Edmund Spenser - The Shepheardes Calendar VII: Julye lyrics

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Edmund Spenser - The Shepheardes Calendar VII: Julye lyrics

THOMALIN. MORREL. Is not thilk same a Goat-herd proud, That sits on yonder Bank; Whose straying Herd themself doth shroud Emong the Bushes rank? MORREL. What ho, thou jolly Shepherd's Swain, Come up the Hill to me: Better is, than the lowly Plain, Als for thy Flock and thee. THOMALIN. Ah! God shield, Man, that I should clime, And learn to look aloft This Read is rife, that oftentime Great Climbers fall unsoft. In humble Dales is footing fast, The Trode is not so tickle; And though one fall through heedless haste, Yet is his Miss not mickle. And now the Sun hath reared up His fiery-footed Teme, Making his way between the Cup And golden Diademe: The rampant Lion hunts he fast, With Dogs of noisom Breath, Whose baleful barking brings in haste, Pine, Plagues, and drery d**h. Against his cruel scorching Heat, Where thou hast Coverture, The wasteful Hills unto his Threat Is a plain Overture. But if thee lust, to holden chat With seely Shepherd's Swain: Come down, and learn the little what, That Thomalin can sain. MORREL. Siker, thous but a lasy Loord, And rekes much of thy Swink, That with fond Terms, and witless Words To blear mine Eyes dost think. In evil hour thou henst in hond Thus holy Hills to blame; For sacred unto Saints they stond, And of them han their Name. St. Michel's Mount who does not know, That wards the Western Coast? And of St. Bridget's Bow'r I trow, All Kent can rightly boast: And they that con of Muses Sk**, Fain most what, that they dwell (As Goat-herds wont) upon a Hill, Beside a learned Well. And wonned not the great God Pan Upon Mount Olivet; Feeding the blessed Flock of Dan, Which did himself beget? THOMALIN. O blessed Sheep! O Shepherd great! That bought his Flock so dear: And them did save with bloody Sweat, From Wolves that would them tear. MORREL. Beside, as holy Fathers sain, There is a holy Place, Where Titan riseth from the Main, To ren his daily Race: Upon whose Tops the Stars been staied, And all the Sky doth lean; There is the Cave where Phoebe laied The Shepherd long to dream. Whilom there used Shepherds all To feed their Flocks at will, Till by his Folly one did fall, That all the rest did spill. And sithence Shepherds been foresaid From Places of Delight; For-thy, I ween thou be afraid, To clime this Hilles hight. Of Synah an I tell thee more, And of our Lady's Bow'r: But little needs to crow my Store, Suffice this Hill of our. Here hen the holy Faunes Recourse, And Sylvanes haunten rathe; Here has the salt Medway his Sourse, Wherein the Nymphs do bathe: The salt Medway, that trickling streams Adown the Dales of Kent, Till with his elder Brother Thames, His brackish Waves be meynt. Here grows Melampode, every where, And Teribinth, good for Goats: The one, my madding Kids to smear, The next to heal their Throats. Hereto, the Hills been nigher Heaven, And thence the Pa**age eath: As well can prove the piercing Levin, That seldom falls beneath. THOMALIN. Siker thou speakest like a lewd Lorel, Of Heaven to deemen so: How be I am but rude and borrel, Yet nearer ways I know. To Kirk the nar, so God more far, Has been an old said Saw; And he that strives to touch a Star, Oft stumbles at a Straw. Alsoon may Shepherds clime to Sky, That leads in lowly Dales; As Goat-herd proud, that sitting high, Upon the Mountain fails. My seely Sheep like well below, They need not Melampode; For they been hale enough, I trow, And liken their Abode. But if they with thy Goats should yede, They soon might be corrupted; Or like not of the frowy Fede, Or with the Weeds be glutted. The Hills, where dwelled holy Saints, I reverence and adore; Not for themself, but for the Saints, Which hen been dead of yore. And now they been to Heaven forewent, Their Good is with them go; Their Sample only to us lent, That als we mought do so. Shepherds they weren of the best, And lived in lowly Leas; And sith their Souls be now at rest, Why done we them Disease? Such one he was (as I have heard Old Algrind often sain) That whilom was the first Shepherd; And liv'd with little Gain: And meek he was, as meek mought be; Simple, as simple Sheep; Humble, and like in each degree The Flock which he did keep. Often he used of his Keep A Sacrifice to bring; Now with a Kid, now with a Sheep, The Altars hallowing. So louted he unto the Lord, Such Favour couth he find, That never sithence was abhor'd The simple Shepherds kind. And such I ween the Brethren were, That came from Canaan; The Brethren twelve, that kept yfere The Flocks of mighty Pan. But nothing such thilk Shepherd was, Whom Ida Hill did bear, That left his Flock to fetch a La**, Whose Love he bought too dear: For he was proud, that ill was paid, (No such mought Shepherds be) And with leud Lust was over-laid; Tway things doen ill agree. But Shepherds mought be meek and mild, Well eyed, as Argus was, With fleshly Follies undefil'd, And stout as Steed of Bra**. Sike one (said Algrind) Moses was, That saw his Maker's Face, His Face more clear than crystal Gla**, And spake to him in place. This had a Brother (his Name I know) The first of all his Coat: A Shepherd true, yet not so true, As he that earst I hote. Whilom all these were low, and leef, And lov'd their Flocks to feed, They never stroven to be chief, And simple was their Weed. But now (thanked be God therefore) The World is well amend: Their Weeds been not so nightly wore, Such Simpless mought them shend. They been yclad in Purple and Pall, So hath their God them blist; They reign and rulen over all, And lord it as they list: Ygirt with Belts of Glitter and Gold, (Mought they good Shepherds been) Their Pan their Sheep to them has sold, I say, as some have seen. For Palinode (if thou him ken) Yode late on Pilgrimage To Rome (if such be Rome) and then He saw thilk Misusage. For Shepherds (said he) there doen lead, As Lords done otherwhere; Their Sheep han Crusts, and they the Bread; The Chips, and they the Chear: They han the Fleece, and eke the Flesh, (O seely Sheep the while!) The Corn is theirs, let others thresh, Their Hands they may not file. They han great Store, and thrifty Flocks, Great Friends, and feeble Foes: What need hem caren for their Flocks, Their Boys can look to those? These Wizards welter in Wealth's Waves, Pamper'd in Pleasures deep; They han fat Kerns and leany Knaves, Their fasting flocks to keep. Sike mister Men been all misgone, They heapen Hills of Wrath: Sike sirly Shepherds hen we none, They keepen all the Path. MORREL. Here is a great deal of good Matter, Lost for lack of telling: Now siker I see thou dost but clatter, Harm may come of melling. Thou meddlest more than shall have thank To witen Shepherd's Wealth: When Folk been fat, and Riches rank, It is a Sign of Health. But say me, what is Algrind, he That is so oft bynempt? THOMALIN. He is a Shepherd great in Gree, But hath been long ypent: One day he sate upon a Hill, (As now thou wouldest me, But I am taught by Algrind's Ill, To love the low degree) For sitting so with bared Scalp, An Eagle soared high, That weening his white Heat was Chalk, A Shell-Fish down let fly. She ween'd the Shell-Fish to have broke, But therewith bruis'd his Brain: So now astonied with the Stroke, He lies in lingring Pain. MORREL. Ah! good Algrind, his Hap was ill, But shall be better in time: Now farewel, Shepherd, sith this Hill Thou hast such doubt to clime. PALINODE'S EMBLEM. In medio Virtus. MORREL'S EMBLEM. In summo Felicitas.