Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. The XV bookes of P. Ouidius Naso, entytuled Metamorphosis. Golding, Arthur, translator. London: W. Seres (printer), 1567.
- And now his lightning had he thought on all the earth to throw,
- But that he feared lest the flames perhaps so hie should grow
- As for to set the Heaven on fire, and burne up all the skie.
- He did remember furthermore how that by destinie
- A certaine time should one day come, wherein both Sea and Lond
- And Heaven it selfe shoulde feele the force of Vulcans scorching brond,
- So that the huge and goodly worke of all the worlde so wide
- Should go to wrecke, for doubt whereof forthwith he laide aside
- His weapons that the Cyclops made, intending to correct
- Mans trespasse by a punishment contrary in effect.
- And namely with incessant showres from heaven ypoured downe,
- He did determine with himselfe the mortall kinde to drowne.
- In Aeolus prison by and by he fettred Boreas fast,
- With al such winds as chase the cloudes or breake them with their blast,
- And set at large the Southerne winde: who straight with watry wings
- And dreadfull face as blacke as pitch, forth out of prison flings.
- His beard hung full of hideous stormes, all dankish was his head,
- With water streaming downe his haire that on his shoulders shead.
- His ugly forehead wrinkled was with foggie mistes full thicke,
- And on his fethers and his breast a stilling dew did sticke.
- As soone as he betweene his hands the hanging cloudes had crusht,
- With ratling noyse adowne from heaven the raine full sadly gusht.
- The Rainbow, Junos messenger, bedect in sundrie hue,
- To maintaine moysture in the cloudes, great waters thither drue:
- The corne was beaten to the grounde, the Tilmans hope of gaine,
- For which he toyled all the yeare, lay drowned in the raine.
- Joves indignation and his wrath began to grow so hot
- That for to quench the rage thereof, his Heaven suffised not.
- His brother Neptune with his waves was faine to doe him ease:
- Who straight assembling all the streames that fall into the seas,
- Said to them standing in his house: Sirs get you home apace,
- (You must not looke to have me use long preaching in this case.)
- Poure out your force (for so is neede) your heads ech one unpende,
- And from your open springs, your streames with flowing waters sende.
- He had no sooner said the word, but that returning backe,
- Eche one of them unlosde his spring, and let his waters slacke.
- And to the Sea with flowing streames yswolne above their bankes,
- One rolling in anothers necke, they rushed forth by rankes.
- Himselfe with his threetyned Mace, did lend the earth a blow,
- That made it shake and open wayes for waters forth to flow.
- The flouds at randon where they list, through all the fields did stray,
- Men, beastes, trees, come, and with their gods were Churches washt away.
- If any house were built so strong, against their force to stonde
- Yet did the water hide the top: and turrets in that ponde
- Were overwhelmde: no difference was betweene the sea and ground,
- For all was sea: there was no shore nor landing to be found.
- Some climbed up to tops of hils, and some rowde to and fro
- In Botes, where they not long before, to plough and Cart did go,
- One over come and tops of townes, whome waves did overwhelme,
- Doth saile in ship, an other sittes a fishing in an Elme.
- In meddowes greene were Anchors cast (so fortune did provide)
- And crooked ships did shadow vynes, the which the floud did hide.
- And where but tother day before did feede the hungry Gote,
- The ugly Seales and Porkepisces now to and fro did flote.
- The Sea nymphes wondred under waves the townes and groves to see,
- And Dolphines playd among the tops and boughes of every tree.
- The grim and greedy Wolfe did swim among the siely sheepe,
- The Lion and the Tyger fierce were borne upon the deepe.
- It booted not the foming Boare his crooked tuskes to whet,
- The running Hart coulde in the streame by swiftnesse nothing get.
- The fleeting fowles long having sought for land to rest upon,
- Into the Sea with werie wings were driven to fall anon.
- Th'outragious swelling of the Sea the lesser hillockes drownde,
- Unwonted waves on highest tops of mountaines did rebownde.
- The greatest part of men were drownde, and such as scapte the floode,
- Forlorne with fasting overlong did die for want of foode.
- Against the fieldes of Aonie and Atticke lies a lande
- That Phocis hight, a fertile ground while that it was a lande:
- But at that time a part of Sea, and even a champion fielde
- Of sodaine waters which the floud by forced rage did yeelde,
- Where as a hill with forked top the which Parnasus hight,
- Doth pierce the cloudes and to the starres doth raise his head upright.
- When at this hill (for yet the Sea had whelmed all beside)
- Deucalion and his bedfellow, without all other guide,
- Arrived in a little Barke immediatly they went,
- And to the Nymphes of Corycus with full devout intent
- Did honor due, and to the Gods to whome that famous hill
- Was sacred, and to Themis eke in whose most holie will
- Consisted then the Oracles. In all the world so rounde
- A better nor more righteous man could never yet be founde
- Than was Deucalion, nor againe a woman, mayde nor wife,
- That feared God so much as shee, nor led so good a life.
