Metamorphoses

Ovid

Ovid. The XV bookes of P. Ouidius Naso, entytuled Metamorphosis. Golding, Arthur, translator. London: W. Seres (printer), 1567.

  1. All Lydia did repine hereat, and of this deede the fame
  2. Through Phrygie ran, and through the world was talking of the same.
  3. Before hir mariage Niobe had knowen hir verie well,
  4. When yet a Maide in Meonie and Sipyle she did dwell.
  5. And yet Arachnes punishment at home before hir eyes,
  6. To use discreter kinde of talke it could hir not advise,
  7. Nor (as behoveth) to the Gods to yeelde in humble wise.
  8. For many things did make hir proud. But neyther did the towne
  9. The which hir husband builded had, nor houses of renowne
  10. Of which they both descended were, nor yet the puissance
  11. Of that great Realme wherein they reignde so much hir minde enhaunce
  12. (Although the liking of them all did greatly hir delight)
  13. As did the offspring of hir selfe. And certenly she might
  14. Have bene of mothers counted well most happie, had she not
  15. So thought hir selfe. For she whome sage Tyresias had begot,
  16. The Prophet Manto, through instinct of heavenly powre, did say
  17. These kinde of wordes in open strete: Ye Thebanes go your way
  18. Apace, and unto Laton and to Latons children pray,
  19. And offer godly Frankinsence, and wreath your haire with Bay.
  20. Latona by the mouth of me commaundes you so to do.
  21. The Thebane women by and by obeying thereunto,
  22. Deckt all their heades with Laurell leaves as Manto did require,
  23. And praying with devout intent threw incense in the fire.
  24. Beholde out commeth Niobe environde with a garde
  25. Of servaunts and a solemne traine that followed afterward.
  26. She was hirselfe in raiment made of costly cloth of golde
  27. Of Phrygia facion verie brave and gorgeous to beholde.
  28. And of hir selfe she was right faire and beautifull of face,
  29. But that hir wrathfull stomake then did somewhat staine hir grace.
  30. She moving with hir portly heade hir haire the which as then
  31. Did hang on both hir shoulders loose, did pawse a while, and when
  32. Wyth loftie looke hir stately eyes she rolled had about:
  33. What madnesse is it (quoth she) to prefer the heavenly rout
  34. Of whome ye doe but heare, to such as daily are in sight?
  35. Or why should Laton honored be with Altars? Never wight
  36. To my most sacred Majestie did offer incense. Yit
  37. My Father was that Tantalus whome only as most fit
  38. The Gods among them at their boordes admitted for to sit.
  39. A sister of the Pleyades is my mother. Finally
  40. My Graundsire on the mothers side is that same Atlas hie
  41. That on his shoulders beareth up the heavenly Axeltree.
  42. Againe my other Graundfather is Jove, and (as you see)
  43. He also is my Fathrinlawe, wherein I glorie may.
  44. The Realme of Phrygia here at hand doth unto me obay.
  45. In Cadmus pallace I thereof the Ladie doe remaine
  46. And joyntly with my husbande I as peerlesse Princesse reigne
  47. Both over this same towne whose walles my husbands harpe did frame,
  48. And also over all the folke and people in the same.
  49. In what soever corner of my house I cast mine eye,
  50. A worlde of riches and of goods I everywhere espie.
  51. Moreover for the beautie, shape, and favor growen in me,
  52. Right well I know I doe deserve a Goddesse for to be.
  53. Besides all this, seven sonnes I have and daughters seven likewise,
  54. By whome shall shortly sonneinlawes and daughtrinlawes arise.
  55. Judge you now if that I have cause of statelynesse or no.
  56. How dare ye then prefer to me Latona that same fro
  57. The Titan Ceus ympe, to whome then readie downe to lie
  58. The hugy Earth a little plot to childe on did denie?
  59. From Heaven, from Earth, and from the Sea your Goddesse banisht was,
  60. And as an outcast through the world from place to place did passe,
  61. Untill that Delos pitying hir, sayde Thou doste fleete on land
  62. And I on Sea, and thereupon did lende hir out of hand
  63. A place unstable. Of two twinnes there brought abed was she:
  64. And this is but the seventh part of the issue borne by me.
  65. Right happie am I. Who can this denie? and shall so still I
  66. Continue. Who doth doubt of that? Abundance hath and will
  67. Preserve me. I am greater than that frowarde fortune may
  68. Empeache me. For although she should pull many things away,
  69. Yet should she leave me many more. My state is out of feare.
  70. Of thys my huge and populous race surmise you that it were
  71. Possible some of them should misse: yet can I never be
  72. So spoyled that no mo than two shall tarie styll with me.
  73. Leave quickly thys lewde sacrifice, and put me off this Bay
  74. That on your heads is wreathed thus. They laide it streight away
  75. And left their holie rites undone, and closely as they may
  76. With secret whispring to themselves to Laton they dyd pray.
  77. How much from utter barrennesse the Goddesse was: so much
  78. Disdeind she more: and in the top of Cynthus framed such
  79. Complaint as this to both hir twinnes. Lo I your mother deare,
  80. Who in my bodie once you twaine with painefull travail beare,
  81. Loe I whose courage is so stout as for to yeelde to none
  82. Of all the other Goddesses except Joves wife alone,
  83. Am lately doubted whether I a Goddesse be or no.
  84. And if you helpe not, children mine, the case now standeth so
  85. That I the honor must from hence of Altars quight forgo.
  86. But this is not mine only griefe. Besides hir wicked fact
  87. Most railing words hath Niobe to my defacing rackt.
  88. She durst prefer hir Barnes to you. And as for me, she naamde
  89. Me barren in respect of hir, and was no whit ashaamde
  90. To shewe hir fathers wicked tongue which she by birth doth take.
  91. This said: Latona was about entreatance for to make.
  92. Cease off (quoth Phebus) long complaint is nothing but delay
  93. Of punishment, and the selfesame wordes did Phebe also say.
  1. And by and by they through the Ayre both gliding swiftly downe,
  2. On Cadmus pallace hid in cloudes did light in Thebe towne.
  3. A fielde was underneath the wall both levell, large and wide,
  4. Betrampled every day with horse that men therin did ride,
  5. Where store of Carres and Horses hoves the cloddes to dust had trode.
  6. A couple of Amphions sonnes on lustie coursers rode
  7. In this same place. Their horses faire Coperisons did weare
  8. Of scarlet: and their bridles brave with golde bedecked were.
  9. Of whome as Niobs eldest sonne Ismenos hapt to bring
  10. His horse about, and reynde him in to make him keepe the ring,
  11. He cride alas: and in his brest with that an arrow stacke
  12. And by and by hys dying hand did let the bridle slacke.
  13. And on the right side of the horse he slipped to the ground.
  14. The second brother Sipylus did chaunce to heare the sound
  15. Of Quivers clattring in the Ayre, and giving streight the reyne
  16. And spur togither to his horse, began to flie amayne:
  17. As doth the master of a ship: who when he sees a shoure
  18. Approching, by some mistie cloud that ginnes to gloume and loure
  19. Doth clap on all his sayles bicause no winde should scape him by
  20. Though nere so small. Howbeit as he turned for to flie,
  21. He was not able for to scape the Arrow which did stricke
  22. Him through the necke. The nocke thereof did shaking upward sticke,
  23. The head appeared at his throte. And as he forward gave
  24. Himselfe in flying: so to ground he groveling also drave,
  25. And toppled by the horses mane and feete amid his race,
  26. And with his warme newshedded bloud berayed all the place.
  27. But Phedimus, and Tantalus, the heir of the name
  28. Of Tantalus, his Graundfather, who customably came
  29. From other dailie exercise to wrestling, had begun
  30. To close, and eache at other now with brest to brest to run,
  31. When Phebus Arrow being sent with force from streyned string
  32. Did strike through both of them as they did fast togither cling.
  33. And so they sighed both at once, and both at once for paine
  34. Fell downe to ground, and both of them at once their eyes did streine
  35. To see their latest light, and both at once their ghostes did yeelde.
  36. Alphenor this mischaunce of theirs with heavie heart behelde,
  37. And scratcht and beate his wofull brest: and therewith flying out
  38. To take them up betweene his armes, was as he went about
  39. This worke of kindly pitie, killde. For Phebus with a Dart
  40. Of deadly dint did rive him through the Bulke and brake his hart.
  41. And when the steale was plucked out, a percell of his liver
  42. Did hang upon the hooked heade: and so he did deliver
  43. His life and bloud into the Ayre departing both togither.
  44. But Damasicthon (on whose heade came never scissor) felt
  45. Mo woundes than one. It was his chaunce to have a grievous pelt
  46. Upon the verie place at which the leg is first begun
  47. And where the hamstrings by the joynt with supple sinewes run
  48. And while to draw this arrow out he with his hand assaide,
  49. Another through his wezant went, and at the feathers staide.
  50. The bloud did drive out this againe, and spinning high did spout
  51. A great way off, and pierst the Ayre with sprinkling all about.
  52. The last of all Ilionie with streched handes, and speche
  53. Most humble (but in vaine) did say: O Gods I you beseche
  54. Of mercie all in generall. He wist not what he saide
  55. Ne how that unto all of them he ought not to have praide.
  56. The God that helde the Bow in hande was moved: but as then
