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Or Vertues Historie. To the Honorable and vertuous Mistris Amy Avdely. By F. R. [i.e. Francis Rous]

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The second Booke.
  
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The second Booke.



The Prologue vnto the second Booke.

Thus farre my lowly Muse in course aray,
Shewes the least riches of her treasury;
And in the plainer tearmes she doth assay,
To please the eares of popularity.
Now shall she tread one litle step aboue,
For those whose itching eares are neuer fild:
But with the thunder of almighty Ioue,
And tales how Giants daring armes did wield.
Yet not so high, though higher then the rest,
Contents me in the Sea beare lowly sayle,
VVith litle barke, least canuas fittest best,
That can with lesser might gainst tide preuayle.
But when to greater seate she shall aspire;
Then may she boldly sing great Phlegraes fire.


Cant. 1.

The tyrant Aimaran oppres'th the iust,
Whose miseries reuenge doth soone acquite,
That basely layes his honour in the dust:
And curtains vp his names obscured light,
While Bdellaes walls downe to the earth are borne,
Whose haughty tops did kisse the skie beforne.
Of bloody gusts, and those vermilion swordes,
VVhich dide themselues in Brothers broken hearts,
How swimming blood in streets made flowing fords,
And ruthfull turmoyles rose in diuers parts
I meane to sing: That fury which affords
Sighs to the sad, and pearc'th with Ebon darts:
Come with thy snaky head engorde in blood,
VVhich while these things were done spectator stoode:
Lift vp blacke Nemesis thy glowing eyes,
VVith Orcus vapours ouerspread the light,
Let not the Sunne from out his couch arise:
But let me write in darke these deedes of night,
Only that burning torch shall here suffise,
VVhose waxe is thickned blood around bedight:
About the sinew of a conquerd foe,
This gloomy light about my eyes shall gloe.
And roare thou from thy earth appaling iaw,
Put me in minde of dread and desolations,
Let vncouth sights keepe downe my thoughts in aw:
As burning blood in fiery exhalations,
And Rauens which a dying carkasse draw,
VVhile deadly screeches helpe to paint their passions,
VVhile Harpyes, Owles, and Night-crowes all around,
Fluttring about me breath a gastly sound.


And thou death-boding Muse whose Tragick quill
Painteth each ruthfull stratagem aright,
My pen with that same dreery water fill,
Whose dropping letters readers doe afright,
Whither from Stixes streames it doth distill,
Or Mare Rubrums floods oreuaylde with night:
That this my Cronicle of woe and death,
May seeme a dying soules last powred breath.
And thou Sedition still thy selfe present,
That euery member right I may display,
And whisper words of woe and dreerement,
Sad notes of ruine and of black decay,
Helpe hatreds praise, and enuies to inuent,
And farre expell the thought of loue away,
While cruell discord thundring in mine eares,
Deepe drownes my heart in high-astounding feares.
Towards the North a goodly Citie lyes,
Whose stately bowers wrought by Dædale hand:
Lay forth their curious riches to the eyes,
And make the passers to admire the land,
Arts chiefest beautie hence doth fayre arise,
And once both fayre and happie was this strand.
But now the renting earthquakes of debate,
Shake Atlas pillars which vpholde the state.
This City Bdella calde, and he that raines,
Is Aimaran, the cruelst wight aliue,
His soule doth leape to view his subiects paynes:
And when his Taxers doe great heapes contriue,
Of subiects riches, and extorted gaines,
Then doth his soule into his port ariue,
Like rauens that on carkasses doe feede,
And glut their corps full glad while others bleede.


But furious hate had with his egging sting,
Commou'd them to the feeling of their woe,
And straight the Commons fall a counsailing,
How they their heauy yoke might from them throw,
And in some bounds this bloody deluge bring,
Least it should shortly make an ouer-flow,
And driue this Waspe from out their hony-nest,
Before his tyrannie consume the rest.
These murmuring conuents came to Midas eares,
(For what from Kings and Potentates are hid?)
But dismall horror in his heart appeares,
An hundred gardians he about doth bid,
And parasites whose troope the State downe teares,
Foule wormes which neuer yet a crowne could rid;
While he at rushing of each moued straw,
Thinks he an host of armed foemen saw.
The guilt of conscience doth his thoughts torment,
Feare is immured in his rented skin,
It seemes here doth a ghost it selfe present,
And houering aske where all his kinsfolks bin,
There one who cryes out blood and dreeriment,
And Tisiphon to plague him for his sin;
While horror in his eares deaths knill doth toule,
And deadly trembling graspeth on his soule.
It chanc'd this time that Phœbus wending downe,
And breathles driuing to his loued west,
Saw where in Thetis breasts softs-softest downe,
Neptune was taking his vnlawfull rest:
Phœbus thereat was wroth and gan to frowne,
And straight forswore his loues now lothed west,
Vowing with Tellus now should be his seate,
And she should feele the comfort of his heate.


Phœbus then timely rose, and did embrace
Fayre Tellus with the vigour of his rayes,
Who straight begun to spring and grow apace;
And hence it came that in these later dayes
We haue ourspring, when Phœbus glorious face
Begins to lengthen his protracted wayes:
And still this time remembring her offence,
He makes on earth his greater residence.
These dayes were come, and Phœbus with his shine
Doth make the solac't earth her fruits to bring,
Whose sight refresheth mens foredaunted eyne,
While tuning birds their sweetest carrols sing,
And naked trees their vestures doe refine,
Mou'd with this sight goes foorth a solacing;
The lustie youth, and to his bonibell,
Each doth a lesson of the Summer tell.
Amongst the rest walks foorth a forlorne wight,
Euen like Heraclitus, from whose moyst eyes,
Still-flowing teares notes of a grieued spright,
As welling fountaines fruitfully arise,
His head as scorning heauens most delight,
Looking still downward on his shoulder lyes,
As though his heart and troubled spirits haue,
His ioy intumulated in the graue.
Sometimes to heau'n he lookes, and then he weepes
For her sweet soule that to her rest is fled;
Vpon the ayre, and then his eyes he steepes
In flowing Oceans which by griefe are bred;
Vpon the earth, then in a trance he sleepes,
And slumbring sinketh downe as carkasse dead:
But then some sence doth him recall againe,
In life to dye and liue in deadly paine.


But now a groane doth beate his hearkning eare,
And many tumblings issuing from below,
When straight he cryes, O death thrice-welcome heare,
My yeares are ripe, come, downe them gently mow,
Giue end vnto the woe my heart doth teare,
And sweetest ease vpon my soule bestow:
With that he falls vnto the loued ground,
While ioyes his drowned heart doe deepe astound.
But then the ghost replies, awake deare loue,
No death, thy life and dearest wife I am,
VVhom tyrants hand from thee did once remoue,
Now doe I come for to reuenge the same,
Strike vp thy sences (deare) thy valour proue:
And when to him the Lady neerer came,
She gaue him armour which Achilles wore,
VVhen Hectors side with hideous stroke he tore.
And sayes, here be the ransomes of my life,
That shall plead vengeance of the tyrants soule:
He at the name of his beloued wife,
Thrice 'ssayd within his armes her to enroule,
But thrice her flying ghost doth end the strife,
And doth his warring sences streight controule:
Farre flyes her soule escaping humane sight,
Like louring Falcon in her ayrie flight.
This was his loued spouse, whom Aimaran,
Not yeelding to his lust, causde to be slaine,
Dicæa was her name, whom wicked man
In sepulcher too timely doth detaine,
VVhen first her wofull husband hopeles ran
Into despayre, not daring to complaine:
And still lamenting all his dayes outweares,
Vpon her graue greene growing with his teares.


As one whom rauing Hecuba hath bit,
Whose blood corrupted with her venom'd tung,
Confounds his sences and amaz'th his wit,
And vncouth noyse that in his eare still rung,
Casteth him downe in some outragious fit,
With such a fury was this mourner stung:
Despayre still howleth in his flagging eare,
Haunting his heart like ouer-hungry beare.
But now hath hope that sweet phisition,
Lifted the spirits which were farre deprest,
Infusing in a cordiall potion,
Solacing drops which worke eternall rest,
And driuing thence this mourning passion,
Inthroniz'th thoughts of Ire within his brest:
Whose sulphure kindled with a mounting fire,
Blow vengeance in his hearts contorted gire.
Foorth doth he march to the seditious campe,
Who only did expect some worthy head,
That might conduct them as their lights bright lampe,
Amidst warres darknes which are menaced:
Who when they saw him, like a clowdy dampe
That doth the vayled fields all ouer-spred:
So doe their troopes concurre from euery part,
As veniall blood vnto the liuely hart.
They haue a greed of placing euery wing,
Themistos is the Generall of the field:
They pitch their tents with ioy and reuelling,
And warlike bowers now apace they build,
And now black night her rusty coach doth bring,
Furthering with silence all euents they wild:
All things for battell readie are prepar'd,
The townsmen sleepe as they that nothing car'd.


The morne no sooner op'd her ruddy gate,
But straight a peale of Trumpetters doe sound,
To stirre their hearts with thoughts of hie debate,
Whose hate against their king might deepe rebound,
As Mandrakes cry a passer doth amate,
Striking his soule with irrecured wound:
So doth this noyse affright great Bdellaes peeres,
To heare such musicke rattle in their eares.
Hark Aimaran how death with gastly cry,
Doth sound the knill of thy deserued fate:
Heare how the trumpet of thy destinie,
Looseth the bands of blood ennurtur'd hate,
That tingles in thine eares and bids thee die:
Yet stops deaths doores and shuts that loued gate,
Bellona howling from her bellowing caue,
Bids thee torment thy selfe and curse and raue.
Where shall thy haunted soule finde place of rest,
The heau'ns are darkned with the bloody smoke
Of harmles Saints, whose liues thy hands opprest,
Hell vapours ready are thy soule to choke:
In earth the shrikes of ghosts thy thoughts molest,
And furies which the doores of bondage broke,
Come vp to banquet on thy powred blood,
And make their damned selues this damned food.
As Athamas whom furic doth enflame,
Teares poore Learchus with his bloodie hands,
And madly runs whom no restraint can tame,
But furious wanders through vnknowne lands:
So doth this tyrant burne in quenchles flames,
Breaking with violence all natures bands,
Like one that drunke the Æthiopian lake,
Into whose soule thousands of furies brake.


But now in counsell house they doe all fit,
To try if policie can better fight,
And make their battels with the armes of wit:
But troubled sences cannot iudge aright,
And they rapt in the trance of sudden fit,
VVith staring gazes each their mates affright,
That now they are but like a flock of owles,
VVondring to see themselues such shapeles fowles.
At last a Nestor bolder doth arise,
And tels no time it was thus staring sit,
But send some Legate to the enemies,
To tell if their requests with reason fit,
They should be granted all in ample wise:
Another as reprouing former wit,
Thinks it is best with fierce and open warre,
To driue these rebels thence remoued farre.
But now stands vp Vlysses: certes (quoth he)
All that you say is but consumed winde:
But rather let our Kings great maiestie,
Himselfe with solemne oth in letters binde,
That whatsoeuer rebels armed be,
If they returne they shall great fauour finde,
And haue rewarded them incontinent,
VVhat wrong soeuer causde their discontent.
But when they come well shall we then prouide,
To quite their curtesie with cutting fare,
The sword of vengeance shall the cause decide,
Each rebell that tumultuous armour bare,
Shall his rebellion with great smart abide:
And for the peoples voyce let no man care,
The Lion roring in his princely den,
Shall with his noyse astonish lesser men.


Foule serpent-head within whose poys'ned braine,
A thousand diuels keepe a cabinet,
VVhich mightie Ioue hath damn'd to during paine,
VVhen for this deed thou shalt for anguish fret,
Thy cankerd soule who shall no rest obtaine,
But feed thy wombe with woe and deepe regret,
Millions of furies yawning with their iawes,
Shall combe thy carkasse with their renting clawes.
Horror within thy soule shall thee affright,
VVhich mak'st of nought the truth despising good,
Damnation doth awayt: But O dread sight!
Loe many I doe see in raging mood,
VVhich bid me silent be, and in despight
Bid me leaue preaching, or the'ile haue my blood:
VVell I recant this couns'ler was not bad,
But worst, and what degree Ill greater had.
Now while this mate was telling on his text,
In breakes Themistos with a mightie host,
The gates are broken and the towne perplext,
It hapt this counsell which they counted most,
Hath lost his end, come come deuise the next,
Or worse then this, and then thy haunted ghost
VVith the next furie that to Orcus went,
May for a token to great Dis be sent.
But tis too late, looke where the winters frost
Fals, that shall kill thy boughs with pinching cold:
Looke Aimaran, see thy heapes which now are lost,
Those heapes which thou from subiects didst withhold,
See how thy souldiers dying ban thy ghost,
And ding it downe to hell a thousand fold:
Goe curse and dye, accompany their soules,
Carrouse with Pluto black Cocitus boles.


