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Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 2
Ïîøóê

Ïåðåâ³ðêà ðîçì³ðó




William Shakespeare

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 552


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

The Rape of Lucrece

TO  THE
RIGHT  HONORABLE  HENRY  WRIOTHESLY,
Earl  of  Southampton,  and  Baron  of  Tichfield.
The  love  I  dedicate  to  your  lordship  is  without  end;  whereof  this  pamphlet,  without  beginning,  is  but  a  superfluous  moiety.  The  warrant  I  have  of  your  honourable  disposition,  not  the  worth  of  my  untutored  lines,  makes  it  assured  of  acceptance.  What  I  have  done  is  yours;  what  I  have  to  do  is  yours;  being  part  in  all  I  have,  devoted  yours.  Were  my  worth  greater,  my  duty  would  show  greater;  meantime,  as  it  is,  it  is  bound  to  your  lordship,  to  whom  I  wish  long  life,  still  lengthened  with  all  happiness.
Your  lordship's  in  all  duty,
WILLIAM  SHAKESPEARE.

The  Rape  of  Lucrece
The  Argument
Lucius  Tarquinius,  for  his  excessive  pride  surnamed  Superbus,  after  he  had  caused  his  own  father-in-law  Servius  Tullius  to  be  cruelly  murdered,  and,  contrary  to  the  Roman  laws  and  customs,  not  requiring  or  staying  for  the  people's  suffrages,  had  possessed  himself  of  the  kingdom,  went,  accompanied  with  his  sons  and  other  noblemen  of  Rome,  to  besiege  Ardea.  During  which  siege  the  principal  men  of  the  army  meeting  one  evening  at  the  tent  of  Sextus  Tarquinius,  the  king's  son,  in  their  discourses  after  supper  every  one  commended  the  virtues  of  his  own  wife:  among  whom  Collatinus  extolled  the  incomparable  chastity  of  his  wife  Lucretia.  In  that  pleasant  humour  they  posted  to  Rome;  and  intending,  by  their  secret  and  sudden  arrival,  to  make  trial  of  that  which  every  one  had  before  avouched,  only  Collatinus  finds  his  wife,  though  it  were  late  in  the  night,  spinning  amongst  her  maids:  the  other  ladies  were  all  found  dancing  and  revelling,  or  in  several  disports.  Whereupon  the  noblemen  yielded  Collatinus  the  victory,  and  his  wife  the  fame.  At  that  time  Sextus  Tarquinius  being  inflamed  with  Lucrece'  beauty,  yet  smothering  his  passions  for  the  present,  departed  with  the  rest  back  to  the  camp;  from  whence  he  shortly  after  privily  withdrew  himself,  and  was,  according  to  his  estate,  royally  entertained  and  lodged  by  Lucrece  at  Collatium.  The  same  night  he  treacherously  stealeth  into  her  chamber,  violently  ravished  her,  and  early  in  the  morning  speedeth  away.  Lucrece,  in  this  lamentable  plight,  hastily  dispatcheth  messengers,  one  to  Rome  for  her  father,  another  to  the  camp  for  Collatine.  They  came,  the  one  accompanied  with  Junius  Brutus,  the  other  with  Publius  Valerius;  and  finding  Lucrece  attired  in  mourning  habit,  demanded  the  cause  of  her  sorrow.  She,  first  taking  an  oath  of  them  for  her  revenge,  revealed  the  actor,  and  whole  manner  of  his  dealing,  and  withal  suddenly  stabbed  herself.  Which  done,  with  one  consent  they  all  vowed  to  root  out  the  whole  hated  family  of  the  Tarquins;  and  bearing  the  dead  body  to  Rome,  Brutus  acquainted  the  people  with  the  doer  and  manner  of  the  vile  deed,  with  a  bitter  invective  against  the  tyranny  of  the  king:  wherewith  the  people  were  so  moved,  that  with  one  consent  and  a  general  acclamation  the  Tarquins  were  all  exiled,  and  the  state  government  changed  from  kings  to  consuls.
FROM  the  besieged  Ardea  all  in  post,
Borne  by  the  trustless  wings  of  false  desire,
Lust-breathed  Tarquin  leaves  the  Roman  host,
And  to  Collatium  bears  the  lightless  fire
Which,  in  pale  embers  hid,  lurks  to  aspire
And  girdle  with  embracing  flames  the  waist
Of  Collatine's  fair  love,  Lucrece  the  chaste.
Haply  that  name  of  'chaste'  unhappily  set
This  bateless  edge  on  his  keen  appetite;
When  Collatine  unwisely  did  not  let
To  praise  the  clear  unmatched  red  and  white
Which  triumph'd  in  that  sky  of  his  delight,
Where  mortal  stars,  as  bright  as  heaven's  beauties,
With  pure  aspects  did  him  peculiar  duties.
For  he  the  night  before,  in  Tarquin's  tent,
Unlock'd  the  treasure  of  his  happy  state;
What  priceless  wealth  the  heavens  had  him  lent
In  the  possession  of  his  beauteous  mate;
Reckoning  his  fortune  at  such  high-proud  rate,
That  kings  might  be  espoused  to  more  fame,
But  king  nor  peer  to  such  a  peerless  dame.
O  happiness  enjoy'd  but  of  a  few!
And,  if  possess'd,  as  soon  decay'd  and  done
As  is  the  morning's  silver-melting  dew
Against  the  golden  splendor  of  the  sun!
An  expired  date,  cancell'd  ere  well  begun:
Honour  and  beauty,  in  the  owner's  arms,
Are  weakly  fortress'd  from  a  world  of  harms.
Beauty  itself  doth  of  itself  persuade
The  eyes  of  men  without  an  orator;
What  needeth  then  apologies  be  made,
To  set  forth  that  which  is  so  singular?
Or  why  is  Collatine  the  publisher
Of  that  rich  jewel  he  should  keep  unknown
From  thievish  ears,  because  it  is  his  own?
Perchance  his  boast  of  Lucrece'  sovereignty
Suggested  this  proud  issue  of  a  king;
For  by  our  ears  our  hearts  oft  tainted  be:
Perchance  that  envy  of  so  rich  a  thing,
Braving  compare,  disdainfully  did  sting
His  high-pitch'd  thoughts,  that  meaner  men  should  vaunt
That  golden  hap  which  their  superiors  want.
But  some  untimely  thought  did  instigate
His  all-too-timeless  speed,  if  none  of  those:
His  honour,  his  affairs,  his  friends,  his  state,
Neglected  all,  with  swift  intent  he  goes
To  quench  the  coal  which  in  his  liver  glows.
O  rash  false  heat,  wrapp'd  in  repentant  cold,
Thy  hasty  spring  still  blasts,  and  ne'er  grows  old!
When  at  Collatium  this  false  lord  arrived,
Well  was  he  welcomed  by  the  Roman  dame,
Within  whose  face  beauty  and  virtue  strived
Which  of  them  both  should  underprop  her  fame:
When  virtue  bragg'd,  beauty  would  blush  for  shame;
When  beauty  boasted  blushes,  in  despite
Virtue  would  stain  that  o'er  with  silver  white.
But  beauty,  in  that  white  intituled,
From  Venus'  doves  doth  challenge  that  fair  field:
Then  virtue  claims  from  beauty  beauty's  red,
Which  virtue  gave  the  golden  age  to  gild
Their  silver  cheeks,  and  call'd  it  then  their  shield;
Teaching  them  thus  to  use  it  in  the  fight,
When  shame  assail'd,  the  red  should  fence  the  white.
This  heraldry  in  Lucrece'  face  was  seen,
Argued  by  beauty's  red  and  virtue's  white
Of  either's  colour  was  the  other  queen,
Proving  from  world's  minority  their  right:
Yet  their  ambition  makes  them  still  to  fight;
The  sovereignty  of  either  being  so  great,
That  oft  they  interchange  each  other's  seat.
Their  silent  war  of  lilies  and  of  roses,
Which  Tarquin  view'd  in  her  fair  face's  field,
In  their  pure  ranks  his  traitor  eye  encloses;
Where,  lest  between  them  both  it  should  be  kill'd,
The  coward  captive  vanquished  doth  yield
To  those  two  armies  that  would  let  him  go,
Rather  than  triumph  in  so  false  a  foe.
Now  thinks  he  that  her  husband's  shallow  tongue,--
The  niggard  prodigal  that  praised  her  so,--
In  that  high  task  hath  done  her  beauty  wrong,
Which  far  exceeds  his  barren  skill  to  show:
Therefore  that  praise  which  Collatine  doth  owe
Enchanted  Tarquin  answers  with  surmise,
In  silent  wonder  of  still-gazing  eyes.
This  earthly  saint,  adored  by  this  devil,
Little  suspecteth  the  false  worshipper;
For  unstain'd  thoughts  do  seldom  dream  on  evil;
Birds  never  limed  no  secret  bushes  fear:
So  guiltless  she  securely  gives  good  cheer
And  reverend  welcome  to  her  princely  guest,
Whose  inward  ill  no  outward  harm  express'd:
For  that  he  colour'd  with  his  high  estate,
Hiding  base  sin  in  plaits  of  majesty;
That  nothing  in  him  seem'd  inordinate,
Save  something  too  much  wonder  of  his  eye,
Which,  having  all,  all  could  not  satisfy;
But,  poorly  rich,  so  wanteth  in  his  store,
That,  cloy'd  with  much,  he  pineth  still  for  more.
But  she,  that  never  coped  with  stranger  eyes,
Could  pick  no  meaning  from  their  parling  looks,
Nor  read  the  subtle-shining  secrecies
Writ  in  the  glassy  margents  of  such  books:
She  touch'd  no  unknown  baits,  nor  fear'd  no  hooks;
Nor  could  she  moralize  his  wanton  sight,
More  than  his  eyes  were  open'd  to  the  light.
He  stories  to  her  ears  her  husband's  fame,
Won  in  the  fields  of  fruitful  Italy;
And  decks  with  praises  Collatine's  high  name,
Made  glorious  by  his  manly  chivalry
With  bruised  arms  and  wreaths  of  victory:
Her  joy  with  heaved-up  hand  she  doth  express,
And,  wordless,  so  greets  heaven  for  his  success.
Far  from  the  purpose  of  his  coming  hither,
He  makes  excuses  for  his  being  there:
No  cloudy  show  of  stormy  blustering  weather
Doth  yet  in  his  fair  welkin  once  appear;
Till  sable  Night,  mother  of  Dread  and  Fear,
Upon  the  world  dim  darkness  doth  display,
And  in  her  vaulty  prison  stows  the  Day.