- When Jove behelde how all the worlde stoode lyke a plash of raine,
- And of so many thousand men and women did remaine
- But one of eche, howbeit those both just and both devout,
- He brake the Cloudes, and did commaund that Boreas with his stout
- And sturdie blasts should chase the floud, that Earth might see the skie
- And Heaven the Earth: the Seas also began immediatly
- Their raging furie for to cease. Their ruler laide awaye
- His dreadfull Mace, and with his wordes their woodnesse did alaye.
- He called Tryton to him straight, his trumpetter, who stoode
- In purple robe on shoulder cast, aloft upon the floode,
- And bade him take his sounding Trumpe and out of hand to blow
- Retreat, that all the streames might heare, and cease from thence to flow.
- He tooke his Trumpet in his hand, hys Trumpet was a shell
- Of some great Whelke or other fishe, in facion like a Bell
- That gathered narrow to the mouth, and as it did descende
- Did waxe more wide and writhen still, downe to the nether ende:
- When that this Trumpe amid the Sea was set to Trytons mouth,
- He blew so loude that all the streames both East, West, North and South,
- Might easly heare him blow retreate, and all that heard the sounde
- Immediatly began to ebbe and draw within their bounde.
- Then gan the Sea to have a shore, and brookes to finde a banke,
- And swelling streames of flowing flouds within hir chanels sanke.
- Then hils did rise above the waves that had them overflow,
- And as the waters did decrease the ground did seeme to grow.
- And after long and tedious time the trees did shew their tops
- All bare, save that upon the boughes the mud did hang in knops.
- The worlde restored was againe, which though Deucalion joyde
- Then to beholde: yet forbicause he saw the earth was voyde
- And silent like a wildernesse, with sad and weeping eyes
- And ruthfull voyce he then did speake to Pyrrha in this wise:
- O sister, O my loving spouse, O sielie woman left,
- As onely remnant of thy sexe that water hath bereft,
- Whome Nature first by right of birth hath linked to me fast
- In that we brothers children bene: and secondly the chast
- And stedfast bond of lawfull bed: and lastly now of all,
- The present perils of the time that latelye did befall.
- On all the Earth from East to West where Phebus shewes his face
- There is no moe but thou and I of all the mortall race.
- The Sea hath swallowed all the rest: and scarsly are we sure,
- That our two lives from dreadfull death in safetie shall endure.
- For even as yet the duskie cloudes doe make my heart adrad.
- Alas poore wretched sielie soule, what heart wouldst thou have had
- To beare these heavie happes, if chaunce had let thee scape alone?
- Who should have bene thy consort then: who should have rewd thy mone?
- Now trust me truly, loving wife, had thou as now bene drownde,
- I would have followde after thee and in the sea bene fownde.
- Would God I could my fathers Arte, of claye to facion men
- And give them life that people might frequent the world agen.
- Mankinde (alas) doth onely now wythin us two consist,
- As mouldes whereby to facion men. For so the Gods doe lyst.
- And with these words the bitter teares did trickle down their cheeke,
- Untill at length betweene themselves they did agree to seeke
- To God by prayer for his grace, and to demaund his ayde
- By aunswere of his Oracle. Wherein they nothing stayde,
- But to Cephisus sadly went, whose streame as at that time
- Began to run within his bankes though thicke with muddie slime,
- Whose sacred liquor straight they tooke and sprinkled with the same
- Their heads and clothes: and afterward to Themis chappell came,
- The roofe whereof with cindrie mosse was almost overgrowne.
- For since the time the raging floud the worlde had overflowne,
- No creature came within the Churche: so that the Altars stood
- Without one sparke of holie fyre or any sticke of wood.
- As soon as that this couple came within the chappell doore,
- They fell downe flat upon the ground, and trembling kist the floore.
- And sayde: If prayer that proceedes from humble heart and minde
- May in the presence of the Gods, such grace and favor finde
- As to appease their worthie wrath, then vouch thou safe to tell
- (O gentle Themis) how the losse that on our kinde befell,
- May now eftsoones recovered be, and helpe us to repaire
- The world, which drowned under waves doth lie in great dispaire.
- The Goddesse moved with their sute, this answere did them make:
- Depart you hence: Go hille your heads, and let your garmentes slake,
- And both of you your Graundames bones behind your shoulders cast.
- They stoode amazed at these wordes, tyll Pyrrha at the last,
- Refusing to obey the hest the which the Goddesse gave,
- Brake silence, and with trembling cheere did meekely pardon crave.
- For sure she saide she was afraide hir Graundames ghost to hurt
- By taking up hir buried bones to throw them in the durt.
