- The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser,
- Volume 5, by Edmund Spenser, Edited by Francis J. Child
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- Title: The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser, Volume 5
- Author: Edmund Spenser
- Release Date: January 5, 2004 [EBook #10602]
- Last Updated: July 19, 2016
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POETICAL WORKS OF SPENSER ***
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- THE
- POETICAL WORKS
- OF
- EDMUND SPENSER.
- VOLUME V.
- M.DCCC.LX.
- CONTENTS
- OF THE FIFTH VOLUME.
- * * * * *
- MISCELLANIES.
- Complaints
- The Ruines of Time
- The Teares of the Muses
- Virgils Gnat
- Prosopopoia: or Mother Hubberds Tale
- Ruines of Rome: by Bellay
- Muiopotmos: or the Fate of the Butterflie
- Visions of the Worlds Vanitie
- The Visions of Bellay
- The Visions of Petrarch
- Daphnaida
- Amoretti
- Epithalamion
- Prothalamion
- Fowre Hymnes
- Epigrams
- Sonnets
- APPENDIX.
- I. Variations from the Original Editions
- II. Two Letters from Spenser to Harvey
- III. Index of Proper Names
- * * * * *
- MISCELLANIES.
- COMPLAINTS.
- CONTAINING SUNDRIE SMALL POEMES OF THE
- WORLDS VANITIE:
- WHEREOF THE NEXT PAGE MAKETH MENTION.
- BY ED. SP.
- * * * * *
- LONDON:
- IMPRINTED FOR WILLIAM PONSONBIE, DWELLING IN PAULES
- CHURCHYARD AT THE SIGNE OF THE BISHOPS HEAD.
- 1591.
- * * * * *
- A NOTE OF THE SUNDRIE POEMES CONTAINED IN THIS VOLUME.
- 1. The Ruines of Time.
- 2. The Teares of the Muses.
- 3. Virgils Gnat.
- 4. Prosopopoia, or Mother Hubberds Tale.
- 5. The Ruines of Rome: by Bellay.
- 6. Muiopotmos, or The Tale of the Butterflie.
- 7. Visions of the Worlds Vanitie.
- 8. Bellayes Visions.
- 9. Petrarches Visions.
- * * * * *
- THE PRINTER TO THE GENTLE READER.
- Since my late setting foorth of the Faerie Queene, finding that it hath
- found a favourable passage amongst you, I have sithence endevoured by
- all good meanes, (for the better encrease and accomplishment of your
- delights,) to get into my handes such smale poemes of the same Authors
- as I heard were disperst abroad in sundrie hands, and not easie to bee
- come by by himselfe; some of them having bene diverslie imbeziled and
- purloyned from him, since his departure over sea. Of the which I have
- by good meanes gathered togeather these fewe parcels present, which I
- have caused to bee imprinted altogeather, for that they al seeme to
- containe like matter of argument in them, being all complaints and
- meditations of the worlds vanitie, verie grave and profitable. To which
- effect I understand that he besides wrote sundrie others, namelie:
- _Ecclesiastes_ and _Canticum Canticorum_ translated, _A Senights
- Slumber, The Hell of Lovers, his Purgatorie_, being all dedicated to
- ladies, so as it may seeme he ment them all to one volume: besides some
- other pamphlets looselie scattered abroad; as _The Dying Pellican, The
- Howers of the Lord, The Sacrifice of a Sinner, The Seven Psalmes_, &c.,
- which, when I can either by himselfe or otherwise attaine too, I meane
- likewise for your favour sake to set foorth. In the meane time, praying
- you gentlie to accept of these, and graciouslie to entertaine the new
- Poet*, I take leave.
- [* Spenser had printed nothing with his name before the Faerie
- Queene.--Ponsonby's account of the way in which this volume was
- collected is rather loose. The Ruins of Time and The Tears of the Muses
- were certainly written shortly before they were published, and there
- can be equally little doubt that Mother Hubberd's Tale was retouched
- about the same time. C.]
- THE RUINES OF TIME.
- DEDICATED
- TO THE RIGHT NOBLE AND BEAUTIFULL LADIE,
- THE LA: MARIE,
- COUNTESSE OF PEMEBROOKE.
- Most honourable and bountifull Ladie, there bee long sithens deepe
- sowed in my brest the seede of most entire love and humble affection
- unto that most brave knight, your noble brother deceased; which, taking
- roote, began in his life time somewhat to bud forth, and to shew
- themselves to him, as then in the weakenes of their first spring; and
- would in their riper strength (had it pleased High God till then to
- drawe out his daies) spired forth fruit of more perfection. But since
- God hath disdeigned the world of that most noble spirit which was the
- hope of all learned men, and the patron of my young Muses, togeather
- with him both their hope of anie further fruit was cut off, and also
- the tender delight of those their first blossoms nipped and quite dead.
- Yet, sithens my late cumming into England, some frends of mine, which
- might much prevaile with me, and indeede commaund me, knowing with howe
- straight bandes of duetie I was tied to him, as also bound unto that
- noble house, of which the chiefs hope then rested in him, have sought
- to revive them by upbraiding me, for that I have not shewed anie
- thankefull remembrance towards him or any of them, but suffer their
- names to sleep in silence and forgetfulnesse. Whome chieflie to
- satisfie, or els to avoide that fowle blot of unthankefulnesse, I have
- conceived this small Poeme, intituled by a generall name of _The Worlds
- Ruines;_ yet speciallie intended to the renowming of that noble race
- from which both you and he sprong, and to the eternizing of some of the
- chiefe of them late deceased. The which I dedicate unto your La. as
- whome it most speciallie concerneth, and to whome I acknowledge my
- selfe bounden by manie singular favours and great graces. I pray for
- your honourable happinesse, and so humblie kisse your handes.
- Your Ladiships ever
- humblie at commaund,
- E.S.
- * * * * *
- THE RUINES OF TIME.
- It chaunced me on* day beside the shore
- Of silver streaming Thamesis to bee,
- Nigh where the goodly Verlame stood of yore,
- Of which there now remaines no memorie,
- Nor anie little moniment to see, 5
- By which the travailer that fares that way
- _This once was she_ may warned be to say.
- [* _On_, one.]
- There, on the other side, I did behold
- A Woman sitting sorrowfullie wailing,
- Rending her yeolow locks, like wyrie golde 10
- About her shoulders careleslie downe trailing,
- And streames of teares from her faire eyes forth railing*:
- In her right hand a broken rod she held,
- Which towards heaven shee seemd on high to weld,
- [* _Railing_, flowing.]
- Whether she were one of that rivers nymphes, 15
- Which did the losse of some dere Love lament,
- I doubt; or one of those three fatall impes
- Which draw the dayes of men forth in extent;
- Or th'auncient genius of that citie brent*;
- But, seeing her so piteouslie perplexed, 20
- I, to her calling, askt what her so vexed.
- [* _Brent_, burnt.]
- "Ah! what delight," quoth she, "in earthlie thing,
- Or comfort can I, wretched creature, have?
- Whose happines the heavens envying,
- From highest staire to lowest step me drave, 25
- And have in mine owne bowels made my grave,
- That of all nations now I am forlorne*,
- The worlds sad spectacle, and Fortunes scorne."
- [* _Forlorne_, forsaken.]
- Much was I mooved at her piteous plaint,
- And felt my heart nigh riven in my brest 30
- With tender ruth to see her sore constraint;
- That, shedding teares, a while I still did rest,
- And after did her name of her request.
- "Name have I none," quoth she, "nor anie being,
- Bereft of both by Fates uniust decreeing. 35
- "I was that citie which the garland wore
- Of Britaines pride, delivered unto me
- By Romane victors which it wonne of yore;
- Though nought at all but ruines now I bee,
- And lye in mine owne ashes, as ye see, 40
- VERLAME I was; what bootes it that I was,
- Sith now I am but weedes and wastfull gras?
- "O vaine worlds glorie, and unstedfast state
- Of all that lives on face of sinfull earth!
- Which, from their first untill their utmost date, 45
- Tast no one hower of happines or merth;
- But like as at the ingate* of their berth
- They crying creep out of their mothers woomb,
- So wailing backe go to their wofull toomb.
- [* _Ingate_, entrance, beginning.]
- "Why then dooth flesh, a bubble-glas of breath, 50
- Hunt after honour and advauncement vaine,
- And reare a trophee for devouring death
- With so great labour and long-lasting paine,
- As if his daies for ever should remaine?
- Sith all that in this world is great or gaie 55
- Doth as a vapour vanish and decaie.
- "Looke backe, who list, unto the former ages,
- And call to count what is of them become.
- Where be those learned wits and antique sages,
- Which of all wisedome knew the perfect somme? 60
- Where those great warriors, which did overcome
- The world with conquest of their might and maine,
- And made one meare* of th'earth and of their raine?
- [* _Meare_, boundary.]
- "What nowe is of th'Assyrian Lyonesse,
- Of whome no footing now on earth appeares? 65
- What of the Persian Beares outragiousnesse,
- Whose memorie is quite worne out with yeares?
- Who of the Grecian Libbard* now ought heares,
- That over-ran the East with greedie powre,
- And left his whelps their kingdomes to devoure? 70
- [* _Libbard_, leopard]
- "And where is that same great seven-headded beast,
- That made all nations vassals of her pride,
- To fall before her feete at her beheast,
- And in the necke of all the world did ride?
- Where doth she all that wondrous welth nowe hide? 75
- With her own weight downe pressed now shee lies,
- And by her heaps her hugenesse testifies.
- "O Rome, thy ruine I lament and rue,
- And in thy fall my fatall overthrowe,
- That whilom was, whilst heavens with equall vewe 80
- Deignd to behold me and their gifts bestowe,
- The picture of thy pride in pompous shew:
- And of the whole world as thou wast the empresse,
- So I of this small Northerne world was princesse.
- "To tell the beawtie of my buildings fayre, 85
- Adornd with purest golde and precious stone,
- To tell my riches and endowments rare,
- That by my foes are now all spent and gone,
- To tell my forces, matchable to none,
- Were but lost labour that few would beleeve, 90
- And with rehearsing would me more agreeve.
- "High towers, faire temples, goodly theaters,
- Strong walls, rich porches, princelie pallaces,
- Large streetes, brave houses, sacred sepulchers,
- Sure gates, sweete gardens, stately galleries 95
- Wrought with faire pillours and fine imageries,--
- All those, O pitie! now are turnd to dust,
- And overgrowen with blacke oblivions rust.
- "Theretoo, for warlike power and peoples store
- In Britannie was none to match with mee, 100
- That manie often did abie full sore:
- Ne Troynovant*, though elder sister shee,
- With my great forces might compared bee;
- That stout Pendragon to his perill felt,
- Who in a siege seaven yeres about me dwelt. 105
- [* _Troynovant_, London]
- "But long ere this, Bunduca, Britonnesse,
- Her mightie hoast against my bulwarkes brought;
- Bunduca! that victorious conqueresse,
- That, lifting up her brave heroick thought
- Bove womens weaknes, with the Romanes fought, 110
- Fought, and in field against them thrice prevailed:
- Yet was she foyld, when as she me assailed.
- "And though at last by force I conquered were
- Of hardie Saxons, and became their thrall,
- Yet was I with much bloodshed bought full deere, 115
- And prizde with slaughter of their generall,
- The moniment of whose sad funerall,
- For wonder of the world, long in me lasted,
- But now to nought, through spoyle of time, is wasted.
- "Wasted it is, as if it never were; 120
- And all the rest that me so honord made,
- And of the world admired ev'rie where,
- Is turnd to smoake that doth to nothing fade;
- And of that brightnes now appeares no shade,
- But greislie shades, such as doo haunt in hell 125
- With fearfull fiends that in deep darknes dwell.
- "Where my high steeples whilom usde to stand,
- On which the lordly faulcon wont to towre,
- There now is but an heap of lyme and sand
- For the shriche-owle to build her balefull bowre: 130
- And where the nightingale wont forth to powre
- Her restles plaints, to comfort wakefull lovers,
- There now haunt yelling mewes and whining plovers.
- "And where the christall Thamis wont to slide
- In silver channell downe along the lee, 135
- About whose flowrie bankes on either side
- A thousand nymphes, with mirthfull iollitee,
- Were wont to play, from all annoyance free,
- There now no rivers course is to be seene,
- But moorish fennes, and marshes ever greene. 140
- "Seemes that that gentle river, for great griefe
- Of my mishaps which oft I to him plained,
- Or for to shunne the horrible mischiefe
- With which he saw my cruell foes me pained,
- And his pure streames with guiltles blood oft stained,
- From my unhappie neighborhood farre fled, 145
- And his sweete waters away with him led.
- "There also where the winged ships were seene
- In liquid waves to cut their fomie waie,
- And thousand fishers numbred to have been, 150
- In that wide lake looking for plenteous praie
- Of fish, which they with baits usde to betraie,
- Is now no lake, nor anie fishers store,
- Nor ever ship shall saile there anie more.
- "They all are gone, and all with them is gone! 155
- Ne ought to me remaines, but to lament
- My long decay, which no man els doth mone,
- And mourne my fall with dolefull dreriment:
- Yet it is comfort in great languishment,
- To be bemoned with compassion kinde, 160
- And mitigates the anguish of the minde.
- "But me no man bewaileth, but in game
- Ne sheddeth teares from lamentable eie;
- Nor anie lives that mentioneth my name
- To be remembred of posteritie, 165
- Save one, that maugre Fortunes iniurie,
- And Times decay, and Envies cruell tort*,
- Hath writ my record in true-seeming sort.
- [* _Tort_, wrong]
- "CAMBDEN! the nourice* of antiquitie,
- And lanterne unto late succeding age 170
- To see the light of simple veritie
- Buried in ruines, through the great outrage
- Of her owne people led with warlike rage,
- CAMBDEN! though Time all moniments obscure,
- Yet thy iust labours ever shall endure. 175
- [* _Nourice_, nurse]
- "But whie, unhappie wight! doo I thus crie,
- And grieve that my remembrance quite is raced*
- Out of the knowledge of posteritie,
- And all my antique moniments defaced?
- Sith I doo dailie see things highest placed, 180
- So soone as Fates their vitall thred have shorne,
- Forgotten quite as they were never borne
- [* _Raced_, razed.]
- "It is not long, since these two eyes beheld
- A mightie Prince*, of most renowmed race,
- Whom England high in count of honour held, 185
- And greatest ones did sue to game his grace;
- Of greatest ones he, greatest in his place,
- Sate in the bosom of his Soveraine,
- And _Right and Loyall_** did his word maintaine.
- [* I. e. the Earl of Leicester.]
- [** Leicester's motto.]
- "I saw him die, I saw him die as one 190
- Of the meane people, and brought foorth on beare;
- I saw him die, and no man left to mone
- His dolefull fate that late him loved deare;
- Scarse anie left to close his eylids neare;
- Scarse anie left upon his lips to laie 195
- The sacred sod, or requiem to saie.
- "O trustlesse state of miserable men,
- That builde your blis on hope of earthly thing,
- And vainly thinke your selves halfe happie then,
- When painted faces with smooth flattering 200
- Doo fawne on you, and your wide praises sing;
- And, when the courting masker louteth* lowe,
- Him true in heart and trustie to you trow!
- [* _Louteth_, boweth.]
- "All is but fained, and with oaker* dide,
- That everie shower will wash and wipe away; 205
- All things doo change that under heaven abide,
- And after death all friendship doth decaie.
- Therefore, what ever man bearst worldlie sway,
- Living, on God and on thy selfe relie;
- For, when thou diest, all shall with thee die. 210
- [* _Oaker_, ochre, paint.]
- "He now is dead, and all is with him dead,
- Save what in heavens storehouse he uplaid:
- His hope is faild, and come to passe his dread,
- And evill men (now dead) his deeds upbraid:
- Spite bites the dead, that living never baid. 215
- He now is gone, the whiles the foxe is crept
- Into the hole the which the badger swept.
- "He now is dead, and all his glorie gone,
- And all his greatnes vapoured to nought,
- That as a glasse upon the water shone, 220
- Which vanisht quite so soone as it was sought.
- His name is worne alreadie out of thought,
- Ne anie poet seekes him to revive;
- Yet manie poets honourd him alive.
- "Ne doth his Colin, carelesse Colin Cloute, 225
- Care now his idle bagpipe up to raise,
- Ne tell his sorrow to the listning rout
- Of shepherd groomes, which wont his songs to praise:
- Praise who so list, yet I will him dispraise,
- Untill he quite* him of this guiltie blame. 230
- Wake, shepheards boy, at length awake for shame!
- [* _Quite_, acquit.]
- "And who so els did goodnes by him game,
- And who so els his bounteous minde did trie*,
- Whether he shepheard be, or shepheards swaine,
- (For manie did, which doo it now denie,) 235
- Awake, and to his song a part applie:
- And I, the whilest you mourne for his decease,
- Will with my mourning plaints your plaint increase.
- [* _Trie_, experience.]
- "He dyde, and after him his brother dyde,
- His brother prince, his brother noble peere, 240
- That whilste he lived was of none envyde,
- And dead is now, as living, counted deare;
- Deare unto all that true affection beare,
- But unto thee most deare, O dearest Dame,
- His noble spouse and paragon of fame. 245
- "He, whilest he lived, happie was through thee,
- And, being dead, is happie now much more;
- Living, that lincked chaunst with thee to bee,
- And dead, because him dead thou dost adore
- As living, and thy lost deare love deplore. 250
- So whilst that thou, faire flower of chastitie,
- Dost live, by thee thy lord shall never die.
- "Thy lord shall never die, the whiles this verse
- Shall live, and surely it shall live for ever:
- For ever it shall live, and shall rehearse 255
- His worthie praise, and vertues dying never,
- Though death his soule doo from his bodie sever:
- And thou thy selfe herein shalt also live;
- Such grace the heavens doo to my verses give.
- "Ne shall his sister, ne thy father, die; 260
- Thy father, that good earle of rare renowne,
- And noble patrone of weake povertie;
- Whose great good deeds, in countrey and in towne.
- Have purchast him in heaven an happie crowne:
- Where he now liveth in eternall blis, 265
- And left his sonne t'ensue those steps of his.
- "He, noble bud, his grandsires livelie hayre,
- Under the shadow of thy countenaunce
- Now ginnes to shoote up fast, and flourish fayre
- In learned artes, and goodlie governaunce, 270
- That him to highest honour shall advaunce.
- Brave impe* of Bedford, grow apace in bountie,
- And count of wisedome more than of thy countie!
- [* _Impe_, graft, scion.]
- "Ne may I let thy husbands sister die,
- That goodly ladie, sith she eke did spring 275
- Out of this stocke and famous familie
- Whose praises I to future age doo sing;
- And foorth out of her happie womb did bring
- The sacred brood of learning and all honour;
- In whom the heavens powrde all their gifts upon her.
- "Most gentle spirite breathed from above, 281
- Out of the bosome of the Makers blis,
- In whom all bountie and all vertuous love
- Appeared in their native propertis,
- And did enrich that noble breast of his 285
- With treasure passing all this worldës worth,
- Worthie of heaven it selfe, which brought it forth:
- "His blessed spirite, full of power divine
- And influence of all celestiall grace,
- Loathing this sinfull earth and earthlie slime, 290
- Fled backe too soonc unto his native place;
- Too soone for all that did his love embrace,
- Too soone for all this wretched world, whom he
- Robd of all right and true nobilitie.
- "Yet, ere his happie soule to heaven went 295
- Out of this fleshlie goale, he did devise
- Unto his heavenlie Maker to present
- His bodie, as a spotles sacrifise,
- And chose that guiltie hands of enemies
- Should powre forth th'offring of his guiltles blood:
- So life exchanging for his countries good. 300
- "O noble spirite, live there ever blessed,
- The worlds late wonder, and the heavens new ioy;
- Live ever there, and leave me here distressed
- With mortall cares and cumbrous worlds anoy! 305
- But, where thou dost that happines enioy,
- Bid me, O bid me quicklie come to thee,
- That happie there I maie thee alwaies see!
- "Yet, whilest the Fates affoord me vitall breath,
- I will it spend in speaking of thy praise, 310
- And sing to thee, untill that timelie death
- By heavens doome doo ende my earthlie daies:
- Thereto doo thou my humble spirite raise,
- And into me that sacred breath inspire,
- Which thou there breathest perfect and entire. 315
- "Then will I sing; but who can better sing
- Than thine owne sister, peerles ladie bright,
- Which to thee sings with deep harts sorrowing,
- Sorrowing tempered with deare delight,
- That her to heare I feele my feeble spright 320
- Robbed of sense, and ravished with ioy;
- O sad ioy, made of mourning and anoy!
- "Yet will I sing; but who can better sing
- Than thou thyselfe thine owne selfes valiance,
- That, whilest thou livedst, madest the forrests ring, 325
- And fields resownd, and flockes to leap and daunce,
- And shepheards leave their lambs unto mischaunce,
- To runne thy shrill Arcadian pipe to heare:
- O happie were those dayes, thrice happie were!
- "But now more happie thou, and wretched wee, 330
- Which want the wonted sweetnes of thy voice,
- Whiles thou now in Elisian fields so free,
- With Orpheus, and with Linus, and the choice
- Of all that ever did in rimes reioyce,
- Conversest, and doost heare their heavenlie layes, 335
- And they heare thine, and thine doo better praise.
- "So there thou livest, singing evermore,
- And here thou livest, being ever song
- Of us, which living loved thee afore,
- And now thee worship mongst that blessed throng 340
- Of heavenlie poets and heroës strong.
- So thou both here and there immortall art,
- And everie where through excellent desart.
- "But such as neither of themselves can sing,
- Nor yet are sung of others for reward, 345
- Die in obscure oblivion, as the thing
- Which never was; ne ever with regard
- Their names shall of the later age be heard,
- But shall in rustic darknes ever lie,
- Unles they mentiond be with infamie. 350
- "What booteth it to have been rich alive?
- What to be great? what to be gracious?
- When after death no token doth survive
- Of former being in this mortall hous,
- But sleepes in dust dead and inglorious, 355
- Like beast, whose breath but in his nostrels is,
- And hath no hope of happinesse or blis.
- "How manie great ones may remembred be,
- Which in their daies most famouslie did florish,
- Of whome no word we heare, nor signe now see, 360
- But as things wipt out with a sponge to perishe,
- Because they living cared not to cherishe
- No gentle wits, through pride or covetize,
- Which might their names for ever memorize!
- "Provide therefore, ye Princes, whilst ye live, 365
- That of the Muses ye may friended bee,
- Which unto men eternitie do give;
- For they be daughters of Dame Memorie
- And love, the father of Eternitie,
- And do those men in golden thrones repose, 370
- Whose merits they to glorifie do chose.
- "The seven-fold yron gates of grislie Hell,
- And horrid house of sad Proserpina,
- They able are with power of mightie spell
- To breake, and thence the soules to bring awaie 375
- Out of dread darkenesse to eternall day,
- And them immortall make which els would die
- In foule forgetfulnesse, and nameles lie.
- "So whilome raised they the puissant brood
- Of golden-girt Alcmena, for great merite, 380
- Out of the dust to which the Oetaean wood
- Had him consum'd, and spent his vitall spirite,
- To highest heaven, where now he doth inherite
- All happinesse in Hebes silver bowre,
- Chosen to be her dearest paramoure. 385
- "So raisde they eke faire Ledaes warlick twinnes.
- And interchanged life unto them lent,
- That, when th'one diës, th'other then beginnes
- To shew in heaven his brightnes orient;
- And they, for pittie of the sad wayment*, 390
- Which Orpheus for Eurydice did make,
- Her back againe to life sent for his sake.
- [* _Wayment_, lament.]
- "So happie are they, and so fortunate,
- Whom the Pierian sacred sisters love,
- That freed from bands of impacable** fate, 395
- And power of death, they live for aye above,
- Where mortall wreakes their blis may not remove:
- But with the gods, for former verities meede,
- On nectar and ambrosia do feede.
- [* _Impacable_, unappeasable.]
- "For deeds doe die, how ever noblie donne, 400
- And thoughts of men do as themselves decay;
- But wise wordes taught in numbers for to runne,
- Recorded by the Muses, live for ay;
- Ne may with storming showers be washt away,
- Ne bitter-breathing windes with harmfull blast, 405
- Nor age, nor envie, shall them ever wast.
- "In vaine doo earthly princes then, in vaine,
- Seeke with pyramides to heaven aspired,
- Or huge colosses built with costlie paine,
- Or brasen pillours never to be fired, 410
- Or shrines made of the mettall most desired,
- To make their memories for ever live:
- For how can mortall immortalitie give?
- "Such one Mausolus made, the worlds great wonder,
- But now no remnant doth thereof remaine: 415
- Such one Marcellus, but was torne with thunder:
- Such one Lisippus, but is worne with raine:
- Such one King Edmond, but was rent for gaine.
- All such vaine moniments of earthlie masse,
- Devour'd of Time, in time to nought doo passe. 420
- "But Fame with golden wings aloft doth flie,
- Above the reach of ruinous decay,
- And with brave plumes doth beate the azure skie,
- Admir'd of base-borne men from farre away:
- Then who so will with vertuous deeds assay 425
- To mount to heaven, on Pegasus must ride,
- And with sweete Poets verse be glorifide.
- "For not to have been dipt in Lethe lake,
- Could save the sonne of Thetis from to die;
- But that blinde bard did him immortall make 430
- With verses dipt in deaw of Castalie:
- Which made the Easterne conquerour to crie,
- O fortunate yong man! whose vertue found
- So brave a trompe thy noble acts to sound.
- "Therefore in this halfe happie I doo read* 435
- Good Melibae, that hath a poet got
- To sing his living praises being dead,
- Deserving never here to be forgot,
- In spight of envie, that his deeds would spot:
- Since whose decease, learning lies unregarded, 440
- And men of armes doo wander unrewarded.
- [* _Read_, consider]
- "Those two be those two great calamities,
- That long agoe did grieve the noble spright
- Of Salomon with great indignities,
- Who whilome was alive the wisest wight: 445
- But now his wisedome is disprooved quite,
- For he that now welds* all things at his will
- Scorns th'one and th'other in his deeper skill.
- [* _Welds_, wields]
- "O griefe of griefes! O gall of all good heartes!
- To see that vertue should dispised bee 450
- Of him that first was raisde for vertuous parts,
- And now, broad spreading like an aged tree,
- Lets none shoot up that nigh him planted bee.
- O let the man of whom the Muse is scorned,
- Nor alive nor dead, be of the Muse adorned! 455
- "O vile worlds trust! that with such vaine illusion
- Hath so wise men bewitcht and overkest*,
- That they see not the way of their confusion:
- O vainesse to be added to the rest
- That do my soule with inward griefe infest! 460
- Let them behold the piteous fall of mee,
- And in my case their owne ensample see.
- [* _Overkest_, overcast.]
- "And who so els that sits in highest seate
- Of this worlds glorie, worshipped of all,
- Ne feareth change of time, nor fortunes threats, 465
- Let him behold the horror of my fall,
- And his owne end unto remembrance call;
- That of like ruine he may warned bee,
- And in himselfe be moov'd to pittie mee."
- Thus having ended all her piteous plaint, 470
- With dolefull shrikes shee vanished away,
- That I, through inward sorrowe wexen faint,
- And all astonished with deepe dismay
- For her departure, had no word to say;
- But sate long time in sencelesse sad affright, 475
- Looking still, if I might of her have sight.
- Which when I missed, having looked long,
- My thought returned greeved home againe,
- Renewing her complaint with passion strong,
- For ruth of that same womans piteous paine; 480
- Whose wordes recording in my troubled braine,
- I felt such anguish wound my feeble heart,
- That frosen horror ran through everie part.
- So inlie greeving in my groning brest,
- And deepelie muzing at her doubtfull speach, 485
- Whose meaning much I labored foorth to wreste,
- Being above my slender reasons reach,
- At length, by demonstration me to teach,
- Before mine eies strange sights presented were,
- Like tragicke pageants seeming to appeare. 490
- I.
- I saw an Image, all of massie gold,
- Placed on high upon an altare faire,
- That all which did the same from farre beholde
- Might worship it, and fall on lowest staire.
- Not that great idoll might with this compaire, 495
- To which th'Assyrian tyrant would have made
- The holie brethren falslie to have praid.
- But th'altare on the which this image staid
- Was (O great pitie!) built of brickle* clay,
- That shortly the foundation decaid, 500
- With showres of heaven and tempests worne away;
- Then downe it fell, and low in ashes lay,
- Scorned of everie one which by it went;
- That I, it seing, dearelie did lament.
- [* _Brickle_, brittle.]
- II.
- Next unto this a statelie Towre appeared, 505
- Built all of richest stone that might bee found,
- And nigh unto the heavens in height upreared,
- But placed on a plot of sandie ground:
- Not that great towre which is so much renownd
- For tongues confusion in Holie Writ, 510
- King Ninus worke, might be compar'd to it.
- But, O vaine labours of terrestriall wit,
- That buildes so stronglie on so frayle a soyle,
- As with each storme does fall away and flit,
- And gives the fruit of all your travailes toyle 515
- To be the pray of Tyme, and Fortunes spoyle,
- I saw this towre fall sodainlie to dust,
- That nigh with griefe thereof my heart was brust.
- III.
- Then did I see a pleasant Paradize,
- Full of sweete flowres and daintiest delights, 520
- Such as on earth man could not more devize,
- With pleasures choyce to feed his cheereful sprights:
- Not that which Merlin by his magicke slights
- Made for the gentle Squire, to entertaine
- His fayre Belphoebe, could this gardine staine. 525
- But O short pleasure bought with lasting paine!
- Why will hereafter anie flesh delight
- In earthlie blis, and ioy in pleasures vaine?
- Since that I sawe this gardine wasted quite,
- That where it was scarce seemed anie sight; 530
- That I, which once that beautie did beholde,
- Could not from teares my melting eyes with-holde.
- IV.
- Soone after this a Giaunt came in place,
- Of wondrous power, and of exceeding stature,
- That none durst vewe the horror of his face; 535
- Yet was he milde of speach, and meeke of nature.
- Not he which in despight of his Creatour
- With railing tearmes defied the Iewish hoast,
- Might with this mightie one in hugenes boast;
- For from the one he could to th'other coast 540
- Stretch his strong thighes, and th'ocean overstride,
- And reatch his hand into his enemies hoast.
- But see the end of pompe and fleshlie pride!
- One of his feete unwares from him did slide,
- That downe hee fell into the deepe abisse, 545
- Where drownd with him is all his earthlie blisse.
- V.
- Then did I see a Bridge, made all of golde,
- Over the sea from one to other side,
- Withouten prop or pillour it t'upholde,
- But like the coloured rainbowe arched wide: 550
- Not that great arche which Traian edifide,
- To be a wonder to all age ensuing,
- Was matchable to this in equall vewing.
- But ah! what bootes it to see earthlie thing
- In glorie or in greatnes to excell, 555
- Sith time doth greatest things to ruine bring?
- This goodlie bridge, one foote not fastned well,
- Gan faile, and all the rest downe shortlie fell,
- Ne of so brave a building ought remained,
- That griefe thereof my spirite greatly pained. 560
- VI.
- I saw two Beares, as white as anie milke,
- Lying together in a mightie cave,
- Of milde aspect, and haire as soft as silke,
- That salvage nature seemed not to have,
- Nor after greedie spoyle of blood to crave: 565
- Two fairer beasts might not elswhere be found,
- Although the compast* world were sought around.
- [* _Compast_, rounded.]
- But what can long abide above this ground
- In state of blis, or stedfast happinesse?
- The cave in which these beares lay sleeping sound
- Was but earth, and with her owne weightinesse 571
- Upon them fell, and did unwares oppresse;
- That, for great sorrow of their sudden fate,
- Henceforth all worlds felicitie I hate.
- Much was I troubled in my heavie spright, 575
- At sight of these sad spectacles forepast,
- That all my senses were bereaved quight,
- And I in minde remained sore agast,
- Distraught twixt feare and pitie; when at last
- I heard a voyce which loudly to me called, 580
- That with the suddein shrill I was appalled.
- "Behold," said it, "and by ensample see,
- That all is vanitie and griefe of minde,
- Ne other comfort in this world can be,
- But hope of heaven, and heart to God inclinde; 585
- For all the rest must needs be left behinde."
- With that it bad me to the other side
- To cast mine eye, where other sights I spide.
- I.
- Upon that famous rivers further shore,
- There stood a snowie Swan, of heavenly hiew 590
- And gentle kinde as ever fowle afore;
- A fairer one in all the goodlie criew
- Of white Strimonian brood might no man view:
- There he most sweetly sung the prophecie
- Of his owne death in dolefull elegie. 595
- At last, when all his mourning melodie
- He ended had, that both the shores resounded,
- Feeling the fit that him forewarnd to die,
- With loftie flight above the earth he bounded,
- And out of sight to highest heaven mounted, 600
- Where now he is become an heavenly signe;
- There now the ioy is his, here sorrow mine.
- II.
- Whilest thus I looked, loe! adowne the lee*
- I sawe an Harpe, stroong all with silver twyne,
- And made of golde and costlie yvorie, 605
- Swimming, that whilome seemed to have been
- The harpe on which Dan Orpheus was seene
- Wylde beasts and forrests after him to lead,
- But was th'harpe of Philisides** now dead.
- [* _Lee_, surface of the stream.]
- [** _Phili-sid-es_, Sir Philip Sidney]
- At length out of the river it was reard, 610
- And borne above the cloudes to be divin'd,
- Whilst all the way most heavenly noyse was heard
- Of the strings, stirred with the warbling wind,
- That wrought both ioy and sorrow in my mind:
- So now in heaven a signe it doth appeare, 615
- The Harpe well knowne beside the Northern Beare.
- III.
- Soone after this I saw on th'other side
- A curious Coffer made of heben* wood,
- That in it did most precious treasure hide,
- Exceeding all this baser worldës good: 620
- Yet through the overflowing of the flood
- It almost drowned was and done to nought,
- That sight thereof much griev'd my pensive thought.
- [* _Heben_, ebony.]
- At length, when most in perill it was brought,
- Two angels, downe descending with swift flight, 625
- Out of the swelling streame it lightly caught,
- And twixt their blessed armes it carried quight
- Above the reach of anie living sight:
- So now it is transform'd into that starre,
- In which all heavenly treasures locked are. 630
- IV.
- Looking aside I saw a stately Bed,
- Adorned all with costly cloth of gold,
- That might for anie princes couche be red*,
- And deckt with daintie flowres, as if it shold
- Be for some bride, her ioyous night to hold: 635
- Therein a goodly virgine sleeping lay;
- A fairer wight saw never summers day.
- [* _Red_, taken.]
- I heard a voyce that called farre away,
- And her awaking bad her quickly dight,
- For lo! her bridegrome was in readie ray 640
- To come to her, and seeke her loves delight:
- With that she started up with cherefull sight,
- When suddeinly both bed and all was gone,
- And I in languor left there all alone.
- V.
- Still as I gazed, I beheld where stood 645
- A Knight all arm'd, upon a winged steed,
- The same that was bred of Medusaes blood,
- On which Dan Perseus, borne of heavenly seed,
- The faire Andromeda from perill freed:
- Full mortally this knight ywounded was, 650
- That streames of blood foorth flowed on the gras.
- Yet was he deckt (small ioy to him, alas!)
- With manie garlands for his victories,
- And with rich spoyles, which late he did purchas
- Through brave atcheivements from his enemies: 655
- Fainting at last through long infirmities,
- He smote his steed, that straight to heaven him bore,
- And left me here his losse for to deplore.
- VI.
- Lastly, I saw an Arke of purest golde
- Upon a brazen pillour standing hie, 660
- Which th'ashes seem'd of some great prince to hold,
- Enclosde therein for endles memorie
- Of him whom all the world did glorifie:
- Seemed the heavens with the earth did disagree,
- Whether should of those ashes keeper bee. 665
- At last me seem'd wing-footed Mercurie,
- From heaven descending to appease their strife,
- The arke did beare with him above the skie,
- And to those ashes gave a second life,
- To live in heaven, where happines is rife: 670
- At which the earth did grieve exceedingly,
- And I for dole was almost like to die.
- _L'Envoy._
- Immortall spirite of Philisides,
- Which now art made the heavens ornament,
- That whilome wast the worldës chiefst riches. 675
- Give leave to him that lov'de thee to lament
- His losse by lacke of thee to heaven hent*,
- And with last duties of this broken verse,
- Broken with sighes, to decke thy sable herse!
- [* _Hent_, taken away.]
- And ye, faire Ladie! th'honor of your daies 680
- And glorie of the world, your high thoughts scorne,
- Vouchsafe this moniment of his last praise
- With some few silver dropping teares t'adorne;
- And as ye be of heavenlie off-spring borne,
- So unto heaven let your high minde aspire, 685
- And loath this drosse of sinfull worlds desire.
- * * * * *
- FOOTNOTES:
- Ver. 8.--_Verlame._ Veralam, or Verulamium, was a British and Roman
- town, near the present city of St. Alban's in Hertfordshire. Some
- remains of its walls are still perceptible. H.
- Ver. 64.--_Th'Assyrian Lyonesse._ These types of nations are taken
- from the seventh chapter of the book of Daniel. H.
- Ver. 190.--_I saw him die_. Leicester died at Cornbury Lodge, in
- Oxfordshire. Todd suggests that he may have fallen sick at St. Alban's,
- and that Spenser, hearing the report in Ireland, may havo concluded
- without inquiry that this was the place of his subsequent death, C.
- Ver. 225.--_Colin Cloute._ Spenser himself, who had been befriended by
- Leicester. H.
- Ver. 239.--_His brother._ Ambrose Dudley, Earl of Warwick.
- Ver. 245.--_His noble spouse._ Anne, the eldest daughter of Francis
- Russell, Earl of Bedford.
- Ver. 260.--_His sister_. Lady Mary Sidney.
- Ver. 261.--_That good earle_, &c. This Earl of Bedford died in 1585.--
- TODD.
- Ver. 267.--_He, noble bud_, &c. Edward Russell, grandson of Francis
- Earl of Bedford, succeeded in the earldom, his father, Francis, having
- been slain by the Scots.--OLDYS.
- Ver. 275.--_That goodly ladie_, &c. Lady Mary Sidney, mother of Sir
- Philip Sidney and the Countess of Pembroke.
- Ver. 281.--_Most gentle spirite._ Sir Philip Sidney.
- Ver. 317.--_Thine owne sister,_ &c. The Countess of Pembroke, to whom
- this poem is dedicated. "The Dolefull Lay of Clorinda" (Vol. IV. p.
- 426) appears to have been written by her.
- Ver. 436.--_Good Melibae_. Sir Francis Walsingham, who died April
- 6,1590. The _poet_ is Thomas Watson.--OLDYS.
- Ver. 447-455.--These lines are aimed at Burghley, who was said to have
- opposed the Queen's intended bounty to the poet. C.
- Ver 491.--These allegorical representations of the vanity of exalted
- position, stately buildings, earthly pleasures, bodily strength, and
- works of beauty and magnificence, admit of an easy application to the
- splendid career of the Earl of Leicester,--his favor and influence with
- the Queen, his enlargement of Kenilworth, his princely style of living,
- and particularly (IV.) his military command in the Low Countries. The
- sixth of these "tragick pageants" strongly confirms this
- interpretation. The two bears are Robert and Ambrose Dudley. While
- Leicester was lieutenant in the Netherlands, he was in the habit of
- using the Warwick crest (a bear and ragged staff) instead of his own.
- Naunton, in his Fragmenta Regalia, calls him _Ursa Major_. C.
- Ver. 497.--_The holie brethren_, &c. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego.
- Daniel, ch. iii. C.
- Ver. 582-586.--A paraphrase of Sir Philip's last words to his brother.
- "Above all, govern your will and affection by the will and word of your
- Creator, in me beholding the end of this world with all her vanities."
- This is pointed out by Zouch, Life of Sidney, p. 263. C.
- Ver 590.--This second series of pageants is applicable exclusively to
- Sir Philip Sidney. The meaning of the third and fourth is hard to make
- out; but the third seems to have reference to the collection of the
- scattered sheets of the Arcadia, and the publication of this work by
- the Countess of Pembroke, after it had been condemned to destruction by
- the author. The fourth may indeed signify nothing more than Lady
- Sidney's bereavement by her husband's death; but this interpretation
- seems too literal for a professed allegory. The sixth obviously alludes
- to the splendid obsequies to Sidney, performed at the Queen's expense,
- and to the competition of the States of Holland for the honor of
- burying his body. C.
- L'ENVOY: _L'Envoy_ was a sort of postscript _sent with_ poetical
- compositions, and serving either to recommend them to the attention of
- some particular person, or to enforce what we call the moral of them.--
- TYRWHITT.
- * * * * *
- THE TEARES OF THE MUSES.
- BY ED. SP.
- LONDON:
- IMPRINTED FOR WILLIAM PONSONBIE, DWELLING IN PAULES CHURCHYARD AT THE
- SIGNE OF THE BISHOPS HEAD.
- 1591.
- * * * * *
- TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE
- THE LADIE STRANGE.
- Most brave and noble Ladie, the things that make ye so much honored of
- the world as ye bee are such as (without my simple lines testimonie)
- are throughlie knowen to all men; namely, your excellent beautie, your
- vertuous behavior, and your noble match with that most honourable Lord,
- the verie paterne of right nobilitie. But the causes for which ye have
- thus deserved of me to be honoured, (if honour it be at all,) are, both
- your particular bounties, and also some private bands of affinitie*,
- which it hath pleased your Ladiship to acknowledge. Of which whenas I
- found my selfe in no part worthie, I devised this last slender meanes,
- both to intimate my humble affection to your Ladiship, and also to make
- the same universallie knowen to the world; that by honouring you they
- might know me, and by knowing me they might honor you. Vouchsafe, noble
- Lady, to accept this simple remembrance, though not worthy of your
- self, yet such as perhaps by good acceptance thereof ye may hereafter
- cull out a more meet and memorable evidence of your own excellent
- deserts. So recommending the same to your Ladiships good liking, I
- humbly take leave.
- Your La: humbly ever.
- ED. SP.
- [Footnote: Lady Strange was Alice Spencer, sixth daughter of Sir John
- Spencer of Althorpe. C.]
- * * * * *
- THE TEARES OF THE MUSES.
- Rehearse to me, ye sacred Sisters nine,
- The golden brood of great Apolloes wit,
- Those piteous plaints and sorowfull sad tine
- Which late ye powred forth as ye did sit
- Beside the silver springs of Helicone, 5
- Making your musick of hart-breaking mone!
- For since the time that Phoebus foolish sonne,
- Ythundered, through loves avengefull wrath,
- For traversing the charret of the Sunne
- Beyond the compasse of his pointed path, 10
- Of you, his mournfull sisters, was lamented,
- Such mournfull tunes were never since invented.
- Nor since that faire Calliope did lose
- Her loved twinnes, the dearlings of her ioy,
- Her Palici, whom her unkindly foes, 15
- The Fatall Sisters, did for spight destroy,
- Whom all the Muses did bewaile long space,
- Was ever heard such wayling in this place.
- For all their groves, which with the heavenly noyses
- Of their sweete instruments were wont to sound, 20
- And th'hollow hills, from which their silver voyces
- Were wont redoubled echoes to rebound,
- Did now rebound with nought but rufull cries,
- And yelling shrieks throwne up into the skies.
- The trembling streames which wont in chanels cleare 25
- To romble gently downe with murmur soft,
- And were by them right tunefull taught to beare
- A bases part amongst their consorts oft;
- Now forst to overflowe with brackish teares,
- With troublous noyse did dull their daintie eares. 30
- The ioyous Nymphes and lightfoote Faëries
- Which thether came to heare their musick sweet,
- And to the measure of their melodies
- Did learne to move their nimble-shifting feete,
- Now hearing them so heavily lament, 35
- Like heavily lamenting from them went.
- And all that els was wont to worke delight
- Through the divine infusion of their skill,
- And all that els seemd faire and fresh in sight,
- So made by nature for to serve their will, 40
- Was turned now to dismall heavinesse,
- Was turned now to dreadfull uglinesse.
- Ay me! what thing on earth, that all thing breeds,
- Might be the cause of so impatient plight?
- What furie, or what feend, with felon deeds 45
- Hath stirred up so mischievous despight?
- Can griefe then enter into heavenly harts,
- And pierce immortall breasts with mortall smarts?
- Vouchsafe ye then, whom onely it concernes,
- To me those secret causes to display; 50
- For none but you, or who of you it learnes,
- Can rightfully aread so dolefull lay.
- Begin, thou eldest sister of the crew,
- And let the rest in order thee ensew.
- CLIO.
- Heare, thou great Father of the Gods on hie, 55
- That most art dreaded for thy thunder darts;
- And thou, our Syre? that raignst in Castalie
- And Mount Parnasse, the god of goodly arts:
- Heare, and behold the miserable state
- Of us thy daughters, dolefull desolate. 60
- Behold the fowle reproach and open shame
- The which is day by day unto us wrought
- By such as hate the honour of our name,
- The foes of learning and each gentle thought;
- They, not contented us themselves to scorne, 65
- Doo seeke to make us of the world forlorne*.
- [* Forlorne, abandoned]
- Ne onely they that dwell in lowly dust,
- The sonnes of darknes and of ignoraunce;
- But they whom thou, great love, by doome uniust
- Didst to the type of honour earst advaunce; 70
- They now, puft up with sdeignfull insolence,
- Despise the brood of blessed Sapience.
- The sectaries* of my celestiall skill,
- That wont to be the worlds chiefe ornament,
- And learned impes that wont to shoote up still, 75
- And grow to hight of kingdomes government,
- They underkeep, and with their spredding armes
- Doo beat their buds, that perish through their harmes.
- [* _Sectaries_, followers.]
- It most behoves the honorable race
- Of mightie peeres true wisedome to sustaine, 80
- And with their noble countenaunce to grace
- The learned forheads, without gifts or game:
- Or rather learnd themselves behoves to bee;
- That is the girlond of nobilitie.
- But ah! all otherwise they doo esteeme 85
- Of th'heavenly gift of wisdomes influence,
- And to be learned it a base thing deeme:
- Base minded they that want intelligence;
- For God himselfe for wisedome most is praised,
- And men to God thereby are nighest raised. 90
- But they doo onely strive themselves to raise
- Through pompous pride, and foolish vanitie;
- In th'eyes of people they put all their praise,
- And onely boast of armes and auncestrie:
- But vertuous deeds, which did those armes first give
- To their grandsyres, they care not to atchive. 96
- So I, that doo all noble feates professe
- To register and sound in trump of gold,
- Through their bad dooings, or base slothfulnesse,
- Finde nothing worthie to be writ, or told: 100
- For better farre it were to hide their names,
- Than telling them to blazon out their blames.
- So shall succeeding ages have no light
- Of things forepast, nor moniments of time;
- And all that in this world is worthie hight 105
- Shall die in darknesse, and lie hid in slime!
- Therefore I mourne with deep harts sorrowing,
- Because I nothing noble have to sing.
- With that she raynd such store of streaming teares,
- That could have made a stonie heart to weep; 110
- And all her sisters rent* their golden heares,
- And their faire faces with salt humour steep.
- So ended shee: and then the next anew
- Began her grievous plaint, as doth ensew.
- [* _Rent_, rend.]
- MELPOMENE.
- O, who shall powre into my swollen eyes 115
- A sea of teares that never may be dryde,
- A brasen voice that may with shrilling cryes
- Pierce the dull heavens and fill the ayër wide,
- And yron sides that sighing may endure,
- To waile the wretchednes of world impure! 120
- Ah, wretched world! the den of wickednesse,
- Deformd with filth and fowle iniquitie;
- Ah, wretched world! the house of heavinesse,
- Fild with the wreaks of mortall miserie;
- Ah, wretched world, and all that is therein! 125
- The vassals of Gods wrath, and slaves of sin.
- Most miserable creature under sky
- Man without understanding doth appeare;
- For all this worlds affliction he thereby,
- And fortunes freakes, is wisely taught to beare: 130
- Of wretched life the onely ioy shee is.
- And th'only comfort in calamities.
- She armes the brest with constant patience
- Against the bitter throwes of dolours darts:
- She solaceth with rules of sapience 135
- The gentle minds, in midst of worldlie smarts:
- When he is sad, shee seeks to make him merie,
- And doth refresh his sprights when they be werie.
- But he that is of reasons skill bereft,
- And wants the staffe of wisedome him to stay, 140
- Is like a ship in midst of tempest left
- Withouten helme or pilot her to sway:
- Full sad and dreadfull is that ships event;
- So is the man that wants intendiment*.
- [* _Intendiment_, understanding.]
- Whie then doo foolish men so much despize 145
- The precious store of this celestiall riches?
- Why doo they banish us, that patronize
- The name of learning? Most unhappie wretches!
- The which lie drowned in deep wretchednes,
- Yet doo not see their owne unhappines. 150
- My part it is and my professed skill
- The stage with tragick buskin to adorne,
- And fill the scene with plaint and outcries shrill
- Of wretched persons, to misfortune borne:
- But none more tragick matter I can finde 155
- Than this, of men depriv'd of sense and minde.
- For all mans life me seemes a tragedy,
- Full of sad sights and sore catastrophees;
- First comming to the world with weeping eye,
- Where all his dayes, like dolorous trophees, 160
- Are heapt with spoyles of fortune and of feare,
- And he at last laid forth on balefull beare.
- So all with rufull spectacles is fild,
- Fit for Megera or Persephone;
- But I that in true tragedies am skild, 165
- The flowre of wit, finde nought to busie me:
- Therefore I mourne, and pitifully mone,
- Because that mourning matter I have none.
- Then gan she wofully to waile, and wring
- Her wretched hands in lamentable wise; 170
- And all her sisters, thereto answering,
- Threw forth lowd shrieks and drerie dolefull cries.
- So rested she: and then the next in rew
- Began her grievous plaint, as doth ensew.
- THALIA.
- Where be the sweete delights of learnings treasure, 175
- That wont with comick sock to beautefie
- The painted theaters, and fill with pleasure
- The listners eyes, and eares with melodie,
- In which I late was wont to raine as queene,
- And maske in mirth with graces well beseene? 180
- O, all is gone! and all that goodly glee,
- Which wont to be the glorie of gay wits,
- Is layd abed, and no where now to see;
- And in her roome unseemly Sorrow sits,
- With hollow browes and greisly countenaunce 185
- Marring my ioyous gentle dalliaunce.
- And him beside sits ugly Barbarisme,
- And brutish Ignorance, ycrept of late
- Out of dredd darknes of the deep abysme,
- Where being bredd, he light and heaven does hate:
- They in the mindes of men now tyrannize, 191
- And the faire scene with rudenes foule disguize.
- All places they with follie have possest,
- And with vaine toyes the vulgare entertaine;
- But me have banished, with all the rest 195
- That whilome wont to wait upon my traine,
- Fine Counterfesaunce*, and unhurtfull Sport,
- Delight, and Laughter, deckt in seemly sort.
- [* _Counterfesaunce_, mimicry.]
- All these, and all that els the comick stage
- With seasoned wit and goodly pleasance graced, 200
- By which mans life in his likest imáge
- Was limned forth, are wholly now defaced;
- And those sweete wits which wont the like to frame
- Are now despizd, and made a laughing game.
- And he, the man whom Nature selfe had made 205
- To mock her selfe, and truth to imitate,
- With kindly counter* under mimick shade,
- Our pleasant Willy, ah! is dead of late:
- With whom all ioy and iolly meriment
- Is also deaded, and in dolour drent**. 210
- [* _Counter_, counterfeit.]
- [** _Drent_, drowned.]
- In stead thereof scoffing Scurrilitie,
- And scornfull Follie with Contempt is crept,
- Rolling in rymes of shameles ribaudrie
- Without regard, or due decorum kept;
- Each idle wit at will presumes to make*, 215
- And doth the learneds taske upon him take.
- [* _Make_, write poetry.]
- But that same gentle spirit, from whose pen
- Large streames of honnie and sweete nectar flowe,
- Scorning the boldnes of such base-borne men,
- Which dare their follies forth so rashlie throwe, 220
- Doth rather choose to sit in idle cell,
- Than so himselfe to mockerie to sell.
- So am I made the servant of the manie,
- And laughing stocke of all that list to scorne,
- Not honored nor cared for of anie, 225
- But loath'd of losels* as a thing forlorne:
- Therefore I mourne and sorrow with the rest,
- Untill my cause of sorrow be redrest.
- [* _Losels_, worthless fellows.]
- Therewith she lowdly did lament and shrike,
- Pouring forth streames of teares abundantly; 230
- And all her sisters, with compassion like,
- The breaches of her singulfs* did supply.
- So rested shee: and then the next in rew
- Began her grievous plaint, as doth ensew.
- [* I.e. the pauses of her sighs.]
- EUTERPE.
- Like as the dearling of the summers pryde, 235
- Faire Philomele, when winters stormie wrath
- The goodly fields, that earst so gay were dyde
- In colours divers, quite despoyled hath,
- All comfortlesse doth hide her chearlesse head
- During the time of that her widowhead, 240
- So we, that earst were wont in sweet accord
- All places with our pleasant notes to fill,
- Whilest favourable times did us afford
- Free libertie to chaunt our charmes at will,
- All comfortlesse upon the bared bow*, 245
- Like wofull culvers**, doo sit wayling now.
- [* _Bow_, bough.]
- [** _Culvers_, doves.]
- For far more bitter storme than winters stowre*
- The beautie of the world hath lately wasted,
- And those fresh buds, which wont so faire to flowre,
- Hath marred quite, and all their blossoms blasted; 250
- And those yong plants, which wont with fruit t'abound,
- Now without fruite or leaves are to be found.
- [* _Stowre_, violence.]
- A stonie coldnesse hath benumbd the sence
- And livelie spirits of each living wight,
- And dimd with darknesse their intelligence, 255
- Darknesse more than Cymerians daylie night:
- And monstrous Error, flying in the ayre,
- Hath mard the face of all that semed fayre.
- Image of hellish horrour, Ignorance,
- Borne in the bosome of the black abysse, 260
- And fed with Furies milke for sustenaunce
- Of his weake infancie, begot amisse
- By yawning Sloth on his owne mother Night,--
- So hee his sonnes both syre and brother hight,--
- He, armd with blindnesse and with boldnes stout, 265
- (For blind is bold,) hath our fayre light defaced;
- And, gathering unto him a ragged rout
- Of Faunes and Satyres, hath our dwellings raced*,
- And our chast bowers, in which all vertue rained,
- With brutishnesse and beastlie filth hath stained. 270
- [* _Raced_, razed.]
- The sacred springs of horsefoot Helicon,
- So oft bedeawed with our learned layes,
- And speaking streames of pure Castalion,
- The famous witnesse of our wonted praise,
- They trampled have with their fowle footings trade*,
- And like to troubled puddles have them made. 276
- [* _Trade_, tread.]
- Our pleasant groves, which planted were with paines,
- That with our musick wont so oft to ring,
- And arbors sweet, in which the shepheards swaines
- Were wont so oft their pastoralls to sing, 280
- They have cut downe, and all their pleasaunce mard,
- That now no pastorall is to bee hard.
- In stead of them, fowle goblins and shriek-owles
- With fearfull howling do all places fill,
- And feeble eccho now laments and howles, 285
- The dreadfull accents of their outcries shrill.
- So all is turned into wildernesse,
- Whilest Ignorance the Muses doth oppresse.
- And I, whose ioy was earst with spirit full
- To teach the warbling pipe to sound aloft, 290
- My spirits now dismayd with sorrow dull,
- Doo mone my miserie in silence soft.
- Therefore I mourne and waile incessantly,
- Till please the heavens affoord me remedy.
- Therewith shee wayled with exceeding woe, 295
- And pitious lamentation did make;
- And all her sisters, seeing her doo soe,
- With equall plaints her sorrowe did partake.
- So rested shee: and then the next in rew
- Began her grievous plaint, as doth ensew. 300
- TERPSICHORE.
- Whoso hath in the lap of soft delight
- Beene long time luld, and fed with pleasures sweet,
- Feareles through his own fault or Fortunes spight
- To tumble into sorrow and regreet,
- Yf chaunce him fall into calamitie, 305
- Findes greater burthen of his miserie.
- So wee, that earst in ioyance did abound,
- And in the bosome of all blis did sit,
- Like virgin queenes, with laurell garlands cround,
- For vertues meed and ornament of wit, 310
- Sith Ignorance our kingdome did confound,
- Bee now become most wretched wightes on ground.
- And in our royall thrones, which lately stood
- In th'hearts of men to rule them carefully,
- He now hath placed his accursed brood, 315
- By him begotten of fowle Infamy;
- Blind Error, scornefull Follie, and base Spight,
- Who hold by wrong that wee should have by right.
- They to the vulgar sort now pipe and sing,
- And make them merrie with their fooleries; 320
- They cherelie chaunt, and rymes at randon fling,
- The fruitfull spawne of their ranke fantasies;
- They feede the eares of fooles with flattery,
- And good men blame, and losels* magnify.
- [* _Losels_, worthless fellows.]
- All places they doo with their toyes possesse, 325
- And raigne in liking of the multitude;
- The schooles they till with fond newfanglenesse,
- And sway in court with pride and rashnes rude;
- Mongst simple shepheards they do boast their skill,
- And say their musicke matcheth Phoebus quill. 330
- The noble hearts to pleasures they allure,
- And tell their Prince that learning is but vaine;
- Faire ladies loves they spot with thoughts impure,
- And gentle mindes with lewd delights distaine;
- Clerks* they to loathly idlenes entice, 335
- And fill their bookes with discipline of vice.
- [* _Clerks_, scholars.]
- So every where they rule and tyrannize,
- For their usurped kingdomes maintenaunce,
- The whiles we silly maides, whom they dispize
- And with reprochfull scorne discountenaunce, 340
- From our owne native heritage exilde,
- Walk through the world of every one revilde.
- Nor anie one doth care to call us in,
- Or once vouchsafeth us to entertaine,
- Unlesse some one perhaps of gentle kin, 345
- For pitties sake, compassion our paine,
- And yeeld us some reliefe in this distresse;
- Yet to be so reliev'd is wretchednesse.
- So wander we all carefull comfortlesse,
- Yet none cloth care to comfort us at all; 350
- So seeke we helpe our sorrow to redresse,
- Yet none vouchsafes to answere to our call;
- Therefore we mourne and pittilesse complaine,
- Because none living pittieth our paine.
- With that she wept and wofullie waymented, 355
- That naught on earth her griefe might pacifie;
- And all the rest her dolefull din augmented
- With shrikes, and groanes, and grievous agonie.
- So ended shee: and then the next in rew
- Began her piteous plaint, as doth ensew. 360
- ERATO.
- Ye gentle Spirits breathing from above,
- Where ye in Venus silver bowre were bred,
- Thoughts halfe devine, full of the fire of love,
- With beawtie kindled, and with pleasure fed,
- Which ye now in securitie possesse, 365
- Forgetfull of your former heavinesse,--
- Now change the tenor of your ioyous layes,
- With which ye use your loves to deifie,
- And blazon foorth an earthlie beauties praise
- Above the compasse of the arched skie: 370
- Now change your praises into piteous cries,
- And eulogies turne into elegies.
- Such as ye wont, whenas those bitter stounds*
- Of raging love first gan you to torment,
- And launch your hearts with lamentable wounds 375
- Of secret sorrow and sad languishment,
- Before your loves did take you unto grace;
- Those now renew, as fitter for this place.
- [* _Stounds_, hours.]
- For I that rule in measure moderate
- The tempest of that stormie passion, 380
- And use to paint in rimes the troublous state
- Of lovers life in likest fashion,
- Am put from practise of my kindlie** skill,
- Banisht by those that love with leawdnes fill.
- [* _Kindlie_, natural.]
- Love wont to be schoolmaster of my skill, 385
- And the devicefull matter of my song;
- Sweete love devoyd of villanie or ill,
- But pure and spotles, as at first he sprong
- Out of th'Almighties bosome, where he nests;
- From thence infused into mortall brests. 390
- Such high conceipt of that celestiall fire,
- The base-borne brood of Blindnes cannot gesse,
- Ne ever dare their dunghill thoughts aspire
- Unto so loftie pitch of perfectnesse,
- But rime at riot, and doo rage in love, 395
- Yet little wote what doth thereto behove.
- Faire Cytheree, the mother of delight
- And queene of beautie, now thou maist go pack;
- For lo! thy kingdoms is defaced quight,
- Thy scepter rent, and power put to wrack; 400
- And thy gay sonne, that winged God of Love,
- May now goe prune his plumes like ruffed* dove.
