- The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hesperides & Noble Numbers: Vol. 1 and 2, by
- Robert Herrick
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
- almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
- re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
- with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
- Title: The Hesperides & Noble Numbers: Vol. 1 and 2
- Author: Robert Herrick
- Release Date: August 28, 2007 [EBook #22421]
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HESPERIDES ***
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- ROBERT HERRICK
- THE HESPERIDES & NOBLE
- NUMBERS: EDITED BY
- ALFRED POLLARD
- WITH A PREFACE BY
- A. C. SWINBURNE
- VOL. I.
- _REVISED EDITION_
- [Illustration]
- LONDON: NEW YORK:
- LAWRENCE & BULLEN, LTD., CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS,
- 16 HENRIETTA STREET, W.C. 153-157 FIFTH AVENUE
- 1898. 1898.
- Transcriber's Note:
- Original spelling and punctuation has been retained.
- ^ indicates 'superscript' within the text.
- Obvious typesetting errors have been corrected without note, however
- additional corrections have been recorded in the Transcriber's
- Endnotes at the end each volume.
- EDITOR'S NOTE.
- In this edition of Herrick quotation is for the first time facilitated
- by the poems being numbered according to their order in the original
- edition. This numbering has rendered it possible to print those
- Epigrams, which successive editors have joined in deploring, in a
- detachable Appendix, their place in the original being indicated by the
- numeration. It remains to be added that the footnotes in this edition
- are intended to explain, as unobtrusively as possible, difficulties of
- phrase or allusion which might conceivably hinder the understanding of
- Herrick's meaning. In the longer Notes at the end of each volume earlier
- versions of some important poems are printed from manuscripts at the
- British Museum, and an endeavour has been made to extend the list of
- Herrick's debts to classical sources, and to identify some of his
- friends who have hitherto escaped research. An editor is always apt to
- mention his predecessors rather for blame than praise, and I therefore
- take this opportunity of acknowledging my general indebtedness to the
- pioneer work of Mr. Hazlitt and Dr. Grosart, upon whose foundations all
- editors of Herrick must necessarily build.
- ALFRED W. POLLARD.
- PREFACE.
- It is singular that the first great age of English lyric poetry should
- have been also the one great age of English dramatic poetry: but it is
- hardly less singular that the lyric school should have advanced as
- steadily as the dramatic school declined from the promise of its dawn.
- Born with Marlowe, it rose at once with Shakespeare to heights
- inaccessible before and since and for ever, to sink through bright
- gradations of glorious decline to its final and beautiful sunset in
- Shirley: but the lyrical record that begins with the author of "Euphues"
- and "Endymion" grows fuller if not brighter through a whole chain of
- constellations till it culminates in the crowning star of Herrick.
- Shakespeare's last song, the exquisite and magnificent overture to "The
- Two Noble Kinsmen," is hardly so limpid in its flow, so liquid in its
- melody, as the two great songs in "Valentinian": but Herrick, our last
- poet of that incomparable age or generation, has matched them again and
- again. As a creative and inventive singer, he surpasses all his rivals
- in quantity of good work; in quality of spontaneous instinct and
- melodious inspiration he reminds us, by frequent and flawless evidence,
- who above all others must beyond all doubt have been his first master
- and his first model in lyric poetry--the author of "The Passionate
- Shepherd to his Love".
- The last of his line, he is and will probably be always the first in
- rank and station of English song-writers. We have only to remember how
- rare it is to find a perfect song, good to read and good to sing,
- combining the merits of Coleridge and Shelley with the capabilities of
- Tommy Moore and Haynes Bayly, to appreciate the unique and
- unapproachable excellence of Herrick. The lyrist who wished to be a
- butterfly, the lyrist who fled or flew to a lone vale at the hour
- (whatever hour it may be) "when stars are weeping," have left behind
- them such stuff as may be sung, but certainly cannot be read and endured
- by any one with an ear for verse. The author of the Ode on France and
- the author of the Ode to the West Wind have left us hardly more than a
- song a-piece which has been found fit for setting to music: and, lovely
- as they are, the fame of their authors does not mainly depend on the
- song of Glycine or the song of which Leigh Hunt so justly and so
- critically said that Beaumont and Fletcher never wrote anything of the
- kind more lovely. Herrick, of course, lives simply by virtue of his
- songs; his more ambitious or pretentious lyrics are merely magnified and
- prolonged and elaborated songs. Elegy or litany, epicede or
- epithalamium, his work is always a song-writer's; nothing more, but
- nothing less, than the work of the greatest song-writer--as surely as
- Shakespeare is the greatest dramatist--ever born of English race. The
- apparent or external variety of his versification is, I should suppose,
- incomparable; but by some happy tact or instinct he was too naturally
- unambitious to attempt, like Jonson, a flight in the wake of Pindar. He
- knew what he could not do: a rare and invaluable gift. Born a blackbird
- or a thrush, he did not take himself (or try) to be a nightingale.
- It has often been objected that he did mistake himself for a sacred
- poet: and it cannot be denied that his sacred verse at its worst is as
- offensive as his secular verse at its worst; nor can it be denied that
- no severer sentence of condemnation can be passed upon any poet's work.
- But neither Herbert nor Crashaw could have bettered such a divinely
- beautiful triplet as this:--
- "We see Him come, and know Him ours,
- Who with His sunshine and His showers
- Turns all the patient ground to flowers".
- That is worthy of Miss Rossetti herself: and praise of such work can go
- no higher.
- But even such exquisite touches or tones of colour may be too often
- repeated in fainter shades or more glaring notes of assiduous and facile
- reiteration. The sturdy student who tackles his Herrick as a schoolboy
- is expected to tackle his Horace, in a spirit of pertinacious and stolid
- straightforwardness, will probably find himself before long so nauseated
- by the incessant inhalation of spices and flowers, condiments and
- kisses, that if a musk-rat had run over the page it could hardly be less
- endurable to the physical than it is to the spiritual stomach. The
- fantastic and the brutal blemishes which deform and deface the
- loveliness of his incomparable genius are hardly so damaging to his fame
- as his general monotony of matter and of manner. It was doubtless in
- order to relieve this saccharine and "mellisonant" monotony that he
- thought fit to intersperse these interminable droppings of natural or
- artificial perfume with others of the rankest and most intolerable
- odour: but a diet of alternate sweetmeats and emetics is for the average
- of eaters and drinkers no less unpalatable than unwholesome. It is
- useless and thankless to enlarge on such faults or such defects, as it
- would be useless and senseless to ignore. But how to enlarge, to
- expatiate, to insist on the charm of Herrick at his best--a charm so
- incomparable and so inimitable that even English poetry can boast of
- nothing quite like it or worthy to be named after it--the most
- appreciative reader will be the slowest to affirm or imagine that he can
- conjecture. This, however, he will hardly fail to remark: that Herrick,
- like most if not all other lyric poets, is not best known by his best
- work. If we may judge by frequency of quotation or of reference, the
- ballad of the ride from Ghent to Aix is a far more popular, more
- generally admired and accredited specimen of Mr. Browning's work than
- "The Last Ride Together"--and "The Lost Leader" than "The Lost
- Mistress". Yet the superiority of the less-popular poem is in either
- case beyond all question or comparison: in depth and in glow of spirit
- and of harmony, in truth and charm of thought and word, undeniable and
- indescribable. No two men of genius were ever more unlike than the
- authors of "Paracelsus" and "Hesperides": and yet it is as true of
- Herrick as of Browning that his best is not always his best-known work.
- Everyone knows the song, "Gather ye rosebuds while ye may"; few, I
- fear, by comparison, know the yet sweeter and better song, "Ye have been
- fresh and green". The general monotony of style and motive which
- fatigues and irritates his too-persevering reader is here and there
- relieved by a change of key which anticipates the note of a later and
- very different lyric school. The brilliant simplicity and pointed grace
- of the three stanzas to Œnone ("What conscience, say, is it in thee")
- recall the lyrists of the Restoration in their cleanlier and happier
- mood. And in the very fine epigram headed by the words "Devotion makes
- the Deity" he has expressed for once a really high and deep thought in
- words of really noble and severe propriety. His "Mad Maid's Song,"
- again, can only be compared with Blake's; which has more of passionate
- imagination, if less of pathetic sincerity.
- A. C. SWINBURNE.
- LIFE OF HERRICK.
- Of the lives of many poets we know too much; of some few too little.
- Lovers of Herrick are almost ideally fortunate. Just such a bare outline
- of his life has come down to us as is sufficient to explain the
- allusions in his poems, and, on the other hand, there is no temptation
- to substitute chatter about his relations with Julia and Dianeme for
- enjoyment of his delightful verse. The recital of the bare outline need
- detain us but a few minutes: only the least imaginative of readers will
- have any difficulty in filling it in from the poems themselves.
- From early in the fourteenth century onwards we hear of the family of
- Eyrick or Herrick at Stretton, in Leicestershire. At the beginning of
- the sixteenth century we find a branch of it settled in Leicester
- itself, where John Eyrick, the poet's grandfather, was admitted a
- freeman in 1535, and afterwards acted as Mayor. This John's second son,
- Nicholas, migrated to London, became a goldsmith in Wood Street,
- Cheapside, and, according to a licence issued by the Bishop of London,
- December 8, 1582, married Julian, daughter of William Stone, sister of
- Anne, wife of Sir Stephen Soame, Lord Mayor of London in 1598. The
- marriage was not unfruitful. A William[A] Herrick was baptized at St.
- Vedast's, Foster Lane, November 24, 1585; Martha, January 22, 1586;
- Mercy, December 22, 1586; Thomas, May 7, 1588; Nicholas, April 22, 1589;
- Anne, July 26, 1590; and Robert himself, August 24, 1591.
- [A] A second William is said to have been born, posthumously, in "Harry
- Campion's house at Hampton," in 1593.
- Fifteen months after the poet's birth, on November 7, 1592, Nicholas
- Herrick made his will, estimating his property as worth £3000, and
- devising it, as to one-third to his wife, and as to the other two-thirds
- to his children in equal shares. In the will he described himself as "of
- perfect memorye in sowle, but sicke in bodye". Two days after its
- execution he was buried, having died, not from disease, but from a fall
- from an upper window. His death had so much the appearance of
- self-destruction that £220 had to be paid to the High Almoner, Dr.
- Fletcher, Bishop of Bristol, in satisfaction of his official claim to
- the goods and chattels of suicides. Herrick's biographers have not
- failed to vituperate the Bishop for his avarice, but dues allowed by law
- are hardly to be abandoned because a baby of fifteen months is destined
- to become a brilliant poet, and no other exceptional circumstances are
- alleged. The estate of Nicholas Herrick could the better afford the fine
- inasmuch as it realized £2000 more than was expected.
- By the will Robert and William Herrick were appointed "overseers," or
- trustees for the children. The former was the poet's godfather, and in
- his will of 1617 left him £5. To William Herrick, then recently knighted
- for his services as goldsmith, jeweller, and moneylender to James I.,
- the young Robert was apprenticed for ten years, September 25, 1607. An
- allusion to "beloved Westminster," in his _Tears to Thamesis_, has been
- taken to refer to Westminster school, and alleged as proof that he was
- educated there. Dr. Grosart even presses the mention of Richmond,
- Kingston, and Hampton Court to support a conjecture that Herrick may
- have travelled up and down to school from Hampton. If so, one wonders
- what his headmaster had to say to the "soft-smooth virgins, for our
- chaste disport" by whom he was accompanied. But the references in the
- poem are surely to his courtier-life in London, and after his father's
- death the apprenticeship to his uncle in 1607 is the first fact in his
- life of which we can be sure.
- In 1607, Herrick was fifteen, and, even if we conjecture that he may
- have been allowed to remain at school some little time after his
- apprenticeship nominally began, he must have served his uncle for five
- or six years. Sir William had himself been bound apprentice in a similar
- way to the poet's father, and we have no evidence that he exacted any
- premium. At any rate, when in 1614, his nephew, then of age, desired to
- leave the business and go to Cambridge, the ten years' apprenticeship
- did not stand in his way, and he entered as a Fellow Commoner at St.
- John's. His uncle plainly still managed his affairs, for an amusing
- series of fourteen letters has been preserved at Beaumanor, until lately
- the seat of Sir William's descendants, in which the poet asks sometimes
- for payment of a quarterly stipend of £10, sometimes for a formal loan,
- sometimes for the help of his avuncular Mæcenas. It seems a fair
- inference from this variety of requests that, since Herrick's share of
- his father's property could hardly have yielded a yearly income of £40,
- he was allowed to draw on his capital for this sum, but that his uncle
- and Lady Herrick occasionally made him small presents, which may account
- for his tone of dependence.
- The quarterly stipend was paid through various booksellers, but
- irregularly, so that the poor poet was frequently reduced to great
- straits, though £40 a-year (£200 of our money) was no bad allowance.
- After two years he migrated from St. John's to Trinity Hall, to study
- law and curtail his expenses. He took his Bachelor's degree from there
- in January, 1617, and his Master's in 1620. The fourteen letters show
- that he had prepared himself for University life by cultivating a very
- florid prose style which frequently runs into decasyllabics, perhaps a
- result of a study of the dramatists. Sir William Herrick is sometimes
- addressed in them as his most "careful" uncle, but at the time of his
- migration the poet speaks of his "ebbing estate," and as late as 1629 he
- was still £10 16s. 9d. in debt to the College Steward. We can thus
- hardly imagine that he was possessed of any considerable private income
- when he returned to London, to live practically on his wits, and a study
- of his poems suggests that, the influence of the careful uncle removed,
- whatever capital he possessed was soon likely to vanish.[B] His verses
- to the Earl of Pembroke, to Endymion Porter and to others, show that he
- was glad of "pay" as well as "praise," but the system of patronage
- brought no discredit with it, and though the absence of any poetical
- mention of his uncle suggests that the rich goldsmith was not
- well-pleased with his nephew, with the rest of his well-to-do relations
- Herrick seems to have remained on excellent terms.
- [B] Yet in his _Farewell to Poetry_ he distinctly says:--
- "I've more to bear my charge than way to go";
- the line, however, is a translation from his favourite Seneca, Ep. 77.
- Besides patrons, such as Pembroke, Westmoreland, Newark, Buckingham,
- Herrick had less distinguished friends at Court, Edward Norgate, Jack
- Crofts and others. He composed the words for two New Year anthems which
- were set to music by Henry Lawes, and he was probably personally known
- both to the King and Queen. Outside the Court he reckoned himself one of
- Ben Jonson's disciples, "Sons of Ben" as they were called, had friends
- at the Inns of Court, knew the organist of Westminster Abbey and his
- pretty daughters, and had every temptation to live an amusing and
- expensive life. His poems were handed about in manuscript after the
- fashion of the time, and wherever music and poetry were loved he was
- sure to be a welcome guest.
- Mr. Hazlitt's conjecture that Herrick at this time may have held some
- small post in the Chapel at Whitehall is not unreasonable, but at what
- date he took Holy Orders is not known. In 1627 he obtained the post of
- chaplain to the unlucky expedition to the Isle of Rhé, and two years
- later (September 30, 1629) he was presented by the King to the Vicarage
- of Dean Prior, in Devonshire, which the promotion of its previous
- incumbent, Dr. Potter, to the Bishopric of Carlisle, had left in the
- royal gift. The annual value of the living was only £50 (£250 present
- value), no great prize, but the poem entitled _Mr. Robert Hericke: his
- farwell unto Poetrie_ (not printed in _Hesperides_, but extant in more
- than one manuscript version) shows that the poet was not unaware of the
- responsibilities of his profession. "But unto me," he says to his Muse:
- "But unto me be only hoarse, since now
- (Heaven and my soul bear record of my vow)
- I my desires screw from thee and direct
- Them and my thoughts to that sublime respect
- And conscience unto priesthood. 'Tis not need
- (The scarecrow unto mankind) that doth breed
- Wiser conclusions in me, since I know
- I've more to bear my charge than way to go;
- Or had I not, I'd stop the spreading itch
- Of craving more: so in conceit be rich;
- But 'tis the God of nature who intends
- And shapes my function for more glorious ends."
- Perhaps it was at this time too that Herrick wrote his _Farewell to
- Sack_, and although he returned both to sack and to poetry we should be
- wrong in imagining him as a "blind mouth," using his office merely as a
- means of gain. He celebrated the births of Charles II and his brother in
- verse, perhaps with an eye to future royal favours, but no more than
- Chaucer's good parson does he seem to have "run to London unto Seynte
- Poules" in search of the seventeenth century equivalent for a chauntry,
- and many of his poems show him living the life of a contented country
- clergyman, sharing the contents of bin and cruse with his poor
- parishioners, and jotting down sermon-notes in verse.
- The great majority of Herrick's poems cannot be dated, and it is idle to
- enquire which were written before his ordination and which afterwards.
- His conception of religion was medieval in its sensuousness, and he
- probably repeated the stages of sin, repentance and renewed assurance
- with some facility. He lived with an old servant, Prudence Baldwin, the
- "Prew" of many of his poems; kept a spaniel named Tracy, and, so says
- tradition, a tame pig. When his parishioners annoyed him he seems to
- have comforted himself with epigrams on them; when they slumbered during
- one of his sermons the manuscript was suddenly hurled at them with a
- curse for their inattention.
- In the same year that Herrick was appointed to his country vicarage his
- mother died while living with her daughter, Mercy, the poet's dearest
- sister (see 818), then for some time married to John Wingfield of
- Brantham in Suffolk (see 590), by whom she had three sons and a
- daughter, also called Mercy. His eldest brother, Thomas, had been placed
- with a Mr. Massam, a merchant, but as early as 1610 had retired to live
- a country life in Leicestershire (see 106). He appears to have married a
- wife named Elizabeth, whose loss Herrick laments (see 72). Nicholas, the
- next brother was more adventurous. He had become a merchant trading to
- the Levant, and in this capacity had visited the Holy Land (see 1100).
- To his wife Susanna, daughter of William Salter, Herrick addresses two
- poems (522 and 977). There were three sons and four daughters in this
- family, and Herrick wrote a poem to one of the daughters, Bridget (562),
- and an elegy on another, Elizabeth (376). When Mrs. Herrick died the
- bulk of her property was left to the Wingfields, but William Herrick
- received a legacy of £100, with ten pounds apiece to his two children,
- and a ring of twenty shillings to his wife. Nicholas and Robert were
- only left twenty-shilling rings, and the administration of the will was
- entrusted to William Herrick and the Wingfields. The will may have been
- the result of a family arrangement, and we have no reason to believe
- that the unequal division gave rise to any ill-feeling. Herrick's
- address to "his dying brother, Master William Herrick" (186), shows
- abundant affection, and there is every reason to believe that it was
- addressed to the William who administered to Mrs. Herrick's will.
- While little nephews and nieces were springing up around him, Herrick
- remained unmarried, and frequently congratulates himself on his freedom
- from the yoke matrimonial. He imagined how he would bid farewell to his
- wife, if he had one (465), and wrote magnificent epithalamia for his
- friends, but lived and died a bachelor. When first civil troubles and
- then civil war cast a shadow over the land, it is not very easy to say
- how he viewed the contending parties. He was devoted to Charles and
- Henrietta Maria and the young Prince of Wales, and rejoiced at every
- Royalist success. Many also of his poems breathe the spirit of
- unquestioning loyalty, but in others he is less certain of kingly
- wisdom. Something, however, must be allowed for his evident habit of
- versifying any phrase or epigram which impressed him, and not all his
- poems need be regarded as expressions of his personal opinions. But with
- whatever doubts his loyalty was qualified, it was sufficiently obvious
- to procure his ejection from his living in 1648; and, making the best of
- his loss, he bade farewell to Dean Prior, shook the dust of "loathed
- Devonshire" off his feet, and returned gaily to London, where he appears
- to have discarded his clerical habit and to have been made abundantly
- welcome by his friends.
- Free from the cares of his incumbency, and free also from the restraints
- it imposed, Herrick's thoughts turned to the publication of his poems.
- As we have said, in his old Court-days these had found some circulation
- in manuscript, and in 1635 one of his fairy poems was printed, probably
- without his leave (see Appendix). In 1639 his poem (575) _The Apparition
- of his Mistress calling him to Elysium_ was licensed at Stationers' Hall
- under the title of _His Mistress' Shade_, and it was included the next
- year in an edition of Shakespeare's Poems (see Notes). On April 29,
- 1640, "The severall poems written by Master Robert Herrick," were
- entered as to be published by Andrew Crook, but no trace of such a
- volume has been discovered, and it was only in 1648 that _Hesperides_ at
- length appeared. Two years later upwards of eighty of the poems in it
- were printed in the 1650 edition of _Witt's Recreations_, but a small
- number of these show considerable variations from the _Hesperides_
- versions, and it is probable that they were printed from the poet's
- manuscript. Compilers of other miscellanies and song books laid Herrick
- under contribution, but, with the one exception of his contribution to
- the _Lacrymæ Musarum_ in 1649, no fresh production of his pen has been
- preserved, and we know nothing further of his life save that he returned
- to Dean Prior after the Restoration (August 24, 1662), and that
- according to the parish register "Robert Herrick, Vicker, was buried
- y^e 15th day October, 1674."
- ALFRED W. POLLARD
- NOTE TO SECOND EDITION.
- In this edition some trifling errors, which had crept into the text and
- the numeration of the poems, have been corrected, and many fresh
- illustrations of Herrick's reading added in the notes, which have
- elsewhere been slightly compressed to make room for them. Almost all of
- the new notes have been supplied from the manuscript collections of a
- veteran student of Herrick who placed himself in correspondence with me
- after the publication of my first edition. To my great regret I am not
- allowed to make my acknowledgments to him by name.
- A. W. P.
- HESPERIDES:
- OR,
- THE WORKS
- BOTH
- HUMANE & DIVINE
- OF
- ROBERT HERRICK _Esq._
- OVID.
- _Effugient avidos Carmina nostra Rogos._
- _LONDON._
- Printed for _John Williams_, and _Francis Eglesfield_,
- and are to be sold by _Tho: Hunt_, Book-seller
- in _Exon._ 1648.
- TO THE
- MOST ILLUSTRIOUS AND MOST HOPEFUL
- PRINCE.
- CHARLES,
- PRINCE OF WALES.
- Well may my book come forth like public day
- When such a light as you are leads the way,
- Who are my work's creator, and alone
- The flame of it, and the expansion.
- And look how all those heavenly lamps acquire
- Light from the sun, that inexhausted fire,
- So all my morn and evening stars from you
- Have their existence, and their influence too.
- Full is my book of glories; but all these
- By you become immortal substances.
- HESPERIDES.
- 1. THE ARGUMENT OF HIS BOOK.
- I sing of brooks, of blossoms, birds and bowers,
- Of April, May, of June and July-flowers;
- I sing of May-poles, hock-carts, wassails, wakes,
- Of bridegrooms, brides and of their bridal cakes;
- I write of youth, of love, and have access
- By these to sing of cleanly wantonness;
- I sing of dews, of rains, and piece by piece
- Of balm, of oil, of spice and ambergris;
- I sing of times trans-shifting, and I write
- How roses first came red and lilies white;
- I write of groves, of twilights, and I sing
- The Court of Mab, and of the Fairy King;
- I write of hell; I sing (and ever shall)
- Of heaven, and hope to have it after all.
- _Hock-cart_, the last cart from the harvest-field.
- _Wakes_, village festivals, properly on the dedication-day of a church.
- _Ambergris_, 'grey amber,' much used in perfumery.
- 2. TO HIS MUSE.
- Whither, mad maiden, wilt thou roam?
- Far safer 'twere to stay at home,
- Where thou mayst sit and piping please
- The poor and private cottages,
- Since cotes and hamlets best agree
- With this thy meaner minstrelsy.
- There with the reed thou mayst express
- The shepherd's fleecy happiness,
- And with thy eclogues intermix
- Some smooth and harmless bucolics.
- There on a hillock thou mayst sing
- Unto a handsome shepherdling,
- Or to a girl, that keeps the neat,
- With breath more sweet than violet.
- There, there, perhaps, such lines as these
- May take the simple villages;
- But for the court, the country wit
- Is despicable unto it.
- Stay, then, at home, and do not go
- Or fly abroad to seek for woe.
- Contempts in courts and cities dwell,
- No critic haunts the poor man's cell,
- Where thou mayst hear thine own lines read
- By no one tongue there censured.
- That man's unwise will search for ill,
- And may prevent it, sitting still.
- 3. TO HIS BOOK.
- While thou didst keep thy candour undefil'd,
- Dearly I lov'd thee as my first-born child,
- But when I saw thee wantonly to roam
- From house to house, and never stay at home,
- I brake my bonds of love, and bade thee go,
- Regardless whether well thou sped'st or no.
- On with thy fortunes then, whate'er they be:
- If good, I'll smile; if bad, I'll sigh for thee.
- 4. ANOTHER.
- To read my book the virgin shy
- May blush while Brutus standeth by,
- But when he's gone, read through what's writ,
- And never stain a cheek for it.
- _Brutus_, see Martial, xi. 16, quoted in Note at the end of the volume.
- 7. TO HIS BOOK.
- Come thou not near those men who are like bread
- O'er-leaven'd, or like cheese o'er-renneted.
- 8. WHEN HE WOULD HAVE HIS VERSES READ.
- In sober mornings, do not thou rehearse
- The holy incantation of a verse;
- But when that men have both well drunk and fed,
- Let my enchantments then be sung or read.
- When laurel spirts i'th' fire, and when the hearth
- Smiles to itself, and gilds the roof with mirth;
- When up the thyrse[C] is rais'd, and when the sound
- Of sacred orgies[D] flies, a round, a round.
- When the rose reigns, and locks with ointments shine,
- Let rigid Cato read these lines of mine.
- _Round_, a rustic dance.
- _Cato_, see Martial, x. 17, quoted in Note.
- [C] "A javelin twined with ivy" (Note in the original edition).
- [D] "Songs to Bacchus" (Note in the original edition.)
- 9. UPON JULIA'S RECOVERY.
- Droop, droop no more, or hang the head,
- Ye roses almost withered;
- Now strength and newer purple get,
- Each here declining violet.
- O primroses! let this day be
- A resurrection unto ye;
- And to all flowers ally'd in blood,
- Or sworn to that sweet sisterhood:
- For health on Julia's cheek hath shed
- Claret and cream commingled;
- And those her lips do now appear
- As beams of coral, but more clear.
- _Beams_, perhaps here = branches: but cp. 440.
- 10. TO SILVIA TO WED.
- Let us, though late, at last, my Silvia, wed,
- And loving lie in one devoted bed.
- Thy watch may stand, my minutes fly post-haste;
- No sound calls back the year that once is past.
- Then, sweetest Silvia, let's no longer stay;
- _True love, we know, precipitates delay._
- Away with doubts, all scruples hence remove;
- _No man at one time can be wise and love._
- 11. THE PARLIAMENT OF ROSES TO JULIA.
- I dreamt the roses one time went
- To meet and sit in parliament;
- The place for these, and for the rest
- Of flowers, was thy spotless breast,
- Over the which a state was drawn
- Of tiffanie or cobweb lawn.
- Then in that parly all those powers
- Voted the rose the queen of flowers;
- But so as that herself should be
- The maid of honour unto thee.
- _State_, a canopy.
- _Tiffanie_, gauze.
- _Parly_, a parliament.
- 12. NO BASHFULNESS IN BEGGING.
- To get thine ends, lay bashfulness aside;
- _Who fears to ask doth teach to be deny'd._
- 13. THE FROZEN HEART.
- I freeze, I freeze, and nothing dwells
- In me but snow and icicles.
- For pity's sake, give your advice,
- To melt this snow and thaw this ice.
- I'll drink down flames; but if so be
- Nothing but love can supple me,
- I'll rather keep this frost and snow
- Than to be thaw'd or heated so.
- 14. TO PERILLA.
- Ah, my Perilla! dost thou grieve to see
- Me, day by day, to steal away from thee?
- Age calls me hence, and my grey hairs bid come,
- And haste away to mine eternal home;
- 'Twill not be long, Perilla, after this,
- That I must give thee the supremest kiss.
- Dead when I am, first cast in salt, and bring
- Part of the cream from that religious spring;
- With which, Perilla, wash my hands and feet;
- That done, then wind me in that very sheet
- Which wrapt thy smooth limbs when thou didst implore
- The gods' protection but the night before.
- Follow me weeping to my turf, and there
- Let fall a primrose, and with it a tear:
- Then, lastly, let some weekly-strewings be
- Devoted to the memory of me:
- Then shall my ghost not walk about, but keep
- Still in the cool and silent shades of sleep.
- _Weekly strewings_, _i.e._, of flowers on his grave.
- _First cast in salt_, cp. 769.
- 15. A SONG TO THE MASKERS.
- Come down and dance ye in the toil
- Of pleasures to a heat;
- But if to moisture, let the oil
- Of roses be your sweat.
- Not only to yourselves assume
- These sweets, but let them fly
- From this to that, and so perfume
- E'en all the standers by;
- As goddess Isis, when she went
- Or glided through the street,
- Made all that touched her, with her scent,
- And whom she touched, turn sweet.
- 16. TO PERENNA.
- When I thy parts run o'er, I can't espy
- In any one the least indecency;
- But every line and limb diffused thence
- A fair and unfamiliar excellence:
- So that the more I look the more I prove
- There's still more cause why I the more should love.
- _Indecency_, uncomeliness.
- 17. TREASON.
- The seeds of treason choke up as they spring:
- _He acts the crime that gives it cherishing_.
- 18. TWO THINGS ODIOUS.
- Two of a thousand things are disallow'd:
- A lying rich man, and a poor man proud.
- 19. TO HIS MISTRESSES.
- Help me! help me! now I call
- To my pretty witchcrafts all;
- Old I am, and cannot do
- That I was accustomed to.
- Bring your magics, spells, and charms,
- To enflesh my thighs and arms.
- Is there no way to beget
- In my limbs their former heat?
- Æson had, as poets feign,
- Baths that made him young again:
- Find that medicine, if you can,
- For your dry decrepit man
- Who would fain his strength renew,
- Were it but to pleasure you.
- _Æson_, rejuvenated by Medea; see Ovid, Met. vii.
- 20. THE WOUNDED HEART.
- Come bring your sampler, and with art
- Draw in't a wounded heart
- And dropping here and there:
- Not that I think that any dart
- Can make yours bleed a tear,
- Or pierce it anywhere;
- Yet do it to this end: that I
- May by
- This secret see,
- Though you can make
- That heart to bleed, yours ne'er will ache
- For me.
- 21. NO LOATHSOMENESS IN LOVE.
- What I fancy I approve,
- _No dislike there is in love_.
- Be my mistress short or tall,
- And distorted therewithal:
- Be she likewise one of those
- That an acre hath of nose:
- Be her forehead and her eyes
- Full of incongruities:
- Be her cheeks so shallow too
- As to show her tongue wag through;
- Be her lips ill hung or set,
- And her grinders black as jet:
- Has she thin hair, hath she none,
- She's to me a paragon.
- 22. TO ANTHEA.
- If, dear Anthea, my hard fate it be
- To live some few sad hours after thee,
- Thy sacred corse with odours I will burn,
- And with my laurel crown thy golden urn.
- Then holding up there such religious things
- As were, time past, thy holy filletings,
- Near to thy reverend pitcher I will fall
- Down dead for grief, and end my woes withal:
- So three in one small plat of ground shall lie--
- Anthea, Herrick, and his poetry.
- 23. THE WEEPING CHERRY.
- I saw a cherry weep, and why?
- Why wept it? but for shame
- Because my Julia's lip was by,
- And did out-red the same.
- But, pretty fondling, let not fall
- A tear at all for that:
- Which rubies, corals, scarlets, all
- For tincture wonder at.
- 24. SOFT MUSIC.
- The mellow touch of music most doth wound
- The soul when it doth rather sigh than sound.
- 25. THE DIFFERENCE BETWIXT KINGS AND SUBJECTS.
- 'Twixt kings and subjects there's this mighty odds:
- Subjects are taught by men; kings by the gods.
- 26. HIS ANSWER TO A QUESTION.
- Some would know
- Why I so
- Long still do tarry,
- And ask why
- Here that I
- Live and not marry.
- Thus I those
- Do oppose:
- What man would be here
- Slave to thrall,
- If at all
- He could live free here?
- 27. UPON JULIA'S FALL.
- Julia was careless, and withal
- She rather took than got a fall,
- The wanton ambler chanc'd to see
- Part of her legs' sincerity:
- And ravish'd thus, it came to pass,
- The nag (like to the prophet's ass)
- Began to speak, and would have been
- A-telling what rare sights he'd seen:
- And had told all; but did refrain
- Because his tongue was tied again.
- 28. EXPENSES EXHAUST.
- Live with a thrifty, not a needy fate;
- _Small shots paid often waste a vast estate_.
- _Shots_, debts.
- 29. LOVE, WHAT IT IS.
- Love is a circle that doth restless move
- In the same sweet eternity of love.
- 30. PRESENCE AND ABSENCE.
- When what is lov'd is present, love doth spring;
- But being absent, love lies languishing.
- 31. NO SPOUSE BUT A SISTER.
- A bachelor I will
- Live as I have liv'd still,
- And never take a wife
- To crucify my life;
- But this I'll tell ye too,
- What now I mean to do:
- A sister (in the stead
- Of wife) about I'll lead;
- Which I will keep embrac'd,
- And kiss, but yet be chaste.
- 32. THE POMANDER BRACELET.
- To me my Julia lately sent
- A bracelet richly redolent:
- The beads I kissed, but most lov'd her
- That did perfume the pomander.
- _Pomander_, a ball of scent.
- 33. THE SHOE-TYING.
- Anthea bade me tie her shoe;
- I did; and kissed the instep too:
- And would have kissed unto her knee,
- Had not her blush rebuked me.
- 34. THE CARCANET.
- Instead of orient pearls of jet
- I sent my love a carcanet;
- About her spotless neck she knit
- The lace, to honour me or it:
- Then think how rapt was I to see
- My jet t'enthral such ivory.
- _Carcanet_, necklace.
- _Lace_, any kind of girdle; used here for the necklace.
- 35. HIS SAILING FROM JULIA.
- When that day comes, whose evening says I'm gone
- Unto that watery desolation,
- Devoutly to thy closet-gods then pray
- That my wing'd ship may meet no remora.
- Those deities which circum-walk the seas,
- And look upon our dreadful passages,
- Will from all dangers re-deliver me
- For one drink-offering poured out by thee.
- Mercy and truth live with thee! and forbear
- (In my short absence) to unsluice a tear;
- But yet for love's sake let thy lips do this,
- Give my dead picture one engendering kiss:
- Work that to life, and let me ever dwell
- In thy remembrance, Julia. So farewell.
- _Closet-gods_, the Roman Lares.
- _Remora_, the sea Lamprey or suckstone, believed to check the course of
- ships by clinging to their keels.
- 36. HOW THE WALL-FLOWER CAME FIRST, AND WHY SO CALLED.
- Why this flower is now call'd so,
- List, sweet maids, and you shall know.
- Understand, this firstling was
- Once a brisk and bonnie lass,
- Kept as close as Danaë was:
- Who a sprightly springall lov'd,
- And to have it fully prov'd,
- Up she got upon a wall,
- Tempting down to slide withal:
- But the silken twist untied,
- So she fell, and, bruis'd, she died.
- Love, in pity of the deed,
- And her loving-luckless speed,
- Turn'd her to this plant we call
- Now _the flower of the wall_.
- _Tempting_, trying.
- 37. WHY FLOWERS CHANGE COLOUR.
- These fresh beauties (we can prove)
- Once were virgins sick of love.
- Turn'd to flowers,--still in some
- Colours go and colours come.
- 38. TO HIS MISTRESS OBJECTING TO HIM NEITHER TOYING OR TALKING.
- You say I love not, 'cause I do not play
- Still with your curls, and kiss the time away.
- You blame me too, because I can't devise
- Some sport to please those babies in your eyes:
- By love's religion, I must here confess it,
- The most I love when I the least express it.
- _Small griefs find tongues_: full casks are ever found
- To give (if any, yet) but little sound.
- _Deep waters noiseless are_; and this we know,
- _That chiding streams betray small depth below_.
- So, when love speechless is, she doth express
- A depth in love and that depth bottomless.
- Now, since my love is tongueless, know me such
- Who speak but little 'cause I love so much.
- _Babies in your eyes_, see Note.
- 39. UPON THE LOSS OF HIS MISTRESSES.
- I have lost, and lately, these
- Many dainty mistresses:
- Stately Julia, prime of all:
- Sappho next, a principal:
- Smooth Anthea for a skin
- White, and heaven-like crystalline:
- Sweet Electra, and the choice
- Myrrha for the lute and voice:
- Next Corinna, for her wit,
- And the graceful use of it:
- With Perilla: all are gone;
- Only Herrick's left alone
- For to number sorrow by
- Their departures hence, and die.
- 40. THE DREAM.
- Methought last night Love in an anger came
- And brought a rod, so whipt me with the same;
- Myrtle the twigs were, merely to imply
- Love strikes, but 'tis with gentle cruelty.
- Patient I was: Love pitiful grew then
- And strok'd the stripes, and I was whole again.
- Thus, like a bee, Love gentle still doth bring
- Honey to salve where he before did sting.
- 42. TO LOVE.
- I'm free from thee; and thou no more shalt hear
- My puling pipe to beat against thine ear.
- Farewell my shackles, though of pearl they be;
- Such precious thraldom ne'er shall fetter me.
- He loves his bonds who, when the first are broke,
- Submits his neck unto a second yoke.
- 43. ON HIMSELF.
- Young I was, but now am old,
- But I am not yet grown cold;
- I can play, and I can twine
- 'Bout a virgin like a vine:
- In her lap too I can lie
- Melting, and in fancy die;
- And return to life if she
- Claps my cheek, or kisseth me:
- Thus, and thus it now appears
- That our love outlasts our years.
- 44. LOVE'S PLAY AT PUSH-PIN.
- Love and myself, believe me, on a day
- At childish push-pin, for our sport, did play;
- I put, he pushed, and, heedless of my skin,
- Love pricked my finger with a golden pin;
- Since which it festers so that I can prove
- 'Twas but a trick to poison me with love:
- Little the wound was, greater was the smart,
- The finger bled, but burnt was all my heart.
- _Push-pin_, a game in which pins are pushed with an endeavor to cross
- them.
- 45. THE ROSARY.
- One ask'd me where the roses grew:
- I bade him not go seek,
- But forthwith bade my Julia show
- A bud in either cheek.
- 46. UPON CUPID.
- Old wives have often told how they
- Saw Cupid bitten by a flea;
- And thereupon, in tears half drown'd,
- He cried aloud: Help, help the wound!
- He wept, he sobb'd, he call'd to some
- To bring him lint and balsamum,
- To make a tent, and put it in
- Where the stiletto pierced the skin;
- Which, being done, the fretful pain
- Assuaged, and he was well again.
- _Tent_, a roll of lint for probing wounds.
- 47. THE PARCÆ; OR, THREE DAINTY DESTINIES: THE ARMILLET.
- Three lovely sisters working were,
- As they were closely set,
- Of soft and dainty maidenhair
- A curious armillet.
- I, smiling, asked them what they did,
- Fair Destinies all three,
- Who told me they had drawn a thread
- Of life, and 'twas for me.
- They show'd me then how fine 'twas spun,
- And I reply'd thereto,--
- "I care not now how soon 'tis done,
- Or cut, if cut by you".
- 48. SORROWS SUCCEED.
- When one is past, another care we have:
- _Thus woe succeeds a woe, as wave a wave_.
- 49. CHERRY-PIT.
- Julia and I did lately sit
- Playing for sport at cherry-pit:
- She threw; I cast; and, having thrown,
- I got the pit, and she the stone.
- _Cherry-pit_, a game in which cherry-stones were pitched into a small
- hole.
- 50. TO ROBIN REDBREAST.
- Laid out for dead, let thy last kindness be
- With leaves and moss-work for to cover me:
- And while the wood-nymphs my cold corpse inter,
- Sing thou my dirge, sweet-warbling chorister!
- For epitaph, in foliage, next write this:
- _Here, here the tomb of Robin Herrick is_.
- 51. DISCONTENTS IN DEVON.
- More discontents I never had
- Since I was born than here,
- Where I have been, and still am sad,
- In this dull Devonshire;
- Yet, justly too, I must confess
- I ne'er invented such
- Ennobled numbers for the press,
- Than where I loathed so much.
- 52. TO HIS PATERNAL COUNTRY.
- O earth! earth! earth! hear thou my voice, and be
- Loving and gentle for to cover me:
- Banish'd from thee I live, ne'er to return,
- Unless thou giv'st my small remains an urn.
- 53. CHERRY-RIPE.
- Cherry-ripe, ripe, ripe, I cry,
- Full and fair ones; come and buy.
- If so be you ask me where
- They do grow, I answer: There,
- Where my Julia's lips do smile;
- There's the land, or cherry-isle,
- Whose plantations fully show
- All the year where cherries grow.
- 54. TO HIS MISTRESSES.
- Put on your silks, and piece by piece
- Give them the scent of ambergris;
- And for your breaths, too, let them smell
- Ambrosia-like, or nectarel;
- While other gums their sweets perspire,
- By your own jewels set on fire.
- 55. TO ANTHEA.
- Now is the time, when all the lights wax dim;
- And thou, Anthea, must withdraw from him
- Who was thy servant. Dearest, bury me
- Under that Holy-oak or Gospel-tree,
- Where, though thou see'st not, thou may'st think upon
- Me, when thou yearly go'st procession;
- Or, for mine honour, lay me in that tomb
- In which thy sacred relics shall have room.
- For my embalming, sweetest, there will be
- No spices wanting when I'm laid by thee.
- _Holy oak_, the oak under which the minister read the Gospel in the
- procession round the parish bounds in Rogation week.
- 56. THE VISION TO ELECTRA.
- I dreamed we both were in a bed
- Of roses, almost smothered:
- The warmth and sweetness had me there
- Made lovingly familiar,
- But that I heard thy sweet breath say,
- Faults done by night will blush by day.
- I kissed thee, panting, and, I call
- Night to the record! that was all.
- But, ah! if empty dreams so please,
- Love give me more such nights as these.
- 57. DREAMS.
- Here we are all by day; by night we're hurl'd
- By dreams, each one into a sev'ral world.
- 58. AMBITION.
- In man ambition is the common'st thing;
- Each one by nature loves to be a king.
- 59. HIS REQUEST TO JULIA.
- Julia, if I chance to die
- Ere I print my poetry,
- I most humbly thee desire
- To commit it to the fire:
- Better 'twere my book were dead
- Than to live not perfected.
- 60. MONEY GETS THE MASTERY.
- Fight thou with shafts of silver and o'ercome,
- When no force else can get the masterdom.
- 61. THE SCARE-FIRE.
- Water, water I desire,
- Here's a house of flesh on fire;
- Ope the fountains and the springs,
- And come all to bucketings:
- What ye cannot quench pull down;
- Spoil a house to save a town:
- Better 'tis that one should fall,
- Than by one to hazard all.
- _Scare-fire_, fire-alarm.
- 62. UPON SILVIA, A MISTRESS.
- When some shall say, Fair once my Silvia was,
- Thou wilt complain, False now's thy looking-glass,
- Which renders that quite tarnished which was green,
- And priceless now what peerless once had been.
- Upon thy form more wrinkles yet will fall,
- And, coming down, shall make no noise at all.
- _Priceless_, valueless.
- 63. CHEERFULNESS IN CHARITY; OR, THE SWEET SACRIFICE.
- 'Tis not a thousand bullocks' thighs
- Can please those heav'nly deities,
- If the vower don't express
- In his offering cheerfulness.
- 65. SWEETNESS IN SACRIFICE.
- 'Tis not greatness they require
- To be offer'd up by fire;
- But 'tis sweetness that doth please
- Those _Eternal Essences_.
- 66. STEAM IN SACRIFICE.
- If meat the gods give, I the steam
- High-towering will devote to them,
- Whose easy natures like it well,
- If we the roast have, they the smell.
- 67. UPON JULIA'S VOICE.
- So smooth, so sweet, so silv'ry is thy voice,
- As, could they hear, the damn'd would make no noise,
- But listen to thee, walking in thy chamber,
- Melting melodious words to lutes of amber.
- _Amber_, used here merely for any rich material: cp. "Treading on amber
- with their silver feet".
- 68. AGAIN.
- When I thy singing next shall hear,
- I'll wish I might turn all to ear
- To drink in notes and numbers such
- As blessed souls can't hear too much;
- Then melted down, there let me lie
- Entranc'd and lost confusedly,
- And, by thy music stricken mute,
- Die and be turn'd into a lute.
- 69. ALL THINGS DECAY AND DIE.
- _All things decay with time_: the forest sees
- The growth and downfall of her aged trees;
- That timber tall, which threescore lusters stood
- The proud dictator of the state-like wood,--
- I mean (the sovereign of all plants) the oak--
- Droops, dies, and falls without the cleaver's stroke.
- _Lusters_, the Roman reckoning of five years.
- 70. THE SUCCESSION OF THE FOUR SWEET MONTHS.
- First, April, she with mellow showers
- Opens the way for early flowers;
- Then after her comes smiling May,
- In a more rich and sweet array;
- Next enters June, and brings us more
- Gems than those two that went before:
- Then (lastly) July comes, and she
- More wealth brings in than all those three.
- 71. NO SHIPWRECK OF VIRTUE. TO A FRIEND.
- Thou sail'st with others in this Argus here;
- Nor wreck or bulging thou hast cause to fear;
- But trust to this, my noble passenger;
- Who swims with virtue, he shall still be sure
- (Ulysses-like) all tempests to endure,
- And 'midst a thousand gulfs to be secure.
- _Bulging_, leaking.
- 72. UPON HIS SISTER-IN-LAW, MISTRESS ELIZABETH HERRICK.
- First, for effusions due unto the dead,
- My solemn vows have here accomplished:
- Next, how I love thee, that my grief must tell,
- Wherein thou liv'st for ever. Dear, farewell.
- _Effusions_, drink-offerings.
- 73. OF LOVE. A SONNET.
- How love came in I do not know,
- Whether by the eye, or ear, or no;
- Or whether with the soul it came
- (At first) infused with the same;
- Whether in part 'tis here or there,
- Or, like the soul, whole everywhere,
- This troubles me: but I as well
- As any other this can tell:
- That when from hence she does depart
- The outlet then is from the heart.
- 74. TO ANTHEA.
- Ah, my Anthea! Must my heart still break?
- (_Love makes me write, what shame forbids to speak_.)
- Give me a kiss, and to that kiss a score;
- Then to that twenty add a hundred more:
- A thousand to that hundred: so kiss on,
- To make that thousand up a million.
- Treble that million, and when that is done
- Let's kiss afresh, as when we first begun.
- But yet, though love likes well such scenes as these,
- There is an act that will more fully please:
- Kissing and glancing, soothing, all make way
- But to the acting of this private play:
- Name it I would; but, being blushing red,
- The rest I'll speak when we meet both in bed.
- 75. THE ROCK OF RUBIES, AND THE QUARRY OF PEARLS.
- Some ask'd me where the rubies grew,
- And nothing I did say:
- But with my finger pointed to
- The lips of Julia.
- Some ask'd how pearls did grow, and where;
- Then spoke I to my girl,
- To part her lips, and show'd them there
- The quarrelets of Pearl.
- _Quarrelets_, little squares.
- 76. CONFORMITY.
- Conformity was ever known
- A foe to dissolution:
- Nor can we that a ruin call,
- Whose crack gives crushing unto all.
- 77. TO THE KING, UPON HIS COMING WITH HIS ARMY INTO THE WEST.
- Welcome, most welcome to our vows and us,
- Most great and universal genius!
- The drooping West, which hitherto has stood
- As one in long-lamented widowhood,
- Looks like a bride now, or a bed of flowers
- Newly refresh'd both by the sun and showers.
- War, which before was horrid, now appears
- Lovely in you, brave prince of cavaliers!
- A deal of courage in each bosom springs
- By your access, O you the best of kings!
- Ride on with all white omens; so that where
- Your standard's up, we fix a conquest there.
- 78. UPON ROSES.
- Under a lawn, than skies more clear,
- Some ruffled roses nestling were:
- And, snugging there, they seem'd to lie
- As in a flowery nunnery:
- They blush'd, and look'd more fresh than flowers
- Quicken'd of late by pearly showers,
- And all because they were possess'd
- But of the heat of Julia's breast:
- Which, as a warm and moisten'd spring,
- Gave them their ever-flourishing.
- 79. TO THE KING AND QUEEN UPON THEIR UNHAPPY DISTANCES.
- Woe, woe to them, who, by a ball of strife,
- Do, and have parted here a man and wife:
- CHARLES the best husband, while MARIA strives
- To be, and is, the very best of wives,
- Like streams, you are divorc'd; but 'twill come when
- These eyes of mine shall see you mix again.
- Thus speaks the oak here; C. and M. shall meet,
- Treading on amber, with their silver-feet,
- Nor will't be long ere this accomplish'd be:
- The words found true, C. M., remember me.
- _Oak_, the prophetic tree.
- 80. DANGERS WAIT ON KINGS.
- As oft as night is banish'd by the morn,
- So oft we'll think we see a king new born.
- 81. THE CHEAT OF CUPID; OR, THE UNGENTLE GUEST.
- One silent night of late,
- When every creature rested,
- Came one unto my gate
- And, knocking, me molested.
- Who's that, said I, beats there,
- And troubles thus the sleepy?
- Cast off, said he, all fear,
- And let not locks thus keep ye.
- For I a boy am, who
- By moonless nights have swerved;
- And all with show'rs wet through,
- And e'en with cold half starved.
- I pitiful arose,
- And soon a taper lighted;
- And did myself disclose
- Unto the lad benighted.
- I saw he had a bow
- And wings, too, which did shiver;
- And, looking down below,
- I spied he had a quiver.
- I to my chimney's shine
- Brought him, as Love professes,
- And chafed his hands with mine,
- And dried his drooping tresses.
- But when he felt him warm'd:
- Let's try this bow of ours,
- And string, if they be harm'd,
- Said he, with these late showers.
- Forthwith his bow he bent,
- And wedded string and arrow,
- And struck me, that it went
- Quite through my heart and marrow.
- Then, laughing loud, he flew
- Away, and thus said, flying:
- Adieu, mine host, adieu,
- I'll leave thy heart a-dying.
- 82. TO THE REVEREND SHADE OF HIS RELIGIOUS FATHER.
- That for seven lusters I did never come
- To do the rites to thy religious tomb;
- That neither hair was cut, or true tears shed
- By me, o'er thee, as justments to the dead,
- Forgive, forgive me; since I did not know
- Whether thy bones had here their rest or no,
- But now 'tis known, behold! behold, I bring
- Unto thy ghost th' effused offering:
- And look what smallage, night-shade, cypress, yew,
- Unto the shades have been, or now are due,
- Here I devote; and something more than so;
- I come to pay a debt of birth I owe.
- Thou gav'st me life, but mortal; for that one
- Favour I'll make full satisfaction;
- For my life mortal rise from out thy hearse.
- And take a life immortal from my verse.
- _Seven lusters_, five and thirty years.
- _Hair was cut_, according to the Greek custom.
- _Justments_, dues.
- _Smallage_, water parsley.
- 83. DELIGHT IN DISORDER.
- A sweet disorder in the dress
- Kindles in clothes a wantonness:
- A lawn about the shoulders thrown
- Into a fine distraction:
- An erring lace which here and there
- Enthralls the crimson stomacher:
- A cuff neglectful, and thereby
- Ribbons to flow confusedly:
- A winning wave, deserving note,
- In the tempestuous petticoat:
- A careless shoe-string, in whose tie
- I see a wild civility:
- Do more bewitch me than when art
- Is too precise in every part.
- 84. TO HIS MUSE.
- Were I to give thee baptism, I would choose
- To christen thee, the bride, the bashful Muse,
- Or Muse of roses: since that name does fit
- Best with those virgin-verses thou hast writ:
- Which are so clean, so chaste, as none may fear
- Cato the censor, should he scan each here.
- 85. UPON LOVE.
- Love scorch'd my finger, but did spare
- The burning of my heart;
- To signify in love my share
- Should be a little part.
- Little I love; but if that he
- Would but that heat recall;
- That joint to ashes burnt should be,[E]
- Ere I would love at all.
- [E] Orig. ed., _should be burnt_.
- 86. TO DEAN BOURN, A RUDE RIVER IN DEVON, BY WHICH SOMETIMES HE LIVED.
- Dean Bourn, farewell; I never look to see
- Dean, or thy watery[F] incivility.
- Thy rocky bottom, that doth tear thy streams
- And makes them frantic even to all extremes,
- To my content I never should behold,
- Were thy streams silver, or thy rocks all gold.
- Rocky thou art, and rocky we discover
- Thy men, and rocky are thy ways all over.
- O men, O manners, now and ever known
- To be a rocky generation!
- A people currish, churlish as the seas,
- And rude almost as rudest savages,
- With whom I did, and may re-sojourn when
- Rocks turn to rivers, rivers turn to men.
- [F] Orig. ed., _warty_.
- 87. KISSING USURY.
- Bianca, let
- Me pay the debt
- I owe thee for a kiss
- Thou lend'st to me,
- And I to thee
- Will render ten for this.
- If thou wilt say
- Ten will not pay
- For that so rich a one;
- I'll clear the sum,
- If it will come
- Unto a million.
- By this, I guess,
- Of happiness
- Who has a little measure,
- He must of right
- To th' utmost mite
- Make payment for his pleasure.
- 88. TO JULIA.
- How rich and pleasing thou, my Julia, art
- In each thy dainty and peculiar part!
- First, for thy queenship, on thy head is set
- Of flowers a sweet commingled coronet:
- About thy neck a carcanet is bound,
- Made of the ruby, pearl and diamond:
- A golden ring that shines upon thy thumb:
- About thy wrist, the rich dardanium.[G]
- Between thy breasts (than down of swans more white)
- There plays the sapphire with the chrysolite.
- No part besides must of thyself be known,
- But by the topaz, opal, chalcedon.
- _Carcanet_, necklace.
- [G] _Dardanium_, a bracelet, from Dardanus so called. (Note in the
- original edition.)
- 89. TO LAURELS.
- A funeral stone
- Or verse I covet none,
- But only crave
- Of you that I may have
- A sacred laurel springing from my grave:
- Which being seen,
- Blest with perpetual green,
- May grow to be
- Not so much call'd a tree
- As the eternal monument of me.
- 90. HIS CAVALIER.
- Give me that man that dares bestride
- The active sea-horse, and with pride
- Through that huge field of waters ride.
- Who with his looks, too, can appease
- The ruffling winds and raging seas,
- In midst of all their outrages.
- This, this a virtuous man can do,
- Sail against rocks, and split them too;
- Ay, and a world of pikes pass through.
- 91. ZEAL REQUIRED IN LOVE.
- I'll do my best to win whene'er I woo:
- _That man loves not who is not zealous too_.
- 92. THE BAG OF THE BEE.
- About the sweet bag of a bee
- Two cupids fell at odds,
- And whose the pretty prize should be
- They vow'd to ask the gods.
- Which Venus hearing, thither came,
- And for their boldness stripp'd them,
- And, taking thence from each his flame,
- With rods of myrtle whipp'd them.
- Which done, to still their wanton cries,
- When quiet grown she'd seen them,
- She kiss'd, and wip'd their dove-like eyes,
- And gave the bag between them.
- 93. LOVE KILLED BY LACK.
- Let me be warm, let me be fully fed,
- _Luxurious love by wealth is nourished_.
- Let me be lean, and cold, and once grown poor,
- I shall dislike what once I lov'd before.
- 94. TO HIS MISTRESS.
- Choose me your valentine,
- Next let us marry--
- Love to the death will pine
- If we long tarry.
- Promise, and keep your vows,
- Or vow ye never--
- Love's doctrine disallows
- Troth-breakers ever.
- You have broke promise twice,
- Dear, to undo me,
- If you prove faithless thrice
- None then will woo ye.
- 95. TO THE GENEROUS READER.
- See and not see, and if thou chance t'espy
- Some aberrations in my poetry,
- Wink at small faults; the greater, ne'ertheless,
- Hide, and with them their father's nakedness.
- Let's do our best, our watch and ward to keep;
- Homer himself, in a long work, may sleep.
- 96. TO CRITICS.
- I'll write, because I'll give
- You critics means to live;
- For should I not supply
- The cause, th' effect would die.
- 97. DUTY TO TYRANTS.
- Good princes must be pray'd for; for the bad
- They must be borne with, and in rev'rence had.
- Do they first pill thee, next pluck off thy skin?
- _Good children kiss the rods that punish sin_.
- Touch not the tyrant; let the gods alone
- To strike him dead that but usurps a throne.
- _Pill_, plunder.
- 98. BEING ONCE BLIND, HIS REQUEST TO BIANCA.
- When age or chance has made me blind,
- So that the path I cannot find,
- And when my falls and stumblings are
- More than the stones i' th' street by far,
- Go thou afore, and I shall well
- Follow thy perfumes by the smell;
- Or be my guide, and I shall be
- Led by some light that flows from thee.
- Thus held or led by thee, I shall
- In ways confus'd nor slip or fall.
- 100. NO WANT WHERE THERE'S LITTLE.
- To bread and water none is poor;
- And having these, what need of more?
- Though much from out the cess be spent,
- _Nature with little is content_.
- _Cess_, the parish assessment for church purposes.
- 101. BARLEY-BREAK; OR, LAST IN HELL.
- We two are last in hell; what may we fear
- To be tormented or kept pris'ners here?
- Alas! if kissing be of plagues the worst,
- We'll wish in hell we had been last and first.
- _Barley-break_, a country game resembling prisoners' base. See Note.
- _Hell_, the "middle den," the occupants of which had to catch the other
- players.
- 102. THE DEFINITION OF BEAUTY.
- Beauty no other thing is than a beam
- Flashed out between the middle and extreme.
- 103. TO DIANEME.
- Dear, though to part it be a hell,
- Yet, Dianeme, now farewell:
- Thy frown last night did bid me go,
- But whither only grief does know.
- I do beseech thee ere we part,
- If merciful as fair thou art,
- Or else desir'st that maids should tell
- Thy pity by love's chronicle,
- O Dianeme, rather kill
- Me, than to make me languish still!
- 'Tis cruelty in thee to th' height
- Thus, thus to wound, not kill outright;
- Yet there's a way found, if you please,
- By sudden death to give me ease;
- And thus devis'd, do thou but this--
- Bequeath to me one parting kiss,
- So sup'rabundant joy shall be
- The executioner of me.
- 104. TO ANTHEA LYING IN BED.
- So looks Anthea, when in bed she lies
- O'ercome or half betray'd by tiffanies,
- Like to a twilight, or that simpering dawn
- That roses show when misted o'er with lawn.
- Twilight is yet, till that her lawns give way;
- Which done, that dawn turns then to perfect day.
- _Tiffanies_, gauzes.
- _Lawn_, fine linen.
- 105. TO ELECTRA.
- More white than whitest lilies far,
- Or snow, or whitest swans you are:
- More white than are the whitest creams,
- Or moonlight tinselling the streams:
- More white than pearls, or Juno's thigh,
- Or Pelops' arm of ivory.
- True, I confess, such whites as these
- May me delight, not fully please;
- Till like Ixion's cloud you be
- White, warm, and soft to lie with me.
- _Pelops' arm_, which Jove gave him to replace the one eaten by Ceres at
- the feast of Tantalus.
- _Ixion's cloud_, to which Jove, for his deception, gave the form of Juno.
- 106. A COUNTRY-LIFE: TO HIS BROTHER, MR. THO. HERRICK.
- Thrice, and above, bless'd, my soul's half, art thou
- In thy both last and better vow:
- Could'st leave the city, for exchange, to see
- The country's sweet simplicity:
- And it to know and practise, with intent
- To grow the sooner innocent
- By studying to know virtue, and to aim
- More at her nature than her name.
- The last is but the least; the first doth tell
- Ways less to live than to live well:
- And both are known to thee, who now can'st live
- Led by thy conscience; to give
- Justice to soon-pleased nature; and to show
- Wisdom and she together go
- And keep one centre: this with that conspires
- To teach man to confine desires
- And know that riches have their proper stint
- In the contented mind, not mint:
- And can'st instruct that those who have the itch
- Of craving more are never rich.
- These things thou know'st to th' height, and dost prevent
- That plague; because thou art content
- With that heav'n gave thee with a wary hand,
- More blessed in thy brass than land,
- To keep cheap nature even and upright;
- To cool, not cocker appetite.
- Thus thou canst tersely live to satisfy
- The belly chiefly, not the eye;
- Keeping the barking stomach wisely quiet,
- Less with a neat than needful diet.
- But that which most makes sweet thy country life
- Is the fruition of a wife:
- Whom, stars consenting with thy fate, thou hast
- Got not so beautiful as chaste:
- By whose warm side thou dost securely sleep,
- While love the sentinel doth keep,
- With those deeds done by day, which ne'er affright
- Thy silken slumbers in the night.
- Nor has the darkness power to usher in
- Fear to those sheets that know no sin;
- But still thy wife, by chaste intentions led,
- Gives thee each night a maidenhead.
- The damask'd meadows and the pebbly streams
- Sweeten and make soft your dreams:
- The purling springs, groves, birds, and well-weav'd bowers,
- With fields enamelled with flowers,
- Present their shapes; while fantasy discloses
- Millions of lilies mix'd with roses.
- Then dream ye hear the lamb by many a bleat
- Woo'd to come suck the milky teat:
- While Faunus in the vision comes to keep
- From rav'ning wolves the fleecy sheep.
- With thousand such enchanting dreams, that meet
- To make sleep not so sound as sweet:
- Nor can these figures so thy rest endear
- As not to rise when Chanticlere
- Warns the last watch; but with the dawn dost rise
- To work, but first to sacrifice;
- Making thy peace with heav'n, for some late fault,
- With holy-meal and spirting-salt.
- Which done, thy painful thumb this sentence tells us,
- _Jove for our labour all things sells us_.
- Nor are thy daily and devout affairs
- Attended with those desp'rate cares
- Th' industrious merchant has; who, for to find
- Gold, runneth to the Western Inde,
- And back again, tortured with fears, doth fly,
- Untaught to suffer poverty.
- But thou at home, bless'd with securest ease,
- Sitt'st, and believ'st that there be seas
- And watery dangers; while thy whiter hap
- But sees these things within thy map.
- And viewing them with a more safe survey
- Mak'st easy fear unto thee say,--
- _"A heart thrice wall'd with oak and brass that man
- Had, first durst plough the ocean"_.
- But thou at home, without or tide or gale,
- Can'st in thy map securely sail:
- Seeing those painted countries, and so guess
- By those fine shades their substances:
- And, from thy compass taking small advice,
- Buy'st travel at the lowest price.
- Nor are thine ears so deaf but thou canst hear,
- Far more with wonder than with fear,
- Fame tell of states, of countries, courts, and kings,
- And believe there be such things:
- When of these truths thy happier knowledge lies
- More in thine ears than in thine eyes.
- And when thou hear'st by that too true report
- Vice rules the most or all at court,
- Thy pious wishes are, though thou not there,
- Virtue had, and mov'd her sphere.
- But thou liv'st fearless; and thy face ne'er shows
- Fortune when she comes or goes,
- But with thy equal thoughts prepared dost stand,
- To take her by the either hand;
- Nor car'st which comes the first, the foul or fair:
- _A wise man ev'ry way lies square_,
- And, like a surly oak with storms perplex'd,
- Grows still the stronger, strongly vex'd.
- Be so, bold spirit; stand centre-like, unmov'd;
- And be not only thought, but prov'd
- To be what I report thee; and inure
- Thyself, if want comes to endure:
- And so thou dost, for thy desires are
- Confin'd to live with private lar:
- Not curious whether appetite be fed
- Or with the first or second bread,
- Who keep'st no proud mouth for delicious cates:
- Hunger makes coarse meats delicates.
- Canst, and unurg'd, forsake that larded fare,
- Which art, not nature, makes so rare,
- To taste boil'd nettles, colworts, beets, and eat
- These and sour herbs as dainty meat,
- While soft opinion makes thy Genius say,
- _Content makes all ambrosia_.
- Nor is it that thou keep'st this stricter size
- So much for want as exercise:
- To numb the sense of dearth, which should sin haste it,
- Thou might'st but only see't, not taste it.
- Yet can thy humble roof maintain a choir
- Of singing crickets by the fire:
- And the brisk mouse may feast herself with crumbs
- Till that the green-eyed kitling comes,
- Then to her cabin blest she can escape
- The sudden danger of a rape:
- And thus thy little well-kept stock doth prove
- _Wealth cannot make a life, but love_.
- Nor art thou so close-handed but canst spend,
- Counsel concurring with the end,
- As well as spare, still conning o'er this theme,
- To shun the first and last extreme.
- Ordaining that thy small stock find no breach,
- Or to exceed thy tether's reach:
- But to live round, and close, and wisely true
- To thine own self, and known to few.
- Thus let thy rural sanctuary be
- Elysium to thy wife and thee;
- There to disport yourselves with golden measure:
- _For seldom use commends the pleasure_.
- Live, and live blest, thrice happy pair; let breath,
- But lost to one, be the other's death.
- And as there is one love, one faith, one troth,
- Be so one death, one grave to both.
- Till when, in such assurance live ye may,
- Nor fear or wish your dying day.
- _Brass_, money.
- _Cocker_, pamper.
- _Neat_, dainty.
- _Spirting-salt_, the "saliente mica" of Horace, See Note.
- _Lar_, the "closet-gods," or gods of the house.
- _Colworts_, cabbages.
- _Size_ or _assize_, a fixed allowance of food, a ration.
- 107. DIVINATION BY A DAFFODIL.
- When a daffodil I see,
- Hanging down his head towards me,
- Guess I may what I must be:
- First, I shall decline my head;
- Secondly, I shall be dead;
- Lastly, safely buried.
- 108. TO THE PAINTER, TO DRAW HIM A PICTURE.
- Come, skilful Lupo, now, and take
- Thy bice, thy umber, pink, and lake;
- And let it be thy pencil's strife,
- To paint a Bridgeman to the life:
- Draw him as like too, as you can,
- An old, poor, lying, flattering man:
- His cheeks bepimpled, red and blue;
- His nose and lips of mulberry hue.
- Then, for an easy fancy, place
- A burling iron for his face:
- Next, make his cheeks with breath to swell,
- And for to speak, if possible:
- But do not so, for fear lest he
- Should by his breathing, poison thee.
- _Bice_, properly a brown grey, but by transference from "blue bice" and
- "green bice," used for blue and green.
- _Burling iron_, pincers for extracting knots.
- 111. A LYRIC TO MIRTH.
- While the milder fates consent,
- Let's enjoy our merriment:
- Drink, and dance, and pipe, and play;
- Kiss our dollies night and day:
- Crowned with clusters of the vine,
- Let us sit, and quaff our wine.
- Call on Bacchus, chant his praise;
- Shake the thyrse, and bite the bays:
- Rouse Anacreon from the dead,
- And return him drunk to bed:
- Sing o'er Horace, for ere long
- Death will come and mar the song:
- Then shall Wilson and Gotiere
- Never sing or play more here.
- _Wilson_, Dr. John Wilson, the singer and composer, one of the king's
- musicians (1594-1673).
- _Gotiere_, Jacques Gaultier, a French lutist at the court of Charles I.
- 112. TO THE EARL OF WESTMORELAND.
- When my date's done, and my grey age must die,
- Nurse up, great lord, this my posterity:
- Weak though it be, long may it grow and stand,
- Shored up by you, brave Earl of Westmoreland.
- 113. AGAINST LOVE.
- Whene'er my heart love's warmth but entertains,
- Oh frost! oh snow! oh hail! forbid the banes.
- One drop now deads a spark, but if the same
- Once gets a force, floods cannot quench the flame.
- Rather than love, let me be ever lost,
- Or let me 'gender with eternal frost.
- 114. UPON JULIA'S RIBAND.
- As shows the air when with a rainbow grac'd,
- So smiles that riband 'bout my Julia's waist:
- Or like--nay 'tis that zonulet of love,
- Wherein all pleasures of the world are wove.
- 115. THE FROZEN ZONE; OR, JULIA DISDAINFUL.
- Whither? say, whither shall I fly,
- To slack these flames wherein I fry?
- To the treasures, shall I go,
- Of the rain, frost, hail, and snow?
- Shall I search the underground,
- Where all damps and mists are found?
- Shall I seek (for speedy ease)
- All the floods and frozen seas?
- Or descend into the deep,
- Where eternal cold does keep?
- These may cool; but there's a zone
- Colder yet than anyone:
- That's my Julia's breast, where dwells
- Such destructive icicles,
- As that the congelation will
- Me sooner starve than those can kill.
- 116. AN EPITAPH UPON A SOBER MATRON.
- With blameless carriage, I lived here
- To the almost seven and fortieth year.
- Stout sons I had, and those twice three
- One only daughter lent to me:
- The which was made a happy bride
- But thrice three moons before she died.
- My modest wedlock, that was known
- Contented with the bed of one.
- 117. TO THE PATRON OF POETS, M. END. PORTER.
- Let there be patrons, patrons like to thee,
- Brave Porter! poets ne'er will wanting be:
- Fabius and Cotta, Lentulus, all live
- In thee, thou man of men! who here do'st give
- Not only subject-matter for our wit,
- But likewise oil of maintenance to it:
- For which, before thy threshold, we'll lay down
- Our thyrse for sceptre, and our bays for crown.
- For, to say truth, all garlands are thy due:
- The laurel, myrtle, oak, and ivy too.
- 118. THE SADNESS OF THINGS FOR SAPPHO'S SICKNESS.
- Lilies will languish; violets look ill;
- Sickly the primrose; pale the daffodil;
- That gallant tulip will hang down his head,
- Like to a virgin newly ravished;
- Pansies will weep, and marigolds will wither,
- And keep a fast and funeral together;
- Sappho droop, daisies will open never,
- But bid good-night, and close their lids for ever.
- 119. LEANDER'S OBSEQUIES.
- When as Leander young was drown'd
- No heart by Love receiv'd a wound,
- But on a rock himself sat by,
- There weeping sup'rabundantly.
- Sighs numberless he cast about,
- And, all his tapers thus put out,
- His head upon his hand he laid,
- And sobbing deeply, thus he said:
- "Ah, cruel sea," and, looking on't,
- Wept as he'd drown the Hellespont.
- And sure his tongue had more express'd
- But that his tears forbade the rest.
- 120. HOPE HEARTENS.
- None goes to warfare but with this intent--
- The gains must dead the fears of detriment.
- 121. FOUR THINGS MAKE US HAPPY HERE.
- Health is the first good lent to men;
- A gentle disposition then:
- Next, to be rich by no by-ways;
- Lastly, with friends t'enjoy our days.
- 122. HIS PARTING FROM MRS. DOROTHY KENNEDY.
- When I did go from thee I felt that smart
- Which bodies do when souls from them depart.
- Thou did'st not mind it; though thou then might'st see
- Me turn'd to tears; yet did'st not weep for me.
- 'Tis true, I kiss'd thee; but I could not hear
- Thee spend a sigh t'accompany my tear.
- Methought 'twas strange that thou so hard should'st prove,
- Whose heart, whose hand, whose every part spake love.
- Prithee, lest maids should censure thee, but say
- Thou shed'st one tear, whenas I went away;
- And that will please me somewhat: though I know,
- And Love will swear't, my dearest did not so.
- 123. THE TEAR SENT TO HER FROM STAINES.
- Glide, gentle streams, and bear
- Along with you my tear
- To that coy girl
- Who smiles, yet slays
- Me with delays,
- And strings my tears as pearl.
- See! see, she's yonder set,
- Making a carcanet
- Of maiden-flowers!
- There, there present
- This orient
- And pendant pearl of ours.
- Then say I've sent one more
- Gem to enrich her store;
- And that is all
- Which I can send,
- Or vainly spend,
- For tears no more will fall.
- Nor will I seek supply
- Of them, the spring's once dry;
- But I'll devise,
- Among the rest,
- A way that's best
- How I may save mine eyes.
- Yet say--should she condemn
- Me to surrender them
- Then say my part
- Must be to weep
- Out them, to keep
- A poor, yet loving heart.
- Say too, she would have this;
- She shall: then my hope is,
- That when I'm poor
- And nothing have
- To send or save,
- I'm sure she'll ask no more.
- _Carcanet_, necklace.
- 124. UPON ONE LILY, WHO MARRIED WITH A MAID CALLED ROSE.
- What times of sweetness this fair day foreshows,
- Whenas the Lily marries with the Rose!
- What next is look'd for? but we all should see
- To spring from thee a sweet posterity.
- 125. AN EPITAPH UPON A CHILD.
- Virgins promis'd when I died
- That they would each primrose-tide
- Duly, morn and evening, come,
- And with flowers dress my tomb.
- Having promis'd, pay your debts,
- Maids, and here strew violets.
- 127. THE HOUR-GLASS.
- That hour-glass which there you see
- With water fill'd, sirs, credit me,
- The humour was, as I have read,
- But lovers' tears incrystalled.
- Which, as they drop by drop do pass
- From th' upper to the under-glass,
- Do in a trickling manner tell,
- By many a watery syllable,
- That lovers' tears in lifetime shed
- Do restless run when they are dead.
- _Humour_, moisture.
- 128. HIS FAREWELL TO SACK.
- Farewell thou thing, time past so known, so dear
- To me as blood to life and spirit; near,
- Nay, thou more near than kindred, friend, man, wife,
- Male to the female, soul to body; life
- To quick action, or the warm soft side
- Of the resigning, yet resisting bride.
- The kiss of virgins, first fruits of the bed,
- Soft speech, smooth touch, the lips, the maidenhead:
- These and a thousand sweets could never be
- So near or dear as thou wast once to me.
- O thou, the drink of gods and angels! wine
- That scatter'st spirit and lust, whose purest shine
- More radiant than the summer's sunbeams shows;
- Each way illustrious, brave, and like to those
- Comets we see by night, whose shagg'd portents
- Foretell the coming of some dire events,
- Or some full flame which with a pride aspires,
- Throwing about his wild and active fires;
- 'Tis thou, above nectar, O divinest soul!
- Eternal in thyself, that can'st control
- That which subverts whole nature, grief and care,
- Vexation of the mind, and damn'd despair.
- 'Tis thou alone who, with thy mystic fan,
- Work'st more than wisdom, art, or nature can
- To rouse the sacred madness and awake
- The frost-bound blood and spirits, and to make
- Them frantic with thy raptures flashing through
- The soul like lightning, and as active too.
- 'Tis not Apollo can, or those thrice three
- Castalian sisters, sing, if wanting thee.
- Horace, Anacreon, both had lost their fame,
- Had'st thou not fill'd them with thy fire and flame.
- Phœbean splendour! and thou, Thespian spring!
- Of which sweet swans must drink before they sing
- Their true-pac'd numbers and their holy lays,
- Which makes them worthy cedar and the bays.
- But why, why longer do I gaze upon
- Thee with the eye of admiration?
- Since I must leave thee, and enforc'd must say
- To all thy witching beauties, Go, away.
- But if thy whimpering looks do ask me why,
- Then know that nature bids thee go, not I.
- 'Tis her erroneous self has made a brain
- Uncapable of such a sovereign
- As is thy powerful self. Prithee not smile,
- Or smile more inly, lest thy looks beguile
- My vows denounc'd in zeal, which thus much show thee
- That I have sworn but by thy looks to know thee.
- Let others drink thee freely, and desire
- Thee and their lips espous'd, while I admire
- And love thee, but not taste thee. Let my muse
- Fail of thy former helps, and only use
- Her inadult'rate strength: what's done by me
- Hereafter shall smell of the lamp, not thee.
- _Shagg'd_, rough-haired.
- _Mystic fan_, the "mystica vannus Iacchi" of Georgic, i. 166.
- _Cedar_, _i.e._, cedar oil, used for the preservation of manuscripts.
- 130. UPON MRS. ELIZABETH WHEELER, UNDER THE NAME OF AMARILLIS.
- Sweet Amarillis by a spring's
- Soft and soul-melting murmurings
- Slept, and thus sleeping, thither flew
- A robin-redbreast, who, at view,
- Not seeing her at all to stir,
- Brought leaves and moss to cover her;
- But while he perking there did pry
- About the arch of either eye,
- The lid began to let out day,
- At which poor robin flew away,
- And seeing her not dead, but all disleav'd,
- He chirp'd for joy to see himself deceiv'd.
- 132. TO MYRRHA, HARD-HEARTED.
- Fold now thine arms and hang the head,
- Like to a lily withered;
- Next look thou like a sickly moon,
- Or like Jocasta in a swoon;
- Then weep and sigh and softly go,
- Like to a widow drown'd in woe,
- Or like a virgin full of ruth
- For the lost sweetheart of her youth;
- And all because, fair maid, thou art
- Insensible of all my smart,
- And of those evil days that be
- Now posting on to punish thee.
- The gods are easy, and condemn
- All such as are not soft like them.
- 133. THE EYE.
- Make me a heaven, and make me there
- Many a less and greater sphere:
- Make me the straight and oblique lines,
- The motions, lations and the signs.
- Make me a chariot and a sun,
- And let them through a zodiac run;
- Next place me zones and tropics there,
- With all the seasons of the year.
- Make me a sunset and a night,
- And then present the morning's light
- Cloth'd in her chamlets of delight.
- To these make clouds to pour down rain,
- With weather foul, then fair again.
- And when, wise artist, that thou hast
- With all that can be this heaven grac't,
- Ah! what is then this curious sky
- But only my Corinna's eye?
- _Lations_, astral attractions.
- _Chamlets_, _i.e._, camlets, stuffs made from camels' hair.
- 134. UPON THE MUCH-LAMENTED MR. J. WARR.
- What wisdom, learning, wit or worth
- Youth or sweet nature could bring forth
- Rests here with him who was the fame,
- The volume of himself and name.
- If, reader, then, thou wilt draw near
- And do an honour to thy tear,
- Weep then for him for whom laments
- Not one, but many monuments.
- 136. THE SUSPICION UPON HIS OVER-MUCH FAMILIARITY WITH A GENTLEWOMAN.
- And must we part, because some say
- Loud is our love, and loose our play,
- And more than well becomes the day?
- Alas for pity! and for us
- Most innocent, and injured thus!
- Had we kept close, or played within,
- Suspicion now had been the sin,
- And shame had followed long ere this,
- T' have plagued what now unpunished is.
- But we, as fearless of the sun,
- As faultless, will not wish undone
- What now is done, since _where no sin
- Unbolts the door, no shame comes in_.
- Then, comely and most fragrant maid,
- Be you more wary than afraid
- Of these reports, because you see
- The fairest most suspected be.
- The common forms have no one eye
- Or ear of burning jealousy
- To follow them: but chiefly where
- Love makes the cheek and chin a sphere
- To dance and play in, trust me, there
- Suspicion questions every hair.
- Come, you are fair, and should be seen
- While you are in your sprightful green:
- And what though you had been embraced
- By me--were you for that unchaste?
- No, no! no more than is yond' moon
- Which, shining in her perfect noon,
- In all that great and glorious light,
- Continues cold as is the night.
- Then, beauteous maid, you may retire;
- And as for me, my chaste desire
- Shall move towards you, although I see
- Your face no more. So live you free
- From fame's black lips, as you from me.
- 137. SINGLE LIFE MOST SECURE.
- Suspicion, discontent, and strife
- Come in for dowry with a wife.
- 138. THE CURSE. A SONG.
- Go, perjured man; and if thou e'er return
- To see the small remainders in mine urn,
- When thou shalt laugh at my religious dust,
- And ask: where's now the colour, form and trust
- Of woman's beauty? and with hand more rude
- Rifle the flowers which the virgins strewed:
- Know I have prayed to Fury that some wind
- May blow my ashes up, and strike thee blind.
- 139. THE WOUNDED CUPID. SONG.
- Cupid, as he lay among
- Roses, by a bee was stung;
- Whereupon, in anger flying
- To his mother, said thus, crying:
- Help! oh help! your boy's a-dying.
- And why, my pretty lad, said she?
- Then, blubbering, replied he:
- A winged snake has bitten me,
- Which country people call a bee.
- At which she smiled; then, with her hairs
- And kisses drying up his tears:
- Alas! said she, my wag, if this
- Such a pernicious torment is,
- Come tell me then, how great's the smart
- Of those thou woundest with thy dart!
- 140. TO DEWS. A SONG.
- I burn, I burn; and beg of you
- To quench or cool me with your dew.
- I fry in fire, and so consume,
- Although the pile be all perfume.
- Alas! the heat and death's the same,
- Whether by choice or common flame,
- To be in oil of roses drowned,
- Or water; where's the comfort found?
- Both bring one death; and I die here
- Unless you cool me with a tear:
- Alas! I call; but ah! I see
- Ye cool and comfort all but me.
- 141. SOME COMFORT IN CALAMITY.
- To conquered men, some comfort 'tis to fall
- By the hand of him who is the general.
- 142. THE VISION.
- Sitting alone, as one forsook,
- Close by a silver-shedding brook,
- With hands held up to love, I wept;
- And after sorrows spent I slept:
- Then in a vision I did see
- A glorious form appear to me:
- A virgin's face she had; her dress
- Was like a sprightly Spartaness.
- A silver bow, with green silk strung,
- Down from her comely shoulders hung:
- And as she stood, the wanton air
- Dangled the ringlets of her hair.
- Her legs were such Diana shows
- When, tucked up, she a-hunting goes;
- With buskins shortened to descry
- The happy dawning of her thigh:
- Which when I saw, I made access
- To kiss that tempting nakedness:
- But she forbade me with a wand
- Of myrtle she had in her hand:
- And, chiding me, said: Hence, remove,
- Herrick, thou art too coarse to love.
- 143. LOVE ME LITTLE, LOVE ME LONG.
- You say, to me-wards your affection's strong;
- Pray love me little, so you love me long.
- Slowly goes far: the mean is best: desire,
- Grown violent, does either die or tire.
- 144. UPON A VIRGIN KISSING A ROSE.
- 'Twas but a single rose,
- Till you on it did breathe;
- But since, methinks, it shows
- Not so much rose as wreath.
- 145. UPON A WIFE THAT DIED MAD WITH JEALOUSY.
- In this little vault she lies,
- Here, with all her jealousies:
- Quiet yet; but if ye make
- Any noise they both will wake,
- And such spirits raise 'twill then
- Trouble death to lay again.
- 146. UPON THE BISHOP OF LINCOLN'S IMPRISONMENT.
- Never was day so over-sick with showers
- But that it had some intermitting hours;
- Never was night so tedious but it knew
- The last watch out, and saw the dawning too;
- Never was dungeon so obscurely deep
- Wherein or light or day did never peep;
- Never did moon so ebb, or seas so wane,
- But they left hope-seed to fill up again.
- So you, my lord, though you have now your stay,
- Your night, your prison, and your ebb, you may
- Spring up afresh, when all these mists are spent,
- And star-like, once more gild our firmament.
- Let but that mighty Cæsar speak, and then
- All bolts, all bars, all gates shall cleave; as when
- That earthquake shook the house, and gave the stout
- Apostles way, unshackled, to go out.
- This, as I wish for, so I hope to see;
- Though you, my lord, have been unkind to me,
- To wound my heart, and never to apply,
- When you had power, the meanest remedy.
- Well, though my grief by you was gall'd the more,
- Yet I bring balm and oil to heal your sore.
- 147. DISSUASIONS FROM IDLENESS.
- Cynthius, pluck ye by the ear,
- That ye may good doctrine hear;
- Play not with the maiden-hair,
- For each ringlet there's a snare.
- Cheek, and eye, and lip, and chin--
- These are traps to take fools in.
- Arms, and hands, and all parts else,
- Are but toils, or manacles,
- Set on purpose to enthral
- Men, but slothfuls most of all.
- Live employed, and so live free
- From these fetters; like to me,
- Who have found, and still can prove,
- _The lazy man the most doth love_.
- 149. AN EPITHALAMY TO SIR THOMAS SOUTHWELL AND HIS LADY.
- I.
- Now, now's the time, so oft by truth
- Promis'd should come to crown your youth.
- Then, fair ones, do not wrong
- Your joys by staying long;
- Or let love's fire go out,
- By lingering thus in doubt;
- But learn that time once lost
- Is ne'er redeem'd by cost.
- Then away; come, Hymen, guide
- To the bed the bashful bride.
- II.
- Is it, sweet maid, your fault these holy
- Bridal rites go on so slowly?
- Dear, is it this you dread
- The loss of maidenhead?
- Believe me, you will most
- Esteem it when 'tis lost;
- Then it no longer keep,
- Lest issue lie asleep.
- Then, away; come, Hymen, guide
- To the bed the bashful bride.
- III.
- These precious, pearly, purling tears
- But spring from ceremonious fears.
- And 'tis but native shame
- That hides the loving flame,
- And may a while control
- The soft and am'rous soul;
- But yet love's fire will waste
- Such bashfulness at last.
- Then, away; come, Hymen, guide
- To the bed the bashful bride.
- IV.
- Night now hath watch'd herself half blind,
- Yet not a maidenhead resign'd!
- 'Tis strange, ye will not fly
- To love's sweet mystery.
- Might yon full moon the sweets
- Have, promised to your sheets,
- She soon would leave her sphere,
- To be admitted there.
- Then, away; come, Hymen, guide
- To the bed the bashful bride.
- V.
- On, on devoutly, make no stay;
- While Domiduca leads the way,
- And Genius, who attends
- The bed for lucky ends.
- With Juno goes the Hours
- And Graces strewing flowers.
- And the boys with sweet tunes sing:
- Hymen, O Hymen, bring
- Home the turtles; Hymen, guide
- To the bed the bashful bride.
- VI.
- Behold! how Hymen's taper-light
- Shows you how much is spent of night.
- See, see the bridegroom's torch
- Half wasted in the porch.
- And now those tapers five,
- That show the womb shall thrive,
- Their silv'ry flames advance,
- To tell all prosp'rous chance
- Still shall crown the happy life
- Of the goodman and the wife.
- VII.
- Move forward then your rosy feet,
- And make whate'er they touch turn sweet.
- May all, like flowery meads,
- Smell where your soft foot treads;
- And everything assume
- To it the like perfume,
- As Zephyrus when he 'spires
- Through woodbine and sweetbriars.
- Then, away; come, Hymen, guide
- To the bed the bashful bride.
- VIII.
- And now the yellow veil at last
- Over her fragrant cheek is cast.
- Now seems she to express
- A bashful willingness:
- Showing a heart consenting,
- As with a will repenting.
- Then gently lead her on
- With wise suspicion;
- For that, matrons say, a measure
- Of that passion sweetens pleasure.
- IX.
- You, you that be of her nearest kin,
- Now o'er the threshold force her in.
- But to avert the worst
- Let her her fillets first
- Knit to the posts, this point
- Remembering, to anoint
- The sides, for 'tis a charm
- Strong against future harm;
- And the evil deads, the which
- There was hidden by the witch.
- X.
- O Venus! thou to whom is known
- The best way how to loose the zone
- Of virgins, tell the maid
- She need not be afraid,
- And bid the youth apply
- Close kisses if she cry,
- And charge he not forbears
- Her though she woo with tears.
- Tell them now they must adventure,
- Since that love and night bid enter.
- XI.
- No fatal owl the bedstead keeps,
- With direful notes to fright your sleeps;
- No furies here about
- To put the tapers out,
- Watch or did make the bed:
- 'Tis omen full of dread;
- But all fair signs appear
- Within the chamber here.
- Juno here far off doth stand,
- Cooling sleep with charming wand.
- XII.
- Virgins, weep not; 'twill come when,
- As she, so you'll be ripe for men.
- Then grieve her not with saying
- She must no more a-maying,
- Or by rosebuds divine
- Who'll be her valentine.
- Nor name those wanton reaks
- You've had at barley-breaks,
- But now kiss her and thus say,
- "Take time, lady, while ye may".
- XIII.
- Now bar the doors; the bridegroom puts
- The eager boys to gather nuts.
- And now both love and time
- To their full height do climb:
- Oh! give them active heat
- And moisture both complete:
- Fit organs for increase,
- To keep and to release
- That which may the honour'd stem
- Circle with a diadem.
- XIV.
- And now, behold! the bed or couch
- That ne'er knew bride's or bridegroom's touch,
- Feels in itself a fire;
- And, tickled with desire,
- Pants with a downy breast,
- As with a heart possesst,
- Shrugging as it did move
- Ev'n with the soul of love.
- And, oh! had it but a tongue,
- Doves, 'twould say, ye bill too long.
- XV.
- O enter then! but see ye shun
- A sleep until the act be done.
- Let kisses in their close,
- Breathe as the damask rose,
- Or sweet as is that gum
- Doth from Panchaia come.
- Teach nature now to know
- Lips can make cherries grow
- Sooner than she ever yet
- In her wisdom could beget.
- XVI.
- On your minutes, hours, days, months, years,
- Drop the fat blessing of the spheres.
- That good which heav'n can give
- To make you bravely live
- Fall like a spangling dew
- By day and night on you.
- May fortune's lily-hand
- Open at your command;
- With all lucky birds to side
- With the bridegroom and the bride.
- XVII.
- Let bounteous Fate[s] your spindles full
- Fill, and wind up with whitest wool.
- Let them not cut the thread
- Of life until ye bid.
- May death yet come at last,
- And not with desp'rate haste,
- But when ye both can say
- "Come, let us now away,"
- Be ye to the barn then borne,
- Two, like two ripe shocks of corn.
- _Domiduca_, Juno, the goddess of marriage, the "home-bringer".
- _Reaks_, pranks.
- _Barley-break_, a country game, see 101.
- _Panchaia_, the land of spices: _cf_, Virg. G. ii. 139; Æn. iv. 379.
- 150. TEARS ARE TONGUES.
- When Julia chid I stood as mute the while
- As is the fish or tongueless crocodile.
- Air coin'd to words my Julia could not hear,
- But she could see each eye to stamp a tear;
- By which mine angry mistress might descry
- Tears are the noble language of the eye.
- And when true love of words is destitute
- The eyes by tears speak, while the tongue is mute.
- 151. UPON A YOUNG MOTHER OF MANY CHILDREN.
- Let all chaste matrons, when they chance to see
- My num'rous issue, praise and pity me:
- Praise me for having such a fruitful womb,
- Pity me, too, who found so soon a tomb.
- 152. TO ELECTRA.
- I'll come to thee in all those shapes
- As Jove did when he made his rapes,
- Only I'll not appear to thee
- As he did once to Semele.
- Thunder and lightning I'll lay by,
- To talk with thee familiarly.
- Which done, then quickly we'll undress
- To one and th' other's nakedness,
- And, ravish'd, plunge into the bed,
- Bodies and souls commingled,
- And kissing, so as none may hear,
- We'll weary all the fables there.
- _Fables_, _i.e._, of Jove's amours.
- 153. HIS WISH.
- It is sufficient if we pray
- To Jove, who gives and takes away:
- Let him the land and living find;
- Let me alone to fit the mind.
- 154. HIS PROTESTATION TO PERILLA.
- Noonday and midnight shall at once be seen:
- Trees, at one time, shall be both sere and green:
- Fire and water shall together lie
- In one self-sweet-conspiring sympathy:
- Summer and winter shall at one time show
- Ripe ears of corn, and up to th' ears in snow:
- Seas shall be sandless; fields devoid of grass;
- Shapeless the world, as when all chaos was,
- Before, my dear Perilla, I will be
- False to my vow, or fall away from thee.
- 155. LOVE PERFUMES ALL PARTS.
- If I kiss Anthea's breast,
- There I smell the phœnix nest:
- If her lip, the most sincere
- Altar of incense I smell there--
- Hands, and thighs, and legs are all
- Richly aromatical.
- Goddess Isis can't transfer
- Musks and ambers more from her:
- Nor can Juno sweeter be,
- When she lies with Jove, than she.
- 156. TO JULIA.
- Permit me, Julia, now to go away;
- Or by thy love decree me here to stay.
- If thou wilt say that I shall live with thee,
- Here shall my endless tabernacle be:
- If not, as banish'd, I will live alone
- There where no language ever yet was known.
- 157. ON HIMSELF.
- Love-sick I am, and must endure
- A desperate grief, that finds no cure.
- Ah me! I try; and trying, prove
- _No herbs have power to cure love._
- Only one sovereign salve I know,
- And that is death, the end of woe.
- 158. VIRTUE IS SENSIBLE OF SUFFERING.
- Though a wise man all pressures can sustain,
- His virtue still is sensible of pain:
- Large shoulders though he has, and well can bear,
- He feels when packs do pinch him, and the where.
- 159. THE CRUEL MAID.
- And cruel maid, because I see
- You scornful of my love and me,
- I'll trouble you no more; but go
- My way where you shall never know
- What is become of me: there I
- Will find me out a path to die,
- Or learn some way how to forget
- You and your name for ever: yet,
- Ere I go hence, know this from me,
- What will, in time, your fortune be:
- This to your coyness I will tell,
- And, having spoke it once, farewell.
- The lily will not long endure,
- Nor the snow continue pure;
- The rose, the violet, one day,
- See, both these lady-flowers decay:
- And you must fade as well as they.
- And it may chance that Love may turn,
- And, like to mine, make your heart burn
- And weep to see't; yet this thing do,
- That my last vow commends to you:
- When you shall see that I am dead,
- For pity let a tear be shed;
- And, with your mantle o'er me cast,
- Give my cold lips a kiss at last:
- If twice you kiss you need not fear
- That I shall stir or live more here.
- Next, hollow out a tomb to cover
- Me--me, the most despisèd lover,
- And write thereon: _This, reader, know:
- Love kill'd this man_. No more, but so.
- 160. TO DIANEME.
- Sweet, be not proud of those two eyes
- Which, starlike, sparkle in their skies;
- Nor be you proud that you can see
- All hearts your captives, yours yet free;
- Be you not proud of that rich hair
- Which wantons with the love-sick air;
- Whenas that ruby which you wear,
- Sunk from the tip of your soft ear,
- Will last to be a precious stone
- When all your world of beauty's gone.
- 161. TO THE KING, TO CURE THE EVIL.
- To find that tree of life whose fruits did feed
- And leaves did heal all sick of human seed:
- To find Bethesda and an angel there
- Stirring the waters, I am come; and here,
- At last, I find (after my much to do)
- The tree, Bethesda and the angel too:
- And all in your blest hand, which has the powers
- Of all those suppling-healing herbs and flowers.
- To that soft charm, that spell, that magic bough,
- That high enchantment, I betake me now,
- And to that hand (the branch of heaven's fair tree),
- I kneel for help; O! lay that hand on me,
- Adored Cæsar! and my faith is such
- I shall be heal'd if that my king but touch.
- The evil is not yours: my sorrow sings,
- "Mine is the evil, but the cure the king's".
- 162. HIS MISERY IN A MISTRESS.
- Water, water I espy;
- Come and cool ye, all who fry
- In your loves; but none as I.
- Though a thousand showers be
- Still a-falling, yet I see
- Not one drop to light on me.
- Happy you who can have seas
- For to quench ye, or some ease
- From your kinder mistresses.
- I have one, and she alone,
- Of a thousand thousand known,
- Dead to all compassion.
- Such an one as will repeat
- Both the cause and make the heat
- More by provocation great.
- Gentle friends, though I despair
- Of my cure, do you beware
- Of those girls which cruel are.
- 164. TO A GENTLEWOMAN OBJECTING TO HIM HIS GRAY HAIRS.
- Am I despised because you say,
- And I dare swear, that I am gray?
- Know, lady, you have but your day:
- And time will come when you shall wear
- Such frost and snow upon your hair;
- And when (though long, it comes to pass)
- You question with your looking-glass;
- And in that sincere crystal seek,
- But find no rose-bud in your cheek:
- Nor any bed to give the show
- Where such a rare carnation grew.
- Ah! then too late, close in your chamber keeping,
- It will be told
- That you are old,
- By those true tears y'are weeping.
- 165. TO CEDARS.
- If 'mongst my many poems I can see
- One only worthy to be wash'd by thee,
- I live for ever, let the rest all lie
- In dens of darkness or condemn'd to die.
- _Cedars_, oil of cedar was used for preserving manuscripts (carmina
- linenda cedro. _Hor._ Ars Poet., 331.)
- 166. UPON CUPID.
- Love like a gipsy lately came,
- And did me much importune
- To see my hand, that by the same
- He might foretell my fortune.
- He saw my palm, and then, said he,
- I tell thee by this score here,
- That thou within few months shalt be
- The youthful Prince d'Amour here.
- I smil'd, and bade him once more prove,
- And by some cross-line show it,
- That I could ne'er be prince of love,
- Though here the princely poet.
- 167. HOW PRIMROSES CAME GREEN.
- Virgins, time-past, known were these,
- Troubled with green-sicknesses:
- Turn'd to flowers, still the hue,
- Sickly girls, they bear of you.
