LONDON.
Printed by Richard Field, for Iohn Harrison, and are
to be sold at the signe of the white Greyhound
in Paules Churh-yard. 1594.
HONOVRABLE, HENRY
Wriothesley, Earle of Southhampton,
and Baron of Titchfield.
THE loue I dedicate to your
Lordship is without end: wher-
of this Pamphlet without be-
ginning is but a superfluous
Moity. The warrant I haue of
your Honourable disposition,
not the worth of my vntutord
Lines makes it assured of acceptance. What I haue
done is yours, what I haue to doe is yours, being
part in all I haue, deuoted yours. Were my worth
greater, my duety would shew greater, meane time,
as it is, it is bound to your Lordship; To whom I wish
long life still lengthned with all happinesse.
Your Lordships in all duety.
William Shakespeare.
A 2
THE ARGVMENT.
0.3LVcius Tarquinius
(for his excessiue pride surnamed Superbus)
after hee had caused his owne father in law Seruius Tullius to
be cruelly murdred, and contrarie to the Romaine lawes and cu-
stomes, not requiring or staying for the peoples suffrages, had possessed
himselfe of the kingdome: went accompanyed with his sonnes and other
Noble men of Rome, to besiege Ardea, during which siege, the principall
men of the Army meeting one euening at the Tent of Sextus Tarquini-
us the Kings sonne, in their discourses after supper euery one commended
the vertues of his owne wife: among whom Colatinus extolled the incom-
parable chastity of his wife Lucretia. In that pleasant humor they all po-
sted to Rome, and intending by theyr secret and sodaine arriuall to make
triall of that which euery one had before auouched, onely Colatinus finds
his wife (though it were late in the night) spinning amongest her maides,
the other Ladies were all found dauncing and reuelling, or in seuerall dis-
ports: whereupon the Noble men yeelded Colatinus the victory, and
his wife the Fame. At that time Sextus Tarquinius being enflamed
with Lucrece beauty, yet smoothering his passions for the present, departed
with the rest backe to the Campe: from whence he shortly after priuily
withdrew himselfe, and was (according to his estate) royally entertayned
and lodged by Lucrece at Colatium. The same night he tretcherouslie
stealeth into her Chamber, violently rauisht her, and early in the mor-
ning speedeth away. Lucrece in this lamentable plight, hastily dispatch-
eth Messengers, one to Rome for her father, another to the Campe for
Colatine. They came, the one accompanyed with Iunius Brutus, the o-
ther with Publius Valerius: and finding Lucrece attired in mourning
habite, demanded the cause of her sorrow. Shee first taking an oath of
them for her reuenge, reuealed the Actor, and whole maner of his dea-
ling, and withall sodainely stabbed her selfe. Which done, with one con-
sent they all vowed to roote out the whole hated family of the Tarquins:
and bearing the dead body to Rome, Brutus acquainted the people with
the doer and manner of the vile deede: with a bitter inuectiue against the
tyranny of the King, wherewith the people were so moued, that with one
consent and a general acclamation, the Tarquins were all exiled, and the
state gouernment changed from Kings to Consuls.
THE RAPE OF
LVCRECE.
11F
ROM the be
sieged Ardea all in po
st,
2Borne by the tru
stle
sse wings of fal
se de
sire,
3Lu
st-breathed TARQVIN, leaues the Roman ho
st,
4And to Colatium beares the lightle
sse
fire,
5Which in pale embers hid, lurkes to a
spire,
6 And girdle with embracing
flames, the wa
st 7 Of
COLATINES fair loue,
LVCRECE the cha
st.
28Hap'ly that name of cha
st, vnhap'ly
set
9This batele
sse edge on his keene appetite:
10When
COLATINE vnwi
sely did not let,
11To prai
se the cleare vnmatched red and white,
12Which triumpht in that skie of his delight:
13 Where mortal
stars as bright as heauēs Beauties,
14 With pure a
spe
cts did him peculiar dueties.
B
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
315For he the night before in Tarquins Tent,
16Vnlockt the trea
sure of his happie
state:
17What pri
sele
sse wealth the heauens had him lent,
18In the po
sse
ssion of his beauteous mate.
19Reckning his fortune at
such high proud rate,
20 That Kings might be e
spow
sed to more fame,
21 But King nor Peere to
such a peerele
sse dame.
422O happine
sse enioy'd but of a few,
23And if po
sse
st as
soone decayed and done:
24As is the mornings
siluer melting dew,
25Again
st the golden
splendour of the Sunne.
26An expir'd date canceld ere well begunne.
27 Honour and Beautie in the owners armes,
28 Are weakelie fortre
st from a world of
harmes.
529Beautie it
selfe doth of it
selfe per
swade,
30The eies of men without an Orator,
31What needeth then Apologies be made
32To
set forth that which is
so
singuler?
33Or why is Colatine the publi
sher
34 Of that rich iewell he
should keepe vnknown,
35 From theeui
sh eares becau
se it is his owne?
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
636Perchance his bo
st of Lucrece Sou'raigntie,
37Sugge
sted this proud i
ssue of a King:
38For by our eares our hearts oft taynted be:
39Perchance that enuie of
so rich a thing
40Brauing compare, di
sdainefully did
sting
41 His high picht thoughts that meaner men
should (vant,
42 That golden hap which their
superiors want.
743But
some vntimelie thought did in
stigate,
44His all too timele
sse
speede if none of tho
se,
45His honor, his a
ffaires, his friends, his
state,
46Negle
cted all, with
swift intent he goes,
47To quench the coale which in his liuer glowes.
48 O ra
sh fal
se heate, wrapt in repentant cold,
49 Thy ha
stie
spring
still bla
sts and nere growes old.
850When at Colatia this fal
se Lord arriued,
51Well was he welcom'd by the Romaine dame,
52Within who
se face Beautie and Vertue
striued,
53Which of them both
should vnderprop her fame.
54Whē Vertue brag'd, Beautie wold blu
sh for
shame,
55 When Beautie bo
sted blu
shes, in de
spight
56 Vertue would
staine that ore with
siluer white.
B 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
957But Beautie in that white entituled,
58From Venus doues doth challenge that faire
field,
59Then Vertue claimes from Beautie, Beauties red,
60Which Vertue gaue the golden age, to guild
61Their
siluer cheekes, and cald it then their
shield,
62 Teaching them thus to v
se it in the
fight,
63 Whē
shame a
ssaild, the red
should fēce the white.
1064This Herauldry in
LVCRECE face was
seene,
65Argued by Beauties red and Vertues white,
66Of eithers colour was the other Queene:
67Prouing from worlds minority their right,
68Yet their ambition makes them
still to
fight:
69 The
soueraignty of either being
so great,
70 That oft they interchange ech others
seat.
1171This
silent warre of Lillies and of Ro
ses,
72Which
TARQVIN vew'd in her faire faces
field,
73In their pure rankes his traytor eye enclo
ses,
74Where lea
st betweene them both it
should be kild.
75The coward captiue vanqui
shed, doth yeeld
76 To tho
se two Armies that would let him goe,
77 Rather then triumph in
so fal
se a foe.
Now
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1278Now thinkes he that her husbands
shallow tongue,
79The niggard prodigall that prai
sde her
so:
80In that high taske hath done her Beauty wrong.
81Which farre exceedes his barren skill to
show.
82Therefore that prai
se which
COLATINE doth owe,
83 Inchaunted
TARQVIN aun
swers with
surmi
se,
84 In
silent wonder of
still gazing eyes.
1385This earthly
sain
ct adored by this deuill,
86Little
su
spe
cteth the fal
se wor
shipper:
87"For vn
staind thoughts do
seldom dream on euill.
88"Birds neuer lim'd, no
secret bu
shes feare:
89So guiltle
sse
shee
securely giues good cheare,
90 And reuerend welcome to her princely gue
st,
91 Who
se inward ill no outward harme expre
st.
1492For that he colourd with his high e
state,
93Hiding ba
se
sin in pleats of Maie
stie:
94That nothing in him
seemd inordinate,
95Saue
sometime too much wonder of his eye,
96Which hauing all, all could not
satis
fie;
97 But poorly rich
so wanteth in his
store,
98 That cloy'd with much, he pineth
still for more.
B 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1599But
she that neuer cop't with
straunger eies,
100Could picke no meaning from their parling lookes,
101Nor read the
subtle
shining
secrecies,
102Writ in the gla
ssie margents of
such bookes,
103Shee toucht no vnknown baits, nor feard no hooks,
104 Nor could
shee moralize his wanton
sight,
105 More then his eies were opend to the light.
16106He
stories to her eares her husbands fame,
107Wonne in the
fields of fruitfull Italie:
108And decks with prai
ses Colatines high name,
109Made glorious by his manlie chiualrie,
110With brui
sed armes and wreathes of vi
ctorie,
111 Her ioie with heaued-vp hand
she doth expre
sse,
112 And wordle
sse
so greetes heauen for his
succe
sse.
17113Far from the purpo
se of his comming thither,
114He makes excu
ses for his being there,
115No clowdie
show of
stormie blu
string wether,
116Doth yet in his faire welkin once appeare,
117Till
sable Night mother of dread and feare,
118 Vppon the world dim darkne
sse doth di
splaie,
119 And in her vaultie pri
son,
stowes the daie.
For
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
18120For then is Tarquine brought vnto his bed,
121Intending wearine
sse with heauie
sprite:
122For after
supper long he que
stioned,
123With mode
st Lucrece, and wore out the night,
124Now leaden
slumber with liues
strength doth
fight,
125 And euerie one to re
st them
selues betake,
126 Saue theeues, and cares, and troubled minds that (wake.
19127As one of which doth Tarquin lie reuoluing
128The
sundrie dangers of his wils obtaining:
129Yet euer to obtaine his will re
soluing.
130Though weake-built hopes per
swade him to ab
stai
-(ning
131Di
spaire to gaine doth tra
ffique oft for gaining,
132 And when great trea
sure is the meede propo
sed,
133 Though death be adiū
ct, ther's no death
suppo
sed.
20134Tho
se that much couet are with gaine
so fond,
135That what they haue not, that which they po
sse
sse
136They
scatter and vnloo
se it from their bond,
137And
so by hoping more they haue but le
sse,
138Or gaining more, the pro
fite of exce
sse
139 Is but to
surfet, and
such griefes
su
staine,
140 That they proue bāckrout in this poore rich gain.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
21141The ayme of all is but to nour
se the life,
142With honor, wealth, and ea
se in wainyng age:
143And in this ayme there is
such thwarting
strife,
144That one for all, or all for one we gage:
145As life for honour, in fell battailes rage,
146 Honor for wealth, and oft that wealth doth co
st 147 The death of all, and altogether lo
st.
22148So that in ventring ill, we leaue to be
149The things we are, for that which we expe
ct:
150And this ambitious foule in
firmitie,
151In hauing much torments vs with defe
ct 152Of that we haue:
so then we doe negle
ct 153 The thing we haue, and all for want of wit,
154 Make
something nothing, by augmenting it.
23155Such hazard now mu
st doting
TARQVIN make,
156Pawning his honor to obtaine his lu
st,
157And for him
selfe, him
selfe he mu
st for
sake.
158Then where is truth if there be no
selfe-tru
st?
159When
shall he thinke to
find a
stranger iu
st,
160 When he him
selfe, him
selfe confounds, betraies,
161 To
sclandrous tongues & wretched hateful daies?
Now
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
24162Now
stole vppon the time the dead of night,
163When heauie
sleeep had clo
sd vp mortall eyes,
164No comfortable
starre did lend his light,
165No noi
se but Owles, & wolues death-boding cries:
166Now
serues the
sea
son that they may
surpri
se
167 The
sillie Lambes, pure thoughts are dead &
still,
168 While Lu
st and Murder wakes to
staine and kill.
25169And now this lu
stfull Lord leapt from his bed,
170Throwing his mantle rudely ore his arme,
171Is madly to
st betweene de
sire and dred;
172Th'one
sweetely
flatters, th'other feareth harme,
173But hone
st feare, bewicht with lu
stes foule charme,
174 Doth too too oft betake him to retire,
175 Beaten away by braine
sicke rude de
sire.
26176His Faulchon on a
flint he
softly
smiteth,
177That from the could
stone
sparkes of
fire doe
flie,
178Whereat a waxen torch forthwith he lighteth,
179Which mu
st be lode
starre to his lu
stfull eye.
180And to the
flame thus
speakes adui
sedlie;
181 As from this cold
flint I enfor
st this
fire,
182 So
LVCRECE mu
st I force to my de
sire.
C
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
27183Here pale with feare he doth premeditate,
184The daungers of his loth
some enterpri
se:
185And in his inward mind he doth debate,
186What following
sorrow may on this ari
se.
187Then looking
scornfully, he doth de
spi
se
188 His naked armour of
still
slaughtered lu
st,
189 And iu
stly thus controlls his thoughts vniu
st.
