Argumentum
The yeare of the Lord aboue the line.
TYTAN
and Saturne
differ, their great strife,
The yeare before Christ vnder the line.
Is by their carefull mother (VESTA)
ended:
Saturane,
his Sister Sybill
takes to wife,
And the heyre-males that are from thē descended
He doomes to death: faire Sybil
saues the life
Of Iupiter,
grim Saturne
is offended,
And to the Oracle at Delphos
hyes,
Whiles Titan
thrugh the earth his fortune tries.
ARG. 2.
The Worlds Creation, gold from the earths veines,
Neptune
and Plutoes
birth, ALPHA
conteines.
THis VNIVERSH with all
The opinions of the old Philosophers touching the creation.
Thales Milesi. Haraclitus
therein conteined,
Was not at first of Water fashioned,
Nor of the Fire, as others oft haue fcyned,
Nor of the Ayre,
Hyppasus
as some haue vainly spred.
Nor the foure Elements
Anaxamines
in order trained.
Nor of
Vacuitie and
Atom's bred.
Empedocles
Nor hath it beene Eternall (as is thought
Epicurus
By naturall men) that haue no further sought.
2
Neither hath man in perpetuity bin,
M
[...]rdorus
And shall on earth eternally perseuer
By endlesse Generation, running in
One circuit; (In corruption lasting euer)
[Page 2] Nor did that
Nation first on earth begin,
Di
[...]dorus
Vnder the mid
Equator: some indeuour
So to perswade; that man was first begunne,
In the place next, to the life-giuing Sunne.
3
Neither was he of Earth and water framed,
Empedocles
Tempered with liuely heat (as others write;)
Anaximander
Nor were we in a former world first named,
Democritus
As in their curious Problems (some recite:)
Others, more ripe in Iudgement, haue proclaimed,
Z
[...]
Man fram'd of clay, in fashion exquisite;
In whom were breath'd sparkes of Celestiall fire,
Whence he still keepes his Nature, to aspire.
4
But this most glorious
Vniuerse, was made
M
[...]yses
Of nothing, by the great
Creators will;
The
Ocean bounded in, not to inuade
Or swallow vp the
Land, so resteth still
The azure
Firmament, to ouer-shade
Both
Continent, and
Waters, which fulfil
The
Makers word, one
God doth sole extend
Without beginning, and shall see no end.
5
That powerfull
Trinity created man
Adam, of Earth, in the faire field
Damaske,
And of his rib he
Euah, formed than,
Supplying them with all things they can aske;
In these first two,
Humanity began;
In whom, confinde IHBHOVAHS fix-da
[...]es taske.
From
Adam then and
Euahs first
Creation,
It followes we deriue our
Brittish Nation.
6
Inspire me in this taske (
Ihoues seede I pray)
With
Hippocrenes drops besprinke my head,
To comfort me vpon this tedious way,
And quicken my cold braine nigh dull and dead;
Direct my wandring spirits, when they stray,
Least forren and forbidden paths they tread:
My iourney's tedious, (blame not then my feares)
My voyage, aymes at many thousand yeares.
7
Oh giue me leaue, from the Worlds first Creation,
The ancient names of
Britons, to deriue
From
Adam, to the Worlds first Invndation,
And so from
Noah, to vs that yet suru
[...]e:
And hauing of
Troyes Worthies made relation,
Your spurs the
Chariot of my Muse must driue
Through all past Ages, and precedent times,
To fill this new World with my worthlesse rymes.
8
Oh, may these Artlesse numbers in your eares,
(Renowmed IAMES) seeme Musically strung,
Your fame (oh IOVES-star'd Prince) spread euery where,
First gaue my still and speech-lesse Muse a tung:
From your Maiestike vertues (prised deare,)
The infant life of these harsh meeters sprung;
Oh, take not then their industrie in skorne,
Who, but to emblaze you, had beene yet vnbo
[...]e.
9
Not let your Princely Peeres hold in disdaine,
To haue their Auncestry stild'e and inrolde
In this poore Register, a higher straine
Their merits aske, since brazen leaues vnfold
Their neuer-dying Fame, yet thus much daine,
Not to despise to heare your vertues told
In a plaine stile, by one, whose wish and hart,
Supplies in zeale, want both of
Skill and
Art.
10
Times faithfully conferd, the first inuention
Of most thinges now in vse, heare you shall finde,
Annext with these, the vse and comprehention
Of Poes
[...], once to the Goddes desceind,
Suffer our bluntnesse then, since our intention
Is to good vse, sent from a zealous mind.
If Stones in Lead set, keepe their vertues: then,
Your worth's the same, though blazde by a rude Pen.
11
In the Worldes
Child-hood, and those Infant-daies,
When the first earth was in her strength and prime,
The Golden Age.
Ofher owne nature yeilding plants and Spraies,
Flowers, both for smell and Medicine: when each time
[Page 4] The chearefull beames of the bright Sunne displaies,
Hessed. in operibus & disbus.
To ripen fruites in their conuenient time;
Before the labouring
Swaine with'is iron plow,
Made furrowed wrinkles in the
Earths smooth brow.
2
When men were gouernd more by
Will, then
Art,
Pherecrates.
And had their appetites by
Nature swayde,
When
Fraud was vnbegot, and had no part
In the worlds Empire; before
Coyne was made,
Tremigistus.
When man his mutuall fortunes did impart
Without
Extortion, Guile, or
Vsurers trade;
Before smooth
Cunning was to ripenesse growne,
Marcil. ficinns.
Or diuellish
Wax and
Parchment yet were knowne.
3
I meane the golden world, the purest Age,
Tibullus.
That knew not brazen warre, or fatall steele,
For war was in his cradle: yron age
Bred but his teeth: yet did the world not feele
His rauenous phangs, no man did battell wage,
Or try the inconstant course of Fortunes wheele;
There was twixt king and king no grim defiance,
Nor bands (saue of affection and alliance.)
4
Then liu'd
Vranus a great Lord in
Creet,
Vranus and Vesta. 1954.
To
Aethra and great
Demogorgon heire,
He married with a Lady bright and sweet,
Vesta through all those climes (sur-nam'd
the faire)
2009.
Hiberius sonne of
Iubal gouerned
Spaine. Nynus
Assyria Mogus
Gallia
With two young lads she did her Husband greet,
Tytan and
Saturne, at two births she bare:
Tytan the eldest, crooked, and il-fac't,
Saturne well shap't, faire spoke, and comely grac't.
5
Vranus, in his hopefull issue famed,
Vranus called also
Creet.
Begot on
Vesta two faire Daughters more,
The first
Sibilla, the last
Ceres named,
Fairer were neuer seene in
Creet before.
Both were by Nature in her cunning framed,
Out of her beauties choise, and purest store:
Tytan, was for his vgly shape abhord,
But
Saturne, for his comlinesse adord.
6
This
Saturne, was the first by whose inuention
The Earth was Til'd, and Ear'd, and gaue increase,
Before his fruitfull daies, was neuer mention
To sowe, or plant; Till then a generall peace
Was made twixt th'earth and vs, our apprehention
Strecht not to know her secrets: Now gan cease
Blind Ignorance in man,
Saturne first found,
To till, to plow, to sow, to reape the ground.
7
He likewise was the first that strung the bow,
And with a feathered Arrow pierst the Aire,
Ph
[...]bus at first, admired, and did not know
What new made Birds could flie so swift and faire,
Mistaking
Saturnes shafts, for who would trow,
Mans wisedome could inuent a thing so rare,
(Being Earth-bred) to stretch his braine so hie,
As teach his shafts way through the empty skie.
8
And now began th'amaz'd Earth to admire,
To see such strange fruites in her bosome growing;
To see her head weare such vnknowne attire,
To see the
Swaines, some planting, others sowing;
Now first began the birds to pearch them hier,
And shun mans sight, still wondering, but not knowing,
How men below on th'earths verdure lying,
Should reach into the aire, and sttike them flying.
9
To kill the Sauadge beast he likewise taught,
And how to pierce the Serpents skale from farre,
By him, the wilde-swift-running Hart was caught,
He first deuis'd for vs the vse of warre;
He shewd which mines of earth be good, which naught,)
Which be the veines of Gold, which siluer are;
He Minerals first found, and from the mold,
To decke his Pallace, brought refined gold.
10
Yet some great
Saturnes glory would deface,
Pliny.
And say, that
Cadmus first this mettall found
In high
Pangeus, a huge hill in
Thrace,
Else
Thoas and
Eaclis searcht the ground
Herodotus
[Page 6] For gold ore; and
Panchaia was the place,
Knowne in such precious mettals to abound:
Some, twixt
Erichthon and
Ceacus deuide,
Finding bright siluer (first in
Athens tride.)
11
Idei Dactili Iron mettall wrought
In
Creet: some deeme, two
Iewes in
Cipres made it,
Selmentes and
Damnameneus brought
Clement.
The Ore from thence, and to their vse assaide it;
For yellow Brasse the fly
Pannonians sought,
The
Scithian Lydus, with the fire allaid it,
Aristotle.
And taught it first to melt; which some suppose,
The
Phrigian Delos did by Art disclose.
Theophrast.
12
Midacritus a Minerall more then these
Strabo.
Brought from a Prouince that belongs to
Spaine,
Lead: from the Ilands
Cassiterides,
Which some would Attribute to
Tuball-Caine.
Glaucus all Mettals brought beyond the seas
Taught how to sother, (else their vse were vaine.)
The first Smiths-forge, the blacke
Calibians made,
And after taught the
Ciclopes their trade.
13
Cyniras: the
Stythee, leuer, Tongs and File,
Polycron. Polidor.
Pyrodes was the first from flint stroke fire,
Which how to keepe in matches longer while
Prometheus taught: This
Vulcan did acquire:
The bellowes:
Anacharsis in the Isle
Cal'd
Scithes, and thus men did still aspire
For knowledge; and in seuerall Countries nurst
These Arts, of whom we hold king
Saturne first.
14
Therefore the
Cretan people much esteemed him,
And cal'd him God on earth for his rare wit;
Much honor he receiu'd which they beteem'd him,
And in their populer iudgements held it fit
To burne him Mirrhe and Insence, for they deem'd him
Worthy alone amongst the Gods to sit,
Perswaded such a high inuentious straine,
Could not proceed from any Mortals braine.
11
As these rare guifts the giddy Commons noted,
So in his mothers hart they tooke Impression,
Who on her sonnes perfections inly doted,
Making for him her daily intercession,
Thus in a Sea of sweet content he floted;
For who, but of his vertues made confession?
In processe, and the chiefe of
Saturnes pride,
The old
Vranus craz'd, fell sicke and dide.
12
After a few sad funerall sighes and teares
By
Vesta, o're her husbands body shed,
In crooked
Tytan, to the world appeares
A strong intention, to impale his head
With his dead fathers Crowne: This
Vesta feares,
And calling
Saturne, thus to him she sed:
My dearest sonne, tis by the Lords decreed,
That in
Vranus Prince-dome, thou succeed.
13
Thy brother
Tytan, though in Age before thee,
Yet in thy wisedome thou hast him out-stript;
Thou hast the popular loue, they all adore thee,
His blasted hopes, are in the blossome nipt;
With Coine, with Men, with Armor, I will store thee,
Let him stand fast, or he shall sure be tript:
Both Lords and people, ioyne with me thy mother,
To invest
Saturne, and depose thy brother.
14
With that, before her sonne could make reply,
Where they were speaking, rusht bold
Tytan in,
A storme was in his brow, fier in his eye,
Difference twixt Tyta
[...] and Saturne.
After some tempest, he doth thus begin:
Must then young
Saturne raigne? Oh, tell me why?
Am I a Bastard, and begot in sinne?
Hath
Vesta playd the strumpet with my Father,
That you despise me, and elect him rather?
15
Was I not of that Virgin-wombe the first?
And lay I not as neere your heart as he?
Was I not of those breasts before him nurst?
And am I not his Elder in degree?
[Page 8] What haue I done, you should affect me worst?
Your Mayden-birth, and your first progeny:
Before him I was borne, and to be plaine,
(By all the Goddes) I will before him raigne.
16
Had I not in your wombe, the selfe-same being?
Am I not of the selfe-same bloud created?
Is not my Royalty with his agreeing?
Is not my birth before his
Anti-dated?
Is elder
Tytan, now not worth the seeing?
Must in my right, that young boy be instated?
Hath he so well, or I so ill deseru'd:
No: first I came, and I will first be seru'd.
17
And turning to young
Saturne, with an eye
Threatning reuenge, and ruyne to his life,
Prin-cox (quoth he) must you be plac't so hye,
The only darling of
Vranu wife?
Canst thou so soone out-leape me? Thou shalt die,
And in thy fatall obits end this strife;
Then, with his fatall blade he blest his head,
Had the blow falne, it had strooke
Saturne dead.
18
But
Vesta staide it comming, and withall
Came
Ceres and
Sibilla thrusting thither,
They hugge young
Saturne, but on
Tytan fall,
Thundring on him with clamors, altogither,
The yonger brother they their Soueraigne call,
And bid the elder packe, they care not whither:
The people second them: thus in disgrace,
The
Stigmaticke is forst to leaue the place.
19
But hauing better with himselfe aduised,
Erythea Sibylla.
Tytan and
Saturne thus the strife decide,
That
Tytan (for his shape so much despised)
Should leaue the Scepter vnto
Saturnes guide,
Their strife compounded.
And so to stint all mallice enterprised;
But after
Saturnes death, the Crownet'abide
Lu
[...].
To
Tytan and his heyres, by his last will;
So
Saturne sweares all his heyres male to kill.
20
King
Saturne must not let a sonne suruiue
Apollonius li. 2 Argonant.
To keepe his brothers I ssue from the Crowne,
Only his Daughters he may saue aliue,
These Couenants are betwixt them both set downe:
Hence-forth, no more these haughty brothers striue,
For eyther by Indenture knowes his owne:
The Crowne is
Saturnes, due to
Tytans seed,
To make which good, all
Saturnes sonnes must bleed.
21
The elder brother, thus o'reswaide with might,
Cannot indure that Clyme, but seekes another,
To see his yonger throned in his right,
Or to be cal'd a Subiect to his brother,
And therefore full of anger and despight,
He leaues his Countrey, Sisters, and his mother;
And to be rid at once of his disgraces,
He seekes aduentures strange, in forren places.
22
Where Fortune his attempts so much befrended,
That many Warlike Nations he subdud'e,
No quest, saue Armes and valour, he intended,
And how by Vsurpation to intrude
Into the rightes of others, who defended
Their Honors, both by strength and multitude:
Thus he of many Islands raignes sole King,
And all the World, of
Tytans Actes doth ring.
23
Yet into
Creet he daily sendes espiall,
To know if
Saturne made his Couenant good,
Forcing his slye skouts (mauger all deniall)
To bring him word, how
Saturnes glory stood,
Whether of Mariage he had yet made tryall,
Or hauing Children male, had spilt their bloud;
Knowing himselfe to be sufficient strong,
By force of Armes, to right his former wrong.
24
So with his fiue and forty Sonnes makes thence,
Diod. S
[...]lus.
With fayre
Tytea, mother to seuenteene
Of that large broode; all these with rage dispence,
And by their late attonement, Exiles beene.
[Page 10] With patience they depart (but with pretence)
Hoping well Armed once more to be seene,
And with their brood of
Tytanois to meet,
And tug with
Saturne, for the Crowne of
Creet.
25
Rhea (of all the beauteous daughters fairest)
Brides with
Hiperion, her best-lou'd Brother:
He likewise, for his feature was the rarest
Of
Tytans sonns (there liu'd not such another)
Oh sweet
Hiperion, thou in shape comparest
With all the Gyant yssue of thy mother;
At feuerall byrths, two Babes she childed soone,
The male she cald the
Sunne; Female, the
Moone.
26
The tother
Tytans fearing, to these two
Their Fathers Conquests should in time descend,
A monstrous Act they haue intent to do,
Whose scandall shall beyond both Poles extend,
And none but
Parricides would yeild vnto,
For they that should their Brothers life defend
Conspire together, and gainst right or reason,
In dead of night, they seeke his death, by
Treason.
27
But first they take his little sonne,
the Sunne,
Pausanias in Corinthiacis.
And to the floud
Eridanus (well knowne,
That streames along their Coast:) In hast they run,
Where the young Lad amongst the waues is throwne,
This, when his tender
Sister knew was dun,
From a high Rocke, her selfe she tumbled downe:
In pitty of whose beauties, grace, and yeares,
The Gods translate them, to the brightest Spheres.
28
Meane time, the new made King of
Creet's renowne
Increast so much, that he was term'd a God,
Of Tytan mor Can 3 stan. 27
He was the first that ware a
Lawrell Crowne,
The first that venter'd on the Scas, and rod
In triumph on the waters; (this being knowne)
They held them happiest, that could make abod
In his blest
Prouince, which being well conducted,
Kings sent their Sonnes to him, to be instructed.
25
Saturne in those daies was helde onely wise,
Many young Princes in his Court wer
[...] trai
[...]d,
He taught them both the vse of
Seas and
[...]es,
And what h
[...]d wealth within the Earth remained;
Then gan he Citties build, and Lawes deuise,
for an Irregular people he disdained:
The mynerall mountaine-veines he vnder-minde,
And was the first, that perfect
Golde refinde.
26
Yet neuer did this King in ought miscarry,
Hauing what
Earth, and
Sea, and
Ayre could yeild,
Happy in all thinges, saue, he durst not marry,
He sees the gorgcous house, he late did build
Shine with reflecting Gold (his obiects varry)
He sees his ripe corne, growing in the field,
He sees the wilde Birds by his Archers caught,
Pierst with those shafts, whose vse before he taught.
27
He sees the vast Seas, by his Oares deuided,
And the decepe waters, without danger past,
By Art of
Sayle and
Rudder, they are guided,
(What greater happinesse could Mortall tast?)
But when the
Couenant long before decided
Twixt him and
Tytan he records, at last,
It pierst his hart with sorrow: for his life
Seemes to him tedeous, led without a wife.
28
What bootes him all his Honours and ritch state?
His wealths-increase, and all his worldly pleasure?
For whom doth he rise early, and sleepe late?
Hauing no heyre, to inherite all his Treasure:
He knowes he hath incur'd his Brothers hate,
Yet must his seed, make of his kingdome seazure:
He enuyes his owne wealth, bicause he knowes,
All his life time he toyles, t'enrich his foes.
29
He loues his Sister
Sybill (yet not so
That if she ch
[...]dren haue, their blouds to spill)
And yet his timerous passions howerly grow,
Nor can he on her beauty gaze his fill:
[Page 12] Faine would he marry her, and yet doth know
If shee haue Issue, he her sonnes must kill,
So that he wishes now, (but all too late)
That for his vow, he might Exchange his state.
30
In this distraction many dayes he dwelt,
Till Loue at length in
Saturnes hart preuailed,
Such feruent passions in his brest he felt,
That spight his Oath, (which he so much bewailed)
He feeles his soft thoughts in his bosome melt:
(Needs must he yeild whom such faire Jookes assailed)
And now vpon this desperate point he stood,
To wade t'her bed, thogh throgh his childrens blood.
31
This can great
Apis witnesse, who that time
Peloponessus gouern'd: This records
Iubalda, who the
Spanish seat doth clime;
This
Craunus kneel'd to by
th'Italian Lords:
This
Satron, who the
Gaules rul'd in his prime,
Now to
Semiramis Assyria affords
The Monarchy: who after
Ninus dide,
Married her Sonne, and perisht by his pride.
32
The marriage rights with solemne feasts are done,
Saturne marrieth his Sister
Sybill.
Sybill both wife and sister; the first Queene
That raign'd in
Creete, hath now conceiu'd a sonne,
Neuer hath lesse applausiue ioy bin seene
2000.
At such a Brides Conception: the time's come
1963.
The long suspensiue daies expired beene:
For if a male, his blood the Earth must staine,
A male she brought forth, and the Lad was slaine.
33
For so the King commanded, being a King,
He thought it base if he should breake his word,
Oh golden dayes, of which the
Poets sing,
How many can this Iron age afford
That hold a promise such a precious thing,
Rather to yeeld their children to the sword,
Then that the world should say, thy oath thou brakest,
Or wast so base, to eate the word thou spakest.
33
Such difference is twixt this, and that of gold,
We in our sinnes are stronger; Vertues weaker;
Words tide them fast, but vs no bonds can hold;
They held it vil'd, to be a promise breaker;
A
Lyar was as strange in times of old,
As to find out amongst vs, a true speaker:
Their harts were of pure mettall, ours haue flawes,
Now lawes are wordes; in those daies, wordes were lawes.
34
The Funerall of the first slaine infant ended,
And the sad daies of mourning quite expir'd,
At which the pittious Queene was most offended,
But now her spirits with dull sorrowes tired,
The King a second metting hath intended,
And the Queenes nuptiall bed againe desired;
Sibill conceiues, and in her wombe doth cherish,
More children, ready in their birth to perish.
35
And growing neere her time, the sorrowfull father,
Displeas'd to see his wife so apt to beare,
Who for his vowes-sake wish her barren rather,
(The murther of his first sonne toucht him neare,)
Sends through his Land, a kingly traine to gather,
And makes for
Delphos, hoping he shall heare
Some better comfort from the
Delphian shrine,
Whose Oracles the king esteemes diuine.
36
He therefore first his sacrifice prepares,
And on
Apollos Altar Incense burnes,
Then kneeling to the Oracle, his praiers
Mount with the sacred sume, which neare returnes,
Tell the pleas'd God acquainted with his cares
Lookes downe from heauen, & sees him how he mourns,
Desiting that his power would nothing hide,
But tell, what of her next birth should betide.
37
With that there fell a storme of Raine and Thunder,
The Temple was all sire, the Alter shooke,
The golden roofe aboue, and pauement vnder,
[Page 14] Trembled at once, about gan
Saturne looke,
To see what heauenly power had caus'd this wonder,
Faine he the holy place would haue forsooke,
When th'Oracle thus spake: thy wife growes great,
With one that shall depose thee from thy seat.
38
For from her royall wombe shall one proceed,
That in despight of thee in
Creet shall dwell;
So haue the neuer-changing fares decreed,
Such is the Oracles (thrice sacred) spell;
A sonne shall issue from king
Saturnes seed,
That shall enforce his father downe to Hell,
This heard, the discontented king arose,
And (doubly sad) away to
Creet he goes.
39
What shall he do, faire
Sibils time drawes neere,
And if the Lad which she brings forth suruiue,
The newes will stretch vnto his brothers eare,
To whom he sware to keepe no male aliue,
Besides a second cause he hath to feare,
Least he his father, from his kingdome driue,
Then, to preuent these ils, he swears (on hie,)
Inspight of fate, the infant borne shall die.
40
Yet when the King his first sonnes death records,
In his resolued thoughts it breeds relenting,
The bloudy and vnnaturall act affords
His troubled thoughts, fresh cause of discontenting,
None dare approach his presence, Queene, no
[...] Lords,
That to his first childs death had bin consenting:
The first vnnaturall act appeares so vilde,
The king intends to saue his second childe.
41
So oft as he the murder cals to mind,
So oft he vowes the second son to saue,
But thinking on his couenant, grows vnkind,
And doomes it straight vnto a timelesse graue;
Againe, the name of sonne would pitty find,
And for his oth some refuge seekes to haue:
But when the Oracle he doth recall,
The very thought of that, confounded all.
42
So deare to him his Crowne and state appeared
That he his pompe before his blood preferred,
It ioyes him to commaund, and to liue feared,
And now he thinkes his foolish pitty erred,
And setting light his issue, seemes well cheared,
His fortune to the Goddes he hath referred,
Rather then loose his Scepter, tis decreed,
Sib
[...] versus.
Had he ten thousand brats, they all should bleed.
43
Resolu'd thus: newes is brought him by his mother,
That
Sibell (late in trauell) is deliuer'd
The birth of
Iupitey and
Iuno.
Of two faire Twins, a Sister, and a Brother,
At this report, his heart is well nigh shiuer'd,
2014.
Go, spare the
[...]one (quoth he) and kill the tother;
Alas (saith she) we women are pale-liuer'd
1946.
And haue not heart to kill: no beast so wilde
Abraham enters
Cana
[...] 24, yeares after Circumcision was commaunded: and
Sodome and
Gomorrah burned.
Or brutish, but would spare so sweete a childe.
44
And shall a father then so madly fare
With his owne issue, his childs blood to spill?
And whom the Tigers and fell beasts would spare,
Shall reasonable man presume to kill?
The birds more tender ore their young ones are,
Fishes are kind vnto their issue still.
Fish, bird, and beast, in sea, Aire,
[...]arth, that breedeth,
Though reasonlesse, her tender young ones feedeth.
45
Further she was proceeding, when the son,
Lycophron.
An irefull frowne vpon his mother threw,
Away (quoth he) and to
Sibilla run,
And let the same hand that my first borne slew
Destroy this to, for as we haue begun,
We will persist, the Lady sad, withdrew,
Affraide and greeu'd at once, to see him moued,
Whom, as her King (she fear'd) her son; she loued,
46
No sooner was she out of fight, but he
One of his trusty seruants cals on hye,
Who waits his pleasure on his bended knee,
[Page 16] Quickly (quoth
Saturne after
Vesta flie,
Say, if the brat suruiue,
Sibill and she
As Traytors to our person, both shall die:
Hees gone, and little in the King doth lacke,
At his departure to haue cal'd him backe.
47
Twice was the word halfe out, and twice kept in,
Faine he would haue it done, and faine neglected,
He thinkes dam'd Parricide on vgly sinne,
But worse he thinkes from State to be deiected,
Neuer hath Prince in such distraction bin,
His bloud he lou'd, his kingdome he affected:
But since he cannot both at once enjoy,
His state hee'l saue, his yssue hee'l destroy.
48
Ambition to his fiery rage gaue fewell,
He now remembers not his
Sibils teares,
Whose tender hart laments, to lose her Iewell,
No sparke of pitty in his looke appeares,
It sports him only to be tearmed cruell,
At name of Father, now he stops his eares;
Had not his Crown, more then his couenant tēmpted,
Sybill, thy sonne had bin from death exempted.
49
But the commaund is gone, and in his breast
He now reuolues the vilenesse of the deed,
Scepter, and Crowne, and life he doth detest,
Within him, his remor cefull entrailes bleed;
And now at length, the King would thinke him blest,
Might he togither perish with his seed:
And that which most his Melancholy furthers,
He knowes, the world condems him for his murthers.
50
No joy can cheere, no object make him glad,
The dayes in sighes, the nights in teares he spends,
Nothing can please him: (be it good or bad)
His troubled and craz'd sences it offends,
That he is now surnam'd,
Saturne the Sad,
He sets not by alliance, strangers, friends;
Here leaue him in the depth of his dispaires,
A melancholy King, composde of cares.
51
And to the Queene returne who sadly waites
Her Infants execution or rep
[...]ue,
Did
Saturne see this boy (she thus debates)
That he would kill him, I can scarce belecue?
Alas: poore infants borne to wofull fates,
What corsicke hart such harmelesse soules can greeue;
Thus lies the Queene, til from her Lord she heare,
Halfe chear'd with hope, and halfe destroy'd through feare.
52
In
Vesta comes; her sad cheare
Sybill spies,
And in her bed (though weake) her selfe sh'aduanced,
She might haue read the Message in her eies,
For as vpon the smiling Babe she glanced,
She fil'd the chamber with lowd shreekes and cries,
At which the wofull mother was intranced:
The Grandam, in her eyes the kings wil showing,
The mother, by her lookes, her meaning knowing.
53
Not long in this strange sorrow they remained,
But the kings seruant mongst the women presleth,
A generall flush the Matrons cheekes hath stained,
And his owne blush
[...]ng with theirs, confesseth
That place vnfit for him; yet none complained,
For euery one his cause of comming gesseth;
Knowing the gentle knight, would not present him
In such a place, vnlesse the king had sent him.
54
On whom, as more attentiuely they gaze,
Thus wils the king (quoth he) my sonne shall die;
In vaine with sorrowfull teares your eies you glaze,
Or fill this chamber with a generall cry,
He for the heart of his young infant staies;
Which if his mother, or his Queene deny,
They shall abide like doome, hee'l haue their harts;
The message ended thus: the knight departs.
55
So long in sorrowes simpathy they mourn'd,
That with excesse of griefe their soules were tired,
Now for a space they haue their feares adiourn'd,
[Page 18] And of the kings displeasure more inquired,
At length their mourning into madnesse turn'd,
(Quoth
Sibell) no base murtherer shall be hired
To worke this out-rage, so the king hath wild,
And by my hand the
[...]weete babe shall be kild.
56
With that a knife the wrathfull
Sibell snatcht,
And bent the point against the infants brest,
Thinking to haue his innocent life dispatcht,
And sent his soule vnto eternall rest;
The Lad his mother by the bosome catcht,
And smiling in her face, that was addrest
To strike him dead, away she hurles the knife,
And faith (sweet babe) that smile hath sau'd thy life.
57
Then giue it me quoth
Vesta, for take heed,
My son hath charg'd vs on our liues, to slay him,
The infant by his Grandams hand shall bleed,
So wils the king (whats she that dares gainsay him?)
My aged hand shall act this ruthlesse deed,
And I that should protect him, will betry him,
She aimes to strike, at which the infant smilde,
And she insteed of killing; kist the childe.
58
Are you so timerous (quoth the Midwife by?)
Or do you count this babe so deare a treasure?
Know you not, if we saue him we shall die,
And shall wehazard death in such high measure?
Though you would slight it, by my life not I;
I am more fearefull of the kings displeasure:
With that, a keener blade the
Beldam drew,
The babe still smild, away the knife she threw.
59
When they behold the beauty of the Lad,
They vow within themselues his life to saue,
But then the kings Iniunction makes them sad,
And straight (alas) they doome it to the graue;
Now with their blades in hand, like
Beldams mad,
They menace death: then smiles the pretty knaue,
Then fall their kniues, then name they the kings will,
And then agai
[...] they threat the babe to kill.
60
Three times by turnes the Infant past their hands,
And three times thrice, the kniues point toucht his skin,
And each of them as oft confounded stands,
(Such pitty did his smiling beauty win)
That more then they estecme their liues or lands,
They all abhor the vilenesse of the sinne;
At length they all consult with heedfull care,
Iupiter saued.
To saue the
[...] owne liues, and the childe to spare.
61
Saith
Vesta, in the bordering Prouince dwels
Melliseus king of Epyre.
Old
Mellisseus, a renowned King,
His daughters I brought vp in sacred Spels,
And taught them Chares, to sow, to weaue, to sing,
No Lady liuing these bright Dames excels
In vertuous Thewes, good graces, euery
[...] thing;
To these my little Graund-child I will send,
And to their trust, this prectious charge commend.
62
Faire
Almache and
Mellissee I know,
Alias, Advastea, and Idas
(For so these vertuous Ladies haue to name)
Will when they vnderstand what Queene doth owe
Apollon. Rhod. lib. 3. Arg. Pausanias in Messemacis. Lactan. lib de falsa religione.
This royall yssue, and from whence it came,
Their best and choysest entertainment shew,
And to no eare our secret Act proclaime;
Thus they conclude, all needfull things are fatcht,
And on her way a trusty mayde dispatcht.
63
Who in the Citty
Of on safe ariuing,
Apol. Atheniensis gramat.
To the two Sisters she her charge presents,
They glad to heare of
Vesta still suruiuing,
Eusebius.
Yet grieued at her cause of discontents,
Welcome the Damsell, In their honors striuing
To cheere her, who as doubtfull still laments,
Not knowing yet how the young Prince shall speed,
Or what the prouident sisters haue decreed.
64
The courteous virgins, hearing the sad story
Of vertuous
Sybill and her sonne related,
Both for the mother and the Sonne, are sorry,
[Page 20] And hauing with themselues a while debated,
They hold their womanish pitty much more glory
Then to be rude, and cruell estimated,
And now their studies are, the Babe to hide,
And for his carefull fostring to prouide.
65
They beare him to a Mountaine, in whose brow,
A C
[...]ue was dig'd, the round mouth was so strait,
That at the entry, you of force must bow,
But entred once, the roome was full of State,
This Cauerne for the darknesse, they allow
To sh
[...]eld the Infant from the Fathers hate;
Which being selected as a place most meet,
The Damsell is againe sent backe to
Creet.
66
With milke of Goates they nurst him for a space,
Paus
[...] in Ar
[...]as
Till Fortune on a time so well prouided,
That when to still the Babe (who cride apace)
Aratus
[...] in phanomenis.
They sounded Cymbals, and with tunes deuided
Strook on their Tymbrels, by some wondrous grace,
[...]nus in Sacri
[...]
A swarme of
Bees was by, that Musicke guided
Into the place, who made the
Caue their
Hiue,
Virg. 4 Greg. 2. sastor.
And with their Hony, kept the Child aliue.
67
By this the Damsell is return'd againe,
And all the newes to
Vesta ha
[...] related,
What prouident care the royall Dames haue tan
[...]
To saue the Prince, how well they haue requited
Her former loue; still
Saturne thinkes it sla
[...]ne,
Being with the terror of his death affrighted,
Which in the Kings opinion, to make good,
Vest a salutes him with a cup of blood.
68
An
Abbest stone into the bole was brayed,
It shew'd like the Babes hart, beaten to powder,
The Dowager in funerall blacke arrayed,
With re
[...]erence to her Son and Soueraigne bowed her,
(Women haue teares at will) their wiles to ayde,
And she hath plenty to ber plot allowed her;
See here (quoth she) and as she more would say,
Griefe strikes her mute, and tu
[...]s her head away.
69
Againe she would proceed, againe she faileth,
But the third time begins her sad Oration:
See heere thy sonne, whose losse thy wife bewaileth,
Murdered and massacred in piteous fashion;
In vaine against the froward fate she raileth,
In vaine she teares her eies in extreame passion,
Saturne hath to this cruell act constrain'd her,
And see of thy young son the poore remainder.
70
Now maist thou keepe thine oath with
Titans feed,
Yet that thou cruell art, I needs must tell thee,
Neuer did
Tiger father such a deed,
In tiranny the
Wolues cannot excell thee?
Now maist thou safely weare thy imperiall weed,
(Can this thy issue from thy throne expell thee?)
This blood can neuer gouerne in thy sted,
Alas poore Grand-child, thou too late hast bled.
71
Th'vnwelcome newes seeme welcome to his cares,
And yet he wishes they awhile had staide;
That the vil'd deed is done, he glad appeares,
Yet in his gladnes, he seemes ill apaid:
She moues the king with her laments and teares,
(What cannot weeping women men perswade?)
The king in sorrow of his sonne late dead,
Vowes euer to abiure Queene
Sibels bed.
72
And whilst the warme blood reck't before his eies,
No wonder if he purpost as he spake,
But when the beauty of his Queene he spies,
Her graces mou'd him, and his vow he brake:
Such charming vertue in her beauty hes,
That he forgets the rash oth he did make;
And rather then his nuptiall sweets forbeare,
Hee'l sac
[...]ce a young sonne euery yeare.
73
These stormes blowne ouer, and their sorrowes spent
(For violent tempests neuer long remain'd)
The king young
Iuno to
Parthemia sent,
[Page 22] There amongst Princes daughters to be train'd,
To doe her honors, is his whole intent,
Since his sonnes bloud by timelesse Fate is drained:
Nor maruell, if to honor her he striue,
Knowing (saue her) no Issue left aliue.
74
Time keepes his course, the King and Queene oft meet,
And once againe she hath conceiu'd a Male,
The Lad in secret is conveyde from
Creet
To
Athens, in a vessell swift of sayle;
Th'
Athenian King, they with the Infant greet,
Who the Babes fortunes sadly doth bewaile,
And the young
Neptune fairely doth intreat,
And traynes him like the sonne of one so great.
75
The husband-King, who no such guile surmised,
Is by the crafty women mock't againe;
New teares are coin'd, a second tricke deuised,
To make him thinke that Issue likewise slaine:
Once more the King with sadnesse is surprised,
Once more appeasd (for teares he knowes are vaine,)
Againe the King and Queene are met in bed,
And in small processe, she againe is sped.
76
A sonne and daughter at this birth she bare,
The sonne she hides, the daughter she discloseth,
The birth 9f Pluto &
gla
[...]a
The sonne she
Pluto named, the winde stood faire,
And him into
The ssalia she disposeth,
The messenger applies with earnest care
Her tedious iourney, for no time she lofeth:
Wh
[...]st the twin-brother she is forst to hide,
Her daughter
Glauca in her childhood dide.
77
Neptune was nurst by
Aruo, after growing
To manhood, fairefoot
Amphitrite hee
would haue espousde, but she her beauty knowing,
Despisde the
Sea God, thinking to liue free,
wherefore he sends the Dolphin, who straight showing
His masters thoughts, the Louers soone agree,
Higinius in fab Stellarum.
For with the
Dolphins signe to Heauen was
[...]orne,
And plast on hye, not farre from
Capricorne.
78
The vntam'd Genn
[...]t he did first bestride,
Pausanias in Arcadicis.
And made him seruant to the vse of Man,
(Before him) no man durst presume to ride,
(Famous alone he was in
Athens than)
He coupled first the Steedes, and curbd their pride,
And by his Art, the armed Chariot ran:
Pam
[...]. Himnographus.
Therefore, as greatest honor to his state,
The Horse to him was freely consecrate.
S
[...]phocles
79
And when he trauels o'rc the foamy waues,
With foure Sea-palfreys he is drawne along,
By sundry Nymphes and Girls, (whose loue he craues,)
Apollen. lib. 4.
Four-score fayre sonnes he got, surpassing strong,
Zezes in bi.
[...].
Who Cittyes built, and mena
[...] Hostile braues
Plutarch
Gainst Tyrants, that vsurpt their States by wrong:
Herodotus.
He Riders grac't, and Sea-men gladly cheared,
And by his hands, the wals of
Troy were rear
[...]d.
80
To him three Temples consecrated were,
H
[...]. in
[...].
Of great Magnificence; In
Isthmus one,
In
Tenarus a second did appeare,
Plut. in vita Pompeia.
A structure (in that Isle) famous alone,
A third to him the stowt
Calabrians reare,
Hom. lib. 5. odis
Semblant to these, through all the world were none;
Vpon these shrines to make his glories full,
Virg. 5.
The people vsde to sacrifice a Bull.
81
Pluto (whom some call
Mammon) God of gold,
Pau. in Atticis
[...] Atticis
Who (after) did the
Tartar kindome seaze,
As
[...]oue a Scepter in his hand doth hold,
Neptune the Trident, so he graspes the Keies:
Some thinke this God inhabited of old
Hiberia, him the
Pyren mountaines please,
Hiberia cald Spaine.
Of whom and
Proserpine his rauisht Btide,
Desist; to speake what
Iuno did betide.
Strabo lib. 3. Geographca.
82
Thus eldest
I
[...]piter liues in a Caue
Neere
Oson, nurst with Hony from the Bees,
Th'
Athenian King did the young
Neptune saue,
[Page 24] In
Athens, where great Clearks haue tane degrees;
2250.
Athens the well of knowledge, and the Graue
1913.
Of Ignorance, where
Neptune safety sees
Pluto the youngest of the three, doth dwell
In lower
The ssaly, since tearmed
Hell.
83
The time these liued, was
Patriarch Isaac borne,
In
Lybia Affer raignde,
Brigus in
Spaine,
By
Inachus, the
Argiue Crowne is worne:
Aratus doth the
Assyrian state maintaine;
Now
Sodom and
Gomorrha to ashes turne,
Pelloponesus doth
Aegidius gaine,
Germania is vpheld by
Herminon,
And
Aethyopia sway'd by
Phaeton.
84
Saturne, that of his three sonnes nothing knew,
Doted on louely
Iuno, and oft sent
Vnto her place of Nurture, where she grew
Faire and well featur'd, there her youth she spent,
Whose soiorne in
Parthemia Saturne drew
To visite her (on earth his sole content)
Many rare presents, and rich guists he brought her,
Where leaue him in
Parthemia with his daughter.
Ovr Poem, though familiarly knowne to them of iudgment and reading, yet because it may not seeme intricate to the lesse capeable, I thought it not altogither impertinent to insert some few obseruations to the ende of euery Caate.
Touching this
Vranus, from whom our History takes life, some Writers (and those not of the least authority) thinke in him to be figured
Chanaan, sonne of
Cham, sonne of
Noah, whom
Noah cursed, but spared his sonne
Cham, because God had once blessed him.
This Canaan
for sundry benefits by him bestowed uppon many Nations,
was called by some Ogyges,
by others Fenix,
as also Coelum, Sol, Proteus, Ianus, Geminus, Iunonius, Quirinus, Patulcius, Bacchus, Vortumnus, Chaos, Ileton
[Page 25] or the seed of the Goddes. Also his wife
Vesta, for her bounty, they cald
Tellus, Opis, Aretia, and
Cibilla, the mother of the Gods
And these liued in the third generation after the Floud. From this
Vesta, came the virgin
Vestals in
Rome. This
Cham father to
Canaan, was cald Aegiptian
Saturne, and
Nemroth, Babilonian Saturne. Cham was also called
Saturne in
Italy, who came thither to dwell, in the time that
Comerus the
Scythian vsurped there: a neighbour to olde
Ianus that dwelt in
Laurentum: And this was in the yeare of the world 1898. the yeare before Christ 2065. but rather then enter too deepe into antiquity, the sequele of our historie we deriue from
Saturne of
Creet.
There were two
Iupiters, the first
Iupiter Belus, from
Cicero de natura deorum. whom
Nilus descended and first Idolatrised to him: the second
Iupiter of
Creet, who was after instiled
Olimpian Iupiter, and supreame king of the Gods.
Tytan, Saturnes brother, is often by the
Poets taken for the
Sunne, he is likewise cald
Hiperion, and ruler of the
Bochas.
Planets: but
Bochas writes
Hiperion to be
Tytans sonne, and not a name soly attributed to the
Sunne.
Where
Saturne makes his expedition to the
Oracle: I read of two
Oracles, one spake in
Delphos from the mouth of
Apollo, the other in
Aegypt, from
Iupiter Belus, who is likewise cald the Sonne of
Saturne, and the second Emperour of
Babylon after
Nemroth.
Oson a Citty and mountaine in
Epyre where
Iupiter was nurst. This
Epyre is a Countrey in
Greece, hauing on the North
Macedonia, the East
Achaya, the West the sea
Ionium: It cannot be the mountaine
Ossa, because
Ossa is in
Thessaly.
Saturnus was the first father of the Goddes, who begatte
Lactantius.
Iupiter, Iuno, Neptune, Pluto, and
Glauca, by his wife
Ops, otherwise cald Sybilla.
Demogorgon, signifieth
Earth, and
Aethra Ayre, supposed
Vranus father and mother.
Cadmus sonne to
Agenor king of
Phenicia, who beeing sent by his father to seeke his sister
Europa whom
Iupiter in
Ovid. meta. 2. the shape of a
Bull had rauished, and not finding her, durst not returne to his Countrey but staied in
Boetia, where bee
[Page 26] built the famous Citty
Thebes, brought letters first into
Greece, and found the casting of mettals in
Pangeus a promontory in
Thrace.
Panchaia a sandy countrey of
Arabia, where is plenty of
Frankincence. In a high hill of this Countrey,
Thoas and
Aeaclis first found out gold Ore.
Erichthon other wise
Erichtheus, he was nurst by
Minerua, after instated king of
Athens, he first inuented the
Chariot, and is supposed to be the first that tryed mettalles, part of which skill, some take from him, and attribute vnto
Ceachus.
Idaei Dactili otherwise called
Corybanthus, were certain priests of
Cibell, these are sayae to find out the vse of Iron.
Salmentes and
Damnamenecus, two Iewes, S.
Clement speakes of, who first found out the vse of
Iron in
Cipres.
Lydus the sonne of
Atis, and brother to
Tyrrhenus, of him
Lidia tooke the name: he first melted brasse, and made it pliable to the hammer: a cunning which
Theophrastus would bestow vpon one
Delos the
Phrigian, but
Aristotle yeildes it to
Lydus.
Cassiterides are ten Istandes in the
Spanish sea, in these
Midacritus (by the opinion of
Strabo) first found out the vse of
Lead.
Cynaras, aritch King of
Cypres, who vnawares laye with his daughter
Myrrha, and on hir begat
Adonis. Hee first deuised the
Stithce, Tongs, File and
Leauer.
Pyrodes was sonne to
Cilix, of whom
Cicilia took name, and Cilix was sonne to Phenicia, he was the first strooke fire from the flint.
Prometheus sonne to
Iapetus, who for stealing Fyre from heauen to inspire life in his Images, was by
Iupiter tyde vnto the mount
Cancasus, where an
Eagle still gnaweth his entrailes.
Anacharsis a great Phylosopher, borne in
Scythia, he first deuised the Bellowes, and as some suppose the Potters wheele.
Apis King of the
Argioes, he taught first the plantinge of vines, and after his death was worshipt in the shape of an Oxe.
Iubalda gouerned
Spaine.
Craunuis Italy.
Satron the
Gaules.
[Page 27] Semiramis
Assyria. At the same time Saturne married his Sister
Sybill. This was in the yeare of the World
2000. and the yeare before Christ
1963. Seauen yeares after this, which was
250. yeares after the Deluge,
Noah paid his due to Nature.
Almache and
Mellisee, are supposed to be
Adrastea and
Isde.
THus it is our purpose to be are along with vs the best knowen Kingdomes of the Worlde, that the truth of an Hystory being countenanced with their credit, may purchase the better beliefe.
The end of the first
CANTO.
Argumentum
Young Dardanus
his brother Iasius
slew,
And leaues the Countrey where he sought to rayne
Warre twixt th'
Epirians and
Pelagrans grew,
Lycaon is by
Ioue exilde, not slaine:
Iupiter of
Calisto taking v
[...]ew,
A
votresse, and one of
Dians traine;
Loues, and is loath'd, the
Virgin is beguild,
Clad like a mayd, he gets the
Mayd with child.
ARG. 6.
TH'Epirian
slaine: Troys
first foundatiō layd,
Chast Dians
vowes in Dcta are conveyd.
OH blind Ambition and desire of Raigne,
How camst thou by this rule in mortall breasts?
Who gaue thee this dominion ore the braine?
Thou murdrest more, then plagues or fatall pests;
Thy drinke Mans bloud, thy food dead bodies slaine,
Treason and
Murder are thy nightly guests:
Ambition knowes no lawe, he that aspires,
Climbes by the liues of brothers, sonnes, and Syres.
2
Corinthus, of whom
Corinth tooke first name,
2425.
Electra daughter to King
Athlas marryed,
From
Lybia hath he fetcht the louely Dame,
1538.
And thence to
Naples this rich purchase carried:
[Page 29]
Corinth and
Naples are indeed the same,
One Citty; though by Time their names be varried:
These dying, left behinde them to succeed,
Two Princes, Lords of many a vahant deed.
3
Whilst
Corinth there,
Memnon all
Egypt swayde,
In
Italy Atleus:
Harbon Gaul,
Hesperus Spaine, the
Argine King was made
Crassus: in
France King
Ludgus gouern'd all
Arming himselfe gainst such as did Inuade,
Syrus in
Syria: Assyrias crowne doth fall
To
Mancaleus which whilst he maintaind,
Orthopolis in
Pelloponessus raign'd.
4
Moyses was borne the selfe-same happy yeare,
That faire
Electra was made haplesse Queene:
Who spake with GOD, and saw the bush burne cleare,
By whom the
Israelites deliuered beene
From
Pharaohs bondage, whom the fiery spheare
Guided by night, when in the day was seene
The Cloud to vsher them: In whose blest daies,
Corinthus yssue their proud fortunes raise.
5
One
Dardanus, that other
Iasius hight,
Dardanus and
Ias
[...]s.
Who strongly for their Fathers Crowne contend,
And to their aydes assemble many a knight,
By force of Armes their challenge to defend,
But Armes nor bloudy battell; force nor fight
Now
Cecrops built Athens.
Can vnto this vnnaturall warre giue end:
Till (at the length) a Treaty was appointed,
Which (by accord) should be the King annointed.
6
Iasius to Parlee comes vnarm'd: his brother
Vnder his Robes of peace bright Armor wore:
And being met, his vengeance could not smother
But slew him dead; The Lords his death deplore,
Thus pitiously the one hath kilde the other:
Iasius vnto his Sepulcher they bore,
But
Dardanus that him so basely slew,
Vnto the Pallaee Royall they pursue.
7
The people such a Traiterous practise hated,
And vow his blood shall for his murder pay,
Such as lou'd
Iasius, the rest animated,
And round begirt the place where
Dardan lay,
Who cals such friends as on his person waited,
And in the dead of night steales thence away,
For well he knowes, they
Iasius lou'd so deerely,
That they his murder will reuenge seucrely.
8
Before the dawne of day they shipping take,
The darkenesse of the night, their purpose aideth,
Through the vast
Ocean a swift saile they make,
But as the morning riseth, and night fadeth,
The sterne
Corinthians to their fury wake,
And euery man th'vngarded house inuadeth,
But when they entring, found the brother fled,
They curse the liuing, and lam
[...] the dead.
9
Long they their weary Fortunes haue in chase,
Still in the mercy of the Seas and winde,
But where to harbor they can find no place,
Or in the seas wilde deserts comfort finde;
At length they touch at
Samos Isle, in
Thrace,
A soile, which yet contents not
Dardans minde,
Ballast, fresh water, victuals he takes in,
And hoysing saile, seekes further shores to win.
10
By this the
Asian Seas his ships hath past,
And now within the
Helle spont he rides,
The Marriners the shore discry at last,
Where calling all their Sea-gods to their guides,
To their discouery they apply them fast,
And now their vessels neere the cost abides,
Not long about the briny beach they houer,
But
Dardan landes, the Iland to discouer.
11
He finds it fruitfull, pleasant, and a soile
Fit to inhabit, hie woods, champion fields,
He holds this countrey worth her former toile,
The place he likes, and to this clime he yeilds,
[Page 31] And after all his trauell and turmoile,
2485.
He plants himselfe: a Citty here he builds,
1478. The first foundation of
Troy
He casts a huge Ditch first, then layes a frame,
And after cals it
Dardan by his name.
12
The time the groundsils of great
Troy were layd,
Was
Lacedemon built (by computation)
In
Athens Ertchthonius King was made,
And
Danaus ruler ore the
Argiue Nation:
Hercules Dasinas, Phenitia swayde,
Egiptus Egypt; now the first foundation
Of great
Apollos Temple was begun
By young
Eristhones, King
Cecrops sonne.
13
In processe is much people there conuented,
Being a Citty, well and fairely seated,
And all such people as this place frequented,
Were by him and his followers well intreated,
No stranger, from the King past discontented;
No Marchant in his traffique was defeated:
In time, his wealth and people both abound,
And here in
Dardan, Dardanus liues crownd.
14
This
Dardan on
Candame got a sonne,
Eruton hight: who the same state maintained,
Time keepes his course, away the swift howers run,
The second King, in Arts and Warres is trained,
Imagine seauen and forty Winters dun,
So long
Eruton in this Citty raigned:
Troos his sonne the kingdome doth enioy,
Troy named of king Troos
And of this
Troos, came the name of
Troy.
15
A puissant King in Armes, his valors fame
Through all the
Asian confines stretched far;
Kingdomes he doth subdue, Invadors tame,
By him the two first kings ecclipsed are;
And the
Dardanians change their auncient name,
And of King
Troos, so renowmd in warre
Are
Troyans cald, for so King
Troos chargeth,
And with his fame, his new-built towne enlargeth.
16
Now all the Graecian Citties
Troy out-shineth,
Whose glory many neighbour kings enuy,
Yet none so bold, that outwardly repineth,
Or date in publicke tearmes, king
Troos defie:
The strongest people he by loue combineth,
The weaker he by armes doth terrifie,
King
Tantalus that liues in
Phrigia crownd,
Most enuies
Troy should be so farre renown'd.
17
But leaue we him in enuy,
Troy in glory,
For enuy still lookes vpward, seldome downe,
And turne to that which most concernes our story,
How
Iupiter attain'd his fathers crowne;
How
Sybill
[...]oyfull was, but
Saturne sorry
To heare his sonnes suruiuing in renowne;
How
Tytan war'd on
Saturne, how
Ione grew,
And in his fathers aid, his Vnckle slew.
18
Twixt the
Pelagians and
Epiriens riseth
Contentious warre, in
Epire raigned then
War betwixt the Epiriens & Pelagians.
King
Milleseus; who in armes surpriseth
Certaine
Pelagians, king
Lycaons men:
Lycaon with his watlike troopes aduiseth,
By pollicy of warre, both how and when
He may awaite th'
Epiriens the like domage,
And make their king vnto his state do homage.
19
At length
Ioues Guardian, the great
Epyre king,
Vnto the son of
Titan offers peace,
In signe whereof they Oliue branches bring,
To signifie their hostile Armes surcease:
Ly
[...]aon.
Lycaon sonne to
Tytan whom wars sting,
Had likewise gald and spoild his lands increase;
Applauds the motion, sweares to this accord,
Condition'd thus, to leaue an
Epire Lord.
20
An
Epyre Lord, as Hostage straight they take,
And in
Pelagia with
Lycaon leaue him,
There to abide, till they amends shall make
For all the spoiles, th'
Eperiens did bereaue him,
[Page 33] The King the daies doth watch, the nights doth wake,
Least his
Epirien hostage should deceiue him:
Lycaon of his couenant naught doth slacke,
The time expires the Lord should be sent backe.
21
And to that purpose
Melliseus sends
Ambassadors, from
Epire to
Pelage,
Who to
Lycaon beares his kind commends,
Lycaon full of spleene and warlike rage
To quit his former in
[...]ury, intends,
And with much paine his fury doth asswage,
Yet giues them outward welcome, they desire
Their Hostage Lord to beare backe to
Epire.
22
Vnto a Morrowes banquet he inuites them,
Saying they shall receiue him at that feast:
The morrow comes (full ill the kings requites them)
He makes
th'Epirien to be kild and drest,
Part to be sod, part to be rosted, which incites them
To horror and amazement, they detest
So hor
[...]ible an obiect: Then the King
Thus saies; Behold your Hostage here I bring.
23
Young
Iupiter was at the Table seated,
Sent with the rest, by his great soster-Father
On th'Ambassie: he hauing heard repeated
A deed so monstrous, or inhumane rather,
As one that brookt not to be so in
[...]reated,
His lofty spirits he to his heart doth gather:
And rising from the Table, drawes his sword,
And beares away the mangled
Epyre Lord.
24
Into the Market place his load he beares,
Before the amazed people to dis
[...]lose it:
The bold vndaunted Worthy nothing seares,
But beares the body, and in publicke shewes it;
Some roasted, and some sod, some bak't appeares,
And cucry soule abhorres the deed that knowes it:
Who wondering whence so vilde a mischiefe came,
Behold (quoth he) your King
Lycaons shame.
25
Behold the prince, the sonne of
Titan kept,
Vpon his honour safely to deliuer,
Some were asham'd, some threatned, and some wept,
Some of their trembling
[...]arts with terror shiuer,
Which
Saturnes sonne espying, forth he stept,
And saith: shall such a Tirant and badliuer?
Shall such a bloudy and insatiate diuell
Vnpunisht scape, for practise of this euill?
26
The infamy of this inhuman act,
[...] to you; it hath defam'd your nation,
Where
[...]re report shall blazon this base fact,
Of our
Epi
[...]tan murdred in such fashion,
It will appeare that you the Tirant bact,
And that it was your deed; This short Oration,
Tooke such eff
[...]ct, that each man blusht w
[...]hin,
Feeling himselfe toucht with that horrid sin.
27
Much more he spake, to bring the king in hate
With such his subrects as had neuer lou'd him,
That fell
Lycaon but vsurpt his state,
And brought a scandall on them all, he prou'd him,
Thus of his murdrous act he doth dilate,
To which his tirany and ranker mou'd him,
His
[...]ormer cruelty, this bloudy sight,
And
Ioues perswasions, makes them bent to fight.
28
Saturnes bold sonne will no adu
[...]ntage leese,
But with his many tirannies proceeds,
He makes such burne, whose harts before did freeze,
At the recitall of his bloudy deedes:
Then beares againe the course, which none that sees
But his heart fires with rage, or Inly bleeds,
Then cries aloud: you bound that would be free,
Cast of your seruile yoake, and follow me.
29
You whom the bloody Tirant hath opprest,
Now (whilst you may reuenge you) arme, and strike,
You that haue seene
th'Epirian kild and drest,
Let him not on your bodies act the like:
[Page 35] Aime all your weapons gainst the Tirants brest:
With that, this catcht a Iauelin, that a Pike,
One takes an Axe, another snatcht a Spade,
Some Swords, some Staues, the pallace to inuade.
30
Their youthfull Captaine they attend, and meet
With the fierce Tirant, arm'd and well prepar'd:
They Barricado both ends of the street,
Then to the battell (where they no man spar'd)
By this
Ioue layes
Lycaon at his feet;
And there had slaine him, but his spleene was bar'd
By one of his best Captaines, who did bring
Happy supply, and so preseru'd the king.
31
Th'inraged multitude esteemed nought
The dauncing Courtiers when they came to blowes,
They watily, the people madly fought,
And euery man his dauntlesse courage showes,
Whilst all about, young
Ioue his kinsman sought,
And still the clamor of the battell rose
So loud, that it rebounded gainst the skies,
And heauen it selfe did
Eccho with their cries.
32
Yet
Ioue triumphant in the first ranke stood,
His foes fixt battaile he by force displaces,
It raines sharpe Arrowes till the ground flowes blood,
And yet no knight his honored fame disgraces:
It did
th'Epiriens and their Captaines good
To see the streets pau'd with their enemies faces:
In this high tumults heat,
Lycaons fled,
Lycaon va
[...] quisht by Iupiter
And sprightly
Ioue left Conqueror mongst the dead.
33
The Tirant when he saw his seruants slaine,
To saue his life, workes for his secret scape,
And to the forrest flying from his traine,
Hecatcus Mileseus lib. 2.
genealogiarum.
He strangely feeles himselfe trans-form`d in shape,
Both woluish forme and mind, he doth retaine,
And in the woods he liues by spoile and rape:
He liu'd a Tirant whilst his kingdome stood,
And chang'd into a
Wolfe, still thirsts for blood.
34
Where we will leaue him in the desert Groue,
Trans-formd in body, but not chang'd in mind.
And as my story leads, returne to Ioue
Who sees
Lycaon fled, none left behind,
But such as whilst they breath'd, in valour stroue,
And dying, to the fire there corpes resignd:
To the
Pelagians turning he thus saies:
Be yours the Conquest, but to heauen the praise.
35
But they his honours backe to him resigne,
And with a generall shout their caps vp fling,
Saying (ô
Ioue) thy valour is deuine;
And thou of vs
Pelagians shalt be king,
Iupiter made king of the Pelagians.
They guard him to the pallace, and in fine
The Crowne and Scepter to his hand they bring:
And after search, finding
Lycaon fled,
They
Saturnes sonne inuested in his sted.
36
King
Iupiter had not yet raignd an hower,
But with his trusty followers searcheth round
About the Pallace royall, for the power
Of king
Lycaon, but he no man found;
(Death spares the king, that doth his folke deuoure,)
Yet iealous of his state, like kings new crown'd,
To abide all future garboiles and assaults,
He searcheth all the Sellers, nookes, and vaults.
37
And breaking vp a strong bard iron dore,
He spies a goodly chamber richly hung,
Where he might see vpon the catelesse floure,
A discontented
Lady rudely flung:
Her habite suting with her griefe she wore,
Her eyes rain'd teares, her Iuory hands she wrung:
Herrobes so blacke were, and her face so faire,
Each other gracst, and made both colours rare.
38
The Virgin lookt out of her sad attire,
Like the bright sun out of a dusky cloud;
Her first aspect set the kings hart afire,
Who vailing first his bonnet, he lowe bowd,
[Page 35] And to haue seizd her fingers preaseth nyer,
But she at fight of strangers weepes alowd,
Her drowned eie she to the Earth directeth,
And no man saue her owne sad woes respecteth.
39
The youthful Prince whom Amorous thoughts surprise,
With comfortable words the Lady cheeres,
Supports her by the arme, intreats her rise,
And from her bosome to remoue her feares,
Yet will not she erect her downe-cast eies:
Nor to his smooth-sweete language lend her cares,
Till from the Earth he rais'd her by the arme,
And thus with words, begins her griefe to charme.
40
Bright Damsell, did you know the worth of all
Those pretious drops you prodigally spill,
You would not let such high-prizd moysture fall,
Which from your hart your Conduit-eyes distill;
Oh spare them though you count their valew small,
To haue them spar'de Ile giue you (if you will)
Although not in full paiment, yet in part,
A Princes fauour, and a Souldiors hart.
41
You dimme those eyes that sparkle fire Deuine,
By whom this melancholy roome is lighted,
The place were darke, and but for their bright shine,
We in this Dungeon should be all benighted:
Oh saue your beauty then and spare your eyen:
Why should you at our presence be affrighted;
we come not with our weapons drawne to feare you,
But with our comfortable words, to cheare you.
42
But say, our hostile weapons were all bent
Against your breast; yet why should you be mated?
Bewty's sword-profe, no forceable intent
But by a face so faire is soone rebated,
Your beauty was vnto your body lent,
To be her Secretary; where instated,
It is as safe as if a wall of Iron
Impreguable, your person should inuiron.
43
With that the wofull maide vplifts her eie,
And fixt it first vpon the Princes face,
But there it dwelt not long, for by and by
It wandered wildly round about the place,
Yet comming to her selfe, when she gan spy
Her selfe mongst strangers with a modest grace,
Hauing her raging griefe awhile restrain'd,
Thus blushing, she her sad estate complain'd.
44
My father, oh my Father, where is he?
To whom these Subiects should of right belong:
You are the Limbes, the head I cannot see,
Oh, you haue done the king some violent wrong,
What Stranger's this that doth sollicite me?
How dare you thus into my chamber throng?
And fright me, (being a Princesse) with your steele,
Or wheres the King, that to this youth you kneele?
45
If King
Lycaon liue, why do you bow
Vnto a stranger, he suruiuing still?
If he be slaine, why am I hindred now,
Vpon his Coarse my Funerall teares to spill?
I may lament by Law, no lawes allow;
Subiects by Treason their liege Lords to kill,
My teares are naturall, and come in season, '
Your treacherous act is meer vnnaturall Treason.
46
By these her words, the Amorous Prince doth gather
This Lady to be king
Lycaons daughter,
It grieues him now he hath exil'd her father,
And once againe of fauour he besought her,
But she all sorrow now intreats him rather
To leaue the Chamber, since his comming brought her
Nothing but newes of death, and words of care,
Her Fathers ruine, and her owne dispaire.
47
By many faire perswasions the
Prince moues her,
To stint her passion, and to stop her teares,
He whispers in her
[...]are how much he loues her,
But all in vaine, his tongue he idly weares:
[Page 39] By all Rhetoricke and Art he proues her,
Which makes her at the length lend her chast eares,
And thus reply: I cannot loue, vntill
You one thing grant me, the
Prince sweares he will.
48
Remember (quoth the Lady) you haue sworn,
Being a
Prince, to breake an oath were base:
Wer't in a Peasant, it were hardly borne,
But in a Prince it seemes a worse disgrace:
The greater y'are, the greater is your scorne,
If you should taint your honour in this case:
Tis nothing if a poore Stars beames be clouded,
But we soone misse the Moone in darknes shrowded.
49
Princes are earthly Gods and placst on high,
Where euery common man may freely gaze
On them, the peoples vniuersal eye,
Is howerly fixt to scan their workes aud w
[...]ies,
They looke through spectacles your deeds to spy,
Which makes the Letters of your shame, or praise
Grosser to be discernd, and easier scand,
(A king should be a light to all his Land.)
50
These words sight out, haue fan'd the amorous fire,
Which did the brest of
Saturnes sonne inflame:
He that at first her beauty did admire,
Now wonders at the wisedome of the dame,
And museth how from such a deuilish Syre
As king
Lycaon, such an Angell came:
Now he entreats her aske, with spirit vndanted,
For as he is a
Prince, her sute is granted.
51
Be it (quoth he) the fortunes of this day:
Be it my selfe, my selfe sweet Saint am thine:
Be it this kingdome, and this Scepters sway,
Behold my interest I will backe resigne;
We haue no power to say such beauty nay,
Being but mortall, and that face deuine,
Whats your demand (sweet Saint?) It is quoth she,
That I a consecrated maide may be.
52
Oh, had she askt more gold then would haue fild
Her fathers Pallace, packt vp to the roofe,
Or in her sad boone had the Lady wild,
Of his resolued spirit to see large profe,
Monsters he would haue tamde, and Gyants kild,
And from no sterne aduenture kept aloofe,
In hope to haue woon her loue: but being thus coy,
This one request, doth all his hopes destroy.
53
The Prince is bound by Oath to graunt her pleasure,
Yet from her will, he seekes her to disswade,
Hoord not (quoth he) vnto your selfe such Treasure,
Nor let so sweet a flower vngathered vade:
Nature her selfe hath tooke from you fit measure
To haue more beautious Creatures by you made,
Then crop this flower before the prime be past,
Loose not the Mould that may such fayre ones caft.
54
Let not a Cloyster such rare beauty smother,
Y'are Natures may ster-peece, made to be seene;
(Sweet) you were borne, that you should beare another,
A Princesse, and discended from a Queene,
That you of Queenes and Princes might be mother:
Had she that bare you still a virgin beene,
You had not beene at all: Mankind should fade,
If euery Female, liu'd a spotlesse mayde.
55
You aske, what you by no meanes can defend,
In seeking a strict Cloyster to enjoy,
Yee wish to see the long-liu'de world at end,
And in your hart you mankinde would destroy,
For when these liues no further can extend,
How shall we people th'Earth: Who shall employ
The Crowns we win? the wealth for which we striue?
When dead our selues, we leaue none to suruiue.
56
You might as well kill Children, as to hold
This dangerous error: Nay Ile proue it true:
For Infant-soules that should haue beene cnrold
In Heauens predestin'de booke, begot of you,
[Page 41] Are by your strangenesse, to obliuion sold,
You might as well your hands in blood imbrew,
Nay better too, for when young Infants die,
Their Angell soules liue in Eternitie.
57
And so the Heauens make vp their numbers full,
You (Lady) heauen and carths right disallow;
What Gods conclude, shall mortals disannull?
So many as you might haue had ere now:
So many Angels from heauens throne you pull,
From carth, so many princes by your vow:
Now could I get a sonne, but you being coy,
Faire murdresse (that you are) haue kil'd the boy:
58
Much more (but all in vaine) the amorous youth
Thinkes in his smooth sweet language to disswade her,
But nothing that he pleads she holds for truth,
Though by all gentle meanes he sought to haue staid her,
She vrgeth still his oath: he thinkes it ruth
To haue such beauty cloister'd, and had made her
Virginity, for
Venus sweets to haue chang'd,
Had not his Oath that purpose soone estrang'd.
59
Now faire
Celisto by
Ioues gtaunt is free
Diana
To be admitted one of
Dians traine,
Dian a Huntresse, the broad shadowy tree
The house, beneath who roofe she doth remaine,
Venson her food, and Honey from the Bee,
The flesh of
Elkes, of
Beares, and
Bores new slaine,
Her drinke the pearled brooke, her followers, maides,
Her vow, chast life, her Cloister, the Coole shades.
60
Her weapons are the Iauelin, and the Bow,
Her garments
Angell like, of Virgin-white;
And tuckt aloft, her falling skirt below
Her Buskin meetes: buckled with siluer bright:
Her Haire behind her, like a Cloake doth flow,
Some tuckt in roules, some loose with Flowers bedight:
Her silken vailes play round about her slacke,
Her golden Quiuer fals athwart her backe.
61
She was the daughter of an antient king
Cald
Iupiter, that sway'd the
Attick scepter,
To her as suters, many princes bring
Theyr Crownes: which scorning, she a virgin kept her,
Yet as her beauties fame abroad doth ring,
Her suters multiply, therefore she stept her
Into the forrest; meaning to exempt her
From such, as to their amorous wils would tempt her.
62
This new religion famous in a Queene,
Of such estate and beauty, drew from farre
Daughters of Princes, they that late were seene
In Courts of kings, now
Dians followers are,
Where they no sooner sworne and entred been,
But against men and loue they proclaime war:
Many frequent the groues, by
Dians motion,
For fashion some; and some too for deuotion.
63
The old
Plateenses holding her deuine,
Gaue her the sacred name of
Euclia,
Plut. in Arist.
Their maids ere married, offered at her shrine,
And then they freely chus'd their marriage day,
Without her leaue they neuer tasted wine,
Or durst in publicke with their husbands play:
The Temple of Diana at Ephesus.
Whole
Asia ioyn'd to make a Church of stone,
Built by the Architector
Chersiphrone.
64
To this
th'Aegiptian hie
Pyramides,
Nor the great
Iouiall portract could compare,
The 7. Wonders.
Mausolus Tombe the
Manes to appease,
Rear'd by the
Carian Queene, but trifles are:
The huge
Colossus that bestrid the seas,
And made
Rhoades famous for a worke so rare:
Great
Babels Tower, nor
Pharos stately Ile,
Could ranke with this, for cost, or height of stile.
65
Two hundred twenty years it was in framing,
In length, foure hundred fiue and twenty feet;
In breadth, two hundred twenty: Thus proclaiming
Their feare of her, they chast
Diana greet:
[Page 43] Of all faire Damsels her the Goddesse naming,
And to her seruice, in her Temple meet:
A Fabricke famous, both for height and length,
Proportion, beauty, wormanship, and strength.
66
A hundred seauen and twenty Collumbs great,
All of white Marble, in faire order stand:
Sixe hundred feet in heigth, both huge and neat,
The like were neuer wrought by mortall hand:
Princes of sundry Kingdomes that intreat
Her Diuine grace, and yeild to her command:
Each one, a high and stately piller bringes,
Full thirty sixe, rear'd by so many Kinges.
67
All these contend, which should the rest exceed
In large expence, to make it more admir'd,
Herostratus that neuer did glad deed,
Neither with wit, nor gracious Thewes inspir'd,
Knowing no meanes his owne renowne to breed,
In deuilish spleene, this royall wonder fier'd;
The purpose why he did this deed of shame,
Was, that the world should Chronicle his name.
68
This when dispoiled
Ephesus once knew,
They made a law, with fine to him that brake it,
To make him lose the fame he did pursue,
His very name, was death to him that spake it,
For many yeares it dide, but times renew
And from obliuious dusky Caues awake it,
Elce had their scilence from these ages kept,
This strange report, that long amongst them slept.
69
The world, the very day it lost the grace
Plutarch in vita Alexand.
Of this rare worke, another Wonder bred
Greater than this, from royall
Philips race,
That then tooke life, when this in fire lay dead:
In
Macedon, a much renowmed place,
Young
Alexander in that Temples stead
Entred the world, whose glories did aspire
Aboue this structure, then consumd with fire.
70
Now is
Calisto one of
Dians traine,
And to th'
Arcadian Forrest newly flitted,
Her beauty can scarce equald be againe,
Mongst al the Huntresses wheres she's admitted:
Meane time
Ihoue cheeres his friends: Inters the slaine,
And all his businesse is by order fitted:
The State establisht, Time in triumph spent,
And newes of all, by posts to
Epire sent.
71
His great affayres determin'd: the
Prince now
Hath leysure to bethinke him of that face,
To which his future actions he doth vow,
Now he remembers each particular grace:
That Loue that makes the Idle spirits bow,
Still giues occasions way, and businesse place:
Abandon sloth, and
Cupids bow vnbends,
His brands extinguist, and his false fire spends.
72
For idlenesse makes Loue, and then maintaines
What it hathmade, when he that well employes
His busie houres, is free from
Venus traines,
And the true freedome of his thoughts enioyes:
He had no time to sigh, that now complaines,
The good his businesse did, his sloath destroyes:
Loue from the painfull flyes, but there most thriues,
And prospers best, when men lead slothfull liues.
73
Being alone,
Calistoes shape imprest
So deepely in his heart, liues in his eie:
Shee's lodg'd both in the Forrest, and his brest,
And (though farre off) she is imaginde nie,
Phabe abroad beholds her mongst the rest,
Young
Ihoue at home, in his blind phantasie:
And now too late he wishes (but in vaine)
Her still at Court, or him of
Dians traine.
74
He haunts the Forrests and those shadowy places,
Where fayre
Dyana hunteth with her Mayds,
And like a Hunts-man the wilde Stag he chases,
Onely to spy his Mistresse mongst the shades:
[Page 45] And if he chance where bright
Calisto traces,
He thankes his fate, if not his Starres vpbraids,
And deemes a tedious Summers day well spent,
For one short sight of her, his soules content.
75
At length, he thus concludes: I am but young,
No downy heire vpon my face appeare,
I'le counterfet a shtill effeminate tongue,
And d'on such habit as the Huntresse weares,
When my guilt Quiuer crosse my brest is hung,
And Bore-speare in my hand such as she beares:
My blood being fresh, my face indifferent faire,
Modest my eie, and neuer shorne my haire.
76
Who can discouer me? Why may not I
Be entred as an Ancresse mongst the rest?
This is the way that I intend to try,
(Of all my full conclusions held the best)
My habit Ile bespeake so secretly,
That what I purpose neuer can be gest,
My Lords assemble, and to them shew reason
Why I of force must leaue them for a season.
77
Th'excuse vnto the Nobles currant seemes,
He takes his leaue and trauels on his way,
Of his entended voyage no man deemes,
Now is he briskt vp in his braue aray,
So preciously his mistresse hee esteemes,
That he makes speed to where the Virgins stay,
And by the way his womanish steps he tride,
And practis'd how to speake, to looke, to stride.
78
To blush and to make honors (and if need)
To pule and weepe at euery idle toy,
As women vse, next to prepare his weed,
And his soft hand to Chare-workes to imploy:
He profits in his practise (heauen him speed)
And of his shape assumed graunt him ioy,
Of all effeminate trickes (if youle beleeue him,)
To practise teares and Sempstry did most greeue him.
79
Yet did he these mongst many others learn,
He growes compleat in all things (sauing one)
And that no eye can outwardly discerne,
Vnlesse they search him, how can it be knowne?
But come vnto the place, his heart doth earne,
Twice it was in his thought backe to haue gone:
But I am
Ioue (quoth he) and shall I then
Of women be affraide, that feare no men.
80
With that he boldly knockes, when to the gate
A royall virgin comes, to know his will:
Atlanta that first strook the Calidonian Boare.
This Lady after was a Queene of state,
And in
Arcadia the fierce Boare did kill:
Atlaula she was cal'd, admitted late,
Who thinking to haue there remained still,
King
Meleager in
Achaya raign'd,
And to his nuptiall bed this Queene constrain'd.
81
Faire Virgin (quoth
Atlaula) whats your pleasure?
Ioue, after bowes and Cuttsies, thus bespake her;
Bright Damsell, if you now retaine that measure
Of grace, you haue of beauty from your maker,
Pitty a maide, that hath nor Gold, not Treasure,
And to your sacred order would betake her:
Know, from a Noble house I am discended,
That humbly pray to be so much befrended.
82
Preferre me to the Mistresse of these shades,
Diana, whom I reuerence, not through folly,
But as diuinest Goddesse of all maides,
To whose chast vowes I am deuoted wholly,
Atlaula saies she will, and straight inuades
Diana thus. Oh thou adored soly
Of Virgins: (fairest
Cinthia) will you daine,
To make this stranger Lady of your traine.
83
Diana takes her state, about her stand
A multitude of beauties, mongst the rest
As
Ioue about him lookes, on his right hand
He spies
Calisto, Dians new come guest,
[Page 47] She, for whose sake he left
th'Epirian Land:
At sight of her, fresh fires inflame his breast:
And as he stands, wal'd in with beautious faces,
He most commends
Calisto for her graces.
84
So many sparkling eyes were in his sight,
That hedg'd the sacred Queene of Virgins round,
That with their splendor haue made noone of night,
Should all at once looke vpward, the base ground
Might match the sky, and make the earth as bright,
As in that eeuen, when
Ariadne crown'd,
was through the
Galaxia in pompe led,
Millions of starres all burning o're hir head.
85
Diana, Ihoue in cuery part surueyes,
Who simpers by himselfe, and stands demurely,
His youth, his face, his stature she doth praise,
(A braue
virago she suppos'd him surely)
Were all my trayne of this large size (she saies)
Within these Forrests we might dwell securely:
Mongst all, that stand or kneele vpon the grasse,
I spy not such another Manly Lasse.
86
So giues her hand to kisse:
Ihoue grace doth win,
With
Phabe and
Atlanta, who suppose
Him what he seemes, and now receiued in,
With all the Maydes, he well acquainted growes,
They teach him how to Sow, to Card, and Spin,
Calisto for his bed-fellow he chose:
With her all day he works, at night he lies,
Yet cuery morne, the mayde, a Mayde doth rise.
87
For if he glaunst but at a word or two
Of Loue, or grew familiar (as Maydes vse)
She frownes, or shakes the head (all will not doe)
His amorous parley she doth quite refuse:
Sometime by feeling touches he would woo;
Sometime her necke and breast, and sometime chuse
Her lip to dally with: what hurt's in this?
Who would forbid a mayd, a May de to kisse?
88
And then amidst this dalliance he would cheere her,
And from her necke, decline vnto her shoulder,
Next to her breast, and thence discending nearer
Vnto the place, where he would haue bin boulder:
He finds the froward Gyrle so chastly beare her,
That the more hot he seem'd, she showed the colder,
And when he grew immodest, oft would say:
Now fie for shame, lay by this foolish play.
89
Alas (poore
Prince) thy punishment's too great,
And more than any mortall can endure,
To be kept hungry in the sight of meat,
And thirsty, in the sight of Waters pure:
Thou seekst the food thou most desirs't to cate,
Which flyes thee most, when most thou thinkst it sure,
Tis double want, mongst Riches to be poore,
And double death, to drowne in sight of shore.
90
Besides, the
Prince too boldly dares not proue her,
As ignorant, how she may take his offer,
Nor dare he tell her he is
Ihoue, her Louer,
Though she at first might deeme, the
Prince did scoffe her:
Yet if she should his secrecie discouer,
He feares what violent force the Queene might profer
To one, that with such impudence prophane,
Should breake the sacred Orders of her traine.
91
He therefore a conuenient season watcht,
When bright
Diana the wilde Stag would chase,
The beautious Virgins were by couples matcht,
And as the lawnes they were about to trace,
Their pointed Iauelins in their hands they latcht
About theyr necks, in many a silken lace
Their Bugles hung, which as the groues they trip,
Were oft-times kist by euery Ladies lip.
92
And in their eares the shrilling Musicke tingled,
Which made the
ecchoing hilles and Vales resound,
Ihoue and
Calisto mongst the rest was mingled,
Vntill the youthfull
Prince occasion found
[Page 49] To shrinke behind: him faire
Calisto singled,
And throwes her selfe by
Ihoue vpon the ground,
And saies: how coms it you so soone are tyred?
(Oh
Ihoue thou now hast, what thou long desired)
93
He chose a place, thicke set with broad-leau'd bowes,
Which from the grassie earth skreend the bright Sunne,
Here neuer did the wanton he-Goat browze,
Nor the wild Asse for food, to this place run,
This seate as fit for pastime he allowes,
And longs withall vntill the sport be dun,
For whilst the game flyes from them, here he lags,
Couer'd with trees, and hemd in round with flags.
94
Nor are they within heating of the cryes
Of the shrill Bugles th'Huntresse Virgins weare,
When the bold Prince doth gainst
Calisto rise,
Resolu'd to act what he did long forbeare,
Nothing to hinder his attempt he spies,
Being alone, what should the bold youth feare?
Now with his Loue, he once more gins to play,
But still she cryes; nay prethe (sweet) away.
95
H
[...] gins t'vnlace him, she thinkes tis for heate,
And so it was for heate, which only she,
And none but she could qualifie: His seat
He changde, and now his dalliance growes more free,
For as her beauty, his desire is great,
Ye
[...] all this while no wrong suspecteth she:
He heaues hir silke-coats, that were thin and rare,
And yet she blusht not, though he see her bare.
96
Ihoue takes th'aduantage, by his former vow
And force perforce, he makes her his sweete prize:
Calisto deflou red.
Th'amazed Virgin (searce a virgin now)
Fils all the neighbour-Groues with shriekes and cries,
She catches at his locks, his lips, his brow,
And rends her garments, as she strugling lies:
The violence came so sudden and so fast,
She skarce knew what had chaunst hir, till twas past.
97
As when a man strooke with a blast of Thunder,
Feeles himselfe pierst, but knowes not how, nor where,
His troubled thoughts confusd with paine and wonder,
Distracted twixt amazednesse and feare,
His foote remoues not, nor his handes doth sunder,
Seemes blind to see, and beeing deafe to heare,
And in an extasie so farre misled,
That he shewes dead aliue, and liuing dead.
98
Euen so this new-made woman, late a mayde,
Lyes senslesse after this her transformation,
Seeing in vaine she had implor'd heauens ayde,
With many a fearefull shrike, and shrill Oration,
Like one intranc't vpon the ground shees layde,
Amazde at this her sudden alteration:
She is she knowes not what, she cares not where,
Confounded with strange passion, force and feare.
99
Ihoue comforts her, and with his Princely arme,
He would haue raisd her from the setled grasse,
With amorous words he faine her griefe would charme,
He tels her what he meant, and who he was,
But there is no amends for such shrewd harme,
Nor can he cheere the discontented Lasse,
Though he oft sware, and by his life protested,
She in his Nuptiall bed should be inuested.
100
But nothing can preuaile, she weeping sweares,
To tell
Diana of his shamefull deed,
So leaues him, watering all her way with teares,
Young
Ihoue to leaue the Forrest hath decreed,
He would not haue it come to
Dians cares,
And therefore to the Citty backe doth speed:
She to the Cloyster with her checkes all wet,
Alone, as many, as when first they met.
[Page 51]
IAsius raigned in
Italy, at whose marriage, the famous
Egyptian Io was present. This was in the yeare of the world
2408. It was iust six yeares after that
Moyses at the age of forty, hauing slane the
Egyptian, sledde from the sight of
Pharao.
Eleuen yeares after
Moyses departed out of
Egypt, the two brothers
Dardanus and
Iasius waged warres in
Italy: Iasius was assisted by the
Ianigenes (so cald of
Ianus,) Dardanus was ayded by the
Aborigines, so called by
Sabatus saga, who succeeded
Comerus Gallus the
Scythian in certaine conquered Prouinces of
Italy.
At this time
Lusus raignd in
Spaine, Allobrox in france,
Crothopus the
8. king of the
Argiues, now raigned:
Craunus the second king of
Athens: and at this time
Aaron was consecrated high Priest among the
Israelites.
Iasius was slaine in the yeare of the world
2457. in whose place
Coribanthus his sonne succeeded.
Dardanus soiourned certaine yeares in
Samothracia, & erected his Citty
Dardan cald
Troy, in the
31. yeare of the Dukedome of
Moyses, receiuing that Prouince where his city
Barotus was erected, from
Atho prince of
Moeonia.
About the same time, by equall computation,
Archas &
Calisto subduing the
Pelagians (by the helpe of
Iupiter) cald the whole prouince
Archadia.
Tantalus ruled the
Phrygians, who were before his time, cald
Moeones: This
Moeonia is now called
Lydia, vnder which clymate
Arachne was borne, by
Pallas turned into a
Spider.
Diana was thought to be daughter to an ancient king called
Iupiter of
Atticke, which Itake to bee
Iupiter Belus before spoken of. She was the first that instituted a profest order of Virginity. The Poets call this
Diana Cinthia, and
phaebe, figuring in her the
Moone, and that her brother
phoebus & she, were borne of their mother
Latona, daughter to
Caeus the
Gyant in the Iste of
Delos.
Atlanta was daughter to
Iasius, sister to
Coribantus, she first wounded the
Calidonian Boare, and was after espoused to
Meleagar sonne to
Oeneus the king of
Calidon, by his wife
Althea.
[Page 52] Lycaon was the sonne of Pelasgus,
the sonne of Iupiter
and Nyobe,
and of Melibea,
or as some thinke Cillene.
He had many sonnes by many wiues, Moenalus, Thesprotus, Nectinnes, Caucon, Lycus, Maeuins, Macareus.
In Archadia, Menatus
that built the Citty Menatus. Moe leneus
that built Moeleneus
not farre from Megapolis. Acontius,
that built Acontium. Charisius,
that gaue name to Charisium,
and Cynethus to Cynetha:
he hadde besides Psophis, Phthinus, Teleboas, Aemon, Mantinus, Stimphelus, Clitor, Orchomenus,
and others.
Some recken them to the number of fifty, others to many
Apollodorus.
more. Amongst all these, he had but two daughters, Calisto
and Dia.
Touching Ariadnes
crowne, it is thus remembred,
Arat. in astron
At
[...], corona nitet clarum inter sidera signum,
Defunct a quem banchusibi dedit esse Ariadnae.
being for saken of Theseus
in the Isle Naxos,
whom before she had deliuered from the Mynotara, she was espoused by the God Bacchus,
and by him had Thoas oenopio, Staphilus, Exanthes, Latramis,
and Tauropolis.
Theopompus.
The end of the second
CANTO.
Argumentum
CAlista knowne to be with Child, is driuen
From
Dians Cloyster:
Archas doth pursue
His mother: vnto him
Pelage is giuen,
Now termed
Archady: when
Tytan knew
Saturne had sonnes aliue, his hart was riuen
With anger: he his men togither drew
To Battayle: the two brothers fight their fils,
Ioue saues his Father, and his Vncle kils.
ARG. 2.
TRans-formed
Calisto, and the
Gyant-kings,
Ioues Combat with great
Tiphō, Gāma sings
1
WHen I record, the dire effects of Warre,
I cannot but with happy praise admire
The blessed friendes of Peace which smoothes the scat
Of wounding steele, and al consuming fire,
Oh, in what safety then thy Subiects are,
King Iames.
Royall
king Iames, secur'd from Warres fierce yre,
That by thy peacefull gouernment alone,
Studrest deuided Christendomet'attone.
2
To thee, may Poets sing the'r chearefull laies,
By whom their Muses flourish in soft peace:
To thee, the Swaines may tune eternall praise,
By whom they freely reape the earths increase;
The Merchants through the earth applaud thy daies,
Wishing their endlesse date may neuer cease,
By who they throgh the quartered world may traffick.
Asia, Europe, America,
and Affricke.
3
Thy Liege-men thou hast plac'st as on a hill,
Free from the
Cannons reach, from farre, to see
Diuided Nations one another kill,
Whilst thy safe people as Spectators be,
Onely to take a view what blood they spill,
They neere to ruine, yet in safety we
Alone in peace, whilst all the realmes about vs,
Enuy our blisse, yet forcst to fight without vs.
4
So did the Newter
Londoners once stand
On
Barnet-Heath, aloofe, to see the fight
Twixt the fourth
Edward, Soueraigne of this land,
Warwicke & Oxford.
And the great
Duke of
Warwicke in the right
Of the sixt
Henry, in which, hand to hand,
Braue
Iohn of
Oxford a renowned knight
Made many a patting soule for liues-breath pant,
And vanquisht many a worthy Combattant.
5
So stood the Kentish men to view the maine,
In the yeare Eighty eight, when th'English fleete
The Spanish Armado, sent to inuade Enland.
Fought with the huge Armadoes brought from
Spaine,
With what impatience did they stand to see't
On the safe shore, willing to leaue the traine
Of such faint Cowards, as thinke safety sweet
In such a quarrell, where inuaders threat vs,
And in our natiue kingdome seeke to beat vs.
6
Where Royal
Englands Admirall, attended
With all the
Chiualry of our braue Nation,
The name of
Howard through the earth extended
By
Naual triumph o're their proud Invasion,
[Page 55] Where victory on the
Red-Crosse descended,
In Lightning and Earths-thunder, in such fashion
That all the sheafed feathered shafts of
Spaine,
Headed with death, were shot them backe againe.
7
It shewed as if two Townes on th'Ocean built,
Had been at once by Th'eauens lightning fired,
The shining waters with the bright flames guilt,
Breathd Clouds of smoke, which to the spheres aspired,
The bloud of
Spanish Souldiers that day spilt,
Which through the Port-holes ran,
Neptune admired,
And tooke it for the Red-sea, whilst the thunder
Of
English shot, proclaymde the
Sea-gods wonder.
8
But least this Ordinance should wake from sleepe,
Our auncient enmity, now buried quite,
The graue of all theyr shame, shall be the deepe,
In which these peopled
Sea-townes first did fight;
Yet that I may a kinde of method keepe,
And some deseruing Captaines to recite:
Liue famous
Hawkins, Frobisher and
Drake,
S. Fran Drake S. 10 Hawkins S. Mart. Frobisher.
Whose very name, made
Spaines Armadoes quake.
9
Now to returne vnto
Pelagia backe,
Which
Ihoue hath made to him and to his seed,
Then takes his leaue: the people loath to lacke
The Prince, that from a Tyrant hath them freed
Who of their liues and Honors sought the wracke,
would change his purpose, but he hath decreed
Pelagia to forsake, and I must leaue him
To
Epires King, who gladly will receiue him.
10
And to the Forrest to
Calisto turne,
Whose sorrow with her swelling belly growes:
Alasse, how can the Lady chuse but mourne?
To see hir selfe so necre her painfull throwes:
Tis August, now the scortching
Dog-starres burne,
Therefore the
Forrest-Queene a set day chose
For all her traine to bath them in the floud,
Calisto mongst them by the riuer stood.
11
The Queene with iealous eyes surueies the place,
Least men or Satyres should be ambusht by them,
The naked Ladies in the floud to face,
Or in their cloth-lesse beauty to espie them,
Now all at once they gin themselues t'vnlace:
(Oh rauishing Harmony) had I bin by them,
I should haue thought so many silken strings,
Tutcht by such white hands, musicke fit for kings.
12
They doffe their vpper garments: each begins
Vnto her Milke-white Linnen sinocke to bare her,
Small difference twixt their white smocks and their skins,
And hard it were to censure which were fairer:
Some plunge into the Riuer past their chins,
Some feare to venture, whilst the others dare her,
And with her tender foot the riuer feeles,
Making the waters margent rinsh her heeles.
13
Some stand vp to the Ankles, some the knees,
Some to the Brest, some diue aboue the Crowne,
Of this her naked fellow nothing sees,
Sauing the troubled waues, where she slid downe:
Another sinkes her body by degrees,
And first her foot, and then her legge doth drowne,
Some their faint fellowes to the deepe are crauing,
Some sit vpon the banke their white legs lauing.
14
One onely discontented, shrinks aside,
Her saint vnbracing idely the doth linger,
Full faine the Lasle her swelling brest would hide,
She pins and vnpins with her thumbe and finger,
Twice
Phabe s
[...]nds, and musing she denide
To bath her: she commands the rest to bring her,
Who betwixt mirth and earnest, force and play,
All but her Cobweb shaddow, snatcht away.
15
Dian at first perceiues her brests to swell,
And whispers to
Atlanta what she found,
Who straight perceiu'd
Calisto was not well,
They iudg'd she had her Virgins belt vnbound,
[Page 57] But when her vaile beneath her nauell fell,
And that her belly shew'd so plumpe and round,
They little need to aske if she transgrest,
Calistoes guilty blush, the act confest.
26
Therefore she banisht her, nor sutes nor teares,
Can with the Queene of Damsels ought preuaile,
Who when by strict inquiry made, she heares
`Of
Iupiter and his deceitfull stale,
Who seem'd so like a Virgin:
Phebe sweares,
Because her iudgement thenceforth shall not faile,
And to avoide occasion of like venter,
To search all such as to her traine shall enter.
17
Thus is
Lyc
[...]ns daughter banisht now
The Citty, by her late assum'd profession,
Banisht the Cloyster by her breach of vow,
For by no praiers, teares or intercession;
Diana her reentrance will allow
After exilement, for her late transgression,
Therefore asham'd, thrugh darke shades she doth run,
Till time expires, and she brings forth a sonne,
18
So did our
Cynthia Chastity preferre,
Qu Elizabeth.
The most admired Quee
[...]ne that euer rained;
If any of her Virgin traine did erre,
Or with the like offence their honors stained
From her Imperiall Court she banisht her,
And a perpetuall exile she remained,
Oh bright
Elisa though thy dated daies
Confine: there is no limit to thy praise.
19
Calistos sonne immagine seuen years old,
Brought vp mongst Lyons, Tygers, Wolues, & Beares,
The sauage impe growes day by day more bold,
And (halfe a bruit) no beast at all he feares,
He brookes both Summers heat and Winters cold,
And from the Woolfe his pray by force he teares,
Vpon a time his mother crost his will,
Whom he inrag'd pursude, and saught to kill.
20
She flies, he followes her with furious rage,
Till she is forest the Forrest to forsake,
And seeing no meanes can his spleene asswage,
She doth the way vnto the citty take,
The neighbour Citty which is cal'd
Pelage,
Where
Iupiter by chance did
merry-make;
Whose hap it was, then crossing through the street,
The mother and th'inraged sonne to meete.
21
Calisto spies
Ioue, and for helpe she cries,
And at his Royall feet she humbly throwes her,
He stops the sauage, and with heedfull eyes,
Viewing
Calisto well, at length he knowes her,
Though clad in barke and leaues, (a strange disguise)
For a kings daughter, and a Realms disposer:
Helpe
Ioue (quoth she) and my pursuer stay,
Archas thy sonne his mother seekes to slay.
22
Ioue gladly doth acknowledge the bold Lad
To be his son, for all the guifts of nature,
Pattern'd and shap't by
Iupiter he had,
And of him nothing wants, but age and stature,
He caus'd him in rich garments to be clad,
And then he seem'd to al, a goodly creature,
For being attir'd in cloath of Gold and Tissew,
He may be easily knowne to be
Ioues Issue.
23
The strife betwixt the mother and the childe,
Is by the father and the husband ended,
Calisto hath againe her selfe exil'd,
Scorning the grace that
Ioue to her extended:
She hies her to the groues and forrests wilde,
With generall mankind for
Ioues sake offended,
But in her flight as through the fields she ranged,
She feeles her figure and proportion changed.
24
Her vpright body now gan forward bend,
Hecateus,
And on the earth she doth directly stare,
And as her hands she would to heauen extend,
She sees her fingers clawes, o're-growne with haire,
[Page 59] And those same lips
Ioue did of late commend
To be for colour pe
[...]relesse, kissing rare,
Are rough and stretcht in length, hir head down hangs
Her skins a rough hide, and her teeth be fangs.
25
And when she would her strange estate bewaile
And speake to heauen, the sorrowes of her hart,
Instead of words she finds her Organs faile,
And grunts out a harsh sound, that makes her starr,
She feares her shape, and ouer hill and dale
Runs from her selfe, yet can she not depart
From what she flies, for what she most doth feare
She carries all the way: the shape of Beare.
26
And though a perfect Beare, yet Beares affright her,
Calisto transformd into a Beate.
So do the Wolues, though mongst their sauage crew
Her Father liues, how should a Wolfe delight her
Vnlesse
Lycaon in such shape she knew?
Meane time young
Archas proues a valiant fighter,
And in all Martiall practise famous grew,
Pauson, in Arcadicis.
Adding seaueu Summers more vnto his age,
Hee seats him in the kingdome of
Pelage.
27
Where leaue him raigning in his Grandsiressted,
Pelagia cald Archadia of Archas.
Changing his kingdome and his peoples name,
Whether by loue or fate (I know not) led
Themselues
Arcadians they abroad proclaime,
After the name of
Archas now their head
Pelage a Citty too of ancient fame,
They
Archad call, a stile that shall perseuer
Vnto the people and the Towne for euet.
28
Archas
in Archad
liues, in Epyre Ioue,
Saturne in
Creet, the God of
Earth proclaimed,
Tytan through forren Seas and Lands doth roue,
Hauing by Conquest many Nations tamed,
For time still gaue him Conquest where he stroue,
which made him through the world both fear'd & famed
Yet with a world the Tyrant seemes not pleasd,
Till he haue
Creet his Natiue birth-right cea
[...].
29
By strict inquiry, heat length hath found
His periur'd Brother hath kept sonnes aliue,
against the couenant he by oath was bound,
Which was, that no male issue should suruiue:
This of his future war must be the ground,
He vowes in Irons his Brothers legs to gyue,
His hands to Manacle, his necke to yoake,
In iust reuenge that he the league hath broke.
30
His sonnes all Gyants, and by nature strong,
He sends to assemble to this dreadfull warre,
Who like their father apt for rape or wrong,
Without the cause demaunding gathered are,
Tytons sons all Gyants.
Vnnumbred people in their armies throng,
Brought by the Big-bon'd
Titanoys from farre,
Where he and all his Gyant-sonnes assemble,
They make the groning earth beneath them tremble.
31
Lycaon was not there, him
Ioue before
Had from th'
Arcadian kingdome quite put downe,
There was the Gyant
Typhon, he that wore
Typhon.
