Page:Metamorphoses (Ovid, 1567).djvu/127

 For shee that loved Ino best was following hir with speede Into the Sea. But as shee would hir selfe have downeward cast, She could not stirre, but to the rock as nailed sticked fast. The second as shee knockt hir breast, did feele hir armes wax stiffe. Another as shee stretched out hir hands upon the cliffe, Was made a stone, and there stoode still ay stretching forth hir hands Into the water as before. And as an other standes A tearing of hir ruffled lockes, hir fingers hardened were And fastned to hir frisled toppe still tearing of hir heare, And looke what gesture eche of them was taken in that tide, Even in the same transformde to stones, they fastned did abide. And some were altered into birds which Cadmies called bee And in that goolfe with flittering wings still to and fro doe flee. Nought knoweth Cadmus that his daughter and hir little childe Admitted were among the Goddes that rule the surges wilde. Compellde with griefe and great mishappes that had ensewd togither, And straunge foretokens often seene since first his comming thither, He utterly forsakes his towne the which he builded had, As though the fortune of the place so hardly him bestad, And not his owne. And fleeting long like pilgrims, at the last Upon the coast of Illirie his wife and he were cast. Where ny forpind with cares and yeares, while of the chaunces past Upon their house, and of their toyles and former travails tane They sadly talkt betweene themselves: Was my speare head the bane Of that same ougly Snake of Cadmus) when I fled From Sidon? or did I his teeth in ploughed pasture spred? If for the death of him the Goddes so cruell vengeaunce take, Drawen out in length upon my wombe then traile I like a snake. He had no sooner sayde the worde but that he gan to glide Upon his belly like a Snake. And on his hardened side He felt the scales new budding out, the which was wholy fret With speccled droppes of blacke and gray as thicke as could be set. He falleth groveling on his breast, and both his shankes doe growe In one round spindle Bodkinwise with sharpned point below. His armes as yet remayned still: his armes that did remayne, He stretched out, and sayde with teares that plentuously did raine Adowne his face, which yet did keepe the native fashion sownd: