Page:Metamorphoses (Ovid, 1567).djvu/113

 Lie sprawling with his dying limmes: at which she started backe, And looked pale as any Box, a shuddring through hir stracke, Even like the Sea which sodenly with whissing noyse doth move, When with a little blast of winde it is but toucht above. But when approching nearer him she knew it was hir love, She beate hir brest, she shricked out, she tare hir golden heares, And taking him betweene hir armes did wash his wounds with teares, She meynt hir weeping with his bloud, and kissing all his face (Which now became as colde as yse) she cride in wofull case: Alas what chaunce, my Pyramus, hath parted thee and mee? Make aunswere O my Pyramus: it is thy Thisb', even shee Whome thou doste love most heartely, that speaketh unto thee. Give eare and rayse thy heavie heade. He hearing Thisbes name, Lift up his dying eyes and having seene hir closde the same. But when she knew hir mantle there and saw his scabberd lie Without the swoorde: Unhappy man thy love hath made thee die: Thy love (she said) hath made thee sley thy selfe. This hand of mine Is strong inough to doe the like. My love no lesse than thine Shall give me force to worke my wound. I will pursue the dead. And wretched woman as I am, it shall of me be sed That like as of thy death I was the only cause and blame, So am I thy companion eke and partner in the same, For death which only coulde alas asunder part us twaine, Shall never so dissever us but we will meete againe. And you the Parentes of us both, most wretched folke alyve, Let this request that I shall make in both our names bylive Entreate you to permit that we whome chaste and stedfast love And whome even death hath joynde in one, may as it doth behove In one grave be together layd. And thou unhappie tree Which shroudest now the corse of one, and shalt anon through mee Shroude two, of this same slaughter holde the sicker signes for ay, Blacke be the colour of thy fruite and mourning like alway, Such as the murder of us twaine may evermore bewray. This said, she tooke the sword yet warme with slaughter of hir love And setting it beneath hir brest, did to hir heart it shove. Hir prayer with the Gods and with their Parentes tooke effect. For when the frute is throughly ripe, the Berrie is bespect