Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. The XV bookes of P. Ouidius Naso, entytuled Metamorphosis. Golding, Arthur, translator. London: W. Seres (printer), 1567.
- When ended was this piteous plaint, the Earth did hold hir peace.
- She could no lenger dure the heate but was compelde to cease.
- Into hir bosome by and by she shrunke hir cinged heade
- More nearer to the Stygian caves, and ghostes of persones deade.
- The Sire of Heaven protesting all the Gods and him also
- That lent the Chariot to his child, that all of force must go
- To havocke if he helped not, went to the highest part
- And top of all the Heaven from whence his custome was to dart
- His thunder and his lightning downe. But neyther did remaine
- A Cloude wherewith to shade the Earth, nor yet a showre of raine.
- Then with a dreadfull thunderclap up to his eare he bent
- His fist, and at the Wagoner a flash of lightning sent,
- Which strake his bodie from the life and threw it over wheele
- And so with fire he quenched fire. The Steedes did also reele
- Upon their knees, and starting up sprang violently, one here,
- And there another, that they brast in pieces all their gere.
- They threw the Collars from their neckes, and breaking quite asunder
- The Trace and Harnesse flang away: here lay the bridles: yonder
- The Extree plucked from the Naves: and in another place
- The shevered spokes of broken wheeles: and so at every pace
- The pieces of the Chariot torne lay strowed here and there.
- But Phaeton (fire yet blasing stil among his yellow haire)
- Shot headlong downe, and glid along the Region of the Ayre
- Like to a starre in Winter nights (the wether cleare and fayre)
- Which though it doe not fall in deede, yet falleth to our sight,
- Whome almost in another world and from his countrie quite
- The River Padus did receyve, and quencht his burning head.
- The water Nymphes of Italie did take his carkasse dead
- And buried it yet smoking still, with Joves threeforked flame,
- And wrate this Epitaph in the stone that lay upon the same:
- Here lies the lusty Phaeton which tooke in hand to guide
- His fathers Chariot, from the which although he chaunst to slide:
- Yet that he gave a proud attempt it cannot be denide.
- Wyth ruthfull cheere and heavie heart his father made great mone
- And would not shew himselfe abrode, but mournd at home alone.
- And if it be to be beleved, as bruited is by fame
- A day did passe without the Sunne. The brightnesse of the flame
- Gave light: and so unto some kinde of use that mischiefe came.
- But Clymen having spoke, as much as mothers usually
- Are wonted in such wretched case, discomfortablely,
- And halfe beside hir selfe for wo, with torne and scratched brest,
- Sercht through the universall world, from East to furthest West,
- First seeking for hir sonnes dead coarse, and after for his bones.
- She found them by a forren streame, entumbled under stones.
- There fell she groveling on his grave, and reading there his name,
- Shed teares thereon, and layd hir breast all bare upon the same.
- The daughters also of the Sunne no lesse than did their mother,
- Bewaild in vaine with flouds of teares, the fortune of their brother:
- And beating piteously their breasts, incessantly did call
- The buried Phaeton day and night, who heard them not at all,
- About whose tumbe they prostrate lay. Foure times the Moone had filde
- The Circle of hir joyned hornes, and yet the sisters hilde
- Their custome of lamenting still: (for now continuall use
- Had made it custome.) Of the which the eldest, Phaetuse,
- About to kneele upon the ground, complaynde hir feete were nom.
- To whome as fayre Lampetie was rising for to com,
- Hir feete were held with sodaine rootes. The third about to teare
- Hir ruffled lockes, filde both hir handes with leaves in steade of heare.
- One wept to see hir legges made wood: another did repine
- To see hir armes become long boughes. And shortly to define,
- While thus they wondred at themselves, a tender barke began
- To grow about their thighes and loynes, which shortly overran
- Their bellies, brestes, and shoulders eke, and hands successively,
- That nothing (save their mouthes) remainde, aye calling piteously
- Upon the wofull mothers helpe. What could the mother doe
- But runne now here now there, as force of nature drue hir to
- And deale hir kisses while she might? She was not so content:
- But tare their tender braunches downe: and from the slivers went
- Red drops of bloud as from a wound. The daughter that was rent
- Cride: Spare us mother spare I pray, for in the shape of tree
- The bodies and the flesh of us your daughters wounded bee.