For  then  is  Tarquin  brought  unto  his  bed,
Intending  weariness  with  heavy  spright;
For,  after  supper,  long  he  questioned
With  modest  Lucrece,  and  wore  out  the  night:
Now  leaden  slumber  with  life's  strength  doth  fight;
And  every  one  to  rest  themselves  betake,
Save  thieves,  and  cares,  and  troubled  minds,  that  wake.
As  one  of  which  doth  Tarquin  lie  revolving
The  sundry  dangers  of  his  will's  obtaining;
Yet  ever  to  obtain  his  will  resolving,
Though  weak-built  hopes  persuade  him  to  abstaining:
Despair  to  gain  doth  traffic  oft  for  gaining;
And  when  great  treasure  is  the  meed  proposed,
Though  death  be  adjunct,  there's  no  death  supposed.
Those  that  much  covet  are  with  gain  so  fond,
For  what  they  have  not,  that  which  they  possess
They  scatter  and  unloose  it  from  their  bond,
And  so,  by  hoping  more,  they  have  but  less;
Or,  gaining  more,  the  profit  of  excess
Is  but  to  surfeit,  and  such  griefs  sustain,
That  they  prove  bankrupt  in  this  poor-rich  gain.
The  aim  of  all  is  but  to  nurse  the  life
With  honour,  wealth,  and  ease,  in  waning  age;
And  in  this  aim  there  is  such  thwarting  strife,
That  one  for  all,  or  all  for  one  we  gage;
As  life  for  honour  in  fell  battle's  rage;
Honour  for  wealth;  and  oft  that  wealth  doth  cost
The  death  of  all,  and  all  together  lost.
So  that  in  venturing  ill  we  leave  to  be
The  things  we  are  for  that  which  we  expect;
And  this  ambitious  foul  infirmity,
In  having  much,  torments  us  with  defect
Of  that  we  have:  so  then  we  do  neglect
The  thing  we  have;  and,  all  for  want  of  wit,
Make  something  nothing  by  augmenting  it.
Such  hazard  now  must  doting  Tarquin  make,
Pawning  his  honour  to  obtain  his  lust;
And  for  himself  himself  be  must  forsake:
Then  where  is  truth,  if  there  be  no  self-trust?
When  shall  he  think  to  find  a  stranger  just,
When  he  himself  himself  confounds,  betrays
To  slanderous  tongues  and  wretched  hateful  days?
Now  stole  upon  the  time  the  dead  of  night,
When  heavy  sleep  had  closed  up  mortal  eyes:
No  comfortable  star  did  lend  his  light,
No  noise  but  owls'  and  wolves'  death-boding  cries;
Now  serves  the  season  that  they  may  surprise
The  silly  lambs:  pure  thoughts  are  dead  and  still,
While  lust  and  murder  wake  to  stain  and  kill.
And  now  this  lustful  lord  leap'd  from  his  bed,
Throwing  his  mantle  rudely  o'er  his  arm;
Is  madly  toss'd  between  desire  and  dread;
Th'  one  sweetly  flatters,  th'  other  feareth  harm;
But  honest  fear,  bewitch'd  with  lust's  foul  charm,
Doth  too  too  oft  betake  him  to  retire,
Beaten  away  by  brain-sick  rude  desire.
His  falchion  on  a  flint  he  softly  smiteth,
That  from  the  cold  stone  sparks  of  fire  do  fly;
Whereat  a  waxen  torch  forthwith  he  lighteth,
Which  must  be  lode-star  to  his  lustful  eye;
And  to  the  flame  thus  speaks  advisedly,
'As  from  this  cold  flint  I  enforced  this  fire,
So  Lucrece  must  I  force  to  my  desire.'
Here  pale  with  fear  he  doth  premeditate
The  dangers  of  his  loathsome  enterprise,
And  in  his  inward  mind  he  doth  debate
What  following  sorrow  may  on  this  arise:
Then  looking  scornfully,  he  doth  despise
His  naked  armour  of  still-slaughter'd  lust,
And  justly  thus  controls  his  thoughts  unjust:
'Fair  torch,  burn  out  thy  light,  and  lend  it  not
To  darken  her  whose  light  excelleth  thine:
And  die,  unhallow'd  thoughts,  before  you  blot
With  your  uncleanness  that  which  is  divine;
Offer  pure  incense  to  so  pure  a  shrine:
Let  fair  humanity  abhor  the  deed
That  spots  and  stains  love's  modest  snow-white  weed.
'O  shame  to  knighthood  and  to  shining  arms!
O  foul  dishonour  to  my  household's  grave!
O  impious  act,  including  all  foul  harms!
A  martial  man  to  be  soft  fancy's  slave!
True  valour  still  a  true  respect  should  have;
Then  my  digression  is  so  vile,  so  base,
That  it  will  live  engraven  in  my  face.
'Yea,  though  I  die,  the  scandal  will  survive,
And  be  an  eye-sore  in  my  golden  coat;
Some  loathsome  dash  the  herald  will  contrive,
To  cipher  me  how  fondly  I  did  dote;
That  my  posterity,  shamed  with  the  note
Shall  curse  my  bones,  and  hold  it  for  no  sin
To  wish  that  I  their  father  had  not  bin.
'What  win  I,  if  I  gain  the  thing  I  seek?
A  dream,  a  breath,  a  froth  of  fleeting  joy.
Who  buys  a  minute's  mirth  to  wail  a  week?
Or  sells  eternity  to  get  a  toy?
For  one  sweet  grape  who  will  the  vine  destroy?
Or  what  fond  beggar,  but  to  touch  the  crown,
Would  with  the  sceptre  straight  be  strucken  down?
'If  Collatinus  dream  of  my  intent,
Will  he  not  wake,  and  in  a  desperate  rage
Post  hither,  this  vile  purpose  to  prevent?
This  siege  that  hath  engirt  his  marriage,
This  blur  to  youth,  this  sorrow  to  the  sage,
This  dying  virtue,  this  surviving  shame,
Whose  crime  will  bear  an  ever-during  blame?
'O,  what  excuse  can  my  invention  make,
When  thou  shalt  charge  me  with  so  black  a  deed?
Will  not  my  tongue  be  mute,  my  frail  joints  shake,
Mine  eyes  forego  their  light,  my  false  heart  bleed?
The  guilt  being  great,  the  fear  doth  still  exceed;
And  extreme  fear  can  neither  fight  nor  fly,
But  coward-like  with  trembling  terror  die.
'Had  Collatinus  kill'd  my  son  or  sire,
Or  lain  in  ambush  to  betray  my  life,
Or  were  he  not  my  dear  friend,  this  desire
Might  have  excuse  to  work  upon  his  wife,
As  in  revenge  or  quittal  of  such  strife:
But  as  he  is  my  kinsman,  my  dear  friend,
The  shame  and  fault  finds  no  excuse  nor  end.
'Shameful  it  is;  ay,  if  the  fact  be  known:
Hateful  it  is;  there  is  no  hate  in  loving:
I'll  beg  her  love;  but  she  is  own:
The  worst  is  but  denial  and  reproving:
My  will  is  strong,  past  reason's  weak  removing.
Who  fears  a  sentence  or  an  old  man's  saw
Shall  by  a  painted  cloth  be  kept  in  awe.'
Thus,  graceless,  holds  he  disputation
'Tween  frozen  conscience  and  hot-burning  will,
And  with  good  thoughts  make  dispensation,
Urging  the  worser  sense  for  vantage  still;
Which  in  a  moment  doth  confound  and  kill
All  pure  effects,  and  doth  so  far  proceed,
That  what  is  vile  shows  like  a  virtuous  deed.
Quoth  he,  'She  took  me  kindly  by  the  hand,
And  gazed  for  tidings  in  my  eager  eyes,
Fearing  some  hard  news  from  the  warlike  band,
Where  her  beloved  Collatinus  lies.
O,  how  her  fear  did  make  her  colour  rise!
First  red  as  roses  that  on  lawn  we  lay,
Then  white  as  lawn,  the  roses  took  away.
'And  how  her  hand,  in  my  hand  being  lock'd
Forced  it  to  tremble  with  her  loyal  fear!
Which  struck  her  sad,  and  then  it  faster  rock'd,
Until  her  husband's  welfare  she  did  hear;
Whereat  she  smiled  with  so  sweet  a  cheer,
That  had  Narcissus  seen  her  as  she  stood,
Self-love  had  never  drown'd  him  in  the  flood.
'Why  hunt  I  then  for  colour  or  excuses?
All  orators  are  dumb  when  beauty  pleadeth;
Poor  wretches  have  remorse  in  poor  abuses;
Love  thrives  not  in  the  heart  that  shadows  dreadeth:
Affection  is  my  captain,  and  he  leadeth;
And  when  his  gaudy  banner  is  display'd,
The  coward  fights  and  will  not  be  dismay'd.
'Then,  childish  fear,  avaunt!  debating,  die!
Respect  and  reason,  wait  on  wrinkled  age!
My  heart  shall  never  countermand  mine  eye:
Sad  pause  and  deep  regard  beseem  the  sage;
My  part  is  youth,  and  beats  these  from  the  stage:
Desire  my  pilot  is,  beauty  my  prize;
Then  who  fears  sinking  where  such  treasure  lies?'
As  corn  o'ergrown  by  weeds,  so  heedful  fear
Is  almost  choked  by  unresisted  lust.
Away  he  steals  with  open  listening  ear,
Full  of  foul  hope  and  full  of  fond  mistrust;
Both  which,  as  servitors  to  the  unjust,
So  cross  him  with  their  opposite  persuasion,
That  now  he  vows  a  league,  and  now  invasion.
Within  his  thought  her  heavenly  image  sits,
And  in  the  self-same  seat  sits  Collatine:
That  eye  which  looks  on  her  confounds  his  wits;
That  eye  which  him  beholds,  as  more  divine,
Unto  a  view  so  false  will  not  incline;
But  with  a  pure  appeal  seeks  to  the  heart,
Which  once  corrupted  takes  the  worser  part;
And  therein  heartens  up  his  servile  powers,
Who,  flatter'd  by  their  leader's  jocund  show,
Stuff  up  his  lust,  as  minutes  fill  up  hours;
And  as  their  captain,  so  their  pride  doth  grow,
Paying  more  slavish  tribute  than  they  owe.
By  reprobate  desire  thus  madly  led,
The  Roman  lord  marcheth  to  Lucrece'  bed.
