Metamorphoses

Ovid

                                   BOOK THE FIRST

                     OF bodies chang'd to various forms, I sing:
                   Ye Gods, from whom these miracles did spring,
                   Inspire my numbers with coelestial heat;
                   'Till I my long laborious work compleat:
                   And add perpetual tenour to my rhimes,
                   Deduc'd from Nature's birth, to Caesar's times.
  The Creation of    Before the seas, and this terrestrial ball,
    the World      And Heav'n's high canopy, that covers all,
                   One was the face of Nature; if a face:
                   Rather a rude and indigested mass:
                   A lifeless lump, unfashion'd, and unfram'd,
                   Of jarring seeds; and justly Chaos nam'd.
                   No sun was lighted up, the world to view;
                   No moon did yet her blunted horns renew:
                   Nor yet was Earth suspended in the sky,
                   Nor pois'd, did on her own foundations lye:
                   Nor seas about the shores their arms had thrown;
                   But earth, and air, and water, were in one.
                   Thus air was void of light, and earth unstable,
                   And water's dark abyss unnavigable.
                   No certain form on any was imprest;
                   All were confus'd, and each disturb'd the rest.
                   For hot and cold were in one body fixt;
                   And soft with hard, and light with heavy mixt.
                     But God, or Nature, while they thus contend,
                   To these intestine discords put an end:
                   Then earth from air, and seas from earth were
                       driv'n,
                   And grosser air sunk from aetherial Heav'n.
                   Thus disembroil'd, they take their proper place;
                   The next of kin, contiguously embrace;
                   And foes are sunder'd, by a larger space.
                   The force of fire ascended first on high,
                   And took its dwelling in the vaulted sky:
                   Then air succeeds, in lightness next to fire;
                   Whose atoms from unactive earth retire.
                   Earth sinks beneath, and draws a num'rous throng
                   Of pondrous, thick, unwieldy seeds along.
                   About her coasts, unruly waters roar;
                   And rising, on a ridge, insult the shore.
                   Thus when the God, whatever God was he,
                   Had form'd the whole, and made the parts agree,
                   That no unequal portions might be found,
                   He moulded Earth into a spacious round:
                   Then with a breath, he gave the winds to blow;
                   And bad the congregated waters flow.
                   He adds the running springs, and standing lakes;
                   And bounding banks for winding rivers makes.
                   Some part, in Earth are swallow'd up, the most
                   In ample oceans, disembogu'd, are lost.
                   He shades the woods, the vallies he restrains
                   With rocky mountains, and extends the plains.
                     And as five zones th' aetherial regions bind,
                   Five, correspondent, are to Earth assign'd:
                   The sun with rays, directly darting down,
                   Fires all beneath, and fries the middle zone:
                   The two beneath the distant poles, complain
                   Of endless winter, and perpetual rain.
                   Betwixt th' extreams, two happier climates hold
                   The temper that partakes of hot, and cold.
                   The fields of liquid air, inclosing all,
                   Surround the compass of this earthly ball:
                   The lighter parts lye next the fires above;
                   The grosser near the watry surface move:
                   Thick clouds are spread, and storms engender there,
                   And thunder's voice, which wretched mortals fear,
                   And winds that on their wings cold winter bear.
                   Nor were those blustring brethren left at large,
                   On seas, and shores, their fury to discharge:
                   Bound as they are, and circumscrib'd in place,
                   They rend the world, resistless, where they pass;
                   And mighty marks of mischief leave behind;
                   Such is the rage of their tempestuous kind.
                   First Eurus to the rising morn is sent
                   (The regions of the balmy continent);
                   And Eastern realms, where early Persians run,
                   To greet the blest appearance of the sun.
                   Westward, the wanton Zephyr wings his flight;
                   Pleas'd with the remnants of departing light:
                   Fierce Boreas, with his off-spring, issues forth
                   T' invade the frozen waggon of the North.
                   While frowning Auster seeks the Southern sphere;
                   And rots, with endless rain, th' unwholsom year.
                     High o'er the clouds, and empty realms of wind,
                   The God a clearer space for Heav'n design'd;
                   Where fields of light, and liquid aether flow;
                   Purg'd from the pondrous dregs of Earth below.
                     Scarce had the Pow'r distinguish'd these, when
                       streight
                   The stars, no longer overlaid with weight,
                   Exert their heads, from underneath the mass;
                   And upward shoot, and kindle as they pass,
                   And with diffusive light adorn their heav'nly
                       place.
                   Then, every void of Nature to supply,
                   With forms of Gods he fills the vacant sky:
                   New herds of beasts he sends, the plains to share:
                   New colonies of birds, to people air:
                   And to their oozy beds, the finny fish repair.
                     A creature of a more exalted kind
                   Was wanting yet, and then was Man design'd:
                   Conscious of thought, of more capacious breast,
                   For empire form'd, and fit to rule the rest:
                   Whether with particles of heav'nly fire
                   The God of Nature did his soul inspire,
                   Or Earth, but new divided from the sky,
                   And, pliant, still retain'd th' aetherial energy:
                   Which wise Prometheus temper'd into paste,
                   And, mixt with living streams, the godlike image
                       cast.
                   Thus, while the mute creation downward bend
                   Their sight, and to their earthly mother tend,
                   Man looks aloft; and with erected eyes
                   Beholds his own hereditary skies.
                   From such rude principles our form began;
                   And earth was metamorphos'd into Man.
        The          The golden age was first; when Man yet new,
    Golden Age     No rule but uncorrupted reason knew:
                   And, with a native bent, did good pursue.
                   Unforc'd by punishment, un-aw'd by fear,
                   His words were simple, and his soul sincere;
                   Needless was written law, where none opprest:
                   The law of Man was written in his breast:
                   No suppliant crowds before the judge appear'd,
                   No court erected yet, nor cause was heard:
                   But all was safe, for conscience was their guard.
                   The mountain-trees in distant prospect please,
                   E're yet the pine descended to the seas:
                   E're sails were spread, new oceans to explore:
                   And happy mortals, unconcern'd for more,
                   Confin'd their wishes to their native shore.
                   No walls were yet; nor fence, nor mote, nor mound,
                   Nor drum was heard, nor trumpet's angry sound:
                   Nor swords were forg'd; but void of care and crime,
                   The soft creation slept away their time.
                   The teeming Earth, yet guiltless of the plough,
                   And unprovok'd, did fruitful stores allow:
                   Content with food, which Nature freely bred,
                   On wildings and on strawberries they fed;
                   Cornels and bramble-berries gave the rest,
                   And falling acorns furnish'd out a feast.
                   The flow'rs unsown, in fields and meadows reign'd:
                   And Western winds immortal spring maintain'd.
                   In following years, the bearded corn ensu'd
                   From Earth unask'd, nor was that Earth renew'd.
                   From veins of vallies, milk and nectar broke;
                   And honey sweating through the pores of oak.
        The          But when good Saturn, banish'd from above,
    Silver Age     Was driv'n to Hell, the world was under Jove.
                   Succeeding times a silver age behold,
                   Excelling brass, but more excell'd by gold.
                   Then summer, autumn, winter did appear:
                   And spring was but a season of the year.
                   The sun his annual course obliquely made,
                   Good days contracted, and enlarg'd the bad.
                   Then air with sultry heats began to glow;
                   The wings of winds were clogg'd with ice and snow;
                   And shivering mortals, into houses driv'n,
                   Sought shelter from th' inclemency of Heav'n.
                   Those houses, then, were caves, or homely sheds;
                   With twining oziers fenc'd; and moss their beds.
                   Then ploughs, for seed, the fruitful furrows broke,
                   And oxen labour'd first beneath the yoke.
        The          To this came next in course, the brazen age:
    Brazen Age     A warlike offspring, prompt to bloody rage,
                   Not impious yet...
        The                          Hard steel succeeded then:
     Iron Age      And stubborn as the metal, were the men.
                   Truth, modesty, and shame, the world forsook:
                   Fraud, avarice, and force, their places took.
                   Then sails were spread, to every wind that blew.
                   Raw were the sailors, and the depths were new:
                   Trees, rudely hollow'd, did the waves sustain;
                   E're ships in triumph plough'd the watry plain.
                     Then land-marks limited to each his right:
                   For all before was common as the light.
                   Nor was the ground alone requir'd to bear
                   Her annual income to the crooked share,
                   But greedy mortals, rummaging her store,
                   Digg'd from her entrails first the precious oar;
                   Which next to Hell, the prudent Gods had laid;
                   And that alluring ill, to sight display'd.
                   Thus cursed steel, and more accursed gold,
                   Gave mischief birth, and made that mischief bold:
                   And double death did wretched Man invade,
                   By steel assaulted, and by gold betray'd,
                   Now (brandish'd weapons glittering in their hands)
                   Mankind is broken loose from moral bands;
                   No rights of hospitality remain:
                   The guest, by him who harbour'd him, is slain,
                   The son-in-law pursues the father's life;
                   The wife her husband murders, he the wife.
                   The step-dame poyson for the son prepares;
                   The son inquires into his father's years.
                   Faith flies, and piety in exile mourns;
                   And justice, here opprest, to Heav'n returns.
        The          Nor were the Gods themselves more safe above;
    Giants' War    Against beleaguer'd Heav'n the giants move.
                   Hills pil'd on hills, on mountains mountains lie,
                   To make their mad approaches to the skie.
                   'Till Jove, no longer patient, took his time
                   T' avenge with thunder their audacious crime:
                   Red light'ning plaid along the firmament,
                   And their demolish'd works to pieces rent.
