Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. The XV bookes of P. Ouidius Naso, entytuled Metamorphosis. Golding, Arthur, translator. London: W. Seres (printer), 1567.
- The krinkes of certaine Prophesies surmounting farre above
- The reach of auncient wits to read, the Brookenymphes did expound:
- And mindlesse of hir owne darke doubts Dame Themis being found,
- Was as a rechelesse Prophetisse throwne flat against the ground.
- For which presumptuous deede of theirs she tooke just punishment.
- To Thebes in Baeotia streight a cruell beast she sent,
- Which wrought the bane of many a Wight. The countryfolk did feed
- Him with their cattell and themselves, untill (as was agreed)
- That all we youthfull Gentlemen that dwelled there about
- Assembling pitcht our corded toyles the champion fields throughout.
- But Net ne toyle was none so hie that could his wightnesse stop,
- He mounted over at his ease the highest of the top.
- Then everie man let slip their Grewnds, but he them all outstript
- And even as nimbly as a birde in daliance from them whipt.
- Then all the field desired me to let my Laelaps go:
- (The Grewnd that Procris unto me did give was named so)
- Who strugling for to wrest his necke already from the band
- Did stretch his collar. Scarsly had we let him off of hand
- But that where Laelaps was become we could not understand.
- The print remained of his feete upon the parched sand,
- But he was clearly out of sight. Was never Dart I trow,
- Nor Pellet from enforced Sling, nor shaft from Cretish bow,
- That flew more swift than he did runne. There was not farre fro thence
- About the middle of the Laund a rising ground, from whence
- A man might overlooke the fieldes. I gate me to the knap
- Of this same hill, and there beheld of this straunge course the hap
- In which the beast seemes one while caught, and ere a man would think,
- Doth quickly give the Grewnd the slip, and from his bighting shrink:
- And like a wilie Foxe he runnes not forth directly out,
- Nor makes a windlasse over all the champion fieldes about,
- But doubling and indenting still avoydes his enmies lips,
- And turning short, as swift about as spinning wheele he whips,
- To disapoint the snatch. The Grewnd pursuing at an inch
- Doth cote him, never losing ground: but likely still to pinch
- Is at the sodaine shifted off. Continually he snatches
- In vaine: for nothing in his mouth save only Aire he latches.
- Then thought I for to trie what helpe my Dart at neede could show.
- Which as I charged in my hand by levell aime to throw,
- And set my fingars to the thongs, I lifting from bylow
- Mine eies, did looke right forth againe, and straight amids the field
- (A wondrous thing) two Images of Marble I beheld:
- Of which ye would have thought the t'one had fled on still apace
- And that with open barking mouth the tother did him chase.
- In faith it was the will of God (at least if any Goddes
- Had care of them) that in their pace there should be found none oddes.
- Thus farre: and then he held his peace. But tell us ere we part
- (Quoth Phocus) what offence or fault committed hath your Dart?
- His Darts offence he thus declarde: My Lorde, the ground of all
- My grief was joy. Those joyes of mine remember first I shall.
- It doth me good even yet to thinke upon that blissfull time
- ( meane the fresh and lustie yeares of pleasant youthfull Prime)
- When I a happie man enjoyde so faire and good a wife,
- And she with such a loving make did lead a happie life.
- The care was like of both of us, the mutuall love all one.
- She would not to have line with Jove my presence have forgone.
- Ne was there any Wight that could of me have wonne the love,
- No though Dame Venus had hir selfe descended from above.
- The glowing brands of love did burne in both our brests alike.
- Such time as first with crased beames the Sunne is wont to strike
- The tops of Towres and mountaines high, according to the wont
- Of youthfull men, in woodie Parkes I went abrode to hunt.
- But neither horse nor Hounds to make pursuit upon the scent.
- Nor Servingman, nor knottie toyle before or after went,
- For I was safe with this same Dart. When wearie waxt mine arme
- With striking Deere, and that the day did make me somewhat warme,
- Withdrawing for to coole my selfe I sought among the shades
- For Aire that from the valleyes colde came breathing in at glades.
- The more excessive was my heate the more for Aire I sought.
- I waited for the gentle Aire: the Aire was that that brought
- Refreshing to my wearie limmes. And (well I bear't in thought)
- Come Aire I wonted was to sing, come ease the paine of me
- Within my bosom lodge thy selfe most welcome unto me,
- And as thou heretofore art wont abate my burning heate.