- 168. TO JOS., LORD BISHOP OF EXETER.
- Whom should I fear to write to if I can
- Stand before you, my learn'd diocesan?
- And never show blood-guiltiness or fear
- To see my lines excathedrated here.
- Since none so good are but you may condemn,
- Or here so bad but you may pardon them.
- If then, my lord, to sanctify my muse
- One only poem out of all you'll choose,
- And mark it for a rapture nobly writ,
- 'Tis good confirm'd, for you have bishop'd it.
- _Blood-guiltiness_, guilt betrayed by blushing; cp. 837.
- _Excathedrated_, condemned _ex cathedra_.
- 169. UPON A BLACK TWIST ROUNDING THE ARM OF THE COUNTESS OF CARLISLE.
- I saw about her spotless wrist,
- Of blackest silk, a curious twist;
- Which, circumvolving gently, there
- Enthrall'd her arm as prisoner.
- Dark was the jail, but as if light
- Had met t'engender with the night;
- Or so as darkness made a stay
- To show at once both night and day.
- One fancy more! but if there be
- Such freedom in captivity,
- I beg of Love that ever I
- May in like chains of darkness lie.
- 170. ON HIMSELF.
- I fear no earthly powers,
- But care for crowns of flowers;
- And love to have my beard
- With wine and oil besmear'd.
- This day I'll drown all sorrow:
- Who knows to live to-morrow?
- 172. A RING PRESENTED TO JULIA.
- Julia, I bring
- To thee this ring,
- Made for thy finger fit;
- To show by this
- That our love is
- (Or should be) like to it.
- Close though it be
- The joint is free;
- So, when love's yoke is on,
- It must not gall,
- Or fret at all
- With hard oppression.
- But it must play
- Still either way,
- And be, too, such a yoke
- As not too wide
- To overslide,
- Or be so strait to choke.
- So we who bear
- This beam must rear
- Ourselves to such a height
- As that the stay
- Of either may
- Create the burden light.
- And as this round
- Is nowhere found
- To flaw, or else to sever:
- So let our love
- As endless prove,
- And pure as gold for ever.
- 173. TO THE DETRACTOR.
- Where others love and praise my verses, still
- Thy long black thumb-nail marks them out for ill:
- A fellon take it, or some whitflaw come
- For to unslate or to untile that thumb!
- But cry thee mercy: exercise thy nails
- To scratch or claw, so that thy tongue not rails:
- Some numbers prurient are, and some of these
- Are wanton with their itch; scratch, and 'twill please.
- _Fellon_, a sore, especially in the finger.
- _Whitflaw_, or whitlow.
- 174. UPON THE SAME.
- I ask'd thee oft what poets thou hast read,
- And lik'st the best. Still thou reply'st: The dead.
- I shall, ere long, with green turfs cover'd be;
- Then sure thou'lt like or thou wilt envy me.
- 175. JULIA'S PETTICOAT.
- Thy azure robe I did behold
- As airy as the leaves of gold,
- Which, erring here, and wandering there,
- Pleas'd with transgression ev'rywhere:
- Sometimes 'twould pant, and sigh, and heave,
- As if to stir it scarce had leave:
- But, having got it, thereupon
- 'Twould make a brave expansion.
- And pounc'd with stars it showed to me
- Like a celestial canopy.
- Sometimes 'twould blaze, and then abate,
- Like to a flame grown moderate:
- Sometimes away 'twould wildly fling,
- Then to thy thighs so closely cling
- That some conceit did melt me down
- As lovers fall into a swoon:
- And, all confus'd, I there did lie
- Drown'd in delights, but could not die.
- That leading cloud I follow'd still,
- Hoping t' have seen of it my fill;
- But ah! I could not: should it move
- To life eternal, I could love.
- _Pounc'd_, sprinkled.
- 176. TO MUSIC.
- Begin to charm, and, as thou strok'st mine ears
- With thy enchantment, melt me into tears.
- Then let thy active hand scud o'er thy lyre,
- And make my spirits frantic with the fire.
- That done, sink down into a silvery strain,
- And make me smooth as balm and oil again.
- 177. DISTRUST.
- To safeguard man from wrongs, there nothing must
- Be truer to him than a wise distrust.
- And to thyself be best this sentence known:
- _Hear all men speak, but credit few or none_.
- 178. CORINNA'S GOING A-MAYING.
- Get up, get up for shame, the blooming morn
- Upon her wings presents the god unshorn.
- See how Aurora throws her fair
- Fresh-quilted colours through the air:
- Get up, sweet slug-a-bed, and see
- The dew bespangling herb and tree.
- Each flower has wept and bow'd toward the east
- Above an hour since: yet you not dress'd;
- Nay! not so much as out of bed?
- When all the birds have matins said
- And sung their thankful hymns, 'tis sin,
- Nay, profanation to keep in,
- Whereas a thousand virgins on this day
- Spring, sooner than the lark, to fetch in May.
- Rise and put on your foliage, and be seen
- To come forth, like the spring-time, fresh and green,
- And sweet as Flora. Take no care
- For jewels for your gown or hair:
- Fear not; the leaves will strew
- Gems in abundance upon you:
- Besides, the childhood of the day has kept,
- Against you come, some orient pearls unwept;
- Come and receive them while the light
- Hangs on the dew-locks of the night:
- And Titan on the eastern hill
- Retires himself, or else stands still
- Till you come forth. Wash, dress, be brief in praying:
- Few beads are best when once we go a-Maying.
- Come, my Corinna, come; and, coming, mark
- How each field turns a street, each street a park
- Made green and trimm'd with trees: see how
- Devotion gives each house a bough
- Or branch: each porch, each door ere this
- An ark, a tabernacle is,
- Made up of white-thorn neatly interwove;
- As if here were those cooler shades of love.
- Can such delights be in the street
- And open fields and we not see't?
- Come, we'll abroad; and let's obey
- The proclamation made for May:
- And sin no more, as we have done, by staying;
- But, my Corinna, come, let's go a-Maying.
- There's not a budding boy or girl this day
- But is got up, and gone to bring in May.
- A deal of youth, ere this, is come
- Back, and with white-thorn laden home.
- Some have despatch'd their cakes and cream
- Before that we have left to dream:
- And some have wept, and woo'd, and plighted troth,
- And chose their priest, ere we can cast off sloth:
- Many a green-gown has been given;
- Many a kiss, both odd and even:
- Many a glance too has been sent
- From out the eye, love's firmament;
- Many a jest told of the keys betraying
- This night, and locks pick'd, yet we're not a-Maying.
- Come, let us go while we are in our prime;
- And take the harmless folly of the time.
- We shall grow old apace, and die
- Before we know our liberty.
- Our life is short, and our days run
- As fast away as does the sun;
- And, as a vapour or a drop of rain,
- Once lost, can ne'er be found again,
- So when or you or I are made
- A fable, song, or fleeting shade,
- All love, all liking, all delight
- Lies drowned with us in endless night.
- Then while time serves, and we are but decaying,
- Come, my Corinna, come, let's go a-Maying.
- _Beads_, prayers.
- _Left to dream_, ceased dreaming.
- _Green-gown_, tumble on the grass.
- 179. ON JULIA'S BREATH.
- Breathe, Julia, breathe, and I'll protest,
- Nay more, I'll deeply swear,
- That all the spices of the east
- Are circumfused there.
- _Circumfused_, spread around.
- 180. UPON A CHILD. AN EPITAPH.
- But born, and like a short delight,
- I glided by my parents' sight.
- That done, the harder fates denied
- My longer stay, and so I died.
- If, pitying my sad parents' tears,
- You'll spill a tear or two with theirs,
- And with some flowers my grave bestrew,
- Love and they'll thank you for't. Adieu.
- 181. A DIALOGUE BETWIXT HORACE AND LYDIA, TRANSLATED ANNO 1627, AND SET
- BY MR. RO. RAMSEY.
- _Hor._ While, Lydia, I was loved of thee,
- Nor any was preferred 'fore me
- To hug thy whitest neck, than I
- The Persian king lived not more happily.
- _Lyd._ While thou no other didst affect,
- Nor Chloe was of more respect
- Than Lydia, far-famed Lydia,
- I flourished more than Roman Ilia.
- _Hor._ Now Thracian Chloe governs me,
- Skilful i' th' harp and melody;
- For whose affection, Lydia, I
- (So fate spares her) am well content to die.
- _Lyd._ My heart now set on fire is
- By Ornithes' son, young Calais,
- For whose commutual flames here I,
- To save his life, twice am content to die.
- _Hor._ Say our first loves we should revoke,
- And, severed, join in brazen yoke;
- Admit I Chloe put away,
- And love again love-cast-off Lydia?
- _Lyd._ Though mine be brighter than the star,
- Thou lighter than the cork by far,
- Rough as the Adriatic sea, yet I
- Will live with thee, or else for thee will die.
- 182. THE CAPTIV'D BEE, OR THE LITTLE FILCHER.
- As Julia once a-slumbering lay
- It chanced a bee did fly that way,
- After a dew or dew-like shower,
- To tipple freely in a flower.
- For some rich flower he took the lip
- Of Julia, and began to sip;
- But when he felt he sucked from thence
- Honey, and in the quintessence,
- He drank so much he scarce could stir,
- So Julia took the pilferer.
- And thus surprised, as filchers use,
- He thus began himself t' excuse:
- Sweet lady-flower, I never brought
- Hither the least one thieving thought;
- But, taking those rare lips of yours
- For some fresh, fragrant, luscious flowers,
- I thought I might there take a taste,
- Where so much syrup ran at waste.
- Besides, know this: I never sting
- The flower that gives me nourishing;
- But with a kiss, or thanks, do pay
- For honey that I bear away.
- This said, he laid his little scrip
- Of honey 'fore her ladyship:
- And told her, as some tears did fall,
- That that he took, and that was all.
- At which she smiled, and bade him go
- And take his bag; but thus much know:
- When next he came a-pilfering so,
- He should from her full lips derive
- Honey enough to fill his hive.
- 185. AN ODE TO MASTER ENDYMION PORTER, UPON HIS BROTHER'S DEATH.
- Not all thy flushing suns are set,
- Herrick, as yet;
- Nor doth this far-drawn hemisphere
- Frown and look sullen ev'rywhere.
- Days may conclude in nights, and suns may rest
- As dead within the west;
- Yet, the next morn, regild the fragrant east.
- Alas! for me, that I have lost
- E'en all almost;
- Sunk is my sight, set is my sun,
- And all the loom of life undone:
- The staff, the elm, the prop, the shelt'ring wall
- Whereon my vine did crawl,
- Now, now blown down; needs must the old stock fall.
- Yet, Porter, while thou keep'st alive,
- In death I thrive:
- And like a phœnix re-aspire
- From out my nard and fun'ral fire:
- And as I prune my feathered youth, so I
- Do mar'l how I could die
- When I had thee, my chief preserver, by.
- I'm up, I'm up, and bless that hand
- Which makes me stand
- Now as I do, and but for thee
- I must confess I could not be.
- The debt is paid; for he who doth resign
- Thanks to the gen'rous vine
- Invites fresh grapes to fill his press with wine.
- _Mar'l_, marvel.
- 186. TO HIS DYING BROTHER, MASTER WILLIAM HERRICK.
- Life of my life, 'take not so soon thy flight,
- But stay the time till we have bade good-night.
- Thou hast both wind and tide with thee; thy way
- As soon despatch'd is by the night as day.
- Let us not then so rudely henceforth go
- Till we have wept, kissed, sigh'd, shook hands, or so.
- There's pain in parting, and a kind of hell,
- When once true lovers take their last farewell.
- What! shall we two our endless leaves take here
- Without a sad look or a solemn tear?
- He knows not love that hath not this truth proved,
- _Love is most loth to leave the thing beloved_.
- Pay we our vows and go; yet when we part,
- Then, even then, I will bequeath my heart
- Into thy loving hands; for I'll keep none
- To warm my breast when thou, my pulse, art gone.
- No, here I'll last, and walk (a harmless shade)
- About this urn wherein thy dust is laid,
- To guard it so as nothing here shall be
- Heavy to hurt those sacred seeds of thee.
- 187. THE OLIVE BRANCH.
- Sadly I walk'd within the field,
- To see what comfort it would yield;
- And as I went my private way
- An olive branch before me lay,
- And seeing it I made a stay,
- And took it up and view'd it; then
- Kissing the omen, said Amen;
- Be, be it so, and let this be
- A divination unto me;
- That in short time my woes shall cease
- And Love shall crown my end with peace.
- 189. TO CHERRY-BLOSSOMS.
- Ye may simper, blush and smile,
- And perfume the air awhile;
- But, sweet things, ye must be gone,
- Fruit, ye know, is coming on;
- Then, ah! then, where is your grace,
- Whenas cherries come in place?
- 190. HOW LILIES CAME WHITE.
- White though ye be, yet, lilies, know,
- From the first ye were not so;
- But I'll tell ye
- What befell ye:
- Cupid and his mother lay
- In a cloud, while both did play,
- He with his pretty finger press'd
- The ruby niplet of her breast;
- Out of which the cream of light,
- Like to a dew,
- Fell down on you
- And made ye white.
- 191. TO PANSIES.
- Ah, cruel love! must I endure
- Thy many scorns and find no cure?
- Say, are thy medicines made to be
- Helps to all others but to me?
- I'll leave thee and to pansies come,
- Comforts you'll afford me some;
- You can ease my heart and do
- What love could ne'er be brought unto.
- 192. ON GILLY-FLOWERS BEGOTTEN.
- What was't that fell but now
- From that warm kiss of ours?
- Look, look! by love I vow
- They were two gilly-flowers.
- Let's kiss and kiss again,
- For if so be our closes
- Make gilly-flowers, then
- I'm sure they'll fashion roses.
- 193. THE LILY IN A CRYSTAL.
- You have beheld a smiling rose
- When virgins' hands have drawn
- O'er it a cobweb-lawn;
- And here you see this lily shows,
- Tomb'd in a crystal stone,
- More fair in this transparent case
- Than when it grew alone
- And had but single grace.
- You see how cream but naked is
- Nor dances in the eye
- Without a strawberry,
- Or some fine tincture like to this,
- Which draws the sight thereto
- More by that wantoning with it
- Than when the paler hue
- No mixture did admit.
- You see how amber through the streams
- More gently strokes the sight
- With some conceal'd delight
- Than when he darts his radiant beams
- Into the boundless air;
- Where either too much light his worth
- Doth all at once impair,
- Or set it little forth.
- Put purple grapes or cherries in-
- To glass, and they will send
- More beauty to commend
- Them from that clean and subtle skin
- Than if they naked stood,
- And had no other pride at all
- But their own flesh and blood
- And tinctures natural.
- Thus lily, rose, grape, cherry, cream,
- And strawberry do stir
- More love when they transfer
- A weak, a soft, a broken beam,
- Than if they should discover
- At full their proper excellence;
- Without some scene cast over
- To juggle with the sense.
- Thus let this crystal'd lily be
- A rule how far to teach
- Your nakedness must reach;
- And that no further than we see
- Those glaring colours laid
- By art's wise hand, but to this end
- They should obey a shade,
- Lest they too far extend.
- So though you're white as swan or snow,
- And have the power to move
- A world of men to love,
- Yet when your lawns and silks shall flow,
- And that white cloud divide
- Into a doubtful twilight, then,
- Then will your hidden pride
- Raise greater fires in men.
- _Tincture_, colour, dye.
- _Scene_, a covering.
- 194. TO HIS BOOK.
- Like to a bride, come forth, my book, at last,
- With all thy richest jewels overcast;
- Say, if there be, 'mongst many gems here, one
- Deserveless of the name of paragon;
- Blush not at all for that, since we have set
- Some pearls on queens that have been counterfeit.
- 195. UPON SOME WOMEN.
- Thou who wilt not love, do this,
- Learn of me what woman is.
- Something made of thread and thrum.
- A mere botch of all and some.
- Pieces, patches, ropes of hair;
- Inlaid garbage everywhere.
- Outside silk and outside lawn;
- Scenes to cheat us neatly drawn.
- False in legs, and false in thighs;
- False in breast, teeth, hair, and eyes;
- False in head, and false enough;
- Only true in shreds and stuff.
- _Thrum_, a small thread.
- _All and some_, anything and everything.
- 196. SUPREME FORTUNE FALLS SOONEST.
- While leanest beasts in pastures feed,
- _The fattest ox the first must bleed_.
- 197. THE WELCOME TO SACK.
- So soft streams meet, so springs with gladder smiles
- Meet after long divorcement by the isles;
- When love, the child of likeness, urgeth on
- Their crystal natures to a union:
- So meet stolen kisses, when the moony nights
- Call forth fierce lovers to their wish'd delights;
- So kings and queens meet, when desire convinces
- All thoughts but such as aim at getting princes,
- As I meet thee. Soul of my life and fame!
- Eternal lamp of love! whose radiant flame
- Out-glares the heaven's Osiris,[H] and thy gleams
- Out-shine the splendour of his mid-day beams.
- Welcome, O welcome, my illustrious spouse;
- Welcome as are the ends unto my vows;
- Aye! far more welcome than the happy soil
- The sea-scourged merchant, after all his toil,
- Salutes with tears of joy, when fires betray
- The smoky chimneys of his Ithaca.
- Where hast thou been so long from my embraces,
- Poor pitied exile? Tell me, did thy graces
- Fly discontented hence, and for a time
- Did rather choose to bless another clime?
- Or went'st thou to this end, the more to move me,
- By thy short absence, to desire and love thee?
- Why frowns my sweet? Why won't my saint confer
- Favours on me, her fierce idolater?
- Why are those looks, those looks the which have been
- Time-past so fragrant, sickly now drawn in
- Like a dull twilight? Tell me, and the fault
- I'll expiate with sulphur, hair and salt;
- And, with the crystal humour of the spring,
- Purge hence the guilt and kill this quarrelling.
- Wo't thou not smile or tell me what's amiss?
- Have I been cold to hug thee, too remiss,
- Too temp'rate in embracing? Tell me, has desire
- To thee-ward died i' th' embers, and no fire
- Left in this rak'd-up ash-heap as a mark
- To testify the glowing of a spark?
- Have I divorc'd thee only to combine
- In hot adult'ry with another wine?
- True, I confess I left thee, and appeal
- 'Twas done by me more to confirm my zeal
- And double my affection on thee, as do those
- Whose love grows more inflam'd by being foes.
- But to forsake thee ever, could there be
- A thought of such-like possibility?
- When thou thyself dar'st say thy isles shall lack
- Grapes before Herrick leaves canary sack.
- Thou mak'st me airy, active to be borne,
- Like Iphiclus, upon the tops of corn.
- Thou mak'st me nimble, as the winged hours,
- To dance and caper on the heads of flowers,
- And ride the sunbeams. Can there be a thing
- Under the heavenly Isis[I] that can bring
- More love unto my life, or can present
- My genius with a fuller blandishment?
- Illustrious idol! could th' Egyptians seek
- Help from the garlic, onion and the leek
- And pay no vows to thee, who wast their best
- God, and far more transcendent than the rest?
- Had Cassius, that weak water-drinker, known
- Thee in thy vine, or had but tasted one
- Small chalice of thy frantic liquor, he,
- As the wise Cato, had approv'd of thee.
- Had not Jove's son,[J] that brave Tirynthian swain,
- Invited to the Thesbian banquet, ta'en
- Full goblets of thy gen'rous blood, his sprite
- Ne'er had kept heat for fifty maids that night.
- Come, come and kiss me; love and lust commends
- Thee and thy beauties; kiss, we will be friends
- Too strong for fate to break us. Look upon
- Me with that full pride of complexion
- As queens meet queens, or come thou unto me
- As Cleopatra came to Anthony,
- When her high carriage did at once present
- To the triumvir love and wonderment.
- Swell up my nerves with spirit; let my blood
- Run through my veins like to a hasty flood.
- Fill each part full of fire, active to do
- What thy commanding soul shall put it to;
- And till I turn apostate to thy love,
- Which here I vow to serve, do not remove
- Thy fires from me, but Apollo's curse
- Blast these-like actions, or a thing that's worse.
- When these circumstants shall but live to see
- The time that I prevaricate from thee.
- Call me the son of beer, and then confine
- Me to the tap, the toast, the turf; let wine
- Ne'er shine upon me; may my numbers all
- Run to a sudden death and funeral.
- And last, when thee, dear spouse, I disavow,
- Ne'er may prophetic Daphne crown my brow.
- _Convinces_, overcomes.
- _Ithaca_, the home of the wanderer Ulysses.
- _Iphiclus_ won the foot-race at the funeral games of Pelias.
- _Circumstants_, surroundings.
- [H] The sun. (Note in the original edition.)
- [I] The moon. (Note in the original edition.)
- [J] Hercules. (Note in the original edition.)
- 198. IMPOSSIBILITIES TO HIS FRIEND.
- My faithful friend, if you can see
- The fruit to grow up, or the tree;
- If you can see the colour come
- Into the blushing pear or plum;
- If you can see the water grow
- To cakes of ice or flakes of snow;
- If you can see that drop of rain
- Lost in the wild sea once again;
- If you can see how dreams do creep
- Into the brain by easy sleep:
- Then there is hope that you may see
- Her love me once who now hates me.
- 201. TO LIVE MERRILY AND TO TRUST TO GOOD VERSES.
- Now is the time for mirth,
- Nor cheek or tongue be dumb;
- For, with the flowery earth,
- The golden pomp is come.
- The golden pomp is come;
- For now each tree does wear.
- Made of her pap and gum,
- Rich beads of amber here.
- Now reigns the rose, and now
- Th' Arabian dew besmears
- My uncontrolled brow
- And my retorted hairs.
- Homer, this health to thee,
- In sack of such a kind
- That it would make thee see
- Though thou wert ne'er so blind.
- Next, Virgil I'll call forth
- To pledge this second health
- In wine, whose each cup's worth
- An Indian commonwealth.
- A goblet next I'll drink
- To Ovid, and suppose,
- Made he the pledge, he'd think
- The world had all one nose.
- Then this immensive cup
- Of aromatic wine,
- Catullus, I quaff up
- To that terse muse of thine.
- Wild I am now with heat:
- O Bacchus, cool thy rays!
- Or, frantic, I shall eat
- Thy thyrse and bite the bays.
- Round, round the roof does run,
- And, being ravish'd thus,
- Come, I will drink a tun
- To my Propertius.
- Now, to Tibullus, next,
- This flood I drink to thee:
- But stay, I see a text
- That this presents to me.
- Behold, Tibullus lies
- Here burnt, whose small return
- Of ashes scarce suffice
- To fill a little urn.
- Trust to good verses then;
- They only will aspire
- When pyramids, as men,
- Are lost i' th' funeral fire.
- And when all bodies meet
- In Lethe to be drown'd,
- Then only numbers sweet
- With endless life are crown'd.
- _Retorted_, bound back, "retorto crine," _Martial_.
- _Immensive_, measureless.
- 202. FAIR DAYS: OR, DAWNS DECEITFUL.
- Fair was the dawn, and but e'en now the skies
- Show'd like to cream inspir'd with strawberries,
- But on a sudden all was chang'd and gone
- That smil'd in that first sweet complexion.
- Then thunder-claps and lightning did conspire
- To tear the world, or set it all on fire.
- What trust to things below, whenas we see,
- As men, the heavens have their hypocrisy?
- 203. LIPS TONGUELESS.
- For my part, I never care
- For those lips that tongue-tied are:
- Tell-tales I would have them be
- Of my mistress and of me.
- Let them prattle how that I
- Sometimes freeze and sometimes fry:
- Let them tell how she doth move
- Fore or backward in her love:
- Let them speak by gentle tones,
- One and th' other's passions:
- How we watch, and seldom sleep;
- How by willows we do weep;
- How by stealth we meet, and then
- Kiss, and sigh, so part again.
- This the lips we will permit
- For to tell, not publish it.
- 204. TO THE FEVER, NOT TO TROUBLE JULIA.
- Thou'st dar'd too far; but, fury, now forbear
- To give the least disturbance to her hair:
- But less presume to lay a plait upon
- Her skin's most smooth and clear expansion.
- 'Tis like a lawny firmament as yet,
- Quite dispossess'd of either fray or fret.
- Come thou not near that film so finely spread,
- Where no one piece is yet unlevelled.
- This if thou dost, woe to thee, fury, woe,
- I'll send such frost, such hail, such sleet, and snow,
- Such flesh-quakes, palsies, and such fears as shall
- Dead thee to th' most, if not destroy thee all.
- And thou a thousand thousand times shalt be
- More shak'd thyself than she is scorch'd by thee.
- 205. TO VIOLETS.
- Welcome, maids-of-honour!
- You do bring
- In the spring,
- And wait upon her.
- She has virgins many,
- Fresh and fair;
- Yet you are
- More sweet than any.
- You're the maiden posies,
- And so grac'd
- To be plac'd
- 'Fore damask roses.
- Yet, though thus respected,
- By-and-by
- Ye do lie,
- Poor girls, neglected.
- 207. TO CARNATIONS. A SONG.
- Stay while ye will, or go
- And leave no scent behind ye:
- Yet, trust me, I shall know
- The place where I may find ye.
- Within my Lucia's cheek,
- Whose livery ye wear,
- Play ye at hide or seek,
- I'm sure to find ye there.
- 208. TO THE VIRGINS, TO MAKE MUCH OF TIME.
- Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,
- Old time is still a-flying:
- And this same flower that smiles to-day
- To-morrow will be dying.
- The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun,
- The higher he's a-getting,
- The sooner will his race be run,
- And nearer he's to setting.
- That age is best which is the first,
- When youth and blood are warmer;
- But being spent, the worse, and worst
- Times still succeed the former.
- Then be not coy, but use your time,
- And while ye may go marry:
- For having lost but once your prime
- You may for ever tarry.
- 209. SAFETY TO LOOK TO ONESELF.
- For my neighbour I'll not know,
- Whether high he builds or no:
- Only this I'll look upon,
- Firm be my foundation.
- Sound or unsound, let it be!
- 'Tis the lot ordain'd for me.
- He who to the ground does fall
- _Has not whence to sink at all_.
- 210. TO HIS FRIEND, ON THE UNTUNABLE TIMES.
- Play I could once; but, gentle friend, you see
- My harp hung up here on the willow tree.
- Sing I could once; and bravely, too, inspire
- With luscious numbers my melodious lyre.
- Draw I could once, although not stocks or stones,
- Amphion-like, men made of flesh and bones,
- Whither I would; but ah! I know not how,
- I feel in me this transmutation now.
- Grief, my dear friend, has first my harp unstrung,
- Wither'd my hand, and palsy-struck my tongue.
- 211. HIS POETRY HIS PILLAR.
- Only a little more
- I have to write,
- Then I'll give o'er,
- And bid the world good-night.
- 'Tis but a flying minute
- That I must stay,
- Or linger in it;
- And then I must away.
- O time that cut'st down all
- And scarce leav'st here
- Memorial
- Of any men that were.
- How many lie forgot
- In vaults beneath?
- And piecemeal rot
- Without a fame in death?
- Behold this living stone
- I rear for me,
- Ne'er to be thrown
- Down, envious Time, by thee.
- Pillars let some set up
- If so they please:
- Here is my hope
- And my Pyramides.
- 212. SAFETY ON THE SHORE.
- What though the sea be calm? Trust to the shore,
- Ships have been drown'd where late they danc'd before.
- 213. A PASTORAL UPON THE BIRTH OF PRINCE CHARLES. PRESENTED TO THE KING,
- AND SET BY MR. NIC. LANIERE.
- _The Speakers_, Mirtillo, Amintas _and_ Amarillis.
- _Amin._ Good-day, Mirtillo. _Mirt._ And to you no less,
- And all fair signs lead on our shepherdess.
- _Amar._ With all white luck to you. _Mirt._ But say, what news
- Stirs in our sheep-walk? _Amin._ None, save that my ewes,
- My wethers, lambs, and wanton kids are well,
- Smooth, fair and fat! none better I can tell:
- Or that this day Menalcas keeps a feast
- For his sheep-shearers. _Mirt._ True, these are the least;
- But, dear Amintas and sweet Amarillis,
- Rest but a while here, by this bank of lilies,
- And lend a gentle ear to one report
- The country has. _Amin._ From whence? _Amar._ From whence?
- _Mirt._ The Court.
- Three days before the shutting in of May
- (With whitest wool be ever crown'd that day!)
- To all our joy a sweet-fac'd child was born,
- More tender than the childhood of the morn.
- _Chor._ Pan pipe to him, and bleats of lambs and sheep
- Let lullaby the pretty prince asleep!
- _Mirt._ And that his birth should be more singular
- At noon of day was seen a silver star,
- Bright as the wise men's torch which guided them
- To God's sweet babe, when born at Bethlehem;
- While golden angels (some have told to me)
- Sung out his birth with heavenly minstrelsy.
- _Amin._ O rare! But is't a trespass if we three
- Should wend along his babyship to see?
- _Mirt._ Not so, not so.
- _Chor._ But if it chance to prove
- At most a fault, 'tis but a fault of love.
- _Amar._ But, dear Mirtillo, I have heard it told
- Those learned men brought incense, myrrh and gold
- From countries far, with store of spices sweet,
- And laid them down for offerings at his feet.
- _Mirt._ 'Tis true, indeed; and each of us will bring
- Unto our smiling and our blooming king
- A neat, though not so great an offering.
- _Amar._ A garland for my gift shall be
- Of flowers ne'er suck'd by th' thieving bee;
- And all most sweet; yet all less sweet than he.
- _Amin._ And I will bear, along with you,
- Leaves dropping down the honeyed dew,
- With oaten pipes as sweet as new.
- _Mirt._ And I a sheep-hook will bestow,
- To have his little kingship know,
- As he is prince, he's shepherd too.
- _Chor._ Come, let's away, and quickly let's be dress'd,
- And quickly give--_the swiftest grace is best_.
- And when before him we have laid our treasures,
- We'll bless the babe, then back to country pleasures.
- _White_, favourable.
- 214. TO THE LARK.
- Good speed, for I this day
- Betimes my matins say:
- Because I do
- Begin to woo,
- Sweet-singing lark,
- Be thou the clerk,
- And know thy when
- To say, Amen.
- And if I prove
- Bless'd in my love,
- Then thou shalt be
- High-priest to me,
- At my return,
- To incense burn;
- And so to solemnise
- Love's and my sacrifice.
- 215. THE BUBBLE. A SONG.
- To my revenge and to her desperate fears
- Fly, thou made bubble of my sighs and tears.
- In the wild air when thou hast rolled about,
- And, like a blasting planet, found her out.
- Stoop, mount, pass by to take her eye, then glare
- Like to a dreadful comet in the air:
- Next, when thou dost perceive her fixed sight
- For thy revenge to be most opposite,
- Then, like a globe or ball of wild-fire, fly,
- And break thyself in shivers on her eye.
- 216. A MEDITATION FOR HIS MISTRESS.
- You are a tulip seen to-day,
- But, dearest, of so short a stay
- That where you grew scarce man can say.
- You are a lovely July-flower,
- Yet one rude wind or ruffling shower
- Will force you hence, and in an hour.
- You are a sparkling rose i' th' bud,
- Yet lost ere that chaste flesh and blood
- Can show where you or grew or stood.
- You are a full-spread, fair-set vine,
- And can with tendrils love entwine,
- Yet dried ere you distil your wine.
- You are like balm enclosed well
- In amber, or some crystal shell,
- Yet lost ere you transfuse your smell.
- You are a dainty violet,
- Yet wither'd ere you can be set
- Within the virgin's coronet.
- You are the queen all flowers among,
- But die you must, fair maid, ere long,
- As he, the maker of this song.
- 217. THE BLEEDING HAND; OR, THE SPRIG OF EGLANTINE GIVEN TO A MAID.
- From this bleeding hand of mine
- Take this sprig of eglantine,
- Which, though sweet unto your smell,
- Yet the fretful briar will tell,
- He who plucks the sweets shall prove
- Many thorns to be in love.
- 218. LYRIC FOR LEGACIES.
- Gold I've none, for use or show,
- Neither silver to bestow
- At my death; but this much know;
- That each lyric here shall be
- Of my love a legacy,
- Left to all posterity.
- Gentle friends, then do but please
- To accept such coins as these
- As my last remembrances.
- 219. A DIRGE UPON THE DEATH OF THE RIGHT VALIANT LORD, BERNARD STUART.
- Hence, hence, profane! soft silence let us have
- While we this trental sing about thy grave.
- Had wolves or tigers seen but thee,
- They would have showed civility;
- And, in compassion of thy years,
- Washed those thy purple wounds with tears.
- But since thou'rt slain, and in thy fall
- The drooping kingdom suffers all;
- _Chor._ This we will do, we'll daily come
- And offer tears upon thy tomb:
- And if that they will not suffice,
- Thou shall have souls for sacrifice.
- Sleep in thy peace, while we with spice perfume thee,
- And cedar wash thee, that no times consume thee.
- Live, live thou dost, and shall; for why?
- _Souls do not with their bodies die_:
- Ignoble offsprings, they may fall
- Into the flames of funeral:
- Whenas the chosen seed shall spring
- Fresh, and for ever flourishing.
- _Chor._ And times to come shall, weeping, read thy glory
- Less in these marble stones than in thy story.
- _Trental_, a dirge; but see Note.
- _Cedar_, oil of cedar.
- 220. TO PERENNA, A MISTRESS.
- Dear Perenna, prithee come
- And with smallage dress my tomb:
- Add a cypress sprig thereto,
- With a tear, and so Adieu.
- _Smallage_, water-parsley.
- 223. THE FAIRY TEMPLE; OR, OBERON'S CHAPEL
- DEDICATED TO MR. JOHN MERRIFIELD, COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW.
- Rare temples thou hast seen, I know,
- And rich for in and outward show:
- Survey this chapel, built alone,
- Without or lime, or wood, or stone:
- Then say if one thou'st seen more fine
- Than this, the fairies' once, now thine.
- THE TEMPLE.
- A way enchased with glass and beads
- There is, that to the chapel leads:
- Whose structure, for his holy rest,
- Is here the halcyon's curious nest:
- Into the which who looks shall see
- His temple of idolatry,
- Where he of godheads has such store,
- As Rome's pantheon had not more.
- His house of Rimmon this he calls,
- Girt with small bones instead of walls.
- First, in a niche, more black than jet,
- His idol-cricket there is set:
- Then in a polished oval by
- There stands his idol-beetle-fly:
- Next in an arch, akin to this,
- His idol-canker seated is:
- Then in a round is placed by these
- His golden god, Cantharides.
- So that, where'er ye look, ye see,
- No capital, no cornice free,
- Or frieze, from this fine frippery.
- Now this the fairies would have known,
- Theirs is a mixed religion:
- And some have heard the elves it call
- Part pagan, part papistical.
- If unto me all tongues were granted,
- I could not speak the saints here painted.
- Saint Tit, Saint Nit, Saint Is, Saint Itis,
- Who 'gainst Mab's-state placed here right is;
- Saint Will o' th' Wisp, of no great bigness,
- But _alias_ called here _Fatuus ignis_;
- Saint Frip, Saint Trip, Saint Fill, Saint Fillie
- Neither those other saintships will I
- Here go about for to recite
- Their number, almost infinite,
- Which one by one here set down are
- In this most curious calendar.
- First, at the entrance of the gate
- A little puppet-priest doth wait,
- Who squeaks to all the comers there:
- "_Favour your tongues who enter here;
- Pure hands bring hither without stain._"
- A second pules: "_Hence, hence, profane!_"
- Hard by, i' th' shell of half a nut,
- The holy-water there is put:
- A little brush of squirrel's hairs
- (Composed of odd, not even pairs,)
- Stands in the platter, or close by,
- To purge the fairy family.
- Near to the altar stands the priest,
- There off'ring up the Holy Grist,
- Ducking in mood and perfect tense,
- With (much-good-do-'t him) reverence.
- The altar is not here four-square,
- Nor in a form triangular,
- Nor made of glass, or wood, or stone,
- But of a little transverse bone;
- Which boys and bruckel'd children call
- (Playing for points and pins) cockal.
- Whose linen drapery is a thin
- Subtile and ductile codlin's skin:
- Which o'er the board is smoothly spread
- With little seal-work damasked.
- The fringe that circumbinds it too
- Is spangle-work of trembling dew,
- Which, gently gleaming, makes a show
- Like frost-work glitt'ring on the snow.
- Upon this fetuous board doth stand
- Something for show-bread, and at hand,
- Just in the middle of the altar,
- Upon an end, the fairy-psalter,
- Grac'd with the trout-flies' curious wings,
- Which serve for watchet ribbonings.
- Now, we must know, the elves are led
- Right by the rubric which they read.
- And, if report of them be true,
- They have their text for what they do;
- Aye, and their book of canons too.
- And, as Sir Thomas Parson tells,
- They have their book of articles;
- And, if that fairy-knight not lies,
- They have their book of homilies;
- And other scriptures that design
- A short but righteous discipline.
- The basin stands the board upon
- To take the free oblation:
- A little pin-dust, which they hold
- More precious than we prize our gold
- Which charity they give to many
- Poor of the parish, if there's any.
- Upon the ends of these neat rails,
- Hatch'd with the silver-light of snails,
- The elves in formal manner fix
- Two pure and holy candlesticks:
- In either which a small tall bent
- Burns for the altar's ornament.
- For sanctity they have to these
- Their curious copes and surplices
- Of cleanest cobweb hanging by
- In their religious vestery.
- They have their ash-pans and their brooms
- To purge the chapel and the rooms;
- Their many mumbling Mass-priests here,
- And many a dapper chorister,
- Their ush'ring vergers, here likewise
- Their canons and their chanteries.
- Of cloister-monks they have enow,
- Aye, and their abbey-lubbers too;
- And, if their legend do not lie,
- They much affect the papacy.
- And since the last is dead, there's hope
- _Elf Boniface shall next be pope_.
- They have their cups and chalices;
- Their pardons and indulgences;
- Their beads of nits, bells, books, and wax
- Candles, forsooth, and other knacks;
- Their holy oil, their fasting spittle;
- Their sacred salt here, not a little;
- Dry chips, old shoes, rags, grease and bones;
- Beside their fumigations
- To drive the devil from the cod-piece
- Of the friar (of work an odd piece).
- Many a trifle, too, and trinket,
- And for what use, scarce man would think it.
- Next, then, upon the chanters' side
- An apple's core is hung up dri'd,
- With rattling kernels, which is rung
- To call to morn and even-song.
- The saint to which the most he prays
- And offers incense nights and days,
- The lady of the lobster is,
- Whose foot-pace he doth stroke and kiss;
- And humbly chives of saffron brings
- For his most cheerful offerings.
- When, after these, h'as paid his vows
- He lowly to the altar bows;
- And then he dons the silk-worm's shed,
- Like a Turk's turban on his head,
- And reverently departeth thence,
- Hid in a cloud of frankincense,
- And by the glow-worm's light well guided,
- Goes to the feast that's now provided.
- _Halcyon_, king-fisher.
- _Saint Tit_, etc., see Note.
- _Mab's-state_, Mab's chair of state.
- _Bruckel'd_, begrimed.
- _Cockal_, a game played with four huckle-bones.
- _Codlin_, an apple.
- _Fetuous_, feat, neat.
- _Watchet_, pale blue.
- _Hatch'd_, inlaid.
- _Bent_, bent grass.
- _Nits_, nuts.
- _The lady of the lobster_, part of the lobster's apparatus for digestion.
- _Foot-pace_, a mat.
- _Chives_, shreds.
- 224. TO MISTRESS KATHERINE BRADSHAW, THE LOVELY, THAT CROWNED HIM WITH
- LAUREL.
- My muse in meads has spent her many hours,
- Sitting, and sorting several sorts of flowers
- To make for others garlands, and to set
- On many a head here many a coronet;
- But, amongst all encircled here, not one
- Gave her a day of coronation,
- Till you, sweet mistress, came and interwove
- A laurel for her, ever young as love--
- You first of all crown'd her: she must of due
- Render for that a crown of life to you.
- 225. THE PLAUDITE, OR END OF LIFE.
- If, after rude and boisterous seas,
- My wearied pinnace here finds ease;
- If so it be I've gained the shore
- With safety of a faithful oar;
- If, having run my barque on ground,
- Ye see the aged vessel crown'd:
- What's to be done, but on the sands
- Ye dance and sing and now clap hands?
- The first act's doubtful, but we say
- It is the last commends the play.
- 226. TO THE MOST VIRTUOUS MISTRESS POT, WHO MANY TIMES ENTERTAINED HIM.
- When I through all my many poems look,
- And see yourself to beautify my book,
- Methinks that only lustre doth appear
- A light fulfilling all the region here.
- Gild still with flames this firmament, and be
- A lamp eternal to my poetry.
- Which, if it now or shall hereafter shine,
- 'Twas by your splendour, lady, not by mine.
- The oil was yours; and that I owe for yet:
- _He pays the half who does confess the debt_.
- 227. TO MUSIC, TO BECALM HIS FEVER.
- Charm me asleep and melt me so
- With thy delicious numbers,
- That, being ravished, hence I go
- Away in easy slumbers.
- Ease my sick head
- And make my bed,
- Thou power that canst sever
- From me this ill;
- And quickly still,
- Though thou not kill,
- My fever.
- Thou sweetly canst convert the same
- From a consuming fire
- Into a gentle-licking flame,
- And make it thus expire.
- Then make me weep
- My pains asleep;
- And give me such reposes
- That I, poor I,
- May think thereby
- I live and die
- 'Mongst roses.
- Fall on me like a silent dew,
- Or like those maiden showers
- Which, by the peep of day, do strew
- A baptism o'er the flowers.
- Melt, melt my pains
- With thy soft strains;
- That, having ease me given,
- With full delight
- I leave this light,
- And take my flight
- For heaven.
- 228. UPON A GENTLEWOMAN WITH A SWEET VOICE.
- So long you did not sing or touch your lute,
- We knew 'twas flesh and blood that there sat mute.
- But when your playing and your voice came in,
- 'Twas no more you then, but a cherubin.
- 229. UPON CUPID.
- As lately I a garland bound,
- 'Mongst roses I there Cupid found;
- I took him, put him in my cup,
- And drunk with wine, I drank him up.
- Hence then it is that my poor breast
- Could never since find any rest.
- 230. UPON JULIA'S BREASTS.
- Display thy breasts, my Julia--there let me
- Behold that circummortal purity,
- Between whose glories there my lips I'll lay,
- Ravish'd in that fair _via lactea_.
- _Circummortal_, more than mortal.
- 231. BEST TO BE MERRY.
- Fools are they who never know
- How the times away do go;
- But for us, who wisely see
- Where the bounds of black death be,
- Let's live merrily, and thus
- Gratify the Genius.
- 232. THE CHANGES TO CORINNA.
- Be not proud, but now incline
- Your soft ear to discipline.
- You have changes in your life--
- Sometimes peace and sometimes strife;
- You have ebbs of face and flows,
- As your health or comes or goes;
- You have hopes, and doubts, and fears
- Numberless, as are your hairs.
- You have pulses that do beat
- High, and passions less of heat.
- You are young, but must be old,
- And, to these, ye must be told
- Time ere long will come and plough
- Loathed furrows in your brow:
- And the dimness of your eye
- Will no other thing imply
- But you must die
- As well as I.
- 234. NEGLECT.
- _Art quickens nature; care will make a face;
- Neglected beauty perisheth apace._
- 235. UPON HIMSELF.
- Mop-eyed I am, as some have said,
- Because I've lived so long a maid:
- But grant that I should wedded be,
- Should I a jot the better see?
- No, I should think that marriage might,
- Rather than mend, put out the light.
- _Mop-eyed_, shortsighted.
- 236. UPON A PHYSICIAN.
- Thou cam'st to cure me, doctor, of my cold,
- And caught'st thyself the more by twenty fold:
- Prithee go home; and for thy credit be
- First cured thyself, then come and cure me.
- 238. TO THE ROSE. A SONG.
- Go, happy rose, and interwove
- With other flowers, bind my love.
- Tell her, too, she must not be
- Longer flowing, longer free,
- That so oft has fetter'd me.
- Say, if she's fretful, I have bands
- Of pearl and gold to bind her hands.
- Tell her, if she struggle still,
- I have myrtle rods (at will)
- For to tame, though not to kill.
- Take thou my blessing, thus, and go
- And tell her this, but do not so,
- Lest a handsome anger fly,
- Like a lightning, from her eye,
- And burn thee up as well as I.
- 240. TO HIS BOOK.
- Thou art a plant sprung up to wither never,
- But like a laurel to grow green for ever.
- 241. UPON A PAINTED GENTLEWOMAN.
- Men say y'are fair, and fair ye are, 'tis true;
- But, hark! we praise the painter now, not you.
- 243. DRAW-GLOVES.
- At draw-gloves we'll play,
- And prithee let's lay
- A wager, and let it be this:
- Who first to the sum
- Of twenty shall come,
- Shall have for his winning a kiss.
- _Draw-gloves_, a game of talking by the fingers.
- 244. TO MUSIC, TO BECALM A SWEET-SICK YOUTH.
- Charms, that call down the moon from out her sphere,
- On this sick youth work your enchantments here:
- Bind up his senses with your numbers so
- As to entrance his pain, or cure his woe.
- Fall gently, gently, and a while him keep
- Lost in the civil wilderness of sleep:
- That done, then let him, dispossessed of pain,
- Like to a slumb'ring bride, awake again.
- 245. TO THE HIGH AND NOBLE PRINCE GEORGE, DUKE, MARQUIS, AND EARL OF
- BUCKINGHAM.
- Never my book's perfection did appear
- Till I had got the name of Villars here:
- Now 'tis so full that when therein I look
- I see a cloud of glory fills my book.
- Here stand it still to dignify our Muse,
- Your sober handmaid, who doth wisely choose
- Your name to be a laureate wreath to her
- Who doth both love and fear you, honoured sir.
- 246. HIS RECANTATION.
- Love, I recant,
- And pardon crave
- That lately I offended;
- But 'twas,
- Alas!
- To make a brave,
- But no disdain intended.
- No more I'll vaunt,
- For now I see
- Thou only hast the power
- To find
- And bind
- A heart that's free,
- And slave it in an hour.
- 247. THE COMING OF GOOD LUCK.
- So good luck came, and on my roof did light,
- Like noiseless snow, or as the dew of night:
- Not all at once, but gently, as the trees
- Are by the sunbeams tickled by degrees.
- 248. THE PRESENT; OR, THE BAG OF THE BEE.
- Fly to my mistress, pretty pilfering bee,
- And say thou bring'st this honey bag from me:
- When on her lip thou hast thy sweet dew placed,
- Mark if her tongue but slyly steal a taste.
- If so, we live; if not, with mournful hum
- Toll forth my death; next, to my burial come.
- 249. ON LOVE.
- Love bade me ask a gift,
- And I no more did move
- But this, that I might shift
- Still with my clothes my love:
- That favour granted was;
- Since which, though I love many,
- Yet so it comes to pass
- That long I love not any.
- 250. THE HOCK-CART OR HARVEST HOME. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE MILDMAY,
- EARL OF WESTMORELAND.
- Come, sons of summer, by whose toil
- We are the lords of wine and oil:
- By whose tough labours and rough hands
- We rip up first, then reap our lands.
- Crowned with the ears of corn, now come,
- And to the pipe sing harvest home.
- Come forth, my lord, and see the cart
- Dressed up with all the country art:
- See here a maukin, there a sheet,
- As spotless pure as it is sweet:
- The horses, mares, and frisking fillies,
- Clad all in linen white as lilies.
- The harvest swains and wenches bound
- For joy, to see the hock-cart crowned.
- About the cart, hear how the rout
- Of rural younglings raise the shout;
- Pressing before, some coming after,
- Those with a shout, and these with laughter.
- Some bless the cart, some kiss the sheaves,
- Some prank them up with oaken leaves:
- Some cross the fill-horse, some with great
- Devotion stroke the home-borne wheat:
- While other rustics, less attent
- To prayers than to merriment,
- Run after with their breeches rent.
- Well, on, brave boys, to your lord's hearth,
- Glitt'ring with fire, where, for your mirth,
- Ye shall see first the large and chief
- Foundation of your feast, fat beef:
- With upper stories, mutton, veal
- And bacon (which makes full the meal),
- With sev'ral dishes standing by,
- As here a custard, there a pie,
- And here all-tempting frumenty.
- And for to make the merry cheer,
- If smirking wine be wanting here,
- There's that which drowns all care, stout beer;
- Which freely drink to your lord's health,
- Then to the plough, the commonwealth,
- Next to your flails, your fans, your fats,
- Then to the maids with wheaten hats:
- To the rough sickle, and crook'd scythe,
- Drink, frolic boys, till all be blithe.
- Feed, and grow fat; and as ye eat
- Be mindful that the lab'ring neat,
- As you, may have their fill of meat.
- And know, besides, ye must revoke
- The patient ox unto the yoke,
- And all go back unto the plough
- And harrow, though they're hanged up now.
- And, you must know, your lord's word's true,
- Feed him ye must, whose food fills you;
- And that this pleasure is like rain,
- Not sent ye for to drown your pain,
- But for to make it spring again.
- _Maukin_, a cloth.
- _Fill-horse_, shaft-horse.
- _Frumenty_, wheat boiled in milk.
- _Fats_, vats.
- 251. THE PERFUME.
- To-morrow, Julia, I betimes must rise,
- For some small fault to offer sacrifice:
- The altar's ready: fire to consume
- The fat; breathe thou, and there's the rich perfume.
- 252. UPON HER VOICE.
- Let but thy voice engender with the string,
- And angels will be born while thou dost sing.
- 253. NOT TO LOVE.
- He that will not love must be
- My scholar, and learn this of me:
- There be in love as many fears
- As the summer's corn has ears:
- Sighs, and sobs, and sorrows more
- Than the sand that makes the shore:
- Freezing cold and fiery heats,
- Fainting swoons and deadly sweats;
- Now an ague, then a fever,
- Both tormenting lovers ever.
- Would'st thou know, besides all these,
- How hard a woman 'tis to please,
- How cross, how sullen, and how soon
- She shifts and changes like the moon.
- How false, how hollow she's in heart:
- And how she is her own least part:
- How high she's priz'd, and worth but small;
- Little thou'lt love, or not at all.
- 254. TO MUSIC. A SONG.
- Music, thou queen of heaven, care-charming spell,
- That strik'st a stillness into hell:
- Thou that tam'st tigers, and fierce storms that rise,
- With thy soul-melting lullabies,
- Fall down, down, down from those thy chiming spheres,
- To charm our souls, as thou enchant'st our ears.
- 255. TO THE WESTERN WIND.
- Sweet western wind, whose luck it is,
- Made rival with the air,
- To give Perenna's lip a kiss,
- And fan her wanton hair.
- Bring me but one, I'll promise thee,
- Instead of common showers,
- Thy wings shall be embalm'd by me,
- And all beset with flowers.
- 256. UPON THE DEATH OF HIS SPARROW. AN ELEGY.
- Why do not all fresh maids appear
- To work love's sampler only here,
- Where spring-time smiles throughout the year?
- Are not here rosebuds, pinks, all flowers
- Nature begets by th' sun and showers,
- Met in one hearse-cloth to o'erspread
- The body of the under-dead?
- Phil, the late dead, the late dead dear,
- O! may no eye distil a tear
- For you once lost, who weep not here!
- Had Lesbia, too-too kind, but known
- This sparrow, she had scorn'd her own:
- And for this dead which under lies
- Wept out her heart, as well as eyes.
- But, endless peace, sit here and keep
- My Phil the time he has to sleep;
- And thousand virgins come and weep
- To make these flowery carpets show
- Fresh as their blood, and ever grow,
- Till passengers shall spend their doom:
- Not Virgil's gnat had such a tomb.
- _Phil_, otherwise Philip or Phip, was a pet name for a sparrow.
- _Virgil's gnat_, the _Culex_ attributed to Virgil.
- 257. TO PRIMROSES FILLED WITH MORNING DEW.
- Why do ye weep, sweet babes? can tears
- Speak grief in you,
- Who were but born
- Just as the modest morn
- Teem'd her refreshing dew?
- Alas! you have not known that shower
- That mars a flower,
- Nor felt th' unkind
- Breath of a blasting wind,
- Nor are ye worn with years,
- Or warp'd as we,
- Who think it strange to see
- Such pretty flowers, like to orphans young,
- To speak by tears before ye have a tongue.
- Speak, whimp'ring younglings, and make known
- The reason why
- Ye droop and weep;
- Is it for want of sleep?
- Or childish lullaby?
- Or that ye have not seen as yet
- The violet?
- Or brought a kiss
- From that sweetheart to this?
- No, no, this sorrow shown
- By your tears shed
- Would have this lecture read:
- That things of greatest, so of meanest worth,
- Conceiv'd with grief are, and with tears brought forth.
- 258. HOW ROSES CAME RED.
- Roses at first were white,
- Till they could not agree,
- Whether my Sappho's breast
- Or they more white should be.
- But, being vanquish'd quite,
- A blush their cheeks bespread;
- Since which, believe the rest,
- The roses first came red.
- 259. COMFORT TO A LADY UPON THE DEATH OF HER HUSBAND.
- Dry your sweet cheek, long drown'd with sorrow's rain,
- Since, clouds dispers'd, suns gild the air again.
- Seas chafe and fret, and beat, and overboil,
- But turn soon after calm as balm or oil.
- Winds have their time to rage; but when they cease
- The leafy trees nod in a still-born peace.
- Your storm is over; lady, now appear
- Like to the peeping springtime of the year.
- Off then with grave clothes; put fresh colours on,
- And flow and flame in your vermilion.
- Upon your cheek sat icicles awhile;
- Now let the rose reign like a queen, and smile.
- 260. HOW VIOLETS CAME BLUE.
- Love on a day, wise poets tell,
- Some time in wrangling spent,
- Whether the violets should excel,
- Or she, in sweetest scent.
- But Venus having lost the day,
- Poor girls, she fell on you:
- And beat ye so, as some dare say,
- Her blows did make ye blue.
- 262. TO THE WILLOW-TREE.
- Thou art to all lost love the best,
- The only true plant found,
- Wherewith young men and maids distres't,
- And left of love, are crown'd.
- When once the lover's rose is dead,
- Or laid aside forlorn:
- Then willow-garlands 'bout the head
- Bedew'd with tears are worn.
- When with neglect, the lovers' bane,
- Poor maids rewarded be,
- For their love lost, their only gain
- Is but a wreath from thee.
- And underneath thy cooling shade,
- When weary of the light,
- The love-spent youth and love-sick maid
- Come to weep out the night.
- 263. MRS. ELIZ. WHEELER, UNDER THE NAME OF THE LOST SHEPHERDESS.
- Among the myrtles as I walk'd,
- Love and my sighs thus intertalk'd:
- Tell me, said I, in deep distress,
- Where I may find my shepherdess.
- Thou fool, said Love, know'st thou not this?
- In everything that's sweet she is.
- In yond' carnation go and seek,
- There thou shalt find her lip and cheek:
- In that enamell'd pansy by,
- There thou shalt have her curious eye:
- In bloom of peach and rose's bud,
- There waves the streamer of her blood.
- 'Tis true, said I, and thereupon
- I went to pluck them one by one,
- To make of parts a union:
- But on a sudden all were gone.
- At which I stopp'd; said Love, these be
- The true resemblances of thee;
- For, as these flowers, thy joys must die,
- And in the turning of an eye:
- And all thy hopes of her must wither,
- Like those short sweets, ere knit together.
- 264. TO THE KING.
- If when these lyrics, Cæsar, you shall hear,
- And that Apollo shall so touch your ear
- As for to make this, that, or any one,
- Number your own, by free adoption;
- That verse, of all the verses here, shall be
- The heir to this _great realm of poetry_.
- 265. TO THE QUEEN.
- _Goddess of youth, and lady of the spring,
- Most fit to be the consort to a king_,
- Be pleas'd to rest you in this sacred grove
- Beset with myrtles, whose each leaf drops love.
- Many a sweet-fac'd wood-nymph here is seen,
- Of which chaste order you are now the queen:
- Witness their homage when they come and strew
- Your walks with flowers, and give their crowns to you.
- Your leafy throne, with lily-work possess,
- And be both princess here and poetess.
- 266. THE POET'S GOOD WISHES FOR THE MOST HOPEFUL AND HANDSOME PRINCE,
- THE DUKE OF YORK.
- May his pretty dukeship grow
- Like t'a rose of Jericho:
- Sweeter far than ever yet
- Showers or sunshines could beget.
- May the Graces and the Hours
- Strew his hopes and him with flowers:
- And so dress him up with love
- As to be the chick of Jove.
- May the thrice-three sisters sing
- Him the sovereign of their spring:
- And entitle none to be
- Prince of Helicon but he.
- May his soft foot, where it treads,
- Gardens thence produce and meads:
- And those meadows full be set
- With the rose and violet.
- May his ample name be known
- To the last succession:
- And his actions high be told
- Through the world, but writ in gold.
- 267. TO ANTHEA, WHO MAY COMMAND HIM ANYTHING.
- Bid me to live, and I will live
- Thy Protestant to be,
- Or bid me love, and I will give
- A loving heart to thee.
- A heart as soft, a heart as kind,
- A heart as sound and free
- As in the whole world thou canst find,
- That heart I'll give to thee.
- Bid that heart stay, and it will stay
- To honour thy decree:
- Or bid it languish quite away,
- And't shall do so for thee.
- Bid me to weep, and I will weep
- While I have eyes to see:
- And, having none, yet I will keep
- A heart to weep for thee.
- Bid me despair, and I'll despair
- Under that cypress-tree:
- Or bid me die, and I will dare
- E'en death to die for thee.
- Thou art my life, my love, my heart,
- The very eyes of me:
- And hast command of every part
- To live and die for thee.
- 268. PREVISION OR PROVISION.
- _That prince takes soon enough the victor's room
- Who first provides not to be overcome._
- 269. OBEDIENCE IN SUBJECTS.
- _The gods to kings the judgment give to sway:
- The subjects only glory to obey._
- 270. MORE POTENT, LESS PECCANT.
- _He that may sin, sins least: leave to transgress
- Enfeebles much the seeds of wickedness._
- 271. UPON A MAID THAT DIED THE DAY SHE WAS MARRIED.
- That morn which saw me made a bride,
- The evening witness'd that I died.
- Those holy lights, wherewith they guide
- Unto the bed the bashful bride,
- Serv'd but as tapers for to burn
- And light my relics to their urn.
- This epitaph, which here you see,
- Supplied the epithalamy.
- 274. TO MEADOWS.
- Ye have been fresh and green,
- Ye have been fill'd with flowers,
- And ye the walks have been
- Where maids have spent their hours.
- You have beheld how they
- With wicker arks did come
- To kiss and bear away
- The richer cowslips home.
- Y'ave heard them sweetly sing,
- And seen them in a round:
- Each virgin like a spring,
- With honeysuckles crown'd.
- But now we see none here
- Whose silvery feet did tread,
- And with dishevell'd hair
- Adorn'd this smoother mead.
- Like unthrifts, having spent
- Your stock and needy grown,
- Y'are left here to lament
- Your poor estates, alone.
- _Round_, a rustic dance.
- 275. CROSSES.
- Though good things answer many good intents,
- _Crosses do still bring forth the best events_.
- 276. MISERIES.
- Though hourly comforts from the gods we see,
- _No life is yet life-proof from misery_.
- 278. TO HIS HOUSEHOLD GODS.
- Rise, household gods, and let us go;
- But whither I myself not know.
- First, let us dwell on rudest seas;
- Next, with severest savages;
- Last, let us make our best abode
- Where human foot as yet ne'er trod:
- Search worlds of ice, and rather there
- Dwell than in loathed Devonshire.
- 279. TO THE NIGHTINGALE AND ROBIN REDBREAST.
- When I departed am, ring thou my knell,
- Thou pitiful and pretty Philomel:
- And when I'm laid out for a corse, then be
- Thou sexton, redbreast, for to cover me.
- 280. TO THE YEW AND CYPRESS TO GRACE HIS FUNERAL.
- Both you two have
- Relation to the grave:
- And where
- The funeral-trump sounds, you are there,
- I shall be made,
- Ere long, a fleeting shade:
- Pray, come
- And do some honour to my tomb.
- Do not deny
- My last request; for I
- Will be
- Thankful to you, or friends, for me.
- 281. I CALL AND I CALL.
- I call, I call: who do ye call?
- The maids to catch this cowslip ball:
- But since these cowslips fading be,
- Troth, leave the flowers, and, maids, take me.
- Yet, if that neither you will do,
- Speak but the word and I'll take you.
- 282. ON A PERFUMED LADY.
- You say you're sweet; how should we know
- Whether that you be sweet or no?
- From powders and perfumes keep free,
- Then we shall smell how sweet you be.
- 283. A NUPTIAL SONG OR EPITHALAMY ON SIR CLIPSEBY CREW AND HIS LADY.
- What's that we see from far? the spring of day
- Bloom'd from the east, or fair enjewell'd May
- Blown out of April, or some new
- Star filled with glory to our view,
- Reaching at heaven,
- To add a nobler planet to the seven?
- Say, or do we not descry
- Some goddess in a cloud of tiffany
- To move, or rather the
- Emergent Venus from the sea?
- 'Tis she! 'tis she! or else some more divine
- Enlightened substance; mark how from the shrine
- Of holy saints she paces on,
- Treading upon vermilion
- And amber: spic-
- ing the chaft air with fumes of Paradise.
- Then come on, come on and yield
- A savour like unto a blessed field
- When the bedabbled morn
- Washes the golden ears of corn.
- See where she comes; and smell how all the street
- Breathes vineyards and pomegranates: O how sweet!
- As a fir'd altar is each stone,
- Perspiring pounded cinnamon.
- The phœnix' nest,
- Built up of odours, burneth in her breast.
- Who, therein, would not consume
- His soul to ash-heaps in that rich perfume?
- Bestroking fate the while
- He burns to embers on the pile.
- Hymen, O Hymen! tread the sacred ground;
- Show thy white feet and head with marjoram crown'd:
- Mount up thy flames and let thy torch
- Display the bridegroom in the porch,
- In his desires
- More towering, more disparkling than thy fires:
- Show her how his eyes do turn
- And roll about, and in their motions burn
- Their balls to cinders: haste
- Or else to ashes he will waste.
- Glide by the banks of virgins, then, and pass
- The showers of roses, lucky four-leav'd grass:
- The while the cloud of younglings sing
- And drown ye with a flowery spring;
- While some repeat
- Your praise and bless you, sprinkling you with wheat;
- While that others do divine,
- _Bless'd is the bride on whom the sun doth shine_;
- And thousands gladly wish
- You multiply as doth a fish.
- And, beauteous bride, we do confess y'are wise
- In dealing forth these bashful jealousies:
- In love's name do so; and a price
- Set on yourself by being nice:
- But yet take heed;
- What now you seem be not the same indeed,
- And turn apostate: love will,
- Part of the way be met or sit stone-still.
- On, then, and though you slow-
- ly go, yet, howsoever, go.
- And now y'are entered; see the coddled cook
- Runs from his torrid zone to pry and look
- And bless his dainty mistress: see
- The aged point out, "This is she
- Who now must sway
- The house (love shield her) with her yea and nay":
- And the smirk butler thinks it
- Sin in's napery not to express his wit;
- Each striving to devise
- Some gin wherewith to catch your eyes.
- To bed, to bed, kind turtles, now, and write
- This the short'st day, and this the longest night;
- But yet too short for you: 'tis we
- Who count this night as long as three,
- Lying alone,
- Telling the clock strike ten, eleven, twelve, one.
- Quickly, quickly then prepare,
- And let the young men and the bride-maids share
- Your garters; and their joints
- Encircle with the bridegroom's points.
- By the bride's eyes, and by the teeming life
- Of her green hopes, we charge ye that no strife
- (Farther than gentleness tends) gets place
- Among ye, striving for her lace:
- O do not fall
- Foul in these noble pastimes, lest ye call
- Discord in, and so divide
- The youthful bridegroom and the fragrant bride:
- Which love forfend; but spoken
- Be't to your praise, no peace was broken.
- Strip her of springtime, tender-whimpering maids,
- Now autumn's come, when all these flowery aids
- Of her delays must end; dispose
- That lady-smock, that pansy, and that rose
- Neatly apart,
- But for prick-madam and for gentle-heart,
- And soft maidens'-blush, the bride
- Makes holy these, all others lay aside:
- Then strip her, or unto her
- Let him come who dares undo her.
- And to enchant ye more, see everywhere
- About the roof a siren in a sphere,
- As we think, singing to the din
- Of many a warbling cherubin.
- O mark ye how
- The soul of nature melts in numbers: now
- See, a thousand Cupids fly
- To light their tapers at the bride's bright eye.
- To bed, or her they'll tire,
- Were she an element of fire.
- And to your more bewitching, see, the proud
- Plump bed bear up, and swelling like a cloud,
- Tempting the two too modest; can
- Ye see it brusle like a swan,
- And you be cold
- To meet it when it woos and seems to fold
- The arms to hug it? Throw, throw
- Yourselves into the mighty overflow
- Of that white pride, and drown
- The night with you in floods of down.
- The bed is ready, and the maze of love
- Looks for the treaders; everywhere is wove
- Wit and new mystery; read, and
- Put in practice, to understand
- And know each wile,
- Each hieroglyphic of a kiss or smile;
- And do it to the full; reach
- High in your own conceit, and some way teach
- Nature and art one more
- Play than they ever knew before.
- If needs we must for ceremony's sake,
- Bless a sack-posset, luck go with it, take
- The night-charm quickly, you have spells
- And magics for to end, and hells
- To pass; but such
- And of such torture as no one would grutch
- To live therein for ever: fry
- And consume, and grow again to die
- And live, and, in that case,
- Love the confusion of the place.
- But since it must be done, despatch, and sew
- Up in a sheet your bride, and what if so
- It be with rock or walls of brass
- Ye tower her up, as Danae was;
- Think you that this
- Or hell itself a powerful bulwark is?
- I tell ye no; but like a
- Bold bolt of thunder he will make his way,
- And rend the cloud, and throw
- The sheet about like flakes of snow.
- All now is hushed in silence: midwife-moon
- With all her owl-eyed issue begs a boon,
- Which you must grant; that's entrance; with
- Which extract, all we can call pith
- And quintessence
- Of planetary bodies, so commence,
- All fair constellations
- Looking upon ye, that two nations,
- Springing from two such fires
- May blaze the virtue of their sires.
- _Tiffany_, gauze.
- _More disparkling_, more widespreading.
- _Nice_, fastidious.
- _Coddled_, lit. boiled.
- _Lace_, girdle.
- _Brusle_, raise its feathers.
- _Grutch_, grumble.
- 284. THE SILKEN SNAKE.
- For sport my Julia threw a lace
- Of silk and silver at my face:
- Watchet the silk was, and did make
- A show as if't had been a snake:
- The suddenness did me afright,
- But though it scar'd, it did not bite.
- _Lace_, a girdle.
- _Watchet_, pale blue.
- 285. UPON HIMSELF.
- I am sieve-like, and can hold
- Nothing hot or nothing cold.
- Put in love, and put in too
- Jealousy, and both will through:
- Put in fear, and hope, and doubt;
- What comes in runs quickly out:
- Put in secrecies withal,
- Whate'er enters, out it shall:
- But if you can stop the sieve,
- For mine own part, I'd as lief
- Maids should say or virgins sing,
- Herrick keeps, as holds nothing.
- 286. UPON LOVE.
- Love's a thing, as I do hear,
- Ever full of pensive fear;
- Rather than to which I'll fall,
- Trust me, I'll not like at all.
- If to love I should intend,
- Let my hair then stand an end:
- And that terror likewise prove
- Fatal to me in my love.
- But if horror cannot slake
- Flames which would an entrance make
- Then the next thing I desire
- Is, to love and live i' th' fire.
- _An end_, on end.
- 287. REVERENCE TO RICHES.
- Like to the income must be our expense;
- _Man's fortune must be had in reverence_.
- 288. DEVOTION MAKES THE DEITY.
- _Who forms a godhead out of gold or stone
- Makes not a god, but he that prays to one._
- 289. TO ALL YOUNG MEN THAT LOVE.
- I could wish you all who love,
- That ye could your thoughts remove
- From your mistresses, and be
- Wisely wanton, like to me,
- I could wish you dispossessed
- Of that _fiend that mars your rest_,
- And with tapers comes to fright
- Your weak senses in the night.
- I could wish ye all who fry
- Cold as ice, or cool as I;
- But if flames best like ye, then,
- Much good do 't ye, gentlemen.
- I a merry heart will keep,
- While you wring your hands and weep.
- 290. THE EYES.
- 'Tis a known principle in war,
- The eyes be first that conquered are.
- 291. NO FAULT IN WOMEN.
- No fault in women to refuse
- The offer which they most would choose.
- No fault in women to confess
- How tedious they are in their dress.
- No fault in women to lay on
- The tincture of vermilion:
- And there to give the cheek a dye
- Of white, where nature doth deny.
- No fault in women to make show
- Of largeness when they're nothing so:
- (When true it is the outside swells
- With inward buckram, little else).
- No fault in women, though they be
- But seldom from suspicion free.
- No fault in womankind at all
- If they but slip and never fall.
- 293. OBERON'S FEAST.
- _Shapcot! to thee the fairy state
- I, with discretion, dedicate.
- Because thou prizest things that are
- Curious and unfamiliar.
- Take first the feast; these dishes gone,
- We'll see the Fairy Court anon._
- A little mushroom table spread,
- After short prayers, they set on bread;
- A moon-parch'd grain of purest wheat,
- With some small glittering grit to eat
- His choice bits with; then in a trice
- They make a feast less great than nice.
- But all this while his eye is serv'd,
- We must not think his ear was sterv'd;
- But that there was in place to stir
- His spleen, the chirring grasshopper,
- The merry cricket, puling fly,
- The piping gnat for minstrelsy.
- And now we must imagine first,
- The elves present, to quench his thirst,
- A pure seed-pearl of infant dew
- Brought and besweetened in a blue
- And pregnant violet, which done,
- His kitling eyes begin to run
- Quite through the table, where he spies
- The horns of papery butterflies:
- Of which he eats, and tastes a little
- Of that we call the cuckoo's spittle.
- A little fuzz-ball pudding stands
- By, yet not blessed by his hands;
- That was too coarse: but then forthwith
- He ventures boldly on the pith
- Of sugar'd rush, and eats the sagg
- And well-bestrutted bee's sweet bag:
- Gladding his palate with some store
- Of emmets' eggs; what would he more?
- But beards of mice, a newt's stewed thigh,
- A bloated earwig and a fly;
- With the red-capp'd worm that's shut
- Within the concave of a nut,
- Brown as his tooth. A little moth
- Late fatten'd in a piece of cloth:
- With withered cherries, mandrakes' ears,
- Moles' eyes; to these the slain stag's tears
- The unctuous dewlaps of a snail,
- The broke-heart of a nightingale
- O'ercome in music; with a wine
- Ne'er ravish'd from the flattering vine,
- But gently press'd from the soft side
- Of the most sweet and dainty bride,
- Brought in a dainty daisy, which
- He fully quaffs up to bewitch
- His blood to height; this done, commended
- Grace by his priest; _the feast is ended_.
- _Sagg_, laden.
- _Bestrutted_, swollen.
- 294. EVENT OF THINGS NOT IN OUR POWER.
- By time and counsel do the best we can,
- Th' event is never in the power of man.
- 295. UPON HER BLUSH.
- When Julia blushes she does show
- Cheeks like to roses when they blow.
- 296. MERITS MAKE THE MAN.
- Our honours and our commendations be
- Due to the merits, not authority.
- 297. TO VIRGINS.
- Hear, ye virgins, and I'll teach
- What the times of old did preach.
- Rosamond was in a bower
- Kept, as Danae in a tower:
- But yet Love, who subtle is,
- Crept to that, and came to this.
- Be ye lock'd up like to these,
- Or the rich Hesperides,
- Or those babies in your eyes,
- In their crystal nunneries;
- Notwithstanding Love will win,
- Or else force a passage in:
- And as coy be as you can,
- Gifts will get ye, or the man.
- _Babies in your eyes_, see Note to p. 17.
- 298. VIRTUE.
- Each must in virtue strive for to excel;
- _That man lives twice that lives the first life well_.
- 299. THE BELLMAN.
- From noise of scare-fires rest ye free,
- From murders _Benedicite_.
- From all mischances that may fright
- Your pleasing slumbers in the night,
- Mercy secure ye all, and keep
- The goblin from ye while ye sleep.
- Past one o'clock, and almost two!
- My masters all, good-day to you.
- _Scare-fires_, alarms of fire.
- 300. BASHFULNESS.
- Of all our parts, the eyes express
- The sweetest kind of bashfulness.
- 301. TO THE MOST ACCOMPLISHED GENTLEMAN, MASTER EDWARD NORGATE, CLERK OF
- THE SIGNET TO HIS MAJESTY. EPIG.
- For one so rarely tun'd to fit all parts,
- For one to whom espous'd are all the arts,
- Long have I sought for, but could never see
- Them all concentr'd in one man, but thee.
- Thus, thou that man art whom the fates conspir'd
- To make but one, and that's thyself, admir'd.
- 302. UPON PRUDENCE BALDWIN: HER SICKNESS.
- Prue, my dearest maid, is sick,
- Almost to be lunatic:
- Æsculapius! come and bring
- Means for her recovering;
- And a gallant cock shall be
- Offer'd up by her to thee.
- _Cock_, the traditional offering to Æsculapius; cp. the last words of
- Socrates; cp. Ben Jonson, Epig. xiii.
- 303. TO APOLLO. A SHORT HYMN.
- Phœbus! when that I a verse
- Or some numbers more rehearse,
- Tune my words that they may fall
- Each way smoothly musical:
- For which favour there shall be
- Swans devoted unto thee.
- 304. A HYMN TO BACCHUS.
- Bacchus, let me drink no more;
- Wild are seas that want a shore.
- When our drinking has no stint,
- There is no one pleasure in't.
- I have drank up, for to please
- Thee, that great cup Hercules:
- Urge no more, and there shall be
- Daffodils given up to thee.
- 306. ON HIMSELF.
- Here down my wearied limbs I'll lay;
- My pilgrim's staff, my weed of gray,
- My palmer's hat, my scallop's shell,
- My cross, my cord, and all, farewell.
- For having now my journey done,
- Just at the setting of the sun,
- Here I have found a chamber fit,
- God and good friends be thanked for it,
- Where if I can a lodger be,
- A little while from tramplers free,
- At my up-rising next I shall,
- If not requite, yet thank ye all.
- Meanwhile, the holy-rood hence fright
- The fouler fiend and evil sprite
- From scaring you or yours this night.
- 307. CASUALTIES.
- Good things that come of course, far less do please
- Than those which come by sweet contingencies.
- 308. BRIBES AND GIFTS GET ALL.
- Dead falls the cause if once the hand be mute;
- But let that speak, the client gets the suit.
- 309. THE END.
- If well thou hast begun, go on fore-right;
- _It is the end that crowns us, not the fight_.
- 310. UPON A CHILD THAT DIED.
- Here she lies, a pretty bud,
- Lately made of flesh and blood:
- Who as soon fell fast asleep
- As her little eyes did peep.
- Give her strewings, but not stir
- The earth that lightly covers her.
- 312. CONTENT, NOT CATES.
- 'Tis not the food, but the content
- That makes the table's merriment.
- Where trouble serves the board, we eat
- The platters there as soon as meat.
- A little pipkin with a bit
- Of mutton or of veal in it,
- Set on my table, trouble-free,
- More than a feast contenteth me.
- 313. THE ENTERTAINMENT; OR, PORCH-VERSE, AT THE MARRIAGE OF MR. HENRY
- NORTHLY AND THE MOST WITTY MRS. LETTICE YARD.
- Welcome! but yet no entrance, till we bless
- First you, then you, and both for white success.
- Profane no porch, young man and maid, for fear
- Ye wrong the Threshold-god that keeps peace here:
- Please him, and then all good-luck will betide
- You, the brisk bridegroom, you, the dainty bride.
- Do all things sweetly, and in comely wise;
- Put on your garlands first, then sacrifice:
- That done, when both of you have seemly fed,
- We'll call on Night, to bring ye both to bed:
- Where, being laid, all fair signs looking on,
- Fish-like, increase then to a million;
- And millions of spring-times may ye have,
- Which spent, one death bring to ye both one grave.
- 314. THE GOOD-NIGHT OR BLESSING.
- Blessings in abundance come
- To the bride and to her groom;
- May the bed and this short night
- Know the fulness of delight!
- Pleasures many here attend ye,
- And, ere long, a boy Love send ye
- Curled and comely, and so trim,
- Maids, in time, may ravish him.
- Thus a dew of graces fall
- On ye both; good-night to all.
- 316. TO DAFFODILS.
- Fair daffodils, we weep to see
- You haste away so soon;
- As yet the early-rising sun
- Has not attain'd his noon.
- Stay, stay,
- Until the hasting day
- Has run
- But to the evensong;
- And, having prayed together, we
- Will go with you along.
- We have short time to stay, as you,
- We have as short a spring;
- As quick a growth to meet decay,
- As you, or anything.
- We die,
- As your hours do, and dry
- Away,
- Like to the summer's rain;
- Or as the pearls of morning's dew,
- Ne'er to be found again.
- 318. UPON A LADY THAT DIED IN CHILD-BED, AND LEFT A DAUGHTER BEHIND HER.
- As gilliflowers do but stay
- To blow, and seed, and so away;
- So you, sweet lady, sweet as May,
- The garden's glory, lived a while
- To lend the world your scent and smile.
- But when your own fair print was set
- Once in a virgin flosculet,
- Sweet as yourself, and newly blown,
- To give that life, resigned your own:
- But so as still the mother's power
- Lives in the pretty lady-flower.
- 319. A NEW-YEAR'S GIFT SENT TO SIR SIMON STEWARD.
- No news of navies burnt at seas;
- No noise of late-spawn'd tittyries;
- No closet plot, or open vent,
- That frights men with a parliament;
- No new device or late-found trick
- To read by the stars the kingdom's sick;
- No gin to catch the state, or wring
- The freeborn nostril of the king,
- We send to you; but here a jolly
- Verse, crown'd with ivy and with holly,
- That tells of winter's tales and mirth,
- That milkmaids make about the hearth,
- Of Christmas sports, the wassail-bowl,
- That['s] tost up, after fox-i'-th'-hole;
- Of blind-man-buff, and of the care
- That young men have to shoe the mare;
- Of Twelfth-tide cakes, of peas and beans,
- Wherewith you make those merry scenes,
- Whenas ye choose your king and queen,
- And cry out: _Hey, for our town green_;
- Of ash-heaps, in the which ye use
- Husbands and wives by streaks to choose;
- Of crackling laurel, which fore-sounds
- A plenteous harvest to your grounds:
- Of these and such-like things for shift,
- We send instead of New-Year's gift.
- Read then, and when your faces shine
- With buxom meat and cap'ring wine,
- Remember us in cups full crown'd,
- And let our city-health go round,
- Quite through the young maids and the men,
- To the ninth number, if not ten;
- Until the fired chesnuts leap
- For joy to see the fruits ye reap
- From the plump chalice and the cup,
- That tempts till it be tossed up;
- Then as ye sit about your embers,
- Call not to mind those fled Decembers,
- But think on these that are t' appear
- As daughters to the instant year:
- Sit crown'd with rosebuds, and carouse
- Till Liber Pater twirls the house
- About your ears; and lay upon
- The year your cares that's fled and gone.
- And let the russet swains the plough
- And harrow hang up, resting now;
- And to the bagpipe all address,
- Till sleep takes place of weariness.
- And thus, throughout, with Christmas plays
- Frolic the full twelve holidays.
- _Tittyries_, _i.e._, the Tityre-tues; see Note.
- _Fox-i'-th'-hole_, a game of hopping.
- _To shoe the mare_, or, shoe the wild mare, a Christmas game.
- _Buxom_, tender.
- _Liber Pater_, Father Bacchus.
- 320. MATINS; OR, MORNING PRAYER.
- When with the virgin morning thou dost rise,
- Crossing thyself, come thus to sacrifice;
- First wash thy heart in innocence, then bring
- Pure hands, pure habits, pure, pure everything.
- Next to the altar humbly kneel, and thence
- Give up thy soul in clouds of frankincense.
- Thy golden censers, fill'd with odours sweet,
- Shall make thy actions with their ends to meet.
- 321. EVENSONG.
- Begin with Jove; then is the work half done,
- And runs most smoothly when 'tis well begun.
- Jove's is the first and last: the morn's his due,
- The midst is thine; but Jove's the evening too;
- As sure a matins does to him belong,
- So sure he lays claim to the evensong.
- 322. THE BRACELET TO JULIA.
- Why I tie about thy wrist,
- Julia, this my silken twist;
- For what other reason is't,
- But to show thee how, in part,
- Thou my pretty captive art?
- But thy bondslave is my heart;
- 'Tis but silk that bindeth thee,
- Knap the thread and thou art free:
- But 'tis otherwise with me;
- I am bound, and fast bound, so
- That from thee I cannot go;
- If I could, I would not so.
- 323. THE CHRISTIAN MILITANT.
- A man prepar'd against all ills to come,
- That dares to dead the fire of martyrdom;
- That sleeps at home, and sailing there at ease,
- Fears not the fierce sedition of the seas;
- That's counter-proof against the farm's mishaps,
- Undreadful too of courtly thunderclaps;
- That wears one face, like heaven, and never shows
- A change when fortune either comes or goes;
- That keeps his own strong guard in the despite
- Of what can hurt by day or harm by night;
- That takes and re-delivers every stroke
- Of chance (as made up all of rock and oak);
- That sighs at others' death, smiles at his own
- Most dire and horrid crucifixion.
- Who for true glory suffers thus, we grant
- Him to be here our Christian militant.
- 324. A SHORT HYMN TO LAR.
- Though I cannot give thee fires
- Glittering to my free desires;
- These accept, and I'll be free,
- Offering poppy unto thee.
- 325. ANOTHER TO NEPTUNE.
- Mighty Neptune, may it please
- Thee, the rector of the seas,
- That my barque may safely run
- Through thy watery region;
- And a tunny-fish shall be
- Offered up with thanks to thee.
- 327. HIS EMBALMING TO JULIA.
- For my embalming, Julia, do but this;
- Give thou my lips but their supremest kiss,
- Or else transfuse thy breath into the chest
- Where my small relics must for ever rest;
- That breath the balm, the myrrh, the nard shall be,
- To give an incorruption unto me.
- 328. GOLD BEFORE GOODNESS.
- How rich a man is all desire to know;
- But none inquires if good he be or no.
- 329. THE KISS. A DIALOGUE.
- 1. Among thy fancies tell me this,
- What is the thing we call a kiss?
- 2. I shall resolve ye what it is.
- It is a creature born and bred
- Between the lips (all cherry-red),
- By love and warm desires fed.
- _Chor._ And makes more soft the bridal bed.
- 2. It is an active flame that flies,
- First, to the babies of the eyes;
- And charms them there with lullabies.
- _Chor._ And stills the bride, too, when she cries.
- 2. Then to the chin, the cheek, the ear,
- It frisks and flies, now here, now there,
- 'Tis now far off, and then 'tis near.
- _Chor._ And here and there and everywhere.
- 1. Has it a speaking virtue? 2. Yes.
- 1. How speaks it, say? 2. Do you but this;
- Part your joined lips, then speaks your kiss
- _Chor._ And this love's sweetest language is.
- 1. Has it a body? 2. Aye, and wings
- With thousand rare encolourings;
- And, as it flies, it gently sings,
- _Chor._ Love honey yields, but never stings.
- 330. THE ADMONITION.
- Seest thou those diamonds which she wears
- In that rich carcanet;
- Or those, on her dishevell'd hairs,
- Fair pearls in order set?
- Believe, young man, all those were tears
- By wretched wooers sent,
- In mournful hyacinths and rue,
- That figure discontent;
- Which when not warmed by her view,
- By cold neglect, each one
- Congeal'd to pearl and stone;
- Which precious spoils upon her
- She wears as trophies of her honour.
- Ah then, consider, what all this implies:
- She that will wear thy tears would wear thine eyes.
- _Carcanet_, necklace.
- 331. TO HIS HONOURED KINSMAN, SIR WILLIAM SOAME. EPIG.
- I can but name thee, and methinks I call
- All that have been, or are canonical
- For love and bounty to come near, and see
- Their many virtues volum'd up in thee;
- In thee, brave man! whose incorrupted fame
- Casts forth a light like to a virgin flame;
- And as it shines it throws a scent about,
- As when a rainbow in perfumes goes out.
- So vanish hence, but leave a name as sweet
- As benjamin and storax when they meet.
- _Benjamin_, gum benzoin.
- _Storax_ or _Styrax_, another resinous gum.
- 332. ON HIMSELF.
- Ask me why I do not sing
- To the tension of the string
- As I did not long ago,
- When my numbers full did flow?
- Grief, ay, me! hath struck my lute
- And my tongue, at one time, mute.
- 333. TO LAR.
- No more shall I, since I am driven hence,
- Devote to thee my grains of frankincense;
- No more shall I from mantle-trees hang down,
- To honour thee, my little parsley crown;
- No more shall I (I fear me) to thee bring
- My chives of garlic for an offering;
- No more shall I from henceforth hear a choir
- Of merry crickets by my country fire.
- Go where I will, thou lucky Lar stay here,
- Warm by a glitt'ring chimney all the year.
- _Chives_, shreds.
- 334. THE DEPARTURE OF THE GOOD DEMON.
- What can I do in poetry
- Now the good spirit's gone from me?
- Why, nothing now but lonely sit
- And over-read what I have writ.
- 335. CLEMENCY.
- For punishment in war it will suffice
- If the chief author of the faction dies;
- Let but few smart, but strike a fear through all;
- Where the fault springs there let the judgment fall.
- 336. HIS AGE, DEDICATED TO HIS PECULIAR FRIEND, M. JOHN WICKES, UNDER
- THE NAME OF POSTHUMUS.
- Ah Posthumus! our years hence fly,
- And leave no sound; nor piety,
- Or prayers, or vow
- Can keep the wrinkle from the brow;
- But we must on,
- As fate does lead or draw us; none,
- None, Posthumus, could ere decline
- The doom of cruel Proserpine.
- The pleasing wife, the house, the ground,
- Must all be left, no one plant found
- To follow thee,
- Save only the curs'd cypress tree;
- A merry mind
- Looks forward, scorns what's left behind;
- Let's live, my Wickes, then, while we may,
- And here enjoy our holiday.
- W'ave seen the past best times, and these
- Will ne'er return; we see the seas
- And moons to wane
- But they fill up their ebbs again;
- But vanish'd man,
- Like to a lily lost, ne'er can,
- Ne'er can repullulate, or bring
- His days to see a second spring.
- But on we must, and thither tend,
- Where Anchus and rich Tullus blend
- Their sacred seed:
- Thus has infernal Jove decreed;
- We must be made,
- Ere long a song, ere long a shade.
- Why then, since life to us is short,
- Let's make it full up by our sport.
- Crown we our heads with roses then,
- And 'noint with Tyrian balm; for when
- We two are dead,
- The world with us is buried.
- Then live we free
- As is the air, and let us be
- Our own fair wind, and mark each one
- Day with the white and lucky stone.
- We are not poor, although we have
- No roofs of cedar, nor our brave
- Baiæ, nor keep
- Account of such a flock of sheep;
- Nor bullocks fed
- To lard the shambles: barbels bred
- To kiss our hands; nor do we wish
- For Pollio's lampreys in our dish.
- If we can meet and so confer
- Both by a shining salt-cellar,
- And have our roof,
- Although not arch'd, yet weather-proof,
- And ceiling free
- From that cheap candle bawdery;
- We'll eat our bean with that full mirth
- As we were lords of all the earth.
- Well then, on what seas we are toss'd,
- Our comfort is, we can't be lost.
- Let the winds drive
- Our barque, yet she will keep alive
- Amidst the deeps.
- 'Tis constancy, my Wickes, which keeps
- The pinnace up; which, though she errs
- I' th' seas, she saves her passengers.
- Say, we must part (sweet mercy bless
- Us both i' th' sea, camp, wilderness),
- Can we so far
- Stray to become less circular
- Than we are now?
- No, no, that self-same heart, that vow
- Which made us one, shall ne'er undo,
- Or ravel so to make us two.
- Live in thy peace; as for myself,
- When I am bruised on the shelf
- Of time, and show
- My locks behung with frost and snow;
- When with the rheum,
- The cough, the ptisick, I consume
- Unto an almost nothing; then
- The ages fled I'll call again,
- And with a tear compare these last
- Lame and bad times with those are past;
- While Baucis by,
- My old lean wife, shall kiss it dry.
- And so we'll sit
- By th' fire, foretelling snow and sleet,
- And weather by our aches, grown
- Now old enough to be our own
- True calendars, as puss's ear
- Washed o'er's, to tell what change is near:
- Then to assuage
- The gripings of the chine by age,
- I'll call my young
- Iülus to sing such a song
- I made upon my Julia's breast;
- And of her blush at such a feast.
- Then shall he read that flower of mine,
- Enclos'd within a crystal shrine;
- A primrose next;
- A piece, then, of a higher text,
- For to beget
- In me a more transcendent heat
- Than that insinuating fire,
- Which crept into each aged sire,
- When the fair Helen, from her eyes,
- Shot forth her loving sorceries;
- At which I'll rear
- Mine aged limbs above my chair,
- And, hearing it,
- Flutter and crow as in a fit
- Of fresh concupiscence, and cry:
- _No lust there's like to poetry_.
- Thus, frantic-crazy man, God wot,
- I'll call to mind things half-forgot,
- And oft between
- Repeat the times that I have seen!
- Thus ripe with tears,
- And twisting my Iülus' hairs,
- Doting, I'll weep and say, in truth,
- Baucis, these were my sins of youth.
- Then next I'll cause my hopeful lad,
- If a wild apple can be had,
- To crown the hearth,
- Lar thus conspiring with our mirth;
- Then to infuse
- Our browner ale into the cruse,
- Which sweetly spic'd, we'll first carouse
- Unto the Genius of the house.
- Then the next health to friends of mine,
- Loving the brave Burgundian wine,
- High sons of pith,
- Whose fortunes I have frolicked with;
- Such as could well
- Bear up the magic bough and spell;
- And dancing 'bout the mystic thyrse,
- Give up the just applause to verse:
- To those, and then again to thee,
- We'll drink, my Wickes, until we be
- Plump as the cherry,
- Though not so fresh, yet full as merry
- As the cricket,
- The untam'd heifer, or the pricket,
- Until our tongues shall tell our ears
- We're younger by a score of years.
- Thus, till we see the fire less shine
- From th' embers than the kitling's eyne,
- We'll still sit up,
- Sphering about the wassail-cup
- To all those times
- Which gave me honour for my rhymes.
- The coal once spent, we'll then to bed,
- Far more than night-bewearied.
- _Posthumus_, the name is taken from Horace, Ode ii. 14, from which the
- beginning of this lyric is translated.
- _Repullulate_, be born again.
- _Anchus and rich Tullus._ Herrick is again translating from Horace (Ode
- iv. 7, 14).
- _Baiæ_, the favourite sea-side resort of the Romans in the time of
- Horace.
- _Pollio_, Vedius Pollio, who fed his lampreys with human flesh. _Ob_.,
- B.C. 15.
- _Bawdery_, dirt (with no moral meaning).
- _Circular_, self-sufficing, the "in se ipso totus teres atque rotundus"
- of Horace. Sat. ii. 7, 86.
- _Iülus_, the son of Æneas.
- _Pith_, marrow.
- _Thyrse_, bacchic staff.
- _Pricket_, a buck in his second year.
- 337. A SHORT HYMN TO VENUS.
- Goddess, I do love a girl,
- Ruby-lipp'd and tooth'd with pearl;
- If so be I may but prove
- Lucky in this maid I love,
- I will promise there shall be
- Myrtles offer'd up to thee.
- 338. TO A GENTLEWOMAN ON JUST DEALING.
- True to yourself and sheets, you'll have me swear;
- You shall, if righteous dealing I find there.
- Do not you fall through frailty; I'll be sure
- To keep my bond still free from forfeiture.
- 339. THE HAND AND TONGUE.
- Two parts of us successively command:
- The tongue in peace; but then in war the hand.
- 340. UPON A DELAYING LADY.
- Come, come away,
- Or let me go;
- Must I here stay
- Because y'are slow,
- And will continue so?
- Troth, lady, no.
- I scorn to be
- A slave to state:
- And, since I'm free,
- I will not wait
- Henceforth at such a rate
- For needy fate.
- If you desire
- My spark should glow,
- The peeping fire
- You must blow,
- Or I shall quickly grow
- To frost or snow.
- 341. TO THE LADY MARY VILLARS, GOVERNESS TO THE PRINCESS HENRIETTA.
- When I of Villars do but hear the name,
- It calls to mind that mighty Buckingham,
- Who was your brave exalted uncle here,
- Binding the wheel of fortune to his sphere,
- Who spurned at envy, and could bring with ease
- An end to all his stately purposes.
- For his love then, whose sacred relics show
- Their resurrection and their growth in you;
- And for my sake, who ever did prefer
- You above all those sweets of Westminster;
- Permit my book to have a free access
- To kiss your hand, most dainty governess.
- 342. UPON HIS JULIA.
- Will ye hear what I can say
- Briefly of my Julia?
- Black and rolling is her eye,
- Double-chinn'd and forehead high;
- Lips she has all ruby red,
- Cheeks like cream enclareted;
- And a nose that is the grace
- And proscenium of her face.
- So that we may guess by these
- The other parts will richly please.
- 343. TO FLOWERS.
- In time of life I graced ye with my verse;
- Do now your flowery honours to my hearse.
- You shall not languish, trust me; virgins here
- Weeping shall make ye flourish all the year.
- 344. TO MY ILL READER.
- Thou say'st my lines are hard,
- And I the truth will tell--
- They are both hard and marr'd
- If thou not read'st them well.
- 345. THE POWER IN THE PEOPLE.
- Let kings command and do the best they may,
- The saucy subjects still will bear the sway.
- 346. A HYMN TO VENUS AND CUPID.
- Sea-born goddess, let me be
- By thy son thus grac'd and thee;
- That whene'er I woo, I find
- Virgins coy but not unkind.
- Let me when I kiss a maid
- Taste her lips so overlaid
- With love's syrup, that I may,
- In your temple when I pray,
- Kiss the altar and confess
- There's in love no bitterness.
- 347. ON JULIA'S PICTURE.
- How am I ravish'd! when I do but see
- The painter's art in thy sciography?
- If so, how much more shall I dote thereon
- When once he gives it incarnation?
- _Sciography_, the profile or section of a building.
- 348. HER BED.
- See'st thou that cloud as silver clear,
- Plump, soft, and swelling everywhere?
- 'Tis Julia's bed, and she sleeps there.
- 349. HER LEGS.
- Fain would I kiss my Julia's dainty leg,
- Which is as white and hairless as an egg.
- 350. UPON HER ALMS.
- See how the poor do waiting stand
- For the expansion of thy hand.
- A wafer dol'd by thee will swell
- Thousands to feed by miracle.
- 351. REWARDS.
- Still to our gains our chief respect is had;
- Reward it is that makes us good or bad.
- 352. NOTHING NEW.
- Nothing is new; we walk where others went;
- There's no vice now but has his precedent.
- 353. THE RAINBOW.
- Look how the rainbow doth appear
- But in one only hemisphere;
- So likewise after our decease
- No more is seen the arch of peace.
- That cov'nant's here, the under-bow,
- That nothing shoots but war and woe.
- 354. THE MEADOW-VERSE; OR, ANNIVERSARY TO MISTRESS BRIDGET LOWMAN.
- Come with the spring-time forth, fair maid, and be
- This year again the meadow's deity.
- Yet ere ye enter give us leave to set
- Upon your head this flowery coronet;
- To make this neat distinction from the rest,
- You are the prime and princess of the feast;
- To which with silver feet lead you the way,
- While sweet-breath nymphs attend on you this day.
- This is your hour, and best you may command,
- Since you are lady of this fairy land.
- Full mirth wait on you, and such mirth as shall
- Cherish the cheek but make none blush at all.
- _Meadow-verse_, to be recited at a rustic feast.
- 355. THE PARTING VERSE, THE FEAST THERE ENDED.
- Loth to depart, but yet at last each one
- Back must now go to's habitation;
- Not knowing thus much when we once do sever,
- Whether or no that we shall meet here ever.
- As for myself, since time a thousand cares
- And griefs hath filed upon my silver hairs,
- 'Tis to be doubted whether I next year
- Or no shall give ye a re-meeting here.
- If die I must, then my last vow shall be,
- You'll with a tear or two remember me.
