Page:Metamorphoses (Ovid, 1567).djvu/78

 There saw she Envie sit within fast gnawing on the flesh Of Snakes and Todes, the filthie foode that keepes hir vices fresh. It lothde hir to beholde the sight. Anon the Elfe arose And left the gnawed Adders flesh, and slouthfully she goes With lumpish laysure like a Snayle, and when she saw the face Of Pallas and hir faire attire adournde with heavenly grace, She gave a sigh, a sorie sigh, from bottome of hir heart. Hir lippes were pale, hir cheekes were wan, and all hir face was swart: Hir bodie leane as any Rake. She looked eke askew. Hir teeth were furde with filth and drosse, hir gums were waryish blew. The working of hir festered gall had made hir stomacke greene. And all bevenimde was hir tongue. No sleepe hir eyes had seene. Continuall Carke and cankred care did keepe hir waking still: Of laughter (save at others harmes) the Helhound can no skill. It is against hir will that men have any good successe, And if they have, she frettes and fumes within hir minde no lesse Than if hir selfe had taken harme. In seeking to annoy And worke distresse to other folke, hir selfe she doth destroy. Thus is she torment to hir selfe. Though Pallas did hir hate, Yet spake she briefly these few wordes to hir without hir gate: Infect thou with thy venim one of Cecrops daughters three, It is Aglauros whome I meane, for so it needes must bee. This said, she pight hir speare in ground, and tooke hir rise thereon. And winding from that wicked wight did take hir flight anon. The Caitife cast hir eye aside, and seeing Pallas gon, Began to mumble with hir selfe the Divels Paternoster, And fretting at hir good successe, began to blow and bluster. She takes a crooked staffe in hand bewreathde with knubbed prickes, And covered with a coly cloude, where ever that she stickes Hir filthie feete, she tramples downe and seares both grasse and corne: That all the fresh and fragrant fieldes seeme utterly forlorne. And with hir staffe she tippeth off the highest poppie heades. Such poyson also every where ungraciously she sheades, That every Cottage where she comes and every Towne and Citie Doe take infection at hir breath. At length (the more is pitie) She found the faire Athenian towne that flowed freshly then In feastfull peace and joyfull welth and learned witts of men.