Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. The XV bookes of P. Ouidius Naso, entytuled Metamorphosis. Golding, Arthur, translator. London: W. Seres (printer), 1567.
- Anon upon the same
- The furious Fiende Tisiphone doth cloth hir out of hand
- In garment streaming gorie bloud, and taketh in hir hand
- A burning Cresset steepte in bloud, and girdeth hir about
- With wreathed Snakes and so goes forth. And at hir going out,
- Feare, terror, grief and pensivenesse for companie she tooke,
- And also madnesse with his flaight, and gastly staring looke.
- Within the house of Athamas no sooner foote she set,
- But that the postes began to quake and doores looke blacke as Jet.
- The sonne withdrew him, Athamas and eke his wife were cast
- With ougly sightes in such a feare, that out of doores agast
- They would have fled. There stoode the Fiend, and stopt their passage out,
- And splaying forth hir filthie armes beknit with Snakes about,
- Did tosse and wave hir hatefull head. The swarme of scaled snakes
- Did make an irksome noyse to heare as she hir tresses shakes.
- About hir shoulders some did craule: some trayling downe hir brest
- Did hisse and spit out poyson greene, and spirt with tongues infest.
- Then from amyd hir haire two snakes with venymd hand she drew
- Of which shee one at Athamas and one at Ino threw.
- The snakes did craule about their breasts, inspiring in their heart
- Most grievous motions of the minde: the bodie had no smart
- Of any wound: it was the minde that felt the cruell stings.
- A poyson made in Syrup wise, shee also with hir brings.
- The filthie fome of Cerberus, the casting of the Snake
- Echidna, bred among the Fennes about the Stygian Lake:
- Desire of gadding foorth abroad: forgetfulnesse of minde:
- Delight in mischiefe: woodnesse: teares: and purpose whole inclinde
- To cruell murther: all the which shee did together grinde:
- And mingling them with new shed bloud had boyled them in brasse,
- And stird them with a Hemblock stalke. Now whyle that Athamas
- And Ino stood and quakte for feare, this poyson ranke and fell
- Shee tourned into both their breastes and made their heartes to swell.
- Then whisking often round about hir head hir balefull brand,
- She made it soone by gathering winde to kindle in hir hand.
- Thus as it were in triumph wise accomplishing hir hest,
- To Duskie Plutos emptie Realme shee gettes hir home to rest,
- And putteth off the snarled Snakes that girded in hir brest.
- Immediatly King Aeolus sonne starke madde comes crying out
- Through all the court: What meane yee Sirs? why go yee not about
- To pitch our toyles within this chace? I saw even nowe here ran
- A Lyon with hir two yong whelpes. And there withall he gan
- To chase his wyfe as if in deede shee had a Lyon beene
- And lyke a Bedlem boystouslie he snatcheth from betweene
- The mothers armes h's little babe Loearchus smyling on him
- And reaching foorth his preatie armes, and floong him fiercely from him
- A twice or thrice as from a slyng: and dasht his tender head
- Against a hard and rugged stone until he sawe him dead.
- The wretched mother (whither griefe did move hir thereunto
- Or that the poyson spred within did force hir so to doe)
- Howld out and frantikly with scattered haire about hir eares
- And with hir little Melicert whome hastely shee beares
- In naked armes she cryeth out, Hoe Bacchus. At the name
- Of Bacchus Juno gan to laugh and scorning sayde in game:
- This guerden loe thy foster child requiteth for the same.
- There hangs a rocke about the Sea the foote whereof is eate
- So hollow with the saltish waves which on the same doe beate,
- That like a house it keepeth off the moysting showers of rayne.
- The toppe is rough and shootes his front amiddes the open mayne.
- Dame Ino (madnesse made hir strong) did climb this cliffe anon
- And headlong downe (without regarde of hurt that hoong thereon)
- Did throwe hir burden and hir selfe, the water where shee dasht
- In sprincling upwarde glisterd red. But Venus sore abasht
- At this hir Neeces great mischaunce without offence or fault,
- Hir Uncle gently thus bespake: O ruler of the hault
- And swelling Seas, O noble Neptune whose dominion large
- Extendeth to the Heaven, whereof the mightie Jove hath charge,
- The thing is great for which I sue. But shewe thou for my sake
- Some mercie on my wretched friends whome in thine endlesse lake
- Thou seest tossed to and fro. Admit thou them among
- The Goddes. Of right even here to mee some favour doth belong
- At least wise if amid the Sea engendred erst I were
- Of Froth, as of the which yet still my pleasaunt name I beare.
