Salmacis and Hermaphroditus.
Francis Beaumont.
Note: this Renascence
Editions text was transcribed by Risa S.
Bear, September 2001, from the 1602 edition. The copy text is in the
Bodleian Library. Any errors that have crept into the transcription are
the fault of the present publisher. The text is in the public domain. Content
unique to this presentation is copyright © 2001 The University of
Oregon. For nonprofit and educational uses only. Send comments and corrections
to the
Publisher, rbear[at]uoregon.edu.
For Stephanie Smith.
S A L M A C I S
A N D
H E R M A P H R O-
D I T V S.
Salmacida spolia sine
sanguine
& sudore.
[image]
Imprinted at
London for Iohn Hodgets:
And are to be sold at his shop
in Fleete-
street, at the signe of the Flowre
de Luce, neere Fetter-lane.
1602.
To the true patronesse
of all Poetrie,
C A L I O P E.
T
is a statute in deepe wisdomes lore,
That for his lines none should a
patro[n] chuse
By wealth or pouerty, by lesse or
more,
But who the same is able to peruse;
Nor ought a man his labours dedicate,
Without a true and sensible desert,
To any power of such a mighty state,
And such a wise Defendresse as thou
art.
Thou great and powerfull Muse, then
pardon mee,
That I presume the Mayden-cheeke
to stayne,
In dedicating such a work to thee,
Sprung from the issue of an idle
brayne.
I
vse thee as a woman ought to be:
I
consecrate my idle howres to thee.
In Laudem Authoris.
LIke to the
weake estate of a poore friend,
To whom sweet fortune hath bene
euer slow,
VVhich dayly doth that happy
howre attend,
VVhen his poore state may his
affection shew:
So fares my loue, not able as
the rest,
To chaunt thy prayses in a lofty
vayne,
Yet my poore Muse doth vow to
doe her best,
And wanting wings, shee'le tread
an humble strayne.
I thought at first her homely
steps to rayse,
And for some blazing Epithites
to looke,
But then I fear'd, that by such
wondrous prayse,
Some men would grow suspicious
of thy booke:
For hee that doth thy due deserts reherse,
Depriues that glory from thy
worthy verse.
W. B.
To the Authour.
EYther
the goddesse drawes her troupe of loues
From Paphos, where she erst was
held diuine,
And doth vnyoke her tender-necked
Doues,
Placing her seat in this small papry
shine;
Or the sweet Graces through th'Idalian
groue,
Led the blest Author in their daunced
rings;
Or wanton Nymphs in watry bowres
haue woue,
With fine Mylesian threds, the verse
he sings;
Or curious Pallas once again
doth striue,
With prowd Arachne for illustrious
glory,
And once againe doth loues of gods
reuiue,
Spinning in silken twists a lasting
story:
If
none of these, then Venus chose his sight,
To
leade the steps of her blind sonne aright.
I. B.
To the Author.
THe
matchlesse Lustre of faire poesie,
Which erst was bury'd in old
Romes decayes,
Now'gins with height of rising
maiesty,
Her dust-wrapt head from rotten
tombes to rayse,
And with fresh splendor gilds her topelesse crest,
Rearing her palace in our Poets brest.
The wanton Ouid, whose
inticing rimes
Haue with attractiue wonder forc't
attention,
No more shall be adir'd at: for
these times
Produce a Poet, whose more mouing
passion
VVill teare the loue-sick mirtle from his browes,
T'adorne his Temple with deserued bowes.
The strongest Marble feares the
smallest rayne:
The rusting Canker eates the
purest gold:
Honours best dye dreads enuies
blackest stayne:
The crimson badge of beautie
must waxe old.
But this faire issue of thy fruitful brayne,
Nor dreads age, enuie, cankring rust, or rayne.
A. F.
The Author to the
Reader.
I Sing
the fortunes of a lucklesse payre,
Whose spotlesse soules now in one
body be:
For beauty still is Prodromus
to care,
Crost by the sad starres of natiuitie;
And of the strange inchauntment
of a well
Gi'n by the gods my sportiue Muse
doth write,
Which sweet-lipt Ouid long
agoe did tell,
Wherein who bathes, strait turnes
Hermaphrodite.
I
hope my Poeme is so liuely writ,
That
thou wilt turne halfe-mayd with reading it.
Salmacis and Hermaphroditus.
Y
wanton lines doe treate of amorous loue,
Such as would bow the hearts of
gods aboue:
Then Venus, thou great Citherean
Queene,
That hourely tript on the Idalian
greene,
Thou laughing Erycina, daygne
to see
The verses wholly consecrate to
thee;
Temper them so within thy Paphian
shrine,
That euery Louers eye may melt a
line;
Commaund the god of Loue that little
King,
To giue each verse a sleight touch
with his wing,
That as I write, one line may draw
the tother,
And euery word skip nimbly o're
another.
There was a louely boy the Nymphs
had kept,
That on the Idane mountains oft
had slept,
Begot and borne by powers that dwelt
aboue,
By learned Mercury of the
Queene of loue:
A face he had that shew'd his parents
fame,
And from them both conioynd, he
drew his name:
So wondrous fayre he was that (as
they say)
Diana being hunting on a day,
Shee saw the boy vpon a greene banke
lay him,
And there the virgin-huntresse meant
to slay him,
Because no Nymphes did now pursue
the chase:
For all were strooke blind with
the wanton's face.
But when that beauteous face Diana
saw,
Her armes were nummed, & shee
could not draw;
Yet she did striue to shoot, but
all in vaine,
Shee bent her bow, and loos'd it
streight againe.
Then she began to chide her wanton
eye,
And fayne would shoot, but durst
not see him die,
She turnd and shot, and did of purpose
misse him,
Shee turnd againe, and did of purpose
kisse him.
