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A03250 Troia Britanica: or, Great Britaines Troy A poem deuided into XVII. seuerall cantons, intermixed with many pleasant poeticall tales. Concluding with an vniuersall chronicle from the Creation, vntill these present times. Written by Tho: Heywood. Heywood, Thomas, d. 1641. 1609 (1609) STC 13366; ESTC S119729 272,735 468

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and Steele-proofe still And though the thickenesse did appeare but small The Plates they with such strength of Mettall fill It hath the force and puissance to withstand The sharpest Speares hurl'd from the strongest hand 50 Aboue them all his shield the rest surpast Massie and onely for his Arme to weare For whom t was made vpon the same was ra'st The great world Tripartyte heauen and each Spheare Thence all the hye Circumference was pla'st Starres Moone and Sun the signes that rule the yeare The Ram the Bull and the Twin-brothers signe The Crab the Lyon and the Maid Deuine 51 The Skale the Scorpion and the Centaure fell Sterne Capricorne and he that water powers The Fishes all these were ingraued well There Phoebus stood about him dayes and howers With the foure Seasons First the Spring gan swell With sweetest Buddes Sommer that seldome lowers Stood next in ranke well clad in freshest greene Autumne next her in ragged Roabes was seene 52 There stood old Winter in hye Furs attyred On whom the flakes of Snow like Feathers hong He shyuering lookes as if he warmth desired With chattering teeth hands Palsied quaking tong Below the Earth with Dales and Hils admired Fields full of Grayne Meads with Grasse new sprong Here Citties rarely built there Hamlets stand Here fallow-fields besides them New-tild Land 53 Betweene the middle Earth Seas ebbe and flow Whose Billowes in their caruing seeme to moue Here the Leuiathan huge waues doth throw From out his Nostrils to the skyes aboue The Dolphins of a thousand coullours show Here Whales their heads aboue the waters proue And sayling ships contriu'd by cunning rare On which strange Fish with wonder seeme to stare 54 A thousand sundry Obiects made by Art This huge Orbicular Shield in compasse holds What Heauen or Earth or Seas to vs Impart His Globe-like compasse to the eye vnfolds When Vulcan taking the fayre Queene apart who with much wonder his strange worke beholds Presents it her made perfect for her Son In whose rich armes Troy seemes already won 55 At Vulcans Caue she yoakes her Chariot-steeds which o're the Oceans rugged backe make way And as she freely on the Seas proceeds About her Coach the Quicke-ear'd Dolphins play At her Sonnes Tent fam'd for his warlike deeds She lights and to the Couch on which he lay Tost those rich armes which when Achilles view'd The halfe-dead spirit within his breast renew'd 56 He leaps from of his Pallet to imbrace The beautious Queene and soone intreats her ayde To arme his shoulders and his head to grace With that inchaced Helme God Vulcan made Who now compleatly furnisht longs for place Where thus be-seene he Hector may inuade He cannot sleepe for gazing on his Shield In hope t' aduance it in the Morrowes field 57 Thetis departs when th' early Cocke gaue signe With his lowd notes Aurora to dispose Who leaues the Bed-rid Tython sunke in Wine From whom the Gold hair'd Goddesse blushing rose To harnesse Phoebus Coach-steeds who in fine About his face his Beames bright ghstring throwes To dry the Mornings teares who weepeth still To see th' vnkind Sunne climb th'Easterne hill 58 He had not left the forelorne Goddesse long But from Olimpus top he may espy Plaine-Crested Hector his arm'd Troopes among Chearing them vp the proud Greekes to defy Next him marcht Noble Troylus Memnon strong Antenor and Aeneas mounted hye Young Deiphebus and Polydamas Paris whose ayme in Arch'ry doth surpasse 59 Sarpedon King Epistropus beside Many more Kings that sundry battailes led Against these soone the Curld Inuaders ride The grim Atrides first aduan'st his hed Achilles next past with vaine-glorious pride For his rich armour Nestor next him sped Menon whose armes were set with many a stone And he that Hector stood bold Telamon 60 The Ithacan with Lacedemons King The widdowed Spartan ground of all this broyle These to the fielde their seuerall battailes bring With thousand followers bent on death and spoyle Their barbed Steeds the earth behind them fling Harnesse and quartered limbes blocke the smooth soyle Amongst the rest Achilles loftiest stood and his new armour double-Guilds in blood 61 With Memnon ●…onne to Tython and the Morne Who came from Egipt in King Priams aide Aeacides encounters change of scorne Betweene them past bold Memnon nought dismaide With that strong hand that had the Scepter borne Of Persiaes kingdome and did once inuade Susa as farre as where Choaspes flowes Vpon his Helme thunders two persant blowes 62 They stound him in his saddle make him kisse His Steeds curl'd Crest ere he can Mount his head Achilles who esteemes no other blisse But to behold his foes before him spread Wak't from his sudden trance espyes by this A Graecian Squadron bout King Memnon dead And his bright sword still to wring ore his Crest Threatning in his third fall Eternall rest 63 The proud Greeke sends a blush out of his face as red as that in which his proofe was lau'de he now records his strength his god-like race and his rich armour with such artingrau'de He knowes it ill becomes his Name or Place By any Mortall puissance to be brau'de He doubles strength on strength and stroak on stroak Euen till he mists himselfe in his owne smoake 64 Auroraes Darling prooues to weake a Foe For him on whose tough Shield no Steele can bite His conquer'd Sword and Armes the field must strow Achilles is too strong an opposite His Red-cheek't Mother ouercharg'd with woe Laments her Son vntimely slaine in fight In griefe of whom a Dusky Roabe she weares And fils the whole world with her dew-drop teares 65 The death of Memnon euen to Hector flyes That Tragicke newes cost many a Princes life Incenst he seemes all safety to dispise And where he spurs he makes red slaughter rife For euery drop of bloud a bold Greeke dies Him Troylus seconds in his purpled strife And if as for a wager they contend Whose Sword most pale Soules can to Orcus send 66 They breake a Ring of Harnesse making way Into the Battayles Center where they see a Noble Knight maintaine a gallant fray Gainst many Troian Knights in valor free Yet of them all this Champion gets the day The strongest cannot make him cringe his knee Polydamus against him brauely sped Yet still his gaz'd at Shield safeguards his hed 67 Against which Paris many arrowes spends But all in vaine they shiuer gainst his Targe and whom he best can reach his force extends as far as life the prisoned Soule t' enlarge Young Deiphebus to that place descends and with his Speate in reast doth gainst him charge But the Dardanian fayles in his intent And from the Noble Knight is bleeding sent 68 Victorious Hector at such deeds amaz'd But more at the rich Armor that he ware Mannadge and shape in heart he highly praysd and in his honors longes to haue a share Hupon Larissaes King that long had
of Histaspes called in the Scripture Ashuerosh Husband to Hester called by 〈◊〉 Aristona as the Name of Vasts was Atossa Some refer the History of Iudith to these times Fourth Xerxes raigned 20. He 〈◊〉 Greece with an Armye of 10000000. Souldiers his cheese Captaine was Mardonius his chiefe Counseller Artabanus He was first repulsed by Pausanias of Sparta after expeld Greece by 〈◊〉 In these warres were famous Artstides and Cimon 4. Artaxerxus with the long hand ruld 40. He was thought to bee the Son to Darius and Hester In his time liued Esdras Haggeus Zachartus and Nehemiah About the time of the Pelloponesian Warre And now was Rome gouerned by the 〈◊〉 forme of gouernment infamous in the lust of 〈◊〉 to the chast Roman Lady Virginia Darius Nothus raigned 19 In his time hued famous Alcibiades and Sophocles Euripides two famous Tragedians Artaxerxes Memnon 40. he loued the famous Lady Aspatia the Noblest Greekes in his daies were Clearchus Anaxilaus Lisander who conquered Athens after gouerned by 30. Tyrants who were supprest by the 〈◊〉 of Thrasibulus Now happened the Wars betweene the Phocenses and the Locri with 〈◊〉 Leuctricum And now 〈◊〉 Conon and 〈◊〉 Epamaminōdas in Greece about the 〈◊〉 that English Brennus sackt Rome Artaxerxes Ochus next Memnon raigned 26. In his time happened the Warre which was called Bellum sacrum 〈◊〉 raigned foure yeares he was slaine by Bagoas Him Darius succeeded in the sixt yeare of his raigne was slaine by Alexander the Great in whom began the third Monarchy translated to the Gracians Alexander by his Father Phillip deriueth his byrth from Hercules by his Mother Olimpius from Aeacus He conquered the World raigned as Emperor 12. years In the 32. of his age He dead the Monarchy was d●…ded into four parts Aegipt Syria Asia Mynor and Macedon The Kinges of Egypt after Alexander were these Ptolomeus the Sonne of Lagus Ptolomeus Philodelphus Alexander Philopater Epiphanes Philometer Euergetes Phiscon Alexander Lathurus Auletes Father to C●…patra Dionisius her Brother in whom ended the race of the Ptolomees and now Egypt came vnder the I●…risdiction of the Romans The Kings of Macedon were Perdicas Craterus Antipater Cassander Antigonus 1. Antigonus 2. Demetrius Philippus and Perseus who was surprised by the Romans The Kings of Syria who after the death of Alexander possest Babylon Syria and Asia Minor were Antiochus Soter Antiochus Theos Antiochus Magnus who had these three Sons Seleucus Philopater Antiochus Epiphanes and Demetrius Demetrius after his Brothers decease had two Sonnes Demetrius Nicanor and Antiochus Sedetes The Son of Nicanor was Antiochus Griphus The Son of Sedetes was Antiochus Cyzenius These hauing slaine each other from theyr Issue Tygranes King of Armenia re●…t the Kingdome of Syria which first Lucullus and after Pompeius Magnus annext to the Roman Empyre These in the time of the third Monarchy were Captaines and Gouernors among the Iewes Nehemiah Ioconias Selathiel Zorobabel Resa