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Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 1
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Ïåðåâ³ðêà ðîçì³ðó




Edmund Spenser

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 205


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

TEARES OF THE MUSES

Rehearse  to  me  ye  sacred  Sisters  nine:
The  golden  brood  of  great  Apolloes  wit,
Those  piteous  plaints  and  sorrowful  sad  tine,
Which  late  ye  powred  forth  as  ye  did  sit
Beside  the  siluer  Springs  of  Helicone,
Making  your  musick  of  hart-breaking  mone.  
For  since  the  time  that  Phoebus  foolish  sonne
Ythundered  through  Ioues  auengefull  wrath,
For  trauersing  the  charret  of  the  Sunne
Beyond  the  compasse  of  his  pointed  path,
Of  you  his  mournfull  Sisters  was  lamented,
Such  mournfull  tunes  were  neuer  since  inuented.
Nor  since  that  faire  Calliope  did  lose
Her  loued  Twinnes,  the  dearlings  of  her  ioy,
Her  Palici,  whom  her  vnkindly  foes
The  fatall  Sisters,  did  for  spight  destroy,
Whom  all  the  Muses  did  bewaile  long  space;
Was  euer  heard  such  wayling  in  this  place.
For  all  their  groues,  which  with  the  heauenly  noyses,
Of  their  sweete  instruments  were  wont  to  sound,
And  th'  hollow  hills,  from  which  their  siluer  voyces
Were  wont  redoubled  Echoes  to  rebound,
Did  now  rebound  with  nought  but  rufull  cries,
And  yelling  shrieks  throwne  vp  into  the  skies.
The  trembling  streames,  which  wont  in  chanels  cleare
To  romble  gently  downe  with  murmur  soft,
And  were  by  them  right  tunefull  taught  to  beare
A  Bases  part  amongst  their  consorts  oft;
Now  forst  to  ouerflowe  with  brackish  teares,
With  troublous  noyse  did  dull  their  daintie  eares.
The  ioyous  Nymphes  and  lightfoote  Faeries
Which  thether  came  to  heare  their  musick  sweet,
And  to  the  measure  of  their  melodies
Did  learne  to  moue  their  nimble  shifting  feete;
Now  hearing  them  so  heauily  lament,
Like  heauily  lamenting  from  them  went.
And  all  that  els  was  wont  to  worke  delight
Through  the  diuine  infusion  of  their  skill,
And  all  that  els  seemd  faire  and  fresh  in  sight,
So  made  by  nature  for  to  serue  their  will,
Was  turned  now  to  dismall  heauinesse,
Was  turned  now  to  dreadfull  vglinesse.
Ay  me,  what  thing  on  earth  that  all  thing  breeds,
Might  be  the  cause  of  so  impatient  plight?
What  furie,  or  what  feend  with  felon  deeds
Hath  stirred  vp  so  mischieuous  despight?
Can  griefe  then  enter  into  heauenly  harts,
And  pierce  immortall  breasts  with  mortall  smarts?
Vouchsafe  ye  then,  whom  onely  it  concernes,
To  me  those  secret  causes  to  display;
For  none  but  you,  or  who  of  you  it  learnes
Can  rightfully  aread  so  dolefull  lay.
Begin  thou  eldest  Sister  of  the  crew,
And  let  the  rest  in  order  thee  ensew.
Clio.
Heare  thou  great  Father  of  the  Gods  on  hie
That  most  art  dreaded  for  thy  thunder  darts
And  thou  our  Syre  that  raignst  in  Castalie
And  mount  Parnasse,  the  God  of  goodly  Arts:
Heare  and  behold  the  miserable  state
Of  vs  thy  daughters,  dolefull  desolate.  
Behold  the  fowle  reproach  and  open  shame,
The  which  is  day  by  day  vnto  vs  wrought
By  such  as  hate  the  honour  of  our  name,
The  foes  of  learning,  and  each  gentle  thought;
They  not  contented  vs  themselues  to  scorne,
Doo  seeke  to  make  vs  of  the  world  forlorne.
Ne  onely  they  that  dwell  in  lowly  dust,
The  sonnes  of  darknes  and  of  ignoraunce;
But  they  whom  thou,  great  Iove,  by  doome  vniust
Didst  to  the  type  of  honour  earst  aduaunce;
They  now  puft  vp  with  sdeignfull  insolence,
Despite  the  brood  of  blessed  Sapience.
