Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. The XV bookes of P. Ouidius Naso, entytuled Metamorphosis. Golding, Arthur, translator. London: W. Seres (printer), 1567.
- The neyghbor Princes thither came, and all the Cities round
- About besought their Kings to go and comfort Thebe: as Arge
- And Sparta, and Mycene which was under Pelops charge,
- And Calydon unhated of the frowning Phebe yit,
- The welthie towne Orchomenos, and Corinth which in it
- Had famous men for workmanship in mettals: and the stout
- Messene which full twentie yeares did hold besiegers out.
- And Patre, and the lowly towne Cleona, Nelies Pyle,
- And Troyzen not surnamed yet Pittheia for a while.
- And all the other Borough townes and Cities which doe stand
- Within the narrow balke at which two Seas doe meete at hand,
- Or which do bound upon the balke without in maine firme land.
- Alonly Athens (who would thinke?) did neither come nor send.
- Warre barred them from courtesie the which they did entend.
- The King of Pontus with an host of savage people lay
- In siege before their famous waHes and curstly did them fray.
- Untill that Tereus, King of Thrace, approching to their ayde,
- Did vanquish him, and with renowne was for his labor payde.
- And sith he was so puissant in men and ready coyne,
- And came of mightie Marsis race, Pandion sought to joyne
- Aliance with him by and by, and gave him to his Feere
- His daughter Progne. At this match (as after will appeare)
- Was neyther Juno, President of mariage wont to bee,
- Nor Hymen, no nor any one of all the graces three.
- The Furies snatching Tapers up that on some Herce did stande
- Did light them, and before the Bride did beare them in their hande.
- The Furies made the Bridegroomes bed. And on the house did rucke
- A cursed Owle the messenger of yll successe and lucke.
- And all the night time while that they were lying in their beds,
- She sate upon the bedsteds top right over both their heds.
- Such handsell Progne had the day that Tereus did hir wed.
- Such handsell had they when that she was brought of childe abed.
- All Thracia did rejoyce at them, and thankt their Gods, and willd
- That both the day of Prognes match with Tereus should be hild
- For feastfull, and the day likewise that Itys first was borne:
- So little know we what behoves. The Sunne had now outworne
- Five Harvests, and by course five times had run his yearly race,
- When Progne flattring Tereus saide: If any love or grace
- Betweene us be, send eyther me my sister for to see,
- Or finde the meanes that hither she may come to visit mee.
- You may assure your Fathrinlaw she shall againe returne
- Within a while. Ye doe to me the highest great good turne
- That can be, if you bring to passe I may my sister see.
- Immediatly the King commaundes his shippes aflote to bee.
- And shortly after, what with sayle and what with force of Ores,
- In Athens haven he arrives and landes at Pyrey shores.
- As soone as of his fathrinlaw the presence he obtainde,
- And had of him bene courteously and friendly entertainde,
- Unhappie handsell entred with their talking first togither.
- The errandes of his wife, the cause of his then comming thither,
- He had but new begon to tell, and promised that when
- She had hir sister seene, she should with speede be sent agen:
- When (see the chaunce) came Philomele in raiment very rich,
- And yet in beautie farre more rich, even like the Fairies which
- Reported are the pleasant woods and water springs to haunt,
- So that the like apparell and attire to them you graunt.
- King Tereus at the sight of hir did burne in his desire,
- As if a man should chaunce to set a gulfe of come on fire,
- Or burne a stacke of hay. Hir face in deede deserved love.
- But as for him, to fleshly lust even nature did him move.
- For of those countries commonly the people are above
- All measure prone to lecherie. And therefore both by kinde
- His flame encreast, and by his owne default of vicious minde.
- He purposde fully to corrupt hir servants with reward:
- Or for to bribe hir Nurce, that she should slenderly regarde
- Hir dutie to hir mistresseward. And rather than to fayle,
- The Ladie even hirselfe with gifts he minded to assayle,
- And all his kingdome for to spend, or else by force of hand
- To take hir, and in maintenance thereof by sword to stand.
- There was not under heaven the thing but that he durst it prove,
- So far unable was he now to stay his lawlesse love.
- Delay was deadly. Backe againe with greedie minde he came
- Of Prognes errands for to talke: and underneath the same
- He workes his owne ungraciousnesse. Love gave him power to frame
- His talke at will. As oft as he demaunded out of square,
- Upon his wives importunate desire himselfe he bare.
- He also wept: as though his wife had willed that likewise.
- O God, what blindnesse doth the heartes of mortall men disguise?
- By working mischiefe Tereus gets him credit for to seeme
- A loving man, and winneth praise by wickednesse extreeme.
- Yea and the foolish Philomele the selfesame thing desires.
- Who hanging on hir fathers necke with flattring armes, requires
- Against hir life and for hir life his licence for to go
- To see hir sister. Tereus beholdes hir wistly tho,
- And in beholding handles hir with heart. For when he saw
- Hir kisse hir father, and about his necke hir armes to draw,
- They all were spurres to pricke him forth, and wood to feede his fire,
- And foode of forcing nourishment to further his desire.
- As oft as she hir father did betweene hir armes embrace,
- So often wished he himselfe hir father in that case.
- For nought at all should that in him have wrought the greater grace.
- Hir father could not say them nay, they lay at him so sore.
- Right glad thereof was Philomele and thanked him therefore.
- And wretched wench she thinkes she had obtained such a thing,
- As both to Progne and hir selfe should joy and comfort bring,
- When both of them in verie deede should afterward it rew.
- To endward of his daily race and travell Phebus drew,
- And on the shoring side of Heaven his horses downeward flew.
- A princely supper was prepaarde, and wine in golde was set:
- And after meate to take their rest the Princes did them get.
- But though the King of Thrace that while were absent from hir sight,
- Yet swelted he: and in his minde revolving all the night
- Hir face, hir gesture, and hir hands, imaginde all the rest
- (The which as yet he had not seene) as likte his fancie best.
- He feedes his flames himselfe. No winke could come within his eyes,
- For thinking ay on hir. As soone as day was in the skies,
- Pandion holding in his hand the hand of Tereus prest
- To go his way, and sheading teares betooke him thus his guest:
- Deare sonneinlaw I give thee here (sith godly cause constraines)
- This Damsell. By the faith that in thy Princely heart remaines,
- And for our late aliance sake, and by the Gods above,
- I humbly thee beseche that as a Father thou doe love
- And maintaine hir, and that as soone as may be (all delay
- Will unto me seeme over long) thou let hir come away,
- The comfort of my carefull age on whome my life doth stay.