The
Ciprian wreath, and the
Cicillian crowne,
Briarius.
Huge
Briareus that the scepter bore
Of
Nericos, a monster, at whose frowne
Nations haue quak't, whole armies stood agast,
And Gods themselues shooke till his rage were past.
32
Coeon likewise king of great
Coeas Isle,
C
[...]on.
A fellow of a high and matchlesse size,
Who the rough Ocean calmed with a smile,
And with a frowne hath made the billowes
[...]ise,
Aegeon.
Aegeon too that hath inlarg'd his stile
Through many a kingdome: from whose raging eies
Bright lightning flames haue in his furious ire,
Afore a storme of thunder flasht out fire.
33
Of him the great
Mediterranean Ocean
Is cald th'
Aegean Sea, it doth deuide
Europe from
Asia, and hath further motion
a long the greatest part of
Greece: beside,
[Page 61] This Gyant to the Gods scorn'd all deuotion,
Therefore was cal'd
Brianchus for his pride:
The next
Hyperion of the selfe-same breed;
All these haue sworne the death of
Saturnes seed.
Hyperion.
34
There likewise came vnto these wars
Japetus,
(
Calum and
Terraes son) in
Tytans aide,
Iapetus
He brought with him his sonne
Prometheus,
Whom
Tytan the first houre a Captaine made,
His brother
Athlas too, and
Hesperus,
Their royall Ensignes in the field displai'd,
Promesheus.
And ouer diuers seas their armies ferried,
From
Mauritania, Lybia, and
Hesperied.
35
Their
Randezvouz in
Sicily they made,
And thence by sea they rigge a royall sleet,
The flourishing realme of
Saturne to inuade,
In time, their countlesse hoast takes land in
Creet,
Vall
[...]es by them are fil'd, hils euen are laid,
Townes burnt, high Castles leuel'd with their feet,
Where ere they turne, fite from their eye-bals flashes,
Which townes and villages consumes to ashes.
36
Saturne their bold inuasion much admires,
Not knowing whence their quarrell may be grounded,
He cals his Counsell, and of them inquires
How their immense ambition may be bounded,
How with his enemies blood to quench the fires,
And by what power the soe may be confounded,
Aduise is giuen to make a generall muster,
To beat them backe that in such numbers cluster.
37
And as the king thron'd in his chaire of state,
Sits in his pallace, all his chiefe Peeres by him,
On these affaires to Counsell and debate,
In thrusts a Knight from
Tytan, to desie him,
And mongst the Lords that bout him circled fat,
He rudely throngs, and presseth to come me him,
But being kept backe, aloud he lifts his voice,
And thus greets
Saturne from the
Tytanoys.
38
Thus sayes imperious
Tytan, Saturnes Lord,
Like a low vassaile from my Throne discend,
Or I shall chase thee thence by fire and sword,
And with thy glory, to thy daies giue end,
For thou hast broke thy oath and Princely word,
And therein made an enemy of thy friend:
My Crowne I but resign'd vpon condition,
And thou those bands hast broke by thy Ambition.
39
Whilst
Saturne his male-children kils: so long
He is the King of
Creet, but that neglected,
The occasion of this wa
[...]e.
He weares the
Cretan Diadem by wrong,
Thy periury is to the world detected,
And therefore with an army great and strong,
Shall
Saturne from his high throne be deiected:
Thus
Tytan doth the king of
Creet defie,
And by these Summons, to submit or die.
40
Bold spirited
Saturne doubly mou'd appeareth,
At his proud Message, with disdaine and wonder,
Disdaine; as being a Prince that nothing feareth
To heare his scorned enemy-threatnings Thunder;
With admiration: when he strangely heareth
Of sonnes aliue, which makes him deepely wonder,
And taking
Sibell by the hand thus say,
(Hauing commanded first his traine away.)
41
Sister and wife, I charge thee by the zeale
Thou owest to me thy husband and thy brother,
The truth of all this practise to reueale,
And what I next demaund thee nothing smother,
Since it concerns th'estate of all our weale,
Art thou of any liuing sonne the mother?
The trembling Queene, low kneeling, thus repli'de,
You charge me deepe, and I will nothing hide.
42
I am a woman, and full well you know,
A woman hath a soft and tender brest,
But more, I am a mother: can you show
A mother that in this kind hath transgrest?
[Page 63] Stranger may stranger kill: Foe murder foe,
Which mothers to their children most detest:
Was it for murder you espous'd me first,
To be a wife, of all good-wiues accurst?
43
I'de rather be a pittious mother helde,
Then through the world a Murdresse be esteem'd,
Be my selfe murdered rather, then compeld
To murder those for whom this womb hath teem'd:
This wombe with three faire Princely sons hath sweld,
Which dead to
Saturne and the world are deem'd,
Yet all three liue, but cruell husband where,
Saturne shall neuer know, nor
Tytan heare.
44
Th'amazed king immagines by her looke,
Her feruent tongue doth on her hart-string strike,
Necessity at this time; makes him brooke
What his disturbed soule doth most dislike,
Without reply the sad Queene he for sooke,
It pierst his hart as if an enemies pike
Had by the aime of some strong hand bin cast,
And side to side through all his entrailes past.
45
He comes where all his Lords in counsell sat,
And tels them of three sons preseru'd to life,
The Peeres at first seeme much amaz'd thereat,
Yet all commend the pitty of his wife,
And praise her vertue: (intermitting that)
They next proceed to
Tytans hostile strife,
And thus conclude their enemies to expell,
Whom they know Barbarous, bloody, fierce and fell.
46
When calling him that the defiance brought,
This answere backe to
Tytan they returne,
That they his brauing menace set at naught,
That their owne blouds shall quench the towns they burn
That their immediate ruines they haue sought,
And they no longer can reuenge adiourne,
But the next sonne shall see strange vengeancetane
Of all his
Cretan subiects they haue slaine.
47
The Messengers dismist, while they prepare
Armes and munition for the Morrowes field,
Meane time great
Tytans sonnes assembled are,
Who all their Fortunes on their fury build,
Their hauty lookes their spleenfull harts declare,
Each brandishing his sword, and ponderous shield,
Longing to heare from
Saturne such reply,
That on his men they may their valours try.
48
Nor do they tempt the
Deities in vaine,
They haue what they desire: to them behold
The bassled messenger gallops amaine,
But ere the Knight his message hath halfe told,
So much the Gyant kings their braues disdaine,
That with their scornefull feet they spurne the mold,
Their browes they furrow, and their teeth they grate,
And all the Gods blaspheame, to shew their hate.
49
Now hath the Sunne slid from his fiery Car,
And in cold
Ister quencht his flaming head,
Blacke darknes risting from the earth afar,
You might perceiue the welkin to orespread,
Orions blazing lockes discouered are,
Pale
Cinthia gouernes in
Apolloes stead,
Bootes his waine, about the pole hath driuen,
And all the stars borne bright that spangle heauen.
50
The morning comes,
Tytan in field appeares
In compleat harnesse, arm'd from head to toe,
Next him
Aegeon, who no Corslet weares
The Armour of the gyants.
Or coat of Armes to incounter any foe,
Vnarmed as he is, he no man feares,
A plume doth from his guilded helmet flow,
Made of the Peacockes traine, his armes is strong,
In which he shakes a skeine, bright, broad, and long.
51
Creous huge sinnowy Armes, and brawny thighes
Are naked, being tawnied with the sun,
Buskins he weares that boue his ankles rise,
Puft with such curl'd silke as
Arachne sp
[...]n,
[Page 65] A coat of Armes well mail'd that fits his size,
Laceth his body in, these Armes he woon
Of a huge Monster, in the Isle of
Thrace,
Whose weapon was a weighty iron mace.
52
His knotted beard was as the
Porphir blacke,
So were the fleecy lockes vpon his crowne,
Which to the middle of his armed backe,
From his rough shaggy head discended downe,
His fiery Eie-bals threaten
Saturnes wracke,
Sterne vengeance rous'd her selfe in
Caons frowne,
His sheild, a broad iron dore, his Lance a beame,
Oft with his large stride he hath Archt a streame.
53
Typhon in skins of Lyons grimly clad,
Next his too Brothers in the march proceeds,
The hides of these imperious beasts he had,
From
th'Erithmanthian forrest, where his deeds
Liue still in memory, like one halfe mad
The Gyant shewes in these disguised weeds,
The Lyons iawes gnawing his Helmet stood,
And grinning with his long fangs stain'd in blood.
54
And yet his owne fierce visage lowring vnder,
Appeares as full of terror as that other,
Two such aspects makes the
Saturniens wonder,
Next him appeares
Euceladus his Brother,
Whose eye darts lightning and his voice speaks Thunder
(This was the onely darling of his mother,)
His weapon was a tall and snaggy Oake,
With which he menac'st death at euery stroake.
59
Hiperion in an armor all of Sunnes,
Shines like the face of
Phoebus o're the rest:
This Gyant to his valiant Brothers runs,
Crying to Armes, base lingering I detest,
Damn'd be that Coward soule that damage shuns,
Or from apparant perill shrinkes his brest,
Behold where
Saturne mongst his people crownd,
His hornes and Clarions doth to battell sound.
56
Saturne appeares as great
Hyperion spake,
Borne in an Iuory chaire with bright stones stoodded,
Mongst which in trailes ran many an Anticke flake,
With rich Inamell, azur'd, greene and rudded,
At the first push their enemies rankes they brake,
He fought till his bright Chariot was all bloodded:
About him round their bowes his Archers drew,
A fight which yet their Foe-men neuer knew.
57
The big-bon'd Gyants wounded from a farre,
And seeing none but their owne souldiers by them,
Amazed stand at this new kind of warre,
To receiue wounds by such as came not nie them,
From euery wing they heare their looses iarre,
They knew not where to turne, or how to flie them,
The showers of Arrowes rain'd so fast and thicke,
That in their legges, thighs, brest, and armes they stick
58
So long as their strong Bowes of trusty Ewe
And silken strings held fast, so long fresh riuers
Of Crimson blood the Champion did imbrew,
For euery shaft the Archers Bow deliuers,
Or kils or woundes one of their countlesse crew,
But when they once had emptied all their quiuers,
And that the enemy saw their arrowes wasted,
To blowes and handy-strokes both armies hasted.
59
Thou famous English
Henry of that name
Henry the 5.
The fift: I cannot but remember thee
That wan vnto thy kingdome endlesse fame,
By thy bold English Archers Chiualry,
In
Agin-Court: when to the Frenchmens shame,
Agincourt.
King,
Dolphin, and the chiefe Nobility
Were with the ods of thousands forcst to yeeld,
And
Henry Lord of that triumphant field.
60
But such successe king
Saturne had not then,
He is in number and in strength too weake,
His people are but one to
Tytans ten,
Nor are his guards so strong their spleene to wreake,
[Page 67] The Gyant-Kings with infinites of men,
Into their foes Battallions rudely breake:
Their Polaxes and Clubs they heaue on hie,
The Kings surpriz'de and the
Saturniens fly.
61
The
Tytans brandish their victorious Glaues,
and enter the great Citty (
Hauocke crying)
In
Cretan bloud they drowne their Chariot Naues,
And slaughter all the poore
Saturniens flying,
One hand sharpe steele, the other fire-brands waues,
In euery place the grones of people, dying
Mixt with the Conquerors showts, to heauen aspire,
and in their harsh sound, make a dismall Quire.
62
The Citty's ceizd,
Saturne and
Sybill bound,
Whilst
Tytan Lords it in the
Cretan Throne,
His reuelling sonnes for Pillage ransacke round,
And where they heare Babes shrike, or olde men grone,
They showt for ioy; meane time King
Saturnes wound
Sybill bindes vp: and being all alone
In prison with her Lord, to him relates
The fortunes of her sonnes, and their estates.
63
She tels him that young
Ihoue, in
Epire famed
For Martiall triumphs, is theyr naturall sonne:
He that
Lycaon queld,
Pelagia tamed,
And many spoyles for
Milliseus woon:
No sooner did the King heare young
Ihoue named,
But he repents the wrongs against him doon;
and proud of such an Issue so farre praisd,
Hopes by his hand to haue his Fortunes raysd.
64
He therefore by the carefull Damsell sends,
(The selfe-same Damsell that to
Oson bore him
as from a sorrowfull father kind commends)
The Damsell hauing found him, kneeles before him,
And the whole proiect she begins and ends
Of
Saturnes fall, and prayes him to restore him:
Ihoue (that till now) a father neuer knew:
amaz'd at first, himselfe a space withdrew,
65
And hauing in his hart her words debated
And euery thing conferd: his birth vnknowne
Which from his infancy the maide related
Euen to the time that he to yeares was growne,
Knowing the day and houre exactly dated,
His mothers pitty, and his fathers frowne,
To which her words she doth as witnesse bring
The two fayre danghters of the
Epyre King.
66
The youthfull Prince is to the full perswaded,
It glads him to be sonne to one so great,
He sweares his Vncle shall be soone disgraded,
And tumbled headlong from his Fathers seat,
And all that haue the
Cretan Clyme inuaded
Shall be repulst with scandall: In this heat
The
Epire King he doth of ayde implore,
And
Archas, whom he late had crownd before.
67
Were he a stranger, yet he holds it sinne,
Not to pursue his rescue being opprest,
But being his father, and his next of Kin,
That by a Tyrants hand is dispossest,
His mother to, that had his ransome bin
And kept the bloudy weapon from his breast:
All these incite his valour, and the rather
To seeme kind sonne, to so vnkind a Father.
68
Posts are to
Archas in
Archadia sent,
His father with two thousand men to meet,
Who musters vp his troopes incontinent,
Proud that his valour shall be knowne in
Creet:
The bold
Parthemians likewise to
Ihoue sent
Of their owne voluntary minds a Fleet
Of ships well stor'd with men, who both admire
His valour, and his amity desire.
69
The men of
Oson round about him flocke,
Glad by so braue a Captaine to be guided,
Knowne to be issued from a Regall stocke,
Meane time King
Milleseus hath prouided
[Page 69] His stout
Epiriens, who haue vowd to blocke
The
Cretan streetes, with trunkes of men deuided,
So with the remnant of their forces troope
To make proud
Tytan and his Issue stoope.
70
Their Army they transport, and on the beach
Of the ritch
Cretan shore securely land it,
No man appeares their entrance to impeach,
The selfe-opiniond Foe so slightly mand it,
They thinke their fortunes out of dangers reach,
And that their power's so great, none can withstand it,
The couetous Princes more intend the spoyle
Of one ritch towne, then losse of all the soyle.
71
But when the watch from the high Citty wals,
Sees all the neighbor playnes with Armor spread,
Alowd to
Tytan and his sonnes he cals,
To arme with speed: the Gyants straight make head
Tydings of bloudy broyles them nought appals,
With courage they their businesse managed,
And hauing each addrest his sword and shield,
Issue from forth the gates, and take the field.
72
Into three Battailes
Iupiter diuides
The Royall Army he conducts: The mayne
King
Melliseus by appointment guides,
Th'
Osoniens and
Epyriens fill his traine,
Some from
Alacre he receiued besides,
A Citty subiect vnto
Epires raigne:
Ihoue the
Parthemians in the vaw doth beare,
Yong
Archas with th'
Arcadians leades the reare.
73
Syx Battailes
Tytan makes, the great'st he leades,
And in the other fiue his sonnes employes,
It cheeres him when he sees his Army spreads
So many furlongs, led by his bold boyes:
He sweares, the ground whereon his enemy treads
Shall drowne the hoast that he this day destroyes
In their owne gore: and after in small while,
Yeeld to their mangled trunks a funerall pile.
74
By this young
Archas twixt the Camps appeares,
A trumpet all the way before him sounding:
Iupiters Embally to
[...]
For
Tytan through the army he inqucers,
The Tyrant with all pride and spleene abounding
Admits him, in the presence of his Peeres,
Legions of armed men his person rounding:
His sudden comming, much amazement breeds,
When
Archas with his message thus proceeds.
75
Thus saith Prince
Iupiter, king
Saturnes sonne,
Stay there (quoth
Tytan) for thou hast confest,
That what I do, is all by Iustice done,
And by good right my selfe I here invest:
The
Cretan Crowne I haue by conquest won,
In which I haue a filiall Interest:
The name of
Saturns sonne,
Saturne excludes,
And
Tytan iustly enters (not intrudes.)
76
When
Archas thus replyes: Great
Saturnes seede
And yssue Male suruiues, to see thee slayne,
The bloud thou sought to shed, shall make thee bleed,
And all the Gyant Princes of thy traine,
So hath the
Epire King with
Ihoue decreed,
Therefore before your blouds this verdure staine
Leaue (these vsurped Confines) and release
My Graundfire King, that hostile armes may cease.
77
Else, thus thy Nephew
Ihoue by me hath sworne,
By me his soone
Archas, th'
Arcadian King,
To plucke that Crowne from off thy browes, in skorne,
And thee from that Tribunall headlong fling,
and such as thy vsurped state suborne
He shall to tuyne and destruction bring:
Tytan, whose rage darts fire out of his eyes,
Thus to the bold vndaunted youth replies:
78
Princox, Thou thinkst by thy despightfull braue
To daunt vs, but thou giu'st vs greater spirit:
Thou comst from
Saturnes sonne: Thou dost depraue
In that one word,
his Tytle, not my
Merit:
[Page 71] Thou telst vs we our naturall Kingdome haue,
Which as our fathers eldest we inherit,
For iust so old as
Ihoue is, iust so long,
Satarne vsurpt vpon my right, by wrong.
79
Go tell thy Father, that his life is mine,
And I that life am now come to bereaue,
So is thy life too which thou must resigne;
When he got thee, he should haue askt me leaue,
His death was at his byrth due, so was thine,
Which then deferd, you now come to receiue:
Reply not: the proud braucs thou hast commenced,
Hath vs and all our Issue much incenccd.
80
Archas departs:
Tytan his Souldiors cheeres,
And tels them the directnesse of his cause;
That tis
Tranus Scepter which he beares,
And he his eldest by all Natures lawes,
The true successor to the Crowne he weares,
They signe his
Aue with a shrill applause,
And by these motiue arguments perswaded,
Threaten their liues, that haue his Clyme inuaded.
81
So
thoue and
Milleseus hauing heard
His peremptory answer, both prepare
For iminent vengeance, not to be deferd,
Lowd showts and cryes from both sides pierce the ayre,
The Battaile.
In cuery battell dauntlesse rage appeard,
The Champions in their hot bloud proudly fare:
A confusd noyse drums in their halfe-deafe eares,
Of trumpets, drums, shouts, swords, shields, splintered Speares.
82
Out of this Battailes
Chaos and confusion,
Of vndistinguisht valor Prince
Ihoue springs,
And where he
Tytan spies makes rough intrusion,
Maugre the strength of all the Gyant-kings:
This prologue was to some the full conclusion
Of that daies Tragedy: theyr darts and Slings
From cuery part with enuious hands they cast,
And
Ihoue through thousand weapons points hath past.
83
Proceeding still, his sword prepares the way
Euen to the Chariot where his Vncle sat,
And spite of those that would his violence stay,
He strikes him on the Helme, and layes him flat,
There had he slaine him dead, but to the fray
Encelad coms, and much inrag'd thereat
Assayles the Prince, whilst he the fight intends,
The rescude
Tytan his high chayre ascends.
84
The noyse of his surprisall, in small space
Was spread through euery wing of this large field,
Such as beheld him fall, ran thence apace,
And to his sonnes reported he was kild:
In hast they draw their forces to this place,
And
Ihoue is round incompast (Heauen him shield)
Saturne from his high turret lookt, and wondred,
To see one Knight hold battell, gainst an hundred.
85
And calling
Sybill to the Battlement,
From whence they might the doubtfull skirmish view,
They may perceiue how
Ihoue incontinent,
Twenty tall Souldiors of King
Tytans slew:
Amaz'd they stand at his great hardiment,
One askt another, if this Knight they knew:
When noting well the bold deedes he had done,
(Quoth
Sybill) may not this be
Ihoue, our sonne?
86
Whilst in this hopefull doubt they stand confounded,
Behold, young
Archas hauing vnderstood
His Father
Ihoue with thousand foes was rounded
And mongst the Gyants fought, all gul'd in blood,
He causd a lowd charge to be shrilly sounded,
And thither makes where
Ihoue inuiron'd stood:
Now grew the battell hot, bold
Archas pierses
Thrugh the mid-hoast, & strewes his way with herses.
87
And at first shocke, breakes through th'Iron ring
Of armed men, that had his Father pend,
Whose sword by this emboweld the proud King
Enceladus, and to his daies gaue end:
[Page 73] But when he saw his sonne fresh succors bring,
And to large proofe his dreadlesse spirit extend,
With such essentiall ioy the Prince doth cheare him,
Each blow deales death and not a man dares near him
88
Saue
Tytan, who mongst many Corses lying,
O're which his Armed chariot swiftly ran,
Amongst the rest
Euceladus espying,
The blood forsooke his cheeke, his face look't wan,
He stampes, he stares, he strikes, still vengeance crying,
And in disordered fury spares no man,
Pl
[...]mmets of Lead, he from his Chariot threw,
And many of the bold
Archadians slew.
89
Ioue wondering whence so great a cry should grow,
Or who so many of his men had slaine,
Spies
Tytan comming on, him
Ioue doth know,
And with all speed makes towards him againe:
Now is the warre at height, for many a blow
Deales wounds and death, thicke shewers of arrows rain,
Quarters of men, and heads, with Helmets battered,
Halfe hid in blood through all the fields are scattered.
90
Tytan encounters
Ioue, Ioue him defies,
And from his Steely Burgon beates out fire,
By
Tytans side doth proud
Hyperion rise,
Against him
Archas doth the field desire,
And now each other brauely doth despise,
They combat son to son, and Sire to Sire,
But
Ioue and
Archas best in power and skill,
Tytan & Hyperion slayne.
Old
Tytan and the young
Hyperion kill,
91
Iust as they fall, comes
Typhon, hauing late
King
Milleseus and his battell chaced,
His enemies swords had hewd off many a plate
From that iron coat in which his sides weare laced,
Who letting out the nailes that bound him straite,
Waikes in a cloud of his own smoake, vnbraced,
And as vpon his fathers trunke he gazed,
He pluckes his bold foote backe, and starts amazed.
92
But when he further looking, gan espy
The proud
Hyperion weltring in his gore,
The Combat twixt Iupiter and
[...]
And huge
Enceladus besides him lie,
He quite forgets their Obits to deplore:
The Earth he curses, and blasphemes the sky,
And from his knotty head the blacke locks tore:
With that inrag'de, his
Axe alost he heaued,
And
Ihoues broad shield iustin the middle cleaued.
93
Both armies giue them field-roome, two such spirits
Beget in their encounter preparation,
If
Ihoue suruiue, King
Saturne Creet inherits:
If
Typhon liue, great
Typhon rules that Nation:
Both parties stand Spectators of their merits,
To view this Combat with high admiration,
Forgetting fight, their weapons downe they bend,
To see these two (the best on earth) contend.
94
Huge
Typhon is vnweeldy,
Ihoue more quicke,
and better breath'd, doth oft-times trauerse round,
(To speed him with a blow, or with a pricke)
Till he hath worne a bloudy circle, round
about his bulky foe:
Typhon strikes thicke,
But his vaine blowes dig Trenches in the ground,
Had they falne right, they to the waast had cleft him,
and both of Father, Crowne, and life bereft him.
95
Two tedious houres lasts this renowmed fray,
Yet neither Victor: with this fight compard
All the dayes bloudy broyle appeard but play,
Both warde, both strike, both skorne to be out-dard,
Ihoue with one blow, quite through his Targe makes way
It cuts the steele-bars, the guilt studs it pared:
Typhon to be aueng'de of this disgrace,
Aymes a stiffe stroke full at his armed face.
96
It crost his Visor, and so downe it glanced,
And onely rac'st his Gorget: when
Ihoue stands
A Tip-toe with his armes on high aduanced,
Holding his conquering sword in both his hands,
[Page 75] He fals it on his Beauer as it chanced,
The massiy stroake vnreuets all the bands
That lockt his Helme, his wounded face appeares,
He mad, with his sharpe nayles his Armour teares.
97
And now both strike at once, steele against steele,
And armour against armour: their lowd strokes
Make the woods tremble, and the earth to reele,
Such blowes, cleaue Rocks, and fell the mountain-Oakes,
At length they close and grapple,
Typhons heele
Twines about
Ihoues mid-legge, his armes he yoakes
about his Gorget: actiue
Ihoue lets slip,
and by fine slight, catcht
Typhon on the hip.
98
The Gyant scapes the fall, and both let goe,
Their weapons lost, they buffet fist to fist,
and at aduantage lie: now hie, now low:
To close againe,
Ihoue catcht by
Typhons wrist,
Typhon by his, both tugge, both cunning show:
Typhon makes play,
Ihoue catcht him by the twist,
Heaues him alost, and in his armes he brings him
To a high Rocke, and in the Sea he flings him.
99
Typhon thus dead, their bands disordred fly,
Ihoue, Archas, and the
Epyre King pursue them,
Aegeon scapes, hereafter kept to die
By him that with his brothers fought and slew them,
Bri'reus, Iapet, Athlas, Hespery,
Prometheus too disguis'd, that no man knew them,
Fled with the rest:
Ihoue tyred in the chace,
Returnes to
Creet, his parents to embrace.
100
Oh in what ioy was
Sybill boue the rest,
And Grandam
Vesta freely to behold him,
They weepe their teares of Ioy vpon his breast,
And thousand sighes in their strict armes infold him,
Saturne for
Iuno sends, with
Ihoue to feast,
And his two sonnes (of whom his wife hath told him)
With
Archas and the
Epyre King to meet,
At generall Triumphs, to be made in
Creet.
[Page 76] HEr virgin belt vnbound,
Stanzo 15. It was the custome in those daies, the day of euery virgins mariage, to haue hir girdle loosed, by him that shoulde bee her husband.
In the
26. Stanzo, where
Calisto is sayde to bee turned into a
Beare, Phurnutius sayth, that the Lady hunting, was deuoured of a
Beare, and being seene no more, was thought to be metamorphosed into a
Beare. There be two
Beares in the heauens, the greater and the lesse, into which
Ovid saith,
Atchas and his mother were translated: one of them
Nauphus first obserued, the other
Thales Milesius. Homer cals them
Helicopes.
The warres twixt
Iupiter and the
Tytanoys, is called by the Poets
Gygantomachia, Of which
Ovid the first of his Metamor:
Aff: classe ferunt regnum coeleste gigantes,
Atta
(que) congestes struxisse ad sidera mantes, &c.
Of this there are diuers Fables extant.
Briaceus they cald
Centimanem Gigantem, the Gyant with a hundred hands, alluding to his valour and his creditious strokes, which he gaue so thicke, as if he had strook with an hundred hands at once.
And of
Typhon, Ovid in his Metamorph.
5. most ingeniously thus speakes;
Vasta Gyganteis Iuierta est Insula memoris,
Tynacris & magnis subiectum motibus vrgit,
Aethercas ausum sperare Typhocaledes,
et sic deinceps
Iapetus is certeinly thought to be sonne of
Iaphet, the
3. sonne of
Noah.
Euseb.
2. eu
[...]g. prepar.
Tantalus some thinke to be the sonne of
Iupiter and the Nymph
Plota: Others, of
Iupiter and
Plutus: as
Iohannes Diaconus and
Didimus: Others haue thought him to be the
Lucian in dial. de dipsad. sonne of
Imolus King of
Lydia: as
Zezes: Others, the son of
Aethon.
Talia ferre Puto quo
(que) Tantalou aethone natum,
Qui nullo potuit fonte leuare sitim
Tantalus being to feast the Gods, for the more magnificence of the banquet and as the richest dish, slew his sonne
Pelops,
[Page 77] and serued him in: which the Goddes knowing, all refused to
Pind. in Olimp. eate, onely
Ceres, almost distraught with the losse of hir daughter, rashly eate of the shoulder: The Goddes pittying the murder of his sonne, floung al his limbes intoa Caldron, which
Lycophron. boyling a space, they restored him againe to life, whom bicause he came out of the Caldron yonger then when he was slaine, he was called
Pelops, but when his shoulder wanted (of which
Ceres had hungerly fed) the Goddes made vp the place with
Isacius.
Iuory, which shoulder of Iuory, was after, a badge of all the
Pelopidans. Of his torments in hell, the report is common. His children were
Broteus, Pelops and
Niobes.
The end of the third
CANTO.
Argumentum,
IHoue Esculapius kils,
Apollo drtues
To keepe
Admetus sheepe in
Thessaly,
And next his beautious sister
Iuno wiues,
At her returne from
Creet to
Parthemy,
The father with the sonne in battell striues,
But by his puissance is insorst to fly:
Acrisius keepes his daughter in a Tower,
Which amorous
Ihoue skales in a golden shower
ARG. 2.
To deuine physicke: Gods made first of men,
And
Perseus birth, swift
Delta guids my pen
THou deuine Art of Physi
[...] let me sing
Thy hononred praise, and let my pen aspire
To giue thee life, that vnto life canst bring
Men halfe departed: whether thy first Syre
Was that
Prometheus, who
[...]om the Heauens King
Stole by his skill part of the vitall fier
That kindles life in man, thereby to saue
Sicke men, that stand with one foot in the graue.
2
Or whether
Aesculapius was thy father,
Sonne to the
Sun-god, by whose liuely heat
Symples and Plants, their saps and vertues gather,
Let it suffice I know thy power is greate;
[Page 79] And my vnable muse admires thee rather,
Then comprehends thy worth, let them intreat
Of thy perfection, that with fame professe thee,
And in their Arts vnto the life expresse thee.
3
As famous
Butler, Pady, Turner, Poe,
Atkinson, Lyster, Lodge, who still suruiue:
Besides these English
Gallens thousands moe,
Who where they come, death and diseases driue
From pale sicke creatures: and all Cordials know,
Spirits spent and wasted to preserue aliue,
In this with Gods and Kings they are at strife,
Physitians Kings and Gods alone giue life.
4
Some hold young
Mercury deuisd the skill
Of Phisicke first, and taught that Art abroad,
Some vnto
Arabus impute it still,
Someyeild that honour to th'
Egiptian God,
Arabus sonne to Apollo.
Cal'd
Apis or
Serapis, others wil
Apollo chiefe, what time he made aboad
With king
Admetus, but mostvoyces runne,
The first renown'd was
Esculap his sonne.
5
Hippocrates reduc't it to an Art,
Gallen and
Auicenna him succeed,
Cassius and
Calpitanus too, impart
His soueraigne skill,
Rubrius taught first to bleed,
Antonius Musa chear'd the wasted hart,
Aruntius too helpt euery griefe at need:
Archagathus profest this first in
Rome,
But all submit to Noble
Gallens doome.
6
The first that did this sacred Art renowne,
And gaue it fame on earth was as I read,
The tale of Aesculapius.
Great
Aesculape who tracing vp and downe
To gather Simples in the flowry Mead,
Hard by a rocke that weares a bushy crowne,
And boue the neighbour champion lifts his head,
He spies a Swaine in habit neate and briske,
Hold battell with a dreadfull
Bassiliske.
7
A monster that kils onely with his eie,
Which from th'vnarmed Shepheard shrunke and ran,
Apolles sonne with wonder stands him
[...]e,
And thinks, or that no beast, or this no man,
Admiring by what hidden
Diety
The piercing
Cockatrice out-gaze he gan,
Vnlesse by chance there lodg'd a Vertue rare,
In some one simple in the wreath he ware.
8
All the strong armour gainst this horrid beast,
Was but a Chaplet which begirt his braine,
Which
Esculape suspecting, much increast
His Ardency, to know what hidden straine
Slept in strange working herbs (thus being possest)
He begs the Garland from the ignorant Swaine,
Who now vnwreath'd, againe the beast defies,
Who straight returnes, and kils him with hir eies.
9
Apolloes sonne by certaine proofe now finds
Th'inuertued hearbes haue gainst such poyson power,
To combate with th'eie-killing Beast he minds,
(Thirsting for fame) the wreath with many a Flower,
And hearbe, and plant, about his braine he binds,
And so with speed hasts to her Rocky tower,
Skales her foule den, and threatens present warre,
T'out-gaze her neare, who seeing, kils from farre.
10
The big-swolne Serpent with broad eye-lids stares,
And through the aire her subtle poison flings,
The Sunnes-hearbe charmed, soone her venom dares,
And shrinkes not at her persaunt eie-bals stings,
The
Basiliske in her owne strength dispaires,
And to flie thence, she shakes her flaggy wings,
But his Dart takes her as she meant to rise,
And pierst her hart, that pierst harts with her eies.
11
Proud of this Trophy, he returning sees
The harmelesse Swaine vpon the ground lie dead,
Whom pittying, he discends vnto his knees,
Taking the vertued Chaplet from his head,
[Page 81] And hearbe by hearbe into his mouth doth squeeze,
And downe his throat their powerfull liquor shed,
But when the iuice of one pure herbe was draind,
The new departed life it backe constraind.
11
Nor wonder if such force in hearbs remaine,
What cannot iuice of deuine Simples bruisd?
The Dragon finding his young Scrpent slaine,
Hauing
th'herbe-Balin in his wounds infusd,
Restores his life and makes him whole againe.
Who taught the Heart how
Dettany is vsed?
Who being pierced through the bones and marrow,
Can with that hearbe expell th'offensiue arrow.
13
Who taught the poore beast hauing poison tasted
Dictamum.
To seeke th`hcarbe
Cancer, and by that to cure him?
Who taught the Bore finding his spirits wasted
To seeke a branch of Iuy to assure him?
The
Tortois spide a
Dragon, and straight hasted
Sauory or Maioram.
For
Sauery, arm'd with which he can endure him,
Chyron found
Centery, whose vse is holy,
Achilles Yarrow, and great
Hermes, Moly.
14
The
Storke hauing a branch of
Orgamy,
Can with much ease the
Adders sting eschew,
And when the little
Weasill chast, doth fly
The
Dragon, he defends himselfe with
Rew,
Much might be done by their rare purity,
By such as all their opperations knew:
No maruell then if such as know their skill,
Find by their practise, Art to saue or kill.
15
The
Basiliske and the reuiued
Swaine,
With all the powerfull hearbes that life restore,
He beares to
Paphos: they beholding slaine
So horrible a Monster knowne before,
Perceiuing likewise how he cal'd againe
Men dead to life: his person they adore,
Now
Esculapius name is sounded hie,
Through the vast compasse of the spatious skie.
16
And whether enuious of this Princes name,
Fitting the humorous world with such applauses,
Or whether for receiuing such as came
From the last field: or at what carping clauses
Ioue was agrieu'd at
Esculapius fame,
I find no certaine ground but for some causes
Vnknowne to me, he
Paphos doth inuade,
And great
Apollo to his sonne giues aide.
17
But
Saturnes seed preuailes: much bloud he spils
To quench the heat of his incensed ire,
Paphos he sackes, and
Esculapius kils,
Oh, wheres the Art that made thy name aspire?
Whose fame, Sea, Earth, and Heauen with clangor fils,
To others thou gauest life, now life desires,
(In vaine alas) when heauen hath doomd thy date,
Prepare thy soule, all physicke comes too late.
18
Besides this sentence, I pronounce or hie
There is no strife with heauen: when their houres call,
Physitians must as well as patients die,
And meete at the great iudgement generall,
Paphos is spoil'd,
Apollo forcst to slie,
The
Cretans him pursue, he scapes them all
Disguis'd, and is in exile forcst to keepe
In
Thessaly, the king
Admetus sheepe.
19
I told you erst, how
Saturne reinuested
Into
Parthemia, for bright
Iuno sent
There, with her vnknowne Brothers to be feasted,
And how
Athenian Neptune had intent
To meet with
Pluto there. Things thus digested,
Triumphant
Ioue, now full of griefe Ostent,
For his late conquest, in his breath'd defiance,
Is in all pompe receiu'd by his alliance.
20
Chiefely by twin-borne
Iuno, not alone
His Sister, now his troth-plight Queene and Bride,
Iupiter matied to Iuno.
Their long diuided bodies they attone
And enter amorous parley, which espide
[Page 83] By
Saturne, speedy Purseuants are gone
To all the bordering Kings to them alide,
Vnto their solemne spousales to inuite,
King, Prince, Duke, Marquesse, Baron, Lord, and Knight.
21
Metis the daughter of
Oceanus
Apol. lib. 1. bib.
They say, was
Ioues first wife, whom being great
He swallowed: least of her being childed thus,
Hes
[...]odus.
One should be borne to lift him from his seate;
Ibo. Draconus.
By this the God growes more then
Timpanus,
And swelling with the same, with throwes did sweat,
Till after anguish, and much trauelling paine,
The arrned
Pallas leapt out of his braine.
22
Metis deuout'd, he
Themis takes to bed,
Espousing her within the
Gnossean Isle,
Orpheus in arg.
There where the flood
Theremus lifts his head,
Paus
[...]n corint.
His third wife
Iuno, whom he wan by guile,
Ioue knowing it vnlawfull was to wed
His sister: by his God-hood in small while
Transformes himselfe, and like a Cuckow flies;
Apol. Rhodius.
Where
Iuno tasts the pleasure of the skies.
23
But at his becke the King of Gods and men,
Commands a storme the Welkin to orecast,
At which the Cuckow trembling, shrinketh then
Her legges beneath her wings,
Iuno at last
Pitties the fearefull Bird, who quakes agen,
And wraps it softly, till the storme was past,
In her warme skirt, when
Ioue within few houres
Takes hart, turnes God, and the faire Queen deflours.
24
After which rape, he takes her to his Bride,
And though some thinke her barren without heires.
Some more iudicious, haue such tales denide,
(Gods that know all things, know their owne affaires)
And vvhat they vvill, their povverfull vvisedomes guide,
Hermesinax eleg. scriptor.
Their children
Preces were, vvhom vve call Prayers,
These dwel on earth, but when they mount the sphears
Haue free accesse to
Ioue their fathers eares.
25
Imagine all the pompe the Sea can yeild,
Or ayre affoord, or earth bestow on Man,
Seas-fish, Ayres-Fowle, beast both of Parke and field,
Rar
[...]eties flowed in abundance than,
Nature and Art striue which is deeplier skild,
Or in these pompous Nuptials better can:
Twixt these (being more then mortall) seem smal ods,
And the high sumptuous shewes made by the Gods.
26
Night coms, a daughter is begot, and nam'd
Hebe, the long-liu'd Feast at length expires,
Hebe.
Great
Iupiter and
Iuno are proclaimd
Parthemian King and Queene:
Neptune desires
To visite
Athens, being likewise nam'd
Th'Athenian King, (his bloud Ambition fires,)
Pluto departs, in
Tartary to dwell,
There founds a deuilish Towne, and cals it
Hell.
27
No day so cleere but darke night must ensue,
Death is the end of life, and care of pleasure:
Paine followes ease, and sorrowes ioy pursue,
Saue (not to want) I know not what is Treasure,
The Gods that scourge the false, and crowne the true,
Darknesse and Light in equall ballance measure:
Tydes fall to ebbes, the world is a meere graunge,
Where all things brooke decay, and couet chaunge,
28
Not long these triumphs last, when
Saturne seeing
Parthemian Ihoue such generall fame atchieue,
Out-shining him, hee envyes at his being,
(Still feare is apt things threatned to beleeue:)
But when the Oracle with this agreeing
He cals to mind: his Soule doth inly grieue,
For this is he whom
Delphos did foretell,
Should
Saturne from his Crowne and Realme, expell.
29
Now turnes he loue to hate: his Ioy to Sadnesse,
His Fathers-pitty, to a Foe-mans spight,
His pleasure to despaire, his myrth to madnesse,
In teares he spends the day, in sighes the night,
[Page 85] To spleene his feares conuert, to griefe his gladnesse,
And all to Melanchollie is sad affright,
Nor can his troubled sences be appeas'd,
Till as a Traitor he Prince
Ioue hath ceas'd.
30
He therefore musters vp a secret power
Warre twixt Saturne and lupiter.
Of his vnwilling Subiects, to surprize
Ioue in
Parthemta, Ioue ascends a Tower
At the same time, and from a farre espies
Their armed troopes, the fields and Champions scowre,
From euery quarter clouds of thicke smoke rise,
No way he can his eyes or body turne,
But he sees Citties blaze, and Hamlets burne.
31
More mad with anger, then with rage dismaid,
From that high Tower he in hast discends,
To know what bold foe dares his realmes inuaid,
And gainst his peacefull kingdome enuy bends,
Tidings is brought, great
Saturne hath displaid
His hostile fury, and his wracke intends:
But
Ioue, that in his Fathers grace affide,
Sweares he shall die, that hath his name belide.
32
It bears no face of truth, no shape of reason,
A father should a guiltlesse sonne pursue,
A sonne that hath his father sau'd from Treason,
And but so late his dangerous enemies slew,
From whose embracing armes he for a season,
With much vnwillingnesse himselfe withdrew,
All things well poys'd, he cannot yet debate,
How such hot loue so soone should change to hate.
33
But whilst he argues thus, behold his foes
With armed rankes begirt
Parthemia round,
Mongst whom the prince his father
Saturne knowes,
And heares his warlike tunes to battell sound,
He now forgets the filiall zeale he owes,
And cries (to armes) their fury to confound,
But then againe into himselfe retiring,
He to his Father sends, his peace desiring.
34
Twice his submission to King
Saturne came,
Twice his submission he returnes in skorne,
Then
Ihoue his protestation doth proclaime,
That with vnwillingnesse his Armes were borne,
Loth with his Syre to fight, more loath with shame
By his bold foes, to haue his Kingdome torne:
Which to make good as
Saturne earst had vowd'e,
They charge and (
cry Assault) with clamors lowde.
35
Since no entreaty can preuaile, he rather
Then trust to certaine death, must battaile wage,
Archas with him their sterne
Parthemians gather,
And issue boldly, to withstand the rage
Of their knowne mallice: Twice
Ihoue meetes his Father,
Twice giues him place, yet nothing can assvvage
His setled hate, he threats the Prince to kill,
Who whilst he strikes, beares off, and guardeth still.
36
And seekes out other Conquest mongst the troopes,
Of men vn-numbred, where his valour shines,
The strongest Champion to his fury stoopes,
And where he profers warre his stand resignes,
That now the pride of
Saturne flagges and droops,
Archas his forces with Prince
Ihoue combines,
And make one hoast of able strength and feare,
Before them as they fight the field to cleare.
40
So haue I seene a storme of hayle and rayne,
With thicke tempestuous clouds of night and smoke,
Before it lay the fields of standing graine,
And top the stiffe bowes from the tallest Oake:
So where they come these Princes smooth the plaine,
Making the greene leaues weare a Crimson cloake:
The skarlet drops that from the wounded slide,
Into deepered, the spring-tydes liuery dide.
38
They still pursue the slaughter,
Saturne flyes,
Him
Archas hotly to the Sea-side chaces,
But in a
Creeke a new-rigd ship he spies,
And skapes by sea, his swist steps
Archas traces,
[Page 87] But all in vaine, the gentle gusts arise
and beare him from the sight of his disgraces,
Leaue we the conquered Father basely fled,
The conquering sonne, triumphant mongst the dead.
39
Who from
Parthemia posts in hast to
Creet,
To ceize vnto his vse his Fathers Crowne,
The
Cretans him with Olyue branches meet,
(For who at prosperous Fortunes dare to frowne?)
The Scepter and themselues too, at his feet
With one consent and voice they prostrate downe,
His person with applause they circle round,
Thus
Ihoue &
Iuno, King and Queene are crownd.
40
So without threatned armes or rude hostility,
In greater pompe, and more degrees of State,
By
Englands Commons, and our high Nobility,
Was Royall
Iames mongst vs receiued of late,
K. Iames and Queene Anne
With his Queene
Anne, to the Realmes large vtility,
Oh, may their dayes on earth haue endlesse date:
In stead of Olyue branches, enterteined
With zeale, with loyall thoughts, and harts vnfeined.
41
Some say,
Ihoue guelded
Saturne, and surrendred
His procreatiue parts into the Ocean,
Of which the Goddesse
Venus was engendred,
Betwixt them and the Seas continuall motion
I thinke such superstitious people tendred
Vnto these idle dreames too much deuotion:
Else by this Morrall, signifie they would,
He mongst his Souldiors dealt his Fathers gould.
42
And from this plenty surfets mongst them grew,
Lasciuious gestures, Lust that had no measure,
And in this kind, appeares the Morrall true:
For ost excesse, begets vnlawfull pleasure;
And so the Froath-borne
Venus might accrew,
and be begot by
Saturnes gelded treasure:
So sacred spels are writ in parchment Tables,
So golden truths are meant, in Leaden Fables.
42
Opinion, strongly mongst the Heathen raignes,
And hath continued from the longest season,
I searcht the Iudgments of some ydle braines,
(That no
Religton like, but built on
Reason:)
To know what strength it hath, when it restraines
Some men in loyall bonds, fils some with Treason:
But found theyr censures vary from the right,
For thus th'Irregular prophanely wright.
43
Opinion iudgeth all by apparition,
And from
Opinion, shame or Honor springs,
The opinion of some ydle discontents.
(
Opinion) Thou that art all Superstition,
Thou makest Beggars, or pronouncest Kings,
For why should man to man, make low submission;
Since each of vs, his line from
Adam brings?
Hauing at first, one Father, and one mother,
What duty owes a brother to a brother.
44
Whats wealth to him that nothing doth esteeme it?
Whats to the dunghill Cocke the Pearle he found?
Giue him a graine of Barley and hee'l deeme it
A richer prize: What differs gold from ground
To him that hath no iudgement to esteeme it?
Or Diamonds from Glasse? Search the world round,
Nothing is pretious held, but whats thought best,
Nothing acquir'd, but whats in most request.
45
Opinion's all: Say, I this man adore:
He is to me a King, (though but a Slaue,)
Or if a King, of him that bowes no more
Or holdes him none, the stile he cannot haue.
Religion is
Opinion too: Before
Religion was, Man worshipt euery Graue,
And in these daies, through all the worlds dominions,
We see as many Churches as
Opinions.
46.
Opinion first made Kings, first founded Lawes,
First did deuide the
Gentle from the
Base,
First bounded Man in compasse for, because
Men thought it good, they gaue
Opinion place:
[Page 89] From this comes all contempt and all applause,
Reuerence to some, and vnto some disgrace:
This, Peace compounds, or Concord turns to ods,
This, first dam'd Deuils, first created Gods.
48
This, breedes the Atheists skorne, the Christians feare,
The
Arrians error,
Pagans misbeliefe,
This makes the
Turke his
Alcoran to heare,
Breeds in the bold, presumption: penitent, griefe:
This made the
Iewes their Saniour
Christ forsweare,
Despising him, choose
Barrabas the Theefe:
Hence came the
Persian Haly (long agone)
Diffring from him the sect of
Praester-Iohn.
49
Hence comes the
Protestant to be deuided
From Triple-crowned
Rome: a long-liu'd warre
Not yet by armes or Arguments decided:
Hence came the
Catholikes mongst themselues to iar,
Hence, diuers orders, diuers waies are guyded:
Some
Iacobins, and some
Franciscans are:
Templers,
Capoochians, Fryers both blacke and gray,
Moonks, and the
Iesuits, bearing the most sway.
50
In our reformed Church too, a new man
Is in few yeares crept vp, in strange disguise
And cald the selfe-opinion'd
Puritan,
A fellow that can be are himselfe precise,
No church supremacy endure he can,
No orders in the Byshops Diocyse:
He keepes a starcht gate, weares a formall ruffe,
A nosegay, set face, and a poted cuffe.
51
He neuer bids God speed you on the way,
Bicause he knowes not what your bosomes smother,
His phrase is, Verily; By yea and nay,
In faith, in truth, good neighbor, or good brother,
And when he borrowes mony, nere will pay,
One of th'elect must common with another,
And when the poore his charity intreat,
You labour not, and therefore must not eate.
52
He will not Preach, but Lector: nor in white,
Because the Elders of the Cburch commaund it,
He will no crosse in Baptisme, none shall fight
Vnder that Banner, if he may withstand it,
Nor out of antient Fathers Latine cite,
The cause may be, he doth not vnderstand it,
His followers preach all faith, and by their workes,
You would not Iudge them Catholickes, but Turkes.
53
He can endure no Organs, but is vext
To heare the Quirristers shrill Antheames sing,
He blames degrees in th'
Accademy next,
And gainst the liberall Arts can Scripture bring,
And when his tongue hath runne beside the text,
You may perceiue him his loud clamors ring
Gainst honest pastimes, and with pittious phrase,
Raile against Hunting, Hawking, Cockes, and plaies.
54
With these the
Brownists in some points cohere,
That likewise hold the marriage ring prophane,
Commanded prayers they'l not indure to heare,
and to subseribe to
Cannons they disdaine:
They hold more sinne a corner'd cap to weare
Then cut a purse: leaue these as vilde and vaine,
By thee (
Opinion) Realmes haue bin confounded,
What darst not thou, where thou art firmly grounded?
55
To the first world now let my muse retire,
And see how strong thou wast
Opinion then,
To create dieties I must aspire
And giue eternity with my fraile pen,
Such as the world did in those daies admire,
It deified, and so made Gods of men:
The
Cretan Iupiter, to heauen translated,
And
Saturne, sire of all the Gods instated.
56
Made
Iuno Queene of heauen,
Venus of pleasure,
Ceres of Corne, and
Bacchus God of wine,
Cupid of Loue,
Mars Warre, and
Mammon treasure,
Pallas of wisedome, and of speech deuine,
[Page 91] God
Mercury: men did their God-hoods measure
By their owne thoughts, and vnto such resigne
Their speciall honours, in whose harts they guest
Most power in that, which they on earth profest.
57
This made the Heathen kings by
Ioue to sweare,
Their Queenes at
Iunoes sacred Altar kneele:
Child-bearing women, chast
Lucian feare,
Souldiers at
Mars his shrine, to hang their steele,
The Swaines to honor
Ceres, by whose cheare
Their graine decaide or prosper'd: this made kneele
Drunkards to
Bacchus, Orpheus strung his
Lyre
To
Phaebus God of Musicke, and of Fire.
58
To
Esculapius the Physitians prai'd,
Shepheards to
Pan, and Poets to the
Muses,
A God of
Neptune Nauigators made,
And he that gardens loues,
Pomona chuses,
Chast Virgins still implore
Dianaes aide,
And who that loues, God
Cupids name refuses,
Vulcan commandeth Smiths,
Flora Flowers,
Aeolus winds, and
Pluto infernall powers.
59
The Poets write, three brothers lots did cast
For th' Vn
[...]uersall Empire: To
Ioue fell
Th'
Olimpicke heauens, which all the rest surpast,
Great
Neptune with his three fork't Mace must dwell
Within the bosome of the Ocean vast
And guide the Seas, blacke
Pluto gouernes hell,
Opinion, whence these Gods build all their glory,
Must be the
Base, to our succeeding story.
60
Whilst thus
Egiptian Belus was instated,
The reuerend
Moyses in Mount
Nebo died,
And Captaine
Iossua second Iudge created,
The
Thractan Boreas, from his Mothers side
Stole faire
Orithia, hauing long awaited,
To make the beautious Virgin his sweet Bride,
From whose rude armes she neuer could be freed:
But leauing these, of
Belus we proceed.
61
The blustring winds before they had a king
To locke them fast within his brazen Caues,
Great deuestations ore the earth did bring,
Tossing blacke tempests on the curled waues:
Tis said rough
Boreas shak't his flaggy wing,
Gainst his three brothers with opposed braues,
Who with such mortall hate, at variance fell,
They made heauen shake, earth reele, the Ocean sw
[...]l:
62
No
Mediterren Sea, before this brall,
How the Medeterranean sea first came.
Was knowne in the earths armes to be inclos'd,
The Seas tost by the winds, brake downe the wall,
Which for his bounds the fates had interpos'd,
At such dissention, the foure Brothers fall:
Hauing the raines of all their gusts vnlos'd,
They cleft the Earth, the Ocean full of pride,
Thrusts in, and two maine Lands shoulders aside.
63
His traine of waues by
Calpes he brought in,
And through his deepe Abismes leads them to warre,
He people euery place where he hath bin
With his broad waters: who are still at iarre
With the torne earth, more roomth and space to win,
For his vnbounded limits (stretch't so farre)
That they haue p
[...]rst the aged
Tellus hart,
The middleearth sea that parts Europe from Africa.
And from
Europa, Affrica still part.
64
So was
Italia and
Sicilia one,
Till the rough gusts the
Ocean did inuade,
Who forcst a channell, where before was none,
Valer. Flaccus lib.
1. Argon.
And twixt these kingdomes large irrnp
[...]ion made,
Therefore the Gods th'vnbrideled winds t'attone,
That their commaundlesse furies might be staid,
Surprisd them, and to
Aelous bound in chaines
Gaue them, and he their roughnes still restraines.
65
With
Ioues lasciuious pastimes I proceede,
As cheefely to the fall of
Troy allide,
Oh you
Ioues daughters borne of heauenly seed,
My braine and pen by inspiration guide,
[Page 93] That what the fates haue against
Troy decreed
Of
Priams glory, and
Achilles pride,
Of
Hectors valor, and bright
Hellens fate,
With all your aydes I may at large delate.
66
Not how on
Semele, Ioue Bacchus got,
Nor in the shape of Bull
Europa stale,
Of Swan-transformed
Loeda speake I not,
Nor of
Mnemosine frame I my tale,
Nor how
Esopis did her honour blot,
Nor
Astery by
Ioue turnd to a Quaile,
Nor how for
Nicteis he himselfe transformed,
Nor
Ioes rape, at which Queene
Iuno stormed.
67
But how he rauisht
Danae that bright Lasse,
By many suters (but in vaine) assailed,
How she was closed in a Tower of Brasse,
Which with a golden Ladder the prince skaled:
What cannot gold? whose brightnesse doth surpasse,
How oft hath Gold boue womens strength preualed?
Laps that haue had gainst all temptations power,
Haue spred themselues wide, to a golden shower.
68
From
Iupiter of
Archad, and a dame
Cal'd
Isis did one
Epaphus proceed,
To him was borne a sonne of ancient fame,
Hight
Belus, who great part of
Egipt freed
From tirrany; and after swaide the same,
He had a Sister too, who soone decreed
Archad to change for
Affricke, and her name
Lybia, from whom the grim
Busyris came.
69
Belus two children had (so the fame runnes)
Dena
[...]s. Egiptus.
2409.
Danaus and
Egiptus: Danaus he
Had fifty girles,
Egyptus fifty sonnes,
Twixt whom, these Brothers a full match decree,
1473.
All parts are pleas'd, not one the marriage shunnes,
False
Danaus, with his daughters doth agree,
As with their Bridegroomes in their beds they lay,
The fifty husbands in one night to slay.
70
(Saue young
Ypermenestra not a maid,)
But in her husbands bosome sheath'd her knife,
And she alone the bloudy plot bewraid,
And to her
Linceus prou'd a loyall wife,
Of all
Egistus sonnes, he by her aide,
Alone did from the murther scape with life,
Of whom, as they in nuptiall loue remained,
He
Abas got,
Abas in
Arges raigned.
71
Abas Acrisius got, from him discended
The tale of
l
[...] pit
[...]r & Danae.
Bright
Danae, of whom we now intreat,
Whose beauties fame is through the earth extended,
Acrisius iealous of his Fathers seat
To
Egipt hies, and there his prayers commended,
Offering large quantities of Gold and Wheat.
At the God
Belus his great Grandsires shrine,
Of his faire daughters fortunes to deuine.
72
This answere he returnes: Away, be gone
Thou sonne of
Abas, Danae forth shall bring
A gallant boy, shall turne thee into stone,
And after thee in
Arges raine sole-King:
Acrisius now hath turn'd his mirth to mone,
From whence his ioyes should grow, his sorrows spring,
His hoped Issue and successiue heire,
Late, al his pleasure, now is all his care.
73
He intimates that from her wombe shall rise
A gallant boy, that shall his Grandfire kill,
And
Arges Crowne by force of armes supprize,
He sweares the maid shall liue a Virgin still,
And to preuent his fate, doth straight deuise
A Tower impregnable, built on a hill,
The building of Barreia tower
Strong of it selfe: but yet to make it sure,
He girts it with a treble brazen Mure.
74
The guiltlesse Lady wonders at the state
Of this new worke, not knowing why tis built,
To see sharpe
Pynacles themselues elate
So high towards heauen, the Arches richly guilt,
[Page 95] Huge Marble collumnes to support the gate,
In euery place rich tinctures largely spilt,
The Tarras with white Iuory pillers rail'd,
And the Crosse-ebon bars, with guilt stoods nail'd.
60
It seemes too strong for pleasure, and for warre
It shewes too neat: but now the worke is ended,
Who that beholds it shining from a farre,
But with admiring thoughts the worke commended?
The nearer you approach, the more you are
Inflam'd with wonder, not a staire ascended
But of white Marble, not a doore but Brasse,
The windowes glaz'd with Cristals, not with glasse.
61
All things prepard, the King will
Danae carry
To view the Tower, she giues it due with praise,
He thus proceeds; Child thou shalt neuer marry,
But in this place of pleasure end thy daies,
And in this brazen circuit euer tarry,
The Lady starts, and thinkes too long she staies
In that loath'd place which now to her appeares
No Pallace, but a dungeon full offeares.
62
And asking why she must be kept a slaue,
Or how she hath deseru'd so strict a doome,
To be so young put in her Marble graue,
(For whats a Prison, but a liuing Toombe?)
Or for what cause she may no husband haue,
But liue an Ancresse in so strict a roome,
Knowing her selfe a Princesse ripe and sit,
Wrongd (as she thinkes) not to be married yet:
63
Acrisius tels her what great
Belus spake,
When hee with Orisons kneeld at his throne,
That from her wombe the world a sonne should take,
That shall his Grandsire change into a stone,
She interrupts him, and thus scilence brake,
Oh would you be eternall liu'd alone?
And neuer die? What would
Acrisius haue,
More then an heire to lodge him in his graue.
79
Did you not into stone great
Abas turne,
And
Abas to his Father
Linceus so,
Their funerall trunkes to sacred ashes burne,
O're which their monumentall marbles grow,
Oh Father, no man can his Fate adiorne,
Shall these your eyes be closed vp by a Foe?
Or can you deeme your owne bloud shall betray you?
Who are more fit within your stone to lay you?
80
What you did to your Father, let my sonne
Performe'to you: successiuely succeed:
Your Fathers glasse is out, yours must be run,
Leaue then your Crowne to one of
Abas breed:
In vaine (quoth he) we cannot thus be wun,
To alter whats vnchangeably decreed;
Here shalt thou liue, but royally attended,
Like a bright Queene, and from a King descended.
81
So leaues her guarded with a troope of Mayds,
And envious
Beldams that were past their lust,
These, with rewardes and threats the King invades
In his high charge, to be seuere and iust,
But most the Matrons, (fittest for such trades)
Rather than wanton wenches, he dare trust:
Louers may Louers fauour,
Crones are past it,
and enuy, but not pitty those would tast it.
82
So doth the full-fed stomach meate deny
Vnto the famisht: So the Drunkard spils
Wine in aboundance, which would cheare the dry,
Cold age the appetite of hot lust kils,
Danae thy beauties fame is sounded hie,
Mongst many other Kings:
Ihoues eares it fils,
He loues her by her fame, and longs to see her,
Nor are her thoughts at peace before he see her.
83
A thousand bracelets, Iewels, Pearls and Rings,
With gold of sundry stamps, the King prepares,
And hauing readied all these costly things,
In a poore Pedlers trusse, he packs his wares,
[Page 97] So hies to
Danaes Tower (loue gaue him wings)
Hope sometime cheeres him, sometimes he dispaires:
At length arriues there, in an euening late,
And fals his rich packe at the Castle gate.
84
Where two leane wrinkled Crones stand Centinell,
To giue the watchword to
Acrisius guard,
Appointed straight to ring the larum Bell,
If any man once neere the Castle dar'd,
The Pedler askes, who in that pallace dwell,
Or how they call the place? Hast thou not heard
Of
Danae quoth the Beldam (looking sower)
Whom
Arges King, closd in this-brazen Tower.
85
He viewes the place, and finds it strongly seared,
Not to be won by armes, but skal'd by slight,
I came from
Creet, quoth he, and was intreated
Heere to deliuer tokens of some weight
From great king
Iupiter: their cold blouds heated
With hope of gaine, they cheare their age-duld sight,
And with a couetous longing, earne to view
What precious knackes he from his Hamper drew.
86
A thousand seuerall Trinckets he displaies,
If this be
Danaes Tower quoth he, then these
Belong to you: the Crones his bounty praise,
And in their hands two costly lewels cease,
The younger Ladies now are come to gaze,
Not one amongst them but he seekes to please:
Some Gold, some stones, some Rings, some Pearles he gaue,
And all haue something, though they nothing craue.
87
Blear'd with these gifts, their charge they quite forget,
And euery Ladies e
[...]e dwels on her prize,
Comming fore
Danae, she beholds them set
With sundry brouches sparkling in her eyes,
And asking whence they had them, they bid fet
The Pedler vp, who hath of fairer size,
Brighter Aspect, and for a Queene to weare,
In worth not to be valewed, yet not deare.
88
Danae commands him vp, he glad ascends,
And through their brib'd hands freely is admitted
Euen to her chamber: Gold, thy might extends
Beyond all opposition, the best witted
Thou canst corrupt; diue through the hearts of friends,
By thee are wal'd Townes entred, skonces splitted,
By thee are armies swayed, Camps ouer-runne,
Children the Fathers spoile, and Sire the sonne.
89
No wonder then if Gold the Pedler brought,
To enter, where besides him, no man came,
Behold the Goddesse this great King hath sought,
Oh how her bright eie doth his soule inflame!
Pearles, Iewels, Rings, and Gold, he sets at naught,
yea all the world, if valewed vvith this Dame,
Variety of costly gems he shewes her,
And makes her of them all, the free disposer.
90
So wils the
Cretan King, not vvill he take
One mite in way of Chaffer or set price,
She thankes the Pedler for his Maisters sake,
And hovv to please him, askes her maids aduice,
But they so much of their ovvne Ouches spake,
Whose brightnesse did their thoughts imparadice,
That they contend whose Iewell rarest glisters,
Whilst
Ioue in
Danaes eare, thus softly whispers.
91
Behold vvhat loue can do: that King of
Creet
That prizes
Danae aboue any rate,
Wrapt in course Garments (for a King vnmeet)
(For
Danaes Loue and grace, despising state)
Proftrates himselfe at thy Imperiall feet,
Resolud before he entred
Darrains gate,
Thy beauty, vertue, youth, and fame to saue,
Buried already in this brazen graue.
92
For Lady, to vvhat purpose are you faire?
as good to haue a tan`d and vvrinkled hide,
Why is your hands so vvhite, your brovv so rare?
An
Ethiops face maskt, shevves as full of Pride,
[Page 99] These brazen walles that only Iudges are
Of your bright lookes, al wonder are denide,
Your Goddesse-shape is to the sencelesse stone
No better than the beauty of yon
Crone.
93
What difference makes the dead twixt grace and skorne?
What luster giues
Apollo to the blind?
What are the choyseft dainties if forborne?
Whats musicke to the eares whom deafnesse binde?
What is the costlyest garment if not worne?
Or being worne, if none his riches mind?
What shewe's in Iewels hid behind a skreene?
Whats state vnknowne? whats beauty if not seene?
94
The
Princesse sighes, as knowing all is true,
When
Iupiter proceedes: Renowned Dame,
Set this ritch beauty to the broad-worlds view,
These rare perfections let the world proclaime,
Whom thousand Kingly Sutors shall pursue,
Vnmaske this beauty: to that end I came:
Oh, leade not here a base condemned life!
That may abroad, liue a free Queene and wife.
95
Pitty yout seruant
Iupiter, whose treasure,
Whose life, whose Crowne, whose fortunes are al yours,
Robbe not your selfe of all earths glorious pleasure,
Pitty your youth, whose pride a gayle deuours,
A dungeon takes of such perfections ceasure,
That should command all free enthroned powers:
And die not here, t'eternal bonds betraide,
Rob'd of all sweets, that for your tast were made.
96
You are a woman desperate here, and lost,
Kept from mans sight, for which you were created,
And beauteous
Princesse (which should touch you most)
Your gealous father by the world is rated
As one that coopes you but to spare his cost,
And enuying you a Queene fhould be instated,
A Tyrant, that prefers his gealous feares,
Before your vertue, beauty, youth and yeares.
97
Graunt me your loue (oh grant it) blush not Queene,
That loue, shall be your ransome from this place,
This prisoned beauty shall abroad be seene,
and Empresses shall homage to your face,
and then this Gaile where you haue cloystred beene
You will despise, and tearme
Acrisius base,
That gold in Brasse, and pearle in stone would shrowd,
Muffling the bright Sunne in so base a clowd.
98
Her tender hart relents, his amorous shape
Appeares out of his base vnknowne disguise,
and if her hart his sweet words cannot scape,
No wonder if his feature charme hir eies,
She knowes no Peasant dares attempt her rape,
Nor any base thought ayme at her surprise:
and saue King
Iupiter by fame held peerlesse,
She knowes no prince so bold, so rich, so fearlesse.
99
But as she would reply, her Virgin-guard
Began to leaue their conference, and draw neere them,
Which
Iupiter espying, straight prepar'd
His bounteous packe with more rewards to cheere them,
and whilst they askt the
Princesse how she far'd,
He ransacks for more trifles, and doth beare them
Vnto the female waiters,
Danaes traine,
So with fresh toyes he bribes them once againe.
100
They throng about him round, to be seru'd first,
and as they tast his bounty start aside,
Comparing which is best, and whose the worst,
More words and wagers must the strife decide,
and whilst these gemmes are by the Ladies pu
[...]st,
and none neere
Danae and the King abide:
She viewes the amorous
Prince with more satictic,
and he the
Princesse courts with fresh variety.
101
She neither giues him promise, nor deniall,
Neither repulse, nor graunt, (so Women vse)
When men (in sight of others) make their tryall,
They will not say you shall: least you abuse
[Page 101] Their friendly grant, but take them free from spyall,
And say withall, they shall nor will, nor chuse,
Then you shall find them weakly, fighting fall,
And willingly, vnwilling prostrate all.
102
Giue louers opportunity, their loues
Are halfe won to their hands without more sute,
The man that verball Court-ship onely moues,
Shall all his life time in vaine words dispute,
When one that proffers faire, and fine force proues,
Speeds with his Action, though his tongue be mute,
For euery maid, takes one thing from her mother,
Whilst her tongue one thing speaks, to think another.
103
The night growes old, and the bright Lamps of heauen,
Are halfe burnt out: the Beldams call to rest,
What shall the Pedler do, so late be driuen
Out of his Inne, the lodge that likes him best,
To lie with
Charles-Waine, and the
Hyads seauen,
He hath deseru'd more grace they dare protest,
To turne him out at this time might seeme cruell,
That bought his bed with many a high priz'd Iewell.
104
And yet to harbor him, they needs must feare,
Because they shall incurre
Acrisius ire,
If such a tiding should arriue his care,
Their bodies all were doomd vnto the fire,
But by what meanes can King
Acrisius heare?
Beside, what pesant pedler dares aspire
To
Danaes bed? and all their liues betray,
Faine they would haue him gone, and faine to stay.
105
His bounty hath preuail'd, and he prouided
A priuate lodging in a place remote,
Danae vnto her Princely couch is guided,
So much her Hand-maids on their fauours dote,
They carelesse plucke her doore too, the locke flided
Besides his fastning place, which none doth note,
Then take their toyes, and to their beds they bear thē,
Longing for day, that they in sight may weare them.
106
A generall hushtnesse hath the world possest,
And all the Tower surpriz'd with golden dreames,
Alone King
Iupiter abandons rest,
Still wishing for
Apolloes Golden beames:
Desperate of hope, he knowes not what is best,
When rising, from a farre he spies bright gleames
Pierce from his window, as from
Danaes Tower,
In th'humid nights most taciturnall houre.
107
He knowes sad sleepe hath ceas'd vpon the many,
He heares no waking clocke, nor watch to iarre,
He venters forth, and searching, finds not any,
And in his way to this new blazing-starre,
He layes his eare to euery ri
[...]t and crany,
Till he with fearefull strides hath woon so farre,
That he must now these Marble steps ascend,
Which led vnto the bower of his fair friend.
108
Wher comming, with a soft and trembling pace,
To touch the doore, he feeles it yeild him way,
And freely giues him entrance to the place
Where his diuinest Mistresse
Danae lay,
He kist her finger, hand, necke, brest, and face,
And euery thing the white sheete durst betray,
That done, into her siluer armes he crept,
And all this while the amorous Virgin slept.
109
Imagine how she waking grew amazed,
Imagine him a double Rhetoricke vsing,
Action and words: sometimes her selfe she raised
To call for helpe, his dalliance quite refusing,
Imagine then how he his loue imblazed,
He at her scorne, she at his boldnesse musing,
His gifts, his name, his loue, plead on his part,
Gainst him, her fame, her feare, and her chast hart.
110
Loue makes him eloquent, and sweet occasion,
Makes him bold too, shee's bashfull, and withstands,
He laies to her both battry and perswasion,
And much ado she hath to passe his hands,
[Page 103] Being girt in Armes, how can she scape invasion,
Or breake the compasse of his Iuory bands:
She would be gon, he wooes her to lye still,
So hee'l no violence vse, she sayth she will.
111
Oh banquerupt
Ihoue, in midst of all thy blisses
Ioylesse, and yet with pleasures
[...]ing'd about:
He wooes againe with Court-ship mixing kisses,
A thousand batteries,
Danae hath held out:
And still the siedger his irruption misses,
They parly, but conclude not, both are stout:
Sometimes he striues, then she begins to threat,
Then hee from striuing, falles againe t'entreat.
112
What, cannot opportunity and place
Bed-fellowship and loue, if they conspire?
A comely feature and a Courtly face,
Cour
[...]-ship and Name of King to win desire?
All these in
Iupiter intreat for grace:
All these haue set her amorous hart a fire,
And gainst all these, the least of which command,
Saue bashfulnesse, sh'hath nothing to withstand.
113
And thats too weake gainst things of their ability,
Yet is it of a temper, not to yeeld,
For though it be subdude with much facility,
T'will proudly seeme still to maintaine the field:
It raignes in many that professe ciuility,
Who all their pleasures on compulsion build:
For bashfull women long since
[...]arnt this skill,
What they would giue, to grant against their will.
114
Women are weake, and weake ones must obey,
Faire
Danae is but woman, and must fall,
Her glory is, that she hath held him play,
And kept her friendly so
[...] so long from all:
What should she doe, the Prince will haue no nay,
Her guard's asleepe, if she for help should call:
What with compulsion, lou
[...], force, and faire words,
She lyes confus'd, and he the Princesse bords.
115
This night the warlike
Perseus was begot,
And now the early day-star gins to rise,
Perseus.
Who cals the Prince vp, least the
Beldam trot
Should find his night-walke with her gealous eyes,
But she their priuate sport suspected not,
Nor knew the King in his assumd'e disguise:
Teares when they part are in aboundance shed,
When he must leaue the Princely
Danaes bed.
116
It is compounded and betweene them sworne,
That
Ihoue must come in Armes by such a day,
By whom the Lasse must be from
Arges borne;
So takes his leaue, he dare no longer stay,
The Sunne is cal'd vp by the early Morne,
High time, to send the
Pedler on his way:
They praise the largesse of their bounteous guest,
But of his Iewels,
Danae keepes the best.
117
Leaue
Ihoue towards
Creet, and
Danae in sad plight,
For his departure, whom she tenders deerely,
She neuer lou'd vntill this
Ominous night,
And now to see him part, she riseth early,
Gladly with him she would haue tane her flight,
But feares her father would reuenge seuearly
Her bold attempt, and backe returne her weeipng,
To spend her future youth in stricter keeping.
118
Besides she s
[...]ares (that which indeed was trew)
That she (of
Ihoues seed) might conceiue a sonne,
Which if the gealous King
Acrisius knew,
At these sad tidings he would franticke run:
The Princesse to her charuber now withdrew,
Arm'd with this hope, that
Ihoue the deed had done:
Th'only renownd, ritch, puissant, and of power,
By force of Armes, to free her from the Tower.
119
Now to record what I remembred earst,
How
Troos in
Troy his neighbor Kings out-shined,
And in the same place where it was reuerst,
How all
Troys fame King
Tantalus repined,
[Page 105] But how the
Phrigian forces were disperst
By
Troas: is to another place assignde:
Here should I speake how
Troy to fame aspired,
But my Muse flags, and my dull pen is tired.
ESculapius
the sonne of Apollo
and the Nymph Coronis
Homer bymno. P
[...]son. in m
[...]ssemacis.
others thinke, of Arsiona
the daughter of Leusippus.
Hee was taught his Physicke of Chiron
the Centaur,
which Zezes chil. 10.
and Lactantius
lib. de falsa Religione,
Me
[...]nus.
both affirme he had a sister called Eriope,
a wife, Ep
[...]one,
& a sonne Machaon
and Podilarius.
He was called Antonius,
Orpheus in bym Medicus oucaeata, Leuctricus, Cortineus, Corilaeus, Agnitas Booueta,
and he was borne among the Epidaurians.
Iupiter
wan from Ae
[...]culapius
the
[...]sle Paphos,
and gaue it to his daughter Venus. Paphos
was built by Aeos
sonne to Typhon.
In Saturne
ended the golden world, and in his sonne Iupiter
began the Brazen
age.
Acolus was son to
Acesta and
Iupiter, because the clouds and mysts rising about the seauen
Eolian Islands, of which he was king, did alwaies portend tempestuous gusts and blasts, therfore the
Poets feigned him to be king & god of the winds.
Epaphus the sonne of
Isis and
Iupiter Belus, builded the famous
Egyptian Memphis, the yeare before Christ came into the world
1492. Orosius writes, that the fifty marriages concluding in nine & forty murders, was the year before Chr:
1473. for which
Daunaus was expulst his Realme, and fled to the
Argiues, where he spent the remainder of his age. The yeare after this vnnaturall massacre,
Aaron deceased amongst the
Israelites.
By
Isis some say is meant
Io, and by
Iupiter Belus, Iupiter of
Creet, Ovid in his metamorph:
Hince Epaphus magni genitus de semine tandem,
Creditur esse Ihouis.
Epaphus and
Phaeton, the one the sonne of
Iupiter by
Io, the other the sonne of
Phaebus by
Clymenen, beeing at some difference about their blouds,
Phaeton leaues his mother to trauaile to the Pallace of the
Sunne, where asking his vnhappy boone as a sure testimony of his discent from
phaebus, he by his rashnesse and pride fired the world, and was strooke headlong
[Page 106] from the Chariot of the
Sunne, by one of
Iupiters thanderbolts.
Of Iupiter
it is thus remembred, of Europa
he begot Minoes
Calimachus de coaditis insulis.
and Rhadamant, Archas
of Calisto, Pelasgus
of Niobe, Scarpedon & Argas
of Laodomeia, Hercules
of Alcmena: Taygetus
of Taigetes: Amphion
and Zetes
of Antiope: Castor, Helena, Pollux,
and Clitemuestra
of Laeda: Perseus,
of Danae: Deucalia
of Iodoma: Britamart
of
Archelaus lib. de fluminibus. Carme
the daughter of Eubulus. Aethilius
the father of Endimion
of Protogenia. Epaphus
of Ione. Aegina
of the daughter of Asopus. Arcecilaus
and Carbius
of Terrebia: Colaxes
of Ora: Cirnus
of Cirna, Dardanus
of Electra, Hiarbus
of Garamantius: Preces, Proserpina,
and the Titiae,
with infinite others, too long to recount.
Fit Taurus Cignus satyras
(que) aurumque ob amorem,
Europa, Laedes, Antiopae, Danaes.
Zeus kvknos Tavros Satvros krusos di e'rata
Ledes, Evrotes, A'ntiopes, Danaes.
Apollo
exilde by Iupiter
kept Admetus
sheepe, which Pindarus in pithicis
affirme, or his Oxen, as Horace 1. carminum.
Lucianns in dial. Calim. in hymn.
And therefore he had the title to be called euer after, the god of pastures. As Virg. 3. Georgic.
Te quo
(que) Magne pales & te memorande Canemus pastor ab Amphriso.
The end of the fourth
CANTO.
Argumentum
KIng Tantalus
before the Troians flyes,
Saturne arriues in
Creet and by
Troas ayded
Once more intendes his Kingdome to surprise,
Creet
is by Troian Ganimede
inuaded,
In ayde of
Iupiter the
Centaures rise,
Aegeons ful-fraught
Gallies are disladed:
Danae and her young sonne are turnd afloate,
By
Arges King, into a Mast-lesse boate.
ARG. 2.
PElops,
the two Atrides
and Aegeon,
Vulcan
the Gorgones
in Epsilon.
1
WHose inspiration shall my heauy brayne
Implore, to make my dull Inuention light,
Or to a loftyer key my pen constraine,
Or raise my Muse, that takes so low a flight,
Thou
Ihoue-borne Pallas o're my numbers raine,
And musicall
Apoll
[...] giue me spright,
With the bright rayes that from thy temples shine,
To shew me way vnto the
Muses nine.
2
Of whom the eldest
Clio first deuisd
To Chronicle the Royall gests of Kings,
Strutting
Melpomene in
Gules disguisd
In Theaters, mongst Tragicke Actors sings,
But soft
Thalya hath such straines despisd,
And to her Commicke sceanes shrill laughter brings,
Wind Instruments
Entirpe best affects,
Terpsichore the stringed
Lyre directs.
3
The
Geometricke figures
Erato
Hath in her charge, as first by her disclosed,
But from
Calliope hie Stanzoes flow,
For the
Heroik numbers first composed,
The course of starres are by
Vrania know,
And how the Planets we aboue disposed,
But
Polihimnia smooth
Rhetoricke chuses,
The youngest of
Ioues daughters, and the Muses.
4
All these at once their sacred gifts aspire,
That may giue beauty to my taske in hand,
Affoording helpe when I their aide desire,
To guide my tost-Bark to desired Land,
A slender barke, slow sayl'd, and apt to tire,
And founder in the Sea: weake, and vnmand,
Apollo with the rest, my voyage speed,
Whilst to
Troyes fatall ruine we proceed.
5
King
Tantalus the sonne of
Iupiter,
That rain'd in
Attique, brought an host 'fore
Troy,
Which his sonne
Pelops led: how can he erre,
Being directed by so braue a Boy
That vndertakes his army to transferre,
And
Troos with his new Citty to destroy,
This
Pelops with the King of
Elis ran,
And in the course bright
Hyppodamia wan.
6
Her Father
Oenemaus was betraid
My
Myrtolus his treacherous Chariot-driuer,
And in the race slaine,
Pelops by his aide,
Of many suters dead the sole suruiuer,
[Page 109] After the goale obtaind, inioyes the maide,
2617.
Intending with all pompous state to wiue her,
1346. Eliud of the tribe of Beniamin, slew Eglon K. of Moab.
Th'espousals ended, Time with swift pace runnes,
And she in processe, hath producst two sonnes.
7
Thyestes and
Atreus nam'd: the first
Ore-come with burning lusts insatiate heat,
Rauisht
Atreus wife (oh deed accurst)
For which
Atreus doth him home intreat,
And takes his Children where the Babes were nurst,
To dresse their bodies for their fathers meat,
Some bak't, some rost, some sod (oh bloody deed!)
To make a father on his owne childe feed.
8
Atreus two sonnes had, the eldest hight
Agamemnon, who was after
Mycenes king,
The progeny of Menelaus and Agamem non.
And
Greekish Generall of the ten yeares fight,
Twixt
Greece and
Troy, which we must after sing:
The second
Menelaus, in whose right,
The
Argiue Dukes their puisant Armies bring,
Husband to
Hellen, when prince
Paris sought her,
And
Hellen, Iupiter and
Laedaes daughter.
9
But we digresse: gainst
Pelops and his Sire
Ilion and
Ganimed from
Troy appeare,
These are the sonnes of
Troos, many a bold squire
They led with them to
Ilion, the first yeare
He rain'd in
Troy in bright celestiall fire,
Came the
Palladium downe from heauens high spheare,
Which
Ilions Towers long after did inioy,
Continuing till the vtter sacke of
Troy.
10
Their hostile Instruments to battell sound,
Ten thousand hands at once to heauen are raised,
Which in their fals, as many strike to ground,
Cowards are scorn'd, none but the bold are praised,
The
Troyans haue begirt the
Phrygians round,
Pelops aboue the rest his fame imblazed,
And
Ganimed that doth bold
Pelops see,
Fights, as if none need kill a man but he.
11
Such was the valour of this
Troian youth,
Though
Troos and
Ilion both did wondrous well,
He onely stands, defends, breakes, and pursueth
Their standing battailes: by his valour fell
The
Phrigian host, now murdred without ruth:
Charon is tyr'd, with ferring soules to hell:
The
Troians follow with victorious
[...]ries,
Whilst
Tantalus and valiant
Pelops flies.
12
This was that
Tantalus bright
Plota bare,
(Whom for a speciall grace) the Gods admit
Tantalus in Hell.
To their high Counsell, where they oft repaire,
He blabs their secrets, therefore they held fit
To punnish him in hell with torments rare,
In
Laethe chin-deepe he must euer sit,
Hungry, whilst Apples touch his lips: and dry,
Whilst from his thirsty chin the waters flie.
13
And this that
Pelops whom his father slew,
Pelops death and life. 1642.
And hewd his body into gobbets smal,
Whose Massacre the Gods in mercy rew,
And gathering vp his limbes to match them all,
1321.
They misse that peece to ioyne his body new,
Which from the throat doth to the shoulder fall;
Which they with Iuory peece, and who more bolder
Then new-made
Pelops, with his Iuory shoulder.
14
And yet inforst to flie: but had his men
B
[...]n euery one a
Pelops, none had fled,
He was the last in field, preferring then
Fore Coward runners, the resolued dead,
But what can one alone gainst thousands ten?
Led by so braue a Prince as
Ganimed,
Leaue we triumphant
Troos, now let our hand
Direct sea-toyled
Saturne safe a Land.
15
Who from his sonne in the last battaile flying,
his Grand-child
Archas to the sea-side chast,
Saturnes arriue in Troy.
We left him in a ship the Ocean trying,
Where he hath plowed strange Seas: great dangers past:
[Page 111] Now entring th'
Hellespont, from farre espying
(After his tedious course) a Towne at last;
His Martiners to shore their sailes imploy,
And Sea-beat
Saturne touches land fore
Troy.
16
Which
Troos amidst his plausiue triumphs seeing,
With
Ilion, Ganimed, and thousand more,
Makes towards the harbor, whilst old
Saturne freeing
His men from ship-bord hath imprest the shore,
He makes his habit with his stile agreeing,
The
Troyans wonder at the state he bore:
Himselfe so well prepar'd, his ships so faire,
Both to the barbarous
Troians seeming rare.
17
So small a number can no warre pretend,
Therefore their strange arriue they neede not feare,
As farre as doth their
Hemisphere extend,
They view the sea, but see no shipping neare,
Which makes the King salute him as a frend,
And aske the reason of his landing there,
Saturne replies: Behold poore strangers throwne,
To vnknowne people, on a Land vnknowne.
18
Yet would you haue his Countrey, Nation, name,
That knowes not on whose earth his bold feet tread,
Nor with what breath he may his stile proclaime,
From his owne Natiue ayre so farre being fled:
If you perhaps haue relisht
Saturnes fame,
Whose glory liues, although his state be dead:
Then view that
Saturne with respectiue eies,
Whose far-spread beames set, at his sonnes vprise.
19
Saturne hath spoke enough, whose longing eares
Haue not bin fild and cloy'd with his renowne,
The Heauenly musicke of th'Harmonious spheares,
Climbe to his praise: by him the fields are sowne,
(The Archers shoot) and
Childing-Tellus beares,
In what remote climbe is not
Saturne knowne,
By him are seas past, heady ships contrould,
He first Tild, Ploud, Sowd, Reapt, and fined Gold.
20
He need not of his
Ominous wars possesse him,
Troos knowes his issues triumph, and his flight,
Inspir'd with supernaturall gifts they gesle him,
And hold themselues heauen fauoured in his sight:
He vowes in
Creet againe to r
[...]pollesle him,
Where
Ihoue vsurps gainst all paternall right,
After few daies in feasts and triumphs ended,
A puisant host is to his charge commended.
21
Of twenty thousand souldiers,
Troians all,
Commanded by the valiant
Ganimed,
Ganimeds warre against
Iupiter.
A better war-exployted Generall
Neuer appear'd in sight of Ersignes spred,
They passe the
Egeon seas (which men so call)
Of the Grand Thiefe
Egeon, he that fled
From
Iupiter, when all the
Tytans perisht,
Now on these Seas by murdrous Pyrats cherisht.
22
Saturne directs their landing, as best knowing
The safest harbors: and their army guided
Through many furlongs of his ancient sowing,
Neuer till his daies by the Plough diuided;
But as their host to
Creet is nearer growing,
With hope to take the
Cretans vnprouided,
King
Iupiter is by the skouts discride,
With many
Centaures that on horsebacke ride.
23
But not expecting any hostile power,
Or to beat backe inuaders, doth he gather
This puisant host, hee's for the brazen Tower
Where
Danae liues, coopt by her ruthlesse father,
But now that host the
Cretan soile must scoure,
Which amorous
Ihoue would haue conducted rather
To scale the brazen for
[...]sse, the darke skreene,
Twixt courtly freedome, and his cloistred Queene.
24
To this imployment the stout
Centaures came
Vnder
Ixions conduct, twice two hundred,
Who first deuis'd
Thessalian steeds to tame,
They seem'd at first, halfe horse, halfe man vnsundred,
[Page 113] At whose strange manage, and admired name,
(Vnknowne till now) th'amazed
Troians wondred,
The battailes ioyne, and both the hosts discouer,
About
Ihoues Tent, a Princely Eagle houer.
25
He takes it for an
Ominous signe of good,
The
Troians for some heauy sad presage,
By this, a thousand quarters swim in blood,
And from both sides the heated Champions rage,
In a deepe red they dy the neighbour flood,
Neuer did bolder spirits battaile wage,
The dying grone, the feare-confounded shrike,
The wounded bleeding fall, the standing strike.
26
The
Centaures boldly fight, the Prince of
Troy
Shines both in Armes and valour aboue all,
Hauing both Art and strength his steele to imploy,
And many halfe-dead limbes about him sprall,
The Combat twixt
I
[...]ne and
Ganimed.
To him
Ihoue makes, and is re-met with ioy,
On either part whole troopes before him fall,
So haue I seene two burning
Meteors fare,
Breaking through diuers clouds to tilt in th'aire,
27
Two fiery
Meteors I may call them right,
For they were both in gilded Armors laced,
And had they fought in a darke cloudy night,
With such rough blowes their shields and helmes they raced
And forcst from them such store of fiery light,
With steele encountring steele, and blowes well placed,
The two maine Armies might haue fought in view,
By the bright sparkes that from their Armors flew.
28
This Monomachy lasted not, for yonder
Comes
Saturne on the part of
Ganimed,
On th'other side, the hoofed
Centaures thunder,
And Character deepe halfe Moones where they tread,
By whom the Champions are inforst assunder,
And all confus'd that was in order led,
Thus in this tumult and disordered brall,
By scotes and hundreds they drop downe and fal.
29
Saturne assailes his sonne, but is refus'd,
He shuns th'vnnaturall combat with his Sire,
Amongst the
Troians he his Champions chus'd,
The Hostile stranger shall his worth admire,
Against whose Armies he such valour vs'd,
That force, p
[...]force, their vaward must retire:
Meane time Prince
Ganimed King
Saturne righting,
Alone, is midst a hundred
Centaures fighting.
30
Encountring
Eson, arm'd at euery peece,
Eson well mounted, gainst the
Troian ran,
This
Eson. sonne was after knowne in
Greece,
Iason.
Twas he that did the stately
Arges man,
And in his bold quest of the golden fleece,
With the rich Sheepe deepe speld
Medea wan,
Who after old, decrepit, weake, and hored,
Was by his daughter to his youth restored.
31
Him
Ganimed vnhorst, and in despight
Of the bold
Centaures mounted on his steed,
Prouing the manage of this vnknown fight,
And in the proofe mad
[...] many
Centaures bleed,
(But all in vaine) his troopes are put to flight,
Saturne is shrunke, and left him at his need,
And
[...]o ther ships in t
[...]oopes his sould
[...]s fled,
Whose shamefull steps, the Prince of force must tred.
32
The
Centaures and the
Cretan king pursue them
Vnto the Oceans Margent, and euen there,
Twixt Sea and shore, in countlesse heaps they slew them,
Such as escape, their course to
Troy-ward beare,
For
Saturnes men, the
Cretans cannot view them,
Another vnknowne tract (alas) they steare:
Whether the winds and waues their vessaile driue,
Twice driuen from
Creet (gainst heauen in vaine wee striue)
33
Iupiter and the
Centaures such ships take,
As should haue bin imploid for
Darraynes Tower,
And after
Ganimed to Sea they make,
Pursuing them to
Troy with all their power,
[Page 115] They Land at once, the fearefull
Troians quake,
Doubting if earth or sea, shall them deuoure,
Troos with an host discends, as one that guessed,
The Prince his sonne, was by his foes distressed.
34
The battaile is renewed, the king intends
To rescue sonne and Subiects in such state,
But (ouer valiant)
Ganimed extends
His valour beyond wisedome, all too late
The King of
Troy his puissant fury bends,
In rescue of his sonne, now in sad fate:
The
Cretans him surprize, and he being tane
Ganimede taken.
With this rich prize, they make to Sea againe.
35
Leaue
Troos and
Islion mated at this crosse,
The pride of
Troy is not to be re-won,
He ra
[...]s him much aboue his kingdomes losse,
And all
Dardania mourneth for his son,
How in the guard of those that from
Molesse
Came with
Ixion, and on horse-backe run,
Ioue giues command (being at Sea assured)
The Prisoners to be chear'd, the wounded cured.
36
And calling now to mind the Bird that soared
The first ensigne borne in Battell.
About his rich Pauillion, he ordained
Her picture should be drawne and quaintly skored,
Vpon a Crimson Ensigne richly stained,
Which since that fight, to all that
Mars adored,
As a perpetuall instance hath remained:
Till then, they bore no flags, no Scutchions drew,
Ioues Eagle was the first, in field that flew.
37
He now remembers
Danae, and commands
His Pylots to direct his waftage thether,
But what the king inioynes, the wind withstands
With boysterous gusts it foulds their sailes together,
And hurries them along by diuers Lands,
They beare their wandering course they ken not whether
Aegeon.
At length, they in the sea,
Aegean wander,
Of which, the Theefe
Aegeon was commander.
38
The blustring tempest hath diuorst their Fleet,
Only the Ship wherein the
Centaurs saile,
With
Ihoue and
Ganimed, the Pirats meet,
The rest were straide, and of their Voyage faile,
Yet some amongst the rest take land in
Creet,
Some bandied too and fro, by euery gale,
Yet all their barkes liue, none so neere to die,
As this the Pyrats from the shore discry.
39
Sixe Gallyes they disanker from the Isle
Cald
Desert, and their Barke incompasse round,
Ihoue and the
Centaurs arme them in smal while,
And al their Martiall notes to battel sound,
Which the bold
Troian hearing, gan to smile
In scornfull guise, to see his armes fast bound:
Oh when (quoth he) stood
Ganimed thus still
To heare the Martial musicke of
Kill, kill?
40
Is my opinion of knowne Armes so weake?
My name so poore, the
Centaurs scorne mine ayde?
Did we for this their maine Battallions breake?
And with our Armed breast their hoasts invade?
Why may I not in this case boldly speake?
Shal I stand still, to see my life betraide?
Although a Prisoner, yet this fauour show,
To guard mine Honor, gainst a common foe.
41
Not fighting against
Troy, we are a friend,
These Pyrats with your honors cou
[...] mine:
Oh let the King of
Cre
[...] such grace extend,
That by his side I may in Armour shine,
To see how wel I can my head defend:
Some desperate Act vnto my charge assigne:
They hale vs neere, our ship the Pirats boord,
For Honors sake, giue me my Armes and sword.
42
These words charme
Iupiter, and draw a vaile
Betwixt his hart and
Ganimeds disgraces,
The King relents, the
Princes words preuaile,
His bands he looseth, and with kind embraces
[Page 117] Sweares to him friendship that shall neuer faile,
Armd as they are, they take their pointed places,
Ihoue in the Prow, the
Centau
[...]s at his beck,
To face their foes, guirt round their vpmost decke.
43
Their golden Eagle is displaide: the Gallies
Grapple on euery side their hooked steele,
Some from the Beak-heads, some the wast make sallies,
But those the
Centaurs make like Drunkards reele,
And drop downe to the Sea, here no man dallies,
Some, with long pointed Irons bare their Keele
To sinke them, others by the Ship sides crall,
The
Centaurs lop their hands off, downe they fall.
44
Twice they are forst t'vngrapple and vnhooke
Their double chaynes: To this I may compare,
Sir Richard Greenvield.
Thy boording (valiant
Greenvild) thou didst brooke,
A hotter skirmish then the Pirats dare,
Who keeping one good Ship, skornst to be tooke
By a whole Fleet of
Spanish men a-warre,
Fighting till powder, shot, and men were wasted,
And these consum'd, euen til thine owne life lasted.
45
As often as they boorded thee, so oft
Brauely repulst, their sides bor'd through and through,
And three times with thy three Decks blowne aloft,
As high as heauen (what more could valor doe?)
Now thy proud Ship hath al her Ensignes doft,
Those sayles the Amorous winds with courtings wooe
To tinder burnt: thou profferd life despising,
Reuenge, one of Q. Elizab. ships Royall.
Leau'st thy (
Reuenge) euen with the waters rising.
46
The Gallyes fasten still: (a watchword giuen
By
Iupiter,) at once they headlong skip
(Dispearst) into such vessels as were driuen
Within their teach, and leaue their
Cretan Ship,
Now many a Pirats skull is bruis'd and riuen,
Some heau'd ore boord, some softly slip
Into the sea for feare, their liues to smother,
So, by auoyding one death, seeke another.
47
Th'vndaunted Gyant-Theefe-Egeon now
Kens
Iupiter, him
Iupiter espies,
And facing him in his owne Gallies prow,
Thus with vndaunted language he defies:
Behold thy fate, see
Ihoue thy ruyne vow,
Whom thou by Coward-ods sought to surprise,
Thou, that by land my ruthlesse fury fled,
Shalt now by Sea be forst t'abide me dead.
48
I am the sonne of
Saturne, by whom fell,
Tytan, with al the Earth-bred Gyant seed,
Thy Sire and brothers I haue sent to Hell,
and thy destruction I haue next decreed:
At this, th'inflam'd
Egeon gan to swel,
Rage makes his language lagge, his fury speed:
Action proceeds his words, before he spake,
With his huge
Axe vpon
Ihoues helme he strake.
49
The blow was put to loane, while they two striue,
Prince
Ganimed hath al the Gally cleared,
and mongst them all he leaues not one aliue,
Saue the graund-theefe, who now not to be feared
Ihoue hath subdude, and gins his legges to gyeue,
Since in the Gyants rescue none appeared,
Bulke, hands, legs, thighes, the
Prince at once inuirons
Egeon
[...]nrprised.
and leads him with an hundred chaynes of Iron.
50
In these the harmlesse Trauellers he bound,
(Now his owne plague) they that suruiue are fled,
and on the Seas disperst, now doth
Ihoue ground
His loue vpon his new friend
Ganimed,
He enters his owne ships and wanders round
The spacious Vast, where wind and waters led,
Crossing both
Torrid and the frozen lines,
By this the
Sunne had compast all the
Signes.
51
The
Ramme of
Helles, and
Europaes Bull,
Castor and
Pollux, Cancers burning Signe,
The 12. Celestiall Sign
[...].
Th'
Herculean Lyon, and the
Virgin-Trull,
The skale of
Iustice, and the
Scorpions line,
[Page 119]
Chyron the
Centaur, with the horned skull
Of watry
Capricorne, next whom doth shine
The
Troian lad, that from his lauer powres,
Last the two
Fishes drilling Southern showres.
52
And at the yeares end taking land in
Creet,
After his tedious progresse on the streame,
Queene
Iuno welcoms him with kisses sweet,
His subiects kneele to him as their supreame,
Fiue hundred Steeds presenting at his seet,
But he whose thoughts harpe on another theame,
Prisons
Aegeon, Ganimed sets free,
And in his grace (saue
Iuno) who but he?
