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A42281 Il pastor fido The faithfull shepherd : a pastorall / written in Italian by Baptista Guarini, a Knight of Italie ; and now newly translated out of the originall.; Pastor fido. English Guarini, Battista, 1538-1612.; Fanshawe, Richard, Sir, 1608-1666. 1647 (1647) Wing G2174; ESTC R9373 96,280 240

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tears to make me bow Cor. Ah courteous Satyr wilt thou kerve in me Such cruell vengeance Sat. Come and thou shalt see Cor. And take no Pity of me Sat. None at all Cor. But art thou firm in this Sat. As a brasse-wall Is this charm ended Cor. O thou base and not To be exampled Rogue half man half goat And all a beast thou carrion that doth stink By-blow and blush of nature If thou think Corisca loves thee not thou thinkst the truth What should she love in such a comely youth That fair Stags head that chimney-sweepers broom Goats ears that grave of rottennesse and rheume Which once had bones in 't Sat. This to me Thou wicked varlet Cor. Ev'n to thee Sat. To me thou scold Cor. To thee thou Goat Sat. And with these pincers pull I not Thy barking tongue out Cor. Would thou durst Come neer 't there 's that will scour their rust Sat. A paltry woman and in such Condition being in my clutch To injure me and dare mee too I will Cor. Base slave what wilt thou do Sat. Eat thee alive I will Cor. Where be The teeth to do 't Sat. Heav'n dost thou see And suffer this But if I doe not Chastise thee Come along Cor. I wo' not Sat. Wo' not my Mistresse Malapert Cor. Wo' not in spight of thy foul heart Sat. That shall be seen Come or I swear This arm I 'le from thy shoulder tear Cor. Tear my head off I wo' not go One foot Sat. Art thou resolved so Let 's ne're dispute then any longer But put to tryall whether's stronger And faster on thy neck-piece or My arm Thy hands to help too Nor Are these perverse one enough guard Cor. That shall be try'd Sat. It shall Cor. Pull hard Satyr adieu Get thy neck set Sat. O me How I am shatter'd O my head my knee O my back-bone my thigh what a vile fall Was here to get upon my legs is all I have the pow'r to do But can it be That she should fly and leave her head with me O marvellous ye Nymphs and Shepherds run Flock hither to behold a wonder one That runs away without her head by skill In Magick Hah how light it is how ill Peopled with brains How comes it that I see None of the blood spirt forth But stay let me Peruse it better O thou stock thou stone Thou hast no head if thou think she hath none Was ever any man so fool'd See now If she had not a trick to scape when thou Thoughtst her most sure Thou all made up of wiles Was 't not enough thy heart thy face thy smiles Thy looks and speeches falsified were But thou must likewise falsifie thy hair The glowing Amber and the flowing Gold Which you mad Poets so extoll behold Blush blush now at your errour and recant Your thred-bare theam in stead whereof go paint The arts of a deform'd and impious Witch Breaking up Sepulchres by night from which She steals the hair that upon Death's head growes To imp her own which she so neatly does That she hath made you praise what ye should more Then dire Megara's snakie locks abhor These Lovers are your gyves I take it too Look on 'em Idiots and if as you Protest your hearts are fastned to these hairs Now every one may without sighs or tears Come by his owne But why do I forbear To publish her disgrace Surely that hair Which stuck with starres adorns the azure skye Never so famous was as this and shee Much more that wore it by my tongue shall be Made infamous to all posterity CHORUS AH 'T was a grievous fault in her the Cause Of all our sorrows who the sacred Lawes Of Love offending by her breach of troth Kindled against this Land the mortall wrath Of the immortall Gods which not a Flood Of generall tears nor so much guiltlesse blood Can quench yet or abate so high a price Vnspotted Faith Expeller of all vice And most undoubted Argument to prove A mind descended nobly bears above And such a care to plant love in his creature By which we deifie our humane Nature Hath the eternall Lover O those blind Mistaken mortals who addict their mind To wealth for which affection 's basely sold Watching the carcasse of their coffin'd gold Like a pale ghost that walks about his grave Or why should beauty our free hearts enslave These are dead loves the living and divine Is where two souls by vertue do combine No outward object can with reason move The heart to love it 'cause it cannot love Onely the soul 'cause that can love again Deserves a Love deserves a Lovers pain Well may that kisse be sweet that 's giv'n t' a sleek And fragrant rose of a vermilion cheek And understanding tasters as are true And happy Lovers will commend that too 'T is a dead kisse say I and must be poor Which the place kist hath no means to restore