William Stanley Braithwaite, ed. The Book of Elizabethan Verse. 1907.
Perigot and Willies RoundelayEdmund Spenser (1552?1599)
I
Hey ho, hollidaye!
When holly fathers wont to shrieve,
Now gynneth this roundelay.
Sitting upon a hill so hye,
Hey ho, the high hyll!
The while my flocke did feede thereby,
The while the shepheard selfe did spill:
Hey ho, Bonibell!
Tripping over the dale alone:
She can trippe it very well;
Well decked in a frocke of gray,
Hey ho, gray is greete!
And in a kirtle of greene saye,
The greene is for maydens meete.
Hey ho, chapelet!
Of sweete violets therein was store,
—She sweeter then the violet.
My sheepe did leave theyr wonted foode,
Hey ho, seely sheepe!
And gazd on her, as they were wood,
—Woode as he, that did them keepe.
Hey ho, bonilasse!
She rovde at me with glauncing eye,
As cleare as the christall glasse:
All as the sunnye beame so bright,
Hey ho, the sunne beame!
Glaunceth from Phœbus face forthright,
So love into my hart did streame:
Hey ho, the thonder!
Wherein the lightsome levin shroudes,
So cleaves thy soule asonder:
Or as Dame Cynthias silver raye
Hey ho, the moonelight!
Upon the glyttering wave doth playe:
Such play is a pitteous plight!
Hey ho, the glyder!
Therewith my soule was sharply gryde;
Such woundes soone wexen wider.
Hasting to raunch the arrow out,
Hey ho, Perigot!
I left the head in my hart roote:
It was a desperate shot.
Hey ho, the arrowe!
Ne can I find salve for my sore:
Love is a cureless sorrowe.
And though my bale with death I brought,
Hey ho, heavie cheere!
Yet should thilk lasse not from my thought:
So you may buye gold to deare.
Hey ho, pinching payne!
Or thrive in welth, she shalbe mine.
But if thou can her obteine.
And if for gracelesse griefe I dye,
Hey ho, gracelesse griefe!
Witnesse, shee slewe me with her eye:
Let thy follye be the priefe.
Hey ho, the fayre flocke!
For priefe thereof my death shall weepe,
And mone with many a mocke.
So learnd I love on a hollye eve,—
Hey ho, holidaye!
That ever since my hart did greve:
Now endeth our roundelay.