  57. The Arrow was alredie gone so farre, that backe agen
  58. He could not call it. Neerthelesse the wound was verie small
  59. Of which he dide, for why his heart it did but lightly gall.
  60. The rumor of the mischiefe selfe, and mone of people, and
  61. The weeping of hir servants gave the mother t'understand
  62. The sodaine stroke of this mischaunce. She wondred verie much
  63. And stormed also that the Gods were able to doe such
  64. A deede, or durst attempt it, yea she thought it more than right
  65. That any of them over hir should have so mickle might.
  66. Amphion had fordone himselfe alreadie with a knife,
  67. And ended all his sorrowes quite togither with his life.
  68. Alas, alas how greatly doth this Niobe differ here
  69. From tother Niobe who alate disdaining any Pere
  70. Did from Latonas Altars drive hir folke, and through the towne
  71. With haultie looke and stately gate went pranking up and downe,
  72. Then spighted at among hir owne, but piteous now to those:
  73. That heretofore for hir deserts had bene hir greatest foes.
  74. She falleth on the corses colde, and taking no regard,
  75. Bestowde hir kysses on hir sonnes as whome she afterwarde
  76. Did know she never more shoulde kisse. From whome she lifting thoe
  77. Hir blew and broosed armes to heaven sayd: O thou cruell foe
  78. Latona, feede, yea feede thy selfe I say upon my woe
  79. And overgorge thy stomacke, yea and glut thy cruell hart
  80. With these my present painefull pangs of bitter griping smart.
  81. In corses seven I seven times deade am caried to my grave.
  82. Rejoyce thou foe and triumph now in that thou seemste to have
  83. The upper hande. What? upper hand? no no it is not so.
  84. As wretched as my case doth seeme, yet have I left me mo
  85. Than thou for all thy happinesse canst of thine owne account.
  86. Even after all these corses yet I still doe thee surmount.
  87. Upon the ende of these same wordes the twanging of the string
  88. In letting of the Arrow flie was clearly heard: which thing
  89. Made every one save Niobe afraide. Hir heart was so
  90. With sorrowe hardned, that she grew more bolde. Hir daughters tho
  91. Were standing all with mourning weede and hanging haire before
  92. Their brothers coffins. One of them in pulling from the sore
  93. An Arrow sticking in his heart, sanke downe upon hir brother
  94. With mouth to mouth, and so did yeelde hir fleeting ghost. Another
  95. In comforting the wretched case and sorrow of hir mother
  96. Upon the sodaine helde hir peace. She stricken was within
  97. With double wound: which caused hir hir talking for to blin
  98. And shut hir mouth: but first hir ghost was gone. One all in vaine
  99. Attempting for to scape by flight was in hir flying slaine.
  100. Another on hir sisters corse doth tumble downe starke dead.
  101. This quakes and trembles piteously, and she doth hide hir head.
  102. And when that sixe with sundrye woundes dispatched were and gone,
  103. At last as yet remained one: and for to save that one,
  104. Hir mother with hir bodie whole did cling about hir fast,
  105. And wrying hir did over hir hir garments wholy cast:
  106. And cried out: O leave me one: this little one yet save:
  107. Of many but this only one the least of all I crave.
  108. But while she prayd, for whome she prayd was kild. Then down she sate
  109. Bereft of all hir children quite, and drawing to hir fate,
  110. Among hir daughters and hir sonnes and husband newly dead.
  111. Hir cheekes waxt hard, the Ayre could stirre no haire upon hir head.
  112. The colour of hir face was dim and clearly voide of blood,
  113. And sadly under open lids hir eyes unmoved stood.
  114. In all hir bodie was no life. For even hir verie tung
  115. And palat of hir mouth was hard, and eche to other clung.
  116. Hir Pulses ceased for to beate, hir necke did cease to bow,
  117. Hir armes to stir, hir feete to go, all powre forwent as now.
  118. And into stone hir verie wombe and bowels also bind.
  119. But yet she wept: and being hoyst by force of whirling wind
  120. Was caried into Phrygie. There upon a mountaines top
  121. She weepeth still in stone. From stone the drerie teares do drop.
  1. Then all both men and women fearde Latonas open ire I
  2. And far with greater sumptuousnesse and earnester desire
  3. Did worship the great majestie of this their Goddesse who
  4. Did beare at once both Phebus and his sister Phebe too.
  5. And through occasion of this chaunce, (as men are wont to do
  6. In cases like) the people fell to telling things of old
  7. Of whome a man among the rest this tale ensuing told.
  8. The auncient folke that in the fieldes of fruitfull Lycia dwelt
  9. Due penance also for their spight to this same Goddesse felt.
  10. The basenesse of the parties makes the thing it selfe obscure.
  11. Yet is the matter wonderfull. My selfe I you assure
  12. Did presently beholde the Pond, and saw the very place
  13. In which this wondrous thing was done. My father then in case,
  14. Not able for to travell well by reason of his age,
  15. To fetch home certaine Oxen thence made me to be his page,
  16. Appointing me a countryman of Lycia to my guide.
  17. With whome as I went plodding in the pasture groundes, I spide
  18. Amids a certaine Pond an olde square Aultar colourd blacke
  19. With cinder of the sacrifice that still upon it stacke.
  20. About it round grew wavering Reedes. My guide anon did stay:
  21. And softly, O be good to me, he in himselfe did say.
  22. And I with like soft whispering did say, Be good to mee.
  23. And then I askt him whether that the Altar wee did see
  24. Belonged to the Waternymphes, or Faunes or other God
  25. Peculiar to the place it selfe upon the which we yod.
  26. He made me aunswere thus: My guest, no God of countrie race
  27. Is in this Altar worshipped. That Goddesse claymes this place,
  28. From whome the wife of mightie Jove did all the world forfend:
  29. When wandring restlesse here and there full hardly in the end
  30. Unsetled Delos did receyve then floting on the wave,
  31. As tide and weather to and fro the swimming Iland drave.
  32. There maugre Juno (who with might and main against hir strave)
  33. Latona staying by a Date and Olyf tree that sted
  34. In travail, of a paire of twinnes was safely brought abed.
  35. And after hir delivrance folke report that she for feare
  36. Of Junos wrath did flie from hence, and in hir armes did beare
  37. Hir babes which afterwarde became two Gods. In which hir travell
  38. In Sommer when the scorching Sunne is wont to burne the gravell
  39. Of Lycie countrie where the fell Chymera hath his place,
  40. The Goddesse wearie with the long continuance of hir race,
  41. Waxt thirstie by the meanes of drought with going in the Sunne.
  42. Hir babes had also suckt hir brestes as long as milke wold runne.
  43. By chaunce she spide this little Pond of water here bylow.
  44. And countrie Carles were gathering there these Osier twigs that grow
  45. So thicke upon a shrubbie stalke: and of these rushes greene:
  46. And flags that in these moorish plots so rife of growing beene.
  47. She comming hither kneeled downe the water up to take
  48. To coole hir thirst. The churlish cloynes forfended hir the Lake.
  49. Then gently said the Goddesse: Sirs, why doe you me forfend
  50. The water? Nature doth to all in common water send.
  51. For neither Sunne, nor Ayre, nor yet the Water private bee,
  52. I seeke but that which natures gift hath made to all things free.
  53. And yet I humbly crave of you to graunt it unto mee.
  54. I did not go about to wash my werie limmes and skin,
  55. I would but only quench my thirst. My throte is scalt within
  56. For want of moysture: and my chappes and lippes are parching drie:
  57. And scarsly is there way for wordes to issue out thereby.
  58. A draught of water will to me be heavenly Nectar now.
  59. And sure I will confesse I have received life of you.
  60. Yea in your giving of a drop of water unto mee,
  61. The case so standeth as you shall preserve the lives of three.
  62. Alas let these same sillie soules that in my bosome stretch
  63. Their little armes (by chaunce hir babes their pretie dolles did retch)
  64. To pitie move you. What is he so hard that would not yeeld
  65. To this the gentle Goddesses entreatance meeke and meeld?
  66. Yet they for all the humble wordes she could devise to say,
  67. Continued in their willfull moode of churlish saying nay,
  68. And threatned for to sende hir thence onlesse she went away,
  69. Reviling hir most spightfully. And not contented so,
  70. With handes and feete the standing Poole they troubled to and fro,
  71. Until with trampling up and downe maliciously, the soft
  72. And slimie mud that lay beneath was raised up aloft.
  73. With that the Goddesse was so wroth that thirst was quight forgot.
  74. And unto such unworthie Carles hirselfe she humbleth not:
  75. Ne speaketh meaner wordes than might beseeme a Goddesse well.
  76. But holding up hir handes to heaven: For ever mought you dwell
  77. In this same Pond, she said: hir wish did take effect with speede.
  78. For underneath the water they delight to be in deede.
  79. Now dive they to the bottome downe, now up their heades they pop,
  80. Another while with sprawling legs they swim upon the top.
  81. And oftentimes upon the bankes they have a minde to stond,
  82. And oftentimes from thence againe to leape into the Pond.
  83. And there they now doe practise still their filthy tongues to scold
  84. And shamelessely (though underneath the water) they doe hold
  85. Their former wont of brawling still amid the water cold.