- And thou my daughter Philomele (it is inough ywis
- That from hir father set so farre thy sister Progne is)
- If any sparke of nature doe within thy heart remayne,
- With all the haaste and speede thou canst returne to me againe.
- In giving charge he kissed hir: and downe his cheekes did raine
- The tender teares, and as a pledge of faith he tooke the right
- Handes of them both, and joyning them did eche to other plight,
- Desiring them to beare in minde his commendations to
- His daughter and hir little sonne. And then with much adoe
- For sobbing, at the last he bad adew as one dismaid.
- The foremisgiving of his minde did make him sore afraid.
- As soone as Tereus and the Maide togither were aboord,
- And that their ship from land with Ores was haled on the foord,
- The fielde is ours, he cride aloude, I have the thing I sought
- And up he skipt, so barbrous and so beastly was his thought,
- That scarce even there he could forbeare his pleasure to have wrought.
- His eye went never off of hir: as when the scarefull Erne
- With hooked talants trussing up a Hare among the Ferne,
- Hath laid hir in his nest, from whence the prisoner can not scape,
- The ravening fowle with greedie eyes upon his pray doth gape.
- Now was their journey come to ende: now were they gone aland
- In Thracia, when that Tereus tooke the Ladie by the hand,
- And led hir to a pelting graunge that peakishly did stand
- In woods forgrowen. There waxing pale and trembling sore for feare,
- And dreading all things, and with teares demaunding sadly where
- Hir sister was, he shet hir up: and therewithall bewraide
- His wicked lust, and so by force bicause she was a Maide
- And all alone he vanquisht hir. It booted nought at all
- That she on sister, or on Sire, or on the Gods did call.
- She quaketh like the wounded Lambe which from the Wolves hore teeth
- New shaken thinkes hir selfe not safe: or as the Dove that seeth
- Hir fethers with hir owne bloud staynde, who shuddring still doth feare
- The greedie Hauke that did hir late with griping talants teare.
- Anon when that this mazednesse was somewhat overpast,
- She rent hir haire, and beate hir brest, and up to heavenward cast
- Hir hands in mourningwise, and said: O cankerd Carle, O fell
- And cruell Tyrant, neyther could the godly teares that fell
- Adowne my fathers cheekes when he did give thee charge of mee,
- Ne of my sister that regarde that ought to be in thee,
- Nor yet my chaaste virginitie, nor conscience of the lawe
- Of wedlocke, from this villanie thy barbrous heart withdraw?
- Is made a Cucqueane: and thy selfe through this offence of thee
- Art made a husband to us both, and unto me a foe,
- Behold thou hast confounded all. My sister thorough mee
- A just deserved punishment for lewdly doing so.
- But to th'intent, O perjurde wretch, no mischiefe may remaine
- Unwrought by thee, why doest thou from murdring me refraine?
- Would God thou had it done before this wicked rape. From hence
- Then should my soule most blessedly have gone without offence.
- But if the Gods doe see this deede, and if the Gods, I say,
- Be ought, and in this wicked worlde beare any kinde of sway
- And if with me all other things decay not, sure the day
- Will come that for this wickednesse full dearly thou shalt pay.
- Yea I my selfe rejecting shame thy doings will bewray.
- And if I may have power to come abrode, them blase I will
- In open face of all the world. Or if thou keepe me still
- As prisoner in these woods, my voyce the verie woods shall fill,
- And make the stones to understand. Let Heaven to this give care
- And all the Gods and powers therein if any God be there.
- The cruell tyrant being chaaft and also put in feare
- With these and other such hir wordes, both causes so him stung,
- That drawing out his naked sworde that at his girdle hung,
- He tooke hir rudely by the haire, and wrung hir hands behind hir,
- Compelling hir to holde them there while he himselfe did bind hir.
- When Philomela sawe the sworde, she hoapt she should have dide,
- And for the same hir naked throte she gladly did provide.
- But as she yirnde and called ay upon hir fathers name,
- And strived to have spoken still, the cruell tyrant came
- And with a paire of pinsons fast did catch hir by the tung,
- And with his sword did cut it off. The stumpe whereon it hung
- Did patter still. The tip fell downe and quivering on the ground
- As though that it had murmured it made a certaine sound.
- And as an Adders tayle cut off doth skip a while: even so
- The tip of Philomelaas tongue did wriggle to and fro,
- And nearer to hir mistresseward in dying still did go.
- And after this most cruell act, for certaine men report
- That he (I scarcely dare beleve) did oftentimes resort
- To maymed Philomela and abusde hir at his will:
- Yet after all this wickednesse he keeping countnance still,
- Durst unto Progne home repaire. And she immediatly
- Demaunded where hir sister was. He sighing feynedly
- Did tell hir falsly she was dead: and with his suttle teares
- He maketh all his tale to seeme of credit in hir eares.
- Hir garments glittring all with golde she from hir shoulders teares
- And puts on blacke, and setteth up an emptie Herce, and keepes
- A solemne obite for hir soule, and piteously she weepes
- And waileth for hir sisters fate who was not in such wise
- As that was, for to be bewailde. The Sunne had in the Skies
- Past through the twelve celestiall signes, and finisht full a yeare.
- But what should Philomela doe? She watched was so neare
- That start she could not for hir life. The walles of that same graunge
- Were made so high of maine hard stone, that out she could not raunge.
- Againe hir tunglesse mouth did want the utterance of the fact.
- Great is the wit of pensivenesse, and when the head is rakt
- With hard misfortune, sharpe forecast of practise entereth in.
- A warpe of white upon a frame of Thracia she did pin,
- And weaved purple letters in betweene it, which bewraide
- The wicked deede of Tereus. And having done, she praide
- A certaine woman by hir signes to beare them to hir mistresse.
- She bare them and deliverde them not knowing nerethelesse
- What was in them. The Tyrants wife unfolded all the clout,
- And of hir wretched fortune red the processe whole throughout.
- She held hir peace (a wondrous thing it is she should so doe)
- But sorrow tide hir tongue, and wordes agreeable unto
- Hir great displeasure were not at commaundment at that stound.
- And weepe she could not. Ryght and wrong she reckeneth to confound,
- And on revengement of the deede hir heart doth wholy ground.
- It was the time that wives of Thrace were wont to celebrate
- The three yeare rites of Bacchus which were done a nighttimes late.