53
But
Iuno, when his mind on
Danae ran,
Shewd like a
Crow vnto a siluer
Doue,
Rose to a
Black-berry, Rauen to a
Swan,
It makes him mad he cannot ayde his Loue,
Twelue Moones are fild and waind, since haplesse man
The day expir'd, he should his valour proue,
And now (though late) hee'l try his best endeuour,
To fetch her thence (for better late than neuer,)
54
But loe, amidst his hosti
[...]e preparation,
The rest of the history of Danae
By chance a Lord of
Arges rode that way,
Who, knowne to be a stranger of that Nation,
The King demaunds of
Danae, to bewray
What he hath heard: he gins a sad Oration
Which doth the
Princes hoast from waftage stay,
In what remote Clime, if by Rumor blowne,
(Quoth th'
Arges Lord) was not bright
Danae known?
55
When she was
Danae, and whilst
Darrain Tower
Inclos'd earths-Beauty in her brazen hold,
But now shee's cropt, and that sweet smelling flower
Is vaded quite and withered, wrapt in mould:
The King at this lost all his vitall power,
His bloud forsakes his hart, his braine growes cold,
His thoughts confuse, his soule within him bleeds,
When th'
Arges Lord of
Danae thus proceeds.
56
Of the Tower,
Darrains strength,
Acrisius guard,
Within how many gates of brasse inclosed,
Of their
nocturnall watch,
Diurnall warde,
Twixt man and her, what strong bars enterposed
To keepe her chast, what deafe man hath not heard:
Yet al these locks are with those bolts vnlosed:
Oh heauens! what mortall wit? what humane skil
Can keepe a woman chast, against her wil?
57
Thou gealous foole, why dost thou gayle thy wife?
When
Darrains strong Tower cannot loue expel?
The fruits of Gelousie.
Better thou hadst to graunt her a free life,
If she be honest, she wil guide it well:
If otherwise adicted, vaine is strife
Though in the circuit of Brasse walles she dwel,
Inmure her body fast as thou canst thinke,
Shee'l make thee Cuckold, bee't but through a chinke.
58
Perhaps her body in strict bonds thou hast,
Yet canst thou not the thoughts within her stay:
Not she that dares not sinne, is counted chast,
Not she thats matcht, and cannot step astray:
Not she that feares, is mongst the vertuous placst:
"Alone shee's Chast, that will not, though she may:
Their Natures are, to couet things demde,
And in forbidden pathes to tread aside.
59
Oft haue I seene a Steed would keepe no Tract,
But fling, and bound, when he was too much raynde,
But when he felt his curbe and bridle slackt,
Play with the Byt, that he so much disdaind,
And so that Steed by gentle meanes is backt
Which brookes no Ryder, being much constraind,
So doth a sicke man stil, though he be chid,
Most couet, what the Doctors most forbid.
60
Had
Danae mongst a thousand suters playd
And reueld in her Fathers pallace, then
I doubt not but she still had beene a mayd
And (as she did before) despised men:
[Page 101] Her ruthlesse Father her fresh youth betraid,
When he inclos'd her in her brazen den:
Though thousand gates and doores her beuty smother
Loue breakes through al, to make the maide a mother.
61
Her time expires, her father spies her great,
And threats the Beldams to consuming fire;
New Guardiens are appointed in this heat,
Acrisu
[...] doth by sundry meanes inquire
Of her, and of her guard, by no intreat
Or forced torment, made to glut his ire:
Will they confesse, the Ladies all dare sweare,
(Sa
[...]th' vnsuspected Pedler) none came there.
62
Nor will bright
Danae yet disclose her shame,
Vntill the long lamented houre draw neare,
Nine Moones o'repast, her houre of Childing came,
Deniall bootes not, when such signes appeare;
And now gainst
Cretan Ihoue shee gins t'exclaime,
And gainst all them that will themselues forsweare:
The birth of Perseus.
A childe is borne, the Lad she
Perseus names,
Cleares all her maids, and on her selfe exclaimes.
63
Th'offended King hath doom'd them both to die,
And (being inexorable) that doome stands;
The Seas they in a mastlesse boat must try,
Where both th'Imperious wind and waue commands,
The pitteous Mar
[...]ers themselues apply
To their vnwilling taske: In their loth hands
They
Perseus take, and the faire
Danae guide,
To tast the mercy of the rigorous tide.
64
The
Argiue Lord heere sighes, but heere
Ihoue rages,
Threatning
Acrisius, cursing his delay,
But
Ganimed at length his spleene asswages,
And aymes his threatned thoughts another way,
Hauing lost
Danae quite, he now ingages
His loue to
Iuno, and beside her lay,
Of whom he got a sonne; In small time after,
From his Aunt
Ceres he deriu'd a daughter.
65
None comes amisse to him, stranger nor kin,
Of his owne Nation, or of climes remote,
His daughter
Venus tels him tis no sin
For men to practise dalliance where they dote,
Prince
Ganimed that long in grace had bin,
And did this loosenesse in his Hauior note,
Demanded how he could his thoughts deuide,
To loue so many, thus the King repli'de:
66
I will not in my owne vaine errors stand,
Nor boldly that (which some condemne) maintaine,
The fault is great, if it bee truely scand,
I knew it bad, but can it not refraine;
For mad-man like I striue to plow the sand,
In seeking my free humor to restraine:
I burne, and seeking ease, run to the fire,
I loath my fault, and yet my guilt desire.
67
I want the power to gouerne mine owne will,
My head-strong appetite beares all the sway,
I know my waies losse, yet I wander still,
I see the path, and yet I turne astray:
Thus like a Ship misguided without skill,
Whom a stiffe violent Tempest beares away,
To wracke it on some Rocke or shallow sounds,
I am transported quite beyond my bounds.
68
I loue, but yet I know not in what fashion,
I loue a thousand, for a thousand reasons,
My mouing thoughts abide in no firme station;
My hart is subiect to my blind thoughts Treasons,
For euery sundry Lasse I enter passion,
And am of loue prouided at all seasons:
That wench is modest! oh shees in my Bookes,
I onely loue her for her modest lookes.
69
Yon lasse is bold, (see, see) my heart she easeth,
I like her, shees not like a Milke-sop bred,
And straight this thought my apprchension seyseth,
She will be much more plyant in the bed,
[Page 103] This is a Shrew: her sharpenesse my soule pleaseth,
Because no sheepe, I would the Damsell wed;
And in that thought I skale her amorous fort,
Sharpe Noses are all Shrewes, yet apt for sport.
70
Is she a Scholler? Then her Art delights me:
Is she a Dunce? Her simplenesse contents me:
Doth she applaud my loue? Her praise incites me:
Or discommend me? Yet she represents me
With matter of new loue: Admit she spights me,
I loue her: for her spight no whit torments me;
For though her words be rough, smooth is her skin,
What in the first I loose, the last, I win.
71
Hath she a tripping gate? Her short steps moue me,
And in her quicker motion I take Pride:
Takes she large steps in going? As you loue me
Let me haue her, I like her for her stride:
Sings she? I am inchanted, let her proue me,
I on her lips can quauer and deuide:
Is she vnwe
[...]ldy? Yet my hart she charmes,
And may be much more actiue in my armes.
72
Her I affect, she is so sweet a Singer,
And I loue her, though she can tune no note:
She playes vpon the Lute, that n
[...]mble finger
Would please me better in a place remote:
Yo
[...] dances; I affect a lusty springer,
And on such capting legges who could not dote.
This cannot dance; yet when she lies in bed,
She will find Art to haue thy fancies fed.
73
All things Inchant me that these Ladies do,
And in my frozen breast bright bon-fires make;
Thou art a
Bona-roba, and I wo
Thee for thy bredth and length: thy Stature sake:
Thou art a little Lasse, I like thee too,
And were I sleepy thou wouldst keepe me wake:
Not one can come amisse, I can find sport,
Both with the fat and leane, the long and short.
74
You Lady manners wants, I straight suppose,
Would she learne Court-ship, how it would beseem her:
This court-ship hath, and I must needs disclose
What loue I for her manners can bet
[...]me her,
That hath a whitely face, and a long nose,
And for them both I wondcrous well esteeme her:
This the greene sicknesse hath, I long to proue her,
This lookes not greene, but black, I therfore loue her
75
Is her haire browne? So louely
Ladaes was,
Browne trameld lockes best grace, the brightest hew:
Are her lockes yellow? Such
Auroraes glasse,
Presents in her attyring to her view:
Is haite orient bright? It doth surpasse,
If Chesnu
[...] coloured? Such do I pursue:
My eies still aime at beauties rare perfections,
and I all colours loue, and all complexions.
76
My loue can fit it selfe to euery story,
I loue a young girle, and a woman staid,
Her fresh yeares please me, and I should be sorry
To loose her youth: who would not loue a Maid,
anothers lookes are Matron-like, I glory
In her: and I her person must inuade:
To end as many as the world can hold,
M'ambitious loue likes, be they young or old.
77
Now to proceed of
Danae and her sonne,
Long tost vpon the Oceans ruthlesse streames,
at length her barke th'
Apulian shores hath won,
about the houre when
Phoebus dons his beame,
and to ascend the Easterne hill begun,
When she new wakt out of her horrid dreames:
Her selfe halfe dead with cold, her Babe neare frozen,
Finds that her barke hath a faire harbor chosen.
78
Which a poore
Naples Fisherman espying,
Kenning a Barke that had nor Oare nor saile,
He leaues the nets that on the shore were drying,
and puts to Sea the mastlesse boat to hale,
[Page 125] Which boording on the bare plankes, he sees lying
A beautious Goddesse, couer'd with a vaile,
And on her knee a babe, or dead, or sleeping,
To which she sange not, but was softly weeping.
79
It mou'd the poore man to behold her teares,
He sees th'extremity they both are in,
Her sailesse boat vnto the Land he steares,
And her young infant that was bare and thin
A wraps in his Capootch, and softly beares
Vnto his cottage, where no Prince hath bin,
He makes a chearefull Fire, and in a while,
The halfe-staru'd babe doth on his mother smile.
80
And being refresht with what the Cottage lent,
Their Natiue beauties repossest their faces,
Whose rarenesse the poore man admiring; went
To acquaint the King with one so full of graces,
Who sends for her to Court incontinent,
And hauing seene her beauty
Danae places,
In his throne Royall, swearing by his life,
The bounteous seas haue sent him this rare wife.
81
This King
Pelonnus hight, who gently praies,
To acquaint him with her birth and fortunes past,
The blushing Dame her modest eye gan raise,
And to his faire demaund replies at last,
She tels him she hath spent her youthfull dayes
In
Arges: next how she to Sea was cast:
Of
Darraines Tower, of her vntimely fate;
Of
Iupiters forg'd loue,
Acrisius hate.
82
Discoursing orderly the sum of all,
At which the King oft wept, her fortunes ruing,
blaming the cause of her vntimely fall,
At euery
Inter-medium loue renewing,
He thinkes
Acrisius hate too great: too small
Pelonnus ma rieth Danac & begat Danaus.
[...]houes loue, that left such beautie for pursuing,
he wooes, she yeelds, that did the King besot,
And married,
Danaus is betweene them got.
83
Of whom and of young
Perseus forbeare,
To speake of
Saturne through the world notorious,
And
Iupiter subduing Climats ncare,
As
Cecill, Lemnos, Cipres (stil victorious)
Piercing large
Italy, and welcom'd there
By
Ianus, for mongst Kings his stile was glorious,
This
Ianus byfrons was of auncient name,
Of him our
Ianuary tooke first name.
Iaunary.
84
Ianus tels
Ihoue King
Saturne dwels them by,
Teaching rude Nations Tillage, there vnknowne
And held in reuerence, for the Princes nie
Receiue his exilde people as their owne,
He shewes him plowes, teemes, yokes and harrowes lie,
And fields of ripened graine, already growne:
This King at length brought
Saturne to
Ihoues view,
[...] & I
[...]piter accord.
And by his meanes, attonement twixt them grew.
85
The good old
Ianus in
Taurentum raignde,
So did
Euander in Mount
Auentine,
Ianus E
[...]der.
Since one of
Roomes seauen hils, and proudly nam'd
By these King
Italus of auncient line,
This
Italus from
Ciracuse constraind
Italus.
Built the great Citty
Albe, by which shine
Bright
Tyber Streames, al these at once desire,
Peace and accord betweene the sonne and Syrc.
86
Saturne surrenders
Creet, hauing erected
A Citty, where
Roomes Capitoll now stands,
And a chast Virgin to his wife elected,
Saturns second m
[...]are.
Philicis cald, colleagued in nuptiall bands,
Of whom he
Picus got,
Picus protected
That Citty after
Saturne, and commands
The Realme adiacent,
Faunus was his sonne,
and from this
Faunus did
Latinus come.
87
The Poets make this
Faunus for his care
O're husbandry, the auncient Sire and Father
Of all the Rural-gods: His Queene was fayre
And
Fatua hight, who would haue bedded rather
[Page 127] With
Hercules suppos'd
Amphitrites heire,
But our dispersed story we must gather,
And of
Nicostrate, wife to
Euander,
A little speake, before too farre we wander.
88
Who dotes on
Iupiter, and laught him charmes,
With
Negromanticke Charracters, in which
He expert growes, and hauing left off armes,
Studies the blacke spels of this sorcering Witch,
Abandons horrid sound of shrill alarmes,
Now onely labours to be wise and rich,
And leaues the
Iatian Kings, where long he staid,
After the league twixt him and
Saturne made.
89
To
Ce
[...]t returning, where Queene
Iun
[...] was
The birth of Vulcan and Proserpine.
Deliuered of a foule mishapen Lad,
Cald
Vulcan, Ceres of a louely Lasse,
Hight
Proserpine: the enuious Queene growes sad,
To see her Aunts child in bright lookes surpasse
Hers in deformed foulenesse:
Ihoue's more glad
Of
Proserpine then
Vulcan, which espide,
The iealous Queene doth with her husband chide.
90
She chafes, he laughes, she blames his wanton ryat,
He giues her liberall scandall a deafe eare,
She counts her selfe food to suffice his diat,
and tels of all his scapes, how, when, and where,
That he is forst to keepe his Queene in quiat,
To marry
Ceres to a great Lord there,
With whom he gaue t'augment his name and power
Sicill and
Syracusa for her dower.
91
To
Vulcan he the Isle of
Lemnos gaue,
To be instructed in his
Geomancy,
In the deepe bowels of the earth to raue,
To learne the force of fire in
Pyromancy,
Taught by
Beroutes, and
Piragma graue,
The third
Sceropes red him
Negromancy,
Himselfe the God of Smiths,
Lemnos his seat,
Where these three
Cyclops on his Anuiles beat:
92
And frame
Ihoues trisulck thunders, some dcuine
Lame
Vulcan in his birth was straight and faire,
And being in
Ihoues lap where Planets shine
How Vulcan became lame.
And stars like golden studs sticke round his chaire,
The Mansion of the Gods, th'heauens Christaline,
Dandling his smiling babe, he spies the ayre
Al in guilt flames, earth burne, the Meteors drinke
The boyling Seas, and heauens huge Collumes shrink.
93
For
Phaeton had set the world on fire,
At which
Ihoue rising from his throne in hast,
To thunder-strike the youth that durst aspire,
Downe drops his sonne towards earth, and falling, past
Through al the Planets, by
Apollo hier
Then al the rest, So by the Moone at last,
Twixt heauen and earth, who can describe the way?
When he was falling a long Summers day.
94
He lights in
Lemnos, nor can
Vulcan die
By this occase, being borne of heauenly seed,
Though on the earth amaz'd the infant lie
He breaths at last, (so haue the Fates decreed)
Of
Vulcans craft, and how he did affie
Venus (Loues Queene) how
Mars did twixt them breed
Strife and dissention: how the winged boy
Was borne, belongs notto the tale of
Troy.
95
Yet that I may not slightly let them passe,
Without some smal remembrance of my pen,
Whose history so oft recorded was,
By auncient Poets, hie-renowned men,
To Thracian
Mars, and the bright
Paphian Lasse
A little space we must looke backe agen;
And speake how she her bridal bed did blot,
The very night yong
Cupid was begot.
96
When
Mars and
Venus made appoint to meet,
And to that end a priuate Conclaue found,
To dally out the howers in kisses sweet,
And sports in which the loues-Queene did abound,
[Page 109] That no sly tell-tales should their pastimes greet,
The obscure Caue they first perused round,
To shunne disturbance til their game was done,
Iealous of all: but fearing most the
Sunne.
97
Knowing his searching eye is prying still
Through euery Casement, loope-hoole, chinke, or crany,
Therefore to blind him they must vse their skill,
The blabbing
Phaebus they dread most of any:
A noble youth on
Mars attended still,
Whose secresie he had prefer'd 'boue many:
Gallus they call him, whom God
Mars wil haue
To watch the
Sunne at th'entrance of the Caue.
98
The Louers enter,
Gallus stayes behind,
All the night long his eye-lids neuer close,
But towards the
Dawne, dul sleepes his sences bind
In their soft chaines: his powers to rest dispose;
He neither feares Fawnes, Nimphs, stars, moon, or wind,
Nor any other eye: the
Sunne God rose,
And in his mounting through th'
Olimpick sky,
He that sees all things, did the Louers
spy.
99
The Tel-tale
Sunne straight to the Smith discouers
Th'adulterate practise of this amorous payre,
Who straight deuis'd a net to catch the louers;
Meane time
Mars wakes, sees
Venus lye all bare,
(Both ouer-slept themselues) for
Phaebus houers
Ouer their caue, and in his face doth stare:
Th'astonisht War-god knowes not what to thinke,
Seeing the
Sunne stil peeping through a chinke.
100
Th'astonisht God first gently
Venus wakes,
Who blusht to thinke the
Sunne their stealth had spide,
Then by the curled lockes he
Gallus takes,
And thus he saies; Since then we are descride
By thy default, behold (poore
Gallus quakes
Before his sentence, and his face would hide)
be thou transformd, thou that hast wrought our shame
Vnto a bird, that stil shal beare thy name.
101
This new made Bird (the
Cocke in shape translated)
Yet in his hart his ancient thoughts retaines,
For euery morne the
Sunne by him is rated;
He by his crowing to God
Mars complaines,
Before the
Sunne is in his chaire instated,
Or in his hand takes the Celestiall raines,
He gainst his sides still with his wings, is drumming,
And tels to all the world the
Sunne is comming.
102
Of
Perseus next, and of the
Gorgon slaine,
And of
Acrisius, by young
Danaus ayde
Restor'd to
Arges, and the Tower
Darraine,
And of
Andromede the louely maid
My muse sings next: In
Hespery cal'd
Spaine,
Porcus (suppos'd a Sea-god) often preyd
On harmelesse Strangers, who their voyage bore
Along by
Spaine, vpon
th'Hesperian shore.
103
This
Porcus three sweet daughters leaues:
Medusa,
Euriale, and
Scennio, their names;
The Gorgons.
All faire at first: the glorious eye of day
Saw neuer three more bright and stately dames,
These did the spacious
Dorcad Islands sway:
The eldest gainst
Mynerua warre proclaimes,
At which the Goddesse high displeasance takes,
And turnes their golden heires to crawling snakes.
104
She leaues them all no more saue one broad eye,
Plac'st in
Medusaes forehead, and to shine
Like sulphure, whose Aspect infects the sky,
Parches the grasse, and blasts both Rose and Spine,
It hath the
Basiliskes true property,
To kill farre off, her head is Serpentine:
And by the pest, that on her fore-head burnes,
All that behold her face, to stones she turnes.
105
About her Pallace thousand pictures stand,
Once men, now Images of sencelesse stone;
Of all that in the
Dorcad Islands Land,
If by these
Gorgons seene suruiues not one:
her poysonous eye-ball hath trans-form'd alone:
armies of men haue compast her at ones,
Armies of men her eie hath turnd to stones.
106
Throughout her kingdome you may people see
Disperst and taking stands in sundry places,
But neither moue hand, arme, head, foot, or knee,
For they haue stony limbes and Marble faces,
That oft-times Trauellors deceiued be,
To see dead stones retaine such liuely graces:
Some asking them the climate, some the way,
Others to know th'vncertaine time of day.
107
Nay sometimes quarrels haue betwixt them growne,
Receiuing to their answeres no reply,
one angry fellow drawes vpon a stone,
And sweares deepe Oaths hee'l make it speake or die,
others more patient yet displeas'd are gone,
And say they skill no points of honesty:
Nor wonder if these strangers so mistooke,
When euery dead face had a liuing looke.
108
Heare one was going, and in going spide
By Adder-haird
Medusa, and so stayes,
Euen as one legge did fore another stride,
and as his hindmost heele he gan to raise
To draw it after, both his legges abide
Fixt to the earth, his armes beside him playes:
his body forward bends, the picture showing,
The shape of one on earnest businesse going.
109
Another digging as the Queene came by,
Stoopes stil with one Hand boue the other placst,
The right foot fixt, the left aduanced hie
To driue the dull Spade in, another facst
the Gorgon-monster, as his loue past by,
Who spreads his amorous armes t'infould her wast:
and smiling in her face, his Image stands,
Laughing with halfe-shut eyes, & broad-spread hands.
110
Heere stands a Fisher by the waters brinke,
The Angle-hand stretcht forward to the ri
[...]er,
And there a Sheapheard heau'd his hands to drinke
On his blacke bottle, both his lips vnseuer,
His head bends backe, legs stride, and you would thinke
He dranke still, but this draught must last for euer:
His bottles gone, stil stands he strangely faring,
Hands heau'd, necke bent, mouth yawning, eies broad staring.
111
Of Marble Statuës many thousands more,
In Field, Groues, orchards, High-waies, houses, streets,
Some naked, others in the robes they wore,
So hardly doth she deale with al she meets,
This man she takes conferring, but before
He can conclude his tale, his spirit fleets:
Some she finds chafing, laughing, striking, riding,
Al
[...]urn'd to stones in selfe-same shape abiding.
112
I feare my pen hath with
Medusa met,
For on the sodaine it growes stiffe and dull,
And cannot now defray my promist debt,
And with the
Gorgons staine this Margent full,
Heere therefore this daies iourney shall be set,
And blame me not, if my tyr'd hand I pull
From his
Diurnal task, at our next view,
I bring him on this stage, that
Gorgon slew.
IXyon was King of
Thessaly, who being by
Iupiter taken vp into Heauen, and comforted of certaines griefes there, fell in loue with
Iuno, which
Iupiter perceiuing, deceiued him with a cloud, made in the likenesse of
Iuno, of which
Ixion begat the
Centaurs: After adiudged by the Destinies to be tortured with the wheele in hell.
I hold
Ganimed rather surprized by
Iupiter in battaile, then as some write to be stolne by him as his minion, & after this rape made his Cup-bearer.
Apulia where
Danae was cast vpon the shore, is now a part of
Italy bordering vpon the
Adriaticke sea.
[Page 113]
Vulcan was
Iupiters Smith, an excellent workeman, on whō the Poets Father many rare workes, among which, I find one, not vnnecessary to be remembred, which
Ouid speaks of, and I thus English.
This Tale is blaz'd through heauen, how once vnware
Venus and
Mars were tooke in
Vulcans snare:
Mars & Venus.
The God of Warre doth in his brow discouer
The perfect and true patterne of a Louer:
Nor could the Goddesse
Venus be so crewell
To deny
Mars: (soft kindnesse is a Iewell
In any woman, and becomes her well)
In this the Queene of loue doth most excell:
(Oh heauen) how often haue they mockt and flouted
The Smiths polt-foote (whilst nothing he misdoubted)
Made Iests of him and his begrimed trade,
And his smoog'd visage, blacke with Cole-dust made:
Mars, tickled with lowd laughter, when he saw
Venus like
Vulcan limpe, to halt and draw
One foot behind another, with sweet grace
To counterfet his lame vneeuen pace.
Their meetings first the Louers hide with fear,
From euery iealons eye, and captious eare.
The God of Warre and Loues lasciuious dame,
In publicke view were full of bashfull shame;
But the
Sunne spies how this sweet paire agree,
(Oh what bright
Phoebus can be hid from thee?)
The
Sun both sees and blabs the sight, forthwith,
And in all post he speeds to tell the Smith:
(Oh
Sunne) what bad examples doest thou show?
What thou in secret seest, must all men know?
For silence, aske a bribe from her faire treasure,
Shee'le grant thee that shall make thee swell with pleasure.
The God whose face is smoog'd with smoke and fiar,
Placeth about their bed a net of Wiar
So quaintly made, that it deceiues the eye
Straight (as he feignes) to
Lemnos he must hie,
The Louers meet, where he the traine hath set,
And both lie fast catcht in a wiery net:
He cals the Gods, the louers naked sprall
And cannot rise, the Queene of Loue shewes all:
Mars chafes,
and Venus weepes, neither can flinch,
[Page 114] Grappled they lie, in vaine they kicke and winch:
Their legs are one within another tide,
Their hands so fast that they can nothing hide:
Amongst these high Spectators, one by chance
That saw them naked in this pitfall dance:
Thus to himselfe said: If it tedious be
Good God of warre, bestow thy place on me.
Of the Gorgons, because there are many opinions, we wil a little insist vpon their particuler discouery. Of them there is a
Hesiodus in Theogon. double; kind some hairy, some bald, yet al born of
Phorcus &
Cetus. These three Sisters had but one common eye, and one
Aeschilus in
[...]. common tooth to feed with. The
Latines call them
Lamiae, à gutteris amplitudine, which
Lamia some thinke to bee the
[...] in Phoricis. daughter of
Neptune, and the first Prophetesse, cald
Sibilla among the
Aphrians. They were also cald
Pemphrado Prito
Athen. Apollodor. lib, 2. and
Dino, to whom some haue likewise added
Iaeno, whose name both
Aeschilus and
Hesiod in their workes remember.
Melanthes lib, de mysterijs. They were cald
Greae, and liue in the vtmost Islands of
Iberia
Apollod. Menander lib, de mysterijs. towards the West. Some likewise number
Silla amongest the
Gorgons; Others describe them not with snaky lockes, but
Nimphodorus Theopompus. Poleme. heads of
Dragons and
Girdles (about their wasts) of
Vipers. All concluding in this, that their sight was immediat death, which
Aeschilus signified in this.
Sunt tres sorores his volucres non procul
Serpentibus dir
[...]sque comptae Gorgones
Quas intuens nemo diu spirauerit.
The Beast
Nomades in
Libia hath likewise the name of Gor-gon,
Alexander, M
[...]dius lib,
[...]
[...]. somewhat resembling a sheep, which others describe more like a Sea-calfe, It is said this monster by the infection of his eyes kils what beast soeuer he meets. His hair couers his brows. Many of
Marius Souldiers marching against
Iugurth, followed
[...], 2 this beast, mistaking him for a sheepe, and presentlie fell down dead: by these
Greae, Phorci, these Gorgons & mōsters of the sea, is vnderstood nothing else but that knowledge and wisedome, which is acquired by experience, to purchase which it behoued
Perseus to vse the aid of
Pallas, the helme of
Pluto, and the sword of
Mercury, by vertue of which, he subdude those monsters. Which the Poets haue amongst others thrust into hell.
Centauri in foris stabulant,
[...]; biformes.
Et centum geminus Briareus, ac belua Lernae
Virgil.
Hor
[...]ndum stridens, flammis
(que) armata chimaera
Gorgones Harpiae
(que) & forma tricorporis vmbrae.
Argumentum
PErseus the
Gorgon kils, then takes his way
To
Ioppen, on his flying horse alone,
Destroyes the Monster, frees
Andromeda,
Acrisius saues, turnes
Atlas into stone:
King
Pricus Wife, the beauteous
Aurai
Doates on the valiant Knight
Bellerephon:
The
Troians are with fearfull pests annoyde,
By
Hercules, great
Troy is first destroyde.
ARG. 2.
IN Zeta Phineus fals,
Chimer is slaine,
Dis acts his rape: Queene
Ceres doth complain.
1
MInerua, thou that hadst the power to make
Monsters of them, that thy high Name despise,
To turne a golde-Wire to a crawling Snake,
And change the beauty of bewitching eyes,
The Patronage of all my labors take,
More sacred Names, thy God-hood may comprise
Religion, Vertue, Zeale, we may thee call,
Whose foes are vgly, and with Adders crall.
2
The three foule
Gorgons by thy power disguised,
Were
Lust insatiate,
Auarice and
Pride,
These Sisters in
Hisperia tyranised,
All looking with one eye, who can deuide
Their powers and Natures, being three comprised
Within one head, and Sisters neere allide,
All such as on their strength themselues assure,
Sencelesse of good, as stones they soone obdure.
3
Therefore to arme vs gainst this horrid fiend,
Behooues vs to implore
Myneruaes ayde,
Perseus bright shield vnto our arme to bind,
And then we boldly may such foes inuade,
His shield was Cristall, and so bright it shind,
Perseus
killeth the Gorgon.
1497
It dim'd the
Gorgons eye, and whilst she plaid
In darkenesse, and her killing sight forsooke,
Her monstrous head he from her shoulders strooke:
1466
4
About the time
Perseus the
Gorgon slew,
[...] lib.
3.
[...]. Theopompus lib
17. Pegasus.
Busyris gouern'd in
Egiptia,
Cadmus
rul'd Thebes:
to Komos France
was due,
Belochus
Emperor of Assyria,
Othoniall
Trumpets before Israel
blew,
Prince
Radamant raign'd King in
Lycia:
Tyrhenus Italy,
and Triton Spaine,
Whilst
Liber Pater all the East doth gaine.
5
The
Gorgons head with power to turne to stone,
Vpon his shield he fixt, and of the blood
That Issued from the wound, swift
Pegas shone,
And neigde out of the earth a Stallion good,
Whom
Perseus backt, and out of sight is gone,
Flying o're Mountaine, Valley, rocke, and flood,
From
Arctos vnto
Cancers burning tracke,
And from hot
Cancer to cold
Arctos backe.
6
In his high Airery progresse ouer all
The Prouinces and Clymes beneath him spreading,
Where ere the purple drops from
Gorgon fall,
Adders and Snakes are bred, the people treading
[Page 117] Their secure steps, see vgly Serpents crall,
Their venomous stings, and fearefull hisses dreading:
Affrique doth Snakes in most aboundance store,
Affrica most abounding with snakes.
Because he longest did o're
Affrique soare.
7
Yet whilst his venomous spoyles were bleeding new,
But leauing
Affrique, forward
Pegas flyes,
He now the
Raemme, now doth the
Fishes view,
And mounts and stoopes as the winds fall or rise:
At length he leaues the Orient to pursue,
The farre
Septemtrion keeping still the skies:
Till falling with
Hyperion in the West,
He with the day-tyrd
Phoebus couets rest.
8
And stooping with the Sunne into these Seas,
Where night by night he sleckes his fiery Carre,
And
Atlas of that Orchard keepes the keyes,
Atlas.
Where golden Apples in aboundance are;
Thus
Perseus greetes him: May your Highnesse please
To be my royall Host, who come from farre:
If greatnesse may my welcome more approoue,
Know thou in me receiuest the Sonne of
Ihoue.
9
If nouelty in strangers thou acquirest,
Behold, my flying steed and couered shield,
Hence groome (quoth
Atlas) thou hat rest desirest,
Lodge with the waking starres in the broad field,
To thee that to our Pallace thus aspirest,
We scorne all succour and reliefe to yeeld:
Thou com'st, as Prophets did long since reueale,
From
Hespery my golden fruit to steale.
10
One of
Ihoues yssue our D
[...]uiners say,
Must perpetrate such theft, and thee I feare,
This prophesie had his end in Hercu les.
Thou lookst like one that aymes at golden pray,
And I my
Aurea Mala, hold so deere,
That I haue stopt vp each accessiue way:
Instead of pales, high mountaines their heads reare
About mine Orchard, by a Dragon kept,
A wakefull Mon
[...]ter, one that neuer slept.
11
With that he violent hands on
Perseus layes,
To beat him from his Pallace, but
Ihoues sonne
The Gorgon-sheild vnto the King displaies,
Atlas transformed.
Who instantly turnes to a hill of stone,
His haires and beard increase to Trees and sprayes,
His Bulke and Shoulders into hils are growne:
His head a Promontory top, o're-peering
The neighbour Rockes, and other Mountains neering.
12
His bones to stones, his bloud to Christall springs,
And by the Gods decrees he so increaseth,
And with his growth such height and vastnesse brings,
That heauens huge weight, the two strong poles releaseth
To rest them on his shoulders: the Larke sings
The Sun his earely note, the night surceaseth:
Acrisius Grand-child doth with
Phoebus rise,
And to his arme his shield
Gorgonian ties.
13
His hooked skeyne he fastens to his thigh,
So mongst the clouds on
Pegas backe he sores,
The Swaine below that filles his wandering eye,
Leaues off his labor, and the helpe implores
Of powers deuine, t'explaine this nouelty,
He passeth diuers Seas and sundry shores:
Euen to th'
Aethiopian Clime, and thence,
To where
Cepheus makes his residence.
14
There for her Mothers guilt,
Andromeda;
The tale of Perseus and Andromeda. 2589
By vniust
Hammon was condemnd to die,
Whom as yong
Perseus in his Ayery way,
Did from amongst the racking clouds espy,
1374
Saue that the winds her golden haires display,
And drops of Pearle raine from her watry eye,
He had mistooke her, being chain'd alone,
For some faire Image of white Marble stone.
15
But when he saw no Marble was so white,
Nor Iuory to her skin to be compared,
He raines his winged Steed and staies his flight,
And greedily vpon her beauty stared,
[Page 119] To shake his flaggy wings forgetting quite;
He loues, and greeues to see how ill she fared,
And now his toong no longer he refrains,
But sayes: oh you, vnworthy these rude chains,
16
Much fitter for a louers kind embrace,
Tell me your stocke, your Nation, and your name,
And why such beauty should possesse this place?
Or for what crime into these bands you came?
Faine would the bashful girle haue hid her face,
Saue that her hands were bound: she blusht for shame:
Twice did he vrge her, she was silent still,
Yet the third time tels al, against her will.
17
How bright
Casseipe her beauteous Mother,
[...] in Perseide.
Knowing her daughter to be wonderous faire,
The pride her hart conceiued could not smother,
But with
Nereides must needs compare,
Aratus.
For which they
[...]l complaind to
Ihoues great Brother
Neptune, who with infection taints the ayre,
Nor can the pest cease, or the Towne be spared,
Til she there dy, that was with Nimphs compared.
18
But in the midst of her discourse, behold,
Ere she can end her lamentable tale,
A huge Sea-monster with his long traine rold
In curled knots, makes the poore Girle looke pale,
The frowning billowes are by him controld,
Bo
[...]e which h'aduanceth many a shelly skale:
She shreekes: her Sire and Mother, both dispaire,
The people with shrill out-cries pierce the ayre.
19
Which
Danaes sonne espying, thus he saies
Vnto the Queene and the lamenting King:
The time you see is short, the Monster staies
Assur'd destruction to yon maid to bring,
If then
Ihoues son his towring fames can raise,
And pierce yon huge Sea-Dragons skaly wing,
Destroy the Monster, and presetue her life,
Shal the bright Virgin be my troth-plight wife?
20
Who doubts, but the sad Parents soone agree?
They paw ne their honors to this sudden motion;
Phineus besides, the Maide doth promise free,
Resigning vp his right with much deuotion;
The Couenantsmade, and now from farre they see
The Whaly Monster beare a-brest the Ocean,
And driuing with his Fins whole Seas afore,
In making to the Virgin on the shore.
21
When suddenly young
Perseus mounts the skies,
His shadow danc'st vpon the siluer waues,
Which when the wrathfull Serpent did espy,
Against the idle shape he fumes and raues,
And as his drowned traine appeares on high
Aboue the brine, in which so oft he laues:
The dantlesse Prince, whose courage neuer failes,
Strikes with his Faulchion, fire out of his scales.
22
And as you see a towring Eagle, when
She spyes a speckled Serpent, soone her spangles
Vpon the greene brest of some Moorish Fen
Stoopes downe, and in the Dragons Crest intangles
Her talents: least his Iawes turning againe,
Ceaze her proud Sears, and whilst in vaine she wrangles
And threatens ruine to the princely Fowle,
She tires on euery knot and curled rowle.
23
So
Perseus sowses on the horrid Beast
He hewes and beats him, till he makes him reele,
Possessing still his backe, which much increast
The Monsters fury, such strange weight to feele,
Sometimes aboue the Sea he lifts his brest,
And
Perseus still pursues him with his steele,
Somtime beneath the blood-stain'd waues he shrinks,
The whilst his woūds like graues, whol billows drinks.
24
Whilst he the Sea, the Prince the Ayre supplies,
Waiting aloft to see the fiend appeare,
Whose yawning chaps aboue the Billowes rise,
Ready to swallow all the Confines neare,
[Page 121] Whom as the valiant Prince againe espyes,
He makes to him amaine, all voyde of feare:
And on his winged Steede against him tilts,
Shouing bright
Harpe vp euen to the hilts.
25
The wounded Whale casts from his hillish Iawes
Riuers of Waters, mixt with purple gore,
But from their force the wary Prince withdrawes,
And strikes behind, on both sides and before,
In many a place his shelly Armour flawes,
Still byting
Harpe, makes the Hell-hound rore:
And tyrd at length, the brutish Monster drownds,
In the blacke bloud that yssued from his wounds.
26
The God of Seas quak't at the frightfull sound
His Monster made: the Gods aboue looke pale,
The waters in the which his bulke lay drownd,
With feare shrunk from him: now the slaughterd whale
Receiues from
Perseus many an vnfelt wound,
Whom Keene-edged
Harpe pierst from head to tale:
The parents now clap hands: the Mayde reioyces,
The people lift to heauen their plausiue voyces.
27
And whilst the multitude their wondring eyes
Cast on the Monster,
Perseus raines his steede,
And from the Marble rocke the Mayde vntyes,
By his late valour from the Hell-
[...]ound sreede,
How can
Cepheus or his Queene
[...]enise,
Cepheus.
Or the bright Mayde to giue sufficient meede
To
Perseus for his merite, who desires,
With quicke dispatch to kindle
Hymens f
[...]es.
28
The yeere
Andromeda from death was freede,
Pheamone first in
Pythia propheside,
Cadmus found Letters: taught the
Greekes to reede:
[...].
Cecrops th'
Athenian Monarchy supplyde,
Rhomnus the
Spanish Scepter (in the weede
Pontificke.)
Ranses did through
Aegypt ride,
Achaio did
Achaya first instaure,
Now breath'd in
Creete, the two shapt Mynotaur.
29
The pallace is prepard, in euery place
Lowd Musicke sounds, the Bride is richly clad,
The Father his bold Sonne in Law to grace
Inuites the Neighbour Kings: but
Phineus mad,
From this high feast absents himselfe a space,
Till of his friends, great troops he gathered had,
To force the Virgine, freed on
Ioppens shore,
Now
Perseus Bride, though plight to him before.
30
Behold, the Pallace Court throngd with a crew,
Of men in Armour glistring: The loud sound
Of Nuptiall Musicke, through the Hall that flew,
With shrill confusions on the sudden drownd,
And still their showtes and cryes more violent grew,
Till all the Bridall guests, incompast round
With hostile fi
[...]dge, amazedly discend,
To know what foes their powers against th em bend.
31
With wrath vntam'd, the hurrying multitude
Rageth, and growes Impetuous: some cry, bring
That Stranger hether, whom we will exclude
From the fayre Court: some cry, lets haue the King:
Others the Bride: some mongst the rest more rude,
Say, come, the Pallace to the ground lets fling:
And whilst these seuerall clamors pierce their eares,
Proud
Phineus first, before them all appeares.
32
And shaking in his hand an Oaken Speare
Headed with Brasse: he thus bold
Perseus greets:
Behold, th'Auenger of my nuptiall Pheere,
Whom thou wouldst force. The Pallace Court & streets
Glister in armes, and canst thou hope to beare
Andromeda from hence, Him
Cepheus meets,
And as he was about his Speare to cast
At warlike
Perseus, Thus replyes at last.
33
Oh! what will
Phineus do? What hellish rage
Mads thee to mischiefe? Who begot this strife?
Is this for
Danaes Sonne sufficient wage,
Whose valor hath preserud my Daughters life?
[Page 123] Why doest not thou, thy loue with ours ingage,
For sauing her that should haue bin thy wife?
Whom not bold
Perseus but the Gods bereft thee,
The fates, and not the prince, hath wiuelesse left thee.
34
When she was married to the Marble rocke,
The fastning of those chaines thy bands vntide,
Wa'st not enough, thou borne of
Cepheus stocke,
Her husband and her Kinsman necre allide,
Saw'st all this people round about her flocke
To see the sea- Whale in his bowels hide
And bury her? Her freedome not pursuing,
Vnworthy thou didst leaue her to her ruine.
35
Is
Phineus sorry that she did not bleed,
That her Redeemer he pursues with ire?
Or if thou holdst her such a high-priz'd meed,
Why didst thou not her from the Rocke desire?
Or else, to him that hath my daughter freed,
Why dost not yeeld her?
Phineus eyes sparke fire:
Doubtfull at whom he shall his Iauelin fling,
His Riual
Perseus, or his Kinsman King.
36
The vprore like the raging sea increaseth,
Where thousand Rebels are by
Perseus slaine,
Till tyr'd with slaughter his tough arme surceaseth,
With multitudes of men to strow the plaine,
For not a daring souldier neere him preaseth,
But dies by
Harpe, and yet all in vaine
Such throngs of
Phineus friends his valor cumber,
That Noble vertue must needs yeeld to number.
37
Therefore the Prince his
Gorgon shield vncases,
And saies aloud (since you compell me) see,
Reuenge sufficient for my foule disgraces,
For where strength failes we must vse policy,
All that are
Perseus friends, turne hence their faces,
My foes all perish in their surquedree:
Fright Babes with Bug-beares, quoth the next that stands,
ayming a speare at
Perseus with both hands.
38
But as on Gorgons head he casts his eye,
His limbes grow stiffe, and he is changed to stone:
Another strikes the next that stands him by,
And pierst him through the brest, who now doth grone
His soule to Ayre: this done, he ment to fly,
But feeles his actiue spirits fled and gone:
His Marble arme hath lost his nimble speed,
To draw it from the bulke which he made bleed.
39
Behold a Prince borne by the seauen-fold
Nyle,
Crying to
Perseus thus: See here thy bane,
Be proud, that we who dallied all this while,
Will at the length vouchsafe thy blood to draine:
And as he spake such words, a scornefull smile
His visage casts, intending to haue slaine
The
Ihoue-star'd prince, his frozen Statue showes
Like one still smiling, and still threatning blowes.
40
What? Stand you at the
Gorgons sight amazed?
(Quoth Moble
Erix;) or hath Witchcrafts spell
Such power vpon the valiant, who haue blazed
Their armes in many conflicts, and fought well?
Lets see what deuill in this shape is raised,
Whom my steele-pollax cannot prostrate fell,
But in his pressing forward, he soone feeles
Cold leaden numbnesse gyue his sencelesse heeles.
41
Amongst the rest, one ofbold
Perseus crew,
Glancing his eye vpon his maisters shield
Turnd stone: him one of
Phineus souldiers knew,
And thought to cleaue him standing in the field,
But with the stroke fire from the Marble flew,
His fore-head sounded like a brazen shield;
At which the Souldier musing,
Gorgon spyes,
So stands transformd, with wonder in his eyes.
42
So that at last
Phineus repents his spleene
And vniust warre made for
Andromeda,
Two hundred of his traine his eye hath seene,
All Statuës: vnto some he cals (
Away)
[Page 123] Follow to some: Where liues that enuious teene,
With which you threatned
Perseus? Wherefore stay
Your paces from pursuite? Wheres the defying?
So claps them on the shoulders, Courage crying.
43
But when he felt their hardned limbs offend
His aking hand, and yeild it no impression,
And that their mockery shapes did idly bend
Their threatning armes, now finds he his transgression:
His penitent hands he doth to heauen extend,
Praying that they would ayd his intercession
To great
Acrisius Grand-childe, who strikes dead,
So many bold sprites with his
Gorgons head.
44
Now as with oblique paces, and his eies
Turnd from the conquering Prince, he kneeling, speakes;
Hoping t'appease him with submissiue cries,
The implacable Prince his rage thus wreakes,
Behold what doome the Impartiall Deities
Alot the wretch that Lawes of honor breakes:
So with his shiled
Gergonian him pursude,
Hardning the face which he behind him skrewd.
45
At th'instant his retorted necke waxt hard,
His spread Armes stiffe, his fixt eyes shewing feare,
And you would thinke his shape all sence debard,
Spake as it stood, words that a man might heare:
These tumults done, and
Hymens rights prepard,
The Prince intends another course to beare:
He takes his leaue, consorted with his Bride,
And to his Mother his swift steps applide.
46
In the Mid-way he youthfull
Danaus meets,
(His hopefull Brother) who at the first sight
Salutes him and his wife, with kind regreets,
In many a sweet discourse they spend that night:
At length the Murke and Palped darkenesse fleets
From the skies azurd forehead: with the light
The Princes rise, and speed them to the shore,
To which the mast-lesse boat their mother bore.
47
Now
Phrigian Mydas (famous for his eares,
In giuing
Apolloes honor to God
Pan,
And for his golden wish) the Scepter beares
Of
Phrigia: In
Israell that good man,
Samgor was Iudge, whose power so great appeares,
He of the
Philistyns kild many a man;
And in one battaile whilst the Trumpets blew,
VVith an Oxe-goade sixe hundred Heathen slew.
48
But in these passages great
Saturnes Sonne,
That with the
Troians was at broad hostility,
At
Ganimeds request, a league begun,
Now
Ihoue and
Troos are one: he whose ability
Could not defend his
Troy from being ore-run,
Now can commaund
Troyes foes with much facility:
So, to yeeld way, rebates the greatest stroake,
So, softest walles, hard bullets soonest choake.
49
T'wixt
England and great
Spaine, two potent Nations,
Like enmity, hath long time beene commenced,
The league twixt Englád and Spaine.
And whilst
Eliza liu'd, her proclamations
Oppos'd their pride, and her owne Prouince fenced,
But now with mutuall kind Congratulations,
All iniuries on both sides are dispensed,
And our great
Englands Ihoue for
Spaines best vse,
Hath at their suite, granted a termine Truce.
50
Troos yeelds his due to Nature, him succeeds
2856
Ilion his Sonne, who
Ilions high Towers reard,
1307
More famous for his buildings, then braue deeds,
A royall Prince, and more beloud then feard,
He for a present, sends foure milke-white Steedes
To
Cretan Ihoue (a Present much indeerd)
Who by the Knight that such a treasure brought,
Re-sends a pretious gold-branch quaintly wrought.
51
Much richer gifts in enterchange of state,
Our Soueraigne to the lofty
Spaniard gaue
The warlike Constable, who came of late
From
Hespery: a fiue yeares truce to craue:
[Page 125] More precious presents and of dearer rate,
The L. High Admiral Imb. for
Spaine.
Bare Englands Admirall: both rich and braue,
When from K.
Iames sent with a princely traine,
He was the great Embassador for
Spaine.
52
Ihoues branch (cald the
Palladium) the King plac'st
In
Pallas royall Temple, where it stood
Till
Troyes proud wals were quite deiect and rac'st,
And
Islions lofty Turrets swam in blood:
Great
Islion dies, and he that next him grac'st
The
Troian Crowne (a prince not all so good)
Laomedon, of whom vve heere vvill stay,
To beare the Sonnes of
Danae on their way.
53
Who as they past the desart, from a farre
They might espy a goodly Knight lie spread
Vpon the grasse, he seem'd a man of Warre,
For he was arm'd at all points (saue the head)
On his faire brow appear'd no souldier scarre,
It seemes he had not Armes long managed:
Exchanges past of many a kind salute,
Thus speaks the
[...]med Knight, whilft they stand mute.
54
Who hath not of the great
Acrisius hard?
Acrisius, hē that built the brazen Tower?
Novv
Arges King no longer, but debard
His nat
[...]e kingdome by his Brothers power,
His Brother
Pricus hath against him ward,
And all his glor
[...]s reft him in an hovver:
Stay there (quoth
Perseus) you haue toucht me neerly
Acrisius vvrongs, King
Pricus shall buy deerely.
54
Weare
Acrisius Grand-child, and discended
From beautious
Danae, and that fort of Brasse
That Lady Rumor hath so farre commended,
Who in Gold-liquid-showre-drops courted was;
Oh! vvhere vvas I
Acrisius, t'haue defended,
With
Pricus blood to haue staind the
Argiue grasse:
Both
Abas sonnes, a Prince frugall and thrifty,
He,
Linceus sonne, the sole remaine of fifty.
56
Is Brother-hood abroad so light esteemed,
That kingdomes can such holy knots vnty?
Let me no more
Ihoues Royall soone be deemed
But for
Acrisius wrongs, King
Pricus die,
He that in all the world austeerest seemed,
And stood vpon most points of honesty,
Hath prou'd the greatest Hypocrite: like those,
Without precise: within, religious foes.
57
Assist me Noble Knight in this aduenture,
(Quoth the great
Gorgon-tamer:) when replide
The armed stranger, by the firme Inde
[...]ture
Of honor, I am else-where bound to ride;
But if with me you will my voyage enter
And see what shall my Chiualry betide,
My Noble taske atchieu'd, I then wil lead you
To
Pricus, where my knowledge much may sted you.
58
When I the Triple-shapt
Chimere haue slaine,
Whose dreadfull forme makes all
Sicilia quake,
Bellerephon.
Bellerephon will then returne againe,
And your attempt gainst
Pricus vndertake:
The Princes wonder at
Chimeraes name,
And that one knight his desperate life should stake
Against such ods, asking what Imposition
Hath sent him on this dangerous expedition.
59
Or whether vncompeld he be so mad
To seeke assur'd destruction, and to scale
The Deuils den, where nothing can be had
But certain ruine, his tough skin is Male,
A terrible huge Lyons head (which drad)
A
Chieures body, and a
Serpents tale,
Him whose vast gorge whole armies cannot fill,
Why should one desperate Knight attempt to kill?
60
Bellerephon replies, by
Pricus doome,
K.
Pricus Brother to
Acris
[...].
Not my owne will I am compeld to go,
Else in my growing yeares that yet but bloome,
I'de flesh my sword on a more equall foe
Or kill the triple-Monster, dreaded so,
(Sayth
Perseus then) VVhat makes him so seuere?
Attend (quoth he) great Princes you shall heare.
61
Oh! Why did Nature frame these Women fayre?
Bellerephons
tale.
And make theyr outward features Angell-bright?
When their blacke insides staynd and spotted are,
With Lust, with Pride, Contempt, disdaine, & Spight?
Why should the snowy Swans in beauty
[...]re
Haue such blacke feet? Why should the Lilly white
Beare such ranke smel? Can men withstand their fates,
When golden vessailes bring in poysoned cates?
62
I thought I might haue gatherd a fresh Rose,
And not haue prick't my finger with a Thorne:
Or a sweete flower out of the Garden chose,
But not a Nettle in my hand haue worne:
Still, next the sweetest flower, the Nettle growes,
The rarest beauty hath the rudest scorne:
The Rouers Shippe beares the best promising sayles,
The foulest Serpents the most golden skales.
63
By a fayre Woman is my youth mispent,
My Innocent youth that neuer loue imbraced,
Her deuillish mind to mallice wholly bent,
My fortunes hath o're turnd, my Name disgraced,
And I, through her maleuol
[...]t entent
Like a poore exile from my Countrey chaced:
Oh woman! Made of Enuy, Pride, and Lustes:
Woe to the man, that to thy weakenesse trusts.
64
My hopes (quoth
Perseus) I on this haue layde,
And thinke her heart to be her beauties peere,
Nor where I trusted most am I betrayde,
Andromeda I know still holds me deere,
The stranger Knight (quoth she) that doth vpbrayde,
Our sex so much, me thinkes is too seuere,
To blame all women, for one Ladies deedes,
At this all silence made, whilst he proceeds.
65
In
Pricus Court my Child-hood I haue spent,
And there the grace of many Ladies gained,
But I whose thoughts were all on Knight-hood bent,
Regardlesse of their lookes, their loues disdained:
Among the rest, Queene
Aurea often sent
Gifts and smooth Letters, fraught with lines vnfaigned:
This beautious Q. whose thoughts were at such strife,
Was my dread Soueraigns spouse: King
Pricus wife.
66
Morethen her rauishing beauty could intice,
Th'allegiance to my King with me preuailed:
The more the wanton Queene incites to vice,
The more her sighes and amorous Courtships failed:
I held my name and honor of more price,
Then basely yeild, when womanish lust assailed:
At last, with such hot flames her entrailes burnd,
Thar (being disdain'd) her loue to rancor turnd.
67
She that before held of my person deerely,
Now damnes my presence to the deepest hell,
And in her hart vowes to reuenge seuerely
My loyall scorne (I know no hate so fell
As that which was once Loue) It toucht her neerely,
Where loue once log'd such poysonous hate doth dwell,
That now she aimes her enuy at my head,
Nor can she liue,
Belerephon not dead.
68
Forthwith she cites me to King
Pricus throne,
And as a Rauisher I am accusd,
She sweares that when I found her all alone,
I would her royall person haue abusd:
And then round pearles about her eyebals shone,
Which dropt downe by her cheeks, (such craft she vsd:)
Oh heauen! what cannot cunning women doo?
By oaths, and teares, to win their husbands too?
69
I pleaded Innocence, but what (God wot)
Could my weake plea against her teares preuaile?
And to accuse her spouse-breach booted not,
Her whom teares helpt, could protestations faile?
Vpon her loyalty, rather bewaile
Her want of grace, and the hy-Gods importune,
To assist my Innocence, and guide my fortune.
70
When I askt witnesse of such foule abuse,
She thus replide, commixing words with teares:
When lustfull men aime at such horride vse,
They watch all spyal-eyes and listning eares:
Nor can the want of witnesse plead excuse,
For who (that to a woman fancy beares)
Will, when he seekes t'inforce her gainst all reason,
First, call his witnesse, to such hated Treason?
71
Rather he watcheth the most silent houre,
When man and beast is sunke in leaden slumbers,
And
Morpheus he that hath on midnight power,
The world with vniuersal darkenesse cumbers:
When (sauing Lust and Murder) al the powers
Of earth lie husht and charmd: vvhen no man numbers
The yron toongs of Clockes: such a blacke time
Should haue bin guilty of his more blacke crime.
72
For double vvitnesse in this case I stand,
Pricus (you are my Husband and my King)
And where should
Aurea if not at your hand
Seeke Iustice: at that word fresh sourses spring
From her drownd eies: what need the cause be scand
With more sufficient proofe? What needs she bung
More arguments? Since euery teare she split,
Perswades her loyalty: my heinous guilt.
73
The King though inly mou'd with wrath and spleene,
Yet in his calme lookes moderates his Ire,
He cals to mind how faithfull I haue bin,
Since, (when I seru'd as
Knight) before (as
Squire)
Loath would he vnreuenged leaue his Queene,
As loth doth he my Innocent blood desire:
Therefore twixt both, this rigorous doome he gaue,
That the
Chimeraes wombe should be my graue.
74
His tale thus ended, the two Princes vow
To lend him all assistance: by their aide
Belerephon hath made
Chimera bow,
Which done, they ioyntly
Pricus Realme invaide:
Acrisius by their armes is raised now,
And
Pricus slaine: In
Arges they are staide
By old
Acrisius, who repents at last,
Of
Danae, mongst the ruthlesse Billowes cast.
75
The Noble
Perseus he adopts his sonne,
And makes him Heyre aparant to the Crowne:
Sorry for all the spight against him done,
And now bright
Danae he accounts his owne,
Sending young
Danaus and
Bellerephon
With royal gifts (soone to the Princesse knowne)
Shewing by these his reconciled hart,
But with the warlike
Perseus hee'l not part.
76
Whom the same day he
Arges King creates,
Himselfe in
Darraine liues a life retyred,
Perseus
Issue. Herodot
[...] in Polimnia.
Perseus, Andromeda his Queene instates
In the like pompe (a Lady much admired)
Fiue children he begat (so would the Fates)
More valiant, with their Fathers gifts inspired:
Rich
Scelenus, great
Bachmon, and bold
Demon,
Noble
Erictreus, and faire
Gorgophon.
77
This
Gorgophon is held to be the first,
Pausanias in
[...]
That in those daies was knowne to marry twice,
Her husband dead, alone this Lady durst
Proue second spousals, which was held a vice,
The chasest Matrons her example curst,
Who held their constant loue in Soueraigne price:
Our hinder widowes, Saint her name in heauen,
Some foure, some fiue, nay some haue told to seauen.
78
His sonnes takes wiues,
Acrisius still suruiuing,
Who glories in his warlike Grand-childs seed,
Their honors from their Fathers acts deriuing,
For by their swords did many Tyrants bleed:
[Page 131] But leaue them in their deedes of valour striuing,
And of
Acrisius timelesse fate proceede:
Forgetting what was told him long agone,
That
Danaes Sonne must turne him into stone.
79
When
Perseus had in
Arges gouernd long,
Vpon a night he much desird to see
Acrisius: and to
Darraine that was strong
With triple gates, alone ascended he,
There knocks, the Porters had forgot his toong,
and with bold words denyde him entrance free:
At which inrag'de, the Prince his
Harpe drew,
And at first stroke th'Ill-languad'g
Guardian slew.
80
The vprore flowes apace, Clamors arise
From all parts of the Fort: to the Kinges eare
They come at last, who with the Warders cryes
Astonisht, to the tumult preaseth neere,
Thinking t'appease the broyle and riotyze,
But haplesse man vnwares he perisht there:
2657.
The inraged Prince that mad-like layde about,
1306.
Struck with a blow, his Grand-sires life-bloud out.
81
Perseus the vnauoyded fates now blames,
And layes
Acrisius in his Marble graue,
He that on earth intoyes the hy'st-stilde-names,
Vnto theyr doomes must yeeld himselfe a slaue,
From all delights the Prince himsefe reclaymes,
In
Arges Throne he no delight can haue:
But for his sake that th'
Argiue Scepter bore,
he leaues the Prouince, neare to see it more.
82
His Court vnto
Mecenes he transported,
But thither did his sorrowes him pursue,
Theseus inrebus Corinthiacis.
and therefore with a huge hoast brauely sorted,
himselfe into the Orient he withdrew:
his army he with warlike phrase exhorted
Gainst
Lyber-Pater, whom in armes he slew,
and where the Easterne Monarchs bloud lay spilt,
Persepolis a stately Towne he built.
Persepolis.
83
He cals the prouince
Persea by his name,
Where
Bachmon in the kingdome him succeeds,
Erictreus did all the Nations tame
By the red Sea, and there his honoured deeds
Are Chronicled: great
Scelemus thy fame
Liues in
Mecenes: the
Pontificke weeds
Are for thy Royalty reseru'd alone,
In
Thebes, remaines twice-married
Gorgophon.
84
Alceus and
Electrion from his line
Discend,
Alceus was
Amphitrioes Sire,
The genealogy of
Hercules
Electrion as
Bochas doth deuine,
Alcmena got, whose face all eyes admire,
Alcmena and
Amphitrio combine
Themselues by
Hymens ceremoniall fire:
Of this bright
Theban dame through
Greece commended,
This Monster-tamer
Hercules discended.
85
But how great
Ihoue with bright
Alcmena lay,
Himselfe transforming to
Amphitrioes shape,
Adding three nights together without day:
How
Iuno enuious of her husbands rape,
Alcmenaes Child-birth hindred, and did slay
The vnborne infants who with wonder scape
Her Hell-borne charmes, how by
Galantis smile,
Iuno was mockt,
Alcmena scapt her guile.
Galantis Alcmenaes nurse.
86
How young
Alcides in the Cradle lying,
Check't two inuenomed Snakes, by
Iuno sent
To strangle him: how
Ypectens dying
[...]pectent Herules tvvinne-Brother and sonne to
Amphitrio
By those charm'd Serpents, to
Elisium went,
And how the
Ihoue-star'd Lad his valor trying
Vpon
th'Olimpicke mount: disgraced sent
All such as came to haue their valours tride,
To leape, to run, to wrastle, or to ride.
87
How by the K.
Eristeus he vvas taught,
Lou'd beautious
Megera, and fam'd all
Greece,
And through the world renown'd aduentures sought,
Conquer'd great
Cacus and the golden fleece:
Doted on
Deianeira that faire peece,
And
Iole, who the more fame to win,
Made great
Alcides on a distaffe spin.
Iole daughter to
Cacus.
88
All these we leaue as tales too often told,
And rubs that would our running voyage let,
Not that our thoughts despise them being old,
(For to antiquity we owe much debt)
But because Time that hath his acts inrold
To many a Common sale his deeds hath set,
Therefore (though no part of his worth to reaue him)
We now for matters more allide, must leaue him.
89
And now looke backe to
Troy: Laomedon
Intends new wals about his Towne to reare,
But wanting coined Gold to deale vpon,
Solicits all the Gods, such as dwelt neare,
Chiefely those two that rule the
Sea and
Sun,
Neptune and
Phoebus Mony-maisters vvere,
Of whose rich Priests for so much coine he cals,
As may repaire his Citties ruin'd wals.
90
They dispuruey their vestry of such Treasure
As they may spare, the vvork now being ended
Herodot
[...].
Demand their sums againe: but out of measure
At their request the Monarch seemes offended,
And saies he meanes to pay them at his pleasure:
The Gods (by whom
Troy vvas vvith wals defended,)
Inrag'd at his ingratitude, conspire,
With ioynt reuenge to vvreake their spleenfull ire.
91
The vvrathfull
Neptune first his Billowes raisd
Aboue the high-built-Wals, thinking to drowne
Those lofty spires whom all the world hath praisd,
Hurrying his brinish waters through the Towne:
Now
Dolphins play, where barbed Steeds haue graz'd,
In euery pau'd-street
Neptunes Billowes frowne,
Till being weary with the Citties sacke,
He drawes himselfe into his Channels backe.
92
For by the fates appointment the proud God
Must keepe his falling ebbes as well as flow,
Else pale-fac'st
Cinthia, at whose dreadfull nod
Obedient
Neptune shrinkes, her rage will show,
For she commands his waues, and his abod
Is pointed by the Moone, whether below
In his Abisme, or rockes appearing hire,
He guids his lookes by her immortall fire.
93
But as he shrinkes his waters at her becke,
He leaues much slimy filth vpon the shore,
Now gan the God of Fire his beames reflect
Vpon the drownded Continent that wore
The sea-Gods wrath, and now must bide his checke,
A hot contagious stemme (not knowne before)
Poysons the Clime, and as the heat increast,
The infectious pest consum'd both man and beast.
94
Halfe-perisht
Troy vnable to withstand
Their double wrath, her people from her flye,
Knowing they both offended Sea and Land,
And to abide their vengeance must needs dye,
The King himselfe that wants power to command,
The all-consuming Plague, fears to come nye,
The wals he reard, but must to
Delphos trauell,
To excuse his Pride, that with the Gods durst cauell.
95
His due Oblations ended: tis returnd,
That he must seeke th'offended Gods t'appease,
Else the hot plague (his peoples entrailes burnd,)
Shall all the remnant of his subiects cease,
Nor must his fearefull pennance be adiournd:
Nothing can
Neptune and
Apollo please,
But monthly to a Monster of the flood,
To yeild a beautious maide of the Kings blood.
96
This couenanted, the
Troyan King prepares
Alotted Virgins, now th'infection slakes,
At length alas (for bold Fate all things dares,)
Hesione
daughter to Laomedō
The lot the beautious maide
Hesione takes,
[Page 135] The Kings sole Daughter, Fortune nothing cares
For him, whose hand th'Imperiall Scepter shakes.
The hood-winckt Goddesse dare on all sides strike,
Beggers and Kings, in lots are both alike.
97
Imagin her with thousand Virgins guided
Vnto her fearefull Toombe, her Monster-graue:
Imagin how the hulky Diuell slyded
Along the Seas smooth breast, parting the waue:
Alasse poore naked Damsell, ill prouided,
Whom Millions, without heauens help cannot saue:
Yet see, help coms: behold the pride of
Greece
Deck't in the conquest of the Golden fleece.
98
Along the glassie
Hellespont by chance
Alcides sayling, sees vpon the Land
The all-dispoyled Virgin in a Trance,
Wayling her ruine on the bryny Strand,
Aboue the Waues he sees a Whale aduance
His dreadfull shape: at whose sight all that stand
Vpon the Beach, some sounding, as halfe dead,
Others dismayde, backe to the Citty fled.
99
Such onely, whom the cause concerned most,
And vnto whom the Virgine was allyde,
Attend her swallowing, on the
Marine coast,
For whom (no Mortall) safety can prouide,
Now great
Alcides with his Greekish hoast
Lands on the Continent vnterrifide:
And while the
Troian King with terrour shakes,
The Virgins Rescue boldly vndertakes.
100
Two barbed Steeds, the best that
Asia bred,
Are by the King ordaind the Victors me
[...]d,
By whose strong hand the Sea-Whale shall fall dead,
The Virgine liue, and
Troy from pest be freed;
Now fals his huge Club on the Monsters head
With such impetuous weight, and violent speede:
As if Heauens greatest Collumne should downe fall,
That beares the high roofe of
th'Olimpicke Hall.
101
The hydious
Augur slaine, and she releast,
The periur'd King, the promist meede denies,
And seeing
Troy both wal'd, and free from pest,
Excludes the
Greeke for his bold enterprise:
Who sayles from
Greece: after few months of rest
Doth burne
Larisse, and
Tenedos surprise,
Ruinates
Troy, expels
Laomedon,
The first destruction of Troy.
Beates downe the wals made by the Sea and Sunne.
102
In which atchieuement
Philicteles fought,
(Made of
Alcides vanquisht foe his friend)
The King
Eristheus there for honor sought:
Cr
[...]on
K. of Thebes.
And
Creon to this dreadfull fight gaue end,
The Noble
Theseus his assistance brought,
Theban Amphitrio did his arme extend
Gainst
Asiaes pride, and with the rest returning,
Ayded great
Hercules in
Troyes first burning.
103
These as they were a Ship-board, hauing fild
The vast Wombes of their Barkes with wealthy spoiles,
Insulting in the
Troian bloud they spild,
Discoursing of their fightes and dangerous broyles,
And such great victories attained but seild,
Though with more labours, and Insudate toyles:
Cups of
Greeke Wine vnto this Conquest crownd,
Thus King
Eristheus boards the Princes round.
104
Now the first
Vigill of the night is entred,
With some discourse lets ouertake the Sunne,
Who flying, is by this beneath vs centred,
And whilst the waking Stars their courses runne,
Discourse, who first the
Tartar gates aduenterd,
And by whose hand that bold attempt was done,
Of
Orpheus and
Euridice, and in fine
Pluto
and Proserpine.
Of
Pluto, and the rauisht
Proserpine.
105
When
Theseus thus: Since you desire to know
The true report of these
Tartarian bralles,
Which none can better then
Alcides shew,
Or
Theseus Present: by th'
Aetnean Walles,
And thence into the Neighboring Ri
[...]er fals:
Crownd with a groue, through which the lake doth run,
Making his bowes a Bon-grace from the Sun.
105
Hether fayre
Proserpine repayring still,
With Daysies, Daffadils, and Lillies white,
Roses and Mary-golds her lap to fill,
And to returne home laden (a sweete sight)
Chaplets to make, or Gyrlands by fine skill;
By chance the God of shades in edge of night
In his blacke
Ebon Chariot hurrying by,
Vpon the Virgine casts a Rauishers eye.
106
He spyes, and loues, and catches vp at ones,
Th'affrighted Virgine, who lets fall her flowers,
he beares her ouer hils, Dales, Rocks, and stones,
She, cals on Mother, Friends, and (teares she powers,)
Mother nor friend can heare her shriekes and groanes,
Through pooles and Lakes the God of
Tartar skoures,
he yerkes his hot Steedes with his wyery strings,
And from his Coach Wheeles rusty darknesse flings.
107
And cals his Ietty Stallions by their Names,
Whose hard hoofes make the vaulted Center-sound,
his ratling Chariot, through the ayre proclaymes
his feare and flight, with burnisht Brasse shod round,
Nor once lookes backe the dreadfull God of flames,
Or thinkes his rape safe on the vpper ground:
But with his
Ebon-Mace the earth inforces,
Which cleft, sinkes him, his Chariot, and his horses.
108
The Queene of
Plenty, she that crownes the land
Ceres
With seuerall graine, and
Neptunes Kingdome bounds,
Searches about, but cannot vnderstand
Of her fayre Daughter, yet the world she rounds,
And day by day she takes this taske in hand,
But in her bootlesse search her selfe confounds:
Aurora finds her in her trauels rising,
The setting Sunne still sees her, ease dispising.
100
But in our labors we our pen must rest,
Least in her search, vve our Inuention loose,
Which finding tyr'd vvith trauell, vve hold best
A vvhile to cherish, (therefore rest we choose)
Heere therefore let vs breath, ere vve disgest
Troyes second fall, as that vvhich next ensues:
Our Muse vvith
Phoebus sets, and vvith the
Sun
To Morrovv rising, is our taske begun.
THe Gorgons were cald by other names,
Pemphrado, Erito
Apoll
[...]d. Athē. lib.
2, Melanthes lib. de misterȳs. and
Dino, to whom was added a third
Iaeno.
Pegasus taking his flight out of
Helicon, striking the earth with his hooues, there presently sprung out the pleasant Fountaine
Hippocrene, after consecrate to the
Muses. Some moralize this winged Horse to a swift-saild Ship, in vvhich
Perseus saild in all his forraine aduentures.
Aurea Mala, which the
Latines conster golden Apples, the
Greekes call golden Sheepe, the word importing so much.
Atlas for his exquisite skil in Astronomy was said to beare heauen on his shoulders.
Of this Sea-monster S.
Augustine speakes in his Booke
de
S. Augustine.
Ciuitate Dei, affirming that one of the bones, was in his time still vncon sumed and kept.
The monster
Chimere described with a Lyons head, a Goats belly, and a Serpents taile, was a mount aine in
Sicily, whose top was full of wilde Lyons, the middle of Goats, and the foote and lower part swarmed with serpents: This hill
Belerephon by the ayde of
Perseus, cleared of all these
Sauadges, & after made it habitable.
Where
Iupiter is said to put three nights into one, som haue ingeniously imagined it, to be about that time, when at
Iosuahs prayer the Sunne staide his Diurnal course (till he had the slaughter of his enemies) which being kept away from a Countrey so farre remote, must of force lengthen the night by his absence, as it prolonged the day by his presence.
Galanthis by her craft deceiuing
Iuno, was by her after in
[...]uid Metamorph. her anger transformed into a Weasill.
Philocletes sonne to
Paean, and after his surprisall, companion with
Hercules in all his trauels, to whom at his death
[Page 139] he gaue his arrowes, poysoned in the bloud of
Hydra.
The length of that night before mentioned, may else be alluded to that in the
2. Kings, Chap: xx. where
Zedekiah beeing promist by God fifteene yeares life after his extreame sicknesse, and crauing a signe, God commanded the shadow of the Sun to go backe ten degrees, which was incontinently performed in the Diall of
Ahuz: as it was promised him by
Isaiah the Prophet.
The
Nereides with whome
Andromeda was compared,
Hes
[...]. in Th
[...]g. were the daughters of
Nereus the son of
Oceanus & The-tis: his daughters were nimphs of the sea: he had by the nimph
Doris these three children,
Halia, Spio, Pasithae & Ligea, with others to the number of fifty, whose names
Hesiodus re-members, and
Apollodorus.
Laomedon, besides
Hesione, whom he best loued, had
3. daughters more,
Aethasa, Astioche, and
Medicastes, but
Apollodorus Athen.
Hesione being deerest to him,
Neptune and
Apollo chuse her to be deuoured of the Sea-monster.
The end of the sixt
CANTO.
Argumentum
EVridia stung with a Snake and dying,
Sad
Orpheus trauels for her sake to Hell,
Among th'Infernals Musickes vertue trying,
Much honoured (euen where fiends & deuils dwel)
Ceres to
Hercules for vengeance crying,
Th'vndaunted
Greeke, seekes
Pluto to expell:
Iasons rich Fleece, & proud
Troy once more racst
By
Hercules, in our next skeades are placst.
ARG. 2.
WHo Musick found: hell sakt:
Perithous harms
Eta describes, with great
Medeas charmes.
1
MVsicke by which the Spheares are taught to moue,
And tune their motion to their makers praise,
Approues it selfe deuine: first found aboue,
After bequeath'd fraile man, to cheare his daies:
Whether t'were taught vs by the Birds, that proue
Their harmony, in their sweet-Chirping layes,
Or whether found by man: of this I am sure,
It hath bin Ancient, and shall long endure.
2
Let
Homers Demodocus witnesse beare,
And
Virgils Iopas: with this heauenly skill,
Eusebius.
Some say
Amphion rauisht first the eare,
Which
Zephus did with Notes and Crotchets fill,
As one that made his Ayers lowd and shrill,
[...]
Men diuersly deriue Musickes soft feet,
Some from
Arcadia; likewise, some from
Creet.
3
On Shalmes
Trezenius Dardanus first plaid,
Solinus
On Cranes legs first, but after fram'd of Reed,
Bright
Mayaes sonne on a parcht
Tortoys made
Th'vnshaped Harpe: most Writers haue agreed
That
Tubal gaue it forme, with pins that staid
Mercury:
The tuned strings, to make his Musicke speed:
Pan found the Pipe, to play at
Syrinx sute,
Tymarias, was the first, that strung the Lute.
4
Nables and
Regals, holy
Dauid found,
Dirceus an
Athenian, Clarious shrill,
And these the
Lacedemons did first sound,
When the
Messenians they in armes did kill:
Vnto the
Dulcimer first danced round
The
Troglodites: after the
Rebeck still
Th'
Archadians fought:
Pises Tyrhenus was
The first that fashiond Trumpets made of Brasse.
5
Which some to
Myses attribute, and say
The
Haebrewes with a Siluer Trumpet led,
Marcht, and retyrd: were taught to keepe array,
When to fall off, when on; fly or make head:
[...]
Dromslades the
Romans taught: the
Cretans they,
After the Lute their hostile paces tread:
Great
Haliattes with his sword and shield,
Marcht not without lowd pipers in the field.
[...]liattes king of
Lydia.
6
This, as it hath the power in dreadfull Warres
Mongst soft effeminate breasts to kindle rage,
and to relenting grace all entrance barres,
So hath it power the rudest thoughts t`asswage:
To musicke moue the Plannets, dance the stars,
It tempers fury, makes the wilde man sage,
In this consent of stringes, he that can well,
May with harmonious
Orpheus enter hell.
7
We left Queene
Ceres in her Daughters Quest,
Measuring the earth from one side to another,
Yet can she find no end to her vnrest,
Her Daughter lost, shee is no more a Mother:
The earth once cherisht, she doth now detest,
Gainst which her spleene, she can no longer smother:
She cals it barbarous, vnthankefull, base,
And no more worthy of her Souer
[...]gne grace.
8
And much against her ancient pleasure speakes,
For what she fauour'd earst, she now dislikes,
In euery place she comes, the Ploughes she breakes,
The laborous Oxen she with Murraine strikes,
Vpon the toyling Swaines her spleene she wreakes,
Cattell and Men choake vp their new-plasht Dykes:
The barraine fieldes deceiue the Plow-mans trust,
The vsuring seede is molded vnto dust.
9
Which rather in the parched furrow dries,
Layd open vnto euery rigorous blast,
Else to the theeuish Byrds a prey it lies,
Or if it hap to gather root at last,
Cockle and Tares, euen with the Corn-eares rise,
Else by the choaking Cooch-grasse it is past:
Thus through her griefe, the earth is barraine made,
The hoped haruest perisht in the blade.
10
Meane time
Euridice, the new made Bride
Orpheus
and Euridice.
Of
Orpheus, with a princely traine consorted,
As in a Meddow by a Riuers side,
Vnto her Husbands
Harpe one day she sported,
And by his tune her measured paces guide,
In a swift
Hadegay (as some reported:)
She shricking starts, for whilst her Husband singes
Vnto his
Harpe, a Snake her Ankle stings.
11
In
Orpheus armes she dyes, her soule discends,
Ferryed by
Charon o're the
Stigian Lake,
The woefull Bridegroome, leaues his house and friendes,
Vowing with her the loath'd world to forsake,
[Page 143] To the
Tenarian part his course he bends,
And by the way, no cheerefull word he spake:
But by ten thousand pathes, turning doth crosse
Through
Tartary, and through the blacke
Molosse.
12
There is a steepe decliuy way lookes downe,
Which to th'Infernall Kingdome
Orpheus guides,
Molossia a part of
Epire, so called of
Molo
[...]us Sonne to
Pyrhus and
Andro
[...]ch.
Whose loouer, vapors breathes: he sits not downe,
But enters the darke Cauerne with large strides,
With thousand shadowes, he is compast round,
Yet still the suffocating Mists diuides:
Millions of Ghosts vnbodied, bout him play,
Yet fearelesse,
Orpheus still keepes no his way.
13
Hels restlesse
Ferriman with Musicke payd,
Is pleas'd to giue him waftage too and fro,
The triple Hell-hound, that his entrance stayd,
Charmed with Musicke, likewise lets him go,
So through the ayry throng he passage made,
(Th'immortall people that remaine below:)
And tuning by the way his siluer stringes,
To the three fatall Sisters, Thus he singes:
14
You powers Infernall, full of awfull dread,
M:
[...] s. rerum Astronomicarum.
Whose dietyes no eye terrestriall sees,
I know all Creatures that are mortall bred,
At first or last, must stand to your decrees,
I come not as a spy among the dead,
To blab your doomes, or rob you of your fees:
I onely pierce these vaults (voyd of all crime)
To seeke my Bride, that perisht fore her time.
15
By loue, whose high commaund was neuer bounded
In Earth or Heauen, but hath some power belovv
By your blacke Ministers: by
Orcus rounded
Minos, Eac
[...], Rhodamant.
With
Styx, whose pitchy Waters ebbe and flow,
By those three Kings, by whom all doomes are sounded,
The
Elisian pleasures, and the Lake of Woe:
By all the dreadfull secr
[...]ts of the dead,
Fayre
Parcae knit againe her vitall thread.
16
I seeke not to exempt her from your doome,
This is our generall home, heare we must stay,
Though now releast, (as all things hither come)
So must she too, and heare abide for aye,
Graunt that she now may but bespeake her roome,
And to her death allot a longer day:
Or if th'immoued Fates, this will not doe
Before my time (with her detaine me to.)
17
This with such moouing accents
Orpheus sung,
Hels torments
That Chin-deepe
Tantalus forgot to bow
Vnto the shrinking Waue:
Ixion hung
Vntost vpon the Wheele: and
Sisiphe now
Rests him vpon his stone. His
Harpe was strung
With such rare art, the
Danaes knew not how:
To vse their empty tubbes,
Stix breath'd not fire,
Nor can the vulture on
Prometheus tyre.
18
The Sisters weepe, Hels Iudges appeare mild,
Clotho,
[...] Atropos.
And euery tortur'd Ghost forgets his paine,
Proserpine laught, and the drad
Pluto smild
To see her chang'd of cheere, no soul
[...]s complaine,
Hels Senate to his grace is reconcild,
And all agree, she shall suruiue againe:
Through million-Ghosts, his Bride is sought & found,
And brought to him, still haulting on her wound.
19
He takes her, with this charge at
Plutoes hand,
Not to looke backe till he
Auernus past,
In Argonanticis.
And the large limits of the
Stygian Strand,
Through darke and obscure wayes, through deserts vast,
Steepe hils and smoaky Caues, his Wife he man'd,
Vntill he came where a thin plancke was pla'st
O're a deepe raging Torrent, where dismayd,
Orpheus lookes backe, her trembling arme t'haue staid.
20
Which the three-throated
Cerberus espying,
Snatches her vp, and beares her backe to hell,
In vaine are all his sighes, his teares, his crying:
Lowder then he can play, the Dog can yell,
[Page 145] He blames his too much loue, and almost dying
Is ready with his Bride mongst shades to dwell,
So long vpon the barren plaines he trifled,
Till with hels vapors he was almost stifled.
21
At length the
Rhodopeian Orpheus turnes
His feeble paces to the vpper earth,
Which now with discontented
Ceres mournes
The rape of
Proserpine, still plagu'd with Dearth,
Either the Sun the gleby Champion burnes,
Else too much raine doth force abortiue birth
To the ranke Corne, the world forcst to complaine,
With widdowed
Orpheus and the Queene of Graine.
22
Who hauing searcht Earth, of her child to know,
She finds her no where on the earth abiding;
And skaling heauen, Heauen can no daughter showe,
Therefore both heauen and earth the Queene is chiding,
Onely she left vnsought the vaults below,
But heares how
Orpheus hath by Musickes guiding
Past through
Auernus and the
Stygian fires,
Therefore of him she for her childe inquires.
23
He tels her of her Daughter new translated,
Whom in the vaulted Kingdomes he had seene
With
Pluto, in th'infernall Throne instated,
Where though against her will she raignes as Queene:
Oh
Ihoue (quoth she) and hath that God (most hated
Of
Proserpine) the hellish raptor beene!
Monarch of Deuils, since thou doest constraine mee,
Vnto the Gods aboue I must complaine mee.
24
This was (quoth
Hercules) about the season
When
Hyppodamia matcht with
Theseus frend,
Noble
Perithous by the
Centaures Treason,
Was rauisht and re-purchast: But an end,
Our watre-toyld limbes we keepe against all reason
From Natiue rest, I feele soft sleepe discend
and close my eye-lids with his downy wings,
I must to rest; For this time, farewell Kings.
25
Whether being weary of his hoftile paine
Tooke in the former fight, he couets rest,
Or whether modesty made him refraine,
To heare his praise where he deserued best:
But his returne the Kings intreat in vaine,
When
Theseus thus proceeds at their request;
Ceres displeasd the hye
Olimpus mounts,
And to the eare of
Ihoue this rape recounts.
26
Reuenge great
Ihoue (quoth she) thy wrongs and mine,
And if mine cannot moue thee, let thy owne,
For ours betwixt vs is faire
Proserpine,
(By diuellish
Pluto into
Orcus throwne)
Long lost, long sought, my daughter's found in fine,
Rather not found, her losse is certaine knowne:
For how alas can I vvell tearme her found
Whom I still lose, kept low, beneath the ground.
27
In the rude armes of the blacke
Dis shees plac'st,
Hels Adamantine gates besides inclose her,
Let not thy Aunt great
Ihoue be thus disgrac'st,
But of my owne childe make me free disposer,
Else let my name be from thy Bed-role rac'st,
and be no more a Goddesse, if I lose her:
But
Ihoue by faire words seekes t'appease the Mother,
and reconcile her to his
Stigian Brother.
28
But th'vnappeased Goddesse hates the Thiefe,
That with her daughter all her pleasure stale,
and since heauen giues no comfort to her griefe,
Sheele try vvhat Mortal can her daughter bale,
She comes vvhere
Hercules and all the chiefe
Of
Greece assembled, where she tels this tale:
And weeping, sweares to be at sterne defiance,
With the
Tartarian Dis, and his alliance.
29
Before
Alcides on this Iourney went
Vnvvares to him, my friend and I prepare,
(Noble
Perithous) to this one discent,
Thinking to cheare the Queene opprest vvith care,
We scarce (well arm'd) had tucht the lowest stare:
But
Cerberus, my friend vntimely slew,
and me halfe-dead vpon the Pauement threw.
[...]rithous
slaine.
30
Vnto my rescue great
Alcides came,
To
Hyppodamias husband much to late,
The
Ihouiall youth that can all Monsters tame,
Ere he findes leysure to lament our Fate,
Or on the murdrous Hel-hound to exclaime,
He fals his huge Club on the Monsters pate,
Which with such violent fury pasht his braines,
It stounds him, so he leaues him bound in chaines.
31
Aduentring forward in his Lyons case,
Th'vnbodied Ghosts affrighted from him flie,
Who see such terror in his yrefull face,
Poore soules they feare by him againe to die,
Hels Marble gates he beates ope with his Mace
And manly might amongst the Deuils try,
Who as they stop his way, his Club makes reele,
Whilst Furyes fly him with their whips of steele.
32
Vast hell is all in vprore,
Pluto wonders
To see his black-fac'st ministers afraide,
he feares th'Imperiall Lord of fire and Thunders
Attempts his lower Kingdoms to inuade:
From
Proserpine, his twined armes he sounders,
Takes vp his sable Mace of
Porphyr made:
And with his blacke Guard forward marcheth still,
where greatest was the presse, the cry most shrill.
33
Hell had beene sack't, and all hels right displayd,
had not the Fates whom Gods and Men obey,
The fury of th'aduentrous
Graecian stayde,
and with their reuerent paces stopt his way,
(Those whom the Gods incline to, he obeyd)
In their Brasse rols that neuer shall decay,
Alcides (by their license) reades his Fate,
and armes layde by, more mildly they debate.
34
Pluto inquires the cause of his arriue,
He tels him for the rauisht
Proserpine,
Whom as he heares, the King intends to wiue,
Whose heauenly face must among Angels shine,
Not be amongst the Deuils damnd aliue,
Of this the Fate twixt him and his define:
And thus amongst them they compound the cause,
According to their neuer-changing Lawes.
35
That if Queene
Proserpine hath kept strict fast,
And since her entring Hell not tasted food,
as she hath once the
Stygian riuer past,
So backe to earth she may re-saile the flood;
Inquiry made, the girle alas did tast
Some few Pomgranat graines, which vnderstood,
Her doome the fates amongst themselues compoun d,
That
Proserpine must still liue vnder ground.
36
Attonement made with hell, the glorious
Greeke,
Arm'd with his club returnes the way he came,
Vpon the earth archieuements new to seeke,
Since hell is fild with his victorious name,
Through many a winding path, and turning creeke,
He comes at last where my deere friend lay slaine:
I wounded, and the triple Hell-hound laid
Bound in those Gyues which he for others made.
37
To mournefull
Hyppodamia he presents
The murdrous Dogs with her deere husbands coarse,
She sings his Dirge in many sad Laments,
But at the fiend that slew without remorse
Her husband, shee aimes all her discontent,
And on his face imprints her womanish force:
heere
Theseus wept, nor could he longer hide
His priuate sorrow for his friend that dide.
38
This is the Noble
Theseus Aethraes sonne,
By King
Egeus, that durst hell inuade,
In battaile th'
Amazonian Baldrick wonne,
And stout
Hyppolite his Dutchesse made,
[Page 149] Who when King
Minos closd
Pasiphaes Sonne
The lal or inth made to
D
[...]alus.
The
Mynotaure in the
Dedalian shade:
He by her helpe, to whom she proou'd vntrue,
Looke in the Skolly.
Releast the Tribute, and the Monster slew.
39
Eristheus, and the valiant
Theban King,
That knew the Prince
Perithous, much lament him,
But with their teares the day began to spring,
They wish the Fates a longer date had lent him,
With kindled Lampes th'attendant Pages bring
The Princes to their Cabins: He that sent him
On this attempt, at parting they desire
To blesse their shores, whilst they the seas aspyre.
40
Our thoughts must land them which their Trophyes brought
From ruin'd
Troy, on seuerall Coasts of
Greece,
Remembring
Iason, who with honor sought
The fam'd aduenture of the golden Fleece,
Duke
Aeson in this voyage spared naught,
Many bold Knights well arm'd at euery peece
Assist the Noble
Greeke in this aduenter,
Off
[...]ng the
Argoe with the Prince to enter.
41
Duke
Peleas gaue it furtherance, to whose Court
Where
Iason feasted, then
Alcides came
Peleas King of
Thess
[...]ly, and Vnckle to
[...]son.
With
Philocletes, as his deare Consort,
From strange aduentures that Imblaze his fame,
Disankring from the fayre
Thessalian Port,
Accompanied with many Knights of fame:
Castor
and Pollux,
bold Amphitrion,
Amphion, Zetus,
and sterne Telamon.
42
Amphion was a fayre Harmonious Youth,
Well skild in Musicke,
Zethus was his Brother,
Am
[...]ion. Zethus.
Begot by
Cretan Ihoue one happy night,
Vpon the fayre
Antiopa his Mother,
She
Lychus Wise, yet rauisht with the sight
Of
Iupiter, her loue she could not smother:
These her fayre sonnes built
Thebes, with large extent,
Thebes.
Two yeares before they on this voyage went.
43
With all the
Graecian chiualry attended
They disimbogue, the gentle B llowes smile,
Th'
Aegean Seas they passe, but late defended
By the Grand Thiefe, that gaue those Seas their stile,
No wind or waue their well-tig'd ship offended,
But the calme looking
Thetis harbors guile:
Her fawning front she wrinkles with a frowne,
A
[...]d thinkes th'ambitious
Argonants to drowne.
44
At the blacke Euening close, the Sea lookt white,
A tempest.
The storme-presaging Waue begins to swell,
And blustring
Eurus rising now at night
With his flag Winges, vpon the waters fell.
The Mayster bids slacke sayle, but gainst the might,
Of his commaunded Mates, the winds rebell:
The Boat-Swayne brals, the Marriners are chid,
For what they would, the stubborne gusts forbid.
45
All fall to labour, one man helps to steere,
Others to slacken the big bellied Sayle,
Some to the Cap-string call, some pray, some sweare,
Some let the Tackles slip, whilst others hale:
Some cling vnto the maine-Mast, and cleaue there,
Some chafe with anger, some with feare looke pale:
Some ply the Pompe (and that which would deuour
Their ship in time) Sea into Sea repoure.
46
Sharpe-b
[...]ting winter growes, and on each side
The foure sedit
[...]ous Brothers threaten war,
and tosse the Billowes, who in scornefull pride
Spit foaming Brine, the winds with waters iarre,
The breaking seas, whose entrance were denyde,
Bea
[...]e gainst each Pitchy-rib and calked sparre:
and by their Oaken strength denyde Intention,
Fall where they were begot, to meere confusion.
47
Now as the shriking Billowes are diuided,
Low Vallyes tweene two mighty Mountaines fall,
From whose steepe breasts the shaken vessaile slyded,
Burying in Sea, Sayles, Tackles, Masts, and all:
[Page 151] But
[...]here remaynes not long, the Barke well guided,
Climbes vp those clyffes, a dreadfull watty wall:
That to themselues, amazd with feare they show,
Like men in th'ayre surueighing hell below.
48
It seem'd as if the Heauens and Seas had Wars,
And that the one the other did defy,
Twixt whom the mutinous winds make greater Iars,
Th'ambitious Billowes seeme to threat the sky,
And fling their brine-waues in the face of Stars,
Who therewith mooud, melt all the Clouds on hye,
And such tempestuous shewers of raine thaw downe,
As if their drops meant the vast Seas to drowne.
49
The waters both of Heaueu and Earth are mixt,
Flagging their sayles to make them brooke no blast,
No Lampe of heauen appeares (wandring or fixt)
Darkenesse hath o're the face of both heauens past,
And left his vgly blindnesse them betwixt,
Whose horride presence makes the
Greekes agast:
The Heauens bright fire, the troubled Water braues,
sindging with lightninges force the Gulfy waues.
50
Vnto these
Argonants I may compare
Our Island-voyages, alike distrest,
The Islands voyage.
With whelming seas, thicke Mists, and troubled ayre,
Loud claps of Thunder: Lightning from the West,
so dreadfull, that their
Pilots loose their care,
Through feare, forgetting what should stead them best:
The sea, to quench Heauens glorious Lamps aspyres,
Heauen burns the Ocean with her lightning fires.
51
As braue a Generall Martiald our great Fleete,
as that bold
Greeke that sought the fleece of Gold,
hoping by sea an enemy to meete,
Fiercer then
Iasons, and more warlike bold,
Renowned
Essex, at whose warlike feete
Spaines countlesse spoyles and Trophyes haue been told,
Who from
Hesperia brought to
Englands Greece,
More Gold then would haue weigh'd downe
Iasons fleece.
52
Grim Terror with the
Greekes a ship-board lyes
All night: some weepe, some rage, the boldest feare,
Soliciting the Gods with Prayers and cryes,
Seeing their Fates and hopelesse ruins neere,
They thinke on Fathers, Children, Wiues, Allyes,
But whom they faine would see, they wish not there:
Grim terror in the Morning forward sped,
The Sunne begins to wake, the tempest fled.
53
Who as from forth the
Spanish Seas he raisde
His burnisht lockes, and bout his shoulders shooke them,
and (as his custome is) about him gazd
To view fayre
Thetis bounds, and ouer-looke them,
He spyes th'Imbarqued
Greekes, with feare amazd,
So sore the rough tumultuous Sea had tooke them:
He sees their Pendants torne, their Sheetes all rent,
Their Hatches broken, and theyr mayne-mast spent.
54
Therefore he angry,
Neptune doth intreat,
as he would haue him guild his siluer streames,
Or thaw his frozen Waters with his heate,
Or cheare his coole Waues with his gorgeous beames,
Th'aduentrous
Greekes (his charge) not to defeat,
But they may safe re-view their Natiue Realmes:
Neptune is pleas'd, his
Trident calmes the Seas,
And grants them waftage to what coast they please.
55
Who entring th'
Hellespont acquire some shore
VVhere they may land, their Fortunes to repaire,
at
Tenedos they tutch (knowne long before
By great
Alcides, since he battayld there)
Where great
Laomedon the Scepter bore,
and to preuent like dangers threatning care,
Re-builds his battred holds, and with supplyes,
Mans euery Sea-skout, that adiacent lyes.
56
These Garrisons, the
Graecian Peeres deny
Reliefe or Anchorage, till the Kings mind
Be fully knowne: Who heares his foes so nye
That had so late his forces ouerthrowne,
[Page 153] Therefore inraged, he sends them to defie,
And from his Coasts to get them quickely gone,
Or mongst them all hee'l leaue no liuing
Greeke
For golden Pillage on the seas to seeke.
57
Vndanted
Hercules at this offended,
Sweares (by his Father
Ihoue)
Troyes second wracke,
And with his
Argonants had then discended
Mauger the King, but
Iason kept him backe,
Who being chiefe Commander, hath intended
A golden coarse, the
Colchōs first must sacke,
Therefore (though much against
Alcides will)
Put from that shore, the Conqueror threatens still.
58
Vowing if Fate affoord him safe returne,
In whose aduenture al the Peeres vnite,
Troyes wals to batter, and their Citty burne,
And be the Kings eternall opposite,
To whose disgrace
Troy shall in ashes mourne,
Th'vngratefull King be forc'st to death or flight,
And all these lofty Towers, at his next Landing,
Not haue one stone vpon another standing.
59
Resolued thus, they make to hoyse vp saile,
Weigh Anchor, and their tackles hale and pull,
Their lofty spleenes gainst
Troy they now auaile,
And onely ayme at the
Phrixean wooll,
The God of winds affoords them a calme gale,
Making their waue-washt sheetes shew swelling full,
Whose gentle Gusts the
Graecian Heroës bring
Phasis a town in
[...] and a Riuer:
Medea.
To
Colchos, welcom'd by the
Phasian King.
60
At whose arriue,
Medea Iason viewing,
Oh heauen (quoth she,) what passion's this I feele?
Shall yon faire
Graecian youth his fame pursuing,
Die by inchanted fire, or tempered steele?
Oh saue thy fame (by this attempt eschevving)
Thy arme vvants povver to make the Dragon reele:
Thy amorous hand (alasse) too soft and white,
with Brasse-hoou'd Buls (that breath out fire) to fight.
61
More fitter t'were a Lady to embrace,
T'imprison beauty in a cristall fold,
Oh why should one that hath so sweet a face,
(Made to be lou'd and loue) seeke acts so bold?
Too ventrous
Greeke, for loues sake leaue this place,
Thou knowst not what thou seekst, the fleece of Gold
A royall prize it is, yet amorous stranger,
It hath not worth to countervaile the danger.
62
For the least blood shall drop downe by thy skin,
Or in the' combat staine the
Colchian grasse,
Is of more worth then all that thou canst win,
Yet doth the riches of this Fleece surpasse:
But stay: What blind maze am I entred in?
What louing laborinth? Forgetfull Lasse:
Oh canst thou to a strangers grace appeale,
Who comes from farre, thy Fathers fleece to steale?
63
This
Iason is our foe: dwels in a Land
Remote, and of another Clyme indeed,
If thou wilt loue, about thee Princes stand
Of thine owne Nation, let this stranger bleed,
Despise him then, and all his forraine band,
That in thy Fathers pillage haue agreed:
Instead of loue, the amorous
Greeke defie,
And by th'inchanted Monsters let him die.
64
But shall
Medea view that Tragicke sight?
And see his faire limbes by her Monsters rent?
Shall his white fingers with grim Hell-hounds sight,
That might
Medea in her loue content?
Apollo may I neuer tast thy light,
Pertake thy earthly rise, or low discent,
But by my Art I shall so well prouide,
To be the Gold-Fleece-conquering
Iasons Bride.
65
But how
Medea? Wilt thou then forsake
Thy Country, Father, Friends: All which are great,
and (to thy Lord) a rouing Pyrate take,
One that perchance hath no abiding seat?
[Page 155] Fond Girle thou wrongst him these faint doubts to make
A Royall Prince and in all acts compleat,
Thy Country, Father, Friends, trifles but small,
And this one warlike
Iason worth them all.