  86. Their voices stil are hoarse and harsh, their throtes have puffed goles,
  87. Their chappes with brawling widened are, their hammer headed Jowls
  88. Are joyned to their shoulders just, the neckes of them doe seeme
  89. Cut off, the ridgebone of their backe stickes up of colour greene.
  90. Their paunch which is the greatest part of all their trunck is gray,
  91. And so they up and downe the Pond made newly Frogges doe play.
  1. When one of Lyce (I wote not who) had spoken in this sort,
  2. Another of a Satyr streight began to make report,
  3. Whome Phebus overcomming on a pipe (made late ago
  4. By Pallas) put to punishment. Why flayest thou me so,
  5. Alas, he cride, it irketh me. Alas a sorie pipe
  6. Deserveth not so cruelly my skin from me to stripe.
  7. For all his crying ore his eares quight pulled was his skin.
  8. Nought else he was than one whole wounde. The griesly bloud did spin
  9. From every part, the sinewes lay discovered to the eye,
  10. The quivering veynes without a skin lay beating nakedly.
  11. The panting bowels in his bulke ye might have numbred well,
  12. And in his brest the shere small strings a man might easly tell.
  13. The Countrie Faunes, the Gods of Woods, the Satyrs of his kin,
  14. The Mount Olympus whose renowne did ere that time begin,
  15. And all the Nymphes, and all that in those mountaines kept their sheepe,
  16. Or grazed cattell thereabouts, did for this Satyr weepe.
  17. The fruitfull earth waxt moyst therewith, and moysted did receyve
  18. Their teares, and in hir bowels deepe did of the same conceyve.
  19. And when that she had turned them to water, by and by
  20. She sent them forth againe aloft to see the open Skie.
  21. The River that doth rise thereof beginning there his race,
  22. In verie deepe and shoring bankes to Seaward runnes apace
  23. Through Phrygie, and according as the Satyr, so the streame
  24. Is called Marsias, of the brookes the clearest in that Realme.
  25. With such examples as these same the common folke returnde
  26. To present things, and every man through all the Citie moornde
  27. For that Amphion was destroyde with all his issue so.
  28. But all the fault and blame was laide upon the mother tho.
  29. For hir alonly Pelops mournde (as men report) and hee
  30. In opening of his clothes did shewe that everie man might see
  31. His shoulder on the left side bare of Ivorie for to bee.
  32. This shoulder at his birth was like his tother both in hue
  33. And flesh, untill his fathers handes most wickedly him slue,
  34. And that the Gods when they his limmes againe togither drue,
  35. To joyne them in their proper place and forme by nature due,
  36. Did finde out all the other partes, save only that which grue
  37. Betwene the throteboll and the arme, which when they could not get
  38. This other made of Ivorie white in place therof they set
  39. And by that meanes was Pelops made againe both whole and sound.
  1. The neyghbor Princes thither came, and all the Cities round
  2. About besought their Kings to go and comfort Thebe: as Arge
  3. And Sparta, and Mycene which was under Pelops charge,
  4. And Calydon unhated of the frowning Phebe yit,
  5. The welthie towne Orchomenos, and Corinth which in it
  6. Had famous men for workmanship in mettals: and the stout
  7. Messene which full twentie yeares did hold besiegers out.
  8. And Patre, and the lowly towne Cleona, Nelies Pyle,
  9. And Troyzen not surnamed yet Pittheia for a while.
  10. And all the other Borough townes and Cities which doe stand
  11. Within the narrow balke at which two Seas doe meete at hand,
  12. Or which do bound upon the balke without in maine firme land.
  13. Alonly Athens (who would thinke?) did neither come nor send.
  14. Warre barred them from courtesie the which they did entend.
  15. The King of Pontus with an host of savage people lay
  16. In siege before their famous waHes and curstly did them fray.
  17. Untill that Tereus, King of Thrace, approching to their ayde,
  18. Did vanquish him, and with renowne was for his labor payde.
  19. And sith he was so puissant in men and ready coyne,
  20. And came of mightie Marsis race, Pandion sought to joyne
  21. Aliance with him by and by, and gave him to his Feere
  22. His daughter Progne. At this match (as after will appeare)
  23. Was neyther Juno, President of mariage wont to bee,
  24. Nor Hymen, no nor any one of all the graces three.
  25. The Furies snatching Tapers up that on some Herce did stande
  26. Did light them, and before the Bride did beare them in their hande.
  27. The Furies made the Bridegroomes bed. And on the house did rucke
  28. A cursed Owle the messenger of yll successe and lucke.
  29. And all the night time while that they were lying in their beds,
  30. She sate upon the bedsteds top right over both their heds.
  31. Such handsell Progne had the day that Tereus did hir wed.
  32. Such handsell had they when that she was brought of childe abed.
  33. All Thracia did rejoyce at them, and thankt their Gods, and willd
  34. That both the day of Prognes match with Tereus should be hild
  35. For feastfull, and the day likewise that Itys first was borne:
  36. So little know we what behoves. The Sunne had now outworne
  37. Five Harvests, and by course five times had run his yearly race,
  38. When Progne flattring Tereus saide: If any love or grace
  39. Betweene us be, send eyther me my sister for to see,
  40. Or finde the meanes that hither she may come to visit mee.
  41. You may assure your Fathrinlaw she shall againe returne
  42. Within a while. Ye doe to me the highest great good turne
  43. That can be, if you bring to passe I may my sister see.
  44. Immediatly the King commaundes his shippes aflote to bee.
  45. And shortly after, what with sayle and what with force of Ores,
  46. In Athens haven he arrives and landes at Pyrey shores.
  47. As soone as of his fathrinlaw the presence he obtainde,
  48. And had of him bene courteously and friendly entertainde,
  49. Unhappie handsell entred with their talking first togither.
  50. The errandes of his wife, the cause of his then comming thither,
  51. He had but new begon to tell, and promised that when
  52. She had hir sister seene, she should with speede be sent agen:
  53. When (see the chaunce) came Philomele in raiment very rich,
  54. And yet in beautie farre more rich, even like the Fairies which
  55. Reported are the pleasant woods and water springs to haunt,
  56. So that the like apparell and attire to them you graunt.
  57. King Tereus at the sight of hir did burne in his desire,
  58. As if a man should chaunce to set a gulfe of come on fire,
  59. Or burne a stacke of hay. Hir face in deede deserved love.
  60. But as for him, to fleshly lust even nature did him move.
  61. For of those countries commonly the people are above
  62. All measure prone to lecherie. And therefore both by kinde
  63. His flame encreast, and by his owne default of vicious minde.
  64. He purposde fully to corrupt hir servants with reward:
  65. Or for to bribe hir Nurce, that she should slenderly regarde
  66. Hir dutie to hir mistresseward. And rather than to fayle,
  67. The Ladie even hirselfe with gifts he minded to assayle,
  68. And all his kingdome for to spend, or else by force of hand
  69. To take hir, and in maintenance thereof by sword to stand.
  70. There was not under heaven the thing but that he durst it prove,
  71. So far unable was he now to stay his lawlesse love.
  72. Delay was deadly. Backe againe with greedie minde he came
  73. Of Prognes errands for to talke: and underneath the same
  74. He workes his owne ungraciousnesse. Love gave him power to frame
  75. His talke at will. As oft as he demaunded out of square,
  76. Upon his wives importunate desire himselfe he bare.
  77. He also wept: as though his wife had willed that likewise.
  78. O God, what blindnesse doth the heartes of mortall men disguise?
  79. By working mischiefe Tereus gets him credit for to seeme
  80. A loving man, and winneth praise by wickednesse extreeme.
  81. Yea and the foolish Philomele the selfesame thing desires.
  82. Who hanging on hir fathers necke with flattring armes, requires
  83. Against hir life and for hir life his licence for to go
  84. To see hir sister. Tereus beholdes hir wistly tho,
  85. And in beholding handles hir with heart. For when he saw
  86. Hir kisse hir father, and about his necke hir armes to draw,
  87. They all were spurres to pricke him forth, and wood to feede his fire,
  88. And foode of forcing nourishment to further his desire.
  89. As oft as she hir father did betweene hir armes embrace,
  90. So often wished he himselfe hir father in that case.
  91. For nought at all should that in him have wrought the greater grace.
  92. Hir father could not say them nay, they lay at him so sore.
  93. Right glad thereof was Philomele and thanked him therefore.
  94. And wretched wench she thinkes she had obtained such a thing,
  95. As both to Progne and hir selfe should joy and comfort bring,
  96. When both of them in verie deede should afterward it rew.
  97. To endward of his daily race and travell Phebus drew,
  98. And on the shoring side of Heaven his horses downeward flew.
  99. A princely supper was prepaarde, and wine in golde was set:
  100. And after meate to take their rest the Princes did them get.
  101. But though the King of Thrace that while were absent from hir sight,
  102. Yet swelted he: and in his minde revolving all the night
  103. Hir face, hir gesture, and hir hands, imaginde all the rest
  104. (The which as yet he had not seene) as likte his fancie best.