28190Faire torch burne out thy light, and lend it not
191To darken her who
se light excelleth thine:
192And die vnhallowed thoughts, before you blot
193With your vncleanne
sse, that which is deuine:
194O
ffer pure incen
se to
so pure a
shrine:
195 Let faire humanitie abhor the deede,
196 That
spots &
stains loues mode
st snow-white weed.
29197O
shame to knighthood, and to
shining Armes,
198O foule di
shonor to my hou
shoulds graue:
199O impious a
ct including all foule harmes.
200A martiall man to be
soft fancies
slaue,
201True valour
still a true re
spe
ct should haue,
202 Then my digre
ssion is
so vile,
so ba
se,
203 That it will liue engrauen in my face.
Yea
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
30204Yea though I die the
scandale will
suruiue,
205And be an eie-
sore in my golden coate:
206Some loth
some da
sh the Herrald will contriue,
207To cipher me how fondlie I did dote:
208That my po
steritie
sham'd with the note
209 Shall cur
se my bones, and hold it for no
sinne,
210 To wi
sh that I their father had not beene.
31211What win I if I gaine the thing I
seeke?
212A dreame, a breath, a froth of
fleeting ioy,
213Who buies a minutes mirth to waile a weeke?
214Or
sels eternitie to get a toy?
215For one
sweete grape who will the vine de
stroy?
216 Or what fond begger, but to touch the crowne,
217 Would with the
scepter
straight be
strokē down?
32218If
COLATINVS dreame of my intent,
219Will he not wake, and in a de
sp'rate rage
220Po
st hither, this vile purpo
se to preuent?
221This
siege that hath ingirt his marriage,
222This blur to youth, this
sorrow to the
sage,
223 This dying vertue, this
suruiuing
shame,
224 Who
se crime will beare an euer-during blame.
C 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
33225O what excu
se can my inuention make
226When thou
shalt charge me with
so blacke a deed?
227Wil not my tongue be mute, my fraile ioints
shake?
228Mine eies forgo their light, my fal
se hart bleede?
229The guilt beeing great, the feare doth
still exceede;
230 And extreme feare can neither
fight nor
flie,
231 But cowardlike with trembling terror die.
34232Had
COLATINVS kild my
sonne or
sire,
233Or laine in ambu
sh to betray my life,
234Or were he not my deare friend, this de
sire
235Might haue excu
se to worke vppon his wife:
236As in reuenge or quittall of
such
strife.
237 But as he is my kin
sman, my deare friend,
238 The
shame and fault
finds no excu
se nor end.
35239Shamefull it is: I, if the fa
ct be knowne,
240Hatefull it is: there is no hate in louing,
241Ile beg her loue: but
she is not her owne:
242The wor
st is but deniall and reproouing.
243My will is
strong pa
st rea
sons weake remoouing:
244 Who feares a
sentence or an old mans
saw,
245 Shall by a painted cloth be kept in awe.
Thus
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
36246Thus gracele
sse holds he di
sputation,
247Tweene frozen con
science and hot burning will,
248And with good thoughts makes di
spen
sation,
249Vrging the wor
ser
sence for vantage
still.
250Which in a moment doth confound and kill
251 All pure e
ffe
cts, and doth
so farre proceede,
252 That what is vile,
shewes like a vertuous deede.
37253Quoth he,
shee tooke me kindlie by the hand,
254And gaz'd for tidings in my eager eyes,
255Fearing
some hard newes from the warlike band,
256Where her beloued
COLATINVS lies.
257O how her feare did make her colour ri
se!
258 Fir
st red as Ro
ses that on Lawne we laie,
259 Then white as Lawne the Ro
ses tooke awaie.
38260And how her hand in my hand being lockt,
261For
st it to tremble with her loyall feare:
262Which
strooke her
sad, and then it fa
ster rockt,
263Vntill her husbands welfare
shee did heare.
264Whereat
shee
smiled with
so
sweete a cheare,
265 That had
NARCISSVS seene her as
shee
stood,
266 Selfe-loue had neuer drown'd him in the
flood.
C 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
39267Why hunt I then for colour or excu
ses?
268All Orators are dumbe when Beautie pleadeth,
269Poore wretches haue remor
se in poore abu
ses,
270Loue thriues not in the hart that
shadows dreadeth,
271A
ffe
ction is my Captaine and he leadeth.
272 And when his gaudie banner is di
splaide,
273 The coward
fights, and will not be di
smaide.
40274Then childi
sh feare auaunt, debating die,
275Re
spe
ct and rea
son waite on wrinckled age:
276My heart
shall neuer countermand mine eie;
277Sad pau
se, and deepe regard be
seemes the
sage,
278My part is youth and beates the
se from the
stage.
279 De
sire my Pilot is, Beautie my pri
se,
280 Then who feares
sinking where
such trea
sure lies?
41281As corne ore-growne by weedes:
so heedfull feare
282Is almo
st choakt by vnre
sisted lu
st:
283Away he
steales with open li
stning eare,
284Full of foule hope, and full of fond mi
stru
st:
285Both which as
seruitors to the vniu
st,
286 So cro
sse him with their oppo
sit per
swa
sion,
287 That now he vowes a league, and now inua
sion.
With-
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
42288Within his thought her heauenly image
sits,
289And in the
selfe
same
seat
sits
COLATINE,
290That eye which lookes on her confounds his wits,
291That eye which him beholdes, as more deuine,
292Vnto a view
so fal
se will not incline;
293 But with a pure appeale
seekes to the heart,
294 Which once corrupted takes the wor
ser part.
43295And therein heartens vp his
seruile powers,
296Who
flattred by their leaders iocound
show,
297Stu
ffe vp his lu
st: as minutes
fill vp howres.
298And as their Captaine:
so their pride doth grow,
299Paying more
slaui
sh tribute then they owe.
300 By reprobate de
sire thus madly led,
301 The Romane Lord marcheth to
LVCRECE bed.
44302The lockes betweene her chamber and his will,
303Ech one by him infor
st retires his ward:
304But as they open they all rate his ill,
305Which driues the creeping theefe to
some regard,
306The thre
shold grates the doore to haue him heard,
307 Night-wandring weezels
shreek to
see him there,
308 They fright him, yet he
still pur
sues his feare.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
45309As each vnwilling portall yeelds him way,
310Through little vents and cranies of the place,
311The wind warres with his torch, to make him
staie,
312And blowes the
smoake of it into his face,
313Extingui
shing his condu
ct in this ca
se.
314 But his hot heart, which fond de
sire doth
scorch,
315 Pu
ffes forth another wind that
fires the torch.
46316And being lighted, by the light he
spies
317LVCRECIAS gloue, wherein her needle
sticks,
318He takes it from the ru
shes where it lies,
319And griping it, the needle his
finger pricks.
320As who
should
say, this gloue to wanton trickes
321 Is not inur'd; returne againe in ha
st,
322 Thou
see
st our mi
stre
sse ornaments are cha
st.
47323But all the
se poore forbiddings could not
stay him,
324He in the wor
st sence con
sters their deniall:
325The dores, the wind, the gloue that did delay him,
326He takes for accidentall things of triall.
327Or as tho
se bars which
stop the hourely diall,
328 Who with a lingring
staie his cour
se doth let,
329 Till euerie minute payes the howre his debt.
So
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
48330So
so, quoth he, the
se lets attend the time,
331Like little fro
sts that
sometime threat the
spring,
332To ad a more reioy
sing to the prime,
333And giue the
sneaped birds more cau
se to
sing.
334Pain payes the income of ech precious thing,
335 Huge rocks, high winds,
strong pirats,
shelues and (
sands
336 The marchant feares, ere rich at home he lands.
49337Now is he come vnto the chamber dore,
338That
shuts him from the Heauen of his thought,
339Which with a yeelding latch, and with no more,
340Hath bard him from the ble
ssed thing he
sought.
341So from him
selfe impiety hath wrought,
342 That for his pray to pray he doth begin,
343 As if the Heauens
should countenance his
sin.
50344But in the mid
st of his vnfruitfull prayer,
345Hauing
solicited th'eternall power,
346That his foule thoughts might cōpa
sse his fair faire,
347And they would
stand au
spicious to the howre.
348Euen there he
starts, quoth he, I mu
st de
flowre;
349 The powers to whom I pray abhor this fa
ct,
350 How can they then a
ssist me in the a
ct?
D
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
51351Then Loue and Fortune be my Gods, my guide,
352My will is backt with re
solution:
353Thoughts are but dreames till their e
ffe
cts be tried,
354The blacke
st sinne is clear'd with ab
solution.
355Again
st loues
fire, feares fro
st hath di
ssolution.
356 The eye of Heauen is out, and mi
stie night
357 Couers the
shame that followes
sweet delight.
52358This
said, his guiltie hand pluckt vp the latch,
359And with his knee the dore he opens wide,
360The doue
sleeps fa
st that this night Owle will catch.
361Thus trea
son workes ere traitors be e
spied.
362Who
sees the lurking
serpent
steppes a
side;
363 But
shee
sound
sleeping fearing no
such thing,
364 Lies at the mercie of his mortall
sting.
53365Into the chamber wickedlie he
stalkes,
366And gazeth on her yet vn
stained bed:
367The curtaines being clo
se, about he walkes,
368Rowling his greedie eye-bals in his head.
369By their high trea
son is his heart mi
s-led,
370 Which giues the watch-word to his hand ful
soon,
371 To draw the clowd that hides the
siluer Moon.
Looke
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
54372Looke as the faire and
fierie pointed Sunne,
373Ru
shing from forth a cloud, bereaues our
sight:
374Euen
so the Curtaine drawne, his eyes begun
375To winke, being blinded with a greater light.
376Whether it is that
shee re
fle
cts
so bright,
377 That dazleth them, or el
se
some
shame
suppo
sed,
378 But blind they are, and keep them
selues inclo
sed.
55379O had they in that darke
some pri
son died,
380Then had they
seene the period of their ill:
381Then
COLATINE againe by
LVCRECE side,
382In his cleare bed might haue repo
sed
still.
383But they mu
st ope this ble
ssed league to kill,
384 And holie-thoughted
LVCRECE to their
sight,
385 Mu
st sell her ioy, her life, her worlds delight.
56386Her lillie hand, her ro
sie cheeke lies vnder,
387Coo
sning the pillow of a lawfull ki
sse:
388Who therefore angrie seemes to part in
sunder,
389Swelling on either
side to want his bli
sse.
390Betweene who
se hils her head intombed is;
391 Where like a vertuous Monument
shee lies,
392 To be admir'd of lewd vnhallowed eyes.
D 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
57393Without the bed her other faire hand was,
394On the greene couerlet who
se perfe
ct white
395Showed like an Aprill dazie on the gra
sse,
396With pearlie
swet re
sembling dew of night.
397Her eyes like Marigolds had
sheath'd their light,
398 And canopied in darkene
sse
sweetly lay,
399 Till they might open to adorne the day.
58400Her haire like goldē threeds playd with her breath,
401O mode
st wantons, wanton mode
stie!
402Showing lifes triumph in the map of death,
403And deaths dim looke in lifes mortalitie.
404Ech in her
sleepe them
selues
so beauti
fie,
405 As if betweene them twaine there were no
strife,
406 But that life liu'd in death, and death in life.
59407Her brea
sts like Iuory globes circled with blew,
408A paire of maiden worlds vnconquered,
409Saue of their Lord, no bearing yoke they knew,
410And him by oath they truely honored.
411The
se worlds in
TARQVIN new ambition bred,
412 Who like a fowle v
surper went about,
413 From this faire throne to heaue the owner out.
What
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
60414What could he
see but mightily he noted?
415What did he note, but
strongly he de
sired?
416What he beheld, on that he
firmely doted,
417And in his will his wilfull eye he tyred.
418With more then admiration he admired
419 Her azure vaines, her alabla
ster skinne,
420 Her corall lips, her
snow-white dimpled chin.
61421As the grim Lion fawneth ore his pray,
422Sharpe hunger by the conque
st satis
fied:
423So ore this
sleeping
soule doth
TARQVIN stay,
424His rage of lu
st by gazing quali
fied;
425Slakt, not
suppre
st, for
standing by her
side,
426 His eye which late this mutiny re
straines,
427 Vnto a greater vprore tempts his vaines.
62428And they like
stragling
slaues for pillage
fighting,
429Obdurate va
ssals fell exploits e
ffe
cting,
430In bloudy death and raui
shment delighting;
431Nor childrens tears nor mothers grones re
spe
cting,
432Swell in their pride, the on
set
still expe
cting:
433 Anon his beating heart allarum
striking,
434 Giues the hot charge, & bids thē do their liking.
D 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
63435His drumming heart cheares vp his burning eye,
436His eye commends the leading to his hand;
437His hand as proud of
such a dignitie,
438Smoaking with pride, marcht on, to make his
stand
439On her bare bre
st, the heart of all her land;
440 Who
se ranks of blew vains as his hand did
scale,
441 Left their round turrets de
stitute and pale.