- A nighttimes soundeth Rhodope of tincling pannes and pots:
- A nighttimes giving up hir house abrode Queene Progne trots
- Disguisde like Bacchus other froes and armed to the proofe
- With all the frenticke furniture that serves for that behoofe.
- Hir head was covered with a vine. About hir loose was tuckt
- A Reddeeres skin, a lightsome Launce upon hir shoulder ruckt.
- In post gaddes terrible Progne through the woods, and at hir heeles
- A flocke of froes. And where the sting of sorrow which she feeles
- Enforceth hir to furiousnesse, she feynes it to proceede
- Of Bacchus motion. At the length she finding out in deede
- The outset Graunge howlde out, and cride, Now well, and open brake
- The gates, and streight hir sister thence by force of hand did take,
- And veyling hir in like attire of Bacchus, hid hir head
- With Ivie leaves, and home to Court hir sore amazed led.
- As soone as Philomela wist she set hir foote within
- That cursed house, the wretched soule to shudther did begin,
- And all hir face waxt pale. Anon hir sister getting place
- Did pull off Bacchus mad attire, and making bare hir face
- Embraced hir betweene hir armes. But she considering that
- Queene Progne was a Cucqueane made by meanes of hir, durst nat
- Once raise hir eyes: but on the ground fast fixed helde the same.
- And where she woulde have taken God to witnesse that the shame
- And villanie was wrought to hir by violence, she was fayne
- To use hir hand in stead of speache. Then Progne chaaft amaine,
- And was not able in hir selfe hir choler to restraine.
- But blaming Philomela for hir weeping, said these wordes:
- Thou must not deale in this behalfe with weeping, but with swordes:
- Or with some thing of greater force than swords. For my part, I
- Am readie, yea and fully bent all mischiefe for to trie.
- This pallace will I eyther set on fire, and in the same
- Bestow the cursed Tereus the worker of our shame:
- Or pull away his tongue: or put out both his eyes: or cut
- Away those members which have thee to such dishonor put:
- Or with a thousand woundes expulse that sinfull soule of his.
- The thing that I doe purpose on is great, what ere it is.
- I know not what it may be yet. While Progne hereunto
- Did set hir minde, came Itys in, who taught hir what to doe.
- She staring on him cruelly, said: Ah, how like thou art
- Thy wicked father, and without moe wordes a sorowfull part
- She purposed, such inward ire was boyling in hir heart.
- But notwithstanding when hir sonne approched to hir neare,
- And lovingly had greeted hir by name of mother deare,
- And with his pretie armes about the necke had hugde hir fast,
- And flattring wordes with childish toyes in kissing forth had cast,
- The mothers heart of hirs was then constreyned to relent,
- Asswaged wholy was the rage to which she erst was bent,
- And from hir eyes against hir will the teares enforced went.
- But when she saw how pitie did compell hir heart to yeelde,
- She turned to hir sisters face from Itys, and behelde
- Now t'one, now tother earnestly and said: Why tattles he
- And she sittes dumbe bereft of tongue? as well why calles not she
- Me sister, as this boy doth call me mother? Seest thou not,
- Thou daughter of Pandion, what a husband thou hast got?
- Thou growest wholy out of kinde. To such a husband as
- Is Tereus, pitie is a sinne. No more delay there was.
- She dragged Itys after hir, as when it happes in Inde
- A Tyger gets a little Calfe that suckes upon a Hynde
- And drags him through the shadie woods. And when that they had found
- A place within the house far off and far above the ground,
- Then Progne strake him with a sword now plainly seeing whother
- He should, and holding up his handes, and crying mother, mother,
- And flying to hir necke: even where the brest and side doe bounde,
- And never turnde away hir face. Inough had bene that wound
- Alone to bring him to his ende. The tother sister slit
- His throte. And while some life and soule was in his members yit,
- In gobbits they them rent: whereof were some in Pipkins boyld,
- And other some on hissing spits against the fire were broyld,
- And with the gellied bloud of him was all the chamber foyld.
- To this same banquet Progne bade hir husband knowing nought
- Nor nought mistrusting of the harme and lewdnesse she had wrought.
- And feyning a solemnitie according to the guise
- Of Athens, at the which there might be none in any wise
- Besides hir husband and hir selfe, she banisht from the same
- Hir householde folke and sojourners, and such as guestwise came.
- King Tereus sitting in the throne of his forefathers, fed
- And swallowed downe the selfesame flesh that of his bowels bred.
- And he (so blinded was his heart) Fetch Itys hither, sed.
- No lenger hir most cruell joy dissemble could the Queene.
- But of hir murther coveting the messenger to beene,
- She said: The thing thou askest for, thou hast within. About
- He looked round, and asked where? To put him out of dout,
- As he was yet demaunding where, and calling for him: out
- Lept Philomele with scattred haire aflaight like one that fled
- Had from some fray where slaughter was, and threw the bloudy head
- Of Itys in his fathers face. And never more was shee
- Desirous to have had hir speache, that able she might be
- Hir inward joy with worthie wordes to witnesse franke and free.
- The tyrant with a hideous noyse away the table shoves:
- And reeres the fiends from Hell. One while with yawning mouth he proves
- To perbrake up his meate againe, and cast his bowels out.
- Another while with wringing handes he weeping goes about.
- And of his sonne he termes himselfe the wretched grave. Anon
- With naked sword and furious heart he followeth fierce upon
- Pandions daughters. He that had bene present would have deemde
- Their bodies to have hovered up with fethers. As they seemde,
- So hovered they with wings in deede. Of whome the one away
- To woodward flies, the other still about the house doth stay.
- And of their murther from their brestes not yet the token goth,
- For even still yet are stainde with bloud the fethers of them both.
- And he through sorrow and desire of vengeance waxing wight,
- Became a Bird upon whose top a tuft of feathers light
- In likenesse of a Helmets crest doth trimly stand upright.
- In stead of his long sword, his bill shootes out a passing space:
- A Lapwing named is this Bird, all armed seemes his face.
- The sorrow of this great mischaunce did stop Pandions breath
- Before his time, and long ere age determinde had his death.
- Erecthey reigning after him the government did take:
- A Prince of such a worthinesse as no man well can make
- Resolution, if he more in armes or justice did excell.