  105. He feedes his flames himselfe. No winke could come within his eyes,
  106. For thinking ay on hir. As soone as day was in the skies,
  107. Pandion holding in his hand the hand of Tereus prest
  108. To go his way, and sheading teares betooke him thus his guest:
  109. Deare sonneinlaw I give thee here (sith godly cause constraines)
  110. This Damsell. By the faith that in thy Princely heart remaines,
  111. And for our late aliance sake, and by the Gods above,
  112. I humbly thee beseche that as a Father thou doe love
  113. And maintaine hir, and that as soone as may be (all delay
  114. Will unto me seeme over long) thou let hir come away,
  115. The comfort of my carefull age on whome my life doth stay.
  116. And thou my daughter Philomele (it is inough ywis
  117. That from hir father set so farre thy sister Progne is)
  118. If any sparke of nature doe within thy heart remayne,
  119. With all the haaste and speede thou canst returne to me againe.
  1. In giving charge he kissed hir: and downe his cheekes did raine
  2. The tender teares, and as a pledge of faith he tooke the right
  3. Handes of them both, and joyning them did eche to other plight,
  4. Desiring them to beare in minde his commendations to
  5. His daughter and hir little sonne. And then with much adoe
  6. For sobbing, at the last he bad adew as one dismaid.
  7. The foremisgiving of his minde did make him sore afraid.
  8. As soone as Tereus and the Maide togither were aboord,
  9. And that their ship from land with Ores was haled on the foord,
  10. The fielde is ours, he cride aloude, I have the thing I sought
  11. And up he skipt, so barbrous and so beastly was his thought,
  12. That scarce even there he could forbeare his pleasure to have wrought.
  13. His eye went never off of hir: as when the scarefull Erne
  14. With hooked talants trussing up a Hare among the Ferne,
  15. Hath laid hir in his nest, from whence the prisoner can not scape,
  16. The ravening fowle with greedie eyes upon his pray doth gape.
  17. Now was their journey come to ende: now were they gone aland
  18. In Thracia, when that Tereus tooke the Ladie by the hand,
  19. And led hir to a pelting graunge that peakishly did stand
  20. In woods forgrowen. There waxing pale and trembling sore for feare,
  21. And dreading all things, and with teares demaunding sadly where
  22. Hir sister was, he shet hir up: and therewithall bewraide
  23. His wicked lust, and so by force bicause she was a Maide
  24. And all alone he vanquisht hir. It booted nought at all
  25. That she on sister, or on Sire, or on the Gods did call.
  26. She quaketh like the wounded Lambe which from the Wolves hore teeth
  27. New shaken thinkes hir selfe not safe: or as the Dove that seeth
  28. Hir fethers with hir owne bloud staynde, who shuddring still doth feare
  29. The greedie Hauke that did hir late with griping talants teare.
  30. Anon when that this mazednesse was somewhat overpast,
  31. She rent hir haire, and beate hir brest, and up to heavenward cast
  32. Hir hands in mourningwise, and said: O cankerd Carle, O fell
  33. And cruell Tyrant, neyther could the godly teares that fell
  34. Adowne my fathers cheekes when he did give thee charge of mee,
  35. Ne of my sister that regarde that ought to be in thee,
  36. Nor yet my chaaste virginitie, nor conscience of the lawe
  37. Of wedlocke, from this villanie thy barbrous heart withdraw?
  38. Is made a Cucqueane: and thy selfe through this offence of thee
  39. Art made a husband to us both, and unto me a foe,
  40. Behold thou hast confounded all. My sister thorough mee
  41. A just deserved punishment for lewdly doing so.
  42. But to th'intent, O perjurde wretch, no mischiefe may remaine
  43. Unwrought by thee, why doest thou from murdring me refraine?
  44. Would God thou had it done before this wicked rape. From hence
  45. Then should my soule most blessedly have gone without offence.
  46. But if the Gods doe see this deede, and if the Gods, I say,
  47. Be ought, and in this wicked worlde beare any kinde of sway
  48. And if with me all other things decay not, sure the day
  49. Will come that for this wickednesse full dearly thou shalt pay.
  50. Yea I my selfe rejecting shame thy doings will bewray.
  51. And if I may have power to come abrode, them blase I will
  52. In open face of all the world. Or if thou keepe me still
  53. As prisoner in these woods, my voyce the verie woods shall fill,
  54. And make the stones to understand. Let Heaven to this give care
  55. And all the Gods and powers therein if any God be there.
  56. The cruell tyrant being chaaft and also put in feare
  57. With these and other such hir wordes, both causes so him stung,
  58. That drawing out his naked sworde that at his girdle hung,
  59. He tooke hir rudely by the haire, and wrung hir hands behind hir,
  60. Compelling hir to holde them there while he himselfe did bind hir.
  61. When Philomela sawe the sworde, she hoapt she should have dide,
  62. And for the same hir naked throte she gladly did provide.
  63. But as she yirnde and called ay upon hir fathers name,
  64. And strived to have spoken still, the cruell tyrant came
  65. And with a paire of pinsons fast did catch hir by the tung,
  66. And with his sword did cut it off. The stumpe whereon it hung
  67. Did patter still. The tip fell downe and quivering on the ground
  68. As though that it had murmured it made a certaine sound.
  69. And as an Adders tayle cut off doth skip a while: even so
  70. The tip of Philomelaas tongue did wriggle to and fro,
  71. And nearer to hir mistresseward in dying still did go.
  72. And after this most cruell act, for certaine men report
  73. That he (I scarcely dare beleve) did oftentimes resort
  74. To maymed Philomela and abusde hir at his will:
  75. Yet after all this wickednesse he keeping countnance still,
  76. Durst unto Progne home repaire. And she immediatly
  77. Demaunded where hir sister was. He sighing feynedly
  78. Did tell hir falsly she was dead: and with his suttle teares
  79. He maketh all his tale to seeme of credit in hir eares.
  80. Hir garments glittring all with golde she from hir shoulders teares
  81. And puts on blacke, and setteth up an emptie Herce, and keepes
  82. A solemne obite for hir soule, and piteously she weepes
  83. And waileth for hir sisters fate who was not in such wise
  84. As that was, for to be bewailde. The Sunne had in the Skies
  85. Past through the twelve celestiall signes, and finisht full a yeare.
  86. But what should Philomela doe? She watched was so neare
  87. That start she could not for hir life. The walles of that same graunge
  88. Were made so high of maine hard stone, that out she could not raunge.
  89. Againe hir tunglesse mouth did want the utterance of the fact.
  90. Great is the wit of pensivenesse, and when the head is rakt
  91. With hard misfortune, sharpe forecast of practise entereth in.
  92. A warpe of white upon a frame of Thracia she did pin,
  93. And weaved purple letters in betweene it, which bewraide
  94. The wicked deede of Tereus. And having done, she praide
  95. A certaine woman by hir signes to beare them to hir mistresse.
  96. She bare them and deliverde them not knowing nerethelesse
  97. What was in them. The Tyrants wife unfolded all the clout,
  98. And of hir wretched fortune red the processe whole throughout.
  99. She held hir peace (a wondrous thing it is she should so doe)
  100. But sorrow tide hir tongue, and wordes agreeable unto
  101. Hir great displeasure were not at commaundment at that stound.
  102. And weepe she could not. Ryght and wrong she reckeneth to confound,
  103. And on revengement of the deede hir heart doth wholy ground.
  1. It was the time that wives of Thrace were wont to celebrate
  2. The three yeare rites of Bacchus which were done a nighttimes late.
  3. A nighttimes soundeth Rhodope of tincling pannes and pots:
  4. A nighttimes giving up hir house abrode Queene Progne trots
  5. Disguisde like Bacchus other froes and armed to the proofe