Behind thee doth a hagge awayt thy end.
To carrie hence that blood-defiled masse:
At hell doe all the ghosts in rancks attend,
For to salute thee when thou foorth doest passe:
Yonder thy deaths-man stands, whose hand shall send
Thy spirit to his well deserued place,
While infants wallowing in their mothers gore,
Shall passe thee downward with a gastly rore.
Looke how thy subiects lye all martyred;
There sits a matron dying on her child;
Their mangled carcasses but tortured,
By neuer dying paine from death beguild;
The rebell-sonnes runne where their fathers bled,
And in vnhumane blood their feete defilde;
The heapes of corses like a Pharas ly,
And bloody riuers like the red-sea by.
Nothing but skarlet doth inuest the streete,
Which like a iudge doth frowne vpon the sky,
A great Ægæum all along doth fleete,
In which dead heapes of men ore-whelmed ly;
Here a big rock of armour you shall meete,
There a great Ile of men you shall passe by,
While sanguine obiect with his strong reflexe,
Staines heau'ns fayre face with purple scattered strekes.
Howle foule Megæra from thy gulfie throat,
And ring thy knill for Aimaranes ghost;
Charon prouide thy neuer emptie boat,
He meanes anon to trauell yonder coast;
Alecto now put on thy crimson coat,
Least he in bloody fayrenes thee out-boast;
Combe downe thy snaky locks, dresse right thy head,
He louing meanes with thee to take his bed.


Like Margiates in West Indyes land,
When Ioues great thunder bellowes in their eares,
Quauering and shaking they afrighted stand,
To heare that heauen a base so hollow beares,
So doth this monster at his foemens band,
Faint feare vp lifts his bloody clotted heares,
For feare (which doth his heart subdued take)
His paralitike members still doe quake.
When comes Themistos and with gliding sword,
No sooner pearceth his disseuerd skin,
But thousand Diuells on his corse doe bord,
And greedie thrust their bloody muzzels in.
After they heaue him to the Stygian ford,
Where for the guilt of deepe inured sin,
With wiery whips he suffers grisly wounds,
And with his rauing, hells vast vault rebounds.
But where that wicked counsailer was gone,
Each man doth doubt, some say that downe to hell
Aliue he was distraught, and many a one
That by the swords well worthy edge he fell;
But how soeuer let him lye alone,
No man shall grudge the chance that him befell:
The heauen shall melt, the Sunne shall baite in South,
Before he shall escape hells yawning mouth.


Cant. 2.

Themistos with Encrata takes his way,
Astonisht with a hideous yelling cry:
And Erophel is flying fast away
From her sweete loue that for her wrong will dye;
Who now affrighted with a rarest chance,
Against his life his owne hand doth aduaunce.
The comet fumes which from the earth ascend,
Vnto great Cinthias concaue circulation,
May long defer their doome-denouncing end,
Before they be compact in conglobation,
But at the last their fury they protend,
Kindled with some celestiall inflamation,
No cloude their eating flames with moysture stops,
But downe they poure their ruddy-burning drops.
So may the smoaky sighs of innocents,
VVhich by great Ioue still make their sad complaint,
Long volley forth, before reuenge assents,
The guiltie damned soules for to attaint,
But when deepe vengeance once her clawes indents,
The comet of their plague shall neuer faint,
But with new brimstone freshly still relieu'd,
Shall keepe them in still-during torments grieu'd.
VVhich Bdellaes towers, wel-worthy towres haue seene,
And felt the stroake which long hath been deferd,
Iustice long houerd heauen and them betweene,
And with repining eares their follies heard,
At last inflamde with wrath and ragefull teene,
Maskt in a bloody fire she streight appeerd,
VVhose flakie flame pitching on Bdella walls,
VVith them in euerlasting ruin falls.


So is it left all desolate forgone,
No call of Musick nor of man doth sound,
The shady Owle in deadly notes doth groane,
And luckles VVezells nestle in the ground,
VVhile goary blood besprinkled all vpon,
Reflecteth in the ayre a circle round,
VVhose gloomie sight vntill these latest day,
Driues fearefull passengers another way.
Sometimes the ghosts walke in those paths of wo,
And with their skreeching fright the neighbour land,
Sometime a fier doth seeme alone to go,
A thousand torches as in battell band,
And brandish in the darknes to and fro,
At which the inhabitants appalled stand,
It seemes blacke hell hath ript her prison wombe,
And meanes in maske vnto the earth to come.
Now hath Themistos left this fearefull place,
And he alone is gone to seeke his chaunce,
Minded not euer back to turne his face,
But armed with that sword of piercing Lance,
VVhich slew great Aimaran, he forth doth passe,
And gainst each foe his weapon doth aduaunce:
Now hath he crost full many a wood and hill,
To vertue no way euer happens ill.
This time it chaunst that Ereb had debate,
VVroth with his wife, rapt forth a fire brand,
VVho lothing light, and kindled straight with hate,
Lifts vp from sable hell her pitchy band,
And with her gloomy troupe at Phœbus gate,
To keepe the light from earth entagde did stand:
So was Themistos ere he was aware,
Left in black shadow and to nightly care.


But on the plaine he spies a mightie tree,
Whose greene attire did shield the falling raine,
And oft in vnder Floraes Nimphs with glee,
Would dauncing leade their fayre Napean traine,
That with soft downe his rootes inuested bee,
Where Faunus with this Nimph hath often laine:
Here doth he meane to passe the silent night,
Till with his eyes he shall salute the light.
The Starres all ready at their watch doe lye,
And silent murmur whistles through the greene,
Which rockes his senses with a Lullaby,
That in deepe slumber now they buried beene,
Delighted with this dumpish harmony:
But now fayre Phœbe halfe her way hath seene,
And his deepe dreaming is so violent,
It cannot longer time be permanent.
Morpheus hath left his blacke pauillion,
And hath vnlockt the portals of his eyes,
When streight he lookes the continent vpon,
Whither the Mornings chariot yet did rise,
But she with Tithon kept her mansion,
And in his colde embraces chayned lies:
This while the Knight doth smile vpon the aire,
To see it shining such a duskie faire.
But as he viewes, the most celestiall face,
That euer nature made to shew her power,
Sends to his eyes the beames of such a grace,
As beauties fairest rayes they forth did powre,
Naked she was, and spotles from deface,
Beautie she seemde it selfe, or beauties bower:
That if fayre heauen on earth did euer dwell,
Then this was heauen, on whom all graces fell.


Her skinne the linnen where with cunning start,
Beauty had wrought the summe of all her skill,
While with her needle heere and there apart,
With azure worke her sampler she doth fill,
And turning to the brestplate of her heart,
She worketh fairely there a double hill,
Where on her double ruddy stewards doe stand,
Which keepe the haruest of fayre beauties land.
These lightning darts his heart had almost brent,
Though not in lust but in diuinest loue,
Therefore his eyes as messengers he sent,
Vnto that mayde her curtesie to proue,
Who with these words her treasure doores vnbent,
Let not the thought of me your passions moue,
For from the heauens I come to guide your feete,
In purest paths from deedes and waies vnmeete.
He gently proferd her a Nectar-kisse,
She met him yet did blush as halfe with shame:
He now is hers, and she is wholy his,
But not as looser wantons them doe name,
This thoughts diuine harmoniall consort is,
Farre from the deedes of night those worthy blame,
Whose noysome poyson cankering within,
Consumes the flesh with paine, the soule with sin.
But while within their soules this melody
Sounds pleasing tunes all rauishing the heart,
They are affrayghted with a hideous cry,
Like to an host conioynd in bloody Mart:
And bellow forth a note when downe they dye,
Which doth perswade these louers to depart:
Where let them take the chance to them assignd,
Ere long time passe, I shall their iourney finde.


This noyse which tumbled in such fearefull wise,
Came from two brethren twixt whom deadly hate,
Still causes of new discord doth deuise,
For when the watrie Queene faire Thetis late,
In Lemnos walke, Uulcan did her surprise;
And on that Lady these two sonnes begate;
VVho of two disagreeing Natures brought,
In passions disagreeing euersought.
But Uulcan wrought them armour with a charme,
And mighty swords which incantation bound,
That neuer could they worke each others harem,
But in their foes would dint a griesly wound,
After he did his Sonnes thus strongly arme,
He set them in a ship, when first this ground
Receaude these warriors, that each little houre,
Their blades into each others brests they poure.
This Diaphon that Pyrhydor is hight,
VVho since they came into this litle Ile,
Haue ouercome in doughty strokes of fight,
All Knights within the space of forty mile;
But she on which these brethren now alight,
A Lady is that did her selfe exile:
From those which loue her as their deare delight,
And doth bewayle this her vngentle flight.
VVhom seeing straight they ran to captiuate,
First Diaphon, then Pyrhydor doth flie,
But cruell Pyrhydor inflamde with hate,
That he before him to the game should hie,
VVith a huge blow downe cloue his riuen pate,
The other fairely quites his surquedry,
The Lady flying, piteously doth crye,
On ground they wounded, bellowing doe lye.


VVhere lye they may this dame I'le follow fast,
And by enquest search out her cause of flight,
She was a vertuous (but that time is past)
A vertuous Lady lou'd of each mans sight,
But now her faithles deedes haue quite defast,
And darkned all her glories shining light:
Blacke cloudes of sinne, and neuer blushing shame,
Doe wrap those siluer wings of former fame.
As when the blossomes of a springing tree,
Promise the owner haruests chiefest pride,
And Uer yclad in gorgeous iollity,
Though Floraes kingdome in her pompe doth ride,
Great hope there is that there great store will be:
But when the lightning from the heauen doth slide,
Then are they choaked in the sweetest prime,
And all forget it was so good a time.
So did the bloome of her fayre springing youth,
Clad in the robes of snow-white chastity,
Perswade the world a fruitfull time ensueth,
And largest riuers of fertility,
But all this hope is turned into ruth,
VVhen filthy flame of infidelity,
Scorcheth the wings on which pure faith doth flye,
And makes her in her verdant blooming dye.
She Erofel is calde, whom long there lou'd,
Good Erophil well tride at sword and speare,
And to her match, her still her parents mou'd,
VVhile she great kindnes in her front did weare,
And seemde to loue him as it her behou'd,
But in went masking heart of cruell beare;
VVhich Loue doth hate, and takes his deepest ioy,
VVith treacherous words to worke her loues annoy.


Mischiefes foule venome bloweth vp her wombe,
VVorse then Calipsoes toxicating draught:
Her wicked heart is his funereall tombe,
From whence the source of his sad death he raught,
Hence doe his soules corrosiue drenches come,
VVhich in deepe sorrow his deare soule indraught;
VVhile she like Iuno at her husbands thunder,
Laugheth to see fayre Semele torne asunder.
For when in gentle sorte she seemde to quite
Faire glaunces to his euer darting eyes,
He would in mariage bands confirme delight,
VVhat ere he askes, she seeming not denyes;
And doth auow to doe her Virgin-right,
The day is come whereon his hope relyes:
They are conioyned in a holy band,
He with his heart, she only with her hand.
Now doth he pray the Sunne to flie apace,
And lash great Pirois on his lightning side,
Then Cynthia he desires to shew her face,
And bids her nightly chariot vpward slide,
Then doth he pray the cloudes for to disgrace
The darkned night, and with their vailes to hide
The loathed beames of Phœbus lingring light,
And make the Sunne arise of his delight.
O foolish man how are thy wits yblent,
VVhy dost thou runne into thy latest path,
Stay yet sweete Knight before thou doe repent,
To late then will it be to heale thy skath,
And quench the fire when as thy bones are brent,
But so dire fate our deedes directed hath,
That like blinde Moles into our bane we goe,
But then she giues vs eyes to see our woe.


Night vp doth rise the marke of all his thought,
But sure his dart will misse the prick anon:
For Erofel hath an Æthiop hath sought,
Whom with rewards and mony she hath won,
That to the genial bed this hagge is brought:
For Erofel to bed would goe alone,
Refusing offred helpe, but she hath set
Another Pigeon in her cabinet.
And as the custome was she set a vaile,
Which hid the worser face, and shewd the fayre:
Thus doth she set her rotten ship to saile,
And to a priuate chamber doth repayre:
But Erophil his hower doth not faile,
At her due time he meanes all debts to pay her:
He off doth cast the clowdes, whose euious darke
Hinders his sayling to the goodly barke.
The torches quenched he is left to rest,
And sets on foote vpon his fatall bed:
O foote step back before thou be vnblest,
And be not guided with so rash a head:
O head seduced with so foule a guest,
With such alluring bayt O be not fed:
And O sweet Knight before thou griefe do reape,
Fall not so soone, but looke before thou leape.
But all in vaine, downe he his bones doth lay;
O haples bones that neuer thence shall rise,
He hopes to driue the chariot of the day,
Whose beames did daze a while his staring eyes:
But Erofel doth giue his wishes nay;
Straight to her breast embraces he applies,
Then sugred-bitter kisses, and anon:
But shame and griefe now bid me to be gon.


The Moone downe wept a dewy dropping raine,
Wayling the fate of sweetest Erophill,
And seemed to fayre Tellus to complaine,
That twas great griefe that loue such soule should kill,
Her darksome steedes she would haue setled faine,
And made black night aboue remaining still,
That day might neuer bring that sunny ray,
Whose sight might bring this wofull Knights decay.
But Phœbus rose, forbidding longer night,
And faine the Æthiop would betime depart:
O no (quoth he) my chiefest loued light,
Then shalt thou take away my dearest hart,
And with eclipsing this thy cleerest bright,
Thou shalt eclipse my soules essentiall part:
And then with an embrace he caught her head,
Therewith her beautie was vncouered.
Out leapes a face like to the Lician men,
That suddenly were turned into frogs:
Or when that Cerberus raised from his den,
Gastly presents three vgly barking dogs:
Or to the pitchy Queene of darknes then,
When she goes masking all in dampish fogs,
Fearing to put her beauties vaile away,
Least to the wind she should her forme display.
The Knight astounded, rapt his mighty sword,
And present die thou Jncubus (quoth he)
Which with a fiend hast wrought these deedes abhord:
Farewell thou falsed loue where ere thou bee,
This edge shall end to griefe and life afford:
With that his troubled ghost he soone doth free,
Who to those mirtle groues doth pearcing flie,
Where he with Dido mournes his miserie.


