VENVS
AND ADONIS
Vilia miretur vulgus: mihi flauus Apollo
Pocula Castalia plena ministret aqua.
LONDON
Imprinted by Richard Field, and are to be sold at
the signe of the white Greyhound in
Paules Church-yard.
1593.
0.2TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE Henrie Wriothesley, Earle of Southampton,
and Baron of Titchfield.
RIght Honourable, I know not how I shall offend in
dedicating my vnpolisht lines to your Lordship, nor
how the worlde will censure mee for choosing so
strong a proppe to support so weake a burthen,
onelye if your Honour seeme but pleased, I ac-
count my selfe highly praised, and vowe to take aduantage of all
idle houres, till I haue honoured you with some grauer labour. But
if the first heire of my inuention proue deformed, I shall be sorie it
had so noble a god-father: and neuer after eare so barren a land,
for feare it yeeld me still so bad a haruest, I leaue it to your Honou-
rable suruey, and your Honor to your hearts content, which I wish
may alwaies answere your owne wish, and the worlds hope-
full expectation.
Your Honors in all dutie,
William Shakespeare.
VENVS AND ADONIS.
11EVEN as the
sunne with purple-colourd face,
2Had tane his la
st leaue of the weeping morne,
3Ro
se-cheekt Adonis hied him to the chace,
4Hunting he lou'd, but loue he laught to
scorne:
5 Sick-thoughted Venus makes amaine vnto him,
6 And like a bold fac'd
suter ginnes to woo him.
27Thri
se fairer then my
selfe, (thus
she began)
8The
fields chiefe
flower,
sweet aboue compare,
9Staine to all Nimphs, more louely then a man,
10More white, and red, then doues, or ro
ses are:
11 Nature that made thee with her
selfe at
strife,
12 Saith that the world hath ending with thy life.
313Vouch
safe thou wonder to alight thy
steed,
14And raine his proud head to the
saddle bow,
15If thou wilt daine this fauor, for thy meed
16A thou
sand honie
secrets
shalt thou know:
17 Here come and
sit, where neuer
serpent hi
sses,
18 And being
set, Ile
smother thee with ki
sses.
419And yet not cloy thy lips with loth'd
sacietie,
20But rather fami
sh them amid their plentie,
21Making them red, and pale, with fre
sh varietie:
22Ten ki
sses
short as one, one long as twentie:
23 A
sommers day will
seeme an houre but
short,
24 Being wa
sted in
such time-beguiling
sport.
525With this
she ceazeth on his
sweating palme,
26The pre
sident of pith, and liuelyhood,
27And trembling in her pa
ssion, calls it balme,
28Earths
soueraigne
salue, to do a godde
sse good,
29 Being
so enrag'd, de
sire doth lend her force,
30 Couragiou
sly to plucke him from his hor
se.
631Ouer one arme the lu
stie cour
sers raine,
32Vnder her other was the tender boy,
33Who blu
sht, and powted in a dull di
sdaine,
34With leaden appetite, vnapt to toy,
35 She red, and hot, as coles of glo
wing
fier,
36 He red for
shame, but fro
stie in de
sier.
737The
studded bridle on a ragged bough,
38Nimbly
she fa
stens, (ô how quicke is loue!)
39The
steed is
stalled vp, and euen now,
40To tie the rider
she begins to proue:
41 Backward
she pu
sht him, as
she would be thru
st,
42 And gouernd him in
strength though not in lu
st.
843So
soone was
she along, as he was downe,
44Each leaning on their elbowes and their hips:
45Now doth
she
stroke his cheek, now doth he frown,
46And gins to chide, but
soone
she
stops his lips,
47 And ki
ssing
speaks, with lu
stful language broken,
48 If thou wilt chide, thy lips
shall neuer open.
949He burnes with ba
shfull
shame,
she with her teares
50Doth quench the maiden burning of his cheekes,
51Then with her windie
sighes, and golden heares,
52To fan, and blow them drie againe
she
seekes.
53 He
saith,
she is immode
st, blames her mi
sse,
54 What followes more,
she murthers with a ki
sse.
1055Euen as an emptie Eagle
sharpe by fa
st,
56Tires with her beake on feathers,
fle
sh, and bone,
57Shaking her wings, deuouring all in ha
st,
58Till either gorge be
stuft, or pray be gone:
59 Euen
so
she ki
st his brow, his cheeke, his chin,
60 And where
she ends,
she doth anew begin.
1163For
st to content, but neuer to obey,
62Panting he lies, and breatheth in her face.
She feedeth on the steame, as on a pray,
64And calls it heauenly moi
sture, aire of grace,
65 Wi
shing her cheeks were gardens ful of
flowers,
66 So they were dew'd with
such di
stilling
showers.
1267Looke how a bird lyes tangled in a net,
68So fa
stned in her armes Adonis lyes,
69Pure
shame and aw'd re
sistance made him fret,
70Which bred more beautie in his angrie eyes:
71 Raine added to a riuer that is ranke,
72 Perforce will force it ouer
flow the banke.
1373Still
she intreats, and prettily intreats,
74For to a prettie eare
she tunes her tale.
75Still is he
sullein,
still he lowres and frets,
76Twixt crim
son
shame, and anger a
shie pale,
77 Being red
she loues him be
st, and being white,
78 Her be
st is betterd with a more delight.
1479Looke how he can,
she cannot chu
se but loue,
80And by her faire immortall hand
she
sweares,
81From his
soft bo
some neuer to remoue,
82Till he take truce with her contending teares,
83 Which lōg haue raind, making her cheeks al wet,
84 And one
sweet ki
sse
shal pay this comptle
sse debt.
1585Vpon this promi
se did he rai
se his chin,
86Like a diuedapper peering through a waue,
87Who being lookt on, ducks as quickly in:
88So o
ffers he to giue what
she did craue,
89 But when her lips were readie for his pay,
90 He winks, and turnes his lips another way.
1691Neuer did pa
ssenger in
sommers heat,
92More thir
st for drinke, then
she for this good turne,
93Her helpe
she
sees, but helpe
she cannot get,
94She bathes in water, yet her
fire mu
st burne:
95 Oh pitie gan
she crie,
flint-heartedboy,
96 Tis but a ki
sse I begge, why art thou coy?
1797I haue bene wooed as I intreat thee now,
98Euen by the
sterne, and direfull god of warre,
99Who
se
sinowie necke in battell nere did bow,
100Who conquers where he comes in euerie iarre,
101 Yet hath he bene my captiue, and my
slaue,
102 And begd for that which thou vnaskt
shalt haue.
18103Ouer my Altars hath he hong his launce,
104His battred
shield, his vncontrolled cre
st,
105And for my
sake hath learnd to
sport, and daunce,
106To toy, to wanton, dallie,
smile, and ie
st,
107 Scorning his churli
sh drumme, and en
signe red,
108 Making my armes his
field, his tent my bed.
19109Thus he that ouer-ruld, I ouer-
swayed,
110Leading him pri
soner in a red ro
se chaine,
111Strong-temperd
steele his
stronger
strength obayed.
112Yet was he
seruile to my coy di
sdaine,
113 Oh be not proud, nor brag not of thy might,
114 For mai
string her that foyld the god of
fight.
20115Touch but my lips with tho
se faire lips of thine,
116Though mine be not
so faire, yet are they red,
117The ki
sse
shalbe thine owne as well as mine,
118What
see
st thou in the ground? hold vp thy head,
119 Looke in mine ey-bals, there thy beautie lyes,
120 Then why not lips on lips,
since eyes in eyes?
21121Art thou a
sham'd to ki
sse? then winke againe,
122And I will winke,
so
shall the day
seeme night.
123Loue keepes his reuels where there are but twaine:
124Be bold to play, our
sport is not in
sight,
125 The
se blew-veind violets whereon we leane,
126 Neuer can blab, nor know not what we meane.
22127The tender
spring vpon thy tempting lip,
128Shewes thee vnripe; yet mai
st thou well be ta
sted,
129Make v
se of time, let not aduantage
slip,
130Beautie within it
selfe
should not bewa
sted,
131 Faire
flowers that are not gathred in their prime,
132 Rot, and con
sume them
selues in litle time.