- [* _Ruffed_, ruffled.]
- And ye three twins, to light by Venus brought,
- The sweete companions of the Muses late,
- From whom whatever thing is goodly thought 405
- Doth borrow grace, the fancie to aggrate*,
- Go beg with us, and be companions still,
- As heretofore of good, so now of ill.
- [* _Aggrate_, please.]
- For neither you nor we shall anie more
- Finde entertainment or in court or schoole: 410
- For that which was accounted heretofore
- The learneds meed is now lent to the foole;
- He sings of love and maketh loving layes,
- And they him heare, and they him highly prayse.
- With that she powred foorth a brackish flood 415
- Of bitter teares, and made exceeding mone;
- And all her sisters, seeing her sad mood,
- With lowd laments her answered all at one.
- So ended she: and then the next in rew
- Began her grievous plaint, as doth ensew. 420
- To whom shall I my evill case complaine,
- Or tell the anguish of my inward smart,
- Sith none is left to remedie my paine,
- Or deignes to pitie a perplexed hart;
- But rather seekes my sorrow to augment 425
- With fowle reproach, and cruell banishment?
- For they to whom I used to applie
- The faithfull service of my learned skill,
- The goodly off-spring of loves progenie,
- That wont the world with famous acts to fill, 430
- Whose living praises in heroick style,
- It is my chiefe profession to compyle,--
- They, all corrupted through the rust of time,
- That doth all fairest things on earth deface,
- Or through unnoble sloth, or sinfull crime, 435
- That doth degenerate the noble race,
- Have both desire of worthie deeds forlorne,
- And name of learning utterly doo scorne.
- Ne doo they care to have the auncestrie
- Of th'old heroes memorizde anew; 440
- Ne doo they care that late posteritie
- Should know their names, or speak their praises dew,
- But die, forgot from whence at first they sprong,
- As they themselves shalbe forgot ere long.
- What bootes it then to come from glorious 445
- Forefathers, or to have been nobly bredd?
- What oddes twixt Irus and old Inachus,
- Twixt best and worst, when both alike are dedd,
- If none of neither mention should make,
- Nor out of dust their memories awake? 450
- Or who would ever care to doo brave deed,
- Or strive in vertue others to excell,
- If none should yeeld him his deserved meed,
- Due praise, that is the spur of doing well?
- For if good were not praised more than ill, 455
- None would choose goodnes of his owne freewill.
- Therefore the nurse of vertue I am hight,
- And golden trompet of eternitie,
- That lowly thoughts lift up to heavens hight,
- And mortall men have powre to deifie: 460
- Bacchus and Hercules I raisd to heaven,
- And Charlemaine amongst the starris seaven.
- But now I will my golden clarion rend,
- And will henceforth immortalize no more,
- Sith I no more finde worthie to commend 465
- For prize of value, or for learned lore:
- For noble peeres, whom I was wont to raise,
- Now onely seeke for pleasure, nought for praise.
- Their great revenues all in sumptuous pride
- They spend, that nought to learning they may spare;
- And the rich fee which poets wont divide 471
- Now parasites and sycophants doo share:
- Therefore I mourne and endlesse sorrow make,
- Both for my selfe and for my sisters sake.
- With that she lowdly gan to waile and shrike, 475
- And from her eyes a sea of teares did powre;
- And all her sisters, with compassion like,
- Did more increase the sharpnes of her showre.
- So ended she: and then the next in rew
- Began her plaint, as doth herein ensew. 480
- URANIA.
- What wrath of gods, or wicked influence
- Of starres conspiring wretched men t'afflict,
- Hath powrd on earth this noyous pestilence,
- That mortall mindes doth inwardly infect
- With love of blindnesse and of ignorance, 485
- To dwell in darkenesse without sovenance?*
- [* _Sovenance_, remembrance.]
- What difference twixt man and beast is left,
- When th'heavenlie light of knowledge is put out,
- And th'ornaments of wisdome are bereft?
- Then wandreth he in error and in doubt, 490
- Unweeting* of the danger hee is in,
- Through fleshes frailtie and deceipt of sin.
- [* _Unweeting_, unknowing.]
- In this wide world in which they wretches stray,
- It is the onelie comfort which they have,
- It is their light, their loadstarre, and their day; 495
- But hell, and darkenesse, and the grislie grave,
- Is Ignorance, the enemie of Grace,
- That mindes of men borne heavenlie doth debace.
- Through knowledge we behold the worlds creation,
- How in his cradle first he fostred was; 500
- And iudge of Natures cunning operation,
- How things she formed of a formelesse mas:
- By knowledge wee do learne our selves to knowe,
- And what to man, and what to God, wee owe.
- From hence wee mount aloft unto the skie, 505
- And looke into the christall firmament;
- There we behold the heavens great hierarchie,
- The starres pure light, the spheres swift movëment,
- The spirites and intelligences fayre,
- And angels waighting on th'Almighties chayre. 510
- And there, with humble minde and high insight,
- Th'eternall Makers maiestie wee viewe,
- His love, his truth, his glorie, and his might,
- And mercie more than mortall men can vew.
- O soveraigne Lord, O soveraigne happinesse, 515
- To see thee, and thy mercie measurelesse!
- Such happines have they that doo embrace
- The precepts of my heavenlie discipline;
- But shame and sorrow and accursed case
- Have they that scorne the schoole of arts divine, 520
- And banish me, which do professe the skill
- To make men heavenly wise through humbled will.
- However yet they mee despise and spight,
- I feede on sweet contentment of my thought,
- And please my selfe with mine owne self-delight, 525
- In contemplation of things heavenlie wrought:
- So, loathing earth, I looke up to the sky,
- And being driven hence, I thether fly.
- Thence I behold the miserie of men,
- Which want the blis that wisedom would them breed.
- And like brute beasts doo lie in loathsome den 531
- Of ghostly darkenes and of gastlie dreed:
- For whom I mourne, and for my selfe complaine,
- And for my sisters eake whom they disdaine.
- With that shee wept and waild so pityouslie, 535
- As if her eyes had beene two springing wells;
- And all the rest, her sorrow to supplie,
- Did throw forth shrieks and cries and dreery yells.
- So ended shee: and then the next in rew
- Began her mournfull plaint, as doth ensew. 540
- POLYHYMNIA.
- A dolefull case desires a dolefull song,
- Without vaine art or curious complements;
- And squallid Fortune, into basenes flong,
- Doth scorne the pride of wonted ornaments.
- Then fittest are these ragged rimes for mee, 545
- To tell my sorrowes that exceeding bee.
- For the sweet numbers and melodious measures
- With which I wont the winged words to tie,
- And make a tunefull diapase of pleasures,
- Now being let to runne at libertie 550
- By those which have no skill to rule them right,
- Have now quite lost their naturall delight.
- Heapes of huge words uphoorded hideously,
- With horrid sound, though having little sence,
- They thinke to be chiefe praise of poetry; 555
- And, thereby wanting due intelligence,
- Have mard the face of goodly poesie,
- And made a monster of their fantasie.
- Whilom in ages past none might professe
- But princes and high priests that secret skill; 560
- The sacred lawes therein they wont expresse,
- And with deepe oracles their verses fill:
- Then was shee held in soveraigne dignitie,
- And made the noursling of nobilitie.
- But now nor prince nor priest doth her maintayne,
- But suffer her prophaned for to bee 566
- Of the base vulgar, that with hands uncleane
- Dares to pollute her hidden mysterie;
- And treadeth under foote hir holie things,
- Which was the care of kesars* and of kings. 570
- [* _Kesars_, emperors.]
- One onelie lives, her ages ornament,
- And myrrour of her Makers maiestie,
- That with rich bountie and deare cherishment
- Supports the praise of noble poesie;
- Ne onelie favours them which it professe, 575
- But is her selfe a peereles poetresse.
- Most peereles Prince, most peereles Poetresse,
- The true Pandora of all heavenly graces,
- Divine Elisa, sacred Emperesse!
- Live she for ever, and her royall p'laces 580
- Be fild with praises of divinest wits,
- That her eternize with their heavenlie writs!
- Some few beside this sacred skill esteme,
- Admirers of her glorious excellence;
- Which, being lightned with her beawties beme, 585
- Are thereby fild with happie influence,
- And lifted up above the worldës gaze,
- To sing with angels her immortall praize.
- But all the rest, as borne of salvage brood,
- And having beene with acorns alwaies fed, 590
- Can no whit savour this celestiall food,
- But with base thoughts are into blindnesse led,
- And kept from looking on the lightsome day:
- For whome I waile and weepe all that I may.
- Eftsoones* such store of teares shee forth did powre,
- As if shee all to water would have gone; 596
- And all her sisters, seeing her sad stowre**,
- Did weep and waile, and made exceeding mone,
- And all their learned instruments did breake:
- The rest untold no living tongue can speake. 600
- [* _Eftsoones_, forthwith.]
- [** _Stowre_, disturbance, trouble.]
- * * * * *
- FOOTNOTES:
- Ver 15--_Palici._. The Palici were children of Jupiter and Thalia, not
- Calliope. H.
- Ver. 205-210.--There are sufficient reasons for believing that these
- lines refer to Shakespeare. He had probably written The Two Gentlemen
- of Verona, and Love's Labor's Lost, before the Complaints were
- published (1591), and no other author had up to this time produced a
- comedy that would compare with these. For a discussion of this subject,
- see Collier's Life, Chap. VII., and Knight's Biography, pp. 344-348. C.
- * * * * *
- VIRGILS GNAT.
- LONG SINCE DEDICATED
- TO THE MOST NOBLE AND EXCELLENT LORD,
- THE EARLE OF LEICESTER,
- LATE DECEASED.
- Wrong'd, yet not daring to expresse my paine,
- To you, great Lord, the causer of my care,
- In clowdie teares my case I thus complaine
- Unto your selfe, that onely privie are.
- But if that any Oedipus unware
- Shall chaunce, through power of some divining spright,
- To reade the secrete of this riddle rare,
- And know the purporte of my evill plight,
- Let him rest pleased with his owne insight,
- Ne further seeke to glose upon the text:
- For griefe enough it is to grieved wight
- To feele his fault, and not be further vext.
- But what so by my selfe may not be showen,
- May by this Gnatts complaint be easily knowen*.
- [* This riddle has never been guessed. Upton conjectures that
- Leicester's displeasure was incurred for "some kind of officious
- sedulity in Spenser, who much desired to see his patron married to the
- Queen." C.]
- * * * * *
- VIRGILS GNAT.
- We now have playde, Augustus, wantonly,
- Tuning our song unto a tender Muse,
- And, like a cobweb weaving slenderly,
- Have onely playde: let thus much then excuse
- This Gnats small poeme, that th'whole history 5
- Is but a iest; though envie it abuse:
- But who such sports and sweet delights doth blame,
- Shall lighter seeme than this Gnats idle name.
- Hereafter, when as season more secure
- Shall bring forth fruit, this Muse shall speak to thee 10
- In bigger notes, that may thy sense allure,
- And for thy worth frame some fit poesie:
- The golden ofspring of Latona pure,
- And ornament of great Ioves progenie,
- Phoebus, shall be the author of my song, 15
- Playing on yvorie harp with silver strong*.
- [* _Strong_, strung.]
- He shall inspire my verse with gentle mood,
- Of poets prince, whether he woon* beside
- Faire Xanthus sprincled with Chimaeras blood,
- Or in the woods of Astery abide, 20
- Or whereas Mount Parnasse, the Muses brood,
- Doth his broad forhead like two hornes divide,
- And the sweete waves of sounding Castaly
- With liquid foote doth slide downe easily.
- [* _Woon_, dwell.]
- Wherefore ye Sisters, which the glorie bee 25
- Of the Pierian streames, fayre Naiades,
- Go too, and dauncing all in companie,
- Adorne that god: and thou holie Pales,
- To whome the honest care of husbandrie
- Returneth by continuall successe, 30
- Have care for to pursue his footing light
- Throgh the wide woods and groves with green leaves dight.
- Professing thee I lifted am aloft
- Betwixt the forrest wide and starrie sky:
- And thou, most dread Octavius, which oft 35
- To learned wits givest courage worthily,
- O come, thou sacred childe, come sliding soft,
- And favour my beginnings graciously:
- For not these leaves do sing that dreadfull stound*,
- When giants bloud did staine Phlegraean ground; 40
- [* _Stound_, time.]
- Nor how th'halfe-horsy people, Centaures hight,
- Fought with the bloudie Lapithaes at bord;
- Nor how the East with tyranous despight
- Burnt th'Attick towres, and people slew with sword;
- Nor how Mount Athos through exceeding might 45
- Was digged downe; nor yron bands abord
- The Pontick sea by their huge navy cast,
- My volume shall renowne, so long since past.
- Nor Hellespont trampled with horses feete,
- When flocking Persians did the Greeks affray: 50
- But my soft Muse, as for her power more meete,
- Delights (with Phoebus friendly leave) to play
- An easie running verse with tender feete.
- And thou, dread sacred child, to thee alway
- Let everlasting lightsome glory strive, 55
- Through the worlds endles ages to survive.
- And let an happie roome remaine for thee
- Mongst heavenly ranks, where blessed soules do rest;
- And let long lasting life with ioyous glee,
- As thy due meede that thou deservest best, 60
- Hereafter many yeares remembred be
- Amongst good men, of whom thou oft are blest.
- Live thou for ever in all happinesse!
- But let us turne to our first businesse.
- The fiery Sun was mounted now on Light 65
- Up to the heavenly towers, and shot each where
- Out of his golden charet glistering light;
- And fayre Aurora, with her rosie heare,
- The hatefull darknes now had put to flight;
- When as the Shepheard, seeing day appeare, 70
- His little goats gan drive out of their stalls,
- To feede abroad, where pasture best befalls.
- To an high mountaines top he with them went,
- Where thickest grasse did cloath the open hills:
- They, now amongst the woods and thickets ment* 75
- Now in the valleies wandring at their wills,
- Spread themselves farre abroad through each descent;
- Some on the soft greene grasse feeding their fills,
- Some, clambring through the hollow cliffes on hy,
- Nibble the bushie shrubs which growe thereby. 80
- [* _Ment_, mingled.]
- Others the utmost boughs of trees doe crop,
- And brouze the woodbine twigges that freshly bud;
- This with full bit* doth catch the utmost top
- Of some soft willow, or new growen stud**;
- This with sharpe teeth the bramble leaves doth lop, 85
- And chaw the tender prickles in her cud;
- The whiles another high doth overlooke
- Her owne like image in a christall brooke.
- [* _Bit_, bite.]
- [** _Stud_, stock.]
- O the great happines which shepheards have,
- Who so loathes not too much the poore estate 90
- With minde that ill use doth before deprave,
- Ne measures all things by the costly rate
- Of riotise, and semblants outward brave!
- No such sad cares, as wont to macerate
- And rend the greedie mindes of covetous men, 95
- Do ever creepe into the shepheards den.
- Ne cares he if the fleece which him arayes
- Be not twice steeped in Assyrian dye;
- Ne glistering of golde, which underlayes*
- The summer beames, doe blinde his gazing eye; 100
- Ne pictures beautie, nor the glauncing rayes
- Of precious stones, whence no good commeth by;
- Ne yet his cup embost with imagery
- Of Baetus or of Alcons vanity.
- [* _Underlayes_, surpasses.]
- Ne ought the whelky* pearles esteemeth hee, 105
- Which are from Indian seas brought far away:
- But with pure brest, from carefull sorrow free,
- On the soft grasse his limbs doth oft display,
- In sweete spring time, when flowres varietie
- With sundrie colours paints the sprincled lay**; 110
- There, lying all at ease from guile or spight,
- With pype of fennie reedes doth him delight.
- [* _Whelky_, shelly (_conchea_).]
- [** _lay_, lea.]
- There he, lord of himselfe, with palme bedight,
- His looser locks doth wrap in wreath of vine:
- There his milk-dropping goats be his delight, 115
- And fruitefull Pales, and the forrest greene,
- And darkesome caves in pleasaunt vallies pight*,
- Wheras continuall shade is to be seene,
- And where fresh springing wells, as christall neate,
- Do alwayes flow, to quench his thirstie heate. 120
- [* _Pight_, placed.]
- O! who can lead then a more happie life
- Than he, that with cleane minde and heart sincere,
- No greedy riches knowes nor bloudie strife,
- No deadly fight of warlick fleete doth feare,
- Ne runs in perill of foes cruell knife, 125
- That in the sacred temples he may reare
- A trophee of his glittering spoyles and treasure,
- Or may abound in riches above measure.
- Of him his God is worshipt with his sythe,
- And not with skill of craftsman polished: 130
- He ioyes in groves, and makes himselfe full blythe
- With sundrie flowers in wilde fieldes gathered,
- Ne frankincens he from Panchaea buyth:
- Sweete Quiet harbours in his harmeles head,
- And perfect Pleasure buildes her ioyous bowre, 135
- Free from sad cares, that rich mens hearts devowre.
- This all his care, this all his whole indevour,
- To this his minde and senses he doth bend,
- How he may flow in quiets matchles treasour,
- Content with any food that God doth send; 140
- And how his limbs, resolv'd through idle leisour,
- Unto sweete sleepe he may securely lend,
- In some coole shadow from the scorching heat,
- The whiles his flock their chawed cuds do eate.
- O Flocks, O Faunes, and O ye pleasaunt Springs 145
- Of Tempe, where the countrey nymphs are rife,
- Through whose not costly care each shepheard sings
- As merrie notes upon his rusticke fife
- As that Ascraean bard*, whose fame now rings
- Through the wide world, and leads as ioyfull life; 150
- Free from all troubles and from worldly toyle,
- In which fond men doe all their dayes turmoyle.
- [* I.e. Hesiod]
- In such delights whilst thus his carelesse time
- This shepheard drives, upleaning on his batt*,
- And on shrill reedes chaunting his rustick rime, 155
- Hyperion, throwing foorth his beames full hott,
- Into the highest top of heaven gan clime,
- And the world parting by an equall lott,
- Did shed his whirling flames on either side,
- As the great Ocean doth himselfe divide. 160
- [* _Batt_, stick]
- Then gan the shepheard gather into one
- His stragling goates, and drave them to a foord,
- Whose caerule streame, rombling in pible stone,
- Crept under mosse as greene as any goord.
- Now had the sun halfe heaven overgone, 165
- When he his heard back from that water foord
- Drave, from the force of Phoebus boyling ray,
- Into thick shadowes, there themselves to lay.
- Soone as he them plac'd in thy sacred wood,
- O Delian goddesse, saw, to which of yore 170
- Came the bad daughter of old Cadmus brood,
- Cruell Agavè, flying vengeance sore
- Of King Nictileus for the guiltie blood
- Which she with cursed hands had shed before;
- There she halfe frantick, having slaine her sonne, 175
- Did shrowd her selfe like punishment to shonne.
- Here also playing on the grassy greene,
- Woodgods, and Satyres, and swift Dryades,
- With many Fairies oft were dauncing seene.
- Not so much did Dan Orpheus represse 180
- The streames of Hebrus with his songs, I weene,
- As that faire troupe of woodie goddesses
- Staied thee, O Peneus, powring foorth to thee,
- From cheereful lookes, great mirth and gladsome glee.
- The verie nature of the place, resounding 185
- With gentle murmure of the breathing ayre,
- A pleasant bowre with all delight abounding
- In the fresh shadowe did for them prepayre,
- To rest their limbs with wearines redounding.
- For first the high palme-trees, with braunches faire,
- Out of the lowly vallies did arise, 191
- And high shoote up their heads into the skyes.
- And them amongst the wicked lotos grew,
- Wicked, for holding guilefully away
- Ulysses men, whom rapt with sweetenes new, 195
- Taking to hoste*, it quite from him did stay;
- And eke those trees, in whose transformed hew
- The Sunnes sad daughters waylde the rash decay
- Of Phaëton, whose limbs with lightening rent
- They gathering up, with sweete teares did lament. 200
- [* _Hoste_, entertain.]
- And that same tree*, in which Demophoon,
- By his disloyalty lamented sore,
- Eternall hurte left unto many one:
- Whom als accompanied the oke, of yore 204
- Through fatall charmes transferred to such an one:
- The oke, whose acornes were our foode before
- That Ceres seede of mortall men were knowne,
- Which first Triptoleme taught how to be sowne.
- [* I.e. the almond-tree.]
- Here also grew the rougher-rinded pine,
- The great Argoan ships brave ornament, 210
- Whom golden fleece did make an heavenly signe;
- Which coveting, with his high tops extent,
- To make the mountaines touch the starres divine,
- Decks all the forrest with embellishment;
- And the blacke holme that loves the watrie vale; 215
- And the sweete cypresse, signe of deadly bale.
- Emongst the rest the clambring yvie grew,
- Knitting his wanton armes with grasping hold,
- Least that the poplar happely should rew
- Her brothers strokes, whose boughes she doth enfold 220
- With her lythe twigs, till they the top survew,
- And paint with pallid greene her buds of gold.
- Next did the myrtle tree to her approach,
- Not yet unmindfull of her olde reproach.
- But the small birds in their wide boughs embowring 225
- Chaunted their sundrie tunes with sweete consent;
- And under them a silver spring, forth powring
- His trickling streames, a gentle murmure sent;
- Thereto the frogs, bred in the slimie scowring
- Of the moist moores, their iarring voyces bent; 230
- And shrill grashoppers chirped them around:
- All which the ayrie echo did resound.
- In this so pleasant place the shepheards flocke
- Lay everie where, their wearie limbs to rest,
- On everie bush, and everie hollow rocke, 235
- Where breathe on them the whistling wind mote best;
- The whiles the shepheard self, tending his stocke,
- Sate by the fountaine side, in shade to rest,
- Where gentle slumbring sleep oppressed him
- Displaid on ground, and seized everie lim. 240
- Of trecherie or traines nought tooke he keep,
- But, looslie on the grassie greene dispredd,
- His dearest life did trust to careles sleep;
- Which, weighing down his drouping drowsie hedd,
- In quiet rest his molten heart did steep, 245
- Devoid of care, and feare of all falshedd:
- Had not inconstant Fortune, bent to ill,
- Bid strange mischance his quietnes to spill.
- For at his wonted time in that same place
- An huge great Serpent, all with speckles pide, 250
- To drench himselfe in moorish slime did trace,
- There from the boyling heate himselfe to hide:
- He, passing by with rolling wreathed pace,
- With brandisht tongue the emptie aire did gride*,
- And wrapt his scalie boughts** with fell despight, 255
- That all things seem'd appalled at his sight.
- [* _Gride_, pierce]
- [** _Boughts_, knots]
- Now more and more having himselfe enrolde,
- His glittering breast he lifteth up on hie,
- And with proud vaunt his head aloft doth holde;
- His creste above, spotted with purple die, 260
- On everie side did shine like scalie golde;
- And his bright eyes, glauncing full dreadfullie,
- Did seeme to flame out flakes of flashing fyre,
- And with sterne lookes to threaten kindled yre.
- Thus wise long time he did himselfe dispace 265
- There round about, when as at last he spide,
- Lying along before him in that place,
- That flocks grand captaine and most trustie guide:
- Eftsoones more fierce in visage and in pace,
- Throwing his firie eyes on everie side, 270
- He commeth on, and all things in his way
- Full stearnly rends that might his passage stay.
- Much he disdaines that anie one should dare
- To come unto his haunt; for which intent
- He inly burns, and gins straight to prepare 275
- The weapons which Nature to him hath lent;
- Fellie he hisseth, and doth fiercely stare,
- And hath his iawes with angrie spirits rent,
- That all his tract with bloudie drops is stained,
- And all his foldes are now in length outstrained. 280
- Whom, thus at point prepared, to prevent,
- A litle noursling of the humid ayre,
- A Gnat, unto the sleepie shepheard went,
- And marking where his ey-lids twinckling rare
- Shewd the two pearles which sight unto him lent, 285
- Through their thin coverings appearing fayre
- His little needle there infixing deep,
- Warnd him awake, from death himselfe to keep.
- Wherewith enrag'd, he fiercely gan upstart,
- And with his hand him rashly bruzing slewe 290
- As in avengement of his heedles smart,
- That streight the spirite out of his senses flew.
- And life out of his members did depart:
- When, suddenly casting aside his vew,
- He spide his foe with felonous intent, 295
- And fervent eyes to his destruction bent.
- All suddenly dismaid, and hartles quight,
- He fled abacke, and, catching hastie holde
- Of a yong alder hard beside him pight,
- It rent, and streight about him gan beholde 300
- What god or fortune would assist his might.
- But whether god or fortune made him bold
- Its hard to read: yet hardie will he had
- To overcome, that made him lesse adrad*.
- [* _Adrad_, terrified]
- The scalie backe of that most hideous snake 305
- Enwrapped round, oft faining to retire
- And oft him to assaile, he fiercely strake
- Whereas his temples did his creast front tyre*;
- And, for he was but slowe, did slowth off shake,
- And, gazing ghastly on, (for feare and yre 310
- Had blent** so much his sense, that lesse he feard,)--
- Yet, when he saw him slaine, himselfe he cheard.
- [* _Tyre_, encircle]
- [** _Blent_, blinded]
- By this the Night forth from the darksome bowre
- Of Herebus her teemed* steedes gan call,
- And laesie Vesper in his timely howre 315
- From golden Oeta gan proceede withall;
- Whenas the shepheard after this sharpe stowre**,
- Seing the doubled shadowes low to fall,
- Gathering his straying flocke, does homeward fare,
- And unto rest his wearie ioynts prepare. 320
- [* _Teemed_, harnessed in a team]
- [** _Stowre_, perturbation]
- Into whose sense so soone as lighter sleepe
- Was entered, and now loosing everie lim,
- Sweete slumbring deaw in carelesnesse did steepe,
- The image of that Gnat appeard to him,
- And in sad tearmes gan sorrowfully weepe, 325
- With grieslie countenaunce and visage grim,
- Wailing the wrong which he had done of late,
- In steed of good, hastning his cruell fate.
- Said he, "What have I wretch deserv'd, that thus
- Into this bitter bale I am outcast, 330
- Whilest that thy life more deare and precious
- Was than mine owne, so long as it did last?
- I now, in lieu of paines so gracious,
- Am tost in th'ayre with everie windie blast:
- Thou, safe delivered from sad decay, 335
- Thy careles limbs in loose sleep dost display.
- "So livest thou; but my poore wretched ghost
- Is forst to ferrie over Lethes river,
- And spoyld of Charon too and fro am tost.
- Seest thou not how all places quake and quiver, 340
- Lightned with deadly lamps on everie post?
- Tisiphone each where doth shake and shiver
- Her flaming fire-brond, encountring me,
- Whose lockes uncombed cruell adders be.
- "And Cerberus, whose many mouthes doo bay, 345
- And barke out flames, as if on fire he fed,
- Adowne whose necke, in terrible array,
- Ten thousand snakes, cralling about his hed,
- Doo hang in heapes, that horribly affray,
- And bloodie eyes doo glister firie red, 350
- He oftentimes me dreadfullie doth threaten
- With painfull torments to be sorely beaten.
- "Ay me! that thankes so much should faile of meed,
- For that I thee restor'd to life againe,
- Even from the doore of death and deadlie dreed. 355
- Where then is now the guerdon of my paine?
- Where the reward of my so piteous deed?
- The praise of pitie vanisht is in vaine,
- And th'antique faith of iustice long agone
- Out of the land is fled away and gone. 360
- "I saw anothers fate approaching fast,
- And left mine owne his safëtie to tender;
- Into the same mishap I now am cast,
- And shun'd destruction doth destruction render:
- Not unto him that never hath trespást, 365
- But punishment is due to the offender:
- Yet let destruction be the punishment,
- So long as thankfull will may it relent.
- "I carried am into waste wildernesse,
- Waste wildernes, amongst Cymerian shades, 370
- Where endles paines and hideous heavinesse
- Is round about me heapt in darksome glades.
- For there huge Othos sits in sad distresse,
- Fast bound with serpents that him oft invades,
- Far of beholding Ephialtes tide, 375
- Which once assai'd to burne this world so wide.
- "And there is mournfull Tityus, mindefull yet
- Of thy displeasure, O Latona faire;
- Displeasure too implacable was it,
- That made him meat for wild foules of the ayre: 380
- Much do I feare among such fiends to sit;
- Much do I feare back to them to repayre,
- To the black shadowes of the Stygian shore,
- Where wretched ghosts sit wailing evermore.
- "There next the utmost brinck doth he abide 385
- That did the bankets of the gods bewray,
- Whose throat through thirst to nought nigh being dride,
- His sense to seeke for ease turnes every way:
- And he that in avengement of his pride,
- For scorning to the sacred gods to pray, 390
- Against a mountaine rolls a mightie stone,
- Calling in vaine for rest, and can have none.
- "Go ye with them, go, cursed damosells,
- Whose bridale torches foule Erynnis tynde*,
- And Hymen, at your spousalls sad, foretells 395
- Tydings of death and massacre unkinde**:
- With them that cruell Colchid mother dwells,
- The which conceiv'd in her revengefull minde
- With bitter woundes her owne deere babes to slay,
- And murdred troupes upon great heapes to lay. 400
- [* _Tynde_, kindled.]
- [** _Unkinde_, unnatural.]
- "There also those two Pandionian maides,
- Calling on Itis, Itis evermore,
- Whom, wretched boy, they slew with guiltie blades;
- For whome the Thracian king lamenting sore,
- Turn'd to a lapwing, fowlie them upbraydes, 405
- And flattering round about them still does sore;
- There now they all eternally complaine
- Of others wrong, and suffer endles paine.
- "But the two brethren* borne of Cadmus blood,
- Whilst each does for the soveraignty contend, 411
- Blinde through ambition, and with vengeance wood**,
- Each doth against the others bodie bend
- His cursed steele, of neither well withstood,
- And with wide wounds their carcases doth rend;
- That yet they both doe mortall foes remaine, 415
- Sith each with brothers bloudie hand was slaine.
- [* I.e. Eteocles and Polynices.]
- [** _Wood_, mad.]
- "Ah (waladay!) there is no end of paine,
- Nor chaunge of labour may intreated bee:
- Yet I beyond all these am carried faine,
- Where other powers farre different I see, 420
- And must passe over to th'Elisian plaine:
- There grim Persephone, encountring mee,
- Doth urge her fellow Furies earnestlie
- With their bright firebronds me to terrifie.
- "There chast Alceste lives inviolate, 425
- Free from all care, for that her husbands daies
- She did prolong by changing fate for fate:
- Lo! there lives also the immortall praise
- Of womankinde, most faithfull to her mate,
- Penelope; and from her farre awayes 430
- A rulesse* rout of yongmen which her woo'd,
- All slaine with darts, lie wallowed in their blood.
- [* _Rulesse_, rule-less.]
- "And sad Eurydice thence now no more
- Must turne to life, but there detained bee
- For looking back, being forbid before: 435
- Yet was the guilt thereof, Orpheus, in thee!
- Bold sure he was, and worthie spirite bore,
- That durst those lowest shadowes goe to see,
- And could beleeve that anie thing could please
- Fell Cerberus, or Stygian powres appease. 440
- "Ne feard the burning waves of Phlegeton,
- Nor those same mournfull kingdomes, compassed
- With rustle horrour and fowle fashion;
- And deep digd vawtes*; and Tartar covered
- With bloodie night and darke confusion; 445
- And iudgement seates, whose iudge is deadlie dred,
- A iudge that after death doth punish sore
- The faults which life hath trespassed before.
- [* _Vawtes_, vaults.]
- "But valiant fortune made Dan Orpheus bolde:
- For the swift running rivers still did stand, 450
- And the wilde beasts their furie did withhold,
- To follow Orpheus musicke through the land:
- And th'okes, deep grounded in the earthly molde,
- Did move, as if they could him understand; 454
- And the shrill woods, which were of sense bereav'd,
- Through their hard barke his silver sound receav'd.
- "And eke the Moone her hastie steedes did stay,
- Drawing in teemes along the starrie skie;
- And didst, O monthly Virgin, thou delay
- Thy nightly course, to heare his melodie? 460
- The same was able, with like lovely lay,
- The Queene of Hell to move as easily
- To yeeld Eurydice unto her fere,
- Backe to be borne, though it unlawfull were.
- "She, ladie, having well before approoved 465
- The feends to be too cruell and severe,
- Observ'd th'appointed way, as her behooved,
- Ne ever did her eysight turne arere,
- Ne ever spake, ne cause of speaking mooved;
- But, cruell Orpheus, thou much crueller, 470
- Seeking to kisse her, brok'st the gods decree,
- And thereby mad'st her ever damn'd to be.
- "Ah! but sweete love of pardon worthie is,
- And doth deserve to have small faults remitted;
- If Hell at least things lightly done amis 475
- Knew how to pardon, when ought is omitted:
- Yet are ye both received into blis,
- And to the seates of happie soules admitted.
- And you beside the honourable band
- Of great heroës doo in order stand. 480
- "There be the two stout sonnes of AEacus,
- Fierce Peleus, and the hardie Telamon,
- Both seeming now full glad and ioyeous
- Through their syres dreadfull iurisdiction,
- Being the iudge of all that horrid hous: 488
- And both of them, by strange occasion,
- Renown'd in choyce of happie marriage
- Through Venus grace, and vertues cariage.
- "For th'one was ravisht of his owne bondmaide,
- The faire Ixione captiv'd from Troy: 490
- But th'other was with Thetis love assaid,
- Great Nereus his daughter and his ioy.
- On this side them there is a yongman layd,
- Their match in glorie, mightie, fierce, and coy,
- That from th'Argolick ships, with furious yre, 495
- Bett back the furie of the Troian fyre.
- "O! who would not recount the strong divorces
- Of that great warre, which Troianes oft behelde,
- And oft beheld the warlike Greekish forces,
- When Teucrian soyle with bloodie rivers swelde, 500
- And wide Sigraean shores were spred with corses,
- And Simois and Xanthus blood outwelde;
- Whilst Hector raged, with outragious minde,
- Flames, weapons, wounds, in Greeks fleete to have tynde.
- "For Ida selfe, in ayde of that fierce fight, 505
- Out of her mountaines ministred supplies;
- And like a kindly nourse did yeeld, for spight,
- Store of firebronds out of her nourseries
- Unto her foster children, that they might
- Inflame the navie of their enemies, 510
- And all the Rhetaean shore to ashes turne,
- Where lay the ships which they did seeke to burne.
- "Gainst which the noble sonne of Telamon
- Oppos'd himselfe, and thwarting* his huge shield,
- Them battell bad; gainst whom appeard anon 515
- Hector, the glorie of the Troian field:
- Both fierce and furious in contention
- Encountred, that their mightie strokes so shrild
- As the great clap of thunder, which doth ryve
- The railing heavens and cloudes asunder dryve. 520
- [* _Thwarting_, interposing.]
- "So th'one with fire and weapons did contend
- To cut the ships from turning home againe
- To Argos; th'other strove for to defend*
- The force of Vulcane with his might and maine.
- Thus th'one Aeacide did his fame extend: 525
- But th'other ioy'd that, on the Phrygian playne
- Having the blood of vanquisht Hector shedd,
- He compast Troy thrice with his bodie dedd.
- [* _Defend_, keep off.]
- "Againe great dole on either partie grewe,
- That him to death unfaithfull Paris sent; 530
- And also him that false Ulysses slewe,
- Drawne into danger through close ambushment;
- Therefore from him Laërtes sonne his vewe
- Doth turn aside, and boasts his good event
- In working of Strymonian Rhaesus fall, 535
- And efte* in Dolons slye surprÿsall.
- [* _Efte_, again.]
- "Againe the dreadfull Cycones him dismay,
- And blacke Laestrigones, a people stout;
- Then greedie Scilla, under whom there bay
- Manie great bandogs, which her gird about; 540
- Then doo the AEtnean Cyclops him affray,
- And deep Charybdis gulphing in and out;
- Lastly the squalid lakes of Tartarie,
- And griesly feends of hell him terrifie.
- "There also goodly Agamemnon bosts, 545
- The glorie of the stock of Tantalus,
- And famous light of all the Greekish hosts;
- Under whose conduct most victorious,
- The Dorick flames consum'd the Iliack posts.
- Ah! but the Greekes themselves, more dolorous, 550
- To thee, O Troy, paid penaunce for thy fall,
- In th'Hellespont being nigh drowned all.
- "Well may appeare by proofe of their mischaunce
- The chaungfull turning of mens slipperie state,
- That none whom fortune freely doth advaunce 555
- Himselfe therefore to heaven should elevate:
- For loftie type of honour through the glaunce
- Of envies dart is downe in dust prostrate,
- And all that vaunts in worldly vanitie
- Shall fall through fortunes mutabilitie. 560
- "Th'Argolicke power returning home againe,
- Enricht with spoyles of th'Ericthonian towre,
- Did happie winde and weather entertaine,
- And with good speed the fomie billowes scowre:
- No signe of storme, no feare of future paine, 565
- Which soone ensued them with heavie stowre*:
- Nereïs to the seas a token gave,
- The whiles their crooked keeles the surges clave.
- [* _Stowre_, turmoil, uproar.]
- "Suddenly, whether through the gods decree,
- Or haplesse rising of some froward starre, 570
- The heavens on everie side enclowded bee:
- Black stormes and fogs are blowen up from farre,
- That now the pylote can no loadstarre see,
- But skies and seas doo make most dreadfull warre;
- The billowes striving to the heavens to reach, 575
- And th'heavens striving them for to impeach*.
- [* _Impeach_, hinder.]
- "And, in avengement of their bold attempt,
- Both sun and starres and all the heavenly powres
- Conspire in one to wreake their rash contempt,
- And downe on them to fall from highest towres: 580
- The skie, in pieces seeming to be rent,
- Throwes lightning forth, and haile, and harmful showres,
- That death on everie side to them appeares,
- In thousand formes, to worke more ghastly feares.
- "Some in the greedie flouds are sunke and drent*; 585
- Some on the rocks of Caphareus are throwne;
- Some on th'Euboick cliffs in pieces rent;
- Some scattred on the Hercaean** shores unknowne;
- And manie lost, of whom no moniment
- Remaines, nor memorie is to be showne: 590
- Whilst all the purchase@ of the Phrigian pray,
- Tost on salt billowes, round about doth stray.
- [* _Drent_, drowned.]
- [** _Hercaean_ should probably be AEgean.]
- [@ _Purchase_, booty.]
- "Here manie other like heroës bee,
- Equall in honour to the former crue,
- Whom ye in goodly seates may placed see, 595
- Descended all from Rome by linage due;
- From Rome, that holds the world in sovereigntie,
- And doth all nations unto her subdue:
- Here Fabii and Decii doo dwell,
- Horatii that in vertue did excell. 600
- "And here the antique fame of stout Camill
- Doth ever live; and constant Curtius,
- Who, stifly bent his vowed life to spill
- For countreyes health, a gulph most hideous
- Amidst the towne with his owne corps did fill, 605
- T'appease the Powers; and prudent Mutius,
- Who in his flesh endur'd the scorching flame,
- To daunt his foe by ensample of the same.
- "And here wise Curius, companion
- Of noble vertues, lives in endles rest; 610
- And stout Flaminius, whose devotion
- Taught him the fires scorn'd furie to detest;
- And here the praise of either Scipion
- Abides in highest place above the best,
- To whom the ruin'd walls of Carthage vow'd, 615
- Trembling their forces, sound their praises lowd.
- "Live they for ever through their lasting praise!
- But I, poore wretch, am forced to retourne
- To the sad lakes that Phoebus sunnie rayes
- Doo never see, where soules doo alwaies mourne; 620
- And by the wayling shores to waste my dayes,
- Where Phlegeton with quenchles flames doth burne;
- By which iust Minos righteous soules doth sever
- From wicked ones, to live in blisse for ever.
- "Me therefore thus the cruell fiends of hell, 625
- Girt with long snakes and thousand yron chaynes,
- Through doome of that their cruell iudge compell,
- With bitter torture and impatient paines,
- Cause of my death and iust complaint to tell.
- For thou art he whom my poore ghost complaines 630
- To be the author of her ill unwares,
- That careles hear'st my intollerable cares.
- "Them therefore as bequeathing to the winde,
- I now depart, returning to thee never,
- And leave this lamentable plaint behinde. 635
- But doo thou haunt the soft downe-rolling river,
- And wilde greene woods and fruitful pastures minde,
- And let the flitting aire my vaine words sever."
- Thus having said, he heavily departed
- With piteous crie that anie would have smarted. 640
- Now, when the sloathfull fit of lifes sweete rest
- Had left the heavie Shepheard, wondrous cares
- His inly grieved minde full sore opprest;
- That balefull sorrow he no longer beares
- For that Gnats death, which deeply was imprest, 645
- But bends what ever power his aged yeares
- Him lent, yet being such as through their might
- He lately slue his dreadfull foe in fight.
- By that same river lurking under greene,
- Eftsoones* he gins to fashion forth a place, 650
- And, squaring it in compasse well beseene**,
- There plotteth out a tombe by measured space:
- His yron-headed spade tho making cleene,
- To dig up sods out of the flowrie grasse,
- His worke he shortly to good purpose brought, 655
- Like as he had conceiv'd it in his thought.
- [* _Eftsoones_, immediately.]
- [** _Well beseene_, seemly.]
- An heape of earth he hoorded up on hie,
- Enclosing it with banks on everie side,
- And thereupon did raise full busily
- A little mount, of greene turffs edifide*; 660
- And on the top of all, that passers by
- Might it behold, the toomb he did provide
- Of smoothest marble stone in order set,
- That never might his luckie scape forget.
- [* _Edifide_, built.]
- And round about he taught sweete flowres to growe; 665
- The Rose, engrained in pure scarlet die;
- The Lilly fresh, and Violet belowe;
- The Marigolde, and cherefull Rosemarie;
- The Spartan Mirtle, whence sweet gumb does flowe;
- The purple Hyacinths, and fresh Costmarie, 670
- And Saffron, sought for in Cilician soyle,
- And Lawrell, th'ornament of Phoebus toyle:
- Fresh Rhododaphne, and the Sabine flowre*,
- Matching the wealth of th'auncient Frankincence;
- And pallid Yvie, building his owne bowre; 675
- And Box, yet mindfull of his olde offence;
- Red Amaranthus, lucklesse paramour;
- Oxeye still greene, and bitter Patience;
- Ne wants there pale Narcisse, that, in a well
- Seeing his beautie, in love with it fell. 680
- [* _Sabine flowre_, a kind of juniper, the savine.]
- And whatsoever other flowre of worth,
- And whatso other hearb of lovely hew
- The ioyous Spring out of the ground brings forth,
- To cloath her selfe in colours fresh and new,
- He planted there, and reard a mount of earth, 685
- In whose high front was writ as doth ensue:
- _To thee, small Gnat, in lieu of his life saved,_
- _The Shepheard hath thy deaths record engraved._
- * * * * *
- FOOTNOTES:
- VIRGILS GNAT. This is a very skilful elaboration of the Culex, a poem
- attributed, without reason, to Virgil. The original, which is crabbed
- and pedantic, where it is not unintelligible from corruption, is here
- rendered with sufficient fidelity to the sense, but with such
- perspicuity, elegance, and sweetness, as to make Spenser's performance
- too good a poem to be called a translation. C.
- * * * * *
- PROSOPOPOIA:
- OR
- MOTHER HUBBERDS TALE.
- BY ED. SP.
- DEDICATED TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE,
- THE LADIE COMPTON AND MOUNTEGLE.
- * * * * *
- LONDON:
- IMPRINTED FOR WILLIAM PONSONBIE, DWELLING IN PAULES
- CHURCHYARD AT THE SIGNE OF THE BISHOPS HEAD.
- 1591.
- TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE,
- THE LADIE COMPTON AND MOUNTEGLE.[*]
- Most faire and vertuous Ladie: having often sought opportunitie by some
- good meanes to make knowen to your Ladiship the humble affection and
- faithfull duetie which I have alwaies professed, and am bound to beare,
- to that house from whence yee spring, I have at length found occasion
- to remember the same by making a simple present to you of these my idle
- labours; which having long sithens composed in the raw conceipt of my
- youth, I lately amongst other papers lighted upon, and was by others,
- which liked the same, mooved to set them foorth. Simple is the device,
- and the composition meane, yet carrieth some delight, even the rather
- because of the simplicitie and meannesse thus personated. The same I
- beseech your Ladiship take in good part, as a pledge of that profession
- which I have made to you, and keepe with you untill with some other
- more worthie labour redeeme it out of your hands, and discharge my
- utmost dutie. Till then, wishing your Ladiship all increase of honour
- and happinesse, I humblie take
- leave.
- Your La: ever
- humbly,
- ED. SP.
- [* "This lady was Anne, the fifth daughter of Sir John
- Spencer, distinguished also, in the pastoral of _Colin Clouts come Home
- again_, by the name of _Charillis_. She was married, first to Sir
- William Stanley, Lord Mountegle; next to Henry Compton, Lord Compton;
- and lastly to Robert Sackvilie, Lord Buckhurst, afterwards Earl of
- Dorset."--TODD.]
- * * * * *
- PROSOPOPOIA:
- OR
- MOTHER HUBBERDS TALE.
- It was the month in which the righteous Maide
- That for disdaine of sinfull worlds upbraide
- Fled back to heaven, whence she was first conceived,
- Into her silver bowre the Sunne received;
- And the hot Syrian Dog on him awayting, 5
- After the chafed Lyons cruell bayting,
- Corrupted had th'ayre with his noysome breath.
- And powr'd on th'earth plague, pestilence, and death.
- Emongst the rest a wicked maladie
- Raign'd emongst men, that manie did to die, 10
- Depriv'd of sense and ordinarie reason;
- That it to leaches seemed strange and geason.
- [_Geason_, rare.]
- My fortune was, mongst manie others moe,
- To be partaker of their common woe;
- And my weake bodie, set on fire with griefe, 15
- Was rob'd of rest and naturall reliefe.
- In this ill plight, there came to visite mee
- Some friends, who, sorie my sad case to see,
- Began to comfort me in chearfull wise,
- And meanes of gladsome solace to devise. 20
- But seeing kindly sleep refuse to doe
- His office, and my feeble eyes forgoe,
- They sought my troubled sense how to deceave
- With talke that might unquiet fancies reave;
- [_Reave_, take away.]
- And sitting all in seates about me round, 25
- With pleasant tales fit for that idle stound
- [_Stound_, time.]
- They cast in course to waste the wearie howres.
- Some tolde of ladies, and their paramoures;
- Some of brave knights, and their renowned squires;
- Some of the faeries and their strange attires; 30
- And some of giaunts hard to be beleeved;
- That the delight thereof me much releeved.
- Amongst the rest a good old woman was,
- Hight Mother Hubberd, who did farre surpas
- The rest in honest mirth, that seem'd her well. 35
- She, when her turne was come her tale to tell,
- Tolde of a strange adventure that betided
- Betwixt the Foxe and th'Ape by him misguided;
- The which, for that my sense it greatly pleased,
- All were my spirite heavie and diseased, 40
- Ile write in termes, as she the same did say,
- So well as I her words remember may.
- No Muses aide me needes heretoo to call;
- Base is the style, and matter meane withall.
- [_Base_, humble.]
- [Symbol: Paragraph mark to indicate beginning of story.]
- Whilome, said she, before the world was civill,
- The Foxe and th'Ape, disliking of their evill 46
- And hard estate, determined to seeke
- Their fortunes farre abroad, lyeke with his lyeke:
- For both were craftie and unhappie witted;
- [_Unhappie_, mischievous.]
- Two fellowes might no where be better fitted. 50
- The Foxe, that first this cause of griefe did finde,
- Gan first thus plaine his case with words unkinde:
- "Neighbour Ape, and my gossip eke beside,
- (Both two sure bands in friendship to be tide,)
- To whom may I more trustely complaine 55
- The evill plight that doth me sore constraine,
- And hope thereof to finde due remedie?
- Heare then my paine and inward agonie.
- Thus manie yeares I now have spent and worne,
- In meane regard, and basest fortunes scorne, 60
- Dooing my countrey service as I might,
- No lesse I dare saie than the prowdest wight;
- And still I hoped to be up advaunced
- For my good parts; but still it hath mischaunced.
- Now therefore that no lenger hope I see, 65
- But froward fortune still to follow mee,
- And losels lifted up on high, where I did looke,
- [_Losels_, worthless fellows.]
- I meane to turne the next leafe of the booke.
- Yet ere that anie way I doe betake,
- I meane my gossip privie first to make." 70
- "Ah! my deare gossip," answer'd then the Ape,
- "Deeply doo your sad words my wits awhape,
- [_Awhape_, astound.]
- Both for because your griefe doth great appeare,
- And eke because my selfe am touched neare:
- For I likewise have wasted much good time, 75
- Still wayting to preferment up to clime,
- Whilst others alwayes have before me stept,
- And from my beard the fat away have swept;
- That now unto despaire I gin to growe,
- And meane for better winde about to throwe. 80
- Therefore to me, my trustie friend, aread
- [_Aread_, declare.]
- Thy councell: two is better than one head."
- "Certes," said he, "I meane me to disguize
- In some straunge habit, after uncouth wize,
- Or like a pilgrime, or a lymiter, 85
- [_Lymiter_, I.e. a friar licensed to beg within a certain
- district.]
- Or like a gipsen, or a iuggeler,
- [_Gipsen_, gypsy.]
- And so to wander to the worlds ende,
- To seeke my fortune, where I may it mend:
- For worse than that I have I cannot meete.
- Wide is the world I wote, and everie streete 90
- Is full of fortunes and adventures straunge,
- Continuallie subiect unto chaunge.
- Say, my faire brother now, if this device
- Doth like you, or may you to like entice."
- "Surely," said th'Ape, "it likes me wondrous well; 95
- And would ye not poore fellowship expell,
- My selfe would offer you t'accompanie
- In this adventures chauncefull ieopardie.
- For to wexe olde at home in idlenesse
- Is disadventrous, and quite fortunelesse: 100
- Abroad, where change is, good may gotten bee."
- The Foxe was glad, and quickly did agree:
- So both resolv'd, the morrow next ensuing,
- So soone as day appeard to peoples vewing,
- On their intended iourney to proceede; 105
- And over night, whatso theretoo did neede
- Each did prepare, in readines to bee.
- The morrow next, so soone as one might see
- Light out of heavens windowes forth to looke,
- Both their habiliments unto them tooke, 110
- And put themselves, a Gods name, on their way.
- Whenas the Ape, beginning well to wey
- This hard adventure, thus began t'advise:
- "Now read, Sir Reynold, as ye be right wise,
- What course ye weene is best for us to take, 115
- That for our selves we may a living make.
- Whether shall we professe some trade or skill?
- Or shall we varie our device at will,
- Even as new occasion appeares?
- Or shall we tie our selves for certaine yeares 120
- To anie service, or to anie place?
- For it behoves, ere that into the race
- We enter, to resolve first hereupon."
- "Now surely, brother," said the Foxe anon,
- "Te have this matter motioned in season: 125
- For everie thing that is begun with reason
- Will come by readie meanes unto his end;
- But things miscounselled must needs miswend.
- [_Miswend_, go wrong.]
- Thus therefore I advize upon the case:
- That not to anie certaine trade or place, 130
- Nor anie man, we should our selves applie.
- For why should he that is at libertie
- Make himselfe bond? Sith then we are free borne.
- Let us all servile base subiection scorne;
- And as we bee sonnes of the world so wide, 135
- Let us our fathers heritage divide,
- And chalenge to our selves our portions dew
- Of all the patrimonie, which a few
- Now hold in hugger mugger in their hand,
- [_In hugger mugger_, in secret]
- And all the rest doo rob of good and land: 140
- For now a few have all, and all have nought,
- Yet all be brethren ylike dearly bought.
- There is no right in this partition,
- Ne was it so by institution
- Ordained first, ne by the law of Nature, 145
- But that she gave like blessing to each creture
- As well of worldly livelode as of life,
- That there might be no difference nor strife,
- Nor ought cald mine or thine: thrice happie then
- Was the condition of mortall men. 150
- That was the golden age of Saturne old,
- But this might better be the world of gold;
- For without golde now nothing wilbe got.
- Therefore, if please you, this shalbe our plot:
- We will not be of anie occupation; 155
- Let such vile vassalls, borne to base vocation,
- Drudge in the world and for their living droyle,
- [_Droyle_, moil]
- Which have no wit to live withouten toyle.
- But we will walke about the world at pleasure,
- Like two free men, and make our ease our treasure.
- Free men some beggers call; but they be free; 161
- And they which call them so more beggers bee:
- For they doo swinke and sweate to feed the other,
- [_Swinke_, toil.]
- Who live like lords of that which they doo gather,
- And yet doo never thanke them for the same, 165
- But as their due by nature doo it clame.
- Such will we fashion both our selves to bee,
- Lords of the world; and so will wander free
- Where so us listeth, uncontrol'd of anie.
- Hard is our hap, if we, emongst so manie, 170
- Light not on some that may our state amend;
- Sildome but some good commeth ere the end."
- Well seemd the Ape to like this ordinaunce:
- Yet, well considering of the circumstaunce,
- As pausing in great doubt awhile he staid, 175
- And afterwards with grave advizement said:
- "I cannot, my lief brother, like but well
- [_Lief_, dear.]
- The purpose of the complot which ye tell;
- For well I wot (compar'd to all the rest
- Of each degree) that beggers life is best, 180
- And they that thinke themselves the best of all
- Oft-times to begging are content to fall.
- But this I wot withall, that we shall ronne
- Into great daunger, like to bee undonne,
- Thus wildly to wander in the worlds eye, 185
- Withouten pasport or good warrantye,
- For feare least we like rogues should be reputed,
- And for eare-marked beasts abroad be bruted.
- Therefore I read that we our counsells call
- How to prevent this mischiefe ere it fall, 190
- And how we may, with most securitie,
- Beg amongst those that beggars doo defie."
- "Right well, deere gossip, ye advized have,"
- Said then the Foxe, "but I this doubt will save:
- For ere we farther passe, I will devise 195
- A pasport for us both in fittest wize,
- And by the names of souldiers us protect,
- That now is thought a civile begging sect.
- Be you the souldier, for you likest are
- For manly semblance, and small skill in warre: 200
- I will but wayte on you, and, as occasion
- Falls out, my selfe fit for the same will fashion."
- The pasport ended, both they forward went;
- The Ape clad souldierlike, fit for th'intent,
- In a blew iacket with a crosse of redd 205
- And manie slits, as if that he had shedd
- Much blood throgh many wounds therein receaved,
- Which had the use of his right arme bereaved,
- Upon his head an old Scotch cap he wore,
- With a plume feather all to peeces tore; 210
- His breeches were made after the new cut,
- _Al Portugese_, loose like an emptie gut,
- And his hose broken high above the heeling,
- And his shooes beaten out with traveling.
- But neither sword nor dagger he did beare; 215
- Seemes that no foes revengement he did feare;
- In stead of them a handsome bat he held,
- [_Bat_, stick.]
- On which he leaned, as one farre in elde.
- [_Elde_, age.]
- Shame light on him, that through so false illusion
- Doth turne the name of souldiers to abusion, 220
- And that which is the noblest mysterie
- [_Mysterie_, profession.]
- Brings to reproach and common infamie!
- Long they thus travailed, yet never met
- Adventure which might them a working set:
- Yet manie waies they sought, and manie tryed; 225
- Yet for their purposes none fit espyed.
- At last they chaunst to meete upon the way
- A simple husbandman in garments gray;
- Yet, though his vesture were but meane and bace,
- [_Bace_, humble.]
- A good yeoman he was of honest place, 230
- And more for thrift did care than for gay clothing:
- Gay without good is good hearts greatest loathing.
- The Foxe, him spying, bad the Ape him dight
- [_Dight_, prepare.]
- To play his part, for loe! he was in sight
- That, if he er'd not, should them entertaine, 235
- And yeeld them timely profite for their paine.
- Eftsoones the Ape himselfe gan up to reare,
- [_Eftsoones_, straightway.]
- And on his shoulders high his bat to beare,
- As if good service he were fit to doo,
- But little thrift for him he did it too: 240
- And stoutly forward he his steps did straine,
- That like a handsome swaine it him became.
- When as they nigh approached, that good man,
- Seeing them wander loosly, first began
- T'enquire, of custome, what and whence they were.
- To whom the Ape: "I am a souldiere, 246
- That late in warres have spent my deerest blood,
- And in long service lost both limbs and good;
- And now, constraint that trade to overgive,
- I driven am to seeke some meanes to live: 250
- Which might it you in pitie please t'afford,
- I would be readie, both in deed and word,
- To doo you faithfull service all my dayes.
- This yron world" (that same he weeping sayes)
- "Brings downe the stowtest hearts to lowest state: 255
- For miserie doth bravest mindes abate,
- And make them seeke for that they wont to scorne,
- Of fortune and of hope at once forlorne."
- [_Forlorne_, deserted.]
- The honest roan that heard him thus complaine
- Was griev'd as he had felt part of his paine; 260
- And, well dispos'd him some reliefe to showe,
- Askt if in husbandrie he ought did knowe,--
- To plough, to plant, to reap, to rake, to sowe,
- To hedge, to ditch, to thrash, to thetch, to mowe;
- Or to what labour els he was prepar'd: 265
- For husbands life is labourous and hard.
- [_Husbands_, husbandman's.]
- Whenas the Ape him hard so much to talke
- Of labour, that did from his liking balke,
- He would have slipt the coller handsomly,
- And to him said: "Good Sir, full glad am I 270
- To take what paines may anie living wight:
- But my late maymed limbs lack wonted might
- To doo their kindly services, as needeth:
- [_Kindly_, natural.]
- Scarce this right hand the mouth with diet feedeth;
- So that it may no painfull worke endure, 275
- Ne to strong labour can it selfe enure.
- But if that anie other place you have,
- Which askes small paines, but thriftines to save,
- Or care to overlooke, or trust to gather,
- Ye may me trust as your owne ghostly father." 280
- With that the husbandman gan him avize,
- That it for him were fittest exercise
- Cattell to keep, or grounds to oversee;
- And asked him, if he could willing bee
- To keep his sheep, or to attend his swyne, 285
- Or watch his mares, or take his charge of kyne.
- "Gladly," said he, "what ever such like paine
- Ye put on me, I will the same sustaine:
- But gladliest I of your fleecie sheepe
- (Might it you please) would take on me the keep. 290
- For ere that unto armes I me betooke,
- Unto my fathers sheepe I usde to looke,
- That yet the skill thereof I have not loste:
- Thereto right well this curdog, by my coste,
- (Meaning the Foxe,) will serve my sheepe to gather,
- And drive to follow after their belwether." 295
- The husbandman was meanly well content
- [_Meanly_, humbly.]
- Triall to make of his endevourment;
- And, home him leading, lent to him the charge
- Of all his flocke, with libertie full large, 300
- Giving accompt of th'annuall increce
- Both of their lambes, and of their woolly fleece.
- Thus is this Ape become a shepheard swaine,
- And the false Foxe his dog: God give them paine!
- For ere the yeare have halfe his course out-run, 305
- And doo returne from whence he first begun,
- They shall him make an ill accompt of thrift.
- Now whenas time, flying with wingës swift,
- Expired had the terme that these two iavels
- [_Iavels,_ worthless fellows.]
- Should render up a reckning of their travels 310
- Unto their master, which it of them sought,
- Exceedingly they troubled were in thought,
- Ne wist what answere unto him to frame,
- Ne how to scape great punishment, or shame,
- For their false treason and vile theeverie: 315
- For not a lambe of all their flockes-supply
- Had they to shew; but ever as they bred,
- They slue them, and upon their fleshes fed:
- For that disguised dog lov'd blood to spill,
- And drew the wicked shepheard to his will. 320
- So twixt them both they not a lambkin left;
- And when lambes fail'd, the old sheepes lives they reft;
- That how t'acquite themselves unto their lord
- They were in doubt, and flatly set abord.
- [_Set abord_, set adrift, at a loss.]
- The Foxe then counsel'd th'Ape for to require 325
- Respite till morrow t'answere his desire:
- For times delay new hope of helpe still breeds.
- The good man granted, doubting nought their deeds,
- And bad next day that all should readie be.
- But they more subtill meaning had than he: 330
- For the next morrowes meed they closely ment,
- [_Closely_, secretly.]
- For feare of afterclaps, for to prevent:
- [_Prevent_, anticipate.]
