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<h2> King Cophetua and the Beggar-Maid </h2>
<p>I read that once in Affrica<br/>
A princely wight did raine,<br/>
Who had to name Cophetua,<br/>
As poets they did faine.<br/>
From natures lawes he did decline,<br/>
For sure he was not of my minde,<br/>
He cared not for women-kind<br/>
But did them all disdaine.<br/>
But marke what hapned on a day;<br/>
As he out of his window lay,<br/>
He saw a beggar all in gray.<br/>
The which did cause his paine.<br/>
<br/>
The blinded boy that shootes so trim<br/>
From heaven downe did hie,<br/>
He drew a dart and shot at him,<br/>
In place where he did lye:<br/>
Which soone did pierse him to the quicke,<br/>
And when he felt the arrow pricke,<br/>
Which in his tender heart did sticke,<br/>
He looketh as he would dye.<br/>
"What sudden chance is this," quoth he,<br/>
"That I to love must subject be,<br/>
Which never thereto would agree,<br/>
But still did it defie?"<br/>
<br/>
Then from the window he did come,<br/>
And laid him on his bed;<br/>
A thousand heapes of care did runne<br/>
Within his troubled head.<br/>
For now he meanes to crave her love,<br/>
And now he seekes which way to proove<br/>
How he his fancie might remoove,<br/>
And not this beggar wed.<br/>
But Cupid had him so in snare,<br/>
That this poor begger must prepare<br/>
A salve to cure him of his care,<br/>
Or els he would be dead.<br/>
<br/>
And as he musing thus did lye,<br/>
He thought for to devise<br/>
How he might have her companye,<br/>
That so did 'maze his eyes.<br/>
"In thee," quoth he, "doth rest my life;<br/>
For surely thou shalt be my wife,<br/>
Or else this hand with bloody knife,<br/>
The Gods shall sure suffice."<br/>
Then from his bed he soon arose,<br/>
And to his pallace gate he goes;<br/>
Full little then this begger knowes<br/>
When she the king espies.<br/>
<br/>
"The gods preserve your majesty,"<br/>
The beggers all gan cry;<br/>
"Vouchsafe to give your charity,<br/>
Our childrens food to buy."<br/>
The king to them his purse did cast,<br/>
And they to part it made great haste;<br/>
This silly woman was the last<br/>
That after them did hye.<br/>
The king he cal'd her back againe,<br/>
And unto her he gave his chaine;<br/>
And said, "With us you shal remaine<br/>
Till such time as we dye.<br/>
<br/>
"For thou," quoth he, "shalt be my wife,<br/>
And honoured for my queene;<br/>
With thee I meane to lead my life,<br/>
As shortly shall be seene:<br/>
Our wedding shall appointed be,<br/>
And every thing in its degree;<br/>
Come on," quoth he, "and follow me,<br/>
Thou shalt go shift thee cleane.<br/>
What is thy name, faire maid?" quoth he.<br/>
"Penelophon, O King," quoth she;<br/>
With that she made a lowe courtsey;<br/>
A trim one as I weene.<br/>
<br/>
Thus hand in hand along they walke<br/>
Unto the king's pallace:<br/>
The king with courteous, comly talke<br/>
This begger doth embrace.<br/>
The begger blusheth scarlet red,<br/>
And straight againe as pale as lead,<br/>
But not a word at all she said,<br/>
She was in such amaze.<br/>
At last she spake with trembling voyce,<br/>
And said, "O King, I doe rejoyce<br/>
That you wil take me for your choyce,<br/>
And my degree so base."<br/>
<br/>
And when the wedding day was come,<br/>
The king commanded strait<br/>
The noblemen, both all and some,<br/>
Upon the queene to wait.<br/>
And she behaved herself that day<br/>
As if she had never walkt the way;<br/>
She had forgot her gowne of gray,<br/>
Which she did weare of late.<br/>
The proverbe old is come to passe,<br/>
The priest, when he begins his masse,<br/>
Forgets that ever clerke he was<br/>
He knowth not his estate.<br/>
<br/>
Here you may read Cophetua,<br/>
Through long time fancie-fed,<br/>
Compelled by the blinded boy<br/>
The begger for to wed:<br/>
He that did lovers lookes disdaine,<br/>
To do the same was glad and faine,<br/>
Or else he would himselfe have slaine,<br/>
In storie, as we read.<br/>
Disdaine no whit, O lady deere,<br/>
But pitty now thy servant heere,<br/>
Least that it hap to thee this yeare,<br/>
As to that king it did.<br/>
<br/>
And thus they led a quiet life<br/>
During their princely raine,<br/>
And in a tombe were buried both,<br/>
As writers sheweth plaine.<br/>
The lords they tooke it grievously,<br/>
The ladies tooke it heavily,<br/>
The commons cryed pitiously,<br/>
Their death to them was paine.<br/>
Their fame did sound so passingly,<br/>
That it did pierce the starry sky,<br/>
And throughout all the world did flye<br/>
To every princes realme.<br/></p>
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