64442They mu
string to the quiet Cabinet,
443Where their deare gouerne
sse and ladie lies,
444Do tell her
shee is dreadfullie be
set,
445And fright her with confu
sion of their cries.
446Shee much amaz'd breakes ope her lockt vp eyes,
447 Who peeping foorth this tumult to behold,
448 Are by his
flaming torch dim'd and controld.
65449Imagine her as one in dead of night,
450From forth dull
sleepe by dreadfull fancie waking,
451That thinkes
shee hath beheld
some ga
stlie
sprite,
452Who
se grim a
spe
ct sets euerie ioint a
shaking,
453What terror tis: but
shee in wor
ser taking,
454 From
sleepe di
sturbed, heedfullie doth view
455 The
sight which makes
suppo
sed terror trew.
Wrapt
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
66456Wrapt and confounded in a thou
sand feares,
457Like to a new-kild bird
shee trembling lies:
458Shee dares not looke, yet winking there appeares
459Quicke-
shifting Antiques vglie in her eyes.
460"Such
shadowes are the weake-brains forgeries,
461 Who angrie that the eyes
flie from their lights,
462 In darknes daunts thē with more dreadfull
sights.
67463His hand that yet remaines vppon her bre
st,
464(Rude Ram to batter
such an Iuorie wall:)
465May feele her heart (poore Cittizen) di
stre
st,
466Wounding it
selfe to death, ri
se vp and fall;
467Beating her bulke, that his hand
shakes withall.
468 This moues in him more rage and le
sser pittie,
469 To make the breach and enter this
sweet Citty.
68470Fir
st like a Trompet doth his tongue begin,
471To
sound a parlie to his heartle
sse foe,
472Who ore the white
sheet peers her whiter chin,
473The rea
son of this ra
sh allarme to know,
474Which he by dum demeanor
seekes to
show.
475 But
shee with vehement prayers vrgeth
still,
476 Vnder what colour he commits this ill.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
69477Thus he replies, the colour in thy face,
478That euen for anger makes the Lilly pale,
479And the red ro
se blu
sh at her owne di
sgrace,
480Shall plead for me and tell my louing tale.
481Vnder that colour am I come to
scale
482 Thy neuer conquered Fort, the fault is thine,
483 For tho
se thine eyes betray thee vnto mine.
70484Thus I fore
stall thee, if thou meane to chide,
485Thy beauty hath en
snar'd thee to this night,
486Where thou with patience mu
st my will abide,
487My will that markes thee for my earths delight,
488Which I to conquer
sought with all my might.
489 But as reproofe and rea
son beat it dead,
490 By thy bright beautie was it newlie bred.
71491I
see what cro
sses my attempt will bring,
492I know what thornes the growing ro
se defends,
493I thinke the honie garded with a
sting,
494All this before-hand coun
sell comprehends.
495But
Will is deafe, and hears no heedfull friends,
496 Onely he hath an eye to gaze on Beautie,
497 And dotes on what he looks, gain
st law or duety.
I
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
72498I haue debated euen in my
soule,
499What wrong, what
shame, what
sorrow I
shal breed,
500But nothing can a
ffe
ctions cour
se controull,
501Or
stop the headlong furie of his
speed.
502I know repentant teares in
sewe the deed,
503 Reproch, di
sdaine, and deadly enmity,
504 Yet
striue I to embrace mine infamy.
73505This
said, hee
shakes aloft his Romaine blade,
506Which like a Faulcon towring in the skies,
507Cowcheth the fowle below with his wings
shade,
508Who
se crooked beake threats, if he mount he dies.
509So vnder his in
sulting Fauchion lies
510 Harmele
sse
LVCRETIA marking what he tels,
511 With trembling feare: as fowl hear Faulcōs bels.
74512LVCRECE, quoth he, this night I mu
st enioy thee,
513If thou deny, then force mu
st worke my way:
514For in thy bed I purpo
se to de
stroie thee.
515That done,
some worthle
sse
slaue of thine ile
slay.
516To kill thine Honour with thy liues decaie.
517 And in thy dead armes do I meane to place him,
518 Swearing I
slue him
seeing thee imbrace him.
E
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
75519So thy
suruiuing husband
shall remaine
520The
scornefull marke of euerie open eye,
521Thy kin
smen hang their heads at this di
sdaine,
522Thy i
ssue blur'd with namele
sse ba
stardie;
523And thou the author of their obloquie,
524 Shalt haue thy tre
spa
sse cited vp in rimes,
525 And
sung by children in
succeeding times.
76526But if thou yeeld, I re
st thy
secret friend,
527The fault vnknowne, is as a thought vna
cted,
528"A little harme done to a great good end,
529For lawfull pollicie remaines ena
cted.
530"The poy
sonous
simple
sometime is compa
cted
531 In a pure compound; being
so applied,
532 His venome in e
ffe
ct is puri
fied.
77533Then for thy husband and thy childrens
sake,
534Tender my
suite, bequeath not to their lot
535The
shame that from them no deui
se can take,
536The blemi
sh that will neuer be forgot:
537Wor
se then a
slaui
sh wipe, or birth howrs blot,
538 For markes di
scried in mens natiuitie,
539 Are natures faultes, not their owne infamie.
Here
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
78540Here with a Cockeatrice dead killing eye,
541He row
seth vp him
selfe, and makes a pau
se,
542While
shee the pi
cture of pure pietie,
543Like a white Hinde vnder the grypes
sharpe clawes,
544Pleades in a wilderne
sse where are no lawes,
545 To the rough bea
st, that knowes no gentle right,
546 Nor ought obayes but his fowle appetite.
79547But when a black-fac'd clowd the world doth thret,
548In his dim mi
st th'a
spiring mountaines hiding:
549From earths dark-womb,
some gentle gu
st doth get,
550Which blow the
se pitchie vapours frō their biding:
551Hindring their pre
sent fall by this deuiding.
552 So his vnhallowed ha
st her words delayes,
553 And moodie PLVTO winks while Orpheus playes.
80554Yet fowle night-waking Cat he doth but dallie,
555While in his hold-fa
st foot the weak mou
se pāteth,
556Her
sad behauiour feedes his vulture follie,
557A
swallowing gulfe that euen in plentie wanteth.
558His eare her prayers admits, but his heart granteth
559 No penetrable entrance to her playning,
560 "Tears harden lu
st though marble were with ray
-ning.
E 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
81561Her pittie-pleading eyes are
sadlie
fixed
562In the remor
sele
sse wrinckles of his face.
563Her mode
st eloquence with
sighes is mixed,
564Which to her Oratorie addes more grace.
565Shee puts the period often from his place,
566 And mid
st the
sentence
so her accent breakes,
567 That twi
se
she doth begin ere once
she
speakes.
82568She coniures him by high Almightie loue,
569By knighthood, gentrie, and
sweete friend
ships oth,
570By her vntimely teares, her husbands loue,
571By holie humaine law, and common troth,
572By Heauen and Earth, and all the power of both:
573 That to his borrowed bed he make retire,
574 And
stoope to Honor, not to fowle de
sire.
83575Quoth
shee, reward not Ho
spitalitie,
576With
such black payment, as thou ha
st pretended,
577Mudde not the fountaine that gaue drinke to thee,
578Mar not the thing that cannot be amended.
579End thy ill ayme, before thy
shoote be ended.
580 He is no wood-man that doth bend his bow,
581 To
strike a poore vn
sea
sonable Doe.
My
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
84582My husband is thy friend, for his
sake
spare me,
583Thy
selfe art mightie, for thine own
sake leaue me:
584My
selfe a weakling, do not then in
snare me.
585Thou look'
st not like deceipt, do not deceiue me.
586My
sighes like whirlewindes labor hence to heaue (thee.
587 If euer man were mou'd with womās mones,
588 Be moued with my teares, my
sighes, my grones.
85589All which together like a troubled Ocean,
590Beat at thy rockie, and wracke-threatning heart,
591To
soften it with their continuall motion:
592For
stones di
ssolu'd to water do conuert.
593O if no harder then a
stone thou art,
594 Melt at my teares and be compa
ssionate,
595 Soft pittie enters at an iron gate.
86596In
TARQVINS likene
sse I did entertaine thee,
597Ha
st thou put on his
shape, to do him
shame?
598To all the Ho
st of Heauen I complaine me.
599Thou wrong
st his honor, woūd
st his princely name:
600Thou art not what thou
seem'
st, and if the
same,
601 Thou
seem'
st not what thou art, a God, a King;
602 For kings like Gods
should gouerne euery thing.
E 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
87603How will thy
shame be
seeded in thine age
604When thus thy vices bud before thy
spring?
605If in thy hope thou dar
st do
such outrage,
606What dar'
st thou not when once thou art a King?
607O be remembred, no outragious thing
608 From va
ssall a
ctors can be wipt away,
609 Then Kings mi
sdeedes cannot be hid in clay.
88610This deede will make thee only lou'd for feare,
611But happie Monarchs
still are feard for loue:
612With fowle o
ffendors thou perforce mu
st beare,
613When they in thee the like o
ffences proue;
614If
but for feare of this, thy will remoue.
615 For Princes are the gla
sse, the
schoole, the booke,
616 Where
subie
cts eies do learn, do read, do looke.
89617And wilt thou be the
schoole where lu
st shall learne?
618Mu
st he in thee read le
ctures of
such
shame?
619Wilt thou be gla
sse wherein it
shall di
scerne
620Authoritie for
sinne, warrant for blame?
621To priuiledge di
shonor in thy name.
622 Thou back
st reproch again
st long-liuing lawd,
623 And mak'
st faire reputation but a bawd.
Hast
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
90624Ha
st thou commaund? by him that gaue it thee
625From a pure heart commaund thy rebell will:
626Draw not thy
sword to gard iniquitie,
627For it was lent thee all that broode to kill.
628Thy Princelie o
ffice how can
st thou ful
fill?
629 When patternd by thy fault fowle
sin may
say,
630 He learnd to
sin, and thou did
st teach the way.
91631Thinke but how vile a
spe
ctacle it were,
632To view thy pre
sent tre
spa
sse in another:
633Mens faults do
seldome to them
selues appeare,
634Their own tran
sgre
ssions partiallie they
smother,
635This guilt would
seem death-worthie in thy brother.
636 O how are they wrapt in with infamies,
637 That frō their own mi
sdeeds askaunce their eyes?
92638To thee, to thee, my heau'd vp hands appeale,
639Not to
seducing lu
st thy ra
sh relier:
640I
sue for exil'd maie
sties repeale,
641Let him returne, and
flattring thoughts retire.
642His true re
spe
ct will pri
son fal
se de
sire,
643 And wipe the dim mi
st from thy doting eien,
644 That thou
shalt
see thy
state, and pittie mine.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
93645Haue done, quoth he, my vncontrolled tide
646Turnes not, but
swels the higher by this let.
647Small lightes are
soone blown out, huge
fires abide,
648And with the winde in greater furie fret:
649The petty
streames that paie a dailie det
650 To their
salt
soueraigne with their fre
sh fals ha
st,
651 Adde to his
flowe, but alter not his ta
st.
94652Thou art, quoth
shee, a
sea, a
soueraigne King,
653And loe there fals into thy boundle
sse
flood,
654Blacke lu
st, di
shonor,
shame, mi
s-gouerning,
655Who
seeke to
staine the Ocean of thy blood.
656If all the
se pettie ils
shall change thy good,
657 Thy
sea within a puddels wombe is her
sed,
658 And not the puddle in thy
sea di
sper
sed.
95659So
shall the
se
slaues be King, and thou their
slaue,
660Thou noblie ba
se, they ba
selie digni
fied:
661Thou their faire life, and they thy fowler graue:
662Thou lothed in their
shame, they in thy pride,
663The le
sser thing
should not the greater hide.
664 The Cedar
stoopes not to the ba
se
shrubs foote,
665 But low-
shrubs wither at the Cedars roote.
So
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
96666So let thy thoughts low va
ssals to thy
state,
667No more quoth he, by Heauen I will not heare thee.
668Yeeld to my loue, if not inforced hate,
669In
steed of loues coy tutch
shall rudelie teare thee.
670That done, de
spitefullie I meane to beare thee
671 Vnto the ba
se bed of
some ra
scall groome,
672 To be thy partner in this
shamefull doome.
97673This
said, he
sets his foote vppon the light,
674For light and lu
st are deadlie enemies,
675Shame folded vp in blind concealing night,
676When mo
st vn
seene, then mo
st doth tyrannize.