- And that same evening, when all shrowded were
- In careles sleep, they without care or feare
- Cruelly fell upon their flock in folde, 335
- And of them slew at pleasure what they wolde.
- Of which whenas they feasted had their fill,
- For a full complement of all their ill,
- They stole away, and tooke their hastie flight,
- Carried in clowdes of all-concealing night. 340
- So was the husbandman left to his losse,
- And they unto their fortunes change to tosse.
- After which sort they wandered long while,
- Abusing manie through their cloaked guile;
- That at the last they gan to be descryed 345
- Of everie one, and all their sleights espyed;
- So as their begging now them failed quyte,
- For none would give, but all men would them wyte.
- [_Wyte_, blame.]
- Yet would they take no paines to get their living,
- But seeke some other way to gaine by giving, 350
- Much like to begging, but much better named;
- For manie beg which are thereof ashamed.
- And now the Foxe had gotten him a gowne,
- And th'Ape a cassocke sidelong hanging downe;
- For they their occupation meant to change, 355
- And now in other state abroad to range:
- For since their souldiers pas no better spedd,
- They forg'd another, as for clerkes booke-redd.
- Who passing foorth, as their adventures fell,
- Through manie haps, which needs not here to tell, 360
- At length chaunst with a formall Priest to meete,
- [_Formall_, regular.]
- Whom they in civill manner first did greete,
- And after askt an almes for Gods deare love.
- The man straightway his choler up did move,
- And with reproachfull tearmes gan them revile, 365
- For following that trade so base and vile;
- And askt what license or what pas they had.
- "Ah!" said the Ape, as sighing wondrous sad,
- "Its an hard case, when men of good deserving
- Must either driven be perforce to sterving, 370
- Or asked for their pas by everie squib,
- [_Squib_, flashy, pretentious fellow]
- That list at will them to revile or snib.
- [_Snib_, snub]
- And yet (God wote) small oddes I often see
- Twixt them that aske, and them that asked bee.
- Natheles because you shall not us misdeeme, 375
- But that we are as honest as we seeme,
- Yee shall our pasport at your pleasure see,
- And then ye will (I hope) well mooved bee."
- Which when the Priest beheld, he vew'd it nere,
- As if therein some text he studying were, 380
- But little els (God wote) could thereof skill:
- [_Skill_, understand.]
- For read he could not evidence nor will,
- Ne tell a written word, ne write a letter,
- Ne make one title worse, ne make one better.
- Of such deep learning little had he neede, 385
- Ne yet of Latine ne of Greeke, that breede
- Doubts mongst divines, and difference of texts,
- From whence arise diversitie of sects,
- And hatefull heresies, of God abhor'd.
- But this good Sir did follow the plaine word, 390
- Ne medled with their controversies vaine;
- All his care was his service well to saine,
- [_Saine_, say.]
- And to read homelies upon holidayes;
- When that was done, he might attend his playes:
- An easie life, and fit high God to please. 395
- He, having overlookt their pas at ease,
- Gan at the length them to rebuke againe,
- That no good trade of life did entertaine,
- But lost their time in wandring loose abroad;
- Seeing the world, in which they bootles boad, 400
- [_Bootless boad_, dwelt unprofitably.]
- Had wayes enough for all therein to live;
- Such grace did God unto his creatures give.
- Said then the Foxe: "Who hath the world not tride
- From the right way full eath may wander wide.
- [_Eath_, easy.]
- We are but novices, new come abroad, 405
- We have not yet the tract of anie troad,
- [I.e. routine of any way of life.]
- Nor on us taken anie state of life,
- But readie are of anie to make preife.
- [_Preife_, proof.]
- Therefore might please you, which the world have proved,
- Us to advise, which forth but lately moved, 410
- Of some good course that we might undertake,
- Ye shall for ever us your bondmen make."
- The priest gan wexe halfe proud to be so praide,
- And thereby willing to affoord them aide,
- "It seemes," said he, "right well that ye be clerks, 415
- Both by your wittie words and by your works.
- Is not that name enough to make a living
- To him that hath a whit of Natures giving?
- How manie honest men see ye arize
- Daylie thereby, and grow to goodly prize; 420
- To deanes, to archdeacons, to commissaries,
- To lords, to principalls, to prebendaries?
- All iolly prelates, worthie rule to beare,
- Who ever them envie: yet spite bites neare.
- Why should ye doubt, then, but that ye likewise 425
- Might unto some of those in time arise?
- In the meane time to live in good estate,
- Loving that love, and hating those that hate;
- Being some honest curate, or some vicker,
- Content with little in condition sicker." 430
- [_Sicker_, sure.]
- "Ah! but," said th'Ape, "the charge is wondrous great,
- To feed mens soules, and hath an heavie threat."
- "To feede mens soules," quoth he, "is not in man:
- For they must feed themselves, doo what we can.
- We are but charg'd to lay the meate before: 435
- Eate they that list, we need to doo no more.
- But God it is that feedes them with his grace,
- The bread of life powr'd downe from heavenly place.
- Therefore said he that with the budding rod
- Did rule the lewes, _All shalbe taught of God._ 440
- That same hath Iesus Christ now to him raught,
- [_Raught_, reached, taken.]
- By whom the flock is rightly fed and taught:
- He is the shcpheard, and the priest is hee;
- We but his shepheard swaines ordain'd to bee.
- Therefore herewith doo not your selfe dismay; 445
- Ne is the paines so great, but beare ye may;
- For not so great, as it was wont of yore,
- It's now a dayes, ne halfe so streight and sore.
- They whilome used duly everie day
- Their service and their holie things to say, 450
- At morne and even, beside their anthemes sweete,
- Their penie masses, and their complynes meete,
- [_Complynes_, even-song; the last service of the day.]
- Their diriges, their trentals, and their shrifts,
- [_Trentals_, thirty masses for the dead.]
- Their memories, their singings, and their gifts.
- [_Memories_, services for the dead.]
- Now all those needlesse works are laid away; 455
- Now once a weeke, upon the Sabbath day,
- It is enough to doo our small devotion,
- And then to follow any merrie motion.
- Ne are we tyde to fast, but when we list;
- Ne to weare garments base of wollen twist, 460
- But with the finest silkes us to aray,
- That before God we may appeare more gay,
- Resembling Aarons glorie in his place:
- For farre unfit it is, that person bace
- Should with vile cloaths approach Gods maiestie, 465
- Whom no uncleannes may approachen nie;
- Or that all men, which anie master serve,
- Good garments for their service should deserve,
- But he that serves the Lord of Hoasts Most High,
- And that in highest place, t'approach him nigh, 470
- And all the peoples prayers to present
- Before his throne, as on ambassage sent
- Both too and fro, should not deserve to weare
- A garment better than of wooll or heare.
- Beside, we may have lying by our sides 475
- Our lovely lasses, or bright shining brides;
- We be not tyde to wilfull chastitie,
- But have the gospell of free libertie."
- By that he ended had his ghostly sermon,
- The Foxe was well induc'd to be a parson; 480
- And of the priest eftsoones gan to enquire
- How to a benefice he might aspire.
- "Marie, there," said the priest, "is arte indeed:
- Much good deep learning one thereout may reed;
- For that the ground-worke is, and end of all, 485
- How to obtaine a beneficiall.
- First, therefore, when ye have in handsome wise
- Your selfe attyred, as you can devise,
- Then to some nobleman your selfe applye,
- Or other great one in the worldës eye, 490
- That hath a zealous disposition
- To God, and so to his religion.
- There must thou fashion eke a godly zeale,
- Such as no carpers may contrayre reveale:
- For each thing fained ought more warie bee. 495
- There thou must walke in sober gravitee,
- And seeme as saintlike as Saint Radegund:
- Fast much, pray oft, looke lowly on the ground,
- And unto everie one doo curtesie meeke:
- These lookes (nought saying) doo a benefice seeke,
- And be thou sure one not to lacke or long. 501
- [_Or_, ere.]
- But if thee list unto the Court to throng,
- And there to hunt after the hoped pray,
- Then must thou thee dispose another way
- For there thou needs must learne to laugh, to lie, 505
- To face, to forge, to scoffe, to companie,
- To crouche, to please, to be a beetle-stock
- Of thy great masters will, to scorne, or mock:
- So maist thou chaunce mock out a benefice,
- Unlesse thou canst one coniure by device, 510
- Or cast a figure for a bishoprick:
- And if one could, it were but a schoole trick.
- These be the wayes by which without reward
- Livings in court he gotten, though full hard;
- For nothing there is done without a fee: 515
- The courtier needes must recompenced bee
- With a benevolence, or have in gage
- [_Gage_, pledge.]
- The primitias of your parsonage:
- [_Primitias_, first-fruits.]
- Scarse can a bishoprick forpas them by,
- But that it must be gelt in privitie. 520
- Doo not thou therefore seeke a living there,
- But of more private persons seeke elswhere,
- Whereas thou maist compound a better penie,
- Ne let thy learning question'd be of anie.
- For some good gentleman, that hath the right 525
- Unto his church for to present a wight,
- Will cope with thee in reasonable wise,
- [_Cope_, bargain.]
- That if the living yerely doo arise
- To fortie pound, that then his yongest sonne
- Shall twentie have, and twentie thou hast wonne: 530
- Thou hast it wonne, for it is of franke gift
- And he will care for all the rest to shift;
- Both that the bishop may admit of thee,
- And that therein thou maist maintained bee.
- This is the way for one that is unlern'd 535
- Living to get, and not to be discern'd.
- But they that are great clerkes have nearer wayes
- For learning sake to living them to raise:
- Yet manie eke of them (God wote) are driven
- T'accept a benefice in peeces riven.-- 540
- How saist thou, friend, have I not well discourst
- Upon this common-place, though plaine, not wourst?
- Better a short tale than a bad long shriving:
- Needes anie more to learne to get a living?"
- "Now sure, and by my hallidome," quoth he 545
- "Yea great master are in your degree:
- Great thankes I yeeld you for your discipline,
- And doo not doubt but duly to encline
- My wits theretoo, as ye shall shortly heare."
- The priest him wisht good speed and well to fare: 550
- So parted they, as eithers way them led.
- But th'Ape and Foxe ere long so well them sped,
- Through the priests holesome counsell lately tought,
- And throgh their owne faire handling wisely wroght,
- That they a benefice twixt them obtained, 555
- And craftie Reynold was a priest ordained,
- And th'Ape his parish clarke procur'd to bee:
- Then made they revell route and goodly glee.
- But, ere long time had passed, they so ill
- Did order their affaires, that th'evill will 560
- Of all their parishners they had constraind;
- Who to the ordinarie of them complain'd,
- How fowlie they their offices abusd,
- And them of crimes and heresies accusd;
- That pursivants he often for them sent. 565
- But they neglected his commaundëment;
- So long persisted obstinate and bolde,
- Till at the length he published to holde
- A visitation, and them cyted thether.
- Then was high time their wits about to geather; 570
- What did they then, but made a composition
- With their next neighbor priest for light condition,
- To whom their living they resigned quight
- For a few pence, and ran away by night.
- So passing through the countrey in disguize, 575
- They fled farre off, where none might them surprize,
- And after that long straied here and there,
- Through everie field and forrest farre and nere;
- Yet never found occasion for their tourne,
- But, almost sterv'd, did much lament and mourne. 580
- At last they chaunst to meete upon the way
- The Mule, all deckt in goodly rich aray,
- With bells and bosses that full lowdly rung,
- And costly trappings that to ground downe hung.
- Lowly they him saluted in meeke wise; 585
- But he through pride and fatnes gan despise
- Their meanesse; scarce vouchsafte them to requite.
- Whereat the Foxe deep groning in his sprite,
- Said: "Ah! Sir Mule, now blessed be the day
- That I see you so goodly and so gay 590
- In your attyres, and eke your silken hyde
- Fil'd with round flesh, that everie bone doth hide.
- Seemes that in fruitfull pastures ye doo live,
- Or fortune doth you secret favour give."
- "Foolish Foxe!" said the Mule, "thy wretched need
- Praiseth the thing that doth thy sorrow breed. 596
- For well I weene thou canst not but envie
- My wealth, compar'd to thine owne miserie,
- That art so leane and meagre waxen late
- That scarse thy legs uphold thy feeble gate." 600
- "Ay me!" said then the Foxe, "whom evill hap
- Unworthy in such wretchednes doth wrap,
- And makes the scorne of other beasts to bee.
- But read, faire Sir, of grace, from whence come yee;
- Or what of tidings you abroad doo heare; 605
- Newes may perhaps some good unweeting beare."
- "From royall court I lately came," said he,
- "Where all the braverie that eye may see,
- And all the happinesse that heart desire,
- Is to be found; he nothing can admire, 610
- That hath not seene that heavens portracture.
- But tidings there is none, I you assure,
- Save that which common is, and knowne to all,
- That courtiers as the tide doo rise and fall."
- "But tell us," said the Ape, "we doo you pray, 615
- Who now in court doth beare the greatest sway:
- That, if such fortune doo to us befall,
- We may seeke favour of the best of all."
- "Marie," said he, "the highest now in grace,
- Be the wilde beasts, that swiftest are in chase; 620
- For in their speedie course and nimble flight
- The Lyon now doth take the most delight:
- But chieflie ioyes on foote them to beholde,
- Enchaste with chaine and circulet of golde:
- [_Enchaste_, adorned.]
- So wilde a beaste so tame ytaught to bee, 625
- And buxome to his bands, is ioy to see;
- [_Buxome_, obedient.]
- So well his golden circlet him beseemeth.
- But his late chayne his Liege unmeete esteemeth;
- For so brave beasts she loveth best to see
- [She: I.e. the queen.]
- In the wilde forrest raunging fresh and free. 630
- Therefore if fortune thee in court to live,
- In case thou ever there wilt hope to thrive,
- To some of these thou must thy selfe apply;
- Els as a thistle-downe in th'ayre doth flie,
- So vainly shalt thou too and fro be tost, 635
- And loose thy labour and thy fruitles cost.
- And yet full few which follow them I see
- For vertues bare regard advaunced bee,
- But either for some gainfull benefit,
- Or that they may for their owne turnes be fit. 640
- Nath'les, perhaps ye things may handle soe,
- That ye may better thrive than thousands moe."
- "But," said the Ape, "how shall we first come in,
- That after we may favour seeke to win?"
- "How els," said he, "but with a good bold face, 645
- And with big words, and with a stately pace,
- That men may thinke of you in generall
- That to be in you which is not at all:
- For not by that which is the world now deemeth,
- (As it was wont) but by that same that seemeth. 650
- Ne do I doubt but that ye well can fashion
- Your selves theretoo, according to occasion.
- So fare ye well: good courtiers may ye bee!"
- So, proudlie neighing, from them parted hee.
- Then gan this craftie couple to devize, 655
- How for the court themselves they might aguize:
- [_Aguize_, decorate.]
- For thither they themselves meant to addresse,
- In hope to finde there happier successe.
- So well they shifted, that the Ape anon
- Himselfe had cloathed like a gentleman, 660
- And the slie Foxe as like to be his groome;
- That to the court in seemly sort they come.
- Where the fond Ape, himselfe uprearing by
- Upon his tiptoes, stalketh stately by,
- As if he were some great magnifico, 665
- And boldlie doth amongst the boldest go;
- And his man Reynold, with fine counterfesaunce,
- [_Counterfesaunce_, counterfeiting.]
- Supports his credite and his countenaunce.
- Then gan the courtiers gaze on everie side,
- And stare on him with big looks basen wide, 670
- [_Basen_, swelled.]
- Wondring what mister wight he was, and whence;
- [_Mister wight_, sort of creature.]
- For he was clad in strange accoustrements,
- Fashion'd with queint devises never seene
- In court before, yet there all fashions beene;
- Yet he them in newfanglenesse did pas. 675
- But his behaviour altogether was
- _Alla Turchesca,_ much the more admyr'd;
- [_Alla Turchesca_, in the Turkish fashion.]
- And his lookes loftie, as if he aspyr'd
- To dignitie, and sdeign'd the low degree;
- That all which did such strangenesse in him see 680
- By secrete meanes gan of his state enquire,
- And privily his servant thereto hire:
- Who, throughly arm'd against such coverture,
- [_Coverture_, underhand dealing.]
- Reported unto all that he was sure
- A noble gentleman of high regard, 685
- Which through the world had with long travel far'd,
- And seene the manners of all beasts on ground,
- Now here arriv'd to see if like he found.
- Thus did the Ape at first him credit gaine,
- Which afterwards he wisely did maintaine 690
- With gallant showe, and daylie more augment
- Through his fine feates and courtly complement;
- For he could play, and daunce, and vaute, and spring,
- And all that els pertaines to reveling.
- Onely through kindly aptnes of his ioynts. 695
- [_Kindly_, natural.]
- Besides he could doo manie other poynts,
- The which in court him served to good stead:
- For he mongst ladies could their fortunes read
- Out of their hands, and merie leasings tell,
- And iuggle finely, that became him well. 700
- But he so light was at legierdemaine,
- That what he toucht came not to light againe;
- Yet would he laugh it out, and proudly looke,
- And tell them that they greatly him mistooke.
- So would he scoffe them out with mockcrie, 705
- For he therein had great felicitie;
- And with sharp quips ioy'd others to deface,
- Thinking that their disgracing did him grace:
- So whilst that other like vaine wits he pleased
- And made to laugh, his heart was greatly eased. 710
- But the right gentle minde woulde bite his lip,
- To heare the iavell so good men to nip:
- [_Iavell_, worthless fellow.]
- For, though the vulgar yeeld an open eare,
- And common courtiers love to gybe and fleare
- At everie thing which they heare spoken ill, 715
- And the best speaches with ill meaning spill,
- [_Spill_, spoil.]
- Yet the brave courtier, in whose beauteous thought
- Regard of honour harbours more than ought,
- Doth loath such base condition, to backbite
- [_Condition_, quality.]
- Anies good name for envie or despite. 720
- He stands on tearmes of honourable minde,
- Ne will be carried with the common winde
- Of courts inconstant mutabilitie,
- Ne after everie tattling fable flie;
- But heares and sees the follies of the rest, 725
- And thereof gathers for himselfe the best.
- He will not creepe, nor crouche with fained face,
- But walkes upright with comely stedfast pace,
- And unto all doth yeeld due curtesie;
- But not with kissed hand belowe the knee, 730
- As that same apish crue is wont to doo:
- For he disdaines himselfe t'embase theretoo.
- He hates fowle leasings and vile flatterie,
- Two filthie blots in noble gentrie;
- And lothefull idlenes he doth detest, 735
- The canker worme of everie gentle brest;
- The which to banish with faire exercise
- Of knightly feates he daylie doth devise:
- Now menaging the mouthes of stubborne steedes,
- Now practising the proofe of warlike deedes, 740
- Now his bright armes assaying, now his speare,
- Now the nigh aymed ring away to beare:
- At other times he casts to sew the chace
- [_Casts_, plans, makes arrangements.]
- Of Swift wilde beasts, or runne on foote a race,
- T'enlarge his breath, (large breath in armes most needfull,) 745
- Or els by wrestling to wex strong and heedfull,
- Or his stiffe armes to stretch with eughen bowe,
- [_Eughen_, made of yew.]
- And manly legs, still passing too and fro,
- Without a gowned beast him fast beside;
- A vaine ensample of the Persian pride, 750
- Who after he had wonne th'Assyrian foe,
- Did ever after scorne on foote to goe.
- Thus when this courtly gentleman with toyle
- Himselfe hath wearied, he doth recoyle
- Unto his rest, and there with sweete delight 755
- Of musicks skill revives his toyled spright;
- Or els with loves and ladies gentle sports,
- The ioy of youth, himselfe he recomforts:
- Or lastly, when the bodie list to pause,
- His minde unto the Muses he withdrawes, 760
- Sweete Ladie Muses, ladies of delight,
- Delights of life, and ornaments of light:
- With whom he close confers with wise discourse,
- Of Natures workes, of heavens continuall course,
- Of forreine lands, of people different, 765
- Of kingdomes change, of divers gouvernment,
- Of dreadfull battailes of renowmed knights;
- With which he kindleth his ambitious sprights
- To like desire and praise of noble fame,
- The onely upshot whereto he doth ayme. 770
- For all his minde on honour fixed is,
- To which he levels all his purposis,
- And in his Princes service spends his dayes,
- Not so much for to game, or for to raise
- Himselfe to high degree, as for his grace, 775
- And in his liking to winne worthie place,
- Through due deserts and comely carriage,
- In whatso please employ his personage,
- That may be matter meete to game him praise.
- For he is fit to use in all assayes, 780
- Whether for armes and warlike amenaunce,
- [_Amenaunce_, conduct.]
- Or else for wise and civill governaunce;
- For he is practiz'd well in policie,
- And thereto doth his courting most applie:
- [_Courting_, life at court.]
- To learne the enterdeale of princes strange, 785
- [_Enterdeale_, dealing together.]
- To marke th'intent of counsells, and the change
- Of states, and eke of private men somewhile,
- Supplanted by fine falshood and faire guile;
- Of all the which he gathereth what is fit
- T'enrich the storehouse of his powerfull wit, 790
- Which through wise speaches and grave conference
- He daylie eekes, and brings to excellence.
- [_Eekes_, increases.]
- Such is the rightfull courtier in his kinde:
- But unto such the Ape lent not his minde;
- Such were for him no fit companions, 795
- Such would descrie his lewd conditions:
- But the yong lustie gallants he did chose
- To follow, meete to whom he might disclose
- His witlesse pleasance and ill pleasing vaine.
- A thousand wayes he them could entertaine, 800
- With all the thriftles games that may be found;
- With mumming and with masking all around,
- With dice, with cards, with balliards farre unfit,
- [_Balliards_, billiards.]
- With shuttelcocks, misseeming manlie wit,
- [_Misseeming_, unbecoming.]
- With courtizans, and costly riotize, 805
- Whereof still somewhat to his share did rize:
- Ne, them to pleasure, would he sometimes scorne
- A pandares coate (so basely was he borne);
- Thereto he could fine loving verses frame,
- And play the poet oft. But ah! for shame, 810
- Let not sweete poets praise, whose onely pride
- Is vertue to advaunce, and vice deride,
- Be with the worke of losels wit defamed,
- Ne let such verses poetrie be named!
- Yet he the name on him would rashly take, 815
- Maugre the sacred Muses, and it make
- A servant to the vile affection
- Of such as he depended most upon;
- And with the sugrie sweete thereof allure
- Chast ladies eares to fantasies impure. 820
- To such delights the noble wits he led
- Which him reliev'd, and their vaine humours fed
- With fruitles folies and unsound delights.
- But if perhaps into their noble sprights
- Desire of honor or brave thought of armes 825
- Did ever creepe, then with his wicked charmes
- And strong conceipts he would it drive away,
- Ne suffer it to house there halfe a day.
- And whenso love of letters did inspire
- Their gentle wits, and kindly wise desire, 830
- [Kindly: Qu. _kindle?_]
- That chieflie doth each noble minde adorne,
- Then he would scoffe at learning, and eke scorne
- The sectaries thereof, as people base
- [_Sectaries_, followers.]
- And simple men, which never came in place
- Of worlds affaires, but, in darke corners mewd, 835
- Muttred of matters as their bookes them shewd,
- Ne other knowledge ever did attaine,
- But with their gownes their gravitie maintaine.
- From them he would his impudent lewde speach
- Against Gods holie ministers oft reach, 840
- And mocke divines and their profession.
- What else then did he by progression,
- But mocke High God himselfe, whom they professe?
- But what car'd he for God, or godlinesse?
- All his care was himselfe how to advaunce, 845
- And to uphold his courtly countenaunce
- By all the cunning meanes he could devise;
- "Were it by honest wayes, or otherwise,
- He made small choyce: yet sure his honestie
- Got him small gaines, but shameles flatterie, 850
- And filthie brocage, and unseemly shifts,
- [_Brocage_, pimping.]
- And borowe base, and some good ladies gifts.
- [_Borowe_, pledging.]
- But the best helpe, which chiefly him sustain'd,
- Was his man Raynolds purchase which he gain'd:
- [_Purchase_, booty.]
- For he was school'd by kinde in all the skill 855
- [_Kinde_, nature.]
- Of close conveyance, and each practise ill
- Of coosinage and cleanly knaverie,
- [_Cleanly_, neat, skillful.]
- Which oft maintain'd his masters braverie.
- Besides, he usde another slipprie slight,
- In taking on himselfe, in common sight, 860
- False personages fit for everie sted,
- With which he thousands cleanly coosined:
- Now like a merchant, merchants to deceave,
- With whom his credite he did often leave
- In gage for his gay masters hopelesse dett: 865
- Now like a lawyer, when he land would lett,
- Or sell fee-simples in his masters name,
- Which he had never, nor ought like the same;
- Then would he be a broker, and draw in
- Both wares and money, by exchange to win: 870
- Then would he seeme a farmer, that would sell
- Bargaines of woods, which he did lately fell,
- Or corne, or cattle, or such other ware,
- Thereby to coosin men not well aware:
- Of all the which there came a secret fee 875
- To th'Ape, that he his countenaunce might bee.
- Besides all this, he us'd oft to beguile
- Poore suters that in court did haunt some while:
- For he would learne their busines secretly,
- And then informe his master hastely, 880
- That he by meanes might cast them to prevent,
- [_Prevent_, anticipate.]
- And beg the sute the which the other ment.
- Or otherwise false Reynold would abuse
- The simple suter, and wish him to chuse
- His master, being one of great regard 885
- In court, to compas anie sute not hard,
- In case his paines were recompenst with reason:
- So would he worke the silly man by treason
- To buy his masters frivolous good will,
- That had not power to doo him good or ill. 890
- So pitifull a thing is suters state!
- Most miserable man, whom wicked fate
- Hath brought to court, to sue for had-ywist,
- That few have found, and manie one hath mist!
- Full little knowest thou that hast not tride, 895
- What hell it is in suing long to bide:
- To loose good dayes, that might be better spent;
- To wast long nights in pensive discontent;
- To speed to day, to be put back to morrow;
- To feed on hope, to pine with feare and sorrow; 900
- To have thy Princes grace, yet want her Peeres;
- To have thy asking, yet waite manie yeeres;
- To fret thy soule with crosses and with cares;
- To eate thy heart through comfortlesse dispaires;
- To fawne, to crowche, to waite, to ride, to ronne, 905
- To spend, to give, to want, to be undonne.
- Unhappie wight, borne to desastrous end,
- That doth his life in so long tendance spend!
- Who ever leaves sweete home, where meane estate
- In safe assurance, without strife or hate, 910
- Findes all things needfull for contentment meeke,
- And will to court for shadowes vaine to seeke,
- Or hope to gaine, himselfe will a daw trie:
- That curse God send unto mine enemie!
- For none but such as this bold Ape unblest 915
- Can ever thrive in that unluckie quest;
- Or such as hath a Reynold to his man,
- That by his shifts his master furnish can.
- But yet this Foxe could not so closely hide
- His craftie feates, but that they were descride 920
- At length by such as sate in iustice seate,
- Who for the same him fowlie did entreate;
- And, having worthily him punished,
- Out of the court for ever banished.
- And now the Ape, wanting his huckster man, 925
- That wont provide his necessaries, gan
- To growe into great lacke, ne could upholde
- His countenaunce in those his garments olde;
- Ne new ones could he easily provide,
- Though all men him uncased gan deride, 930
- Like as a puppit placed in a play,
- Whose part once past all men bid take away:
- So that he driven was to great distresse,
- And shortly brought to hopelesse wretchednesse.
- Then closely as he might he cast to leave 935
- The court, not asking any passe or leave;
- But ran away in his rent rags by night,
- Ne ever stayd in place, ne spake to wight,
- Till that the Foxe, his copesmate, he had found;
- [_Copesmate_, partner in trade.]
- To whome complayning his unhappie stound, 940
- [_Stound_, plight, exigency.]
- At last againe with him in travell ioynd,
- And with him far'd some better chaunee to fynde.
- So in the world long time they wandered,
- And mickle want and hardnesse suffered;
- That them repented much so foolishly 945
- To come so farre to seeke for misery,
- And leave the sweetnes of contented home,
- Though eating hipps and drinking watry fome.
- [_Hipps_, dog-rose berries.]
- Thus as they them complayned too and fro,
- Whilst through the forest rechlesse they did goe, 950
- [_Rechlesse_, reckless.]
- Lo! where they spide how in a gloomy glade
- The Lyon sleeping lay in secret shade,
- His crowne and scepter lying him beside,
- And having doft for heate his dreadfull hide:
- Which when they saw, the Ape was sore afrayde, 955
- And would have fled with terror all dismayde.
- But him the Foxe with hardy words did stay,
- And bad him put all cowardize away;
- For now was time, if ever they would hope,
- To ayme their counsels to the fairest scope, 960
- And them for ever highly to advaunce,
- In case the good which their owne happie chaunce
- Them freely offred they would wisely take.
- Scarse could the Ape yet speake, so did he quake;
- Yet, as he could, he askt how good might growe 965
- Where nought but dread and death do seeme in show.
- "Now," sayd he, "whiles the Lyon sleepeth sound,
- May we his crowne and mace take from the ground,
- And eke his skinne, the terror of the wood,
- Wherewith we may our selves, if we thinke good, 970
- Make kings of beasts, and lords of forests all
- Subiect unto that powre imperiall."
- "Ah! but," sayd the Ape, "who is so bold a wretch,
- That dare his hardy hand to those outstretch,
- When as he knowes his meede, if he be spide, 975
- To be a thousand deathes, and shame beside?"
- "Fond Ape!" sayd then the Foxe, "into whose brest
- Never crept thought of honor nor brave gest,
- [_Gest_, deed.]
- Who will not venture life a king to be,
- And rather rule and raigne in soveraign see, 980
- Than dwell in dust inglorious and bace,
- Where none shall name the number of his place?
- One ioyous howre in blisfull happines,
- I chose before a life of wretchednes.
- Be therefore counselled herein by me, 985
- And shake off this vile-harted cowardree.
- If he awake, yet is not death the next,
- For we may colour it with some pretext
- Of this or that, that may excuse the cryme:
- Else we may flye; thou to a tree mayst clyme, 990
- And I creepe under ground; both from his reach:
- Therefore be rul'd to doo as I doo teach."
- The Ape, that earst did nought but chill and quake,
- Now gan some courage unto him to take,
- And was content to attempt that enterprise, 995
- Tickled with glorie and rash covetise.
- But first gan question, whether should assay
- [_Whether_, which of the two.]
- Those royall ornaments to steale away?
- "Marie, that shall your selfe," quoth he theretoo,
- "For ye be fine and nimble it to doo; 1000
- Of all the beasts which in the forrests bee
- Is not a fitter for this turne than yee:
- Therefore, mine owne deare brother, take good hart,
- And ever thinke a kingdome is your part."
- Loath was the Ape, though praised, to adventer, 1005
- Yet faintly gan into his worke to enter,
- Afraid of everie leafe that stir'd him by,
- And everie stick that underneath did ly:
- Upon his tiptoes nicely he up went,
- For making noyse, and still his eare he lent 1010
- To everie sound that under heaven blew;
- Now went, now stopt, now crept, now backward drew,
- That it good sport had been him to have eyde.
- Yet at the last, so well he him applyde,
- Through his fine handling and cleanly play 1015
- He all those royall signes had stolne away,
- And with the Foxes helpe them borne aside
- Into a secret corner unespide.
- Whither whenas they came they fell at words,
- Whether of them should be the lords of lords: 1020
- For th'Ape was stryfull and ambicious,
- And the Foxe guilefull and most covetous;
- That neither pleased was to have the rayne
- Twixt them divided into even twaine,
- But either algates would be lords alone: 1025
- [_Algates_, by all means.]
- For love and lordship bide no paragone.
- [_Paragone_, equal, partner.]
- "I am most worthie," said the Ape, "sith I
- For it did put my life in ieopardie:
- Thereto I am in person and in stature
- Most like a man, the lord of everie creature, 1030
- So that it seemeth I was made to raigne,
- And borne to be a kingly soveraigne."
- "Nay," said the Foxe, "Sir Ape, you are astray;
- For though to steale the diademe away
- Were the worke of your nimble hand, yet I 1035
- Did first devise the plot by pollicie;
- So that it wholly springeth from my wit:
- For which also I claime my selfe more fit
- Than you to rule: for government of state
- Will without wisedome soone be ruinate. 1040
- And where ye claime your selfe for outward shape
- Most like a man, man is not like an ape
- In his chiefe parts, that is, in wit and spirite;
- But I therein most like to him doo merite,
- For my slie wyles and subtill craftinesse, 1045
- The title of the kingdome to possesse.
- Nath'les, my brother, since we passed are
- Unto this point, we will appease our iarre;
- And I with reason meete will rest content,
- That ye shall have both crowne and government, 1050
- Upon condition that ye ruled bee
- In all affaires, and counselled by mee;
- And that ye let none other ever drawe
- Your minde from me, but keepe this as a lawe:
- And hereupon an oath unto me plight." 1055
- The Ape was glad to end the strife so light,
- And thereto swore: for who would not oft sweare,
- And oft unsweare, a diademe to beare?
- Then freely up those royall spoyles he tooke,
- Yet at the Lyons skin he inly quooke; 1060
- But it dissembled, and upon his head
- The crowne, and on his backe the skin, he did,
- And the false Foxe him helped to array.
- Then when he was all dight he tooke his way
- Into the forest, that he might be seene 1065
- Of the wilde beasts in his new glory sheene.
- There the two first whome he encountred were
- The Sheepe and th'Asse, who, striken both with feare
- At sight of him, gan fast away to flye;
- But unto them the Foxe alowd did cry, 1070
- And in the kings name bad them both to stay,
- Upon the payne that thereof follow may.
- Hardly naythles were they restrayned so,
- Till that the Foxe forth toward them did goe,
- And there disswaded them from needlease feare, 1075
- For that the King did favour to them beare;
- And therefore dreadles bad them come to corte;
- For no wild beasts should do them any torte
- [_Torte_, wrong.]
- There or abroad, ne would his Maiestye
- Use them but well, with gracious clemencye, 1080
- As whome he knew to him both fast and true.
- So he perswaded them with homage due
- Themselves to humble to the Ape prostrate,
- Who, gently to them bowing in his gate,
- [_Gate_, way.]
- Receyved them with chearefull entertayne. 1085
- Thenceforth proceeding with his princely trayne,
- He shortly met the Tygre, and the Bore,
- Which with the simple Camell raged sore
- In bitter words, seeking to take occasion
- Upon his fleshly corpse to make invasion: 1090
- But soone as they this mock-king did espy,
- Their troublous strife they stinted by and by,
- [_Stinted by and by_, stopped at once.]
- Thinking indeed that it the Lyon was.
- He then, to prove whether his powre would pas
- As currant, sent the Foxe to them streight way, 1095
- Commaunding them their cause of strife bewray;
- And, if that wrong on eyther side there were,
- That he should warne the wronger to appeare
- The morrow next at court, it to defend;
- In the meane time upon the King t'attend. 1100
- The subtile Foxe so well his message sayd,
- That the proud beasts him readily obayd:
- Whereby the Ape in wondrous stomack woxe,
- Strongly encorag'd by the crafty Foxe;
- That king indeed himselfe he shortly thought, 1105
- And all the beasts him feared as they ought,
- And followed unto his palaice hye;
- Where taking congé, each one by and by
- Departed to his home in dreadfull awe,
- Full of the feared sight which late they sawe. 1110
- The Ape, thus seized of the regall throne,
- Eftsones by counsell of the Foxe alone
- Gan to provide for all things in assurance,
- That so his rule might lenger have endurance.
- First, to his gate be pointed a strong gard, 1115
- That none might enter but with issue hard:
- Then, for the safegard of his personage,
- He did appoint a warlike equipage
- Of forreine beasts, not in the forest bred,
- But part by land and part by water fed; 1120
- For tyrannie is with strange ayde supported.
- Then unto him all monstrous beasts resorted
- Bred of two kindes, as Griffons, Minotaures,
- Crocodiles, Dragons, Beavers, and Centaures:
- With those himselfe he strengthned mightelie, 1125
- That feare he neede no force of enemie.
- Then gan he rule and tyrannize at will,
- Like as the Foxe did guide his graceles skill;
- And all wylde beasts made vassals of his pleasures,
- And with their spoyles enlarg'd his private treasures.
- No care of iustice, nor no rule of reason, 1131
- No temperance, nor no regard of season,
- Did thenceforth ever enter in his minde;
- But crueltie, the signe of currish kinde,
- And sdeignfull pride, and wilfull arrogaunce; 1135
- Such followes those whom fortune doth advaunce.
- But the false Foxe most kindly plaid his part:
- [_Kindly_, according to his nature.]
- For whatsoever mother-wit or arte
- Could worke, he put in proofe: no practise slie,
- No counterpoint of cunning policie, 1140
- [_Counterpoint_, counterplot.]
- Ne reach, no breach, that might him profit bring,
- But he the same did to his purpose wring.
- Nought suffered he the Ape to give or graunt,
- But through his hand must passe the fiaunt.
- [_Fiaunt_, fiat.]
- All offices, all leases by him lept, 1145
- And of them all whatso he likte he kept.
- Iustice he solde iniustice for to buy,
- And for to purchase for his progeny.
- [_Purchase_, collect spoil.]
- Ill might it prosper that ill gotten was,
- But, so he got it, little did he pas. 1150
- [_Pas_, care.]
- He fed his cubs with fat of all the soyle,
- And with the sweete of others sweating toyle;
- He crammed them with crumbs of benefices,
- And fild their mouthes with meeds of malefices;
- [_Malifices_, evil deeds.]
- He cloathed them with all colours save white, 1155
- And loded them with lordships and with might,
- So much as they were able well to beare,
- That with the weight their backs nigh broken were.
- He chaffred chayres in which churchmen were set,
- [_Chaffred_, bartered.]
- And breach of lawes to privie ferme did let. 1160
- [_Ferme_, farm.]
- No statute so established might bee,
- Nor ordinaunce so needfull, but that hee
- Would violate, though not with violence,
- Yet under colour of the confidence
- The which the Ape repos'd in him alone, 1165
- And reckned him the kingdomes corner stone.
- And ever, when he ought would bring to pas,
- His long experience the platforme was:
- And when he ought not pleasing would put by
- The cloke was care of thrift, and husbandry, 1170
- For to encrease the common treasures store.
- But his owne treasure he encreased more,
- And lifted up his loftie towres thereby,
- That they began to threat the neighbour sky;
- The whiles the princes pallaces fell fast 1175
- To ruine; for what thing can ever last?
- And whilest the other peeres for povertie
- Were forst their auncient houses to let lie,
- And their olde castles to the ground to fall,
- Which their forefathers famous over-all 1180
- [_Over-all_, everywhere.]
- Had founded for the kingdomes ornament,
- And for their memories long moniment.
- But he no count made of nobilitie,
- Nor the wilde beasts whom armes did glorifie, 1185
- The realmes chiefe strength and girlond of the crowne.
- All these through fained crimes he thrust adowne,
- Or made them dwell in darknes of disgrace:
- For none but whom he list might come in place.
- Of men of armes he had but small regard,
- But kept them lowe, and streigned verie hard. 1190
- For men of learning little he esteemed;
- His wisedome he above their learning deemed.
- As for the rascall commons, least he cared,
- For not so common was his bountie shared: 1194
- "Let God," said he, "if please, care for the manie,
- I for my selfe must care before els anie."
- So did he good to none, to manie ill,
- So did he all the kingdome rob and pill,
- [_Pill_, plunder.]
- Yet none durst speake, ne none durst of him plaine;
- So great he was in grace, and rich through game.
- Ne would he anie let to have accesse 1201
- Unto the Prince, but by his owne addresse:
- For all that els did come were sure to faile;
- Yet would he further none but for availe.
- For on a time the Sheepe, to whom of yore 1205
- The Foxe had promised of friendship store,
- What time the Ape the kingdome first did gaine,
- Came to the court, her case there to complaine;
- How that the Wolfe, her mortall enemie,
- Had sithence slaine her lambe most cruellie; 1210
- [_Sithence_, since.]
- And therefore crav'd to come unto the King,
- To let him knowe the order of the thing.
- "Soft, Gooddie Sheepe!" then said the Foxe, "not soe:
- Unto the King so rash ye may not goe;
- He is with greater matter busied 1215
- Than a lambe, or the lambes owne mothers hed.
- Ne certes may I take it well in part,
- That ye my cousin Wolfe so fowly thwart,
- And seeke with slaunder his good name to blot:
- For there was cause, els doo it he would not: 1220
- Therefore surcease, good dame, and hence depart."
- So went the Sheepe away with heavie hart;
- So manie moe, so everie one was used,
- That to give largely to the boxe refused.
- Now when high Iove, in whose almightie hand 1225
- The care of kings and power of empires stand,
- Sitting one day within his turret hye,
- From whence he vewes with his black-lidded eye
- Whatso the heaven in his wide vawte containes,
- And all that in the deepest earth remaines, 1230
- And troubled kingdome of wilde beasts behelde,
- Whom not their kindly sovereigne did welde,
- [_Welde_, govern.]
- But an usurping Ape, with guile suborn'd,
- Had all subverst, he sdeignfully it scorn'd
- In his great heart, and hardly did refraine 1235
- But that with thunder bolts he had him slaine,
- And driven downe to hell, his dewest meed.
- But him avizing, he that dreadfull deed
- Forbore, and rather chose with scornfull shame
- Him to avenge, and blot his brutish name 1240
- Unto the world, that never after anie
- Should of his race be voyd of infamie;
- And his false counsellor, the cause of all,
- To damne to death, or dole perpetuall,
- From whence he never should be quit nor stal'd.
- [_Stal'd_, forestalled (?).]
- Forthwith he Mercurie unto him cal'd, 1246
- And bad him flie with never-resting speed
- Unto the forrest, where wilde beasts doo breed,
- And, there enquiring privily, to learne
- What did of late chaunce to the Lyon stearne, 1250
- That he rul'd not the empire, as he ought;
- And whence were all those plaints unto him brought
- Of wrongs and spoyles by salvage beasts committed:
- Which done, he bad the Lyon be remitted
- Into his seate, and those same treachours vile 1255
- [_Treachours_, traitors.]
- Be punished for their presumptuous guile.
- The sonne of Maia, soone as he receiv'd
- That word, streight with his azure wings he cleav'd
- The liquid clowdes and lucid firmament,
- Ne staid till that he came with steep descent 1260
- Unto the place where his prescript did showe.
- There stouping, like an arrowe from a bowe,
- He soft arrived on the grassie plaine,
- And fairly paced forth with easie paine,
- Till that unto the pallace nigh he came. 1265
- Then gan he to himselfe new shape to frame,
- And that faire face, and that ambrosiall hew,
- Which wonts to decke the gods immortall crew,
- And beautefie the shinie firmament,
- He doft, unfit for that rude rabblement. 1270
- So, standing by the gates in strange disguize,
- He gan enquire of some in secret wize,
- Both of the King, and of his government,
- And of the Foxe, and his false blandishment:
- And evermore he heard each one complaine 1275
- Of foule abuses both in realme and raine:
- Which yet to prove more true, he meant to see,
- And an ey-witnes of each thing to bee.
- Tho on his head his dreadfull hat he dight,
- Which maketh him invisible in sight, 1280
- And mocketh th'eyes of all the lookers on,
- Making them thinke it but a vision.
- Through power of that he runnes through enemies swerds;
- Through power of that he passeth through the herds
- Of ravenous wilde beasts, and doth beguile 1285
- Their greedie mouthes of the expected spoyle;
- Through power of that his cunning theeveries
- He wonts to worke, that none the same espies;
- And through the power of that he putteth on
- What shape he list in apparition. 1290
- That on his head he wore, and in his hand
- He tooke caduceus, his snakie wand,
- With which the damned ghosts he governeth,
- And furies rules, and Tartare tempereth.
- With that he causeth sleep to seize the eyes, 1295
- And feare the harts, of all his enemyes;
- And when him list, an universall night
- Throughout the world he makes on everie wight;
- As when his syre with Alcumena lay.
- Thus dight, into the court he tooke his way, 1300
- Both through the gard, which never him descride,
- And through the watchmen, who him never spide:
- Thenceforth he past into each secrete part,
- Whereas he saw, that sorely griev'd his hart,
- Each place abounding with fowle iniuries, 1305
- And fild with treasure rackt with robberies;
- Each place defilde with blood of guiltles beasts
- Which had been slaine to serve the Apes beheasts;
- Gluttonie, malice, pride, and covetize,
- And lawlesnes raigning with riotize; 1310
- Besides the infinite extortions,
- Done through the Foxes great oppressions,
- That the complaints thereof could not be tolde.
- Which when he did with lothfull eyes beholde,
- He would no more endure, but came his way, 1315
- And cast to seeke the Lion, where he may,
- [_Cast_, projected.]
- That he might worke the avengement for this shame
- On those two caytives which had bred him blame
- And seeking all the forrest busily,
- At last he found where sleeping he did ly. 1320
- The wicked weed which there the Foxe did lay
- From underneath his head he tooke away,
- And then him, waking, forced up to rize.
- The Lion, looking up, gan him avize,
- [_Avize_, bethink.]
- As one late in a traunce, what had of long 1325
- Become of him: for fantasie is strong.
- "Arise," said Mercurie, "thou sluggish beast,
- That here liest senseles, like the corpse deceast,
- The whilste thy kingdome from thy head is rent,
- And thy throne royall with dishonour blent: 1330
- [_Blent_, stained.]
- Arise, and doo thy selfe redeeme from shame,
- And be aveng'd on those that breed thy blame."
- Thereat enraged, soone he gan upstart,
- Grinding his teeth, and grating his great hart;
- And, rouzing up himselfe, for his rough hide 1335
- He gan to reach; but no where it espide.
- Therewith he gan full terribly to rore,
- And chafte at that indignitie right sore.
- But when his crowne and scepter both he wanted,
- Lord! how he fum'd, and sweld, and rag'd, and panted,
- And threatned death and thousand deadly dolours
- To them that had purloyn'd his princely honours.
- With that in hast, disroabed as he was,
- He toward his owne pallace forth did pas;
- And all the way he roared as he went, 1345
- That all the forrest with astonishment
- Thereof did tremble, and the beasts therein
- Fled fast away from that so dreadfull din.
- At last he came unto his mansion,
- Where all the gates he found fast lockt anon 1350
- And manie warders round about them stood:
- With that he roar'd alowd, as he were wood,
- [_Wood_, frantic.]
- That all the pallace quaked at the stound,
- [_Stound_, (time, scene) tumult.]
- As if it quite were riven from the ground,
- And all within were dead and hartles left; 1355
- And th'Ape himselfe, as one whose wits were reft,
- Fled here and there, and everie corner sought.
- To hide himselfe from his owne feared thought.
- But the false Foxe, when he the Lion heard,
- Fled closely forth, streightway of death afeard, 1360
- [_Closely_, secretly.]
- And to the Lion came, full lowly creeping,
- With fained face, and watrie eyne halfe weeping,
- T'excuse his former treason and abusion,
- And turning all unto the Apes confusion:
- Nath'les the royall beast forbore beleeving, 1365
- But bad him stay at ease till further preeving.
- [_Preeving_, proving.]
- Then when he saw no entrance to him graunted,
- Roaring yet lowder that all harts it daunted,
- Upon those gates with force he fiercely newe,
- And, rending them in pieces, felly slewe 1370
- Those warders strange, and all that els he met
- But th'Ape still flying he no where might get:
- From rowme to rowme, from beame to beame he fled,
- All breathles, and for feare now almost ded:
- Yet him at last the Lyon spide, and caught, 1375
- And forth with shame unto his iudgement brought.
- Then all the beasts he causd' assembled bee,
- To heare their doome, and sad ensample see:
- The Foxe, first author of that treacherie
- He did uncase, and then away let flie. 1380
- [_Uncase_, strip of his disguise.]
- But th'Apes long taile (which then he had) he quight
- Cut off, and both eares pared of their hight;
- Since which, all Apes but halfe their eares have left,
- And of their tailes are utterlie bereft.
- So Mother Hubberd her discourse did end: 1385
- Which pardon me if I amisse have pend,
- For weake was my remembrance it to hold,
- And bad her tongue that it so bluntly tolde.
- * * * * *
- FOOTNOTES:
- MOTHER HUBBERDS TALE. This charming little poem, Spenser's only
- successful effort at satire, is stated by the author to have been
- composed in the raw conceit of his youth. There is internal evidence,
- however, that some of the happiest passages were added at the date of
- its publication, at which time the whole was probably retouched.
- Although Mother Hubberds Tale is in its plan an imitation of the
- satires of Reynard the Fox; the treatment of the subject is quite
- original. For the combination of elegance with simplicity, this poem
- will stand a comparison with Goethe's celebrated translation of the
- Reineke. C.
- Ver. I.--_It was the month_, &c. August.
- Ver. 453.--_Diriges_, dirges. The office for the dead received this
- name from the antiphon with which the first nocturne in the mattens
- commenced, taken from Psalm v. 8, "Dirige, Domine Deus meus, in
- conspectu tuo viam meam." Way's _Promptorium Parvulorum._ C.
- Ver. 519.--_Scarse can a bishoprick_, &c. This is probably an allusion
- to the frequent alienations of the lands and manors of bishoprics in
- Elizabeth's time. TODD.
- Ver. 562.--_The ordinarie._ An ordinary is a judge having jurisdiction
- in ecclesiastical matters. In England, it is usually the bishop of the
- diocese. H.
- Ver. 623, 624.--The Queen was so much pleased with the results of the
- Portugal expedition of 1589, that she honored the commanders, and Sir
- Walter Raleigh among the rest, with a gold chain. C.
- Ver. 717.--_The brave courtier_, &c. This description is perhaps
- intended for Sir Philip Sidney. C.
- Ver. 893.--Had-ywist. That is, _had I wist! had I known_ that it would
- end so! a proverbial expression for late repentance consequent on
- disappointment. C.
- Ver. 901.--_To have thy Princes grace, yet want her Peeres._ Elizabeth
- was said to have granted Spenser a pension which Burghley intercepted,
- and to have ordered him a gratuity which her minister neglected to pay.
- C.
- Ver. 913.--_Himselfe will a daw trie._ So the old copy: the reading
- should probably be _himselfe a daw will trie_, prove or find himself by
- experience to be a daw or fool. C.
- Ver. 1189.--_Of men of armes,_ &c. This passage certainly provokes an
- application to Lord Burghley, and was probably intended for him. C.
- * * * * *
- RUINES OF ROME:
- BY BELLAY*
- [* Joachim du Bellay, a French poet of considerable reputation in his
- day, died in 1560. These sonnets are translated from _Le Premier Livre
- des Antiquez de Rome_. Further on we have the Visions of Bellay,
- translated from the _Songes_ of the same author. The best that can be
- said of these sonnets seems to be, that they are not inferior to the
- original. C.]
- I.
- Ye heavenly spirites, whose ashie cinders lie
- Under deep ruines, with huge walls opprest,
- But not your praise, the which shall never die
- Through your faire verses, ne in ashes rest;
- If so be shrilling voyce of wight alive
- May reach from hence to depth of darkest hell,
- Then let those deep abysses open rive,
- That ye may understand my shreiking yell!
- Thrice having seene under the heavens veale
- Your toombs devoted compasse over all,
- Thrice unto you with lowd voyce I appeale,
- And for your antique furie here doo call,
- The whiles that I with sacred horror sing
- Your glorie, fairest of all earthly thing!
- II.
- Great Babylon her haughtie walls will praise,
- And sharped steeples high shot up in ayre;
- Greece will the olde Ephesian buildings blaze,
- And Nylus nurslings their Pyramides faire;
- The same yet vaunting Greece will tell the storie
- Of Ioves great image in Olympus placed;
- Mausolus worke will be the Carians glorie,
- And Crete will boast the Labyrinth, now raced;
- The antique Rhodian will likewise set forth
- The great Colosse, erect to Memorie;
- And what els in the world is of like worth,
- Some greater learned wit will magnifie.
- But I will sing above all moniments
- Seven Romane Hils, the worlds seven wonderments.
- III.
- Thou stranger, which for Rome in Rome hero seekest,
- And nought of Rome in Rome perceiv'st at all,
- These same olde walls, olde arches, which thou seest,
- Olde palaces, is that which Rome men call.
- Beholde what wreake, what mine, and what wast,
- And how that she which with her mightie powre
- Tam'd all the world hath tam'd herselfe at last;
- The pray of Time, which all things doth devowre!
- Rome now of Rome is th'onely funerall,
- And onely Rome of Rome hath victorie;
- Ne ought save Tyber hastning to his fall
- Remaines of all: O worlds inconstancie!
- That which is firme doth flit and fall away,
- And that is flitting doth abide and stay.
- IV.
- She whose high top above the starres did sore,
- One foote on Thetis, th'other on the Morning,
- One hand on Scythia, th'other on the More,
- Both heaven and earth in roundnesse compassing;
- Iove fearing, least if she should greater growe,
- The old giants should once againe uprise,
- Her whelm'd with hills, these seven hils, which be nowe
- Tombes of her greatnes which did threate the skies:
- Upon her head he heapt Mount Saturnal,
- Upon her bellie th'antique Palatine,
- Upon her stomacke laid Mount Quirinal,
- On her left hand the noysome Esquiline,
- And Caelian on the right; but both her feete
- Mount Viminal and Aventine doo meete.
- V.
- Who lists to see what ever nature, arte,
- And heaven could doo, O Rome, thee let him see,
- In case thy greatnes he can gesse in harte
- By that which but the picture is of thee!
- Rome is no more: but if the shade of Rome
- May of the bodie yeeld a seeming sight,
- It's like a corse drawne forth out of the tombe
- By magicke skill out of eternall night:
- The corpes of Rome in ashes is entombed,
- And her great spirite, reioyned to the spirite
- Of this great masse, is in the same enwombed;
- But her brave writings, which, her famous merite
- In spight of Time out of the dust doth reare,
- Doo make her idole* through the world appeare.
- [* _Idole_, image, idea.]
- VI.
- Such as the Berecynthian goddesse bright,
- In her swifte charret with high turrets crownde,
- Proud that so manie gods she brought to light,
- Such was this citie in her good daies fownd:
- This citie, more than that great Phrygian mother
- Renowm'd for fruite of famous progenie,
- Whose greatnes by the greatnes of none other,
- But by her selfe, her equall match could see:
- Rome onely might to Rome compared bee,
- And onely Rome could make great Rome to tremble:
- So did the gods by heavenly doome decree,
- That other earthlie power should not resemble
- Her that did match the whole earths puissaunce,
- And did her courage to the heavens advaunce.
- VII.
- Ye sacred ruines, and ye tragick sights,
- Which onely doo the name of Rome retaine,
- Olde moniments, which of so famous sprights
- The honour yet in ashes doo maintaine,
- Triumphant arcks, spyres neighbours to the skie,
- That you to see doth th'heaven it selfe appall,
- Alas! by little ye to nothing flie,
- The peoples fable, and the spoyle of all!
- And though your frames do for a time make warre
- Gainst Time, yet Time in time shall ruinate
- Your workes and names, and your last reliques marre.
- My sad desires, rest therefore moderate!
- For if that Time make ende of things so sure,
- It als will end the paine which I endure.
- VIII.
- Through armes and vassals Rome the world subdu'd,
- That one would weene that one sole cities strength
- Both land and sea in roundnes had survew'd,
- To be the measure of her bredth and length:
- This peoples vertue yet so fruitfull was
- Of vertuous nephewes*, that posteritie,
- Striving in power their grandfathers to passe,
- The lowest earth ioin'd to the heaven hie;
- To th'end that, having all parts in their power,
- Nought from the Romane Empire might be quight**;
- And that though Time doth commonwealths devowre,
- Yet no time should so low embase their hight,
- That her head, earth'd in her foundations deep,
- Should not her name and endles honour keep.
- [* _Nephewes_, descendants.]
- [** _Quight_, quit, free.]
- IX.
- Ye cruell starres, and eke ye gods unkinde,
- Heaven envious, and bitter stepdame Nature!
- Be it by fortune, or by course of kinde*,
- That ye doo weld th'affaires of earthlie creature;
- Why have your hands long sithence traveiled
- To frame this world, that doth endure so long?
- Or why were not these Romane palaces
- Made of some matter no lesse firme and strong?
- I say not, as the common voyce doth say,
- That all things which beneath the moone have being
- Are temporall and subiect to decay:
- But I say rather, though not all agreeing
- With some that weene the contrarie in thought,
- That all this whole shall one day come to nought.
- [* _Kinde_, nature.]
- X.
- As that brave sonne of Aeson, which by charmes
- Atcheiv'd the golden fleece in Colchid land,
- Out of the earth engendred men of armes
- Of dragons teeth, sowne in the sacred sand,
- So this brave towne, that in her youthlie daies
- An hydra was of warriours glorious,
- Did fill with her renowmed nourslings praise
- The firie sunnes both one and other hous:
- But they at last, there being then not living
- An Hercules so ranke seed to represse,
- Emongst themselves with cruell furie striving,
- Mow'd downe themselves with slaughter mercilesse;
- Renewing in themselves that rage unkinde,
- Which whilom did those earthborn brethren blinde.
- XI.
- Mars, shaming to have given so great head
- To his off-spring, that mortall puissaunce,
- Puft up with pride of Romane hardiehead,
- Seem'd above heavens powre it selfe to advaunce,
- Cooling againe his former kindled heate
- With which he had those Romane spirits fild.
- Did blowe new fire, and with enflamed breath
- Into the Gothicke colde hot rage instil'd.
- Then gan that nation, th'earths new giant brood,
- To dart abroad the thunderbolts of warre,
- And, beating downe these walls with furious mood
- Into her mothers bosome, all did marre;
- To th'end that none, all were it* Iove his sire,
- Should boast himselfe of the Romane empire.
- [* _All were it_, although it were.]
- XII.
- Like as whilome the children of the earth
- Heapt hils on hils to scale the starrie skie,
- And fight against the gods of heavenly berth,
- Whiles Iove at them his thunderbolts let flie;
- All suddenly with lightning overthrowne,
- The furious squadrons downe to ground did fall,
- That th'earth under her childrens weight did grone,
- And th'heavens in glorie triumpht over all;
- So did that haughtie front, which heaped was
- On these seven Romane hils, it selfe upreare
- Over the world, and lift her loftie face
- Against the heaven, that gan her force to feare.
- But now these scorned fields bemone her fall,
- And gods secure feare not her force at all.
- XIII.
- Nor the swift furie of the flames aspiring,
- Nor the deep wounds of victours raging blade,
- Nor ruthlesse spoyle of souldiers blood-desiring,
- The which so oft thee, Rome, their conquest made,
- Ne stroke on stroke of fortune variable,
- Ne rust of age hating continuance,
- Nor wrath of gods, nor spight of men unstable,
- Nor thou oppos'd against thine owne puissance,
- Nor th'horrible uprore of windes high blowing,
- Nor swelling streames of that god snakie-paced*
- Which hath so often with his overflowing
- Thee drenched, have thy pride so much abaced,
- But that this nothing, which they have thee left,
- Makes the world wonder what they from thee reft.
- [* _Snakie-paced_, winding; or perhaps (like Ovid's _anguipes_) swift.]
- XIV.
- As men in summer fearles passe the foord
- Which is in winter lord of all the plaine,
- And with his tumbling streames doth beare aboord*
- The ploughmans hope and shepheards labour vaine,
- And as the coward beasts use to despise
- The noble lion after his lives end,
- Whetting their teeth, and with vaine foolhardise
- Daring the foe that cannot him defend,
- And as at Troy most dastards of the Greekes
- Did brave about the corpes of Hector colde,
- So those which whilome wont with pallid cheekes
- The Romane triumphs glorie to behold,
- Now on these ashie tombes shew boldnesse vaine,
- And, conquer'd, dare the conquerour disdaine.
- [*_Aboord_, into the current.]
- XV.
- Ye pallid spirits, and ye ashie ghoasts,
- Which, ioying in the brightnes of your day,
- Brought foorth those signes of your presumptuous boasts
- Which now their dusty reliques do bewray,
- Tell me, ye spirits! (sith the darksome river
- Of Styx, not passable to soules returning,
- Enclosing you in thrice three wards for ever,
- Doo not restraine your images still mourning,)
- Tell me then, (for perhaps some one of you
- Yet here above him secretly doth hide,)
- Doo ye not feele your torments to accrewe,
- When ye sometimes behold the ruin'd pride
- Of these old Romane works, built with your hands,
- To become nought els but heaped sands?
- XVI.
