A most lamentable and Tragicall historie, conteyning the outragious and horrible tyrannie which a Spanishe gentlewoman named Violenta executed upon her louer Didaco, because he espoused another beyng first betrothed unto her Newly translated into English meter, by T. A. [i.e. Thomas Achelley] |
The Tragicall Historie of Didaco, and Uiolenta.
Where Phœbus firie foming steedes,Their restles race doo ende:
And leauing our Horizon, to
Th' Antipodes doo wende,
Right there dooth lye a famous soyle,
Whose farthest boundes of land:
Environd with the brinishe floods,
Of Ocean Sea doo stand.
Whose weary waming weltring waues,
Against the Cliffes doo rore:
And tumble foorth their rowling streames,
And surges to the shore.
And then deuiding foorth it selfe,
In seuerall armes againe:
Dooth on his swelling tides, the waight
Of fleeting Barke sustayne.
Whereby an hougy heape of wealth.
And fruites of sundry sortes:
By entertraffique from a farre,
Are leuied to the Portes.
Long entercourse of nations straung.
Haue so enrichte the same:
That this from all Europaes boundes,
Hath borne away the fame.
The same Hesperia hight:
But tract of time presound, the name
Iberia for to write.
Both names by great dexteritie,
And iudgement founde, againe
Hispania the same at last,
Was callde, in Englishe Spaine.
Spayne therefore slowyng ofte in wealth,
In buildinges fine and braue:
Of all the nations round about,
Deserues the crowne to haue.
The pleasaunt planted soyle thereof,
In eche respect excels:
The pompouse Ilande Paphos, where
The goddesse Venus dwelles.
And gorgeous glistering Guidos eke,
Whereas her throne dooth rest:
Or faire Ephesus where was kept,
A solemne yeerely feast.
In chaste Dianaes sacred fance,
Whose building fine and rare:
Of all the monuments in Greece,
The cheefest glory bare.
All these I say must stoupe, when as
Recorded is the fame:
Of woorthy Spayne, and yeelde they must,
All honour to the same.
For Mars his griessely traine:
A mighty campe of warlike Impes,
Might soone be had in Spayne.
In prowes like the Romane knightes,
Whose force so fierce in feelde:
Constrainde the hunger starued Iewes,
Unto their yoke to yeelde.
And raunged foorth so farre in fine,
That all the worlde at last:
Was subiect to their seruitude,
When many a broyle was past.
In courage, not inferiour,
Unto the Troiane knightes:
Whose valiant hartes and noble force,
Was tryde in sundry fyghtes.
Against the griessely Grecian crue,
Whose engins strong did shake:
The Troiane walles so stoutly, that
The very grounde did quake.
And so in fine (but hauing fyrst
Sustayned many a foyle)
Did woorke the finall fall thereof,
In tearme of ten yeeres toyle.
But yf the woorthy Troiane knightes,
Had had a Spanishe band,
Then surely the stately walles of Troy,
Unto this day should stand.
And skild in feates of warre:
The raging Macedonian route,
Had neuer rom'd so farre.
Againe, if Territories braue,
Or stately Towers on hye:
With woorthy prayse deserue, to be
Extolled to the skye.
Then Spayne in that respect, is not
Inferior to the rest:
But for the beautie rare thereof,
Coequall to the best.
Whose farthest limits with prospectes,
Of Cities large and strong:
Are fortified about and fenste,
With bulwarkes great among,
In beautie like the stately forte,
Which Dido once did frame:
When she exiled from her land,
To mightie Afrike came.
Valence among the rest, this day
A Citie of passing fame:
Through regions farre and neere, in Spayne,
Dooth beare a princely name.
A fortresse and a rampiar strong,
That gardeth all the land:
A brasen wall for to repulse,
The force of forraine band.
Or warlike Impes beside:
Whose valiaunt actes haue purchaste fame,
Through regions farre and wyde.
Among the rest not long agoe,
There dwelt a woorthy knight:
Deriu'd from auncient royall race,
His name Didaco hight.
In chiualrie to Hector like,
Like Hercules in might:
In policy Vlisses mate,
Like Hannibal in fight.
In martiall prowes ioyning aye,
Him selfe to Mars assignde:
So that for courage stoute, his peere
In Spayne was hard to finde.
He knewe the skill by stayed arme,
The quiuering launce to shake:
To toue the thirling darte a farre,
And make the pike to quake.
To brandishe braue the blade so bright,
At barriers to contend:
The glauncing shafte with twanging bowe,
From marke to marke to send.
At tylt to trye the sturdy strength,
Of stately steede in feelde:
And eke to crase the shiuering speare,
On creste of glistering shielde.
In warlike feates to vaunt:
That knewe by setled strength, his foes
In furious fight to daunt.
Didaco then, Didaco he,
Might ioy aboue the rest:
Whose actes had purchaste him a name,
Superior to the best.
What great delight did he conceaue,
To marche in midst of feelde:
Protected with a fatall blade,
And eke a glistering shielde.
Sometime to trauerse foorth his ground,
His foe for to entrappe:
And then retyring backe agayne,
To shunne the afterclap
And mounting eft the prauncing steede,
To gall wich dent of spurre:
Whose swiftnesse was a remedie,
From daungers to recurre.
None better knewe with skill to guide,
God Mars his pompous trayne:
Or to direct his winges and troupes,
In order in the playne.
Long practizd had this Iouiall Impe,
His greene and youthfull dayes:
To winne the spurres in chiualrie,
And martiall actes of prayse.
Not knowyng Uenus yoke:
Unexpert in the panges of loue,
And cursed Cupides stroke.
He neuer haunted Uenus Court,
Ne yet her carped troupe:
Such weaklinges he abhord, his mind
To no such thing would stoupe.
He let that passe to amorous knightes,
Whose seruile yeeres were spent:
In seruice of dame Uenus, whyle
Her Courte they did frequent.
To leane to Cupids seruile lore,
He counted it a payne.
The glauncing glees of amorous dames,
Such toyes he counted vayne.
Such exerise vnfit for Mars,
Or Mars his warlike band:
To bowe to such a shrine, would not
With Mars his honor stand.
No, no, God Mars his votaries,
Delight in Trumpets sound,
To heare the battering bullet, foorth
From Engine to rebound.
To tosse the iron tipped pike,
To gird the dart at length:
To shake the warlike persing launce,
By sleight of setled strength.
His troupes in batayle ray:
To set his garisons, sometime
To marche, sometime to stay.
Long Winter watches to endure,
To beare the furious force:
Of nipping colde, to ioye in armes,
And strength of haughtie horse.
And not to loyter by the fyre,
Like Cupids carpet crue:
Which homage yeelde to Uenus lawes.
And bid god Mars Adieu.
And lingering long in louers lore,
These Impes in fine are faine:
A colde pursute to render vp,
with trauayle for their payne.
No, no, Didaco doth pretend,
To runne another race:
To honour Mars, and not to sue
Nor seeke for Uenus grace.
Let them that haue abandoned,
The race that I wyll runne:
Submit them selues to Uenus lure,
And Mars his practise shun.
Whose fainting fingers farre vnfit,
To handle speare or shield:
With amorous lynes their duetie may,
Unto their Ladyes yeeld.
Wyll not a brother be:
That brotherhood I say doth not,
Accord with his degree.
Adieu therefore dame Uenus thou,
Adieu ye weakelinges all:
Whose humour suckes the filthy dregges,
Of Uenus poysoned gall.
Cupide Adieu thou eluishe dwarfe,
In spite of this thy bowe:
And percing dartes Didaco he,
Wyl not thy godhead knowe,
Didaco cruell warre proclaymes,
Unto thy desperate arte:
He nought regardes the percing stroke,
Of this thy poysoned darte.
Sound out alarum loude, and woorke
Didacos cheefe annoy:
Doo what thou canst, ile make thee graunt,
Thou dealste not with a boy.
Helpe goddesse Uenus, helpe thy sonne,
Expresse part of thy cure:
Didaco, spite of both, wyll not
Be subiect to your lure.
Assayle me both at once I say,
Shewe here your heauenly skyl:
Didaco singes, in spite of both,
Ile be a warrier still.
In her supernall throne:
Reuoluing proud Didacos vauntes,
Unto her selfe alone.
And pondering, that a mortall wight,
Her godhead did reiect:
To Cupid she addrest her tale,
In this, or lyke effect.
Cupide thy mothers onely care,
And meane of good successe:
Attend myne hestes incontinent,
Thereto thy selfe addresse.
And as thou art the sonne of Mars,
And mighty in thy kinde:
To shewe thy force without remorse,
To please thy mothers minde.
My griefe is thyne, not myne alone
But common to vs both:
A mortall wight with vaunting bragges,
Our power deuine dooth lothe,
Hast thou not yet, long time or this,
By Trumpe of blasting fame:
Heard of a ryght redouted knight,
Didoco calld by name.
He he it is that shakes our throne.
With many a thundring vaunt:
Howe that our power is not of force,
His courage for to daunt.
Our godhead to prouoke?
Shal he from Uenus scotfree scape?
And shun god Cupides stroke?
And shall this youngling vndertake
With Uenus to contend?
Shall he presume agaynst our sorte
His batterie for to bend?
Where then shall Uenus godhead lye?
Her art? her power deuine?
Forsooth euen prostrate in the dust,
And voyde of name in fine.
Who hencefoorth wyll adore my shrine?
Or Uenus godhead knowe:
Or shortly on myne aulters, who
Due honour wyll bestowe?
My ioy and dearling deare, why is
Thy bowe vnbent so long?
Why shall we beare this iniurie,
Or tollerate such wrong.
If this should passe, the brute shal raigne,
By euery humaine wight:
That Cupids bowe is out of force,
And wants his woonted might.
Eclipsed shall our honour be,
Farewel god Cupids name:
And dame Uenus power, none nowe,
Acknowledge wyll thy name.
And with thy golden darte:
In open streetes whereas he walkes,
Goe wound Didacos hart.
Fyrst whet thy denting shafte his point,
Then drawe thy stryng so farre:
That so this youth may learne, what is
With Uenus for to warre.
Thou knowest right well his wonted haunt,
In Ualence citie bright:
Euen in the Goldsmithes rowe doth walke,
This right renowmed knight.
Fayre Violenta she it is,
The instrument must woorke:
Theffect of this the late deuise,
Whiche in my brest doth lurke.
On her enamored shall he be,
When fyrst he vewes her face:
And mauger all his vauntes, shal stoupe,
To seeke and sue for grace.
So shal dame Uenus godhead lyue,
Her fame shall not decay:
The memory of Cupids acte,
Shalbe aduauncte for aye.
Nowe dearling myne, I haue displayd,
The summe of myne entent:
Expecting here howe thou the same.
To execute art bent.
Your Cupids only stay:
Your part it is for to commaund,
My duetie to obey.
Behold my bended bowe, behold,
My pearcing shaftes are prest:
And me in eche respect full bent,
To execute your heste.
Long since I vewed his glorious vauntes.
And yet I still decreed:
To suffer him his humour fond,
With folly for to feede.
He hath not been the first perdie,
That spurned at my lore:
The wound is not past cure, my dart
Hath launcte as great a sore.
He neuer yet was priuiledge,
From Cupids heauenly power:
Ile teache him well inough to come,
And goe at Uenus lure.
I mightie Ioue enamoured,
On Ledyes glistering face,
And causd him, chaung int' shape of Swanne:
His Lady to embrace.
And then shall he, a humaine wight,
Depriud' of mortall race:
Presume so much vpon his strength,
As Cupide to deface?
Ile tame this newcome geste.
That from his scornefull lippes at last,
Peccaui I wyll wreste,
Nowe Ladie mother mine adue,
Your Cupide wyll attend,
The comming of this Champion stout,
My golden bowe to bend.
In hope t' achiue this feate so well,
That all the worlde may knowe:
Howe Cupide wyll not sticke, his arte
In Uenus cause to showe.
This sayde from skies vnto the Earth:
He takes his flight amayne.
And ouer Ualence towne his winges
His naked corps sustayne.
Right soone the shout Didaco comes,
Frequenting still his gyse,
And veweth al the streetes about.
With glaunce of rowllyng eyes.
Thus raunging long at laste his eyes,
On Violenta cast.
Wherewith blinde Cupids poysoned shafte,
From bowe so fiercely brast.
That glidyng through the Ayre at last,
It touchte so nere the quicke,
So that thinfected point thereof,
Dyd in his stomacke sticke.
As mute he stoode agaste.
And groning once or twise, in fyne,
Int' this complaynt he braste
O Heauen, o, earth, o Ioue aboue,
What meanes this sodayne stroke?
Did euer poore Didaco yet
Thy power diuine prouoke?
What sodayne marirdome is this?
What pinching pangues of hell?
The fates agaynst the freedome, of
Didaco doe rebell.
Oh what infernall monster thus:
Doth worke Didacos thrall.
What fury fell of Stigian Lake.
Hath nowe conspird my fall?
Oh pinching panges of seruitude,
What iust desert dyd make
The gods on poore Didacos lyfe,
Suche vengeance for to take?
O goddesse Uenus bowe thyne eares,
Of mercy to my playnt:
At lest wyse to these parching flambes,
Apply thou some restraint.
Powre not forth al thy penalties,
Upon one simple wight
But nowe whereas I mercy craue,
Doo mitigate thy spite:
By plaguing thus the ghost:
Of one poore captiue knight (alas)
In treble tormentes toste.
O qualifie thy burnyng rage,
Represse thy boyling ire:
Destil the droppes of mercie, on
Didacos feruent fyre.
I vowe my selfe thy seruaunt then,
Thy bondslaue and thy thrall:
With duetifull obedience,
To come when thou shalt call.
And sith I haue transgreste thy lawes,
And spurned at thy state:
Yet mercie graunt, Repentaunce due,
Doth neuer come to late.
O Cupide thou, whose fatall shaft,
Hath thirld my wounded hart:
Some pitie to thy prisoner shewe,
And mitigate his smart.
Due homage I wyll yeeld to thee,
Thy power I wyll confesse:
And prayses to thy sacred name,
With thankfull voyce expresse.
My former vauntes I here recant,
The palme to thee I render:
With thy celestiall power to striue,
My force is farre to slender.
Upon his pensiue bed:
A thousand heapes of wauering thoughtes,
Turmoyles his doubtfull head.
Oh Violenta bright, quod he,
Of bewtie passing rare:
Whose orient hue of face hath trapt,
My sences all in snare.
Why did curst fortune to vs both,
Such haples hap assigne:
That thy descent, and race, is not
Coequall vnto myne?
What hellishe hagge did gyde the glaunce,
Of this my raunging vewe:
That th'amorous glee of thee (poore girle)
My sences should subdue?
What spitefull constellacion, did
Enuy thy lucklesse fate,
To spring of line vnequall for,
Heroicall estate?
At least to all those giftes so rare,
Wherwith thou art possest:
Why did not Nature pitie plant,
Within thy stonie brest?
The rare perfection which she framd
In thee by heauenly art:
Wilbe eclipsed with the cloude,
Of this thy sauage hart.
Thou wilt not once relent:
Unto those thousand seas of teares,
Which I for thee haue spent.
Thy heauie hardned eares will not,
Unto my charmes encline:
But suffer poore Didaco still,
In languor for to pine.