Then the boy ran: for (some say)
had he stayd,
Diana had no longer bene
a mayd.
Phoebus so doted on this
rosiat face,
That he hath oft stole closely from
his place,
When he did lie by fayre Leucothoes
side,
To dally with him in the vales of
Ide:
And euer since this louely boy did
die,
Phoebus each day about the
world doth flie,
And on the earth he seekes him all
the day,
And euery night he seekes him in
the sea:
His cheeke was sanguine, and his
lip as red
As are the blushing leaues of the
Rose spred:
And I haue heard, that till this
boy was borne,
Rose grew white vpon the virgin
thorne,
Till one day walking to a pleasant
spring,
To heare how cunningly the birds
could sing,
Laying him downe vpon a flowry bed,
The Roses blush'd and turn'd themselues
to red.
The Rose that blush'd not, for his
great offence,
The gods did punish, and for impudence
They gaue this doome that was agreed
by all,
The smell of the white Rose should
be but small.
His haire was bushie, but it was
not long,
The Nymphs had done his tresses
mighty wrong:
For as it grew, they puld away his
haire,
And made abilliments of gold to
weare.
His eyes were Cupids: for
vntill his birth,
Cupid had eyes, and liu'd
vpon the earth,
Till on a day, when the great Queene
of loue
Was by her white doues drawn fro[m]
heauen aboue,
Vnto the top of the Idalian hill,
To see how well the Nymphs their
charge fulfill,
And whether they had done the goddesse
right,
In nursing of her sweet Hermaphrodite:
VVhom when she saw, although complete
& full,
Yet she complaynd, his eyes were
somewhat dull:
And therefore, more the wanton boy
to grace,
She puld the sparkling eyes from
Cupids
face,
Fayning a cause to take away his
sight,
Because the Ape would sometimes
shoot for spight.
But Venus set those eyes
in such a place,
As grac'd those cleare eyes with
a clearer face.
For his white hand each goddesse
did him woo:
For it was whiter then the driuen
snow:
His legge was straighter then the
thigh of Ioue:
And he farre fairer then the god
of loue.
When first this wel-shapt boy, beauties
chiefe king,
Had seene the labour of the fifteenth
spring,
How curiously it paynted all the
earth,
He 'gan to trauaile from his place
of birth,
Leauing the stately hils where he
was nurst,
And where the Nymphs had brought
him vp at first:
He lou'd to trauaile to the coasts
vnknowne,
To see the regions farre beyond
his owne,
Seeking cleare watry springs to
bathe him in:
(For he did loue to wash his iuory
skinne)
The louely Nymphes haue oft times
seene him swimme,
And closely stole his clothes from
off the brim,
Because the wanton wenches would
so fayne
See him come nak'd to ask his clothes
againe.
He lou'd besides to see the Lycian
grounds,
And know the wealthy Carians vtmost
bounds.
Vsing to trauaile thus, one day
he found
A cristall brook, that tril'd along
the ground,
A brooke, that in reflection did
surpasse
The cleare reflection of the clearest
glasse.
About the side there grew no foggy
reedes,
Nor was the fount compast with barren
weedes:
But liuing turfe grew all along
the side,
And grasse that euer flourisht in
his pride.
Within this brook a beauteous Nymph
did dwell,
Who for her comely feature did excell;
So faire she vvas, of such a pleasing
grace,
So straight a body, and so sweet
a face,
So soft a belly, such a lustie thigh,
So large a forehead, such a cristall
eye,
So soft and moyst a hand, so smooth
a brest,
So faire a cheeke, so well in all
the rest,
That Iupiter would reuell
in her bowre,
Were he to spend againe his golden
showre:
Her teeth were whiter then the mornings
milke,
Her lip was softer then the softest
silke,
Her haire as farre surpast the burnisht
gold,
As siluer doth excell the basest
mold:
Ioue courted her for her
translucent eye,
And told her, he would place her
in the skye,
Promising her, if she would be his
loue,
He would ingraue her in the heauen
aboue,
Telling this louely Nymph, that
if he would,
He could deceiue her in a showre
of gold,
Or like a Swanne come to her naked
bed,
And so deceiue her of her maiden-head:
But yet, because he thought that
pleasure best,
Where each consenting ioynes each
louing brest,
He would put off that all-commaunding
crowne,
Whose terrour strooke th'aspiring
Giants downe,
That glittereing crown, whose radia[n]t
sight did tosse
Great Pelion from the top
of mighty Osse,
He would depose from his world-swaying
head,
To taste the amorous pleasures of
her bed:
This added he besides, the more
to grace her,
Like a bright starre he would in
heauens vault place her.
By this the proud lasciuious Nymph
was mou'd,
Perceiuing by great Ioue
shee was belou'd,
And hoping as a starre she should
ere long,
Be sterne or gracious to the Sea-mans
song,
(For mortals still are subiect to
their eye,
And what it sees, they striue to
get as hie:)
She was contented that almighty
Ioue
Should haue the first and best fruits
of her loue:
(For women may be likened to the
yeere,
Whose first fruits still do make
the dayntiest cheere)
But yet Astræa first
should plight her troth,
For the performance of Ioues
sacred oth.
(Iust times decline, and all good
dayes are dead,
When heauenly othes had need be
warranted)
This heard great Iupiter
and lik'd it well,
And hastily he seeks Astræas
cell,
About the massie earth searching
her towre:
But she had long since left this
earthly bowre,
And flew to heauen aboue, lothing
to see
The sinfull actions of humanitie.
Which when Ioue did perceiue,
he left the earth,
And flew vp to the place of his
owne birth,
The burning heauenly throne, where
he did spy
Astræas palace in the
glittering skie.