- Foure sonnes, and daughters foure he had. Of which a couple well
- Did eche in beautie other match. The one of these whose name
- Was Procris unto Cephalus, King Aeolus sonne, became
- A happie wife. The Thracians and King Tereus were a let
- To Boreas: so that long it was before the God could gt
- His dearbeloved Orithya, while trifling he did stand
- With faire entreatance rather than did use the force of hand.
- But when he saw he no reliefe by gentle meanes could finde,
- Then turning unto boystous wrath (which unto that same winde
- Is too familiar and too much accustomed by kinde)
- He said: I served am but well: for whylaid I apart
- My proper weapons, fiercenesse, force, and ire, and cruell hart?
- And fell to fauning like a foole, which did me but disgrace?
- For me is violence meete. Through this the pestred cloudes I chace.
- Through this I tosse the Seas. Through this I turne up knottie Okes,
- And harden Snow, and beate the ground in hayle with sturdie strokes,
- When I my brothers chaunce to get in open Ayre and Skie.
- (For that is my fielde in the which my maisteries I doe trie)
- I charge upon them with such brunt, that of our meeting smart
- The Heaven betweene us soundes, and from the hollow Cloudes doth start
- Enforced fire. And when I come in holes of hollow ground,
- And fiersly in those emptie caves doe rouse my backe up round,
- I trouble even the ghostes, and make the verie world to quake.
- This helpe in wooing of my wife (to speede) I should have take.
- Erecthey should not have bene prayde my Fatherinlaw to bee:
- He should have bene compelde thereto by stout extremitie.
- In speaking these or other wordes as sturdie, Boreas gan
- To flaske his wings. With waving of the which he raysed than
- So great a gale, that all the earth was blasted therewithall,
- And troubled was the maine brode Sea. And as he traylde his pall
- Bedusted over highest tops of things, he swept the ground.
- And having now in smokie cloudes himselfe enclosed round,
- Betweene his duskie wings he caught Orithya straught for feare,
- And like a lover, verie soft and easly did hir beare.
- And as he flew, the flames of love enkindled more and more
- By meanes of stirring. Neither did he stay his flight before
- He came within the land and towne of Cicons with his pray.
- And there soone after being made his wife she hapt to lay
- Hir belly, and a paire of boyes she at a burthen brings,
- Who else in all resembled full their mother, save in wings
- The which they of their father tooke. Howbeit (by report)
- They were not borne with wings upon their bodies in this sort.
- While Calais and Zetes had no beard upon their chin,
- They both were callow. But as soone as haire did once begin
- In likenesse of a yellow Downe upon their cheekes to sprout,
- Then (even as comes to passe in Birdes) the feathers budded out
- Togither on their pinyons too, and spreaded round about
- On both their sides. And finally when childhod once was spent
- And youth come on, togither they with other Minyes went
- To Colchos in the Galley that was first devisde in Greece,
- Upon a sea as then unknowen, to fetch the golden fleece.
- And now in ship of Pagasa the Mynies cut the seas.
- And leading under endlesse night his age in great disease
- Of scarcitie was Phiney seene, and Boreas sonnes had chaste
- Away the Maidenfaced foules that did his victels waste.
- And after suffring many things in noble Jasons band,
- In muddie Phasis gushing streame at last they went aland.
- There while they going to the King demaund the golden fleece
- Brought thither certaine yeares before by Phryxus out of Greece,
- And of their dreadfull labors wait an answere to receive:
- Aeetas daughter in hir heart doth mightie flames conceyve.
- And after strugling verie long, when reason could not win
- The upper hand of rage: she thus did in hir selfe begin:
- In vaine, Medea, doste thou strive: some God what ere he is
- Against thee bendes his force. For what a wondrous thing is this?
- Is any thing like this which men doe terme by name of Love?
- For why should I my fathers hestes esteeme so hard above
- All measure? sure in very deede they are too hard and sore.
- Why feare I lest yon straunger whome I never saw before
- Should perish? what should be the cause of this my feare so great?
- Unhappie wench (and if thou canst) suppresse this uncouth heat
- That burneth in thy tender brest: and if so be I coulde,
- A happie turne it were, and more at ease then be I shoulde.
- But now an uncouth maladie perforce against my will
- Doth hale me. Love persuades me one, another thing my skill.
- The best I see and like: the worst I follow headlong still.
- Why being of the royall bloud so fondly doste thou rave,
- Upon a straunger thus to dote, desiring for to have
- An husband of another world? at home thou mightest finde
- A lover meete for thine estate on whome to set thy minde.
- And yet it is but even a chaunce if he shall live or no:
- God graunt him for to live. I may without offence pray so,
- Although I lovde him not: for what hath Jason trespast me?
- Who woulde not pitie Jasons youth onlesse they cruell be?
- What creature is there but his birth and prowesse might him move?
- And setting all the rest asyde, who woulde not be in love
- With Jasons goodlie personage? my heart assuredly
- Is toucht therewith. But if that I provide not remedie,
- With burning breath of blasting Bulles needes sindged must he bee.
- Of seedes that he himselfe must sow a harvest shall he see
- Of armed men in battell ray upon the ground up grow
- Against the which it hoveth him his manhode for to show.
- And as a pray he must be set against the Dragon fell.
- If I these things let come to passe, I may confesse right well
- That of a Tyger I was bred: and that within my brest
- A heart more harde than any steele or stonie rocke doth rest.
- Why rather doe I not his death with wrathfull eyes beholde?
- And joy with others seeing him to utter perill solde?
- Why doe I not enforce the Bulles against him? Why, I say,
- Exhort I not the cruell men which shall in battell ray
- Arise against him from the ground? and that same Dragon too
- Within whose eyes came never sleepe? God shield I so should doo.
- But prayer smally bootes, except I put to helping hand.
- And shall I like a Caytife then betray my fathers land?
- Shall I a straunger save whome we nor none of ours doth know?
- That he by me preserved may without me homeward row?
- And take another to his wife, and leave me, wretched wight,
- To torments? If I wist that he coulde worke me such a spight,
- Or could in any others love than only mine delight,
- The Churle should die for me. But sure he beareth not the face
- Like one that wold doe so. His birth, his courage, and his grace
- Doe put me clearly out of doubt he will not me deceyve,
- No nor forget the great good turnes he shall by me receyve.
- Yet shall he to me first his faith for more assurance plight
- And solemly he shall be sworne to keepe the covenant right.
- Why fearste thou now without a cause? step to it out of hand:
- And doe not any lenger time thus lingring fondly stand.