66
That he is louely; witnesseth mine eye,
And valiant: what can better record beare
Then this attempt, whose fame to heauen will flye,
T'amaze the Gods that shall this Nouell heare,
I leaue a barraine kingdome, to discry
A populous Nation, what then should I feare?
In seeking with this amorous
Greeke to dwell,
I aske
Elisum, in exchange for Hell.
67
A Land, where if his people him resemble
Humanity, and all good Thewes are rife,
Who if they loue their Lord, cannot dissemble
Their harts to her that shall safegard his life,
Th'inchanted Buls whose bellowing made heauen trēble,
Shall by their ruines make me
Iasons wife,
Whom all the faire and potent Queenes of
Greece,
Shall better welcome then the conquerd Fleece.
68
Opinion'd thus; at their next enter-view,
(After their diuers oaths betweene them past)
That he the fam'd aduenture shall pursue;
Whose conquests with inchantments she binds fast,
And when his hands these monsters shall imbrew,
He to receiue her as his Bride at last:
Night passeth on, at the next birth of day,
Aurora frights the Feare
[...]ll Stars away.
66
Much confluence of people throng together,
Dionis. Milesius.
In the large field of
Mars they take their places,
The Princes of the Land in Scarffe and Feather
And Triumph robes, expect the
Greekes disgraces,
The burdend earth grones with spectators: whether
The King himselfe martiald with golden Maces
In person comes, his Ba
[...]ns him inuest
In a high Throne, degr
[...]d aboue the rest.
70
To such prepared ioyes the Frenchmen came,
To see the valiaunt
Mount-morensi roon,
Charles Bran
[...]on Duke of Suffolke.
against
Charles Brandon, who for
Englands fame,
Vanquisht their Knight, at which their ioy was doon,
The
French, who to disgrace the English came,
Saw how bold
Charles at one incounter woon
Their Champions armes, the
French Qu. to his pheer,
Which chang'd their promist mirth to sadder cheere.
71
Behold where
Polymelaes sonne vndanted,
Iason sonne to
E
[...]on and
Po
[...]nela.
against the brazen-hoofed Beasts appeares,
How (richly armd) his sword aloft he vanted,
T'incounter with the two infernall steares,
Who as he strikes, still breaths out words inchanted,
Antimachus
[...].
3.
[...].
The
Graecians stand amaz'd,
Medea feares
To see young
Iason Lord of her desire,
Betwixt two Buls, their Nosthrils breathing fire.
72
And least her Incantatious force might faile,
She mumbles to her selfe more powerfull charmes,
Still doth the dreadlesse
Greeke those Buls assaile,
Reddy to scorch him in his twice-guilt armes,
His sharpe edg'd sword their horned crests makes vaile,
That fire that scaldeth others, him scarce warmes,
(Such power hath Magicke) the fell Buls grovv tame,
And
Iason tugs with them amidst the flame.
73
And first he by the dangling dew-laps takes them,
Who force perforce his valour must obey,
He twixt his sinnowy armes together shakes them,
They bellowing yeeld themselves his glorious prey,
To bow their stubborne necke, bold
Iason makes them,
On which th'obedient yoake he gently lay,
The
Greekes applaud his conquest with shrill cries,
The
Colchians shew their sorrowes in their eyes.
74
But alls not furnisht yet, he makes them draw
The teemed plow, to furrow vp his field,
The rusty yron doth the greene verdure flaw,
Quite vanquisht now, the conqu
[...]d Oxen yeild,
[Page 157] Yet more then this the
Colchian Princes saw,
The Vipers teeth he cast vpon his shield,
And sow'd them in the furrowes: they straight grew,
To armed men, and all on
Iason flew.
75
The
Greekes dismay, th'incourag'd
Colchians showt,
Onely
Medea doth their ioy detest,
With magicke she assists her Champion stout,
Her Exorcismes haue power to arme his brest,
Those that but late incompast him about,
And with their steele strooke Stars out of his Crest,
Seeke mutuall armes, amongst themselues they brall,
So by seditious weapons perish all.
76
It now remaines the three-tongu'd venomous Snake,
The Riuer-waking-Serpent to make sleepe,
Whose horride crest, blew skales, and vnces blacke,
Threat euery one a death (vnto his keepe
The Fleece is put)
Medea bids him take
Grasse in blacke
Lethe, laid three nights to steepe,
Vttering such powerfull charmes as calme the winds,
Apolon. lib.
3.
And the mou'd Billowes in their Channell binds.
77
Those drops being spinkled on the Dragons head,
The words thrice spoke (the wakefull Serpent lies)
Drownd in forgetfull slumbers, seeming dead,
and sleepe (till now not knowne) seales vp his eyes,
Iason in safety may the Mansion tread
Where
Colchos long preseru'd the golden prize,
and now at length faire
Polimelaes sonne,
Inioyes the Fleece that he with danger wonne.
78
Proud of this purchase, but of her more glad,
That by the Vertue of a powerfull word,
More hy command vpon these Monsters had,
Then he in vse of his remorslesse sword,
Vnto his
Argoe he
Medea Lad
Commanding all his merry mates aboord
But secretly, least when King
Aeta knew,
his daughters rape, he might her flight pursue.
79
Which to preuent the
Negerous Lady takes
The young
Absyrtes, a faire hopefull youth,
Absyrtus
Brother to Medea Strabo lib.
7.
And when her father after
Iason makes,
And with rough fury her escape pursuth,
She chops the Lads limbes into bits and flakes,
and in the Kings way strowes him without ruth,
Atusilaus. Ph
[...]cides lib
7
And whilst he gathers vp with watry eyes
His peece-meale body, she in safety flies.
80
With triumphs they in
Greece are welcomd all,
Timaut
2.
[...]
[...].
And
Iason famous for his royal Quest,
The Bed red Father will his sonne install
In his owne kingdome, and with him his guest
Deepe-speld-Medea, at whose Magicke call
The Seas and winds, or trauell, or find rest:
Oh Magicke, by thy power what cannot they,
To whom the Seas submit, the winds obey?
81
Amongst those Princes that with
Iason vvent,
and vvere at home receiu'd, the great
Alcide
amidst this generall Ioy seemes discontent,
His spleene to
Troy he can no longer hide,
To be reueng'd he holds his firme intent,
He that to their distresse reliefe denide,
Must knovv whatt'is to scorne his firme alliance,
So through all
Greece he breaths gainst
Troy defiance.
82
And vvith a gallant army taking Land,
attaines the shore perforce, and in his way,
No Village, Fortresse, Tovvne, or Tower can stand,
But to his ruthlesse fury must giue way:
This hearing, King
Laomedon hath mand
a Noble army, to make good the day:
Which ere the Sun into the West-sea fall,
Must see ten thousand
Troians kild and thrall.
83
Laomedon remembring what great vvracke
Twelue-labord
Hercules before time made,
Recounts to them his vvrongs, his Citties sack,
Their tyranies to al vvhom they inuade,
[Page 163] Therefore incites them to repulse those backe,
That haue too long vpon his confines staid:
Behold (quoth he) these would your freedomes barre,
Then with a generall showt prepare for warre.
84
The hoast of
Greekes that heare their exclamation,
Wait but to heare
Alcides watch-word giuen,
Who cheares them thus: You are that warlike Nation
Whose fame fils all the Clymates vnder heauen,
Sinc
[...] you are strangers, let your salutations
Be with your swords, not words; for yet ere Euen
You standing hoast in their owne bloods wee'l drown,
And part the rich spoyle of yon rampierd Towne.
85
Lowd chearing Instruments on both sides sound,
The battailes ioyne, both
Greekes and
Troians sinke:
They that but late the firme Earth proudly bound,
Now must below the waues of
Lethe drinke,
The great
Alcides borne to sway the ground,
Against his strength opposd, al mortals shrinke:
Who being more then man, must needs haue ods.
To fight with any that are lesse then Gods.
86
Him whome th'all-doming Fates will haue to sway,
How can
Laomedon in armes subdue,
Though
Troy be strong, yet must it
Greece obey,
Alcides with his Club whole thousands slew,
By his sole-strength the
Greekes obtaine the day,
And to the Citty gates the foe pursue,
Who mingled with their troopes, in this aduenture,
Slaughter the bold, and with the Cowards enter.
87
So by the English was great
Cales suprisd
Cales.
And entred, with the
Spaniards that retire,
they that at first the generals name despisd,
Now at the last are forc'st his fame t'admire,
English and Dutch in Spanish wealth disguisd,
Cales twice taken once by Sir
Francis Drake, since by the Earle of Essex.
Laden their fleet with pillage, whilst bright fire
Consumes the Towne, which twice the English take,
As
Greece did
Troy, great
Essex and bold
Drake.
88
Stout
Aiax Telamon amongst the rest,
Set his first foot in
Troy, but him succeed
Ten thousand
Greeks, and many a warlike brest,
Pierst with the
Argiue weapons, freshly bleed:
They sacke the populous Towne from East to West,
Troyes second sacke is by the Fates decreed:
They sacke and ransacke, spoile, and freely kill,
And all the Towne with shreekes and clamors fill.
89
Amongst the rest that perisht in this broile,
Laomedon fals by
Alcides hand,
Whilst euery where the conquering
Graecians spoile,
No man so bold that dares against them stand,
Great is the booty in so rich a soile,
They pillage all the substance of the land,
Beat downe the wals, the Temples ruine quite,
And kill poore infants in their mothers sight.
90
The Matrons in their husbands armes deflow
[...],
The reuerent Virgins in their parents eye,
And such as interdict their awfull power,
By their remorselesse bloudy weapons die,
Hie looking
Troy is ruin'd in an houre,
Those Towres quite racst, whose sharpe spyres mockt the sky
and that proud towne the
Asian glory ones,
Is now a confus'd heape of men and stones.
91
Al-conquering
Hercules reueng'd at last
Of
Troyes ingratefull Soueraigne, takes full ceasure
Of
Asiaes Monarchy: his fury past,
amongst his host he parts the Citties treasure,
But
Telamonus Aiax most he gracst,
and gaue him her that pleas'd him aboue measure,
The bright
Hesione his valours meed,
The beautious Virgin from the sea-Whale freed.
92
Well was it for young
Priam the Kings sonne,
Hercules Lybicus
That he was else-where in the East imployd,
The
Lybian else that
Asia ouer-ronne
and conquered
Troy, had likewise him destroid,
[Page 161] Th
[...] laden
Greekes after the conquest woon,
Are fraught with wealth, with pleasure ouer-ioyd:
Poore
Troy, whilst they in their full mi
[...]h abound,
Liues desolate, and leueld with the ground.
93
The Monster-maister hauing fild the sky
With martiall clangor in the lowdest straine,
After reuenge on
Cacus Tyranny,
and the great Gyants of
Cremona slaine,
King
Pricus death, King
Affer raised hie,
And the two
Collumnes that he reard in
Spaine,
To include in few his many deeds; we thus
In narrow roome, his labors twelue discusse.
94
1. The
Eremanthion Bore, 2. and the fire-breathing Bul,
The 12 labors of
Hercules.
3. The
Lernan Hydra. 4, and the winged Hind,
5.
Stymphalidus. 6. The
Amazonian trull:
7. Th'
Aegean stables, the seauenth taske assind,
8. The
Cleonean Lyon. 9. with the scull
Of
Diomed, who fed his Steeds gainst kind:
10. The golden fruit made ripe by bright
Heperion,
11. Grim
Cerbarus, 12. and triple-headed
Gerion.
95
These taskes by
Iunoes imposition ended,
Whilst he on
Ictes attractiue face
Doted, and her deserts alone commended,
Faire
Deyaneyr imputes it her disgrace,
With such great wrongs vnto her bed offended,
Because his vassaile had supplied her place.
She sends a shirt, (and meanes her husband good)
Dipt in the poyson of the
Centaures blood.
96
The traitor
Nessus passing a deepe foord
With
Deianeyre, away with her he flyes,
Alcides cannot reach him with his sword,
But after him his wounding arrow hies,
The dying
Centaure speakes this latest word,
Faire
Deiancyre, before death close mine eyes,
Receiue a guift, in signe I lou'd thee deerely,
Which though I die, in time may stead thee neerely.
97
I know thy Lord a Conqueror, yet subdude
By womens beauty: therefore when you find,
The lustfull Prince mongst Forraine Queenes intrude,
and that their amorous Court-ships change his mind,
Send him a Shirt, with this my bloud Imbrude,
The vertue is, to make
Alcides kind:
This said, his life he ended in a trice,
She (for it was his last) trusts his aduise.
98
Hearing faire
Iole the hart had ceasd
Of her deare Lord, and that she kept away,
She feeles her thoughts within themselues diseas'd,
and hopes to call him backe that went astray,
The
Centaures dying guist the Lady pleasd,
Her seruant
Lychas posts it without stay:
Oh! Thou weake woman, thou his death maist vant,
Whom Hell-hounds, Gyants, Monsters, could not daunt.
99
Hoping (alasse) his fauour to regaine,
The Innocent Lady her deare Lord destroyd,
He d'ons her present, whose inuenomed Bane
Cleaues to his bones (Oh! Who can Fate auoyde?)
More then a man before he would complaine
Alcides beares, and no whit seemes annoyd:
Such tortures as the strongest might strike dead
he brookes: yet no part of his coulour fled.
100
But when he felt such Tortures, anguish, smart,
That Gods aboue, nor Deuils damd could beare,
That stung his breast, and pierst his Noble hart,
he growes Impatient, that could neuer feare
Infernall panges, Infusde in euery part,
he striues the poysonous Shirt away to teare:
But with the cleauing Linnens forst to draw
The Brawnes from off his armes, and leaue them raw.
101
The poysond boyles, and he that could confound
Gyants, so late to his immortall fame,
Now from the head to heele, is all one wound,
The raging venom-drops his flesh inflame,
[Page 151] Sometimes he grouels on the sencele
[...]e ground,
Sometimes those powerfull hands that Monsters tame,
plucks down huge rocks, & cleaues thē with his stroaks
And sometimes by the roots rends vp huge Oakes.
102
Mad with these Torments
Oeta Mount he traces,
Where creeping in a hole he
Lychas spies,
When stalking to his Caue with leasurd paces,
About his head he wheeles him in the skies,
And that being done the whole Mount he defaces,
A groue of Trees dispoyld about him lies,
A thousand Oakes he heapes vp on a pile,
And kindling th
[...]m, sayes with a f
[...]ornfull smile,
103
Whom neither
Iunoes wrath, nor
Plutoes hell,
Whom neither Lyons, Buls, Dogs, Dragons, Whales,
Whom neither Tyrants grim, nor Gyants
[...]ell,
against that spirit a womans gift preuailes,
Her iealousie hath power that hart to quell,
Whom Serpents feare with their
[...]uenomed skales,
Since none on earth deserues our blood to spill,
The great
Alcides shall
Alcides kill.
104
The fire burnes bright, he
Philocletes cals,
And vnto him bequeaths his shasts and bow,
Who at his warlike f
[...]et confounded fals,
The Club and Lyons case his bold hands throw
Into the flame, then he whom noughts appals,
Cries
Ihoue I come, and boldly leaps in so:
The death of
[...].
That life that mortall did the heauens aspire,
Now with Immortall wings climes heauen by fire.
105
Alcides dead, and
Priam backe returnd
From his successefull Battailes in the East,
He sees his Country spoyld, his Citty burnd,
His Father slaine, which most his griefe increast,
These losses with his Sisters rape he mournd,
Nor are such weighty sorrowes soone surceast:
we for a while will leaue him to his care,
His Syre t'intoombe, his Citty to repaire.
[Page 152]
MEdea some thinke to be the daughter of
Eta, some the daughter of the
Sun, some the Daughter of
Hecare. Apollod lib. 3. Cals her
Aeea. Heraclides writes her
Eripid, in Med
[...]. Andron Teius.
[...]. Epist. to be the daughter of
Neaera of the
Nereides: Dionisius Milesius, cals her the daughter of
Eurelytes, others of
Ipsaea, & that
Chalciope was her sister. She had a sonne cald
Medus by
Aegeas. Demodocus a Harpers name in
Homer, of whom the Country
Medea tooke name.
Iopas a King of
Affrica, one of
Didoes wooers, a skilfull
Cithara canitus
[...]. per
[...] Aurata
[...] quae maximus Atlas.
[...] canit errā tem Lunam
[...] labores.
[...]
[...]
[...] et pecuder vnde imber et Ignes. S.
[...]. Timonax in rebus
[...]. Musition,
Iason committed to the charge of his Vnkle
Pelius, in his minority, because
Pelus was loath to resigne to him his kingdome, deuised for his Nephew the dangerous enterprize of the golden Fleece, which
lason contrary to his Vnckles supposition, with his
Argonants valiantly atchieued.
In memory of
Absyrtus, there are still certaine Islandes in the
Venetian Sea, cald
Absyrtides of
Absyrtus, there slaine by his sister
Medea.
Phrixus was sonne to
Athamas, and Brother to
Helles, of whom the Ram that bore the golden fleece, was named
Phrixeus: Helle with her Brother
Phrixus was drowned. Of whom that Sea is still called
Hellespontus.
Because we onely remember
[...] and the
Mynotaur, and haue no further Trafficke in our History with his life, I holde it not much amisse in these Annoaations, to remember, that History, and how the
Mynotaure was begot:
Ouid arte Amandi.
Ida of Caedars and tall Trees stand full,
Pasiphae.
Where fed the glory of the Heard (a Bull
Snow-white) saue twixt his hornes one spot there grew,
Saue that one staine, he was of milky hew.
This faire Steare did the Heyfers of the Groues
Desire to beare as Prince of al the Droues,
But most
Pasiphae with adulterous breath,
Enuies the wanton Heyfers to the death,
Tis saide that for this Bull the doting lasse
Did vse to crop young boughes, and mow fresh grasse,
Nor was the Amorous
Cretan Queene affeard
To grow a kind Companion to the Heard:
Thus through the Champion she is madly borne
[Page 153] And a wilde Bull, to
Minos giues the horne,
Tis not for by auery he can loue or loath thee,
Then why
Pasiphae doest thou richly cloath thee?
Why shouldst thou thus thy face a
[...]d lookes prepare?
What makest thou with thy glasse ordering thy haire?
Vnlesse thy glasse could make thee seeme a Cow,
But how can hornes grow on that tender brow?
If
Mynos please thee, no Adulterer seeke thee,
Or if thy husband
Mynos do not leeke thee,
but thy la
[...]ciutous thoughts are still increast,
Deceiue him with a man, not with a beast:
Thus by the Queene the wilde Woods are frequented,
And leauing the Kings bed, she is contented
To vse the groues, borne by the rage of mind,
Euen as a ship with a full Easterne wind:
Some of these strumpet-Heyfers the Queene slew,
Their smoaking Alters their warme bloods imbrew,
Whilst by the sacrificing Priest she stands,
And gripes their trembling entrailes in her hands.
Zezes histors
19
At length, the Captaine of the Heard beguild
With a Cowes skin, by curious Art compild,
The longing Queene obtaines her full desire,
And in her infants byrth bewrayes the Sire.
This
Mynotaure, when he came to groath, was inclosed in
the Laborinth, which was made by the curious Arts-maister
Dedalus, whose Tale likewise we thus pursue:
When
Dedalus the laborinth had built,
In which t'include the Queene
Pasiphaes guilt,
And that the time was now expired full,
To inclose the
Mynotaure, halfe man, halfe Bull:
Dedalus and Icarus.
Kneeling he sayes, Iust
Mynos end my mones,
And let my Natiue soile intoombe my bones:
Or if dread soueraigne I deserue no grace,
Looke with a pittious eye on my sonnes face,
Ouid
2. de arte Amandi.
And graunt me leaue from whence we are exild,
Or pittie me, if you d
[...]ny my Child:
This and much more he speakes, but all in vaine,
The King both Sonne and Father wil detaine,
Which he perceiuing saies: Now, now, tisfit,
To giue the world cause to admire thy wit,
[Page 154] Both Land and Sea, are watcht by day and night,
Nor Land nor Sea lie open to our flight:
Onely the Ayre remaines, then let vs try
To cut a passage through the ayre and fly,
Ihoue be auspicious to my enterprise,
I couet not to mount aboue the skies:
But make this refuge, since I can prepare
No meanes to fly my Lord, but through the ayre,
Make me immortall, bring me to the brim
Of the blacke
Stigian Water,
Styx Ile swim:
Oh human, wit thou, canst inuent much ill?
Thou searchest strange Artes, who would thinke by skill.
A heauy man, like a light Bird should stray,
And through the empty Heauens find a fit way.
He placeth in iust order all his Quils,
Whose bottoms with resolued waxe he fils,
Then binds them with a line, and being fast tyde,
He placeth them like Oares on eyther side,
The tender Lad the downy Feathers blew,
And what his Father meant, he nothing knew:
The wax he fastned with the strings he playde,
Not thinking for his shoulders they were made,
To whom his Father spake (and then lookt pale)
With these swift Ships, we to our Land must saile:
All passages doth crewell
Mynos stop,
Onely the empty ayre he stils leaues ope.
That way must we, the Land, and the rough deepe
Doth
Mynos barre: the ayre he cannot keepe,
But in thy way beware thou set no eye
On the signe
Virgo, nor
Boetes hye:
Looke not the blacke
Orion in the face
That shakes his Sword, but iust with me keepe pace.
Thy wings are now in fastning, follow me,
I will before thee fly, as thou shalt see
Thy Father mount, or stoope, so I aread thee,
Take me thy Guarde, and safely I will lead thee:
If we should soare to neere great
Phoebus seate,
The melting Waxe will not endure the heate,
Or if we fly to neere the Humid Seas,
Our moystned wings we cannot shake with ease.
[Page 167] Fly betweene both, and with the gusts that rise,
Let thy light body saile amidst the skies,
And euer as his little sonne he charmes,
He sits the feathers to his tender Armes:
And shewes him how to moue his body light,
As Birds first teach their little young ones flight:
By this he cals to Counsell all his wits,
And his owne wings vnto his shoulders fits,
Being about to rise, he fearefull quakes,
and in this new way his faint body shakes:
First ere he tooke his flight, he kist his sonne,
Whilst by his cheekes the brinish waters ronne:
There was a Hillocke not so towring tall
As lofty Mountaines bee, nor yet so small
To be with Valleyes euen, and yet a hill,
From this thus both attempt their vncoath skill:
The Father moues his wings, and with respect
His eyes vpon his wandering sonne reflect:
They beare a spacious course, and the apt boy
Fearlesse of harme, in his new tract doth ioy,
and flyes more boldly: Now vpon them lookes
The Fishermen, that angle in the brookes,
and with their eyes cast vpward, frighted stand,
By this is
Samos Isle on their left hand,
Vpon the right
Lebinthos they for sake,
Astipalen and the Fishy Lake,
Shady
Pachime ful of Woods and Groues,
When the rash youth too bold in ventring, roues;
Looseth his guide, and takes his flight so hie,
That the soft wax against the Sun doth frie,
and the Cords slip that kept the Feathers fast
So that his armes haue power vpon no blast:
He fearefully from the hye clouds lookes downe
Vpon the lower heauens, whose curld waues frowne
at his ambitious height, and from the skies
He sees blacke night and death before his eyes,
Stil melts the wax, his naked armes he shakes,
and thinking to catch hold, no hold he takes:
But now the naked Lad downe headlong fals,
And by the way, he Father, Father, cals:
[Page 168] Helpe, Father helpe, I die, and as he speakes,
A violent surge his course of language breakes.
Th'vnhappy Father, but no Father now,
Cryes out aloud, Sonne
Icarus where art thou?
Where art thou
Icarus, where dost thou flie?
Icarus where art? When loe he may espy
The feathers swim, aloud he doth exclaime,
The earth his bones the Sea stil beares his name.
But least we in
[...]st too much on these impertinent tales, we wil proceed in our proposed History.
The end of the seauenth
CANTO.
Argumentum
THE twice sackt
Troy with all abundāce flowes,
Her wals mlarg'd, hir spacious bounds augmēted,
Fortune on
Priam all her fauour strowes,
Her populous streets from all parts are frequented,
Proud of his sonnes, the King impatient growes,
And with all
Greece for wrongs past, discontented:
Warlike
Anthenot by Embassage seekes,
To haue the Kings faire Sister from the
Greeks
ARG. 2.
THe worth of Poets. Who first weapons found,
Troy & the Troians,
Theta makes hir groūd
1
FAyre Poesie, both ancient and Deuine,
Tell me thy true Diuinity and age,
Emmius oft cals thee Sacred, thou didst shine
In
Moses dayes, a Prophet wise and Sage,
Who sang sweet Hymnes compos'd in measured line,
To great
Iehoua. Oft
Dauid did asswage
His melancholy cares in many an Oade,
Tun'd to the praises of th'almighty God.
2
A sweeter verse then good
Isaias wrote,
Or
Salomon in his deuinest song,
For Number, Accent,
Euphony or note
Were neuer set with pen, or ayr'd with toong,
Greeke Pindarus, whose meeters made men dote,
Nor
Saphos vaine so Musically strong,
Could in their fluent Verse, or sweet inuention,
Better delight the rauisht eares attention.
3
The rising and soft
Cadens of a verse,
In
Deutronomium liuely is expressed,
He that shall
Dauids Haebrew Psalmes reherse,
Shall find true number in his words professed,
Not
Orpheus, Horrace line could sooner pierce
Th'inchanted braine: not
Homer whom so me gessed
To be chiefe Poet, this approues it holy,
Not as some hold deriu'd from Apish folly.
4
In verse
Hexamiter did
Moises praise
The heauens Creator (through the red sea flying,)
S. Hi
[...]roms.
Archilochus Iambickes first gan raise,
Apollo meetred Verse, all Prose denying,
Daphne the sonne of
Mercury assaies
The
Elegeick verse (soone after dying,)
Thespis: Quintilian Tragedies deuisd,
Which
Sophocles soone after enterprisd.
5
A Poëm is the richest Monument,
And onely liues when Marble toombes decay,
Shewing Kings deeds, their merit, and discent,
Notstab'd by time, whom Sepulchers obey,
Thou proud
Achilles with thy great ostent,
Where stands thy Monumentall graue this day:
Toome-makers die disgracst, then
Homer trust,
By whom thy fame liues, now thy graue is dust.
6
By Poëm
Troyes name is preseru'd from fire,
Which else long since had perisht with the towne,
Who in these dayes would for her fame inquire?
Had not deuine wits Chronicled her downe,
[Page 171] Those flames that eate her buildings with like Ire,
Had burnt her Name, and swallowed her renowne:
But Poësy apt all such things to saue,
Redeems her glory from Obliuions graue.
7
Poets are Makers, had great
Homer pleasd
Penelop had beene wanton,
Hellen chast,
The
Spartan King the mutinous hoast appeasde,
And smooth
Vlisses with the horne disgra'st,
Thersites had the Imperiall Scepter ceasd,
And
Agamemnon in his rancke beene plast:
Oh!
Homer, t'was in thee
Troy to subdue,
Thy pen, not
Greece; the
Troyans ouerthrew.
8
Achilles, durst not looke on
Hector when
He guld his Siluer armes in Greekish bloud,
Homer that lou'd him more then other men,
Gaue him such hart, that he gainst
Hector stood,
Twas not
Achilles sword, but
Homers pen
That drew from
Hectors breast a Crimson-flood:
Hector his
Myrindons, and him subdude,
In such hye-blood faint hands were not imbrude.
9
Twas Poesy that made
Achilles bold,
Stout
Aiax, valiant, and
Vlisses wise,
By
Homers guift the great
Alcide contrould
The hoast of
Greekes: all such as highly prise
The sacred Muse, their Names are writ in gold,
Thersites was well featur'd, but denyes
The Muse her honor, therefore to his shame,
The Muse hath made him
Stigmaticke and lame.
10
This made great
Scipio Affricanus bring
Dead
Ennius from the rude
Calabrian Coast,
Pompey
gaue Theoptanes
a Citty.
placing his statuë, that his prayse did sing,
In
Romes hye Capitoll, who now can boast
Of such rich meede, worthy the greatest King?
So
Pompey guerdon'd learning to his cost:
And gaue a large Towne rounded with a Wall,
And thought it for the Muse a guift to small.
11
Art thou a Tyrant? to thy seruice take,
Some
Helliconian Scholler, whose fine quill
To after times thy raigne, may gentle make,
And giue them life, whom thou in rage didst kill?
Art thou a Vsurer? Wilt thou not forsake
A hundred for a hundred? Learne this skill:
To some one fluent
Poet pension giue,
And he shall make thy famous bounty liue.
12
Had
Thais fauour'd Arts, the Arts had raisd her,
and made her Chast as Faire: This
Lucresse knew,
Thais
a Curtezan of Ath
[...]nt.
Because she lou'd the Muse, the Muse hath praisd her,
Lending the knife, with which her selfe she slew:
Who
Lais can accuse? Though fame hath blaz'd her
For wanton? who can say report is true?
Lais a Curtezan of
Corinth
Happly though Chast, al Poets she eschewes,
And now liues onely famous mongst the Stewes.
13
Art thou a Coward? Exhibitions lend
To Schollers that shal make thee ventrous bold;
Art thou a Glutton? Make the Muse thy friend?
Or a loose Leacher? Giue thy Poet Gold,
Hee'l cleare thy Fame, and giue thy scandall end,
He can redeeme renowne, to ruine sold,
Make Ryoters frugall, the dull blind to see,
The Drunkard temperate, and the Couetous free.
14
Th'ambitious meeke, the Lofty minded low,
Th'inconstant stable, and the Rough, remisse;
Women that your defectiue humors know,
Are likewise by your bounty helpt in this,
Some speciall grace vnto the Muses show,
That haue the power t'inthrone your names in blisse:
Had faire fac'st
Hellen this opinion cherisht,
O're-whelmed
Troy, had not for her sake perisht.
15
They can make wantons Ciuill, the Foole wise,
The stooping Straight, the Tawny coloured faire,
The merry, Modest, and the Loose, precise,
and change the colour both offace and haire,
[Page 173] All your Mercuriall mixtures then dispyse,
For your Vermillion tinctures take no care:
What neede you far for couloured vnctions seeke,
When our blacke Inke can better paint thy cheeke.
16
Some of this Artfull coulour now I want,
Which from the Muses I desire to borrow,
In Melancholly
Priam to dispaint
The perfect Image and true face of Sorrow,
At sight of ruind
Troy his spirits faint,
Yet after gathers strength, and on the morrow
Resolues himselfe with bootlesse cares to striue,
To interre the dead, and cheere those that suruiue.
17
In processe, taking truce with all Vexation,
Priam intends a fayrer
Troy to reare
Of larger bounds, so layes a firme foundation
So strong, that being mounted they need feare
Nor
Phoebus wrath, nor
Neptunes Invndation,
Nor any other bordering Neighbour neare:
His Towne repayrd, King
Priam in small space,
Takes to his Wife a Princesse, borne in
Thrace.
18
Great
Aegipseus Daughter,
Hecuba
Prooues Mother of fiue Sonnes, the first in Row
Aegipseus King of
Thrace. Hecubaes Issue.
Hector, the boldest Knight in
Asia,
Paris the fayrest, expert in the bow,
Then
Deiphebus, named by
Phaebus ray,
Helemus taught all hidden Arts to know:
Bold
Troylus youngest of his Mothers store,
Hath Bastard-Brothers fiue and forty more.
19
Some thinke young
Polidore from her descended,
And
Ganimed that standes in
Aebes place,
Her Eldest Girle
Creusa, much commended
Matcht with
Eneas, of a Noble race,
VVhose puisance next:
Priam most extended
Then sweet
Cassandra, one of regall grace,
A Prophetesse: but
Polixene surpast,
Fayrest of all the world, and
Hee
[...]bs last.
20
But now since Armes, and Battailes, Swords, & Speares,
With other warlike Engines we must vse,
Before
Troyes rich aboundance touch our eares,
With some delay we must restraine our Muse,
To shew what people the first Armour beares
And who they were first broake the generall Truce:
In the first age, erae men keene weapons knew,
They fought with naked fists, but no man slew.
21
Some say, the
Thratian Mars first Armour brought,
Diodorus.
Others, that
Pallas was of wars the ground,
Tully.
Others, that
Tubal-Cayne for weapons sought,
Ihosephus.
And taught the way how to defend and wound,
Most thinke Lame
Vulcan on the
Styth first wrought
Homer.
Helmets, Swords, Speares, the
Lacedemons found:
The
Haberion Midias, Messenius filed,
Iauelins and Darts
Aetolus first compiled,
A
[...]tolus Sonne to
Mars.
22
Yet were not Souldiers arm'd at euery Peece,
Herodotus.
Some thinke th'
Aegyptians flourisht in this trade,
And Helmets and bright Salets brought to
Greece,
Leg-harnesse by the
Carians was first made,
Polidor,
These
Iason vsde in Conquest of the fleece,
Great
Fuluius Flachus Iustings Speares assayde:
At
Capua first, by old
Tyrhenus framed,
Plutarch.
For the browne Bill, the
Thracian was first named.
23
Pyses the hunting Staffe, the warlike Queene
Penthiselea, taught the Pollax-fight,
Crosse-bowes were first among the
Cretans seene,
Quartyes and Bolts the
Syrians bring to sight,
The euer-bold
Phenetians furnisht beene
Dares. The first that was seene to vse the snield.
With Brakes and Slings to Chronicle their might:
In lists appointed, in the
Argiue fields,
Acrisius and bold
Pretus fought with shields.
24
Epeus at
Troyes seidge the
Ramme deuisde,
The
Tortoyes Citty wals to vndermine,
Artemon Clazemonius enterprisde
Bellerephon, to imitate the signe
[Page 175] Cald
Sagitarius, Footmanship dispisde,
Peletronians a nation of
Thessaly.
And backt the
Iennet: after some Deuine:
Bridles, Bits, Trappings, to adorne a Steede,
Seru'd first the
Peletronians warlike speede.
25
But of all Hellish Engines, he whose brayne
By Deuilish practise first deuisd the Gun,
The world shall Vniuersally complaine
A generall murder, by that,
Almain done,
By which the strong men are by Weakelings slaine,
By him hath many a Mother lost her Sonne:
Macheuil historie Flore
[...]tina.
This Hell-borne Art, sinceby the Deuill must
Venice against the
Genoes practise first.
26
Of
Priam now, and of his royall seede,
Priam:
Their fashions, and their features
Dares writes,
The aged King of puissance in his deed,
And in his prime-age expert in all fights:
Tall, but well shaped, Mounted on his Steede,
In Horseman-ship excelling all his Knights:
Grisled his heyre, grey-eyde, Beard full and long,
Soft voy'st, his limbs, though slender, rare and strong.
27
In enterprises dreadlesse: early rysing,
Eating betimes, with Musicke highly pleasd,
Not rash to execute, but with aduising,
Sound in his body, and no way diseasd,
Vpright in sentence, flattery dispising,
Apt to be angry, and as soone appeasd:
Euen to the last, in armes his body prouing,
Amorous of Ladies, and Souldiers dearely louing.
28
Hector the eldest of King
Priams race,
Hector.
Past in his puissance all Knights of that age,
An able body, and a pleasant face,
Affable, and not much inclinde to rage,
Big-limb'd, but featur'd well, which added grace
To his proportion, young, but grauely sage:
His flesh tough-hard, but white, his blew veines ayery,
His quicke eye fiery bright: his skin much heyry.
29
His head short curld: his beard an aburne browne,
His pleasant Language lisping, but not lowd,
(Saue in the wars) he was not seene to frowne,
Saue to his Gods and King, he neuer bowd,
In field a Lyon, but a Lambe in towne,
Strong without equall, but in Armes not prowd,
Was neuer knowne to speake fellonious word,
Or but against
Troyes foes to vse a sword.
30
Aduentrous bold, but with discreet aduice,
Patient of trauell, with no labour tyr'd,
In the
Pannonian wars he triumpht thrice,
And more the Tent, then walled towne desird,
Oft hath his pillow bin a Caue of Ice,
Oft hath his sword his foes Caske proudly fird
To warme him by, when he before app
[...]ard
With
Isicles low hanging at his beard.
31
Forth of
Troyes gates neare yssued man so strong,
So double vertued, Chiualrous and mild,
Or better Vsher through a Mattiall throng,
Mongst foes a Gyant, to his friends a Child,
Dreaded and lou'd, and sooner bear̄ing wrong,
Then knowne t'oppresse: he neuer grace exild
From Captiues, whom in armes he ouerthrew,
He neuer fled the strong, or yeilding slew.
32
A
Homers fluence, or a
Virgils pen,
Behooues him that should giue great
Hector due,
Whom with this Title,
Valian
[...]est of Men,
I now forbeare his Brothers to pursue:
Parls.
Next
Alexander sirnam'd
Paris, when
His Mothers ominous dreame mongst Shepherds threw
The infant Prince. In him you may discouer
The true proportion of a perfect Louer.
33
Straight bodied, mid-statu'rd, wondrous faire,
A pleasant looke, his eye both great and gray,
Round visag'd, soft, and Crispe at end his haire,
Smooth skind, well spoke, effeminate euery way,
Swift, a good Hunts-man, and much giuen to play,
Cunning at
Chesse, which as most voyces run,
Was by King
Priam first in
Troy begun.
Daris. Ches-play first deuised in Troy.
34
Louing gay cloaths, and go richly clad,
Costly in Iewels, and stones highly rated,
Quicke-witted, iesting, dallying, seldome glad,
Who aboue all things Melancholy hated:
At loose lasciuious speeches seeming sad,
And by all Starre-coni
[...]cture fairely fated,
A Courtly carriage, and a promising face,
A manly looke mixt with a womanish grace.
35
Bold
Deiphebus, and wise
Helenus,
Deiphebus.
Were scarse to be distinguisht, both so like:
The last a Clarke, sawes hidden to discusse,
Helenus.
The first not taught to pray so well as strike,
The one deuout, the other Chiualrous,
One grub'd his pen, while th'other tost his Pike:
Though seuerall byrths, yet twins they seemed rather
And both the true proportions of their Father.
36
The most redoubted
Troylus youngst of fiue,
Troylus.
Next after
Hector was esteemd in field,
(Saue this bold brother) the best Knight aliue,
Most expert in the vse of sword and shield:
Cressida.
Amorous of
Calchas daughter: Ladies striue
Which to his sweet embracements soon'st may yeild:
Neuer was Knight in valor better proued,
Or Courtier amongst Ladies deerlyer loued.
37
Then in one word, his aprises to comprise,
He was another
Hector, shape, looke, gate,
Stature, proportion, fashion, haire, and eyes;
Martiall encounter, or for Courtly state,
Aeneas a bold Knight, a States man wise,
Louer of peace, and foe to sterne debate:
A Counsellor and Souldier, who imparts,
Aeneus.
Inequaliz'd proportion, Armes and Arts.
38
Large stature, and broad set, deuinely skild,
His haire by Nature browne, but grayed with yeares,
Cleare ey'd, sharpe visag'd, but with colour fild,
One of King
Priams best esteemed Peeres,
Sober in speech, and seene to laugh but seild,
Whom
Paphian Venus by
Anchises beares,
Preferring much the Counsels of the old,
And Beards of Siluer, before Haires of Gold.
39
Anthenor, second to
Aeneas, blacke,
Anthenor.
Long, and leane visag'd, whom the King affected
And much esteem'd his Counsell, in the sacke
And fall of
Troy, by
Priam much suspected,
Polydanus his sonne, in whom no lacke
Polydanus.
Of vertue was, or valor well directed:
Of Counsell with his Father in
Troyes fall,
Resembling him, leane visag'd, swart, and tall.
40
Menon of all the Kings that
Priam ayded
Menon.
With best assistance, and most valiant Knights,
Broad-brested, and big-limb'd, not soone disswaded
From hostile oppositions, and sterne sights,
By him was many a
Graecian Knight disgraded,
Whom hope of Honour, more then gaine incites:
Queene
Hecuba, Religious, Graue, well staide,
Hee
[...]ba.
A Manly Woman, somewhat rudely made.
41
Andromache, well shapt, looking alost,
A dromache.
Exceeding faire, her eye-ball broad and cleare,
Her
Alablaster skin, white, smooth, and soft,
A worthy Wife to such a worthy Peere,
As full of Grace as Beauty, praying oft,
A visage Louely, but withall seuere:
Promising loue, but with so Chast an eye,
That what her beauty grants, her lookes deny.
42
Creusa like her Mother bodied well,
Creusa.
But nothing faire, her grace is manly rude;
Onely the wise
Aeneas happy fell
Into her fauour, with good Thewes indude,
[Page 197] Her inward, more then outward gifts excell,
Vnapt young amorous Courtiers to delude,
A gracious, affable, kind, modest Creature,
Loued for her Vertues, more then for her feature.
43
Cassandra, Hecubs second, chast and wise,
A profest Virgin, and Deuinely red,
Cassandra
In Deuinations, Sawes, and Prophesies,
She for her life abandons
Hymens bed;
Faire-hair'd, Meane-statur'd, Round-mouthd, stedfast eies
Sometime her yellow Lockes about her spread:
(Rapt with Deuinest fury) oft she weares,
Like a rich cloake, wouen of her golden haires.
44
But young
Polixena among the rest,
Most Beautifully perfect, Rauishing sweet,
Polyxena
Of all
Terrestriall graces, loe the best,
In one exact and Compleat creature meet,
Celestiall coloured veines, Swan-downy brest,
And from her Natiue golden crowne to feet
Spotlesse, her brow the whitest, eye the clearest,
And her Rose coloured Cheeke of al Dyes dearest.
45
One Ladies beauty lies most in her haire,
Anothers in her Checke, this in her brow,
Her eye is quicke, another colour's rare,
To which the Knights their deeds of Honour vow,
Foot, skin, or hand: and all esteemed faire,
The least of these best Iudging wits alow:
And where but one of all these are extended,
For that one guift bright Ladies are commended.
29
On such quicke feet as makes you Lady praisd,
Polixena doth lightly touch the ground,
Such hands as make anothers name imblazd,
White, azure-vain'd within her Gloues are found;
A body on two Iuory collumnes raisd,
A brest so white, a Globe-like head so round:
a haire, so bright-hewed Brests so softly sweld,
Saue in this maide no Mortall hath beheld.
47
She is all beauty, Nature shew'd her skill
To haue this Maide made in all parts compleate,
her Store-house, the Creator first did fill,
The Prodigall Queene, doth for the Lady cheate
her Surplusse, then the world lamenteth still
The
Troian Ladyes Larges was so great:
That hye-borne women yet in many places,
Are for'st since her, to haue hard-fauoured faces.
48
But least we dwell vpon her shape too long,
From her vnto the buildings we looke downe,
Leauing the Ladyes fayre, the Princes strong,
It followes, that we next suruiew the Towne,
How
Priam sought to quit
Hesiones wrong,
His Scepter, State, and his Imperiall Crowne:
These by th'assistance of th'all-guiding Fate,
And by the Muses helpe, we next relate.
49
The glorious Towers and Spyres of
Tray looke hye,
Sixe principall Percullist Gates admit
The sixe gates of Troy.
The people in and out: first
Dardany,
Fimbria the second (but scarce finisht yet)
Hely the third: we
Chetas next descry,
Troyen the fift, with Marble Turrets fit:
The sixt and last, but of like state with these,
Cald by
Antenor, Antenorides.
50
Vn-numbred Pallaces, houses of State,
With their guilt couers seeme to mocke the Sunne,
Which towards heauen their hye tops eleuate,
Staples of Forraine Marchants now begun,
Free Traffickt-Marts, and Wares of euery rate,
By which, much wealth may be acquird and wun:
Nothing is wanting in this New-built-Towne,
That may acquire
Troy Riches or Renowne.
51
Midst this young Citties hart, a Riuer glydes,
The Riuer
Symois.
Bleeding her Azure veines through euery streete;
Whose meeting streames a spacious Channell guids
To the maine Ocean, where the
Troyan fleete
[Page 181] In all tempestuous sea-stormes safely rides,
The Merchant ferried for his pleasure, meets
His laden Lyters, Barkes, and ships of trade,
Whom at their rich keyes they with Cranes vnlade.
52
Vpon the highest hill the rest o're-peering
The Pallace royall doth the King erect,
On her wind-mouing vanes
Troyes Scutchion wearing,
Whose shyning guilt vpon the Towne reflect,
The Marble posts, and
Porphyr-Collumnes bearing,
Roofes of pure-gold from the best Mines select;
By good aduise they
Islium Towers inuest,
A Citadell to ouer-looke the rest.
53
The glorious Sunne, from whose all-seeing eye,
Nothing on earth can be conceiled long,
In his Diurnall trauels through the sky,
Saw neuer Pallace built so faire and strong,
The square
Pyramides appeared hye,
As if they had bin rear'd the Clouds among,
The Porches, Tarras, windowes, Arches, Towers,
Resembling one of
Ihoues Celestiall Bowers.
54
More then the rest his great Hall men admire,
Built like th
Olimpicke pallace, where
Ihoue feasts,
Paued with bright Starres, like those of Heauenly fire,
On which he treads, when he inuites his guests,
The roofe hung round with Angels (a rich Quire)
With Diamond eyes, red Rubies in their breasts,
Holding like Grapes long branches in their fists,
Of
Emeralds greene, and purple
Amethists.
55
At one end of the Hall stands
Priams Throne,
To which by twelue degrees the King ascended,
His chaire all Gold, and set with many a Stone,
By curled Lyons, and grim Beares defended,
Who seem'd to fawne on him that sat thereon,
The curious Grauer all his Art extended:
The sauage Monsters that support his chaire,
Euen to the life, cut and proportiond are.
56
Next this, from twenty hie steps looking downe
Towards the Skreene aloft inthroned stands
Ihoues Statuë, on's head a glorious Crowne,
An vniuerse and Scepter grac'st both hands:
His length full fifteene foot, his colour browne,
His front Maiesticke, like him that commands:
His state, as when with Gods he was couersing,
His face so dreadfull, and his eye so piersing.
57
By his Stone-shining Alter, rooted growes
The rich
Palladium, the two Thrones betwixt,
Whose golden roote enameld Branches strowes
Through the vast Hall, the leaues with blossomes mixt:
Mongst which ripe Fruits their coloured sides dispose,
As mellowed with the Sun, Deuinely fixt;
A wonder twas, this Arbor to behold,
The Fruit and blossomes Stones, the branches Gold.
58
Of selfe-same Metall was his dining boord,
Where with his Sonnes and Peeres oft times inuested
He eat in state, and sometimes would affoord
That stranger Peeres were at his Table feasted;
In stead of plate they precious Lycours powr'd
Into bright hollowed Pearle, rarely digested,
Gold was thought base, and therefore for the nones,
They diu'd for Pearle, and pierst the rockes for stones.
59
With as great state as
Troian Priam could,
I haue beheld our Soueraign, Strangers feast,
In Boules as precious, Cups, as deerely sould,
and hy-prizd Lyquors equall with the rest,
When from the
Lands-graue and the
Browns-wicke bold,
The
Arch-duke and the
Spaniard Legats prest:
But chiefely when the royall Brittish
Iames,
at
Greenwitch feasted the great King of
Danes.
60
No King for wealth was to this King compared,
Fortune showrd all her bounties on his head,
No King had bold Sonnes that like
Priams dared,
Or
Dames with greater beauties garnished,
[Page 183] Kings and Kings sonnes were in their eyes insnared,
Whom their imperious beauties captiue led:
Prince
Hector more his Fathers Crowne to grace,
Addes by his sword,
Pannonia, Phrigia, Thrace.
Three kingdomes conquered by
Hector.
61
Full with all plenty, with aboundance stored,
Seeing his wals so strong, his Towne so faire,
Himselfe by forraigne Potentates ador'd,
And his Exchequer rich without compare,
Fifty tall sonnes, the least to vse a sword,
And most of them in Martiall Turneyes rare:
His Counsell graue, his Lords of hie degree,
As prouident, as full of Chiualry.
62
He therefore now bethinkes him of his shame,
Done by the
Argiues in
Alcides dayes,
Therefore against all
Greece will warre proclame,
And to their opposition, forces rayse,
He summons all his Lords, who forthwith came,
To whom assembled thus
King Priam sayes:
Oh! which of all this faire and princely traine,
Hath not (by
Greece) a friend or Kinsman slaine.
63
Shew me the man hath not inricht their Treasure
With his owne substance by his Father lost,
Whose wiues & daughters haue not serud their pleasure,
If they be rich, they Reuell at our cost,
Their Barbarous Tyranies exceed all measure,
They spoil'd our Nauy on the salt Sea Coast;
Beate downe our Wals, they pillag'd all our goods,
And waded knee-deepe in our Fathers bloods.
64
Amongst vn-numbred of your neare allyes,
My royall Father treacherously they slew,
Were not your Fathers in the selfe-same wyse
Butcher'd and mangled by that murdrous erew?
I see my words confirm'd in your wet eyes,
(Remembrance of these wrongs their moist teares drew)
Besides they slewe my Sister in their spleene,
A free borne princesse, Daughter to a Queene,
65
Behold my state, surueigh your priuate powers,
Is it for
Priams honor this to beare?
Being your Soueraigne, my disgrace is yours,
And that which troubles me, should touch you neare;
We haue defer'd reuenge to these last howers,
Till we had gathered Armes, strength, wealth, and feare:
And now since heauen supplies our generall need,
I aske your Counsel: Is reuenge decreed?
66
So deepely did the Kings words pierce their brests,
That with a generall voyce,
Reuenge they cry,
Now euery man the inuasiue
Greeke detests,
And thinkes it long, tili they-can
Greece defie,
Soone after this, the King his Nobles feasts,
Longing till some aduantage they can spy
To make their warre seeme iust, at length deuise
This colour to their Hostile enterprise.
67
That
Pryam shall in courteous manner, send
To al the Graecian Kings, to aske againe
His captiue Sister, like a royall frend:
(Which if they grant,) in friend-ship to remaine:
But if this Embassie their eares offend,
And they the faire
Hesione detaine;
To Menace warre:
Anthenor Nobly mand,
At
Priams vrgence, takes this taske in hand.
68
In
Thessaly where
Peleus that time raign'd,
Anthenor after some few moneths a
[...]iues,
And of
Hesiones estate complain'd,
That her returne might saue ten thousand liues,
But if to bondage shee were still constrain'd,
Her Brother that as yet by faire meanes striues,
Must in his Honour seeke by armes to gaine her,
Vnto their costs, that proudly dare detaine her.
69
Peleus inrag'd, commands
Anthenor thence,
Nor will he grace the
Troian with reply,
That dare to him so proud a sute commence,
He therefore makes with speed from
Thessaly,
Who keepes the Princesse in base Slauery:
In
Salaminaes Port he Anchor casts,
And thence vnto Duke
Aiax Pallace hasts.
70
Mildly of him the Embassador demands
Hesione, or if he keepe her still,
With her to enter
Hymens Nuptiall bands,
Not as a Slaue to serue his lustfull will:
When
Tellamon this Message vnderstands,
He was in thought, the
Troian Lord to kil:
So scornefully the Duke his Message tooke,
His face lookt pale, his head with anger shooke.
71
He tels him he is not allyde at all
With twice-won
Troy, nor any league desires;
The beautious Princesse to his lot did fall,
Whom he wil keepe (and mauger all their yres,)
For scaling first
Troyes well defended Wall,
She was his Trophies prize: He that aspires
To take her thence, or once demand her backe,
Is but the meanes their
Troy againe to Sacke.
72
And so commands him thence, who still proceeds
Vnto
Achaia, where the famous Twins
Castor and
Pollux haue aduanc'st their deeds,
And by their Valours were both crowned Kings;
Vnto their Court in hast
Anthenor speeds,
And to their eares his Embassie begins:
But they with
Telamons rude scornes reply,
And charge him straight out of their Confines hie.
73
With like contempt Duke
Nestor sends him backe,
So did the two
Atrides; So the rest
Of all the
Argiue Kings, command him packe
Out of their bounds, as an vnwelcome guest,
Since
Troy deseruedly indur'd such wracke:
Anthenor answered thus, esteemes it best,
Backe to resaile, and to King
Priam tell,
What in his bootlesse voyage him befell.
74
The King at this reproach inflam'd with rage,
Assembles all his people, Sonnes, and Peeres,
Intending by their aydes new warre to wage,
To which the youthfull Gallants wanting yeares,
Freely assent, but those of riper age,
Out of their grauer wisedome, not pale feares,
Seeke by their Counsels
Priam to perswade,
To raigne in peace, and not proud
Greece inuade.
75
Among the rest, great
Hector, from whose tong
Did neuer yssue proud discourteous word,
Whom
Greeke nor
Troian can accuse of wrong,
Nor they within whose blouds he glaz'd his sword,
Rayseth himselfe aboue the populous throng,
And thus he sayes: Who rather should afford
Vengeance on
Greece, then I your eldest sonne,
Hectors Oration.
To whom these rough iniurious wrongs are done.
76
But if we well consider what a foe,
And what great wrath vpon our heads we pull,
Not
Greece alone, but all that homage owe,
Asia and
Affricke make their numbers full,
The oddes is too vnequall, therefore knowe,
I am of thought all warres to disanull.
Troy's but a Citty, and though rich and strong,
Yet gainst the world oppos'd, must needs take wrong.
77
Why will Rich
Priam hazard his estate,
Being in peace? what need we couet warre?
What can we more desire, then fortunate?
So
Priam, Troy, and all our people are:
Why should we seeke t'incurre the
Argiue hate,
Of which remains so incurable a scarre?
Wisemen in their reuenges should forsee
What ends may fall, not what beginnings be.
78
My Grand-sire's dead, perhaps he did offend,
But howsoeuer he cannot now suruiue?
To seeke his life we vainely should contend:
Methinkes in this against the Gods we striue,
[Page 187] What the
Greekes mar'd, the Gods themselues amend,
Whence should we then our detriments deriue?
Our
Troy is since her second fall, much fairer,
Her people richer, and her buildings rarer.
79
Troy lost a King, that losse your Grace supply,
And though (your sonne) of this I proudly vant,
He is in you receiu'd with vsury,
They pillag'd vs, and yet we nothing want,
Of all their wounds, we not one scarre can spy,
Vnlesse
Hesione our Princely Ant:
Whose bondage long since hapning, we may gesse,
The custome and continuance makes seeme lesse.
80
But how soeuer neare to mee allyde,
I do not hold her freedome of that meed,
That for her sake
Troy should in blood be dyde,
Priam or any of his yssue bleed:
And for this cause do I my selfe deuide
From their rash Counsel, that Reuenge decreed:
Knowing all warre is doubtfull, and fore-seeing
Of
Troy, what it may be, not of
Troyes being.
81
If any hot blood prouder then the rest,
Accuse my words, and thinke I speake through feare,
I wish that man the boldest
Graecian guest
That euer with
Alcides Anchor'd heare,
That I might print my valour on his Crest,
And on his armed Vaunt-brace proue my Speare:
This said, great
Hector Congied to the King,
Then takes his place, when vp doth
Paris spring.
82
And to the King his
Idaes dreame relates,
And how he iudg'd three beauties for the ball;
How farre he
Venus 'boue the rest instates,
The fairest
Greeke vnto his lot must fall,
A fit reuenge for those whom
Priam hates:
For if the King will make him Generall,
He makes no doubt, from
Greece a Queene to bring,
Shall equalize the Sister of the King.
83
Now all the peoples voyce on his side flowes,
In euery eare his famous dreame is rife,
When ranckt next
Paris, Deiphebus growes,
Perswading still to giue these discords life,
As one that by presumptions thus much knowes,
His voyage can procure no further strife:
Then if the promising Fates assist his Brother,
To proue th'exchance of one Queene for another.
84
But
Helenus with sacred spels indude,
The prophesie of
Helenus.
Seekes this prepared voyage to restrayne,
He saith, the
Greekes shall with their hands imbrude
In
Troyes bloud royall, conquer once againe,
Intreating
Paris, he will not delude
Theyr reuerent eares, with dreames and visions vaine:
Assuring him, that of this Quest shall grow
The Citties vniuersall ouerthrow.
85
When youthfull
Troylus thus: Who euer heard
A bookish Priest perswade to hostyle Armes,
Let such as are to Fates and Sawes indeard,
Crouch by the fires that smoking Alters warmes,
And cherish their faint sinnewes (much affeard)
Dreading their owne, not Souldiers threatned harmes:
He that's a Priest, amongst priests let him pray,
We Souldiers cry
Arme: and a glorious day.
86
What lets the King my Father, but to grant
My Brother
Paris a right royall fleete?
That in reuenge of our surprised Aunt,
He Warlike prayes among the
Graecians meete?
Shall tymerous Clarkes our Martiall Spirits dant?
No royall Father: know reuenge is sweet:
Which since the Fates by visions promise beare:
Not to obey their Hests, we Cowards were.
87
Troylus preuailes, and
Hector is perswaded
To shun the imputation of base feare,
With which his courage should be wrong vpbrayded,
A tymerous thought came neuer
Hector neare,
[Page 189] Si
[...]ce tis agreed that
Greece must be inuaded,
Hee'l guard his honor with his sword and Speare;
Or if the
Gerekes will on the
Troians pray,
Through his bold body they shall first make way.
88
Without his faire applause it had not past,
So reuerent was th'opinion of his braine;
His words were Oracles, so sweetly gracst,
They generall murmur in all Counsels gaine,
His free consent they hauing w
[...]on at last,
The King appoints them a well furnisht traine,
With two and twenty Ships well rig'd and man'd,
In any part of
Greece freely to Land.
89
Which when the Prophetesse
Cassandra heares,
Indu'de with deuine wisedome, she exclaimes,
Her yellow Tramels she in fury teares,
And cries alowd: poore
Troy shall burne in flames.
Oh had not changelesse Fate made deafe their eares
They had bin mou'd: Th'vnhappy King she blames:
The credulous Queene, rash
Paris, and all
Troy,
That giue consent their Citty to destroy.
90
But as her Deuinations neuer fayled,
So were they neuer credited for true,
Till
Troy vnwares with mischiefe was assayled,
And then too late their misbeliefe they rue,
They that now held her mad, ere long bewailed
Their slacke distrust, when threatned Ils ensue:
But twas a Fate their Sawes were still neglected,
and till prooud true by processe: false, suspected.
91
Apollo, in whose sacred gift remaines
The true presage and ken of future things,
Phoebus and Cassandra.
Dotes on
Cassandraes beauty, and complaines,
To her chast eares he tunes his golden strings;
The crasty Girle that in her heart disdaines
The gold, as she had earst despised Kings,
Demands a boone, which
Phaebus hath decreed
To grant
Cassandra, in sure hope to speed.
92
He sweares by
Styx, an oath that cannot change,
That he will graunt what she shall next impose him,
She askes to know the skill of secrets strange,
And future Prophesies; withall she shewes him
Her beauty where his eyes may freely range:
The amorous God of Fire securely throwes him
In her faire lap, and on her Iuory brest,
Laies his bright head, so grants her her request.
93
But when she feeles a deuine spirit infus'd
Through all her parts, (this
Phoebus did inspire,)
She fled his loose imbraces, and refus'd
By any meanes to accomplish his desire:
He mad with anger to be thus abus'd,
Thus sayes: Thou think'st to mock the God of Fire:
Thy Sawes, though sooth, yet shall do no man good,
Not be beleeu'd, or else not vnderstood.
94
This was the cause the King remain'd vnmou'd,
The Queene vntoucht with her lamenting cries,
And all those Princes that their safeties lou'd,
Though long for-warn'd, her Counsell yet despise,
Her Spels haue credit, when th'euents are prou'd,
Till then, though true, they are esteemed lies:
But leaue
Cassandra to her ceaselesse care,
And
Paris to his
Troian Fleet prepare.
95
Who with his Brother
Deiphebus sends,
To hast
Aeneas to the Seas with speed,
Polydamus, Anthenor, and such frends,
As in this generall voyage were agreed,
His Souldiers most
Pannonians, he entends
Shall rather see his Aunt from
Aiax freed,
Or some bright
Graecian Queene, for her disgrace
Shall Captiue liue in faire
Hesiones place.
96
Imbarckt, and passing diuers Seas, at last,
In
Lacedemons Port they safely Land,
But what twixt
Paris and bright
Hellen past,
What fauours he receiu'd from her faire hand,
[Page 191] How the
Greeke Spartan Queene the
Troian grac'st,
You in the sequell Booke must vnderstand,
Some small retyrement at this time we craue,
What you want heere, another place shall haue,
TOuching the Dignity of Poets, I referre you to
Ouids 3. Booke, De arte Amandi, omitting others, translating him thus:
SEe, see, What alterations rude time brings,
Poets of old, were the right hands of Kings,
Large were their gifts, supreame was their reward,
Their meeterd Lines with feare and reuerence hard,
Honour, and state, and sacred Maiesty,
Belong'd to such as studied Poetry:
Ennius (by
Scipio the great) was sought,
And from the Mountaines in
Calabria brought:
Dishonoured now, the Iuy Garland lies,
The Ancient worship vnto Poets dies,
Yet should we striue our owne fames to awake,
Homer an euerlasting worke did make,
His
Illiades cald, else who had
Homer knowne,
Had
Danae in her Tower an old wife growne,
And neuer vnto publish view resorted,
How had her beauty bin so farre reported?
And in another place proceedeth thus:
We in our flowing numbers beauty praise,
And in our Poems your deserts can raise:
We first bestow'd on
Nemesis a name,
Cinthia by our admittance keeps hir fame,
Lycoris neuer hath bin knowne before,
By vs she sounds in euery forraine shore,
And many proffer me large gifts, to know
Who my
Corinna is, whom I praise so:
In vs there is a power shall neuer perrish,
Vs the
Pierides and
Muses cherrish:
A Godhead raignes in vs, & with the stars,
We haue Trafficke and acquaintance, holding wars
Which none saue Barbarisme, our Sacred spirit,
We from the bye Deuinest powers inherit.
[Page 192]
POlydor was sonne to
Priam and
Hecuba, who was committed to
Polynestor, to be kept in the time of the
Troian warres, with a great sum of money.
The description of the
Troians be according to
Dares the
Troian, who liued in the warres of
Troy, and writ their vtter subuersion.
The
Peletronij were the
Lapithes, who first found the vse of Bridles, Bits, and Snaffels, so cald of
Peletronium a Towne in
Thessaly.
Castor and
Pollux were two twins, whom
Iupiter begot of
Laeda, Kings in
Achaya, Brothers to
Helena.
The Fortunes of
Paris, his casting out to bee a Sheapherd after the ominous dreame of his Mother, with the vision of the three Goddesses in the mount of
Ida, are more at large expressed in his Epistle to
Helena.
Cassandraes Prophesies true, and neuer credited, alude to the Prophet
Tyresias a Southsayer of
Thebes. Who vvith striking two Adders ingendring, became forthwith a Woman. Seauen yeares after, he likewise finding two Serpents, stroke them, and was immediately turned againe into a man, and participated both the affection of man and vvoman.
It so fell out, that
Iupiter and
Iuno arguing, fel into great difference: Shee holding obstinately Women lesse wanton then men: Hee affirming men lesse Lasciuious then Women: and who can better moderate this discention then
Tyresius, that had felt the desires of both, to him they appeale; He tooke
Iupiters part, and averd Women to be most Luxurious: At vvhich
Iuno inraged, strooke him vvith blindnesse, vvhich because
Iupiter could not helpe (for one Godde cannot vndoe what another hath done) she gaue him the guift of Prophesie: to vvhich, the spightfull Goddesse added also this, that his Prophefies (though true) yet they shoulde neuer bee beleeued.
Clazemonij vvere people of
Ionia. Of that Country,
Artemō, was cald
Clazemonius: It was the name of a Physitian in
Pliny, also a beautiful young man much loued of al Women.
Mideus wat called
Messenius of
Messe, a Towne in
Peloponesus.
Of
Acrisius vvee haue spoake before, the Father of
Danae' his Brother
Praetus, sought to dispossesse
[Page 193] him of his kingdom, and they are said to be the first that vsed a shield in battaile.
Of the
Palladium, what it was, many writers differ:
Palladia, are all such Images as are made without hands, or such
Pherecides. as fell from heauen to Earth: such was the
Palladiū of
I roy, and light first in the Citty
Pessinus, a Mart-Towne in
Phrygia, where
Sibell had a Temple. Others thinke it to be giuen
Dio, Drodorus. by
Iupiter to
Icus the Brother of
Ganimed, whose censure we most allow. Though others write this
Palladium to bee made by
Asius a great Phylosopher, and a Mathematitian, of
I
[...]hanes Antioch
[...]s. whom the thirde part of the world was called
Asia, being modeld with this Vertue, that the Citty which inioyed it, shoulde for the time be inuincible. The like things was attributed to the shafts of
Hercules, giuen to
Philocteres by dying
Hercules in the Mount
Oeta, betweene
Thessaly and
Macedonia, when the
Delphian Oracles had signified to the
Greeks, that
Troy could neuer be surprised without the shaftes of
Hercules, they sought
Philoctetes, and demaunding of him those spoiles (which hee vvas bound by oath to conceale) being extreamely vrged, hee pointed with his foote to the place where they vvere buried, vvhich the ioyfull
Greeks inioying, they receaued by them victory, and the
Troians the ouerthrow.
The end of the eight
CANTO.
Argumentum
PAris
departs from Troy, & Greece
doth enter
Whom
Menelaus welcomes, hauing seene;
The King is cald thence by a strange aduenter
And to his
Troian-guest he trusts his Queene:
Paris fayre
Hellen Loues, & doth present her
With a long sute, to heale his wound yet greene:
First
Paris writes, she answers; Then with ioy
Greece they for sake, & both are shipt for
Troy
ARG. 2.
BRight
Hellen courted,
Paris birth and Fate,
With his Loue-trickes,
Iota shall relate.
WHo can describe the purity of those,
Whose beauties are by Sacred Vertues guided,
Or who their vgly pictures that oppose
Their beauti
[...]s against Chastity deuided,
Proud
Lucifer an
Angell was, but chose
Vice: Vertue to eschew: and from heauen slided:
Women like him (in shape
Angellicall)
are
Angels whilst they stand, Deuils when they fall.
2
Their gifts well vsd, haue power t'inchant the wise,
To daunt the bold, and ruinate the strong,
Which well applyde, can make the ruin'd rise,
The Coward valiant, weake to tast no wrong,
[Page 197] They are all poyson, when they wantonize,
All Soueraigne, where ther's Vertue mixt among:
Chast, nothing better; wanton, nothing worse,
The grate-fulst Blessing, or the greatest Curse.
3
Had
Spartan Hellen bin as chast as faire,
her Vertue sooner might haue raisd a
Troy
Then her loose gestures: great without compare,
Had power so rich a Citty to destroy:
By this time all the
Troians Landed are,
and
Paris of the Queene receiu'd with ioy:
To whom th'inamored Prince in priuate sends
These lines, in which his duty he commends.
The Epistle of
Paris to
Hesten.
HEalth vnto
Laedaes daughter,
Priains son
Sends in these lines, whose health cannot be won
But by your guift, in whose power it may lie,
To make me whole or sicke; to liue, or die:
Shall I then speaks? Or doth my flame appeare
Plaine without Index? Oh, tis that Ifeare:
My Loue without discouering smile takes place,
And more then I could wish shines in my face.
When I could rather in my thoughts desire
To hide the smoke, til time display the fire:
Time, that can make the fire of Loue shine cleare,
Vntroubled with the misty smoke of feare:
But I dissemble it, for who I pray
Can fire conceale, that will it selfe betray?
yet if you looke, I should affirme that plaine
In words, which in my countenance Imaintaine:
I burne, I burne, my fault I haue confest,
My words beare witnesse how my lookes transgrest.
Oh pardon me that haue confest my error,
Cast not vpon my lines a looke of terror,
But as your beautic is beyond compare,
Suite vnto that your lookes (oh you most faire)
That you my Letter haue receiu'd, by this
The supposition glads me, and I wish
[Page 198] By hope incourag'd, hope that makes me strong,
you will receiue me in some sort ere long,
I aske no more then what the Queene of Beauty
Hath promist me, for you are mine by duty,
By her I claime you, you for me were made,
And she it was my iourney did perswade:
Nor Lady thinke your beauty vainely sought,
I by deuine instinct was hether brought,
And to this enterprize, the heauenly powers,
Haue giuen consent, the Gods proclaime me yours,
I ayme at wonders, for I couet you,
yet pardon me, I aske but whats my due,
Venus her selfe my iourney hether led,
And giues you freely to my promist bed:
Vnder her safe conduct the seas I past,
Till I arriu'd vpon these Coasts at last:
Shipping my selfe from the
Sygean shore,
Whence vnto these Confines my course I bore:
She made the
Surges gentle, the winds fayre,
Nor maruell whence these calmes proceeded are,
Needs must she power vpon the salt-Seas haue,
That was sea-borne, created from a waue,
Still may she potent stand in her ability,
And as she made the seas vvith much facility
To be through-saild, so may she calme my heat,
And beare my thoughts to their desired seat:
My flames I found not Here, no, I protest,
I brought them with me closed in my brest,
My selfe transported then without Atturney,
Loue was the Motiue to my tedious iourney;
Not blustring Winter when he triumpht most,
Nor any error droue me to this Coast,
Nor led by Fortune where the rough winds please,
Nor Marchant-like for gaine crost I the Seas:
Fulnesse of wealth in all my Fleet I see,
I am rich in all things saue in wanting thee.
No spoile of petty Nations my Ship seekes,
Nor Land I as a spie among the
Greekes,
What need we? See of all things we haue store,
Compar'd with
Troy (alas) your
Greece is pore,
[Page 197] For thee I come, thy fame hath thus farre driuen me,
Whom golden
Venus hath by promise giuen me,
I Wisht thee ere I knew thee, long ago,
Before these eyes dwelt on this glorious show:
I saw thee in my thoughts, know beautious Dame,
I first beheld you with the eyes of Fame,
Nor maruell Lady I was stroke so farre,
Thus Darts or Arrowes sent from
[...]owes of warre
Wound a great distance off: so was I hit
With a deepe smarting wound that ranckles yet,
For so it pleas'd the Fates, whom least you blame,
Ile tell a true Tale to confirme the same.
When in my Mothers wombe full ripe I lay,
Ready the first houre to be hold the day,
And she at point to be deliuered streight,
And to vnlade her of her Royall freight,
My Byrth-houre was delaid, and that sad night
A fearefull vision did the Queene affright,
In a sonnes stead to please the aged Sire,
She dreampt she had brought forth a Brand of fire,
Frighted she rises, and to
Priam goes,
To the old King this ominous dreame she showes:
He to the Priest, the Priest doth this returne,
That the Child borne shall stately
Islium burne:
Better then he was ware the Prophet guest,
Hecubaes dreame.
For loe a kindled Brand flames in my brest,
To preuent Fate a Pesant I was held,
Till my faire shape all other Swaines exeld,
And gaue the doubtfull world assurance good,
To preuent the Oracle,
Para was cast out among the shepheards of
Ida.
your
Paris was deriu'd from royall blood.
Amid the
Idean Fields there is a place
Remote, full of hie Trees, which hide the face
Of the greene mantled Earth, where in thicke rowes,
The Oake, the Elme, the Pine, the Pitch-tree growes:
Heere neuer yet did browze the wanton Ewe,
Nor from this plot the slow Oxe licke the dew:
The sauage Goat that feeds among the Rockes
Hath not graz'd heere, nor any of their Flockes,
Hence the
Dardanian wals I might espy,
The lofty Towers of
Islium reared by,
[Page 198] Hence I the Seas might from the firme Land see,
Which to behold, I leant me to a Tree:
Beleeue me, for I speake but what is true,
The vision of Paris.
Downe from the skies with feathered pynions flew
The Nephew to great
Atlas, and doth stand
With Golden
Caducens in his hand,
(This as the Gods to me thought good to show,
I hold it good that you the same should know:
Three Goddesses behind young
Hermes moue
Great
Iuno, Pallas, and the Queene of
Loue;
Who as in pompe and Pride of gate they passe,
Iuno, Palles, and
[...]enus.
Scarse with their weight they bend the tops of grasse:
Amaz'd I start, and endlong stands my haire,
When
Mayus Sonne thus sayes, abandon feare
Thou Curteous Swaine, that to these groues repairest,
And freely Iudge which of these three is fairest:
And least I should this curious sentence shun,
He tels me by
Iboues sentence all is done.
And to be Iudge I no way can eschew,
This hauing saide, vp through the Ayre he flew:
I straight take Hart a grace, and grow more bold,
And there their beauties one by one behold.
Why am I made the Iudge to giue this dome?
Methinkes all three are Worthy to o're-come:
To iniure two such Beauties what tongue dare?
Or preserre one where they be all faire:
Now this seemes fairest, now againe that other,
Now would I speake, and now my thoughts I smother,
And yet at length the praise of one most sounded,
And from that one my present Loue is grounded:
The Goddesses out of their earnest care
And pride of Beauty to be held most faire,
Seeke with large Ariues, and gifts of wondrous price,
To their owne thoughts my censure to intice:
Inno the Wife of
Ihoue doth first inchant me,
To Iudge her fairest, she a Crowne will grant me:
Pallas her Daughter, next doth vnder take me,
Giue her the price, and valiant she will make me:
I straight deuise which can most pleasure bring,
To be a valiant Souldier or a King:
[Page 199] Last
Venus smiling came with such a grace,
As if she swayed an Empire in her face,
Let not (said she) these guifts the Conquest be are,
Combats and Kingdomes are both fraught with feare.
Ile giue thee what thou louest best, (louely Swaine,)
The furest Saint that doth on earth remaine
Shalbe thine owne, make thou the Conquest mine,
Faire
Laedaes fairest daughter shalbe thine.
This said, when with my se'se I had deuised,
And her rich guift and beauty ioyntly prised:
Venus victor, ore the rest is plac'st,
Iuno and
Pallas leaue the Mount disgrac'st,
Meane time my Fates a prosperous course had ron,
And by knowne signes King
Priam cald me Son:
The day of my restoring is kept holy
Among the Saints-dates, consecrated soly
To my remembrance, being a day of ioy,
For euer in the Calenders of
Troy.
As I wish you I haue bin wisht by others,
The fairest maids by me would haue bin Mothers,
Of all my fauours I bestow'd not any,
you onely may inioy the Loues of many:
Nor by the Daughters of great Dukes and Kings
Haue I alone bin sought, whose marriage Rings
I haue turn'd backe, but by a straine more hie,
By Nimphs and Phairies. such as neuer die.
No sooner were you promist as my due,
But I (al hated) to remember you:
Waking, I saw your Image, if I dreampt,
Your beautious figure stil appeard to tempt
And vrge this voyage: Til your face excelling
These eies beheld, my dreames were all of
Hellen.
Imagine how your face should now incite me,
Being seene, that vnseene did so much delite me:
If I was scorcht so farre off from the Fyer,
How am I burnt to Cinders thus much nyer:
Nor could I longer owe my selfe this treasure,
But through the Ocean I must search my pleasure,
The
Phrygian Hatchets to the rootes are put
Of the
Idean Pines, (asunder cut)
[Page 200] The Wood-land Mountaine yeilded me large fees,
Being despoyl'd of all her tallest Trees,
From whence we haue squar'd out vn-numbred beames,
That must be washt within the Marine streames:
The grounded Oakes are bowed, though stiffe as steele,
And to the tough Ribs is the bending Keele
Wouen by Ship-wrights craft, then the Maine-mast,
Acrosse whose middle is the Saile yard plast.
Tackles and sailes, and next you may discerne,
Our painted Gods vpon the hooked stearne:
The God that beares me on my happy way,
And is my guide, is
Cupid: Now the day
In which the last stroke of the Hammer's heard,
Within our Nauy, in the East appeard,
And I must now lanch forth, (so the Fates please)
To seeke aduentures in the
Egean Seas.
My Father and my Mother moue delay,
And by intreaties would inforce my stay:
They hang about my necke, and with their teares
Woo me deferre my iourney: but their feares
Can haue no power to keepe me from thy sight:
And now
Cassandra full of sad affright,
With loose disheuel'd Tramels, madly skips,
Iust in the way betwixt me and my Ships:
Oh, whether wilt thou head-long run she cries?
Theu bearest fire with thee, whose smoake vp flies
Vnto the heauens (Oh
Ihoue) thou little fearest
What quenchlesse flames thou through the water bearest:
Caffandra was too true a Prophetesse,
Her quenchlesse flames she spake of (I confesse,)
My hot desires burne in my breast so fast,
That no Red Furnace hotter flames can cast.
I passe the Citty gates, my Barke I boord,
The entertainment of
Paris.
The fauourable winds calme gales affoord,
And fill my sail
[...]s, vnto your Land I steare,
For whether else (his course) should
Paris beare:
Your Husband entertaines me as his guest,
And all this hapneth by the Gods behest,
He shewes me all his Pastures, parts, and Fields,
And euery rare thing
Lacedemon yeilds,
[Page 201] He holds himselfe much pleased with my being,
And nothing hides, that he esteems worth seeing.
I am on fire, till I behold your face,
Of all
Achayas Kingdome, the sole grace,
All other Curious obiects I defie,
Nothing but
Hellen can content mine eie,
Whom when I saw, I stood transformd with wonder,
Sencelesse, as one strooke dead by
Ihoues sharpe Thunder:
As I reuiue, my eyes Irowle and turne,
Whilst my flam'd thoughts with hotter fancies burne,
Euen so (as I remember,) lookt Loues Queene,
When she was last in
Phrygian Ida seene,
Vnto which place by Fortune I was trained,
Where by my censure she the Conquest gained:
But had you made a fourth in that contention,
Of
Venus beauty, there had bin no mention:
Hellen assuredly had borne from all
The prize of beauty, the bright Golden Ball.
Onely of you may this your Kingdome boast,
by you it is renown'd in euery Coast:
Rumor hath euery where your beautie blazed,
In what remote Clyme is not
Hellen praised?
From the bright Eastern Suns vprise, Inquire
Euen to his downfall, where he slakes his fire,
There liues not any of your Sex that dare,
Contend with you that are proclaimd so faire;
Trust me, for truth I speake. Nay vvhats most true,
Too sparingly the vvorld hath spoke of you:
Fame that hath vndertooke your name to blaze,
Plaid but the envious Husvvife in your praise:
More then report could promise, or fame blazon,
H
[...]en at nine yeares of age rauisht by
Theseus.
Are these Deuine perfections that I gaze on:
These were the same that made Duke
Theseus lauish,
Who in thy prime and Nonage did thee rauish;
A vvorthie Rape for such a vvorthie Man,
Thrice happie Rauisher, to ceize thee than
When thou vvert stript starke naked to the skin,
A custome in
Pelepones
[...], the Prou
[...] in which
[...]
[...] stands.
(A sight, of force to make the Gods to sin:)
Such is your Countries guise at seasons vvhen,
vvith naked Ladies they mixe naked Men;
[Page 202] That he did steale thee from thy Friends, I praise him,
And for that deed, I to the Heauens will raise him:
That he return'd thee backe, by
Ihoue I wonder,
Had I bin
Theseus, he that should assonder
Haue parted vs, or snacht thee from my bed,
First from my shoulders should haue par'd my head:
So rich a purchase, such a glorious pray,
Should constantly haue bin detai'nd for aye.
Could these my strong Armes possibly vnclaspe,
Whilst in their amorous Foulds they
Hellen graspe,
Neither by free constraint, nor by free-giuing,
Could you depart that compasse, and I liuing:
But if by rough inforce I must restore you,
Some fruits of Loue, (which I so long haue bore you,)
I first would reape, and some sweet fauour gaine,
That all my suite were not bestowd in vaine;
Either with me you should abide and stay,
Or for your passe your maiden-head should pay.
Or say I spar'd you that, yet would I try
What other fauour, I could else come by,
All that belongs to loue, I would not misse,
You should not let me both to clip and kisse.
Giue me your heart faire Queene, my hart you owe,
And what my resolution is, you knowe,
Til the last fire my breathlesse body take,
The fire within my breast can neuer slake,
Before large kingdomes I preferd your face,
And
Iunoes loue, and potent gifts disgrace.
To sold you in my amorous Armes I chusd,
And
Pallas vertues scornefully refusd.
When they with
Venus in the Hil of
Idc,
Made mee the Iudge their beauties to decide,
Nor do I yet repent me, hauing tooke
Beauty: and strength and Scepter'd rule for sooke:
Methinkes I chusd the best, (nor thinke it strange)
I still persist, and neuer meane to change;
Onely that my imployment be not vain,
Oh you more worth then any Empires gaine,
Let me intreat, least you my byrth should scorne
Or parentage: know I am royall borne.
[Page 203] By marrying me, you shall not wrong your State,
Nor be a wife to one degenerate.
Search the Records where vve did first begin,
And you shall find the Pleyads of our Kin:
Nay
Iho
[...]e himselfe, all others to forbeare,
That in our stocke renowned Princes were:
My Father of all
Asia raignes sole-King,
Whose boundlesse Coast, scarce any featheredwing
Can giue a girdle too, a happier Land
A neighbor to the Ocean cannot stand:
There in a narrovv compasse you may see
Citties and Towers, more then may numbred be,
The houses guilt, rich Temples that exell,
And you will say I neere the great Gods dwell.
You shall behold hie
Issiums lofty Towers,
And
Troyes braue Wals built by Immortall powers,
But made by
Phoebus the great God of Fire,
And by the touch of his melodious
Lyer:
If we haue people to inhabit, vvhen
The sad earth grones to beare such troopes of men:
Iudge
Hellen, Likevvise when you come to Land,
The
Asian Women shall admiring stand,
Saluting thee with welcome, more and lesse
Inpreasing throngs and numbers, numberlesse:
More then our Courts can hold of you (most faire)
You to your selfe will say, alasse, how bare
And poore
Achaya is, when with great pleasure,
You see each house containe a Citties Treasure.
Mistake me not I
Sparta do not scorne,
I hold the Land blest where my Loue was borne:
Though barren else, rich
Sparta Hellen bore,
And therefore I that Prouince must adore;
Yet is your Land methinkes but leane and empty,
You worthy of a Clyme that flowes with plenty
Full
Troy, I prostrate it is yours by duty,
This petty-seat becomes not your rich beauty;
Attendance, Preparation, Curtsie, state,
Fit such a Heauenly forme, on which should waite,
Cost, fresh variety, Delicious diet,
Pleasure, Contentment, and Luxurious ryet,
[Page 204] What Ornaments we vse, what fashions faigne,
You may perceiue by me and my proud traine,
Thus we attyre our men, but with more cost
Of Gold and Pearle, the rich Gownes are Imbost
Of our chiefe Ladies, guesse by what you see,
you may be soone induc'st to credit me.
Ganimed.
Be tractable faire
Spartan, nor contemne
A
Troian borne, deriu'd from Royall stemne:
He was a
Troian and allyde to
Hector,
That waits vpon
Ihoues cup, and fils him
Nector:
Cephalus.
A
Troian did the faire
Aurora wed,
And nightly slept within her Roseat bed:
The Goddesse that ends night and enters day,
From our faire
Troian Coast stole him away,
Anchises.
Anchises was a
Troian, whom Loues Queene,
(Making the Trees of
Ida a thicke Screene
Twixt Heauen and her) oft lay with, view me vvell,
I am a
Troian too, in
Troy I dwell:
Thy Husband
Menelaus hether bring,
Compare our shapes, our yeares, and euery thing
I make you Iudgesse, wrong me if you can,
you needs must say I am the properer man:
None of my line hath turn'd the Sun to blood,
And rob'd his Steeds of their Ambrosiall food:
My Father grew not from the
Caucasse Rocke,
Nor shall I graft you in a bloody Stocke:
Priam nere wrong'd the guiltlesse soule, or further,
Made the
Myrtoan Sea looke red with murder.
Myrtoan is a part of the sea betwixt the
Ioutum &
Eg
[...]um.
Nor thirsteth my great Grand-sire in the Lake
Of
Lethe, Chin-deepe, yet no thirst can slake:
Nor after ripened Apples vainely skips,
Who flie him still, and yet still touch his lips,
But what of this? If you be so deriu'd,
You notwithstanding are no right depriu'd:
You grace your Stocke, and being so deuine,
Ihoue is of force compeld into your Liue.
Oh mischiefe! Whilst I vainely speake of this,
Your Husband all vnworthy of such blisse
Inioyes you this long night, enfolds your wast,
And where he list may boldly touch and tast,
Passeth betweene you my vext soule t'annoy,
At such hie feasts I wish my enemy sit,
Where discontent attendes on euery bit,
I neuer yet was plac'st at any Feast,
But oft it irkt me that I was your Guest:
That which offends me most, thy rude Lord knowes,
For still his arme about thy necke he throwes,
Which I no sooner spy but I grow mad,
And hate the man whose courting makes me sad:
Shall I be plaine? I am ready to sinke downe
When I behold him wrap you in his Gowne,
While you sit smiling on his amorous knee,
His fingers presse, where my hands itch to bee:
But when he hugs you I am forc'st to frowne,
The meat I'am eating will by no meanes downe,
But stickes halfe way, amidst these discontents
I haue obseru'd you laugh at my laments,
And with a scornefull, yet a wanton smile
Deride my sighes and grones, oft to beguile
My passions, and to quench my fiery rage,
By quaffing healths I'haue thought my flame t'asswage,
But
Bacchus full cups make my flame burne hyer,
Add wine to loue, and you adde fire to fire.
To shun the sight of many a wanton feat,
Betwixt your Lord and you I shift my seat,
And turne my head, but thinking of your grace,
Loue skrewes my bead to ga
[...]e backe on your face.
What were I best to do? To see you play
Mads me, and I perforce must turne away,
And to forbeare the place where you abide,
Would kill me dead should I but start aside:
As much as lyes in me I striue to bury
The shape of Loue, in mirths spight I seeme mery:
But oh, the more I seeke it to suppresse,
The more my blabbing lookes my loue professe.
You know my Loue which I in vaine should hide,
Would God it did appeare to none beside,
Oh
Ihoue how often haue I turnd my cheeke,
To hide th'apparant teares that passage seeke,
[Page 206] From forth my etes, and to a corner stept,
Least any man should aske wherefore Iwept:
How often haue I told you pittious tales,
Of constant louers, and how Loue preuailes?
When such great heed to my discourse I tooke,
That euery accent suited to your looke.
In forged names my selfe I represented,
The Louer so perplext and so tor
[...]ented,
If you will know? Behold I am the same,
Paris was ment in that true Louers name:
As often, that I might the more securely
Speake loose immodest words that sound impurely,
That they offencelesse might your sweet eares tutch,
I haue lispt them out, like one had drunke too mutch:
Once I remember, your loose vayle betraid
Your naked skin, and a fayre passage made
To my inamored eye, Oh skin much brighter
Then snow, or purest milk, in colour whiter
Then your faire mother
Laeda, when
Ihoue grac'st her,
And in the shape of Feathered Swan imbrac'st her:
Whilst at this rauishing sight I stand amazed,
And without interruption freely gazed,
The wreathed handle of the Boule I graspt,
Fell from my hold, my strengthlesse hand vnclaspt,
A Goblet at that time I held by chanee,
And downe it fell, for I was in a trance;
Kisse your faire daughter, and to her I skip,
And snatch your kisses from your sweet Childs lip.
Sometimes I throw my selfe along, and lie
Singing Loue-songs, and if you cast your eie
On my effeminate gesture, I still find
Some pretty couered signes to speake my mind,
And then my earnest suit bluntly inuades
Aethra and
Clim
[...]nca your two chiefe maides,
But they returne me answeres full of feare,
And to my motions lend no further eare.
Oh that you were the prize of some great strife,
And he that wins might claime you for his wife,
Hyppomanes with swift
Atlanta ran,
And at one course the Goale and Lady wan,
[Page 207] Euen she, by whom so many Suters perisht,
Was in the bosome of her new Loue cherisht:
So
Hercules for
Deyaneira stroue,
Brake
Achelous horne, and gain'd his loue,
Had I such liberty: such freedome graunted,
My resolution neuer could be daunted,
Your selfe should find, and all the world should see,
Hellen (a prize alone) reseru'd for me.
There is not left me any meanes (most faire)
To Court you now, but by intreats and praire,
Vnlesse (as it becoms me) you thinke meet,
That I should prostrate fall, and kisse your feet,
Oh, all the honour that our last age wins,
Then glory of the two
Tyndarian Twins,
Worthy to be Ihoues Wife, in heauen to raigne,
Were you not Ihoues owne daughter, of his straine.
To the
Sygean confines I will carry thee,
And in the Temple of great Pallas marry thee:
Or in this Island where I vent my mones,
Ile beg a Toombe for my exiled bones:
My wound is not a slight race with an arrow,
But it hath pierst my hart, and burnt my marrow,
This Prophesie my Sister oft hath sounded,
That by an heauenly dart I should be wounded:
Oh then forbeare (fayre
Hellen) to oppose you.
Against the Gods, they say I shall not lose you:
Yeeld you to their beheast, and you shall find,
The Gods to your petitions likewise kind.
A thousand things at once are in my braine,
Which that I may essentially complaine,
And not in papers empty all my head,
Anon at night receiue me to your bed.
Blush you at this, or Lady doe you feare
To violate the Nuptiall lawes austearc?
Oh (simple
Hellen) Foolish, I might say,
What profite reape you to be Chast, I pray?
1st possible, that you a World to winne,
Should keepe that face, that beauty, without sinne?
Rather you must your glorious face exchange
For one (lesse Faire) or else not seeme so strange:
Tis hard to finde one Woman chast and faire,
Venus will not haue beauty ouer aw'de,
Hie Ihoue him selfe, stolne pleasures will applaude,
And by such theeuish pastimes we may gather,
How Ihoue gainst Wedlocks lawes, became your father:
He and your mother
Laeda both transgrest
When you were got, she bare a tender breast.
What glory can you gaine Loues sweets to smother?
Or to be counted Chaster then your mother?
Professe strict chastity, when vvith great ioy,
I lead you as my Bride-espousd, through
Troy;
Then Ientreat you raine your pleasures in,
I wish thy
Paris may be all thy sinne.
If
Citherea her firme Couenant keepe,
Though I within your bosome nightly sleepe,
We shall not much misdoo, but so offend,
That we by marriage may our guilt amend.
Your husband hath himselfe this businesse ayded,
And though (not with his toung) he hath per swaded
By all his deedes (as much) least he should stay
Our priuate meetings, he is farre away:
Of purpose rid vnto the farthest West,
That he might leaue his wife vnto his guest.
No fitter time he could haue found to visit
The
Chrisean royall Scepter, and to ceize it:
Oh, simple simple Husband: but hees gone,
And going, left you this to thinke vpon.
Faire Wife (quoth he) I prethe in my place,
Regard the
Troian Prince, and do him grace:
Behold, a witnesse I against you stand,
You haue beene carelesse of his kinde command.
Count from his first dayes iourney, neuer since
Did you regard or grace the
Troian Prince;
What thinke you of your Husband? that he knowes
The worth and value of the face he owes?
Who (but a Fool) such beauty would indanger,
Or trust it to the mercy of a Stranger.
Then (royall Queene) if neither may intreat,
My quenchlesse passion, nor Loues raging heate
[Page 209] Can win you, we are wooed both to this crime,
Euen by the fit aduantage of the time,
Either to Loues sweet sport we must agree,
Or shew our selues to be worse fooles then he.
He tooke you by the hand the hower he rode,
And knowing, I with you must make abode,
Brings you to me, What should I further say?
It was his minde to giue you quite away.
What meant he else? Then lets be blithe and iolly,
And make the best vse of your Husbands folly:
What should we doe? Your husband is farre gone,
And this colde night (poore soule) you lie alone:
I want a bedfellow, so doe we eather,
What lets vs then, but that we lie together.
You slumbring thinke on me, On you I dreame,
Both our desires are feruent, and extreame:
Sweet, then appoint the night. Why doe you stay?
Oh night, more clearer then the brightest day,
Then I dare freely speake, protest, and sweare,
And of my vowes the Gods shall record beare:
Then will I seale the contract, and the strife,
From that day forward, we are man and Wife:
Then questionlesse I shall so farre per swade,
That you with me shall
Troyes ritch Coast invade,
And with your
Phrygian guest at last agree,
Our potent Kingdome and rich Crowne to see:
But if you (blushing) feare the vulger bruit,
That sayes, you follow me, to me make suite,
Feare it not
Hellen; Ile so vvorke with Fame,
I will (alone) be guilty of all blame.
Duke
Theseus was my instance, and so were
Your brothers Lady, Can I come more neare
To ensample my attempts by?
Theseus haled
Hellen perforce: Your brothers they preuayled
With the
Leucippian Sisters, now from these
Ile count my selfe the fourth (if
Hellen please.)
Our
Troian Nauy rides vpon the Coast,
Rig'd, arm'd, and Man'd, and I can proudly boast,
The bankes are high, Why doe you longer stay?
The windes and Oares are ready to make way,
[Page 210] You shall be like a high Maiesticke Queene,
Led through the
Dardan Citty, and be seene
By millions, who your State hauing commended,
Will (wondring) sweare, some Goddesse is descended.
Where ere you walke the Priests shall Incence burne,
No way you shall your eie or body turne,
But sacrificed beasts the ground shall beate,
And bright religious fires the Welkin heate,
My father, mother, brother, sisters: all
Islium and
Troy in pompe maiesticall,
Shall with rich guifts present you (but alasse)
Not the least part (so farre they doe surpasse)
Can my Epistle speake, you may behold
More then my words or writings can vnfold.
Nor feare the bruit of vvarre, or threatning Steele,
When we are fled, to dogge vs at the heele:
Or that all
Graecia will their powers vnite,
Of many rauisht, can you one recite,
Whom vvarre re-purchast? These be ydle feares,
Rough blustering
Boreas fayre
Orithea beares
Vnto the Land of
Thrace, yet
Thrace still free,
And
Athens raisd no rude Hostility:
In winged
Pegasus did
Iason saile,
And from great
Colchos he
Medea stale:
Yet
Thessaly you see can shew no scar
Of former wounds in the
Thessalian warre.
He that first rauisht you: In such a Fleet
As ours is,
Ariadne brought from
Creet:
Yet
Mynos and Duke
Theseus were agreed,
About that quarrell, not a breast did bleed:
Lesse is the daunger (trust me) then the feare
That in these vaine and ydle doubts appeare.
But say rude vvarre should be proclaimde at length,
Know, I am valiant and haue sinowie strength:
The vveapons that I vse are apt to kill,
Asia besides, more spacious fields can fill
With armed men then
Greece, amongst vs are
More perfect Souldiers, more beasts apt for war:
Nor can thy husband
Menelaus be
Of any high spirit and Magnanimity,
[Page 211] Or so well prou'd in Armes: for
Hellen I
Beeing but a Lad, haue made my enemies fly,
Re-gaind the prey from out the hands of Theeues,
Who had dispoild our Heards, and stolne our Beeues,
By such aduentures I my name obtained,
(Being but a Lad) the conquest I haue gained
Of young men in their prime, who much could do,
Deiphebus, Ilioneas
to,
I haue orecome in many sharpe contentions,
Nor thinke these are my vaine and forg'd inuentions,
Or that I only hand to hand can fight,
My arrowes when I please shall touch the white.
I am expert in the Quarrey and the Bovv,
You cannot boast your hartlesse husband so:
Had you the power in all things to supply me,
And should you nothing in the world deny mē,
To giue me such a
Hector to my brother
You could not: The earth beares not such another:
By him alone all
Asia is well mand,
He like an enemy against
Greece shall stand
Opposd to your best fortunes, wherefore striue you?
You do not know his valour that must wiue you,
Or what hid vvorth is in me, but at length
You will confesse when you haue prou'd my strength:
Thus either war shall still our steps pursue,
Or
Greece shall fall in
Troyes all-conquering view,
Nor vvould I feare for such a royall Wife,
To set the Vniuersall world at strife:
To gaine ritch Prizes, men will venter farre,
The hope of purchase makes vs bold in vvarre:
If all the vvorld about you should contend,
Your name would be eternizd vvithout end,
Only be bold, and fearelesse may vve saile
Into my Countrey, with a prosperous gale,
If the Gods graunt me my expected day,
I to the full shall all these Couenants pay.
THese two Epistles being so pertinent to our Historie, I thought necessarie to translate, as well for their elegancy as for their alliance, opening the whole proiect of
[Page 212] the Loue betwixt
Paris and
Hellen, the preparation to his iourney, his entertainment in
Sparta, as also
Hecubaes dreame,
Paris his casting out among Shepheards, his Vision, and the whole prosecution of his intended Rape.
Laeda was wife to
Tindarus King of
Laconia. The Poets write, that
Iupiter accompanying her in forme of a
Swanne, she brought forth two egges, of the one came
Pollux and
Helena, of the other came
Castor and
Clitemnestra, after wife to
Agamemnon.
The
Pleyades from whom
Paris deriues his progeny, are the seauen starres, once daughters to
Lycurgus the famous Law-giuer of
Athens.