23133Were I hard-fauourd, foule, or wrinckled old,
134Il-nurtur'd, crooked, churli
sh, har
sh invoice,
135Ore-worne, de
spi
sed, reumatique, and cold,
136Thick-
sighted, barren, leane, and lacking iuyce;
137 Thē might
st thou pau
se, forthē I were not for thee,
138 But hauing no defe
cts, why doe
st abhor me?
24139Thou can
st not
see one wrinckle in my brow,
140Mine eyes are grey, and bright, & quicke in turning:
141My beautie as the
spring doth yearelie grow,
142My
fle
sh is
soft, and plumpe, my marrow burning,
143 My
smooth moi
st hand, were it with thy hand felt,
144 Would in thy palme di
ssolue, or
seeme to melt.
25145Bid me di
scour
se, I will inchaunt thine eare,
146Or like a Fairie, trip vpon the greene,
147Or like a Nimph, with long di
sheueled heare,
148Daunce on the
sands, and yet no footing
seene.
149 Loue is a
spirit all compa
ct of
fire,
150 Not gro
sse to
sinke, but light, and will a
spire.
26151Witne
sse this Primro
se banke whereon I lie,
152The
se forcele
sse
flowers like
sturdy trees
support me:
153Two
strēgthles doues will draw me through the skie,
154From morne till night, euen where I li
st to
sport me.
155 Is loue
so light
sweet boy, and may it be,
156 That thou
should thinke it heauie vnto thee?
27157Is thine owne heart to thine owne face a
ffe
cted?
158Can thy right hand ceaze loue vpon thy left?
159Then woo thy
selfe, be of thy
selfe reie
cted:
160Steale thine own freedome, and complaine on theft.
161 Narci
ssus
so him
selfe him
selfe for
sooke,
162 And died to ki
sse his
shadow in the brooke.
28163Torches are made to light, iewels to weare,
164Dainties to ta
st, fre
sh beautie for the v
se,
165Herbes for their
smell, and
sappie plants to beare.
166Things growing to them
selues, are growths abu
se,
167 Seeds
spring frō
seeds, & beauty breedeth beauty,
168 Thou wa
st begot, to get it is thy duty.
29169Vpon the earths increa
se why
should
st thou feed,
170Vnle
sse the earth with thy increa
se be fed?
171By law of nature thou art bound to breed,
172That thine may liue, when thou thy
selfe art dead:
173 And
so in
spite of death thou doe
stsuruiue,
174 In that thy likene
sse
still is left aliue.
30175By this the loue-
sicke Queene began to
sweate,
176For where they lay the
shadow had for
sooke them,
177And Titan tired in the midday heate,
178With burning eye did hotly ouer-looke them,
179 Wi
shing Adonis had his teame to guide,
180 So he were like him, and by Venus
side.
31181And now Adonis with a lazie
sprite,
182And with a heauie, darke, di
sliking eye,
183His lowring browes ore-whelming his faire
sight,
184Like mi
stie vapors when they blot the skie,
185 So wring his cheekes, cries,
fie, no more of loue,
186 The
sunne doth burne my face I mu
st remoue.
32187Ay, me, (quoth Venus) young, and
so vnkinde,
188What bare excu
ses mak'
st thou to be gon?
189Ile
sigh cele
stiall breath, who
se gentle winde,
190Shall coole the heate of this de
scending
sun:
191 Ile make a
shadow for thee of my heares,
192 If they burn too, Ile quench them with my teares.
33193The
sun that
shines from heauen,
shines but warme,
194And lo I lye betweene that
sunne, and thee:
195The heate I haue from thence doth litle harme,
196Thine eye darts forth the
fire that burneth me,
197 And were I not immortall, life were done,
198 Betweene this heauenly, and earthly
sunne.
34199Art thou obdurate,
flintie, hard as
steele?
200Nay more then
flint, for
stone at raine relenteth:
201Art thou a womans
sonne and can
st not feele
202What tis to loue, how want of loue tormenteth?
203 O had thy mother borne
so hard a minde,
204 She had not brought forth thee, but died vnkind.
35205What am I that thou
should
st contemne me this?
206Or what great danger, dwels vpon my
sute?
207What were thy lips the wor
se for one poore kis?
208Speake faire, but
speake faire words, or el
se be mute:
209 Giue me one ki
sse, Ile giue it thee againe,
210 And one for intre
st, if thou wilt haue twaine.
36211Fie, liuele
sse pi
cture, cold, and
sencele
sse
stone,
212Well painted idoll, image dull, and dead,
213Statüe contenting but the eye alone,
214Thing like a man, but of no woman bred:
215 Thou art no man, though of a mans complexion,
216 For men will ki
sse euen by their owne dire
ction.
37217This
said, impatience chokes her pleading tongue,
218And
swelling pa
ssion doth prouoke a pau
se,
219Red cheeks, and
fierie eyes blaze forth her wrong:
220Being Iudge in loue,
she cannot right her cau
se.
221 And now
she weeps, & now
she faine would
speake
222 And now her
sobs do her intendments breake.
38223Sometime
she
shakes her head, and then his hand,
224Now gazeth
she on him, now on the ground;
225Sometime her armes infold him like a band,
226She would, he will not in her armes be bound:
227 And when from thence he
struggles to be gone,
228 She locks her lillie
fingers one in one.
39229Fondling,
she
saith,
since I haue hemd thee here
230Within the circuit of this iuorie pale,
231Ile be a parke, and thou
shalt be my deare:
232Feed where thou wilt, on mountaine, or in dale;
233 Graze on my lips, and if tho
se hils be drie,
234 Stray lower, where the plea
sant fountaines lie.
40235Witin this limit is reliefe inough,
236Sweet bottome gra
sse, and high delightfull plaine,
237Round ri
sing hillocks, brakes ob
scure, and rough,
238To
shelter thee from tempe
st, and from raine:
239 Then be my deare,
since I am
such a parke,
240 No dog
shal rowze thee, though a thou
sand bark.
41241At this Adonis
smiles as in di
sdaine,
242That in ech cheeke appeares a prettie dimple;
243Loue made tho
se hollowes, if him
selfe were
slaine,
244He might be buried in a tombe
so
simple,
245 Foreknowing well, if there he came to lie,
246 Why there loue liu'd, & there he could not die.
42247The
se louely caues, the
se round inchanting pits,
248Opend their mouthes to
swallow Venus liking:
249Being mad before, how doth
she now for wits?
250Strucke dead at
fir
st, what needs a
second
striking?
251 Poore Queene of loue, in thine own law forlorne,
252 To loue a cheeke that
smiles at thee in
scorne.
43253Now which way
shall
she turne? what
shall
she
say?
254Her words are done, her woes the more increa
sing,
255The time is
spent, her obie
ct will away,
256And ftom her twining armes doth vrge relea
sing:
257 Pitie
she cries,
some fauour,
some remor
se,
258 Away he
springs, and ha
steth to his hor
se.
44259But lo from forth a copp's that neighbors by,
260A breeding Iennet, lu
stie, young, and proud,
261Adonis trampling Cour
ser doth e
spy:
262And forth
she ru
shes,
snorts, and neighs aloud.
263 The
strong-neckt
steed being tied vnto a tree,
264 Breaketh his raine, and to her
straight goes hee.
45265Imperiou
sly he leaps, he neighs, he bounds,
266And now his wouen girthes he breaks a
sunder,
267The bearing earth with his hard hoofe he wounds,
268Who
se hollow wombe re
sounds like heauens thun
-(der,
269 The yron bit he cru
sheth tweene his teeth,
270 Controlling what he was controlled with.
46271His eares vp prickt, his braided hanging mane
272Vpon his compa
st cre
st now
stand on end,
273His no
strils drinke the aire, and forth againe
274As from a fornace, vapors doth he
send:
275 His eye which
scornfully gli
sters like
fire,
276 Shewes his hote courage, and his high de
sire.
47277Sometime he trots, as if he told the
steps,
278With gentle maie
stie, and mode
st pride,
279Anon he reres vpright, curuets, and leaps,
280As who
should
say, lo thus my
strength is tride.
281 And this I do, to captiuate the eye,
282 Of the faire breeder that is
standing by.