- By chaunce (such was my destinie) proceeding to repeate
- Mo words of daliance like to these, I used for to say
- Great pleasure doe I take in thee: for thou from day to day
- Doste both refresh and nourish me. Thou makest me delight
- In woods and solitarie grounds. Now would to God I might
- Receive continuall at my mouth this pleasant breath of thine.
- Some man (I wote not who) did heare these doubtfull words of mine,
- And taking them amisse supposde that this same name of Aire
- The which I callde so oft upon, had bene some Ladie faire:
- He thought that I had lovde some Nymph. And thereupon streight way
- He runnes me like a Harebrainde blab to Procris, to bewray
- This fault as he surmised it: and there with lavish tung
- Reported all the wanton words that he had heard me sung.
- A thing of light beliefe is love. She (as I since have harde)
- For sodeine sorrow swounded downe: and when long afterwarde
- She came againe unto hir selfe, she said she was accurst
- And borne to cruell destinie: and me she blamed wurst
- For breaking faith: and freating at a vaine surmised shame
- She dreaded that which nothing was: she fearde a headlesse name.
- She wist not what to say or thinke. The wretch did greatly feare
- Deceit: yet could she not beleve the tales that talked were.
- Onlesse she saw hir husbands fault apparant to hir eie,
- She thought she would not him condemne of any villanie.
- Next day as soone as Morning light had driven the night away,
- I went abrode to hunt againe: and speeding, as I lay
- Upon the grasse, I said: Come, Aire, and ease my painfull heate.
- And on the sodaine as I spake there seemed for to beate
- A certaine sighing in mine eares of what I could not gesse.
- But ceasing not for that I still proceeded nathelesse:
- And said, O come, most pleasant Aire. With that I heard a sound
- Of russling softly in the leaves that lay upon the ground.
- And thinking it had bene some beast I threw my flying Dart.
- It was my wife. Who being now sore wounded at the hart,
- Cride out, Alas. As soone as I perceyved by the shrieke
- It was my faithfull spouse, I ran me to the voiceward lieke
- A madman that had lost his wits. There found I hir halfe dead,
- Hir scattred garments staining in the bloud that she had bled,
- And (wretched creature as I am) yet drawing from the wound
- The gift that she hir selfe had given. Then softly from the ground
- I lifted up that bodie of hirs of which I was more chare
- Than of mine owne, and from hir brest hir clothes in hast I tare.
- And binding up hir cruell wound I strived for to stay
- The bloud, and prayd she would not thus by passing so away
- Forsake me as a murtherer: she waxing weake at length
- And drawing to hir death apace, enforced all hir strength
- To utter these few wordes at last: I pray thee humbly by
- Our bond of wedlocke, by the Gods as well above the Skie
- As those to whome I now must passe, as ever I have ought
- Deserved well by thee, and by the Love which having brought
- Me to my death doth even in death unfaded still remaine,
- To nestle in thy bed and mine let never Aire obtaine.
- This sed, she held hir peace, and I perceyved by the same
- And tolde hir also how she was beguiled in the name.
- But what avayled telling then? she quoathde: and with hir bloud
- Hir little strength did fade. Howbeit as long as that she coud
- See ought, she stared in my face and gasping still on me
- Even in my mouth she breathed forth hir wretched ghost. But she
- Did seeme with better cheare to die for that hir conscience was
- Discharged quight and cleare of doubtes. Now in conclusion as
- Duke Cephal weeping told this tale to Phocus and the rest
- Whose eyes were also moyst with teares to heare the pitious gest,
- Behold King Aeacus and with him his eldest sonnes both twaine
- Did enter in and after them there followed in a traine
- Of well appointed men of warre new levied: which the King
- Delivered unto Cephalus to Athens towne to bring.
- The day starre now beginning to disclose the Morning bright
- And for to dense the droupie Skie from darkenesse of the night,
- The Easterne wind went downe and flakes of foggie Clouds gan show,
- And from the South a merrie gale on Cephals sayles did blow.
- The which did hold so fresh and large, that he and all his men
- Before that he was looked for arrived safe agen
- In wished Haven. In that while King Minos with his fleete
- Did waste the cost of Megara. And first he thought it meete
- To make a triall of the force and courage of his men
- Against the towne Alcathoe where Nisus reigned then.
- Among whose honorable haire that was of colour gray,
- One scarlet haire did grow upon his crowne, whereon the stay
- Of all his Kingdome did depende. Sixe times did Phoebe fill
- Hir homes with borrowed light, and yet the warre hung wavering still
- In fickle fortunes doubtfull scaales: and long with fleeting wings
- Betwene them both flew victorie. A Turret of the Kings
- Stood hard adjoyning to the Wall which being touched rings,
- For Phoebus (so men say) did lay his golden Violl there,
- And so the stones the sound thereof did ever after beare.