                   Sing'd with the flames, and with the bolts
                       transfixt,
                   With native Earth, their blood the monsters mixt;
                   The blood, indu'd with animating heat,
                   Did in th' impregnant Earth new sons beget:
                   They, like the seed from which they sprung,
                       accurst,
                   Against the Gods immortal hatred nurst,
                   An impious, arrogant, and cruel brood;
                   Expressing their original from blood.
                     Which when the king of Gods beheld from high
                   (Withal revolving in his memory,
                   What he himself had found on Earth of late,
                   Lycaon's guilt, and his inhumane treat),
                   He sigh'd; nor longer with his pity strove;
                   But kindled to a wrath becoming Jove:
                     Then call'd a general council of the Gods;
                   Who summon'd, issue from their blest abodes,
                   And fill th' assembly with a shining train.
                   A way there is, in Heav'n's expanded plain,
                   Which, when the skies are clear, is seen below,
                   And mortals, by the name of Milky, know.
                   The ground-work is of stars; through which the road
                   Lyes open to the Thunderer's abode:
                   The Gods of greater nations dwell around,
                   And, on the right and left, the palace bound;
                   The commons where they can: the nobler sort
                   With winding-doors wide open, front the court.
                   This place, as far as Earth with Heav'n may vie,
                   I dare to call the Louvre of the skie.
                   When all were plac'd, in seats distinctly known,
                   And he, their father, had assum'd the throne,
                   Upon his iv'ry sceptre first he leant,
                   Then shook his head, that shook the firmament:
                   Air, Earth, and seas, obey'd th' almighty nod;
                   And, with a gen'ral fear, confess'd the God.
                   At length, with indignation, thus he broke
                   His awful silence, and the Pow'rs bespoke.
                     I was not more concern'd in that debate
                   Of empire, when our universal state
                   Was put to hazard, and the giant race
                   Our captive skies were ready to imbrace:
                   For tho' the foe was fierce, the seeds of all
                   Rebellion, sprung from one original;
                   Now, wheresoever ambient waters glide,
                   All are corrupt, and all must be destroy'd.
                   Let me this holy protestation make,
                   By Hell, and Hell's inviolable lake,
                   I try'd whatever in the godhead lay:
                   But gangren'd members must be lopt away,
                   Before the nobler parts are tainted to decay.
                   There dwells below, a race of demi-gods,
                   Of nymphs in waters, and of fawns in woods:
                   Who, tho' not worthy yet, in Heav'n to live,
                   Let 'em, at least, enjoy that Earth we give.
                   Can these be thought securely lodg'd below,
                   When I my self, who no superior know,
                   I, who have Heav'n and Earth at my command,
                   Have been attempted by Lycaon's hand?
                     At this a murmur through the synod went,
                   And with one voice they vote his punishment.
                   Thus, when conspiring traytors dar'd to doom
                   The fall of Caesar, and in him of Rome,
                   The nations trembled with a pious fear;
                   All anxious for their earthly Thunderer:
                   Nor was their care, o Caesar, less esteem'd
                   By thee, than that of Heav'n for Jove was deem'd:
                   Who with his hand, and voice, did first restrain
                   Their murmurs, then resum'd his speech again.
                   The Gods to silence were compos'd, and sate
                   With reverence, due to his superior state.
                     Cancel your pious cares; already he
                   Has paid his debt to justice, and to me.
                   Yet what his crimes, and what my judgments were,
                   Remains for me thus briefly to declare.
                   The clamours of this vile degenerate age,
                   The cries of orphans, and th' oppressor's rage,
                   Had reach'd the stars: I will descend, said I,
                   In hope to prove this loud complaint a lye.
                   Disguis'd in humane shape, I travell'd round
                   The world, and more than what I heard, I found.
                   O'er Maenalus I took my steepy way,
                   By caverns infamous for beasts of prey:
                   Then cross'd Cyllene, and the piny shade
                   More infamous, by curst Lycaon made:
                   Dark night had cover'd Heaven, and Earth, before
                   I enter'd his unhospitable door.
                   Just at my entrance, I display'd the sign
                   That somewhat was approaching of divine.
                   The prostrate people pray; the tyrant grins;
                   And, adding prophanation to his sins,
                   I'll try, said he, and if a God appear,
                   To prove his deity shall cost him dear.
                   'Twas late; the graceless wretch my death prepares,
                   When I shou'd soundly sleep, opprest with cares:
                   This dire experiment he chose, to prove
                   If I were mortal, or undoubted Jove:
                   But first he had resolv'd to taste my pow'r;
                   Not long before, but in a luckless hour,
                   Some legates, sent from the Molossian state,
                   Were on a peaceful errand come to treat:
                   Of these he murders one, he boils the flesh;
                   And lays the mangled morsels in a dish:
                   Some part he roasts; then serves it up, so drest,
                   And bids me welcome to this humane feast.
                   Mov'd with disdain, the table I o'er-turn'd;
                   And with avenging flames, the palace burn'd.
                   The tyrant in a fright, for shelter gains
                   The neighb'ring fields, and scours along the
                       plains.
                   Howling he fled, and fain he wou'd have spoke;
                   But humane voice his brutal tongue forsook.
                   About his lips the gather'd foam he churns,
                   And, breathing slaughters, still with rage he
                       burns,
                   But on the bleating flock his fury turns.
                   His mantle, now his hide, with rugged hairs
                   Cleaves to his back; a famish'd face he bears;
                   His arms descend, his shoulders sink away
                   To multiply his legs for chase of prey.
                   He grows a wolf, his hoariness remains,
                   And the same rage in other members reigns.
                   His eyes still sparkle in a narr'wer space:
                   His jaws retain the grin, and violence of his face
                     This was a single ruin, but not one
                   Deserves so just a punishment alone.
                   Mankind's a monster, and th' ungodly times
                   Confed'rate into guilt, are sworn to crimes.
                   All are alike involv'd in ill, and all
                   Must by the same relentless fury fall.
                   Thus ended he; the greater Gods assent;
                   By clamours urging his severe intent;
                   The less fill up the cry for punishment.
                   Yet still with pity they remember Man;
                   And mourn as much as heav'nly spirits can.
                   They ask, when those were lost of humane birth,
                   What he wou'd do with all this waste of Earth:
                   If his dispeopl'd world he would resign
                   To beasts, a mute, and more ignoble line;
                   Neglected altars must no longer smoke,
                   If none were left to worship, and invoke.
                   To whom the Father of the Gods reply'd,
                   Lay that unnecessary fear aside:
                   Mine be the care, new people to provide.
                   I will from wondrous principles ordain
                   A race unlike the first, and try my skill again.
                     Already had he toss'd the flaming brand;
                   And roll'd the thunder in his spacious hand;
                   Preparing to discharge on seas and land:
                   But stopt, for fear, thus violently driv'n,
                   The sparks should catch his axle-tree of Heav'n.
                   Remembring in the fates, a time when fire
                   Shou'd to the battlements of Heaven aspire,
                   And all his blazing worlds above shou'd burn;
                   And all th' inferior globe to cinders turn.
                   His dire artill'ry thus dismist, he bent
                   His thoughts to some securer punishment:
                   Concludes to pour a watry deluge down;
                   And what he durst not burn, resolves to drown.
                     The northern breath, that freezes floods, he
                       binds;
                   With all the race of cloud-dispelling winds:
                   The south he loos'd, who night and horror brings;
                   And foggs are shaken from his flaggy wings.
                   From his divided beard two streams he pours,
                   His head, and rheumy eyes distill in show'rs,
                   With rain his robe, and heavy mantle flow:
                   And lazy mists are lowring on his brow;
                   Still as he swept along, with his clench'd fist
                   He squeez'd the clouds, th' imprison'd clouds
                       resist:
                   The skies, from pole to pole, with peals resound;
                   And show'rs inlarg'd, come pouring on the ground.
                   Then, clad in colours of a various dye,
                   Junonian Iris breeds a new supply
                   To feed the clouds: impetuous rain descends;
                   The bearded corn beneath the burden bends:
                   Defrauded clowns deplore their perish'd grain;
                   And the long labours of the year are vain.
                     Nor from his patrimonial Heaven alone
                   Is Jove content to pour his vengeance down;
                   Aid from his brother of the seas he craves,
                   To help him with auxiliary waves.
                   The watry tyrant calls his brooks and floods,
                   Who rowl from mossie caves (their moist abodes);
                   And with perpetual urns his palace fill:
                   To whom in brief, he thus imparts his will.
                     Small exhortation needs; your pow'rs employ:
                   And this bad world, so Jove requires, destroy.
                   Let loose the reins to all your watry store:
                   Bear down the damms, and open ev'ry door.
                     The floods, by Nature enemies to land,
                   And proudly swelling with their new command,
                   Remove the living stones, that stopt their way,
                   And gushing from their source, augment the sea.
                   Then, with his mace, their monarch struck the
                       ground;
                   With inward trembling Earth receiv'd the wound;
                   And rising streams a ready passage found.
                   Th' expanded waters gather on the plain:
                   They float the fields, and over-top the grain;
                   Then rushing onwards, with a sweepy sway,
                   Bear flocks, and folds, and lab'ring hinds away.
                   Nor safe their dwellings were, for, sap'd by
                       floods,
                   Their houses fell upon their houshold Gods.
                   The solid piles, too strongly built to fall,
                   High o'er their heads, behold a watry wall:
                   Now seas and Earth were in confusion lost;
                   A world of waters, and without a coast.
                     One climbs a cliff; one in his boat is born:
                   And ploughs above, where late he sow'd his corn.
                   Others o'er chimney-tops and turrets row,
                   And drop their anchors on the meads below:
                   Or downward driv'n, they bruise the tender vine,
                   Or tost aloft, are knock'd against a pine.
                   And where of late the kids had cropt the grass,
                   The monsters of the deep now take their place.
                   Insulting Nereids on the cities ride,
                   And wond'ring dolphins o'er the palace glide.