- For ay shall Jason thinke himselfe beholding unto thee:
- And shall thee marrie solemly: yea honored shalt thou bee
- Of all the Mothers great and small throughout the townes of Greece
- For saving of their sonnes that come to fetch the golden fleece.
- And shall I then leave brother, sister, father, kith and kin?
- And household Gods, and native soyle, and all that is therein?
- And saile I know not whither with a straunger? Yea: why not?
- My father surely cruell is, my Countrie rude God wot:
- My brother yet a verie babe: my sister I dare say
- Contented is with all hir heart that I should go away:
- The greatest God is in my selfe: the things I doe forsake
- Are trifles in comparison of those that I shall take.
- For saving of the Greekish ship renoumed shall I bee.
- A better place I shall enjoy with Cities riche and free,
- Whose fame doth florish fresh even here, and people that excell
- In civill life and all good Artes: and whome I would not sell
- For all the goods within the worlde, Duke Aesons noble sonne.
- Whome had I to my lawfull Feere assuredly once wonne,
- Most happie yea and blest of God I might my selfe account,
- And with my head above the starres to heaven I should surmount.
- But men report that certaine rockes (I know not what) doe meete
- Amid the waves, and monstrously againe asunder fleete:
- And how Charybdis, utter foe to ships that passe thereby,
- Now sowpeth in, now speweth out the Sea incessantly:
- And ravening Scylla being hemde with cruell dogs about,
- Amids the gulfe of Sicilie doth make a barking out.
- What skilleth that? As long as I enjoy the thing I love,
- And hang about my Jasons necke, it shall no whit me move
- To saile the daungerous Seas: as long as him I may embrace
- I cannot surely be afraide in any kinde of case.
- Or if I chaunce to be afraide, my feare shall only tende
- But for my husband. Callste thou him thy husband? Doste pretende
- Gay titles to thy foule offence, Medea? nay not so:
- But rather looke about how great a lewdnesse thou doste go,
- And shun the mischiefe while thou mayst. She had no sooner said
- These wordes, but right and godlinesse and shamefastnesse were staid
- Before hir eyes, and frantick love did flie away dismaid.
- She went me to an Altar that was dedicate of olde
- To Perseys daughter Hecate (of whome the witches holde
- As of their Goddesse) standing in a thicke and secrete wood
- So close it coulde not well be spide: and now the raging mood
- Of furious love was well alaide and clearely put to flight:
- When spying Aesons sonne, the flame that seemed quenched quight
- Did kindle out of hand againe. Hir cheekes began to glowe,
- And flushing over all hir face the scarlet bloud did flowe.
- And even as when a little sparke that was in ashes hid,
- Uncovered with the whisking windes is from the ashes rid,
- Eftsoones it taketh nourishment and kindleth in such wise,
- That to his former strength againe and flaming it doth rise:
- Even so hir quailed love which late ye would have thought had quight
- Bene vanisht out of minde, as soone as Jason came in sight
- Did kindle to his former force in vewing of the grace
- With which he did avaunce himselfe then comming there in place.
- And (as it chaunced) farre more faire and beautifull of face
- She thought him then than ever erst, but sure it doth behove
- Hir judgement should be borne withall bicause she was in love.
- She gapte and gazed in his face with fixed staring eyen
- As though she never had him seene before that instant time.
- So farre she was beside hir selfe she thought it should not bee
- The face of any worldly wight the which she then did see.
- She was not able for hir life to turne hir eyes away,
- But when he tooke hir by the hand and speaking gan to pray
- Hir softly for to succor him, and promisde faithfully
- To take hir to his wedded wife, she falling by and by
- A weeping, said: Sir, what I doe I see apparantly.
- Not want of knowledge of the truth but love shall me deceive.
- You shalbe saved by my meanes. And now I must receive
- A faithfull promise at your hand for saving of your life.
- He made a solemne vow, and sware to take hir to his wife,
- By triple Hecates holie rites, and by what other power
- So ever else had residence within that secret bower,
- And by the Sire of him that should his Fathrinlaw become
- Who all things doth behold, and as he hopte to overcome
- The dreadfull daungers which he had soone after to assay.
- Duke Jason being credited receivde of hir streight way
- Enchaunted herbes: and having learnde the usage of the same,
- Departed thence with merrie heart, and to his lodging came.
- Next Morne had chaste the streaming stars: and folke by heapes did flocke
- To Marsis sacred field, and there stoode thronging in a shocke,
- To see the straunge pastimes. The King most stately to beholde
- With yvorie Mace above them all did sit in throne of golde.
- Anon the brazenhoved Bulles from stonie nostrils cast
- Out flakes of fire: their scalding breath the growing grasse did blast.
- And looke what noise a chimney full of burning fewell makes,
- Or Flint in softning in the Kell when first the fire it takes
- By sprincling water thereupon: such noyse their boyling brests
- Turmoyling with the firie flames enclosed in their chests,
- Such noise their scorched throtebolles make. Yet stoutly Jason went
- To meete them. They their dreadfull eyes against him grimly bent, '
- And eke their homes with yron tipt: and strake the dust about
- In stamping with their cloven clees: and with their belowing out
- Set all the fielde upon a smoke. The Mynies seeing that
- Were past their wits with sodaine feare, but Jason feeled nat
- So much as any breath of theirs: such strength hath sorcerie.
- Their dangling Dewlaps with his hand he coyd unfearfully.
- And putting yokes upon their neckes he forced them to draw
- The heavie burthen of the plough which erst they never saw,
- And for to breake the fielde which erst had never felt the share.
- The men of Colchos seeing this, like men amazed fare.
- The Mynies with their shouting out their mazednesse augment,
- And unto Jason therewithall give more encouragement.
- Then in a souldiers cap of steele a Vipers teeth he takes,
- And sowes them in the new plowde fielde. The ground then soking makes
- The seede foresteepte in poyson strong, both supple lithe and soft,
- And of these teeth a right straunge graine there growes anon aloft.
- For even as in the mothers wombe an infant doth begin
- To take the lively shape of man, and formed is within
- To due proportion piece by piece in every limme, and when
- Full ripe he is, he takes the use of Aire with other men:
- So when that of the Vipers teeth the perfect shape of man
- Within the bowels of the earth was formed, they began
- To rise togither orderly upon the fruitefull fielde:
- And (which a greater wonder is) immediatly they wielde
- Their weapons growing up with them, whom when the Greekes behilde
- Preparing for to push their Pikes (which sharply headed were)
- In Jasons face, downe went their heades, their heartes did faint for feare:
- And also she that made him safe began abasht to bee.
