The
Masque of
Blacknesse.
Ben Jonson.
Masque
of Blacknesse
| Masque
of Beauty
Note: this Renascence
Editions text was transcribed by Risa S.
Bear, May 2001, from the 1608 quarto (STC number 14761). Where the
page is illegible in the source text, the Cambridge edition of 1941 has
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THE
CHARACTERS
of
Two royall
Masques.
The one of
BLACKNESSE,
The other of
BEAVTIE.
personated
By the most magnificent of
Queenes
ANNE
Queene of great Britaine, &c.
With her honorable
Ladyes,
1605. and 1608.
at White-Hall:
and
Inuented by B E N:
I O N S O N.
Ouid. —Salue festa dies,
meliorque
reuertere semper.
_____________________________________________________
Imprinted at London for Thomas
Thorp, and are to
be sold at the signes of the
Tigers
head
in Paules Church-yard.
THE
Q V E E N E
S
M A S Q V E
S.
The first, of Blacknesse:
personated
at the
Court, at W H
I T E-H A L L, on the
Twelu'th night.
1605.
He
honor; and splendor of these Spectacles was such in the
performance,
as could those houres haue lasted, this of mine, now; had beene a most
vnprofitable worke. But (when it is the fate, euen of the greatest, and
most absolute births, to need, and borrow a life of posterity) little
had
beene done to the study of magnificence in these; if presently
with
the rage of the people, who (as a part of greatnesse) are priuiledged
by
Custome, to deface their carkasses, the spirits had
also
perished. In dutie, therefore, to that Maiestie, who gaue them
their
authoritie, and grace; and, no lesse then the most royall of
predecessors,
deserues eminent celebration for these solemnities: I adde this later
hand,
to redeeme them as well from ignorance, as enuie, two common euills,
the
one of Censure, the other of Obliuion.
a
Natu. Hist.
l. 5 cap. 8.
b
Poly. hist.
cap. 40. & 43.
c
Lib 4. cap. 5.
d
Descrip.
Afric.
e
Some take
it to be the same with Nilus, which is by Lucan called Melas,
signifying Niger. Howsoeuer, Plinie, in the place aboue
noted,
hath this: Nigri fluuio eadem natura, quæ Nilo, calamum,
papyrum,
& easdem gignit animantes. See Solin. aboue mentioned.
f
The forme of
these Tritons, with their trumpets, you may read liuely
describ'd,
in Ouid. Metamor. l. 1. Cæruleum Tritona vocat,
&c. and
in Virgil. Æneid. l. 10. Hunc vehit immanis Triton
&
sequent.
g
Lucian.
in PHTOP. presents
Nilus so. Equo fluuiatili insidentem. And Statius
Neptune,
in Theb.
h
The ancients
induc'd Oceanus alwayes with a Bulls head: propter
vim ventorum,
à quibus incitatur, & impellitur: vel quia Tauris similem
fremitum
emittat, vel quia tanquam Taurus furibundus, in littora feratur, Euripid.
in Oreste.
And
riuers somtimes
were so called. Looke Virg. de Tiberi,& Eridano. Geor. 4.
Æneid. 8. Hor. Car. l. 4. Ode. 14. and Eurip.
in Ione.
i
The daughters
of Oceanus and Tethys. See Hesiod. in Theogon.
Orphe.
in Hym. and Virgil. in Georg.
|
a P L
I N I E, b S O L I N V S, c
P T
O L E M A E E, and of late L E O d
the African, remember vnto vs a riuer in Æthiopia,
famous by the name of Niger; of which the people were called Negritœ,
now Negro's: and are the blackest nation of the world. This e
riuer
taketh spring out of a certaine Lake, east-ward; & after a
long
race, falleth into the westerne Ocean. Hence (because it was
her
Maiesties will, to haue them Black-mores at first) the
inuention
was deriued by me, & presented thus.
First, for the Scene,
was drawne a Landtschape, consisting of small woods, and here
and
there a voide place filld with huntings; which falling, an artificiall
Sea was seene to shoote forth, as if it flowed to the land, raised with
waues, which seemed to moue, and in some places the billow to breake,
as
imitating that orderly disorder, which is common in nature. In front of
this Sea were placed sixe f Tritons, in mouing, and
sprightly
actions, their vpper parts humane, saue that their haires were blue, as
partaking of the Sea-colour: their desinent parts, fishe, mounted aboue
their heads, and all varied in disposition. From their backs were borne
out certaine light pieces of Taffata, as if carried by the winde, and
their
Musique made out of wreathed shells. Behinde these, a paire of Sea-Maides,
for song, were as conspicuously seated; betweene which, two great
Sea-horses
(as bigge as the life) put forth themselues; the one mounting aloft,
&
writhing his head from the other, which seemed to sinck forwards; so
intended
for variation, & that the Figure behind, might come of[f] better: g
vpon
their backs, OCEANVS & NIGER
were aduanced.
