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English Pages 233 [290] Year 1888
1866
ERAGILE DOES NOT CIRCULATE fe^.
cornfIl fJlNblVcE^SITY lib'rary
FROW A FUND RECEIVEEi Br- BEQUEST OF
WILLARD FISKE 1831-1904
LIBRARIAN OF THIS UNIVERSITY 1868-1883
FIRST
:
Date Due
DATE DUE JMiXL
T^ W7DMP
p£t-^4-i
must
move
Stella love.
,
X :
X
^
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
Some
when they
lovers speake,
Of hopes begot by
feare, of
Of
force of heav'nly
Of
living deaths, deare
ing
Some one
fires
his
their
Muses
wot not what
beames infusing wounds,
entertaii
desires,
hellish paine,
faire stormes,
and
:
song
in
Jove and Jove's strange
tales at
Bordred with buls and swans, powdred with golden Another, humbler
wit, to
Yet hiding royall bloud
To some
f
shepheard's pipe retires,
full oft in rurall
a sweetest plaint a sweetest
While teares powre out
r;
his inke,
vaine.
stile affords,
and sighs breath
his words.
His paper pale dispaire, and paine his pen doth mov I
can speake what
But thinke that
When
all
I feele,
the
and
map
feele as
much
of my state
I
trembling voice brings forth, that
I
as they
display
do
Stella
1
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
VII.-
Wlien Nature made her chiefe worke, In colour blacke
why wrapt she beames. so
Would
she, in
Frame
daintiest lustre, mixt of shades
Or did she
Stella's eye?,
beamie blacke,
else that sober
bright
and
light
if
no
?
hue devise,
In object best to knit and strength our sight Least,
vaile these brave
;
gleames did disguise,
They, sunlike, should more dazle then delight
?
Or would she her miraculous power show, That, whereas blacke seemes beautie's contrary,
She even Both
so,
in blacke
and
thus,
doth make
all
beauties flow
?
— she, minding Love should be
Placed ever there, gave him this mourning weed
To honor
all their
?
like painter wise,-
deaths who for her bleed.
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
VIII.
Love, borne in Greece, of late fled from his native place
Forc'd by a tedious proofe that Turkish hardned hart Is
not
fit
marke
to pierce with his fine-pointed
And, pleas'd with our
soft peace, staid
dart—
here his flying
rai
But, finding these north clymes too coldly
him embrac
Not usde
some
Where
he strave
to frozen clips,
to find
part
with most ease and warmth he might employ
art
At length he perch'd himself
Whose
faire skin,
Deceiv'd the quaking boy, Effects of lively heat
But she, most
in Stella'sjoyfull face.
beamy. eyes,
cold,
morning sun on
thought, from so pure
must needs
most
faire,
who
like
in nature
grow
made him thence
snc lig
:
take
flight
\To
my
close heart
;
where, while some firebrands he
lay,
le burnt unwares his wings,
and cannot
fly
away.
(
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
IX.
Queene Vertue's Court, which some
call Stella's face,
Prepar'd by Nature's choisest furniture,
Hath
his front built of alabaster pure
Gold
is
doore,
Red
porphir
by which sometimes comes is,
porches rich (which
JMarble, mixt red
name
and white, do
Looks over the world, and can
Which dare claime from Of touch they
forth her grace,
which locke of pearle makes
sure,
of cheekes endure)
enterlace.
The windowes now, through which
Which
^
the covering of that stately place.
The
Whose
;
this heav'nly guest
find nothing such.
those lights the
are, that without
name
of best,
touch doth touch,
Cupid's selfe from Beautie's mine did draw
Of touch they
are,
and poore
I
am
their straw.
:
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
Reason, in
faith
thou art well serv'd, that
still
.Wouldst_brabling_be vvith .seace-aH-d-ieve-tmne I
rather wisht thee clime the Muses'
Or reach the Or seeke
Why
fruite
hill
;
;
of Nature's choisest tree
;
heav'n's course or heav'n's inside to see
shouldst thou toyle our thornie soile to
:
till ?
Leave sence, and those which sence's objects be
;
Deale thou with powers of thoughts, leave love to
But thou wouldst,needs, fight both with love
With sword of Till
wit giving
wounds of
will.
ajad_s,e,nce.
dispraise,
downe-right blowes did foyle thy cunning fence
;
For, soone; as they strake thee with StellaZsrayes,
Reason, thou kneel'dst, and- offeredst stiaigbtto prove.
By
reason good, good reasoit her tojoxe.
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
XI.
In truth,
Thou
O
-4"-^-
Love, with what a boyish kind
doest proceed in thy most serious wayes,
That when the heav'n Yet of that best thou
leav'st the best
For, like a childe that
With guilded
to thee his best displayes,
some
behind
faire boolie
doth
!
find,
leaves or colourd velume playes,
Or, at the most, on some fine picture stayes,
But never heeds the
So when thou Stella,
fruit
of writer's
mind
saw'st in Nature's cabinet
thou straight look'st babies in her eyes,
In her cheekes' pit thou didst thy pitfould
And
in
;
set,
her breast bo-peepe or couching lyes.
Playing and shining in each outward part But, fQolejieekstjiot.to get into her hart.
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
V^t"- ''
XII.
