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The Complete Poetical Works of George Chapman

Page 150

by George Chapman


  ‭ With many an ill hath numb’d and deaded me.

  ‭ He took life with him, when he took my hand

  ‭ In parting from me to the Trojan strand,

  ‭ These words my witness: ‘Woman! I conceive

  ‭ That not all th’ Achives bound for Troy shall leave

  ‭ Their native earth their safe returnéd bones,

  ‭ Fame saying, that Troy trains up approvéd sons

  ‭ In deeds of arms, brave putters-off of shafts,

  ‭ For winging lances masters of their crafts,

  ‭ Unmatchéd riders, swift of foot, and straight

  ‭ Can arbitrate a war of deadliest weight.

  ‭ Hope then can scarce fill all with life’s supply,

  ‭ And of all any failing, why not I?

  ‭ Nor do I know, if God hath marshall’d me

  ‭ Amongst the safe-return’d; or his decree

  ‭ Hath left me to the thraldom order’d there.

  ‭ However, all cares be thy burthens here,

  ‭ My sire and mother tend as much as now,

  ‭ I further off, more near in cares be you.

  ‭ Your son to man’s state grown, wed whom you will;

  ‭ And, you gone, his care let his household fill.’

  ‭ Thus made my lord his will, which Heav’n sees prov’d

  ‭ Almost at all parts; for the Sun remov’d

  ‭ Down to his set, ere long, will lead the night

  ‭ Of those abhorréd nuptials, that should fright

  ‭ Each worthy woman, which her second are

  ‭ With any man that breathes, her first lord’s care

  ‭ Dead, because he to flesh and blood is dead;

  ‭ Which, I fear, I shall yield to, and so wed

  ‭ A second husband; and my reason is,

  ‭ Since Jove hath taken from me all his bliss.

  ‭ Whom God gives over they themselves forsake,

  ‭ Their griefs their joys, their God their devil, make.

  ‭ And ’tis a great grief, nor was seen till now

  ‭ In any fashion of such men as woo

  ‭ A good and wealthy woman, and contend

  ‭ Who shall obtain her, that those men should spend

  ‭ Her beeves and best sheep, as their chiefest ends,

  ‭ But rather that herself and all her friends

  ‭ They should with banquets and rich gifts entreat.

  ‭ Their life is death that live with other’s meat.”

  ‭ Divine Ulysses much rejoic’d to hear

  ‭ His Queen thus fish for gifts, and keep in cheer.

  ‭ Their hearts with hope that she would wed again,

  ‭ Her mind yet still her first intent retain.

  ‭ Antinous saw the Wooers won to give,

  ‭ And said: “Wise Queen, by all your means receive

  ‭ Whatever bounty any Wooer shall use.

  ‭ Gifts freely giv’n ’tis folly to refuse.

  ‭ For know, that we resolve not to be gone

  ‭ To keep our own roofs, till of all some one,

  ‭ Whom best you like, your long-woo’d love shall win.”

  ‭ This pleas’d the rest, and ev’ry one sent in

  ‭ His present by the herald. First had place

  ‭ Antinous’ gift: A robe of special grace,

  ‭ Exceeding full and fair, and twenty hues

  ‭ Chang’d lustre to it; to which choice of shows,

  ‭ Twelve massy plated buttons, all of gold,

  ‭ Enrich’d the substance, made to fairly hold

  ‭ The robe together, all lac’d down before,

  ‭ Where keeps and catches both sides of it wore.

  ‭ Eurymachus a golden tablet gave,

  ‭ In which did Art her choicest works engrave;

  ‭ And round about an amber verge did run,

  ‭ That cast a radiance from it like the Sun.

  ‭ Eurydamas two servants had that bore

  ‭ Two goodly earrings, whose rich hollows wore

  ‭ Three pearls in either, like so many eyes,

  ‭ Reflecting glances radiant as the skies.

  ‭ The king Pisander, great Polyctor’s heir,

  ‭ A casket gave, exceeding rich and fair.

  ‭ The other other wealthy gifts commended

  ‭ To her fair hand; which took, and straight ascended

  ‭ This Goddess of her sex her upper state.

  ‭ Her ladies all her gifts elaborate

  ‭ Up bearing after. All to dancing then

  ‭ The Wooers went, and song’s delightful strain;

  ‭ In which they frolick’d, till the evening came,

  ‭ And then rais’d sable Hesperus his flame.