OCEANVS,
presented in a humane forme; the colour of his flesh, blew; and
shadowed
with a robe of Sea-greene; his head grey; & h horned;
as he is described by the Antients: his beard of the like mixt
colour:
hee was gyrlonded with Alga, or Sea-grasse; and in his hand a Trident.
NIGER,
in forme and colour of an Æthiope; his haire, and rare
beard
curled, shadowed with a blue, and bright mantle: his front, neck, and
wrists
adorned with Pearle, and crowned, with an artificiall wreathe of Cane,
and Paper-rush.
These induced the Masquers,
which were twelue Nymphs, Negro's; and the daughters of
NIGER;
attended by so many of the i OCEANAE,
which
were their Light-bearers.
The Masquers
were
placed in a great concaue shell, like mother of Pearle, curiously made
to moue on those waters, and rise with the billow; the top thereof was
stuck with a cheu'ro[n] of lights, which, indented to the
proportion
of the shell, strooke a glorious beame vpon them, as they were seated,
one aboue another: so that they were all seene, but in an extravagant
order.
On sides of the
shell, did
swim sixe huge Sea-monsters, varied in their shapes, and
dispositions,
bearing on their backs the twelue Torch bearers; who were
planted
there in seuerall graces; so as the backs of some were seene; some in purfle,
or side; others in face; & all hauing their lights burning out of Whelks,
or Murex shels.
The attire of the Masquers
was alike, in all, without difference: the colours, Azure, and Siluer;
[their hayre thicke, and curled vpright in tresses, lyke Pyramids,]
but returned on the top with a scrole and antique dressing of Feathers,
and Iewels interlaced with ropes of Pearle. And, for the front, eare,
neck,
and wrists, the ornament was of the most choise and orient Pearle; best
setting of[f] from the black.
For the Light
bearers,
Sea-greene, waued about the skirts with gold and siluer; [th]eir
hayre
loose, and flowing, gyrlanded with Sea-grasse, and that stuck with
branches
of Corall.
These thus presented,
the Scene
behind, seemed a vast Sea (and vnited with this that flowed forth) from
the termination, or horizon of which (being the leuell of the State,
which was placed in the vpper end of the Hall) was drawne, by the lines
of Prospectiue, the whole worke shooting downe-wards, from the
eye;
which decorum made it more conspicuous, and caught the eye a
farre
of[f] with a wandring beauty. To which was added an obscure and cloudy
night-piece, that made the whole set of[f]. So much for the bodily
part.
Which was of master Y N I G O I O
N E S his designe, and act.
By this, one of the Tritons,
with the two Sea-Maides, began to sing to the others lowd
Musique,
their voyces being a tenor, and two trebles.
S O N G.
Ound, sound aloud
The welcome of the orient
Floud,
Into the West;
k
All riuers
are said to be the sons of the Ocean: for, as the Ancients
thought,
out of the vapours, exhaled by the heat of the Sunne,riuers,
and
fountaines were begotten.
And
both by Orph.
in Hymn. & Homer Iliad § Oceanus is celebrated tanquam
pater, & origo, dijs, & rebus, quia nihil sine humectatione
nascitur,
aut putrescit.
l
There wants
not inough, in nature, to authorize this part of our fiction, in
separating Niger, from
the Ocean, (beside the fable of Alpheus, and that, to
which Virgil alludes
of Arethusa in his 10. Eclog. Sic tibi, cum fluctus
subterlabere
Sicanos, Doris amara suam non intermisceat vndam) examples of Nilus,
Iordan, and others, whereof see Nican. lib. 1. de
flumin. & Plut. in vita Syllæ, euen of this our
riuer
(as some thinke)
by the name of Melas.
|
Fayre, N I G
E R, k sonne to great O C E
A N
V S,
Now honord, thus,
With all his beauteous
race:
Who, though but blacke in
face,
Yet, are they bright,
And full of life, and
light.
To proue that Beauty best,
Which not the colour, but
the
feature
Assures vnto the creature.
O C E A N V S.
E silent, now the
Ceremonies done,
And N I
G E
R, say, how comes it, louely Sonne,
That thou, the
Æ T
H I O P E S Riuer, so farre East,
Art seene to fall into
the'extreamest West
Of me, the King of flouds,
O C E A N V S,
And, in mine Empires
heart, salute
me thus?