This stately towre was builded vp
on hie,
Farre from the reach of any mortall
eye;
And from the palace side there did
distill
A little water, through a little
quill,
The dewe of iustice, which did seldome
fall,
And when it dropt, the drops were
very small.
Glad was great Ioue when
he beheld her towre,
Meaning a while to rest him in her
bowre;
And therefore sought to enter at
her dore:
But there was such a busie rout
before;
Some seruing men, and some promooters
bee,
That he could passe no foote without
a fee:
But as he goes, he reaches out his
hands,
And payes each one in order as he
stands;
And still, as he was paying those
before,
Some slipt againe betwixt him and
the dore.
At length (with much adoo) he past
them all,
And entred straight into a spacious
hall,
Full of dark angles, and of hidden
wayes,
Crooked Maranders, infinite delays;
All which delayes and entries he
must passe,
Ere he could come where iust Astræa
was.
All these being past by his immortall
wit,
Without her doore he sawe a porter
sit,
An aged man, that long time there
had beene,
Who vs'd to search all those that
entred in,
And still to euery one he gaue this
curse,
None must see Iustice but with emptie
purse.
This man searcht Ioue for
his owne priuate gaine,
To haue the money which did yet
remaine,
Which was but small: for much was
spent before
On the tumultuous rout that kept
the dore.
When he had done, he broght him
to the place
Where he should see diuine Astræas
face.
Then the great King of gods and
men in went,
And saw his daughter Venus
there lament,
And crying lowd for iustice, whom
Ioue
found
Kneeling before Astræa
on
the ground,
And still she cry'd and beg'd for
a iust doome
Against blacke Vulcan, that
vnseemely groome,
Whome she had chosen for her onely
loue,
Though she was daughter to great
thundering Ioue:
And thought the fairest goddesse,
yet content
To marrie him, though weake and
impotent;
But for all this they alwayes were
at strife:
For euermore he ralyd at her his
wife,
Telling her still, Thou art no wife
of mine,
Anothers strumpet, Mars his
concubine.
By this Astræa spyde
almighty Ioue,
And bow'd her finger to the Queene
of loue,
To cease her sute, which she would
hear anon,
When the great King of all the world
was gone.
Then she descended from her stately
throne,
Which seat was builded all of Iasper
stone,
And o're the seat was paynted all
aboue,
The wanton vnseene stealths of amorous
Ioue;
There might a man behold the naked
pride
Of louely Venus in the vales
of Ide,
When Pallas, and Ioues
beauteous wife and she
Stroue for the prise of beauties
raritie:
And there lame Vulcan and
his Cyclops stroue
To make the thunderbolts for mighty
Ioue:
From this same stately throne she
down descended,
And sayd, The griefs of Ioue
should be amended,
Asking the King of gods what lucklesse
cause,
What great conte[m]pt of states,
what breach of lawes
(For sure she thought, some vncouth
cause befell,
That made him visit poore Astræas
cell)
Troubled his thought: and if she
might decide it,
VVho vext great, Ioue, he
deareley should abide it.
Ioue onely thankt her, and beganne
to show
His cause of comming (for each one
doth know
The longing words of Louers are
not many,
If they desire to be inioyd of any.
Telling Astræa, It
might now befall,
That she might make him blest, that
blesseth all:
For as he walk'd vpon the flowry
earth,
To which his owne hands whilome
gaue a birth,
To see how streight he held it and
how iust
He rold this massy pondrous heape
of dust,
He laid him downe by a coole riuer
side,
Whose pleasant water did so gently
slide
With such soft whispering: for the
brook was deepe,
That it had lul'd him in a heauenly
sleepe.
When first he laid him downe, there
was none neere him:
(for he did call before, but none
could heare him)
But a faire Nymph was bathing when
he wak'd,
(Here sigh'd great Ioue,
and after brought forth) nak'd,
He seeing lou'd, the Nymph yet here
did rest,
Where iust Astræa might
make Ioue be blest,
If she would passe her faithfull
word so farre,
As that great Ioue should
make the mayd a starre.
Astræa yeelded: at
which Ioue was pleas'd,
And all his longing hopes and feares
were eas'd.
Ioue tooke his leaue, and
parted from her sight,
Whose thoughts were ful of louers
sweet delight,
And she ascended to her throne aboue,
To heare the griefes of the great
Queene of loue.
But she was satisfide, and would
no more
Rayle at her husband as she did
before:
But forth she tript apace, because
she stroue,
With her swift feet to ouertake
great Ioue,
She skipt so nimbly as she went
to looke him,
That at the palace doore she ouertooke
him,
Which way was plaine and broade
as they went out,
And now they could see no tumultuous
rout.
Here Venus fearing, lest
the loue of Ioue
Should make this mayd be plac'd
in heauen aboue,
Because she thought this Nymph so
wondrous bright,
That she would dazel her accustom'd
light:
And fearing now she should not first
be seene
Of all the glittering starres as
shee had beene,
But that the wanton Nymph would
eu'ry night
Be first that should salute eche
mortal sight,
Began to tell great Ioue,
she grieu'd to see
The heauen so full of his iniquity,
Complayning that eche strumpet now
was grac'd,
And with immortall goddesses was
plac'd,
Intreating him to place in heauen
no more
Eche wanton strumpet and lasciuious
whore.
Ioue mad with loue, harkned
not what she sayd,
His thoughts were so intangled with
the mayd,
But furiously he to his palace lept,
Being minded there till morning
to haue slept:
For the next morne, as soone as
Phoebus
rayes
Should yet shine coole, by reason
of the seas,
And ere the parting teares of Thætis
bed,
Should be quite shak't from off
his glittring head,
Astræa promis'd to
attend great Ioue,
At his owne Palace in the heauen
above,
And at that Palace she would set
her hand
To what the loue-sick god should
her command:
But to descend to earth she did
deny,
She loath'd the sight of any mortall
eye,
And for the compasse of the earthly
round,
She would not set one foot vpon
the ground.