- Neptunus graunted hir request, and by and by bereft them
- Of all that ever mortall was. Insted wherof he left them
- A hault and stately majestie: and altring them in hew
- With shape and names most meete for Goddes he did them both endew.
- Leucothoe was the mothers name, Palemon was the sonne.
- The Thebane Ladies following hir as fast as they could runne,
- Did of hir feete perceive the print upon the utter stone.
- And taking it for certaine signe that both were dead and gone,
- In making mone for Cadmus house, they wrang their hands and tare
- Their haire, and rent their clothes, and railde on Juno out of square,
- As nothing just, but more outragious farre than did behove
- In so revenging of hir selfe upon hir husbands love.
- The Goddesse Juno could not beare their railing. And in faith:
- You also will I make to be as witnesses (she sayth)
- Of my outragious crueltie. And so shee did in deede.
- For shee that loved Ino best was following hir with speede
- Into the Sea. But as shee would hir selfe have downeward cast,
- She could not stirre, but to the rock as nailed sticked fast.
- The second as shee knockt hir breast, did feele hir armes wax stiffe.
- Another as shee stretched out hir hands upon the cliffe,
- Was made a stone, and there stoode still ay stretching forth hir hands
- Into the water as before. And as an other standes
- A tearing of hir ruffled lockes, hir fingers hardened were
- And fastned to hir frisled toppe still tearing of hir heare,
- And looke what gesture eche of them was taken in that tide,
- Even in the same transformde to stones, they fastned did abide.
- And some were altered into birds which Cadmies called bee
- And in that goolfe with flittering wings still to and fro doe flee.
- Nought knoweth Cadmus that his daughter and hir little childe
- Admitted were among the Goddes that rule the surges wilde.
- Compellde with griefe and great mishappes that had ensewd togither,
- And straunge foretokens often seene since first his comming thither,
- He utterly forsakes his towne the which he builded had,
- As though the fortune of the place so hardly him bestad,
- And not his owne. And fleeting long like pilgrims, at the last
- Upon the coast of Illirie his wife and he were cast.
- Where ny forpind with cares and yeares, while of the chaunces past
- Upon their house, and of their toyles and former travails tane
- They sadly talkt betweene themselves: Was my speare head the bane
- Of that same ougly Snake of Mars (quoth Cadmus) when I fled
- From Sidon? or did I his teeth in ploughed pasture spred?
- If for the death of him the Goddes so cruell vengeaunce take,
- Drawen out in length upon my wombe then traile I like a snake.
- He had no sooner sayde the worde but that he gan to glide
- Upon his belly like a Snake. And on his hardened side
- He felt the scales new budding out, the which was wholy fret
- With speccled droppes of blacke and gray as thicke as could be set.
- He falleth groveling on his breast, and both his shankes doe growe
- In one round spindle Bodkinwise with sharpned point below.
- His armes as yet remayned still: his armes that did remayne,
- He stretched out, and sayde with teares that plentuously did raine
- Adowne his face, which yet did keepe the native fashion sownd:
- Come hither wyfe, come hither wight most wretched on the ground,
- And whyle that ought of mee remaynes vouchsafe to touche the same.
- Come take mee by the hand as long as hand may have his name,
- Before this snakish shape doe whole my body over runne.
- He would have spoken more when sodainely his tongue begunne
- To split in two and speache did fayle: and as he did attempt
- To make his mone, he hist: for nature now had cleane exempt
- All other speach. His wretched wyfe hir naked stomack beete
- And cryde: What meaneth this? deare Cadmus, where are now thy feete?
- Where are thy shoulders and thy handes? thy hew and manly face?
- With all the other things that did thy princely person grace
- Which nowe I overpasse? But why yee Goddes doe you delay
- My bodie into lyke misshape of Serpent to convay?
- When this was spoken, Cadmus lickt his wyfe about the lippes:
- And (as a place with which he was acquaynted well) he slippes
- Into hir boosome, lovingly embracing hir, and cast
- Himselfe about hir necke, as oft he had in tyme forepast.
- Such as were there (their folke were there) were flaighted at the sight,
- For by and by they sawe their neckes did glister slicke and bright.
- And on their snakish heades grew crests: and finally they both
- Were into verie Dragons tournd, and foorth together goth
- T'one trayling by the tothers side, untill they gaynd a wood,
- The which direct against the place where as they were then stood.
- And now remembring what they were themselves in tymes forepast,
- They neyther shonne nor hurten men with stinging nor with blast.
