Page:Metamorphoses (Ovid, 1567).djvu/38

 Began to warre both soft and smothe: and shortly afterwarde To winne therwith a better shape: and as they did encrease, A mylder nature in them grew, and rudenesse gan to cease. For at the first their shape was such, as in a certaine sort Resembled man, but of the right and perfect shape came short. Even like to Marble ymages new drawne and roughly wrought, Before the Carver by his Arte to purpose hath them brought. Such partes of them where any juice or moysture did abound, Or else were earthie, turned to flesh: and such as were so sound, And harde as would not bow nor bende did turne to bones: againe The part that was a veyne before, doth still his name retaine. Thus by the mightie powre of God ere lenger time was past, The mankinde was restorde by stones, the which a man did cast. And likewise also by the stones the which a woman threw, The womankinde repayred was and made againe of new. Of these are we the crooked ympes, and stonie race in deede, Bewraying by our toyling life, from whence we doe proceede. The lustie earth of owne accorde soone after forth did bring According to their sundrie shapes eche other living thing, As soone as that the moysture once caught heate against the Sunne, And that the fat and slimie mud in moorish groundes begunne To swell through warmth of Phebus beames, and that the fruitfull seede Of things well cherisht in the fat and lively soyle in deede, As in their mothers wombe, began in length of time to grow, To one or other kinde of shape wherein themselves to show. Even so when that seven mouthed Nile the watrie fieldes forsooke, And to his auncient channel eft his bridled streames betooke, So that the Sunne did heate the mud, the which he left behinde, The husbandmen that tilde the ground, among the cloddes did finde Of sundrie creatures sundrie shapes: of which they spied some, Even in the instant of their birth but newly then begonne, And some unperfect, wanting brest or shoulders in such wise, That in one bodie oftentimes appeared to the eyes One halfe thereof alive to be, and all the rest beside Both voyde of life and seemely shape, starke earth to still abide. For when that moysture with the heate is tempred equally, They doe conceyve: and of them twaine engender by and by