Hermione was daughter to
Menalaus and
Helena, betrothed to
Orestes, but married to
Pyrrhus, for which cause
Orestes slew
Pyrrhus at the Altar, and after enioyed his loue
Hermione.
To prosecute the Tale of
Ariadnes transformation after she had saued the life of ingratefull
Theseus, who by hir aduise and prouidence slew the
Mynotaur, Theseus in his returne home for sooke her, and left her vpon a desolate Island.
It so fell out,
MAdde
Ariadne stayde that Isle about,
Left desolate vpon that harren plaine
Where the brooke
Dia poures into the Maine,
Who waking from her rest, her vaile vnbound,
Her barefoot treading on the vnknowne ground,
Her golden haire disheue'ld, loude she raues,
Calling on
Theseus to the deaf-ned waues,
On
Theseus, cruell
Theseus, whom she seekes,
Whilst shewers of teares make furrowes in her cheekes.
She cals and weepes, and weepes and cals at once,
Which might haue mou'd to ruth the sencelesse stones,
Yet both alike became her, they both gracst her,
The whilst she striues to call him, or cry faster.
Then beats she her soft breast, and makes it grone,
And then she cryes, What, is false
Theseus gone?
What shall I doe? she cryes, What shall I doe?
And with that noate, she runs the Forrests throoe,
[Page 213] When suddenly her eare might vnderstand,
Cimbals and Tymbrels toucht with a lowd hand,
To which the Forrests, Woods, and Caues resound,
And now amazde she sencelesse fals to ground.
Behold the Nymphs come with their scattered haire,
Falling behind, which they like garments ware,
And the light Satyres, an vnruly crew,
Neerer and neerer to the Virgin grew.
Next old
Sylenus on his lasie Asse,
Sylenus the Priest of Bacchus.
Nods with his drunken pate, about to passe,
Where the poore Lady all in teares lies drownd,
Scarce sits the Drunkard but he fals to ground,
Scarce holds the Bridle fast, but staggering stoopes,
Following those giddy bachinalian troopes,
Who daunce the wilde
Lauolto on the grasse,
Whilst with a staffe he layes vpon his Asse.
At length, when the young Satyres least suspect,
He tumbling, fals quite from his Asses necke.
But vppe they heaue him, whilst each Satyre cries,
Rise good old Father, good old Father rise.
Now coms the god himselfe, next after him
His Vine-like Chariot, drawne with Tygres grim,
Coulour, and voice, and
Theseus, she doth lacke,
Thrice would she fly, and thrice feare pluckt her back,
She trembles like a stalke the wind doth shake,
Or a weake reede that growes beside the Lake,
To whom the God spake: Lady, take good cheere,
See one more faithfull then false
Theseus heere:
Thou shalt be wife to
Bacchus, for a guift
Take the high heauens, and to the Spheares be lift,
Where thou shalt shine a starre to guide by night,
The wandring Sea-man in his course aright:
This saide, least his grim Tygers should affray
The trembling Mayde, the God his Coach doth stay,
And leaping from his Chariot with his heeles
Imprints the sand, and then the Nymph he feeles,
And hugging her, in vaine she may resist,
He beares her thence (Gods can do what they list)
Some Hymen sing, some
Io, Io cry,
So
Bacchus with the mayde all night doth lie.
[Page 214] Therefore when wine in plentious cups doth flow,
And thou the night vnto thy Loue dost owe,
Pray to the God of grapes that in thy bed,
The quaffing healths do not offend thy hed.
Agreeable to this, is that in the first booke,
de Art. aman. for from
Paris he deriues these Loue-tricks in wine.
LOe, I can teach thee, though thy toung be mute,
How with thy speaking eie to moue thy sute:
Good language may be made in lookes and winkes,
Be first that takes the cup wherein she drinkes,
And note the very place her lip did tutch,
Drinke iust at that, let thy regard be such:
Or when she carues, what part of all the meat
She with her fingers touch, that carue and eate:
Carouse not, but with soft and moderate sups,
Haue a regard and measure, in thy cups:
Let both thy feet and thoughts theyr office know,
Chiefly beware of brauling, which may grow
By too much wine. From fighting most abstaine,
In such a quarrell was
Eurilion slayne:
Where Swaggering leades the way, Mischiefe coms after,
Iunkets and Wine were made for mirth and laughter:
Though to be drunke indeed, may hurt thy braine,
Yet now and then, I hold it good to fayne:
Instruct thy lisping toung sometimes to trip
That if misplacst, a word transgresse thy lip
It may be iudgd that quaffing was the cause, &c.
The end of the nynth
CANTO.
Argumentum
HEllen re-wrytes, the
Troians sute preuails,
And of the appointed Rape they both agree,
Proud of so fayre a purchase,
Paris sailes
To
Troy, from whence the
Graecians seek to free
The rauisht
Spartan: Menalaus bewailes
The absence of his Queene, longing to see
Reuenge on
Troy, to which the
Graecians meet,
Castor and
Pollux perish with the Fleet.
ARG. 2.
KAppa records her Rape, describes and brings
To
Aulis Gulph the powerfull
Graecian kings.
CANTO. 10.
Hellen to Paris.
NO sooner came mine eye vnto the sight
Of thy rude Lynes, but I must needes re-wright:
Dar'st thou (Oh shamelesse) in such heynous wise,
The Lawes of Hospitality despise? And being a straunger,
from thy Countries reach,
Solicite a chast wife to Wedlocks breach?
Was it for this, our free
Tenarian Port,
Receiu'd thee and thy traine, in friendly sort?
[Page 216] And when great Neptune nothing could appease,
Gaue thee safe harbour from the stormy Seas?
Was it for this, our Kingdomes armes spread vvide,
To entertaine thee from the waters side?
Yet thou of forren soyle remote from hence,
A stranger, comming we scarce know from whence,
Is periur'd wrong the recompence of right?
Is all our friendship guerdond with despight?
I doubt me then, whither in our Court doth tarry,
A friendly guest, or a fierce aduersary:
Nor blame me, for if iustly you consider,
And these presumptions well compare togither,
So simple my complaint will not appeare,
But you your selfe must needes excuse my feare.
Well, hold me simple, much it matters not,
Whilst I preserue my chast name farre from spot,
For when I seeme toucht with bashfull shame,
It shewes how highly I regard my Fame:
When I seeme sad, my countnance is not fained,
And when I lower, my looke is vnconstrained.
But say my brovv be cloudy, my name's cleere,
And reuerently you shall of
Hellen heere:
No man from me adulterate spoyles can win,
For to this houre I haue sported without sin,
Which makes me in my hart the more to wonder,
What hope you haue in time to bring me vnder,
Or from mine eie what comfort thou canst gather
To pitty thee, and not despise thee rather:
Because once
Theseus hurried me from hence,
And did to me a kind of violence,
Followes it therefore, I am of such prize,
That rauisht once, I should he rauisht twice:
Was it my fault, because I striu'd in vaine,
And vvanted strength his fury, to restraine?
He flattered and spake fayre, I strugled still,
And what he got, vvas much against my will:
Of all his toyle, he reapt no wished fruit,
For with my wrangling I vvithstood his sute,
At length, I was restor'd, vntoucht and cleere,
In all my Rape, I sufferd naught (saue feare)
Dry, without rhellish, by much striuing got,
And them with much adoo, and to his cost,
Of further fauours, he could neuer boast:
I doubt your purpose aymes at greater blisses,
And hardly would alone be pleasd with kisses,
Thou hast some further ayme, and seekst to do
What (Ihoue defend) I should consent vnto:
He bare not thy bad mind, but did restore me,
Vnblemisht, to the place from whence he bore me:
The youth was bashfull, and thy boldnesse lackt,
And tis well knowne, repented his bold fact:
Theseus repented, so should
Paris do,
Succeed in Loue, and in repentance to;
Nor am I angry: Who can angry be
With him that loues her? If your hart agree
With your kinde vvords, your suite I could applaude
So I were sure your lines were voyd of fraude.
I cast not these strange doubts or this dispence
Like one that were bereft all confidence:
Nor that I with my selfe am in disgrace,
Or do not know the beauty of my face,
But because too much trust hath damag'd such
As haue beleeu'd men in their loues to much,
And now the generall toung of woman saith,
Mans words are full of Treason, void of faith.
Let others sinne, and howers in pleasure wast,
Tis rare to find the sober Matron chast:
Why, say it be that sinne preuailes with fayre ones,
May not my name be rank't among the rare ones?
Because my mother
Laeda was beguilde,
Must I stray too, that am her eldest childe?
I must confesse, my mother made a rape,
But Ihoue beguild her in a borrowed shape,
When she (poore soule) nor dreampt of god nor man,
He troad her like a milke-white feathered
Swan:
She was deceiu'd by error, If I yeild
To your vniust request, nothing can shield
Me from reproach, I cannot plead concealing,
T'was in her, error, tis in me plaine dealing:
[Page 218] She happily err'd, He that her honour spilt,
Had in himselfe full power to salue the guilt;
Her error happyed me to (I confesse)
If to be Ihoues childe, be a happinesse.
To omit high Ihoue, of whom I standin awe,
As the great Grandsire to our Father in Lawe,
To passe the kinne I claime from
Tantalus,
From
Pelopes, and from Noble
Tyndarus.
Laeda by Ihoue in shape of Swan beguild,
Her selfe so chaungde and by him made with ch
[...]ld
Proues Ihoue my Father: then you ydely striue
Your name from Gods and Princes to deriue.
What need you of olde
Priam make relation?
Laomedon, or your great
Phrygian Nation?
Say, all be true: What then? He, of whom most
To be of your alliance you so boast,
Ihoue (fiue degrees at least) from you remoued,
To be the first from me, is plainly proued;
And though (as I beleeue well)
Troy may stand
Powerfull by Sea, and full of strength by Land,
And no Dominion to your State superior,
I hold our Clyme nothing to
Troy inferior:
Say, you in ritches passe vs, or in number
Of people, whom you boast your streets to cumber,
Yet yours a Barbarous Nation is, I tell you,
And in that kind, do we of
Greece excell you.
Your ritch Epistle doth such guifts present,
As might the Goddesses themselues content
And woo them to your pleasures, but if I
Should passe the bonds of shame, & tread awry
If euer you should put me to my shifts,
Your selfe should moue me more then all your guifts:
Or if I euer shall transgresse by stealth,
It shall be for your sake, not for your wealth;
But as your guifts I scorne not, so such seeme
Most pretious, where the giuer we esteeme.
More then your presence, it shall
Hellen please
That you for her haue past the stormy Seas,
That she hath causde your toyle, that you respect her,
And more then all your
Troyan Dames affect her.
But ye'are a Wag in troth, the notes and signes
You make at Table, in the meats and Wines,
I haue obseru'd, when I least seemde to minde them,
For at the first my curious eie did finde them.
Sometimes (you wanton) your fixt eie aduaunces
His brightnesse against mine, darting sweet glaunces,
Outgazing me with such a steadfast looke,
That my dazd eyes their splendor baue for sooke,
And then you sigh, and by and by you stretch
Your amorous arme outright, the bowle to reatch
That next me stands, making excuse to sip
Iust in the self-same place that kist my lip.
How oft haue I obserud your finger make
Tricks and conceited signes, which straight I take?
How often doth your brow your smooth thoughts cloke
When (to my seeming) it hath almost spoke,
And still I fearde my Husband would haue spide ye,
In troth you are to blame, and I must chyde ye:
You are too manifest a Louer (Tush,)
At such knowne signes I could not choose but blush,
And to my selfe I oft was forst to say,
This man at nothing shames. Is this (I pray)
ought saue the truth? Oft times vpon the bord
Where
Hellen was ingrauen, you the word
Amo haue vnder-writ, in new spilt wine
(Good sooth) at first I could not skan the line,
Nor vnderstand your meaning: Now, (oh spight)
My selfe am now taught, so to Read and write.
Should I offend, as Sinne to me is strange,
These blandishments haue power chast thoughts to change
Or if I could be mou'd to step astray
These would prouoke me to lasciuious play:
Besides, I must confesse, you haue a Face,
So admirably rare, so full of grace,
That it hath power to woo and to make ceasure,
Of the most bright chast beauties to your pleasure.
yet had I rather stainelesse keepe my Fame,
Then to a straunger hazzard my good name:
Make me your instance, and forbeare the fare,
Of that which most doth please you, make most spare.
[Page 220] The greatest vertues of which wise men boast,
Is to abstaine from that which pleaseth most.
How many gallant Youths (thinke you) desire,
That which you couet? Skorcht with the selfe-same fire?
Are all the World fooles? Only
Paris wise?
Or is there none saue you haue iudging eies?
No
[...] no, you view no more then others see,
But you are playner and more bold with me,
You are more earnest to pursue your game,
Iyeeld you not more knowledge, but less shame
I would to God that you had sayld from
Troy,
When my Virginity and bedde to enioy
A thousand gallant princely Suters came:
Had I beheld young
Paris, I proclaime,
Of all those thousand I had made you chiefe,
And Spartan
Menalaus to his griefe
Should to my censure haue subscribde and yeilded,
But now (alasse) your hopes are weakely builded
You couet goodes possest; pleasures fore-tasted,
Tarde you come, that should before haue hasted,
What you desire, another claymes as due.
As I could wishe t'haue beene espousde to you,
So let me tell you, since it is my fate,
I hold me happy in this present state,
Then cease fayre Prince, an ydle suite to moue
Seek not to harme hir whom you seem to loue:
In my contented state let me be guided,
As both my stars and fortunes haue prouided,
Nor in so vaine a quest your spirits toyle,
To seeke at my hands an vnworthy spoyle.
But see how soone poore Women are deluded,
Venus her selfe this couenant hath concluded,
For in the
Idaean Valleyes you espy
Three Goddesses, stript naked to your eie,
And when the first had promist you a Crowne,
The second Fortitude and warres renowne,
The third bespake you thus: Crowne, nor Wars pride
Will I bequeath, but
Hellen to thy Bride,
I scarce belieue those high immortall Creatures,
Would to your eye expose their naked features,
[Page 221] Or say the first part of your Tale be pure,
And meet with truth: The second's false I'am sure,
In which poore I was thought the greatest meede,
In such a hie cause by the Goddes decreed.
I haue not of my beauty such opinion
T'imagine it preferd before Dominton,
Or fortitude: nor can your words persu
[...]de me
The greatest gift of al, the Goddesse made me.
It is enough to me, men praise my face,
But from the Goddes, I merit no such grace,
Nor doth the praise you charge me with offend me,
If
Venus doe not enuiously commend me.
But loe I graunt you, and imagine true,
Your free report, claiming your praise as due,
Who would in pleasing things call
Fame a liar,
But giue that credit, which we most desire.
That we haue mou'd these doubts be not you grieued,
The greatest wonders are the least beleeued,
Know then I first am pleasde that
Venus ought me
Such vndeserued grace: Next, that you thought me
The greatest meede: Nor Scepter, nor Warres Fame,
Did you preferre before poore
Hellens name.
(Hard-hart tis time thou shouldst at last come downe)
Therefore I am your valour, I your Crowne,
Your kindnesse conquers me do what I can,
I were hard-harted, not to loue this man;
Obdurate I was neuer, and yet coy,
To fauour him whom I can ner'e enioy.
What profits it the barren sandes to plow
And in the furrowes our affections sow,
In the sweete theft of
Venus I am rude,
And know not how my Husband to delude;
Now I these Loue-lines write, my pen I vow
Is a new office taught, not knowne till now,
Happy are they that in this Trade haue skill,
(Alasse I am a Foole) and shall be still,
And hauing till this houre not slept astray,
Feare in these sports least I should mis my way
The feare (no doubt) is greater then the blame
I stand confounded and amaz'd with shame.
[Page 222] And with the very thought of what you seeke,
Thinke euery eie fixt on my guilty cheeke,
Nor are these suppositions meerely vaine,
The murmuring people whisperingly complaine,
And my maid
Aethra hath by listning slily,
Brought me such newes, as toucht mine honor hily:
Wherefore (deere Lord) dissemble, or desist,
Being ouer-eyde, we cannot as we list,
Fashion our sports, our Loues pure haruest gather:
But why should you desist? dissemble rather:
Sport, (but in secret) sport where none may see,
The greater, but not greatest liberty
Is limitted to our Lasciuious play,
That
Menalaus is farre hence away,
My Husband about great affaires is pousted,
Leauing his royall guest securely hoasted,
His businesse was important and materiall,
Being employd about a Crowne Imperiall:
And as he now is mounted on his Steed,
Ready on his long iourney to proceede,
Euen as he questions to depart or stay,
Sweet hart (quoth I) oh be not long away,
With that he reacht me a sweet parting kisse,
(How loath he was to leaue me, ghesse by this.)
Farwell fayre Wife (saith he) bend all thy cares
To my domesticke businesse, home affayres,
But as the thing that I affection best,
Sweet Wife, looke well vnto my
Troian guest.
It was no sooner out, but with much paine,
My itching spleene from laughter Irestraine,
Which striuing to keepe in and bridle still,
At length Iwrung forth these few words
(I wil.)
Hee's on his iourney to the Isle of
Creet,
But thinke not we may therefore safely meet,
He is so absent, that as present I
Am still within his reach: His Eare, his Eye
And though abroad, his power at home commands
For know you not Kings haue long reaching hads?
The fame for beauty you besides haue giuen me,
Into a great exigent hath driuen me:
[Page 223] The more your commendation fild his care,
The more iust cause my husband hath to fear:
Nor maruell you the King hath left me so,
Into remoate and forraine Climes to goe,
Much confidence he dares repose in me,
My carriage, hauiour, and my modesty,
My beauty he mistrusts, my hart relies in
my face he feares, my Chast life he affies in.
To take time now when time is, you perswade me,
And with his apt fit absence you invade me:
I would, but feare, nor is my mind well set,
my Will would further, what my feare doth let.
I haue no husband here, and you no wife,
I loue your shape, you mine, deare as your life.
The nights seeme long to such as sleepe alone,
Our letters meet to enterchange our mone:
You iudge me beauteous, I esteeme you faire,
Vnder oue Roofe vve Louers lodged are,
And (let me die) but euery thing consider,
Each thing perswades vs we should lie together,
Nothing we see molests vs, naught we heare,
And yet my forward will is slackt through feare:
I would to God that what you ill perswade,
You could as well compell, So I were made
Vn-willing willing, pleasingly abusde,
So my simplicity might be excusde:
Iniurious force is oft-times wondrous pleasing,
To such as suffer ease in their diseasing,
If what I will, you gainst my vvill should doe,
I with such force could be well pleased too.
But whilst our loue is young and in the bud,
Suffer his Infant vigor be withstood,
A flame new kindled is as easily quench't,
And sudden sparkles in little drops are drencht:
A Trauellours Loue is like himselfe, vnstaid,
And wanders where he walkes, It is not layde
On any firmer ground, for when vve alone
Thinke him to vs, the winde blovves faire, hees gone:
Witnesse
Hypsipile, alike betraide,
Ariadnt.
Witnesse vvith her, the bright
Mynoyan maide:
[Page 224] Nay then your selfe, as you your selfe haue spoken
To fayre
Oenone haue your promise broken,
Since I beheld your face first, my desire
Hath beene, of
Troyan Paris to inquire:
I know you now in euery true respect,
Ile grant you thus much then, say you affect
Me (whom you terme your owne.) Ile grow thus farre
Do not the
Phagian marriners prepare
Their sailes and Oares, and now whilst we recite
Exchange of words about the wished night:
Say that euen now you vvere prepard to clime
my long wisht bed, iust at th'appointed time
The wind should alter and blow fayre for
Troy,
You must breake off, in midst of all your ioy
And leaue me in the infancy of pleasure,
Amid my riches, I shall lose my treasure.
You will for sake the sweets my bed affoords,
T'exchange for Cabins, Hatches, and pitcht boords,
Then what a fickle Courtship you commence,
When, with the first vvind, all your Loue blowes hence.
But shall I follow you vvhen you are gone,
And be the graund-child to
Laomedon?
And
Islium see, whose beauty you proclaime?
I doe not so despise the bruit of fame,
That she to whom I am in debt such thanks,
Should fill the Earth with such adulterate pranks:
What will
Achaia? What will
Sparta say?
What will your
Troy report and
Asia?
What may old
Priam or his reuerent Queene?
What may your Sisters hauing
Hellen seene,
Or your
Dardanian brothers deeme of me?
Will they not blame my loose
[...]nchastity:
Nay, how can you your self faithfull deem me,
And not amongst the loosest dames esteem me
No stranger shall your
Asian Ports com neare
But he shall fill your guilty soule with feare.
How often (angry at some small offence)
Will you thus say; Adultresse, get thee hence,
Forgetting you your selfe haue been the chiefe
In my transgression, though not in my griefe.
To be sinnes Author, and sinnes sharpe reprouer,
But ere the least of all these Illes betide me,
I wish the earth may in her bosome hide me.
But I shall all your
Phrygian wealth possesse,
And more then your Epistle can expresse;
Gifts, wouen gold, Imbrodery, rich attire,
Purple and Plate, or what I can desire?
Yet giue me leaue, thinke you all this extends
To counter-vaile the losse of my chiefe friends?
Whose friendship, or whose ayde shall I imploy,
To succour me when I am wrong'd in
Troy?
Or whether can I, hauing thus misdone,
Vnto my Father or my Brothers ronne,
As much as you to me, false
Iason swore
Vnto
Medea, yet from
Aesons dore
He after did exile her: Now poore hart,
Where is thy Father that should take thy part?
Old
Aeres or
Calciope? thou tookest
No aid from them, who thou before forsookest.
Or say thou didst (alas they cannot beare
Thy sad complaints) yet I no such thing feare,
No more
Medea did, good hopes ingage
Themselues so farre, they faile in their presage:
You see the ships that in the Mayne are tost,
And many times by Tempests wrackt and lost,
Had at their launching from the Hauens mouth,
A smooth sea, and a calme gale from the South.
Besides, the brand your mother dreampt she bare
The night before your byrth, breeds me fresh care,
It Propheside, ere many yeares expire,
Inflamed
Troy must burne with
Greekish fire,
As
Venus fauours you, because she gained
A double prize by you; yet the disdained
And vanquisht Goddesses, disgracst so late,
May beare you hard, I therefore feare their hate:
Nor make no question, but if I consort you,
And for a Rauisher our
Greece report you:
Warre will be wag'd with
Troy, and you shall rue,
The sword (alas) your conquest shall pursue:
Was rudely rauisht by her
Centaur guest,
Because the Saluages the Bride durst ceaze,
War grew betwixt them and the
Lapythes:
Or thinke you
Menelaus hath no spleene?
Or that he hath not power to auenge his teene?
Or that old
Tyndarus this wrong can smother?
Or the two famous Twins each lo'ud of other.
So where your valour and rare deedes you boast,
Castor & Poll.
And warlike spirits in which you tryumph most,
By which you haue attaind mongst Souldiers grace,
None will beleeue you that but sees your face,
Your feature and fayre shape, is fitter farre
For amorous Courtships, then remorselesse warre:
Let rough-hevv'd Souldiers warlike dangers proue,
Tis pitty
Paris should do ought saue loue.
Hector (whom you so praise) for you may fight,
Ile finde you warre, to skirmish euery night,
Which shall become you better: Were I wise
And bold withall, I might obtaine the prize,
In such sweete single Combats, hand to hand,
Gainst which no woman that is wise vvill stand:
my Champion Ile encounter breast to breast,
Though I vvere sure to fall, and be o'repreast.
In that you priuate conference intreat me,
I apprehend you, and you cannot cheat me,
I know the meaning durst I yeeld thereto,
Of what you vvould confer; What you would do,
You are too forward, you too farre would vvade,
But yet (God knowes) your haruests in the blade.
My tyred pen shall heere his labour end,
A guilty sence in theeuish lines I send,
Speake next when your occasion best perswades,
By
Clymenea and
Aethra my two maydes.
1
THese enter-changes of theyr Amors past,
And
Menelaus absent, they compound,
That in some place an ambush shall be plac't,
With which the Queene shall be incompast round,
And willingly surpriz'd, seeming agast,
and at theyr armes, to weepe, to shrieke, to sound:
But all in vaine, the
Troyan seemes to feare her,
and force perforce, vnto his Fleet to beare her.
2
Shee in her frightfull agony, seemes dum,
Yet when shee was past helpe, for helpe she cride,
She cals for rescue, that had rescue come,
Euen at the sight of
Spartan armes had dide:
Shee seemes affrighted at the
Troian drum,
and at theyr stearne allarmes terrifide:
Shee cals on Father, Husband, Brother, Friend,
Naming them most, who could her least defend.
3
This vprore made the bold
Pannomians guard
The passage to their ships, still
Hellen cryes
Vpon th'
Acaians, from her rescue bar'd,
The rumour of her Rape through
Sparta flyes,
Whilst
Paris with his Souldiers keepes strict ward,
Launching at length with his desired prize:
Her two Twin-brother-Kings, that nothing doubt,
At the same season soiournd thereabout.
4
And hearing of their Sisters Rape, make hast,
The Rauisher with fury to pursue,
They disimbogue, hoping to gaine at last
Sight of the
Tro
[...] Nauye, which now grew
neere to the
Hellespont, hauing quite past
Th'Aegean Sea, the Windes against them blew,
The Surges swell, and with the rough Winds meet,
Conspiring both the ruyne of the Fleet.
5
Ships, Sailes, and men, are swallowed in
th'Abisse,
The brothers to two Starres the Gods translate,
Castor & Poll
[...] translated into the two Poles, the North and South,
Pauson.
One of the Poles by
Castor named is,
The tother
Pollux, to record theyr fate,
Where now they shine in theyr Celestiall blisse,
But so farre distant in theyr blest estate,
As neither hath the power to see his brother,
For when we rayse the one, we loose the other.
6
By this time with his
Troian Rape arriues
At
Tenedos, the amorous
Troian Lad,
Which
Priam vnderstanding, nobly striues
To welcome her (at her arriuall glad)
The Queene attended with the Noble Wiues
Of all the
Troian Princes, richly clad,
Issues from
Troy, with thousands following after,
To entertaine bright
Ladaes rauisht daughter.
7
Behold where (on an aumbling Palfrey mounted
White as her mothers feathers) she appeares,
Now one of
Priams daughters counted,
For with that stile, young
Paris Hellen cheeres,
At meeting, the old King himselfe dismounted,
and with soft kisses dryes her feigned teares,
Old
Hecuba next
Priam cheeres her mone,
and after her, her daughters one by one.
8
Hector and
Troylus with the Lords of
Troy,
Kisse her by turnes, and with kind armes embrace her,
The people with applauses crowne theyr ioy,
Whilst
Priam 'fore the multitude to grace her,
Betrothes the
Spartan to his amorous boy,
And in's returne on his right hand doth place her,
Aeneas and
Anthenor highlie praisde,
Kneele to the King, and by his hand are raisde.
9
The long diuorced Peeres now enterchange
Their free embracements, whom with kisses sweet
Theyr wiues, to whom such fauours were grown strange,
with theyr long absence wirh like language meete,
[Page 229] The
Troyans eyes on
Hellen freely range,
With prayse and wonder they her welcome greet,
Her beauty euen so deepe in
Hector strake,
He now repines that he against her spake.
10
The ground is strewd with sweet and various flowers,
In euery place is Musicke heard to sound,
From
Tenedos in lesse then two short howers
They enter
Troy, whose Walles are peopled round,
She wonders at their buildings and hye Towers,
The like to which in
Sparta are not found,
Wals, wealth, and people, Pallace, all appearing
Richer to th'eye, then theyr report in hearing.
11
She treads not but on
Arras, Casts her eyes
But on ritch hangings, beautyes, rooffes of Gold,
Iewels, State, Garments: Now she doth despise
The pouerty of
Sparta, as things old,
The nouelties of
Troy she gins to prise,
But most delights in her sweet armes to infold
Inamoured
Paris, who as much excels
her husband; as Troy
Sparta, in ought else.
12
The morrow coms, by
Priam shee is led
To
Pallas Temple, and espoused there
To
Paris; and at night conueyde to bed
By
Hecuba, her bright Attendants were
Andromache, Crevsa, (and instead
Of hand-maydes)
Polyxene and
Cressyde, deare
To
Troylus; None saue Ladyes of estate,
Are suffred on the
Spartan Queene to waite.
13
Eyght entyre dayes and nights, the hye feast lasts,
And
Troy's all mirth, whylst
Sparta is all woe,
With swiftest speed a winged Curror hasts
As farre as
Creet, Queene
Hellens Rape to show,
Menelaus his sad howers in anguish wasts,
By this the Graecian Kinges his sorrowes know:
And of themselues assemble, offering free,
Theyr hostyle ayde, and in Troyes fall agree.
14
To bring so huge a Nauy on the Seas,
Behooues vs know theyr names that first deuisde
These noble vessayles: whether for their ease,
Whether Ambitious, they the Land despisde,
Whether the Creatan
Minos did first please
Strabo. Diodo.
The sutges God: or
Neptune enterprise
The foaming billowes, being by
Saturnes motion,
Made Admirall of all the brinish Ocean.
15
Whether
Ericthris in the red Sea sayled
Pliny
And first made Boats, which others would impute
To the
Meones, such as neuer sayled
In th'Hellespont, or whether the pursuit
Palydor
Of
Danaus in the Egyptian Sea preuailed,
An honour which to him most attribute:
Or whether Navigators first had place,
In
Atlas kingdome, or in
Samo-Thrace.
Polichron.
16
This I averre, his Arke first
Noah made
Fore th'vniuersall Deluge, since his dayes
Iason the Greeke, who
Colchos sought to invade,
Composde the Galley, which next him assayes
Sesostris King of Aegypt, In this Trade
Eytheus flourisht, whom our Anthors prayse
For Marine skill, his Barge did first deuide
The Surges with two Oares on eyther side.
17
First, with three course of Oares
Amocles rowed,
The
Carthagens with foure, as many write,
Amocl
[...]s of Corinth. Nesichthon of Salamis.
With fiue
Nesichthon: These were first bestowed
By the bold
Romans in the great Sea-fight
At the first battayle
Punicke: He that owed
The sixe-Oard barge to do
Zenagaras right
Must yeld it him (in
Siracusa dwelling
For ship-wrights Craft, all other much excelling.
18
Hyppias the Troyan the broad Lyter framed,
The
Cyrenens the Hoy, which some more fine,
The Gallioon call: with Barks the
Cyprians tamed
The rude sea-Rouers, Cockboates (some diuine)
[Page 231] Th'
[...]lyrians built: the Keele and Craer were named
By the
Phenetians first: the
Brigandine
The
Rhodians rear'd: the
Canoas now in trade,
In
India by the
Germans were first made.
19
The
Copians found the Rudder, the broad Oare
The sly
Plateans by their Art composed;
Young
Icarus the saile not knowne before,
Which some affirme, King
Aeolus disclosed,
With Masts and Sayle-yards
Dedalus did store
The
Cretans: but the sterne
Typhis disposed:
The stemme
Pyseus: Anacharsis wrought
The Tackle, Anchors first the
Tyrhens sought.
20
Athens first ferried men, whether we must draw
Th'Graecian fleete, the great'st that hath bin seene,
Such store th'amazed
Neptune neuer saw,
No not when
France and
England met betweene
A sea-battaile fought betwixt
Phillip of Frāce & Ed. the 3. in the yeare 1340. when there were slay
[...] Frēch 30000, ships taken 200.
Callice and vs, where after many a flaw;
Phillip gaue place to the third
Edwards spleene,
Before, the blacke Prince, by wars prosperous chance,
Quater'd our Lyons with the Flowers of
France.
21
Nor when the stout
Venetian Gallies frame
Their expedition gainst the
Turkes Armade,
Nor when Sea-wars
Malta or
Rhodes proclaime,
Whose ponderous hulkes the Oceans backe nie swayde,
Nor when th'
[...]uincible huge Nauy came
In the yeare Eighty eight, England t'inuade:
Were there so many Vessailes well prouided,
As by the
Argiue Pylots are now guided.
22
Great
Agamemnon they Grand-Duke create
Agamemnon
Of all their powerfull hoast, who in the ayde
Of
Menelaus, as one of hyest estate,
With full an hundred ships at
Athens staide,
All stuft with Armed Knights sworne to the Fate
Of threatned
Troy, whome they with scornes vpbraid,
With forty ships faire rig'd and well supplide
Menelaus
In
Athens road, doth
Menelaus now ride.
23
For
Athens was their Randeuous, and there
King
Archelaus and
Prothenor stay,
Arch
[...]laus.
With fifty Ships that of
Boetia were,
With fifty Ships from
Orconomies bay:
Prothenor. Helmius. Ascalaphus.
Helmius and Duke
Ascalaphus appeare,
The Kings
Epistrophus and
Sedius, way
Their Anchors next, and to the
Spartan King,
Epistropus.
Thirty tall ships rig'd from
Phociden bring.
Sedius.
24
King
Telamon launcht fifty Souldierd well
Telamon.
From
Salamine, and in his princely traine
Theuter. Thebus.
Duke
Theuter, Polyxeme, and
Thebes fell,
With Duke
Amphimachus: from
Pylon came
Amphimachus
With three-ag'd
Nestor fifty ships t'expell
Nestor
The
Troians from the
Hellesponticke Maine;
Thoas with fifty ships the harbour sought,
Thoas
whether K.
Doxunois likewise fifty brought.
Doxunois
25
King
Telamon Chileus three times ten
Telam. Chyleus
And six good Ships rig'd, in the
Spartans Quest,
Amphimachus
Amphimachus and
Polibetes, men
Polybetes.
Of high rcsolue, accompany the rest
With thirty saile, King
Idumeus then,
Idumeus.
And
Cretan Mereon their loues exprest,
Mereon.
They fourescore and two Frigots brought in place,
And thirty two
Vlisses weighed from
Thrace.
Vlisses
26
Twelue Ships from
Phrygia Duke
Tynelus brings,
Tynelus Prothocathus
And from
Phtlaca fifty two arriue,
at the great charge of two imperious Kings
Prothesilaus
Prothocathus: The Prince to that did wiue
Laodomeia faire, whose praise Fame sings.
Prothesilaus: Collesis seeks to driue
Collosis.
With foure and twenty Craers th'opposed fleets
Whom King
Machaon by appointment meets.
Machaon
27
Machaons Sonne
Pollydris thirty three,
Pollydris Achilles. Thelaphus Eruphilus
Achilles two and twenty hath in store,
King
Thelaphus as many, these agree
By their ioynt Armes to win the
Troian shore,
The rauisht Queene with two and fifty more:
Anthipus and
Amphimachus are seene,
Anthipus
From
Rustican with
Hulkes and
Hoyes thirteene.
Amphimachus
27
King
Polybetes that from
Rythee came,
Polybetes
Bring sixty two, and in his friendly ayde,
His Brother the Duke
Lopius mou'd with fame
Lopius
Of these great warres, seekes
Phrygia to i
[...]ade:
Diomedes
King
Diomed of
Arges threats the same,
Fourescore and two tall Vessailes he displaide:
Eurialus and
Thelanus in sight,
Of all the hoast, beneath his Ensignes sight.
Eurialus Thelanus.
29
Thirteene K.
Fureus, Polyphebus nine,
Fureus Polyphebus
Prothoylus fifty two, as many led
The King
Carpenor of the
Bresseian line,
Carpenor Theorius
Theorius foure and twenty colours spread,
In foure and twenty ships, all these in fine
In the
Athenian part meet and make head:
Twelue hundred twenty Ships make th'Ocean trēble,
In whom full sixty nine bold Kings assemble.
38
But ere we further enter or proceed
In these
Heroike wars, we hold it fit,
Before the
Graecians or the
Troians bleed,
To memorize their shapes; ere we admit
The
Argiue Peeres (all in one thought agreed)
To be reueng'd on
Troy, and ransacke it:
Hellen
Hellen the first, as Pearelesse through all Lands,
As
Venus picture that in
Coos stands.
31
She was nor dwarfe-like statur'd, nor too tall,
Nor foggy fat, nor yet Consumptiue leane,
Her Wast not grosse, nor yet too slender-small,
Her saire proportion, was smooth, quaint, and cleane:
Her habit shadowed no extreame at all,
She was all shaped by the Golden meane;
So rare, that neuer eye dwelt on her Checke,
But lost it selfe, and had his light to seeke.
32
What should I with harsh Language slubber o're
Exact perfection? Shall my ragged quill
In seeking Natures cunning to explore,
Iniure the worke in which she shewes such skill?
T'expresse such Graces as the Gods adore
In
Hellen, would a spacious Volume fill:
And asko (should I her beauties al recite,)
A world of Paper, and an Age to write.
33
And all my Subiect should be
Hellen, she
That in the Vniuerse can find no peere:
Hellen the scope of all my Verse should be,
Yet to her worth my praise not once comes neere;
Therefore, since more them
Hellen call on me
To speake their Valors, and insert them heere:
I leaue her with this Title:
Hellen, fairest
Of all the World, and for Perfection rarest.
34
Bold
Agamemnon Duke of all the Host,
Invoakes me next his features to set downe,
Tall statur'd, ably limb'd, adored most
Of all the
Argiues with th'imperiall Crowne:
White-bodied, straight, tres-puissant without boast,
Hardy, well-spoke, Ambitious of Renowne.
Menelaus, of meane stature, his voyce lowd,
Brown-hair'd, well set, Valiant in armes, not prowd.
35
Achilles, he whose
Myrmidons defended
The hoast of
Greekes with a strong brazen Mure,
From
Thetis Goddesse of the Sea discended,
Pourefull, expensiue, on his Couenant sure,
Bright-hair'd, his face and feature much commended,
His eye much fiery, his Complexion pure:
Broad shoulder'd, and big-arm'd, large brested, strong
His match in Atmes, liu'd not the
Greekes among.
36
King
Tantalus, broad, fat, and hye withall,
His head Crispe-blacke, his Beard-thicke, but not long,
Affable, Courteous, and despising bral,
Delighting much in Musicke, and in Song:
[Page 135]
Al
[...] as broad as
Tantall, and as tall,
But in his deeds of Armes more actiue strong:
He that alone by the
Greekes awfull rector,
Was chosen worthy to encounter
Hector.
37
Aiax Oeleus was of smaller size,
Of milder temper, Curteous, Blacke his haire,
His Colour fresh, himselfe of faire Emptize,
And a great part among the Princes bare;
Vlesses King of
Ithaca most wise,
A right Mercurialist, in discourse rare,
An Orator, whom Iudging eares applaud,
Yet Oyly toong'd, full of deceit and fraud.
38
King
Diomed, of Gyant-like aspect,
The largest
Greeke that menac'st
Troy with steele:
A Prince, whom all the Princes must respect,
His ponderous blowes make many
Troians reele,
Equally apt to fight, or to direct,
Dreadlesse of Fortune, or her turning wheele:
Comely, and deck't with all the guifts of Nature,
His hart hauing Correspondence with his stature.
39
The three-ag'd liuing
Nestor, Pytous King,
Slenderly-tall, his Visage Sagely graue
And promising Counsell, he whose Muse did sing
Of King
Prothesilaus, to him gaue
The wreath, for quicke and Actiue combatting,
Yet all his Art his body cannot saue:
His looke effeminate, his Courage bold,
His strength by might, but not by feare controld.
40
Strout
Neptolynus, in his Countenance grim,
Blacke-hait'd, broad-ey'd, his hairy win-browes meet,
Arm'd at all points, deepe Riuers he would swim,
Though heauy bodied, actiue were his feet,
They that most curiously decipher him,
Report his Language stammering and vnsweet:
Palumides, faire-shapt, but sickly tender,
His Colour chearefull, but his stature slender.
41
Nereus Ipasse, the faire
Greeke Homer lou'd,
Penelaus, Leitus, Eurialus,
Clouius Arcecilaus,
Nobly prou'd,
Ialmen
of Boetia, Ascalaphus;
Bold
Idomen, (a Fury) being mou'd,
The Phocean Scedius,
and Amphimachus,
Prothous, Ieonteus, Polybetes,
Guneus, Aemilius,
and great Philoctetes
Philoctetes
companion to Hercules.
42
Who brought the Arrowes dipt in
Hydraes blood,
To
Troyes sad siege, there was the braue
Prothenor,
By whom
Podarces and King
Merion stood
Tlepolemus, Cteatus,
and Alphenor,
Phidippes, Anthipus
a souldier good,
With stout
Alceus soone,
K. Agapenor,
Talpheus, Phetides,
King Polyxemon,
Muestheus, Stenetus, Thoas,
sonne to Andremon.
43
Rough
Polidarius, fat, and scornefull proude,
False of his promise, and yet warlike bold,
Mathaon of meane stature, yet aloude
For valiant to, and mongst the best inrold,
More princes did the
Greeke pauilions shroud,
Whose shapes we leaue, to haue their merits told:
Now come we to
Crescida, Calchas doughter,
So faire, that many warlike Princes sought her.
44
She was a worthy and a beautious Dame,
Whom
Troylus lou'd, and
Diomedes sought,
To gaine her Grace, they wan immortall Fame,
And still their glorious spoiles to
Cresseid brought,
For her the mighty
Persian Sophy came,
To gaine her Loue, he gainst the
Troyans fought:
Filling the number of the
Graecian hoast,
Who waite but waftage to the
Dardan Coast.
45
They call a Counsell, and dispatch away
Achilles and
Patroclus to the Isle
Cald
Delos, which our Cosmographers say,
Stands midst the
Ciclades: Heere of long while
[Page 137] T
[...]e God
Apolio, vnto such as pray,
Giues answere (by his Oracle:) His smile
Cheares such as kneele, his frown strikes them with terror
Such was the
Panims Faith, the
Pagans Error.
46
To this faire Clyme (which some
Ortigia call,)
The Sun and Moone were in their Nonage seene,
Latona brought them forth: Heere first of all
Phoebus (the dayes God) and his Sister Queene
Cynthia, that guids the night, both rise and fall:
Heere stands the Temple, and the guilded Skreene,
On which
Apolloes Statuë dwels for aye,
pronouncing Oracles to such as pray.
47
Heere did
Achilles and
Patroclus find
The
Troian Calchas, reuerent
Thystranes sonne,
Sent by King
Priam to know
Phoebus mind,
And what shall in these future warres be done:
The Oracles hath by his priests assignd,
That after ten yeares
Troy shall be o're-run:
Which
Calchas hearing, with
Achilles makes
His speedy peace, and so his
Troy forsakes.
48
Achilles proud of such a glorious pray,
With these glad tydings to the Fleet returnes,
Who with all prosperous speed their Anchors way,
And whilst
Troyes King reuolted,
Calchas mournes,
Whose graue aduice was to his Realme chiefe stay,
No longer th'
Argiue Duke his speed adiournes:
But launcheth his Fleet royall: They set sales,
And the calme
Eurus yeilds them gentle Gales.
49
Diana (that was euer friend to
Troy,)
Neptune intreats, that may command his waues,
The great
Armade of
Gracia to destroy
And swallow them within his Briny graues,
She takes it ill, the
Greekes depart with ioy
From
Aulis Gulfe, yet none her license craues
Or offers at her Altars, the due rights
Of Sacrifice, amongst those Kings and Knights.
50
Amidst the wrathfull Tempest
Calchas praies
To
Neptune and the Moone, their Fleet to spare,
Who not with words to be appeas'd, will raise
His tumbling waues, and tosse them in the ayre,
Vnlesse great
Agamemnon Altars raise
To angry
Cynthia, and performe his Prayer,
And on her bleeding Shrine, at
Dians feet,
Kill
Iphegenia to preserue the Fleet.
51
Loath is the Generall his Childs blood to spill
Yet holds it better that one Lady dye,
(Although his Daughter) then the Seas to fill
With Ships, bold Knights, and Kings aduanced hye:
Calchas the Priest the Innocent Maid doth kill,
T'appease
Dianaes wrathfull Deity:
The Sacrifice perform'd, the wind blowes faire,
The Seas are calm'd, the Sun hath clear'd the Aire.
52
And now the wind playes with those swelling sailes
Which they but late in fury rent and tore,
Calme
Zephyr cheares their Fleet with gentle Gales,
Which made but late the violent
Surges rore,
(This can the Gods) but ere proud
Greece preuailes,
Or Land their powers vpon the
Phrygian shore:
Or that
Scamander field in blood be dide,
We from our taske our selfe a while deuide.
Aethra and
Clymenen, were
Hellens Chamber-maids and imployd in all her most priuate businesse.
Some affirme that
Paris onely met
Menelaus vpon the sea, and haled him as hee was in his voyage towardes
Creet, and by that meanes vnderstanding his absence, thoght it a fit opportunity for him to steale away his Queene. And that he rauisht her out of the Temple dedicate to
Cy
[...]herea, where
Paris and she as strangers one to another, sacrificed together, but in this I
[...]mitate
Ouid as my approued Author.
[Page 239] That
Menelaus was at home when
Paris Landed in the Isle
Cythere, and gaue him friendly entertainment, though some seeme to disproue, yet
Ouid in diuers of his workes affirms it.
WHen
Menelaus from his house is gone,
Poore
Hellen is afraid to lie alone;
De Arte Amandi
2.
And to alay these feares (lod'g in her breast)
In her warme bosome she receiues her guest:
What madnesse was this?
Menelaus, say
Thou art abroad, whilst in thy house doth stay
Vnder the selfe same roofe, thy Guest, and Loue?
Mad-man vnto the Hawke thou trusts the Doue:
And who, but such a Gull, would giue to keepe
Vnto the Mountaine-Wolfe full folds of Sheepe.
Hellen is blamelesse, so is
Paris too,
And did what thou, or I my selfe would doo.
The fault is thine, I tell thee to thy face,
By limiting these Louers, Time and Place.
From thee the seeds of all thy wrongs are growne,
Whose Counsels haue they followed, but thine owne?
(Alacke) what should they do? Abroad thou art,
At home thou leauest thy Ghest, to play thy part:
To lie alone, the (poore Queene) is affraid,
In the next roome an Amorous stranger staid,
Her Armes are ope to imbrace him, he fals in,
And
Paris I acquit thee of the sin.
And in another place somewhat resembling this:
Orestes liked, but not loued deerely
Hermione, til he had lost her clearely:
Sad
Menelaus, why dost thou lament
Deremedio Amoris
2.
Thy late mishap? I prethee be content:
Thou knewest the amorous
Hellen faire and sweet,
And yet without her didst thou saile to
Creet,
And thou wast blithe and merry al the way,
But when thou saw'st she was the
Troians p
[...]ay,
Then wast thou mad for her, and for thy life,
Thou canst not now one minute want thy wife.
So slout
Achilles, when his louely Bride
Briseis, was dispos'd to great
Atride,
Offerd no more then he of force must doo:
I should haue done as much, to set her free,
Yet I (heauen knovves) am not so Wise as he.
Hipsipile the Daughter to
Thoas King of
Lemnos, whō when al the women of that Island had slain their Husbands & Kinsmen, she onely referu'd her Father aliue, for which they after exiled her.
By the
Mynoxan Maid, is vnderstood
Ariadne forsaken by
Theseus.
The
Meones are those, who are now cald
Troians. First
Dardanians of King
Dardanus.
Coos an Isle in the Sea
Icarium, not farre from
Rhodes, now called
Langor. The chiefest Citty is likewise cald
Coos, where as some thinke,
Apelles left his admirable vnfinisht Picture of
Venus, so rarely begun, that not the most exquisite Art-maister (hee dying before it was finished) durst enterprise to perfect it.
Homer. Virgill.
The assembly of the
Greekes was in the Hauen of
Athens, or
Aulis Gulfe, a port-Towne in the Country of
Boetia.
The names of the
Graecian Princes, though they seeme somwhat straunge, yet are all remembred by
Homer and others, that writ the History of
Troy, which (though no question) diuers Translations and seuer all Languages haue somewhat corrupted, yet they all meet in one Trueth, that such men as are heere remembred, were at this renowned siedge.
Legos where the Temple of
Apollo stands: in the Nauel of the world.
It is likewise cald
Ortigia, of the Birds
Ottiges. in English
Quailes, because those Birds (to vs common) were first seene in that Island.
Many differ about the Sacrifice which
Agamemnon slew
Metamor.
12. to appease the wrath of offended
Diana: some thinke it to haue beene a Hart: but
Ouid avers is to be the daughter of
Iphegenia.
Theacritus in dioscuris Apollon, lib,
1
Of
Castor and
Pollux there are many thinges extant, of their byrth we haue spoke before. They vvere the Sonnes of
Iupiter, not of
Tyndaris, They vvent vvith
Iason to the
[Page 241] Conquest of the golden Fleece, where
Pollux slew hand to hand
Amicus the Gyant-sonne of
Neptune, who had beefore dar'd all the
Argonantes to a single Combat, and after the
Colchian voyage, when
Theseus had rauisht
Helena, they warred vppon
Athens, and hauing recouered her, spared all the vanquisht
Athenians, and in their returne these Brothers
Zezes hist,
46 rauisht the two Daughters of
Leucippus and
Arsinoe. They were cald
Phebe and
Falaira: Of
Phebe Pollux begot
Asineus: Of
Falaira, Castor begot
Amagon, whose former Husbandes pursuing the rauishers, fought against them a bloudy battaile neare to the foot of the mountaine
Taigetes, & when they had hidde themselues within the body of an ore-growne Oake, they were espide by
Linceus, of all mortal men the best
Stasinus in rebus Ciprijs. sighted, which an ancient poet thus describes.
—Quo tempore Linceus,
Taygeti velox ascendit Culmina montis,
Lustrauitque oculis quicquid tenet insula magni,
Tantalidae
Pelopis: praeacuto lumine vidit,
Hos ambos intra ventrosae robora quercus,
Pollucem fortem & domitorem Castora equorum.
Of their deaths we haue already discoursed, they were after drowning, translated into Starres, to whom the Nauigators of old did ordinary Sacrifice.
The end of the tenth
CANTO.
Argumentum
THe
Graecians Land,
Prothesilaus fals
By
Hectors sword, King
Diomed is sent
With wise
Vlisses to debate their brals,
And fetch the
Spartan to her Husbands Tent:
Hellen denide: the
Greekes begirt
Troy wals,
But are by
Hector raisd incontinent:
Troylus and
Diomed in Armes contend
For
Cressida, so the first battels end.
ARG. 2.
Our English Worthies, Fame & her rich Crowne,
With
Troyes confedred Kings,
Lambda sets down
OH can we forraine Worthies Memorize,
And our owne Natiue Champions quite forget,
Whose fame swift
Clangor hath through pierst the skies,
To whom due Honor still remaines in debt:
How many true victorious Peeres arise
From this faire Garden, midst the Ocean set:
How many an English Knight hath borne his head
As hie as those, whom
Troy or
Greece hath bread?
2
Achilles, Aiax, Diomed,
or those
Whom
Homer hath extold with Golden praise,
Haue not done greater spoile vpon their foes,
Then some that haue suruiu'd euen in our dayes,
[Page 245] And had I spirit but like the least of those
That writ the
Graecian Acts, my pen should raise
Our
Brittish Champious, and their acts proclame,
Aboue the
Greekes in the high Tower of Fame.
3
What could
Achilles more then Brittish
Bren,
Bren.
That after many dangerous battailes wun,
Fotrag'd
France, Denmarke, Germany, and then
Sackt
Rome, and high
Pernassus ouer-run,
And by the ayde of his bold Englishmen,
Laid siege vnto the Temple of the Sun:
Or what bold
Graecian dare gainst
Nennius stand,
Nennius.
That fought with twice-foyl'd
Caesar hand to hand.
4
Renowned
Arthur famous in his age,
Arthur.
In his round Table, and his thirteene Crownes,
Hie
Romes Impetious Senate felt his rage,
and paid him homage in their purple Gownes,
His Came'lot Knights their hardiments ingage,
Through all the world to purchase their renownes:
Of Noble
Edgar, my dull Muse next sings,
Edgar
Row'd on the Thames by eight commanded Kings.
5
Bold
Edmond (Sir-nam'd
Ironside) him succeeds,
Edmond Ironside.
a brauer Spirit breath'd not vitall ayre,
The Bastard
Williams Sonne, Duke
Roberts deeds
aske the next place, for his attempts were rare,
Robert of No, mandy sirnamed Cort-bise.
By
Cort-hose many a Tyrant
Panim bleeds,
By whom the Christians re-invested are:
and whilst hye
Syons Towers triumphant stand,
He chosen Monarch o're the holy Land.
6
Richard the first that
Cordelyon hight,
Richard Cordelyon. Edward long shankes. Edward
3. Black prince inuested don
Pedro in
Spaine. Iohn a
[...]
and
Edward Sirnam'd
Long-shankes, without Peere,
Was neuer
Dardan Prince or
Argiue Knight,
That in their ages more admired were:
Edvvard the third that Conquer'd
France by fight,
and
Edvvard the Blacke Prince to England deere,
He forrag'd
France, for
Pedro wan all
Spaine,
Which after
Iohn a-Gaunt subdude againe.
7
Henry the fift, then whom the world neare bread
A worthier Prince.
Bedford and
Talbot bold,
Bedford. Talbot.
Who in their forrain Regency so sped,
That puissant
France was by their powers controld,
Edward the fourth (though wantonly misled)
Edward
4. Richard
3.
Wan ten set battailes: The third
Richard sold
His name to scandall, else his warlike merit,
Might with the rest, a Worthies name inherit.
8
The valiant Earle of
Surrey often staid
Earle Surrey
The Northerne Enemies from filching heare:
Charls Brandon.
In the eight
Henries dayes
Charles Brandon made
England renown'd, by his victorious Speare,
And those whose Woorths these late times haue displaid
Howard, Grey, Norris, Sidney, Essex, Veare:
These, had they liu'd in aged
Priams dayes,
Had dim'd the
Greekes, and matcht the
Troians prayse.
9
Now to our hostile preparations, we
Must arme our Pen, the
Greekes are vnder saile,
There is a place from Earth, Sea, Heauen, stands free,
And equally remoued from them all:
In the worlds Nauell, fixt where Concaues be,
And hollow-sounding Vaults through Crannies small:
Where the reports and rumors of all sounds,
Giue shrill
Reuerberat Ecchoes and rebounds.
10
Heere Fame her Pallace builds by wondrous skill,
Fame.
Seating her selfe in her most lofty Tower,
Yet is her house erected on a hill,
A thousand Loope-holes are within her Bower,
A thousand doores and windowes open still,
Transparant euery late and early hower,
Full of Big-bellyed Vaults, and the wals such,
Of sounding Brasse that rings with euery tutch.
11
Whose empty wombe continuall murmur yeilds,
And iterates againe each word it heares,
Within this place no toonglesse silence builds,
No solitary dumnesse spares the eares:
[Page 247] A whistling wind flyes round about the fields,
Which shakes the trembling branches, but forbeares
All violent gusts: about this hollowed ground,
There are perpetuall calmes, no Tempests found.
12
And though no silence, yet no clamors rise,
Onely a whispering murmur like the Seas
Heard a farre off, or when the troubled skies,
(With remote Thunder mou'd) soft showers appease,
The Courts are throng'd with multitudes of spies,
Light giddy people tatling what they please:
Who (in and out) through euery chamber passe,
Whispering sometimes what is, and what neare was.
13
Infinite Currors, Purseuants, and Posts,
Embassadors, and such as hurry newes,
Heralds (such men as Trafficke betweene Hosts)
Walke too and fro, and no man Tales eschewes,
One speakes of Warres, of Combats, and rude boasts,
Another serious talke of Peace pursues:
All as they are dispos'd, this man is telling
Of buying Land, that other speakes of selling.
14
Some talkes of this mans Honors, that mans shames,
Others of Stormes, and many a boysterous flaw,
Some men of their successe and chance in games,
One what he heard, another what he saw,
Some men of Knights aduenturers, some of Dames,
Others how long their sutes haue hung in Law:
Toies with things serious passe, graue things with bables
Lies mixt with truths, and truths discourst with Fables.
15
Numberlesse rumors through the Pallace flye,
In euery nooke they make their free intrusion,
heere bashfull truth doth face the bold fac'd lye,
To fend and proue begets a meere confusion,
Whilst some th'attentiue eare with newes supply,
Others report Stale things, and in conclusion,
Addes of his owne, which bandied without ceasing,
From euery seuerall tongue receiues increasing
16
Heere you may see a dwarfe-like rumor grow,
Euen in an instant to a Gyants size,
Whether the Nature of the winds that blow,
Retaines the power to make the tumors rise
Or whether Fame all tydings apt to know,
Giues to her traine such Bombast Liueries:
Their growth is strange, whom I compare aright,
Vnto the Mush-roome, statur'd in a night.
17
Heere dwels credulity, rash error, feare,
Doubt, volubility, and quicke beliefe,
There is no voyce hath power to pierce the eare,
But fame of brutes and rumors, Queene and chiefe,
Shrieks through the world: From hence the
Troians hear
Th'
Atrides rage, King
Menelaus griefe:
Their expedition, and their Naual power,
Ready the threatned Enemy to deuower.
18
Their Frontier Townes that border next the waues
Are fortified, three distant leagues from
Troy
Tenedos
subverted.
Stands
Tenedos, whom with imperious braues
The
Argine Flect assault, race, and destroy:
The wrathfull
Greeke not one poore
Phrygian saues,
But to their ruines all their powers imploy:
This done, by generall Counsell tis decreed,
Two Kings to
Priam shail on Message speed.
19
Into the Hall where th'aged King then sate,
Attended with his Captaines, Sonnes, and Peeres,
And such confedered Kings as to the Fate
Of threatned
Troy, brought Horsemen, Bowes & Spears,
On this hie businesse to deliberate,
And rid their hearts from all inuasiue feares:
In, throngs
Vlisses and bold
Diomed,
Two Princes arm'd at all points saue the head.
20
Heere sat the King
Pandrastus King
Pandore,
Pandrastus. Panodrus. Galior.
And the King
Galior, that to
Priams ayde,
Brought each of them a thousand Knights and more,
Foure Kings that from
Tholosson waftage made,
[Page 287] Carras, Amasius, Nestor
dreaded sore,
Carras. Amasius. Nestor. Amphimac.
And stowt
Amphimachus: these Kings displaid
Their warlike Ensignes, in all dreadfull fights,
Bringing along fiue thousand valiant Knights
21
Next these seauen Kings, K.
Glaucus tooke his place,
Glaucus
Three thousand bold Squires he from
Lycia brought,
Sarpedon.
His Sonne
Sarpedon of the
Troian race,
In all King
Priams battailes brauely fought,
Next whom
Eusemus sat, distant a space,
Eusemus.
Who with three thousand Knights
Troyes honor sought,
Lyconians all,
Lyconias Realme he guided,
Since into seuerall parted Crownes deuided.
22
Two puissant Kings to make the Iury full,
Came from
Larissa, these had in their traine
Mystor.
Knights sist
[...]ene hundred;
Mystor, whose tough scul
The
Argiue Princes bruis'd:
Capidus slaine
Capidus.
In battaile too, about the
Spartan Trull,
Neuer to see hir Natiue Clyme againe:
On a rich bench sast by King
Priams State,
These twelue bold Kings vpon the right hand sate.
23
Vpon the left, from
Thahory that came,
King
Remus, who besides three thousand men,
Remus.
Brought foure great Dukes, seauen Earles of Noble fame
All clad in Azure armes, wel noted then;
The King of
Trachy, whom some
Pylex name,
Pylex.
Was plac'st next him, this royall Monarch, when
He entred
Troy, had in his Princely traine,
Eleuen hundred valiant Knights, all after slaine.
24
With him Duke
Achumus the
Troians ayded,
Achamas.
By whom
Pessemus the
Pannonian King
Tessemus.
Was seated, him great
Hector had perswaded
Vnto these wars three thousand Knights to bring,
All expert Archers, with whom
Stupex traded,
Stupex. Fortunus Samnus Ausernumus
A valiant Duke, and in his youthfull spring:
Next him sat three
Boetian Dukes
Fortunus,
Duke
Samnus, and the bold Duke
Ausernumus:
25
These led twelue hundred Knights, next whom tooke
Boetes.
Two Brother-Kings, the bold
Boetes first,
Epistemus.
place,
The other
Epistemus, of one race,
Both Princes, in the Realme of
Burtia nurst,
They brought a thousand Knights the
Greekes to chace,
Men of great spirit, and such as all things durst:
Next them was set a Gyant (dreaded sore)
[...]hilemus.
Philemus, of the Realme of
Paphlagore.
26
The
Aethiopian Perseus Rauen-blacke,
Perseus. Thiction.
And the King
Thiclion of the selfe-same hue,
With
Symagon, in whom there was no lacke
Symagou.
Of heart or skill his foe-men to pursue:
These Kingly
Moores that
Priam come to backe
Next to the lofty Gyant sit in view,
Three thousand sunburnt knights, that brauely fought
From
Aethiopia they to
Phrygia brought.
27
This State was full: and lower one degree,
Another longer Bench runs crosse the Hall,
Where mixt with
Priams valiant sonnes, you see
More of these leagued Kings in order fall:
First of the ranke was
Hector, next him, be
Hector.
Two potent Kings,
Thelemus hye and tall,
Thelemus.
And young
Archilochus a valiant Boy:
Archilocus
These with a thousand good Knights strengthen
Troy.
28
Paris next them, and by his amorous side,
Two Princes raigning in
Argrestes Land,
Two Kinges from Argrest
They brought twelue hundred Knights to see them tride,
Next these was
Troylus plac'st on the left hand,
Tro
[...]lus. Deiphebus.
And
Deiphebus full of warlike pride
Mixt amongst these, a King of great command:
Epistropus, that beyond
Scythia came,
Epistropus.
Twixt
Greece and
Troy his valour to proclame.
29
He brought a thousand Knights, and a strange Beast
Halfe horse, halfe Man, two perfect shapes deuided,
A
Sagittary cal'd (not dreaded least)
Sagittarius.
An expert Archer, his strong shafts were guided
[Page 289] With wondrous ayme and cunning, which increast
His dread among the
Greekes (at first derided:)
Next, great
Epistropus rankt by their yeeres,
Sat
Priams Bastard-sonnes, next them his Peeres.
30
Next them a Prince in Iewels rich, and Gold,
That many Knights brought from
Meander flood,
The barbarous
Meones Duke
Nastes told,
Nastes.
By whom, vpon a costly foot-pace stood
Tentumidas, by some (sirnam'd the
Bold,)
Tentumidas.
Now aged in his prime, a Souldier good:
By him Prince
Pindarus aduanct his head,
Pandarus. Hyrtacides.
Next him
Hyrtacides in
Sestos bread.
31
Adrastus, Amphius, Merops,
Princes three,
Adrestus. Amphius. Merops.
Are ranked then, by whom
Ennonius sits,
And
Chronius, vnder whom the
Mysians bee,
Pylemen the next empty place well fits,
Ennonius. Chronius. Pylemen Pyrechmes. Euphemes.
Prince o're the
Paphlagonian Chiualry:
Pyrechmes next, whose fiery Horses bits
The
Paeons manage. Good
Euphemes then
Whom the
Cicintans led, all expert men.
32
Ascanius and
Dius, who doth guide
Ascanius. Dius.
The
Halizonians next in order fall,
Then
Pyrous who his
Thracian Souldiers tride,
Pyrous. Mnemon. Pyleus. Hypothous.
And warlike
Mnemon boldest of them all:
Pyleus and
Hypothous them beside,
These the
Pelasgians vnto battle cal:
Warlike
Aeneas of the Noblest race,
Next whom, the Lords and Barons take chiefe place.
33
Anthenor, with
Polydamus his sonne,
The glistering Ladies keepe another State
Aboue them all:
Priams hye throne begun
To lift it selfe where he in glory sate,
Benches of Dukes and Earles from all sides run,
Apparel'd in rich Robes of greatest rate:
Thus was the King prepar'd, when the two
Greekes,
Presse forward to his throne with blushlesse Cheekes
34
At their approach the Lords amazed rise,
And at their bold intrusion musing stand,
Vlisses
and Diomeds
Embassle.
Vpon these two, the Kings fix all their eyes,
Prepar'd for some strange Nouell, when his hand
Vlisses wafts for silence, and applyes
His speech to
Priam thus: Hee whose command
Rauisht from
Sparta, great
Atrides wife,
Forfeits to
Greece, his Country, Crowne, and Life.
35
If thou beest he whom all these Lords adore,
I summon thee in
Agamemnons name,
Backe to her Lord, Queene
Hellen to restore,
With full amends done to the rauisht Dame,
And to present thy lustfull sonne before
The bench of
Argiue Kings, t'abide such shame
That he in after times to our successors,
Be made a terror to the like Transgressors.
36
Else shall th'inraged Princes spoile thy Townes,
Thy Matrons in their husbands armes defloure,
Slaughter thy Sonnes and bury their renownes,
And with thy peoples blood the channels scoure,
Of these confederate Kings ceaze all the Crownes,
When death that swallowes them must thee deuoure:
Say, wilt thou to preuent this and much more,
Punnish thy sonne, and
Hellen backe restore?
37
To this th'incensed King replies againe,
Th'vnable
Greekes (alas) are much too weake,
Wanting the power thy proud vants to maintaine,
Or to make good what thou doost rashly speake:
They rauisht our faire Sister, whom in vaine
We re-demanded, her despights to wreake:
Our Sonne the amorous
Paris crost the deepe,
To fetch thence
Hellen whom the Boy shall keepe.
38
Haue they not slaine our Father, spoyld our Citty,
Pillag'd our people, wiues nor Matrons spared,
Eucn Babes and Infants mangled without pitty,
And in their barbarous rigor all things dared,
[Page 251] Then in faire
Hellens rape what wrong commit I,
Since not the least of these
Greece hath repair'd:
Since whilst our Sister leads a Strumpets life,
Hellen is grac'st to be young
Paris wife.
39
You shall repent: King
Diomed replies,
This insolence which we will punish deerely,
By vs the Generall of the
Greekes defies:
Priam and
Troy whom wee'l chastice seuerely,
Vnto whose ruines seauenty Princes rise,
Whose forces shall begirt you late and earely:
These words promist, the
Troians so disdaine them,
That many drew their Faulchions to haue slain them.
40
But euer. Honoured
Hector qualified
The sudden vprore, and appeas'd the brall,
Their passage by the multitude denide,
Hector makes free, and Vshers them through all,
Yet many proud braues past on either side
Twixt the strange Kings and them i'th Pallace Hall:
At their departure casting vp his eye,
King
Diomed by chance doth
Cresseid spy,
41
As she with
Hecuba and
Hectors wife,
Creusa and
Pollixena was plac'st,
Him thought he neuer saw in all his life
A Lady better form'd, or Sweet-lyer grac'st,
His mutinous thoughts are in themselues at strife,
To see a face so faire, an eye so cha'st:
Beauty so full of charme, with which inchanted,
He craues her name by whom he seemes so danted.
42
When vp starts netled
Troylus; and thus sayes,
Her name is beautious
Cressid whom you seeke,
And
Troylus Mistresse? to whose heauenly praise
My soule hath bin deuoted many a Weeke,
And if thou aym'st my graces thence to raise,
I challenge thee the combat valiant
Greeke,
He would accept it, but he needs must part,
His body goes, he leaues behind his hart.
43
The dantlesse
Troians now prepare for warre,
Whilst to th'incamped hoast the Legat Kings
Relate King
Priams answere, and how farre
He stands from peace, the Grand-Duke now begins
Like a good Captaine to foresee what barre
May lie twixt him and safety: with swift wings
Achilles is dispatcht to crosse the Scas,
With
Telephus the sonne of
Hercules.
44
Because the
Messean Land where
Theutram raign'd
Theutr
[...]m.
Was fettile, they from thence demand supply
Of Victuall for the hoast, but he disdaind
T'assist them, therefore him the Greekes defie:
The Kings hye blood
Achilles Faulchion stain'd,
Theutram (alas) by him is forest to dye,
And
Telephus crown'd King, from whose rich Coast,
With store, & Victuall he relieues the hoast.
45
Twelue Moones were past since first the
Greeks took land,
When Duke
Palamides at th'host ariues,
Whose absence murmur'd long, yet the command
Of the whole Army, with the Princes liues,
Are made his charge, none seeming to withstand
his principality: this Duke deriues
His byrth from
Naulus, and is made the head
Of the stout
Greekes, in
Agamemnons stead.
46
But in desaster houre,
Vlisses friend,
To
Agamemnon by his crafty fraud,
Both to his life and his command gaue end:
He that but late the
Argiue Princes aw'd,
And foyld the common foe, cannot defend
his owne deere life, but whilst the hoast applaud
Atrides honor, in vnhappy season,
Is forcst to perrish for suspected Treason.
47
Tenedos sackt, the
Greekes insult vpon't,
The first battaile.
And from that place made leuell with the plaine,
The Fleet disanchors, whose proud Nauall front,
Prothesilaus proudly doth maintaine,
[Page 253] Hoysing the first Sayles in the
Hellespont,
A hundred Ships whose Flags and Pendants staine
The Ayre with various Colours, he commands,
And twice repulst, vpon the Beach he Lands.
48
His ships tough ribs vpon the sands he brake,
And many
Greekes, some drown'd, some landing, fall,
As well the boldest that the Ship forsake,
As those that keepe aboord must perish all,
Onely the bold King makes the
Troians quake:
Who whilst his maymed traine for rescue call,
Makes good the place, till with an hundred more,
Archelaus and
Prothenor mans the shore.
49
Now growes the battle hot, for the rude rout
Of the disordered
Troians madly flocke
To impeach their Landing, who with courage stout
Leape on the shore, and there abide the shocke
Of the proud Foe, who murder all about,
And with rude taunts their proud Inuasion mocke:
But
Askalus and
Agabus draw neare,
Two Kings, whose landed souldiers change their chear.
50
Yet at the length into the Sea driuen backe,
Till
Nestor seconds them with fresh supply,
and now th'astonisht
Troians suffer wracke,
Yet still make good the shores with fresh supply;
againe repulst, the
Greekes made good the lacke
Of more arm'd men;
Vlisses Ships prest ny,
Whose dreaded Ensignes on the Margent spred,
Conquer the Beach, the whilst the
Troians fled.
51
King
Philomenes enuious of his Fame,
A pointed Speare brake on
Vlisses face,
and stounded him: but when the bold King came
T'himselfe againe, he quitted that disgrace:
So much did wrath his Noble thoughts inflame,
he wounded him in such a speeding place,
That had not
Ihoue kept backe his Weapons force,
The late victorious, had dropt downe a Corse.
52
Whilst these two Kings contend, the
Greekes retire,
And backe into the blood-stain'd Sea are driuen,
When
Thoas with his fleet doth Land desire,
Now
Agamemnons Ships are all to riuen
Vpon the Strond, his men halfe blood, halfe mire,
Tugge for the shore, whilst many die vnshriuen;
Next
Menelaus hath vnmand his Ship,
And from his Barke doth stormy
Aiax skip.
53
At whose approach neere to the brinish brinke,
Th'amazed
Troians yeild him Landing free,
Beneath his ponderous Arme the strongest shrinke,
Before his sword th'affrighted people flee,
Their soules below the waues of
Lethe drinke,
Whose deeds of valor when King
Perses see:
He with a band of
Moores their violence stayde,
Making th'astonisht
Greekes expect more ayde.
54
When the great Duke
Palumides discends
Vpon the Continent, and in his traine
A thousand Armed Knights, his Noble Friends,
Whose swords the Beach with blood of
Troians slaine:
Palumides gainst
Symagon extends
His pointed Iauelin,
Symagon lies slaine:
A valiant Moore, to
Perses neere alide,
Though strong, he by the sonne of
Naulus dide.
55
Now gainst the beaten
Troians rose lowd cries,
Which puissant
Hector hearing, from the Towne,
Issues from forth the gates, and soone applies
His fortitude, where Warre seem'd most to frowne;
His armor Siluer-white, his shields deuise
A Lyon
Gules the field,
Or after knowne
And dreaded mongst the
Greeks, where ere he marches
The Flowers & grasse with blood of
Greeks he parches
56
Prothesilaus him encounters first,
and at his Steely Beauer aymes his Speare,
The King his Staffe vpon his Visor burst,
But from the Worthy
Hector past not cleare:
[Page 243] All that encounter him must tast the worst,
The steel-head Lance from off his steed doth beare:
The dreadlesse King, who rose by great indeuour,
But
Hector cleft his head quite through his Beauer.
Prothesilaus slaine.
57
So passeth on strowing his way with Corses,
That in a while his smoaking blade was feared,
Whom ere he meets he to the ground inforces,
His valour hath the drooping
Troians cheared,
He without riders leaues fiue hundred horses,
Whose broken limbes lie on the earth besmeared:
Death Marshals him the way where ere he traces,
Pauing the Margent of the Sea with faces.
58
His courser
Galathee the Noblest Steed,
That euer Knight bestrid, i'th morning white,
In euery bare place seemes from farre to bleed,
His valiant ryder shun'd no dangerous fight:
Hee's flak't all ore, and where no wounds indeed
Were hewed, great gashes grisly to the sight
Appeare vpon him,
Galathee still stood
Sound, and yet stain'd all ore with
Gracian blood.
59
Nor wonder if his white Steed were so painted,
When his sharpe sword so many Riuers shed,
This day a thousand Knights beneath him fainted,
And on the verdure by his hand lye dead,
With this mortality the ayre is tainted,
The spatious plaines with wounded
Greekes are spred:
Charon the sweat wipes from his ghastly face,
And neuer wrought so hard in so short space.
60
Hels Iudges and the Gods of Darkenesse wonder,
What's now to do on earth, that such a throng
Of Ghosts whose threds the fatall Sisters sunder,
Presse in such multitudes for sentence: long
The Princes of the Vaults and regions vnder,
Were not so troubled to iudge right and wrong:
For neuer in one day it hath befell,
So great a Sessions hath bin seene in Hell.
61
Th'inuincible
Dardanian Heroe tyr'd
With purple Massacre, towards night with-drew,
Horse, Armes, and Plumes the brightest morne admir'd
For whitenesse, at his yssue, purple grew,
And he returnes Vermilion all: attir'd
In Crimson, scarce the royall
Priam knew
Great
Hector from the Torras where he stood,
Seeing his onset white, Retrait all blood.
62
Soone was the Noble
Troian mist in field,
For with his Myrmidons proudly attended
Achilles Lands, and that renowned sheild
God
Vulcan made, in which his art extended,
He vaunteth: yet the daunted
Troians yeild,
Th'vnconquered shores
Hector so late defended
Lie open to inuaders, whole
Greece Lands,
For gainst the great
Achilles no man stands.
63
Euen to the Citty wals the
Troians fly,
Whom the maine hoast with hostile showtes pursude,
And had not Noble
Troylus heard the cry,
Paris and
Deiphebus where they view'd
So great effusion from a Turret hy,
They'had won the Towne, the streets had bin imbrude
With Natiue blood, but they in hast discend,
Releeue th'opprest, the Citty gates defend.
64
And yssuing with three thousand Knights, compell
Achilles to retrait, and when his face
Look't backe from
Troy ward, there was none so fell
Vpon the
Graectan party, but gaue place:
This day Prince
Diomed was seene t'excell
In Armes: him
Troylus met in equall race:
They spur their Steeds that ran both swift and true,
Incountring, both their Staues to splinters flew.
65
Their Launces broake, they try their burnisht blades,
A thousand fiery starres at euery rushing
Fly from their helmes, with fury each inuades
His opposite, their mutuall Armors frushing,
[Page 257] The big-limb'd
Diomed himselfe perswades,
Young
Troylus cannot match his strength, and blushing
A beardlesse Lad should hold him so long play,
Doubles his blowes and thinkes to end the fray.
66
The Noble youth whom
Cresseids loue prouokes
To all atchieuements, beyond mortal power,
(Though young,) his lofty spirit his riuall yoakes,
Who thought his infant Vertues to deuoure,
He doubles and re-doubles warlike stroakes,
The battell lasts the best part of an houre:
But whilst vpon their helmes each champion thunders
Night that deuides the hoast their fury sunders.
67
This Eeuen the
Greekes incampe, earely the Morrow,
The second daies battayle.
They shine in armor with the rising Sunne,
The
Troian Princes from their Ladies borrow
Rich fauours, and withall to horse-backe runne,
A kind of feare begot twixt ioy and sorrow,
Liues in their eyes, til the dread fight be done:
To see their Champions proudly arm'd they ioy,
Grieue to behold so huge an hoast fore
Troy.
68
Now are both Battailes pitcht,
Menon appeares
First from the
Argiue hoast: from
Troy forth stands
Hector, who in his burnisht Beauer weares
Andromachs Gloue, and now all
Troy commands:
These two begin the battell with their Speares,
They broke, they tosse their bright steele in their hands:
Hector soone hurles King
Menon from his horse,
So passes on to proue his warlike force.
69
The two hoasts ioyne, ruffling confusion flyes
Through all
Scamander field, the dying grones
Are mixed with th'applausiue Conquerors cryes
Troians and
Greekes conquer and fall at ones,
Renowned
Hector this day wins the pryse,
he sunders Males and Armors, flesh and bones:
His al-deuiding sword was made by charme,
No steele so wrought but shrunke beneath his arme.
70
Thus like a raging storme he rusheth still,
Ouer his Plume a Clowd of terror hung,
And where he rides he doth on all sides kill,
His bloud-staind Faulchion spares nor old nor yung,
Tyr'd with his horse, his Chariot Mount he will,
Now vp he takes a Bow deuinely strung,
And shooting midst the Hoast, not one steele-head
Iat'd from his Bow but stroke a
Graecian dead.
71
Him the King
Menon and king
Glaucion then,
Huge
Thesus and
Archilochus defie,
They in their squadron lead three thousand men,
But
Hector in his Chariot still sits hie,
Vntill his Brasse-shod wheeles are purpled, when
Their Naues are drown'd in blood of men that die:
Charioted
Hector these foure Kings assaile,
But his smart Steeds spring through their armed pale.
72
Menon that was too forward boue the rest,
Pursues great
Hector in his lofty Carre,
A dart the
Troian quiuer'd through his brest,
King
Menon bids his last farewell to warre,
King Menon slaine.
With multitudes the Prince is ouer-prest,
And yet he kils the
Greekes neare and from farre:
Neere, with his fatall sword he cleaues their harts,
And a farre off, with his keene shafts and Darts.
73
Vnto this rescue Prince
Securabor,
One of King
Priams Bastard sonnes soone came,
And Noble
Margareton thirsting for
Honor, and mongst the
Greekes to get a name,
All
Priams yssue cowardice abhor,
Duke
Menesteus enuious of their fame,
Against them comes, now clamors fill the skie,
Whilst about
Hectors Chariot thousands lie.
74
Vnto this hostile tumor from
Troy-ward,
Three Kings with Noble
Troylus the fourth man
Make their incursions: King
Sampitus far'd
Like a fierce Lyon, King
Maclaon wan
[Page 259] With anger, and the King that all things dar'd
Alcanus: gainst whom
Menesteus ran
And bore him Nobly, yet alas too weake,
Till
Thesus came the
Troian rankes to breake.
75
Troylus Menesteus singles, but his Horse
Stumbled, and he enforcst on foot to fight:
Fiue hundred
Greekes beguirt him, and enforce
The youthfull
Troian (now debard from flight)
To be their prisoner; Many a liuelesse corse
Troylus first made, before compeld t'alight:
When
Hector heard but word of his disgrace,
He slew on all sides till he wan the place.
76
But first
Alccenus had addrest his Speare,
Against the Duke that led Prince
Troylus bound,
The Steele point tooke him twixt his cheeke and eate,
And made th'
Athenian Duke a dangerous wound,
Sampilus seconds him (a Steed was neare)
On which they mounted
Troylus from the ground:
Menesteus mad that he hath lost his prise,
Pierst through the throng, and cald for more supplies.
77
King
Menelaus and
Prothenor knowing
Th'
Athenians voyce, presse that way with their powers,
But find
Hyripsus and King
Hapon strowing
The earth with
Greekes, at which the
Spartan lowers:
These foure their forces ioyne, many yet growing,
Their swords supplant: death through the Champion scowers
At whom
th'Olimpian Gods amazed stand,
To see him with such quicknesse moue his hand.
78
Anthenors sonne
Polydamus makes on,
King
Rhemus backes him with three thousand more,
Their Speare-length (through the presse he had not gon)
But
Celidus him from his Courser bore,
A fairer Prince then
Celidus liu'd none,
By
Venus gift he Beauties Liuery wore:
Polydamus re-mounted, soone addrest,
A second course, and pierst him through the brest.
79
Which
Menelaus seeing, soone assayles
Rhemus, and layes him stounded in the field,
And but that stowt
Polydamas preuailes,
H'had borne him to his Tent vpon his shield,
Still was not
Hector Idle, Hils and Dales
His Chariot skoures, to him the mightiest yeild:
For like a raging Torrent after Rayne,
Where ere he comes confusion fils the plaine.
80
Now was he by the men that
Aiax led
Troopt in: the
Salamines Thunder about him
Like
Ciclopes, as if his Noble head
Were
Vulcans Anuile (yet the boldest doubt him)
And seeing store of Carcasse bout him spred,
Wish in their hearts to fight else-where without him:
For like a baited Lyon at a stake,
he cuts them off, and makes the boldest qnake.
81
King
Theuter somewhat rougher then the rest,
as worthy
Hector kept these Dogs at bay,
Finding the Prince with two much taske opprest,
against him with his Courser makes swife way,
The brazen-headed staffe glides by his brest,
and gainst his rib he feeles the Iauelin stay:
King
Theuter thou hast done a Noble deed,
Thou art the first that mad'st great
Hector bleed.
82
Well was it for thee that thou staidst not long,
Those that growe next him for thy act must fall,
Like a mad Bull he fares the
Greekes among,
and whom he hits, beneath his Chariot sprall,
The Prince, the common man, the weake, the strong,
The Bold, the Coward, tast confusion all:
The Sun looks pale, heauen red, the green earth blusht
To see their bones beneath his Chariot crusht.
83
Whose valour
Thesus seeing, nobly spake:
Thesus.
Great
Hector, I admire thee, though my Foe:
Thou art too bold, why dost thou vndertake,
Things beyond man, to seeke thine ouerthrow?
[Page 261] I see thee breathlesse, wherefore dost thou make
So little of thy worth, to perish so?
Fond man retyre thee, and recouer breath,
And being thy selfe, pursue the workes of death.
84
Prince
Hector his debility now finding,
Thankes royall
Thesus, and begins to pawse,
And bout the field with his swift coursers winding,
Vnto a place remote himselfe withdrawes,
Meane time King
Menelaus the battaile minding,
Wan in the dangerous conflict much applawse:
Heere
Celidonius valiant
Moles slew:
Moles that his discent from
Oreb drew.
85
By
Mandon, King
Cedonius lost an eye,
A
Graecian Admirall,
Sadellus kils,
And
Aix Telamonius doth defie
Prince
Margareton, King
Menestheus, spils
The
Galles red blood,
Prothenor low doth lie
By
Samuels Speare, renowned
Hector fils
The field with wonder, he his Carre forsakes,
And Milke white
Galathee againe he takes.
86
At his first entrance he espies his friend
Polydamas by thirty souldiers led,
Amongst whom spurring, they themselues defend,
But scarce one man hath power to guard his head,
Vnto their dayes great
Hectors sword gaue end,
And freedome to
Polydamas, nye dead:
With shame and wrath, next to the battell came
King
Thoas to redeeme the
Argiues Fame.
87
With him the King
Philotas who adrest
Themselues gainst two of
Priams Bastard Sonnes,
Young
Cassilanus puts his Speare in rest,
And with great fury against
Thoas ronnes,
He brake his staffe, but
Thoas sped the best,
As to their bold encounter
Hector comes,
He sees his young halfe-brother he held deare,
Through-pierst (alas) by
Thoas fatall Speare.
88
Hye-stomackt
Hector with this obiect mad,
hurries through the thicke prease, and there had slaine
Whole thousands, for the death of that young Lad,
But his red wrath King
Nestor did restraine,
For with six thousand Knights in armor clad,
he fortifies the late forsaken plaine:
Gainst whom marcht
Philon, of the part of
Troy,
Their battailes ioyne, each other they destroy.
89
Polydamus and
Hector taking part
With
Philon, aged-Nestor growes too weake,
For
Cassilanus death the
Greekes must smart,
They through their flankes, wings, rankes, and squadrons breake
When
Aiax Telamon spide what huge wreake,
The
Troian Worthy made: his men take hart,
And with King
Menelaus them dispose,
To rescue
Nestor, and assault their Foes.
90
Gainst them
Aeneas with the hoast arriues,
And ioynes with
Hector: on the
Argiue side
Philoatas with three thousand souldiers striues,
all proued
Greekes, whose valors had bin tride:
Aeneas and great
Aiax gage their liues
To equall conflict, whom their troopes deuide:
Philoatas on great
Hector thinkes to proue him,
(In vaine) he from his saddle cannot moue him.
91
But him the Woorthy stounded with a blow,
A flatling blow that on his Beauer glancst,
Vlisses and
Humerus next in row,
With twice fiue thousands Knights on
Hector chancst,
But
Paris hapned with as many moe
On
Hectors part, where numbers lye intrancst:
Paris a keene shaft from his Quiner drew,
Whose fatall point the King of
Cipresse slew.
92
This
Ciprian, Kinsman to
Vlisses was,
In whose reuenge the
Ithacan defies
Prince
Paris, who in Arch'ry did surpasse,
These two in field against each other rise,
[Page 263] And with their mutuall blood they staine the grasse,
But parted by the tumult, they deuise
On further massacre, neere to this place,
Troylus, Vlisses meets, and wounds his face.
93
Nor scapt the
Troian wound-free, in this stower
Was
Galathee beneath Prince
Hector slaine,
And he on foot, the
Greekes with all their power
Begirt him, and assault the Prince amaine;
But he whose fame aboue the Clouds must lower,
From all their battering strokes still guards his braine:
Till
Dynadorus Priams Bastard son,
Against well-mounted
Polixemus ron.
94
A strong Barb'd horse the Noble
Greeke bestrid,
a Worthier Maister now the steed must haue,
The Bastard youth gainst
Polixemus rid,
Vnhorst him, and his Steed to
Hector gaue,
Who mounted, farre more deeds of Honor did,
Leauing the
Greekes most Coarses to ingraue:
a troope of Archers
Deiphebus brings,
Who expell the
Greekes with arrowes, darts, and slings
95
At the first shocke the Prince King
Theuter hit,
and car
[...]'d a deepe wound on his armed face,
The well steel'd point his sword-proofe Beauer split,
and now th'assaulted
Greekes are all in chace,
Some saue themselues by swiftnesse, some by wit,
Young
Quinteline of
Priams Bastard race,
and King
Moderus haue surpriz'd by force,
Thesus, and spoyl'd him both of armes and horse.
96
Whom when the
Dardan-Worthy saw surpriz, d
He cals to mind the cur'sie to him done,
By whom nye breathlesse, he was well aduis'd,
The future eminence of warre to shunne,
King
Thesus whom his Victors much despis'd,
Hector releast, and by the glorious Sunne,
Sweares not to leaue him, till he see him sent,
With safe conduct vnto his warlike Tent.
97
Here
Thoas, by whom
Cafsilan
[...] fell,
Is by great
Hector beaten from his Steed,
Who razing of his Helme, to send to hell
A soule he so much hated, was soone freed
By
Menesteus: who makes on, Pell-Mell
With a huge hoast, and rescues with all speed
Th'astonisht King: not long the day he tride,
Till
Paris with an arrow pierst his side.
98
Humerus glaunst a Iauelin through the sight
Of
Hectors Beauer, that it racst the skin,
Th'inraged Prince on proud
Humerus light
And with one stroke he cleft him to the chin,
Proceeding on, hee still pursues the fight,
The
Grecians loose, and now the
Troians win,
They beate them to their Tents, where some inquire
For pillage, whilst the rest the Nauy fite.
99
In this pursute
Hector and
Aiax meete,
Who (after interchange of hostile blowes)
Part on eeuen tearmes, and with kind language greet,
For the two kinsmen now each other knowes:
Aiax intreats the Prince to spare theyr Fleet,
And saue theyrtents, whose flame to heauen-ward grows
Which courteous
Hector sweares to vndertake,
For
Aiax and his Aunt
Hesiones sake.
100
Oh Il-stard
Hector! Thou hast ouerseene
A Victory, thou canst not reach to more?
Hadst thou to him inexorable beene
Thou hadst sau'd
Troy, and freed the
Dardan Shore:
Duke
Aiax prayet hath wrought
Troyes fatall teene
And hath the power (lost
Grecia) to restore:
Oh, hadst thou tane the aduantage of this day,
all
Greece had perisht, that now liues for aye.
101
But theres a Fate in all things:
Hector blowes
His wel-knowne horne, his Souldiers all retreat:
The
Greekes to quench theyr Fleet themselues dispose,
and re-instaure their tents, whose spoile was great:
[Page 265] The next day from the campe to
Priam goes
A Herald, to surcease all hostile heat:
Demanding truce till they the dead haue grounded,
And both of Campe and Citty cur'd the wounded.
102
Tis granted, from the Towne with Coffins com
Pale widdowes, winpled in their mourning weeds,
To fetch their husbands coarses cold and nom,
To whom they offer solemne Funerall deeds,
The Children fetch their Sires, and Fathers some
Their slaughtred sons, which generall mourning breeds:
The
Greekes likewise their fellow-mates desire,
And yeild their bodies to the hallowed fire.
103
But whilst these odoriferous piles they reare,
And sacrifiz'd their friends in holy flames,
And in perfumed Boxes, prized deare,
Coffin their precious ashes, least their names
Should die in
Lethe: Nouell broyles appeare,
And
Ate through the Campe discord proclames:
But now to truce our spirits we haue intention,
Before twixt them we moue a new dissention.
TO omit all our English worthies, whose names wee haue only memoriz'd, not hauing roome to insert their deeds in so little a compasse as we haue prescrib'd to our History, we rather couet to touch matter more forraigne, and lesse familiar to some, with whome our Booke must necessarily Traficke.
In the description of Fame, we haue rather imitated
Ouid then
Virgill, his
Fama malum quo non &c.
In the description of King
Priams state, we must needes imagine it great, where so many forraigne Kings assembled in his ayde, in whose names we haue confer'd
Dares, the
Troian Dictes, the
Greeke Homer, Virgill, and others, who though in some particuler thinges (not momentarily they differ) yet they generally concurre in this, that such Princes with such populous and almost inuincible assistance succored
Troy.
[Page 254]
Telephus ioynd in commission with
Achilles, to saile to the land of
Messe, was sonne to
Hercules, whom
Theutam (hauing before in the battayle receiued his deaths wound) voluntarily adopted his successour, for the great loue that he for many benefits formerly receiued) had borne to his father
Hercules.
The passages of Loue betwixt
Troylus and
Cressida, the reuerent Poet
Chaucer hath sufficiently discourst, to whom I wholy refer you, hauing past it ouer with little circumstance.
The description of the first battailes seruice, disordred and confused, we must excuse, with this necessity, that beeing to remember so many, and to imploy them all, we could not do it with a directer method, then to set downe things done without order disorderly, and actions hapning by accident accidentally, and confused things, confusedly.
King
Prothesilaus was the first King that perisht before
Troy, for though it were foretold by Oracle, that he that first set foot a shore, should perish by the sword of Hector, yet hee fearelesse of death, first landed, and in his too much valor made the fayre
Laodomeia a desolate widdow.
Ate, Goddesse of reuenge or strife, she is cald by
Homer one of
Ihoues daughters,
Lesio. Homerus Iliad. 7.
Presba dios thugater ate
H pantas a-atai,
Ate prisca Iouis proles quae leserit omnes.
Mortales—
The Tale of
Cephalus and
Procris, because I haue omitted in my former Cantons, especially in that which seemes to inueigh against Iealousie, I thinke not altogither vnnecessary to insert in this Skolia, knowing that which was ill forgot, cannot be amisse remembred at any seasonable opportunity, Here therefore (though out of his ranke) I intend to admit him.
BEneath Hymettus hill well cloath'd with flowers,
A holy Well her soft springs gently powers,
The Tale of Cephalns and Procris.
Where stands a Cops, in which the Wood-Nymphs shroue,
(No wood) It rather seemes a slender Groue,
The humble shrubs and bushes hide the grasse,
Heere Lawrell, Rosemary, heare Myrtle was,
[Page 301] Heere grew thicke Box, and
Tam'rix, that excels,
And made a meere confusion of sweet smels:
The Triffoly, the Pine, and on this Heath
Stands many a plant that feeles coole
Zephirs breath.
Heere the young
Cephalus tyr'd in the chace,
Vsd his repose and rest alone t'embrace,
And where he sat, these words he would repeate,
Come Ayre, sweet Ayre come, coole my heat
[...]:
Come gentle Ayre, I neuer will for sake thee,
Ile hug thee thus, and in my bosome take thee.
Some double dutious Tel-tale hapt to heare this,
And to his Iealous wife doth straight-way beare this.
Which
Proctis hearing, and with all the Name
Of Ayre, (sweete Ayre) which he did oft proclaime,
She stands confounded, and amazd with griefe,
By giuing this fond tale too sound beleefe.
And lookes as doe the Trees by winter nipt,
Whom Frost and cold, of fruit and leaues hath stript,
She bends like Corueile, when too ranke it growes,
Or when the ripe fruits clog the Quinch-tree bowes:
But when she comes to her selfe, she teares
Her Garments, and her eyes, her cheekes, and heares,
And then she starts, and to her feet applies her,
Then to the Woods (storke Wood) in rage she hies her.
Approaching somewhat neare, her seruants they
By her appointment in a Vally stay,
Whilst she alone with creeping paces steales
To take the Strumpet whom her Lord conceales.
What mean'st thou
Procris in these Groues to hide thee?
What rage of loue doth to this madnesse guide thee?
Thou hopst the Arye he cals in all her brauery,
Will straight approach, and thou shalt see their knauery,
and now againe it Irkes her to be there.
For such a killing sight her heart will teare,
No truce can with her troubled thoughts dispence,
She would not now he there, nor yet be thence:
Behold the place, her iealous mind fortels,
Here doe they vse to meet, and no where els:
The Grasse is layd, and see their true impression,
Euen heere they lay: I, heere was their transgression.
[Page 302] A bodies print she saw, it was his seat,
Which makes her faint hart gainst her ribs to beat,
Phoebus the lofty Easterne Hill had scald,
And all moist vapours from the earth exhald:
Now in his noone-tide point he shineth bright,
It was the middle houre twixt noone and night:
Behold young
Cephalus drawes to the place,
And with the Fountaine water sprinkes his face,
Procris is hid, vpon the grasse he lyes,
And come sweet
Zephir, Come sweet Ayre he cryes.
She sees her error now from where he stood,
Her mind returnes to her, and her fresh blood,
Among the Shrubs and Briars she moues and rustles,
And the iniurious boughes away she
[...]stles,
Intending, as he lay there to repose him,
Nimbly to run, and in her armes inclose him:
He quickly casts his eye vpon the bush,
Thinking therein some sauage Beast did rush,
His bow he bends, and a keene shaft he drawes,
Vnhappy man, what doost thou? Stay and pause,
It is no bruite beast thou wouldst reaue of life;
(Oh man vnhappy) thou hast slaine thy wife:
Oh Heauen she cries, Oh helpe me I am slaine,
Stil doth thy Arrow in my wound remaine:
Yet though by timelesse Fate, my bones heere lye,
It glads me most, that I, no Cuck-queane dye:
Her breath (thus in the Armes she most affected,)
She breaths into the Ayre (before suspected)
The whilst he lifts her body from the ground,
And with his teares doth wash her b
[...]eeding wound.
The end of the eleuenth
CANTO.
Argumentum
A Chilles
transformation: Palimed
Accusd of Treason and condemnd to die:
After long battaile, honor
Hector led
The boldest
Argiue Champion to defie:
The
Graecians storme to be so chalenged,
Hector and
Aiax the fierce Combat try:
A Truce, a Banquet: at this pompous feast,
Queene
Hellen is inuited a chiefe guest.
ARG. 2.
Deiademeias
Loue, Vlisses
Spleene,
Two Princely husbands claime the
Spartan Queen
1
FArre beit, I so much on
Hector doate,
To rob the aduerse part of any right,
I am not to the
Troians so deuoate,
(Though thence deriu'd) that the least
Argiue Knight
Should me accuse, or any passage coate,
Guilty of flattering loue, or partiall spight:
Loe to both parts we newtrall hate professe,
But equall loue, as we can euenly gesse.
2
I cannot flatter with smooth
Virgils pe
[...]
Or giue
Augustus more then he should haue,
(With
Ouid) bestow Dieties on men,
And where he hates or loues, condemne or saue:
Blind
Homer, how shall I excuse thee then;
That all the glory to
Achilles gaue,
For wit and strength, to whom hast thou don wrong,
Vlisses was as wise,
Aiax as strong.