Therefore Ioue meant to rise
but with the sunne,
Yet thought it long vntill the night
was done.
In the meane space Venus
was drawne along
By her white Doues vnto the sweating
throng
Of hammering Black-smithes, at the
lofty hill
Of stately Etna, whose top
burneth
still:
(For at that burning mountaynes
glittring top,
Her cripple husband Vulcan
kept his shop)
To him she went, and so collogues
that night
With the best straines of pleasures
sweet delight,
That ere they parted, she made Vulcan
sweare
By dreadfull Stix, an othe
the gods do feare,
If Ioue would make the mortall
mayd a starre,
Himselfe should frame his instruments
of warre,
And tooke his othe by blacke Cocitus
Lake,
He neuer more a thunder-bolt would
make:
For Venus so this night his
sences pleas'd,
That now he thought his former griefs
were eas'd.
She with her hands the black-smiths
body bound,
And with her Iu'ry armes she twyn'd
him round,
And still the faire Queene with
a prety grace,
Disperst her sweet breath o're his
swarty face:
Her snowy armes so well she did
display,
That Vulcan thought they
melted as they lay.
Vntill the morne in this delight
they lay:
Then vp they got, and hasted fast
away
In the white Chariot of the Queene
of loue,
Towards the Palace of great thundring
Ioue,
Where they did see diuine Astræa
stand,
To passe her word for what Ioue
should command.
In limpt the Blacke-smith, after
stept his Queene,
Whose light arrayment was of louely
greene.
When they were in, Vulcan
began to sweare
By othes that Iupiter himselfe
doth feare,
If any whore in heauens bright vault
were seene,
To dimme the shining of his beauteous
Queene,
Each mortall man should the great
gods disgrace,
And mocke almightie Ioue
vnto his face,
And Giants should enforce bright
heauen to fall,
Ere he would frame one thunderbolt
at all.
Ioue did intreat him that
he would forbeare.
The more he spoke, the more did
Vulcan
sweare.
Ioue heard his words, and
'gan to make his mone,
That mortall men would pluck him
from his throne,
Or else he must incurre this plague,
he said,
Quite to forgoe the pleasure of
the mayd:
And once he thought, rather than
lose her blisses,
Her heauenly sweets, her most delicious
kisses,
Her soft embraces, and the amorous
nights,
That he should often spend in her
delights,
He would be quite thrown down by
mortal hands,
From the blest place where his bright
palace stands.
But afterwards hee saw with better
sight,
He should be scorn'd by euery mortall
wight,
If he should want his thunderbolts,
to beate
Aspiring mortals from his glittering
seate:
Therefore the god no more did woo
or proue her,
But left to seeke her loue, though
not to loue her.
Yet he forgot not that he woo'd
the lasse,
But made her twise as beauteous
as she was,
Because his wonted loue he needs
would shew.
This haue I heard, but yet scarce
thought it true.
And whether her cleare beautie was
so bright,
That it could dazel the immortall
sight
Of gods, and make them for her loue
despaire,
I do not know; but sure the maid
was faire.
Yet the faire Nymph was neuer seene
resort
Vnto the sauage and the bloudy sport
Of chaste Diana, nor was
euer wont
To bend a bow, nor euer did she
hunt,
Nor did she euer striue with pretie
cunning,
To ouergoe her fellow Nymphs in
running:
For she was the faire water-Nymph
alone,
That vnto chaste Diana was
vnknowne.
It is reported, that her fellowes
vs'd
To bid her (though the beauteous
Nymph refus'd)
To take, or painted quiuers or a
dart,
And put her lazy idlenesse apart.
Nor tooke she painted quiuers, nor
a dart,
Nor put her lazy idlenesse apart,
But in her cristall fountaine oft
she swimmes,
And oft she washes o're her snowy
limmes:
Sometimes she com'b her soft discheuel'd
hayre,
Which with a fillet tide she oft
did weare:
But sometimes loose she did it hang
behind,
When she was pleas'd to grace the
Easterne wind:
For vp and downe it would her tresses
hurle,
And as she went, it made her loose
hayre curl:
Oft in the water did she looke her
face,
And oft she vs'd to practise what
quaint grace
Might well become her, and what
comely feature
Might be best fitting so diuine
a creature.
Her skinne was with a thinne vaile
ouerthrowne,
Through which her naked beauty clearly
shone.
She vs'd in this light rayment as
she was,
To spread her body on the dewy grasse:
Sometimes by her owne fountaine
as she walkes,
She nips the flowres from off the
fertile stalkes,
And with a garland of the sweating
vine,
Sometimes she doth her beauteous
front in-twine:
But she was gathering flowres with
her white hand,
When she beheld Hermaphroditus
stand
By her cleare fountaine, wondring
at the sight,
That there was any brooke could
be so bright:
For this was the bright riuer where
the boy
Did dye himselfe, that he could
not enioy
Himselfe in pleasure, nor could
taste the blisses
Of his owne melting and delicious
kisses.
Here she did see him, and by Venus
law,
She did desire to haue him as she
saw:
But the fayre Nymph had neuer seene
the place,
Where the boy was, nor his inchanting
face,
But by an vncouth accident of loue
Betwixt great Phoebus and
the sonne of Ioue,
Light -headed Bacchus: for
vpon a day,
As the boy-god was keeping on his
way,
Bearing his Vine leaues and his
Iuie bands,
To Naxos, where his house
and temple stands,
He saw the Nymph, and seeing, he
did stay,
And threw his leaues and Iuie bands
away,
Thinking at first she was of heauenly
birth,
Some goddesse that did liue vpon
the earth,
Virgin Diana that so liuely
shone,
When she did court her sweet Endimion:
But he a god, at last did plainely
see,
She had no marke of immortalitie.
