The Shepheardes Calender:
August
Note on
this Renascence
Editions text:
This
edition
is copyright © The University
of
Oregon; it is distributed for scholarly and nonprofit purposes
only. Risa S. Bear
August.
Ægloga
Octaua.
A R G
V M E N
T.
IN
this Æglogue
is set forth a delectable controuersie, made in imitation of that in
Theocritus:
whereto also Virgile fashioned his third & seuenth Æglogue.
They
choose for vmpere of their strife, Cuddie a neatherds boye, who hauing
ended their cause, reciteth also himsefe a proper song, whereof Colin
he
sayth was Authour.
Willye.
Perigot. Cuddie.
Ell
me Perigot, what shalbe the game,
Wherefore with myne thou
dare thy
musick matche?
Or bene thy Bagpypes renne
farre
out of frame?
Or hath the Crampe thy
ioynts benomd
with ache?
Perigot.
Ah Willye, when the
hart is ill
assayde,
How can Bagpipe, or ioynts
be well
apayd?
Willye.
What the foule euill hath
thee so bestadde?
Whilom
thou
was peregall to the best,
And wont to make the iolly
shepeheards
gladde
With pyping and dauncing,
didst
passe the rest.
Perigot.
Ah Willye now I haue
learnd a
newe daunce:
My old musick mard by a newe
mischaunce.
Willye.
Mischiefe mought to that
newe mischaunce
befall,
That hath so raft
vs of our meriment.
But reede me, what payne
doth thee
so appall?
Or louest thou, or bene thy
younglings miswent?
Perigot.
Loue hath misled both my
younglings,
and mee:
I pyne for payne, and they
my payne
to see.
Willye.
Perdie and wellawaye: ill
may they thriue:
Neuer knewe I louers sheepe
in good
plight.
But and if rymes with me
thou dare
striue,
Such fond fantsies shall
soone be
put to flight.
Perigot.
That shall I doe, though
mochell worse
I fared:
Neuer shall be sayde that Perigot
was dared.
Willye.
Then loe Perigot the
Pledge,
which I plight:
A mazer
ywrought
of the Maple warre:
Wherein is enchased
many a fayre sight
Of Beres and Tygres, that
maken
fiers warre:
And ouer them spred a goodly
wild
vine,
Entrailed
with a wanton Yuie twine.
Thereby is a Lambe
in the Wolues
iawes:
But see, how fast renneth
the shepheard
swayne,
To saue the innocent from
the beastes
pawes:
And here with his shepehooke
hath
him slayne.
Tell me, such a cup hast
thou euer
sene?
Well mought it beseme any haruest
Queene.
Perigot.
Thereto will I pawne yon
spotted Lambe,
Of all my flocke there nis
sike
another:
For I brought him vp without
the
Dambe.
But Colin Clout
rafte me
of his brother,
That he purchast of me in
the playne
field:
Sore against my will was I
forst
to yield.
Willye.
Sicker make like account of
his brother.
But who shall iudge the
wager wonne
or lost?
Perigot.
That shall yonder
heardgrome, and none
other,
Which ouer the pousse
hetherward doth post.
Willye.
But for the Sunnebeame so
sore doth
vs beate
, Were not better, to shunne
the
scortching heate?
Perigot.
Well agreed Willy:
then sitte
thee downe swayne:
Sike a song neuer heardest
thou,
but Colin sing.
Cuddie.
Gynne, when ye lyst, ye
iolly shepheards
twayne:
Sike a iudge, as Cuddie,
were for a king.
Perigot. T
fell vpon a holly eue,
Willye. hey ho
hollidaye,
Per. When holly
fathers
wont to shrieue:
Wil. now gynneth
this
roundelay.
Per. Sitting
vpon a
hill so hye,
Wil. hey ho the
high
hyll,
Per. The while
my flocke
did feede thereby,
Wil. the while
the shepheard
selfe did spill:
Per. I saw the
bouncing
Bellibone,
Wil. Hey ho
Bonibell,
Per. Tripping
ouer the
dale alone,
Wil. she can
trippe
it very well:
Per. Well decked
in
a frocke of gray,
Wil. hey ho gray
is greete,
Per. And in a
Kirtle
of greene saye,
Wil. the greene
is for
maydens meete:
Per. A chapelet
on her head she wore,
Wil. hey ho
chapelet,
Per. Of sweete
Violets
therein was store,
Wil. she sweeter
than
the Violet.