Thy stomacke, sturdie, stonie, sterne,
Alas will neuer bend:
To poore Didacos flowing teares,
Whose dolors haue no end.
O cruell, crabbed, cursed fate,
O hap of all most harde:
What desperate dolefull destenie,
Haue you for me preparde?
What gilt of mine hath wrought such cause
Didaco to enthrall:
On her, whose hart as hard is bent,
As is the brasen wall?
In nature like the Adamant,
Whose substance will not yeld:
Though thousand shoures from top of house,
Were on the same distild.
But oh my Violenta why
Do I thy rigor blame?
Why vomite I such foule despite,
Against thy sacred name?
I neuer tride thy spite:
Ne yet that thou didst loyall loue,
with rigor rude requite.
Dame nature framing this thy forme,
When she her skill expreste:
She might as well engraffe the sparkes,
Of pitie in thy brest.
And so perdie she did. Why then
Do I (mad man) accuse:
Thy sundry vertues with reproche?
And eke thy name abuse.
Ioue graunt, there rest not in thine hart,
Of pitie such a want:
That I may iust occasion haue:
Thy prayses to recant.
Thus beating still his busied braine,
With many a wauering thought:
With thousand checkes he bannes the fates,
That this his thraldome wrought.
Againe rebuking this his rage,
With bit of reasons lore:
Reuokes eftsoone the curses, which
He thundered out before.
Fie fond Didaco, fie (quod he)
Sith Ioue appoynts it so:
Thy teares do but renue thy griefe,
And aggrauate thy woe.
Thy burthen thou must beare,
Exclaime no more on Uenus, why
Dost thou her godhead feare.
Why railste thou thus on Cupids bowe?
Why spurnste thou at his stroke?
No, no, thy stout vntamed necke,
Must bowe vnto his yoke.
Thou hast not bene the first, or this
That tasted of his dart,
Ne yet shalt be the last perdie,
That he shall make to smart.
As valiant knightes, as thou, or this
Haue bended at his becke:
And borne the waight of Cupids yoke,
Upon their tamed necke.
Where is Hercules that worthy wight,
That made the world to wonder?
Who in his Cradle tare the Iawes,
Of Scorpions twaine asunder.
Why, was not he for all his might,
Enthrald in Uenus lure:
And forc'te his Ladies loue in fine,
By teares for to procure?
Yes sure if credite ought be due,
To Poets learned lore:
If that their volumes he perusde,
As gemmes of passing store.
His Ladies loue to winne:
Was faine in womans habite, on
A distaffe for to spinne.
And all that he had wrought by day
In turning of his wheele:
At night he was constraynde, the same,
Upon his rocke to reele.
If loue of Lidian Omphale,
Were of such passing might:
The traunced sences for to daunt,
Of this renouned Knight.
As to enioyne such peeuish taskes,
To Mars his chiefest saint:
What marueile then, I say, if loue
Hath made Didaco faint?
Didaco thou art not a god,
Nor sprong of heauenly line.
But subiect to mortalitie,
The fates did so assigne.
And was not mightie Ioue himselfe,
Who with his stately becke:
Could cause the heauens and earth to quake,
And surging seas could checke.
Why, was not he, I say, a thrall,
And slaue to Uenus lure?
Could his celestiall deytie,
His maladie recure?
Into his vaines instill:
His fixed fancie to remoue?
Had Ioue such heauenly skill?
No, no, his honor to withdrawe,
That feate farre paste his Art:
His wound to deepe was trenched in,
By bloodie Cupidoes dart.
So farre vnable to expell,
his late conceaued flame:
That euery houre did minister,
A faggot to the same.
In fine constrained his deytie,
To chaunge into shape of bull:
Was faine that practise for to proue,
In hope to wynne his trull.
Why then if mightie Ioue himselfe,
Who rules the loftie skie:
For all his secrete god head, yet
In flames of loue did frie.
Then fond Didaco cease at laste,
Gainst Cupides lore to spurne:
Who made the mightie Ioue aboue,
In feruent amours burne.
He was a God and forc'te to yelde,
But thou a mortall man:
And spronge of humaine progenie,
Wilt kicke at Cupide than?
Some other way to proue:
Adapt thy selfe to Venus lore,
And learne to liue by loue.
Renounce thy triple trenching launce,
Detest thy fatall blade:
Abandon now thy glistering targe,
Of golde and amber made.
Farewell all martiall practises,
Bid griesely Mars Adieu:
And all his traine: be dubde a knight,
Of Venus courtly crue.
Resigne, thy warlike exercise,
To guyde a pompous traine:
Thou taken hast another charge,
In hand. Such toyes are vaine.
Farewell ye Impes of Chiualrie,
That Mars his bands do rule:
Didaco taken hath degree,
Within another schoole.
A prentice now to Cupids trade,
And Ladie Venus thrall:
Fast bound in sacred soleme vowe,
To come when they shall call.
Ten thousand times ye Spanish knightes,
In prowes that excell,
And all the band of Mars his badge,
Ten thousand times farewell.
To take a second vewe:
Of that so amorous glee, which first
Thy sences did subdue.
With flowing teares from eyes distild,
With many a pensiue grone:
With thousand signes of loyaltie,
Goe make to her thy mone.
Unfold those restles agonies,
Expresse the endles smarte:
Which since th'encounter of her vewe,
Haue slaine thy poore true harte.
Perchaunce, she is not of haggards kind
Nor hart so hard is bend:
But thy distylling teares in fine,
May moue her to relend.
But if thy profered loyall loue,
with sterne replies be fed:
Then farewell life, and libertie,
Didaco thou art dead.
Hap glad, or sad, I meane to prooue,
If that my restles flame:
With thousand flouds of teares expreste,
My Ladyes hart may tame.
Perchaunce my plaints may mollifie,
Her hard and stonie minde:
And that the planges which I sustaine,
Some sweete remorse may finde.
From bed he rose againe:
And layes his faintie limmes, within
A sweete perfumed bayne.
And casting on his Spanish Cape,
Directes his trembling pace:
Into goldsmithes rowe, to haue a vewe,
Of Violentas face.
And often trauersing the streetes,
Adioyning to her boure:
To cast a secrete glaunce, sometimes
His eyes he doth inure.
Full many a pilgrimage he made
His fancie for to feede:
Unto the shrine of this his saint,
Before he once could speede.
In fine when many an amorous glaunce,
He wrested had in vaine:
Unto the temple, where he knewe,
The goddesse did remaine.
In th'end Dame fortune fickle Dame,
In lieu of former spite:
Preferres this doting amorous Impe,
Unto his ladyes sight.
Who tooke the present offer straight,
And costing thwart the way:
With bonnet vayld vnto the ground,
Before his saint doth stay.
And courteous gyse of Spayne:
Doth with a courtly braue Bomour,
Salute the knight agayne.
Whereat his fond conceytes did sinke,
So deepe into his braine:
So that the flaming humor straight,
Retyrde into euery vayne.
And feeding on a frustrate hope.
With visage wanne and pale:
In this effect vnto his dame,
He frames his trembling tale.
If that the dames of destenie,
The twiste in twayne had shred:
By which the vitall breth into,
My panting vaynes is led.
If they I say had fined my fate,
Before mine eyes did see:
The forme of this thy heauenly face,
Adornd with such a glee.
Then Madame, neuer had I felt,
The feuers of such payne:
Ne had your bewtie brued the bale,
That I poore man sustayne.
At least wise this straunge martirdome,
That rackes my wounded hart:
Farre easier were to tolerate,
And lesser were my smart,
My sences did enthrall:
Might better be dispenst withall,
For this my fatall fall.