                   On leaves, and masts of mighty oaks they brouze;
                   And their broad fins entangle in the boughs.
                   The frighted wolf now swims amongst the sheep;
                   The yellow lion wanders in the deep:
                   His rapid force no longer helps the boar:
                   The stag swims faster, than he ran before.
                   The fowls, long beating on their wings in vain,
                   Despair of land, and drop into the main.
                   Now hills, and vales no more distinction know;
                   And levell'd Nature lies oppress'd below.
                   The most of mortals perish in the flood:
                   The small remainder dies for want of food.
                     A mountain of stupendous height there stands
                   Betwixt th' Athenian and Boeotian lands,
                   The bound of fruitful fields, while fields they
                       were,
                   But then a field of waters did appear:
                   Parnassus is its name; whose forky rise
                   Mounts thro' the clouds, and mates the lofty skies.
                   High on the summit of this dubious cliff,
                   Deucalion wafting, moor'd his little skiff.
                   He with his wife were only left behind
                   Of perish'd Man; they two were human kind.
                   The mountain nymphs, and Themis they adore,
                   And from her oracles relief implore.
                   The most upright of mortal men was he;
                   The most sincere, and holy woman, she.
                     When Jupiter, surveying Earth from high,
                   Beheld it in a lake of water lie,
                   That where so many millions lately liv'd,
                   But two, the best of either sex, surviv'd;
                   He loos'd the northern wind; fierce Boreas flies
                   To puff away the clouds, and purge the skies:
                   Serenely, while he blows, the vapours driv'n,
                   Discover Heav'n to Earth, and Earth to Heav'n.
                   The billows fall, while Neptune lays his mace
                   On the rough sea, and smooths its furrow'd face.
                   Already Triton, at his call, appears
                   Above the waves; a Tyrian robe he wears;
                   And in his hand a crooked trumpet bears.
                   The soveraign bids him peaceful sounds inspire,
                   And give the waves the signal to retire.
                   His writhen shell he takes; whose narrow vent
                   Grows by degrees into a large extent,
                   Then gives it breath; the blast with doubling
                       sound,
                   Runs the wide circuit of the world around:
                   The sun first heard it, in his early east,
                   And met the rattling ecchos in the west.
                   The waters, listning to the trumpet's roar,
                   Obey the summons, and forsake the shore.
                     A thin circumference of land appears;
                   And Earth, but not at once, her visage rears,
                   And peeps upon the seas from upper grounds;
                   The streams, but just contain'd within their
                       bounds,
                   By slow degrees into their channels crawl;
                   And Earth increases, as the waters fall.
                   In longer time the tops of trees appear,
                   Which mud on their dishonour'd branches bear.
                     At length the world was all restor'd to view;
                   But desolate, and of a sickly hue:
                   Nature beheld her self, and stood aghast,
                   A dismal desart, and a silent waste.
                     Which when Deucalion, with a piteous look
                   Beheld, he wept, and thus to Pyrrha spoke:
                   Oh wife, oh sister, oh of all thy kind
                   The best, and only creature left behind,
                   By kindred, love, and now by dangers joyn'd;
                   Of multitudes, who breath'd the common air,
                   We two remain; a species in a pair:
                   The rest the seas have swallow'd; nor have we
                   Ev'n of this wretched life a certainty.
                   The clouds are still above; and, while I speak,
                   A second deluge o'er our heads may break.
                   Shou'd I be snatcht from hence, and thou remain,
                   Without relief, or partner of thy pain,
                   How cou'dst thou such a wretched life sustain?
                   Shou'd I be left, and thou be lost, the sea
                   That bury'd her I lov'd, shou'd bury me.
                   Oh cou'd our father his old arts inspire,
                   And make me heir of his informing fire,
                   That so I might abolisht Man retrieve,
                   And perisht people in new souls might live.
                   But Heav'n is pleas'd, nor ought we to complain,
                   That we, th' examples of mankind, remain.
                   He said; the careful couple joyn their tears:
                   And then invoke the Gods, with pious prayers.
                   Thus, in devotion having eas'd their grief,
                   From sacred oracles they seek relief;
                   And to Cephysus' brook their way pursue:
                   The stream was troubled, but the ford they knew;
                   With living waters, in the fountain bred,
                   They sprinkle first their garments, and their head,
                   Then took the way, which to the temple led.
                   The roofs were all defil'd with moss, and mire,
                   The desart altars void of solemn fire.
                   Before the gradual, prostrate they ador'd;
                   The pavement kiss'd; and thus the saint implor'd.
                     O righteous Themis, if the Pow'rs above
                   By pray'rs are bent to pity, and to love;
                   If humane miseries can move their mind;
                   If yet they can forgive, and yet be kind;
                   Tell how we may restore, by second birth,
                   Mankind, and people desolated Earth.
                   Then thus the gracious Goddess, nodding, said;
                   Depart, and with your vestments veil your head:
                   And stooping lowly down, with losen'd zones,
                   Throw each behind your backs, your mighty mother's
                       bones.
                   Amaz'd the pair, and mute with wonder stand,
                   'Till Pyrrha first refus'd the dire command.
                   Forbid it Heav'n, said she, that I shou'd tear
                   Those holy reliques from the sepulcher.
                   They ponder'd the mysterious words again,
                   For some new sense; and long they sought in vain:
                   At length Deucalion clear'd his cloudy brow,
                   And said, the dark Aenigma will allow
                   A meaning, which, if well I understand,
                   From sacrilege will free the God's command:
                   This Earth our mighty mother is, the stones
                   In her capacious body, are her bones:
                   These we must cast behind. With hope, and fear,
                   The woman did the new solution hear:
                   The man diffides in his own augury,
                   And doubts the Gods; yet both resolve to try.
                   Descending from the mount, they first unbind
                   Their vests, and veil'd, they cast the stones
                       behind:
                   The stones (a miracle to mortal view,
                   But long tradition makes it pass for true)
                   Did first the rigour of their kind expel,
                   And suppled into softness, as they fell;
                   Then swell'd, and swelling, by degrees grew warm;
                   And took the rudiments of human form.
                   Imperfect shapes: in marble such are seen,
                   When the rude chizzel does the man begin;
                   While yet the roughness of the stone remains,
                   Without the rising muscles, and the veins.
                   The sappy parts, and next resembling juice,
                   Were turn'd to moisture, for the body's use:
                   Supplying humours, blood, and nourishment;
                   The rest, too solid to receive a bent,
                   Converts to bones; and what was once a vein,
                   Its former name and Nature did retain.
                   By help of pow'r divine, in little space,
                   What the man threw, assum'd a manly face;
                   And what the wife, renew'd the female race.
                   Hence we derive our nature; born to bear
                   Laborious life; and harden'd into care.
                     The rest of animals, from teeming Earth
                   Produc'd, in various forms receiv'd their birth.
                   The native moisture, in its close retreat,
                   Digested by the sun's aetherial heat,
                   As in a kindly womb, began to breed:
                   Then swell'd, and quicken'd by the vital seed.
                   And some in less, and some in longer space,
                   Were ripen'd into form, and took a sev'ral face.
                   Thus when the Nile from Pharian fields is fled,
                   And seeks, with ebbing tides, his ancient bed,
                   The fat manure with heav'nly fire is warm'd;
                   And crusted creatures, as in wombs, are form'd;
                   These, when they turn the glebe, the peasants find;
                   Some rude, and yet unfinish'd in their kind:
                   Short of their limbs, a lame imperfect birth:
                   One half alive; and one of lifeless earth.
                     For heat, and moisture, when in bodies join'd,
                   The temper that results from either kind
                   Conception makes; and fighting 'till they mix,
                   Their mingled atoms in each other fix.
                   Thus Nature's hand the genial bed prepares
                   With friendly discord, and with fruitful wars.
                     From hence the surface of the ground, with mud
                   And slime besmear'd (the faeces of the flood),
                   Receiv'd the rays of Heav'n: and sucking in
                   The seeds of heat, new creatures did begin:
                   Some were of sev'ral sorts produc'd before,
                   But of new monsters, Earth created more.
                   Unwillingly, but yet she brought to light
                   Thee, Python too, the wondring world to fright,
                   And the new nations, with so dire a sight:
                   So monstrous was his bulk, so large a space
                   Did his vast body, and long train embrace.
                   Whom Phoebus basking on a bank espy'd;
                   E're now the God his arrows had not try'd
                   But on the trembling deer, or mountain goat;
                   At this new quarry he prepares to shoot.
                   Though ev'ry shaft took place, he spent the store
                   Of his full quiver; and 'twas long before
                   Th' expiring serpent wallow'd in his gore.
                   Then, to preserve the fame of such a deed,
                   For Python slain, he Pythian games decred.
                   Where noble youths for mastership shou'd strive,
                   To quoit, to run, and steeds, and chariots drive.
                   The prize was fame: in witness of renown
                   An oaken garland did the victor crown.
                   The laurel was not yet for triumphs born;
                   But every green alike by Phoebus worn,
                   Did, with promiscuous grace, his flowing locks
                       adorn.
        The          The first and fairest of his loves, was she
  Transformation   Whom not blind fortune, but the dire decree
  of Daphne into   Of angry Cupid forc'd him to desire:
     a Lawrel      Daphne her name, and Peneus was her sire.
                   Swell'd with the pride, that new success attends,
                   He sees the stripling, while his bow he bends,
                   And thus insults him: Thou lascivious boy,
                   Are arms like these for children to employ?
                   Know, such atchievements are my proper claim;
                   Due to my vigour, and unerring aim:
                   Resistless are my shafts, and Python late
                   In such a feather'd death, has found his fate.
                   Take up the torch (and lay my weapons by),
                   With that the feeble souls of lovers fry.