  ‭ When, for their lights within, they set up there

  ‭ Three lamps, whose wicks were wood exceeding sere,

  ‭ And passing porous; which they caus’d to burn,

  ‭ Their matter ever minister’d by turn

  ‭ Of sev’ral handmaids. Whom Ulysses seeing

  ‭ Too conversant with Wooers, ill-agreeing

  ‭ With guise of maids, advis’d in this fair sort:

  ‭ “Maids of your long-lack’d King, keep you the port

  ‭ Your Queen’s chaste presence bears. Go up to her,

  ‭ Employ your looms, or rocks, and keep ye there;

  ‭ I’ll serve to feed these lamps, should these lords’ dances

  ‭ Last till Aurora cheer’d us with their glances.

  ‭ They cannot weary me, for I am one

  ‭ Born to endure when all men else have done.”

  ‭ They wantonly brake out in laughters all,

  ‭ Look’d on each other; and to terms did fall

  ‭ Cheek-proud Melantho, who was Dolius’ seed,

  ‭ Kept by the Queen, that gave her dainty bread

  ‭ Fit for her daughter; and yet won not so

  ‭ Her heart to her to share in any woe

  ‭ She suffer’d for her lord, but she was great

  ‭ With great Eurymachus, and her love’s heat

  ‭ In his bed quench’d. And this choleric thing

  ‭ Bestow’d this railing language on the King:

  ‭ “Base stranger, you are taken in your brain,

  ‭ You talk so wildly. Never you again

  ‭ Can get where you were born, and seek your bed

  ‭ In some smith’s hovel, or the marketsted,

  ‭ But here you must take confidence to prate

  ‭ Before all these; for fear can get no state

  ‭ In your wine-hardy stomach. Or ’tis like

  ‭ To prove your native garb, your tongue will strike

  ‭ On this side of your mouth still, being at best.

  ‭ Is the man idle-brain’d for want of rest?

  ‭ Or proud because he beat the roguish beggar?

  ‭ Take heed, Sir, lest some better man beleager

  ‭ Your ears with his fists, and set headlong hence

  ‭ Your bold abode here with your blood’s expence.”

  ‭ He, looking sternly on her, answer’d her:

  ‭ “Dog! What broad language giv’st thou? I’ll prefer

  ‭ Your usage to the prince, that he may fall

  ‭ Foul on your fair limbs till he tell them all.”

  ‭ This fray’d the wenches, and all straight got gone

  ‭ In fear about their business, ev’ry one

  ‭ Confessing he said well. But he stood now

  ‭ Close by the cressets, and did looks bestow

  ‭ On all men there; his brain employ’d about

  ‭ Some sharper business than to dance it out,

  ‭ Which had not long to go. Nor therefore would

  ‭ Minerva let the Wooers’ spleens grow cold

  ‭ With too good usuage of him, that his heart

  ‭ Might fret enough, and make his choler smart.

  ‭ Eurymachus provok’d him fi
rst, and made

  ‭ His fellow laugh, with a conceit he had

  ‭ Fetch’d far from what was spoken long before,

  ‭ That his poor form perhaps some Deity bore.

  ‭ “It well may chance,” said he, “some God doth bear

  ‭ This man’s resemblance, for, thus standing near

  ‭ The glist’ring torches, his slick’d head doth throw

  ‭ Beams round about it as those cressets do,

  ‭ For not a hair he hath to give it shade.

  ‭ Say, will thy heart serve t’ undertake a trade

  ‭ For fitting wages? Should I take thee hence

  ‭ To walk my grounds, and look to ev’ry fence,

  ‭ Or plant high trees, thy hire should raise thy forces

  ‭ Food store, and clothes. But these same idle courses

  ‭ Thou art so prompt in that thou wilt not work,

  ‭ But forage up and down, and beg, and lurk

  ‭ In ev’ry house whose roofs hold any will

  ‭ To feed such fellows. That thy gut may fill,

  ‭ Gives end to all thy being.” He replied:

  ‭ “I wish, at any work we two were tried,

  ‭ In height of spring-time, when heav’n’s lights are long,

  ‭ I a good crook’d scythe that were sharp and strong,

  ‭ You such another, where the grass grew deep,

  ‭ Up by day-break, and both our labours keep

  ‭ Up till slow darkness eas’d the labouring light,

  ‭ Fasting all day, and not a crumb till night;

  ‭ We then should prove our either workmanship.

