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XLIX.

Which seeing fayre Belphoebe gan to feare
Least that his wound were inly well not heald,
Or that the wicked steele empoysned were:
Litle shee weend that love he close conceald.
Yet still he wasted, as the snow congeald

When the bright sunne his beams thereon doth beat:
Yet never he his hart to her reveald;

But rather chose to dye for sorow great
Then1 with dishonourable termes her to entreat.

L.

She, gracious Lady, yet no paines did spare
To doe him ease, or doe him remedy:
Many restoratives of vertues rare
And costly cordialles she did apply,
To mitigate his stubborne malady:
But that sweet cordiall, which can restore
A love-sick hart, she did to him envy 2;

To him, and to all th' unworthy world forlore,3
She did envý 2 that soveraine salve in secret store.

LI.

That daintie rose, the daughter of her morne,
More deare then life she tendered, whose flowre
The girlond of her honour did adorne:

Ne suffred she the middayes scorching powre,
Ne the sharp northerne wind thereon to showre;
But lapped up her silken leaves most chayre,1
Whenso the froward skye began to lowre;

1 Then, than.

2 Envy, grudge, deny.

nature or

process.

3 Forlore, forlorn, forsaken.
4 Chayre, chary.

quality, or as completely as if it were done by an artificial

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But, soone as calmed was the christall ayre, She did it fayre dispred and let to florish fayre.

LII.

Eternall God, in his almightie powre,
To make ensample of his heavenly grace,
In paradize whylome 1 did plant this Flowre;
Whence he it fetcht out of her native place,
And did in stocke of earthly flesh enrace,2
That mortall men her glory should admyre.
In gentle Ladies breste and bounteous race
Of woman-kind it fayrest Flowre doth spyre,3
And beareth fruit of honour and all chast desyre.

LIII.

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Fayre ympes of beautie, whose bright shining beames Adorne the world with like to heavenly light,

And to your willes both royalties and reames 5 Subdew, through conquest of your wondrous might; With this fayre Flowre your goodly girlonds dight 6 Of Chastity and Vertue virginall,

That shall embellish more your beautie bright,

And crowne your heades with heavenly coronall, Such as the Angels weare before God's tribunall!

LIV.

To youre faire selves a faire ensample 7 frame
Of this faire Virgin, this Belphœbe fayre;
To whom, in perfect love and spotlesse fame
Of Chastitie, none living may compayre:
Ne poysnous Envy iustly can empayre
The prayse of her fresh-flowring Maydenhead;
Forthy she standeth on the highest stayre

1 Whylome, formerly.
2 Enrace, implant.
3 Spyre, shoot forth.
• Ympes, daughters.

3 Reames, realms.

• Dight, adorn.
7 Ensample, model.
8 Forthy, therefore.

Of th' honorable stage of womanhead,

That Ladies all may follow her ensample dead.

LV.

In so great prayse of stedfast Chastity
Nathlesse she was so courteous and kynde,
Tempred with Grace and goodly Modesty,
That seemed those two vertues strove to fynd
The higher place in her heroick mynd:
So striving each did other more augment,
And both encreast the prayse of womankynde,
And both encreast her beautie excellent:
So all did make in her a perfect complement.1

1 Complement, complete character.

LIV. 9. Her ensample dead.] The example of her dead.

LV. 9. A perfect complement.] The affection of Timias for Belphoebe is supposed to allude to Sir Walter Raleigh's pretended admiration of Queen Elizabeth.

CANTO VI.

The Birth of fayre Belphobe and

Of Amorett is told:

The Gardins of Adonis fraught
With pleasures manifold.

1.

WELL may I weene, faire Ladies, all this while
Ye wonder how this noble Damozell
So great perfections did in her1 compile,2
Sith 3 that in salvage forests she did dwell,
So farre from Court and royall Citadell,
The great schoolmaistresse of all Courtesy:
Seemeth that such wilde woodes should far expell
All civile usage and gentility,

And gentle sprite deforme with rude rusticity.

II.

But to this faire Belphœbe in her Berth
The hevens so favorable were and free,
Looking with myld aspéct upon the earth
In th' horoscope of her nativitee,

That all the gifts of grace and chastitee
On her they poured forth of plenteous horne:
Iove laught on Venus from his soverayne see,*
And Phoebus with faire beames did her adorne,
And all the Graces rockt her cradle being borne.

1 Her, herself.

2 Compile, combine.

3 Sith, since.

See, dwelling.

III.

Her Berth was of the wombe of morning dew,
And her conception of the ioyous prime;
And all her whole creation did her shew
Pure and unspotted from all loathly crime
That is ingenerate in fleshly slime.

So was this Virgin borne, so was she bred;
So was she trayned up from time to time
In all chaste vertue and true bountihed,1
Till to her dew perfection she were ripened.

IV.

Her mother was the faire Chrysogonee,
The daughter of Amphisa, who by race
A Faerie was, yborne of high degree:
She bore Belphœbe; she bore in like cace

Fayre Amoretta in the second place:

These two were twinnes, and twixt them two did share

The heritage of all celestiall grace;

That all the rest it seemd they robbed bare

Of bounty, and of beautie, and all vertues rare.

V.

It were a goodly storie to declare

By what straunge accident faire Chrysogone
Conceiv'd these infants, and how them she bare
In this wilde forrest wandring all alone,
After she had nine moneths fulfild and gone:
For not as other wemens commune brood
They were enwombed in the sacred throne

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1 Bountihed, goodness.

IV. 1. The faire Chrysogonee.] This mythological pedigree is entirely fanciful, and though Belphœbe is Queen Elizabeth, Chrysogonee is not Anne Boleyn.

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