But the sweet ecchoing and the Dove-like billing Of two encountring Mouthes when both are willing And when at once both Loves advance their bows Their shafts drawn home at once sound at the loose How sweet is such Revenge This is true kissing Where there is one for t'other without missing A minute of the time or taking more Then that which in the taking they restore Where by an interchange of amorous blisses At the same time they sow and gather kisses Kisse a red swelling lip then kisse a wrist A brest a forehead or what else thou list No part of a fair Nymph so just will be Except the lip to pay this kisse to thee Thither your souls come sallying forth and they Kisse too and by the wandring pow'rs convey Life into smacking Rubies and transfuse Into the live and sprightly kisse their use Of reason so that yee discourse together In kisses which with little noyse deliver Much matter and sweet secrets which hee spels Who is a Lover Gibbrish to all else Like life like mutuall joy they feel where Love With equall flames as with two wings doth move And as where lips kisse lips is the best Kisse So where one 's lov'd to love best loving is Actus Tertius Scena Prima MIRTILLO SPring the yeers youth fair Mother of new flowrs New leaves new loves drawn by the winged hours Thou art return'd but the felicity Thou brought'st me last is not return'd with thee Thou art return'd but nought returns with thee Save my lost joyes regretfull memory Thou art the self same thing thou wert before As fair and jocund but I am no more The thing I was so gracious in her sight Who is Heav'ns master-piece and Earth's delight O bitter-sweets of Love Far worse it is To love then never to have tasted blisse But O how sweet were Love if it could not Be lost or being lost could be forgot Though if my hopes as mine are wont to be Are not of glasse or my love make me see Them through a multiplying glasse If
drunk but now This cave's mouth open was I 'm sure then how Comes it now shut and with a ponderous And massie stone rowl'd down upon it thus Earth-quake I 'm sure t' unhenge it there was none Would I knew certainly that Coridon And Amarillis were within and then I car'd not how it came Hee 's in the den If as Lisetta said he parted were From home so long ago Both may be there And by Mirtillo shut together Love Prickt with disdain hath strength enough to move The world much more a stone Should it be true Mirtillo could not have deviz'd to doe Ought more according to my heart then this Though he Corisca had enthron'd in his In stead of Amarillis I will goe The back way in that I the truth may know Scena secunda DORINDA LINCO Dor. BUt Linco didst not thou know me indeed Lin. Who could have known thee in this savage weed For meek Dorinda But if I had been A ravenous hound as I am Linco then I to thy cost had known thee for a beast What do I see What do I see Dor. Thou seest A sad effect of Love a sad and strange Effect of loving Linco Lin. Wondrous change Thou a young Maid so soft so delicate That wert me thinks an infant but of late Whom in mine arms I bore as I may say A very little childe but yesterday And steering thy weak steps taught thee to name When I thy Father serv'd Daddy and Mam Who like a tim'rous Doe before thy heart Was made a prey t' insulting Love didst start At every thing that on the sudden stirr'd At every winde at every little bird That shook a bough each Lizard that but ran Out of a bush made thee look pale and wan Now all alone o're hils through woods do'st passe Fearlesse of hounds or savage beasts Dor. Alas She whom Love wounds no other wound doth fear Lin. Indeed fair Nymph Love shew'd his godhead here From woman to a man transforming thee Or rather to a wolf Dor. If thou couldst see Into my brest O Linco then thou 'dst say A living wolf upon my heart doth prey As on a harmlesse lamb Lin. Is Silvio That wolf Dor. Alas who else can be ' t Lin. And so Cause he 's a wolf thou a shee-wolf wouldst be To try since on thy humane visage he Was not enamour'd if he would at least Affect thee in the likenesse of a beast As being of his kind But prethee where Gotst thou these robes Dor. I 'le tell thee I did hear Silvio would chase to day the noble Bore At Erimanthus foot and there before The morning peept was I from wood to wood Hunting the Hunter by a crystall flood From which our flocks did climb the hils I found Melampo the most beauteous Silvio's hound Who having quench'd his thirst there as I ghesse Lay to repose him on the neighb'ring grasse I who love any thing that 's Silvio's Even the very ground on which he goes And shadow which his beauteous limbs do cast Much more the dog on which his love is plac't Stooping laid sudden hold on him who came Along with me as gently as a lamb And whilst t' was in my thoughts to lead him back Unto his Lord and mine hoping to make A friend of him with what he held so deer He came