The  locks  between  her  chamber  and  his  will,
Each  one  by  him  enforced,  retires  his  ward;
But,  as  they  open,  they  all  rate  his  ill,
Which  drives  the  creeping  thief  to  some  regard:
The  threshold  grates  the  door  to  have  him  heard;
Night-wandering  weasels  shriek  to  see  him  there;
They  fright  him,  yet  he  still  pursues  his  fear.
As  each  unwilling  portal  yields  him  way,
Through  little  vents  and  crannies  of  the  place
The  wind  wars  with  his  torch  to  make  him  stay,
And  blows  the  smoke  of  it  into  his  face,
Extinguishing  his  conduct  in  this  case;
But  his  hot  heart,  which  fond  desire  doth  scorch,
Puffs  forth  another  wind  that  fires  the  torch:
And  being  lighted,  by  the  light  he  spies
Lucretia's  glove,  wherein  her  needle  sticks:
He  takes  it  from  the  rushes  where  it  lies,
And  griping  it,  the  needle  his  finger  pricks;
As  who  should  say  'This  glove  to  wanton  tricks
Is  not  inured;  return  again  in  haste;
Thou  see'st  our  mistress'  ornaments  are  chaste.'
But  all  these  poor  forbiddings  could  not  stay  him;
He  in  the  worst  sense  construes  their  denial:
The  doors,  the  wind,  the  glove,  that  did  delay  him,
He  takes  for  accidental  things  of  trial;
Or  as  those  bars  which  stop  the  hourly  dial,
Who  with  a  lingering  slay  his  course  doth  let,
Till  every  minute  pays  the  hour  his  debt.
'So,  so,'  quoth  he,  'these  lets  attend  the  time,
Like  little  frosts  that  sometime  threat  the  spring,
To  add  a  more  rejoicing  to  the  prime,
And  give  the  sneaped  birds  more  cause  to  sing.
Pain  pays  the  income  of  each  precious  thing;
Huge  rocks,  high  winds,  strong  pirates,  shelves  and  sands,
The  merchant  fears,  ere  rich  at  home  he  lands.'
Now  is  he  come  unto  the  chamber-door,
That  shuts  him  from  the  heaven  of  his  thought,
Which  with  a  yielding  latch,  and  with  no  more,
Hath  barr'd  him  from  the  blessed  thing  be  sought.
So  from  himself  impiety  hath  wrought,
That  for  his  prey  to  pray  he  doth  begin,
As  if  the  heavens  should  countenance  his  sin.
But  in  the  midst  of  his  unfruitful  prayer,
Having  solicited  th'  eternal  power
That  his  foul  thoughts  might  compass  his  fair  fair,
And  they  would  stand  auspicious  to  the  hour,
Even  there  he  starts:  quoth  he,  'I  must  deflower:
The  powers  to  whom  I  pray  abhor  this  fact,
How  can  they  then  assist  me  in  the  act?
'Then  Love  and  Fortune  be  my  gods,  my  guide!
My  will  is  back'd  with  resolution:
Thoughts  are  but  dreams  till  their  effects  be  tried;
The  blackest  sin  is  clear'd  with  absolution;
Against  love's  fire  fear's  frost  hath  dissolution.
The  eye  of  heaven  is  out,  and  misty  night
Covers  the  shame  that  follows  sweet  delight.'
This  said,  his  guilty  hand  pluck'd  up  the  latch,
And  with  his  knee  the  door  he  opens  wide.
The  dove  sleeps  fast  that  this  night-owl  will  catch:
Thus  treason  works  ere  traitors  be  espied.
Who  sees  the  lurking  serpent  steps  aside;
But  she,  sound  sleeping,  fearing  no  such  thing,
Lies  at  the  mercy  of  his  mortal  sting.
Into  the  chamber  wickedly  he  stalks,
And  gazeth  on  her  yet  unstained  bed.
The  curtains  being  close,  about  he  walks,
Rolling  his  greedy  eyeballs  in  his  head:
By  their  high  treason  is  his  heart  misled;
Which  gives  the  watch-word  to  his  hand  full  soon
To  draw  the  cloud  that  hides  the  silver  moon.
Look,  as  the  fair  and  fiery-pointed  sun,
Rushing  from  forth  a  cloud,  bereaves  our  sight;
Even  so,  the  curtain  drawn,  his  eyes  begun
To  wink,  being  blinded  with  a  greater  light:
Whether  it  is  that  she  reflects  so  bright,
That  dazzleth  them,  or  else  some  shame  supposed;
But  blind  they  are,  and  keep  themselves  enclosed.
O,  had  they  in  that  darksome  prison  died!
Then  had  they  seen  the  period  of  their  ill;
Then  Collatine  again,  by  Lucrece'  side,
In  his  clear  bed  might  have  reposed  still:
But  they  must  ope,  this  blessed  league  to  kill;
And  holy-thoughted  Lucrece  to  their  sight
Must  sell  her  joy,  her  life,  her  world's  delight.
Her  lily  hand  her  rosy  cheek  lies  under,
Cozening  the  pillow  of  a  lawful  kiss;
Who,  therefore  angry,  seems  to  part  in  sunder,
Swelling  on  either  side  to  want  his  bliss;
Between  whose  hills  her  head  entombed  is:
Where,  like  a  virtuous  monument,  she  lies,
To  be  admired  of  lewd  unhallow'd  eyes.
Without  the  bed  her  other  fair  hand  was,
On  the  green  coverlet;  whose  perfect  white
Show'd  like  an  April  daisy  on  the  grass,
With  pearly  sweat,  resembling  dew  of  night.
Her  eyes,  like  marigolds,  had  sheathed  their  light,
And  canopied  in  darkness  sweetly  lay,
Till  they  might  open  to  adorn  the  day.
Her  hair,  like  golden  threads,  play'd  with  her  breath;
O  modest  wantons!  wanton  modesty!
Showing  life's  triumph  in  the  map  of  death,
And  death's  dim  look  in  life's  mortality:
Each  in  her  sleep  themselves  so  beautify,
As  if  between  them  twain  there  were  no  strife,
But  that  life  lived  in  death,  and  death  in  life.
Her  breasts,  like  ivory  globes  circled  with  blue,
A  pair  of  maiden  worlds  unconquered,
Save  of  their  lord  no  bearing  yoke  they  knew,
And  him  by  oath  they  truly  honoured.
These  worlds  in  Tarquin  new  ambition  bred;
Who,  like  a  foul  ursurper,  went  about
From  this  fair  throne  to  heave  the  owner  out.
What  could  he  see  but  mightily  he  noted?
What  did  he  note  but  strongly  he  desired?
What  he  beheld,  on  that  he  firmly  doted,
And  in  his  will  his  wilful  eye  he  tired.
With  more  than  admiration  he  admired
Her  azure  veins,  her  alabaster  skin,
Her  coral  lips,  her  snow-white  dimpled  chin.
As  the  grim  lion  fawneth  o'er  his  prey,
Sharp  hunger  by  the  conquest  satisfied,
So  o'er  this  sleeping  soul  doth  Tarquin  stay,
His  rage  of  lust  by  gazing  qualified;
Slack'd,  not  suppress'd;  for  standing  by  her  side,
His  eye,  which  late  this  mutiny  restrains,
Unto  a  greater  uproar  tempts  his  veins:
And  they,  like  straggling  slaves  for  pillage  fighting,
Obdurate  vassals  fell  exploits  effecting,
In  bloody  death  and  ravishment  delighting,
Nor  children's  tears  nor  mothers'  groans  respecting,
Swell  in  their  pride,  the  onset  still  expecting:
Anon  his  beating  heart,  alarum  striking,
Gives  the  hot  charge  and  bids  them  do  their  liking.
His  drumming  heart  cheers  up  his  burning  eye,
His  eye  commends  the  leading  to  his  hand;
His  hand,  as  proud  of  such  a  dignity,
Smoking  with  pride,  march'd  on  to  make  his  stand
On  her  bare  breast,  the  heart  of  all  her  land;
Whose  ranks  of  blue  veins,  as  his  hand  did  scale,
Left  there  round  turrets  destitute  and  pale.
They,  mustering  to  the  quiet  cabinet
Where  their  dear  governess  and  lady  lies,
Do  tell  her  she  is  dreadfully  beset,
And  fright  her  with  confusion  of  their  cries:
She,  much  amazed,  breaks  ope  her  lock'd-up  eyes,
Who,  peeping  forth  this  tumult  to  behold,
Are  by  his  flaming  torch  dimm'd  and  controll'd.
Imagine  her  as  one  in  dead  of  night
From  forth  dull  sleep  by  dreadful  fancy  waking,
That  thinks  she  hath  beheld  some  ghastly  sprite,
Whose  grim  aspect  sets  every  joint  a-shaking;
What  terror  or  'tis!  but  she,  in  worser  taking,
From  sleep  disturbed,  heedfully  doth  view
The  sight  which  makes  supposed  terror  true.
Wrapp'd  and  confounded  in  a  thousand  fears,
Like  to  a  new-kill'd  bird  she  trembling  lies;
She  dares  not  look;  yet,  winking,  there  appears
Quick-shifting  antics,  ugly  in  her  eyes:
Such  shadows  are  the  weak  brain's  forgeries;
Who,  angry  that  the  eyes  fly  from  their  lights,
In  darkness  daunts  them  with  more  dreadful  sights.
His  hand,  that  yet  remains  upon  her  breast,--
Rude  ram,  to  batter  such  an  ivory  wall!--
May  feel  her  heart-poor  citizen!--distress'd,
Wounding  itself  to  death,  rise  up  and  fall,
Beating  her  bulk,  that  his  hand  shakes  withal.
This  moves  in  him  more  rage  and  lesser  pity,
To  make  the  breach  and  enter  this  sweet  city.
First,  like  a  trumpet,  doth  his  tongue  begin
To  sound  a  parley  to  his  heartless  foe;
Who  o'er  the  white  sheet  peers  her  whiter  chin,
The  reason  of  this  rash  alarm  to  know,
Which  he  by  dumb  demeanor  seeks  to  show;
But  she  with  vehement  prayers  urgeth  still
Under  what  colour  he  commits  this  ill.
Thus  he  replies:  'The  colour  in  thy  face,
That  even  for  anger  makes  the  lily  pale,
And  the  red  rose  blush  at  her  own  disgrace,
Shall  plead  for  me  and  tell  my  loving  tale:
Under  that  colour  am  I  come  to  scale
Thy  never-conquer'd  fort:  the  fault  is  thine,
For  those  thine  eyes  betray  thee  unto  mine.