48283What recketh he his riders angrie
sturre,
284His
flattering holla, or his
stand, I
say,
285What cares he now, for curbe, or pricking
spurre,
286For rich capari
sons, or trappings gay:
287 He
sees his loue, and nothing el
se he
sees,
288 For nothing el
se with his proud
sight agrees.
49289Looke when a Painter would
surpa
sse the life,
290In limming out a well proportioned
steed,
291His Art with Natures workman
ship at
strife,
292As if the dead the liuing
should exceed:
293 So did this Hor
se excell a common one,
294 In
shape, in courage, colour, pace and bone.
50295Round hooft,
short ioynted, fetlocks
shag, and long,
296Broad brea
st, full eye,
small head, and no
strill wide,
297High cre
st,
short eares,
straight legs, & pa
ssing
strōg,
298Thin mane, thicke taile, broad buttock, tender hide:
299 Looke what a Hor
se
should haue, he did not lack,
300 Saue a proud rider on
so proud a back.
51301Sometime he
scuds farre o
ff, aud there he
stares,
302Anon he
starts, at
sturring of a feather:
303To bid the wind a ba
se he now prepares,
304And where he runne, or
flie, they know not whether:
305 For through his mane, & taile, the high wind
sings,
306 Fanning the haires, who waue like feathred wings.
52307He lookes vpon his loue, and neighes vnto her,
308She an
swers him, as if
she knew his minde,
309Being proud as females are, to
see him woo her,
310She puts on outward
strangene
sse,
seemes vnkinde:
311 Spurnes at his loue, and
scorns the heat he feeles,
312 Beating his kind imbracements with her heeles.
53313Then like a melancholy malcontent,
314He vailes his taile that like a falling plume,
315Coole
shadow to his melting buttocke lent,
316He
stamps, and bites the poore
flies in his fume:
317 His loue perceiuing how he was inrag'd,
318 Grew kinder, and his furie was a
sswag'd.
54319His te
stie mai
ster goeth about to take him,
320When lo the vnbackt breeder full of feare,
321Iealous of catching,
swiftly doth for
sake him,
322With her the Hor
se, and left Adonis there:
323 As they were mad vnto the wood they hie them,
324 Out
stripping crowes, that
striue to ouer
fly them.
55325All
swolne with cha
fing, downe Adonis
sits,
326Banning his boy
strous, and vnruly bea
st;
327And now the happie
sea
son once more
fits
328That loue
sicke loue, by pleading may be ble
st:
329 For louers
say, the heart hath treble wrong,
330 When it is bard the aydance of the tongue.
56331An Ouen that is
stopt, or riuer
stayd,
332Burneth more hotly,
swelleth with more rage:
333So of concealed
sorow may be
sayd,
334Free vent of words loues
fier doth a
sswage,
335 But when the hearts atturney once is mute,
336 The client breakes, as de
sperat in his
sute.
57337He
sees her comming, and begins to glow:
338Euen as a dying coale reuiues with winde,
339And with his bonnet hides his angrie brow,
340Lookes on the dull earth with di
sturbed minde:
341 Taking no notice that
she is
so nye,
342 For all askance he holds her in his eye.
58343O what a
sight it was wi
stly to view,
344How
she came
stealing to the wayward boy,
345To note the
fighting con
fli
ct of her hew,
346How white and red, ech other did de
stroy:
347 But now her cheeke was pale, and by and by
348 It
fla
sht forth
fire, as lightning from the skie.
59349Now was
she iu
st before him as he
sat,
350And like a lowly louer downe
she kneeles,
351With one faire hand
she heaueth vp his hat,
352Her other tender hand his faire cheeke feeles:
353 His tendrer cheeke, receiues her
soft hands print,
354 As apt, as new falne
snow takes any dint.
60355Oh what a war of lookes was then betweene them,
356Her eyes petitioners to his eyes
suing,
357His eyes
saw her eyes, as they had not
seene them,
358Her eyes wooed
still, his eyes di
sdaind the wooing:
359 And all this dumbe play had his a
cts made plain,
360 With tears which Chorus-like her eyes did rain.
61361Full gently now
she takes him by the hand,
362A lillie pri
sond in a gaile of
snow,
363Or Iuorie in an allabla
ster band,
364So white a friend, ingirts
so white a fo:
365 This beautious combat wilfull, and vnwilling,
366 Showed like two
siluer doues that
sit a billing.
62367Once more the engin of her thoughts began,
368O faire
st mouer on this mortall round,
369Would thou wert as I am, and I a man,
370My heart all whole as thine, thy heart my wound,
371 For one
sweet looke thy helpe I would a
ssure thee,
372 Thogh nothing but my bodies bane wold cure thee
63373Giue me my hand (
saith he,) why do
st thou feele it?
374Giue me my heart (
saith
she,) and thou
shalt haue it.
375O giue it me le
st thy hard heart do
steele it,
376And being
steeld,
soft
sighes can neuer graue it.
377 Then loues deepe grones, I neuer
shall regard,
378 Becau
se Adonis heart hath made mine hard.
64379For
shame he cries, let go, and let me go,
380My dayes delight is pa
st, my hor
se is gone,
381And tis your fault I am bereft him
so,
382I pray you hence, and leaue me here alone,
383 For all my mind, my thought, my bu
sie care,
384 Is how to get my palfrey from the mare.
65385Thus
she replies, thy palfrey as he
should,
386Welcomes the warme approch of
sweet de
sire,
387A
ffe
ction is a coale that mu
st be coold,
388El
se
su
fferd it will
set the heart on
fire,
389 The
sea hath bounds, but deepe de
sire hath none,
390 Therfore no maruell though thy hor
se be gone.
66391How like a iade he
stood tied to the tree,
392Seruilly mai
sterd with a leatherne raine,
393Bnt when he
saw his loue, his youths faire fee,
394He held
such pettie bondage in di
sdaine:
395 Throwing the ba
se thong from his bending cre
st,
396 Enfranchi
sing his mouth, his backe, his bre
st.
67397Who
sees his true-loue in her naked bed,
398Teaching the
sheets a whiter hew then white,
399But when his glutton eye
so full hath fed,
400His other agents ayme at like delight?
401 Who is
so faint that dares not be
so bold,
402 To touch the
fier the weather being cold?
68403Let me excu
se thy cour
ser gentle boy,
404And learne of him I heartily be
seech thee,
405To take aduantage on pre
sented ioy,
406Though I were dūbe, yet his proceedings teach thee
407 O learne to loue, the le
sson is but plaine,
408 And once made perfe
ct, neuer lo
st againe.
69409I know not loue (quoth he) nor will not know it,
410Vnle
sse it be a Boare, and then I cha
se it,
411Tis much to borrow, and I will not owe it,
412My loue to loue, is loue, but to di
sgrace it,
413 For I haue heard, it is a life in death,
414 That laughs and weeps, and all but with a breath.
70415Who weares a garment
shapele
sse and vn
fini
sht?
416Who plucks the bud before one leafe put forth?
417If
springing things be anie iot dimini
sht,
418They wither in their prime, proue nothing worth,
419 The colt that's backt and burthend being yong,
420 Lo
seth his pride, and neuer waxeth
strong.
71421You hurt my hand with wringing, let vs part,
422And leaue this idle theame, this bootle
sse chat,
423Remoue your
siege from my vnyeelding hart,
424To loues allarmes it will not ope the gate,
425 Di
smi
sse your vows, your fained tears, your
flattry,
426 For where a heart is hard they make no battry.
72427What can
st thou talke (quoth
she) ha
st thou a tong?
428O would thou had
st not, or I had no hearing,
429Thy marmaides voice hath done me double wrong,
430I had my lode before, now pre
st with bearing,
431 Mellodious di
scord, heauenly tune har
sh sounding,
432 Eares deep
sweet mu
sik, & harts deep
sore woūding
73433Had I no eyes but eares, my eares would loue,
434That inward beautie and inui
sible,
435Or were I deafe, thy outward parts would moue
436Ech part in me, that were but
sen
sible,
437 Though neither eyes, nor eares, to heare nor
see,
438 Yet
should I be in loue, by touching thee.
