Colin
Clouts
Come
Home
Againe
The
shepheards
boy
(best
knowen
by
that
name)
That
after
Tityrus
first
sung
his
lay,
Laies
of
sweet
loue,
without
rebuke
or
blame,
Sate
(as
his
custome
was)
vpon
a
day,
Charming
his
oaten
pipe
vnto
his
peres,
The
shepheard
swaines,
that
did
about
him
play:
Who
all
the
while
with
greedie
listfull
eares,
Did
stand
astonisht
at
his
curious
skill,
Like
hartlesse
deare,
dismayed
with
thunders
sound.
At
last
when
as
he
piped
had
his
fill,
He
rested
him:
and
sitting
then
around,
One
of
those
groomes
(a
iolly
groome
was
he,
As
euer
piped
on
an
oaten
reed,
And
lou'd
this
shepheard
dearest
in
degree,
Hight
Hobbinol)
gan
thus
to
him
areed.
Colin
my
liefe,
my
life,
how
great
a
losse
Had
all
the
shepheards
nation
by
thy
lacke?
And
I
poore
swaine
of
many
greatest
crosse:
That
sith
thy
Muse
first
since
thy
turning
backe
Was
heard
to
sound
as
she
was
wont
on
hye,
Hast
made
vs
all
so
blessed
and
so
blythe.
Whilest
thou
wast
hence,
all
dead
in
dole
did
lye:
The
woods
were
heard
to
waile
full
many
a
sythe,
And
all
their
birds
with
silence
to
complaine:
The
fields
with
faded
flowers
did
seem
to
mourne,
And
all
their
flocks
from
feeding
to
refraine:
The
running
waters
wept
for
thy
returne,
And
all
their
fish
with
langour
did
lament:
But
now
both
woods
and
fields,
and
floods
reuiue,
Sith
thou
art
come,
their
cause
of
meriment,
That
vs
late
dead,
hast
made
againe
aliue:
But
were
it
not
too
painfull
to
repeat
The
passed
fortunes,
which
to
thee
befell
In
thy
late
voyage,
we
thee
would
entreat,
Now
at
thy
leisure
them
to
vs
to
tell.
To
whom
the
shepheard
gently
answered
thus,
Hobbin
thou
temptest
me
to
that
I
couet:
For
of
good
passed
newly
to
discus,
By
dubble
vsurie
doth
twise
renew
it.
And
since
I
saw
that
Angels
blessed
eie,
Her
worlds
bright
sun,
her
heauens
fairest
light,
My
mind
full
of
my
thoughts
satietie,
Doth
feed
on
sweet
contentment
of
that
sight:
Since
that
same
day
in
nought
I
take
delight,
Ne
feeling
haue
in
any
earthly
pleasure,
But
in
remembrance
of
that
glorious
bright,
My
lifes
sole
blisse,
my
hearts
eternall
threasure.
Wake
then
my
pipe,
my
sleepie
Muse
awake,
Till
I
haue
told
her
praises
lasting
long:
Hobbin
desires,
thou
maist
it
not
forsake,
Harke
then
ye
iolly
shepheards
to
my
song.
With
that
they
all
gan
throng
about
him
neare,
With
hungrie
eares
to
heare
his
harmonie:
The
whiles
their
flocks
deuoyd
of
dangers
feare,
Did
round
about
them
feed
at
libertie.
One
day
(quoth
he)
I
sat,
(as
was
my
trade)
Vnder
the
foot
of
Mole
that
mountaine
hore,
Keeping
my
sheepe
amongst
the
cooly
shade,
Of
the
greene
alders
by
the
Mullaes
shore:
There
a
straunge
shepherd
chaunst
to
find
me
out,
Whether
allured
with
my
pipes
delight,
Whose
pleasing
sound
yshrilled
far
about,
Or
thither
led
by
chaunce,
I
know
not
right:
VVhom
when
I
asked
from
what
place
he
came,
And
how
he
hight,
himselfe
he
did
ycleepe,
The
shepheard
of
the
Ocean
by
name,
And
said
he
came
far
from
the
main-sea
deepe.
He
sitting
me
beside
in
that
same
shade,
Prouoked
me
to
plaie
some
pleasant
fit,
And
when
he
heard
the
musicke
which
I
made,
He
found
himselfe
full
greatly
pleased
at
it:
Yet
æmuling
my
pipe,
he
tooke
in
hond
My
pipe
before
that
æmuled
of
many,
And
plaid
thereon;
(for
well
that
skill
he
cond)
Himselfe
as
skilfull
in
that
art
as
any.
He
pip'd,
I
sung;
and
when
he
sung,
I
piped,
By
chaunge
of
turnes,
each
making
other
mery,
Neither
enuying
other,
nor
enuied,
So
piped
we,
vntill
we
both
were
weary,
There
interrupting
him,
a
bonie
swaine,
That
Cuddy
hight,
him
thus
atweene
bespake:
And
should
it
not
thy
ready
course
restraine,
I
would
request
thee
Colin,
for
my
sake,
To
tell
what
thou
didst
sing,
when
he
did
plaie.
For
well
I
weene
it
worth
recounting
was,
VVhether
it
were
some
hymne,
or
morall
laie,
Or
carol
made
to
praise
thy
loued
lasse.
Nor
of
my
loue,
nor
of
my
losse
(quoth
he)
I
then
did
sing,
as
then
occasion
fell:
For
loue
had
me
forlorne,
forlorne
of
me,
That
made
me
in
that
desart
chose
to
dwell.
But
of
my
riuer
Bregogs
loue
I
soong,
VVhich
to
the
shiny
Mulla
he
did
beare,
And
yet
doth
beare,
and
euer
will,
so
long
As
water
doth
within
his
bancks
appeare.
Of
fellowship
(said
then
that
bony
Boy)
Record
to
vs
that
louely
lay
againe:
The
staie
whereof,
shall
nought
these
eares
annoy,
VVho
all
that
Colin
makes,
do
couet
faine.
Heare
then
(quoth
he)
the
tenor
of
my
tale,
In
sort
as
I
it
to
that
shepheard
told:
No
leasing
new,
nor
Grandams
fable
stale,
But
auncient
truth
confirm'd
with
credence
old.
Old
father
Mole,
(Mole
hight
that
mountain
gray
That
walls
the
Northside
of
Armulla
dale)
He
had
a
daughter
fresh
as
floure
of
May,
VVhich
gaue
that
name
vnto
that
pleasant
vale;
Mulla
the
daughter
of
oldMole,
so
hight
The
Nimph,
which
of
that
water
course
has
charge,
That
springing
out
of
Mole,
doth
run
downe
right
to
Butteuant
where
spreding
forth
at
large,
It
giueth
name
vnto
that
auncient
Cittie,
VVhich
Kilnemullah
cleped
is
of
old:
VVhose
ragged
ruines
breed
great
ruth
and
pittie,
To
travailers,
which
it
from
far
behold.