- But yet a comfort to them both in this their altred hew
- Became that noble impe of theirs that Indie did subdew,
- Whom al Achaia worshipped with temples builded new.
- All only Acrise, Abas sonne, (though of the selfesame stocke)
- Remaind, who out of Argos walles unkindly did him locke,
- And moved wilfull warre against his Godhead: thinking that
- There was not any race of Goddes, for he beleved not
- That Persey was the sonne of Jove: or that he was conceyved
- By Danae of golden shower through which shee was deceived.
- But yet ere long (such present force hath truth) he doth repent
- As well his great impietie against God Bacchus meant,
- As also that he did disdaine his Nephew for to knowe.
- But Bacchus now full gloriously himselfe in Heaven doth showe.
- And Persey bearing in his hand the monster Gorgons head,
- That famous spoyle which here and there with snakish haire was spread,
- Doth beat the ayre with wavyng wings. And as he overflew
- The Lybicke sandes, the droppes of bloud that from the head did sew
- Of Gorgon being new cut off, upon the ground did fal.
- Which taking them (and as it were conceyving therwithall)
- Engendred sundrie Snakes and wormes: by meanes wherof that clyme
- Did swarme with Serpents ever since, even to this present tyme.
- From thence he lyke a watrie cloud was caried with the weather,
- Through all the heaven, now here, now there as light as any feather.
- And from aloft he viewes the earth that underneath doth lie,
- And swiftly over all the worlde doth in conclusion flie,
- Three times the chilling Beares, three times the Crabbes fel cleas he saw:
- Oft times to Weast, oftimes to East did drive him many a flaw.
- Now at such time as unto rest the sonne began to drawe,
- Bicause he did not thinke it good to be abroad all night,
- Within King Atlas western Realme he ceased from his flight,
- Requesting that a little space of rest enjoy he might,
- Untill such tyme as Lucifer should bring the morning gray,
- And morning bring the lightsome Sunne that guides the cherefull day.
- This Atlas, Japets Nephewe, was a man that did excell
- In stature everie other wight that in the worlde did dwell.
- The utmost coast of all the earth and all that Sea wherein
- The tyred steedes and wearied Wayne of Phoebus dived bin,
- Were in subjection to this King. A thousande flockes of sheepe,
- A thousand heirdes of Rother beastes he in his fields did keepe:
- And not a neighbor did anoy his ground by dwelling nie.
- To him the wandring Persey thus his language did applie:
- If high renowne of royall race thy noble heart may move,
- I am the sonne of Jove himselfe: or if thou more approve
- The valiant deedes and hault exploytes, thou shalt perceive in mee
- Such doings as deserve with prayse extolled for to bee.
- I pray thee of thy courtesie receive mee as thy guest,
- And let mee only for this night within thy palace rest.
- King Atlas called straight to minde an auncient prophesie
- Made by Parnassian Themys, which this sentence did implie:
- The time shall one day, Atlas, come in which thy golden tree
- Shall of hir fayre and precious fruite dispoyld and robbed bee.
- And he shall be the sonne of Jove that shall enjoy the pray.
- For feare hereof he did enclose his Orchard everie way
- With mightie hilles, and put an ougly Dragon in the same
- To keepe it. Further he forbad that any straunger came
- Within his Realme, and to this knight he sayde presumtuouslie:
- Avoyd my land, onlesse thou wilt by utter perill trie
- That all thy glorious actes whereof thou doest so loudly lie
- And Jove thy father be too farre to helpe thee at thy neede.
- To these his wordes he added force, and went about in deede
- To drive him out by strength of hand. To speake was losse of winde
- For neyther could intreating faire nor stoutnesse tourne his minde.
- Well then (quoth Persey) sith thou doest mine honour set so light,
- Take here a present: and with that he turnes away his sight,
- And from his left side drewe mee out Medusas lothly head.
- As huge and big as Atlas was he tourned in that stead
- Into a mountaine: into trees his beard and locks did passe:
- His hands and shoulders made the ridge: that part which lately was
- His head, became the highest top of all the hill: his bones
- Were turnd to stones: and therewithall he grew mee all at once
- Beyond all measure up in heighth (for so God thought it best)
- So farre that Heaven with all the starres did on his shoulders rest.
- In endlesse prison by that time had Aeolus lockt the wind
- And now the cheerely morning starre that putteth folke in mind
- To rise about their daylie worke shone brightly in the skie.
- Then Persey unto both his feete did streight his feathers tie
- And girt his Woodknife to his side, and from the earth did stie.
- And leaving nations nomberlesse beneath him everie way
- At last upon King Cepheyes fields in Aethiop did he stay.
