One such was the epyllion. Invariably erotic in subject matter, it offered a range of possible treatments up to and including satire. But, on occasion, such elasticity of tone could raise questions about the author's intent. In 1598 John Marston's Metamorphosis of Pygmalion's Image seemed sufficiently lewd to some readers that he felt compelled to append verses indicating its satiric purpose. With Chapman the question has remained, Is his epyllion a spiritual epiphany or a sexual debauch? With Marston, Is it titillation, satire, or even parody? This flexibility, in consequence, allowed John Weever in 1600 to turn his epyllion Faunus and Melliflora into an account of the origin of satire. Like Shakespeare with the first heir of his invention, young poets could exploit the rhetorical tricks they had so recently learned at school or the university, and like Shakespeare, their choice of love as subject matter required a treatment that was, as Puttenham had pointed out in his Art of English Poesy , "variable, inconstant, affected, curious, and most witty."
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Salmacis and Hermaphroditus , the most impressive of the several derivatives of Marlowe's epyllion, was published anonymously in 1602. Following its appearance in later collections (1618+), it was attributed to Francis Beaumont, who would have been about eighteen years of age at the time of initial publication. Based like most of the others on "sweet-lipped Ovid," it is the story of the lovely young offspring of Venus and Mercury and the equally lovely nymph Salmacis, who, having attracted the attention of Jove, is promised that she will become a star in exchange for the "amorous pleasures of her bed." Although content to yield, the nymph insists that Jove first get Astraea, the goddess of justice, to guarantee his worda stipulation which elicits the narrator's comment: "Just times decline, and all good days are dead / When heavenly oaths had need be warranted."
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There follows an account of Jove's visit to Astraea's palace, its description clearly modeled on the Elizabethan courtwith its rout of doorkeepers and its aged porter who exacts his own fees. Venus obstructs the agreement by enticing Vulcan to withhold the thunderbolts from the king of the gods should he fulfill his promise to Salmacis. Jove complies, but in order to show his love, he makes Salmacis "twice as beauteous as before."
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"Light-headed" Bacchus is the next to become enamored of Salmacis, and it is only by the intervention of Apollo that her maidenhead is preserved. This calls for an account of the hostility between
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