- And now farewell. That word once said, the barke grew over all.
- Now from these trees flow gummy teares that Amber men doe call,
- Which hardened with the heate of sunne as from the boughs they fal
- The trickling River doth receyve, and sendes as things of price
- To decke the daintie Dames of Rome and make them fine and nice.
- Now present at this monstruous hap was Cygnus, Stenels son,
- Who being by the mothers side akinne to Phaeton
- Was in condicion more akinne. He leaving up his charge
- (For in the land of Ligurie his Kingdome stretched large)
- Went mourning all along the bankes and pleasant streame of Po
- Among the trees encreased by the sisters late ago.
- Annon his voyce became more small and shrill than for a man.
- Gray fethers muffled in his face: his necke in length began
- Far from his shoulders for to stretche: and furthermore there goes
- A fine red string acrosse the joyntes in knitting of his toes:
- With fethers closed are his sides: and on his mouth there grew
- A brode blunt byll: and finally was Cygnus made a new
- And uncoth fowle that hight a Swan, who neither to the winde,
- The Ayre, nor Jove betakes himselfe, as one that bare in minde
- The wrongfull fire sent late against his cousin Phaeton.
- In Lakes and Rivers is his joy: the fire he aye doth shon,
- And chooseth him the contrary continually to won.
- Forlorne and altogether voyde of that same bodie shene
- Was Phaetons father in that while which erst had in him bene,
- Like as he looketh in Th'eclypse. He hates the yrkesome light,
- He hates him selfe, he hates the day, and settes his whole delight
- In making sorrow for his sonne, and in his griefe doth storme -
- And chaufe denying to the worlde his dutie to performe.
- My lot (quoth he) hath had inough of this unquiet state
- From first beginning of the worlde. It yrkes me (though too late)
- Of restlesse toyles and thankelesse paines. Let who so will for me
- Go drive the Chariot in the which the light should caried be.
- If none dare take the charge in hand, and all the Gods persist
- As insufficient, he himselfe go drive it if he list,
- That at the least by venturing our bridles for to guide
- His lightning making childlesse Sires he once may lay aside.
- By that time that he hath assayde the unappalled force
- That doth remaine and rest within my firiefooted horse,
- I trow he shall by tried proufe be able for to tell
- How that he did not merit death that could not rule them well.
- The Goddes stoode all about the Sunne thus storming in his rage
- Beseching him in humble wise his sorrow to asswage.
- And that he would not on the world continuall darkenesse bring,
- Jove eke excusde him of the fire the which he chaunst to sling,
- And with entreatance mingled threates as did become a King.
- Then Phebus gathered up his steedes that yet for feare did run
- Like flaighted fiendes, and in his moode without respect begun
- To beate his whipstocke on their pates and lash them on the sides.
- It was no neede to bid him chaufe; for ever as he rides
- He still upbraides them with his sonne, and layes them on the hides.
- And Jove almighty went about the walles of heaven to trie
- If ought were perisht with the fire, which when he did espie
- Continuing in their former state, all strong and safe and sound,
- He went to vew the workes of men, and things upon the ground.
- Yet for his land of Arcadie he tooke most care and charge.
- The Springs and streames that durst not run he set againe at large.
- He clad the earth with grasse, the trees with leaves both fresh and greene
- Commaunding woods to spring againe that erst had burned bene.
- Now as he often went and came it was his chaunce to light
- Upon a Nymph of Nonacris whose forme and beautie bright
- Did set his heart on flaming fire. She used not to spinne
- Nor yet to curle hir frisled haire with bodkin or with pinne.
- A garment with a buckled belt fast girded did she weare
- And in a white and slender Call slight trussed was hir heare.
- Sometimes a dart sometime a bow she used for to beare.