- Your sometime poet; but if fates do give
- Me longer date and more fresh springs to live,
- Oft as your field shall her old age renew,
- Herrick shall make the meadow-verse for you.
- 356. UPON JUDITH. EPIG.
- Judith has cast her old skin and got new,
- And walks fresh varnish'd to the public view;
- Foul Judith was and foul she will be known
- For all this fair transfiguration.
- 359. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE PHILIP, EARL OF PEMBROKE AND MONTGOMERY.
- How dull and dead are books that cannot show
- A prince of Pembroke, and that Pembroke you!
- You who are high born, and a lord no less
- Free by your fate than fortune's mightiness,
- Who hug our poems, honour'd sir, and then
- The paper gild and laureate the pen.
- Nor suffer you the poets to sit cold,
- But warm their wits and turn their lines to gold.
- Others there be who righteously will swear
- Those smooth-paced numbers amble everywhere,
- And these brave measures go a stately trot;
- Love those, like these, regard, reward them not.
- But you, my lord, are one whose hand along
- Goes with your mouth or does outrun your tongue;
- Paying before you praise, and, cockering wit,
- Give both the gold and garland unto it.
- _Cockering_, pampering.
- 360. AN HYMN TO JUNO.
- Stately goddess, do thou please,
- Who are chief at marriages,
- But to dress the bridal bed
- When my love and I shall wed;
- And a peacock proud shall be
- Offered up by us to thee.
- 362. UPON SAPPHO SWEETLY PLAYING AND SWEETLY SINGING.
- When thou dost play and sweetly sing--
- Whether it be the voice or string
- Or both of them that do agree
- Thus to entrance and ravish me--
- This, this I know, I'm oft struck mute,
- And die away upon thy lute.
- 364. CHOP-CHERRY.
- Thou gav'st me leave to kiss,
- Thou gav'st me leave to woo;
- Thou mad'st me think, by this
- And that, thou lov'dst me too.
- But I shall ne'er forget
- How, for to make thee merry,
- Thou mad'st me chop, but yet
- Another snapp'd the cherry.
- _Chop-cherry_, another name of cherry-bob.
- 365. TO THE MOST LEARNED, WISE, AND ARCH-ANTIQUARY, M. JOHN SELDEN.
- I, who have favour'd many, come to be
- Grac'd now, at last, or glorified by thee,
- Lo! I, the lyric prophet, who have set
- On many a head the delphic coronet,
- Come unto thee for laurel, having spent
- My wreaths on those who little gave or lent.
- Give me the daphne, that the world may know it,
- Whom they neglected thou hast crown'd a poet.
- A city here of heroes I have made
- Upon the rock whose firm foundation laid,
- Shall never shrink; where, making thine abode,
- Live thou a Selden, that's a demi-god.
- _Daphne_, _i.e._, the laurel
- 366. UPON HIMSELF.
- Thou shalt not all die; for, while love's fire shines
- Upon his altar, men shall read thy lines,
- And learn'd musicians shall, to honour Herrick's
- Fame and his name, both set and sing his lyrics.
- 367. UPON WRINKLES.
- Wrinkles no more are or no less
- Than beauty turned to sourness.
- 370. PRAY AND PROSPER.
- First offer incense, then thy field and meads
- Shall smile and smell the better by thy beads.
- The spangling dew, dredg'd o'er the grass, shall be
- Turn'd all to mell and manna there for thee.
- Butter of amber, cream, and wine, and oil
- Shall run, as rivers, all throughout thy soil.
- Would'st thou to sincere silver turn thy mould?
- Pray once, twice pray, and turn thy ground to gold.
- _Beads_, prayers.
- _Mell_, honey.
- _Sincere silver_, pure silver.
- 371. HIS LACHRYMÆ; OR, MIRTH TURNED TO MOURNING.
- Call me no more,
- As heretofore,
- The music of a feast;
- Since now, alas!
- The mirth that was
- In me is dead or ceas'd.
- Before I went,
- To banishment,
- Into the loathed west,
- I could rehearse
- A lyric verse,
- And speak it with the best.
- But time, ay me!
- Has laid, I see,
- My organ fast asleep,
- And turn'd my voice
- Into the noise
- Of those that sit and weep.
- 375. TO THE MOST FAIR AND LOVELY MISTRESS ANNE SOAME, NOW LADY ABDIE.
- So smell those odours that do rise
- From out the wealthy spiceries;
- So smells the flower of blooming clove,
- Or roses smother'd in the stove;
- So smells the air of spiced wine,
- Or essences of jessamine;
- So smells the breath about the hives
- When well the work of honey thrives,
- And all the busy factors come
- Laden with wax and honey home;
- So smell those neat and woven bowers
- All over-arch'd with orange flowers,
- And almond blossoms that do mix
- To make rich these aromatics;
- So smell those bracelets and those bands
- Of amber chaf'd between the hands,
- When thus enkindled they transpire
- A noble perfume from the fire;
- The wine of cherries, and to these
- The cooling breath of respasses;
- The smell of morning's milk and cream,
- Butter of cowslips mix'd with them;
- Of roasted warden or bak'd pear,
- These are not to be reckon'd here,
- Whenas the meanest part of her,
- Smells like the maiden pomander.
- Thus sweet she smells, or what can be
- More lik'd by her or lov'd by me.
- _Factors_, workers.
- _Respasses_, raspberries.
- _Pomander_, ball of scent.
- 376. UPON HIS KINSWOMAN, MISTRESS ELIZABETH HERRICK.
- Sweet virgin, that I do not set
- The pillars up of weeping jet
- Or mournful marble, let thy shade
- Not wrathful seem, or fright the maid
- Who hither at her wonted hours
- Shall come to strew thy earth with flowers.
- No; know, bless'd maid, when there's not one
- Remainder left of brass or stone,
- Thy living epitaph shall be,
- Though lost in them, yet found in me;
- Dear, in thy bed of roses then,
- Till this world shall dissolve as men,
- Sleep while we hide thee from the light,
- Drawing thy curtains round: Good-night.
- 377. A PANEGYRIC TO SIR LEWIS PEMBERTON.
- Till I shall come again let this suffice,
- I send my salt, my sacrifice
- To thee, thy lady, younglings, and as far
- As to thy Genius and thy Lar;
- To the worn threshold, porch, hall, parlour, kitchen,
- The fat-fed smoking temple, which in
- The wholesome savour of thy mighty chines
- Invites to supper him who dines,
- Where laden spits, warp'd with large ribs of beef,
- Not represent but give relief
- To the lank stranger and the sour swain,
- Where both may feed and come again;
- For no black-bearded vigil from thy door
- Beats with a button'd-staff the poor;
- But from thy warm love-hatching gates each may
- Take friendly morsels and there stay
- To sun his thin-clad members if he likes,
- For thou no porter keep'st who strikes.
- No comer to thy roof his guest-rite wants,
- Or staying there is scourg'd with taunts
- Of some rough groom, who, yirkt with corns, says: "Sir,
- Y'ave dipped too long i' th' vinegar;
- And with our broth, and bread, and bits, sir friend,
- Y'ave fared well: pray make an end;
- Two days y'ave larded here; a third, ye know,
- Makes guests and fish smell strong; pray go
- You to some other chimney, and there take
- Essay of other giblets; make
- Merry at another's hearth--y'are here
- Welcome as thunder to our beer;
- Manners know distance, and a man unrude
- Would soon recoil and not intrude
- His stomach to a second meal". No, no!
- Thy house well fed and taught can show
- No such crabb'd vizard: thou hast learnt thy train
- With heart and hand to entertain,
- And by the armsful, with a breast unhid,
- As the old race of mankind did,
- When either's heart and either's hand did strive
- To be the nearer relative.
- Thou dost redeem those times, and what was lost
- Of ancient honesty may boast
- It keeps a growth in thee, and so will run
- A course in thy fame's pledge, thy son.
- Thus, like a Roman tribune, thou thy gate
- Early sets ope to feast and late;
- Keeping no currish waiter to affright
- With blasting eye the appetite,
- Which fain would waste upon thy cates, but that
- The trencher-creature marketh what
- Best and more suppling piece he cuts, and by
- Some private pinch tells danger's nigh
- A hand too desp'rate, or a knife that bites
- Skin-deep into the pork, or lights
- Upon some part of kid, as if mistook,
- When checked by the butler's look.
- No, no; thy bread, thy wine, thy jocund beer
- Is not reserved for Trebius here,
- But all who at thy table seated are
- Find equal freedom, equal fare;
- And thou, like to that hospitable god,
- Jove, joy'st when guests make their abode
- To eat thy bullock's thighs, thy veals, thy fat
- Wethers, and never grudged at.
- The _pheasant_, _partridge_, _gotwit_, _reeve_, _ruff_, _rail_,
- The _cock_, the _curlew_ and the _quail_,
- These and thy choicest viands do extend
- Their taste unto the lower end
- Of thy glad table: not a dish more known
- To thee than unto anyone.
- But as thy meat so thy _immortal wine_
- Makes the smirk face of each to shine
- And spring fresh rosebuds, while the salt, the wit,
- Flows from the wine and graces it;
- While reverence, waiting at the bashful board,
- Honours my lady and my lord.
- No scurril jest; no open scene is laid
- Here for to make the face afraid;
- But temperate mirth dealt forth, and so discreet-
- ly that it makes the meat more sweet;
- And adds perfumes unto the wine, which thou
- Dost rather pour forth than allow
- By cruse and measure; thus devoting wine
- As the Canary Isles were thine;
- But with that wisdom and that method, as
- No one that's there his guilty glass
- Drinks of distemper, or has cause to cry
- Repentance to his liberty.
- No, thou knowest order, ethics, and has read
- All economics, know'st to lead
- A house-dance neatly, and canst truly show
- How far a figure ought to go,
- Forward or backward, sideward, and what pace
- Can give, and what retract a grace;
- What gesture, courtship, comeliness agrees
- With those thy primitive decrees,
- To give subsistence to thy house, and proof
- What Genii support thy roof,
- Goodness and Greatness; not the oaken piles;
- _For these and marbles have their whiles
- To last, but not their ever_; virtue's hand
- It is which builds 'gainst fate to stand.
- Such is thy house, whose firm foundation's trust
- Is more in thee than in her dust
- Or depth; these last may yield and yearly shrink
- When what is strongly built, no chink
- Or yawning rupture can the same devour,
- But fix'd it stands, by her own power
- And well-laid bottom, on the iron and rock
- Which tries and counter-stands the shock
- And ram of time, and by vexation grows
- The stronger; _virtue dies when foes
- Are wanting to her exercise, but great
- And large she spreads by dust and sweat_.
- Safe stand thy walls and thee, and so both will,
- Since neither's height was rais'd by th' ill
- Of others; since no stud, no stone, no piece
- Was rear'd up by the poor man's fleece;
- No widow's tenement was rack'd to gild
- Or fret thy ceiling or to build
- A sweating-closet to anoint the silk-
- soft skin, or bathe in asses' milk;
- No orphan's pittance left him serv'd to set
- The pillars up of lasting jet,
- For which their cries might beat against thine ears,
- Or in the damp jet read their tears.
- No plank from hallowed altar does appeal
- To yond' Star-Chamber, or does seal
- A curse to thee or thine; but all things even
- Make for thy peace and pace to heaven.
- Go on directly so, as just men may
- A thousand times more swear than say:
- This is that princely Pemberton who can
- Teach man to keep a god in man;
- And when wise poets shall search out to see
- Good men, they find them all in thee.
- _Vigil_, watchman.
- _Button'd-staff_, staff with a knob at its end.
- _Yirkt_, scourged.
- _Redeem_, buy back.
- _Suppling_, tender.
- _Trebius_, friend of the epicure Lucullus; cp. Juv. v. 19.
- 378. TO HIS VALENTINE ON ST. VALENTINE'S DAY.
- Oft have I heard both youths and virgins say
- Birds choose their mates, and couple too this day;
- But by their flight I never can divine
- When I shall couple with my valentine.
- 382. UPON M. BEN. JONSON. EPIG.
- After the rare arch-poet, Jonson, died,
- The sock grew loathsome, and the buskin's pride,
- Together with the stage's glory, stood
- Each like a poor and pitied widowhood.
- The cirque profan'd was, and all postures rack'd;
- For men did strut, and stride, and stare, not act.
- Then temper flew from words, and men did squeak,
- Look red, and blow, and bluster, but not speak;
- No holy rage or frantic fires did stir
- Or flash about the spacious theatre.
- No clap of hands, or shout, or praise's proof
- Did crack the play-house sides, or cleave her roof.
- Artless the scene was, and that monstrous sin
- Of deep and arrant ignorance came in:
- Such ignorance as theirs was who once hiss'd
- At thy unequall'd play, the _Alchemist_;
- Oh, fie upon 'em! Lastly, too, all wit
- In utter darkness did, and still will sit,
- Sleeping the luckless age out, till that she
- Her resurrection has again with thee.
- 383. ANOTHER.
- Thou had'st the wreath before, now take the tree,
- That henceforth none be laurel-crown'd but thee.
- 384. TO HIS NEPHEW, TO BE PROSPEROUS IN HIS ART OF PAINTING.
- On, as thou hast begun, brave youth, and get
- The palm from Urbin, Titian, Tintoret,
- Brugel and Coxu, and the works outdo
- Of Holbein and that mighty Rubens too.
- So draw and paint as none may do the like,
- No, not the glory of the world, Vandyke.
- _Urbin_, Raphael.
- _Brugel_, Jan Breughel, Dutch landscape painter (1569-1625), or his
- father or brother.
- _Coxu_, Michael van Coxcie, Flemish painter (1497-1592).
- 386. A VOW TO MARS.
- Store of courage to me grant,
- Now I'm turn'd a combatant;
- Help me, so that I my shield,
- Fighting, lose not in the field.
- That's the greatest shame of all
- That in warfare can befall.
- Do but this, and there shall be
- Offer'd up a wolf to thee.
- 387. TO HIS MAID, PREW.
- These summer-birds did with thy master stay
- The times of warmth, but then they flew away,
- Leaving their poet, being now grown old,
- Expos'd to all the coming winter's cold.
- But thou, kind Prew, did'st with my fates abide
- As well the winter's as the summer's tide;
- For which thy love, live with thy master here,
- Not one, but all the seasons of the year.
- 388. A CANTICLE TO APOLLO.
- Play, Phœbus, on thy lute;
- And we will all sit mute,
- By listening to thy lyre,
- That sets all ears on fire.
- Hark, hark, the god does play!
- And as he leads the way
- Through heaven the very spheres,
- As men, turn all to ears.
- 389. A JUST MAN.
- A just man's like a rock that turns the wrath
- Of all the raging waves into a froth.
- 390. UPON A HOARSE SINGER.
- Sing me to death; for till thy voice be clear,
- 'Twill never please the palate of mine ear.
- 391. HOW PANSIES OR HEART'S-EASE CAME FIRST.
- Frolic virgins once these were,
- Over-loving, living here;
- Being here their ends denied,
- Ran for sweethearts mad, and died.
- Love, in pity of their tears,
- And their loss in blooming years,
- For their restless here-spent hours,
- Gave them heart's-ease turn'd to flowers.
- 392. TO HIS PECULIAR FRIEND, SIR EDWARD FISH, KNIGHT BARONET.
- Since, for thy full deserts, with all the rest
- Of these chaste spirits that are here possest
- Of life eternal, time has made thee one
- For growth in this my rich plantation,
- Live here; but know 'twas virtue, and not chance,
- That gave thee this so high inheritance.
- Keep it for ever, grounded with the good,
- Who hold fast here an endless livelihood.
- 393. LAR'S PORTION AND THE POET'S PART.
- At my homely country-seat
- I have there a little wheat,
- Which I work to meal, and make
- Therewithal a holy cake:
- Part of which I give to Lar,
- Part is my peculiar.
- _Peculiar_, his own property.
- 394. UPON MAN.
- Man is compos'd here of a twofold part:
- The first of nature, and the next of art:
- Art presupposes nature; nature she
- Prepares the way for man's docility.
- 395. LIBERTY.
- Those ills that mortal men endure
- So long, are capable of cure,
- As they of freedom may be sure;
- But, that denied, a grief, though small,
- Shakes the whole roof, or ruins all.
- 396. LOTS TO BE LIKED.
- Learn this of me, where'er thy lot doth fall,
- Short lot or not, to be content with all.
- 397. GRIEFS.
- Jove may afford us thousands of reliefs,
- Since man expos'd is to a world of griefs.
- 399. THE DREAM.
- By dream I saw one of the three
- Sisters of fate appear to me;
- Close to my bedside she did stand,
- Showing me there a firebrand;
- She told me too, as that did spend,
- So drew my life unto an end.
- Three quarters were consum'd of it;
- Only remained a little bit,
- Which will be burnt up by-and-by;
- Then, Julia, weep, for I must die.
- 402. CLOTHES DO BUT CHEAT AND COZEN US.
- Away with silks, away with lawn,
- I'll have no scenes or curtains drawn;
- Give me my mistress as she is,
- Dress'd in her nak'd simplicities;
- For as my heart e'en so mine eye
- Is won with flesh, not drapery.
- 403. TO DIANEME.
- Show me thy feet; show me thy legs, thy thighs;
- Show me those fleshy principalities;
- Show me that hill where smiling love doth sit.
- Having a living fountain under it;
- Show me thy waist, then let me therewithal,
- By the assention of thy lawn, see all.
- 404. UPON ELECTRA.
- When out of bed my love doth spring,
- 'Tis but as day a-kindling;
- But when she's up and fully dress'd,
- 'Tis then broad day throughout the east.
- 405. TO HIS BOOK.
- Have I not blest thee? Then go forth, nor fear
- Or spice, or fish, or fire, or close-stools here.
- But with thy fair fates leading thee, go on
- With thy most white predestination.
- Nor think these ages that do hoarsely sing
- The farting tanner and familiar king,
- The dancing friar, tatter'd in the bush;
- Those monstrous lies of little Robin Rush,
- Tom Chipperfeild, and pretty lisping Ned,
- That doted on a maid of gingerbread;
- The flying pilchard and the frisking dace,
- With all the rabble of Tim Trundell's race
- (Bred from the dunghills and adulterous rhymes),
- Shall live, and thou not superlast all times.
- No, no; thy stars have destin'd thee to see
- The whole world die and turn to dust with thee.
- _He's greedy of his life who will not fall
- Whenas a public ruin bears down all._
- _The farting tanner_, etc., see Note.
- 406. OF LOVE.
- I do not love, nor can it be
- Love will in vain spend shafts on me;
- I did this godhead once defy,
- Since which I freeze, but cannot fry.
- Yet out, alas! the death's the same,
- Kill'd by a frost or by a flame.
- 407. UPON HIMSELF.
- I dislik'd but even now;
- Now I love I know not how.
- Was I idle, and that while
- Was I fir'd with a smile?
- I'll to work, or pray; and then
- I shall quite dislike again.
- 408. ANOTHER.
- Love he that will, it best likes me
- To have my neck from love's yoke free.
- 412. THE MAD MAID'S SONG.
- Good-morrow to the day so fair,
- Good-morning, sir, to you;
- Good-morrow to mine own torn hair,
- Bedabbled with the dew.
- Good-morning to this primrose too,
- Good-morrow to each maid
- That will with flowers the tomb bestrew
- Wherein my love is laid.
- Ah! woe is me, woe, woe is me,
- Alack and well-a-day!
- For pity, sir, find out that bee
- Which bore my love away.
- I'll seek him in your bonnet brave,
- I'll seek him in your eyes;
- Nay, now I think th'ave made his grave
- I' th' bed of strawberries.
- I'll seek him there; I know ere this
- The cold, cold earth doth shake him;
- But I will go or send a kiss
- By you, sir, to awake him.
- Pray, hurt him not, though he be dead,
- He knows well who do love him,
- And who with green turfs rear his head,
- And who do rudely move him.
- He's soft and tender (pray take heed);
- With bands of cowslips bind him,
- And bring him home; but 'tis decreed
- That I shall never find him.
- 413. TO SPRINGS AND FOUNTAINS.
- I heard ye could cool heat, and came
- With hope you would allay the same;
- Thrice I have wash'd but feel no cold,
- Nor find that true which was foretold.
- Methinks, like mine, your pulses beat
- And labour with unequal heat;
- Cure, cure yourselves, for I descry
- Ye boil with love as well as I.
- 414. UPON JULIA'S UNLACING HERSELF.
- Tell if thou canst, and truly, whence doth come
- This camphor, storax, spikenard, galbanum;
- These musks, these ambers, and those other smells,
- Sweet as the vestry of the oracles.
- I'll tell thee: while my Julia did unlace
- Her silken bodice but a breathing space,
- The passive air such odour then assum'd,
- As when to Jove great Juno goes perfum'd,
- Whose pure immortal body doth transmit
- A scent that fills both heaven and earth with it.
- 415. TO BACCHUS, A CANTICLE.
- Whither dost thou whorry me,
- Bacchus, being full of thee?
- This way, that way, that way, this,
- Here and there a fresh love is.
- That doth like me, this doth please,
- Thus a thousand mistresses
- I have now; yet I alone,
- Having all, enjoy not one.
- _Whorry_, carry rapidly.
- 416. THE LAWN.
- Would I see lawn, clear as the heaven, and thin?
- It should be only in my Julia's skin,
- Which so betrays her blood as we discover
- The blush of cherries when a lawn's cast over.
- 417. THE FRANKINCENSE.
- When my off'ring next I make,
- Be thy hand the hallowed cake,
- And thy breast the altar whence
- Love may smell the frankincense.
- 420. TO SYCAMORES.
- I'm sick of love, O let me lie
- Under your shades to sleep or die!
- Either is welcome, so I have
- Or here my bed, or here my grave.
- Why do you sigh, and sob, and keep
- Time with the tears that I do weep?
- Say, have ye sense, or do you prove
- What crucifixions are in love?
- I know ye do, and that's the why
- You sigh for love as well as I.
- 421. A PASTORAL SUNG TO THE KING: MONTANO, SILVIO, AND MIRTILLO,
- SHEPHERDS.
- _Mon._ Bad are the times. _Sil._ And worse than they are we.
- _Mon._ Troth, bad are both; worse fruit and ill the tree:
- The feast of shepherds fail. _Sil._ None crowns the cup
- Of wassail now or sets the quintell up;
- And he who us'd to lead the country-round,
- Youthful Mirtillo, here he comes grief-drown'd.
- _Ambo._ Let's cheer him up. _Sil._ Behold him weeping-ripe.
- _Mir._ Ah! Amaryllis, farewell mirth and pipe;
- Since thou art gone, no more I mean to play
- To these smooth lawns my mirthful roundelay.
- Dear Amaryllis! _Mon._ Hark! _Sil._ Mark! _Mir._ This earth grew sweet
- Where, Amaryllis, thou didst set thy feet.
- _Ambo._ Poor pitied youth! _Mir._ And here the breath of kine
- And sheep grew more sweet by that breath of thine.
- This flock of wool and this rich lock of hair,
- This ball of cowslips, these she gave me here.
- _Sil._ Words sweet as love itself. Montano, hark!
- _Mir._ This way she came, and this way too she went;
- How each thing smells divinely redolent!
- Like to a field of beans when newly blown,
- Or like a meadow being lately mown.
- _Mon._ A sweet-sad passion----
- _Mir._ In dewy mornings when she came this way
- Sweet bents would bow to give my love the day;
- And when at night she folded had her sheep,
- Daisies would shut, and, closing, sigh and weep.
- Besides (ay me!) since she went hence to dwell,
- The voices' daughter ne'er spake syllable.
- But she is gone. _Sil._ Mirtillo, tell us whither.
- _Mir._ Where she and I shall never meet together.
- _Mon._ Forfend it Pan, and, Pales, do thou please
- To give an end. _Mir._ To what? _Sil._ Such griefs as these.
- _Mir._ Never, O never! Still I may endure
- The wound I suffer, never find a cure.
- _Mon._ Love for thy sake will bring her to these hills
- And dales again. _Mir._ No, I will languish still;
- And all the while my part shall be to weep,
- And with my sighs, call home my bleating sheep:
- And in the rind of every comely tree
- I'll carve thy name, and in that name kiss thee.
- _Mon._ Set with the sun thy woes. _Sil._ The day grows old,
- And time it is our full-fed flocks to fold.
- _Chor._ The shades grow great, but greater grows our sorrow;
- But let's go steep
- Our eyes in sleep,
- And meet to weep
- To-morrow.
- _Quintell_, quintain or tilting board.
- _Bents_, grasses.
- _Pales_, the goddess of sheepfolds.
- 422. THE POET LOVES A MISTRESS, BUT NOT TO MARRY.
- I do not love to wed,
- Though I do like to woo;
- And for a maidenhead
- I'll beg and buy it too.
- I'll praise and I'll approve
- Those maids that never vary;
- And fervently I'll love,
- But yet I would not marry.
- I'll hug, I'll kiss, I'll play,
- And, cock-like, hens I'll tread,
- And sport it any way
- But in the bridal bed.
- For why? that man is poor
- Who hath but one of many,
- But crown'd he is with store
- That, single, may have any.
- Why then, say, what is he,
- To freedom so unknown,
- Who, having two or three,
- Will be content with one?
- 425. THE WILLOW GARLAND.
- A willow garland thou did'st send
- Perfum'd, last day, to me,
- Which did but only this portend--
- I was forsook by thee.
- Since so it is, I'll tell thee what,
- To-morrow thou shalt see
- Me wear the willow; after that,
- To die upon the tree.
- As beasts unto the altars go
- With garlands dress'd, so I
- Will, with my willow-wreath, also
- Come forth and sweetly die.
- 427. A HYMN TO SIR CLIPSEBY CREW.
- 'Twas not love's dart,
- Or any blow
- Of want, or foe,
- Did wound my heart
- With an eternal smart;
- But only you,
- My sometimes known
- Companion,
- My dearest Crew,
- That me unkindly slew.
- May your fault die,
- And have no name
- In books of fame;
- Or let it lie
- Forgotten now, as I.
- We parted are
- And now no more,
- As heretofore,
- By jocund Lar
- Shall be familiar.
- But though we sever,
- My Crew shall see
- That I will be
- Here faithless never,
- But love my Clipseby ever.
- 430. EMPIRES.
- Empires of kings are now, and ever were,
- As Sallust saith, coincident to fear.
- 431. FELICITY QUICK OF FLIGHT.
- Every time seems short to be
- That's measured by felicity;
- But one half-hour that's made up here
- With grief, seems longer than a year.
- 436. THE CROWD AND COMPANY.
- In holy meetings there a man may be
- One of the crowd, not of the company.
- 438. POLICY IN PRINCES.
- That princes may possess a surer seat,
- 'Tis fit they make no one with them too great.
- 440. UPON THE NIPPLES OF JULIA'S BREAST.
- Have ye beheld (with much delight)
- A red rose peeping through a white?
- Or else a cherry, double grac'd,
- Within a lily centre plac'd?
- Or ever mark'd the pretty beam
- A strawberry shows half-drown'd in cream?
- Or seen rich rubies blushing through
- A pure smooth pearl and orient too?
- So like to this, nay all the rest,
- Is each neat niplet of her breast.
- 441. TO DAISIES, NOT TO SHUT SO SOON.
- Shut not so soon; the dull-ey'd night
- Has not as yet begun
- To make a seizure on the light,
- Or to seal up the sun.
- No marigolds yet closed are,
- No shadows great appear;
- Nor doth the early shepherd's star
- Shine like a spangle here.
- Stay but till my Julia close
- Her life-begetting eye,
- And let the whole world then dispose
- Itself to live or die.
- 442. TO THE LITTLE SPINNERS.
- Ye pretty housewives, would ye know
- The work that I would put ye to?
- This, this it should be: for to spin
- A lawn for me, so fine and thin
- As it might serve me for my skin.
- For cruel Love has me so whipp'd
- That of my skin I all am stripp'd:
- And shall despair that any art
- Can ease the rawness or the smart,
- Unless you skin again each part.
- Which mercy if you will but do,
- I call all maids to witness to
- What here I promise: that no broom
- Shall now or ever after come
- To wrong a spinner or her loom.
- _Spinners_, spiders.
- 443. OBERON'S PALACE.
- After the feast, my Shapcot, see
- The fairy court I give to thee;
- Where we'll present our Oberon, led
- Half-tipsy to the fairy bed,
- Where Mab he finds, who there doth lie,
- Not without mickle majesty.
- Which done, and thence remov'd the light,
- We'll wish both them and thee good-night.
- Full as a bee with thyme, and red
- As cherry harvest, now high fed
- For lust and action, on he'll go
- To lie with Mab, though all say no.
- Lust has no ears; he's sharp as thorn,
- And fretful, carries hay in's horn,
- And lightning in his eyes; and flings
- Among the elves, if moved, the stings
- Of peltish wasps; well know his guard--
- _Kings, though they're hated, will be fear'd_.
- Wine lead[s] him on. Thus to a grove,
- Sometimes devoted unto love,
- Tinselled with twilight, he and they,
- Led by the shine of snails, a way
- Beat with their num'rous feet, which, by
- Many a neat perplexity,
- Many a turn and many a cross-
- Track they redeem a bank of moss,
- Spongy and swelling, and far more
- Soft than the finest Lemster ore,
- Mildly disparkling like those fires
- Which break from the enjewell'd tyres
- Of curious brides; or like those mites
- Of candi'd dew in moony nights.
- Upon this convex all the flowers
- Nature begets by th' sun and showers,
- Are to a wild digestion brought,
- As if love's sampler here was wrought:
- Or Citherea's ceston, which
- All with temptation doth bewitch.
- Sweet airs move here, and more divine
- Made by the breath of great-eyed kine,
- Who, as they low, impearl with milk
- The four-leaved grass or moss like silk.
- The breath of monkeys met to mix
- With musk-flies are th' aromatics
- Which 'cense this arch; and here and there
- And farther off, and everywhere
- Throughout that brave mosaic yard,
- Those picks or diamonds in the card
- With peeps of hearts, of club, and spade
- Are here most neatly inter-laid
- Many a counter, many a die,
- Half-rotten and without an eye
- Lies hereabouts; and, for to pave
- The excellency of this cave,
- Squirrels' and children's teeth late shed
- Are neatly here enchequered
- With brownest toadstones, and the gum
- That shines upon the bluer plum.
- The nails fallen off by whitflaws: art's
- Wise hand enchasing here those warts
- Which we to others, from ourselves,
- Sell, and brought hither by the elves.
- The tempting mole, stolen from the neck
- Of the shy virgin, seems to deck
- The holy entrance, where within
- The room is hung with the blue skin
- Of shifted snake: enfriez'd throughout
- With eyes of peacocks' trains and trout-
- Flies' curious wings; and these among
- Those silver pence that cut the tongue
- Of the red infant, neatly hung.
- The glow-worm's eyes; the shining scales
- Of silv'ry fish; wheat straws, the snail's
- Soft candle light; the kitling's eyne;
- Corrupted wood; serve here for shine.
- No glaring light of bold-fac'd day,
- Or other over-radiant ray,
- Ransacks this room; but what weak beams
- Can make reflected from these gems
- And multiply; such is the light,
- But ever doubtful day or night.
- By this quaint taper light he winds
- His errors up; and now he finds
- His moon-tann'd Mab, as somewhat sick,
- And (love knows) tender as a chick.
- Upon six plump dandillions, high-
- Rear'd, lies her elvish majesty:
- Whose woolly bubbles seem'd to drown
- Her Mabship in obedient down.
- For either sheet was spread the caul
- That doth the infant's face enthral,
- When it is born (by some enstyl'd
- The lucky omen of the child),
- And next to these two blankets o'er-
- Cast of the finest gossamore.
- And then a rug of carded wool,
- Which, sponge-like drinking in the dull
- Light of the moon, seemed to comply,
- Cloud-like, the dainty deity.
- Thus soft she lies: and overhead
- A spinner's circle is bespread
- With cob-web curtains, from the roof
- So neatly sunk as that no proof
- Of any tackling can declare
- What gives it hanging in the air.
- The fringe about this are those threads
- Broke at the loss of maidenheads:
- And, all behung with these, pure pearls,
- Dropp'd from the eyes of ravish'd girls
- Or writhing brides; when (panting) they
- Give unto love the straiter way.
- For music now, he has the cries
- Of feigned-lost virginities;
- The which the elves make to excite
- A more unconquered appetite.
- The king's undrest; and now upon
- The gnat's watchword the elves are gone.
- And now the bed, and Mab possess'd
- Of this great little kingly guest;
- We'll nobly think, what's to be done,
- He'll do no doubt; _this flax is spun_.
- _Mickle_, much.
- _Carries hay in's horn_ (fœnum habet in cornu), is dangerous.
- _Peltish_, angry.
- _Redeem_, gain.
- _Lemster ore_, Leominster wool.
- _Tyres_, head-dresses.
- _Picks_, diamonds on playing-cards were so called from their points.
- _Peeps_, pips.
- _Whitflaws_, whitlows.
- _Corrupted_, _i.e._, phosphorescent.
- _Winds his errors up_, brings his wanderings to an end.
- _Dandillions_, dandelions.
- _Comply_, embrace.
- _Spinner_, spider.
- _Proof_, sign.
- 444. TO HIS PECULIAR FRIEND, MR. THOMAS SHAPCOTT, LAWYER.
- I've paid thee what I promis'd; that's not all;
- Besides I give thee here a verse that shall
- (When hence thy circummortal part is gone),
- Arch-like, hold up thy name's inscription.
- Brave men can't die, whose candid actions are
- Writ in the poet's endless calendar:
- Whose vellum and whose volume is the sky,
- And the pure stars the praising poetry.
- Farewell
- _Circummortal_, more than mortal.
- _Candid_, fair.
- 445. TO JULIA IN THE TEMPLE.
- Besides us two, i' th' temple here's not one
- To make up now a congregation.
- Let's to the altar of perfumes then go,
- And say short prayers; and when we have done so,
- Then we shall see, how in a little space
- Saints will come in to fill each pew and place.
- 446. TO OENONE.
- What conscience, say, is it in thee,
- When I a heart had one,
- To take away that heart from me,
- And to retain thy own?
- For shame or pity now incline
- To play a loving part;
- Either to send me kindly thine,
- Or give me back my heart.
- Covet not both; but if thou dost
- Resolve to part with neither,
- Why! yet to show that thou art just,
- Take me and mine together.
- 447. HIS WEAKNESS IN WOES.
- I cannot suffer; and in this my part
- Of patience wants. _Grief breaks the stoutest heart._
- 448. FAME MAKES US FORWARD.
- To print our poems, the propulsive cause
- Is fame--the breath of popular applause.
- 449. TO GROVES.
- Ye silent shades, whose each tree here
- Some relique of a saint doth wear,
- Who, for some sweetheart's sake, did prove
- The fire and martyrdom of love:
- Here is the legend of those saints
- That died for love, and their complaints:
- Their wounded hearts and names we find
- Encarv'd upon the leaves and rind.
- Give way, give way to me, who come
- Scorch'd with the self-same martyrdom:
- And have deserv'd as much (love knows)
- As to be canonis'd 'mongst those
- Whose deeds and deaths here written are
- Within your greeny calendar:
- By all those virgins' fillets hung
- Upon your boughs, and requiems sung
- For saints and souls departed hence
- (Here honour'd still with frankincense);
- By all those tears that have been shed,
- As a drink-offering to the dead;
- By all those true love-knots that be
- With mottoes carv'd on every tree;
- By sweet Saint Phyllis pity me:
- By dear Saint Iphis, and the rest
- Of all those other saints now blest,
- Me, me, forsaken, here admit
- Among your myrtles to be writ:
- That my poor name may have the glory
- To live remembered in your story.
- _Phyllis_, the Thracian princess who hanged herself for love of
- Demophoon.
- _Iphis_, a Cyprian youth who hanged himself for love of Anaxaretes.
- 450. AN EPITAPH UPON A VIRGIN.
- Here a solemn fast we keep,
- While all beauty lies asleep
- Hush'd be all things--no noise here--
- But the toning of a tear:
- Or a sigh of such as bring
- Cowslips for her covering.
- 451. TO THE RIGHT GRACIOUS PRINCE, LODOWICK, DUKE OF RICHMOND AND
- LENNOX.
- Of all those three brave brothers fall'n i' th' war
- (Not without glory), noble sir, you are,
- Despite of all concussions, left the stem
- To shoot forth generations like to them.
- Which may be done, if, sir, you can beget
- Men in their substance, not in counterfeit,
- Such essences as those three brothers; known
- Eternal by their own production.
- Of whom, from fame's white trumpet, this I'll tell,
- Worthy their everlasting chronicle:
- Never since first Bellona us'd a shield,
- _Such three brave brothers fell in Mars his field_.
- These were those three Horatii Rome did boast,
- Rome's were these three Horatii we have lost.
- One Cœur-de-Lion had that age long since;
- This, three; which three, you make up four, brave prince.
- 452. TO JEALOUSY.
- O jealousy, that art
- The canker of the heart;
- And mak'st all hell
- Where thou do'st dwell;
- For pity be
- No fury, or no firebrand to me.
- Far from me I'll remove
- All thoughts of irksome love:
- And turn to snow,
- Or crystal grow,
- To keep still free,
- O! soul-tormenting jealousy, from thee.
- 453. TO LIVE FREELY.
- Let's live in haste; use pleasures while we may;
- Could life return, 'twould never lose a day.
- 455. HIS ALMS.
- Here, here I live,
- And somewhat give
- Of what I have
- To those who crave,
- Little or much,
- My alms is such;
- But if my deal
- Of oil and meal
- Shall fuller grow,
- More I'll bestow;
- Meantime be it
- E'en but a bit,
- Or else a crumb,
- The scrip hath some.
- _Deal_, portion.
- 456. UPON HIMSELF.
- Come, leave this loathed country life, and then
- Grow up to be a Roman citizen.
- Those mites of time, which yet remain unspent,
- Waste thou in that most civil government.
- Get their comportment and the gliding tongue
- Of those mild men thou art to live among;
- Then, being seated in that smoother sphere,
- Decree thy everlasting topic there;
- And to the farm-house ne'er return at all:
- Though granges do not love thee, cities shall.
- 457. TO ENJOY THE TIME.
- While Fates permit us let's be merry,
- Pass all we must the fatal ferry;
- And this our life too whirls away
- With the rotation of the day.
- 458. UPON LOVE.
- Love, I have broke
- Thy yoke,
- The neck is free;
- But when I'm next
- Love-vexed,
- Then shackle me.
- 'Tis better yet
- To fret
- The feet or hands,
- Than to enthral
- Or gall
- The neck with bands.
- 459. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE MILDMAY, EARL OF WESTMORELAND.
- You are a lord, an earl, nay more, a man
- Who writes sweet numbers well as any can;
- If so, why then are not these verses hurled,
- Like Sybil's leaves, throughout the ample world?
- What is a jewel if it be not set
- Forth by a ring or some rich carcanet?
- But being so, then the beholders cry:
- See, see a gem as rare as Belus' eye.
- Then public praise does run upon the stone,
- For a most rich, a rare, a precious one.
- Expose your jewels then unto the view,
- That we may praise them, or themselves prize you.
- _Virtue concealed_, with Horace you'll confess,
- _Differs not much from drowsy slothfulness_.
- _Belus' eye_, the eye onyx. "The stone called Belus' eie is white, and
- hath within it a black apple." (Holland's _Pliny_.)
- 460. THE PLUNDER.
- I am of all bereft,
- Save but some few beans left,
- Whereof, at last, to make
- For me and mine a cake,
- Which eaten, they and I
- Will say our grace, and die.
- 461. LITTLENESS NO CAUSE OF LEANNESS.
- One feeds on lard, and yet is lean,
- And I but feasting with a bean
- Grow fat and smooth. The reason is:
- Jove prospers my meat more than his.
- 464. THE JIMMALL RING OR TRUE-LOVE KNOT.
- Thou sent'st to me a true love-knot, but I
- Returned a ring of jimmals to imply
- Thy love had one knot, mine a triple tie.
- _Jimmal_ or _gimmal_, double or triple ring.
- 465. THE PARTING VERSE OR CHARGE TO HIS SUPPOSED WIFE WHEN HE TRAVELLED.
- Go hence, and with this parting kiss,
- Which joins two souls, remember this:
- Though thou be'st young, kind, soft, and fair
- And may'st draw thousands with a hair;
- Yet let these glib temptations be
- Furies to others, friends to me.
- Look upon all, and though on fire
- Thou set their hearts, let chaste desire
- Steer thee to me, and think, me gone,
- In having all, that thou hast none.
- Nor so immured would I have
- Thee live, as dead and in thy grave;
- But walk abroad, yet wisely well
- Stand for my coming, sentinel.
- And think, as thou do'st walk the street,
- Me or my shadow thou do'st meet.
- I know a thousand greedy eyes
- Will on thy feature tyrannise
- In my short absence, yet behold
- Them like some picture, or some mould
- Fashion'd like thee, which, though 't have ears
- And eyes, it neither sees or hears.
- Gifts will be sent, and letters, which
- Are the expressions of that itch,
- And salt, which frets thy suitors; fly
- Both, lest thou lose thy liberty;
- For, that once lost, thou't fall to one,
- Then prostrate to a million.
- But if they woo thee, do thou say,
- As that chaste Queen of Ithaca
- Did to her suitors, this web done,
- (Undone as oft as done), I'm won;
- I will not urge thee, for I know,
- Though thou art young, thou canst say no,
- And no again, and so deny
- Those thy lust-burning incubi.
- Let them enstyle thee fairest fair,
- The pearl of princes, yet despair
- That so thou art, because thou must
- Believe love speaks it not, but lust;
- And this their flattery does commend
- Thee chiefly for their pleasure's end.
- I am not jealous of thy faith,
- Or will be, for the axiom saith:
- He that doth suspect does haste
- A gentle mind to be unchaste.
- No, live thee to thy self, and keep
- Thy thoughts as cold as is thy sleep,
- And let thy dreams be only fed
- With this, that I am in thy bed;
- And thou, then turning in that sphere,
- Waking shalt find me sleeping there.
- But yet if boundless lust must scale
- Thy fortress, and will needs prevail,
- And wildly force a passage in,
- Banish consent, and 'tis no sin
- Of thine; so Lucrece fell and the
- Chaste Syracusian Cyane.
- So Medullina fell; yet none
- Of these had imputation
- For the least trespass, 'cause the mind
- Here was not with the act combin'd.
- _The body sins not, 'tis the will
- That makes the action, good or ill._
- And if thy fall should this way come,
- Triumph in such a martyrdom.
- I will not over-long enlarge
- To thee this my religious charge.
- Take this compression, so by this
- Means I shall know what other kiss
- Is mixed with mine, and truly know,
- Returning, if't be mine or no:
- Keep it till then; and now, my spouse,
- For my wished safety pay thy vows
- And prayers to Venus; if it please
- The great blue ruler of the seas,
- Not many full-faced moons shall wane,
- Lean-horn'd, before I come again
- As one triumphant, when I find
- In thee all faith of womankind.
- Nor would I have thee think that thou
- Had'st power thyself to keep this vow,
- But, having 'scaped temptation's shelf,
- Know virtue taught thee, not thyself.
- _Queen of Ithaca_, Penelope.
- _Incubi_, adulterous spirits.
- _Cyane_, a nymph of Syracuse, ravished by her father whom (and herself)
- she slew.
- _Medullina_, a Roman virgin who endured a like fate.
- _Compression_, embrace.
- 466. TO HIS KINSMAN, SIR THOS. SOAME.
- Seeing thee, Soame, I see a goodly man,
- And in that good a great patrician.
- Next to which two, among the city powers
- And thrones, thyself one of those senators;
- Not wearing purple only for the show,
- As many conscripts of the city do,
- But for true service, worthy of that gown,
- The golden chain, too, and the civic crown.
- _Conscripts_, "patres conscripti," aldermen.
- 467. TO BLOSSOMS.
- Fair pledges of a fruitful tree,
- Why do ye fall so fast?
- Your date is not so past
- But you may stay yet here a while,
- To blush and gently smile;
- And go at last.
- What! were ye born to be
- An hour or half's delight,
- And so to bid good-night?
- 'Twas pity Nature brought ye forth
- Merely to show your worth,
- And lose you quite.
- But you are lovely leaves, where we
- May read how soon things have
- Their end, though ne'er so brave:
- And after they have shown their pride
- Like you a while, they glide
- Into the grave.
- 468. MAN'S DYING-PLACE UNCERTAIN.
- Man knows where first he ships himself, but he
- Never can tell where shall his landing be.
- 469. NOTHING FREE-COST.
- Nothing comes free-cost here; Jove will not let
- His gifts go from him, if not bought with sweat.
- 470. FEW FORTUNATE.
- Many we are, and yet but few possess
- Those fields of everlasting happiness.
- 471. TO PERENNA.
- How long, Perenna, wilt thou see
- Me languish for the love of thee?
- Consent, and play a friendly part
- To save, when thou may'st kill a heart.
- 472. TO THE LADIES.
- Trust me, ladies, I will do
- Nothing to distemper you;
- If I any fret or vex,
- Men they shall be, not your sex.
- 473. THE OLD WIVES' PRAYER.
- Holy rood, come forth and shield
- Us i' th' city and the field:
- Safely guard us, now and aye,
- From the blast that burns by day;
- And those sounds that us affright
- In the dead of dampish night.
- Drive all hurtful fiends us fro,
- By the time the cocks first crow.
- 475. UPON HIS DEPARTURE HENCE.
- Thus I
- Pass by,
- And die:
- As one
- Unknown
- And gone:
- I'm made
- A shade,
- And laid
- I' th' grave:
- There have
- My cave,
- Where tell
- I dwell.
- Farewell.
- 476. THE WASSAIL.
- Give way, give way, ye gates, and win
- An easy blessing to your bin
- And basket, by our entering in.
- May both with manchet stand replete;
- Your larders, too, so hung with meat,
- That though a thousand, thousand eat,
- Yet, ere twelve moons shall whirl about
- Their silv'ry spheres, there's none may doubt
- But more's sent in than was served out.
- Next, may your dairies prosper so
- As that your pans no ebb may know;
- But if they do, the more to flow,
- Like to a solemn sober stream
- Bank'd all with lilies, and the cream
- Of sweetest cowslips filling them.
- Then, may your plants be prest with fruit,
- Nor bee, or hive you have be mute;
- But sweetly sounding like a lute.
- Next, may your duck and teeming hen
- Both to the cock's tread say Amen;
- And for their two eggs render ten.
- Last, may your harrows, shears, and ploughs,
- Your stacks, your stocks, your sweetest mows,
- All prosper by our virgin vows.
- Alas! we bless, but see none here
- That brings us either ale or beer;
- _In a dry house all things are near_.
- Let's leave a longer time to wait,
- Where rust and cobwebs bind the gate,
- And all live here with needy fate.
- Where chimneys do for ever weep
- For want of warmth, and stomachs keep,
- With noise, the servants' eyes from sleep.
- It is in vain to sing, or stay
- Our free feet here; but we'll away:
- Yet to the Lares this we'll say:
- The time will come when you'll be sad
- And reckon this for fortune bad,
- T'ave lost the good ye might have had.
- _Manchet_, fine white bread.
- _Prest_, laden.
- _Near_, penurious.
- _Leave to wait_, cease waiting.
- 477. UPON A LADY FAIR BUT FRUITLESS.
- Twice has Pudica been a bride, and led
- By holy Hymen to the nuptial bed.
- Two youths she's known thrice two, and twice three years;
- Yet not a lily from the bed appears:
- Nor will; for why, Pudica this may know,
- _Trees never bear unless they first do blow_.
- 478. HOW SPRINGS CAME FIRST.
- These springs were maidens once that lov'd,
- But lost to that they most approv'd:
- My story tells by Love they were
- Turn'd to these springs which we see here;
- The pretty whimpering that they make,
- When of the banks their leave they take,
- Tells ye but this, they are the same,
- In nothing chang'd but in their name.
- 479. TO ROSEMARY AND BAYS.
- My wooing's ended: now my wedding's near
- When gloves are giving, gilded be you there.
- 481. UPON A SCAR IN A VIRGIN'S FACE.
- 'Tis heresy in others: in your face
- That scar's no schism, but the sign of grace.
- 482. UPON HIS EYESIGHT FAILING HIM.
- I begin to wane in sight;
- Shortly I shall bid good-night:
- Then no gazing more about,
- When the tapers once are out.
- 483. TO HIS WORTHY FRIEND, M. THOS. FALCONBIRGE.
- Stand with thy graces forth, brave man, and rise
- High with thine own auspicious destinies:
- Nor leave the search, and proof, till thou canst find
- These, or those ends, to which thou wast design'd.
- Thy lucky genius and thy guiding star
- Have made thee prosperous in thy ways thus far:
- Nor will they leave thee till they both have shown
- Thee to the world a prime and public one.
- Then, when thou see'st thine age all turn'd to gold,
- Remember what thy Herrick thee foretold,
- When at the holy threshold of thine house
- _He boded good luck to thy self and spouse_.
- Lastly, be mindful, when thou art grown great,
- _That towers high rear'd dread most the lightning's threat:
- Whenas the humble cottages not fear
- The cleaving bolt of Jove the thunderer_.
- 484. UPON JULIA'S HAIR FILL'D WITH DEW.
- Dew sat on Julia's hair
- And spangled too,
- Like leaves that laden are
- With trembling dew:
- Or glitter'd to my sight,
- As when the beams
- Have their reflected light
- Danc'd by the streams.
- 485. ANOTHER ON HER.
- How can I choose but love and follow her
- Whose shadow smells like milder pomander?
- How can I choose but kiss her, whence does come
- The storax, spikenard, myrrh, and laudanum?
- _Pomander_, ball of scent.
- 486. LOSS FROM THE LEAST.
- Great men by small means oft are overthrown;
- _He's lord of thy life who contemns his own_.
- 487. REWARD AND PUNISHMENTS.
- All things are open to these two events,
- Or to rewards, or else to punishments.
- 488. SHAME NO STATIST.
- Shame is a bad attendant to a state:
- _He rents his crown that fears the people's hate_.
- 489. TO SIR CLIPSEBY CREW.
- Since to the country first I came
- I have lost my former flame:
- And, methinks, I not inherit,
- As I did, my ravish'd spirit.
- If I write a verse or two,
- 'Tis with very much ado;
- In regard I want that wine
- Which should conjure up a line.
- Yet, though now of Muse bereft,
- I have still the manners left
- For to thank you, noble sir,
- For those gifts you do confer
- Upon him who only can
- Be in prose a grateful man.
- 490. UPON HIMSELF.
- I could never love indeed;
- Never see mine own heart bleed:
- Never crucify my life,
- Or for widow, maid, or wife.
- I could never seek to please
- One or many mistresses:
- Never like their lips to swear
- Oil of roses still smelt there.
- I could never break my sleep,
- Fold mine arms, sob, sigh, or weep:
- Never beg, or humbly woo
- With oaths and lies, as others do.
- I could never walk alone;
- Put a shirt of sackcloth on:
- Never keep a fast, or pray
- For good luck in love that day.
- But have hitherto liv'd free
- As the air that circles me:
- And kept credit with my heart,
- Neither broke i' th' whole, or part.
- 491. FRESH CHEESE AND CREAM.
- Would ye have fresh cheese and cream?
- Julia's breast can give you them:
- And, if more, each nipple cries:
- To your cream here's strawberries.
- 492. AN ECLOGUE OR PASTORAL BETWEEN ENDYMION PORTER AND LYCIDAS HERRICK,
- SET AND SUNG.
- _End._ Ah! Lycidas, come tell me why
- Thy whilom merry oat
- By thee doth so neglected lie,
- And never purls a note?
- I prithee speak. _Lyc._ I will. _End._ Say on.
- _Lyc._ 'Tis thou, and only thou,
- That art the cause, Endymion.
- _End._ For love's sake, tell me how.
- _Lyc._ In this regard: that thou do'st play
- Upon another plain,
- And for a rural roundelay
- Strik'st now a courtly strain.
- Thou leav'st our hills, our dales, our bowers,
- Our finer fleeced sheep,
- Unkind to us, to spend thine hours
- Where shepherds should not keep.
- I mean the court: Let Latmos be
- My lov'd Endymion's court.
- _End._ But I the courtly state would see.
- _Lyc._ Then see it in report.
- What has the court to do with swains,
- Where Phyllis is not known?
- Nor does it mind the rustic strains
- Of us, or Corydon.
- Break, if thou lov'st us, this delay.
- _End._ Dear Lycidas, e're long
- I vow, by Pan, to come away
- And pipe unto thy song.
- Then Jessamine, with Florabell,
- And dainty Amaryllis,
- With handsome-handed Drosomell
- Shall prank thy hook with lilies.
- _Lyc._ Then Tityrus, and Corydon,
- And Thyrsis, they shall follow
- With all the rest; while thou alone
- Shalt lead like young Apollo.
- And till thou com'st, thy Lycidas,
- In every genial cup,
- Shall write in spice: Endymion 'twas
- That kept his piping up.
- And, my most lucky swain, when I shall live to see
- Endymion's moon to fill up full, remember me:
- Meantime, let Lycidas have leave to pipe to thee.
- _Oat_, oaten pipe.
- _Prank_, bedeck.
- _Drosomell_, honey dew.
- 493. TO A BED OF TULIPS.
- Bright tulips, we do know
- You had your coming hither,
- And fading-time does show
- That ye must quickly wither.
- Your sisterhoods may stay,
- And smile here for your hour;
- But die ye must away,
- Even as the meanest flower.
- Come, virgins, then, and see
- Your frailties, and bemoan ye;
- For, lost like these, 'twill be
- As time had never known ye.
- 494. A CAUTION.
- That love last long, let it thy first care be
- To find a wife that is most fit for thee.
- Be she too wealthy or too poor, be sure
- _Love in extremes can never long endure_.
- 495. TO THE WATER NYMPHS DRINKING AT THE FOUNTAIN.
- Reach, with your whiter hands, to me
- Some crystal of the spring;
- And I about the cup shall see
- Fresh lilies flourishing.
- Or else, sweet nymphs, do you but this,
- To th' glass your lips incline;
- And I shall see by that one kiss
- The water turn'd to wine.
- 496. TO HIS HONOURED KINSMAN, SIR RICHARD STONE.
- To this white temple of my heroes here,
- Beset with stately figures everywhere
- Of such rare saintships, who did here consume
- Their lives in sweets, and left in death perfume,
- Come, thou brave man! And bring with thee a stone
- Unto thine own edification.
- High are these statues here, besides no less
- Strong than the heavens for everlastingness:
- Where build aloft; and, being fix'd by these,
- Set up thine own eternal images.
- 497. UPON A FLY.
- A golden fly one show'd to me,
- Clos'd in a box of ivory,
- Where both seem'd proud: the fly to have
- His burial in an ivory grave;
- The ivory took state to hold
- A corpse as bright as burnish'd gold.
- One fate had both, both equal grace;
- The buried, and the burying-place.
- Not Virgil's gnat, to whom the spring
- All flowers sent to's burying;
- Not Martial's bee, which in a bead
- Of amber quick was buried;
- Nor that fine worm that does inter
- Herself i' th' silken sepulchre;
- Nor my rare Phil,[K] that lately was
- With lilies tomb'd up in a glass;
- More honour had than this same fly,
- Dead, and closed up in ivory.
- _Virgil's gnat_, see 256.
- _Martial's bee_, see Note.
- [K] _Sparrow._ (Note in the original edition.)
- 499. TO JULIA.
- Julia, when thy Herrick dies,
- Close thou up thy poet's eyes:
- And his last breath, let it be
- Taken in by none but thee.
- 500. TO MISTRESS DOROTHY PARSONS.
- If thou ask me, dear, wherefore
- I do write of thee no more,
- I must answer, sweet, thy part
- Less is here than in my heart.
- 502. HOW HE WOULD DRINK HIS WINE.
- Fill me my wine in crystal; thus, and thus
- I see't in's _puris naturalibus_:
- Unmix'd. I love to have it smirk and shine;
- _'Tis sin I know, 'tis sin to throttle wine_.
- What madman's he, that when it sparkles so,
- Will cool his flames or quench his fires with snow?
- 503. HOW MARIGOLDS CAME YELLOW.
- Jealous girls these sometimes were,
- While they liv'd or lasted here:
- Turn'd to flowers, still they be
- Yellow, mark'd for jealousy.
- 504. THE BROKEN CRYSTAL.
- To fetch me wine my Lucia went,
- Bearing a crystal continent:
- But, making haste, it came to pass
- She brake in two the purer glass,
- Then smil'd, and sweetly chid her speed;
- So with a blush beshrew'd the deed.
- _Continent_, holder.
- 505. PRECEPTS.
- Good precepts we must firmly hold,
- By daily learning we wax old.
- 506. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE EDWARD, EARL OF DORSET.
- If I dare write to you, my lord, who are
- Of your own self a public theatre,
- And, sitting, see the wiles, ways, walks of wit,
- And give a righteous judgment upon it,
- What need I care, though some dislike me should,
- If Dorset say what Herrick writes is good?
- We know y'are learn'd i' th' Muses, and no less
- In our state-sanctions, deep or bottomless.
- Whose smile can make a poet, and your glance
- Dash all bad poems out of countenance;
- So that an author needs no other bays
- For coronation than your only praise,
- And no one mischief greater than your frown
- To null his numbers, and to blast his crown.
- _Few live the life immortal. He ensures
- His fame's long life who strives to set up yours._
- 507. UPON HIMSELF.
- Thou'rt hence removing (like a shepherd's tent),
- And walk thou must the way that others went:
- Fall thou must first, then rise to life with these,
- Mark'd in thy book for faithful witnesses.
- 508. HOPE WELL AND HAVE WELL: OR, FAIR AFTER FOUL WEATHER.
- What though the heaven be lowering now,
- And look with a contracted brow?
- We shall discover, by-and-by,
- A repurgation of the sky;
- And when those clouds away are driven,
- Then will appear a cheerful heaven.
- 509. UPON LOVE.
- I held Love's head while it did ache;
- But so it chanc'd to be,
- The cruel pain did his forsake,
- And forthwith came to me.
- Ay me! how shall my grief be still'd?
- Or where else shall we find
- One like to me, who must be kill'd
- For being too-too kind?
- 510. TO HIS KINSWOMAN, MRS. PENELOPE WHEELER.
- Next is your lot, fair, to be number'd one,
- Here, in my book's canonisation:
- Late you come in; but you a saint shall be,
- In chief, in this poetic liturgy.
- 511. ANOTHER UPON HER.
- First, for your shape, the curious cannot show
- Any one part that's dissonant in you:
- And 'gainst your chaste behaviour there's no plea,
- Since you are known to be Penelope.
- Thus fair and clean you are, although there be
- _A mighty strife 'twixt form and chastity_.
- _Form_, beauty.
- 513. CROSS AND PILE.
- Fair and foul days trip cross and pile; the fair
- Far less in number than our foul days are.
- _Trip cross and pile_, come haphazard, like the heads and tails of coins.
- 514. TO THE LADY CREW, UPON THE DEATH OF HER CHILD.
- Why, madam, will ye longer weep,
- Whenas your baby's lull'd asleep?
- And (pretty child) feels now no more
- Those pains it lately felt before.
- All now is silent; groans are fled:
- Your child lies still, yet is not dead;
- But rather like a flower hid here
- To spring again another year.
- 515. HIS WINDING-SHEET.
- Come thou, who art the wine and wit
- Of all I've writ:
- The grace, the glory, and the best
- Piece of the rest.
- Thou art of what I did intend
- The all and end;
- And what was made, was made to meet
- Thee, thee, my sheet.
- Come then, and be to my chaste side
- Both bed and bride.
- We two, as reliques left, will have
- One rest, one grave.
- And, hugging close, we will not fear
- Lust entering here,
- Where all desires are dead or cold
- As is the mould;
- And all affections are forgot,
- Or trouble not.
- Here, here the slaves and pris'ners be
- From shackles free:
- And weeping widows long oppress'd
- Do here find rest.
- The wronged client ends his laws
- Here, and his cause.
- Here those long suits of chancery lie
- Quiet, or die:
- And all Star-Chamber bills do cease,
- Or hold their peace.
- Here needs no Court for our Request,
- Where all are best,
- All wise, all equal, and all just
- Alike i' th' dust.
- Nor need we here to fear the frown
- Of court or crown:
- _Where fortune bears no sway o'er things,
- There all are kings_.
- In this securer place we'll keep,
- As lull'd asleep;
- Or for a little time we'll lie
- As robes laid by;
- To be another day re-worn,
- Turn'd, but not torn:
- Or, like old testaments engrost,
- Lock'd up, not lost.
- And for a while lie here conceal'd,
- To be reveal'd
- Next at that great Platonick year,
- And then meet here.
- _Platonick year_, the 36,000th year, in which all persons and things
- return to their original state.
- 516. TO MISTRESS MARY WILLAND.
- One more by thee, love, and desert have sent,
- T' enspangle this expansive firmament.
- O flame of beauty! come, appear, appear
- A virgin taper, ever shining here.
- 517. CHANGE GIVES CONTENT.
- What now we like anon we disapprove:
- _The new successor drives away old love_.
- 519. ON HIMSELF.
- Born I was to meet with age,
- And to walk life's pilgrimage.
- Much I know of time is spent,
- Tell I can't what's resident.
- Howsoever, cares, adieu!
- I'll have nought to say to you:
- But I'll spend my coming hours
- Drinking wine and crown'd with flowers.
- _Resident_, remaining.
- 520. FORTUNE FAVOURS.
- Fortune did never favour one
- Fully, without exception;
- Though free she be, there's something yet
- Still wanting to her favourite.
- 521. TO PHYLLIS, TO LOVE AND LIVE WITH HIM.
- Live, live with me, and thou shall see
- The pleasures I'll prepare for thee;
- What sweets the country can afford
- Shall bless thy bed and bless thy board.
- The soft, sweet moss shall be thy bed
- With crawling woodbine over-spread;
- By which the silver-shedding streams
- Shall gently melt thee into dreams.
- Thy clothing, next, shall be a gown
- Made of the fleece's purest down.
- The tongues of kids shall be thy meat,
- Their milk thy drink; and thou shalt eat
- The paste of filberts for thy bread,
- With cream of cowslips buttered;
- Thy feasting-tables shall be hills
- With daisies spread and daffodils,
- Where thou shalt sit, and red-breast by,
- For meat, shall give thee melody.
- I'll give thee chains and carcanets
- Of primroses and violets.
- A bag and bottle thou shalt have,
- That richly wrought, and this as brave;
- So that as either shall express
- The wearer's no mean shepherdess.
- At shearing-times, and yearly wakes,
- When Themilis his pastime makes,
- There thou shalt be; and be the wit,
- Nay, more, the feast, and grace of it.
- On holidays, when virgins meet
- To dance the heyes with nimble feet,
- Thou shall come forth, and then appear
- The queen of roses for that year;
- And having danced, 'bove all the best,
- Carry the garland from the rest.
- In wicker baskets maids shall bring
- To thee, my dearest shepherling,
- The blushing apple, bashful pear,
- And shame-fac'd plum, all simp'ring there.
- Walk in the groves, and thou shalt find
- The name of Phyllis in the rind
- Of every straight and smooth-skin tree;
- Where kissing that, I'll twice kiss thee.
- To thee a sheep-hook I will send,
- Be-prank'd with ribands to this end;
- This, this alluring hook might be
- Less for to catch a sheep than me.
- Thou shalt have possets, wassails fine,
- Not made of ale, but spiced wine,
- To make thy maids and self free mirth,
- All sitting near the glitt'ring hearth.
- Thou shalt have ribands, roses, rings,
- Gloves, garters, stockings, shoes, and strings
- Of winning colours, that shall move
- Others to lust, but me to love.
- These, nay, and more, thine own shall be
- If thou wilt love, and live with me.
- _Carcanets_, necklaces.
- _Wakes_, village feasts on the dedication day of the church.
- _The heyes_, a winding, country dance.
- _Be-prank'd_, be-decked.
- 522. TO HIS KINSWOMAN, MISTRESS SUSANNA HERRICK.
- When I consider, dearest, thou dost stay
- But here a-while, to languish and decay,
- Like to these garden-glories, which here be
- The flowery-sweet resemblances of thee;
- With grief of heart, methinks, I thus do cry:
- Would thou hadst ne'er been born, or might'st not die.
- 523. UPON MISTRESS SUSANNA SOUTHWELL, HER CHEEKS.
- Rare are thy cheeks, Susanna, which do show
- Ripe cherries smiling, while that others blow.
- 524. UPON HER EYES.
- Clear are her eyes,
- Like purest skies,
- Discovering from thence
- A baby there
- That turns each sphere,
- Like an Intelligence.
- _A baby_, see Note to 38, "To his mistress objecting to him neither
- toying nor talking".
- 525. UPON HER FEET.
- Her pretty feet
- Like snails did creep
- A little out, and then,
- As if they played at Bo-Peep,
- Did soon draw in again.
- 526. TO HIS HONOURED FRIEND, SIR JOHN MINCE.
- For civil, clean, and circumcised wit,
- And for the comely carriage of it,
- Thou art the man, the only man best known,
- Mark'd for the true wit of a million:
- From whom we'll reckon. Wit came in but since
- The calculation of thy birth, brave Mince.
- 527. UPON HIS GREY HAIRS.
- Fly me not, though I be grey:
- Lady, this I know you'll say;
- Better look the roses red
- When with white commingled.
- Black your hairs are, mine are white;
- This begets the more delight,
- When things meet most opposite:
- As in pictures we descry
- Venus standing Vulcan by.
- 528. ACCUSATION.
- If accusation only can draw blood,
- None shall be guiltless, be he ne'er so good.
- 529. PRIDE ALLOWABLE IN POETS.
- As thou deserv'st, be proud; then gladly let
- The Muse give thee the Delphic coronet.
- 530. A VOW TO MINERVA.
- Goddess, I begin an art;
- Come thou in, with thy best part
- For to make the texture lie
- Each way smooth and civilly;
- And a broad-fac'd owl shall be
- Offer'd up with vows to thee.
- _Civilly_, orderly.
- _Owl_, the bird sacred to Athene or Minerva.
- 534. TO ELECTRA.
- 'Tis evening, my sweet,
- And dark, let us meet;
- Long time w'ave here been a-toying,
- And never, as yet,
- That season could get
- Wherein t'ave had an enjoying.
- For pity or shame,
- Then let not love's flame
- Be ever and ever a-spending;
- Since now to the port
- The path is but short,
- And yet our way has no ending.
- Time flies away fast,
- Our hours do waste,
- The while we never remember
- How soon our life, here,
- Grows old with the year
- That dies with the next December.
- 535. DISCORD NOT DISADVANTAGEOUS.
- Fortune no higher project can devise
- Than to sow discord 'mongst the enemies.
- 536. ILL GOVERNMENT.
- Preposterous is that government, and rude,
- When kings obey the wilder multitude.
- _Preposterous_, lit. hind-part before.
- 537. TO MARIGOLDS.
- Give way, and be ye ravish'd by the sun,
- And hang the head whenas the act is done,
- Spread as he spreads, wax less as he does wane;
- And as he shuts, close up to maids again.
- 538. TO DIANEME.
- Give me one kiss
- And no more:
- If so be this
- Makes you poor,
- To enrich you,
- I'll restore
- For that one two
- Thousand score.
- 539. TO JULIA, THE FLAMINICA DIALIS OR QUEEN-PRIEST.
- Thou know'st, my Julia, that it is thy turn
- This morning's incense to prepare and burn.
- The chaplet and Inarculum[L] here be,
- With the white vestures, all attending thee.
- This day the queen-priest thou art made, t' appease
- Love for our very many trespasses.
- One chief transgression is, among the rest,
- Because with flowers her temple was not dressed;
- The next, because her altars did not shine
- With daily fires; the last, neglect of wine;
- For which her wrath is gone forth to consume
- Us all, unless preserved by thy perfume.
- Take then thy censer, put in fire, and thus,
- O pious priestess! make a peace for us.
- For our neglect Love did our death decree;
- That we escape. _Redemption comes by thee_.
- [L] A twig of a pomegranate, which the queen-priest did use to wear on
- her head at sacrificing. (Note in the original edition.)
- 540. ANACREONTIC.
- Born I was to be old,
- And for to die here:
- After that, in the mould
- Long for to lie here.
- But before that day comes
- Still I be bousing,
- For I know in the tombs
- There's no carousing.
- 541. MEAT WITHOUT MIRTH.
- Eaten I have; and though I had good cheer,
- I did not sup, because no friends were there.
- Where mirth and friends are absent when we dine
- Or sup, there wants the incense and the wine.
- 542. LARGE BOUNDS DO BUT BURY US.
- All things o'er-ruled are here by chance:
- The greatest man's inheritance,
- Where'er the lucky lot doth fall,
- Serves but for place of burial.
- 543. UPON URSLEY.
- Ursley, she thinks those velvet patches grace
- The candid temples of her comely face;
- But he will say, whoe'er those circlets seeth,
- They be but signs of Ursley's hollow teeth.
- 544. AN ODE TO SIR CLIPSEBY CREW.
- Here we securely live and eat
- The cream of meat,
- And keep eternal fires,
- By which we sit, and do divine
- As wine
- And rage inspires.
- If full we charm, then call upon
- Anacreon
- To grace the frantic thyrse;
- And having drunk, we raise a shout
- Throughout
- To praise his verse.
- Then cause we Horace to be read,
- Which sung, or said,
- A goblet to the brim
- Of lyric wine, both swell'd and crown'd,
- Around
- We quaff to him.
- Thus, thus we live, and spend the hours
- In wine and flowers,
- And make the frolic year,
- The month, the week, the instant day
- To stay
- The longer here.
- Come then, brave knight, and see the cell
- Wherein I dwell,
- And my enchantments too,
- Which love and noble freedom is;
- And this
- Shall fetter you.
- Take horse, and come, or be so kind
- To send your mind,
- Though but in numbers few,
- And I shall think I have the heart,
- Or part
- Of Clipseby Crew.
- _Securely_, free from care.
- _Thyrse_, a Bacchic staff.
- _Instant_, oncoming.
- _Numbers_, verses.
- 545. TO HIS WORTHY KINSMAN, MR. STEPHEN SOAME.
- Nor is my number full till I inscribe
- Thee, sprightly Soame, one of my righteous tribe;
- A tribe of one lip, leaven, and of one
- Civil behaviour, and religion;
- A stock of saints, where ev'ry one doth wear
- A stole of white, and canonised here;
- Among which holies be thou ever known,
- Brave kinsman, mark'd out with the whiter stone
- Which seals thy glory, since I do prefer
- Thee here in my eternal calender.
- 546. TO HIS TOMB-MAKER.
- Go I must; when I am gone,
- Write but this upon my stone:
- Chaste I lived, without a wife,
- That's the story of my life.
- Strewings need none, every flower
- Is in this word, bachelour.
- 547. GREAT SPIRITS SUPERVIVE.
- Our mortal parts may wrapp'd in sear-cloths lie:
- _Great spirits never with their bodies die_.
- 548. NONE FREE FROM FAULT.
- Out of the world he must, who once comes in.
- _No man exempted is from death, or sin._
- 549. UPON HIMSELF BEING BURIED.
- Let me sleep this night away,
- Till the dawning of the day;
- Then at th' opening of mine eyes
- I, and all the world, shall rise.
- 550. PITY TO THE PROSTRATE.
- 'Tis worse than barbarous cruelty to show
- No part of pity on a conquered foe.
- 552. HIS CONTENT IN THE COUNTRY.
- Here, here I live with what my board
- Can with the smallest cost afford.
- Though ne'er so mean the viands be,
- They well content my Prew and me.
- Or pea, or bean, or wort, or beet,
- Whatever comes, content makes sweet.
- Here we rejoice, because no rent
- We pay for our poor tenement,
- Wherein we rest, and never fear
- The landlord or the usurer.
- The quarter-day does ne'er affright
- Our peaceful slumbers in the night.
- We eat our own and batten more,
- Because we feed on no man's score;
- But pity those whose flanks grow great,
- Swell'd with the lard of others' meat.
- We bless our fortunes when we see
- Our own beloved privacy;
- And like our living, where we're known
- To very few, or else to none.
- _Prew_, _i.e._, his servant, Prudence Baldwin.
- 553. THE CREDIT OF THE CONQUEROR.
- He who commends the vanquished, speaks the power
- And glorifies the worthy conqueror.
- 554. ON HIMSELF.
- Some parts may perish, die thou canst not all:
- The most of thee shall 'scape the funeral.
- 556. THE FAIRIES.
- If ye will with Mab find grace,
- Set each platter in his place;
- Rake the fire up, and get
- Water in, ere sun be set.
- Wash your pails, and cleanse your dairies;
- Sluts are loathsome to the fairies;
- Sweep your house, who doth not so,
- Mab will pinch her by the toe.
- 557. TO HIS HONOURED FRIEND, M. JOHN WEARE, COUNCILLOR.
- Did I or love, or could I others draw
- To the indulgence of the rugged law,
- The first foundation of that zeal should be
- By reading all her paragraphs in thee,
- Who dost so fitly with the laws unite,
- As if you two were one hermaphrodite.
- Nor courts[t] thou her because she's well attended
- With wealth, but for those ends she was intended:
- Which were,--and still her offices are known,--
- _Law is to give to ev'ry one his own_;
- To shore the feeble up against the strong,
- To shield the stranger and the poor from wrong.
- This was the founder's grave and good intent:
- To keep the outcast in his tenement,
- To free the orphan from that wolf-like man,
- Who is his butcher more than guardian;
- To dry the widow's tears, and stop her swoons,
- By pouring balm and oil into her wounds.
- This was the old way; and 'tis yet thy course
- To keep those pious principles in force.
- Modest I will be; but one word I'll say,
- Like to a sound that's vanishing away,
- Sooner the inside of thy hand shall grow
- Hisped and hairy, ere thy palm shall know
- A postern-bribe took, or a forked fee,
- To fetter Justice, when she might be free.
- _Eggs I'll not shave_; but yet, brave man, if I
- Was destin'd forth to golden sovereignty,
- A prince I'd be, that I might thee prefer
- To be my counsel both and chancellor.
- _Hisped_ (_hispidus_), rough with hairs.
- _Postern-bribe_, a back-door bribe.
- _Forked fee_, a fee from both sides in a case; cp. Ben Jonson's
- _Volpone_: "Give forked counsel, take provoking gold on either hand".
- _Eggs I'll not shave_, a proverb.
- 560. THE WATCH.
- Man is a watch, wound up at first, but never
- Wound up again: once down, he's down for ever.
- The watch once down, all motions then do cease;
- And man's pulse stop'd, all passions sleep in peace.
- 561. LINES HAVE THEIR LININGS, AND BOOKS THEIR BUCKRAM.
- As in our clothes, so likewise he who looks,
- Shall find much farcing buckram in our books.
- _Farcing_, stuffing.
- 562. ART ABOVE NATURE: TO JULIA.
- When I behold a forest spread
- With silken trees upon thy head,
- And when I see that other dress
- Of flowers set in comeliness;
- When I behold another grace
- In the ascent of curious lace,
- Which like a pinnacle doth show
- The top, and the top-gallant too.
- Then, when I see thy tresses bound
- Into an oval, square, or round,
- And knit in knots far more than I
- Can tell by tongue, or true-love tie;
- Next, when those lawny films I see
- Play with a wild civility,
- And all those airy silks to flow,
- Alluring me, and tempting so:
- I must confess mine eye and heart
- Dotes less on Nature than on Art.
- _Civility_, order.
- 564. UPON HIS KINSWOMAN, MISTRESS BRIDGET HERRICK.
- Sweet Bridget blush'd, and therewithal
- Fresh blossoms from her cheeks did fall.
- I thought at first 'twas but a dream,
- Till after I had handled them
- And smelt them, then they smelt to me
- As blossoms of the almond tree.
- 565. UPON LOVE.
- I played with Love, as with the fire
- The wanton Satyr did;
- Nor did I know, or could descry
- What under there was hid.
- That Satyr he but burnt his lips;
- But mine's the greater smart,
- For kissing Love's dissembling chips
- The fire scorch'd my heart.
- _The wanton Satyr_, see Note.
- 566. UPON A COMELY AND CURIOUS MAID.
- If men can say that beauty dies,
- Marbles will swear that here it lies.
- If, reader, then thou canst forbear
- In public loss to shed a tear,
- The dew of grief upon this stone
- Will tell thee pity thou hast none.
- 567. UPON THE LOSS OF HIS FINGER.
- One of the five straight branches of my hand
- Is lop'd already, and the rest but stand
- Expecting when to fall, which soon will be;
- First dies the leaf, the bough next, next the tree.
- 568. UPON IRENE.
- Angry if Irene be
- But a minute's life with me:
- Such a fire I espy
- Walking in and out her eye,
- As at once I freeze and fry.
- 569. UPON ELECTRA'S TEARS.
- Upon her cheeks she wept, and from those showers
- Sprang up a sweet nativity of flowers.
- NOTES.
- NOTES.
- 2. _Whither, mad maiden_, etc. From Martial, I. iv. 11, 12:--
- Aetherias, lascive, cupis volitare per auras:
- I, fuge; sed poteras tutior esse domi.
- _But for the Court._ Cp. Martial, I. iv. 3, 4.
- 4. _While Brutus standeth by._ "Brutus and Cato are commonplaces of
- examples of severe virtue": Grosart. But Herrick is translating. This is
- from Martial, XI. xvi. 9, 10:--
- Erubuit posuitque meum Lucretia librum,
- Sed coram Bruto; Brute, recede, leget.
- 8. _When he would have his verses read._ The thought throughout this
- poem is taken from Martial, X. xix., beginning:--
- Nec doctum satis et parum severum,
- Sed non rusticulum nimis libellum
- Facundo mea Plinio, Thalia,
- I perfer:
- where the address to Thalia perhaps explains Herrick's "do not _thou_
- rehearse". The important lines are:--
- Sed ne tempore non tuo disertam
- Pulses ebria januam, videto.
- ... ... ...
- Seras tutior ibis ad lucernas.
- Hæc hora est tua, cum furit Lyæus,
- Cum regnat rosa, cum madent capilli:
- Tunc me vel rigidi legant Catones.
- _When laurel spirts i' th' fire._ Burning bay leaves was a Christmas
- observance. Herrick sings:--
- "Of crackling laurel, which foresounds
- A plenteous harvest to your grounds":
- where compare Tibull. II. v. 81-84. It was also used by maids as a love
- omen.
- _Thyrse ... sacred Orgies._ Herrick's glosses show that the passage he
- had in mind was Catullus, lxiv. 256-269:--
- Harum pars tecta quatiebant cuspide thyrsos
- ... ... ... ...
- Pars obscura cavis celebrabant orgia cistis,
- Orgia, quæ frustra cupiunt audire profani.
- 10. _No man at one time can be wise and love._ Amare et sapere vix deo
- conceditur. (Publius Syrus.) The quotation is found in both Burton and
- Montaigne.
- 12. _Who fears to ask_, etc. From Seneca, _Hippol._ 594-95. Qui timide
- rogat ... docet negare.
- 15. _Goddess Isis ... with her scent._ Cp. Plutarch, _De Iside et
- Osiride_, 15.
- 17. _He acts the crime._ Seneca: Nil interest faveas sceleri an illud
- facias.
- 18. _Two things odious._ From Ecclus. xxv. 2.
- 31. _A Sister ... about I'll lead._ "Have we not power to lead about a
- sister, a wife?" 1 Cor. ix. 5.
- 35. _Mercy and Truth live with thee._ 2 Sam. xv. 20.
- 38. _To please those babies in your eyes._ The phrase "babies [_i.e._,
- dolls] in the eyes" is probably only a translation of its metaphor,
- involved in the use of the Latin _pupilla_ (a little girl), or "pupil,"
- for the central spot of the eye. The metaphor doubtless arose from the
- small reflections of the inlooker, which appear in the eyes of the
- person gazed at; but we meet with it both intensified, as in the phrase
- "to look babies in the eyes" (= to peer amorously), and with its origin
- disregarded, as in Herrick, where the "babies" are the pupils, and have
- an existence independent of any inlooker.
- _Small griefs find tongue._ Seneca, _Hippol._ 608:
- Curæ leves loquuntur, ingentes stupent.
- _Full casks._ So G. Herbert, _Jacula Prudentum_ (1640): Empty vessels
- sound most.
- 48. _Thus woe succeeds a woe as wave a wave._ Horace, Ep. II. ii. 176:
- Velut unda supervenit unda. Κύματα κακῶν and κακῶν τρικυμία are common
- phrases in Greek tragedy.
- 49. _Cherry-pit._ Printed in the 1654 edition of _Witts Recreations_,
- where it appears as:--
- "_Nicholas_ and _Nell_ did lately sit
- Playing for sport at cherry-pit;
- They both did throw, and, having thrown,
- He got the pit and she the stone".
- 51. _Ennobled numbers._ This poem is often quoted to prove that
- Herrick's country incumbency was good for his verse; but if the
- reference be only to his sacred poems or _Noble Numbers_ these would
- rather prove the opposite.
- 52. _O earth, earth, earth, hear thou my voice._ Jerem. xxii. 29: O
- earth, earth, earth, hear the word of the Lord.
- 56. _Love give me more such nights as these._ A reminiscence of
- Marlowe's version of Ovid, _Amor_. I. v. 26: "Jove send me more such
- afternoons as this".
- 72. _Upon his Sister-in-law, Mistress Elizabeth Herrick_, wife to his
- brother Thomas (see _infra_, 106).
- 74. _Love makes me write what shame forbids to speak._ Ovid, _Phædra to
- Hippol._: Dicere quæ puduit scribere jussit amor.
- _Give me a kiss._ Herrick is here imitating the well-known lines of
- Catullus to Lesbia (_Carm._ v.):--
- Da mi basia mille, deinde centum,
- Dein mille altera, dein secunda centum,
- Deinde usque altera mille, deinde centum,
- Dein, cum millia multa fecerimus,
- Conturbabimus illa, ne sciamus, etc.
- 77. _To the King, upon his coming with his army into the west._ Essex
- had marched into the west in June, 1644, relieved Lyme, and captured
- royal fortresses in Dorset and Devon. Charles followed him into "the
- drooping west," and, in September, the Parliamentary infantry were
- forced to surrender, while Essex himself escaped by sea. Herrick's
- "white omens" were thus fulfilled.
- 79. _To the King and Queen upon their unhappy distances._ Henrietta
- Maria escaped abroad with the crown jewels in 1642, returned the next
- year and rejoined Charles in the west in 1644, whence she escaped again
- to France. This poem has been supposed to refer to domestic dissensions;
- but the "ball of strife" is surely the Civil War in general, and the
- reference to the parting of 1644.
- 81. _The Cheat of Cupid._ Herrick is here translating "Anacreon," 31
- [3]:--
- Μεσονυκτίοις ποθ' ὥραις
- στρέφεθ' ἡνίκ' Ἄρκτος ἤδη
- κατὰ χεῖρα τὴν Βοώτου,
- μερόπων δὲ φῦλα πάντα
- κέαται κόπῳ δαμέντα, 5
- τότ' Ἔρως ἐπισταθείς μευ
- θυρέων ἔκοπτ' ὀχῆας.
- τίς, ἔφην, θύρας ἀράσσει;
- κατά μευ σχίζεις ὀνείρους.
- ὁ δ' Ἔρως, ἄνοιγε, φησίν· 10
- βρέφος εἰμί, μὴ φόβησαι·
- βρέχομαι δὲ κἀσέληνον
- κατὰ νύκτα πεπλάνημαι.
- ἐλέησα ταῦτ' ἀκούσας,
- ἀνὰ δ' εὐθὺ λύχνον ἅψας 15
- ἀνέῳξα, καὶ βρέφος μέν
- ἐσορῶ φἐροντα τόξον
- πτέρυγάς τε καὶ φαρέτρην.
- παρὰ δ' ἱστίην καθῖσα,
- παλάμαις τε χεῖρας αὐτοῦ 20
- ἀνέθαλπον, ἐκ δὲ χαίτης
- ἀπέθλιβον ὑγρὸν ὕδωρ.
- ὁ δ', ἐπεὶ κρύος μεθῆκεν,
- φέρε, φησί, πειράσωμεν
- τόδε τόξον, εἴ τι μοι νῦν 25
- βλάβεται βραχεῖσα νευρή.
- τανύει δὲ καί με τύπτει
- μέσον ἡπαρ, ὥσπερ οἶστρος·
- ἀνὰ δ' ἅλλεται καχάζων,
- ξένε δ', εἶπε, συγχάρηθι· 30
- κέρας ἀβλαβὲς μὲν ἡμῖν,
- σὺ δὲ καρδίην πονήσεις.
- Some of his phrases, however, prove that he was occasionally more
- indebted to the Latin version of Stephanus than to the original.
- 82. _That for seven lusters I did never come._ The fall of Herrick's
- father from a window, fifteen months after the poet's birth, was imputed
- at the time to suicide; and it has been reasonably conjectured that some
- mystery may have attached to the place of his burial. If "seven
- lusters" can be taken literally for thirty-five years, this poem was
- written in 1627.
- 83. _Delight in Disorder._ Cp. Ben Jonson's "Still to be neat, still to
- be drest," in its turn imitated from one of the _Basia_ of Johannes
- Bonefonius.
- 85. _Upon Love._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1654. The only variant
- is "To tell me" for "To signifie" in the third line.
- 86. _To Dean Bourn._ "We found many persons in the village who could
- repeat some of his lines, and none who were not acquainted with his
- 'Farewell to Dean Bourn,' which they said he uttered as he crossed the
- brook upon being ejected by Cromwell from the vicarage, to which he had
- been presented by Charles the First. But they added, with an air of
- innocent triumph, 'he did see it again,' as was the fact after the
- restoration." Barron Field in _Quarterly Review_, August, 1810. Herrick
- was ejected in 1648.
- _A rocky generation! a people currish._ Cp. Burton, II. iii. 2: a rude
- ... uncivil, wild, currish generation.
- 91. _That man loves not who is not zealous too._ Augustine, _Adv.
- Adimant._ 13: Qui non zelat, non amat.
- 92. _The Bag of the Bee._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1654, and in
- Henry Bold's _Wit a-sporting in a Pleasant Grove of new Fancies_, 1657.
- Set to music by Henry Lawes.
- 93. _Luxurious love by wealth is nourished._ Ovid, _Remed. Amor._ 746:
- Divitiis alitur luxuriosus amor.
- 95. _Homer himself._ Indignor quandoque bonus dormitat Homerus. Horace,
- _De Art. Poet._ 359.
- 100. _To bread and water none is poor._ Seneca, _Excerpt._ ii. 887:
- Panem et aquam Natura desiderat; nemo ad haec pauper est.
- _Nature with little is content._ Seneca, _Ep._ xvi.: Exiguum Natura
- desiderat. _Ep._ lx.: parvo Natura dimittitur.
- 106. _A Country Life: To his brother, M. Tho. Herrick._ "Thomas,
- baptized May 12, 1588, was placed by his uncle and guardian, Sir William
- Heyrick, with Mr. Massam, a merchant in London; but in 1610 he appears
- to have returned into the country and to have settled in a small farm.
- It is supposed that this Thomas was the father of Thomas Heyrick, who in
- 1668 resided at Market Harborough and issued a trader's token there, and
- grandfather to the Thomas who was curate of Harborough and published
- some sermons and poems." Hill's _Market Harborough_, p. 122.
- A MS. version of this poem is contained in Ashmole 38, from which Dr.
- Grosart gives a full collation on pp. cli.-cliii. of his Memorial
- Introduction. The MS. appears to follow an unrevised version of the
- poem, and contains a few couplets which Herrick afterwards thought fit
- to omit. The most important passage comes after line 92: "Virtue had,
- and mov'd her sphere".
- "Nor know thy happy and unenvied state
- Owes more to virtue than to fate,
- Or fortune too; for what the first secures,
- That as herself, or heaven, endures.
- The two last fail, and by experience make
- Known, not they give again, they take."
- _Thrice and above blest._ Felices ter et amplius, Hor. I. _Od._ xiii. 7.
- _My soul's half:_ Animæ dimidium meæ, Hor. I. _Od._ iii. 8. The poem is
- full of such reminiscences: "With holy meal and spirting (MS. crackling)
- salt" is the "Farre pio et saliente mica" of III. _Od._ xxiii. 20;
- "Untaught to suffer poverty" the "Indocilis pauperiem pati" of I. _Od._
- i. 18; "A heart thrice wall'd" comes from I. _Od._ iii. 9: Illi robur et
- æs triplex, etc. Similar instances might be multiplied. Note, too, the
- use of "Lar" and "Genius".
- _Jove for our labour all things sells us._ Epicharm. apud Xenoph.
- _Memor._ II. i. 20, τῶν πόνων Πωλοῦσιν ἡμῖν πάντα τἀγαθ' οἱ θεοί. Quoted
- by Montaigne, II. xx.
- _Wisely true to thine own self._ Possibly a Shakespearian reminiscence
- of the "to thine own self be true" in the speech of Polonius to Laertes,
- Hamlet, I. iii. 78.
- _A wise man every way lies square._ Cp. Arist. _Eth._ I. x. 11, ὡς ἀληθῶς
- ἀγαθὸς καὶ τετράγωνος ἄνευ ψόγου.
- _For seldom use commends the pleasure._ Voluptates commendat rarior
- usus. Juvenal, _Sat._ xi. ad fin.
- _Nor fear or wish your dying day._ Summum nec metuas diem, nec optes.
- Mart. X. xlvii. 13.
- 112. _To the Earl of Westmoreland._ Mildmay Fane succeeded his father,
- Thomas Fane, the first earl, in March, 1628. At the outbreak of the
- Civil War he sided with the king, but after a short imprisonment made
- his submission to the Parliament, and was relieved of the sequestration
- of his estates. He subsequently printed privately a volume of poems,
- called _Otia Sacra_, which has been re-edited by Dr. Grosart.
- 117. _To the Patron of Poets, M. End. Porter._ Five of Herrick's poems
- are addressed to Endymion Porter, who seems to have been looked to as a
- patron by all the singers of his day. According to the inscription on a
- medal of him executed by Varin in 1635, he was then forty-eight, so that
- he was born in 1587, coming into the world at Aston-under-Hill in
- Gloucestershire. He went with Charles on his trip to Spain, and after
- his accession became groom of his bedchamber, was active in the king's
- service during the Civil War, and died in 1649. He was a collector of
- works of art both for himself and for the king, and encouraged Rob.
- Dover's Cotswold games by presenting him with a suit of the king's
- clothes. À Wood tells us this, and mentions also that he was a friend of
- Donne, that Gervase Warmsely dedicated his _Virescit Vulnere Virtus_ to
- him in 1628, and that in conjunction with the Earl of St. Alban's he
- also received the dedication of Davenant's _Madagascar_.
- _Let there be patrons_, etc. Burton, I. ii. 3, § 15. 'Tis an old saying:
- "Sint Mæcenates, non deerunt, Flacce, Marones" (Mart. VIII. lvi. 5).
- Fabius, Cotta, and Lentulus are examples of Roman patrons of poetry,
- themselves distinguished. Cp. Juvenal, vii. 94.
- 119. _His tapers thus put out._ So Ovid, _Am._ iii. 9:--
- Ecce puer Veneris fert eversamque pharetram
- Et fractos arcus, et sine luce facem.
- 121. _Four things make us happy here._ From
- Ὑγιαίνειν μὲν ἄριστον ἀνδρὶ θνατῷ·
- δεύτερον δὲ φυὰν καλὸν γενέσθαι·
- τὸ τρίτον δὲ πλουτεῖν αδόλως·
- καὶ τὸ τέταρτον, ἡβᾶν μετὰ τῶν φίλων.
- (Bergk, _Anth. Lyr._, _Scol._ 8.)
- 123. _The Tear sent to her from Staines._ This is printed in _Witts
- Recreations_ with no other variation than in the title, which there
- runs: "A Teare sent his Mistresse". Dr. Grosart notes that Staines was
- at the time a royal residence.
- 128. _His Farewell to Sack._ A manuscript version of this poem at the
- British Museum omits many lines (7, 8, 11-22, 29-36), and contains few
- important variants. "Of the yet chaste and undefiled bride" is a poor
- anticipation of line 6, and "To raise the holy madness" for "To rouse
- the sacred madness" is also weak. For the line and a half:--
- "Prithee not smile
- Or smile more inly, lest thy looks beguile,"
- we have the very inferior passage:--
- "I prithee draw in
- Thy gazing fires, lest at their sight the sin
- Of fierce idolatry shoot into me, and
- I turn apostate to the strict command
- Of nature; bid me now farewell, or smile
- More ugly, lest thy tempting looks beguile".
- This MS. version is followed in the first published text in _Witts
- Recreations_, 1645.
- 130. _Upon Mrs. Eliz. Wheeler._ "The lady complimented in this poem was
- probably a relation by marriage. Herrick's first cousin, Martha, the
- seventh daughter of his uncle Robert, married Mr. John Wheeler." Nott.
- 132. _Fold now thine arms._ A sign of grief. Cp. "His arms in this sad
- knot". _Tempest._
- 134. _Mr. J. Warr._ This John Warr is probably the same as the "honoured
- friend, Mr. John Weare, Councellour," of a later poem. Dr. Grosart
- quotes an "Epitaph upon his honoured friend, Master Warre," by Randolph.
- Nothing is known of him, but I find in the Oxford Register that a John
- Warr matriculated at Exeter College, 16th May, 1619, and proceeded M.A.
- in 1624. He may possibly be Herrick's friend.
- 137. _Dowry with a wife._ Cp. Ovid, _Ars Am._ ii. 155: Dos est uxoria
- lites.
- 139. _The Wounded Cupid._ This is taken from Anacreon, 33 [40]:--
- Ἔρως ποτ' ἐν ῥόδοισιν
- κοιμωμένην μέλιτταν
- οὐκ εἶδεν, ἀλλ' ἐτοώθη
- τὸν δάκτυλον· παταχθείς
- τὰς χεῖρας ὠλόλυξεν·
- δραμὼν δὲ καὶ πετασθεις
- πρὸς τὴν καλὴν Κυθήρην
- ὄλωλα, μᾶτερ, εἶπεν,
- ὄλωλα κἀποθνήσκω·
- ὄφις μ' ἔτυψε μικρός
- πτερωτός, ὃν καλοῦσιν
- μέλιτταν οἱ γεωργοί.
- ἁ δ' εἶπεν· εἰ τὸ κέντρον
- πονεῖ τὸ τᾶς μελίττας,
- πόσον δοκεῖς πονοῦσιν,
- Ἔρως, ὅσους σὺ βάλλεις;
- 142. _A Virgin's face she had._ Herrick is imitating a charming passage
- from the first Æneid (ll. 315-320), in which Æneas is confronted by
- Venus:--
- Virginis os habitumque gerens et virginis arma,
- Spartanae vel qualis equos Threissa fatigat
- Harpalyce volucremque fuga praevertitur Eurum.
- Namque umeris de more habilem suspenderat arcum
- Venatrix, dederatque comam diffundere ventis,
- Nuda genu nodoque sinus collecta fluentis.
- _With a wand of myrtle_, etc. Cp. Anacreon, 7 [29]:--
- Ὑακινθίνῃ με ῥάβδῳ
- χαλέπως, Ἔρως ῥαπίζων ... εἶπε·
- Σὺ γὰρ οὐ δύνῃ φιλῆσαι.
- 146. _Upon the Bishop of Lincoln's Imprisonment._ John Williams
- (1582-1650), Bishop of Lincoln, 1621; Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal,
- 1621-1625; suspended and imprisoned, 1637-1640, on a frivolous charge of
- having betrayed the king's secrets; Archbishop of York, 1641. Save from
- this poem and the _Carol_ printed in the Appendix we know nothing of his
- relations with Herrick. He had probably stood in the way of the poet's
- obtaining holy orders or preferment. When Herrick was appointed to the
- cure of Dean Prior in 1629, Williams had already lost favour at the
- Court.
- 147. _Cynthius pluck ye by the ear._ Cp. Virg. _Ecl._ vi. 3: Cynthius
- aurem Vellit et admonuit; and Milton's _Lycidas_, 77: "Phœbus replied
- and touched my trembling ears".
- _The lazy man the most doth love._ Cp. Ovid, _Remed. Amor._ 144: Cedit
- amor rebus: res age, tutus eris. Nott. But Ovid could also write: Qui
- nolet fieri desidiosus amet (1 _Am._ ix. 46).
- 149. _Sir Thomas Southwell_, of Hangleton, Sussex, knighted 1615, died
- before December 16, 1642.
- _Those tapers five._ Mentioned by Plutarch, _Qu. Rom._ 2. For their
- significance see Ben Jonson's _Masque of Hymen_.