The  sectaries  of  my  celestiall  skill,
That  wont  to  be  the  worlds  cheife  ornament,
And  learned  Impes  that  wont  to  shoot  vp  still,
And  grow  to  hight  of  kingdomes  gouernment
They  vnderkeep,  and  with  their  spredding  armes
Do  beat  their  buds,  that  perish  through  their  harmes.
It  most  behoues  the  honorable  race
Of  mightie  Peeres,  true  wisedome  to  sustaine,
And  with  their  noble  countenaunce  to  grace
The  learned  forheads,  without  gifts  or  gaine:
Or  rather  learnd  themselues  behooues  to  bee;
That  is  the  girlond  of  Nobilitie.
But  (ah)  all  otherwise  they  doo  esteeme
Of  th'heauenly  gift  of  wisedomes  influence,
And  to  be  learned  it  a  base  thing  deeme;
Base  minded  they  that  want  intelligence:
For  God  himselfe  for  wisedome  most  is  praised,
And  men  to  God  thereby  are  nighest  raised.
But  they  doo  onely  striue  themselues  to  raise
Through  pompous  pride,  and  foolish  vanitie;
In  th'eyes  of  people  they  put  all  their  praise,
And  onely  boast  of  Armes  and  Auncestrie:
But  vertuous  deeds,  which  did  those  Armes  first  giue
To  their  Grandsyres,  they  care  not  to  atchiue.
So  I,  that  doo  all  noble  feates  professe,
To  register,  and  sound  in  trump  of  gold;
Through  their  bad  dooings,  or  base  slothfulnesse,
Finde  nothing  worthie  to  be  writ,  or  told:
For  better  farre  it  were  to  hide  their  names,
Than  telling  them  to  blazon  out  their  blames.
So  shall  succeeding  ages  haue  no  light
Of  things  forepast,  nor  moniments  of  time,
And  all  that  in  this  world  is  worthie  hight
Shall  die  in  darknesse,  and  lie  hid  in  slime:
Therefore  I  mourne  with  deep  harts  sorrowing,
Because  I  nothing  noble  haue  to  sing.
With  that  she  raynd  such  store  of  streaming  teares,
That  could  haue  made  a  stonie  heart  to  weep,
And  all  her  Sisters  rent  their  golden  heares,
And  their  faire  faces  with  salt  humour  steep.
So  ended  shee:  and  then  the  next  [in  rew],
Began  her  greiuous  plaint  as  doth  ensew.
Melpomene
O  who  shall  powre  into  my  swollen  eyes
A  sea  of  teares  that  neuer  may  be  dryde,
A  brasen  voice  that  many  with  shrilling  cryes
Pierce  the  dull  heauens  and  fill  the  ayer  wide,
And  yron  sides  that  sighing  may  endure,
To  waile  the  wretchednes  of  world  impure?  
Ah,  wretched  world  the  den  of  wickednesse,
Deformd  with  filth  and  fowle  iniquitie;
Ah  wretched  world  the  house  of  heauinesse,
Fild  with  the  wreaks  of  mortall  miserie:
Ah  wretched  world,  and  all  that  is  therein,
The  vassals  of  Gods  wrath,  amd  slaues  of  sin.
Most  miserable  creature  vnder  sky
Man  without  vnderstanding  doth  appeare;
For  all  this  worlds  affliction  he  thereby,
And  Fortunes  freakes  is  wisely  taught  to  beare:
Of  wretched  life  the  onely  ioy  shee  is,
And  th'only  comfort  in  calamities.
She  armes  the  brest  with  constant  patience
Against  the  bitter  throwes  of  dolours  darts,
She  solaceth  with  rules  of  Sapience
The  gentle  minds,  in  midst  of  worldlie  smarts:
When  he  is  sad,  shee  seeks  to  make  him  merie,
And  doth  refresh  his  sprights  when  they  be  werie.
But  he  that  is  of  reasons  skill  bereft,
And  wants  the  staffe  of  wisedome  him  to  stay,
Is  like  a  ship  in  midst  of  tempest  left
Withouten  helme  or  Pilot  her  to  sway,
Full  sad  and  dreadfull  is  that  ships  euent:
So  is  the  man  that  wants  intendiment.
Whie  then  doo  foolish  men  so  much  despize
The  precious  store  of  this  celestiall  riches?
Why  doo  they  banish  vs,  that  patronize
The  name  of  learning?  Most  vnhappie  wretches,
The  which  lie  drowned  in  deep  wretchednes,
Yet  doo  not  see  their  owne  vnhappines.