Mesollam ●…ohanna Ben Resa Iudas Hircanus primus in his Dukedome Alexander flew Darius Iosephus primus Abner Semei Eli matathai Asa mahat Nagid Artaxad Haggai Eli Maslot Nahum Amos Sirach Matathia Siloah Iosephus Iun●…r Ianua secun●…s Hircanus And then began the race of the Machabees in Matathias whose Sons succeeded him Iudas Ionathas Simon Iohannes Hercanus The Kinges of that line were Aristobulus son to Hercanus Alexander I●…neus Queen Alixandra his Wife otherwise cald Salome The Sonnes of Alexander were Hircanus and Aristobulus in theyr death ended the line of the Machabees Succeeding these in the 30. yeare of the raigne of Herod Tetrache was borne the Sauiour of the World vnto which we haue studyed to reduce the best knowne Nations of the Earth leauing the 4. Monarchy among the Romans who by this time awed the Earth whose warres and Fortunes being so commonly from many worthy Writers translated into our moderne tongue We here om●… letting this short Epitome onley serue in the Front of our Booke to instruct your memories and guide your thoughts through those vnknown Deserts in which without this direction many Readers may loose themselues bee this therefore their Pylot to direct them to the harbour of these latter Ages more familiarly knowne Argumentum TYTAN and Saturne differ their great strife Is by their carefull mother VESTA ended Saturane his Sister Sybill takes to wife And the heyre-males that are from thē descended He doomes to death faire Sybil saues the life Of Iupiter grim Saturne is offended And to the Oracle at Delphos hyes Whiles Titan thrugh the earth his fortune tries ARG. 2. The Worlds Creation gold from the earths veines Neptune and Plutoes birth ALPHA conteines CANTO 1. THis VNIVERSH with all therein conteined Was not at first of Water fashioned Nor of the Fire as others oft haue fcyned Nor of the Ayre as some haue vainly spred Nor the foure Elements in order trained Nor of Vacuitie and Atom's bred Nor hath it beene Eternall as is thought By naturall men that haue no further sought 2 Neither hath man in perpetuity bin And shall on earth eternally perseuer By endlesse Generation running in One circuit In corruption lasting euer Nor did that Nation first on earth begin Vnder the mid Equator some indeuour So to perswade that man was first begunne In the place next to the life-giuing Sunne 3 Neither was he of Earth and water framed Tempered with liuely heat as others write Nor were we in a former world first named As in their curious Problems some recite Others more ripe in Iudgement haue proclaimed Man fram'd of clay in fashion exquisite In whom were breath'd sparkes of Celestiall fire Whence he still keepes his Nature to aspire 4 But this most glorious Vniuerse was made Of nothing by the great Creators will The Ocean bounded in not to inuade Or swallow vp the Land so resteth still The azure Firmament to ouer-shade Both Continent and Waters which fulfil The Makers word one God doth sole extend Without beginning and shall see no end 5 That powerfull Trinity created man Adam of Earth in the faire field Damaske And of his rib he Euah formed than Supplying them with all things they can aske In these first two Humanity began In whom confinde IHBHOVAHS fix-da●…es taske From Adam then and Euahs first Creation It followes we deriue our Brittish Nation 6 Inspire me in this taske Ihoues seede I pray With Hippocrenes drops besprinke my head To comfort me vpon this tedious way And quicken my cold braine nigh dull and dead Direct my wandring spirits when they stray Least forren and forbidden paths they tread My iourney 's tedious blame not then my feares My voyage aymes at many thousand yeares 7 Oh giue me leaue from the Worlds first Creation The ancient names of Britons to deriue From Adam to the Worlds first Invndation And so from Noah to vs that yet suru●…e And hauing of Troyes
And when he borrowes mony nere will pay One of th'elect must common with another And when the poore his charity intreat You labour not and therefore must not eate 52 He will not Preach but Lector nor in white Because the Elders of the Cburch commaund it He will no crosse in Baptisme none shall fight Vnder that Banner if he may withstand it Nor out of antient Fathers Latine cite The cause may be he doth not vnderstand it His followers preach all faith and by their workes You would not Iudge them Catholickes but Turkes 53 He can endure no Organs but is vext To heare the Quirristers shrill Antheames sing He blames degrees in th' Accademy next And gainst the liberall Arts can Scripture bring And when his tongue hath runne beside the text You may perceiue him his loud clamors ring Gainst honest pastimes and with pittious phrase Raile against Hunting Hawking Cockes and plaies 54 With these the Brownists in some points cohere That likewise hold the marriage ring prophane Commanded prayers they 'l not indure to heare and to subseribe to Cannons they disdaine They hold more sinne a corner'd cap to weare Then cut a purse leaue these as vilde and vaine By thee Opinion Realmes haue bin confounded What darst not thou where thou art firmly grounded 55 To the first world now let my muse retire And see how strong thou wast Opinion then To create dieties I must aspire And giue eternity with my fraile pen Such as the world did in those daies admire It deified and so made Gods of men The Cretan Iupiter to heauen translated And Saturne sire of all the Gods instated 56 Made Iuno Queene of heauen Venus of pleasure Ceres of Corne and Bacchus God of wine Cupid of Loue Mars Warre and Mammon treasure Pallas of wisedome and of speech deuine God Mercury men did their God-hoods measure By their owne thoughts and vnto such resigne Their speciall honours in whose harts they guest Most power in that which they on earth profest 57 This made the Heathen kings by Ioue to sweare Their Queenes at Iunoes sacred Altar kneele Child-bearing women chast Lucian feare Souldiers at Mars his shrine to hang their steele The Swaines to honor Ceres by whose cheare Their graine decaide or prosper'd this made kneele Drunkards to Bacchus Orpheus strung his Lyre To Phaebus God of Musicke and of Fire 58 To Esculapius the Physitians prai'd Shepheards to Pan and Poets to the Muses A God of Neptune Nauigators made And he that gardens loues Pomona chuses Chast Virgins still implore Dianaes aide And who that loues God Cupids name refuses Vulcan commandeth Smiths Flora Flowers Aeolus winds and Pluto infernall powers 59 The Poets write three brothers lots did cast For th' Vn●…uersall Empire To Ioue fell Th' Olimpicke heauens which all the rest surpast Great Neptune with his three fork't Mace must dwell Within the bosome of the Ocean vast And guide the Seas blacke Pluto gouernes hell Opinion whence these Gods build all their glory Must be the Base to our succeeding story 60 Whilst thus Egiptian Belus was instated The reuerend Moyses in Mount Nebo died And Captaine Iossua second Iudge created The Thractan Boreas from his Mothers side Stole faire Orithia hauing long awaited To make the beautious Virgin his sweet Bride From whose rude armes she neuer could be freed But leauing these of Belus we proceed 61 The blustring winds before they had a king To locke them fast within his brazen Caues Great deuestations ore the earth did bring Tossing blacke tempests on the curled waues T is said rough Boreas shak't his flaggy wing Gainst his three brothers with opposed braues Who with such mortall hate at variance fell They made heauen shake earth reele the Ocean sw●…l 62 No Mediterren Sea before this brall Was knowne in the earths armes to be inclos'd The Seas tost by the winds brake downe the wall Which for his bounds the fates had interpos'd At such dissention the foure Brothers fall Hauing the raines of all their gusts vnlos'd They cleft the Earth the Ocean full of pride Thrusts in and two maine Lands shoulders aside 63 His traine of waues by Calpes he brought in And through his deepe Abismes leads them to warre He people euery place where he hath bin With his broad waters who are still at iarre With the torne earth more roomth and space to win For his vnbounded limits stretch't so farre That they haue p●…rst the aged Tellus hart And from Europa Affrica still part 64 So was Italia and Sicilia one Till the rough gusts the Ocean did inuade Who forcst a channell where before was none And twixt these kingdomes large irrnp●…ion made Therefore the Gods th'vnbrideled winds t' attone That their commaundlesse furies might be staid Surprisd them and to Aelous bound in chaines Gaue them and he their roughnes still restraines 65 With Ioues lasciuious pastimes I proceede As cheefely to the fall of Troy allide Oh you Ioues daughters borne of heauenly seed My braine and pen by inspiration guide That what the fates haue against Troy decreed Of Priams glory and Achilles pride Of Hectors valor and bright Hellens fate With all your aydes I may at large delate 66 Not how on Semele Ioue Bacchus got Nor in the shape of Bull Europa stale Of Swan-transformed Loeda speake I not Nor of Mnemosine frame I my tale Nor how Esopis did her honour blot Nor Astery by Ioue turnd to a Quaile Nor how for Nicteis he himselfe transformed Nor Ioes rape at which Queene Iuno stormed 67 But how he rauisht Danae that bright Lasse By many suters but in vaine assailed How she was closed in a Tower of Brasse Which with a golden Ladder the prince skaled What cannot gold whose brightnesse doth surpasse How oft hath Gold boue womens strength preualed Laps that haue had gainst all temptations power Haue spred themselues wide to a golden shower 68 From Iupiter of Archad and a dame Cal'd Isis did one Epaphus proceed To him was borne a sonne of ancient fame Hight Belus who great part of Egipt freed From tirrany and after swaide the same He had a Sister too who soone decreed Archad to change for Affricke and her name Lybia from whom the grim Busyris came 69 Belus two children had so the fame runnes Danaus and Egiptus Danaus he Had fifty girles Egyptus fifty sonnes Twixt whom these Brothers a full match decree All parts are pleas'd not one the marriage shunnes False Danaus with his daughters doth agree As with their Bridegroomes in their beds they lay The fifty husbands in one night to slay 70 Saue young Ypermenestra not a maid But in her husbands bosome sheath'd her knife And she alone the bloudy plot bewraid And to her Linceus prou'd a loyall wife Of all Egistus sonnes he by her aide Alone did from the murther scape with life Of whom as they in nuptiall loue remained He Abas got Abas in Arges raigned 71 Abas Acrisius