- King Nisus daughter oftentimes resorted to this Wall
- And strake it with a little stone to raise the sound withall,
- In time of peace. And in the warre she many a time and oft
- Behelde the sturdie stormes of Mars from that same place aloft.
- And by continuance of the siege the Captaines names she knew,
- Their armes, horse, armor and aray in everie band and crew.
- Bit specially above the rest she noted Minos face.
- She knew inough and more than was inough as stoode the case.
- For were it that he hid his head in Helme with fethered crest,
- To hir opinion in his Helme he stayned all the rest.
- Or were it that he tooke in hand of steele his target bright,
- She thought in weelding of his shielde he was a comly Knight.
- Or were it that he raisde his arme to throw the piercing Dart,
- The Ladie did commend his force and manhode joynde with Art.
- Or drew he with his arrow nockt his bended Bow in hand
- She sware that so in all respectes was Phoebus wont to stand.
- But when he shewde his visage bare, his Helmet laid aside,
- And on a Milke white Steede brave trapt, in Purple Robe did ride,
- She scarce was Mistresse of hir selfe, hir wits were almost straught.
- A happie Dart she thought it was that he in fingars caught,
- And happie called she those reynes that he in hand had raught.
- And if she might have had hir will, she could have founde in hart,
- Among the enmies to have gone. She could have found in hart,
- From downe the highest Turret there hir bodie to have throwne,
- Among the thickest of the Tents of Gnossus to have flowne,
- Or for to ope the brazen gates and let the enmie in,
- Or whatsoever else she thought might Minos favor win.
- And as she sate beholding still the King of Candies tent,
- She said: I doubt me whether that I rather may lament
- Or of this wofull warre be glad. It grieves me at the hart
- That thou O Minos unto me thy Lover enmie art.
- But had not this same warfare bene, I never had him knowne.
- Yet might he leave this cruell warre, and take me as his owne.
- A wife, a feere, a pledge for peace he might receive of me.
- O flowre of beautie, O thou Prince most pearlesse: if that she
- That bare thee in hir wombe were like in beautie unto thee,
- A right good cause had Jove on hir enamored for to bee.
- Oh happie were I if with wings I through the Aire might glide
- And safely to King Minos Tent from this same Turret slide.
- Then would I utter who I am, and how the firie flame
- Of Cupid burned in my brest, desiring him to name
- What dowrie he would aske with me in loan of his love,
- Save only of my Fathers Realme no question he should move.
- For rather than by traitrous meanes my purpose should take place,
- Adue, desire of hoped Love. Yet oftentimes such grace
- Hath from the gentle Conqueror proceeded erst, that they
- Which tooke the foyle have found the same their profit and their stay.
- Assuredly the warre is just that Minos takes in hand,
- As in revengement of his sonne late murthered in this land.
- And as his quarrell seemeth just, even so it cannot faile,
- But rightfull warre against the wrong must (I beleve) prevaile.
- Now if this Citie in the ende must needes be taken, why
- Should his owne sworde and not my Love be meanes to win it by?
- It were yet better he should speede by gentle meanes without
- The slaughter of his people, yea and (as it may fall out)
- With spending of his owne bloud too. For sure I have a care
- O Minos lest some Souldier wound thee ere he be aware.
- For who is he in all the world that hath so hard a hart
- That wittingly against thy head would aime his cruell Dart?
- I like well this devise, and on this purpose will I stand:
- To yeelde my selfe endowed with this Citie to the hand
- Of Minos: and in doing so to bring this warre to ende.
- But smally it availeth me the matter to intende.
- The gates and yssues of this towne are kept with watch and warde,
- And of the Keyes continually my Father hath the garde.
- My Father only is the man of whome I stand in dreede,
- My Father only hindreth me of my desired speede.
- Would God that I were Fatherlesse. Tush, everie Wight may bee
- A God as in their owne behalfe, and if their hearts be free
- From fearefulnesse. For fortune works against the fond desire
- Of such as through faint heartednesse attempt not to aspire.
- Some other feeling in hir heart such flames of Cupids fire
- Already would have put in proofe some practise to destroy
- What thing so ever of hir Love the furtherance might anoy
- And why should any woman have a bolder heart than I?
- Through fire and sword I boldly durst adventure for to flie.