Full
faine
she
lou'd,
and
was
belou'd
full
faine,
Of
her
owne
brother
riuer,
Bregog
hight,
So
hight
because
of
this
deceitfull
traine,
VVhich
he
with
Mulla
wrought
to
win
delight.
But
her
old
sire
more
carefull
of
her
good,
And
meaning
her
much
better
to
preferre,
Did
thinke
to
match
her
with
the
neighbour
flood,
VVhich
Allo
hight,
Broad
water
called
farre:
And
wrought
so
well
with
his
continuall
paine,
That
he
that
riuer
for
his
daughter
wonne:
The
dowre
agreed,
the
day
assigned
plaine,
The
place
appointed
where
it
should
be
doone.
Nath
lesse
the
Nymph
her
former
liking
held;
For
loue
will
not
be
drawne,
but
must
be
ledde,
And
Bregog
did
so
well
her
fancie
weld,
That
her
good
will
he
got
her
first
to
wedde.
But
for
her
father
sitting
still
on
hie,
Did
warily
still
watch
which
way
she
went,
And
eke
from
far
obseru'd
with
iealous
eie,
VVhich
way
his
course
the
wanton
Bregog
bent,
Him
to
deceiue
for
all
his
watchfull
ward,
The
wily
louer
did
deuise
this
slight:
First
into
many
parts
his
streame
he
shar'd,
That
whilest
the
one
was
watcht,
the
other
might
Passe
vnespide
to
meete
her
by
the
way;
And
then
besides,
those
little
streames
so
broken
He
vnder
ground
so
closely
did
conuay,
That
of
their
passage
doth
appeare
no
token,
Till
they
into
the
Mullaes
water
slide.
So
secretly
did
he
his
loue
enioy:
Yet
not
so
secret,
but
it
was
descried,
And
told
her
father
by
a
shepheards
boy.
Who
wondrous
wroth
for
that
so
foule
despight,
In
great
auenge
did
roll
downe
from
his
hill
Huge
mightie
stones,
the
which
encomber
might
His
passage,
and
his
water-courses
spill.
So
of
a
Riuer,
which
he
was
of
old,
He
none
was
made,
but
scattred
all
to
nought,
And
lost
emong
those
rocks
into
him
rold,
Did
lose
his
name:
so
deare
his
loue
he
bought.
Which
hauing
said,
him
Thestylis
bespake,
Now
by
my
life
this
was
a
mery
lay:
Worthie
of
Colin
selfe,
that
did
it
make.
But
read
now
eke
of
friendship
I
thee
pray,
What
dittie
did
that
other
shepheard
sing?
For
I
do
couet
most
the
same
to
heare,
As
men
vse
most
to
couet
forreine
thing
That
shall
I
eke
(quoth
he)
to
you
declare.
His
song
was
all
a
lamentable
lay,
Of
great
vnkindnesse,
and
of
vsage
hard,
Of
Cynthia
the
Ladie
of
the
sea,
Which
from
her
presence
faultlesse
him
debard.
And
euer
and
anon
with
singults
rife,
He
cryed
out,
to
make
his
vndersong
Ah
my
loues
queene,
and
goddesse
of
my
life,
Who
shall
me
pittie,
when
thou
doest
me
wrong?
Then
gan
a
gentle
bonylasse
to
speake,
That
Marin
hight,
Right
well
he
sure
did
plaine:
That
could
great
Cynthiaes
sore
displeasure
breake,
And
moue
to
take
him
to
her
grace
againe.
But
tell
on
further
Colin,
as
befell
Twixt
him
and
thee,
that
thee
did
hence
dissuade.
When
thus
our
pipes
we
both
had
wearied
well,
(Quoth
he)
and
each
an
end
of
singing
made,
He
gan
to
cast
great
lyking
to
my
lore,
And
great
dislyking
to
my
lucklesse
lot:
That
banisht
had
my
selfe,
like
wight
forlore,
Into
that
waste,
where
I
was
quite
forgot.
The
which
to
leaue,
thenceforth
he
counseld
mee,
Vnmeet
for
man,
in
whom
was
ought
regardfull,
And
wend
with
him,
his
Cynthia
to
see:
Whose
grace
was
great,
&
bounty
most
rewardful.
Besides
her
peerlesse
skill
in
making
well
And
all
the
ornaments
of
wondrous
wit,
Such
as
all
womankynd
did
far
excell:
Such
as
the
world
admyr'd
and
praised
it:
So
what
with
hope
of
good,
and
hate
of
ill,
He
me
perswaded
forth
with
him
to
fare.
Nought
tooke
I
with
me,
but
mine
oaten
quill:
Small
needments
else
need
shepheard
to
prepare.
So
to
the
sea
we
came;
the
sea?
that
is
A
world
of
waters
heaped
vp
on
hie,
Rolling
like
mountaines
in
wide
wildernesse,
Horrible,
hideous,
roaring
with
hoarse
crie.
And
is
the
sea
(quoth
Coridon)
so
fearfull?
Fearful
much
more
(quoth
he)
then
hart
can
fear:
Thousand
wyld
beasts
with
deep
mouthes
gaping
direfull
Therein
stil
wait
poore
passengers
to
teare.
Who
life
doth
loath,
and
longs
death
to
behold,
Before
he
die,
alreadie
dead
with
feare,
And
yet
would
liue
with
heart
halfe
stonie
cold,
Let
him
to
sea,
and
he
shall
see
it
there.
Before
he
die,
alreadie
dead
with
feare:
And
yet
as
ghastly
dreadfull,
as
it
seemes,
Bold
men
presuming
life
for
gaine
to
sell,
Dare
tempt
that
gulf,
and
in
those
wandring
stremes
Seek
waies
vnknowne,
waies
leading
down
to
hell.
For
as
we
stood
there
waiting
on
the
strond,
Behold
an
huge
great
vessell
to
vs
came,
Dauncing
vpon
the
waters
back
to
lond,
As
if
it
scornd
the
daunger
of
the
same;
Yet
it
was
but
a
wooden
frame
and
fraile,
Glewed
togither
with
some
subtile
matter,
Yet
had
it
armes
and
wings,
and
head
and
taile,
And
life
to
moue
it
selfe
vpon
the
water.
Strange
thing,
how
bold
&
swift
the
monster
was,
That
neither
car'd
for
wynd,
nor
haile,
nor
raine,
Nor
swelling
waues,
but
thorough
them
did
passe
So
proudly,
that
she
made
them
roare
againe.
The
same
aboord
vs
gently
did
receaue,
And
without
harme
vs
farre
away
did
beare,
So
farre
that
land
our
mother
vs
did
leaue,
And
nought
but
sea
and
heauen
to
vs
appeare.
Then
hartlesse
quite
and
full
of
inward
feare,
That
shepheard
I
besought
to
me
to
tell,
Vnder
what
skie,
or
in
what
world
we
were,
In
which
I
saw
no
liuing
people
dwell,
Who
me
recomforting
all
that
he
might,
Told
me
that
that
same
was
the
Regiment
Of
a
great
shepheardesse,
that
Cynthia
hight,
His
leige
his
Ladie,
and
his
lifes
Regient.
If
then
(quoth
I)
a
shepheardesse
she
bee,
Where
be
the
flockes
and
heards,
which
she
doth
keep?
And
where
may
I
the
hills
and
pastures
see,
On
which
she
vseth
for
to
feede
her
sheepe?
These
be
the
hills
(quoth
he)
the
surges
hie,
On
which
faire
Cynthia
her
heards
doth
feed:
Her
heards
be
thousand
fishes
with
their
frie,
Which
in
the
bosome
of
the
billowes
breed.
Of
them
the
shepheard
which
hath
charge
in
chief,
Is
Triton
blowing
loud
his
wreathed
horne:
At
sound
whereof,
they
all
for
their
relief
Wend
too
and
fro
at
euening
and
at
morne.
And
Proteus
eke
with
him
does
driue
his
heard
Of
stinking
Seales
and
Porcpisces
together,
With
hoary
head
and
deawy
dropping
beard,
Compelling
them
which
way
he
list,
and
whether.
And
I
among
the
rest
of
many
least,
Haue
in
the
Ocean
charge
to
me
assigned:
Where
I
will
liue
or
die
at
her
beheast,
And
serue
and
honour
her
with
faithfull
mind.
Besides
an
hundred
Nymphs
all
heauenly
borne,
And
of
immortall
race,
doo
still
attend
To
wash
faire
Cynthiaes
sheep
when
they
be
shorne,
And
fold
them
vp,
when
they
haue
made
an
end.
Those
be
the
shepheards
which
my
Cynthia
serue,
At
sea,
beside
a
thousand
moe
at
land:
Froe
land
and
sea
my
Cynthia
doth
deserue
To
haue
in
her
commandement
at
hand.
Thereat
I
wondred
much,
till
wondring
more
And
more,
at
length
we
land
far
off
descryde:
Which
sight
much
gladded
me;
for
much
afore
I
feard,
least
land
we
neuer
should
haue
eyde:
Thereto
our
ship
her
course
directly
bent,
As
if
the
way
she
perfectly
had
knowne.
We
Lunday
passe;
by
that
same
name
is
ment
An
Island,
which
the
first
to
west
was
showne.
From
thence
another
world
of
land
we
kend,
Floting
amid
the
sea
in
ieopardie,
And
round
about
with
mightie
white
rocks
hemd,
Against
the
seas
encroaching
crueltie.
Those
same
the
shepheard
told
me,
were
the
fields
In
which
dame
Cynthia
her
landheards
fed:
Faire
goodly
fields,
then
which
Armulla
yields
None
fairer,
nor
more
fruitfull
to
be
red.
The
first
to
which
we
nigh
approched,
was
An
high
headland
thrust
far
into
the
sea,
Like
to
an
horne,
whereof
the
neame
it
has,
Yet
seemd
to
be
a
goodly
pleasant
lea:
There
did
a
loftie
mount
at
first
vs
greet,
Which
did
a
stately
heape
of
stones
vpreare,
That
seemd
amid
the
surges
for
to
fleet,
Much
greater
then
that
frame,
which
vs
did
beare:
There
did
our
ship
her
fruitfull
womb
vnlade,
And
put
vs
all
ashore
on
Cynthias
land.
What
land
is
that
thou
meanst
(then
Cuddy
sayd)
And
is
there
other,
then
whereon
we
stand?
Ah
Cuddy
(then
quoth
Colin)
thous
a
fon,
That
hast
not
seene
least
part
of
natures
work:
Much
more
there
is
vnkend,
then
thou
doest
kon,
And
much
more
that
does
from
mens
knowledge
lurke.
For
that
same
land
much
larger
is
then
this,
And
other
men
and
beasts
and
birds
doth
feed:
There
fruitfull
corne,
faire
trees,
fresh
herbage
is
And
all
things
else
that
liuing
creatures
need.
Besides
most
goodly
riuers
there
appeare,
No
whit
inferiour
to
thy
Funchins
praise,
Or
vnto
Allo
or
to
Mulla
cleare:
Nought
hast
thou
foolish
boy
seene
in
thy
daies,
But
if
that
land
be
there
(quoth
he)
as
here,
And
is
theyr
heauen
likewise
there
all
one?
And
if
like
heauen,
be
heauenly
graces
there,
Like
as
in
this
same
world
where
we
do
wone?
Both
heauen
and
heauenly
graces
do
much
more
(Quoth
he)
abound
in
that
same
land,
then
this.
For
there
all
happie
peace
and
plenteous
store
Conspire
in
one
to
make
contented
bliss:
No
wayling
there
nor
wretchednesse
is
heard,
No
bloodie
issues
nor
no
leprosies,
No
griesly
famine,
nor
no
raging
sweard,
No
nightly
bordrags,
nor
no
hue
and
cries;
The
shepheards
there
abroad
may
safely
lie,
On
hills
and
downes,
withouten
dread
or
daunger:
No
rauenous
wolues
the
good
mans
hope
destroy,
Nor
outlawes
fell
affray
the
forest
raunger.
There
learned
arts
do
florish
in
great
honor,
And
Poets
wits
are
had
in
peerlesse
price:
Religion
hath
lay
powre
to
rest
vpon
her,
Aduauncing
vertue
and
suppressing
vice.
For
end,
all
good,
all
grace
it
gratefully
to
vse:
For
God
his
gifts
there
plenteously
bestowes,
But
gracelesse
men
them
greatly
do
abuse.
But
say
on
further,
then
said
Corylas,
The
rest
of
thine
aduentures,
that
betyded.
Foorth
on
our
voyage
we
by
land
did
passe,
(Quoth
he)
as
that
same
shepheard
still
vs
guyded,
Vntill
that
we
to
Cynthiaes
presence
came:
Whose
glorie
greater
then
my
simple
thought,
I
found
much
greater
then
the
former
fame;
Such
greatnes
I
cannot
compare
to
ought:
But
if
I
her
like
ought
on
earth
might
read,
I
would
her
lyken
to
a
crowne
of
lillies,
Vpon
a
virgin
brydes
adorned
head,
With
Roses
dight
and
Goolds
and
Daffadillies;
Or
like
the
circlet
of
a
Turtle
true,
In
which
all
colours
of
the
rainbow
bee;
Or
like
faire
Phebes
garlond
shining
new,
In
which
all
pure
perfection
one
may
see.
But
vaine
it
is
to
thinke
by
paragone
Of
earthly
things,
to
iudge
of
things
diuine:
Her
power,
her
mercy,
and
her
wisedome,
none
Can
deeme,
but
who
the
Godhead
can
define.
Why
then
do
I
base
shepheard
bold
and
blind,
Presume
the
things
so
sacred
to
prophane?
More
fit
it
is
t'adore
with
humble
mind,
The
image
of
the
heauens
in
shape
humane.
With
that
Alexis
broke
his
tale
asunder,
Saying,
By
wondring
at
thy
Cynthiaes
praise:
Colin,
thy
selfe
thou
mak'st
vs
more
to
wonder,
And
her
vpraising,
Doest
thy
selfe
vpraise.
But
let
vs
heare
what
grace
she
shewed
thee,
And
how
that
shepheard
strange,
thy
cause
advanced?
The
shepheard
of
the
Ocean
(quoth
he)
Vnto
that
Goddesse
grace
me
first
enhanced,
And
to
mine
oaten
pipe
enclin'd
her
eare,
That
she
thenceforth
therein
gan
take
delight,
And
it
desir'd
at
timely
houres
to
heare,
All
were
my
notes
but
rude
and
roughly
dight;
For
not
by
measure
of
her
owne
great
mynd,
And
wondrous
worth
she
mott
my
simple
song,
But
ioyd
that
country
shepheard
ought
could
fynd
Worth
harkening
to,
emongst
the
learned
throng.
Why?
(said
Alexis
then)
what
needeth
shee
That
is
so
great
a
shepheardesse
her
selfe,
And
hath
so
many
shepheards
in
her
fee,
To
heare
thee
sing,
a
simple
silly
Elfe?
Or
be
the
shepheardes
which
do
serue
her
laesie,
That
they
list
not
their
mery
pipes
applie?
Or
be
their
pipes
vntunable
and
craesie,
That
they
cannot
her
honour
worthylie?
Ah
nay
(said
Colin)
neither
so,
nor
so:
For
better
shepheards
be
not
vnder
skie,
Nor
better
hable,
when
they
list
to
blow,
Their
pipes
aloud,
her
name
to
glorifie.
There
is
good
Harpalus
now
woxen
aged,
In
faithfull
seruice
of
faire
Cynthia:
And
there
is
Corydon,
though
meanly
waged,
Yet
hablest
wit
of
most
I
know
this
day.
And
there
is
sad
Alcyon
bent
to
mourne,
Though
fit
to
frame
an
euerlasting
dittie,
Whose
gentle
spright
for
Daphnes
death
doth
tourn
Sweet
layes
of
loue
to
endlesse
plaints
of
pittie.
Ah
pensiue
boy
pursue
that
braue
conceipt,
In
thy
sweet
Eglantine
of
Meriflure,
Lift
vp
thy
notes
vnto
their
wonted
height,
That
may
thy
Muse
and
mates
to
mirth
allure.
There
eke
is
Palin
worthie
of
great
praise,
Albe
he
envie
at
my
rustick
quill:
And
there
is
pleasing
Alcon,
could
he
raise
His
tunes
from
laies
to
matter
of
more
skill.
And
there
is
old
Palemon
free
from
spight,
Whose
carefull
pipe
may
make
the
hearer
rew:
Yet
he
himselfe
may
rewed
be
more
right,
That
sung
so
long
vntill
quite
hoarse
he
grew.
And
there
is
Alabaster
throughly
taught,
In
all
this
skill,
though
knowen
yet
to
few,
Yet
were
he
knowne
to
Cynthia
as
he
ought,
His
Eliseïs
would
be
redde
anew.
Who
liues
that
can
match
that
heroick
song,
Which
he
hath
of
that
mightie
Princesse
made?
O
dreaded
Dread,
do
not
thy
selfe
that
wrong,
To
let
thy
fame
lie
so
in
hidden
shade:
But
call
it
forth,
O
call
him
forth
to
thee,
To
ende
thy
glorie
which
he
hath
begun:
That
when
he
finisht
hath
as
it
should
be,
No
brauer
Poeme
can
be
vnder
Sun.
Nor
Po
nor
Tyburs
swans
so
much
renowned,
Nor
all
the
brood
of
Greece
so
highly
praised,
Can
match
that
Muse
when
it
with
bayes
is
crowned,
And
to
the
pitch
of
her
perfection
raised.
And
there
is
a
new
shepheard
late
vp
sprong,
The
which
doth
all
afore
him
far
surpasse:
Appearing
well
in
that
well
tuned
song,
Which
late
he
sung
vnto
a
scornefull
lasse.
Yet
doth
his
trembling
Muse
but
lowly
flie,
As
daring
not
too
rashly
mount
on
hight,
And
doth
her
tender
plumes
as
yet
but
trie,
In
loues
soft
lais
and
looser
thoughts
delight.
Then
rouze
thy
feathers
quickly
Daniell,
And
to
what
course
thou
please
thy
selfe
aduaunce:
But
most
me
seemes,
thy
accent
will
excell,
In
Tragick
plaints
and
passionate
mischance.
And
there
that
shepheard
of
the
Ocean
is,
That
spends
his
wit
in
loues
consuming
smart:
Full
sweetly
tempred
is
that
Muse
of
his
That
can
empierce
a
Princes
mightie
hart.
There
also
is
(ah
no,
he
is
not
now)
But
since
I
said
he
is,
he
is
quite
gone,
Amyntas
quite
is
gone,
and
lies
full
low,
Hauing
his
Amaryllis
left
to
mone.
Helpe,
O
ye
shepheards
helpe
ye
all
in
this,
Helpe
Amaryllis
this
her
losse
to
mourne:
Her
losse
is
yours,
your
losse
Amyntas
is,
Amyntas
floure
of
Shepheards
pride
forlorne:
He
whilest
he
liued
was
the
noblest
swaine,
That
euer
piped
in
an
oaten
quill:
Both
did
he
other,
which
could
pipe,
maintaine,
And
eke
could
pipe
himselfe
with
passing
skill.
And
there
though
last
not
least
is
Aetion,
A
gentler
shepheard
may
no
where
be
found:
Whose
Muse
full
of
high
thoughts
inuention,
Doth
like
himselfe
Heroically
sound.
All
these,
and
many
others
mo
remaine,
Now
after
Astrofell
is
dead
and
gone:
But
while
as
Astrofell
did
liue
and
raine,
Amongst
all
these
was
none
his
Paragone.
All
these
do
florish
in
their
sundry
kynd,
And
do
their
Cynthia
immortall
make:
Yet
found
I
lyking
in
her
royall
mynd,
Not
for
my
skill,
but
for
that
shepheards
sake.
Then
spake
a
louely
lasse,
hight
Lucida,
Shepheard,
enough
of
shepheards
thou
hast
told,
Which
fauour
thee,
and
honour
Cynthia:
But
of
so
many
Nymphs
which
she
doth
hold
In
her
retinew,
thou
hast
nothing
sayd;
That
seems
with
none
of
them
thou
fauor
foundest,
Or
art
ingratefull
to
each
gentle
mayd,
That
none
of
all
their
due
deserts
resoundest.
Ah
far
be
it
(quoth
Colin
Clout)
fro
me,
That
I
of
gentle
Mayds
should
ill
deserue:
For
that
my
selfe
I
do
professe
to
be
Vassall
to
one,
whom
all
my
dayes
I
serue;
The
beame
of
beautie
sparkled
from
aboue,
The
floure
of
vertue
and
pure
chastitie,
The
blossome
of
sweet
ioy
and
perfect
loue,
The
pearle
of
peerlesse
grace
and
modestie:
To
her
my
thoughts
I
daily
dedicate,
To
her
my
heart
I
nightly
martyrize:
To
her
my
loue
I
lowly
do
prostrate,
To
her
my
life
I
wholly
sacrifice:
My
thoughts,
my
heart,
my
loue,
my
life
is
shee,
And
I
hers
euer
onely,
euer
one:
One
euer
I
all
vowed
hers
to
bee,
One
euer
I,
and
others
neuer
none.