- For when against one naked man so huge an armie shee
- Beheld of armed enmies bent, hir colour did abate
- And sodainly both voyd of bloud and livelie heate she sate.
- And lest the chaunted weedes the which she had him given before
- Should faile at neede, a helping charme she whispred overmore,
- And practisde other secret Artes the which she kept in store.
- He casting streight a mightie stone amid his thickest foes,
- Doth voyde the battell from him selfe and turnes it unto those.
- These earthbred brothers by and by did one another wound
- And never ceased till that all lay dead upon the ground.
- The Greekes were glad, and in their armes did clasp their Champion stout,
- And clinging to him earnestly embraced him about.
- And thou fond Medea too couldst well have found in hart
- The Champion for to have embraste, but that withheld thou wart
- By shamefastnesse, and yet thou hadst embraced him, if dread
- Of stayning of thine honor had not staid thee in that stead.
- But yet as far forth as thou maist, thou doste in heart rejoyce,
- And secretly (although without expressing it in voyce)
- Doste thanke thy charmes and eke the Gods as Authors of the same.
- Now was remaining as the last conclusion of this game,
- By force of chaunted herbes to make the watchfull Dragon sleepe
- Within whose eyes came never winke: who had in charge to keepe
- The goodly tree upon the which the golden fleeces hung.
- With crested head, and hooked pawes, and triple spirting tung,
- Right ougly was he to beholde. When Jason had besprent
- Him with the juice of certaine herbes from Lethey River sent,
- And thrice had mumbled certaine wordes which are of force to cast
- So sound a sleepe on things that even as dead a time they last,
- Which make the raging surges calme and flowing Rivers stay,
- The dreadfull Dragon by and by (whose eyes before that day
- Wist never erst what sleeping ment) did fall so fast asleepe
- That Jason safely tooke the fleece of golde that he did keepe.
- Of which his bootie being proud, he led with him away
- The Author of his good successe another fairer pray:
- And so with conquest and a wife he loosde from Colchos strand,
- And in Larissa haven safe did go againe aland.
- The auncient men of Thessalie togither with their wives
- To Church with offrings gone for saving of their childrens lives.
- Great heapes of fuming frankincense were fryed in the flame
- And vowed Bulles to sacrifice with homes faire gilded came.
- But from this great solemnitie Duke Aeson was away,
- Now at deathes door and spent with yeares. Then Jason thus gan say:
- O wife to whome I doe confesse I owe my life in deede,
- Though al things thou to me hast given, and thy deserts exceede
- Beleife: yet if enchauntment can, (for what so hard appeares
- Which strong enchauntment can not doe?) abate thou from my yeares,
- And add them to my fathers life. As he these wordes did speake,
- The teares were standing in his eyes. His godly sute did breake
- Medeas heart: who therewithall bethought hir of hir Sire
- In leaving whome she had exprest a far unlike desire.
- But yet bewraying not hir thoughts, she said: O Husband fie,
- What wickednesse hath scapt your mouth? Suppose you then that I
- Am able of your life the terme where I will to bestow?
- Let Hecat never suffer that. Your sute (as well you know)
- Against all right and reason is. But I will put in proofe
- A greater gift than you require and more for your behoofe.
- I will assay your father's life by cunning to prolong,
- And not with your yeares for to make him yong againe and strong:
- So our threeformed Goddesse graunt with present helpe to stand
- A furthrer of the great attempt the which I take in hand.
- Before the Moone should circlewise close both hir homes in one
- Three nightes were yet as then to come. As soon as that she shone
- Most full of light, and did behold the earth with fulsome face,
- Medea with hir haire not trust so much as in a lace,
- But flaring on hir shoulders twaine, and barefoote, with hir gowne
- Ungirded, gate hir out of doores and wandred up and downe
- Alone the dead time of the night. Both Man, and Beast, and Bird
- Were fast asleepe: the Serpents slie in trayling forward stird
- So softly as ye would have thought they still asleepe had bene.
- The moysting Ayre was whist. No leafe ye could have moving sene.
- The starres alonly faire and bright did in the welkin shine
- To which she lifting up hir handes did thrise hirselfe encline:
- And thrice with water of the brooke hir haire besprincled shee:
- And gasping thrise she opte hir mouth: and bowing downe hir knee
- Upon the bare hard ground, she said: O trustie time of night
- Most faithfull unto privities, O golden starres whose light
- Doth jointly with the Moone succeede the beames that blaze by day
- And thou three headed Hecate who knowest best the way
- To compasse this our great attempt and art our chiefest stay:
- Ye Charmes and Witchcrafts, and thou Earth which both with herbe and weed
- Of mightie working furnishest the Wizardes at their neede:
- Ye Ayres and windes: ye Elves of Hilles, of Brookes, of Woods alone,
- Of standing Lakes, and of the Night approche ye everychone.
- Through helpe of whom (the crooked bankes much wondring at the thing)
- I have compelled streames to run cleane backward to their spring.
- By charmes I make the calme Seas rough, and make the rough Seas plaine,
- And cover all the Skie with Cloudes and chase them thence againe.
- By charmes I raise and lay the windes, and burst the Vipers jaw.
- And from the bowels of the Earth both stones and trees doe draw.
- Whole woods and Forestes I remove: I make the Mountaines shake,
- And even the Earth it selfe to grone and fearfully to quake.
- I call up dead men from their graves: and thee lightsome Moone
- I darken oft, though beaten brasse abate thy perill soone.
- Our Sorcerie dimmes the Morning faire, and darkes the Sun at Noone.
- The flaming breath of firie Bulles ye quenched for my sake
- And caused their unwieldie neckes the bended yoke to take.
- Among the Earthbred brothers you a mortall war did set
- And brought asleepe the Dragon fell whose eyes were never shet.
- By meanes whereof deceiving him that had the golden fleece
- In charge to keepe, you sent it thence by Jason into Greece.
- Now have I neede of herbes that can by vertue of their juice
- To flowring prime of lustie youth old withred age reduce.
- I am assurde ye will it graunt. For not in vaine have shone
- These twincling starres, ne yet in vaine this Chariot all alone
- By drought of Dragons hither comes. With that was fro the Skie
- A Chariot softly glaunced downe, and stayed hard thereby.