- And yet in this behalfe at all there needes no sword nor fire,
- There needeth but my fathers haire to accomplish my desire. I
- That Purple haire of his to me more precious were than golde:
- That Purple haire of his would make me blest a thousand folde:
- That haire would compasse my desire and set my heart at rest.
- Night (chiefest Nurce of thoughts to such as are with care opprest)
- Approched while she spake these words, and darknesse did encrease
- Hir boldnesse. At such time as folke are wont to finde release
- Of cares that all the day before were working in their heds,
- By sleepe which falleth first of all upon them in their beds,
- Hir fathers chamber secretly she entered: where (alasse
- That ever Maiden should so farre the bounds of Nature passe)
- She robde hir Father of the haire upon the which the fate
- Depended both of life and death and of his royall state.
- And joying in hir wicked prey, she beares it with hir so
- As if it were some lawfull spoyle acquired of the fo.
- And passing through a posterne gate she marched through the mid
- Of all hir enmies (such a trust she had in that she did)
- Untill she came before the King, whom troubled with the sight
- She thus bespake: Enforst, O King, by love against all right
- I Scylla, Nisus daughter, doe present unto thee heere
- My native soyle, my household Gods, and all that else is deere
- For this my gift none other thing in recompence I crave
- Than of thy person which I love, fruition for to have.
- And in assurance of my love receyve thou here of mee
- My fathers Purple haire: and thinke I give not unto thee
- A haire but even my fathers head. And as these words she spake,
- The cursed gift with wicked hand she profered him to take.
- But Minos did abhorre hir gift: and troubled in his minde
- With straungenesse of the heynous act so sore against hir kinde,
- He aunswerde: O thou slaunder of our age, the Gods expell
- Thee out of all this world of theirs and let thee no where dwell.
- Let rest on neither Sea nor Land be graunted unto thee.
- Assure thy selfe that as for me I never will agree
- That Candie, Joves owne foster place (as long as I there raigne),
- Shall unto such a monstruous Wight a Harbrow place remaine.
- This said, he like a righteous Judge among his vanquisht foes
- Set order under paine of death. Which done he willed those
- That served him to go aboorde and Anchors up to wey.
- When Scylla saw the Candian fleete aflote to go away,
- And that the Captaine yeelded not so good reward as shee
- Had for hir lewdnesse looked for: and when in fine she see
- That no entreatance could prevaile, then bursting out in ire
- With stretched hands and scattred haire, as furious as the fire
- She shraming cryed out aloud: And whither doste thou flie
- Rejecting me, the only meanes that thou hast conquerde by?
- O cankerde Churle preferde before my native soyle, preferd
- Before my father, whither flyste, O Carle of heart most hard?
- Whose conquest as it is my sinne, so doth it well deserve
- Reward of thee, for that my fault so well thy turne did serve.
- Doth neither thee the gift I gave, nor yet my faithfull love,
- Nor yet that all my hope on thee alonly rested, move?
- For whither shall I now resort forsaken thus of thee?
- To Megara the wretched soyle of my nativitie?
- Behold it lieth vanquished and troden under foote.
- But put the case it flourisht still: yet could it nothing boote.
- I have foreclosde it to my selfe through treason when I gave
- My fathers head to thee. Whereby my countriefolke I drave
- To hate me justly for my crime. And all the Realmes about
- My lewde example doe abhorre. Thus have I shet me out
- Of all the world that only Crete might take me in, which if
- Thou like a Churle denie, and cast me up without relief,
- The Ladie Europ surely was not mother unto thee:
- But one of Affricke Sirts where none but Serpents fostred bee,
- But even some cruell Tiger bred in Armen or in Inde,
- Or else the Gulfe Charybdis raisde with rage of Southerne winde.
- Thou wert not got by Jove: ne yet thy mother was beguilde
- In shape of Bull: of this thy birth the tale is false compilde.
- But rather some unwieldie Bull even altogither wilde
- That never lowed after Cow was out of doubt thy Sire.
- O father Nisus, put thou me to penance for my hire.
- Rejoyce thou in my punishment, thou towne by me betrayd.
- I have deserved (I confesse) most justly to be payd
- With death. But let some one of them that through my lewdnesse smart
- Destroy me, why doste thou that by my crime a gainer art,
- Commit like crime thy selfe? Admit this wicked act of me
- As to my land and Fatherward in deede most hainous be.
- Yet oughtest thou to take it as a friendship unto thee.
- But she was meete to be thy wife, that in a Cow of tree
- Could play the Harlot with a Bull, and in hir wombe could beare
- A Barne, in whome the shapes of man and beasts confounded were.
