Page:Metamorphoses (Ovid, 1567).djvu/77

 Of which Aglauros had the left and Pandrose had the right, And Herse had the middlemost. She that Aglauros hight First markt the comming of the God, and asking him his name Demaunded him for what entent and cause he thither came. Pleiones Nephew, Maias sonne, did make hir aunswere thus: I am my fathers messenger, his pleasure to discusse To mortall folke and hellish fiendes as list him to commaund. My father is the mightie Jove. To that thou doste demaund I will not feyne a false excuse. I aske no more but graunt To keepe thy sisters counsell close, and for to be the Aunt Of such the issue as on hir my chaunce shalbe to get. Thy sister Herse is the cause that hath me hither fet. I pray thee beare thou with my love that is so firmely set. Aglauros cast on Mercurie hir scornfull eyes aside, With which against Minervas will hir secretes late she spide, Demaunding him in recompence a mighty masse of Golde: And would not let him enter in until the same were tolde. The warlike Goddesse cast on hir a sterne and cruell looke, And fetched such a cutting sigh that forcibly it shooke Both brest and brestplate, wherewithall it came unto hir thought How that Aglauros late ago against hir will had wrought In looking on the Lemman childe contrarie to hir othe, The whiche she tooke hir in the chest, for which she waxed wrothe. Againe she saw hir cancred heart maliciously repine Against hir sister and the God. And furthermore in fine How that the golde which Mercurie had given hir for hir meede, Would make hir both in welth and pride all others to exceede. She goes me straight to Envies house, a foule and irksome cave, Replete with blacke and lothly filth and stinking like a grave. It standeth in a hollow dale where neyther light of Sunne Nor blast of any winde or Ayre may for the deepenesse come. A dreyrie sad and dolefull den ay full of slouthfull colde As which ay dimd with smoldring smoke doth never fire beholde, When Pallas, that same manly Maide, approched nere this plot, She staide without, for to the house in enter might she not, And with hir Javelin point did give a push against the doore. The doore flue open by and by and fell me in the floore.