- Like as ye see the wrathfull sea from farre
- In a great mountaine heap't with hideous noyse,
- Eftsoones of thousand billowes shouldred narre*,
- Against a rocke to breake with dreadfull poyse;
- Like as ye see fell Boreas with sharpe blast
- Tossing huge tempests through the troubled skie,
- Eftsoones having his wide wings spent in wast,
- To stop his wearie cariere** suddenly;
- And as ye see huge flames spred diverslie,
- Gathered in one up to the heavens to spyre,
- Eftsoones consum'd to fall downe feebily,
- So whilom did this monarchie aspyre
- As waves, as winde, as fire, spred over all,
- Till it by fatall doome adowne did fall.
- [* _Narre_, nearer.]
- [** _Cariere_, career.]
- XVII.
- So long as Ioves great bird did make his flight,
- Bearing the fire with which heaven doth us fray,
- Heaven had not feare of that presumptuous might,
- With which the giaunts did the gods assay:
- But all so soone as scortching sunne had brent*
- His wings which wont the earth to overspredd,
- The earth out of her massie wombe forth sent
- That antique horror which made heaven adredd.
- Then was the Germane raven in disguise
- That Romane eagle seene to cleave asunder,
- And towards heaven freshly to arise
- Out of these mountaines, now consum'd to pouder.
- In which the foule that serves to beare the lightning
- Is now no more seen flying nor alighting.
- [* _Brent_, burned.]
- XVIII.
- These heapes of stones, these old wals which ye see,
- Were first enclosures but of salvage soyle;
- And these brave pallaces, which maystred bee
- Of time, were shepheards cottages somewhile.
- Then tooke the shepheards kingly ornaments
- And the stout hynde arm'd his right hand with steele:
- Eftsoones their rule of yearely presidents
- Grew great, and sixe months greater a great deele;
- Which, made perpetuall, rose to so great might,
- That thence th'imperiall eagle rooting tooke,
- Till th'heaven it selfe, opposing gainst her might,
- Her power to Peters successor betooke,
- Who, shepheardlike, (as Fates the same foreseeing,)
- Doth shew that all things turne to their first being.
- [XVIII. 8.--_Sixe months_, &c. The term of the dictatorship at Rome.]
- XIX.
- All that is perfect, which th'heaven beautefies;
- All that's imperfect, borne belowe the moone;
- All that doth feede our spirits and our eies;
- And all that doth consume our pleasures soone;
- All the mishap the which our daies outweares;
- All the good hap of th'oldest times afore,
- Rome, in the time of her great ancesters,
- Like a Pandora, locked long in store.
- But destinie this huge chaos turmoyling,
- In which all good and evill was enclosed,
- Their heavenly vertues from these woes assoyling,
- Caried to heaven, from sinfull bondage losed:
- But their great sinnes, the causers of their paine,
- Under these antique ruines yet remaine.
- XX.
- No otherwise than raynie cloud, first fed
- With earthly vapours gathered in the ayre,
- Eftsoones in compas arch't, to steepe his hed,
- Doth plonge himselfe in Tethys bosome faire,
- And, mounting up againe from whence he came,
- With his great bellie spreds the dimmed world,
- Till at the last, dissolving his moist frame,
- In raine, or snowe, or haile, he forth is horld,
- This citie, which was first but shepheards shade,
- Uprising by degrees, grewe to such height
- That queene of land and sea her selfe she made.
- At last, not able to beare so great weight,
- Her power, disperst, through all the world did vade*;
- To shew that all in th'end to nought shall fade.
- [* _Vade_, vanish.]
- XXI.
- The same which Pyrrhus and the puissaunce
- Of Afrike could not tame, that same brave citie
- Which, with stout courage arm'd against mischaunce,
- Sustein'd the shocke of common enmitie,
- Long as her ship, tost with so manie freakes,
- Had all the world in armes against her bent,
- Was never seene that anie fortunes wreakes
- Could breake her course begun with brave intent.
- But, when the obiect of her vertue failed,
- Her power it selfe against it selfe did arme;
- As he that having long in tempest sailed
- Faine would arive, but cannot for the storme,
- If too great winde against the port him drive,
- Doth in the port it selfe his vessell rive.
- XXII.
- When that brave honour of the Latine name,
- Which mear'd* her rule with Africa and Byze**,
- With Thames inhabitants of noble fame,
- And they which see the dawning day arize,
- Her nourslings did with mutinous uprore
- Harten against her selfe, her conquer'd spoile,
- Which she had wonne from all the world afore,
- Of all the world was spoyl'd within a while:
- So, when the compast course of the universe
- In sixe and thirtie thousand yeares is ronne,
- The bands of th'elements shall backe reverse
- To their first discord, and be quite undonne;
- The seedes of which all things at first were bred
- Shall in great Chaos wombe againe be hid.
- [* _Mear'd_, bounded.]
- [** _Byze_, Byzantium.]
- XXIII.
- O warie wisedome of the man* that would
- That Carthage towres from spoile should be forborne,
- To th'end that his victorious people should
- With cancring laisure not be overworne!
- He well foresaw how that the Romane courage,
- Impatient of pleasures faint desires,
- Through idlenes would turne to civill rage,
- And be her selfe the matter of her fires.
- For in a people given all to ease,
- Ambition is engendred easily;
- As, in a vicious bodie, grose disease
- Soone growes through humours superfluitie.
- That came to passe, when, swolne with plenties pride,
- Nor prince, nor peere, nor kin, they would abide.
- [* I.e. Scipio Nasica.]
- XXIV.
- If the blinde Furie which warres breedeth oft
- Wonts not t'enrage the hearts of equall beasts,
- Whether they fare on foote, or flie aloft,
- Or armed be with clawes, or scalie creasts,
- What fell Erynnis, with hot burning tongs,
- Did grype your hearts with noysome rage imbew'd,
- That, each to other working cruell wrongs,
- Your blades in your owne bowels you embrew'd?
- Was this, ye Romanes, your hard destinie?
- Or some old sinne, whose unappeased guilt
- Powr'd vengeance forth on you eternallie?
- Or brothers blood, the which at first was spilt
- Upon your walls, that God might not endure
- Upon the same to set foundation sure?
- XXV.
- O that I had the Thracian poets harpe,
- For to awake out of th'infernall shade
- Those antique Caesars, sleeping long in darke,
- The which this auncient citie whilome made!
- Or that I had Amphions instrument,
- To quicken with his vitall notes accord
- The stonie ioynts of these old walls now rent,
- By which th'Ausonian light might be restor'd!
- Or that at least I could with pencill fine
- Fashion the pourtraicts of these palacis,
- By paterne of great Virgils spirit divine!
- I would assay with that which in me is
- To builde, with levell of my loftie style,
- That which no hands can evermore compyle.
- XXVI.
- Who list the Romane greatnes forth to figure,
- Him needeth not to seeke for usage right
- Of line, or lead, or rule, or squaire, to measure
- Her length, her breadth, her deepnes, or her hight;
- But him behooves to vew in compasse round
- All that the ocean graspes in his long armes;
- Be it where the yerely starre doth scortch the ground,
- Or where colde Boreas blowes his bitter stormes.
- Rome was th'whole world, and al the world was Rome;
- And if things nam'd their names doo equalize,
- When land and sea ye name, then name ye Rome,
- And, naming Rome, ye land and sea comprize:
- For th'auncient plot of Rome, displayed plaine,
- The map of all the wide world doth containe.
- XXVII.
- Thou that at Rome astonisht dost behold
- The antique pride which menaced the skie,
- These haughtie heapes, these palaces of olde,
- These wals, these arcks, these baths, these temples his,
- Iudge, by these ample ruines vew, the rest
- The which iniurious time hath quite outworne,
- Since, of all workmen helde in reckning best,
- Yet these olde fragments are for paternes borne:
- Then also marke how Rome, from day to day,
- Repayring her decayed fashion,
- Renewes herselfe with buildings rich and gay;
- That one would iudge that the Romaine Daemon*
- Doth yet himselfe with fatall hand enforce
- Againe on foot to reare her pouldred** corse.
- [* _Romaine Daemon_, Genius of Rome.]
- [** _Pouldred_, reduced to dust.]
- XXVIII.
- He that hath seene a great oke drie and dead,
- Yet clad with reliques of some trophees olde,
- Lifting to heaven her aged hoarie head,
- Whose foote in ground hath left but feeble holde,
- But halfe disbowel'd lies above the ground,
- Shewing her wreathed rootes, and naked armes,
- And on her trunke all rotten and unsound
- Onely supports herselfe for meate of wormes,
- And, though she owe her fall to the first winde,
- Yet of the devout people is ador'd,
- And manie yong plants spring out of her rinde;
- Who such an oke hath seene, let him record
- That such this cities honour was of yore,
- And mongst all cities florished much more.
- XXIX.
- All that which Aegypt whilome did devise,
- All that which Greece their temples to embrave,
- After th'Ionicke, Atticke, Doricke guise,
- Or Corinth skil'd in curious workes to grave,
- All that Lysippus practike* arte could forme,
- Apelles wit, or Phidias his skill,
- Was wont this auncient citie to adorne,
- And the heaven it selfe with her wide wonders fill.
- All that which Athens ever brought forth wise,
- All that which Afrike ever brought forth strange,
- All that which Asie ever had of prise,
- Was here to see. O mervelous great change!
- Rome, living, was the worlds sole ornament;
- And, dead, is now the worlds sole moniment.
- [* _Practike_, cunning.]
- XXX.
- Like as the seeded field greene grasse first showes,
- Then from greene grasse into a stalke doth spring,
- And from a stalke into an eare forth-growes,
- Which eare the frutefull graine doth shortly bring,
- And as in season due the husband* mowes
- The waving lockes of those faire yeallow heares,
- Which, bound in sheaves, and layd in comely rowes,
- Upon the naked fields in stalkes he reares,
- So grew the Romane empire by degree,
- Till that barbarian hands it quite did spill,
- And left of it but these olde markes to see,
- Of which all passers by doo somewhat pill**,
- As they which gleane, the reliques use to gather
- Which th'husbandman behind him chanst to scater.
- [* _Husband_, husbandman.]
- [** _Pill_, plunder.]
- XXXI.
- That same is now nought but a champian wide,
- Where all this worlds pride once was situate.
- No blame to thee, whosoever dost abide
- By Nyle, or Gange, or Tygre, or Euphrate;
- Ne Afrike thereof guiltie is, nor Spaine,
- Nor the bolde people by the Thamis brincks,
- Nor the brave warlicke brood of Alemaine,
- Nor the borne souldier which Rhine running drinks.
- Thou onely cause, O Civill Furie, art!
- Which, sowing in th'Aemathian fields thy spight,
- Didst arme thy hand against thy proper hart;
- To th'end that when thou wast in greatest hight
- To greatnes growne, through long prosperitie,
- Thou then adowne might'st fall more horriblie.
- [XXXI. 10.--_Aemathian fields_. Thessalian fields; alluding to the
- battle fought at Pharsalia, in Thessaly, between Caesar and Pompey. H.]
- XXXII.
- Hope ye, my Verses, that posteritie
- Of age ensuing shall you ever read?
- Hope ye that ever immortalitie
- So meane harpes worke may chalenge for her meed?
- If under heaven anie endurance were,
- These moniments, which not in paper writ,
- But in porphyre and marble doo appeare,
- Might well have hop'd to have obtained it.
- Nath'les, my Lute, whom Phoebus deigned to give,
- Cease not to sound these olde antiquities:
- For if that Time doo let thy glorie live,
- Well maist thou boast, how ever base thou bee,
- That thou art first which of thy nation song
- Th'olde honour of the people gowned long.
- L'ENVOY.
- Bellay, first garland of free poesie
- That France brought forth, though fruitfull of brave wits,
- Well worthie thou of immortalitie,
- That long hast traveld*, by thy learned writs,
- Olde Rome out of her ashes to revive,
- And give a second life to dead decayes!
- Needes must he all eternitie survive,
- That can to other give eternall dayes.
- Thy dayes therefore are endles, and thy prayse
- Excelling all that ever went before:
- And, after thee, gins Bartas hie to rayse
- His heavenly Muse, th'Almightie to adore.
- Live happie spirits, th'honour of your name,
- And fill the world with never dying fame!
- [* _Traveld_, travailed, toiled.]
- L'Envoy, 11.--_Bartas_. Guillaume de Salluste du Bartas, a French poet
- of the time of Henry IV, of extraordinary popularity in his day. His
- poem on the Creation is said to have been reprinted more than thirty
- times in six years, and was translated into several languages; among
- others, into English by Joshua Sylvester. H.
- MUIOPOTMOS:
- OR
- THE FATE OF THE BUTTERFLIE.
- BY ED. SP.
- DEDICATED TO THE MOST FAIRE AND VERTUOUS LADIE,
- THE LADIE CAREY.
- LONDON:
- IMPRINTED FOR WILLIAM PONSONBIE, DWELLING IN PAULES
- CHURCHYARD AT THE SIGNE OF THE BISHOPS HEAD.
- 1590*
- [* This date seems to be an error for 1591; or, as Mr. Craik suggests,
- it may have been used designedly with reference to real events, not yet
- ascertained, which furnished the subject of this very pleasing
- allegory. The Visions of the Worlds Vanitie, which follow this piece,
- may be suspected of a similar application. C.]
- TO THE RIGHT WORTHY AND VERTUOUS LADIE, THE LA: CAREY.
- Most brave and bountifull La: for so excellent favours as I have
- received at your sweet handes, to offer these fewe leaves as in
- recompence, should be as to offer flowers to the gods for their divine
- benefites. Therefore I have determined to give my selfe wholy to you,
- as quite abandoned from my selfe, and absolutely vowed to your
- services: which in all right is ever held for full recompence of debt
- or damage, to have the person yeelded. My person I wot wel how little
- worth it is. But the faithfull minde and humble zeale which I bear unto
- your La: may perhaps be more of price, as may please you to account and
- use the poore service thereof; which taketh glory to advance your
- excellent partes and noble vertues, and to spend it selfe in honouring
- you; not so much for your great bounty to my self, which yet may not be
- unminded; nor for name or kindreds* sake by you vouchsafed, beeing
- also regardable; as for that honorable name, which yee have by your
- brave deserts purchast to your self, and spred in the mouths of al men:
- with which I have also presumed to grace my verses, and, under your
- name, to commend to the world this smal poeme; the which beseeching
- your La: to take in worth, and of all things therein according to your
- wonted graciousnes to make a milde construction, I humbly pray for your
- happines.
- Your La: ever
- humbly,
- E. S.
- [Footnote: "This lady was Elizabeth, one of the six daughters of Sir
- John Spencer, of Althorpe, in Northamptonshire, and was married to Sir
- George Carey, who became Lord Hunsdon on the death of his father, in
- 1596."--TODD.]
- MUIOPOTMOS:
- OR
- THE FATE OF THE BUTTERFLIE.
- * * * * *
- I sing of deadly dolorous debate,
- Stir'd up through wrathful! Nemesis despight,
- Betwixt two mightie ones of great estate,
- Drawne into armes and proofe of mortall fight
- Through prowd ambition and hart-swelling hate, 5
- Whilest neither could the others greater might
- And sdeignfull scorne endure; that from small iarre
- Their wraths at length broke into open warre.
- The roote whereof and tragicall effect,
- Vouchsafe, O thou the mournfulst Muse of nyne, 10
- That wontst the tragick stage for to direct,
- In funerall complaints and waylfull tyne*
- Reveale to me, and all the meanes detect
- Through which sad Clarion did at last declyne
- To lowest wretchednes: And is there then 15
- Such rancour in the harts of mightie men?
- [* _Tyne_, grief.]
- Of all the race of silver-winged flies
- Which doo possesse the empire of the aire,
- Betwixt the centred earth and azure skies
- Was none more favourable nor more faire, 20
- Whilst heaven did favour his felicities,
- Then Clarion, the eldest sonne and haire
- Of Muscaroll, and in his fathers sight
- Of all alive did seeme the fairest wight.
- With fruitfull hope his aged breast he fed 25
- Of future good, which his yong toward yeares,
- Full of brave courage and bold hardyhed
- Above th'ensample of his equall peares,
- Did largely promise, and to him fore-red,
- (Whilst oft his heart did melt in tender teares,) 30
- That he in time would sure prove such an one,
- As should be worthie of his fathers throne.
- The fresh yong flie, in whom the kindly fire
- Of lustfull yongth* began to kindle fast,
- Did much disdaine to subiect his desire 35
- To loathsome sloth, or houres in ease to wast;
- But ioy'd to range abroad in fresh attire
- Through the wide compas of the ayrie coast,
- And with unwearied wings each part t'inquire
- Of the wide rule of his renownned sire. 40
- [* _Yongth_, youth.]
- For he so swift and nimble was of flight,
- That from this lower tract he dar'd to stie*
- Up to the clowdes, and thence with pineons light
- To mount aloft unto the christall skie,
- To vew the workmanship of heavens hight 45
- Whence down descending he along would flie
- Upon the streaming rivers, sport to finde,
- And oft would dare to tempt the troublous winde.
- [* _Stie_, mount.]
- So on a summers day, when season milde
- With gentle calme the world had quieted, 50
- And high in heaven Hyperions fierie childe
- Ascending did his beames abroad dispred,
- Whiles all the heavens on lower creatures smilde,
- Yong Clarion, with vauntfull lustiehead;
- After his guize did cast abroad to fare, 55
- And theretoo gan his furnitures prepare.
- His breastplate first, that was of substance pure,
- Before his noble heart he firmely bound,
- That mought his life from yron death assure,
- And ward his gentle corpes from cruell wound: 60
- For it by arte was framed to endure
- The bit* of balefull steele and bitter stownd**,
- No lesse than that which Vulcane made to sheild
- Achilles life from fate of Troyan field.
- [* _Bit_, bite.]
- [** _Stownd_, hour.]
- And then about his shoulders broad he threw 65
- An hairie hide of some wilde beast, whom hee
- In salvage forrest by adventure slew,
- And reft the spoyle his ornament to bee;
- Which, spredding all his backe with dreadfull vew,
- Made all that him so horrible did see 70
- Thinke him Alcides with the lyons skin,
- When the Naeméan conquest he did win.
- Upon his head, his glistering burganet*,
- The which was wrought by wonderous device
- And curiously engraven, he did set: 75
- The mettall was of rare and passing price;
- Not Bilbo** steele, nor brasse from Corinth fet,
- Nor costly oricalche from strange Phoenice;
- But such as could both Phoebus arrowes ward,
- And th'hayling darts of heaven beating hard. 80
- [* _Burganet_, helmet.]
- [** _Bilbo_, Bilboa.]
- Therein two deadly weapons fixt he bore,
- Strongly outlaunced towards either side,
- Like two sharpe speares, his enemies to gore:
- Like as a warlike brigandine, applyde
- To fight, layes forth her threatfull pikes afore, 85
- The engines which in them sad death doo hyde,
- So did this flie outstretch his fearefull hornes,
- Yet so as him their terrour more adornes.
- Lastly his shinie wings, as silver bright,
- Painted with thousand colours passing farre 90
- All painters skill, he did about him dight:
- Not halfe so manie sundrie colours arre
- In Iris bowe; ne heaven doth shine so bright,
- Distinguished with manie a twinckling starre;
- Nor Iunoes bird, in her ey-spotted traine, 95
- So manie goodly colours doth containe.
- Ne (may it be withouten perill spoken)
- The Archer-god, the sonne of Cytheree,
- That ioyes on wretched lovers to be wroken*,
- And heaped spoyles of bleeding harts to see, 100
- Beares in his wings so manie a changefull token.
- Ah! my liege Lord, forgive it unto mee,
- If ought against thine honour I have tolde;
- Yet sure those wings were fairer manifolde.
- [* _Wroken_, avenged.]
- Full many a ladie faire, in court full oft 105
- Beholding them, him secretly envide,
- And wisht that two such fannes, so silken soft
- And golden faire, her Love would her provide;
- Or that, when them the gorgeous flie had doft,
- Some one that would with grace be gratifide 110
- From him would steale them privily away,
- And bring to her so precious a pray.
- Report is that Dame Venus on a day,
- In spring when flowres doo clothe the fruitful ground,
- Walking abroad with all her nymphes to play, 115
- Bad her faire damzels flocking her arownd
- To gather flowres, her forhead to array.
- Emongst the rest a gentle nymph was found,
- Hight Astery, excelling all the crewe
- In curteous usage and unstained hewe. 120
- Who, being nimbler ioynted than the rest,
- And more industrious, gathered more store
- Of the fields honour than the others best;
- Which they in secret harts envying sore,
- Tolde Venus, when her as the worthiest 125
- She praisd', that Cupide (as they heard before)
- Did lend her secret aide in gathering
- Into her lap the children of the Spring,
- Whereof the goddesse gathering iealous feare,--
- Not yet unmindfull how not long agoe 130
- Her sonne to Psyche secrete love did beare,
- And long it close conceal'd, till mickle woe
- Thereof arose, and manie a rufull teare,--
- Reason with sudden rage did overgoe;
- And, giving hastie credit to th'accuser, 135
- Was led away of them that did abuse her.
- Eftsoones that damzel by her heavenly might
- She turn'd into a winged butterflie,
- In the wide aire to make her wandring flight;
- And all those flowres, with which so plenteouslie 140
- Her lap she filled had, that bred her spight,
- She placed in her wings, for memorie
- Of her pretended crime, though crime none were:
- Since which that flie them in her wings doth beare.
- Thus the fresh Clarion, being readie dight, 145
- Unto his iourney did himselfe addresse,
- And with good speed began to take his flight:
- Over the fields, in his franke* lustinesse;
- And all the champion** he soared light;
- And all the countrey wide he did possesse, 150
- Feeding upon their pleasures bounteouslie,
- That none gainsaid, nor none did him envie.
- [* _Franke_, free.]
- [** _Champion_, champaign.]
- The woods, the rivers, and the medowes green.
- With his aire-cutting wings he measured wide,
- Ne did he leave the mountaines bare unseene, 155
- Nor the ranke grassie fennes delights untride.
- But none of these, how ever sweete they beene,
- Mote please his fancie nor him cause t'abide:
- His choicefull sense with everie change doth flit;
- No common things may please a wavering wit. 160
- To the gay gardins his unstaid desire
- Him wholly caried, to refresh his sprights:
- There lavish Nature, in her best attire,
- Powres forth sweete odors and alluring sights;
- And Arte, with her contending, doth aspire 165
- T'excell the naturall with made delights:
- And all that faire or pleasant may be found
- In riotous excesse doth there abound.
- There he arriving round about doth flie,
- From bed to bed, from one to other border; 170
- And takes survey, with curious busie eye,
- Of every flowre and herbe there set in order;
- Now this, now that, he tasteth tenderly,
- Yet none of them he rudely doth disorder,
- Ne with his feete their silken leaves deface, 175
- But pastures on the pleasures of each place.
- And evermore with most varietie,
- And change of sweetnesse, (for all change is sweete,)
- He casts his glutton sense to satisfie;
- Now sucking of the sap of herbe most meete, 180
- Or of the deaw which yet on them does lie,
- Now in the same bathing his tender feete:
- And then he pearcheth on some braunch thereby,
- To weather him, and his moyst wings to dry.
- And then againe he turneth to his play, 185
- To spoyle the pleasures of that paradise;
- The wholsome saulge*, and lavender still gray,
- Ranke-smelling rue, and cummin good for eyes,
- The roses raigning in the pride of May,
- Sharpe isope, good for greene wounds remedies, 190
- Faire marigoldes, and bees-alluring thime,
- Sweete marioram, and daysies decking prime:
- [* _Saulge_, sage.]
- Coole violets, and orpine growing still,
- Embathed balme, and chearfull galingale,
- Fresh costmarie, and breathfull camomill, 195
- Dull poppie, and drink-quickning setuale*,
- Veyne-healing verven, and hed-purging dill,
- Sound savorie, and bazil hartie-hale,
- Fat colworts, and comfórting perseline**,
- Colde lettuce, and refreshing rosmarine. 200
- [* _Setuale_, valerian.]
- [** _Perseline_, purslain.]
- And whatso else of vertue good or ill
- Grewe in this gardin, fetcht from farre away,
- Of everie one he takes and tastes at will,
- And on their pleasures greedily doth pray.
- Then when he hath both plaid, and fed his fill, 205
- In the warme sunne he doth himselfe embay*,
- And there him rests in riotous suffisaunce
- Of all his gladfulnes and kingly ioyaunce.
- [* _Embay_, bathe.]
- What more felicitie can fall to creature
- Than to enioy delight with libertie, 210
- And to be lord of all the workes of Nature,
- To raine in th'aire from earth to highest skie,
- To feed on flowres and weeds of glorious feature,
- To take whatever thing doth please the eie?
- Who rests not pleased with such happines, 215
- Well worthie he to taste of wretchednes.
- But what on earth can long abide in state?
- Or who can him assure of happie day?
- Sith morning faire may bring fowle evening late,
- And least mishap the most blisse alter may! 220
- For thousand perills lie in close awaite
- About us daylie, to worke our decay;
- That none, except a God, or God him guide,
- May them avoyde, or remedie provide.
- And whatso heavens in their secret doome 225
- Ordained have, how can fraile fleshly wight
- Forecast, but it must needs to issue come?
- The sea, the aire, the fire, the day, the night,
- And th'armies of their creatures, all and some*,
- Do serve to them, and with importune might 230
- Warre against us, the vassals of their will.
- Who then can save what they dispose to spill?
- [* _All and some_, one and all.]
- Not thou, O Clarion, though fairest thou
- Of all thy kinde, unhappie happie flie,
- Whose cruell fate is woven even now 235
- Of loves owne hand, to worke thy miserie!
- Ne may thee helpe the manie hartie vow,
- Which thy olde sire with sacred pietie
- Hath powred forth for thee, and th'altars sprent*
- Nought may thee save from heavens avengëment! 240
- [* _Sprent_, sprinkled.]
- It fortuned (as heavens had behight*)
- That in this gardin where yong Clarion
- Was wont to solace him, a wicked wight,
- The foe of faire things, th'author of confusion,
- The shame of Nature, the bondslave of spight, 245
- Had lately built his hatefull mansion;
- And, lurking closely, in awayte now lay,
- How he might anie in his trap betray.
- [* _Behight_, ordained.]
- But when he spide the ioyous butterflie
- In this faire plot dispacing* too and fro, 250
- Fearles of foes and hidden ieopardie,
- Lord! how he gan for to bestirre him tho,
- And to his wicked worke each part applie!
- His heart did earne** against his hated foe,
- And bowels so with rankling poyson swelde, 255
- That scarce the skin the strong contagion helde.
- [* _Dispacing_, ranging about.]
- [** _Earne_, yearn.]
- The cause why he this flie so maliced*
- Was (as in stories it is written found)
- For that his mother which him bore and bred,
- The most fine-fingred workwoman on ground, 260
- Arachne, by his meanes was vanquished
- Of Pallas, and in her owne skill confound**,
- When she with her for excellence contended,
- That wrought her shame, and sorrow never ended.
- [* _Maliced_, bore ill-will to.]
- [** _Confound_, confounded.]
- For the Tritonian goddesse, having hard 265
- Her blazed fame, which all the world had fil'd,
- Came downe to prove the truth, and due reward
- For her prais-worthie workmanship to yeild:
- But the presumptuous damzel rashly dar'd
- The goddesse selfe to chalenge to the field, 270
- And to compare with her in curious skill
- Of workes with loome, with needle, and with quill.
- Minerva did the chalenge not refuse,
- But deign'd with her the paragon* to make:
- So to their worke they sit, and each doth chuse 275
- What storie she will for her tapet** take.
- Arachne figur'd how love did abuse
- Europa like a bull, and on his backe
- Her through the sea did beare; so lively@ seene,
- That it true sea and true bull ye would weene. 280
- [* _Paragon_, comparison.]
- [** _Tapet_, tapestry.]
- [@ _Lively_, life-like.]
- Shee seem'd still backe unto the land to looke,
- And her play-fellowes aide to call, and feare
- The dashing of the waves, that up she tooke
- Her daintie feete, and garments gathered neare:
- But Lord! how she in everie member shooke, 285
- When as the land she saw no more appeare,
- But a wilde wildernes of waters deepe:
- Then gan she greatly to lament and weepe.
- Before the bull she pictur'd winged Love,
- With his yong brother Sport, light fluttering 290
- Upon the waves, as each had been a dove;
- The one his bowe and shafts, the other spring*
- A burning teade** about his head did move,
- As in their syres new love both triumphing;
- And manie Nymphes about them flocking round, 295
- And manie Tritons which their homes did sound.
- [* _Spring_, springal, youth.]
- [** _Teade_, torch.]
- And round about her-worke she did empale*
- With a faire border wrought of sundrie flowres,
- Enwoven with an yviewinding trayle:
- A goodly worke, full fit for kingly bowres, 300
- Such as Dame Pallas, such as Envie pale,
- That al good things with venemous tooth devowres,
- Could not accuse. Then gan the goddesse bright
- Her selfe likewise unto her worke to dight.
- [* _Empale_, inclose.]
- She made the storie of the olde debate 305
- Which she with Neptune did for Athens trie:
- Twelve gods doo sit around in royall state,
- And love in midst with awfull maiestie,
- To iudge the strife betweene them stirred late:
- Each of the gods by his like visnomie* 310
- Eathe** to be knowen; but love above them all,
- By his great lookes and power imperiall.
- [* _Visnomie_, countenance.]
- [** _Eathe_, easy.]
- Before them stands the god of seas in place,
- Clayming that sea-coast citie as his right,
- And strikes the rockes with his three-forked mace;
- Whenceforth issues a warlike steed in sight, 316
- The signe by which he chalengeth the place;
- That all the gods which saw his wondrous might
- Did surely deeme the victorie his due:
- But seldom seene, foreiudgement proveth true. 320
- Then to herselfe she gives her Aegide shield,
- And steel-hed speare, and morion * on her hedd,
- Such as she oft is seene in warlicke field:
- Then sets she forth, how with her weapon dredd
- She smote the ground, the which streight foorth did yield 325
- A fruitfull olyve tree, with berries spredd,
- That all the gods admir'd; then all the storie
- She compast with a wreathe of olyves hoarie.
- [* _Morion_, steel cap.]
- Emongst those leaves she made a butterflie,
- With excellent device and wondrous slight, 330
- Fluttring among the olives wantonly,
- That seem'd to live, so like it was in sight:
- The velvet nap which on his wings doth lie,
- The silken downe with which his backe is dight,
- His broad outstretched homes, his hayrie thies, 335
- His glorious colours, and his glistering eies.
- Which when Arachne saw, as overlaid *
- And mastered with workmanship so rare,
- She stood astonied long, ne ought gainesaid;
- And with fast fixed eyes on her did stare, 340
- And by her silence, signe of one dismaid,
- The victorie did yeeld her as her share;
- Yet did she inly fret and felly burne,
- And all her blood to poysonous rancor turne:
- [* _Overlaid_, overcome.]
- That shortly from the shape of womanhed, 345
- Such as she was when Pallas she attempted,
- She grew to hideous shape of dryrihed*,
- Pined with griefe of follie late repented:
- Eftsoones her white streight legs were altered
- To crooked crawling shankes, of marrowe empted, 350
- And her faire face to foule and loathsome hewe,
- And her fine corpes to a bag of venim grewe.
- [* _Dryrihed_, sadness, unsightliness.]
- This cursed creature, mindfull of that olde
- Enfestred grudge the which his mother felt,
- So soone as Clarion he did beholde, 355
- His heart with vengefull malice inly swelt;
- And weaving straight a net with mame a folde
- About the cave in which he lurking dwelt,
- With fine small cords about it stretched wide,
- So finely sponne that scarce they could be spide, 360
- Not anie damzell which her vaunteth most
- In skilfull knitting of soft silken twyne,
- Nor anie weaver, which his worke doth boast
- In dieper, in damaske, or in lyne*,
- Nor anie skil'd in workmanship embost, 365
- Nor anie skil'd in loupes of fingring fine,
- Might in their divers cunning ever dare
- With this so curious networks to compare.
- [* _Lyne_, linen.]
- Ne doo I thinke that that same subtil gin
- The which the Lemnian god framde craftilie, 370
- Mars sleeping with his wife to compasse in,
- That all the gods with common mockerie
- Might laugh at them, and scorne their shamefull sin,
- Was like to this. This same he did applie
- For to entrap the careles Clarion, 375
- That rang'd each where without suspition.
- Suspition of friend, nor feare of foe,
- That hazarded his health, had he at all,
- But walkt at will, and wandred too and fro,
- In the pride of his freedome principall*: 380
- Litle wist he his fatall future woe,
- But was secure; the liker he to fall.
- He likest is to fall into mischaunce,
- That is regardles of his governaunce.
- [* _Principall_, princely.]
- Yet still Aragnoll (so his foe was hight) 385
- Lay lurking covertly him to surprise;
- And all his gins, that him entangle might,
- Drest in good order as he could devise.
- At length the foolish flie, without foresight,
- As he that did all daunger quite despise, 390
- Toward those parts came flying careleslie,
- Where hidden was his hatefull enemie.
- Who, seeing him, with secret ioy therefore
- Did tickle inwardly in everie vaine;
- And his false hart, fraught with all treasons store, 395
- Was fil'd with hope his purpose to obtaine:
- Himselfe he close upgathered more and more
- Into his den, that his deceiptfull traine
- By his there being might not be bewraid,
- Ne anie noyse, ne anie motion made. 400
- Like as a wily foxe, that, having spide
- Where on a sunnie banke the lambes doo play,
- Full closely creeping by the hinder side,
- Lyes in ambushment of his hoped pray,
- Ne stirreth limbe, till, seeing readie tide*, 405
- He rusheth forth, and snatcheth quite away
- One of the litle yonglings unawares;
- So to his worke Aragnoll him prepares.
- [* _Tide_, time.]
- Who now shall give unto my heavie eyes
- A well of teares, that all may overflow? 410
- Or where shall I finde lamentable cryes,
- And mournfull tunes enough my griefe to show?
- Helpe, O thou Tragick Muse, me to devise
- Notes sad enough, t'expresse this bitter throw:
- For loe, the drerie stownd* is now arrived, 415
- That of all happines hath us deprived.
- [* _Stownd_, hour.]
- The luckles Clarion, whether cruell Fate
- Or wicked Fortune faultles him misled,
- Or some ungracious blast out of the gate
- Of Aeoles raine* perforce him drove on hed**, 420
- Was (O sad hap and howre unfortunate!)
- With violent swift flight forth caried
- Into the cursed cobweb, which his foe
- Had framed for his finall overthroe.
- [* _Raine_, kingdom.]
- [** _On hed_, head-foremost.]
- There the fond flie, entangled, strugled long, 425
- Himselfe to free thereout; but all in vaine.
- For, striving more, the more in laces strong
- Himselfe he tide, and wrapt his wingës twaine
- In lymie snares the subtill loupes among;
- That in the ende he breathelesse did remaine, 430
- And, all his yongthly* forces idly spent,
- Him to the mercie of th'avenger lent.
- [* _Yongthly_, youthful.]
- Which when the greisly tyrant did espie,
- Like a grimme lyon rushing with fierce might
- Out of his den, he seized greedelie 435
- On the resistles pray, and, with fell spight,
- Under the left wing stroke his weapon slie
- Into his heart, that his deepe-groning spright
- In bloodie streames foorth fled into the aire,
- His bodie left the spectacle of care. 440
- * * * * *
- FOOTNOTES
- Ver. 365.--_And Arte, with her contendlng._ Compare the description of
- Aerasia's garden, Faerie Queene, II. xii. 59; and also v. 29. TODD.
- Ver. 273.--_Minerva did_, &c. Much of what follows is taken from the
- fable of Arachne in Ovid. JORTIN.
- * * * * *
- VISIONS
- OF
- THE WORLDS VANITIE.
- I.
- One day, whiles that my daylie cares did sleepe,
- My spirit, shaking off her earthly prison,
- Began to enter into meditation deepe
- Of things exceeding reach of common reason;
- Such as this age, in which all good is geason*,
- And all that humble is and meane** debaced,
- Hath brought forth in her last declining season,
- Griefe of good mindes, to see goodnesse disgraced!
- On which when as my thought was throghly@ placed,
- Unto my eyes strange showes presented were,
- Picturing that which I in minde embraced,
- That yet those sights empassion$ me full nere.
- Such as they were, faire Ladie%, take in worth,
- That when time serves may bring things better forth.
- [* _Geason_, rare.]
- [** _Meane_, lowly.]
- [@ _Throghly_, thoroughly.]
- [$ _Empassion_, move.]
- [% _Faire Ladie._ The names of the ladies to whom these Visions and
- those of Petrarch (see p. 210, VII. 9) were inscribed have not been
- preserved. C.]
- II.
- In summers day, when Phoebus fairly shone,
- I saw a Bull as white as driven snowe,
- With gilden hornes embowed like the moone,
- In a fresh flowring meadow lying lowe:
- Up to his eares the verdant grasse did growe,
- And the gay floures did offer to be eaten;
- But he with fatnes so did overflows,
- That he all wallowed in the weedes downe beaten,
- Ne car'd with them his daintie lips to sweeten:
- Till that a Brize*, a scorned little creature,
- Through his faire hide his angrie sting did threaten,
- And vext so sore, that all his goodly feature
- And all his plenteous pasture nought him pleased:
- So by the small the great is oft diseased**.
- III.
- Beside the fruitfull shore of muddie Nile,
- Upon a sunnie banke outstretched lay,
- In monstrous length, a mightie Crocodile,
- That, cram'd with guiltles blood and greedie pray
- Of wretched people travailing that way,
- Thought all things lesse than his disdainfull pride.
- I saw a little Bird, cal'd Tedula,
- The least of thousands which on earth abide,
- That forst this hideous beast to open wide
- The greisly gates of his devouring hell,
- And let him feede, as Nature doth provide,
- Upon his iawes, that with blacke venime swell.
- Why then should greatest things the least disdaine,
- Sith that so small so mightie can constraine?
- [* _Brize_, a gadfly.]
- [** _Diseased_, deprived of ease.]
- III. 7.--Tedula. Spenser appears to mean the bird Trochilos, which,
- according to Aristotle, enters the mouth of the crocodile, and picks her
- meat out of the monster's teeth. C.
- IV.
- The kingly bird that beares Ioves thunder-clap
- One day did scorne the simple Scarabee*,
- Proud of his highest service and good hap,
- That made all other foules his thralls to bee.
- The silly flie, that no redresse did see,
- Spide where the Eagle built his towring nest,
- And, kindling fire within the hollow tree,
- Burnt up his yong ones, and himselfe distrest;
- Ne suffred him in anie place to rest,
- But drove in Ioves owne lap his egs to lay;
- Where gathering also filth him to infest,
- Forst with the filth his egs to fling away:
- For which, when as the foule was wroth, said Iove,
- "Lo! how the least the greatest may reprove."
- V.
- Toward the sea turning my troubled eye,
- I saw the fish (if fish I may it cleepe**)
- That makes the sea before his face to flye,
- And with his flaggie finnes doth seeme to sweepe
- The fomie waves out of the dreadfull deep;
- The huge Leviathan, dame Natures wonder,
- Making his sport, that manie makes to weep.
- A Sword-fish small him from the rest did sunder
- That, in his throat him pricking softly under,
- His wide abysse him forced forth to spewe,
- That all the sea did roare like heavens thunder,
- And all the waves were stain'd with filthie hewe.
- Hereby I learned have not to despise
- Whatever thing seemes small in common eyes.
- [* _Scarabee,_ beetle.]
- [** _Cleepe,_ call.]
- VI.
- An hideous Dragon, dreadfull to behold,
- Whose backe was arm'd against the dint of speare
- With shields of brasse that shone like burnisht golde,
- And forkhed sting that death in it did beare,
- Strove with a Spider, his unequall peare,
- And bad defiance to his enemie.
- The subtill vermin, creeping closely* neare,
- Did in his drinke shed poyson privilie;
- Which, through his entrailes spredding diversly,
- Made him to swell, that nigh his bowells brust,
- And him enforst to yeeld the victorie,
- That did so much in his owne greatnesse trust.
- O, how great vainnesse is it then to scorne
- The weake, that hath the strong so oft forlorne!**
- [* _Closely,_ secretly.]
- [** _Forlorne,_ ruined.]
- VII.
- High on a hill a goodly Cedar grewe,
- Of wondrous length and straight proportion,
- That farre abroad her daintie odours threwe;
- Mongst all the daughters of proud Libanon,
- Her match in beautie was not anie one.
- Shortly within her inmost pith there bred
- A litle wicked worme, perceiv'd of none,
- That on her sap and vitall moysture fed:
- Thenceforth her garland so much honoured
- Began to die, O great ruth* for the same!
- And her faire lockes fell from her loftie head,
- That shortly balde and bared she became.
- I, which this sight beheld, was much dismayed,
- To see so goodly thing so soone decayed.
- [* _Ruth,_ pity.]
- VIII.
- Soone after this I saw an Elephant,
- Adorn'd with bells and bosses gorgeouslie,
- That on his backe did beare, as batteilant*,
- A gilden towre, which shone exceedinglie;
- That he himselfe through foolish vanitie,
- Both for his rich attire and goodly forme,
- Was puffed up with passing surquedrie**,
- And shortly gan all other beasts to scorne,
- Till that a little Ant, a silly worme,
- Into his nosthrils creeping, so him pained,
- That, casting downe his towres, he did deforme
- Both borrowed pride, and native beautie stained.
- Let therefore nought that great is therein glorie,
- Sith so small thing his happines may varie.
- [* _As batteilant,_ as if equipped for battle.]
- [** _Surquedrie,_ presumption.]
- IX.
- Looking far foorth into the ocean wide,
- A goodly Ship with banners bravely dight,
- And flag in her top-gallant, I espide
- Through the maine sea making her merry flight.
- Faire blewe the wind into her bosome right,
- And th'heavens looked lovely all the while,
- That she did seeme to daunce, as in delight,
- And at her owne felicitie did smile.
- All sodainely there clove unto her keele
- A little fish that men call Remora,
- Which stopt her course, and held her by the heele,
- That winde nor tide could move her thence away.
- Straunge thing me seemeth, that so small a thing
- Should able be so great an one to wring.
- X.
- A mighty Lyon, lord of all the wood,
- Having his hunger throughly satisfide
- With pray of beasts and spoyle of living blood,
- Safe in his dreadles den him thought to hide:
- His sternesse was his prayse, his strength his pride,
- And all his glory in his cruell clawes.
- I saw a Wasp, that fiercely him defide,
- And bad him battaile even to his iawes;
- Sore he him stong, that it the blood forth drawes,
- And his proude heart is fild with fretting ire:
- In vaine he threats his teeth, his tayle, his pawes,
- And from his bloodie eyes doth sparkle fire;
- That dead himselfe he wisheth for despight.
- So weakest may anoy the most of might!
- XI.
- What time the Romaine Empire bore the raine
- Of all the world, and florisht most in might,
- The nations gan their soveraigntie disdaine,
- And cast to quitt them from their bondage quight.
- So, when all shrouded were in silent night,
- The Galles were, by corrupting of a mayde,
- Possest nigh of the Capitol through slight,
- Had not a Goose the treachery bewrayde.
- If then a goose great Rome from ruine stayde,
- And Iove himselfe, the patron of the place,
- Preservd from being to his foes betrayde,
- Why do vaine men mean things so much deface*,
- And in their might repose their most assurance,
- Sith nought on earth can chalenge long endurance?
- [* _Deface,_ disparage, despise.]
- XII.
- When these sad sights were overpast and gone,
- My spright was greatly moved in her rest,
- With inward ruth and deare affection,
- To see so great things by so small distrest.
- Thenceforth I gan in my engrieved brest
- To scorne all difference of great and small,
- Sith that the greatest often are opprest,
- And unawares doe into daunger fall.
- And ye, that read these ruines tragicall,
- Learne, by their losse, to love the low degree;
- And if that Fortune chaunce you up to call
- To honours seat, forget not what you be:
- For he that of himselfe is most secure
- Shall finde his state most fickle and unsure.
- * * * * *
- THE
- VISIONS OF BELLAY.*
- [* Eleven of these Visions of Bellay (all except the 6th, 8th,
- 13th, and 14th) differ only by a few changes necessary for rhyme from
- blank-verse translations found in Van der Noodt's _Theatre of
- Worldlings_, printed in 1569; and the six first of the Visions of
- Petrarch (here said to have been "formerly translated") occur almost
- word for word in the same publication, where the authorship appears to
- be claimed by one Theodore Roest. The Complaints were collected, not by
- Spenser, but by Ponsonby, his bookseller, and he may have erred in
- ascribing these Visions to our poet. C.]
- I.
- It was the time when rest, soft sliding downe
- From heavens hight into mens heavy eyes,
- In the forgetfulnes of sleepe doth drowne
- The carefull thoughts of mortall miseries.
- Then did a ghost before mine eyes appeare,
- On that great rivers banck that runnes by Rome;
- Which, calling me by name, bad me to reare
- My lookes to heaven whence all good gifts do come,
- And crying lowd, "Loe! now beholde," quoth hee,
- "What under this great temple placed is:
- Lo, all is nought but flying vanitee!"
- So I, that know this worlds inconstancies,
- Sith onely God surmounts all times decay,
- In God alone my confidence do stay.
- II.
- On high hills top I saw a stately frame,
- An hundred cubits high by iust assize*,
- With hundreth pillours fronting faire the same,
- All wrought with diamond after Dorick wize.
- Nor brick nor marble was the wall in view,
- But shining christall, which from top to base
- Out of her womb a thousand rayons** threw
- On hundred steps of Afrike golds enchase.@
- Golde was the parget,$ and the seeling bright
- Did shine all scaly with great plates of golde;
- The floore of iasp and emeraude was dight.%
- O worlds vainesse! Whiles thus I did behold,
- An earthquake shooke the hill from lowest seat,
- And overthrew this frame with ruine great.
- [* _Assize_, measure.]
- [** _Rayons_, beams, rays.]
- [@ I.e. enchased with gold.]
- [$ _Parget_, varnish, plaster.]
- [% _Dight_, composed.]
- III.
- Then did a sharped spyre of diamond bright,
- Ten feete each way in square, appeare to mee,
- Iustly proportion'd up unto his hight,
- So far as archer might his level see.
- The top thereof a pot did seeme to beare,
- Made of the mettall which we most do honour;
- And in this golden vessel couched weare
- The ashes of a mightie emperour:
- Upon foure corners of the base were pight*,
- To beare the frame, foure great lyons of gold;
- A worthy tombe for such a worthy wight.
- Alas! this world doth nought but grievance hold:
- I saw a tempest from the heaven descend,
- Which this brave monument with flash did rend.
- [* _Pight_, placed.]
- IV.
- I saw raysde up on yvorie pillowes tall,
- Whose bases were of richest mettalls warke,
- The chapters* alablaster, the fryses christall,
- The double front of a triumphall arke.
- On each side purtraid was a Victorie,
- Clad like a nimph, that wings of silver weares,
- And in triumphant chayre was set on hie,
- The auncient glory of the Romaine peares.
- No worke it seem'd of earthly craftsmans wit,
- But rather wrought by his owne industry
- That thunder-dartes for Iove his syre doth fit.
- Let me no more see faire thing under sky,
- Sith that mine eyes have seene so faire a sight
- With sodain fall to dust consumed quight.
- [* _Chapters_, capitals.]
- V.
- Then was the faire Dodonian tree far seene
- Upon seaven hills to spread his gladsome gleame,
- And conquerours bedecked with his greene,
- Along the bancks of the Ausonian streame.
- There many an auncient trophee was addrest*,
- And many a spoyle, and many a goodly show,
- Which that brave races greatnes did attest,
- That whilome from the Troyan blood did flow.
- Ravisht I was so rare a thing to vew;
- When lo! a barbarous troupe of clownish fone**
- The honour of these noble boughs down threw:
- Under the wedge I heard the tronck to grone;
- And since, I saw the roote in great disdaine
- A twinne of forked trees send forth againe.
- [* _Addrest_, hung on, arranged.]
- [** _Fone_, foes.]
- VI.
- I saw a wolfe under a rockie cave
- Noursing two whelpes; I saw her litle ones
- In wanton dalliance the teate to crave,
- While she her neck wreath'd from them for the nones*.
- I saw her raunge abroad to seeke her food,
- And roming through the field with greedie rage
- T'embrew her teeth and clawes with lukewarm blood
- Of the small heards, her thirst for to asswage.
- I saw a thousand huntsmen, which descended
- Downe from the mountaines bordring Lombardie,
- That with an hundred speares her flank wide rened:
- I saw her on the plaine outstretched lie,
- Throwing out thousand throbs in her owne soyle**:
- Soone on a tree uphang'd I saw her spoyle.
- [* _Nones_, nonce.]
- [** I.e. the mire made by her blood.]
- VII.
- I saw the bird that can the sun endure
- With feeble wings assay to mount on hight;
- By more and more she gan her wings t'assure,
- Following th'ensample of her mothers sight.
- I saw her rise, and with a larger flight
- To pierce the cloudes, and with wide pinneons
- To measure the most haughtie* mountaines hight,
- Untill she raught** the gods owne mansions.
- There was she lost; when suddaine I behelde,
- Where, tumbling through the ayre in firie fold,
- All flaming downe she on the plaine was felde,
- And soone her bodie turn'd to ashes colde.
- I saw the foule that doth the light dispise
- Out of her dust like to a worme arise.
- [* _Haughtie_, lofty.]
- [** _Raught_, reached.]
- [VII. 1-14.--
- "A falcon, tow'ring in her pride of place,
- Was by a mousing owl hawk'd at and kill'd." C.]
- VIII.
- I saw a river swift, whose fomy billowes
- Did wash the ground-work of an old great wall;
- I saw it cover'd all with griesly shadowes,
- That with black horror did the ayre appall:
- Thereout a strange beast with seven heads arose,
- That townes and castles under her brest did coure*,
- And seem'd both milder beasts and fiercer foes
- Alike with equall ravine to devoure.
- Much was I mazde to see this monsters kinde
- In hundred formes to change his fearefull hew;
- When as at length I saw the wrathfull winde,
- Which blows cold storms, burst out of Scithian mew,
- That sperst these cloudes; and, in so short as thought,
- This dreadfull shape was vanished to nought.
- [* _Coure_, cover.]
- IX.
- Then all astonied with this mighty ghoast,
- An hideous bodie, big and strong, I sawe,
- With side* long beard, and locks down hanging loast**,
- Sterne face, and front full of Satúrnlike awe;
- Who, leaning on the belly of a pot,
- Pourd foorth a water, whose out gushing flood
- Ran bathing all the creakie@ shore aflot,
- Whereon the Troyan prince spilt Turnus blood;
- And at his feete a bitch wolfe suck did yeeld
- To two young babes: his left the palme tree stout,
- His right hand did the peacefull olive wield.
- And head with lawrell garnisht was about.
- Sudden both palme and olive fell away,
- And faire green lawrell branch did quite decay.
- [* _Side_, long, trailing.]
- [** _Loast_, loosed.]
- [@ _Creakie_, indented with creeks.]
- X.
- Hard by a rivers side a virgin faire,
- Folding her armes to heaven with thousand throbs,
- And outraging her cheekes and golden haire,
- To falling rivers sound thus tun'd her sobs.
- "Where is," quoth she, "this whilom honoured face?
- Where the great glorie and the auncient praise,
- In which all worlds felicitie had place,
- When gods and men my honour up did raise?
- Suffisd' it not that civill warres me made
- The whole worlds spoile, but that this Hydra new,
- Of hundred Hercules to be assaide,
- With seven heads, budding monstrous crimes anew,
- So many Neroes and Caligulaes
- Out of these crooked shores must dayly rayse?"
- XI.
- Upon an hill a bright flame I did see,
- Waving aloft with triple point to skie,
- Which, like incense of precious cedar tree,
- With balmie odours fil'd th'ayre farre and nie.
- A bird all white, well feathered on each wing,
- Hereout up to the throne of gods did flie,
- And all the way most pleasant notes did sing,
- Whilst in the smoake she unto heaven did stie*.
- Of this faire fire the scattered rayes forth threw
- On everie side a thousand shining beames:
- When sudden dropping of a silver dew
- (O grievous chance!) gan quench those precious flames;
- That it, which earst** so pleasant sent did yeld,
- Of nothing now but noyous sulphure smeld.
- [* _Stie_, mount.]
- [** _Earst_, at first.]
- XII.
- I saw a spring out of a rocke forth rayle*,
- As cleare as christall gainst the sunnie beames;
- The bottome yeallow, like the golden grayle*
- That bright Pactolus washeth with his streames.
- It seem'd that Art and Nature had assembled
- All pleasure there for which mans hart could long;
- And there a noyse alluring sleepe soft trembled,
- Of manie accords, more sweete than mermaids song,
- The seates and benches shone as yvorie,
- And hundred nymphes sate side by side about;
- When from nigh hills, with hideous outcrie,
- A troupe of satyres in the place did rout,@
- Which with their villeine feete the streame did ray,$
- Threw down the seats, and drove the nymphs away.
- [* _Rayle_, flow.]
- [** _Grayle_, gravel.]
- [@ _Rout_, burst.]
- [$ _Ray_, defile.]
- XIII.
- Much richer then that vessell seem'd to bee
- Which did to that sad Florentine appeare,
- Casting mine eyes farre off, I chaunst to see
- Upon the Latine coast herselfe to reare.
- But suddenly arose a tempest great,
- Bearing close envie to these riches rare,
- Which gan assaile this ship with dreadfull threat,
- This ship, to which none other might compare:
- And finally the storme impetuous
- Sunke up these riches, second unto none,
- Within the gulfe of greedie Nereus.
- I saw both ship and mariners each one,
- And all that treasure, drowned in the maine:
- But I the ship saw after raisd' againe.
- [XIII. 1.--_That vessell_. See the second canto of the Purgatorio. C.]
- XIV.
- Long having deeply gron'd these visions sad,
- I saw a citie like unto that same
- Which saw the messenger of tidings glad,
- But that on sand was built the goodly frame:
- It seem'd her top the firmament did rayse,
- And, no lesse rich than faire, right worthie sure
- (If ought here worthie) of immortall dayes,
- Or if ought under heaven might firme endure.
- Much wondred I to see so faire a wall:
- When from the Northerns coast a storme arose,
- Which, breathing furie from his inward gall
- On all which did against his course oppose,
- Into a clowde of dust sperst in the aire
- The weake foundations of this citie faire.
- XV.
- At length, even at the time when Morpheus
- Most trulie doth unto our eyes appeare,
- Wearie to see the heavens still wavering thus,
- I saw Typhaeus sister* comming neare;
- Whose head, full bravely with a morion** hidd,
- Did seeme to match the gods in maiestie.
- She, by a rivers bancke that swift downe slidd,
- Over all the world did raise a trophee hie;
- An hundred vanquisht kings under her lay,
- With armes bound at their backs in shamefull wize.
- Whilst I thus mazed was with great affray,
- I saw the heavens in warre against her rize:
- Then downe she stricken fell with clap of thonder,
- That with great noyse I wakte in sudden wonder.
- [* I.e. (apparently) Change or Mutability. See the two cantos of the
- Seventh Book of the Faerie Queene.]
- [** _Morion_, steel cap.]
- * * * * *
- THE VISIONS OF PETRARCH:
- FORMERLY TRANSLATED.
- [Footnote: The first six of these sonnets are translated (not directly,
- but through the French of Clement Marot) from Petrarch's third Canzone
- in Morte di Laura. The seventh is by the translator. The circumstance
- that the version is made from Marot renders it probable that these
- sonnets are really by Spenser. C.]
- I.
- Being one day at my window all alone,
- So manie strange things happened me to see,
- As much it grieveth me to thinke thereon.
- At my right hand a hynde appear'd to mee.
- So faire as mote the greatest god delite;
- Two eager dogs did her pursue in chace,
- Of which the one was blacke, the other white.
- With deadly force so in their cruell race
- They pincht the haunches of that gentle beast,
- That at the last, and in short time, I spide,
- Under a rocke, where she, alas! opprest,
- Fell to the ground, and there untimely dide.
- Cruell death vanquishing so noble beautie,
- Oft makes me wayle so hard a destenie.
- II.
- After, at sea a tall ship did appeare,
- Made all of heben* and white yvorie;
- The sailes of golde, of silke the tackle were.
- Milde was the winde, calme seem'd the sea to bee,
- The skie eachwhere did show full bright and faire:
- With rich treasures this gay ship fraighted was:
- But sudden storme did so turmoyle the aire,
- And tumbled up the sea, that she, alas!
- Strake on a rock, that under water lay,
- And perished past all recoverie.
- O! how great ruth, and sorrow-full assay**,
- Doth vex my spirite with perplexitie,
- Thus in a moment to see lost and drown'd
- So great riches as like cannot be found.
- [* _Heben_, ebony.]
- [** _Assay_, trial.]
- III.
- The heavenly branches did I see arise
- Out of the fresh and lustie lawrell tree,
- Amidst the yong greene wood: of Paradise
- Some noble plant I thought my selfe to see.
- Such store of birds therein yshrowded were,
- Chaunting in shade their sundrie melodie,
- That with their sweetnes I was ravish't nere.
- While on this lawrell fixed was mine eie,
- The skie gan everie where to overcast,
- And darkned was the welkin all about,
- When sudden flash of heavens fire out brast*,
- And rent this royall tree quite by the roote;
- Which makes me much and ever to complaine,
- For no such shadow shalbe had againe.
- [* _Brast_, burst.]
- IV.
- Within this wood, out of a rocke did rise
- A spring of water, mildly rumbling downe,
- Whereto approched not in anie wise
- The homely shepheard, nor the ruder clowne;
- But manie Muses, and the Nymphes withall,
- That sweetly in accord did tune their voyce
- To the soft sounding of the waters fall;
- That my glad hart thereat did much reioyce.
- But, while herein I tooke my chiefe delight,
- I saw, alas! the gaping earth devoure
- The spring, the place, and all cleane out of sight;
- Which yet aggreeves my hart even to this houre,
- And wounds my soule with rufull memorie,
- To see such pleasures gon so suddenly.
- V.
- I saw a Phoenix in the wood alone,
- With purple wings and crest of golden hewe;
- Strange bird he was, whereby I thought anone
- That of some heavenly wight I had the vewe;
- Untill he came unto the broken tree,
- And to the spring that late devoured was.
- What say I more? Each thing at last we see
- Doth passe away: the Phoenix there, alas!
- Spying the tree destroid, the water dride,
- Himselfe smote with his beake, as in disdaine,
- And so foorthwith in great despight he dide;
- That yet my heart burnes in exceeding paine
- For ruth and pitie of so haples plight.
- O, let mine eyes no more see such a sight!
- VI.
- At last, so faire a ladie did I spie,
- That thinking yet on her I burne and quake:
- On hearbs and flowres she walked pensively;
- Milde, but yet love she proudly did forsake:
- White seem'd her robes, yet woven so they were
- As snow and golde together had been wrought:
- Above the wast a darke clowde shrouded her.
- A stinging serpent by the heele her caught;
- Wherewith she languisht as the gathered floure,
- And, well assur'd, she mounted up to ioy.
- Alas! on earth so nothing doth endure,
- But bitter griefe and sorrowfull annoy:
- Which make this life wretched and miserable.
- Tossed with stormes of fortune variable.
- VII.
- When I behold this tickle* trustles state
- Of vaine worlds glorie, flitting too and fro,
- And mortall men tossed by troublous fate
- In restles seas of wretchednes and woe,
- I wish I might this wearie life forgoe,
- And shortly turne unto my happie rest,
- Where my free spirite might not anie moe
- Be vest with sights that doo her peace molest.
- And ye, faire Ladie, in whose bounteous brest
- All heavenly grace and vertue shrined is,
- When ye these rythmes doo read, and vew the rest,
- Loath this base world, and thinke of heavens blis:
- And though ye be the fairest of Gods creatures,
- Yet thinke that death shall spoyle your goodly features.
- [* _Tickle_, uncertain.]
- * * * * *
- DAPHNAIDA:
- AN ELEGIE
- UPON THE DEATH OF THE NOBLE AND VERTUOUS
- DOUGLAS HOWARD,
- DAUGHTER AND HEIRE OF HENRY LORD HOWARD, VISCOUNT
- BYNDON, AND WIFE OF ARTHUR GORGES, ESQUIER.
- DEDICATED TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE
- THE LADIE HELENA,
- MARQUESSE OF NORTHAMPTON.