- How sayst thou, Carle? compell not these my words thine eares to glow?
- Or doe the windes that drive thy shyps, in vaine my sayings blow?
- In faith it is no wonder though thy wife Pasiphae
- Preferrde a Bull to thee, for thou more cruell wert than he.
- Now wo is me. To make more hast it standeth me in hand.
- The water sounds with Ores, and hales from me and from my land.
- In vaine thou striveth, O thou Churle, forgetfull quight of my
- Desertes: for even in spight of thee pursue thee still will I.
- Upon thy courbed Keele will I take holde: and hanging so
- Be drawen along the Sea with thee where ever thou do go.
- She scarce had said these words, but that she leaped on the wave
- And getting to the ships by force of strength that Love hir gave
- Upon the King of Candies Keele in spight of him she clave.
- Whome when hir father spide (for now he hovered in the aire,
- And being made a Hobby Hauke did soare between a paire
- Of nimble wings of yron Mayle) he soused downe amaine
- To seaze upon hir as she hung, and would have tome hir faine
- With bowing Beake. But she for feare did let the Caricke go:
- And as she was about to fall, the lightsome Aire did so
- Uphold hir that she could not touch the Sea as seemed tho.
- Anon all fethers she became, and forth away did flie
- Transformed to a pretie Bird that stieth to the Skie.
- And for bicause like clipped haire hir head doth beare a marke,
- The Greekes it Cyris call, and we doe name the same a Larke.
- As soone as Minos came aland in Crete, he by and by
- Performde his vowes to Jupiter in causing for to die
- A hundred Bulles for sacrifice. And then he did adorne
- His Pallace with the enmies spoyles by conquest wonne beforne.
- The slaunder of his house encreast: and now appeared more
- The mothers filthie whoredome by the monster that she bore
- Of double shape, an ugly thing. This shamefull infamie,
- This monster borne him by his wife he mindes by pollicie
- To put away, and in a house with many nookes and krinks
- From all mens sights and speach of folke to shet it up he thinks.
- Immediatly one Daedalus renowmed in that lande
- For fine devise and workmanship in building, went in hand
- To make it. He confounds his worke with sodaine stops and stayes,
- And with the great uncertaintie of sundrie winding wayes
- Leades in and out, and to and fro, at divers doores astray.
- And as with trickling streame the Brooke Maeander seemes to play
- In Phrygia, and with doubtfull race runnes counter to and fro,
- And meeting with himselfe doth looke if all his streame or no
- Come after, and retiring eft cleane backward to his spring
- And marching eft to open Sea as streight as any string,
- Indenteth with reversed streame: even so of winding wayes
- Unnumerable Daedalus within his worke convayes.
- Yea scarce himselfe could find the meanes to winde himselfe well out:
- So busie and so intricate the house was all about.
- Within this Maze did Minos shet the Monster that did beare
- The shape of man and Bull. And when he twise had fed him there
- With bloud of Atticke Princes sonnes that given for tribute were,
- The third time at the ninth yeares end the lot did chaunce to light
- On Theseus, King Aegaeus sonne: who like a valiant Knight
- Did overcome the Minotaur: and by the pollicie
- Of Minos eldest daughter (who had taught him for to tie
- A clew of Linnen at the doore to guide himselfe thereby)
- As busie as the turnings were, his way he out did finde,
- Which never man had done before. And streight he having winde,
- With Minos daughter sailde away to Dia: where (unkinde
- And cruell creature that he was) he left hir post alone
- Upon the shore. Thus desolate and making dolefull mone
- God Bacchus did both comfort hir and take hir to his bed.
- And with an everlasting starre the more hir fame to spred,
- He tooke the Chaplet from hir head, and up to Heaven it threw.
- The Chaplet thirled through the Aire: and as it gliding flew,
- The precious stones were turnd to starres which biased cleare and bright,
- And tooke their place (continuing like a Chaplet still to sight)
- Amid betweene the Kneeler Downe and him that gripes the Snake.
- Now in this while gan Daedalus a wearinesse to take
- Of living like a banisht man and prisoner such a time
- In Crete, and longed in his heart to see his native Clime.
- But Seas enclosed him as if he had in prison be.
- Then thought he: though both Sea and Land King Minos stop fro me,
- I am assurde he cannot stop the Aire and open Skie.
- To make my passage that way then my cunning will I trie.
- Although that Minos like a Lord held all the world beside:
- Yet doth the Aire from Minos yoke for all men free abide.