Now Erofell is gone in triumph fled,
And laugheth at her Tragick-plotting wit;
Where still with feare be thou disquieted,
Let gastly thoughts thy gnawed conscience bite;
And let those wormes within thy soule be bred,
That neuer may surcease tormenting it:
While with all plots of mischiefe that I may,
Ile compasse thee, not resting night or day.

Cant. 3.

Themistos heares a wofull wight complaine,
And fights against the fearfull Giants twins,
While Erofel doth heare Pirinoes paine,
And to torment him freshly she begins:
Still he repeats his loue and loues desire,
Still she doth scorch him in a greater fire.
Though fortune feed thee with her delicates,
And starres doe seeme t'aspire vnto thy blisse,
Trust not the fickle reeling of the fates,
Nor in fond pleasures lap doe lie remisse,
Hell still in op'ning her black rustie gates,
And sends foorth fiends that tempt vs to amisse:
Therefore about thy soule keepe surest watch,
Least that temptation should thee ouer-match.
Though good Themistos had from heauen sent
A blessed gardian to direct his feete,
Yet cleere he was not, for incontinent
A wicked Lady doth his iourney meete,
And arm'd she was as one for iustice bent:
But she was wanton and for pleasure meete:
At her birth-day fierce warriours angry king,
VVith the fayre Queene of loue was reuelling.


And Cipribel her name, who now in loue
With good Themistos, still did tempt to shame,
And with vaine questions did his fancie moue:
But fayre Encrata would her sharply blame,
And with some holy tale her talke remoue,
That she enraged with this Angell dame,
Swelleth with wrath that neuer can be quencht,
So deepe in poysond heart it is indrencht.
She would haue rackt her lims ten thousand wayes,
And spred her like the dust vpon the ground:
But loue enforcing, she much other sayes,
When soone Themistos had her purpose found,
And seemes to yeeld to her: but with delayes,
Least he should quite enforce a cureles wound:
And still he seekes to turne her path awry,
Into some other iourney lying by.
Now while they passe, loe yond they see a wight,
Beating his breast with huge and ruthles blowes:
Sometimes he stating lookes on heauens light,
And streight himselfe vpon the earth he throwes:
Then on his haire his fingers doe alight,
And flyes as if he were pursu'd with foes,
And then as burden of his deadly song,
He scricheth that the woods resound along.
His face so pale and skin transparent was,
It seem'd Deaths ghastly looking glasse to be,
And then he cryes, loe yond he comes alas!
The Giant! O now whither shall I flie?
But soone toward him doth Themistos passe,
And bids him cheare his wofull heart: but he
Refuseth any sparke of least delight,
And with his soule gainst comfort strong doth fight.


O what haue you to doe in dead mens graues?
(Quoth he) why trouble you what longs to death?
And hinder my repast, as curses, raues,
And sighs and teares, which feede my lingring breath,
Sorrow within my breast round-vaulted caues
Sings tunes, which most my eares sweet rauisheth:
Goe fondlings to your haples wanton end,
I will on Griefe and blessed Death attend.
Then with a griping gnash he ends his tale,
As though an earthquake all his bow'ls did teare:
But him the Knight bespoke to tell his bale,
And who the authors of his sorrow were.
But he: so shall I cause thee to bewaile,
And I grow worse: for cursed hope may nere
Take me from out my loued sorrowes bands,
For all my soule I yeeld into thy hands.
But since thou needs wilt draw my cursed chance,
I Algiger am calde, that happie of yore,
Till fortune frownd with crabbed countenance,
But now ill luck downe all my triumphs bore:
Yonder two monsters did their strength aduance
Against my house, which fearfull ruin tore,
My friends are slaine, and I am left alone
To be: and there he breathd a deadly grone.
Faine would the Knight more of his tale expresse,
But he to any earthly ioy was dead;
His soule entombed in deepe heauinesse,
Into a pleasing sensles dreame was led.
The Knight full greatly mou'd with his distresse,
Awakt him from his cares most vncouth bed:
But for no treasure that on earth doth lie,
Would he this Knight in way accompanie.


VVhere leauing him, the Knight doth forward goe,
Seeking by any meanes the way to finde:
But soone he found it, for all passers know,
VVith sad experience all that monstrous kinde,
For still they worke the countrie scath and woe,
Leauing each where sad notes of ruth behinde:
And now the Knight arriues vnto the place,
VVhere his great valour shall their force deface.
He knocks against the posternes of the gate,
VVhen streight foorth steps a beldam dry with age,
VVhen she the Knight espies, then plung'd in hate,
Vnto her sonnes she runnes, who all in rage
Come foorth embrued with the spoyle, which late
They made, for safely passe no carriage:
This find hath Policlopon to his name,
That Pantarpazon children of one dame.
Huge mighty corps they haue, which like a tree
March to and fro full gastly to behold:
Their heads with rau'nish iawes foule woluish bee:
Some say a diuell did their dame infold,
Other that with a wolfe lay vgly shee:
But how-soere, all filthie is her mold,
Harpyia she, well worthie such a brood,
At whose birth-time some hagge as midwife stood.
Now with the Knight the elder boy doth fight,
Yawning like Orcus iawes and gaping wide:
But at the first downe in his throte there pight
The speares sharpe poynt which dothfull deeply slide,
VVhen streight he parbreakes forth (O lothsome sight)
Great filthie gobbets which doe vpward glide,
And rawish meate and flesh that yet did bleede,
The nourishment on which his vice did feede.


But then Harpya soule doth curse amaine,
VVhen as she sees him groueling on the ground,
And howles and raues, and bids his brother gaine
The full reuengement of that deadly wound:
He thought with meeting blow at first t'haue slaine,
The Knight auoyding, downe it doth rebound:
The hideous beame wherewith this monster fought,
Into the groning earth full deepe is wrought.
VVhen nimbly he diuides his conduit-pipe,
Through which the Lerna of his sinne did flow,
It seem'd for Pluto now his soule was ripe,
VVith such a trice off doth his forhead goe:
The whining dame doth with her apron wipe
His brothers throte, thinking his life to slow:
But all the furies of infernall hell,
Long since within his damned corps doe dwell.
They thus captiu'd, he takes that foggie fiend,
And strips her naked from her antique hew,
And to a spreader both her feete doth binde,
That she might neuer him nor his pursew,
And with a cord doth tye her hands behinde:
Thus is this haggard placed in her mew,
And to the scorching Sunne her face doth turne,
VVho with his beames doth her most feruent burne.
She with her curses gripes heau'ns highest seat,
Accusing them of her deserued paine,
And execrates the Sunne for sending heat,
Bidding him drench his steeds within the maine,
Then gainst the fearfull throane she foule doth bleat:
But all her plaints and curses are in vaine,
Her tortur'd soule to bloomy Ereb fell,
VVhile on her carkasse crowes and rauens dwell.


Hereto his spoyles we'le leaue this worthie Knight,
And follow Erofel that flies amaine,
Whom those two brethren did but now affright,
She to her former tricks returnes againe,
Seeking to worke fayre loue her foule despight;
And that she sooner might her end attaine,
In mans apparell she is fairly clad,
While womans skin and woluish heart she had.
Thus foorth she marched in her way alone,
But that consorted with deceit and guile,
And she in many Sunnes hath painfull gone,
But none she meets whom may her art beguile:
Further she trauailes still, but now anon
A voyce she heard that fits her plotted wile,
And thus it faintly beates the yeelding ayre,
Issuing from pangs of woe and deepe despayre.
Heart leaue to pine, since pining cannot saue,
Soule loue not her, that doth not loue thy loue,
Minde be no longer to that force a slaue,
That can deepe passions, but no mercie moue,
You clowdes of sorrow no more issue haue,
This tree for all your watring will not proue:
For that fayre plant bout which your waters flow,
In midst of them all barren will not grow.
O she is sick with vnrecur'd disease,
That serpent foule disdaine her sharp doth sting,
And to the cure I proued many wayes;
Of my heart-blood I did a plaister bring,
And kept it warme with sighs, and stroue to please,
And washt it with the wels of sorrowing:
My soules deare garden-plots I did reueale,
Yet by the chiefest herbs she will not heale.


But no, I am diseasd, here lyes the wound;
For when her beautie had the harts in chace,
Which in the pale of loue were seruants bound,
Then I not able to withdraw my pace,
My selfe by those her arrowes gored found,
Which fly from that fayre bow of her sweet face:
Yet though I feele the arrow in my hart,
It doth deny me leaue to breake the dart.
Therefore thus festring deepe in venom'd skin,
Since my liues Surgeon doth her helpe deny,
And all my sinewes are consum'd within,
No hope remaines on which I may rely,
After this death my soule no life shall win,
But in a second griefe shall ending dy:
So shall her cruell heart be fully pleasde,
My wounds embalmed, and my passions easde.
These and more mournfull words still sighing deepe,
He breathed vainly to the sensles sky,
Which might haue brought a stony heart asleepe:
But Erofel arm'd with black crueltie,
Shutteth the gates which pitie vsde to keepe,
And barring foorth the plaints of miserie:
Thus doth she boord the Knight with words of guile,
Which craft and fained sorrow did compile.
O doe not clowd the heauen of your face,
With mistie vapours which black woe doth spread,
Nor those bright lineaments so much disgrace,
That in their chiefest spring they should be dead:
Sorrow with swiftest wings still flyes apace,
And ioy goes flagging on the plumes of lead:
Driue that away which of it selfe will flie,
You need not open gates to miserie.


What is it loue? I know that poyson strong,
Yet to resist against his powers assay:
If then you be too weake to daunt his wrong,
Open (if safely) all your storie lay:
And if my helpe you will accept among,
And to my precepts will eftsoones obay,
My greatest ayd to you I will auow,
Within this breast hath loue been cur'd ere now.
O neuer may (quoth he) my wound feele ease,
I turne with Sisiphusa restles stone:
The flames of hell the furies may appease,
But these heart-burning coales will nere be gone:
Gods may Prometheus from his chaines release,
This vultur euer feedes my heart vpon:
These euerlasting pangs and weary breath,
Vnto my woes giue life, to life a death.
But since her name thus sounded by my words,
Doth so much rauish my euen-sleeping soule,
And then Disdaine like many thousand swords,
Rips vp the closed wound which erst was whole,
And neerer end to fainting thought affords,
This Tragick storie here I will vnrole,
The Chronicle of many a wofull thing,
Which in those dayes were done when loue was king.
VVithin a stately pallace happie dwels
A mightie Lord, whose now-extolled height,
By fortunes ayd the state by much excels,
Of any neighbour Prince or forren Knight
Blest now he is, but not so blessed els,
Had not fayre Nature lent those torches light,
VVhich guide the fortune of each mightie peere,
VVithout whose helpe their fame will nere be cleere.


The fayrest ofspring from his loynes proceed,
That euer heau'ns coniur'd should rauish eye,
VVhose very thought my dying soule doth feed,
VVith fainting sight of such felicitie:
Sure some diuine she is, no earthly seed,
No man can sound so sweet a harmonie,
Fairest of faires, burning bright beauties flame,
Heauenly her nature, Bellamy her name.
O let me see the mornes fayre blushing rise,
Or let the doue set forth her fayrest white;
Let heauen vnclose his treasure to the eyes,
And fayrest gemmes present them to my sight,
Or pleasant'st shew that in each colour lyes,
VVith which faind beautie often shineth bright:
These all vnited in one goodly frame,
Can scarse describe the picture of my dame.
Sure Ioue was framing a new starry light,
And seeing heauen full, here made her place:
Heart-plunging thoughts doe rauish with delight,
VVhen I but once doe seeme to view her face;
Me thinks my spirit nere should see the night,
Rapt deeply with the image of her grace:
In vaine I haue her fame and praises sung,
My tongue disgraceth her she grac'th my tung.
Now doth she flourish in her chiefest spring,
(O heauenly spring, though winter to my dayes)
And thirtie Knights there lie a reuelling,
Seeking by valiant acts and sundrie wayes,
VVho to her thoughts may sweetest pleasure bring,
And who may win the sunshine of her rayes:
O rayes which through my heart as thinnest glasse,
VVith pearcing light and brightest edge doe passe.


One time in Iusts a spectacle they made,
When as my eyes the sad spectators were,
Still with my growing sight my hope did fade,
And still my loue did grow though hope did weare.
Thus pressed with despayres most heauy lade,
Her sight all hopeles, heartles I forbeare:
For when so many woo'd one onely dame,
I thought too late my fancies suing came.
Therefore exposde to sorrow and despayre,
Here will I sing the Dirges of my death:
Sometimes the Nightingale doth here repaire,
Consorting with me in a plaining breath:
Sometimes the turtle robbed of her paire,
In groaning noyse my tune accompaneth,
While pleasant death sweet singing in mine eare,
A part in this my plaining song doth beare.
Thus farre this Swan sung foorth his mournfull plaint,
And much I rue the paine which him doth hold:
For well I know the plague which doth attaint,
This wofull man doth him most heauy fold.
Now Erofel with words which ioy did paint,
Seemed to haue his sorrow much controld:
But what she spoke occasion doth deny
To tell, till better time shall bid reply.
Now some will thinke that I am much vnkinde,
To let this wofull wight thus plungedly:
But little doe they know what I doe finde,
That yet remaines more infelicitie,
And she as women wont will haue her minde,
Though for his ease I many wayes doe trie:
And though in his defence I strongly stand,
These women needs will haue the vpper hand.