- She was a knight of Phebes troope. There came not at the mount
- Of Menalus of whome Diana made so great account.
- But favor never lasteth long. The Sunne had gone that day
- A good way past the poynt of Noone: when werie of hir way
- She drue to shadowe in a wood that never had bene cut.
- Here off hir shoulder by and by hir quiver did she put,
- And hung hir bow unbent aside, and coucht hir on the ground,
- Hir quiver underneth hir head. Whom when that Jove had found
- Alone and wearie: Sure (he said) my wife shall never know
- Of this escape, and if she do, I know the worst I trow.
- She can but chide, shall feare of chiding make me to forslow?
- He counterfeiteth Phebe streight in countnance and aray.
- And says: O virgine of my troope, where didst thou hunt to day?
- The Damsell started from the ground and said: Hayle Goddesse deare,
- Of greater worth than Jove (I thinke) though Jove himselfe did heare.
- Jove heard hir well and smylde thereat, it made his heart rejoyce
- To heare the Nymph preferre him thus before himselfe in choyce.
- He fell to kissing: which was such as out of square might seeme,
- And in such sort as that a mayde coulde nothing lesse beseeme.
- And as she would have told what woods she ranged had for game,
- He tooke hir fast betweene his armes, and not without his shame,
- Bewrayed plainly what he was and wherefore that he came.
- The wench against him strove as much as any woman could:
- I would that Juno had it seene. For then I know thou would
- Not take the deede so heynously: with all hir might she strove.
- But what poore wench or who alive could vanquish mighty Jove?
- Jove having sped flue straight to heaven. She hateth in hir hart
- The guiltlesse fields and wood where Jove had playd that naughty part,
- Alwaye she goes in such a griefe as that she had welnie
- Forgot hir quiver with hir shaftes and bow that hanged by.
- Dictynna, garded with hir traine and proude of killing Deere,
- In raunging over Menalus, espying, cald hir neere.
- The Damsell hearing Phebe call did run away amaine,
- She feared lest in Phebes shape that Jove had come againe,
- But when she saw the troope of Nymphes that garded hir about,
- She thought there was no more deceyt, and came among the rout.
- Oh Lord how hard a matter ist for guiltie hearts to shift
- And kepe their countnance? from the ground hir eyes scarce durst she lift.
- She prankes not by hir mistresse side, she preases not to bee
- The foremost of the companie, as when she erst was free.
- She standeth muet: and by chaunging of hir colour ay
- The treading of hir shooe awrie she plainely doth bewray,
- Diana might have founde the fault but that she was a May.
- A thousand tokens did appeare apparant to the eye,
- By which the Nymphes themselves (they say) hir fault did well espie.
- Nine times the Moone full to the worlde had shewde hir horned face
- When fainting through hir brothers flames and hunting in the chace.
- She found a coole and shadie lawnde through midst whereof she spide
- A shallow brooke with trickling streame on gravell bottom glide.
- And liking well the pleasant place, upon the upper brim
- She dipt hir foote, and finding there the water coole and trim,
- Away (she sayd) with standers by: and let us bath us here.
- Then Parrhasis cast downe hir head with sad and bashfull chere.
- The rest did strip them to their skinnes. She only sought delay,
- Untill that would or would she not hir clothes were pluckt away.
- Then with hir naked body straight hir crime was brought to light.
- Which yll ashamde as with hir hands she would have hid from sight,
- Fie beast (quoth Cynthia) get thee hence, thou shalt not here defile
- This sacred Spring, and from hir traine she did hir quite exile.
- The Matrone of the thundring Jove had inckling of the fact,
- Delaying till convenient time the punishment to exact.
- There is no cause of further stay. To spight hir heart withall,
- Hir husbands Leman bare a boy that Arcas men did call.
- On whome she casting lowring looke with fell and cruell minde
- Saide: Was there, arrant strumpet thou, none other shift to finde
- But that thou needes must be with barne? that all the world must see
- My husbandes open shame and thine in doing wrong to mee?
- But neyther unto heaven nor hell this trespasse shalt thou beare.
