Edmund Spenser

The Faerie Queene, Book Iii, Canto VI

THE THIRD BOOKE OF THE FAERIE QUEENE
Contayning
THE LEGENDE OF BRITOMARTIS
OR OF CHASTITIECANTO VI
    The birth of faire Belphoebe and
       Of Amoret is told.
   The Gardins of Adonis fraught
       With pleasures manifold.
 
 
i
   Well may I weene, faire Ladies, all this while
   Ye wonder, how this noble Damozell
   So great perfections did in her compile,
   Sith that in salvage forests she did dwell,
   So farre from court and royall Citadell,
  The great schoolmistresse of all curtesy:
  Seemeth that such wild woods should far expell
  All civill usage and gentility,
  And gentle sprite deforme with rude rusticity.
 
ii
 
  But to this faire Belphoebe in her berth
  The heavens so favourable were and free,
  Looking with myld aspect upon the earth,
  In th’Horoscope of her nativitee,
  That all the gifts of grace and chastitee
  On her they poured forth of plenteous horne;
  Jove laught on Venus from his soveraigne see,
  And Phoebus with faire beames did her adorne,
  And all the Graces rockt her cradle being borne.
 
iii
 
  Her berth was of the wombe of Morning dew,
  And her conception of the joyous Prime,
  And all her whole creation did her shew
  Pure and unspotted from all loathly crime,
  That is ingenerate in fleshly slime.
  So was this virgin borne, so was she bred,
  So was she trayned up from time to time,
  In all chast vertue, and true bounti-hed
  Till to her dew perfection she was ripened.
 
iv
 
  Her mother was the faire Chrysogonee,
  The daughter of Amphisa, who by race
  A Faerie was, yborne of high degree,
  She bore Belphoebe, she bore in like cace
  Faire Amoretta in the second place:
  These two were twinnes, and twixt them two did share
  The heritage of all celestiall grace.
  That all the rest it seem’d they robbed bare
  Of bountie, and of beautie, and all vertues rare.
 
v
 
  It were a goodly storie, to declare,
  By what straunge accident faire Chrysogone
  Conceiv’d these infants, and how them she bare,
  In this wild forrest wandring all alone,
  After she had nine moneths fulfild and gone:
  For not as other wemens commune brood,
  They were enwombed in the sacred throne
  Of her chaste bodie, nor with commune food,
  As other wemens babes, they sucked vitall blood.
 
vi
 
  But wondrously they were begot, and bred
  Through influence of th’heavens fruitfull ray,
  As it in antique bookes is mentioned.
  It was upon a Sommers shynie day,
  When Titan faire his beames did display,
  In a fresh fountaine, farre from all mens vew,
  She bath’d her brest, the boyling heat t’allay;
  She bath’d with roses red, and violets blew,
  And all the sweetest flowres, that in the forrest grew.
 
vii
 
  Till faint through irkesome wearinesse, adowne
   Upon the grassie ground her selfe she layd
  To sleepe, the whiles a gentle slombring swowne
  Upon her fell all naked bare displayd;
  The sunne-beames bright upon her body playd,
  Being through former bathing mollifide,
  And pierst into her wombe, where they embayd
  With so sweet sence and secret power unspide,
  That in her pregnant flesh they shortly fructifide.
 
viii
 
  Miraculous may seeme to him, that reades
  So straunge ensample of conception;
  But reason teacheth that the fruitfull seades
  Of all things living, through impression
  Of the sunbeames in moyst complexion,
  Doe life conceive and quickned are by kynd:
  So after Nilus inundation,
  Infinite shapes of creatures men do fynd,
  Informed in the mud, on which the Sunne hath shynd.
 
ix
 
  Great father he of generation
  Is rightly cald, th’author of life and light;
  And his faire sister for creation
  Ministreth matter fit, which tempred right
  With heate and humour, breedes the living wight.
  So sprong these twinnes in wombe of Chrysogone,
  Yet wist she nought thereof, but sore affright,
  Wondred to see her belly so upblone,
  Which still increast, till she her terme had full outgone.
 
x
 
  Whereof conceiving shame and foule disgrace,
  Albe her guiltlesse conscience her cleard,
  She fled into the wildernesse a space,
  Till that unweeldy burden she had reard,
  And shund dishonor, which as death she feard:
  Where wearie of long travell, downe to rest
  Her selfe she set, and comfortably cheard;
  There a sad cloud of sleepe her overkest,
  And seized every sense with sorrow sore opprest.
 