- _O'er the threshold force her in._ The custom of lifting the bride over
- the threshold, probably to avert an ill-omened stumble, has prevailed
- among the most diverse races. For the anointing of the doorposts Brand
- quotes Langley's translation of Polydore Vergil: "The bryde anoynted the
- poostes of the doores with swynes' grease, because she thought by that
- meanes to dryve awaye all misfortune, whereof she had her name in Latin
- 'Uxor ab unguendo'".
- _To gather nuts._ A Roman marriage custom mentioned in Catullus, _Carm._
- lxi. 124-127, the _In Nuptias Juliæ et Manlii_, which Herrick keeps in
- mind all through this ode.
- _With all lucky birds to side._ Bona cum bona nubit alite virgo. Cat.
- _Carm._ lxi. 18.
- _But when ye both can say Come._ The wish in this case appears to have
- been fulfilled, as Lady Southwell administered to her husband's estate,
- Dec. 16, 1642, and her own estate was administered on the thirtieth of
- the following January.
- _Two ripe shocks of corn._ Cp. Job v. 26.
- 153. _His wish._ From Hor. _Epist._ I. xviii. 111, 112:--
- Sed satis est orare Jovem quæ donat et aufert;
- Det vitam, det opes; æquum mî animum ipse parabo:
- where Herrick seems to have read _qui_ for _quæ_.
- 157. _No Herbs have power to cure Love._ Ovid, _Met._ i. 523; id. _Her._
- v. 149: Nullis amor est medicabilis herbis. For the 'only one sovereign
- salve' cp. Seneca, _Hippol._ 1189: Mors amoris una sedamen.
- 159. _The Cruel Maid._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, with no
- other variant than the mistaken omission of "how" in l. 7. I do not
- think that it has been yet pointed out that the whole poem is a close
- imitation of Theocritus, xxiii. 19-47:--
- Ἄγριε παῖ καὶ στυγνέ, κ.τ.λ.
- Possibly Herrick meant to translate the whole poem, which would explain
- his initial _And_. But cp. Ben Jonson's _Engl. Gram._ ch. viii.: "'And'
- in the beginning of a sentence serveth instead of an admiration".
- 164. _To a Gentlewoman objecting to him his gray hairs._ Mr. Hazlitt
- quotes an early MS. copy headed: "An old man to his younge Mrs.". The
- variants, as he observes, are mostly for the worse. The poem may have
- been suggested to Herrick by Anacreon, 6 [11]:--
- Λέγουσιν αἱ γυναῖκες,
- Ἀνακρέων, γέρων εἶ·
- λαβὼν ἔσοπτρον ἄθρει
- κόμας μὲν οὐκέτ' οὔσας κ.τ.λ.
- 168. _Jos. Lo. Bishop of Exeter._ Joseph Hall, 1574-1656, author of the
- satires.
- 169. _The Countess of Carlisle._ Lucy, the second wife of James, first
- Earl of Carlisle, the Lady Carlisle of Browning's _Strafford_.
- 170. _I fear no earthly powers._ Probably suggested by Anacreon [36],
- beginning: τί με τοὺς νόμους διδάσκεις; Cp. also 7 [15]: Οὔ μοι μέλει τὰ
- Γύγεω.
- 172. _A Ring presented to Julia._ Printed without variation in _Witts
- Recreations_, 1650, under the title: "With a O to Julia".
- 174. _Still thou reply'st: The Dead._ Cp. Martial, VIII. lxix. 1, 2:--
- Miraris veteres, Vacerra, solos
- Nec laudas nisi mortuos poetas.
- 178. _Corinna's going a-Maying._ Herrick's poem is a charming expansion
- of Chaucer's theme: "For May wol have no slogardye a night". The account
- of May-day customs in Brand (vol. i. pp. 212-234) is unusually full, and
- all Herrick's allusions can be illustrated from it. Dr. Nott compares
- the last stanza to Catullus, _Carm._ v.; but parallels from the classic
- poets could be multiplied indefinitely.
- _The God unshorn_ of l. 2 is from Hor. I. _Od_. xxi. 2: Intonsum pueri
- dicite Cynthium.
- 181. _A dialogue between Horace and Lydia._ Hor. III. _Od._ ix.
- _Ramsey._ Organist of Trinity College, Cambridge, 1628-1634. Some of his
- music still exists in MS.
- 185. _An Ode to Master Endymion Porter, upon his brother's death._
- Endymion Porter is said to have had an only brother, Giles, who died in
- the king's service at Oxford, _i.e._, between 1642 and 1646, and it has
- been taken for granted that this ode refers to his death. The
- supposition is possibly right, but if so, the ode, despite its beauty,
- is so gratingly and extraordinarily selfish that we may wonder if the
- dead brother is not the William Herrick of the next poem. The first
- verse is, of course, a soliloquy of Herrick's, not, as Dr. Grosart
- suggests, addressed to him by Porter. Dr. Nott again parallels Catullus,
- _Carm_. v.
- 186. _To his dying brother, Master William Herrick._ According to Dr.
- Grosart and Mr. Hazlitt the poet had an elder brother, William,
- baptized at St. Vedast's, Foster Lane, Nov. 24, 1585 (he must have been
- born some months earlier, if this date be right, for his sister Martha
- was baptized in the following January), and alive in 1629, when he acted
- as one of the executors of his mother's will. But, it is said, there was
- also another brother named William, born in 1593, after his father's
- death, "at Harry Campion's house at Hampton". I have not been able to
- find the authority for this last statement, which, as it asserts the
- co-existence of two brothers, of the same name, is certainly surprising.
- According to Dr. Grosart, it is the younger William who "died young" and
- was addressed in this poem, but I must own to feeling some doubt in the
- matter.
- 193. _The Lily in a Crystal._ The poem may be taken as an expansion of
- Martial, VIII. lxviii. 5-8:--
- Condita perspicuâ vivit vindemia gemmâ
- Et tegitur felix, nec tamen uva latet:
- Femineum lucet sic per bombycina corpus,
- Calculus in nitidâ sic numeratur aquâ.
- 197. _The Welcome to Sack._ Two MSS. at the British Museum (Harl. 6931
- and Add. 19,268) contain copies of this important poem. These copies
- differ considerably from the printed version, are proved by small
- variations to be independent of each other, and at the same time agree
- in all important points. We may conclude, therefore, that they represent
- an earlier version of the poem, subsequently revised by Herrick before
- the issue of _Hesperides_. In the subjoined copy, in which the two MSS.
- are corrected from each other, italics show the variations, asterisks
- mark lines omitted in _Hesperides_, and a dagger the absence of lines
- subsequently added.
- "So _swift_ streams meet, so springs with gladder smiles
- Meet after long divorcement _made by_ isles:
- When love (the child of likeness) urgeth on
- Their crystal _waters_ to an union.
- So meet stol'n kisses when the moonie _night_
- Calls forth fierce lovers to their wisht _delight_:
- So kings and queens meet, when desire convinces
- All thoughts, _save those that tend to_ getting princes.
- As I meet thee, Soul of my life and fame!
- Eternal Lamp of Love, whose radiant flame
- Out-_darts_ the heaven's Osiris; and thy _gems
- Darken_ the splendour of his mid-day beams.
- Welcome, O welcome, my illustrious spouse!
- Welcome as are the ends unto my vows:
- _Nay_, far more welcome than the happy soil
- The sea-scourged merchant, after all his toil,
- Salutes with tears of joy, when fires _display_
- The _smoking_ chimneys of his Ithaca.
- Where hast thou been so long from my embraces,
- Poor pitied exile? Tell me, did thy Graces
- Fly discontented hence, and for a time
- _Choose rather for_ to bless _some_ other clime?
- †*_Oh, then, not longer let my sweet defer
- *Her buxom smiles from me, her worshipper!_
- Why _have those amber_ looks, the which have been
- Time-past so fragrant, sickly now _call'd_ in
- Like a dull twilight? Tell me, *_hath my soul
- *Prophaned in speech or done an act that is foul
- *Against thy purer essence?_ _For that_ fault
- I'll expiate with sulphur, hair and salt:
- And with the crystal humour of the spring
- Purge hence the guilt, and kill _the_ quarrelling.
- _Wilt_ thou not smile, _nor_ tell me what's amiss?
- Have I been cold to hug thee, too remiss,
- Too temperate in embracing? Tell me, has desire
- To-thee-ward died in the embers, and no fire
- Left in _the_ raked-up _ashes_, as a mark
- To testify the glowing of a spark?
- †_I must_ confess I left thee, and appeal
- 'Twas done by me more to _increase_ my zeal,
- And double my affection[†]; as do those
- Whose love grows more inflamed by being _froze_.
- But to forsake thee, [†] could there _ever_ be
- A thought of such-like possibility?
- When _all the world may know that vines_ shall lack
- Grapes, before Herrick _leave_ Canary sack.
- *_Sack is my life, my leaven, salt to all
- *My dearest dainties, nay, 'tis the principal
- *Fire unto all my functions, gives me blood,
- *An active spirit, full marrow, and, what is good,_
- _Sack makes_ me _sprightful, airy_ to be borne,
- Like Iphyclus, upon the tops of corn.
- _Sack makes_ me nimble, as the wingèd hours,
- To dance and caper _o'er the tops_ of flowers,
- And ride the sunbeams. Can there be a thing
- Under the _cope of heaven_ that can bring
- More _joy_ unto my _soul_, or can present
- My Genius with a fuller blandishment?
- Illustrious Idol! _Can_ the Egyptians seek
- Help from the garlick, onion and the leek,
- And pay no vows to thee, who _art the_ best
- God, and far more _transcending_ than the rest?
- Had Cassius, that weak water-drinker, known
- Thee in _the_ Vine, or had but tasted one
- Small chalice of thy _nectar, he, even_ he
- As the wise Cato had approved of thee.
- Had not Jove's son, the _rash_ Tyrinthian swain
- (Invited to the Thesbian banquet), ta'ne
- Full goblets of thy [†] blood; his *_lustful_ sprite
- _Had not_ kept heat for fifty maids that night.
- †As Queens meet Queens, _so let sack come to_ me
- _Or_ as Cleopatra _unto_ Anthonie,
- When her high _visage_ did at once present
- To the Triumvir love and wonderment.
- Swell up my _feeble sinews_, let my blood
- †Fill each part full of fire,* _let all my good_
- _Parts be encouraged_, active to do
- What thy commanding soul shall put _me_ to,
- And till I turn apostate to thy love,
- Which here I vow to serve, _never_ remove
- Thy _blessing_ from me; but Apollo's curse
- Blast _all mine_ actions; or, a thing that's worse,
- When these circumstants _have the fate_ to see
- The time _when_ I prevaricate from thee,
- Call me the Son of Beer, and then confine
- Me to the tap, the toast, the turf; let wine
- Ne'er shine upon me; _let_ my _verses_ all
- _Haste_ to a sudden death and funeral:
- And last, _dear Spouse, when I thee_ disavow,
- _May ne'er_ prophetic Daphne crown my brow."
- Certainly this manuscript version is in every way inferior to that
- printed in the _Hesperides_, and Herrick must be reckoned among the
- poets who are able to revise their own work.
- _The smoky chimneys of his Ithaca._ Ovid, I. _de Ponto_, ix. 265:--
- Non dubia est Ithaci prudentia sed tamen optat
- Fumum de patriis posse videre focis.
- _Upon the tops of corn._ Virgil (_Æn._ vii. 808-9) uses the same
- comparison of Camilla: Illa vel intactae segetis per summa volaret
- Gramina, nec teneras cursu laesisset aristas.
- _Could the Egyptians seek Help from the garlick, onion and the leek._
- Cp. Numbers xi. 5, and Juv., xi. 9-11.
- _Cassius, that weak water-drinker._ Not, as Dr. Grosart queries:
- "Cassius Iatrosophista, or Cassius Felix?" but C. Cassius Longinus, the
- murderer of Cæsar. Cp. Montaigne, II. 2, and Seneca, _Ep._ 83: "Cassius
- totâ vitâ aquam bibit" there quoted.
- 201. _To trust to good verses._ Carminibus confide bonis. Ovid, _Am._
- III. ix. 39.
- _The Golden Pomp is come._ Aurea pompa venit, Ovid, _Am._ III. ii. 44.
- "Now reigns the rose" (nunc regnat rosa) is a common phrase in Martial
- and elsewhere. For the "Arabian dew," cp. Ovid, _Sappho to Phaon_, 98:
- Arabo noster rore capillus olet.
- _A text ... Behold Tibullus lies._ Jacet ecce Tibullus: Vix manet e
- tanto parva quod urna capit. Ovid, _Am._ III. ix. 39.
- 203. _Lips Tongueless._ Dr. Nott parallels Catullus, _Carm._ lii.
- (lv.):--
- Si linguam clauso tenes in ore,
- Fructus projicies amoris omnes:
- Verbosa gaudet Venus loquela.
- 208. _Gather ye rosebuds while ye may._ Set to music by William Lawes in
- Playford's second book of "Ayres," 1652. Printed in _Witts Recreations_,
- 1654, with the variants: "Gather _your_ Rosebuds" in l. 1; l. 4, _may_
- for _will_; l. 6, _he is getting_ for _he's a-getting_; l. 8, _nearer to
- his setting_ for _nearer he's to setting_. The opening lines are from
- Ausonius, ccclxi. 49, 50 (quoted by Burton, _Anat. Mel._ III. 2, 5 §
- 5):--
- Collige, virgo, rosas, dum flos novus, et nova pubes,
- Et memor esto aevum sic properare tuum:
- cp. also l. 43:--
- Quam longa una dies, ætas tam longa rosarum.
- 209. _Has not whence to sink at all._ Seneca, _Ep._ xx.: Redige te ad
- parva ex quibus cadere non possis. Cp. Alain Delisle: Qui decumbit humi
- non habet unde cadat.
- 211. _His poetry his pillar._ A variation upon the Horatian theme:--
- "Exegi monumentum aere perennius
- Regalique situ pyramidum altius".
- (III. _Od._ xxx.)
- 212. _What though the sea be calm._ Almost literally translated from
- Seneca, _Ep._ iv.: Noli huic tranquillitati confidere: momento mare
- evertitur: eodem die ubi luserunt navigia sorbentur.
- 213. _At noon of day was seen a silver star._ "King Charles the First
- went to St. Paul's Church the 30th day of May, 1630, to give praise for
- the birth of his son, attended with all his Peers and a most royal
- Train, where a bright star appeared at High Noon in the sight of all."
- (_Stella Meridiana_, 1661.)
- 213. _And all most sweet, yet all less sweet than he._ It is
- characteristic of Herrick that in his _Noble Numbers_ ("The New-Year's
- Gift") he repeats this line, applying it to Christ.
- _The swiftest grace is best._ Ὠκεῖαι χάριτες γλυκερώτεραι. Anth. Pal. x.
- 30.
- 214. _Know thy when._ So in _The Star-song_ Herrick sings: "Thou canst
- clear All doubts and manifest the where".
- 219. _Lord Bernard Stewart_, fourth son of Esme, third Duke of Lennox,
- and himself created Earl of Lichfield by Charles I. He commanded the
- king's troop of guards, and was killed at the battle of Rowton Heath,
- outside Chester, Sept. 24, 1645.
- Clarendon (_History of the Rebellion_, ix. 19) thus records his death
- and character: "Here fell many gentlemen and officers of name, with the
- brave Earl of Litchfield, who was the third brother of that illustrious
- family that sacrificed his life in this quarrel. He was a very faultless
- young man, of a most gentle, courteous, and affable nature, and of a
- spirit and courage invincible; whose loss all men lamented, and the king
- bore it with extraordinary grief."
- _Trentall._ Properly a set of thirty masses for the repose of a dead
- man's soul. Here and elsewhere Herrick uses the word as an equivalent
- for dirge, but Sidney distinguished them: "Let dirige be sung and
- trentalls rightly read. For love is dead," etc. "Hence, hence profane,"
- is the Latin, _procul o procul este profani_ of Virg. _Æn._ vi. 258,
- where "profane" is only equivalent to uninitiated.
- 223. _The Fairy Temple._ For a brief note on Herrick's fairy poems, see
- Appendix. On the dedication to Mr. John Merrifield, Counsellor-at-Law,
- Dr. Grosart remarks: "Nothing seems to be now known of Merrifield. It is
- just possible that--as throughout the poem--the name was an invented
- one, 'Merry Field'." But the records of the Inner Temple show that the
- Merrifields were a legal family from Woolmiston, near Crewkerne,
- Somersetshire. John (son of Richard) Merrifield, the father, was
- admitted to the Inner Temple in 1581, and John, the son, in 1611. This
- latter must be Herrick's Counsellor. He rose to be a Master of the Bench
- in 1638 and Sergeant-at-Law in 1660. He died October, 1666, aged 75, at
- Crewkerne. On the other hand, it can hardly be doubted that Dr. Grosart
- is right in regarding the names of the fairy saints as quite imaginary.
- He nevertheless suggests SS. Titus, Neot, Idus, Ida, Fridian or
- Fridolin, Trypho, Felan and Felix as the possible prototypes of "Saint
- _Tit_, Saint _Nit_, Saint _Is_," etc. It should be noted that "Tit and
- Nit" occur with "Wap and Win" and other obviously made-up names, in
- Drayton's _Nymphidia_.
- 229. _Upon Cupid._ Taken from Anacreon, 5 [59].
- Στέφος πλέκων ποθ' εὗρον
- ἐν τοῖς ῥόδοις Ἔρωτα·
- καὶ τῶν πτερῶν κατασχών
- ἐβάπτισ' εἰς τὸν οἶνον·
- λαβὼν δ' ἔπινον αὐτόν,
- καὶ νῦν ἔσω μελῶν μου
- πτεροῖσι γαργαλίζει.
- 234. _Care will make a face._ Ovid, _Ar. Am._ iii. 105: Cura dabit
- faciem, facies neglecta peribit.
- 235. _Upon Himself._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1654, under the
- title: _On an old Batchelor_, and with the variants, _married_ for
- _wedded_, l. 3, _one_ for _a_ in l. 4, and _Rather than mend me, blind
- me quite_ in l. 6.
- 238. _To the Rose._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1654, with the
- variants _peevish_ for _flowing_ in l. 4, _say, if she frets, that I
- have bonds_ in l. 6, _that can tame although not kill_ in l. 10, and
- _now_ for _thus_ in l. 11. The opening couplet is from Martial, VII.
- lxxxix.:--
- I, felix rosa, mollibusque sertis
- Nostri cinge comas Apollinaris.
- 241. _Upon a painted Gentlewoman._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650,
- under the title, _On a painted madame_.
- 250. _Mildmay, Earl of Westmoreland._ See Note to 112. According to the
- date of the earl's succession, this poem must have been written after
- 1628.
- 253. _He that will not love_, etc. Ovid, _Rem. Am._ 15, 16:--
- Si quis male fert indignae regna puellae,
- Ne pereat nostrae sentiat artis opem.
- _How she is her own least part._ _Ib._ 344: Pars minima est ipsa puella
- sui, quoted by Bacon, Burton, Lyly, and Montaigne.
- Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1654, with the variants, '_freezing_
- colds and _fiery_ heats,' and 'and how she is _in every_ part'.
- 256. _Had Lesbia_, etc. See Catullus, _Carm_. iii.
- 260. _How violets came blue._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1654, as
- _How the violets came blue_. The first two lines read:--
- "The violets, as poets tell,
- With Venus wrangling went".
- Other variants are _did_ for _sho'd_ in l. 3; _Girl_ for _Girls_; _you_
- for _ye_; _do_ for _dare_.
- 264. _That verse_, etc. Herrick repeats this assurance in a different
- context in the second of his _Noble Numbers_, _His Prayer for
- Absolution_.
- 269. _The Gods to Kings the judgment give to sway._ From Tacitus, _Ann._
- vi. 8 (M. Terentius to Tiberius): Tibi summum rerum judicium dii dedere;
- nobis obsequi gloria relicta est.
- 270. _He that may sin, sins least._ Ovid, _Amor._ III. iv. 9, 10:--
- Cui peccare licet, peccat minus: ipsa potestas
- Semina nequitiae languidiora facit.
- 271. _Upon a maid that died the day she was married._ Cp. Meleager,
- Anth. Pal. vii. 182:
- Οὐ γάμον ἀλλ' Ἀίδαν ἐπινυμφίδιον Κλεαρίστα
- δέξατο παρθενίας ἅμματα λυομένα·
- Ἄρτι γὰρ ἑσπέριοι νύμφας ἐπὶ δικλίσιν ἄχευν
- λωτοί, καὶ θαλάμων ἐπλαταγεῦντο θύραι·
- Ἠῷοι δ' ὀλολυγμὸν ἀνέκραγον, ἐκ δ' Ὑμέναιος
- σιγαθεὶς γοερὸν φθέγμα μεθαρμόσατο,
- Αἱ δ' αὐταὶ καὶ φέγγος ἐδᾳδούχουν παρὰ παστῷ
- πεῦκαι καὶ φθιμένᾳ νέρθεν ἔφαινον ὁδόν.
- 278. _To his Household Gods._ Obviously written at the time of his
- ejection from his living.
- 283. _A Nuptial Song on Sir Clipseby Crew._ Of this Epithalamium
- (written in 1625 for the marriage of Sir Clipseby Crew, knighted by
- James I. at Theobald's in 1620, with Jane, daughter of Sir John
- Pulteney), two manuscript versions, substantially agreeing, are
- preserved at the British Museum (Harl. MS. 6917, and Add. 25, 303).
- Seven verses are transcribed in these manuscripts which Herrick
- afterwards saw fit to omit, and almost every verse contains variants of
- importance. It is impossible to convey the effect of the earlier version
- by a mere collation, and I therefore transcribe it in full, despite its
- length. As before, variants and additions are printed in italics. The
- numbers in brackets are those of the later version, as given in
- _Hesperides_. The marginal readings are variants of Add. 25, 303, from
- the Harleian manuscript.
- 1 [1].
- "What's that we see from far? the spring of Day
- Bloom'd from the East, or fair _enamell'd_ May
- Blown out of April; or some new
- Star fill'd with glory to our view,
- Reaching at Heaven,
- To add a nobler Planet to the seven?
- Say or do we not descry
- Some Goddess in a Cloud of Tiffany
- To move, or rather the
- Emerg_ing_ Venus from the sea?
- 2 [2].
- "'Tis she! 'tis she! or else some more Divine
- Enlightened substance; mark how from the shrine
- Of holy Saints she paces on
- _Throwing about_ Vermilion
- And Amber: spice-
- ing the chafte-air with fumes of Paradise.
- Then come on, come on, and yield
- A savour like unto a blessed field,
- When the bedabbled morn
- Washes the golden ears of corn.
- 3.
- "_Lead on fair paranymphs, the while her eyes,
- Guilty of somewhat, ripe the strawberries
- And cherries in her cheeks, there's cream
- Already spilt, her rays must gleam
- Gently thereon,
- And so beget lust and temptation
- To surfeit and to hunger.
- Help on her pace; and, though she lag, yet stir
- Her homewards; well she knows
- Her heart's at home, howe'er she goes._
- 4 [3].
- "See where she comes; and smell how all the street
- Breathes Vine-yards and Pomegranates: O how sweet,
- As a fir'd Altar, is each stone
- _Spirting forth_ pounded Cinnamon.
- The Phœnix nest,
- Built up of odours, burneth in her breast.
- Who _would not then_ consume
- His soul to _ashes_ in that rich perfume? [ash-heaps
- Bestroking Fate the while
- He burns to embers on the Pile.
- 5 [4].
- "Hymen, O Hymen! tread the sacred _round_ [ground
- Shew thy white feet, and head with Marjoram crowned:
- Mount up thy flames, and let thy Torch
- Display _thy_ Bridegroom in the porch
- In his desires
- More towering, more _besparkling_ than thy fires: [disparkling
- Shew her how his eyes do turn
- And roll about, and in their motions burn
- Their balls to cinders: haste
- Or, _like a firebrand_, he will waste.
- 6.
- "_See how he waves his hand, and through his eyes
- Shoots forth his jealous soul, for to surprise
- And ravish you his Bride, do you
- Not now perceive the soul of C[lipseby] C[rew],
- Your mayden knight,
- With kisses to inspire
- You with his just and holy ire._
- 7 [5].
- "_If so, glide through the ranks of Virgins_, pass
- The Showers of Roses, lucky four-leaved grass:
- The while the cloud of younglings sing,
- And drown _you_ with a flowery spring:
- While some repeat
- Your praise, and bless you, sprinkling you with Wheat,
- While that others do divine,
- 'Blest is the Bride on whom the Sun doth shine';
- And thousands gladly wish
- You multiply as _do the_ fish.
- 8.
- "_Why then go forward, sweet Auspicious Bride,
- And come upon your Bridegroom like a Tide
- Bearing down Time before you; hye
- Swell, mix, and loose your souls; imply
- Like streams which flow
- Encurled together, and no difference show
- In their [most] silver waters; run
- Into your selves like wool together spun.
- Or blend so as the sight
- Of two makes one Hermaphrodite._
- 9 [6].
- "And, beauteous Bride, we do confess _you_ are wise
- _On drawing_ forth _those_ bashful jealousies [doling
- In love's name, do so; and a price
- Set on yourself by being nice.
- But yet take heed
- What now you seem be not the same indeed,
- And turn Apostat_a_: Love will
- Part of the way be met, or sit stone still;
- On them, and though _y'are slow
- In going_ yet, howsoever go.
- 10.
- "_How long, soft Bride, shall your dear C[lipseby] make
- Love to your welcome with the mystic cake,
- How long, oh pardon, shall the house
- And the smooth Handmaids pay their vows
- With oil and wine
- For your approach, yet see their Altars pine?
- How long shall the page to please
- You stand for to surrender up the keys
- Of the glad house? Come, come,
- Or Lar will freeze to death at home._
- 11.
- "_Welcome at last unto the Threshold, Time
- Throned in a saffron evening, seems to chime
- All in, kiss and so enter. If
- A prayer must be said, be brief,
- The easy Gods
- For such neglect have only myrtle rods
- To stroke, not strike; fear you
- Not more, mild Nymph, than they would have you do;
- But dread that you do more offend
- In that you do begin than end._
- 12 [7].
- "And now y'are entered, see the coddled cook
- Runs from his Torrid Zone to pry and look
- And bless his dainty mistress; see
- _How_ th' aged point out: 'This is she
- Who now must sway
- _Us_ (_and God_ shield her) with her yea and nay,'
- And the smirk Butler thinks it
- Sin in _his_ nap'ry not t' express his wit;
- Each striving to devise
- Some gin wherewith to catch _her_ eyes.
- 13.
- "_What though your laden Altar now has won
- The credit from the table of the Sun
- For earth and sea; this cost
- On you is altogether lost
- Because you feed
- Not on the flesh of beasts, but on the seed
- Of contemplation: your,
- Your eyes are they, wherewith you draw the pure
- Elixir to the mind
- Which sees the body fed, yet pined._
- 14 [14].
- "If _you must needs_ for ceremonie's sake
- Bless a sack posset, Luck go with _you_, take
- The night charm quickly; you have spells
- And magic for to end, and Hells
- To pass, but such
- And of such torture as no _God_ would grutch
- To live therein for ever: fry,
- _Aye_ and consume, and grow again to die,
- And live, and in that case
- Love the _damnation_ of _that_ place. [the
- 15 [8].
- "To Bed, to Bed, _sweet_ Turtles now, and write
- This the shortest day,† this the longest night
- _And_ yet too short for you; 'tis we
- Who count this night as long as three,
- Lying alone
- _Hearing_ the clock _go_ Ten, Eleven, Twelve, One:
- Quickly, quickly then prepare.
- And let the young men and the Bridemaids share
- Your garters, and their joints
- Encircle with the Bridegroom's points.
- 16 [9].
- "By the Bride's eyes, and by the teeming life
- Of her green hopes, we charge you that no strife,
- _Further_ than _virtue lends_, gets place
- Among _you catching at_ her Lace.
- Oh, do not fall
- Foul in these noble pastimes, lest you call
- Discord in, and so divide
- The _gentle_ Bridegroom and the _fragrous_ Bride,
- Which Love forefend: but spoken
- Be't to your praise: 'No peace was broken'.
- 17[10].
- "Strip her of spring-time, tender whimpering maids,
- Now Autumn's come, when all _those_ flowery aids
- Of her delays must end, dispose
- That Lady-smock, that pansy and that Rose
- Neatly apart;
- But for prick-madam, and for gentle-heart,
- And soft maiden-blush, the Bride
- Makes holy these, all others lay aside:
- Then strip her, or unto her
- Let him come who dares undo her.
- 18 [11].
- "And to enchant _you_ more, _view_ everywhere [ye
- About the roof a Syren in a sphere,
- As we think, singing to the din
- Of many a warbling cherubin:
- _List, oh list!_ how
- _Even heaven gives up his soul between you_ now, [ye
- _Mark how_ thousand Cupids fly
- To light their Tapers at the Bride's bright eye;
- To bed, or her they'll tire,
- Were she an element of fire.
- 19 [12].
- "And to your more bewitching, see the proud
- Plump bed bear up, and _rising_ like a cloud,
- Tempting _thee, too, too_ modest; can
- You see it brussle like a swan
- And you be cold
- To meet it, when it woos and seems to fold
- The arms to hug _you_? throw, throw
- Yourselves into _that main, in the full_ flow
- Of _the_ white pride, and drown
- The _stars_ with you in floods of down.
- 20 [13].
- "_You see 'tis_ ready, and the maze of love
- Looks for the treaders; everywhere is wove
- Wit and new mystery, read and
- Put in practice, to understand
- And know each wile,
- Each Hieroglyphic of a kiss or smile;
- And do it _in_ the full, reach
- High in your own conceipts, and _rather_ teach
- Nature and Art one more
- _Sport_ than they ever knew before.
- 21.
- To the Maidens:]
- "_And now y' have wept enough, depart; yon stars [the
- Begin to pink, as weary that the wars
- Know so long Treaties; beat the Drum
- Aloft, and like two armies, come
- And guild the field,
- Fight bravely for the flame of mankind, yield
- Not to this, or that assault,
- For that would prove more Heresy than fault
- In combatants to fly
- 'Fore this or that hath got the victory._
- 22 [15].
- "But since it must be done, despatch and sew
- Up in a sheet your Bride, and what if so
- It be with _rib of Rock and_ Brass,
- _Yea_ tower her up, as Danae was, [ye
- Think you that this,
- Or Hell itself, a powerful Bulwark is?
- I tell _you_ no; but like a [ye
- Bold bolt of thunder he will make his way,
- And rend the cloud, and throw
- The sheet about, like flakes of snow.
- 23 [16].
- "All now is hushed in silence: Midwife-moon
- With all her Owl-ey'd issue begs a boon
- Which you must grant; that's entrance with
- Which extract, all we † call pith
- And quintessence
- Of Planetary bodies; so commence,
- All fair constellations
- Looking upon _you_ that _the_ Nations
- Springing from to such Fires
- May blaze the virtue of their Sires."
- --R. HERRICK.
- The variants in this version are not very important; one of the most
- noteworthy, _round_ for _ground_, in stanza 5 [4], was overlooked by Dr.
- Grosart in his collation. Of the seven stanzas subsequently omitted
- several are of great beauty. There are few happier images in Herrick
- than that of _Time throned in a saffron evening_ in stanza 11. It is
- only when the earlier version is read as a whole that Herrick's taste
- in omitting is vindicated. Each stanza is good in itself, but in the
- MSS. the poem drags from excessive length, and the reduction of its
- twenty-three stanzas to sixteen greatly improves it.
- 286. _Ever full of pensive fear._ Ovid, _Heroid._ i. 12: Res est
- solliciti plena timoris amor.
- 287. _Reverence to riches._ Perhaps from Tacit. _Ann._ ii. 33: Neque in
- familia et argento quæque ad usum parantur nimium aliquid aut modicum,
- nisi ex fortuna possidentis.
- 288. _Who forms a godhead._ From Martial, VIII. xxiv. 5:--
- Qui fingit sacros auro vel marmore vultus
- Non facit ille deos: qui rogat, ille facit.
- 290. _The eyes be first that conquered are._ From Tacitus, _Germ._ 43:
- Primi in omnibus proeliis oculi vincuntur.
- 293. _Oberon's Feast._ For a note on Herrick's Fairy Poems and on the
- _Description of the King and Queene of the Fayries_ (1635), in which
- part of this poem was first printed, see Appendix. Add. MS. 22, 603, at
- the British Museum, and Ashmole MS. 38, at the Bodleian, contain early
- versions of the poem substantially agreeing. I transcribe the Museum
- copy:--
- "A little mushroom table spread
- After _the dance_, they set on bread,
- A _yellow corn of hecky_ wheat
- With some small _sandy_ grit to eat
- His choice bits; with _which_ in a trice
- They make a feast less great than nice.
- But all _the_ while his eye _was_ served
- We _dare_ not think his ear was sterved:
- But that there was in place to stir
- His _fire_ the _pittering_ Grasshopper;
- The merry Cricket, puling Fly,
- The piping Gnat for minstralcy.
- _The Humming Dor, the dying Swan,
- And each a choice Musician._
- And now we must imagine first,
- The Elves present to quench his thirst
- A pure seed-pearl of infant dew,
- Brought and _beswetted_ in a blue
- And pregnant violet; which done,
- His kitling eyes begin to run
- Quite through the table, where he spies
- The horns of papery Butterflies:
- Of which he eats, _but with_ a little
- _Neat cool allay_ of Cuckoo's spittle;
- A little Fuz-ball pudding stands
- By, yet not blessed by his hands--
- That was too coarse, but _he not spares
- To feed upon the candid hairs
- Of a dried canker, with a_ sagg
- And well _bestuffed_ Bee's sweet bag:
- _Stroking_ his pallet with some store
- Of Emme_t_ eggs. What would he more,
- But Beards of Mice, _an Ewt's_ stew'd thigh,
- _A pickled maggot and a dry
- Hipp, with a_ Red cap worm, that's shut
- Within the concave of a Nut
- Brown as his tooth, _and with the fat
- And well-boiled inchpin of a Bat.
- A bloated Earwig with the Pith
- Of sugared rush aglads him with;
- But most of all the Glow-worm's fire.
- As most betickling his desire
- To know his Queen, mixt with the far-
- Fetcht binding-jelly of a star.
- The silk-worm's seed_, a little moth
- _Lately_ fattened in a piece of cloth;
- Withered cherries; Mandrake's ears;
- Mole's eyes; to these the slain stag's tears;
- The unctuous dewlaps of a Snail;
- The broke heart of a Nightingale
- O'er-come in music; with a wine
- Ne'er ravished from the flattering Vine,
- But gently pressed from the soft side
- Of the most sweet and dainty Bride,
- Brought in a _daisy chalice_, which
- He fully quaffs _off_ to bewitch
- His blood _too high_. This done, commended
- Grace by his Priest, the feast is ended."
- The Shapcott to whom this _Oberon's Feast_ and _Oberon's Palace_ are
- dedicated is Herrick's "peculiar friend, Master Thomas Shapcott,
- Lawyer," of a later poem. Dr. Grosart again suggests that it may have
- been a character-name, but, as in the case of John Merrifield, the owner
- was a West country-man and a member of the Inner Temple, where he was
- admitted in 1632 as the "son and heir of Thomas Shapcott," of Exeter.
- 298. _That man lives twice._ From Martial, X. xxiii. 7:--
- Ampliat aetatis spatium sibi vir bonus: hoc est
- Vivere bis vita posse priore frui.
- 301. _Master Edward Norgate, Clerk of the Signet of his Majesty:_--
- Son to Robert Norgate, D.D., Master of Bene't College, Cambridge. He was
- employed by the Earl of Arundel to purchase pictures, and on one
- occasion found himself at Marseilles without remittances, and had to
- tramp through France on foot. According to the Calendars of State Papers
- in 1625, it was ordered that, "forasmuch as his Majesty's letters to the
- Grand Signior, the King of Persia, the Emperor of Russia, the Great
- Mogul, and other remote Princes, had been written, limned, and garnished
- with gold and colours by scriveners abroad, thenceforth they should be
- so written, limned, and garnished by Edward Norgate, Clerk of the Signet
- in reversion". Six years later this order was renewed, the "Kings of
- Bantam, Macassar, Barbary, Siam, Achine, Fez, and Sus" being added to
- the previous list, and Norgate being now designated as a Clerk of the
- Signet Extraordinary. In the same year, having previously been
- Bluemantle Pursuivant, he was promoted to be Windsor Herald, in which
- capacity he received numerous fees during the next few years, and was
- excused ship money. He still, however, retained his clerkship, for he
- writes in 1639: "The poor Office of Arms is fain to blazon the Council
- books and Signet". The phrase occurs in a series of nineteen letters of
- extraordinary interest, which Norgate wrote from the North, chiefly to
- his friend, Robert Reade, secretary to Windebank, on the course of
- affairs. In Sept., 1641, "Ned Norgate" was ordered personally to attend
- the king. "It is his Majesty's pleasure that the master should wait and
- not the men, and _that_ they shall find." Henceforth I find no certain
- reference to him; according to Fuller he died at the Herald's Office in
- 1649. It would be interesting if we could be sure that this Edward
- Norgate is the same as the one who in 1611 was appointed Tuner of his
- Majesty's "virginals, organs, and other instruments," and in 1637
- received a grant of £140 for the repair of the organ at Hampton Court.
- Herrick's love of music makes us expect to find a similar trait in his
- friends.
- 313. _The Entertainment, or Porch Verse._ The words _Ye wrong the
- threshold-god_ and the allusion to the porch in the Clipsby Crew
- Epithalamium (stanza 4) show that there is no reference here (as Brand
- thinks, ii. 135) to the old custom of reading part of the marriage
- service at the church door or porch (cp. Chaucer: "Husbands at churchë
- door she had had five"). The porch of the house is meant, and the
- allusions are to the ceremonies at the threshold (cp. the Southwell
- Epithalamium). Dr. Grosart quotes from the Dean Prior register the entry
- of the marriage of Henry Northleigh, gentleman, and Mistress Lettice
- Yard on September 5, 1639, by licence from the Archbishop of Canterbury.
- 319. _No noise of late-spawned Tittyries._ In the Camden Society's
- edition of the _Diary of Walter Yonge_, p. 70 (kindly shown me by the
- Rev. J. H. Ward), we have a contemporary account of the Club known as
- the Tityre Tues, which took its name from the first words of Virgil's
- first _Eclogue_. "The beginning of December, 1623, there was a great
- number in London, haunting taverns and other debauched places, who swore
- themselves in a brotherhood and named themselves _Tityre Tues_. The oath
- they gave in this manner: he that was to be sworn did put his dagger
- into a pottle of wine, and held his hand upon the pommel thereof, and
- then was to make oath that he would aid and assist all other of his
- fellowship and not disclose their council. There were divers knights,
- some young noblemen and gentlemen of this brotherhood, and they were to
- know one the other by a black bugle which they wore, and their followers
- to be known by a blue ribbond. There are discovered of them about 80 or
- 100 persons, and have been examined by the Privy Council, but nothing
- discovered of any intent they had. It is said that the king hath given
- commandment that they shall be re-examined." In Mennis's _Musarum
- Deliciæ_ the brotherhood is celebrated in a poem headed "The Tytre Tues;
- or, a Mocke Song. To the tune of Chive Chase. By Mr. George Chambers."
- The second verse runs:--
- "They call themselves the Tytere-tues,
- And wore a blue rib-bin;
- And when a-drie would not refuse
- To drink. O fearful sin!
- "The council, which is thought most wise,
- Did sit so long upon it,
- That they grew weary and did rise,
- And could make nothing on it."
- According to a letter of Chamberlain to Carleton, indexed among the
- _State Papers_, the Tityres were a secret society first formed in Lord
- Vaux's regiment in the Low Countries, and their "prince" was called
- Ottoman. Another entry shows that the "Bugle" mentioned by Yonge was the
- badge of a society originally distinct from the Tityres, which
- afterwards joined with it. The date of Herrick's poem is thus fixed as
- December, 1623/4, and this is confirmed by another sentence in the same
- passage in _Yonge's Diary_, in which he says: "The Jesuits and Papists
- do wonderfully swarm in the city, and rumours lately have been given out
- for firing the Navy and House of Munition, on which are set a double
- guard". The Parliament to which Herrick alludes was actually summoned in
- January, 1624, to meet on February 12. Sir Simeon Steward, to whom the
- poem is addressed, was of the family of the Stewards of Stantney, in the
- Isle of Ely. He was knighted with his father, Mark Steward, in 1603, and
- afterwards became a fellow-commoner of Trinity Hall, Cambridge. He was
- at different times Sheriff and Deputy-Lieutenant for Cambridgeshire, and
- while serving in the latter capacity got into some trouble for unlawful
- exactions. In 1627 he wrote a poem on the _King of the Fairies Clothes_
- in the same vein as Herrick's fairy pieces.
- 321. _Then is the work half done._ As Dr. Grosart suggests, Herrick may
- have had in mind the "Dimidium facti qui cœpit habet" of Horace, I.
- _Epist._ ii. 40. But here the emphasis is on beginning _well_, there on
- _beginning_.
- _Begin with Jove_ is doubtless from the "Ab Jove principium, Musæ," of
- Virg. _Ecl._ iii. 60.
- 323. _Fears not the fierce sedition of the seas._ A reminiscence of
- Horace, III. _Od._ i. 25-32.
- 328. _Gold before goodness._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, as _A
- Foolish Querie_. The sentiment is from Seneca, _Ep._ cxv.: An dives,
- omnes quærimus; nemo, an bonus. Cp. Juvenal, III. 140 sqq.; Plaut.
- _Menæchm._ IV. ii. 6.
- 331. _To his honoured kinsman, Sir William Soame._ The second son of Sir
- Stephen Soame, Lord Mayor of London in 1598. Herrick's father and Sir
- Stephen married sisters.
- _As benjamin and storax when they meet._ Instances of the use of
- "Benjamin" for gum benzoin will be found in the Dictionaries. Dr.
- Grosart's gloss, "_Benjamin_, the favourite youngest son of the
- Patriarch," is unfortunate.
- 336. _His Age: dedicated to ... M. John Wickes under the name of
- Posthumus._ There is an important version of this poem in Egerton MS.,
- 2725, where it is entitled _Mr. Herrick's Old Age to Mr. Weekes_. I do
- not think it has been collated before. Stanzas i.-vi. contain few
- variants; ii. 6 reads: "Dislikes to care for what's behind"; iii. 6:
- "Like a lost maidenhead," for "Like to a lily lost"; v. 8: "With the
- best and whitest stone"; vi. 1: "We'll not be poor". After this we have
- two stanzas omitted in 1648:--
- "We have no vineyards which do bear
- Their lustful clusters all the year,
- Nor odoriferous
- Orchards, like to Alcinous;
- Nor gall the seas
- Our witty appetites to please
- With mullet, turbot, gilt-head bought
- At a high rate and further brought.
- "Nor can we glory of a great
- And stuffed magazine of wheat;
- We have no bath
- Of oil, but only rich in faith
- O'er which the hand
- Of fortune can have no command,
- But what she gives not, she not takes,
- But of her own a spoil she makes."
- Stanza vii., l. 2, has "close" for "both"; l. 3 "see" for "have"; l. 6,
- "open" for "that cheap"; l. 7, "full" for "same". Stanzas x.-xvii. have
- so many variants that I am obliged to transcribe them in full, though
- they show Herrick not at his best, and the poem is not one to linger
- over:--
- 10.
- "Live in thy peace; as for myself,
- When I am bruisèd on the shelf
- Of Time, and _read
- Eternal daylight o'er my head:_
- When with the rheum,
- _With_ cough _and_ ptisick, I consume
- _Into an heap of cinders:_ then
- The Ages fled I'll call again,
- 11.
- "And with a tear compare these last
- _And cold times unto_ those are past,
- While Baucis by
- _With her lean lips_ shall kiss _them dry
- Then will we_ sit
- By the fire, foretelling snow and sleet
- And weather by our aches, grown
- †Old enough to be our own
- 12.
- "True Calendar [ ]
- _Is for to know_ what change is near,
- Then to assuage
- The gripings _in_ the chine by age,
- I'll call my young
- Iülus to sing such a song
- I made upon my _mistress'_ breast;
- _Or such a_ blush at such a feast.
- 13.
- "Then shall he read _my Lily fine
- Entomb'd_ within a crystal shrine:
- _My_ Primrose next:
- A piece then of a higher text;
- For to beget
- In me a more transcendent heat
- Than that insinuating fire
- Which crept into each _reverend_ Sire,
- 14.
- "When the _high_ Helen _her fair cheeks
- Showed to the army of the Greeks;_
- At which I'll _rise_
- (_Blind though as midnight in my eyes_),
- And hearing it,
- Flutter and crow, _and_, in a fit
- Of _young_ concupiscence, and _feel
- New flames within the aged steal_.
- 15.
- "Thus frantic, crazy man (God wot),
- I'll call to mind _the times_ forgot
- And oft between
- _Sigh out_ the Times that _we_ have seen!
- _And shed a tear_,
- And twisting my Iülus _hair_,
- Doting, I'll weep and say (in truth)
- Baucis, these were _the_ sins of youth.
- 16.
- "Then _will I_ cause my hopeful Lad
- (If a wild Apple can be had)
- To crown the Hearth
- (Lar thus conspiring with our mirth);
- _Next_ to infuse
- Our _better beer_ into the cruse:
- Which, neatly spiced, we'll first carouse
- Unto the _Vesta_ of the house.
- 17.
- "Then the next health to friends of mine
- _In oysters, and_ Burgundian wine,
- _Hind, Goderiske, Smith,
- And Nansagge_, sons of _clune[M] and_ pith,
- Such _who know_ well
- _To board_ the magic _bowl_, and _spill
- All mighty blood, and can do more
- Than Jove and Chaos them before_."
- [M] Clune = "clunis," a haunch.
- This John Wickes or Weekes is spoken of by Anthony à Wood as a "jocular
- person" and a popular preacher. He enters Wood's _Fasti_ by right of his
- co-optation as a D.D. in 1643, while the court was at Oxford; his
- education had been at Cambridge. He was a prebendary of Bristol and Dean
- of St. Burian in Cornwall, and suffered some persecution as a royalist.
- Herrick later on, when himself shedless and cottageless, addresses
- another poem to him as his "peculiar friend,"
- To whose glad threshold and free door
- I may, a poet, come, though poor.
- A friend suggests that Hind may have been John Hind, an Anacreontic poet
- and friend of Greene, and has found references to a Thomas Goodricke of
- St. John's Coll., Camb., author of two poems on the accession of James
- I., and a Martin Nansogge, B.A. of Trinity Hall, 1614, afterwards vicar
- of Cornwood, Devon. Smith is certainly James Smith, who, with Sir John
- Mennis, edited the _Musarum Deliciæ_, in which the first poem is
- addressed "to Parson Weekes: an invitation to London," and contains a
- reference to--
- "That old sack
- Young Herrick took to entertain
- The Muses in a sprightly vein".
- The early part of this poem contains, along with the name Posthumus,
- many Horatian reminiscences: cp. especially II. _Od._ xiv. 1-8, and IV.
- _Od._ vii. 14. It may be noted that in the imitation of the latter
- passage in stanza iv. the MS. copy at the Museum corrects the
- misplacement of the epithet, reading:--
- "But we must on and thither tend
- Where Tullus and rich Ancus blend," etc.,
- for "Where Ancus and rich Tullus".
- Again the variant, "_Open_ candle baudery," in verse 7, is an additional
- argument against Dr. Grosart's explanation: "Obscene words and figures
- made with candle-smoke," the allusion being merely to the blackened
- ceilings produced by cheap candles without a shade.
- 337. _A Short Hymn to Venus._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, as
- _A vow to Cupid_, with variants: l. 1, _Cupid_ for _Goddess_; l. 2,
- _like_ for _with_; l. 3, _that I may_ for _I may but_; l. 5, _do_ for
- _will_.
- 340. _Upon a delaying lady._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, as _A
- Check to her delay_.
- 341. _The Lady Mary Villars_, niece of the first Duke of Buckingham,
- married successively Charles, son of Philip, Earl of Pembroke, Esme
- Stuart, Duke of Richmond and Lennox, and Thomas Howard. Died 1685.
- 355. _Hath filed upon my silver hairs._ Cp. Ben Jonson, _The King's
- Entertainment_:--
- "What all the minutes, hours, weeks, months, and years
- That hang in file upon these silver hairs
- Could not produce," etc.
- 359. _Philip, Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery._ Philip Herbert (born
- 1584, died 1650), despite his foul mouth, ill temper, and devotion to
- sport ("He would make an excellent chancellor to the mews were Oxford
- turned into a kennel of hounds," wrote the author of _Mercurius
- Menippeus_ when Pembroke succeeded Laud as chancellor), was also a
- patron of literature. He was one of the "incomparable pair of brethren"
- to whom the Shakespeare folio of 1623 was dedicated, and he was a good
- friend to Massinger. His fondness for scribbling in the margins of books
- may, or may not, be considered as further evidence of a respect for
- literature.
- 366. _Thou shall not all die._ Horace's "non omnis moriar".
- 367. _Upon Wrinkles._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, under the
- title _To a Stale Lady_. The first line there reads:--
- "Thy wrinkles are no more nor less".
- 375. _Anne Soame, now Lady Abdie_, eldest daughter of Sir Thomas Soame,
- and second wife of Sir Thomas Abdy, Bart., of Felix Hall, Essex.
- Herrick's poem is modelled on Mart. III. lxv.
- 376. _Upon his Kinswoman, Mistress Elizabeth Herrick_, daughter of the
- poet's brother Nicholas.
- 377. _A Panegyric to Sir Lewis Pemberton_ of Rushden, in
- Northamptonshire, sheriff of the county in 1622; married Alice, daughter
- of Tho. Bowles. Died 1641. With this poem cp. Ben Jonson's _Epig._ ci.
- _But great and large she spreads by dust and sweat._ Dr. Grosart very
- appositely quotes Montaigne: "For it seemeth that the verie name of
- vertue presupposeth difficultie and inferreth resistance, and cannot
- well exercise it selfe without an enemie" (Florio's tr., p. 233). But I
- think the two passages have a common origin in some version of Hesiod's
- τῆς ἀρετῆς ἱδρῶτα θεοὶ προπάροιθεν ἔθηκαν, which is twice quoted by Plato.
- 382. _After the rare arch-poet, Jonson, died._ Perhaps suggested by the
- Epitaph of Plautus on himself, _ap._ Gell. i. 24:--
- Postquam est mortem aptus Plautus, comoedia luget;
- Scena deserta, dein risus, ludu' jocusque,
- Et numeri innumeri simul omnes collacrumarunt.
- 384. _To his nephew, to be prosperous in painting._ This artistic nephew
- may have been a Wingfield, son of Mercy Herrick, who married John
- Wingfield, of Brantham, Suffolk; or one of three sons of Nicholas
- Herrick and Susanna Salter, or Thomas, or some unknown son of Thomas
- Herrick. There is no record of any painter Herrick's achievements.
- 392. _Sir Edward Fish, Knight Baronet_, of Chertsey, in Surrey. Died
- 1658.
- 405. _Nor fear or spice or fish._ Herrick is remembering Persius, i. 43:
- Nec scombros metuentia carmina, nec thus. To form the paper jacket or
- _tunica_ which wrapt the mackerel in Roman cookery seems to have been
- the ultimate employment of many poems. Cp. Mart. III. l. 9; IV. lxxxvii.
- 8; and Catullus, XCV. 8.
- _The farting Tanner and familiar King._ The ballad here alluded to is
- that of _King Edward IV. and the tanner of Tamworth_, printed in Prof.
- Child's collection. "The dancing friar tattered in the bush" of the next
- line is one of the heroes of the old ballad of _The Fryar and the Boye_,
- printed by Wynkyn de Worde, and included in the Appendix to Furnivall
- and Hales' edition of the Percy folio. The boy was the possessor of a
- "magic flute," and, having got the friar into a bush, made him dance
- there.
- "Jack, as he piped, laughed among,
- The Friar with briars was vilely stung,
- He hopped wondrous high.
- At last the Friar held up his hand
- And said: I can no longer stand,
- Oh! I shall dancing die."
- "Those monstrous lies of little Robin Rush" is explained by Dr. Grosart
- as an allusion to "The Historie of Friar Rush, how he came to a House of
- Religion to seek a Service, and being entertained by the Prior was made
- First Cook, being full of pleasant Mirth and Delight for young people".
- Of "Tom Chipperfield and pretty lisping Ned" I can find nothing. "The
- flying Pilchard and the frisking Dace" probably belong to the fish
- monsters alluded to in the _Tempest_. In "Tim Trundell" Herrick seems
- for the sake of alliteration to have taken a liberty with the Christian
- name of a well-known ballad publisher.
- _He's greedy of his life._ From Seneca, _Thyestes_, 884-85:--
- Vitæ est avidus quisquis non vult
- Mundo secum pereunte mori.
- 407. _Upon Himself._ 408. _Another._ Both printed in _Witts
- Recreations_, 1650, the second under the title of _Love and Liberty_.
- This last is taken from Corn. Gall. _Eleg._ i. 6, quoted by Montaigne,
- iii. 5:--
- Et mihi dulce magis resoluto vivere collo.
- 412. _The Mad Maid's Song._ A manuscript version of this song is
- contained in Harleian MS. 6917, fol. 48, ver. 80. The chief variants
- are: st. i. l. 2, _morrow_ for _morning_; l. 4, _all dabbled_ for
- _bedabbled_; st. ii. l. 1, _cowslip_ for _primrose_; l. 3, _tears_ for
- _flowers_; l. 4, _was_ for _is_; st. v. l. 1, _hope_ for _know_; st.
- vii. l. 2, _balsam_ for _cowslips_.
- 415. _Whither dost thou whorry me._ Quo me, Bacche, rapis tui Plenum?
- Hor. III. _Od._ xxv. 1.
- 430. _As Sallust saith_, _i.e._, the pseudo-Sallust in the _Epist. ad
- Cai. Cæs. de Repub. Ordinanda_.
- 431. _Every time seems short._ Epigr. in Farnabii, _Florileg._ [a.
- 1629]:--
- Τοῖσι μὲν εὖ πράττουσιν ἅπας ὁ βίος βραχύς ἐστιν·
- Τοῖς δὲ κακῶς, μία νὺξ ἄπλετός ἐστι χρόνος.
- 443. _Oberon's Palace.--After the feast (my Shapcott) see._ See 223,
- 293, from which it is a pity that this poem should have been divorced.
- Of the _Palace_ there are as many as three MS. versions, viz., Add. 22,
- 603 (p. 59), and Add. 25, 303 (p. 157), at the British Museum, both of
- which I have collated, and Ashmole MS. 38, which I only know through my
- predecessors. The three MSS. appear to agree very harmoniously, and they
- unite in increasing our knowledge of Herrick by a passage of
- twenty-seven lines, following on the words "And here and there and
- farther off," and in lieu of the next four and a half lines in
- _Hesperides_. They read as follows:--
- "Some sort of pear,
- Apple or plum, is neatly laid
- (As if it was a tribute paid)
- By the round urchin; some mixt wheat
- The which the ant did taste, not eat;
- Deaf nuts, soft Jews'-ears, and some thin
- Chippings, the mice filched from the bin
- Of the gray farmer, and to these
- The scraps of lentils, chitted peas,
- Dried honeycombs, brown acorn cups,
- Out of the which he sometimes sups
- His herby broth, and there close by
- Are pucker'd bullace, cankers (?), dry
- Kernels, and withered haws; the rest
- Are trinkets fal'n from the kite's nest,
- As butter'd bread, the which the wild
- Bird snatched away from the crying child,
- Blue pins, tags, fesenes, beads and things
- Of higher price, as half-jet rings,
- Ribbons and then some silken shreaks
- The virgins lost at barley-breaks.
- Many a purse-string, many a thread
- Of gold and silver therein spread,
- _Many a counter, many a die,
- Half rotten and without an eye,
- Lies here about_, and, as we guess,
- Some bits of thimbles seem to dress
- The brave cheap work; _and for to pave
- The excellency of this cave,
- Squirrels and children's teeth late shed_,
- Serve here, both which _enchequered_
- With castors' doucets, which poor they
- Bite off themselves to 'scape away:
- Brown _toadstones_, ferrets' eyes, _the gum
- That shines_," etc.
- The italicised words in the last few lines appear in _Hesperides_; all
- the rest are new. Other variants are: "The grass of Lemster ore soberly
- sparkling" for "the finest Lemster ore mildly disparkling"; "girdle" for
- "ceston"; "The eyes of all doth strait bewitch" for "All with temptation
- doth bewitch"; "choicely hung" for "neatly hung"; "silver roach" for
- "silvery fish"; "cave" for "room"; "get reflection" for "make
- reflected"; "Candlemas" for "taper-light"; "moon-tane" for
- "moon-tanned," etc., etc.
- _Kings though they're hated._ The "Oderint dum metuant" of the _Atreus_
- of Accius, quoted by Cicero and Seneca.
- 446. _To Oenone._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, under the
- title: "The Farewell to Love and to his Mistress," and with the unlucky
- misprint "court" for "covet" (also "for" for "but") in the stanza iii.
- l. i.
- 447. _Grief breaks the stoutest heart._ Frangit fortia corda dolor.
- Tibull. III. ii. 6.
- 451. _To the right gracious Prince, Lodowick, Duke of Richmond and
- Lennox._ There appears to me to be a blunder here which Dr. Grosart and
- Mr. Hazlitt do not elucidate, by recording the birth of Lodowick, first
- Duke of Richmond, in 1574, his succession to the Lennox title in 1583,
- creation as Duke of Richmond in May, 1623, and death in the following
- February. For this first duke was no "stem" left "of all those three
- brave brothers fallen in the war," and the allusion here is undoubtedly
- to his nephews--George, Lord d'Aubigny, who fell at Edgehill; Lord John
- Stewart, who fell at Alresford; and Lord Bernard Stewart (Earl of
- Lichfield), who fell at Rowton Heath. In elucidation of Herrick's Dirge
- (219) over the last of these three brothers, I have already quoted
- Clarendon's remark, that he was "the third brother of that illustrious
- family that sacrificed his life in this quarrel," and it cannot be
- doubted that Herrick is here alluding to the same fact. The poem must
- therefore have been written after 1645, _i.e._, more than twenty years
- after the death of Duke Lodowick. But the duke then living was James,
- who succeeded his father Esme in 1624, was recreated Duke of Richmond in
- 1641, and did not die till 1655. It is true that there was a brother
- named Lodovic, but he was an abbot in France and never succeeded to the
- title. Herrick, therefore, seems to have blundered in the Christian
- name.
- 453. _Let's live in haste._ From Martial, VII. xlvii. 11, 12:--
- Vive velut rapto: fugitivaque gaudia carpe:
- Perdiderit nullum vita reversa diem.
- 457. _While Fates permit._ From Seneca, _Herc. Fur._ 177:--
- Dum Fata sinunt,
- Vivite laeti: properat cursu
- Vita citato, volucrique die
- Rota praecipitis vertitur anni.
- 459. _With Horace_ (IV. _Od._ ix. 29):--
- Paulùm sepultae distat inertiae
- Celata virtus.
- 465. _The parting Verse or charge to his Supposed Wife when he
- travelled._ MS. variants of this poem are found at the British Museum in
- Add. 22, 603, and in Ashmole MS. 38. Their title, "Mr. Herrick's charge
- to his wife," led Mr. Payne Collier to rashly identify with the poet a
- certain Robert Herrick married at St. Clement Danes, 1632, to a Jane
- Gibbons. The variants are numerous, but not very important. In l. 4 we
- have "draw wooers" for "draw thousands"; ll. 11-16 are transposed to
- after l. 28; and "Are the expressions of that itch" is written "As
- emblems will express that itch"; ll. 27, 28 appear as:--
- "For that once lost thou _needst must fall
- To one, then prostitute to all:_
- And we then have the transposed passage:--
- Nor so immurèd would I have
- Thee live, as dead, _or_ in thy grave;
- But walk abroad, yet wisely well
- _Keep 'gainst_ my coming sentinel.
- And think _each man thou seest doth doom
- Thy thoughts to say, I back am come._
- Farther on we have the rather pretty variant:--
- "Let them _call thee wondrous fair,
- Crown of women_, yet despair".
- Eight lines lower "virtuous" is read for "gentle," and the omission of
- some small words throws some light on a change in Herrick's metrical
- views as he grew older. The words omitted are bracketed:--
- "[And] Let thy dreams be only fed
- With this, that I am in thy bed.
- And [thou] then turning in that sphere,
- Waking findst [shall find] me sleeping there.
- But [yet] if boundless lust must scale
- Thy fortress and _must_ needs prevail
- _'Gainst thee and_ force a passage in," etc.
- Other variants are: "Creates the action" for "That makes the action";
- "Glory" for "Triumph"; "my last signet" for "this compression"; "turn
- again in my full triumph" for "come again, As one triumphant," and "the
- height of womankind" for "all faith of womankind".
- _The body sins not, 'tis the will_, etc. A maxim of law Latin: Actus non
- facit reum nisi mens sit rea.
- 466. _To his Kinsman, Sir Thos. Soame_, son of Sir Stephen Soame, Lord
- Mayor of London, 1589, and of Anne Stone, Herrick's aunt. Sir Thomas
- was Sheriff of London, 1635, M.P. for the City, 1640, and died Jan.,
- 1670. See Cussan's _Hertfortshire_. (_Hundred of Edwinstree_, p. 100.)
- 470. _Few Fortunate._ A variant on the text (Matt. xx. 16): "Many be
- called but few chosen".
- 479. _To Rosemary and Bays._ The use of rosemary and bays at weddings
- forms a section in Brand's chapter on marriage customs (ii. 119). For
- the gilding he quotes from a wedding sermon preached in 1607 by Roger
- Hacket: "Smell sweet, O ye flowers, in your native sweetness: be not
- gilded with the idle art of man". The use of gloves at weddings forms
- the subject of another section in Brand (ii. 125). He quotes Ben
- Jonson's _Silent Woman_; "We see no ensigns of a wedding here, no
- character of a bridal; where be our scarves and our gloves?"
- 483. _To his worthy friend, M. Thomas Falconbrige._ As Herrick hints at
- his friend's destiny for a public career, it seemed worth while to hunt
- through the Calendar of State Papers for a chance reference to this
- Falconbridge, who so far has evaded editors. He is apparently the Mr.
- Thomas Falconbridge who appears in various papers between 1640 and 1644,
- as passing accounts, and in the latter year was "Receiver-General at
- Westminster".
- _Towers reared high_, etc. Cp. Horace, _Od._ II. x. 9-12.
- Saepius ventis agitatur ingens
- Pinus, et celsae graviore casu
- Decidunt turres, feriuntque summos
- Fulgura montes.
- 486. _He's lord of thy life_, etc. Seneca, _Epist. Mor._ iv.: Quisquis
- vitam suam contempsit tuae dominus est. Quoted by Montaigne, I. xxiii.
- 488. _Shame is a bad attendant to a state._ From Seneca, _Hippol._ 431:
- Malus est minister regii imperii pudor.
- _He rents his crown that fears the people's hate._ Also from Seneca,
- _Oedipus_, 701: Odia qui nimium timet regnare nescit.
- 496. _To his honoured kinsman, Sir Richard Stone_, son of John Stone,
- sergeant-at-law, the brother of Julian Stone, Herrick's mother. He died
- in 1660.
- _To this white temple of my heroes._ Ben Jonson's admirers were proud to
- call themselves "sealed of the tribe of Ben," and Herrick, a devout
- Jonsonite, seems to have imitated the idea so far as to plan sometimes,
- as here, a Temple, sometimes a Book (see _infra_, 510), sometimes a City
- (365), a Plantation (392), a Calendar (545), a College (983), of his own
- favourite friends, to whom his poetry was to give immortality. The
- earliest direct reference to this plan is in his address to John Selden,
- the antiquary (365), in which he writes:--
- "A city here of heroes I have made
- Upon the rock whose firm foundation laid
- Shall never shrink; where, making thine abode,
- Live thou a Selden, that's a demi-god".
- It is noteworthy that the poems which contain the clearest reference to
- this Temple (or its variants) are mostly addressed to kinsfolk, _e.g._,
- this to Sir Richard Stone, to Mrs. Penelope Wheeler, to Mr. Stephen
- Soame, and to Susanna and Thomas Herrick. Other recipients of the honour
- are Sir Edward Fish and Dr. Alabaster, Jack Crofts, Master J. Jincks,
- etc.
- 497. _All flowers sent_, etc. See Virgil's--or the Virgilian--_Culex_,
- ll. 397-410.
- _Martial's bee._ See _Epig._ IV. xxxii.
- De ape electro inclusa.
- Et latet et lucet Phaethontide condita gutta,
- Ut videatur apis nectare clausa suo.
- Dignum tantorum pretium tulit illa laborum.
- Credibile est ipsam sic voluisse mori.
- 500. _To Mistress Dorothy Parsons._ This "saint" from Herrick's Temple
- may certainly be identified with the second of the three children
- (William, Dorothy, and Thomasine) of Mr. John Parsons, organist and
- master of the choristers at Westminster Abbey, where he was buried in
- 1623. Herrick addresses another poem to her sister Thomasine:--
- "Grow up in beauty, as thou dost begin,
- And be of all admired, Thomasine".
- 502. _'Tis sin to throttle wine._ Martial, I. xix. 5: Scelus est
- jugulare Falernum.
- 506. _Edward, Earl of Dorset_, Knight of the Garter, grandson of Thomas
- Sackville, author of _Gorboduc_. He succeeded his brother, Richard
- Sackville, the third earl, in 1624, and died in 1652. Clarendon
- describes a duel which he fought with Lord Bruce in Flanders.
- _Of your own self a public theatre._ Cp. Burton (Democ. to Reader) "Ipse
- mihi theatrum".
- 510. _To his Kinswoman, Mrs. Penelope Wheeler._ See Note on 130.
- 511. _A mighty strife 'twixt form and chastity._ Lis est cum formâ magna
- pudicitiæ. Quoted from Ovid by Burton, who translates: "Beauty and
- honesty have ever been at odds".
- 514. _To the Lady Crew, upon the death of her child._ This must be the
- child buried in Westminster Abbey, according to the entry in the
- register "1637/8, Feb. 6. Sir Clipsy Crewe's daughter, in the North
- aisle of the monuments." Colonel Chester annotates: "She was a younger
- daughter, and was born at Crewe, 27th July, 1631. She died on the 4th of
- February, and must have been an independent heiress, as her father
- administered to her estate on the 24th May following."
- 515. _Here needs no Court for our Request._ An allusion to the Court of
- Requests, established in the time of Richard II. as a lesser Court of
- Equity for the hearing of "all poor men's suits". It was abolished in
- 1641, at the same time as the Star Chamber.
- 517. _The new successor drives away old love._ From Ovid, _Rem. Am._
- 462: Successore novo vincitur omnis amor.
- 519. _Born I was to meet with age._ Cp. 540. From Anacreon, 38 [24]:--
- Ἐπείδη βρότος ἐτέχθην,
- Βιότου τρίβον ὁδεύειν,
- Χρόνον ἔγνων ὃν παρῆλθον,
- Ὅν δ' ἔχω δραμεῖν οὐκ οἶδα·
- Μέθετέ με, φρονίιδες·
- Μηδέν μοι καὶ ὑμῖν ἔστω.
- Πρὶν ἐμὲ φθάσῃ τὸ τέρμα,
- Παίξω, γελάσω, χορεύσω,
- Μετὰ τοῦ καλοῦ Λυαίου.
- 520. _Fortune did never favour one._ From Dionys. Halicarn. as quoted by
- Burton, II. iii. 1, § 1.
- 521. _To Phillis to love and live with him._ A variant on Marlowe's
- theme: "Come live with me and be my love". Donne's _The Bait_ (printed
- in Grosart's edition, vol. ii. p. 206) is another.
- 522. _To his Kinswoman, Mistress Susanna Herrick_, wife of his elder
- brother Nicholas.
- 523. _Susanna Southwell._ Probably a daughter of Sir Thomas Southwell,
- for whom Herrick wrote the Epithalamium (No. 149).
- 525. _Her pretty feet_, etc. Cp. Suckling's "Ballad upon a Wedding":--
- "Her feet beneath her petticoat,
- Like little mice stole in and out,
- As if they feared the light".
- 526. _To his Honoured Friend, Sir John Mynts._ John Mennis, a
- Vice-Admiral of the fleet and knighted in 1641, refused to join in the
- desertion of the fleet to the Parliament. After the Restoration he was
- made Governor of Dover and Chief Comptroller of the Navy. He was one of
- the editors of the collection called _Musarum Deliciæ_ (1656), in the
- first poem of which there is an allusion to--
- "That old sack
- Young Herrick took to entertain
- The Muses in a sprightly vein".
- 527. _Fly me not_, etc. From Anacreon, 49 [34]:--
- Μή με φύγῃς, ὁρῶσα
- Τὰν πολιὰν ἔθειραν· ...
- Ὅρα κἀν στεφάνοισιν
- Ὅπως πρέπει τὰ λευκὰ
- Ῥόδοις κρίν' ἐμπλακέντα.
- 529. _As thou deserv'st be proud._ Cp. Hor. III. _Od._ xxx. 14:--
- Sume superbiam
- Quaesitam meritis et mihi Delphica
- Lauro cinge volens, Melpomene, comam.
- 534. _To Electra._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, where it is
- entitled _To Julia_.
- 536. _Ill Government.... When kings obey_, etc. From Seneca, _Octav._
- 581:--
- Male imperatur, cum regit vulgus duces.
- 545. _To his Worthy Kinsman, Mr. Stephen Soame_ (the son or, less
- probably, the brother of Sir Thomas Soame): _One of my righteous tribe_.
- Cp. Note to 496.
- 547. _Great spirits never with their bodies die._ Tacit. _Agric._
- 46:--"Si quis piorum manibus locus, si, ut sapientibus placet, non cum
- corpore extinguuntur magnae animae".
- 554. _Die thou canst not all._ Hor. IV. _Od._ xxx. 6,7.
- 556. _The Fairies._ Cp. the old ballad of _Robin Goodfellow_:--
- "When house or hearth doth sluttish lie,
- I pinch the maids both black and blue";
- and Ben Jonson's _Entertainment at Althorpe_, etc.
- 557. _M. John Weare, Councellour._ Probably the same as "the
- much-lamented Mr. J. Warr" of 134.
- _Law is to give to every one his own._ Cicero, _De Fin._ v.: Animi
- affectio suum cuique tribuens Justitia dicitur.
- 564. _His Kinswoman, Bridget Herrick_, eldest daughter of his brother
- Nicholas.
- 565. _The Wanton Satyr._ See Sir E. Dyer's _The Shepherd's Conceit of
- Prometheus_:--
- "Prometheus, when first from heaven high
- He brought down fire, ere then on earth not seen,
- Fond of delight, a Satyr standing by
- Gave it a kiss, as it like sweet had been.
- ... ... ... ...
- The difference is--the Satyr's lips, my heart,
- He for a time, I evermore, have smart."
- So _Euphues_: "Satirus not knowing what fire was would needs embrace it
- and was burnt;" and Sir John Davies, _False and True Knowledge_.
- Transcriber's Endnotes
- Numeration Errors in the Hesperides:
- Errors in the numbering system, despite the corrections mentioned in
- the NOTE TO SECOND EDITION, still exist in the text. A clear example
- is shown by _569. UPON ELECTRA'S TEARS_ ending Vol. I, whilst Vol. II
- begins with _569. A HYMN TO THE GRACES_. When the poems within the
- APPENDIX OF EPIGRAMS are considered, more errors in the numeration
- system become apparent.
- Without an obvious solution to a discrepancy the numbers remain as
- originally printed, however the following alterations have been made
- to ensure any details in the NOTES section apply to the relevant
- poem.
- Page 204. OBERON'S PALACE. "444" changed to _443_.
- "443. OBERON'S PALACE."
- Page 221. FEW FORTUNATE. "472" changed to _470_.
- "470. FEW FORTUNATE."
- Page 223. THE WASSAIL. "478" changed to _476_.
- "476. THE WASSAIL."
- Page 317. Note to 496. "512" changed to _510_.
- "... sometimes a Book (see infra, 510) ..."
- Page 321. Note to 545. "498" changed to _496_.
- "... Cp. Note to 496...."
- Page 322. Note to 564. "562" changed to _564_.
- "564. _His Kinswoman, Bridget Herrick_, eldest ..."
- Page 322. Note to 565. "563" changed to _565_.
- "565. _The Wanton Satyr._ See Sir E. Dyer's ..."
- Typographical Errors:
- Page 83. 178. CORINNA'S GOING.... "pries" corrected to _priest_.
- "And chose their priest, ere we can cast off sloth:"
- Page 137. 275. CROSSES. "goods" corrected to _good_.
- "Though good things answer many good intents,"
- Page 316. Note to 479. " owers" corrected to _flowers_.
- "Smell sweet, O ye flowers, in your native sweetness:"
- Unresolved Errors:
- The following errors remain as printed:
- In 405. TO HIS BOOK., _Chipperfeild_, has been retained as it is
- unclear whether this is a misprint, or intentional.
- In 101. BARLEY-BREAK; OR, LAST IN HELL. No corresponding note can
- be found for _Barley-break, a country game resembling prisoners'
- base_.
- ABERDEEN UNIVERSITY PRESS.
- ROBERT HERRICK
- THE HESPERIDES & NOBLE
- NUMBERS: EDITED BY
- ALFRED POLLARD
- WITH A PREFACE BY
- A. C. SWINBURNE
- VOL. II.
- _REVISED EDITION_
- [Illustration]
- LONDON: NEW YORK:
- LAWRENCE & BULLEN, LTD., CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS,
- 16 HENRIETTA STREET, W.C. 153-157 FIFTH AVENUE
- 1898. 1898.
- HESPERIDES.
- 569. A HYMN TO THE GRACES.
- When I love (as some have told,
- Love I shall when I am old),
- O ye Graces! make me fit
- For the welcoming of it.
- Clean my rooms, as temples be,
- T' entertain that deity.
- Give me words wherewith to woo,
- Suppling and successful too;
- Winning postures, and, withal,
- Manners each way musical:
- Sweetness to allay my sour
- And unsmooth behaviour.
- For I know you have the skill
- Vines to prune, though not to kill,
- And of any wood ye see,
- You can make a Mercury.
- _Suppling_, softening.
- _Mercury_, god of eloquence and inventor of the lyre.
- 570. TO SILVIA.
- No more, my Silvia, do I mean to pray
- For those good days that ne'er will come away.
- I want belief; O gentle Silvia, be
- The patient saint, and send up vows for me.
- 573. THE POET HATH LOST HIS PIPE.
- I cannot pipe as I was wont to do,
- Broke is my reed, hoarse is my singing, too;
- My wearied oat I'll hang upon the tree,
- And give it to the sylvan deity.
- 574. TRUE FRIENDSHIP.
- Wilt thou my true friend be?
- Then love not mine, but me.
- 575. THE APPARITION OF HIS MISTRESS CALLING HIM TO ELYSIUM.
- _Desunt nonnulla ----_
- Come then, and like two doves with silv'ry wings,
- Let our souls fly to th' shades where ever springs
- Sit smiling in the meads; where balm and oil,
- Roses and cassia crown the untill'd soil.
- Where no disease reigns, or infection comes
- To blast the air, but ambergris and gums
- This, that, and ev'ry thicket doth transpire,
- More sweet than storax from the hallowed fire,
- Where ev'ry tree a wealthy issue bears
- Of fragrant apples, blushing plums, or pears;
- And all the shrubs, with sparkling spangles, shew
- Like morning sunshine tinselling the dew.
- Here in green meadows sits eternal May,
- Purfling the margents, while perpetual day
- So double gilds the air, as that no night
- Can ever rust th' enamel of the light.
- Here, naked younglings, handsome striplings, run
- Their goals for virgins' kisses; which when done,
- Then unto dancing forth the learned round
- Commixed they meet, with endless roses crown'd.
- And here we'll sit on primrose-banks, and see
- Love's chorus led by Cupid; and we'll be
- Two loving followers, too, unto the grove
- Where poets sing the stories of our love.
- There thou shalt hear divine Musæus sing
- Of Hero and Leander; then I'll bring
- Thee to the stand, where honour'd Homer reads
- His Odysseys and his high Iliads;
- About whose throne the crowd of poets throng
- To hear the incantation of his tongue:
- To Linus, then to Pindar; and that done,
- I'll bring thee, Herrick, to Anacreon,
- Quaffing his full-crown'd bowls of burning wine,
- And in his raptures speaking lines of thine,
- Like to his subject; and as his frantic
- Looks show him truly Bacchanalian-like
- Besmear'd with grapes, welcome he shall thee thither,
- Where both may rage, both drink and dance together.
- Then stately Virgil, witty Ovid, by
- Whom fair Corinna sits, and doth comply
- With ivory wrists his laureate head, and steeps
- His eye in dew of kisses while he sleeps;
- Then soft Catullus, sharp-fang'd Martial,
- And towering Lucan, Horace, Juvenal,
- And snaky Persius, these, and those, whom rage
- (Dropt for the jars of heaven) fill'd t' engage
- All times unto their frenzies,--thou shalt there
- Behold them in a spacious theatre.
- Among which glories, crowned with sacred bays
- And flatt'ring ivy, two recite their plays--
- Beaumont and Fletcher, swans to whom all ears
- Listen, while they, like syrens in their spheres,
- Sing their Evadne; and still more for thee
- There yet remains to know than thou can'st see
- By glim'ring of a fancy. Do but come,
- And there I'll show thee that capacious room
- In which thy father Jonson now is plac'd,
- As in a globe of radiant fire, and grac'd
- To be in that orb crown'd, that doth include
- Those prophets of the former magnitude,
- And he one chief; but hark, I hear the cock
- (The bellman of the night) proclaim the clock
- Of late struck one, and now I see the prime
- Of day break from the pregnant east: 'tis time
- I vanish; more I had to say,
- But night determines here, away.
- _Purfling_, trimming, embroidering.
- _Round_, rustic dance.
- _Comply_, encircle.
- _Their Evadne_, the sister of Melantius in their play "The Maid's
- Tragedy".
- 576. LIFE IS THE BODY'S LIGHT.
- Life is the body's light, which once declining,
- Those crimson clouds i' th' cheek and lips leave shining.
- Those counter-changed tabbies in the air
- (The sun once set) all of one colour are.
- So, when Death comes, fresh tinctures lose their place,
- And dismal darkness then doth smutch the face.
- _Tabbies_, shot silks.
- 579. LOVE LIGHTLY PLEASED.
- Let fair or foul my mistress be,
- Or low, or tall, she pleaseth me;
- Or let her walk, or stand, or sit,
- The posture hers, I'm pleas'd with it;
- Or let her tongue be still, or stir,
- Graceful is every thing from her;
- Or let her grant, or else deny,
- _My love will fit each history_.
- 580. THE PRIMROSE.
- Ask me why I send you here
- This sweet Infanta of the year?
- Ask me why I send to you
- This primrose, thus bepearl'd with dew?
- I will whisper to your ears:
- The sweets of love are mix'd with tears.
- Ask me why this flower does show
- So yellow-green, and sickly too?
- Ask me why the stalk is weak
- And bending (yet it doth not break)?
- I will answer: These discover
- What fainting hopes are in a lover.
- 581. THE TITHE. TO THE BRIDE.
- If nine times you your bridegroom kiss,
- The tenth you know the parson's is.
- Pay then your tithe, and doing thus,
- Prove in your bride-bed numerous.
- If children you have ten, Sir John
- Won't for his tenth part ask you one.
- _Sir John_, the parson.
- 582. A FROLIC.
- Bring me my rosebuds, drawer, come;
- So, while I thus sit crown'd,
- I'll drink the aged Cæcubum,
- Until the roof turn round.
- _Drawer_, waiter.
- _Cæcubum_, Cæcuban, an old Roman wine.
- 583. CHANGE COMMON TO ALL.
- All things subjected are to fate;
- Whom this morn sees most fortunate,
- The evening sees in poor estate.
- 584. TO JULIA.
- The saints'-bell calls, and, Julia, I must read
- The proper lessons for the saints now dead:
- To grace which service, Julia, there shall be
- One holy collect said or sung for thee.
- Dead when thou art, dear Julia, thou shalt have
- A trentall sung by virgins o'er thy grave:
- Meantime we two will sing the dirge of these,
- Who dead, deserve our best remembrances.
- _Trentall_, a service for the dead.
- 585. NO LUCK IN LOVE.
- I do love I know not what,
- Sometimes this and sometimes that;
- All conditions I aim at.
- But, as luckless, I have yet
- Many shrewd disasters met
- To gain her whom I would get.
- Therefore now I'll love no more
- As I've doted heretofore:
- He who must be, shall be poor.
- 586. IN THE DARK NONE DAINTY.
- Night hides our thefts, all faults then pardon'd be;
- All are alike fair when no spots we see.
- Lais and Lucrece in the night-time are
- Pleasing alike, alike both singular:
- Joan and my lady have at that time one,
- One and the self-same priz'd complexion:
- Then please alike the pewter and the plate,
- The chosen ruby, and the reprobate.
- _Lais and Lucrece_, opposite types of incontinence and purity. Cp.
- 665, 885.
- 587. A CHARM, OR AN ALLAY FOR LOVE.
- If so be a toad be laid
- In a sheep's-skin newly flay'd,
- And that tied to man, 'twill sever
- Him and his affections ever.
- 590. TO HIS BROTHER-IN-LAW, MASTER JOHN WINGFIELD.
- For being comely, consonant, and free
- To most of men, but most of all to me;
- For so decreeing that thy clothes' expense
- Keeps still within a just circumference;
- Then for contriving so to load thy board
- As that the messes ne'er o'erlade the lord;
- Next for ordaining that thy words not swell
- To any one unsober syllable:
- These I could praise thee for beyond another,
- Wert thou a Winstfield only, not a brother.
- _Consonant_, harmonious.
- 591. THE HEADACHE.
- My head doth ache,
- O Sappho! take
- Thy fillet,
- And bind the pain,
- Or bring some bane
- To kill it.
- But less that part
- Than my poor heart
- Now is sick;
- One kiss from thee
- Will counsel be
- And physic.
- 592. ON HIMSELF.
- Live by thy muse thou shalt, when others die
- Leaving no fame to long posterity:
- When monarchies trans-shifted are, and gone,
- Here shall endure thy vast dominion.
- 593. UPON A MAID.
- Hence a blessed soul is fled,
- Leaving here the body dead;
- Which since here they can't combine,
- For the saint we'll keep the shrine.
- 596. UPON THE TROUBLESOME TIMES.
- O times most bad,
- Without the scope
- Of hope
- Of better to be had!
- Where shall I go,
- Or whither run
- To shun
- This public overthrow?
- No places are,
- This I am sure,
- Secure
- In this our wasting war.
- Some storms we've past,
- Yet we must all
- Down fall,
- And perish at the last.
- 597. CRUELTY BASE IN COMMANDERS.
- Nothing can be more loathsome than to see
- Power conjoin'd with Nature's cruelty.
- 599. UPON LUCIA.
- I ask'd my Lucia but a kiss,
- And she with scorn denied me this;
- Say then, how ill should I have sped,
- Had I then ask'd her maidenhead?
- 600. LITTLE AND LOUD.
- Little you are, for woman's sake be proud;
- For my sake next, though little, be not loud.
- 601. SHIPWRECK.
- He who has suffered shipwreck fears to sail
- Upon the seas, though with a gentle gale.
- 602. PAINS WITHOUT PROFIT.
- A long life's-day I've taken pains
- For very little, or no gains;
- The evening's come, here now I'll stop,
- And work no more, but shut up shop.
- 603. TO HIS BOOK.
- Be bold, my book, nor be abash'd, or fear
- The cutting thumb-nail or the brow severe;
- But by the Muses swear all here is good
- If but well read, or, ill read, understood.
- 604. HIS PRAYER TO BEN JONSON.
- When I a verse shall make,
- Know I have pray'd thee,
- For old religion's sake,
- Saint Ben, to aid me.
- Make the way smooth for me,
- When I, thy Herrick,
- Honouring thee, on my knee
- Offer my lyric.
- Candles I'll give to thee,
- And a new altar,
- And thou, Saint Ben, shall be
- Writ in my Psalter.
- 605. POVERTY AND RICHES.
- Give Want her welcome if she comes; we find
- Riches to be but burdens to the mind.
- 606. AGAIN.
- Who with a little cannot be content,
- Endures an everlasting punishment.
- 607. THE COVETOUS STILL CAPTIVES.
- Let's live with that small pittance that we have;
- _Who covets more, is evermore a slave_.
- 608. LAWS.
- When laws full power have to sway, we see
- Little or no part there of tyranny.
- 609. OF LOVE.
- I'll get me hence,
- Because no fence
- Or fort that I can make here,
- But love by charms,
- Or else by arms
- Will storm, or starving take here.
- 611. TO HIS MUSE.
- Go woo young Charles no more to look
- Than but to read this in my book:
- How Herrick begs, if that he can-
- Not like the muse, to love the man,
- Who by the shepherds sung, long since,
- The star-led birth of Charles the Prince.
- _Long since_, _i.e._, in the "Pastoral upon the Birth of Prince
- Charles" (213), where see Note.
- 612. THE BAD SEASON MAKES THE POET SAD.
- Dull to myself, and almost dead to these
- My many fresh and fragrant mistresses;
- Lost to all music now, since everything
- Puts on the semblance here of sorrowing.
- Sick is the land to the heart, and doth endure
- More dangerous faintings by her desp'rate cure.
- But if that golden age would come again,
- And Charles here rule, as he before did reign;
- If smooth and unperplexed the seasons were,
- As when the sweet Maria lived here:
- I should delight to have my curls half drown'd
- In Tyrian dews, and head with roses crown'd;
- And once more yet, ere I am laid out dead,
- _Knock at a star with my exalted head_.
- _Knock at a star_ (sublimi feriam sidera vertice). Horace Ode, i. 1.
- 613. TO VULCAN.
- Thy sooty godhead I desire
- Still to be ready with thy fire;
- That should my book despised be,
- Acceptance it might find of thee.
- 614. LIKE PATTERN, LIKE PEOPLE.
- _This is the height of justice: that to do
- Thyself which thou put'st other men unto.
- As great men lead, the meaner follow on,
- Or to the good, or evil action._
- 615. PURPOSES.
- No wrath of men or rage of seas
- Can shake a just man's purposes:
- No threats of tyrants or the grim
- Visage of them can alter him;
- But what he doth at first intend,
- That he holds firmly to the end.
- 616. TO THE MAIDS TO WALK ABROAD.
- Come, sit we under yonder tree,
- Where merry as the maids we'll be;
- And as on primroses we sit,
- We'll venture, if we can, at wit:
- If not, at draw-gloves we will play;
- So spend some minutes of the day:
- Or else spin out the thread of sands,
- Playing at Questions and Commands:
- Or tell what strange tricks love can do,
- By quickly making one of two.
- Thus we will sit and talk, but tell
- No cruel truths of Philomel,
- Or Phyllis, whom hard fate forc'd on
- To kill herself for Demophon.
- But fables we'll relate: how Jove
- Put on all shapes to get a love;
- As now a satyr, then a swan;
- A bull but then, and now a man.
- Next we will act how young men woo,
- And sigh, and kiss as lovers do;
- And talk of brides, and who shall make
- That wedding-smock, this bridal cake,
- That dress, this sprig, that leaf, this vine,
- That smooth and silken columbine.
- This done, we'll draw lots who shall buy
- And gild the bays and rosemary;
- What posies for our wedding rings;
- What gloves we'll give and ribandings:
- And smiling at ourselves, decree,
- Who then the joining priest shall be.
- What short, sweet prayers shall be said;
- And how the posset shall be made
- With cream of lilies, not of kine,
- And maiden's-blush, for spiced wine.
- Thus, having talked, we'll next commend
- A kiss to each, and so we'll end.
- _Draw-gloves_, talking on the fingers.
- _Philomela_, daughter of Pandion, changed into a nightingale.
- _Phyllis_, the S. Phyllis of a former lyric (To Groves).
- _Gild the bays_, see Note to 479.
- 617. HIS OWN EPITAPH.
- As wearied pilgrims, once possest
- Of long'd-for lodging, go to rest,
- So I, now having rid my way,
- Fix here my button'd staff and stay.
- Youth, I confess, hath me misled;
- But age hath brought me right to bed.
- _Button'd_, knobbed.
- 618. A NUPTIAL VERSE TO MISTRESS ELIZABETH LEE, NOW LADY TRACY.
- Spring with the lark, most comely bride, and meet
- Your eager bridegroom with auspicious feet.
- The morn's far spent, and the immortal sun
- Corals his cheek to see those rites not done.
- Fie, lovely maid! indeed you are too slow,
- When to the temple Love should run, not go.
- Dispatch your dressing then, and quickly wed;
- Then feast, and coy't a little, then to bed.
- This day is Love's day, and this busy night
- Is yours, in which you challenged are to fight
- With such an arm'd, but such an easy foe,
- As will, if you yield, lie down conquer'd too.
- The field is pitch'd, but such must be your wars,
- As that your kisses must outvie the stars.
- Fall down together vanquished both, and lie
- Drown'd in the blood of rubies there, not die.
- _Corals_, reddens.
- 619. THE NIGHT-PIECE, TO JULIA.
- Her eyes the glow-worm lend thee,
- The shooting stars attend thee;
- And the elves also,
- Whose little eyes glow
- Like the sparks of fire, befriend thee.
- No Will-o'-th'-Wisp mislight thee,
- Nor snake or slow-worm bite thee;
- But on, on thy way
- Not making a stay,
- Since ghost there's none to affright thee.
- Let not the dark thee cumber:
- What though the moon does slumber?
- The stars of the night
- Will lend thee their light
- Like tapers clear without number.
- Then, Julia, let me woo thee,
- Thus, thus to come unto me;
- And when I shall meet
- Thy silv'ry feet
- My soul I'll pour into thee.
- 620. TO SIR CLIPSEBY CREW.
- Give me wine, and give me meat,
- To create in me a heat,
- That my pulses high may beat.
- Cold and hunger never yet
- Could a noble verse beget;
- But your bowls with sack replete.
- Give me these, my knight, and try
- In a minute's space how I
- Can run mad and prophesy.
- Then, if any piece prove new
- And rare, I'll say, my dearest Crew,
- It was full inspired by you.
- 621. GOOD LUCK NOT LASTING.
- If well the dice run, let's applaud the cast:
- _The happy fortune will not always last_.
- 622. A KISS.
- What is a kiss? Why this, as some approve:
- The sure, sweet cement, glue, and lime of love.
- 623. GLORY.
- I make no haste to have my numbers read:
- _Seldom comes glory till a man be dead_.
- 624. POETS.
- Wantons we are, and though our words be such,
- Our lives do differ from our lines by much.
- 625. NO DESPITE TO THE DEAD.
- Reproach we may the living, not the dead:
- _'Tis cowardice to bite the buried_.
- 626. TO HIS VERSES.
- What will ye, my poor orphans, do
- When I must leave the world and you?
- Who'll give ye then a sheltering shed,
- Or credit ye when I am dead?
- Who'll let ye by their fire sit,
- Although ye have a stock of wit
- Already coin'd to pay for it?
- I cannot tell, unless there be
- Some race of old humanity
- Left, of the large heart and long hand,
- Alive, as noble Westmorland,
- Or gallant Newark, which brave two
- May fost'ring fathers be to you.
- If not, expect to be no less
- Ill us'd, than babes left fatherless.
- _Westmorland_, _Newark_, see Notes.
- 627. HIS CHARGE TO JULIA AT HIS DEATH.
- Dearest of thousands, now the time draws near
- That with my lines my life must full-stop here.
- Cut off thy hairs, and let thy tears be shed
- Over my turf when I am buried.
- Then for effusions, let none wanting be,
- Or other rites that do belong to me;
- As love shall help thee, when thou dost go hence
- Unto thy everlasting residence.
- _Effusions_, the "due drink-offerings" of the lyric "To his lovely
- mistresses" (634).
- 628. UPON LOVE.
- In a dream, Love bade me go
- To the galleys there to row;
- In the vision I ask'd why?
- Love as briefly did reply,
- 'Twas better there to toil, than prove
- The turmoils they endure that love.
- I awoke, and then I knew
- What Love said was too-too true;
- Henceforth therefore I will be,
- As from love, from trouble free.
- _None pities him that's in the snare,
- And, warned before, would not beware._
- 629. THE COBBLERS' CATCH.
- Come sit we by the fire's side,
- And roundly drink we here;
- Till that we see our cheeks ale-dy'd
- And noses tann'd with beer.
- 633. CONNUBII FLORES, OR THE WELL-WISHES AT WEDDINGS.
- _Chorus Sacerdotum._ From the temple to your home
- May a thousand blessings come!
- And a sweet concurring stream
- Of all joys to join with them.
- _Chorus Juvenum._ Happy Day,
- Make no long stay
- Here
- In thy sphere;
- But give thy place to Night,
- That she,
- As thee,
- May be
- Partaker of this sight.
- And since it was thy care
- To see the younglings wed,
- 'Tis fit that Night the pair
- Should see safe brought to bed.
- _Chorus Senum._ Go to your banquet then, but use delight,
- So as to rise still with an appetite.
- Love is a thing most nice, and must be fed
- To such a height, but never surfeited.
- What is beyond the mean is ever ill:
- _'Tis best to feed Love, but not overfill_;
- Go then discreetly to the bed of pleasure,
- And this remember, _virtue keeps the measure_.
- _Chorus Virginum._ Lucky signs we have descri'd
- To encourage on the bride,
- And to these we have espi'd,
- Not a kissing Cupid flies
- Here about, but has his eyes
- To imply your love is wise.
- _Chorus Pastorum._ Here we present a fleece
- To make a piece
- Of cloth;
- Nor, fair, must you be both
- Your finger to apply
- To housewifery.
- Then, then begin
- To spin:
- And, sweetling, mark you, what a web will come
- Into your chests, drawn by your painful thumb.
- _Chorus Matronarum._ Set you to your wheel, and wax
- Rich by the ductile wool and flax.
- Yarn is an income, and the housewives' thread
- The larder fills with meat, the bin with bread.
- _Chorus Senum._ Let wealth come in by comely thrift
- And not by any sordid shift;
- 'Tis haste
- Makes waste:
- Extremes have still their fault:
- _The softest fire makes the sweetest malt:
- Who grips too hard the dry and slippery sand
- Holds none at all, or little in his hand._
- _Chorus Virginum._ Goddess of pleasure, youth and peace,
- Give them the blessing of increase:
- And thou, Lucina, that dost hear
- The vows of those that children bear:
- Whenas her April hour draws near,
- Be thou then propitious there.
- _Chorus Juvenum._ Far hence be all speech that may anger move:
- _Sweet words must nourish soft and gentle love_.
- _Chorus Omnium._ Live in the love of doves, and having told
- The raven's years, go hence more ripe than old.
- _Nice_, dainty.
- _Painful_, painstaking; for the passage cp. Catull. _Nupt. Pel. et
- Thet._ 311-314.
- 634. TO HIS LOVELY MISTRESSES.
- One night i' th' year, my dearest beauties, come
- And bring those due drink-offerings to my tomb.
- When thence ye see my reverend ghost to rise,
- And there to lick th' effused sacrifice:
- Though paleness be the livery that I wear,
- Look ye not wan or colourless for fear.
- Trust me, I will not hurt ye, or once show
- The least grim look, or cast a frown on you:
- Nor shall the tapers when I'm there burn blue.
- This I may do, perhaps, as I glide by,
- Cast on my girls a glance and loving eye,
- Or fold mine arms and sigh, because I've lost
- The world so soon, and in it you the most.
- Than these, no fears more on your fancies fall,
- Though then I smile and speak no words at all.
- _Fold mine arms_, cp. "crossing his arms in this sad knot"
- (_Tempest_).
- 635. UPON LOVE.
- A crystal vial Cupid brought,
- Which had a juice in it;
- Of which who drank, he said no thought
- Of love he should admit.
- I, greedy of the prize, did drink,
- And emptied soon the glass;
- Which burnt me so, that I do think
- The fire of hell it was.
- Give me my earthen cups again,
- The crystal I contemn;
- Which, though enchas'd with pearls, contain
- A deadly draught in them.
- And thou, O Cupid! come not to
- My threshold, since I see,
- For all I have, or else can do,
- Thou still wilt cozen me.
- 638. THE BEGGAR TO MAB, THE FAIRY QUEEN.
- Please your Grace, from out your store,
- Give an alms to one that's poor,
- That your mickle may have more.
- Black I'm grown for want of meat
- Give me then an ant to eat,
- Or the cleft ear of a mouse
- Over-sour'd in drink of souce;
- Or, sweet lady, reach to me
- The abdomen of a bee;
- Or commend a cricket's hip,
- Or his huckson, to my scrip.