Per. My sheepe
did leaue
theyr wonted foode,
Wil. hey ho
seely sheepe,
Per. And gazd on
her,
as they were wood,
Wil. woode as
he, that
did them keepe.
Per. As the
bonilasse
passed bye,
Wil. hey ho
bonilasse,
Per. She roude
at me
with glauncing eye,
Wil. as cleare
as the
christall glasse:
Per. All as the
Sunnye
beame so bright,
Wil. hey ho the
Sunne
beame,
Per. Glaunceth
from Phoebus
face forthright,
Wil. so loue
into thy
hart did streame:
Per. Or as the
thonder
cleaues the cloudes,
Wil. hey ho the
Thonder,
Per. Wherein the
lightsome leuin
shroudes,
Wil. so cleaues
thy
soule a sonder:
Per. Or as Dame Cynthias
siluer raye
Wil. hey ho the
Moonelight,
Per. Vpon the
glittering
waue doth playe:
Wil. such play
is a
pitteous plight.
Per. The glaunce
into
my heart did glide,
Wil. hey ho the
glyder,
Per. Therewith
my soule
was sharply gryde,
Wil. uch wounds
soone
wexen wider.
Per. Hating to
raunch
the arrow out,
Wil. hey ho
Perigot,
Per. I left the
head
in my hart roote:
Wil. it was a
desperate
shot.
Per. There it
ranckleth
ay more and more,
Wil. hey ho the
arrowe,
Per. Ne can I
find salue
for my sore:
Wil. loue is a
curelesse
sorrowe.
Per. And though
my bale
with death I bought,
Wil. hey ho the
heauie
cheere,
Per. Yet should
thilke
lasse not from my thought:
Wil. so you may
buye
gold to deare.
Per. But whether
in
paynefull loue I pyne,
Wil. hey ho
pinching
payne,
Per. Or thriue
in welth,
she shalbe mine.
Wil. but
if thou can her obteine.
Per. And if for
gracelesse
greefe I dye,
Wil. hey ho
gracelesse
griefe,
Per. Witnesse,
shee
slewe me with her eye:
Wil. let thy
follye
be the priefe.
Per. And you,
that sawe
it, simple shepe,
Wil. hey ho the
fayre
flocke,
Per. For priefe
thereof,
my death shall weepe,
Wil. and mone
with many
a mocke.
Per. So learnd I
loue
on a hollye eue,
Wil. hey ho
hollidaye,
Per. That euer since my hart
did
greue.
Wil. now endeth our
roundelay.
Cuddye.
Sicker sike a roundle neuer
heard I
none.
Little lacketh Perigot
of
the best.
And Willye is not
greatly
ouergone,
So weren his vndersongs well
addrest.
Willye.
Herdgrome, I feare me, thou
haue a squint
eye:
Areede vprightly, who has
the victorye?
Cuddie.
Fayth of my soule, I deeme ech
haue gayned.
For thy let the Lambe be Willye
his owne:
And for Perigot so
well hath
hym payned,
To him be the wroughten
mazer alone.
Perigot.
Perigot is well
pleased with
the doome.
Ne can Willye wite
the witelesse herdgroome.
Willye.
Never dempt
more
right of beautye I weene,
The
shepheard of Ida, that iudged beauties
Queene.
Cuddie.
But tell me shepheards,
should it not
yshend
Your roundels fresh, to
heare a
dolefull verse
Of Rosalend (who knowes not
Rosalend?)
That Colin made, ylke can I
you
rehearse.
Perigot.
Now say it Cuddie,
as thou art
a ladde:
With mery thing its good to
medle
sadde.
Willy.
Fayth of my soule, thou
shalt ycrouned
be
In Colins stede, if
thou
this song areede:
For neuer thing on earth so
pleaseth
me,
As him to heare, or matter
of his
deede.
Cuddie.
Then listneth ech vnto my
heauy laye,
And tune your pypes as
ruthful,
as ye may.
E
wastefull woodes beare witnesse of my woe,
Wherein my plaints did
oftentimes
resound:
Ye carelesse byrds are
priuie to
my cryes,
Which in your songs were
wont to
make a part:
Thou pleasaunt spring hast
luld
me oft a sleepe,
Whose streames my trickling
teares
did ofte augment.