xi
 
  It fortuned, faire Venus having lost
  Her little sonne, the winged god of love,
  Who for some light displeasure, which him crost,
  Was from her fled, as flit as ayerie Dove,
  And left her blisfull bowre of joy above,
 (So from her often he had fled away,
 When she for ought him sharpely did reprove,
 And wandred in the world in strange aray,
 Disguiz’d in thousand shapes, that none might him bewray.)
 
xii
 
 
 Him for to seeke, she left her heavenly hous,
 The house of goodly formes and faire aspects,
 Whence all the world derives the glorious
 Features of beautie, and all shapes select,
 With which high God his workmanship hath deckt;
 And searched every way, through which his wings
 Had borne him, or his tract she mote detect:
 She promist kisses sweet, and sweeter things
 Unto the man, that of him tydings to her brings.
 
xiii
 
 
 First she him sought in Court, where most he used
 Whylome to haunt, but there she found him not;
 But many there she found, which sore accused
 His falsehood, and with foule infamous blot
 His cruell deedes and wicked wyles did spot:
 Ladies and Lords she every where mote heare
 Complayning, how with his empoysned shot
 Their wofull harts he wounded had whyleare,
 And so had left them languishing twixt hopt and feare.
 
xiv
 
 
 She then the Citties sought from gate to gate,
 And every one did aske, did he him see;
 And every one her answerd, that too late
 He had him seene, and felt the crueltie
 Of his sharpe darts and whot artillerie;
 And every one threw forth reproches rife
 Of his mischievous deedes, and said, That hee
 Was the disturber of all civill life,
 The enimy of peace, and author of all strife.
 
xv
 
 
 Then in the countrey she abroad him sought,
 And in the rurall cottages inquired,
 Where also many plaints to her were brought,
 How he their heedlesse harts with love had fyred,
 And his false venim through their veines inspyred;
 And eke the gentle shepheard swaynes, which sat
 Keeping their fleecie flockes, as they were hyred,
 She sweetly heard complaine, both how and what
 Her sonne had to them doen; yet she did smile thereat.
 
xvi
 
 
 But when in none of all these she him got,
 She gan avize, where else he mote him hyde:
 At last she her bethought, that she had not
 Yet sought the salvage woods and forrests wyde,
 In which full many lovely Nymphes abyde,
 Mongst whom might be, that he did closely lye,
 Or that the love of some of them him tyde:
 For thy she thither cast her course t’apply,
 To search the secret haunts of Dianes company.
 
xvii
 
 
 Shortly unto the wastefull woods she came,
 Whereas she found the Goddesse with her crew,
 After late chace of their embrewed game,
 Sitting beside a fountaine in a rew,
 Some of them washing with the liquid dew
 From offtheir dainty limbes the dustie sweat,
 And soyle which did deforme their lively hew;
 Others lay shaded from the scorching heat;
 The rest upon her person gave attendance great.
 
xviii
 
 
 She having hong upon a bough on high
 Her bow and painted quiver, had unlaste
 Her silver buskins from her nimble thigh,
 And her lancke loynes ungirt, and brests unbraste,
 After her heat the breathing cold to taste;
 Her golden lockes, that late in tresses bright
 Embreaded were for hindring of her haste,
 Now loose about her shoulders hong undight,
 And were with sweet Ambrosia all besprinckled light.
 
xix
 
 
 Soone as she Venus saw behind her backe,
 She was asham’d to be so loose surprized,
 And woxe halfe wroth against her damzels slacke,
 That had not her thereof before avized,
 But suffred her so carelesly disguized
 Be overtaken. Soone her garments loose
 Upgath’ring, in her bosome she comprized,
 Well as she might, and to the Goddesse rose,
 Whiles all her Nymphes did like a girlond her enclose.
 
xx
 
 
 Goodly she gan faire Cytherea greet,
 And shortly asked her, what cause her brought
 Into that wildernesse for her unmeet,
 From her sweete bowres, and beds with pleasures fraught:
 That suddein change she strange adventure thought.
 To whom halfe weeping, she thus answered,
 That she her dearest sonne Cupido sought,
 Who in his frowardnesse from her was fled;
 That she repented sore, to have him angered.
 