Ledes Evrotes A'ntiopes Danaes Apollo exilde by Iupiter kept Admetus sheepe which Pindarus in pithicis affirme or his Oxen as Horace 1. carminum And therefore he had the title to be called euer after the god of pastures As Virg. 3. Georgic Te quoque Magne pales te memorande Canemus pastor ab Amphriso The end of the fourth CANTO Argumentum KIng Tantalus before the Troians flyes Saturne arriues in Creet and by Troas ayded Once more intendes his Kingdome to surprise Creet is by Troian Ganimede inuaded In ayde of Iupiter the Centaures rise Aegeons ful-fraught Gallies are disladed Danae and her young sonne are turnd afloate By Arges King into a Mast-lesse boate ARG. 2. PElops the two Atrides and Aegeon Vulcan the Gorgones in Epsilon CANTO 5. 1 WHose inspiration shall my heauy brayne Implore to make my dull Inuention light Or to a loftyer key my pen constraine Or raise my Muse that takes so low a flight Thou Ihoue-borne Pallas o're my numbers raine And musicall Apoll●… giue me spright With the bright rayes that from thy temples shine To shew me way vnto the Muses nine 2 Of whom the eldest Clio first deuisd To Chronicle the Royall gests of Kings Strutting Melpomene in Gules disguisd In Theaters mongst Tragicke Actors sings But soft Thalya hath such straines despisd And to her Commicke sceanes shrill laughter brings Wind Instruments Entirpe best affects Terpsichore the stringed Lyre directs 3 The Geometricke figures Erato Hath in her charge as first by her disclosed But from Calliope hie Stanzoes flow For the Heroik numbers first composed The course of starres are by Vrania know And how the Planets we aboue disposed But Polihimnia smooth Rhetoricke chuses The youngest of Ioues daughters and the Muses 4 All these at once their sacred gifts aspire That may giue beauty to my taske in hand Affoording helpe when I their aide desire To guide my tost-Bark to desired Land A slender barke slow sayl'd and apt to tire And founder in the Sea weake and vnmand Apollo with the rest my voyage speed Whilst to Troyes fatall ruine we proceed 5 King Tantalus the sonne of Iupiter That rain'd in Attique brought an host 'fore Troy Which his sonne Pelops led how can he erre Being directed by so braue a Boy That vndertakes his army to transferre And Troos with his new Citty to destroy This Pelops with the King of Elis ran And in the course bright Hyppodamia wan 6 Her Father Oenemaus was betraid My Myrtolus his treacherous Chariot-driuer And in the race slaine Pelops by his aide Of many suters dead the sole suruiuer After the goale obtaind inioyes the maide Intending with all pompous state to wiue her Th'espousals ended Time with swift pace runnes And she in processe hath producst two sonnes 7 Thyestes and Atreus nam'd the first Ore-come with burning lusts insatiate heat Rauisht Atreus wife oh deed accurst For which Atreus doth him home intreat And takes his Children where the Babes were nurst To dresse their bodies for their fathers meat Some bak't some rost some sod oh bloody deed To make a father on his owne childe feed 8 Atreus two sonnes had the eldest hight Agamemnon who was after Mycenes king And Greekish Generall of the ten yeares fight Twixt Greece and Troy which we must after sing The second Menelaus in whose right The Argiue Dukes their puisant Armies bring Husband to Hellen when prince Paris sought her And Hellen Iupiter and Laedaes daughter 9 But we digresse gainst Pelops and his Sire Ilion and Ganimed from Troy appeare These are the sonnes of Troos many a bold squire They led with them to Ilion the first yeare He rain'd in Troy in bright celestiall fire Came the Palladium downe from heauens high spheare Which Ilions Towers long after did inioy Continuing till the vtter sacke of Troy 10 Their hostile Instruments to battell sound Ten thousand hands at once to heauen are raised Which in their fals as many strike to ground Cowards are scorn'd none but the bold are praised The Troyans haue begirt the Phrygians round Pelops aboue the rest his fame imblazed And Ganimed that doth bold Pelops see Fights as if none need kill a man but he 11 Such was the valour of this Troian youth Though Troos and Ilion both did wondrous well He onely stands defends breakes and pursueth Their standing battailes by his valour fell The Phrigian host now murdred without ruth Charon is tyr'd with ferring soules to hell The Troians follow with victorious ●…ries Whilst Tantalus and valiant Pelops flies 12 This was that Tantalus bright Plota bare Whom for a speciall grace the Gods admit To their high Counsell where they oft repaire He blabs their secrets therefore they held fit To punnish him in hell with torments rare In Laethe chin-deepe he must euer sit Hungry whilst Apples touch his lips and dry Whilst from his thirsty chin the waters flie 13 And this that Pelops whom his father slew And hewd his body into gobbets smal Whose Massacre the Gods in mercy rew And gathering vp his limbes to match them all They misse that peece to ioyne his body new Which from the throat doth to the shoulder fall Which they with Iuory peece and who more bolder Then new-made Pelops with his Iuory shoulder 14 And yet inforst to flie but had his men B●…n euery one a Pelops none had fled He was the last in field preferring then Fore Coward runners the resolued dead But what can one alone gainst thousands ten Led by so braue a Prince as Ganimed Leaue we triumphant Troos now let our hand Direct sea-toyled Saturne safe a Land 15 Who from his sonne in the last battaile flying his Grand-child Archas to the sea-side chast We left him in a ship the Ocean trying Where he hath plowed strange Seas great dangers past Now entring th' Hellespont from farre espying After his tedious course a Towne at last His Martiners to shore their sailes imploy And Sea-beat Saturne touches land fore Troy 16 Which Troos amidst his plausiue triumphs seeing With Ilion Ganimed and thousand more Makes towards the harbor whilst old Saturne freeing His men from ship-bord hath imprest the shore He makes his habit with his stile agreeing The Troyans wonder at the state he bore Himselfe so well prepar'd his ships so faire Both to the barbarous Troians seeming rare 17 So small a number can no warre pretend Therefore their strange arriue they neede not feare As farre as doth their Hemisphere extend They view the sea but see no shipping neare Which makes the King salute him as a frend And aske the reason of his landing there Saturne replies Behold poore strangers throwne To vnknowne people on a Land vnknowne 18 Yet would you haue his Countrey Nation name That knowes not on whose earth his bold feet tread Nor with what breath he may his stile proclaime From his owne Natiue ayre so farre being fled If you perhaps haue relisht Saturnes
fame Whose glory liues although his state be dead Then view that Saturne with respectiue eies Whose far-spread beames set at his sonnes vprise 19 Saturne hath spoke enough whose longing eares Haue not bin fild and cloy'd with his renowne The Heauenly musicke of th'Harmonious spheares Climbe to his praise by him the fields are sowne The Archers shoot and Childing-Tellus beares In what remote climbe is not Saturne knowne By him are seas past heady ships contrould He first Tild Ploud Sowd Reapt and fined Gold 20 He need not of his Ominous wars possesse him Troos knowes his issues triumph and his flight Inspir'd with supernaturall gifts they gesle him And hold themselues heauen fauoured in his sight He vowes in Creet againe to r●…pollesle him Where Ihoue vsurps gainst all paternall right After few daies in feasts and triumphs ended A puisant host is to his charge commended 21 Of twenty thousand souldiers Troians all Commanded by the valiant Ganimed A better war-exployted Generall Neuer appear'd in sight of Ersignes spred They passe the Egeon seas which men so call Of the Grand Thiefe Egeon he that fled From Iupiter when all the Tytans perisht Now on these Seas by murdrous Pyrats cherisht 22 Saturne directs their landing as best knowing The safest harbors and their army guided Through many furlongs of his ancient sowing Neuer till his daies by the Plough diuided But as their host to Creet is nearer growing With hope to take the Cretans vnprouided King Iupiter is by the skouts discride With many Centaures that on horsebacke ride 23 But not expecting any hostile power Or to beat backe inuaders doth he gather This puisant host hee 's for the brazen Tower Where Danae liues coopt by her ruthlesse father But now that host the Cretan soile must scoure Which amorous Ihoue would haue conducted rather To scale the brazen for●…sse the darke skreene Twixt courtly freedome and his cloistred Queene 24 To this imployment the stout Centaures came Vnder Ixions conduct twice two hundred Who first deuis'd Thessalian steeds to tame They seem'd at first halfe horse halfe man vnsundred At whose strange manage and admired name Vnknowne till now th' amazed Troians wondred The battailes ioyne and both the hosts discouer About Ihoues Tent a Princely Eagle houer 25 He takes it for an Ominous signe of good The Troians for some heauy sad presage By this a thousand quarters swim in blood And from both sides the heated Champions rage In a deepe red they dy the neighbour flood Neuer did bolder spirits battaile wage The dying grone the feare-confounded shrike The wounded bleeding fall the standing strike 26 The Centaures boldly fight the Prince of Troy Shines both in Armes and valour aboue all Hauing both Art and strength his steele to imploy And many halfe-dead limbes about him sprall To him Ihoue makes and is re-met with ioy On either part whole troopes before him fall So haue I seene two burning Meteors fare Breaking through diuers clouds to tilt in th' aire 27 Two fiery Meteors I may call them right For they were both in gilded Armors