- This sed: to uncoth Arts he bent the force of all his wits
- To alter natures course by craft. And orderly he knits
- A rowe of fethers one by one, beginning with the short,
- And overmatching still eche quill with one of longer sort,
- That on the shoring of a hill a man would thinke them grow.
- Even so the countrie Organpipes of Oten reedes ir row
- Ech higher than another rise. Then fastned he with Flax
- The middle quilles, and joyned in the lowest sort with Wax.
- And when he thus had finisht them, a little he them bent
- In compasse, that the verie Birdes they full might represent.
- There stoode me by him Icarus, his sonne, a pretie Lad.
- Who knowing not that he in handes his owne destruction had,
- With smiling mouth did one while blow the fethers to and fro
- Which in the Aire on wings of Birds did flask not long ago:
- And with his thumbes another while he chafes the yelow Wax
- And lets his fathers wondrous worke with childish toyes and knacks.
- As soon as that the worke was done, the workman by and by
- Did peyse his bodie on his wings, and in the Aire on hie
- Hung wavering: and did teach his sonne how he should also flie.
- I warne thee (quoth he), Icarus, a middle race to keepe.
- For if thou hold too low a gate, the dankenesse of the deepe
- Will overlade thy wings with wet. And if thou mount too hie,
- The Sunne will sindge them. Therfore see betweene them both thou flie.
- I bid thee not behold the Starre Bootes in the Skie.
- Nor looke upon the bigger Beare to make thy course thereby,
- Nor yet on Orions naked sword. But ever have an eie
- To keepe the race that I doe keepe, and I will guide thee right.
- In giving counsell to his sonne to order well his flight,
- He fastned to his shoulders twaine a paire of uncoth wings.
- And as he was in doing it and warning him of things,
- His aged cheekes were wet, his hands did quake, in fine he gave
- His sonne a kisse the last that he alive should ever have.
- And then he mounting up aloft before him tooke his way
- Right fearfull for his followers sake: as is the Bird the day
- That first she tolleth from hir nest among the braunches hie
- Hir tender yong ones in the Aire to teach them for to flie.
- So heartens he his little sonne to follow teaching him
- A hurtfull Art. His owne two wings he waveth verie trim,
- And looketh backward still upon his sonnes. The fishermen
- Then standing angling by the Sea, and shepeherdes leaning then
- On sheepehookes, and the Ploughmen on the handles of their Plough,
- Beholding them, amazed were: and thought that they that through
- The Aire could flie were Gods. And now did on their left side stand
- The Iles of Paros and of Dele and Samos, Junos land:
- And on their right, Lebinthos and the faire Calydna fraught
- With store of honie: when the Boy a frolicke courage caught
- To flie at randon. Whereupon forsaking quight his guide,
- Of fond desire to flie to Heaven, above his boundes he stide.
- And there the nerenesse of the Sunne which burnd more hote aloft,
- Did make the Wax (with which his wings were glewed) lithe and soft.
- As soone as that the Wax was molt, his naked armes he shakes,
- And wanting wherewithall to wave no helpe of Aire he takes.
- But calling on his father loud he drowned in the wave:
- And by this chaunce of his those Seas his name for ever have.
- His wretched Father (but as then no father) cride in feare:
- O Icarus, O Icarus, where art thou? tell me where
- That I may finde thee, Icarus. He saw the fethers swim
- Upon the waves, and curst his Art that so had spighted him.
- At last he tooke his bodie up and laid it in a grave,
- And to the Ile the name of him then buried in it gave.
- And as he of his wretched sonne the corse in ground did hide,
- The cackling Partrich from a thicke and leavie thorne him spide,
- And clapping with his wings for joy aloud to call began.
- There was of that same kinde of Birde no mo but he as than.
- In times forepast had none bene seene. It was but late anew
- Since he was made a bird: and that thou, Daedalus, mayst rew:
- For whyle the world doth last thy shame shall thereupon ensew.
- For why thy sister, ignorant of that which after hapt,
- Did put him to thee to be taught full twelve yeares old and apt
- To take instruction. He did marke the middle bone that goes
- Through fishes, and according to the paterne tane of those
- He filed teeth upon a piece of yron one by one
- And so devised first the Saw where erst was never none.
- Moreover he two yron shankes so joynde in one round head,
- That opening an indifferent space, the one point downe shall tread,
- And tother draw a circle round. The finding of these things,
- The spightfull heart of Daedalus with such a m lice stings,
- That headlong from the holy towre of Pallas downe he thrue
- His Nephew, feyning him to fall by chaunce, which was not true.