xxi
 
 
 Thereat Diana gan to smile, in scorne
 Of her vaine plaint, and to her scoffmg sayd;
 Great pittie sure, that ye be so forlorne
 Of your gay sonne, that gives ye so good ayd
 To your disports: ill mote ye bene apayd.
 But she was more engrieved, and replide;
 Faire sister, ill beseemes it to upbrayd
 A dolefull heart with so disdainfull pride;
 The like that mine, may be your paine another tide.
 
xxii
 
 
 As you in woods and wanton wildernesse
 Your glory set, to chace the salvage beasts,
 So my delight is all in joyfulnesse,
 In beds, in bowres, in banckets, and in feasts:
 And ill becomes you with your loftie creasts,
 To scorne the joy, that Jove is glad to seeke;
 We both are bound to follow heavens beheasts,
 And tend our charges with obeisance meeke:
 Spare, gentle sister, with reproch my paine to eeke.
 
xxiii
 
 
 And tell me, if that ye my sonne have heard,
 To lurk emongst your Nymphes in secret wize;
 Or keepe their cabins: much I am affeard,
 Lest he like one of them him selfe disguize,
 And turne his arrowes to their exercize:
 So may he long himselfe full easie hide:
 For he is faire and fresh in face and guize,
 As any Nymph (let not it be envyde.)
 So saying every Nymph full narrowly she eyde.
 
xxiv
 
 
 But Phoebe therewith sore was angered,
 And sharply said; Goe Dame, goe seeke your boy,
 Where you him lately left, in Mars his bed;
 He comes not here, we scorne his foolish joy,
 Ne lend we leisure to his idle toy:
 But if I catch him in this company,
 By Stygian lake I vow, whose sad annoy
 The Gods doe dread, he dearely shall abye:
 Ile clip his wanton wings, that he no more shall fly.
 
xxv
 
 
 Whom when as Venus saw so sore displeased,
 She inly sory was, and gan relent,
 What she had said: so her she soone appeased,
 With sugred words and gentle blandishment,
 Which as a fountaine from her sweet lips went,
 And welled goodly forth, that in short space
 She was well pleasd, and forth her damzels sent,
 Through all the woods, to search from place to place,
 If any tract of him or tydings they mote trace.
 
xxvi
 
 
 To search the God of love, her Nymphes she sent
 Throughout the wandring forrest every where:
 But after them her selfe eke with her went
 To seeke the fugitive, both farre and nere.
 So long they sought, till they arrived were
 In that same shadie covert, whereas lay
 Faire Crysogone in slombry traunce whilere:
 Who in her sleepe (a wondrous thing to say)
 Unwares had borne two babes, as faire as springing day.
 
xxvii
 
 
 Unwares she them conceiv’d, unwares she bore:
 She bore withouten paine, that she conceived
 Withouten pleasure: ne her need implore
 Lucinaes aide: which when they both perceived,
 They were through wonder nigh of sense bereaved,
 And gazing each on other, nought bespake:
 At last they both agreed, her seeming grieved
 Out of her heavy swowne not to awake,
 But from her loving side the tender babes to take.
 
xxviii
 
 
 Up they them tooke, each one a babe uptooke,
 And with them carried, to be fostered;
 Dame Phoebe to a Nymph her babe betooke,
 To be upbrought in perfect Maydenhed,
 And of her selfe her name Belphoebe red:
 But Venus hers thence farre away convayd,
 To be upbrought in goodly womanhed,
 And in her litle loves stead, which was strayd,
 Her Amoretta cald, to comfort her dismayd.
 
xxix
 
 
 She brought her to her joyous Paradize,
 Where most she wonnes, when she on earth does dwel.
 So faire a place, as Nature can devize:
 Whether in Paphos, or Cytheron hill,
 Or it in Gnidus be, I wote not well;
 But well I wote by tryall, that this same
 All other pleasant places doth excell,
 And called is by her lost lovers name,
 The Gardin of Adonis, farre renowmd by fame.
 
xxx
 
 
 In that same Gardin all the goodly flowres,
 Wherewith dame Nature doth her beautifie,
 And decks the girlonds of her paramoures,
 Are fetcht: there is the first seminarie
 Of all things, that are borne to live and die,
 According to their kindes. Long worke it were,
 Here to account the endlesse progenie
 Of all the weedes, that bud and blossome there;
 But so much as doth need, must needs be counted here.
 