laced And had they fought in a darke cloudy night With such rough blowes their shields and helmes they raced And forcst from them such store of fiery light With steele encountring steele and blowes well placed The two maine Armies might haue fought in view By the bright sparkes that from their Armors flew 28 This Monomachy lasted not for yonder Comes Saturne on the part of Ganimed On th' other side the hoofed Centaures thunder And Character deepe halfe Moones where they tread By whom the Champions are inforst assunder And all confus'd that was in order led Thus in this tumult and disordered brall By scotes and hundreds they drop downe and fal 29 Saturne assailes his sonne but is refus'd He shuns th' vnnaturall combat with his Sire Amongst the Troians he his Champions chus'd The Hostile stranger shall his worth admire Against whose Armies he such valour vs'd That force p●…force their vaward must retire Meane time Prince Ganimed King Saturne righting Alone is midst a hundred Centaures fighting 30 Encountring Eson arm'd at euery peece Eson well mounted gainst the Troian ran This Eson sonne was after knowne in Greece T was he that did the stately Arges man And in his bold quest of the golden fleece With the rich Sheepe deepe speld Medea wan Who after old decrepit weake and hored Was by his daughter to his youth restored 31 Him Ganimed vnhorst and in despight Of the bold Centaures mounted on his steed Prouing the manage of this vnknown fight And in the proofe mad●… many Centaures bleed But all in vaine his troopes are put to flight Saturne is shrunke and left him at his need And ●…o ther ships in t●…oopes his sould●…s fled Whose shamefull steps the Prince of force must tred 32 The Centaures and the Cretan king pursue them Vnto the Oceans Margent and euen there Twixt Sea and shore in countlesse heaps they slew them Such as escape their course to Troy-ward beare For Saturnes men the Cretans cannot view them Another vnknowne tract alas they steare Whether the winds and waues their vessaile driue Twice driuen from Creet gainst heauen in vaine wee striue 33 Iupiter and the Centaures such ships take As should haue bin imploid for Darraynes Tower And after Ganimed to Sea they make Pursuing them to Troy with all their power They Land at once the fearefull Troians quake Doubting if earth or sea shall them deuoure Troos with an host discends as one that guessed The Prince his sonne was by his foes distressed 34 The battaile is renewed the king intends To rescue sonne and Subiects in such state But ouer valiant Ganimed extends His valour beyond wisedome all too late The King of Troy his puissant fury bends In rescue of his sonne now in sad fate The Cretans him surprize and he being tane With this rich prize they make to Sea againe 35 Leaue Troos and Islion mated at this crosse The pride of Troy is not to be re-won He ra●…s him much aboue his kingdomes losse And all Dardania mourneth for his son How in the guard of those that from Molesse Came with Ixion and on horse-backe run Ioue giues command being at Sea assured The Prisoners to be chear'd the wounded cured 36 And calling now to mind the Bird that soared About his rich Pauillion he ordained Her picture should be drawne and quaintly skored Vpon a Crimson Ensigne richly stained Which since that fight to all that Mars adored As a perpetuall instance hath remained Till then they bore no flags no Scutchions drew Ioues Eagle was the first in field that flew 37 He now remembers Danae and commands His Pylots to direct his waftage thether But what the king inioynes the wind withstands With boysterous gusts it foulds their sailes together And hurries them along by diuers Lands They beare their wandering course they ken not whether At length they in the
was the first that strung the Lute 4 Nables and Regals holy Dauid found Dirceus an Athenian Clarious shrill And these the Lacedemons did first sound When the Messenians they in armes did kill Vnto the Dulcimer first danced round The Troglodites after the Rebeck still Th' Archadians fought Pises Tyrhenus was The first that fashiond Trumpets made of Brasse 5 Which some to Myses attribute and say The Haebrewes with a Siluer Trumpet led Marcht and retyrd were taught to keepe array When to fall off when on fly or make head Dromslades the Romans taught the Cretans they After the Lute their hostile paces tread Great Haliattes with his sword and shield Marcht not without lowd pipers in the field 6 This as it hath the power in dreadfull Warres Mongst soft effeminate breasts to kindle rage and to relenting grace all entrance barres So hath it power the rudest thoughts t`asswage To musicke moue the Plannets dance the stars It tempers fury makes the wilde man sage In this consent of stringes he that can well May with harmonious Orpheus enter hell 7 We left Queene Ceres in her Daughters Quest Measuring the earth from one side to another Yet can she find no end to her vnrest Her Daughter lost shee is no more a Mother The earth once cherisht she doth now detest Gainst which her spleene she can no longer smother She cals it barbarous vnthankefull base And no more worthy of her Souer●…gne grace 8 And much against her ancient pleasure speakes For what she fauour'd earst she now dislikes In euery place she comes the Ploughes she breakes The laborous Oxen she with Murraine strikes Vpon the toyling Swaines her spleene she wreakes Cattell and Men choake vp their new-plasht Dykes The barraine fieldes deceiue the Plow-mans trust The vsuring seede is molded vnto dust 9 Which rather in the parched furrow dries Layd open vnto euery rigorous blast Else to the theeuish Byrds a prey it lies Or if it hap to gather root at last Cockle and Tares euen with the Corn-eares rise Else by the choaking Cooch-grasse it is past Thus through her griefe the earth is barraine made The hoped haruest perisht in the blade 10 Meane time Euridice the new made Bride Of Orpheus with a princely traine consorted As in a Meddow by a Riuers side Vnto her Husbands Harpe one day she sported And by his tune her measured paces guide In a swift Hadegay as some reported She shricking starts for whilst her Husband singes Vnto his Harpe a Snake her Ankle stings 11 In Orpheus armes she dyes her soule discends Ferryed by Charon o're the Stigian Lake The woefull Bridegroome leaues his house and friendes Vowing with her the loath'd world to forsake To the Tenarian part his course he bends And by the way no cheerefull word he spake But by ten thousand pathes turning doth crosse Through Tartary and through the blacke Molosse 12 There is a steepe decliuy way lookes downe Which to th' Infernall Kingdome Orpheus guides Whose loouer vapors breathes he sits not downe But enters the darke Cauerne with large strides With thousand shadowes he is compast round Yet still the suffocating Mists diuides Millions of Ghosts vnbodied bout him play Yet fearelesse Orpheus still keepes no his way 13 Hels restlesse Ferriman with Musicke payd Is pleas'd to giue him waftage too and fro The triple Hell-hound that his entrance stayd Charmed with Musicke likewise lets him go So through the ayry throng he passage made Th' immortall people that remaine below And tuning by the way his siluer stringes To the three fatall Sisters Thus he singes 14 You powers Infernall full of awfull dread Whose dietyes no eye terrestriall sees I know all Creatures that are mortall bred At first or last must stand to your decrees I come not as a spy among the dead To blab your doomes or rob you of your fees I onely pierce these vaults voyd of all crime To seeke my Bride that perisht fore her time 15 By loue whose high commaund was neuer bounded In Earth or Heauen but hath some power belovv By your blacke Ministers by Orcus rounded With Styx whose pitchy Waters ebbe and flow By those three Kings by whom all doomes are sounded The Elisian pleasures and the Lake of Woe By all the dreadfull secr●…ts of the dead Fayre Parcae knit againe her vitall thread 16 I seeke not to exempt her from your doome This is our generall home heare we must stay Though now releast as all things hither come So must she too and heare abide for aye Graunt that she now may but bespeake her roome And to her death allot a longer day Or if th'immoued Fates this will not doe Before my time with her detaine me to 17 This with such moouing accents Orpheus sung That Chin-deepe Tantalus forgot to bow Vnto the shrinking Waue Ixion hung Vntost vpon the Wheele and Sisiphe now Rests him vpon his stone His Harpe was strung With such rare art the Danaes knew not how To vse their empty tubbes Stix breath'd not fire Nor can the vulture on Prometheus tyre 18 The Sisters weepe Hels Iudges appeare mild And euery tortur'd Ghost forgets his paine Proserpine laught and the drad Pluto smild To see her chang'd of cheere no soul●…s complaine Hels Senate to his grace is reconcild And all agree she shall suruiue againe Through million-Ghosts his Bride is sought found And brought to him still haulting on her wound 19 He takes her with this charge at Plutoes hand Not to looke backe till he Auernus past And the large limits of the Stygian Strand Through darke and obscure wayes through deserts vast Steepe hils and smoaky Caues his Wife he man'd Vntill he came where a thin plancke was pla'st O're a deepe raging Torrent where dismayd Orpheus lookes backe her trembling arme t' haue staid 20 Which the three-throated Cerberus espying Snatches her vp and beares her backe to hell In vaine are all his sighes his teares his crying Lowder then he can play the Dog can yell He blames his too much loue and almost dying Is ready with his Bride mongst shades to dwell So long vpon the barren plaines he trifled Till with hels vapors he was almost stifled 21 At length the Rhodopeian Orpheus turnes His feeble paces to the vpper earth Which now with discontented Ceres mournes The rape of Proserpine still plagu'd with Dearth Either the Sun the gleby Champion burnes Else too much raine doth force abortiue birth To the ranke Corne the world forcst to complaine With widdowed Orpheus and the Queene of Graine 22 Who hauing searcht Earth of her child to know She finds her no where on the earth abiding And skaling heauen Heauen can no daughter showe Therefore both heauen and earth the Queene is chiding Onely she left vnsought the vaults below But heares how Orpheus hath by Musickes guiding Past through Auernus and the Stygian fires Therefore of him she for her childe inquires