A fall sayd I? nay rather downe,
To Limbo lake deiecte:
If mercy thine be not a meane,
My state for to erecte.
Thy face hath captiuate my witts,
And traunc'te my sences so:
That euery houre with thousand thoughtes
Doth aggrauate my woe.
And doubtles (dame) except your grace,
That did my thrall procure:
Prepare some speedie remedie,
My feuer to recure.
These handes of mine shall execute,
The cursed fates beheste:
With bloudie knife to perce the hart,
In this turmoyled brest.
And when this breathles corps of mine,
Shalbe interd in mould:
This Epitaph shall there be fixt,
For all men to behold.
Stay passenger, a knight within,
This secrete vaute doth lie:
VVho pyning long with restles loue,
At last for loue did die.
And pointed at of all:
As she whose hardned hart did worke,
The poore Didacoes thrall.
O harden not thine heauie cares,
Against the grieuous grone:
Of poore Didaco, whom thy loue
Hath causde to make his mone.
Recount the restles agonies,
Record the endles smart:
And pyning passions, that turmoyle
And racke Didacoes hart.
O thinke vpon that hell of paines,
That raunge within my minde:
Thinke on my mortall martirdome,
That no reliefe can finde.
Stoppe not thine eares, as doth the Aspe,
Against my piteous plaints:
But harken to the restles toyle,
That thus my soule atteints.
And sure I thinke, if that the sound
Of these my drery teares:
With seas of sobbing sighes expreste,
Might perce your hardned eares.
The vehemence therof no doubt,
Would openly define:
The furious force of these turmoyles,
Wherein (poore man) I pine.
Cannot at full expresse:
The lingring languor, and the woe
That doth myne hart oppresse.
This said, with many a secrete grone,
Displaying forth his case:
The brinishe teares distilling downe,
Embrude his blubbered face.
That who had seene his tragicall lookes,
In gesturing his part:
Would say his tongue did truly tell,
The message of his hart.
She somwhat basht at this discourse,
Which he poore man expreste:
With gesture seemely set, in fine
This short replie addreste.
My Seigniour Didaco if your youth,
In martiall practise spent:
And perfect skill in Chiualrie,
Which vse to you haue lent.
Or if your brute iblazd abroade,
With golden trumpe of fame:
Cannot enforce you to represse,
This brutish raging flame.
Why, then with bitt of reasons lore,
Restrayning your desire:
Endeuour for to quench the sparkes,
Of this turmoyling fire.
The floure of Mars his traine:
And throughly tried in all respectes,
That vnto warre pertaine.
And haue not you full ofte or this,
With golden crested shield:
And with a fatall slicing blade,
Marchste formost in the field.
You sundry times haue made you foes,
With terror for to quake:
And eke the brasen bulwarkes strong,
With Engins force to shake.
And then shall he whom thousand foes,
Could not subdue in fight:
Be made a seruile slaue and thrall,
To Cupids onely might?
What shame is this to you, who erst
In fight haue wonne such fame:
Yet now at last to want the force,
Your owne desires to tame?
But sure not you alone sustayne,
The force of Cupids flame:
But I poore girle as well haue felt,
The furie of the same.
And yet so farre to my desires.
I neuer loase the rayne:
But that I know by reasons rule,
The brydle to restraine.
To honest purpose tend:
If vnder cloke of loyall loue,
No treason you pretend.
Then Violenta vowes her selfe,
Your seruant for to be:
Till tearme of these her dayes shalbe,
Abridgde by fares decree.
But if to glut your lust, you vile,
Your purpose to obtaine:
In faith your labour is but lost,
And all your trauaile vaine.
And therfore best it were in time,
Your fancie to forgoe:
Least further fostering of the same,
Do aggrauate your woe.
This said within the doores she flange,
And so her aunswere ended:
With scornefull scoffes and furious face
As though she were offended.
He silly soule when this reply,
So sterne, had cut his combe:
With minde surprised with thousand panges,
In fine returneth home.
And casting downe his faynting corps,
Upon his restles bed:
Renues the wonted heape of plaints,
Within his wauering head.
Or worthy guilt of thine:
Enflamd the furious hellish fates,
Thy life for to repine?
What mou'd their mindes for to directe,
Thy wanton glauncing eye:
On her who forceth not thy griefe,
Though thousand times thou die?
O Cupid thou, thou iudge vniuste,
Uniustest iudge of all:
Do thou in equall balance payse,
The burthen of my thrall.
Thy golden quiuer ransacke vp,
And with the selfe same dart:
Wherwith thou first didst perce my brest,
Wound Violentas hart.
O let not poore Didaco pine,
In restles languor still:
Whose frustrate plaints, with piteous sounds,
The vacant ayre doe fill.
Whose griefe succeedes a second griefe,
Whose plaints fresh plaints ensueth:
Whose racking martirdome would moue,
A stonie rocke to ruthe.
Some say that Orpheus with the tune,
Of syluer sounding stringe,
Causde trees to moue and birdes to carpe,
And stones to leape and springe.
Were all istriken mute:
To heare the soleme ditties sound,
Recorded on his lute.
The staruing Tantalus that stoode,
The weltring floud within:
And pines though Apples touch his nose,
And water reach his chinne.
When once he heard this hermony,
(Though staruing still he stoode:)
He forced not the fruite, ne yet
The water of the floud.
Thou sweting Sisiphus amayne,
Whose straunge and endles taske:
Requires an endles time to doe,
And endles toyle doth aske.
Who toilste in tumbling vp thy stone,
Unto the top of hill:
And yet for all thine Art, the same,
Comes rowling downward still.
Orpheus his lute did lullaby,
Thy traunced sences so:
That thou didst rest vpon thy stone,
And cleane forgotst thy woe.
You Belides which for to fill,
The hogsheads take such payne:
And yet the water that you poure,
Comes gusshing forth againe.
Your myndes did so enchaunte:
That you forgat the taske which erst.
Did vse your spirites to daunt.
Ixion, thou, whose snakie whele,
For euer turneth round:
The same had not the power to moue,
At Orpheus heauenly sound.
The rauening vulture eke constraynd,
His talents to withdrawe:
And forced not with becke to rent,
Promethus mangled mawe.
The greedie gripe which erst was wont,
To play his cursed part:
Doth loath his pray, and cease to teare.
Poore Titius rented hart.
But if thou Sisiphus shouldst vewe,
My restles plaints and moone:
I thinke thine hand would cease to rowle,
The fatall tumbling stone.
Thou Tantalus, and all the ghostes,
That lurke in Stygian lake:
Wheras your hellish howling throates,
A monstrous noyse do make.
Thou Pluto with thy griesely trayne,
And all th' infernall crue:
Would bend your eares to heare my plaints,
And eke my dolors rue.
My musing mazed minde:
The dayly restles agonies,
Which no reliefe can finde.
The percing panges and endles toyles,
Which I poore man sustayne:
Would moue an hart of flint, to rue
The rigor of my payne.
I frie, I freese, I burne, I broyle,
I starue, I fret, I fume:
I liue and die, I die and liue,
In languor I consume.
O poore Didaco wretched wight,
which liuing, still dost die:
Whose limmes within the smothering flames,
Of Ætna sulphure frie.
O martird man consumd away,
In stormes of treble thrall:
Thou bearst the shadow of a man,
And art no man at all.
But from a man into a ghost,
The destenies did thee chaunge:
Full like th' infernall furies which,
In Plutoes kingdome raunge.
Therfore Didaco arme thy selfe,
Against the fates decree:
Sith that thy toile with nought but death,
Shall counteruayled bee.
Thy traueile to resigne?
Thy sute, if well pursued it be,
May haue successe in fine.
Some say there is no fort so strong,
Though founded on a rocke:
But that a golden key hath power,
And force to breake the locke.