My ceaselesse current,
now, amazed
stands!
To see thy labor, through
so
many lands,
l Mixe thy
fresh billow,
with my brackish streame;
And, in thy sweetnesse,
stretch
thy diademe,
To these farre distant,
and vn-equall'd
skies
This squared Circle of
cœlestiall
bodies.
N I G E R.
Diuine O C E
A N V S, tis not strange at all,
That (since the immortall
soules
of creatures mortal,
Mixe with their bodies,
yet reserue
for euer
A powre of seperation) I
should
seuer
My fresh streames, from
thy brackish
(like things fixed)
Though, with thy
powerfull saltnes,
thus far mixed.
"Vertue,
though chain'd
to earth, will still liue free;
"And Hell it
selfe
must yeeld to industry.
O C E A N V S.
Vt, what's the end of
thy Herculean
labors,
Extended to these calme,
and
blessed shores?
NIGER.
O do a kind, and
carefull Fathers
part,
In satisfying euery
pensiue heart
Of these my Daughters,
my most loued birth:
m
Read Diod.
Sicul. lib. 3. It is a coniecture of the old Ethnicks, that
they, which dwell vnder the South,were the first begotten of
the
earth. |
Who though they were
the m first
form'd Dames of earth,
And in whose sparckling,
and
refulgent eyes,
The glorious Sunne did
still delight to rise;
Though he (the best
Iudge, and
most formall cause
Of all Dames beauties) in
their
firm hiewes, drawes
Signes of his feruent'st
Loue;
and thereby shewes
That, in their black, the
perfectst
beauty growes;
Since the fix't colour of
their
curled haire,
(Which is the highest
grace of
dames most faire)
No cares, no age can
change;
or there display
The fearefull tincture of
abhorred
Gray;
Since Death hir
selfe
(hir selfe being pale & blue)
Can neuer alter their
most faith-full
hew;
All which are arguments,
to proue,
how far
Their beauties conquer,
in great
Beauties warre;
And more, how neere
Diuinity they
be,
That stand from passion,
or decay
so free.
Yet, since the fabulous
voices
of some few
Poore brain-sicke men,
stil'd
Poets, here with you,
Haue, with such enuy of
their
graces, sung
The painted Beauties,
other Empires sprung;
Letting their loose, and
winged
fictions fly
To infect all clymates,
yea our
purity;
n
Notissima
fabula. Ouid. Met. lib. 2.
o
Alluding to
that of Iuuenal, Satir. 5. Et cui per mediam nolis
occurrere
noctem.
p The Poets.
q
A custome of
the Aethiopes, notable in Herod. and Diod. Sic. See
Plinie.
Nat. Hist. lib. 5. cap. 8.
|
As of one n P
H
A E T O N, that fir'd the world,
And, that, before his
heedles
flames were hurld
About the Globe, the
Æthiopes were as faire,
As other Dames; now
blacke,
with blacke dispaire:
And in respect of their
complections
chang'd,
Are each where, since, forolucklesse
creatures rang'd.
Which, when my
Daughters heard,
(as women are
Most iealous of their
beauties)
feare, and care
Possess'd them whole;
yea, and
beleeuing p them,
They wept such ceaseles
teares,
into my streame,
That it hath, thus far,
ouerflow'd
his shore
To seeke them patience:
who haue
since, ere more
As the Sunne riseth,q
charg'd
his burning throne
With volleys of
reuilings; 'cause
he shone
On their scorch'd
cheekes, with
such intemperate fires,
And other Dames, made
Queenes of all desires.
To frustrate which
strange error,
oft, I sought,
(Though most in vaine,
against
a setled thought
As women are) till they
confirm'd
at length
By miracle, what I, with
so much
strength
Of argument resisted; els
they
fain'd:
For in the Lake, where
their first spring they gain'd,
As they sate, cooling
their soft
Limmes, one night,
Appear'd a Face, all
circumfus'd
with light;
(And sure they saw't, for
Æthiopes r neuer dreame)
Wherein they might
decipher through
the streame,
These words.
That they a Land
must forthwith seeke,
Whose termination (of the Greeke)
Sounds T A
N I A;
where bright Sol, that heat
r
Plin. ibid.
s
Consult with Tacitus, in vita Agric.and the Paneg. ad Constant.
|
Their blouds, doth neuer
s rise,
or set,
But in his Iourney passeth
by,
And leaues that Clymat
of
the sky,
To comfort of a greater Light,
Who formes all beauty,
with his
sight.