Vnto the Nymph went the yong god
of wine,
Whose head was chaf'd so with the
bleeding vine,
That now, or feare or terrour had
he none,
But 'gan to court her as she sate
alone:
Fayrer then fayrest (thus began
his speech)
Would but your radiant eye please
to inrich
My eye with looking, or one glaunce
to giue,
Whereby my other parts might feede
and liue,
Or with one sight my sences to inspire,
Far liuelier then the stole Promethean
fire;
Then I might liue, then by the sunny
light
That should proceed from thy thrise-radiant
sight,
I might suruiue to ages; but that
missing,
(At that same word he would haue
faine bin kissing)
I pine, fayre Nymph: O neuer let
me dye
For one poore glaunce from thy translucent
eye,
Farre more transparent then the
clearest brooke.
The Nymph was taken with his golden
hooke:
Yet she turn'd backe, and would
haue tript away;
But Bacchus forc't the louely
mayd to stay,
Asking her why she struggled to
be gone,
Why such a Nymph should wish to
be alone?
Heauen neuer made her faire, that
she should vaunt
She kept all beautie, it would neuer
graunt
She should be borne so beauteous
from her mother,
But to reflect her beauty on another:
Then with a sweet kisse cast thy
beames on mee,
And Ile reflect then backe againe
on thee.
At Naxos stands my Temple and my
Shrine,
Where I do presse the lusty swelling
Vine,
There with green Iuie shall thy
head be bound,
And with the red Grape be incircled
round;
There shall Silenus sing
vnto thy praise,
His drunken reeling songs and tickling
layes.
Come hither, gentle Nymph. Here
blusht the maid,
And faine she would haue gone, but
yet she staid.
Bacchus perceiued he had
o'ercome the lasse,
And downe he throwes her in the
dewy grasse,
And kist the helplesse Nymph vpon
the ground,
And would haue stray'd beyond that
lawful bou[n]d.
This saw bright Phœbus: for
his glittering eye
Sees all that lies below the starry
skye;
And for an old affection that he
bore
Vnto this louely Nymph long time
before,
(For he would ofttimes in his circle
stand,
To sport himselfe vpon her snowy
hand)
He kept her from the sweets of Bacchus
bed,
And 'gainst her will he sau'd her
maiden-head.
Bacchus perceiuing this apace
did hie
Vnto the Palace of swift Mercury:
But he did find him farre below
his birth,
Drinking with theiues and catch-poles
on the earth;
And they were drinking what they
stole to day,
In consultation for to morrowes
prey.
To him went youthful Bacchus,
and begun
To shew his cause of griefe against
the Sunne,
How he bereft him of his heauenly
blisses,
His sweet delights, his Nectar-flowing
kisses,
And other sweeter sweetes that he
had wonne,
But for the malice of the bright-fac't
Sunne,
Intreating Mercury by all
the loue,
That had bene borne amongst the
sonnes of Ioue,
Of which they two were part, to
stand his friend,
Against the god that did him so
offend:
The quaint-tongu'd issue of great
Atlas
race,
Swift Mercury, that with
delightfull grace,
And pleasing accents of his fayned
tongue,
Hath oft reform'd a rude vnciuill
throng
Of mortals; that great messenger
of Ioue,
And all the meaner gods that dwell
aboue:
He whose acute wit was so quicke
and sharpe
In the inuention of the crooked
Harpe:
He that's so cunning with his iesting
slights,
To steale from heauenly gods or
earthly wights,
Bearing a great hate in his grieued
brest,
Against that great commaunder of
the West,
Bright-fac't Apollo: for
vpon a day,
Yong Mercury did steale his
beasts away:
Which the great god perceiuing,
streight did shew
The pearcing arrowes and the fearefull
bow
That kild great Pithon, &
with that did threat him,
To bring his beast againe, or he
would beat him.
Which Mercury perceiuing,
vnespide,
Did closely steale his arrowes from
his side.
For this olde grudge, he was the
easlyer wonne
To helpe young Bacchus 'gainst
the fierie Sunne.
And now the Sunne was in the middle
way,
And had o'ercome the one halfe of
the day,
Scorching so hot vpon the reeking
sand,
That lies vpon the neere Egyptian
land,
That the hot people burnt e'ne from
their birth,
Do creepe againe into their mother
earth,
When Mercury did take his
powerfull wand,
His charming Cadusæus
in his hand,
And a thick Beuer which he vs'd
to weare,
When ought from Ioue he to
the Sunne did beare,
That did protect him from the piercing
light,
Which did proceed from Phoebus
glittering sight.
Clad in these powerfull ornaments
he flies,
With out-stretcht wings vp to the
azure skies:
Where seeing Phoebus in his
orient shrine,
He did so well reuenge the god of
wine,
That whil'st the Sun wonders his
Chariot reeles,
The craftie god had stole away his
wheeles.
Which when he did perceiue, he downe
did slide,
(Laying his glittering Coronet aside)
From the bright spangled firmament
aboue,
To seeke the Nymph that Bacchus
so did loue,
And found her looking in her watry
glasse,
To see how cleare her radiant beauty
was:
And, for he had but little time
to stay,
Because he meant to finish out his
day,
At the first sight he 'gan to make
his mone,
Telling her how his fiery wheeles
were gone;
Promising her, if she would but
obtaine
The wheeles, that Mercury
had stolne, againe,
That he might end his day, she should
enioy
The heauenly sight of the most beauteous
boy
That euer was. The Nymph was pleas'd
with this,
Hoping to reape some vnaccustom'd
blisse
By the sweet pleasure that she should
enioy,
In the blest sight of such a melting
boy.