Therfore, where loue doth want the skill,
Thy purpose for to reache:
There hazard once to put in proofe,
If Coyne can make the breeche.
Thy Lady is not of royall race,
But of a meane descent:
Therefore thy golden chaines perchaunce,
May cause her to relent.
When this was sayd with trembling fiste,
He frames his louing lines:
The faithfull charge wherof, vnto
His seruaunt he assignes.
Six hundred Ducats therewithall,
To send he doth not faile:
To proue, where feruent sute was vaine,
If gold could there preuaile.
The Post, who of this Embassage,
The full effect had scand:
Surrenders vp the signed briefe,
To Violentas hand.
The tenure of the same:
Could not represse her rage, but forth,
It burst into a flame.
What moues your maisters mind, (quod she)
Such battery for to bend:
Against the fort where sure he is,
The beare foyle in th'end.
And did he thinke, his wished pray,
With golden trappes to trayne:
Where lingring loue with restles sute,
His purpose could not gayne.
Goe, bid him proue some other dames,
With this his tangling tale:
For Violenta hath not set,
Her chastitie to sale.
The loue of other wanton dames,
Let him with golde procure:
That are more prone and pliable,
Unto his beastly lure.
Poore Violentas loue, is not
With money to be solde:
The price of her Uirginitie,
She measures not with golde,
And sure the breache therof, shall not
With golden siege be wrought:
Where loue with profered seruice once,
Thereto preuayled nought.
And frustrate trauayle end:
For sure he shall not wynne his will,
By meanes be doth pretend.
This dolefull newes, the Post vnto
Didaco doth display:
Recounting all the case at large,
In chamber where he lay.
Who when he heard that all his driftes,
Her loue could not attayne:
And how that this vncessant toyle,
And trauayle was in vayne.
Full faine God wotte poore man he would,
Haue quencht this raging fyre:
But yet he wanted force and strength,
To brydle his desire.
O Violenta fayre, quod he,
Why did the fates decree:
That thou by lineall race art borne,
Inferiour farre to mee.
In thee alone (poore girle) doth rest.
The cause of lyfe of death:
Thy stonie hart will force me yeld,
This brittle borowed breath.
But sith dame reason is exild,
And fancie beares the sway:
That wisdomes rule is not of force,
Affection to allay.
Do combate in my brayne,
Needes must I proue some straunge deuise,
My purpose to obtayne.
Didaco, why is thy fond mynd,
With lusting humors led:
Why doest thou not with nuptiall bands,
Adioyne her to thy bed.
Forsooth thy reason is because,
Shee is not of royall line:
But of base parentage deriu'd,
Unequall farre for thine.
And then shouldst thou conioyne thy selfe,
To such a one as shee?
Fie, no, that match were farre vnfit,
And not for thy degree.
Why foole doth true nobilitie,
Consist in bloud alone?
Is there no meane, but noble race,
To clime to honors throne?
Yes, foolish man, the vertues rare,
That harber in her brest:
Haue power to scale the steepie mount,
where honors seate doth rest.
When nature this her image formd,
Her giftes she did not scant:
But to to prodigall the same,
In this one peece did plaint.
That glyster in her face:
May counterpayse the dignitie,
And fame of royall race.
Then doubt not, Violenta bright,
To take vnto thy mate:
Whose vertues matche the titles, of
Heroicall estate.
And sure I meane if fates agree,
Euen thee poore girle to choose:
If thou wilt dayne for to accept,
Didaco to thy spouse.
And hauing thus his minde resolu'd,
Within his wauering brest:
On Violenta nowe a freshe,
The onset he addrest.
Madame, if Spousall vowes be demed,
The touchstone for to be:
Whereby men try the sacred bonds.
Of perfect amitie.
Then haue you gotte, if so you please,
Such one to be your feere:
Who, then thimperiall crowne of Spaine,
Esteemes your loue more deere.
He is not borne of base degree,
Ne yet of rascall race:
Didaco I euen I am he,
The knight you shall embrace.
Nor perilles shall remoue:
If that you doe him worthy deme,
For to enioye your loue.
She rauished with ioye, to heare,
The knight this tale recite:
Her foltring tongue within her mouth,
Stoode mute and speachles quite.
At last with shamefast bashfulnes,
She set aside the vaile:
Of silence, and to this effect,
She framd her sugred tale.
Didaco you perdie haue forgde,
This long discourse of loue:
To vndermine my meaning, and
My constancie to proue.
But yet assure your selfe of this,
If that your meaning tend:
Unto no worse effect then this,
That you in words pretend.
Though Violenta be deriu'd,
Of parentage but base:
Yet sure in zeale of loyall loue,
She will not geue you place.
And further hopes, for to behaue,
Her selfe so well in fine:
That you shall haue no cause to wishe,
Her person to resigne.
Though she in dignitie:
Do farre surmount the basenes, of
My simple pedegree.
Hereat his motions of delite,
Beginning to renue:
Doth with a precious Emerald,
Confirme his plighted vowe.
And printing many an amorous kisse,
Her orient lippes vpon,
Debateth of the Nuptiall rites,
And howe to haue them done.
Wherof they both concluded thus,
To be a meane most fit:
That some vnknown strange minister
That sacred knot should knit.
And that before the twinkling starres,
were from the heauens fled:
Or flaming Phœbus should display,
His glorious glistring head:
And so resolu'd, before day light,
Didaco did her wed:
Where she by plighted vow was made
Partaker of his bed.
And spending all that ioyfull day,
In seas of braue delight:
Enioye alike the benefite,
Of that long wished night,
Deuoyd of all annoy:
And no deuise was left vnprou'd,
That might augment their ioy.
In briefe he never was at ease,
But in his ladies sight:
And she did neuer ioy, without
The presence of her knight:
Thus euery night in couert wise.
He marcheth to her boure:
To staunch his greedie lusting thrist,
And toyes to put in vre.
So long he haunted this recourse,
Unto his Idolls shrine:
That Violentas honesty,
Was doubted of in fine.
Some demd because that he so soft,
From home to her retired
He vsed more homely daliance,
Then honestie required.
Wherby her fame defamed was
With this surmised blot:
Which by the oft repayring of
Didaco, she had got.
But she whose blameles conscience,
Was giltles of the crime:
Referres the triall of her cause,
To course of further time.
Of people to deface:)
She prayes her spouse to take her home,
Unto his dwelling place.
But he that know with long delayes,
Her fancie for to feede;
Protractes the time, and neuer to
Her iuste request agreed:
And hauing purchased the whole,
Possession of her harte:
He knewe the meanes, her doting minde,
As pleasde him to conuert.
That gathering by her amorous looke,
Her loue did still enflame:
By litle he withdrewe his mynde,
And zeale more cold became.
And leauing now the gyse, which erste,
He vsed to frequent:
Accustometh at sundry times,
Himselfe for to absent.
And whensoeuer he repayred,
Her companie vntyll:
Was still to glut his greedy lust,
And neuer for good will.
In fine he loathes his former matche,
And pondering in his brayne.
What great reproche, his honor was,
In daunger to sustayne.
That he had tane to mate:
A girle, whose linage was so farre,
Unfit for his estate.
To this effect he bends his toyle,
And trauelles all doth frame:
What way he soonest might preuent,
The cause of such defame.
Wheron acquainting straight himselfe,
with dames of noble race:
In fine he founde one to supply,
Poore Violentas place.
Of qualities so excellent,
And bewtie passing rare:
That might with any Spanish dame,
In eche respect compale.
He taking efte the benefite,
Of this so happy fate:
The nuptiall rites to consecrate,
Doth in his minde debate,
Procuring such triumphant showes,
And choyse of princely sportes:
That all the crue of Spanish knightes,
To vewe thereof resortes.