  6. With all the frenticke furniture that serves for that behoofe.
  7. Hir head was covered with a vine. About hir loose was tuckt
  8. A Reddeeres skin, a lightsome Launce upon hir shoulder ruckt.
  9. In post gaddes terrible Progne through the woods, and at hir heeles
  10. A flocke of froes. And where the sting of sorrow which she feeles
  11. Enforceth hir to furiousnesse, she feynes it to proceede
  12. Of Bacchus motion. At the length she finding out in deede
  13. The outset Graunge howlde out, and cride, Now well, and open brake
  14. The gates, and streight hir sister thence by force of hand did take,
  15. And veyling hir in like attire of Bacchus, hid hir head
  16. With Ivie leaves, and home to Court hir sore amazed led.
  17. As soone as Philomela wist she set hir foote within
  18. That cursed house, the wretched soule to shudther did begin,
  19. And all hir face waxt pale. Anon hir sister getting place
  20. Did pull off Bacchus mad attire, and making bare hir face
  21. Embraced hir betweene hir armes. But she considering that
  22. Queene Progne was a Cucqueane made by meanes of hir, durst nat
  23. Once raise hir eyes: but on the ground fast fixed helde the same.
  24. And where she woulde have taken God to witnesse that the shame
  25. And villanie was wrought to hir by violence, she was fayne
  26. To use hir hand in stead of speache. Then Progne chaaft amaine,
  27. And was not able in hir selfe hir choler to restraine.
  28. But blaming Philomela for hir weeping, said these wordes:
  29. Thou must not deale in this behalfe with weeping, but with swordes:
  30. Or with some thing of greater force than swords. For my part, I
  31. Am readie, yea and fully bent all mischiefe for to trie.
  32. This pallace will I eyther set on fire, and in the same
  33. Bestow the cursed Tereus the worker of our shame:
  34. Or pull away his tongue: or put out both his eyes: or cut
  35. Away those members which have thee to such dishonor put:
  36. Or with a thousand woundes expulse that sinfull soule of his.
  37. The thing that I doe purpose on is great, what ere it is.
  38. I know not what it may be yet. While Progne hereunto
  39. Did set hir minde, came Itys in, who taught hir what to doe.
  40. She staring on him cruelly, said: Ah, how like thou art
  41. Thy wicked father, and without moe wordes a sorowfull part
  42. She purposed, such inward ire was boyling in hir heart.
  43. But notwithstanding when hir sonne approched to hir neare,
  44. And lovingly had greeted hir by name of mother deare,
  45. And with his pretie armes about the necke had hugde hir fast,
  46. And flattring wordes with childish toyes in kissing forth had cast,
  47. The mothers heart of hirs was then constreyned to relent,
  48. Asswaged wholy was the rage to which she erst was bent,
  49. And from hir eyes against hir will the teares enforced went.
  50. But when she saw how pitie did compell hir heart to yeelde,
  51. She turned to hir sisters face from Itys, and behelde
  52. Now t'one, now tother earnestly and said: Why tattles he
  53. And she sittes dumbe bereft of tongue? as well why calles not she
  54. Me sister, as this boy doth call me mother? Seest thou not,
  55. Thou daughter of Pandion, what a husband thou hast got?
  56. Thou growest wholy out of kinde. To such a husband as
  57. Is Tereus, pitie is a sinne. No more delay there was.
  58. She dragged Itys after hir, as when it happes in Inde
  59. A Tyger gets a little Calfe that suckes upon a Hynde
  60. And drags him through the shadie woods. And when that they had found
  61. A place within the house far off and far above the ground,
  62. Then Progne strake him with a sword now plainly seeing whother
  63. He should, and holding up his handes, and crying mother, mother,
  64. And flying to hir necke: even where the brest and side doe bounde,
  65. And never turnde away hir face. Inough had bene that wound
  66. Alone to bring him to his ende. The tother sister slit
  67. His throte. And while some life and soule was in his members yit,
  68. In gobbits they them rent: whereof were some in Pipkins boyld,
  69. And other some on hissing spits against the fire were broyld,
  70. And with the gellied bloud of him was all the chamber foyld.
  71. To this same banquet Progne bade hir husband knowing nought
  72. Nor nought mistrusting of the harme and lewdnesse she had wrought.
  73. And feyning a solemnitie according to the guise
  74. Of Athens, at the which there might be none in any wise
  75. Besides hir husband and hir selfe, she banisht from the same
  76. Hir householde folke and sojourners, and such as guestwise came.
  77. King Tereus sitting in the throne of his forefathers, fed
  78. And swallowed downe the selfesame flesh that of his bowels bred.
  79. And he (so blinded was his heart) Fetch Itys hither, sed.
  80. No lenger hir most cruell joy dissemble could the Queene.
  81. But of hir murther coveting the messenger to beene,
  82. She said: The thing thou askest for, thou hast within. About
  83. He looked round, and asked where? To put him out of dout,
  84. As he was yet demaunding where, and calling for him: out
  85. Lept Philomele with scattred haire aflaight like one that fled
  86. Had from some fray where slaughter was, and threw the bloudy head
  87. Of Itys in his fathers face. And never more was shee
  88. Desirous to have had hir speache, that able she might be
  89. Hir inward joy with worthie wordes to witnesse franke and free.
  90. The tyrant with a hideous noyse away the table shoves:
  91. And reeres the fiends from Hell. One while with yawning mouth he proves
  92. To perbrake up his meate againe, and cast his bowels out.
  93. Another while with wringing handes he weeping goes about.
  94. And of his sonne he termes himselfe the wretched grave. Anon
  95. With naked sword and furious heart he followeth fierce upon
  96. Pandions daughters. He that had bene present would have deemde
  97. Their bodies to have hovered up with fethers. As they seemde,
  98. So hovered they with wings in deede. Of whome the one away
  99. To woodward flies, the other still about the house doth stay.
  100. And of their murther from their brestes not yet the token goth,
  101. For even still yet are stainde with bloud the fethers of them both.
  102. And he through sorrow and desire of vengeance waxing wight,
  103. Became a Bird upon whose top a tuft of feathers light
  104. In likenesse of a Helmets crest doth trimly stand upright.
  105. In stead of his long sword, his bill shootes out a passing space:
  106. A Lapwing named is this Bird, all armed seemes his face.
  1. The sorrow of this great mischaunce did stop Pandions breath
  2. Before his time, and long ere age determinde had his death.
  3. Erecthey reigning after him the government did take:
  4. A Prince of such a worthinesse as no man well can make
  5. Resolution, if he more in armes or justice did excell.
  6. Foure sonnes, and daughters foure he had. Of which a couple well
  7. Did eche in beautie other match. The one of these whose name
  8. Was Procris unto Cephalus, King Aeolus sonne, became
  9. A happie wife. The Thracians and King Tereus were a let
  10. To Boreas: so that long it was before the God could gt
  11. His dearbeloved Orithya, while trifling he did stand
  12. With faire entreatance rather than did use the force of hand.
  13. But when he saw he no reliefe by gentle meanes could finde,
  14. Then turning unto boystous wrath (which unto that same winde
  15. Is too familiar and too much accustomed by kinde)
  16. He said: I served am but well: for whylaid I apart
  17. My proper weapons, fiercenesse, force, and ire, and cruell hart?
  18. And fell to fauning like a foole, which did me but disgrace?
  19. For me is violence meete. Through this the pestred cloudes I chace.
  20. Through this I tosse the Seas. Through this I turne up knottie Okes,
  21. And harden Snow, and beate the ground in hayle with sturdie strokes,
  22. When I my brothers chaunce to get in open Ayre and Skie.
  23. (For that is my fielde in the which my maisteries I doe trie)