Cupid, because thou shin'st in Stella's eyes,
That from her That those That her
That
in
lockes, thy day-nets,
lips sweld, so full of
svveete breath
makes
none scapes
free,
thee they bee.
oft
thy flames to
her breast thy pap well sugred
rise.
That her grace gracious makes thy wrongs, that
What words
thy fame to the skies
lifts
countest Stella thine, like those whose powers
Having got up a breach by
fighting well,
Crie " Victorie, this faire day
O So
no
;
her heart
fortified
That
she.
soere she speake, perswades for thee.
That her cleare voyce
Thou
fJT'' ^
lies,
to
win
is
such a
all is
ours
!
cittadell.
with wit, stor'd with djsdaine. it is all
the
skill
and paine.
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
XIII.
-
13
;^
Phcebus was judge betweene Jove, Mars, and Love,
Of
those three gods, whose armes the fairest were.
Jove's golden shield did eagle sables beare.
Whose But
talents held
in vert field
Mars bare a golden
Which through a Each had
young Ganimed above
:
speare,
bleeding heart his point did shove
his creast.
Mars caried Venus'
glove,
Jove on his helme the thunderbolt did reare.
Cupid then
smiles, for
Stella's faire haire,
Where
on his crest there
her face he makes his shield.
roses gueuls are borne in silver
field.
Phoebus drew wide the curtaines of the
To
blaze these last,
lies
and sware devoutly
skies.
then,
The- first, thus matcht, were.scantly gentlemen.
:
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
14
XIV.
Alas, have
I
Upon whose
not paine enough,
my friend,
breast a fiercer Gripe doth tire
Then did on him who While Love on
me
first stale
doth
all
down
the
fire,
his quiver spend,
But with your rubarb words ye must contend.
To
grieve
me
Doth pkmge
Of
worse, in saying that Desire
my
wel-form'd soule even in the mire
sinfull thoughts,
If that
Well
If that
in ruine
end
?
be sinne which doth the maners frame,
staid with truth in
Readie of
wit,
love
is
word and
faith of deed,
and fearing nought but shame
be sinne which
A loathing of Then
which do
all
in fixt hearts
doth breed
loose unchastitie,
sinne,
and
let
me
;
sinfull be.
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
XV.
You
that do search for everie
15
•
purhng spring
WTiich from the ribs of old Parnassus flowes,
And
Neare thereabouts,
Ye
which growes
everie floure, not sweet perhaps, into
that do dictionarie's
your poesie wring
methode bring
Into your rimes, running in rathng rowes
You
With new-borne
You
---
But
You
sighes
take wrong waies -
—
As do bewray
And
;
that poore Petrarch's long-deceasfed woes
;
and denisen'd
'
'_
!
.
goods do come
both for your love and
seeke to nurse at
Stella behold,
^
a want of inward tuch.
sure, at length stolne if,
wit do sing
;
those far-fet helpes be such
skill,
fullest breasts of
and then.begin
to light
your name
to endite.
Fame,
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
i6
XVI.
In nature apt to
like,
when
did see
I
Beauties which were of manie carrets
My
fine,
boiling sprites did thither soone incline,
And, Love,
thought that
I
I
was
full
of thee
:
But finding not those restlesse flames in rne.
Which I
others said did
their soules to pine,
thought those babes of some pinne's hurt did whine,
By my
sonle judging
But while
I
Mine eyes
— shall
Stella
:
now have
what Love's paine might
be.
thus with this young lyon plaid,
now she
In her sight I
make
I
I
is
say curst or blest?
—beheld
nam'd, need more be said
a lesson
new have
learn'd love right,
speld
and
.'
;
learn'd even so
As,who„by being poispnd doth poison-know.
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
17
XVII.
His mother deare Cupid offended -late, Because that Mars, growne slacker
in her love,
With pricking shot he did not throughly move
To keepe The boy
Who
the place of Their
threatned stripes,
But she,
in chafe,
Till thatjhis Stella's
And
in
O how And
if
he his wrath did prove
him from her
Brake bowe, brake
Of
loving state
first
refusde for feare of Marses hate,
shafts, while
grandame Nature,
;
lap did shove.
Cupid weeping sate
pittying
it,
browes made him two better bowes,
her eyes of arrowes for joy
he leapes
!
infinit.
O how
straight therewith, like
Fals to shrewd turnes ;,and
he crowes
wags new got I
was- in
his-
!
to play,
way.
:
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
i8
XVIII.
With what sharpe ;
When
:
And by just Of
all
checl^es
my
counts
in
I
into Reason's audite
I
my
do
to
Whiche unto
it
And, which But that
is
my
pay even Nature's by
birthright
I
am
shent-
gfo,
a banclcrout
selfe
those goods which heav'n to
Unable quite
selfe
me
know
hath lent
rent,
do ow
;
worse, no good excuse can show,
wealth
I
have most
idly spent
My youth doth waste, my knowledge brings forth My wit doth strive those passions to defend. Which, I
see,
I
see
for
my
reward, spoile
course to loose
it
with vaine annoyes.
my
selfe
doth bend
— and yet no greater sorow take
Then
that
Moose no more
for Stella's sake.
;
toyes
;
ASTROPHEL AND STELLA.
19
XIX. M"-'«r-v
On
Cupid's
That see
are
my wracke,
When most I
bow how
I
my
and yet embrace the same then
glorie,
heart-strings bent,
willing run, yet while
I
most shame
I feele
run repent
!
;
-'"
,v