himself to seek him and stopt here Deer Linco I 'le not lose thee so much time As to tell all that 's past 'twixt me and him This onely to be brief After a long Preface of oathes on one another strung And treach'rous promises this cruell swain Flung from me full of Anger and disdain Both with his own Melampo to his Lord So true and with my deer and sweet reward Lin. O cruell Silvio ruthlesse swain But what Didst thou do then Dorinda didst thou not Hate him for this Dor. Rather as if the fire Of his disdain Loves fire had been his ire Increast my former flame His steps I trace And thus pursuing him towards the chace I met hard by with my Lupino whom Before a little I had parted from When straight it came into my head that I In his attire and in the company Of shepherds might be thought a shepherd too And undiscover'd my fair Silvio view Lin. In a wolves likenesse amongst hounds and none Bite thee 'T is much Dorinda thou hast done Dor. This Linco was no miracle for they Durst not touch her who was their Masters prey There I out of the tents amidst the crue Of neighb'ring shepherds that were met to view The famous passe-time stood admiring more To see the Huntsman then the hunted Bore At every motion of the furious beast My cold heart shiv'red in my brest At every action of the brave young man My soul with all her touch'd affections ran In to his aid But my extreme delight Again was poyson'd with the horrid sight Of the fierce Bore whose strength and vast Proportion all proportion past As an impetuous whirlwind in a great And sudden storm which all that it doth meet Houses and trees and stones before it bears All it can get within its circle tears To pieces in an instant so the Bore Wheeling about his tusks all foam and gore Pil'd in one heap dogs slain spears knapt men wounded How oft did I desire to have compounded For Silvio's life with the inraged Swine And for his blood t' have giv'n the Monster mine How oft was I about to run between And with my body his fair body screen Spare cruell Bore how often did I cry Spare my fair Silvio's brest of Ivory Thus to my self I spake and sigh'd and pray'd When his fierce dog arm'd with a brest-plate made Of hard and scaly barks of trees he slipt After the beast now prouder being dipt Throughly in blood and lifted from the ground On slaughter'd trunks The valour of that hound Linco exceeds beliefe and Silvio Not without reason surely loves him so As a chaft Lion which now meets now turns From an untamed Buls well brandish'd horns If once he come with his strong paw to seize Upon his shoulder masters him with ease So bold Melampo shunning with fine slights The Bores short turns and rapid motion lights At length upon his ear which having bit Quite through and lugg'd him twice or thrice by it He with his teeth so naild him to the ground That at his vast bulk now a mortall wound Might levell'd be with greater certainty Before but slghtly hurt then suddenly My lovely Silvio calling on the name Of Dian Goddesse do thou give me aim Quoth he the horrid head is thine This sed His golden Quiver's swiftest shaft to th' head He drew which flying to that very point Where the left shoulder knits with the neck joint There wounded the fierce Bore so down he fell Then I took breath seeing my Silvio well And out of danger Happy beast to die So sweet a death as by that hand which I Would beg my end from
in vain But dost thou breath nor art to pity barr'd Art thou a tender brest or marble hard I would not idolize fair Alablaster Led by the humane likenesse as thy Master And mine when on the outside he did look A harmlesse woman for a beast mistook I strike thee strike thee Love Nor can I wish For my revenge a greater plague then this Yet must I blesse the day that I took fire My tears and martyrdome All I desire Is that thou praise my faith my zeale but no Revenging me But courteous Silvio That to thy servant kneel'st why this to me Or if Dorinda must thy Mistresse be Obey her then the first command I give Is that thou rise the second that thou live Heav'ns Will be done with me I shall survive In thee and cannot dye whilest thou' rt alive But if thou thinkst unjust I should be found Without all satisfaction for my wound Be that which did it punish'd 'T was that Bow Let that be broke I 'm well revenged so Lin. A very heavie doom Sil. Come then thou mad Thou bloody actor of a deed so sad That thou maist ne're break thred of life again Thus do I break thee and thy thred in twain And send thee a uselesse trunk back to the wood Nor you ill sanguin'd with an innocents blood Which my deer Mistresse side so rudely rent Brothers in ill shall scape your punishment Not shafts nor flights but sticks since yee shall want Those wings and heads which garnisht you Avant Plum'd and disarmed Arms. How well O Love Didst thou foretell me this from yonder grove In a prophetick Eccho O thou high Conqu'rour of