677The wolfe hath ceazd his pray, the poor lamb cries,
678 Till with her own white
fleece her voice controld,
679 Intombes her outcrie in her lips
sweet fold.
98680For with the nightlie linnen that
shee weares,
681He pens her piteous clamors in her head,
682Cooling his hot face in the cha
ste
st teares,
683That euer mode
st eyes with
sorrow
shed.
684O that prone lu
st should
staine
so pure a bed,
685 The
spots whereof could weeping puri
fie,
686 Her tears
should drop on them perpetuallie.
F
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
99687But
shee hath lo
st a dearer thing then life,
688And he hath wonne what he would loo
se againe,
689This forced league doth force a further
strife,
690This momentarie ioy breeds months of paine,
691This hot de
sire conuerts to colde di
sdaine;
692 Pure cha
stitie is ri
fled of her
store,
693 And lu
st the theefe farre poorer then before.
100694Looke as the full-fed Hound, or gorged Hawke,
695Vnapt for tender
smell, or
speedie
flight,
696Make
slow pur
suite, or altogether bauk,
697The praie wherein by nature they delight:
698So
surfet-taking
TARQVIN fares this night:
699 His ta
st delicious, in dige
stion
sowring,
700 Deuoures his will that liu'd by fowle deuouring.
101701O deeper
sinne then bottomele
sse conceit
702Can comprehend in
still imagination!
703Drunken De
sire mu
st vomite his receipt
704Ere he can
see his owne abhomination.
705While Lu
st is in his pride no exclamation
706 Can curbe his heat, or reine his ra
sh de
sire,
707 Till like a Iade,
self-will him
selfe doth tire.
And
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
102708And then with lanke, and leane di
scolour'd cheeke,
709With heauie eye, knit-brow, and
strengthle
sse pace,
710Feeble de
sire all recreant, poore and meeke,
711Like to a banckrout begger wailes his cace:
712The
fle
sh being proud, De
sire doth
fight with grace;
713 For there it reuels, and when that decaies,
714 The guiltie rebell for remi
ssion praies.
103715So fares it with this fault-full Lord of Rome,
716Who this accompli
shment
so hotly cha
sed,
717For now again
st him
selfe he
sounds this doome,
718That through the length of times he
stāds di
sgraced:
719Be
sides his
soules faire temple is defaced,
720 To who
se weake ruines mu
ster troopes of cares,
721 To aske the
spotted Prince
sse how
she fares.
104722Shee
sayes her
subie
cts with fowle in
surre
ction,
723Haue batterd downe her con
secrated wall,
724And by their mortall fault brought in
subie
ction
725Her immortalitie, and made her thrall,
726To liuing death and payne perpetuall.
727 Which in her pre
science
shee controlled
still,
728 But her fore
sight could not fore
stall their will.
F 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
105729Eu'n in this thought through the dark-night he
stea
-(leth,
730A captiue vi
ctor that hath lo
st in gaine,
731Bearing away the wound that nothing healeth,
732The
scarre that will di
spight of Cure remaine,
733Leauing his
spoile perplext in greater paine.
734 Shee beares the lode of lu
st he left behinde,
735 And he the burthen of a guiltie minde.
106736Hee like a theeui
sh dog creeps
sadly thence,
737Shee like a wearied Lambe lies panting there,
738He
scowles and hates him
selfe for his o
ffence,
739Shee de
sperat with her nailes her
fle
sh doth teare.
740He faintly
flies
sweating with guiltie feare;
741 Shee
staies exclayming on the direfull night,
742 He runnes and chides his vani
sht loth'd delight.
107743He thence departs a heauy conuertite,
744Shee there remaines a hopele
sse ca
st-away,
745He in his
speed lookes for the morning light:
746Shee prayes
shee neuer may behold the day.
747For daie, quoth
shee, nights
scapes doth open lay,
748 And my true eyes haue neuer pra
ctiz'd how
749 To cloake o
ffences with a cunning brow.
They
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
108750They thinke not but that euerie eye can
see,
751The
same di
sgrace which they them
selues behold:
752And therefore would they
still in darkene
sse be,
753To haue their vn
seene
sinne remaine vntold.
754For they their guilt with weeping will vnfold,
755 And graue like water that doth eate in
steele,
756 Vppon my cheeks, what helpele
sse
shame I feele.
109757Here
shee exclaimes again
st repo
se and re
st,
758And bids her eyes hereafter
still be blinde,
759Shee wakes her heart by beating on her bre
st,
760And bids it leape from thence, where it maie
finde
761Some purer che
st, to clo
se
so pure a minde.
762 Franticke with griefe thus breaths
shee forth her
spite,
763 Again
st the vn
seene
secrecie of night.
110764O comfort-killing night, image of Hell,
765Dim regi
ster, and notarie of
shame,
766Blacke
stage for tragedies, and murthers fell,
767Va
st sin-concealing Chaos, nour
se of blame.
768Blinde muf
fled bawd, darke harber for defame,
769 Grim caue of death, whi
spring con
spirator,
770 With clo
se-tong'd trea
son & the raui
sher.
F 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
111771O hatefull, vaporous, and foggy night,
772Since thou art guilty of my curele
sse crime:
773Mu
ster thy mi
sts to meete the Ea
sterne light,
774Make war again
st proportion'd cour
se of time.
775Or if thou wilt permit the Sunne to clime
776 His wonted height, yet ere he go to bed,
777 Knit poy
sonous clouds about his golden head.
112778With rotten damps raui
sh the morning aire,
779Let their exhald vnhold
some breaths make
sicke
780The life of puritie, the
supreme faire,
781Ere he arriue his wearie noone-tide pricke,
782And let thy mu
stie vapours march
so thicke,
783 That in their
smoakie rankes, his
smothred light
784 May
set at noone, and make perpetuall night.
113785Were
TARQVIN night, as he is but nights child,
786The
siluer
shining Queene he would di
staine;
787Her twinckling handmaids to (by him de
fil'd)
788Through nights black bo
som
shuld not peep again.
789So
should I haue copartners in my paine,
790 And fellow
ship in woe doth woe a
sswage,
791 As Palmers chat makes
short their pilgrimage.
Where
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
114792Where now I haue no one to blu
sh with me,
793To cro
sse their armes & hang their heads with mine,
794To maske their browes and hide their infamie,
795But I alone, alone mu
st sit and pine,
796Sea
soning the earth with
showres of
siluer brine;
797 Mingling my talk with tears, my greef with grones,
798 Poore wa
sting monuments of la
sting mones.
115799O night thou furnace of fowle reeking
smoke!
800Let not the iealous daie behold that face,
801Which vnderneath thy blacke all-hiding cloke
802Immode
stly lies martird with di
sgrace.
803Keepe
still po
sse
ssion of thy gloomy place,
804 That all the faults which in thy raigne are made,
805 May likewi
se be
sepulcherd in thy
shade.
116806Make me not obie
ct to the tell-tale day,
807The light will
shew chara
cterd in my brow,
808The
storie of
sweete cha
stities decay,
809The impious breach of holy wedlocke vowe.
810Yea the illiterate that know not how
811 To cipher what is writ in learned bookes,
812 Will cote my loth
some tre
spa
sse in my lookes.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
117813The nour
se to
still her child will tell my
storie,
814And fright her crying babe with
TARQVINS name.
815The Orator to decke his oratorie,
816Will couple my reproch to
TARQVINS shame.
817Fea
st-
finding min
strels tuning my defame,
818 Will tie the hearers to attend ech line,
819 How
TARQVIN wronged me, I
COLATINE.
118820Let my good name, that
sencele
sse reputation,
821For
COLATINES deare loue be kept vn
spotted:
822If that be made a theame for di
sputation,
823The branches of another roote are rotted;
824And vnde
seru'd reproch to him alotted,
825 That is as cleare from this attaint of mine,
826 As I ere this was pure to
COLATINE.
119827O vn
seene
shame, inui
sible di
sgrace,
828O vnfelt
sore, cre
st-wounding priuat
scarre!
829Reproch is
stampt in
COLATINVS face,
830And
TARQVINS eye maie read the mot a farre,
831"How he in peace is wounded not in warre.
832 "Alas how manie beare
such
shamefull blowes,
833 Which not thē
selues but he that giues thē knowes.
If
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
120834If
COLATINE, thine honor laie in me,
835From me by
strong a
ssault it is bereft:
836My Honnie lo
st, and I a Drone-like Bee,
837Haue no perfe
ction of my
sommer left,
838But rob'd and ran
sak't by iniurious theft.
839 In thy weake Hiue a wandring wa
spe hath crept,
840 And
suck't the Honnie which thy cha
st Bee kept.
121841Yet am I guiltie of thy Honors wracke,
842Yet for thy Honor did I entertaine him,
843Comming from thee I could not put him backe:
844For it had beene di
shonor to di
sdaine him,
845Be
sides of wearine
sse he did complaine him,
846 And talk't of Vertue (O vnlook't for euill,)
847 When Vertue is prophan'd in
such a Deuill.
122848Why
should the worme intrude the maiden bud?
849Or hatefull Kuckcowes hatch in Sparrows ne
sts?
850Or Todes infe
ct faire founts with venome mud?
851Or tyrant follie lurke in gentle bre
sts?
852Or Kings be breakers of their owne behe
stes?
853 "But no perfe
ction is
so ab
solute,
854 That
some impuritie doth not pollute.
G
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
123855The aged man that co
ffers vp his gold,
856Is plagu'd with cramps, and gouts, and painefull
fits,
857And
scarce hath eyes his trea
sure to behold,
858But like
still pining
TANTALVS he
sits,
859And v
sele
sse barnes the harue
st of his wits:
860 Hauing no other plea
sure of his gaine,
861 But torment that it cannot cure his paine.
124862So then he hath it when he cannot v
se it,
863And leaues it to be mai
stred by his yong:
864Who in their pride do pre
sently abu
se it,
865Their father was too weake, and they too
strong
866To hold their cur
sed-ble
ssed Fortune long.
867 "The
sweets we wi
sh for, turne to lothed
sowrs,
868 "Euen in the moment that we call them ours.
125869Vnruly bla
sts wait on the tender
spring,
870Vnhol
some weeds take roote with precious
flowrs,
871The Adder hi
sses where the
sweete birds
sing,
872What Vertue breedes Iniquity deuours:
873We haue no good that we can
say is ours,
874 But ill annexed opportunity
875 Or kils his life, or el
se his quality.
O
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
126876O opportunity thy guilt is great,
877Tis thou that execut'
st the traytors trea
son:
878Thou
sets the wolfe where he the lambe may get,
879Who euer plots the
sinne thou poin
st the
sea
son.
880Tis thou that
spurn'
st at right, at law, at rea
son,
881 And in thy
shadie Cell where none may
spie him,
882 Sits
sin to ceaze the
soules that wander by him.
127883Thou make
st the ve
stall violate her oath,
884Thou blowe
st the
fire when temperance is thawd,
885Thou
smother
st hone
stie, thou murthre
st troth,
886Thou fowle abbettor, thou notorious bawd,
887Thou plante
st scandall, and di
splace
st lawd.
888 Thou raui
sher, thou traytor, thou fal
se theefe,
889 Thy honie turnes to gall, thy ioy to greefe.
128890Thy
secret plea
sure turnes to open
shame,
891Thy priuate fea
sting to a publicke fa
st,
892Thy
smoothing titles to a ragged name,
893Thy
sugred tongue to bitter wormwood ta
st,
894Thy violent vanities can neuer la
st.
895 How comes it then, vile opportunity
896 Being
so bad,
such numbers
seeke for thee?
G 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
129897When wilt thou be the humble
suppliants friend
898And bring him where his
suit may be obtained?
899When wilt thou
sort an howre great
strifes to end?
900Or free that
soule which wretchednes hath chained?
901Giue phi
sicke to the
sicke, ea
se to the pained?
902 The poore, lame, blind, hault, creepe, cry out for (thee,
903 But they nere meet with oportunitie.
130904The patient dies while the Phi
sitian
sleepes,
905The Orphane pines while the oppre
ssor feedes.
906Iu
stice is fea
sting while the widow weepes.
907Adui
se is
sporting while infe
ction breeds.
908Thou graunt'
st no time for charitable deeds.
909 Wrath, enuy, trea
son, rape, and murthers rages,
910 Thy heinous houres wait on them as their Pages.
131911When Trueth and Vertue haue to do with thee,
912A thou
sand cro
sses keepe them from thy aide:
913They buie thy helpe, but
sinne nere giues a fee,
914He gratis comes, and thou art well apaide,
915As well to heare, as graunt what he hath
saide.
916 My
COLATINE would el
se haue come to me,
917 When
TARQVIN did, but he was
staied by thee.
Guilty
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
132918Guilty thou art of murther, and of theft,
919Guilty of periurie, and
subornation,
920Guilty of trea
son, forgerie, and
shift,
921Guilty of ince
st that abhomination,
922An acce
ssarie by thine inclination.