xxxi
 
 
 It sited was in fruitfull soyle of old,
 And girt in with two walles on either side;
 The one of yron, the other of bright gold,
 That none might thorough breake, nor over-stride:
 And double gates it had, which opened wide,
 By which both in and out men moten pas;
 Th’one faire and fresh, the other old and dride:
 Old Genius the porter of them was,
 Old Genius, the which a double nature has.
 
xxxii
 
 
 He letteth in, he letteth out to wend,
 All that to come into the world desire;
 A thousand thousand naked babes attend
 About him day and night, which doe require,
 That he with fleshly weedes would them attire:
 Such as him list, such as eternall fate
 Ordained hath, he clothes with sinfull mire,
 And sendeth forth to live in mortall state,
 Till they againe returne backe by the hinder gate.
 
xxxiii
 
 
 After that they againe returned beene,
 They in that Gardin planted be againe;
 And grow afresh, as they had never seene
 Fleshly corruption, nor mortall paine.
 Some thousand yeares so doen they there remaine;
 And then of him are clad with other hew,
 Or sent into the chaungefull world againe,
 Till thither they returne, where first they grew:
 So like a wheele around they runne from old to new.
 
xxxiv
 
 
 Ne needs there Gardiner to set, or sow,
 To plant or prune: for of their owne accord
 All things, as they created were, doe grow,
 And yet remember well the mightie word,
 Which first was spoken by th’Almightie lord,
 That bad them to increase and multiply:
 Ne doe they need with water of the ford,
 Or of the clouds to moysten their roots dry;
 For in themselves eternall moisture they imply.
 
xxxv
 
 
 Infinite shapes of creatures there are bred,
 And uncouth formes, which none yet ever knew,
 And every sort is in a sundry bed
 Set by it selfe, and ranckt in comely rew:
 Some fit for reasonable soules t’indew,
 Some made for beasts, some made for birds to weare,
 And all the fruitfull spawne of fishes hew
 In endlesse rancks along enraunged were,
 That seem’d the Ocean could not containe them there.
 
xxxvi
 
 
 Daily they grow, and daily forth are sent
 Into the world, it to replenish more;
 Yet is the stocke not lessened, nor spent,
 But still remaines in everlasting store,
 As it at first created was of yore.
 For in the wide wombe of the world there lyes,
 In hatefull darkenesse and in deepe horrore,
 An huge eternall Chaos, which supplyes
 The substances of natures fruitfull progenyes.
 
xxxvii
 
 
 All things from thence doe their first being fetch,
 And borrow matter, whereof they are made,
 Which when as forme and feature it does ketch,
 Becomes a bodie, and doth then invade
 The state of life, out of the griesly shade.
 That substance is eterne, and bideth so,
 Ne when the life decayes, and forme does fade,
 Doth it consume, and into nothing go,
 But chaunged is, and often altred to and fro.
 
xxxviii
 
 
 The substance is not chaunged, nor altered,
 But th’only forme and outward fashion;
 For every substance is conditioned
 To change her hew, and sundry formes to don,
 Meet for her temper and complexion:
 For formes are variable and decay,
 By course of kind, and by occasion;
 And that faire flowre of beautie fades away,
 As doth the lilly fresh before the sunny ray.
 
xxxix
 
 
 Great enimy to it, and to all the rest,
 That in the Gardin of Adonis springs,
 Is wicked Time, who with his scyth addrest,
 Does mow the flowring herbes and goodly things,
 And all their glory to the ground downe flings,
 Where they doe wither, and are fowly mard:
 He flyes about, and with his flaggy wings
 Beates downe both leaves and buds without regard,
 Ne ever pittie may relent his malice hard.
 
xl
 
 
 Yet pittie often did the gods relent,
 To see so faire things mard, and spoyled quight:
 And their great mother Venus did lament
 The losse of her deare brood, her deare delight;
 Her hart was pierst with pittie at the sight,
 When walking through the Gardin, them she saw,
 Yet no’te she find redresse for such despight.
 For all that lives, is subject to that law:
 All things decay in time, and to their end do draw.
 
xli
 
 
 But were it not, that Time their troubler is,
 All that in this delightfull Gardin growes,
 Should happie be, and have immortall blis:
 For here all plentie, and all pleasure flowes,
 And sweet love gentle fits emongst them throwes,
 Without fell rancor, or fond gealosie;
 Franckly each paramour his leman knowes,
 Each bird his mate, ne any does envie
 Their goodly meriment, and gay felicitie.
 