Resort of people doth my
greefs
augment,
The walled townes do worke
my greater
woe:
The forest wide is fitter to
resound
The hollow Echo of my
carefull cryes,
I hate the house, since
thence my
loue did part,
Whose waylefull want
debarres myne
eyes from sleepe.
Let stremes of teares supply
the
place of sleepe:
Let all that sweete is,
voyd: and
all that may augment
My doole, drawe neare. More
meete
to wayle my woe,
Bene the wild woddes my
sorrowes
to resound,
Then bedde, or bowre, both
which
I fill with cryes,
When I them see so waist,
and fynd
no part
Of pleasure past. Here will
I dwell
apart
In gastful groue therefore,
till
my last sleepe
Doe close mine eyes: so
shall I
not augment
With sight of such a chaunge
my
recklesse woe:
Helpe me, ye banefull byrds,
whose
shrieking sound
Ys signe of dreery death, my
deadly
cryes
Most ruthfully to tune. And
as my
cryes
(Which of my woe cannot
bewray least
part)
You heare all night, when
nature
craueth sleepe,
Increase, so let your
yrksome yells
augment.
Thus all the night in
plaints, the
daye in woe
I vowed haue to wayst, till
safe
and sound
She home returne, whose
voyces siluer
sound
To cheerefull songs can
chaunge
my cherelesse cryes.
Hence with the Nightingale
will
I take part,
That blessed byrd, that
spends her
time of sleepe
In songs and plaintiue
pleas, the
more taugment
The memory of hys misdeede,
that
bred her woe:
And you that feele no woe, |
when
as the sound
Of these my nightly cryes |
ye heare
apart,
Let breake your sounder
sleepe |
and pitie augment.
Perigot.
O Colin, Colin, the
shepheards
ioye,
How I admire ech turning of
thy
verse:
And Cuddie, fresh Cuddie,
the liefest boye,
How dolefully his doole thou
didst
rehearse.
Cuddie.
Then blowe your pypes
shepheards, til
you be at home:
The night nigheth fast, yts
time
to be gone.
Perigot
his
Embleme.
Vincenti
gloria
victi.
Willyes Embleme.
Vinto
non vitto.
Cuddies Embleme.
Felice chi puo.
GLOSSE.
Bestadde)
disposed, ordered.
Peregall)
equall.
Whilome)
once.
Rafte)
bereft, depriued.
Miswent)
gon astraye
Ill
may) according to Virgile. In felix o semper ouis pecus.
A
mazer) So also do Theocritus and Virgile feigne pledges of their strife.
Enchased)
engrauen. Such pretie descriptions euery where vseth Theocritus, to
bring
in his Idyllia. For which speciall cause indede he by that name termeth
his Æglogues: for Idyllion in Greke signifieth the shape or
picture
of any thing, whereof his booke is ful. And not, as I haue heard some
fondly
guesse, that they be called not Idyllia, but Haedilia, of the Goteherds
in them.
Entrailed)
wrought betwene.
Haruest
Queene) The manner of country folke in haruest tyme.
Pousse.)
Pease.
It
fell vpon) Perigot maketh hys song in prayse of his loue, to whom Willy
answereth euery vnder verse. By Perigot who is meant, I can not
vprightly
say: but if it be, who is supposed, his love deserueth no lesse prayse,
then he giueth her.
Greete)
weeping and complaint.
Chaplet)
a kind of Garlond lyke a crowne.
Leuen)
Lightning.
Cynthia)
was sayd to be the Moone.
Gryde)
perced.
But
if) not vnlesse.
Squint
eye) partiall iudgement.
Ech
haue) so saith Virgile. Et vitula tu dignus, et hic &c. So by
enterchaunge
of gyfts Cuddie pleaseth both partes.
Doome)
iudgement.
Dempt)
for deemed, iudged.
Wite
the witelesse) blame the blamelesse.
The
shapherd of Ida) was sayd to be Paris.
Beauties
Queene) Venus, to whome Paris adiudged the golden Apple, as the pryce
of
her beautie.
Embleme.
The meaning
hereof
is very ambiguous: for Perigot by his poesie claiming the conquest,
&
Willye not yeelding, Cuddie the arbiter of theyr cause, and Patron of
his
own, semeth to chalenge it, as his dew, saying, that he, is happy which
can, so abruply ending but hee meaneth eyther him, that can win the
beste,
or moderate him selfe being best, and leaue of with the best.
Go on to September.
Renascence
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