923 To all
sinnes pa
st and all that are to come,
924 From the creation to the generall doome.
133925Mi
sshapen time, cope
smate of vgly night,
926Swift
subtle po
st, carrier of grie
slie care,
927Eater of youth, fal
se
slaue to fal
se delight:
928Ba
se watch of woes,
sins packhor
se, vertues
snare.
929Thou nour
se
st all, and murthre
st all that are.
930 O heare me then, iniurious
shifting time,
931 Be guiltie of my death
since of my crime.
134932Why hath thy
seruant opportunity
933Betraide the howres thou gau'
st me to repo
se?
934Canceld my fortunes, and inchained me
935To endle
sse date of neuer-ending woes?
936Times o
ffice is to
fine the hate of
foes,
937 To eate vp errours by opinion bred,
938 Not
spend the dowrie of a lawfull bed.
G 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
135939Times glorie is to calme contending Kings,
940To vnmaske fal
shood, and bring truth to light,
941To
stampe the
seale of time in aged things,
942To wake the morne, and Centinell the night,
943To wrong the wronger till he render right,
944 To ruinate proud buildings with thy howres,
945 And
smeare with du
st their glitring golden towrs.
136946To
fill with worme-holes
stately monuments,
947To feede obliuion with decay of things,
948To blot old bookes, and alter their contents,
949To plucke the quils from auncient rauens wings,
950To drie the old oakes
sappe, and cheri
sh springs:
951 To
spoile Antiquities of
hammerd
steele,
952 And turne the giddy round of Fortunes wheele.
137953To
shew the beldame daughters of
her daughter,
954To make the child a man, the man a childe,
955To
slay the tygre that doth liue by
slaughter,
956To tame the Vnicorne, and Lion wild,
957To mocke the
subtle in them
selues beguild,
958 To cheare the Plowman with increa
sefull crops,
959 And wa
st huge
stones with little water drops.
Why
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
138960Why work'
st thou mi
schiefe in thy Pilgrimage,
961Vnle
sse thou could'
st returne to make amends?
962One poore retyring minute in an age
963Would purcha
se thee a thou
sand thou
sand friends,
964Lending him wit that to bad detters lends,
965 O this dread night, would'
st thou one howr come (backe,
966 I could preuent this
storme, and
shun thy wracke.
139967Thou cea
sele
sse lackie to Eternitie,
968With
some mi
schance cro
sse TARQVIN in his
flight.
969Deui
se extreames beyond extremitie,
970To make him cur
se this cur
sed crimefull night:
971Let ga
stly
shadowes his lewd eyes a
ffright,
972 And the dire thought of his committed euill,
973 Shape euery bu
sh a hideous
shapele
sse deuill.
140974Di
sturbe his howres of re
st with re
stle
sse trances,
975A
ffli
ct him in his bed with bedred grones,
976Let there bechaunce him pitifull mi
schances,
977To make him mone, but pitie not his mones:
978Stone him with hardned hearts harder then
stones,
979 And let milde women to him loo
se their mildne
sse,
980 Wilder to him then Tygers in their wildne
sse.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
141981Let him haue time to teare his curled haire,
982Let him haue time again
st him
selfe to raue,
983Let him haue time of times helpe to di
spaire,
984Let him haue time to liue a lothed
slaue,
985Let him haue time a beggers orts to craue,
986 And time to
see one that by almes doth liue,
987 Di
sdaine to him di
sdained
scraps to giue.
142988Let him haue time to
see his friends his foes,
989And merrie fooles to mocke at him re
sort:
990Let him haue time to marke how
slow time goes
991In time of
sorrow, and how
swift and
short
992His time of follie, and his time of
sport.
993 And euer let his vnrecalling crime
994 Haue time to waile th'abu
sing of
his time.
143995O time thou tutor both to good and bad,
996Teach me to cur
se him that thou taught'
st this ill:
997At his owne
shadow let the theefe runne mad,
998Him
selfe, him
selfe
seeke euerie howre to kill,
999Such wretched hāds
such wretched blood
shuld
spill.
1000 For who
so ba
se would
such an o
ffice haue,
1001 As
sclandrous deaths-man to
so ba
se a
slaue.
The
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1441002The ba
ser is he comming from a King,
1003To
shame his hope with deedes degenerate,
1004The mightier man the mightier is the thing
1005That makes him honord, or begets him hate:
1006For greate
st scandall waits on greate
st state.
1007 The Moone being clouded, pre
sently is mi
st,
1008 But little
stars may hide them when they li
st.
1451009The Crow may bath his coaleblacke wings in mire,
1010And vnperceau'd
flie with the
filth away,
1011But if the like the
snow-white Swan de
sire,
1012The
staine vppon his
siluer Downe will
stay.
1013Poore grooms are
sightles night, kings glorious day,
1014 Gnats are vnnoted where
soere they
flie,
1015 But Eagles gaz'd vppon with euerie eye.
1461016Out idle wordes,
seruants to
shallow fooles,
1017Vnpro
fitable
sounds, weake arbitrators,
1018Bu
sie your
selues in skill contending
schooles,
1019Debate where ley
sure
serues with dull debators:
1020To trembling Clients be you mediators,
1021 For me, I force not argument a
straw,
1022 Since that my ca
se is pa
st the helpe of law.
H
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1471023In vaine I raile at oportunitie,
1024At time, at
TARQVIN, and vnchearfull night,
1025In vaine I cauill with mine infamie,
1026In vaine I
spurne at my con
firm'd de
spight,
1027This helple
sse
smoake of words doth me no right:
1028 The remedie indeede to do me good,
1029 Is to let forth my fowle de
filed blood.
1481030Poore hand why quiuer
st thou at this decree?
1031Honor thy
selfe to rid me of this
shame,
1032For if I die, my Honor liues in thee,
1033But if I liue thou liu'
st in my defame;
1034Since thou could
st not defend thy loyall Dame,
1035 And wa
st a
ffeard to
scratch her wicked Fo,
1036 Kill both thy
selfe, and her for yeelding
so.
1491037This
said, from her betombled couch
shee
starteth,
1038To
finde
some de
sp'rat In
strument of death,
1039But this no
slaughter hou
se no toole imparteth,
1040To make more vent for pa
ssage of her breath,
1041Which thronging through her lips
so vani
sheth,
1042 As
smoake from
AETNA, that in aire con
sumes,
1043 Or that which from di
scharged Cannon fumes.
In
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1501044In vaine (quoth
shee) I liue, and
seeke in vaine
1045Some happie meane to end a haple
sse life.
1046I fear'd by
TARQVINS Fauchion to be
slaine,
1047Yet for the
selfe
same purpo
se
seeke a knife;
1048But when I fear'd I was a loyall wife,
1049 So am I now, ô no that cannot be,
1050 Of that true tipe hath
TARQVIN ri
fled me.
1511051O that is gone for which I
sought to liue,
1052And therefore now I need not feare to die,
1053To cleare this
spot by death (at lea
st) I giue
1054A badge of Fame to
sclanders liuerie,
1055A dying life, to liuing infamie:
1056 Poore helple
sse helpe, the trea
sure
stolne away,
1057 To burne the guiltle
sse casket where it lay.
1521058Well well deare
COLATINE, thou
shalt not know
1059The
stained ta
st of violated troth:
1060I will not wrong thy true a
ffe
ction
so,
1061To
flatter thee with an infringed oath:
1062This ba
stard gra
ffe
shall neuer come to growth,
1063 He
shall not boa
st who did thy
stocke pollute,
1064 That thou art doting father of his fruite.
H 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1531065Nor
shall he
smile at thee in
secret thought,
1066Nor laugh with his companions at thy
state,
1067But thou
shalt know thy intre
st was not bought
1068Ba
sely with gold, but
stolne from foorth thy gate.
1069For me I am the mi
stre
sse of my fate,
1070 And with my tre
spa
sse neuer will di
spence,
1071 Till life to death acquit my for
st o
ffence.
1541072I will not poy
son thee with my attaint,
1073Nor fold my fault in cleanly coin'd excu
ses,
1074My
sable ground of
sinne I will not paint,
1075To hide the truth of this fal
se nights abu
ses.
1076My tongue
shall vtter all, mine eyes like
sluces,
1077 As from a mountaine
spring that feeds a dale,
1078 Shal gu
sh pure
streams to purge my impure tale.
1551079By this lamenting Philomele had ended
1080The well-tun'd warble of her nightly
sorrow,
1081And
solemne night with
slow
sad gate de
scended
1082To ouglie Hell, when loe the blu
shing morrow
1083Lends light to all faire eyes that light will borrow.
1084 But cloudie
LVCRECE shames her
selfe to
see,
1085 And therefore
still in night would cloi
stred be.
Reuealing
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1561086Reuealing day through euery crannie
spies,
1087And
seems to point her out where
she
sits weeping,
1088To whom
shee
sobbing
speakes, ô eye of eyes,
1089Why pry'
st thou throgh my window? leaue thy pee
-(ping,
1090Mock with thy tickling beams, eies that are
sleeping;
1091 Brand not my forehead with thy percing light,
1092 For day hath nought to do what's done by night.
1571093Thus cauils
shee with euerie thing
shee
sees,
1094True griefe is fond and te
stie as a childe,
1095Who wayward once, his mood with naught agrees,
1096Old woes, not infant
sorrowes beare them milde,
1097Continuance tames the one, the other wilde,
1098 Like an vnpra
ctiz'd
swimmer plunging
still,
1099 With too much labour drowns for want of skill.
1581100So
shee deepe drenched in a Sea of care,
1101Holds di
sputation with ech thing
shee vewes,
1102And to her
selfe all
sorrow doth compare,
1103No obie
ct but her pa
ssions
strength renewes:
1104And as one
shiftes another
straight in
sewes,
1105 Somtime her griefe is dumbe and hath no words,
1106 Sometime tis mad and too much talke a
ffords.
H 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1591107The little birds that tune their mornings ioy,
1108Make her mones mad, with their
sweet melodie,
1109"For mirth doth
search the bottome of annoy,
1110"Sad
soules are
slaine in merrie companie,
1111"Griefe be
st is plea
s'd with griefes
societie;
1112 "True
sorrow then is feelinglie
su
ffiz'd,
1113 "
When with like
semblance it is
simpathiz'd.
1601114"Tis double death to drowne in ken of
shore,
1115"He ten times pines, that pines beholding food,
1116"To
see the
salue doth make the wound ake more:
1117"Great griefe greeues mo
st at that wold do it good;
1118"Deepe woes roll forward like a gentle
flood,
1119 Who being
stopt, the boūding banks ore
flowes,
1120 Griefe dallied with, nor law, nor limit knowes.
1611121You mocking Birds (quoth
she) your tunes intombe
1122Within your hollow
swelling feathered brea
sts,
1123And in my hearing be you mute and dumbe,
1124My re
stle
sse di
scord loues no
stops nor re
sts:
1125"A woefull Ho
ste
sse brookes not merrie gue
sts.
1126 Rali
sh your nimble notes to plea
sing eares,
1127 "Di
stres likes dūps whē time is kept with teares.
Come
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1621128Come Philomele that
sing'
st of raui
shment,
1129Make thy
sad groue in my di
sheueld heare,
1130As the danke earth weepes at thy langui
shment:
1131So I at each
sad
straine, will
straine a teare,
1132And with deepe grones the Diapa
son beare:
1133 For burthen-wi
se ile hum on
TARQVIN still,
1134 While thou on
TEREVS de
scants better skill.
1631135And whiles again
st a thorne thou bear'
st thy part,
1136To keepe thy
sharpe woes waking, wretched I
1137To imitate thee well, again
st my heart
1138Will
fixe a
sharpe knife to a
ffright mine eye,
1139Who if it winke
shall thereon fall and die.
1140 The
se meanes as frets vpon an in
strument,
1141 Shal tune our heart-
strings to true langui
shment.
1641142And for poore bird thou
sing'
st not in the day,
1143As
shaming anie eye
should thee behold:
1144Some darke deepe de
sert
seated from the way,
1145That knowes not parching heat, nor freezing cold
1146Will wee
find out: and there we will vnfold
1147 To creatures
stern,
sad tunes to change their kinds,
1148 Since mē proue bea
sts, let bea
sts bear gētle minds.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1651149As the poore frighted Deare that
stands at gaze,
1150Wildly determining which way to
flie,
1151Or one incompa
st with a winding maze,
1152That cannot tread the way out readilie:
1153So with her
selfe is
shee in mutinie,
1154 To liue or die which of the twaine were better,
1155 When life is
sham'd and death reproches detter.
1661156To kill my
selfe, quoth
shee, alacke what were it,
1157But with my body my poore
soules pollu
sion?
1158They that loo
se halfe with greater patience beare it,
1159Then they who
se whole is
swallowed in confu
sion.