Then
thus
Melissa
said;
Thrice
happie
Mayd,
Whom
thou
doest
so
enforce
to
deify:
That
woods,
and
hills,
and
valleyes
thou
hast
made
Her
name
to
eccho
vnto
heauen
hie.
But
say,
who
else
vouchsafed
thee
of
grace?
They
all
(quoth
he)
me
graced
goodly
well,
That
all
I
praise,
but
in
the
highest
place,
Vrania,
sister
vnto
Astrofell,
In
whose
braue
mynd
as
in
a
golden
cofer,
All
heauenly
gifts
and
riches
locked
are,
More
rich
then
pearles
of
Ynde,
or
gold
of
Opher,
And
in
her
sex
more
wonderfull
and
rare.
Ne
lesse
praise
worthie
I
Theana
read,
Whose
goodly
beames
though
they
be
ouer
dight
With
mourning
stole
of
carefull
widowhead,
Yet
through
that
darksome
vale
do
glister
bright;
She
is
the
well
of
bountie
and
braue
mynd,
Excelling
most
in
glorie
and
great
light:
She
is
the
ornament
of
womankynd,
And
Courts
chief
garlond
with
all
vertues
dight.
Therefore
great
Cynthia
her
in
chiefest
grace
Doth
hold,
and
next
vnto
her
selfe
aduaunce,
Well
worthie
of
so
honourable
place,
For
her
great
worth
and
noble
gouernance.
Ne
lesse
praise
worthie
is
her
sister
deare,
Faire
Marian,
the
Muses
onely
darling:
Whose
beautie
shyneth
as
the
morning
cleare,
With
siluer
deaw
vpon
the
roses
pearling.
Ne
lesse
praise
worthie
is
Mansilia,
Best
knowne
by
bearing
vp
great
Cynthiaes
traine:
That
same
is
she
to
whom
Daphnaida
Vpon
her
neeces
death
I
did
complaine.
She
is
the
paterne
of
true
womanhead,
And
onely
mirrhor
of
feminitie:
Worthie
next
after
Cynthia
to
tread,
As
she
is
next
her
in
nobilitie.
Ne
lesse
praise
worthie
Galathea
seemes,
Then
best
of
all
that
honourable
crew,
Faire
Galathea
with
bright
shining
beames,
Inflaming
feeble
eyes
that
do
her
view.
She
there
then
waited
vpon
Cynthia,
Yet
there
is
not
her
won,
but
here
with
vs
About
the
borders
of
our
rich
Coshma,
Now
made
of
Maa
the
nymph
delitious.
Ne
lesse
praiseworthie
faire
Neæra
is,
Neæra
ours,
not
theirs,
though
there
she
be,
For
of
the
famous
Shure,
the
Nymph
she
is,
For
high
desert,
aduaunst
to
that
degree.
She
is
the
blosome
of
grace
and
curtesie,
Adorned
with
all
honourable
parts:
She
is
the
braunch
of
true
nobilitie,
Belou'd
of
high
and
low
with
faithfull
harts.
Ne
lesse
praiseworthie
Stella
do
I
read,
Though
nought
my
praises
of
her
needed
arre,
Whom
verse
of
noblest
shepheard
lately
dead
Hath
prais'd
and
rais'd
aboue
each
other
starre.
Ne
lesse
paiseworthie
are
the
sister
three,
The
honor
of
the
noble
familie:
Of
which
I
meanest
boast
my
selfe
to
be,
And
most
that
vnto
them
I
am
so
nie.
Phyllis,
Charyllis,
and
sweet
Amaryllis:
Phyllis
the
faire,
is
eldest
of
the
three:
The
next
to
her,
is
bountifull
Charyllis:
But
th'youngest
is
the
highest
in
degree.
Phyllis
the
floure
of
rare
perfection,
Faire
spreading
forth
her
leaues
with
fresh
delight,
That
with
their
beauties
amorous
reflexion,
Bereaue
of
sence
each
rash
beholders
sight.
But
sweet
Charyllis
is
the
Paragone
Of
peerlesse
price,
and
ornament
of
praise,
Admyr'd
of
all,
yet
envied
of
none,
Through
the
myld
temperance
of
her
goodly
raies
Thrise
happie
do
I
hold
thee
noble
swaine,
The
which
art
of
so
rich
a
spoile
possest,
And
it
embracing
deare
without
disdaine,
Hast
sole
possession
in
so
chaste
a
brest:
Of
all
the
shepheards
daughters
which
there
bee,
And
yet
there
be
the
fairest
vnder
skie,
Or
that
elsewhere
I
euer
yet
did
see.
A
fairer
Nymph
yet
neuer
saw
mine
eie:
She
is
the
pride
and
primrose
of
the
rest,
Made
by
the
maker
selfe
to
be
admired:
And
like
a
goodly
beacon
high
addrest,
That
is
with
sparks
of
heauenle
beautie
fired.
But
Amaryllis,
whether
fortunate,
Or
else
vnfortunate
may
I
aread.
That
freed
is
from
Cupids
yoke
by
fate,
Since
which
she
doth
new
bands
aduenture
dread.
Shepheard
what
euer
thou
hast
heard
to
be
In
this
or
that
praysd
diuersly
apart,
In
her
thou
maist
them
all
assembled
see,
And
seald
vp
in
the
threasure
of
her
hart.
Ne
thee
lesse
worthie
gentle
Flauia,
For
thy
chaste
life
and
vertue
I
esteeme:
Ne
thee
lesse
worthie
curteous
Candida,
For
thy
true
loue
and
loyaltie
I
deeme.
Besides
yet
many
mo
that
Cynthia
serue,
Right
noble
Nymphs,
and
high
to
be
commended:
But
if
I
all
should
praise
as
they
deserue,
This
sun
would
faile
me
ere
I
halfe
had
ended.
Therefore
in
closure
of
a
thankfull
mynd,
I
deeme
it
best
to
hold
eternally,
Their
bounteous
deeds
and
noble
fauours
shrynd,
Then
by
discourse
them
to
indignifie.
So
hauing
said,
Aglaura
him
bespake:
Colin,
well
worthie
were
those
goodly
fauours
Bestowd
on
thee,
that
so
of
them
doest
make,
And
them
requitest
with
thy
thankful
labours.
But
of
great
Cynthiaes
goodnesse
and
high
grace,
Finish
the
storie
which
thou
hast
begunne.
More
eath
(quoth
he)
it
is
in
such
a
case
How
to
begin,
then
know
how
to
haue
donne.
For
euerie
gift
and
euerie
goodly
meed
Which
she
on
me
bestowd,
demaunds
a
day;
And
euerie
day,
in
which
she
did
a
deed,
Demaunds
a
yeare
it
duly
to
display.