My  part  it  is  and  my  professed  skill
The  Stage  with  Tragick  buskin  to  adorne,
And  fill  the  Scene  with  plaint,  and  outcries  shrill
Of  wretched  persons,  to  misfortune  borne:
But  none  more  tragick  matter  I  can  finde
Then  this,  of  men  depriu'd  of  sense  and  minde.
For  all  mans  life  me  seemes  a  Tragedy,
Full  of  sad  sights  and  sore  Catastrophees;
First  comming  to  the  world  with  weeping  eye,
Where  all  his  dayes  like  dolorous  Trophees,
Are  heapt  with  spyles  of  fortune  and  of  feare,
And  he  at  last  laid  forth  on  balefull  beare.
So  all  with  rufull  spectacles  is  fild,
Fit  for  Megara  or  Persephone;
But  I,  that  in  true  Tragedies  am  skild,
The  flowre  of  wit,  finde  nought  to  busie  me:
Therefore  I  mourne,  and  pitifully  mone,
Because  that  mourning  matter  I  haue  none.
Then  gan  she  wofully  to  waile,  and  wring
Her  wretched  hands  in  lamentable  wise:
And  all  her  Sisters  thereto  answering,
Threw  forth  lowd  shrieks  and  drerie  dolefull  cries.
So  rested  she:  and  then  the  next  in  rew,
Began  her  grieuous  plaint  as  doth  ensew.
Thalia.
Where  be  the  sweete  delights  of  learnings  treasure,
That  wont  with  Comick  sock  to  beautefie
The  painted  Theaters,  and  fill  with  pleasure
The  listners  eyes,  and  eares  with  melodie;
In  which  I  late  was  wont  to  raine  as  Queene,
And  maske  in  mirth  with  Graces  well  beseene?  
O  all  is  gone,  and  all  that  goodly  glee,
Which  wont  to  be  the  glorie  of  gay  wits,
Is  layd  abed,  and  no  where  now  to  see;
And  in  her  roome  vnseemly  Sorrow  sits,
With  hollow  browes  and  greisly  countenaunce,
Marring  my  ioyous  gentle  dalliaunce.
And  him  beside  sits  ugly  Barbarisme,
And  brutish  Ignorance,  ycrept  of  late
Out  of  dredd  darknes  of  the  deepe  Abysme,
Where  being  bredd,  he  light  and  heauen  does  hate:
They  in  the  mindes  of  men  now  tyrannize,
And  the  faire  Scene  with  rudenes  foule  disguize.
All  places  they  with  follie  haue  possest,
And  with  vaine  toyes  the  vulgare  entertaine;
But  me  haue  banished,  with  all  the  rest
That  whilome  wont  to  wait  vpon  my  traine,
Fine  Counterfesaunce,  and  vnhurtfull  Sport,
Delight,  and  Laughter  deckt  in  seemly  sort.
All  these  and  all  that  els  the  Comick  Stage
With  season'd  wit  and  goodly  pleasance  graced;
By  which  mans  life  in  his  likest  image
Was  limned  forth,  are  wholly  now  defaced;
And  those  sweete  wits  which  wont  the  like  to  frame,
Are  now  despizd,  and  made  a  laughing  game.
And  he  the  man,  whom  Nature  selfe  had  made
To  mock  her  selfe,  and  Truth  to  imitate,
With  kindly  counter  vnder  Mimick  shade,
Our  pleasant  Willy,  ah  is  dead  of  late:
With  whom  all  ioy  and  iolly  meriment
Is  also  deaded,  and  in  dolour  drent.
In  stead  thereof  scoffing  Scurrilitie,
And  scornfull  Follie  with  Contempt  is  crept,
Rolling  in  rymes  of  shameles  ribaudrie
Without  regard,  or  due  Decorum  kept,
Each  idle  wit  at  will  presumes  to  make,
And  doth  the  Learneds  taske  vpon  him  take.
But  that  same  gentle  Spirit,  from  whose  pen
Large  streames  of  honnie  and  sweete  Nectar  flowe,
Scorning  the  boldnes  of  such  base-borne  men,
Which  dare  their  follies  forth  so  rashlie  throwe;
Doth  rather  choose  to  sit  in  idle  Cell,
Than  so  himselfe  to  mockerie  to  sell.