- And with the aunswere here upon eftsoones in hand they go,
- The doubtfull wordes wherof they scan and canvas to and fro.
- Which done, Prometheus sonne began by counsell wise and sage
- His cousin germanes fearfulnesse thus gently to asswage:
- Well, eyther in these doubtfull words is hid some misterie,
- Whereof the Gods permit us not the meaning to espie,
- Or questionlesse and if the sence of inward sentence deeme
- Like as the tenour of the words apparantly doe seeme,
- It is no breach of godlynesse to doe as God doth bid.
- I take our Graundame for the earth, the stones within hir hid
- I take for bones, these are the bones the which are meaned here.
- Though Titans daughter at this wise conjecture of hir fere
- Were somewhat movde, yet none of both did stedfast credit geve,
- So hardly could they in their heartes the heavenly hestes beleve.
- But what and if they made a proufe? what harme could come thereby?
- They went their wayes and heild their heades, and did their cotes untie.
- And at their backes did throw the stones by name of bones foretolde.
- The stones (who would beleve the thing, but that the time of olde
- Reportes it for a stedfast truth?) of nature tough and harde,
- Began to warre both soft and smothe: and shortly afterwarde
- To winne therwith a better shape: and as they did encrease,
- A mylder nature in them grew, and rudenesse gan to cease.
- For at the first their shape was such, as in a certaine sort
- Resembled man, but of the right and perfect shape came short.
- Even like to Marble ymages new drawne and roughly wrought,
- Before the Carver by his Arte to purpose hath them brought.
- Such partes of them where any juice or moysture did abound,
- Or else were earthie, turned to flesh: and such as were so sound,
- And harde as would not bow nor bende did turne to bones: againe
- The part that was a veyne before, doth still his name retaine.
- Thus by the mightie powre of God ere lenger time was past,
- The mankinde was restorde by stones, the which a man did cast.
- And likewise also by the stones the which a woman threw,
- The womankinde repayred was and made againe of new.
- Of these are we the crooked ympes, and stonie race in deede,
- Bewraying by our toyling life, from whence we doe proceede.
- The lustie earth of owne accorde soone after forth did bring
- According to their sundrie shapes eche other living thing,
- As soone as that the moysture once caught heate against the Sunne,
- And that the fat and slimie mud in moorish groundes begunne
- To swell through warmth of Phebus beames, and that the fruitfull seede
- Of things well cherisht in the fat and lively soyle in deede,
- As in their mothers wombe, began in length of time to grow,
- To one or other kinde of shape wherein themselves to show.
- Even so when that seven mouthed Nile the watrie fieldes forsooke,
- And to his auncient channel eft his bridled streames betooke,
- So that the Sunne did heate the mud, the which he left behinde,
- The husbandmen that tilde the ground, among the cloddes did finde
- Of sundrie creatures sundrie shapes: of which they spied some,
- Even in the instant of their birth but newly then begonne,
- And some unperfect, wanting brest or shoulders in such wise,
- That in one bodie oftentimes appeared to the eyes
- One halfe thereof alive to be, and all the rest beside
- Both voyde of life and seemely shape, starke earth to still abide.
- For when that moysture with the heate is tempred equally,
- They doe conceyve: and of them twaine engender by and by
- All kinde of things. For though that fire with water aye debateth
- Yet moysture mixt with equall heate all living things createth.
- And so those discordes in their kinde, one striving with the other,
- In generation doe agree and make one perfect mother.
- And therfore when the mirie earth bespred with slimie mud,
- Brought over all but late before by violence of the flud,
- Caught heate by warmnesse of the Sunne, and calmenesse of the skie,
- Things out of number in the worlde, forthwith it did applie.
- Whereof in part the like before in former times had bene,
- And some so straunge and ougly shapes as never erst were sene.
- In that she did such Monsters breede, was greatly to hir woe,
- But yet thou, ougly Python, wert engendred by hir thoe.
- A terror to the newmade folke, which never erst had knowne
- So foule a Dragon in their lyfe, so monstrously foregrowne;
- So great a ground thy poyson paunch did underneath thee hide.
- The God of shooting who no where before that present tide
- Those kinde of weapons put in ure, but at the speckled Deare,
- Or at the Roes so wight of foote, a thousand shaftes well neere,
- Did on that hideous serpent spende: of which there was not one,
- But forced forth the venimd bloud along his sydes to gone.
- So that his quiver almost voyde, he nailde him to the grounde,
- And did him nobly at the last by force of shot confounde.
- And least that time might of this worke deface the worthy fame,
- He did ordeyne in mynde thereof a great and solemne game,
- Which of the serpent that he slue of Pythians bare the name.
- Where who so could the maistrie winne in feates of strength, or sleight
- Of hande or foote or rolling wheele, might claime to have of right,
- An Oken garland fresh and brave. There was not any wheare
- As yet a Bay: by meanes whereof was Phebus faine to weare
- The leaves of every pleasant tree about his golden heare.
- Peneian Daphne was the first where Phebus set his love,
- Which not blind chaunce but Cupids fierce and cruel wrath did move.
- The Delian God but late before surprisde with passing pride
- For killing of the monstrous worme, the God of love espide,
- With bowe in hand alredy bent and letting arrowes go:
- To whome he sayd, and what hast thou thou wanton baby so
- With warlike weapons for to toy? It were a better sight,
- To see this kinde of furniture on my two shoulders bright:
- Who when we list with stedfast hand both man and beast can wound,
- Who tother day wyth arrowes keene, have nayled to the ground
- The serpent Python so forswolne, whose filthie wombe did hide
- So many acres of the grounde in which he did abide.
- Content thy selfe sonne, sorie loves to kindle with thy brand,
- For these our prayses to attaine thou must not take in hand.
- To him quoth Venus sonne againe, well Phebus I agree
- Thy bow to shoote at every beast, and so shall mine at thee
- And looke how far that under God eche beast is put by kinde,
- So much thy glorie lesse than ours in shooting shalt thou finde.
- This saide, with drift of fethered wings in broken ayre he flue,
- And to the forkt and shadie top of Mount Parnasus drue.
- There from hys quiver full of shafts two arrowes did he take
- Of sundrie workes: t'one causeth Love, the tother doth it slake.
- That causeth love, is all of golde with point full sharpe and bright,
- That chaseth love is blunt, whose stele with leaden head is dight.
- The God this fired in the Nymph Peneis for the nones:
- The tother perst Apollos heart and overraft his bones.
- Immediatly in smoldring heate of Love the t'one did swelt,
- Againe the tother in hir heart no sparke nor motion felt.
- In woods and forrests is hir joy, the savage beasts to chase,
- And as the price of all hir paine to take the skinne and case.
- Unwedded Phebe doth she haunt and follow as hir guide,
- Unordred doe hir tresses wave scarce in a fillet tide.
- Full many a wooer sought hir love, she lothing all the rout,
- Impacient and without a man walkes all the woods about.
- And as for Hymen, or for love, and wedlocke often sought
- She tooke no care, they were the furthest end of all hir thought.
- Hir father many a time and oft would saye: My daughter deere,
- Thow owest me a sonneinlaw to be thy lawfull feere.
- Hir father many a time and oft would say: My daughter deere,
- Of Nephewes thou my debtour art, their Graundsires heart to cheere.
- She hating as a haynous crime the bonde of bridely bed
- Demurely casting downe hir eyes, and blushing somwhat red,
- Did folde about hir fathers necke with fauning armes: and sed:
- Deare father, graunt me while I live my maidenhead for to have,
- As to Diana here tofore hir father freely gave.
- Thy father (Daphne) could consent to that thou doest require,
- But that thy beautie and thy forme impugne thy chaste desire:
- So that thy will and his consent are nothing in this case,
- By reason of the beautie bright that shineth in thy face.
- Apollo loves and longs to have this Daphne to his Feere,
- And as he longs he hopes, but his foredoomes doe fayle him there.
- And as light hame when corne is reapt, or hedges burne with brandes,
- That passers by when day drawes neere throwe loosely fro their handes,
- So into flames the God is gone and burneth in his brest
- And feedes his vaine and barraine love in hoping for the best.
- Hir haire unkembd about hir necke downe flaring did he see,
- O Lord and were they trimd (quoth he) how seemely would she bee?
- He sees hir eyes as bright as fire the starres to represent,
- He sees hir mouth which to have seene he holdes him not content.
- Hir lillie armes mid part and more above the elbow bare,
- Hir handes, hir fingers and hir wrystes, him thought of beautie rare.
- And sure he thought such other parts as garments then did hyde,
- Excelled greatly all the rest the which he had espyde.
- But swifter than the whyrling winde shee flees and will not stay,
- To give the hearing to these wordes the which he had to say:
- I pray thee Nymph Penaeis stay, I chase not as a fo:
- Stay Nymph: the Lambes so flee the Wolves, the Stags the Lions so.
- With flittring feathers sielie Doves so from the Gossehauke flie,
- And every creature from his foe. Love is the cause that I
- Do followe thee: alas alas how would it grieve my heart,
- To see thee fall among the briers, and that the bloud should start
- Out of thy tender legges, I, wretch, the causer of thy smart.
- The place is rough to which thou runst, take leysure I thee pray,
- Abate thy flight, and I my selfe my running pace will stay.
- Yet would I wishe thee take advise, and wisely for to viewe
- What one he is that for thy grace in humble wise doth sewe.
- I am not one that dwelles among the hilles and stonie rockes,
- I am no sheepehearde with a Curre, attending on the flockes:
- I am no Carle nor countrie Clowne, nor neathearde taking charge
- Of cattle grazing here and there within this Forrest large.
- Thou doest not know, poore simple soule, God wote thou dost not knowe,
- From whome thou fleest. For if thou knew, thou wouldste not flee me so.
- In Delphos is my chiefe abode, my Temples also stande
- At Glaros and at Patara within the Lycian lande.
- And in the Ile of Tenedos the people honour mee.
- The king of Gods himselfe is knowne my father for to bee.
- By me is knowne that was, that is, and that that shall ensue,
- By mee men learne to sundrie tunes to frame sweete ditties true.
- In shooting have I stedfast hand, but surer hand had hee
- That made this wound within my heart that heretofore was free.
- Of Phisicke and of surgerie I found the Artes for neede,
- The powre of everie herbe and plant doth of my gift proceede.
- Nowe wo is me that nere an herbe can heale the hurt of love
- And that the Artes that others helpe their Lord doth helpelesse prove.
- As Phoebus would have spoken more, away Penaeis stale
- With fearefull steppes, and left him in the midst of all his tale.
- And as she ran the meeting windes hir garments backewarde blue,
- So that hir naked skinne apearde behinde hir as she flue,
- Hir goodly yellowe golden haire that hanged loose and slacke,
- With every puffe of ayre did wave and tosse behinde hir backe.
- Hir running made hir seeme more fayre, the youthfull God therefore
- Coulde not abyde to waste his wordes in dalyance any more.
- But as his love advysed him he gan to mende his pace,
- And with the better foote before, the fleeing Nymph to chace.
- And even as when the greedie Grewnde doth course the sielie Hare,
- Amiddes the plaine and champion fielde without all covert bare,
- Both twaine of them doe straine themselves and lay on footemanship,
- Who may best runne with all his force the tother to outstrip,
- The t'one for safetie of his lyfe, the tother for his pray,
- The Grewnde aye prest with open mouth to beare the Hare away,
- Thrusts forth his snoute and gyrdeth out and at hir loynes doth snatch,
- As though he would at everie stride betweene his teeth hir latch:
- Againe in doubt of being caught the Hare aye shrinking slips
- Upon the sodaine from his Jawes, and from betweene his lips:
- So farde Apollo and the Mayde: hope made Apollo swift,
- And feare did make the Mayden fleete devising how to shift.
- Howebeit he that did pursue of both the swifter went,
- As furthred by the feathred wings that Cupid had him lent,
- So that he would not let hir rest, but preased at hir heele
- So neere that through hir scattred haire she might his breathing feele.
- But when she sawe hir breath was gone and strength began to fayle
- The colour faded in hir cheekes, and ginning for to quayle,
- Shee looked to Penaeus streame and sayde: Nowe Father dere,
- And if yon streames have powre of Gods then help your daughter here.
- O let the earth devour me quicke, on which I seeme too fayre,
- Or else this shape which is my harme by chaunging straight appayre.
- This piteous prayer scarsly sed: hir sinewes waxed starke,
- And therewithall about hir breast did grow a tender barke.
- Hir haire was turned into leaves, hir armes in boughes did growe,
- Hir feete that were ere while so swift, now rooted were as slowe.
- Hir crowne became the toppe, and thus of that she earst had beene,
- Remayned nothing in the worlde, but beautie fresh and greene.
- Which when that Phoebus did beholde (affection did so move)
- The tree to which his love was turnde he coulde no lesse but love,
- And as he softly layde his hande upon the tender plant,
- Within the barke newe overgrowne he felt hir heart yet pant.
- And in his armes embracing fast hir boughes and braunches lythe,
- He proferde kisses to the tree, the tree did from him writhe.
- Well (quoth Apollo) though my Feere and spouse thou can not bee,
- Assuredly from this tyme forth yet shalt thou be my tree.
- Thou shalt adorne my golden lockes, and eke my pleasant Harpe,
- Thou shalt adorne my Quyver full of shaftes and arrowes sharpe.
- Thou shalt adorne the valiant knyghts and royall Emperours:
- When for their noble feates of armes like mightie conquerours,
- Triumphantly with stately pompe up to the Capitoll,
- They shall ascende with solemne traine that doe their deedes extoll.
- Before Augustus Pallace doore full duely shalt thou warde,
- The Oke amid the Pallace yarde aye faythfully to garde,
- And as my heade is never poulde nor never more without
- A seemely bushe of youthfull haire that spreadeth rounde about,
- Even so this honour give I thee continually to have
- Thy braunches clad from time to tyme with leaves both fresh and brave.
- Now when that Pean of this talke had fully made an ende,
- The Lawrell to his just request did seeme to condescende,
- By bowing of hir newe made boughs and tender braunches downe,
- And wagging of hir seemely toppe, as if it were hir crowne.
- There is a lande in Thessalie enclosd on every syde
- With wooddie hilles, that Timpe hight, through mid whereof doth glide
- Penaeus gushing full of froth from foote of Pindus hye,
- Which with his headlong falling downe doth cast up violently
- A mistie streame lyke flakes of smoke, besprinckling all about
- The toppes of trees on eyther side, and makes a roaring out
- That may be heard a great way off. This is the fixed seate,
- This is the house and dwelling place and chamber of the greate
- And mightie Ryver: Here he sittes in Court of Peeble stone,
- And ministers justice to the waves and to the Nymphes eche one,
- That in the Brookes and waters dwell. Now hither did resorte
- (Not knowing if they might rejoyce and unto mirth exhort
- Or comfort him) his Countrie Brookes, Sperchius well beseene
- With sedgie heade and shadie bankes of Poplars fresh and greene,
- Enipeus restlesse, swift and quicke, olde father Apidane,
- Amphrisus with his gentle streame, and Aeas clad with cane:
- With dyvers other Ryvers moe, which having runne their race,
- Into the Sea their wearie waves doe lead with restlesse pace.
- From hence the carefull Inachus absentes him selfe alone,
- Who in a corner of his cave with doolefull teares and mone,
- Augments the waters of his streame, bewayling piteously
- His daughter Io lately lost. He knewe not certainly
- And if she were alive or deade. But for he had hir sought
- And coulde not finde hir any where, assuredly he thought
- She did not live above the molde, ne drewe the vitall breath:
- Misgiving worser in his minde, if ought be worse than death.
- It fortunde on a certaine day that Jove espide this Mayde
- Come running from hir fathers streame alone: to whome he sayde:
- O Damsell worthie Jove himselfe, like one day for to make
- Some happie person whome thou list unto thy bed to take,
- I pray thee let us shroude our selves in shadowe here togither,
- Of this or that (he poynted both) it makes no matter whither,
- Untill the hotest of the day and Noone be overpast.
- And if for feare of savage beastes perchaunce thou be agast
- To wander in the Woods alone, thou shalt not neede to feare,
- A God shall bee thy guide to save thee harmelesse every where.
- And not a God of meaner sort, but even the same that hath
- The heavenly scepter in his hande, who in my dreadfull wrath,
- Do dart downe thunder wandringly: and therefore make no hast
- To runne away. She ranne apace, and had alreadie past
- The Fen of Lerna and the field of Lincey set with trees:
- When Jove intending now in vaine no lenger tyme to leese,
- Upon the Countrie all about did bring a foggie mist,
- And caught the Mayden whome poore foole he used as he list.
- Queene Juno looking downe that while upon the open field,
- When in so fayre a day such mistes and darkenesse she behelde,
- Dyd marvell much, for well she knewe those mistes ascended not
- From any Ryver, moorishe ground, or other dankishe plot.
- She lookt about hir for hir Jove as one that was acquainted
- With such escapes and with the deede had often him attainted.
- Whome when she founde not in the heaven: Onlesse I gesse amisse,
- Some wrong agaynst me (quoth she) now my husbande working is.
- And with that worde she left the Heaven, and downe to earth shee came,
- Commaunding all the mistes away. But Jove foresees the same,
- And to a Cow as white as milke his Leman he convayes.
- She was a goodly Heifer sure: and Juno did hir prayse,
- Although (God wot) she thought it not, and curiously she sought,
- Where she was bred, whose Cow she was, who had hir thither broughte
- As though she had not knowne the truth. Hir husband by and by
- (Bycause she should not search too neare) devisde a cleanly lie,
- And tolde hir that the Cow was bred even nowe out of the grounde.
- Then Juno who hir husbands shift at fingers endes had founde,
- Desirde to have the Cow of gift. What should he doe as tho?
- Great cruelnesse it were to yeelde his Lover to hir so.
- And not to give would breede mistrust. As fast as shame provoked,
- So fast agayne a tother side his Love his minde revoked.
- So much that Love was at the poynt to put all shame to flight.
- But that he feared if he should denie a gift so light
- As was a Cowe to hir that was his sister and his wyfe,
- Might make hir thinke it was no Cow, and breede perchaunce some strife.
- Now when that Juno had by gift hir husbands Leman got,
- Yet altogether out of feare and carelesse was she not.
- She had him in a jelousie and thoughtfull was she still
- For doubt he should invent some meanes to steale hir from hir: till
- To Argus, olde Aristors sonne, she put hir for to keepe.
- This Argus had an hundreth eyes: of which by turne did sleepe
- Alwayes a couple, and the rest did duely watch and warde,
- And of the charge they tooke in hande had ever good regarde,
- What way so ever Argus stood with face, with backe, or side,
- To Io warde, before his eyes did lo still abide.
- All day he let hir graze abroade, the Sunne once under ground
- He shut hir up and by the necke with wrythen Withe hir bound.
- With croppes of trees and bitter weedes now was she dayly fed,
- And in the stead of costly couch and good soft featherbed,
- She sate a nightes upon the ground, and on such ground whereas
- Was not sometime so much as grasse: and oftentymes she was
- Compeld to drinke of muddie pittes: and when she did devise
- To Argus for to lift hir handes in meeke and humble wise,
- She sawe she had no handes at all: and when she did assay
- To make complaint, she lowed out, which did hir so affray,
- That oft she started at the noyse, and would have runne away.
- Unto hir father Inachs banckes she also did resorte,
- Where many a tyme and oft before she had beene wont to sporte.
- Now when she looked in the streame, and sawe hir horned hed,
- She was agast and from hir selfe would all in hast have fled.
- The Nymphes hir sisters knewe hir not nor yet hir owne deare father,
- Yet followed she both him and them, and suffred them the rather
- To touch and stroke hir where they list, as one that preaced still
- To set hir selfe to wonder at and gaze upon their fill.
- The good old Inach puls up grasse and to hir straight it beares.
- She as she kyst and lickt his handes did shed forth dreerie teares.
- And had she had hir speach at will to utter forth hir thought,
- She would have tolde hir name and chaunce and him of helpe besought.
- But for bicause she could not speake, she printed in the sande,
- Two letters with hir foote, whereby was given to understande
- The sorrowfull chaunging of hir shape.
- Which seene straight cryed out
- Hir father Inach, Wo is me, and clasping hir about
- Hir white and seemely Heifers necke and christal hornes both twaine,
- He shrieked out full piteously: Now wo is me, again.
- Alas art thou my daughter deare, whome through the worlde I sought
- And could not finde, and now by chaunce art to my presence brought?
- My sorrow certesse lesser farre a thousande folde had beene
- If never had I seene thee more, than thus to have thee seene.
- Thou standst as dombe and to my wordes no answere can thou give,
- But from the bottom of thy heart full sorie sighes dost drive
- As tokens of thine inwarde griefe, and doolefully dost mooe
- Unto my talke, the onely thing leaft in thy powre to dooe.
- But I mistrusting nothing lesse than this so great mischaunce,
- By some great mariage earnestly did seeke thee to advaunce,
- In hope some yssue to have seene betweene my sonne and thee.
- But now thou must a husband have among the Heirds I see,
- And eke thine issue must be such as other cattels bee.
- Oh that I were a mortall wight as other creatures are,
- For then might death in length of time quite rid mee of this care,
- But now bycause I am a God, and fate doth death denie,
- There is no helpe but that my griefe must last eternallie.
- As Inach made this piteous mone quicke sighted Argus drave
- His daughter into further fieldes to which he could not have
- Accesse, and he himselfe aloof did get him to a hill,
- From whence he sitting at his ease viewd everie way at will.
- Now could no lenger Jove abide his Lover so forlorne,
- And thereupon he cald his sonne that Maia had him borne,
- Commaunding Argus should be kild. He made no long abod,
- But tyde his feathers to his feete, and tooke his charmed rod.
- (With which he bringeth things asleepe, and fetcheth soules from Hell)
- And put his Hat upon his head: and when that all was well
- He leaped from his fathers towres, and downe to earth he flue
- And there both Hat and winges also he lightly from him thrue,
- Retayning nothing but his staffe, the which he closely helde
- Betweene his elbowe and his side, and through the common fielde
- Went plodding lyke some good plaine soule that had some flocke to feede.
- And as he went he pyped still upon an Oten Reede.
- Queene Junos Heirdman farre in love with this straunge melodie
- Bespake him thus: Good fellow mine, I pray thee heartely
- Come sitte downe by me on this hill, for better feede I knowe
- Thou shalt not finde in all these fieldes, and (as the thing doth showe)
- It is a coole and shadowie plot, for sheepeheirds verie fitte.
- Downe by his elbow by and by did Atlas nephew sit.
- And for to passe the tyme withall for seeming overlong,
- He helde him talke of this and that, and now and than among
- He playd upon his merrie Pipe to cause his watching eyes
- To fall asleepe. Poore Argus did the best he could devise
- To overcome the pleasant nappes: and though that some did sleepe,
- Yet of his eyes the greater part he made their watch to keepe.
- And after other talke he askt (for lately was it founde)
- Who was the founder of that Pype that did so sweetely sounde.
- Then sayde the God: There dwelt sometime a Nymph of noble fame
- Among the hilles of Arcadie, that Syrinx had to name.
- Of all the Nymphes of Nonacris and Fairie farre and neere,
- In beautie and in personage thys Ladie had no peere.