Her
words
were
like
a
streame
of
honnyfleeting,
The
which
doth
softly
trickle
from
the
hiue:
Hable
to
melt
the
hearers
heart
vnweeting,
And
eke
to
make
the
dead
againe
aliue.
Her
deeds
were
like
great
clusters
of
ripe
grapes,
Which
load
the
braunches
of
the
fruitfull
vine:
Offring
to
fall
into
each
mouth
that
gapes,
And
fill
the
same
with
store
of
timely
wine.
Her
lookes
were
like
beames
of
the
morning
Sun,
Forth
looking
through
the
windowes
of
the
East:
When
first
the
fleecie
cattell
haue
begun
Vpon
the
perled
grasse
to
make
their
feast.
Her
thoughts
are
like
the
fume
of
Franckincence,
Which
from
a
golden
Censer
forth
doth
rise:
And
throwing
forth
sweet
odours
mounts
fro
thence
In
rolling
globes
vp
to
the
vauted
skies.
There
she
beholds
with
high
aspiring
thought,
The
cradle
of
her
owne
creation:
Emongst
the
seats
of
Angels
heauenly
wrought,
Much
like
an
Angell
in
all
forme
and
fashion.
Colin
(said
Cuddy
then)
thou
hast
forgot
Thy
selfe,
me
seemes,
too
much,
to
mount
so
hie:
Such
loftie
flight,
base
shepheard
seemeth
not,
From
flocks
and
fields,
to
Angels
and
to
skie.
True
(answered
he)
but
her
great
excellence,
Lifts
me
aboue
the
measure
of
my
might:
That
being
fild
with
furious
insolence,
I
feele
my
selfe
like
one
yrapt
in
spright.
For
when
I
thinke
of
her,
as
oft
I
ought,
Then
want
I
words
to
speake
it
fitly
forth:
And
when
I
speake
of
her
what
I
haue
thought,
I
cannot
thinke
according
to
her
worth.
Yet
will
I
thinke
of
her,
yet
will
I
speake,
So
long
as
life
my
limbs
doth
hold
together,
And
when
as
death
these
vitall
bands
shall
breake,
Her
name
recorded
I
will
leaue
for
euer.
Her
name
in
euery
tree
I
will
endosse,
That
as
the
trees
do
grow,
her
name
may
grow.
And
in
the
ground
each
where
will
it
engrosse,
And
fill
with
stones,
that
all
men
may
it
know.
The
speaking
woods
and
murmuring
waters
fall,
Her
name
Ile
teach
in
knowen
termes
to
frame:
And
eke
my
lambs
when
for
their
dams
they
call,
Ile
teach
to
call
for
Cynthia
by
name.
And
long
while
after
I
am
dead
and
rotten:
Amõgst
the
shepheards
daughters
dancing
rownd,
My
layes
made
of
her
shall
not
be
forgotten,
But
sung
by
them
with
flowry
gyrlonds
crownd.
And
ye,
who
so
ye
be,
that
shall
suruiue:
When
as
ye
heare
her
memory
renewed,
Be
witnesse
of
her
bounty
here
aliue,
Which
she
to
Colin
her
poore
shepheard
shewed.
Much
was
the
whole
assembly
of
those
heards,
Moou'd
at
his
speech,
so
feelingly
he
spake:
And
stood
awhile
astonisht
at
his
words,
Till
Thestylis
at
last
their
silence
brake,
Saying,
Why
Colin,
since
thou
foundst
such
grace
With
Cynthia
and
all
her
noble
crew:
Why
didst
thou
euer
leaue
that
happie
place,
In
which
such
wealth
might
vnto
thee
accrew?
And
back
returnedst
to
this
barrein
soyle,
Where
cold
and
care
and
penury
do
dwell:
Here
to
keepe
sheepe,
with
hunger
and
with
toyle,
Most
wretched
he,
that
is
and
cannot
tell.
Happie
indeed
(said
Colin)
I
him
hold,
That
may
that
blessed
presence
still
enioy,
Of
fortune
and
of
enuy
vncomptrold,
Which
still
are
wont
most
happie
states
t'annoy:
But
I
by
that
which
little
while
I
prooued:
Some
part
of
those
enormities
did
see,
The
which
in
Court
continually
hooued,
And
followd
those
which
happie
seemd
to
bee.
Therefore
I
silly
man,
whose
former
dayes
Had
in
rude
fields
bene
altogether
spent,
Durst
not
aduenture
such
vnknowen
wayes,
Nor
trust
the
guile
of
fortunes
blandishment,
But
rather
chose
back
to
my
sheep
to
tourne,
Whose
vtmost
hardnesse
I
before
had
tryde,
Then
hauing
learnd
repentance
late,
to
mourne
Emongst
those
wretches
which
I
there
descryde.
Shepheard
(said
Thestylis)
it
seems
of
spight
Thou
speakest
thus
gainst
their
felicitie,
Which
thou
enuiest,
rather
then
of
right
That
ought
in
them
blameworthie
thou
dost
spie.
Cause
haue
I
none
(quoth
he)
of
cancred
will
To
quite
them
ill,
that
me
demeand
so
well:
But
selfe-regard
of
priuate
good
or
ill,
Moues
me
of
each,
so
as
I
found,
to
tell
And
eke
to
warne
yong
shepheards
wandring
wit,
Which
through
report
of
that
liues
painted
blisse,
Abandon
quiet
home,
to
seeke
for
it,
And
leaue
their
lambes
to
losse
misled
amisse.
For
sooth
to
say,
it
is
no
sort
of
life,
For
shepheard
fit
to
lead
in
that
same
place,
Where
each
one
seeks
with
malice
and
with
strife,
To
thrust
downe
other
into
foule
disgrace,
Himselfe
to
raise:
and
he
doth
soonest
rise
That
best
can
handle
his
deceitfull
wit,
In
subtil
shifts,
and
finest
sleights
deuise,
Either
by
slaundring
his
well
deemed
name,
Through
leasings
lewd,
and
fained
forgerie:
Or
else
by
breeding
him
some
blot
of
blame,
By
creeping
close
into
his
secrecie;
To
which
him
needs,
a
guilefull
hollow
hart,
Masked
with
faire
dissembling
curtesie,
A
filed
toung
furnisht
with
tearmes
of
art,
No
art
of
schoole,
but
Courtiers
schoolery.
For
arts
of
schoole
haue
there
small
countenance,
Counted
but
toyes
to
busie
idle
braines,
And
there
professours
find
small
maintenance,
But
to
be
instruments
of
others
gaines.
Ne
is
there
place
for
any
gentle
wit,
Vnlesse
to
please,
it
selfe
it
can
applie:
But
shouldred
is,
or
out
of
doore
quite
shit,
As
base,
or
blunt,
vnmeet
for
melodie.
For
each
mans
worth
is
measured
by
his
weed,
As
harts
by
hornes,
or
asses
by
their
eares:
Yet
asses
been
not
all
whose
eares
exceed,
Nor
yet
all
harts,
that
hornes
the
highest
beares.