  ‭ Or if, again, beeves, that the goad or whip

  ‭ Were apt t’ obey before a tearing plow,

  ‭ Big lusty beasts, alike in bulk and brow,

  ‭ Alike in labour, and alike in strength,

  ‭ Our task four acres, to be till’d in length

  ‭ Of one sole day; again: then you should try

  ‭ If the dull glebe before the plow-should fly,

  ‭ Or I a long stitch could bear clean and even.

  ‭ Or lastly, if the Guide of earth and heaven

  ‭ Should stir stern war up, either here or there,

  ‭ And that at this day I had double spear,

  ‭ And shield, and steel casque fitting for my brows;

  ‭ At this work likewise, ‘midst the foremost blows,

  ‭ Your eyes should note me, and get little cause

  ‭ To twit me with my belly’s sole applause.

  ‭ But you affect t’ affect with injury,

  ‭ Your mind ungentle, seem in valour high,

  ‭ Because ‘gainst few, and those not of the best,

  ‭ Your conversation hath been still profest.

  ‭ But if Ulysses, landed on his earth,

  ‭ And enter’d on the true right of his birth,

  ‭ Should come and front ye, straight his ample gates

  ‭ Your feet would hold too narrow for your fates.”

  ‭ He frown’d, rag’d, call’d him wretch, and vow’d

  ‭ To be his death, since he durst prove so proud

  ‭ Amongst so many, to tell him so home

  ‭ What he affected; ask’d, if overcome

  ‭ With wine he were, or, as his minion said,

  ‭ Talk’d still so idly, and were palsiéd

  ‭ In his mind’s instruments, or was proud because

  ‭ He gat from Irus off with such applause?

  ‭ With all which, snatching up a stool, he threw;

  ‭ When old Ulysses to the knees withdrew

  ‭ Of the Dulichian lord, Amphinomus,

  ‭ As if he fear’d him. His dart missing thus

  ‭ His aged object, and his page’s hand

  ‭ (A boy that waited on his cup’s command,

  ‭ Now holding of an ewer to him) he smit,

  ‭ Down fell the sounding ewer, and after it

  ‭ The guiltless page lay sprawling in the dust,

  ‭ And crying out. When all the Wooers thrust

  ‭ A tumult up amongst them, wishing all

  ‭ The rogue had perish’d in some hospital,

  ‭ Before his life there stirr’d such uproars up,

  ‭ And with rude speeches spice their pleasures’ cup.

  ‭ And all this for a beggar to fulfill

  ‭ A filthy proverb: Good still yields to ill.

  ‭ The prince cried out on them, to let the bad

  ‭ Obscure the good so; told them they were mad,

  ‭ Abus’d their banquet, and affirm’d some God

  ‭ Tried mast’ries with them; bade them take their load

  ‭ Of food and wine, sit up, or fall to bed

  ‭ At their free pleasures; and since he gave head

  ‭ To all their freedoms, why should they mistake

  ‭ Their own rich humours for a beggar’s sake?

  ‭ All bit their lips to be so taken down,

  ‭ And taught the course that should have been their own,

  ‭ Admir’d the prince; and said he bravely spoke.

  ‭ But Nisus’ son then struck the equal stroke,

  ‭ And said: “O friends, let no man here disdain

  ‭ To put up equal speeches, nor maintain

  ‭ With serious words an humour, nor with stroke

  ‭ A stranger in another’s house provoke,

  ‭ Nor touch the meanest servant, but confine

  ‭ All these dissentions in a bowl of wine;

  ‭ Which fill us, cup-bearer, that, having done

  ‭ Our nightly sacrifice, we may atone

  ‭ Our pow’rs with sleep, resigning first the guest

  ‭ Up to the prince, that holds all interest

  ‭ In his disposure here; the house being his

  ‭ In just descent, and all the faculties.”

  ‭ This all approv’d; when noble Mulius,

  ‭ Herald-in-chief to lord Amphinomus,

  ‭ The wine distributed with rev’rend grace

  ‭ To ev’ry Wooer; when the Gods giv’n place;

  ‭ With service fit; they serv’d themselves, and took

  ‭ Their parting cups, till, when they all had shook

  ‭ The angry humour off, they bent to rest,

  ‭ And ev’ry Wooer to sev’ral roofs addrest.