In search of this, haue
we three Princedomes
past,
That speake out Tania,
in their accents last;
Blacke Mauritania,
first;
and secondly,
Swarth Lusitania;
next,
we did descry
Rich Aquitania;
and, yet,
cannot find
The place vnto these
longing
Nymphes design'd.
Instruct, and ayde me,
great
O C E A N V S,
What land is this, that
now appeares
to vs?
OCEANVS.
This Land, that
lifts into
the temperate ayre
t
Orpheus in
his Argonaut. calls it
u
Alluding to
the rite of stiling princes, after the name of their
princedomes:
so is he still Albion, and Neptunes sonne that
gouernes.
As also his being deare to Neptune, in being so imbrac'd by
him. |
His snowy cliffe, is
t Albion the
faire;
So call'd of u Neptunes
son, who ruleth here:
For whose deare guard, my
selfe,
(foure thousand yeere,
Since old Deucalion's
daies) haue walk'd the round
About his empire, proud,
to see
him crown'd
Aboue my waues.
At this, the Moone
was discouered in the vpper part of the house, triumphant in a Siluer
throne, made in figure of a Pyramis. Her garments White,
and Siluer, the dressing of her head antique; & crown'd
with
a Luminarie, or Sphære of light: which striking
on
the clouds, and heightened with Siluer, reflected as naturall
clouds
doe by the splendour of the Moone. The heauen, about her, was
vaulted
with blew silke, and set with Starres of Siluer which had in
them
their seuerall lights burning. The suddaine sight of which, made NIGER
to interrupt O C E A N V S, with
this
present passion.
N I G E R.
—O see, our siluer Starre!
Whose pure, auspicious
light
greetes vs, thus farre!
The
Aethiopians
worshipd the Moone, by that surname. See Stepha.
in voce
and his reasons. |
Great
Æthiopia, Goddesse
of our shore,
Since, with particular
worshippe
we adore
Thy generall brightnesse,
let
particular grace
Shyne on my zealous Daughters:
Shew the place,
Which, long, their
longings vrg'd
their eyes to see.
Beautifie them, which
long haue
Deified thee.
Æ T H I O P I A.
I G E
R,
be glad: Resume thy natiue cheare.
Thy Daughters labors haue
their
period here,
And so thy errors. I was
that
bright Face
Reflected by the Lake,
in which thy Race
Read mysticke lines;
(which skill P
I T H A G O R A S
First taught to men, by a
reuerberate
glasse)
This blessed Isle doth
with that T
A N I A end,
Which there they saw
inscrib'd,
and shall extend
Wish'd satisfaction to
their
best desires.
B R I T A N
I A,
which the triple world admires,
This Isle hath now
recouered
for her name;
Where raigne those
Beauties,
that with so much fame
The sacred M
V S E S Sonnes haue honored,
And from bright H
E S P E R V S to E O V S
spred.
With that great name B
R I T A N I A, this blest Isle
Hath wonne her ancient
dignitie,
and stile,
A World, diuided from the
world: and
tri'd
The abstract of it, in
his generall
pride.
For were the world, with
all
his wealth, a Ring,
BRITANIA
(whose
new name makes all tongues sing)
Might be a Diamant worthy
to
inchase it,
Rul'd by a SVNNE,
that to this height doth grace it:
Whose Beames shine day,
and night,
and are of force
To blanch an Æ
T
H I O P E, and reuiue a Cor's.
His light scientiall is,
and
(past mere nature)
Can salue the rude
defects of
euery creature.
Call forth thy honor'd Daughters, then;
And let them, 'fore the Brittaine men,
Indent the Land, with those pure traces
They flow with, in their natiue graces.
Inuite them, boldly, to the shore,
Their Beauties shalbe scorch'd no more:
This Sunne is temperate, and refines
All things, on which his radiance shines.
Here the Tritons
sounded,
& they daunced on shore, euery couple (as they aduanced) seuerally
presenting their Fans: in one of which were inscribed their mixt Names,
in the other a mute Hieroglyphick, expressing their mixed
quallities.
Which manner of Symbole I rather chose, then Imprese,
as
well for strangenesse, as relishing of antiquity, and more applying to
that originall doctrine of sculpture, which the Ægyptians
are said, first, to haue brought from the Æthiopians.
|
The Names. |
The Symboles. |
The Queene.
Co: of Bedford. |
1. {E V P H O R I
S.
{A
G L A I A. |
1.{A golden Tree,
la-
{den with
fruict. |
La: Herbert.
Co: of Derby |
2. {D I A P H A N
E.