                   To whom the son of Venus thus reply'd,
                   Phoebus, thy shafts are sure on all beside,
                   But mine of Phoebus, mine the fame shall be
                   Of all thy conquests, when I conquer thee.
                     He said, and soaring, swiftly wing'd his flight:
                   Nor stopt but on Parnassus' airy height.
                   Two diff'rent shafts he from his quiver draws;
                   One to repel desire, and one to cause.
                   One shaft is pointed with refulgent gold:
                   To bribe the love, and make the lover bold:
                   One blunt, and tipt with lead, whose base allay
                   Provokes disdain, and drives desire away.
                   The blunted bolt against the nymph he drest:
                   But with the sharp transfixt Apollo's breast.
                     Th' enamour'd deity pursues the chace;
                   The scornful damsel shuns his loath'd embrace:
                   In hunting beasts of prey, her youth employs;
                   And Phoebe rivals in her rural joys.
                   With naked neck she goes, and shoulders bare;
                   And with a fillet binds her flowing hair.
                   By many suitors sought, she mocks their pains,
                   And still her vow'd virginity maintains.
                   Impatient of a yoke, the name of bride
                   She shuns, and hates the joys, she never try'd.
                   On wilds, and woods, she fixes her desire:
                   Nor knows what youth, and kindly love, inspire.
                   Her father chides her oft: Thou ow'st, says he,
                   A husband to thy self, a son to me.
                   She, like a crime, abhors the nuptial bed:
                   She glows with blushes, and she hangs her head.
                   Then casting round his neck her tender arms,
                   Sooths him with blandishments, and filial charms:
                   Give me, my Lord, she said, to live, and die,
                   A spotless maid, without the marriage tye.
                   'Tis but a small request; I beg no more
                   Than what Diana's father gave before.
                   The good old sire was soften'd to consent;
                   But said her wish wou'd prove her punishment:
                   For so much youth, and so much beauty join'd,
                   Oppos'd the state, which her desires design'd.
                     The God of light, aspiring to her bed,
                   Hopes what he seeks, with flattering fancies fed;
                   And is, by his own oracles, mis-led.
                   And as in empty fields the stubble burns,
                   Or nightly travellers, when day returns,
                   Their useless torches on dry hedges throw,
                   That catch the flames, and kindle all the row;
                   So burns the God, consuming in desire,
                   And feeding in his breast a fruitless fire:
                   Her well-turn'd neck he view'd (her neck was bare)
                   And on her shoulders her dishevel'd hair;
                   Oh were it comb'd, said he, with what a grace
                   Wou'd every waving curl become her face!
                   He view'd her eyes, like heav'nly lamps that shone,
                   He view'd her lips, too sweet to view alone,
                   Her taper fingers, and her panting breast;
                   He praises all he sees, and for the rest
                   Believes the beauties yet unseen are best:
                   Swift as the wind, the damsel fled away,
                   Nor did for these alluring speeches stay:
                   Stay Nymph, he cry'd, I follow, not a foe.
                   Thus from the lyon trips the trembling doe;
                   Thus from the wolf the frighten'd lamb removes,
                   And, from pursuing faulcons, fearful doves;
                   Thou shunn'st a God, and shunn'st a God, that
                       loves.
                   Ah, lest some thorn shou'd pierce thy tender foot,
                   Or thou shou'dst fall in flying my pursuit!
                   To sharp uneven ways thy steps decline;
                   Abate thy speed, and I will bate of mine.
                   Yet think from whom thou dost so rashly fly;
                   Nor basely born, nor shepherd's swain am I.
                   Perhaps thou know'st not my superior state;
                   And from that ignorance proceeds thy hate.
                   Me Claros, Delphi, Tenedos obey;
                   These hands the Patareian scepter sway.
                   The King of Gods begot me: what shall be,
                   Or is, or ever was, in Fate, I see.
                   Mine is th' invention of the charming lyre;
                   Sweet notes, and heav'nly numbers, I inspire.
                   Sure is my bow, unerring is my dart;
                   But ah! more deadly his, who pierc'd my heart.
                   Med'cine is mine; what herbs and simples grow
                   In fields, and forrests, all their pow'rs I know;
                   And am the great physician call'd, below.
                   Alas that fields and forrests can afford.
                   No remedies to heal their love-sick lord!
                   To cure the pains of love, no plant avails:
                   And his own physick, the physician falls.
                     She heard not half; so furiously she flies;
                   And on her ear th' imperfect accent dies,
                   Fear gave her wings; and as she fled, the wind
                   Increasing, spread her flowing hair behind;
                   And left her legs and thighs expos'd to view:
                   Which made the God more eager to pursue.
                   The God was young, and was too hotly bent
                   To lose his time in empty compliment:
                   But led by love, and fir'd with such a sight,
                   Impetuously pursu'd his near delight.
                     As when th' impatient greyhound slipt from far,
                   Bounds o'er the glebe to course the fearful hare,
                   She in her speed does all her safety lay;
                   And he with double speed pursues the prey;
                   O'er-runs her at the sitting turn, and licks
                   His chaps in vain, and blows upon the flix:
                   She scapes, and for the neighb'ring covert strives,
                   And gaining shelter, doubts if yet she lives:
                   If little things with great we may compare,
                   Such was the God, and such the flying fair,
                   She urg'd by fear, her feet did swiftly move,
                   But he more swiftly, who was urg'd by love.
                   He gathers ground upon her in the chace:
                   Now breathes upon her hair, with nearer pace;
                   And just is fast'ning on the wish'd embrace.
                   The nymph grew pale, and in a mortal fright,
                   Spent with the labour of so long a flight;
                   And now despairing, cast a mournful look
                   Upon the streams of her paternal brook;
                   Oh help, she cry'd, in this extreamest need!
                   If water Gods are deities indeed:
                   Gape Earth, and this unhappy wretch intomb;
                   Or change my form, whence all my sorrows come.
                   Scarce had she finish'd, when her feet she found
                   Benumb'd with cold, and fasten'd to the ground:
                   A filmy rind about her body grows;
                   Her hair to leaves, her arms extend to boughs:
                   The nymph is all into a lawrel gone;
                   The smoothness of her skin remains alone.
                   Yet Phoebus loves her still, and casting round
                   Her bole, his arms, some little warmth he found.
                   The tree still panted in th' unfinish'd part:
                   Not wholly vegetive, and heav'd her heart.
                   He fixt his lips upon the trembling rind;
                   It swerv'd aside, and his embrace declin'd.
                   To whom the God, Because thou canst not be
                   My mistress, I espouse thee for my tree:
                   Be thou the prize of honour, and renown;
                   The deathless poet, and the poem, crown.
                   Thou shalt the Roman festivals adorn,
                   And, after poets, be by victors worn.
                   Thou shalt returning Caesar's triumph grace;
                   When pomps shall in a long procession pass.
                   Wreath'd on the posts before his palace wait;
                   And be the sacred guardian of the gate.
                   Secure from thunder, and unharm'd by Jove,
                   Unfading as th' immortal Pow'rs above:
                   And as the locks of Phoebus are unshorn,
                   So shall perpetual green thy boughs adorn.
                   The grateful tree was pleas'd with what he said;
                   And shook the shady honours of her head.
        The          An ancient forest in Thessalia grows;
  Transformation   Which Tempe's pleasing valley does inclose:
   of Io into a    Through this the rapid Peneus take his course;
      Heyfer       From Pindus rolling with impetuous force;
                   Mists from the river's mighty fall arise:
                   And deadly damps inclose the cloudy skies:
                   Perpetual fogs are hanging o'er the wood;
                   And sounds of waters deaf the neighbourhood.
                   Deep, in a rocky cave, he makes abode
                   (A mansion proper for a mourning God).
                   Here he gives audience; issuing out decrees
                   To rivers, his dependant deities.
                   On this occasion hither they resort;
                   To pay their homage, and to make their court.
                   All doubtful, whether to congratulate
                   His daughter's honour, or lament her fate.
                   Sperchaeus, crown'd with poplar, first appears;
                   Then old Apidanus came crown'd with years:
                   Enipeus turbulent, Amphrysos tame;
                   And Aeas last with lagging waters came.
                   Then, of his kindred brooks, a num'rous throng
                   Condole his loss; and bring their urns along.
                   Not one was wanting of the wat'ry train,
                   That fill'd his flood, or mingled with the main:
                   But Inachus, who in his cave, alone,
                   Wept not another's losses, but his own,
                   For his dear Io, whether stray'd, or dead,
                   To him uncertain, doubtful tears he shed.
                   He sought her through the world; but sought in
                       vain;
                   And no where finding, rather fear'd her slain.
                     Her, just returning from her father's brook,
                   Jove had beheld, with a desiring look:
                   And, Oh fair daughter of the flood, he said,
                   Worthy alone of Jove's imperial bed,
                   Happy whoever shall those charms possess;
                   The king of Gods (nor is thy lover less)
                   Invites thee to yon cooler shades; to shun
                   The scorching rays of the meridian sun.
                   Nor shalt thou tempt the dangers of the grove
                   Alone, without a guide; thy guide is Jove.
                   No puny Pow'r, but he whose high command
                   Is unconfin'd, who rules the seas and land;
                   And tempers thunder in his awful hand,
                   Oh fly not: for she fled from his embrace
                   O'er Lerna's pastures: he pursu'd the chace
                   Along the shades of the Lyrcaean plain;
                   At length the God, who never asks in vain,
                   Involv'd with vapours, imitating night,
                   Both Air, and Earth; and then suppress'd her
                       flight,
                   And mingling force with love, enjoy'd the full
                       delight.
                   Mean-time the jealous Juno, from on high,
                   Survey'd the fruitful fields of Arcady;
                   And wonder'd that the mist shou'd over-run
                   The face of day-light, and obscure the sun.
