Page:Metamorphoses (Ovid, 1567).djvu/32

 Such time as twilight on the Earth dim darknesse gan to bring. I gave a signe that God was come, and streight the common sort Devoutly prayde, whereat Lycaon first did make a sport And after said: By open proufe, ere long I minde to see, If that this wight a mighty God or mortall creature bee. The truth shall trie it selfe: he ment (the sequele did declare) To steale upon me in the night, and kyll me unbeware. And yet he was not so content: but went and cut the throte, Of one that laye in hostage there, which was an Epyrote: And part of him he did to rost, and part he did to stewe. Which when it came upon the borde, forthwith I overthrew The house with just revenging fire upon the owners hed, Who seeing that, slipt out of doores amazde for feare, and fled Into the wilde and desert woods, where being all alone, As he endevorde (but in vaine) to speake and make his mone, He fell a howling: wherewithall for verie rage and moode He ran me quite out of his wits and waxed furious woode. Still practising his wonted lust of slaughter on the poore And sielie cattle, thirsting still for bloud as heretofore, His garments turnde to shackie haire, his armes to rugged pawes: So is he made a ravening Wolfe: whose shape expressely drawes To that the which he was before: his skinne is horie graye, His looke still grim with glaring eyes, and every kinde of waye His cruell heart in outward shape doth well it selfe bewraye. Thus was one house destroyed quite, but that one house alone Deserveth not to be destroyde: in all the Earth is none, But that such vice doth raigne therein, as that ye would beleve, That all had sworne and solde themselves to mischiefe us to greve. And therefore as they all offende: so am I fully bent, That all forthwith (as they deserve) shall have due punishment. These wordes of Jove some of the Gods did openly approve, And with their sayings more to wrath his angry courage move. And some did give assent by signes. Yet did it grieve them all That such destruction utterly on all mankinde should fall, Demaunding what he purposed with all the Earth to doe, When that he had all mortall men so cleane destroyde, and whoe On holie Altars afterward should offer frankinsence,