Cant. 4

Diaphon and Pirrhydor in endles blowes
Batter the castles of their furious harts,
Brethren by birth, by deeds most cruell foes,
That bloody still torment each others parts,
While Algiger all mortifide in soule,
The worlds short pleasures deeply doth controule.
As when a firie brand that fiercely burnes,
Taken from Vulcans euer-breathing flame,
And in the water layd, each other turnes
Their force, their angry enemie to tame,
And while that either others might doth spurne,
From twixt them both a mightie ratling came:
At last when neither gets the vpper side,
The force of both in might away doth slide.
Such is the flame which Discord doth incense,
That still it fights, and still it wasts away,
Still suffering losse, without a recompence,
With her owne subiect still she doth decay:
Still on her face she doth presume defence,
When still she meanes to get a spoyled pray,
The filthie rust that in our soule doth creepe,
And with her griping teeth still gnaweth deepe.
Thus doe these brethren wast each others might,
Hewing their armour with down-thundring blowes:
The burning fire neuer wanteth light,
Which discord with her enuious bellowes blowes;
Her bellowes to her seruants likned right,
Whereof one swels when downe his mate he throwes:
Such is the state of any enuious minde,
That by anothers fall his seat doth finde.


But now the mightiest fit that euer mou'd
A warring soule to furie and to rage,
Their concord with new quarels hath reprou'd,
Whose force no hope there is ere to asswage:
If euer least degree they faining lou'd,
Their loue shall neuer see that infant-age,
Madnes hath blowen vp their swelling harts,
Whose tumour neuer from his seate departs.
For while they trauaild on a pleasant plaine,
They saw a little mount, that with his head
A prospect made vpon the smiling maine:
No bushie tree his beautie shadowed,
But open his faire flowrie top hath laine:
And to this hill a path directly led,
Whither these warring brethren take their way,
Willing to see what nouelties there lay.
Streight to their eares the sweetest harmonie
Doth blow, that euer sweet to eare can blow,
Whose force like fire could melt black crueltie,
And make it quickly gentle mercie know:
From out that little hill it soft doth flie,
As if Apollo all his art would show:
A little death it is, which vp doth send
Our soules to heauen, before we make our end.
O cease those murdring strokes what ere thou be,
My soule will flie from hence vnto thy cell,
And all in loue with this will banish me;
Sweet hony issuing from a siluer well,
Which giu'st a surfet, not sacietie:
O doe no more such pleasing murmurs tell,
But leaue my virgin-thoughts without annoy,
Which thou wilt rauish with too great a ioy.


When this enchanting noyse their eares doth kis,
They hating all what harmonie doth make,
With madnes almost burst, all turned is
To egging ire, and forth their swords they take,
And like mad bedlams when their wit's amis,
Into an open fight most fierce they brake,
Where we will leaue them there to learne some wit,
No other schoole then this can be more fit.
But now perchance this seemeth truth to passe,
That from the earth such heauenly tunes ascend:
But thus the Chronicles report it was,
That long agoe within this land did wend
A Mathematick, that did work with brasse,
And other things which to his art did tend,
So skilfull that no sound on earth deuisde
Hath been, but he hath highly equalizde.
And here within the earth he built a cell,
Where he will try the vtmost of his art,
And hath by labour now conioyned well,
Each mouing member and each sounding part,
When with a running streame that thither fell,
To each he doth a motion impart:
Which all conioynd do frame a Musick sound,
Whose forciue might can stony hearts confound.
Now Death his seruant Sicknes forth hath sent,
Who with his dooming mace doth him arrest,
And well he knowes his bow so long ly'ne bent,
For euer in his vigour may not least:
Therefore vnto this vaulted cell he went,
Where minding to set vp his latest rest,
He closely shuts the caues fast ceeled dore,
VVhich entrance may forbid to any more.


And now his engines he in worke doth set,
Which sent foorth dulcet tunes to chant the eare,
While he to Nature payes his common debt,
And to the world did neuer more appeare:
Therefore some thought that in this cabinet,
Immortall he all ages did outweare:
Some superstitious thought he was diuine,
And offred sacrifice vnto his shrine.
But he is dead (wo that such worth should die)
And darknes triumphs ore his rotten masse:
But his bright fame shall on her pineons flie,
As long as light from Eos doores shall passe:
Nor euer may that base obscuritie,
Blot from mens thoughts that such an Artist was:
Obliuion all thy teeth may nere deuoure,
His famousde names still ouer-liuing powre.
But here the musick and these fighting mates
I now must leaue, where with vnweldie blowes
And mightie thunderclaps each other bates:
So angrie Neptune foorth the surges throwes,
When Æolus hath loosd his windy gates,
And so against a rock the billow goes,
As doe the lightnings of black enuies heat,
With slicing dints their rocky armour beat.
But let me see where Algiger is gone,
That erst was wounded deepe in cureles hart;
Looke yond I see him where he walks alone,
Still yelling with the horror of my smart:
Sometimes to heauen he darts a heauy grone,
Then to the earth he doth a sigh impart,
While with the teares downe rouling on his skin,
He wash'th his face without, not wo within.


Not long he trauaild till a mournfull sound,
Sadly doth beat his sadder seated eare,
VVhen ô he cryes, and is there on the ground,
That can with me such part of sorrow beare,
Thrise happie I that such a mate haue sound,
VVose soule woes mourning gowne alike doth weare,
Sweet sorrow which my fainting breast dost feed,
And with new cause of griefe new ioy doth breed.
Further he comes, when soone he sees a cell,
A little clowdie cell scarse taking light,
In which one only wofull wight did dwell,
That in the mortall world did not delight,
But still with teares vnto his prayers fell,
Mourning full deeply what he did not right,
And still perswades his care-encompast minde,
That on the earth it could no pleasure finde.
True, true (quoth Algiger) no ioy there is,
That may delight the burdned soule of man:
Sorrow doth streightest leade the minde to blisse,
VVhence perfect ioy and happines began.
VVherefore good Sire (and if I speak not misse)
Since I so rightly haue this fortune wan,
Let vs together here vnknowen goe,
Telling each other of vncured woe.
Let vs perswade the wandring passenger
VVith morall precepts mortifying the minde,
In sunder all his former ioyes to teare,
And bid him mourne for that his soule hath find,
Telling him neuer can his faults be cleare,
Vnles his former thred he doe vn winde,
VVhich leades vnto the labyrinth of hell,
VVhere nere returning ghosts downe damned fell.


Agreed (quoth he) and these clowdes of mine eyes
Shall from their vaults in fertill showers fall,
To fructuate the earth that barren lyes,
Those earthly soules I meane, to grace to call,
That life is fullest farre of miseries,
VVhom sharpest miserie doth neuer gall:
For pleasure seemes some solace forth to bring,
But deadly it doth pearce with Scorpion sting.
Thus they conioynd begin to ambulate,
And when they meet a wandring pilgrim-wight,
Then doe they tell mans miserable state,
How pleasures light is but a blackest night,
How nothing that we doe can quench the hate,
VVhich heauenly powres doe beare, but in despight
Of earth and what the chained hurt may draw,
Make to our lawles hearts a new-found law.
Plunge deepe in teares to wash thy spotted skin,
In Iordans waters seuen times thee clense,
To purge the leprosie that lyes within:
Let sighs still offer vp a sweet incense,
And where with foule contagion of sin,
Those filthie fumes haue wrought the soules offence:
There let that heauenly sacrifice repaire,
And make the rinced soule twice brighter faire.
Contemne the world, where nought but griefe is found,
VVhere sighs the ayre, and sorrow is the food,
Eternall teares the drinke, and howles the sound,
VVhose gastly notes we heare, while dropping blood
Makes seas of woe within our heart abound,
And discontent the fire, our selues the wood:
From whose great flames black vapours doe arise,
VVhich turnd to clowds doe raine downe from our eyes.


But lie below where neuer tempest blowes,
Seeke out some narrow place where thou maist weepe,
VVhere solitarines inuested goes:
On day remember griefe, in silent sleepe
Dreame of thy faults, and those deserued woes,
VVhich in a prison doe thy sad thoughts keepe:
No thunder may thy cottage ouerturne,
Nor thus bedewd with teares can lightning burne.
VVhile mightie Cedars feele the tempests wrack,
Each little shame as winters timeles frost,
Makes them all bare, and doth vncloth their back,
VVhile they below smile at their garments lost,
Each of their faults and each vnlawfull act
Is seene to all, and they are learned most,
VVhich in these great mens crimes a lesson reede,
And tell their fellowes any lawles deede.
VVhile we in silence passe our silent dayes,
No ill on earth nor sorrow after death,
VVe feare not enuious tongues, nor black disprayse,
VVhile they (though soothed in this liuely breath)
After their time are punisht many wayes,
Each swelling heart his hate vnburdeneth,
And wisheth that the earth may heauy lie,
And presse them deeply with her grauitie.
Thus passing foorth a rufull sight they view,
VVhere many hung vpon a crossing tree:
O these (quoth they) no more earths woe shall rew,
Thrise happie easde of mortall miserie:
VVe haue a mightie Ocean yet anew,
Through which our tossed ships to port must flie,
Brought to the summe of great felicitie.


Further they goe when comes a down-cast wight,
VVhose face the Sunne had dide with sunnie black:
O friends (quoth he) and can you take delight
On earth, while heau'ns great pleasures you doe lack?
Come, come each man breath vp his ending spright,
Before foule sin it driue to deadly wrack:
Send vp to heauen a soule, ere sin it get,
Intangled in his nere-dissolued net.
O cease (quoth they) to make an ouerflow
Ouer the bounds of our ny-drowned mindes:
This worlds vncertaintie we well doe know,
VVho so seekes ought, nought but despayre he findes,
And these our earthly bodies sinking low,
In mancipate of shame our soules doe binde:
Our Sunne with clowds is darkned in the rise,
The noone is black, but brightest when he dyes.
Since then the fates our meeting thus ordaind,
Let vs not seeke to teach what each doth see:
But let him happiest be most soules that gaind,
Franchising them to immortalitie:
Here will we tell how that the soule is paind,
Laden with earthly things, not euer free,
Before the bodies seruice they reiect,
And here we'le counsell them to that effect.
Agreed, they fram'd full many a wooden crosse,
And digd vp pooles and many other wayes,
VVhen they perswade them to this gaining losse,
The worlds losse gaine, which gaine our soule imbayes
In happy rest where neuer tempests tosse:
But sweet content our soules in quiet layes,
VVhere Æol dares not foorth his seruants send,
VVhere ending wo, woes heire doth neuer end.


Cant. 5.

The Hermite tels Asotus Tragedie,
His wicked deeds and filthie luparie:
And Cipribel there learnes felicitie,
But Erofel still plagues with crueltie
Pirinoes soule, whose craft when they had found,
They stript her clothes, and to the steed her bound.
Haples that wight within whose bowels lye
The deep-drencht poysons of vncured vice,
Nor any Antidote can helpe apply,
To whose soules cure no leach-art will suffice,
But tossed in the waues from any eye,
Payes desperate his soules vnmatched price:
But happy they awakt from sleepe of night,
To see the blessed dayes thought-clearing light.
Which seld seene blisse new-changed Cipribel,
Hath by her gentle-smiling fortune gaind:
So they that in a parfum'd house doe dwell,
The parfum'd odour afterlong retaind;
And wicked chaind with those that vse doe well,
Haue from their wicked customes soone refraind:
The horse whose back the tamer oft bestrides,
At length with easie pacefull gently rides.
After the Giant-fight when downe he threw,
The filthie sonnes which Aloeus bare,
And those same monsters great Themistos flew,
Spoyling those wolues which all the passers tare,
From their black mansions he his feete withdrew,
And with the Ladies in his way doth fare:
Freeing each wretch from his vnworthie paine,
Restoring them vnto their rest againe.


At length they past where they all wondring spide
A little rocky forme, whence did arise
A fruitfull issuing streame, that still did slide
From out the hollow stone in ample wise:
Fast by a little cabinet they eyde,
Whither desirous of some nouelties,
They goe enquiring what these things mought bee,
VVhich they so strange and neuer-heard did see.
VVhen by a crany there they silent view,
An old age-worne-out father that with beades
Praying full deeply, seem'd some gift to sue
Of the great king, when still he earnest reades,
And letting downe his beades sayes prayer new:
Thus he his lifes cold Autumne-yeares doth leade,
Nor caring for the world nor worldly wealth,
But his beloued soules beloued health.
When streight Themistos; Sir, without offence,
If tell you may, pray tell the mysterie
Of yonder stone, and if oft recompence
Can quite, I pray my kindnes proue and trie:
Sir, your request (quoth he) doth grieue my sence,
With new memoriall of this historie:
Yet though each word doe bring with him a teare,
You shall my storie and sad fortune heare.
VVeeping and speaking thus the mourner sayes:
VVhere now vast rudenes shewes her rugged face,
Here on these plaines shone in the former dayes,
The stateliest walls that ere with glories grace,
Send to the world their fayre prospectiue rayes,
The place to them gaue worth, they to the place,
That twixt both worths farre worthiest they were seene:
O that as once they were they now had beene.