  24. I charge upon them with such brunt, that of our meeting smart
  25. The Heaven betweene us soundes, and from the hollow Cloudes doth start
  26. Enforced fire. And when I come in holes of hollow ground,
  27. And fiersly in those emptie caves doe rouse my backe up round,
  28. I trouble even the ghostes, and make the verie world to quake.
  29. This helpe in wooing of my wife (to speede) I should have take.
  30. Erecthey should not have bene prayde my Fatherinlaw to bee:
  31. He should have bene compelde thereto by stout extremitie.
  32. In speaking these or other wordes as sturdie, Boreas gan
  33. To flaske his wings. With waving of the which he raysed than
  34. So great a gale, that all the earth was blasted therewithall,
  35. And troubled was the maine brode Sea. And as he traylde his pall
  36. Bedusted over highest tops of things, he swept the ground.
  37. And having now in smokie cloudes himselfe enclosed round,
  38. Betweene his duskie wings he caught Orithya straught for feare,
  39. And like a lover, verie soft and easly did hir beare.
  40. And as he flew, the flames of love enkindled more and more
  41. By meanes of stirring. Neither did he stay his flight before
  42. He came within the land and towne of Cicons with his pray.
  43. And there soone after being made his wife she hapt to lay
  44. Hir belly, and a paire of boyes she at a burthen brings,
  45. Who else in all resembled full their mother, save in wings
  46. The which they of their father tooke. Howbeit (by report)
  47. They were not borne with wings upon their bodies in this sort.
  48. While Calais and Zetes had no beard upon their chin,
  49. They both were callow. But as soone as haire did once begin
  50. In likenesse of a yellow Downe upon their cheekes to sprout,
  51. Then (even as comes to passe in Birdes) the feathers budded out
  52. Togither on their pinyons too, and spreaded round about
  53. On both their sides. And finally when childhod once was spent
  54. And youth come on, togither they with other Minyes went
  55. To Colchos in the Galley that was first devisde in Greece,
  56. Upon a sea as then unknowen, to fetch the golden fleece.
  1. And now in ship of Pagasa the Mynies cut the seas.
  2. And leading under endlesse night his age in great disease
  3. Of scarcitie was Phiney seene, and Boreas sonnes had chaste
  4. Away the Maidenfaced foules that did his victels waste.
  5. And after suffring many things in noble Jasons band,
  6. In muddie Phasis gushing streame at last they went aland.
  7. There while they going to the King demaund the golden fleece
  8. Brought thither certaine yeares before by Phryxus out of Greece,
  9. And of their dreadfull labors wait an answere to receive:
  10. Aeetas daughter in hir heart doth mightie flames conceyve.
  11. And after strugling verie long, when reason could not win
  12. The upper hand of rage: she thus did in hir selfe begin:
  13. In vaine, Medea, doste thou strive: some God what ere he is
  14. Against thee bendes his force. For what a wondrous thing is this?
  15. Is any thing like this which men doe terme by name of Love?
  16. For why should I my fathers hestes esteeme so hard above
  17. All measure? sure in very deede they are too hard and sore.
  18. Why feare I lest yon straunger whome I never saw before
  19. Should perish? what should be the cause of this my feare so great?
  20. Unhappie wench (and if thou canst) suppresse this uncouth heat
  21. That burneth in thy tender brest: and if so be I coulde,
  22. A happie turne it were, and more at ease then be I shoulde.
  23. But now an uncouth maladie perforce against my will
  24. Doth hale me. Love persuades me one, another thing my skill.
  25. The best I see and like: the worst I follow headlong still.
  26. Why being of the royall bloud so fondly doste thou rave,
  27. Upon a straunger thus to dote, desiring for to have
  28. An husband of another world? at home thou mightest finde
  29. A lover meete for thine estate on whome to set thy minde.
  30. And yet it is but even a chaunce if he shall live or no:
  31. God graunt him for to live. I may without offence pray so,
  32. Although I lovde him not: for what hath Jason trespast me?
  33. Who woulde not pitie Jasons youth onlesse they cruell be?
  34. What creature is there but his birth and prowesse might him move?
  35. And setting all the rest asyde, who woulde not be in love
  36. With Jasons goodlie personage? my heart assuredly
  37. Is toucht therewith. But if that I provide not remedie,
  38. With burning breath of blasting Bulles needes sindged must he bee.
  39. Of seedes that he himselfe must sow a harvest shall he see
  40. Of armed men in battell ray upon the ground up grow
  41. Against the which it hoveth him his manhode for to show.
  42. And as a pray he must be set against the Dragon fell.
  43. If I these things let come to passe, I may confesse right well
  44. That of a Tyger I was bred: and that within my brest
  45. A heart more harde than any steele or stonie rocke doth rest.
  46. Why rather doe I not his death with wrathfull eyes beholde?
  47. And joy with others seeing him to utter perill solde?
  48. Why doe I not enforce the Bulles against him? Why, I say,
  49. Exhort I not the cruell men which shall in battell ray
  50. Arise against him from the ground? and that same Dragon too
  51. Within whose eyes came never sleepe? God shield I so should doo.
  52. But prayer smally bootes, except I put to helping hand.
  53. And shall I like a Caytife then betray my fathers land?
  54. Shall I a straunger save whome we nor none of ours doth know?
  55. That he by me preserved may without me homeward row?
  56. And take another to his wife, and leave me, wretched wight,
  57. To torments? If I wist that he coulde worke me such a spight,
  58. Or could in any others love than only mine delight,
  59. The Churle should die for me. But sure he beareth not the face
  60. Like one that wold doe so. His birth, his courage, and his grace
  61. Doe put me clearly out of doubt he will not me deceyve,
  62. No nor forget the great good turnes he shall by me receyve.
  63. Yet shall he to me first his faith for more assurance plight
  64. And solemly he shall be sworne to keepe the covenant right.
  65. Why fearste thou now without a cause? step to it out of hand:
  66. And doe not any lenger time thus lingring fondly stand.
  67. For ay shall Jason thinke himselfe beholding unto thee:
  68. And shall thee marrie solemly: yea honored shalt thou bee
  69. Of all the Mothers great and small throughout the townes of Greece
  70. For saving of their sonnes that come to fetch the golden fleece.
  71. And shall I then leave brother, sister, father, kith and kin?
  72. And household Gods, and native soyle, and all that is therein?
  73. And saile I know not whither with a straunger? Yea: why not?
  74. My father surely cruell is, my Countrie rude God wot:
  75. My brother yet a verie babe: my sister I dare say
  76. Contented is with all hir heart that I should go away:
  77. The greatest God is in my selfe: the things I doe forsake
  78. Are trifles in comparison of those that I shall take.
  79. For saving of the Greekish ship renoumed shall I bee.
  80. A better place I shall enjoy with Cities riche and free,
  81. Whose fame doth florish fresh even here, and people that excell
  82. In civill life and all good Artes: and whome I would not sell
  83. For all the goods within the worlde, Duke Aesons noble sonne.
  84. Whome had I to my lawfull Feere assuredly once wonne,
  85. Most happie yea and blest of God I might my selfe account,