- I will bereve thee of thy shape through pride whereof thou were
- So hardy to entyce my Feere. Immediatly with that
- She raught hir by the foretop fast and fiercely threw hir flat
- Against the grounde. The wretched wench hir armes up mekely cast,
- Hir armes began with griesly haire to waxe all rugged fast.
- Hir handes gan warpe and into pawes ylfavordly to grow,
- And for to serve in stede of feete. The lippes that late ago
- Did like the mightie Jove so well, with side and flaring flaps
- Became a wide deformed mouth. And further lest perhaps
- Hir prayers and hir humble wordes might cause hir to relent:
- She did bereve hir of hir speach. In steade whereof there went
- An yreful, horce, and dreadfull voyce out from a threatning throte:
- But yet the selfesame minde that was before she turnde hir cote,
- Was in hir still in shape of Beare. The griefe whereof she showes
- By thrusting forth continuall sighes, and up she gastly throwes
- Such kinde of handes as then remainde unto the starrie Skie.
- And forbicause she could not speake she thought Jove inwardly
- To be unthankfull. Oh how oft she daring not abide
- Alone among the desert woods, full many a time and tide
- Would stalke before hir house in grounds that were hir owne erewhile?
- How oft oh did she in the hilles the barking houndes beguile
- And in the lawndes where she hir selfe had chased erst hir game,
- Now flie hirselfe to save hir life when hunters sought the same?
- Full oft at sight of other beastes she hid hir head for feare,
- Forgetting what she was hir selfe. For though she were a Beare,
- Yet when she spied other Beares she quooke for verie paine:
- And feared Wolves although hir Sire among them did remaine.
- Beholde Lycaons daughters sonne that Archas had to name
- About the age of fiftene yeares within the forrest came
- Of Erymanth, not knowing ought of this his mothers case.
- There after pitching of his toyles, as he the stagges did chase,
- Upon his mother sodenly it was his chaunce to light,
- Who for desire to see hir sonne did stay hirselfe from flight.
- And wistly on him cast hir looke as one that did him know.
- But he not knowing what she was began his heeles to show.
- And when he saw hir still persist in staring on his face,
- He was afrayde, and from hir sight withdrew himselfe apace,
- But when he coulde not so be rid, he tooke an armed pike,
- In full intent hir through the heart with deadly wound to strike.
- But God almighty held his hand, and lifting both away
- Did disapoint the wicked Act. For straight he did convay
- Them through the Ayre with whirling windes to top of all the skie,
- And there did make them neighbour starres about the Pole on hie.
- When Juno shining in the heaven hir husbands minion found,
- She swelde for spight: and downe she comes to watry Tethys round
- And unto olde Oceanus, whome even the Gods aloft
- Did reverence for their just deserts full many a time and oft,
- To whome demaunding hir the cause: And aske ye (quoth she) why
- That I which am the Queene of Goddes come hither from the sky?
- Good cause there is I warrant you. Another holdes my roome.
- For never trust me while I live, if when the night is coome,
- And overcasteth all the world with shadie darknesse whole,
- Ye see not in the heigth of heaven hard by the Northren Pole
- Whereas the utmost circle runnes about the Axeltree
- In shortest circuit, gloriously enstalled for to bee
- In shape of starres the stinging woundes that make me yll apayde.
- Now is there (trow ye) any cause why folke should be afrayde
- To do to Juno what they list, or dread hir wrathfull mood,
- Which only by my working harme doe turne my foes to good?
- O what a mightie act is done? How passing is my powre!
- I have bereft hir womans shape, and at this present howre
- She is become a Goddesse. Loe this is the scourge so sowre
- Wherewith I strike mine enimies. Loe here is all the spight
- That I can doe: this is the ende of all my wondrous might,
- No force. I would he should (for me) hir native shape restore,
- And take away hir brutish shape, like as he hath before
- Done by his other Paramour, that fine and proper piece
- Of Argos whom he made a Cow, I meane Phononeus Niece.
- Why makes he not a full devorce from me, and in my stead
- Straight take his Sweetheart to his wife, and coll hir in my bed?