'Thus  I  forestall  thee,  if  thou  mean  to  chide:
Thy  beauty  hath  ensnared  thee  to  this  night,
Where  thou  with  patience  must  my  will  abide;
My  will  that  marks  thee  for  my  earth's  delight,
Which  I  to  conquer  sought  with  all  my  might;
But  as  reproof  and  reason  beat  it  dead,
By  thy  bright  beauty  was  it  newly  bred.
'I  see  what  crosses  my  attempt  will  bring;
I  know  what  thorns  the  growing  rose  defends;
I  think  the  honey  guarded  with  a  sting;
All  this  beforehand  counsel  comprehends:
But  will  is  deaf  and  hears  no  heedful  friends;
Only  he  hath  an  eye  to  gaze  on  beauty,
And  dotes  on  what  he  looks,  'gainst  law  or  duty.
'I  have  debated,  even  in  my  soul,
What  wrong,  what  shame,  what  sorrow  I  shall  breed;
But  nothing  can  affection's  course  control,
Or  stop  the  headlong  fury  of  his  speed.
I  know  repentant  tears  ensue  the  deed,
Reproach,  disdain,  and  deadly  enmity;
Yet  strive  I  to  embrace  mine  infamy.'
This  said,  he  shakes  aloft  his  Roman  blade,
Which,  like  a  falcon  towering  in  the  skies,
Coucheth  the  fowl  below  with  his  wings'  shade,
Whose  crooked  beak  threats  if  he  mount  he  dies:
So  under  his  insulting  falchion  lies
Harmless  Lucretia,  marking  what  he  tells
With  trembling  fear,  as  fowl  hear  falcon's  bells.
'Lucrece,'  quoth  he,'this  night  I  must  enjoy  thee:
If  thou  deny,  then  force  must  work  my  way,
For  in  thy  bed  I  purpose  to  destroy  thee:
That  done,  some  worthless  slave  of  thine  I'll  slay,
To  kill  thine  honour  with  thy  life's  decay;
And  in  thy  dead  arms  do  I  mean  to  place  him,
Swearing  I  slew  him,  seeing  thee  embrace  him.
'So  thy  surviving  husband  shall  remain
The  scornful  mark  of  every  open  eye;
Thy  kinsmen  hang  their  heads  at  this  disdain,
Thy  issue  blurr'd  with  nameless  bastardy:
And  thou,  the  author  of  their  obloquy,
Shalt  have  thy  trespass  cited  up  in  rhymes,
And  sung  by  children  in  succeeding  times.
'But  if  thou  yield,  I  rest  thy  secret  friend:
The  fault  unknown  is  as  a  thought  unacted;
A  little  harm  done  to  a  great  good  end
For  lawful  policy  remains  enacted.
The  poisonous  simple  sometimes  is  compacted
In  a  pure  compound;  being  so  applied,
His  venom  in  effect  is  purified.
'Then,  for  thy  husband  and  thy  children's  sake,
Tender  my  suit:  bequeath  not  to  their  lot
The  shame  that  from  them  no  device  can  take,
The  blemish  that  will  never  be  forgot;
Worse  than  a  slavish  wipe  or  birth-hour's  blot:
For  marks  descried  in  men's  nativity
Are  nature's  faults,  not  their  own  infamy.'
Here  with  a  cockatrice'  dead-killing  eye
He  rouseth  up  himself  and  makes  a  pause;
While  she,  the  picture  of  pure  piety,
Like  a  white  hind  under  the  gripe's  sharp  claws,
Pleads,  in  a  wilderness  where  are  no  laws,
To  the  rough  beast  that  knows  no  gentle  right,
Nor  aught  obeys  but  his  foul  appetite.
But  when  a  black-faced  cloud  the  world  doth  threat,
In  his  dim  mist  the  aspiring  mountains  hiding,
From  earth's  dark  womb  some  gentle  gust  doth  get,
Which  blows  these  pitchy  vapours  from  their  bidding,
Hindering  their  present  fall  by  this  dividing;
So  his  unhallow'd  haste  her  words  delays,
And  moody  Pluto  winks  while  Orpheus  plays.
Yet,  foul  night-waking  cat,  he  doth  but  dally,
While  in  his  hold-fast  foot  the  weak  mouse  panteth:
Her  sad  behavior  feeds  his  vulture  folly,
A  swallowing  gulf  that  even  in  plenty  wanteth:
His  ear  her  prayers  admits,  but  his  heart  granteth
No  penetrable  entrance  to  her  plaining:
Tears  harden  lust,  though  marble  wear  with  raining.
Her  pity-pleading  eyes  are  sadly  fix'd
In  the  remorseless  wrinkles  of  his  face;
Her  modest  eloquence  with  sighs  is  mix'd,
Which  to  her  oratory  adds  more  grace.
She  puts  the  period  often  from  his  place;
And  midst  the  sentence  so  her  accent  breaks,
That  twice  she  doth  begin  ere  once  she  speaks.
She  conjures  him  by  high  almighty  Jove,
By  knighthood,  gentry,  and  sweet  friendship's  oath,
By  her  untimely  tears,  her  husband's  love,
By  holy  human  law,  and  common  troth,
By  heaven  and  earth,  and  all  the  power  of  both,
That  to  his  borrow'd  bed  he  make  retire,
And  stoop  to  honour,  not  to  foul  desire.
Quoth  she,  'Reward  not  hospitality
With  such  black  payment  as  thou  hast  pretended;
Mud  not  the  fountain  that  gave  drink  to  thee;
Mar  not  the  thing  that  cannot  be  amended;
End  thy  ill  aim  before  thy  shoot  be  ended;
He  is  no  woodman  that  doth  bend  his  bow
To  strike  a  poor  unseasonable  doe.
'My  husband  is  thy  friend;  for  his  sake  spare  me:
Thyself  art  mighty;  for  thine  own  sake  leave  me:
Myself  a  weakling;  do  not  then  ensnare  me:
Thou  look'st  not  like  deceit;  do  not  deceive  me.
My  sighs,  like  whirlwinds,  labour  hence  to  heave  thee:
If  ever  man  were  moved  with  woman  moans,
Be  moved  with  my  tears,  my  sighs,  my  groans:
'All  which  together,  like  a  troubled  ocean,
Beat  at  thy  rocky  and  wreck-threatening  heart,
To  soften  it  with  their  continual  motion;
For  stones  dissolved  to  water  do  convert.
O,  if  no  harder  than  a  stone  thou  art,
Melt  at  my  tears,  and  be  compassionate!
Soft  pity  enters  at  an  iron  gate.
'In  Tarquin's  likeness  I  did  entertain  thee:
Hast  thou  put  on  his  shape  to  do  him  shame?
To  all  the  host  of  heaven  I  complain  me,
Thou  wrong'st  his  honour,  wound'st  his  princely  name.
Thou  art  not  what  thou  seem'st;  and  if  the  same,
Thou  seem'st  not  what  thou  art,  a  god,  a  king;
For  kings  like  gods  should  govern  everything.
'How  will  thy  shame  be  seeded  in  thine  age,
When  thus  thy  vices  bud  before  thy  spring!
If  in  thy  hope  thou  darest  do  such  outrage,
What  darest  thou  not  when  once  thou  art  a  king?
O,  be  remember'd,  no  outrageous  thing
From  vassal  actors  can  be  wiped  away;
Then  kings'  misdeeds  cannot  be  hid  in  clay.
'This  deed  will  make  thee  only  loved  for  fear;
But  happy  monarchs  still  are  fear'd  for  love:
With  foul  offenders  thou  perforce  must  bear,
When  they  in  thee  the  like  offences  prove:
If  but  for  fear  of  this,  thy  will  remove;
For  princes  are  the  glass,  the  school,  the  book,
Where  subjects'  eyes  do  learn,  do  read,  do  look.
'And  wilt  thou  be  the  school  where  Lust  shall  learn?
Must  he  in  thee  read  lectures  of  such  shame?
Wilt  thou  be  glass  wherein  it  shall  discern
Authority  for  sin,  warrant  for  blame,
To  privilege  dishonour  in  thy  name?
Thou  black'st  reproach  against  long-living  laud,
And  makest  fair  reputation  but  a  bawd.
'Hast  thou  command?  by  him  that  gave  it  thee,
From  a  pure  heart  command  thy  rebel  will:
Draw  not  thy  sword  to  guard  iniquity,
For  it  was  lent  thee  all  that  brood  to  kill.
Thy  princely  office  how  canst  thou  fulfil,
When,  pattern'd  by  thy  fault,  foul  sin  may  say,
He  learn'd  to  sin,  and  thou  didst  teach  the  way?
'Think  but  how  vile  a  spectacle  it  were,
To  view  thy  present  trespass  in  another.
Men's  faults  do  seldom  to  themselves  appear;
Their  own  transgressions  partially  they  smother:
This  guilt  would  seem  death-worthy  in  thy  brother.
O,  how  are  they  wrapp'd  in  with  infamies
That  from  their  own  misdeeds  askance  their  eyes!
'To  thee,  to  thee,  my  heaved-up  hands  appeal,
Not  to  seducing  lust,  thy  rash  relier:
I  sue  for  exiled  majesty's  repeal;
Let  him  return,  and  flattering  thoughts  retire:
His  true  respect  will  prison  false  desire,
And  wipe  the  dim  mist  from  thy  doting  eyne,
That  thou  shalt  see  thy  state  and  pity  mine.'
'Have  done,'  quoth  he:  'my  uncontrolled  tide
Turns  not,  but  swells  the  higher  by  this  let.
Small  lights  are  soon  blown  out,  huge  fires  abide,
And  with  the  wind  in  greater  fury  fret:
The  petty  streams  that  pay  a  daily  debt
To  their  salt  sovereign,  with  their  fresh  falls'  haste
Add  to  his  flow,  but  alter  not  his  taste.'
'Thou  art,'  quoth  she,  'a  sea,  a  sovereign  king;
And,  lo,  there  falls  into  thy  boundless  flood
Black  lust,  dishonour,  shame,  misgoverning,
Who  seek  to  stain  the  ocean  of  thy  blood.
If  all  these  pretty  ills  shall  change  thy  good,
Thy  sea  within  a  puddle's  womb  is  hearsed,
And  not  the  puddle  in  thy  sea  dispersed.
'So  shall  these  slaves  be  king,  and  thou  their  slave;
Thou  nobly  base,  they  basely  dignified;
Thou  their  fair  life,  and  they  thy  fouler  grave:
Thou  loathed  in  their  shame,  they  in  thy  pride:
The  lesser  thing  should  not  the  greater  hide;
The  cedar  stoops  not  to  the  base  shrub's  foot,
But  low  shrubs  wither  at  the  cedar's  root.
