Page:Metamorphoses (Ovid, 1567).djvu/175

 Yet swelted he: and in his minde revolving all the night Hir face, hir gesture, and hir hands, imaginde all the rest (The which as yet he had not seene) as likte his fancie best. He feedes his flames himselfe. No winke could come within his eyes, For thinking ay on hir. As soone as day was in the skies, Pandion holding in his hand the hand of Tereus prest To go his way, and sheading teares betooke him thus his guest: Deare sonneinlaw I give thee here (sith godly cause constraines) This Damsell. By the faith that in thy Princely heart remaines, And for our late aliance sake, and by the Gods above, I humbly thee beseche that as a Father thou doe love And maintaine hir, and that as soone as may be (all delay Will unto me seeme over long) thou let hir come away, The comfort of my carefull age on whome my life doth stay. And thou my daughter Philomele (it is inough ywis That from hir father set so farre thy sister Progne is) If any sparke of nature doe within thy heart remayne, With all the haaste and speede thou canst returne to me againe. In giving charge he kissed hir: and downe his cheekes did raine The tender teares, and as a pledge of faith he tooke the right Handes of them both, and joyning them did eche to other plight, Desiring them to beare in minde his commendations to His daughter and hir little sonne. And then with much adoe For sobbing, at the last he bad adew as one dismaid. The foremisgiving of his minde did make him sore afraid. As soone as Tereus and the Maide togither were aboord, And that their ship from land with Ores was haled on the foord, The fielde is ours, he cride aloude, I have the thing I sought And up he skipt, so barbrous and so beastly was his thought, That scarce even there he could forbeare his pleasure to have wrought. His eye went never off of hir: as when the scarefull Erne With hooked talants trussing up a Hare among the Ferne, Hath laid hir in his nest, from whence the prisoner can not scape, The ravening fowle with greedie eyes upon his pray doth gape. Now was their journey come to ende: now were they gone aland In Thracia, when that Tereus tooke the Ladie by the hand, And led hir to a pelting graunge that peakishly did stand