- Full often had she given the slippe both to the Satyrs quicke
- And other Gods that dwell in Woods, and in the Forrests thicke,
- Or in the fruitfull fieldes abrode: It was hir whole desire
- To follow chaste Dianas guise in Maydenhead and attire,
- Whome she did counterfaite so nighe, that such as did hir see
- Might at a blush have taken hir Diana for to bee,
- But that the Nymph did in hir hande a bowe of Cornell holde,
- Whereas Diana evermore did beare a bowe of golde.
- And yet she did deceyve folke so. Upon a certaine day
- God Pan with garland on his heade of Pinetree, sawe hir stray
- From Mount Lyceus all alone, and thus to hir did say:
- Unto a Gods request, O Nymph, voucesafe thou to agree
- That doth desire thy wedded spouse and husband for to bee.
- There was yet more behinde to tell: as how that Syrinx fled,
- Through waylesse woods and gave no eare to that that Pan had sed,
- Untill she to the gentle streame of sandie Ladon came,
- Where, for bicause it was so deepe, she could not passe the same,
- She piteously to chaunge hir shape the water Nymphes besought:
- And how when Pan betweene his armes, to catch the Nymph had thought,
- In steade of hir he caught the Reedes newe growne upon the brooke,
- And as he sighed, with his breath the Reedes he softly shooke
- Which made a still and mourning noyse, with straungnesse of the which
- And sweetenesse of the feeble sounde the God delighted mich,
- Saide: Certesse, Syrinx, for thy sake it is my full intent,
- To make my comfort of these Reedes wherein thou doest lament:
- And how that there of sundrie Reedes with wax together knit,
- He made the Pipe which of hir name the Greekes call Syrinx yet.
- But as Cyllenius would have tolde this tale, he cast his sight
- On Argus, and beholde his eyes had bid him all good night.
- There was not one that did not sleepe, and fast he gan to nodde,
- Immediately he ceast his talke, and with his charmed rodde,
- So stroked all his heavie eyes that earnestly they slept.
- Then with his Woodknife by and by he lightly to him stept,
- And lent him such a perlous blowe, where as the shoulders grue
- Unto the necke, that straight his heade quite from the bodie flue.
- Then tombling downe the headlong hill his bloudie coarse he sent,
- That all the way by which he rolde was stayned and besprent.
- There lyest thou Argus under foote, with all thy hundreth lights,
- And all the light is cleane extinct that was within those sights.
- One endelesse night thy hundred eyes hath nowe bereft for aye,
- Yet would not Juno suffer so hir Heirdmans eyes decay:
- But in hir painted Peacocks tayle and feathers did them set,
- Where they remayne lyke precious stones and glaring eyes as yet.
- She tooke his death in great dispight and as hir rage did move,
- Determinde for to wreeke hir wrath upon hir husbandes Love.
- Forthwith she cast before hir eyes right straunge and ugly sightes,
- Compelling hir to thinke she sawe some Fiendes or wicked sprightes.
- And in hir heart such secret prickes and piercing stings she gave hir,
- As through the worlde from place to place with restlesse sorrow drave hir.
- Thou Nylus wert assignd to stay hir paynes and travails past,
- To which as soone as Io came with much adoe at last,
- With wearie knockles on thy brim she kneeled sadly downe,
- And stretching foorth hir faire long necke and christall horned crowne,
- Such kinde of countnaunce as she had she lifted to the skie,
- And there with sighing sobbes and teares and lowing doolefully
- Did seeme to make hir mone to Jove, desiring him to make
- Some ende of those hir troublous stormes endured for his sake.
- He tooke his wife about the necke, and sweetely kissing prayde,
- That Ios penance yet at length might by hir graunt be stayde.
- Thou shalt not neede to feare (quoth he) that ever she shall grieve thee
- From this day forth. And in this case the better to beleve mee,
- The Stygian waters of my wordes unparciall witnesse beene.
- As soone as Juno was appeasde, immediately was seene
- That Io tooke hir native shape in which she first was borne,
- And eke became the selfesame thing the which she was beforne.
- For by and by she cast away hir rough and hairie hyde,
- Insteede whereof a soft smouth skinne with tender fleshe did byde.
- Hir hornes sank down, hir eies and mouth were brought in lesser roome,
- Hir handes, hir shoulders, and hir armes in place againe did come.
- Hir cloven Clees to fingers five againe reduced were,
- On which the nayles lyke pollisht Gemmes did shine full bright and clere.
- In fine, no likenesse of a Cow save whitenesse did remaine
- So pure and perfect as no snow was able it to staine.
- She vaunst hir selfe upon hir feete which then was brought to two.
- And though she gladly would have spoke: yet durst she not so do,
- Without good heede, for feare she should have lowed like a Cow.
- And therefore softly with hir selfe she gan to practise how
- Distinctly to pronounce hir wordes that intermitted were.