Mother She Lychus Wise yet rauisht with the sight Of Iupiter her loue she could not smother These her fayre sonnes built Thebes with large extent Two yeares before they on this voyage went 43 With all the Graecian chiualry attended They disimbogue the gentle B llowes smile Th' Aegean Seas they passe but late defended By the Grand Thiefe that gaue those Seas their stile No wind or waue their well-tig'd ship offended But the calme looking Thetis harbors guile Her fawning front she wrinkles with a frowne A●…d thinkes th' ambitious Argonants to drowne 44 At the blacke Euening close the Sea lookt white The storme-presaging Waue begins to swell And blustring Eurus rising now at night With his flag Winges vpon the waters fell The Mayster bids slacke sayle but gainst the might Of his commaunded Mates the winds rebell The Boat-Swayne brals the Marriners are chid For what they would the stubborne gusts forbid 45 All fall to labour one man helps to steere Others to slacken the big bellied Sayle Some to the Cap-string call some pray some sweare Some let the Tackles slip whilst others hale Some cling vnto the maine-Mast and cleaue there Some chafe with anger some with feare looke pale Some ply the Pompe and that which would deuour Their ship in time Sea into Sea repoure 46 Sharpe-b●…ting winter growes and on each side The foure sedit●…ous Brothers threaten war and tosse the Billowes who in scornefull pride Spit foaming Brine the winds with waters iarre The breaking seas whose entrance were denyde Bea●…e gainst each Pitchy-rib and calked sparre and by their Oaken strength denyde Intention Fall where they were begot to meere confusion 47 Now as the shriking Billowes are diuided Low Vallyes tweene two mighty Mountaines fall From whose steepe breasts the shaken vessaile slyded Burying in Sea Sayles Tackles Masts and all But ●…here remaynes not long the Barke well guided Climbes vp those clyffes a dreadfull watty wall That to themselues amazd with feare they show Like men in th' ayre surueighing hell below 48 It seem'd as if the Heauens and Seas had Wars And that the one the other did defy Twixt whom the mutinous winds make greater Iars Th' ambitious Billowes seeme to threat the sky And fling their brine-waues in the face of Stars Who therewith mooud melt all the Clouds on hye And such tempestuous shewers of raine thaw downe As if their drops meant the vast Seas to drowne 49 The waters both of Heaueu and Earth are mixt Flagging their sayles to make them brooke no blast No Lampe of heauen appeares wandring or fixt Darkenesse hath o're the face of both heauens past And left his vgly blindnesse them betwixt Whose horride presence makes the Greekes agast The Heauens bright fire the troubled Water braues sindging with lightninges force the Gulfy waues 50 Vnto these Argonants I may compare Our Island-voyages alike distrest With whelming seas thicke Mists and troubled ayre Loud claps of Thunder Lightning from the West so dreadfull that their Pilots loose their care Through feare forgetting what should stead them best The sea to quench Heauens glorious Lamps aspyres Heauen burns the Ocean with her lightning fires 51 As braue a Generall Martiald our great Fleete as that bold Greeke that sought the fleece of Gold hoping by sea an enemy to meete Fiercer then Iasons and more warlike bold Renowned Essex at whose warlike feete Spaines countlesse spoyles and Trophyes haue been told Who from Hesperia brought to Englands Greece More Gold then would haue weigh'd downe Iasons fleece 52 Grim Terror with the Greekes a ship-board lyes All night some weepe some rage the boldest feare Soliciting the Gods with Prayers and cryes Seeing their Fates and hopelesse ruins neere They thinke on Fathers Children Wiues Allyes But whom they faine would see they wish not there Grim terror in the Morning forward sped The Sunne begins to wake the tempest fled 53 Who as from forth the Spanish Seas he raisde His burnisht lockes and bout his shoulders shooke them and as his custome is about him gazd To view fayre Thetis bounds and ouer-looke them He spyes th'Imbarqued Greekes with feare amazd So sore the rough tumultuous Sea had tooke them He sees their Pendants torne their Sheetes all rent Their Hatches broken and theyr mayne-mast spent 54 Therefore he angry Neptune doth intreat as he would haue him guild his siluer streames Or thaw his frozen Waters with his heate Or cheare his coole Waues with his gorgeous beames Th'aduentrous Greekes his charge not to defeat But they may safe re-view their Natiue Realmes Neptune is pleas'd his Trident calmes the Seas And grants them waftage to what coast they please 55 Who entring th' Hellespont acquire some shore VVhere they may land their Fortunes to repaire at Tenedos they tutch knowne long before By great Alcides since he battayld there Where great Laomedon the Scepter bore and to preuent like dangers threatning care Re-builds his battred holds and with supplyes Mans euery Sea-skout that adiacent lyes 56 These Garrisons the Graecian Peeres deny Reliefe or Anchorage till the Kings mind Be fully knowne Who heares his foes so nye That had so late his forces ouerthrowne Therefore inraged he sends them to defie And from his Coasts to get them quickely gone Or mongst them all hee 'l leaue no liuing Greeke For golden Pillage on the seas to seeke 57 Vndanted Hercules at this offended Sweares by his Father Ihoue Troyes second wracke And with his Argonants had then discended Mauger the King but Iason kept him backe Who being chiefe Commander hath intended A golden coarse the Colchōs first must sacke Therefore though much against Alcides will Put from that shore the Conqueror threatens still 58 Vowing if Fate affoord him safe returne In whose aduenture al the Peeres vnite Troyes wals to batter and their Citty burne And be the Kings eternall opposite To whose disgrace Troy shall in ashes mourne Th' vngratefull King be forc'st to death or flight And all these lofty Towers at his next Landing Not haue one stone vpon another standing 59 Resolued thus they make to hoyse vp saile Weigh Anchor and their tackles hale and pull Their lofty spleenes gainst Troy they now auaile And onely ayme at the Phrixean wooll The God of winds affoords them a calme gale Making their waue-washt sheetes shew swelling full Whose gentle Gusts the Graecian Heroës bring To Colchos welcom'd by the Phasian King 60 At whose arriue Medea Iason viewing Oh heauen quoth she what passion 's this I feele Shall yon faire Graecian youth his fame pursuing Die by inchanted fire or tempered steele Oh saue thy fame by this attempt eschevving Thy arme vvants povver to make the Dragon reele Thy amorous hand alasse too soft and white with Brasse-hoou'd Buls that breath out fire to fight 61 More fitter t' were a Lady to embrace T' imprison beauty in a cristall fold Oh why should one that hath so sweet a face Made to be lou'd and loue seeke acts so
bold Too ventrous Greeke for loues sake leaue this place Thou knowst not what thou seekst the fleece of Gold A royall prize it is yet amorous stranger It hath not worth to countervaile the danger 62 For the least blood shall drop downe by thy skin Or in the' combat staine the Colchian grasse Is of more worth then all that thou canst win Yet doth the riches of this Fleece surpasse But stay What blind maze am I entred in What louing laborinth Forgetfull Lasse Oh canst thou to a strangers grace appeale Who comes from farre thy Fathers fleece to steale 63 This Iason is our foe dwels in a Land Remote and of another Clyme indeed If thou wilt loue about thee Princes stand Of thine owne Nation let this stranger bleed Despise him then and all his forraine band That in thy Fathers pillage haue agreed Instead of loue the amorous Greeke defie And by th'inchanted Monsters let him die 64 But shall Medea view that Tragicke sight And see his faire limbes by her Monsters rent Shall his white fingers with grim Hell-hounds sight That might Medea in her loue content Apollo may I neuer tast thy light Pertake thy earthly rise or low discent But by my Art I shall so well prouide To be the Gold-Fleece-conquering Iasons Bride 65 But how Medea Wilt thou then forsake Thy Country Father Friends All which are great and to thy Lord a rouing Pyrate take One that perchance hath no abiding seat Fond Girle thou wrongst him these faint doubts to make A Royall Prince and in all acts compleat Thy Country Father Friends trifles but small And this one warlike Iason worth them all 66 That he is louely witnesseth mine eye And valiant what can better record beare Then this attempt whose fame to heauen will flye T' amaze the Gods that shall this Nouell heare I leaue a barraine kingdome to discry A populous Nation what then should I feare In seeking with this amorous Greeke to dwell I aske Elisum in exchange for Hell 67 A Land where if his people him resemble Humanity and all good Thewes are rife Who if they loue their Lord cannot dissemble Their harts to her that shall safegard his life Th'inchanted Buls whose bellowing made heauen trēble Shall by their ruines make me Iasons wife Whom all the faire and potent Queenes of Greece Shall better welcome then the conquerd Fleece 68 Opinion'd thus at their next enter-view After their diuers oaths betweene them past That he the fam'd aduenture shall pursue Whose conquests with inchantments she binds fast And when his hands these monsters shall imbrew He to receiue her as his Bride at last Night passeth on at the next birth of day Aurora frights the Feare●…ll Stars away 66 Much confluence of people throng together In the large field of Mars they take their places The Princes of the Land in Scarffe and Feather And Triumph robes expect the Greekes disgraces The burdend earth grones with spectators whether The King himselfe martiald with golden Maces In person comes his Ba●…ns him inuest In a high Throne degr●…d aboue the rest 70 To such prepared ioyes the Frenchmen came To