- But Pallas (who doth favour wits) did stay him in his fall
- And chaunging him into a Bird did clad him over all
- With fethers soft amid the Aire. The quicknesse of his wit
- (Which erst was swift) did shed it selfe among his wings and feete.
- And as he Partrich hight before, so hights he Partrich still.
- Yet mounteth not this Bird aloft ne seemes to have a will
- To build hir nest in tops of trees among the boughes on hie
- But flecketh nere the ground and layes hir egges in hedges drie.
- And forbicause hir former fall she ay in minde doth beare,
- She ever since all lofty things doth warely shun for feare.
- And now forwearied Daedalus alighted in the land
- Within the which the burning hilles of firie Aetna stand.
- To save whose life King Cocalus did weapon take in hand,
- For which men thought him merciful. And now with high renowne
- Had Theseus ceast the wofull pay of tribute in the towne
- Of Athens. Temples decked were with garlands every where,
- And supplications made to Jove and warlicke Pallas were,
- And all the other Gods, to whome more honor for to show,
- Gifts, blud of beasts, and frankincense the people did bestow
- As in performance of their vowes. The right redoubted name
- Of Theseus through the lande of Greece was spred by flying fame.
- And now the folke that in the land of rich Achaia dwelt,
- Praid him of succor in the harmes and perils that they felt.
- Although the land of Calydon had then Meleager:
- Yet was it faine in humble wise to Theseus to prefer
- A supplication for the aide of him. The cause wherfore
- They made such humble suit to him was this. There was a Bore
- The which Diana for to wreake hir wrath conceyvde before
- Had thither as hir servant sent the countrie for to waast.
- For men report that Oenie when he had in storehouse plaast
- The full encrease of former yeare, to Ceres did assigne
- The firstlings of his corne and fruits: to Bacchus, of the Wine:
- And unto Pallas Olife oyle. This honoring of the Gods
- Of graine and fruits who put their help to toyling in the clods,
- Ambitiously to all, even those that dwell in heaven did clime.
- Dianas Altars (as it hapt) alonly at that time
- Without reward of Frankincense were overskipt (they say).
- Even Gods are subject unto wrath. He shall not scape away
- Unpunisht, though unworshipped he passed me wyth spight:
- He shall not make his vaunt he scapt me unrevenged quight,
- Quoth Phoebe. And anon she sent a Bore to Oenies ground
- Of such a hugenesse as no Bull could ever yet be found,
- In Epyre: but in Sicilie are Bulles much lesse than hee.
- His eies did glister blud and fire: right dreadfull was to see
- His brawned necke, right dredfull was his haire which grew as thicke
- With pricking points as one of them could well by other sticke.
- And like a front of armed Pikes set close in battell ray
- The sturdie bristles on his back stoode staring up alway.
- The scalding fome with gnashing hoarse which he did cast aside,
- Upon his large and brawned shield did white as Curdes abide.
- Among the greatest Oliphants in all the land of Inde,
- A greater tush than had this Boare, ye shall not lightly finde.
- Such lightning flashed from his chappes, as seared up the grasse.
- Now trampled he the spindling come to ground where he did passe,
- Now ramping up their riped hope he made the Plowmen weepe.
- And chankt the kernell in the eare. In vaine their floores they sweepe:
- In vaine their Barnes for Harvest long, the likely store they keepe.
- The spreaded Vines with clustred Grapes to ground he rudely sent,
- And full of Berries loden boughes from Olife trees he rent.
- On cattell also did he rage. The shepeherd nor his dog,
- Nor yet the Bulles could save the herdes from outrage of this Hog.
- The folke themselves were faine to flie. And yet they thought them not
- In safetie when they had themselves within the Citie got.
- Untill their Prince Meleager, and with their Prince a knot
- Of Lords and lustie gentlemen of hand and courage stout,
- With chosen fellowes for the nonce of all the Lands about,
- Inflamed were to win renowne. The chiefe that thither came
- Were both the twinnes of Tyndarus of great renowne and fame,
- The one in all activitie of manhode, strength and force,
- The other for his cunning skill in handling of a horse.
- And Jason he that first of all the Gallie did invent:
- And Theseus with Pirithous betwene which two there went
- A happie leage of amitie: And two of Thesties race:
- And Lynce, the sonne of Apharie and Idas, swift of pace.
- And fierce Leucyppus and the brave Acastus with his Dart
- In handling of the which he had the perfect skill and Art.