The prauncing coursers some bestride,
with percing launce in rest:
The mightie troncheons do rebound,
Icrasde on helmets crest.
At barriers braue some fight:
And some with maskes of rare deuise,
The lookers on delight.
The straunge confects of daintie cates,
The choyse of pleasant wine;
The curious course of costly knacks.
With iunkets passing fine.
Did make the Spanish knights to muse.
That bruted was the fame:
How that no feast in twentie yeares,
Was iudged of such fame.
The noyse wherof the vulgar sort,
So worthylie displayes:
That vnto Violentas eares,
Iblazd was the praise.
Who hearing that Didaco he,
Had falsifyed his vowes:
In that, against his othe, he tooke
Another dame to spouse.
With scratching nayles shee rent her haire,
And braue attaire defac'te:
And in her closet all alone:
Into this complaint shee braste,
O wretched girle what fate hath wrought,
These plunging panges of thine?
What starre at thy natiuitie:
So lucklessely did shine.
O stinge of endles smart:
O seas of thousand great annoyes,
That racke my wounded hart.
O cursed fates, why did you not,
Then execute your spite:
On this tormented corps of myne.
When first it came to light.
O wretched wight then hadst thou bene,
Ten thousand times iblest.
If thou hadst bene interd in mawe,
Of some deuouring beast.
Or if into the surging seas,
Thou hadst bene throwne at once:
Where monsters fell, with grating Iawes,
Might tire thy rotten bones.
Then shouldst thou not haue languisht thus,
In gulfes of treble payne:
Ne knowne the furie of such panges,
As now thou dost sustaine.
Accursed be that cursed houre,
wherin thy tender eyes:
At time of thy natiuitie,
Beheld the azurd skies.
O false Didaco periurd wight,
Did euer my desert:
Geue cause to alieuate thy vowes,
Once plighted with thy hart.
why hast thou thus deceau'd:
The wight that trusted thee so well,
And all her ioyes bereui'd.
Is this thy care of plighted faith?
Is this thy sacred vowe?
Is this the true performance, which
Thy promise doth ensue.
O haples hap and dolefull chaunce,
That euer thy tangling tonge:
Made breache into my Uirginitie,
which I preseru'd so longe.
O caytife wretch, and can thine eyes,
Sustaine for to behold:
These raging panges and martirdome,
wherein I am enrold?
Is this the guerdon of the fayth,
which I haue vsde alway:
Now like a beast and reprobate,
Thus to be cast away?
Why did not Ioue consent, my line
More noble for to bee:
That I might worke a full reuenge,
Of this thy villanie?
But sith the heauens haue denyed,
Me (wretched girle) that fate:
With tooth and nayle, ile toyle to shake,
The ground of thine estate.
At thy successe rebell:
With mortall hate ile prosecute,
Thine odious ghost to hell.
Thus thundering out the raging flames,
That from her stomacke springe:
With howling shrikes and frensie plaints,
She makes the house to ringe,
Wherat her mother with her mayd,
Hight Iamque by name:
And eke her sonne, for to appease,
Her daughters fury came.
All they with holsome preceptes, toile
To qualifie her rage:
But all their witt had not the skill,
Her howling to asswage,
Whereat her mother with her sonne,
Away with teares are gone:
And leaue her pencing forth her plaints,
To Iamque alone.
The mayd with sundry reasons seekes,
Her mistres to entreate:
To quench at last the smothering smoke,
Of that turmoyling heate.
Deere dame (she sayd) why doth disdaine,
Thus boyle within your brest:
Or why doth rancor ransacke thus,
Your mynd from setled rest.
Nought else but griefe ye finde?
Represse these furious fits and calme,
This tempest of your minde.
Know this you haue not first bene trapt,
In mens alluring net:
Ne shall you be the last perdie,
That shalbe tangled yet.
Did not periurd Demophoon,
Leaue Phillis on the strand:
When secretely by night embarke,
He launced from the land?
And Thesus, Aruidue bright,
Where he such loue did finde:
At last in desert Maxos Ile,
Left her poore girle behinde.
Why then turmoyle you thus your selfe,
In flouds of endles teares:
Sith he respecteth nought the panges,
That your vext conscience beares.
Be sure he forceth nought the griefes,
And horror that you feele:
But that which you set next your hart,
He setteth next his heele,
Therefore cease of those trickling teares,
which from your eyes distill:
And then referre your cause, vnto
The triall of my skill.
My traueyle to bestowe:
That you vpon his life may take,
Reuengement of your woe.
Meane time with pacience arme your selfe,
And ease your heauie hart:
While I meane while do put in proofe,
Some practise of myne Arte.
Dame Violenta, easde with this,
Discoursing of her mayde.
Sweete Iamque (quod she) if thou,
Can doe as thou hast sayde.
Twelue hundred Crownes of readie coyne.
Ile render to thine hand:
Whereby thou mayst conuay thy selfe,
Into some vnknowen land.
And neuer to returne againe,
Into thy natiue soyle,
But leaue me to sustayne theuent:
And hazard of the broyle.
Then mystres myne sayd she, attend
To that I shall recite:
Your chiefest charge is this: you must
A dolefull scroll endite.
Contayning such infernall panges,
And passions of the minde:
That you by meanes therof, no rest
Nor ease at all can finde.
Of that so stinging smart:
Which for th' excessiue loue of him,
Hath slaine your loyall harte.
Next adding that he might renue,
The cause of your delight:
If he sometimes will take the paynes,
To visite you by night.
As erste he vsed for to doe,
When this is done, proceede:
In such a methode as you knowe,
May best his fancie feede.
And when you haue displayde at large,
The meaning of your will:
Commit the charge thereof, to be
Directed by my skill.
I trow that force of fyled phrase,
His wittes shall so enchaunt:
That he with free consent, sometime
To visite you shall graunt.
And when he in the dead of night,
His soundest rest doth take:
We'le set him then in such a traunce,
That he shall neuer wake.
O gentle Iamque, sayd shee,
If thy deuise take place:
Then hast thou sure for euer wonne,
Poore Violentas grace.
Her fiste she doth directe:
The stile whereof imported this.
Or else the like effecte.
Soignieur Didaco, I am persuaded that if you
will vouchsafe to peruse the tenure of these my lamentable
lines, you will be moued with some remorse
and compassion, in contemplation of the
true image of my wretched life, purtraied & truelie
described in the same, which through your disloyaltie
and breach of promise is consumed, and
spent with so manie riuers of vncessant teares and
lamentations, that many times I marueyle with
my self that nature, amidst so many martirdomes,
hath neuer yet had the force to separate that vnitie
which coupleth my soule vnto this turmoyled
carcasse. Alas howe many thousand times a day
haue I called for death, to abridge and interrupte
the course of these myne vnhappie dayes. And yet
she reclineth not vnto my crie? Alas howe many
Millions of times euery day, hath my tormented
minde bene vanquished with the extremitie of
this intollerable hell of vexations, expecting still
the time when I may take mine Ultimum vale of
all worldly delightes, being now arriued at the vttermost
panges of death. But what is this in comparison
of the horror that oppresseth my waueuering
minde when time requireth that I should
Distilled from her eye:
Write would she faine, but that the wordes,
Within her mouth did die.
And casting by the instrumentes,
That did this Engine frame,
With seale she signes it vp, and to
Her mayde she yeldes the same.
Holde Iamque she sayd and if,
Thou play thy part so fine:
As I in forging of these lines,
At large haue vttered myne.
I doubt not, but or long we shall
Entrap the traytour so:
That he shall quite forget the meanes,
To worke poore maydens thrall.
Shee hauing once receyued the briefe,
With speede doth post away:
Unto the palaice where she knewe,
The knight Didaco lay.