see the valiaunt Mount-morensi roon against Charles Brandon who for Englands fame Vanquisht their Knight at which their ioy was doon The French who to disgrace the English came Saw how bold Charles at one incounter woon Their Champions armes the French Qu. to his pheer Which chang'd their promist mirth to sadder cheere 71 Behold where Polymelaes sonne vndanted against the brazen-hoofed Beasts appeares How richly armd his sword aloft he vanted T' incounter with the two infernall steares Who as he strikes still breaths out words inchanted The Graecians stand amaz'd Medea feares To see young Iason Lord of her desire Betwixt two Buls their Nosthrils breathing fire 72 And least her Incantatious force might faile She mumbles to her selfe more powerfull charmes Still doth the dreadlesse Greeke those Buls assaile Reddy to scorch him in his twice-guilt armes His sharpe edg'd sword their horned crests makes vaile That fire that scaldeth others him scarce warmes Such power hath Magicke the fell Buls grovv tame And Iason tugs with them amidst the flame 73 And first he by the dangling dew-laps takes them Who force perforce his valour must obey He twixt his sinnowy armes together shakes them They bellowing yeeld themselves his glorious prey To bow their stubborne necke bold Iason makes them On which th'obedient yoake he gently lay The Greekes applaud his conquest with shrill cries The Colchians shew their sorrowes in their eyes 74 But all 's not furnisht yet he makes them draw The teemed plow to furrow vp his field The rusty yron doth the greene verdure flaw Quite vanquisht now the conqu●…d Oxen yeild Yet more then this the Colchian Princes saw The Vipers teeth he cast vpon his shield And sow'd them in the furrowes they straight grew To armed men and all on Iason flew 75 The Greekes dismay th'incourag'd Colchians showt Onely Medea doth their ioy detest With magicke she assists her Champion stout Her Exorcismes haue power to arme his brest Those that but late incompast him about And with their steele strooke Stars out of his Crest Seeke mutuall armes amongst themselues they brall So by seditious weapons perish all 76 It now remaines the three-tongu'd venomous Snake The Riuer-waking-Serpent to make sleepe Whose horride crest blew skales and vnces blacke Threat euery one a death vnto his keepe The Fleece is put Medea bids him take Grasse in blacke Lethe laid three nights to steepe Vttering such powerfull charmes as calme the winds And the mou'd Billowes in their Channell binds 77 Those drops being spinkled on the Dragons head The words thrice spoke the wakefull Serpent lies Drownd in forgetfull slumbers seeming dead and sleepe till now not knowne seales vp his eyes Iason in safety may the Mansion tread Where Colchos long preseru'd the golden prize and now at length faire Polimelaes sonne Inioyes the Fleece that he with danger wonne 78 Proud of this purchase but of her more glad That by the Vertue of a powerfull word More hy command vpon these Monsters had Then he in vse of his remorslesse sword Vnto his Argoe he Medea Lad Commanding all his merry mates aboord But secretly least when King Aeta knew his daughters rape he might her flight pursue 79 Which to preuent the Negerous Lady takes The young Absyrtes a faire hopefull youth And when her father after Iason makes And with rough fury her escape pursuth She chops the Lads limbes into bits and flakes and in the Kings way strowes him without ruth And whilst he gathers vp with watry eyes His peece-meale body she in safety flies 80 With triumphs they in Greece are welcomd all And Iason famous for his royal Quest The Bed red Father will his sonne install In his owne kingdome and with him his guest Deepe-speld-Medea at whose Magicke call The Seas and winds or trauell or
whom they offer solemne Funerall deeds The Children fetch their Sires and Fathers some Their slaughtred sons which generall mourning breeds The Greekes likewise their fellow-mates desire And yeild their bodies to the hallowed fire 103 But whilst these odoriferous piles they reare And sacrifiz'd their friends in holy flames And in perfumed Boxes prized deare Coffin their precious ashes least their names Should die in Lethe Nouell broyles appeare And Ate through the Campe discord proclames But now to truce our spirits we haue intention Before twixt them we moue a new dissention TO omit all our English worthies whose names wee haue only memoriz'd not hauing roome to insert their deeds in so little a compasse as we haue prescrib'd to our History we rather couet to touch matter more forraigne and lesse familiar to some with whome our Booke must necessarily Traficke In the description of Fame we haue rather imitated Ouid then Virgill his Fama malum quo non c. In the description of King Priams state we must needes imagine it great where so many forraigne Kings assembled in his ayde in whose names we haue confer'd Dares the Troian Dictes the Greeke Homer Virgill and others who though in some particuler thinges not momentarily they differ yet they generally concurre in this that such Princes with such populous and almost inuincible assistance succored Troy Telephus ioynd in commission with Achilles to saile to the land of Messe was sonne to Hercules whom Theutam hauing before in the battayle receiued his deaths wound voluntarily adopted his successour for the great loue that he for many benefits formerly receiued had borne to his father Hercules The passages of Loue betwixt Troylus and Cressida the reuerent Poet Chaucer hath sufficiently discourst to whom I wholy refer you hauing past it ouer with little circumstance The description of the first battailes seruice disordred and confused we must excuse with this necessity that beeing to remember so many and to imploy them all we could not do it with a directer method then to set downe things done without order disorderly and actions hapning by accident accidentally and confused things confusedly King Prothesilaus was the first King that perisht before Troy for though it were foretold by Oracle that he that first set foot a shore should perish by the sword of Hector yet hee fearelesse of death first landed and in his too much valor made the fayre Laodomeia a desolate widdow Ate Goddesse of reuenge or strife she is cald by Homer one of Ihoues daughters Lesio Homerus Iliad 7. Presba dios thugater ate H pantas a-atai Ate prisca Iouis proles quae leserit omnes Mortales The Tale of Cephalus and Procris because I haue omitted in my former Cantons especially in that which seemes to inueigh against Iealousie I thinke not altogither vnnecessary to insert in this Skolia knowing that which was ill forgot cannot be amisse remembred at any seasonable opportunity Here therefore though out of his ranke I intend to admit him BEneath Hymettus hill well cloath'd with flowers A holy Well her soft springs gently powers Where stands a Cops in which the Wood-Nymphs shroue No wood It rather seemes a slender Groue The humble shrubs and bushes hide the grasse Heere Lawrell Rosemary heare Myrtle was Heere grew thicke Box and Tam'rix that excels And made a meere confusion of sweet smels The Triffoly the Pine and on this Heath Stands many a plant that feeles coole Zephirs breath Heere the young Cephalus tyr'd in the chace Vsd his repose and rest alone t' embrace And where he sat these words he would repeate Come Ayre sweet Ayre come coole my heat●… Come gentle Ayre I neuer will for sake thee I le hug thee thus and in my bosome take thee Some double dutious Tel-tale hapt to heare this And to his Iealous wife doth straight-way beare this Which Proctis hearing and with all the Name Of Ayre sweete Ayre which he did oft proclaime She stands confounded and amazd with griefe By giuing this fond tale too sound beleefe And lookes as doe the Trees by winter nipt Whom Frost and cold of fruit and leaues hath stript She bends like Corueile when too ranke it growes Or when the ripe fruits clog the Quinch-tree bowes But when she comes to her selfe she teares Her Garments and her eyes her cheekes and heares And then she starts and to her feet applies her Then to the Woods storke Wood in rage she hies her Approaching somewhat neare her seruants they By her appointment in a Vally stay Whilst she alone with creeping paces steales To take the Strumpet whom her Lord conceales What mean'st thou Procris in these Groues to hide thee What rage of loue doth to this madnesse guide thee Thou hopst the Arye he cals in all her brauery Will straight approach and thou shalt see their knauery and now againe it Irkes her to be there For such a killing sight her heart will teare No truce can with her troubled thoughts dispence She would not now he there nor yet be thence Behold the place her iealous mind fortels Here doe they vse to meet and no where els The Grasse is layd and see their true impression Euen heere they lay I heere was their transgression A bodies print she saw it was his seat Which makes her faint hart gainst her ribs to beat Phoebus the lofty Easterne Hill had scald And all moist vapours from the earth exhald Now in his noone-tide point he shineth bright It was the middle houre twixt noone and night Behold young Cephalus drawes to the place And with the Fountaine water sprinkes his face Procris is hid vpon the grasse he lyes And come sweet Zephir Come sweet Ayre he cryes She sees her error now from where he stood Her mind returnes to her and her fresh blood Among the Shrubs and Briars she moues and rustles And the iniurious boughes away she ●…stles Intending as he lay there to repose him Nimbly to run and in her armes inclose him He quickly casts his eye vpon the bush Thinking therein some sauage Beast did rush His bow he bends and a keene shaft he drawes Vnhappy man what doost thou Stay and pause It is no bruite beast thou wouldst reaue of life Oh man vnhappy thou hast slaine thy wife Oh Heauen she cries Oh helpe me I am slaine Stil doth thy Arrow in my wound remaine Yet though by timelesse Fate my bones heere lye It glads me most that I no Cuck-queane dye Her breath thus in the Armes she most affected She breaths into the Ayre before suspected The whilst he lifts her body from the ground And with his teares doth wash her b●…eeding wound The end of the eleuenth CANTO Argumentum A Chilles transformation Palimed Accusd of Treason and condemnd to die After long battaile honor Hector led The boldest Argiue Champion to defie The Graecians storme to be so chalenged Hector and Aiax the fierce Combat try A Truce a Banquet at this pompous feast