                   No nat'ral cause she found, from brooks, or bogs,
                   Or marshy lowlands, to produce the fogs;
                   Then round the skies she sought for Jupiter,
                   Her faithless husband; but no Jove was there:
                   Suspecting now the worst, Or I, she said,
                   Am much mistaken, or am much betray'd.
                   With fury she precipitates her flight:
                   Dispels the shadows of dissembled night;
                   And to the day restores his native light.
                   Th' Almighty Leacher, careful to prevent
                   The consequence, foreseeing her descent,
                   Transforms his mistress in a trice; and now
                   In Io's place appears a lovely cow.
                   So sleek her skin, so faultless was her make,
                   Ev'n Juno did unwilling pleasure take
                   To see so fair a rival of her love;
                   And what she was, and whence, enquir'd of Jove:
                   Of what fair herd, and from what pedigree?
                   The God, half caught, was forc'd upon a lye:
                   And said she sprung from Earth. She took the word,
                   And begg'd the beauteous heyfer of her lord.
                   What should he do? 'twas equal shame to Jove
                   Or to relinquish, or betray his love:
                   Yet to refuse so slight a gift, wou'd be
                   But more t' increase his consort's jealousie:
                   Thus fear, and love, by turns, his heart assail'd;
                   And stronger love had sure, at length, prevail'd:
                   But some faint hope remain'd, his jealous queen
                   Had not the mistress through the heyfer seen.
                   The cautious Goddess, of her gift possest,
                   Yet harbour'd anxious thoughts within her breast;
                   As she who knew the falshood of her Jove;
                   And justly fear'd some new relapse of love.
                   Which to prevent, and to secure her care,
                   To trusty Argus she commits the fair.
                     The head of Argus (as with stars the skies)
                   Was compass'd round, and wore an hundred eyes.
                   But two by turns their lids in slumber steep;
                   The rest on duty still their station keep;
                   Nor cou'd the total constellation sleep.
                   Thus, ever present, to his eyes, and mind,
                   His charge was still before him, tho' behind.
                   In fields he suffer'd her to feed by Day,
                   But when the setting sun to night gave way,
                   The captive cow he summon'd with a call;
                   And drove her back, and ty'd her to the stall.
                   On leaves of trees, and bitter herbs she fed,
                   Heav'n was her canopy, bare earth her bed:
                   So hardly lodg'd, and to digest her food,
                   She drank from troubled streams, defil'd with mud.
                   Her woeful story fain she wou'd have told,
                   With hands upheld, but had no hands to hold.
                   Her head to her ungentle keeper bow'd,
                   She strove to speak, she spoke not, but she low'd:
                   Affrighted with the noise, she look'd around,
                   And seem'd t' inquire the author of the sound.
                     Once on the banks where often she had play'd
                   (Her father's banks), she came, and there survey'd
                   Her alter'd visage, and her branching head;
                   And starting, from her self she wou'd have fled.
                   Her fellow nymphs, familiar to her eyes,
                   Beheld, but knew her not in this disguise.
                   Ev'n Inachus himself was ignorant;
                   And in his daughter, did his daughter want.
                   She follow'd where her fellows went, as she
                   Were still a partner of the company:
                   They stroak her neck; the gentle heyfer stands,
                   And her neck offers to their stroaking hands.
                   Her father gave her grass; the grass she took;
                   And lick'd his palms, and cast a piteous look;
                   And in the language of her eyes, she spoke.
                   She wou'd have told her name, and ask'd relief,
                   But wanting words, in tears she tells her grief.
                   Which, with her foot she makes him understand;
                   And prints the name of Io in the sand.
                     Ah wretched me! her mournful father cry'd;
                   She, with a sigh, to wretched me reply'd:
                   About her milk-white neck, his arms he threw;
                   And wept, and then these tender words ensue.
                   And art thou she, whom I have sought around
                   The world, and have at length so sadly found?
                   So found, is worse than lost: with mutual words
                   Thou answer'st not, no voice thy tongue affords:
                   But sighs are deeply drawn from out thy breast;
                   And speech deny'd, by lowing is express'd.
                   Unknowing, I prepar'd thy bridal bed;
                   With empty hopes of happy issue fed.
                   But now the husband of a herd must be
                   Thy mate, and bell'wing sons thy progeny.
                   Oh, were I mortal, death might bring relief:
                   But now my God-head but extends my grief:
                   Prolongs my woes, of which no end I see,
                   And makes me curse my immortality!
                   More had he said, but fearful of her stay,
                   The starry guardian drove his charge away,
                   To some fresh pasture; on a hilly height
                   He sate himself, and kept her still in sight.
    The Eyes of      Now Jove no longer cou'd her suff'rings bear;
       Argus       But call'd in haste his airy messenger,
    transform'd    The son of Maia, with severe decree
      into a       To kill the keeper, and to set her free.
     Peacock's     With all his harness soon the God was sped,
       Train       His flying hat was fastned on his head,
                   Wings on his heels were hung, and in his hand
                   He holds the vertue of the snaky wand.
                   The liquid air his moving pinions wound,
                   And, in the moment, shoot him on the ground.
                   Before he came in sight, the crafty God
                   His wings dismiss'd, but still retain'd his rod:
                   That sleep-procuring wand wise Hermes took,
                   But made it seem to sight a sherpherd's hook.
                   With this, he did a herd of goats controul;
                   Which by the way he met, and slily stole.
                   Clad like a country swain, he pip'd, and sung;
                   And playing, drove his jolly troop along.
                     With pleasure, Argus the musician heeds;
                   But wonders much at those new vocal reeds.
                   And whosoe'er thou art, my friend, said he,
                   Up hither drive thy goats, and play by me:
                   This hill has browz for them, and shade for thee.
                   The God, who was with ease induc'd to climb,
                   Began discourse to pass away the time;
                   And still betwixt, his tuneful pipe he plies;
                   And watch'd his hour, to close the keeper's eyes.
                   With much ado, he partly kept awake;
                   Not suff'ring all his eyes repose to take:
                   And ask'd the stranger, who did reeds invent,
                   And whence began so rare an instrument?
        The          Then Hermes thus: A nymph of late there was
  Transformation   Whose heav'nly form her fellows did surpass.
     of Syrinx     The pride and joy of fair Arcadia's plains,
    into Reeds     Belov'd by deities, ador'd by swains:
                   Syrinx her name, by Sylvans oft pursu'd,
                   As oft she did the lustful Gods delude:
                   The rural, and the woodland Pow'rs disdain'd;
                   With Cynthia hunted, and her rites maintain'd:
                   Like Phoebe clad, even Phoebe's self she seems,
                   So tall, so streight, such well-proportion'd limbs:
                   The nicest eye did no distinction know,
                   But that the goddess bore a golden bow:
                   Distinguish'd thus, the sight she cheated too.
                   Descending from Lycaeus, Pan admires
                   The matchless nymph, and burns with new desires.
                   A crown of pine upon his head he wore;
                   And thus began her pity to implore.
                   But e'er he thus began, she took her flight
                   So swift, she was already out of sight.
                   Nor stay'd to hear the courtship of the God;
                   But bent her course to Ladon's gentle flood:
                   There by the river stopt, and tir'd before;
                   Relief from water nymphs her pray'rs implore.
                     Now while the lustful God, with speedy pace,
                   Just thought to strain her in a strict embrace,
                   He fill'd his arms with reeds, new rising on the
                       place.
                   And while he sighs, his ill success to find,
                   The tender canes were shaken by the wind;
                   And breath'd a mournful air, unheard before;
                   That much surprizing Pan, yet pleas'd him more.
                   Admiring this new musick, Thou, he said,
                   Who canst not be the partner of my bed,
                   At least shall be the confort of my mind:
                   And often, often to my lips be joyn'd.
                   He form'd the reeds, proportion'd as they are,
                   Unequal in their length, and wax'd with care,
                   They still retain the name of his ungrateful fair.
                     While Hermes pip'd, and sung, and told his tale,
                   The keeper's winking eyes began to fail,
                   And drowsie slumber on the lids to creep;
                   'Till all the watchman was at length asleep.
                   Then soon the God his voice, and song supprest;
                   And with his pow'rful rod confirm'd his rest:
                   Without delay his crooked faulchion drew,
                   And at one fatal stroke the keeper slew.
                   Down from the rock fell the dissever'd head,
                   Opening its eyes in death; and falling, bled;
                   And mark'd the passage with a crimson trail:
                   Thus Argus lies in pieces, cold, and pale;
                   And all his hundred eyes, with all their light,
                   Are clos'd at once, in one perpetual night.
                   These Juno takes, that they no more may fail,
                   And spreads them in her peacock's gaudy tail.
                     Impatient to revenge her injur'd bed,
                   She wreaks her anger on her rival's head;
                   With Furies frights her from her native home;
                   And drives her gadding, round the world to roam:
                   Nor ceas'd her madness, and her flight, before
                   She touch'd the limits of the Pharian shore.
                   At length, arriving on the banks of Nile,
                   Wearied with length of ways, and worn with toil,
                   She laid her down; and leaning on her knees,
                   Invok'd the cause of all her miseries:
                   And cast her languishing regards above,
                   For help from Heav'n, and her ungrateful Jove.
                   She sigh'd, she wept, she low'd; 'twas all she
                       cou'd;
                   And with unkindness seem'd to tax the God.
                   Last, with an humble pray'r, she beg'd repose,
                   Or death at least, to finish all her woes.
                   Jove heard her vows, and with a flatt'ring look,
                   In her behalf to jealous Juno spoke,
                   He cast his arms about her neck, and said,
                   Dame, rest secure; no more thy nuptial bed
                   This nymph shall violate; by Styx I swear,
                   And every oath that binds the Thunderer.