Therefore at his request she did
obtaine
The burning wheeles, that he had
lost, againe:
VVhich when he had receiu'd, he
left the land,
And brought them thither where his
Coach did stand,
And there he set them on: for all
this space,
The horses had not stirr'd from
out their place.
VVhich when he saw, he wept and
'gan to say,
VVould Mercury had stole
my wheeles away,
When Phaeton my hare-brain'd
issue tride,
What a laborious thing it vvas to
guide
My burning chariot, the[n] he might
haue pleas'd me,
And of one fathers griefe he might
haue eas'd me:
For then the Steeds would haue obayd
his will,
Or else at least they would haue
rested still.
When he had done, he tooke his whip
of steele,
Whose bitter smart he made his horses
feele:
For he did lash so hard, to end
the day,
That he was quickly at the Westerne
sea,
And there with Thætis
did he rest a space,
For he did neuer rest in any place
Before that time: but euer since
his wheeles
Were stole away, his burning chariot
reeles
Tow'rds the declining of the parting
day:
Therefore he lights and mends them
in the sea.
And though the poets fayne, that
Ioue
did make
A treble night for faire Alcmena's
sake,
That he might sleepe securely with
his loue;
Yet sure the long night was vnknowne
to Ioue:
But the Sunnes wheeles one day disordred
more,
Were thrise as long amending as
before.
Now was the Sunne inuiron'd with
the Sea,
Cooling his watrie tresses as he
lay,
And in dread Neptunes kingdome
while he sleeps,
Faire Thætis clips
him in the watry deeps,
The Mayre-maids and the Tritons
of the West,
Strayning their voyces, to make
Titan
rest.
And while the blacke night with
her pitchie hand,
Tooke iust possession of the swarfie
land:
He spent the darkesome howres in
this delight,
Giuing his power vp to the gladsome
night:
For ne're before he was so truely
blest,
To take an houre or one poore minutes
rest.
But now the burning god this pleasure
feeles,
By reason of his newly crazed wheeles,
There must he stay vntill lame Vulcan
send
The fierie wheeles which he had
tooke to mend.
Now al the night the Smith so hard
had wrought,
That ere the Sunne could wake, his
wheeles were brought.
Titan being pleas'd with
rest, and not to rise,
And loth to open yet his slumbring
eyes:
And yet perceiuing how the longing
sight
Of mortals wayted for his glittring
light,
He sent Aurora from him to
the skie,
To giue a glimsing to each mortall
eye.
Aurora much asham'd of that
same place
That great Apollos light
was wont to grace,
Finding no place to hide her shamefull
head,
Paynted her chaste cheeks with a
blushing red,
Which euer since remain'd vpon her
face,
In token of her new receiu'd disgrace:
Therefore she not so white as she
had beene,
Lothing of eu'ry mortall to be seene,
No sooner can the rosie fingred
morne
Kisse eu'ry flowre that by her dew
is borne,
But from her golden window she doth
peepe,
When the most part of earthly creatures
sleepe.
By this, bright Titan opened
had his eyes,
And 'gan to ierke his horses through
the skies,
And taking in his hand his fierie
whip,
He made AEous and swift AEthon
skip
So fast, that straight he dazled
had the sight
Of faire Aurora, glad to
see his light.
And now the Sunne in all his fierie
haste,
Did call to mind his promise lately
past,
And all the vowes and othes that
he did passe
Vnto faire Salmacis, the
beauteous lasse:
For he had promis'd her she should
enioy
So louely faire, and such a well
shapt boy,
As ne're before his owne all-seeing
eye
Saw from his bright seate in the
starry skye:
Remembring this, he sent the boy
that way,
Where the cleare fountain of the
fayre Nymph lay.
There was he co[m]e to seeke some
pleasing brooke.
No sooner came he, but the Nymph
was strooke:
And though she hasted to imbrace
the boy,
Yet did the Nymph awhile deferre
her ioy,
Till she had bound vp her loose
flagging haire,
And ordred well the garments she
did weare,
Fayning her count'nance with a louers
care,
And did deserue to be accounted
fayre.
And thus much spake she while the
boy abode:
O boy, most worthy to be thought
a god,
Thou mayst inhabit in the glorious
place
Of gods, or maist proceed from human
race:
Thou mayst be Cupid, or the
god of wine,
That lately woo'd me with the swelling
vine:
But whosoe're thou art, O happy
he,
That was so blest, to be a sire
to thee;
Thy happy mother is most blest of
many,
Blessed thy sisters, if her wombe
bare any,
Both fortunate, and O thrise happy
shee,
Whose too much blessed breasts gaue
suck to thee:
If any wife with thy sweet bed be
blest,
O, she is farre more happy then
the rest;
If thou hast any, let my sport be
sto'ne,
Or else let me be she, if thou haue
none.
Here did she pause a while, and
then she sayd,
Be not obdurate to a silly mayd.
A flinty heart within a smowy brest,
Is like base mold lockt in a golden
chest:
They say the eye's the Index of
the heart,
And shewes th'affection of each
inward part:
There loue playes liuely, there
the little god
Hath a cleare cristall Palace of
abode.
O barre him not from playing in
thy heart,
That sports himselfe vpon eche outward
part.
Thus much she spake, & then
her tongue was husht.
At her loose speach Hermaphroditus
blusht:
He knew not what loue was, yet loue
did shame him,
Making him blush, and yet his blush
became him:
Then might a man his shamefast colour
see,
Like the ripe apple on the sunny
tree,
Or Iuory dide o're with a pleasing
red,
Or like the pale Moone being shadowed.
By this, the Nymph recouer'd had
her tongue,
That to her thinking lay in silence
long,
And sayd, Thy cheeke is milde, O
be thou so,
Thy cheeke, saith I, then do not
answere no,
Thy cheeke doth shame, then doe
thou shame, she sayd,
It is a mans shame to deny a mayd.