1160That mother tries a mercile
sse conclu
sion,
1161 Who hauing two
sweet babes, when death takes (one,
1162 Will
slay the other, and be nur
se to none.
1671163My bodie or my
soule which was the dearer?
1164When the one pure, the other made deuine,
1165Who
se loue of eyther to my
selfe was nearer?
1166When both were kept for Heauen and COLATINE:
1167Ay me, the Barke pild from the loftie Pine,
1168 His leaues will wither, and his
sap decay,
1169 So mu
st my
soule her barke being pild away.
Her
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1681170Her hou
se is
sackt, her quiet interrupted,
1171Her man
sion batterd by the enemie,
1172Her
sacred temple
spotted,
spoild, corrupted,
1173Gro
slie ingirt with daring infamie.
1174Then let it not be cald impietie,
1175 If in this blemi
sht fort I make
some hole,
1176 Through which I may conuay this troubled
soule.
1691177Yet die I will not, till my
COLATINE 1178Haue heard the cau
se of my vntimelie death,
1179That he may vow in that
sad houre of mine,
1180Reuenge on him that made me
stop my breath,
1181My
stained bloud to
TARQVIN ile bequeath,
1182 Which by him tainted,
shall for him be
spent,
1183 And as his due writ in my te
stament.
1701184My Honor ile bequeath vnto the knife
1185That wounds my bodie
so di
shonored,
1186Tis Honor to depriue di
shonord life,
1187The one will liue, the other being dead.
1188So of
shames a
shes
shall my Fame be bred,
1189 For in my death I murther
shamefull
scorne,
1190 My
shame
so dead, mine honor is new borne.
I
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1711191Deare Lord of that deare iewell I haue lo
st,
1192What legacie
shall I bequeath to thee?
1193My re
solution loue
shall be thy bo
st,
1194By who
se example thou reueng'd may
st be.
1195How
TARQVIN mu
st be v
s'd, read it in me,
1196 My
selfe thy friend will kill my
selfe thy fo,
1197 And for my
sake
serue thou fal
se
TARQVIN so.
1721198This briefe abridgement of my will I make,
1199My
soule and bodie to the skies and ground:
1200My re
solution Husband doe thou take,
1201Mine Honor be the knifes that makes my wound,
1202My
shame be his that did my Fame confound;
1203 And all my Fame that liues disbur
sed be,
1204 To tho
se that liue and thinke no
shame of me.
1731205Thou
COLATINE shalt ouer
see this will,
1206How was I ouer
seene that thou
shalt
see it?
1207My bloud
shall wa
sh the
sclander of mine ill,
1208My liues foule deed my lifes faire end
shall free it.
1209Faint not faint heart, but
stoutlie
say
so be it,
1210 Yeeld to my hand, my hand
shall conquer thee,
1211 Thou dead, both die, and both
shall vi
ctors be.
This
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1741212This plot of death when
sadlie
shee had layd,
1213And wip't the brini
sh pearle from her bright eies,
1214With vntun'd tongue
shee hoar
slie cals her mayd,
1215Who
se
swift obedience to her mi
stre
sse hies.
1216"For
fleet-wing'd duetie with thoghts feathers
flies,
1217 Poore
LVCRECE cheeks vnto her maid
seem
so,
1218 As winter meads when
sun doth melt their
snow.
1751219Her mi
stre
sse
shee doth giue demure good morrow,
1220With
soft
slow-tongue, true marke of mode
stie,
1221And
sorts a
sad looke to her Ladies
sorrow,
1222(For why her face wore
sorrowes liuerie.)
1223But dur
st not aske of her audaciou
slie,
1224 Why her two
suns were clowd ecclip
sed
so,
1225 Nor why her faire cheeks ouer-wa
sht with woe.
1761226But as the earth doth weepe the Sun being
set,
1227Each
flowre moi
stned like a melting eye:
1228Euen
so the maid with
swelling drops gan wet
1229Her circled eien infor
st, by
simpathie
1230Of tho
se faire Suns
set in her mi
stre
sse skie,
1231 Who in a
salt wau'd Ocean quench their light,
1232 Which makes the maid weep like the dewy night.
I 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1771233A prettie while the
se prettie creatures
stand,
1234Like Iuorie conduits corall ce
sterns
filling:
1235One iu
stlie weepes, the other takes in hand
1236No cau
se, but companie of her drops
spilling.
1237Their gentle
sex to weepe are often willing,
1238 Greeuing them
selues to ge
sse at others
smarts,
1239 And thē they drown their eies, or break their harts.
1781240For men haue marble, women waxen mindes,
1241And therefore are they form'd as marble will,
1242The weake oppre
st, th'impre
ssion of
strange kindes
1243Is form'd in them by force, by fraud, or skill.
1244Then call them not the Authors of their ill,
1245 No more then waxe
shall be accounted euill,
1246 Wherein is
stampt the
semblance of a Deuill.
1791247Their
smoothne
sse; like a goodly champaine plaine,
1248Laies open all the little wormes that creepe,
1249In men as in a rough-growne groue remaine.
1250Caue-keeping euils that ob
scurely
sleepe.
1251Through chri
stall wals ech little mote will peepe,
1252 Though mē cā couer crimes with bold
stern looks,
1253 Poore womens faces are their owne faults books.
No
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1801254No man inueigh again
st the withered
flowre,
1255But chide rough winter that the
flowre hath kild,
1256Not that deuour'd, but that which doth deuour
1257Is worthie blame, ô let it not be hild
1258Poore womens faults, that they are
so ful
fild
1259 With mens abu
ses, tho
se proud Lords to blame,
1260 Make weak-made womē tenants to their
shame.
1811261The pre
sident whereof in
LVCRECE view,
1262A
ssail'd by night with circum
stances
strong
1263Of pre
sent death, and
shame that might in
sue.
1264By that her death to do her husband wrong,
1265Such danger to re
sistance did belong:
1266 That dying feare through all her bodie
spred,
1267 And who cannot abu
se a bodie dead?
1821268By this milde patience bid faire
LVCRECE speake,
1269To the poore counterfaite of her complayning,
1270My girle, quoth
shee, on what occa
sion breake
1271Tho
se tears frō thee, that downe thy cheeks are raig
-(ning?
1272If thou do
st weepe for griefe of my
su
staining:
1273 Know gentle wench it
small auailes my mood,
1274 If tears could help, mine own would do me good.
I 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1831275But tell me girle, when went (and there
shee
staide,
1276Till after a deepe grone)
TARQVIN from hence,
1277Madame ere I was vp (repli'd the maide,)
1278The more to blame my
sluggard negligence.
1279Yet with the fault I thus farre can di
spence:
1280 My
selfe was
stirring ere the breake of day,
1281 And ere I ro
se was
TARQVIN gone away.
1841282But Lady, if your maide may be
so bold,
1283Shee would reque
st to know your heauine
sse:
1284(O peace quoth
LVCRECE) if it
should be told,
1285The repetition cannot make it le
sse:
1286For more it is, then I can well expre
sse,
1287 And that deepe torture may be cal'd a Hell,
1288 When more is felt then one hath power to tell.
1851289Go get mee hither paper, inke, and pen,
1290Yet
saue that labour, for I haue them heare,
1291(
What
should I
say) one of my husbands men
1292Bid thou be readie, by and by, to beare
1293A letter to my Lord, my Loue, my Deare,
1294 Bid him with
speede prepare to carrie it,
1295 The cau
se craues ha
st, and it will
soone be writ.
Her
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1861296Her maide is gone, and
shee prepares to write,
1297Fir
st houering ore the paper with her quill:
1298Conceipt and griefe an eager combat
fight,
1299What wit
sets downe is blotted
straight with will.
1300This is too curious good, this blunt and ill,
1301 Much like a pre
sse of people at a dore,
1302 Throng her inuentions which
shall go before.
1871303At la
st shee thus begins: thou worthie Lord,
1304Of that vnworthie wife that greeteth thee,
1305Health to thy per
son, next, vouch
safe t'a
fford
1306(If euer loue, thy
LVCRECE thou wilt
see,)
1307Some pre
sent
speed, to come and vi
site me:
1308 So I commend me, from our hou
se in griefe,
1309 My woes are tedious, though my words are briefe.
1881310Here folds
shee vp the tenure of her woe,
1311Her certaine
sorrow writ vncertainely,
1312By this
short Cedule
COLATINE may know
1313Her griefe, but not her griefes true quality,
1314Shee dares not thereof make di
scouery,
1315 Le
st he
should hold it her own gro
sse abu
se,
1316 Ere
she with bloud had
stain'd her
stain'd excu
se.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1891317Be
sides the life and feeling of her pa
ssion,
1318Shee hoords to
spend, when he is by to heare her,
1319When
sighs, & grones, & tears may grace the fa
shiō
1320Of her di
sgrace, the better
so to cleare her
1321From that
su
spiciō which the world might bear her.
1322 To
shun this blot,
shee would not blot the letter
1323 With words, till a
ction might becom thē better.
1901324To
see
sad
sights, moues more then heare them told,
1325For then the eye interpretes to the eare
1326The heauie motion that it doth behold,
1327When euerie part, a part of woe doth beare.
1328Tis but a part of
sorrow that we heare,
1329 Deep
sounds make le
sser noi
se thē
shallow foords,
1330 And
sorrow ebs, being blown with wind of words.
1911331Her letter now is
seal'd, and on it writ
1332At
ARDEA to my Lord with more then ha
st,
1333The Po
st attends, and
shee deliuers it,
1334Charging the
sowr-fac'd groome, to high as fa
st 1335As lagging fowles before the Northerne bla
st,
1336 Speed more then
speed, but dul &
slow
she deems,
1337 Extremity
still vrgeth
such extremes.
The
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1921338The homelie villaine cur
sies to her low,
1339And blu
shing on her with a
stedfa
st eye,
1340Receaues the
scroll without or yea or no,
1341And forth with ba
shfull innocence doth hie.
1342But they who
se guilt within their bo
somes lie,
1343 Imagine euerie eye beholds their blame,
1344 For LVCRECE thought, he blu
sht to
see her
shame.
1931345When
seelie Groome (God wot) it was defe
ct 1346Of
spirite, life, and bold audacitie,
1347Such harmle
sse creatures haue a true re
spe
ct 1348To talke in deeds, while others
saucilie
1349Promi
se more
speed, but do it ley
surelie.
1350 Euen
so this patterne of the worne-out age,
1351 Pawn'd hone
st looks, but laid no words to gage.
1941352His kindled duetie kindled her mi
stru
st,
1353That two red
fires in both their faces blazed,
1354Shee thought he blu
sht, as knowing TARQVINS lu
st,
1355And blu
shing with him, wi
stlie on him gazed,
1356Her earne
st eye did make him more amazed.
1357 The more
shee
saw the bloud his cheeks repleni
sh,
1358 The more
she thought he
spied in her
som blemi
sh.
K
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1951359But long
shee thinkes till he returne againe,
1360And yet the dutious va
ssall
scarce is gone,
1361The wearie time
shee cannot entertaine,
1362For now tis
stale to
sigh, to weepe, and grone,
1363So woe hath wearied woe, mone tired mone,
1364 That
shee her plaints a little while doth
stay,
1365 Paw
sing for means to mourne
some newer way.
1961366At la
st shee cals to mind where hangs a peece
1367Of skilfull painting, made for
PRIAMS Troy,
1368Before the which is drawn the power of Greece,
1369For
HELENS rape, the Cittie to de
stroy,
1370Threatning cloud-ki
ssing
ILLION with annoy,
1371 Which the conceipted Painter drew
so prowd,
1372 As Heauen (it
seem'd) to ki
sse the turrets bow'd.
1971373A thou
sand lamentable obie
cts there,
1374In
scorne of Nature, Art gaue liuele
sse life,
1375Many a dry drop
seem'd a weeping teare,
1376Shed for the
slaughtred husband by the wife.
1377The red bloud reek'd to
shew the Painters
strife,
1378 And dying eyes gleem'd forth their a
shie lights,
1379 Like dying coales burnt out in tedious nights.
There
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
1981380There might you
see the labouring Pyoner
1381Begrim'd with
sweat, and
smeared all with du
st,
1382And from the towres of Troy, there would appeare
1383The verie eyes of men through loop-holes thru
st,
1384Gazing vppon the Greekes with little lu
st,
1385 Such
sweet ob
seruance in this worke was had,
1386 That one might
see tho
se farre of eyes looke
sad.
1991387In great commaunders, Grace, and Maie
stie,
1388You might behold triumphing in their faces,
1389In youth quick-bearing and dexteritie,
1390And here and there the Painter interlaces
1391Pale cowards marching on with trembling paces.
1392 Which hartle
sse pea
saunts did
so wel re
semble,
1393 That one would
swear he
saw them quake & trēble.