So  am  I  made  the  seruant  of  the  manie,
And  laughing  stocke  of  all  that  list  to  scorne,
Not  honored  nor  cared  for  of  anie;
But  loath'd  of  losels  as  a  thing  forlorne:
Therefore  I  mourne  and  sorrow  with  the  rest,
Vntill  my  cause  of  sorrow  be  redrest.
There  with  she  lowdly  did  lament  and  shrike,
Pouring  forth  stremes  of  teares  abundantly,
And  all  her  Sisters  with  compassion  like,
The  breaches  of  her  singul[t]s  did  supply.
So  rested  she:  and  then  the  next  in  rew
Began  her  grieuous  plaint,  as  doth  ensew.
Euterpe.
Like  as  the  Dearling  of  the  Summers  pryde,
Faire  Philomele,  when  winters  stormie  wrath
The  goodly  fields,  that  earst  so  gay  were  dyde
In  colours  diuers,  quite  despoyled  hath,
All  comfortlesse  doth  hide  her  chearlesse  head
During  the  time  of  that  her  widowhead:  
So  we,  that  earst  were  wont  in  sweet  accord
All  places  with  our  pleasant  notes  to  fill,
Whilest  fauourable  times  did  vs  afford
Free  libertie  to  chaunt  our  charmes  at  will:
All  comfortlesse  vpon  the  bared  bow,
Like  wofull  Culuers  doo  sit  wayling  now.
For  far  more  bitter  storme  than  winters  stowre
The  beautie  of  the  world  hath  lately  wasted,
And  those  fresh  buds,  which  wont  so  faire  to  flowre,
Hath  marred  quite,  and  all  their  blossoms  blasted:
And  those  yong  plants,  which  wont  with  fruit  t'  abound,
Now  without  fruite  or  leaues  are  to  be  found.
A  stonie  coldnesse  hath  benumbd  the  sence
And  liuelie  spirits  of  each  liuing  wight,
And  dimd  with  darknesse  their  intelligence,
Darknesse  more  than  Cymerians  daylie  night?
And  monstrous  error  flying  in  the  ayre,
Hath  mard  the  face  of  all  that  semed  fayre.
Image  of  hellish  horrour  Ignorance,
Borne  in  the  bosome  of  the  black  Abysse,
And  fed  with  furies  milke,  for  sustenaunce
Of  his  weake  infancie,  begot  amisse
By  yawning  Sloth  on  his  owne  mother  Night;
So  hee  his  sonnes  both  Syre  and  brother  hight.
Her  armd  with  blindnesse  and  with  boldnes  stout,
(For  blind  is  bold)  hath  our  fayre  light  defaced;
And,  gathering  vnto  him  a  ragged  rout
Of  Faunes  and  Satyres,  hath  our  dwellings  raced
And  our  chast  bowers,  in  which  all  vertue  rained,
With  brutishnesse  and  beastlie  filth  hath  stained.
The  sacred  springs  of  horsefoot  Helicon,
So  oft  bedeawed  with  our  learned  layes,
And  speaking  streames  of  pure  Castalion,
The  famous  witnesse  of  our  wonted  praise,
They  trampled  haue  their  fowle  footings  trade,
And  like  to  troubled  puddles  haue  them  made.
Our  pleasant  groues,  which  planted  were  with  paines,
That  with  our  musick  wont  so  oft  to  ring,
And  arbors  sweet,  in  which  the  Shepheards  swaines
Were  wont  so  oft  their  Pastoralls  to  sing,
They  haue  cut  downe,  and  all  their  pleasaunce  mard,
That  now  no  pastorall  is  to  bee  hard.
In  stead  of  them  fowle  Goblins  and  Shreikowles
With  fearfull  howling  do  all  places  fill;
And  feeble  Eccho  now  laments  and  howles,
The  dreadfull  accents  of  their  outcries  shrill.
So  all  is  turned  into  wildernesse,
Whilest  Ignorance  the  Muses  doth  oppresse.
And  I  whose  ioy  was  earst  with  Spirit  full
To  teach  the  warbling  pipe  to  sound  aloft,
My  spirits  now  dismayd  with  sorrow  dull,
Doo  mone  my  miserie  with  silence  soft.
Therefore  I  mourne  and  waile  incessantly,
Till  please  the  heauens  afford  me  remedy.
Therewith  she  wayled  with  exceeding  woe,
And  piteous  lamentation  did  make,
And  all  her  sisters  seeing  her  doo  soe,
With  equall  plaints  her  sorrowe  did  partake.