- BY ED. SP.
- (1591.)
- TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE AND VERTUOUS LADY,
- HELENA,
- MARQUESSE OF NORTH HAMPTON.[*]
- I have the rather presumed humbly to offer unto your Honour the
- dedication of this little poeme, for that the noble and vertuous
- gentlewoman of whom it is written was by match neere alied, and in
- affection greatly devoted, unto your Ladiship. The occasion why I wrote
- the same was as well the great good fame which I heard of her deceassed,
- as the particular goodwill which I bear unto her husband, Master Arthur
- Gorges, a lover of learning and vertue, whose house, as your Ladiship by
- marriage hath honoured, so doe I find the name of them, by many notable
- records, to be of great antiquitie in this realme, and such as have ever
- borne themselves with honourable reputation to the world, and unspotted
- loyaltie to their prince and countrey: besides, so lineally are they
- descended from the Howards, as that the Lady Anne Howard; eldest
- daughter to John Duke of Norfolke, was wife to Sir Edmund, mother to Sir
- Edward, and grandmother to Sir William and Sir Thomas Gorges, Knightes:
- and therefore I doe assure my selfe that no due honour done to the White
- Lyon, but will be most gratefull to your Ladiship, whose husband and
- children do so neerely participate with the bloud of that noble family.
- So in all dutie I recommend this pamphlet, and the good acceptance
- thereof, to your honourable favour and protection. London, this first of
- Ianuarie, 1591.
- Your Honours humbly ever.
- [* This lady, when widow of William Parr, the only person who was ever
- Marquis of Northampton, had married Sir Thomas Gorges, uncle of Lady
- Douglas Howard, the subject of this elegy. Mr. (afterwards Sir) Arthur
- Gorges was himself a poet, and the author of the English translation of
- Bacon's tract _De Sapientia Veterum_, published in 1619. See Craik's
- Spenser and his Poetry, Vol. III. p. 187. C.]
- * * * * *
- DAPHNAIDA.
- Whatever man he be whose heavie mynd,
- With griefe of mournefull great mishap opprest,
- Fit matter for his cares increase would fynd,
- Let reade the rufull plaint herein exprest,
- Of one, I weene, the wofulst man alive,
- Even sad Alcyon*, whose empierced brest
- Sharpe sorrowe did in thousand peeces rive.
- [* I.e. Sir Arthur Gorges.]
- But whoso else in pleasure findeth sense,
- Or in this wretched life doeth take delight,
- Let him he banisht farre away from hence; 10
- Ne let the Sacred Sisters here be hight*,
- Though they of sorrowe heavilie can sing,
- For even their heavie song would breede delight;
- But here no tunes save sobs and grones shall ring.
- [* _Hight_, summoned.]
- In stead of them and their sweet harmonie, 15
- Let those three Fatall Sisters, whose sad hands
- Doe weave the direfull threeds of destinie,
- And in their wrath break off the vitall bands,
- Approach hereto; and let the dreadfull Queene
- Of Darknes deepe come from the Stygian strands, 20
- And grisly ghosts, to heare this dolefull teene*,
- [* _Teene_, sorrow]
- In gloomy evening, when the wearie sun
- After his dayes long labour drew to rest,
- And sweatie steedes, now having overrun
- The compast skie, gan water in the west, 25
- I walkt abroad to breath the freshing ayre
- In open fields, whose flowring pride, opprest
- With early frosts, had lost their beautie faire.
- There came unto my mind a troublous thought,
- Which dayly doth my weaker wit possesse, 30
- Ne lets it rest untill it forth have brought
- Her long borne infant, fruit of heavinesse,
- Which she conceived hath through meditation
- Of this worlds vainnesse and life's wretchednesse,
- That yet my soule it deepely doth empassion*. 35
- [* _Empassion_, move]
- So as I muzed on the miserie
- In which men live, and I of many most,
- Most miserable man, I did espie
- Where towards me a sory wight did cost*,
- Clad all in black, that mourning did bewray, 40
- And Iacob staffe ** in hand devoutly crost,
- Like to some pilgrim come from farre away.
- [* _Cost_, approach]
- [** _Iacob staffe_, a pilgrim's staff, in the form of a cross]
- His carelesse locks, uncombed and unshorne,
- Hong long adowne, and bearde all overgrowne,
- That well he seemd to be some wight forlorne: 45
- Downe to the earth his heavie eyes were throwne,
- As loathing light, and ever as he went
- He sighed soft, and inly deepe did grone,
- As if his heart in peeces would have rent.
- Approaching nigh his face I vewed nere, 50
- And by the semblant of his countenaunce
- Me seemd I had his person seene elsewhere,
- Most like Alcyon seeming at a glaunce;
- Alcyon he, the iollie shepheard swaine,
- That wont full merrilie to pipe and daunce, 55
- And fill with pleasance every wood and plaine.
- Yet halfe in doubt, because of his disguize,
- I softlie sayd, Alcyon! There-withall
- He lookt aside as in disdainefull wise,
- Yet stayed not, till I againe did call: 60
- Then, turning back, he saide, with hollow sound,
- "Who is it that dooth name me, wofull thrall,
- The wretchedst man that treads this day on ground?"
- "One whom like wofulnesse, impressed deepe,
- Hath made fit mate thy wretched case to heare, 65
- And given like cause with thee to waile and wepe;
- Griefe finds some ease by him that like does beare.
- Then stay, Alcyon, gentle shepheard! stay,"
- Quoth I, "till thou have to my trustie eare
- Committed what thee dooth so ill apay*." 70
- [* _Ill apay _, discontent, distress.]
- "Cease, foolish man!" saide he halfe wrothfully,
- "To seeke to heare that which cannot be told;
- For the huge anguish, which doeth multiply
- My dying paines, no tongue can well unfold;
- Ne doo I care that any should bemone 75
- My hard mishap, or any weepe that would,
- But seeke alone to weepe, and dye alone."
- "Then be it so," quoth I, "that thou are bent
- To die alone, unpitied, unplained;
- Yet, ere thou die, it were convenient 80
- To tell the cause which thee thereto constrained,
- Least that the world thee dead accuse of guilt,
- And say, when thou of none shall be maintained,
- That thou for secret crime thy blood hast spilt."
- "Who life does loath, and longs to be unbound 85
- From the strong shackles of fraile flesh," quoth he,
- "Nought cares at all what they that live on ground
- Deem the occasion of his death to bee;
- Rather desires to be forgotten quight,
- Than question made of his calamitie; 90
- For harts deep sorrow hates both life and light.
- "Yet since so much thou seemst to rue my griefe,
- And car'st for one that for himselfe cares nought,
- (Sign of thy love, though nought for my reliefe,
- For my reliefe exceedeth living thought,) 95
- I will to thee this heavie case relate:
- Then harken well till it to end be brought,
- For never didst thou heare more haplesse fate.
- "Whilome I usde (as thou right well doest know)
- My little flocke on westerns downes to keep, 100
- Not far from whence Sabrinaes streame doth flow,
- And flowrie bancks with silver liquor steepe;
- Nought carde I then for worldly change or chaunce,
- For all my ioy was on my gentle sheepe,
- And to my pype to caroll and to daunce. 105
- "It there befell, as I the fields did range
- Fearlesse and free, a faire young Lionesse,
- White as the native rose before the chaunge
- Which Venus blood did in her leaves impresse,
- I spied playing on the grassie plaine 110
- Her youthfull sports and kindlie wantonnesse,
- That did all other beasts in beawtie staine.
- [Ver. 107.--_A fair young Lionesse,_ So called from the white lion in
- the arms of the Duke of Norfolk, the head of the family to which Lady
- Douglas Howard belonged. H.]
- "Much was I moved at so goodly sight,
- Whose like before mine eye had seldome seene,
- And gan to cast how I her compasse might, 115
- And bring to hand that yet had never beene:
- So well I wrought with mildnes and with paine,
- That I her caught disporting on the greene,
- And brought away fast bound with silver chaine.
- "And afterwardes I handled her so fayre, 120
- That though by kind shee stout and salvage were,
- For being borne an auncient lions hayre,
- And of the race that all wild beastes do feare,
- Yet I her fram'd, and wan so to my bent,
- That shee became so meeke and milde of cheare 125
- As the least lamb in all my flock that went.
- "For shee in field, where-ever I did wend,
- Would wend with me, and waite by me all day;
- And all the night that I in watch did spend,
- If cause requir'd, or els in sleepe, if nay, 130
- Shee would all night by me or watch or sleepe;
- And evermore when I did sleepe or play,
- She of my flock would take full warie keepe*.
- [* _Keepe_, care.]
- "Safe then, and safest, were my sillie sheepe,
- Ne fear'd the wolfe, ne fear'd the wildest beast, 135
- All* were I drown'd in carelesse quiet deepe:
- My lovely Lionesse without beheast
- So careful was for them and for my good,
- That when I waked, neither most nor least
- I found miscarried, or in plaine or wood. 140
- [* _All_, although.]
- "Oft did the shepheards which my hap did heare,
- And oft their lasses, which my luck envyde,
- Daylie resort to me from farre and neare,
- To see my Lyonesse, whose praises wyde
- Were spred abroad; and when her worthinesse 145
- Much greater than the rude report they tryde*,
- They her did praise, and my good fortune blesse.
- [* _Tryde_, proved, found.]
- "Long thus I ioyed in my happinesse,
- And well did hope my ioy would have no end;
- But oh! fond man! that in worlds ficklenesse 150
- Reposedst hope, or weenedst Her thy frend
- That glories most in mortall miseries,
- And daylie doth her changefull counsels bend
- To make new matter fit for tragedies.
- "For whilest I was thus without dread or dout, 155
- A cruel Satyre with his murdrous dart,
- Greedie of mischiefe, ranging all about,
- Gave her the fatall wound of deadly smart,
- And reft from me my sweete companion,
- And reft from me my love, my life, my hart: 160
- My Lyonesse, ah woe is me! is gon!
- "Out of the world thus was she reft away,
- Out of the world, unworthy such a spoyle,
- And borne to heaven, for heaven a fitter pray;
- Much fitter then the lyon which with toyle 165
- Alcides slew, and fixt in firmament;
- Her now I seeke throughout this earthly soyle,
- And seeking misse, and missing doe lament."
- Therewith he gan afresh to waile and weepe,
- That I for pittie of his heavie plight 170
- Could not abstain mine eyes with teares to steepe;
- But when I saw the anguish of his spright
- Some deale alaid, I him bespake againe:
- "Certes, Alcyon, painfull is thy plight,
- That it in me breeds almost equall paine, 175
- "Yet doth not my dull wit well understand
- The riddle of thy loved Lionesse;
- For rare it seemes in reason to be skand,
- That man, who doth the whole worlds rule possesse,
- Should to a beast his noble hart embase, 180
- And be the vassall of his vassalesse;
- Therefore more plain areade* this doubtfull case."
- [* _Areade_, explain.]
- Then sighing sore, "Daphne thou knew'st," quoth he;
- "She now is dead": no more endur'd to say,
- But fell to ground for great extremitie; 185
- That I, beholding it, with deepe dismay
- Was much apald, and, lightly him uprearing,
- Revoked life, that would have fled away,
- All were my selfe through grief in deadly drearing*.
- [* _Drearing_, sorrowing.]
- Then gan I him to comfort all my best, 190
- And with milde counsaile strove to mitigate
- The stormie passion of his troubled brest;
- But he thereby was more empassionate,
- As stubborne steed that is with curb restrained
- Becomes more fierce and fervent in his gate, 195
- And, breaking foorth at last, thus dearnely* plained:
- [* _Dearnely_, sadly.]
- I.
- "What man henceforth that breatheth vitall aire
- Will honour Heaven, or heavenly powers adore,
- Which so uniustly doth their iudgements share
- Mongst earthly wights, as to afflict so sore 200
- The innocent as those which do transgresse,
- And doe not spare the best or fairest more
- Than worst or foulest, but doe both oppresse?
- "If this be right, why did they then create
- The world so faire, sith fairenesse is neglected? 205
- Or why be they themselves immaculate,
- If purest things be not by them respected?
- She faire, she pure, most faire, most pure she was,
- Yet was by them as thing impure reiected;
- Yet she in purenesse heaven it self did pas. 210
- "In purenesse, and in all celestiall grace
- That men admire in goodly womankind,
- She did excell, and seem'd of angels race,
- Living on earth like angell new divinde*,
- Adorn'd with wisedome and with chastitie, 215
- And all the dowries of a noble mind,
- Which did her beautie much more beautifie.
- [* _Divinde_, deified.]
- "No age hath bred (since faire Astræa left
- The sinfull world) more vertue in a wight;
- And, when she parted hence, with her she reft 220
- Great hope, and robd her race of bounty* quight.
- Well may the shepheard lasses now lament;
- For doubble losse by her hath on them light,
- To loose both her and bounties ornament.
- [* _Bounty_, goodness.]
- "Ne let Elisa, royall shepheardesse, 225
- The praises of my parted* love envy,
- For she hath praises in all plenteousnesse
- Powr'd upon her, like showers of Castaly,
- By her owne shepheard, Colin, her own shepheard,
- That her with heavenly hymnes doth deifie, 230
- Of rusticke Muse full hardly to be betterd.
- [* _Parted_, departed.]
- "She is the rose, the glory of the day,
- And mine the primrose in the lowly shade:
- Mine? ah, not mine! amisse I mine did say:
- Not mine, but His which mine awhile her made; 235
- Mine to be-his, with him to live for ay.
- O that so faire a flowre so soon should fade,
- And through untimely tempest fall away!
- "She fell away in her first ages spring,
- Whilst yet her leafe was greene, and fresh her rinde;
- And whilst her braunch faire blossomes foorth did bring, 241
- She fell away against all course of kinde*.
- For age to dye is right, but youth is wrong;
- She fell away like fruit blowne down with winde.
- Weepe, Shepheard! weepe, to make my undersong**.
- [* _Kinde_, nature.]
- [** _Undersong_, accompaniment.]
- II.
- "What hart so stonie hard but that would weepe.
- And poure forth fountaines of incessant teares?
- What Timon but would let compassion creepe
- Into his breast, and pierce his frosen eares?
- In stead of teares, whose brackish bitter well 250
- I wasted have, my heart bloud dropping weares,
- To think to ground how that faire blossome fell.
- "Yet fell she not as one enforst to dye,
- Ne dyde with dread and grudging discontent,
- But as one toyld with travell downe doth lye, 255
- So lay she downe, as if to sleepe she went,
- And closde her eyes with carelesse quietriesse;
- The whiles soft death away her spirit hent*,
- And soule assoyld** from sinfull fleshlinesse.
- [* _Hent_, took]
- [** _Assoyld_, absolved.]
- "Yet ere that life her lodging did forsake, 260
- She, all resolv'd, and readie to remove,
- Calling to me (ay me!) this wise bespake;
- 'Alcyon! ah, my first and latest love!
- Ah! why does my Alcyon weepe and mourne,
- And grieve my ghost, that ill mote him behove, 265
- As if to me had chaunst some evill tourne!
- "'I, since the messenger is come for mee
- That summons soules unto the bridale feast
- Of his great Lord, must needs depart from thee,
- And straight obay his soveraine beheast; 270
- Why should Alcyon then so sore lament
- That I from miserie shall be releast,
- And freed from wretched long imprisonment!
- "'Our daies are full of dolour and disease.
- Our life afflicted with incessant paine, 275
- That nought on earth may lessen or appease;
- Why then should I desire here to remaine!
- Or why should he that loves me sorrie bee
- For my deliverance, or at all complaine
- My good to heare, and toward* ioyes to see! 280
- [* _Toward,_ preparing, near at hand.]
- "'I goe, and long desired have to goe;
- I goe with gladnesse to my wished rest,
- Whereas* no worlds sad care nor wasting woe
- May come, their happie quiet to molest;
- But saints and angels in celestiall thrones 285
- Eternally Him praise that hath them blest;
- There shall I be amongst those blessed ones.
- [* _Whereas,_ where.]
- "'Yet, ere I goe, a pledge I leave with thee
- Of the late love the which betwixt us past;
- My young Ambrosia; in lieu of mee, 290
- Love her; so shall our love for ever last.
- Thus, deare! adieu, whom I expect ere long.'--
- So having said, away she softly past;
- Weepe, Shepheard! weepe, to make mine undersong.
- III.
- "So oft as I record those piercing words, 295
- Which yet are deepe engraven in my brest,
- And those last deadly accents, which like swords
- Did wound my heart and rend my bleeding chest,
- With those sweet sugred speeches doe compare
- The which my soul first conquerd and possest, 300
- The first beginners of my endlesse care,
- "And when those pallid cheekes and ashe hew,
- In which sad Death his pourtraiture had writ,
- And when those hollow eyes and deadly view,
- On which the cloud of ghastly night did sit, 305
- I match, with that sweete smile and chearful brow,
- Which all the world subdued unto it,
- How happie was I then, and wretched now!
- "How happie was I when I saw her leade
- The shepheards daughters dauncing in a rownd! 310
- How trimly would she trace* and softly tread
- The tender grasse, with rosye garland crownd!
- And when she list advaunce her heavenly voyce,
- Both Nymphes and Muses nigh she made astownd,
- And flocks and shepheards caused to reioyce. 315
- [* _Trace_, step]
- "But now, ye shepheard lasses! who shall lead
- Your wandring troupes, or sing your virelayes*?
- Or who shall dight** your bowres, sith she is dead
- That was the lady of your holy-dayes?
- Let now your blisse be turned into bale, 320
- And into plaints convert your ioyous playes,
- And with the same fill every hill and dale.
- [* _Virelayes_, roundelays.]
- [** _Dight_, deck.]
- "Let bagpipe never more be heard to shrill,
- That may allure the senses to delight,
- Ne ever shepheard sound his oaten quill 325
- Unto the many*, that provoke them might
- To idle pleasance; but let ghastlinesse
- And drearie horror dim the chearfull light,
- To make the image of true heavinesse.
- [* _Many_, company.]
- "Let birds be silent on the naked spray, 330
- And shady woods resound with dreadfull yells;
- Let streaming floods their hastie courses stay,
- And parching drouth drie up the cristall wells;
- Let th'earth be barren, and bring foorth no flowres,
- And th'ayre be fild with noyse of dolefull knells, 335
- And wandring spirits walke untimely howres.
- "And Nature, nurse of every living thing,
- Let rest her selfe from her long wearinesse,
- And cease henceforth things kindly forth to bring,
- But hideous monsters full of uglinesse; 340
- For she it is that hath me done this wrong;
- No nurse, but stepdame cruell, mercilesse.
- Weepe, Shepheard! weepe, to make my undersong.
- IV.
- "My little flock, whom earst I lov'd so well,
- And wont to feed with finest grasse that grew, 345
- Feede ye hencefoorth on bitter astrofell*,
- And stinking smallage, and unsaverie rew;
- And when your mawes are with those weeds corrupted,
- Be ye the pray of wolves; ne will I rew
- That with your carkasses wild beasts be glutted. 350
- [* _Astrofell_, (probably) starwort. See _Astrophel_, v. 184-196.]
- "Ne worse to you, my sillie sheepe, I pray,
- Ne sorer vengeance wish on you to fall
- Than to my selfe, for whose confusde decay**
- To carelesse heavens I doo daylie call;
- But heavens refuse to heare a wretches cry; 355
- And cruell Death doth scorn to come at call,
- Or graunt his boone that most desires to dye.
- [* _Decay_, destruction.]
- "The good and righteous he away doth take,
- To plague th'unrighteous which alive remaine;
- But the ungodly ones he doth forsake, 360
- By living long to multiplie their paine;
- Else surely death should be no punishment,
- As the Great Iudge at first did it ordaine,
- But rather riddance from long languishment.
- "Therefore, my Daphne they have tane away; 365
- For worthie of a better place was she:
- But me unworthie willed here to stay,
- That with her lacke I might tormented be.
- Sith then they so have ordred, I will pay
- Penance to her, according* their decree, 370
- And to her ghost doe service day by day.
- [* _According_, according to.]
- "For I will walke this wandring pilgrimage,
- Throughout the world from one to other end,
- And in affliction waste my better age:
- My bread shall be the anguish of my mynd, 375
- My drink the teares which fro mine eyes do raine,
- My bed the ground that hardest I may fynd;
- So will I wilfully increase my paine.
- "And she, my love that was, my saint that is,
- When she beholds from her celestiall throne 380
- (In which shee ioyeth in eternall blis)
- My bitter penance, will my case bemone,
- And pittie me that living thus doo die;
- For heavenly spirits have compassion
- On mortall men, and rue their miserie. 385
- "So when I have with sorrow satisfyde
- Th'importune Fates which vengeance on me seeks,
- And th'heavens with long languor pacifyde,
- She, for pure pitie of my sufferance meeke,
- Will send for me; for which I daily long, 390
- And will till then my painfull penance eeke,
- Weepe, Shepheard! weepe, to make my undersong.
- V.
- "Hencefoorth I hate whatever Nature made,
- And in her workmanship no pleasure finde,
- For they be all but vaine, and quickly fade 395
- So soone as on them blowes the northern winde;
- They tarrie not, but flit and fall away,
- Leaving behind them nought but griefe of minde,
- And mocking such as thinke they long will stay.
- "I hate the heaven, because it doth withhould 400
- Me from my love, and eke my love from me;
- I hate the earth, because it is the mould
- Of fleshly slime and fraile mortalitie;
- I hate the fire, because to nought it flyes;
- I hate the ayre, because sighes of it be; 405
- I hate the sea, because it teares supplyes.
- "I hate the day, because it lendeth light
- To see all things, and not my love to see;
- I hate the darknesse and the dreary night,
- Because they breed sad balefulnesse in mee; 410
- I hate all times, because all times doo fly
- So fast away, and may not stayed bee,
- But as a speedie post that passeth by.
- "I hate to speake, my voyce is spent with crying;
- I hate to heare, lowd plaints have duld mine eares;
- I hate to tast, for food withholds my dying; 416
- I hate to see, mine eyes are dimd with teares;
- I hate to smell, no sweet on earth is left;
- I hate to feele, my flesh is numbd with feares:
- So all my senses from me are bereft. 420
- "I hate all men, and shun all womankinde;
- The one, because as I they wretched are;
- The other, for because I doo not finde
- My love with them, that wont to be their starre.
- And life I hate, because it will not last; 425
- And death I hate, because it life doth marre;
- And all I hate that is to come or past.
- "So all the world, and all in it I hate,
- Because it changeth ever to and fro,
- And never standeth in one certaine state, 430
- But, still unstedfast, round about doth goe
- Like a mill-wheele in midst of miserie,
- Driven with streames of wretchednesse and woe,
- That dying lives, and living still does dye.
- "So doo I live, so doo I daylie die, 435
- And pine away in selfe-consuming paine!
- Sith she that did my vitall powres supplie,
- And feeble spirits in their force maintaine,
- Is fetcht fro me, why seeke I to prolong
- My wearie daies in dolour and disdalne! 440
- Weepe, Shepheard! weepe, to make my undersong.
- IV.
- "Why doo I longer live in lifes despight,
- And doo not dye then in despight of death!
- Why doo I longer see this loathsome light,
- And doo in darknesse not abridge my breath, 445
- Sith all my sorrow should have end thereby,
- And cares finde quiet! Is it so uneath*
- To leave this life, or dolorous to dye?
- [* _Uneath_, difficult.]
- "To live I finde it deadly dolorous,
- For life drawes care, and care continuall woe; 450
- Therefore to dye must needes be ioyeous,
- And wishfull thing this sad life to forgoe.
- But I must stay; I may it not amend;
- My Daphne hence departing bad me so;
- She bad me stay, till she for me did send. 455
- "Yet, whilest I in this wretched vale doo stay,
- My wearie feete shall ever wandring be,
- That still I may be readie on my way
- When, as her messenger doth come for me;
- Ne will I rest my feete for feeblenesse, 460
- Ne will I rest my limmes for frailtie,
- Ne will I rest mine eyes for heavinesse.
- "But, as the mother of the gods, that sought
- For faire Euridyce, her daughter dere,
- Throughout the world, with wofull heavie thought,
- So will I travell whilest I tarrie heere, 466
- Ne will I lodge, ne will I ever lin*,
- Ne, when as drouping Titan draweth nere
- To loose his teeme, will I take up my inne**.
- [* _Lin_, cease.]
- [** _Inne_, lodging.]
- "Ne sleepe, the harbenger* of wearie wights, 470
- Shall ever lodge upon mine eye-lids more,
- Ne shall with rest refresh my fainting sprights,
- Nor failing force to former strength restore:
- But I will wake and sorrow all the night
- With Philumene*, my fortune to deplore; 475
- With Philumene, the partner of my plight.
- [* _Harbenger_, one who provides lodging or repose.]
- [** _Philumene_, Philomel.]
- "And ever as I see the starre to fall,
- And under ground to goe to give them light
- Which dwell in darknesse, I to mind will call
- How my faire starre, that shind on me so bright, 480
- Fell sodainly and faded under ground;
- Since whose departure, day is turnd to night,
- And night without a Venus starre is found.
- "But soon as day doth shew his deawie face,
- And cals foorth men unto their toylsome trade, 485
- I will withdraw me to some darkesome place,
- Or some dere* cave, or solitarie shade;
- There will I sigh, and sorrow all day long,
- And the huge burden of my cares unlade. 489
- Weepe, Shepheard! weepe, to make my undersong.
- [* Qu. _derne_, lonely? Or, _drere?_]
- VII.
- "Henceforth mine eyes shall never more behold
- Faire thing on earth, ne feed on false delight
- Of ought that framed is of mortall mould,
- Sith that my fairest flower is faded quight;
- For all I see is vaine and transitorie, 495
- Ne will be held in any stedfast plight,
- But in a moment loose their grace and glorie.
- "And ye, fond Men! on Fortunes wheele that ride,
- Or in ought under heaven repose assurance,
- Be it riches, beautie, or honours pride, 500
- Be sure that they shall have no long endurance,
- But ere ye be aware will flit away;
- For nought of them is yours, but th'only usance
- Of a small time, which none ascertains may.
- "And ye, true Lovers! whom desastrous chaunce, 505
- Hath farre exiled from your ladies grace,
- To mourne in sorrow and sad sufferauncc,
- When ye doe heare me in that desert place
- Lamenting loud my Daphnes elegie,
- Helpe me to waile my miserable case, 510
- And when life parts vouchsafe to close mine eye.
- "And ye, more happie Lovers! which enioy
- The presence of your dearest loves delight,
- "When ye doe heare my sorrowfull annoy,
- Yet pittie me in your empassiond spright, 515
- And thinke that such mishap as chaunst to me
- May happen unto the most happiest wight;
- For all mens states alike unstedfast be.
- "And ye, ray fellow Shepheards! which do feed
- Your carelesse flocks on hils and open plaines, 520
- With better fortune than did me succeed,
- Remember yet my undeserved paines;
- And when ye heare that I am dead or slaine,
- Lament my lot, and tell your fellow-swaines
- That sad Aleyon dyde in lifes disdaine. 525
- "And ye, faire Damsels! shepheards deare delights,
- That with your loves do their rude hearts possesse,
- When as my hearse shall happen to your sightes,
- Vouchsafe to deck the same with cyparesse;
- And ever sprinckle brackish teares among, 530
- In pitie of my undeserv'd distresse,
- The which, I, wretch, endured have thus long.
- "And ye, poore Pilgrims! that with restlesse toyle
- Wearie your selves in wandring desart wayes,
- Till that you come where ye your vowes assoyle*, 535
- When passing by ye reade these wofull layes
- On my grave written, rue my Daphnes wrong,
- And mourne for me that languish out my dayes.
- Cease, Shepheard! cease, and end thy undersong."
- [* _Assoyle_, absolve, pay.]
- Thus when he ended had his heavie plaint, 540
- The heaviest plaint that ever I heard sound,
- His cheekes wext pale, and sprights began to faint,
- As if againe he would have fallen to ground;
- Which when I saw, I, stepping to him light,
- Amooved* him out of his stonie swound, 545
- And gan him to recomfort as I might.
- [* _Amooved_, roused.]
- But he no waie recomforted would be,
- Nor suffer solace to approach him nie,
- But, casting up a sdeinfull eie at me,
- That in his traunce I would not let him lie, 550
- Did rend his haire, and beat his blubbred face,
- As one disposed wilfullie to die,
- That I sore griev'd to see his wretched case.
- Tho when the pang was somewhat overpast,
- And the outragious passion nigh appeased, 555
- I him desyrde, sith daie was overcast
- And darke night fast approched, to be pleased
- To turne aside unto my cabinet*,
- And staie with me, till he were better eased
- Of that strong stownd** which him so sore beset. 560
- [* _Cabinet_, cabin.]
- [** _Stownd_, mood, paroxysm of grief.]
- But by no meanes I could him win thereto,
- Ne longer him intreate with me to staie,
- But without taking leave he foorth did goe
- With staggring pace and dismall looks dismay,
- As if that Death he in the face had seene, 565
- Or hellish hags had met upon the way:
- But what of him became I cannot weene.
- * * * * *
- AMORETTI
- AND
- EPITHALAMION.
- WRITTEN NOT LONG SINCE BY
- EDMUNDE SPENSER.
- * * * * *
- PRINTED FOR WILLIAM POSBONBY.
- 1595.
- G. W. SENIOR*,
- TO THE AUTHOR.
- [* These commendatory Sonnets first appeared in the first folio edition
- of Spenser's entire works (1611). G. W., as Todd conjectures, may be
- George Whetstone. C.]
- Darke is the day when Phoebus face is shrowded,
- And weaker sights may wander soone astray;
- But when they see his glorious raies unclowded,
- With steddy steps they keepe the perfect way:
- So, while this Muse in forraine land doth stay,
- Invention weepes, and pennes are cast aside;
- The time, like night, deprivd of chearfull day;
- And few doe write, but ah! too soone may slide.
- Then his thee home, that art our perfect guide,
- And with thy wit illustrate Englands fame,
- Daunting therby our neighbors ancient pride,
- That do for Poesie challenge chiefest name:
- So we that live, and ages that succeed,
- With great applause thy learned works shall reed.
- * * * * *
- Ah! Colin, whether on the lowly plaine,
- Piping to shepheards thy sweet roundelayes,
- Or whether singing, in some loftie vaine,
- Heroicke deeds of past or present dayes,
- Or whether in thy lovely mistresse praise
- Thou list to exercise thy learned quill,
- Thy Muse hath got such grace and power to please,
- With rare invention, beautified by skill,
- As who therin can ever ioy their fill!
- O, therefore let that happy Muse proceed
- To clime the height of Vertues sacred hill,
- Where endlesse honour shal be made thy meed:
- Because no malice of succeeding dales
- Can rase those records of thy lasting praise.
- G. W. I[unior].
- * * * * *
- AMORETTI.[*]
- [* These Sonnets furnish us with a circumstantial and very interesting
- history of Spenser's second courtship, which, after many repulses, was
- successfully terminated by the marriage celebrated in the
- _Epithalamion_. As these poems were entered in the Stationers' Registers
- on the 19th of November, 1594, we may infer that they cover a period of
- time extending from the end of 1592 to the summer of 1594. It is
- possible, however, that these last dates may be a year too late, and
- that Spenser was married in 1593. We cannot be sure of the year, but we
- know, from the 266th verse of the Epithalamion, that the day was the
- feast of St. Barnabas, June 11 of the Old Style. In the 74th sonnet we
- are directly told that the lady's name was Elizabeth. In the 61st, she
- is said to be of the "Brood of Angels, heavenly born." From this and
- many similar expressions, interpreted by the laws of Anagram, and taken
- in conjunction with various circumstances which do not require to be
- stated here, it may be inferred that her surname was Nagle. C.]
- * * * * *
- I.
- Happy, ye leaves! when as those lilly hands
- Which hold my life in their dead-doing might
- Shall handle you, and hold in loves soft bands,
- Lyke captives trembling at the victors sight.
- And happy lines! on which, with starry light.
- Those lamping eyes will deigne sometimes to look,
- And reade the sorrowes of my dying spright,
- And happy rymes! bath'd in the sacred brooke
- Of Helicon, whence she derived is.
- When ye behold that Angels blessed looke,
- My soules long-lacked food, my heavens blis,
- Leaves, lines, and rymes, seeke her to please alone,
- Whom if ye please, I care for other none!
- II.
- Unquiet thought! whom at the first I bred
- Of th'inward bale of my love-pined hart,
- And sithens have with sighes and sorrowes fed,
- Till greater then my wombe thou woxen art,
- Breake forth at length out of the inner part,
- In which thou lurkest lyke to vipers brood,
- And seeke some succour both to ease my smart,
- And also to sustayne thy selfe with food.
- But if in presence of that fayrest Proud
- Thou chance to come, fall lowly at her feet;
- And with meek humblesse and afflicted mood
- Pardon for thee, and grace for me, intreat:
- Which if she graunt, then live, and my love cherish:
- If not, die soone, and I with thee will perish.
- III.
- The soverayne beauty which I doo admyre,
- Witnesse the world how worthy to be prayzed!
- The light wherof hath kindled heavenly fyre
- In my fraile spirit, by her from basenesse raysed;
- That being now with her huge brightnesse dazed,
- Base thing I can no more endure to view:
- But, looking still on her, I stand amazed
- At wondrous sight of so celestiall hew.
- So when my toung would speak her praises dew,
- It stopped is with thoughts astonishment;
- And when my pen would write her titles true,
- It ravisht is with fancies wonderment:
- Yet in my hart I then both speak and write
- The wonder that my wit cannot endite.
- IV.
- New yeare, forth looking out of Ianus gate,
- Doth seeme to promise hope of new delight,
- And, bidding th'old adieu, his passed date
- Bids all old thoughts to die in dumpish* spright;
- And calling forth out of sad Winters night
- Fresh Love, that long hath slept in cheerlesse bower,
- Wils him awake, and soone about him dight
- His wanton wings and darts of deadly power.
- For lusty Spring now in his timely howre
- Is ready to come forth, him to receive;
- And warns the Earth with divers colord flowre
- To decke hir selfe, and her faire mantle weave.
- Then you, faire flowre! in whom fresh youth doth raine,
- Prepare your selfe new love to entertaine.
- [l _Dumpish_, mournful.]
- V.
- Rudely thou wrongest my deare harts desire,
- In finding fault with her too portly pride:
- The thing which I doo most in her admire,
- Is of the world unworthy most envide.
- For in those lofty lookes is close implide
- Scorn of base things, and sdeigne of foul dishonor;
- Thretning rash eies which gaze on her so wide,
- That loosely they ne dare to looke upon her.
- Such pride is praise, such portlinesse is honor,
- That boldned innocence beares in hir eies,
- And her faire countenaunce, like a goodly banner,
- Spreds in defiaunce of all enemies.
- Was never in this world ought worthy tride*,
- Without some spark of such self-pleasing pride.
- [* _Tride_, found.]
- VI.
- Be nought dismayd that her unmoved mind
- Doth still persist in her rebellious pride:
- Such love, not lyke to lusts of baser kynd,
- The harder wonne, the firmer will abide.
- The durefull oake whose sap is not yet dride
- Is long ere it conceive the kindling fyre;
- But when it once doth burne, it doth divide
- Great heat, and makes his flames to heaven aspire.
- So hard it is to kindle new desire
- In gentle brest, that shall endure for ever:
- Deepe is the wound that dints the parts entire*
- With chaste affects, that naught but death can sever.
- Then thinke not long in taking litle paine
- To knit the knot that ever shall remaine.
- [* _Entire_, inward.]
- VII.
- Fayre eyes! the myrrour of my mazed hart,
- What wondrous vertue is contayn'd in you,
- The which both lyfe and death forth from you dart
- Into the obiect of your mighty view?
- For when ye mildly looke with lovely hew,
- Then is my soule with life and love inspired:
- But when ye lowre, or looke on me askew,
- Then do I die, as one with lightning fyred.
- But since that lyfe is more then death desyred,
- Looke ever lovely, as becomes you best;
- That your bright beams, of my weak eies admyred,
- May kindle living fire within my brest.
- Such life should be the honor of your light,
- Such death the sad ensample of your might.
- VIII
- More then most faire, full of the living fire
- Kindled above unto the Maker nere,
- No eies, but ioyes, in which al powers conspire,
- That to the world naught else be counted deare!
- Thrugh your bright beams doth not the blinded guest
- Shoot out his darts to base affections wound;
- But angels come, to lead fraile mindes to rest
- In chast desires, on heavenly beauty bound.
- You frame my thoughts, and fashion me within;
- You stop my toung, and teach my hart to speake;
- You calme the storme that passion did begin,
- Strong thrugh your cause, but by your vertue weak.
- Dark is the world where your light shined never;
- Well is he borne that may behold you ever.
- IX.
- Long-while I sought to what I might compare
- Those powrefull eies which lighten my dark spright;
- Yet find I nought on earth, to which I dare
- Resemble th'ymage of their goodly light.
- Not to the sun, for they doo shine by night;
- Nor to the moone, for they are changed never;
- Nor to the starres, for they have purer sight;
- Nor to the fire, for they consume not ever;
- Nor to the lightning, for they still persever;
- Nor to the diamond, for they are more tender;
- Nor unto cristall, for nought may them sever;
- Nor unto glasse, such basenesse mought offend her.
- Then to the Maker selfe they likest be,
- Whose light doth lighten all that here we see.
- X.
- Unrighteous Lord of love, what law is this,
- That me thou makest thus tormented be,
- The whiles she lordeth in licentious blisse
- Of her freewill, scorning both thee and me?
- See! how the Tyrannesse doth ioy to see
- The hugh massácres which her eyes do make,
- And humbled harts brings captive unto thee,
- That thou of them mayst mightie vengeance take.
- But her proud hart doe thou a little shake,
- And that high look, with which she doth comptroll
- All this worlds pride, bow to a baser make*,
- And al her faults in thy black booke enroll:
- That I may laugh at her in equall sort
- As she doth laugh at me, and makes my pain her sport.
- [* _Make_, mate.]
- XI.
- Dayly when I do seeke and sew for peace,
- And hostages doe offer for ray truth,
- She, cruell warriour, doth her selfe addresse
- To battell, and the weary war renew'th;
- Ne wilbe moov'd, with reason or with rewth*,
- To graunt small respit to my restlesse toile;
- But greedily her fell intent poursewth,
- Of my poore life to make unpittied spoile.
- Yet my poore life, all sorrowes to assoyle,
- I would her yield, her wrath to pacify;
- But then she seeks, with torment and turmoyle,
- To force me live, and will not let me dy.
- All paine hath end, and every war hafh peace;
- But mine, no price nor prayer may surcease.
- [* _Rewth_, ruth, pity.]
- XII.
- One day I sought with her hart-thrilling eies
- To make a truce, and termes to entertaine;
- All fearlesse then of so false enimies,
- Which sought me to entrap in treasons traine.
- So, as I then disarmed did remaine,
- A wicked ambush, which lay hidden long
- In the close covert of her guilful eyen,
- Thence breaking forth, did thick about me throng.
- Too feeble I t'abide the brunt so strong,
- Was forst to yield my selfe into their hands;
- Who, me captiving streight with rigorous wrong,
- Have ever since kept me in cruell bands.
- So, Ladie, now to you I doo complaine
- Against your eies, that iustice I may gaine.
- XIII.
- In that proud port which her so goodly graceth,
- Whiles her faire face she reares up to the skie,
- And to the ground her eie-lids low embaseth,
- Most goodly temperature ye may descry;
- Myld humblesse mixt with awful! maiestie.
- For, looking on the earth whence she was borne,
- Her minde remembreth her mortalitie,
- Whatso is fayrest shall to earth returne.
- But that same lofty countenance seemes to scorne
- Base thing, and thinke how she to heaven may clime;
- Treading downe earth as lothsome and forlorne,
- That hinders heavenly thoughts with drossy slime.
- Yet lowly still vouchsafe to looke on me;
- Such lowlinesse shall make you lofty be.
- XIV.
- Retourne agayne, my forces late dismayd,
- Unto the siege by you abandon'd quite.
- Great shame it is to leave, like one afrayd,
- So fayre a peece* for one repulse so light.
- 'Gaynst such strong castles needeth greater might
- Then those small forts which ye were wont belay**:
- Such haughty mynds, enur'd to hardy fight,
- Disdayne to yield unto the first assay.
- Bring therefore all the forces that ye may,
- And lay incessant battery to her heart;
- Playnts, prayers, vowes, ruth, sorrow, and dismay;
- Those engins can the proudest love convert:
- And, if those fayle, fall down and dy before her;
- So dying live, and living do adore her.
- [l _Peece_, fortress.]
- [** _Belay_, beleaguer.]
- XV.
- Ye tradefull Merchants, that, with weary toyle,
- Do seeke most pretious things to make your gain,
- And both the Indias of their treasure spoile,
- What needeth you to seeke so farre in vaine?
- For loe, my Love doth in her selfe containe
- All this worlds riches that may farre be found:
- If saphyres, loe, her eies be saphyres plaine;
- If rubies, loe, hir lips be rubies sound;
- If pearles, hir teeth be pearles, both pure and round;
- If yvorie, her forhead yvory weene;
- If gold, her locks are finest gold on ground;
- If silver, her faire hands are silver sheene:
- But that which fairest is but few behold:--
- Her mind adornd with vertues manifold.
- XVI.
- One day as I unwarily did gaze
- On those fayre eyes, my loves immortall light,
- The whiles my stonisht hart stood in amaze,
- Through sweet illusion of her lookes delight,
- I mote perceive how, in her glauncing sight,
- Legions of Loves with little wings did fly,
- Darting their deadly arrows, fyry bright,
- At every rash beholder passing by.
- One of those archers closely I did spy,
- Ayming his arrow at my very hart:
- When suddenly, with twincle of her eye,
- The damzell broke his misintended dart.
- Had she not so doon, sure I had bene slayne;
- Yet as it was, I hardly scap't with paine.
- XVII.
- The glorious pourtraict of that angels face,
- Made to amaze weake mens confused skil,
- And this worlds worthlesse glory to embase,
- What pen, what pencil!, can expresse her fill?
- For though he colours could devize at will,
- And eke his learned hand at pleasure guide,
- Least, trembling, it his workmanship should spill*,
- Yet many wondrous things there are beside:
- The sweet eye-glaunces, that like arrowes glide,
- The charming smiles, that rob sence from the hart,
- The lovely pleasance, and the lofty pride,
- Cannot expressed be by any art.
- A greater craftesmans hand thereto doth neede,
- That can expresse the life of things indeed.
- [l _Spill_, spoil.]
- XVIII.
- The rolling wheele that runneth often round,
- The hardest steele, in tract of time doth teare:
- And drizling drops, that often doe redound*,
- The firmest flint doth in continuance weare:
- Yet cannot I, with many a drooping teare
- And long intreaty, soften her hard hart,
- That she will once vouchsafe my plaint to heare,
- Or looke with pitty on my payneful smart.
- But when I pleade, she bids me play my part;
- And when I weep, she sayes, teares are but water;
- And when I sigh, she sayes, I know the art;
- And when I waile, she turnes hir selfe to laughter.
- So do I weepe, and wayle, and pleade in vaine,
- Whiles she as steele and flint doth still remayne.
- [* _Redound_, overflow.]
- XIX.
- The merry cuckow, messenger of Spring,
- His trompet shrill hath thrise already sounded.
- That warnes al lovers wayte upon their king,
- Who now is coming forth with girland crouned.
- With noyse whereof the quyre of byrds resounded
- Their anthemes sweet, devized of loves prayse,
- That all the woods theyr ecchoes back rebounded,
- As if they knew the meaning of their layes.
- But mongst them all which did Loves honor rayse,
- No word was heard of her that most it ought;
- But she his precept proudly disobayes,
- And doth his ydle message set at nought.
- Therefore, O Love, unlesse she turne to thee
- Ere cuckow end, let her a rebell be!
- XX.
- In vaine I seeke and sew to her for grace,
- And doe myne humbled hart before her poure,
- The whiles her foot she in my necke doth place,
- And tread my life downe in the lowly floure*.
- And yet the lyon, that is lord of power,
- And reigneth over every beast in field,
- In his most pride disdeigneth to devoure
- The silly lambe that to his might doth yield.
- But she, more cruell and more salvage wylde
- Than either lyon or the lyonesse,
- Shames not to be with guiltlesse bloud defylde,
- But taketh glory in her cruelnesse.
- Fayrer then fayrest! let none ever say
- That ye were blooded in a yeelded pray.
- [* _Floure_, floor, ground.]
- XXI.
- Was it the worke of Nature or of Art,
- Which tempred so the feature of her face,
- That pride and meeknesse, mist by equall part,
- Doe both appeare t'adorne her beauties grace?
- For with mild pleasance, which doth pride displace,
- She to her love doth lookers eyes allure;
- And with stern countenance back again doth chace
- Their looser lookes that stir up lustes impure.
- With such strange termes* her eyes she doth inure,
- That with one looke she doth my life dismay,
- And with another doth it streight recure:
- Her smile me drawes; her frowne me drives away.
- Thus doth she traine and teach me with her lookes;
- Such art of eyes I never read in bookes!
- [* _Termes_, extremes (?).]
- XXII.
- This holy season*, fit to fast and pray,
- Men to devotion ought to be inclynd:
- Therefore, I lykewise, on so holy day,
- For my sweet saynt some service fit will find.
- Her temple fayre is built within my mind,
- In which her glorious ymage placed is;
- On which my thoughts doo day and night attend,
- Lyke sacred priests that never thinke amisse.
- There I to her, as th'author of my blisse,
- Will builde an altar to appease her yre;
- And on the same my hart will sacrifise,
- Burning in flames of pure and chaste desyre:
- The which vouchsafe, O Goddesse, to accept,
- Amongst thy deerest relicks to be kept.
- [* I.e. Easter.]
- XXIII.
- Penelope, for her Ulisses sake,
- Deviz'd a web her wooers to deceave;
- In which the worke that she all day did make,
- The same at night she did againe unreave.
- Such subtile craft my damzell doth conceave,
- Th'importune suit of my desire to shonne:
- For all that I in many dayes do weave,
- In one short houre I find by her undonne.
- So when I thinke to end that I begonne,
- I must begin and never bring to end:
- For with one looke she spils that long I sponne,
- And with one word my whole years work doth rend.
- Such labour like the spyders web I fynd,
- Whose fruitlesse worke is broken with least wynd.
- XXIV.
- When I behold that beauties wonderment,
- And rare perfection of each goodly part,
- Of Natures skill the onely complement,
- I honor and admire the Makers art.
- But when I feele the bitter balefull smart
- Which her fayre eyes unwares doe worke in mee,
- That death out of theyr shiny beames doe dart,
- I thinke that I a new Pandora see,
- Whom all the gods in councell did agree
- Into this sinfull world from heaven to send,
- That she to wicked men a scourge should bee,
- For all their faults with which they did offend.
- But since ye are my scourge, I will intreat
- That for my faults ye will me gently beat.
- XXV.
- How long shall this lyke-dying lyfe endure,
- And know no end of her owne mysery,
- But wast and weare away in termes unsure,
- 'Twixt feare and hope depending doubtfully!
- Yet better were attonce to let me die,
- And shew the last ensample of your pride,
- Then to torment me thus with cruelty,
- To prove your powre, which I too wel have tride.
- But yet if in your hardned brest ye bide
- A close intent at last to shew me grace,
- Then all the woes and wrecks which I abide,
- As meanes of blisse I gladly wil embrace;
- And wish that more and greater they might be,
- That greater meede at last may turne to mee.
- XXVI.
- Sweet is the rose, but growes upon a brere;
- Sweet is the iunipeer; but sharpe his bough;
- Sweet is the eglantine, but pricketh nere;
- Sweet is the firbloome, but his braunches rough*;
- Sweet is the cypresse, but his rynd is rough;
- Sweet is the nut, but bitter is his pill**;
- Sweet is the broome-flowre, but yet sowre enough;
- And sweet is moly, but his root is ill.
- So every sweet with soure is tempred still,
- That maketh it be coveted the more:
- For easie things, that may be got at will,
- Most sorts of men doe set but little store.
- Why then should I accompt of little paine,
- That endlesse pleasure shall unto me gaine!
- [* I.e. raw, crude.]
- [** _Pill_, peel.]
- XXVII.
- Faire Proud! now tell me, why should faire be proud,
- Sith all worlds glorie is but drosse uncleane,
- And in the shade of death it selfe shall shroud,
- However now thereof ye little weene!
- That goodly idoll, now so gay beseene*,
- Shall doffe her fleshes borrowd fayre attyre,
- And be forgot as it had never beene,
- That many now much worship and admire!
- Ne any then shall after it inquire,
- Ne any mention shall thereof remaine,
- But what this verse, that never shall expyre,
- Shall to you purchas with her thankles pain!
- Faire! be no lenger proud of that shall perish,
- But that which shall you make immortall cherish.
- [* _Beseene_, appearing.]
- XVIII.
- The laurel-leafe which you this day doe weare
- Gives me great hope of your relenting mynd:
- For since it is the badge which I doe beare*,
- Ye, bearing it, doe seeme to me inclind.
- The powre thereof, which ofte in me I find,
- Let it likewise your gentle brest inspire
- With sweet infusion, and put you in mind
- Of that proud mayd whom now those leaves attyre:
- Proud Daphne, scorning Phrebus lovely** fyre,
- On the Thessalian shore from him did flie;
- For which the gods, in theyr revengefull yre,
- Did her transforme into a laurell-tree.
- Then fly no more, fayre Love, from Phebus chace,
- But in your brest his leafe and love embrace.
- [* I. e. as poet-laureate.]
- [** _Lovely_, loving.]
- XXIX.
- See! how the stubborne damzell doth deprave
- My simple meaning with disdaynfull scorne,
- And by the bay which I unto her gave
- Accoumpts my self her captive quite forlorne.
- The bay, quoth she, is of the victours born,
- Yielded them by the vanquisht as theyr meeds,
- And they therewith doe poetes heads adorne,
- To sing the glory of their famous deeds.
- But sith she will the conquest challeng needs,
- Let her accept me as her faithfull thrall;
- That her great triumph, which my skill exceeds,
- I may in trump of fame blaze over all.
- Then would I decke her head with glorious bayes,
- And fill the world with her victorious prayse.
- XXX.
- My Love is lyke to yse, and I to fyre:
- How comes it then that this her cold so great
- Is not dissolv'd through my so hot desyre,
- But harder growes the more I her intreat?
- Or how comes it that my exceeding heat
- Is not delayd* by her hart-frosen cold,
- But that I burne much more in boyling sweat,
- And feele my flames augmented manifold?
- What more miraculous thing may be told,
- That fire, which all things melts, should harden yse,
- And yse, which is congeald with sencelesse cold,
- Should kindle fyre by wonderful devyse?
- Such is the powre of love in gentle mind,
- That it can alter all the course of kynd.
- [* _Delayd_, tempered.]
- XXXI.
- Ah! why hath Nature to so hard a hart
- Given so goodly giftes of beauties grace,
- Whose pryde depraves each other better part,
- And all those pretious ornaments deface?
- Sith to all other beastes of bloody race
- A dreadfull countenance she given hath,
- That with theyr terrour all the rest may chace,
- And warne to shun the daunger of theyr wrath.
- But my proud one doth worke the greater scath*,
- Through sweet allurement of her lovely hew,
- That she the better may in bloody bath
- Of such poore thralls her cruell hands embrew.
- But did she know how ill these two accord,
- Such cruelty she would have soone abhord.
- [* _Scath_, injury.]
- XXXII.
- The paynefull smith with force of fervent heat
- The hardest yron soone doth mollify,
- That with his heavy sledge he can it beat,
- And fashion to what he it list apply.
- Yet cannot all these flames in which I fry
- Her hart, more hard then yron, soft a whit,
- Ne all the playnts and prayërs with which I
- Doe beat on th'andvile of her stubberne wit:
- But still, the more she fervent sees my fit,
- The more she frieseth in her wilfull pryde,
- And harder growes, the harder she is smit
- With all the playnts which to her be applyde.
- What then remaines but I to ashes burne,
- And she to stones at length all frosen turne!
- XXXIII.
- Great wrong I doe, I can it not deny,
- To that most sacred empresse, my dear dred,
- Not finishing her Queene of Faëry,
- That mote enlarge her living prayses, dead.
- But Lodwick*, this of grace to me aread:
- Do ye not thinck th'accomplishment of it
- Sufficient worke for one mans simple head,
- All were it, as the rest, but rudely writ?
- How then should I, without another wit,
- Thinck ever to endure so tedious toyle,
- Sith that this one is tost with troublous fit
- Of a proud Love, that doth my spirite spoyle?
- Cease, then, till she vouchsafe to grawnt me rest,
- Or lend you me another living brest.
- [* I.e. Lodowick Bryskett.]
- XXXIV.
- Lyke as a ship, that through the ocean wyde
- By conduct of some star doth make her way,
- Whenas a storm hath dimd her trusty guyde,
- Out of her course doth wander far astray,
- So I, whose star, that wont with her bright ray
- Me to direct, with cloudes is over-cast,
- Doe wander now in darknesse and dismay,
- Through hidden perils round about me plast.
- Yet hope I well that, when this storme is past,
- My Helice*, the lodestar of ray lyfe,
- Will shine again, and looke on me at last,
- With lovely light to cleare my cloudy grief.
- Till then I wander carefull, comfortlesse,
- In secret sorrow and sad pensivenesse.
- [* I. e. Cynosure.]
- XXXV.
- My hungry eyes, through greedy covetize
- Still to behold the obiect of their paine,
- With no contentment can themselves suffize;
- But having, pine, and having not, complaine.
- For lacking it, they cannot lyfe sustayne;
- And having it, they gaze on it the more,
- In their amazement lyke Narcissus vaine,
- Whose eyes him starv'd: so plenty makes me poore.
- Yet are mine eyes so filled with the store
- Of that faire sight, that nothing else they brooke,
- But lothe the things which they did like before,
- And can no more endure on them to looke.
- All this worlds glory seemeth vayne to me,
- And all their showes but shadowes, saving she.
- XXXVI.
- Tell me, when shall these wearie woes have end;
- Or shall their ruthlesse torment never cease,
- But al my days in pining languor spend,
- Without hope of asswagement or release?
- Is there no meanes for me to purchace peace,
- Or make agreement with her thrilling eyes;
- But that their cruelty doth still increace,
- And dayly more augment my miseryes?
- But when ye have shew'd all extremityes,
- Then think how little glory ye have gayned
- By slaying him, whose lyfe, though ye despyse,
- Mote have your life in honor long maintayned.
- But by his death, which some perhaps will mone,
- Ye shall condemned be of many a one.
- XXXVII.
- What guyle is this, that those her golden tresses
- She doth attyre under a net of gold,
- And with sly skill so cunningly them dresses,
- That which is gold or haire may scarse be told?
- Is it that mens frayle eyes, which gaze too bold,
- She may entangle in that golden snare;
- And, being caught, may craftily enfold
- Their weaker harts, which are not wel aware?
- Take heed therefore, myne eyes, how ye doe stare
- Henceforth too rashly on that guilefull net,
- In which if ever ye entrapped are,
- Out of her bands ye by no meanes shall get.
- Fondnesse it were for any, being free,
- To covet fetters, though they golden bee!
- XXXVIII.
- Arion, when, through tempests cruel wracke,
- He forth was thrown into the greedy seas,
- Through the sweet musick which his harp did make
- Allur'd a dolphin him from death to ease.
- But my rude musick, which was wont to please
- Some dainty eares, cannot, with any skill,
- The dreadfull tempest of her wrath appease,
- Nor move the dolphin from her stubborn will.
- But in her pride she dooth persever still,
- All carelesse how my life for her decayes:
- Yet with one word she can it save or spill.
- To spill were pitty, but to save were prayse!
- Chuse rather to be praysd for doing good,
- Then to be blam'd for spilling guiltlesse blood.
- XXXIX.
- Sweet smile! the daughter of the Queene of Love,
- Expressing all thy mothers powrefull art,
- With which she wonts to temper angry Iove,
- When all the gods he threats with thundring dart,
- Sweet is thy vertue, as thy selfe sweet art.
- For when on me thou shinedst late in sadnesse,
- A melting pleasance ran through every part,
- And me revived with hart-robbing gladnesse;
- Whylest rapt with ioy resembling heavenly madness,
- My soule was ravisht quite as in a traunce,
- And, feeling thence no more her sorrowes sadnesse,
- Fed on the fulnesse of that chearfull glaunce.
- More sweet than nectar, or ambrosiall meat,
- Seem'd every bit which thenceforth I did eat.
- XL.
- Mark when she smiles with amiable cheare,
- And tell me whereto can ye lyken it;
- When on each eyelid sweetly doe appeare
- An hundred Graces as in shade to sit.
- Lykest it seemeth, in my simple wit,
- Unto the fayre sunshine in somers day,
- That, when a dreadfull storme away is flit,
- Thrugh the broad world doth spred his goodly ray
- At sight whereof, each bird that sits on spray.
- And every beast that to his den was fled,
- Comes forth afresh out of their late dismay,
- And to the light lift up their drouping hed.
- So my storme-beaten hart likewise is cheared
- With that sunshine, when cloudy looks are cleared.
- [Footnote: XL. 4.--_An hundred Graces._ E.K., in his commentary on the
- Shepheards Calender, quotes a line closely resembling this from
- Spenser's Pageants:
- "An hundred Graces on her eyelids sat."
- The same fancy occurs in the Faerie Queene, and in the Hymn to Beauty.
- It is copied from a poem ascribed to Musaeus. C.]
- XLI.
- Is it her nature, or is it her will,
- To be so cruell to an humbled foe?
- If nature, then she may it mend with skill;
- If will, then she at will may will forgoe.
- But if her nature and her will be so,
- That she will plague the man that loves her most,
- And take delight t'encrease a wretches woe,
- Then all her natures goodly guifts are lost;
- And that same glorious beauties ydle boast
- Is but a bayt such wretches to beguile,
- As, being long in her loves tempest tost,
- She meanes at last to make her pitious spoyle.
- O fayrest fayre! let never it be named,
- That so fayre beauty was so fowly shamed.
- XLII.
- The love which me so cruelly tormenteth
- So pleasing is in my extreamest paine,
- That, all the more my sorrow it augmenteth,
- The more I love and doe embrace my bane.
- Ne do I wish (for wishing were but vaine)
- To be acquit fro my continual smart,
- But ioy her thrall for ever to remayne,
- And yield for pledge my poor and captyved hart,
- The which, that it from her may never start,
- Let her, yf please her, bynd with adamant chayne,
- And from all wandring loves, which mote pervart
- His safe assurance, strongly it restrayne.
- Onely let her abstaine from cruelty,
- And doe me not before my time to dy.
- XLIII.
- Shall I then silent be, or shall I speake?
- And if I speake, her wrath renew I shall;
- And if I silent be, my hart will breake,
- Or choked be with overflowing gall.
- What tyranny is this, both my hart to thrall,
- And eke my toung with proud restraint to tie,
- That neither I may speake nor thinke at all,
- But like a stupid stock in silence die!
- Yet I my hart with silence secretly
- Will teach to speak and my just cause to plead,
- And eke mine eies, with meek humility,
- Love-learned letters to her eyes to read;
- Which her deep wit, that true harts thought can spel,
- Wil soon conceive, and learne to construe well.
- XLIV.
- When those renoumed noble peres of Greece
- Through stubborn pride among themselves did iar,
- Forgetfull of the famous golden fleece,
- Then Orpheus with his harp theyr strife did bar.
- But this continuall, cruell, civill warre
- The which my selfe against my selfe doe make,
- Whilest my weak powres of passions warreid arre,
- No skill can stint, nor reason can aslake.
- But when in hand my tunelesse harp I take,
- Then doe I more augment my foes despight,
- And griefe renew, and passions doe awake
- To battaile, fresh against my selfe to fight.
- Mongst whome the more I seeke to settle peace,
- The more I fynd their malice to increace.
- XLV.
- Leave, Lady! in your glasse of cristall clene
- Your goodly selfe for evermore to vew,
- And in my selfe, (my inward selfe I meane,)
- Most lively lyke behold your semblant trew.
- Within my hart, though hardly it can shew
- Thing so divine to vew of earthly eye,
- The fayre idea of your celestiall hew
- And every part remaines immortally:
- And were it not that through your cruelty
- With sorrow dimmed and deform'd it were,
- The goodly ymage of your visnomy*,
- Clearer than cristall, would therein appere.
- But if your selfe in me ye playne will see,
- Remove the cause by which your fayre beames darkned be.