439Say that the
sence of feeling were bereft me,
440And that I could not
see, nor heare, nor touch,
441And nothing but the verie
smell were left me,
442Yet would my loue to thee be
still as much,
443 For frō the
stillitorie of thy face excelling,
444 Coms breath perfumd, that breedeth loue by
smel
-(ling.
75445But oh what banquet wert thou to the ta
st,
446Being nour
se, and feeder of the other foure,
447Would they not wi
sh the fea
st might euerla
st,
448And bid
su
spition double locke the dore;
449 Le
st iealou
sie that
sowervn welcome gue
st,
450 Should by his
stealing in di
sturbe the fea
st?
76451Once more the rubi-colourd portall opend,
452Which to his
speech did honie pa
ssage yeeld,
453Like a red morne that euer yet betokend,
454Wracke to the
sea-man, tempe
st to the
field:
455 Sorrow to
shepherds, wo vnto the birds,
456 Gu
sts, and foule
flawes, to heardmen, & to herds.
77457This ill pre
sage adui
sedly
she marketh,
458Euen as the wind is hu
sht before it raineth:
459Or as the wolfe doth grin before he barketh:
460Or as the berrie breakes before it
staineth:
461 Or like the deadly bullet of a gun:
462 His meaning
strucke her ere his words begun.
78463And at his looke
she
flatly falleth downe,
464For lookes kill loue, and loue by lookes reuiueth,
465A
smile recures the wounding of a frowne,
466But ble
ssed bankrout that by loue
so thriueth.
467 The
sillie boy beleeuing
she is dead,
468 Claps her pale cheeke, till clapping makes it red.
79469And all amaz'd, brake o
ff his late intent,
470For
sharply he did thinke to reprehend her,
471Which cunning loue did wittily preuent,
472Faire-fall the wit that can
so well defend her:
473 For on the gra
sse
she lyes as
she were
slaine,
474 Till his breath breatheth life in her againe.
80475He wrings her no
se, he
strikes her on the cheekes,
476He bends her
fingers, holds her pul
ses hard,
477He chafes her lips, a thou
sand wayes he
seekes,
478To mend the hurt, that his vnkindne
sse mard,
He kisses her, and she by her good will,
479 Will neuer ri
se,
so he will ki
sse her
still.
81480The night of
sorrow now is turnd to day,
481Her two blew windowes faintly
she vpheaueth,
482Like the faire
sunne when in his fre
sh array,
483He cheeres the morne, and all the earth releeueth:
484 And as the bright
sunne glori
fies the skie:
485 So is her face illumind with her eye.
82487Who
se beames vpon his hairele
sse face are
fixt,
488As if from thence they borrowed all their
shine,
489Were neuer foure
such lamps, together mixt,
490Had not his clouded with his browes repine.
491 But hers, which through the cri
stal tears gaue light,
492 Shone like the Moone in water
seene by night.
83493O where am I (quoth
she,) in earth or heauen,
494Or in the Ocean drencht, or in the
fire:
495What houre is this, or morne, or wearie euen,
496Do I delight to die or life de
sire?
497 But now I liu'd, and life was deaths annoy,
498 But now I dy'de, and death was liuely ioy.
84499O thou did
st kill me, kill me once againe,
500Thy eyes
shrowd tutor, that hard heart of thine,
501Hath taught them
scornfull tricks, &
such di
sdaine,
502That they haue murdred this poore heart of mine,
503 And the
se mine eyes true leaders to their queene,
504 But for thy piteous lips no more had
seene.
85505Long may they ki
sse ech other for this cure,
506Oh neuer let their crim
son liueries weare,
507And as they la
st, their verdour
still endure,
508To driue infe
ction from the dangerous yeare:
509 That the
star-gazers hauing writ on death,
510 May
say, the plague is bani
sht by thy breath.
86511Pure lips,
sweet
seales in my
soft lips imprinted,
512What bargaines may I make
still to be
sealing?
513To
sell my
selfe I can be well contented,
514So thou wilt buy, and pay, and v
se good dealing,
515 Which purcha
se if thou make, for feare of
slips,
516 Set thy
seale manuell, on my wax-red lips.
87517A thou
sand ki
sses buyes my heart from me,
518And pay them at thy lei
sure, one by one,
519What is ten hundred touches vnto thee,
520Are they not quickly told, and quickly gone?
521 Say for non-paimet, that the debt
should double,
522 Is twentie hundred ki
sses
such a trouble?
88523Faire Queene (quoth he) if anie loue you owe me,
524Mea
sure my
strangene
sse with my vnripe yeares,
525Before I know my
selfe,
seeke not to know me,
526No
fisher but the vngrowne frie forbeares,
527 The mellow plum doth fall, the greene
sticks fa
st,
528 Or being early pluckt, is
sower tota
st.
89529Looke the worlds comforter with wearie gate,
530His dayes hot taske hath ended in the we
st,
531The owle (nights herald)
shreeks, tis verie late,
532The
sheepe are gone to fold, birds to their ne
st,
533 And cole-black clouds, that
shadow heauens light,
534 Do
summon vs to part, and bid good night.
90535Now let me
say goodnight, and
so
say you,
536If you will
say
so, you
shall haue a kis;
537Goodnight (quoth
she) and ere he
sayes adue,
538The honie fee of parting tendred is,
539 Her armes do lend his necke a
sweet imbrace,
540 Incorporate then they
seeme, face growes to face.
91541Till breathle
sse he di
sioynd, and backward drew,
542The heauenly moi
sture that
sweet corall mouth,
543Who
se precious ta
st, her thir
stie lips well knew,
544Whereon they
surfet, yet complaine on drouth,
545 He with her plentie pre
st,
she faint with dearth,
546 Their lips together glewed, fall to the earth.
92547Now quicke de
sire hath caught the yeelding pray,
548And gluttonlike
she feeds, yet neuer
filleth,
549Her lips are conquerers, his lips obay,
550Paying what ran
some the in
sulter willeth:
551 Who
se vultur thought doth pitch the price
so hie,
552 That
she will draw his lips rich trea
sure drie.
93553And hauing felt the
sweetne
sse of the
spoile,
554With blind fold furie
she begins to forrage,
555Her face doth reeke, &
smoke, her blood doth boile,
556And carele
sse lu
st stirs vp ade
sperat courage,
557 Planting obliuion, beating rea
son backe,
558 Forgetting
shames pure blu
sh, & honors wracke.
94559Hot, faint, and wearie, with her hard imbracing,
560Like a wild bird being tam'd with too much hādling,
561Or as the
fleet-foot Roe that's tyr'd with cha
sing,
562Or like the froward infant
stild with dandling:
563 He now obayes, and now no more re
sisteth,
564 While
she takes all
she can, not all
she li
steth.
95565What waxe
so frozen but di
ssolues with tempring,
566And yeelds at la
st to euerie light impre
ssion?
567Things out of hope, are compa
st oft with ventring,
568Chie
fly in loue, who
se leaue exceeds commi
ssion:
569 A
ffe
ction faints not like a pale-fac'd coward,
570 But thē woes be
st, whē mo
st his choice is froward.
96571When he did frowne, ô had
she then gaue ouer,
572Such ne
ctar from his lips
she had not
suckt,
573Foule wordes, and frownes, mu
st not repell a louer,
574What though the ro
se haue prickles, yet tis pluckt?
575 Were beautie vnder twentie locks kept fa
st,
576 Yet loue breaks through, & picks them all at la
st.
97577For pittie now
she can no more detaine him,
578The poore foole praies her that he may depart,
579She is re
solu'd no longer to re
straine him,
580Bids him farewell, and looke well to her hart,
581 The which by Cupids bow
she doth prote
st,
582 He carries thence incaged in his bre
st.
98583Sweet boy
she
saies, this night ile wa
st in
sorrow
584For my
sick heart commands mine eyes to watch,
585Tell me loues mai
ster,
shall we meete tomorrow,
586Say,
shall we,
shall we, wilt thou make the match?
587 He tell's her no, to morrow he intends,
588 To hunt the boare with certaine of his frends.
99589The boare (quoth
she) whereat a
suddain pale,
590Like lawne being
spred vpon the blu
shing ro
se,
591V
surpes her cheeke,
she trembles at his tale,
592And on his neck her yoaking armes
she throwes.