Where hauing once attaynd vnto,
The speeche of him alone:
In this effect the traytorous hagge,
Her Iudas tale begonne,
Seignieur Didaco: in mysteries,
Of learning I am mute:
But sure I am this signed briefe,
Importes some earnest sute.
And griefe hath vexte my dame:
And eke amidst a thousand sighes,
She did this letter frame.
And sure to say the truth, you seeme,
To offer her great wrong:
Because that from her house, you doe
Absent your selfe so long.
As for your breach of Mariage,
At that she naught repines:
And reason to, if that she waye,
The difference of your lines:
But this one pange aboue the rest,
Doth aggrauate her woe:
Because you see her not sometimes,
As erst you vsde to doe.
God wotte, she sillie soule would thinke,
Her selfe of Ioue most blest:
If that some nightes she might obtaine,
By your sweete side to rest.
And by that meanes, the second place
Of your loue to possesse:
If this she had, then easde she were,
Of this so great distresse.
And sure sir Knight you may do well,
Your fancie for to bend:
In seeing her sometimes, vnto
Her sute to condescend,
As braue a spouse retayne:
And eke as faire a paragon,
As any liues in Spayne.
This said, she renders vp the briefe,
Unto Didacoes hand:
Who, when with christall rowling eye,
Th' effect thereof had scand.
His dumpish mynd was for a space,
with wauering fancies led:
For loue, and hate with motions straunge,
Did combate in his head.
At last he sayd: deere Iamque,
Thy mistres certifye:
That time permits me not as now,
To frame a new replye.
But that Ile visite her before,
The rysing of the sonne:
To morow morne, and there discourse,
The summe of that is donne
She glad, with fayned reuerence,
Premisd away doth trotte:
And, till she was within the doores,
To runne she ceaseth not.
Where to her dame the order of,
Her toile she doth display:
And how Didaco would be there,
The next ensuing day.
Her sorowes all were gone:
And hard embracing Iamque,
This wise replyed anone.
Sweete wench if thou hast framd the grynne,
This traytour to begyle:
Be sure of this, that for my part,
I haue not slept the while.
But after sundry thoughtes, I haue
Deuisde this pretie fetche,
To execute our boochery,
On this false periurd wretch.
Thy chiefest charge is this: thou must
A mightie rope prepare:
Wherwith, when fast he is a sleepe,
We may this traytor snare.
Next that two monstrous chopping kniues,
Must for this feate be bought:
Although the price be neuer so great,
Yet spare thou not for ought.
That done let me my selfe alone:
Our practize to fulfill:
Thou maist referre that knacke,
To tryall of my skill.
I trow that or he passe from hence,
Ile charme my youth so well:
That he, who vsde him in such sort,
Shall neuer haue time to dwell.
To doe as she decreed:
For slowes no time but doth prepare.
The instrumentes with speede.
The time drue on when he poore man,
To Iamque did say:
That he his former wife would see,
Before the breake of day.
And so what time the clocke stroke foure,
His seruaunt he doth wake:
Two Spanish Iennets of the best,
For iourney prest to make.
And mounted on their coursers braue,
In shade of vgly night:
Euen at the turning of the streete,
Didaco doth alight.
And to his man commits his horse,
Commaunding him to ryde:
Into the countrie, where he should,
Untill the morowe abyde.
And then before that Phœbus lampe,
Displayed her wonted fire:
To him at Violentas house,
In hast he should retyre:
Meane time his Iennets to bestowe,
Within some secrete Inne:
For none might know how he that while,
Had with his louer bin.
Unto his former wife:
Preparing syllie soule, his throte,
Unto the hangmans knife.
And knocking softly at the gate,
Where Iamque did waite:
She into her mystres closet doth
Conuay Didaco straight.
The knight, who ere his comming, had
A fine excuse prepard:
Doth greete her with a friendly kisse,
Enquiring how she feard.
Didaco, you in words (quod she)
Seeme carefull for my state:
Although your stomacke inwardly,
Repineth at my fate.
I trowe your giltie conscience,
Will testifie the payne:
Which I poore girle vncessantly,
Both day and night sustayne.
The furie of which martirdome,
Hath brought my soule so lowe:
That still I looke when as the breath,
My carcasse will forgoe.
And yet the letter which I sent,
I wrote not to this ende:
In hope it would your stonie hart,
To rue mine anguishe bend.
To worke their endles thrall:
Which to these glosing words of yours,
To credence geue at all.
Wherof I wretched wench, at first
Unwitting of your trade:
Of this your trecherous villany,
To plaine a proofe haue made.
He fearing, least her boyling rage,
Would more and more enflame:
With often kissing of her cheeke,
This forg'd reply doth frame.
Madame why doubt you of my faith
My match was but pretended:
For willingly vnto the same,
I neuer condescended.
And though I was enforste to take,
Another to my wife:
Yet sure or long, ile cut in twayne,
The fillet of her lyfe
And when my practize once hath wrought,
Her cursed finall end:
The remnant of my vitall race,
with thee (my deare) ile spend.
And then in tearme of further time.
It plainely shall appeare:
How that Didaco is the knight,
That holdes thy loue most deare.
Of this his tangling tonge:
With filed phrase he seekes to frame,
Excuse for former wronge.
Shee loth to loose the benefite,
Of this so fit a time:
Doth seeme to hold the knight excusde,
For that pretended crime.
And with a forced smiling face,
(But with a Iudas brest)
In this effect vnto the knight,
Her aunswere she addrest.
Didaco, I am content this once,
To thinke your aunsweres iust:
Although your deedes haue geuen me cause,
Your sayings to instrust.
But sure your loue so rooted is,
Within my burning hart:
That needes the crime must heynous be,
That may the same auert:
Therfore I will constrayne my selfe,
To thinke your saying true:
If you to visite me sometimes,
By night, will plight your vowe.
For if at certaine times I might,
Your companie enioye:
Than would I thinke my selfe iblest,
And free from all annoye.
Her furie so represte:
With sacred vowe and plighted faith,
Accorded to her heste.
Thus while they both no truth at all,
But deepe dissembling ment:
Darke Nox with mantle black approchte,
And Phœbus race was spent.
And while the remnant of the night,
with speedie passage flyes:
At last god Morpheus charmes attachte,
Didacoes drousy eyes,
That able scarce to keepe awake,
His weary drouping head:
With Violenta croucheth downe:
Within his fatall bed.
Then Iamque rakes vp the fire,
And takes the light away:
And softly from the bed, she doth
Didacoes sword conuaye.
Next that the cursed trayterous bitch,
Beneath the bed doth grope:
(As though she somwhat had to doe
And maketh fast the rope:
And marching to the chamber doore,
To goe her way doth fayne:
But hauing bard the same full fast,
Returneth in againe,
Had all his vaines possest:
And throughly drencht his heauy limmes,
In gulfe of careles rest.
Precisely Iamque besturres,
her selfe in shade of night:
And into Violentas handes,
Directs the rope aright.
Who when shee had with nimble fyst,
bestowde the same full fast:
The end againe crosse thwart the bed,
To Iamque shee cast.
Who foulding it about her armes,
With bum flat clapt on floore:
Hoystes vp her feete against the bed,
To pull when he should sturre.
This done, her mystres takes in hand,
Her fatall caruing blade:
And searching secretely, wheras
Th'assalt might soonste be made.
Forthwith his tender throte with knife,
So fiercely she doth pricke:
That glyding thorow, the poynt therof
Did in the pillowe sticke.
He syllie soule when first he felt,
The cursed stroke she strake:
With frustrate hands poore man he striues,
Resistance for to make.
His wittes did so appall:
That hand or foote to saue himselfe,
He could not stirre at all.