'So  let  thy  thoughts,  low  vassals  to  thy  state'--
No  more,'  quoth  he;  'by  heaven,  I  will  not  hear  thee:
Yield  to  my  love;  if  not,  enforced  hate,
Instead  of  love's  coy  touch,  shall  rudely  tear  thee;
That  done,  despitefully  I  mean  to  bear  thee
Unto  the  base  bed  of  some  rascal  groom,
To  be  thy  partner  in  this  shameful  doom.'
This  said,  he  sets  his  foot  upon  the  light,
For  light  and  lust  are  deadly  enemies:
Shame  folded  up  in  blind  concealing  night,
When  most  unseen,  then  most  doth  tyrannize.
The  wolf  hath  seized  his  prey,  the  poor  lamb  cries;
Till  with  her  own  white  fleece  her  voice  controll'd
Entombs  her  outcry  in  her  lips'  sweet  fold:
For  with  the  nightly  linen  that  she  wears
He  pens  her  piteous  clamours  in  her  head;
Cooling  his  hot  face  in  the  chastest  tears
That  ever  modest  eyes  with  sorrow  shed.
O,  that  prone  lust  should  stain  so  pure  a  bed!
The  spots  whereof  could  weeping  purify,
Her  tears  should  drop  on  them  perpetually.
But  she  hath  lost  a  dearer  thing  than  life,
And  he  hath  won  what  he  would  lose  again:
This  forced  league  doth  force  a  further  strife;
This  momentary  joy  breeds  months  of  pain;
This  hot  desire  converts  to  cold  disdain:
Pure  Chastity  is  rifled  of  her  store,
And  Lust,  the  thief,  far  poorer  than  before.
Look,  as  the  full-fed  hound  or  gorged  hawk,
Unapt  for  tender  smell  or  speedy  flight,
Make  slow  pursuit,  or  altogether  balk
The  prey  wherein  by  nature  they  delight;
So  surfeit-taking  Tarquin  fares  this  night:
His  taste  delicious,  in  digestion  souring,
Devours  his  will,  that  lived  by  foul  devouring.
O,  deeper  sin  than  bottomless  conceit
Can  comprehend  in  still  imagination!
Drunken  Desire  must  vomit  his  receipt,
Ere  he  can  see  his  own  abomination.
While  Lust  is  in  his  pride,  no  exclamation
Can  curb  his  heat  or  rein  his  rash  desire,
Till  like  a  jade  Self-will  himself  doth  tire.
And  then  with  lank  and  lean  discolour'd  cheek,
With  heavy  eye,  knit  brow,  and  strengthless  pace,
Feeble  Desire,  all  recreant,  poor,  and  meek,
Like  to  a  bankrupt  beggar  wails  his  case:
The  flesh  being  proud,  Desire  doth  fight  with  Grace,
For  there  it  revels;  and  when  that  decays,
The  guilty  rebel  for  remission  prays.
So  fares  it  with  this  faultful  lord  of  Rome,
Who  this  accomplishment  so  hotly  chased;
For  now  against  himself  he  sounds  this  doom,
That  through  the  length  of  times  he  stands  disgraced:
Besides,  his  soul's  fair  temple  is  defaced;
To  whose  weak  ruins  muster  troops  of  cares,
To  ask  the  spotted  princess  how  she  fares.
She  says,  her  subjects  with  foul  insurrection
Have  batter'd  down  her  consecrated  wall,
And  by  their  mortal  fault  brought  in  subjection
Her  immortality,  and  made  her  thrall
To  living  death  and  pain  perpetual:
Which  in  her  prescience  she  controlled  still,
But  her  foresight  could  not  forestall  their  will.
Even  in  this  thought  through  the  dark  night  he  stealeth,
A  captive  victor  that  hath  lost  in  gain;
Bearing  away  the  wound  that  nothing  healeth,
The  scar  that  will,  despite  of  cure,  remain;
Leaving  his  spoil  perplex'd  in  greater  pain.
She  bears  the  load  of  lust  he  left  behind,
And  he  the  burden  of  a  guilty  mind.
He  like  a  thievish  dog  creeps  sadly  thence;
She  like  a  wearied  lamb  lies  panting  there;
He  scowls  and  hates  himself  for  his  offence;
She,  desperate,  with  her  nails  her  flesh  doth  tear;
He  faintly  flies,  sneaking  with  guilty  fear;
She  stays,  exclaiming  on  the  direful  night;
He  runs,  and  chides  his  vanish'd,  loathed  delight.
He  thence  departs  a  heavy  convertite;
She  there  remains  a  hopeless  castaway;
He  in  his  speed  looks  for  the  morning  light;
She  prays  she  never  may  behold  the  day,
'For  day,'  quoth  she,  'nights  scapes  doth  open  lay,
And  my  true  eyes  have  never  practised  how
To  cloak  offences  with  a  cunning  brow.
'They  think  not  but  that  every  eye  can  see
The  same  disgrace  which  they  themselves  behold;
And  therefore  would  they  still  in  darkness  be,
To  have  their  unseen  sin  remain  untold;
For  they  their  guilt  with  weeping  will  unfold,
And  grave,  like  water  that  doth  eat  in  steel,
Upon  my  cheeks  what  helpless  shame  I  feel.'
Here  she  exclaims  against  repose  and  rest,
And  bids  her  eyes  hereafter  still  be  blind.
She  wakes  her  heart  by  beating  on  her  breast,
And  bids  it  leap  from  thence,  where  it  may  find
Some  purer  chest  to  close  so  pure  a  mind.
Frantic  with  grief  thus  breathes  she  forth  her  spite
Against  the  unseen  secrecy  of  night:
'O  comfort-killing  Night,  image  of  hell!
Dim  register  and  notary  of  shame!
Black  stage  for  tragedies  and  murders  fell!
Vast  sin-concealing  chaos!  nurse  of  blame!
Blind  muffled  bawd!  dark  harbour  for  defame!
Grim  cave  of  death!  whispering  conspirator
With  close-tongued  treason  and  the  ravisher!
'O  hateful,  vaporous,  and  foggy  Night!
Since  thou  art  guilty  of  my  cureless  crime,
Muster  thy  mists  to  meet  the  eastern  light,
Make  war  against  proportion'd  course  of  time;
Or  if  thou  wilt  permit  the  sun  to  climb
His  wonted  height,  yet  ere  he  go  to  bed,
Knit  poisonous  clouds  about  his  golden  head.
'With  rotten  damps  ravish  the  morning  air;
Let  their  exhaled  unwholesome  breaths  make  sick
The  life  of  purity,  the  supreme  fair,
Ere  he  arrive  his  weary  noon-tide  prick;
And  let  thy  misty  vapours  march  so  thick,
That  in  their  smoky  ranks  his  smother'd  light
May  set  at  noon  and  make  perpetual  night.
'Were  Tarquin  Night,  as  he  is  but  Night's  child,
The  silver-shining  queen  he  would  distain;
Her  twinkling  handmaids  too,  by  him  defiled,
Through  Night's  black  bosom  should  not  peep  again:
So  should  I  have  co-partners  in  my  pain;
And  fellowship  in  woe  doth  woe  assuage,
As  palmers'  chat  makes  short  their  pilgrimage.
'Where  now  I  have  no  one  to  blush  with  me,
To  cross  their  arms  and  hang  their  heads  with  mine,
To  mask  their  brows  and  hide  their  infamy;
But  I  alone  alone  must  sit  and  pine,
Seasoning  the  earth  with  showers  of  silver  brine,
Mingling  my  talk  with  tears,  my  grief  with  groans,
Poor  wasting  monuments  of  lasting  moans.
'O  Night,  thou  furnace  of  foul-reeking  smoke,
Let  not  the  jealous  Day  behold  that  face
Which  underneath  thy  black  all-hiding  cloak
Immodestly  lies  martyr'd  with  disgrace!
Keep  still  possession  of  thy  gloomy  place,
That  all  the  faults  which  in  thy  reign  are  made
May  likewise  be  sepulchred  in  thy  shade!
'Make  me  not  object  to  the  tell-tale  Day!
The  light  will  show,  character'd  in  my  brow,
The  story  of  sweet  chastity's  decay,
The  impious  breach  of  holy  wedlock  vow:
Yea  the  illiterate,  that  know  not  how
To  cipher  what  is  writ  in  learned  books,
Will  quote  my  loathsome  trespass  in  my  looks.
'The  nurse,  to  still  her  child,  will  tell  my  story,
And  fright  her  crying  babe  with  Tarquin's  name;
The  orator,  to  deck  his  oratory,
Will  couple  my  reproach  to  Tarquin's  shame;
Feast-finding  minstrels,  tuning  my  defame,
Will  tie  the  hearers  to  attend  each  line,
How  Tarquin  wronged  me,  I  Collatine.
'Let  my  good  name,  that  senseless  reputation,
For  Collatine's  dear  love  be  kept  unspotted:
If  that  be  made  a  theme  for  disputation,
The  branches  of  another  root  are  rotted,
And  undeserved  reproach  to  him  allotted
That  is  as  clear  from  this  attaint  of  mine
As  I,  ere  this,  was  pure  to  Collatine.
'O  unseen  shame!  invisible  disgrace!
O  unfelt  sore!  crest-wounding,  private  scar!
Reproach  is  stamp'd  in  Collatinus'  face,
And  Tarquin's  eye  may  read  the  mot  afar,
How  he  in  peace  is  wounded,  not  in  war.
Alas,  how  many  bear  such  shameful  blows,
Which  not  themselves,  but  he  that  gives  them  knows!
'If,  Collatine,  thine  honour  lay  in  me,
From  me  by  strong  assault  it  is  bereft.
My  honour  lost,  and  I,  a  drone-like  bee,
Have  no  perfection  of  my  summer  left,
But  robb'd  and  ransack'd  by  injurious  theft:
In  thy  weak  hive  a  wandering  wasp  hath  crept,
And  suck'd  the  honey  which  thy  chaste  bee  kept.
'Yet  am  I  guilty  of  thy  honour's  wrack;
Yet  for  thy  honour  did  I  entertain  him;
Coming  from  thee,  I  could  not  put  him  back,
For  it  had  been  dishonour  to  disdain  him:
Besides,  of  weariness  he  did  complain  him,
And  talk'd  of  virtue:  O  unlook'd-for  evil,
When  virtue  is  profaned  in  such  a  devil!
'Why  should  the  worm  intrude  the  maiden  bud?
Or  hateful  cuckoos  hatch  in  sparrows'  nests?
Or  toads  infect  fair  founts  with  venom  mud?
Or  tyrant  folly  lurk  in  gentle  breasts?
Or  kings  be  breakers  of  their  own  behests?