3
If
Hector with
Achilles thou comparest,
Or rather wouldst preferre the valiant
Greeke
As he whose valour and esteeme was rarest,
Needs must I cast a blush vpon thy cheeke:
Because great
Hector was thy foe, thou sparest
To speake of him, (his praise must be to seeke)
And all thy skeads
Achilles Fame display,
Whom
Hestor hath vn-horst twice in one day.
4
I must confesse
Achilles highly blest,
To haue a
Homer in his Country borne,
Had
Troy bred
Homer, or had
Greece possest
Renowned
Hector, no Prince should haue worne
A wreath equall with his, Fame should inuest
The
Troian hyest, maugre Enuies scorne:
Shew me the cause else, why to his disgrace,
Hector's the worthy? he hath lost the place?
5
Or how can this through
Gracia be digested,
A
Troians Fame should with such Luster shine,
The generall bench of Iudgements hath inuested
The
Troian Hector one amongst the nine,
Though
Homer for
Achilles hath protested,
Made his Fame Tower-lesse, and his birth Deuine:
Yet hath the world the
Troian so respected,
Achilles is put by,
Hector elected.
6
And reason too, for what
Achilles wan,
Was by the valour of his armed traine,
When
Hector fought, he buckled man to man,
And by his proper hand lie thousands slaine,
And who first brought him to
Scamander plaine,
My Muse sings next,
Ihoue-borne my braine inspire,
Whilst I the Fate of
Thetis sonne inquire.
7
Old
Peleus yssue by the Seas faire Queene,
Lycomedes K. of Scyros.
Thetis
in Lycomedes
Court abides
Clad like a Gitle (for such his youth was seene)
His warlike hand a Womanish distaffe guides,
Achilles and Deiademeia.
A female shape obscures his Martiall spleene,
In stead of Cushes a long Kirtle hides
His warlike limbes, those armes mongst Virgins plaid,
That were indeed for
Vulcans armor made.
8
The carefull Mother that pre-science had
By Oracle, her sonne'fore
Troy should fall,
Seekes to preuent his Fate, and sends the Lad
Vnto the King of
Sciros (being but small)
He passes for a Girle, so was he clad,
Such was his shape, gate, gesture, looke, and all:
And through the Court a generall voyce doth ronne,
Of
Thetis daughter, not of
Thetis sonne.
9
The King appoints him Bed-fellow to be
With faire
Deiademeia his sole-Child,
So well the youthfull paire in bed agree,
That when
Achilles laught, the Lady smild,
And when he honor'd, she would bend her knee,
With him she tasted ioy, or mirch exild:
His amorous gestures were to her a Lawe,
To keepe her actions and her lookes in awe.
10
Achilles growes, so doth the Lady too,
And as their yeares increase, so their affection,
Custome and long continuance taught them doo
Pleasures to youth vnknowne (without direction)
Without suspicion, he may freely woo,
The opportunous night friends her complexion:
When in her Armes the Prince doth rudely rush
Night Curtens her and none can see her blush.
11
So long they vse this dalliance, the young Lasse
Feeles her brests swell, and her lanke belly grow,
(No maruell) by the Prince with childe she was,
Of him that wrought
Troyes fatall ouerthrow;
Great
Neptolemus who did surpasse
Neptolemus
cald Pyrrl
[...].
In Martiall prowesse, and laide
Islium low:
Whilst these things are in processe, tis decreed
By Oracle,
Troyes warres shall ill succeed.
12
For when th'inuasiue
Greekes demaund th'euent
That in these expeditions shall betide,
Answere is them return'd, incontinent
Without
Achilles, Troy shall swell with pride,
And therefore was
Vlisses forthwith sent
With
Diomed, to finde the Prince, denide
By
Thetis, vnto whom was then reuealed
Her sonnes short date, (the cause she him concealed.)
13
The crafty
Greeke the Mothers guile suspecting,
To
Lycomedes Court posts in disguise,
His weeds of state and Princely robes reiecting,
He Pedler-like attempts the enterprise,
He beares along bright glasses, faire reflecting
Cawles, Laces, Tyres, to please young Ladies eyes:
Besides these womens toyes, he beares along
A bright sword, and a Bow surpassing strong.
14
In the Court-hall he opens his faire packe,
And twenty seuerall Ladies come to buy,
The Pedler needs not aske them what they lacke,
Not one, but with some trifle gluts her eye,
Achilles (hanging at the Pedlers backe,)
Spies a faire Bow, and by his Hamper lye
A rich caru'd sword, the strong Steele-bow he drew,
And shooke the sword, by which the Prince he knew.
15
Then closing with
Aeacides, perswades
The valiant youth to suite him to his kind,
His loose effeminate habit he vpbraids,
Tels him what honors are to him assind,
[Page 307] with what disgrace he liues mongst wanton Maides,
And what renowne attends a valiant minde:
Which in his noble thoughts takes such Impression,
The Prince repents his former loose transgression.
16
He teares his feminine Vales, rends off his tyres,
His golden Cawle and Fillet throwes aside,
and for his head, a Steele-wrought Caske desires,
That hand that did so late a spindle guide,
To brandish a bright luster'd sword aspires,
a sword that must in
Hectors bloud be dyde:
His smooth Rebata from his necke he fals,
and to the
Greeke, for a stiffe Gorget cals.
17
From his large Limbs th'Imbrodered Roabes hee shakes,
and leapes out of his Garments with proude scorne,
In stead of which, he a rich Vaunt-brace takes,
Which buckling on, growes proud to see it worne,
The wanton Guirles first wonder what he makes,
With sword and armes (his Garments hauing torne:)
But when he frown'd, the Ladies grow affrayde
Of him so arm'd, with whom but late they playde.
18
But now
Vlisses, Diomed, and he,
Leaue (without leaue,) both
Sciros and the King,
(
Deiademeia most bewailde of thee)
Whoseyssue in thy Wombe thou feelst to springe.
They pierce through
Greece, whom when the Princes see,
To their arriue, they Oades and Cantons sing:
Praysing theyr Gods, that haue
Achilles found,
Whose hand must lay
Troy leauell with the ground.
19
This
Thetis hearing, that her royall sonne
had left his secure habit of a Woman,
and by
Vlisses to the warres was won,
She for his safety doth her wits still sommon,
To
Lemnian Vulcan she doth post-hastronne,
Whose art in forging armes she knew not common:
at her be-heast, he for her Sonne did yeild,
a Speere-proofe-armour, and a Globe-like Shield.
20
What can a Mothers care gainst Fare preuaile?
Not
Vulcans Armour can defend his life,
When th'vnauoyded destinies assayle
against the Sisters bootlesse wee make strife,
Mortall preuention then of force must fayle,
In vaine then hast thou laboured (
Peleus wife)
To guirt his body in a steely wall,
Since thy
Achilles must by
Paris fall.
21
No sooner was he borne, but the fayre Queene
Plung'd him into the Sea, all saue the heele,
By which she held him fast, that which was seene
Beueath the waues, was wound-free against Steele,
Had she but drown'd her hand, the Prince had beene
Sword-proofe euen there, her nicenesse would not feele
The coldnesse of the waues, therefore that part
Was left vnarm'd, for
Paris poysoned Dart.
22
Who therefore would against the Fates contend,
By whom our elementall parts are swayde,
Since euery thing thats borne must haue his end,
and Nature still decayes what she hath made,
Tis Heauen, not Earth, that can our liues defend,
The hygh powers must in all things be obayd:
But leaue the fayre-foot
Thet is, and proceede
To what the Campe hath against
Troy decreed.
23
By this great discords monges the
Gracians fall,
Twixt Duke
Palamides, and
Mecenes King,
But no man knowes the byrth of this great brall,
Or from what Fountaine these dissentions spring,
Achilles thinkes his warlike meed too small,
He will not fight: not
Diomedes bring
His Men to battayle, while their Soueraigne head,
Is
Nawlus sonne, the generall
Palamed.
24
Whom some affirme, the amorous
Paris slew,
In euen Incounter of opposed hate,
But others say, gainst him
Vlisses drew
Such points of Treason, as concern'd his fate,
Twixt whom and great
Atrides fell debate
About the Soueraigne sway, enuies fire nurst
Long in their bosomes, into flashes burst,
25
The King of
Ithaca marryed but newly
Vnto the chastest Queene that hath beene crown'd,
Vlisses and Palamides.
When all the
Grectan Kings appointed duly,
To make their meeting, and assemble round,
Gaue out he was turn'd Frantique, but not truely;
Which craft of his, the Son of
Nawlus found:
For comming where
Vlisses Plowd the Sand,
and steer'd the crooked Rafter with his hand.
26
Palumides iust in the Mad-mans way,
Layd young
Telemachus his first borne Son,
Which made the
Greeke his yoaked teeme to stay,
and where his Issuelay, the place to shon,
Palumides dilcouers his delay,
Finds that his Lunacy by craft was don:
That whilst the
Gracians were with
Troy at strife,
He might at home sleepe with his constant wife.
27
In ill time did the Son of
Nawlus this,
The vengfull King rouz'd from so fayre a Bride,
who by this meanes now quite abandon'd is,
Doth in his bosome spleene and rankor hide,
and for the losse of euery amorous kisse,
Threatens a wide wound in the Princes side:
Oh treacherous
Greeke! to want thy wife in Bed,
Mustat
Troyes siedge cost the great Generals hed.
28
Arnea was Sole-Daughter to the King
Icarius and faire
peribea his wife,
Peribea daughter to
Nais.
who feeles a young Babe in her VVombe to spring,
The Father when he knew th'Infant had life,
after conception: doubting some strange thing,
Oracle. Femine
[...] Peribea d
[...]s Peribeap
[...]dorem fort
[...]ere.
To
Delphos hyes, where answers then were ryfe;
When th'Oracle thus spake, the princely Dame
Shall child one full of Honor, full of Shame.
29
A beauteous Maide the troubled Mother beares,
The Father misinterprets
Phoebus minde,
And to auoyde her shame his future feares
Commits her to the rage of Seas and Wind,
The Birds that bred of
Meleagers teares,
Heredotus lib. de perse & Andromeda.
Cald
Meleagrides (by Nature kind:)
With their broad wings about the Cock-boat houer,
And from all stormes the beautious Infant couer.
30
And hauing nourisht her for a certaine space,
Into the selfe-same Port her Barke they driue,
Where the sad King without paternall grace,
First launcht it forth, and finding her aliue
Circled with Birds of
Meleagers race,
Their melting harts against their furies striue:
Penelopes Grece sig.
A brood of Indian hens.
They take the young
Arnea from the Sea,
And call her of those Birds
Penelope.
31
In beauty, stature, and in wit she growes,
But when her Father findes her apt to marry,
Fearing the Oracle, whom still he knowes
Sooth in his words, perswades the dame to tarry,
A safer course to keepe her chast, he chose,
(Virginiti's a heauy loade to carry:)
And to deuise to haue her nobly sped,
At a high rate he sets her Maiden-head.
32
When all the
Graecian Princes sought her grace,
And lay their Crownes and Scepters at her feete,
Icarius leades them to a Martiall race,
where the young Kinges in hot incounter meete,
Aboue them all,
Vlisses won chiefe place,
The shamefast Queene must her new Husband greete:
The bashfull modesty of this chast Dame,
The earefull Father did misconster: shame.
33
For woman-hood this Lady had no Peere,
[...] in Chrisilla.
witnesse her many Suters in the time
Her Husband absent was, some twice ten yeare,
who though much woo'd (and in her youthfull prime)
[Page 311] Yet in their force or fayre meanes could appeare,
Not the least taynt of any amorous cryme:
Though many Suters through her doores intruded,
They by her Bow and Web were all deluded.
33
Whether
Vlisses breast doth malice shrowde,
And being at full groath, now out it must;
Whether his loue to
Agamemnon vowde,
Bred in the
Nawlian Prince some great distrust;
Or whether great
Palamides grew proude,
And in the Ballance of his awe vniust:
But the great Duke vnto the Barre he brings,
And there arraignes him by a Bench of Kings.
34
Vnto this royall Sessions men are brought,
That sweare
Palamides would
Greece betray,
And that King
Priam had by Factors wrought,
To make the
Argiue Campe the
Troyans pray,
The Generals priuate Tent is forthwith sought,
Where Bags of
Troyan Coyne conceiled lay:
This euidence condems the Prince (betrayd)
For there that Gold before
Vlisses layd.
35
And
Agamemnon is againe restord,
With whose election the late Truce expires,
The maimd are cur'd, the victors are ador'd,
The bodyes slaine, receiue the funerall fires,
The third battell.
The Obits on both sides are full deplord,
And eyther party the fayre field desires:
The great
Atrides Martials his fayre hoast,
Who shine in Steele by the
Sygean Coast.
36
Vpon the aduerse party,
Hector leades
His m
[...]n to battaile, flanct with sleeues and winges,
His nimble Horsemen forrage round the Meads,
The maine well-fen'st with Skirts of Shafts and Slings,
In forehead of the battayle
Hector treads,
This day the Generall ouer thirty Kings:
The charge is giuē, arm'd knights meet breast to breast
Striking bright starres out of each others Crest.
37
The doughty
Greekes after their long tru'st ease,
Are full of breath and vigor, they fight well,
The
Troyans that but late droue to the seas
The scattred Camp, thinke likewise to excell,
Euen Ballan'st is the field, as the Scales please
who Victors be, who vanquisht none can tell?
On both sides some are conquer'd, some subdue,
And as the day increast, the conflict grew.
38
Broad breasted
Diomed gainst
Paris rides,
and lifts him from his Saddle with his Speare,
The Prince, the Buttockes of his Horse bestrydes,
And hardly can the
Troyan keepe him there,
Whilst
Diomed his quicke remoue derides
Vnshaken, from the Prince he passes cleere:
Spurring from troope to troope, making intrusion,
Where the hot fight was growne to most confusion.
39
Now in his Chariot stands
Achilles hy,
And with his Speare before him, squadrons strowes,
Great
Hectors puissance he longs to try,
Or some thats able to withstand his blowes,
And whilst whole troopes before his Chariot fly,
The raynes vpon his steedes white necke he throwes:
Calling for
Hector: Hector, fore him stood,
His Chariot-steedes caparison'd in blood.
40
To whom
Aeacides, what ere thou be
That thus confronst me like the God of warre?
Know tis
Achilles must thy life set free,
And tumble thee from thy triumphant Carre:
This said, a pointed Iauelin he lets flee,
Which
Hector at his loose perceiu'd to iarre,
And tooke vpon his Targe: the Dart he cast,
Pierst nine Steele folds, and in the tenth stucke fast.
41
Helme-graced
Hector started at this blow,
And aemulous of great
Achilles Fame,
Charg'd in his hand another dart to throw,
But first he sayes: Inquir'st thou
Hectors name?
[Page 313] Behold him heere, see thy eternall foe,
Hector thou seek'st, and loe I am the same:
His actiue arme his language doth pursue,
For with his latest word his Iauelen flew.
42
Well was it his Orbicular Targe was strong,
Which
Vulcan by deuine composure made,
Else had it stretcht the warlike
Greeke along,
It hit against the Bosse, and there it stayde,
But with the force it brake the mighty thong
In which his massie shield about him plaide:
The affrighted Palfreyes with so great a stroke
Startle aside, and the proud Curbe reuoke.
43
Now when
Achilles rousde himselfe, and saw
Illustrate
Hector in his Chariot stand,
Himselfe so basely, his hot Steedes withdraw,
As if he meant to charge some other band,
Thinkes in himselfe it is too great a flaw
To his cleere mettald fame, and with his hand
Wastes to Imperious
Hector from a-far,
T'abide a second deadly shocke of warre.
44
Th'vndaunted Heroë, who already wonders,
The brauing
Greeke so quickly should retire,
And what strange fate their Brasse-bard chariots sunders,
Since both so ardently the fight desire,
Expects
Achilles, who against him thunders,
VVhilst from the Flints his armed wheeles beate fire:
Now the two Chariot-driuers prooue their might,
The Prince with Prince, Horses with Horses fyght.
45
This six-fold Combat hath not lasted long,
VVhen
Archeptolemnus that guides the raines
Archeptolemnus Hectors Charioter.
Antomedon Achilles Charioter.
Of
Hectors Coach-Steedes, thinking them more stronge
Then those whom rough
Antomedon constraines,
Lashes his fiery Palphreyes, hot and young,
Expert
Antomedon his skill disdaines:
Yerkes his proud horse, whose fiersenesse he dares trust
Till their white foaming mouthes snowed all the dust.
46
The two sterne Champions mounted in theyr Carres,
Confront each other with their armed Staues,
Whose points on eithers Vaunt-brace print deep scarres,
Sometimes they flourish them, with idle braues
Dart them sometimes (like Knights well seene inwarr,)
But when they ioyne, they Combat with their Glaues:
Sometimes they grapple, sometimes they retire,
And at their meeting make their Helmes all fire.
47
The grim
Aeacides mad in his mind,
The warlike
Troyan should against him stand,
Inradg'd, his teeth against his teeth doth grinde,
And beates his Arm'd-breast with his Gauntlet hand,
About him through the field doth
Hector winde,
His fayre-maynde Coursers haue so well been man'd:
That to retreat, or to assault the foe,
He at his will can checke, or make them goe.
48
Antomedon hath taught his Steeds like skill,
For trauersing, he likewise takes the fielde,
His Iades are countermaunded by his will,
For with the Curbe they both rebell and yeild,
Theyr Milky foame vpon their breasts they spill,
Being parted thus: great
Hector vaunts his Shield:
Achilles his: againe their Coursers meete,
And from the Earth beate Thunder with their feete.
49
In this rude Iustle is
Achilles bruis'd,
His high plumde Helme close to his Scull is batterd
And he within his Chariot sits diffusde,
His Sword, his shield, his Darts about him scatterd,
Antomedon retraites, to haue excusde
His second shocke: and o're the plaines he clatterd:
his barbed teeme o're thousand Coarses flyes,
In whose Red-blood, his Chariot Naues he Dyes.
50
Great
Hector scornes pursuit, nor takes he breath,
But fals vpon the next
Greeke that he finds,
And prints on him the bloudy stamp of death,
The long imprisoned soule his Sword vnbinds,
[Page 315] Meane time
Achilles rous'd, abroad surveith
For
Hector, th'obiect of all Noble minds:
But when he found himselfe from
Hector straid,
The Prince doth base
Antomedon vpbraid.
51
Who falling prostrate, sooths
Achilles thus,
Let not on me your deadly hate be grounded,
Not I from him, but
Archeptolemus
Made way from me, for sure great
Hectors wounded?
With you retyr'd the sonne of
Priamus
On equal points: our rich-main'd Steeds haue bounded:
Ouer these plaines great
Hector wel-nie dead,
By great
Achilles, is to
Troy-ward sped.
52
This calmes the wrathfull
Greeke who else had sought
His opposite amidst the slaughtering troopes,
Disioynd from him th'inraged else-where fought,
And where he reares his hand that Squadron stoopes,
His armed Chariot, midst their
Phalany wrought
Horrid effusion,
Troyes proud faction droopes
Beneath
Achilles arme, nor can it yeild,
(Saue
Hector) one to stand him in the field.
53
The Arch-Duke
Agamemnon with his speare
Encountred King
Pandolus, till both bled
King
Thelamon prest to
Sarpedon neare,
And with his blade he raught him on the hed,
By their rude force they both vnhorsed were,
Against
Eurialus King
Thesus sped,
Neither scape wound-free;
Carras bare him well,
Gainst
Scenetus, till from their Steeds both fell.
54
King
Philomenes made
An
[...]henor flye,
King
Rhemus with the King
Philotas ran,
Before
Vlisses doth
Arastus lye,
Aiax this day hath slaughterd many a man,
King
Priams Bastard sonnes themselues apply
In many a skirmish since the charge began:
Young
Deiphebus and
Aeneas stand
Gainst
Hupon, and the three-ag'd
Nestors band.
55
Troylus and
Diomed fiercely assaile,
And brauely beat each other from their steeds,
Both resku'd by the prease, else without faile
There had bin fixt the period of their deeds,
Re-mounted
Diomed breakes through the pale
Of his arm'd foes, and to his horse proceeds:
So
Troylus hewes his passage through the rings
Of harnest foes, and to his Steed he springs.
56
Paris and
Menelaus once more meet,
And bring vnto the battaile fresh supplies,
With thundering strokes vpon their Helmes they greet,
Bretes the Admirall
Hector defies:
Bretes that did command their blacke-stem'd Fleet,
Against him doth
Priamides arise,
And with such violent rage vppon him sped,
That with one blow he cleft his Helme-deckt hed.
57
The Admirall thus dead,
Hector desires
The goodly Steed, from whom the
Greeke was feld,
Which (as for deeds of honour he inquires)
The King
Archilochus by chance beheld,
Who seeing
Bretes dead, the wound admires,
His face lookt pale, his hart with anger sweld:
And with his sword he couets to make bleed
The
Troian Prince, who still pursues the Steed.
58
Who storming to be troubled in the chace,
Against the King
Archilochus returnes,
Inraged
Mars is figured in his face,
And in his lookes the eye of
Gorgons burnes,
The
Greekes blunt sword can scarce his Helmet race,
So weake a foe (inflamed
Hector) scornes:
Vpon his Crest his Faulchion he lets fall,
And cleaues the
Greeke, helme, body, armes and all.
59
The emulous son of
Thetis, crost by chance
The blacke goar'd field, and came to view this blow,
And mad in mind, against him charg'd his Lance,
In hope the towring Prince to ouerthrow,
[Page 285] Him
Thoas seconds, and doth proudly'aduance
His reeking sword, late crimson'd in the foe,
Both with remorflesse blowes; the Prince offend,
And his bruisd Shield about his arme they bend.
60
Had not his helmet beene of mettall pure,
With Axes they had hewed it from his head,
But he that made it was an Arts-man sure,
Else had his braines bin on his harnesse spread,
Nor had he long bin able to indure
Such tedious battry, had not Fortune led
Paris, Aeneas, Troylus and the rest,
To rescue valiant
Hector, thus opprest.
61
At their approch the
Achive bands retire,
Whom to their
Pallisadoes they pursue,
By this, in heauen ten thousand Lampes of fire
Shine through the ayre, and now both Hoasts withdrew,
The re-assembled
Greekes Hector admire,
And mongst themselues into sad counsell grew:
Since not by force of Armes, by what sly traine,
The neuer-daunted Worthy may be slaine.
62
More honoured
Hector, in his royall braine
Reuolues on milder thoughts, how bloud to saue:
It pitties him to see so many slaine,
And come to such a generall timelesse graue:
Then, that no more red bloud may
Symois staine,
And change the coulour of her siluer waue,
He by a generall challenge will deuise,
For thousands safeties, one to Sacrifice.
63
Against all
Greece hee'l flyng his hostile gage,
And to a single Fight their Princes dare,
That two bolde Champions may the combat wage,
And in their mutuall Fury, thousands spare,
Meane time, blacke night, from th'vniuersall Stage
Of Earth, is cha'st and driuen: Now all prepare
For th'early Field, and with
Apollo rise,
To shine in Armour by his rhadiant eies.
64
The Princes to the place where
Hector lay
Throng in theyr Armes, and his command attend,
After they had tooke and giuen the time of day,
with him they to the aged King descend,
Before whom
Hector briefly doth display
his purpost challenge, which they all commend,
For well his Father and his Brothers know,
Hector hath power t'incounter any foe.
65
The Sunne, vp the steepe Easterne hils clymes fast,
Th'embattaild Greekes vpon the plaines appeare,
To them the faire-rankt
Troians march in hast,
Within the reach of
Hectors armed speare:
Both Hoasts attend the charge: when vnagast
The Prince first wafts, that all the Campemay may heare,
Then leaning on his Iauelin, makes this boast,
Euen in the face of their assembled hoast.
66
You curled
Greekes, that haue vnpeopled quite
Hectors challenge.
Threescore vast Kingdomes of theyr ablest men,
To throng our fieldes with numbers infinite,
All hopelesse of theyr safe returne agen:
Among these sixty Kings that shine so bright
In burnisht Steele, vpon this sanguine Fen:
Can you select one boulder then the rest,
T'encounter armed
Hector, Creast to Creast?
67
Or if your Princes be too weake a number,
Can all those threescore Climats yeild one hand,
Amidst this world that coms our Realme to cumber,
That dares betweene these hoasts gainst
Hector stand?
Or doe you all feare deaths eternall slumber?
As well your Kinges. as those of common band,
That with a braue, breath'd in so many eares,
No soule (more valiant then the rest) appeares.
68
If any of these Princes proue so free
His prodigall life against ours to ingage,
Know by exposing his, whole thousands be
Sau'd from the spoyle of warres infernall rage:
[Page 287] Oh, let me then that thrifty Champion see,
That will spare
Graecian blood, with him
[...]wage wage
Equall contention: with my liues expence,
I will maintaine the
Troians eminence.
69
A Prince shall meet that Prince: as neere allide
To thundering
Ihoue as he thats best degreed,
If in his warlike Chariot he will ride,
I in my Chariot will con
[...]tont his speed,
March me these foure white Coursers
Greece hath tride,
These faire
Andromache doth mornely feed:
With her white hand with bread of purest wheat,
And waters them with Wine still when they eat.
70
Xanthus, Podargus, Lampus, Aethon
deare,
Hectors steeds
To
Hector, you my armed Coach shall draw,
And in this fierce exposure shall appeare,
Before the best Steeds that the Sun ere saw,
But all
Greece cannot match your swift Carrere,
Not
Diomedes Steeds that fed on r
[...]w
And mangled limbes, that in their Mangers bleed,
Can equall you in courage or in speed.
71
Therefore Ile cease that oddes, and once againe
Leauing the Kings to common men I turne,
Among such clusters growing on this plaine,
In no warme brest doth so much valor burne,
But shall so many shewers of blood still raine
On
Symois banke: so many widdowes mourne
For their slaine Lords, so many Children cry
For their poore Fathers that heere slaughtred die.
72
If not for Loue of honour, in despaire
Methinkes some one our puissance should accost,
For no
[...] two soules that heere assembled are,
Shall scape the
[...]y of our
Troian hoast,
Death and deuouring ruin shall not spare
One, of your infinites, you are ingrost
All on destructions File, then let some
Greeke
(Despairing life,) a death with honor seeke.
73
Yeilds our besieged Towne a Nobler spirit
Then sixty assembled Kingdomes can produce?
That none dares enterpose his hostile merit,
But all put off this combat with excuse,
Among such infinites will none inherit
A name with vs? Feares
Greece our hand shall sluce
Their Vniuersall blood? That feare can slaue
So many Legions with one
Hectors braue?
74
I beg it of you
Greekes, let some forth stand
To try what puissancelyes in
Hectors sword,
If I be foyl'd by his all-daring hand,
The
Spartan Hellen shall be soone restord,
And all the spoyles brought from the fertile Land
Of
Cythara, made good, and he ador'd
With these ennobled armes, the sword and crest
Of
Hector, Honors more then all the rest.
75
If I subdue your Champion:
Greece in peace
Shall ease our burden'd earth of this huge weight,
Hostility betweene our hoasts shall cease,
You with your men and armes your ships shall freight,
And from our bloud-stain'd soyle free this large prease,
So shall illustrate
Hector reach his height:
When th'Vniuersall world hath vnderstood,
Hector gag'd his, to saue his Citties blood.
76
Oh, let it not in after times be saide,
Twice thirty kingdomes could not one man finde,
Prince, Knight, or Swaine, durst equally inuade,
A
Troian Prince in Armes, and height of mind,
Nor let succeeding time the
Greekes vpbraide,
To heare such lofty spirits so soone declinde:
Behold, heere stand I to abide the rage
Of his arm'd hand, that dares but touch our gage.
77
These words thus breath'd, a generall showt is giuen
Through al the
Tr
[...]n army, which aspires
And strikes against the Marble floores of heauen,
Where fixed are ten thousand sparkling fires,
[Page 321] The hart of whole
Greece is asunder riuen,
Rude tumult springes out of their strange desires:
A confusde murmur flyes along the shoare,
Which to the
Tr
[...]yans eares, the calme winds boare.
78
The
[...]ager Souldiers mutiny: Some say,
Oh would the Kinges and Dukes were not in place,
Our Darts through
Hectors Curace should make way,
But common-men must not the Peeres disgrace,
The rage-burnt Kinges their furies cannot stay,
They fixe their fyr'd eies in each others face:
Yet none presums the Gaunlet vp to take,
When thus the younger of th'
Atrides spake.
79
Is it my lot all
Grecia to excuse?
Greece, that farre from these powers hath congregated?
Shall Pesant cowardise the Campe abuse,
Whilst
Menelaus liues a King instated?
It shall not: what these Princes all refuse,
I will take vp, the cause shall be debated
Twixt me and
Hector, for the generall hoast,
(And reason) since the cause concernes me most.
80
With that he ceasde the gage, when his great Brother
Blaming his rashnesse, makes him let it fall,
And now the warlike Kinges eying each other,
The
Spartans wordes moou'd fury in them all,
Their shame and rage they can no longer smother,
About the Gauntlet they begin new brall:
Toward the ground nine royall Princes be
[...]d,
And for great
Hectors gage at once contend.
81
The Archduke first: then great
Andremons Sonne,
Thoas, King
Diomed, King
Idomen,
Aiax the strong, surnamed
Telamon,
Aiax Oleus: Eriphilus, and then
The warlike
Ithacyan, that alwaies won
The praise for eloquence, boue other men:
Vlisses: King
Meriones, all these
Stoope to the earth, and would the gauntlet cease.
82
T'appease their wrath, thus
Nestor doth deuise
Three seuerall Lots into some Helme to throw,
And that bold Prince whose hand extracts the prize
Betweene the Armies to assault the foe,
The Lots are made, and all with ardent eyes,
Into the Generals Caske iniect them so:
Achilles was not there, till word was sent
Whose the Lot was (that day he kept his Tent.)
83
The souldiers that had prou'd great
Hectors might,
Pray to the Gods the Combats chance may fall
To
Aiax Telamon, that he may fight
With
Hector, for the
Greekes in generall,
If not on warlike
Aiax, it may light
On warlike
Diomed, broad set, and tall:
Or if not these, yet to appease his rage,
Great
Agamemnon may the battaile wage.
84
The Heralds from the generals Helmet drew
The first Inscription, which being knowne, was laid
At
Aiax foot, the Prince the Paper knew,
Glad of his Lot (as all the souldiers praid)
The Kings retyr'd, onely sterne
Aiax grew
Neere to
Dardanian Hector, nought dismaid;
Arm'd at all points, he struts vpon the plaine,
Like angry
Mars, after an army slaine.
85
His shape was huge, his presence full of feare,
An angry Tempest sat vpon his brow,
A Sanguine Plume doth from his Helme appeare,
Which double armes his backe, and seemes to bow
Beneath his Bases: arm'd with such a Speare
His right hand was, that none can disallow:
Athwart his breast a purple Bawdricke fell,
Bearing a sword, which many had sent to hell.
86
The scabberd Crimson Veluet, richly embost
And chap't with Gold: vpon the hilt was grau'd
The battaile of the
Centaures who were lost
In that fierce warre, and whom the conflict sau'd,
A Citties prize, the bright Blade had bin lau'd
In many bosomes, many Princes bloods,
The handle was stucke round with Golden stoods.
87
The Pummell wayde a Talent, rarely wrought
The combat twixt Archelous & Hercules.
With Artfull Modules, on that curious round,
Grim
Achelous with
Alcides fought,
And there in all his
Proteus shapes was found,
Thether the prize faire
Deyaneyr was brought
And placst aloft; beneath her, those that sound
Vnto the dreadfull charge, with Clarious shrill,
Sit with swolne cheekes their lofty pipes to fill.
88
Such Art th'inchacer shewd, to mocke the eye,
That some would thinke their Reeds did Musicke yeild:
There sat the King her Father Thron'd on hye,
With him his Peeres, and round about the field
Th'vnruly multitude still pressing nye
The bounded lists, to see their Champions weild
Their dreadfull Armes, and who the prise can win,
One with a Club arm'd, and a Lyons skin.
89
The other with his God-hood and his power,
To change himselfe to shapes of strange disguise,
Sometimes he seemes a Dragon, to deuoure
His riuall Prince, who doth his Art dispise,
For on his head his Club fals like a Tower,
Next like a fire into his face he flies:
Ali which the Noble Champion cannot tame,
For with a Club he straight beats out the Flame.
90
Then like a grim mad-Bull the halfe-God raues,
And with his hornes
Alcides thinkes to gore,
But he contemning such inchaunted braues
Flyes to his head, and with his rude hands tore
One horne quite off (at this the Workman grieues)
The conquered Bull in falling seemes to rore:
Foure Nimphs discend from a faire sacred hill,
And this rich horne with Flowers and fruits they fill.
91
Which of the horne of plenty still beares name,
This and much more the hye-pris'd Pummell beares
A finer temper'd blade, or of more fame
Cornucopia.
By his proud side no Princely souldier weares:
With this arm'd
Aiax to the combat came,
And singly to the
Dardan Prince appeares:
On his left arme a ponderous Targe he bare,
Quilted with seuen Oxe-hides all Tan'd with haire.
92
Tycheus was the Currier drost those hides,
Best of his trade that dwelt on
Hyla then,
Accootred thus, strong
Atax with huge strides
Stalkes in the field before the best of m
[...]n,
And fixing his bold foot, boldly h'abides
Con
[...]onting him: the
Argiue army when
They saw the
Salamine Prince beare him so prowd,
Their soules reioyc'st, their harts his lot allowd.
93
Priamides that neuer was affraide,
Of ought (saue feare) his Combattant thus greets,
Oh thou whose presence to my soule is made
More pleasing then the most delicious sweets!
Let me pertake his name, who vndismaide
In such faire equipage great
Hector greets:
For since mine eye first knew
Apollos light,
I neuer saw a more accomplisht Knight.
94
Nor one whose presence better pleas'd mine eye,
(Although my foe) Ile giue thee all thy dew,
If courage suite, by shape I can
[...]spy
No blemish in thee; either let me view
Thy open Helme, or else thy name discry,
When stormy
Aiax vp his Beauer drew,
And thus reply'de: The Helmet I had on,
Obscur'd the face of
Aiax Telamon.
95
And Coozin
Hector, know I am the least
Of many that our spacious campe containes,
Who to thy fury dare oppose their Crest,
And on euen language charge thee on these plaines,
[Page 325] We come to fight, not brall, then doe thy best,
The strongest hate that in thy bosome raignes
Powre on my Shield, destruction be my share,
If with my Sword or Speare, I
Hector spare.
96
Gramercies Cooze, the
Troyan Heroë spake,
Thou lou'st me best, to lay it soundly on,
These noble thoughts thy mixed byrth did take
From vs of
Troy, and not from
Telamon:
Our
Dardan bloud thou in thy arme dost shake,
But when thou fearest: thy Mothers heate is gon:
And onely that remaines to chill thy hart
Which
Troy disclaymes, and yeilds
Greece as her part.
97
And would to
Ihoue I knew where that blood ran,
Vnto those Veines I would direct my Speare,
And those in which our Kindred first began,
My hate should spare, as blood to
Hector deare:
Come Noble
Aiax, beare thee like a man,
And one of
Hectors Kinsmen, scorning feare:
(Feare) is a word in
Troy not vnderstood,
A banisht exile from all
Priams bloud.
98
More, I could wish that I might prooue my rage
On some, whose veine no
Troyan moysture guides,
Thetis arm'd Son, whose heate we must asswage,
Tetydes, or the Elder of the
Atrides,
Saue these liues, none can equall conflict wage
With
Hector: but behold, our fury rides
On Horrors wings, our bloud is vp and hye,
Then guard thee Cooze, my Iauelin now must fly.
99
His words and speare together cleaue the ayre,
The Combat betwixt Aiax and Achilles.
The Golden-headed-staffe as lightning flew,
And like the swiftest Curror makes repayre
Whether t'was sent, and doth his message true,
Aiax huge shield hath interpos'd the bare,
Which
Hectors agitagious still pursue:
Through sixe tough hydes, it pier'st without respect,
But the sharp point vpon the seauenth was check't.
100
Aiax then shakes his Iauelin, forth it flyes,
And through the Plates of
Hectors Target pierces,
The toughest Mettall that the Anuile tryes,
Must at his force relent: a thousand hierces
His rage hath fild, and now the Prince applies
His Vniuersall power, f
[...]ry dispierces
Through all his veynes, which to one force vnited,
No wonder,
Hector was so well requited.
101
The Combat is begun, which to descry,
To their full vertues doth surpasse my skill,
Their blowes so swift are, they deceiue the eye,
The least of thousands are of power to kill,
At aduantagious places they soone spy,
Both seas and shores with their lowd strokes sound shrill:
Were neuer heard such blowes, so sound, so thicke,
Or seene such Wards, so cunning, and so quicke.
102
Such that saue
Hector and blunt
Aiax, none
On Earth could equall, then much lesse exceed
These two Heroicke spirits, spent and gone,
To riuall them, no age the like can breed;
Nor maruell though these two exceld alone,
They being both deriu'd from God-like seed:
In whom th'Imperiall Dietyes contended,
In two such men, to haue two Hoasts defended.
103
Infinite Charges passe from eyther side,
From eyther part their nimble Iauelins sing,
Both fixe their bold feet, and such stormes abide
As with their force tempestuous fury bring,
Euen till their Noble blouds the Verdure Dyde,
with Ecchoing rage, their vaulted Helmets ring:
Whose deafning Clangor from the field rebowne,
Through the best Arches of
Troyes Marble Towne.
104
Their speares being shiuered in the empty ayre,
The Truncheons swelling from their hands they take,
with interchange of heate, they madly fare,
Till the tough Oake euen to their Gauntlets brake,
[Page 327] And now their hands vnseruiceably bare,
For their bright Swords, their crack't staues they forsake,
Behold their wrastling Steeles contend on hye,
And
[...]ug for honor in the empty sky.
105
With lightning such as
Ihoues Incensements breede,
Swifter then thought, or sight, theyr furies meet;
Both seeming doubly arm'd with such quicke speede,
Theyr bright swords guard them round, frō head to feet,
Theyr trusty Armours stand them much in steed,
For with such wounding strokes theyr Caskes they greet,
So full of horror, that both armies wonder,
how Earth-bred men, shold make such
Iouiall thunder.
106
The inuincible
Dardanian with one stroke,
Raught
Aiax Beauer, and vnplum'd his hed,
The Steely Claspe (deuinely wrought) it broake,
Which in the
Salmin Duke sterne fury bred,
Who striuing now the
Dardan Prince to yoake,
His spleene and powerfull Sword together sped,
The point to
Hectors breasted Armour flew,
And from his Bulke Vermillion drops it drew.
107
The
Troian growes inflam'd, the
Argiue proud
To see his bright Skeyne in such bloud Imbrude,
Th'Inuaders showte, and lift theyr cryes aloud,
To see their Champion with such power indude,
For this (great
Hector) in his Soule hath vowde
Suddaine reuenge, he growes more fierce and rude:
His Sword plyde
Aiax Helme, yet shining bright,
As
Cyclops hammers on theyr Anuiles light.
108
So well t'was tempered, and his strength so hy,
That his tough mettal'd Blade in pieces flew,
At selfe-same instant
Aiax gan apply
His trusty steele, and close to
Hector grew,
But as he thus pronoun'st (now
Hector dy)
And heaues his arme aloft to make it true,
his Sword vpon his Caske fell as he spake,
And with the force close by the handle brake.
109
The Champions both disarmed saue their shields,
First
Hector with his eye doth round inquire,
And findes a scatter'd Rocke left in the fieldes,
Neuer till then remou'd, now all on fire,
To auenge his wonnd, what no man else could weild,
(His mind boue Mortall puisance gins t'aspyre:)
His puisant arme aduanceth at the last,
And the huge Masse he towards
Aiax cast.
110
He takes it on his shield, but with the power
Of his comparelesse strength, the seauen tough Hides
were all to crusht and bruisd, he thinkes some Tower
Of arched stone from his high structure slides
Him to intombe aliue, and to deuour,
Downe droppes his Targe to earth, and he abides
Asto
[...]sht for a space, at length his eye
Glan'st on a young tall Oake that grew fast by.
111
VVhose sinnowy strings with shaking to and fro,
He soone vnloos'd, and by the Earth vp teares,
And wauing boue his Helmet, with one blow
seekes to giue end to all the
Dardans feares,
should it fall steddy, he should lye full low,
The threatning Oake still in the ayre appeares:
Menacing veng
[...]ance, but before it light,
Here breath my Muse, and cheere thy traueld sprite.
Achilles his concealement ofhis sex in the Court of
Lycomedes:
De Arte Aman
[...].
1.
Ouid thus writeth.
NOw from another World doth saile with ioy,
A welcome Daughter to the King of
Troy,
The whilst the
Graecians are already come,
Achilles and D
[...]a.
(mou'd with that generall wrong gainst
[...]slium:)
Achilles in a Smocke, his Sexe doth smother,
and layes the blame vpon his carefull mother,
What mak'st thou great
Achilles, teazing Woo
[...],
When
Pallas in a Helme should claspe thy Scull?
What doth these fingers with fine threads of Gold?
Which were more fit a Warlike Shield to hold.
[Page 329] Why should that right hand, Rocke or Tow containe,
By which the
Tro
[...]n Hector must be slaine?
Cast off thy loose vailes, and thy Armour take,
And in thy hand the Speare of
Pelias shake.
Thus Lady-like he with a Lady lay,
Till what he was, her belly must bewray,
Yet was she forst (so should we all beleeue)
Not to be forst so, now her heart would greeue:
When he should rise from her, still would she cry,
(For he had arm'd him, and his Rooke laid by)
And with a soft voyce speake:
Achilles stay,
It is too soone to rise, lie downe I pray,
And then the man that forst her, she would kisse,
What force
(Deiademeia) call you this?
Antomedon was
Achilles Charioter, and Squire to
Pyrhus,
Ouid de Arte Amandi lib.
1. whose skill
Ouid remembers.
By art of Sayle and Oare, Seas are diuided,
By art the Chariot runs, by art Loue's guided,
By art are Bridles rain'd in, or let slip,
Typhis by art did steare th'
Hemonian ship:
And
Tymes succeeding, shall call me alon,
Loues expert
Typhis and
Antomedon.
The reason why
Achilles kept his Tent, and was not in the
Homer. field when
Hector breathed his chalenge, is not fully resolued: some thinke he was discontent about a difference betwixt the Generall
Agamemnon and him, who kept away perforce
Briseis, a beauteous Lady, claimed by
Achilles as his Prise, which wee rather follow in our History, then to lay his absence on his Loue to
Polixena, whom hee had not yet seene, and the promise which for her sake he made to
Hecuba, to keepe himselfe and his
M
[...]midons from the battaile.
Achelous was sonne to
Oceanus and
Tellus (viz:) the sea and the Earth whence all Riuers are deriued, who beeing
Strabo lib.
10. vanquisht by
Hercules, hid himselfe in the Riuer, called of himselfe
Achelous, a famous stoud in
Greece, diuiding
Aetolia from
Acatnauia. This
Achelous was before called
Plutarch lib. d
[...] fluminibus.
Thoas, and riseth from the Mount
Pindus, but
Plutarch
[Page 330] calleth it
Thestius, of
Thestius the son of
Mars and
Pisidices who had three daughters.
Calirhoe, Castalia and
Dirce, of whom the famous
Greeke Poet
Akeloou thugater diska, &c.
Eurip. in Bachis
Oh Acheloi filia, venerande Virgo dierce:
The Flouds of
Achelous were so famous that all the waters vsed in the deuine sacrifices were by the Oracle cald
Aquae
Heredot
[...] in Eutripe.
Acheloae.
The Poets faine him to transhape himselfe in a Bul, because
Hellanicus. Riuersplow the earth as Oxen make Furrowes, or because Buls draw neere to the brinkes of riuers when they bellow for fresh pasture: else because waters breaking violently through any fall, make a confused noise, like the roarings of many Buls together: He was
[...]ald a Dragon by his many indented windings and turnings.
Hercules being leagued with King
Oeneus, vndertooke
Strabe
10. to suppresse this raging riuer, whose many inundations had much damag'd his Kiingdome, who extenuating his maine streame, by inforcing it into many riualets, by that meanes made the country more fertil, therefore it was moraliz'd that
Hercules breaking off his horn receiu'd in the same all fruits of plenty.
To this
Cornucopia or horne of abundance,
Iupiter gaue
Xanthus in rebut Etolicis. this property, that whosoeuer held it, and wisht, should receiue according to their desire. The rarieties of the most choise fruits and wines of all kinds, how delicious soeuer to tast the Pallat.
This vertue was first prou'd by
Amatthea daughter to
Hemonius King of
Aetolia, though some take
Amatthea to
Her
[...]genes lib de Phrygia. be the Goat that nurst
Iupiter with her milke, when
Rhea had giuen him to be brought vp to
Adrastea and
Isde.
The end of the twelfth
CANTO.
Argumentum
A Chilles
dotes on beauteous Polixaine,
And at her faire request refraines the fielde,
The Truce expierd, both Hoasts prepare againe
For battaile, with proud harts, in valour steel'd:
The
Greekes are beate backe, many kild and taine,
Patroclus
don's Achilles
Armes and shield:
Him
Hector, for
Achilles tooke and slew,
Whose Armor gone, his Mother seeks him new.
ARG. 2.
TRuce after Combat,
Hecuba is wonne
By
Paris meanes, to league with
Thetis sonne.
1
AWake soft Muse from sleepe, and after rest
Shew thy selfe quicke and actiue in thy way,
Thy labouring flight and trauell long opprest
Is comforted, no longer then delay,
But with thy swiftest winges fly in the Quest
Of thy prefyxed goale: The happy day
In which this Kingdome did her wide armes spread,
To imbrace king
Iames, our Soueraigne Lord & head.
2
And you (great Lord) to whom I Dedicate
A second worke, the yssue of my braine,
Accept this Twin to that you saw of late,
Sib to the first, and of the selfe-same straine,
That onely craue the shelters of your state,
To keepe it from all stormes of Ha
[...]le and Raine,
Who neither dread the rage of winds or Thunder,
whilst your faire roofe they may be shadowed vnd
[...]r.
3
Your fauour and protection deckes my phrase,
and is to me like
Ariadnes clew,
To guide me through the Laborinthean Maze,
[...] which my brain's intangled: Tis by you,
That euery vulger eye hath leaue to gaze,
and on this Pro
[...]ct takes free enter view,
Which, but t'expresse a due debt (yet vnpaid)
Had still remain'd vnperfect and vnmade.
4
Proceed we then, and where we left repaire:
About his head (the Tree) rough
Aiax flings,
Like to a threatning Meteor in the aire,
Which where it lights exitiall ruin brings,
Such seemes th'vngrounded Oake, leauelesse and bare,
Who shakes ore
Hectors Crest her rooted strings,
And with such rude impetuous fury fell,
T'haue dingd him through the Center downe to hel.
5
But
Hector with his broad shield waits the fall,
Which shiuers all the plates of his strong Targe:
The
Graectans too much fury, strikes withall,
The plant from his owne hands, in his rough charge,
Vnarm'd once more they grapple, to make thrall
Each others strength their armes sinnowy and large,
About their sides with mutuall strength they cling,
and wrastling striue, which can each other fling.
6
When loe, the Kings on bothsides much admiting
Their neuer equald valour, loth to lose
Such Champions, in whose charging or retyring
Their spring of victory, declines or Flowes,
[Page 333] (Their Conquests droop towards earth, or rise aspiring)
The generall of each hoast his Warder throwes
Betweene the Combattants, who still contend.
By slight of strength to giue the difference end.
7
Two Guards from either Army step betweene
Their heated furies, till their blood retyr'd,
For with fresh breath they both abate their spleene,
And cease that Combate thousands late admyr'd,
Instead of blowes their friendly Armes are seene
T'infold each other (with new loues inspyr'd)
Aiax his Belt pluckes from athwart his brest,
An enterchāge of gifts betwixt Hector and Aiax.
And giues to
Hector (of all Knights the best.)
8
Who takes a good sword flesht on many a foe,
And enter-chang'd with
Aiax (but oh Fate)
Two ominous Tokens these good Knights bestow,
Which to themselues prou'd most vnfortunate,
To
Hectors heeles must
Aiax Baldricke grow,
And three times drag him by each
Troian gate:
Whose sight whole
Troy with clamorous shricks shal fill,
With
Hectors sword,
Aiax, must
Aiax kil.
9
These passages of friendship giuen and tooke,
Behold a Herald from the Towne appeares,
Who greets the proud
Greekes with a friendly looke
From
Priam, (reuerent both in state and yeares:)
Them, whom but late the
Troians could not brooke,
Troy now inuites, and for a space forbeares
A Truce.
All hostile hate, betweene both hoasts proclaiming
A day of Iubile for feast and gaming.
10
The Faith of
Hector as best hostage giuen,
Th'inuasiue Kings in peace the Citty enter,
Whom
Priam feasts, with all that vnder heauen
Can be found rare, or bred aboue the Center,
The Dames and Damsels all pale feare bereauen,
Amongst the dreadfull
Greekes dare freely venter,
And they that late did fright them aboue measure,
Haue liberty to sport and Court their pleasure.
11
Vnpeered
Hector (who had neuer seene
Achilles, (but on Horse-backe arm'd) before,
Eyes him with pleasure, and forgets all spleene,
Dictes.
And
Thetis sonne that (but in blood and gore)
Stain'd and besmear'd, had neuer
Hector seene,
Freely surueighs his shape: his robes he wore:
His brawny Limbes, broad bulk, his face, and stature,
Nor can he but applaud the pride of nature.
12
To whom
Achilles thus?
Hector, I see
A presence I could Loue, but his Fame hate,
Tis thy renowne alone doth blemish me,
And makes me in these warres vnfortunate,
I neuer yet dropt blood, but drain'd by thee,
For which, my teene is growne inueterate:
Nor could I rellish pleasure, but still trusting
To end thy dayes, by sword-fight, or by iusting.
13
To him the Heroë mildly thus replies:
Aeacides pursues a double wrong,
That comes from
Greece our Citty to surprise,
And race our wals that we haue builded strong,
Your Loues we hold deere, but your hates despise,
(As opposites that dare not front vs long:
If more thou wouldst: To armes: referre the rest,
Sit, (for th'art welcome) freely tast our feast.
14
Priam and
Agamemnon take chiefe place,
The rest are rankt vnto their states or fames,
The Greekes feasted by Priam.
Troylus and
Diomed, sit face to face,
and gin to brall, for
Diomedes blames
Troylus, and
Troylus him, to his disgrace
The iarres appeas'd, for see the fairest Dames
Of the best bloods of
Troy, richly attired,
Bring in the Queene, whose state the
Greekes admired
15
Hellen, Troyes Fire-brand sat at this hye feast,
Nor did she blush to see her husband there,
Him,
Paris thinkes a bold vnwelcome guest,
and that to
Hellen he was plac'st too neere,
[Page 335] Alone he tasts no dainties, mongst the rest,
Her very sight hath cloyd him without cheare;
On
Hecuba faire
Pollixene attended,
Whose beauty great
Achilles most commended.
16
Now the reuolted
Cal
[...]has free time found
Gainst
Troian, louely
Cresseid to perswade,
With Arguments and words so firme and sound,
The
Troian now no more may Court the Maid,
King
Diomed must henceforth be the ground
Of all her passionate Loue, she can be staid
In
Troy no longer (though she wisht it rather)
Shee's but a Child, and must obey her Father.
17
Whilst all the Kingly Leaders had lowd chat
Of Chiualty, hye Bloods, and deeds of warre,
(And as their humors led, of this or that)
Of many a bleeding wound and grisly skarre,
Whilst some spake much, and some sat mute thereat,
Achilles
loue to Polixena.
Achilles eye fixt on a brighter starre
Then any shines, fixt mongst the heauenly fires,
The rarest
Pollixene alone admires.
18
He neither can dilate of Noble deeds,
Nor enter-change discourse of slaughtered Kings,
What comes of peace, or what of warre proceeds;
What profit rest, what hurt inuasion brings;
His new dissolued heart within him bleeds,
And from his Rocky brest a Fountaine springs
Of passion, onely by her sight ingendred,
In place of which, old hate is quite surrendred.
19
It now repents him he hath lift a blade
Against the Syre, that such a childe hath bred,
Or to the place that foster'd that sweetmaide,
His bloody Myrmidons to battaile led;
Or that his dreadfull hand did once inuade
Her Brother (for whose Loue hee's well-nye dead)
To gaine whose beauty, he could find in hart,
Greece to renounce, and take the
Troians part.
20
Queene
Hecuba obserues
Achilles passion
Thinking to make it vse-full to her good,
That the most strong of all the
Argiue Nation,
Shall for her daughters sake spare
Troian blood:
By this, the feast and Royall preparation
Breakes vp, the Kings that on their honors stood,
With bounteous thanks take leaue, bent on the morrow,
This Truce-full ioy to mix with hostile sorrow.
21
The selfe-same night by
Hecubaes aduice,
Vnto
Achilles Tent faire
Paris sends,
Offring his Sisters loue (held at hye price)
Mixt with the aged Queenes most kind commends,
With courteous words the bold
Greeke they intice
To leaue the siege, which
Thetis sonne intends
Her nuptiall bed being promist, with much ioy,
Answer's return'd, hee'l warre no more gainst
Troy.
22
Now while he rests him in his Idle Tent,
And to his amorous Harpe Loue-Ditties sings,
A battaile lasting 30 daies
Both Armies sundry Stratagems inuent,
Great
Hector to the field his puissance brings,
Vpon the plaine appeares incontinent
A gallant hoast led by th'incamped Kings:
Warres Musicke sounds,
Mars trots vpon his Steed
Ore thousand mangled sides, that freshly bleed.
23
Sometime the
Troian Leaders with their powers,
Euen to their
Pallisadoes beat the Foe,
Whence being repulst, the camp the Champion scowers
And fore
Troyes gates their purple Launces grow,
Whom th'yssue from the Citty soone deuoures,
Againe the
Greeke sustaines great ouerthrow:
Againe relieu'd, the
Troian powers they face,
Whom to their Tents againe the
Dardans chace.
24
Full thirty daies together Fortune striues
To make their Conquest doubtfull, in which time
Vnnumbred Knights on both parts lost their liues,
Some in their waine of yeares, some in their prime,
[Page 337] Some slaine out-right, some captiu'd put in Gyues,
Some loose their Fame, and some to honors clime:
Amongst whom
Hector in the first ranke stands,
For deeds of name wrought by his warlike hands.
25
Though farre-fear'd
Aiax did hye workes of Fame,
And blacke-hair'd
Agamemnon boldly fought;
Though strong-limb'd
Diomed his worth proclame
By Martiall Acts midst fields of slaughter wrought,
Though
Nestor oft-times to the battaile came,
And (to his strength and age) for honour sought:
Though
Menelaus oft in field was seene,
Vlisses too, more full of guile, then spleene.
26
Though these and more among themselues contended,
With aemulation to atchieue most praise,
Yet when great
Hector to the field discended,
Back't by his Brothers, their swift current stayes,
Aboue them all his glorious worth extended,
The
Greekes grow warre-tyr'd after thirty dayes:
And beaten to their Trenches much decayd,
Achilles his abstinence frō battaile.
They ioyntly flocke t'implore
Achilles ayd.
27
Who with his Myrmidons from field abstaines,
In hope to gaine the fairest Dame aliue,
Still through the fields remorselesse slaughter raines,
The
Greekes beyond their Parapets they driue,
Still they intreat, he still their words disdaines,
Within the Campes skirts he may heare them striue:
Yet (all this notwithstanding) he seemes loath
To Arme himselfe against a sacred oath.
28
But when he saw the wounded souldiers run,
Their bleeding heads amongst the Tents to hide,
Heard, by their swords so many slaughters done,
Beheld some mangled, that before him dide,
Found how the foe their Campe had well nye won,
Perceiu'd the fire burne bright on euery side,
Himselfe surcharg'd with Flames, in his tent sweating
And all the princes by his bed intreating.
29
He then relents, and at their faire request,
Hee'l keepe his oath, and yet affoord them ayde,
For now the man whom he esteemed best,
He whom alone his bosome friend he made,
Patroclus don's his armes, his shield, his Crest,
And to his thigh girts his victorious blade:
And with three hundred Myrmidons attended,
He yssues where the Campe was least defended.
30
At his appearance when those armes were seene
So well, among the
Troians knowne and feared,
They make him way,
Patroclus had not beene
Long in the place, but all the
Greekes were cheared:
They that before stood like a haruest screene,
Gaue backe apace, for not a man appeared,
Patroclus still aduanc'st
Achilles shicld,
And with his Myrmidons maintaines the field:
31
Now horrid Massacre pursues apace
Th'astonisht
Troians Paris, wounders most
To see
Achilles arm'd, makes good the place,
And with such rage assault the
Troian hoast,
That not a man dares their Pauillions face,
Or gainst the Myrmidons his valour boast:
He cals him troth-lesse, periur'd, false, forsworne,
And as he speakes (withal) is backward borne.
32
The cry growes great, which
Hector ouer-hearing,
He cals vpon his men to cease base flight,
And spying one aboue the rest appearing,
Dreadfull in shape, and all imbrude in fight,
His quakefull hand and sword, so often rearing,
He takes him for the warlike
Pelean Knight
Achilles, of the
Graecians great'st in pride,
Whom he had oft before in battaile tride.
33
He chuseth from his Page an Oaken speare.
Hewed from the hart of
Ihoues relentlesse tree,
And couching it, spurres with a full Carriere
Against
Patroclus: his proud Steed was free,
[Page 339] And like a shot starre doth his Ryder beare,
At euery plunge the ground neere kist his knee:
His constant ayme, that neuer er'd at need,
Tops the proud
Greeke from off his Noble steed.
34
And now
Achilles armour strowes the field,
Patroclus slain
Patroclus lyes vpon the Verdure spred,
Heere lay his sword, and there his trusty shield,
The Myrmidons (as had their Lord bin dead,
And neuer more victorious Armes should weild)
Al in disordred rankes retyr'd and fled:
Achilles armes ceizd, who durst longer stay?
This was the cause the
Dardan wan the day.
35
When dead by
Hector was
Menetius son,
And that his wounded body strowed the plaine,
(Quoth
Hector) Now
Achilles armes are won,
These are mine owne, and these wil I maintaine:
He strips the faire
Patroclus (new foredone,)
And thought at first
Achilles he had slaine:
But when he saw one not of God-like kind,
The Armes he takes, the body leaues behind.
36
Achilles franticke with so great disgrace,
Losse both of friend, and of his glorious armes,
Torments himselfe with fury for a space,
Threatning to Princely
Hector hostile harmes,
Yet when he thinkes to haue his life in chace,
And rowse the Worthy with his warres alarmes:
He now records his friends disgrace in field,
To combat him, he hath nor armes, nor Shield.
37
The bright-foot
Amphetrite his fayre Mother,
Thetis otherwise called
Amphetrite.
Knowing the griefe her sonne conceiues at hart,
Her true Maternall pitty cannot smother,
But with her care she seekes to cure his smart,
Instead of these, she will prouide him other
Made by Deuine composure, not Mans art,
And thus resolu'd, to
Lemnos she doth hie,
Where
Vulcan workes in heauenly Ferrarie.
38
She found him with his face all smoog'd and blacke,
And labouring at his Forge quite hid in smoke,
The stifling fume kept the faire Goddesse backe,
About she was her soft steps to reuoke,
But whilst the
C
[...]ps on their Anuiles thwacke,
She spies faire
Charis, and to her she spoke:
That the Lame Mettall-God might vnderstand,
Thetis his friend, the Seas-Queene was at hand.
39
Charis the hand-maide, grace whose Office still
Charis.
Is to strow
Venus louely bed with Flowers,
And to them both Caelestiall
Nectar fill,
As vnto
Ihoue-himselfe faire
Hebe powers,
Prayes the bright Goddesse but to stay vntill
The swetty Smith his face and visage skowers;
And whilst she tels the God of her repaire,
To ease her selfe in a rich golden Chaire.
40
Charis departs, she mounts the Inamel'd seat,
Homer Iliad
The backe of solid Gold richly ingrau'd,
Cut and inchac'st, it shewed his skill was great,
and in the Metall too, no cost was sau'd,
So though the frame was large, his art was neat,
The foure supporters round about were stau'd
With pillers of white siluer, moulded so,
That by the worke, the worke-man you may know.
41
Meane time faire
Charis to the Smith relates,
How faire-foote
Amphetrite stayes without,
at this report lame
Vulcan thankes the Fates,
Who had so well his businesse brought about,
The Queene whose fauour he so highly rates,
Should take the paine to finde his Concaue out:
Of whom, he (falling through the Plannets seauen,)
More fauour found, then all the rest in heauen.
42
With that his apron from his brest he takes,
His airy Bellowes haue surceast to blow,
He sleckes his Coales, his smoaky Forge forsakes,
Spunges his hands and face, then gins to throw
[Page 341] A rich Roabe ore his shoulders, and so makes
On to the Queene, whose mind he longs to know:
When after many a limping Curtsie made,
Thus
Amphetrite doth the Smith perswade.
43
If euer I was held worthy the name
Of the seas-Queene, vnfortunate alone,
Apollodorus.
For of the seed of Gods deriu'd I came,
Yet (married to a Mortall,) find you none
Thetis except: yet ist to me no shame;
Behold my Deuine beauty, I was one
Euen
Ihoue himselfe lou'd, whom, cause I denide,
In spight he gaue me to a Mortals Bride.
44
Yet am I not esteem'd amongst them least,
For when my hye espousals were first made
Staphilus in lib de Thessalia.
In the Mount
Pelion, all the Gods increast
My glory with their presence; for none stayed
Or kept away from
th'Hymenean feast,
Sauing the Goddes discord, the Spheares plaid
Dailochus. Pherecides.
Musicke to vs; my
Peleus me contented
To grace, whom all the Gods rich gifts presented.
45
Ihoue gaue vs Graces on our bed to wait,
Apollo, Ingots of the purest Gold,
Zezes histo 45.
Pluto, a smarag'd to be worne in state,
Iuno, a lem worth, more then can be told,
Neptune two Steeds, aboue all Mortall rate,
Xanthus and
Ballia, whom you may behold
Still draw my Coach, a rich Knife rarely wrought,
Mongst other presents you God
Vulcan brought.
46
But what of these digressions, If my hap
Hath euer bin to do you any grace,
When falling from hye Heauen, in my soft lap
I gently catcht you, See: behold the place
On which your head fel, which to fold and wrap
In smoothest silkes, my robes I did vnlace:
For this, and much more kindnesse by me done,
Requite all, with an Armour for my sonne.
47
Inough (quoth
Vulcan fetch
Pyragmon straight)
A parcell of the best and purest Steele,
And you
Berountes let it finde the waight
Pyragmon, Berountes, and
S
[...]pes, the three Ciclops that attend on Vulcan.
Of your huge Hammers, and their ponders feele,
The
Ciclops fetcht a Plate six Cubes in haight,
So Massie, that the burden made him reele;
Sceropes stain'd with smoake, the Bellowes blew,
And all at once themselues to worke withdrew.
48
They forg'd a Helmet with rich Flowers inchac'st
Achilles armor
So curiously, that Art it much exceeded,
Borders of sundry workes about were plac'st,
The precise sight of the best eye they needed,
That could discerne the closures, they were grac'st
With God-like skill (from God-hood it proceeded)
For beauty, it was glorious to the sight,
For proofe, no Steele could on this Helmet bite.
49
The Gorget, Vaunt-brace, Backe-peece, brest, and all,
Came from the selfe-same substance, and like skill,
The Cushes that beneath the girdle fall,
Impenetrable were, and Steele-proofe still,
And though the thickenesse did appeare but small,
The Plates they with such strength of Mettall fill:
It hath the force and puissance to withstand
The sharpest Speares hurl'd from the strongest hand.
50
Aboue them all, his shield the rest surpast,
Massie, and onely for his Arme to weare
Achilles shield
For whom twas made, vpon the same was ra'st
The great world Tripartyte: heauen and each Spheare,
Thence all the hye Circumference was pla'st
Starres, Moone, and Sun, the signes that rule the yeare,
The Ram, the Bull, and the Twin-brothers signe,
The Crab, the Lyon, and the Maid Deuine.
51
The Skale, the Scorpion, and the Centaure fell,
Sterne Capricorne, and he that water powers,
The Fishes: all these were ingraued well,
There
Phoebus stood, about him dayes and howers,
[Page 343] With the foure Seasons: First the Spring gan swell
With sweetest Buddes: Sommer that seldome lowers
Stood next in ranke, well clad in freshest greene,
Autumne next her, in ragged Roabes was seene.
52
There stood old Winter in hye Furs attyred,
On whom the flakes of Snow like Feathers hong,
He shyuering lookes, as if he warmth desired,
With chattering teeth, hands Palsied, quaking tong
Below the Earth, with Dales and Hils admired,
Fields full of Grayne, & Meads with Grasse new sprong:
Here Citties rarely built, there Hamlets stand,
Here fallow-fields, besides them, New-tild Land.
53
Betweene the middle Earth, Seas ebbe and flow,
Whose Billowes in their caruing seeme to moue,
Here the
Leuiathan huge waues doth throw
From out his Nostrils to the skyes aboue,
The Dolphins, of a thousand coullours show,
Here Whales their heads aboue the waters proue:
And sayling ships contriu'd by cunning rare,
On which strange Fish, with wonder seeme to stare.
54
A thousand sundry Obiects made by Art,
This huge Orbicular Shield in compasse holds,
What Heauen or Earth, or Seas to vs Impart,
His Globe-like compasse to the eye vnfolds,
When
Vulcan taking the fayre Queene apart,
(who with much wonder his strange worke beholds:)
Presents it her, made perfect for her Son,
In whose rich armes,
Troy seemes already won.
55
At
Vulcans Caue she yoakes her Chariot-steeds,
which o're the Oceans rugged backe make way,
And as she freely on the Seas proceeds,
About her Coach the Quicke-ear'd Dolphins play
At her Sonnes Tent (fam'd for his warlike deeds,
She lights, and to the Couch on which he lay:)
Tost those rich armes, which when
Achilles view'd,
The halfe-dead spirit within his breast renew'd.
56
He leaps from of his Pallet, to imbrace
The beautious Queene, and soone intreats her ayde,
To arme his shoulders, and his head to grace,
With that inchaced Helme God
Vulcan made,
Who now compleatly furnisht, longs for place
Where thus be-seene, he
Hector may inuade:
He cannot sleepe for gazing on his Shield,
In hope t'aduance it in the Morrowes field.
57
Thetis departs, when th'early Cocke gaue signe,
With his lowd notes
Aurora to dispose,
Who leaues the Bed-rid
Tython sunke in Wine,
From whom the Gold hair'd Goddesse blushing rose,
To harnesse
Phoebus Coach-steeds, who in fine
About his face, his Beames bright ghstring throwes:
To dry the Mornings teares, who weepeth still,
To see th'vnkind Sunne climb th'Easterne hill.
58
He had not left the forelorne Goddesse long,
A Battaile.
But from
Olimpus top he may espy,
Plaine-Crested
Hector, his arm'd Troopes among,
Chearing them vp the proud
Greekes to defy:
Next him marcht Noble
Troylus, Memnon strong,
Antenor and
Aeneas mounted hye:
Young
Deiphebus and
Polydamas,
Paris, whose ayme in Arch'ry doth surpasse.
59
Sarpedon, King
Epistropus: beside
Many more Kings that sundry battailes led
Against these soone the Curld Inuaders ride,
The grim
Atrides first aduan'st his hed,
Achilles next, past with vaine-glorious pride
For his rich armour,
Nestor next him sped
Menon, whose armes were set with many a stone,
And (he that
Hector stood) bold
Telamon.
60
The
Ithacan, with
Lacedemons King,
The widdowed
Spartan: ground of all this broyle,
These to the fielde their seuerall battailes bring,
With thousand followers, bent on death and spoyle,
[Page 345] Their barbed Steeds the earth behind them fling,
Harnesse and quartered limbes blocke the smooth soyle:
Amongst the rest,
Achilles loftiest stood,
and his new armour double-Guilds in blood.
61
With
Memnon,
[...]onne to
Tython and the Morne,
Apollodorus lib.
3.
Who came from
Egipt in King
Priams aide,
Aeacides encounters, change of scorne
Betweene them past, bold
Memnon nought dismaide,
With that strong hand that had the Scepter borne
Of
Persiaes kingdome, and did once inuade
Susa, as farre as where
Choaspes flowes,
Vpon his Helme thunders two persant blowes.
62
They stound him in his saddle, make him kisse
Hesiodus in Theogonia.
His Steeds curl'd Crest, ere he can Mount his head,
Achilles who esteemes no other blisse,
But to behold his foes before him spread,
(Wak't from his sudden trance) espyes by this,
A
Graecian Squadron bout King
Memnon dead,
And his bright sword still to wring ore his Crest,
Threatning in his third fall, Eternall rest.
63
The proud
Greeke sends a blush out of his face,
as red as that in which his proofe was lau'de,
he now records his strength, his god-like race,
and his rich armour with such artingrau'de,
He knowes it ill becomes his Name or Place,
By any Mortall puissance to be brau'de;
He doubles strength on strength, and stroak on stroak,
Euen till he mists himselfe in his owne smoake.
64
Auroraes Darling prooues to weake a Foe
Simonides Poeta
For him, on whose tough Shield no Steele can bite,
His conquer'd Sword and Armes the field must strow,
Achilles is too strong an opposite,
His Red-cheek't Mother ouercharg'd with woe,
K. Memnon slain by Achilles.
Laments her Son vntimely slaine in fight:
In griefe of whom, a Dusky Roabe she weares,
And fils the whole world with her dew-drop teares.
65
The death of
Memnon euen to
Hector flyes,
That Tragicke newes cost many a Princes life,
Incenst, he seemes all safety to dispise,
And where he spurs, he makes red slaughter rife,
For euery drop of bloud, a bold
Greeke dies:
Him
Troylus seconds in his purpled strife:
And (if as for a wager) they contend,
Whose Sword most pale Soules can to
Orcus send.
66
They breake a Ring of Harnesse, making way
Into the Battayles Center, where they see
a Noble Knight maintaine a gallant fray,
Gainst many
Troian Knights (in valor free)
Yet of them all, this Champion gets the day,
The strongest cannot make him cringe his knee:
Polydamus against him brauely sped,
Yet still his gaz'd at Shield, safeguards his hed.
67
Against which
Paris many arrowes spends,
But all in vaine, they shiuer gainst his Targe,
and whom he best can reach his force extends
as far as life, the prisoned Soule t'enlarge,
Young
Deiphebus to that place descends,
and with his Speate in reast, doth gainst him charge:
But the
Dardanian fayles in his intent,
And from the Noble Knight is bleeding sent.
68
Victorious
Hector at such deeds amaz'd,
But more at the rich Armor that he ware,
Mannadge and shape in heart he highly praysd,
and in his honors longes to haue a share,
Hupon Larissaes King, that long had gaz'd
Vpon his valor, sees him fight so fayre:
A pointed Staffe against his breast he prooued,
But from his Steed the bold
Greeke was not mooued.
69
Vnhappy
Hupon could not stay the force
King Hupon slaine.
Of his keene Sword, but soone before him fals,
King Philos slaine.
King
Philos, next against him spurd his Horse,
And (turne thee valiant
Greeke) aloud he cals,
[Page 347] But he was likewise slaine without remorse,
It seem'd he was invr'd to such hot brals:
Hector no longer can his rage forbeare,
But gainst the vnknowne Knight aymes a stiffe Speare.
70
Who when he
Hector from a far espyde,
As if he had but sported with the rest,
and that was he gainst whom he should be tryde,
He thrild a Iauelin at the
Dardans brest,
T'was terror to behold these Champions ride,
and skorch the Plumes that grew in eithers Crest,
With fire that from their Steele in sparkles flew,
No sooner dead, but still they forced new.
71
Ther's for
Patroclus death, the proud
Greeke sayes
Ther's for my armes, which thou didst basely win,
and as he speakes vpon his shoulders layes,
at euery dint his bruisde armes pincht his skin,
Hector now knowes his Champion by his phrase,
and by his stroake (he thinkes his armes too thin:)
Such puissant blowes, whose weight he scarce can like,
None but
Achilles hand hath power to strike.
72
A well knowne Knight, in vnknowne armes he sees,
against whose force he gathers all his might,
His hye-stretcht arme contendes to make him leese
All fore-past Fame, and hazard dreadfull fight,
But now the multitude like Swarmes of Bees
Betweene them flocke, who farre from all affright:
Vex in their heated bloods to be so parted,
So with their Steedes mongst other rankes they started.
73
Three puissant Kings beneath Prince
Hector fell,
Archilochus, a Souldier of hye Fame,
Three Kinges slaine by Hector.
Prothenor, who in battailes did excell,
And with th'
Atrides to the field then came:
King
Archelaus too, a Champion fell,
Who mongst the
Greekes had won a glorious Name:
And whilst halfe tyerd, he from the throng withdrew,
The Sagittary slaine by Diomed.
King
Diomed the
Sagittary slew.
74
Thoas tooke Prisoner, to the Towne was sent,
Whom
Paris with his arrowes had surprisde,
Antenor likewise to
Vlisses Tent
Was Captiue led (whom he before depisde)
Epistropus, his hostile fury bent
Gainst
Polyxenes, in rich armes disguisde;
King Polixenes slaine.
They part, when
Polixenes full of pride,
Crost-Hectors course, and by his valor dyde.
75
Once more the dauntlesse
Troians haue the best,
The night comes on, both Hoasts themselues withdraw,
The Citties Captaines take them to their rest,
But th'
Argiue Kings (that naught but ruine saw
Impendent still, whilst
Hectors able brest
Bucklerd large
Troy from each tempestuous flaw)
At
Agamemnons Tenta Counsell call,
To find some traine, by which the Prince may fall.
76
Achilles oft-times Mated, vowes in heart
With his blacke
Mirmid
[...]ns to guirt him round,
And neuer from a second field depart,
Till
Hectors length be measured on the ground,
Th'assembled Kings, whose bleeding wounds yet smart,
Vow by all meanes his puissance to confound:
For well they know whilst Noble
Hector stands,
In vaine gainst
Troy they reare their armed hands.
77
Night passeth on, and the gray Morne appeares,
The
Greekes a six-months Truce of
Troy demaund,
In which the Campe bloud-staynd
Scamander cleares
Of Bodies slaine by warres infernall hand,
A Herald to the Camp King
Thoas beares,
Receiuing backe
Antenor, Nobly man'd,
The Truce expires, both parties now prouide
To haue their Armes tight, and their Weapons tride.
78
Andromache this night dreampt a strange dreame,
Andromaches dreame.
That if her Husband tryde the field that day,
His slaughter should be made the generall Theame
Of
Troyes laments, she faine would haue him stay,
[Page 349] She wooes him, as he loues the populous Realme,
Her Life, his Honors, safety, or decay:
The ayde of
Troy, their Vniuersall good,
To saue all these in keeping still his blood.
79
This (
Hector censures) spoake from Womanish feare,
He armes himselfe in hast and cals to Horse,
Takes in his hand a bright Brasse-headed Speare,
Longing for some on whom to proue his force,
Andromache spends many a ruthfull teare,
His thoughtes were fixt, they bred no soft remorse:
He armes for field, she to the Kings proceeds,
and tels his thus: If
Hector fight, he bleedes.
80
Her dreame and feare she to the King relates,
and praies him to entreat her Husband fayre,
Or if soft speech his purpose naught abates
To vse his power: This said, she doth repayre
Where
Hecuba and
Hellen kept their states,
and where the rest of
Priams Daughters are:
To whose requests she knowes hee'l soonest yeild,
Still vrging them to keepe him from the field.
81
The
Greekes Imbattayld are, and from the Towne,
The
Troians Issue the Mid-way to meet,
When from the loftie Pallace hastning downe
Andromache, prostrate at
Hectors feet
Throwes her fayre selfe: and by King
Priams Crowne,
His Mothers loue, her owne imbracements sweete:
his Brothers, Sisters, and his little Sonne,
Astianax Hectors Sonne.
Con-iures his stay, till one daies fight be done.
82
Hector bids one: she mingles words with teares,
and once more casts her selfe to stop his way,
(That he shall backe) she begs, she wooes, she sweares,
and shun the battaile for that ominous day,
her horrid dreame hath fild her heart with feares,
And hill she hanges on him, to haue him stay:
She weepes, intreats, clinges, begs, and Coniures stil,
(In vaine) hee's arm'd, and to the battayle will.
83
King
Priam by
Antenors mouth desires
To vnarme him streight, and to the Court returne,
For should his life fayle:
Troyes fayre Sons and Sires,
Matrons and Damsels, for his death should mourne,
The Prince inrag'd, his Eye-bals sparkle fires,
With inward rage his troubled Entrails burne:
He knowes from whence these Coniurations spring,
And that his Wiues dreame hath incenst the King.
84
Yet will he forward: when the aged Queene
This hearing: with the
Spartan makes swift speede,
They ring his Horse: Intreat him cease his spleene,
And for one day to act no warlike deed,
The more they pray, the more they rouse his teene,
a purpose irremoueably decreede:
Hee'l put in action though they kneele and pray,
and compasse in his Steede to haue him stay.
85
This
Priam vnderstanding, he descends,
And in his face a gracefull reuerence brings,
He stayes his Courser by the Raines, and ends
The difference thus: Oh! Thou the awe of Kings,
Death to thy Foes, supporture to thy Friends,
From whose strong arme our generall safty springs:
Refraine this day, tempt not the Gods decree,
Who by thy Wife this night forwarneth thee.
86
The discontented Prince at length is wonne,
Yet will he not vnarme him for them all,
But to expresse the duty of a Sonne,
With
Priam and the rest he mountes the wall,
To see both Armies to the Skirmish roone,
Where some stand hye, and some by slaughter fall:
King
Diomed and
Troylus from a farre,
Wafts to each other, as a figne of warre.
87
They meete like Bullets, by two Souldiers chang'd,
Their way as swift, their charge as full of Terror,
Their Steedes keepe euen, they neither tript nor rang'd,
Both Man and Horse are free from any Error,
[Page 351] No art of Warre was from these Knights estrang'd
In
Troylus, might be seene a Souldiers Mirror,
In
Diomed, the patterne of such skill,
as they desire that would their Foe-men kill.
88
The fayre-browde Sky shrinkes vp her Azure face,
Least their sharpe splinterd Staues should race her brow,
Both couet honor in this warlike race,
and in their hearts they eythers ruine vow,
But
Menelaus happily came in place,
With him three hundred Knights that well knew how
To manage battaile, these betweene them grew,
and they to further ranks perforce withdrew.
89
Miseres (King of
Phrigia) met by chance
The
Spartan King, and shooke him in his Seat,
Against Duke
Aiax, Paris charg'd a Launce,
Aiax Telemon
and him, the
Sal'mine did but ill intreat,
At the first blow he stounds him in a trance,
Then midst the
Troian rankes doth
[...]oyle and sweat:
Striuing behind, on both sides, and before,
Euen till his armes with bloud were vermeil'd o're.
90
Prince
Margareton, vnto
Hector deare
Knowing the slaughter Noble
Aiax made,
against his Vaunt-brace brauely prooues his Speare,
and to their vanquisht
Phalanx brings fresh ayde,
Aiax is for'st his fury to forbeare,
The
Troians powers on all sides him inuade,
Till
Agamemnon comes with fresh supply,
at whose approach, th'astonish
Troians fly.
91
Yet Noble
Margareton keepes his stand,
Nor can the strongest arme of
Greece remoue him,
He feeles the strength of
Agamemnons hand,
Grim
Aiax sword with a towers weight doth proue him,
Yet shrinkes not, till the place was Nobly man'd
By
Paris and
Polydamus that loue him:
These hearing
Margareton much distrest,
Rescue the Prince, who brauely guards his Crest.
92
It ioyes the King and Ladyes, that on hy
Stand on the Torras to behold the field,
To see the Prince so full of Chiualry,
And with such power to vle his Sword and Shield,
Achilles (in a place where thousands lye
Besmeard in bloud, as if he meant to build
a wall of Limbes and Quarters) brauely fought,
And bout himself
[...] a siedge of bodies wrought.
93
Where issuing after much effuse of blood
To calme himselfe, remotely from the throng
(Retyerd alike) young
Margareton stood
Striuing for breath, he had not rested long,
Butspyes
Achilles with a purple flood
Powerd o'rehis armes, a Iauelin light and strong
The valiant
Troian Prince against him bent,
Whom the proud
Greeke receiues incontinent.
94
From broken Speares they come to two-edg'd Steele,
Oh! How stont
Hector yernd to be in place,
His very Soule doth all the puissance feele
Of him that hath his Brothers life in chace,
No stroake that makes Prince
Margareton reele,
But (as he thinkes) it tingles on his face:
And from the wall in Armour he had lept,
Had not the King and Queene perforce him kept.
95
By this the youthfull
Priameian tyerd
With oddes of might, he wauers too and fro,
Doubtfull which way to fall, the
Greeke admierd
To find so young a gallant plunge him so,
and therefore with hisanclent rankor fierd,
He doubles and redoubles blow and blow:
Till he (whose deere life was to
Hector sweet)
Prince Margareton flaine.
Sinkes from his Horse beneath his ruthlesse feete.
96
Who with his barb'd Steede tramples o're his Coarse,
Whose Iron hoofe the Princes armor raceth,
This
Hector seeing, breakes from all their force,
He cla ps his Beauer downe, his Helme fast laceth,
[Page 353] With
[...]mble quicknesse vaults vpon his horse,
(And yssuing) where he rides, the enemy cheareth:
For
Margaretons death, he vowes that day,
Achilles with a thousand more shall pay.
97
Two Noble Dukes he chargeth, and both slew,
D. Coriphus & Duke Bastidius slaine.
Duke
Cortphus, Bastidius big and tall,
And forth like lightning mongst their squadrons flew,
Where such as cannot flye before him fall,
Leocides an Armour fresh and new,
(He was amongst the
Greekes chiefe Admirall)
Would proue gainst
Hector, but in his swift race,
Leocides slain.
The
Troians Speare brake on the
Gr
[...]ns face.
98
A splinter strooke the
Greeke into the braine,
And downe he sinkes,
Achilles full of yre,
Spying so many bold
Pelasgians slaine,
Prickes on with
Polyceus: both desire
To proue themselues with
Hector on the plaine,
The bold assaylants need not far
[...]e inquire
For the sterne Prince: In that part of the host,
Th'are sure to find him where the cry growes most.
99
Both Menace him, gainst both he stands prepared,
Duke
Policeus to
Achilles deare,
Policeus slaine
(Whose Sister he was promist, had warre spared
His destin'd life) drew to the
Troians neare,
At the first stroke his Beauer'd face he bared,
But with the next his sparpled braines appeare,
Achilles mads at this, and sweares on hye,
For
Polyceus death,
Hector shall dye.
100
His threatned vengeance
Hector did soone quaile,
For through his thigh he quiuers a sharpe Dart,
Achilles woū ded.
Achilles feeles his bleeding sinnowes faile,
And with all speed doth to his Tent depart,
Where hauing bound his wound vp, wan and pale,
With fury, and the rancor of his hart;
Three hundred Myrmidons that all things dar'd,
he leads to field his person to saue-gard.
101
Swearing them all theyrioynt-rage to bestow
On
Hector, and on him sterne vengeance power,
And sauing him t'intend no
Dardan Foe,
That Heauen with him may on his Conquests lower,
They listen where the clamors loudest grow,
And there spy
Hector, wald in like a Tower
With heapes os men, that bout him bleeding lay,
For not a li
[...]ng
Greeke durst necre him stay.
102
Now tyrd with slaughter, he was lean'd vpon
The Pomell of his bright victorious Blade,
and for his strength and breath was almost gone,
His Armour he had slackt, it loosely playde
about his shoulders (for he dreaded none:)
Him now the bloudy
Myrmidons inuade:
In three-fold rings about him they were guided,
To take the Noble Hero
[...] vnproulded.
103
Oh! Where is
Paris with his Archers bow?
Where's youthfull
Deiphebus now at need?
Where's the inuinced
Troylus, to bestow
His puissant stroakes before Prince
Hector bleed?
Where is
Aeneas to repulse the foe?
You
Troyes confedred Kings, where do you speede?
Bring rescue now, or in his Mountaine fall
Bencath destruction, he will crush you all.
104
All these are absent, naught saue death and ruine
Compasse the Prince, a tripple ring of blades
Inguirts him round, who still their rankes renewing,
Threaten to send him to th'infernall shades,
With bloudy appetites his fall pursuing,
Achilles as they shrinke, on hye perswades
With promises: and some with threats, he sweares
To pay the base shame of their dastard feares.
105
A hundred
Myrmidons before him lye
Drownde in their owne blouds, by his strong arme shed,
The rest renew the charge with fresh fupply,
and thunder on his shoulders, armes, and head,
[Page 353]
Achilles strongly ar
[...]'d and horst, spurres by
To see the hunger of his Blood-hounds fed:
Was neuer Mortall, without might of Gods,
That stood so long against such powerfull ods.
106
They hew his armour peece-meale from his backe,
Yet still the valiant Prince ma
[...]taines the fray,
Though but halfe-harnest, yet he holds them tacke,
And still the bloudy Slaues vpon him lay,
Armour and breath at once the Prince doth lacke,
Stor'd with nought else saue wounds (alacke the day:)
Yet like a stedfast rocke the worthy stood,
From whom ran twenty seuerall springs of blood.
107
This, when the fresh-breath'd
Greeke beheld, and saw
So much effuse of blood about him run,
He chargd his warlike Myrmidons withdraw,
And crying out alowd: Now
Troy is won,
(With shamefull oddes against all Knight-hoods law)
Gainst naked
Hector, well-arm'd
Thetis son
Aymes a stiffe Iauelin, and against him rides,
The death of H
[...].
The ruthlesse staffe through picrst his Royall sides.
108
With him King
Priam and whole
Asiaes glory,
Queene
Hecuba with all her daughters faire
Sinke into
Lethe, euen the Gods are sorry
To see the man they made without compare,
So basely fall, to make
Achilles story
Reproachfull to all eares that would not spare
So great a Worthy, but with oddes strike vnder,
Him that atchi
[...]ud things beyond strength & wonder
109
Hector thus falne, the
Troians (whose whole power
Lay in the arme of
Hector) flye the field,
And now th'incourag'd
Greekes Scamander scower,
(The head subdude, the body needs must yeild,)
Behold the Prince that aw'd within this hower,
Millions of
Greekes lyes dead vpon his shield,
He gone, whose
Atlas Arme vpheld their states,
Amazed
Troy rams-vp her sieged Gates.
110
At sight of which
Achilles sweld with rage,
From
Hectors breast, the Belt
Aiax him gaue
Snatcheth in hast, and his sad spleene t'asswage,
Fetters his Legges, and like a conquerd slaue,
Voyde of all honor, ruth, or Counsell sage,
at his Horse-heeles he drags him like a slaue:
Hauing
Troyes wall first three-times circled round,
hurdling the
Dardan Hero
[...] on the ground.
111
To thinke so braue a Peere should basely bleede,
A Prince t'insult vpon a slaughter'd Foe,
and ga
[...]nst a worthy act so base a deede,
Makes my soft eye with Springs of Sorrow flow,
Nor can I further at this time proc
[...]ede,
The
Greekes blacke practise doth offend me so,
Heare therefore I desist my Tragicke verse,
To mourne in silence o're Prince
Hectors hearse.
Aeacides, a name we sometimes giue to
Achilles, is a deriuatiue of Aeacus, and is as much as to say, the Grand childe of Aeacus, sometime we call him
Pelias Issue (viz:) the Sonne of
Peleas, the Sonne of Aeacus.
Patroclus a Noble
Greeke, sonne to
Menetius and
Stheuele, he was brought up under
Chiron the
Centaure with
Achilles, who euer after entirely loued him.
Chiron likewise, whom we ha
[...]e before in some places mentioned, is thought to be Sonne of
Saturne.
Ouid. Metamerpho. 6.
Vt Saturnus Equo geminum Chirona creauit.
Apollonius lib. 1 Arg
[...].
His Mother was cald Philyra:
Ad mare descendit montis de parte suprema
Chiron Philerides.
Saturne deflowring the faire
Philiris, Daughter to the old
Oceanus, and fearing leaft his
[...]ife
Rhea (otherwise cald
Sibilla)
Appolo lib. 2. should discouer his wantonnesse, transhapes him selfe into a Horse, and then beg at in the Islands
Philerides, Chiton the
Centaure, from the Nauell vpwardes hauing the perfect semblance of Man, the rest downewards the shape of an Horse.
Suidas.
Others haue thought him to be the Sonne of
Ixion, & Brother to the race of the
Centaurs. He taught Aesculapius Phisicke,
[Page 357]
Hercules Astronomy, and
Apollo to play on the Lute or Harpe. Of
Thetis, otherwise cald
Amph
[...] it is thus reported, that she was the most beautifull of all the Goddesses, & when
Apollo, Neptune, and
Iu
[...]ter, contended about her
Homer. which should
[...]ioy her bed (being all frustrate)
Iupiter inraged, doom'd her to be a mortals Bride, because shee had so peremptorily despised their God hoods. The Goddesse much agrieu'd to be so abiectly bestowed, despised
Pelcus, who extreamely doted on her beauty, and still when hee would haue comprest her, she metamorphised her selfe, somtimes to a flame of Fire, sometimes to a Lyon, then a serpent, so dreadfull, that he was still deter'd from his purpose, till after by the aduice of
Chiron the
Centaure, (neglecting all terror) she helde her
Isacius. fast so long, till hauing run through all her
Protean shapes, he wearted her in her transformation, till she return'd into her owne shape of the most beautiful Goddesse, of whom he begat
Achilles.
Tython for his beauty beloued of
Aurora the morning, is said to be the son of
Laomedon, and Brother to
Priam, thogh by diuers mothers, he gat
Pr
[...]am of
Leucippe, and
Tython of
S
[...]ma, or else of
Rhoea the daughter of
Scamander: Aurora begd of the Fates for her Husband
Tython Imortality, which being imediately graunted her, she had for got with his length of life, to beg withal that he should neuer wax old and decrepit, wherefore he is said to be euer bed rid, till the Gods pittying his feeblenesse, turn'd him after into a Grashopper.
Horatius lib. 2 Carminum.
Longa Tithonum minuit sen
[...]ctus.
su
[...]a a chiefe Citty in
Persia, where the great Sophies keepe their Courts, it is seated neare the famous riuer
Choaspes, and was builded by
Tython.
Pclasgians are an auncient people of
Greece dwelling in
Peloponesus in the edge of
Macedonia, of whom the generall
Graecians sometimes haue vsurpt that name.
The end of the thirteenth
CANTO.
Argumentum
TRoylus, Achilles wounds, and is betraid
By his fell Myrmidons, which being spredd,
The bloody Greeke still loues the beautious Maid
Pollixena, and for her loue is lead
To
Pallas Church, whom
Paris doth inuade,
And with an Arrow in the heele strikes dead:
Penthisilea with her valiant Maydes,
Assists sad
Troy, Greece lofty
Pyrthus ayds.
ARG. 2.
IN this last fight, fall by the
Argiue spleene,
Paris, Amphimachus, & Scithiaes Queene.
1
TO whom,
Andromache may I compare
Thy Funerall teares ore
Hectors body shed,
If mongst late Widdowes none suruiue so rare
To equall thee, lets search among the dead,
The
Carian Queene that was as chast as faire,
Bright
Artimesia a wonder bred:
Galathian Camna did likewise constant proue,
Artimesia Camna.
And
[...]al'd her in firme Coniugall Loue.
2
What Fathers griefe could equall
Priams teares?
Who lost a sonne, no age, no world could match,
Whose arme vpheld his glory many yeares,
Whose vigilant eye did on his safety watch,
[Page 359]
Englands third
Edward in thy face appeares
Like griefe, when timelesse death did soone dispatch
Edward the 3.
Thy braue sonnes life,
Edward Sirnam'd the blacke,
By whom
Spaine flag'd, and
France sustained wracke.
3
No
[...]
Margaret, when at
Teuxbury her sonne
Q. Margaret wife to Henry the 6.
Was stab'd to death by Tyrant
Glosters hand,
Felt from her riueld cheekes more Pearle drops ronne,
Then
Hecuba, when she did vnderstand
The thred of
Hectors life already sponne,
Whose glories stretcht through Heauen, aire, sea, & land
Though he of semblant hope to England were
With him, whom
Asia did account most deare.
4
Nor could the Countesse Mary sorrow more,
To heare her Brother (the braue
Sidney wounded,)
Laide Mary Countesse of Penbrooke, & Sister to Sir Phillip Sidney.
Whose death the seuenteene
Belgian states deplore,
Whose Fame for Arts and armes the whole world sounded,
Then did
Cassandra, who her garments tore,
Creusa who with extreame griefe confounded,
With whom
Polyxena bare a sad straine,
To heare a third part of the earth complaine.
5
Nor when the hopefull youth Prince
Arthur dide,
Prince Arthur elder brother to Prince Henry, after Henry the 8.
Leauing his Brother both his life and Crowne,
Could the prince
Henry lesse his sorrowes hide,
Then
Hectors Brothers who still guard the Towne,
The vniuersall Citty doffes her pride,
The King himselfe puts on a Mourners gowne:
The Queene and Ladies with their leagued Kings,
Bury with him their best and costliest things.
6
So when from
Rome great
Tully was exild,
Full twenty thousand Cittizens the best,
M. F. Cicero.
In garments Tragicke, and in countenance wild,
For twelue sad Moones their loues to him profest,
But
Troy euen from the Bed-rid to the Child,
From Crutch vnto the Cradle, haue exprest
A generall griefe in their lamenting cryes,
Lookes, gestures, habits, mournefull harts and eyes.
7
Now when the Fountaine of their teares grew dry,
And Men and Ma
[...]ons him bewayld their fill,
With one Ioynt-voyce for iust reuenge they cry
On him, that did the Prince by Treason kill;
They lay their sad and Funerall Garments by,
The souldiets long to proue their Martiall skill,
And try their strengths vpon
Scamander plaine,
Thinking themselues too long Inmut'd in vaine.
8
Tis Questionable whether greater woe
In
Troy, then glee within the Campe abounded,
They hold themselues free from that late dread foe,
Who with his Steed had oft their trenches rounded,
And neuer but to th'
Argiues ouerthrow
appear'd in field, or to the battaile sounded
With shrill applause, they proud
Aehilles Crowne,
And with Brauadoes oft-times front the Towne.
9
Thus when re-spirited
Greece had Dominear'd
and brau'd the fieged
Troians at their gates,
Old
Priam for his age now little fear'd,
With
Troylus and the rest, of warres debates,
For
Hectors slaughter (to them all indeer'd)
They vow reuenge on those hye Potentates
That were spectators of the ruthlesse deed,
When
Hectors coarse thrice round the wals did bleed
10
And yssuing with their power, the aged King
Puts acts in execution, much aboue
The battaile.
His age or strength, he youthfully doth spring
Vpon his Steed, and for his
Hectors loue,
Amongst the throng of
Greekes dares any thing,
The valour of King Pria
[...]
Himselfe gainst
Diomed he longs to prone,
and scapes vntoucht, then gainst
Vlisses rides,
and still his age doth equipage their prides.
11
Forthwith gainst
Agamemn
[...] he contends,
and on his Beauer raught him many a blow,
Who like a souldier his renowne defends,
amazd that weake age should assacult him so,
[Page 361] The King his puissance further yet extends,
Against the
Spartan King (an equall foe)
Whom with his speare he did so ill inrreat,
Faire
Hellens husband sits beside his seat.
12
From them he further to the throng proceeds,
And deales about great Larges of grim wounds,
Admir'd alone for his renowned deeds,
Some with his sword vpon the Caske he stounds,
This day old
Nestor by his Iauelin bleeds
With many more, and still the field he rounds:
Against old
Priam not a
Greeke dare stay,
Who soly claimes the honour of that day.
13
Yet the meane time the King was in this broyle,
Bold
Deiphebus kept the rest in fee
With bloods and death, whilst
Paris made great spoyle
Of such as in their valour seem'd most free,
Aeneas strongly mounted, gaue the foyle
Vnto th'
Athenian Duke, whose warlike knee
Bended to him, yet in an vpright hart,
Achilles in his rescue claimes a part.
14
The King
Epistropus amongst them fought,
So did
Sarpedon gainst th'incamped Kings,
The stout
Pelasgian strength they dreaded nought,
Now mongst their renged squadrons
Treylus flings,
And on their foyl'd troopes much effusion wrought,
In him the life and spirit of
Hector springs;
Twice he
Achilles met, and twice him feld,
Who all the other Kings of
Greece exeld.
15
A hundred thousand
Troians were that day
Led to the field to auenge Prince
Hectors life,
Double their number on
Scamander stay,
To entertaine them in their aemulous strife,
Duke
Aiax Telamon then kept in play
Troylus, whilst murder through the field grew rife,
The sterne
Polydamas did Nobly fight,
And was the death of many a gallant Knight.