  86. And with my head above the starres to heaven I should surmount.
  87. But men report that certaine rockes (I know not what) doe meete
  88. Amid the waves, and monstrously againe asunder fleete:
  89. And how Charybdis, utter foe to ships that passe thereby,
  90. Now sowpeth in, now speweth out the Sea incessantly:
  91. And ravening Scylla being hemde with cruell dogs about,
  92. Amids the gulfe of Sicilie doth make a barking out.
  93. What skilleth that? As long as I enjoy the thing I love,
  94. And hang about my Jasons necke, it shall no whit me move
  95. To saile the daungerous Seas: as long as him I may embrace
  96. I cannot surely be afraide in any kinde of case.
  97. Or if I chaunce to be afraide, my feare shall only tende
  98. But for my husband. Callste thou him thy husband? Doste pretende
  99. Gay titles to thy foule offence, Medea? nay not so:
  100. But rather looke about how great a lewdnesse thou doste go,
  101. And shun the mischiefe while thou mayst. She had no sooner said
  102. These wordes, but right and godlinesse and shamefastnesse were staid
  103. Before hir eyes, and frantick love did flie away dismaid.
  104. She went me to an Altar that was dedicate of olde
  105. To Perseys daughter Hecate (of whome the witches holde
  106. As of their Goddesse) standing in a thicke and secrete wood
  107. So close it coulde not well be spide: and now the raging mood
  108. Of furious love was well alaide and clearely put to flight:
  109. When spying Aesons sonne, the flame that seemed quenched quight
  110. Did kindle out of hand againe. Hir cheekes began to glowe,
  111. And flushing over all hir face the scarlet bloud did flowe.
  112. And even as when a little sparke that was in ashes hid,
  113. Uncovered with the whisking windes is from the ashes rid,
  114. Eftsoones it taketh nourishment and kindleth in such wise,
  115. That to his former strength againe and flaming it doth rise:
  116. Even so hir quailed love which late ye would have thought had quight
  117. Bene vanisht out of minde, as soone as Jason came in sight
  118. Did kindle to his former force in vewing of the grace
  119. With which he did avaunce himselfe then comming there in place.
  120. And (as it chaunced) farre more faire and beautifull of face
  121. She thought him then than ever erst, but sure it doth behove
  122. Hir judgement should be borne withall bicause she was in love.
  123. She gapte and gazed in his face with fixed staring eyen
  124. As though she never had him seene before that instant time.
  125. So farre she was beside hir selfe she thought it should not bee
  126. The face of any worldly wight the which she then did see.
  127. She was not able for hir life to turne hir eyes away,
  128. But when he tooke hir by the hand and speaking gan to pray
  129. Hir softly for to succor him, and promisde faithfully
  130. To take hir to his wedded wife, she falling by and by
  131. A weeping, said: Sir, what I doe I see apparantly.
  132. Not want of knowledge of the truth but love shall me deceive.
  133. You shalbe saved by my meanes. And now I must receive
  134. A faithfull promise at your hand for saving of your life.
  135. He made a solemne vow, and sware to take hir to his wife,
  136. By triple Hecates holie rites, and by what other power
  137. So ever else had residence within that secret bower,
  138. And by the Sire of him that should his Fathrinlaw become
  139. Who all things doth behold, and as he hopte to overcome
  140. The dreadfull daungers which he had soone after to assay.
  141. Duke Jason being credited receivde of hir streight way
  142. Enchaunted herbes: and having learnde the usage of the same,
  143. Departed thence with merrie heart, and to his lodging came.
  144. Next Morne had chaste the streaming stars: and folke by heapes did flocke
  145. To Marsis sacred field, and there stoode thronging in a shocke,
  146. To see the straunge pastimes. The King most stately to beholde
  147. With yvorie Mace above them all did sit in throne of golde.
  148. Anon the brazenhoved Bulles from stonie nostrils cast
  149. Out flakes of fire: their scalding breath the growing grasse did blast.
  150. And looke what noise a chimney full of burning fewell makes,
  151. Or Flint in softning in the Kell when first the fire it takes
  152. By sprincling water thereupon: such noyse their boyling brests
  153. Turmoyling with the firie flames enclosed in their chests,
  154. Such noise their scorched throtebolles make. Yet stoutly Jason went
  155. To meete them. They their dreadfull eyes against him grimly bent, '
  156. And eke their homes with yron tipt: and strake the dust about
  157. In stamping with their cloven clees: and with their belowing out
  158. Set all the fielde upon a smoke. The Mynies seeing that
  159. Were past their wits with sodaine feare, but Jason feeled nat
  160. So much as any breath of theirs: such strength hath sorcerie.
  161. Their dangling Dewlaps with his hand he coyd unfearfully.
  162. And putting yokes upon their neckes he forced them to draw
  163. The heavie burthen of the plough which erst they never saw,
  164. And for to breake the fielde which erst had never felt the share.
  165. The men of Colchos seeing this, like men amazed fare.
  166. The Mynies with their shouting out their mazednesse augment,
  167. And unto Jason therewithall give more encouragement.
  168. Then in a souldiers cap of steele a Vipers teeth he takes,
  169. And sowes them in the new plowde fielde. The ground then soking makes
  170. The seede foresteepte in poyson strong, both supple lithe and soft,
  171. And of these teeth a right straunge graine there growes anon aloft.
  172. For even as in the mothers wombe an infant doth begin
  173. To take the lively shape of man, and formed is within
  174. To due proportion piece by piece in every limme, and when
  175. Full ripe he is, he takes the use of Aire with other men:
  176. So when that of the Vipers teeth the perfect shape of man
  177. Within the bowels of the earth was formed, they began
  178. To rise togither orderly upon the fruitefull fielde:
  179. And (which a greater wonder is) immediatly they wielde
  180. Their weapons growing up with them, whom when the Greekes behilde
  181. Preparing for to push their Pikes (which sharply headed were)
  182. In Jasons face, downe went their heades, their heartes did faint for feare:
  183. And also she that made him safe began abasht to bee.
  184. For when against one naked man so huge an armie shee
  185. Beheld of armed enmies bent, hir colour did abate
  186. And sodainly both voyd of bloud and livelie heate she sate.
  187. And lest the chaunted weedes the which she had him given before
  188. Should faile at neede, a helping charme she whispred overmore,
  189. And practisde other secret Artes the which she kept in store.
  190. He casting streight a mightie stone amid his thickest foes,
  191. Doth voyde the battell from him selfe and turnes it unto those.
  192. These earthbred brothers by and by did one another wound
  193. And never ceased till that all lay dead upon the ground.
  194. The Greekes were glad, and in their armes did clasp their Champion stout,
  195. And clinging to him earnestly embraced him about.
  196. And thou fond Medea too couldst well have found in hart
  197. The Champion for to have embraste, but that withheld thou wart
  198. By shamefastnesse, and yet thou hadst embraced him, if dread
  199. Of stayning of thine honor had not staid thee in that stead.