Gods and men once enemy Now lord of all my thoughts if 't is thy glory To tame a heart that 's proud and refractory Divert Death's impious shaft which with one blow Slaying Dorinda will slay Silvio Now thine so cruell death if it remove Her hence will triumph or'e triumphant Love Lin. Now both are wounded but the one in vain Unlesse the other's wound be heal'd again About it then Dor. Ah Linco do not pray Carry me home disguis'd in this array Sil. Why should Dorinda go to any house But Silvio's surely she shall be my Spouse ' Ere it be night either alive or dead And Silvio in life or death will wed Dorinda Lin. Now she may become thy Wife Since Amarillis is to marriage life And vertue lost Blest pair Ye Gods that doe Wonders with one cure now give life to two Dor. O Silvio I shall faint my wounded thigh Feebly supporting me Sil. Good remedy For that take heart th' art mine and Linco's care And I and Linco thy two crutches are Linco thy hand Lin. There ' t is Sil. Hold fast a chair Let 's make for her of our two arms Rest here Dorinda suffring thy right hand t' imbrace The neck of Linco thy left mine Now place Thy body tenderly that the hurt part May not be strain'd Dor. O cruell pricking dart Sil. Sit at more ease my Love Dor. It is well now Sil. Deer Linco do not stagger Lin. Nor do thou Swag with thine arme but steddy go and wary It will concern thee Ah! we do not carry A Boars head now in triumph Sil. Say my Deer How is it now Dor. In pain but leaning here My Heart to be in pain is pleas'd to be To languish health to die eternity CHORUS FAir golden Age when milk was th' onely food And cradle of the infant-world the wood Rock'd by the windes and th' untoucht flocks did bear Their deer young for themselves None yet did fear The sword or poyson no black thoughts begun T' eclipse the light of the eternall Sun Nor wandring Pines unto a forreign shore Or War or Riches a worse mischief bore That pompous sound Idoll of vanity Made up of Title Pride and Flattery Which they call Honour whom Ambition blindes Was not as yet the Tyrant of our mindes But to buy reall goods with honest toil Amongst the woods and flocks to use no guile Was honour to those sober souls that knew No happinesse but what from vertue grew Then sports and carols amongst Brooks and Plains Kindled a lawfull flame in Nymphs and Swains Their hearts and Tongues concurr'd the kisse and joy Which were most sweet and yet which least did cloy Hymen bestow'd on them To one alone The lively Roses of delight were blown The theevish Lover found them shut on triall And fenc'd with prickles of a sharp denyall Were it in Cave or Wood or purling Spring Husband and Lover signifi'd one thing Base present age which dost with thy impure Delights the beauty of the soul obscure Teaching to nurse a Dropsie in the veins Bridling the look but giv'st desire the reins Thus like a net that spread and cover'd lies With leaves and tempting flowrs thou dost disguise With coy and holy arts a wanton heart Mak'st life a Stage-play vertue but a part Nor thinkst it any fault Love's sweets to steal So from the world thou canst the theft conceal But thou that art the King of Kings create In us true honour Vertue 's all the state Great souls should keep Vnto these cels return Which were thy Court but now thy absence mourn From their dead sleep with thy sharp goad awake Them who to follow their base wils forsake Thee and the glory of the ancient world Let 's hope our ills have truce till we are hurld From that Let 's hope the sun that 's set may rise And with new light salute our longing eyes Actus Quintus Scena Prima VRANIO CARINO Vr. ALl places are our Country where w' are well Which to the wise is wheresoe're they dwel Car. It is most true Vranio and no man By proof can say it better then I can Who leaving long ago my Fathers house Being very young and then ambitious Of something more then holding of the plough Or keeping sheep travell'd abroad and now To the same point where I began return When my gilt locks are to the silver worn Yet a sweet thing it needs must be confest To any that hath sense is his first nest For Nature gave to all men at their birth Something of secret love unto that Earth Where they were born which never old doth grow In us but follows wheresoe're we go The Loadstone which the wary Mariner Doth as Directer of his travels bear Now to the rising Sun now to his set Doth never lose that hidden vertue yet Which makes it to the North retort its look So he that hath his native soil forsook Though he may wander far much compasse take I and his nest in forraign Countries make Yet that same naturall love doth still retain Which makes him wish his native soil again O fair Arcadia the sweetest part Of all the world at least to me thou art Which my feet trod on but my thoughts adore Had I been landed blindfold on thy shore Yet then I should have known thee such a floud