16
But
Troyl
[...]s that succeeds
Hector in force,
In courage, and in all good Thewes beside,
Whom ere he met that day did braue
[...] vnhorse,
Till his white Armour was with Crimson dide,
For
Hectors sake his sword vsd no remorse,
His warre-steel'd spirits to slaughter he applyde:
No man that saw him his bright weapons weild,
But sware another
Hector was in field.
17
This day is
Troyes, and now repose they borrow
From the still night, to giue the wounded cure,
And such of note as dide, t'intombe with sorrow,
They that
[...], themselues with armes assure,
And so prepare for battaile on the morrow,
Some to be siedge, the rest the siedge t'indure:
Or if they can, to their eternall praise,
The forren Legions from their Trenches raise.
18
Six Moones gaue nightly rest to th'Hostile paines,
Ofiust so many dayes, for full so long
Troy without respight the proud Campe constraines,
Howerly to proue whose puissance is most strong,
Blood-drops by Plannets on
Scamander
[...]nes,
Horrid destruction flyes the
Greekes among;
Troylus still held the Noblest Armes professor,
And
Hectors equall, though his late successor.
19
T'omit a thousand Combats and Contentions,
Hostile Encounters, Oppositions braue,
Such as exceed all human apprehensions,
Where some win liuing honour, some a graue,
With Stratagems and sundry rare inuentions,
The Towne to fortefie, the Campe to saue:
And contrary, to stretch all human reach,
The Hoast t'indamage, and the Towne t'impeach,
20
In all which,
Troylus wondrous Fame atchieued,
His sword and Armour were best knowne and feared,
Aboue the rest the
Argiue Dukes he gricued,
By his sole valour were the
Troians cheared,
[Page 363] In acting wonders scarce to be bele
[...]ud,
The life of
Hector in his blood appeared:
Priam and
Troy now thinke themselues secure,
So long as
Troylus mongst them may indure.
21
Achilles by his valour mated oft,
And (as he thinkes) much blemisht in renowne,
To see anothers valor soare aloft,
But his owne bruitfull fame still sinking downe,
His downy bed to him appeares vnsoft,
He takes no pleasure in his regall Crowne:
The best delights to him are harsh and sower,
Since in one arme rests a whole Citties power.
22
The
Greekes thinke
Hector in this youth aliue,
To stop whose honors torrent they deuise,
For since by force of armes in vaine they striue
To catch at that which soares aboue the skies,
They to the depth of all their Counsels diue,
How they by cunning may the Prince surprise:
Being well assur'd that whilst his honors grow,
In vaine they seeke
Troyes fatall ouerthrow.
23
The sonne of
The
[...]is feeles his armes yet sore,
By the rude stroakes that from his fury came,
His armour heere and there be sprinkt with gore
Of his owne wounds, that he is well-nye lame
With often iustles: and can no more
Indure the vertue of his strength or Fame:
For since his brest's in many places seard,
Hee'l flye vnto the rescue of his guard.
24
Since neyther the broad-brested
Diomed
Can in the course his rude incounter stay,
Since last when
Telamon against him sped,
He was perforc'st to giue his fury way,
Since all those
[...]
Agamem
[...] led,
Though Martial'd in their best and proud'st array,
Could not repell his swift and violent speed,
he by his guard his ruine hath Decreed.
25
The selfe-same charge that he gainst
Hector vsd,
Gainst
Troylus he his Myrmidons perswades,
Behold where he with
Hectors spirit infusd,
Troylus.
The warlike
Thous in euen course inuades,
Him, whom his strength of armes might haue excusd,
The
Treian sends vnto
th'Elisian shades:
The
Athenian Duke against him spurres his horse,
But quite through-piercst, the
Greeke drops downe a corse.
26
Foure Princes in as many coarses tasted
Like Fate, yet still the
Dardan Prince sits hye,
No coarse, no towring blow he vainly wasted,
(In his great heart an hoast he dares defie)
King
Diomed once more against him hasted,
And long'd with him a warlike course to try:
But horse and man were in the race ore-throwne,
(Normaruell) now the princes strength was growne.
27
The elder of th'
Atrides next him grew,
And tryes the vigour of his arme and Speare,
Him likewise
Troylus brauely ouerthrew,
And forth (vnshooke himselfe) he past on cleare,
Now well-nigh breathlesse he himselfe with-drew,
Whom then the spleenefull
Pelean watched ncare:
And as he lights to rest him on the ground,
Him the blacke Myrmidons incompasse round.
28
With mercilesse keene glaues they siege the youth,
Whom all at once with fury they assaile,
In them is neither Honoured grace not ruth,
Nor is one
Troian neere the Prince to bale
Achilles, with the rest his blood pursuith,
(Thousands against one man must needs preuaile)
Who seeing nothing else saue death appearing,
Euen gainst all oddes, contemnes despaire, or fearing.
29
But through their squadrons hewes a bloudy trackt,
And lops the formost that before him stands,
Had
Deiphebus now his Brother backt,
Or had the place bin by
Sarpedon mand,
Vpon his party, tear'd his conquering hand,
Had their brigat Faulchions-brandisht by his side,
The Myrmidons had fayl'd,
Troylus not dide.
30
But hee's alone rouud guirt with death and ruin,
And still maintaines the battel, though in vaine,
On euery side a bloudy passage he wing,
To worke himselfe out through a dismall Lane
Of Myrmidons:
Achilles still pursuing,
Who keepes the hindmost of his rough-hair'd traine:
Yet had Prince
Troylus markt him where he stood,
And almost wrought to him through death and blood
31
But ods preuail'd, he sinkes downe the mid-way,
The death of Troylus.
Euen in his fall his sword against him darting,
That did both
Hectors and his life betray,
Boasting a Noble spirit in his departing
By
Troylus death the
Greekes obtaine the day,
The Myrmidons their many wounds yet smarting,
Cure in their Lords Tent: whom the
Greekes aplaud,
For
Troylus death (gainst honour) wrought by fraud.
32
Now the deiected
Troians dare no more
Enter the field, the
Greekes approach the gates
And dare them to grim warre, who still deplore
Hector and
Troylus in their Tragicke fates,
Queene
Hecuba yet keepes reuenge in store.
Of which at length with
Paris she dabates,
Vowing to catch his life in some flye traine,
That by like fraud her two bold sonnes had slaine.
33
She clas to minde the great
Athilles pride,
Withall, the loue he to her Daughter beares,
A thing in zeale she can no longer hide,
Since in
Polyxena like loue appeares,
Troyes weake deiection she makes knowne besides,
Disabled by a siege of many years:
Therefore intreats him to accept her loue,
And in a generall truce the
Argiues moue.
34
The lofty
Greeke proud, by so great a Queene
To be sued to, when he records withall
How much hees fear'd, he gins to slake his spleene,
And the Maids beauty to remembrance call,
What can he more? Since he hath dreaded beene,
And seene his ablest Foes before him fall:
But yeild to beauties soft inchaunting charme,
Knowing weake
Troy dares not conspire his harme.
35
The day drawes on, a peace hath bin debated,
To which
Achilles the proud
Greekes perswades;
Some thinke it needfull, others, hyer rated
Their honours, and this Concord much vpbraides,
Alone
Achilles longs to be instated
In her faire grace (the beautifulst of Maids)
And with the sonne of
Nestor makes repaire,
Where
Priam with his sonnes and Daughters are.
Archilochus the sonne of
Nestor.
36
Truce is proclaim'd, the Damsell richly clad,
And by the
Troian Ladies proudly attended,
Whom none that saw, but admiration had,
As at a Goddesse from hye heauen discended,
The innocenr Maide was still in count'nance sad,
For losse of those that
Tray but late defended:
Yet guiltlesse in her soule of any spleene
Dreampt gainst the Prince, by
Paris or the Queene.
37
Vnarm'd
Achilles to the Temple goes,
Whom
Nestors sonne attends to
Pallas shrine,
and all the way with Gold and Iew
[...]ls strowes,
Prising them Earthy, but his Bride Deuine,
and nothing of their Treacherous act he knowes,
When
Paris from a place where he had line
With arm'd Knights yssues, and a keene shaft drew,
Which in the heele the proud
Achilles slow,
38
Who when he sees himselfe and friend betraid,
and wounded to the Death, whilst he could stand,
Brandisht his sword, and mongst them slaughters made,
But now he wants his Myrmidons at hand,
[Page 367] and his strong armour
Paris to inuade,
The death of Achilles and Archilochus.
Alacke, the Temple was too strongly man'd:
his strength that cannot bandy gainst them ali,
at length must sinke, and his hye courage fall.
39
There lies the great
Achilles in his gore,
and by his side the Sonne of
Nestor slaine,
Amongst the
Trotans to be feard no more,
His body to the
Greekes is sent againe,
Whom they for
Hectors change, and long deplore
his death (by Treason wrought:) vpon the plaine
For him a Monumentall Toombe they reare,
and for his death a ioynt reuenge they sweare.
40
The siedge still lasts, vpon the part of
Troy
Penthisilia with a thousand Maydes,
penthis
[...]
Vowes all their
Amazenian strength to imploy,
and for the death of
Hector, Greece vpbraides,
Whilst in the Campe with much applausiue ioy,
Neopto
[...]mus
Grim
Pyrrh
[...] is receiu'd,
Pyrrh
[...] that trades
In gore and slaughter, with reuenge pursuing,
Euen to the death,
Troy, for his Fathers t
[...]ine.
41
No longer t
[...]e he will delay, but streight
Dare them to battaile by the Morrowes Sunne,
The
Scythian Damsels long to shew their height,
and imitate theyr deedes before-time dunne,
They know they enterprise a worke of weight,
and long for Signall, now to battaile runne:
The
[...]
Greekes that were of
Pyrrhus traine,
Whom th'
Amazonians soone repulse againe.
42
Penthisilea, was not that fayre Queen
A tale of a chast Queene amongst the Amazons.
Of
Amazons, of whom we now intreate,
That made a Law, what Man so'ere had beene
Within her Court, to make a byding Seate
aboue three dayes, he might not there be seene,
Though his power mighty, and his State were great:
For if within her Court he longer dwelt,
The penall Law was, he should sure be gelt.
43
So much she feared the supposed traines,
With which soft Women-kind vs men accuse,
That our society she quite disdaynes,
Nor shall our fellowship her Ladies vse,
To this decree she their applause constraines,
Because false men their weaker Sex abuse:
From which her words, nor warning can restrain thē,
She chusd this way, the onely meanes to tame them.
44
This stri
[...]kt decree kept many from her Coast,
That else had flockt as Suters to the place,
Their Angell beauties which men couet most,
Must from the eyes of man receiue no grace,
Many too bold their deerest Iewell lost,
And were made Eunuches within three dayes space:
Else they were thought vnfit for the Queens dyet,
Who held that the first way to keepe them quiet.
45
Some that could well haue ventur'd their best blood,
Were loath to hazzard what they needs must pay,
The Queene so much vpon this Edict stood,
That she had driuen her Suters quite away,
And still (to be at rest) she held it good,
Vowing t'obserue it to her dying day:
Hauing this prou'd, those men that came most bold,
Their forf
[...]it pay, none more submisse and cold.
46
So that in processe few approacht their shore,
But such as had no meanes to hue else-where,
Whom their owne Countries did esteeme no more,
But pay theyr fine, they may be welcome here,
And haue good place, and Lands, and liuings store,
Nothing the Court hath, can be held too deere:
Amongst the rest that held a Soueraigne place,
Their liu'd a
Baron of a Noble race.
47
He that was from his Nat
[...]e Countrey fled,
For some offence that questioned his life,
and as a refuge to secure his head,
He shund the deadly Axe to tast the Knife,
[Page 369] But time out-weares disgrace, his course he led
Among the Damsels, free from femenine strife:
Doubtlesse the Woman that's suspitious most,
Would be resolu'd to see what he had lost.
48
The Noble Eunuch left a Sonne behind
In his owne Countrey, who being growne to yeares,
Grew fairely featurd, of a generous mind,
and in his face much excellence appeares,
He vowes the world to trauell, till he find
His banisht Father, whose estate he feares:
At length by search, hee's made to vnderstand,
Of his late soiourne in the
Scithians Land.
49
Thither he will, for so his vow decrees,
But when he knowes an Edict too seuere,
Hee's loath to pay vnto the Land such Fees,
Which he hopes better to bestow else-where,
In this distraction, loe from farre he sees
A nimble Fayry, tripping like a Deere:
and as holies strowde on the grassie playne,
With sw
[...]st speede she makes to him amaine.
50
And greetes him thus: (Fayre Youth) boldlie proceede,
I promise thee good Fortune on thy way,
Among the
Scithian Dames thou shalt not bleed,
Onely obserue and keepe still what I say,
My counsell now may stand thee much in steede,
and saue thee that, thou wouldst be loath to pay:
Receiue this Handkercheife, this Purse, this Ring,
The least of them a present for a King.
52
These vertues they retaine: when thou shouldst eate,
Vpon the Board this curious Napkin spred,
It streight shall fill with all delicious meate,
Foule, Fish, and Fruits, shall to th
[...] place be led,
With all delicious Cates, costly, and neate,
Which likewise shall depart when thou hast fed:
This Ring hath hath
[...] stone, whose vertue, know
Is to discerne a true Friend, from a Foe.
52
In this thou mayst perceiue both late and early,
Who flatters thee, and who intends thee well,
Who hates thee deadly, or who loues thee deerely:
The vertue of this Iewell doth excell,
Out of this Purse if I may iudge seuerely,
and in few words the worth exactly tell:
Valew it rightly, it exceedes the rest,
and of the three, is rated for the best,
53
So oft as thou shalt in it thrust thy hand,
So oft thy Palme shall be repleat with Gold,
Spend where thou wilt, trauell by Sea or Land,
The riches of that Purse cannot be told,
Vse well these guifts, their vertues vnderstand,
Thanke my deuinest Mistresse and be bold:
Adde but thy will to her auspicious ayde,
Shee'le sure thee that which others late haue payde.
54
Incourag'd thus, he pierces theyr cold Clime,
Where many hot Spirits had beene calm'd of late,
And enters the great Court at such a time,
When he beheld his Father sit in State,
They that
[...]uriew the Youth now in his prime,
Not knowing his decree, blame his hard Fate:
And wish he might a safer Countrey choose,
Not come thus far, his deer'st things to loose.
55
For not a Ladyes eye dwels on his face,
Or with iudiciall note viewes his perfection,
But thinkes him worthy of theyr deerest grace,
They prayse his looke, gate, stature, and complection,
And Iudge him Issu'd of a Noble race,
A person worthy of a Queenes election:
Not one among them that his beauty saw,
But now at length too cruell thinke their Law.
56
After some interchange of kindest greeting
Betwixt the Father and the stranger Son,
Such as is vsuall to a suddaine meeting,
With extasies that Kindred cannot shon,
[Page 371] To omit their height of ioy, as a thing fleeting,
For greatest ioyes are oft-times loohest don:
The Fath
[...] of his Sonnes ability,
Askes, If
[...] brookt his
[...] losse with facility.
57
For well he knowes, he cannot anchor theare,
Or soiourne on that rude and
[...] barous Cost,
But his free harborage must cost him d
[...]ate,
(Censuring his Sonne) by what himselfe had lost,
she gentie Youth, whose thoughts are free from feare,
Sayth he is come securely there to host:
and spight the Queene and Ladies (with oaths deepe)
Sweares to his Father (what he hath) to keepe.
58
By this th'
Amazonian P
[...] heares
Of a young stranger in her Court arriu'd,
She sends to know his Nation, Name, and yeares,
But being told his Father there suruiu'd,
A reuerentman, one of her chiefest Peeres,
She will not as the custome haue him gyu'd:
But takes his Fathers promise, oath, and hand,
To haue his Sonne made Free-man of her Land.
59
Three dayes the limits him, but they expierd
As others carst, he must the Razortry,
all thinges determin'd, the fayre Queene desierd
The Stranger to a banquet instantly,
Who at his first appearance much admierd
Her state, her port, proportion, face, and eye:
Nor had he (since his Cradle) seene a Creature
So rich in beauty, or so rare in feature.
60
Downe sat the Queene and Damsels at the board,
But the young Stranger stands by, discontent,
They pray him sit: He answeres not a word,
Three times to him the Queene of
Scithia sent,
But still the Youth would no reply affoord,
The rest not minding what his silencement:
Leaue him vnto his humor, and apply
Themselues to feede and eate deliciously.
61
But when he saw the Ladies freely eate,
and feede vpon the rude Cates of the Land,
At a with-drawing board he takes his seate,
and spreads his curious Napkin with his hand,
Streight you might see a thousand sorts of meate,
Of strangest kinds vpon the Table stand:
What Earth, or Ayre, or Sea, within them breeds,
On these the Youth, with lookes di
[...]dainefull feeds.
62
The Queene amaz'd to see such change of cheare,
Whose beauty and variety surpast,
Longing to know the newes, could not forbeare,
But rose with all her Damsels at the last,
To know from whence he was supplyde, and wheare,
With Cates so rich in show, so sweete in tast:
The like in
Scithia she had neuer seene,
The least of them a seruice for a Queene.
63
For now she hath in scorne her owne prouision
And cals her choysest banquet, homely fare,
Her dainty Cates she hath in proud derision,
Since she beheld the Strangers foode so rare,
The Youth, who hopes by this t'escape incision,
Tels her (if so she please) he can prepare
A richer feast (yet not her Treasure wrong)
With any dish, for which her grace may long.
64
She growes the more Inquisitiue, and streight
Sweares, if he will her royall Cater be,
Shee'l in her Kingdome rayse him to the height
Of all high state, and chiefe Nobility:
For well she knowes, it is a worke of weight
To furnish her with such variety:
Since her cold Climat, with ten Kingdomes more,
Cannot supply her board with halfe that store.
65
When vp the Stranger ryseth, and thus sayes:
Madam, for your sake was I hither guided,
Whom I will freely serue at all assayes,
For you this dyet haue I here prouided.
[Page 373] Sit then, and as you like, my bounty praise,
These no illusions are to be derided,
But meats essentiall, made for your repast,
Sit downe and welcome, and wher't please you tast.
66
The more she eats, the more she longs to know
Whence this strange bounty of the heauens proceeds,
They proue as sweet in tast, as faire in show,
The more she wonders, still the more she feeds,
The more she eats, the more her wonders grow,
She vowes her Land shall Chronicle his deeds:
And make him Lord of all his present wishes,
Excepting Loue, and what belongs to kisses.
67
The stranger then his Napkins vertue tels,
What wonders it affoords when it is spred,
Without all charmes or
Negr
[...]ticke spels,
Or inuocations made vnto the dead,
Onely in natiue Vertue it excels
(A secret power by inspiration bred)
This hee'l bestow with all their Vertues store,
To saue his forfet but for three dayes more.
68
Th'ambitious Queene loath her Decrees should slacke,
More loath to loose a Iewell of such prize,
That can affoord her all things she doth lacke,
To make a feast as with the Dieties,
Vowes for three dayes he shall sustaine no wracke,
But then her law of force must tyranize:
Meane time her Court is for the stranger free,
Vpon these firme conditions they agree.
69
Glad was the Queene, more glad the amorous stranger,
For neither at their bargaine was agrieued,
She for her guift, he to escape such danger,
Hauing his Man-hood for three dayes reprieu'd,
In her faire Parke he longs to be a ranger,
Where fed such store of Deere (scarcely belieu'd)
Till he by tride experience had beheld,
How many beauties in the Court exceld.
70
Now trusting to the vertue of his Ring,
He longes to proue; who hate, who meane him good,
Who onely to his eare smooth flatteries bring,
Who with the Queene vpon his party stood,
For flattery is like an oyly Spring,
Whose smooth soft waters waxing to a flood:
Entyce fond men, his Siluer streames to crowne,
But he that proues to swim, perforce must drowne.
71
Among the rest, one
Beldam neere in place,
Vnto rhe lustlesse
Amazon, he knowes
Perswades the Queene to his especiall grace,
and stands in plea b
[...]weene him and his Foes,
With her he growes acquainted in small space,
And in her lap a liberall Treasure throwes:
He giues h
[...] Gold in euery place he finds her,
And by large bounty to his Loue he binds her.
72
The time weares on, his three-dayes Lease expires,
In which he
[...]s the things, to which hee's borne,
His owne Fee simple, yet the Queene requires
To haue the forfeit since, the day's outworne,
But still his precious guifts the Youth inspires
With chearefull hope, he shall not liue forlorne:
But trusts by promise of the fayry Dame,
A Man to part thence, as a Man he came.
73
The day fore th'Execution, he was viewing
His precious Ring, the like was neuer seene,
Finding the time so neare, he sits still
[...]ewing
His rashnesse, for he feares the Knife is keene,
Each man he thinkes a Barbar him pursuing
To haue him Enunch't; when in comes the Queene
And spyes this glorious Ring vpon his Finger,
(The Beldam, to this troubled youth did bring'er.)
74
Of this she fals in Question, much admiring
The Splendor, and besides she longs to know
What vertue't hath, with
[...]gency desiring
If it be rare in worth, as rich in show,
[Page 375] The Youth into his former hopes retyring,
Recounts to her what Soueraigne Vertues grow
From this bright Loue, a meanes ordaind by Fate,
Onely by which she may secure her State.
74
In this her Friendes she may discerne and try,
On whom she may relye her certaine trust,
Who in her charge their vtmost wils apply,
Who in her Seate of Iudgement proue most iust:
Next, she by this all Traytors may descry,
Such as against her vertues arme their lust:
Such as intend their Soueraigne to depose,
Briefly, it points her Friends out from her Foes.
76
No maruell if the Queene were much in loue
With such a Iewell, and for it would pay
What he would aske, as that which much behooues
To keepe her doubtfull Kingdome from decay,
To buy it at the deerest rate she proues,
He onely craues but respight for one day:
That she but one day more his Youth would spare,
Eare he came bound vnto the Barbers Chayre.
77
The match is made, his guifts are knowne abroad,
and from all partes they come this man to see,
The multitude esteeme him as a God,
That to their Soueraigne Queene hath beene so free,
A starely S
[...]eede he mo
[...]s and thereon road
About the Court, wherethrongs of people be:
and from his Purse, of Gold whole handfuls flings,
A bounty that is seldome seene in Kings.
78
A thousand times his arme abroad he stretcht,
as oft the figured plates of coyn'd-Gold fly
about theyr eares, still to his Purse he reacht,
And still to his applause the peoply cry,
The more they showte, the greater store he fetcht
From his deuine vnending Treasury:
The newes of this vnto the Queenes soone came,
Wondring whose praise her people thus proclaime.
79
In comes th'admired Stranger and alighting,
The Queene him meets, and takes him by the hand
To lead him vp: he by the way reciting
The Proiect she much longs to vnderstand,
The
Scithian Queene in his discourse, delighting
Vpon the vertue of this Purse long scand:
Thinking if this third Prize she might inioy,
She by her wealth might all the Earth destroy.
80
But Treasure cannot gaine it, for tis Treasure
Euen of it selfe, in vaine she offers Gold
aboue all wealth, the Youth esteemes his pleasure,
One thing will doo't, that in her eare he told,
The couetous Queene's, perplexed aboue measure,
To buy the price that will be cheaply sold:
Onely to bed with her, he doth desire,
But till two Peares be roasted in the fite.
81
Oh! Gold, what canst not thou? Long she doth pause,
How great's the Wealth, how easie tis to buy
She knowes, besides she is aboue her Lawes,
And what she will, no Subiect dares deny,
Why should she loose this Iewell? What's the cause
She to her owne Land should proue Enemy?
Whose weale, since she may compasse with such ease,
Why should she not her-selfe somewhat displease?
82
The time's but little that the Youth doth aske,
Besides, shee'l cause her Maide her charge to hast,
If she compare her wages with her taske,
She knowes her time will not be spent in wast,
The friendly night will put a blushlesse Maske
Vpon her brow, then how can she be trast?
The fire is made, the Peares plast, both agreed,
To Bed they goe, good Fortune be their speed.
83
The trusted Hag, he knowes to be his friend,
and one whom he had bribed long before,
It pleasd her well, that his desires haue end,
To haue had him Eunuch't, would haue griu'd her sore,
[Page 377] In bed meane time the louing payre contend,
To proue the game she neuer tride before,
And still she cals to make a quicker fire,
And prethy sweet Nurse let the Peares be nyer.
84
They shall (quoth she,) yet let them roast at
[...]easure,
The way-ward Queene yet thinkes the time too long,
And that she payes too sweetly for his Treasure,
(For yeeld she must) the stranger prooues too strong)
Yet still she cals (not yet?) Tis out of measure,
Nor yet, nor yet, she sings no other song,
Alacke the Beldams slacknesse quite betrayes her,
(The onely meanes to keepe him from the Razer.)
85
The youth preuail'd, the Queene's somewhat appeasd,
And for there is no helpe the vtmost tries,
Since her the stranger hath by wager ceasd,
Before the watch-word giuen she must not rise,
The Beldam thinkes at last the Queene t'haue pleasd,
Oh Madam they are rosted now (she cries:)
Are they indeed? Let them rost on (quoth she,)
And prethy Nurse put in two more for me.
86
I know not what effect this wager tooke,
But the next day she canceld her strict Law,
She that men hated:
Eunuchs cannot brooke,
Command was giuen that all such should withdraw,
And not presume within her Court to looke,
That could be found toucht with the smallest flaw,
And this Decree among the
Scithians grew,
Till the sad day that they their husbands slew.
87
For when their flying men were quite disgracst,
And sayl'd in battaile, they disdain'd their yoke,
And scorning all subiection, proudly facst
Their foes themselues with many a boysterous stroke,
From
Scithiaes bounds all men they cleane displacst,
And strongly arm'd, through many Regions broke:
Thus raign'd successiuely many a bold Dame
In
Scithia, whence
Penthisilea came.
88
Their Pollaxes, whose vse the
Greekes neare knew,
Thunder vpon theyr losty Caskes and fell them,
The
Greekes st
[...]ll guarde the field, although some fewe
Perisht at first, and striuing to excell them,
Being but Women, they some Damsels slew,
And with the oddes of number they repell them,
But when the Queene into the battaile flings,
VVhere eare she comes, she bloudy Conquest bringes.
89
King
philomines Combats by her side,
VVith many a bold Knight brought from
Paphlagone,
Gainst whom the King
Cassilius fierce can ride,
Srriuing that day to haue his valour knowne,
Betweene them was a fayre and euen course tryde,
Amphimacus to
Priam deare alone
Since
Troylus death, thrust in amongst the
Greekes,
Forcing their flight with many clamorous shrikes.
90
Him
Aiax Telamon encounters then,
And stayes the fury of his barbed Steede,
Acting that day, deeds, more then commen men,
Such as through both the Armies wonder breede,
Whom Noble
Deiphebus meetes agen,
The youthfull Prince, whose valour doth exceed,
The fearefull slaughter of his puissance stayes,
Whose discipline his Focs could not but prayse.
91
And had not wrathfull
pyrrhus now led on
His Fathers Myrmidons, and quite forsooke
His vntryde Knights, the day had sure beene gon,
But where they march't, the Earth beneath them shooke,
And to withstand theyr vigor, they found none,
Till
Paris with his Archers that way tooke:
and now began a fierce and Mortall fray,
In Emulation who should fly, who stay.
92
Paris preuailes, his forces gaine the best,
And
Lycomedes Grand-child must retire,
Behold, where gainst the
Troians Aiax Crest
Seemes aboue all his Souldiers to aspyre,
[Page 379] His huge seauen-folded Targe still guards his brest,
For
Paris through the field he doth inquire:
Whom as the
Sal'mine fighting, spyes from far,
He heares a Steele-shaft from his Crosbow iarre.
93
It aymes at him, and where his Armour parted
Betweene the Arme and Shoulder, there it fell,
Aiax obseru'd the man by whom he smarted,
And pressing forward, vowes to quite him well,
Through the mid-throng the neerest way he thwarted,
No opposition can his rage expell:
Till he had past through Groues of growing Speares,
To come where thousand Shafts sung by his eares.
94
Yet past them all, euen till he came where fought
The amorous
Troian, and to him he makes
His guard of Archers, the
Greeke dradded naught,
But o're his Helme his reeking Glaue he shakes,
Which in his fall assured ruine brought
The death of Paris.
Vpon the Earth, the dying
Troian quakes:
And in his death leaues all terrestriall ioy,
Faire
Hellen, Priam, Heeuba, and
Troy.
95
Oh! Had the
Raptor in his Cradle dide,
Millions of liues had in his death beene sau'd,
and
Asiaes glory, that late sweld in pride,
Had not with siedge and death so long beene brau'd,
O're his dead Coarse the warlike
Greeke doth stride,
and workes his way through harnesse richly ingrau'd:
Whose curious workes he blemisht where he stood,
Blurring their Fingers with wide wounds and blood.
96
The
Dardans fly at
Brute of
Paris fall,
The
Greekes with dreadfull march their flight pursue,
Euen to the very skirts of
Troyes fayre wall,
But betweene death and them the
Scithians grew,
Squadrons of
Greekes before the Damsels fall,
Now the re-spirited
Troians fight ren
[...]w:
Twice fore the
Scithian Queene did
Pyrrhus stand,
Yet twice by her repulsed, hand to hand.
97
Night partes the battaile vpon equall oddes,
In
Paris death, the
Troians haue the wurst,
Hellen and
Troy bequeath him to the Gods,
His death lesse mourn'd, then hath his life bin curst,
The morning comes, the
Greekes make their aboad
Before the gates, through which the
Scithians burst:
And scorning to be Coopt, each with her shielde
Brauely aduanst, make roomth into the field.
98
Them
Deiphebus follow
[...]s with his traine,
The Sole-remainder of King
Priams race,
By whom at first a valiant
Greeke was slaine,
That in the Campe inioyde a Soueraigne place,
Amphimachus next him spurs on the pla
[...]ne,
With
Philomines who rankes on apace:
Aeneas and
Antenor, these contend,
With all their powers to giue the long siedge end.
99
In vaine: for lo, vpon the aduerse part,
Guirt with his Fathers Myrmidons appeares,
Sterne
Pyrrhus, whose late bleeding woundes yet smart,
Next him
Pelides, with a band of Speares,
Then marcht
Tysander with a Lyons hart,
Vlisses, Steuelus, and (proud in yeares:)
Nestor: the two
Atrides well attended,
The two
Achiaces next the field as
[...]nded.
100
These with the other Princes proudly fare,
Disordred ruine, ruffles on each side,
Thousands of eyther party slaughterd are
In this incounter,
Deiphebus dide,
And b
[...]aue
Amphimachus, forward to dare,
The death of Deiphebus and Amphiemachus.
And able to performe (a Souldier tride)
And now on
Priams party onely stand,
The
Scithian Damsels to protect his Land.
101
Troy droopes, and
[...] aspyres full foureteene dayes,
Penthisilea hath vph
[...]ld her fame,
Both Campe and C
[...]ty surf
[...]it with her prayse,
and her renowne deseruedly proclayme,
[Page 381] The best of
Greece her hardiment assayes,
Yet shrinke beneath the fury of the Dame:
None can escape her vigour vnrewarded,
Troy by this sterne
Virago's soly guarded.
102
But destiny swayes all things:
Troy was founded
To endure a third wracke, and must fate obay,
Therefore euen those that with most might abounded,
Cannot reprieue her to a longer day,
The
S
[...]ythian Dames (by many Princes wounded)
Were with the Queene at length to
Greece a pray,
Her too much hardinesse her selfe inmur'd,
Admidst her foes, in Armour well assur'd.
103
And when her Launce was
[...]plinter'd to her hand,
Her warlike Pollax hew'd to pieces small,
Her selfe round guirt with many an armed band,
Euen in her height of Fame she needs must fall,
The warlike Wench amongst the
Greekes doth stand
Vnbackt by
Troy, left of her Damsels all,
The battery of a thousand swords she bides,
Till her yron plates are hew'd off from her sides.
104
Thus br
[...]athlesse, and vnha
[...]est, (fresh in breath
And strong in armor,)
Pyrrhus her inuades,
At these aduantages he knowes tis eath
To cope with her quite scuered from her Maids,
His bale
[...]ull thoughts are spur'd with rage and death,
Close to her
[...]ide in blood of
Greekes he wades:
(Blood sluc'st by her) and naked thus assayles her,
Whilst a whole Campe of foes from safety railes her.
105
After much warre
th'Amazonian fals,
Whom
Pyrrhus lops to pieces with his Glaue,
The death of P
[...]nthisilea.
And
[...]ing p
[...]-meale hew'd her, lowd he cals
To haue her limbes kept from an honoured graue,
But to be strow'd about the sieged wals:
She dead, the
Troians seeke themselues to saue
By open flight, her Virgins fighting dye,
Scorning the life, to gaine which, they must flye.
106
Now
Troy's at her last cast, her succors fayle,
Her souldiers are cut off by ruthlesse warre,
Her Sea-ports hemd in with a thousand sayle,
In her land fiedge two hundred thousand are,
They close their Iron gates their liues to baile,
And strengthen them with many an yron barre:
After that day, they dare no weapons weild,
Or front the proud
Greekes in the open field.
107
Aeneas and
Anten
[...]r now conspire,
(As some suppose) the Citty to betray,
Dares.
And with the
Greekes they doome it to the fire,
But whilst the rich
Palladium's seene to stay,
In
Pallas Temple, they in vaine desire
King
Priams ruin or the Lands decay:
Therefore the slye
Vlisses buyes for Gold,
The Iewell that doth
Troy in safety hold.
108
Oh cursed Priest, that canst thy selfe professe,
The Palladi
[...] bought by Vlisses of the Priest of Pallas for a great sum of mony.
Seuere in habit, but in heart prophane,
Would of thy name and Order, there were lesse,
That will not sticke to sell their friends for gaine,
Who (but that knowes thy Treason,) once would gesse
Such treacherous thoughts should taint a Church-mans braine,
But many to the Gods deuoted soly,
In harts are godlesse, though in garments holy.
109
Whether by purchase, or by stealth, (Heauen knowes,)
But the
Palladium now the
Greekes inioy,
And by a generall voyce the Campe arose
From their long
[...]ege, their ships againe t'inioy,
The
Greekes vnto the sea themselues dispose,
And make a show to bid farewell to
Troy:
But of this Stratagem, what next befell,
This Canto will not giue vs roome to tell.
ARtimesia Queene of
Caria, and wife to King
Mansolus, she is famous for her Chastity & the loue to her husband, after whose death she made so royalla Sepulcher
[Page 383] for him, that it was helde of the Wonders of the world, and of that, all stately buildinges haue since then beene called
Mansolea.
Camna a beautious maide borne in
Galatia, the wife of
Plutarchus libde virtutibus Mulierum. one
Sinatus, she was religiously deuoted to the cha
[...] Goddesse
Diana, whom her Countrey held in great reuerence, whome when
Synorix had often sollicited with loue, but coulde not preuaile, he treacherously slew her husband
Sinatus, and after inforced her to his Marriage-bed, to whom by the vrgent instigation of her friends, and the promotion expected by the greatnesse of
Synotix, she seemed willingly to yeild, (he perswading her, that for his loue to her, he wrought the death of her beloued
Sinatus.) When before the Altar of the Goddesse they were to be espoused, she drank to
Synorix (as the custom was) a Bowle of Wine, in which when he had pledged her, shee told him with a ioyfull countenance, that in that draught they had both caroused their deaths, being extreamely ouer-ioyed, that before the chast goddesse
Diana, & in the face of so great a people, she had iustified her owne Innocence, and reuenged the murder of her husband, which incontinently appeared, for the potion being commixt with poyson, they both expired before the Alter.
When
Achilles was slaine in the Temple by
Paris, it is remembred
Antimachus. of him that the
Graecians could not purchase his bodie of the
Troians till (to ransome him) they waighed them downe ass much Gold as poysed the body of
Hector. Tis sayde that for his death all the Muses & Nimphes wept exceedingly
Rursus redempto pro altero cadauere
Lycophron in Alexandra.
P
[...]r pondus Auris splendidi parto
[...]j ferent.
The Isle
Boristhenes was called
Achilleides of
Achilles that
Ibicus. was there buried, besides it is Poetised of him that in the
Elisian field, after his death, he espoused
Medea.
Herodotus in Euterpe.
Paris that slewe
Achilles, and was after slaine by
Aiax, was sent into
Greece with two and twenty saile, whence hee brought the faire
Hellen. His Shipmaister, or he that built
Diognetes in rebus. his ships, was called
Phereclus. Some thinke he pierst
Greece first by the Commandement of
Venus, and hauing
[...]
Smernais Harmonida
[...]
Hellen, carried her into
Aegypt, where he first lay with her.
[Page 384] Others are opinioned, that he bedded with her in
Athens, and
[...], Duris
[...].
[...]. had by her these foure Sonnes,
Dunichus, Carithus, Aganus, and
Ideus. Others thinke, he first lay with her in
Cranae, one of the Sp
[...]rad Islands, which when
Paris had done almost
Alexandar in
[...]
[...]. by violense, and after many teares sbed for the leauing of her Husband, it is said, that of her teares grew the Hearbe
Helenium, which if women drinke in wine, it prouokes mirth and Venery.
Of
Helena it is thus recorded,
Menelaus being dead, after their returne to
Greece, for her former luxuriousnes, she was expulsed from
Lacedemon by her Sonnes,
Nicostratus and
Megapenthe. She fled to her Cozen
Polixo, the Wife of
Tlepolemus, who gouerned
Rhodes, where shee soiourned for a space, but
Polixo after remembring, that her Husband was by reason of the Adultery of
Hellen, stain in the wars of Troy,
[...] in
[...]
[...]. she came vpon
Hellen suddainely, as she was bathing her selfe amongst her Maids, and hurriyng her vnto a tree, vppon the same she strangled her.
Others report, that
Hellen waxing old, & seeing her beauty wrinkled, and quite faded, in griefe therof hanged her selfe, as a iust reward of her former incontinence.
Some thinke the
Palladium to be bought by
Vlisses of the priest of
Pallas. Others, that it was stole by
Vlisses and
Diomed, others that it was Merchandized by
Aeneas and
Antenor, In which sale, the famous Citty of
Troy was betrayed to
[...] lib. 3. the
Greekes. These opinions are vncertaine, but when
Ilus was to build the Pallace of
Islion, following a party-couloured Oxe, he praied to the Gods, that some auspicious signe might satisfie him from the Heauens, that his buildinges were pleasing to the dietyes: then to him descended the
Palladium, an Image of three Cubits height, which seemed to haue motion, and to walke of it selfe; in the right hand holding a Speare, in the left hand a Distaffe, or Rocke and a Spindle, and where he further proceeded to the Oracle to know the vertue of this
Palladium, it was them aunswered him, that as long as that was kept free, inviolate, and vnprophaned, so long
TIOY shold be in peace and security, which accordingly happened. For till
Vlisses had either bought or stolne away the
Palladium, the
Greekes had neuer any apportunity or meanes to vse any vielence vpon the Citty.
The end of the 14. Canto.
Argumentum
ON
th'Hellesponticke Sands
Ep
[...]us reares
A brazen horse: the
Graecians hoise vp saile
And feigning to depart:
Synon with teares
Tels to the inuaded King an ominous tale,
The Fleetereturnes by night: After ten yeares
Troy is surprisde, and the proud
Greeks preuaile,
The Citty a burnt, and after tragicke broyles,
The
Greekes returne, laden with
Asiaes spoyles.
ARG. 2.
LAocon and
Polites, Hectors Ghost.
K.
Priams death,
Troyes Fate,
Crevsa lost.
1
TReason, whose horrid Front I must vnmaske,
And pluck the Vizor from thy Fiend-like face,
To paint thee out in coulours is my taske.
And by thy clouen foote thy steps to trace,
In which (I still Di
[...]ine assistance aske)
Hell gaue thee Byrth, and thou
[...] thy race
From the grand Prince of darkenesse, in whose Cell
Thou first tookst life, and
[...] returne to dwell.
2
T
[...]y thou wast strong, and thy defence was good,
But Treason through thy strength made bloody way,
Hadst thou not harbour'd Traitors, thou hadst stood,
And to thy age annext the longest day,
But Treason that most thirsts for Princes blood,
And of the hyest kingdomes seekes decay,
Enters thy Court, and couets to destroy
With thy proud buildings (euen the name of
Troy.)
3
Thy enuy stretcht to our Chast Maiden-Queene,
Q Elizabeth.
Whose Vertues, euen her foes could not but praise,
Yet gainst her graces didst thou Arme thy
[...],
Thinking by
Parries hand to end her dayes,
Doctor Parry.
But God and Truth (whose Patron she was seene,)
Against their Cannons did hye Bulwarkes raise,
Such Bullet-proofe, that neither priuate Traine
Could reach her,
[...]or the open arme of
Spaine,
4
What
Parry mist, fourteene fierce Traitors moe
Babington & his
[...]
Stir'd vp by
Rome, tooke Sacramentall vowes,
That God that kept her
[...] th'invasiue foe,
Against these bloody Butchers knit their browes;
Heauen gaue them all a fatall ouerthrow,
(For heauen no such
[...] act allowes:)
But to all them a blacke end hath appointed,
Whose bold hand dares to touch the Lords anointed.
5
If such
Aeneas and
Antenor were,
Percy and Catesby with their Con
[...]ederates.
That would for Coyne their King and Country sell,
Like plots with them our late Arch-traitors beare,
To whom for aye they may be ranked well,
Guido Vaux.
And thou (
Gui
[...]) that neuer yet foundst peere
(For a damn'd purpose) bred in Earth or hell:
He whom all pens with most reproaches taint
Symon, (with thee compat'd) is found a Saint.
6
He told a forg'd tale to a forraigne King,
With hope his King and Countries fame to raise;
But thou, from strangers didst thy complots bring,
He a strange Countrey, not his owne betraies,
[Page] The poysons from the head of Treasons spring,
False
Guide suckt, which fed him many dayes:
Treasons, Milkt, tasted, seemes to quench the thurst,
But once tooke downe, it
[...] men till they burst.
7
That fate which he and his confederates had,
May all receiue that beare their Treacherous mind,
Their purpose cuill, and their ends were bad,
A Fate to all men of their ranke affignd,
And that great King whose safety hath made glad
The hearts of three great Kingdomes,
[...] confind:
Long may he raigne, still guarded by those powers,
Whose hands Crowne Vertue, & her foes devowers
8
That the same state that was in hazard then,
May in this peacefull Kingdome long endure,
The King to guide his Peeres: Peetes, Common men:
Whose summon'd Parliaments may plant secure
Brittaines faire Peere, for many a worthy pen
To Chronicle: These acts black and impure,
We cannot iustly on
Aeneas lay,
In whose reproach we must our Censures stay.
9
Since some, whose hy workes to the world are deere,
Whose grauity we reuerence and admire
Virgils Eneids.
His Fame, vnto posterity would cleare,
And in his Innocent applause desire,
T'were pitty he that two
New-Troyes did reare,
As famous as that one consumde by fire:
(
Rome and our
London) for the double gaine
Of one lost
Troy, should weare a Traytors staine,
10
The bruised
Greekes
[...] with rough stormes of War,
By
Pallas art,
[...] a Timber-steede,
The horse of Troy.
Whose Backs Tree,
[...], of such huge vastnesse are,
That they in all
[...]
[...] wonder breed,
The Mountaine structure may be seene from far,
Which finisht, they amongst them haue agreed:
To stuffe his hollow
[...] with great store
Of Harnest men (so
[...] it on the shore.)
11
This done, their new-calkt Nauy they winde thence,
As if they to
My
[...]ne would backe repaire,
Beneath a promontory not farre thence,
They Anchor East, where they concealed are,
Now
Troy secure and dreadlesse of offence,
Looseth her selfe from her
Diurnall care:
Wide stand the Ports, the people yssue free,
Th'vnsouldierd fields and Deserts, plaine to see.
12
Where
Hector did
[...] inuade,
Where
Nestor pitcht, where
Troylus wan the day,
Where grim
Achilles log'd, where
Aiax made
His hot incursions, hewing out his way,
Where
Agamemnon with his forces plaid,
Where with his
[...] Vlisses lay:
Where such men fought, and such their valours tride,
Where some men conquered, others brauely dide.
13
Some wonder at
Myneruaes stately piece,
Saying t'were good to place it in her fawne,
Since the
Pelasgians are return'd to
Greece,
Their brazen horse may through their wals be drawne,
Other more staide know they are come to Fleece
And pillage them, this leauing as a pawne
Of some strange Treason, whose suspected guile,
Seemes to frowne inward, though it outward smile.
14
Thus is the multitude in parts deuided,
Some wonder at the Module being so rare,
Others, whose braines are with more i
[...]dgement guided,
would rip his wombe, which some desire to spare,
Ardent
Laocoon thinking to haue decided
This generall doubt (as one that all things dare)
Is seene from top of a high Tower discending,
A threatning speare against the
Machi
[...]e bending.
15
Crying from farre, you foolish men of
Troy,
Oh, can you trust the presents of a foe?
Who came from
Greece these high wals to destroy,
And ten whole yeares haue wrought your ouerthrow,
[Page 389] What can you in the
Danauish Treasons ioy?
Amongst you all, doth none
Vlisses know?
Either this swelling wombe is big with childe
Of armed
Greekes: or gainst your wals compild.
16
These brazen hoofes are made to
[...] your mure,
The trusty pale that hath so long defended
Your sonnes and wiues, where they haue liu'd secure,
Maugre the ruine by the foe intended,
Against your trusty Guards no wrong endure,
Whose Bulwarkt strength you haue so oft commended:
This said, against the brazen Steed he flung
A steele-head speare which through his entrailes rung
17
The trembling Mole from forth his Cauernes gaue
A horrid grone, a noyse of armor iar'd
Through his transfixed brest, (if ought could saue
Ill-fated
Troy) this had their ruin bard,
And they had ript the bowels of that graue,
From which the sad confused sound was heard:
Behold the
Dardan shepheards with lowd cries,
Before the King bring bound a
Greekish prise.
18
Dispersed
Troy assembles, and attend
Some vncoth Nouell, manacled now stands,
The surprisd
Greeke, his eyes to heauen extend,
To heauen he likewise would exalt his hands,
Whilst showers of teares downe by his cheekes discend,
And thus he sayes: Haue I
[...] the bands
Of armed
Greekes, to
[...] heere in
Troy?
And whom my foes haue spar'd, must foes destroy.
19
Relenting
Priam is soone mou'd to ruth,
His misery and teares woo him to passion:
He thinkes such lookes, such teares should harbor truth,
And pitties him, disguisd in wretched fashion,
With comfortable words he cheares the youth,
Askes him of whence he is, and of what Nation:
When to the passionate king he thus replide,
Priam commands, and I will nothing hide.
20
Who hath not heard of the Duke
Palimed,
By the
Pelasgian Princes doom'd to dye,
Whom false
Vlisses to the scaffold led,
Him aboue all the rest most loued I,
He was my Kinsman (but alas hee's dead)
With that, swift watry drops drill from his eye:
Him when I guiltlesse saw, condemn'd of Treason,
I mourn'd my Kinsmans death, (as I had reason)
21
Not could I keepe my tongue (vnhappy man)
But priuate whispering haue I breath'd gainst those,
That sought his death, to threat them I began,
Who to my friend had bin opposed foes,
Fox-like
Vlisses first, obseru'd me than,
Whom
Calchas seconds (why should I disclose
My miserable state) vnhappy wretch?
Since their reuenge as farre as
Troy doth stretch.
22
I had but dide there, and I heare am dying,
(Griefe stops his speech, he can no further speake)
Still what he wants in words, with teares supplying,
Till they with interruptions silence breake,
When after farre-fecht sighes himselfe applying
To further processe, (he proceeds:) the wreake
They threatned then, since now I must not flye,
Synons Tale
(Witnesse you
Troians, Synon cannot lye.
23
Oft would the warre-tyr'd
Greekes haue left this Towne,
But still the Morrow tempests them restraine,
Threatning their Nauy in the
Abisme to drowne,
And they attempt their wisht returne in vaine,
But most the angry
Neptune seemes to frowne,
When old
Epeus had vpon this plaine,
Builded this Monumentall Steed, of late
To the Deuinest
Pallas Consecrate.
24
Euriphilus is straight to
Delos sent',
To know the Oracles aduice heerein,
He thus returnes: A Virgins blood is spent
To appease the tempests when these warres begin,
[Page 391] And in their end the Gods haue like intent,
That you with sacrifice shall purge your sin:
In your pursute they humaine bloud desire,
and you with bloud must purchaso your retyre.
25
This when the vulgar knew, not one but feares,
Whose dreaded life offended
Phabus craues,
Oh! Hence proceedes the force of all my teares,
All prophesie his ruine, that depraues
The Oyle-tong'd
Greeke: Vlisses Calchas cheares,
To point him out that must appease the Waues:
Ten dayes he scilence kept, as loath to name,
His destin'd life, whom
Phabus seemes to clayme.
26
Scarce with
Vlisses clamors is he won
To sentence any: till with vrgence great,
He doomes me to the flames, the people ron
To see him that must tast the Alters heate,
all glad that this denounced doome is don,
That I th offended God-hood must intreat:
And that my bloudy slaughter answers all,
Which each one feard, vpon himselfe might fall.
27
The day was com, my brows with wreaths wer crown'd,
and I made ready for the sacred fire,
My hands behind (as you behold them) bound,
The Priest in his Pontificall attyre,
Ready to strike, and I incompast round
With fire and death, (yet Mortals life desire)
The truth Ile tell, alasse sinne cannot lie;
I lcapt from of the Altar, thence I fly.
28
Pursude in vaine, feare gaue my body winges,
In a deepe saggy couert, I obseure me,
Vntill the night had with her aiery stringes
Drawne her blacke vaile o're Heauens face, to assure me,
Hoping to hide me, till the
Argiue Kings
Had sayld from thence, but thinking to seeure me:
Poore wretch, I from the
Gracians fled a way,
and now (alasse)
[...] made the
[...] pray.
29
Whom neither Heauen, nor Earth, nor
Greece, nor
Tr
[...]y,
nor ayre, nor Sea, will take to their protection,
But all conspire poore
S
[...]non to destroy,
Then ayre, Come lend me part of thy infection,
Heauen, Earth, and Sea, all your
[...] powers imploy,
and like confederates
[...] in my deiection:
and then he beates his breast, weeps, sighes, & grones,
Whose griefe King
Pri
[...]m and all
Troy bemones.
30
The good old
Pri
[...]m bids his hands vnbind,
and cheares him thus: Of
Greece thou art no more,
Thou shalt be ours, thy Countrey hath resign'd
Thy life to vs, which freely we restore,
Then say; What meanes this Monster we here find
Vpon our Beach? Whom should this guist adore?
Or what Religion's int? Whence is he bred?
Or for what cause doth he our Confines tred?
31
When with his new loosd hands to heauen vpreard,
Thus
Synon: Witnesse you eternal Fires,
Thou
[...]
[...], which but late I feard,
and all you powers to whom our zeale aspytes,
That I hate
Greece, and
Troy that hath me cheard
I am ingra'st too,
Tr
[...]y hath my desires:
I am a Child of
Troy, Greece I desye,
Witnesse you Gods, that
Synon cannot lye.
32
The false
pel
[...]gians in great
Pallas
[...]
Her:
Diomed
[...]
[...] offended,
By stealing from her charge with guile vniust,
Herrare
Palladium for which she extended
Reuenge gainst
Greece: they to appease hir, must
By some Oblation see their guile amended:
That her commensed
[...] may be withdrawne
From them, whose violence spard not her
[...]wne.
33
And now to make the
[...] borne
Pallas smile,
Whose anger made the Tempests gainst them war,
Chalchas
[...] the high Equinall pile,
That his huge
[...] might all entrance bar,
[Page 393] Through your percullist Gates (such was his guile)
For should you on this Horse print the least
[...]
Of an offensiue hand (being for her made)
You by your
[...] haue your liues betrayd.
34
If you deny it entrance through your wals,
Or this vnweildy frame in ought despise,
Well guarded
Troy by
Pallas anger fals,
The
Greekes returne, and long-liu'd
[...] dies:
But if this Steede for whom the
[...] cals
Pierce through your
[...] mure, or if it rise
And mount aboue your wals, to
Pallas shrine,
Troy still shall stand, and
Greece the wracke is thine?
35
Priam and his consederate Kings shall then
To
Sparta, and
Meceane the
Greekes pursue,
Deuast their losty spyring Citti
[...]s, when
The clamorous Land shall their destruction rue,
Loosing by
Troy whole infinites of men,
Witnesse you Gods, poore
Synons words are true,
Such lookes, such teares, such protestations chiefe,
Wins in all
Troy remorse: the King beliefe.
36
What many a well-rig'd barke, and armed Keele,
What not the bloudy
[...]edge of ten whole yeare,
To make
Troy tast inconstant Fortunes wheele,
Vlisses wisedome, nor
Achilles Speare,
What not King
Diomeds through piercing Steele?
All this did periurd
[...] with a teare;
B
[...]old (whilst all the rowt on
Synon gaze)
a dread portent that doth all
Troy amaze.
37
Along the troubled Billowes towards the shore,
Two Blacke-scal'd Serpents on their bellyes glide,
at whose approach the foaming Surges rore,
These
[...]ery Serpents to the Beach applyde,
and in
Laocons bloud who that time wore
The Priest-hoods roabes, their arming Scales they dide:
Their winding traines, they with loud hissinges roule
About his breast, till they inlarg'd his Soule.
38
The Monster-multitude before dismayd
At the recourse of these infernall Snakes,
Thinke bold
Laocon to be iustly payd,
Because he yet his harmefull Iauelin shakes,
Some Cables fetch, some with their Leauers stayd
The Pondrous Engine which deepe
[...]urrowes rakes
Along the Earth: others the Wals hurle downe
To giue the Horse free passage to the Towne.
39
Wide stand the yron-bard gates, whilst all the rout
Buckle to worke, the fatall Muchine climes,
Th
[...]thronged Bulwarkes (big with Souldiers stout)
Ready to be deliuered: hallowed rimes,
The Virgins sing, and nimbly dance about,
Myneruas Steed, the wonder of these times:
Thinking themselues boue others highly blest,
That can be more officious then the rest.
40
Foure times the Brazen Horse entring, stuck fast
Anenst the ruinde guirdle of the Towne,
Foure times was armour heard (yet vnagast)
The fatall Beast with sacred wreathes they Crowne,
(Sunke in blind ignorance) and now at last,
Before
Mineruaes shrine, they place it downe:
In Himnes and Feasts the ominous day they spend.
Offring to her that must their liues defend.
41
Meane time heauen turnes. night from the Ocean fals,
Inuoluing with blacke darkenesse, earth, and ayre,
And call the
Gracian craft about the wals,
The scattred
Troians slumber, far from care,
and now his Pilots (great
Atrides cals,)
Who backe to
Tenedos with speed repayre:
The Vniuersall
Phalanx lands in hast,
And through the silence of the Moone are past.
42
Now startles
Synon, and a flaming-brand,
He wafts from top of one of
[...] Towers,
Which like a Beacon in the night must stand
To guide the
Greekes, and their nocturnall powers,
[Page 395] Then with a Key graspt in his fatall hand,
Feareless, he through the palped darknesse scowres
To the big bellied Stallion, turnes the spring,
and through the doore the Harnest
Grecians fling.
43
First, blacke-hayrd
Pyrrhus fixes in the ground,
His Oaken Speare, and from the loft he slydes,
Vlisses next, yet halting of his wound,
and then the younger of the two
Atrides:
Tysandar from the structure next doth bound
Thoas and
Athanas, two warlike guides:
With
Stheuelus downe by a Cable fall,
and bruisde with leaping, on the Pauement sprall.
44
Pelidus followes these, and then the man
That in his braine first cast this fatall mould,
Epeus th'enginer, whom
Synon than
Did in his blacke and penurd arm
[...]s in fould
Their sweatty browes, they with the darknesse fan,
Each chearing vp his Mate with courage bould:
Strip their bright Swords, by whose quicke glimering light,
They find their way in the darke star-lesse night.
45
The Citty sunke in Wine and Mirth they'nuade,
Slaughter the Watch that on the ground lie spred,
Then through the broken Wals (but late decayde)
The Generals Army is by
Synon led,
And
Agamemnons coulours are displayde,
Now tumults and confusions first are bred:
Hauocke begins, loude showtes and clamors rise,
Lifting their Tragicke vprore through the skyes.
46
Heauens lamps were halfe burntout, t'was past midnight
When to
Aeneas in his bed appear'd
Sad
Hector,
[...] and wan, full of affright,
His hayre clotterd with bloud, his ruffled Beard
Hectors ghost
Disordred, all those deepe caru'd wounds in sight,
Which in defence of
Tr
[...]y and his indeard:
Were graude vpon his flesh, behind him fall,
Those thongs, that drag'd him round about
Troyes wall.
47
Oh, how much from that great King-killer chang'd,
Hye spirited
Hector, when being proudly deckt
In great
Achilles spoyles, he freely rang'd
Through guards of Steele, whilst from his Helme reflect
Trophies of
Greece: Oh me! How much estrang'd,
From him that did all
Asiaes pride protect,
Euen to their Fleet the
Achiue Kings pursue,
And mongst their ships round Bals of Wild-fire flew.
48
When to the sleeping Prince approaching nye,
He with a sigh from his decpe intrailes fetcht,
Thus sayes. (Thou Goddesse sonne,
Aeneas flye)
And from these burnings, that by this are stretcht
Quite o're your glorious buildings, climbing hye,
Deliuer thee: the Arme of warre hath retcht
Euen to the Crest of
Troy, and with one blow,
Giuen it a sad and certaine ou
[...]throw.
49
Greece hath your wals, the Vniuersall roofe
Of
Troy is sunke and falne, her bearers fayld,
Destruction that hath houered long aloose,
Hath ceaz'd her towers, and her spires auayld,
Could might haue kept her, by the manly proofe
Of this right hand, the Prisoner had bin bayld:
But
Troy (alas) is sentenc'st, and must dye,
Then from her funerall Flames (
Aeneas flye.)
50
To thee her Gods and Reliques she commends
Thee, that must her posterity r
[...]uiue,
For though her glory heere in seeming end,
Yet dying
Troy in thee is kept aliue,
Now cleaues the earth, and the sad Ghost discends,
Aeneas with dull sleepe begins to striue:
And waking, heares a noise of clattering Warre,
And many
[...] Clamors,
[...] and farre.
51
When mounting on a Turret, he might spy
The Citty all on Flame, and by the light,
A thousand seuerall Conflicts: sparkles flye
As farre as to the Sea, the waues shine bright,
[Page 397] And now at length he sees,
Synon can lie,
His Treasons manifest, still this blacke night
Clamors of men, and Trumpets, clangors grow,
Whilst with warme recking blood the chanels flow.
52
Aeneas armes in hast, graspes in his hand
A two-edg'd Semiter to guard his life,
Knowes not to whom to run, or where to stand,
In euery
[...] is danger, rage, and strife,
Yet longes for skirmish: and on some proud band
To proue his strength, now whilst the tumults rife:
For since th'Achiue fires such splendor giue,
To dye in armes, seemes sweeter then to liue.
53
Behold, where from the forraine slaughter flying
Panthus Otriades.
Panthus Otriades, Priest of the Sunne?
Scoures through the streetes:
Aeneas him espying,
Cals to him thus. Whether doth
Panthus run?
What meane these flames, these grones of people dying?
This frightfull iarte of battailes new begun?
When
Panthus thus:
Aeneas lets away,
Of
Troy and vs, this is the latest day.
54
Troy was, and
[...] was, but they are past,
Great
Ihoue hath from th'earths bosome swept vs all,
Th'insulting
Greekes haue conquerd vs at last,
And forraine Steele now menases our wall,
The Brazen Horse that midst our Meure stickes fast,
Hath powrd an army forth: whole thousands fall
And drop downe from his sides, whilst
Synon stands
Warming amidst the flames his treacherous handes.
55
The Gates are ceasd, the broken wals made good
With bright Death-pointed Steele, Irruption's bard,
Behold my passage was Knee-deepe in blood,
Crossing the streete from great
Atrides guard,
Such as escape this purple falling flood,
Fyre or the Sword consumes, our choise is hard:
Ruine beguirts vs, and what most we feare
We cannot fly, death rageth euery where.
56
Now hurries strong
Eneas, madly faring,
Through flames, through swords, whether
Erinnis cals,
Eg'd on by rage and fury, no man sparing,
On euery side are fires, wounds, Clamors, brals,
To him arm'd
Ripheus ioynes (and wonders daring)
Iphilus, Hypanis, and
Dimas, fals
In the same tanke: youthfull
Chorebus tride,
Doth likewise glister by
Aeneas side.
57
Chorebus, who for faire
Cassandracs Loue,
Came from
Megdomia to the
Dardan broyles,
These seeking, flying death, all dangers proue,
And taske their valours to all desperate toyles,
To places of most slaughter they remoue,
Euen where the
Greekes commit most horrid spoyls:
Arm'd with this Saw; This onely Captiues cheares,
When safetie flyes, all-resting death appeares.
58
Thus seeke they certaine death amidst the hart
Of Flame-guilt
Troy, whilst the blacke fatall night
Flyes hood-winkt twixt the poles, her yron Cart
Rusty with darkenesse, oh what Mortall wight
Can halfe the terror of that houre impart,
Such howles, sighs, grones, wounds, slaughters & afright:
In euery street, Liues-blood, death, murder, feare,
The reeking Faulchion, and the fatall Speare.
59
With Arm'd
Androgeos they encounter first,
Androgeos.
Androgeos who mistakes them for his mates,
And cheares them thus, we haue already burst,
and made irruption through the batterd Gates,
Now let your Swords that for their liue-blouds thurst,
Glut them with purple healths, behold their Fates:
But when from them he lookes some fyre apply,
With armed hands vpon his traynes they fly.
60
And put them all to massacre: the whiles
Chorebus sayes. Some comforts in despaire,
Fortune vpon our first endeuours smiles,
The Foes are vanquisht, and we victors are,
[Page 399] Then come; Make vse of their
Pelasgian guiles,
Put on their armes, and to their Guards repayre:
Their proper armes shall gainst themselues contend,
Where vertue fayles, vse fraud, (to God and friend.)
61
With that he dons
Androgeos shining Caske,
Which like a Bearded Commet glisters farre,
The rest in forraine Helmes theyr faces maske,
And mingled with the
Greekes, began new warre,
Still Fortune smiles on their Nocturnall taske,
Where
Greekes with
Greekish armes confounded are:
And mongst their frighted guards, great vprore growes,
Since from their Friends, they cannot ken theyr Foes.
62
A thousand fall to Hell, a thousand fly,
Some to the Nauy, others to the shore,
and many Pale-fast
Greekes affray de to dye
Run to the Horse where they were lodg'd before,
and in his darke conceited Entrayles lye,
See fayre
Cassandra from the Temple dore,
Drag'd by blacke
Myrmidons: her Son espyes
Frightfull
Chorebus, and that way he flyes.
63
They after him, adismall conflict now
Growes in the entrance of the Temple, when
Theyr friends mistaking theyr disguised brow,
Route from the battayle, meetes by strength of men
Huge stones, and Webs of Lead stounding below
Their
Greece-arm'd Friendes, whose craft's deceiu'd agen:
(By Ignorance) they call theyr friends on hye,
and by theyr tongues the
gr
[...]cians them descry.
64
For now rough
Aiax reuels in the place,
The two
Atrides with their armed Bands,
And sly
Vlisses too: yet in the face
Of all theyr guards the bold
Chorebus stands,
The death of Chorobus.
Till number o're swayes might:
Migdoniaes race
Is now extinct by force of thousand hands:
Then
Ripheus fals, then is bold
Dimas brest
Through-pierst: so one by one decliue the rest.
65
Alone scapes bold
Eneas by a cry
Raisde at King
Priams Pallace, whether hying
More Mutiny and broyles he may espy,
More Tragicke sight of wretched
Troians dying,
The massacre seemes dreadfull in his eye,
Before the assaulted Gates are thousands lying:
The hauocke did so v
[...]olent appeare,
as had their bin no place of death but there.
66
The vntam'd
Mars vpon his Altars grones,
Hye crown'd in bloud: some
Greekes tho Pallace scale,
The Laders cleaue vnto the lettying Stones,
Whose Marble Collumns bend, and seeme to faile
Beneath the weight of fire and Steele at ones,
and still the Banicadoed Gates the' assayle:
Where able armed
Pyrrhus stands before,
Th'inflamed Porch (his armor slack't in gore)
67
The inclosed Princes broyle, doubly pend in
With flames and steele, inclosde on enery side
With eminent death, yet no irruption win
Though they di
[...]olue, the hye roofe beautified
With Gold and figures (which to touch were sin)
The
Geometricke ridge of Siluer tride:
Fires o're their heads, and drils downe by the wals,
Which scalds the Princes as it melting fals.
68
Sterne
Pyrrhus sweats, and with
Antomedon
His fathers Charioter assaults the place,
Scarse able to endure the armes they hau
[...] on,
So ouer-heat with Flames, in whose bright face
They stand with naked swords to gaze vpon
Those shrinking Monuments the fires imbrace:
at length with beames shocking by strength of hand,
They shake the wals, vnable to withstand.
69
Which tumbling in, like a Bay-window showes,
Whose gaping mouth seemes vast, (oh) now appeares,
The gorgeous Courts, whose floore each Lady strowes
With her torne garments, haire, and pearly teares,
[Page 401] Still, still, their shrickes and feminine clanger growes,
as the Breach waxeth, so increase their feares;
Their cries pierce heauen, slake Fire, and soften stones,
Yet mooue not
Pyrrhus and his
Myrmidons.
70
For neyther
Priams Guard, the doore of Brasse,
Nor trusty Marble can withstand the Foe,
But through them all by force of armes they passe
The heauy Gates, they from the henges throw,
Shiuering theyr plated leaues like paines of Glasse:
Which with the fury of theyr burnings glow:
and breaking in, the spacious Courts they fill
With bloudy Souldiers, who on all sides kill.
71
King
Priam, when he saw his Towne inuaded,
His
Troy sitting in fire, not to be freed,
and all those Gods that long had
Islium ayded,
Shrunke from his helpe, and in his fall agreede,
That his farre shining beames at last were faded,
and the Vniuerfall hart of
Troy must bleede:
The larum Bels of death on all sides ringing,
His shrieking wife and Daughter bout him clinging.
72
Expecting helpe from him in whom remaind
No helpe at all, he first dissolues in teares,
But casting vp his eye to haue complaind
His griefe to Heauen, his Sword and Helme appeares,
Hung by the Walles, with rust and Canker staynd,
Now burdens to his arme, in former yeares
Easy as Silkes, his griefe conuerts to rage,
He dons those armes, forgetfull of his age.
73
To whom the sad Queene with wet eyes thus sayes:
What meanes my wofull Lord in his weake hand
To tosse this burdenous Steele? There is no prayse
For men to fight, when the high Gods withstand,
Liu'd puissant
Hector in these Fatall dayes,
Yet could not his stronge Limbs protect thy Land:
Much lesse these Saplesse branches, poore and bare,
Then let the reuerent
Priam keepe his Chayre.
74
Heere at these holy Altars let vs cling,
The Gods, if they be pleasd, our liues may guard,
If not, we all will perish with the King,
and die at once, there shall not one be spard:
Behold, where broken through th'all-slaughtring ring
Of
Pyrrhus Myrmidons, Slaues rough and hard:
The young
Polytes well-ny breathlesse rons,
Polytes, one of
Priams best-lou'd Sons.
75
Through many an Entry and blind-turning path,
The burning
Pyrrhus hath the Lad pursude,
Longing vpon the Youth to vent his wrath,
now both at once before the King intrude,
The slaughterd-thoughted
Greeke, all bale and scath
In the Childs bloud his satall Blade imbrude
Which plucking from his wounds: in the same place
Sparkled the Sons bloud in the Fathers face.
76
To whom the arm'd King thus: You Gods aboue,
Whose diuine eyes all deedes of horror see,
as you are
[...]ust, and actes of pitry loue,
Behold how this rude man h
[...]th dealt by me,
What God (worthy Heauens Pallace) can approue
So blacke a deede as this, that's done by thee?
Before the Fathers eye the Child to kill,
The death of Polytes.
and in his face his Innocent bloud to spill.
77
Thou art a Bastard, not
Achilles Son,
Of some she Wolfe, or
Hyrcan Tygresse bred,
not (to be shrin'd in Heauen) would he haue don
So horrible a deede, so full of dred,
The shame and scandall thou this night hast won,
More then
Achilles honors shall be spred:
Thy Father honor'd, liude and dide in fame,
Dishonored thou, shalt perish in thy shame.
78
With that the Ia
[...]elin in his hand he threw,
Th'vnprofitable strength of his weake arme,
Though it had art to guid the Weapon true,
It wanted power to doe blacke
Pyrrhus harme,
[Page 415] Against the long skirt of his Targe it flew,
But the round Bosse, as if composd by charme,
Shooke off the ydle steele, which on the barre
That tooke the blow, scarce left the smallest scarre.
79
Inflamed
Pyrrhus thus to him replies:
Priam, thy soule shall straight discend to hell,
Euen to the place where great
Achilles lyes,
And my sad deeds vnto my Father Father,
With that (all wrath) in
Prisms face he flies)
The prostrate King at
Ihoues hye Altar fell:
With such hot rage he did the King pursue,
That though he mist, the whiske him ouerthrew.
80
When being groueled in
Polites gore,
Grim
Pyrrhus with his left hand takes the king,
By his white lockes (neuer prophand before,
His reuerent head against the ground to ding,
His proud right hand a smoaking Curtlax wore,
The death of Priam.
Which to perpetuall rest must
Priam bring:
With which against the good old King he tilts,
Till his hart bloud flowed much aboue the hilts.
81
This was old
Prisms Fate, his fatall end,
And ending glory, he that
As
[...] swayed,
Whose spreading Fame did through the earth extend,
Liu'd till he saw both him and his betraid,
Euen till he had no subiect, Sonne, or friend,
And saw
Troyes spyres euen with the groundsils laid,
Who now before
loues golden face lyes dead,
A namelesse coarse, a Trunke without a head.
82
All this, when good
Aeneas saw from farre
The ends of
Troy and
Priam: burnt, and slaine,
And no abatement yet of heat, or warre,
To his owne Pallace he returnes againe,
Where gathered on a heape together are,
His wife
Creausa showring teares amaine:
His seruants: old
Anchises, and his sonne
Askanius, these about
Aeneas ronne.
83
After some short discourse of their affaires,
Aeneas on his backe
Anchises takes,
For young
Askanius he his left hand spares,
In his right hand his guardant sword he shakes,
Creusa followes close, with teares and Prayers,
So through the fire and foe
Aeneas makes:
He with his sonne and Syre, the right way choose,
But in the darkenesse they
Creusa loose.
84
Whom missing, they
Creusa call alowd,
Creusaes death
Creusa, for whose safety they'l returne,
But sorne blacke Fate doth her in darkenesse shrowd,
Either
Troyes Funerall fires the Lady burne,
Else is she stifled in the Hostile crowd,
For her, the Father, sonne, and husband mourne:
And seeking her amidst the wrathfull flames,
Helenus.
They encounter
Helenus; who thus exclaimes.
85
Keepe on
Aeneas to the
Se
[...]n shore,
The heauens on
Troy and vs haue vengeance powred,
Onely thy ruind fortunes they restore,
They smile on thee, that haue on
Priam lowred,
The faire
Creausa thou shalt see no more,
Her, the none-sparing slaughter hath deuowred:
But in her stead, the Gods to thee shal giue
A wife, in whom deceased
Troy shall liue.
86
Follow yon starre, whether his Bearded beames
Directs thy Nauigation: on the fand
Thousands attend thy conduct through the streames,
Whom ruin spares, for thee and thy command,
Obserue yon blazing Meteor, whose bright gleames
Points thee vnto a rich and fertile Land:
Where, after many strange aduentures past,
Storme-driu'n
Aeneas shall arriue at last.
87
They to a spacious Climate thee restore,
Italy
A Prouince which the Gods and fates hold best,
The
Meditteren Sea beats on the shore,
With the
Scicilian waters, South and East,
[Page 405] The
Adriaticke Billowes North-ward rore,
With the hye
Alpes incompast on the West:
These Countries it containes,
Latium Liguria,
The Climates of
Campania and
Hetruria.
88
With Fertill
I stria and
Calabria,
Full peopled
Craunia and
Apentium,
Aemilia, else cald
Rhomandtola;
With Gallia, Cisalpina,
and Pycenum,
Iapidia, Vmbria,
and Venetia,
Flauinia, Apulia, Sumnium:
All these are
Italy, with great
Lucania,
Which shall in times to come be cald
Rhomania.
89
Farewell and thriue, but leaue vs to our Fates:
This saide, the Deuine
Helenus retires,
And shuts himselfe within those fatall gates,
Where none commands but foes and raging fires,
Aeneas hasts to meet his promist Mates,
And on the Coast their fellow-ship desires,
Who through the street hewes out a bloody tracke,
With old
Anchises hanging at his backe.
90
Still
[...]stium burnes, nor are the ruthlesse Flames
Yet quencht,
Ihoues sparpled Alters licke the blood
Of slaughtred
Priam, the bright vestall Dames
Are puld from
Pallas Statuë where they stood,
About their golden lockes (with lowd exclaimes)
Rough souldiers wind their armes, and through a flood
Of gore and teares, in which the pauement flowes,
Drag them along, that faint beneath their blowes.
91
The young
Astianax from that hye Tower,
The death of Astianax.
On which his Fathers valour oft he saw,
Is tumbled headlong on the rough-pau'd flower,
His all to bruised limbes lye broke and raw,
To wofull
Hecuba, in thrust a power
Of blood-staind
Greekes, without regard or awe,
and from her aged armes, snatcht by rude force
Polixena, whose beauty begs remorse.
92
Shees hurried to
Achilles tombe, where stands
Sterne
Neptolemus, from top to toc
Satued in blood and slaughter, in both hands
Wauing a keene glaue, Crimsond in the foe,
To bind with Cords her soft armes he commands,
That more red liues may on his Faulchion flow:
The death of Polyxeua.
There the bright Mayde that bands did ill become,
He piece-meale howes vpon
Achilles tombe.
93
Thus is King
Priam and Queene
Hecubs race,
Extinct in dust, young
Palidore alone,
The youngest Lad is with the king of
Thrace
Left in great charge, with Gold and many a Stone
Polymnestor K. of Thrace.
Beyond all rate, but
Polymnestor base,
Hearing the pride of
Troy was spent and gone,
False to the world, and to his friend vntrew,
The death of Polidore.
To gaino that wealth, the louely Infant slew.
94
Whose death when
Hecuba reuenged had,
By tearing out the periur'd Tyrants eyes,
First she records the beauty of the Lad,
Then all the glories she beneath the skies
Possest before, which makes her Franticke-mad,
On her sloine husband, daughters, sonnes, she crics:
Troy she bewaild, and fatall
Greece she curst,
The death of Hecuba
Till her great heart (with griese surcharged) burst.
95
Ten yeares, ten months, twelue dayes this siege indured,
In which of
Greece before the Towne were slame,
The number of Greckes & Troians slaine at the siedge.
Fourescoute hundred and sixe thousand, all inured
To steely warre: Of
Troians that maintaine
The honour of their Citty, well assured,
(Besides the number that were prisoners tane)
Six hundred fifty, and six thousand tride,
Omitting those that in the last night dide.
96
Chiualrous
Hector voyd of fraud or slight,
Eighteene great Kings slew by his proper hands,
No aduantagious oddes he vsd in fight,
Therefore his fame spreds farre, through forraigne lands,
[Page 407] Three Kings to do the amorous
Paris right
Fell by his Bow, next rankt
Achilles stands:
Who (besides
Troylus and great
Hector) slew
Seauen puissant Kings at
Troy (if Fame speake true)
97
Foure Kings beside the
Sagitary fell
By
Diomed, two by
Aeneas lost
Their precious liues, though many moe fought well,
Their warlike deeds are not so farte ingrost,
Blacke
Pyrrhus acts aboue the rest excell,
Who thinking mongst them to be praised most:
Three Royall liues his Tragicke wrath obayd,
Ironia.
An aged King, a Woman, and a Mayd.
98
Not how two worthy
Greekes in words contended,
Who should the rich
Vulcanian armor haue,
Ouid metam
[...].
Now how from
Aiax, who had
Greece defended,
Th'impartiall Iudges to
Vlisses gaue,
To proue that Counsell aboue strength extended,
And had more power the
Argine Campe to saue:
In griese of which great losse,
Aiax grew mad,
Slaine by the sword that he from
Hector had,
The death of Aiax.
99
Nor of
Vlisses trauels twice ten yeares,
Nor of his loue with
Circe the faire Queene,
Who by her spels transform'd him and his Pecres,
And kept him thence, where he desird t'haue beene,
With faire
Penelope, Fam'd mongst the spheares
In liuing chast: though Princes full of spleene
Possest her kingdome, and her pallace ceaz'd,
VVhom (wanting power) she by delaies appeasd.
100
Nor how he after twenty winters came,
Telegonus son to Vlisses and Circe, otherwise cald Calipso.
And in disguise his constant Lady proued,
How he by armes releast the beautious Dame,
And all her suiters from his Land remoued,
Vlisses slain by his Bastard son Telegonus.
Nor how
Telegonus won with the Fame
Of him whom most the witch
Calipso loued
From his faire Mother
Circe himselfe vvith-drevv,
And vnavvares his Royall Father slevv.
101
Nor how King
Naulus laide Traines on the Seas,
To a
[...]enge him on the
Gracians for his sonne
Palamides, whose death did much displease
The aged Prince, since twas by treason donne,
Nor how such wandering
Greekes as he could ceaze,
Who on his shores their ship-wrackt vessels ronne,
Naul
[...]s destroyd, and vnto ruine brought,
Since they his sonnes deere life esteemed nought.
102
Nor how King
Agamemnon home returning,
Was by his faire wife
Clitemnestra slaine,
The death of Ag
[...]memnon
How false
Egistus in the Queenes loue burning,
Plotted with her to shorten the Kings raigne,
Nor bow
Horestes for his Father mourning
Grew mad, and slew
Egistus that had laine
The death of Cletemenestra
With his faire Mother, whō when he had caught her,
Vnchild-like he did with his owne hands slaughter.
103
Nor how blacke
Pyrrhus Hellens daughter stal
[...]
The faire
Her mione, she that before
Was to
Horestes troth'd, and should
Sance fayle,
Haue bin espousd to him, who at the doore
Of
Delphos Templeflew him without blae,
The death of Pytrhus.
Staining
Apoltos shrine with
Pyrrhus gore:
Not how that face for which the whol world wrangled
The death of Hellen.
To see it chang'd with age, her selfe she strangled.
104
Nor how the
Greekes after their bloody toyles,
Antenor left to inhabit raced
Troy,
And after th'end of their sad Tragicke broyles,
All
Asiaes wealth within their flect inioy,
Robbing the Towne of all her richest spoyles,
Whose hye Clowd-peircing spyres the flames destroy,
nor how
Aeneas doth his forces gather,
And ships with his young son, and aged Father.
105
Rigging to soa these two and twenty sayle,
That fetcht the fire brand that all
Troy inflamd,
The selfe-same shippes in which the
Troian stale
The
Spartan Queene, gainst whome all
Greece exclaimd,
[Page 409] Nor of Queene
Didoes loue and Tragicke bate,
Nor of
Aeneas trauels nobly fam'd:
Nor how
Andromache was Captaine led,
Left to the hot lust of the Conquerors bed.
106
With whom
Cassandra was inforst to goe
With
Helenus that kend deuinest things,
And al these sad proceedings did fore-show,
and propheside to
Troyes confedered Kings,
Nor of King
Di
[...]meds sad ouerthrow,
Of
Albions Isle first knowne, my Muse next sings,
Her Chariot now I can no further driue,
Brittaine from conquerd
Troy, we next deriue.
Dolopes are a people of
Thessaly, in the borders of
Phthiolis, out of which prouince
Vlisses made choyce of his Guard.
Pallas whose name we have often vsed, some take to be the
Pausa. in Atticis Heredotus in Melpom. Apollonius lib. 4. Arg. nanc. Daughter of
Neptune and
Tritonis, and liued in the time of
Giges. Others hold her to be sprung of
Ihoues braine, as wee haue before remembred.—
Palluda quandam
Cum patris è capite exilijt Clarissi
[...]a patuam
lauerunt Tritonis aquae.
The like many others affirme, as also that when she leapt out of
slefichorus Lucia
[...]s.
Ihoues brain, at the saide time it rained a shewer of Gold on the Earth. Of her birth many writers differ, some affirme her
Strabo. lib. 14. to be the Daughter of
[...]riton: others to berather the Daughter of
[...]upiter & Thetis: Others of
Craunus, differing from
Apollodor
[...]s. Athenodor
[...]
[...]izantius. zozes Cic. de nature deorum their opinions, therfore I hold with
Cicero, who auers, that there were more of the names. One of the Mother of
Apollo, a second borne by
Nyle. and adored of the
Egyptians, a third of the braine of
[...]upiter, a fourth of
Jupi
[...]er and
Ceriphe, the Daughter of
Oceanus, whom the
Arcadians call
Cerin, and the Inuentor of the Chariot. A fift that was supposed to kill hir Father, to perserue her virginity.
Pallas and
Minet
[...]a were one, she was also by some called
Callimachus in Himn. Homer. Simonides Coeus 2. geneal. Isacius. Hor
[...] I. carnium
T
[...]iloma. Ihouis filia gloriosa Tritonia.
Both
Greece and
Troy highly honered her, she is saide to inuent Armes, and to haue aided her Father
J
[...]piter in the destruction of, the
Tytanoyes, which the poets call
Gigomantichia. Of whom it is thus remembred.
Palluda bellorum studijs Cautanus amicam è Ihoue progenitam magno quae destruit vrbes.
Stesicherus.
[Page 410] And of another thus:
Sed prius illa fugis fum
[...]tia soluit equorum
Calli
[...].
Colla lauans alti fluctibus Oceani.
And so much of
Pallas or
Minctua, to whom the
Troians dedicated their chiefe Temple.
Migdonia is a part of
Phrigia, next
Troas by the Riuer
Rhindacus, of this Countrey Prince
Chorebus, that loued
Cassandra, was called
Mygdonides.
The
Scaean sbore:
Scaea is a gate of
Troy, opening to the West, where
Laomedon was buried, of that Gate the Sea & shore adiacent, beare the name of
Scaea.
The Names of the
18. Kinges slaine by
Hector, are thus, though somewhat corruptly by an
[...]ient Writers remembred: K.
Archilochus, K.
Protesilaus, K.
Patroclus, K.
Menon,
Dares. Dictes. K.
Protenor, K.
Archimenes, K.
Polemon, K.
Epistropus, K.
Ecedius, K.
Doxius, K.
Polixenus, K.
Phibus, K.
Anthiphus, K.
Cenutus, K.
Polibetus, K.
Humerus, K.
Fumus, K.
Exampitus Achilles slew 7. Kings, K.
Cupemus, King
Yponeus, K.
Plebeius, K.
Austerus, K.
Cymonius, K.
Memnon, K.
Neoptolemus, besides
Hector, Troylus, and
Margareton, with other of
Priams Bastard Sonnes.
Some likewise, contrary to the assertion of
Ouid and others, affirme that
Paris slew the Emp.
Palumides, Aiax and
Achilles. Aeneas slew K.
Amphimachus, and K.
Mereus, the faire Greeke whom
Homer so much loued.
[...]yrrhus the son of
Achilles, slew K.
Priam, an aged man, Queene
Penthisilea, awarlike woman,
Polytes a young Lad, and
Polyxena a beauteous Maide. K.
Diomed slew the
Sagittary, K.
Antipus, K.
Escorius, K.
Obstin
[...]us, and K.
Protenor. Many others were slaine in the disordred battailes, but how, or by whom, it is not particularly registred. Of
Vlisses loue to
Circe Ouid in diuers places toucheth it, part whereof I h
[...]e thus Englishe. (
Calipso as they on the sea banke stood,
2. De Arte Amand.
Casting her eyes vpon the Neighbour flood,
Desires the acts and bloudy deeds to beare,
Done by
th'Odrisean Captaines sword and speare,
When holding twixt his fingers a white wand,
Vlisses & Circo
What she requests he drawes vpon the sand,
Heres
Troy (quoth he) (for here the Towne is ment)
Thinke
Simois that, Imagin this my Tent,
Here
Scithian Rhesus Tents are pitched hie,
This way his Horsemen slaine, returned I.
[Page 411] Here
Dolon dyde, when on the suddaine
[...]oe,
A climbing Waue the shewers doth ouerthrow,
And as the drops vpon his worke doth fall,
It washt away his Tents, his Troy, and all:
To whom the Goddesses dares
Vlisses trust
These sencelesse violent waues that are so curst,
And darestthou with these waters be annoyd,
By whom such great Names are so soone destroyd?
How could her magicke potions
Circe please,
De
[...] remedio Amoris lib. 1.
When
[...]ise
Vlisses Ships float on the Seas,
All exorcisms the louing Witch doth try,
To stay the Greekes, whilst he away doth fly.
All Spels and Charmes the louing Witch assaide,
That such hot flames might not her thoughs inuade,
But spight the cunning Hag, and charme her best,
Vlisses flies, Loue scornes to be suppr
[...]st:
She that Mens shapes could from themselues estrange,
Had not the power her owne desires to change.
Tis sayd, that when
Vlisses would away
With such like words she did intreat his stay:
What I hop't earst, I doe not now intreat,
That you with me would make a lasting seate
And be my Husband, yet if I my race
Call but to minde, I might de serue that place.
Despising me, a worthy Wife you shunne,
A Goddesse, and the Daughter of the Sunne,
All that I beg, my humorous Loue to feede,
Is onely this: you would not make such speede.
Stay but a while, it is an easte taske,
What lesse thing can you grant? What lesse I aske?
Behold, the deepe Sea rageth:
Neptune feare,
Stay till a Calme, and then begin to steare,
Why shouldst thy fly? Thy fore sheate, and thy Mizen,
Why swell they with the Wind? No
Troy is risen,
For thee againe to sacke, heare are no brals,
No man thy Mates, and thee to battaile cals:
Heere true Loue raines, heere peace is firmely grounded,
In which my selfe, and onely I am wounded,
My heart is thine, and shall be thine for ay,
And all my Land is in thy Kingly sway:
She speakes, he lancheth, and the selfe same wind,
Mm 2
[Page 412] That fils his sayles, blowes thence the words and mind.
Of
Circe, otherwise cald
Calisso, hee begot
Telegons, who
Zczeshistor. 16. Chil. 5. Hesiodusin Theog. Homerus libr. odiss. Dionisius Milctus. afterward unawares slew his Father
Vlisses. Shee was the Daughter of the Sun and
Perses. Others haue imagined hir the Daughter of
Hecate, or of
Aeeta: others to bee the Daughter of
Asteripes and
Hiperion, as
Orpheus in
Argonantis.
Aeetae affinis coniunctaque sanguine, solis
filia quam proprio dixerunt nomine Circen
Astropey, patuus Hiperiony est auus, illa, &c.
She had by
Vlisses these sons,
Agrius & Latinus: Telegons
Hesiodus in Theog onea. Lycophron. and
Auson, of whom
Ausonia (alias Italia) bears the Name, with
Casiphon, with
Marsius, of whom the
Marsiaus tooke Name, and
Rhomanus: Her Toomb was in one of the
Pharmacusan Islands, not far from
Salamine.
Diomedes, the manner of whose death wee haue not touched
Strabo lib. 9. Tymaus siculus in our History, was kild by
Danaus, whose Countrey hee had before freed, and in the same slaine a huge Dragon, vvho threw his body with all the statues that were reared to his honor (Ingratefully) into the sea where they perished.
Of
Clitemnestraes Adultery
Ouid saith:
De arte Amandi. 2. De remedio Amoris. I.
Whilst
Agamemnon liud with one contented,
His Wife liude chast, and neither it repented.
His secret blowes her heart did so prouoke,
VVanting the Sword, she with the Scabberd stroke:
She heares of
Criseis, and the many Iarres
About
Lyrnesis, to increase the warres,
And therefore meere reuenge the Lady Charmes,
To take
Thiestes in her amorous Armes.
And in another place;
VVhy could not his blind lusts
Aegistus bridle?
will you needs know, th' Adulterer was still Idle,
When others laboured
Islion to annoy,
And lay strong siedge about the wals of
Troy,
Abroad he war'd not; nor at home he law'd,
His thoughts no nauall office could applaud:
what he could doe he did, (for so it prou'd)
Least he should nothing doe, he therefore lou'd,
So is this loue begot, so is he bred,
So cherisht, so at length be gathers head,
The end of the 15. Canto.
Argumentum
HAuing the sight of our wisht harbor gaind,
The yeares from
Brute to Christ: what famous Kinges
Gouernd in
Britan, & how long they raignd,
From Christ to
Norman William, and what things
Of specill note were in their da
[...]es containd,
In a briefe Chronicle, our Muse next sings:
Much matter in few words: swift runs our Glasse,
We many Ages in one instant passe.
ARG. 2.
A Genealogie exactly found,
From the first man, to
Norman Williā crownd.
1
ADam
got Seth: Seth, Enos: Enos, Cayne,
Cayne,
got Melaliel: Iareth
next begon,
From
Iareth Enoch, that to Heauen was tane,
He got
Methusalem, whose line doth ron
To
Lamech: of him
Noah, and from
Noah came
Ihapheth: then
Cichem, who was
Iapheths Son:
Cichem
got Cipre: Cipre, Creete,
and so
Creete, Saturne: from whose braunch great
Ihoue doth
grow.
2
Dardanus is immediate Heyre from
Ihoue,
Dardanus Son to Jupiter and Electra.
And by
Candame, got
Erichthonius,
Erichthon Tros: Tros Ilion: next him stroue
Laomedon, and he got
Priamus,
And when the
Greekes from
Troy Aeneas droue,
He by
Creusa had
Askanius:
Who after (
Carthaginean Dido past)
Vp through the Riuer
Tiber
[...]ayles at last.
3
At
Hostiaes Port (the place the Gods behight)
Aeneas Landes:
Euander him receiues
The Latines King, whose Daughter at first sight
Aeneas loues, and for her sake, bercaues
The
Tuskayne King of life in single fight,
Turnus King of Tuskaine
Turnus being dead, the fayre
Lauinia leaues
Her virgine vowes, by whom the
Troian Prince
Siluius begot: and
Siluius, Brutus since.
4
Brutes Mother in her painefull throwes deceast,
(H
[...]) his glancing Shaft his Father slew,
For which with melancholy griefes infest
From
Italy, the Prince himselfe withdrew,
Ten thousand voluntary men vnprest,
Consort him, strange aduentures to pursue:
Whom
Corineus with many
Troians more
Mcetcs, and assists, new Countries to explore.
5
Brute (
Grecian Pandras who denide him way,
And through his spacious Kingdome passage free)
O're-comes in battaile, but denyes to stay
Till he more Coasts and various Clymats see,
Fayre
Innogen, a Virgin fresh as May,
Innogen Daughter to Pandras.
He marrieth, and with
Pandras doth agree,
For her rich Dower to haue a royall fleete,
Well furnisht for his Trayne: with all things meete.
6
He past
Alcides Pillers, euen to
Guall,
Landing in
Guien, Guffor the proud King
Denyes prince
Brute to hunt, but (
Mauger all)
He chac't his Deere, and made his Buckes to spring,
[Page 415] Thence,
Albion he discries, like a white wall
Washt with the sea, and longs his fleet to bring
To a safe Harbour, where he might suruay,
The long sought Isle where he his boues must lay.
7
When
Ayoth iudged
Israell, in the yeare
Hugh Genesis and Harding.
Threescore and twelue, of his command and state,
Aegiptian Dana
[...] daughters lauded heere
After long search, who for they had of late,
Theyr nine and forty husbands by th'austere
Iniunction of their Sire, brought to sad Fate:
Albion of Albania the eldest Sister.
Were in a Mastlesse ship to exile throwne,
And landinging heere, cald this Isle
Albion.
8
Some say of these
Viragoes spirits begot
Gyants, that were of huge and monstrous size,
The yeare of the world aboue the line./ The yeare before
[...]hri: vnder the line.
Who when they grew to stature, spared not
Asfinity, for Sonne with Mother lies,
Brother with Sister: so the learned
Scot
Marian, doth in his Chronicles comprize:
And of these lustfull Ladies, in small while,
Twelue thousand Gyants peopled this large Ile.
9
PRince
Brute with
Corineus doth
Albion enter,
Brute.
At
Totnes, thirty monstrous Gyants kils,
And after much and dangerous aduenter,
2855./1108.
Builds
London (cald new
Troy:) his Throne he fils
Twenty foure yeares, then payes his last debenter
To Nature;
Brittaine he to
Locrine wils:
Scotland to
Albanact, Wales, Camber swayes,
2878./1085.
Israell was iudg'd by
Samuell in their dayes.
2
Locrine raign'd twenty yeares, his wife him slew,
Locrine.
Because he
Sabrine lou'd, and her forsooke,
2889./1074.
Mother and Child bold
Guendolina threw
Into the
Seuerne streames, who there name tooke
From
Sabrine. In his dayes young
Dauid grew,
2889./1704.
And with a Sling the great
Goliah strooke:
At
Locrines death, sterne
Guendoline begun,
Guendoline.
Her husband she succeeds; and her, her Sonne.
3
Madan rul'd forty yeares, and in his dayes
Madan.
Was beautious
Absolom by
Ioab slaine,
Note: 2916./1047.
Memprisius twenty yeares the Scepter swayes,
Me
[...]prisius.
Procuring first his Brother
Manlius bane
Note: 2954./1009.
Whom
Madan lou'd, and had intent to raise:
In Lust and ryot he consum'd his raigne,
For which iust heauens their righteous vengeance powred,
Memprisius hunting was by Wolues deuoured.
4
Him his sonne
Ebranke in the Throne succeeds,
Ebranke.
Who gouernes threescore happy Summers thorow,
2972./991.
Famous for many charitable deeds,
He builded
Yorke, Dunbar, and
Edenborowe,
Brute Green
Next him
Brute Greene-shield don'd th'Imperiall weeds,
After twelue happy yeares his subiects sorrow
3033./930.
For his vntimely Fate, and in his raigne,
B'Elias prayer the Priests of
Ball were slaine.
3034./929.
5
L'Eill, Brutes sonne, raignd fiue and twenty yeares
Leill. 3046/917.
And
Carleil built, then did his seat resigne
To young
Lud Hurdibras, lou'd of his Peeres,
Lud Hurdibras.
Who gouernd
Britaines Scepter twenty nine,
He
Winchester and
Canterbury reares,
With
Shafts-bury, then seekes a Throne deuine:
3071/892.
Whose Obits were in
Brittaine long bemoned,
3097/896
The propher
Zachary in his dayes was stoned.
6
BLadud, Luds sonne raignd next, and
Bath erected,
Bladud.
A Sorcerer, and did attempt to flye,
And hauing twenty yeare the Realme protected,
He brake his necke downe from a Steeple hie,
3109./854.
Amos and
Amazia were directed
In those dayes by the spirit of Prophesie.
Leir.
Leir next him, in whose time (as Bookes say)
3123/840.
Ionas three dayes in the Whales belly lay.
7
Leir built
Leicester, forty yeares was Crownd,
Famous in his three Daughters and their Loue,
The youngest most suspected, faithfull found,
And they that promist most, least thankefull proue,
[Page 417] Kindest
Cordeilla that did most abound
Cordeilla.
In filiall zeale next
Leir sits aboue:
1358./805.
Morgan and
Cunedadgius two false Peeres,
Morgan. Cunedadgius
Depose their Aunt after fiue vnhappy yeares.
8
They ioyntly raigne, till
Cunedadgius slew
His Brother
Morgan in
Glamorgan-sheere,
3162./801.
(From whom the Title of that Country grew)
And after gouernd three and thirty yeare,
Now
Naum preacht:
Riuallo doth pursue
Riuallo.
The Kingdome next, a Prince that had no peere:
In his dayes Propheside,
Esay, Micheas,
3196./767.
The Prophets
Adad, Amos, and
Oseas.
9
Forty six yeares he gouernd: In his raigne
Rome was first built, wise
Sibell gaue forth Sawes,
King
Ezechy by God heal'd of hispaine,
Had fifteene yeares life promist: for some cause
The Sun full ten Degrees, turnd backe againe:
Thales Milesius to the
Greekes gaue Lawes:
In
Brittaine it raind blood,
Riuallo wained,
Gurgustius.
And eight and thirty yeares
Gurgustius raigned.
3242./721.
10
Now
Ioel taughts, his Iliads
Homer wrate,
3252/711.
And
Glaucus Chius Sodering first inuented,
Sicillius next
Gurgustius takes the state,
Sisillus.
Forty nine yeares he gouernes well contented,
3279./084.