- [* _Visnomy_, countenance.]
- XLVI.
- When my abodes prefixed time is spent,
- My cruell fayre streight bids me wend my way:
- But then from heaven most hideous stormes are sent,
- As willing me against her will to stay.
- Whom then shall I--or heaven, or her--obay?
- The heavens know best what is the best for me:
- But as she will, whose will my life doth sway,
- My lower heaven, so it perforce must be.
- But ye high hevens, that all this sorowe see,
- Sith all your tempests cannot hold me backe,
- Aswage your storms, or else both you and she
- Will both together me too sorely wrack.
- Enough it is for one man to sustaine
- The stormes which she alone on me doth raine.
- XLVII.
- Trust not the treason of those smyling lookes,
- Untill ye have their guylefull traynes well tryde;
- For they are lyke but unto golden hookes,
- That from the foolish fish theyr bayts do hyde:
- So she with flattring smyles weake harts doth guyde
- Unto her love, and tempte to theyr decay;
- Whome, being caught, she kills with cruell pryde,
- And feeds at pleasure on the wretched pray.
- Yet even whylst her bloody hands them slay,
- Her eyes looke lovely, and upon them smyle,
- That they take pleasure in their cruell play,
- And, dying, doe themselves of payne beguyle.
- O mighty charm! which makes men love theyr bane,
- And thinck they dy with pleasure, live with payne.
- XLVIII.
- Innocent paper! whom too cruell hand
- Did make the matter to avenge her yre,
- And ere she could thy cause well understand,
- Did sacrifize unto the greedy fyre,
- Well worthy thou to have found better hyre
- Then so bad end, for hereticks ordayned;
- Yet heresy nor treason didst conspire,
- But plead thy maisters cause, unjustly payned:
- Whom she, all carelesse of his grief, constrayned
- To utter forth the anguish of his hart,
- And would not heare, when he to her complayned
- The piteous passion of his dying smart.
- Yet live for ever, though against her will,
- And speake her good, though she requite it ill.
- XLIX.
- Fayre Cruell! why are ye so fierce and cruell?
- Is it because your eyes have powre to kill?
- Then know that mercy is the Mighties iewell,
- And greater glory think to save then spill.
- But if it be your pleasure and proud will
- To shew the powre of your imperious eyes,
- Then not on him that never thought you ill,
- But bend your force against your enemyes.
- Let them feel the utmost of your crueltyes,
- And kill with looks, as cockatrices do:
- But him that at your footstoole humbled lies,
- With mercifull regard give mercy to.
- Such mercy shall you make admyr'd to be;
- So shall you live, by giving life to me.
- L.
- Long languishing in double malady
- Of my harts wound and of my bodies griefe,
- There came to me a leach, that would apply
- Fit medcines for my bodies best reliefe.
- Vayne man, quoth I, that hast but little priefe*
- In deep discovery of the mynds disease;
- Is not the hart of all the body chiefe,
- And rules the members as it selfe doth please?
- Then with some cordialls seeke for to appease
- The inward languor of my wounded hart,
- And then my body shall have shortly ease.
- But such sweet cordialls passe physicians art:
- Then, my lyfes leach! doe you your skill reveale,
- And with one salve both hart and body heale.
- [* _Priefe_, proof, experience.]
- LI.
- Doe I not see that fayrest ymáges
- Of hardest marble are of purpose made,
- For that they should endure through many ages,
- Ne let theyr famous moniments to fade?
- Why then doe I, untrainde in lovers trade,
- Her hardnes blame, which I should more commend?
- Sith never ought was excellent assayde
- Which was not hard t'atchive and bring to end;
- Ne ought so hard, but he that would attend
- Mote soften it and to his will allure.
- So do I hope her stubborne hart to bend,
- And that it then more stedfast will endure:
- Only my paines wil be the more to get her;
- But, having her, my ioy wil be the greater.
- LII.
- So oft as homeward I from her depart,
- I go lyke one that, having lost the field,
- Is prisoner led away with heavy hart,
- Despoyld of warlike armes and knowen shield.
- So doe I now my self a prisoner yield
- To sorrow and to solitary paine,
- From presence of my dearest deare exylde,
- Long-while alone in languor to remaine.
- There let no thought of ioy, or pleasure vaine,
- Dare to approch, that may my solace breed;
- Bet sudden* dumps**, and drery sad disdayne
- Of all worlds gladnesse, more my torment feed.
- So I her absens will my penaunce make,
- That of her presens I my meed may take.
- [* _Sudden_, Qu. sullen?]
- [** _Dumps_, lamentations.]
- LIII.
- The panther, knowing that his spotted hyde
- Doth please all beasts, but that his looks them fray*,
- Within a bush his dreadful head doth hide,
- To let them gaze, whylst he on them may pray.
- Right so my cruell fayre with me doth play;
- For with the goodly semblance of her hew
- She doth allure me to mine owne decay,
- And then no mercy will unto me shew.
- Great shame it is, thing so divine in view,
- Made for to be the worlds most ornament,
- To make the bayte her gazers to embrew:
- Good shames to be to ill an instrument!
- But mercy doth with beautie best agree,
- As in theyr Maker ye them best may see.
- [* _Fray_, frighten.]
- LIV.
- Of this worlds theatre in which we stay,
- My Love, like the spectator, ydly sits,
- Beholding me, that all the pageants play,
- Disguysing diversly my troubled wits.
- Sometimes I ioy when glad occasion fits,
- And mask in myrth lyke to a comedy:
- Soone after, when my ioy to sorrow flits,
- I waile, and make my woes a tragedy.
- Yet she, beholding me with constant eye,
- Delights not in my merth, nor rues my smart:
- But when I laugh, she mocks; and when I cry,
- She laughs, and hardens evermore her hart.
- What then can move her? If nor merth, nor mone,
- She is no woman, but a sencelesse stone.
- LV.
- So oft as I her beauty doe behold,
- And therewith doe her cruelty compare,
- I marvaile of what substance was the mould
- The which her made attonce so cruell faire.
- Not earth; for her high thoughts more heavenly are:
- Not water; for her love doth burne like fyre:
- Not ayre; for she is not so light or rare;
- Not fyre; for she doth friese with faint desire.
- Then needs another element inquire,
- Whereof she mote be made; that is, the skye.
- For to the heaven her haughty looks aspire,
- And eke her love is pure immortall hye.
- Then sith to heaven ye lykened are the best,
- Be lyke in mercy as in all the rest.
- LVI.
- Fayre ye be sure, but cruell and unkind,
- As is a tygre, that with greedinesse
- Hunts after bloud; when he by chance doth find
- A feeble beast, doth felly him oppresse.
- Fayre be ye sure, but proud and pitilesse,
- As is a storme, that all things doth prostrate;
- Finding a tree alone all comfortlesse,
- Beats on it strongly, it to ruinate.
- Fayre be ye sure, but hard and obstinate,
- As is a rocke amidst the raging floods;
- Gaynst which a ship, of succour desolate,
- Doth suffer wreck both of her selfe and goods.
- That ship, that tree, and that same beast, am I,
- Whom ye doe wreck, doe ruine, and destroy.
- LVII.
- Sweet warriour! when shall I have peace with you?
- High time it is this warre now ended were,
- Which I no lenger can endure to sue,
- Ne your incessant battry more to beare.
- So weake my powres, so sore my wounds, appear,
- That wonder is how I should live a iot,
- Seeing my hart through-launced every where
- With thousand arrowes which your eies have shot.
- Yet shoot ye sharpely still, and spare me not,
- But glory thinke to make these cruel stoures*.
- Ye cruell one! what glory can be got,
- In slaying him that would live gladly yours?
- Make peace therefore, and graunt me timely grace,
- That al my wounds will heale in little space.
- [* _Stoures_, agitations.]
- LVIII.
- _By her that is most assured to her selfe._
- Weake is th'assurance that weake flesh reposeth
- In her own powre, and scorneth others ayde;
- That soonest fals, when as she most supposeth
- Her selfe assur'd, and is of nought affrayd,
- All flesh is frayle, and all her strength unstayd,
- Like a vaine bubble blowen up with ayre:
- Devouring tyme and changeful chance have prayd*
- Her glorious pride, that none may it repayre.
- Ne none so rich or wise, so strong or fayre,
- But fayleth, trusting on his owne assurance:
- And he that standeth on the hyghest stayre
- Fals lowest; for on earth nought hath endurance.
- Why then doe ye, proud fayre, misdeeme so farre,
- That to your selfe ye most assured arre!
- [Footnote: LVIII.--_By her_, &c. _By_ is perhaps a misprint for _to_; or
- this title may belong to Sonnet LIX. H.]
- [* _Prayd_, preyed upon.]
- LIX.
- Thrise happie she that is so well assured
- Unto her selfe, and setled so in hart,
- That neither will for better be allured,
- Ne feard with worse to any chaunce to start:
- But, like a steddy ship, doth strongly part
- The raging waves, and kcepes her course aright,
- Ne ought for tempest doth from it depart,
- Ne ought for fayrer weathers false delight.
- Such selfe-assurance need not feare the spight
- Of grudging foes, ne favour seek of friends:
- But in the stay of her owne stedfast might,
- Neither to one her selfe nor other bends.
- Most happy she that most assur'd doth rest;
- But he most happy who such one loves best.
- LX.
- They that in course of heavenly spheares are skild
- To every planet point his sundry yeare,
- In which her circles voyage is fulfild:
- As Mars in threescore yeares doth run his spheare.
- So, since the winged god his planet cleare
- Began in me to move, one yeare is spent;
- The which doth longer unto me appeare,
- Then al those fourty which my life out-went.
- Then, by that count which lovers books invent,
- The spheare of Cupid fourty yeares containes,
- Which I have wasted in long languishment,
- That seem'd the longer for my greater paines.
- But let my Loves fayre planet short her wayes
- This yeare ensuing, or else short my dayes.
- [Footnote: LX. 4.--_As Mars in three score yeares_. I do not understand
- Spenser's astronomy. C.]
- LXI.
- The glorious image of the Makers beautie,
- My soverayne saynt, the idoll of my thought,
- Dare not henceforth, above the bounds of dewtie,
- T'accuse of pride, or rashly blame for ought.
- For being, as she is, divinely wrought,
- And of the brood of angels heavenly born,
- And with the crew of blessed saynts upbrought,
- Each of which did her with theyr guifts adorne,
- The bud of ioy, the blossome of the morne,
- The beame of light, whom mortal eyes admyre,
- What reason is it then but she should scorne
- Base things, that to her love too bold aspire!
- Such heavenly formes ought rather worshipt be,
- Then dare be lov'd by men of meane degree.
- LXII.
- The weary yeare his race now having run,
- The new begins his compast course anew:
- With shew of morning mylde he bath begun,
- Betokening peace and plenty to ensew.
- So let us, which this chaunge of weather vew,
- Chaunge eke our mynds, and former lives amend;
- The old yeares sinnes forepast let us eschew,
- And fly the faults with which we did offend.
- Then shall the new yeares ioy forth freshly send
- Into the glooming world his gladsome ray,
- And all these stormes, which now his beauty blend*,
- Shall turne to calmes, and tymely cleare away.
- So, likewise, Love! cheare you your heavy spright,
- And chaunge old yeares annoy to new delight.
- [* _Blend_, blemish.]
- LXIII.
- After long stormes and tempests sad assay,
- Which hardly I endured heretofore,
- In dread of death, and daungerous dismay,
- With which my silly bark was tossed sore,
- I doe at length descry the happy shore,
- In which I hope ere long for to arryve:
- Fayre soyle it seemes from far, and fraught with store
- Of all that deare and daynty is alyve.
- Most happy he that can at last atchyve
- The ioyous safety of so sweet a rest;
- Whose least delight sufficeth to deprive
- Remembrance of all paines which him opprest.
- All paines are nothing in respect of this;
- All sorrowes short that gaine eternall blisse.
- LXIV.
- Comming to kisse her lyps, (such grace I found,)
- Me seemd I smelt a gardin of sweet flowres,
- That dainty odours from them threw around,
- For damzels fit to decke their lovers bowres.
- Her lips did smell lyke unto gillyflowers;
- Her ruddy cheekes lyke unto roses red;
- Her snowy browes lyke budded bellamoures;
- Her lovely eyes lyke pincks but newly spred;
- Her goodly bosome lyke a strawberry bed;
- Her neck lyke to a bounch of cullambynes;
- Her brest lyke lillyes, ere their leaves be shed;
- Her nipples lyke young blossomd jessemynes.
- Such fragrant flowres doe give most odorous smell;
- But her sweet odour did them all excell.
- [Footnote: LXIV. 7.--_Bellamoures_. I have not discovered what flower is
- here meant. C.]
- LXV.
- The doubt which ye misdeeme, fayre Love, is vaine,
- That fondly feare to lose your liberty,
- When, losing one, two liberties ye gayne,
- And make him bond that bondage earst did fly.
- Sweet be the bands the which true love doth tye,
- Without constraynt or dread of any ill:
- The gentle birde feeles no captivity
- Within her cage, but sings, and feeds her fill.
- There pride dare not approch, nor discord spill
- The league twixt them that loyal love hath bound,
- But simple Truth and mutual Good-will
- Seeks with sweet peace to salve each others wound:
- There Fayth doth fearless dwell in brasen towre,
- And spotlesse Pleasure builds her sacred bowre.
- LXVI.
- To all those happy blessings which ye have
- With plenteous hand by heaven upon you thrown,
- This one disparagement they to you gave,
- That ye your love lent to so meane a one.
- Ye, whose high worths surpassing paragon
- Could not on earth have found one fit for mate,
- Ne but in heaven matchable to none,
- Why did ye stoup unto so lowly state?
- But ye thereby much greater glory gate,
- Then had ye sorted with a princes pere:
- For now your light doth more it selfe dilate,
- And, in my darknesse, greater doth appeare.
- Yet, since your light hath once enlumind me,
- With my reflex yours shall encreased be.
- LXVII.
- Lyke as a huntsman, after weary chace,
- Seeing the game from him escapt away,
- Sits downe to rest him in some shady place,
- With panting hounds, beguiled of their pray,
- So, after long pursuit and vaine assay,
- When I all weary had the chace forsooke,
- The gentle deer returnd the selfe-same way,
- Thinking to quench her thirst at the next brooke.
- There she, beholding me with mylder looke,
- Sought not to fly, but fearlesse still did bide,
- Till I in hand her yet halfe trembling tooke,
- And with her own goodwill her fyrmely tyde.
- Strange thing, me seemd, to see a beast so wyld
- So goodly wonne, with her owne will beguyld.
- LXVIII
- Most glorious Lord of lyfe! that on this day
- Didst make thy triumph over death and sin,
- And, having harrowd* hell, didst bring away
- Captivity thence captive, us to win,
- This ioyous day, dear Lord, with ioy begin;
- And grant that we, for whom thou diddest dy,
- Being with thy deare blood clene washt from sin,
- May live for ever in felicity;
- And that thy love we weighing worthily,
- May likewise love thee for the same againe,
- And for thy sake, that all lyke deare didst buy.
- With love may one another entertayne!
- So let us love, deare Love, lyke as we ought:
- Love is the lesson which the Lord us taught.
- [* _Harrowd_, despoiled.]
- LXIX.
- The famous warriors of the anticke world
- Us'd trophees to erect in stately wize,
- In which they would the records have enrold
- Of theyr great deeds and valorous emprize.
- What trophee then shall I most fit devize,
- In which I may record the memory
- Of my loves conquest, peerlesse beauties prise,
- Adorn'd with honour, love, and chastity!
- Even this verse, vowd to eternity,
- Shall be thereof immortall moniment,
- And tell her praise to all posterity,
- That may admire such worlds rare wonderment;
- The happy purchase of my glorious spoile,
- Gotten at last with labour and long toyle.
- LXX.
- Fresh Spring, the herald of loves mighty king,
- In whose cote-armour richly are displayd
- All sorts of flowres the which on earth do spring,
- In goodly colours gloriously arrayd,
- Goe to my Love, where she is carelesse layd,
- Yet in her winters bowre not well awake:
- Tell her the ioyous time wil not be staid,
- Unlesse she doe him by the forelock take;
- Bid her therefore her selfe soone ready make,
- To wayt on Love amongst his lovely crew,
- Where every one that misseth then her make*
- Shall be by him amearst with penance dew.
- Make haste therefore, sweet Love, while it is prime**;
- For none can call againe the passed time.
- [* _Make_, mate.]
- [** _Prime_, spring.]
- LXXI.
- I ioy to see how, in your drawen work,
- Your selfe unto the Bee ye doe compare,
- And me unto the Spyder, that doth lurke
- In close awayt, to catch her unaware.
- Right so your selfe were caught in cunning snare
- Of a deare foe, and thralled to his love;
- In whose streight bands ye now captived are
- So firmely, that ye never may remove.
- But as your worke is woven all about
- With woodbynd flowers and fragrant eglantine,
- So sweet your prison you in time shall prove,
- With many deare delights bedecked fyne:
- And all thensforth eternall peace shall see
- Betweene the Spyder and the gentle Bee.
- LXXII.
- Oft when my spirit doth spred her bolder winges,
- In mind to mount up to the purest sky,
- It down is weighd with thought of earthly things,
- And clogd with burden of mortality:
- Where, when that soverayne beauty it doth spy,
- Resembling heavens glory in her light,
- Drawn with sweet pleasures bayt it back doth fly,
- And unto heaven forgets her former flight.
- There my fraile fancy, fed with full delight,
- Doth bathe in blisse, and mantlcth most at ease;
- Ne thinks of other heaven, but how it might
- Her harts desire with most contentment please.
- Hart need not wish none other happinesse,
- But here on earth to have such hevens blisse.
- LXXIII
- Being my self captyved here in care,
- My hart, (whom none with servile bands can tye,
- But the fayre tresses of your golden hayre,)
- Breaking his prison, forth to you doth fly.
- Like as a byrd, that in ones hand doth spy
- Desired food, to it doth make his flight,
- Even so my hart, that wont on your fayre eye
- To feed his fill, flyes backe unto your sight.
- Doe you him take, and in your bosome bright
- Gently encage, that he may be your thrall:
- Perhaps he there may learne, with rare delight,
- To sing your name and prayses over all:
- That it hereafter may you not repent,
- Him lodging in your bosome to have lent.
- LXXIV
- Most happy letters! fram'd by skilfull trade,
- With which that happy name was first desynd
- The which three times thrise happy hath me made,
- With guifts of body, fortune, and of mind.
- The first ray being to me gave by kind,
- From mothers womb deriv'd by dew descent:
- The second is my sovereigne Queene most kind,
- That honour and large richesse to me lent:
- The third my Love, my lives last ornament,
- By whom my spirit out of dust was raysed,
- To speake her prayse and glory excellent,
- Of all alive most worthy to be praysed.
- Ye three Elizabeths! for ever live,
- That three such graces did unto me give.
- LXXV.
- One day I wrote her name upon the strand,
- But came the waves and washed it away:
- Agayne I wrote it with a second hand;
- But came the tyde, and made my paynes his pray.
- "Vayne man," sayd she, "that doest in vaine assay
- A mortall thing so to immortalize;
- For I my selve shall lyke to this decay,
- And eke my name bee wyped out lykewize."
- "Not so," quod I; "let baser things devize
- To dy in dust, but you shall live by fame:
- My verse your vertues rare shall eternize,
- And in the hevens wryte your glorious name.
- Where, when as death shall all the world subdew,
- Our love shall live, and later life renew."
- LXXVI
- Fayre bosome! fraught with vertues richest tresure,
- The neast of love, the lodging of delight,
- The bowre of blisse, the paradice of pleasure,
- The sacred harbour of that hevenly spright,
- How was I ravisht with your lovely sight,
- And my frayle thoughts too rashly led astray,
- Whiles diving deepe through amorous insight,
- On the sweet spoyle of beautie they did pray,
- And twixt her paps, like early fruit in May,
- Whose harvest seemd to hasten now apace,
- They loosely did theyr wanton winges display,
- And there to rest themselves did boldly place.
- Sweet thoughts! I envy your so happy rest,
- Which oft I wisht, yet never was so blest.
- LXXVII.
- Was it a dreame, or did I see it playne?
- A goodly table of pure yvory,
- All spred with juncats fit to entertayne
- The greatest prince with pompous roialty:
- Mongst which, there in a silver dish did ly
- Two golden apples of unvalewd* price,
- Far passing those which Hercules came by,
- Or those which Atalanta did entice;
- Exceeding sweet, yet voyd of sinfull vice;
- That many sought, yet none could ever taste;
- Sweet fruit of pleasure, brought from Paradice
- By Love himselfe, and in his garden plaste.
- Her brest that table was, so richly spredd;
- My thoughts the guests, which would thereon have fedd.
- [* _Unvalewd_, invaluable]
- LXXVIII
- Lackyng my Love, I go from place to place,
- Lyke a young fawne that late hath lost the hynd,
- And seeke each where where last I sawe her face,
- Whose ymage yet I carry fresh in mynd.
- I seeke the fields with her late footing synd;
- I seeke her bowre with her late presence deckt;
- Yet nor in field nor bowre I can her fynd,
- Yet field and bowre are full of her aspect.
- But when myne eyes I therunto direct,
- They ydly back return to me agayne;
- And when I hope to see theyr trew obiect,
- I fynd my self but fed with fancies vayne.
- Cease then, myne eyes, to seeke her selfe to see,
- And let my thoughts behold her selfe in mee.
- LXXIX
- Men call you fayre, and you doe credit it,
- For that your selfe ye daily such doe see:
- But the trew fayre, that is the gentle wit
- And vertuous mind, is much more praysd of me.
- For all the rest, how ever fayre it be,
- Shall turne to nought and lose that glorious hew;
- But onely that is permanent, and free
- From frayle corruption that doth flesh ensew.
- That is true beautie: that doth argue you
- To be divine, and born of heavenly seed,
- Deriv'd from that fayre Spirit from whom all true
- And perfect beauty did at first proceed.
- He only fayre, and what he fayre hath made;
- All other fayre, lyke flowres, untymely fade.
- LXXX
- After so long a race as I have run
- Through Faery land, which those six books compile,
- Give leave to rest me being half foredonne,
- And gather to my selfe new breath awhile.
- Then, as a steed refreshed after toyle,
- Out of my prison I will break anew,
- And stoutly will that second work assoyle*,
- With strong endevour and attention dew.
- Till then give leave to me in pleasant mew**
- To sport my Muse, and sing my Loves sweet praise,
- The contemplation of whose heavenly hew
- My spirit to an higher pitch will rayse.
- But let her prayses yet be low and meane,
- Fit for the handmayd of the Faery Queene.
- [* _Assoyle_, discharge.]
- [** _Mew_, prison, retreat.]
- LXXXI.
- Fayre is my Love, when her fayre golden haires
- With the loose wynd ye waving chance to marke;
- Fayre, when the rose in her red cheekes appeares,
- Or in her eyes the fyre of love does sparke;
- Fayre, when her brest, lyke a rich laden barke,
- With pretious merchandize she forth doth lay;
- Fayre, when that cloud of pryde, which oft doth dark
- Her goodly light, with smiles she drives away.
- But fayrest she, when so she doth display
- The gate with pearles and rubyes richly dight,
- Throgh which her words so wise do make their way,
- To beare the message of her gentle spright.
- The rest be works of Natures wonderment;
- But this the worke of harts astonishment.
- LXXXII.
- Ioy of my life! full oft for loving you
- I blesse my lot, that was so lucky placed:
- But then the more your owne mishap I rew,
- That are so much by so meane love embased.
- For had the equall hevens so much you graced
- In this as in the rest, ye mote invent*
- Some hevenly wit, whose verse could have enchased
- Your glorious name in golden moniment.
- But since ye deignd so goodly to relent
- To me your thrall, in whom is little worth,
- That little that I am shall all be spent
- In setting your immortal prayses forth:
- Whose lofty argument, uplifting me,
- Shall lift you up unto an high degree.
- [* _Invent_, light upon, find.]
- LXXXIII
- Let not one sparke of filthy lustfull fyre
- Breake out, that may her sacred peace molest;
- Ne one light glance of sensuall desyre
- Attempt to work her gentle mindes unrest:
- But pure affections bred in spotlesse brest,
- And modest thoughts breathd from well-tempred spirits,
- Goe visit her in her chaste bowre of rest,
- Accompanyde with ángelick delightes.
- There fill your selfe with those most ioyous sights,
- The which my selfe could never yet attayne:
- But speake no word to her of these sad plights,
- Which her too constant stiffnesse doth constrayn.
- Onely behold her rare perfection,
- And blesse your fortunes fayre election.
- LXXXIV.
- The world, that cannot deeme of worthy things,
- When I doe praise her, say I doe but flatter:
- So does the cuckow, when the mavis* sings,
- Begin his witlesse note apace to clatter.
- But they, that skill not of so heavenly matter,
- All that they know not, envy or admyre;
- Rather then envy, let them wonder at her,
- But not to deeme of her desert aspyre.
- Deepe in the closet of my parts entyre**,
- Her worth is written with a golden quill,
- That me with heavenly fury doth inspire,
- And my glad mouth with her sweet prayses fill:
- Which when as Fame in her shril trump shall thunder,
- Let the world chuse to envy or to wonder.
- [* _Mavis_, song-thrush.]
- [** _Entyre,_ inward.]
- LXXXV.
- Venemous tongue, tipt with vile adders sting,
- Of that self kynd with which the Furies fell,
- Their snaky heads doe combe, from which a spring
- Of poysoned words and spightfull speeches well,
- Let all the plagues and horrid paines of hell
- Upon thee fall for thine accursed hyre,
- That with false forged lyes, which thou didst tell.
- In my true Love did stirre up coles of yre:
- The sparkes whereof let kindle thine own fyre,
- And, catching hold on thine own wicked bed,
- Consume thee quite, that didst with guile conspire
- In my sweet peace such breaches to have bred!
- Shame be thy meed, and mischiefe thy reward,
- Due to thy selfe, that it for me prepard!
- LXXXVI.
- Since I did leave the presence of my Love,
- Many long weary dayes I have outworne,
- And many nights, that slowly seemd to move
- Theyr sad protract from evening untill morn.
- For, when as day the heaven doth adorne,
- I wish that night the noyous day would end:
- And when as night hath us of light forlorne,
- I wish that day would shortly reascend.
- Thus I the time with expectation spend,
- And faine my griefe with chaunges to beguile,
- That further seemes his terme still to extend,
- And maketh every minute seem a myle.
- So sorrowe still doth seem too long to last;
- But ioyous houres do fly away too fast.
- LXXXVII.
- Since I have lackt the comfort of that light
- The which was wont to lead my thoughts astray,
- I wander as in darknesse of the night,
- Affrayd of every dangers least dismay.
- Ne ought I see, though in the clearest day,
- When others gaze upon theyr shadowes vayne,
- But th'only image of that heavenly ray
- Whereof some glance doth in mine eie remayne.
- Of which beholding the idaea playne,
- Through contemplation of my purest part,
- With light thereof I doe my self sustayne,
- And thereon feed my love-affamisht hart.
- But with such brightnesse whylest I fill my mind,
- I starve my body, and mine eyes doe blynd.
- LXXXVIII.
- Lyke as the culver* on the bared bough
- Sits mourning for the absence of her mate,
- And in her songs sends many a wishful vow
- For his returns, that seemes to linger late,
- So I alone, how left disconsolate,
- Mourne to my selfe the absence of my Love;
- And wandring here and there all desolate,
- Seek with my playnts to match that mournful dove
- Ne ioy of ought that under heaven doth hove**,
- Can comfort me, but her owne ioyous sight,
- Whose sweet aspect both God and man can move,
- In her unspotted pleasauns to delight.
- Dark is my day, whyles her fayre light I mis,
- And dead my life that wants such lively blis.
- [* _Culver_, dove.]
- [** _Hove_, hover, exist.]
- * * * * *
- EPITHALAMION.
- Ye learned Sisters, which have oftentimes
- Beene to me ayding, others to adorne
- Whom ye thought worthy of your gracefull rymes,
- That even the greatest did not greatly scorne
- To heare theyr names sung in your simple layes, 5
- But ioyed in theyr praise,
- And when ye list your own mishaps to mourne,
- Which death, or love, or fortunes wreck did rayse,
- Your string could soone to sadder tenor turne,
- And teach the woods and waters to lament 10
- Your dolefull dreriment,
- Now lay those sorrowfull complaints aside,
- And having all your heads with girlands crownd,
- Helpe me mine owne Loves prayses to resound:
- Ne let the same of any be envide: 15
- So Orpheus did for his owne bride;
- So I unto my selfe alone will sing;
- The woods shall to me answer, and my eccho ring.
- Early, before the worlds light-giving lampe
- His golden beame upon the hils doth spred, 20
- Having disperst the nights unchearfull dampe,
- Doe ye awake, and, with fresh lustyhed,
- Go to the bowre of my beloved Love,
- My truest turtle dove.
- Bid her awake; for Hymen is awake, 25
- And long since ready forth his maske to move,
- With his bright tead* that flames with many a flake,
- And many a bachelor to waite on him,
- In theyr fresh garments trim.
- Bid her awake therefore, and soone her dight**, 30
- For loe! the wished day is come at last,
- That shall for all the paynes and sorrowes past
- Pay to her usury of long delight:
- And whylest she doth her dight,
- Doe ye to her of ioy and solace sing, 35
- That all the woods may answer, and your eccho ring.
- [* _Tead,_ torch.]
- [** _Dight,_ deck.]
- Bring with you all the nymphes that you can heare,
- Both of the rivers and the forrests greene,
- And of the sea that neighbours to her neare,
- All with gay girlands goodly wel beseene*. 40
- And let them also with them bring in hand
- Another gay girland,
- For my fayre Love, of lillyes and of roses,
- Bound truelove wize with a blew silke riband.
- And let them make great store of bridale poses, 45
- And let them eke bring store of other flowers,
- To deck the bridale bowers:
- And let the ground whereas her foot shall tread,
- For feare the stones her tender foot should wrong,
- Be strewd with fragrant flowers all along, 50
- And diapred** lyke the discolored mead.
- Which done, doe at her chamber dore awayt,
- For she will waken strayt;
- The whiles do ye this song unto her sing,
- The woods shall to you answer, and your eccho ring;.
- [* _Beseene,_ adorned.]
- [** _Diapred,_ variegated.]
- Ye Nymphes of Mulla, which with carefull heed 56
- The silver scaly trouts do tend full well,
- And greedy pikes which use therein to feed,
- (Those trouts and pikes all others doe excell,)
- And ye likewise which keepe the rushy lake, 60
- Where none doo fishes take,
- Bynd up the locks the which hang scatterd light,
- And in his waters, which your mirror make,
- Behold your faces as the christall bright,
- That when you come whereas my Love doth lie, 65
- No blemish she may spie.
- And eke, ye lightfoot mayds which keepe the dere
- That on the hoary mountayne use to towre,
- And the wylde wolves, which seeke them to devoure,
- With your steele darts doe chace from coming neer,
- Be also present heere, 71
- To helpe to decke her, and to help to sing,
- That all the woods may answer, and your eccho ring.
- Wake now, my Love, awake! for it is time:
- The rosy Morne long since left Tithons bed, 75
- All ready to her silver coche to clyme,
- And Phoebus gins to shew his glorious hed.
- Hark! how the cheerefull birds do chaunt theyr laies,
- And carroll of Loves praise:
- The merry larke hir mattins sings aloft; 80
- The thrush replyes; the mavis* descant** playes;
- The ouzell@ shrills; the ruddock$ warbles soft;
- So goodly all agree, with sweet consent,
- To this dayes meriment.
- Ah! my deere Love, why doe ye sleepe thus long, 85
- When meeter were that ye should now awake,
- T'awayt the comming of your ioyous make,%
- And hearken to the birds love-learned song,
- The deawy leaves among!
- For they of ioy and pleasance to you sing, 90
- That all the woods them answer, and theyr eccho ring.
- [* _Mavis_, song-thrush.]
- [** _Descant_, variation.]
- [@ _Ouzell_, blackbird.]
- [$ _Ruddock_, redbreast.]
- [% _Make_, mate.]
- My love is now awake out of her dreame,
- And her fayre eyes, like stars that dimmed were
- With darksome cloud, now shew theyr goodly beams
- More bright then Hesperus his head doth rere. 95
- Come now, ye damzels, daughters of delight,
- Helpe quickly her to dight.
- But first come, ye fayre Houres, which were begot,
- In Ioves sweet paradice, of Day and Night,
- Which doe the seasons of the year allot, 100
- And all that ever in this world is fayre
- Do make and still repayre:
- And ye three handmayds of the Cyprian Queene,
- The which doe still adorn her beauties pride,
- Helpe to adorne my beautifullest bride: 105
- And, as ye her array, still throw betweene
- Some graces to be scene;
- And, as ye use to Venus, to her sing,
- The whiles the woods shal answer, and your eccho ring.
- Now is my Love all ready forth to come: 110
- Let all the virgins therefore well awayt,
- And ye fresh boyes, that tend upon her groome,
- Prepare your selves, for he is comming strayt.
- Set all your things in seemely good aray,
- Fit for so ioyfull day, 115
- The ioyfulst day that ever sunne did see.
- Fair Sun! shew forth thy favourable ray,
- And let thy lifull* heat not fervent be,
- For feare of burning her sunshyny face,
- Her beauty to disgrace. 120
- O fayrest Phoebus! Father of the Muse!
- If ever I did honour thee aright,
- Or sing the thing that mote thy mind delight,
- Doe not thy servants simple boone refuse,
- But let this day, let this one day, be mine; 125
- Let all the rest be thine.
- Then I thy soverayne prayses loud wil sing,
- That all the woods shal answer, and theyr eccho ring.
- [* _Lifull_, life-full.]
- Harke! how the minstrils gin to shrill aloud
- Their merry musick that resounds from far, 130
- The pipe, the tabor, and the trembling croud*,
- That well agree withouten breach or iar.
- But most of all the damzels doe delite,
- When they their tymbrels smyte,
- And thereunto doe daunce and carrol sweet, 135
- That all the sences they doe ravish quite;
- The whyles the boyes run up and downe the street,
- Crying aloud with strong confused noyce,
- As if it were one voyce,
- "Hymen, Iö Hymen, Hymen," they do shout; 140
- That even to the heavens theyr shouting shrill
- Doth reach, and all the firmament doth fill;
- To which the people, standing all about,
- As in approvance, doe thereto applaud,
- And loud advaunce her laud; 145
- And evermore they "Hymen, Hymen," sing,
- That all the woods them answer, and theyr eccho ring.
- [* _Croud_, violin]
- Loe! where she comes along with portly pace,
- Lyke Phoebe, from her chamber of the East,
- Arysing forth to run her mighty race, 150
- Clad all in white, that seems a virgin best.
- So well it her beseems, that ye would weene
- Some angell she had beene.
- Her long loose yellow locks lyke golden wyre,
- Sprinckled with perle, and perling flowres atweene,
- Doe lyke a golden mantle her attyre, 156
- And, being crowned with a girland greene,
- Seem lyke some mayden queene.
- Her modest eyes, abashed to behold
- So many gazers as on her do stare, 160
- Upon the lowly ground affixed are,
- Ne dare lift up her countenance too bold,
- But blush to heare her prayses sung so loud,--
- So farre from being proud.
- Nathlesse doe ye still loud her prayses sing, 165
- That all the woods may answer, and your eccho ring.
- Tell me, ye merchants daughters, did ye see
- So fayre a creature in your towne before;
- So sweet, so lovely, and so mild as she,
- Adornd with beautyes grace and vertues store? 170
- Her goodly eyes lyke saphyres shining bright,
- Her forehead yvory white,
- Her cheekes lyke apples which the sun hath rudded,
- Her lips lyke cherries, charming men to byte,
- Her brest like to a bowl of creame uncrudded*, 175
- Her paps lyke lyllies budded,
- Her snowie necke lyke to a marble towre,
- And all her body like a pallace fayre,
- Ascending up, with many a stately stayre,
- To honors seat and chastities sweet bowre. 180
- Why stand ye still, ye virgins, in amaze,
- Upon her so to gaze,
- Whiles ye forget your former lay to sing,
- To which the woods did answer, and your eccho ring?
- [* _Uncrudded_, uncurdled.]
- [Ver. 168.--_In your towne_. The marriage seems to have taken place in
- Cork, and we might infer from this passage that the heroine of the
- song was a merchant's daughter. C.]
- But if ye saw that which no eyes can see, 185
- The inward beauty of her lively spright,
- Garnisht with heavenly guifts of high degree,
- Much more then would ye wonder at that sight,
- And stand astonisht lyke to those which red*
- Medusaes mazeful bed. 190
- There dwells sweet Love, and constant Chastity,
- Unspotted Fayth, and comely Womanhood,
- Regard of Honour, and mild Modesty;
- There Vertue raynes as quecne in royal throne,
- And giveth lawes alone, 195
- The which the base affections doe obay,
- And yeeld theyr services unto her will;
- Be thought of tilings uncomely ever may
- Thereto approch to tempt her mind to ill.
- Had ye once seene these her celestial threasures, 200
- And unrevealed pleasures,
- Then would ye wonder, and her prayses sing,
- That all the woods should answer, and your eccho ring.
- [* _Red_, saw.]
- Open the temple gates unto my Love,
- Open them wide that she may enter in, 205
- And all the postes adorne as doth behove,
- And all the pillours deck with girlands trim,
- For to receyve this saynt with honour dew,
- That commeth in to you.
- With trembling steps and humble reverence, 210
- She commeth in before th'Almighties view:
- Of her, ye virgins, learne obedience,
- When so ye come into those holy places,
- To humble your proud faces.
- Bring her up to th'high altar, that she may 215
- The sacred ceremonies there partake,
- The which do endlesse matrimony make;
- And let the roring organs loudly play
- The praises of the Lord in lively notes;
- The whiles, with hollow throates, 220
- The choristers the ioyous antheme sing,
- That all the woods may answer, and their eccho ring.
- Behold, whiles she before the altar stands,
- Hearing the holy priest that to her speakes
- And blesseth her with his two happy hands, 225
- How the red roses flush up in her cheekes,
- And the pure snow with goodly vermill stayne,
- Like crimsin dyde in grayne:
- That even the angels, which continually
- About the sacred altar doe remaine, 230
- Forget their service and about her fly,
- Ofte peeping in her face, that seems more fayre
- The more they on it stare.
- But her sad* eyes, still fastened on the ground,
- Are governed with goodly modesty, 235
- That suffers not one look to glaunce awry,
- Which may let in a little thought unsownd.
- Why blush ye, Love, to give to me your hand,
- The pledge of all our band?
- Sing, ye sweet angels, Alleluya sing, 240
- That all the woods may answer, and your eccho ring.
- [* _Sad_, serious]
- Now al is done; bring home the bride againe;
- Bring home the triumph of our victory;
- Bring home with you the glory of her game,
- With ioyance bring her and with iollity. 245
- Never had man more ioyfull day than this,
- Whom heaven would heape with blis.
- Make feast therefore now all this live-long day;
- This day for ever to me holy is.
- Poure out the wine without restraint or stay,
- Poure not by cups, but by the belly full,
- Poure out to all that wull*,
- And sprinkle all the posts and wals with wine,
- That they may sweat, and drunken be withall.
- Crowne ye god Bacchus with a coronall,
- And Hymen also crowne with wreaths of vine;
- And let the Graces daunce unto the rest,
- For they can doo it best:
- The whiles the maydens doe theyr carroll sing,
- To which the woods shall answer, and theyr eccho ring.
- [* _Wull_, will.]
- Ring ye the bels, ye yong men of the towne,
- And leave your wonted labors for this day:
- This day is holy; doe ye write it downe,
- That ye for ever it remember may.
- This day the sunne is in his chiefest hight,
- With Barnaby the bright*,
- From whence declining daily by degrees,
- He somewhat loseth of his heat and light,
- When once the Crab behind his back he sees.
- But for this time it ill ordained was,
- To choose the longest day in all the yeare,
- And shortest night, when longest fitter weare:
- Yet never day so long, but late would passe.
- Ring ye the bels to make it weare away,
- And bonefiers make all day; 275
- And daunce about them, and about them sing,
- That all the woods may answer, and your eccho ring.
- [* Ver. 266.--_Barnaby the bright_. The difference between the old
- and new style at the time this poem was written was ten days. The
- summer solstice therefore fell on St. Barnabas's day, the 11th of
- June. C.]
- Ah! when will this long weary day have end,
- And lende me leave to come unto my Love?
- How slowly do the houres theyr numbers spend? 280
- How slowly does sad Time his feathers move?
- Hast thee, O fayrest planet, to thy home,
- Within the Westerne fome:
- Thy tyred steedes long since have need of rest.
- Long though it be, at last I see it gloome, 285
- And the bright evening-star with golden creast
- Appeare out of the East.
- Fayre childe of beauty! glorious lampe of love!
- That all the host of heaven in rankes doost lead,
- And guidest lovers through the nights sad dread, 290
- How chearefully thou lookest from above,
- And seemst to laugh atweene thy twinkling light,
- As ioying in the sight
- Of these glad many, which for ioy do sing, 294
- That all the woods them answer, and their eccho ring!
- Now ceasse, ye damsels, your delights fore-past;
- Enough it is that all the day was youres:
- Now day is doen, and night is nighing fast;
- Now bring the bryde into the brydall bowres.
- The night is come; now soon her disaray, 300
- And in her bed her lay;
- Lay her in lillies and in violets,
- And silken curteins over her display,
- And odourd sheets, and Arras coverlets.
- Behold how goodly my faire Love does ly, 305
- In proud humility!
- Like unto Maia, when as Iove her took
- In Tempe, lying on the flowry gras,
- Twixt sleepe and wake, after she weary was
- With bathing in the Acidalian brooke. 310
- Now it is night, ye damsels may be gone,
- And leave my Love alone,
- And leave likewise your former lay to sing:
- The woods no more shall answer, nor your eccho ring.
- Now welcome, Night! thou night so long expected,
- That long daies labour doest at last defray, 316
- And all my cares, which cruell Love collected,
- Hast sumd in one, and cancelled for aye.
- Spread thy broad wing over my Love and me,
- That no man may us see; 320
- And in thy sable mantle us enwrap,
- From feare of perrill and foule horror free.
- Let no false treason seeke us to entrap,
- Nor any dread disquiet once annoy
- The safety of our ioy; 325
- But let the night be calme and quietsome,
- Without tempestuous storms or sad afray;
- Lyke as when Iove with fayre Alemena lay,
- When he begot the great Tirynthian groome;
- Or lyke as when he with thy selfe did lie, 330
- And begot Maiesty:
- And let the mayds and yongmen cease to sing;
- Ne let the woods them answer, nor theyr eccho ring.
- Let no lamenting cryes, nor dolefull teares,
- Be heard all night within, nor yet without: 335
- Ne let false whispers, breeding hidden feares,
- Breake gentle sleepe with misconceived dout.
- Let no deluding dreames, nor dreadful sights,
- Make sudden sad affrights:
- No let house-fyres, nor lightnings helpless harmes, 340
- Ne let the Pouke, nor other evill sprights,
- Ne let mischievous witches with theyr charmes,
- Ne let hob-goblins, names whose sence we see not,
- Fray us with things that be not:
- Let not the shriech-owle, nor the storke, be heard, 345
- Nor the night-raven, that still deadly yels,
- Nor damned ghosts, cald up with mighty spels,
- Nor griesly vultures, make us once affeard:
- Ne let th'unpleasant quyre of frogs still croking
- Make us to wish theyr choking. 350
- Let none of these theyr drery accents sing;
- Ne let the woods them answer, nor theyr eccho ring.
- [Ver. 341.--The _Pouke_ (Puck is a generic term, signifying fiend, or
- mischievous imp) is Robin Goodfellow. C.]
- But let stil Silence trew night-watches keepe,
- That sacred Peace may in assurance rayne,
- And tymely Sleep, when it is tyme to sleepe, 355
- May poure his limbs forth on your pleasant playne.
- The whiles an hundred little winged Loves,
- Like divers-fethered doves,
- Shall fly and flutter round about the bed,
- And in the secret darke, that none reproves, 360
- Their prety stealthes shall worke, and snares shall spread
- To filch away sweet snatches of delight,
- Conceald through covert night.
- Ye sonnes of Venus, play your sports at will!
- For greedy Pleasure, carelesse of your toyes, 365
- Thinks more upon her paradise of ioyes,
- Then what ye do, albe it good or ill.
- All night, therefore, attend your merry play,
- For it will soone be day:
- Now none doth hinder you, that say or sing; 370
- Ne will the woods now answer, nor your eccho ring.
- Who is the same which at my window peepes?
- Or whose is that faire face that shines so bright?
- Is it not Cinthia, she that never sleepes,
- But walkes about high heaven al the night? 375
- O fayrest goddesse! do thou not envy
- My Love with me to spy:
- For thou likewise didst love, though now unthought,
- And for a fleece of wooll, which privily
- The Latmian Shepherd* once unto thee brought, 380
- His pleasures with thee wrought.
- Therefore to us be favorable now;
- And sith of wemens labours thou hast charge,
- And generation goodly dost enlarge,
- Encline thy will t'effect our wishfull vow, 385
- And the chast womb informe with timely seed,
- That may our comfort breed:
- Till which we cease our hopefull hap to sing,
- Ne let the woods us answer, nor our eccho ring.
- [* I.e. Endymion.]
- And thou, great Iuno! which with awful might 390
- The lawes of wedlock still dost patronize,
- And the religion of the faith first plight
- With sacred rites hast taught to solemnize,
- And eke for comfort often called art
- Of women in their smart, 395
- Eternally bind thou this lovely band,
- And all thy blessings unto us impart.
- And thou, glad Genius! in whose gentle hand
- The bridale bowre and geniall bed remaine,
- Without blemish or staine, 400
- And the sweet pleasures of theyr loves delight
- With secret ayde doost succour and supply,
- Till they bring forth the fruitfull progeny,
- Send us the timely fruit of this same night,
- And thou, fayre Hebe! and thou, Hymen free! 405
- Grant that it may so be.
- Till which we cease your further prayse to sing,
- Ne any woods shall answer, nor your eccho ring.
- And ye high heavens, the temple of the gods,
- In which a thousand torches flaming bright 410
- Doe burne, that to us wretched earthly clods
- In dreadful darknesse lend desired light,
- And all ye powers which in the same remayne,
- More than we men can fayne,
- Poure out your blessing on us plentiously, 415
- And happy influence upon us raine,
- That we may raise a large posterity,
- Which from the earth, which they may long possesse
- With lasting happinesse,
- Up to your haughty pallaces may mount, 420
- And for the guerdon of theyr glorious merit,
- May heavenly tabernacles there inherit,
- Of blessed saints for to increase the count.
- So let us rest, sweet Love, in hope of this,
- And cease till then our tymely ioyes to sing: 425
- The woods no more us answer, nor our eccho ring!
- _Song, made in lieu of many ornaments
- With which my Love should duly have been dect,
- Which cutting off through hasty accidents,
- Ye would not stay your dew time to expect, 430
- But promist both to recompens,
- Be unto her a goodly ornament,
- And for short time an endlesse moniment!_
- * * * * *
- PROTHALAMION:
- OR,
- A SPOUSALL VERSE,
- MADE BY
- EDM. SPENSER.
- IN HONOUR OF THE DOUBLE MARRIAGE OF THE TWO HONORABLE
- AND VERTUOUS LADIES, THE LADIE ELIZABETH,
- AND THE LADIE KATHERINE SOMERSET, DAUGHTERS
- TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE THE EARLE
- OF WORCESTER, AND ESPOUSED TO THE
- TWO WORTHIE GENTLEMEN, M. HENRY
- GILFORD AND M. WILLIAM PETER,
- ESQUYERS.
- (1596)
- PROTHALAMION:
- OR,
- A SPOUSALL VERSE.
- Calme was the day, and through the trembling ayre
- Sweete-breathing Zephyrus did softly play
- A gentle spirit, that lightly did delay*
- Hot Titans beames, which then did glyster fayre;
- When I (whom sullein care,
- Through discontent of my long fruitlesse stay
- In princes court, and expectation vayne
- Of idle hopes, which still doe fly away
- Like empty shadows, did afflict my brayne,)
- Walkt forth to ease my payne 10
- Along the shoare of silver streaming Themmes;
- Whose rutty** bank, the which his river hemmes,
- Was paynted all with variable flowers,
- And all the meades adornd with dainty gemmes,
- Fit to decke maydens bowres, 15
- And crowne their paramours
- Against the brydale day, which is not long@:
- Sweet Themmes! runne softly, till I end my song.
- [* _Delay_, allay.]
- [** _Rutty_, rooty.]
- [@ _Long_, distant.]
- There, in a meadow by the rivers side,
- A flocke of Nymphes I chaunced to espy, 20
- All lovely daughters of the flood thereby,
- With goodly greenish locks, all loose untyde,
- As each had bene a bryde;
- And each one had a little wicker basket,
- Made of fine twigs, entrayled* curiously, 25
- In which they gathered flowers to fill their flasket**,
- And with fine fingers cropt full feateously@
- The tender stalkes on hye.
- Of every sort which in that meadow grew
- They gathered some; the violet, pallid blew, 30
- The little dazie, that at evening closes,
- The virgin lillie, and the primrose trew,
- With store of vermeil roses,
- To deck their bridegroomes posies
- Against the brydale day, which was not long: 35
- Sweet Themmes! runne softly, till I end my song.
- [* _Entrayled_, interwoven.]
- [** _Flasket_, a long, shallow basket.]
- [@ _Feateously_, dexterously.]
- With that I saw two Swannes of goodly hewe
- Come softly swimming downe along the lee*:
- Two fairer birds I yet did never see;
- The snow which doth the top of Pindus strew 40
- Did never whiter shew,
- Nor Jove himselfe, when he a swan would be
- For love of Leda, whiter did appear;
- Yet Leda was, they say, as white as he,
- Yet not so white as these, nor nothing near: 45
- So purely white they were,
- That even the gentle stream, the which them bare,
- Seem'd foule to them, and bad his billowes spare
- To wet their silken feathers, least they might
- Soyle their fayre plumes with water not so fayre, 50
- And marre their beauties bright,
- That shone as heavens light,
- Against their brydale day, which was not long:
- Sweet Themmes! runne softly, till I end my song.
- [* _Lee_, stream.]
- Eftsoones, the Nymphes, which now had flowers their fill, 55
- Ran all in haste to see that silver brood,
- As they came floating on the cristal flood;
- Whom when they sawe, they stood amazed still,
- Their wondring eyes to fill.
- Them seem'd they never saw a sight so fayre 60
- Of fowles, so lovely, that they sure did deeme
- Them heavenly borne, or to be that same payre
- Which through the skie draw Venus stiver teeme;
- For sure they did not seeme
- To be begot of any earthly seede, 65
- But rather angels, or of angels breede;
- Yet were they bred of Somers-heat, they say,
- In sweetest season, when each flower and weede
- The earth did fresh aray;
- So fresh they seem'd as day, 70
- Even as their brydale day, which was not long:
- Sweet Themmes! runne softly, till I end my song.
- [Ver. 67--_Somers-heat_. A pun on the name of the Ladies Somerset. C.]
- Then forth they all out of their baskets drew
- Great store of flowers, the honour of the field,
- That to the sense did fragrant odours yeild, 75
- All which upon those goodly birds they threw,
- And all the waves did strew,
- That like old Peneus waters they did seeme,
- When downe along by pleasant Tempes shore,
- Scattred with flowres, through Thessaly they streeme,
- That they appeare, through lillies plenteous store, 81
- Like a brydes chamber flore.
- Two of those Nymphes, meane while, two garlands bound
- Of freshest flowres which in that mead they found,
- The which presenting all in trim array, 85
- Their snowie foreheads therewithall they crownd,
- Whilst one did sing this lay,
- Prepar'd against that day,
- Against their brydale day, which was not long:
- Sweet Themmes! runne softly, till I end my song.
- "Ye gentle Birdes! the worlds faire ornament, 91
- And heavens glorie, whom this happie hower
- Doth leade unto your lovers blissfull bower,
- Ioy may you have, and gentle hearts content
- Of your loves couplement; 95
- And let faire Venus, that is Queene of Love,
- With her heart-quelling sonne upon you smile,
- Whose smile, they say, hath vertue to remove
- All loves dislike, and friendships faultie guile
- For ever to assoile*. 100
- Let endlesse peace your steadfast hearts accord,
- And blessed plentie wait upon your bord;
- And let your bed with pleasures chast abound.
- That fruitfull issue may to you afford,
- Which may your foes confound, 105
- And make your ioyes redound
- Upon your brydale day, which is not long:
- Sweet Themmes! runne softlie, till I end my song."
- [* _Assoile_, do away with.]
- So ended she; and all the rest around
- To her redoubled that her undersong*, 110
- Which said, their brydale daye should not be long:
- And gentle Eccho from the neighbour ground
- Their accents did resound.
- So forth those ioyous birdes did passe along
- Adowne the lee, that to them murmurde low, 115
- As he would speake, but that he lackt a tong,
- Yet did by signes his glad affection show,
- Making his streame run slow.
- And all the foule which in his flood did dwell
- Gan flock about these twaine, that did excell 120
- The rest so far as Cynthia doth shend**
- The lesser stars. So they, enranged well,
- Did on those two attend,
- And their best service lend
- Against their wedding day, which was not long: 125
- Sweet Themmes! runne softly, till I end my song.
- [* _Undersong_, burden.]
- [** _Shend_, put to shame.]
- At length they all to mery London came,
- To mery London, my most kyndly nurse,
- That to me gave this lifes first native sourse,
- Though from another place I take my name, 130
- An house of auncient fame.
- There when they came whereas those bricky towres
- The which on Themmes brode aged backe doe ryde,
- Where now the studious lawyers have their bowers.--
- There whylome wont the Templer Knights to byde,
- Till they decayd through pride,-- 136
- Next whereunto there standes a stately place,
- Where oft I gayned giftes and goodly grace
- Of that great lord which therein wont to dwell,
- Whose want too well now feels my freendles case: 140
- But ah! here fits not well
- Olde woes, but ioyes, to tell,
- Against the bridale daye, which is not long:
- Sweet Themmes! runne softly, till I end my song.
- [Ver. 137.--_A stately place_ Exeter House, the residence first of the
- Earl of Leicester, and afterwards of Essex. C.]
- Yet therein now doth lodge a noble peer, 145
- Great Englands glory and the worlds wide wonder,
- Whose dreadfull name late through all Spaine did thunder,
- And Hercules two pillors standing neere
- Did make to quake and feare.
- Faire branch of honor, flower of chevalrie! 150
- That fillest England with thy triumphs fame,
- Ioy have thou of thy noble victorie,
- And endlesse happinesse of thine owne name,
- That promiseth the same;
- That through thy prowesse and victorious armes 155
- Thy country may be freed from forraine harmes,
- And great Elisaes glorious name may ring
- Through al the world, fil'd with thy wide alarmes.
- Which some brave Muse may sing
- To ages following, 160
- Upon the brydale day, which is not long:
- Sweet Themmes! runne softly, till I end my song.
- [Ver. 147.--_Whose dreadfull name, &c_. The allusion here is to the
- expedition against Cadiz, from which Essex returned in August, 1596. C.]
- From those high towers this noble lord issuing,
- Like radiant Hesper, when his golden hayre
- In th'ocean billowes he hath bathed fayre, 165
- Descended to the rivers open vewing,
- With a great traine ensuing.
- Above the rest were goodly to bee scene
- Two gentle Knights of lovely face and feature,
- Beseeming well the bower of any queene, 170
- With gifts of wit and ornaments of nature
- Fit for so goodly stature,
- That like the twins of Iove they seem'd in sight,
- Which decke the bauldricke of the heavens bright.
- They two, forth pacing to the rivers side, 175
- Receiv'd those two faire brides, their loves delight;
- Which, at th'appointed tyde,
- Each one did make his bryde
- Against their brydale day, which is not long: 179
- Sweet Themmes! runne softly, till I end my song.
- * * * * *
- FOWRE HYMNES
- MADE BY
- EDM. SPENSER.
- TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE AND MOST VERTUOUS LADIES,
- THE LADIE MARGARET,
- COUNTESSE OF CUMBERLAND;
- AND THE LADIE MARIE*,
- COUNTESSE OF WARWICK.
- Having, in the greener times of my youth, composed these former two
- Hymnes in the praise of love and beautie, and finding that the same too
- much pleased those of like age and disposition, which, being too
- vehemently carried with that kind of affection, do rather sucke out
- poyson to their strong passion, then honey to their honest delight, I
- was moved, by the one of you two most excellent Ladies, to call in the
- same; but being unable so to do, by reason that many copies thereof were
- formerly scattered abroad, I resolved at least to amend, and, by way of
- retraction, to reforme them, making (instead of those two Hymnes of
- earthly or naturall love and beautie) two others of heavenly and
- celestiall; the which I doe dedicate ioyntly unto you two honorable
- sisters, as to the most excellent and rare ornaments of all true love
- and beautie, both in the one and the other kind; humbly beseeching you
- to vouchsafe the patronage of them, and to accept this my humble
- service, in lieu of the great graces and honourable favours which ye
- dayly shew unto me, until such time as I may, by better meanes, yeeld
- you some more notable testimonie of my thankfull mind and dutifull
- devotion. And even so I pray for your happinesse. Greenwich, this first
- of September, 1596. Your Honors most bounden ever,
- In all humble service,
- ED. SP.
- [* The Countess of Warwick's name was Anne, not Mary. TODD.]
- * * * * *
- AN HYMNE
- IN HONOUR OF LOVE.
- Love, that long since hast to thy mighty powre
- Perforce subdude my poor captived hart,
- And raging now therein with restlesse stowre*,
- Doest tyrannize in everie weaker part,
- Faine would I seeke to ease my bitter smart 5
- By any service I might do to thee,
- Or ought that else might to thee pleasing bee.
- [* _Stowre_, commotion.]
- And now t'asswage the force of this new flame,
- And make thee more propitious in my need,
- I meane to sing the praises of thy name, 10
- And thy victorious conquests to areed*,
- By which thou madest many harts to bleed
- Of mighty victors, with wide wounds embrewed,
- And by thy cruell darts to thee subdewed.
- [* _Areed_, set forth.]
- Onely I fear my wits, enfeebled late 15
- Through the sharp sorrowes which thou hast me bred,
- Should faint, and words should faile me to relate
- The wondrous triumphs of thy great god-hed:
- But, if thou wouldst vouchsafe to overspred
- Me with the shadow of thy gentle wing, 20
- I should enabled be thy actes to sing.
- Come, then, O come, thou mightie God of Love!
- Out of thy silver bowres and secret blisse,
- Where thou dost sit in Venus lap above,
- Bathing thy wings in her ambrosial kisse, 25
- That sweeter farre than any nectar is,
- Come softly, and my feeble breast inspire
- With gentle furie, kindled of thy fire.
- And ye, sweet Muses! which have often proved
- The piercing points of his avengefull darts, 30
- And ye, fair Nimphs! which oftentimes have loved
- The cruel worker of your kindly smarts,
- Prepare yourselves, and open wide your harts
- For to receive the triumph of your glorie,
- That made you merie oft when ye were sorrie. 35
- And ye, faire blossoms of youths wanton breed!
- Which in the conquests of your beautie bost,
- Wherewith your lovers feeble eyes you feed,
- But sterve their harts, that needeth nourture most,
- Prepare your selves to march amongst his host, 40
- And all the way this sacred hymne do sing,
- Made in the honor of your soveraigne king.
- Great God of Might, that reignest in the mynd,
- And all the bodie to thy hest doest frame,
- Victor of gods, subduer of mankynd, 45
- That doest the lions and fell tigers tame,
- Making their cruell rage thy scornfull game,
- And in their roring taking great delight,
- Who can expresse the glorie of thy might?
- Or who alive can perfectly declare 50
- The wondrous cradle of thine infancie,
- When thy great mother Venus first thee bare,
- Begot of Plenty and of Penurie,
- Though elder then thine own nativitie,
- And yet a chyld, renewing still thy yeares, 55
- And yet the eldest of the heavenly peares?
- For ere this worlds still moving mightie masse
- Out of great Chaos ugly prison crept,
- In which his goodly face long hidden was
- From heavens view, and in deep darknesse kept, 60
- Love, that had now long time securely slept
- In Venus lap, unarmed then and naked,
- Gan reare his head, by Clotho being waked:
- And taking to him wings of his own heat,
- Kindled at first from heavens life-giving fyre, 65
- He gan to move out of his idle seat;
- Weakly at first, but after with desyre
- Lifted aloft, he gan to mount up hyre*,
- And, like fresh eagle, made his hardy flight
- Thro all that great wide wast, yet wanting light. 70
- [* _Hyre_, higher.]