- Give for bread a little bit
- Of a pea that 'gins to chit,
- And my full thanks take for it.
- Flour of fuzz-balls, that's too good
- For a man in needihood;
- But the meal of milldust can
- Well content a craving man.
- Any orts the elves refuse
- Well will serve the beggar's use.
- But if this may seem too much
- For an alms, then give me such
- Little bits that nestle there
- In the prisoner's panier.
- So a blessing light upon
- You and mighty Oberon:
- That your plenty last till when
- I return your alms again.
- _Mickle_, much.
- _Souce_, salt-pickle.
- _Huckson_, huckle-bone.
- _Chit_, sprout.
- _Orts_, scraps of food.
- _Prisoner's panier_, the basket which poor prisoners used to hang out
- of the gaol windows for alms in money or kind.
- 639. AN END DECREED.
- Let's be jocund while we may,
- All things have an ending day;
- And when once the work is done,
- _Fates revolve no flax they've spun_.
- _Revolve_, _i.e._, bring back.
- 640. UPON A CHILD.
- Here a pretty baby lies
- Sung asleep with lullabies;
- Pray be silent, and not stir
- Th' easy earth that covers her.
- 641. PAINTING SOMETIMES PERMITTED.
- If Nature do deny
- Colours, let Art supply.
- 642. FAREWELL FROST, OR WELCOME THE SPRING.
- Fled are the frosts, and now the fields appear
- Re-cloth'd in fresh and verdant diaper.
- Thaw'd are the snows, and now the lusty spring
- Gives to each mead a neat enamelling.
- The palms put forth their gems, and every tree
- Now swaggers in her leafy gallantry.
- The while the Daulian minstrel sweetly sings,
- With warbling notes, her Terean sufferings.
- What gentle winds perspire! As if here
- Never had been the northern plunderer
- To strip the trees and fields, to their distress,
- Leaving them to a pitied nakedness.
- And look how when a frantic storm doth tear
- A stubborn oak, or holm, long growing there,
- But lull'd to calmness, then succeeds a breeze
- That scarcely stirs the nodding leaves of trees:
- So when this war, which tempest-like doth spoil
- Our salt, our corn, our honey, wine and oil,
- Falls to a temper, and doth mildly cast
- His inconsiderate frenzy off, at last,
- The gentle dove may, when these turmoils cease,
- Bring in her bill, once more, the branch of peace.
- _Gems_, buds.
- _Daulian minstrel_, the nightingale Philomela.
- _Terean sufferings_, _i.e._, at the hands of Tereus.
- 643. THE HAG.
- The hag is astride
- This night for to ride,
- The devil and she together;
- Through thick and through thin,
- Now out and then in,
- Though ne'er so foul be the weather.
- A thorn or a burr
- She takes for a spur,
- With a lash of a bramble she rides now;
- Through brakes and through briars,
- O'er ditches and mires,
- She follows the spirit that guides now.
- No beast for his food
- Dare now range the wood,
- But hush'd in his lair he lies lurking;
- While mischiefs, by these,
- On land and on seas,
- At noon of night are a-working.
- The storm will arise
- And trouble the skies;
- This night, and more for the wonder,
- The ghost from the tomb
- Affrighted shall come,
- Call'd out by the clap of the thunder.
- 644. UPON AN OLD MAN: A RESIDENTIARY.
- Tread, sirs, as lightly as ye can
- Upon the grave of this old man.
- Twice forty, bating but one year
- And thrice three weeks, he lived here.
- Whom gentle fate translated hence
- To a more happy residence.
- Yet, reader, let me tell thee this,
- Which from his ghost a promise is,
- If here ye will some few tears shed,
- He'll never haunt ye now he's dead.
- _Residentiary_, old inhabitant.
- 645. UPON TEARS.
- Tears, though they're here below the sinner's brine,
- Above they are the angels' spiced wine.
- 646. PHYSICIANS.
- Physicians fight not against men; but these
- Combat for men by conquering the disease.
- 647. THE PRIMITIÆ TO PARENTS.
- Our household-gods our parents be;
- And manners good require that we
- The first fruits give to them, who gave
- Us hands to get what here we have.
- 649. UPON LUCY. EPIG.
- Sound teeth has Lucy, pure as pearl, and small,
- With mellow lips, and luscious therewithal.
- 651. TO SILVIA.
- I am holy while I stand
- Circum-crost by thy pure hand;
- But when that is gone, again
- I, as others, am profane.
- _Circum-crost_, marked round with a cross.
- 652. TO HIS CLOSET-GODS.
- When I go hence, ye Closet-Gods, I fear
- Never again to have ingression here
- Where I have had whatever thing could be
- Pleasant and precious to my muse and me.
- Besides rare sweets, I had a book which none
- Could read the intext but myself alone.
- About the cover of this book there went
- A curious-comely clean compartlement,
- And, in the midst, to grace it more, was set
- A blushing, pretty, peeping rubelet.
- But now 'tis closed; and being shut and seal'd,
- Be it, O be it, never more reveal'd!
- Keep here still, Closet-Gods, 'fore whom I've set
- Oblations oft of sweetest marmelet.
- _Ingression_, entrance.
- _Intext_, contents.
- 653. A BACCHANALIAN VERSE.
- Fill me a mighty bowl
- Up to the brim,
- That I may drink
- Unto my Jonson's soul.
- Crown it again, again;
- And thrice repeat
- That happy heat,
- To drink to thee, my Ben.
- Well I can quaff, I see,
- To th' number five
- Or nine; but thrive
- In frenzy ne'er like thee.
- _To the number five or nine_, see Note.
- 654. LONG-LOOKED-FOR COMES AT LAST.
- Though long it be, years may repay the debt;
- _None loseth that which he in time may get_.
- 655. TO YOUTH.
- Drink wine, and live here blitheful, while ye may:
- _The morrow's life too late is; live to-day_.
- 656. NEVER TOO LATE TO DIE.
- No man comes late unto that place from whence
- Never man yet had a regredience.
- _Regredience_, return.
- 657. A HYMN TO THE MUSES.
- O you the virgins nine!
- That do our souls incline
- To noble discipline!
- Nod to this vow of mine.
- Come, then, and now inspire
- My viol and my lyre
- With your eternal fire,
- And make me one entire
- Composer in your choir.
- Then I'll your altars strew
- With roses sweet and new;
- And ever live a true
- Acknowledger of you.
- 658. ON HIMSELF.
- I'll sing no more, nor will I longer write
- Of that sweet lady, or that gallant knight.
- I'll sing no more of frosts, snows, dews and showers;
- No more of groves, meads, springs and wreaths of flowers.
- I'll write no more, nor will I tell or sing
- Of Cupid and his witty cozening:
- I'll sing no more of death, or shall the grave
- No more my dirges and my trentalls have.
- _Trentalls_, service for the dead.
- 660. TO MOMUS.
- Who read'st this book that I have writ,
- And can'st not mend but carp at it;
- By all the Muses! thou shalt be
- Anathema to it and me.
- 661. AMBITION.
- In ways to greatness, think on this,
- _That slippery all ambition is_.
- 662. THE COUNTRY LIFE, TO THE HONOURED M. END. PORTER, GROOM OF THE
- BEDCHAMBER TO HIS MAJESTY.
- Sweet country life, to such unknown
- Whose lives are others', not their own!
- But serving courts and cities, be
- Less happy, less enjoying thee.
- Thou never plough'st the ocean's foam
- To seek and bring rough pepper home;
- Nor to the Eastern Ind dost rove
- To bring from thence the scorched clove;
- Nor, with the loss of thy lov'd rest,
- Bring'st home the ingot from the West.
- No, thy ambition's masterpiece
- Flies no thought higher than a fleece;
- Or how to pay thy hinds, and clear
- All scores, and so to end the year:
- But walk'st about thine own dear bounds,
- Not envying others larger grounds:
- For well thou know'st _'tis not th' extent
- Of land makes life, but sweet content_.
- When now the cock (the ploughman's horn)
- Calls forth the lily-wristed morn,
- Then to thy corn-fields thou dost go,
- Which though well soil'd, yet thou dost know
- That the best compost for the lands
- Is the wise master's feet and hands.
- There at the plough thou find'st thy team
- With a hind whistling there to them;
- And cheer'st them up by singing how
- The kingdom's portion is the plough.
- This done, then to th' enamelled meads
- Thou go'st, and as thy foot there treads,
- Thou see'st a present God-like power
- Imprinted in each herb and flower;
- And smell'st the breath of great-ey'd kine,
- Sweet as the blossoms of the vine.
- Here thou behold'st thy large sleek neat
- Unto the dew-laps up in meat;
- And, as thou look'st, the wanton steer,
- The heifer, cow, and ox draw near
- To make a pleasing pastime there.
- These seen, thou go'st to view thy flocks
- Of sheep, safe from the wolf and fox,
- And find'st their bellies there as full
- Of short sweet grass as backs with wool,
- And leav'st them, as they feed and fill,
- A shepherd piping on a hill.
- For sports, for pageantry and plays
- Thou hast thy eves and holidays;
- On which the young men and maids meet
- To exercise their dancing feet;
- Tripping the comely country round,
- With daffodils and daisies crown'd.
- Thy wakes, thy quintels here thou hast,
- Thy May-poles, too, with garlands grac'd;
- Thy morris dance, thy Whitsun ale,
- Thy shearing feast which never fail;
- Thy harvest-home, thy wassail bowl,
- That's toss'd up after fox i' th' hole;
- Thy mummeries, thy Twelfth-tide kings
- And queens, thy Christmas revellings,
- Thy nut-brown mirth, thy russet wit,
- And no man pays too dear for it.
- To these, thou hast thy times to go
- And trace the hare i' th' treacherous snow;
- Thy witty wiles to draw, and get
- The lark into the trammel net;
- Thou hast thy cockrood and thy glade
- To take the precious pheasant made;
- Thy lime-twigs, snares and pit-falls then
- To catch the pilfering birds, not men.
- O happy life! if that their good
- The husbandmen but understood!
- Who all the day themselves do please,
- And younglings, with such sports as these,
- And lying down have nought t' affright
- Sweet sleep, that makes more short the night.
- _Cætera desunt ----_
- _Soil'd_, manured.
- _Compost_, preparation.
- _Fox i' th' hole_, a hopping game in which boys beat each other with
- gloves.
- _Cockrood_, a run for snaring woodcocks.
- _Glade_, an opening in the wood across which nets were hung to catch
- game. (Willoughby, _Ornithologie_, i. 3.)
- 663. TO ELECTRA.
- I dare not ask a kiss,
- I dare not beg a smile,
- Lest having that, or this,
- I might grow proud the while.
- No, no, the utmost share
- Of my desire shall be
- Only to kiss that air
- That lately kissed thee.
- 664. TO HIS WORTHY FRIEND, M. ARTHUR BARTLY.
- When after many lusters thou shalt be
- Wrapt up in sear-cloth with thine ancestry;
- When of thy ragg'd escutcheons shall be seen
- So little left, as if they ne'er had been;
- Thou shalt thy name have, and thy fame's best trust,
- Here with the generation of my Just.
- _Luster_, a period of five years.
- 665. WHAT KIND OF MISTRESS HE WOULD HAVE.
- Be the mistress of my choice
- Clean in manners, clear in voice;
- Be she witty more than wise,
- Pure enough, though not precise;
- Be she showing in her dress
- Like a civil wilderness;
- That the curious may detect
- Order in a sweet neglect;
- Be she rolling in her eye,
- Tempting all the passers-by;
- And each ringlet of her hair
- An enchantment, or a snare
- For to catch the lookers-on;
- But herself held fast by none.
- Let her Lucrece all day be,
- Thais in the night to me.
- Be she such as neither will
- _Famish me, nor overfill_.
- 667. THE ROSEMARY BRANCH.
- Grow for two ends, it matters not at all,
- Be 't for my bridal or my burial.
- 669. UPON CRAB. EPIG.
- Crab faces gowns with sundry furs; 'tis known
- He keeps the fox fur for to face his own.
- 670. A PARANÆTICALL, OR ADVISIVE VERSE, TO HIS FRIEND, M. JOHN WICKS.
- Is this a life, to break thy sleep,
- To rise as soon as day doth peep?
- To tire thy patient ox or ass
- By noon, and let thy good days pass,
- Not knowing this, that Jove decrees
- Some mirth t' adulce man's miseries?
- No; 'tis a life to have thine oil
- Without extortion from thy soil;
- Thy faithful fields to yield thee grain,
- Although with some, yet little, pain;
- To have thy mind, and nuptial bed,
- With fears and cares uncumbered;
- A pleasing wife, that by thy side
- Lies softly panting like a bride.
- This is to live, and to endear
- Those minutes Time has lent us here.
- Then, while fates suffer, live thou free
- As is that air that circles thee,
- And crown thy temples too, and let
- Thy servant, not thy own self, sweat,
- To strut thy barns with sheafs of wheat.
- Time steals away like to a stream,
- And we glide hence away with them.
- _No sound recalls the hours once fled,
- Or roses, being withered_;
- Nor us, my friend, when we are lost,
- Like to a dew or melted frost.
- Then live we mirthful while we should,
- And turn the iron age to gold.
- Let's feast, and frolic, sing, and play,
- And thus less last than live our day.
- _Whose life with care is overcast,
- That man's not said to live, but last;
- Nor is't a life, seven years to tell,
- But for to live that half seven well;_
- And that we'll do, as men who know,
- Some few sands spent, we hence must go,
- Both to be blended in the urn
- From whence there's never a return.
- _Adulce_, sweeten.
- _Strut_, swell.
- 671. ONCE SEEN AND NO MORE.
- Thousands each day pass by, which we,
- Once past and gone, no more shall see.
- 672. LOVE.
- This axiom I have often heard,
- _Kings ought to be more lov'd than fear'd_.
- 673. TO M. DENHAM ON HIS PROSPECTIVE POEM.
- Or look'd I back unto the times hence flown
- To praise those Muses and dislike our own--
- Or did I walk those Pæan-gardens through,
- To kick the flowers and scorn their odours too--
- I might, and justly, be reputed here
- One nicely mad or peevishly severe.
- But by Apollo! as I worship wit,
- Where I have cause to burn perfumes to it;
- So, I confess, 'tis somewhat to do well
- In our high art, although we can't excel
- Like thee, or dare the buskins to unloose
- Of thy brave, bold, and sweet Maronian muse.
- But since I'm call'd, rare Denham, to be gone,
- Take from thy Herrick this conclusion:
- 'Tis dignity in others, if they be
- Crown'd poets, yet live princes under thee;
- The while their wreaths and purple robes do shine
- Less by their own gems than those beams of thine.
- _Pæan-gardens_, gardens sacred to Apollo.
- _Nicely_, fastidiously.
- 674. A HYMN TO THE LARES.
- It was, and still my care is,
- To worship ye, the Lares,
- With crowns of greenest parsley
- And garlic chives, not scarcely;
- For favours here to warm me,
- And not by fire to harm me;
- For gladding so my hearth here
- With inoffensive mirth here;
- That while the wassail bowl here
- With North-down ale doth troul here,
- No syllable doth fall here
- To mar the mirth at all here.
- For which, O chimney-keepers!
- (I dare not call ye sweepers)
- So long as I am able
- To keep a country table,
- Great be my fare, or small cheer,
- I'll eat and drink up all here.
- _Troul_, pass round.
- 675. DENIAL IN WOMEN NO DISHEARTENING TO MEN.
- Women, although they ne'er so goodly make it,
- Their fashion is, but to say no, to take it.
- 676. ADVERSITY.
- _Love is maintain'd by wealth_; when all is spent,
- _Adversity then breeds the discontent_.
- 677. TO FORTUNE.
- Tumble me down, and I will sit
- Upon my ruins, smiling yet;
- Tear me to tatters, yet I'll be
- Patient in my necessity.
- Laugh at my scraps of clothes, and shun
- Me, as a fear'd infection;
- Yet, scare-crow-like, I'll walk as one
- Neglecting thy derision.
- 678. TO ANTHEA.
- Come, Anthea, know thou this,
- _Love at no time idle is_;
- Let's be doing, though we play
- But at push-pin half the day;
- Chains of sweet bents let us make
- Captive one, or both, to take:
- In which bondage we will lie,
- Souls transfusing thus, and die.
- _Push-pin_, a childish game in which one player placed a pin and the
- other pushed it.
- _Bents_, grasses.
- 679. CRUELTIES.
- Nero commanded; but withdrew his eyes
- From the beholding death and cruelties.
- 680. PERSEVERANCE.
- Hast thou begun an act? ne'er then give o'er:
- _No man despairs to do what's done before_.
- 681. UPON HIS VERSES.
- What offspring other men have got,
- The how, where, when, I question not.
- These are the children I have left,
- Adopted some, none got by theft;
- But all are touch'd, like lawful plate,
- And no verse illegitimate.
- _Touch'd_, tested.
- 682. DISTANCE BETTERS DIGNITIES.
- Kings must not oft be seen by public eyes:
- _State at a distance adds to dignities_.
- 683. HEALTH.
- Health is no other, as the learned hold,
- But a just measure both of heat and cold.
- 684. TO DIANEME. A CEREMONY IN GLOUCESTER.
- I'll to thee a simnel bring,
- 'Gainst thou go'st a-mothering:
- So that when she blesseth thee,
- Half that blessing thou'lt give me.
- _Simnel_, a cake, originally made of fine flour, eaten at Mid-Lent.
- _A-mothering_, visiting relations in Mid-Lent, but see Note.
- 685. TO THE KING.
- Give way, give way! now, now my Charles shines here
- A public light, in this immensive sphere;
- Some stars were fix'd before, but these are dim
- Compar'd, in this my ample orb, to him.
- Draw in your feeble fires, while that he
- Appears but in his meaner majesty.
- Where, if such glory flashes from his name,
- Which is his shade, who can abide his flame!
- _Princes, and such like public lights as these,
- Must not be look'd on but at distances:
- For, if we gaze on these brave lamps too near,
- Our eyes they'll blind, or if not blind, they'll blear._
- _Immensive_, immeasurable.
- 686. THE FUNERAL RITES OF THE ROSE.
- The rose was sick, and smiling died;
- And, being to be sanctified,
- About the bed there sighing stood
- The sweet and flowery sisterhood.
- Some hung the head, while some did bring,
- To wash her, water from the spring.
- Some laid her forth, while others wept,
- But all a solemn fast there kept.
- The holy sisters, some among,
- The sacred dirge and trentall sung.
- But ah! what sweets smelt everywhere,
- As heaven had spent all perfumes there.
- At last, when prayers for the dead
- And rites were all accomplished,
- They, weeping, spread a lawny loom
- And clos'd her up, as in a tomb.
- _Trentall_, a service for the dead.
- 687. THE RAINBOW, OR CURIOUS COVENANT.
- Mine eyes, like clouds, were drizzling rain;
- And as they thus did entertain
- The gentle beams from Julia's sight
- To mine eyes levell'd opposite,
- O thing admir'd! there did appear
- A curious rainbow smiling there;
- Which was the covenant that she
- No more would drown mine eyes or me.
- 688. THE LAST STROKE STRIKES SURE.
- Though by well warding many blows we've pass'd,
- _That stroke most fear'd is which is struck the last_.
- 689. FORTUNE.
- Fortune's a blind profuser of her own,
- Too much she gives to some, enough to none.
- 690. STOOL-BALL.
- At stool-ball, Lucia, let us play
- For sugar-cakes and wine:
- Or for a tansy let us pay,
- The loss, or thine, or mine.
- If thou, my dear, a winner be
- At trundling of the ball,
- The wager thou shall have, and me,
- And my misfortunes all.
- But if, my sweetest, I shall get,
- Then I desire but this:
- That likewise I may pay the bet
- And have for all a kiss.
- _Stool-ball_, a game of ball played by girls.
- _Tansy_, a cake made of eggs, cream, and herbs.
- 691. TO SAPPHO.
- Let us now take time and play,
- Love, and live here while we may;
- Drink rich wine, and make good cheer,
- While we have our being here;
- For once dead and laid i' th' grave,
- No return from thence we have.
- 692. ON POET PRAT. EPIG.
- Prat he writes satires, but herein's the fault,
- In no one satire there's a mite of salt.
- 693. UPON TUCK. EPIG.
- At post and pair, or slam, Tom Tuck would play
- This Christmas, but his want wherewith says nay.
- _Post and pair, or slam_, old games of cards. Ben Jonson calls the
- former a "thrifty and right worshipful game".
- 694. BITING OF BEGGARS.
- Who, railing, drives the lazar from his door,
- Instead of alms, sets dogs upon the poor.
- 695. THE MAY-POLE.
- The May-pole is up!
- Now give me the cup,
- I'll drink to the garlands around it;
- But first unto those
- Whose hands did compose
- The glory of flowers that crown'd it.
- A health to my girls,
- Whose husbands may earls
- Or lords be, granting my wishes,
- And when that ye wed
- To the bridal bed,
- Then multiply all like to fishes.
- 696. MEN MIND NO STATE IN SICKNESS.
- That flow of gallants which approach
- To kiss thy hand from out the coach;
- That fleet of lackeys which do run
- Before thy swift postillion;
- Those strong-hoof'd mules which we behold
- Rein'd in with purple, pearl, and gold,
- And shod with silver, prove to be
- The drawers of the axletree.
- Thy wife, thy children, and the state
- Of Persian looms and antique plate;
- All these, and more, shall then afford
- No joy to thee, their sickly lord.
- 697. ADVERSITY.
- Adversity hurts none, but only such
- Whom whitest fortune dandled has too much.
- 698. WANT.
- Need is no vice at all, though here it be
- With men a loathed inconveniency.
- 699. GRIEF.
- Sorrows divided amongst many, less
- Discruciate a man in deep distress.
- _Discruciate_, torture.
- 700. LOVE PALPABLE.
- I press'd my Julia's lips, and in the kiss
- Her soul and love were palpable in this.
- 701. NO ACTION HARD TO AFFECTION.
- Nothing hard or harsh can prove
- Unto those that truly love.
- 702. MEAN THINGS OVERCOME MIGHTY.
- By the weak'st means things mighty are o'erthrown.
- _He's lord of thy life who contemns his own_.
- 705. THE BRACELET OF PEARL: TO SILVIA.
- I brake thy bracelet 'gainst my will,
- And, wretched, I did see
- Thee discomposed then, and still
- Art discontent with me.
- One gem was lost, and I will get
- A richer pearl for thee,
- Than ever, dearest Silvia, yet
- Was drunk to Antony.
- Or, for revenge, I'll tell thee what
- Thou for the breach shall do;
- First crack the strings, and after that
- Cleave thou my heart in two.
- 706. HOW ROSES CAME RED.
- 'Tis said, as Cupid danc'd among
- The gods he down the nectar flung,
- Which on the white rose being shed
- Made it for ever after red.
- 707. KINGS.
- Men are not born kings, but are men renown'd;
- Chose first, confirm'd next, and at last are crown'd.
- 708. FIRST WORK, AND THEN WAGES.
- Preposterous is that order, when we run
- To ask our wages ere our work be done.
- _Preposterous_, lit. hind part before.
- 709. TEARS AND LAUGHTER.
- Knew'st thou one month would take thy life away,
- Thou'dst weep; but laugh, should it not last a day.
- 710. GLORY.
- Glory no other thing is, Tully says,
- Than a man's frequent fame spoke out with praise.
- 711. POSSESSIONS.
- Those possessions short-liv'd are,
- Into the which we come by war.
- 713. HIS RETURN TO LONDON.
- From the dull confines of the drooping West
- To see the day spring from the pregnant East,
- Ravish'd in spirit I come, nay, more, I fly
- To thee, bless'd place of my nativity!
- Thus, thus with hallowed foot I touch the ground,
- With thousand blessings by thy fortune crown'd.
- O fruitful Genius! that bestowest here
- An everlasting plenty, year by year.
- O place! O people! Manners! fram'd to please
- All nations, customs, kindreds, languages!
- I am a free-born Roman; suffer, then,
- That I amongst you live a citizen.
- London my home is: though by hard fate sent
- Into a long and irksome banishment;
- Yet since call'd back; henceforward let me be,
- O native country, repossess'd by thee!
- For, rather than I'll to the West return,
- I'll beg of thee first here to have mine urn.
- Weak I am grown, and must in short time fall;
- Give thou my sacred relics burial.
- 714. NOT EVERY DAY FIT FOR VERSE.
- 'Tis not ev'ry day that I
- Fitted am to prophesy;
- No; but when the spirit fills
- The fantastic pannicles
- Full of fire, then I write
- As the godhead doth indite.
- Thus enrag'd, my lines are hurled,
- Like the Sybil's, through the world.
- Look how next the holy fire
- Either slakes, or doth retire;
- So the fancy cools, till when
- That brave spirit comes again.
- _Fantastic pannicles_, brain cells of the imagination.
- _Sybil's_, the oracles of the Cumæan Sybil were written on leaves,
- which the wind blew about her cave.--Virg. Æn. iv.
- 715. POVERTY THE GREATEST PACK.
- To mortal men great loads allotted be,
- _But of all packs, no pack like poverty_.
- 716. A BUCOLIC, OR DISCOURSE OF NEATHERDS.
- 1. Come, blitheful neatherds, let us lay
- A wager who the best shall play,
- Of thee or I, the roundelay
- That fits the business of the day.
- _Chor._ And Lalage the judge shall be,
- To give the prize to thee, or me.
- 2. Content, begin, and I will bet
- A heifer smooth, and black as jet,
- In every part alike complete,
- And wanton as a kid as yet.
- _Chor._ And Lalage, with cow-like eyes,
- Shall be disposeress of the prize.
- 1. Against thy heifer, I will here
- Lay to thy stake a lusty steer
- With gilded horns, and burnish'd clear.
- _Chor._ Why, then, begin, and let us hear
- The soft, the sweet, the mellow note
- That gently purls from either's oat.
- 2. The stakes are laid: let's now apply
- Each one to make his melody.
- _Lal._ The equal umpire shall be I,
- Who'll hear, and so judge righteously.
- _Chor._ Much time is spent in prate; begin,
- And sooner play, the sooner win.
- [_1 Neatherd plays_
- 2. That's sweetly touch'd, I must confess,
- Thou art a man of worthiness;
- But hark how I can now express
- My love unto my neatherdess. [_He sings_
- _Chor._ A sugar'd note! and sound as sweet
- As kine when they at milking meet.
- 1. Now for to win thy heifer fair,
- I'll strike thee such a nimble air
- That thou shalt say thyself 'tis rare,
- And title me without compare.
- _Chor._ Lay by a while your pipes, and rest,
- Since both have here deserved best.
- 2. To get thy steerling, once again
- I'll play thee such another strain
- That thou shalt swear my pipe does reign
- Over thine oat as sovereign. [_He sings_
- _Chor._ And Lalage shall tell by this,
- Whose now the prize and wager is.
- 1. Give me the prize. 2. The day is mine.
- 1. Not so; my pipe has silenc'd thine:
- And hadst thou wager'd twenty kine,
- They were mine own. _Lal._ In love combine.
- _Chor._ And lay ye down your pipes together,
- As weary, not o'ercome by either.
- _And lay_ ye _down your pipes_. The original edition reads _And lay_
- we _down_ our _pipes_.
- 717. TRUE SAFETY.
- 'Tis not the walls or purple that defends
- A prince from foes, but 'tis his fort of friends.
- 718. A PROGNOSTIC.
- As many laws and lawyers do express
- Nought but a kingdom's ill-affectedness;
- Even so, those streets and houses do but show
- Store of diseases where physicians flow.
- 719. UPON JULIA'S SWEAT.
- Would ye oil of blossoms get?
- Take it from my Julia's sweat:
- Oil of lilies and of spike?
- From her moisture take the like.
- Let her breathe, or let her blow,
- All rich spices thence will flow.
- _Spike_, lavender.
- 720. PROOF TO NO PURPOSE.
- You see this gentle stream that glides,
- Shov'd on by quick-succeeding tides;
- Try if this sober stream you can
- Follow to th' wilder ocean;
- And see if there it keeps unspent
- In that congesting element.
- Next, from that world of waters, then
- By pores and caverns back again
- Induct that inadult'rate same
- Stream to the spring from whence it came.
- This with a wonder when ye do,
- As easy, and else easier too,
- Then may ye recollect the grains
- Of my particular remains,
- After a thousand lusters hurl'd
- By ruffling winds about the world.
- 721. FAME.
- _'Tis still observ'd that fame ne'er sings
- The order, but the sum of things._
- 722. BY USE COMES EASINESS.
- Oft bend the bow, and thou with ease shalt do
- What others can't with all their strength put to.
- 723. TO THE GENIUS OF HIS HOUSE.
- Command the roof, great Genius, and from thence
- Into this house pour down thy influence,
- That through each room a golden pipe may run
- Of living water by thy benison.
- Fulfill the larders, and with strengthening bread
- Be evermore these bins replenished.
- Next, like a bishop consecrate my ground,
- That lucky fairies here may dance their round;
- And after that, lay down some silver pence
- The master's charge and care to recompense.
- Charm then the chambers, make the beds for ease,
- More than for peevish, pining sicknesses.
- Fix the foundation fast, and let the roof
- Grow old with time but yet keep weather-proof.
- 724. HIS GRANGE, OR PRIVATE WEALTH.
- Though clock,
- To tell how night draws hence, I've none,
- A cock
- I have to sing how day draws on.
- I have
- A maid, my Prew, by good luck sent
- To save
- That little Fates me gave or lent.
- A hen
- I keep, which creeking day by day,
- Tells when
- She goes her long white egg to lay.
- A goose
- I have, which with a jealous ear
- Lets loose
- Her tongue to tell that danger's near.
- A lamb
- I keep, tame, with my morsels fed,
- Whose dam
- An orphan left him, lately dead.
- A cat
- I keep that plays about my house,
- Grown fat
- With eating many a miching mouse.
- To these
- A Tracy[A] I do keep whereby
- I please
- The more my rural privacy;
- Which are
- But toys to give my heart some ease;
- Where care
- None is, slight things do lightly please.
- _My Prew_, Prudence Baldwin.
- _Creeking_, clucking.
- _Miching_, skulking.
- [A] His spaniel. (Note in the original edition.)
- 725. GOOD PRECEPTS OR COUNSEL.
- In all thy need be thou possess'd
- Still with a well-prepared breast;
- Nor let the shackles make thee sad;
- Thou canst but have what others had.
- And this for comfort thou must know
- Times that are ill won't still be so.
- Clouds will not ever pour down rain;
- _A sullen day will clear again_.
- First peals of thunder we must hear,
- Then lutes and harps shall stroke the ear.
- 726. MONEY MAKES THE MIRTH.
- When all birds else do of their music fail,
- Money's the still sweet-singing nightingale.
- 727. UP TAILS ALL.
- Begin with a kiss,
- Go on too with this;
- And thus, thus, thus let us smother
- Our lips for awhile,
- But let's not beguile
- Our hope of one for the other.
- This play, be assur'd,
- Long enough has endur'd,
- Since more and more is exacted;
- For Love he doth call
- For his _uptails all_;
- And that's the part to be acted.
- _Uptails all_, the refrain of a song beginning "Fly Merry News": see
- Note.
- 729. UPON LUCIA DABBLED IN THE DEW.
- My Lucia in the dew did go,
- And prettily bedabbled so,
- Her clothes held up, she showed withal
- Her decent legs, clean, long, and small.
- I follow'd after to descry
- Part of the nak'd sincerity;
- But still the envious scene between
- Denied the mask I would have seen.
- _Decent_, in the Latin sense, comely; _sincerity_, purity.
- _Scene_, a curtain or "drop-scene".
- _Mask_, a play.
- 730. CHARON AND PHILOMEL; A DIALOGUE SUNG.
- _Ph._ Charon! O gentle Charon! let me woo thee
- By tears and pity now to come unto me.
- _Ch._ What voice so sweet and charming do I hear?
- Say what thou art. _Ph._ I prithee first draw near.
- _Ch._ A sound I hear, but nothing yet can see;
- Speak, where thou art. _Ph._ O Charon pity me!
- I am a bird, and though no name I tell,
- My warbling note will say I'm Philomel.
- _Ch._ What's that to me? I waft nor fish or fowls,
- Nor beasts, fond thing, but only human souls.
- _Ph._ Alas for me! _Ch._ Shame on thy witching note
- That made me thus hoist sail and bring my boat:
- But I'll return; what mischief brought thee hither?
- _Ph._ A deal of love and much, much grief together.
- _Ch._ What's thy request? _Ph._ That since she's now beneath
- Who fed my life, I'll follow her in death.
- _Ch._ And is that all? I'm gone. _Ph._ By love I pray thee.
- _Ch._ Talk not of love; all pray, but few souls pay me.
- _Ph._ I'll give thee vows and tears. _Ch._ Can tears pay scores
- For mending sails, for patching boat and oars?
- _Ph._ I'll beg a penny, or I'll sing so long
- Till thou shalt say I've paid thee with a song.
- _Ch._ Why then begin; and all the while we make
- Our slothful passage o'er the Stygian Lake,
- Thou and I'll sing to make these dull shades merry,
- Who else with tears would doubtless drown my ferry.
- _Fond_, foolish.
- _She's now beneath_, her mother Zeuxippe?
- 733. A TERNARY OF LITTLES, UPON A PIPKIN OF JELLY SENT TO A LADY.
- A little saint best fits a little shrine,
- A little prop best fits a little vine:
- As my small cruse best fits my little wine.
- A little seed best fits a little soil,
- A little trade best fits a little toil:
- As my small jar best fits my little oil.
- A little bin best fits a little bread,
- A little garland fits a little head:
- As my small stuff best fits my little shed.
- A little hearth best fits a little fire,
- A little chapel fits a little choir:
- As my small bell best fits my little spire.
- A little stream best fits a little boat,
- A little lead best fits a little float:
- As my small pipe best fits my little note.
- A little meat best fits a little belly,
- As sweetly, lady, give me leave to tell ye,
- This little pipkin fits this little jelly.
- 734. UPON THE ROSES IN JULIA'S BOSOM.
- Thrice happy roses, so much grac'd to have
- Within the bosom of my love your grave.
- Die when ye will, your sepulchre is known,
- Your grave her bosom is, the lawn the stone.
- 735. MAIDS' NAYS ARE NOTHING.
- Maids' nays are nothing, they are shy
- But to desire what they deny.
- 736. THE SMELL OF THE SACRIFICE.
- The gods require the thighs
- Of beeves for sacrifice;
- Which roasted, we the steam
- Must sacrifice to them,
- Who though they do not eat,
- Yet love the smell of meat.
- 737. LOVERS: HOW THEY COME AND PART.
- A gyges' ring they bear about them still,
- To be, and not seen when and where they will.
- They tread on clouds, and though they sometimes fall,
- They fall like dew, but make no noise at all.
- So silently they one to th' other come,
- As colours steal into the pear or plum,
- And air-like, leave no pression to be seen
- Where'er they met or parting place has been.
- _Gyges' ring_, which made the wearer invisible.
- 738. TO WOMEN, TO HIDE THEIR TEETH IF THEY BE ROTTEN OR RUSTY.
- Close keep your lips, if that you mean
- To be accounted inside clean:
- For if you cleave them we shall see
- There in your teeth much leprosy.
- 739. IN PRAISE OF WOMEN.
- O Jupiter, should I speak ill
- Of woman-kind, first die I will;
- Since that I know, 'mong all the rest
- Of creatures, woman is the best.
- 740. THE APRON OF FLOWERS.
- To gather flowers Sappha went,
- And homeward she did bring
- Within her lawny continent
- The treasure of the spring.
- She smiling blush'd, and blushing smil'd,
- And sweetly blushing thus,
- She look'd as she'd been got with child
- By young Favonius.
- Her apron gave, as she did pass,
- An odour more divine,
- More pleasing, too, than ever was
- The lap of Proserpine.
- _Continent_, anything that holds, here the bosom of her dress.
- 741. THE CANDOUR OF JULIA'S TEETH.
- White as Zenobia's teeth, the which the girls
- Of Rome did wear for their most precious pearls.
- _Zenobia_, Queen of Palmyra, conquered by the Romans, A.D. 273.
- 742. UPON HER WEEPING.
- She wept upon her cheeks, and weeping so,
- She seem'd to quench love's fire that there did glow.
- 743. ANOTHER UPON HER WEEPING.
- She by the river sat, and sitting there,
- She wept, and made it deeper by a tear.
- 744. DELAY.
- Break off delay, since we but read of one
- That ever prospered by cunctation.
- _Cunctation_, delay: the word is suggested by the name of Fabius
- Cunctator, the conqueror of the Carthaginians, addressed by Virg.
- (Æn. vi. 846) as "Unus qui nobis cunctando restituis rem".
- 745. TO SIR JOHN BERKLEY, GOVERNOR OF EXETER.
- Stand forth, brave man, since fate has made thee here
- The Hector over aged Exeter,
- Who for a long, sad time has weeping stood
- Like a poor lady lost in widowhood,
- But fears not now to see her safety sold,
- As other towns and cities were, for gold
- By those ignoble births which shame the stem
- That gave progermination unto them:
- Whose restless ghosts shall hear their children sing,
- "Our sires betrayed their country and their king".
- True, if this city seven times rounded was
- With rock, and seven times circumflank'd with brass,
- Yet if thou wert not, Berkley, loyal proof,
- The senators, down tumbling with the roof,
- Would into prais'd, but pitied, ruins fall,
- Leaving no show where stood the capitol.
- But thou art just and itchless, and dost please
- Thy Genius with two strengthening buttresses,
- Faith and affection, which will never slip
- To weaken this thy great dictatorship.
- _Progermination_, budding out.
- _Itchless_, _i.e._, with no itch for bribes.
- 746. TO ELECTRA. LOVE LOOKS FOR LOVE.
- Love love begets, then never be
- Unsoft to him who's smooth to thee.
- Tigers and bears, I've heard some say,
- For proffer'd love will love repay:
- None are so harsh, but if they find
- Softness in others, will be kind;
- Affection will affection move,
- Then you must like because I love.
- 747. REGRESSION SPOILS RESOLUTION.
- Hast thou attempted greatness? then go on:
- Back-turning slackens resolution.
- 748. CONTENTION.
- Discreet and prudent we that discord call
- That either profits, or not hurts at all.
- 749. CONSULTATION.
- Consult ere thou begin'st; that done, go on
- With all wise speed for execution.
- _Consult_, take counsel. The word and the epigram are suggested by
- Sallust's "Nam et, prius quam incipias, consulto, et ubi
- consulueris, mature facto opus est," Cat. i.
- 750. LOVE DISLIKES NOTHING.
- Whatsoever thing I see,
- Rich or poor although it be;
- 'Tis a mistress unto me.
- Be my girl or fair or brown,
- Does she smile or does she frown,
- Still I write a sweetheart down.
- Be she rough or smooth of skin;
- When I touch I then begin
- For to let affection in.
- Be she bald, or does she wear
- Locks incurl'd of other hair,
- I shall find enchantment there.
- Be she whole, or be she rent,
- So my fancy be content,
- She's to me most excellent.
- Be she fat, or be she lean,
- Be she sluttish, be she clean,
- I'm a man for ev'ry scene.
- 751. OUR OWN SINS UNSEEN.
- Other men's sins we ever bear in mind;
- _None sees the fardell of his faults behind_.
- _Fardell_, bundle.
- 752. NO PAINS, NO GAINS.
- If little labour, little are our gains:
- Man's fortunes are according to his pains.
- 754. VIRTUE BEST UNITED.
- By so much, virtue is the less,
- By how much, near to singleness.
- 755. THE EYE.
- A wanton and lascivious eye
- Betrays the heart's adultery.
- 756. TO PRINCE CHARLES UPON HIS COMING TO EXETER.
- What fate decreed, time now has made us see,
- A renovation of the west by thee.
- That preternatural fever, which did threat
- Death to our country, now hath lost his heat,
- And, calms succeeding, we perceive no more
- Th' unequal pulse to beat, as heretofore.
- Something there yet remains for thee to do;
- Then reach those ends that thou wast destin'd to.
- Go on with Sylla's fortune; let thy fate
- Make thee like him, this, that way fortunate:
- Apollo's image side with thee to bless
- Thy war (discreetly made) with white success.
- Meantime thy prophets watch by watch shall pray,
- While young Charles fights, and fighting wins the day:
- That done, our smooth-paced poems all shall be
- Sung in the high doxology of thee.
- Then maids shall strew thee, and thy curls from them
- Receive with songs a flowery diadem.
- _Sylla's fortune_, in allusion to Sylla's surname of _Felix_.
- _Doxology_, glorifying.
- 757. A SONG.
- Burn, or drown me, choose ye whether,
- So I may but die together;
- Thus to slay me by degrees
- Is the height of cruelties.
- What needs twenty stabs, when one
- Strikes me dead as any stone?
- O show mercy then, and be
- Kind at once to murder me.
- 758. PRINCES AND FAVOURITES.
- Princes and fav'rites are most dear, while they
- By giving and receiving hold the play;
- But the relation then of both grows poor,
- When these can ask, and kings can give no more.
- 759. EXAMPLES; OR, LIKE PRINCE, LIKE PEOPLE.
- Examples lead us, and we likely see;
- Such as the prince is, will his people be.
- 760. POTENTATES.
- Love and the Graces evermore do wait
- Upon the man that is a potentate.
- 761. THE WAKE.
- Come, Anthea, let us two
- Go to feast, as others do.
- Tarts and custards, creams and cakes,
- Are the junkets still at wakes:
- Unto which the tribes resort,
- Where the business is the sport.
- Morris-dancers thou shall see,
- Marian, too, in pageantry,
- And a mimic to devise
- Many grinning properties.
- Players there will be, and those
- Base in action as in clothes;
- Yet with strutting they will please
- The incurious villages.
- Near the dying of the day
- There will be a cudgel-play,
- Where a coxcomb will be broke
- Ere a good word can be spoke:
- But the anger ends all here,
- Drenched in ale, or drown'd in beer.
- Happy rustics! best content
- With the cheapest merriment,
- And possess no other fear
- Than to want the wake next year.
- _Marian_, Maid Marian of the Robin Hood ballads.
- _Action_, _i.e._, dramatic action.
- _Incurious_, careless, easily pleased.
- _Coxcomb_, to cause blood to flow from the opponent's head was the
- test of victory.
- 762. THE PETER-PENNY.
- Fresh strewings allow
- To my sepulchre now,
- To make my lodging the sweeter;
- A staff or a wand
- Put then in my hand,
- With a penny to pay S. Peter.
- Who has not a cross
- Must sit with the loss,
- And no whit further must venture;
- Since the porter he
- Will paid have his fee,
- Or else not one there must enter.
- Who at a dead lift
- Can't send for a gift
- A pig to the priest for a roaster,
- Shall hear his clerk say,
- By yea and by nay,
- _No penny, no paternoster_.
- _S. Peter_, as the gate-ward of heaven.
- _Cross_, a coin.
- 763. TO DOCTOR ALABASTER.
- Nor art thou less esteem'd that I have plac'd,
- Amongst mine honour'd, thee almost the last:
- In great processions many lead the way
- To him who is the triumph of the day,
- As these have done to thee who art the one,
- One only glory of a million:
- In whom the spirit of the gods does dwell,
- Firing thy soul, by which thou dost foretell
- When this or that vast dynasty must fall
- Down to a fillet more imperial;
- When this or that horn shall be broke, and when
- Others shall spring up in their place again;
- When times and seasons and all years must lie
- Drowned in the sea of wild eternity;
- When the black doomsday books, as yet unseal'd,
- Shall by the mighty angel be reveal'd;
- And when the trumpet which thou late hast found
- Shall call to judgment. Tell us when the sound
- Of this or that great April day shall be,
- And next the Gospel we will credit thee.
- Meantime like earth-worms we will crawl below,
- And wonder at those things that thou dost know.
- For an account of Alabaster see Notes: the allusions here are to his
- apocalyptic writings.
- _Horn_, used as a symbol of prosperity.
- _The trumpet which thou late hast found_, _i.e._, Alabaster's
- "Spiraculum Tubarum seu Fons Spiritualium Expositionum," published
- 1633.
- _April day_, day of weeping, or perhaps rather of "opening" or
- revelation.
- 764. UPON HIS KINSWOMAN, MRS. M. S.
- Here lies a virgin, and as sweet
- As e'er was wrapt in winding sheet.
- Her name if next you would have known,
- The marble speaks it, Mary Stone:
- Who dying in her blooming years,
- This stone for name's sake melts to tears.
- If, fragrant virgins, you'll but keep
- A fast, while jets and marbles weep,
- And praying, strew some roses on her,
- You'll do my niece abundant honour.
- 765. FELICITY KNOWS NO FENCE.
- Of both our fortunes good and bad we find
- Prosperity more searching of the mind:
- Felicity flies o'er the wall and fence,
- While misery keeps in with patience.
- 766. DEATH ENDS ALL WOE.
- Time is the bound of things; where'er we go
- _Fate gives a meeting, Death's the end of woe_.
- 767. A CONJURATION TO ELECTRA.
- By those soft tods of wool
- With which the air is full;
- By all those tinctures there,
- That paint the hemisphere;
- By dews and drizzling rain
- That swell the golden grain;
- By all those sweets that be
- I' th' flowery nunnery;
- By silent nights, and the
- Three forms of Hecate;
- By all aspects that bless
- The sober sorceress,
- While juice she strains, and pith
- To make her philters with;
- By time that hastens on
- Things to perfection;
- And by yourself, the best
- Conjurement of the rest:
- O my Electra! be
- In love with none, but me.
- _Tods of wool_, literally, tod of wool=twenty-eight pounds, here used
- of the fleecy clouds.
- _Tinctures_, colours.
- _Three forms of Hecate_, the _Diva triformis_ of Hor. Od. iii. 22.
- Luna in heaven, Diana on earth, Persephone in the world below.
- _Aspects_, _i.e._, of the planets.
- 768. COURAGE COOLED.
- I cannot love as I have lov'd before;
- For I'm grown old and, with mine age, grown poor.
- _Love must be fed by wealth_: this blood of mine
- Must needs wax cold, if wanting bread and wine.
- 769. THE SPELL.
- Holy water come and bring;
- Cast in salt, for seasoning:
- Set the brush for sprinkling:
- Sacred spittle bring ye hither;
- Meal and it now mix together,
- And a little oil to either.
- Give the tapers here their light,
- Ring the saints'-bell, to affright
- Far from hence the evil sprite.
- 770. HIS WISH TO PRIVACY.
- Give me a cell
- To dwell,
- Where no foot hath
- A path:
- There will I spend
- And end
- My wearied years
- In tears.
- 771. A GOOD HUSBAND.
- A Master of a house, as I have read,
- Must be the first man up, and last in bed.
- With the sun rising he must walk his grounds;
- See this, view that, and all the other bounds:
- Shut every gate; mend every hedge that's torn,
- Either with old, or plant therein new thorn;
- Tread o'er his glebe, but with such care, that where
- He sets his foot, he leaves rich compost there.
- 772. A HYMN TO BACCHUS.
- I sing thy praise, Iacchus,
- Who with thy thyrse dost thwack us:
- And yet thou so dost back us
- With boldness, that we fear
- No Brutus ent'ring here,
- Nor Cato the severe.
- What though the lictors threat us,
- We know they dare not beat us,
- So long as thou dost heat us.
- When we thy orgies sing,
- Each cobbler is a king,
- Nor dreads he any thing:
- And though he do not rave,
- Yet he'll the courage have
- To call my Lord Mayor knave;
- Besides, too, in a brave,
- Although he has no riches,
- But walks with dangling breeches
- And skirts that want their stitches,
- And shows his naked flitches,
- Yet he'll be thought or seen
- So good as George-a-Green;
- And calls his blouze, his queen;
- And speaks in language keen.
- O Bacchus! let us be
- From cares and troubles free;
- And thou shalt hear how we
- Will chant new hymns to thee.
- _Orgies_, hymns to Bacchus.
- _Brave_, boast.
- _George-a-Green_, the legendary pinner of Wakefield, renowned for the
- use of the quarterstaff.
- _Blouze_, a fat wench.
- 773. UPON PUSS AND HER 'PRENTICE. EPIG.
- Puss and her 'prentice both at drawgloves play;
- That done, they kiss, and so draw out the day:
- At night they draw to supper; then well fed,
- They draw their clothes off both, so draw to bed.
- _Drawgloves_, the game of talking on the fingers.
- 774. BLAME THE REWARD OF PRINCES.
- Among disasters that dissension brings,
- This not the least is, which belongs to kings:
- If wars go well, each for a part lays claim;
- If ill, then kings, not soldiers, bear the blame.
- 775. CLEMENCY IN KINGS.
- Kings must not only cherish up the good,
- But must be niggards of the meanest blood.
- 776. ANGER.
- Wrongs, if neglected, vanish in short time,
- But heard with anger, we confess the crime.
- 777. A PSALM OR HYMN TO THE GRACES.
- Glory be to the Graces!
- That do in public places
- Drive thence whate'er encumbers
- The list'ning to my numbers.
- Honour be to the Graces!
- Who do with sweet embraces,
- Show they are well contented
- With what I have invented.
- Worship be to the Graces!
- Who do from sour faces,
- And lungs that would infect me,
- For evermore protect me.
- 778. A HYMN TO THE MUSES.
- Honour to you who sit
- Near to the well of wit,
- And drink your fill of it.
- Glory and worship be
- To you, sweet maids, thrice three,
- Who still inspire me,
- And teach me how to sing
- Unto the lyric string
- My measures ravishing.
- Then while I sing your praise,
- My priesthood crown with bays
- Green, to the end of days.
- 779. UPON JULIA'S CLOTHES.
- Whenas in silks my Julia goes,
- Then, then, methinks, how sweetly flows
- The liquefaction of her clothes.
- Next, when I cast mine eyes and see
- That brave vibration each way free;
- O how that glittering taketh me!
- 780. MODERATION.
- In things a moderation keep:
- _Kings ought to shear, not skin their sheep_.
- 781. TO ANTHEA.
- Let's call for Hymen, if agreed thou art;
- _Delays in love but crucify the heart_.
- Love's thorny tapers yet neglected lie:
- Speak thou the word, they'll kindle by-and-bye.
- The nimble hours woo us on to wed,
- And Genius waits to have us both to bed.
- Behold, for us the naked Graces stay
- With maunds of roses for to strew the way:
- Besides, the most religious prophet stands
- Ready to join, as well our hearts as hands.
- Juno yet smiles; but if she chance to chide,
- Ill luck 'twill bode to th' bridegroom and the bride.
- Tell me, Anthea, dost thou fondly dread
- The loss of that we call a maidenhead?
- Come, I'll instruct thee. Know, the vestal fire
- Is not by marriage quench'd, but flames the higher.
- _Maunds_, baskets.
- _Fondly_, foolishly.
- 782. UPON PREW, HIS MAID.
- In this little urn is laid
- Prudence Baldwin, once my maid:
- From whose happy spark here let
- Spring the purple violet.
- 783. THE INVITATION.
- To sup with thee thou did'st me home invite;
- And mad'st a promise that mine appetite
- Should meet and tire on such lautitious meat,
- The like not Heliogabalus did eat:
- And richer wine would'st give to me, thy guest,
- Than Roman Sylla pour'd out at his feast.
- I came, 'tis true, and looked for fowl of price,
- The bastard phœnix, bird of paradise,
- And for no less than aromatic wine
- Of maiden's-blush, commix'd with jessamine.
- Clean was the hearth, the mantel larded jet;
- Which wanting Lar, and smoke, hung weeping wet;
- At last, i' th' noon of winter, did appear
- A ragg'd-soust-neat's-foot with sick vinegar:
- And in a burnished flagonet stood by,
- Beer small as comfort, dead as charity.
- At which amaz'd, and pondering on the food,
- How cold it was, and how it chill'd my blood;
- I curs'd the master, and I damn'd the souce,
- And swore I'd got the ague of the house.
- Well, when to eat thou dost me next desire,
- I'll bring a fever, since thou keep'st no fire.
- _Tire_, feed on.
- _Lautitious_, sumptuous.
- _Maiden's-blush_, the pink-rose.
- _Larded jet_, _i.e._, blacked.
- _Soust_, pickled.
- 784. CEREMONIES FOR CHRISTMAS.
- Come, bring with a noise,
- My merry, merry boys,
- The Christmas log to the firing;
- While my good dame, she
- Bids ye all be free,
- And drink to your hearts' desiring.
- With the last year's brand
- Light the new block, and
- For good success in his spending
- On your psaltries play,
- That sweet luck may
- Come while the log is a-teending.
- Drink now the strong beer,
- Cut the white loaf here;
- The while the meat is a-shredding
- For the rare mince-pie,
- And the plums stand by
- To fill the paste that's a-kneading.
- _Psaltries_, a kind of guitar.
- _Teending_, kindling.
- 785. CHRISTMAS-EVE, ANOTHER CEREMONY.
- Come guard this night the Christmas-pie,
- That the thief, though ne'er so sly,
- With his flesh-hooks, don't come nigh
- To catch it
- From him, who all alone sits there,
- Having his eyes still in his ear,
- And a deal of nightly fear,
- To watch it.
- 786. ANOTHER TO THE MAIDS.
- Wash your hands, or else the fire
- Will not teend to your desire;
- Unwash'd hands, ye maidens, know,
- Dead the fire, though ye blow.
- _Teend_, kindle.
- 787. ANOTHER.
- Wassail the trees, that they may bear
- You many a plum and many a pear:
- For more or less fruits they will bring,
- As you do give them wassailing.
- 788. POWER AND PEACE.
- _'Tis never, or but seldom known,
- Power and peace to keep one throne._
- 789. TO HIS DEAR VALENTINE, MISTRESS MARGARET FALCONBRIDGE.
- Now is your turn, my dearest, to be set
- A gem in this eternal coronet:
- 'Twas rich before, but since your name is down
- It sparkles now like Ariadne's crown.
- Blaze by this sphere for ever: or this do,
- Let me and it shine evermore by you.
- 790. TO OENONE.
- Sweet Oenone, do but say
- Love thou dost, though love says nay.
- Speak me fair; for lovers be
- Gently kill'd by flattery.
- 791. VERSES.
- Who will not honour noble numbers, when
- Verses out-live the bravest deeds of men?
- 792. HAPPINESS.
- That happiness does still the longest thrive,
- Where joys and griefs have turns alternative.
- 793. THINGS OF CHOICE LONG A-COMING.
- We pray 'gainst war, yet we enjoy no peace;
- _Desire deferr'd is that it may increase_.
- 794. POETRY PERPETUATES THE POET.
- Here I myself might likewise die,
- And utterly forgotten lie,
- But that eternal poetry
- Repullulation gives me here
- Unto the thirtieth thousand year,
- When all now dead shall reappear.
- _Repullulation_, rejuvenescence.
- _Thirtieth thousand year_, an allusion to the doctrine of the Platonic
- year.
- 797. KISSES.
- Give me the food that satisfies a guest:
- Kisses are but dry banquets to a feast.
- 798. ORPHEUS.
- Orpheus he went, as poets tell,
- To fetch Eurydice from hell;
- And had her; but it was upon
- This short but strict condition:
- Backward he should not look while he
- Led her through hell's obscurity:
- But ah! it happened, as he made
- His passage through that dreadful shade,
- Revolve he did his loving eye,
- For gentle fear or jealousy;
- And looking back, that look did sever
- Him and Eurydice for ever.
- 803. TO SAPPHO.
- Sappho, I will choose to go
- Where the northern winds do blow
- Endless ice and endless snow:
- Rather than I once would see
- But a winter's face in thee,
- To benumb my hopes and me.
- 804. TO HIS FAITHFUL FRIEND, M. JOHN CROFTS, CUP-BEARER TO THE KING.
- For all thy many courtesies to me,
- Nothing I have, my Crofts, to send to thee
- For the requital, save this only one
- Half of my just remuneration.
- For since I've travell'd all this realm throughout
- To seek and find some few immortals out
- To circumspangle this my spacious sphere,
- As lamps for everlasting shining here;
- And having fix'd thee in mine orb a star,
- Amongst the rest, both bright and singular,
- The present age will tell the world thou art,
- If not to th' whole, yet satisfi'd in part.
- As for the rest, being too great a sum
- Here to be paid, I'll pay't i' th' world to come.
- 805. THE BRIDE-CAKE.
- This day, my Julia, thou must make
- For Mistress Bride the wedding-cake:
- Knead but the dough, and it will be
- To paste of almonds turn'd by thee:
- Or kiss it thou but once or twice,
- And for the bride-cake there'll be spice.
- 806. TO BE MERRY.
- Let's now take our time
- While w'are in our prime,
- And old, old age is afar off:
- For the evil, evil days
- Will come on apace,
- Before we can be aware of.
- 807. BURIAL.
- Man may want land to live in; but for all
- Nature finds out some place for burial.
- 808. LENITY.
- 'Tis the Chirurgeon's praise, and height of art,
- Not to cut off, but cure the vicious part.
- 809. PENITENCE.
- Who after his transgression doth repent,
- Is half, or altogether innocent.
- 810. GRIEF.
- Consider sorrows, how they are aright:
- _Grief, if't be great, 'tis short; if long, 'tis light_.
- 811. THE MAIDEN-BLUSH.
- So look the mornings when the sun
- Paints them with fresh vermilion:
- So cherries blush, and Kathern pears,
- And apricots in youthful years:
- So corals look more lovely red,
- And rubies lately polished:
- So purest diaper doth shine,
- Stain'd by the beams of claret wine:
- As Julia looks when she doth dress
- Her either cheek with bashfulness.
- _Kathern pears_, _i.e._, Catharine pears.
- 812. THE MEAN.
- _Imparity doth ever discord bring;
- The mean the music makes in everything._
- 813. HASTE HURTFUL.
- _Haste is unhappy; what we rashly do
- Is both unlucky, aye, and foolish, too.
- Where war with rashness is attempted, there
- The soldiers leave the field with equal fear._
- 814. PURGATORY.
- Readers, we entreat ye pray
- For the soul of Lucia;
- That in little time she be
- From her purgatory free:
- In the interim she desires
- That your tears may cool her fires.
- 815. THE CLOUD.
- Seest thou that cloud that rides in state,
- Part ruby-like, part candidate?
- It is no other than the bed
- Where Venus sleeps half-smothered.
- _Candidate_, robed in white.
- 817. THE AMBER BEAD.
- I saw a fly within a bead
- Of amber cleanly buried;
- The urn was little, but the room
- More rich than Cleopatra's tomb.
- 818. TO MY DEAREST SISTER, M. MERCY HERRICK.
- Whene'er I go, or whatsoe'er befalls
- Me in mine age, or foreign funerals,
- This blessing I will leave thee, ere I go:
- Prosper thy basket and therein thy dough.
- Feed on the paste of filberts, or else knead
- And bake the flour of amber for thy bread.
- Balm may thy trees drop, and thy springs run oil,
- And everlasting harvest crown thy soil!
- These I but wish for; but thyself shall see
- The blessing fall in mellow times on thee.
- 819. THE TRANSFIGURATION.
- Immortal clothing I put on
- So soon as, Julia, I am gone
- To mine eternal mansion.
- Thou, thou art here, to human sight
- Cloth'd all with incorrupted light;
- But yet how more admir'dly bright
- Wilt thou appear, when thou art set
- In thy refulgent thronelet,
- That shin'st thus in thy counterfeit!
- 820. SUFFER THAT THOU CANST NOT SHIFT.
- Does fortune rend thee? Bear with thy hard fate:
- _Virtuous instructions ne'er are delicate_.
- Say, does she frown? still countermand her threats:
- _Virtue best loves those children that she beats_.
- 821. TO THE PASSENGER.
- If I lie unburied, sir,
- These my relics pray inter:
- 'Tis religion's part to see
- Stones or turfs to cover me.
- One word more I had to say:
- But it skills not; go your way;
- He that wants a burial room
- _For a stone, has Heaven his tomb_.
- _Religion's_, orig. ed. _religious_.
- 823. TO THE KING, UPON HIS TAKING OF LEICESTER.
- This day is yours, great Charles! and in this war
- Your fate, and ours, alike victorious are.
- In her white stole now Victory does rest
- _Ensphered with palm on your triumphant crest_.
- Fortune is now your captive; other Kings
- _Hold but her hands; you hold both hands and wings_.
- 824. TO JULIA, IN HER DAWN, OR DAYBREAK.
- By the next kindling of the day,
- My Julia, thou shalt see,
- Ere Ave-Mary thou canst say
- I'll come and visit thee.
- Yet ere thou counsel'st with thy glass,
- Appear thou to mine eyes
- As smooth, and nak'd, as she that was
- The prime of paradise.
- If blush thou must, then blush thou through
- A lawn, that thou mayst look
- As purest pearls, or pebbles do
- When peeping through a brook.
- As lilies shrin'd in crystal, so
- Do thou to me appear;
- Or damask roses when they grow
- To sweet acquaintance there.
- 825. COUNSEL.
- 'Twas Cæsar's saying: _Kings no less conquerors are
- By their wise counsel, than they be by war._
- 826. BAD PRINCES PILL THE PEOPLE.
- Like those infernal deities which eat
- The best of all the sacrificed meat;
- And leave their servants but the smoke and sweat:
- So many kings, and primates too there are,
- Who claim the fat and fleshy for their share
- And leave their subjects but the starved ware.
- 827. MOST WORDS, LESS WORKS.
- In desp'rate cases all, or most, are known
- Commanders, few for execution.
- 828. TO DIANEME.
- I could but see thee yesterday
- Stung by a fretful bee;
- And I the javelin suck'd away,
- And heal'd the wound in thee.
- A thousand thorns and briars and stings,
- I have in my poor breast;
- Yet ne'er can see that salve which brings
- My passions any rest.
- As love shall help me, I admire
- How thou canst sit, and smile
- To see me bleed, and not desire
- To staunch the blood the while.
- If thou, compos'd of gentle mould,
- Art so unkind to me;
- What dismal stories will be told
- Of those that cruel be?
- _Admire_, wonder.
- 830. HIS LOSS.
- All has been plundered from me but my wit:
- Fortune herself can lay no claim to it.
- 831. DRAW AND DRINK.
- Milk still your fountains and your springs: for why?
- The more th'are drawn, the less they will grow dry.
- 833. TO OENONE.
- Thou say'st Love's dart
- Hath pricked thy heart;
- And thou dost languish too:
- If one poor prick
- Can make thee sick,
- Say, what would many do?
- 836. TO ELECTRA.
- Shall I go to Love and tell,
- Thou art all turned icicle?
- Shall I say her altars be
- Disadorn'd and scorn'd by thee?
- O beware! in time submit;
- Love has yet no wrathful fit:
- If her patience turns to ire,
- Love is then consuming fire.
- 837. TO MISTRESS AMY POTTER.
- Ay me! I love; give him your hand to kiss
- Who both your wooer and your poet is.
- Nature has precompos'd us both to love:
- Your part's to grant; my scene must be to move.
- Dear, can you like, and liking love your poet?
- If you say "Aye," blush-guiltiness will show it.
- Mine eyes must woo you, though I sigh the while:
- _True love is tongueless as a crocodile_.
- And you may find in love these different parts--
- _Wooers have tongues of ice, but burning hearts_.
- 838. UPON A MAID.
- Here she lies, in bed of spice,
- Fair as Eve in Paradise:
- For her beauty it was such
- Poets could not praise too much.
- Virgins, come, and in a ring
- Her supremest requiem sing;
- Then depart, but see ye tread
- Lightly, lightly, o'er the dead.
- _Supremest_, last.
- 839. UPON LOVE.
- Love is a circle, and an endless sphere;
- From good to good, revolving here and there.
- 840. BEAUTY.
- Beauty's no other but a lovely grace
- Of lively colours flowing from the face.
- 841. UPON LOVE.
- Some salve to every sore we may apply;
- Only for my wound there's no remedy.
- Yet if my Julia kiss me, there will be
- A sovereign balm found out to cure me.
- 844. TO HIS BOOK.
- Make haste away, and let one be
- A friendly patron unto thee:
- Lest, rapt from hence, I see thee lie
- Torn for the use of pastery:
- Or see thy injur'd leaves serve well,
- To make loose gowns for mackerel:
- Or see the grocers in a trice,
- Make hoods of thee to serve out spice.
- 845. READINESS.
- The readiness of doing doth express
- No other but the doer's willingness.
- 846. WRITING.
- When words we want, Love teacheth to indite;
- And what we blush to speak, she bids us write.
- 847. SOCIETY.
- Two things do make society to stand:
- The first commerce is, and the next command.
- 848. UPON A MAID.
- Gone she is a long, long way,
- But she has decreed a day
- Back to come, and make no stay:
- So we keep, till her return,
- Here, her ashes, or her urn.
- 849. SATISFACTION FOR SUFFERINGS.
- For all our works a recompense is sure:
- _'Tis sweet to think on what was hard t' endure_.
- 850. THE DELAYING BRIDE.
- Why so slowly do you move
- To the centre of your love?
- On your niceness though we wait,
- Yet the hours say 'tis late:
- _Coyness takes us, to a measure;
- But o'eracted deads the pleasure._
- Go to bed, and care not when
- Cheerful day shall spring again.
- One brave captain did command,
- By his word, the sun to stand:
- One short charm, if you but say,
- Will enforce the moon to stay,
- Till you warn her hence, away,
- T' have your blushes seen by day.
- _Niceness_, delicacy.
- 851. TO M. HENRY LAWES, THE EXCELLENT COMPOSER OF HIS LYRICS.
- Touch but thy lyre, my Harry, and I hear
- From thee some raptures of the rare Gotiere;
- Then if thy voice commingle with the string,
- I hear in thee rare Laniere to sing;
- Or curious Wilson: tell me, canst thou be
- Less than Apollo, that usurp'st such three?
- Three, unto whom the whole world give applause;
- Yet their three praises praise but one; that's Lawes.
- _Gotiere_, Wilson, see above, 111.
- _Laniere_, Nicholas Laniere (1590?-1670?), musician and painter,
- appointed Master of the King's Music in 1626.
- 852. AGE UNFIT FOR LOVE.
- Maidens tell me I am old;
- Let me in my glass behold
- Whether smooth or not I be,
- Or if hair remains to me.
- Well, or be't or be't not so,
- This for certainty I know,
- Ill it fits old men to play,
- When that Death bids come away.
- 853. THE BEDMAN, OR GRAVEMAKER.
- Thou hast made many houses for the dead;
- When my lot calls me to be buried,
- For love or pity, prithee let there be
- I' th' churchyard made one tenement for me.
- 854. TO ANTHEA.
- Anthea, I am going hence
- With some small stock of innocence:
- But yet those blessed gates I see
- Withstanding entrance unto me.
- To pray for me do thou begin,
- The porter then will let me in.
- 855. NEED.
- Who begs to die for fear of human need,
- Wisheth his body, not his soul, good speed.
- 856. TO JULIA.
- I am zealless; prithee pray
- For my welfare, Julia,
- For I think the gods require
- Male perfumes, but female fire.
- _Male perfumes_, perfumes of the best kind.
- 857. ON JULIA'S LIPS.
- Sweet are my Julia's lips and clean,
- As if o'erwashed in Hippocrene.
- 858. TWILIGHT.
- Twilight no other thing is, poets say,
- Than the last part of night and first of day.
- 859. TO HIS FRIEND, MR. J. JINCKS.
- Love, love me now, because I place
- Thee here among my righteous race:
- The bastard slips may droop and die
- Wanting both root and earth; but thy
- Immortal self shall boldly trust
- To live for ever with my Just.
- _With my Just_, cp. 664.
- 860. ON HIMSELF.
- If that my fate has now fulfill'd my year,
- And so soon stopt my longer living here;
- What was't, ye gods, a dying man to save,
- But while he met with his paternal grave!
- Though while we living 'bout the world do roam,
- We love to rest in peaceful urns at home,
- Where we may snug, and close together lie
- By the dead bones of our dear ancestry.
- 861. KINGS AND TYRANTS.
- 'Twixt kings and tyrants there's this difference known:
- _Kings seek their subjects' good, tyrants their own_.
- 862. CROSSES.
- Our crosses are no other than the rods,
- And our diseases, vultures of the gods:
- Each grief we feel, that likewise is a kite
- Sent forth by them, our flesh to eat, or bite.
- 863. UPON LOVE.
- Love brought me to a silent grove
- And show'd me there a tree,
- Where some had hang'd themselves for love,
- And gave a twist to me.
- The halter was of silk and gold,
- That he reach'd forth unto me;
- No otherwise than if he would
- By dainty things undo me.
- He bade me then that necklace use;
- And told me, too, he maketh
- A glorious end by such a noose,
- His death for love that taketh.
- 'Twas but a dream; but had I been
- There really alone,
- My desp'rate fears in love had seen
- Mine execution.
- 864. NO DIFFERENCE I' TH' DARK.
- Night makes no difference 'twixt the priest and clerk;
- Joan as my lady is as good i' th' dark.
- 865. THE BODY.
- The body is the soul's poor house or home,
- Whose ribs the laths are, and whose flesh the loam.
- 866. TO SAPPHO.
- Thou say'st thou lov'st me, Sappho; I say no;
- But would to Love I could believe 'twas so!
- Pardon my fears, sweet Sappho; I desire
- That thou be righteous found, and I the liar.
- 867. OUT OF TIME, OUT OF TUNE.
- We blame, nay, we despise her pains
- That wets her garden when it rains:
- But when the drought has dried the knot,
- Then let her use the wat'ring-pot.
- We pray for showers, at our need,
- To drench, but not to drown our seed.
- _Knot_, quaintly shaped flower-bed.
- 868. TO HIS BOOK.
- Take mine advice, and go not near
- Those faces, sour as vinegar.
- For these, and nobler numbers can
- Ne'er please the supercilious man.
- 869. TO HIS HONOURED FRIEND, SIR THOMAS HEALE.
- Stand by the magic of my powerful rhymes
- 'Gainst all the indignation of the times.
- Age shall not wrong thee; or one jot abate
- Of thy both great and everlasting fate.
- While others perish, here's thy life decreed,
- Because begot of my immortal seed.
- 870. THE SACRIFICE, BY WAY OF DISCOURSE BETWIXT HIMSELF AND JULIA.
- _Herr._ Come and let's in solemn wise
- Both address to sacrifice:
- Old religion first commands
- That we wash our hearts, and hands.
- Is the beast exempt from stain,
- Altar clean, no fire profane?
- Are the garlands, is the nard
- Ready here?
- _Jul._ All well prepar'd,
- With the wine that must be shed,
- 'Twixt the horns, upon the head
- Of the holy beast we bring
- For our trespass-offering.
- _Herr._ All is well; now next to these
- Put we on pure surplices;
- And with chaplets crown'd, we'll roast
- With perfumes the holocaust:
- And, while we the gods invoke,
- Read acceptance by the smoke.
- 871. TO APOLLO.
- Thou mighty lord and master of the lyre,
- Unshorn Apollo, come and re-inspire
- My fingers so, the lyric-strings to move,
- That I may play and sing a hymn to Love.
- 872. ON LOVE.
- Love is a kind of war: hence those who fear!
- No cowards must his royal ensigns bear.
- 873. ANOTHER.
- Where love begins, there dead thy first desire:
- _A spark neglected makes a mighty fire_.
- 874. A HYMN TO CUPID.
- Thou, thou that bear'st the sway,
- With whom the sea-nymphs play;
- And Venus, every way:
- When I embrace thy knee,
- And make short pray'rs to thee,
- In love then prosper me.
- This day I go to woo;
- Instruct me how to do
- This work thou put'st me to.
- From shame my face keep free;
- From scorn I beg of thee,
- Love, to deliver me:
- So shall I sing thy praise,
- And to thee altars raise,
- Unto the end of days.
- 875. TO ELECTRA.
- Let not thy tombstone e'er be laid by me:
- Nor let my hearse be wept upon by thee:
- But let that instant when thou diest be known
- The minute of mine expiration.
- One knell be rung for both; and let one grave
- To hold us two an endless honour have.
- 876. HOW HIS SOUL CAME ENSNARED.
- My soul would one day go and seek
- For roses, and in Julia's cheek
- A richesse of those sweets she found,
- As in another Rosamond.
- But gathering roses as she was,
- Not knowing what would come to pass,
- It chanc'd a ringlet of her hair
- Caught my poor soul, as in a snare:
- Which ever since has been in thrall;
- Yet freedom she enjoys withal.
- _Richesse_, wealth.
- 877. FACTIONS.
- The factions of the great ones call,
- To side with them, the commons all.
- 881. UPON JULIA'S HAIR BUNDLED UP IN A GOLDEN NET.
- Tell me, what needs those rich deceits,
- These golden toils, and trammel nets,
- To take thine hairs when they are known
- Already tame, and all thine own?
- 'Tis I am wild, and more than hairs
- Deserve these meshes and those snares.
- Set free thy tresses, let them flow
- As airs do breathe or winds do blow:
- And let such curious net-works be
- Less set for them than spread for me.
- 883. THE SHOWER OF BLOSSOMS.
- Love in a shower of blossoms came
- Down, and half drown'd me with the same:
- The blooms that fell were white and red;
- But with such sweets comminglèd,
- As whether--this I cannot tell--
- My sight was pleas'd more, or my smell:
- But true it was, as I roll'd there,
- Without a thought of hurt or fear,
- Love turn'd himself into a bee,
- And with his javelin wounded me:
- From which mishap this use I make,
- _Where most sweets are, there lies a snake:
- Kisses and favours are sweet things;
- But those have thorns and these have stings._
- 885. A DEFENCE FOR WOMEN.
- Naught are all women: I say no,
- Since for one bad, one good I know:
- For Clytemnestra most unkind,
- Loving Alcestis there we find:
- For one Medea that was bad,
- A good Penelope was had:
- For wanton Lais, then we have
- Chaste Lucrece, a wife as grave:
- And thus through womankind we see
- A good and bad. Sirs, credit me.
- 887. SLAVERY.
- 'Tis liberty to serve one lord; but he
- Who many serves, serves base servility.
- 888. CHARMS.
- Bring the holy crust of bread,
- Lay it underneath the head;
- 'Tis a certain charm to keep
- Hags away, while children sleep.
- 889. ANOTHER.
- Let the superstitious wife
- Near the child's heart lay a knife:
- Point be up, and haft be down
- (While she gossips in the town);
- This, 'mongst other mystic charms,
- Keeps the sleeping child from harms.
- 890. ANOTHER TO BRING IN THE WITCH.
- To house the hag, you must do this:
- Commix with meal a little piss
- Of him bewitch'd; then forthwith make
- A little wafer or a cake;
- And this rawly bak'd will bring
- The old hag in. No surer thing.
- 891. ANOTHER CHARM FOR STABLES.
- Hang up hooks and shears to scare
- Hence the hag that rides the mare,
- Till they be all over wet
- With the mire and the sweat:
- This observ'd, the manes shall be
- Of your horses all knot-free.
- 892. CEREMONIES FOR CANDLEMAS EVE.
- Down with the rosemary and bays,
- Down with the mistletoe;
- Instead of holly, now up-raise
- The greener box, for show.
- The holly hitherto did sway;
- Let box now domineer
- Until the dancing Easter day,
- Or Easter's eve appear.
- Then youthful box which now hath grace
- Your houses to renew;
- Grown old, surrender must his place
- Unto the crisped yew.
- When yew is out, then birch comes in,
- And many flowers beside;
- Both of a fresh and fragrant kin
- To honour Whitsuntide.
- Green rushes, then, and sweetest bents,
- With cooler oaken boughs,
- Come in for comely ornaments
- To re-adorn the house.
- Thus times do shift; each thing his turn does hold:
- _New things succeed, as former things grow old_.
- _Bents_, grasses.
- 893. THE CEREMONIES FOR CANDLEMAS DAY.
- Kindle the Christmas brand, and then
- Till sunset let it burn;
- Which quench'd, then lay it up again
- Till Christmas next return.
- Part must be kept wherewith to teend
- The Christmas log next year,
- And where 'tis safely kept, the fiend
- Can do no mischief there.
- 894. UPON CANDLEMAS DAY.
- End now the white loaf and the pie,
- And let all sports with Christmas die.
- _Teend_, kindle.
- 897. TO BIANCA, TO BLESS HIM.
- Would I woo, and would I win?
- Would I well my work begin?
- Would I evermore be crowned
- With the end that I propound?
- Would I frustrate or prevent
- All aspects malevolent?
- Thwart all wizards, and with these
- Dead all black contingencies:
- Place my words and all works else
- In most happy parallels?
- All will prosper, if so be
- I be kiss'd or bless'd by thee.
- 898. JULIA'S CHURCHING, OR PURIFICATION.
- Put on thy holy filletings, and so
- To th' temple with the sober midwife go.
- Attended thus, in a most solemn wise,
- By those who serve the child-bed mysteries,
- Burn first thine incense; next, whenas thou see'st
- The candid stole thrown o'er the pious priest,
- With reverend curtsies come, and to him bring
- Thy free (and not decurted) offering.
- All rites well ended, with fair auspice come
- (As to the breaking of a bride-cake) home,
- Where ceremonious Hymen shall for thee
- Provide a second epithalamy.
- _She who keeps chastely to her husband's side
- Is not for one, but every night his bride;
- And stealing still with love and fear to bed,
- Brings him not one, but many a maidenhead._
- _Candid_, white.
- _Decurted_, curtailed.
- 899. TO HIS BOOK.
- Before the press scarce one could see
- A little-peeping-part of thee;
- But since thou'rt printed, thou dost call
- To show thy nakedness to all.
- My care for thee is now the less,
- Having resign'd thy shamefac'dness.
- Go with thy faults and fates; yet stay
- And take this sentence, then away:
- Whom one belov'd will not suffice,
- She'll run to all adulteries.
- 900. TEARS.
- Tears most prevail; with tears, too, thou may'st move
- Rocks to relent, and coyest maids to love.
- 901. TO HIS FRIEND TO AVOID CONTENTION OF WORDS.
- Words beget anger; anger brings forth blows;
- Blows make of dearest friends immortal foes.
- For which prevention, sociate, let there be
- Betwixt us two no more logomachy.
- Far better 'twere for either to be mute,
- Than for to murder friendship by dispute.
- _Logomachy_, contention of words.
- 902. TRUTH.
- Truth is best found out by the time and eyes;
- _Falsehood wins credit by uncertainties_.
- 904. THE EYES BEFORE THE EARS.
- We credit most our sight; one eye doth please
- Our trust far more than ten ear-witnesses.
- 905. WANT.
- Want is a softer wax, that takes thereon
- This, that, and every base impression.
- 906. TO A FRIEND.
- Look in my book, and herein see
- Life endless signed to thee and me.
- We o'er the tombs and fates shall fly;
- While other generations die.
- 907. UPON M. WILLIAM LAWES, THE RARE MUSICIAN.
- Should I not put on blacks, when each one here
- Comes with his cypress and devotes a tear?
- Should I not grieve, my Lawes, when every lute,
- Viol, and voice is by thy loss struck mute?
- Thy loss, brave man! whose numbers have been hurl'd,
- And no less prais'd than spread throughout the world.
- Some have thee call'd Amphion; some of us
- Nam'd thee Terpander, or sweet Orpheus:
- Some this, some that, but all in this agree,
- Music had both her birth and death with thee.
- _Blacks_, mourning garments.
- 908. A SONG UPON SILVIA.
- From me my Silvia ran away,
- And running therewithal
- A primrose bank did cross her way,
- And gave my love a fall.
- But trust me now, I dare not say
- What I by chance did see;
- But such the drap'ry did betray
- That fully ravished me.
- 909. THE HONEYCOMB.
- If thou hast found an honeycomb,
- Eat thou not all, but taste on some:
- For if thou eat'st it to excess,
- That sweetness turns to loathsomeness.
- Taste it to temper, then 'twill be
- Marrow and manna unto thee.
- 910. UPON BEN JONSON.
- Here lies Jonson with the rest
- Of the poets: but the best.
- Reader, would'st thou more have known?
- Ask his story, not this stone.
- That will speak what this can't tell
- Of his glory. So farewell.
- 911. AN ODE FOR HIM.
- Ah Ben!
- Say how, or when
- Shall we thy guests
- Meet at those lyric feasts
- Made at the Sun,
- The Dog, the Triple Tun?
- Where we such clusters had,
- As made us nobly wild, not mad;
- And yet each verse of thine
- Out-did the meat, out-did the frolic wine.
- My Ben!
- Or come again,
- Or send to us
- Thy wit's great overplus;
- But teach us yet
- Wisely to husband it,
- Lest we that talent spend:
- And having once brought to an end
- That precious stock; the store
- Of such a wit the world should have no more.
- _The Sun_, _etc._, famous taverns.
- 912. UPON A VIRGIN.
- Spend, harmless shade, thy nightly hours
- Selecting here both herbs and flowers;
- Of which make garlands here and there
- To dress thy silent sepulchre.
- Nor do thou fear the want of these
- _In everlasting properties_,
- Since we fresh strewings will bring hither,
- Far faster than the first can wither.
- 913. BLAME.
- In battles what disasters fall,
- The king he bears the blame of all.
- 914. A REQUEST TO THE GRACES.
- Ponder my words, if so that any be
- Known guilty here of incivility:
- Let what is graceless, discompos'd, and rude,
- With sweetness, smoothness, softness, be endu'd.
- Teach it to blush, to curtsy, lisp, and show
- Demure, but yet full of temptation, too.
- _Numbers ne'er tickle, or but lightly please,
- Unless they have some wanton carriages._
- This if ye do, each piece will here be good,
- And graceful made by your neat sisterhood.
- 915. UPON HIMSELF.
- I lately fri'd, but now behold
- I freeze as fast, and shake for cold.
- And in good faith I'd thought it strange
- T' have found in me this sudden change;
- But that I understood by dreams
- These only were but Love's extremes;
- Who fires with hope the lover's heart,
- And starves with cold the self-same part.
- 916. MULTITUDE.
- We trust not to the multitude in war,
- But to the stout, and those that skilful are.
- 917. FEAR.
- Man must do well out of a good intent;
- Not for the servile fear of punishment.
- 918. TO M. KELLAM.
- What! can my Kellam drink his sack
- In goblets to the brim,
- And see his Robin Herrick lack,
- Yet send no bowls to him?
- For love or pity to his muse,
- That she may flow in verse,
- Contemn to recommend a cruse,
- But send to her a tierce.
- 919. HAPPINESS TO HOSPITALITY; OR, A HEARTY WISH TO GOOD HOUSEKEEPING.
- First, may the hand of bounty bring
- Into the daily offering
- Of full provision such a store,
- Till that the cook cries: Bring no more.
- Upon your hogsheads never fall
- A drought of wine, ale, beer, at all;
- But, like full clouds, may they from thence
- Diffuse their mighty influence.
- Next, let the lord and lady here
- Enjoy a Christ'ning year by year;
- And this good blessing back them still,
- T' have boys, and girls too, as they will.
- Then from the porch may many a bride
- Unto the holy temple ride:
- And thence return, short prayers said,
- A wife most richly married.
- Last, may the bride and bridegroom be
- Untouch'd by cold sterility;
- But in their springing blood so play,
- As that in lusters few they may,
- By laughing too, and lying down,
- People a city or a town.
- _Wish_, om. orig. ed.
- _Lusters_, quinquenniums.
- 920. CUNCTATION IN CORRECTION.
- The lictors bundled up their rods; beside,
- Knit them with knots with much ado unti'd,
- That if, unknitting, men would yet repent,
- They might escape the lash of punishment.
- 921. PRESENT GOVERNMENT GRIEVOUS.
- _Men are suspicious, prone to discontent:
- Subjects still loathe the present government._
- 922. REST REFRESHES.
- Lay by the good a while; a resting field
- Will, after ease, a richer harvest yield;
- Trees this year bear: next, they their wealth withhold:
- _Continual reaping makes a land wax old_.
- 923. REVENGE.
- _Man's disposition is for to requite
- An injury, before a benefit:
- Thanksgiving is a burden and a pain;
- Revenge is pleasing to us, as our gain._
- 924. THE FIRST MARS OR MAKES.
- In all our high designments 'twill appear,
- _The first event breeds confidence or fear_.
- 925. BEGINNING DIFFICULT.
- _Hard are the two first stairs unto a crown:
- Which got, the third bids him a king come down._
- 926. FAITH FOUR-SQUARE.
- Faith is a thing that's four-square; let it fall
- This way or that, it not declines at all.
- 927. THE PRESENT TIME BEST PLEASETH.
- Praise they that will times past; I joy to see
- Myself now live: _this age best pleaseth me_.
- 928. CLOTHES ARE CONSPIRATORS.
- Though from without no foes at all we fear,
- We shall be wounded by the clothes we wear.
- 929. CRUELTY.
- _'Tis but a dog-like madness in bad kings,
- For to delight in wounds and murderings:
- As some plants prosper best by cuts and blows,
- So kings by killing do increase their foes._
- 930. FAIR AFTER FOUL.
- _Tears quickly dry, griefs will in time decay:
- A clear will come after a cloudy day._
- 931. HUNGER.
- Ask me what hunger is, and I'll reply,
- 'Tis but a fierce desire of hot and dry.
- 932. BAD WAGES FOR GOOD SERVICE.
- In this misfortune kings do most excel,
- To hear the worst from men when they do well.
- 933. THE END.
- Conquer we shall, but we must first contend;
- _'Tis not the fight that crowns us, but the end_.
- 934. THE BONDMAN.
- Bind me but to thee with thine hair,
- And quickly I shall be
- Made by that fetter or that snare
- A bondman unto thee.
- Or if thou tak'st that bond away,
- Then bore me through the ear,
- And by the law I ought to stay
- For ever with thee here.
- 935. CHOOSE FOR THE BEST.
- Give house-room to the best; _'tis never known
- Virtue and pleasure both to dwell in one_.
- 936. TO SILVIA.
- Pardon my trespass, Silvia; I confess
- My kiss out-went the bounds of shamefastness:
- None is discreet at all times; no, _not Jove
- Himself, at one time, can be wise and love_.
- 937. FAIR SHOWS DECEIVE.
- Smooth was the sea, and seem'd to call
- Two pretty girls to play withal:
- Who paddling there, the sea soon frown'd,
- And on a sudden both were drown'd.
- What credit can we give to seas,
- Who, kissing, kill such saints as these?
- 938. HIS WISH.
- Fat be my hind; unlearned be my wife;
- Peaceful my night; my day devoid of strife:
- To these a comely offspring I desire,
- Singing about my everlasting fire.
- _Hind_, country servant.
- 939. UPON JULIA WASHING HERSELF IN THE RIVER.
- How fierce was I, when I did see
- My Julia wash herself in thee!
- So lilies thorough crystal look:
- So purest pebbles in the brook:
- As in the river Julia did,
- Half with a lawn of water hid.
- Into thy streams myself I threw,
- And struggling there, I kiss'd thee too;
- And more had done, it is confess'd,
- Had not thy waves forbade the rest.
- 940. A MEAN IN OUR MEANS.
- Though frankincense the deities require,
- _We must not give all to the hallowed fire_.
- Such be our gifts, and such be our expense,
- As for ourselves to leave some frankincense.
- 941. UPON CLUNN.
- A roll of parchment Clunn about him bears,
- Charg'd with the arms of all his ancestors:
- And seems half ravish'd, when he looks upon
- That bar, this bend; that fess, this cheveron;
- This manch, that moon; this martlet, and that mound;
- This counterchange of pearl and diamond.
- What joy can Clunn have in that coat, or this,
- Whenas his own still out at elbows is?
- 942. UPON CUPID.
- Love, like a beggar, came to me
- With hose and doublet torn:
- His shirt bedangling from his knee,
- With hat and shoes outworn.
- He ask'd an alms; I gave him bread,
- And meat too, for his need:
- Of which, when he had fully fed,
- He wished me all good speed.
- Away he went, but as he turn'd
- (In faith I know not how)
- He touch'd me so, as that I burn['d],
- And am tormented now.
- Love's silent flames and fires obscure
- Then crept into my heart;
- And though I saw no bow, I'm sure
- His finger was the dart.
- 946. AN HYMN TO LOVE.
- I will confess
- With cheerfulness,
- Love is a thing so likes me,
- That let her lay
- On me all day,
- I'll kiss the hand that strikes me.
- I will not, I,
- Now blubb'ring, cry,
- It, ah! too late repents me,
- That I did fall
- To love at all,
- Since love so much contents me.
- No, no, I'll be
- In fetters free:
- While others they sit wringing
- Their hands for pain,
- I'll entertain
- The wounds of love with singing.
- With flowers and wine,
- And cakes divine,
- To strike me I will tempt thee:
- Which done; no more
- I'll come before
- Thee and thine altars empty.
- 947. TO HIS HONOURED AND MOST INGENIOUS FRIEND, MR. CHARLES COTTON.
- For brave comportment, wit without offence,
- Words fully flowing, yet of influence:
- Thou art that man of men, the man alone,
- Worthy the public admiration:
- Who with thine own eyes read'st what we do write,
- And giv'st our numbers euphony and weight;
- Tell'st when a verse springs high, how understood
- To be, or not, born of the royal blood.
- What state above, what symmetry below,
- Lines have, or should have, thou the best can'st show.
- For which, my Charles, it is my pride to be
- Not so much known, as to be lov'd of thee.
- Long may I live so, and my wreath of bays
- Be less another's laurel than thy praise.
- 948. WOMEN USELESS.
- What need we marry women, when
- Without their use we may have men,
- And such as will in short time be
- For murder fit, or mutiny?
- As Cadmus once a new way found,
- By throwing teeth into the ground;
- From which poor seed, and rudely sown,
- Sprung up a war-like nation:
- So let us iron, silver, gold,
- Brass, lead, or tin throw into th' mould;
- And we shall see in little space
- Rise up of men a fighting race.
- If this can be, say then, what need
- Have we of women or their seed?
- 949. LOVE IS A SYRUP.
- Love is a syrup; and whoe'er we see
- Sick and surcharg'd with this satiety,
- Shall by this pleasing trespass quickly prove
- _There's loathsomeness e'en in the sweets of love_.
- 950. LEAVEN.
- Love is a leaven; and a loving kiss
- The leaven of a loving sweetheart is.
- 951. REPLETION.
- Physicians say repletion springs
- More from the sweet than sour things.
- 952. ON HIMSELF.
- Weep for the dead, for they have lost this light:
- And weep for me, lost in an endless night.
- Or mourn, or make a marble verse for me,
- Who writ for many. Benedicite.
- 953. NO MAN WITHOUT MONEY.
- No man such rare parts hath that he can swim,
- If favour or occasion help not him.
- 954. ON HIMSELF.
- Lost to the world; lost to myself; alone
- Here now I rest under this marble stone:
- In depth of silence, heard and seen of none.
- 955. TO M. LEONARD WILLAN, HIS PECULIAR FRIEND.
- I will be short, and having quickly hurl'd
- This line about, live thou throughout the world;
- Who art a man for all scenes; unto whom,
- What's hard to others, nothing's troublesome.
- Can'st write the comic, tragic strain, and fall
- From these to pen the pleasing pastoral:
- Who fli'st at all heights: prose and verse run'st through;
- Find'st here a fault, and mend'st the trespass too:
- For which I might extol thee, but speak less,
- Because thyself art coming to the press:
- And then should I in praising thee be slow,
- Posterity will pay thee what I owe.
- 956. TO HIS WORTHY FRIEND, M. JOHN HALL, STUDENT OF GRAY'S INN.
- Tell me, young man, or did the Muses bring
- Thee less to taste than to drink up their spring,
- That none hereafter should be thought, or be
- A poet, or a poet-like but thee?
- What was thy birth, thy star that makes thee known,
- At twice ten years, a prime and public one?
- Tell us thy nation, kindred, or the whence
- Thou had'st and hast thy mighty influence,
- That makes thee lov'd, and of the men desir'd,
- And no less prais'd than of the maids admired.
- Put on thy laurel then; and in that trim
- Be thou Apollo or the type of him:
- Or let the unshorn god lend thee his lyre,
- And next to him be master of the choir.
- 957. TO JULIA.
- Offer thy gift; but first the law commands
- Thee, Julia, first, to sanctify thy hands:
- Do that, my Julia, which the rites require,
- Then boldly give thine incense to the fire.
- 958. TO THE MOST COMELY AND PROPER M. ELIZABETH FINCH.
- Handsome you are, and proper you will be
- Despite of all your infortunity:
- Live long and lovely, but yet grow no less
- In that your own prefixed comeliness:
- Spend on that stock: and when your life must fall,
- Leave others beauty to set up withal.
- _Proper_, well-made.
- 960. TO HIS BOOK.
- If hap it must, that I must see thee lie
- Absyrtus-like, all torn confusedly:
- With solemn tears, and with much grief of heart,
- I'll recollect thee, weeping, part by part;
- And having wash'd thee, close thee in a chest
- With spice; that done, I'll leave thee to thy rest.
- _Absyrtus-like_, the brother of Medea, cut in pieces by her that his
- father might be delayed by gathering his limbs.
- 961. TO THE KING, UPON HIS WELCOME TO HAMPTON COURT. SET AND SUNG.
- Welcome, great Cæsar, welcome now you are
- As dearest peace after destructive war:
- Welcome as slumbers, or as beds of ease
- After our long and peevish sicknesses.
- O pomp of glory! Welcome now, and come
- To repossess once more your long'd-for home.
- A thousand altars smoke: a thousand thighs
- Of beeves here ready stand for sacrifice.
- Enter and prosper; while our eyes do wait
- For an ascendent throughly auspicate:
- Under which sign we may the former stone
- Lay of our safety's new foundation:
- That done, O Cæsar! live and be to us
- Our fate, our fortune, and our genius;
- To whose free knees we may our temples tie
- As to a still protecting deity:
- That should you stir, we and our altars too
- May, great Augustus, go along with you.
- _Chor._ Long live the King! and to accomplish this,
- We'll from our own add far more years to his.
- _Ascendent_, the most influential position of a planet in astrology.
- _Auspicate_, propitious.
- 962. ULTIMUS HEROUM: OR, TO THE MOST LEARNED, AND TO THE RIGHT
- HONOURABLE, HENRY, MARQUIS OF DORCHESTER.
- And as time past when Cato the severe
- Enter'd the circumspacious theatre,
- In reverence of his person everyone
- Stood as he had been turn'd from flesh to stone;
- E'en so my numbers will astonished be
- If but looked on; struck dead, if scann'd by thee.
- 963. TO HIS MUSE; ANOTHER TO THE SAME.
- Tell that brave man, fain thou would'st have access
- To kiss his hands, but that for fearfulness;
- Or else because th'art like a modest bride,
- Ready to blush to death, should he but chide.
- 966. TO HIS LEARNED FRIEND, M. JO. HARMAR, PHYSICIAN TO THE COLLEGE OF
- WESTMINSTER.
- When first I find those numbers thou dost write,
- To be most soft, terse, sweet, and perpolite:
- Next, when I see thee tow'ring in the sky,
- In an expansion no less large than high;
- Then, in that compass, sailing here and there,
- And with circumgyration everywhere;
- Following with love and active heat thy game,
- And then at last to truss the epigram;
- I must confess, distinction none I see
- Between Domitian's Martial then, and thee.
- But this I know, should Jupiter again
- Descend from heaven to reconverse with men;
- The Roman language full, and superfine,
- If Jove would speak, he would accept of thine.
- _Perpolite_, well polished.
- 967. UPON HIS SPANIEL TRACY.
- Now thou art dead, no eye shall ever see,
- For shape and service, spaniel like to thee.
- This shall my love do, give thy sad death one
- Tear, that deserves of me a million.
- 968. THE DELUGE.
- Drowning, drowning, I espy
- Coming from my Julia's eye:
- 'Tis some solace in our smart,
- To have friends to bear a part:
- I have none; but must be sure
- Th' inundation to endure.
- Shall not times hereafter tell
- This for no mean miracle?
- When the waters by their fall
- Threaten'd ruin unto all,
- Yet the deluge here was known
- Of a world to drown but one.
- 971. STRENGTH TO SUPPORT SOVEREIGNTY.
- Let kings and rulers learn this line from me:
- _Where power is weak, unsafe is majesty_.
- 973. CRUTCHES.
- Thou see'st me, Lucia, this year droop;
- Three zodiacs filled more, I shall stoop;
- Let crutches then provided be
- To shore up my debility.
- Then, while thou laugh'st, I'll sighing cry,
- "A ruin, underpropp'd, am I".
- Don will I then my beadsman's gown,
- And when so feeble I am grown,
- As my weak shoulders cannot bear
- The burden of a grasshopper,
- Yet with the bench of aged sires,
- When I and they keep termly fires,
- With my weak voice I'll sing, or say,
- Some odes I made of Lucia:
- Then will I heave my wither'd hand
- To Jove the mighty, for to stand
- Thy faithful friend, and to pour down
- Upon thee many a benison.
- _Zodiacs_, used as symbols of the astronomical year.
- _Beadsman's_, almshouseman's.