2001394In
AIAX and
VLYSSES, ô what Art
1395Of Phi
siognomy might one behold!
1396The face of eyther cypher'd eythers heart,
1397Their face, their manners mo
st expre
slie told,
1398In
AIAX eyes blunt rage and rigour rold,
1399 But the mild glance that
slie
VLYSSES lent,
1400 Shewed deepe regard and
smiling gouernment.
K 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2011401There pleading might you
see graue NESTOR
stand,
1402As'twere incouraging the Greekes to
fight,
1403Making
such
sober a
ction with his hand,
1404That it beguild attention, charm'd the
sight,
1405In
speech it
seemd his beard, all
siluer white,
1406 Wag'd vp and downe, and from his lips did
flie,
1407 Thin winding breath which purl'd vp to the skie.
2021408About him were a pre
sse of gaping faces,
1409Which
seem'd to
swallow vp his
sound aduice,
1410All ioyntlie li
stning, but with
seuerall graces,
1411As if
some Marmaide did their eares intice,
1412Some high,
some low, the Painter was
so nice.
1413 The
scalpes of manie almo
st hid behind,
1414 To iump vp higher
seem'd to mocke the mind.
2031415Here one mans hand leand on anothers head,
1416His no
se being
shadowed by his neighbours eare,
1417Here one being throng'd, bears back all boln, & red,
1418Another
smotherd,
seemes to pelt and
sweare,
1419And in their rage
such
signes of rage they beare,
1420 As but for lo
sse of
NESTORS golden words,
1421 It
seem'd they would debate with angrie
swords.
For
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2041422For much imaginarie worke was there,
1423Conceipt deceitfull,
so compa
ct so kinde,
1424That for
ACHILLES image
stood his
speare
1425Grip't in an Armed hand, him
selfe behind
1426Was left vn
seene,
saue to the eye of mind,
1427 A hand, a foote, a face, a leg, a head
1428 Stood for the whole to be imagined.
2051429And from the wals of
strong be
sieged
TROY,
1430When their braue hope, bold
HECTOR march'd to (
field,
1431Stood manie Troian mothers
sharing ioy,
1432To
see their youthfull
sons bright weapons wield,
1433And to their hope they
such odde a
ction yeeld,
1434 That through their light ioy
seemed to appeare,
1435 (Like bright things
staind) a kind of heauie feare.
2061436And from the
strond of DARDAN where they fought,
1437To
SIMOIS reedie bankes the red bloud ran,
1438Who
se waues to imitate the battaile
sought
1439With
swelling ridges, and their rankes began
1440To breake vppon the galled
shore, and than
1441 Retire againe, till meeting greater ranckes
1442 They ioine, &
shoot their fome at SIMOIS bancks.
K 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2071443To this well painted peece is
LVCRECE come,
1444To
find a face where all di
stre
sse is
steld,
1445Manie
shee
sees, where cares haue carued
some,
1446But none where all di
stre
sse and dolor dweld,
1447Till
shee di
spayring
HECVBA beheld,
1448 Staring on
PRIAMS wounds with her old eyes,
1449 Which bleeding vnder PIRRHVS proud foot lies.
2081450In her the Painter had anathomiz'd
1451Times ruine, beauties wracke, and grim cares raign,
1452Her cheeks with chops and wrincles were di
sguiz'd,
1453Of what
shee was, no
semblance did remaine:
1454Her blew bloud chang'd to blacke in euerie vaine,
1455 Wanting the
spring, that tho
se
shrunke pipes had (fed,
1456 Shew'd life impri
son'd in a bodie dead.
2091457On this
sad
shadow
LVCRECE spends her eyes,
1458And
shapes her
sorrow to the Beldames woes,
1459Who nothing wants to an
swer her but cries,
1460And bitter words to ban her cruell Foes.
1461The Painter was no God to lend her tho
se,
1462 And therefore LVCRECE
swears he did her wrong,
1463 To giue her
so much griefe, and not a tong.
Poore
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2101464Poore In
strument (quoth
shee) without a
sound,
1465Ile tune thy woes with my lamenting tongue,
1466And drop
sweet Balme in
PRIAMS painted wound,
1467And raile on
PIRRHVS that hath done him wrong;
1468And with my tears quench Troy that burns
so long;
1469 And with my knife
scratch out the angrie eyes,
1470 Of all the Greekes that are thine enemies.
2111471Shew me the
strumpet that began this
stur,
1472That with my nailes her beautie I may teare:
1473Thy heat of lu
st fond
PARIS did incur
1474This lode of wrath, that burning Troy doth beare;
1475Thy eye kindled the
fire that burneth here,
1476 And here in Troy for tre
spa
sse of thine eye,
1477 The Sire, the
sonne, the Dame and daughter die.
2121478Why
should the priuate plea
sure of
some one
1479Become the publicke plague of manie moe?
1480Let
sinne alone committed, light alone
1481Vppon his head that hath tran
sgre
ssed
so.
1482Let guiltle
sse
soules be freed from guilty woe,
1483 For ones o
ffence why
should
so many fall?
1484 To plague a priuate
sinne in generall.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2131485Lo here weeps
HECVBA, here
PRIAM dies,
1486Here manly
HECTOR faints, here TROYLVS
sounds;
1487Here friend by friend in bloudie channel lies:
1488And friend to friend giues vnadui
sed wounds,
1489And one mans lu
st the
se manie liues confounds.
1490 Had doting
PRIAM checkt his
sons de
sire,
1491 TROY had bin bright with Fame, & not with
fire.
2141492Here feelingly
she weeps
TROYES painted woes,
1493For
sorrow, like a heauie hanging Bell,
1494Once
set on ringing, with his own waight goes,
1495Then little
strength rings out the dolefull knell,
1496So
LVCRECE set a worke,
sad tales doth tell
1497 To pencel'd pen
siuenes, & colour'd
sorrow,
1498 She lends them words, &
she their looks doth bor
-(row,
2151499Shee throwes her eyes about the painting round,
1500And who
shee
finds forlorne,
shee doth lament:
1501At la
st shee
sees a wretched image bound,
1502That piteous lookes, to Phrygian
sheapheards lent,
1503His face though full of cares, yet
shew'd content,
1504 Onward to
TROY with the blunt
swains he goes,
1505 So mild that patience
seem'd to
scorne his woes.
In
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2161506In him the Painter labour'd with his skill
1507To hide deceipt, and giue the harmle
sse
show
1508An humble gate, calme looks, eyes wayling
still,
1509A brow vnbent that
seem'd to welcome wo,
1510Cheeks neither red, nor pale, but mingled
so,
1511 That blu
shing red, no guiltie in
stance gaue,
1512 Nor a
shie pale, the feare that fal
se hearts haue.
2171513But like a con
stant and con
firmed Deuill,
1514He entertain'd a
show,
so
seeming iu
st,
1515And therein
so en
sconc't his
secret euill,
1516That Iealou
sie it
selfe could not mi
stru
st,
1517Fal
se creeping Craft, and Periurie
should thru
st 1518 Into
so bright a daie,
such blackfac'd
storms,
1519 Or blot with Hell-born
sin
such Saint-like forms.
2181520The well-skil'd workman this milde Image drew
1521For periur'd
SINON, who
se inchaunting
storie
1522The credulous old
PRIAM after
slew.
1523Who
se words like wild
fire burnt the
shining glorie
1524Of rich-built
ILLION, that the skies were
sorie,
1525 And little
stars
shot from their
fixed places,
1526 Whē their glas fel, wherin they view'd their faces.
L
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2191527This pi
cture
shee adui
sedly peru
s'd,
1528And chid the Painter for his wondrous skill:
1529Saying,
some
shape in
SINONS was abu
s'd,
1530So faire a forme lodg'd not a mind
so ill,
1531And
still on him
shee gaz'd, and gazing
still,
1532 Such
signes of truth in his plaine face
shee
spied,
1533 That
shee concludes, the Pi
cture was belied.
2201534It cannot be (quoth
she) that
so much guile,
1535(Shee would haue
said) can lurke in
such a looke:
1536But
TARQVINS shape, came in her mind the while,
1537And from her tongue, can lurk, from cannot, tooke
1538It cannot be,
shee in that
sence for
sooke,
1539 And turn'd it thus, it cannot be I
find,
1540 But
such a face
should beare a wicked mind.
2211541For euen as
subtill
SINON here is painted,
1542So
sober
sad,
so wearie, and
so milde,
1543(As if with griefe or trauaile he had fainted)
1544To me came
TARQVIN armed to beguild
1545With outward hone
stie, but yet de
fild
1546 With inward vice, as
PRIAM him did cheri
sh:
1547 So did I
TARQVIN,
so my Troy did peri
sh.
Looke
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2221548Looke looke how li
stning
PRIAM wets his eyes,
1549To
see tho
se borrowed teares that
SINON sheeds,
1550PRIAM why art thou old, and yet not wi
se?
1551For euerie teare he fals a Troian bleeds:
1552His eye drops
fire, no water thence proceeds,
1553 Tho
se roūd clear pearls of his that moue thy pitty,
1554 Are bals of quenchle
sse
fire to burne thy Citty.
2231555Such Deuils
steale e
ffe
cts from lightle
sse Hell,
1556For
SINON in his
fire doth quake with cold,
1557And in that cold hot burning
fire doth dwell,
1558The
se contraries
such vnitie do hold,
1559Only to
flatter fooles, and make them bold,
1560 So
PRIAMS tru
st fal
se
SINONS teares doth
flatter,
1561 That he
finds means to burne his Troy with water.
2241562Here all inrag'd
such pa
ssion her a
ssailes,
1563That patience is quite beaten from her brea
st,
1564Shee tears the
sencele
sse
SINON with her nailes,
1565Comparing him to that vnhappie gue
st,
1566Who
se deede hath made her
selfe, her
selfe dete
st,
1567 At la
st shee
smilingly with this giues ore,
1568 Foole fool, quoth
she, his wounds wil not be
sore.
L 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2251569Thus ebs and
flowes the currant of her
sorrow,
1570And time doth wearie time with her complayning,
1571Shee looks for night, & then
shee longs for morrow,
1572And both
shee thinks too long with her remayning.
1573Short time
seems long, in
sorrowes
sharp
su
stayning,
1574 Though wo be heauie, yet it
seldome
sleepes,
1575 And they that watch,
see time, how
slow it creeps.
2261576Which all this time hath ouer
slipt her thought,
1577That
shee with painted Images hath
spent,
1578Being from the feeling of her own griefe brought,
1579By deepe
surmi
se of others detriment,
1580Loo
sing her woes in
shews of di
scontent:
1581 It ea
seth
some, though none it euer cured,
1582 To thinke their dolour others haue endured.
2271583But now the mindfull Me
ssenger come backe,
1584Brings home his Lord and other companie,
1585Who
finds his
LVCRECE clad in mourning black,
1586And round about her teare-di
stained eye
1587Blew circles
stream'd, like Rain-bows in the skie.
1588 The
se watergalls in her dim Element,
1589 Foretell new
stormes to tho
se alreadie
spent.
Which
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2281590Which when her
sad beholding husband
saw,
1591Amazedlie in her
sad face he
stares:
1592Her eyes though
sod in tears look'd red and raw,
1593Her liuelie colour kil'd with deadlie cares,
1594He hath no power to aske her how
shee fares,
1595 Both
stood like old acquaintance in a trance,
1596 Met far from home, wondring ech others chance.
2291597At la
st he takes her by the bloudle
sse hand,
1598And thus begins: what vncouth ill euent
1599Hath thee befalne, that thou do
st trembling
stand?
1600Sweet loue what
spite hath thy faire colour
spent?
1601Why art thou thus attir'd in di
scontent?
1602 Vnmaske deare deare, this moodie heauine
sse,
1603 And tell thy griefe, that we may giue redre
sse.
2301604Three times with
sighes
shee giues her
sorrow
fire,
1605Ere once
shee can di
scharge one word of woe:
1606At length addre
st to an
swer his de
sire,
1607Shee mode
stlie prepares, to let them know
1608Her Honor is tane pri
soner by the Foe,
1609 While
COLATINE and his con
sorted Lords,
1610 With
sad attention long to heare her words.
L 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2311611And now this pale Swan in her watrie ne
st,
1612Begins the
sad Dirge of her certaine ending,
1613Few words (quoth
shee)
shall
fit the tre
spa
sse be
st,
1614Where no excu
se can giue the fault amending.
1615In me moe woes then words are now depending,
1616 And my laments would be drawn out too long,
1617 To tell them all with one poore tired tong.
2321618Then be this all the taske it hath to
say,
1619Deare husband in the intere
st of thy bed
1620A
stranger came, and on that pillow lay,
1621Where thou wa
st wont to re
st thy wearie head,
1622And what wrong el
se may be imagined,
1623 By foule inforcement might be done to me,
1624 From that (alas) thy
LVCRECE is not free.