- Where cleane against all right and law by Joves commaundement
- Andromad for hir mothers tongue did suffer punishment.
- Whome to a rocke by both the armes when fastned hee had seene,
- He would have thought of Marble stone shee had some image beene,
- But that hir tresses to and fro the whisking winde did blowe,
- And trickling teares warme from hir eyes adowne hir cheeks did flow,
- Unwares hereat gan secret sparkes within his breast to glow.
- His wits were straught at sight thereof and ravisht in such wise,
- That how to hover with his wings he scarsly could devise.
- As soone as he had stayd himselfe: O Ladie faire (quoth hee)
- Not worthie of such bands as these, but such wherewith we see
- Togither knit in lawfull bed the earnest lovers bee,
- I pray thee tell mee what thy selfe and what this lande is named
- And wherefore thou dost weare these Chains. The Ladie ill ashamed
- Was at the sodaine striken domb: and lyke a fearfull maid
- Shee durst not speake unto a man. Had not hir handes beene staid
- She would have hid hir bashfull face. Howbeit as she might
- With great abundance of hir teares shee stopped up hir sight
- But when that Persey oftentimes was earnestly in hand
- To learne this matter, for bicause shee would not seeme to stand
- In stubborne silence of hir faultes, shee tolde him what the land
- And what she hight: and how hir mother for hir beauties sake
- Through pride did unadvisedly too much upon hir take.
- And ere shee full had made an ende, the water gan to rore:
- An ougly monster from the deepe was making to the shore
- Which bare the Sea before his breast. The Virgin shrieked out.
- Hir father and hir mother both stood mourning thereabout,
- In wretched ease both twaine, but not so wretched as the maid
- Who wrongly for hir mothers fault the bitter raunsome paid.
- They brought not with them any help: but (as the time and cace
- Requird) they wept and wrang their hands, and streightly did embrace
- Hir bodie fastened to the rock. Then Persey them bespake,
- And sayde: The time may serve too long this sorrow for to make:
- But time of helpe must eyther now or never else be take.
- Now if I, Persey, sonne of hir whome in hir fathers towre
- The mightie Jove begat with childe in shape of golden showre,
- Who cut off ougly Gorgons head bespred with snakish heare,
- And in the ayre durst trust these winges my body for to beare,
- perchaunce should save your daughters life, I think ye should as then
- Accept mee for your sonne in lawe before all other men.
- To these great thewes (by the help of God) I purpose for to adde
- A just desert in helping hir that is so hard bestadde.
- I covenaunt with you by my force and manhod for to save hir,
- Conditionly that to my wife in recompence I have hir.
- Hir parents tooke his offer streight: for who would sticke thereat?
- And praid him faire, and promisde him that for performing that
- They would endow him with the ryght of al their Realme beeside.
- Like as a Gally with hir nose doth cut the waters wide,
- Enforced by the sweating armes of Rowers wyth the tide
- Even so the monster with his brest did beare the waves aside,
- And was now come as neere the rocke as well a man myght fling
- Amid the pure and vacant aire a pellet from a sling.
- When on the sodaine Persey pusht his foote against the ground,
- And stied upward to the clouds his shadow did rebound
- Upon the sea: the beast ran fierce upon the passing shade.
- And as an Egle when he sees a Dragon in a glade
- Lie beaking of his blewish backe against the sunnie rayes,
- Doth seize upon him unbeware, and with his talants layes
- Sure holde upon his scalie necke lest writhing back his head
- His cruell teeth might doe him harme: so Persey in that stead
- Discending downe the ayre amaine with all his force and might
- Did seize upon the monsters backe: and underneath the right
- Finne hard unto the verie hilt his hooked sworde did smight.
- The monster being wounded sore did sometime leape aloft,
- And sometime under water dive, bestirring him full oft
- As doth a chaufed Boare beset with barking Dogges about.
- But Persey with his lightsome wings still keeping him without
- The monsters reach, with hooked sword doth sometime hew his back
- Where as the hollow scales give way: and sometime he doth hacke
- The ribbes on both his maled sides: and sometime he doth wound
- His spindle tayle where into fish it growes most smal and round.
- The Whale at Persey from his mouth such waves of water cast,
- Bemixed with the purple bloud, that all bedreint at last
- His feathers verie heavie were: and doubting any more
- To trust his wings now waxing wet, he straight began to sore
- Up to a rocke which in the calme above the water stood:
- But in the tempest evermore was hidden with the flood.