is figured in his face And in his lookes the eye of Gorgons burnes The Greekes blunt sword can scarce his Helmet race So weake a foe inflamed Hector scornes Vpon his Crest his Faulchion he lets fall And cleaues the Greeke helme body armes and all 59 The emulous son of Thetis crost by chance The blacke goar'd field and came to view this blow And mad in mind against him charg'd his Lance In hope the towring Prince to ouerthrow Him Thoas seconds and doth proudly'aduance His reeking sword late crimson'd in the foe Both with remorflesse blowes the Prince offend And his bruisd Shield about his arme they bend 60 Had not his helmet beene of mettall pure With Axes they had hewed it from his head But he that made it was an Arts-man sure Else had his braines bin on his harnesse spread Nor had he long bin able to indure Such tedious battry had not Fortune led Paris Aeneas Troylus and the rest To rescue valiant Hector thus opprest 61 At their approch the Achive bands retire Whom to their Pallisadoes they pursue By this in heauen ten thousand Lampes of fire Shine through the ayre and now both Hoasts withdrew The re-assembled Greekes Hector admire And mongst themselues into sad counsell grew Since not by force of Armes by what sly traine The neuer-daunted Worthy may be slaine 62 More honoured Hector in his royall braine Reuolues on milder thoughts how bloud to saue It pitties him to see so many slaine And come to such a generall timelesse graue Then that no more red bloud may Symois staine And change the coulour of her siluer waue He by a generall challenge will deuise For thousands safeties one to Sacrifice 63 Against all Greece hee 'l flyng his hostile gage And to a single Fight their Princes dare That two bolde Champions may the combat wage And in their mutuall Fury thousands spare Meane time blacke night from th' vniuersall Stage Of Earth is cha'st and driuen Now all prepare For th' early Field and with Apollo rise To shine in Armour by his rhadiant eies 64 The Princes to the place where Hector lay Throng in theyr Armes and his command attend After they had tooke and giuen the time of day with him they to the aged King descend Before whom Hector briefly doth display his purpost challenge which they all commend For well his Father and his Brothers know Hector hath power t' incounter any foe 65 The Sunne vp the steepe Easterne hils clymes fast Th'embattaild Greekes vpon the plaines appeare To them the faire-rankt Troians march in hast Within the reach of Hectors armed speare Both Hoasts attend the charge when vnagast The Prince first wafts that all the Campemay may heare Then leaning on his Iauelin makes this boast Euen in the face of their assembled hoast 66 You curled Greekes that haue vnpeopled quite Threescore vast Kingdomes of theyr ablest men To throng our fieldes with numbers infinite All hopelesse of theyr safe returne agen Among these sixty Kings that shine so bright In burnisht Steele vpon this sanguine Fen Can you select one boulder then the rest T' encounter armed Hector Creast to Creast 67 Or if your Princes be too weake a number Can all those threescore Climats yeild one hand Amidst this world that coms our Realme to cumber That dares betweene these hoasts gainst Hector stand Or doe you all feare deaths eternall slumber As well your Kinges as those of common band That with a braue breath'd in so many eares No soule more valiant then the rest appeares 68 If any of these Princes proue so free His prodigall life against ours to ingage Know by exposing his whole thousands be Sau'd from the spoyle of warres infernall rage Oh let me then that thrifty Champion see That will spare Graecian blood with him ●…wage wage Equall contention with my liues expence I will maintaine the Troians eminence 69 A Prince shall meet that Prince as neere allide To thundering Ihoue as he that 's best degreed If in his warlike Chariot he will ride I in my Chariot will con●…tont his speed March me these foure white Coursers Greece hath tride These faire Andromache doth mornely feed With her white hand with bread of purest wheat And waters them with Wine still when they eat 70 Xanthus Podargus Lampus Aethon deare To Hector you my armed Coach shall draw And in this fierce exposure shall appeare Before the best Steeds that the Sun ere saw But all Greece cannot match your swift Carrere Not Diomedes Steeds that fed on r●…w And mangled limbes that in their Mangers bleed Can equall you in courage or in speed 71 Therefore I le cease that oddes and once againe Leauing the Kings to common men I turne Among such clusters growing on this plaine In no warme brest doth so much valor burne But shall so many shewers of blood still raine On Symois banke so many widdowes mourne For their slaine Lords so many Children cry For their poore Fathers that heere slaughtred die 72 If not for Loue of honour in despaire Methinkes some one our puissance should accost For no●… two soules that heere assembled are Shall scape the ●…y of our Troian hoast Death and deuouring ruin shall not spare One of your infinites you are ingrost All on destructions File then let some Greeke Despairing life a death with honor seeke 73 Yeilds our besieged Towne a Nobler spirit Then sixty assembled Kingdomes can produce That none dares enterpose his hostile merit But all put off this combat with excuse Among such infinites will none inherit A name with vs Feares Greece our hand shall sluce Their Vniuersall blood That feare can slaue So many Legions with one Hectors braue 74 I beg it of you Greekes let some forth stand To try what puissancelyes in Hectors sword If I be foyl'd by his all-daring hand The Spartan Hellen shall be soone restord And all the spoyles brought from the fertile Land Of Cythara made good and he ador'd With these ennobled armes the sword and crest Of Hector Honors more then all the rest 75 If I subdue your Champion Greece in peace Shall ease our burden'd earth of this huge weight Hostility betweene our hoasts shall cease You with your men and armes your ships shall freight And from our bloud-stain'd soyle free this large prease So shall illustrate Hector reach his height When th' Vniuersall world hath vnderstood Hector gag'd his to saue his Citties blood 76 Oh let it not in after times be saide Twice thirty kingdomes could not one man finde Prince Knight or Swaine durst equally inuade A Troian Prince in Armes and height of mind Nor let succeeding time the Greekes vpbraide To heare such lofty spirits so soone declinde Behold heere stand I to abide the rage Of his arm'd hand that dares but touch our gage 77 These words thus breath'd a generall showt is giuen Through al the Tr●…n army which aspires And strikes against the Marble floores of heauen Where fixed are
whose skill Ouid remembers By art of Sayle and Oare Seas are diuided By art the Chariot runs by art Loue 's guided By art are Bridles rain'd in or let slip Typhis by art did steare th' Hemonian ship And Tymes succeeding shall call me alon Loues expert Typhis and Antomedon The reason why Achilles kept his Tent and was not in the field when Hector breathed his chalenge is not fully resolued some thinke he was discontent about a difference betwixt the Generall Agamemnon and him who kept away perforce Briseis a beauteous Lady claimed by Achilles as his Prise which wee rather follow in our History then to lay his absence on his Loue to Polixena whom hee had not yet seene and the promise which for her sake he made to Hecuba to keepe himselfe and his M●…midons from the battaile Achelous was sonne to Oceanus and Tellus viz the sea and the Earth whence all Riuers are deriued who beeing vanquisht by Hercules hid himselfe in the Riuer called of himselfe Achelous a famous stoud in Greece diuiding Aetolia from Acatnauia This Achelous was before called Thoas and riseth from the Mount Pindus but Plutarch calleth it Thestius of Thestius the son of Mars and Pisidices who had three daughters Calirhoe Castalia and Dirce of whom the famous Greeke Poet Akeloou thugater diska c. Oh Acheloi filia venerande Virgo dierce The Flouds of Achelous were so famous that all the waters vsed in the deuine sacrifices were by the Oracle cald Aquae Acheloae The Poets faine him to transhape himselfe in a Bul because Riuersplow the earth as Oxen make Furrowes or because Buls draw neere to the brinkes of riuers when they bellow for fresh pasture else because waters breaking violently through any fall make a confused noise like the roarings of many Buls together He was ●…ald a Dragon by his many indented windings and turnings Hercules being leagued with King Oeneus vndertooke to suppresse this raging riuer whose many inundations had much damag'd his Kiingdome who extenuating his maine streame by inforcing it into many riualets by that meanes made the country more fertil therefore it was moraliz'd that Hercules breaking off his horn receiu'd in the same all fruits of plenty To this Cornucopia or horne of abundance Iupiter gaue this property that whosoeuer held it and wisht should receiue according to their desire The rarieties of the most choise fruits and wines of all kinds how delicious soeuer to tast the Pallat. This vertue was first prou'd by Amatthea daughter to Hemonius King of Aetolia though some take Amatthea to be the Goat that nurst Iupiter with her milke when Rhea had giuen him to be brought vp to Adrastea and Isde. The end of the twelfth CANTO Argumentum A Chilles dotes on beauteous Polixaine And at her faire request refraines the fielde The Truce expierd both Hoasts prepare againe For battaile with proud harts in valour steel'd The Greekes are beate backe many kild and taine Patroclus don's Achilles Armes and shield Him Hector for Achilles tooke and slew Whose Armor gone his Mother seeks him new ARG. 2. TRuce after Combat Hecuba is wonne By Paris meanes to league with Thetis sonne CANTO 13. 1 AWake soft Muse from sleepe and after rest Shew thy selfe quicke and actiue in thy way Thy labouring flight and trauell long opprest Is comforted no longer then delay But with thy swiftest winges fly in the Quest Of thy prefyxed goale The happy day In which this Kingdome did her wide armes spread To imbrace king Iames our Soueraigne Lord head 2 And you great Lord to whom I Dedicate A second worke the yssue of my braine Accept this Twin to that you saw of late Sib to the first and of the selfe-same straine That onely craue the shelters of your state To keepe it from all stormes of Ha●…le and Raine Who neither dread the rage of winds or Thunder whilst your faire roofe they may be shadowed vnd●…r 3 Your fauour and protection deckes my phrase and is to me like Ariadnes clew To guide me through the Laborinthean Maze 〈◊〉 which my brain 's intangled T is by you That euery vulger eye hath leaue to gaze and on this Pro●…ct takes free enter view Which but t' expresse a due debt yet vnpaid Had still remain'd vnperfect and vnmade 4 Proceed we then and where we left repaire About his head the Tree rough Aiax flings Like to a threatning Meteor in the aire Which where it lights exitiall ruin brings Such seemes th'vngrounded Oake leauelesse and bare Who shakes ore Hectors Crest her rooted strings And with such rude impetuous fury fell T' haue dingd him through the Center downe to hel 5 But Hector with his broad shield waits the fall Which shiuers all the plates of his strong Targe The Graectans too much fury strikes withall The plant from his owne hands in his rough charge Vnarm'd once more they grapple to make thrall Each others strength their armes sinnowy and large About their sides with mutuall strength they cling and wrastling striue which can each other fling 6 When loe the Kings on bothsides much admiting Their neuer equald valour loth to lose Such Champions in whose charging or retyring Their spring of victory declines or Flowes Their Conquests droop towards earth or rise aspiring The generall of each hoast his Warder throwes Betweene the Combattants who still contend By slight of strength to giue the difference end 7 Two Guards from either Army step betweene Their heated furies till their blood retyr'd For with fresh breath they both abate their spleene And cease that Combate thousands late admyr'd Instead of blowes their friendly Armes are seene T'infold each other with new loues inspyr'd Aiax his Belt pluckes from athwart his brest And giues to Hector of all Knights the best 8 Who takes a good sword flesht on many a foe And enter-chang'd with Aiax but oh Fate Two ominous Tokens these good Knights bestow Which to themselues prou'd most vnfortunate To Hectors heeles must Aiax Baldricke grow And three times drag him by each Troian gate Whose sight whole Troy with clamorous shricks shal fill With Hectors sword Aiax must Aiax kil 9 These passages of friendship giuen and tooke Behold a Herald from the Towne appeares Who greets the proud Greekes with a friendly looke From Priam reuerent both in state and yeares Them whom but late the Troians could not brooke Troy now inuites and for a space forbeares All hostile hate betweene both hoasts proclaiming A day of Iubile for feast and gaming 10 The Faith of Hector as best hostage giuen Th'inuasiue Kings in peace the Citty enter Whom Priam feasts with all that vnder heauen Can be found rare or bred aboue the Center The Dames and Damsels all pale feare bereauen Amongst the dreadfull Greekes dare freely venter And they that late did fright them aboue measure Haue liberty to sport and Court their pleasure 11 Vnpeered Hector
From which her words nor warning can restrain thē She chusd this way the onely meanes to tame them 44 This stri●…kt decree kept many from her Coast That else had flockt as Suters to the place Their Angell beauties which men couet most Must from the eyes of man receiue no grace Many too bold their deerest Iewell lost And were made Eunuches within three dayes space Else they were thought vnfit for the Queens dyet Who held that the first way to keepe them quiet 45 Some that could well haue ventur'd their best blood Were loath to hazzard what they needs must pay The Queene so much vpon this Edict stood That she had driuen her Suters quite away And still to be at rest she held it good Vowing t' obserue it to her dying day Hauing this prou'd those men that came most bold Their forf●…it pay none more submisse and cold 46 So that in processe few approacht their shore But such as had no meanes to hue else-where Whom their owne Countries did esteeme no more But pay theyr fine they may be welcome here And haue good place and Lands and liuings store Nothing the Court hath can be held too deere Amongst the rest that held a Soueraigne place Their liu'd a Baron of a Noble race 47 He that was from his Nat●…e Countrey fled For some offence that questioned his life and as a refuge to secure his head He shund the deadly Axe to tast the Knife But time out-weares disgrace his course he led Among the Damsels free from femenine strife Doubtlesse the Woman that 's suspitious most Would be resolu'd to see what he had lost 48 The Noble Eunuch left a Sonne behind In his owne Countrey who being growne to yeares Grew fairely featurd of a generous mind and in his face much excellence appeares He vowes the world to trauell till he find His banisht Father whose estate he feares At length by search hee 's made to vnderstand Of his late soiourne in the Scithians Land 49 Thither he will for so his vow decrees But when he knowes an Edict too seuere Hee 's loath to pay vnto the Land such Fees Which he hopes better to bestow else-where In this distraction loe from farre he sees A nimble Fayry tripping like a Deere and as holies strowde on the grassie playne With sw●…st speede she makes to him amaine 50 And greetes him thus Fayre Youth boldlie proceede I promise thee good Fortune on thy way Among the Scithian Dames thou shalt not bleed Onely obserue and keepe still what I say My counsell now may stand thee much in steede and saue thee that thou wouldst be loath to pay Receiue this Handkercheife this Purse this Ring The least of them a present for a King 52 These vertues they retaine when thou shouldst eate Vpon the Board this curious Napkin spred It streight shall fill with all delicious meate Foule Fish and Fruits shall to th●… place be led With all delicious Cates costly and neate Which likewise shall depart when thou hast fed This Ring hath hath●… stone whose vertue know Is to discerne a true Friend from a Foe 52 In this thou mayst perceiue both late and early Who flatters thee and who intends thee well Who hates thee deadly or who loues thee deerely The vertue of this Iewell doth excell Out of this Purse if I may iudge seuerely and in few words the worth exactly tell Valew it rightly it exceedes the rest and of the three is rated for the best 53 So oft as thou shalt in it thrust thy hand So oft thy Palme shall be repleat with Gold Spend where thou wilt trauell by Sea or Land The riches of that Purse cannot be told Vse well these guifts their vertues vnderstand Thanke my deuinest Mistresse and be bold Adde but thy will to her auspicious ayde Shee 'le sure thee that which others late haue payde 54 Incourag'd thus he pierces theyr cold Clime Where many hot Spirits had beene calm'd of late And enters the great Court at such a time When he beheld his Father sit in State They that ●…uriew the Youth now in his prime Not knowing his decree blame his hard Fate And wish he might a safer Countrey choose Not come thus far his deer'st things to loose 55 For not a Ladyes eye dwels on his face Or with iudiciall note viewes his perfection But thinkes him worthy of theyr deerest grace They prayse his looke gate stature and complection And Iudge him Issu'd of a Noble race A person worthy of a Queenes election Not one among them that his beauty saw But now at length too cruell thinke their Law 56 After some interchange of kindest greeting Betwixt the Father and the stranger Son Such as is vsuall to a suddaine meeting With extasies that Kindred cannot shon To omit their height of ioy as a thing fleeting For greatest ioyes are oft-times loohest don The Fath●… of his Sonnes ability Askes If 〈◊〉 brookt his 〈◊〉 losse with facility 57 For well he knowes he cannot anchor theare Or soiourne on that rude and 〈◊〉 barous Cost But his free harborage must cost him d●…ate Censuring his Sonne by what himselfe had lost she gentie Youth whose thoughts are free from feare Sayth he is come securely there to host and spight the Queene and Ladies with oaths deepe Sweares to his Father what he hath to keepe 58 By this th' Amazonian P●… heares Of a young stranger in her Court arriu'd She sends to know his Nation Name and yeares But being told his Father there suruiu'd A reuerentman one of her chiefest Peeres She will not as the custome haue him gyu'd But takes his Fathers promise oath and hand To haue his Sonne made Free-man of her Land 59 Three dayes the limits him but they expierd As others carst he must the Razortry all thinges determin'd the fayre Queene desierd The Stranger to a banquet instantly Who at his first appearance much admierd Her state her port proportion face and eye Nor had he since his Cradle seene a Creature So rich in beauty or so rare in feature 60 Downe sat the Queene and Damsels at the board But the young Stranger stands by discontent They pray him sit He answeres not a word Three times to him the Queene of Scithia sent But still the Youth would no reply affoord The rest not minding what his silencement Leaue him vnto his humor and apply Themselues to feede and eate deliciously 61 But when he saw the Ladies freely eate and feede vpon the rude Cates of the Land At a with-drawing board he takes his seate and spreads his curious Napkin with his hand Streight you might see a thousand sorts of meate Of strangest kinds vpon the Table stand What Earth or Ayre or Sea within them breeds On these the Youth with lookes di●…dainefull feeds 62 The Queene amaz'd to see such change of cheare Whose beauty and variety surpast Longing to know the newes could not forbeare But rose with all her Damsels at the last To know