Here dwelt (vnworthie farre here for to dwell)
My brother (why should I him brother call?)
Asotus height, that nere-recured, fell
Into the snares of vice (O haples fall!)
Nothing but luxurie did please him well,
Drinking and feasting and consuming all:
His belly was the ship whereto he set
All marchandize that he could euer get.
Like to the yawning mouth of vgly Dis,
That euer gapes still hungry for his pray,
Where sinking downe into the black Abysse,
The pained soules their sinnes deare tribute pay:
Such was the neuer-satiat gulfe of his,
Wherein still soules of beasts he fresh did lay:
VVhen to extinguish his thirsts raging fire,
VVhole haruests he of prest-grapes doth require.
Once when the Sunne began for to release
His teames, all weary with their daily paine,
Came by a godly father, whom he prayes
His castles lodging for a night to daigne,
Though loth he were so much to yeeld to ease,
Yet by requests here now he will remaine:
In is he gone to take his nightly rest,
Meaning to lodge within this Pythoes nest.
Hunger the vulture that on euery maw
Bites with her meager teeth her wombe to fill,
Bids them to yeeld to common natures law,
And satisfie her not resisted will:
The father who before then neuer saw
The dish where rawish blood downe did distill,
But Pythagorean like with gardens fed,
VVonders to see so many creatures dead.


Fie shame (quoth he) to kill the harmeles beast,
That with his fleece maintaines our vestiment,
And with this bloodie meate to make a feast,
VVhich nature made for a more good intent:
VVhat hath the oxe deseru'd, that still opprest
VVith heauie yoke in paine his yeares hath spent?
Or what the sheepe, the sheepe that innocent,
VVhich neuer cryes for slaughter vp ypent?
Sauing your tale (quoth he) and taking wine,
Asotus in a full carouse doth swill:
But he whose grieued heart doth much repine,
To see him with those bloodie meates to fill
His rau'ning panch, goes forward to diuine;
Telling that for his soule this feast was ill,
Who in deepe hell for penance long shall fast,
Guiltie to thinke vpon his pleasure past.
Thus long he spoke when downe Asotus lyes,
Whom deep-fetcht draughts had ouer-nie opprest,
When streight the Sire from out the castles flyes:
Whence fled, he falls vpon his humbled breast,
And zealous to the king of heauen cryes,
Turning his face vnto the darkned East,
Praying to shew some iudgement on his sin,
Before more soules this wicked vice might win.
No sooner hath he prayd, but vanisht quite
The old foundations of the ruinde walls,
Like to a bird that flieth from the sight,
And in some farre remoued valley falls,
Nothing appeares, but this vngodly wight,
Who while for helpe all cursing deeply calls,
Into this stone was chang'd, whence still arise
New issuing streames of superfluities.


And here stay I, that to the rising Sunne,
For that his soule full many prayers say;
Beginning still, nor euer will haue done,
Vntill to rest his soule transport I may:
This said; downe riuolets of teares doe run,
And streight all vehement begins to pray:
A ruthfull sight it was, for deepest smart
Was sure ingrauen in his grieued hart.
But now is Cipribel quite shapte a new,
Sorrow within her heart doth tirannize,
Her former pleasure she doth deepely rew;
And be their Gods which see our vanities,
Quoth she; rewarding men their sins great due,
Or is there any heauenly paradise,
Where euerlasting haruest shall repay
The fruites of good which here on earth we lay?
This said, she doth the aged Sire request
To tell the blessed newes she nere did heare:
Who all the rites that holy men profest,
And who vnhappie, and who blessed were,
Which was the way to euiternall rest,
Where was the place of horror and of feare:
To her in largest tolde where we will leaue
This new made Saint her lessons to receiue.
Now good Pyrino must I tell thy wo,
The mighty wrack, thy weary barke sustaines,
Whom Erofel thus tumbleth to and fro,
With boistrous winds of her infected braines;
Needes must thou to thy haples fortune goe,
When desperate rider holds thy guiding raines:
Losse of a loue, in loue is greatest death,
But mocking of his losse twise burdeneth.


After he had sung forth the historie,
VVherein his Tragedies he did reueale:
Erofel seemes some comfort to applie,
And where she poyson laies, she seemes to heale,
Like the Hiena, that will sorriest crie,
VVhen she in cruelst manner meanes to deale:
The Adder in his seeming kisse doth sting,
And mischiefe lies within most flattering.
Now she perswades to lift his wearied seete,
And to his Lady turne his dolefull course;
Perchance (quoth she) some streames of hope doe fleete,
VVhich may quench out the flame, ere growing worse;
VVho neuer ventures, prize shall neuer meete,
And he his owne vnwillingnes will curse:
That while occasion turnes her hairy face,
Staies not her neuer-back returning pace.
Now when the darkened euening cals to rest,
VVhen Stars all ready in their watch doe stand,
VVhen he doth of his loue remember least;
Then comes she in, and questions doth demaund,
To ouercharge the wight so deepe opprest,
To make him dreame of things like furies brand,
In the infernall nookes of gaping hell,
Torturing the soules which downe condemned fell.
So lankish famine gnawing on her breast,
Tires Erisicton with a restles drought,
And makes him euer hungring for a feast;
VVhen yet that swallowed feast but grieues his thought,
That his luxurious end so soone hath ceast,
Eu'n such loue famine hath this Tiger brought:
To this ore burning youth, within whose soule
A thousand Sisiphus their restles burdens roule.


Sometimes in womans cloathes she would appeare,
In mightie shadowes to affright him more,
And Bellamies diuinest image beare,
And play an Anticke by his chamber dore:
VVhen straight the louer thinks that she was there,
And in pursuite out from his bed he tore:
She flies, he now remaines of all bereft,
Like one whom Fayries company hath left.
One night she came to play her wonted game,
When he all desp'rate in a mightie rage
Drew forth his blade, and brandishing the same,
Betwixt them made an vncouth mariage,
And made her arme giue to her head the blame,
That fram'd such plaies vpon so strange a stage:
For he deepe stroke vnto the center-bone,
O haples stroke it had no further gone.
Like Cadmus Dragon in the Theban caue,
VVhen with his speare he pierst his writhed tayle,
Begins within his den to rage and raue,
And swelling deepely meanes then to preuaile,
VVhen with vnited force at him he draue,
Such rancor doth her cancred heart assaile:
As loues great Eagle lesser foule doth rent,
To massaker him so, her heart is bent.
But now the fates thy whiter threede haue spun,
Foule Erofel, now hath thy shady loome,
All died in pitch her griesly birth begun,
Masking misfortunes shade and haples bloome:
Now hath thy night vailde thy most orient sunne,
Blacke chance to worser fortune doth thee doome:
Cast downe Loues Scepter, tirannize no more,
The wings are scorcht which once thy flight vpbore.


When cheating Phœbus had his fiery steeds
Breath forth bright lightning in the rising morne:
Pirino on whose heart grim sorrow feeds,
Lest his sad couch in which no rest is borne,
Now easier fate his happier chaunce areedes,
Loue doth not pricke him as it wont beforne:
Whose presage drieth vp the ice of smart,
And makes a verdant spring within his hart.
Vpon his foaming Palfrey doth he mount,
When straight his furie hath his heart in chase:
But let the cottages make great account,
When Boreas turnes his cloud-in-wrapped face,
This Castell now all stormes wrath doth surmount,
It scornes to stooping now his height debase:
Goe Erofel those iawes in sunder teare,
Whose poyson to no worth their edge doth reare.
Foreward they trauell in appoynted way,
Driuing the tediousnes of shortned miles,
She still is egged to the Knights decay;
And with new stinging tales his eares defiles,
While nothing can her words his minde afray:
But now a sudden noyse doth end her wiles,
Like to the humming of great swarmes of Bees,
VVhich in this sorte vnto their hearing flees.
Goe Aspicke goe, which with thy venomd sting
Defil'st the puritie which nature gaue,
VVithin thy head a thousand fiends doe ring,
And whispering counsell doe thy thoughts depraue,
Let mischiefe thee vnto thy buriall bring,
Or robbers lay thee in some vncouth caue:
VVhere thou entombed in eternall night,
Maist not defile the toxicated light.


VVhile thou my soule whom spots of sinne doe staine,
Vanish from this thy worldly pilgrimage,
And to the highest powers of heauen complaine,
Thou didst vnwilling spoyle thy heritage,
VVhile as the sunne who knowes my inward paine,
Viewing the wofull ofspring of my rage:
Shall witnes to blacke Radamant that I,
A penitentiall sinner fainting dye.
VVhile thou fell hagge, whose foule corrupted minde
Doth glut his thought with sight of others griefe,
Maist wander haples neuer helpe maist finde,
But driuen from thy hauen of reliefe,
Tosse vp and downe with some vncertaine winde,
Not euer trusted neuer get beliefe:
And I appoynted to a fatall end,
VVill dye that life, whose death is liues deare friend.
Following the sound vnto a bush they came,
VVhom when he saw: and doest thou liue (quoth he)
And tooke his sworde and would haue pearst the dame:
But straight Pirino; pray Sir patient be,
VVhat euer your offended thoughts can blame,
I deepely vow shall be redrest by me:
Onely bewray the reason of your wrath,
And who the author is of all your scath.
O Sir (quoth he) this is a woman borne,
Though falsely hid in seeming mans disguise,
VVhose beautie as his badge my heart hath worne:
VVoe to the time I heard her flatteries,
For since that time my soule was still forlorne,
Of th' Angell hew of my faire infancies:
I toucht the pitch which in her corps doe lye,
By which the vestalls of my heart doe dye.


For this was she whose once beloued face
VVrought deepe affections in my yeelding minde;
And ouer rulde me with her pleasing grace,
VVhile in this loue, her tractable I finde,
And all my words doth seeme glad to imbrace,
VVhich doth in double bands my dutie binde:
Her did I worship, Idoll of my hart,
And my most dearest soules more dearer part.
Now are we ioyned each in giuing troth,
And haue appoynted certaine time to bride,
One was the minde, one was the thought of both,
VVhen I was sad, then she her light would hide,
And seeme as if to ioy her soule was loth,
Both in vniting of their loues abide:
But this so high a sea of rising loue,
Soone to a lowest ebbe then ere did proue.
She seemde like Phæeton in her desire,
And needs would driue the chariot of Sunne,
Carying her Sunnes to ouercharging fire,
VVhen thus to me her dolefull speech began:
O loue whose heart the seate where I aspire,
Hath with so deepe a loue my louing wonne:
O be not hard which Nature soft hath made,
Nor let the spring of kindnes scarce borne fade,
Here is my heart whom thy Sunnes loue doth melt,
But it like waxe more melting more doth hang,
VVhich loues comburing zonefull deepe hath felt,
This heart which in my breasts faire temple rang,
Vnto thy seruice still; and still hath dealt
Faithfull in loue, though thorough many a pang:
Ease it and me from such a sweltring zone,
VVhere thirstie still; still water we haue none.


This heart all bloodles let it be thy white,
And shoote therewith thy arrowes piercing steele;
Or if in his confusion thou delite,
Then torture is vpon a racking wheele,
Or let thy swordes sharpe edge thine ire acquite,
And let it any torment plagued feele:
Onely first pierce it with a dart of loue,
Then all the instruments of anger proue.
Sweete loue, one onely Nectar-drop I craue,
Doe not denie me one: one is not much,
Though to thy loue thus I am bound a slaue,
Yet litle meat to feede me doe not grutch,
And with one morsell me from dying saue,
O cruelst death of all, whose death is such:
O didst thou see my heart, how it doth beate
And pant for hunger, sure it should haue meate.
Perchaunce the peoples voyce thou much doest feare,
That's like a winde which neuer man can see,
VVhose idle rumor many things doth beare
VVhich are vntrue, she euery where doth flee,
The best doe often her worst colours weare,
And on her sable pinsons lifted be:
Beside our mariage, to be made ere long,
VVill strengthen al the breach, & make it twice as strong.
Now in my heart Reason and Loue did fight,
Reason with ensigne red, Loues ensigne pale,
My face the field where they doe wreake their spight,
Sometimes Loues ensigne vanquished, downe would fall
Then Reasons colour plaied most in sight,
And in a blushing red enuellop'd all:
Straight Loue recouering his former spright,
Kept Reason downe, and claimde the place for right.


Then said I to my soule, how dost thou kill
The onely childe I haue sweete Chastitie,
The Iudge for murther damne to torments will,
Thy wicked thoughts? O whither dost thou flye?
O doe not leaue thy goodly fort, vntill
VVith these thy holy goods thou needs must dye:
But then my soule that scornde a woman stay,
Opend the Castell doore and made her way.
Now am I robbing from my spoyled Saint,
Those milke white robes wherewith she was araide,
And with this sacriledge my soule doe taint,
My goddesse in her shrine no longer staide:
VVhen as she saw her seruants faith to faint,
And on her turtle wings her selfe she laide:
VVhen to my thoughts she gaue her latest will,
That still hereafter shame her seate should fill.
Now is my garden naked of his flower,
Whom I before with care did till and dresse,
And gaue it to her for my chiefest dower,
The vtmost toll of all that I possesse:
But then her wanton lookes began to lower,
And filthie figure of ingratefulnesse:
Leauing my bower vnto the world she fled,
Since when with horror all my daies I led.
And here a Pilgrime haue I spent my life,
My life growne olde with care and guiltie shame;
VVhere now blacke melancholy is my wife,
Harb'ring my thoughts when they for succor came,
Scorning the world, whose sorrowes are so rife,
VVhere one howres ioy doth bring one ages blame:
VVhile musing thoughts which on my wife I bred,
Doe finde me meate on which I still haue fed.


