Page:Metamorphoses (Ovid, 1567).djvu/35

 But at that time a part of Sea, and even a champion fielde Of sodaine waters which the floud by forced rage did yeelde, Where as a hill with forked top the which Parnasus hight, Doth pierce the cloudes and to the starres doth raise his head upright. When at this hill (for yet the Sea had whelmed all beside) Deucalion and his bedfellow, without all other guide, Arrived in a little Barke immediatly they went, And to the Nymphes of Corycus with full devout intent Did honor due, and to the Gods to whome that famous hill Was sacred, and to Themis eke in whose most holie will Consisted then the Oracles. In all the world so rounde A better nor more righteous man could never yet be founde Than was Deucalion, nor againe a woman, mayde nor wife, That feared God so much as shee, nor led so good a life. When Jove behelde how all the worlde stoode lyke a plash of raine, And of so many thousand men and women did remaine But one of eche, howbeit those both just and both devout, He brake the Cloudes, and did commaund that Boreas with his stout And sturdie blasts should chase the floud, that Earth might see the skie And Heaven the Earth: the Seas also began immediatly Their raging furie for to cease. Their ruler laide awaye His dreadfull Mace, and with his wordes their woodnesse did alaye. He called Tryton to him straight, his trumpetter, who stoode In purple robe on shoulder cast, aloft upon the floode, And bade him take his sounding Trumpe and out of hand to blow Retreat, that all the streames might heare, and cease from thence to flow. He tooke his Trumpet in his hand, hys Trumpet was a shell Of some great Whelke or other fishe, in facion like a Bell That gathered narrow to the mouth, and as it did descende Did waxe more wide and writhen still, downe to the nether ende: When that this Trumpe amid the Sea was set to Trytons mouth, He blew so loude that all the streames both East, West, North and South, Might easly heare him blow retreate, and all that heard the sounde Immediatly began to ebbe and draw within their bounde. Then gan the Sea to have a shore, and brookes to finde a banke, And swelling streames of flowing flouds within hir chanels sanke. Then hils did rise above the waves that had them overflow,