- And leaning thereunto and with his left hand holding just
- The top thereof a dozen times his weapon he did thrust
- Among his guttes. The joyfull noyse and clapping of their hands
- The which were made for loosening of Andromad from hir bands,
- Filde all the coast and heaven it selfe. The parents of the Maide
- Cassiope and Cepheus were glad and well appayde:
- And calling him their sonne in law confessed him to bee
- The helpe and savegarde of their house. Andromade the fee
- And cause of Perseys enterprise from bondes now beyng free,
- He washed his victorious hands. And lest the Snakie heade
- With lying on the gravell hard should catch some harme, he spred
- Soft leaves and certaine tender twigs that in the water grew,
- And laid Medusas head thereon: the twigs yet being new
- And quicke and full of juicie pith full lightly to them drew
- The nature of this monstrous head. For both the leafe and bough
- Full straungely at the touch thereof became both hard and tough.
- The Sea nymphes tride this wondrous fact in divers other roddes
- And were full glad to see the chaunge, bicause there was no oddes
- Of leaves or twigs or of the seedes new shaken from the coddes.
- For still like nature ever since is in our Corall founde:
- That looke how soone it toucheth Ayre it waxeth hard and sounde,
- And that which under water was a sticke, above is stone.
- Three altars to as many Gods he makes of Turfe anon:
- Upon the left hand Mercuries: Minervas on the right:
- And in the middle Jupiters: to Pallas he did dight
- A Cow: a Calfe to Mercurie: a Bull to royall Jove.
- Forthwith he tooke Andromade the price for which he strove
- Endowed with hir fathers Realme. For now the God of Love
- And Hymen unto mariage his minde in hast did move.
- Great fires were made of sweete perfumes, and curious garlandes hung
- About the house, which every where of mirthful musicke rung
- The gladsome signe of merie mindes. The Pallace gates were set
- Wide open. None from comming in were by the Porters let.
- All Noblemen and Gentlemen that were of any port
- To this same great and royall feast of Cephey did resort.
- When having taken their repast as well of meate as wine
- Their hearts began to pleasant mirth by leysure to encline,
- The valiant Persey of the folke and facions of the land
- Began to be inquisitive. One Lincide out of hand
- The rites and manners of the folke did doe him t'understand.
- Which done he sayd: O worthie knight I pray thee tell us by
- What force or wile thou gotst the head with haires of Adders slie.
- Then Persey tolde how underneath colde Atlas lay a plaine
- So fenced in on every side with mountaines high, that vaine
- Were any force to win the same. In entrance of the which
- Two daughters of King Phorcis dwelt whose chaunce and hap was such
- That one eye served both their turnes: whereof by wilie slight
- And stealth in putting forth his hand he did bereve them quight,
- As they from t'one to tother were delivering of the same.
- From whence by long blind crooked wayes unhandsomly he came
- Through gastly groves by ragged cliffes unto the drerie place
- Whereas the Gorgons dwelt: and there he saw (a wretched case)
- The shapes as well of men as beasts lie scattered everie where
- In open fields and common wayes, the which transformed were
- From living things to stones at sight of foule Medusas heare,
- But yet that he through brightnesse of his monstrous brazen shield
- The which he in his left hand bare, Medusas face beheld.
- And while that in a sound dead sleepe were all hir Snakes and she,
- He softly pared off hir head: and how that he did see
- Swift Pegasus the winged horse and eke his brother grow
- Out of their mothers new shed bloud. Moreover he did show
- A long discourse of all his happes and not so long as trew:
- As namely of what Seas and landes the coasts he overflew,
- And eke what starres with stying wings he in the while did vew.
- But yet his tale was at an ende ere any lookt therefore.
- Upon occasion by and by of wordes reherst before
- There was a certaine noble man demaunded him wherefore
- Shee only of the sisters three haire mixt with Adders bore.
- Sir (aunswerde Persey) sith you aske a matter worth report
- I graunt to tell you your demaunde. She both in comly port
- And beautie, every other wight surmounted in such sort,
- That many suters unto hir did earnestly resort.
- And though that whole from top to toe most bewtifull she were,
- In all hir bodie was no part more goodly than hir heare.
- I know some parties yet alive, that say they did hir see.
- It is reported how she should abusde by Neptune bee
- In Pallas Church: from which fowle facte Joves daughter turnde hir eye,
- And with hir Target hid hir face from such a villanie.
- And lest it should unpunisht be, she turnde hir seemely heare
- To lothly Snakes: the which (the more to put hir foes in feare)
- Before hir brest continually she in her shield doth beare.