Thus hath he sayd, while guiltie Erofell
Did oftentimes assay from thence to flie:
But good Pirino that her guiles did smell,
Made her the listning of the tale aby:
Which when he ended, both vpon her fell,
And stript the cloathes of her hypocrisie:
VVhen by the fresh apparance of the wound,
Pirino all her craft and guile had found.
Then bound they fast her naked armes behinde,
And to the horse her feete they strongly tide,
And let her goe where she shall neuer finde
Rest nor reliefe, but still in horror ride:
Like to the Affrick Mares that on the winde
Engender, and their kinde haue multiplide:
So doth this furie on the emptie ayre
Breed guiltie shame, and stinging deepe despayre.
She scoures like Auster on the sandie plaines,
And when a farre she vieweth any man,
She turnes her course and flieth thence amaine,
VVhile as the Sunne with his still scorching bran,
Dies her quaint face in a farre blacker graine,
And her deformed haire downe still doth fan,
VVhile on her heart sharpe hunger still doth feede,
Quenching her thirst with teares that euer bleede.
Now doe Pirino and this Knight consent,
To wander through the Ile as errant Knights,
And sweare to keepe their martiall thoughts vnbent
From Ladies seruice, or those loues delights,
Though I still bad them from their vow relent,
Telling the worth of all those femall wights,
VVhen they fro me all raging spurd amaine,
Swearing that womans loue I nere should gaine.


Cant. 6.

Faire Cypribel doth proud Orguillo meete,
And wins his helmet by her martiall might,
Who lay low conquerd humbly at her feete,
And with a Tiger fiercely she doth fight,
And her loues tombe and death she now doth see,
Themistos doth a Knight from bondage free.
As doth the Elixer with his secret power,
Turne baser mettals into purest gold:
Or as the comfort of a moystning shower,
Reuiues the flowers which downe their heads did hold,
VVhose parched rootes barren drouth did deuoure:
So doth the speech which he to her hath told,
Clensing the drosse from her defiled minde,
As mistie fogges with a North scouring winde.
And now Themistos will depart away,
Sundring their diuers wayes vnlike euents:
And Cypribel, whose soule in new array,
Goes forth to helpe the poore and innocents,
Is marching early by the blush of day,
With speare in rest and shield fit for defence:
Meaning to teach the worse what she doth learne,
Or with her sword to make them dearly earne.
Forth gone, she meetes vpon a mountaines head
A stately Knight that proud vpbore his crest,
His footcloth all with starres bespangled,
And on his shield all azurde was imprest
An Eagle, or, aboue a Sunne was leyd,
VVhereon his fastned eybeames still did rest:
Sic oculos his word, the world to tell,
That so on high his haughtie minde did dwell.


Behind him on a lingring asse there rode
A sober man, downe by whose belt was tide
An inkhorne pendant, from his neck there yode
A thinnest robe not cut of any side,
VVhereon his poesie patchingly was sowde,
A bird that pickt a Serpents iawes all wide:
Dura necessitas the word, to show,
Hunger and want did make them both doe so.
This was a poet whom this loftie Knight,
Maintainde to write his verse ennobled gests:
For he to ground full many foes had dight,
Vpheauing them from out their saddle rests,
All which in loftie verse this hand did write,
And sure I storie was that Muses hests,
Should thus be prentises to seruile deede,
But rocks cannot resist sharpe pearcing neede.
Now are they met, when quoth that loftie mate,
Giue me thy sword, least this my breath confound
Thy blasted soule, if once I wreake my hate:
When nay, replide she, things so hardly found,
May not be giuen to each that big will prate:
But fight for it, and first we will compound,
That who orecomes shall this for reward beare,
He shall the helmet haue his foe did weare.
He is agreed: now are they set for race,
And fiercely runne each against th' others breast:
So haue I seene when Neptune with his mace,
Hath made the raging floods with stormes opprest,
Two hugie Argoes with most tumbling pace,
Too much with tossing tempests ouerprest,
Thunder against his fellowes bellowing side,
VVhile in the gulfe downe swallowed both they slide.


Both tumbled downe, they doe renew with hand
The fight, which on their palfraies not preuailes,
Each on the other laies his steely brand,
And where they see defence most surest sailes,
There streight their cleauing weapon fixt doth stand:
At last Orgillo on her helmet nailes
VVith mightie force his plate-intrenching blade,
And on her head a skarring wound he made.
She moued with the rigour of the blow,
Plucks in one stroke the force of all her might,
And on his shoulder downe her blade doth throw,
VVhich sliding thence his arme doth sharply bite:
VVhich wounded, doth his fencing targe let go,
VVhile she doth claime her victories due right:
He willing, but not able to resist,
Doth suffer her to doe what ere she list.
Downe doth she take his helmet from his head,
VVhose loftie plume vp on the highest set,
Told that his proud heart would to heauen haue fled,
But that the drosse of his foule corps did let:
And streight her helmet she vncouered,
VVhen from her crowne the curled corronet,
In which she pleated had her tangled haire,
Fell from her head downe playing with the aire.
Orguillo shaming now to see a maide
That got the conquest ore his quailed might,
Himselfe vpon his palfrey straight he laide,
And spurring mainly vanisht out of sight,
His peny poet hastie after made,
But neuer was he since seene by the light:
Yet often hath his poet since been knowne,
Nor yet from out the earth his name is flowne.


Now Cypribel still followeth on her way,
Lead by a beaten path vpon a plaine,
VVhen streight she sees, as farre as see she may,
A Tiger, hunting seem'd for bloodie gaine,
VVho thinking that she hath espide a pray,
VVith yawning iawes runnes hoping to attaine:
And with the Lady ramping she doth meete,
VVho with her sword her grisly foe doth greete.
Such in the Næmæan forrest was the fight,
VVhen Ælcid with the hideous Lion straue:
Such was the battell when in furious spight,
Iason the firie breathing monsters draue
Vnto their end, by Colchis magicks might:
And such was Theseus when in writhed caue,
VVith puissant force and deeply graued dint,
His wrath on Minotaure he did imprint.
The Tiger bites, she cuts, but now at last
With griping teeth he hath vnloosd a plate:
Where when his iawes he ment next time to cast,
Drawing her bodies sent, he doth abate
The dreadfull furie which is ouer-past,
And fawning seem'd that was so fierce of late:
VVhen straight he back returnes his wonted way,
And seem'd to follow did the Lady pray.
For when he softly went, he turnes his eyes
Back to the dame, whom nothing feare dismayd,
But streight she followes him, that humble wise
Lead to a Sepulcher this errant mayd:
A Sepulcher it is that couered lyes
VVith helmets and with shields all ouer layd,
VVhich from the passing Knights this Tiger tore,
And for a couering to his master bore.


This is a Knight whose thoughts like to the skie,
VVere turnde about his Ladies beauties pole,
A vertuous Knight he was, whom wantonlie
This Lady in her fond youth did controle:
But now his losse she mourneth inwardlie,
That she hath sent away so sweet a soule:
But when to cindars all consumed are,
Too late then fall the watrie teares of care.
This Knight, when Cypribel was fled away,
Wandred through many a dale and weary hill,
Seeking his wretched sight on her to lay;
But she whom deepe disdaine too much did fill,
Flies from his sight, and seekes an vncouth way:
VVhen he his labour neuer left, vntill
All in despayre he came vnto this plaine,
VVhich by a forrest neerely doth remaine.
Here when he came, he heard a hollow grone,
VVhich from some caue did seeme to volley out:
VVhen following the sound, he now is gone
Vnto the wood, where searching all about,
He saw a doore which placed was vpon,
To trap the wild beasts by some rustick lout:
VVhich when he opened forth a Tiger came,
That to a flattring looke his face did frame.
Nor euer would he leaue his dearest Lord,
Who ment ere long to leaue himselfe and all:
But serues him faithfully at bed and bord,
VVatching by night, by day abroad he stale
Such forrest pray as did the wood afford,
Or he could get in great Syluanus hall:
But nothing could his former ioy reduce,
VVhose only cates are on her forme to muse.


He powres foorth teares when downe the Tiger lies,
And with a wrinched face doth seeme to weepe:
Sometimes in hope to flatter fantasies,
He with his eyes doth woo sweet banisht sleepe,
VVhen softly wrapt, the beast doth close his eyes,
Yet not full closde, a watch he still doth keepe,
That rockie heart he hath, whom could not moue
This Tigers and this mans so fruitles loue.
But now he sees where death with greedie spade,
Meanes vp to dig the minerals of his hart,
And his soules treasure dearely to inuade:
VVhen readie and prepared to depart,
He tooke a stone, on which he grauing made
The wofull ditty of his pinching smart,
And wrote his stony loue on marble stone,
That to the grauer seem'd for pitty mone.
Receiue thou stone the issues of my woe,
Of which blood-issue now my heart must die:
And you black words shall forth testators goe,
Of this my will to her that hence doth flie:
And if you see her, for me tell her so,
That in you all my testament doth lie:
Tell that on you I haue ingrau'd by art,
That art and nature could not on her hart.
Tell her how still I lou'd her till my night,
And then I wrote to you, you should her loue:
Tell how that teares my eyes did euer fright
Till now, and then I bad you springs to moue:
Tell how I mou'd you with my pensils might,
VVhen her my pensiue heart in vaine did proue:
How on my graue I grau'd these things to her,
My selfe the grauesman and my selfe the beare.


These things he writing dide, and dying wrote,
And left that storie tomb-stone for his hearse:
When he no sooner past black Stixes bote,
But streight the Tiger with his clawes did pearce
The trenched earth as deepe as ere he mote,
Wherein he put the corse and heauie verse,
And from the Knights their helmets still would teare,
Which for a couering he would thither beare.
Now when the Lady came vnto the graue,
She rouled thence the armes that on him lay:
Whom when she saw, from out her eyes she draue
A gushing flood that did his face imbay
In siluer streames, which dying he did craue,
Yet could not gaine it in his dying day:
But now his face all sprinkled with her dew,
Seemes looking fresh againe and liuing new.
Sweet Nectar teares Electrus pretious drops,
Wound saluing balme, whose sweet infusion
The bloody festring or an issue stops,
Cælestis-aqua, whose sweet potion
Makes winter boughs renew their naked tops:
Æson Medeas incantation,
Which powred life into the wrinkled eld,
And plants the tree Deaths woodman downe had feld.
Then takes she vp the grauen marble-stone,
And through her watrie spectacles she reedes,
Which makes the letters three which erst were one:
Other (quoth she) of you there is no needes,
Vnles three hearts I had for all to mone,
My heart for one enough alreadie bleedes:
O cruell heart that in so sweet a chace,
Couldest deny to turne thy flying face.


This fiercest Tiger seemes to rue his case,
Thou wroughtst this miserie whom he doth rue:
He with the earth hath couered his face,
Thou didst vnclaspe his heart, and there imbrue
Thy tyrant-thoughts that had too little grace:
These armes for shelter he about him drue,
When I denide my armes about him wreath,
Which might orecome the surquedrie of death.
But now she leaueth this funereall song,
And causeth on his graue a stone be set,
While in the forrest by the trees among,
There she hath fram'd a syluan cabinet,
Vowing to make the Knights that passe along,
To pay their shields to quit her sorrowes det:
But vaine, thy beauties shield would once haue done,
More then the heape of shields thou now hast wonne.
Where leaue we her to penance for her loue,
And turne our driuing sailes another way,
Searching Themistos forth, that now doth roue
Towards the maiden towne, where streight a fray
He hath begun, and with his fauchion droue
The quailed citizens to their decay,
He wing and slicing with his glistring blade,
Such spoyle with lambes haue rau'ning Lions made.
This is a towne whither a wanton dame,
That fled an exile through the loathed land,
And to these parts with her attendants came,
Where streight this goodly towne they tooke in hand,
And in a little space vpraisde this frame,
Where that same Ladie Queene did still command,
And many lawes she made, whose greater part
Art quite extinguisht, not without desart.


And this was one, that euery Lady might
Two husbands haue, and he that did refuse
To haue a partner in his loues delight,
Should beare that paine that womens heads should chuse.
One time it chanst when darkned was the light,
The Sunne downe sinking low from mortall viewes,
VVhen to this towne arriu'd a valiant Knight,
VVhere with his Lady will he spend the night.
There had he past that night and many a day,
Blinded with pleasure of so fayre a place,
And ment a longer time to make delaye
But while a citizen that saw the face
Of that fayre dame, where beauties beames doe play,
So rauishing and with so pleasing grace,
That his burnt heart was scorcht with too much heat,
Feeling no moysture where the flame was great.
And seeing no good salue to heale his sore,
VVhere chastitie the Surgeon should bee,
Vpon the womens law he trusted more,
And vnto that his only hope doth flee:
VVherewith he warnes the Knight, who not forbore
His lightning wrath, but quickly makes them see
How ill a cause they had, and with his sword
Hundreds of soules on Charons bote doth bord.
But multitudes his valour much opprest,
And tooke him prisoner: so a Lyonesse
VVhom from his young a ranger hath supprest,
Caught in the subtile gins of craftinesse,
Bound in an iron grate doth quiet rest,
Helples despayring and all comfortlesse:
But when his libertie he once doth finde,
He deeply shewes the furie of his minde.


Now is this Knight captiude, and streight they call
A Iurie all of women, that must sit
To iudge this captiue gotten in their thrall:
Some hags that meate in ten yeares did not bite,
Scarse able from their rustie couch to crall:
Some whose downe sinking nose their chin did hit,
And some deepe furrowed fogs with hollow eyes,
On whom who lookes ten months he sooner dyes.
These nod their heads like to a flock of geese,
Consulting what must in this cause be done:
VVhen forth there steps an old vnlusty peece,
That twentie yeares hath neuer seene the Sunne,
On whose furd chin did hang a budgie fleece,
VVith filthie mosse and drosse all ouerrunne,
VVhose gummes the palsie so to ods did set,
That they their loosed teeth did all out spet.
Quoth she, euen strip the youth that is so nice,
And let him naked there before them stand,
Bound to a post, that shall this once suffice:
No sooner she this iudgement did command,
But all about him runne like to the mice,
VVhose troopes conioyned in an endles band,
About the Bishop of great Mentz did runne,
And on his corps an vncouth conquest wonne.
Now is he led vnto an open place,
VVhere shameles creatures will his shame disclose:
But by the way a Knight there comes a pace,
Wondring a farre to see such troopes as those,
And doth enquire why this so great disgrace
Is offred him, and why he chained goes:
They streight the manner of his storie tell,
VVho to their words replide they did not well.