                   The Goddess was appeas'd; and at the word
                   Was Io to her former shape restor'd.
                   The rugged hair began to fall away;
                   The sweetness of her eyes did only stay,
                   Tho' not so large; her crooked horns decrease;
                   The wideness of her jaws and nostrils cease:
                   Her hoofs to hands return, in little space:
                   The five long taper fingers take their place,
                   And nothing of the heyfer now is seen,
                   Beside the native whiteness of the skin.
                   Erected on her feet she walks again:
                   And two the duty of the four sustain.
                   She tries her tongue; her silence softly breaks,
                   And fears her former lowings when she speaks:
                   A Goddess now, through all th' Aegyptian State:
                   And serv'd by priests, who in white linnen wait.
                     Her son was Epaphus, at length believ'd
                   The son of Jove, and as a God receiv'd;
                   With sacrifice ador'd, and publick pray'rs,
                   He common temples with his mother shares.
                   Equal in years, and rival in renown
                   With Epaphus, the youthful Phaeton
                   Like honour claims; and boasts his sire the sun.
                   His haughty looks, and his assuming air,
                   The son of Isis could no longer bear:
                   Thou tak'st thy mother's word too far, said he,
                   And hast usurp'd thy boasted pedigree.
                   Go, base pretender to a borrow'd name.
                   Thus tax'd, he blush'd with anger, and with shame;
                   But shame repress'd his rage: the daunted youth
                   Soon seeks his mother, and enquires the truth:
                   Mother, said he, this infamy was thrown
                   By Epaphus on you, and me your son.
                   He spoke in publick, told it to my face;
                   Nor durst I vindicate the dire disgrace:
                   Even I, the bold, the sensible of wrong,
                   Restrain'd by shame, was forc'd to hold my tongue.
                   To hear an open slander, is a curse:
                   But not to find an answer, is a worse.
                   If I am Heav'n-begot, assert your son
                   By some sure sign; and make my father known,
                   To right my honour, and redeem your own.
                   He said, and saying cast his arms about
                   Her neck, and beg'd her to resolve the doubt.
                     'Tis hard to judge if Clymene were mov'd
                   More by his pray'r, whom she so dearly lov'd,
                   Or more with fury fir'd, to find her name
                   Traduc'd, and made the sport of common fame.
                   She stretch'd her arms to Heav'n, and fix'd her
                       eyes
                   On that fair planet that adorns the skies;
                   Now by those beams, said she, whose holy fires
                   Consume my breast, and kindle my desires;
                   By him, who sees us both, and clears our sight,
                   By him, the publick minister of light,
                   I swear that Sun begot thee; if I lye,
                   Let him his chearful influence deny:
                   Let him no more this perjur'd creature see;
                   And shine on all the world but only me.
                   If still you doubt your mother's innocence,
                   His eastern mansion is not far from hence;
                   With little pains you to his Leve go,
                   And from himself your parentage may know.
                   With joy th' ambitious youth his mother heard,
                   And eager, for the journey soon prepar'd.
                   He longs the world beneath him to survey;
                   To guide the chariot; and to give the day:
                   From Meroe's burning sands he bends his course,
                   Nor less in India feels his father's force:
                   His travel urging, till he came in sight;
                   And saw the palace by the purple light.

                            The End of the First Book.
                                     BOOK THE SECOND

                     THE Sun's bright palace, on high columns rais'd,
                   With burnish'd gold and flaming jewels blaz'd;
                   The folding gates diffus'd a silver light,
                   And with a milder gleam refresh'd the sight;
                   Of polish'd iv'ry was the cov'ring wrought:
   The Story of    The matter vied not with the sculptor's thought,
      Phaeton      For in the portal was display'd on high
                   (The work of Vulcan) a fictitious sky;
                   A waving sea th' inferiour Earth embrac'd,
                   And Gods and Goddesses the waters grac'd.
                   Aegeon here a mighty whale bestrode;
                   Triton, and Proteus (the deceiving God)
                   With Doris here were carv'd, and all her train,
                   Some loosely swimming in the figur'd main,
                   While some on rocks their dropping hair divide,
                   And some on fishes through the waters glide:
                   Tho' various features did the sisters grace,
                   A sister's likeness was in ev'ry face.
                   On Earth a diff'rent landskip courts the eyes,
                   Men, towns, and beasts in distant prospects rise,
                   And nymphs, and streams, and woods, and rural
                       deities.
                   O'er all, the Heav'n's refulgent image shines;
                   On either gate were six engraven signs.
                     Here Phaeton still gaining on th' ascent,
                   To his suspected father's palace went,
                   'Till pressing forward through the bright abode,
                   He saw at distance the illustrious God:
                   He saw at distance, or the dazling light
                   Had flash'd too strongly on his aking sight.
                     The God sits high, exalted on a throne
                   Of blazing gems, with purple garments on;
                   The Hours, in order rang'd on either hand,
                   And Days, and Months, and Years, and Ages stand.
                   Here Spring appears with flow'ry chaplets bound;
                   Here Summer in her wheaten garland crown'd;
                   Here Autumn the rich trodden grapes besmear;
                   And hoary Winter shivers in the reer.
                     Phoebus beheld the youth from off his throne;
                   That eye, which looks on all, was fix'd in one.
                   He saw the boy's confusion in his face,
                   Surpriz'd at all the wonders of the place;
                   And cries aloud, "What wants my son? for know
                   My son thou art, and I must call thee so."
                   "Light of the world," the trembling youth replies,
                   "Illustrious parent! since you don't despise
                   The parent's name, some certain token give,
                   That I may Clymene's proud boast believe,
                   Nor longer under false reproaches grieve."
                     The tender sire was touch'd with what he said,
                   And flung the blaze of glories from his head,
                   And bid the youth advance: "My son," said he,
                   "Come to thy father's arms! for Clymene
                   Has told thee true; a parent's name I own,
                   And deem thee worthy to be called my son.
                   As a sure proof, make some request, and I,
                   Whate'er it be, with that request comply;
                   By Styx I swear, whose waves are hid in night,
                   And roul impervious to my piercing sight."
                   The youth transported, asks, without delay,
                   To guide the sun's bright chariot for a day.
                     The God repented of the oath he took,
                   For anguish thrice his radiant head he shook;
                   "My son," says he, "some other proof require,
                   Rash was my promise, rash is thy desire.
                   I'd fain deny this wish, which thou hast made,
                   Or, what I can't deny, wou'd fain disswade.
                   Too vast and hazardous the task appears,
                   Nor suited to thy strength, nor to thy years.
                   Thy lot is mortal, but thy wishes fly
                   Beyond the province of mortality:
                   There is not one of all the Gods that dares
                   (However skill'd in other great affairs)
                   To mount the burning axle-tree, but I;
                   Not Jove himself, the ruler of the sky,
                   That hurles the three-fork'd thunder from above,
                   Dares try his strength: yet who so strong as Jove?
                   The steeds climb up the first ascent with pain,
                   And when the middle firmament they gain,
                   If downward from the Heav'ns my head I bow,
                   And see the Earth and Ocean hang below,
                   Ev'n I am seiz'd with horror and affright,
                   And my own heart misgives me at the sight.
                   A mighty downfal steeps the ev'ning stage,
                   And steddy reins must curb the horses' rage.
                   Tethys herself has fear'd to see me driv'n
                   Down headlong from the precipice of Heav'n.
                   Besides, consider what impetuous force
                   Turns stars and planets in a diff'rent course.
                   I steer against their motions; nor am I
                   Born back by all the current of the sky.
                   But how cou'd you resist the orbs that roul
                   In adverse whirls, and stem the rapid pole?
                   But you perhaps may hope for pleasing woods,
                   And stately dooms, and cities fill'd with Gods;
                   While through a thousand snares your progress lies,
                   Where forms of starry monsters stock the skies:
                   For, shou'd you hit the doubtful way aright,
                   The bull with stooping horns stands opposite;
                   Next him the bright Haemonian bow is strung,
                   And next, the lion's grinning visage hung:
                   The scorpion's claws, here clasp a wide extent;
                   And here the crab's in lesser clasps are bent.
                   Nor wou'd you find it easie to compose
                   The mettled steeds, when from their nostrils flows
                   The scorching fire, that in their entrails glows.
                   Ev'n I their head-strong fury scarce restrain,
                   When they grow warm and restif to the rein.
                   Let not my son a fatal gift require,
                   But, O! in time, recall your rash desire;
                   You ask a gift that may your parent tell,
                   Let these my fears your parentage reveal;
                   And learn a father from a father's care:
                   Look on my face; or if my heart lay bare,
                   Cou'd you but look, you'd read the father there.
                   Chuse out a gift from seas, or Earth, or skies,
                   For open to your wish all Nature lies,
                   Only decline this one unequal task,
                   For 'tis a mischief, not a gift, you ask.
                   You ask a real mischief, Phaeton:
                   Nay hang not thus about my neck, my son:
                   I grant your wish, and Styx has heard my voice,
                   Chuse what you will, but make a wiser choice."
                     Thus did the God th' unwary youth advise;
                   But he still longs to travel through the skies.
                   When the fond father (for in vain he pleads)
                   At length to the Vulcanian Chariot leads.
                   A golden axle did the work uphold,
                   Gold was the beam, the wheels were orb'd with gold.
                   The spokes in rows of silver pleas'd the sight,
                   The seat with party-colour'd gems was bright;
                   Apollo shin'd amid the glare of light.
                   The youth with secret joy the work surveys,
                   When now the moon disclos'd her purple rays;
                   The stars were fled, for Lucifer had chased
                   The stars away, and fled himself at last.