2331625For in the dreadfull dead of darke midnight,
1626With
shining Fauchion in my chamber came
1627A creeping creature with a
flaming light,
1628And
softly cried, awake thou Romaine Dame,
1629And entertaine my loue, el
se la
sting
shame
1630 On thee and thine this night I will in
fli
ct,
1631 If thou my loues de
sire do contradi
ct.
For
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2341632For
some hard fauour'd Groome of thine, quoth he,
1633Vnle
sse thou yoke thy liking to my will
1634Ile murther
straight, and then ile
slaughter thee,
1635And
sweare I found you where you did ful
fill
1636The loth
some a
ct of Lu
st, and
so did kill
1637 The lechors in their deed, this A
ct will be
1638 My Fame, and thy perpetuall infamy.
2351639With this I did begin to
start and cry,
1640And then again
st my heart he
set his
sword,
1641Swearing, vnle
sse I tooke all patiently,
1642I
should not liue to
speake another word.
1643So
should my
shame
still re
st vpon record,
1644 And neuer be forgot in mightie Roome
1645 Th'adulterat death of LVCRECE, and her Groome.
2361646Mine enemy was
strong, my poore
selfe weake,
1647(And farre the weaker with
so
strong a feare)
1648My bloudie Iudge forbod my tongue to
speake,
1649No rightfull plea might plead for Iu
stice there.
1650His
scarlet Lu
st came euidence to
sweare
1651 That my poore beautie had purloin'd his eyes,
1652 And when the Iudge is rob'd, the pri
soner dies.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2371653O teach me how to make mine owne excu
se,
1654Or (at the lea
st) this refuge let me
finde,
1655Though my gro
sse bloud be
staind with this abu
se,
1656Immaculate, and
spotle
sse is my mind,
1657That was not forc'd, that neuer was inclind
1658 To acce
ssarie yeeldings, but
still pure
1659 Doth in her poy
son'd clo
set yet endure.
2381660Lo heare the hopele
sse Marchant of this lo
sse,
1661With head declin'd, and voice dam'd vp with wo,
1662With
sad
set eyes and wretched armes acro
sse,
1663From lips new waxen pale, begins to blow
1664The griefe away, that
stops his an
swer
so.
1665 But wretched as he is he
striues in vaine,
1666 What he breaths out, his breath drinks vp again.
2391667As through an Arch, the violent roaring tide,
1668Outruns the eye that doth behold his ha
st:
1669Yet in the Edie boundeth in his pride,
1670Backe to the
strait that for
st him on
so fa
st:
1671In rage
sent out, recald in rage being pa
st,
1672 Euen
so his
sighes, his
sorrowes make a
saw,
1673 To pu
sh griefe on, and back the
same grief draw.
Which
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2401674Which
speechle
sse woe of his poore
she attendeth,
1675And his vntimelie frenzie thus awaketh,
1676Deare Lord, thy
sorrow to my
sorrow lendeth
1677Another power, no
floud by raining
slaketh,
1678My woe too
sencible thy pa
ssion maketh
1679 More feeling painfull, let it than
su
ffice
1680 To drowne on woe, one paire of weeping eyes.
2411681And for my
sake when I might charme thee
so,
1682For
shee that was thy
LVCRECE, now attend me,
1683Be
sodainelie reuenged on my Foe.
1684Thine, mine, his own,
suppo
se thou do
st defend me
1685From what is pa
st, the helpe that thou
shalt lend me
1686 Comes all too late, yet let the Traytor die,
1687 "For
sparing Iu
stice feeds iniquitie.
2421688But ere I name him, you faire Lords, quoth
shee,
1689(Speaking to tho
se that came with
COLATINE)
1690Shall plight your Honourable faiths to me,
1691With
swift pur
suit to venge this wrong of mine,
1692For 'tis a meritorious faire de
signe,
1693 To cha
se iniu
stice with reuengefull armes,
1694 Knights by their oaths
should right poore Ladies harmes.
M
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2431695At this reque
st, with noble di
spo
sition,
1696Each pre
sent Lord began to promi
se aide,
1697As bound in Knighthood to her impo
sition,
1698Longing to heare the hatefull Foe bewraide.
But shee that yet her sad taske hath not said,
1700 The prote
station
stops, ô
speake quoth
shee,
1701 How may this forced
staine be wip'd from me?
2441702What is the qualitie of my o
ffence
1703Being con
strayn'd with dreadfull circum
stance?
1704May my pure mind with the fowle a
ct di
spence
1705My low declined Honor to aduance?
1706May anie termes acquit me from this chance?
1707 The poy
soned fountaine cleares it
selfe againe,
1708 And why not I from this compelled
staine?
2451709With this they all at once began to
saie,
1710Her bodies
staine, her mind vntainted cleares,
1711While with a ioyle
sse
smile,
shee turnes awaie
1712The face, that map which deepe impre
ssion beares
1713Of hard misfortune, caru'd it in with tears.
1714 No no, quoth
shee, no Dame hereafter liuing,
1715 By my excu
se
shall claime excu
ses giuing.
Here
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2461716Here with a
sigh as if her heart would breake,
1717Shee throwes forth TARQVINS name: he he,
she
saies,
1718But more then he, her poore tong could not
speake,
1719Till after manie accents and delaies,
1720Vntimelie breathings,
sicke and
short a
ssaies,
1721 Shee vtters this, he he faire Lords, tis he
1722 That guides this hand to giue this wound to me.
2471723Euen here
she
sheathed in her harmle
sse brea
st 1724A harmfull knife, that thence her
soule vn
sheathed,
1725That blow did baile it from the deepe vnre
st 1726Of that polluted pri
son, where it breathed:
1727Her contrite
sighes vnto the clouds bequeathed
1728 Her winged
sprite, & through her woūds doth
flie
1729 Liues la
sting date, from cancel'd de
stinie.
2481730Stone
still, a
stoni
sht with this deadlie deed,
1731Stood
COLATINE, and all his Lordly crew,
1732Till
LVCRECE Father that beholds her bleed,
1733Him
selfe, on her
selfe-
slaughtred bodie threw,
1734And from the purple fountaine
BRVTVS drew
1735 The murdrous knife, and as it left the place,
1736 Her blood in poore reuenge, held it in cha
se.
M 2
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2491737And bubling from her bre
st, it doth deuide
1738In two
slow riuers, that the crim
son bloud
1739Circles her bodie in on euerie
side,
1740Who like a late
sack't Iland va
stlie
stood
1741Bare and vnpeopled, in this fearfull
flood.
1742 Some of her bloud
still pure and red remain'd,
1743 And
som look'd black, & that fal
se TARQVIN
stain'd.
2501744About the mourning and congealed face
1745Of that blacke bloud, a watrie rigoll goes,
1746Which
seemes to weep vpon the tainted place,
1747And euer
since as pittying
LVCRECE woes,
1748Corrupted bloud,
some waterie token
showes,
1749 And bloud vntainted,
still doth red abide,
1750 Blu
shing at that which is
so putri
fied.
2511751Daughter, deare daughter, old
LVCRETIVS cries,
1752That life was mine which thou ha
st here depriued,
1753If in the childe the fathers image lies,
1754Where
shall I liue now
LVCRECE is vnliued?
1755Thou wa
st not to this end from me deriued.
1756 If children pr
aedecea
se progenitours,
1757 We are their of
spring and they none of ours.
Poore
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2521758Poore broken gla
sse, I often did behold
1759In thy
sweet
semblance, my old age new borne,
1760But now that faire fre
sh mirror dim and old
1761Shewes me a bare-bon'd death by time out-worne,
1762O from thy cheekes my image thou ha
st torne,
1763 And
shiuerd all the beautie of my gla
sse,
1764 That I no more can
see what once I was.
2531765O time cea
se thou thy cour
se and la
st no longer,
1766If they
surcea
se to be that
should
suruiue:
1767Shall rotten death make conque
st of the
stronger,
1768And leaue the foultring feeble
soules aliue?
1769The old Bees die, the young po
sse
sse their hiue,
1770 Then liue
sweet
LVCRECE, liue againe and
see
1771 Thy father die, and not thy father thee.
2541772By this
starts
COLATINE as from a dreame,
1773And bids
LVCRECIVS giue his
sorrow place,
1774And than in key-cold
LVCRECE bleeding
streame
1775He fals, and bathes the pale feare in his face,
1776And counterfaits to die with her a
space,
1777 Till manly
shame bids him po
sse
sse his breath,
1778 And liue to be reuenged on her death.
M 3
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2551779The deepe vexation of his inward
soule,
1780Hath
seru'd a dumbe arre
st vpon his tongue,
1781Who mad that
sorrow
should his v
se controll,
1782Or keepe him from heart-ea
sing words
so long,
1783Begins to talke, but through his lips do throng
1784 Weake words,
so thick come in his poor harts aid,
1785 That no man could di
stingui
sh what he
said.
2561786Yet
sometime
TARQVIN was pronounced plaine,
1787But through his teeth, as if the name he tore,
1788This windie tempe
st, till it blow vp raine,
1789Held backe his
sorrowes tide, to make it more.
1790At la
st it raines, and bu
sie windes giue ore,
1791 Then
sonne and father weep with equall
strife,
1792 Who
shuld weep mo
st for daughter or for wife.
2571793The one doth call her his, the other his,
1794Yet neither may po
sse
sse the claime they lay.
1795The father
saies,
shee's mine, ô mine
shee is
1796Replies her husband, do not take away
1797My
sorrowes intere
st, let no mourner
say
1798 He weepes for her, for
shee was onely mine,
1799 And onelie mu
st be wayl'd by
COLATINE.
O,
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2581800O, quoth
LVCRETIVS, I did giue that life
1801Which
shee to earely and too late hath
spil'd.
1802Woe woe, quoth
COLATINE,
shee was my wife,
1803I owed her, and tis mine that
shee hath kil'd.
1804My daughter and my wife with clamors
fild
1805 The di
sper
st aire, who holding
LVCRECE life,
1806 An
swer'd their cries, my daughter and my wife.
2591807BRVTVS who pluck't the knife from LVCRECE
side,
1808Seeing
such emulation in their woe,
1809Began to cloath his wit in
state and pride,
1810Burying in
LVCRECE wound his follies
show,
1811He with the Romains was e
steemed
so
1812 As
seelie ieering idiots are with Kings,
1813 For
sportiue words, and vttring fooli
sh things.
2601814But now he throwes that
shallow habit by,
1815Wherein deepe pollicie did him di
sgui
se,
1816And arm'd his long hid wits adui
sedlie,
1817To checke the teares in
COLATINVS eies.
1818Thou wronged Lord of Rome, quoth he, ari
se,
1819 Let my vn
sounded
selfe
suppo
s'd a foole,
1820 Now
set thy long experienc't wit to
schoole.
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2611821Why
COLATINE, is woe the cure for woe?
1822Do wounds helpe wounds, or griefe helpe greeuous (deeds?
1823Is it reuenge to giue thy
selfe a blow,
1824For his fowle A
ct, by whom the faire wife bleeds?
1825Such childi
sh humor from weake minds proceeds,
1826 Thy wretched wife mi
stooke the matter
so,
1827 To
slaie her
selfe that
should haue
slaine her Foe.
2621828Couragious Romaine, do not
steepe thy hart
1829In
such relenting dew of Lamentations,
1830But kneele with me and helpe to beare thy part,
1831To row
se our Romaine Gods with inuocations,
1832That they will
su
ffer the
se abhominations.
1833 (Since Rome her
self in thē doth
stand di
sgraced,)
1834 By our
strong arms frō forth her fair
streets chaced.
2631835Now by the Capitoll that we adore,
1836And by this cha
st bloud
so vniu
stlie
stained,
1837By heauens faire
sun that breeds the fat earths
store,
1838By all our countrey rights in Rome maintained,
1839And by cha
st LVCRECE soule that late complained
1840 Her wrongs to vs, and by this bloudie knife,
1841 We will reuenge the death of this true wife.
This
THE RAPE OF LVCRECE.
2641842This
sayd, he
strooke his hand vpon his brea
st,
1843And ki
st the fatall knife to end his vow:
1844And to his prote
station vrg'd the re
st,
1845Who wondring at him, did his words allow.
1846Then ioyntlie to the ground their knees they bow,
1847 And that deepe vow which BRVTVS made before,
1848 He doth againe repeat, and that they
swore.
2651849When they had
sworne to this adui
sed doome,
1850They did conclude to beare dead LVCRECE thence,
1851To
shew her bleeding bodie thorough Roome,
1852And
so to publi
sh TARQVINS fowle o
ffence;
1853Which being done, with
speedie diligence,
1854 The Romaines plau
sibly did giue con
sent,
1855 To
TARQVINS euerla
sting bani
shment.
N
FINIS.