- 974. TO JULIA.
- Holy waters hither bring
- For the sacred sprinkling:
- Baptise me and thee, and so
- Let us to the altar go,
- And, ere we our rites commence,
- Wash our hands in innocence.
- Then I'll be the Rex Sacrorum,
- Thou the Queen of Peace and Quorum.
- _Quorum_, _i.e._, quorum of justices of the peace, sportively added
- for the rhyme's sake.
- 975. UPON CASE.
- Case is a lawyer, that ne'er pleads alone,
- But when he hears the like confusion,
- As when the disagreeing Commons throw
- About their House, their clamorous Aye or No:
- Then Case, as loud as any serjeant there,
- Cries out: My lord, my lord, the case is clear.
- But when all's hush'd, Case, than a fish more mute,
- Bestirs his hand, but starves in hand the suit.
- 976. TO PERENNA.
- I a dirge will pen to thee;
- Thou a trentall make for me:
- That the monks and friars together,
- Here may sing the rest of either:
- Next, I'm sure, the nuns will have
- Candlemas to grace the grave.
- _Trentall_, services for the dead.
- 977. TO HIS SISTER-IN-LAW, M. SUSANNA HERRICK.
- The person crowns the place; your lot doth fall
- Last, yet to be with these a principal.
- Howe'er it fortuned; know for truth, I meant
- You a fore-leader in this testament.
- 978. UPON THE LADY CREW.
- This stone can tell the story of my life,
- What was my birth, to whom I was a wife:
- In teeming years, how soon my sun was set.
- Where now I rest, these may be known by jet.
- For other things, my many children be
- The best and truest chronicles of me.
- 979. ON TOMASIN PARSONS.
- Grow up in beauty, as thou dost begin,
- And be of all admired, Tomasin.
- 980. CEREMONY UPON CANDLEMAS EVE.
- Down with the rosemary, and so
- Down with the bays and mistletoe;
- Down with the holly, ivy, all,
- Wherewith ye dressed the Christmas Hall:
- That so the superstitious find
- No one least branch there left behind:
- For look, how many leaves there be
- Neglected, there (maids, trust to me)
- So many goblins you shall see.
- 981. SUSPICION MAKES SECURE.
- He that will live of all cares dispossess'd,
- Must shun the bad, aye, and suspect the best.
- 983. TO HIS KINSMAN, M. THO. HERRICK, WHO DESIRED TO BE IN HIS BOOK.
- Welcome to this my college, and though late
- Thou'st got a place here (standing candidate)
- It matters not, since thou art chosen one
- Here of my great and good foundation.
- 984. A BUCOLIC BETWIXT TWO: LACON AND THYRSIS.
- _Lacon._ For a kiss or two, confess,
- What doth cause this pensiveness,
- Thou most lovely neat-herdess?
- Why so lonely on the hill?
- Why thy pipe by thee so still,
- That erewhile was heard so shrill?
- Tell me, do thy kine now fail
- To full fill the milking-pail?
- Say, what is't that thou dost ail?
- _Thyr._ None of these; but out, alas!
- A mischance is come to pass,
- And I'll tell thee what it was:
- See, mine eyes are weeping-ripe.
- _Lacon._ Tell, and I'll lay down my pipe.
- _Thyr._ I have lost my lovely steer,
- That to me was far more dear
- Than these kine which I milk here:
- Broad of forehead, large of eye,
- Party-colour'd like a pie;
- Smooth in each limb as a die;
- Clear of hoof, and clear of horn:
- Sharply pointed as a thorn,
- With a neck by yoke unworn;
- From the which hung down by strings,
- Balls of cowslips, daisy rings,
- Interplac'd with ribbonings:
- Faultless every way for shape;
- Not a straw could him escape;
- Ever gamesome as an ape,
- But yet harmless as a sheep.
- Pardon, Lacon, if I weep;
- _Tears will spring where woes are deep_.
- Now, ay me! ay me! Last night
- Came a mad dog and did bite,
- Aye, and kill'd my dear delight.
- _Lacon._ Alack, for grief!
- _Thyr._ But I'll be brief.
- Hence I must, for time doth call
- Me, and my sad playmates all,
- To his ev'ning funeral.
- Live long, Lacon, so adieu!
- _Lacon._ Mournful maid, farewell to you;
- _Earth afford ye flowers to strew_.
- _Pie_, _i.e._, a magpie.
- 985. UPON SAPPHO.
- Look upon Sappho's lip, and you will swear
- There is a love-like leaven rising there.
- 988. A BACCHANALIAN VERSE.
- Drink up
- Your cup,
- But not spill wine;
- For if you
- Do,
- 'Tis an ill sign;
- That we
- Foresee
- You are cloy'd here,
- If so, no
- Ho,
- But avoid here.
- 989. CARE A GOOD KEEPER.
- _Care keeps the conquest; 'tis no less renown
- To keep a city than to win a town._
- 990. RULES FOR OUR REACH.
- Men must have bounds how far to walk; for we
- Are made far worse by lawless liberty.
- 991. TO BIANCA.
- Ah, Bianca! now I see
- It is noon and past with me:
- In a while it will strike one;
- Then, Bianca, I am gone.
- Some effusions let me have
- Offer'd on my holy grave;
- Then, Bianca, let me rest
- With my face towards the East.
- 992. TO THE HANDSOME MISTRESS GRACE POTTER.
- As is your name, so is your comely face
- Touch'd everywhere with such diffused grace,
- As that in all that admirable round
- There is not one least solecism found;
- And as that part, so every portion else
- Keeps line for line with beauty's parallels.
- 993. ANACREONTIC.
- I must
- Not trust
- Here to any;
- Bereav'd,
- Deceiv'd
- By so many:
- As one
- Undone
- By my losses;
- Comply
- Will I
- With my crosses;
- Yet still
- I will
- Not be grieving,
- Since thence
- And hence
- Comes relieving.
- But this
- Sweet is
- In our mourning;
- Times bad
- And sad
- Are a-turning:
- And he
- Whom we
- See dejected,
- Next day
- We may
- See erected.
- 994. MORE MODEST, MORE MANLY.
- 'Tis still observ'd those men most valiant are,
- That are most modest ere they come to war.
- 995. NOT TO COVET MUCH WHERE LITTLE IS THE CHARGE.
- Why should we covet much, whenas we know
- W'ave more to bear our charge than way to go?
- 996. ANACREONTIC VERSE.
- Brisk methinks I am, and fine
- When I drink my cap'ring wine:
- Then to love I do incline,
- When I drink my wanton wine:
- And I wish all maidens mine,
- When I drink my sprightly wine:
- Well I sup and well I dine,
- When I drink my frolic wine;
- But I languish, lower, and pine,
- When I want my fragrant wine.
- 998. PATIENCE IN PRINCES.
- _Kings must not use the axe for each offence:
- Princes cure some faults by their patience._
- 999. FEAR GETS FORCE.
- _Despair takes heart, when there's no hope to speed:
- The coward then takes arms and does the deed._
- 1000. PARCEL-GILT POETRY.
- Let's strive to be the best; the gods, we know it,
- Pillars and men, hate an indifferent poet.
- 1001. UPON LOVE, BY WAY OF QUESTION AND ANSWER.
- I bring ye love: _Quest._ What will love do?
- _Ans._ Like and dislike ye.
- I bring ye love: _Quest._ What will love do?
- _Ans._ Stroke ye to strike ye.
- I bring ye love: _Quest._ What will love do?
- _Ans._ Love will befool ye.
- I bring ye love: _Quest._ What will love do?
- Ans. Heat ye to cool ye.
- I bring ye love: _Quest._ What will love do?
- _Ans._ Love gifts will send ye.
- I bring ye love: _Quest._ What will love do?
- _Ans._ Stock ye to spend ye.
- I bring ye love: _Quest._ What will love do?
- _Ans._ Love will fulfil ye.
- I bring ye love: _Quest._ What will love do?
- _Ans._ Kiss ye to kill ye.
- 1002. TO THE LORD HOPTON, ON HIS FIGHT IN CORNWALL.
- Go on, brave Hopton, to effectuate that
- Which we, and times to come, shall wonder at.
- Lift up thy sword; next, suffer it to fall,
- And by that one blow set an end to all.
- 1003. HIS GRANGE.
- How well contented in this private grange
- Spend I my life, that's subject unto change:
- Under whose roof with moss-work wrought, there I
- Kiss my brown wife and black posterity.
- _Grange_, a farmstead.
- 1004. LEPROSY IN HOUSES.
- When to a house I come, and see
- The Genius wasteful, more than free:
- The servants thumbless, yet to eat
- With lawless tooth the flour of wheat:
- The sons to suck the milk of kine,
- More than the teats of discipline:
- The daughters wild and loose in dress,
- Their cheeks unstained with shamefac'dness:
- The husband drunk, the wife to be
- A bawd to incivility;
- I must confess, I there descry,
- A house spread through with leprosy.
- _Thumbless_, lazy: cp. painful thumb, _supra_.
- 1005. GOOD MANNERS AT MEAT.
- This rule of manners I will teach my guests:
- To come with their own bellies unto feasts;
- Not to eat equal portions, but to rise
- Farced with the food that may themselves suffice.
- _Farced_, stuffed.
- 1006. ANTHEA'S RETRACTATION.
- Anthea laugh'd, and fearing lest excess
- Might stretch the cords of civil comeliness,
- She with a dainty blush rebuk'd her face,
- And call'd each line back to his rule and space.
- 1007. COMFORTS IN CROSSES.
- Be not dismayed though crosses cast thee down;
- Thy fall is but the rising to a crown.
- 1008. SEEK AND FIND.
- _Attempt the end, and never stand to doubt;
- Nothing's so hard but search will find it out._
- 1009. REST.
- On with thy work, though thou be'st hardly press'd:
- _Labour is held up by the hope of rest_.
- 1010. LEPROSY IN CLOTHES.
- When flowing garments I behold
- Inspir'd with purple, pearl and gold,
- I think no other, but I see
- In them a glorious leprosy
- That does infect and make the rent
- More mortal in the vestiment.
- _As flowery vestures do descry
- The wearer's rich immodesty:
- So plain and simple clothes do show
- Where virtue walks, not those that flow._
- 1012. GREAT MALADIES, LONG MEDICINES.
- _To an old sore a long cure must go on:
- Great faults require great satisfaction._
- 1013. HIS ANSWER TO A FRIEND.
- You ask me what I do, and how I live?
- And, noble friend, this answer I must give:
- Drooping, I draw on to the vaults of death,
- O'er which you'll walk, when I am laid beneath.
- 1014. THE BEGGAR.
- Shall I a daily beggar be,
- For love's sake asking alms of thee?
- Still shall I crave, and never get
- A hope of my desired bit?
- Ah, cruel maids! I'll go my way,
- Whereas, perchance, my fortunes may
- Find out a threshold or a door
- That may far sooner speed the poor:
- Where thrice we knock, and none will hear,
- Cold comfort still I'm sure lives there.
- 1015. BASTARDS.
- Our bastard children are but like to plate
- Made by the coiners--illegitimate.
- 1016. HIS CHANGE.
- My many cares and much distress
- Has made me like a wilderness;
- Or, discompos'd, I'm like a rude
- And all confused multitude:
- Out of my comely manners worn,
- And, as in means, in mind all torn.
- 1017. THE VISION.
- Methought I saw, as I did dream in bed,
- A crawling vine about Anacreon's head.
- Flushed was his face; his hairs with oil did shine;
- And, as he spake, his mouth ran o'er with wine.
- Tippled he was, and tippling lisped withal;
- And lisping reeled, and reeling like to fall.
- A young enchantress close by him did stand,
- Tapping his plump thighs with a myrtle wand:
- She smil'd; he kiss'd; and kissing, cull'd her too,
- And being cup-shot, more he could not do.
- For which, methought, in pretty anger she
- Snatched off his crown, and gave the wreath to me;
- Since when, methinks, my brains about do swim,
- And I am wild and wanton like to him.
- _Cull'd_, embraced.
- _Cup-shot_, drunk.
- 1018. A VOW TO VENUS.
- Happily I had a sight
- Of my dearest dear last night;
- Make her this day smile on me,
- And I'll roses give to thee.
- 1019. ON HIS BOOK.
- The bound, almost, now of my book I see,
- But yet no end of these therein, or me:
- Here we begin new life, while thousands quite
- Are lost, and theirs, in everlasting night.
- 1020. A SONNET OF PERILLA.
- Then did I live when I did see
- Perilla smile on none but me.
- But, ah! by stars malignant crossed,
- The life I got I quickly lost;
- But yet a way there doth remain
- For me embalm'd to live again,
- And that's to love me; in which state
- I'll live as one regenerate.
- 1021. BAD MAY BE BETTER.
- Man may at first transgress, but next do well:
- _Vice doth in some but lodge a while, not dwell_.
- 1022. POSTING TO PRINTING.
- Let others to the printing press run fast;
- Since after death comes glory, I'll not haste.
- 1023. RAPINE BRINGS RUIN.
- What's got by justice is established sure:
- _No kingdoms got by rapine long endure_.
- 1024. COMFORT TO A YOUTH THAT HAD LOST HIS LOVE.
- What needs complaints,
- When she a place
- Has with the race
- Of saints?
- In endless mirth,
- She thinks not on
- What's said or done
- In earth.
- She sees no tears,
- Or any tone
- Of thy deep groan
- She hears:
- Nor does she mind,
- Or think on't now,
- That ever thou
- Wast kind;
- But chang'd above,
- She likes not there.
- As she did here,
- Thy love.
- Forbear, therefore,
- And lull asleep
- Thy woes, and weep
- No more.
- 1026. SAINT DISTAFF'S DAY, OR THE MORROW AFTER TWELFTH DAY.
- Partly work and partly play
- Ye must on S. Distaff's day:
- From the plough soon free your team,
- Then come home and fodder them.
- If the maids a-spinning go,
- Burn the flax and fire the tow;
- Scorch their plackets, but beware
- That ye singe no maidenhair.
- Bring in pails of water, then,
- Let the maids bewash the men.
- Give S. Distaff all the right,
- Then bid Christmas sport good-night;
- And next morrow everyone
- To his own vocation.
- _Plackets_, petticoats.
- 1027. SUFFERANCE.
- In the hope of ease to come,
- Let's endure one martyrdom.
- 1028. HIS TEARS TO THAMESIS.
- I send, I send here my supremest kiss
- To thee, my silver-footed Thamesis.
- No more shall I reiterate thy Strand,
- Whereon so many stately structures stand:
- Nor in the summer's sweeter evenings go
- To bathe in thee, as thousand others do;
- No more shall I along thy crystal glide
- In barge with boughs and rushes beautifi'd,
- With soft-smooth virgins for our chaste disport,
- To Richmond, Kingston, and to Hampton Court.
- Never again shall I with finny oar
- Put from, or draw unto the faithful shore:
- And landing here, or safely landing there,
- Make way to my beloved Westminster,
- Or to the golden Cheapside, where the earth
- Of Julia Herrick gave to me my birth.
- May all clean nymphs and curious water-dames
- With swan-like state float up and down thy streams:
- No drought upon thy wanton waters fall
- To make them lean and languishing at all.
- No ruffling winds come hither to disease
- Thy pure and silver-wristed Naiades.
- Keep up your state, ye streams; and as ye spring,
- Never make sick your banks by surfeiting.
- Grow young with tides, and though I see ye never,
- Receive this vow, so fare ye well for ever.
- _Reiterate_, retread.
- 1029. PARDONS.
- Those ends in war the best contentment bring,
- _Whose peace is made up with a pardoning_.
- 1030. PEACE NOT PERMANENT.
- _Great cities seldom rest; if there be none
- T' invade from far, they'll find worse foes at home._
- 1031. TRUTH AND ERROR.
- _'Twixt truth and error there's this difference known;
- Error is fruitful, truth is only one._
- 1032. THINGS MORTAL STILL MUTABLE.
- _Things are uncertain, and the more we get,
- The more on icy pavements we are set._
- 1033. STUDIES TO BE SUPPORTED.
- _Studies themselves will languish and decay,
- When either price or praise is ta'en away._
- 1034. WIT PUNISHED, PROSPERS MOST.
- Dread not the shackles: on with thine intent;
- _Good wits get more fame by their punishment_.
- 1035. TWELFTH NIGHT: OR, KING AND QUEEN.
- Now, now the mirth comes
- With the cake full of plums,
- Where bean's the king of the sport here;
- Beside we must know,
- The pea also
- Must revel, as queen, in the court here.
- Begin then to choose,
- This night as ye use,
- Who shall for the present delight here,
- Be a king by the lot,
- And who shall not
- Be Twelfth-day queen for the night here.
- Which known, let us make
- Joy-sops with the cake;
- And let not a man then be seen here,
- Who unurg'd will not drink
- To the base from the brink
- A health to the king and the queen here.
- Next crown the bowl full
- With gentle lamb's wool:
- Add sugar, nutmeg, and ginger,
- With store of ale too;
- And thus ye must do
- To make the wassail a swinger.
- Give then to the king
- And queen wassailing:
- And though with ale ye be whet here,
- Yet part ye from hence,
- As free from offence
- As when ye innocent met here.
- 1036. HIS DESIRE.
- Give me a man that is not dull
- When all the world with rifts is full;
- But unamaz'd dares clearly sing,
- Whenas the roof's a-tottering:
- And, though it falls, continues still
- Tickling the cittern with his quill.
- _Cittern_, a kind of lute; _quill_, the plectrum for striking it.
- 1037. CAUTION IN COUNSEL.
- Know when to speak; for many times it brings
- Danger to give the best advice to kings.
- 1038. MODERATION.
- Let moderation on thy passions wait;
- Who loves too much, too much the lov'd will hate.
- 1039. ADVICE THE BEST ACTOR.
- _Still take advice; though counsels, when they fly
- At random, sometimes hit most happily._
- 1040. CONFORMITY IS COMELY.
- _Conformity gives comeliness to things:
- And equal shares exclude all murmurings._
- 1041. LAWS.
- Who violates the customs, hurts the health,
- Not of one man, but all the commonwealth.
- 1042. THE MEAN.
- 'Tis much among the filthy to be clean;
- _Our heat of youth can hardly keep the mean_.
- 1043. LIKE LOVES HIS LIKE.
- Like will to like, each creature loves his kind;
- Chaste words proceed still from a bashful mind.
- 1044. HIS HOPE OR SHEET ANCHOR.
- Among these tempests great and manifold
- My ship has here one only anchor-hold;
- That is my hope, which if that slip, I'm one
- Wildered in this vast wat'ry region.
- 1045. COMFORT IN CALAMITY.
- 'Tis no discomfort in the world to fall,
- When the great crack not crushes one, but all.
- 1046. TWILIGHT.
- The twilight is no other thing, we say,
- Than night now gone, and yet not sprung the day.
- 1047. FALSE MOURNING.
- He who wears blacks, and mourns not for the dead,
- Does but deride the party buried.
- _Blacks_, mourning garments.
- 1048. THE WILL MAKES THE WORK; OR, CONSENT MAKES THE CURE.
- No grief is grown so desperate, but the ill
- Is half way cured if the party will.
- 1049. DIET.
- If wholesome diet can recure a man,
- What need of physic or physician?
- 1050. SMART.
- Stripes, justly given, yerk us with their fall;
- But causeless whipping smarts the most of all.
- 1051. THE TINKER'S SONG.
- Along, come along,
- Let's meet in a throng
- Here of tinkers;
- And quaff up a bowl
- As big as a cowl
- To beer drinkers.
- The pole of the hop
- Place in the aleshop
- To bethwack us,
- If ever we think
- So much as to drink
- Unto Bacchus.
- Who frolic will be
- For little cost, he
- Must not vary
- From beer-broth at all,
- So much as to call
- For Canary.
- 1052. HIS COMFORT.
- The only comfort of my life
- Is, that I never yet had wife;
- Nor will hereafter; since I know
- Who weds, o'er-buys his weal with woe
- 1053. SINCERITY.
- Wash clean the vessel, lest ye sour
- Whatever liquor in ye pour.
- 1054. TO ANTHEA.
- Sick is Anthea, sickly is the spring,
- The primrose sick, and sickly everything;
- The while my dear Anthea does but droop,
- The tulips, lilies, daffodils do stoop:
- But when again she's got her healthful hour,
- Each bending then will rise a proper flower.
- 1055. NOR BUYING OR SELLING.
- Now, if you love me, tell me,
- For as I will not sell ye,
- So not one cross to buy thee
- I'll give, if thou deny me.
- _Cross_, a coin.
- 1056. TO HIS PECULIAR FRIEND, M. JO. WICKS.
- Since shed or cottage I have none,
- I sing the more, that thou hast one
- To whose glad threshold, and free door,
- I may a poet come, though poor,
- And eat with thee a savoury bit,
- Paying but common thanks for it.
- Yet should I chance, my Wicks, to see
- An over-leaven look in thee,
- To sour the bread, and turn the beer
- To an exalted vinegar:
- Or should'st thou prize me as a dish
- Of thrice-boiled worts, or third-day's fish;
- I'd rather hungry go and come,
- Than to thy house be burdensome;
- Yet, in my depth of grief, I'd be
- One that should drop his beads for thee.
- _Worts_, cabbages.
- _Drop his beads_, _i.e._, pray.
- 1057. THE MORE MIGHTY, THE MORE MERCIFUL.
- _Who may do most, does least: the bravest will
- Show mercy there, where they have power to kill._
- 1058. AFTER AUTUMN, WINTER.
- Die ere long, I'm sure, I shall;
- After leaves, the tree must fall.
- 1059. A GOOD DEATH.
- For truth I may this sentence tell,
- _No man dies ill, that liveth well_.
- 1060. RECOMPENSE.
- Who plants an olive, but to eat the oil?
- _Reward, we know, is the chief end of toil_.
- 1061. ON FORTUNE.
- This is my comfort when she's most unkind:
- She can but spoil me of my means, not mind.
- 1062. TO SIR GEORGE PARRY, DOCTOR OF THE CIVIL LAW.
- I have my laurel chaplet on my head
- If, 'mongst these many numbers to be read,
- But one by you be hugg'd and cherished.
- Peruse my measures thoroughly, and where
- Your judgment finds a guilty poem, there
- Be you a judge; but not a judge severe.
- The mean pass by, or over, none contemn;
- The good applaud; the peccant less condemn,
- Since absolution you can give to them.
- Stand forth, brave man, here to the public sight;
- And in my book now claim a twofold right:
- The first as doctor, and the last as knight.
- 1063. CHARMS.
- This I'll tell ye by the way:
- Maidens, when ye leavens lay,
- Cross your dough, and your dispatch
- Will be better for your batch.
- 1064. ANOTHER.
- In the morning when ye rise,
- Wash your hands and cleanse your eyes.
- Next be sure ye have a care
- To disperse the water far;
- For as far as that doth light,
- So far keeps the evil sprite.
- 1065. ANOTHER.
- If ye fear to be affrighted
- When ye are by chance benighted,
- In your pocket for a trust
- Carry nothing but a crust:
- For that holy piece of bread
- Charms the danger and the dread.
- 1067. GENTLENESS.
- _That prince must govern with a gentle hand
- Who will have love comply with his command._
- 1068. A DIALOGUE BETWEEN HIMSELF AND MISTRESS ELIZA WHEELER, UNDER THE
- NAME OF AMARYLLIS.
- _Her._ My dearest love, since thou wilt go,
- And leave me here behind thee,
- For love or pity let me know
- The place where I may find thee.
- _Ama._ In country meadows pearl'd with dew,
- And set about with lilies,
- There, filling maunds with cowslips, you
- May find your Amaryllis.
- _Her._ What have the meads to do with thee,
- Or with thy youthful hours?
- Live thou at Court, where thou mayst be
- The queen of men, not flowers.
- Let country wenches make 'em fine
- With posies, since 'tis fitter
- For thee with richest gems to shine,
- And like the stars to glitter.
- _Ama._ You set too high a rate upon
- A shepherdess so homely.
- _Her._ Believe it, dearest, there's not one
- I' th' Court that's half so comely.
- I prithee stay. _Ama._ I must away;
- Let's kiss first, then we'll sever.
- _Ambo._ And though we bid adieu to-day,
- We shall not part for ever.
- _Maunds_, baskets.
- 1069. TO JULIA.
- Help me, Julia, for to pray,
- Matins sing, or matins say:
- This, I know, the fiend will fly
- Far away, if thou be'st by.
- Bring the holy water hither,
- Let us wash and pray together;
- When our beads are thus united,
- Then the foe will fly affrighted.
- _Beads_, prayers.
- 1070. TO ROSES IN JULIA'S BOSOM.
- Roses, you can never die,
- Since the place wherein ye lie,
- Heat and moisture mix'd are so
- As to make ye ever grow.
- 1071. TO THE HONOURED MASTER ENDYMION PORTER.
- When to thy porch I come and ravish'd see
- The state of poets there attending thee,
- Those bards and I, all in a chorus sing:
- We are thy prophets, Porter, thou our king.
- 1072. SPEAK IN SEASON.
- When times are troubled, then forbear; but speak
- When a clear day out of a cloud does break.
- 1073. OBEDIENCE.
- The power of princes rests in the consent
- Of only those who are obedient:
- Which if away, proud sceptres then will lie
- Low, and of thrones the ancient majesty.
- 1074. ANOTHER OF THE SAME.
- _No man so well a kingdom rules as he
- Who hath himself obeyed the sovereignty._
- 1075. OF LOVE.
- 1. Instruct me now what love will do.
- 2. 'Twill make a tongueless man to woo.
- 1. Inform me next, what love will do.
- 2. 'Twill strangely make a one of two.
- 1. Teach me besides, what love will do.
- 2. 'Twill quickly mar, and make ye too.
- 1. Tell me now last, what love will do.
- 2. 'Twill hurt and heal a heart pierc'd through.
- 1076. UPON TRAP.
- Trap of a player turn'd a priest now is:
- Behold a sudden metamorphosis.
- If tithe-pigs fail, then will he shift the scene,
- And from a priest turn player once again.
- 1080. THE SCHOOL OR PEARL OF PUTNEY, THE MISTRESS OF ALL SINGULAR
- MANNERS, MISTRESS PORTMAN.
- Whether I was myself, or else did see
- Out of myself that glorious hierarchy;
- Or whether those, in orders rare, or these
- Made up one state of sixty Venuses;
- Or whether fairies, syrens, nymphs they were,
- Or muses on their mountain sitting there;
- Or some enchanted place, I do not know,
- Or Sharon, where eternal roses grow.
- This I am sure: I ravished stood, as one
- Confus'd in utter admiration.
- Methought I saw them stir, and gently move,
- And look as all were capable of love;
- And in their motion smelt much like to flowers
- Inspir'd by th' sunbeams after dews and showers.
- There did I see the reverend rectress stand,
- Who with her eye's gleam, or a glance of hand,
- Those spirits raised; and with like precepts then,
- As with a magic, laid them all again.
- _A happy realm! When no compulsive law,
- Or fear of it, but love keeps all in awe._
- Live you, great mistress of your arts, and be
- A nursing mother so to majesty,
- As those your ladies may in time be seen,
- For grace and carriage, everyone a queen.
- One birth their parents gave them; but their new,
- And better being, they receive from you.
- _Man's former birth is graceless; but the state
- Of life comes in, when he's regenerate._
- 1081. TO PERENNA.
- Thou say'st I'm dull; if edgeless so I be,
- I'll whet my lips, and sharpen love on thee.
- 1082. ON HIMSELF.
- Let me not live if I not love:
- Since I as yet did never prove
- Where pleasures met, at last do find
- All pleasures meet in womankind.
- 1083. ON LOVE.
- That love 'twixt men does ever longest last
- Where war and peace the dice by turns do cast.
- 1084. ANOTHER ON LOVE.
- Love's of itself too sweet; the best of all
- Is, when love's honey has a dash of gall.
- 1086. UPON CHUB.
- When Chub brings in his harvest, still he cries,
- "Aha, my boys! here's meat for Christmas pies!"
- Soon after he for beer so scores his wheat,
- That at the tide he has not bread to eat.
- 1087. PLEASURES PERNICIOUS.
- Where pleasures rule a kingdom, never there
- Is sober virtue seen to move her sphere.
- 1088. ON HIMSELF.
- A wearied pilgrim, I have wandered here
- Twice five-and-twenty, bate me but one year;
- Long I have lasted in this world, 'tis true,
- But yet those years that I have lived, but few.
- Who by his grey hairs doth his lusters tell,
- Lives not those years, but he that lives them well.
- One man has reach'd his sixty years, but he
- Of all those threescore, has not liv'd half three.
- _He lives, who lives to virtue; men who cast
- Their ends for pleasure, do not live, but last._
- _Luster_, five years.
- 1089. TO M. LAURENCE SWETNAHAM.
- Read thou my lines, my Swetnaham; if there be
- A fault, 'tis hid if it be voic'd by thee.
- Thy mouth will make the sourest numbers please:
- How will it drop pure honey speaking these!
- 1090. HIS COVENANT; OR, PROTESTATION TO JULIA.
- Why dost thou wound and break my heart,
- As if we should for ever part?
- Hast thou not heard an oath from me,
- After a day, or two, or three,
- I would come back and live with thee?
- Take, if thou dost distrust that vow,
- This second protestation now.
- Upon thy cheek that spangled tear,
- Which sits as dew of roses there,
- That tear shall scarce be dried before
- I'll kiss the threshold of thy door.
- Then weep not, sweet; but thus much know,
- I'm half return'd before I go.
- 1091. ON HIMSELF.
- I will no longer kiss,
- I can no longer stay;
- The way of all flesh is
- That I must go this day.
- Since longer I can't live,
- My frolic youths, adieu;
- My lamp to you I'll give,
- And all my troubles too.
- 1092. TO THE MOST ACCOMPLISHED GENTLEMAN, M. MICHAEL OULSWORTH.
- Nor think that thou in this my book art worst,
- Because not plac'd here with the midst, or first.
- Since fame that sides with these, or goes before
- Those, that must live with thee for evermore;
- That fame, and fame's rear'd pillar, thou shalt see
- In the next sheet, brave man, to follow thee.
- Fix on that column then, and never fall,
- Held up by Fame's eternal pedestal.
- _In the next sheet._ See 1129.
- 1093. TO HIS GIRLS, WHO WOULD HAVE HIM SPORTFUL.
- Alas! I can't, for tell me, how
- Can I be gamesome, aged now?
- Besides, ye see me daily grow
- Here, winter-like, to frost and snow;
- And I, ere long, my girls, shall see
- Ye quake for cold to look on me.
- 1094. TRUTH AND FALSEHOOD.
- _Truth by her own simplicity is known,
- Falsehood by varnish and vermilion._
- 1095. HIS LAST REQUEST TO JULIA.
- I have been wanton and too bold, I fear,
- To chafe o'ermuch the virgin's cheek or ear.
- Beg for my pardon, Julia: _he doth win
- Grace with the gods who's sorry for his sin_.
- That done, my Julia, dearest Julia, come
- And go with me to choose my burial room:
- My fates are ended; when thy Herrick dies,
- Clasp thou his book, then close thou up his eyes.
- 1096. ON HIMSELF.
- One ear tingles; some there be
- That are snarling now at me:
- Be they those that Homer bit,
- I will give them thanks for it.
- 1097. UPON KINGS.
- _Kings must be dauntless; subjects will contemn
- Those who want hearts and wear a diadem._
- 1098. TO HIS GIRLS.
- Wanton wenches, do not bring
- For my hairs black colouring:
- For my locks, girls, let 'em be
- Grey or white, all's one to me.
- 1100. TO HIS BROTHER, NICHOLAS HERRICK.
- What others have with cheapness seen and ease
- In varnish'd maps, by th' help of compasses,
- Or read in volumes and those books with all
- Their large narrations incanonical,
- Thou hast beheld those seas and countries far,
- And tell'st to us what once they were, and are.
- So that with bold truth thou can'st now relate
- This kingdom's fortune, and that empire's fate:
- Can'st talk to us of Sharon, where a spring
- Of roses have an endless flourishing;
- Of Sion, Sinai, Nebo, and with them
- Make known to us the new Jerusalem;
- The Mount of Olives, Calvary, and where
- Is, and hast seen, thy Saviour's sepulchre.
- So that the man that will but lay his ears
- As inapostate to the thing he hears,
- Shall by his hearing quickly come to see
- The truth of travels less in books than thee.
- _Large_, exaggerated.
- _Incanonical_, untrustworthy.
- 1101. THE VOICE AND VIOL.
- Rare is the voice itself: but when we sing
- To th' lute or viol, then 'tis ravishing.
- 1102. WAR.
- If kings and kingdoms once distracted be,
- The sword of war must try the sovereignty
- 1103. A KING AND NO KING.
- _That prince who may do nothing but what's just,
- Rules but by leave, and takes his crown on trust._
- 1104. PLOTS NOT STILL PROSPEROUS.
- All are not ill plots that do sometimes fail;
- Nor those false vows which ofttimes don't prevail.
- 1105. FLATTERY.
- What is't that wastes a prince? example shows,
- 'Tis flattery spends a king, more than his foes.
- 1109. EXCESS.
- Excess is sluttish: keep the mean; for why?
- Virtue's clean conclave is sobriety.
- _Conclave_, guard.
- 1111. THE SOUL IS THE SALT.
- The body's salt the soul is; which when gone,
- The flesh soon sucks in putrefaction.
- 1117. ABSTINENCE.
- Against diseases here the strongest fence
- Is the defensive virtue, abstinence.
- 1118. NO DANGER TO MEN DESPERATE.
- When fear admits no hope of safety, then
- Necessity makes dastards valiant men.
- 1119. SAUCE FOR SORROWS.
- Although our suffering meet with no relief,
- _An equal mind is the best sauce for grief_.
- 1120. TO CUPID.
- I have a leaden, thou a shaft of gold;
- Thou kill'st with heat, and I strike dead with cold.
- Let's try of us who shall the first expire;
- Or thou by frost, or I by quenchless fire:
- _Extremes are fatal where they once do strike,
- And bring to th' heart destruction both alike_.
- 1121. DISTRUST.
- Whatever men for loyalty pretend,
- _'Tis wisdom's part to doubt a faithful friend_.
- 1123. THE MOUNT OF THE MUSES.
- After thy labour take thine ease,
- Here with the sweet Pierides.
- But if so be that men will not
- Give thee the laurel crown for lot;
- Be yet assur'd, thou shall have one
- Not subject to corruption.
- 1124. ON HIMSELF.
- I'll write no more of love; but now repent
- Of all those times that I in it have spent.
- I'll write no more of life; but wish 'twas ended,
- And that my dust was to the earth commended.
- 1125. TO HIS BOOK.
- Go thou forth, my book, though late:
- Yet be timely fortunate.
- It may chance good luck may send
- Thee a kinsman, or a friend,
- That may harbour thee, when I
- With my fates neglected lie.
- If thou know'st not where to dwell,
- See, the fire's by: farewell.
- 1126. THE END OF HIS WORK.
- Part of the work remains; one part is past:
- And here my ship rides, having anchor cast.
- 1127. TO CROWN IT.
- My wearied bark, O let it now be crown'd!
- The haven reach'd to which I first was bound.
- 1128. ON HIMSELF.
- The work is done: young men and maidens, set
- Upon my curls the myrtle coronet
- Washed with sweet ointments: thus at last I come
- To suffer in the Muses' martyrdom;
- But with this comfort, if my blood be shed,
- The Muses will wear blacks when I am dead.
- _Blacks_, mourning garments.
- 1129. THE PILLAR OF FAME.
- Fame's pillar here, at last, we set,
- Outduring marble, brass, or jet.
- Charm'd and enchanted so
- As to withstand the blow
- Of o v e r t h r o w;
- Nor shall the seas,
- Or o u t r a g e s
- Of storms o'erbear
- What we uprear.
- Tho' kingdoms fall,
- This pillar never shall
- Decline or waste at all;
- But stand for ever by his own
- Firm and well-fix'd foundation.
- To his book's end this last line he'd have placed:
- _Jocund his muse was, but his life was chaste_.
- HIS
- NOBLE NUMBERS:
- _OR_,
- HIS PIOUS PIECES,
- Wherein (amongst other things)
- he sings the Birth of his CHRIST;
- and sighes for his _Saviours_ suffering
- on the _Crosse_.
- HESIOD.
- Ἴδμεν ψεύδεα πολλὰ λέγειν ἐτύμοισιν ὁμοῖα.
- Ἴδμεν δ', εὖτ' ἐθέλωμεν, ἀληθέα μυθήσασθαι.
- [Illustration]
- LONDON
- Printed for _John Williams_, and _Francis Eglesfield_.
- 1647.
- HIS NOBLE NUMBERS:
- OR,
- HIS PIOUS PIECES.
- 1. HIS CONFESSION.
- Look how our foul days do exceed our fair;
- And as our bad, more than our good works are,
- E'en so those lines, pen'd by my wanton wit,
- Treble the number of these good I've writ.
- Things precious are least numerous: men are prone
- To do ten bad for one good action.
- 2. HIS PRAYER FOR ABSOLUTION.
- For those my unbaptised rhymes,
- Writ in my wild unhallowed times;
- For every sentence, clause, and word,
- That's not inlaid with Thee, my Lord,
- Forgive me, God, and blot each line
- Out of my book that is not Thine.
- But if, 'mongst all, thou find'st here one
- Worthy Thy benediction;
- That one of all the rest shall be
- The glory of my work and me.
- 3. TO FIND GOD.
- Weigh me the fire; or canst thou find
- A way to measure out the wind;
- Distinguish all those floods that are
- Mix'd in that watery theatre;
- And taste thou them as saltless there
- As in their channel first they were.
- Tell me the people that do keep
- Within the kingdoms of the deep;
- Or fetch me back that cloud again
- Beshiver'd into seeds of rain;
- Tell me the motes, dust, sands, and spears
- Of corn, when summer shakes his ears;
- Show me that world of stars, and whence
- They noiseless spill their influence:
- This if thou canst, then show me Him
- That rides the glorious cherubim.
- _Keep_, abide.
- 4. WHAT GOD IS.
- God is above the sphere of our esteem,
- And is the best known, not defining Him.
- 5. UPON GOD.
- God is not only said to be
- An Ens, but Supraentity.
- 6. MERCY AND LOVE.
- God hath two wings which He doth ever move;
- The one is mercy, and the next is love:
- Under the first the sinners ever trust;
- And with the last He still directs the just.
- 7. GOD'S ANGER WITHOUT AFFECTION.
- God when He's angry here with anyone,
- His wrath is free from perturbation;
- And when we think His looks are sour and grim,
- The alteration is in us, not Him.
- 8. GOD NOT TO BE COMPREHENDED.
- 'Tis hard to find God, but to comprehend
- Him, as He is, is labour without end.
- 9. GOD'S PART.
- Prayers and praises are those spotless two
- Lambs, by the law, which God requires as due.
- 10. AFFLICTION.
- God ne'er afflicts us more than our desert,
- Though He may seem to overact His part:
- Sometimes He strikes us more than flesh can bear;
- But yet still less than grace can suffer here.
- 11. THREE FATAL SISTERS.
- Three fatal sisters wait upon each sin;
- First, fear and shame without, then guilt within.
- 12. SILENCE.
- Suffer thy legs, but not thy tongue to walk:
- God, the Most Wise, is sparing of His talk.
- 13. MIRTH.
- True mirth resides not in the smiling skin:
- The sweetest solace is to act no sin.
- 14. LOADING AND UNLOADING.
- God loads and unloads, thus His work begins,
- To load with blessings and unload from sins.
- 15. GOD'S MERCY.
- God's boundless mercy is, to sinful man,
- Like to the ever-wealthy ocean:
- Which though it sends forth thousand streams, 'tis ne'er
- Known, or else seen, to be the emptier;
- And though it takes all in, 'tis yet no more
- Full, and fill'd full, than when full fill'd before.
- 16. PRAYERS MUST HAVE POISE.
- God, He rejects all prayers that are slight
- And want their poise: words ought to have their weight.
- 17. TO GOD: AN ANTHEM SUNG IN THE CHAPEL AT WHITEHALL BEFORE THE KING.
- _Verse._ My God, I'm wounded by my sin,
- And sore without, and sick within.
- _Ver. Chor._ I come to Thee, in hope to find
- Salve for my body and my mind.
- _Verse._ In Gilead though no balm be found
- To ease this smart or cure this wound,
- _Ver. Chor._ Yet, Lord, I know there is with Thee
- All saving health, and help for me.
- _Verse._ Then reach Thou forth that hand of Thine,
- That pours in oil, as well as wine,
- _Ver. Chor._ And let it work, for I'll endure
- The utmost smart, so Thou wilt cure.
- 18. UPON GOD.
- God is all fore-part; for, we never see
- Any part backward in the Deity.
- 19. CALLING AND CORRECTING.
- God is not only merciful to call
- Men to repent, but when He strikes withal.
- 20. NO ESCAPING THE SCOURGING.
- God scourgeth some severely, some He spares;
- But all in smart have less or greater shares.
- 21. THE ROD.
- God's rod doth watch while men do sleep, and then
- The rod doth sleep, while vigilant are men.
- 22. GOD HAS A TWOFOLD PART.
- God, when for sin He makes His children smart,
- His own He acts not, but another's part;
- But when by stripes He saves them, then 'tis known
- He comes to play the part that is His own.
- 23. GOD IS ONE.
- God, as He is most holy known,
- So He is said to be most one.
- 24. PERSECUTIONS PROFITABLE.
- Afflictions they most profitable are
- To the beholder and the sufferer:
- Bettering them both, but by a double strain,
- The first by patience, and the last by pain.
- 25. TO GOD.
- Do with me, God, as Thou didst deal with John,
- Who writ that heavenly Revelation.
- Let me, like him, first cracks of thunder hear,
- Then let the harps enchantments stroke mine ear:
- Here give me thorns, there, in Thy kingdom, set
- Upon my head the golden coronet;
- There give me day; but here my dreadful night:
- My sackcloth here; but there my stole of white.
- _Stroke_, text _strike_.
- 26. WHIPS.
- God has His whips here to a twofold end:
- The bad to punish, and the good t' amend.
- 27. GOD'S PROVIDENCE.
- If all transgressions here should have their pay,
- What need there then be of a reckoning day?
- If God should punish no sin here of men,
- His providence who would not question then?
- 28. TEMPTATION.
- Those saints which God loves best,
- The devil tempts not least.
- 29. HIS EJACULATION TO GOD.
- My God! look on me with Thine eye
- Of pity, not of scrutiny;
- For if Thou dost, Thou then shalt see
- Nothing but loathsome sores in me.
- O then, for mercy's sake, behold
- These my eruptions manifold,
- And heal me with Thy look or touch;
- But if Thou wilt not deign so much,
- Because I'm odious in Thy sight,
- Speak but the word, and cure me quite.
- 30. GOD'S GIFTS NOT SOON GRANTED.
- God hears us when we pray, but yet defers
- His gifts, to exercise petitioners;
- And though a while He makes requesters stay,
- With princely hand He'll recompense delay.
- 31. PERSECUTIONS PURIFY.
- God strikes His Church, but 'tis to this intent,
- To make, not mar her, by this punishment;
- So where He gives the bitter pills, be sure
- 'Tis not to poison, but to make thee pure.
- 32. PARDON.
- God pardons those who do through frailty sin,
- But never those that persevere therein.
- 33. AN ODE OF THE BIRTH OF OUR SAVIOUR.
- In numbers, and but these few,
- I sing Thy birth, O JESU!
- Thou pretty baby, born here,
- With sup'rabundant scorn here;
- Who for Thy princely port here,
- Hadst for Thy place
- Of birth a base
- Out-stable for Thy court here.
- Instead of neat enclosures
- Of interwoven osiers,
- Instead of fragrant posies
- Of daffodils and roses,
- Thy cradle, Kingly Stranger,
- As Gospel tells,
- Was nothing else
- But here a homely manger.
- But we with silks, not crewels,
- With sundry precious jewels,
- And lily-work will dress Thee;
- And as we dispossess Thee
- Of clouts, we'll make a chamber,
- Sweet babe, for Thee
- Of ivory,
- And plaister'd round with amber.
- The Jews they did disdain Thee,
- But we will entertain Thee
- With glories to await here,
- Upon Thy princely state here;
- And more for love than pity,
- From year to year,
- We'll make Thee, here,
- A freeborn of our city.
- _Crewels_, worsteds.
- _Clouts_, rags.
- 34. LIP-LABOUR.
- In the old Scripture I have often read,
- The calf without meal ne'er was offered;
- To figure to us nothing more than this,
- Without the heart lip-labour nothing is.
- 35. THE HEART.
- In prayer the lips ne'er act the winning part,
- Without the sweet concurrence of the heart.
- 36. EARRINGS.
- Why wore th' Egyptians jewels in the ear?
- But for to teach us, all the grace is there,
- When we obey, by acting what we hear.
- 37. SIN SEEN.
- When once the sin has fully acted been,
- Then is the horror of the trespass seen.
- 38. UPON TIME.
- Time was upon
- The wing, to fly away;
- And I call'd on
- Him but awhile to stay;
- But he'd be gone,
- For ought that I could say.
- He held out then
- A writing, as he went;
- And ask'd me, when
- False man would be content
- To pay again
- What God and Nature lent.
- An hour-glass,
- In which were sands but few,
- As he did pass,
- He show'd, and told me, too,
- Mine end near was;
- And so away he flew.
- 39. HIS PETITION.
- If war or want shall make me grow so poor,
- As for to beg my bread from door to door;
- Lord! let me never act that beggar's part,
- Who hath Thee in his mouth, not in his heart:
- He who asks alms in that so sacred Name,
- Without due reverence, plays the cheater's game.
- 40. TO GOD.
- Thou hast promis'd, Lord, to be
- With me in my misery;
- Suffer me to be so bold
- As to speak, Lord, say and hold.
- 41. HIS LITANY TO THE HOLY SPIRIT.
- In the hour of my distress,
- When temptations me oppress,
- And when I my sins confess,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When I lie within my bed,
- Sick in heart and sick in head,
- And with doubts discomforted,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When the house doth sigh and weep,
- And the world is drown'd in sleep,
- Yet mine eyes the watch do keep,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When the artless doctor sees
- No one hope, but of his fees,
- And his skill runs on the lees,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When his potion and his pill
- Has, or none, or little skill,
- Meet for nothing, but to kill;
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When the passing bell doth toll,
- And the furies in a shoal
- Come to fright a parting soul,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When the tapers now burn blue,
- And the comforters are few,
- And that number more than true,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When the priest his last hath prayed,
- And I nod to what is said,
- 'Cause my speech is now decayed,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When, God knows, I'm toss'd about,
- Either with despair, or doubt;
- Yet before the glass be out,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When the tempter me pursu'th
- With the sins of all my youth,
- And half damns me with untruth,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When the flames and hellish cries
- Fright mine ears, and fright mine eyes,
- And all terrors me surprise,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- When the judgment is reveal'd,
- And that open'd which was seal'd,
- When to Thee I have appeal'd,
- Sweet Spirit, comfort me!
- 42. THANKSGIVING.
- Thanksgiving for a former, doth invite
- God to bestow a second benefit.
- 43. COCK-CROW.
- Bellman of night, if I about shall go
- For to deny my Master, do thou crow.
- Thou stop'dst St. Peter in the midst of sin;
- Stay me, by crowing, ere I do begin:
- Better it is, premonish'd for to shun
- A sin, than fall to weeping when 'tis done.
- 44. ALL THINGS RUN WELL FOR THE RIGHTEOUS.
- Adverse and prosperous fortunes both work on
- Here, for the righteous man's salvation;
- Be he oppos'd, or be he not withstood,
- All serve to th' augmentation of his good.
- 45. PAIN ENDS IN PLEASURE.
- Afflictions bring us joy in times to come,
- When sins, by stripes, to us grow wearisome.
- 46. TO GOD.
- I'll come, I'll creep, though Thou dost threat,
- Humbly unto Thy mercy-seat:
- When I am there, this then I'll do,
- Give Thee a dart, and dagger too;
- Next, when I have my faults confessed,
- Naked I'll show a sighing breast;
- Which if that can't Thy pity woo,
- Then let Thy justice do the rest
- And strike it through.
- 47. A THANKSGIVING TO GOD FOR HIS HOUSE.
- Lord, Thou hast given me a cell
- Wherein to dwell;
- A little house, whose humble roof
- Is weather-proof;
- Under the spars of which I lie
- Both soft and dry;
- Where Thou my chamber for to ward
- Hast set a guard
- Of harmless thoughts, to watch and keep
- Me, while I sleep.
- Low is my porch, as is my fate,
- Both void of state;
- And yet the threshold of my door
- Is worn by th' poor,
- Who thither come, and freely get
- Good words or meat;
- Like as my parlour, so my hall
- And kitchen's small;
- A little buttery, and therein
- A little bin
- Which keeps my little loaf of bread
- Unclipt, unflead.
- Some brittle sticks of thorn or briar
- Make me a fire,
- Close by whose living coal I sit,
- And glow like it.
- Lord, I confess, too, when I dine,
- The pulse is Thine,
- And all those other bits, that be
- There placed by Thee;
- The worts, the purslain, and the mess
- Of water-cress,
- Which of Thy kindness Thou hast sent;
- And my content
- Makes those, and my beloved beet,
- To be more sweet.
- 'Tis Thou that crown'st my glittering hearth
- With guiltless mirth;
- And giv'st me wassail bowls to drink,
- Spiced to the brink.
- Lord, 'tis Thy plenty-dropping hand,
- That soils my land;
- And giv'st me for my bushel sown,
- Twice ten for one.
- Thou mak'st my teeming hen to lay
- Her egg each day;
- Besides my healthful ewes to bear
- Me twins each year,
- The while the conduits of my kine
- Run cream for wine.
- All these, and better Thou dost send
- Me, to this end,
- That I should render, for my part,
- A thankful heart;
- Which, fired with incense, I resign,
- As wholly Thine;
- But the acceptance, that must be,
- My Christ, by Thee.
- _Unflead_, lit. unflay'd.
- _Purslain_, an herb.
- 48. TO GOD.
- Make, make me Thine, my gracious God,
- Or with Thy staff, or with Thy rod;
- And be the blow, too, what it will,
- Lord, I will kiss it, though it kill:
- Beat me, bruise me, rack me, rend me,
- Yet, in torments, I'll commend Thee;
- Examine me with fire, and prove me
- To the full, yet I will love Thee;
- Nor shall Thou give so deep a wound
- But I as patient will be found.
- 49. ANOTHER TO GOD.
- Lord, do not beat me,
- Since I do sob and cry,
- And swoon away to die,
- Ere Thou dost threat me.
- Lord, do not scourge me,
- If I by lies and oaths
- Have soil'd myself or clothes,
- But rather purge me.
- 50. NONE TRULY HAPPY HERE.
- Happy's that man to whom God gives
- A stock of goods, whereby he lives
- Near to the wishes of his heart:
- No man is blest through every part.
- 51. TO HIS EVER-LOVING GOD.
- Can I not come to Thee, my God, for these
- So very many meeting hindrances,
- That slack my pace, but yet not make me stay?
- Who slowly goes, rids, in the end, his way.
- Clear Thou my paths, or shorten Thou my miles,
- Remove the bars, or lift me o'er the stiles;
- Since rough the way is, help me when I call,
- And take me up; or else prevent the fall.
- I ken my home, and it affords some ease
- To see far off the smoking villages.
- Fain would I rest, yet covet not to die
- For fear of future biting penury:
- No, no, my God, Thou know'st my wishes be
- To leave this life, not loving it, but Thee.
- _Rids way_, gets over the ground.
- 52. ANOTHER.
- Thou bid'st me come; I cannot come; for why?
- Thou dwell'st aloft, and I want wings to fly.
- To mount my soul, she must have pinions given;
- For 'tis no easy way from earth to heaven.
- 53. TO DEATH.
- Thou bid'st me come away,
- And I'll no longer stay
- Than for to shed some tears
- For faults of former years,
- And to repent some crimes
- Done in the present times:
- And next, to take a bit
- Of bread, and wine with it:
- To don my robes of love,
- Fit for the place above;
- To gird my loins about
- With charity throughout;
- And so to travel hence
- With feet of innocence:
- These done, I'll only cry
- God mercy, and so die.
- 54. NEUTRALITY LOATHSOME.
- God will have all, or none; serve Him, or fall
- Down before Baal, Bel, or Belial:
- Either be hot or cold: God doth despise,
- Abhor, and spew out all neutralities.
- 55. WELCOME WHAT COMES.
- Whatever comes, let's be content withal:
- Among God's blessings there is no one small.
- 56. TO HIS ANGRY GOD.
- Through all the night
- Thou dost me fright,
- And hold'st mine eyes from sleeping;
- And day by day,
- My cup can say
- My wine is mix'd with weeping.
- Thou dost my bread
- With ashes knead
- Each evening and each morrow;
- Mine eye and ear
- Do see and hear
- The coming in of sorrow.
- Thy scourge of steel,
- Ah me! I feel
- Upon me beating ever:
- While my sick heart
- With dismal smart
- Is disacquainted never.
- Long, long, I'm sure,
- This can't endure,
- But in short time 'twill please Thee,
- My gentle God,
- To burn the rod,
- Or strike so as to ease me.
- 57. PATIENCE: OR, COMFORTS IN CROSSES.
- Abundant plagues I late have had,
- Yet none of these have made me sad:
- For why? My Saviour with the sense
- Of suff'ring gives me patience.
- 58. ETERNITY.
- O years! and age! farewell:
- Behold, I go
- Where I do know
- Infinity to dwell.
- And these mine eyes shall see
- All times, how they
- Are lost i' th' sea
- Of vast eternity.
- Where never moon shall sway
- The stars; but she
- And night shall be
- Drown'd in one endless day.
- 59. TO HIS SAVIOUR, A CHILD: A PRESENT BY A CHILD.
- Go, pretty child, and bear this flower
- Unto thy little Saviour;
- And tell Him, by that bud now blown,
- He is the Rose of Sharon known.
- When thou hast said so, stick it there
- Upon His bib or stomacher;
- And tell Him, for good handsel too,
- That thou hast brought a whistle new,
- Made of a clean strait oaten reed,
- To charm His cries at time of need.
- Tell Him, for coral, thou hast none,
- But if thou hadst, He should have one;
- But poor thou art, and known to be
- Even as moneyless as He.
- Lastly, if thou canst win a kiss
- From those mellifluous lips of His;
- Then never take a second on,
- To spoil the first impression.
- _Handsel_, earnest money.
- 60. THE NEW-YEAR'S GIFT.
- Let others look for pearl and gold,
- Tissues, or tabbies manifold:
- One only lock of that sweet hay
- Whereon the blessed baby lay,
- Or one poor swaddling-clout, shall be
- The richest New-Year's gift to me.
- _Tabbies_, shot silks.
- 61. TO GOD.
- If anything delight me for to print
- My book, 'tis this: that Thou, my God, art in't.
- 62. GOD AND THE KING.
- How am I bound to Two! God, who doth give
- The mind; the king, the means whereby I live.
- 63. GOD'S MIRTH: MAN'S MOURNING.
- Where God is merry, there write down thy fears:
- What He with laughter speaks, hear thou with tears.
- 64. HONOURS ARE HINDRANCES.
- Give me honours! what are these,
- But the pleasing hindrances?
- Stiles, and stops, and stays that come
- In the way 'twixt me and home;
- Clear the walk, and then shall I
- To my heaven less run than fly.
- 65. THE PARASCEVE, OR PREPARATION.
- To a love-feast we both invited are:
- The figur'd damask, or pure diaper,
- Over the golden altar now is spread,
- With bread, and wine, and vessels furnished;
- The sacred towel and the holy ewer
- Are ready by, to make the guests all pure:
- Let's go, my Alma; yet, ere we receive,
- Fit, fit it is we have our parasceve.
- Who to that sweet bread unprepar'd doth come,
- Better be starv'd, than but to taste one crumb.
- _Parasceve_, preparation.
- 66. TO GOD.
- God gives not only corn for need,
- But likewise sup'rabundant seed;
- Bread for our service, bread for show,
- Meat for our meals, and fragments too:
- He gives not poorly, taking some
- Between the finger and the thumb;
- But for our glut and for our store,
- Fine flour press'd down, and running o'er.
- 67. A WILL TO BE WORKING.
- Although we cannot turn the fervent fit
- Of sin, we must strive 'gainst the stream of it;
- And howsoe'er we have the conquest miss'd,
- 'Tis for our glory that we did resist.
- 68. CHRIST'S PART.
- Christ, He requires still, wheresoe'er He comes
- To feed or lodge, to have the best of rooms:
- Give Him the choice; grant Him the nobler part
- Of all the house: the best of all's the heart.
- 69. RICHES AND POVERTY.
- God could have made all rich, or all men poor;
- But why He did not, let me tell wherefore:
- Had all been rich, where then had patience been?
- Had all been poor, who had His bounty seen?
- 70. SOBRIETY IN SEARCH.
- To seek of God more than we well can find,
- Argues a strong distemper of the mind.
- 71. ALMS.
- Give, if thou canst, an alms; if not, afford,
- Instead of that, a sweet and gentle word:
- _God crowns our goodness wheresoe'er He sees,
- On our part, wanting all abilities_.
- 72. TO HIS CONSCIENCE.
- Can I not sin, but thou wilt be
- My private protonotary?
- Can I not woo thee to pass by
- A short and sweet iniquity?
- I'll cast a mist and cloud upon
- My delicate transgression
- So utter dark as that no eye
- Shall see the hugg'd impiety;
- Gifts blind the wise, and bribes do please
- And wind all other witnesses;
- And wilt not thou with gold be ti'd
- To lay thy pen and ink aside?
- That in the mirk and tongueless night
- Wanton I may, and thou not write?
- It will not be. And, therefore, now,
- For times to come I'll make this vow,
- From aberrations to live free;
- So I'll not fear the Judge or thee.
- _Protonotary_, once the title of the chief clerk in the Courts of
- Common Pleas and King's Bench.
- 73. TO HIS SAVIOUR.
- Lord, I confess, that Thou alone art able
- To purify this my Augean stable:
- Be the seas water, and the land all soap,
- Yet if Thy blood not wash me, there's no hope.
- 74. TO GOD.
- God is all sufferance here; here He doth show
- No arrow nockt, only a stringless bow:
- His arrows fly, and all His stones are hurl'd
- Against the wicked in another world.
- _Nockt_, placed ready for shooting.
- 75. HIS DREAM.
- I dreamt, last night, Thou didst transfuse
- Oil from Thy jar into my cruse;
- And pouring still Thy wealthy store,
- The vessel full did then run o'er;
- Methought I did Thy bounty chide
- To see the waste; but 'twas replied
- By Thee, dear God, God gives man seed
- Ofttimes for waste, as for his need.
- Then I could say that house is bare
- That has not bread and some to spare.
- 76. GOD'S BOUNTY.
- God's bounty, that ebbs less and less
- As men do wane in thankfulness.
- 77. TO HIS SWEET SAVIOUR.
- Night hath no wings to him that cannot sleep,
- And time seems then not for to fly, but creep;
- Slowly her chariot drives, as if that she
- Had broke her wheel, or crack'd her axletree.
- Just so it is with me, who, list'ning, pray
- The winds to blow the tedious night away,
- That I might see the cheerful, peeping day.
- Sick is my heart! O Saviour! do Thou please
- To make my bed soft in my sicknesses:
- Lighten my candle, so that I beneath
- Sleep not for ever in the vaults of death;
- Let me Thy voice betimes i' th' morning hear:
- Call, and I'll come; say Thou the when, and where.
- Draw me but first, and after Thee I'll run
- And make no one stop till my race be done.
- 78. HIS CREED.
- I do believe that die I must,
- And be return'd from out my dust:
- I do believe that when I rise,
- Christ I shall see, with these same eyes:
- I do believe that I must come,
- With others, to the dreadful doom:
- I do believe the bad must go
- From thence, to everlasting woe:
- I do believe the good, and I,
- Shall live with Him eternally:
- I do believe I shall inherit
- Heaven, by Christ's mercies, not my merit.
- I do believe the One in Three,
- And Three in perfect unity:
- Lastly, that JESUS is a deed
- Of gift from God: and here's my creed.
- 79. TEMPTATIONS.
- Temptations hurt not, though they have access:
- Satan o'ercomes none, but by willingness.
- 80. THE LAMP.
- When a man's faith is frozen up, as dead;
- Then is the lamp and oil extinguished.
- 81. SORROWS.
- Sorrows our portion are: ere hence we go,
- Crosses we must have; or, hereafter woe.
- 82. PENITENCY.
- A man's transgressions God does then remit,
- When man He makes a penitent for it.
- 83. THE DIRGE OF JEPHTHAH'S DAUGHTER: SUNG BY THE VIRGINS.
- O thou, the wonder of all days!
- O paragon, and pearl of praise!
- O virgin-martyr, ever blest
- Above the rest
- Of all the maiden train! We come,
- And bring fresh strewings to thy tomb.
- Thus, thus, and thus we compass round
- Thy harmless and unhaunted ground;
- And as we sing thy dirge, we will
- The daffodil
- And other flowers lay upon
- The altar of our love, thy stone.
- Thou wonder of all maids, liest here.
- Of daughters all the dearest dear;
- The eye of virgins; nay, the queen
- Of this smooth green,
- And all sweet meads; from whence we get
- The primrose and the violet.
- Too soon, too dear did Jephthah buy,
- By thy sad loss, our liberty:
- His was the bond and cov'nant, yet
- Thou paid'st the debt:
- Lamented maid! he won the day,
- But for the conquest thou didst pay.
- Thy father brought with him along
- The olive branch and victor's song:
- He slew the Ammonites, we know,
- But to thy woe;
- And in the purchase of our peace,
- The cure was worse than the disease.
- For which obedient zeal of thine,
- We offer here, before thy shrine,
- Our sighs for storax, tears for wine;
- And to make fine
- And fresh thy hearse-cloth, we will, here,
- Four times bestrew thee ev'ry year.
- Receive, for this thy praise, our tears:
- Receive this offering of our hairs:
- Receive these crystal vials fill'd
- With tears distill'd
- From teeming eyes; to these we bring,
- Each maid, her silver filleting,
- To gild thy tomb; besides, these cauls,
- These laces, ribbons, and these falls,
- These veils, wherewith we use to hide
- The bashful bride,
- When we conduct her to her groom:
- And all we lay upon thy tomb.
- No more, no more, since thou art dead,
- Shall we e'er bring coy brides to bed;
- No more, at yearly festivals
- We cowslip balls
- Or chains of columbines shall make
- For this or that occasion's sake.
- No, no; our maiden pleasures be
- Wrapp'd in the winding-sheet with thee:
- 'Tis we are dead, though not i' th' grave:
- Or, if we have
- One seed of life left, 'tis to keep
- A Lent for thee, to fast and weep.
- Sleep in thy peace, thy bed of spice,
- And make this place all paradise:
- May sweets grow here: and smoke from hence
- Fat frankincense:
- Let balm and cassia send their scent
- From out thy maiden-monument.
- May no wolf howl, or screech-owl stir
- A wing about thy sepulchre!
- No boisterous winds, or storms, come hither
- To starve or wither
- Thy soft sweet earth! but, like a spring,
- Love keep it ever flourishing.
- May all shy maids, at wonted hours,
- Come forth to strew thy tomb with flow'rs:
- May virgins, when they come to mourn,
- Male-incense burn
- Upon thine altar! then return,
- And leave thee sleeping in thy urn.
- _Cauls_, nets for the hair.
- _Falls_, trimmings hanging loosely.
- _Male-incense_, incense in globular drops.
- 84. TO GOD: ON HIS SICKNESS.
- What though my harp and viol be
- Both hung upon the willow tree?
- What though my bed be now my grave,
- And for my house I darkness have?
- What though my healthful days are fled,
- And I lie number'd with the dead?
- Yet I have hope, by Thy great power,
- To spring; though now a wither'd flower.
- 85. SINS LOATHED, AND YET LOVED.
- _Shame checks our first attempts_; but then 'tis prov'd
- _Sins first dislik'd are after that belov'd_.
- 86. SIN.
- Sin leads the way, but as it goes, it feels
- The following plague still treading on his heels.
- 87. UPON GOD.
- God, when He takes my goods and chattels hence,
- Gives me a portion, giving patience:
- What is in God is God; if so it be
- He patience gives, He gives Himself to me.
- 88. FAITH.
- What here we hope for, we shall once inherit;
- By faith we all walk here, not by the Spirit.
- 89. HUMILITY.
- Humble we must be, if to heaven we go:
- High is the roof there; but the gate is low:
- Whene'er thou speak'st, look with a lowly eye:
- Grace is increased by humility.
- 90. TEARS.
- Our present tears here, not our present laughter,
- Are but the handsels of our joys hereafter.
- _Handsels_, earnest money, foretaste.
- 91. SIN AND STRIFE.
- After true sorrow for our sins, our strife
- Must last with Satan to the end of life.
- 92. AN ODE, OR PSALM TO GOD.
- Dear God,
- If Thy smart rod
- Here did not make me sorry,
- I should not be
- With Thine or Thee
- In Thy eternal glory.
- But since
- Thou didst convince
- My sins by gently striking;
- Add still to those
- First stripes new blows,
- According to Thy liking.
- Fear me,
- Or scourging tear me;
- That thus from vices driven,
- I may from hell
- Fly up to dwell
- With Thee and Thine in heaven.
- 93. GRACES FOR CHILDREN.
- What God gives, and what we take,
- 'Tis a gift for Christ, His sake:
- Be the meal of beans and peas,
- God be thanked for those and these:
- Have we flesh, or have we fish,
- All are fragments from His dish.
- He His Church save, and the king;
- And our peace here, like a spring,
- Make it ever flourishing.
- 94. GOD TO BE FIRST SERVED.
- Honour thy parents; but good manners call
- Thee to adore thy God the first of all.
- 95. ANOTHER GRACE FOR A CHILD.
- Here a little child I stand
- Heaving up my either hand;
- Cold as paddocks though they be,
- Here I lift them up to Thee,
- For a benison to fall
- On our meat and on us all. Amen.
- _Paddocks_, frogs.
- 96. A CHRISTMAS CAROL SUNG TO THE KING IN THE PRESENCE AT WHITEHALL.
- _Chor._ What sweeter music can we bring,
- Than a carol for to sing
- The birth of this our heavenly King?
- Awake the voice! awake the string!
- Heart, ear, and eye, and everything
- Awake! the while the active finger
- Runs division with the singer.
- _FROM THE FLOURISH THEY CAME TO THE SONG._
- 1. Dark and dull night, fly hence away
- And give the honour to this day
- That sees December turn'd to May.
- 2. If we may ask the reason, say
- The why and wherefore all things here
- Seem like the spring-time of the year.
- 3. Why does the chilling winter's morn
- Smile like a field beset with corn?
- Or smell like to a mead new shorn,
- Thus, on the sudden?
- 4. Come and see
- The cause, why things thus fragrant be:
- 'Tis He is born, whose quick'ning birth
- Gives life and lustre, public mirth,
- To heaven and the under-earth.
- _Chor._ We see Him come, and know Him ours,
- Who, with His sunshine and His showers,
- Turns all the patient ground to flowers.
- 1. The darling of the world is come,
- And fit it is we find a room
- To welcome Him.
- 2. The nobler part
- Of all the house here is the heart,
- _Chor._ Which we will give Him; and bequeath
- This holly and this ivy wreath,
- To do Him honour; who's our King,
- And Lord of all this revelling.
- _The musical part was composed by M. Henry Lawes._
- _Division_, a rapid passage of music sung in one breath or a single
- syllable.
- 97. THE NEW-YEAR'S GIFT: OR, CIRCUMCISION'S SONG. SUNG TO THE KING IN
- THE PRESENCE AT WHITEHALL.
- 1. Prepare for songs; He's come, He's come;
- And be it sin here to be dumb,
- And not with lutes to fill the room.
- 2. Cast holy water all about,
- And have a care no fire goes out,
- But 'cense the porch and place throughout.
- 3. The altars all on fire be;
- The storax fries; and ye may see
- How heart and hand do all agree
- To make things sweet. _Chor._ Yet all less sweet than He.
- 4. Bring Him along, most pious priest,
- And tell us then, whenas thou seest
- His gently-gliding, dove-like eyes,
- And hear'st His whimpering and His cries;
- How can'st thou this Babe circumcise?
- 5. Ye must not be more pitiful than wise;
- For, now unless ye see Him bleed,
- Which makes the bapti'm, 'tis decreed
- The birth is fruitless. _Chor._ Then the work God speed.
- 1. Touch gently, gently touch; and here
- Spring tulips up through all the year;
- And from His sacred blood, here shed,
- May roses grow to crown His own dear head.
- _Chor._ Back, back again; each thing is done
- With zeal alike, as 'twas begun;
- Now singing, homeward let us carry
- The Babe unto His mother Mary;
- And when we have the Child commended
- To her warm bosom, then our rites are ended.
- _Composed by M. Henry Lawes._
- 98. ANOTHER NEW-YEAR'S GIFT: OR, SONG FOR THE CIRCUMCISION.
- 1. Hence, hence profane, and none appear
- With anything unhallowed here;
- No jot of leaven must be found
- Conceal'd in this most holy ground.
- 2. What is corrupt, or sour'd with sin,
- Leave that without, then enter in;
- _Chor._ But let no Christmas mirth begin
- Before ye purge and circumcise
- Your hearts, and hands, lips, ears, and eyes.
- 3. Then, like a perfum'd altar, see
- That all things sweet and clean may be:
- For here's a Babe that, like a bride,
- Will blush to death if ought be spi'd
- Ill-scenting, or unpurifi'd.
- _Chor._ The room is 'cens'd: help, help t' invoke
- Heaven to come down, the while we choke
- The temple with a cloud of smoke.
- 4. Come then, and gently touch the birth
- Of Him, who's Lord of Heaven and Earth:
- 5. And softly handle Him; y'ad need,
- Because the pretty Babe does bleed.
- Poor pitied Child! who from Thy stall
- Bring'st, in Thy blood, a balm that shall
- Be the best New-Year's gift to all.
- 1. Let's bless the Babe: and, as we sing
- His praise, so let us bless the King.
- _Chor._ Long may He live till He hath told
- His New-Years trebled to His old:
- And when that's done, to re-aspire
- A new-born Phœnix from His own chaste fire.
- 99. GOD'S PARDON.
- When I shall sin, pardon my trespass here;
- For once in hell, none knows remission there.
- 100. SIN.
- Sin once reached up to God's eternal sphere,
- And was committed, not remitted there.
- 101. EVIL.
- Evil no nature hath; the loss of good
- Is that which gives to sin a livelihood.
- 102. THE STAR-SONG: A CAROL TO THE KING SUNG AT WHITEHALL.
- _The Flourish of Music; then followed the Song._
- 1. Tell us, thou clear and heavenly tongue,
- Where is the Babe but lately sprung?
- Lies he the lily-banks among?
- 2. Or say, if this new Birth of ours
- Sleeps, laid within some ark of flowers,
- Spangled with dew-light; thou canst clear
- All doubts, and manifest the where.
- 3. Declare to us, bright star, if we shall seek
- Him in the morning's blushing cheek,
- Or search the beds of spices through,
- To find him out.
- _Star._ No, this ye need not do;
- But only come and see Him rest
- A Princely Babe in's mother's breast.
- _Chor._ He's seen, He's seen! why then a round,
- Let's kiss the sweet and holy ground;
- And all rejoice that we have found
- _A King before conception crown'd_.
- 4. Come then, come then, and let us bring
- Unto our pretty Twelfth-tide King,
- Each one his several offering;
- _Chor._ And when night comes, we'll give Him wassailing;
- And that His treble honours may be seen,
- We'll choose Him King, and make His mother Queen.
- 103. TO GOD.
- With golden censers, and with incense, here
- Before Thy virgin-altar I appear,
- To pay Thee that I owe, since what I see
- In, or without, all, all belongs to Thee.
- Where shall I now begin to make, for one
- Least loan of Thine, half restitution?
- Alas! I cannot pay a jot; therefore
- I'll kiss the tally, and confess the score.
- Ten thousand talents lent me, Thou dost write;
- 'Tis true, my God, but I can't pay one mite.
- _Tally_, the record of his score or debt.
- 104. TO HIS DEAR GOD.
- I'll hope no more
- For things that will not come;
- And if they do, they prove but cumbersome.
- Wealth brings much woe;
- And, since it fortunes so,
- 'Tis better to be poor
- Than so t' abound
- As to be drown'd
- Or overwhelm'd with store.
- Pale care, avaunt!
- I'll learn to be content
- With that small stock Thy bounty gave or lent.
- What may conduce
- To my most healthful use,
- Almighty God, me grant;
- But that, or this,
- That hurtful is,
- Deny Thy suppliant.
- 105. TO GOD: HIS GOOD WILL.
- Gold I have none, but I present my need,
- O Thou, that crown'st the will, where wants the deed.
- Where rams are wanting, or large bullocks' thighs,
- There a poor lamb's a plenteous sacrifice.
- Take then his vows, who, if he had it, would
- Devote to Thee both incense, myrrh and gold
- Upon an altar rear'd by him, and crown'd
- Both with the ruby, pearl, and diamond.
- 106. ON HEAVEN.
- Permit mine eyes to see
- Part, or the whole of Thee,
- O happy place!
- Where all have grace,
- And garlands shar'd,
- For their reward;
- Where each chaste soul
- In long white stole,
- And palms in hand,
- Do ravish'd stand;
- So in a ring,
- The praises sing
- Of Three in One
- That fill the Throne;
- While harps and viols then
- To voices say, Amen.
- 107. THE SUM AND THE SATISFACTION.
- Last night I drew up mine account,
- And found my debits to amount
- To such a height, as for to tell
- How I should pay 's impossible.
- Well, this I'll do: my mighty score
- Thy mercy-seat I'll lay before;
- But therewithal I'll bring the band
- Which, in full force, did daring stand
- Till my Redeemer, on the tree,
- Made void for millions, as for me.
- Then, if thou bidst me pay, or go
- Unto the prison, I'll say, no;
- Christ having paid, I nothing owe:
- For, this is sure, the debt is dead
- By law, the bond once cancelled.
- _Score_, debt or reckoning.
- _Band_, bond.
- _Daring_, frightening.
- 108. GOOD MEN AFFLICTED MOST.
- God makes not good men wantons, but doth bring
- Them to the field, and, there, to skirmishing.
- With trials those, with terrors these He proves,
- And hazards those most whom the most He loves;
- For Sceva, darts; for Cocles, dangers; thus
- He finds a fire for mighty Mutius;
- Death for stout Cato; and besides all these,
- A poison, too, He has for Socrates;
- Torments for high Attilius; and, with want,
- Brings in Fabricius for a combatant:
- But bastard-slips, and such as He dislikes,
- He never brings them once to th' push of pikes.
- 109. GOOD CHRISTIANS
- Play their offensive and defensive parts,
- Till they be hid o'er with a wood of darts.
- 110. THE WILL THE CAUSE OF WOE.
- When man is punish'd, he is plagued still,
- Not for the fault of nature, but of will.
- 111. TO HEAVEN.
- Open thy gates
- To him, who weeping waits,
- And might come in,
- But that held back by sin.
- Let mercy be
- So kind to set me free,
- And I will straight
- Come in, or force the gate.
- 112. THE RECOMPENSE.
- All I have lost that could be rapt from me;
- And fare it well: yet, Herrick, if so be
- Thy dearest Saviour renders thee but one
- Smile, that one smile's full restitution.
- 113. TO GOD.
- Pardon me, God, once more I Thee entreat,
- That I have placed Thee in so mean a seat
- Where round about Thou seest but all things vain,
- Uncircumcis'd, unseason'd and profane.
- But as Heaven's public and immortal eye
- Looks on the filth, but is not soil'd thereby,
- So Thou, my God, may'st on this impure look,
- But take no tincture from my sinful book:
- Let but one beam of glory on it shine,
- And that will make me and my work divine.
- 114. TO GOD.
- Lord, I am like to mistletoe,
- Which has no root, and cannot grow
- Or prosper but by that same tree
- It clings about; so I by Thee.
- What need I then to fear at all,
- So long as I about Thee crawl?
- But if that tree should fall and die,
- Tumble shall heav'n, and down will I.
- 115. HIS WISH TO GOD.
- I would to God that mine old age might have
- Before my last, but here a living grave,
- Some one poor almshouse; there to lie, or stir
- Ghostlike, as in my meaner sepulchre;
- A little piggin and a pipkin by,
- To hold things fitting my necessity,
- Which rightly used, both in their time and place,
- Might me excite to fore and after-grace.
- Thy Cross, my Christ, fix'd 'fore mine eyes should be,
- Not to adore that, but to worship Thee.
- So, here the remnant of my days I'd spend,
- Reading Thy Bible, and my Book; so end.
- _Piggin_, a small wooden vessel.
- 116. SATAN.
- When we 'gainst Satan stoutly fight, the more
- He tears and tugs us than he did before;
- Neglecting once to cast a frown on those
- Whom ease makes his without the help of blows.
- 117. HELL.
- Hell is no other but a soundless pit,
- Where no one beam of comfort peeps in it.
- 118. THE WAY.
- When I a ship see on the seas,
- Cuff'd with those wat'ry savages,
- And therewithal behold it hath
- In all that way no beaten path,
- Then, with a wonder, I confess
- Thou art our way i' th' wilderness;
- And while we blunder in the dark,
- Thou art our candle there, or spark.
- 119. GREAT GRIEF, GREAT GLORY.
- The less our sorrows here and suff'rings cease,
- The more our crowns of glory there increase.
- 120. HELL.
- Hell is the place where whipping-cheer abounds,
- But no one jailer there to wash the wounds.
- 121. THE BELLMAN.
- Along the dark and silent night,
- With my lantern and my light,
- And the tinkling of my bell,
- Thus I walk, and this I tell:
- Death and dreadfulness call on
- To the gen'ral session,
- To whose dismal bar we there
- All accounts must come to clear.
- Scores of sins w'ave made here many,
- Wip'd out few, God knows, if any.
- Rise, ye debtors, then, and fall
- To make payment while I call.
- Ponder this, when I am gone;
- By the clock 'tis almost one.
- 122. THE GOODNESS OF HIS GOD.
- When winds and seas do rage
- And threaten to undo me,
- Thou dost, their wrath assuage
- If I but call unto Thee.
- A mighty storm last night
- Did seek my soul to swallow,
- But by the peep of light
- A gentle calm did follow.
- What need I then despair,
- Though ills stand round about me;
- Since mischiefs neither dare
- To bark or bite without Thee?
- 123. THE WIDOWS' TEARS: OR, DIRGE OF DORCAS.
- Come pity us, all ye who see
- Our harps hung on the willow tree:
- Come pity us, ye passers-by
- Who see or hear poor widows cry:
- Come pity us; and bring your ears
- And eyes to pity widows' tears.
- _Chor._ And when you are come hither
- Then we will keep
- A fast, and weep
- Our eyes out altogether.
- For Tabitha, who dead lies here,
- Clean washed, and laid out for the bier,
- O modest matrons, weep and wail!
- For now the corn and wine must fail:
- The basket and the bin of bread,
- Wherewith so many souls were fed,
- _Chor._ Stand empty here for ever:
- And ah! the poor
- At thy worn door
- Shall be relieved never.
- Woe worth the time, woe worth the day
- That 'reaved us of thee, Tabitha!
- For we have lost with thee the meal,
- The bits, the morsels, and the deal
- Of gentle paste and yielding dough
- That thou on widows did'st bestow.
- _Chor._ All's gone, and death hath taken
- Away from us
- Our maundy; thus
- Thy widows stand forsaken.
- Ah, Dorcas, Dorcas! now adieu
- We bid the cruse and pannier too:
- Ay, and the flesh, for and the fish
- Doled to us in that lordly dish.
- We take our leaves now of the loom
- From whence the housewives' cloth did come:
- _Chor._ The web affords now nothing;
- Thou being dead,
- The worsted thread
- Is cut, that made us clothing.
- Farewell the flax and reaming wool
- With which thy house was plentiful;
- Farewell the coats, the garments, and
- The sheets, the rugs, made by thy hand;
- Farewell thy fire and thy light
- That ne'er went out by day or night:
- _Chor._ No, or thy zeal so speedy,
- That found a way
- By peep of day,
- To feed and cloth the needy.
- But, ah, alas! the almond bough
- And olive branch is withered now.
- The wine press now is ta'en from us,
- The saffron and the calamus.
- The spice and spikenard hence is gone,
- The storax and the cinnamon.
- _Chor._ The carol of our gladness
- Has taken wing,
- And our late spring
- Of mirth is turned to sadness.
- How wise wast thou in all thy ways!
- How worthy of respect and praise!
- How matron-like didst thou go dressed!
- How soberly above the rest
- Of those that prank it with their plumes,
- And jet it with their choice perfumes!
- _Chor._ Thy vestures were not flowing:
- Nor did the street
- Accuse thy feet
- Of mincing in their going.
- And though thou here li'st dead, we see
- A deal of beauty yet in thee.
- How sweetly shows thy smiling face,
- Thy lips with all-diffused grace!
- Thy hands, though cold, yet spotless white,
- And comely as the chrysolite!
- _Chor._ Thy belly like a hill is,
- Or as a neat
- Clean heap of wheat,
- All set about with lilies.
- Sleep with thy beauties here, while we
- Will show these garments made by thee;
- These were the coats, in these are read
- The monuments of Dorcas dead.
- These were thy acts, and thou shall have
- These hung as honours o'er thy grave;
- _Chor._ And after us, distressed,
- Should fame be dumb,
- Thy very tomb
- Would cry out, Thou art blessed.
- _Deal_, portion.
- _Maundy_, the alms given on Thursday in Holy Week.
- _Reaming_, drawing out into threads.
- _Calamus_, a fragrant plant, the sweet flag.
- _Chrysolite_, the topaz.
- 124. TO GOD IN TIME OF PLUNDERING.
- Rapine has yet took nought from me;
- But if it please my God I be
- Brought at the last to th' utmost bit,
- God make me thankful still for it.
- I have been grateful for my store:
- Let me say grace when there's no more.
- 125. TO HIS SAVIOUR. THE NEW-YEAR'S GIFT.
- That little pretty bleeding part
- Of foreskin send to me:
- And I'll return a bleeding heart
- For New-Year's gift to Thee.
- Rich is the gem that Thou did'st send,
- Mine's faulty too and small;
- But yet this gift Thou wilt commend
- Because I send Thee all.
- 126. DOOMSDAY.
- Let not that day God's friends and servants scare;
- The bench is then their place, and not the bar.
- 127. THE POOR'S PORTION.
- The sup'rabundance of my store,
- That is the portion of the poor:
- Wheat, barley, rye, or oats; what is't
- But He takes toll of? all the grist.
- Two raiments have I: Christ then makes
- This law; that He and I part stakes.
- Or have I two loaves, then I use
- The poor to cut, and I to choose.
- 128. THE WHITE ISLAND: OR, PLACE OF THE BLEST.
- In this world, the isle of dreams,
- While we sit by sorrow's streams,
- Tears and terrors are our themes
- Reciting:
- But when once from hence we fly,
- More and more approaching nigh
- Unto young Eternity
- Uniting:
- In that whiter island, where
- Things are evermore sincere;
- Candour here, and lustre there
- Delighting:
- There no monstrous fancies shall
- Out of hell an horror call,
- To create, or cause at all,
- Affrighting.
- There in calm and cooling sleep
- We our eyes shall never steep;
- But eternal watch shall keep,
- Attending
- Pleasures, such as shall pursue
- Me immortalised, and you;
- And fresh joys, as never to
- Have ending.
- 129. TO CHRIST.
- I crawl, I creep; my Christ, I come
- To Thee for curing balsamum:
- Thou hast, nay more, Thou art the tree
- Affording salve of sovereignty.
- My mouth I'll lay unto Thy wound
- Bleeding, that no blood touch the ground:
- For, rather than one drop shall fall
- To waste, my JESU, I'll take all.
- 130. TO GOD.
- God! to my little meal and oil
- Add but a bit of flesh to boil:
- And Thou my pipkinet shalt see,
- Give a wave-off'ring unto Thee.
- 131. FREE WELCOME.
- God He refuseth no man, but makes way
- For all that now come or hereafter may.
- 132. GOD'S GRACE.
- God's grace deserves here to be daily fed
- That, thus increased, it might be perfected.
- 133. COMING TO CHRIST.
- To him who longs unto his Christ to go,
- Celerity even itself is slow.
- 134. CORRECTION.
- God had but one Son free from sin; but none
- Of all His sons free from correction.
- 135. GOD'S BOUNTY.
- God, as He's potent, so He's likewise known
- To give us more than hope can fix upon.
- 136. KNOWLEDGE.
- Science in God is known to be
- A substance, not a quality.
- 137. SALUTATION.
- Christ, I have read, did to His chaplains say,
- Sending them forth, Salute no man by th' way:
- Not that He taught His ministers to be
- Unsmooth or sour to all civility,
- But to instruct them to avoid all snares
- Of tardidation in the Lord's affairs.
- Manners are good; but till His errand ends,
- Salute we must nor strangers, kin, or friends.
- _Tardidation_, sloth.
- 138. LASCIVIOUSNESS.
- Lasciviousness is known to be
- The sister to saturity.
- 139. TEARS.
- God from our eyes all tears hereafter wipes,
- And gives His children kisses then, not stripes.
- 140. GOD'S BLESSING.
- In vain our labours are whatsoe'er they be,
- Unless God gives the benedicite.
- 141. GOD, AND LORD.
- God is His name of nature; but that word
- Implies His power when He's called the Lord.
- 142. THE JUDGMENT-DAY.
- God hides from man the reck'ning day, that he
- May fear it ever for uncertainty;
- That being ignorant of that one, he may
- Expect the coming of it every day.
- 143. ANGELS.
- Angels are called gods; yet of them, none
- Are gods but by participation:
- As just men are entitled gods, yet none
- Are gods of them but by adoption.
- 144. LONG LIFE.
- The longer thread of life we spin,
- The more occasion still to sin.
- 145. TEARS.
- The tears of saints more sweet by far
- Than all the songs of sinners are.
- 146. MANNA.
- That manna, which God on His people cast,
- Fitted itself to ev'ry feeder's taste.
- 147. REVERENCE.
- True rev'rence is, as Cassiodore doth prove,
- The fear of God commix'd with cleanly love.
- _Cassiodore_, Marcus Aurelius Cassiodorus, theologian and statesman
- 497-575?
- 148. MERCY.
- Mercy, the wise Athenians held to be
- Not an affection, but a deity.
- 149. WAGES.
- After this life, the wages shall
- Not shared alike be unto all.
- 150. TEMPTATION.
- God tempteth no one, as St. Austin saith,
- For any ill, but for the proof of faith;
- Unto temptation God exposeth some,
- But none of purpose to be overcome.
- 151. GOD'S HANDS.
- God's hands are round and smooth, that gifts may fall
- Freely from them and hold none back at all.
- 152. LABOUR.
- Labour we must, and labour hard
- I' th' forum here, or vineyard.
- 153. MORA SPONSI, THE STAY OF THE BRIDEGROOM.
- The time the bridegroom stays from hence
- Is but the time of penitence.
- 154. ROARING.
- Roaring is nothing but a weeping part
- Forced from the mighty dolour of the heart.
- 155. THE EUCHARIST.
- _He that is hurt seeks help_: sin is the wound;
- The salve for this i' th' Eucharist is found.
- 156. SIN SEVERELY PUNISHED.
- God in His own day will be then severe
- To punish great sins, who small faults whipt here.
- 157. MONTES SCRIPTURARUM: THE MOUNTS OF THE SCRIPTURES.
- The mountains of the Scriptures are, some say,
- Moses, and Jesus, called Joshua:
- The prophets, mountains of the Old are meant,
- Th' apostles, mounts of the New Testament.
- 158. PRAYER.
- A prayer that is said alone
- Starves, having no companion.
- Great things ask for when thou dost pray,
- And those great are which ne'er decay.
- Pray not for silver, rust eats this;
- Ask not for gold, which metal is;
- Nor yet for houses, which are here
- But earth: _such vows ne'er reach God's ear_.
- 159. CHRIST'S SADNESS.
- Christ was not sad, i' th' garden, for His own
- Passion, but for His sheep's dispersion.
- 160. GOD HEARS US.
- God, who's in heaven, will hear from thence;
- If not to th' sound, yet to the sense.
- 161. GOD.
- God, as the learned Damascene doth write,
- A sea of substance is, indefinite.
- _The learned Damascene_, _i.e._, St. John of Damascus.
- 162. CLOUDS.
- He that ascended in a cloud, shall come
- In clouds descending to the public doom.
- 163. COMFORTS IN CONTENTIONS.
- The same who crowns the conqueror, will be
- A coadjutor in the agony.
- 164. HEAVEN.
- Heaven is most fair; but fairer He
- That made that fairest canopy.
- 165. GOD.
- In God there's nothing, but 'tis known to be
- Even God Himself, in perfect entity.
- 166. HIS POWER.
- God can do all things, save but what are known
- For to imply a contradiction.
- 167. CHRIST'S WORDS ON THE CROSS: MY GOD, MY GOD.
- Christ, when He hung the dreadful cross upon,
- Had, as it were, a dereliction
- In this regard, in those great terrors He
- Had no one beam from God's sweet majesty.
- _Dereliction_, abandonment.
- 168. JEHOVAH.
- Jehovah, as Boëtius saith,
- No number of the plural hath.
- 169. CONFUSION OF FACE.
- God then confounds man's face when He not bears
- The vows of those who are petitioners.
- 170. ANOTHER.
- The shame of man's face is no more
- Than prayers repell'd, says Cassiodore.
- 171. BEGGARS.
- Jacob God's beggar was; and so we wait,
- Though ne'er so rich, all beggars at His gate.
- 172. GOOD AND BAD.
- The bad among the good are here mix'd ever;
- The good without the bad are here plac'd never.
- 173. SIN.
- _Sin no existence; nature none it hath,
- Or good at all_, as learned Aquinas saith.
- 174. MARTHA, MARTHA.
- The repetition of the name made known
- No other than Christ's full affection.
- 175. YOUTH AND AGE.
- God on our youth bestows but little ease;
- But on our age most sweet indulgences.
- 176. GOD'S POWER.
- God is so potent, as His power can
- Draw out of bad a sovereign good to man.
- 177. PARADISE.
- Paradise is, as from the learn'd I gather,
- _A choir of bless'd souls circling in the Father_.
- 178. OBSERVATION.
- The Jews, when they built houses, I have read,
- One part thereof left still unfinished,
- To make them thereby mindful of their own
- City's most sad and dire destruction.
- 179. THE ASS.
- God did forbid the Israelites to bring
- An ass unto Him for an offering,
- Only, by this dull creature, to express
- His detestation to all slothfulness.
- 180. OBSERVATION.
- The Virgin Mother stood at distance, there,
- From her Son's cross, not shedding once a tear,
- Because the law forbad to sit and cry
- For those who did as malefactors die.
- So she, to keep her mighty woes in awe,
- Tortured her love not to transgress the law.
- Observe we may, how Mary Joses then,
- And th' other Mary, Mary Magdalen,
- Sat by the grave; and sadly sitting there,
- Shed for their Master many a bitter tear;
- But 'twas not till their dearest Lord was dead
- And then to weep they both were licensed.
- 181. TAPERS.
- Those tapers which we set upon the grave
- In fun'ral pomp, but this importance have:
- That souls departed are not put out quite;
- But as they walked here in their vestures white,
- So live in heaven in everlasting light.
- 182. CHRIST'S BIRTH.
- One birth our Saviour had; the like none yet
- Was, or will be a second like to it.
- 183. THE VIRGIN MARY.
- To work a wonder, God would have her shown
- At once a bud and yet a rose full-blown.
- 184. ANOTHER.
- As sunbeams pierce the glass, and streaming in,
- No crack or schism leave i' th' subtle skin:
- So the Divine Hand worked and brake no thread,
- But, in a mother, kept a maidenhead.
- 185. GOD.
- God, in the holy tongue, they call
- The place that filleth all in all.
- 186. ANOTHER OF GOD.
- God's said to leave this place, and for to come
- Nearer to that place than to other some,
- Of local motion, in no least respect,
- But only by impression of effect.
- 187. ANOTHER.
- God is Jehovah call'd: which name of His
- Implies or Essence, or the He that Is.
- 188. GOD'S PRESENCE.
- God's evident, and may be said to be
- Present with just men, to the verity;
- But with the wicked if He doth comply,
- 'Tis, as St. Bernard saith, but seemingly.
- 189. GOD'S DWELLING.
- God's said to dwell there, wheresoever He
- Puts down some prints of His high Majesty;
- As when to man He comes, and there doth place
- His Holy Spirit, or doth plant His Grace.
- 190. THE VIRGIN MARY.
- The Virgin Mary was, as I have read,
- The House of God, by Christ inhabited;
- Into the which He entered, but, the door
- Once shut, was never to be open'd more.
- 191. TO GOD.
- God's undivided, One in Persons Three,
- And Three in inconfused unity.
- Original of Essence there is none,
- 'Twixt God the Father, Holy Ghost, and Son:
- And though the Father be the first of Three,
- 'Tis but by order, not by entity.
- 192. UPON WOMAN AND MARY.
- So long, it seem'd, as Mary's faith was small,
- Christ did her woman, not her Mary call;
- But no more woman, being strong in faith,
- But Mary call'd then, as St. Ambrose saith.
- 193. NORTH AND SOUTH.
- The Jews their beds and offices of ease,
- Placed north and south for these clean purposes;
- That man's uncomely froth might not molest
- God's ways and walks, which lie still east and west.
- 194. SABBATHS.
- Sabbaths are threefold, as St. Austin says:
- The first of time, or Sabbath here of days;
- The second is a conscience trespass-free;
- The last the Sabbath of Eternity.
- 195. THE FAST, OR LENT.
- Noah the first was, as tradition says,
- That did ordain the fast of forty days.
- 196. SIN.
- There is no evil that we do commit,
- But hath th' extraction of some good from it:
- As when we sin, God, the great Chemist, thence
- Draws out th' elixir of true penitence.
- 197. GOD.
- God is more here than in another place,
- Not by His essence, but commerce of grace.
- 198. THIS, AND THE NEXT WORLD.
- God hath this world for many made, 'tis true:
- But He hath made the World to Come for few.
- 199. EASE.
- God gives to none so absolute an ease
- As not to know or feel some grievances.
- 200. BEGINNINGS AND ENDINGS.
- Paul, he began ill, but he ended well;
- Judas began well, but he foully fell:
- In godliness not the beginnings so
- Much as the ends are to be look'd unto.
- 201. TEMPORAL GOODS.
- These temporal goods God, the most wise, commends
- To th' good and bad in common for two ends:
- First, that these goods none here may o'er-esteem
- Because the wicked do partake of them;
- Next, that these ills none cowardly may shun,
- Being, oft here, the just man's portion.
- 202. HELL FIRE.
- The fire of hell this strange condition hath,
- To burn, not shine, as learned Basil saith.
- 203. ABEL'S BLOOD.
- Speak, did the blood of Abel cry
- To God for vengeance? Yes, say I,
- Ev'n as the sprinkled blood called on
- God for an expiation.
- 204. ANOTHER.
- The blood of Abel was a thing
- Of such a rev'rend reckoning,
- As that the old world thought it fit
- Especially to swear by it.
- 205. A POSITION IN THE HEBREW DIVINITY.
- One man repentant is of more esteem
- With God, than one that never sinned 'gainst Him.
- 206. PENITENCE.
- The doctors, in the Talmud, say,
- That in this world one only day
- In true repentance spent will be
- More worth than heaven's eternity.
- 207. GOD'S PRESENCE.
- God's present everywhere, but most of all
- Present by union hypostatical:
- God, He is there, where's nothing else, schools say,
- And nothing else is there where He's away.
- _Hypostatical_, personal.
- 208. THE RESURRECTION POSSIBLE AND PROBABLE.
- For each one body that i' th' earth is sown,
- There's an uprising but of one for one;
- But for each grain that in the ground is thrown,
- Threescore or fourscore spring up thence for one:
- So that the wonder is not half so great
- Of ours as is the rising of the wheat.
- 209. CHRIST'S SUFFERING.
- Justly our dearest Saviour may abhor us,
- Who hath more suffered by us far, than for us.
- 210. SINNERS.
- Sinners confounded are a twofold way,
- Either as when, the learned schoolmen say,
- Men's sins destroyed are when they repent,
- Or when, for sins, men suffer punishment.
- 211. TEMPTATIONS.
- No man is tempted so but may o'ercome,
- If that he has a will to masterdom.
- 212. PITY AND PUNISHMENT.
- God doth embrace the good with love; and gains
- The good by mercy, as the bad by pains.
- 213. GOD'S PRICE AND MAN'S PRICE.