  THE END OF THE EIGHTEENTH BOOK OF HOMER’S ODYSSEYS.

  THE NINETEENTH BOOK OF HOMER’S ODYSSEYS

  ‭

  ‭ THE ARGUMENT

  Ulysses and his son eschew

  ‭ Offending of the Wooers’ view

  ‭ With any armour. His birth’s seat,

  ‭ Ulysses tells his Queen, is Crete,

  ‭ Euryclea the truth yet found,

  ‭ Discover’d by a scar-heal’d wound,

  ‭ Which in Parnassus’ tops a boar,

  ‭ Struck by him in his chace, did gore.

  ANOTHER ARGUMENT

  Ταυ̑.

  ‭ The King still hid

  ‭ By what he said;

  ‭ By what he did

  ‭ Informs his maid.

  Yet did divine Ulysses keep his roof,

  ‭ And with Minerva plotted still the proof

  ‭ Of all the Wooers’ deaths; when thus his son

  ‭ He taught with these fore-counsels: “We must run

  ‭ A close course with these arms, and lay them by,

  ‭ And to the Wooers make so fair a sky

  ‭ As it would never thunder. Let me then,

  ‭ That you may well retain, repeat again

  ‭ What in Eumæus’ cottage I advis’d:

  ‭ If when they see no leisure exercis’d,

  ‭ In fetching down your arms, and ask what use

  ‭ Your mind will give them, say, ’tis their abuse

  ‭ With smoke and rust that makes you take them down,

  ‭ This not being like the armory well-known

  ‭
To be the leavings of Laertes’ son

  ‭ Consorting the design for Ilion;

  ‭ Your eyes may see how much they are infected,

  ‭ As all fires’ vapours ever since reflected

  ‭ On those sole arms. Besides, a graver thought

  ‭ Jove graves within you, lest, their spirits wrought

  ‭ Above their pitch with wine, they might contend

  ‭ At some high banquet, and to wounds transcend,

  ‭ Their feast inverting; which, perhaps, may be

  ‭ Their nuptial feast with wise Penelopé.

  ‭ The ready weapon, when the blood is up,

  ‭ Doubles the uproar heighten’d by the cup.

  ‭ Wrath’s means for act, curb all the ways ye can,

  ‭ As loadstones draw the steel, so steel draws man.

  ‭ Retain these words; nor what is good think, thus

  ‭ Receiv’d at second hand, superfluous.”

  ‭ The son, obeying, did Euryclea call,

  ‭ And bade her shut in th’ utter porches all

  ‭ The other women, till himself brought down

  ‭ His father’s arms, which all were overgrown

  ‭ By his neglect with rust, his father gone,

  ‭ And he too-childish to spend thoughts upon

  ‭ Those manly implements; but he would now

  ‭ Reform those young neglects, and th’ arms bestow

  ‭ Past reach of smoke. The loving nurse replied:

  ‭ “I wish, O son, your pow’rs would once provide

  ‭ For wisdom’s habit, see your household were

  ‭ In thrifty manage, and tend all things there.

  ‭ But if these arms must down, and ev’ry maid

  ‭ Be shut in utter rooms, who else should aid

  ‭ Your work with light?” He answer’d: “This my guest.

  ‭ There shall no one in my house taste my feast,

  ‭ Or join in my nave, that shall idly live, 1

  ‭ However far hence he his home derive.”

  ‭ He said, and his words stood. The doors she shut

  ‭ Of that so well-fill’d house. And th’ other put

  ‭ Their thoughts in act; best shields, helms, sharpen’d lances,

  ‭ Brought down; and Pallas before both advances

  ‭ A golden cresset, that did cast a light

  ‭ As if the Day sat in the throne of Night.

  ‭ When, half-amaz’d, the prince said: “O my father,

  ‭ Mine eyes my soul’s pow’rs all in wonder gather,

  ‭ For though the walls, and goodly wind-beams here,

  ‭ All all these pillars, that their heads so rear,

  ‭ And all of fir, they seem yet all of fire.

  ‭ Some God is surely with us.” His wise sire

  ‭ Bade peace, and keep the counsels of the Gods,

 

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