- As soone as she had gotten up, and with hir hand had coyd
- The Dragons reined neckes, and with their bridles somewhat toyd,
- They mounted with hir in the Ayre, whence looking downe she saw
- The pleasant Temp of Thessalie, and made hir Dragons draw
- To places further from resort: and there she tooke the view
- What herbes on high mount Pelion, and what on Ossa grew,
- And what on mountaine Othris and on Pyndus growing were,
- And what Olympus (greater than mount Pyndus far) did beare.
- Such herbes of them as liked hir she pullde up roote and rinde
- Or cropt them with a hooked knife. And many she did finde
- Upon the bankes of Apidane agreeing to hir minde:
- And many at Amphrisus foords: and thou Enipeus eke
- Didst yeelde hir many pretie weedes of which she well did like.
- Peneus and Sperchius streames contributarie were,
- And so were Boebes rushie bankes of such as growed there.
- About Anthedon which against the Ile Euboea standes,
- A certaine kind of lively grasse she gathered with her handes,
- The name whereof was scarsly knowen or what the herbe could doe
- Untill that Glaucus afterward was chaunged thereinto.
- Nine dayes with winged Dragons drawen, nine nights in Chariot swift
- She searching everie field and frith from place to place did shift.
- She was no sooner home returnde but that the Dragons fell
- Which lightly of hir gathered herbes had taken but the smell,
- Did cast their sloughes and with their sloughes their riveled age forgo.
- She would none other house than heaven to hide hir head as tho:
- But kept hir still without the doores: and as for man was none
- That once might touch hir. Altars twayne of Turfe she builded: one
- Upon hir left hand unto Youth, another on the right
- To tryple Hecat. Both the which as soone as she had dight
- With Vervain and with other shrubbes that on the fieldes doe rise,
- Not farre from thence she digde two pits: and making sacrifice
- Did cut a couple of blacke Rams throtes and filled with their blood
- The open pits, on which she pourde of warme milke pure and good
- A boll full, and another boll of honie clarifide.
- And babling to hir selfe therewith full bitterly she cride
- On Pluto and his ravisht wife the sovereigne states of Hell,
- And all the Elves and Gods that on or in the Earth doe dwell,
- To spare olde Aesons life a while, and not in hast deprive
- His limmes of that same aged soule which kept them yet alive.
- Whome when she had sufficiently with mumbling long besought,
- She bade that Aesons feebled corse should out of doores be brought
- Before the Altars. Then with charmes she cast him in so deepe
- A slumber, that upon the herbes he lay for dead asleepe.
- Which done she willed Jason thence a great way off to go
- And likewise all the Ministers that served hir as tho:
- And not presume those secretes with unhallowed eyes to see.
- They did as she commaunded them. When all were voyded, shee
- With scattred haire about hir eares like one of Bacchus froes
- Devoutly by and by about the burning Altars goes:
- And dipping in the pits of bloud a sort of clifted brandes
- Upon the Altars kindled them that were on both hir handes.
- And thrise with brimstone, thrise with fire, and thrise with water pure
- She purged Aesons aged corse that slept and slumbred sure.
- The medicine seething all the while a wallop in a pan
- Of brasse, to spirt and leape aloft and gather froth began.
- There boyled she the rootes, seedes, flowres, leaves, stalkes and juice togither
- Which from the fieldes of Thessalie she late had gathered thither.
- She cast in also precious stones fetcht from the furthest East
- And, which the ebbing Ocean washt, fine gravell from the West.
- She put thereto the deaw that fell upon a Monday night:
- And flesh and feathers of a Witch, a cursed odious wight
- Which in the likenesse of an Owle abrode a nightes did flie,
- And Infants in their cradels chaunge or sucke them that they die.
- The singles also of a Wolfe which when he list could take
- The shape of man, and when he list the same againe forsake.
- And from the River Cyniphis which is in Lybie lande
- She had the fine sheere scaled filmes of water snayles at hand.
- And of an endlesselived hart the liver had she got,
- To which she added of a Crowe that then had lived not
- So little as nine hundred yeares the head and Bill also.
- Now when Medea had with these and with a thousand mo
- Such other kinde of namelesse things bestead hir purpose through
- For lengthning of the old mans life, she tooke a withered bough
- Cut lately from an Olyf tree, and jumbling all togither
- Did raise the bottome to the brim: and as she stirred hither
- And thither with the withered sticke, behold it waxed greene.
- Anon the leaves came budding out: and sodenly were seene
- As many berries dangling downe as well the bough could beare.
- And where the fire had from the pan the scumming cast, or where
- The scalding drops did fall, the ground did springlike florish there,
- And flowres with fodder fine and soft immediatly arose.
- Which when Medea did behold, with naked knife she goes
- And cuttes the olde mans throte: and letting all his old bloud go
- Supplies it with the boyled juice: the which when Aeson tho
- Had at his mouth or at his wounde receyved in, his heare
- As well of head as beard from gray to coleblacke turned were.
- His leane, pale, hore, and withered corse grew fulsome, faire and fresh:
- His furrowed wrincles were fulfilde with yong and lustie flesh.
- His limmes waxt frolicke, baine and lithe: at which he wondring much,
- Remembred that at fortie yeares he was the same or such.
- And as from dull unwieldsome age to youth he backward drew:
- Even so a lively youthfull spright did in his heart renew.
- The wonder of this monstrous act had Bacchus seene from hie,
- And finding that to youthfull yeares his Nurses might thereby
- Restored bee, did at hir hand receive it as a gift.
- And lest deceitfull guile should cease, Medea found a shift
- To feyne that Jason and hir selfe were falne at oddes in wroth:
- And thereupon in humble wise to Pelias Court she goth.
- Where forbicause the King himselfe was feebled sore with age,
- His daughters entertainde hir, whome Medea, being sage,
- Within a while through false pretence of feyned friendship brought
- To take hir baite. For as she tolde what pleasures she had wrought
- For Jason, and among the rest as greatest sadly tolde
- How she had made his father yong that withred was and olde,
- And taried long upon that point: they hoped glad and faine
- That their olde father might likewise his youthful yeares regaine.
- And this they craving instantly did proffer for hir paine
- What recompence she would desire. She helde hir peace a while
- As though she doubted what to doe: and with hir suttle guile
- Of counterfetted gravitie more eger did them make.