593 She
sincketh downe,
still hanging by his necke,
594 He on her belly fall's,
she on her backe.
100595Now is
she in the verie li
sts of loue,
596Her champion mounted for the hot incounter,
597All is imaginarie
she doth proue,
598He will not mannage her, although he mount her,
599 That wor
se then Tantalus is her annoy,
600 To clip Elizium, and to lacke her ioy.
101601Euen
so poore birds deceiu'd with painted grapes,
602Do
surfet by the eye, and pine the maw:
603Euen
so
she langui
sheth in her mi
shaps,
604As tho
se poore birds that helple
sse berries
saw,
605 The warme e
ffe
cts which
she in him
finds mi
ssing,
606 She
seekes to kindle with continuall ki
ssing.
102607But all in vaine, good Queene, it will not bee,
608She hath a
ssai'd as much as may be prou'd,
609Her pleading hath de
seru'd a greater fee,
610She's loue;
she loues, and yet
she is not lou'd,
611 Fie,
fie, he
saies, you cru
sh me, let me go,
612 You haue no rea
son to withhold me
so.
103613Thou had
st bin gone (quoth
she)
sweet boy ere this,
614But that thou told
st me, thou wold
st hunt the boare,
615Oh be adui
sd, thou know'
st not what it is,
616With iauelings point a churli
sh swine to goare,
617 Who
se tu
shes neuer
sheathd, he whetteth
still,
618 Like to a mortall butcher bent to kill.
104619On his bow-backe, he hath a battell
set,
620Of bri
sly pikes that euer threat his foes,
621His eyes like glow-wormes
shine, when he doth fret
622His
snout digs
sepulchers where ere he goes,
623 Being mou'd he
strikes, what ere is in his way,
624 And whom he
strikes, his crooked tu
shes
slay.
105625His brawnie
sides with hairie bri
stles armed,
626Are better proofe then thy
speares point can enter,
627His
short thick necke cannot be ea
sily harmed,
628Being irefull, on the lyon he will venter,
629 The thornie brambles, and imbracing bu
shes,
630 As fearefull of him part, through whom he ru
shes.
106631Alas, he naught e
steem's that face of thine,
632To which loues eyes paies tributarie gazes,
633Nor thy
soft handes,
sweet lips, and chri
stall eine,
634Who
se full perfe
ction all the world amazes,
635 But hauing thee at vantage (wondrous dread!)
636 Wold roote the
se beauties, as he root's the mead.
107637Oh let him keep his loath
some cabin
still,
638Beautie hath nanght to do with
such foule
fiends,
639Come not within his danger by thy will,
640They that thriue well, take coun
sell of their friends,
641 When thou did
st name the boare, not to di
ssēble,
642 I feard thy fortune, aud my ioynts did tremble.
108643Did
st thou not marke my face, was it not white?
644Sawe
st thou not
signes of feare lurke in mine eye?
645Grew I not faint, and fell I not downe right?
646Within my bo
some whereon thou doe
st lye,
647 My boding heart, pants, beats, and takes no re
st,
648 But like an earthquake,
shakes thee on my bre
st.
109649For where loue raignes, di
sturbing iealou
sie,
650Doth call him
selfe a
ffe
ctions centinell,
651Giues fal
se alarmes,
sugge
steth mutinie,
652And in a peacefull houre doth crie, kill, kill,
653 Di
stempring gentle loue in his de
sire,
654 As aire, and water do abate the
fire.
110655This
sower informer, this bate-breeding
spie,
656This canker that eates vp loues tender
spring,
657This carry-tale, di
ssentious iealou
sie,
658That
somtime true newes,
somtime fal
se doth bring,
659 Knocks at my heart, and whi
spers in mine eare,
660 That if I loue thee, I thy death
should feare.
111661And more then
so, pre
senteth to mine eye,
662The pi
cture of an angrie cha
fing boare,
663Vnder who
se
sharpe fangs, on his backe doth lye,
664An image like thy
selfe, all
staynd with goare,
665 Who
se blood vpon the fre
sh flowers being
shed,
666 Doth make thē droop with grief, & hang the hed.
112667What
should I do,
seeing thee
so indeed?
668That tremble at th'imagination,
669The thought of it doth make my faint heart bleed,
670And feare doth teach it diuination;
671 I prophecie thy death, my liuing
sorrow,
672 If thou incounter with the boare to morrow.
113673But if thou needs wilt hunt, be rul'd by me,
674Vncouple at the timerous
flying hare,
675Or at the foxe which liues by
subtiltie,
676Or at the Roe which no incounter dare:
677 Pur
sue the
se fearfull creatures o're the downes,
678 And on thy wel breathd hor
se keep with thy hoūds
114679And when thou ha
st on foote the purblind hare,
680Marke the poore wretch to ouer-
shut his troubles,
681How he outruns the wind, and with what care,
682He crankes and cro
sses with a thou
sand doubles,
683 The many mu
sits through the which he goes,
684 Are like a laberinth to amaze his foes.
115685Sometime he runnes among a
flocke of
sheepe,
686To make the cunning hounds mi
stake their
smell,
687And
sometime where earth-deluing Conies keepe,
688To
stop the loud pur
suers in their yell:
689 And
sometime
sorteth with a heard of deare,
690 Danger deui
seth
shifts, wit waites on feare.
116691For there his
smell with others being mingled,
692The hot
sent-
snu
ffing hounds are driuen to doubt,
693Cea
sing their clamorous cry, till they haue
singled
694With much ado the cold fault cleanly out,
695 Then do they
spend their mouth's, eccho replies,
696 As if an other cha
se were in the skies.
117697By this poore wat farre o
ff vpon a hill,
698Stands on his hinder-legs with li
stning eare,
699To hearken if his foes pur
sue him
still,
700Anon their loud alarums he doth heare,
701 And now his griefe may be compared well,
702 To one
sore
sicke, that heares the pa
ssing bell.
118703Then
shalt thou
see the deaw-bedabbled wretch,
704Turne, and returne, indenting with the way,
705Ech enuious brier, his wearie legs do
scratch,
706Ech
shadow makes him
stop, ech murmour
stay,
707 For mi
serie is troden on by manie,
708 And being low, neuer releeu'd by anie.
119709Lye quietly, and heare a litle more,
710Nay do not
struggle, for thou
shalt not ri
se,
711To make thee hate the hunting of the bore,
712Vnlike my
selfe thou hear'
st me moralize,
713 Applying this to that, and
so to
so,
714 For loue can comment vpon euerie wo.
120715Where did I leaue? no matter where (quoth he)
716Leaue me, and then the
storie aptly ends,
717The night is
spent; why what of that (quoth
she?)
718I am (quoth he) expe
cted of my friends,
719 And now tis darke, and going I
shall fall.
720 In night (quoth
she) de
sire
sees be
st of all.
121721But if thou fall, oh then imagine this,
722The earth in loue with thee, thy footing trips,
723And all is but to rob thee of a kis,
724Rich prayes make true-men theeues:
so do thy lips
725 Make mode
st Dyan, cloudie and forlorne,
726 Le
st she
should
steale a ki
sse and die for
sworne.
122727Now of this darke night I perceiue the rea
son,
728Cinthia for
shame, ob
scures her
siluer
shine,
729Till forging nature be condemn'd of trea
son,
730For
stealing moulds from heauen, that were diuine,
731 Wherin
she fram'd thee, in hie heauens de
spight,
732 To
shame the
sunne by day, and her by night.
123733And therefore hath
she brib'd the de
stinies,
734To cro
sse the curious workman
ship of nature,
735To mingle beautie with in
firmities,
736And pure perfe
ction with impure defeature,
737 Making it
subie
ct to the tyrannie,
738 Of mad mi
schances, and much mi
serie.
124739As burning feauers, agues pale, and faint,
740Life-poy
soning pe
stilence, and frendzies wood,
741The marrow-eating
sickne
sse who
se attaint,
742Di
sorder breeds by heating of the blood,
743 Surfets, impo
stumes, griefe, and damnd di
spaire,
744 Sweare natures death, for framing thee
so faire.