- God bought man here with His heart's blood expense;
- And man sold God here for base thirty pence.
- 214. CHRIST'S ACTION.
- Christ never did so great a work but there
- His human nature did in part appear;
- Or ne'er so mean a piece but men might see
- Therein some beams of His Divinity:
- So that in all He did there did combine
- His human nature and His part divine.
- 215. PREDESTINATION.
- Predestination is the cause alone
- Of many standing, but of fall to none.
- 216. ANOTHER.
- Art thou not destin'd? then with haste go on
- To make thy fair predestination:
- If thou can'st change thy life, God then will please
- To change, or call back, His past sentences.
- 217. SIN.
- Sin never slew a soul unless there went
- Along with it some tempting blandishment.
- 218. ANOTHER.
- Sin is an act so free, that if we shall
- Say 'tis not free, 'tis then no sin at all.
- 219. ANOTHER.
- Sin is the cause of death; and sin's alone
- The cause of God's predestination:
- And from God's prescience of man's sin doth flow
- Our destination to eternal woe.
- 220. PRESCIENCE.
- God's prescience makes none sinful; but th' offence
- Of man's the chief cause of God's prescience.
- 221. CHRIST.
- To all our wounds here, whatsoe'er they be,
- Christ is the one sufficient remedy.
- 222. CHRIST'S INCARNATION.
- Christ took our nature on Him, not that He
- 'Bove all things loved it for the purity:
- No, but He dress'd Him with our human trim,
- Because our flesh stood most in need of Him.
- 223. HEAVEN.
- Heaven is not given for our good works here;
- Yet it is given to the labourer.
- 224. GOD'S KEYS
- God has four keys, which He reserves alone:
- The first of rain; the key of hell next known;
- With the third key He opes and shuts the womb;
- And with the fourth key he unlocks the tomb.
- 225. SIN.
- There's no constraint to do amiss,
- Whereas but one enforcement is.
- 226. ALMS.
- Give unto all, lest he, whom thou deni'st,
- May chance to be no other man but Christ.
- 227. HELL FIRE.
- One only fire has hell; but yet it shall
- Not after one sort there excruciate all:
- But look, how each transgressor onward went
- Boldly in sin, shall feel more punishment.
- 228. TO KEEP A TRUE LENT.
- Is this a fast, to keep
- The larder lean?
- And clean
- From fat of veals and sheep?
- Is it to quit the dish
- Of flesh, yet still
- To fill
- The platter high with fish?
- Is it to fast an hour,
- Or ragg'd to go,
- Or show
- A downcast look and sour?
- No; 'tis a fast to dole
- Thy sheaf of wheat,
- And meat,
- Unto the hungry soul.
- It is to fast from strife,
- From old debate
- And hate;
- To circumcise thy life.
- To show a heart grief-rent;
- To starve thy sin,
- Not bin;
- And that's to keep thy Lent.
- 229. NO TIME IN ETERNITY.
- By hours we all live here; in Heaven is known
- No spring of time, or time's succession.
- 230. HIS MEDITATION UPON DEATH.
- Be those few hours, which I have yet to spend,
- Blest with the meditation of my end:
- Though they be few in number, I'm content:
- If otherwise, I stand indifferent.
- Nor makes it matter Nestor's years to tell,
- If man lives long and if he live not well.
- A multitude of days still heaped on,
- Seldom brings order, but confusion.
- Might I make choice, long life should be withstood;
- Nor would I care how short it were, if good:
- Which to effect, let ev'ry passing-bell
- Possess my thoughts, "Next comes my doleful knell":
- And when the night persuades me to my bed,
- I'll think I'm going to be buried.
- So shall the blankets which come over me
- Present those turfs which once must cover me:
- And with as firm behaviour I will meet
- The sheet I sleep in as my winding-sheet.
- When sleep shall bathe his body in mine eyes,
- I will believe that then my body dies:
- And if I chance to wake and rise thereon,
- I'll have in mind my resurrection,
- Which must produce me to that General Doom,
- To which the peasant, so the prince, must come,
- To hear the Judge give sentence on the throne,
- Without the least hope of affection.
- Tears, at that day, shall make but weak defence,
- When hell and horror fright the conscience.
- Let me, though late, yet at the last, begin
- To shun the least temptation to a sin;
- Though to be tempted be no sin, until
- Man to th' alluring object gives his will.
- Such let my life assure me, when my breath
- Goes thieving from me, I am safe in death;
- Which is the height of comfort: when I fall,
- I rise triumphant in my funeral.
- _Affection_, partiality.
- 231. CLOTHES FOR CONTINUANCE.
- Those garments lasting evermore,
- Are works of mercy to the poor,
- Which neither tettar, time, or moth
- Shall fray that silk or fret this cloth.
- _Tettar_, scab.
- 232. TO GOD.
- Come to me, God; but do not come
- To me as to the General Doom
- In power; or come Thou in that state
- When Thou Thy laws did'st promulgate,
- Whenas the mountain quaked for dread,
- And sullen clouds bound up his head.
- No; lay Thy stately terrors by
- To talk with me familiarly;
- For if Thy thunder-claps I hear,
- I shall less swoon than die for fear.
- Speak Thou of love and I'll reply
- By way of Epithalamy,
- Or sing of mercy and I'll suit
- To it my viol and my lute;
- Thus let Thy lips but love distil,
- Then come, my God, and hap what will.
- _Mountain_, orig. ed. _mountains_.
- 233. THE SOUL.
- When once the soul has lost her way,
- O then how restless does she stray!
- And having not her God for light,
- How does she err in endless night!
- 234. THE JUDGMENT-DAY.
- In doing justice God shall then be known,
- Who showing mercy here, few prized, or none.
- 235. SUFFERINGS.
- We merit all we suffer, and by far
- More stripes than God lays on the sufferer.
- 236. PAIN AND PLEASURE.
- God suffers not His saints and servants dear
- To have continual pain or pleasure here;
- But look how night succeeds the day, so He
- Gives them by turns their grief and jollity.
- 237. GOD'S PRESENCE.
- God is all-present to whate'er we do,
- And as all-present, so all-filling too.
- 238. ANOTHER.
- That there's a God we all do know,
- But what God is we cannot show.
- 239. THE POOR MAN'S PART.
- Tell me, rich man, for what intent
- Thou load'st with gold thy vestiment?
- Whenas the poor cry out: To us
- Belongs all gold superfluous.
- 240. THE RIGHT HAND.
- God has a right hand, but is quite bereft
- Of that which we do nominate the left.
- 241. THE STAFF AND ROD.
- Two instruments belong unto our God:
- The one a staff is and the next a rod;
- That if the twig should chance too much to smart,
- The staff might come to play the friendly part.
- 242. GOD SPARING IN SCOURGING.
- God still rewards us more than our desert;
- But when He strikes, He quarter-acts His part.
- 243. CONFESSION.
- Confession twofold is, as Austin says,
- The first of sin is, and the next of praise.
- If ill it goes with thee, thy faults confess:
- If well, then chant God's praise with cheerfulness.
- 244. GOD'S DESCENT.
- God is then said for to descend, when He
- Doth here on earth some thing of novity;
- As when in human nature He works more
- Than ever yet the like was done before.
- 245. NO COMING TO GOD WITHOUT CHRIST.
- Good and great God! how should I fear
- To come to Thee if Christ not there!
- Could I but think He would not be
- Present to plead my cause for me,
- To hell I'd rather run than I
- Would see Thy face and He not by.
- 246. ANOTHER TO GOD.
- Though Thou be'st all that active love
- Which heats those ravished souls above;
- And though all joys spring from the glance
- Of Thy most winning countenance;
- Yet sour and grim Thou'dst seem to me
- If through my Christ I saw not Thee.
- 247. THE RESURRECTION.
- That Christ did die, the pagan saith;
- But that He rose, that's Christians' faith.
- 248. CO-HEIRS.
- We are co-heirs with Christ; nor shall His own
- Heirship be less by our adoption.
- The number here of heirs shall from the state
- Of His great birthright nothing derogate.
- 249. THE NUMBER OF TWO.
- God hates the dual number, being known
- The luckless number of division;
- And when He bless'd each sev'ral day whereon
- He did His curious operation,
- 'Tis never read there, as the fathers say,
- God bless'd His work done on the second day;
- Wherefore two prayers ought not to be said,
- Or by ourselves, or from the pulpit read.
- 250. HARDENING OF HEARTS.
- God's said our hearts to harden then,
- Whenas His grace not supples men.
- 251. THE ROSE.
- Before man's fall the rose was born,
- St. Ambrose says, without the thorn;
- But for man's fault then was the thorn
- Without the fragrant rose-bud born;
- But ne'er the rose without the thorn.
- 252. GOD'S TIME MUST END OUR TROUBLE.
- God doth not promise here to man that He
- Will free him quickly from his misery;
- But in His own time, and when He thinks fit,
- Then He will give a happy end to it.
- 253. BAPTISM.
- The strength of baptism that's within,
- It saves the soul by drowning sin.
- 254. GOLD AND FRANKINCENSE.
- Gold serves for tribute to the king,
- The frankincense for God's off'ring.
- 255. TO GOD.
- God, who me gives a will for to repent,
- Will add a power to keep me innocent;
- That I shall ne'er that trespass recommit
- When I have done true penance here for it.
- 256. THE CHEWING THE CUD.
- When well we speak and nothing do that's good,
- We not divide the hoof, but chew the cud;
- But when good words by good works have their proof,
- We then both chew the cud and cleave the hoof.
- 257. CHRIST'S TWOFOLD COMING.
- Thy former coming was to cure
- My soul's most desp'rate calenture;
- Thy second advent, that must be
- To heal my earth's infirmity.
- _Calenture_, delirium caused by excessive heat.
- 258. TO GOD, HIS GIFT.
- As my little pot doth boil,
- We will keep this level-coil,
- That a wave and I will bring
- To my God a heave-offering.
- _Level-coil_, the old Christmas game of changing chairs; to "keep
- level-coil" means to change about.
- 259. GOD'S ANGER.
- God can't be wrathful: but we may conclude
- Wrathful He may be by similitude:
- God's wrathful said to be, when He doth do
- That without wrath which wrath doth force us to.
- 260. GOD'S COMMANDS.
- In God's commands ne'er ask the reason why;
- Let thy obedience be the best reply.
- 261. TO GOD.
- If I have played the truant, or have here
- Failed in my part, oh! Thou that art my dear,
- My mild, my loving tutor, Lord and God!
- Correct my errors gently with Thy rod.
- I know that faults will many here be found,
- But where sin swells there let Thy grace abound.
- 262. TO GOD.
- The work is done; now let my laurel be
- Given by none but by Thyself to me:
- That done, with honour Thou dost me create
- Thy poet, and Thy prophet Laureate.
- 263. GOOD FRIDAY: REX TRAGICUS; OR, CHRIST GOING TO HIS CROSS.
- Put off Thy robe of purple, then go on
- To the sad place of execution:
- Thine hour is come, and the tormentor stands
- Ready to pierce Thy tender feet and hands.
- Long before this, the base, the dull, the rude,
- Th' inconstant and unpurged multitude
- Yawn for Thy coming; some ere this time cry,
- How He defers, how loath He is to die!
- Amongst this scum, the soldier with his spear
- And that sour fellow with his vinegar,
- His sponge, and stick, do ask why Thou dost stay;
- So do the scurf and bran too. Go Thy way,
- Thy way, Thou guiltless man, and satisfy
- By Thine approach each their beholding eye.
- Not as a thief shalt Thou ascend the mount,
- But like a person of some high account;
- The Cross shall be Thy stage, and Thou shalt there
- The spacious field have for Thy theatre.
- Thou art that Roscius and that marked-out man
- That must this day act the tragedian
- To wonder and affrightment: Thou art He
- Whom all the flux of nations comes to see,
- Not those poor thieves that act their parts with Thee;
- Those act without regard, when once a king
- And God, as Thou art, comes to suffering.
- No, no; this scene from Thee takes life, and sense,
- And soul, and spirit, plot and excellence.
- Why then, begin, great King! ascend Thy throne,
- And thence proceed to act Thy Passion
- To such an height, to such a period raised,
- As hell, and earth, and heav'n may stand amazed.
- God and good angels guide Thee; and so bless
- Thee in Thy several parts of bitterness,
- That those who see Thee nail'd unto the tree
- May, though they scorn Thee, praise and pity Thee.
- And we, Thy lovers, while we see Thee keep
- The laws of action, will both sigh and weep,
- And bring our spices to embalm Thee dead;
- That done, we'll see Thee sweetly buried.
- _Scurf and bran_, the rabble.
- 264. HIS WORDS TO CHRIST GOING TO THE CROSS.
- When Thou wast taken, Lord, I oft have read,
- All Thy disciples Thee forsook and fled.
- Let their example not a pattern be
- For me to fly, but now to follow Thee.
- 265. ANOTHER TO HIS SAVIOUR.
- If Thou be'st taken, God forbid
- I fly from Thee, as others did:
- But if Thou wilt so honour me
- As to accept my company,
- I'll follow Thee, hap hap what shall,
- Both to the judge and judgment hall:
- And, if I see Thee posted there,
- To be all-flayed with whipping-cheer,
- I'll take my share; or else, my God,
- Thy stripes I'll kiss, or burn the rod.
- 266. HIS SAVIOUR'S WORDS GOING TO THE CROSS.
- Have, have ye no regard, all ye
- Who pass this way, to pity Me,
- Who am a man of misery!
- A man both bruis'd, and broke, and one
- Who suffers not here for Mine own,
- But for My friends' transgression!
- Ah! Sion's daughters, do not fear
- The cross, the cords, the nails, the spear,
- The myrrh, the gall, the vinegar;
- For Christ, your loving Saviour, hath
- Drunk up the wine of God's fierce wrath;
- Only there's left a little froth,
- Less for to taste than for to show
- What bitter cups had been your due,
- Had He not drank them up for you.
- 267. HIS ANTHEM TO CHRIST ON THE CROSS.
- When I behold Thee, almost slain,
- With one and all parts full of pain:
- When I Thy gentle heart do see
- Pierced through and dropping blood for me,
- I'll call, and cry out, thanks to Thee.
- _Vers._ But yet it wounds my soul to think
- That for my sin Thou, Thou must drink,
- Even Thou alone, the bitter cup
- Of fury and of vengeance up.
- _Chor._ Lord, I'll not see Thee to drink all
- The vinegar, the myrrh, the gall:
- _Vers. Chor._ But I will sip a little wine;
- Which done, Lord, say: The rest is Mine.
- 268.
- This crosstree here
- Doth Jesus bear,
- Who sweet'ned first
- The death accurs'd.
- Here all things ready are, make haste, make haste away;
- For long this work will be, and very short this day.
- Why then, go on to act: here's wonders to be done
- Before the last least sand of Thy ninth hour be run;
- Or ere dark clouds do dull or dead the mid-day's sun.
- Act when Thou wilt,
- Blood will be spilt;
- Pure balm, that shall
- Bring health to all.
- Why then, begin
- To pour first in
- Some drops of wine,
- Instead of brine,
- To search the wound
- So long unsound:
- And, when that's done,
- Let oil next run
- To cure the sore
- Sin made before.
- And O! dear Christ,
- E'en as Thou di'st,
- Look down, and see
- Us weep for Thee.
- And tho', love knows,
- Thy dreadful woes
- We cannot ease,
- Yet do Thou please,
- Who mercy art,
- T' accept each heart
- That gladly would
- Help if it could.
- Meanwhile let me,
- Beneath this tree,
- This honour have,
- To make my grave.
- 269. TO HIS SAVIOUR'S SEPULCHRE: HIS DEVOTION.
- Hail, holy and all-honour'd tomb,
- By no ill haunted; here I come,
- With shoes put off, to tread thy room.
- I'll not profane by soil of sin
- Thy door as I do enter in;
- For I have washed both hand and heart,
- This, that, and every other part,
- So that I dare, with far less fear
- Than full affection, enter here.
- Thus, thus I come to kiss Thy stone
- With a warm lip and solemn one:
- And as I kiss I'll here and there
- Dress Thee with flow'ry diaper.
- How sweet this place is! as from hence
- Flowed all Panchaia's frankincense;
- Or rich Arabia did commix,
- Here, all her rare aromatics.
- Let me live ever here, and stir
- No one step from this sepulchre.
- Ravish'd I am! and down I lie
- Confused in this brave ecstasy.
- Here let me rest; and let me have
- This for my heaven that was Thy grave:
- And, coveting no higher sphere,
- I'll my eternity spend here.
- _Panchaia_, a fabulous spice island in the Erythrean Sea.
- 270. HIS OFFERING, WITH THE REST, AT THE SEPULCHRE.
- To join with them who here confer
- Gifts to my Saviour's sepulchre,
- Devotion bids me hither bring
- Somewhat for my thank-offering.
- Lo! thus I bring a virgin flower,
- To dress my Maiden Saviour.
- 271. HIS COMING TO THE SEPULCHRE.
- Hence they have borne my Lord; behold! the stone
- Is rolled away and my sweet Saviour's gone.
- Tell me, white angel, what is now become
- Of Him we lately sealed up in this tomb?
- Is He, from hence, gone to the shades beneath,
- To vanquish hell as here He conquered death?
- If so, I'll thither follow without fear,
- And live in hell if that my Christ stays there.
- Of all the good things whatsoe'er we do,
- God is the ΑΡΧΗ, and the ΤΕΛΟΣ too.
- POEMS
- NOT INCLUDED IN _HESPERIDES_.
- THE DESCRIPTION OF A WOMAN.
- Whose head, befringed with bescattered tresses,
- Shows like Apollo's when the morn he dresses,[B]
- Or like Aurora when with pearl she sets
- Her long, dishevell'd, rose-crown'd trammelets:
- Her forehead smooth, full, polish'd, bright and high
- Bears in itself a graceful majesty,
- Under the which two crawling eyebrows twine
- Like to the tendrils of a flatt'ring vine,
- Under whose shade two starry sparkling eyes
- Are beautifi'd with fair fring'd canopies.
- Her comely nose, with uniformal grace,
- Like purest white, stands in the middle place,
- Parting the pair, as we may well suppose.
- Each cheek resembling still a damask rose,
- Which like a garden manifestly show
- How roses, lilies, and carnations grow,
- Which sweetly mixed both with white and red,
- Like rose leaves, white and red, seem[C] mingled.
- Then nature for a sweet allurement sets
- Two smelling, swelling, bashful cherrylets,
- The which with ruby redness being tipp'd,
- Do speak a virgin, merry, cherry-lipp'd.
- Over the which a neat, sweet skin is drawn,
- Which makes them show like roses under lawn:
- These be the ruby portals, and divine,
- Which ope themselves to show a holy shrine
- Whose breath is rich perfume, that to the sense
- Smells like the burn'd Sabean frankincense:
- In which the tongue, though but a member small,
- Stands guarded with a rosy-hilly wall;
- And her white teeth, which in the gums are set
- Like pearl and gold, make one rich cabinet.
- Next doth her chin with dimpled beauty strive
- For his white, plump, and smooth prerogative;
- At whose fair top, to please the sight, there grows
- The fairest[D] image of a blushing rose,
- Mov'd by the chin, whose motion causeth this,
- That both her lips do part, do meet, do kiss;
- Her ears, which like two labyrinths are plac'd
- On either side, with rich rare jewels grac'd,
- Moving a question whether that by them
- The gem is grac'd, or they grac'd by the gem.
- But the foundation of the architect
- Is the swan-staining, fair, rare, stately neck
- Which with ambitious humbleness stands under,
- Bearing aloft this rich, round world of wonder.
- Her breast, a place for beauty's throne most fit,
- Bears up two globes where love and pleasure sit,
- Which, headed with two rich, round rubies, show
- Like wanton rosebuds growing out of snow;
- And in the milky valley that's between
- Sits Cupid, kissing of his mother queen,
- Fingering the paps that feel like sieved silk,
- And press'd a little they will weep pure milk.
- Then comes the belly, seated next below,
- Like a fair mountain in Riphean snow,
- Where Nature, in a whiteness without spot,
- Hath in the middle tied a Gordian knot.
- Now love invites me to survey her thighs,
- Swelling in likeness like two crystal skies,
- Which to the knees by Nature fastened on,
- Derive their ever well 'greed motion.
- Her legs with two clear calves, like silver tri'd,
- Kindly swell up with little pretty pride,
- Leaving a distance for the comely[E] small
- To beautify the leg and foot withal.
- Then lowly, yet most lovely stand the feet,
- Round, short and clear, like pounded spices sweet,
- And whatsoever thing they tread upon
- They make it scent like bruised cinnamon.
- The lovely shoulders now allure the eye
- To see two tablets of pure ivory
- From which two arms like branches seem to spread
- With tender rind[F] and silver coloured,
- With little hands and fingers long and small
- To grace a lute, a viol, virginal.
- In length each finger doth his next excel,
- Each richly headed with a pearly shell.
- Thus every part in contrariety
- Meet in the whole and make a harmony,
- As divers strings do singly disagree,
- But form'd by number make sweet melody.
- [B] MS. blesses.
- [C] MS. lye.
- [D] MS. blessed.
- [E] MS. beauteous.
- [F] W.R. vein'd.
- MR. HERRICK: HIS DAUGHTER'S DOWRY.
- Ere I go hence and be no more
- Seen to the world, I'll give the score
- I owe unto a female child,
- And that is this, a verse enstyled
- My daughter's dowry; having which,
- I'll leave thee then completely rich.
- Instead of gold, pearl, rubies, bonds
- Long forfeit, pawned diamonds
- Or antique pledges, house or land,
- I give thee this that shall withstand
- The blow of ruin and of chance.
- These hurt not thine inheritance,
- For 'tis fee simple and no rent
- Thou fortune ow'st for tenement.
- However after times will praise,
- This portion, my prophetic bays,
- Cannot deliver up to th' rust,
- Yet I keep peaceful in my dust.
- As for thy birth and better seeds
- (Those which must grow to virtuous deeds),
- Thou didst derive from that old stem
- (Love and mercy cherish them),
- Which like a vestal virgin ply
- With holy fire lest that it die.
- Grow up with milder laws to know
- At what time to say aye or no;
- Let manners teach thee where to be
- More comely flowing, where less free.
- These bring thy husband, like to those
- Old coins and medals we expose
- To th' show, but never part with. Next,
- As in a more conspicuous text,
- Thy forehead, let therein be sign'd
- The maiden candour of thy mind;
- And under it two chaste-born spies
- To bar out bold adulteries,
- For through these optics fly the darts
- Of lust which set on fire our hearts.
- On either side of these quick ears
- There must be plac'd, for seasoned fears
- Which sweeten love, yet ne'er come nigh
- The plague of wilder jealousy.
- Then let each cheek of thine entice
- His soul as to a bed of spice
- Where he may roll and lose his sense,
- As in a bed of frankincense.
- A lip enkindled with that coal
- With which love chafes and warms the soul,
- Bring to him next, and in it show
- Love's cherries from such fires grow
- And have their harvest, which must stand
- The gathering of the lip, not hand;
- Then unto these be it thy care
- To clothe thy words in gentle air,
- That smooth as oil, sweet, soft and clean
- As is the childish bloom of bean,
- They may fall down and stroke, as the
- Beams of the sun the peaceful sea.
- With hands as smooth as mercy's bring
- Him for his better cherishing,
- That when thou dost his neck ensnare,
- Or with thy wrist, or flattering hair,
- He may, a prisoner, there descry
- Bondage more loved than liberty.
- A nature so well formed, so wrought
- To calm and tempest, let be brought
- With thee, that should he but incline
- To roughness, clasp him like a vine,
- Or like as wool meets steel, give way
- Unto the passion, not to stay;
- Wrath, if resisted, over-boils,
- If not, it dies or else recoils.
- And lastly, see you bring to him
- Somewhat peculiar to each limb;
- And I charge thee to be known
- By n'other face but by thine own.
- Let it in love's name be kept sleek,
- Yet to be found when he shall seek
- It, and not instead of saint
- Give up his worth unto the paint;
- For, trust me, girl, she over-does
- Who by a double proxy woos.
- But lest I should forget his bed,
- Be sure thou bring a maidenhead.
- That is a margarite, which lost,
- Thou bring'st unto his bed a frost
- Or a cold poison, which his blood
- Benumbs like the forgetful flood.
- Now for some jewels to supply
- The want of earrings' bravery
- For public eyes; take only these
- Ne'er travelled for beyond the seas;
- They're nobly home-bred, yet have price
- Beyond the far-fet merchandise:
- Obedience, wise distrust, peace, shy
- Distance and sweet urbanity;
- Safe modesty, lov'd patience, fear
- Of offending, temperance, dear
- Constancy, bashfulness and all
- The virtues less or cardinal,
- Take with my blessing, and go forth
- Enjewelled with thy native worth.
- And now if there a man be found
- That looks for such prepared ground,
- Let him, but with indifferent skill,
- So good a soil bestock and till;
- He may ere long have such a wife
- Nourish in's breast a tree of life.
- MR. ROBERT HERRICK: HIS FAREWELL UNTO POETRY.
- I have beheld two lovers in a night
- Hatched o'er with moonshine from their stolen delight
- (When this to that, and that to this, had given
- A kiss to such a jewel of the heaven,
- Or while that each from other's breath did drink
- Health to the rose, the violet, or pink),
- Call'd on the sudden by the jealous mother,
- Some stricter mistress or suspicious other,
- Urging divorcement (worse than death to these)
- By the soon jingling of some sleepy keys,
- Part with a hasty kiss; and in that show
- How stay they would, yet forced they are to go.
- Even such are we, and in our parting do
- No otherwise than as those former two
- Natures like ours, we who have spent our time
- Both from the morning to the evening chime.
- Nay, till the bellman of the night had tolled
- Past noon of night, yet wear the hours not old
- Nor dulled with iron sleep, but have outworn
- The fresh and fairest nourish of the morn
- With flame and rapture; drinking to the odd
- Number of nine which makes us full with God,
- And in that mystic frenzy we have hurled,
- As with a tempest, nature through the world,
- And in a whirlwind twirl'd her home, aghast
- At that which in her ecstasy had past;
- Thus crowned with rosebuds, sack, thou mad'st me fly
- Like fire-drakes, yet didst me no harm thereby.
- O thou almighty nature, who didst give
- True heat wherewith humanity doth live
- Beyond its stinted circle, giving food,
- White fame and resurrection to the good;
- Shoring them up 'bove ruin till the doom,
- The general April of the world doth come
- That makes all equal. Many thousands should,
- Were't not for thee, have crumbled into mould,
- And with their serecloths rotted, not to show
- Whether the world such spirits had or no,
- Whereas by thee those and a million since,
- Nor fate, nor envy, can their fames convince.
- Homer, Musæus, Ovid, Maro, more
- Of those godful prophets long before
- Held their eternal fires, and ours of late
- (Thy mercy helping) shall resist strong fate,
- Nor stoop to the centre, but survive as long
- As fame or rumour hath or trump or tongue;
- But unto me be only hoarse, since now
- (Heaven and my soul bear record of my vow)
- I my desires screw from thee, and direct
- Them and my thoughts to that sublim'd respect
- And conscience unto priesthood; 'tis not need
- (The scarecrow unto mankind) that doth breed
- Wiser conclusions in me, since I know
- I've more to bear my charge than way to go,
- Or had I not, I'd stop the spreading itch
- Of craving more, so in conceit be rich;
- But 'tis the God of Nature who intends
- And shapes my function for more glorious ends.
- Kiss, so depart, yet stay a while to see
- The lines of sorrow that lie drawn in me
- In speech, in picture; no otherwise than when,
- Judgment and death denounced 'gainst guilty men,
- Each takes a weeping farewell, racked in mind
- With joys before and pleasures left behind;
- Shaking the head, whilst each to each doth mourn,
- With thought they go whence they must ne'er return.
- So with like looks, as once the ministrel
- Cast, leading his Eurydice through hell,
- I strike thy love, and greedily pursue
- Thee with mine eyes or in or out of view.
- So looked the Grecian orator when sent
- From's native country into banishment,
- Throwing his eyeballs backward to survey
- The smoke of his beloved Attica;
- So Tully looked when from the breasts of Rome
- The sad soul went, not with his love, but doom,
- Shooting his eyedarts 'gainst it to surprise
- It, or to draw the city to his eyes.
- Such is my parting with thee, and to prove
- There was not varnish only in my love,
- But substance, lo! receive this pearly tear
- Frozen with grief and place it in thine ear.
- Then part in name of peace, and softly on
- With numerous feet to hoofy Helicon;
- And when thou art upon that forked hill
- Amongst the thrice three sacred virgins, fill
- A full-brimm'd bowl of fury and of rage,
- And quaff it to the prophets of our age;
- When drunk with rapture curse the blind and lame,
- Base ballad-mongers who usurp thy name
- And foul thy altar; charm some into frogs,
- Some to be rats, and others to be hogs;
- Into the loathsom'st shapes thou canst devise
- To make fools hate them, only by disguise;
- Thus with a kiss of warmth and love I part
- Not so, but that some relic in my heart
- Shall stand for ever, though I do address
- Chiefly myself to what I must profess.
- Know yet, rare soul, when my diviner muse
- Shall want a handmaid (as she oft will use),
- Be ready, thou for me, to wait upon her,
- Though as a servant, yet a maid of honour.
- The crown of duty is our duty: well
- Doing's the fruit of doing well. Farewell.
- _Shoring_, copies _soaring_.
- A CAROL PRESENTED TO DR. WILLIAMS, BISHOP OF LINCOLN AS A NEW-YEAR'S
- GIFT.
- Fly hence, pale care, no more remember
- Past sorrows with the fled December,
- But let each pleasant cheek appear
- Smooth as the childhood of the year,
- And sing a carol here.
- 'Twas brave, 'twas brave, could we command the hand
- Of youth's swift watch to stand
- As you have done your day;
- Then should we not decay.
- But all we wither, and our light
- Is spilt in everlasting night,
- Whenas your sight
- Shows like the heavens above the moon,
- Like an eternal noon
- That sees no setting sun.
- Keep up those flames, and though you shroud
- Awhile your forehead in a cloud,
- Do it like the sun to write
- In the air a greater text of light;
- Welcome to all our vows,
- And since you pay
- To us this day
- So long desir'd,
- See we have fir'd
- Our holy spikenard, and there's none
- But brings his stick of cinnamon,
- His eager eye or smoother smile,
- And lays it gently on the pile,
- Which thus enkindled, we invoke
- Your name amidst the sacred smoke.
- _Chorus._ Come then, great Lord.
- And see our altar burn
- With love of your return,
- And not a man here but consumes
- His soul to glad you in perfumes.
- SONG. HIS MISTRESS TO HIM AT HIS FAREWELL.
- You may vow I'll not forget
- To pay the debt
- Which to thy memory stands as due
- As faith can seal it you;
- Take then tribute of my tears,
- So long as I have fears
- To prompt me I shall ever
- Languish and look, but thy return see never.
- Oh then to lessen my despair
- Print thy lips into the air,
- So by this
- Means I may kiss thy kiss
- Whenas some kind
- Wind
- Shall hither waft it, and in lieu
- My lips shall send a 1000 back to you.
- UPON PARTING.
- Go hence away, and in thy parting know
- 'Tis not my voice but Heaven's that bids thee go;
- Spring hence thy faith, nor think it ill desert
- I find in thee that makes me thus to part.
- But voice of fame, and voice of Heaven have thundered
- We both were lost, if both of us not sundered.
- Fold now thine arms, and in thy last look rear
- One sigh of love, and cool it with a tear.
- Since part we must, let's kiss; that done, retire
- With as cold frost as erst we met with fire;
- With such white vows as fate can ne'er dissever,
- But truth knit fast; and so, farewell for ever.
- UPON MASTER FLETCHER'S INCOMPARABLE PLAYS.
- Apollo sings, his harp resounds: give room,
- For now behold the golden pomp is come,
- Thy pomp of plays which thousands come to see
- With admiration both of them and thee.
- O volume! worthy, leaf by leaf and cover,
- To be with juice of cedar wash'd all over;
- Here words with lines and lines with scenes consent
- To raise an act to full astonishment;
- Here melting numbers, words of power to move
- Young men to swoon and maids to die for love.
- _Love lies a-bleeding_ here, _Evadne_, there
- Swells with brave rage, yet comely everywhere;
- Here's _A mad lover_, there that high design
- Of _King and no King_, and the rare plot thine.
- So that whene'er we circumvolve our eyes,
- Such rich, such fresh, such sweet varieties
- Ravish our spirits, that entranc'd we see
- None writes love's passion in the world like thee.
- _THE NEW CHARON:_
- UPON THE DEATH OF HENRY, LORD HASTINGS.
- _The musical part being set by Mr. Henry Lawes._
- THE SPEAKERS,
- CHARON AND EUCOSMIA.
- _Euc._ Charon, O Charon, draw thy boat to th' shore,
- And to thy many take in one soul more.
- _Cha._ Who calls? who calls? _Euc._ One overwhelm'd with ruth;
- Have pity either on my tears or youth,
- And take me in who am in deep distress;
- But first cast off thy wonted churlishness.
- _Cha._ I will be gentle as that air which yields
- A breath of balm along the Elysian fields.
- Speak, what art thou? _Euc_. One once that had a lover,
- Than which thyself ne'er wafted sweeter over.
- He was---- _Cha._ Say what? _Euc._ Ah me, my woes are deep.
- _Cha._ Prithee relate, while I give ear and weep.
- _Euc._ He was a Hastings; and that one name has
- In it all good that is, and ever was.
- He was my life, my love, my joy, but died
- Some hours before I should have been his bride.
- _Chorus._ Thus, thus the gods celestial still decree,
- For human joy contingent misery.
- _Euc._ The hallowed tapers all prepared were,
- And Hymen call'd to bless the rites. _Cha._ Stop there.
- _Euc._ Great are my woes. _Cha._ And great must that grief be
- That makes grim Charon thus to pity thee.
- But now come in. _Euc._ More let me yet relate.
- _Cha._ I cannot stay; more souls for waftage wait
- And I must hence. _Euc._ Yet let me thus much know,
- Departing hence, where good and bad souls go?
- _Cha._ Those souls which ne'er were drench'd in pleasure's stream,
- The fields of Pluto are reserv'd for them;
- Where, dress'd with garlands, there they walk the ground
- Whose blessed youth with endless flowers is crown'd.
- But such as have been drown'd in this wild sea,
- For those is kept the Gulf of Hecate,
- Where with their own contagion they are fed,
- And there do punish and are punished.
- This known, the rest of thy sad story tell
- When on the flood that nine times circles hell.
- _Chorus._ We sail along to visit mortals never;
- But there to live where love shall last for ever.
- EPITAPH ON THE TOMB OF SIR EDWARD GILES AND HIS WIFE IN THE SOUTH AISLE
- OF DEAN PRIOR CHURCH, DEVON.
- No trust to metals nor to marbles, when
- These have their fate and wear away as men;
- Times, titles, trophies may be lost and spent,
- But virtue rears the eternal monument.
- What more than these can tombs or tombstones pay?
- But here's the sunset of a tedious day:
- These two asleep are: I'll but be undress'd
- And so to bed: pray wish us all good rest.
- NOTES.
- NOTES.
- 569. _And of any wood ye see, You can make a Mercury._ Pythagoras
- allegorically said that Mercury's statue could not be made of every sort
- of wood: cp. Rabelais, iv. 62.
- 575. _The Apparition of his Mistress calling him to Elysium._ An earlier
- version of this poem was printed in the 1640 edition of Shakespeare's
- poems under the title, _His Mistris Shade_, having been licensed for
- separate publication at Stationers' Hall the previous year. The variants
- are numerous, and some of them important. l. 1, _of silver_ for _with
- silv'rie_; l. 3, on the Banks for _in the Meads_; l. 8, _Spikenard
- through_ for _Storax from_; l. 10 reads: "_Of mellow_ Apples, _ripened_
- Plums _and_ Pears": l. 17, the order of "naked younglings, handsome
- striplings" is reversed; in place of l. 20 we have:--
- "So soon as each his dangling locks hath crown'd
- With Rosie Chaplets, Lilies, Pansies red,
- Soft Saffron Circles to perfume the head";
- l. 23, _to_ for _too unto_; l. 24, _their_ for _our_; ll. 29, 30:--
- "Unto the Prince of Shades, whom once his Pen
- Entituled the Grecian Prince of Men";
- l. 31, _thereupon_ for _and that done_; l. 36, _render him true_ for
- _show him truly_; l. 37, _will_ for _shall_; l. 38, "Where both may
- _laugh_, both drink, _both_ rage together"; l. 48, _Amphitheatre_ for
- _spacious theatre_; l. 49, _synod_ for _glories_, followed by:--
- "crown'd with sacred Bays
- And flatt'ring _joy, we'll have to_ recite their plays,
- _Shakespeare and Beamond_, Swans to whom _the Spheres_
- Listen while they _call back the former year[s]
- To teach the truth of scenes_, and more for thee,
- There yet remains, _brave soul_, than thou can'st see,"
- etc.;
- l. 56, _illustrious for capacious_; l. 57, _shall be_ for _now is_
- [Jonson died 1637]; ll. 59-61:--
- "To be of that high Hierarchy where none
- But brave souls take illumination
- Immediately from heaven; but hark the cock," etc.;
- l. 62, _feel_ for _see_; l. 63, _through_ for _from_.
- 579. _My love will fit each history._ Cp. Ovid, _Amor._ II. iv. 44:
- Omnibus historiis se meus aptat amor.
- 580. _The sweets of love are mixed with tears._ Cp. Propert. I. xii. 16:
- Nonnihil adspersis gaudet Amor lacrimis.
- 583. _Whom this morn sees most fortunate_, etc. Seneca, _Thyest._ 613:
- Quem dies vidit veniens superbum Hunc dies vidit fugiens jacentem.
- 586. _Night hides our thefts_, etc. Ovid, _Ars Am._ i. 249:--
- Nocte latent mendæ vitioque ignoscitur omni,
- Horaque formosam quamlibet illa facit.
- 590. _To his brother-in-law, Master John Wingfield._ Of Brantham,
- Suffolk, husband of the poet's sister, Mercy. See 818, and Sketch of
- Herrick's Life in vol. i.
- 599. _Upon Lucia._ Cp. "The Resolution" in _Speculum Amantis_, ed. A. H.
- Bullen.
- 604. _Old Religion._ Certainly not Roman Catholicism, though Jonson was
- a Catholic. Herrick uses the noun and its adjective rather curiously of
- the dead: cp. 82, "To the reverend shade of his religious Father," and
- 138, "When thou shalt laugh at my religious dust". There may be
- something of this use here, or we may refer to his ancient cult of
- Jonson. But the use of the phrase in 870 makes the exact shade of
- meaning difficult to fix.
- 605. _Riches to be but burdens to the mind._ Seneca _De Provid._ 6:
- Democritus divitias projecit, onus illas bonae mentis existimans.
- 607. _Who covets more is evermore a slave._ Hor. I. _Ep._ x. 41: Serviet
- aeternum qui parvo nesciet uti.
- 615. _No Wrath of Men._ Cp. Hor. _Od._ III. iii. 1-8.
- 616. _To the Maids to walk abroad._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_,
- 1650, under the title: _Abroad with the Maids_.
- 618. _Mistress Elizabeth Lee, now Lady Tracy._ Elizabeth, daughter of
- Thomas, first Lord Leigh of Stoneleigh, in Warwickshire, married John,
- third Viscount Tracy. She survived her husband two years, and died in
- 1688.
- 624. _Poets._ _Wantons we are_, etc. From Ovid, _Trist._ ii. 353-4:--
- Crede mihi, mores distant a carmine nostri:
- Vita verecunda est, Musa jocosa, mihi.
- 625. _'Tis cowardice to bite the buried._ Cp. Ben Jonson, _The
- Poetaster_, I. 1: "Envy the living, not the dead, doth bite"; perhaps
- from Ovid, _Am._ I. xv. 39: Pascitur in vivis livor; post fata quiescit.
- 626. _Noble Westmoreland._ See Note to 112.
- _Gallant Newark._ Robert Pierrepoint was created Viscount Newark in 1627
- and Earl of Kingston in the following year. But Herrick is perhaps
- addressing his son, Henry Pierrepoint, afterwards Marquis of Dorchester
- (see 962 and Note), who during the first Earl of Kingston's life would
- presumably have borne his second title.
- 633. _Sweet words must nourish soft and gentle love._ Ovid, _Ars Am._
- ii. 152: Dulcibus est verbis mollis alendus amor.
- 639. _Fates revolve no flax they've spun._ Seneca, _Herc. Fur._ 1812:
- Duræ peragunt pensa sorores, Nec sua retro fila revolvunt.
- 642. _Palms ... gems._ A Latinism. Cp. Ovid, _Fasti_, i. 152: Et nova de
- gravido palmite gemma tumet.
- 645. _Upon Tears._ Cp. S. Bernard: Pœnitentium lacrimæ vinum angelorum.
- 649. _Upon Lucy._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, under the title,
- _On Betty_.
- 653. _To th' number five or nine._ Probably Herrick is mistaking the
- references in Greek and Latin poets to the mixing of their wine and
- water (_e.g._, Hor. _Od._ III. xix. 11-17) for the drinking of so many
- cups.
- 654. _Long-looked-for comes at last._ Cp. G. Herbert, preface to Sibbes'
- Funeral Sermon on Sir Thomas Crew (1638): "That ancient adage, 'Quod
- differtur non aufertur' for 'Long-looked-for comes at last'".
- 655. _The morrow's life too late is_, etc. Mart. I. xvi. 12: Sera nimis
- vita est crastina: vive hodie.
- 662. _O happy life_, etc. From Virg. _Georg._ ii. 458-9:--
- O fortunatos nimium sua si bona norint
- Agricolas.
- It is not uncharacteristic that these fervid praises of country life
- were left unfinished.
- 664. _Arthur Bartly._ Not yet identified.
- 665. _Let her Lucrece all day be._ From Martial XI. civ. 21, 22:--
- Lucretia toto
- Sis licet usque die: Laida nocte volo.
- _Neither will Famish me, nor overfill._ Mart. I. lviii. 4: Nec volo quod
- cruciat, nec volo quod satiat.
- 667. _Be't for my Bridal or my Burial._ Cp. Brand, vol. ii., and Coles'
- _Introduction to the Knowledge of Plants_: "Rosemary and bayes are used
- by the commons both at funerals and weddings".
- 672. _Kings ought to be more lov'd than fear'd._ Seneca, _Octavia_, 459:
- Decet timeri Cæsarem. At plus diligi.
- 673. _To Mr. Denham, on his prospective poem._ Sir John Denham
- published in 1642 his _Cooper's Hill_, a poem on the view over the
- Thames towards London, from a hill near Windsor.
- 675. _Their fashion is, but to say no_, etc. Cp. Montaigne's _Essais_,
- II. 3, p. 51; Florio's tr. p. 207: "Let it suffice that in doing it they
- say no and take it".
- 676. _Love is maintained by wealth._ Ovid, _Rem. Am._ 746: Divitiis
- alitur luxuriosus amor.
- 679. _Nero commanded, but withdrew his eyes._ Tacit. _Agric._ 45: Nero
- subtraxit oculos, jussitque scelera, non spectavit.
- 683. _But a just measure both of Heat and Cold._ This is a version of
- the medieval doctrine of the four humours. So Chaucer says of his Doctor
- of Physic:--
- "He knew the cause of every maladye,
- Were it of hoot or cold, or moyste, or drye,
- And where engendered and of what humour".
- 684. _'Gainst thou go'st a-mothering._ The Epistle for Mid-Lent Sunday
- was from Galat. iv. 21, etc., and contained the words: "Jerusalem, quæ
- est Mater nostra". On that Sunday people made offerings at their Mother
- Church. After the Reformation the natural mother was substituted for the
- spiritual, and the day was set apart for visiting relations. Excellent
- simnel cakes (Low Lat., _siminellus_, fine flour) are still made in the
- North, where the current derivation of the word is from _Sim_ and
- _Nell_!
- 685. _To the King._ Probably written in 1645, when Charles was for a
- short time in the West.
- 689. _Too much she gives to some, enough to none._ Mart. XII. x.;
- Fortuna multis dat nimis, satis nulli.
- 696. _Men mind no state in sickness._ There is a general resemblance in
- this poem to the latter part of Hor. III. _Od._ i., but I have an uneasy
- sense that Herrick is translating.
- 697. _Adversity._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650.
- 702. _Mean things overcome mighty._ Cp. 486 and Note.
- 706. _How roses came red._ Cp. Burton, _Anat. Mel._ III. ii. 3:
- "Constantine (_Agricult._ xi. 18) makes Cupid himself to be a great
- dancer: by the same token that he was capering among the gods, he flung
- down a bowl of nectar, which, distilling upon the white rose, ever since
- made it red".
- 709. _Tears and Laughter._ Bishop Jebb quotes a Latin couplet inscribed
- on an old inn at Four Crosses, Staffordshire:--
- Fleres si scires unum tua tempora mensem:
- Rides, cum non sit forsitan una dies.
- 710. _Tully says._ Cic. _Tusc. Disp._ III. ii. 3: Gloria est frequens de
- aliquo, fama cum laude.
- 713. _His return to London._ Written at the same time as his _Farewell
- to Dean Bourn_, _i.e._, after his ejection in 1648, the year of the
- publication of the _Hesperides_.
- 715. _No pack like poverty._ Burton, _Anat. Mel._ iii. 3: Οὐδὲν πενίας
- βαρύτερόν ἐστι φόρτιον. "No burden, saith Menander, is so intolerable as
- poverty."
- 718. _As many laws_, etc. Tacit. _Ann._ iii. 27: Corruptissima in
- republica plurimæ leges.
- 723. _Lay down some silver pence._ Cp. Bishop Corbet's _The Faeryes
- Farewell_:--
- "And though they sweep their hearths no less
- Than maids were wont to do,
- Yet who of late for cleanliness
- Finds sixpence in her shoe?"
- 725. _Times that are ill ... Clouds will not ever_, etc., two
- reminiscences of Horace, II. _Od._ x. 17, and ix.
- 727. _Up tails all._ This tune will be found in Chappell's _Popular
- Music of the Olden Time_, vol. i. p. 196. He notes that it was a
- favourite with Herrick, who wrote four other poems in the metre, viz.:
- _The Hag is Astride_, _The Maypole is up_, _The Peter-penny_, and
- _Twelfth Night: or, King and Queen_. The tune is found in Queen
- Elizabeth's Virginal Book, and in the _Dancing Master_ (1650-1690). It
- is alluded to by Ben Jonson, and was a favourite with the Cavaliers.
- 730. _Charon and Philomel._ This dialogue is found with some slight
- variations of text in Rawlinson's MS. poet. 65. fol. 32. The following
- variants may be noted: l. 5, _voice_ for _sound_; l. 7, _shade_ for
- _bird_; l. 11, _warbling_ for _watching_; l. 12, _hoist up_ for _thus
- hoist_; l. 13, _be gone_ for _return_; l. 18, _praise_ for _pray_; l.
- 19, _sighs_ for _vows_; l. 24, omit _slothful_. The dialogue is
- succeeded in the MS. by an old catch (probably written before Herrick
- was born):--
- "A boat! a boat! haste to the ferry!
- For we go over to be merry,
- To laugh and quaff, and drink old sherry".
- After the catch comes the following dialogue, written (it would seem) in
- imitation of Herrick's _Charon and Philomel_: the speakers' names are
- not marked:--
- "Charon! O Charon! the wafter of all souls to bliss or bane!
- Who calls the ferryman of Hell?
- Come near and say who lives in bliss and who in pain.
- Those that die well eternal bliss shall follow.
- Those that die ill their own black deeds shall swallow.
- Shall thy black barge those guilty spirits row
- That kill themselves for love? Oh, no! oh, no!
- My cordage cracks when such foul sins draw near,
- No wind blows fair, nor I my boat can steer.
- What spirits pass and in Elysium reign?
- Those harmless souls that love and are beloved again.
- That soul that lives in love and fain would die to win,
- Shall he go free? Oh, no! it is too foul a sin.
- He must not come aboard, I dare not row,
- Storms of despair my boat will overblow.
- But when thy mistress (?) shall close up thine eyes then come aboard,
- Then come aboard and pass; till then be wise and sing."
- "Then come aboard" from the penultimate line and "and sing" from the
- last should clearly be struck out.
- 739. _O Jupiter_, etc. Eubulus in Athenaeus, xiii. 559: Ὠ Ζεῦ
- πολυτίμητ', εἶτ' ἐγὼ κακῶς ποτε | ἐρῶ γυναῖκας; νὴ Δί' ἀπολοίμην ἄρα· |
- πάντων ἄριστον κτημάτων. Comp. 885.
- 743. _Another upon her Weeping._ Printed in Witts _Recreations_, 1650,
- under the title: _On Julia's Weeping_.
- 745. _To Sir John Berkeley, Governour of Exeter._ Youngest son of Sir
- Maurice Berkeley, of Bruton, in Somersetshire; knighted in Berwick in
- 1638; commander-in-chief of all the Royalist forces in Devonshire, 1643;
- captured Exeter Sept. 4 of that year, and held it till April 13, 1646.
- Created Baron Berkeley of Stratton, in Cornwall, 1658; died 1678.
- 749. _Consultation._ As noted in the text, this is from Sallust, _Cat._
- i.
- 751. _None sees the fardell of his faults behind._ Cp. Catullus, xxii.
- 20, 21:--
- Suus cuique attributus est error,
- Sed non videmus manticae quod in tergo est,
- or, perhaps more probably from Seneca, _de Irá_, ii. 28: Aliena vitia in
- oculis habemus; à tergo nostra sunt.
- 755. _The Eye._ Æschyl. _Fragm._ in Plutarch, _Amat._ 21: Νέας γυναικὸς
- οὔ με μὴ λάθῃ φλέγων Ὀφθαλμὸς, ἥτις ἀνδρὸς ᾖ γεγευμένη.
- 756. _To Prince Charles upon his coming to Exeter._ In August, 1645.
- 761. _The Wake._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, under the title:
- _Alvar and Anthea_.
- 763. _To Doctor Alabaster._ William Alabaster, or Alablaster, born at
- Hadleigh, Suffolk (1567); educated at Westminster and Trinity College,
- Cambridge; a friend of Spencer; was converted to Roman Catholicism while
- chaplain to the Earl of Essex in Spain, 1596. In 1607 he began his
- series of apocalyptic writings by an _Apparatus in Revelationem Jesu
- Christi_. On visiting Rome he was imprisoned by the Inquisition,
- escaped, and returned to Protestantism. Besides his theological works,
- he published (in 1637) a Lexicon Pentaglotton. Died April, 1640.
- 766. _Time is the bound of things_, etc. From Seneca, _Consol. ad Marc._
- xix.: Excessit filius tuus terminos intra quos servitur ... mors omnium
- dolorum solutio est et finis.
- 771. _As I have read must be the first man up_, etc. Hor. I. _Ep._ vi.
- 48: Hoc primus repetas opus, hoc postremus omittas.
- _Rich compost._ Cp. the same thought in 662.
- 772. _A Hymn to Bacchus._ Printed, with the misprint _Bacchus for
- Iacchus_ in l. 1, in _Witts Recreations_, 1650.
- _Brutus ... Cato._ Cp. Note to 4 and 8.
- 774. _If wars go well_, etc. Tacitus, _Ann._ iii. 53: cùm rectè factorum
- sibi quisque gratiam trahant, unius [Principis scil.] invidiâ ab omnibus
- peccatur.
- 775. _Niggards of the meanest blood._ Seneca, _de Clem._ i. 1: Summa
- parsimonia etiam vilissimi sanguinis.
- 776. _Wrongs, if neglected_, etc. Tacit. _Ann._ iv. 34: [Probra] spreta
- exolescunt, si irascare agnita videntur.
- 780. _Kings ought to shear_, etc. A saying of Tiberius quoted by
- Suetonius: Boni pastoris est tondere oves, non deglubere. Herrick
- probably took it from Ben Jonson's _Discoveries_.
- 784-7. _Ceremonies for Christmas._ More will be found about the Yule-log
- in _Ceremonies for Candlemas Day_ (893); cp. also _The Wassail_ (476).
- 788. _Power and Peace._ From Tacitus, _Ann._ iv. 4: Quanquam arduum sit
- eodem loci potentiam et concordiam esse.
- 789. _Mistress Margaret Falconbridge._ A daughter, probably, of the
- Thomas Falconbridge of number 483.
- 797. _Kisses._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, with omission of me
- in l. 1.
- 804. _John Crofts, Cup-bearer to the King._ Third son of Sir John
- Crofts, of Saxham, Suffolk. We hear of him in the king's service as
- early as 1628, and two years later Lord Conway, in thanking Wm. Weld for
- some verses sent him, hopes "the lines are strong enough to bind Robert
- Maule and Jack Crofts from ever more using the phrase". So Jack was
- probably a bit of a poet himself. He may be the Mr. Crofts for
- assaulting whom George, Lord Digby, was imprisoned a month and more, in
- 1634.
- 807. _Man may want land to live in._ Tacitus, _Ann._ xiii. 56: Addidit
- [Boiocalus] Deësse nobis terra in quâ vivamus, in quâ moriamur non
- potest, quoted by Montaigne, II. 3.
- 809. _Who after his transgression doth repent._ Seneca, _Agam._ 243:
- Quem poenitet peccasse paene est innocens.
- 810. _Grief, if't be great 'tis short._ Seneca, quoted by Burton (II.
- iii. 1, § 1): "Si longa est, levis est; si gravis est, brevis est. If it
- be long, 'tis light; if grievous, it cannot last."
- 817. _The Amber Bead._ Cp. Martial's epigram quoted in Note to 497. The
- comparison to Cleopatra is from Mart. IV. xxxii.
- 818. _To my dearest sister, M. Mercy Herrick._ Not quite five years his
- senior. She married John Wingfield, of Brantham, Suffolk, to whom also
- Herrick addresses a poem.
- 820. _Suffer that thou canst not shift._ From Seneca; the title from
- _Ep._ cvii.: Optimum est pati quod emendare non possis, the epigram from
- _De Provid._ 4, as translated by Thomas Lodge, 1614, "Vertuous
- instructions are never delicate. Doth fortune beat and rend us? Let us
- suffer it"--whence Herrick reproduces the printer's error, _Vertuous_
- for Vertues (Virtue's).
- 821. _For a stone has Heaven his tomb._ Cp. Sir T. Browne, _Relig. Med._
- § 40: "Nor doe I altogether follow that rodomontado of Lucan (_Phars._
- vii. 819): Coelo tegitur qui non habet urnam,
- He that unburied lies wants not his hearse,
- For unto him a tomb's the universe".
- 823. _To the King upon his taking of Leicester._ May 31, 1645, a brief
- success before Naseby.
- 825. _'Twas Cæsar's saying._ Tiberius ap. Tacit. _Ann._ ii. 26: Se
- novies a divo Augusto in Germaniam missum plura consilio quam vi
- perfecisse.
- 830. _His Loss._ A reference to his ejection from Dean Prior.
- 837. _Mistress Amy Potter._ Daughter of Barnabas Potter, Bishop of
- Carlisle, Herrick's predecessor at Dean Prior.
- 839. _Love is a circle ... from good to good._ So Burton, III. i. 1, §
- 2: Circulus a bono in bonum.
- 844. TO HIS BOOK. _Make haste away._ Martial, III. ii. Ad Librum
- suum--Festina tibi vindicem parare, Ne nigram cito raptus in culinam
- Cordyllas madidâ tegas papyro, Vel thuris piperisque sis cucullus. _To
- make loose gowns for mackerel._ From Catullus, xcv. 1:--
- At Volusi annales Paduam morientur ad ipsam,
- Et laxas scombris saepe dabunt tunicas.
- 846. _And what we blush to speak_, etc. Ovid, _Phaedra to Hipp._ 10:
- Dicere quae puduit scribere jussit amor.
- 849. _'Tis sweet to think_, etc. Seneca, _Herc. Fur._ 657-58: Quae fuit
- durum pati Meminisse dulce est.
- 851. _To Mr. Henry Lawes, the excellent composer of his lyrics._ Henry
- Lawes (1595-1662), the friend of Milton, admitted a Gentleman of the
- Chapel Royal, 1625. In the _Noble Numbers_ he is mentioned as the
- composer of Herrick's _Christmas Carol_ and the first of his two
- _New-Year's Gifts_. Lawes also set to music Herrick's _Not to Love_, _To
- Mrs. Eliz. Wheeler_ (Among the Myrtles as I walked), _The Kiss_, _The
- Primrose_, _To a Gentlewoman objecting to him his Grey Hairs_, and
- doubtless others.
- 852. _Maidens tell me I am old._ From Anacreon:
- Λέγουσιν αἱ γυναῖκες
- Ἀνακρέων γέρων εἶ κ.τ.λ.
- With a significant variation--"Ill it fits"--for μᾶλλον πρέπει.
- 859. _Master J. Jincks._ Not identified.
- 861. _Kings seek their subjects' good, tyrants their own._ Aristot.
- _Politics_, iii. 7: καλεῖν εἰώθαμεν τῶν μὲν μοναρχιῶν τὴν πρὸς τὸ κοινὸν
- ἀποβλέπουσαν συμφέρον βασιλείαν ... ἡ τυραννίς ἐστι μοναρχία πρὸς τὸ
- συμφέρον τὸ τοῦ μοναρχοῦντος.
- 869. _Sir Thomas Heale._ Probably a son of the Sir Thomas Hele, of
- Fleet, Co. Devon, who died in 1624. This Sir Thomas was created a
- baronet in 1627, and according to Dr. Grosart was one of the Royalist
- commanders at the siege of Plymouth. He died 1670.
- 872. _Love is a kind of war._ Ovid, _Ars Am._ II. 233, 34:--
- Militiae species amor est: discedite segnes!
- Non sunt haec timidis signa tuenda viris.
- 873. _A spark neglected_, etc. Ovid, _Rem. Am._ 732-34:--
- E minimo maximus ignis erit.
- Sic nisi vitaris quicquid renovabit amorem,
- Flamma redardescet quae modo nulla fuit.
- 874. _An Hymn to Cupid._ From Anacreon:--
- Ὠναξ, ᾧ δαμάλης Ἔρως
- καὶ Νύμφαι κυανώπιδες
- πορφυρέη τ' Ἀφροδίτη
- συμπαίζουσιν ... γουνοῦμαί σε, κ.τ.λ.
- 885. _Naught are all women._ Burton, III. ii. 5. § 5.
- 907. _Upon Mr. William Lawes, the rare musician._ Elder brother of the
- more famous Henry Lawes; appointed a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal,
- 1602, and also one of Charles I.'s musicians-in-ordinary. When the Civil
- War broke out he joined the king's army and was killed by a stray shot
- during the siege of Chester, 1645. He set Herrick's _Gather ye rosebuds_
- to music.
- 914. _Numbers ne'er tickle_, etc. Martial, I. xxxvi.:--
- Lex haec carminibus data est jocosis,
- Ne possint, nisi pruriant, juvare.
- 918. _M. Kellam._ As yet unidentified. Dr. Grosart suggests that he may
- have been one of Herrick's parishioners, and the name sounds as of the
- west country.
- 920. _Cunctation in correction._ Is Herrick translating? According to a
- relief at Rome the lictors' rods were bound together not only by a red
- thong twisted from top to bottom, but by six straps as well.
- 922. _Continual reaping makes a land wax old._ Ovid, _Ars Am._ iii. 82:
- Continua messe senescit ager.
- 923. _Revenge._ Tacitus, _Hist._ iv. 3: Tanto proclivius est injuriae
- quàm beneficio vicem exsolvere; quia gratia oneri, ultio in quaestu
- habetur.
- 927. _Praise they that will times past._ Ovid, _Ars Am._ iii. 121:--
- Prisca juvent alios: ego me nunc denique natum
- Gratulor; haec aetas moribus apta meis.
- 928. _Clothes are conspirators._ I can suggest no better explanation of
- this oracular epigram than that the tailor's bill is an enemy of a
- slender purse.
- 929. _Cruelty_. Seneca _de Clem._ i. 24: Ferina ista rabies est,
- sanguine gaudere et vulneribus; (i. 8), Quemadmodum praecisae arbores
- plurimis ramis repullulant [H. uses repullulate, -tion, 336, 794], et
- multa satorum genera, ut densiora surgant, reciduntur; ita regia
- crudelitas auget inimicorum numerum tollendo. Ben Jonson, _Discoveries_
- (_Clementia_): "The lopping of trees makes the boughs shoot out quicker;
- and the taking away of some kind of enemies increaseth the number".
- 931. _A fierce desire of hot and dry._ Cp. note on 683.
- 932. _To hear the worst_, etc. Antisthenes ap. _Diog. Laert._ VI. i. 4,
- § 3: Ἀκούσας ποτὲ ὅτι Πλάτων αὐτὸν κακῶς λέγει Βασιλικὸν ἔφη καλῶς
- ποιοῦντα κακῶς ἀκούειν, quoted by Burton, II. iii. 7.
- 934. _The Bondman._ Cp. Exodus xxi. 5, 6: "And if the servant shall
- plainly say: I love my master, my wife, and my children: I will not go
- out free: Then his master shall bring him unto the judges; he shall also
- bring him to the door, or unto the doorpost; and his master shall bore
- his ear through with an awl, and he shall serve him for ever".
- 936. _My kiss outwent the bonds of shamefastness._ Cp. Sidney's
- _Astrophel and Stella_, sonnet 82. For _not Jove himself_, etc., cp. 10,
- and note.
- 938. _His wish._ From Martial, II. xc. 7-10:--
- Sit mihi verna satur: sit non doctissima conjux:
- Sit nox cum somno, sit sine lite dies, etc.
- 939. _Upon Julia washing herself in the river._ Imitated from Martial,
- IV. xxii.:--
- Primos passa toros et adhuc placanda marito
- Merserat in nitidos se Cleopatra lacus,
- Dum fugit amplexus: sed prodidit unda latentem,
- Lucebat, totis cum tegeretur aquis.
- Condita sic puro numerantur lilia vitro,
- Sic prohibet tenuis gemma latere rosas,
- Insilui mersusque vadis luctantia carpsi
- Basia: perspicuae plus vetuistis aquae.
- 940. _Though frankincense_, etc. Ovid, _de Medic. Fac._ 83, 84:--
- Quamvis thura deos irataque numina placent,
- Non tamen accensis omnia danda focis.
- 947. _To his honoured and most ingenious friend, Mr. Charles Cotton._
- Dr. Grosart annotates: "The translator of Montaigne, and associate of
- Izaak Walton"; but as the younger Cotton was only eighteen when
- _Hesperides_ was printed, it is perhaps more probable that the father is
- meant, though we may note that Herrick and the younger Cotton were
- joint-contributors in 1649 to the _Lacrymæ Musarum_, published in memory
- of Lord Hastings. For a tribute to the brilliant abilities of the elder
- Cotton, see Clarendon's _Life_ (i. 36; ed. 1827).
- 948. _Women Useless._ A variation on a theme as old as Euripides. Cp.
- _Medea_, 573-5:--
- χρῆν γὰρ ἀλλοθέν ποθεν βροτοὺς
- παῖδας τεκνοῦσθαι, θῆλυ δ' οὐκ εἶναι γένος·
- χοὒτως ἂν οὐκ ἦν οὐδὲν ἀνθρώποις κακόν.
- 952. _Weep for the dead, for they have lost the light_, cp. Ecclus.
- xxii. 11.
- 955. _To M. Leonard Willan, his peculiar friend._ A wretched poet;
- author of "The Phrygian Fabulist; or the Fables of Æsop" (1650),
- "Astraea; or True Love's Mirror" (1651), etc.
- 956. _Mr. John Hall, Student of Gray's Inn._ Hall remained at Cambridge
- till 1647, and this poem, which addresses him as a "Student of Gray's
- Inn," must therefore have been written almost while _Hesperides_ was
- passing through the press. Hall's _Horæ Vacivæ, or Essays_, published in
- 1646, had at once given him high rank among the wits.
- 958. _To the most comely and proper M. Elizabeth Finch._ No certain
- identification has been proposed.
- 961. _To the King, upon his welcome to Hampton Court, set and sung._ The
- allusion can only be to the king's stay at Hampton Court in 1647. Good
- hope was then entertained of a peaceful settlement, and Herrick's ode,
- enthusiastic as it is, expresses little more than this.
- _For an ascendent_, etc.: This and the next seven lines are taken from
- phrases on pp. 29-33 of the _Notes and Observations on some passages of
- Scripture_, by John Gregory (see note on N. N. 178). According to
- Gregory, "The Ascendent of a City is that sign which riseth in the
- Heavens at the laying of the first stone".
- 962. _Henry, Marquis of Dorchester._ Henry Pierrepoint, second Earl of
- Kingston, succeeded his father (Herrick's Newark) July 30, 1643, and was
- created Marquis of Dorchester, March, 1645. "He was a very studious
- nobleman and very learned, particularly in law and physics." (See
- Burke's _Extinct Peerages_, iii. 435.)
- _When Cato, the severe, entered the circumspacious theatre._ The
- allusion is to the visit of Cato to the games of Flora, given by
- Messius. When his presence in the theatre was known, the dancing-women
- were not allowed to perform in their accustomed lack of costume,
- whereupon the moralist obligingly retired, amidst applause.
- 966. _M. Jo. Harmar, physician to the College of Westminster._ John
- Harmar, born at Churchdown, near Gloucester, about 1594, was educated at
- Winchester and Magdalen College, Oxford; was a master at Magdalen
- School, the Free School at St. Albans, and at Westminster, and Professor
- of Greek at Oxford under the Commonwealth. He died 1670. Wood
- characterises him as a butt for the wits and a flatterer of great men,
- and notes that he was always called by the name of Doctor Harmar, though
- he took no higher degree than M.A. But in 1632 he supplicated for the
- degree of M.B., and Dr. Grosart's note--"Herrick, no doubt, playfully
- transmuted 'Doctor' into 'Physician'"--is misleading. He may have cared
- for the minds and bodies of the Westminster boys at one and the same
- time.
- _The Roman language.... If Jove would speak_, etc. Cp. Ben Jonson's
- _Discoveries_: "that testimony given by L. Aelius Stilo upon Plautus who
- affirmed, "Musas si latine loqui voluissent Plautino sermone fuisse
- loquuturas". And Cicero [in Plutarch, § 24] "said of the Dialogues of
- Plato, that Jupiter, if it were his nature to use language, would speak
- like him".
- 967. _Upon his spaniel, Tracy._ Cp. _supra_, 724.
- 971. _Strength_, etc. Tacitus, _Ann._ xiii. 19: Nihil rerum mortalium
- tam instabile ac fluxum est, quàm fama potentiae, non suâ vi nixa.
- 975. _Case is a lawyer_, etc. Martial, I. xcviii. Ad Naevolum
- Causidicum. Cùm clamant omnes, loqueris tu, Naevole, tantùm.... Ecce,
- tacent omnes; Naevole, dic aliquid.
- 977. _To his sister-in-law, M. Susanna Herrick._ Cp. _supra_, 522. The
- subject is again the making up of the book of the poet's elect.
- 978. _Upon the Lady Crew._ Cp. Herrick's Epithalamium for her marriage
- with Sir Clipsby Crew, 283. She died 1639, and was buried in Westminster
- Abbey.
- 979. _On Tomasin Parsons._ Daughter of the organist of Westminster
- Abbey: cp. 500 and Note.
- 983. _To his kinsman, M. Thomas Herrick, who desired to be in his book._
- Cp. 106 and Note.
- 989. _Care keeps the conquest._ Perhaps jotted down with reference to
- the Governorship of Exeter by Sir John Berkeley: see Note to 745.
- 992. _To the handsome Mistress Grace Potter._ Probably sister to the
- Mistress Amy Potter celebrated in 837, where see Note.
- 995. _We've more to bear our charge than way to go._ Seneca, Ep. 77:
- quantulumcunque haberem, tamen plus superesset viatici quam viae, quoted
- by Montaigne, II. xxviii.
- 1000. _The Gods, pillars, and men._ Horace's Mediocribus esse poetis
- Non homines, non di, non concessere columnae (_Ars Poet._ 373). Latin
- poets hung up their epigrams in public places.
- 1002. _To the Lord Hopton on his fight in Cornwall._ Sir Ralph Hopton
- won two brilliant victories for the Royalists, at Bradock Down and
- Stratton, January and May, 1643, and was created Baron Hopton in the
- following September. Originally a Parliamentarian, he was one of the
- king's ablest and most loyal servants.
- 1008. _Nothing's so hard but search will find it out._ Terence, _Haut._
- IV. ii. 8: Nihil tam difficile est quin quaerendo investigari posset.
- 1009. _Labour is held up by the hope of rest._ Ps. Sallust, _Epist. ad
- C. Caes._: Sapientes laborem spe otii sustentant.
- 1022. _Posting to Printing._ Mart. V. x. 11, 12:--
- Vos, tamen, o nostri, ne festinate, libelli:
- Si post fata venit gloria, non propero.
- 1023. _No kingdoms got by rapine long endure._ Seneca, _Troad._ 264:
- Violenta nemo imperia continuit dies.
- 1026. _Saint Distaff's Day._ "Saint Distaff is perhaps only a coinage of
- our poet's to designate the day when, the Christmas vacation being over,
- good housewives, with others, resumed their usual employment." (Nott.)
- The phrase is explained in dictionaries and handbooks, but no other use
- of it is quoted than this. Herrick's poem was pilfered by Henry Bold (a
- notorious plagiarist) in _Wit a-sporting in a pleasant Grove of New
- Fancies_, 1657.
- 1028. _My beloved Westminster._ As mentioned in the brief "Life" of
- Herrick prefixed to vol. i., all the references in this poem seem to
- refer to Herrick's courtier-days, between leaving Cambridge and going to
- Devonshire. He then, doubtless, resided in Westminster for the sake of
- proximity to Whitehall. It has been suggested, however, that the
- reference is to Westminster School, but we have no evidence that Herrick
- was educated there.
- _Golden Cheapside._ My friend, Mr. Herbert Horne, in his
- admirably-chosen selection from the _Hesperides_, suggests that the
- allusion here is to the great gilt cross at the end of Wood Street. The
- suggestion is ingenious; but as Cheapside was the goldsmiths' quarter
- this would amply justify the epithet, which may indeed only refer to
- Cheapside as a money-winning street, as we might say Golden Lombard
- Street.
- 1032. _Things are uncertain._ Tiberius, in Tacitus, _Annal._ i. 72:
- Cuncta mortalium incerta; quantoque plus adeptus foret, tanto se magis
- in lubrico.
- 1034. _Good wits get more fame by their punishment._ Cp. Tacit. _Ann._
- iv. 35, sub fin.: Punitis ingeniis gliscit auctoritas, etc., quoted by
- Bacon and Milton.
- 1035. _Twelfth Night: or King and Queen._ Herrick alludes to these
- "Twelfth-Tide Kings and Queens" in writing to Endymion Porter (662), and
- earlier still, in the "New-Year's Gift to Sir Simeon Steward" (319) he
- speaks--
- "Of Twelfth-Tide cakes, of Peas and Beans,
- Wherewith ye make those merry scenes,
- Whenas ye choose your King and Queen".
- Brand (i. 27) illustrates well from "Speeches to the Queen at Sudley" in
- Nichols' _Progresses of Queen Elizabeth_.
- "_Melibœus._ Cut the cake: who hath the bean shall be king, and where
- the pea is, she shall be queen.
- _Nisa._ I have the pea and must be queen.
- _Mel._ I the bean, and king. I must command."
- 1045. _Comfort in Calamity._ An allusion to the ejection from their
- benefices which befel most of the loyal clergy at the same time as
- Herrick. It is perhaps worth noting that in the second volume of this
- edition, and in the last hundred poems printed in the first, wherever a
- date can be fixed it is always in the forties. Equally late poems occur,
- though much less frequently, among the first five hundred, but there the
- dated poems belong, for the most part, to the years 1623-1640. Now, in
- April 29, 1640, as stated in the brief "Life" prefixed to vol. i., there
- was entered at Stationers' Hall, "The severall poems written by Master
- Robert Herrick," a book which, as far as is known, never saw the light.
- It was probably, however, to this book that Herrick addressed the poem
- (405) beginning:--
- "Have I not blest thee? Then go forth, nor fear
- Or spice, or fish, or fire, or close-stools here";
- and we may fairly regard the first five hundred poems of _Hesperides_
- as representing the intended collection of 1640, with a few additions,
- and the last six hundred as for the most part later, and I must add,
- inferior work. This is borne out by the absence of any manuscript
- versions of poems in the second half of the book. Herrick's verses would
- only be passed from hand to hand when he was living among the wits in
- London.
- 1046. _Twilight._ Ovid, _Amores_, I. v. 5, 6: Crepuscula ... ubi nox
- abiit, nec tamen orta dies.
- 1048. _Consent makes the cure._ Seneca, _Hippol._ 250: Pars sanitatis
- velle sanari fuit.
- 1050. _Causeless whipping._ Ovid, _Heroid._ v. 7, 8: Leniter ex merito
- quicquid patiare, ferendum est; Quae venit indignae poena, dolenda
- venit. Quoted by Montaigne, III. xiii.
- 1052. _His comfort._ Terence, _Adelph._ I. i. 18: Ego ... quod
- fortunatum isti putant, Uxorem nunquam habui.
- 1053. _Sincerity._ From Hor. _Ep._ I. ii. 54: Sincerum est nisi vas,
- quodcunque infundis acescit. Quoted by Montaigne, III. xiii.
- 1056. _To his peculiar friend, M. Jo. Wicks._ See 336 and Note. Written
- after Herrick's ejection. We know that the poet's uncle, Sir William
- Herrick, suffered greatly in estate during the Civil War, and it may
- have been the same with other friends and relatives. But there can be
- little doubt that the poet found abundant hospitality on his return to
- London.
- 1059. _A good Death._ August. _de Disciplin. Christ._ 13: Non potest
- malè mori, qui benè vixerit.
- 1061. _On Fortune._ Seneca, _Medea_, 176: Fortuna opes auferre non
- animum potest.
- 1062. _To Sir George Parry, Doctor of the Civil Law._ According to Dr.
- Grosart, Parry "was admitted to the College of Advocates, London, 3rd
- Nov., 1628; but almost nothing has been transmitted concerning him save
- that he married the daughter and heir of Sir Giles Sweet, Dean of
- Arches". I can hardly doubt that he must be identified with the Dr.
- George Parry, Chancellor to the Bishop of Exeter, who in 1630 was
- accused of excommunicating persons for the sake of fees, but was highly
- praised in 1635 and soon after appointed a Judge Marshal. If so, his
- wife was a widow when she came to him, as she is spoken of in 1638 as
- "Lady Dorothy Smith, wife of Sir Nicholas Smith, deceased". She brought
- him a rich dower, and her death greatly confused his affairs.
- 1067. _Gentleness._ Seneca, _Phoen._ 659: Qui vult amari, languidâ
- regnet manu. And Ben Jonson, _Panegyre_ (1603): "He knew that those who
- would with love command, Must with a tender yet a steadfast hand,
- Sustain the reins".
- 1068. _Mrs. Eliza Wheeler._ See 130 and Note.
- 1071. _To the Honoured Master Endymion Porter._ For Porter's patronage
- of poetry see 117 and Note.
- 1080. _The Mistress of all singular Manners, Mistress Portman._ Dr.
- Grosart notes that a Mrs. Mary Portman was buried at Putney Parish
- Church, June 27, 1671, and this was perhaps Herrick's schoolmistress,
- the "pearl of Putney".
- 1087. _Where pleasures rule a kingdom._ Cicero, _De Senect._ xii. 41:
- Neque omnino in voluptatis regno virtutem posse consistere. _He lives
- who lives to virtue._ Comp. Sallust, _Catil._ 2, s. fin.
- 1088. _Twice five-and-twenty (bate me but one year)._ As Herrick was
- born in 1591, this poem must have been written in 1640.
- 1089. _To M. Laurence Swetnaham._ Unless the various entries in the
- parish registers of St. Margaret's, Westminster, refer to different men,
- this Lawrence Swetnaham was the third son of Thomas Swettenham of
- Swettenham in Cheshire, married in 1602 to Mary Birtles. Lawrence
- himself had children as early as 1629, and ten years later was
- church-warden. He was buried in the Abbey, 1673.
- 1091. _My lamp to you I give._ Allusion to the Λαμπαδηφορία which Plato
- (_Legg._ 776B) uses to illustrate the succession of generations. So
- Lucretius (ii. 77): Et quasi cursores vitaï lampada tradunt.
- 1092. _Michael Oulsworth._ Michael Oulsworth, Oldsworth or Oldisworth,
- graduated M.A. from Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1614. According to
- Wood, "he was afterwards Fellow of his College, Secretary to Earl of
- Pembroke, elected a burgess to serve in several Parliaments for Sarum
- and Old Sarum, and though in the Grand Rebellion he was no Colonel, yet
- he was Governor of Old Pembroke, and Montgomery led him by the nose as
- he pleased, to serve both their turns". The partnership, however, was
- not eternal, for between 1648 and 1650 Oldisworth published at least
- eight virulent satires against his former master.
- 1094. _Truth--her own simplicity._ Seneca, _Ep._ 49: (Ut ille tragicus),
- Veritatis simplex oratio est.
- 1097. _Kings must be dauntless._ Seneca, _Thyest._ 388: Rex est qui
- metuit nihil.
- 1100. _To his brother, Nicholas Herrick._ Baptized April 22, 1589; a
- merchant trading to the Levant. He married Susanna Salter, to whom
- Herrick addresses two poems (522, 977).
- 1103. _A King and no King._ Seneca, _Thyest._ 214: Ubicunque tantùm
- honestè dominanti licet, Precario regnatur.
- 1118. _Necessity makes dastards valiant men._ Sallust, _Catil._ 58:
- Necessitudo ... timidos fortes facit.
- 1119. _Sauce for Sorrows._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650. _An
- equal mind._ Plautus, _Rudens_, II. iii. 71: Animus aequus optimum est
- aerumnae condimentum.
- 1126. _The End of his Work._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, under
- the title: _Of this Book._ From Ovid, _Ars Am._ i. 773, 774:--
- Pars superest caepti, pars est exhausta laboris:
- Hic teneat nostras anchora jacta rates.
- 1127. _My wearied bark_, etc. Ovid, _Rem. Am._ 811, 812:--
- fessae date serta carinæ:
- Contigimus portum, quo mihi cursus erat.
- 1128. _The work is done._ Ovid, _Ars Am._ ii. 733, 734:--
- Finis adest operi: palmam date, grata juventus,
- Sertaque odoratae myrtea ferte comae.
- 1130. _His Muse._ Cp. Note on 624.
- NOBLE NUMBERS.
- 3. _Weigh me the Fire._ _2 Esdras_, iv. 5, 7; v. 9, 36: "Weigh me ...
- the fire, or measure me ... the wind," etc.
- 4. _God ... is the best known, not...._ _August. de Ord._ ii. 16: [Deus]
- scitur melius nesciendo.
- 5. _Supraentity_, τὸ ὑπερόντως ὄν, Plotinus.
- 7. _His wrath is free from perturbation._ August. _de Civ. Dei_, ix. 5:
- Ipse Deus secundum Scripturas irascitur, nec tamen ullâ passione
- turbatur. _Enchir. ad Laurent._ 33: Cum irasci dicitur Deus, non
- significatur perturbatio, qualis est in animo irascentis hominis.
- 9. _Those Spotless two Lambs._ "This is the offering made by fire which
- ye shall offer unto the Lord: two lambs of the first year without spot,
- day by day, for a continual burnt-offering." (Numb. xxviii. 3.)
- 17. _An Anthem sung in the Chapel of Whitehall._ This may be added to
- Nos. 96-98, and 102, the poems on which Mr. Hazlitt bases his conjecture
- that Herrick may have held some subordinate post in the Chapel Royal.
- 37. _When once the sin has fully acted been._ Tacitus, _Ann._ xiv. 10:
- Perfecto demum scelere, magnitudo ejus intellecta est.
- 38. _Upon Time._ Were this poem anonymous it would probably be
- attributed rather to George Herbert than to Herrick.
- 41. _His Litany to the Holy Spirit._ We may quote again from Barron
- Field's account in the _Quarterly Review_ (1810) of his
- cross-examination of the Dean Prior villagers for Reminiscences of
- Herrick: "The person, however, who knows more of Herrick than all the
- rest of the neighbourhood we found to be a poor woman in the 99th year
- of her age, named Dorothy King. She repeated to us, with great
- exactness, five of his _Noble Numbers_, among which was his beautiful
- 'Litany'. These she had learnt from her mother, who was apprenticed to
- Herrick's successor at the vicarage. She called them her prayers, which
- she said she was in the habit of putting up in bed, whenever she could
- not sleep; and she therefore began the 'Litany' at the second stanza:--
- 'When I lie within my bed,' etc."
- Another of her midnight orisons was the poem beginning:--
- "Every night Thou dost me fright,
- And keep mine eyes from sleeping," etc.
- The last couplet, it should be noted, is misquoted from No. 56.
- 54. _Spew out all neutralities._ From the message to the Church of the
- Laodiceans, Rev. iii. 16.
- 59. _A Present by a Child._ Cp. "A pastoral upon the Birth of Prince
- Charles" (_Hesperides_ 213), and Note.
- 63. _God's mirth: man's mourning._ Perhaps founded on Prov. i. 26: "I
- also will laugh at your calamity; I will mock when your fear cometh".
- 65. _My Alma._ The name is probably suggested by its meaning "soul". Cp.
- Prior's _Alma_.
- 72. _I'll cast a mist and cloud._ Cp. Hor. I. _Ep._ xvi. 62: Noctem
- peccatis et fraudibus objice nubem.
- 75. _That house is bare._ Horace, _Ep._ I. vi. 45: Exilis domus est, ubi
- non et multa supersunt.
- 77. _Lighten my candle_, etc. The phraseology of the next five lines is
- almost entirely from the Psalms and the Song of Solomon.
- 86. _Sin leads the way._ Hor. _Odes_, III. ii. 32: Raro antecedentem
- scelestum Deseruit pede Poena claudo.
- 88. _By Faith we ... walk ..., not by the Spirit._ 2 Cor. v. 7: "We walk
- by faith, not by sight". 'By the Spirit' perhaps means, 'in spiritual
- bodies'.
- 96. _Sung to the King._ See Note on 17.
- _Composed by M. Henry Lawes._ See _Hesperides_ 851, and Note.
- 102. _The Star-Song._ This may have been composed partly with reference
- to the noonday star during the Thanksgiving for Charles II.'s birth. See
- _Hesperides_ 213, and Note.
- _We'll choose him King._ A reference to the Twelfth Night games. See
- _Hesperides_ 1035, and Note.
- 108. _Good men afflicted most._ Taken almost entirely from Seneca, _de
- Provid._ 3, 4: Ignem experitur [Fortuna] in Mucio, paupertatem in
- Fabricio, ... tormenta in Regulo, venenum in Socrate, mortem in Catone.
- The allusions may be briefly explained for the unclassical. At the siege
- of Dyrrachium, Marcus Cassius Scæva caught 120 darts on his shield;
- Horatius Cocles is the hero of the bridge (see Macaulay's _Lays_); C.
- Mucius Scævola held his hand in the fire to illustrate to Porsenna Roman
- fearlessness; Cato is Cato Uticensis, the philosophic suicide; "high
- Atilius" will be more easily recognised as the M. Atilius Regulus who
- defied the Carthaginians; Fabricius Luscinus refused not only the
- presents of Pyrrhus, but all reward of the State, and lived in poverty
- on his own farm.
- 109. _A wood of darts._ Cp. Virg. _Æn._ x. 886: Ter secum Troius heros
- Immanem aerato circumfert tegmine silvam.
- 112. _The Recompense._ Herrick is said to have assumed the lay habit on
- his return to London after his ejection, perhaps as a protection against
- further persecution. This quatrain may be taken as evidence that he did
- not throw off his religion with his cassock. Compare also 124.
- _All I have lost that could be rapt from me._ From Ovid, III. _Trist._
- vii. 414: Raptaque sint adimi quae potuere mihi.
- 123. _Thy light that ne'er went out._ Prov. xxxi. 18 (of 'the Excellent
- Woman'): "Her candle goeth not out by night". _All set about with
- lilies._ Cp. _Cant. Canticorum_, vii. 2: Venter tuus sicut acervus
- tritici, vallatus liliis.
- _Will show these garments._ So Acts ix. 39.
- 134. _God had but one son free from sin._ Augustin. _Confess._ vi.:
- Deus unicum habet filium sine peccato, nullum sine flagello, quoted in
- Burton, II. iii. 1.
- 136. _Science in God._ Bp. Davenant, _on Colossians_, 166, _ed._ 1639;
- speaking of Omniscience: Proprietates Divinitatis non sunt accidentia,
- sed ipsa Dei essentia.
- 145. _Tears._ Augustin. _Enarr. Ps._ cxxvii.: Dulciores sunt lacrymae
- orantium quàm gaudia theatorum.
- 146. _Manna._ Wisdom xvi. 20, 21: "Angels' food ... agreeing to every
- taste".
- 147. _As Cassiodore doth prove._ Reverentia est enim Domini timor cum
- amore permixtus. Cassiodor. _Expos. in Psalt._ xxxiv. 30; quoted by Dr.
- Grosart. My clerical predecessor has also hunted down with much industry
- the possible sources of most of the other patristic references in _Noble
- Numbers_, though I have been able to add a few. We may note that Herrick
- quotes Cassiodorus (twice), John of Damascus, Boethius, Thomas Aquinas,
- St. Bernard, St. Augustine (thrice), St. Basil, and St. Ambrose--a
- goodly list of Fathers, if we had any reason to suppose that the
- quotations were made at first hand.
- 148. _Mercy ... a Deity._ Pausanias, _Attic._ I. xvii. 1.
- 153. _Mora Sponsi, the stay of the bridegroom._ Maldonatus, _Comm. in
- Matth._ xxv.: Hieronymus et Hilarius moram sponsi pœnitentiae tempus
- esse dicunt.
- 157. _Montes Scripturarum._ See August. _Enarr. in Ps._ xxxix., and
- passim.
- 167. _A dereliction._ The word is from Ps. xxii. 1: Quare me
- dereliquisti? "Why hast Thou forsaken me?" Herrick took it from
- Gregory's _Notes and Observations_ (see infra), p. 5: 'Our Saviour ...
- in that great case of dereliction'.
- 174. _Martha, Martha._ See Luke x. 41, and August. _Serm._ cii. 3:
- Repetitio nominis indicium est dilectionis.
- 177. _Paradise._ Gregory, p. 75, on "the reverend Say of Zoroaster, Seek
- Paradise," quotes from the Scholiast Psellus: "The Chaldæan Paradise
- (saith he) is a Quire of divine powers incircling the Father".
- 178. _The Jews when they built houses._ Herrick's rabbinical lore (cp.
- 180, 181, 193, 207, 224), like his patristic, was probably derived at
- second hand through some biblical commentary. Much of it certainly comes
- from the _Notes and Observations upon some Passages of Scripture_
- (Oxford, 1646) of John Gregory, chaplain of Christ Church, a prodigy of
- oriental learning, who died in his 39th year, March 13, 1646. Thus in
- his Address to the Reader (3rd page from end) Gregory remarks: "The
- Jews, when they build a house, are bound to leave some part of it
- unfinished in memory of the destruction of Jerusalem," giving a
- reference to Leo of Modena, _Degli Riti Hebraici_, Part I.
- 180. _Observation. The Virgin Mother_, etc. Gregory, pp. 24-27, shows
- that Sitting, the usual posture of mourners, was forbidden by both Roman
- and Jewish Law "in capital causes". "This was the reason why ... she
- stood up still in a resolute and almost impossible compliance with the
- Law.... They sat ... after leave obtained ... to bury the body."
- 181. _Tapers._ Cp. Gregory's _Notes_, p. 111: "The funeral tapers
- (however thought of by some) are of the same harmless import. Their
- meaning is to show that the departed souls are not quite put out, but
- having walked here as the children of the Light are now gone to walk
- before God in the light of the living."
- 185. _God in the holy tongue._ J. G., p. 135: "God is called in the Holy
- Tongue ... the Place; or that Fulness which filleth All in All".
- 186, 187, 188, 189, 197. _God's Presence, Dwelling_, etc. J. G., pp.
- 135-9: "Shecinah, or God's Dwelling Presence". "God is said to be nearer
- to this man than to that, more in one place than in another. Thus he is
- said to depart from some and come to others, to leave this place and to
- abide in that, not by essential application of Himself, much less by
- local motion, but by impression of effect." "With just men (saith St.
- Bernard) God is present, _in veritate_, in deed, but with the wicked,
- dissemblingly." "He is called in the Holy Tongue, Jehovah, He that is,
- or Essence." "He is said to dwell there (saith Maimon) where He putteth
- the marks ... of His Majesty; and He doth this by His Grace and Holy
- Spirit."
- 190. _The Virgin Mary._ J. G., p. 86: "St. Ephrem upon those words of
- Jacob, This is the House of God, and this is the Gate of Heaven. This
- saying (saith he) is to be meant of the Virgin Mary ... truly to be
- called the House of God, as wherein the Son of God ... inhabited, and as
- truly the Gate of Heaven, for the Lord of heaven and earth entered
- thereat; and it shall not be set open the second time, according to that
- of Ezekiel (xliv. 2): I saw (saith he) a gate in the East; the glorious
- Lord entered thereat; thenceforth that gate was shut, and is not any
- more to be opened (_Catena Arab._ c. 58)."
- 192. _Upon Woman and Mary._ The reference is to Christ's appearance to
- St. Mary Magdalene in the Garden after the Resurrection, John xx. 15,
- 16.
- 193. _North and South._ Comp. _Hesper._ 429. _Observation_. J. G., pp.
- 92, 93: "Whosoever (say the Doctors in Berachoth) shall set his bed N.
- and S., shall beget male children. Therefore the Jews hold this rite of
- collocation ... to this day.... They are bound to place their ... house
- of office in the very same situation ... that the uncomely necessities
- ... might not fall into the Walk and Ways of God, whose Shecinah or
- dwelling presence lieth W. and E."
- 195. _Noah the first was_, etc. Cp. Gregory, _Notes_, p. 28.
- 201. _Temporal goods._ August., quoted by Burton, II. iii. 3: Dantur
- quidem bonis, saith Austin, ne quis mala aestimet, malis autem ne quis
- nimis bona.
- 203. _Speak, did the blood of Abel cry_, etc. Cp. Gregory's _Notes_, pp.
- 118: "But did the blood of Abel speak? saith Theophylact. Yes, it cried
- unto God for vengeance, as that of sprinkling for propitiation and
- mercy."
- 204. _A thing of such a reverend reckoning._ Cp. Gregory, 118-9: "The
- blood of Abel was so holy and reverend a thing, in the sense and
- reputation of the old world, that the men of that time used to swear by
- it".
- 205. _A Position in the Hebrew Divinity._ From Gregory's _Notes_, pp.
- 134, 5: "That old position in the Hebrew Divinity ... that a repenting
- man is of more esteem in the sight of God than one that never fell
- away".
- 206. _The Doctors in the Talmud._ From Gregory's _Notes_, _l.c._: "The
- Doctors in the Talmud say, that one day spent here in true Repentance is
- more worth than eternity itself, or all the days of heaven in the other
- world".
- 207. _God's Presence._ Again from Gregory's Notes, pp. 136 sq.
- 208. _The Resurrection._ Gregory's _Notes_, pp. 128-29, translating from
- a Greek MS. of Mathæus Blastares in the Bodleian: "The wonder of this is
- far above that of the resurrection of our bodies; for then the earth
- giveth up her dead but one for one, but in the case of the corn she
- giveth up many living ones for one dead one".
- 243. _Confession twofold is._ August, in Ps. xxix. _Enarr._ ii. 19:
- Confessio gemina est, aut peccati, aut laudis.
- 254. _Gold and frankincense._ St. Matt. ii. 11. St. Ambrose. Aurum Regi,
- thus Deo.
- 256. _The Chewing the Cud._ Cp. Lev. xi. 6.
- 258. _As my little pot doth boil_, etc. This far-fetched little poem
- is an instance of Herrick's habit of jotting down his thoughts in verse.
- In cooking some food for a charitable purpose he seems to have noticed
- that the boiling pot tossed the meat to and fro, or "waved" it (the
- priest's work), and that he himself was giving away the meat he lifted
- off the fire, the "heave-offering," which was the priest's perquisite.
- This is the confusion or "level-coil" to which he alludes.
- NOTES TO ADDITIONAL POEMS.
- _The Description of a Woman_. Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1645, and
- contained also in Ashmole MS. 38, where it is signed: "Finis. Robert
- Herrick." Our version is taken from _Witts Recreations_, with the
- exception of the readings _show_ and _grow_ (for _shown_ and _grown_, in
- ll. 15 and 16). The Ashmole MS. contains in all thirty additional lines,
- which may or may not be by Herrick, but which, as not improving the
- poem, have been omitted in our text in accordance with the precedent set
- by the editor of _Witts Recreations_.
- _Mr. Herrick: his Daughter's Dowry._ From Ashmole MS. 38, where it is
- signed: "Finis. Robt. Hericke."
- _Mr. Robert Herrick: his Farewell unto Poetry._ Printed by Dr. Grosart
- and Mr. Hazlitt from Ashmole MS. 38. I add a few readings from Brit.
- Mus. Add. MS. 22, 603, where it is entitled: _Herrick's Farewell to
- Poetry_. The importance of the poem for Herrick's biography is alluded
- to in the brief "Life" prefixed to vol. i.
- For _some sleepy keys_ the Museum MS. reads, _the sleeping keys_; for
- _yet forc't they are to go_ it has _and yet are forc't to go_; _drinking
- to the odd Number of Nine_ for _Number of Wine_, as to which see below;
- _turned her home_ for _twirled her home_; _dear soul_ for _rare soul_.
- All these are possible, but _beloved Africa_, and the omission of the
- two half lines, "'tis not need The scarecrow unto mankind," are pure
- blunders.
- _Drinking to the odd Number of Nine_. I introduce this into the text
- from the Museum manuscript as agreeing with the
- "Well, I can quaff, I see,
- To th' number five
- Or nine"
- of _A Bacchanalian Verse_ (_Hesperides_ 653), on which see Note. Dr.
- Grosart explains the Ashmole reading _Wine_ by the Note "_οἶνος_ and
- _vinum_ both give five, the number of perfection"; but this seems too
- far-fetched for Herrick.
- _Kiss, so depart._ By a strange freak Ashmole MS. writes _Guesse_, and
- the Museum MS. _Ghesse_; but the emendation _Kiss_ (adopted both by Dr.
- Grosart and Mr. Hazlitt) cannot be doubted.
- _Well doing's the fruit of doing well._ Seneca, _de Clem._ i. 1: Rectè
- factorum verus fructus [est] fecisse. Also _Ep._ 81: Recte facti fecisse
- merces est. The latter, and Cicero, _de Finib._ II. xxii. 72, are quoted
- by Montaigne, _Ess._ II. xvi.
- _A Carol presented to Dr. Williams._ From Ashmole MS. 36, 298. For Dr.
- Williams, see Note to _Hesperides_ 146. This poem was apparently written
- in 1640, after the removal of the bishop's suspension.
- _His Mistress to him at his Farewell._ From Add. MS. 11, 811, at the
- British Museum, where it is signed "Ro. Herrick".
- _Upon Parting._ From Harleian MS. 6917, at the British Museum.
- _Upon Master Fletcher's Incomparable Plays._ Printed in Beaumont and
- Fletcher's Works, 1647, and Beaumont's Poems, 1653.
- _The Golden Pomp is come._ Ovid, "Aurea Pompa venit" (as in _Hesperides_
- 201).
- _To be with juice of cedar washed all over._ Horace's "linenda cedro,"
- as in _Hesperides_.
- _Evadne._ See Note to _Hesperides_ 575.
- _The New Charon._ First printed in "Lachrymae Musarum. The tears of the
- Muses: exprest in Elegies written by divers persons of Nobility and
- Worth, upon the death of the most hopefull Henry, Lord Hastings....
- Collected and set forth by R[ichard] B[rome]. _London_, 1649." This is
- the only poem which we know of Herrick's, written after 1648, and even
- in this Herrick uses materials already employed in "Charon and the
- Nightingale" in _Hesperides_.
- _Epitaph on the Tomb of Sir Edward Giles._ First printed by Dr. Grosart
- from the monument in Dean Prior Church. Sir Edward Giles was the
- occupant of Dean Court and the magnate of the parish.
- APPENDIX I.
- HERRICK'S POEMS IN WITTS RECREATIONS.