Amon in
Iuda raind:
Zaleucus sate
Iudge on his sonnes eye:
Ieremy lamented
For the sad Tragedy of King
Iosias,
3299/668.
Now flourish
Olda, Baruch, Sophonius.
11
Now
Phalleris in
Agrigentine swayde,
3311./652.
And thrust
Perilles in his brazen Bull,
To tast the torment he for others made,
Iago next
Sisillius makes vp full
Iago.
Twenty fiue yeares, then in his Tombe was laide,
Nabuchadnezar sought to disanull
3327./636
The
Hebrew Lawes.
susannaes fame increased,
By th'Elders wrongd, by
Daniels doome released.
12
Fifty foure yeares
Kinimachus was knowne
3351./612.
After
[...]ago in the
Brittish Chaire,
Kinimachus
Arion with his Harpe was o're-Boord throwne,
Whom through the Seas the pittious Dolphin bare:
Bell was cald God, and fore him
[...]rumpets blowne,
And the three Children in the robes they ware
3369./594.
Cast in the fiery Furnace, now I gesse,
Liud
Solon: Sapho the sweet Po
[...]tesse.
13
Annaximander th'
Horoscope first made,
Gorbodug.
Aesope in Birds and Beasts, first figured men:
Next King
Kinimachus, Gorbodug swayde
3404/559.
The
Brittish Scepter: In the Lyons den
Daniell was cast. Now
Cyrus did inuade
3417./546.
Cressus of
Lydia, t'was the season when
Zacharias, Aggeus, Malack Propheside,
3430./533.
And the chast
Lucresse by her owne hand dide.
14
Next
Gorbodug, Ferrex and
Porrex raigned,
Forrex
After fiue yeares, bold
Porrex Ferrex slew.
For which their Mother
Porrex much disdained,
Porrex
And in his blood did her blacke hands imbrew,
3467./496.
After their death sedition was maintained
Full one and fifty yeares, whilst no man knew
Th'imediate heyre, and whilst these wars were norisht
3475./488
Darius, Xerxes, and Queene
Hestor flourisht.
15
Th'
Athenian Sophocles, a Tragicke Poet,
Plato, Cratinus, Aristarchus, were
3513./450,
All Commicke Writers, as their workes best show it:
Empedocles of
Athens, did acquiere
Musickes full ground, and made the world to know it,
Parmenides made Lodgicke first appeare:
Which in Mount
Cancasus he first deuised,
3522./441,
Esdras the Scribe the Scriptures now comprised.
16
MVlmutius Dunwallo, sonne and heyre
To
Cloten Duke of
Corweyle's next instated,
Mulmutius.
He did the foure broad High-wayes first repaire,
First Crown'd:
Paules Church first built and consecrated,
[Page 419] And after forty yeares from
Brittaines Chaire
To a new Throne in hea
[...] he was translated,
3550./413.
Now
Socrates th'
Athenian hea
[...] charmes,
Demosthenes, famous for Arts and Armes.
17
BEline and
Bren the Brittish Crowne deuide,
Beline. Bren.
Being by their Mother (after wars) attoned,
Whilst
Bren in forraigne Armes his valour tride,
Beline built
Belinsgate: all
Denmarke groned
Beneath his yoake,
Bren (to the
Galles alide,)
3563./400.
Sackt
Rome, burnt
Delphos, and was after stoned,
With Hayle and Thunder-stroke, much blood was spilt,
In
Italy ten stately Townes he built.
18
Twenty sixe yeares hetwixt them they supply
3568./395.
The Crowne and Sceptet:
Dionisius raignd
In
Sicily, Dam
[...]n and
Pythias try
Their mutuall friendship.
Xenoph
[...]n maintained
His schoole in
Athens, Plat
[...] prized higher
His
Accademy rear'd: Now was ordained
3586./377.
For King
Mansolus, by the
Carian Qneene,
A stately Tombe rankt mongst the wonders nine.
19
GVrguintus, Belins sonne, nin
[...]teene yeares made
Gurguintus.
The
Brittaines homagers, by euen Tradition,
3588/375.
Aristotle liu'd, whose Fame shall neuer fade,
Sonne to
Nichomachus, a great Physition,
3595./368.
Now
Macedonian Phillip gan t'inuade
His neighbour-Kings in many an expedition,
3604/359.
The Noble
Marcus Curtius for
Romes sake,
Arm'd at all points, leapt in the
Curtian Lake.
20
GVintheline six and twenty yeares made good
Guintheline.
His right in
Brittaine, Mercia his faire wife
3607/356.
De
[...]isde the
Mercian Lawes: by
Tibur flood
The clouds raind stones: after
Darius strife,
3628./311.
Which ended in eff
[...]sion of much blood,
Cecilius. Kimar.
By poyson
Alexander lost his life:
Next
Guintheline, seauen yeares
Cecilius raigned,
Next him three yeares
Kimar the state maintained.
3633./330.
21
Nine yeares
Elanius raign'd,
Morindus eight,
Elanius. Morindus.
Deuour'd of a Sea-monster: In their dayes
Onias sonne of
Taddus, reacht the height
3,652./311.
Of the Priests Office:
Gorbomannus swayes
Gorbomanus 3660.
Eleauen full yeares, a Prince assisting right,
3660./303.
(
Symon Onyas sonne), the
Habrewes raise
Archigall.
To the Priest-hood, next iust
Gorboman,
Fierce
Archigall to Tyranize began.
3671./292.
22
After fiue yeares depos'd, his second Brother
Succeeded in the stile of
Elidure,
Elidure
A vertuous Prince, there sat not such another
In
Brittaines Chaire, in life seuere and pure;
Fiue yeares himselfe did
Archigallo smother,
3676./287
And his deposing patiently endure:
At length by
Elidurus met and knowne,
Archigallo.
To
Archigallo. he resignes his Throne.
3681./282.
23
Ten yeares the twice-Crown'd
Archigallo now,
Gouernes the State in Honour, and then dying,
To
Elidure againe the
Brittans bow,
Elidure.
After two yeares his Brothers him defying,
Keepe him in bonds: the
Brittaine Peeres allow,
3691./272.
Their double rule, nine yeares their Conquesttrying:
Vigenius. Peridure.
Vigenius and
Peridure are past,
3693./270.
And
Elidure the third time Crown'd at last,
Elidure.
24
Raigning foure yeares. In this forepassed state
Liu'd
Epyre pyrrh
[...]s, and
Lisimachus,
3702./261.
The High-priest
Eleasar chus'd oflate,
Receiues
th'Egiptian league: Now breath
Seleucus
And
Ptolomy; now by the
Roman Senate
Siluer was coyned first,
Theos-Antiochus
3684./279.
In
Syria raign'd, blood sprang out of a Well,
And from the Clowds Milke in abundance fell.
23
MAnasses liu'd high Priest among the
Iewes,
3705./258.
Ten yeares ruld
Gorboman, Morgan
[...],
Gorboman. Morgan. Emerianus.
Emerianus next to him, pursues
The Diadem: a Tyrant full of spleene,
[Page 421] After seauen yeares deposd:
Inall insues,
3736./227.
A temperate Prince, who twenty yeares was seene
In
Brittaines Throne:
Amilchar Carthage swaide,
Illyrian Teuca
[...]id proud
Rome inuade.
3756./207.
26
RImo raignd sixteene yeares, bold
Hanniball
Rimo.
And
Scipio fought, Wise
Cato liu'd in
Rome:
Next
Rimo King
Geruntius they install,
Geruntius
Him after twenty yeares his Lords intoome,
The losty
Spaniards from
Romes Empire fal,
And after stand to
Fuluius Flaccus doome:
3771/192
Ten yeares
Catellus raign'd: the
Iewes were foyld,
Catellus
And by
Antiochus Gods Temple spoyld.
3790./173.
27
The Mother and her seauen sonnes Martird were,
3795./168.
The worthy
Iudas Machabeus fought
Coill.
Gods battailes,
Coill raigned twenty yeare,
3800./263.
Great
Carthage was destroyd, and
Corinth brought
To fall by fire: The Doctrines first apeare
3820/140.
The
Pharisei and
Sadducei taught:
Fiue yeares iust
Porrex, drunken
Cherimus
Porrex. Cherimus Fulgen. Eldred Androgeus Dedantius Detonnus
One,
Fulgen two, one
Eldred, one
Androgeus.
28
Dendantius fiue yeares, two
Detonnus held
The soueraignty, then lest this life for new,
Nature a Monstrous byrth in
Rome compeld,
Hauing foure hands, foure feet: Corne grew
In
Bonony on Trees, whose tast exceld,
3843./120.
The
Parthian Arsaces, Demetrius slew.
3835./128.
Great
Scipio Affricanus ends his life,
By salse
Sempronia his disloyall wife.
3848./115.
29
Young
Vrianus three, King
Eliud fiue,
Vrianus Eliud. M
[...]rianus Bladunus Capenas Ouinius Sisilus. Bladgabred.
Two
Meria
[...]ns, and
Bladunus twaine,
Capen
[...]s three,
Ouinius doth next striue,
And his imperiall state two yeares maintaine,
Two
Silius, Bledgabredus
[...]id suruiue
Full twenty yeares in his auspitious raigne
Hircan
[...]s gouernd in the high-Priests sted,
Marius
[...]mpht o're
Iugurth, Captiueled.
3857/109
30
Archemachus raignd two,
Eldotus foure,
3869./94
Two
Rodianus, three
Redargius,
Archemac. Eldotus. Rodianus Redargius Samillus Penesillus Pirrhus Caporus Diuellus He
[...].
Samillius two: the
Brittaines next adore,
King
penesellus three, two princely
pirrhus,
And after him
Caporus two, no more,
Now grew the watres twixt
Scilla and
Marius:
Diuellus foure,
Helyas, Ely named,
Gouernd ten months, when death his body claimed.
3893./70.
31
Lvd, Helyes sonne, his happy rule began,
Nam'd
Troynouant, Luds-towne, Ludgate erected,
Lud
Eleau
[...]n yeares raign'd, then to
Cassibelan
3894./69
Left his two infant sonnes to be protected,
[...]belan
Who till the Princes grew to state of man,
By all the
Brittish Peeres was King elected:
Raign'd nineteene yeares, in his dayes twice repeld
3911/52
The
Roman Casar, the bold
Brittaines queld.
Caesar.
32
Nennius wan
Casars sword, and had it brought
To be hang'd ore his hearse:
Pompey the great
With
Iulius Casar in
Pharsalia fought,
3916/47
Iulius vsu
[...]pes in
Romes Imperiall seat,
Was stab'd with Bodkins, he that neuer fought,
But conq
[...]'d, in all Martiall acts compleat:
Now flourisht
Cicero with praise Deuine,
Hermius and seditious
Cateline.
3919/44
33
And not the least grace to Triumphant
Rome,
The rare
Comadian Roseius, Next in rowe
Of
Brittish Kings, must young
Tenancius come,
3921/42
Twenty three yeares he raignd, and then did owe
Tenancius
No more to nature, then th'adopted son
Of
Casar, great
Augustus: now doth grow
Romes Monarchy:
Marke Anthony through pride
3934/29
Rebeld, by Aspes great
Cleopatra dide.
34
Virgil and
Horace flourisht: In these dayes
Iesus Sabetes sonne was consecrated
High Priest: King
Herod Iewries Scepter swayes,
A generall peace is through the world debated,
[Page 423] The
Brittaines next, King
Cimbelinus raise,
3944./19
And fiue and thirty yeares he is instated:
Cimbeline.
And now the Sauiour of the world was borne,
Th'eternall King Crownd with a wreath of Thorne.
The yeare of the worldboue the line./The yeare after Christ vnder the line.
35
Hortensius, Lyuy, Salust, Ouid, all
3962./1.
Were Fam'de in
Rome, valiant
Guiderius next,
The
Brittaines as their soueraigne Liege install,
Twenty eight yeares he gouernes, much perplext
3978./17
With
Roman warre: now chanc'st
Seianus fall.
Guiderius.
Vnder
Tyberius, now as saith the text:
3985/24.
Iohn Baptist preacht, and by King
Herod dide,
3994./33.
Pylate was Iudge, and Christ was Crucifide.
36
Now
Aruiragus raignes, and takes to wife
4006/45
Th'Emperour
Clodius daughter:
I
[...]wries King
Aruiragus.
Was eat with wormes: Graue
Seneck breath'd this life,
And
Simon Magus did his Money bring
To buy the Holy-ghost, his Fame was rife
Amongst the
Romans: now did
Nero sing
Vpon a hill
Troyes burning to his Lyre,
Hauing before set stately
Rome a fire.
37
Saint
Marke in
Alexandria Martyrd was,
At'
Ierusalem Iames for the Gospell dide,
Paule suffred too, whose boldnesse did surpasse,
4017/56.
Peter likewise in
Rome was Crucified,
4019./58.
Queene
Voada a gallant
Brittish Lasse,
Marcht with fiue thousand Ladies by her side,
and in one battaile (if report be true,)
4029/68
Full fourscore thousand valiant
Romans slew.
4024./73.
38
Next
Aruiragus, Brittan Marius guided,
Marius
Now was the Temple of the highest defaced,
His City sackt, and those that Christ derided,
4024/73
Burnt, staru'd, or slaine,
Ierusalem quite raced,
Iosephus liu'd,
Domitian Rome deuided,
and after
Tytus in the Throne was placed:
4070/108
Ignatius life in
Rome mongst Lyons vanisht,
Saint
Iohn whom Christ lou'd, was to
Pathmos banisht.
93
In
Rome now liu'd
Cornelius Tacitus,
Suetonius, younger
Pliny, Iuvenal,
Valerius Flaccus, and
Patauius,
and the Lasciuious Poet
Martial,
and vnder
Traian: Aulus Gellius,
Plutarch and
Apuleius: now the wall
From
Tyne to the
Scotch Sea was made for strength,
Being one hundred and twelue miles in length.
48
Coylus built
Colchester: now
Iustine wrote,
4087/126
and with his Bookes and Life Christs Fayth defended,
Coyll.
Egyptian Ptolomee the Starres did note,
4141./180.
and Mathematickes found.
Lucius ascended
The State next
Coyll, who first set aflote
Baptizme in England, by the Church commended
Lucius.
For our first Christian King: he mounts the Spheares,
and without King, leaues
Brittan fifteene yeares.
49
Seuerus th'Emperor did fiue yeares supply
4169./208.
The
Brittish Throne, then of the Goute he dyde
Seuerus.
At
Yorke, to
Bassianus his ally,
4174./213.
Leauing both
Rome and
Brittans Islle to guide
Six yeares this
Caracalla lifted high,
Caracalla.
His Crowned state in Tirany and pride:
4179./218.
Tertullian now and
Origen were knowne,
Carassus.
Carassus next assumes the
Brittish Throne,
4187./226.
50
Gouernd eight yeares, then by
Alectus dide,
Alectus. Asclipiodale
After three yeares bold
Asclepiodale,
Alectus slew, in hight of all his pride,
And
Roman Wallus, by whose timelesse fall
Walbrooke tooke name. He thirty yeares supplide
4193./232.
The kingdome, then exchangd his Mortall state,
Artabanus great
Artaxerxus slew,
S.
Albon martyr'd, left this life for new.
4223/262.
51
COill kild
Asclepiodale, and raigned
Coill.
Twenty seuen yeares:
Constantius succeeds
4250/289.
By marraying
Brittish Hellen, hauing gained
Constantius.
The
Roman Diadem: His vertuous deedes
[Page 425] The fauour of the multitude attained
4271./310.
Next:
Constantine (sur-nam'd the great,) who reads
Constantine
The Bible first in
Brittan: Arrius preacht,
4284./325
And
th'Arrian errors through the whole world teacht
52
Now at
Ierusalem Queene
Hellen found
The very Crosse whereon our Sauiour dide,
4290./329.
And the three nayles his feet and hands did wound,
Octauius
Octauius next fifty foure yeares supplide
The Diadem, and then was laid in ground,
Three hundred eighteene Byshops now applide
The
Nycene Counsell, now did
Ambrose reed,
And
Athanasius that set downe the Creed.
53
With learned
Basill, and about their dayes
Iulian-Apostat liu'd: the next ad
[...]anced
4344./383.
Was
Maximus, whom the bold
Brittans rayse,
To
Vrsula a pittious Fortune ehanced,
With eleuen thousand Maids passing the Seas
Maximus
To
Brittaine lesse, their liues were all intranced:
S.
Ierom flourisht, writing Bookes Deuine,
4388./387.
So did in
Hyppone learned
Augustine.
54
GRatian succeeds, whom the bold
Brittans slew
4352./391.
After foure yeares, in whose vnhappy
[...]aigne
Gratian
Ambrose the
Millein Byshop famous grew,
And
Chrisostom did the true faith maintaine
In
Constantinople, a Doctrine new
Th'Hereticke
Pell
[...]ges did in
Carthage faine,
Where all his errors to his pride imputed,
Were by two hundred and seuen Clarkes confuted.
4380/419
55
Algelmond raign'd first King of
[...]ombardy,
at
Millen th'Emperor
Theod
[...] dide,
Alaricus sackt
Rome. The Monarchy
4381/422.
and Throne of
France first
[...]mond supplide,
The
Scots and
Picts vnpeople
Brittany,
But
Constantine the
Brittaines valiant guide,
4394./443.
Who came from
Brittaine le
[...]e, the Throne asc
[...]nds,
Constantine
and rules ten yeares,
[...]
[...]
Romes tribute ends.
59
COnstans a Foole, the sonne of
Constantine,
4404./443.
Was from a Monke by
Vortiger made King,
Constans.
And hauing one yeare gouernd, did resigne
4409./448.
To the Duke
Vortiger, who gouerning
Vortiger.
Eighteene whole yeares, two Lords of
Saxon line,
H
[...]ngest and
Horseus cald, an army bring
To Land in
Brittaine, where not long they tarried,
Till
Vortiger Prince
Hengists daughter maried.
57
For which the
Brittaines him deposd, electing
Young
Vortimer his sonne to sway the state,
Vortimer.
He the allyans of those Lords reiecting,
4426./465.
Whom
Vortiger his Father raisd so late,
Gouern'd six yeares, the land in peace protecting,
Whom his faire Step-dame brought to timelesse Fate,
By cursed poyson, which no sooner chanced,
4432./471.
But
Vortiger was once againe aduanced.
Vortiger.
58
In these dissentious dayes
Gensericus
The
Vandall King tooke
Cartage. Attila
4402./441
King of the
Hunnes, euen to
Thermopilus
Ore-came all
Greece, Illyria, Thracia,
Against whom brauely fought
Meroneus,
The most renowned King of
Gallia,
4411./450.
Nam'd
Gallia, France, and till King
Pepius time,
All the French Kings discended of his line.
59
Venice was now first founded and begun,
4417/456
Of such poore people, as to shun the rage
Of
Tyrant Attila the samous
Hun,
From
Aquilea fled: whose pride to asswage,
The
Roman Aetius a braue battaile won,
Slew eighteene thousand
Hunnes (in his young age)
4418./457.
Aetius enuide for raising
Romes Dominion,
Was murdred by his Maister
Valentinian.
60
Which Emperor at
Thrasila was slaine
By one of
Etius souldiers,
Vortiger
Of
Brittaines awfull seat, possest againe,
The
Saxons with the
Brittish Peeres conferre,
[Page 427] VVhere at a VVatch-word giuen by
Hengists traine,
4432./471.
Foure hundred
Brittish Barons murdred were;
Hengist.
The King surprisde, and being in prison pent,
Gaue to them
Norfolke, Suffolke, Sussex, Kent.
61
And of this
Hengist Brittan chang'd the name,
Was
cleaped-Hengists Land; since
England cald,
Next
Constantines two younger Sonnes proclaime
Their rights in England, being naught appald
at
Hengists might, stird by their Fathers Fame,
4442/482.
Ambros and
Vter seeke to be instald:
Aurelius Ambros.
They land at
Totnes, Vortiger they burne,
Kill
Hengist too, for whom the
Saxons murne.
62
Now
Merline Aurelius,
Aurelius Ambres raign'd
Thirty three yeares, made
Stone-henge, which till now
Hath on the plaine of
Salsbury remaind,
He dead, the
Brittans to his Brothers vow
Like homage, and in State haue entertaind
Vter Pendragon, to whose throne they bow
4461/500.
Sixteene whole yeares: He doats on
Cornwayles wife,
Vter Pendragon.
and for her loue bereaues her Husbands life.
63
Of her he
Arthur got: In
France Clodouens
4478./517.
Gouernd as King, the first that was Baptiz'd
In
Italy: great
Theodoricus
Arthur.
King of the
Astrogothes, who enterprisde
Gainst
Odeacer battaile, bold
Honoricus
Gouernd in
Affricke, who so much despisde
True Fayth, that he for th'
Arrians in one hower,
By shops exild, three hundred thirty foure.
63
Arthur the worthy, next the State ascended,
Fought twelue set battailes, and the order made
Of the Round Table, whose renowne extended
Through all the world, whilst
Arthur doth inuade
Forraine Dominious, and Christs Faith desended,
4504./533.
Mordred at home, his Crowne' and Queene betrayde:
Mordred.
Twixt whom, at
Arthurs backe returne againe,
War was commenst, in which both Kings were slain.
65
Next
Arthur, Constantine, Duke
Cadors Sonne,
4504/543
After his Vncle sixe and twenty years
Constantine.
Had gouern'd England, his estate begonne,
Slew
Mordred Sonnes in fight, with
Saxon Peeres,
That ayded them in batta
[...]le, these warres donne
After foure Sommers, he ascends the Spheares:
4482/521.
Iustine a Swine-heard, by ambition fierd,
By crafty meanes th'Imperiall Seate aspyerd.
66
Now liu'd in
Italy the famous Dame
4488/527
Analasiantha, with
Athalarius
Her Son, by whom her Soueraignty first came,
She could both Greeke and Latine well discusse,
Whose reuerence many Histories proclayme,
Daughter to th'Emperor
Theodoricus:
Iustinian, the
Gracian Empyre swayes,
The
Persians to their State
Cosroe rayse.
67
Iustinian in his Captaines much renowned,
4505/545
Narses the Eunuch, a right
[...] Knight,
And
Bellisarius, whose name was crowned
Through all the world: Twice
Carthage won in fight,
Twice rescude
Rome: his fame in
Persia sowned,
Thrace, Greece, th'Affricke G
[...]aths, he put to flight:
For much more seruice th'Emperor from his head,
Tore out his eyes, he for'st to beg his bread,
68
Aurelius Conanus slew in field,
4507./546.
Constantine, Arthurs Nephew, three yeares swade,
Aurelius Conanus.
Then did his due to death and nature yeild,
4509./548.
And
Vortigore his Sonne is Soueraigne made,
Who did but foure yeares
Brittans
[...] weild,
Vortigorus.
When
Malgo did the
[...] inuade,
4513./542.
Who slew his first Wife, her chast Bed for sooke,
Malgo.
And to his Bride, his Brothers Daughter tooke.
69
King
Totylus sack't
Rome the second time,
What in the first he spoyl'd, he now repayred,
4539./578.
Altinus king of
Lumbards, full with Wine,
Cals for a Mazer (which he might haue spared)
[Page 429] Of his Wiues Fathers Scull, for which in fine,
She loath'd her Husband, and yet further dar'd:
Vnto his loyall Bed she prou'd vntrue
With
Helme-child, who after
Albine slew.
70
CAreticus by help of
Irelands King,
4577./586.
Cald
Gurmond, Brittan Malgo did expell,
Careticus. Ethelfrid.
Whom after three yeares
Ethelfrid did bring
To ruine, and in battaile prosperd well,
About this time
Sybert th'East
Saxon King,
Erected
Westminster: Ethelfrid fell,
4574./613.
And
Cadwan, Duke of
Northwales, him defeated,
Cadwan.
And two and twenty yeares in peace was seated.
71
Queene
Tredegunde of
France in the meane season,
4549./588.
Lawdry the Earle of
Soysons deerely lou'd,
And for his
[...]ake destroyd the King by Treason,
Gainst
Gregory, (sir-nam'd the great) was mou'd
By
[...]ohn the Patr
[...]arch (against all reason)
The Churches Primacy which he improu'd,
4586/625.
Arabian Mahomet his
Alkeron made,
Frensh Brunchild liu'd, who had Princes ten betrayde.
72
CAdwallin, Cadwans Sonne next
Bittan guided,
4596/335.
Benet the Monke, Paynting and Glazing found,
Cadwallin.
The
Sarasins by
Mahomet prouided,
Wan
Persia, where
Ormisda long sat crown'd,
And in short space hauing their powers di
[...]ided,
Conquerd all
Aegypt with the Climats round:
Damascus likewise was subdude by them,
So was rich
Antioch and
Hierusalem.
73
Three yeares
Cadwallader (esteem'd the last
4644./683.
Of
Brittan Princes) gouernd: and he dead,
Cadwallader
The Kingdome wholly to
West-Saxons past,
4684/723.
Of whom King
Iue first impald his head,
Iue raigned 37 yeares.
Ethelard.
And next him
Ethelard, whose raigne was grast
By reuerent
Beda, of whose workes we read:
Of Clearkly Bookes on seuerall Subiects stil'd,
Thre
[...]ore and eyghteene Volums well compil'd.
4685/724
74
Next
Ethelard, raign'd
Cuthred, whom succeeds
4690/729.
Sigebert, and he not one full yeare did raigne,
Cuthred.
But was deposde for many tyrranous deedes,
4706./745.
And after besely by a Swine-heard slaine,
Sigebert.
Kinulphus to the Kingdome next proceedes,
Who after by a man of
Sigeberts traine
4709/748.
Was murdred in the night, as he should passe
Kinulphus.
Vnto his Mistris, a braue
Brittish Lasse.
75
The
Sarasins pierce
Europe, Rhodes they wasted,
4702/749
The Firmament two daies appeares to burne,
The Emperour
Constantine his Army hasted
The
Sarasins by armes to ouerturne,
Where thirty thousand
Pagans of death tasted,
When
Constantine expites, the Christians mourne:
His Throne and State
Iustinian next maintained,
And from the
Turkes, Affricke and
Libia gayned.
76
The next
West-Saxon King was
Brithricus,
4739/778
Who eyghteene yeares after
Kinulphus fall
Brithricus.
Raign'd King, came from the blooud of
Cerdicus,
And queld the
Danes in many a bloudy brall,
Wiu'd
Ethelburgh, by whom, as Bookes discusse
He poysond was: yet whilst he gouern'd all
S. Albons, Winchcombe Abbeyes were both built,
Blood rayn'd, which seem'd like Crosses where t'was spilt.
77
Egbert the
Sexon, thirty seauen supplyde
4756/795
The Soueraignety, now raign'd
Prench Charles the great,
Egbert.
Eyghteene whole dayes the Sunne his light denyde,
Hyren the Empresse from th'Imperiall Seat
Her young Sonne
Constantine deposde through p
[...]de,
And after did him cruelly intreat:
She causd his eyes be torne out of his head,
And foure yeares after gouernd in his stead.
78
King
Ethelwolfe, the fore-nam'd
Egbert's Sonne,
4793/832
As Chroniclers affirme,
Oxford erected,
Ethelwolf.
a Priest at first, in Orders he begon,
Till after marrying, he the State affected,
[Page 431] The Warlike
Danes his Kingdome ouer-ron,
4804./843.
But are expled:
Sergius is Pope elected:
Os Porci
[...]
[...].
Whose name
Os Porcy seem'd so vile, that they
Chang'd it, and from him all Popes to this day.
79
Foure Sonnes each other in the State succeedes
4816./845.
King
Ethelwald, who gouern'd not a yeare
Ethelwald.
When
Ethelbert his Brother don'd the Weedes
4817./856.
Imperiall, and next him doth appeare
Ethelbert.
The third Sonne
Etheldred, (whose body bleeds
4824./863.
By the bold
Danes) who after slaughterd were
Etheldred.
By the fourth Sonne: at
Brixium as Bookes tell,
Three dayes together bloud in thicke shewers fell.
80
Young
Alured from
Ethelwolfe the last,
4833/872,
Twenty nine yeares sixe monthes, the Scepter bore,
Alured.
Hungar and
Hubba quite through
Scotland past,
Bels were first vsde in
Greece (not knowne before)
4862/901
In sixe set battailes,
Alured disgrast
Edward.
The warlike
Danes, then dyde: The Peeres adore
Edward his elder Sonne, who nobly beares
The
Brittish Scepter foure and twenty yeares.
81
Nine
Popes in lesse then nine yeares were instald,
Adelwald, Edwards Brother, twice rebelling
VVas by the Elders Prowesse twice appald,
And after slaine, the
Huns and
Hungars quelling
All
Europe, were much feard: a Princesse cald
4872/911.
Elflede, King
Edwards Sister much excelling:
after the throwes in her first Child-birth tryde,
For euermore her Husbands Bed denide.
82
And proouing armes, by them she honor sought,
She tam'd the
VVelch-men, and the
Danes disgraced,
4886/925
Next
Edward Adelstane the battailes fought,
Adelstane.
Of the bold English, and the Castles raced
(as the proud
Danes reard) and to ruine brought
The
Sarafins euen from
Hetruria chased:
4896/915
Th
Italian Guards: they
G
[...]n ouerthrow,
VVhere bloud three dayes out of a VVell did flow.
83
Now Gui
of Warwick, Danish Colebrand slew,
And England of all Tribute quite releast,
King
Edmond did the Soueraignety pursue,
4901/940
When
Adelstane at
Malmsbury deceast,
Edmond.
Slaine after fiue yeares: by succession true
Eldred his Brother raignes, whose pomp increast:
4907/949
Edmonds two Sons being young, the Peeres cōplaine,
Eldred.
and thinke their Vncle of more worth to raigne.
84
France, Tuskaine, Germany,
the Hungars
wast,
4915/954
Hugh King of
Italy, by Fire destroyes
The nauy of the
Sarazens, then past
To
Traxinetum, Edwin next inioyes
4916/955.
The Scepter (
Eldred hauing breath'd his last)
Edwin.
At
Kingstone crown'd, whose hart was set on toyes,
He
Dunstan banisht, his Landes and Treasure lauisht,
and his neere N
[...]c vpon his Crowne-day rauisht.
85
And next he slew her Husband, for all which
after foure yeares he was depriude his state,
Edgar his Brother, a Prince wise and rich,
4920./959
In all things
[...]ust, seuere, and Fortunate,
ascends the Throne, no Sorcerer nor Witch
Edgar.
His sentence spard, Theeues, Bribers he did hate:
To him
Ludwallis, Prince of
Wales obayd,
Three hundred Wolues for Tribute yearely payd.
86
Forty seauen Monasteryes this King erected
Red Crosses made, and on mens Roabes were seared,
When
Duffus had foure yeares the
Scots protected,
4927/966
Donewald a
Scotch Lord, that no bad thing feared,
Him basely slew, and from his Throne derected,
From which,
[...]xe monthes no Moone or Sunne appeared:
The
Turkes by
Euecus Earle of
Bygar,
Were
Spaine expold, he first King of
Nauar.
87
King
Edgar in his sixteenth yeare expyres,
4939./975.
When his Sonne
Edward was at
Kingstone crownde,
Edward
Slaine by his trayterous Stepdame, who desires
The Crowne for her Sonne
Etheldred: he founde
[Page 433]
Exter Abbey,
Swayne of
Denmarke fires
4936/978
Citties and Townes in England, burning round:
Etheldred.
King
Etheldred raign'd in this Kingdome free,
Thirty eyght yeares: His murdred Brother three.
88
Now
Stephen was made first King of
Hungary,
And thirty nine yeares raign'd.
Alphons of
Spaine
4961/1000
Besiedging great
Visenum valiantly,
Was with an arrow kild, and strowed the plaine:
All the
Lord-Danes that liu'd here tyranously,
Were by the English Wiues in one night slaine:
Ierusalem was by the
Turkes possest,
Whom twice the bold
Venetian Duke distrest.
89
King
Edmond (sir-nam'd
Iron-side) next his Father
Edmond Iron-side.
Inioyes the Kingdome, gainst whom
Swanus Son
The bold
Canutus all his
Dan
[...]s doth gather,
Twixt whom were many battayles lost and won,
4977/1016
After much bloods effusion they chose rather,
By single strife to end the broyles begon:
Theyr valors were in epuall ballance tryde,
and after Combat they the Land deuide.
90
Edrick of
Stratton, valiant
Edmond slew,
4978/1017.
And from
Canutus had a Traytors meede,
The valiant
Dane in Stiles and Honors grew,
Canutus.
He
Scotland wan, and
Norway: To his seed
Leauing foure Kingdomes, Vice he did eschew,
Nor euer did a juster Prince succeed:
4993./1032.
English and
Dan
[...]s he atton'd vnto his doome,
and after went on Pilgrimage to
Roome.
91
Robert the
Norman Duke, for valor famed,
Hyes to the holy warres in
Palestine,
He gone, his young Sonne
William is proclaymed
4896/1038.
The
Norman Duke: Now seekes a Throne deuine
Harrold. Harefoote.
Canutus when he twenty yeares had raigned,
and
Harrold Harefoote vnto whom incline
The
Dan
[...]s in England, next the Scepter swayes,
and three yeares past: at
Oxford ends his dayes.
92
Hardi-canutus the same number fild,
5002/1041
and drinking dide: whom the good
Edward (Sainted
Hardicanutus
For holy workes) succeeds, no bloud he spild,
Nor with knowne sinnes his high profession taynted,
5004/1043
He married as the great Earle
Goodwin wild,
Edward
Th'Earles Daughter
Edgitha, and nothing wanted:
That a iust Prince should haue, one and twenty years,
In zeale and clemency the Crowne he weares.
93
This
Goodwin, Alphred Edward younger Brother,
Traytorously slew, and by his power he yoaked
The King himselfe, betray de his Soueraigne Mother,
By Byshop
Robert to these illes prouoked,
5008/1047
But Heauen no longer could such mischiefe smother,
5016/1055
Swearing by Bread, he by the bit was choaked:
The swallowing Sea deuour'd all his Lands,
Which to this day beare name of
Goodwins sands.
94
William the Bastard Duke first landing heare,
5014/1053
Was by the King receaued, and Englands Crowne
Promist by
Edward, which no English Peere
Was knowne to contradict, after lenthome
With greatest pompe, and
Harrold the same yeare
Earle
Goodwins sonne, a man of great renowne:
Arriude in
Normandy, and with oathes deepe,
Sware (the King dead) for him the Crowne to keepe.
95
But
Edward dead,
Harrold vsurpes the seate,
5027./1066.
Whom
Fauston and the
Norwey King inuade
Harrold.
Vpon the North, both whom he did defeate,
And brauely slew in battaile.
William made
A new Incursion gainst whom in t'is heare,
Harrold his Ensignes in the field displayde:
The
Norman Duke preuaylde: and
Harrald slaine,
5028/1067.
William (the first so cald) begins his raigne.
William.
[Page 435]
In Brutes
time whilst he gouernd Brittan, Anaeus Siluius
raigned amongst the Latines. Dercitus
in Assyria, Athletets
in Corinth: Pipinus
in Thus
[...]an, Codrus
in Athens,
Lanquet.
in whose dayes the Arke of God was taken by the Philistims.
In Locrynes
raigne Dauid
was annoynted King ouer Israel.
In Guendolins
raigne, he
[...] Vriah,
and marryed Bersheba.
In Madans
dayes, Salomon
built the Temple, &c.
From
Brute to
Caelar, the Brittans were not Tributary
Stow. to any, the gouernment of the
Romans from
Caesar to
Theodosius, lasted
483. years. In
Theodosius the youngers raign, the yeare of Christ
443. the Tribute
[...].
The gouernment of the
Saxons continued the space of
600. yeares in continuall warre and hostility, either with the
Brittans, the
Danes, or the
Normans.
The opinions of those that write of the first inhabiting of
Harding. this Iland are diuerse, and how it came first to receiue the name of
Albion, some thinke of the Chalky and white Cliffe which seemes to wall it in from the Sea. But
Hugh Genisis, a
Hugh Genesis.
Roman Chronicler, writing of all the Kinges and Kingdomes of the World, from the Vniuer sall Deluge, to Christ. Writes, that
Danaus, King of
Greece, had fifty Daughters, and
Aegiptus as many Sonnes, who being married, and the women the first night murdring their Husbands, were for the offence banished, and sayling on the Seas, were driuen vpon this Island, which
Albiana called after her Name
Albion: vvith these Ladies he reports that Spirits engendred, and begotte Gyants, who laie with their Mothers and Sisters (led onely by their lustes) till they had multiplyed themselues to the number of twelue thousand. But Idoubt not, but that this Land may contend with any other whatsoeuer, for her antiquity, being inhabited with the first, which beeing continually vexed within it selfe with ci
[...]
[...] and forraine inuasions, her
Marian. Monuments and remembrances, haue by these warres bin de
[...]oured, which haue left the certainty of our first Antiquity doubtfull to the world, and not truely re
[...]embred by any that haue undertooke her first discouery.
Here moreouer, wee could haue tooke fit occasion to haue
[Page 436] recorded all the Genealogies before the flood, with a briefe report, who after the floud peopled euery other Kingdome, and from whom euery Region tooke her Name: but it had bin a
By Mirandula. course, too strange and different from our purpose, which is onely to finde out such thinges as haue alliance to this Land of
Brittan, and the memorable things best knowne to us.
We infist not much in
Aeneas trauels, of his landing at
Carthage, his loue to Queene
Dldo, her killing her selfe at his departure from her land, the funer all of his Father
Anchises, with his warres against king
Turnus, for the beautious
Laninia These, because they are amply set downe in
Virgils 12.
Virgil. Bookes of his
Aeneids, wee thought better rather superficially to passe them ouer with a bare remembrance, then to bee too palpably tract in a History so common to all men Which we (the rather to) omit, because we hasten to the antiquittes, and the successiue Souer aigneties of our natiue Island, whose age (our purpose is) to deriue from the first Inhabitantes, and so to continue it euen to this present government.
The Antiquity of London was helde to bee longe before
Rome. For
Brute landed here in the yeare of the Lord
2855. in the yeare before Christ
1108. Rome was built long after,
Eusebius. in the time that
Riuallo ruld in
Brittain, the yeare after the floud
155
[...]. after
Comerus, the first king of
Italy, 1414 after the destruction of
Troy, 432 after
Brute arriuedin in this Land of
B
[...]tain 355.
The end of the sixteenth
CANTO.
Argumentum
OF all great
Brittans Kinges, truely descended
From the first Conqueror next we shall intreat,
How they haue sayld, or how their hands extended
Through any forraine Realmes by Conquest great,
How they begun, and how their raignes they ended,
Till royall
Iames claymes his Monarchall Seate;
In whom three kingdomes, first by
Brute deuided,
Vnited are, and by one Scepter guided.
ARG. 2.
From
Norman William a true note collected,
Of all the kinges and Queenes that here protected.
1
William, the
Norman Duke is next inuested,
William the Conqueror.
Sixt of that
Dutchy entring by sterne warre,
5028/1067
A troublous raigne he liu'd, and sildome rested
From rough rebellious armes: yet euery barre
His Sword remou'd,
Hertford his pride detested,
Roger Earle of Hert
[...]ord
But for his Treason was confined farre:
Earle
Walter too, into that faction led,
5037/1076
Disclosde the plot, and for it lost his head.
2
Duke
Robert, Williams Sonne, by th'instigation
5042/1081
Of the
French King, doth
Normandy inuade,
Against whom
William raysde the English nation,
And when no Prince betwixt them could perswade,
They met and fought, with much loude acclamation,
Robert vnhorst his Father, and then stayde
His warlike hand, whom by his voyce he knew,
And raisd him: for which, peace betweene them grew.
3
William inuading
France, in
Caan expyerd,
5050/1089
And there lies buried by his warlike Peeres,
after he many Towers and Townes had fierd,
Raigning o're England one and twenty yeares,
Foure Sonnes he left, one Danghter much admierd:
Robert and
Richard, who ascends the Spheares
Before ripe age:
William who next doth sway,
Henry cald
Bewclack, and fayre
Adela.
4
Whilst our great Conqueror liu'd, the King of
Danes,
5030/1069.
Canutus by the English Out-Lawes ayded,
Inuades the North, but
William him restraynes,
Henry the Emperor
Bauaria inuaded,
5031./1670.
Malcolm that ore the troublous
Scots then raignes
Peirces Northumberland, at this time vaded
The
Saxons glory,
Otho them defaced,
Otho Duke of Bauaria.
after the
Thuringas he by armes had chaced.
5
Eudochia who had seuen yeares worne the Crown
Of
Graciaes Empyre, was by maryage tyde
Pope Gregory the seauenth.
Vnto
Rhomanus, one of high renowne,
(Sir-nam'd
Diogenes.)
Gregory denyde
Marriage to Priests, the
Russ. Duke was put downe
5030/1069
By Prince
Demetrius, neare to him allyde:
William foure Castles built, his Foes to tame,
At
Yorke, at
Lincolne, aud at
Nottighame.
6
Henry then
Casar for some sinne detected,
5037/1079
Did by the Pope stand excommunicate,
and being of his Feudor King reiected,
To
Gregory submits him and his State,
[Page 439] Now liu'd the famous
Oswald much respected,
Byshop of
Sarum: Casar absolu'd late:
(The second time condemnd) gainst
Gregory sped,
Robert Byshop of
Rauenna, made pope by the name of
Clement.
Stating
Rauennaes Robert in his sted.
7
Vradislaus was the first King made
Of
Boheme, and of all the Countries neare,
Ansell who then
Galisiaes Scepter swayed,
5047/1089
Did gainst the
Sarazens in armes appeare,
And wan from them
Tolledo, by the ayde
Of Christian Princes:
Rufus gouernd heer
Next after conquering
William, thirteene springs
Will. Rufus
He sat inuested in our Throne of Kings.
5050/1089
8
Twice
Robert made incursion, but supprest
5051/1090.
By
Williams power, the
Scots inuade againe
But are appeasd, the
Welshmen Rees inuest,
Who in a conflict was by
William slaine:
5055./1044
lerusalem by
Pagan Armes opprest,
Th'assembled christiā kings by force maintain:
5061/1100.
Where dide in battaile as the rumor ran,
The
Babilonian Souldan, Soliman.
9
The
Norman Robert, chusd King by election
Of
Palestine, refusd the Sacred stile,
Which
Bulloin Godfrey tooke to his protection,
Scotch
Malcolm with his sonne entring by guile
Northumbers Marches, came to the deiection
By valiant
Robert, who was Earle that while:
5060/1099
(Both slaine in field) K.
William the same yeare,
Erected the great Hall in
Westminster.
10
Duncan vsurpes in
Scotland, not two yeares
He gouernd there, but in his bed was slaine,
5060./1099
Donnald restor'd, not long the Scepter beares,
But
Edgar (that ambitious was to raigne)
By armes supprest him, and the Dia'dem weares,
5062./1101
Rufus being hunting,
Tyrrell of his traine,
By glauncing of an Arrow, the King slew,
Henrie next gouernes, by succession true.
11
Thirty fiue yeares did
Henry Beauclarke guide
Henry Beuclarke.
Th'Helme-Royall, he for Thest strict lawes decreed,
Robert returnd from
Palestine, defide
Henry, who after parley were agreed,
5062/1101
Long their truce lasted not,
Beu-clarke denide
His Brothers pension, great dissentions breed:
5067/1106
After much warre, Duke
Robert they surprise,
Who for a prisons breach forfeits his eyes.
12
Norwich Cathedrall Church is founded new,
S.
Bartholmewes built, by
Reior a Musitian,
In
Belgia great Inundations grew,
Being almost drown'd: Now vpon good condition
Peace twixt the Emperor and King
Henry grew,
Whose daughter was with much hye superstition
Made Empresse:
Maud the English Queen being dead
Henry takes
Adelisia in her stead.
Adelisia daughter to the Duke of Louaine.
13
The King of
England with
French Lodwicke tryes
Great discords, where the
English gaine the best,
In their returne by Sea great Tempests ryse,
5071/1110
Where all the yssue-Royall most and least
Perisht, with many Nobles grane and wise,
Where eight-score soules at once are sent to rest:
5081/1120
Of all the ship, one Butcher and no more,
Escapt the seas, and swam vnto the shore.
14
Geffrey plantagenet (the Emperour dead)
Wiues
Maud the Empresse, vnto whom she bare
Two sonnes,
Henry and
Geoffrey: now life fled
From
Beu-clarke, who to
Stephen resignes his Chaire,
But ere he rests him in his earthy bed,
5096/1135.
He is renown'd for many buildings rare:
Dunstable Priory, Reading Abbey, and
Windsore fayre Castle, that on hye doth sland.
15
Duke
Bohemond in
Asia warres maintaining,
Was by the Turkes surpriz'd, restor'd againe
By
Tanered, who in
Puell after raigning,
Infinite Turkes were by his valour slaine,
[Page 441]
Baldwin defies the
Souldan, thereby gaining
Gazim and
Damascus,
Two famous Townes: Now
Alphons rules in
Spaine:
Lawes the gro
[...]e in
France, in
Scotlands rights,
Malcolms first
[...], that
Alexander
[...]ight.
16
Alexius did the
Gracian Empire sway,
Henry in
Rome, the Pope-
[...]om
Pascall guids,
In
Hungary
[...]
Stephen: about that day
A blazing-Starre appeares, and long abides,
Two Moones are seene, and in
Flaminia
Blood raignes; Michaell the Duke of
Venice rides
5083/1122.
Against the
Pagans, who were made his pray
Rhodes, Chiu
[...], Samos, Lesbos, Mitelene.
At
[...]oppen: After in his
[...] feturne,
He many of the Emperours townes did burne.
17
Charles Earle of
flaunders in the Church was slaine
By the proud
B
[...]ggis prouost, which related,
5085/1125
William the sonne of
Cort-hose did complaine,
And by French
Lewes was next Earle instated,
Balach the
Parthian did proud warres maintaine
5086/1125
Gainst
Baldwin, which was by rough steele debated:
Baldwin surprizd, fayre
Stons Towers quite raced,
And faire
Ierusalem once more defaced.
18
Stephen Earle of
Bulloin sonne to th'Earle of
Bloys,
K. Stephen
and
Addela next
Henry rules as King,
Though
Maud the Empresse had th'applausiue voyce,
Of many
English peeres, through which warres spring,
Gloster and
Chester Earles, after much choise
5102/1141
Of fields and battailes, such an Army bring,
That
Stephen is tooke, and vnto
Bristow sent,
After releast, by
London and by
Kent.
19
These Counties rayse an army and surprize
Gloster, for whom the Barons change King
Stephen,
5107/1136
Dauid of
Scotland doth gainst England rife,
after much warre then discords are made ecuen,
By th'Empresse meanes his Barons him despise,
First
Stephen preuailes, the Lords their Lands bereauen:
But gathering head, at
Wilton they preuaile,
Where the King flyes, whom
Gloster doth assaile.
20
Henry, Ma
[...]ds sonne, after K.
Stephens decease,
Is proclaim'd King, which soone attones their strife
By which mild
Stephen raignes all his dayes in peace,
Eustace son to King
Stephen.
His sonne, the
French Kings Sister takes to wife,
Gersa the sonne of
Bela gan encrease
His fame among the
Hungars, and his life
Was fearefull to the
Germans; Lewes swayd
France,
The
Turkes grim
Alaph to their Crowne aduance,
21
Earle
Roger rul'd
Sicilia. Almany
5114/1153
Great
Barbarosse, Romes Empery
Conrade,
Adrian of
England held the Papacy,
In
Scotland raignd
Malcolm a beautious mayd,
5115/1154
The
English Iewes at
Easter Crucifie
A Christian child, and life for life they paid:
Next
Stephen, King
Henry, second of that name,
Henry the 2
Sonne to the Empresse
Maud the Peeres proclame.
5116/1155
22
Thirty fiue yeares his prosperous raigne doth last,
In which he
Englands
[...] augmented,
With
Scotland, Ireland, and then further past
To
th'Orcad Isles, whose forces he preuented,
Brittaine, Poictou, and
Guien he made fast
To th'English Crowne,
[...] that but late dissented,
His sword appeasd, and after well protected,
Which done great
Rutland Castle he erected.
23
Two Sunnes at once within our skies apeare,
And in the Moone a bloody Crosfe was seene,
5118/1157
Lewes of
France sent ouer
Margaret heere,
His daughter, to be made young
Henries Queene,
By which the discords that both Realmes did feare
In this alliance quite dispersed beene:
Once more the King gainst
Scotland is prouoked,
Pope
Adrian drinking, with a Fly was choked.
5120./1159
24
Vradislaus for his valour showne,
At
Milleins siedge, was by the Emperour made
Bohemians second King, his Armes well knowne,
A faire red Rampant Lyon:
Baldwin layde
[Page 443] On his blacke hearse,
Almerious is growne
King of
Ierusalem, who brauely staid
Th `Aegiptian power, and in one gloriou
[...]day,
Wan from the
Souldan Alexandria.
25
Now
Thomas B
[...]ket who before had fled
To
Rome, and there complaind him of the King,
Was to his Sea restor'd, after strooke dead
In
Canterbury Church (a p
[...]tious thing)
Him
Rome Cannoniz'd for a Saint, which bred
5132./1171.
Much superstition:
Salladine doth bring
A puissant host
[...]his Conquests he began,
5133/1172
And by the sword
Egipt and
Sarry wan
26
Henry, King
Henries sonne, was twice instated
And Crown'd in
England in his Fathers dayes,
By which much vprore was by warre debated,
The sonnes against the father tumults raise,
The Pope gainst th'Emperour
Fredericke animated,
Fredericke submits, and at his foot he layes
His princely head, whilst with a Lordly checke,
5137/1176.
The Pope his foot sets on the Emperors necke.
27
Andronicus hauing his Maister slaine,
5143./1183
(The childe
Alexius left to his tuition)
Three yeares the
Gracian Empire doth maintaine,
Baldwin the fift, (a Chiln of faire condition)
Is Crowd in
Syon: Saladin againe
5144/1183
Gainst
Palestine doth make new expedition:
Subdues
Ierusalem, and
[...]nce his dayes,
The Infidell the holy kingdome sways.
28
Henry the sonne before the Father dyes,
5149./1186
Whose warres his Brother
Richard takes in hand,
And by hostility the King defies,
Vnable gainst his puissant sonne to stand,
Sickenesse and griefe of thoughts the King surprise,
Who dying, to Prince
Richard leaues the Land:
5150/1189.
Richard in A
[...]nes a bold reputed Knight,
Who for his stout heart
Cordelyon hight.
Richard Cordelion.
29
Eleuen full years, nine months and twenty dayes
5151/1189.
He sat inthr
[...]'d Now Bayliffes first begun
In London: many Christian princes raise
Fresh powers, to gaine
Ierusalem late wun,
Almaine, France, England, Burgoine (whom most praise)
To this,
Sicilia, Venice, Pysa run,
5152./1191
And quell the
Pagans. Richard Cipresse tooke,
And
Acon, where the French King him forsooke.
30
Frederick the Empetor, hauing late subdude
The lesse
Armenia, where his Fame was sowned,
Through greatest part of
Asia gan inttude,
5151/1190
And of that Tri-part world was soueraigne Crowned,
But by misfortune or by rashnes
[...]ude,
Was after in the flood
Selephins drowned:
Richard exchang'd with
Gui of
Lessingham
The Crowne of
Cipresse, for
Ierusalem.
5154./1193
31
Grac'st with the title of the holy King,
Returning with a small and slendet traine
Towards
England, where his Brother
Iohn vsurping,
Tooke to himselfe a short rebellious raigne,
The
Austrich Duke, King
Richard enuying,
Surpriz'd him first, then gaue him to be slaine
To s fierce Lyon, whom vnarm'd he beat,
And from his bulke his warme heart tore and eat.
32
Thence ransom'd, (after warre) prince
Iohn submits,
5154/1193.
Whilst
Saphandenus Egipts Empire swayde,
In
Spaines Tribunall the eight
Alphons sits,
Emericus Hungariaes King is made,
To
Innocent the third, th'Emperour submits,
Who eighteene years the Papall
Crosier staide,
5159/1198
He first deuisd Auricular confession,
Which since his time, the Popes keepe by succession.
33
Richard besideging
Gailerd long with Steele,
Was with an Arrow from the Castle wounded,
5161/1200
Shot by the hand of one
Peter Bazeele,
He slaine, Retrait the valiant English sounded,
[Page 445] His want, the Cleargy, Peeres, and Commons feele,
In whom Religion, power, and state abound:
Next him King
Iohn succeeds by the Lands doome,
King Iohn
Who whilst he raign'd despisd the threats of
Rome.
34
Raign'd seuenteene years, him
phillip King of
France
5162/1201.
Inuades, in
Arthur Duke of
Brittons name,
Whose powers the English
Iohn surprisd by chance,
Imprisoning
Arthur whence these Garboyles came,
The
Persians Dauid to the Throne aduance,
Who with his
Indian Troopes marcht with much Fame,
Of
Parthia and
Armenia Conqueror,
And of
Tartaria the first Emperor.
5164/1203
35
Fiue Moones were all at once in
Torkeshire seene,
After which portent many stormes insude,
prince
Iohn hauing incurd the popes fell spleene,
Stands with his Land accurst, which some allude
To Byshop
Lanchton, who at
Rome had beene,
5167/1206.
And sought in
Canterbury to intrude:
In
Suffolke was a strange Fish tooke, that bore
The shape of man, and six months liu'd a shore.
36
The Maior and Shrieffes in London were first made,
5170/1209
Wales twice rebelling was by warre appeasd,
Th'English at
Sluce the Nauy of France inuade,
A thousand twenty sayle at once they ceasd,
Pope
Innocent great
Coesars pompe all aide,
Making such Lawes as searce the Empire pleasd,
Onely such princes should as Emperors stand,
As should receiue their Crownes at the popes hand.
37
Of whom the
Saxon Duke
Otho was first,
5173/1212
Venice subdues
Coreyra, and the Iles
Adiacent,
Otho by the popeaccurst,
For taking to himselfe the Empires stiles,
Against him Menace warre pope
Innocent durst,
and traind into these broyles by prayers and smiles:
Fredericke the second, who the Diadem weares
after Duke
Otho, three and twenty yeares.
38
Iohn for a yearely tribute to
Rome payde,
Of twice fiue hundred Markes, absolues his Land,
King
Alexander is the
Scotch King made,
5174/1213
(After deceased
William, to command,)
He twenty and foure yeares the kingdome staide,
Against King
Iohn the English Barons stand,
And to their faction the French
Lewes bring,
Whom in
Iohns stead they seeke t'elect as King.
5177./1216.
39
Amidst these tumults
Iohn by fate expires,
(As some suppose) by poyson: whom succeeds
Henry his sonne: him more the Land desires
Then
Lewes, hated for some bloody deeds,
Henry the
3.
For him the people make triumphant fires,
5179./1220
A generall ioy his hye instalment breeds:
at nineteene yeares, the kingdome hee attained,
and fifty fix yeares o're his subiects raigned.
40
Our Ladies Church in
Westminster he reared,
5181/1220.
Now
Hocata the second puissant King
Of great
Tartaria, was renownd and feared,
He first the Title of great
Caan did win,
The drooping
Scotch King was by
Henry cheared,
To whom he gaue his Sister (next of Kin)
5182/1221
Faire
Ioane Robert: Graciaes Empire swayd.
Who to his Empresse tooke a beautious Mayd.
41
She was before betroth'd to a great peere
Of
Burgoine, he the Emperours pompe despysing,
Entred his armed pallace without feare,
5183/1222
The Damsell in the Emperors armes surprising,
He first cut off her nose (reuenge seuere)
And from that place himselfe disguising:
To her'fore bribed Mother posting fast,
Th'in constant Dame into the Seas he cast.
42
The
Scots in
Cathnes their proud Byshop burne,
Because he curst such, as their tythes denide,
5184./1223
Wards were first graunted,
Frederick doth returne
5186./1225
Towards
Asia, and the
Souldan puft with pride,
[Page 447] Vanquisht in field, and now no longer mourne
Those Christians that in
Palestine abide;
5190/1229
England with
France makes warre, and after peace,
Tumults in
Wales arise, but soone surcease.
43
Frederick, King
Henries Sister takes to wife,
5196/1235.
Cald
Isabell: Henry takes
Elanour,
Daughter to th'Earle of
Prouence, ending strife
Twixt them before begun, about that houre
His spousals were solemniz'd, and ioyes rife,
In th'Element appear'd a war like power
5198/1237
Of men in armes, of di
[...]ers wings compacted,
The
Merton Statute now was first enacted.
44
This yeare the famous faction first begun
5201/1240
Of
Guelfes and
Gibelines, Tartarian Caan
Inuades the
Hungars, and their kingdome won,
5202/1241
Where their King
Bela was in battaile slaine,
The Mother eats her Childe, and Sire, the Sonne,
So great was hunger mongst the
Hungars than:
Now London Aldermen were first elected,
5203./1242
and
Frederick once more by the pope reiected.
45
Pope
Innocent the fourth from th'Emperour flying
5204/1243.
To
Lyons: to the Cardinals first gaue
Red hats. A
Iew in
Spaine Christs faith denying,
picrst a huge rocke, there found a hallow Caue,
In it a Marble stone which with Steele trying,
He finds a Booke inclosd with praecepts graue,
5206/1245
Which spoke of Christ, by which the Story saith,
The stiffe-neckt
Iew was turn'd to Christian faith.
46
Henry with London Citty late displeasd,
For sentence gainst one
Margaret Viell past,
5209/1248
Into his power the Cities Charters ceasd,
Which by submission they regain'd at last,
Young
Alexanders Father long diseads
Expir'd in
Scotland, the young prince in hast
at nine yeares Crownd, to whom
Henry affide,
5213./1252.
His Daughter
Mary, whom he tooke to Bride.
47
In
Italy bloud issued out of bread
5214/1253
As out of woundes,
French Lewes was surprisd
By the great
Souldan: Mango Caan's made head
Of the rude
Tartars, who being well aduisde,
5219/1254
Receiued the Christian Fayth, and after sped
against the
Turkes, in Crosses red disguisde:
Alphons of
Spaine bestowes his Daughter fayre
On young Prince
Edward, Henries hopefull heyre.
48
Richard of
Cornwall, Brother to the King,
5218/1257
At
Aquisgraue was Emperor elected,
and
Alphons of
Castile the State affecting,
5219/1258.
Was by the Electors from the State reiected,
Albertus Magnus flourisht in his spring,
And
Michael Paleologus, respected
For his great warres in
Greece, who
Baldwin slew,
5221./1260.
and thirty fiue yeares in the Empire grewe.
49
At
Oxford the mad Parlement began,
5225/1264.
King
Henry with his
Barons doth contend,
They fought neare
Lewes, many a valiant man
Of Noble bloud came to a timeless end,
The King against his Peeres the best he can,
Striues by the Sword, his
Barons to offend:
Richard of Cornwayle Brother to the King and Emperor.
Who
Manger all his force the battaile wonne,
Surprisd the King, his Brother, and his Sonne.
50
Prince
Edward entred
Asia, and there fought
5233./1272
against the
Turkes, where he atchieued much fame,
at length his life was by a
Sarazan sought,
Who with a Knife to his Pauilion came
Empoysoned: and his death had almost wrought,
For in his princely arme he fixt the same:
Richard, King
Henries Brother, and
Romes king
5233/1272
First dyes, and after
Henry, the same spring.
51
Next whom, Prince
Edward Long-shankes was inucsted,
Edward the first.
and thirty foure yeares raign'd, admir'd and feared,
Th'vsurping pride of Priests, he much detested,
5235/1274
Bounty and Vertue in this Prince appeared,
[Page 449]
Nicholas the third made Pope, from th'Empire wrested
5238/1277
Two Kingdomes for two
Nephewes, much indeered:
5240/1279
Of
lewes at once (that in their wealth tooke pride,)
Two hundred eyghty foure, for Coyning dyde.
52
Lewellen next rebeld, slaino by the hand
Of
Roger Mortimer. After not long
Dauid his Brother did gainst
Edward stand,
5246/1285.
A daungerous Rebell, and infaction strong,
Yet perisht likewise, with his warlike Band
Of
Welch reuolted: (other things among)
King
Edward ioyes, to quell the
French-mens scorne,
and for Prince
Edward at
Carnaruan borne.
53
Alexander Issu-lesse fell from his Steed
And brake his necke, the
Carmelites began.
5247/1286.
Phillip the fayre, in
France was King decreed,
Two Women in
Heluetia liued than,
Who in their Wombs did two strange Monsters breed,
One bore a Child that had the face of man,
and body of a Lyon: th'other bred
5248/1287
One with two bodies, from the Girdle-sted.
54
The
Scotch King dying Issulesse, contention
In
Scotland grew, who should succeede the State,
The strife
Edward atton'd, and after mention
5253./1292
Made of their Title, which these Lords relate,
He arbitrates theyr fierce and hot dissention,
And to
Iohn Balioll priz'd at hyest rate
5254/1293
He giues the Crowne, which pleased
Scotland well,
Madock and
Morgan now in
Wales rebell.
5255/1294
55
Edward thrice war'd gainst
Scotland, and preuayled,
5260/1299
The
French Kings Sister
Margaret tooke to Wife,
and to his Sonne the Princedome he entayled
Edward the 2. the 1. Prince of Wales.
Of
Wales, proud
Ottoman began great stufe
With Christendome, and many Townes assayled,
In him the Empire of the
Turkes tooke life:
5261/1300
Pope
Boniface the eyght suruiued than,
He first in
Rome the
Iubilee began.
56
Creat
Tamor Ca
[...] gouernd
Tartaria,
Albert the Empire,
France, King
Phillip guided,
5267./1306.
Prince
Ladislaus ruld
Hungaria;
Clement the fift the seat of
Rome deuided,
Transporting it to
France, which from that day
Seauenty foure yeares continew'd vndecided:
5268/1307.
Seraph th'
Egiptian Souldan-ship supplide,
Edward 2.
Edward the first in his
Scotch garboiles dide.
57
The second
Edward him succeeds, and raignes
5269/1308
Full eighteene yeares, a Prince of no renowne,
He ryots, Lusts, and wantonnesse maintaind
Mongst priuate vnthrifts, and his peeres put downe,
Henry the Emperour hauing brauely gaind,
Henry 7. Em.
Many great fields was with an yron Crowne
5270/1309.
at
Milleine Crownd, where he aduancst his name,
The Crutched Fryares first into England came.
58
Peirs Gaueston twice banisht by the Peeres,
Was by the King recald:
Iohn Tamer rose
5076./1315
In rebell armes, destroyd by his owne feares,
Phillip the long, their King the French-men chose,
The hauty
Spencers triumpht many yeares
Ouer the Nobles, who themselues oppose
against their pride: the Spencers they exile,
Whom the loose King reuoked in small while.
59
Twenty two Barons (for the Spencers loue)
5283/1322.
The King cut off: the
Sun six houres appeared
Of sanguine hew, his glorious brightnesse stroue
with his red Maske, which at the last he cleared,
Edward his force did twice gainst
Scotland proue,
(Both times the soyle with English blood besmeared:)
5
[...]84/1323
The Queene and Prince the Spencers could not brook
And like two exiles their owne Land forsooke.
60
Sir
Iohn of
Henault Lands in the Queenes ayde,
And hy the Barons helpe, the King pursued,
who after in strong
Barkley Castle layde
Sir
Roger Mortimer, a man indude
[Page 451] With Pride and Tyrrany the King betrayde,
5287/1326
and with the Kings bloud
[...] Tower Imbrude:
Baldock, the Spencers Minions to the King,
The Conquering Peeres vnto destruction bring.
61
Edward King
Edwards Sonne, fifty yeares bore
Edward the 3.
Englands rich Scepter:
Charles the
French King dide,
Leauing no issue of the Royall store,
5288/1327
Therefore King
Edward being next alyde,
Claymes
France, to which the
Doncipeeres restore
Phillip Valois, and
Edwards clayme deride:
Sir
Roger Mortimer (long graft boue reason
5291/1330
By the Kings Mother) was condemn'd of Treason.
62
Edward the Blacke-Prince was at
Woodstocke borne,
5293/1332
King
Edward fought the fi
[...]ld cald
Haldonne Hill
In
Scotland, After some few dayes out-worne,
The King his clayme to
France doth menace still,
Petrach the
Laureat liu'd, the French in scorne,
Foure hundred Sayle with armed Souldiers fill:
5301/1340.
These
Edward meetes at Siuce, whom fame hath sounded,
Thirty three thousand of
French t'haue slain & drowned.
63
The order of the Garter was first made,
Soone after was the famous Cressie field,
Don Petro by his
Spanish Peeres betrayde,
Was to their violent fury forst to yeild,
Edward wan
Callis: Iohn next
Phillip swayde
5309/1348
In
France, and mena'st with his warlike Shield:
The braue Black-Prince at
Poytieres battayle wonne
5317./1356
The field, the
French King Prisoner, and his Sonne.
64
Melchella was now
Souldan, Amurath
Emperor of
Turky, and with Conquest fought,
5324/1363.
(A persecutor of the Christian Fayth)
The
French King-Iohn hauing his peace now bought,
at
Sauoy dide: and
Charles the sixt next hath
The Crowne of
France, Don-Peter ayde besought:
5327/1366
Who late exiled from the Crowne of
Spaine,
Was by the Black-Prince repostest againe.
65
The Duke of
La
[...]caster France ouer-run.
Iohn a Gaunt Duke of Lancaster
Vnfought withall: Sir
Robert Knowles likewise
Marcht by the Citty
Paris: now begun
5334/1373.
Great
Baiazeth among the Turkes to rise,
The braue blacke Prince (from
France where he had won
So many Noble fields) returning dyes:
5337./1376.
The King himselfe (as our best writers say)
Expird, of
Iune the two and twentith day.
66
Richard the second, sonne to the bold Prince
Richard 2.
Edward (sit-namd the Blacke) at yeares eleuen
Began his rule, whom many men conuince
Of wanton ryot, and a course vneuen,
Well tutor'd in's minority, but since
5341/1380
He manag'd state, too much neglecting heauen:
Gunnes were deuisd first by a
Germaine Fryer,
France doth the Kingdome of
Nauar desire.
67
Queene
[...]ane of
Naples flourisht,
Bohemes King
Vinceslaus, was
Almaine Emperor made,
Twixt
Portugall and
Castile discords spring,
Two Popes contend; the
Genowayes inuade
The bold
Venetians, and to battaile bring
Their Nauall powers, both Ensignes flye displaid:
5342/1381
Iacke Straw dyes, stabd in
Smithfield by the care
Of
William Walworth, at that time Lord Maior.
68
A wondrous Earth-quake did whole England shake,
5343/1382
King
Richard th
[...]
Almaine Emperors daughter wiude,
The Turkes in Christendome great vprores make,
5346/1385
Iohn Galeazo in those dayes suruiu'd,
Duke
Iohn of Gaunt, doth a braue voyage take
To conquer
Spaine, and in his purpose thriu'd:
The Barons of the Realme themselues with-drew,
5347/1386
And many of the King seducers slew.
69
The Duke of
Lancaster his daughter
Kate,
5349/1389
Married to
Henry Castiles eldess sonne,
His second daughter had the Queene-like state
Of
Portugall, by which all warres were done,
[Page 453] The
Turke in
Hungary suppreft but late,
5350/1389.
Seekes by his power all
G
[...]eece to ouer-ron:
The Academy of
[...] leine fou
[...]d.
Against
Constanti
[...]opolis, he layde
at eyght-yeare siedge: now
Colleines Schoole was made.
70
Robert of
Scotland dying,
Iohn his heyre
5356/1395
Succeedes next:
Richard (Queene
Anne beiug dead)
Espousd
French Isabel: then did prepare
For
Ireland, where's voyage slowly sped,
The Duke of Gloster and Earle of Arundell.
He put to death his Vncles, for the care
Of him and his Realmes safty (sore misled)
Hereford and
Norfolke Dukes the Combat clayme,
5359/1398
and both are banist in King
Richards name.
71
The
S
[...]ithian Tamberlaine the
Turkes subdude,
and kept theyr Emperor in an Iron Cage,
Hereford against his sentence, durst intrude
Himselfe int'England, and gainst
Richard wage
A threatned warre: the Peeres
Richard exclude
From gouernment, who in his strength of age
Resignes his Crowne, his Dignity, and Fame,
Edward the fourth.
To
Henry Bullingbrooke, fourth of that name.
72
Gainst whom the Duke of
Exeter, Richards Brother,
5360/1399
The Dukes of
Surry and
Aumarle conspyre,
With
Glocester, who his hatred cannot smother,
And
Salsbury, all these his life conspyre,
and for it lost their lyues, with many other
Of the same faction, seeking to aspyre:
Richard is slayne in Prison, after showne
Through
London streets, to haue his death wel known.
73
Owen Glendoure raysd armes:
Hotspur rebeld,
Woorster, Northumberland, with others moe,
5362/1401
Whom
Edward met at
Shrewsbury, and queld,
Giuing those Lords a Mortall ouerthrow,
The
Milleine Duke, that many yeares exceld
Galiazo Duke of Milleine.
In Tyranny, at length was layde full low:
Leauing to
Iohn his Sonne the Dukedomes Seat,
5363/1402
This yeare was stated
Mahome
[...] the great.
74
Charles of
Cremona, by the Treason dide
5367/1460.
Of base
Cabrinus Fundulus, his slaue,
Th'Arch-Byshop
Scroope, that
Edward late defide,
Surprizd in field, came to a timelesse graue,
In
Poland at
Cracouia full of pride,
Was founded
th'Accademy: some depraue
5368/1407
The
Burgoin Duke, that did his hands imbrew
In
Orleance blood, whom he by Treason slew.
75
Saint
Andrewes Vniuersity begon
5372/1411
In
Scotland, Ioh
[...] the
Milleine Duke is slaine
Of his owne Subjects:
Ladislaus won
The Citty
Rome, which he gaue vp againe,
Henry the S.
King
Edward dying, left vnto his son
Henry the fift, a faire and prosperous raigne:
5374/1413.
Ten yeares he did his Royall fame aduance,
and to his Crowne annext the Realme of
France.
76
Great
Amurath sway'd
Turky: Iohn, Castile:
The sixt
Charles, France; Pope
Martin, Peters Chaire:
at
Henries claime to France the French-men smile,
With many taunts they Englands puissance dare,
King
Henrie crost the seas, and in small while
5377./1416
at
Agin-court, manag'd a fight so rare:
That in one battaile he the Land ore-tun,
Leauiug the Crowne successiue to his son.
77
Ieremy Prague, and
Iohn Husse dye by fire
5378/1417
about religious causes,
Ziscaled
The
Thaborytes, and further gan aspire
against the Emperour to list his head,
French Katherine was Crownd Queene by great desire
Of all our English peeres: Duke
Clarens sped
5382/1421
against the Dolphin, but (alas) in vaine,
By multitudes he was ore-set and slaine.
78
Henry t'auenge his Brothers death, prepares
5383/1422
againe to inuade France, where he breaths his last,
Pale death that in his rigour no man spates,
Beteaues him life: his infant sonne not past
[Page 455] Eyght months of age, assumes the Lands affayres
Henry the sixt
Vnder protection:
Bedfards Duke was great
5389/1428
With
Regency of
France, a Sorceting Maide,
Ioane de pusill.
Fought on the Dolphins part, and brought him ayde.
79
Who in small time was King of
France proclaymde,
at
Orleance braue
Mountacute is slaine,
Prince
Sigismond is
Roman Emperor nam'd,
5394/1433.
Eugenius doth the papall Sea maintaine,
Eug. 4.
Phillip guides
Milleine: now was
Talboot fam'd,
Who many lost Townes did in
France regaine:
5398/1437
Now flourisht
Francis Forza in his pride,
The Lyons in the Tower this yeare all dyde.
80
Zeuza liues
Persiaes King: for Sorcery
5399/1438
Dame
Elen Cobham the Protectors Wise,
With diuers others were found treacherously
5420/1441
To haue cnnspyred against King
Henries life,
Dame
Margaret to the King of
Scicily
Sole-Daughter (which began much future strife)
5406/1445
To
Henries Bed, with
Suffolke crost the Scas,
now liu'd the braue Prince
Huniades.
81
Humphrey the Duke of
Gloster, was depriu'd
5408/1447
His harmelesse life at
Bury: Suffolke now
5411/1450
Was banisht England, where he long had striu'd
By the Kings grace to make the Barons bow,
Iacke Cade, a mutit ous Rebell, now suruiu'd,
Dating the Kings Edicts to disalow:
This was the yeare of
Iubilee: In
Menz,
5413/1452.
Faustius first printed, at his owne expence.
82
The
Turkish Mahomet sackt and despoylde
5414/1453
Constantinople: at this time was fought
5415/1454
Saint
Albons battaile, where the King was foyld,
and by the Duke of
yorke a prisoner blought
To London: the sixt
Henry being much toyld
5416/1455
With Kingdomes cares, his peace and quiet sought,
Making proud
yorke protector: now was fam'd
George Castriotus, (
Scanderbag sir-nam'd,)
83
Great
Warwicke at
Northampton the King met
In battaile, of the Barons many slew,
Surpri'd the King in person without let,
5420/1459
The Duke of
Torke reuiues his claime anew,
Whom many of the chiefest Lords abet,
5421/1460
And in the Parlement his right pursue:
Being Titled heyre apparant to the Crowne,
at
Wakefield him, King
Henries Queene put downe.
84
Great
Warwi
[...]ke at Saint
Albons she made flie,
Rescuing the King her husband in small space,
Torkes sonne the Earle of
March gan to defie,
and sought by armes King
Henry to displace,
Neere
Torke both powers each other soone discry,
Where the fourth
Edward hath the King in chace:
Edward 4.
and now the victors Lord it where they please,
Whilst
Margaret with her young son crost the Seas.
85
Twelue Kingdomes, and two hundred Citties more,
5224/1463
Great
Mahomet subdues: next
Exham field
Was fought by them that
Henry would restore,
But to King
Edwards powers perforce they yeild,
5225/1464
Who wiues the Lady
Gray, she that before
Was wife to Sir
Iohn Gray: Warwick, his shield
aduancst against the King, whom he had Crownd,
and for French
Bona seekes him to confound.
78
Edward flyes
England, Henry is restord,
5431/1470
and
Edward with an army Lands againe,
Where
Warwickes pride vpon his shield is scord,
Edward ore-comes his powers on
Barnet plaine,
Earle
Warwicke by the Commons is deplord,
5432/1471
Edward the fourth once more vsurpes his raigne:
Gloster kils
Henries sonne, then madly fares
Gainst
Henrie, whom he murdred at his Prayers.
87
Cassanus gouernd
Persia, Mistris
Shore
5435/1474
Was famous for her beauty:
Hungary
Mathias ruld, The Pope (not knowne before)
5436/1475
at twenty fiue yeares made the lubily
[Page 457] The Duke of
Clarens is lamented sore,
5444./1483
Being in a Wine-but murdred treacherously:
Edward expyres: two sons he leaues behind,
Three Daughters, and a Brother most vnkind.
88
The eleauenth of Aprill, and the eleauenth sad yeare
Edward the 5
Of his young age, fift
Edward gins his raigne,
But eare he yet was Crown'd,
Richard (too neare)
His Vncle did his hands with murther stayne,
Both
Edwards Children by his doome seuere,
Were Butcherd in the Tower, and fouly slaine:
now famous wearc,
Gaza, Sabellicus
Pycus Myrandula, Aldus Minutius.
89
George Valla, Hermolaus Barbarus,
Pelitian Platine, with a many moe,
Marcilius Ficinus, Pomponius Latus
With Iohannes de monte regio,
Now
Venice and
Ferara peace discusse,
5445/1484
Great
Baiazeth sustaines an ouerthrow
By the bold
Souldan, next instated came
Vsurping
Richard, cald third of that name.
Richard the 3.
90
Two yeares, two months, and two dayes he inioyes
Regality, whilst
Charles the eyght swayes France,
And
Innocent the eyght his power imployes
In
Rome, his Bastards to inhance
Richard, the Duke of
Buckingham destroyes,
Who thought the Earle of
Richmond to aduance:
5446/1485
Henry Earle
Richmond, M
[...]lford Hauen sought,
Where landing, he the field of
Bosworth fought.
91
Richard there slaine,
Henry the seauenth sits Crown'd,
Henry the 7.
Twenty three yeares:
Vgnerus Persia guides:
Fredericke the Empire:
Henry, to make found
The breach that
Torke and
Lancaster deuides,
a happy nuptiall contract doth propound
With fayre
Elizabeth, whom soone he brides:
She heyre to
yorke: This yeare (a disease new)
The Sweating sicknesse first in England grew.
82
Spaines Ferdinand, the kingdome of
Granade
5448/1487
Wan from the
Sarazens: Lambert a Child
Taught by a Priest cald
Simon, came to inuade
England with a new stile, by him compil'd
As Sonne to
Clarens: in this claime were made
Chiese Leaders,
Francis Louel once exil'd:
5450/1439
Broughton, and
Lincolnes Earle, with whom took part,
A valiant
German that hight
Martin-Swart.
83
These
Henry slew in battaile, and arrear'd
A Taxe of the Tenth-penny through the Land,
5451/1490.
For which the Commons in the field appeard,
And kill
Northumbers Earle: with a strong band
Henry inuaded
France: Columbus cleard
5453/1492
The vnknowne Seas, and boldly tooke in hand
The
Indies first discouery: Insurrection
5456/1495
By
Perkin Warbeck, in forraine protection.
84
In
Italy a Stone exceeding great
Fell from the ayre: Lord
Audly now rebeld,
5457/1496.
Henry and the
Scotch King of peace intreat,
The
Turke the bold
Venetian forces queld,
5459./1498
Who at
Dyrachium sought him to defeate,
Katherine of
Spaine, a Lady that exceld,
Was fianst to Prince
Arthur, Sforce subdude
5461/1500
Milleine, and all the
French-men did exclude.
1462/1501
85
Margaret King
Henries Daughter was affyde
Vnto
Scotch Iames: In
Germany bloud raind,
5460/1502
Elizabeth the Queene in Child-bed dyde,
The
French this yeare from
Naples were constrainde
5469/1508
By
Ferdinand of
Spaine: Now in his pride
Liu'd
Prestor-Iohn, Great
Ismael Sophy gaind,
5470/1509
Vpon the
Turke in many a warlike strife,
Henry the seauenth at
Richmond ends his life.
86
At eyghteene yeares
Henry the eyght succedes
And thirty eyght yeares raign'd, his Brothers Wife
Henry the eyght.
He marries by the Popes dispence, which breedes
Among the
Cardinals murmure and strife,
[Page 459]
Emson and
Dudley hated for theyr deeds,
5471/1510.
To please the Commons were depriu'd of life:
Now Doctor
Collet liu'd, a man of fame,
Erasmus too, deriu'd from
Rhoterdame.
97
The Turkish Tyrant
Selimus by warre,
5473/1512
Two Aegiptian Souldans chast and slew,
The
Muscouites the stoute
Pollonians barre,
Some rights, for which great battailes t'ween them grew,
France still retaines the memorable searre
Of
Henries valor, who that time o'rethrew
5474/1513
Turwin and
Turney: in whose streetes appeare,
Turrets as many as be daies
[...]'th yeare.
98
A peace with
France, King
Lewes, Mary wiues,
Sister to
Henry, and within few dayes
5475/1514
Expyres,
Charles Brandon gainst the French-men striues,
At Tilt and Barriers where he won great prayse,
and fetcht the Queene thence:
Francis next suruiues
The King of
France: Charles Brandon now assayes
The Queene, and marryes her, in small while after,
5476/1515
Mary was borne, King
Henries eldest Daughter.
99
Charles Duke of
Austrich is made King of
Spaine,
5478/1517
The Citties tumult chanc't on
Ill-May-day,
Cardinall
Woolsy flourisht: now complaine
The Popes allyes gainst
Luther: Turkes display
5479/1518
Theyr Ensignes against
Belgrade: once againe
5481/1520
Zuinglius began against the Pope t'inuaye:
Whose Doctrines, learnd
Erasmus seemde to abet,
Henry at
Arde in
France, the
French King met.
100
Charles is Crown'd Emperor: th'eyght
Henry writ
5481/1520
A Booke gainst
Luther: This yeare lost his head
The Duke of
Buckingham, and now did sit
In the Turkes Throne, a Prince with fury led,
5483/1522.
Who
Belgraue did besidge, and threatned it
Great
Solyman: The Emperor
Charles him sped
For England, where at
Windsore he was called
Vnto the Garter, and there Knight installed.
101
Christierne of
Denmarke banisht, with his Wife
5484/1523
Enter this Land, where they were well intreated,
The Earle of
Surry in his
Northerne strife,
In many sundry fights the Foe defeated,
Stormes and tempestuous Gusts this yeare were rife,
And in
Granade, a
Prodince fayrely seared,
5487/1526.
Were Citties swallowed, the great
Turke makes hed,
From whom the
Hungars king, drown'd as he fled.
102
The
Annabaptists sect was first begun,
5488/1527
Charles Burbons Duke sackt
Rome, and there was slaine,
Vaivad grew great in Fame, this yeare the Sunne
Appear'd three Sunnes at once.
Katherine of
Spaine,
(Before prince
Arthurs wife) the king is wun,
To be diuorst from; this diuorse in vaine
5490/1528
Cardinall Woolsie seekes (by meanes) to crosse,
Which to his ruine turnes, and fauours losse,
103
Tindall the holy Scripture now translated,
5491/1530
Th'arrested
Cardinall at
Leister dide,
5493/1523
And
Ferdinand is King of
Rome created,
Anne Bulloine next became King
Henrtes Bride,
And
Thomas Cromwell whom the Cleargy hated,
Made of the Counsell, the Kings Sister tyde
In marriage to
Charles Brandon, dyes forlorne,
5494/1533
Elizabeth was now at
Greenewich borne.
104
For Treason dyde the holy Mayde of
Kent,
5494/1536
Lady
Anne Bulloine like wise lost her head,
Erasmus after seauenty Winters spent
Expi'd, whose fame through Christendome is spread,
Lady
Iane Seamors beauty did content
The King so well, he tooke her to his bed,
5498/1537.
And on Saint
Edwards Eeue this yeare, tooke life
noble Prince
Edward, by the kings late Wife.
105
Fryer
Forrest dyde for Treason: One of
Spaine,
5499/1538
For eating Flesh vpon a day of Fast,
Was hang'd in
Paris (and tooke downe againe)
His Lady burnt: A full conclusion past,
[Page 461] Of Marriage tweene the King and Lady
Anne
5500/1539
Of
Cleeue, which solemne contract did distast
The Kinges soone after: who for her rare feature,
Wiu'd Lady
Katherine Howard, a fayer Creature.
106
Cromwell next lost his head: the disputation
5501/1540.
Begun at
Rat'isbone: Henry th'eyght is stiled
The King of
Ireland, by his proclamation,
and Lady
Katherine Howard, who defiled
Her vnchast body, with much lamentation
Led to her death: now
Luther was re
[...]led
5504./1533
In the
Popes Trident Counsell, the King wed
The Lady
Katherine, Lat'mer to his Bed.
107
The
Turkish Barbaressa famous grew
In
Germany, at
Mounster bloud did raigne,
Troubles with
Scotland: next these did insue
The Counsell held at
Spyre: now once againe
Henry inuaded
France, and did pursue
5505/1544.
The
Bullenois, since many did complaine
Against the Stewes, they were abandond quite,
The
pope the
Wormace Counsell did accite.
108
Luther expyres, soone after dyes the king,
5507/1546
Henry the eyght, whom the sixt
Edward then
1508/1547
Succeedes at nine yeares old, now first gan spring
That reform'd Church, which at first many men
Edward the 6.
Impugn'd: Masses no more the Church-men sing,
Next
Musele-borrow field did happen, when
Much bloud was spilt a both-sides,
Bonner now,
5509/1548
(Great in his Fathers dayes) the king makes bow.
109
Stephen Gardiner is cast into the tower,
The Brother
Seamers (falling at dissention
By meanes of their proud Wiues) begin to lower
Each vpon other, which without preuention,
Causd timelesse Fate, both their sweet liues deuower,
5500/1549
First
Arundell, then
Kit had firme intention
To change the State, but both were hang'd in chaines,
Bulloine was giuen vp by the
French-mens traynes.
111
At
Feuersham was murdred by his Wife
5512/1551,
Arden, by helpe of
Mosby and
Blacke-Will,
5514/1553.
The Trade with
Musco did now first grow rife,
Cu
[...]ford Dudley to the D. Northumberland.
Mong th'English Marchants, by the Nauiall skill
Of one
Gabato, he that first gaue life
To these aduentures. Many rumors fill
The Land with newes, that
Edward lately dide,
Meane time the Lady
Iane's made
Guilfords Bride.
112
Edward at sixteene yeares ofage deceast,
The Duke
Northumberland proclaimes Queene
Iane,
Q. Iane.
But soone her young and Infant title ceast,
The Commons by their power
Mary maintaine,
Q. Mary.
Sister to
Edward: her high State increast,
And next her Brother she begins her raigne:
Guilford and
Iane, with whom the Queene's offended,
Sent to the Tower where their sweete liues they en
[...]ded.
113
Bourne preaching at
Panles-Crosse, the Masse maintaining,
Bourne Cannon of Paules
A suddaine tumult at his Sermon raisde,
A man vnknowne his Doctrine much disdaining,
Threw at his face a Dagger:
Ridley praysd
Mongst protestants: and
Cramner fauour gaining
Ridley Bishop of London Cra
[...]mer Archbishop of C
[...]terbury.
In
Edwards dayes, were for Arch-traitors blaz'd
And dide by fire,
Northumberland that sped
To
Cambridge: on the Tower-hill lost his hed.
114
The
Turkish Solyman with his owne hands
Slew his sonne
Mustapha, the Cardinall
Car
[...]al Poole
In
Henries dayes but late exild his Lands,
Was by the Queene re
[...]cald, now gan to fall
The protestants; against them strictly stands
The Catholicke Cleargy: the proud
Genowayes brall
With the French King, who after in small while,
Wan by the Turkes ayde the rich
Corsicke Ile.
115
Englands great Queene espousd
Phillip of
Spaine,
5515/1554
Sir
Thomas Wyat for rebellion dide,
Coortney earle of Deuonshire.
Duke
Suffolke Father to the Lady
Iane,
Was at the Tower beheaded,
Coortney allyde
[Page 463] To the blood Royall once more they restraine
Of Liberty: the fourth
Paule full of pride
Supplies the pope-dome, the same year did chance,
Much warr
[...] and trouble betweene
Spaine and
France.
116
Lady
Elizabeth was keptin hold,
and by the Queene committed to the Tower,
5516./1555
There harshly vsd, her life to danger sold,
By souldiers the
[...]ce remooud to
Wood-stocke Bower,
Sir
Henry Benning-field (somewhat too bold)
Vpon her iust proceedings looking sower:
5517/1556.
a blazing Comet twelue full nights appeared,
Great Lones of Money by the Queene were reared.
117
Great dearth in England: For base murder dide
at
Salisbury Lord
Sturton: Callis lost,
5510./1558
Which was by England many yeares supplide,
Since the third
Edward, the proud Clergy mgrost
all the spirituall fruits, to glut their pride,
Phillip tooke fea, and left the English Coast,
K. Phillip.
For griefe of which
Mary soone after craisd,
5520/1959.
and dide, with Cardinall
Poole, (in England raisd)
118
Next whom the faire
Elizabeth is Crownd;
a Princesse with all gracious Thewes indude,
Q Elizab.
She did the Gospell quicken, and confound
Romes Antichrist, all such as he pursude
With fire and Inquisition, she guirt round
With safety, and her Lands pure face imbrude
With blood of Innocents, her prospetous raigne
Cleard, and wipt off each foule and bloody staine.
119
Henry the French King in the
[...]ilt was layde
Henry the 2
Breathlesse at
Paris, Paules is burnt, a peace
5521./1560.
Betweene the Realmes of France and England made,
Newhauen siege, and a great plag
[...]les increase,
Lord
Henry Stewart to the hests obayd
Of the Scotch peeres, whose v
[...]gings neuer
[...]ease:
5525./1564
Till to their generall comforts, he was seene
Espousd to Lady
Mary Scotlands Queene.
120
Now came the
Baden margra
[...] with his wife
5246./1565.
To London, she heere brought him a new sonne,
Whom the Queene Christend, breathing a new life
In his decaid estate. Now was begun
5227/1566.
The Burse on
Cornhill, whose renowne grew rife
In euery place, where Traffickes gaine is won:
In
Scotland to restore a kingdome torne,
Iames (of that name) the fixt, this yeare was borne.
121
Henry of
Scotland was by Traytors slaine,
And
Shan Oneile in
Ireland put to flight
5528/1567
By bold Sir
Henry Sidney, with the gaine
Of a great battaile, where theyr Treasons light
Vpon the Traytors: with a gallant trayne,
The
Muscouite lands in his Emperors right
5530/5569
T'establish Trafficke: now as rebels stand
Th'Earles of
Nor thumber land and Westmerland.
122
Debate with
Scotland: and in
Norfolke grew
Conspiracy, the Queene in person came
5531./1570
To
Gressams Burse, to take a princely view,
To which she gaue at his request a name,
Royall Exchange: this yeare the Christians slew
Many proud
Turkes, and beate them backe with shame
5532/1571.
Into theyr Foretresses, and Citties walled,
This was the battaile of
Lepantho called.
123
A massacre in
Paris, now their heads
The
Norfolke Duke lost, and
Northumber land,
5533./1572
A blazing starre, six months together spreds
Her fiery rayes, now by the violent hand
Of one
George Browne, who murdrous futy leads,
5524/1373.
Was Maister
Saunders slaine (the matter scand)
Anne Dreury (for that fact) and
Saunders wife,
George Browne, with trusty
Roger lost his life.
124
By
Furbusher, Cathaia was made knowne,
5435./1576.
The
Essex Earle this yeare at
Dinelon dide
In
Ireland, where his Fame was dreadfull growne,
Ioh
[...] Cassimerus did through London ride,
[Page 465]
Desmond rebeld,
Drake that had compast rowne
5542/1582
The world, and many dangerous Fortunes tride,
Was Knighted by the Queene, Mounsier arriued,
Thinking the English Monarchesse t'haue wiued.
125
William the Prince of
Orenge was betrayde,
5543./1582
And with a Pystoll by a souldier slaine,
Poland Musco into England made
5544./1583.
avoyage, and did six months heere remaine,
Purser and
Clinton Pyrars, that denaide
allegiance to the Queene, at length were tane
By
William Barrowes: Antwerpe sackt and spoyld
By
Parmaes Duke, who long against it toyld.
126
Northumberland himselfe in the Tower slew,
5546/1585.
Iago, Domingo, and
Carthagen,
By
Drake and
Furbusher (whom most men knew)
Carletle and many gallant Englishmen
Surprisd and
[...]ckt, the Earle of
Liester grew
Great in the Land, and sayld to
Flushing then:
5547/1586
Where his Commission he at large relates,
Being made chiefe Generall to the
Belgian states.
127
Embassadors from
Denmarke gratulate
Her highnesse raigne, the Earle of
Arundell
Conuict, aleague twixt England and the state
Of
Scotland, Noble
Candish furnisht well
In two good ships well mand and builded late,
His twn ships the Desire and Content.
Compast the world: the foureteene Traitors fell,
and suffer'd for the guilt, at
Zutphen dide,
Noble Sir
Phillip Sidney souldiers pride.
128
His death a generall griefe mongst souldiers bred,
5549/1588.
a Parlyment. The great
At made of
Spaine
Rode on the English Coast, and gainst vs sped,
But by our Fleet they were repulst againe,
at
Tilbery, the Campe was brauely led
By
Elizabeth in person, in whose traine
all Englands Chiualry mustred and met,
Leister meane time to Nature paid his debt.
129
Portugall voyage;
Lodwicke Grewill prest
For murder: the bold Duke of
Guise betraid
And slaine, by the third
Henry, when he least
Suspected Death, a Fryer no whit dismaid,
(Incouragd by the
Guisians as tis ghest)
Henry 4. kild
Murdred the King, then
Henrie Burbon laid
Claime to the Crowne, whom
England so supplies,
That by her ayde, his warlike Fortunes rise.
130
Whom
Essex, Willoughby, Norris assist,
Sir
Roger Williams with a many moe,
Strong
Paris they besiege, and as they list
5552/1591
March thorough
France, maugre the common foe,
Hacket is hangd in
Cheape, who did persist
In blasphemy: In London gan to grow
5553/1592
a grieuous Plague:
Lopes arraind and tride,
Drawne from the London Tower, at
Tyburne dide.
131
Cales sieg'd and won, the Duke of
Bulloine lands
5555/1594
In England: th'Islands voyage, this yeare came
5557/1596.
Embassadors from
Denmarke, from whose hands
The Queene receiu'd rich presents: Now with Fame
Th'Earle
Cumberland renownd in forraigne Lands
5558/1597
Wan
Iohn de Porterico, sackt the same:
Lord
Burleigh (Treasurer) submits to fate,
5559/1598.
Since the sixt
Edward Counsellor of state.
132
Essex is sent for
Ireland, gainst
Tyrone,
a Muster at Mile-end:
Essex comes backe
5560/1599
With a small traine of followers, after whom
Lord
Montioy speeds, against the dangerous packe
Of
Irish Rebels, whose braue valours showne
In his hye Conquests, and their fatall wracke:
The treacherous
Gowry gainst King
Iames conspired,
5561/1600
whose safety heauen couserud, the world admired.
133
Peace betwixt
Spaine and
France: from
Barbary,
and from the
Russian Emperour Legats come,
To gratulate the Queenes hye Soueraignty;
A sudden Insurrection, for which some
[Page 465] Suffred, some Finde, some set at Liberty,
Supprest without the clamour of the Drum:
Embassador from
Scotland, th'Earle of
Marre,
Desmond sent Prisoner from the
Irish warre.
5563./1602.
34
Martiall Byron arriues from
France: great ioy
For victories in
Ireland, since their pride
Was queld by th'English, who their powers imploy
To end the warres: soone after the Queene dide
The death of Q. Elizabeth.
At
Richmond, in her death she did destroy
All former mirth, this Virgin Queene supplide,
Forty foure yeares, fiue months a prosperous raine,
To Englands honour, and the feare of
Spaine.
133
To Register her vertues, I should spend
An age of time, yet thinke my scope too small,
The pages of this Volume would extend
Beyond strict number, yet not quote them all,
Therefore her praises, in her death I end,
They are so boundlesse that they cannot fall
Within the compasse of my apprehension,
Being sub
[...]ect to no limit, no dimension.
136
And to attempt that taske, I should alone
My owne sicke weakenesle to the world bewray,
And of her worth the smallest part or none,
Vnto the Readers couetous eyes display,
Therefore since she hath left an earthy Throne,
For heauens hye Mansion (there to raigne for aye)
I leaue her shrind mongst Angels, there to sing
5594/1603.
Vn-ending praises to th'eternal King.
137
KIng
Iames the sixt in
Scotland, of that name
In England first, her true and lawfull heyre,
Next Queene
Elizabeth the peeres proclaime,
King Iames.
And gladly plant him in fa
[...]e Englands Chaire,
Whose Vertues, Graces, Royall gifts, and Fame,
Zeale, Iustice, Learning, all without compare:
For thousands such, my Muse must' needs adore him,
Vnriuald yet, by such as raignd before him.
138
His praise is for my pen a straine too hye,
Therefore where he begins I make my pause,
and onely pray that he may still supply
Great
Brittaines Empyre with the Lands applause,
That as he hath begun to rectifie
This Common-weale, and st
[...]blish vertuous Lawes:
He still may'inioy his Queene, and yssue Royall,
Mongst subiects euer true, and Peeres still loyall.
139
But where's the harbour and the happy Bay,
Where after stormes I may in safety ride,
The Gusts and Tempests now begin t'allay,
Whose many boysterous flawes my Barke hath tride,
A gentle Land-wind with my sayles doth play,
and (thankes to Heauen) I now my hauen haue spide,
And maugte the Seas wrath: Behold at last,
Heere doth my shaken Ship her Anchor cast.
HE that expects in this briefe Epitomy of Chronicles, that infinitnes of laber, to suruey all the particuler kingdoms of the earth, and euery destinct accident hapning in the, must not onely allow mee an Ages limit (and all too little) but with all assist me in the search of many Authors, whose workes are (some rare to be found) & others not at all extant. But my purpose was not to troble the world with such prolixity or confusion of History, onely in a briefe Index, or short Register, (to comprize many and the most noted things) & to conferre their times with our history of England: In which, if I haue any way failed the Readers expectation, by inserting things friuolous, or omitting things Material, I must excuse it thus; I haue more will then Art, and more Indeuour then Cunning; yet, I make no question, he that shall succeed me in the like labour, will vse some mittigation of his Iudgement against me, and say at the least:
It is done, though not well done: Onely thus much let me speake in my owne behalfe: With Ages past I haue been too little acquainted, and with this age present, I dare not bee too bold.
FINIS.