                   Soon as the father saw the rosy morn,
                   And the moon shining with a blunter horn,
                   He bid the nimble Hours, without delay,
                   Bring forth the steeds; the nimble Hours obey:
                   From their full racks the gen'rous steeds retire,
                   Dropping ambrosial foams, and snorting fire.
                   Still anxious for his son, the God of day,
                   To make him proof against the burning ray,
                   His temples with celestial ointment wet,
                   Of sov'reign virtue to repel the heat;
                   Then fix'd the beamy circle on his head,
                   And fetch'd a deep foreboding sigh, and said,
                   "Take this at least, this last advice, my son,
                   Keep a stiff rein, and move but gently on:
                   The coursers of themselves will run too fast,
                   Your art must be to moderate their haste.
                   Drive 'em not on directly through the skies,
                   But where the Zodiac's winding circle lies,
                   Along the midmost Zone; but sally forth
                   Nor to the distant south, nor stormy north.
                   The horses' hoofs a beaten track will show,
                   But neither mount too high, nor sink too low.
                   That no new fires, or Heav'n or Earth infest;
                   Keep the mid way, the middle way is best.
                   Nor, where in radiant folds the serpent twines,
                   Direct your course, nor where the altar shines.
                   Shun both extreams; the rest let Fortune guide,
                   And better for thee than thy self provide!
                   See, while I speak, the shades disperse away,
                   Aurora gives the promise of a day;
                   I'm call'd, nor can I make a longer stay.
                   Snatch up the reins; or still th' attempt forsake,
                   And not my chariot, but my counsel, take,
                   While yet securely on the Earth you stand;
                   Nor touch the horses with too rash a hand.
                   Let me alone to light the world, while you
                   Enjoy those beams which you may safely view."
                   He spoke in vain; the youth with active heat
                   And sprightly vigour vaults into the seat;
                   And joys to hold the reins, and fondly gives
                   Those thanks his father with remorse receives.
                     Mean-while the restless horses neigh'd aloud,
                   Breathing out fire, and pawing where they stood.
                   Tethys, not knowing what had past, gave way,
                   And all the waste of Heav'n before 'em lay.
                   They spring together out, and swiftly bear
                   The flying youth thro' clouds and yielding air;
                   With wingy speed outstrip the eastern wind,
                   And leave the breezes of the morn behind.
                   The youth was light, nor cou'd he fill the seat,
                   Or poise the chariot with its wonted weight:
                   But as at sea th' unballass'd vessel rides,
                   Cast to and fro, the sport of winds and tides;
                   So in the bounding chariot toss'd on high,
                   The youth is hurry'd headlong through the sky.
                   Soon as the steeds perceive it, they forsake
                   Their stated course, and leave the beaten track.
                   The youth was in a maze, nor did he know
                   Which way to turn the reins, or where to go;
                   Nor wou'd the horses, had he known, obey.
                   Then the sev'n stars first felt Apollo's ray,
                   And wish'd to dip in the forbidden sea.
                   The folded serpent next the frozen pole,
                   Stiff and benum'd before, began to rowle,
                   And raged with inward heat, and threaten'd war,
                   And shot a redder light from ev'ry star;
                   Nay, and 'tis said Bootes too, that fain
                   Thou woud'st have fled, tho' cumber'd with thy
                       wane.
                     Th' unhappy youth then, bending down his head,
                   Saw Earth and Ocean far beneath him spread.
                   His colour chang'd, he startled at the sight,
                   And his eyes darken'd by too great a light.
                   Now cou'd he wish the fiery steeds untry'd,
                   His birth obscure, and his request deny'd:
                   Now wou'd he Merops for his father own,
                   And quit his boasted kindred to the sun.
                     So fares the pilot, when his ship is tost
                   In troubled seas, and all its steerage lost,
                   He gives her to the winds, and in despair
                   Seeks his last refuge in the Gods and pray'r.
                     What cou'd he do? his eyes, if backward cast,
                   Find a long path he had already past;
                   If forward, still a longer path they find:
                   Both he compares, and measures in his mind;
                   And sometimes casts an eye upon the east,
                   And sometimes looks on the forbidden west,
                   The horses' names he knew not in the fright,
                   Nor wou'd he loose the reins, nor cou'd he hold 'em
                       right.
                     Now all the horrors of the Heav'ns he spies,
                   And monstrous shadows of prodigious size,
                   That, deck'd with stars, lye scatter'd o'er the
                       skies.
                   There is a place above, where Scorpio bent
                   In tail and arms surrounds a vast extent;
                   In a wide circuit of the Heav'ns he shines,
                   And fills the space of two coelestial signs.
                   Soon as the youth beheld him vex'd with heat
                   Brandish his sting, and in his poison sweat,
                   Half dead with sudden fear he dropt the reins;
                   The horses felt 'em loose upon their mains,
                   And, flying out through all the plains above,
                   Ran uncontroul'd where-e're their fury drove;
                   Rush'd on the stars, and through a pathless way
                   Of unknown regions hurry'd on the day.
                   And now above, and now below they flew,
                   And near the Earth the burning chariot drew.
                     The clouds disperse in fumes, the wond'ring Moon
                   Beholds her brother's steeds beneath her own;
                   The highlands smoak, cleft by the piercing rays,
                   Or, clad with woods, in their own fewel blaze.
                   Next o'er the plains, where ripen'd harvests grow,
                   The running conflagration spreads below.
                   But these are trivial ills: whole cities burn,
                   And peopled kingdoms into ashes turn.
                     The mountains kindle as the car draws near,
                   Athos and Tmolus red with fires appear;
                   Oeagrian Haemus (then a single name)
                   And virgin Helicon increase the flame;
                   Taurus and Oete glare amid the sky,
                   And Ida, spight of all her fountains, dry.
                   Eryx and Othrys, and Cithaeron, glow,
                   And Rhodope, no longer cloath'd in snow;
                   High Pindus, Mimas, and Parnassus, sweat,
                   And Aetna rages with redoubled heat.
                   Ev'n Scythia, through her hoary regions warm'd,
                   In vain with all her native frost was arm'd.
                   Cover'd with flames the tow'ring Appennine,
                   And Caucasus, and proud Olympus, shine;
                   And, where the long-extended Alpes aspire,
                   Now stands a huge continu'd range of fire.
                     Th' astonisht youth, where-e'er his eyes cou'd
                       turn,
                   Beheld the universe around him burn:
                   The world was in a blaze; nor cou'd he bear
                   The sultry vapours and the scorching air,
                   Which from below, as from a furnace, flow'd;
                   And now the axle-tree beneath him glow'd:
                   Lost in the whirling clouds that round him broke,
                   And white with ashes, hov'ring in the smoke.
                   He flew where-e'er the horses drove, nor knew
                   Whither the horses drove, or where he flew.
                     'Twas then, they say, the swarthy Moor begun
                   To change his hue, and blacken in the sun.
                   Then Libya first, of all her moisture drain'd,
                   Became a barren waste, a wild of sand.
                   The water-nymphs lament their empty urns,
                   Boeotia, robb's of silve Dirce, mourns,
                   Corinth Pyrene's wasted spring bewails,
                   And Argos grieves whilst Amymone fails.
                     The floods are drain'd from ev'ry distant coast,
                   Ev'n Tanais, tho' fix'd in ice, was lost.
                   Enrag'd Caicus and Lycormas roar,
                   And Xanthus, fated to be burnt once more.
                   The fam'd Maeander, that unweary'd strays
                   Through mazy windings, smoaks in ev'ry maze.
                   From his lov'd Babylon Euphrates flies;
                   The big-swoln Ganges and the Danube rise
                   In thick'ning fumes, and darken half the skies.
                   In flames Ismenos and the Phasis roul'd,
                   And Tagus floating in his melted gold.
                   The swans, that on Cayster often try'd
                   Their tuneful songs, now sung their last and dy'd.
                   The frighted Nile ran off, and under ground
                   Conceal'd his head, nor can it yet be found:
                   His sev'n divided currents all are dry,
                   And where they row'ld, sev'n gaping trenches lye:
                   No more the Rhine or Rhone their course maintain,
                   Nor Tiber, of his promis'd empire vain.
                     The ground, deep-cleft, admits the dazling ray,
                   And startles Pluto with the flash of day.
                   The seas shrink in, and to the sight disclose
                   Wide naked plains, where once their billows rose;
                   Their rocks are all discover'd, and increase
                   The number of the scatter'd Cyclades.
                   The fish in sholes about the bottom creep,
                   Nor longer dares the crooked dolphin leap
                   Gasping for breath, th' unshapen Phocae die,
                   And on the boiling wave extended lye.
                   Nereus, and Doris with her virgin train,
                   Seek out the last recesses of the main;
                   Beneath unfathomable depths they faint,
                   And secret in their gloomy caverns pant.
                   Stern Neptune thrice above the waves upheld
                   His face, and thrice was by the flames repell'd.
                     The Earth at length, on ev'ry side embrac'd
                   With scalding seas that floated round her waste,
                   When now she felt the springs and rivers come,
                   And crowd within the hollow of her womb,
                   Up-lifted to the Heav'ns her blasted head,
                   And clapt her hand upon her brows, and said
                   (But first, impatient of the sultry heat,
                   Sunk deeper down, and sought a cooler seat):
                   "If you, great king of Gods, my death approve,
                   And I deserve it, let me die by Jove;
                   If I must perish by the force of fire,
                   Let me transfix'd with thunder-bolts expire.
                   See, whilst I speak, my breath the vapours choak
                   (For now her face lay wrapt in clouds of smoak),
                   See my singe'd hair, behold my faded eye,
                   And wither'd face, where heaps of cinders lye!
                   And does the plow for this my body tear?