For
highest
lookes
haue
not
the
highest
mynd,
Nor
haughtie
words
most
full
of
highest
thoughts:
But
are
like
bladders
blowen
vp
with
wynd,
That
being
prickt
do
vanish
into
noughts.
Euen
such
is
all
their
vaunted
vanitie,
Nought
else
but
smoke,
that
fumeth
soone
away,
Such
is
their
glorie
that
in
simple
eie
Seeme
greatest,
when
their
garments
are
most
gay.
So
they
themselues
for
praise
of
fooles
do
sell,
And
all
their
wealth
for
painting
on
a
wall;
With
price
whereof,
they
buy
a
golden
bell,
And
purchase
highest
rowmes
in
bowre
and
hall:
Whiles
single
Truth
and
simple
honestie
Do
wander
vp
and
downe
despys'd
of
all;
Their
plaine
attire
such
glorious
gallantry
Disdaines
so
much,
that
none
them
in
doth
call.
Ah
Colin
(then
said
Hobbinol)
the
blame
Which
thou
imputest,
is
too
generall,
As
if
not
any
gentle
wit
of
name,
Nor
honest
mynd
might
there
be
found
at
all.
For
well
I
wot,
sith
I
my
selfe
was
there,
To
wait
on
Lobbin
(Lobbin
well
thow
knewest)
Full
many
worrhie
ones
then
waiting
were,
As
euer
elfe
in
Princes
Court
thou
vewest.
Of
which,
among
you
many
yet
remaine,
Whose
names
I
cannot
readily
now
ghesse:
Those
that
poore
Sutors
papers
do
retaine,
And
those
that
skill
of
medicine
professe.
And
those
that
do
to
Cynthia
expound,
The
ledden
of
straunge
languages
in
charge:
For
Cynthia
doth
in
sciences
abound,
And
giues
to
their
professors
stipend
large.
Therefore
vniustly
thou
doest
wyte
them
all,
For
that
which
thou
mislikedst
in
a
few.
Blame
is
(quoth
he)
more
blamelesse
generall,
Then
that
which
priuate
errours
doth
pursew:
For
well
I
wot,
that
there
amongst
them
bee
Full
many
persons
of
right
worthie
parts,
Both
for
report
of
spotlesse
honestie,
And
for
profession
of
all
learned
arts,
Whose
praise
hereby
no
whit
impaired
is,
Though
blame
do
light
on
those
that
faultie
bee,
For
all
the
rest
do
most-what
fare
amis,
And
yet
their
owne
misfaring
will
not
see:
For
either
they
be
puffed
vp
with
pride,
Or
fraught
with
enuie
that
their
galls
do
swell,
Or
they
their
dayes
to
ydlenesse
diuide,
Or
drownded
lie
in
pleasures
wastefull
well,
In
which
like
Moldwarps
noursling
still
they
lurke,
Vnmyndfull
of
chiefe
parts
of
manlinesse,
And
do
themselues
for
want
of
other
worke,
Vaine
votaries
of
laesie
loue
professe,
Whose
seruice
high
so
basely
they
ensew,
That
Cupid
selfe
of
them
ashamed
is,
And
mustring
all
his
men
in
Venus
vew,
Denies
them
quite
for
seruitors
of
his.
And
is
loue
then
(said
Corylas
once
knowne
In
Court,
and
his
sweet
lore
professed
there?
I
weened
sure
he
was
our
God
alone,
And
only
woond
in
feilds
and
forests
here.
Not
so
(quoth
he)
loue
most
aboundeth
there.
For
all
the
walls
and
windows
there
are
writ,
All
full
of
loue,
and
loue,
and
loue
my
deare,
And
all
their
talke
and
studie
is
of
it.
Ne
any
there
doth
braue
or
valiant
seeme,
Vnlesse
that
some
gay
Mistresse
badge
he
beares:
Ne
any
one
himselfe
doth
ought
esteeme,
Vnlesse
he
swim
in
loue
up
to
the
eares.
But
they
of
loue
and
of
his
sacred
lere,
(As
it
should
be)
all
otherwise
deuise,
Then
we
poore
shepheards
are
accustomd
here,
And
him
do
sue
and
serue
all
otherwise.
For
with
lewd
speeches
and
licentious
deeds,
His
mightie
mysteries
they
do
prophane,
And
vse
his
ydle
name
to
other
needs,
But
as
a
complement
for
courting
vaine.
So
him
they
do
not
serue
as
they
professe,
But
make
him
serue
to
them
for
sordid
vses.
Ah
my
dread
Lord,
that
doest
liege
hearts
possese;
Auenge
thy
selfe
on
them
for
their
abuses.
But
we
poore
shepheards
whether
rightly
so,
Or
through
our
rudenesse
into
errour
led:
Do
make
religion
how
we
rashly
go,
To
serue
that
God,
that
is
so
greatly
dred;
For
him
the
greatest
of
the
Gods
we
deeme,
Borne
without
Syre
or
couples
of
one
kynd,
For
Venus
selfe
doth
soly
couples
seeme,
Both
male
and
female
though
commixture
ioynd.
So
pure
and
spotlesse
Cupid
forth
she
brought,
And
in
the
gardens
of
Adonis
nurst:
Where
growing
he,
his
owne
perfection
wrought,
And
shortly
was
of
all
the
Gods
the
first.
Then
got
he
bow
and
shafts
of
gold
and
lead,
In
which
so
fell
and
puissant
he
grew,
That
Ioue
himselfe
his
powre
began
to
dread,
And
taking
him
vp
to
heauen,
him
godded
new.
From
thence
he
shootes
his
arrowes
euery
where
Into
the
world,
at
randon
as
he
will,
On
vs
fraile
men,
his
wretched
vassals
here,
Like
as
himselfe
vs
pleaseth,
saue
or
spill.
So
we
him
worship,
so
we
him
adore
With
humble
hearts
to
heauen
vplifted
hie,
That
to
true
loues
he
may
vs
euermore
Preferre,
and
of
their
grace
vs
dignifie:
Ne
is
there
shepheard,
ne
yet
shepheards
swaine,
What
euer
feeds
in
forest
or
in
field,
That
dare
with
euil
deed
or
leasing
vaine
Blaspheme
his
powre,
or
termes
vnworthie
yield.
Shepheard
it
seemes
that
some
celestiall
rage
Of
loue
(quoth
Cuddy)
is
breath'd
into
thy
brest,
That
powreth
forth
these
oracles
so
sage,
Of
that
high
powre,
wherewith
thou
art
possest.
But
neuer
wist
I
till
this
present
day
Albe
of
loue
I
alwayes
humbly
deemed,
That
he
was
such
an
one,
as
thou
doest
say,
And
so
religiously
to
be
esteemed.
Well
may
it
seeme
by
this
thy
deep
insight,
That
of
that
God
the
Priest
thou
shouldest
bee:
So
well
thou
wot'st
the
mysterie
of
his
might,
As
if
his
godhead
thou
didst
present
see.