But  no  perfection  is  so  absolute,
That  some  impurity  doth  not  pollute.
'The  aged  man  that  coffers-up  his  gold
Is  plagued  with  cramps  and  gouts  and  painful  fits;
And  scarce  hath  eyes  his  treasure  to  behold,
But  like  still-pining  Tantalus  he  sits,
And  useless  barns  the  harvest  of  his  wits;
Having  no  other  pleasure  of  his  gain
But  torment  that  it  cannot  cure  his  pain.
'So  then  he  hath  it  when  he  cannot  use  it,
And  leaves  it  to  be  master'd  by  his  young;
Who  in  their  pride  do  presently  abuse  it:
Their  father  was  too  weak,  and  they  too  strong,
To  hold  their  cursed-blessed  fortune  long.
The  sweets  we  wish  for  turn  to  loathed  sours
Even  in  the  moment  that  we  call  them  ours.
'Unruly  blasts  wait  on  the  tender  spring;
Unwholesome  weeds  take  root  with  precious  flowers;
The  adder  hisses  where  the  sweet  birds  sing;
What  virtue  breeds  iniquity  devours:
We  have  no  good  that  we  can  say  is  ours,
But  ill-annexed  Opportunity
Or  kills  his  life  or  else  his  quality.
'O  Opportunity,  thy  guilt  is  great!
'Tis  thou  that  executest  the  traitor's  treason:
Thou  set'st  the  wolf  where  he  the  lamb  may  get;
Whoever  plots  the  sin,  thou  'point'st  the  season;
'Tis  thou  that  spurn'st  at  right,  at  law,  at  reason;
And  in  thy  shady  cell,  where  none  may  spy  him,
Sits  Sin,  to  seize  the  souls  that  wander  by  him.
'Thou  makest  the  vestal  violate  her  oath;
Thou  blow'st  the  fire  when  temperance  is  thaw'd;
Thou  smother'st  honesty,  thou  murder'st  troth;
Thou  foul  abettor!  thou  notorious  bawd!
Thou  plantest  scandal  and  displacest  laud:
Thou  ravisher,  thou  traitor,  thou  false  thief,
Thy  honey  turns  to  gall,  thy  joy  to  grief!
'Thy  secret  pleasure  turns  to  open  shame,
Thy  private  feasting  to  a  public  fast,
Thy  smoothing  titles  to  a  ragged  name,
Thy  sugar'd  tongue  to  bitter  wormwood  taste:
Thy  violent  vanities  can  never  last.
How  comes  it  then,  vile  Opportunity,
Being  so  bad,  such  numbers  seek  for  thee?
'When  wilt  thou  be  the  humble  suppliant's  friend,
And  bring  him  where  his  suit  may  be  obtain'd?
When  wilt  thou  sort  an  hour  great  strifes  to  end?
Or  free  that  soul  which  wretchedness  hath  chain'd?
Give  physic  to  the  sick,  ease  to  the  pain'd?
The  poor,  lame,  blind,  halt,  creep,  cry  out  for  thee;
But  they  ne'er  meet  with  Opportunity.
'The  patient  dies  while  the  physician  sleeps;
The  orphan  pines  while  the  oppressor  feeds;
Justice  is  feasting  while  the  widow  weeps;
Advice  is  sporting  while  infection  breeds:
Thou  grant'st  no  time  for  charitable  deeds:
Wrath,  envy,  treason,  rape,  and  murder's  rages,
Thy  heinous  hours  wait  on  them  as  their  pages.
'When  Truth  and  Virtue  have  to  do  with  thee,
A  thousand  crosses  keep  them  from  thy  aid:
They  buy  thy  help;  but  Sin  ne'er  gives  a  fee,
He  gratis  comes;  and  thou  art  well  appaid
As  well  to  hear  as  grant  what  he  hath  said.
My  Collatine  would  else  have  come  to  me
When  Tarquin  did,  but  he  was  stay'd  by  thee.
Guilty  thou  art  of  murder  and  of  theft,
Guilty  of  perjury  and  subornation,
Guilty  of  treason,  forgery,  and  shift,
Guilty  of  incest,  that  abomination;
An  accessary  by  thine  inclination
To  all  sins  past,  and  all  that  are  to  come,
From  the  creation  to  the  general  doom.
'Mis-shapen  Time,  copesmate  of  ugly  Night,
Swift  subtle  post,  carrier  of  grisly  care,
Eater  of  youth,  false  slave  to  false  delight,
Base  watch  of  woes,  sin's  pack-horse,  virtue's  snare;
Thou  nursest  all  and  murder'st  all  that  are:
O,  hear  me  then,  injurious,  shifting  Time!
Be  guilty  of  my  death,  since  of  my  crime.
'Why  hath  thy  servant,  Opportunity,
Betray'd  the  hours  thou  gavest  me  to  repose,
Cancell'd  my  fortunes,  and  enchained  me
To  endless  date  of  never-ending  woes?
Time's  office  is  to  fine  the  hate  of  foes;
To  eat  up  errors  by  opinion  bred,
Not  spend  the  dowry  of  a  lawful  bed.
'Time's  glory  is  to  calm  contending  kings,
To  unmask  falsehood  and  bring  truth  to  light,
To  stamp  the  seal  of  time  in  aged  things,
To  wake  the  morn  and  sentinel  the  night,
To  wrong  the  wronger  till  he  render  right,
To  ruinate  proud  buildings  with  thy  hours,
And  smear  with  dust  their  glittering  golden  towers;
'To  fill  with  worm-holes  stately  monuments,
To  feed  oblivion  with  decay  of  things,
To  blot  old  books  and  alter  their  contents,
To  pluck  the  quills  from  ancient  ravens'  wings,
To  dry  the  old  oak's  sap  and  cherish  springs,
To  spoil  antiquities  of  hammer'd  steel,
And  turn  the  giddy  round  of  Fortune's  wheel;
'To  show  the  beldam  daughters  of  her  daughter,
To  make  the  child  a  man,  the  man  a  child,
To  slay  the  tiger  that  doth  live  by  slaughter,
To  tame  the  unicorn  and  lion  wild,
To  mock  the  subtle  in  themselves  beguiled,
To  cheer  the  ploughman  with  increaseful  crops,
And  waste  huge  stones  with  little  water  drops.
'Why  work'st  thou  mischief  in  thy  pilgrimage,
Unless  thou  couldst  return  to  make  amends?
One  poor  retiring  minute  in  an  age
Would  purchase  thee  a  thousand  thousand  friends,
Lending  him  wit  that  to  bad  debtors  lends:
O,  this  dread  night,  wouldst  thou  one  hour  come  back,
I  could  prevent  this  storm  and  shun  thy  wrack!
'Thou  ceaseless  lackey  to  eternity,
With  some  mischance  cross  Tarquin  in  his  flight:
Devise  extremes  beyond  extremity,
To  make  him  curse  this  cursed  crimeful  night:
Let  ghastly  shadows  his  lewd  eyes  affright;
And  the  dire  thought  of  his  committed  evil
Shape  every  bush  a  hideous  shapeless  devil.
'Disturb  his  hours  of  rest  with  restless  trances,
Afflict  him  in  his  bed  with  bedrid  groans;
Let  there  bechance  him  pitiful  mischances,
To  make  him  moan;  but  pity  not  his  moans:
Stone  him  with  harden'd  hearts  harder  than  stones;
And  let  mild  women  to  him  lose  their  mildness,
Wilder  to  him  than  tigers  in  their  wildness.
'Let  him  have  time  to  tear  his  curled  hair,
Let  him  have  time  against  himself  to  rave,
Let  him  have  time  of  Time's  help  to  despair,
Let  him  have  time  to  live  a  loathed  slave,
Let  him  have  time  a  beggar's  orts  to  crave,
And  time  to  see  one  that  by  alms  doth  live
Disdain  to  him  disdained  scraps  to  give.
'Let  him  have  time  to  see  his  friends  his  foes,
And  merry  fools  to  mock  at  him  resort;
Let  him  have  time  to  mark  how  slow  time  goes
In  time  of  sorrow,  and  how  swift  and  short
His  time  of  folly  and  his  time  of  sport;
And  ever  let  his  unrecalling  crime
Have  time  to  wail  th'  abusing  of  his  time.
'O  Time,  thou  tutor  both  to  good  and  bad,
Teach  me  to  curse  him  that  thou  taught'st  this  ill!
At  his  own  shadow  let  the  thief  run  mad,
Himself  himself  seek  every  hour  to  kill!
Such  wretched  hands  such  wretched  blood  should  spill;
For  who  so  base  would  such  an  office  have
As  slanderous  death's-man  to  so  base  a  slave?
'The  baser  is  he,  coming  from  a  king,
To  shame  his  hope  with  deeds  degenerate:
The  mightier  man,  the  mightier  is  the  thing
That  makes  him  honour'd,  or  begets  him  hate;
For  greatest  scandal  waits  on  greatest  state.
The  moon  being  clouded  presently  is  miss'd,
But  little  stars  may  hide  them  when  they  list.
'The  crow  may  bathe  his  coal-black  wings  in  mire,
And  unperceived  fly  with  the  filth  away;
But  if  the  like  the  snow-white  swan  desire,
The  stain  upon  his  silver  down  will  stay.
Poor  grooms  are  sightless  night,  kings  glorious  day:
Gnats  are  unnoted  wheresoe'er  they  fly,
But  eagles  gazed  upon  with  every  eye.
'Out,  idle  words,  servants  to  shallow  fools!
Unprofitable  sounds,  weak  arbitrators!
Busy  yourselves  in  skill-contending  schools;
Debate  where  leisure  serves  with  dull  debaters;
To  trembling  clients  be  you  mediators:
For  me,  I  force  not  argument  a  straw,
Since  that  my  case  is  past  the  help  of  law.
'In  vain  I  rail  at  Opportunity,
At  Time,  at  Tarquin,  and  uncheerful  Night;
In  vain  I  cavil  with  mine  infamy,
In  vain  I  spurn  at  my  confirm'd  despite:
This  helpless  smoke  of  words  doth  me  no  right.
The  remedy  indeed  to  do  me  good
Is  to  let  forth  my  foul-defiled  blood.
'Poor  hand,  why  quiver'st  thou  at  this  decree?
Honour  thyself  to  rid  me  of  this  shame:
For  if  I  die,  my  honour  lives  in  thee;
But  if  I  live,  thou  livest  in  my  defame:
Since  thou  couldst  not  defend  thy  loyal  dame,
And  wast  afeard  to  scratch  her  wicked  foe,
Kill  both  thyself  and  her  for  yielding  so.'