{E V
C A M P S E. |
2. {The figure Icosae-
{dron
of crystall. |
La: Rich.
Co: of Suffolke. |
3. {O C Y T E.
{K A
T H A R E. |
3. {A payre of
naked
{feet, in a Riuer. |
La: Beuill.
La: Effingham. |
4. {N O T I S.
{P S
Y C H R O T E. |
4. {The Salaman-
{der simple. |
La: El. Howard.
La: Sus: Vere. |
5. {G L Y C Y T E.
{M A
L A C I A. |
5. {A clowd full of
{raine, dropping. |
La: Wroth.
La: Walsingham |
6. {B A R Y T E.
{P E
R I P H E R E. |
6. {An vrne[,]
spheared
{with wine. |
|
The names of
the O C
E A N I A E were.
|
Hesiod in Theog.
|
D O
R I S. |
C Y
D I P P E. |
B E
R O E. |
I A
N T H E. |
P E
T R A E A. |
G L
A V C E. |
A C
A S T E. |
L Y
C O R I S. |
O C
Y R H O E. |
T Y
C H E. |
C L
Y T I A. |
P L
E X A V R E. |
Their owne single Daunce
ended,
as they were about to make choice of their Men: One, from the Sea, was
heard to call 'hem with this charme, sung by a tenor
voyce.
S O N G.
Ome away, come
away,
We grow iealous of
your stay:
If you do not stop
your eare,
We shall haue more
cause to feare
Syrens of the land,
then they
To doubt the Syrens
of
the Sea.
|
Here they daunc'd with
their men,
seuerall measures, and corranto's. All which ended,
they
were againe accited to sea, with a Song of two Trebles,
whose
cadences were iterated by a double Eccho, from seuerall parts
of
the Land.
S O N G.
Aughters of the subtle
Flood,
Doe not let Earth longer
intertayne
you;
1. Ecch. {
Let Earth longer intertaine you.
2. Ecch. { Longer intertaine you.
'Tis to them,
inough of
good,
That you giue this little
hope,
to gaine you.
1.
Ecch.
{ Giue this little hope, to gaine you.
2. Ecch. Little hope, to gaine you.
If they loue,
You shall quickly see;
For when to flight
you
mooue,
They'll follow you, the
more
you flee.
1.
Ecch. { Follow you, the more you flee[.]
2. Ecch. The more you flee.
If
not, impute
it to each others matter;
They are but
Earth,
& what you vow'd was Water.
1. Ecch: but
earth,
2. Ecch: earth
|
}{
}{
}{
}{ |
1. Ecch. And
what you vow'd
was Water.
2.
Ecch. You
vow'd was
Water. |
A E T H I O P I A.
Nough, bright Nymphes,
the night growes old,
And we are grieu'd, we
can not
hold
You longer light: But
comfort
take.
Your Father,
onely, to
the Lake
Shall make returne:
Your selues,
with feasts,
Must here remayne the Ocean's
guests.
Nor shall this vayle,
the Sunne
hath cast
Aboue your bloud, more
Summers
last.
For which, you shall
obserue
these rites.
Thirteene times thrise,
on thirteene
nights,
(So often as I fill my Sphære
With glorious light,
throughout
the yeere)
You shall (when all
things els
do sleepe
Saue your chast
thoughts) with
reuerence, steepe
Your bodies in that
purer brine,
And wholesome dew,
call'd Ros-marine:
Then with that soft,
and gentler
fome,
Of which, the Ocean,
yet,
yeelds some,
Whereof bright V
E N V S, Beauties Queene,
Is sayd to haue
begotten beene,
You shall your gentler
limmes
ore-laue,
And for your paines,
perfection
haue.
So that this night, the
yeare
gone round,
You doe againe salute
this ground;
And, in the beames of
yond' bright Sunne,
Your faces dry, and all
is done.
At which, in a Daunce
they returned
to the Sea, where they tooke their Shell; and, with this full Song,
went out.
SONG.
Ow Dian,
with her burning
face,
Declines apace:
By
which our
Waters know
To
ebbe, that
late did flow.
Back Seas, back Nymphes;
but,
with a forward grace,
Keepe, still,
your reuerence to the place:
And shout with ioy of
fauor,
you haue wonne,
In
sight of Albion,
Neptunes Sonne.
So ended the first Masque,
which
(beside the singular grace of Musicke and Daunces) had
that
successe in the nobilitie of performance; as nothing needes to the
illustration,
but the memory by whome it was personated.
Continue on to the Masque
of Beauty, which was published in the same quarto.
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