Of
loues
perfection
perfectly
to
speake,
Or
of
his
nature
rightly
to
define,
Indeed
(said
Colin)
passeth
reasons
reach,
And
needs
his
priest
t'expresse
his
powre
diuine.
For
long
before
the
world
he
was
y'bore
And
bred
aboue
in
Venus
bosome
deare:
For
by
his
powre
the
world
was
made
of
yore,
And
all
that
therein
wondrous
doth
appeare.
For
how
should
else
things
so
far
from
attone
And
so
great
enemies
as
of
them
bee,
Be
euer
drawne
together
into
one,
And
taught
in
such
accordance
to
agree.
Through
him
the
cold
began
to
couet
heat,
And
water
fire;
the
light
to
mount
on
hie,
And
th'heauie
down
to
peize;
the
hungry
t'eat,
And
voydnesse
to
seeke
full
satietie,
So
being
former
foes,
they
wexed
friends,
And
gan
by
litle
learne
to
loue
each
other:
So
being
knit,
they
brought
forth
other
kynds
Out
of
the
fruitfull
wombe
of
their
great
mother.
Then
first
gan
heauen
out
of
darknesse
dread
For
to
appeare,
and
brought
forth
chearfull
day:
Next
gan
the
earth
to
shew
her
naked
head,
Out
of
deep
waters
which
her
drownd
alway.
And
shortly
after
euerie
liuing
wight,
Crept
forth
like
wormes
out
of
her
slimy
nature.
Soone
as
on
them
the
Suns
life-giuing
light,
had
powred
kindly
heat
and
formall
feature,
Thenceforth
they
gan
each
one
his
like
to
loue,
And
like
himselfe
desire
for
to
beget:
The
Lyon
chose
his
mate
the
Turtle
doue
Her
deare,
the
Dolphin
his
owne
Dolphinet,
But
man
that
had
the
sparke
of
reasons
might,
More
then
the
rest
to
rule
his
passion:
Chose
for
his
loue
the
fairest
in
his
sight,
Like
as
himselfe
was
fairest
by
creation.
For
beautie
is
the
bayt
which
with
delight
Doth
man
allure,
for
to
enlarge
his
kynd,
Beautie
the
burning
lamp
of
heauens
light,
Darting
her
beames
into
each
feeble
mynd:
Against
whose
powre,
nor
God
nor
man
can
fynd,
Defence,
ne
ward
the
daunger
of
the
wound,
But
being
hurt,
seeke
to
be
medicynd
Of
her
that
first
did
stir
that
mortall
stownd.
Then
do
they
cry
and
call
to
loue
apace,
With
praiers
lowd
importuning
the
skie,
Whence
he
them
heares,
&
when
he
list
shew
grace,
Does
graunt
them
grace
that
otherwise
would
die.
So
loue
is
Lord
of
all
the
world
by
right,
And
rules
their
creatures
by
his
powrfull
saw:
All
being
made
the
vassalls
of
his
might,
Through
secret
sence
which
therto
doth
them
draw.
Thus
ought
all
louers
of
their
lord
to
deeme:
And
with
chaste
heart
to
honor
him
alway:
But
who
so
else
doth
otherwise
esteeme,
Are
outlawes,
and
his
lore
do
disobay.
For
their
desire
is
base,
and
doth
not
merit,
The
name
of
loue,
but
of
disloyall
lust:
Ne
mongst
true
louers
they
shall
place
inherit,
But
as
Exuls
out
of
his
court
be
thrust.
So
hauing
said,
Melissa
spake
at
will,
Colin,
thou
now
full
deeply
hast
diuynd:
Of
loue
and
beautie
and
with
wondrous
skill,
Hast
Cupid
selfe
depainted
in
his
kynd.
To
thee
are
all
true
louers
greatly
bound,
That
doest
their
cause
so
mightily
defend:
But
most,
all
wemen
are
thy
debtors
found,
That
doest
their
bountie
still
so
much
commend.
That
ill
(said
Hobbinol)
they
him
requite,
For
hauing
loued
euer
one
most
deare:
He
is
repayd
with
scorne
and
foule
despite,
That
yrkes
each
gentle
heart
which
it
doth
heare.
Indeed
(said
Lucid)
I
haue
often
heard
Faire
Rosalind
of
diuers
fowly
blamed:
For
being
to
that
swaine
too
cruell
hard,
That
her
bright
glorie
else
hath
much
defamed.
But
who
can
tell
what
cause
had
that
faire
Mayd
To
vse
him
so
that
vsed
her
so
well:
Or
who
with
blame
can
iustly
her
vpbrayd,
For
louing
not?
for
who
can
loue
compell.
And
sooth
to
say,
it
is
foolhardie
thing,
Rashly
to
wyten
creatures
so
diuine,
For
demigods
they
be,
and
first
did
spring
From
heauen,
though
graft
in
frailnesse
feminine.
And
well
I
wote,
that
oft
I
heard
it
spoken,
How
one
that
fairest
Helene
did
reuile:
Through
iudgement
of
the
Gods
to
been
ywroken
Lost
both
his
eyes
and
so
remaynd
long
while,
Till
he
recanted
had
his
wicked
rimes,
And
made
amends
to
her
with
treble
praise:
Beware
therefore,
ye
groomes,
I
read
betimes,
How
rashly
blame
of
Rosalind
ye
raise.
Ah
shepheards
(then
said
Colin)
ye
ne
weet
How
great
a
guilt
vpon
your
heads
ye
draw:
To
make
so
bold
a
doome
with
words
vnmeet,
Of
thing
celestiall
which
ye
neuer
saw.
For
she
is
not
like
as
the
other
crew
Of
shepheards
daughters
which
emongst
you
bee,
But
of
diuine
regard
and
heauenly
hew,
Excelling
all
that
euer
ye
did
see.
Not
then
to
her
that
scorned
thing
so
base,
But
to
my
selfe
the
blame
that
lookt
so
hie:
So
hie
her
thoughts
as
she
her
selfe
haue
place,
And
loath
each
lowly
thing
with
loftie
eie.
Yet
so
much
grace
let
her
vouchsafe
to
grant
To
simple
swaine,
sith
her
I
may
not
loue:
Yet
that
I
may
her
honour
parauant,
And
praise
her
worth,
though
far
my
wit
aboue
Such
grace
shall
be
some
guerdon
for
the
griefe,
And
long
affliction
which
I
haue
endured:
Such
grace
sometimes
shall
giue
me
some
reliefe,
And
ease
of
paine
which
cannot
be
recured.
And
ye
my
fellow
shepheards
which
do
see
And
heare
the
langours
of
my
too
long
dying,
Vnto
the
world
for
euer
witnesse
bee,
That
hers
I
die,
nought
to
the
world
denying,
This
simple
trophe
of
her
great
conquest.
So
hauing
ended,
he
from
ground
did
rise,
And
after
him
vprose
eke
all
the
rest:
All
loth
to
part,
but
that
the
glooming
skies,
Warnd
them
to
draw
their
bleating
flocks
to
rest.