Thou look'st to sport with Venus
in her towre,
And be belou'd of euery heauenly
powre.
Men are but mortals, so are women
too,
Why should your thoughts aspire
more than ours doo?
For sure they doe aspire: Else could
a youth,
Whose count'nance is so full of
spotlesse truth,
Be so relentlesse to a virgins tongue?
Let me be woo'd by thee but halfe
so long,
With halfe those tearmes doe but
my loue require,
And I will easly graunt thee thy
desire.
Ages are bad, when men become so
slow,
That poore vnskillful mayds are
forc't to woo.
Her radiant beauty and her subtill
arte
S deepely strooke Hermaphroditus
heart,
That she had wonne his loue, but
that the light
Of her translucent eyes did shine
too bright:
For long he look'd vpon the louely
mayd,
And at the last Hermaphroditus
sayd,
How should I loue thee, when I doe
espie
A farre more beauteous Nymph hid
in thy eye?
When thou doost loue, let not that
Nymph be nie thee;
Nor when thou woo'st, let not that
Nymph be by thee:
Or quite obscure her from thy louers
face,
Or hide her beauty in a darker place.
By this, the Nymph perceiu'd he
did espie
None but himselfe reflected in her
eye,
And, for himselfe no more she meant
to shew him,
She shut her eyes & blind-fold
thus did woo him:
Fayre boy, thinke not thy beauty
can dispence
With any payne due to a bad offence;
Remember how the gods punisht that
boy
That scorn'd to let a beauteous
Nymph enioy
Her long wisht pleasure, for the
peeuish elfe,
Lou'd of all other, needs would
loue himselfe.
So mayst thou loue, perhaps thou
mayst be blest;
By graunting to a lucklesse Nymphs
request:
Then rest awhile with me amid these
weeds.
The Sunne that sees all, sees not
louers deeds;
Phoebus is blind when loue-sports
are begun,
And neuer sees vntill their sports
be done:
Beleeue me, boy, thy blood is very
stayd,
That art so loth to kisse a youthfull
mayd.
Wert thou a mayd, and I a man, Ile
show thee,
With what a manly boldnesse I could
woo thee,
Fayrer then loues Queene, thus I
would begin,
Might not my ouer-boldnesse be a
sinne,
I would intreat this fauor, if I
could,
Thy rosiat cheeke a little to behold:
Then would I beg a touch, and then
a kisse,
And then a lower, yet a higher blisse:
Then would I aske what Ioue
and Læda did,
When like a Swan the craftie god
was hid?
What came he for? why did he there
abide?
Surely I thinke hee did not come
to chide:
He came to see her face, to talke,
and chat,
To touch, to kisse: came he for
nought but that?
Yea, something else: what was it
he would haue?
That which all men of maydens ought
to craue.
This sayd, her eye-lids wide she
did display:
But in this space the boy was runne
away:
The wanton speeches of the louely
lasse
Forc't him for shame to hide him
in the grasse.
When she perceiu'd she could not
see him neere her,
When she had cal'd and yet he could
not heare her,
Look how when Autumne comes,
a little space
Paleth the red blush of the Summers
face,
Tearing the leaues the Summers couering,
Three months in weauing by the curious
spring,
Making the grasse his greene locks
go to wracke,
Tearing each ornament from off his
backe;
So did she spoyle the garments she
did weare,
Tearing whole ounces of her golden
hayre:
She thus deluded of her longed blisse,
With much adoo at last she vttred
this:
Why wert thou bashfull, boy? Thou
hast no part
Shewes thee to be of such a female
heart.
His eye is gray, so is the mornings
eye,
That blusheth alwayes when the day
is nye.
Then his gray eye's the cause: that
cannot be:
The gray-ey'd morne is farre more
bold then he:
For with a gentle dew from heauens
bright towre,
It gets the mayden-head of eu'ry
flowre.
I would to God, he were the rosiat
morne,
And I a flowre from out the earth
new-borne?
His face was smooth; Narcissus
face was so,
And he was carelesse of a sad Nymphs
woe.
Then that's the cause; and yet that
cannot be:
Youthfull Narcissus was more
bold then he,
Because he dide for loue, though
of his shade:
This boy nor loues himselfe, nor
yet a mayd.
Besides, his glorious eye is wondrous
bright;
So is the fierie and all-seeing
light
Of Phœbus, who at eu'ry mornings
birth
Blusheth for shame vpon the sullen
earth.
Then that's the cause; and yet that
cannot be:
The fierie Sunne is farre more bold
then he;
He nightly kisseth Thætis
in the sea:
All know the story of Leucothoe.
His cheeke is red: so is the fragrant
Rose,
Whose ruddie cheeke with ouer-blushing
gloes:
Then that's the cause; and yet that
cannot bee:
Eche blushing Rose is farre more
bold then he,
Whose boldnesse may be plainely
seene in this,
The ruddy Rose is not asham'd to
kisse;
For alwayes when the day is new
begun,
The spreading Rose will kisse the
morning Sun.
This sayd, hid in the grasse she
did espie him,
And stumbling with her will, she
fel down by him,
And with her wanton talke, because
he woo'd not,
Beg'd that, which he poore nouice
vnderstood not:
And, for she could not get a greater
blisse,
She did intreate a least a sisters
kisse;
But still the more she did the boy
beseech,
The more he powted at her wanton
speech.
At last the Nymph began to touch
his skin,
Whiter then mountaine snow hath
euer bin,
And did in purenesse that cleare
spring surpasse,
Wherein Acteon saw th'Arcadian
lasse.
Thus did she dally long, till at
the last,
In her moyst palme she lockt his
white hand fast:
Then in her hand his wrest she 'gan
to close,
When through his pulses strait the
warm bloud gloes,
Whose youthfull musike fanning Cupids
fire,
In her warme brest kindled a fresh
desire.