This  said,  from  her  be-tumbled  couch  she  starteth,
To  find  some  desperate  instrument  of  death:
But  this  no  slaughterhouse  no  tool  imparteth
To  make  more  vent  for  passage  of  her  breath;
Which,  thronging  through  her  lips,  so  vanisheth
As  smoke  from  AEtna,  that  in  air  consumes,
Or  that  which  from  discharged  cannon  fumes.
'In  vain,'  quoth  she,  'I  live,  and  seek  in  vain
Some  happy  mean  to  end  a  hapless  life.
I  fear'd  by  Tarquin's  falchion  to  be  slain,
Yet  for  the  self-same  purpose  seek  a  knife:
But  when  I  fear'd  I  was  a  loyal  wife:
So  am  I  now:  O  no,  that  cannot  be;
Of  that  true  type  hath  Tarquin  rifled  me.
'O,  that  is  gone  for  which  I  sought  to  live,
And  therefore  now  I  need  not  fear  to  die.
To  clear  this  spot  by  death,  at  least  I  give
A  badge  of  fame  to  slander's  livery;
A  dying  life  to  living  infamy:
Poor  helpless  help,  the  treasure  stol'n  away,
To  burn  the  guiltless  casket  where  it  lay!
'Well,  well,  dear  Collatine,  thou  shalt  not  know
The  stained  taste  of  violated  troth;
I  will  not  wrong  thy  true  affection  so,
To  flatter  thee  with  an  infringed  oath;
This  bastard  graff  shall  never  come  to  growth:
He  shall  not  boast  who  did  thy  stock  pollute
That  thou  art  doting  father  of  his  fruit.
'Nor  shall  he  smile  at  thee  in  secret  thought,
Nor  laugh  with  his  companions  at  thy  state:
But  thou  shalt  know  thy  interest  was  not  bought
Basely  with  gold,  but  stol'n  from  forth  thy  gate.
For  me,  I  am  the  mistress  of  my  fate,
And  with  my  trespass  never  will  dispense,
Till  life  to  death  acquit  my  forced  offence.
'I  will  not  poison  thee  with  my  attaint,
Nor  fold  my  fault  in  cleanly-coin'd  excuses;
My  sable  ground  of  sin  I  will  not  paint,
To  hide  the  truth  of  this  false  night's  abuses:
My  tongue  shall  utter  all;  mine  eyes,  like  sluices,
As  from  a  mountain-spring  that  feeds  a  dale,
Shall  gush  pure  streams  to  purge  my  impure  tale.'
By  this,  lamenting  Philomel  had  ended
The  well-tuned  warble  of  her  nightly  sorrow,
And  solemn  night  with  slow  sad  gait  descended
To  ugly  hell;  when,  lo,  the  blushing  morrow
Lends  light  to  all  fair  eyes  that  light  will  borrow:
But  cloudy  Lucrece  shames  herself  to  see,
And  therefore  still  in  night  would  cloister'd  be.
Revealing  day  through  every  cranny  spies,
And  seems  to  point  her  out  where  she  sits  weeping;
To  whom  she  sobbing  speaks:  'O  eye  of  eyes,
Why  pry'st  thou  through  my  window?  leave  thy  peeping:
Mock  with  thy  tickling  beams  eyes  that  are  sleeping:
Brand  not  my  forehead  with  thy  piercing  light,
For  day  hath  nought  to  do  what's  done  by  night.'
Thus  cavils  she  with  every  thing  she  sees:
True  grief  is  fond  and  testy  as  a  child,
Who  wayward  once,  his  mood  with  nought  agrees:
Old  woes,  not  infant  sorrows,  bear  them  mild;
Continuance  tames  the  one;  the  other  wild,
Like  an  unpractised  swimmer  plunging  still,
With  too  much  labour  drowns  for  want  of  skill.
So  she,  deep-drenched  in  a  sea  of  care,
Holds  disputation  with  each  thing  she  views,
And  to  herself  all  sorrow  doth  compare;
No  object  but  her  passion's  strength  renews;
And  as  one  shifts,  another  straight  ensues:
Sometime  her  grief  is  dumb  and  hath  no  words;
Sometime  'tis  mad  and  too  much  talk  affords.
The  little  birds  that  tune  their  morning's  joy
Make  her  moans  mad  with  their  sweet  melody:
For  mirth  doth  search  the  bottom  of  annoy;
Sad  souls  are  slain  in  merry  company;
Grief  best  is  pleased  with  grief's  society:
True  sorrow  then  is  feelingly  sufficed
When  with  like  semblance  it  is  sympathized.
'Tis  double  death  to  drown  in  ken  of  shore;
He  ten  times  pines  that  pines  beholding  food;
To  see  the  salve  doth  make  the  wound  ache  more;
Great  grief  grieves  most  at  that  would  do  it  good;
Deep  woes  roll  forward  like  a  gentle  flood,
Who  being  stopp'd,  the  bounding  banks  o'erflows;
Grief  dallied  with  nor  law  nor  limit  knows.
'You  mocking-birds,'  quoth  she,  'your  tunes  entomb
Within  your  hollow-swelling  feather'd  breasts,
And  in  my  hearing  be  you  mute  and  dumb:
My  restless  discord  loves  no  stops  nor  rests;
A  woeful  hostess  brooks  not  merry  guests:
Relish  your  nimble  notes  to  pleasing  ears;
Distress  likes  dumps  when  time  is  kept  with  tears.
'Come,  Philomel,  that  sing'st  of  ravishment,
Make  thy  sad  grove  in  my  dishevell'd  hair:
As  the  dank  earth  weeps  at  thy  languishment,
So  I  at  each  sad  strain  will  strain  a  tear,
And  with  deep  groans  the  diapason  bear;
For  burden-wise  I'll  hum  on  Tarquin  still,
While  thou  on  Tereus  descant'st  better  skill.
'And  whiles  against  a  thorn  thou  bear'st  thy  part,
To  keep  thy  sharp  woes  waking,  wretched  I,
To  imitate  thee  well,  against  my  heart
Will  fix  a  sharp  knife  to  affright  mine  eye;
Who,  if  it  wink,  shall  thereon  fall  and  die.
These  means,  as  frets  upon  an  instrument,
Shall  tune  our  heart-strings  to  true  languishment.
'And  for,  poor  bird,  thou  sing'st  not  in  the  day,
As  shaming  any  eye  should  thee  behold,
Some  dark  deep  desert,  seated  from  the  way,
That  knows  not  parching  heat  nor  freezing  cold,
Will  we  find  out;  and  there  we  will  unfold
To  creatures  stern  sad  tunes,  to  change  their  kinds:
Since  men  prove  beasts,  let  beasts  bear  gentle  minds.'
As  the  poor  frighted  deer,  that  stands  at  gaze,
Wildly  determining  which  way  to  fly,
Or  one  encompass'd  with  a  winding  maze,
That  cannot  tread  the  way  out  readily;
So  with  herself  is  she  in  mutiny,
To  live  or  die  which  of  the  twain  were  better,
When  life  is  shamed,  and  death  reproach's  debtor.
'To  kill  myself,'  quoth  she,  'alack,  what  were  it,
But  with  my  body  my  poor  soul's  pollution?
They  that  lose  half  with  greater  patience  bear  it
Than  they  whose  whole  is  swallow'd  in  confusion.
That  mother  tries  a  merciless  conclusion
Who,  having  two  sweet  babes,  when  death  takes  one,
Will  slay  the  other  and  be  nurse  to  none.
'My  body  or  my  soul,  which  was  the  dearer,
When  the  one  pure,  the  other  made  divine?
Whose  love  of  either  to  myself  was  nearer,
When  both  were  kept  for  heaven  and  Collatine?
Ay  me!  the  bark  peel'd  from  the  lofty  pine,
His  leaves  will  wither  and  his  sap  decay;
So  must  my  soul,  her  bark  being  peel'd  away.
'Her  house  is  sack'd,  her  quiet  interrupted,
Her  mansion  batter'd  by  the  enemy;
Her  sacred  temple  spotted,  spoil'd,  corrupted,
Grossly  engirt  with  daring  infamy:
Then  let  it  not  be  call'd  impiety,
If  in  this  blemish'd  fort  I  make  some  hole
Through  which  I  may  convey  this  troubled  soul.
'Yet  die  I  will  not  till  my  Collatine
Have  heard  the  cause  of  my  untimely  death;
That  he  may  vow,  in  that  sad  hour  of  mine,
Revenge  on  him  that  made  me  stop  my  breath.
My  stained  blood  to  Tarquin  I'll  bequeath,
Which  by  him  tainted  shall  for  him  be  spent,
And  as  his  due  writ  in  my  testament.
'My  honour  I'll  bequeath  unto  the  knife
That  wounds  my  body  so  dishonoured.
'Tis  honour  to  deprive  dishonour'd  life;
The  one  will  live,  the  other  being  dead:
So  of  shame's  ashes  shall  my  fame  be  bred;
For  in  my  death  I  murder  shameful  scorn:
My  shame  so  dead,  mine  honour  is  new-born.
'Dear  lord  of  that  dear  jewel  I  have  lost,
What  legacy  shall  I  bequeath  to  thee?
My  resolution,  love,  shall  be  thy  boast,
By  whose  example  thou  revenged  mayest  be.
How  Tarquin  must  be  used,  read  it  in  me:
Myself,  thy  friend,  will  kill  myself,  thy  foe,
And  for  my  sake  serve  thou  false  Tarquin  so.
'This  brief  abridgement  of  my  will  I  make:
My  soul  and  body  to  the  skies  and  ground;
My  resolution,  husband,  do  thou  take;
Mine  honour  be  the  knife's  that  makes  my  wound;
My  shame  be  his  that  did  my  fame  confound;
And  all  my  fame  that  lives  disbursed  be
To  those  that  live,  and  think  no  shame  of  me.
'Thou,  Collatine,  shalt  oversee  this  will;
How  was  I  overseen  that  thou  shalt  see  it!
My  blood  shall  wash  the  slander  of  mine  ill;
My  life's  foul  deed,  my  life's  fair  end  shall  free  it.
Faint  not,  faint  heart,  but  stoutly  say  'So  be  it:'
Yield  to  my  hand;  my  hand  shall  conquer  thee:
Thou  dead,  both  die,  and  both  shall  victors  be.'
This  Plot  of  death  when  sadly  she  had  laid,
And  wiped  the  brinish  pearl  from  her  bright  eyes,
With  untuned  tongue  she  hoarsely  calls  her  maid,
Whose  swift  obedience  to  her  mistress  hies;
For  fleet-wing'd  duty  with  thought's  feathers  flies.