So  rested  shee:  and  then  the  next  in  rew,
Began  her  grieuous  plaint,  as  doth  ensew.
Terpsichore.
Who  so  hath  in  the  lap  of  soft  delight
Beene  long  time  luld,  and  fed  with  pleasures  sweet,
Feareles  through  his  owne  fault  or  Fortunes  spight,
To  tumble  into  sorrow  and  regreet,
Yf  chaunce  him  fall  into  calamitie,
Finds  greater  burthen  of  his  miserie.  
So  wee  that  earst  in  ioyance  did  abound
And  in  the  bosome  of  all  blis  did  sit,
Like  virgin  Queenes  with  laurell  garlands  cround
For  vertues  meed  and  ornament  of  wit,
Sith  ignorance  our  kingdome  did  confound,
Bee  now  become  most  wretched  wightes  on  ground:
And  in  our  royall  thrones  which  lately  stood
In  th'  hearts  of  men  to  rule  them  carefully,
He  now  hath  placed  his  accursed  brood,
By  him  begotten  of  fowle  infamy;
Blind  Error,  scornefull  Follie,  and  base  Spight,
Who  hold  by  wrong,  that  wee  should  haue  by  right.
They  to  the  vulgar  sort  now  pipe  and  sing,
And  make  them  merrie  with  their  fooleries,
They  cherelie  chaunt  and  rymes  at  randon  fling,
The  fruitfull  spawne  of  their  ranke  fantasies:
They  feede  the  eares  of  fooles  with  flattery,
And  good  men  blame,  and  losels  magnify:
All  places  they  doo  with  their  toyes  possesse,
And  raigne  in  liking  of  the  multitude,
The  schooles  they  fill  with  fond  new  fanglenesse,
And  sway  in  Court  with  pride  and  rashnes  rude;
Mongst  simple  shepheards  they  do  boast  their  skill,
And  say  their  musicke  matches  Phoebus  quill.
The  noble  hearts  to  pleasures  they  allure,
And  tell  their  Prince  that  learning  is  but  vaine,
Faire  Ladies  loues  they  spot  with  thoughts  impure,
And  gentle  mindes  with  lewd  delights  distaine:
Clerks  they  to  loathly  idlenes  entice,
And  fill  their  bookes  with  discipline  of  vice.
So  euery  where  they  rule  and  tyrannize,
For  their  vsurped  kingdomes  maintenaunce,
The  whiles  we  silly  Maides,  whom  they  dispize,
And  with  reproachfull  scorne  discountenance,
From  our  owne  natiue  heritage  exilde,
Walk  through  the  world  of  euery  one  reuilde.
Nor  anie  one  doth  care  to  call  vs  in,
Or  once  vouchsafeth  vs  to  entertaine,
Vnlesse  some  one  perhaps  of  gentle  kin,
For  pitties  sake  compassion  our  paine:
And  yeeld  vs  some  reliefe  in  this  distresse:
Yet  to  be  so  relieu'd  is  wretchednesse.
So  wander  we  all  carefull  comfortlesse,
Yet  none  doth  care  to  comfort  vs  at  all;
So  seeke  we  helpe  our  sorrow  to  redresse,
Yet  none  vouchsafes  to  answere  to  our  call:
Therefore  we  mourne  and  pittilesse  complaine,
Because  none  liuing  pittieth  our  paine.
With  that  she  wept  and  wofullie  waymented,
That  naught  on  earth  her  griefe  might  pacifie;
And  all  the  rest  her  dolefull  din  augmented
With  shrikes  and  goanes  and  grieuous  agonie.
So  ended  shee:  and  then  the  next  in  rew,
Began  her  piteous  plaint  as  doth  ensew.
Erato.
Ye  gentle  Spirits  breathing  from  aboue,
Where  ye  in  Venus  siluer  bowre  were  bred,
Thoughts  halfe  deuine,  full  of  the  fire  of  loue,
With  beawtie  kindled  and  with  pleasure  fed,
Which  ye  now  in  securitie  possesse,
Forgetfull  of  your  former  heauinesse:  
Now  change  the  tenor  of  your  ioyous  layes,
With  which  ye  vse  your  loues  to  deifie,
And  blazon  foorth  an  earthlie  beauties  praise,
Aboue  the  compasse  of  the  arched  skie:
Now  change  your  praises  into  piteous  cries,
And  Eulogies  turne  into  Elegies:
Such  as  ye  wont  whenas  those  bitter  stounds
Of  raging  loue  first  gan  you  to  torment,
And  launch  your  hearts  with  lamentable  wounds
Of  secret  sorrow  and  sad  languishment,
Before  your  Loues  did  take  you  vnto  grace;
Those  now  renew  as  fitter  for  this  place.