- He can not doe a better deede (I thinke) than for to take
- Lycaon to his fatherinlaw. But if that you doe make
- Accompt of me your foster childe, then graunt that for my sake,
- The Oxen and the wicked Waine of starres in number seven,
- For whoredome sake but late ago receyved into heaven,
- May never dive within your waves. Ne let that strumpet vyle
- By bathing of hir filthie limmes your waters pure defile.
- The Gods did graunt hir hir request: and straight to heaven she flue,
- In handsome Chariot through the Ayre, which painted peacocks drue
- As well beset with blasing eyes late tane from Argus hed,
- As thou thou prating Raven white by nature being bred,
- Hadst on thy fethers justly late a coly colour spred.
- For this same birde in auncient time had fethers faire and whight
- As ever was the driven snow, or silver cleare and bright.
- He might have well comparde himself in beautie with the Doves
- That have no blemish, or the Swan that running water loves:
- Or with the Geese that afterward should with their gagling out
- Preserve the Romaine Capitoll beset with foes about.
- His tongue was cause of all his harme, his tatling tongue did make
- His colour which before was white, become so foule and blake.
- Coronis of Larissa was the fairest maide of face,
- In all the land of Thessalie. Shee stoode in Phebus grace
- As long as that she kept hir chast, or at the least as long
- As that she scaped unespide in doing Phebus wrong.
- But at the last Apollos birde hir privie packing spide,
- Whome no entreatance could persuade but that he swiftly hide
- Him to his maister, to bewray the doings of his love.
- Now as he flue, the pratling Crow hir wings apace did move:
- And overtaking fell in talke and was inquisitive
- For what intent and to what place he did so swiftly drive.
- And when she heard the cause thereof, she said: Now trust me sure,
- This message on the whiche thou goste no goodnesse will procure.
- And therefore hearken what I say: disdaine thou not at all,
- To take some warning by thy friende in things that may befall.
- Consider what I erst have bene and what thou seest me now:
- And what hath bene the ground hereof. I boldly dare avow,
- That thou shalt finde my faithfulnesse imputed for a crime.
- For Pallas in a wicker chest had hid upon a time
- A childe calde Ericthonius, whome never woman bare,
- And tooke it unto Maidens three that Cecrops daughters were,
- Not telling them what was within, but gave them charge to keepe
- The Casket shut, and for no cause within the same to peepe.
- I standing close among the leaves upon an Elme on hie,
- Did marke their doings and their wordes, and there I did espie
- How Pandrosos and Herse kept their promise faithfully.
- Aglauros calles them Cowardes both, and makes no more adoe,
- But takes the Casket in hir hand and doth the knots undooe.
- And there they saw a childe whose partes beneath were like a snake.
- Straight to the Goddesse of this deede a just report I make.
- For which she gave me this reward that never might I more
- Accompt hir for my Lady and my Mistresse as before.
- And in my roume she put the fowle that flies not but by night,
- A warning unto other birdes my lucke should be of right
- To holde their tongues for being shent. But you will say perchaunce
- I came unsentfor of my selfe, she did me not advaunce.
- I dare well say though Pallas now my heavie Mistresse stand
- Yet if perhaps ye should demaund the question at hir hand,
- As sore displeased as she is, she would not this denie:
- But that she chose me first hir selfe to beare hir companie.
- For (well I know) my father was a Prince of noble fame,
- Of Phocis King by long discent, Coronew was his name:
- I was his darling and his joy, and many a welthie Piere
- (I would not have you thinke disdaine) did seeke me for their Fere.
- My forme and beautie did me hurt. For as I leysurely
- Went jetting up and downe the shore upon the gravell drie,
- As yet I customably doe, the God that rules the Seas
- Espying me fell straight in love. And when he saw none ease
- In sute, but losse of wordes and time, he offred violence,
- And after me he runnes apace. I skudde as fast fro thence,
- From sand to shore from shore to sand, still playing Foxe to hole,
- Untill I was so tirde that he had almost got the gole.