Poor  Lucrece'  cheeks  unto  her  maid  seem  so
As  winter  meads  when  sun  doth  melt  their  snow.
Her  mistress  she  doth  give  demure  good-morrow,
With  soft-slow  tongue,  true  mark  of  modesty,
And  sorts  a  sad  look  to  her  lady's  sorrow,
For  why  her  face  wore  sorrow's  livery;
But  durst  not  ask  of  her  audaciously
Why  her  two  suns  were  cloud-eclipsed  so,
Nor  why  her  fair  cheeks  over-wash'd  with  woe.
But  as  the  earth  doth  weep,  the  sun  being  set,
Each  flower  moisten'd  like  a  melting  eye;
Even  so  the  maid  with  swelling  drops  gan  wet
Her  circled  eyne,  enforced  by  sympathy
Of  those  fair  suns  set  in  her  mistress'  sky,
Who  in  a  salt-waved  ocean  quench  their  light,
Which  makes  the  maid  weep  like  the  dewy  night.
A  pretty  while  these  pretty  creatures  stand,
Like  ivory  conduits  coral  cisterns  filling:
One  justly  weeps;  the  other  takes  in  hand
No  cause,  but  company,  of  her  drops  spilling:
Their  gentle  sex  to  weep  are  often  willing;
Grieving  themselves  to  guess  at  others'  smarts,
And  then  they  drown  their  eyes  or  break  their  hearts.
For  men  have  marble,  women  waxen,  minds,
And  therefore  are  they  form'd  as  marble  will;
The  weak  oppress'd,  the  impression  of  strange  kinds
Is  form'd  in  them  by  force,  by  fraud,  or  skill:
Then  call  them  not  the  authors  of  their  ill,
No  more  than  wax  shall  be  accounted  evil
Wherein  is  stamp'd  the  semblance  of  a  devil.
Their  smoothness,  like  a  goodly  champaign  plain,
Lays  open  all  the  little  worms  that  creep;
In  men,  as  in  a  rough-grown  grove,  remain
Cave-keeping  evils  that  obscurely  sleep:
Through  crystal  walls  each  little  mote  will  peep:
Though  men  can  cover  crimes  with  bold  stern  looks,
Poor  women's  faces  are  their  own  fault's  books.
No  man  inveigh  against  the  wither'd  flower,
But  chide  rough  winter  that  the  flower  hath  kill'd:
Not  that  devour'd,  but  that  which  doth  devour,
Is  worthy  blame.  O,  let  it  not  be  hild
Poor  women's  faults,  that  they  are  so  fulfill'd
With  men's  abuses:  those  proud  lords,  to  blame,
Make  weak-made  women  tenants  to  their  shame.
The  precedent  whereof  in  Lucrece  view,
Assail'd  by  night  with  circumstances  strong
Of  present  death,  and  shame  that  might  ensue
By  that  her  death,  to  do  her  husband  wrong:
Such  danger  to  resistance  did  belong,
That  dying  fear  through  all  her  body  spread;
And  who  cannot  abuse  a  body  dead?
By  this,  mild  patience  bid  fair  Lucrece  speak
To  the  poor  counterfeit  of  her  complaining:
'My  girl,'  quoth  she,  'on  what  occasion  break
Those  tears  from  thee,  that  down  thy  cheeks  are
raining?
If  thou  dost  weep  for  grief  of  my  sustaining,
Know,  gentle  wench,  it  small  avails  my  mood:
If  tears  could  help,  mine  own  would  do  me  good.
'But  tell  me,  girl,  when  went'--and  there  she  stay'd
Till  after  a  deep  groan--'Tarquin  from  hence?'
'Madam,  ere  I  was  up,'  replied  the  maid,
'The  more  to  blame  my  sluggard  negligence:
Yet  with  the  fault  I  thus  far  can  dispense;
Myself  was  stirring  ere  the  break  of  day,
And,  ere  I  rose,  was  Tarquin  gone  away.
'But,  lady,  if  your  maid  may  be  so  bold,
She  would  request  to  know  your  heaviness.'
'O,  peace!'  quoth  Lucrece:  'if  it  should  be  told,
The  repetition  cannot  make  it  less;
For  more  it  is  than  I  can  well  express:
And  that  deep  torture  may  be  call'd  a  hell
When  more  is  felt  than  one  hath  power  to  tell.
'Go,  get  me  hither  paper,  ink,  and  pen:
Yet  save  that  labour,  for  I  have  them  here.
What  should  I  say?  One  of  my  husband's  men
Bid  thou  be  ready,  by  and  by,  to  bear
A  letter  to  my  lord,  my  love,  my  dear;
Bid  him  with  speed  prepare  to  carry  it;
The  cause  craves  haste,  and  it  will  soon  be  writ.'
Her  maid  is  gone,  and  she  prepares  to  write,
First  hovering  o'er  the  paper  with  her  quill:
Conceit  and  grief  an  eager  combat  fight;
What  wit  sets  down  is  blotted  straight  with  will;
This  is  too  curious-good,  this  blunt  and  ill:
Much  like  a  press  of  people  at  a  door,
Throng  her  inventions,  which  shall  go  before.
At  last  she  thus  begins:  'Thou  worthy  lord
Of  that  unworthy  wife  that  greeteth  thee,
Health  to  thy  person!  next  vouchsafe  t'  afford--
If  ever,  love,  thy  Lucrece  thou  wilt  see--
Some  present  speed  to  come  and  visit  me.
So,  I  commend  me  from  our  house  in  grief:
My  woes  are  tedious,  though  my  words  are  brief.'
Here  folds  she  up  the  tenor  of  her  woe,
Her  certain  sorrow  writ  uncertainly.
By  this  short  schedule  Collatine  may  know
Her  grief,  but  not  her  grief's  true  quality:
She  dares  not  thereof  make  discovery,
Lest  he  should  hold  it  her  own  gross  abuse,
Ere  she  with  blood  had  stain'd  her  stain'd  excuse.
Besides,  the  life  and  feeling  of  her  passion
She  hoards,  to  spend  when  he  is  by  to  hear  her:
When  sighs  and  groans  and  tears  may  grace  the  fashion
Of  her  disgrace,  the  better  so  to  clear  her
From  that  suspicion  which  the  world  might  bear  her.
To  shun  this  blot,  she  would  not  blot  the  letter
With  words,  till  action  might  become  them  better.
To  see  sad  sights  moves  more  than  hear  them  told;
For  then  eye  interprets  to  the  ear
The  heavy  motion  that  it  doth  behold,
When  every  part  a  part  of  woe  doth  bear.
'Tis  but  a  part  of  sorrow  that  we  hear:
Deep  sounds  make  lesser  noise  than  shallow  fords,
And  sorrow  ebbs,  being  blown  with  wind  of  words.
Her  letter  now  is  seal'd,  and  on  it  writ
'At  Ardea  to  my  lord  with  more  than  haste.'
The  post  attends,  and  she  delivers  it,
Charging  the  sour-faced  groom  to  hie  as  fast
As  lagging  fowls  before  the  northern  blast:
Speed  more  than  speed  but  dull  and  slow  she  deems:
Extremity  still  urgeth  such  extremes.
The  homely  villain  court'sies  to  her  low;
And,  blushing  on  her,  with  a  steadfast  eye
Receives  the  scroll  without  or  yea  or  no,
And  forth  with  bashful  innocence  doth  hie.
But  they  whose  guilt  within  their  bosoms  lie
Imagine  every  eye  beholds  their  blame;
For  Lucrece  thought  he  blush'd  to  her  see  shame:
When,  silly  groom!  God  wot,  it  was  defect
Of  spirit,  Life,  and  bold  audacity.
Such  harmless  creatures  have  a  true  respect
To  talk  in  deeds,  while  others  saucily
Promise  more  speed,  but  do  it  leisurely:
Even  so  this  pattern  of  the  worn-out  age
Pawn'd  honest  looks,  but  laid  no  words  to  gage.
His  kindled  duty  kindled  her  mistrust,
That  two  red  fires  in  both  their  faces  blazed;
She  thought  he  blush'd,  as  knowing  Tarquin's  lust,
And,  blushing  with  him,  wistly  on  him  gazed;
Her  earnest  eye  did  make  him  more  amazed:
The  more  she  saw  the  blood  his  cheeks  replenish,
The  more  she  thought  he  spied  in  her  some  blemish.
But  long  she  thinks  till  he  return  again,
And  yet  the  duteous  vassal  scarce  is  gone.
The  weary  time  she  cannot  entertain,
For  now  'tis  stale  to  sigh,  to  weep,  and  groan:
So  woe  hath  wearied  woe,  moan  tired  moan,
That  she  her  plaints  a  little  while  doth  stay,
Pausing  for  means  to  mourn  some  newer  way.
At  last  she  calls  to  mind  where  hangs  a  piece
Of  skilful  painting,  made  for  Priam's  Troy:
Before  the  which  is  drawn  the  power  of  Greece.
For  Helen's  rape  the  city  to  destroy,
Threatening  cloud-kissing  Ilion  with  annoy;
Which  the  conceited  painter  drew  so  proud,
As  heaven,  it  seem'd,  to  kiss  the  turrets  bow'd.
A  thousand  lamentable  objects  there,
In  scorn  of  nature,  art  gave  lifeless  life:
Many  a  dry  drop  seem'd  a  weeping  tear,
Shed  for  the  slaughter'd  husband  by  the  wife:
The  red  blood  reek'd,  to  show  the  painter's  strife;
And  dying  eyes  gleam'd  forth  their  ashy  lights,
Like  dying  coals  burnt  out  in  tedious  nights.
There  might  you  see  the  labouring  pioner
Begrimed  with  sweat,  and  smeared  all  with  dust;
And  from  the  towers  of  Troy  there  would  appear
The  very  eyes  of  men  through  loop-holes  thrust,
Gazing  upon  the  Greeks  with  little  lust:
Such  sweet  observance  in  this  work  was  had,
That  one  might  see  those  far-off  eyes  look  sad.
In  great  commanders  grace  and  majesty
You  might  behold,  triumphing  in  their  faces;
In  youth,  quick  bearing  and  dexterity;
Pale  cowards,  marching  on  with  trembling  paces;
Which  heartless  peasants  did  so  well  resemble,
That  one  would  swear  he  saw  them  quake  and  tremble.
In  Ajax  and  Ulysses,  O,  what  art
Of  physiognomy  might  one  behold!
The  face  of  either  cipher'd  either's  heart;
Their  face  their  manners  most  expressly  told:
In  Ajax'  eyes  blu

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