Then streight on him they rush, and left alone
The prisoner, only one attending stayes:
Whom downe he throwing drew his fauchion,
And on his masters throte it freely layes:
This while the other Knight so much hath done,
That many saw the latest of their dayes:
And sinking downe to Plutoes smokie sort.
Told him they could not stay to see the sport.
So Perseus of the Centaures hauock made,
Cleauing their hoofie legs with steely dint,
And Stixes banks with damned soules doth lade,
As doe their Knights whose wrath will neuer stint,
Vntill the edge of euer-hungrie blade,
Shall with his bloodie seale each foman print,
And make his pasport currant downe to hell,
Not hindred by the ghosts below that dwell.
The captiue now is freed, while downe they fall
Like to vntimely fruit, whom blustring winde,
Breaking from out his iron-prison wall,
Strooke from the tree, and made new place to finde
In lowest ground, that erst on boughes so tall,
All loftily his proudest stem did binde:
Dying into the dust he downe doth slide,
Neuer to see his summer beauties pride.


Cant. 7.

The brethren still renew their sharpe debate,
Pirino viewes a fayre distressed dame,
Whom cruell Knight had brought to wofull state:
With whom vnto a castle soone he came,
After he had reueng'd the bloodie deede,
Quiting the bloodie man with bloodie meede.
When as the earths great palsie doth her moue,
Shaking her bowels with an ayrie rent,
It shiuers downe the Citadels aboue,
And her great burthens all in peeces rent:
But not so much as discord doth remoue,
Whose quartan shaking in his continent,
Feeds on the intrals of the stinging harts,
And teares his bowels in tormented parts.
Which mightie earthquake now these brethren shooke,
That with their swords each others limbes doe hew,
And makes them like the ruddy morning looke,
Embrude in sanguine and in purple hew:
No time doth slide but one the other strooke,
Dying the stayned earth with gory dew:
The musick still in harmonie doth sing,
While still their swords to others sides they fling.
Thus doe they hack and spoyle with grisly wounds,
The vitall fountaines of their welling blood:
Like to the Bore whom Meleagers hounds
In Calidons forwasted fields withstood,
Whose iron tuske with renting edge confounds
The springs fayre fruits and summers growing food,
Tearing the vine and Bacchus ensigne downe,
And in his panch that sacred iuyce doth drowne.


Thus doe they cruelly their forces waste,
Vntill two princes came vnto the place,
Two princes that with loue each one imbraste,
Ioyned in strongest league and mightie grace,
That in a louing heart could ere be plaste,
No enuie could their plighted loued face:
But like two doues that in the woods doe fly,
Starue out themselues when as his mate doth dy.
They pitying to see that spitefull hate,
Should thus distract the soules of tortur'd wights,
VVent streight to part them from that sharpe debate:
But they now swelling with vnbounded sprights,
No whit the more their furie did abate,
But exercising still their hatefull sprights,
Vpon each other wreake their mightie wrath,
And in each others gore their swords imbath.
Like mightie buls that in a femall flock,
Striue who should be the droues promoted head,
VVith horny engines do their frontiers knock,
That from their browes a purple streame downe bled,
VVhile drumming still with mightie blowes they stroke,
And with their fellowes hurt their ire they fed,
VVhen ramping fiercely on each others skull,
Downe to the earth their carkasses they pull.
But now at length they haue disseuered
These fighting brethren, and their swords vp lay,
And euery prince with him one brother led,
And parted thence vnto a diuers way:
VVhen home this burden soone they caried,
VVhose teeth yet gnash that this their bloodie fray
VVas not full tried, and with venome swell
Gainst those that parted them, though doing well.


And still doe egge these sworne friends to fight,
Stirring so long to strife their burning mindes,
That though no cause they had of their despight,
Yet enuie still some secret reason findes:
And they send challenges to try by might
Their strife, no longer league their friendship bindes:
But like two beares that from a keeper scape,
Doe waste the fields with massacre and rape.
VVhere we will leaue to desolation,
Those whom fell discord doth so much increase:
And to Pirino will againe be gone,
VVho marched forward still in great pretence,
That Ladies seruice he would nere haue done:
But he his formers sinne shall recompence,
And ere I leaue him (so I loue your kinde)
His heart and hands another way shall finde.
After the shameles Erofels defeate,
VVhen with the pilgrime Knight he ioynde his way,
They for aduentures strangest paths doe beate,
Searching out works of valour euery day,
VVhose haughtie mindes thinke nothing is so great,
But with their puissance they'le ouerway:
About whose boldest hearts encircled was,
Strong mightie oke and thrice enfolded brasse.
Not long they forreind, till on plaine they spide
A wofull sight as euer eye beheld,
A Ladie that on ground all wounded lide,
Fayrer then her the Sunne hath viewed seld,
And more mishap did neuer dame betide:
For she to ground with ruthles blow was feld,
Like to the sweetest rose in haruest time,
Is mowen downe in youths most lustie prime.


They rested not vntill they to her came,
Vpon whose eyes death seemeth to arrest:
And turning vp their Alabaster frame,
Made death in loue with them that lou'd death best:
But now those Knights did ransome fayre the dame,
Barring her soule from such a heauie rest,
And vp did binde the life dissoluing wound,
VVho wept in blood, that it on her was found.
But now Pirino quite his oth forgate,
And moued much with pitie, more with loue,
Downe from his horse as light as winde he gate,
And from the ground her quickly doth remoue,
Cursing the sword, the hand, and cursed fate,
That on this Lady crueltie did proue:
O who can tell what vertue hidden lyes,
VVithin the charming of a Ladies eyes.
Now doth he wish that he the sword had beene,
For to haue kist that Ladies downy brest:
Or he were Balsamum to powre betweene
The lips of that broad wound: where sweetest rest
In beauties haruest yet lookes euer greene,
And would from stony hearts haue teares exprest,
To see so fayre a Ladie foully vsde,
And that same beautie which such wrong abusde.
Forth doe they goe to finde some resting place,
VVhere they her deepe intrenched wound may dresse,
VVhile still Pirino musing on her face,
Studieth the astronomie of happinesse,
VVhose starres doe leade vnto the port of grace,
VVhere is inuested perfect blessednesse:
The starres of her sweet eyes where beautie plaines,
That wrongfull prison her in bonds detaines.


Forth doe they cary her their purposde way,
VVhile still she lieth dumbe, no word doth flowe:
From out the Oracle where Beautie lay,
Silence in darknes all within doth goe,
To keepe her whom sharpe paine holds for a pray,
Subdued to pinching griefe and griefly woe:
That filthie dragon keepes the garden gate,
VVhere heauenly Roses flourished of late.
Now haue they spied a castell from a farre,
VVhether with all their speede they forward make,
Meaning to make that heauen of this starre,
That makes all heau'n where her bright beames doe flake,
But ere vnto the fort they arriued are,
A new aduenture doth them ouertake:
Foure Knights doe meete them with their drawen swords,
VVhose edges on their armes act Tragick wordes.
Now on a banke the Lady downe they set,
And to the battell doe themselues addresse,
VVhere with outragious blowes each other beat,
And on their foemen doe Reuenge impresse:
At last one brustling in a furious hear,
Ran through his mate, whom he his foe did gesse:
The other quiting him, they downeward fell,
Their bodies to the earth, their soules to hell.
VVhere we will leaue the other to their fight,
And of this Ladies wofull storie tell:
And what misfortune brought her to this plight,
How to this gulfe of miserie she fell:
But thinke the whiles that to the pilgrim Knight,
Pirino still his fight continues well:
And pray that he the victorie may win
Here in this fray which they a fresh begin.


This Lady hath long time both liu'd and lou'd,
With a good Knight whose yeares were tender yong,
Nor euer from his bosome she remou'd,
But like the Iuy still embracing long,
Who with like care his carefull loue approu'd,
And in the consort of her musicke song:
Clasping her with the twine of compast armes,
While with his kisses he her fancy charmes.
Chast and most strong his loue did still remaine,
And in her brest his flowring yeares he spent,
No time nor strife his spotles loue could staine,
But still was pleased when she was content,
And would begin to mourne when she did plaine,
Grieuing on woe, ioying on meriment:
One breath betwixt their kissing lips doth passe,
One onely soule in two faite bodies was.
The sight of them could Enuies force abate,
And make her Isie hardnes to relent,
Such loue their interchanged thoughts begate,
As still to mutuall ioye their hearts were bent,
Within their breasts Loue in his kingdome sate,
Minding to fill them with deepe rauishment:
My thoughts scarce view, my words their loue disgrace,
That for such heauenly things are farre too base.
Thus each delighted with the others sight,
Would needes a solacing in progresse ride,
Sometimes for fainting heate they would alight,
And gentle rest fast by a riuers side,
There cooled with the shade, while they delight
Their pleased eyes, when in the streames they spide
The siluer riuer to reflect againe
Each others looke, and make their loues seeme twaine.


Sometimes downe in a groue they would discend,
And print the grasse with beauties brightest seale,
And with the bowes a round faire garlonds bend:
Mingling in posies which their loue reueale,
While to their eares the birds loue-carrolls sent,
And still among the doue with groning peale,
Doth seeme to sound a farewell to his loue,
Which fowlers hand did cruelly remoue.
Thus doe they spend the summer of their daies,
Studying how each might worke them most delight,
Vntill they came to these vnluckie waies,
Where let blacke darkenes stand and pitchy night,
And fearefull Earthquake vp huge mountaines raise,
Renting the place that wrought these loues despight:
Let still fierce winter choke the dying spring,
And none but night-crowes groning scriches sing.
For hither when they came, a Knight they met,
That without challenge or a cause of hate,
Vpon her Knight downe blowes full spitefull let,
And with his sword infring'd the pretious gate
Which keepes the entrance to his senses seate,
Freeing his soule with this vntimely fate:
Downe on the luckles earth his bones doe fall,
While Saints his soule in heauen doe install.
Which when his Lady saw twixt rage and wo,
His sword she takes from out his loued hand;
And to her ruthles enemie doth goe,
Offring with force that tirant to withstand,
But to her strong heart, weake armes answere no,
Telling they cannot such a waight command:
This while that cursed man with cruell blade,
Into her tender brest a deepe wound made.


O heart so stony as the rocky mount,
On which fayre Rhodope doth buried lye,
VVhich doth th' Hircanian Tigars far surmount
In blood and tirranizing crueltye:
That of sweete beautie mak'st so small account,
And couldst with that accursed flaming eye,
Beholde a Lady thus most louely fayre,
Driuen to mightie woe and deepe dispayre.
But O: he heares me not, for he is fled,
And with him caryed her louing Knight,
VVhile she twixt woe and griefe is almost dead,
The fayrest and the farre most grieued wight
That euer heauenly beautie coloured,
In whom terrestriall shone diuinest light:
Her wound doth pearce vnto her gored heart,
Yet then that wound she feeles more wounding smart.
This cruell Knight was one that still did liue
By rapine, and did rob each passenger:
VVho, as he once with valiant Knight did striue,
Lost his left hand, when he did deepely sweare,
That all the Knights he could to worser driue,
Should so be martird, thus he vp doth reare
VVithin his fort a heape of ioynted hands,
That like a wall now raysed lofty stands.
And this is he that with Pirino fought,
Thinking such victory of him to win:
But so the prouidence of heauen wrought,
That to repent his deedes he doth begin,
For now to conquest he is shamefull brought,
And he that hath so proudly cruell been,
Lyes at the mercie of the victors hands,
VVho leade him prisoner in vnknowen bands.


After this battell to the fort they go,
VVhile still Pirino solaceth the Dame,
Hoping to drye the Ocean of her wo,
But now too late all comforts sun-shine came,
Griefe more resisted still the more doth grow,
And ioy too slow goes euer halting-lame:
The cloudes which darke the glory of her light,
Presage there still shall be blacke sorrowes night.
Now to their lodging are they come at last,
VVhich was the castle where this tirant dwelt:
VVhen straight his bloody triumphes forth they cast,
And now Pirino hath so carefull delt
That she is cured, but her sorrow past,
Can ne're be past which she so deepely felt:
VVhile in a tombe she layes her loued Knight,
VVhose view might banish thence all ioyes delight.

Cant. 8.

Pirino with the Lady doe addres,
To see fayre Bellamyes sad funerall,
Her loue is tolde, and how all comfortles,
For Amians sake in wo her heart doth fall:
Where blacke eclipsing of his radiant light,
Maskt her sweet soule in sorrowes drery night.
O vvho could giue me Eagle soaring wings,
Or plumes of vapours to ascend on hye:
VVhich Sol exhaled to the heauen brings,
That I might see the true diuinity,
Or view the Angel-thoughts, whose musick sings
Vnto heau'ns maker sweetest harmony:
There onely could my thoughts the thought approue
Of thought-surpassing and diuinest loue.