And feeling efte a second charge,
His naked throte vpon:
Both strength to striue, and speach to speake,
Were quite bereft and gone.
Shee like a vile Medea fell,
Her deuelish rage prouokes:
And on his wretched rented corps,
Redoubleth still her strokes.
So long with dent of trenching blade,
His martird limmes she tyred:
Tyll that his senceles corps at last,
The grudging ghost expyred.
Nowe, Iamque my girle, quod shee,
With speede prepare a light:
So shall we quickly see if that,
This feare be wrought aright.
Where hauing vewde with firie lookes,
His breathles corps at full:
The closed eyes from forth his head,
With scortching knife doth pull.
And hauing throughly launc'te the same,
With many a griesely gashe:
At last with choler hotte enflamd,
Her venome forth doth flashe.
The fort you erst possest:
Come forth for aye, come forth: for there
You shall no longer rest.
Come forth from this your shameles siege,
Where you so long did byde:
For nowe your fount of fayned teares,
Is cleane exhaust and dride.
Then haling forth his senceles tongue,
With force of murtherous hand:
When she with many a monstrous slashe,
The forme thereof had scand.
O tickling tangling, tongue quod she,
That vtteredst nought at all:
But deepe deceyt in cloake of loue,
And hony mixst with gall.
How long didst thou turmoyle in vayne,
With this thy cannon shotte:
Or that of my Uirginitie,
Thou hadst the conquest gotte.
Whereof depriued by thy meanes,
Ile hasten eke to death:
For hauing lost that precious gemme,
Nought profits vitall breath.
Then launching in a violent hole,
Into his swelling brest:
With tygers nayles she rents the hart,
From where it erst did rest.
With dent of launcing blade:
With thundering checkes against the same,
Her inuectiue she made.
O hart more hard then Adamant,
Whose Anduill did prepare:
The trapping toyles and gaging grynnes,
Which me poore girle did snare.
Why could I not thy former thoughtes,
So perfectly descrie:
As thy materiall substance now,
I vewe with perfect eye.
Then had I not poore wretch (alas)
In these thy trappes bene tane:
Ne had thy battery brued the bale,
Of my vnhappy bane.
This said she bathes her deuelish nayles,
within his blond a freshe:
And cufs her curst anatomy,
Upon his mangled fleshe.
Then hewing all his other partes,
So long shee wreakes her teene:
That no one place in all his limmes,
Deuoyd of scarres was seene.
Now Iamque my deere she sayd,
This taske doth yet remayne:
That we this monstrous mangled beast,
Unto the windowe traine.
My shame abroade is blowen:
So will I eke that this reuenge.
Should openly be knowen.
This sayd, they both the martird corps,
Unto the windowe drewe:
And then with violent hands the same,
Upon the pauement threwe.
Now take this golde my girle she sayd,
In guerdon of thy payne:
And speede thee hence into Africa,
And neuer come againe.
The mayde with teares doth take her leaue,
And purposde so to doe:
Long time before, although her dame,
Had not aduisde her so.
Which done this boocher frames her selfe,
Some quiet sleepe to take:
Because all night to worke her feate,
Shee tooke such paynes to wake.
O monstrous hellish hagge, that forth
From Plutoes kingdome brake:
O hydeous hissing Hydra huge,
That lurkes in Lerna lake.
O bitch for sprong of serpents seede,
And not of humayne stocke:
But fosterd vp in desert groues,
Within some holowe rocke:
From ramping tygers dugge:
Which thou amongst the craggy cliffes,
With sauage chappes didst tugge.
The raging senceles Lions brode,
Within themselues agree:
Detesting all against their makes,
Iniurious for to bee.
But thou deriu'd of humayne race,
Endued with reason to:
Aduenturest vpon such factes,
As they abhorre to doe.
O curtall curst, of woman kind,
Unworthy of the name:
But aye for to be bayted at,
With trumpe of blacke defame.
You Ladies all whose weeping eyes,
This hystorie peruse:
At rarenes of this monstrous fact,
No marueyle though ye muse.
But as the splendant blasing lampe,
Doth neuer burne so bright:
As when a darkesome shade doth seeme,
For to eclipse his light.
So you, deere dames whose vertuous minds,
Abandon all such wayes:
By contrarie of this foule facte,
Deserue immortal prayse.
To prosecute the acte:
Although my mazed mynd abhorres,
So thinke vpon the facte.
No sooner had the day appeered,
And Phœbus showne his head:
But that this monstrous murther straight,
Through all the towne was spred.
That great concourse from euery where,
Resorted to the place:
In mightie companies, to scanne,
The strangenes of the case.
But yet the sillie martirs face,
And limmes were mangled so,
That though the multitude were great,
Not one the man did know.
Some iudgde there had a fray bene made,
And so the partie slaine:
Some this, some that, but none of all,
Could to the truth attaine.
She leaning all this while alone,
And vewing of the thronge:
At last with manly courage mou'd,
She steppes the prease among.
My maisters all (quod she) you seeme,
To diuersly to scanne:
With iudgements contrary, the case
Concerne this sayd man.
For some say that some this:
And eche man thinkes his verdite best,
But all the marke do misse.
The meaning of this mystery,
By me must be reuealed:
Which else (no doubt) in couert wise,
Long time would lie concealed,
Therefore your listening eares I say,
Unto my words apply:
This is the Lord Didaco he,
That slaine on grounde doth lye.
But first because it is requisite,
His friends the case should know,
Let them be straight accited, then
Th'effect of all ile showe.
Whereon Didacos kinsfolkes all,
Were somoned to the place:
In presence of the Iudge, so heare
The scanning of the case:
Which done, this hellish Hydra forth,
Was led the streetes throughout:
Unto the iudgement hall, which then
Was pestered with the rout.
Where with a quiet countenance,
And conscience voyde of grudge:
She frames her loathsome long discourse,
In hearing of the iudge.
Had languisht styll in loue:
And neuer any rest attaynd,
His panges for to remoue.
But lingring long, and not of force,
His fancie to represse:
That euery day with thousand thoughts,
Augmented his distresse.
In fine resolu'd, what way he might,
His hotte consumption cure:
By sacred solemne nuptiall bands,
He wanne me to his lure.
But hauing falsifyed at last,
His former plighted vowes:
He cast me of and chose eftsone,
Another Dame to spouse.
Therefore because my fame by him,
Into the lapse was brought:
With helpe of Iamque my mayde,
This due reuenge I wrought.
Wherefore pronounce your righteous doome,
Of death vpon my acte:
Or else these hands of myne shall take,
Reuengement of the facte.
This sayd, she ceasde, with greedie eyes,
Upon the iudges bent:
Who with distilling teares amayne,
The heauie hap lament.
The case so playne did lye:
That forc'te they were by righteous doome,
To iudge this hagge to die.
From whence she was vnto the place,
Of execution led:
Where with the stroke of fatall blade,
Shee lost her cursed bead.
And nowe this dolefull Tragedy,
To end, my muse decreed:
Inough to make a stonie hart:
With brackish teares to bleede.
Loe here you amorous knightes a glasse,
Wherein you plaine may vewe,
The future fate and last euent:
That louers liues ensue,
Why then enforce you not your selues.
Such humors to represse:
And to preuent by reasons lore,
The cause of your distresse.
With brydle of discretion seeke,
This fire for to allay:
That Phœbe may possesse the fort,
Where Venus bare the swaye.
Consider this, if wisedomes bit,
You desperately let fall:
You hazard rashely on the rocke,
Of euerlasting thrall.
Your remedie procure:
Yet commonly those wished ioyes,
Do neuer long endure,
The somme of both is this
Hap glad or sad, hap weale or woe,Hap hoped ioy, or payne:
Yet both in this one issue end,
In loue nought is but vayne,