For  I  that  rule  in  measure  moderate
The  tempest  of  that  stormie  passion,
And  vse  to  paint  in  rimes  the  troublous  state
Of  Louers  life  in  likest  fashion,
Am  put  from  practise  of  my  kindlie  skill,
Banisht  by  those  that  Loue  with  leawdnes  fill.
Loue  wont  to  be  schoolmaster  of  my  skill,
And  the  sweet  deuicefull  matter  of  my  song;
Sweete  Loue  deuoyd  of  villanie  or  ill,
But  pure  and  spotles,  as  at  first  he  sprong
Out  of  th'Almighties  bosome,  where  he  nests;
From  thence  infused  into  mortall  brests.
Such  high  conceipt  of  that  celstiall  fire,
The  base-borne  brood  of  blindnes  cannot  gesse,
Ne  euer  dare  their  dunghill  thoughts  aspire
Vnto  so  loftie  pitch  of  perfectnesse,
But  rime  at  riot,  and  doo  rage  in  loue;
Yet  little  wot  what  doth  thereto  behoue.
Faire  Cytheree  the  Mother  of  delight,
And  Queene  of  beautie,  now  thou  maist  go  pack;
For  lo  thy  Kingdome  is  defaced  quight,
Thy  scepter  rent,  and  power  put  to  wrack;
And  thy  gay  Sonne,  that  winged  God  of  Loue,
May  now  goe  prune  his  plumes  like  ruffed  Doue.
And  ye  three  Twins  to  light  by  Venus  brought,
The  sweete  companions  of  the  Muses  late,
From  whom  what  euer  thing  is  goodly  thought
Doth  borrow  grace,  the  fancie  to  aggrate;
Go  beg  with  vs,  and  be  companions  still
As  heretofore  of  good,  so  now  of  ill.
For  neither  you  nor  we  shall  anie  more
Find  entertainment,  or  in  Court  or  Schoole:
For  that  which  was  accounted  heretofore
The  learneds  meed,  is  now  lent  to  the  foole,
He  sings  of  loue,  and  maketh  louing  layes,
And  they  him  heare,  and  they  him  highly  prayse.
With  that  she  powred  foorth  a  brackish  flood
Of  bitter  teares,  and  made  exceeding  mone;
And  all  her  Sisters  seeing  her  sad  mood,
With  lowd  laments  her  answered  all  at  one.
So  ended  she:  and  then  the  next  in  rew
Began  her  grieuous  plaint,  as  doth  ensew.
Calliope.
TO  whom  shall  I  my  euill  case  complaine,
Or  tell  the  anguish  of  my  inward  smart,
Sith  none  is  left  to  remedie  my  paine,
Or  deignes  to  pitie  a  perplexed  hart;
But  rather  seekes  my  sorrow  to  augment
With  fowle  reproach,  and  cruell  banishment.  
For  they,  to  whom  I  vsed  to  applie
The  faithfull  seruice  of  my  learned  skill,
The  goodly  off-spring  of  Ioues  progenie,
That  wont  the  world  with  famous  acts  to  fill;
Whose  liuing  praises  in  heroick  style,
It  is  my  cheife  posession  to  compyle.
They,  all  corrupted  through  the  rust  of  time,
That  doth  all  fairest  things  on  earth  deface,
Or  through  vnnoble  sloth,  or  sinfull  crime,
That  doth  degenerate  the  noble  race;
Haue  both  desire  of  worthie  deeds  forlorne,
And  name  of  learning  vtterly  doo  scorne.
Ne  doo  they  care  to  haue  the  auncestrie
Of  th'  old  Heroës  memorizde  anew,
Ne  doo  they  care  that  late  posteritie
Should  know  their  names,  or  speak  their  praises  dew:
But  die  forgot  from  whence  at  first  they  sprong,
As  they  themselues  shalbe  forgot  ere  long.
What  bootes  it  then  to  come  from  glorious
Forefathers,  or  to  haue  been  nobly  bredd?
What  oddes  twixt  Irus  and  old  Inachus,
Twixt  best  and  worst,  when  both  alike  are  dedd;
If  none  of  neither  mention  should  make,
Nor  out  of  dust  their  memories  awake?