125745And not the lea
st of all the
se maladies,
746But in one minutes
fight brings beautie vnder,
747Both fauor,
sauour, hew, and qualities,
748Whereat the th'impartiall gazer late did wonder,
749 Are on the
sudden wa
sted, thawed, and donne,
750 As mountain
snow melts with the midday
sonne.
126751Therefore de
spight of fruitle
sse cha
stitie,
752Loue-lacking ve
stals, and
selfe-louing Nuns,
753That on the earth would breed a
scarcitie,
754And barraine dearth of daughters, and of
suns;
755 Be prodigall, the lampe that burnes by night,
756 Dries vp his oyle, to lend the world his light.
127757What is thy bodie but a
swallowing graue,
758Seeming to burie that po
steritie,
759Which by the rights of time thou needs mu
st haue,
760If thou de
stroy them not in darke ob
scuritie?
761 If
so the world will hold thee indi
sdaine,
762 Sith in thy pride,
so faire a hope is
slaine.
128763So in thy
selfe, thy
selfe art made away,
764A mi
schiefe wor
se then ciuill home-bred
strife,
765Or theirs who
se de
sperat hands them
selues do
slay,
766Or butcher
sire, that reaues his
sonne of life:
767 Foule cankring ru
st, the hidden trea
sure frets,
768 But gold that's put to v
se more gold begets.
129769Nay then (quoth Adon) you will fall againe,
770Into your idle ouer-handled theame,
771The ki
sse I gaue you is be
stow'd in vaine,
772And all in vaine you
striue again
st the
streame,
773 For by this black-fac't night, de
sires foule nour
se,
774 Your treati
se makes me like you, wor
se & wor
se.
130775If loue haue lent you twentie thou
sand tongues,
776And euerie tongue more mouing then your owne,
777Bewitching like the wanton Marmaids
songs,
778Yet from mine eare the tempting tune is blowne,
779 For know my heart
stands armed in mine eare,
780 And will not let a fal
se
sound enter there.
131781Le
st the deceiuing harmonie
should ronne,
782Into the quiet clo
sure of my bre
st,
783And then my litle heart were quite vndone,
784In his bed-chamber to be bard of re
st,
785 No Ladie no, my heart longs not to grone,
786 But
soundly
sleeps, while now it
sleeps alone.
132787What haue you vrg'd, that I can not reproue?
788The path is
smooth that leadeth on to danger,
789I hate not loue, but your deui
se in loue,
790That lends imbracements vnto euery
stranger,
791 You do it for increa
se, ô
straunge excu
se!
792 When rea
son is the bawd to lu
sts abu
se.
133793Call it not loue, for loue to heauen is
fled,
794Since
sweating lu
st on earth v
surpt his name,
795Vnder who
se
simple
semblance he hath fed,
796Vpon fre
sh beautie, blotting it with blame;
797 Which the hot tyrant
staines, &
soone bereaues:
798 As Caterpillers do the tender leaues.
134799Loue comforteth like
sun-
shine after raine,
800But lu
sts e
ffe
ct is tempe
st after
sunne,
801Loues gentle
spring doth alwayes fre
sh remaine,
802Lu
sts winter comes, ere
sommer halfe be donne:
803 Loue
surfets not, lu
st like a glutton dies:
804 Loue is all truth, lu
st full of forged lies.
135805More I could tell, but more I dare not
say,
806The text is old, the Orator too greene,
807Therefore in
sadne
sse, now I will away,
808My face is full of
shame, my heart of teene,
809 Mine eares that to your wanton talke attended,
810 Do burne them
selues, for hauing
so o
ffended.
136811With this he breaketh from the
sweet embrace,
812Of tho
se faire armes which bound him to her bre
st,
813And homeward through the dark lawnd runs apace,
814Leaues loue vpon her backe, deeply di
stre
st,
815 Looke how a bright
star
shooteth from the skye;
816 So glides he in the night from Venus eye.
137817Which after him
she dartes, as one on
shore
818Gazing vpon a late embarked friend,
819Till the wilde waues will haue him
seene no more,
820Who
se ridges with the meeting cloudes contend:
821 So did the mercile
sse, and pitchie night,
822 Fold in the obie
ct that did feed her
sight.
138823Whereat ama
s'd as one that vnaware,
824Hath dropt a precious iewell in the
flood,
825Or
stoni
sht, as night wandrers often are,
826Their light blowne out in
some mi
stru
stfull wood;
827 Euen
so confounded in the darke
she lay,
828 Hauing lo
st the faire di
scouerie of her way.
139829And now
she beates her heart, whereat it grones,
830That all the neighbour caues as
seeming troubled,
831Make verball repetition of her mones,
832Pa
ssion on pa
ssion, deeply is redoubled,
833 Ay me,
she cries, and twentie times, wo, wo,
834 And twentie ecchoes, twentie times crie
so,
140835She marking them, begins a wailing note,
836And
sings extemporally a wofull dittie,
837How loue makes yong-men thrall, & old men dote,
838How loue is wi
se in follie, fooli
sh wittie:
839 Her heauie antheme
still concludes in wo,
840 And
still the quier of ecchoes an
swer
so.
141841Her
song was tedious, and out-wore the night,
842For louers houres are long, though
seeming
short,
843If plea
sd them
selues, others they thinke delight,
844In
such like circum
stance, with
such like
sport:
845 Their copious
stories oftentimes begunne,
846 End without audience, and are neuer donne.
142847For who hath
she to
spend the night withall,
848But idle
sounds re
sembling para
sits?
849Like
shrill-tongu'd Tap
sters an
swering euerie call,
850Soothing the humor of fanta
stique wits,
851 She
sayes tis
so, they an
swer all tis
so,
852 And would
say after her, if
she
said no.
143853Lo here the gentle larke wearie of re
st,
854From his moy
st cabinet mounts vp on hie,
855And wakes the morning, from who
se
siluer bre
st,
856The
sunne ari
seth in his maie
stie,
857 Who doth the world
so gloriou
sly behold,
858 That Ceader tops and hils,
seeme burni
sht gold.
144859Venus
salutes him with this faire good morrow,
860Oh thou cleare god, and patron of all light,
861From whom ech lamp, and
shining
star doth borrow,
862The beautious in
fluence that makes him bright,
863 There liues a
sonne that
suckt an earthly mother,
864 May lend thee light, as thou doe
st lend to other.
145865This
sayd,
she ha
steth to a mirtle groue,
866Mu
sing the morning is
so much ore-worne,
867And yet
she heares no tidings of her loue;
868She harkens for his hounds, and for his horne,
869 Anon
she heares them chaunt it lu
stily,
870 And all in ha
st she coa
steth to the cry.
146871And as
she runnes, the bu
shes in the way,
872Some catch her by the necke,
some ki
sse her face,
873Some twin'd about her thigh to make her
stay,
874She wildly breaketh from their
stri
ct imbrace,
875 Like a milch Doe, who
se
swelling dugs do ake,
876 Ha
sting to feed her fawne, hid in
some brake,
147877By this
she heares the hounds are at a bay,
878Whereat
she
starts like one that
spies an adder,
879Wreath'd vp in fatall folds iu
st in his way,
880The feare where of doth make him
shake, &
shudder,
881 Euen
so the timerous yelping of the hounds,
882 Appals her
sen
ses, and her
spirit confounds.
148883For now
she knowes it is no gentle cha
se,
884But the blunt boare, rough beare, or lyon proud,
885Becau
se the crie remaineth in one place,
886Where fearefully the dogs exclaime aloud,
887 Finding their enemie to be
so cur
st,
888 They all
straine curt'
sie who
shall cope him
fir
st.
149889This di
small crie rings
sadly in her eare,
890Through which it enters to
surpri
se her hart,
891Who ouercome by doubt, and bloodle
sse feare,
892With cold-pale weakene
sse, nums ech feeling part,
893 Like
soldiers when their captain once doth yeeld,
894 They ba
sely
flie, and dare not
stay the
field.
150895Thus
stands
she in a trembling exta
sie,
896Till cheering vp her
sen
ses all di
smayd,
897She tels them tis a cau
sle
sse fanta
sie,
898And childi
sh error that they are a
ffrayd,
899 Bids thē leaue quaking, bids them feare no more,
900 And with that word,
she
spide the hunted boare.