                   This the reward for all the fruits I bear,
                   Tortur'd with rakes, and harrass'd all the year?
                   That herbs for cattle daily I renew,
                   And food for Man, and frankincense for you?
                   But grant me guilty; what has Neptune done?
                   Why are his waters boiling in the sun?
                   The wavy empire, which by lot was giv'n,
                   Why does it waste, and further shrink from Heav'n?
                   If I nor he your pity can provoke,
                   See your own Heav'ns, the Heav'ns begin to smoke!
                   Shou'd once the sparkles catch those bright abodes,
                   Destruction seizes on the Heav'ns and Gods;
                   Atlas becomes unequal to his freight,
                   And almost faints beneath the glowing weight.
                   If Heav'n, and Earth, and sea, together burn,
                   All must again into their chaos turn.
                   Apply some speedy cure, prevent our fate,
                   And succour Nature, ere it be too late."
                   She cea'sd, for choak'd with vapours round her
                       spread,
                   Down to the deepest shades she sunk her head.
                     Jove call'd to witness ev'ry Pow'r above,
                   And ev'n the God, whose son the chariot drove,
                   That what he acts he is compell'd to do,
                   Or universal ruin must ensue.
                   Strait he ascends the high aetherial throne,
                   From whence he us'd to dart his thunder down,
                   From whence his show'rs and storms he us'd to pour,
                   But now cou'd meet with neither storm nor show'r.
                   Then, aiming at the youth, with lifted hand,
                   Full at his head he hurl'd the forky brand,
                   In dreadful thund'rings. Thus th' almighty sire
                   Suppress'd the raging of the fires with fire.
                     At once from life and from the chariot driv'n,
                   Th' ambitious boy fell thunder-struck from Heav'n.
                   The horses started with a sudden bound,
                   And flung the reins and chariot to the ground:
                   The studded harness from their necks they broke,
                   Here fell a wheel, and here a silver spoke,
                   Here were the beam and axle torn away;
                   And, scatter'd o'er the Earth, the shining
                       fragments lay.
                   The breathless Phaeton, with flaming hair,
                   Shot from the chariot, like a falling star,
                   That in a summer's ev'ning from the top
                   Of Heav'n drops down, or seems at least to drop;
                   'Till on the Po his blasted corps was hurl'd,
                   Far from his country, in the western world.
     Phaeton's       The Latian nymphs came round him, and, amaz'd,
      Sisters      On the dead youth, transfix'd with thunder, gaz'd;
    transform'd    And, whilst yet smoaking from the bolt he lay,
    into Trees     His shatter'd body to a tomb convey,
                   And o'er the tomb an epitaph devise:
                   "Here he, who drove the sun's bright chariot, lies;
                   His father's fiery steeds he cou'd not guide,
                   But in the glorious enterprize he dy'd."
                     Apollo hid his face, and pin'd for grief,
                   And, if the story may deserve belief,
                   The space of one whole day is said to run,
                   From morn to wonted ev'n, without a sun:
                   The burning ruins, with a fainter ray,
                   Supply the sun, and counterfeit a day,
                   A day, that still did Nature's face disclose:
                   This comfort from the mighty mischief rose.
                     But Clymene, enrag'd with grief, laments,
                   And as her grief inspires, her passion vents:
                   Wild for her son, and frantick in her woes,
                   With hair dishevel'd round the world she goes,
                   To seek where-e'er his body might be cast;
                   'Till, on the borders of the Po, at last
                   The name inscrib'd on the new tomb appears.
                   The dear dear name she bathes in flowing tears,
                   Hangs o'er the tomb, unable to depart,
                   And hugs the marble to her throbbing heart.
                     Her daughters too lament, and sigh, and mourn
                   (A fruitless tribute to their brother's urn),
                   And beat their naked bosoms, and complain,
                   And call aloud for Phaeton in vain:
                   All the long night their mournful watch they keep,
                   And all the day stand round the tomb, and weep.
                     Four times, revolving, the full moon return'd;
                   So long the mother and the daughters mourn'd:
                   When now the eldest, Phaethusa, strove
                   To rest her weary limbs, but could not move;
                   Lampetia wou'd have help'd her, but she found
                   Her self with-held, and rooted to the ground:
                   A third in wild affliction, as she grieves,
                   Wou'd rend her hair, but fills her hands with
                       leaves;
                   One sees her thighs transform'd, another views
                   Her arms shot out, and branching into boughs.
                   And now their legs, and breasts, and bodies stood
                   Crusted with bark, and hard'ning into wood;
                   But still above were female heads display'd,
                   And mouths, that call'd the mother to their aid.
                   What cou'd, alas! the weeping mother do?
                   From this to that with eager haste she flew,
                   And kiss'd her sprouting daughters as they grew.
                   She tears the bark that to each body cleaves,
                   And from their verdant fingers strips the leaves:
                   The blood came trickling, where she tore away
                   The leaves and bark: the maids were heard to say,
                   "Forbear, mistaken parent, oh! forbear;
                   A wounded daughter in each tree you tear;
                   Farewell for ever." Here the bark encreas'd,
                   Clos'd on their faces, and their words suppress'd.
                     The new-made trees in tears of amber run,
                   Which, harden'd into value by the sun,
                   Distill for ever on the streams below:
                   The limpid streams their radiant treasure show,
                   Mixt in the sand; whence the rich drops convey'd
                   Shine in the dress of the bright Latian maid.
        The          Cycnus beheld the nymphs transform'd, ally'd
  Transformation   To their dead brother on the mortal side,
  of Cycnus into   In friendship and affection nearer bound;
      a Swan       He left the cities and the realms he own'd,
                   Thro' pathless fields and lonely shores to range,
                   And woods made thicker by the sisters' change.
                   Whilst here, within the dismal gloom, alone,
                   The melancholy monarch made his moan,
                   His voice was lessen'd, as he try'd to speak,
                   And issu'd through a long-extended neck;
                   His hair transforms to down, his fingers meet
                   In skinny films, and shape his oary feet;
                   From both his sides the wings and feathers break;
                   And from his mouth proceeds a blunted beak:
                   All Cycnus now into a Swan was turn'd,
                   Who, still remembring how his kinsman burn'd,
                   To solitary pools and lakes retires,
                   And loves the waters as oppos'd to fires.
                     Mean-while Apollo in a gloomy shade
                   (The native lustre of his brows decay'd)
                   Indulging sorrow, sickens at the sight
                   Of his own sun-shine, and abhors the light;
                   The hidden griefs, that in his bosom rise,
                   Sadden his looks and over-cast his eyes,
                   As when some dusky orb obstructs his ray,
                   And sullies in a dim eclipse the day.
                     Now secretly with inward griefs he pin'd,
                   Now warm resentments to his griefs he joyn'd,
                   And now renounc'd his office to mankind.
                   "Ere since the birth of time," said he, "I've born
                   A long ungrateful toil, without return;
                   Let now some other manage, if he dare,
                   The fiery steeds, and mount the burning carr;
                   Or, if none else, let Jove his fortune try,
                   And learn to lay his murd'ring thunder by;
                   Then will he own, perhaps, but own too late,
                   My son deserv'd not so severe a fate."
                     The Gods stand round him, as he mourns, and pray
                   He would resume the conduct of the day,
                   Nor let the world be lost in endless night:
                   Jove too himself descending from his height,
                   Excuses what had happen'd, and intreats,
                   Majestically mixing pray'rs and threats.
                   Prevail'd upon at length, again he took
                   The harness'd steeds, that still with horror shook,
                   And plies 'em with the lash, and whips 'em on,
                   And, as he whips, upbraids 'em with his son.
   The Story of    The day was settled in its course; and Jove
      Calisto      Walk'd the wide circuit of the Heavens above,
                   To search if any cracks or flaws were made;
                   But all was safe: the Earth he then survey'd,
                   And cast an eye on ev'ry diff'rent coast,
                   And ev'ry land; but on Arcadia most.
                   Her fields he cloath'd, and chear'd her blasted
                       face
                   With running fountains, and with springing grass.
                   No tracks of Heav'n's destructive fire remain,
                   The fields and woods revive, and Nature smiles
                       again.
                     But as the God walk'd to and fro the Earth,
                   And rais'd the plants, and gave the spring its
                       birth,
                   By chance a fair Arcadian nymph he view'd,
                   And felt the lovely charmer in his blood.
                   The nymph nor spun, nor dress'd with artful pride,
                   Her vest was gather'd up, her hair was ty'd;
                   Now in her hand a slender spear she bore,
                   Now a light quiver on her shoulders wore;
                   To chaste Diana from her youth inclin'd,
                   The sprightly warriors of the wood she joyn'd.
                   Diana too the gentle huntress lov'd,
                   Nor was there one of all the nymphs that rov'd
                   O'er Maenalus, amid the maiden throng,
                   More favour'd once; but favour lasts not long.
                     The sun now shone in all its strength, and drove
                   The heated virgin panting to a grove;
                   The grove around a grateful shadow cast:
                   She dropt her arrows, and her bow unbrac'd;
                   She flung her self on the cool grassy bed;
                   And on the painted quiver rais'd her head,
                   Jove saw the charming huntress unprepar'd,
                   Stretch'd on the verdant turf, without a guard.
                   "Here I am safe," he cries, "from Juno's eye;
                   Or shou'd my jealous queen the theft descry,
                   Yet wou'd I venture on a theft like this,
                   And stand her rage for such, for such a bliss!"
                   Diana's shape and habit strait he took,
                   Soften'd his brows, and smooth'd his awful look,
                   And mildly in a female accent spoke.
                   "How fares my girl? How went the morning chase?"
                   To whom the virgin, starting from the grass,
                   "All hail, bright deity, whom I prefer
                   To Jove himself, tho' Jove himself were here."
                   Th


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