  200. But yet as far forth as thou maist, thou doste in heart rejoyce,
  201. And secretly (although without expressing it in voyce)
  202. Doste thanke thy charmes and eke the Gods as Authors of the same.
  203. Now was remaining as the last conclusion of this game,
  204. By force of chaunted herbes to make the watchfull Dragon sleepe
  205. Within whose eyes came never winke: who had in charge to keepe
  206. The goodly tree upon the which the golden fleeces hung.
  207. With crested head, and hooked pawes, and triple spirting tung,
  208. Right ougly was he to beholde. When Jason had besprent
  209. Him with the juice of certaine herbes from Lethey River sent,
  210. And thrice had mumbled certaine wordes which are of force to cast
  211. So sound a sleepe on things that even as dead a time they last,
  212. Which make the raging surges calme and flowing Rivers stay,
  213. The dreadfull Dragon by and by (whose eyes before that day
  214. Wist never erst what sleeping ment) did fall so fast asleepe
  215. That Jason safely tooke the fleece of golde that he did keepe.
  216. Of which his bootie being proud, he led with him away
  217. The Author of his good successe another fairer pray:
  218. And so with conquest and a wife he loosde from Colchos strand,
  219. And in Larissa haven safe did go againe aland.
  1. The auncient men of Thessalie togither with their wives
  2. To Church with offrings gone for saving of their childrens lives.
  3. Great heapes of fuming frankincense were fryed in the flame
  4. And vowed Bulles to sacrifice with homes faire gilded came.
  5. But from this great solemnitie Duke Aeson was away,
  6. Now at deathes door and spent with yeares. Then Jason thus gan say:
  7. O wife to whome I doe confesse I owe my life in deede,
  8. Though al things thou to me hast given, and thy deserts exceede
  9. Beleife: yet if enchauntment can, (for what so hard appeares
  10. Which strong enchauntment can not doe?) abate thou from my yeares,
  11. And add them to my fathers life. As he these wordes did speake,
  12. The teares were standing in his eyes. His godly sute did breake
  13. Medeas heart: who therewithall bethought hir of hir Sire
  14. In leaving whome she had exprest a far unlike desire.
  15. But yet bewraying not hir thoughts, she said: O Husband fie,
  16. What wickednesse hath scapt your mouth? Suppose you then that I
  17. Am able of your life the terme where I will to bestow?
  18. Let Hecat never suffer that. Your sute (as well you know)
  19. Against all right and reason is. But I will put in proofe
  20. A greater gift than you require and more for your behoofe.
  21. I will assay your father's life by cunning to prolong,
  22. And not with your yeares for to make him yong againe and strong:
  23. So our threeformed Goddesse graunt with present helpe to stand
  24. A furthrer of the great attempt the which I take in hand.
  25. Before the Moone should circlewise close both hir homes in one
  26. Three nightes were yet as then to come. As soon as that she shone
  27. Most full of light, and did behold the earth with fulsome face,
  28. Medea with hir haire not trust so much as in a lace,
  29. But flaring on hir shoulders twaine, and barefoote, with hir gowne
  30. Ungirded, gate hir out of doores and wandred up and downe
  31. Alone the dead time of the night. Both Man, and Beast, and Bird
  32. Were fast asleepe: the Serpents slie in trayling forward stird
  33. So softly as ye would have thought they still asleepe had bene.
  34. The moysting Ayre was whist. No leafe ye could have moving sene.
  35. The starres alonly faire and bright did in the welkin shine
  36. To which she lifting up hir handes did thrise hirselfe encline:
  37. And thrice with water of the brooke hir haire besprincled shee:
  38. And gasping thrise she opte hir mouth: and bowing downe hir knee
  39. Upon the bare hard ground, she said: O trustie time of night
  40. Most faithfull unto privities, O golden starres whose light
  41. Doth jointly with the Moone succeede the beames that blaze by day
  42. And thou three headed Hecate who knowest best the way
  43. To compasse this our great attempt and art our chiefest stay:
  44. Ye Charmes and Witchcrafts, and thou Earth which both with herbe and weed
  45. Of mightie working furnishest the Wizardes at their neede:
  46. Ye Ayres and windes: ye Elves of Hilles, of Brookes, of Woods alone,
  47. Of standing Lakes, and of the Night approche ye everychone.
  48. Through helpe of whom (the crooked bankes much wondring at the thing)
  49. I have compelled streames to run cleane backward to their spring.
  50. By charmes I make the calme Seas rough, and make the rough Seas plaine,
  51. And cover all the Skie with Cloudes and chase them thence againe.
  52. By charmes I raise and lay the windes, and burst the Vipers jaw.
  53. And from the bowels of the Earth both stones and trees doe draw.
  54. Whole woods and Forestes I remove: I make the Mountaines shake,
  55. And even the Earth it selfe to grone and fearfully to quake.
  56. I call up dead men from their graves: and thee lightsome Moone
  57. I darken oft, though beaten brasse abate thy perill soone.
  58. Our Sorcerie dimmes the Morning faire, and darkes the Sun at Noone.
  59. The flaming breath of firie Bulles ye quenched for my sake
  60. And caused their unwieldie neckes the bended yoke to take.
  61. Among the Earthbred brothers you a mortall war did set
  62. And brought asleepe the Dragon fell whose eyes were never shet.
  63. By meanes whereof deceiving him that had the golden fleece
  64. In charge to keepe, you sent it thence by Jason into Greece.
  65. Now have I neede of herbes that can by vertue of their juice
  66. To flowring prime of lustie youth old withred age reduce.
  67. I am assurde ye will it graunt. For not in vaine have shone
  68. These twincling starres, ne yet in vaine this Chariot all alone
  69. By drought of Dragons hither comes. With that was fro the Skie
  70. A Chariot softly glaunced downe, and stayed hard thereby.
  71. As soone as she had gotten up, and with hir hand had coyd
  72. The Dragons reined neckes, and with their bridles somewhat toyd,
  73. They mounted with hir in the Ayre, whence looking downe she saw
  74. The pleasant Temp of Thessalie, and made hir Dragons draw
  75. To places further from resort: and there she tooke the view
  76. What herbes on high mount Pelion, and what on Ossa grew,
  77. And what on mountaine Othris and on Pyndus growing were,
  78. And what Olympus (greater than mount Pyndus far) did beare.
  79. Such herbes of them as liked hir she pullde up roote and rinde
  80. Or cropt them with a hooked knife. And many she did finde
  81. Upon the bankes of Apidane agreeing to hir minde:
  82. And many at Amphrisus foords: and thou Enipeus eke
  83. Didst yeelde hir many pretie weedes of which she well did like.
  84. Peneus and Sperchius streames contributarie were,
  85. And so were Boebes rushie bankes of such as growed there.
  86. About Anthedon which against the Ile Euboea standes,
  87. A certaine kind of lively grasse she gathered with her handes,
  88. The name whereof was scarsly knowen or what the herbe could doe
  89. Untill that Glaucus afterward was chaunged thereinto.
  90. Nine dayes with winged Dragons drawen, nine nights in Chariot swift
  91. She searching everie field and frith from place to place did shift.
  92. She was no sooner home returnde but that the Dragons fell
  93. Which lightly of hir gathered herbes had taken but the smell,
  94. Did cast their sloughes and with their sloughes their riveled age forgo.