- Then cald I out on God and man. But (as it did appeare)
- There was no man so neare at hand that could my crying heare.
- A Virgin Goddesse pitied me bicause I was a mayde:
- And at the utter plunge and pinche did send me present ayde.
- I cast mine armes to heaven, mine armes waxt light with fethers black,
- I went about to cast in hast my garments from my back,
- And all was fethers. In my skinne the rooted fethers stack.
- I was about with violent hand to strike my naked breast,
- But nether had I hand nor breast that naked more did reast.
- I ran, but of my feete as erst remained not the print.
- Me thought I glided on the ground. Anon with sodaine dint,
- I rose and hovered in the Ayre. And from that instant time
- Did wait on Pallas faithfully without offence or crime.
- But what availes all this to me, and if that in my place
- The wicked wretch Nyctyminee (who late for lacke of grace
- Was turned to an odious birde) to honor called bee?
- I pray thee didst thou never heare how false Nyctyminee
- (A thing all over Lesbos knowne) defilde hir fathers couch?
- The beast is now become a birde, whose lewdnesse doth so touch
- And pricke hir guiltie conscience that she dares not come in sight,
- Nor shewe hirselfe abrode a dayes, but fleeteth in the night
- For shame lest folke should see hir fault: and every other birde
- Doth in the Ayre and Ivie toddes with wondring at hir girde.
- A mischiefe take thy tatling tongue, the Raven answerde tho.
- Thy vaine forspeaking moves me not. And so he forth did go
- And tels his Lorde Apollo how he saw Coronis lie
- Wyth Isthyis, a Gentleman that dwelt in Thessalie.
- When Phebus heard his lovers fault, he fiersly gan to frowne,
- And cast his garlond from his head, and threw his violl downe.
- His colour chaungde, his face lookt pale, and as the rage of yre
- That boyled in his belking breast had set his heart on fyre,
- He caught me up his wonted tooles, and bent his golden bow
- And by and by with deadly stripe of unavoyded blow
- Strake through the breast the which his owne had toucht so oft afore.
- She wounded gave a piteous shrike, and (drawing from the sore
- The deadly Dart the which the bloud pursuing after fast
- Upon hir white and tender limmes a scarlet colour cast)
- Saide: Phebus, well, thou might have wreakt this trespasse on my head
- And yet forborne me till the time I had bene brought abed.
- Now in one body by thy meanes a couple shall be dead.
- Thus muche she saide: and with the bloud hir life did fade away.
- The bodie being voyde of soule became as colde as clay.
- Than all too late, alas too late gan Phebus to repent
- That of his lover he had tane so cruell punishment.
- He blames himselfe for giving eare so unadvisedly.
- He blames himselfe in that he tooke it so outragiously.
- He hates and bannes his faithfull birde bicause he did enforme
- Him of his lovers naughtinesse that made him so to storme.
- He hates his bow, he hates his shaft that rashly from it went:
- And eke he hates his hasty hands by whom the bow was bent.
- He takes hir up betweene his armes endevoring all too late
- By plaister made of precious herbes to stay hir helplesse fate.
- But when he saw there was no shift: but that she needes must burne,
- And that the solemne sacred fire was prest to serve the turne,
- Then from the bottome of his heart full sorie sighes he fet,
- (For heavenly powres with watrie teares their cheekes may never wet)
- In case as when a Cow beholdes the cruell butcher stand
- With launching Axe embrewd with bloud and lifting up his hand
- Aloft to snatch hir sucking Calfe that hangeth by the heeles
- And of the Axe the deadly dint upon his forehead feeles.
- Howbeit after sweete perfumes bestowde upon hir corse
- And much embracing, having sore bewailde hir wrong divorse,
- He followed to the place assignde hir bodie for to burne.
- There coulde he not abide to see his seede to ashes turne.
- But tooke the baby from hir wombe and from the firie flame,
- And unto double Chyrons den conveyed straight the same.
- The Raven hoping for his truth to be rewarded well,
- He maketh blacke, forbidding him with whiter birdes to dwell.