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