Which like Arion in the floting waues,
Can chaunt the Dolphins with his charming sounds,
And bindes al base affections as slaues,
VVhich with celestiall beautie it confounds,
Sweet-saluing balme which wounds dispayred saues,
VVhose kingdome cannot suffer earthly bounds:
The cinosure of all our ioyes it is,
VVhich leades vs through a world of happly blisse.
VVhich this faire Lady fully doth possesse,
Raught with the thought of her deceased Knight,
And euer keepes her soule in heauinesse:
Like to the Moone that must obscure her light,
VVhen as the Sunne his beautie doth represse,
Of whom she borrowes beames of all delight:
VVhich buried in the sad Sepulchrall ground,
Downe to the earth her captiue thoughts hath bound.
Which when Pirino saw (whose words of ioy
Still wooed sorrow to forsake her brest)
Knowing her Knights deare sight wrought this annoy,
Did counsell her to leaue this idle rest,
VVhich still with musing thoughts did her accloy,
And trauell forth where neuer should molest
Her quiet thoughts the spectacle of death,
VVhose saddest sight the soule disquieteth.
She loth to leaue that where her treasure lay,
VVhere she had buried thoughts of all delight,
Determines neuer to depart away:
But so Pirino sues by day and night,
That now she'le wander till a certaine day,
Though sorie to remoue from out his sight:
VVhose tombe containd with him her dearest hart,
VVith whom in graue she lest her better part.


The Sunne appeareth in his bright aray,
Of firy beames and golden-wreathed gowne,
Meaning to cheare her with so fayre a day,
Now hauing banisht mistie vapours downe,
VVhen forth they ride now setled in their way,
Flying the place whence all her woe was growne:
But though vnto the farthest Indes thou flie,
Swifter then winde will sorrow after hie.
They had not gone as farre as Scithian bow
Darts forth an arrow with his bended string,
Before they see where an old man doth goe
As fast as dried bones his feete can bring:
Who ouertaking him whom age made slow,
Enquired whither he was trauailing:
But deepest cares that raigned in his thought,
Had silence and black melancholy brought.
At last they rouzd him from his musing dreame,
VVhen of a Ladies death he gan a tale,
VVhile downe his cheekes doth raine a pearling streame,
From out the clowdes of wrack and weary bale:
And this is Algiger that doth exclaime
Against our life, that still in woe doth fall:
VVho like the luckles owle these many yeares,
Neuer but at some funerall appeares.
And Bellamy was she whom vgly death
Hath couerd with the graues vntimely shade,
Her now in dusky bloome he manteleth,
That with her beames the world astonisht made,
And on her corps his colours he displayeth,
VVhose colours in too soone a haruest fade:
The weeds doe grow and worser things suruiue,
While as the good are thought too long aliue.


Pirino like to Dædals winged sonne,
That from great heau'n fell to the lowest flood,
To sinke in sorrowes drery gulfe begun,
And in his face doth care depaint in blood,
The victorie he ouer him hath wonne,
Senceles with too much sence of griefe he stood:
Vntill thus brake the cloudes into a showre,
VVhich forth with drery teares he thus did powre.
O cursed earth goe maske thee from the light,
VVhose light is quenched that did make the day,
And let the spring no more with greene bedight,
Adorned be with birds or Musick lay,
For she in whose sweete face spring still did write
Her chiefest glory, now in sad decay,
Hideth the heauenly lampe of louely grace,
And shadoweth from the earth her starrie face.
Her tresses like the flakie beames of morne,
Sheueld along vpon her snowie backe,
That did the golden Tagus colour scorne,
And dangling made behinde a goodly tracke,
Those which haue many harts in triumph borne,
And in loues sea haue driuen them to wracke:
These lye embraced of the basest ground,
VVhose curly traines haue many louers bound.
Thus forth he driues his passion with his plaint,
VVhen they agree to see her funerall,
VVhere we will leaue them wearied and faint:
Pricking toward her wofull buriall,
VVhile I full deepely greeud will striue to paint,
The story of this ladies wofull fall,
And when my teares shall stop their weeping spring,
I will plaine forth the tale I cannot sing.


When at the Dukes long time those thirtie Knights,
Lay for to try who could obtaine the prize,
Where with continuall showes and pleasant sights,
They woo'd the deare attention of her eyes:
One Knight there was whom she aboue all wights
Most dearely lou'd, whose image deepely lyes,
Sealed below vpon her softned hart,
From which his pressure neuer can depart.
Within the blessed heauen of her thought,
His comely face, the onely starre doth shine,
Whose beautie to her soule amazement brought,
That then her selfe a wight was more diuine,
Like Cinthia when on Latmus top she spide
The sleeping shepheard lately dreaming ly'ne:
She is amazed at so great a grace,
And with sweete Mel-dewes doth anoint her face.
No winde but Amian her ship doth blow,
Filling with pleasing breath fayre beauties sayles,
In which to happy Iles she meanes to go;
He beares the rule, and he so much preuailes,
That now she doth not sticke to let him know,
How his most gratefull suite with her auailes:
Who though with those sweete wordes in loue he was,
Yet scarse for kisses could he let them passe.
She grants the garden where delight doth ly,
Which with chaste marriage they will seale anon:
And now she brings him roses by and by,
From which he wished neuer to haue gone,
So sweete an ayre vnto his smell doth fly,
That would with pleasure quite haue ouerflowne,
Drenching olde aged bones in youthfull dew,
And make the hoary man his dayes renew.


Like Hibla fields, where though Bees still doe suck
The hony of delight and rauishing,
Yet in this fertile field remaine to pluck
Heavenly posies, deeply solacing
Distressed mindes which sharpe misfortune strook,
And in thoughts winter doth vpreare the spring,
Whose verdant head shall neuer languish downe,
But stand adorned with a flowry crowne.
VVhich when the lothed wooers quickly found,
They did enuy the happie chance he gate,
And ten of them in mightie challenge bound
His valiant heart to answer their debate,
VVho now thus setled on so sure a ground,
Scorned the easie shafts of fruitles hate,
And sent them answer that next rising day,
He would controle what enuy durst to say.
But still fayre Bellamy doth him intreat,
To shun the dangers of the bloody fight,
And doth his breast with sighs and groning beat,
Enchasing with fayre pearle her clowded sight,
VVhich drooping downe her richest eyes beget,
And to his louing bosome take their flight,
VVhen watering the plants that loue doth sow,
They quickly made sweet lowly pitty grow.
But he that had his vowed promise past,
VVith kisses still her opned lips doth stay:
She opneth still, he still his lets doth cast,
Sweet lets, which let him in where beautie lay,
That doubt it was whether she spoke so fast,
Because more kisses of him gaine she may:
Or kistes seeming for to stop the dore,
Still kist, because they would haue kisses more.


Thus in this golden chaine of purest loue
They past the euening, when with rustie coach
The Rauen-hud night her dusky traine vphoue,
And grisly darknes doth on earth encroach,
The weary Sunne his wagon doth remoue,
Seeing the vgly night so neere approach,
That from the furnace of her sooty throte,
Forth foggy vapours and black smoke vpshote.
Still Bellamy vnluckie chance doth feare,
VVarned with fatall noyse of nightly soule:
Now doth she seeme sweet Amians voyce to heare,
Yeelding the lowly present of his soule
Vnto his maker, when her heart doth reare
A swelling sigh his fortune to condole,
The mournfull presage of some euill hap,
As lightning flames before a thunder-clap.
Thus in sad thought the silent night is spent,
VVhen Phœbus gan vpreare his firy crest,
And had the easterne heauen with flames ybrent,
VVhen streight doth Amian leaue his quiet rest,
And armed to the place appoynted went,
VVhere nine strong Knights that enmitie profest,
He with his speare dismounted to the ground,
VVhere with disgrace an humble seate they found.
Like to a loftie ranke of Cedar trees,
VVhen Æolus is kindled deepe with rage,
And with a whirlwing vp from earth he frees
Their riuen rootes, now laydin equipage
VVith baser shrubs, while to the heauen flees
The roring noyse, ypent in iron cage
Of tumbling vapours that doe scoure the ayre,
Inuested highly in a clowdy chayre.


Now Bellamies good heart for ioy doth dance,
Driuing forth stormes of sorrow and of care,
VVhen the tenth Knight his speare did high aduance,
That ouer al his armour Cypres ware,
Shadowing with clowdes of griefe his countenance,
VVho now towards the Knight his palfrey bare:
VVhere meeting with a hideous shiuering stroke,
Their yelding speares in sprinkled dust they broke.
On foote they try what thus on horse doth faile,
Each other driuing with a deadly blow,
And with their weapons kisse the splitted maile,
Which riuen, gushing blood in streames doth throw,
While now or neuer meaning to preuaile,
Sir, Amian droue vnto his riuall foe,
And with his sword his intrals doth vnclose,
Whose soule vp fled his earthly bowels doth lose.
Viewing the sword wherewith his riuall fought,
That on it written had his fathers name,
Whom with a charme from vnknowne land he brought,
He curst himselfe with much vnworthie blame,
That he this wofull Tragedie had wrought:
For well he knew his brother was the same,
Whom with his wretched might he thus had slaine,
To whom his father gaue that hurtfull gaine.
Now horror ringeth in his grieued soule,
And guilt of thought that he his brother flew,
VVhere fearfull sight his rest doth deepe controle:
Wherefore vnto his palfrey he withdrew,
And doth to none his inward griefe vnrole,
But to the woods all solitarie flew,
Banishing any thought of pleasing mirth,
Or any ioy which lighteth on the earth.


In leauy shadowes and in bushie brakes,
He with the wood-doue grones for pinching woe:
Sometimes in hand his cursed sword he takes,
But streight his sword he from his hand doth throw,
Now in a bush a hollow nest he makes,
From whence he swares his feete shall neuer goe:
Each little glimse of light his soule doth shun,
And in despayre to headlong death doth run.
But how fayre Bellamy doth rue his case,
Plaining and seeking him that her forgat,
Is deeply grauen in her parched face,
Which doth not lighten as it did of late,
Earth-brightning beames of neuer-matched grace:
But frowning with the force of angrie fate,
Downe drooping doth she close her folded eyes,
Drowning themselues in their owne Nectaries.
And euery where to seeke him out she sends,
Whom neuer shall againe her eyes behold:
Wherefore despayring now her thoughts she bends,
Fixt on th' Idea of his heauenly mold,
And to her minde that only food she lends,
While from her body rest she doth withhold,
And still her beautie doth consuming pine,
Wasting those torches which are so diuine.
Like as the sweetest Querister of Night,
VVhen rau'ning fowle bereft her of her young,
VVhile Phœbe sends from high her clowdy light,
Vnto the Moone in chanting tunes she sung,
That rauishing the trauailer with delight,
Made him bewaile the birds disproferd wrong:
So doth each eye lament this wofull plaint,
VVhich beautie makes while she in woe doth faint.


But O my pen transforme thy swanny face,
And in eternall streames my inck shall weepe:
Driue madly downe thy coach in tumbly pace,
O thou which heauens mightie lights dost keepe,
That neuer beames may brighten any place,
Since she in neuer-ending dreame doth sleepe:
O Bellamy that now vntimely dyes,
And in sad tombe deaths cruell triumph lyes.
The fearfull thought of her deare loued Knight,
Eats on her heart consuming vitall heat,
That taking in the world not lest delight,
She with her hands that softest breast doth beat,
And vexeth still with griefe her wofull spright,
VVho weary of so much vneasie seat,
To heauen on her snowy pineons fled,
VVhere in Ioues breast she layes her quiet head.
Now came the Knights that dwelt remoued farre,
To see the buriall of this Angel wight:
The Sunne arose with his low drooping carre,
To see (though grieu'd to see) that wofull sight:
And Pirin with the dame ariued are,
And Cypribel her tombe forsaketh quight,
Prepar'd all to doe honour to her graue,
The latest honour now her corps could haue.
Where with such rites as loue and wit deuise,
VVhich might renew a storie to expresse,
She was entombed in most glorious wise,
Accompanide with number numberlesse,
VVhile fountaines ouerflow the Dukes sad eyes,
That now for lack of teares to weepe doe cease:
Faine would he in her armes his death-bed see,
That in two heauens he and his soule might bee.


But enuious fates resist his louing will,
VVho doe command his soule here to remaine,
VVhere with lamenting noyse she plaineth still,
Yet neuer can her plaints bring back againe
That soule, which mounted on Olympus hill,
In sacred spirits and the Muses traine,
Singing soule-pleasing tunes her dayes doth spend,
VVhose musick and whose dayes haue neuer end.
And now ye heauens, if euer Musick straine
Issued from a concord-mouing spheare,
Then in a dolefull language helpe to plaine,
And mourning part in sorrowes confort beare:
For neuer shall you haue like cause againe,
For neuer may the like on earth appeare:
And for her death ring out a dolefull knell,
VVhile dewy teares at euery stroke distill.
And ye fayre Ladies in a pilgrimage,
Attiring blushing white in mourning black,
Vntill the world shall end his endles age,
Goe to her tombe, and plaine her beauties wrack,
Raught from the earth by deaths vnsatiate rage:
And though your teares can neuer bring her back,
Kissing her tombe, to Libitina pray
The earth may easie on her bosome lay.
VVhere with the parbreake of vnclowded hell,
Night wraps in ruggy black the ayres darke face,
Still vomiting fro her defiled Cell,
The shadowy fumes that mought the light disgrace,
VVhile scriching Owles their fearfull stories tell,
Hoarsly complaining in that gloomy place,
Groning with hollow notes their dismall song,
VVhile trembling tunes to guiltie hearts they rung.


The wolues about that haples place doe cry,
And howling weepe for her that lieth slaine:
Sometimes in hollow fearfull harmony
The Harpyes doe a dumpish consort straine:
Sometimes it seemes they see some passing by,
That on a beere a carkasse doe sustaine,
VVhite meager Death with hels vnchained hags,
Vpon her graue display their pitchie flags.