- Yet wanting light to guide his wandring way,
- His own faire mother, for all creatures sake,
- Did lend him light from her owne goodly ray;
- Then through the world his way he gan to take,
- The world, that was not till he did it make, 75
- Whose sundrie parts he from themselves did sever.
- The which before had lyen confused ever.
- The earth, the ayre, the water, and the fyre,
- Then gan to raunge themselves in huge array,
- And with contráry forces to conspyre 80
- Each against other by all meanes they may,
- Threatning their owne confusion and decay:
- Ayre hated earth, and water hated fyre,
- Till Love relented their rebellious yre.
- He then them tooke, and, tempering goodly well 85
- Their contrary dislikes with loved meanes,
- Did place them all in order, and compell
- To keepe themselves within their sundrie raines*,
- Together linkt with adamantine chaines;
- Yet so as that in every living wight 90
- They mix themselves, and shew their kindly might.
- [* _Raines_, kingdoms.]
- So ever since they firmely have remained,
- And duly well observed his beheast;
- Through which now all these things that are contained
- Within this goodly cope, both most and least, 95
- Their being have, and daily are increast
- Through secret sparks of his infused fyre,
- Which in the barraine cold he doth inspyre.
- Thereby they all do live, and moved are
- To multiply the likenesse of their kynd, 100
- Whilest they seeke onely, without further care,
- To quench the flame which they in burning fynd;
- But man, that breathes a more immortall mynd,
- Not for lusts sake, but for eternitie,
- Seekes to enlarge his lasting progenie. 105
- For having yet in his deducted spright
- Some sparks remaining of that heavenly fyre,
- He is enlumind with that goodly light,
- Unto like goodly semblant to aspyre;
- Therefore in choice of love he doth desyre 110
- That seemes on earth most heavenly to embrace,
- That same is Beautie, borne of heavenly race.
- For sure, of all that in this mortall frame
- Contained is, nought more divine doth seeme,
- Or that resembleth more th'immortall flame 115
- Of heavenly light, than Beauties glorious beam.
- What wonder then, if with such rage extreme
- Frail men, whose eyes seek heavenly things to see,
- At sight thereof so much enravisht bee?
- Which well perceiving, that imperious boy 120
- Doth therewith tip his sharp empoisned darts,
- Which glancing thro the eyes with* countenance coy
- Kest not till they have pierst the trembling harts,
- And kindled flame in all their inner parts,
- Which suckes the blood, and drinketh up the lyfe, 125
- Of carefull wretches with consuming griefe.
- [* Qu. from? WARTON.]
- Thenceforth they playne, and make full piteous mone
- Unto the author of their balefull bane:
- The daies they waste, the nights they grieve and grone,
- Their lives they loath, and heavens light disdaine; 130
- No light but that whose lampe doth yet remaine
- Fresh burning in the image of their eye,
- They deigne to see, and seeing it still dye.
- The whylst thou, tyrant Love, doest laugh and scorne
- At their complaints, making their paine thy play; 135
- Whylest they lye languishing like thrals forlorne,
- The whyles thou doest triumph in their decay;
- And otherwhyles, their dying to delay,
- Thou doest emmarble the proud hart of her
- Whose love before their life they doe prefer. 140
- So hast thou often done (ay me the more!)
- To me thy vassall, whose yet bleeding hart
- With thousand wounds thou mangled hast so sore,
- That whole remaines scarse any little part;
- Yet to augment the anguish of my smart, 145
- Thou hast enfrosen her disdainefull brest,
- That no one drop of pitie there doth rest.
- Why then do I this honor unto thee,
- Thus to ennoble thy victorious name,
- Sith thou doest shew no favour unto mee, 150
- Ne once move ruth in that rebellious dame,
- Somewhat to slacke the rigour of my flame?
- Certes small glory doest thou winne hereby,
- To let her live thus free, and me to dy.
- But if thou be indeede, as men thee call, 155
- The worlds great parent, the most kind preserver
- Of living wights, the soveraine lord of all,
- How falles it then that with thy furious fervour
- Thou doest afflict as well the not-deserver,
- As him that doeth thy lovely heasts despize, 160
- And on thy subiects most doth tyrannize?
- Yet herein eke thy glory seemeth more,
- By so hard handling those which best thee serve,
- That, ere thou doest them unto grace restore,
- Thou mayest well trie if they will ever swerve, 165
- And mayest them make it better to deserve,
- And, having got it, may it more esteeme;
- For things hard gotten men more dearely deeme.
- So hard those heavenly beauties be enfyred,
- As things divine least passions doe impresse; 170
- The more of stedfast mynds to be admyred,
- The more they stayed be on stedfastnesse;
- But baseborne minds such lamps regard the lesse,
- Which at first blowing take not hastie fyre;
- Such fancies feele no love, but loose desyre. 175
- For Love is lord of truth and loialtie,
- Lifting himself out of the lowly dust
- On golden plumes up to the purest skie,
- Above the reach of loathly sinfull lust,
- Whose base affect*, through cowardly distrust 180
- Of his weake wings, dare not to heaven fly,
- But like a moldwarpe** in the earth doth ly.
- [* _Affect_, affection, passion.]
- [** _Moldwarpe_, mole.]
- His dunghill thoughts, which do themselves enure
- To dirtie drosse, no higher dare aspyre;
- Ne can his feeble earthly eyes endure 185
- The flaming light of that celestiall fyre
- Which kindleth love in generous desyre,
- And makes him mount above the native might
- Of heavie earth, up to the heavens hight.
- Such is the powre of that sweet passion, 190
- That it all sordid basenesse doth expell,
- And the refyned mynd doth newly fashion
- Unto a fairer forme, which now doth dwell
- In his high thought, that would it selfe excell;
- Which he beholding still with constant sight, 195
- Admires the mirrour of so heavenly light.
- Whose image printing in his deepest wit,
- He thereon feeds his hungrie fantasy,
- Still full, yet never satisfyde with it;
- Like Tantale, that in store doth sterved ly, 200
- So doth he pine in most satiety;
- For nought may quench his infinite desyre,
- Once kindled through that first conceived fyre.
- Thereon his mynd affixed wholly is,
- Ne thinks on ought but how it to attaine; 205
- His care, his ioy, his hope, is all on this,
- That seemes in it all blisses to containe,
- In sight whereof all other blisse seemes vaine:
- Thrice happie man, might he the same possesse,
- He faines himselfe, and doth his fortune blesse. 210
- And though he do not win his wish to end,
- Yet thus farre happie he himselfe doth weene,
- That heavens such happie grace did to him lend
- As thing on earth so heavenly to have seene,
- His harts enshrined saint, his heavens queene, 215
- Fairer then fairest in his fayning eye,
- Whose sole aspect he counts felicitye.
- Then forth he casts in his unquiet thought,
- What he may do her favour to obtaine;
- What brave exploit, what perill hardly wrought, 220
- What puissant conquest, what adventurous paine,
- May please her best, and grace unto him gaine;
- He dreads no danger, nor misfortune feares,
- His faith, his fortune, in his breast he beares.
- Thou art his god, thou art his mightie guyde, 225
- Thou, being blind, letst him not see his feares,
- But carriest him to that which he had eyde,
- Through seas, through flames, through thousand swords and speares; *
- Ne ought so strong that may his force withstand,
- With which thou armest his resistlesse hand. 230
- [* The fifth verse of this stanza appears to have dropped out. C.]
- Witnesse Leander in the Euxine waves,
- And stout Aeneas in the Troiane fyre,
- Achilles preassing through the Phrygian glaives*,
- And Orpheus, daring to provoke the yre
- Of damned fiends, to get his love retyre; 235
- For both through heaven and hell thou makest way,
- To win them worship which to thee obay.
- [* _Glaives_, swords.]
- And if by all these perils and these paynes
- He may but purchase lyking in her eye,
- What heavens of ioy then to himselfe he faynes! 240
- Eftsoones he wypes quite out of memory
- Whatever ill before he did aby*:
- Had it beene death, yet would he die againe,
- To live thus happie as her grace to gaine.
- [* _Aby_, abide.]
- Yet when he hath found favour to his will, 245
- He nathëmore can so contented rest,
- But forceth further on, and striveth still
- T'approch more neare, till in her inmost brest
- He may embosomd bee and loved best;
- And yet not best, but to be lov'd alone; 250
- For love cannot endure a paragone*.
- [* _Paragone_, competitor.]
- The fear whereof, O how doth it torment
- His troubled mynd with more then hellish paine!
- And to his fayning fansie represent
- Sights never seene, and thousand shadowes vaine, 255
- To breake his sleepe and waste his ydle braine:
- Thou that hast never lov'd canst not beleeve
- Least part of th'evils which poore lovers greeve.
- The gnawing envie, the hart-fretting feare,
- The vaine surmizes, the distrustfull showes, 260
- The false reports that flying tales doe beare,
- The doubts, the daungers, the delayes, the woes,
- The fayned friends, the unassured foes,
- With thousands more then any tongue can tell,
- Doe make a lovers life a wretches hell. 265
- Yet is there one more cursed then they all,
- That cancker-worme, that monster, Gelosie,
- Which eates the heart and feedes upon the gall,
- Turning all Loves delight to miserie,
- Through feare of losing his felicitie. 270
- Ah, gods! that ever ye that monster placed
- In gentle Love, that all his ioyes defaced!
- By these, O Love! thou doest thy entrance make
- Unto thy heaven, and doest the more endeere
- Thy pleasures unto those which them partake, 275
- As after stormes, when clouds begin to cleare,
- The sunne more bright and glorious doth appeare;
- So thou thy folke, through paines of Purgatorie,
- Dost beare unto thy blisse, and heavens glorie.
- There thou them placest in a paradize 280
- Of all delight and ioyous happy rest,
- Where they doe feede on nectar heavenly-wize,
- With Hercules and Hebe, and the rest
- Of Venus dearlings, through her bountie blest;
- And lie like gods in yvory beds arayd, 285
- With rose and lillies over them displayd.
- There with thy daughter Pleasure they doe play
- Their hurtlesse sports, without rebuke or blame,
- And in her snowy bosome boldly lay
- Their quiet heads, devoyd of guilty shame, 290
- After full ioyance of their gentle game;
- Then her they crowne their goddesse and their queene,
- And decke with floures thy altars well beseene.
- Ay me! deare Lord, that ever I might hope,
- For all the paines and woes that I endure, 295
- To come at length unto the wished scope
- Of my desire, or might myselfe assure
- That happie port for ever to recure*!
- Then would I thinke these paines no paines at all,
- And all my woes to be but penance small. 300
- [* _Recure_, recover, gain.]
- Then would I sing of thine immortal praise
- An heavenly hymne such as the angels sing,
- And thy triumphant name then would I raise
- Bove all the gods, thee only honoring;
- My guide, my god, my victor, and my king: 305
- Till then, drad Lord! vouchsafe to take of me
- This simple song, thus fram'd in praise of thee.
- AN HYMNE
- IN HONOUR OF BEAUTIE.
- Ah! whither, Love! wilt thou now carry mee?
- What wontlesse fury dost thou now inspire
- Into my feeble breast, too full of thee?
- Whylest seeking to aslake thy raging fyre,
- Thou in me kindlest much more great desyre, 5
- And up aloft above my strength doth rayse
- The wondrous matter of my fire to praise.
- That as I earst in praise of thine owne name,
- So now in honour of thy mother deare
- An honourable hymne I eke should frame, 10
- And, with the brightnesse of her beautie cleare,
- The ravisht hearts of gazefull men might reare
- To admiration of that heavenly light,
- From whence proceeds such soule-enchanting might.
- Therto do thou, great Goddesse! Queene of Beauty,
- Mother of Love and of all worlds delight, 16
- Without whose soverayne grace and kindly dewty
- Nothing on earth seems fayre to fleshly sight,
- Doe thou vouchsafe with thy love-kindling light
- T'illuminate my dim and dulled eyne, 20
- And beautifie this sacred hymne of thyne:
- That both to thee, to whom I meane it most,
- And eke to her whose faire immortall beame
- Hath darted fyre into my feeble ghost,
- That now it wasted is with woes extreame, 25
- It may so please, that she at length will streame
- Some deaw of grace into my withered hart,
- After long sorrow and consuming smart.
- WHAT TIME THIS WORLDS GREAT WORKMAISTER did cast
- To make al things such as we now behold, 30
- It seems that he before his eyes had plast
- A goodly paterne, to whose perfect mould
- He fashiond them as comely as he could,
- That now so faire and seemely they appeare
- As nought may be amended any wheare. 35
- That wondrous paterne, wheresoere it bee,
- Whether in earth layd up in secret store,
- Or else in heaven, that no man may it see
- With sinfull eyes, for feare it do deflore,
- Is perfect Beautie, which all men adore; 40
- Whose face and feature doth so much excell
- All mortal sence, that none the same may tell.
- Thereof as every earthly thing partakes
- Or more or lesse, by influence divine,
- So it more faire accordingly it makes, 45
- And the grosse matter of this earthly myne
- Which closeth it thereafter doth refyne,
- Doing away the drosse which dims the light
- Of that faire beame which therein is empight*.
- [* _Empight_, placed.]
- For, through infusion of celestiall powre, 50
- The duller earth it quickneth with delight,
- And life-full spirits privily doth powre
- Through all the parts, that to the lookers sight
- They seeme to please; that is thy soveraine might,
- O Cyprian queene! which, flowing from the beame 55
- Of thy bright starre, thou into them doest streame.
- That is the thing which giveth pleasant grace
- To all things faire, that kindleth lively fyre;
- Light of thy lampe; which, shyning in the face,
- Thence to the soule darts amorous desyre, 60
- And robs the harts of those which it admyre;
- Therewith thou pointest thy sons poysned arrow,
- That wounds the life and wastes the inmost marrow.
- How vainely then do ydle wits invent
- That Beautie is nought else but mixture made 65
- Of colours faire, and goodly temp'rament
- Of pure complexions, that shall quickly fade
- And passe away, like to a sommers shade;
- Or that it is but comely composition
- Of parts well measurd, with meet disposition! 70
- Hath white and red in it such wondrous powre,
- That it can pierce through th'eyes unto the hart,
- And therein stirre such rage and restlesse stowre*,
- As nought but death can stint his dolours smart?
- Or can proportion of the outward part 75
- Move such affection in the inward mynd,
- That it can rob both sense, and reason blynd?
- [* _Stowre_, commotion.]
- Why doe not then the blossomes of the field,
- Which are arayd with much more orient hew,
- And to the sense most daintie odours yield, 80
- Worke like impression in the lookers vew?
- Or why doe not faire pictures like powre shew,
- In which oft-times we Nature see of Art
- Exceld, in perfect limming every part?
- But ah! beleeve me there is more then so, 85
- That workes such wonders in the minds of men;
- I, that have often prov'd, too well it know,
- And who so list the like assayes to ken
- Shall find by trial, and confesse it then,
- That Beautie is not, as fond men misdeeme, 90
- An outward shew of things that onely seeme.
- For that same goodly hew of white and red
- With which the cheekes are sprinckled, shall decay,
- And those sweete rosy leaves, so fairly spred
- Upon the lips, shall fade and fall away 95
- To that they were, even to corrupted clay:
- That golden wyre, those sparckling stars so bright,
- Shall turne to dust, and lose their goodly light.
- But that faire lampe, from whose celestiall ray
- That light proceedes which kindleth lovers fire, 100
- Shall never be extinguisht nor decay;
- But, when the vitall spirits doe espyre,
- Unto her native planet shall retyre;
- For it is heavenly borne, and cannot die,
- Being a parcell of the purest skie. 105
- For when the soule, the which derived was,
- At first, out of that great immortall Spright,
- By whom all live to love, whilome did pas
- Down from the top of purest heavens hight
- To be embodied here, it then tooke light 110
- And lively spirits from that fayrest starre
- Which lights the world forth from his firie carre.
- Which powre retayning still, or more or lesse,
- When she in fleshly seede is eft* enraced**,
- Through every part she doth the same impresse, 115
- According as the heavens have her graced,
- And frames her house, in which she will be placed,
- Fit for her selfe, adorning it with spoyle
- Of th'heavenly riches which she robd erewhyle.
- [* _Eft_, afterwards.]
- [** _Enraced_, implanted.]
- Thereof it comes that these faire soules which have
- The most resemblance of that heavenly light 121
- Frame to themselves most beautifull and brave
- Their fleshly bowre, most fit for their delight,
- And the grosse matter by a soveraine might
- Temper so trim, that it may well be seene 125
- A pallace fit for such a virgin queene.
- So every spirit, as it is most pure,
- And hath in it the more of heavenly light,
- So it the fairer bodie doth procure
- To habit in, and it more fairely dight* 130
- With chearfull grace and amiable sight:
- For of the soule the bodie forme doth take;
- For soule is forme, and doth the bodie make.
- [* _Dight_, adorn.]
- Therefore, where-ever that thou doest behold
- A comely corpse*, with beautie faire endewed, 135
- Know this for certaine, that the same doth hold
- A beauteous soule with fair conditions thewed**,
- Fit to receive the seede of vertue strewed;
- For all that faire is, is by nature good;
- That is a sign to know the gentle blood. 140
- [* _Corpse_, body.]
- [** i.e. endowed with fair qualities.]
- Yet oft it falles that many a gentle mynd
- Dwels in deformed tabernacle drownd,
- Either by chaunce, against the course of kynd*,
- Or through unaptnesse in the substance fownd,
- Which it assumed of some stubborne grownd, 145
- That will not yield unto her formes direction,
- But is deform'd with some foule imperfection.
- [* _Kynd_, nature.]
- And oft it falles, (ay me, the more to rew!)
- That goodly Beautie, albe heavenly borne,
- Is foule abusd, and that celestiall hew, 150
- Which doth the world with her delight adorne,
- Made but the bait of sinne, and sinners scorne,
- Whilest every one doth seeke and sew to have it,
- But every one doth seeke but to deprave it.
- Yet nathëmore is that faire Beauties blame, 155
- But theirs that do abuse it unto ill:
- Nothing so good, but that through guilty shame
- May be corrupt*, and wrested unto will.
- Nathelesse the soule is faire and beauteous still,
- However fleshes fault it filthy make; 160
- For things immortall no corruption take.
- [* _Corrupt_, corrupted.]
- But ye, faire Dames! the worlds deare ornaments,
- And lively images of heavens light,
- Let not your beames with such disparagements
- Be dimd, and your bright glorie darkned quight; l65
- But mindfull still of your first countries sight,
- Doe still preserve your first informed grace,
- Whose shadow yet shynes in your beauteous face.
- Loath that foule blot, that hellish fiërbrand,
- Disloiall lust, fair Beauties foulest blame, 170
- That base affections, which your eares would bland*,
- Commend to you by loves abused name,
- But is indeede the bondslave of defame;
- Which will the garland of your glorie marre,
- And quench the light of your brightshyning starre. 175
- [* _Bland_, blandish.]
- But gentle Love, that loiall is and trew,
- Wil more illumine your resplendent ray,
- And add more brightnesse to your goodly hew
- From light of his pure fire; which, by like way
- Kindled of yours, your likenesse doth display; 180
- Like as two mirrours, by opposd reflection,
- Doe both expresse the faces first impression.
- Therefore, to make your beautie more appeare,
- It you behoves to love, and forth to lay
- That heavenly riches which in you ye beare, 185
- That men the more admyre their fountaine may;
- For else what booteth that celestiall ray,
- If it in darknesse be enshrined ever,
- That it of loving eyes be vewed never?
- But, in your choice of loves, this well advize, 190
- That likest to your selves ye them select,
- The which your forms first sourse may sympathize,
- And with like beauties parts be inly deckt;
- For if you loosely love without respect,
- It is not love, but a discordant warre, 195
- Whose unlike parts amongst themselves do iarre.
- For love is a celestiall harmonie
- Of likely* harts composd of** starres concent,
- Which ioyne together in sweete sympathie,
- To work each others ioy and true content, 200
- Which they have harbourd since their first descent
- Out of their heavenly bowres, where they did see
- And know ech other here belov'd to bee.
- [* _Likely_, similar.]
- [** _Composd of_, combined by.]
- Then wrong it were that any other twaine
- Should in Loves gentle band combyned bee, 205
- But those whom Heaven did at first ordaine,
- And made out of one mould the more t'agree;
- For all that like the beautie which they see
- Straight do not love; for Love is not so light
- As straight to burne at first beholders sight. 210
- But they which love indeede looke otherwise,
- With pure regard and spotlesse true intent,
- Drawing out of the obiect of their eyes
- A more refyned form, which they present
- Unto their mind, voide of all blemishment; 215
- Which it reducing to her first perfection,
- Beholdeth free from fleshes frayle infection.
- And then conforming it unto the light
- Which in it selfe it hath remaining still,
- Of that first sunne, yet sparckling in his sight, 220
- Thereof he fashions in his higher skill
- An heavenly beautie to his fancies will;
- And it embracing in his mind entyre,
- The mirrour of his owne thought doth admyre.
- Which seeing now so inly faire to be, 225
- As outward it appeareth to the eye,
- And with his spirits proportion to agree,
- He thereon fixeth all his fantasie,
- And fully setteth his felicitie;
- Counting it fairer then it is indeede, 230
- And yet indeede her fairnesse doth exeede.
- For lovers eyes more sharply sighted bee
- Then other mens, and in deare loves delight
- See more then any other eyes can see,
- Through mutuall receipt of beamës bright, 235
- Which carrie privie message to the spright,
- And to their eyes that inmost faire display,
- As plaine as light discovers dawning day.
- Therein they see, through amorous eye-glaunces,
- Annies of Loves still flying too and fro, 240
- Which dart at them their litle fierie launces;
- Whom having wounded, back againe they go,
- Carrying compassion to their lovely foe;
- Who, seeing her faire eyes so sharp effect,
- Cures all their sorrowes with one sweete aspect. 245
- In which how many wonders doe they reede
- To their conceipt, that others never see!
- Now of her smiles, with which their soules they feede,
- Like gods with nectar in their bankets free;
- Now of her lookes, which like to cordials bee; 250
- But when her words embássade* forth she sends,
- Lord, how sweete musicke that unto them lends!
- [* _Embássade_, embassy.]
- Sometimes upon her forhead they behold
- A thousand graces masking in delight;
- Sometimes within her eye-lids they unfold 255
- Ten thousand sweet belgards*, which to their sight
- Doe seeme like twinckling starres in frostie night;
- But on her lips, like rosy buds in May,
- So many millions of chaste pleasures play.
- [* _Belgards_, fair looks.]
- All those, O Cytherea! and thousands more, 260
- Thy handmaides be, which do on thee attend,
- To decke thy beautie with their dainties store,
- That may it more to mortall eyes commend,
- And make it more admyr'd of foe and frend;
- That in mans harts thou mayst thy throne enstall, 265
- And spred thy lovely kingdome over all.
- Then Iö, tryumph! O great Beauties Queene,
- Advance the banner of thy conquest hie,
- That all this world, the which thy vassels beene,
- May draw to thee, and with dew fëaltie 270
- Adore the powre of thy great maiestie,
- Singing this hymne in honour of thy name,
- Compyld by me, which thy poor liegeman am!
- In lieu whereof graunt, O great soveraine!
- That she whose conquering beauty doth captÃve 275
- My trembling hart in her eternall chaine,
- One drop of grace at length will to me give,
- That I her bounden thrall by her may live,
- And this same life, which first fro me she reaved,
- May owe to her, of whom I it receaved. 280
- And you, faire Venus dearling, my dear dread!
- Fresh flowre of grace, great goddesse of my life,
- When your faire eyes these fearfull lines shall read,
- Deigne to let fall one drop of dew reliefe,
- That may recure my harts long pyning griefe, 285
- And shew what wondrous powre your beauty hath,
- That can restore a damned wight from death.
- AN HYMNE
- OF HEAVENLY LOVE*.
- [* See the sixth canto of the third book of the Faerie Queene,
- especially the second and the thirty-second stanzas; which, with his
- Hymnes of Heavenly Love and Heavenly Beauty, are evident proofs of
- Spenser's attachment to the Platonic school. WARTON.]
- Love, lift me up upon thy golden wings
- From this base world unto thy heavens hight,
- Where I may see those admirable things
- Which there thou workest by thy soveraine might,
- Farre above feeble reach of earthly sight, 5
- That I thereof an heavenly hymne may sing
- Unto the God of Love, high heavens king.
- Many lewd layes (ah! woe is me the more!)
- In praise of that mad fit which fooles call Love,
- I have in th'heat of youth made heretofore, 10
- That in light wits did loose affection move;
- But all those follies now I do reprove,
- And turned have the tenor of my string,
- The heavenly prayses of true Love to sing.
- And ye that wont with greedy vaine desire 15
- To reade my fault, and, wondring at my flame,
- To warme your selves at my wide sparckling fire,
- Sith now that heat is quenched, quench my blame,
- And in her ashes shrowd my dying shame;
- For who my passed follies now pursewes, 20
- Beginnes his owne, and my old fault renewes.
- BEFORE THIS WORLDS GREAT FRAME, in which al things
- Are now containd, found any being-place,
- Ere flitting Time could wag* his eyas** wings
- About that mightie bound which doth embrace 25
- The rolling spheres, and parts their houres by space,
- That high eternall Powre, which now doth move
- In all these things, mov'd in it selfe by love.
- [* _Wag_, move.]
- [** _Eyas_, unfledged.]
- It lovd it selfe, because it selfe was faire;
- (For fair is lov'd;) and of it self begot 30
- Like to it selfe his eldest Sonne and Heire,
- Eternall, pure, and voide of sinfull blot,
- The firstling of his ioy, in whom no iot
- Of loves dislike or pride was to be found,
- Whom he therefore with equall honour crownd. 35
- With him he raignd, before all time prescribed,
- In endlesse glorie and immortall might,
- Together with that Third from them derived,
- Most wise, most holy, most almightie Spright! 39
- Whose kingdomes throne no thoughts of earthly wight
- Can comprehend, much lesse my trembling verse
- With equall words can hope it to reherse.
- Yet, O most blessed Spirit! pure lampe of light,
- Eternall spring of grace and wisedom trew,
- Vouchsafe to shed into my barren spright 45
- Some little drop of thy celestiall dew,
- That may my rymes with sweet infuse* embrew,
- And give me words equall unto my thought,
- To tell the marveiles by thy mercie wrought.
- [* _Infuse_, infusion]
- Yet being pregnant still with powrefull grace, 50
- And full of fruitfull Love, that loves to get
- Things like himselfe and to enlarge his race,
- His second brood, though not of powre so great,
- Yet full of beautie, next he did beget,
- An infinite increase of angels bright, 55
- All glistring glorious in their Makers light.
- To them the heavens illimitable hight
- (Not this round heaven which we from hence behold,
- Adornd with thousand lamps of burning light,
- And with ten thousand gemmes of shyning gold) 60
- He gave as their inheritance to hold,
- That they might serve him in eternall blis,
- And be partakers of those ioyes of his.
- There they in their trinall triplicities
- About him wait, and on his will depend, 65
- Either with nimble wings to cut the skies,
- When he them on his messages doth send,
- Or on his owne dread presence to attend,
- Where they behold the glorie of his light,
- And caroll hymnes of love both day and night. 70
- [Ver. 64.--_Trinall triplicities_. See the Faerie Queene, Book I.
- Canto XII. 39. H.]
- Both day and night is unto them all one;
- For he his beames doth unto them extend,
- That darknesse there appeareth never none;
- Ne hath their day, ne hath their blisse, an end,
- But there their termelesse time in pleasure spend; 75
- Ne ever should their happinesse decay,
- Had not they dar'd their Lord to disobay.
- But pride, impatient of long resting peace,
- Did puffe them up with greedy bold ambition,
- That they gan cast their state how to increase 80
- Above the fortune of their first condition,
- And sit in Gods own seat without commission:
- The brightest angel, even the Child of Light*,
- Drew millions more against their God to fight.
- [* I.e. Lucifer.]
- Th'Almighty, seeing their so bold assay, 85
- Kindled the flame of his consuming yre,
- And with his onely breath them blew away
- From heavens hight, to which they did aspyre,
- To deepest hell, and lake of damned fyre,
- Where they in darknesse and dread horror dwell, 90
- Hating the happie light from which they fell.
- So that next off-spring of the Makers love,
- Next to himselfe in glorious degree,
- Degendering* to hate, fell from above
- Through pride; (for pride and love may ill agree;) 95
- And now of sinne to all ensample bee:
- How then can sinfull flesh it selfe assure,
- Sith purest angels fell to be impure?
- [* _Degendering_, degenerating.]
- But that Eternall Fount of love and grace,
- Still flowing forth his goodnesse unto all, 100
- Now seeing left a waste and emptie place
- In his wyde pallace through those angels fall,
- Cast to supply the same, and to enstall
- A new unknowen colony therein,
- Whose root from earths base groundworke should begin. 105
- Therefore of clay, base, vile, and nest to nought,
- Yet form'd by wondrous skill, and by his might
- According to an heavenly patterne wrought,
- Which he had fashiond in his wise foresight,
- He man did make, and breathd a living spright 110
- Into his face, most beautifull and fayre,
- Endewd with wisedomes riches, heavenly, rare.
- Such he him made, that he resemble might
- Himselfe, as mortall thing immortall could;
- Him to be lord of every living wight 115
- He made by love out of his owne like mould,
- In whom he might his mightie selfe behould;
- For Love doth love the thing belov'd to see,
- That like it selfe in lovely shape may bee.
- But man, forgetfull of his Makers grace 120
- No lesse than angels, whom he did ensew,
- Fell from the hope of promist heavenly place,
- Into the mouth of Death, to sinners dew,
- And all his off-spring into thraldome threw,
- Where they for ever should in bonds remaine 125
- Of never-dead, yet ever-dying paine;
- Till that great Lord of Love, which him at first
- Made of meere love, and after liked well,
- Seeing him lie like creature long accurst
- In that deep horor of despeyred hell, 130
- Him, wretch, in doole* would let no lenger dwell,
- But cast** out of that bondage to redeeme,
- And pay the price, all@ were his debt extreeme.
- [* _Doole_, pain.]
- [** _Cast_, devised.]
- [@ _All_, although.]
- Out of the bosome of eternall blisse,
- In which he reigned with his glorious Syre, 135
- He downe descended, like a most demisse*
- And abiect thrall, in fleshes fraile attyre,
- That he for him might pay sinnes deadly hyre,
- And him restore unto that happie state
- In which he stood before his haplesse fate. 140
- [* _Demisse_, humble.]
- In flesh at first the guilt committed was,
- Therefore in flesh it must be satisfyde;
- Nor spirit, nor angel, though they man surpas,
- Could make amends to God for mans misguyde,
- But onely man himselfe, who selfe did slyde: 145
- So, taking flesh of sacred virgins wombe,
- For mans deare sake he did a man become.
- And that most blessed bodie, which was borne
- Without all blemish or reprochfull blame,
- He freely gave to be both rent and torne 150
- Of cruell hands, who with despightfull shame
- Revyling him, (that them most vile became,)
- At length him nayled on a gallow-tree,
- And slew the iust by most uniust decree.
- O huge and most unspeakeable impression 155
- Of Loves deep wound, that pierst the piteous hart
- Of that deare Lord with so entyre affection,
- And, sharply launcing every inner part,
- Dolours of death into his soule did dart,
- Doing him die that never it deserved, 160
- To free his foes, that from his heast* had swerved!
- [* _Heast_, command.]
- What hart can feel least touch of so sore launch,
- Or thought can think the depth of so deare wound?
- Whose bleeding sourse their streames yet never staunch,
- But stil do flow, and freshly still redownd*, 165
- To heale the sores of sinfull soules unsound,
- And clense the guilt of that infected cryme,
- Which was enrooted in all fleshly slyme.
- [* _Redownd_, overflow.]
- O blessed Well of Love! O Floure of Grace!
- O glorious Morning-Starre! O Lampe of Light! 170
- Most lively image of thy Fathers face,
- Eternal King of Glorie, Lord of Might,
- Meeke Lambe of God, before all worlds behight*,
- How can we thee requite for all this good?
- Or what can prize** that thy most precious blood? 175
- [* _Behight_, named.]
- [** _Prize_, price.]
- Yet nought thou ask'st in lieu of all this love
- But love of us, for guerdon of thy paine:
- Ay me! what can us lesse than that behove?
- Had he required life for us againe,
- Had it beene wrong to ask his owne with gaine? 180
- He gave us life, he it restored lost;
- Then life were least, that us so little cost.
- But he our life hath left unto us free,
- Free that was thrall, and blessed that was band*;
- Ne ought demaunds but that we loving bee, 185
- As he himselfe hath lov'd us afore-hand,
- And bound therto with an eternall band;
- Him first to love that was so dearely bought,
- And next our brethren, to his image wrought.
- [* _Band_, cursed.]
- Him first to love great right and reason is, 190
- Who first to us our life and being gave,
- And after, when we fared* had amisse,
- Us wretches from the second death did save;
- And last, the food of life, which now we have,
- Even he himselfe, in his dear sacrament, 195
- To feede our hungry soules, unto us lent.
- [* _Fared_, gone.]
- Then next, to love our brethren, that were made
- Of that selfe* mould and that self Maker's hand
- That we, and to the same againe shall fade,
- Where they shall have like heritage of land, 200
- However here on higher steps we stand,
- Which also were with selfe-same price redeemed
- That we, however of us light esteemed.
- [* _Selfe_, same.]
- And were they not, yet since that loving Lord
- Commaunded us to love them for his sake, 205
- Even for his sake, and for his sacred word
- Which in his last bequest he to us spake,
- We should them love, and with their needs partake;
- Knowing that whatsoere to them we give
- We give to him by whom we all doe live. 210
- Such mercy he by his most holy reede*
- Unto us taught, and, to approve it trew,
- Ensampled it by his most righteous deede,
- Shewing us mercie, miserable crew!
- That we the like should to the wretches shew, 215
- And love our brethren; thereby to approve
- How much himselfe that loved us we love.
- [* _Reede_, precept.]
- Then rouze thy selfe, O Earth! out of thy soyle*,
- In which thou wallowest like to filthy swyne,
- And doest thy mynd in durty pleasures moyle**, 220
- Unmindfull of that dearest Lord of thyne;
- Lift up to him thy heavie clouded eyne,
- That thou this soveraine bountie mayst behold,
- And read, through love, his mercies manifold.
- [* _Soyle_, mire.]
- [** _Moyle_, defile.]
- Beginne from first, where he encradled was 225
- In simple cratch*, wrapt in a wad of hay,
- Betweene the toylfull oxe and humble asse,
- And in what rags, and in how base aray,
- The glory of our heavenly riches lay,
- When him the silly shepheards came to see, 230
- Whom greatest princes sought on lowest knee.
- [* _Cratch_, manger.]
- From thence reade on the storie of his life,
- His humble carriage, his unfaulty wayes,
- His cancred foes, his fights, his toyle, his strife,
- His paines, his povertie, his sharpe assayes, 235
- Through which he past his miserable dayes,
- Offending none, and doing good to all,
- Yet being malist* both by great and small.
- [* _Malist_, regarded with ill-will.]
- And look at last, how of most wretched wights
- He taken was, betrayd, and false accused; 240
- How with most scornfull taunts and fell despights,
- He was revyld, disgrast, and foule abused;
- How scourgd, how crownd, how buffeted, how brused;
- And, lastly, how twixt robbers crucifyde,
- With bitter wounds through hands, through feet, and syde! 245
- Then let thy flinty hart, that feeles no paine,
- Empierced be with pittifull remorse,
- And let thy bowels bleede in every vaine,
- At sight of his most sacred heavenly corse,
- So torne and mangled with malicious forse; 250
- And let thy soule, whose sins his sorrows wrought,
- Melt into teares, and grone in grieved thought.
- With sence whereof whilest so thy softened spirit
- Is inly toucht, and humbled with meeke zeale
- Through meditation of his endlesse merit, 255
- Lift up thy mind to th'author of thy weale,
- And to his soveraine mercie doe appeale;
- Learne him to love that loved thee so deare,
- And in thy brest his blessed image beare.
- With all thy hart, with all thy soule and mind, 260
- Thou must him love, and his beheasts embrace;
- All other loves, with which the world doth blind
- Weake fancies, and stirre up affections base,
- Thou must renounce and utterly displace,
- And give thy self unto him full and free, 265
- That full and freely gave himselfe to thee.
- Then shalt thou feele thy spirit so possest,
- And ravisht with devouring great desire
- Of his dear selfe, that shall thy feeble brest
- Inflame with love, and set thee all on fire 270
- With burning zeale, through every part entire*,
- That in no earthly thing thou shalt delight,
- But in his sweet and amiable sight.
- [* _Entire_, inward.]
- Thenceforth all worlds desire will in thee dye,
- And all earthes glorie, on which men do gaze, 275
- Seeme durt and drosse in thy pure-sighted eye,
- Compar'd to that celestiall beauties blaze,
- Whose glorious beames all fleshly sense doth daze
- With admiration of their passing light,
- Blinding the eyes, and lumining the spright. 280
- Then shall thy ravisht soul inspired bee
- With heavenly thoughts, farre above humane skil,
- And thy bright radiant eyes shall plainely see
- Th'idee of his pure glorie present still
- Before thy face, that all thy spirits shall fill 285
- With sweete enragement of celestiall love,
- Kindled through sight of those faire things above.
- AN HYMNE
- OF HEAVENLY BEAUTIE.
- Rapt with the rage of mine own ravisht thought,
- Through contemplation of those goodly sights
- And glorious images in heaven wrought,
- Whose wondrous beauty, breathing sweet delights,
- Do kindle love in high conceipted sprights, 5
- I faine* to tell the things that I behold,
- But feele my wits to faile and tongue to fold.
- [* _Faine_, long.]
- Vouchsafe then, O Thou most Almightie Spright!
- From whom all guifts of wit and knowledge flow,
- To shed into my breast some sparkling light 10
- Of thine eternall truth, that I may show
- Some little beames to mortall eyes below
- Of that immortall Beautie there with Thee,
- Which in my weake distraughted mynd I see;
- That with the glorie of so goodly sight 15
- The hearts of men, which fondly here admyre
- Faire seeming shewes, and feed on vaine delight,
- Transported with celestiall desyre
- Of those faire formes, may lift themselves up hyer,
- And learne to love, with zealous humble dewty, 20
- Th'Eternall Fountaine of that heavenly Beauty.
- Beginning then below, with th'easie vew
- Of this base world, subiect to fleshly eye,
- From thence to mount aloft, by order dew,
- To contemplation of th'immortall sky; 25
- Of the soare faulcon* so I learne to flye.
- That flags a while her fluttering wings beneath,
- Till she her selfe for stronger flight can breath.
- [* _Soare faulcon_, a young falcon; a hawk that has not shed its first
- feathers, which are _sorrel_.]
- Then looke, who list thy gazefull eyes to feed
- With sight of that is faire, looke on the frame 30
- Of this wyde universe, and therein reed
- The endlesse kinds of creatures which by name
- Thou canst not count, much less their natures aime;
- All which are made with wondrous wise respect,
- And all with admirable beautie deckt. 35
- First, th'Earth, on adamantine pillers founded
- Amid the Sea, engirt with brasen bands;
- Then th'Aire, still flitting, but yet firmely bounded
- On everie side with pyles of flaming brands,
- Never consum'd, nor quencht with mortall hands; 40
- And last, that mightie shining cristall wall,
- Wherewith he hath encompassed this all.
- By view whereof it plainly may appeare,
- That still as every thing doth upward tend
- And further is from earth, so still more cleare 45
- And faire it growes, till to his perfect end
- Of purest Beautie it at last ascend;
- Ayre more then water, fire much more then ayre,
- And heaven then fire, appeares more pure and fayre.
- Looke thou no further, but affixe thine eye 50
- On that bright shynie round still moving masse,
- The house of blessed God, which men call Skye,
- All sowd with glistring stars more thicke then grasse,
- Whereof each other doth in brightnesse passe,
- But those two most, which, ruling night and day, 55
- As king and queene the heavens empire sway;
- And tell me then, what hast thou ever seene
- That to their beautie may compared bee?
- Or can the sight that is most sharpe and keene
- Endure their captains flaming head to see? 60
- How much lesse those, much higher in degree,
- And so much fairer, and much more then these,
- As these are fairer then the land and seas?
- For farre above these heavens which here we see,
- Be others farre exceeding these in light, 65
- Not bounded, not corrupt, as these same bee,
- But infinite in largenesse and in hight,
- Unmoving, uncorrupt, and spotlesse bright,
- That need no sunne t'illuminate their spheres,
- But their owne native light farre passing theirs. 70
- And as these heavens still by degrees arize,
- Until they come to their first movers* bound,
- That in his mightie compasse doth comprize
- And came all the rest with him around,
- So those likewise doe by degrees redound**, 75
- And rise more faire, till they at last arive
- To the most faire, whereto they all do strive.
- [* I.e. the _primum mobile_.]
- [** I.e. exceed the one the other.]
- Faire is the heaven where happy soules have place,
- In full enioyment of felicitie,
- Whence they doe still behold the glorious face 80
- Of the Divine Eternall Maiestie;
- More faire is that where those Idees on hie
- Enraunged be, which Plato so admyred,
- And pure Intelligences from God inspyred.
- Yet fairer is that heaven in which do raine 85
- The soveraigne Powres and mightie Potentates,
- Which in their high protections doe containe
- All mortall princes and imperiall states;
- And fayrer yet whereas the royall Seates
- And heavenly Dominations are set, 90
- From whom all earthly governance is fet*.
- [* _Fet_, fetched, derived.]
- Yet farre more faire be those bright Cherubins,
- Which all with golden wings are overdight,
- And those eternall burning Seraphins,
- Which from their faces dart out fierie light; 95
- Yet fairer then they both, and much more bright,
- Be th'Angels and Archangels, which attend
- On Gods owne person, without rest or end.
- These thus in faire each other farre excelling,
- As to the Highest they approach more near, 100
- Yet is that Highest farre beyond all telling,
- Fairer then all the rest which there appeare,
- Though all their beauties ioyn'd together were;
- How then can mortall tongue hope to expresse
- The image of such endlesse perfectnesse? 105
- Cease then, my tongue! and lend unto my mynd
- Leave to bethinke how great that Beautie is,
- Whose utmost* parts so beautifull I fynd;
- How much more those essentiall parts of His,
- His truth, his love, his wisedome, and his blis, 110
- His grace, his doome**, his mercy, and his might,
- By which he lends us of himselfe a sight!
- [* _Utmost_, outmost.]
- [** _Doome_, judgment.]
- Those unto all he daily doth display,
- And shew himselfe in th'image of his grace,
- As in a looking-glasse, through which he may 115
- Be seene of all his creatures vile and base,
- That are unable else to see his face;
- His glorious face! which glistereth else so bright,
- That th'angels selves can not endure his sight.
- But we, fraile wights! whose sight cannot sustaine 120
- The suns bright beames when he on us doth shyne,
- But* that their points rebutted** backe againe
- Are duld, how can we see with feeble eyne
- The glorie of that Maiestie Divine,
- In sight of whom both sun and moone are darke, 125
- Compared to his least resplendent sparke?
- [* _But_, unless.]
- [** _Rebutted_, reflected.]
- The meanes, therefore, which unto us is lent
- Him to behold, is on his workes to looke.
- Which he hath made in beauty excellent,
- And in the same, as in a brasen booke, 130
- To read enregistred in every nooke
- His goodnesse, which his beautie doth declare;
- For all thats good is beautifull and faire.
- Thence gathering plumes of perfect speculation
- To impe* the wings of thy high flying mynd, 135
- Mount up aloft through heavenly contemplation
- From this darke world, whose damps the soule do blynd,
- And, like the native brood of eagles kynd,
- On that bright Sunne of Glorie fixe thine eyes,
- Clear'd from grosse mists of fraile infirmities. 140
- [* _Impe_, mend, strengthen.]
- Humbled with feare and awfull reverence,
- Before the footestoole of his Maiestie
- Throw thy selfe downe, with trembling innocence,
- Ne dare looke up with córruptible eye
- On the dred face of that great Deity, 145
- For feare lest, if he chaunce to look on thee,
- Thou turne to nought, and quite confounded be.
- But lowly fall before his mercie seate,
- Close covered with the Lambes integrity
- From the iust wrath of His avengefull threate 150
- That sits upon the righteous throne on hy;
- His throne is built upon Eternity,
- More firme and durable then steele or brasse,
- Or the hard diamond, which them both doth passe.
- His scepter is the rod of Righteousnesse, 155
- With which he bruseth all his foes to dust,
- And the great Dragon strongly doth represse
- Under the rigour of his iudgment iust;
- His seate is Truth, to which the faithfull trust,
- From whence proceed her beames so pure and bright, 160
- That all about him sheddeth glorious light:
- Light farre exceeding that bright blazing sparke
- Which darted is from Titans flaming head,
- That with his beames enlumineth the darke
- And dampish air, wherby al things are red*; 165
- Whose nature yet so much is marvelled
- Of mortall wits, that it doth much amaze
- The greatest wisards** which thereon do gaze.
- [* _Red_, perceived.]
- [** _Wisards_, wise men, _savants_.]
- But that immortall light which there doth shine
- Is many thousand times more bright, more cleare, 170
- More excellent, more glorious, more divine;
- Through which to God all mortall actions here,
- And even the thoughts of men, do plaine appeare;
- For from th'Eternall Truth it doth proceed,
- Through heavenly vertue which her beames doe breed. 175
- With the great glorie of that wondrous light
- His throne is all encompassed around,
- And hid in his owne brightnesse from the sight
- Of all that looke thereon with eyes unsound;
- And underneath his feet are to be found 180
- Thunder, and lightning, and tempestuous fyre,
- The instruments of his avenging yre.
- There in his bosome Sapience doth sit,
- The soveraine dearling of the Deity,
- Clad like a queene in royall robes, most fit 185
- For so great powre and peerelesse maiesty,
- And all with gemmes and iewels gorgeously
- Adornd, that brighter then the starres appeare,
- And make her native brightnes seem more cleare.
- And on her head a crown of purest gold 190
- Is set, in signe of highest soverainty;
- And in her hand a scepter she doth hold,
- With which she rules the house of God on hy,
- And menageth the ever-moving sky,
- And in the same these lower creatures all 195
- Subiected to her powre imperiall.
- Both heaven and earth obey unto her will,
- And all the creatures which they both containe;
- For of her fulnesse, which the world doth fill,
- They all partake, and do in state remaine 200
- As their great Maker did at first ordaine,
- Through observation of her high beheast,
- By which they first were made, and still increast.
- The fairnesse of her face no tongue can tell;
- For she the daughters of all wemens race, 205
- And angels eke, in beautie doth excell,
- Sparkled on her from Gods owne glorious face,
- And more increast by her owne goodly grace,
- That it doth farre exceed all humane thought,
- Ne can on earth compared be to ought. 210
- Ne could that painter (had he lived yet)
- Which pictured Venus with so curious quill
- That all posteritie admyred it,
- Have purtray'd this, for all his maistring* skill;
- Ne she her selfe, had she remained still, 215
- And were as faire as fabling wits do fayne,
- Could once come neare this Beauty soverayne.
- [* _Maistring_, superior.]
- But had those wits, the wonders of their dayes,
- Or that sweete Teian poet*, which did spend
- His plenteous vaine in setting forth her praise, 220
- Seen but a glims of this which I pretend**,
- How wondrously would he her face commend,
- Above that idole of his fayning thought,
- That all the world should with his rimes be fraught!
- [* I.e. Anacreon.]
- [** _Pretend_, set forth, (or, simply) intend.]
- How then dare I, the novice of his art, 225
- Presume to picture so divine a wight,
- Or hope t'expresse her least perfections part,
- Whose beautie filles the heavens with her light,
- And darkes the earth with shadow of her sight?
- Ah, gentle Muse! thou art too weake and faint 230
- The pourtraict of so heavenly hew to paint.
- Let angels, which her goodly face behold,
- And see at will, her soveraigne praises sing,
- And those most sacred mysteries unfold
- Of that faire love of mightie Heavens King; 235
- Enough is me t'admyre so heavenly thing,
- And being thus with her huge love possest,
- In th'only wonder of her selfe to rest.
- But whoso may, thrise happie man him hold
- Of all on earth, whom God so much doth grace, 240
- And lets his owne Beloved to behold;
- For in the view of her celestiall face
- All ioy, all blisse, all happinesse, have place;
- Ne ought on earth can want unto the wight
- Who of her selfe can win the wishfull sight. 245
- For she out of her secret threasury
- Plentie of riches forth on him will powre,
- Even heavenly riches, which there hidden ly
- Within the closet of her chastest bowre,
- Th'eternall portion of her precious dowre, 250
- Which Mighty God hath given to her free,
- And to all those which thereof worthy bee.
- None thereof worthy be, but those whom shee
- Vouchsafeth to her presence to receave,
- And letteth them her lovely face to see, 255
- Wherof such wondrous pleasures they conceave,
- And sweete contentment, that it doth bereave
- Their soul of sense, through infinite delight,
- And them transport from flesh into the spright.
- In which they see such admirable things, 260
- As carries them into an extasy;
- And heare such heavenly notes and carolings
- Of Gods high praise, that filles the brasen sky;
- And feele such ioy and pleasure inwardly,
- That maketh them all worldly cares forget, 265
- And onely thinke on that before them set.
- Ne from thenceforth doth any fleshly sense,
- Or idle thought of earthly things, remaine;
- But all that earst seemd sweet seemes now offence,
- And all that pleased earst now seemes to paine: 270
- Their ioy, their comfort, their desire, their game,
- Is fixed all on that which now they see;
- All other sights but fayned shadowes bee.
- And that faire lampe which useth to enflame
- The hearts of men with selfe-consuming fyre, 275
- Thenceforth seemes fowle, and full of sinfull blame
- And all that pompe to which proud minds aspyre
- By name of Honor, and so much desyre,
- Seemes to them basenesse, and all riches drosse,
- And all mirth sadnesse, and all lucre losse. 280
- So full their eyes are of that glorious sight,
- And senses fraught with such satietie.
- That in nought else on earth they can delight,
- But in th'aspect of that felicitie
- Which they have written in theyr inward ey; 285
- On which they feed, and in theyr fastened mynd
- All happie ioy and full contentment fynd.
- Ah, then, my hungry soule! which long hast fed
- On idle fancies of thy foolish thought,
- And, with false Beauties flattring bait misled, 290
- Hast after vaine deceiptfull shadowes sought,
- Which all are fled, and now have left thee nought
- But late repentance, through thy follies prief,
- Ah! ceasse to gaze on matter of thy grief:
- And looke at last up to that Soveraine Light, 295
- From whose pure beams al perfect Beauty springs,
- That kindleth love in every godly spright,
- Even the love of God; which loathing brings
- Of this vile world and these gay-seeming things;
- With whose sweet pleasures being so possest, 300
- Thy straying thoughts henceforth for ever rest.
- * * * * *
- EPIGRAMS AND SONNETS.
- EPIGRAMS.
- I*.
- [* In the folio of 1611, these four short pieces are appended
- to the Sonnets. The second and third are translated from Marot's
- Epigrams, Liv. III. No. 5, _De Diane_, and No. 24, _De Cupido et de sa
- Dame_. C.]
- In youth, before I waxed old,
- The blynd boy, Venus baby,
- For want of cunning, made me bold
- In bitter hyve to grope for honny:
- But when he saw me stung and cry,
- He tooke his wings and away did fly.
- II.
- As Diane hunted on a day,
- She chaunst to come where Cupid lay,
- His quiver by his head:
- One of his shafts she stole away,
- And one of hers did close convay,
- Into the others stead:
- With that Love wounded my Loves hart,
- But Diane, beasts with Cupids dart.
- III.
- I saw, in secret to my dame
- How little Cupid humbly came,
- And said to her, "All hayle, my mother!"
- But when he saw me laugh, for shame
- His face with bashfull blood did flame,
- Not knowing Venus from the other.
- "Then, never blush, Cupid," quoth I,
- "For many have err'd in this beauty."
- IV.
- Upon a day, as Love lay sweetly slumbring
- All in his mothers lap,
- A gentle Bee, with his loud trumpet murm'ring,
- About him flew by hap.
- Whereof when he was wakened with the noyse,
- And saw the beast so small,
- "Whats this," quoth he, "that gives so great a voyce,
- That wakens men withall?"
- In angry wize he flies about,
- And threatens all with corage stout. 10
- To whom his mother, closely* smiling, sayd,
- 'Twixt earnest and 'twixt game:
- "See! thou thy selfe likewise art lyttle made,
- If thou regard the same.
- And yet thou suffrest neyther gods in sky, 15
- Nor men in earth, to rest:
- But when thou art disposed cruelly,
- Theyr sleepe thou doost molest.
- Then eyther change thy cruelty,
- Or give lyke leave unto the fly." 20
- [* _Closely_, secretly.]
- Nathelesse, the cruell boy, not so content,
- Would needs the fly pursue,
- And in his hand, with heedlesse hardiment,
- Him caught for to subdue.
- But when on it he hasty hand did lay, 25
- The Bee him stung therefore.
- "Now out, alas," he cryde, "and welaway!
- I wounded am full sore.
- The fly, that I so much did scorne,
- Hath hurt me with his little horne." 30
- Unto his mother straight he weeping came,
- And of his griefe complayned;
- Who could not chuse but laugh at his fond game,
- Though sad to see him pained.
- "Think now," quoth she, "my son, how great the smart 35
- Of those whom thou dost wound:
- Full many thou hast pricked to the hart,
- That pitty never found.
- Therefore, henceforth some pitty take,
- When thou doest spoyle of lovers make." 40
- She tooke him streight full pitiously lamenting,
- She wrapt him softly, all the while repenting
- That he the fly did mock.
- She drest his wound, and it embaulmed well 45
- With salve of soveraigne might;
- And then she bath'd him in a dainty well,
- The well of deare delight.
- Who would not oft be stung as this,
- To be so bath'd in Venus blis? 50
- The wanton boy was shortly wel recured
- Of that his malady;
- But he soone after fresh again enured*
- His former cruelty.
- And since that time he wounded hath my selfe 55
- With his sharpe dart of love,
- And now forgets the cruell carelesse elfe
- His mothers heast** to prove.
- So now I languish, till he please
- My pining anguish to appease. 60
- [* _Enured_, practised.]
- [** _Heast_, command.]
- SONNETS
- WRITTEN BY SPENSER,
- COLLECTED FKOM THE ORIGINAL PUBLICATIONS IN
- WHICH THEY APPEARED.
- I*.
- _To the right worshipfull, my singular good frend,
- M. Gabriell Harvey, Doctor of the Lawes._
- Harvey, the happy above happiest men
- I read**; that, sitting like a looker-on
- Of this worldes stage, doest note with critique pen
- The sharpe dislikes of each condition:
- And, as one carelesse of suspition,
- Ne fawnest for the favour of the great,
- Ne fearest foolish reprehension
- Of faulty men, which daunger to thee threat:
- But freely doest of what thee list entreat,@
- Like a great lord of peerelesse liberty,
- Lifting the good up to high Honours seat,
- And the evill damning evermore to dy:
- For life and death is in thy doomeful writing;
- So thy renowme lives ever by endighting.
- Dublin, this xviij. of July, 1586.
- Your devoted friend, during life,
- EDMUND SPENCER.
- [* From "Foure Letters and certaine Sonnets especially touching Robert
- Greene, and other parties by him abused," &c. London, 1592. TODD.]
- [** _Read_, consider.]
- [@ _Entreat_, treat.]
- II*.
- Whoso wil seeke, by right deserts, t'attaine
- Unto the type of true nobility,
- And not by painted shewes, and titles vaine,
- Derived farre from famous auncestrie,
- Behold them both in their right visnomy**
- Here truly pourtray'd as they ought to be,
- And striving both for termes of dignitie,
- To be advanced highest in degree.
- And when thou doost with equall insight see
- The ods twist both, of both then deem aright,
- And chuse the better of them both to thee;
- But thanks to him that it deserves behight@:
- To Nenna first, that first this worke created,
- And next to Iones, that truely it translated.
- ED. SPENSER.
- [* Prefixed to "Nennio, or A Treatise of Nobility, &c. Written in
- Italian by that famous Doctor and worthy Knight, Sir John Baptista
- Nenna of Bari. Done into English by William Iones, Gent." 1595. TODD.]
- [** _Visnomy_, features.]
- [@ _Behight_, accord.]
- III*.
- _Upon the Historie of George Castriot, alias Scanderbeg, King of the
- Epirots, translated into English._
- Wherefore doth vaine Antiquitie so vaunt
- Her ancient monuments of mightie peeres,
- And old heröes, which their world did daunt
- With their great deedes and fild their childrens eares?
- Who, rapt with wonder of their famous praise,
- Admire their statues, their colossoes great,
- Their rich triumphall arcks which they did raise,
- Their huge pyrámids, which do heaven threat.
- Lo! one, whom later age hath brought to light,
- Matchable to the greatest of those great;
- Great both by name, and great in power and might,
- And meriting a meere** triumphant seate.
- The scourge of Turkes, and plague of infidels,
- Thy acts, O Scanderbeg, this volume tels.
- ED. SPENSER.
- [* Prefixed to the "Historie of George Castriot, alias Scanderbeg, King
- of Albanie: Containing his famous actes, &c. Newly translated out of
- French into English by Z.I. Gentleman." 1596. TODD.]
- [** _Meere_, absolute, decided.]
- IV*.
- The antique Babel, empresse of the East,
- Upreard her buildinges to the threatned skie:
- And second Babell, tyrant of the West,
- Her ayry towers upraised much more high.
- But with the weight of their own surquedry**
- They both are fallen, that all the earth did feare,
- And buried now in their own ashes ly,
- Yet shewing, by their heapes, how great they were.
- But in their place doth now a third appeare,
- Fayre Venice, flower of the last worlds delight;
- And next to them in beauty draweth neare,
- But farre exceedes in policie of right.
- Yet not so fayre her buildinges to behold
- As Lewkenors stile that hath her beautie told.
- EDM. SPENCER.
- [* Prefixed to "The Commonwealth and Government of Venice,
- Written by the Cardinall Gaspar Contareno, and translated out of Italian
- into English by Lewes Lewkenor, Esquire." London, 1599. TODD.]
- [** _Surquedry_, presumption.]
- * * * * *
- APPENDIX.
- APPENDIX I.
- VARIATIONS FROM THE ORIGINAL EDITIONS.
- The Ruines of Time v. 353, covetize, Q. covertize.
- The Ruines of Time v. 541, ocean, Q. Occaean.
- The Ruines of Time v. 551, which (ed. 1611), Q. with.
- The Ruines of Time v. 574, worlds (ed. 1611), Q. words.
- The Ruines of Time v. 675, worldës, Q. worlds.
- The Teares of the Muses v. 600, living (ed. 1611), Q. loving.
- Virgils Gnat v. 149, Ascraean, Q. Astraean.
- Virgils Gnat v. 340, seest thou not (ed. 1611), Q. seest thou.
- Virgils Gnat v. 387, throat (ed. 1611), Q. threat.
- Virgils Gnat v. 575, billowes, Q. billowe.
- Prosopopoia v. 53, gossip, Q. goship.
- Prosopopoia v. 453, diriges, Q. dirges.
- Prosopopoia v. 648, at all, Q. all.
- Prosopopoia v. 997, whether, Q. whither.
- Prosopopoia v. 1012, stopt, Q. stept.
- Prosopopoia v. 1019, whither, Q. whether.
- Ruines of Rome xviii. 5, ornaments, Q. ornament.
- Muiopotmos v. 250, dispacing, Q. displacing.
- Muiopotmos v. 431, yongthly, Q. yougthly.
- The Visions of Bellay ii. 8, one, Q. on.
- The Visions of Bellay ix. 1, astonied, Q. astoined.
- The Visions of Petrarche vii. 1, behold, Q. beheld.
- Amoretti lxxxii. 2, placed, Orig ed*. plac'd. [* According to Todd.]
- Epithalmion v. 67, dere, orig. ed. dore.
- Epithalmion v. 190, mazeful (ed. 1611), orig. ed. amazeful.
- Epithalmion v. 290, sad dread (ed. 1611), orig. ed. dread.
