Page:Metamorphoses (Ovid, 1567).djvu/22

 Wherein although for pleasant style, I cannot make account, To match myne author, who in that all other dooth surmount: Yit (gentle Reader) doo I trust my travail in this cace May purchace favour in thy sight my dooings to embrace: Considring what a sea of goodes and Jewelles thou shalt fynd, Not more delyghtfull to the eare than frutefull to the mynd. For this doo lerned persons deeme, of Ovids present woorke: That in no one of all his bookes the which he wrate, doo lurke Mo darke and secret misteries, mo counselles wyse and sage, Mo good ensamples, mo reprooves of vyce in youth and age, Mo fyne inventions to delight, mo matters clerkly knit, No, nor more straunge varietie to shew a lerned wit. The high, the lowe: the riche, the poore: the mayster, and the slave: The mayd, the wife: the man, the chyld: the simple and the brave: The yoong, the old: the good, the bad: the warriour strong and stout: The wyse, the foole: the countrie cloyne: the lerned and the lout: And every other living wight shall in this mirrour see His whole estate, thoughtes, woordes and deedes expresly shewd to bee. Whereof if more particular examples thou doo crave, In reading the Epistle through thou shalt thy longing have. Moreover thou mayst fynd herein descriptions of the tymes: With constellacions of the starres and planettes in theyr clymes: The Sites of Countries, Cities, hilles, seas, forestes, playnes and floods: The natures both of fowles, beastes, wormes, herbes, mettals, stones and woods, And finally what ever thing is straunge and delectable, The same conveyed shall you fynd most featly in some fable. And even as in a cheyne eche linke within another wynds, And both with that that went before and that that followes binds: So every tale within this booke dooth seeme to take his ground Of that that was reherst before, and enters in the bound Of that that folowes after it: and every one gives light To other: so that whoo so meenes to understand them ryght, Must have a care as well to know the thing that went before, As that the which he presently desyres to see so sore. Now to th'intent that none have cause heereafter to complaine Of mee as setter out of things that are but light and vaine, If