Or  who  would  euer  care  to  doo  braue  deed,
Or  striue  in  vertue  others  to  excell;
If  none  should  yeeld  him  his  deserued  meed,
Due  praise,  that  is  the  spur  of  dooing  well?
For  if  good  were  not  praised  more  than  ill,
None  would  choose  goodnes  of  his  owne  freewill.
Therefore  the  nurse  of  vertue  I  am  hight,
And  golden  Trompet  of  eternitie,
That  lowly  thoughts  lift  vp  to  heauens  hight,
And  mortall  men  haue  powre  to  deifie:
Bacchus  and  Hercules  I  raisd  to  heauen,
And  Charlemaine,  amongst  the  Starris  seauen.
But  now  I  will  my  golden  Clarion  rend,
And  will  henceforth  immortalize  no  more:
Sith  I  no  more  find  worthie  to  commend
For  prize  of  value,  or  for  learned  lore:
For  noble  Peeres  whom  I  was  wont  to  raise,
Now  onely  seeke  for  pleasure,  nought  for  praise.
Their  great  reuenues  all  in  sumptuous  pride
They  spend,  that  nought  to  learning  they  may  spare;
And  the  rich  fee  which  Poets  wont  diuide,
Now  Parasites  and  Sycophants  doo  share:
Therefore  I  mourne  and  endlesse  sorrow  make,
Both  for  my  selfe  and  for  my  Sisters  sake.
With  that  she  lowdly  gan  to  waile  and  shrike,
And  from  her  eyes  a  sea  of  teares  did  powre,
And  all  her  sisters  with  compassion  like,
Did  more  increase  the  sharpnes  of  her  showre.
So  ended  she:  and  then  the  next  in  rew
Began  her  plaint,  as  doth  herein  ensew.
Urania.
What  wrath  of  Gods,  or  wicked  influence
Of  Starres  conspiring  wretched  men  t'  afflict,
Hath  powrd  on  earth  this  noyous  pestilence,
That  mortall  mindes  doth  inwardly  infect
With  loue  of  blindnesse  and  of  ignorance,
To  dwell  in  darknesse  without  souerance?  
What  difference  twixt  man  and  beast  is  left,
When  th'  heauenlie  light  of  knowledge  is  put  out,
And  th'  ornaments  of  wisdome  are  bereft?
Then  wandreth  he  in  error  and  in  doubt,
Vnweeting  of  the  danger  hee  is  in,
Through  fleshes  frailtie,  and  deceit  of  sin.
In  this  wide  world  in  which  they  wretches  stray,
It  is  the  onelie  comfort  which  they  haue,
It  is  their  light,  their  loadstarre  and  their  day;
But  hell,  and  darknesse  and  the  grislie  graue,
Is  ignorance,  the  enemie  of  grace,
That  mindes  of  men  borne  heauenlie  doth  debace.
Through  knowledge  we  behold  the  worlds  creation,
How  in  his  cradle  first  he  fostred  was:
And  iudge  of  Natures  cunning  operation,
How  things  she  formed  of  a  formlesse  mas:
By  knowledge  wee  doo  learne  our  selues  to  knowe,
And  what  to  man,  and  what  to  God  wee  owe.
From  hence  wee  mount  aloft  vnto  the  skie,
And  looke  into  the  Christall  firmament,
There  we  behold  the  heauens  great  Hierarchie,
The  Starres  pure  light,  the  Spheres  swift  mouement,
The  Spirites  and  Intelligences  fayre,
And  Angels  waighting  on  th'  Almighties  chayre.
And  there  with  humble  minde  and  high  insight,
Th'eternall  Makers  maiestie  wee  viewe,
His  loue,  his  truth,  his  glorie,  and  his  might,
And  mercie  more  than  mortall  men  can  vew.
O  soueraigne  Lord,  ô  soueraigne  happinesse
To  see  thee,  and  thy  mercie  measurelesse:
Such  happiness  haue  they,  that  do  embrace
The  precepts  of  my  heauenlie  discipline;
But  shame  and  sorrow  and  accursed  case
Haue  they,  that  scorne  the  schoole  of  arts  diuine,
And  banish  me,  which  do  professe  the  skill
To  make  men  heauenly  wise,  through  humbled  will.
How  euer  yet  they  mee  despise  and  spight,
I  feede  on  sweet  contentment  of  my  thought,
And  please  my  selfe  with  mine  owne  selfe-delight,
In  contemplation  of  things  heauenlie  wrought:
So  loathing  earth,  I  looke  vp  to  the  sky,
And  being  driuen  hence  I  thether  fly.
Thence  I  behold  the  miserie  of  men,
Which  want  the  blis  that  wisedom  would  them  breed,
And  like  brute  beasts  doo  lie  in  loathsome  den,
Of  ghostly  darkenes,  and  of  gastlie  dreed:
For  whom  I  mourne  and  for  my  selfe  complaine,
And  for  my  Sisters  eake  whom  they  disdaine.
With  that  shee  wept  and  waild  so  pityouslie,
As  if  her  eyes  had  been  two  springing  wells:
And  all  the  rest  her  sorrow  to  supplie,
Did  throw  forth  shrieks  and  cries  and  dreery  yells.
So  ended  shee,  and  then  the  next  in  rew,
Began  her  mournfull  plaint  as  doth  ensew.
Polyhymnia.
A  DOLEFULL  case  desires  a  dolefull  song,
Without  vaine  art  or  curious  complements,
And  squallid  Fortune  into  basenes  flong,
Doth  scorne  the  pride  of  wonted  ornaments.
Then  fittest  are  these  ragged  rimes  for  mee,
To  tell  my  sorrowes  that  exceeding  bee:  
For  the  sweet  numbers  and  melodious  measures,
With  which  I  wont  the  winged  words  to  tie,
And  make  a  tuneful  Diapase  of  pleasures,
Now  being  let  to  runne  at  libertie
By  those  which  haue  no  skill  to  rule  them  right,
Haue  now  quite  lost  their  naturall  delight.
Heapes  of  huge  words  vphoorded  hideously,
With  horrid  sound  though  hauing  little  sence,
They  thinke  to  be  chiefe  praise  of  Poëtry:
And  thereby  wanting  due  intelligence,
Haue  mard  the  face  of  goodly  Poësie,
And  made  a  monster  of  their  fantasie:
Whilom  in  ages  past  none  might  professe
But  Princes  and  high  Priests  that  secret  skill,
The  sacred  lawes  therein  they  wont  expresse,
And  with  deepe  Oracles  their  verses  fill:
Then  was  shee  held  in  soueraigne  dignitie,
And  made  the  noursling  of  Nobilitie.
But  now  nor  Prince  nor  Priest  doth  her  maintayne,
But  suffer  her  prophaned  for  to  bee
Of  the  base  vulgar,  that  with  hands  vncleane
Dares  to  pollute  her  hidden  mysterie,
And  treadeth  vnder  foote  hir  holie  things,
Which  was  the  care  of  Kesars  and  of  Kings.
One  onelie  liues,  her  ages  ornament,
And  myrrour  of  her  Makers  maiestie;
That  with  rich  bountie  and  deare  cherishment,
Supports  the  praise  of  noble  Poësie:
Ne  onelie  fauours  them  which  it  professe,
But  is  herselfe  a  peereles  Poëtresse.
Most  peereles  Prince,  most  peereles  Poëtresse,
The  true  Pandora  of  all  heauenly  graces,
Diuine  Elisa,  sacred  Emperesse:
Liue  she  for  euer,  and  her  royall  P'laces
Be  fild  with  praises  of  diuinest  wits,
That  her  eternize  with  their  heauenlie  writs.
Some  few  beside,  this  sacred  skill  esteme,
Admirers  of  her  glorious  excellence,
Which  being  lightned  with  her  beawties  beme,
Are  thereby  fild  with  happie  influence:
And  lifted  vp  aboue  the  worldes  gaze,
To  sing  with  Angels  her  immortall  praize.
But  all  the  rest  as  borne  of  saluage  brood,
And  hauing  beene  with  Acorns  alwaies  fed;
Can  no  whit  fauour  this  celestiall  food,
But  with  base  thoughts  are  into  blindnesse  led,
And  kept  from  looking  on  the  lightsome  day:
For  whome  I  waile  and  weepe  all  that  I  may.
Eftsoones  such  store  of  teares  she  forth  did  powre,
As  if  shee  all  to  water  would  haue  gone;
And  all  her  sisters  seeing  her  sad  stowre,
Did  weep  and  waile  and  make  exceeding  mone,
And  all  their  learned  instruments  did  breake:
The  rest  vntold  no  louing  tongue  can  speake.
F  I  N  I  S.

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