response comes, "Here am I"; to his "Will no man here?" comes the answer "O man hear."
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On finding him asleep, Echo fervently kisses him and steals away, but, sensing her presence, Narcissus hails her, "Thou dost excell, and if a heaven, 'tis clear / That here it is, because thou are not there." Unable at first to answer his queries, she is finally given back her voice and becomes the wooer, offering him a catalogue of promised delights, including this enticement:
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| | Lovely Narcissus, prithee stay with me, If thou do thirst, from every spring shall rise Divinest nectar, and thy food shall be The glorious apples of Hesperides; A nymph shall be thy Hebe; if thou need, Shalt have another for thy Ganymede.
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Narcissus flees nonetheless, stopping only at a goodly springthe very one that served Salmacis and Hemaphroditus. Seeing his reflected beauty, he becomes his "own Idolater," but on recognizing his obsession, he dies, with only a saffron-colored flower to mark the spot.
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With Shirley's poem the epyllion may be said to have run its course. It was a genre consonant with young poets writing in the first flush of literary achievement, but, as we have seen, during the 1590s and early 1600s many of these same writers essayed other varieties of narrative poetry. Their concern with historical matters, engendered by the Mirror for Magistrates and coupled with the stylistic flare of Ovid, produced the unique amalgam we know as Elizabethan.
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| Bullough, Geoffrey. Narrative and Dramatic Sources of Shakespeare . Vol. 1. New York: Columbia University Press, 1966. [Includes the text of Arthur Brooke's Tragical Historie of Romeus and Juliet sources for Shakespeare's Poems .]
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| Bush, Douglas. Mythology and the Renaissance Tradition in English Poetry . Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1932; rev. ed., New York: Norton, 1963.
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| Campbell, Lily Bess, ed. The Mirror for Magistrates . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1938.
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