xlii
 
 
 There is continuall spring, and harvest there
 Continuall, both meeting at one time:
 For both the boughes doe laughing blossomes beare,
 And with fresh colours decke the wanton Prime,
 And eke attonce the heavy trees they clime,
 Which seeme to labour under their fruits lode:
 The whiles the joyous birdes make their pastime
 Emongst the shadie leaves, their sweet abode,
 And their true loves without suspition tell abrode.
 
xliii
 
 
 Right in the middest of that Paradise,
 There stood a stately Mount, on whose round top
 A gloomy grove of mirtle trees did rise,
 Whose shadie boughes sharpe steele did never lop,
 Nor wicked beasts their tender buds did crop,
 But like a girlond compassed the hight,
 And from their fruitfull sides sweet gum did drop,
 That all the ground with precious deaw bedight,
 Threw forth most dainty odours, and most sweet delight.
 
xliv
 
 
 And in the thickest covert of that shade,
 There was a pleasant arbour, not by art,
 But of the trees owne inclination made,
 Which knitting their rancke braunches part to part,
 With wanton yvie twyne entrayld athwart,
 And Eglantine, and Caprifole emong,
 Fashiond above within their inmost part,
 That neither Phoebus beams could through them throng,
 Nor Aeolus sharp blast could worke them any wrong.
 
xlv
 
 
 And all about grew every sort of flowre,
 To which sad lovers were transformd of yore;
 Fresh Hyacinthus, Phoebus paramoure,
 And dearest love,
 Foolish Narcisse, that likes the watry shore,
 Sad Amaranthus, made a flowre but late,
 Sad Amaranthus, in whose purple gore
 Me seemes I see Amintas wretched fate,
 To whom sweet Poets verse hath given endlesse date.
 
xlvi
 
 
 There wont faire Venus often to enjoy
 Her deare Adonis joyous company,
 And reape sweet pleasure of the wanton boy;
 There yet, some say, in secret he does ly,
 Lapped in flowres and pretious spycery,
 By her hid from the world, and from the skill
 Of Stygian Gods, which doe her love envy;
 But she her selfe, when ever that she will,
 Possesseth him, and of his sweetnesse takes her fill.
 
xlvii
 
 
 And sooth it seemes they say: for he may not
 For ever die, and ever buried bee
 In balefull night, where all things are forgot;
 All be he subject to mortalitie,
 Yet is eterne in mutabilitie,
 And by succession made perpetuall,
 Transformed oft, and chaunged diverslie:
 For him the Father of all formes they call;
 Therefore needs mote he live, that living gives to all.
 
xlviii
 
 
 There now he liveth in eternall blis,
 Joying his goddesse, and of her enjoyd:
 Ne feareth he henceforth that foe of his,
 Which with his cruell tuske him deadly cloyd:
 For that wilde Bore, the which him once annoyd,
 She firmely hath emprisoned for ay,
 That her sweet love his malice mote avoyd,
 In a strong rocky Cave, which is they say,
 Hewen underneath that Mount, that none him losen may.
 
xlix
 
 
 There now he lives in everlasting joy,
 With many of the Gods in company,
 Which thither haunt, and with the winged boy
 Sporting himselfe in safe felicity:
 Who when he hath with spoiles and cruelty
 Ransackt the world, and in the wofull harts
 Of many wretches set his triumphes hye,
 Thither resorts, and laying his sad darts
 Aside, with faire Adonis playes his wanton parts.
 
l
 
 
 And his true love faire Psyche with him playes,
 Faire Psyche to him lately reconcyld,
 After long troubles and unmeet upbrayes,
 With which his mother Venus her revyld,
 And eke himselfe her cruelly exyld:
 But now in stedfast love and happy state
 She with him lives, and hath him borne a chyld,
 Pleasure, that doth both gods and men aggrate,
 Pleasure, the daughter of Cupid and Psyche late.
 
li
 
 
 Hither great Venus brought this infant faire,
 The younger daughter of Chrysogonee,
 And unto Psyche with great trust and care
 Committed her, yfostered to bee,
 And trained up in true feminitee:
 Who no lesse carefully her tendered,
 Then her owne daughter Pleasure, to whom shee
 Made her companion, and her lessoned
 In all the lore of love, and goodly womanhead....
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