Then did she lift her hand vnto
his brest,
A part as white and youthfull as
the rest,
Where, as his flowry breath still
comes and goes,
She felt his gentle heart pant through
his clothes.
At last she tooke her hand from
off that part,
And sayd, It panted like anothers
heart.
Why should it be more feeble, and
lesse bold?
Why should the bloud about it be
more cold?
Nay sure, that yeelds, onely thy
tongue denyes,
And the true fancy of thy heart
belyes.
Then did she lift her hand vnto
his chin,
And prays'd the prety dimpling of
his skin:
But straight his chin she 'gan to
ouerslip,
When she beheld the rednesse of
his lip;
And sayd, thy lips are soft, presse
them to mine,
And thou shalt see they are as soft
as thine.
Then would she faine haue gone vnto
his eye,
But still his ruddy lip standing
so nie,
Drew her hand backe, therefore his
eye she mist,
'Ginning to claspe his neck, and
would haue kist;
But then the boy did struggle to
be gone,
Vowing to leaue her and that place
alone.
But then bright Salmacis
began to feare,
And sayd, Fayre stranger, I wil
leaue thee here
Amid these pleasant places all alone.
So turning back, she fayned to be
gone;
But from his sight she had no power
to passe,
Therefore she turn'd and hid her
in the grasse,
When to the ground bending her snow-white
knee,
The glad earth gaue new coates to
euery tree.
He then supposing he was all alone,
(Like a young boy that is espy'd
of none)
Runnes here, and there, then on
the bankes doth looke,
Then on the cristall current of
the brooke,
Then with his foote he toucht the
siluer streames,
Whose drowsy waues made musike in
their dreames,
And, for he was not wholy in, did
weepe,
Talking alowd and babbling in their
sleepe:
Whose pleasant coolnesse when the
boy did feele,
He thrust his foote downe lower
to the heele:
O'ercome with whose sweet noyse,
he did begin
To strip his soft clothes from his
tender skin,
When strait the scorching Sun wept
teares of brine,
Because he durst not touch him with
his shine,
For feare of spoyling that same
Iu'ry skin,
Whose whitenesse he so much delighted
in;
And then the Moone, mother of mortall
ease,
Would fayne haue come from the Antipodes,
To haue beheld him naked as he stood,
Ready to leape into the siluer flood;
But might not: for the lawes of
heauen deny,
To shew mens secrets to a womans
eye:
And therefore was her sad and gloomy
light
Confin'd vnto the secret-keeping
night.
When beauteous Salmacis awhile
had gaz'd
Vpon his naked corps, she stood
amaz'd,
And both her sparkling eyes burnt
in her face,
Like the bright Sunne reflected
in a glasse:
Scarce can she stay from running
to the boy,
Scarce can she now deferre her hoped
ioy;
So fast her youthfull bloud playes
in her vaynes,
That almost mad, she scarce herselfe
contaynes.
When young Hermaphroditus
as he stands,
Clapping his white side with his
hollow hands,
Leapt liuely from the land, whereon
he stood,
Into the mayne part of the cristall
flood.
Like Iu'ry then his snowy body was,
Or a white Lilly in a christall
glasse.
Then rose the water Nymph from where
she lay,
As hauing wonne the glory of the
day,
And her light garments cast from
off her skin,
Hee's mine, she cry'd, and so leapt
spritely in.
The flattering Iuy who did euer
see
Inclaspe the huge trunke of an aged
tree,
Let him behold the young boy as
he stands,
Inclaspt in wanton Salmacis's
hands,
Betwixt those Iu'ry armes she lockt
him fast,
Striuing to get away, till at the
last,
Fondling, she sayd, why striu'st
thou to be gone?
Why shouldst thou so desire to be
alone?
Thy cheeke is neuer fayre, when
none is by:
For what is red and white, but to
the eye:
And for that cause the heauens are
darker at night,
Because all creatures close their
weary sight;
For there's no mortall can so earely
rise,
But still the morning waytes vpon
his eyes.
The earely-rising and soone-singing
Larke
Can neuer chaunt her sweete notes
in the darke,
For sleepe she ne're so little or
so long,
Yet still the morning will attend
her song.
All creatures that beneath bright
Cinthia
be,
Haue appetite vnto society;
The ouerflowing waues would haue
a bound
Within the confines of the spacious
ground,
And all their shady currents would
be plaste
In hollow of the solitary vaste,
But what they lothe to let their
soft streames sing,
Where non can heare their gentle
murmuring.
Yet still the boy regardlesse what
she sayd,
Struggled apace to ouerswimme the
mayd.
Which when the Nymph perceiu'd she
'gan to say,
Struggle thou mayst, but neuer get
away.
So graunt, iust gods, that neuer
day may see
The separation twixt this boy and
mee.
The gods did heare her pray'r and
feele her woe;
And in one body they began to grow.
She felt his youthfull bloud in
euery vaine;
And he felt hers warme his colde
brest againe.
And euer since was womans loue so
blest,
That it will draw bloud from the
strongerst brest.
Nor man nor mayd now could they
be esteem'd:
Neither, and either, might they
well be deem'd,
When the young boy Hermaphroditus
sayd,
VVith the set voyce of neither man
nor mayd,
Swift Mercury, the author
of my life,
And thou my mother Vulcans
louely wife,
Let your poore offsprings latest
breath be blest,
In but obtayning this his last request,
Grant that whoe're heated by Phoebus
beames,
Shall come to coole him in these
siluer streames,
May neuermore a manly shape retaine,
But halfe a virgine may returne
againe.
His parents hark'ned to his last
request,
And with that great power they the
fountaine blest.
And since that time who in that
fountaine swimmes,
A mayden smoothnesse seyzeth half
his limmes.
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