- As soone as she had promisde them to doe it for their sake,
- For more assurance of my graunt, your selves (quoth she) shall see
- The oldest Ram in all your flocke a Lambe streight made to bee
- By force of my confections strong. Immediatly a Ram
- So olde that no man thereabouts remembred him a Lam
- Was thither by his warped homes which turned inward to
- His hollow Temples, drawne: whose withred throte she slit in two.
- And when she cleane had drayned out that little bloud that was,
- Upon the fire with herbes of strength she set a pan of brasse,
- And cast his carcasse thereinto. The Medcine did abate
- The largenesse of his limmes and seard his dossers from his pate,
- And with his homes abridgde his yeares. Anon was plainly heard
- The bleating of a new yeand Lambe from mid the Ketleward.
- And as they wondred for to heare the bleating, streight the Lam
- Leapt out, and frisking ran to seeke the udder of some Dam.
- King Pelias daughters were amazde. And when they did beholde
- Hir promise come to such effect, they were a thousand folde
- More earnest at hir than before. Thrise Phoebus having pluckt
- The Collars from his horses neckes, in Iber had them duckt.
- And now in Heaven the streaming starres the fourth night shined cleare:
- When false Medea on the fire had hanged water shere,
- With herbes that had no powre at all. The King and all his garde
- Which had the charge that night about his person for to warde
- Were through hir nightspels and hir charmes in deadly sleepe all cast.
- And Pelias daughters with the Witch which eggde them forward, past
- Into his chamber by the watch, and compast in his bed.
- Then: Wherefore stand ye doubting thus like fooles, Medea sed.
- On: draw your swordes: and let ye out his old bloud, that I may
- Fill up his emptie veynes againe with youthfull bloud streight way.
- Your fathers life is in your handes: it lieth now in you
- To have him olde and withred still or yong and lustie. Now
- If any nature in ye be, and that ye doe not feede
- A fruitelesse hope, your dutie to your father doe with speede.
- Expulse his age by sword, and let the filthy matter out.
- Through these persuasions which of them so ever went about
- To shewe hirselfe most naturall, became the first that wrought
- Against all nature: and for feare she should be wicked thought,
- She executes the wickednesse which most to shun she sought.
- Yet was not any one of them so bolde that durst abide
- To looke upon their father when she strake, but wride aside
- Hir eyes: and so their cruell handes not marking where they hit
- With faces turnde another way at all aventure smit.
- He all beweltred in his bloud awaked with the smart,
- And maimde and mangled as he was did give a sodeyne start
- Endevoring to have risen up. But when he did beholde
- Himselfe among so many swordes, he lifting up his olde
- Pale waryish armes, said: Daughters mine what doe ye? who hath put
- These wicked weapons in your hands your fathers throte to cut?
- With that their heartes and handes did faint. And as he talked yet,
- Medea breaking off his wordes, his windpipe quickly slit,
- And in the scalding liquor torne did drowne him by and by.
- But had she not with winged wormes streight mounted in the skie
- She had not scaped punishment, but stying up on hie
- She over shadie Pelion flew where Chyron erst did dwell,
- And over Othrys and the grounds renoumde for that befell
- To auncient Ceramb: who such time as old Deucalions flood
- Upon the face of all the Earth like one maine water stood,
- By helpe of Nymphes with fethered wings was in the Ayer lift,
- And so escaped from the floud undrowned by the shift.
- She left Aeolian Pytanie upon hir left hand: and
- The Serpent that became a stone upon the Lesbian sand.
- And Ida woods where Bacchus hid a Bullocke (as is sayd)
- In shape of Stag the which his sonne had theevishly convayde.
- And where the Sire of Corytus lies buried in the dust.
- The fieldes which Meras (when he first did into barking brust)
- Affraide with straungenesse of the noyse. And eke Eurypils towne
- In which the wives of Cos had homes like Oxen on their crowne
- Such time as Hercles with his hoste departed from the Ile,
- And Rhodes to Phoebus consecrate: and Ialyse where ere while
- The Telchines with their noysome sight did every thing bewitch.
- At which their hainous wickednesse Jove taking rightfull pritch,
- Did drowne them in his brothers waves. Moreover she did passe
- By Ceos and olde Carthey walles where Sir Alcidamas
- Did wonder how his daughter should be turned to a Dove.
- The Swannie Temp and Hyries Poole she viewed from above,
- The which a sodeine Swan did haunt. For Phyllie there for love
- Of Hyries sonne did at his bidding Birdes and Lions tame,
- And being willde to breake a Bull performed streight the same:
- Till wrothfull that his love so oft so streightly should him use,
- When for his last reward he askt the Bull, he did refuse
- To give it him. The boy displeasde, said: Well: thou wilt anon
- Repent thou gave it not: and leapt downe headlong from a stone.
- They all supposde he had bene falne: but being made a Swan
- With snowie feathers in the Ayre to flacker he began.
- His mother Hyrie knowing not he was preserved so,
- Resolved into melting teares for pensivenesse and wo,
- And made the Poole that beares hir name. Not far from hence doth stand
- The Citie Brauron, where sometime by mounting from the land
- With waving pinions Ophyes ympe, dame Combe, did eschue
- Hir children which with naked swordes to slea hir did pursue.
- Anon she kend Calaurie fieldes which did sometime pertaine
- To chast Diana where a King and eke his wife both twaine
- Were turnde to Birdes. Cyllene hill upon hir right hand stood,
- In which Menephron like a beast of wilde and savage moode
- To force his mother did attempt. Far thence she spide where sad
- Cephisus mourned for his Neece whome Phebus turned had
- To ugly shape of swelling Seale: and Eumelles pallace faire
- Lamenting for his sonnes mischaunce with whewling in the Aire.
- At Corinth with hir winged Snakes at length she did arrive.
- Here men (so auncient fathers said that were as then alive)
- Did breede of deawie Mushrommes. But after that hir teene
- With burning of hir husbands bride by witchcraft wreakt had beene
- And that King Creons pallace she on blasing fire had seene,
- And in hir owne deare childrens bloud had bathde hir wicked knife
- Not like a mother but a beast bereving them of life:
- Lest Jason should have punisht hir she tooke hir winged Snakes,
- And flying thence againe in haste to Pallas Citie makes,
- Which saw the auncient Periphas and rightuous Phiney too
- Togither flying, and the Neece of Polypemon who
- Was fastened to a paire of wings as well as t'other two.
- Aegeus enterteined hir wherein he was to blame
- Although he had no further gone but staid upon the same.
- He thought it not to be inough to use hir as his guest
- Onlesse he tooke hir to his wife.