The vvoman in the moone As it was presented before her Highnesse. By Iohn Lyllie maister of Artes.
About this Item
- Title
- The vvoman in the moone As it was presented before her Highnesse. By Iohn Lyllie maister of Artes.
- Author
- Lyly, John, 1554?-1606.
- Publication
- Imprinted at London :: [By G. Simson] for William Iones, and are to be sold at the signe of the Gun, neere Holburne Conduict,
- 1597.
- Rights/Permissions
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To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.
- Link to this Item
-
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A06629.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"The vvoman in the moone As it was presented before her Highnesse. By Iohn Lyllie maister of Artes." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A06629.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 23, 2025.
Pages
Page [unnumbered]
I cannot go no faster, I must rest.
VVe are almost at the the sea side I pray thee ryse.
O I am faynt and weary, let me sleepe.
Pandora if thou loue me let vs goe.
VVhy doest thou waken me ile remember this.
VVhat are you angry with me.
What a suddayne change is here?
Now he sweares by his ten bones, downe I say.
Did I not tell you I should haue Larkes,
Any thing, what you will.
Page [unnumbered]
what then?
But you will loue me vvhen the sun is downe▪
No but I will not.
Did you not promise me.
No I, I saw thee not till now.
Do you see me now.
I and loth thee.
Belike I was a spirit all this vvhile?
A spirit, a spirit, vvhither may I flye.
I see Pandora and Gunophilus.
And I see Stesias welcome Stesias.
Page [unnumbered]
I feare it is too true that he reportes.
Nay stay a while and you shall see her daunce.
Pandora speake, louest thou Gunophilus?
Speake gentle maister and intreat her fayre▪
Pandora, my loue Pandora.
Page [unnumbered]
VVhere be all these.
I haue them in my bower, come follow me?
I was nere in loue with her till now, O absolute Pandora, because folish, for folly is womens perfection. To talke Idely, to loke wildly, to laugh at euery breach and play with a feather, is that would make a Stoyke in loue, yea thou thy selfe.
O Marcifili annum iam audientem Cratippum idque Athaenis. Grauity in a vvoman, is like to a gray beard vpon a breach∣ing boies chinne, vvhich a good Scholemaister would cause to be clipt, and the vvise husband to be avoyded.
Gunophilus, vvhere is thy Mistresse?
A ketching a blew kings fisher.
Tell vs where is she?
A gathering little pibles.
VVhat dost thou mocke vs.
No: but if she were here she vvould make mowes at the proudest of you.
VVhat meanest thou by this.
I meane my mistres is become folish.
A iust reward for one so false as shee.
Such hap betide those that intend vs ill.
Neuer vvere simple shepherdes so abusd.
Page [unnumbered]
And thou this bloody napkin vnto me.
And thou this flattering letter vnto me.
VVhy I brought you the ring thinking you and shee should be maried togeather. And being hurt as she told me. I had thought she had sent for you as a surgeon.
But why broughtest thou me this letter?
The wicked youngling flouteth vs, let him goe.
Page [unnumbered]
The like vow makes Learchus to great Pan.
And Iphicles though soare agaynst his will.
Looke how Pandora raues, now she is starke mad.
May she with rauing dye? do what thou darst.
Come come Pandora sleepe within my armes,
Page [unnumbered]
She is a sleepe, mayster shall I vvake her?
Stesias thou pittiest her that loues thee not
The vvordes we told thee Stesias vvere too true.
VVert thou the messenger vnto them all.
Page [unnumbered]
Ah how my hart swels at these miscreants wordes.
Come let vs leaue him in this pensiue mood.
Fret, Stesias fret, while we daunce on the playne.
Such fortune happen to incredulus swaines.
Sweete is a single life, Stesias farewell.
Stay shepherd, stay.
Hurt not Pandora louely Stesias.
VVhat meanes my loue to looke so pale and wan.
For thee base strumpet am I pale and wanne.
Speake mildly, or Ile make thee crabbed swaine.
Take her agayne, and loue her Stesias.
Not for Vtopia, no, not for the world.
Ah canst thou frowne on her that lookes so sweet▪
Haue I offended thee? Ile make amends.
And what canst thou demaund more at her hand?
To slay her selfe that I may liue alone.
Flint harted shepherd thou deseruest her not.
O Ioue, let this be my punishment, to liue still with Pandora.
Page [unnumbered]
VVith me, and I will leaue the Queene of heauen.
VVith me, and Uenus shall no more be mine.
VVith me, and Ile forget fayre Daphnes loue.
VVith me, and ile turne Cupid out of doores.
with me, and ile forsake Aglauros loue.
Go where thou wilt so I be rid of thee,
Speake my Pandora where wilt thou be?
Page [unnumbered]
I Pandora.
Ile rather dye then beare her company,
Nature will haue it so attend on her.
Ile haue thee be her vassaile, murmur not.
O that they had my roome.
I charge thee follow her, but hurt her not.