151901Who
se frothie mouth bepainted all with red,
902Like milke, & blood, being mingled both togither,
903A
second feare through all her
sinewes
spred,
904Which madly hurries her,
she knowes not whither,
905 This way
she runs, and now
she will no further,
906 But backe retires, to rate the boare for murther.
152907A thou
sand
spleenes beare her a thou
sand wayes,
908She treads the path, that
she vntreads againe;
909Her more then ha
st, is mated with delayes,
910Like the proceedings of a drunken braine,
911 Full of respe
cts, yet naught at all respe
cting,
912 In hand with all things, naught at all e
ffe
cting.
153913Here kenneld in a brake,
she
finds a hound,
914And askes the wearie caiti
ffe for his mai
ster,
915And there another licking of his wound,
916Gain
st venimd
sores, the onely
soueraigne plai
ster.
917 And here
she meets another,
sadly skowling,
918 To whom
she
speaks, & he replies with howling.
154919When he hath cea
st his ill re
sounding noi
se,
920Another
flapmouthd mourner, blacke, and grim,
921Again
st the welkin, volies out his voyce,
922Another, and another, an
swer him,
923 Clapping their proud tailes to the ground below,
924 Shaking their
scratcht-eares, bleeding as they go.
155925Looke how, the worlds poore people are amazed,
926At apparitions,
signes, and prodigies,
927Whereon with feareful eyes, they long haue gazed,
928Infu
sing them with dreadfull prophecies;
929 So
she at the
se
sad
signes, drawes vp her breath,
930 And
sighing it againe, exclaimes on death.
156931Hard fauourd tyrant, ougly, meagre, leane,
932Hatefull diuorce of loue, (thus chides
she death)
933Grim-grinning gho
st, earths-worme what do
st thou thou (meane?
934To
sti
fle beautie, and to
steale his breath?
935 Who when he liu'd, his breath and beautie
set
936 Glo
sse on the ro
se,
smell to the violet.
157937If he be dead, ô no, it cannot be,
938Seeing his beautie, thou
should
st strike at it,
939Oh yes, it may, thou ha
st no eyes to
see,
940But hatefully at randon doe
st thou hit,
941 Thy marke is feeble age, but thy fal
se dart,
942 Mi
stakes that aime, and cleaues an infants hart.
158943Had
st thou but bid beware, then he had
spoke,
944And hearing him, thy power had lo
st his power,
945The de
stinies will cur
se thee for this
stroke,
946They bid thee crop a weed, thou pluck
st a
flower,
947 Loues golden arrow at him
should haue
fled,
948 And not deaths ebon dart to
strike him dead.
159949Do
st thou drink tears, that thou prouok'
st such wee
-(ping,
950What may a heauie grone aduantage thee?
951Why ha
st thou ca
st into eternall
sleeping,
952Tho
se eyes that taught all other eyes to
see?
953 Now nature cares not for thy mortall vigour,
954 Since her be
st worke is ruin'd with thy rigour.
160955Here ouercome as one full of di
spaire,
956She vaild her eye-lids, who like
sluces
stopt
957The chri
stall tide, that from her two cheeks faire,
958In the
sweet channell of her bo
some dropt.
959 But through the
floud-gates breaks the
siluer rain,
960 And with his
strong cour
se opens them againe.
161961O how her eyes, and teares, did lend, and borrow,
962Her eye
seene in the teares, teares in her eye,
963Both chri
stals, where they viewd ech others
sorrow:
964Sorrow, that friendly
sighs
sought
still to drye,
965 But like a
stormie day, now wind, now raine,
966 Sighs drie her cheeks, tears make thē wet againe.
162967Variable pa
ssions throng her con
stant wo,
968As
striuing who
should be
st become her griefe,
969All entertaind, ech pa
ssion labours
so,
970That euerie pre
sent
sorrow
seemeth chiefe,
971 But none is be
st, then ioyne they all together,
972 Like many clouds, con
sulting for foule weather.
163973By this farre o
ff,
she heares
some hunt
sman hallow,
974A nour
ses
song nere plea
sd her babe
so well,
975The dyre imagination
she did follow,
976This
sound of hope doth labour to expell,
977 For now reuiuing ioy bids her reioyce,
978 And
flatters her, it is Adonis voyce.
164979Whereat her teares began to turne their tide,
980Being pri
sond in her eye: like pearles in gla
sse,
981Yet
sometimes fals an orient drop be
side,
982Which her cheeke melts, as
scorning it
should pa
sse
983 To wa
sh the foule face of the
slutti
sh ground,
984 Who is but dronken when
she
seemeth drownd.
165985O hard beleeuing loue how
strange it
seemes!
986Not to beleeue, and yet too credulous:
987Thy weale, and wo, are both of them extreames,
988De
spaire, and hope, makes thee ridiculous.
989 The one doth
flatter thee in thoughts vnlikely,
990 In likely thoughts the other kils thee quickly.
166991Now
she vnweaues the web that
she hath wrought,
992Adonis liues, and death is not to blame:
993It was not
she that cald him all to nought;
994Now
she ads honours to his hatefull name.
995 She clepes him king of graues, & graue for kings,
996 Imperious
supreme of all mortall things.
167997No, no, quoth
she,
sweet death, I did but ie
st,
998Yet pardon me, I felt a kind of feare
999When as I met the boare, that bloodie bea
st,
1000Which knowes no pitie but is
still
seuere,
1001 Then gentle
shadow (truth I mu
st confe
sse)
1002 I rayld on thee, fearing my loues dece
sse.
1681003Tis not my fault, the Bore prouok't my tong,
1004Be wreak't on him (inui
sible commaunder)
1005T'is he foule creature, that hath done thee wrong,
1006I did but a
ct, he's author of thy
slaunder.
1007 Greefe hath two tongues, and neuer woman yet,
1008 Could rule them both, without ten womens wit.
1691009Thus hoping that Adonis is aliue,
1010Her ra
sh su
spe
ct she doth extenuate,
1011And that his beautie may the better thriue,
1012With death
she humbly doth in
sinuate.
1013 Tels him of trophies,
statues, tombes, and
stories,
1014 His vi
ctories, his triumphs, and his glories.
1701015O Ioue quoth
she, how much a foole was I,
1016To be of
such a weake and
sillie mind,
1017To waile his death who liues, and mu
st not die,
1018Till mutuall ouerthrow of mortall kind?
1019 For he being dead, with him is beautie
slaine,
1020 And beautie dead, blacke Chaos comes againe.
1711021Fy, fy, fond loue, thou art as full of feare,
1022As one with trea
sure laden, hem'd with theeues,
1023Tri
fles vnwitne
ssed with eye, or eare,
1024Thy coward heart with fal
se bethinking greeues.
1025 Euen at this word
she heares a merry horne,
1026 Whereat
she leaps, that was but late forlorne.
1721027As Faulcons to the lure, away
she
flies,
1028The gra
sse
stoops not,
she treads on it
so light,
1029And in her ha
st, vnfortunately
spies,
1030The foule boares conque
st, on her faire delight,
1031 Which
seene, her eyes are murdred with the view,
1032 Like
stars a
sham'd of day, them
selues withdrew.
1731033Or as the
snaile, who
se tender hornes being hit,
1034Shrinks backward in his
shellie caue with paine,
1035And, there all
smoothred vp, in
shade doth
sit,
1036Long after fearing to creepe forth againe:
1037 So at his bloodie view her eyes are
fled,
1038 Into the deep-darke cabbins of her head.
1741039Where they re
signe their o
ffice, and their light,
1040To the di
spo
sing of her troubled braine,
1041Who bids them
still con
sort with ougly night,
1042And neuer wound the heart with lookes againe,
1043 Who like a king perplexed in his throne,
1044 By their
sugge
stion, giues a deadly grone.
1751045Whereat ech tributarie
subie
ct quakes,
1046As when the wind impri
sond in the ground,
1047Struggling for pa
ssage, earths foundation
shakes,
1048Which with cold terror, doth mens minds confoūd:
1049 This mutinie ech part doth
so
surpri
se,
1050 That frō their dark beds once more leap hereies.
1761051And being opend, threw vnwilling light,
1052Vpon the wide wound, that the boare had trencht
1053In his
soft
flanke, who
se wonted lillie white
1054With purple tears that his wound wept, had drēcht.
1055 No
floure was nigh, no gra
sse, hearb, leaf, or weed,
1056 But
stole his blood, and
seemd with him to bleed.
1771057This
solemne
sympathie, poore Venus noteth,
1058Ouer one
shoulder doth
she hang her head,
1059Dumblie
she pa
ssions, frantikely
she doteth,
1060She thinkes he could not die, he is not dead,
1061 Her voice is
stopt, her ioynts forget to bow,
1062 Her eyes are mad, that they haue wept till now.
1781063Vpon his hurt
she lookes
so
stedfa
stly,
1064That her
sight dazling, makes the wound
seem three,
1065And then
she reprehends her mangling eye,
1066That makes more ga
shes, where no breach
shuld be:
1067 His face
seems twain, ech
seuerall lim is doubled,
1068 For oft the eye mi
stakes, the brain being troubled
1791069My tongue cannot expre
sse my griefe for one,
1070And yet (quoth
she) behold two Adons dead,
1071My
sighes are blowne away, my
salt teares gone,
1072Mine eyes are turn'd to
fire, my heart to lead,
1073 Heauie hearts lead melt at mine eyes red
fire,
1074 So
shall I die by drops of hot de
sire.
1801075Alas poore world what trea
sure ha
st thou lo
st,
1076What face remains aliue that's worth the viewing?
1077Who
se tongue is mu
sick now? What cā
st thou boa
st,
1078Of things long
since, or any thing in
suing?
1079 The
flowers are
sweet, their colours fre
sh, and trim,
1080 But true
sweet beautie liu'd, and di'de with him.
1811081Bonnet, nor vaile henceforth no creature weare,
1082Nor
sunne, nor wind will euer
striue to ki
sse you,
1083Hauing no faire to lo
se, you need not feare,
1084The
sun doth skorne you, & the wind doth hi
sse you.
1085 But when Adonis liu'de,
sunne, and
sharpe aire,
1086 Lurkt like two theeues, to rob him of his faire.
1821087And therefore would he put his bonnet on,
1088Vnder who
se brim the gaudie
sunne would peepe,
1089The wind would blow it o
ff, and being gon,
1090Play with his locks, then would Adonis weepe.
1091 And
straight in pittie of his tender yeares,
1092 They both would
striue who
fir
st should drie his (teares.
1831093To
see his face the Lion walkt along,
1094Behind
some hedge, becau
se he would not fear him:
1095To recreate him
self when he hath
song,
1096The Tygre would be tame, and gently heare him.
1097 If he had
spoke, the wolfe would leaue his praie,
1098 And neuer fright the
sillie lambe that daie.
1841099When he beheld his
shadow in the brooke,
1100The
fishes
spread on it their golden gils,
1101When he was by the birds
such plea
sure tooke,
1102That
some would
sing,
some other in their bils
1103 Would bring him mulberries & ripe-red cherries,
1104 He fed them with his
sight, they him with berries.
1851105But this foule, grim, and vrchin-
snowted Boare,
1106Who
se downeward eye
still looketh for a graue:
1107Ne're
saw the beautious liuerie that he wore,
1108Witne
sse the intertainment that he gaue.
1109 If he did
see his face, why then I know,
1110 He thought to ki
sse him, and hath kild him
so.
1861111Tis true, tis true, thus was Adonis
slaine,
1112He ran vpon the Boare with his
sharpe
speare,
1113Who did not whet his teeth at him againe,
1114But by a ki
sse thought to per
suade him there.
1115 And nou
sling in his
flanke the louing
swine,
1116 Sheath'd vnaware the tuske in his
soft groine.
1871117Had I bin tooth'd like him I mu
st confe
sse,
1118With ki
ssing him I
should haue kild him
fir
st,
1119But he is dead, and neuer did he ble
sse
1120My youth with his, the more am I accur
st.
1121 With this
she falleth in the place
she
stood,
1122 And
staines her face with his congealed bloud.
1881123She lookes vpon his lips, and they are pale,
1124She takes him by the hand, and that is cold,
1125She whi
spers in his eares a heauie tale,
1126As if they heard the wofull words
she told:
1127 She lifts the co
ffer-lids that clo
se his eyes,
1128 Where lo, two lamps burnt out in darkne
sse lies.
1891129Two gla
sses where her
selfe, her
selfe beheld
1130A thou
sand times, and now no more re
fle
ct,
1131Their vertue lo
st, wherein they late exceld,
1132And euerie beautie robd of his e
ffe
ct;
1133 Wonder of time (quoth
she) this is my
spight,
1134 That thou being dead, the day
shuld yet belight.
1901135Since thou art dead, lo here I prophecie,
1136Sorrow on loue hereafter
shall attend:
1137It
shall be wayted on with iealou
sie,
1138Find
sweet beginning, but vn
sauorie end.
1139 Nere
setled equally, but high or lo,
1140 That all loues plea
sure
shall not match his wo.
1911141It
shall be
fickle, fal
se, and full of fraud,
1142Bud, and be bla
sted, in a breathing while,
1143The bottome poy
son, and the top ore-
strawd
1144With
sweets, that
shall the true
st sight beguile,
1145 The
stronge
st bodie
shall it make mo
st weake,
1146 Strike the wi
se dūbe, & teach the foole to
speake.
1921147It
shall be
sparing, and too full of ryot,
1148Teaching decrepit age to tread the mea
sures,
1149The
staring ru
ffian
shall it keepe in quiet,
1150Pluck down the rich, in rich the poore with trea
sures,
1151 It
shall be raging mad, and
sillie milde,
1152 Make the yoong old, the old become a childe.
1931153It
shall
su
spe
ct where is no cau
se of feare,
1154It
shall not feare where it
should mo
st mi
stru
st,
1155It
shall be mercifull, and too
seueare,
1156And mo
st deceiuing, when it
seemes mo
st iu
st,
1157 Peruer
se it
shall be, where it
showes mo
st toward,
1158 Put feare to valour, courage to the coward.
1941159It
shall be cau
se of warre, and dire euents,
1160And
set di
ssention twixt the
sonne, and
sire,
1161Subie
ct, and
seruill to all di
scontents:
1162As drie combu
stious matter is to
fire,
1163 Sith in his prime, death doth my loue de
stroy,
1164 They that loue be
st, their loues
shall not enioy.
1951165By this the boy that by her
side laie kild,
1166Was melted like a vapour from her
sight,
1167And in his blood that on the ground laie
spild,
1168A purple
floure
sproong vp, checkred with white,
1169 Re
sembling well his pale cheekes, and the blood,
1170 Which in round drops, vpō their whitene
sse
stood.
1961171She bowes her head, the new-
sprong
floure to
smel,
1172Comparing it to her Adonis breath,
1173And
saies within her bo
some it
shall dwell,
1174Since he him
selfe is reft from her by death;
1175 She crop's the
stalke, and in the breach appeares,
1176 Green-dropping
sap, which
she cōpares to teares.
1971177Poore
floure (quoth
she) this was thy fathers gui
se,
1178Sweet i
ssue of a more
sweet
smelling
sire,
1179For euerie little griefe to wet his eies,
1180To grow vnto him
selfe was his de
sire;
1181 And
so tis thine, but know it is as good,
1182 To wither in my bre
st, as in his blood.
1981183Here was thy fathers bed, here in my bre
st,
1184Thou art the next of blood, and tis thy right.
1185Lo in this hollow cradle take thy re
st,
1186My throbbing hart
shall rock thee day and night;
1187 There
shall not be one minute in an houre,
1188 Wherein I wil not ki
sse my
sweet loues
floure.
1991189Thus weary of the world, away
she hies,
1190And yokes her
siluer doues, by who
se
swift aide,
1191Their mi
stre
sse mounted through the emptie skies,
1192In her light chariot, quickly is conuaide,
1193 Holding their cour
se to Paphos, where their queen,
1194 Meanes to immure her
selfe, and not be
seen.
FINIS