- Epithalmion v. 341, Pouke, orig. ed. ponke.
- An Hymne in Honour of Love v. 165, they will (ed. 1611), orig. ed. thou
- wilt.
- An Hymne in Honour of Love v. 169, be enfyred (ed. 1611), orig. ed. he
- enfyred.
- An Hymne in Honour of Love v. 302, an (ed. 1611), orig. ed. and.
- An Hymne in Honour of Beautie v. 147, deform'd, orig. ed. perform'd.
- An Hymne in Honour of Beautie v. 171, affections (ed. 1611), orig. ed.
- affection.
- APPENDIX II.
- _To the Worshipfull, his very singular good friend,
- Maister G. H., Fellow of Trinitie Hall in Cambridge._ *
- [* Reprinted from "Ancient Critical Essays upon English Poets
- and Poesy. Edited by Joseph Haslewood". Vol II]
- GOOD MAISTER G.:--
- I perceiue, by your most curteous and frendly letters, your good will to
- be no lesse in deed than I alwayes esteemed. In recompence wherof,
- think, I beseech you, that I wil spare neither speech, nor wryting, nor
- aught else, whensoeuer and wheresoeuer occasion shal be offred me; yea,
- I will not stay till it be offred, but will seeke it in al that possibly
- I may. And that you may perceiue how much your counsel in al things
- preuaileth with me, and how altogither I am ruled and ouer-ruled
- thereby, I am now determined to alter mine owne former purpose, and to
- subscribe to your advizement; being, notwithstanding, resolued stil to
- abide your farther resolution. My principal doubts are these. First, I
- was minded for a while to haue intermitted the vttering of my writings;
- leaste by ouer-much cloying their noble eares, I should gather a
- contempt of myself, or else seeme rather for game and commoditie to doe
- it, for some sweetnesse that I haue already tasted. Then also me seemeth
- the work too base for his excellent lordship, being made in honour of a
- priuate personage vnknowne, which of some ylwillers might be vpbraided,
- not to be so worthie as you knowe she is; or the matter not so weightie
- that it should be offred to so weightie a personage, or the like. The
- selfe former title still liketh me well ynough, and your fine addition
- no lesse. If these and the like doubtes maye be of importaunce, in your
- seeming, to frustrate any parte of your aduice, I beeseeche you without
- the leaste selfe loue of your own purpose, councell me for the beste:
- and the rather doe it faithfullye and carefully, for that, in all
- things, I attribute so muche to your iudgement, that I am euermore
- content to adnihilate mine owne determinations in respecte thereof. And,
- indeede, for your selfe to, it sitteth with you now to call your wits &
- senses togither (which are alwaies at call) when occasion is so fairely
- offered of estimation and preferment, For whiles the yron is hote it is
- good striking, and minds of nobles varie, as their estates. _Verum ne
- quid durius._
- I pray you bethinks you well hereof, good Maister G., and forth with
- write me those two or three special points and caueats for the nonce;
- _De quibus in superioribus illis mellitissimus longissimisque litteris
- tuis._ Your desire to heare of my late beeing with hir Maiestie muste
- dye in it selfe. As for the twoo worthy gentle men, Master Sidney and
- Master Dyer, they haue me, I thanke them, in some vse of familiarity; of
- whom and to whome what speache passeth for youre credite and estimation
- I leaue your selfe to conceiue, hauing alwayes so well conceiued of my
- vnfained affection and zeale towardes you. And nowe they haue proclaimed
- in their [Greek: hareiophaga] a generall surceasing and silence of balde
- rymers, and also of the verie beste to; in steade whereof they haue, by
- authoritie of their whole senate, prescribed certaine lawes and rules of
- quantities of English sillables for English verse; hauing had thereof
- already greate practise, and drawen mee to their faction. Newe bookes I
- heare of none, but only of one* [* Stephen Gosson.], that
- writing a certaine booke called _The Schoole of Abuse_, and dedicating
- it to Maister Sidney, was for hys labor scorned; if, at leaste, it be in
- the goodnesse of that nature to scorne. Such follie is it not to regard
- aforehande the inclination and qualitie of him to whome wee dedicate
- oure bookes. Suche mighte I happily incurre, entituling _My Slomber_,
- and the other pamphlets, vnto his honor. I meant them rather to Maister
- Dyer. But I am of late more in loue wyth my Englishe versifying than
- with ryming: whyche I should haue done long since, if I would then haue
- followed your councell. _Sed te solum iam tum suspicabar cum Aschamo
- sapere; nunc aulam video egregios alere poetas Anglicos_. Maister E.K.
- hartily desireth to be commended vnto your worshippe: of whome what
- accompte he maketh youre selfe shall hereafter perceiue by hys paynefull
- and dutifull verses of your selfe.
- Thus muche was written at Westminster yesternight; but comming this
- morning, beeyng the sixteenth of October [1579], to Mystresse Kerkes, to
- haue it deliuered to the carrier, I receyued youre letter, sente me the
- laste weeke; whereby I perceiue you otherwhiles continue your old
- exercise of versifying in English,--whych glorie I had now thought
- whoulde haue bene onely ours heere at London and the court.
- Truste me, your verses I like passingly well, and enuye your hidden
- paines in this kinde, or rather maligne and grudge at your selfe, that
- woulde not once imparte so muche to me. But once or twice you make a
- breache in Maister Drants rules: _quod tamen condonabimus tanto poetae,
- tuaeque ipsius maximae in his rebus autoritati._ You shall see, when we
- meete in London, (whiche when it shall be, certifye vs,) howe fast I
- haue followed after you in that course: beware, leaste in time I
- ouertake you. _Veruntamen te solum sequar, (vt saepenumero sum
- professus,) nunquam sane assequar dum viuam._ And nowe requite I you
- with the like, not with the verye beste, but with the verye shortest,
- namely, with a few _Iambickes_. I dare warrant, they be precisely
- perfect for the feete, (as you can easily iudge,) and varie not one inch
- from the rule. I will imparte yours to Maister Sidney and Maister Dyer,
- at my nexte going to the courte. I praye you keepe mine close to your
- selfe, or your verie entire friendes, Maister Preston, Maister Still,
- and the reste.
- _Iambicum Trimetrum_
- Vnhappie Verse, the witnesse of my vnhappie state,
- Make thy selfe fluttring wings of thy fast flying
- Thought, and fly forth vnto my love whersoeuer she be:
- Whether lying reastlesse in heauy bedde, or else
- Sitting so cheerelesse at the cheerfull boorde, or else
- Playing alone carelesse on hir heauenlie virginals.
- If in bed, tell hir, that my eyes can take no reste;
- If at boorde, tell hir, that my mouth can eate no meate;
- If at hir virginals, tel hir, I can heare no mirth.
- Asked why? say, Waking loue suffereth no sleepe;
- Say, that raging loue dothe appall the weake stomacke;
- Say, that lamenting loue marreth the musicall.
- Tell hir, that hir pleasures were wonte to lull me asleepe;
- Tell hir, that hir beautie was wonte to feede mine eyes;
- Tell hir, that hir sweete tongue was wonte to make me mirth.
- Nowe doe I nightly waste, wanting my kindely reste;
- Nowe doe I dayly starue, wanting my liuely foode;
- Nowe doe I alwayes dye, wanting thy timely mirth.
- And if I waste, who will bewaile my heauy chaunce?
- And if I starue, who will record my cursed end?
- And if I dye, who will saye, _This was Immerito?_
- I thought once agayne here to haue made an ende, with heartie _Vale_, of
- the best fashion; but loe, an ylfavoured mys chaunce. My last farewell,
- whereof I made great accompt, and muche maruelled you shoulde make no
- mention thereof, I am nowe tolde, (in the diuel's name,) was thorough
- one mans negligence quite forgotten, but shoulde nowe vndoubtedly haue
- beene sent, whether I hadde come or no. Seing it can now be no
- otherwise, I pray you take all togither, wyth all their faults: and nowe
- I hope you will vouchsafe mee an answeare of the largest size, or else I
- tell you true, you shall bee verye deepe in my debte; notwythstandyng
- thys other sweete but shorte letter, and fine, but fewe verses. But I
- woulde rather I might yet see youre owne good selfe, and receiue a
- reciprocall farewell from your owne sweete mouth.
- _Ad ornatissimum virum, multis iam diu nominibus clarissimum,
- G. H., Immerito sui, mox in Gallias nauigaturi,_ [Greek: Eutuchein]
- Sic malus egregium, sic non inimicus amicum,
- Sicque nouus veterem iubet ipse poeta poetam
- Saluere, ac caelo, post secula multa, secundo,
- Iam reducem, (caelo mage quam nunc ipse sccundo)
- Vtier. Ecce deus, (modo sit deus ille, renixum
- Qui vocet in scelus, et iuratos perdat amores)
- Ecce deus mihi clara dedit modo signa marinus,
- Et sua veligero lenis parat aequora ligno
- Mox sulcanda; suas etiam pater AEolus iras
- Ponit, et ingentes animos Aquilonis.
- Cuncta vijs sic apta meis: ego solus ineptus.
- Nam mihi nescio quo mens saucia vulnere, dudum
- Fluctuat ancipiti pelago, dum navita proram
- Inualidam validus rapit huc Amor, et rapit illuc
- Consilijs Ratio melioribus vsa, Decusque
- Immortale leui diffissa Cupidinis arcu*:
- [* This line appears to be corrupt.]
- Angimur hoc dubio, et portu vexamur in ipso.
- Magne pharetrati nunc tu contemptor Amoris,
- (Id tibi Dij nomen precor haud impune remittant)
- Hos nodos exsolue, et eris mihi magnus Apollo!
- Spiritus ad summos, scio, te generosus honores
- Exstimulat, majusque docet spirare poetam.
- Quam leuis est Amor, et tamen haud leuis est Amor omnis.
- Ergo nihil laudi reputas aequale perenni,
- Praeque sacrosancta splendoris imagine tanti,
- Caetera, quae vecors, vti numina, vulgus adorat,
- Praedia, amicitias, vrbana peculia, nummos,
- Quaeque placent oculis, formas, spectacula, amores,
- Conculcare soles, vt humum, et ludibria sensus:
- Digna meo certe Haruejo sententia, digna
- Oratore amplo, et generoso pectore, quam non
- Stoica formidet veterum sapientia vinclis
- Sancire aeternis: sapor haud tamen omnibus idem.
- Dicitur effoeti proles facunda Laertae,
- Quamlibet ignoti iactata per aequora caeli,
- Inque procelloso longum exsul gurgite ponto,
- Prae tamen amplexu lachrymosae conjugis, ortus
- Caelestes, Diuûmque thoros spreuisse beatos.
- Tantum amor, et mulier, vel amore potetitior. Ilium
- Tu tamen illudis; tua magnificentia tanta est:
- Praeque subumbrata splendoris imagine tanti,
- Praeque illo meritis famosis nomine parto,
- Caetera, quae vecors, vti numina, vulgus adorat,
- Praedia, amicitias, armenta, peculia, nummos,
- Quaeque placent oculis, formas, spectacula, amores,
- Quaeque placent ori, quaeque auribus, omnia temnis.
- Nae tu grande sapis! sapor et sapientia non est:
- Omnis et in paruis bene qui scit desipuisse,
- Saepe supercilijs palmam sapientibus aufert.
- Ludit Aristippum modo tetrica turba sophorum,
- Mitia purpureo moderantem verba tyranno;
- Ludit Aristippus dictamina vana sophorum,
- Quos leuis emensi male torquet Culicis vmbra:
- Et quisquis placuisse studet heroibus altis,
- Desipuisse studet; sic gratia crescit ineptis.
- Denique laurigeris quisquis sua tempora vittis
- Insignire volet, populoque placere fauenti,
- Desipere insanus discit, turpemque pudendae
- Stultitiae laudem quaerit. Pater Ennuis vnus
- Dictus in innumeris sapiens: laudatur at ipse
- Carmina vesano fudisse liquentia vino.
- Nec tu, pace tua, nostri Cato Maxime saecli,
- Nomen honorati sacrum mereare poetae,
- Quantumvis illustre canas, et nobile carmen,
- Ni _stultire_ velis; sic stultorum omnia plena.
- Tuta sed in medio superest via gurgite; nam qui
- Nec reliquis nimium vult desipuisse videri,
- Nec sapuisse nimis, sapientem dixeris vnum:
- Hinc te merserit vnda, illine combusserit ignis.
- Nec tu delicias nimis aspernare fluentes,
- Nec sero dominam venientem in vota, nec aurum,
- Si sapis, oblatum: (Curijs ea, Fabricijsque
- Grande sui decus ij, nostri sed dedecus aeui;)
- Nec sectare nimis: res vtraque crimine plena.
- Hoc bene qui callet, (si quis tamen hoc bene callet,)
- Scribe vel invito sapientem hunc Socrate solum.
- Vis facit vna pios, iustos facit altera, et alt'ra
- Egregie cordata ac fortia pectora: verum
- _Omne tulit punctum, qui miscuit vtile dulci._
- Dij mihi dulce diu dederant, verum vtile nunquam:
- Vtile nunc etiam, o vtinam quoque dulce dedissent.
- Dij mihi, (quippe Dijs aequalia maxima paruis,)
- Ni nimis inuideant mortalibus esse beatis,
- Dulce simul tribuisse queant, simul vtile: tanta
- Sed fortuna tua est: pariter quaeque vtile, quaeque
- Dulce dat ad placitum: sseuo nos sydere nati
- Quaesitum imus eam per inhospita Caucasa longe,
- Perque Pyrenaeos montes, Babilonaque turpem.
- Quod si quaesitum nec ibi invenerimus, ingens
- AEquor inexhaustis permensi erroribus vltra
- Fluctibus in medijs socij quaeremus Vlyssis:
- Passibus inde deam fessis comitabimur aegram,
- Nobile cui furtum quaerenti defuit orbis.
- Namque sinu pudet in patrio tenebrisque pudendis,
- Non nimis ingenio iuuenem infoelice virentes
- Officijs frustra deperdere vilibus annos,
- Frugibus et vacuas speratis cernere spicas.
- Ibimus ergo statim, (quis eutiti fausta precetur?)
- Et pede clivosas fesso calcabimus Alpes.
- Quis dabit interea, conditas rore Britanno,
- Quis tibi litterulas, quis carmen amore petulcum!
- Musa sub Oebalij desueta cacumine mentis,
- Flebit inexhausto tarn longa silentia planctu,
- Lugebitque sacrum lacrymis Helicona tacentem.
- Harueiusque bonus, (charus licet omnibus idem,)
- Idque suo merito prope suauior omnibus, vnus
- Angelus et Gabriel, quamuis comitatus araicis
- Innumeris, geniûmque choro stipatus amaeno,
- _Immerito_ tamen vnum absentem saepe requiret;
- Optabitque, Utinam meus hic _Edmundus_ adesset,
- Qui noua scripsisset, nee amores conticuisset,
- Ipse suos; et saepe animo verbisque benignis
- Fausta precaretur, _Deus illum aliqaundo reducat_. &c.
- Plura vellem per Charites, sed non licet per Musas.
- Vale, Vale plurimum, Mi amabilissime Harueie, meo cordi, meorum
- omnium longe charissime.
- I was minded also to haue sent you some English verses, or rymes, for a
- farewell; but, by my troth, I haue no spare time in the world to thinke
- on such toyes, that, you knowe, will demaund a freer head than mine is
- presently. I beseeche you by all your curtesies and graces, let me be
- answered ere I goe; which will be (I hope, I feare, I thinke) the next
- weeke, if I can be dispatched of my Lorde. I goe thither, as sent by
- him, and maintained most what of him; and there am to employ my time, my
- body, my minde, to his Honours seruice. Thus, with many superhartie
- commendations and recommendations to your selfe, and all my friendes
- with you, I ende my last farewell, not thinking any more to write vnto
- you before I goe; and withall committing to your faithfull credence the
- eternall memorie of our euerlasting friendship; the inuiolable memorie
- of our ynspotted friendshippe, the sacred memorie of our vowed
- friendship; which I beseech you continue with vsuall writings, as you
- may, and of all things let me hears some newes from you: as gentle M.
- Sidney, I thanke his good worship, hath required of me, and so promised
- to doe againe. _Qui monet, vt facias, quod iam facis_, you knowe the
- rest. You may alwayes send them most safely to me by Mistresse Kerke,
- and by none other. So once againe, and yet once more, farewell most
- hardly, mine owne good Master H., and loue me, as I loue you, and thinke
- vpon poore Immerito, as he thinketh vppon you.
- Leyc'ester House, this 5 [16*] of October, 1579.
- [*: See Appendix II, para. 3:2.]
- _Per mare, per terras,
- Viuus mortuusque,
- Tuus Immerito_.
- * * * * *
- _To my long approoued and singular good frende,
- Master G. H._
- GOOD MASTER H.:--
- I doubt not but you haue some great important matter in hande, which al
- this while restraineth your penne, and wonted readinesse in prouoking me
- vnto that wherein yourselfe nowe faulte. If there bee any such thing in
- hatching, I pray you hartily lette vs knowe, before al the worlds see
- it. But if happly you dwell altogither in Iustinians Courte, and giue
- your selfe to be devoured of secreate studies, as of all likelyhood you
- doe, yet at least imparte some your olde or newe, Latine or Englishe,
- eloquent and gallant poesies to vs, from whose eves, you saye, you keepe
- in a manner nothing hidden. Little newes is here stirred, but that olde
- greate matter still depending. His Honoure neuer better. I thinke the
- earthquake wyth you (which I would gladly learne), as it was here with
- vs; ouerthrowing diuers old buildings and peeces of churches. Sure verye
- straunge to be hearde of in these countries, and yet I heare some saye
- (I knowe not howe truely) that they haue knowne the like before in their
- dayes. _Sed quid vobis videtur magnis philosophis?_ I like your late
- Englishe hexameters so exceedingly well, that I also enure my penne
- sometime in that kinde: whyche I fynd, indeede, as I haue heard you
- often defende in worde, neither so harde nor so harshe, that it will
- easily and fairely yeelde it selfe to oure moother tongue. For the onely
- or chiefest hardnesse whych seemeth is in the accente, whyche sometime
- gapeth, and as it were yawneth ilfauouredly, comming shorte of that it
- should, and sometime exceeding the measure of the number; as in
- _carpenter_, the middle sillable being vsed shorte in speache, when it
- shall be read long in verse, seemeth like a lame gosling, that draweth
- one legge after hir: and _heauen_, beeing vsed shorte as one sillable,
- when it is in verse, stretched out with a _diastole_, is like a lame
- dogge that holdes vp one legge. But it is to be wonne with custome, and
- rough words must be subdued with vse. For why, a God's name, may not we,
- as else the Greekes, haue the kingdome of oure owne language, and
- measure our accents by the sounde, reseruing the quantitie to the verse?
- Loe, here I let you see my olde vse of toying in rymes, turned into your
- artificiall straightnesse of verse by this _tetrasticon_. I beseech you
- tell me your fancie, without parcialitie.
- See yee the blindefolded pretie god, that feathered archer,
- Of louers miseries which maketh his bloodie game?
- Wote ye why his moother with a veale hath coouered his face?
- Trust me, least he my looue happely chaunce to beholde.
- Seeme they comparable to those two which I translated you _ex tempore_
- in bed, the last time we lay togither in Westminster?
- That which I eate, did I ioy, and that which I greedily gorged;
- As for those many goodly matters leaft I for others.
- I would hartily wish you would either send me the rules and precepts of
- arte which you obscrue in quantities, or else followe mine, that M.
- Philip Sidney gave me, being the very same which M. Drant deuised, but
- enlarged with M. Sidneys own iudgement, and augmented with my
- obseruations, that we might both accorde and agree in one; leaste we
- ouerthrowe one an other, and be ouerthrown of the rest. Truste me, you
- will hardly beleeue what greate good liking and estimation Maister Dyer
- had of your _Satyricall Verses_, and I, since the viewe thereof, hauing
- before of my selfe had speciall liking of Englishe versifying, am euen
- nowe aboute to giue you some token what and howe well therein I am able
- to doe: for, to tell you trueth, I minde shortely, at conuenient
- leysure, to sette forth a booke in this kinde, whyche I entitle,
- _Epithalamion Thamesis_, whyche booke I dare vndertake wil be very
- profitable for the knowledge, and rare for the inuention and manner of
- handling. For in setting forth the marriage of the Thames, I shewe his
- first beginning, and offspring, and all the countrey that he passeth
- thorough, and also describe all the riuers throughout Englande, whyche
- came to this wedding, and their righte names and right passage, &c.; a
- worke, beleeue me, of much labour, wherein notwithstanding Master
- Holinshed hath muche furthered and aduantaged me, who therein hath
- bestowed singular paines in searching oute their firste heades and
- sourses, and also in tracing and dogging onto all their course, til they
- fall into the sea.
- _O Tite, siquid ego,
- Ecquid erit pretij?_
- But of that more hereafter. Nowe, my _Dreames_ and _Dying Pellicane_
- being fully finished (as I partelye signified in my laste letters) and
- presentlye to bee imprinted, I wil in hande forthwith with my _Faery
- Queene_, whyche I praye you hartily send me with al expedition: and your
- frendly letters, and long expected judgement wythal, whyche let not be
- shorte, but in all pointes suche as you ordinarilye vse and I
- extraordinarily desire. _Multum vale. Westminster. Quarto Nonas
- Aprilis, 1580. Sed, amabo te, meum Corculum tibi se ex animo commendat
- plurimum: iamdiu mirata, te nihil ad literas suas responsi dedisse.
- Vide quaeso, ne id tibi capitale sit: mihi certe quidem erit, neque tibi
- hercle impune, vt opinor. Iterum vale, et quam voles soepe._
- Yours alwayes, to commaunde,
- IMMERITO.
- _Postcripte._
- I take best my _Dreames_ shoulde come forth alone, being growen, by
- meanes of the Glosse (running continually in maner of a paraphrase),
- full as great as my _Calendar_ Therin be some things excellently, and
- many things wittily, discoursed of E. K., and the pictures so singularly
- set forth and purtrayed, as if Michael Angelo were there, he could (I
- think) nor amende the beste, nor reprehende the worst. I knowe you
- woulde lyke them passing wel. Of my _Stemmata Dudleiana_, and especially
- of the sundry apostrophes therein, addressed you knowe to whome, muste
- more aduisement be had, than so lightly to sende them abroade: howbeit,
- trust me, (though I doe never very well,) yet, in my owne fancie, I
- neuer dyd better: _Veruntamen te sequor solum; nunquam vero assequar._
- * * * * *
- _Extract from Harvey's Reply._
- But Master Collin Cloute is not euery body, and albeit his olde
- companions, Master Cuddy & Master Hobbinoll, be as little be holding to
- their Mistresse Poetrie as euer you wist, yet he peraduenture, by the
- meanes of hir speciall fauour, and some personall priuiledge, may
- happely line by Dying Pellicanes, and purchase great landes and
- lordshippes with the money which his Calendar and Dreames haue and will
- affourde him. _Extra iocum_, I like your Dreames passingly well; and the
- rather, bicause they sauour of that singular extraordinarie veine and
- inuention whiche I euer fancied moste, and in a manner admired onelye in
- Lucian, Petrarche, Aretine, Pasquill, and all the most delicate and fine
- conceited Grecians and Italians, (for the Romanes to speake of are but
- verye ciphars in this kinde,) whose chiefest endeuour and drifte was to
- haue nothing vulgare, but, in some respecte or other, and especially in
- liuely hyperbolicall amplifications, rare, queint, and odde in euery
- pointe, and, as a man woulde saye, a degree or two, at the leaste, aboue
- the reache and compasse of a common scholars capacitie. In whiche
- respecte notwithstanding, as well for the singularitie of the manner as
- the diuinitie of the matter, I hearde once a diuine preferre Saint Iohns
- Reuelation before al the veriest metaphysicall visions and iolliest
- conceited dreames or extasies that euer were deuised by one or other,
- howe admirable or super excellent soeuer they seemed otherwise to the
- worlde. And truely I am so confirmed in this opinion, that when I
- bethinke me of the verie notablest and moste wonderful propheticall or
- poeticall vision that euer I read, or hearde, meseemeth the proportion
- is so vnequall, that there hardly appeareth anye semblaunce of
- comparison: no more in a manner (specially for poets) than doth betweene
- the incomprehensible wisedome of God and the sensible wit of man. But
- what needeth this digression betweene you and me? I dare saye you wyll
- holde your selfe reasonably wel satisfied, if youre Dreames be but as
- well esteemed of in Englande as Petrarches Visions be in Italy; whiche,
- I assure you, is the very worst I wish you. But see how I haue the arte
- memoratiue at commaundement. In good faith, I had once again nigh
- forgotten your Faerie Queene: howbeit, by good chaunce, I haue nowe sent
- hir home at the laste, neither in better nor worse case than I founde
- hir. And must you of necessitie haue my iudgement of hir indeede? To be
- plaine, I am voyde of al iudgement, if your nine Comoedies, whervnto, in
- imitation of Herodotus, you giue the names of the nine Muses, (and in
- one mans fansie not vnworthily), come not neerer Ariostoes comoedies,
- eyther for the finesse of plausible elocution or the rarenesse of
- poetical inuention, than that Eluish Queene doth to his Orlando Furioso;
- which, notwithstanding, you wil needes seeme to emulate, and hope to
- ouergo, as you flatly professed yourself in one of your last letters.
- Besides that, you know, it hath bene the vsual practise of the most
- exquisite and odde wittes in all nations, and specially in Italie,
- rather to shewe and aduaunce themselues that way than any other; as,
- namely, those three notorious dyscoursing heads, Bibiena, Machiauel, and
- Aretine, did, (to let Bembo and Ariosto passe,) with the great
- admiration and wonderment of the whole countrey: being, in deede,
- reputed matchable in all points, both for conceyt of witte and eloquent
- decyphering of matters, either with Aristophanes and Menander in Greek,
- or with Plautus and Terence in Latin, or with any other in any other
- tong. But I wil not stand greatly with you in your owne matters. If so
- be the Faerye Queeue be fairer in your eie than the nine Muses, and
- Hobgoblin runne away with the garland from Apollo, marke what I saye:
- and yet I will not say that I thought, but there an end for this once,
- and fare you well, till God or some good aungell putte you in a better
- minde.
- APPENDIX III.
- INDEX OF PROPER NAMES.
- Abessa, i.
- Abus, ii.
- Achilles, v.
- Acidalian Mount, iii.; iv.
- Acontius, ii.
- Acrasiai, ii.
- Actea, iii.
- Adicia, iii.
- Adin, ii.
- Adonis, Gardens of, ii.; v.
- Aeacidee, iv.
- Aedus, iii.
- Aegerie, ii.
- Aegina, ii.
- Aemylia, iii.
- Aeneas, ii.
- Aesculapius, i.
- Aeson, v.
- Aëtion, iv.
- Agamemnon, v.
- Agape, iii.
- Agave, iii.
- Agdistes, ii.
- Agenor, iii.
- Aggannip of Celtica, ii.
- Aglaia, iv.
- Aglaura, iv.
- Alabaster, iv.
- Aladine, iv.
- Alane, iv.
- Albanact, ii.
- Albania, ii.
- Albany, iii.
- Albion, ii.
- Alceste, v.
- Alcluid, ii.
- Alcmena, ii.; brood of, v.
- Alcon, iv.; v.
- Alcyon, iv.; v.
- Alcides, ii.; iii.
- Alebius, iii.
- Alexander, ii.; iii.
- Alexis, iv.
- Algrind, iv.
- Alimeda, iii.
- Allan, ii.
- Allectus, ii.
- Allo, iii.; iv.
- Alma, ii.
- Alpheus, iii.
- Amaryllis, iv.
- Amavia, i.
- Amazon (river), i.
- Ambition, ii.
- Ambrosia, ii.; v.
- Ambrosius, King, ii.
- America, ii.
- Amidas, iii.
- Amintas, ii.
- Amoret, ii.; iii.
- Amoretta, ii.
- Amphisa, ii.
- Amphitrite (Nereid), iii.
- Amyas, iii.
- Amyntas, iii.
- Anamnestes, ii.
- Anchyses, ii.
- Androgeus, ii.
- Angela, ii.
- Angles, ii.
- Antiochus, i.
- Antiopa, ii.
- Antiquitiee of Faery Lond, ii.
- Antonius, i.
- Aon, iii.
- Ape (the), v.
- Apollo, ii.
- Appetite, ii.
- Aprill, iv.
- Arachne, v.
- Aragnoll, v.
- Arcady, iv.
- Archigald, ii.
- Archimago, i.; ii.
- Ardenne, iii.
- Ardeyn, iv.
- Argante, ii.
- Argo, ii.
- Argonauts, iii.
- Ariadne, iv.
- Arion, iii.
- Arlo-hill, iv.
- Armeddan, iii.
- Armoricke, ii.
- Armulla, iv.
- Arne, ii.
- Arras, ii.
- Artegall, ii.; iii.; iv.
- Artegall, Legend of, iii.
- Arthure, Prince, i.; ii.; iii.; iv.
- Arvirage, ii.
- Asclepiodate, ii.
- Ascraean bard, v.
- Asie, ii.
- Asopus, iii.
- Assaracus, ii.
- Assyrian Lyonesse, v.
- Asterie, ii.; v.
- Astraea, iii.
- Astraeus, iii.
- Astrophell, iv.
- Atalanta, ii.
- Ate, ii.; iii.
- Athens, ii.
- Athos, Mount, v.
- Atin, i.; ii.
- Atlas, ii.
- Atropos, iii.
- Aubrian, iii.
- August, iv.
- Augustine, ii.
- Augustus, v.
- Autonoë, iii.
- Autumne, iv.
- Avarice, i.
- Avon, iii.
- Awe, iii.
- Babell, ii.
- Babylon, iii.; v.
- Bacchante, ii.
- Bacchus, iii.
- Baetus, v.
- Ball, iv.
- Ban, iii.
- Bandon, iii.
- Bangor, ii.
- Barnaby, v.
- Barow, iii.
- Barry, ii.
- Bartas, v.
- Basciante, ii.
- Bath, i.; iii.
- Bedford, v.
- Belgae, iii.
- Belgard, castle of, iv.
- Belgicke, i.
- Belinus, ii.
- Bellamoure, Sir, iv.
- Bellay, v.
- Bellisont, Sir, iii.
- Bellodant, iii.
- Bellona, ii.; iv.
- Belphoebe, i.; ii.; iii.; v.
- Belus, iii.
- Biblis, ii.
- Berecynthian goddesse, v.
- Bilbo, v.
- Bisaltis, ii.
- Blacke-water, iii.
- Bladud, ii.
- Blandamour, iii.
- Blandford, iii.
- Blandina, iv.
- Blatant Beast, iii.; iv.
- Blomius, iii.
- Boccace, iv.
- Bonfont, iii.
- Bowre of Blis, i.; ii.
- Boyne, iii.
- Bracidas, iii.
- Braggadocchio, i.; ii.; iii.
- Breane, iii.
- Bregog, iv.
- Brennus, ii.
- Briana, iv.
- Brianor, Sir, iii.
- Brigadore, viii.
- Bristow, iii.
- Britany, ii.
- Britomart, ii.; iii.
- Britomartis, Legend of, ii.
- Britonesse, ii.
- Briton Moniments, ii.
- Briton Prince, i.; ii.; iii.
- Broad-water, iv.
- Brockwell, ii.
- Brontes, iii.
- Bronteus, iii.
- Bruin, Sir, iv.
- Bruncheval, iii.
- Brunchild, ii.
- Brunell, iii.
- Brute, ii.
- Brutus, ii.
- Brytayne, Greater, ii.
- Buckhurst, Lord of, i.
- Bunduca, ii.; v.
- Burbon, iii.
- Burleigh, Lord, i.
- Busyrane, ii.; iii.
- Buttevant, iv.
- Byze, v.
- Cadmus, ii.
- Cador, ii.
- Cadwallader, ii.
- Cadwallin, ii.
- Cadwar, ii.
- Caecily, ii.
- Caelia, i.
- Caelian Hill,
- Caesar, i.; ii.
- Caicus, iii.
- Cairbadon, ii.
- Cairleill, ii.
- Cairleon, ii.
- Calepine, Sir, iv.
- Calidore, ii.; iv.
- Calidore, Sir, Legend of, iv.
- Calliope, iv.; v.
- Cambden, v.
- Cambel and Triamond, Legend of, iii.
- Cambell, iii.
- Camber, ii.
- Cambine, iii.
- Cambria, king of, ii.
- Cambridge, iii.
- Camilla, ii.; v.
- Canacee, iii.
- Candide, iv.
- Cantium, ii.
- Canutus, ii.
- Caphareus, v.
- Carados, ii.
- Carausius, ii.
- Care, ii.; iii.
- Careticus, ii.
- Carew (Cary), Lady, i.
- Cary, Ladie, v.
- Cassibalane, ii.
- Castaly, v.
- Castle Joyeous, ii.
- Castriot, George, v.
- Cayr-Merdin, ii.
- Cayr-Varolame, ii.
- Celeno, ii.
- Centaures, iii.
- Cephise, i.
- Cephisus, ii.
- Cerberus, i.; iv.; v.
- Cestus, iii.
- Change, iv.
- Chaos, iii.
- Charillis, iv.
- Charissa, i.
- Charlemaine, v.
- Charybdis, v.
- Charrwell, iii.
- Chastity, Legend of, ii.
- Chaucer, Dan, iii.
- Chester, iii.
- Cherefulnesse, iii.
- Child of Light (Lucifer), v.
- Chimaera, iv.
- Christ, v.
- Chrysaor (Artegall's sword), iii.
- Chrysogonee, ii.
- Churne, iii.
- Clare, iii.
- Claribell, i.; iii.; iv.
- Clarin (Clarinda), iii.
- Clarion, v.
- Claudius, ii.
- Cle, iii.
- Cleopatra, i.
- Cleopolis, i.; ii.
- Climene, ii.
- Clio, ii.; v.
- Clonmell, iii.
- Clorinda, iv.
- Clotho, iii.; v.
- Cocytus, i.; ii.
- Colchid mother, v.
- Cole, iii.
- Colin Clout, iv.; v.
- Columbell, ii.
- Compton and Mountegle, Ladie, v.
- Concotion, ii.
- Concord, iii.
- Constantine, ii.
- Constantius, ii.
- Contemplation, i.
- Conway, iii.
- Coradin, i.
- Corceca, i.
- Cordeill, ii.
- Corflambo, iii.
- Coridon, iv.
- Corineus, ii.; iv.
- Cork, iii.
- Cormoraunt, iv.
- Cornwaile, ii.; iv.
- Coronis, ii.
- Corybantes, iv.
- Corydon, iv.
- Corylas, iv.
- Coshma, iv.
- Coulin, ii.
- Countesse of Pembroke, i.; v.
- Courtesie, Legend of, iv.
- Coylchester, ii.
- Coyll, ii.
- Crane, iii.
- Crete, v.
- Creüsa, ii.
- Critias, ii.; iii.
- Croesus, i.
- Crudor, iv.
- Cruelty, ii.
- Cteatus, iii.
- Cuddie, iv.; iii.
- Cumberland, Earle of, i.
- Cundah, ii.
- Cupido, ii.
- Cupid, ii.; iii.; v.;
- Maske of, ii.;
- Court of, iv.
- Curius, v.
- Curtesie, iii.
- Curtius, v.
- Cybele, iii.
- Cycones, v.
- Cymo, iii.
- Cymochles, i.
- Cymodoce, iii.
- Cymoënt, ii.
- Cymothoë, iii.
- Cynthia (Moon, Diana), i.; iv.; v.
- Cyparisse, i.
- Cytherea, ii.; v.
- Cytheron, ii.
- Damon and Pythias, iii.
- Danaë, ii.
- Daniell, iv.
- Danius, ii.
- Daphnaida, iv.
- Daphne, ii.,; iv.; v.
- Darent, iii.
- Dart, iii.
- Daunger, ii.; iii.
- Day, iv.
- Death, iv.
- Debon, ii.
- Debora, ii.
- Decii, v.
- December, iv.
- Decetto, iv.
- Dee, i.; ii.; iii.
- Defetto, iv.
- Deheubarth, ii.
- Delay, iii.
- Dell, ii.
- Delos, ii.
- Demogorgon, iii.
- Demophoon, v.
- Denmarke, ii.
- Despayre, i.
- Despetto, iv.
- Despight, ii.
- Desyre, ii.
- Detraction, iii.
- Devon, Sir, iii.
- Diana, ii.; iv.; v.
- Dice, iii.
- Dido, iv.
- Diet, ii.
- Digestion, ii.
- Diggon Davie, iv.
- Dioclesian, daughters of, ii.
- Discord, iii.
- Disdayne, ii.; iv.
- Displeasure, ii.
- Dissemblaunce, ii.
- Dolon, iii.; v.
- Donwallo, ii.
- Dony, iii.
- Doris (Nereid), iii.
- Doto, iii.
- Doubt, ii.; iii.
- Douglas, Sir, iii.
- Doune, iii.
- Druon, iii.
- Dryope, i.
- Duessa, i.; iii.
- Dumarin, ii.
- Dyamond, iii.
- Dynamene, iii.
- Dynevowre, ii.
- Easterland, ii.
- Easterlings, ii.
- Ebranck. ii.
- Ecaster, iii.
- Echidna, iii.; iv.
- Eden, ii.; iii.
- Edwin, ii.
- Egaltine of Meriflure, iv.
- Eione, iii.
- Eirene, iii.
- Elfant, ii.
- Elfar, ii.
- Elferon, ii.
- Elficleos, ii.
- Elfiline, ii.
- Elfin, ii.
- Elfinan, ii.
- Elfinell, ii.
- Elfin Knight, i.
- Elfinor, ii.
- Elidure, ii.
- Eliseis (of Alabaster), iv.
- Elissa, i.
- Eliza, i.; iv.; v.
- Elizabeths three, v.
- Elversham, ii.
- Emmilen, ii.
- Emiline, iv.
- Encelade, ii.
- Enias, Sir, iv.
- Ennius, i.
- Envie, i.; iii.
- Ephialtes, v.
- Erate (Nereid), iii.;
- (Muse), v.
- Erichthonian towre, v.
- Erivan, iii.
- Errant Damzell, ii.
- Errour, i.
- Eryx, iii.
- Esquiline, v.
- Essex, Earle of, i.
- Esthambruges, ii.
- Estrild, Ladie, ii.
- Etheldred, ii.
- Euboick cliffs, v.
- Eucrate, iii.
- Eudore, iii.
- Eulimene, iii.
- Eumenias, iii.
- Eumnestes, ii.
- Eunica, iii.
- Eunomie, iii.
- Euphoemus, iii.
- Euphrates, i.; iii.
- Euphrosyne, iv.
- Eupompe, iii.
- Europa, ii.
- Eurydice, v.
- Eurynome, iv.
- Eurypulus, iii.
- Eurytion, iii.
- Eurytus, iii.
- Euterpe, v.
- Evagore, iii.
- Evarna, iii.
- Excesse, ii.
- Fabii, v.
- Faery Lond, i.; iii.
- Faery Queene, i.; ii.; iii.; v.
- Fanchin, iv.
- Fansy, ii.
- Father of Philosophie, iii.
- Faunus, iv.
- Feare, ii.
- February, iv.
- Ferramont, iii.
- Ferraugh, Sir, iii.
- Ferrex, ii.
- Fidelia, i.
- Fidessa, i.
- Flaminius, v.
- Flavia, iv.
- Florimell, ii.; iii.
- Flourdelis, iii.
- Force, ii.
- Foules Parley (Chaucer's), iv.
- Foxe, the, v.
- Fradubio, i.
- Fraud, ii.
- Fraunce, i.; ii.
- Friendship Legend of, iii.
- Frith, iii.
- Fulgent, ii.
- Furor, i.
- Fury, ii.
- Galathaea, iii.; iv.
- Galene, iii.
- Ganges, iii.
- Gardante, ii.
- Gardin of Proserpina, ii.
- Gate of Good Desert, iii.
- Gealosy, ii.
- Geffrey, Dan, iv.
- Gehon, i.
- Genius, ii.
- Genuissa, ii.
- Georgos, i.
- Germany, ii.
- Geryon, iii.
- Geryoneo, iii.
- Gilford, Henry, v.
- Glamorgan, ii.
- Glauce, ii.; iii.
- Glauconome, iii.
- Glaucus, iii.
- Gloriana, i.; ii.; iv.
- Gluttony, i.
- Gnat, v.
- Gnidas, ii.
- Gobbelines, ii.
- Godmer, ii.
- God of Love, ii.
- Goëmagot, ii.
- Goëmot, ii.
- Golden Fleece, iii.
- Gonorill, ii.
- Gorbogud, ii.
- Gorboman, ii.
- Gorges, Arthur, v.
- Gorgon, i.
- Gorlois, ii.
- Gormond, ii.
- Graces, iv.
- Grant, iii.
- Grantorto, iii.
- Gratian, ii.
- Grecian Libbard, v.
- Greece, ii.; v.
- Greenwich, v.
- Grey, Lord, of Wilton, i.
- Griefe, ii.
- Griffyth, Conan, ii.
- Gryll, ii.
- Gualsever, iii.
- Guendolene, ii.
- Guitheline, ii.
- Guizor, iii.
- Gulfe of Greedinesse, ii.
- Gurgiunt, ii.
- Gurgustus, ii.
- Guyon, i.; ii.; iii.;
- Legend of Sir, i.
- Haemony, iv.
- Haemus, iv.
- Hania, ii.
- Hanniball, i.
- Harpalus, iv.
- Harvey, Gabriel, iv.; v.
- Harwitch, iii.
- Hate, ii.; iii.
- Hatton, Sir Christopher, i.
- Hebe, v.
- Hebrus, i.
- Hecate, iv.
- Hector, ii.
- Helena, ii.
- Helena, Marquesse of North Hampton, v.
- Heliconian Maides, ii.
- Helle, ii.
- Hellenore, ii.
- Hellespont, v.
- Hely, ii.
- Hemus, ii.
- Henalois, ii.
- Henault, ii.
- Hengist, ii.
- Hercaean shores, vi.
- Hercules, ii.; iii.
- Hercules and Hyllus, iii.
- Hercules two pillors, v.
- Hevenfield, ii.
- Hippolytus, i.
- Hippothoë, iii.
- Hobbinol, iv.
- Hogh, ii.
- Holland, iii.
- Hope, ii.
- Horror, ii.
- Horsus, ii.
- House of Care, iii.
- House of Holinesse, i.
- House of Pryde, i.
- House of Temperance, ii.
- Howard, Douglas, v.
- Howard, Lord Charles, i.
- Howell, Dha, ii.
- Huddibras, Sir, i.; ii.
- Humber, ii.; iii.
- Humilta, i.
- Hunnes, ii.
- Hunsdon, Lord of, i.
- Huntingdon, iii.
- Huon, Sir, i.
- Hyacinct, ii.
- Hygate, ii.
- Hylas, ii.
- Hymen, v.
- Hypocrisie, i.
- Hyponeo, iii.
- Hypsiphil, ii.
- Ianuary, iv.
- Ida, ii.
- Idaean Ladies, ii.
- Idle Lake, i.; ii.
- Idlenesse, i.
- Ignaro, i.
- Ignorance, v.
- Ilion, iii.
- Immerito, iv.
- Impatience, ii.
- Impotence, ii.
- Inachus, ii.; iii.
- India, ii.
- Indus, iii.
- Ino, iii.
- Inogene of Italy, ii.
- Inquisition, iii.
- Iocante, ii.
- Iola, iii.
- Ionathan and David, iii.
- Iones, v.
- Iordan, i.
- Ioseph of Arimathy, ii.
- Iove, iv.; v.
- Iphimedia, ii.
- Ireland, i.; ii.; iv.
- Irena, iii.
- Isis, ii.; iii.
- Ismaël Africk, ii.
- Isse, ii.
- Ister, iii.
- Itis, v.
- Iulus, ii.
- Iuly, iv.
- Iune, iv.
- Iuno, ii.; v.
- Iustice, Legend of, iii.
- Ixion, i.
- Ixione, v.
- Kenet, iii.
- Kent, ii.
- Kilkenny, iii.
- Kilnemullah, iv.
- Kimarus, ii.
- Kimbeline, ii.
- Kingdomes Care (Burleigh), iii.
- King Edmond, v.
- King Nine, ii.
- Kinmarke, ii.
- Kirkrapine, i.
- Knight of the Hebene Speare, iii.
- Knight of the Red Crosse, i.; iii.;
- Legend of, i.
- Knights of Maidenhead, iii.
- Labryde, i.
- Lacedaemon, ii.
- Lachesis, iii.
- Lady of Delight, ii.
- Laestrigones, v.
- Lago, ii.
- Lamoracke, Sir, iv.
- Land of Faerie, iv.
- Lansack, iii.
- Laomedia, iii.
- Laomedon, ii.
- Lapithees, iii.; v.
- Latinus, ii.
- Latium, ii.
- Latmian Shepherd, v.
- Latona, ii.; iv.
- Layburne, ii.
- Leander, v.
- Lechery, i.
- Leda, ii.
- Leda (twinnes of), v.
- Lee, iii.
- Legend of Chastity, ii.
- Legend of Courtesie, iv.
- Legend of Friendship, iii.
- Legend of Holinesse, i.
- Legend of Iustice, iii.
- Legend of Temperaunce, i.
- Leicester, Earl of, v.
- Leill, King, ii.
- Lemno, iii.
- Lentulus, i.
- Lewkenor, v.
- Leyr, King, ii.
- Liagore, ii.; iii.
- Life, iv.
- Liffar, iii.
- Liffy, iii.
- Lincolne, ii.; iii.
- Lindus, iii.
- Lionnesse, iv.
- Lipari, iii.
- Lisianassa, iii.
- Lisippus, v.
- Litae, iii.
- Lobbin, iv.
- Locrine, ii.
- Locrinus, iii.
- Lodwick (Bryskett), v.
- Logris, ii.; iii.
- Loncaster, iii.
- London, v.
- Lone, iii.
- Long Alba, ii.
- Louthiane, ii.
- Love, iii.; v.
- Lowder, iv.
- Lucinda, iii.; iv.
- Lucifera, i.
- Lucius, ii.
- Lucy (Lucida), iii.
- Lud, ii.
- Lusitanian soile, i.
- Lycon, iv.
- Lyon, the, v.
- Maa, iv.
- Maeander, iii.
- Madan, ii.
- Maglan, king of Scottes, ii.
- Mahound, iv.
- Mahoune, ii.
- Maia, v.
- Maidenhed, Order of, i.
- Malbecco, ii.
- Malecasta, ii.
- Maleffort, iv.
- Maleger, ii.
- Malengin, iii.
- Malfont, iii.
- Malgo, ii.
- Malvenu, i.
- Mammon, ii.
- Manild, ii.
- Mansilia, iv.
- Mantuane, iv.
- Marcellus, v.
- March, iv.
- Margaret, Countesse of Cumberland, v.
- Marian, iv.
- Maridunum, ii.
- Marie (Anne), Countesse of Warwick, v.
- Marin, iv.
- Marinell, ii.; iii.
- Marius, i.; ii.
- Maro, i.
- Marot, iv.
- Mars, ii.; iv.
- Martia, ii.
- Mathraval, ii.
- Mathusalem, ii.
- Matilda, ii.; iv.
- Mausolus, v.
- Maximian, ii.
- Maximinian, ii.
- May, iv.
- Mayre, iii.
- Mecaenas, iv.
- Medea, iii.
- Medina, i.
- Medua, iii.
- Medusa, ii.
- Medway, iv.
- Medway and Thames, marriage of, iii.
- Meliboe, iv.; v.
- Meliogras, iv.
- Melissa, iv.
- Melite, iii.
- Memprise, ii.
- Menalcas, iv.
- Melpomene, v.
- Menevia, ii.
- Menippe, iii.
- Mercy, i.
- Mercilla, iii.
- Mercury, iv.; v.
- Merlin, i.; ii.
- Mertia, Dame, ii.
- Mertians, ii.
- Milesio, iii.
- Minerva, v.
- Mirabella, iv.
- Modestie, iii.
- Molanna, iv.
- Mole, iii.; iv.
- Mona, ii.
- Mongiball, ii.
- Morands, ii.
- Mordant, i.
- Morddure, ii.
- More, the, v.
- Morgan, ii.
- Morindus, ii.
- Morpheus, i.
- Morrell, iv.
- Mother Hubberd, v.
- Mount Aventine, v.
- Mount Quirinal, v.
- Mount Saturnal, v.
- Mount Viminal, v.
- Mnemon, ii.
- Mnemosyne, ii.
- Mule, the, v.
- Mulla, iii.; iv.;
- Nymphes of, v.
- Munera, iii.
- Muscaroll, v.
- Mutability, iv.
- Mutius, v.
- Myrrhe, ii.
- Naiades, v.
- Nature, iv.
- Nausa, ii.
- Nausicle, ii.
- Neaera, iv.
- Neleus, iii.
- Nemertea, iii.
- Nene, iii.
- Nenna, v.
- Nennius, i.; ii.
- Nepenthe, iii.
- Neptune, ii.; iii.
- Nereus, ii.; iii.
- Nesaea, iii.
- Neso, iii.
- Nestor, ii.
- Neustria, ii.
- New Hierusalem, i.
- Newre, iii.
- Nictileus, v.
- Nide, iii.
- Night, i; iv.
- Nile, iii.
- Nilus, i.
- Nimrod, i; iii.
- Ninus, i.
- Niobe, iv.
- Noctante, ii.
- Norris, Sir John, i.
- Northumber, ii.
- Northumberland, Earle of, i.
- Norveyses, ii.
- Norwitch, iii.
- November, iv.
- Numa, ii.
- Nylus, v.
- Obedience, iii.
- Oberon, King, i; ii.
- Occasion, i.
- Ocean, iii.
- Octa, ii.
- Octavius, ii.
- October, iv.
- Oenone, ii; v.
- Oeta, v.
- Offricke, ii.
- Ogyges, iii.
- Ollyphant, ii.
- Olympus, Mount, ii.
- Oranochy, iii.
- Oraxes, iii.
- Order, iii.
- Orgoglio, i; iv.
- Origone, iii.
- Orinont, Sir, iii.
- Orion, iii.
- Orkeny, ii.
- Ormond and Ossory, Earle of, i.
- Orown, iv.
- Orpheus, iii; v.
- Orsilochus, ii.
- Orthrus, iii.
- Osricke, ii.
- Oswald, ii.
- Oswin, ii.
- Osyris, iii.
- Othos, v.
- Oure, iii.
- Our Ladyes Bowre, iv.
- Ouze, iii.
- Overt-gate, ii.
- Oxenford, Earle of, i.
- Oxford, iii.
- Oza, ii.
- Pactolus, iii.
- Paeon, ii.
- Palatine, v.
- Palemon, iii; iv.
- Pales, iv; v.
- Palici, v.
- Palimord, Sir, iii.
- Palin, iv.
- Palinode, iv.
- Palladine, iii.
- Palmer, i; ii.
- Pan, iv.
- Panchaea, v.
- Pandionian maides, v
- Panopae, iii.
- Panope, ii.
- Panthea, ii.
- Panwelt, ii.
- Paphos, ii.
- Paridas, ii.
- Paridell, ii, iii.
- Paris, ii; iii.
- Parius, ii.
- Parlante, ii.
- Parnasse, Mount, v.
- Paros, ii.
- Pasiphaë, ii.
- Pasithee, iii.
- Pastorella, iiv.
- Patience, i.
- Paulinus, ii.
- Payne, ii.
- Paynim king (Philip II.), i.
- Pelasgus, iii.
- Peleus, iv; v.
- Pelias, iii.
- Pelleas, Sir, iv.
- Pellite, ii.
- Pembroke, Countesse of, i.
- Penaunce, i.
- Penda, ii.
- Pendragon, v.
- Penelope, iv.
- Peneus, iii; v.
- Penthesilee, ii.
- Peridue, ii.
- Perigot, iv.
- Perissa, i.
- Persephone, v.
- Persian Beare, v.
- Peru, i.; ii.
- Peter, v.
- Peter, William, v.
- Petrarque, iv.
- Phaedria, i.; ii.
- Phaëton, v.
- Phantastes, ii.
- Phao, ii.; iii.
- Phaon, i.
- Phasides, iii.
- Pherusa, iii.
- Philemon, i.
- Philip (Sidney), iv.
- Phillisides, iv.; v.
- Phillira, ii.
- Philotime, ii.
- Philtera, iii.
- Phison, i.
- Phoeax, iii.
- Phoebe, ii.
- Phoebus, ii.; iv.
- Phoenice, v.
- Phoenix, iii.
- Pholoe, i.
- Phorcys, iii.
- Phyllis, iv.
- Picts, ii.
- Piers, iv.
- Pilate, ii.
- Placidas, iii.
- Plaint of Kinde (Alane's), iv.
- Pleasaunce, ii.
- Plexippus, iv.
- Plim, iii.
- Plimmouth, iii.
- Podalyrius, iv.
- Poeana, iii.
- Pollente, iii.
- Polyhymnia, v.
- Polynome, iii.
- Pompey, i.
- Pontoporea, iii.
- Poris, iii.
- Porrex, ii.
- Portamore, iv.
- Port Esquiline, ii.
- Praxiteles, ii.
- Prays-Desire, ii.
- Priamond, iii.
- Priest, formall, v.
- Priscilla, iv.
- Prometheus, ii.
- Pronaea, iii.
- Proteus, ii.; iii.; iv.
- Proto, iii.
- Protomedaea, iii.
- Pryene, i.
- Psalmist, iii.
- Psamathe, iii.
- Psyche, ii.; v.
- Ptolomaee, ii.; iii.
- Pubidius, ii.
- Pylades and Orestes, iii.
- Pyracmon, iii.
- Pyrochles, i.; ii.
- Pyrrha and Deucalione, iii.
- Pyrrus, v.
- Queen Elizabeth, ii.; iv.
- Quickesand of Unthriftyhed, ii.
- Radegone, iii.
- Radigund, iii.
- Raleigh, Sir Walter, i.; iv.
- Rauran, i.
- Redcrosse Knight, ii.
- Regan, ii.
- Remorse, i.
- Repentaunce, i.; ii.
- Reproch, ii.
- Revenge, ii.
- Reverence, i.; iii.
- Rhaesus, v.
- Rhene, iii.
- Rheüsa, iii.
- Rhodanus, iii.
- Rhodope, ii.
- Rhodoricke the Great, ii.
- Rhy, iii.
- Rich Strond, ii.
- Rinaldo, iii.
- Rivall, ii.
- Rock of Reproch, ii.
- Roffin, iv.
- Rome, ii.; iii.; v.
- Romulus, i.; ii.
- Rosalind, i.; iv.
- Rosseponte, iii.
- Rother, iii.
- Rowne, iii.
- Ruddoe, ii.
- Ruddymane, i.
- Russian, ii.
- Ryence, King, ii.
- Sabrina, ii.
- Saint George, i.
- Saint Radegund, v.
- Salem, iii.
- Salomon, v.
- Salvage Island, iv.
- Salvage Knight, iii.
- Salvage Man, iv.
- Samient, iii.
- Sanazarius, iv.
- Sangliere, Sir, iii.
- Sansfoy, i.
- Sansioy, i.
- Sansloy, i.
- Sao, iii.
- Sathan, i.
- Saturne, ii.; iv.
- Satyrane, i.; iii.
- Saxons, ii.; v.
- Scaldis, ii.
- Sclaunder, iii.
- Scamander, ii.; iii.
- Sanderbeg, v.
- Scipio, i.
- Scipion, v.
- Scorne, iv.
- Scudamore, Sir, ii.; iii.
- Selinis, i.
- Semelee, ii.
- Semiramis, i.; ii.
- September, iv.
- Serena, iv.
- Sergis, Sir, iii.
- Severne, ii.; iii.
- Severus, ii.
- Shame, ii.
- Shamefastnes, ii.; iii.
- Shenan, iii.
- Shepheard of the Ocean (Raleigh), iv.
- Shield of Love, iii.
- Shure, iii.; iv.
- Sidney, Sir Philip, i.; iv.; v.
- Silence, iii.
- Silo, i.
- Sisera, ii.
- Sisillus, ii.
- Sisyphus, i.
- Skell, iii.
- Slane, iii.
- Sleepe, ii.
- Slewbloome, iii.
- Slewlogher, iii.
- Slowth, i.
- Socrates, ii.
- Somerset, Ladies Elizabeth and Katherine, v.
- Sommer, iv.
- Sophy, ii.
- Sorrow, ii.
- South-Wales, ii.
- Spau, i.
- Spayne, ii.
- Spencer, ii.
- Speranza, i.
- Spio, iii.
- Spring, iv.
- Spumador, ii.
- Squire of Dames, ii.; iii.
- Squire of Low Degree, iii.
- Stamford, iii.
- Stater, ii.
- St. Brigets Bowre, iv.
- St. Michels Mount, iv.
- Stella, iv.
- Sthenoboea, i.
- Stoneheng, ii.
- Stoure, iii.
- Strange, Ladie, v.
- Stremona, i.
- Strife, i.; ii.
- Sture, iii.
- Styx, i.
- Suspect, ii.
- Swale, iii.
- Sylla, i.
- Sylvanus, i.
- Sylvius, ii.
- Syrinx, iv.
- Talus, iii.
- Tamar, iii.
- Tanaquill, i.; ii.
- Tantalus, i.; ii.
- Tarquin, i.
- Tartar, ii.
- Tartare, ii.
- Tartary, i.; v.
- Teian Poet, v.
- Telamon, v.
- Tempe, ii.
- Temperaunce, ii.; iii.
- Templer Knights, v.
- Tenantius, ii.
- Termagaunt, ii.
- Terwin, Sir, ii.
- Terpsichore, v.
- Tethys, i.; iii.
- Thabor, Mount, iv.
- Thalia, v.
- Thalia (Grace), iv.
- Thalia (Nereid), iii.
- Thame, iii.
- Thames, v.
- Thamesis, v.
- Thamis, ii.; iii.; v.
- Theana, iv.
- Thebes, ii.; iii.
- Theise, iii.
- Themes, iv.; v.
- Themis, iii.
- Themiste, iii.
- Thenot, iv.
- Theocritus, iv.
- Therion, i.
- Theseus, i.
- Theseus and Pirithous, iii.
- Thestylis, iv.
- Thetis, iii.; iv.; v.
- Thomalin, iv.
- Thomiris, ii.
- Thyamis, i.
- Timias, ii.; iv.
- Timon, i.; v.
- Tindarid lasse, iii.
- Titan, iv.
- Titus and Gesippus, iii.
- Tityrus, iv.
- Tityus, i.; v.
- Toure, ii.
- Traherne, ii.
- Treason, ii.
- Trent, iii.
- Trevisan, i.
- Triamond, iii.
- Triptoleme, v.
- Tristram, iv.
- Triton, iv.
- Trompart, i.
- Trowis, iii.
- Troy, ii.
- Troynovant, ii.; iii.; v.
- Tryphon, ii.; iii.
- Turmagant, iv.
- Turpin, Sir, iii.; iv.
- Twede, iii.
- Tybris, iii.
- Tygris, iii.
- Tyne, iii.
- Typhaeus sister, v.
- Typhaon, iii.; iv.
- Typhoeus, i.; ii.
- Typhon, iii.
- Ulfin, ii.
- Ulysses, v.
- Una, i.
- Urania, iv.
- Uranus, iv.
- Ure, iii.
- Uther, ii.
- Velntide, Saint, iv.
- Vanitie, i.
- Venus, ii; iii; v.
- temple and statue of, iii.
- Verdant, ii.
- Verlame, v.
- Vespasian, ii.
- Vigent, ii.
- Virgil, iv.
- Virginia, i.
- Vortigere, ii.
- Vortimere, ii.
- Vortipore, ii.
- Vulcan, iii.
- Walsingham, Sir Francis, i.
- Wandring Islands, ii.
- Waterford, iii.
- Welland, iii.
- Were, iii.
- Werfe, iii.
- Whirlepoole of Decay, ii.
- Willie, iv.
- Willy, pleasant, v.
- Winborne, iii.
- Winter, iv.
- Wiseman, the, iii.
- Witches Sonne, ii.
- Witch, the, ii.
- Womanhood, iii.
- Wrath, i.
- Wrenock, iv.
- Wyden, ii.
- Wylibourne, iii.
- Xanthus, ii.; v.
- Yar, iii.
- Ymner, ii.
- Zele, i.; iii.
- Zeuxis, ii.
- THE END.
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