- And Caeny who by birth a wench, the shape of man had wonne
- And Drias and Hippothous: and Phoenix eke the sonne
- Of olde Amyntor: and a paire of Actors ympes: and Phyle
- Who came from Elis. Telamon was also there that while:
- And so was also Peleus, the great Achilles Sire:
- And Pherets sonne: and Iolay, the Thebane who with fire
- Helpt Hercules the monstruous heades of Hydra off to seare.
- The lively Lad Eurytion and Echion who did beare
- The pricke and prise for footemanship, were present also there.
- And Lelex of Narytium too. And Panopie beside:
- And Hyle: and cruell Hippasus: and Naestor who that tide
- Was in the Prime of lustie youth: moreover thither went
- Three children of Hippocoon from old Amicle sent.
- And he that of Penelope the fathrinlaw became.
- And eke the sonne of Parrhasus, Ancaeus cald by name.
- There was the sonne of Ampycus of great forecasting wit:
- And Oeclies sonne who of his wife was unbetrayed yit.
- And from the Citie Tegea there came the Paragone
- Of Lycey forrest, Atalant, a goodly Ladie, one
- Of Schoenyes daughters, then a Maide. The garment she did weare
- A brayded button fastned at hir gorget. All hir heare
- Untrimmed in one only knot was trussed. From hir left
- Side hanging on hir shoulder was an Ivorie quiver deft:
- Which being full of arrowes, made a clattring as she went.
- And in hir right hand she did beare a Bow already bent.
- Hir furniture was such as this. Hir countnance and hir grace
- Was such as in a Boy might well be cald a Wenches face,
- And in a Wench be cald a Boyes. The Prince of Calydon
- No sooner cast his eie on hir, but being caught anon
- In love, he wisht hir to his wife. But unto this desire
- God Cupid gave not his consent. The secret flames of fire
- He haling inward still did say: O happy man is he
- Whom this same Ladie shall vouchsave hir Husband for to be.
- The shortnesse of the time and shame would give him leave to say
- No more: a worke of greater weight did draw him then away.
- A wood thick growen with trees which stoode unfelled to that day
- Beginning from a plaine, had thence a large prospect throughout
- The falling grounds that every way did muster round about.
- As soone as that the men came there, some pitched up the toyles,
- Some tooke the couples from the Dogs, and some pursude the foyles
- In places where the Swine had tract: desiring for to spie
- Their owne destruction. Now there was a hollow bottom by,
- To which the watershots of raine from all the high grounds drew.
- Within the compasse of this pond great store of Osiers grew:
- And Sallowes lithe, and flackring Flags, and moorish Rushes eke,
- And lazie Reedes on little shankes, and other baggage like.
- From hence the Bore was rowzed out, and fiersly forth he flies
- Among the thickest of his foes like thunder from the Skies,
- When Clouds in meeting force the fire to burst by violence out.
- He beares the trees before him downe, and all the wood about
- Doth sound of crashing. All the youth with hideous noyse and shout
- Against him bend their Boarspeare points with hand and courage stout.
- He rushes forth among the Dogs that held him at a bay,
- And now on this side now on that, as any come in way,
- He rippes their skinnes and splitteth them, and chaseth them away,
- Echion first of all the rout a Dart at him did throw,
- Which mist and in a Maple tree did give a little blow.
- The next (if he that threw the same had used lesser might),
- The backe at which he aimed it was likely for to smight.
- It overflew him. Jason was the man that cast the Dart.
- With that the sonne of Ampycus sayd: Phoebus (if with hart
- I have and still doe worship thee) now graunt me for to hit
- The thing that I doe levell at. Apollo graunts him it
- As much as lay in him to graunt. He hit the Swine in deede.
- But neyther entred he his hide nor caused him to bleede.
- For why Diana (as the Dart was flying) tooke away
- The head of it: and so the Dart could headlesse beare no sway.
- But yet the moodie beast thereby was set the more on fire
- And chafing like the lightning swift he uttreth forth his ire.
- The fire did sparkle from his eyes: and from his boyling brest
- He breathed flaming flakes of fire conceyved in his chest.
- And looke with what a violent brunt a mightie Bullet goes
- From engines bent against a wall, or bulwarks full of foes:
- With even such violence rusht the Swine among the Hunts amayne,
- And overthrew Eupalamon and Pelagon both twaine
- That in the right wing placed were. Their fellowes stepping to
- And drawing them away, did save their lives with much ado.
- But as for poore Enesimus, Hippocoons sonne had not
- The lucke to scape the deadly dint. He would away have got,
- And trembling turnde his backe for feare. The Swine him overtooke,
- And cut his hamstrings, so that streight his going him forsooke.