- Both Mr. Hazlitt and Dr. Grosart have slightly misrepresented the
- relation of _Hesperides_ to the anthology known as _Witts Recreations_:
- Mr. Hazlitt by mistakes as to their respective contents; Dr. Grosart
- (after a much more careful collation) by taking down the date of the
- wrong edition. To put matters straight four editions have to be
- examined:--
- I. "Witts Recreations. Selected from the finest Fancies of Moderne
- Muses, With a Thousand out Landish Proverbs. _London. Printed for
- Humph. Blunden at ye Castle in Cornhill, 1640._ 8vo."
- This general title-page is engraved by W. Marshall. The Outlandish
- Proverbs were selected by George Herbert, and, like the first part, have
- a printed title-page of their own.
- II. "Witts Recreations. Augmented with Ingenious Conceites for the
- wittie and Merrie Medicines for the Melancholie. _London. Printed
- for Humph. Blunden: at ye Castle in Cornhill, 1641._ 8vo."
- In this, and subsequent editions, Marshall's title-page is re-engraved
- and the Outlandish Proverbs are omitted. The printed title-page reads:
- "Wit's Recreations. Containing 630 Epigrams, 160 Epitaphs. Variety of
- Fancies and Fantasticks, Good for Melancholly humours. _London. Printed
- by Thomas Cotes_," etc. The epigrams vary considerably from the
- selection in the previous edition.
- III. "Witts Recreations refined. Augmented, with Ingenious Conceites
- for the wittie, and Merrie Medicines for the Melancholie...."
- In the Museum copy of this edition the imprint to the engraved title has
- been cropped away. The printed title-page reads: "Recreation for
- Ingenious Head-peeces. Or, A Pleasant Grove for their Wits to walke in.
- Of Epigrams, 630: Epitaphs, 180: Fancies, a number: Fantasticks,
- abundance, Good for melancholy Humors. _Printed by R. Cotes for H. B.
- London, 1645._ 8vo." Two poems of Herrick's occur in the additional
- "Fancies and Fantasticks," first printed in this edition, viz.: _The
- Description of a Woman_ (not contained in _Hesperides_), and the
- _Farewell to Sack_.
- IV. "Witts Recreations refined. Augmented, with Ingenious Conceites
- for the wittie and Merrie Medicines for the Melancholie. _Printed by
- M. S. sould by I. Hancock in Popes head Alley, 1650._ 8vo."
- The printed title-page reads: "Recreations for Ingenious Head-peeces.
- Or, A Pleasant Grove for their Wits to Walke in. Of Epigrams, 700:
- Epitaphs, 200: Fancies, a number: Fantasticks, abundance. With their
- Addition, Multiplication, and Division. _London, Printed by M.
- Simmons_," etc. In this edition many of the Epigrams are omitted and
- more than one hundred fresh ones added. Additions are also made to the
- Epitaphs and Fancies and Fantasticks. Of the new Epigrams and Poems no
- less than seventy-two had been printed two years earlier in Herrick's
- _Hesperides_, and ten others were added in 1654 from the same source.
- _Witts Recreations_ was again reprinted in 1663, 1667, and perhaps
- oftener. In 1817 it was issued as vol. ii. of a collection of _Facetiæ_,
- of which Mennis and Smith's _Musarum Deliciæ_ and _Wit Restor'd_ formed
- vol. i. On the title-page _Witts Recreations_ is said to be printed from
- edition 1640, with all the wood engravings and improvements of
- subsequent editions, and in the preface it is explained to be "reprinted
- after a collation of the four editions, 1640, 41, 54, and 63, for the
- purpose of bringing together in one body all the various articles spread
- throughout, and not to be found in any one edition". This 1817 reprint
- was re-issued by Hotten in 1874, and this re-issue, as his references to
- pagination show, was the one used by Dr. Grosart. The date 1640 on the
- title-page may have caught his eye and led to his mistaken allusion to
- the "prior publication" of the Herrick poems in 1640, whereas
- _Hesperides_ was published in 1648, and the editions of _Witts
- Recreations_ which contain anything of his besides the _Description of a
- Woman_ and _A Farewell to Sack_, in 1650, 1654, etc.
- In the Notes to the present edition I have drawn attention to all
- variations in the text of the poems as printed by Herrick and the later
- editors, and now subjoin a complete list of the poems under the titles
- which they take in _Witts Recreations_, with their numbers in this
- edition.
- 1645 Edition.
- 128. A Farewell to Sack.
- [Not in _Hesp._] The Description of a Woman.
- 1650 Edition Adds:--
- 123. A Tear sent to his M^is.
- 159. The Cruel Maid.
- 162. His Misery.
- 172. With a Ring to Julia.
- 200. On Gubbs.
- 206. On Bunce.
- 239. On Guesse.
- 241. On a Painted Madam.
- 310. On a Child.
- 311. On Sneape.
- 328. A Foolish Querie.
- 340. A Check to her Delay.
- 352. Nothing New.
- 357. Long and Lazy.
- 367. To a Stale Lady.
- 374. Gain and Gettings.
- 379. On Doll.
- 380. On Skrew.
- 381. On Linnit.
- 400. On Raspe.
- 407. On Himself.
- 408. Love and Liberty.
- 409. On Skinns.
- 428. On Craw.
- 434. On Jack and Jill.
- 517. Change.
- 534. To Julia.
- 572. On Umber.
- 600. Little and Loud.
- 616. Abroad with the Maids.
- 637. On Lungs.
- 640. On a Child.
- 644. On an Old Man, a Residentiary.
- 648. On Cob.
- 649. On Betty.
- 650. On Skoles.
- 661. Ambition.
- 666. On Zelot.
- 669. On Crab.
- 675. On Women's Denial.
- 676. Adversity.
- 693. On Tuck.
- 697. Adversity.
- 703. On Trigg.
- 711. Possessions.
- 735. Maids' Nays.
- 743. On Julia's Weeping.
- 752. No Pains No Gains.
- 761. Alvar and Anthea.
- 772. A Hymn to Bacchus.
- 776. Anger.
- 791. Verses.
- 795. On Bice.
- 796. On Trencherman.
- 797. Kisses.
- 832. On Punchin.
- 838. On a Maid.
- 840. Beauty.
- 846. Writing.
- 849. Satisfaction.
- 873. On Love.
- 881. ll. 13, 14, Sharp Sauce.
- 886. On Lulls.
- 902. Truth.
- 910. On Ben Jonson.
- 946. An Hymn to Love.
- 950. Leaven.
- 1025. On Boreman.
- 1084. On Love.
- 1085. On Gut.
- 1106. On Rump.
- 1119. Sauce for Sorrows.
- 1126. Of this Book.
- 1654 Edition Adds:--
- 49. Cherry Pit.
- 85. On Love.
- 92. The Bag of a Bee.
- 208. To make much of Time.
- 235. On an Old Batchelor.
- 238. Another. (On the Rose.)
- 253. Counsel not to Love.
- 260. How the Violets came blue.
- 337. A Vow to Cupid.
- 446. The Farewell to Love and to his Mistress.
- APPENDIX II.
- HERRICK'S FAIRY POEMS AND THE DESCRIPTION OF THE KING AND QUEENE OF
- FAYRIES PUBLISHED 1635.
- The publisher's freak, by which Herrick's three chief Fairy poems ("The
- Fairy Temple; or, Oberon's Chapel," "Oberon's Feast," and "Oberon's
- Palace") are separated from each other, is greatly to be regretted. The
- last two, both dedicated to Shapcott, are distinctly connected by their
- opening lines, and "Oberon's Chapel," dedicated to Mr. John Merrifield,
- Herrick's other fairy-loving lawyer, of course belongs to the same
- group. All three were probably first written in 1626 and cannot be
- dissociated from Drayton's _Nymphidia_, published in 1627, and Sir
- Simeon Steward's "A Description of the King of Fayries clothes, brought
- to him on New-yeares day in the morning, 1626 [O. S.], by his Queenes
- Chambermaids". In 1635 there was published a little book of a dozen
- leaves, most kindly transcribed for this edition by Mr. E. Gordon Duff,
- from the unique copy at the Bodleian Library. It is entitled:--
- "A | Description | of the King and Queene of | Fayries, their habit,
- fare, their | abode pompe and state. | Beeing very delightfull to
- the sense, and | full of mirth. | [Wood-cut.] London. | _Printed
- for Richard Harper, and are to be sold | at his shop, at the
- Hospitall gate._ 1635."
- Fol. 1 is blank; fol. 2 occupied by the title-page; ff. 3, 4 (verso
- blank) by a letter "To the Reader," signed: "Yours hereafter, If now
- approved on, R. S.," beginning: "Courteous Reader, I present thee here
- with the Description of the King of the Fayries, of his Attendants,
- Apparel, Gesture, and Victuals, which though comprehended in the brevity
- of so short a volume, yet as the Proverbe truely averres, it hath as
- mellifluous and pleasing discourse, as that whose amplitude contains the
- fulnesse of a bigger composition"; on fol. 5 (verso blank) occurs the
- following poem [spelling here modernised]:--
- "Deep-skilled Geographers, whose art and skill
- Do traverse all the world, and with their quill
- Declare the strangeness of each several clime,
- The nature, situation, and the time
- Of being inhabited, yet all their art
- And deep informèd skill could not impart
- In what set climate of this Orb or Isle,
- The King of Fairies kept, whose honoured style
- Is here inclosed, with the sincere description
- Of his abode, his nature, and the region
- In which he rules: read, and thou shalt find
- Delightful mirth, fit to content thy mind.
- May the contents thereof thy palate suit,
- With its mellifluous and pleasing fruit:
- For nought can more be sweetened to my mind
- Than that this Pamphlet thy contentment find;
- Which if it shall, my labour is sufficed,
- In being by your liking highly prized.
- "Yours to his power,
- "R. S."
- This is followed (pp. 1-3) by: "A Description of the Kings [sic] of
- Fayries Clothes, brought to him on New-Yeares day in the morning, 1626,
- by his Queenes Chambermaids:--
- "First a cobweb shirt, more thin
- Than ever spider since could spin.
- Changed to the whiteness of the snow,
- By the stormy winds that blow
- In the vast and frozen air,
- No shirt half so fine, so fair;
- A rich waistcoat they did bring,
- Made of the Trout-fly's gilded wing:
- At which his Elveship 'gan to fret
- The wearing it would make him sweat
- Even with its weight: he needs would wear
- A waistcoat made of downy hair
- New shaven off an Eunuch's chin,
- That pleased him well, 'twas wondrous thin.
- The outside of his doublet was
- Made of the four-leaved, true-loved grass,
- Changed into so fine a gloss,
- With the oil of crispy moss:
- It made a rainbow in the night
- Which gave a lustre passing light.
- On every seam there was a lace
- Drawn by the unctuous snail's slow pace,
- To which the finest, purest, silver thread
- Compared, did look like dull pale lead.
- His breeches of the Fleece was wrought,
- Which from Colchos Jason brought:
- Spun into so fine a yarn
- No mortal wight might it discern,
- Weaved by Arachne on her loom,
- Just before she had her doom.
- A rich Mantle he did wear,
- Made of tinsel gossamer.
- Beflowered over with a few
- Diamond stars of morning dew:
- Dyed crimson in a maiden's blush,
- Lined with humble-bees' lost plush.
- His cap was all of ladies' love,
- So wondrous light, that it did move
- If any humming gnat or fly
- Buzzed the air in passing by,
- About his neck a wreath of pearl,
- Dropped from the eyes of some poor girl,
- Pinched, because she had forgot
- To leave clean water in the pot."
- The next page is occupied by a woodcut, and then (pp. 5, misnumbered 4,
- and 6) comes the variation on Herrick's "Oberon's Feast":--
- "A DESCRIPTION OF HIS DIET.
- "Now they, the Elves, within a trice,
- Prepared a feast less great than nice,
- Where you may imagine first,
- The Elves prepare to quench his thirst,
- In pure seed pearl of infant dew
- Brought and sweetened with a blue
- And pregnant violet; which done,
- His killing eyes begin to run
- Quite o'er the table, where he spies
- The horns of watered butterflies,
- Of which he eats, but with a little
- Neat cool allay of cuckoo's spittle.
- Next this the red-cap worm that's shut
- Within the concave of a nut.
- Moles' eyes he tastes, then adders' ears;
- To these for sauce the slain stags' tears,
- A bloated earwig, and the pith
- Of sugared rush he glads him with.
- Then he takes a little moth,
- Late fatted in a scarlet cloth,
- A spinner's ham, the beards of mice,
- Nits carbonadoed, a device
- Before unknown; the blood of fleas,
- Which gave his Elveship's stomach ease.
- The unctuous dew-laps of a snail,
- The broke heart of a nightingale
- O'ercome in music, with the sag
- And well-bestrutted bee's sweet bag.
- Conserves of atoms, and the mites,
- The silk-worm's sperm, and the delights
- Of all that ever yet hath blest
- Fairy-land: so ends his feast."
- On the next page is printed: "Orpheus. Thrice excelling, for the
- finishment of this Feast, thou must music it so that the Deities may
- descend to grace it." This is succeeded by a page bearing a woodcut,
- then we have "The Fairies Fegaries," a poem occupying three more pages
- followed by another woodcut, and then "The Melancholly Lover's Song,"
- and a third woodcut. The occurrence of the _Melancholy Lover's Song_
- (the well-known lines beginning: "Hence all you vain delights") in print
- in 1635 is interesting, as I believe that _The Nice Valour_, the play in
- which they occur, was not printed till 1647, and Milton's _Il
- Penseroso_, which they suggested, appeared in 1645. But the verses are
- rather out of place in the little Fairy-Book.
- APPENDIX III.
- POOR ROBIN'S ALMANACK.
- Herrick's name has been so persistently connected with _Poor Robert's
- Almanack_ that a few words must be said on the subject. There is, we are
- told, a Devonshire tradition ascribing the _Almanack_ to him, and this
- is accepted by Nichols in his _Leicestershire_, and "accredited" by Dr.
- Grosart. The tradition apparently rests on no better basis than
- Herrick's Christian name, and of the poems in the issues of the
- _Almanack_ which I have seen, it may be said, that, while the worst of
- them, save for some lack of neatness of turn, might conceivably have
- been by Herrick--on the principle that if Herrick could write some of
- his epigrams, he could write anything--the more ambitious poems it is
- quite impossible to attribute to the author of the _Hesperides_. But
- apart from opinion, the negative evidence is overwhelming. Of the three
- earliest issues in the British Museum, 1664, 1667 and 1669 (all in the
- annual collections of Almanacs, issued by the Stationers' Company, and
- all, it may be noted, bound for Charles II.), I transcribe the
- title-page of the first. "Poor Robin. 1664. An Almanack After a New
- Fashion wherein the Reader may see (if he be not blinde) many remarkable
- things worthy of Observation. Containing a two-fold Kalendar, viz. the
- Iulian or English, and the Roundheads or Fanaticks: with their several
- Saints daies and Observations, upon every month. Written by Poor Robin,
- Knight of the burnt Island and a well-willer to the Mathematicks.
- Calculated for the Meridian of Saffron Walden, where the Pole is
- elevated 52 degrees and 6 minutes above the Horizon. London: Printed for
- the Company of Stationers."
- In the 1667 issue the paragraph about the Pole runs: "Where the
- Maypole is elevated (with a plumm cake on the top of it) 5 yards ¾ above
- the Market Cross". The mention of Saffron Walden had apparently been
- ridiculed, and the author in this year joins in the laugh, and in 1669
- omits the paragraph altogether. But what had Herrick at any time to do
- with Saffron Walden, and why should the poet, whose politics, apart from
- some personal devotion to Charles I., were distinctly moderate, mix
- himself up with an ultra-Cavalier publication? Also, if Herrick be "Poor
- Robin" we must attribute to him, at least, the greater part of the
- twenty-one "Poor Robin" publications, of which Mr. H. Ecroyd Smith gave
- a list in _Notes and Queries_, 6th series, vii. 321-3, _e.g._, "Poor
- Robin's Perambulation from the Town of Saffron Walden to London" (1678),
- "The Merrie Exploits of Poor Robin, the Merrie Saddler of Walden," etc.
- These have been generally assigned to William Winstanley, the
- barber-poet, on the ground of a supposed similarity of style, and from
- "Poor Robin" having been written under a portrait of him. Mr. Ecroyd
- Smith, however, attributes them to Robert Winstanley (born, 1646, at
- Saffron Walden), younger brother of Henry Winstanley, the projector of
- the Eddystone Lighthouse. He assigns the credit of the "identification"
- to Mr. Joseph Clark, F.S.A., of the Roos, Saffron Walden, but does not
- state the grounds which led Mr. Clark to his conclusion, in itself
- probable enough. In any case there is no valid ground for connecting
- Herrick either with the _Almanack_ or with any of the other "Poor Robin"
- publications.
- INDEX TO PERSONS MENTIONED.
- Abdie, Lady. [_See_ Soame, Anne.]
- Alabaster, Doctor, II. 70.
- Baldwin, Prudence,
- I. 152, 189, 251
- II. 78.
- Bartly, Arthur, II. 36.
- Beaumont, Francis, II. 4, 276.
- Berkley, Sir John, II. 63.
- Bradshaw, Katharine, I. 116.
- Bridgeman, I. 46.
- Buckingham, Duke of, I. 123.
- Carlisle, Countess of, I. 78.
- Charles I.,
- I. 28, 29, 74, 133, 198;
- II. 43, 87, 123, 202, 204, 207.
- Charles II.,
- I. 1, 105;
- II. 13, 66.
- Cotton, Charles, the elder, II. 119.
- Crew, Lady,
- I. 237;
- II. 128.
- Crew, Sir Clipseby,
- I. 139, 201, 228, 248;
- II. 18.
- Crofts, John, II. 83.
- Denham, Sir John, II. 39.
- Dorchester, Marquis of, II. 124, 125.
- Dorset, Earl of, I. 235.
- Falconbridge, Margaret, II. 81.
- Falconbridge, Thomas, I. 226.
- Finch, Elizabeth, II. 123.
- Fish, Sir Edward, I. 191.
- Fletcher, John, II. 4, 269.
- Giles, Sir Edward, II. 272.
- Gotiere [Gouter, Jacques], I. 47.
- Hall, John, II. 122.
- Hall, Joseph, Bishop of Exeter, I. 77.
- Harmar, Joseph, II. 125.
- Hastings, Henry, Lord, II. 270.
- Heale, Sir Thomas, II. 98.
- Henrietta Maria, I. 133.
- Herrick, Bridget, I. 255.
- Herrick, Elizabeth, I. 26, 182.
- Herrick, Julia, II. 143.
- Herrick, Mercy, II. 86.
- Herrick, Nicholas, II. 161.
- Herrick, Robert, Poem on his Father, I. 31.
- Herrick, Robert, Poem to his Nephew, I. 188.
- Herrick, Robert,
- I. 229;
- II. 153, 157, 159, 160, 164.
- Herrick, Susanna,
- I. 243;
- II. 128.
- Herrick, Thomas,
- I. 40;
- II. 129.
- Herrick, William, I. 88.
- Hopton, Lord, II. 136.
- Jincks, J., II. 96.
- Jonson, Ben,
- I. 188;
- II. 4, 11, 30, 109, 110.
- Kellam, II. 112.
- Kennedy, Dorothy, I. 50.
- Lamiere, Nicholas, I. 105.
- Lawes, Henry, II. 94, 270.
- Lawes, William, II. 108.
- Lee, Elizabeth, II. 16.
- Lowman, Bridget, I. 176.
- Merrifield, John, I. 111.
- Mince [Mennis], Sir John, I. 244.
- Norgate, Edward, I. 152.
- Northly, Henry, I. 155.
- Oulsworth, Michael, II. 159.
- Parry, Sir George, II. 151.
- Parsons, Dorothy, I. 234.
- Parsons, Tomasin, II. 129.
- Pemberton, Sir Lewis, I. 183.
- Pembroke, Earl of, I. 177.
- Porter, Endymion,
- I. 49, 87, 229;
- II. 33, 154.
- Portman, Mrs., II. 156.
- Potter, Amy, II. 91.
- Potter, Grace, II. 133.
- Prat, II. 46.
- Ramsay, Robert, I. 85.
- Richmond and Lennox, Duke of, I. 212.
- Selden, John, I. 179.
- Shakespeare, William, II. 276.
- Shapcott, Thomas, I. 148, 204, 209.
- Soame, Anne, I. 181.
- Soame, Stephen, I. 250.
- Soame, Sir Thomas, I. 220.
- Soame, Sir William, I. 163.
- Southwell, Sir Thomas, I. 63.
- Southwell, Susanna, I. 243.
- Steward, Sir Simeon, I. 157.
- Stone, Mary, II. 71.
- Stone, Sir Richard, I. 232.
- Stuart, Lord Bernard, I. 109.
- Swetnaham, Lawrence, II. 158.
- Tracy, Lady. [_See_ Lee, Elizabeth.]
- Villars [Villiers], Lady Mary, I. 172.
- Warr [_or_ Weare], John, I. 57, 253.
- Westmoreland, Earl of, I. 47, 125, 215.
- Wheeler, Elizabeth,
- I. 55, 132;
- II. 153.
- Wheeler, Penelope, I. 236.
- Wickes, John,
- I. 165;
- II. 37, 150.
- Willan, Leonard, II. 121.
- Willand, Mary, I. 239.
- Williams, John, Bishop of Lincoln,
- I. 62;
- II. 267.
- Wilson, Dr. John, I. 47.
- Wingfield, John, II. 8.
- Yard, Lettice, I. 155.
- York, Duke of, I. 134.
- INDEX OF FIRST LINES.
- A Bachelor I will, I. 14.
- A crystal vial Cupid brought, II. 24.
- A funeral stone, I. 35.
- A golden fly one show'd to me, I. 233.
- A gyges ring they bear about them still, II. 61.
- A just man's like a rock that turns the wrath, I. 190.
- A little mushroom table spread, I. 148.
- A little saint best fits a little shrine, II. 59.
- A long life's-day I've taken pains, II. 11.
- A man prepar'd against all ills to come, I. 160.
- A man's transgressions God does then remit, II. 196.
- A master of a house, as I have read, II. 73.
- A prayer that is said alone, II. 226.
- A roll of parchment Clunn about him bears, II. 117.
- A sweet disorder in the dress, I. 32.
- A wanton and lascivious eye, II. 66.
- A way enchased with glass and beads, I. 111.
- A wearied pilgrim, I have wandered here, II. 157.
- A willow garland thou didst send, I. 201.
- About the sweet bag of a bee, I. 36.
- Abundant plagues I late have had, II. 188.
- Adverse and prosperous fortunes both work on, II. 182.
- Adversity hurts none but only such, II. 47.
- Afflictions bring us joy in time to come, II. 182.
- Afflictions they most profitable are, II. 174.
- After the feast, my Shapcot, see, I. 204.
- After the rare arch-poet, Jonson, died, I. 188.
- After this life, the wages shall, II. 225.
- After thy labour take thine ease, II. 163.
- After true sorrow for our sins, our strife, II. 201.
- Against diseases here the strongest fence, II. 162.
- Ah, Ben! II. 110.
- Ah, Bianca! now I see, II. 132.
- Ah, cruel love! must I endure, I. 90.
- Ah! Lycidas, come tell me why, I. 229.
- Ah, me! I love; give him your hand to kiss, II. 91.
- Ah, my Anthea! Must my heart still break, I. 27.
- Ah, my Perilla! dost thou grieve to see, I. 8.
- Ah, Posthumus! our years hence fly, I. 165.
- Alas! I can't, for tell me how, II. 159.
- All are not ill plots that do sometimes fail, II. 162.
- All has been plundered from me but my wit, II. 90.
- All I have lost that could be rapt from me, II. 212.
- All things are open to these two events, I. 227.
- All things decay with time: the forest sees, I. 25.
- All things o'er-ruled are here, by chance, I. 248.
- All things subjected are to fate, II. 7.
- Along, come along, II. 148.
- Along the dark and silent night, II. 214.
- Although our sufferings meet with no relief, II. 163.
- Although we cannot turn the fervent fit, II. 192.
- Am I despised because you say, I. 75.
- Among disasters that dissension brings, II. 75.
- Among the myrtles as I walk'd, I. 132.
- Among these tempests great and manifold, II. 147.
- Among thy fancies tell me this, I. 162.
- And as time past when Cato, the severe, II. 124.
- And, cruel maid, because I see, I. 72.
- And must we part, because some say, I. 57.
- Angels are called gods; yet of them none, II. 224.
- Angry if Irene be, I. 256.
- Anthea bade me tie her shoe, I. 14.
- Anthea, I am going hence, II. 95.
- Anthea laugh'd, and fearing lest excess, II. 137.
- Apollo sings, his harp resounds: give room, II. 269.
- Art quickens nature; care will make a face, I. 120.
- Art thou not destin'd? then with haste go on, II. 237.
- As gilliflowers do but stay, I. 156.
- As in our clothes, so likewise he who looks, I. 254.
- As is your name, so is your comely face, II. 133.
- As Julia once a-slumbering lay, I. 86.
- As lately I a garland bound, I. 119.
- As many laws and lawyers do express, II. 53.
- As my little pot doth boil, II. 248.
- As oft as night is banish'd by the morn, I. 29.
- As shows the air when with a rainbow grac'd, I. 47.
- As sunbeams pierce the glass, and streaming in, II. 231.
- As thou deserv'st, be proud; then gladly let, I. 244.
- As wearied pilgrims, once possessed, II. 16.
- Ask me what hunger is, and I'll reply, II. 115.
- Ask me why I do not sing, I. 164.
- Ask me why I send you here, II. 6.
- At draw-gloves we'll play, I. 122.
- At my homely country seat, I. 191.
- At post and pair, or slam, Tom Tuck would play, II. 46.
- At stool-ball, Lucia, let us play, II. 45.
- Attempt the end, and never stand to doubt, II. 137.
- Away enchased with glass and beads, I. 111.
- Away with silks, away with lawn, I. 193.
- Bacchus, let me drink no more, I. 153.
- Bad are the times. And worse than they are we, I. 198.
- Be bold, my book, nor be abash'd, or fear, II. 11.
- Be not dismayed, though crosses cast thee down. II. 137.
- Be not proud, but now incline, I. 120.
- Be the mistress of my choice, II. 36.
- Be those few hours, which I have yet to spend, II. 241.
- Beauty no other thing is than a beam, I. 39.
- Beauty's no other but a lovely grace, II. 92.
- Before man's fall the rose was born, II. 246.
- Before the press scarce one could see, II. 107.
- Begin to charm, and as thou strok'st mine ears, I. 81.
- Begin with a kiss, II. 57.
- Begin with Jove; then is the work half-done, I. 159.
- Bellman of night if I about shall go, II. 182.
- Besides us two, i' th' temple here's not one, I. 210.
- Biancha let, I. 34.
- Bid me to live, and I will live, I. 135.
- Bind me but to thee with thine hair, II. 115.
- Blessings in abundance come, I. 155.
- Born I was to be old, I. 247.
- Born I was to meet with age, I. 240.
- Both you two have, I. 138.
- Break off delay, since we but read of one, II. 63.
- Breathe, Julia, breathe, and I'll protest, I. 84.
- Bright tulips, we do know, I. 231.
- Bring me my rosebuds, drawer, come, II. 6.
- Bring the holy crust of bread, II. 103.
- Brisk methinks I am, and fine, II. 134.
- Burn or drown me, choose ye whether, II. 67.
- But born, and like a short delight, I. 84.
- By dream I saw one of the three, I. 192.
- By hours we all live here; in Heaven is known, II. 240.
- By so much virtue is the less, II. 66.
- By the next kindling of the day, II. 88.
- By the weak'st means things mighty are o'erthrown, II. 48.
- By those soft tods of wool, II. 71.
- By time and counsel do the best we can, I. 150.
- Call me no more, I. 180.
- Can I not come to Thee, my God, for these, II. 186.
- Can I not sin, but thou wilt be, II. 193.
- Care keeps the conquest; 'tis no less renown, II. 132.
- Case is a lawyer that ne'er pleads alone, II. 127.
- Charm me asleep, and melt me so, I. 117.
- Charms that call down the moon from out her sphere, I. 122.
- Charon, O Charon, draw thy boat to th' shore, II. 270.
- Charon! O gentle Charon! let me woo thee, II. 58.
- Cherry-ripe, ripe, ripe, I cry, I. 21.
- Choose me your valentine, I. 36.
- Christ, He requires still, wheresoe'er He comes, II. 192.
- Christ, I have read, did to His chaplains say, II. 223.
- Christ never did so great a work but there, II. 237.
- Christ took our nature on Him, not that He, II. 238.
- Christ was not sad, i' the garden, for His own, II. 227.
- Christ, when He hung the dreadful cross upon, II. 228.
- Clear are her eyes, I. 243.
- Close keep your lips, if that you mean, II. 61.
- Come, and let's in solemn wise, II. 99.
- Come, Anthea, know thou this, II. 41.
- Come, Anthea, let us two, II. 68.
- Come, blitheful neat-herds, let us lay, II. 51.
- Come, bring with a noise, II. 79.
- Come, bring your sampler, and with art, I. 10.
- Come, come away, I. 172.
- Come down and dance ye in the toil, I. 9.
- Come, guard this night the Christmas-pie, II. 80.
- Come, leave this loathed country life, and then, I. 214.
- Come, pity us, all ye who see, II., 216.
- Come, sit we by the fire's side, II. 20.
- Come, sit we under yonder tree, II. 15.
- Come, skilful Lupo, now, and take, I. 46.
- Come, sons of summer, by whose toil, I. 125.
- Come, then, and like two doves with silv'ry wings, II. 2.
- Come thou not near those men who are like bread, I. 5.
- Come thou, who art the wine and wit, I. 238.
- Come to me God; but do not come, II. 242.
- Come with the spring-time forth, fair maid, and be, I. 176.
- Command the roof, great Genius, and from thence, II. 55.
- Confession twofold is, as Austine says, II. 244.
- Conformity gives comeliness to things, II. 147.
- Conformity was ever known, I. 28.
- Conquer we shall, but we must first contend, II. 115.
- Consider sorrows, how they are aright, II. 84.
- Consult ere thou begin'st, that done, go on, II. 65.
- Crab faces gowns with sundry furs; 'tis known, II. 37.
- Cupid, as he lay among, I. 59.
- Cynthius, pluck ye by the ear, I. 62.
- Dark and dull night, fly hence away, II. 203.
- Dead falls the cause if once the hand be mute, I. 154.
- Dean Bourne, farewell; I never look to see, I. 33.
- Dear God, II. 201.
- Dear Perenna, prithee come, I. 110.
- Dear, though to part it be a hell, I. 39.
- Dearest of thousands, now the time draws near, II. 20.
- Despair takes heart, when there's no hope to speed, II. 135.
- Dew sat on Julia's hair, I. 226.
- Did I or love, or could I others draw, I. 253.
- Die ere long, I'm sure I shall, II. 151.
- Discreet and prudent we that discord call, II. 64.
- Display thy breasts my Julia--Here let me, I. 119.
- Do with me, God, as Thou didst deal with John, II. 174.
- Does fortune rend thee? Bear with thy hard fate, II. 87.
- Down with the rosemary and bays, II. 104.
- Down with the rosemary, and so, II. 129.
- Dread not the shackles: on with thine intent, II. 144.
- Drink up, II. 131.
- Drink wine, and live here blitheful while ye may, II. 31.
- Droop, droop no more, or hang the head, I. 6.
- Drowning, drowning, I espy, II. 126.
- Dry your sweet cheek, long drown'd with sorrow's rain, I. 131.
- Dull to myself, and almost dead to these, II. 13.
- Each must in virtue strive for to excel, I. 151.
- Eaten I have; and though I had good cheer, I. 248.
- Empires of kings are now, and ever were, I. 202.
- End now the white loaf and the pie, II. 105.
- Ere I go hence, and be no more, II. 260.
- Every time seems short to be, I. 202.
- Evil no nature hath; the loss of good, II. 207.
- Examples lead us, and we likely see, II. 68.
- Excess is sluttish: keep the mean; for why? II. 162.
- Fain would I kiss my Julia's dainty leg, I. 175.
- Fair and foul days trip cross and pile; the fair, I. 237.
- Fair daffodils, we weep to see, I. 156.
- Fair pledges of a fruitful tree, I. 220.
- Fair was the dawn; and but e'en now the skies, I. 99.
- Faith is a thing that's four-square; let it fall, II. 114.
- Fame's pillar here, at last, we set, II. 165.
- Farewell, thou thing, time past so known, so dear, I. 53.
- Fat be my hind; unlearned be my wife, II. 116.
- Fight thou with shafts of silver and o'ercome, I. 23.
- Fill me a mighty bowl, II. 30.
- Fill me my wine in crystal; thus, and thus, I. 234.
- First, April, she with mellow showers, I. 26.
- First, for effusions due unto the dead, I. 26.
- First, for your shape, the curious cannot show, I. 237.
- First, may the hand of bounty bring, II. 112.
- First offer incense, then thy field and meads, I. 180.
- Fled are the frosts, and now the fields appear, II. 27.
- Fly hence, pale care, no more remember, II. 267.
- Fly me not, though I be grey, I. 244.
- Fly to my mistress, pretty pilfering bee, I. 124.
- Fold now thine arms and hang the head, I. 56.
- Fools are they who never know, I. 119.
- For a kiss or two, confess, II. 130.
- For all our works a recompense is sure, II. 93.
- For all thy many courtesies to me, II. 83.
- For being comely, consonant, and free, II. 8.
- For brave comportment, wit without offence, II. 119
- For civil, clean, and circumcised wit, I. 244.
- For each one body that i' th' earth is sown, II. 236.
- For my embalming, Julia, do but this, I. 161.
- For my neighbour, I'll not know, I. 103.
- For my part, I never care, I. 100.
- For one so rarely tun'd to fit all parts, I. 152.
- For punishment in war it will suffice, I. 165.
- For sport my Julia threw a lace, I. 145.
- For those, my unbaptised rhymes, II. 169.
- For truth I may this sentence tell, II. 151.
- Fortune did never favour one, I. 240.
- Fortune no higher project can devise, I. 246.
- Fortune's a blind profuser of her own, II. 45.
- Fresh strewings allow, II. 69.
- Frolic virgins once these were, I. 190.
- From me my Sylvia ran away, II. 109.
- From noise of scare-fires rest ye free, I. 151.
- From the dull confines of the drooping West, II. 150.
- From the temple to your home, II. 21.
- From this bleeding hand of mine, I. 108.
- Gather ye rosebuds while ye may, I. 102.
- Get up, get up for shame, the blooming morn, I. 82.
- Give house-room to the best; 'tis never known, II. 116.
- Give if thou canst an alms; if not, afford, II. 193.
- Give me a cell, II. 73.
- Give me a man that is not dull, II. 146.
- Give me honours! what are these, II. 191.
- Give me one kiss, I. 246.
- Give me that man that dares bestride, I. 35.
- Give me the food that satisfies a guest, II. 82.
- Give me wine, and give me meat, II. 18.
- Give unto all, lest he, whom thou deni'st, II. 239.
- Give Want her welcome if she comes; we find. II. 12.
- Give way, and be ye ravish'd by the sun, I. 246.
- Give way, give way now; now my Charles shines here, II. 43.
- Give way, give way, ye gates and win, I. 223.
- Glide, gentle streams, and bear, I. 51.
- Glory be to the graces! II. 76.
- Glory no other thing is, Tullie says, II. 50.
- Go, happy rose, and interwove, I. 121.
- Go hence, and with this parting kiss, I. 217.
- Go hence away, and in thy parting know, II. 269.
- Go I must; when I am gone, I. 250.
- Go, perjured man; and if thou e'er return, I. 59.
- Go on, brave Hopton, to effectuate that, II. 136.
- Go, pretty child, and bear this flower, II. 189.
- Go thou forth, my book, though late, II. 164.
- Go, woo young Charles no more to look, II. 13.
- God as He is most holy known, II. 174.
- God, as He's potent, so He's likewise known, II. 222.
- God, as the learned Damascene doth write, II. 227.
- God bought man here with His heart's blood expense, II. 237.
- God can do all things, save but what are known, II. 228.
- God can't be wrathful; but we may conclude, II. 248.
- God could have made all rich, or all men poor, II. 192.
- God did forbid the Israelites to bring, II. 230.
- God doth embrace the good with love, and gains, II. 237
- God doth not promise here to man that He, II. 247.
- God from our eyes, all tears hereafter wipes, II. 223.
- God gives not only corn for need, II. 191.
- God gives to none so absolute an ease, II. 234.
- God had but one Son free from sin; but none, II. 222.
- God has a right hand, but is quite bereft, II. 244.
- God has four keys, which He reserves alone, II. 239.
- God has His whips here to a twofold end, II. 175.
- God hates the dual numbers, being known, II. 246.
- God hath this world for many made, 'tis true, II. 234.
- God hath two wings which He doth ever move, II. 171.
- God, He refuseth no man, but makes way, II. 222.
- God, He rejects all prayers that are slight, II. 173.
- God hears us when we pray, but yet defers, II. 176.
- God hides from man the reck'ning day, that he, II. 224.
- God in His own day will be then severe, II. 226.
- God, in the holy tongue, they call, II. 231.
- God is above the sphere of our esteem, II. 170.
- God is all forepart; for, we never see, II. 173.
- God is all present to whate'er we do, II. 243.
- God is all sufferance here, here He doth show, II. 194.
- God is His name of nature; but that word, II. 223.
- God is Jehovah called: which name of His, II. 232.
- God is more here than in another place, II. 234.
- God is not only merciful to call, II. 173.
- God is not only said to be, II. 170.
- God is so potent, as His power can, II. 229.
- God is then said for to descend, when He, II. 245.
- God loads and unloads, thus His work begins, II. 172.
- God makes not good men wantons, but doth bring, II. 211.
- God ne'er afflicts us more than our desert, II. 171.
- God on our youth bestows but little ease, II. 229.
- God pardons those who do through frailty sin, II. 176.
- God scourgeth some severely, some He spares, II. 174.
- God still rewards us more than our desert, II. 244.
- God strikes His Church, but 'tis to this intent, II. 176.
- God suffers not His saints and servants dear, II. 243.
- God tempteth no one, as St. Aug'stine saith, II. 225.
- God then confounds man's face when He not hears, II. 228.
- God! to my little meal and oil, II. 221.
- God, when for sin He makes His children smart, II. 174.
- God, when He's angry here with anyone, II. 171.
- God, when He takes my goods and chattels hence, II. 200.
- God, who me gives a will for to repent, II. 247.
- God, who's in heaven, will hear from thence, II. 227.
- God will have all or none; serve Him, or fall, II. 187.
- God's boundless mercy is, to sinful man, II. 172.
- God's bounty, that ebbs less and less, II. 194.
- God's evident, and may be said to be, II. 232.
- God's grace deserves here to be daily fed, II. 222.
- God's hands are round and smooth, that gifts may fall, II. 225.
- God's prescience makes none sinful; but th' offence, II. 238.
- God's present everywhere, but most of all, II. 236.
- God's rod doth watch while men do sleep, and then, II. 74.
- God's said our hearts to harden then, II. 246.
- God's said to dwell there, wheresoever He, II. 232.
- God's said to leave this place, and for to come, II. 231.
- God's undivided, One in Persons Three, II. 232.
- Goddess, I begin an art, I. 245.
- Goddess, I do love a girl, I. 171.
- Goddess of youth, and lady of the spring, I. 133.
- Gold I have none, but I present my need, II. 209.
- Gold I've none, for use or show, I. 109.
- Gold serves for tribute to the king, II. 247.
- Gone she is a long, long way, II. 93.
- Good and great God! how should I fear, II. 245.
- Good-day, Mirtello. And to you no less, I. 105.
- Good morrow to the day so fair, I. 195.
- Good precepts we must firmly hold, I. 235.
- Good princes must be pray'd for; for the bad, I. 37.
- Good speed, for I this day, I. 107.
- Good things that come, of course, for less do please. I. 154.
- Great cities seldom rest; if there be none, II. 144.
- Great men by small means oft are overthrown, I. 227.
- Grow for two ends, it matters not at all, II. 37.
- Grow up in beauty, as thou dost begin, II. 129.
- Hail holy and all-honoured tomb, II. 254.
- Handsome you are, and proper you will be, II. 123.
- Hang up hooks and shears to scare, II. 104.
- Happily I had a sight, II. 140.
- Happy's that man to whom God gives, II. 185.
- Hard are the two first stairs unto a crown, II. 114.
- Hast thou attempted greatness? then go on, II. 64.
- Hast thou begun an act? ne'er then give o'er, II. 42.
- Haste is unhappy: what we rashly do, II. 85.
- Have, have ye no regard, all ye, II. 251.
- Have I not blest thee? Then go forth, nor fear, I. 193.
- Have ye beheld (with much delight), I. 203.
- He that ascended in a cloud shall come, II. 227.
- He that is hurt seeks help: sin is the wound, II. 226.
- He that may sin, sins least: leave to transgress, I. 136.
- He that will live of all cares dispossess'd, II. 129.
- He that will not love must be, I. 127.
- He who commends the vanquished, speaks the power, I. 252.
- He who has suffered shipwreck fears to sail, II. 11.
- He who wears blacks and mourns not for the dead, II. 148.
- Health is no other, as the learned hold, II. 42.
- Health is the first good lent to men, I. 50.
- Hear, ye virgins, and I'll teach, I. 151.
- Heaven is most fair; but fairer He, II. 227.
- Heaven is not given for our good works here, II. 239.
- Hell is no other but a soundless pit, II. 214.
- Hell is the place where whipping-cheer abounds, II. 214.
- Help me! help me! now I call, I. 10.
- Help me, Julia, for to pray, II. 154.
- Hence a blessed soul is fled, II. 9.
- Hence, hence, profane, and none appear, II. 205.
- Hence, hence, profane! soft silence let us have, I. 109.
- Hence they have borne my Lord; behold! the stone, II. 255.
- Her eyes the glow-worm lend thee, II. 17.
- Her pretty feet, I. 243.
- Here a little child I stand, II. 202.
- Here a pretty baby lies, II. 26.
- Here a solemn fast we keep, I. 212.
- Here, here, I live, I. 214.
- Here down my wearied limbs I'll lay, I. 153.
- Here, here I live with what my board, I. 251.
- Here I myself might likewise die, II. 82.
- Here lies a virgin, and as sweet, II. 71.
- Here lies Jonson with the rest, II. 109.
- Here she lies, a pretty bud, I. 154.
- Here she lies in bed of spice, II. 91.
- Here we are all by day; by night we're hurl'd, I. 23.
- Here we securely live and eat, I. 248.
- Holyrood, come forth and shield, I. 222.
- Holy water come and bring, II. 73.
- Holy waters hither bring, II. 127.
- Honour thy parents; but good manners call, II. 202.
- Honour to you who sit, II. 76.
- How am I bound to Two! God who doth give, II. 190.
- How am I ravish'd! when I do but see, I. 174.
- How can I choose but love and follow her, I. 227.
- How dull and dead are books that cannot show, I. 177.
- How fierce was I, when I did see, II. 117.
- How long, Perenna, wilt thou see, I. 222.
- How love came in I do not know, I. 27.
- How rich a man is all desire to know, I. 161.
- How rich and pleasing thou, my Julia, art, I. 34.
- How well contented in this private grange, II. 136.
- Humble we must be, if to heaven we go, II. 200.
- I a dirge will pen to thee, II. 128.
- I am holy while I stand, II. 30.
- I am of all bereft, I. 216.
- I am sieve-like, and can hold, I. 146.
- I am zealless; prithee pray, II. 95.
- I ask'd my Lucia but a kiss, II. 10.
- I asked thee oft what poets thou hast read, I. 80.
- I begin to wane in sight, I. 226.
- I brake thy bracelet 'gainst my will, II. 48.
- I bring ye love. What will love do? II. 135.
- I burn, I burn; and beg of you, I. 60.
- I call, I call: who do ye call? I. 139.
- I can but name thee, and methinks I call, I. 163.
- I cannot love as I have lov'd before, II. 72.
- I cannot pipe as I was wont to do, II. 2.
- I cannot suffer; and in this my part, I. 210.
- I could but see thee yesterday, II. 89.
- I could never love indeed, I. 228.
- I could wish you all who love, I. 147.
- I crawl, I creep; my Christ, I come, II. 221.
- I dare not ask a kiss, II. 35.
- I dislik'd but even now, I. 194.
- I do believe that die I must, II. 195.
- I do love I know not what, II. 7.
- I do not love, nor can it be, I. 194.
- I do not love to wed, I. 200.
- I dreamed we both were in a bed, I. 22.
- I dreamt the roses one time went, I. 7.
- I dreamt, last night, Thou didst transfuse, II. 194.
- I fear no earthly powers, I. 78.
- I freeze, I freeze, and nothing dwells, I. 8.
- I have a leaden, thou a shaft of gold, II. 163.
- I have been wanton and too bold, I fear, II. 160.
- I have beheld two lovers in a night, II. 263.
- I have lost, and lately, these, I. 17.
- I have my laurel chaplet on my head, II. 151.
- I heard ye could cool heat, and came, I. 196.
- I held Love's head while it did ache, I. 236.
- I lately fri'd, but now behold, II. 111.
- I make no haste to have my numbers read, II. 19.
- I must, II. 133.
- I played with Love, as with the foe, I. 255.
- I press'd my Julia's lips, and in the kiss, II. 48.
- I saw a fly within a bead, II. 86.
- I saw about her spotless wrist, I. 78.
- I saw a cherry weep, and why? I. 12.
- I send, I send here my supremest kiss, II. 143.
- I sing of brooks, of blossoms, birds, and bowers, I. 3.
- I sing thy praise, Iacchus, II. 74.
- I, who have favour'd many, come to be, I. 179.
- I will be short, and having quickly hurl'd, II. 121.
- I will confess, II. 118.
- I will no longer kiss, II. 159.
- I would to God that mine old age might have, II. 213.
- I'll come, I'll creep, though Thou dost threat, II. 182.
- I'll come to thee in all those shapes, I. 70.
- I'll do my best to win when e'er I woo, I. 36.
- I'll get me hence, II. 13.
- I'll hope no more, II. 209.
- I'll sing no more, nor will I longer write, II. 32.
- I'll to thee a simnel bring, II. 43.
- I'll write, because I'll give, I. 37.
- I'll write no more of love; but now repent, II. 164.
- I'm free from thee; and thou no more shalt bear, I. 18.
- I'm sick of love, O let me lie, I. 197.
- I've paid thee what I promis'd; that's not all, I. 209.
- If accusation only can draw blood, I. 244.
- If after rude and boisterous seas, I. 117.
- If all transgressions here should have their pay, II. 175.
- If anything delight me for to print, II. 190.
- If, dear Anthea, my hard fate it be, I. 11.
- If hap it must, that I must see thee lie, II. 123.
- If I dare write to you, my lord, who are, I. 235.
- If I have played the truant, or have here, II. 249.
- If I kiss Anthea's breast, I. 71.
- If I lie unburied, sir, II. 87.
- If kings and kingdoms once distracted be, II. 161.
- If little labour, little are our gains, II. 66.
- If meat the gods give, I the steam, I. 24.
- If men can say that beauty dies, I. 256.
- If 'mongst my many poems I can see, I. 76.
- If nature do deny, II. 26.
- If nine times you your bridegroom kiss, II. 6.
- If so be a toad be laid, II. 8.
- If that my fate has now fulfil'd my year, II. 96.
- If thou ask me, dear, wherefore, I. 234.
- If thou be'st taken, God forbid, II. 251.
- If thou hast found a honey comb, II. 109.
- If war or want shall make me grow so poor, II. 179.
- If well the dice run, let's applaud the cast, II. 18.
- If well thou hast begun, go on fore-right, I. 154.
- If when these lyrics, Cæsar, you shall hear, I. 133.
- If wholesome diet can re-cure a man, II. 148.
- If ye fear to be affrighted, II. 152.
- If ye will with Mab find grace, I. 252.
- Immortal clothing I put on, II. 86.
- Imparity doth ever discord bring, II. 85.
- In a dream, Love bade me go, II. 20.
- In all our high designments 'twill appear, II. 114.
- In all thy need be thou possess'd, II. 57.
- In battles what disasters fall, II. 111.
- In desp'rate cases all, or most, are known, II. 89.
- In doing justice God shall then be known, II. 243.
- In God's commands ne'er ask the reason why, II. 248.
- In God there's nothing, but 'tis known to be, II. 227.
- In holy meetings there a man may be, I. 203.
- In man ambition is the common'st thing, I. 23.
- In numbers, and but these a few, II. 176.
- In prayer the lips ne'er act the winning part, II. 178.
- In sober mornings, do not thou rehearse, I. 5.
- In the hope of ease to come, II. 143.
- In the hour of my distress, II. 180.
- In the morning when ye rise, II. 152.
- In the old Scripture I have often read, II. 178.
- In things a moderation keep, II. 77.
- In this little urn is laid, II. 78.
- In this little vault she lies, I. 61.
- In this misfortune kings do most excel, II. 115.
- In this world, the isle of dreams, II. 220.
- In time of life I graced ye with my verse, I. 173.
- In vain our labours are whatsoe'er they be, II. 223.
- In ways to greatness, think on this, II. 33.
- Instead of orient pearls of jet, I. 15.
- Instruct me now what love will do, II. 155.
- Is this a fast, to keep, II. 240.
- Is this a life, to break thy sleep, II. 37.
- It is sufficient if we pray, I. 71.
- It was, and still my care is, II. 40.
- Jacob God's beggar was; and so we wait, II. 228.
- Jealous girls these sometimes were, I. 234.
- Jehovah, as Boëtius saith, II. 228.
- Jove may afford us thousands of reliefs, I. 192.
- Judith has cast her old skin and got new, I. 177.
- Julia and I did lately sit, I. 20.
- Julia, I bring, I. 78.
- Julia, if I chance to die, I. 23.
- Julia was careless, and withal, I. 13.
- Julia, when thy Herrick dies, I. 233.
- Justly our dearest Saviour may abhor us, II. 236.
- Kindle the Christmas brand, and then, II. 105.
- Kings must be dauntless; subjects will contemn, II. 160.
- Kings must not oft be seen by public eyes, II. 42.
- Kings must not only cherish up the good, II. 75.
- Kings must not use the axe for each offence, II. 135.
- Knew'st thou one month would take thy life away, II. 49.
- Know when to speak for many times it brings, II. 146.
- Labour we must, and labour hard, II. 225.
- Laid out for dead, let thy last kindness be, I. 20.
- Lasciviousness is known to be, II. 223.
- Last night I drew up mine account, II. 210.
- Lay by the good a while; a resting field, II. 113.
- Learn this of me, where'er thy lot doth fall, I. 192.
- Let all chaste matrons when they chance to see, I. 70.
- Let but thy voice engender with the string, I. 127.
- Let fair or foul my mistress be, II. 5.
- Let kings and rulers learn this line from me, II. 126.
- Let kings command and do the best they may, I. 174.
- Let me be warm, let me be fully fed, I. 36.
- Let me not live if I do not love, II. 157.
- Let me sleep this night away, I. 251.
- Let moderation on thy passions wait, II. 146.
- Let not that day God's friends and servants scare, II. 220.
- Let not thy tombstone e'er be lain by me, II. 101.
- Let others look for pearl or gold, II. 190.
- Let others to the printing press run fast, II. 141.
- Let the superstitious wife, II. 103.
- Let there be patrons, patrons like to thee, I. 49.
- Let us now take time and play, II. 46.
- Let us, though late, at last, my Silvia, wed, I. 6.
- Let's be jocund while we may, II. 26.
- Let's call for Hymen if agreed thou art, II. 77.
- Let's live in haste; use pleasures while we may, I. 213.
- Let's live with that small pittance that we have, II. 12.
- Let's now take our time, II. 84.
- Let's strive to be the best: the gods, we know it, II. 135.
- Life of my life, take not so soon thy flight, I. 88.
- Life is the body's light, which once declining, II. 5.
- Like those infernal deities which eat, II. 88.
- Like to a bride, come forth my book, at last, I. 92.
- Like to the income must be our expense, I. 147.
- Like will to like, each creature loves his kind, II. 147.
- Lilies will languish; violets look ill, I. 49.
- Little you are, for woman's sake be proud, II. 11.
- Live by thy muse thou shalt, when others die, II. 9.
- Live, live with me, and thou shalt see, I. 240.
- Live with a thrifty, not a needy fate, I. 13.
- Look how our foul days do exceed our fair, II. 169.
- Look how the rainbow doth appear, I. 175.
- Look in my book, and herein see, II. 108.
- Look upon Sappho's lip, and you will swear, II. 131.
- Lord do not beat me, II. 185.
- Lord, I am like to mistletoe, II. 213.
- Lord, I confess that Thou alone art able, II. 194.
- Lord, Thou hast given me a cell, II. 183.
- Lost to the world; lost to myself alone, II. 121.
- Loth to depart, but yet at last each one, I. 176.
- Love and myself, believe me, on a day, I. 19.
- Love and the graces evermore do wait, II. 68.
- Love bade me ask a gift, I. 124.
- Love brought me to a silent grove, II. 97.
- Love he that will, it best likes me, I. 195.
- Love, I have broke, I. 215.
- Love, I recant, I. 123.
- Love in a shower of blossoms came, II. 102.
- Love is a circle, and an endless sphere, II. 91.
- Love is a circle that doth restless move, I. 13.
- Love is a kind of war: hence those who fear, II. 100.
- Love is a leaven; and a loving kiss, II. 120.
- Love is a syrup, and whoe'er we see, II. 120.
- Love is maintain'd by wealth; when all is spent, II. 41.
- Love like a beggar came to me, II. 118.
- Love like a gipsy lately came, I. 76.
- Love, love begets, then never be, II. 64.
- Love, love me now, because I place, II. 96.
- Love on a day, wise poets tell, I. 131.
- Love scorch'd my finger, but did spare, I. 33.
- Love's a thing, as I do hear, I. 146.
- Love's of itself too sweet; the best of all, II. 157.
- Love-sick I am, and must endure, I. 72.
- Maidens tell me I am old, II. 94.
- Maids' nays are nothing, they are shy, II. 60.
- Make haste away, and let one be, II. 92.
- Make, make me Thine, my gracious God, II. 185.
- Make me a heaven and make me there, I. 56.
- Man is a watch, wound up at first, but never, I. 254.
- Man is compos'd here of a twofold part, I. 191.
- Man knows where first he ships himself, but he, I. 221.
- Man may at first transgress, but next do well, II. 141.
- Man may want land to live in, but for all, II. 84.
- Man must do well out of a good intent, II. 112.
- Man's disposition is for to requite, II. 114.
- Many we are, and yet but few possess, I. 221.
- May his pretty dukeship grow, I. 134.
- Men are not born kings, but are men renown'd, II. 49.
- Men are suspicious, prone to discontent, II. 113.
- Men must have bounds how far to walk; for we, II. 132.
- Men say y'are fair, and fair ye are, 'tis true, I. 122.
- Mercy, the wise Athenians held to be, II. 225.
- Methought I saw, as I did dream in bed, II. 139.
- Methought last night love in an anger came, I. 18.
- Mighty Neptune, may it please, I. 161.
- Milk still your fountains and your springs, for why? II. 90.
- Mine eyes, like clouds, were drizzling rain, II. 44.
- Mop-eyed I am, as some have said, I. 120.
- More discontents I never had, I. 21.
- More white than whitest lilies far, I. 40.
- Music, thou queen of heaven, care-charming spell, I. 128.
- My dearest love, since thou wilt go, II. 153.
- My faithful friend, if you can see, I. 97.
- My God, I'm wounded by my sin, II. 173.
- My God! look on me with thine eye, II. 175
- My head doth ache, II. 9.
- My Lucia in the dew did go, II. 58.
- My many cares and much distress, II. 139.
- My muse in meads has spent her many hours, I. 116.
- My soul would one day go and seek, II. 101.
- My wearied bark, O let it now be crown'd, II. 164.
- My wooing's ended: now my wedding's near, I. 225.
- Naught are all women: I say no, II. 102.
- Need is no vice at all, though here it be, II. 48.
- Nero commanded; but withdrew his eyes, II. 42.
- Never my book's perfection did appear, I. 123.
- Never was day so over-sick with showers, I. 62.
- Next is your lot, fair, to be numbered one, I. 236.
- Night hath no wings to him that cannot sleep, II. 195.
- Night hides our thefts, all faults then pardon'd be, II. 8.
- Night makes no difference 'twixt priest and clerk, II. 97.
- No fault in women to refuse, I. 148.
- No grief is grown so desperate, but the ill, II. 148.
- No man comes late unto that place from whence, II. 31.
- No man is tempted so but may o'ercome, II. 236.
- No man so well a kingdom rules, as he, II. 155.
- No man such rare parts hath, that he can swim, II. 121.
- No more, my Sylvia, do I mean to pray, II. 2.
- No more shall I, since I am driven hence, I. 164.
- No news of navies burnt at seas, I. 157.
- No trust to metals, nor to marbles, when, II. 272.
- No wrath of men or rage of seas, II. 14.
- Noah the first was, as tradition says, II. 233.
- None goes to warfare but with this intent, I. 50.
- Noonday and midnight shall at once be seen, I. 71.
- Nor art thou less esteem'd that I have plac'd, II. 70.
- Nor is my number full till I inscribe, I. 250.
- Nor think that thou in this my book art worst, II. 159.
- Not all thy flushing suns are set, I. 87.
- Nothing can be more loathsome than to see, II. 10.
- Nothing comes free-cost here; Jove will not let, I. 221.
- Nothing hard or harsh can prove, II. 48.
- Nothing is new, we walk where others went, I. 175.
- Now if you love me, tell me, II. 150.
- Now is the time for mirth, I. 97.
- Now is the time, when all the lights wax dim, I. 22.
- Now is your turn, my dearest, to be set, II. 81.
- Now, now's the time, so oft by truth, I. 63.
- Now, now the mirth comes, II. 145.
- Now thou art dead, no eye shall ever see, II. 125.
- O earth! earth! earth! hear thou my voice, and be, I. 21.
- O Jealousy, that art, I. 213.
- O Jupiter, should I speak ill, II. 61.
- O Times most bad, II. 10.
- O Thou, the wonder of all days! II. 196.
- O years! and age! farewell, II. 189.
- O you the virgins nine! II. 31.
- Of all our parts, the eyes express, I. 152.
- Of all the good things whatsoe'er we do, II. 255.
- Of all those three brave brothers fall'n i' th' war, I. 212.
- Of both our fortunes good and bad we find, II. 71.
- Offer thy gift; but first the law commands, II. 122.
- Oft bend the bow, and thou with ease shalt do, II. 55.
- Oft have I heard both youths and virgins say, I. 187.
- Old wives have often told how they, I. 19.
- On, as thou hast begun, brave youth, and get, I. 188.
- On with thy work, though thou be'st hardly press'd, II. 137.
- One ask'd me where the roses grew, I. 19.
- One birth our Saviour had; the like none yet, II. 231.
- One ear tingles, some there be, II. 160.
- One feeds on lard, and yet is lean, I. 216.
- One man repentant is of more esteem, II. 235.
- One more by thee, love, and desert have sent, I. 239.
- One night i' th' year, my dearest beauties, come, II. 23.
- One of the five straight branches of my hand, I. 256.
- One only fire has hell; but yet it shall, II. 239.
- One silent night of late, I. 30.
- Only a little more, I. 103.
- Open thy gates, II. 212.
- Or look'd I back unto the time hence flown, II. 39.
- Orpheus he went, as poets tell, II. 82.
- Other men's sins we ever bear in mind, II. 66.
- Our bastard children are but like to plate, II. 139.
- Our crosses are no other than the rods, II. 97.
- Our honours and our commendations be, I. 150.
- Our household gods our parents be, II. 29.
- Our mortal parts may wrapp'd in sear-clothes lie, I. 251.
- Our present tears here, not our present laughter, II. 201.
- Out of the world he must, who once comes in, I. 251.
- Paradise is, as from the learn'd I gather, II. 229.
- Pardon me, God, once more I Thee entreat, II. 212.
- Pardon my trespass, Silvia, I confess, II. 116.
- Part of the work remains; one part is past, II. 164.
- Partly work and partly play, II. 142.
- Paul, he began ill, but he ended well, II. 234.
- Permit me, Julia, now to go away, I. 72.
- Permit mine eyes to see, II. 210.
- Phœbus! when that I a verse, I. 152.
- Physicians fight not against men; but these, II. 29.
- Physicians say repletion springs, II. 121.
- Play I could once; but gentle friend, you see, I. 103.
- Play, Phœbus, on thy lute, I. 190.
- Play their offensive and defensive parts, II. 211.
- Please your grace, from out your store, II. 25.
- Ponder my words, if so that any be, II. 111.
- Praise they that will times past; I joy to see, II. 114.
- Prat, he writes satires, but herein's the fault, II. 46.
- Prayers and praises are those spotless two, II. 171.
- Predestination is the cause alone, II. 237.
- Prepare for songs; He's come, He's come, II. 204.
- Preposterous is that government, and rude, I. 246.
- Preposterous is that order, when we run, II. 49.
- Princes and fav'rites are most dear, while they, II. 67.
- Prue, my dearest maid, is sick, I. 152.
- Puss and her 'prentice both at drawgloves play, II. 75.
- Put off thy robe of purple, then go on, II. 249.
- Put on thy holy filletings, and so, II. 106.
- Put on your silks, and piece by piece, I. 22.
- Rapine has yet took nought from me, II. 219.
- Rare are thy cheeks, Susanna, which do show, I. 243.
- Rare is the voice itself: but when we sing, II. 161.
- Rare temples thou hast seen, I know, I. 111.
- Reach with your whiter hands, to me, I. 232.
- Read thou my lines, my Swetnaham; if there be, II. 158.
- Readers, we entreat ye pray, II. 85.
- Reproach we may the living, not the dead, II. 19.
- Rise, household gods, and let us go, I. 138.
- Roaring is nothing but a weeping part, II. 226.
- Roses at first were white, I. 130.
- Roses, you can never die, II. 154.
- Sabbaths are threefold, as St. Austine says, II. 233.
- Sadly I walk'd within the field, I. 88.
- Sappho, I will choose to go, II. 83.
- Science in God is known to be, II. 222.
- Sea-born goddess, let me be, I. 174.
- See and not see, and if thou chance t'espy, I. 37.
- See how the poor do waiting stand, I. 175.
- Seeing thee, Soame, I see a goodly man, I. 220.
- See'st thou that cloud as silver clear, I. 174.
- See'st thou that cloud that rides in state, II. 86.
- See'st thou those diamonds which she wears, I. 163.
- Shall I a daily beggar be, II. 138.
- Shall I go to Love and tell, II. 90.
- Shame checks our first attempts; but when 'tis prov'd, II. 200.
- Shame is a bad attendant to a state, I. 227.
- Shapcot! to thee the fairy state, I. 148.
- She by the river sat, and sitting there, II. 63.
- She wept upon her cheeks, and weeping so, II. 62.
- Should I not put on blacks when each one here, II. 108.
- Show me thy feet, show me thy legs, thy thighs, I. 193.
- Shut not so soon; the dull-ey'd night, I. 203.
- Sick is Anthea, sickly is the spring, II. 149.
- Sin is an act so free, that if we shall, II. 238.
- Sin is the cause of death; and sin's alone, II. 238.
- Sin leads the way, but as it goes it feels, II. 200.
- Sin never slew a soul unless there went, II. 238.
- Sin no existence; nature none it hath, II. 229.
- Sin once reached up to God's eternal sphere, II. 207.
- Since, for thy full deserts, with all the rest, I. 191.
- Since shed or cottage I have none, II. 150.
- Since to the country first I came, I. 228.
- Sing me to death; for till thy voice be clear, I. 190.
- Sinners confounded are a twofold way, II. 236.
- Sitting alone, as one forsook, I. 60.
- Smooth was the sea, and seem'd to call, II. 116,
- So good luck came, and on my roof did light, I. 124.
- So long it seem'd, as Mary's faith was small, II. 233.
- So long you did not sing or touch your hue, I. 119.
- So look the mornings when the sun, II. 85.
- So looks Anthea, when in bed she lies, I. 39.
- So smell those odours that do rise, I. 181.
- So smooth, so sweet, so silv'ry is thy voice, I. 25.
- So soft streams meet, so springs with gladder smiles, I. 93.
- Some ask'd me where the rubies grew, I. 28.
- Some parts may perish, die thou canst not all, I. 252.
- Some salve to every sore we may apply, II. 92.
- Some would know, I. 12.
- Sorrows divided amongst many, less, II. 48.
- Sorrows our portion are: ere hence we go, II. 196.
- Sound teeth has Lucy, pure as pearl, and small, II. 29.
- Speak, did the blood of Abel cry, II. 235.
- Spend, harmless shade, thy nightly hours, II. 110.
- Spring with the lark, most comely bride, and meet, II. 16.
- Stand by the magic of my powerful rhymes, II. 98.
- Stand forth, brave man, since fate has made thee here, II. 63.
- Stand with thy graces forth, brave man, and rise, I. 226.
- Stately goddess, do thou please, I. 178.
- Stay while ye will, or go, I. 102.
- Still take advice; though counsels, when they fly, II. 146.
- Still to our gains our chief respect is had, I. 175.
- Store of courage to me grant, I. 189.
- Stripes justly given yerk us with their fall, II. 148.
- Studies themselves will languish and decay, II. 144.
- Suffer thy legs but not thy tongue to walk, II. 172.
- Suspicion, discontent, and strife, I. 58.
- Sweet Amarillis, by a spring's, I. 55.
- Sweet are my Julia's lips, and clean, II. 95.
- Sweet, be not proud of those two eyes, I. 74.
- Sweet Bridget blush'd, and therewithal, I. 255.
- Sweet country life, to such unknown, II. 33.
- Sweet Œnone, do but say, II. 81.
- Sweet virgin, that I do not set, I. 182.
- Sweet western wind, whose luck it is, I. 128.
- Take mine advice, and go not near, II. 98.
- Tears most prevail; with tears, too, thou mayst move, II. 107.
- Tears quickly dry, griefs will in time decay, II. 115.
- Tears, though they're here below the sinner's brine, II. 29.
- Tell if thou canst, and truly, whence doth come, I. 196.
- Tell me, rich man, for what intent. II. 244.
- Tell me, what needs those rich deceits, II. 101.
- Tell me, young man, or did the muses bring, II. 122.
- Tell that brave man, fain thou wouldst have access, II. 125.
- Tell us, thou clear and heavenly tongue, II. 207.
- Temptations hurt not, though they have access II. 196.
- Thanksgiving for a former, doth invite, II. 181
- Th' art hence removing (like a shepherd's tent), I. 235.
- Th' 'ast dar'd too far; but, fury, now forbear, I. 100.
- That Christ did die, the pagan saith, II. 245.
- That flow of gallants which approach, II. 47.
- That for seven lusters I did never come, I. 31.
- That happiness does still the longest thrive, II. 81.
- That hour-glass which there you see, I. 52.
- That little, pretty, bleeding part, II. 279.
- That love last long, let it thy first care be, I. 232.
- That love 'twixt men does ever longest last, II. 157.
- That manna, which God on His people cast, II. 224.
- That morn which saw me made a bride, I. 136.
- That prince must govern with a gentle hand, II. 153.
- That prince takes soon enough the victor's room, I. 136.
- That prince who may do nothing but what's just, II. 162.
- That princes may possess a surer seat, I. 203.
- That there's a God we all do know, II. 243.
- The bad among the good are here mixed ever, II. 229.
- The blood of Abel was a thing, II. 235.
- The body is the soul's poor house or home, II. 98.
- The body's salt, the soul is; which when gone, II. 162.
- The bound almost now of my book I see, II. 140.
- The doctors in the Talmud, say, II. 235.
- The factions of the great ones call, II. 101.
- The fire of hell this strange condition hath, II. 235.
- The gods require the thighs, II. 60.
- The gods to kings the judgment give to sway, I. 136.
- The hag is astride, II. 27.
- The Jews their beds and offices of ease, II. 233.
- The Jews, when they built houses, I have read, II. 230.
- The less our sorrows here and suff'rings cease, II. 214.
- The lictors bundled up their rods; beside, II. 113.
- The longer thread of life we spin, II. 224.
- The May-pole is up, II. 46.
- The mellow touch of music most doth wound, I. 12.
- The mountains of the Scriptures are, some say, II. 226.
- The only comfort of my life, II. 149.
- The person crowns the place; your lot doth fall, II. 128.
- The power of princes rest in the consent, II. 155.
- The readiness of doing doth express, II. 92.
- The repetition of the name made known, II. 229.
- The rose was sick, and smiling died, II. 44.
- The saints-bell calls, and, Julia, I must read, II. 7.
- The same who crowns the conquerer, will be, II. 227.
- The seeds of treason choke up as they spring, I. 9.
- The shame of man's face is no more, II. 228.
- The strength of baptism that's within, II. 247.
- The sup'rabundance of my store, II. 220.
- The tears of saints more sweet by far, II. 224.
- The time the bridegroom stays from hence, II. 225.
- The twilight is no other thing, we say, II. 148.
- The Virgin Mary was, as I have read, II. 232.
- The Virgin Mother stood at a distance, there, II. 230.
- The work is done, now let my laurel be, II. 249.
- The work is done: young men and maidens, set, II. 164.
- Then did I live when I did see, II. 140.
- There is no evil that we do commit, II. 233.
- There's no constraint to do amiss, II. 239.
- These fresh beauties (we can prove), I. 16.
- These springs were maidens once that lov'd, I. 225.
- These summer-birds did with thy master stay, I. 189.
- These temporal goods God, the most wise, commends, II. 234.
- Things are uncertain, and the more we get, II. 144.
- This axiom I have often heard, II. 39.
- This crosstree here, II. 253.
- This day is yours, great Charles! and in this war, II. 87.
- This day, my Julia, thou must make, II. 83.
- This I'll tell ye by the way, II. 152.
- This is my comfort when she's most unkind, II. 151.
- This is the height of justice: that to do, II. 14.
- This rule of manners I will teach my guests, II. 137.
- This stone can tell the story of my life, II. 128.
- Those ends in war the best contentment bring, II. 144.
- Those garments lasting evermore, II. 242.
- Those ills that mortal men endure, I. 192.
- Those possessions short-liv'd are, II. 50.
- Those saints which God loves best, II. 175.
- Those tapers which we set upon the grave, II. 230.
- Thou art a plant sprung up to wither never, I. 122.
- Thou art to all lost love the best, I. 132.
- Thou bid'st me come away, II. 186.
- Thou bid'st me come; I cannot come; for why? II. 186.
- Thou cam'st to cure me, doctor, of my cold, I. 121.
- Thou gav'st me leave to kiss, I. 178.
- Thou had'st the wreath before, now take the tree, I. 188.
- Thou hast made many houses for the dead, II. 95.
- Thou hast promis'd, Lord, to be, II. 179.
- Thou knowest, my Julia, that it is thy turn, I. 247.
- Thou mighty lord and master of the lyre, II. 100.
- Thou sail'st with others in this Argus here, I. 26.
- Thou say'st I'm dull; if edgeless so I be, II. 157.
- Thou sayest Love's dart, II. 90.
- Thou say'st my lines are hard, I. 173.
- Thou say'st thou lov'st me, Sappho; I say no, II. 98.
- Thou see'st me, Lucia, this year droop, II. 126.
- Thou sent'st to me a true love-knot, but I, I. 217.
- Thou shall not all die; for while love's fire shines, I. 179.
- Thou, thou that bear'st the sway, II. 100.
- Thou who wilt not love, do this, I. 93.
- Though a wise man all pressures can sustain, I. 72.
- Though by well warding many blows we've pass'd, II. 45.
- Though clock, II. 55.
- Though frankincense the deities require, II. 117.
- Though from without no foes at all we fear, II. 114.
- Though good things answer many good intents, I. 137.
- Though hourly comforts from the gods we see, I. 137.
- Though I cannot give thee fires, I. 161.
- Though long it be, years may repay the debt, II. 31.
- Though thou be'st all that active love, II. 245.
- Thousands each day pass by, which we, II. 39.
- Three fatal sisters wait upon each sin, II. 172.
- Three lovely sisters working were, I. 20.
- Thrice, and above, bless'd, my soul's half, art thou, I. 40.
- Thrice happy roses, so much grac'd to have, II. 60.
- Through all the night, II. 187.
- Thus I, I. 222.
- Thy azure robe I did behold, I. 80.
- Thy former coming was to cure, II. 248.
- Thy sooty godhead, I desire, II. 14.
- Till I shall come again let this suffice, I. 183.
- Time is the bound of things where e'er we go, II. 71.
- Time was upon, II. 178.
- 'Tis a known principle in war, I. 147.
- 'Tis but a dog-like madness in bad kings, II. 115.
- 'Tis evening, my sweet, I. 245.
- 'Tis hard to find God, but to comprehend, II. 171.
- 'Tis heresy in others: in your face, I. 225.
- 'Tis liberty to serve one lord; but he, II. 103.
- 'Tis much among the filthy to be clean, II. 147.
- 'Tis never, or but seldom known, II. 80.
- 'Tis no discomfort in the world to fall, II. 147.
- 'Tis not a thousand bullocks' thighs, I. 24.
- 'Tis not every day that I, II. 51.
- 'Tis not greatness they require, I. 24.
- 'Tis not the food but the content, I. 154.
- 'Tis not the walls or purple that defends, II. 53.
- 'Tis said as Cupid danc'd among, II. 49.
- 'Tis still observ'd that fame ne'er sings, II. 55.
- 'Tis still observ'd those men most valiant are, II. 134.
- 'Tis the chyrurgeon's praise and height of art, II. 84.
- 'Tis worse than barbarous cruelty to show, I. 251.
- To a love feast we both invited are, II. 191.
- To all our wounds here, whatsoe'er they be, II. 238.
- To an old sore a long cure must go on, II. 138.
- To bread and water none is poor, I. 38.
- To conquered men, some comfort 'tis to fall, I. 60.
- To fetch me wine my Lucia went, I. 234.
- To find that tree of life whose fruits did feed, I. 74.
- To gather flowers Sappha went, II. 62.
- To get thine ends lay bashfulness aside, I. 7.
- To him who longs unto his Christ to go, II. 222.
- To his book's end this last line he'd have placed, II. 165.
- To house the hag, you must do this, II. 104.
- To join with them who here confer, II. 255.
- To me my Julia lately sent, I. 14.
- To-morrow, Julia, I betimes must rise, I. 127.
- To mortal men great loads allotted be, II. 51.
- To my revenge, and to her desperate fears, I. 107.
- To print our poems, the propulsive cause, I. 211.
- To read my book the virgin shy, I. 5.
- To safeguard man from wrongs, there nothing must, I. 81.
- To seek of God more than we well can find, II. 192.
- To sup with thee thou did'st me home invite, II. 78.
- To this white temple of my heroes, here, I. 232.
- To work a wonder, God would have her shown, II. 231.
- Touch but thy lyre, my Harry, and I hear, II. 94.
- Trap of a player turn'd a priest now is, II. 155.
- Tread, sirs, as lightly as you can, II. 28.
- True mirth resides not in the smiling skin, II. 172.
- True rev'rence is, as Cassiodore doth prove, II. 224.
- True to yourself and sheets, you'll have me swear, I. 171.
- Trust me, ladies, I will do, I. 222.
- Truth, by her own simplicity is known, II. 160.
- Truth is best found out by the time and eyes, II. 108.
- Tumble me down, and I will sit, II. 41.
- 'Twas but a single rose, I. 61.
- 'Twas Cæsar's saying: kings no less conquerors are, II. 88.
- 'Twas not love's dart, I. 201.
- Twice has Pudica been a bride, and led, I. 225.
- Twilight, no other thing is, poets say, II. 96.
- 'Twixt kings and subjects there's this mighty odds, I. 12.
- 'Twixt kings and tyrants there's this difference known, II. 96.
- 'Twixt truth and error there's this difference known, II. 144.
- Two instruments belong unto our God, II. 244.
- Two of a thousand things are disallow'd, I. 10.
- Two parts of us successively command, I. 171.
- Two things do make society to stand, II. 93.
- Under a lawn, than skies more clear, I. 29.
- Upon her cheeks she wept, and from those showers, I. 256.
- Ursley, she thinks those velvet patches grace, I. 248.
- Virgins promis'd when I died, I. 52.
- Virgins, time past, known were these, I. 77.
- Want is a softer wax, that takes thereon, II. 108.
- Wantons we are, and though our words be such, II. 19.
- Wanton wenches do not bring, II. 160.
- Wash clean the vessel, lest ye sour, II. 149.
- Wash your hands, or else the fire, II. 80.
- Wassail the trees, that they may bear, II. 80.
- Water, water I desire, I. 23.
- Water, water I espy, I. 75.
- We are co-heirs with Christ; nor shall His own, II. 246.
- We blame, nay we despise her pains, II. 98.
- We credit most our sight; one eye doth please, II. 108.
- We merit all we suffer, and by far, II. 243.
- We pray 'gainst war, yet we enjoy no peace, II. 81.
- We trust not to the multitude in war, II. 112.
- We two are last in hell; what may we fear, I. 38.
- Weep for the dead, for they have lost this light, II. 121.
- Weigh me the fire; or canst thou find, II. 170.
- Welcome! but yet no entrance, till we bless, I. 155.
- Welcome, great Cæsar, welcome now you are, II. 123.
- Welcome, maids-of-honour, I. 101.
- Welcome, most welcome to our vows and us, I. 28.
- Welcome to this my college, and though late, II. 129.
- Well may my book come forth like public day, _Dedication_.
- Were I to give the baptism, I would choose, I. 32.
- What can I do in poetry, I. 164.
- What! can my Kellam drink his sack, II. 112.
- What, conscience, say, is it in thee, I. 210.
- What fate decreed, time now has made us see, II. 66.
- What God gives, and what we take, II. 202.
- What here we hope for, we shall once inherit, II. 200.
- What I fancy I approve, I. 11.
- What is a kiss? Why this, as some approve, II. 18.
- What is't that wastes a prince? example shows, II. 162.
- What need we marry women, when, II. 120.
- What needs complaints, II. 141.
- What now we like, anon we disapprove, I. 240.
- What offspring other men have got, II. 42.
- What others have with cheapness seen and ease, II. 161.
- What sweeter music can we bring, II. 202.
- What though my harp and viol be, II. 199.
- What though the heaven be lowering now, I. 236.
- What though the sea be calm? Trust to the shore, I. 104.
- What times of sweetness this fair day foreshows, I. 52.
- What was't that fell but now, I. 90.
- What will ye, my poor orphans, do, II. 19.
- What wisdom, learning, wit or wrath, I. 57.
- What's got by justice is established sure, II. 141.
- What's that we see from far? the spring of day, I. 139.
- Whatever comes, let's be content withal, II. 187.
- Whatever men for loyalty pretend, II. 163.
- Whatsoever thing I see, II. 65.
- When a daffodil I see, I. 45.
- When a man's faith is frozen up, as dead, II. 196.
- When after many lusters thou shalt be, II. 36.
- When age or chance has made me blind, I. 38.
- When all birds else do of their music fail, II. 57.
- When as in silks my Julia goes, II. 77.
- When as Leander young was drown'd, I. 49.
- When Chub brings in his harvest, still he cries, II. 157.
- When fear admits no hope of safety, then, II. 163.
- When first I find those numbers thou dost write, II. 125.
- When flowing garments I behold, II. 138.
- When I a ship see on the seas, II. 214.
- When I a verse shall make, II. 11.
- When I behold a forest spread, I. 254.
- When I behold Thee, almost slain, II. 252.
- When I consider, dearest, thou dost stay, I. 243.
- When I departed am, ring thou my knell, I. 138.
- When I did go from thee, I felt that smart, I. 50.
- When I go hence, ye closet-gods, I fear, II. 30.
- When I love (as some have told), II. 1.
- When I of Villars do but hear the name, I. 172.
- When I shall sin, pardon my trespass here, II. 206.
- When I through all my many poems look, I. 117.
- When I thy parts run o'er, I can't espy, I. 9.
- When I thy singing next shall hear, I. 25.
- When Julia blushes she does show, I. 150.
- When Julia chid, I stood as mute the while, I. 70.
- When laws full powers have to sway, we see, II. 12.
- When man is punished, he is plagued still, II. 211.
- When my date's done, and my grey age must die, I. 47.
- When my off'ring next I make, I. 197.
- When one is past, another care we have, I. 20.
- When once the sin has fully acted been, II. 178.
- When once the soul has lost her way, II. 243.
- When out of bed my love doth spring, I. 193.
- When some shall say, Fair once my Silvia was, I. 24.
- When that day comes, whose evening says I'm gone, I. 15.
- When thou dost play and sweetly sing, I. 178.
- When Thou wast taken, Lord, I oft have read, II. 251.
- When times are troubled then forbear; but speak, II. 155.
- When to a house I come and see, II. 136.
- When to thy porch I come, and ravish'd see, II. 154.
- When we 'gainst Satan stoutly fight, the more, II. 213.
- When well we speak and nothing do that's good, II. 247.
- When what is lov'd is present, love doth spring, I. 13.
- When winds and seas do rage, II. 215.
- When with the virgin morning thou dost rise, I. 159.
- When words we want, Love teacheth to indite, II. 92.
- Whene'er I go, or whatsoe'er befalls, II. 86.
- Whene'er my heart love's warmth but entertains, I. 47.
- Where God is merry, there write down thy fears, II. 191.
- Where love begins, there dead thy first desire, II. 100.
- Where others love and praise my verses, still, I. 80.
- Where pleasures rule a kingdom, never there, II. 157.
- Whether I was myself, or else did see, II. 156.
- While Fates permit us let's be merry, I. 215.
- While leanest beasts in pastures feed, I. 93.
- While, Lydia, I was loved of thee, I. 85.
- While the milder fates consent, I. 46.
- While thou didst keep thy candour undefil'd, I. 5.
- White as Zenobia's teeth, the which the girls, II. 62.
- White though ye be, yet, lilies, know, I. 89.
- Whither dost thou whorry me, I. 197.
- Whither, mad maiden, wilt thou roam? I. 4.
- Whither? say, whither shall I fly, I. 48.
- Who after his transgression doth repent, II. 84.
- Who begs to die for fear of human need, II. 95.
- Who forms a godhead out of gold or stone, I. 147.
- Who may do most, does least; the bravest will, II. 150.
- Who plants an olive but to eat the oil? II. 151.
- Who, railing, drives the lazar from his door, II. 46.
- Who read'st this book that I have writ, II. 32.
- Who violates the customs, hurts the health, II. 147.
- Who will not honour noble numbers when, II. 81.
- Who with a little cannot be content, II. 12.
- Whom should I fear to write to if I can, I. 77.
- Whose head befringed with bescattered tresses, II. 257.
- Why do not all fresh maids appear, I. 128.
- Why do ye weep, sweet babes? Can tears, I. 129.
- Why dost thou wound and break my heart, II. 158.
- Why I tie about thy wrist, I. 159.
- Why, madam, will ye longer weep, I. 237.
- Why should we covet much, when as we know, II. 134.
- Why so slowly do you move, II. 93.
- Why this flower is now call'd so, I. 16.
- Why wore th' Egyptians jewels in the ear? II. 178.
- Will ye hear what I can say, I. 173.
- Wilt thou my true friend be? II. 2.
- With blameless carriage, I lived here, I. 48.
- With golden censors and with incense here, II. 208.
- Woe, woe to them, who by a ball of strife, I. 29.
- Women, although they ne'er so goodly make it, II. 41.
- Words beget anger; anger brings forth blows, II. 107.
- Would I see lawn, clear as the heaven and thin? I. 197.
- Would I woo, and would I win, II. 106.
- Would ye have fresh cheese and cream? I. 229.
- Would ye oil of blossoms get? II. 54.
- Wrinkles no more are or no less, I. 179.
- Wrongs, if neglected, vanish in short time, II. 75.
- Ye have been fresh and green, I. 136.
- Ye may simper, blush, and smile, I. 89.
- Ye pretty housewives, would ye know, I. 204.
- Ye silent shades, whose each tree here, I. 211.
- You are a lord, an earl; nay more, a man, I. 215.
- You are a tulip seen to-day, I. 108.
- You ask me what I do, and how I live, II. 138.
- You have beheld a smiling rose, I. 90.
- You may vow I'll not forget, II. 268.
- You say I love not 'cause I do not play, I. 16.
- You say to me-wards your affection's strong, I. 61.
- You say you're sweet; how should we know, I. 139.
- You see this gentle stream that glides, II. 54.
- Young I was, but now am old, I. 18.
- APPENDIX OF EPIGRAMS, etc.
- _NOTE._
- _Herrick's coarser epigrams and poems are included in this_ Appendix.
- _A few decent, but somewhat pointless, epigrams have been added._
- APPENDIX OF EPIGRAMS.
- 5. [TO HIS BOOK.] ANOTHER.
- Who with thy leaves shall wipe, at need,
- The place where swelling piles do breed;
- May every ill that bites or smarts
- Perplex him in his hinder parts.
- 6. TO THE SOUR READER.
- If thou dislik'st the piece thou light'st on first,
- Think that of all, that I have writ, the worst:
- But if thou read'st my book unto the end,
- And still do'st this and that verse, reprehend;
- O perverse man! if all disgustful be,
- The extreme scab take thee, and thine, for me.
- 41. THE VINE.
- I dreamt this mortal part of mine
- Was metamorphos'd to a vine;
- Which crawling one and every way
- Enthrall'd my dainty Lucia.
- Methought, her long small legs and thighs
- I with my tendrils did surprise;
- Her belly, buttocks, and her waist
- By my soft nerv'lets were embrac'd;
- About her head I writhing hung, }
- And with rich clusters, hid among }
- The leaves, her temples I behung: }
- So that my Lucia seem'd to me
- Young Bacchus ravish'd by his tree.
- My curls about her neck did crawl,
- And arms and hands they did enthrall:
- So that she could not freely stir,
- All parts there made one prisoner.
- But when I crept with leaves to hide
- Those parts, which maids keep unespy'd,
- Such fleeting pleasures there I took,
- That with the fancy I awoke;
- And found, ah me! this flesh of mine
- More like a stock than like a vine.
- 64. ONCE POOR, STILL PENURIOUS.
- Goes the world now, it will with thee go hard:
- The fattest hogs we grease the more with lard.
- To him that has, there shall be added more;
- Who is penurious, he shall still be poor.
- 99. UPON BLANCH.
- Blanch swears her husband's lovely; when a scald
- Has blear'd his eyes: besides, his head is bald
- Next, his wild ears, like leathern wings full spread,
- Flutter to fly, and bear away his head.
- 109. UPON CUFFE. EPIG.
- Cuffe comes to church much: but he keeps his bed
- Those Sundays only whenas briefs are read.
- This makes Cuffe dull; and troubles him the most,
- Because he cannot sleep i' th' church free cost.
- _Briefs._--Letters recommending the collection of alms.
- 110. UPON FONE A SCHOOLMASTER. EPIG.
- Fone says, those mighty whiskers he does wear
- Are twigs of birch, and willow, growing there:
- If so, we'll think too, when he does condemn
- Boys to the lash, that he does whip with them.
- 126. UPON SCOBBLE. EPIG.
- Scobble for whoredom whips his wife; and cries
- He'll slit her nose; but blubb'ring, she replies,
- Good sir, make no more cuts i' th' outward skin,
- One slit's enough to let adultry in.
- 129. UPON GLASCO. EPIG.
- Glasco had none, but now some teeth has got;
- Which though they fur, will neither ache or rot.
- Six teeth he has, whereof twice two are known
- Made of a haft that was a mutton bone.
- Which not for use, but merely for the sight,
- He wears all day, and draws those teeth at night.
- 131. THE CUSTARD.
- For second course, last night, a custard came
- To th' board, so hot as none could touch the same:
- Furze three or four times with his cheeks did blow
- Upon the custard, and thus cooled so;
- It seem'd by this time to admit the touch,
- But none could eat it, 'cause it stunk so much.
- 135. UPON GRYLL.
- Gryll eats, but ne'er says grace; to speak the truth,
- Gryll either keeps his breath to cool his broth,
- Or else, because Gryll's roast does burn his spit,
- Gryll will not therefore say a grace for it.
- 148. UPON STRUT.
- Strut, once a foreman of a shop we knew;
- But turn'd a ladies' usher now, 'tis true:
- Tell me, has Strut got e're a title more?
- No; he's but foreman, as he was before.
- 163. UPON JOLLY'S WIFE.
- First, Jolly's wife is lame; then next loose-hipp'd:
- Squint-ey'd, hook-nos'd; and lastly, kidney-lipp'd.
- 171. UPON PAGGET.
- Pagget, a schoolboy, got a sword, and then
- He vow'd destruction both to birch and men:
- Who would not think this younker fierce to fight?
- Yet coming home, but somewhat late (last night),
- Untruss, his master bade him; and that word
- Made him take up his shirt, lay down his sword.
- 183. UPON PRIG.
- Prig now drinks water, who before drank beer;
- What's now the cause? we know the case is clear;
- Look in Prig's purse, the chev'ril there tells you
- Prig money wants, either to buy or brew.
- _Chevril_, kid.
- 184. UPON BATT.
- Batt he gets children, not for love to rear 'em;
- But out of hope his wife might die to bear 'em.
- 188. UPON MUCH-MORE. EPIG.
- Much-more provides and hoards up like an ant,
- Yet Much-more still complains he is in want.
- Let Much-more justly pay his tithes; then try
- How both his meal and oil will multiply.
- 199. UPON LUGGS. EPIG.
- Luggs, by the condemnation of the Bench,
- Was lately whipt for lying with a wench.
- Thus pains and pleasures turn by turn succeed:
- He smarts at last who does not first take heed.
- 200. UPON GUBBS. EPIG.
- Gubbs calls his children kitlings: and would bound,
- Some say, for joy, to see those kitlings drown'd.
- 206. UPON BUNCE. EPIG.
- Money thou ow'st me; prethee fix a day
- For payment promis'd, though thou never pay:
- Let it be Dooms-day; nay, take longer scope;
- Pay when th'art honest; let me have some hope.
- 221. GREAT BOAST SMALL ROAST.
- Of flanks and chines of beef doth Gorrell boast
- He has at home; but who tastes boil'd or roast?
- Look in his brine-tub, and you shall find there
- Two stiff blue pigs'-feet and a sow's cleft ear.
- 222. UPON A BLEAR-EY'D WOMAN.
- Wither'd with years, and bed-rid Mumma lies;
- Dry-roasted all, but raw yet in her eyes.
- 233. NO LOCK AGAINST LETCHERY.
- Bar close as you can, and bolt fast too your door,
- To keep out the letcher, and keep in the whore;
- Yet quickly you'll see by the turn of a pin,
- The whore to come out, or the letcher come in.
- 237. UPON SUDDS, A LAUNDRESS.
- Sudds launders bands in piss, and starches them
- Both with her husband's and her own tough fleam.
- 239. UPON GUESS. EPIG.
- Guess cuts his shoes, and limping, goes about
- To have men think he's troubled with the gout;
- But 'tis no gout, believe it, but hard beer,
- Whose acrimonious humour bites him here.
- 242. UPON A CROOKED MAID.
- Crooked you are, but that dislikes not me:
- So you be straight where virgins straight should be.
- 261. UPON GROYNES. EPIG.
- Groynes, for his fleshly burglary of late,
- Stood in the holy forum candidate;
- The word is Roman; but in English known:
- Penance, and standing so, are both but one.
- _Candidate_, clothed in white.
- 272. UPON PINK, AN ILL-FAC'D PAINTER. EPIG.
- To paint the fiend, Pink would the devil see;
- And so he may, if he'll be rul'd by me;
- Let but Pink's face i' th' looking-glass be shown,
- And Pink may paint the devil's by his own.
- 273. UPON BROCK. EPIG.
- To cleanse his eyes, Tom Brock makes much ado,
- But not his mouth, the fouler of the two.
- A clammy rheum makes loathsome both his eyes:
- His mouth, worse furr'd with oaths and blasphemies.
- 277. LAUGH AND LIE DOWN.
- Y'ave laughed enough, sweet, vary now your text!
- And laugh no more; or laugh, and lie down next.
- 292. UPON SHARK. EPIG.
- Shark, when he goes to any public feast,
- Eats to one's thinking, of all there, the least.
- What saves the master of the house thereby
- When if the servants search, they may descry
- In his wide codpiece, dinner being done,
- Two napkins cramm'd up, and a silver spoon?
- 305. UPON BUNGY.
- Bungy does fast; looks pale; puts sackcloth on;
- Not out of conscience, or religion:
- Or that this younker keeps so strict a Lent,
- Fearing to break the king's commandement:
- But being poor, and knowing flesh is dear,
- He keeps not one, but many Lents i' th' year.
- 311. UPON SNEAPE. EPIG.
- Sneape has a face so brittle, that it breaks
- Forth into blushes whensoe'er he speaks.
- 315. UPON LEECH.
- Leech boasts, he has a pill, that can alone
- With speed give sick men their salvation:
- 'Tis strange, his father long time has been ill,
- And credits physic, yet not trusts his pill:
- And why? he knows he must of cure despair,
- Who makes the sly physician his heir.
- 317. TO A MAID.
- You say, you love me! that I thus must prove:
- It that you lie, then I will swear you love.
- 326. UPON GREEDY. EPIG.
- An old, old widow Greedy needs would wed,
- Not for affection to her or her bed;
- But in regard, 'twas often said, this old
- Woman would bring him more than could be told.
- He took her; now the jest in this appears,
- So old she was, that none could tell her years.
- 357. LONG AND LAZY.
- That was the proverb. Let my mistress be
- Lazy to others, but be long to me.
- 358. UPON RALPH. EPIG.
- Curse not the mice, no grist of thine they eat;
- But curse thy children, they consume thy wheat.
- 361. UPON MEASE. EPIG.
- Mease brags of pullets which he eats: but Mease
- Ne'er yet set tooth in stump or rump of these.
- 363. UPON PASKE, A DRAPER.
- Paske, though his debt be due upon the day
- Demands no money by a craving way;
- For why, says he, all debts and their arrears
- Have reference to the shoulders, not the ears.
- 368. UPON PRIGG.
- Prigg, when he comes to houses, oft doth use,
- Rather than fail, to steal from thence old shoes:
- Sound or unsound be they, or rent or whole,
- Prigg bears away the body and the sole.
- 369. UPON MOON.
- Moon is a usurer, whose gain,
- Seldom or never knows a wain,
- Only Moon's conscience, we confess,
- That ebbs from pity less and less.
- 372. UPON SHIFT.
- Shift now has cast his clothes: got all things new;
- Save but his hat, and that he cannot mew.
- _Mew_, change feathers.
- 373. UPON CUTS.
- If wounds in clothes Cuts calls his rags, 'tis clear
- His linings are the matter running there.
- 374. GAIN AND GETTINGS.
- When others gain much by the present cast,
- The cobblers' getting time is at the last.
- 379. UPON DOLL. EPIG.
- Doll, she so soon began the wanton trade,
- She ne'er remembers that she was a maid.
- 380. UPON SKREW. EPIG.
- Skrew lives by shifts; yet swears by no small oaths
- For all his shifts he cannot shift his clothes.
- 381. UPON LINNET. EPIG.
- Linnet plays rarely on the lute, we know;
- And sweetly sings, but yet his breath says no.
- 385. UPON GLASS. EPIG.
- Glass, out of deep, and out of desp'rate want,
- Turn'd from a Papist here a Predicant.
- A vicarage at last Tom Glass got here,
- Just upon five and thirty pounds a year.
- Add to that thirty-five but five pounds more,
- He'll turn a Papist, ranker than before.
- 398. UPON EELES. EPIG.
- Eeles winds and turns, and cheats and steals; yet Eeles
- Driving these sharking trades, is out at heels.
- 400. UPON RASP. EPIG.
- Rasp plays at nine-holes; and 'tis known he gets
- Many a tester by his game and bets:
- But of his gettings there's but little sign;
- When one hole wastes more than he gets by nine.
- 401. UPON CENTER, A SPECTACLE-MAKER WITH A FLAT NOSE.
- Center is known weak-sighted, and he sells
- To others store of helpful spectacles.
- Why wears he none? Because we may suppose,
- Where leaven wants, there level lies the nose.
- 410. UPON SKINNS. EPIG.
- Skinns, he dined well to-day: how do you think?
- His nails they were his meat, his rheum the drink.
- 411. UPON PIEVISH. EPIG.
- Pievish doth boast that he's the very first
- Of English poets, and 'tis thought the worst.
- 412. UPON JOLLY AND JILLY. EPIG.
- Jolly and Jilly bite and scratch all day,
- But yet get children (as the neighbours say).
- The reason is: though all the day they fight,
- They cling and close some minutes of the night.
- 419. UPON PATRICK, A FOOTMAN. EPIG.
- Now Patrick with his footmanship has done,
- His eyes and ears strive which should fastest run.
- 420. UPON BRIDGET. EPIG.
- Of four teeth only Bridget was possest;
- Two she spat out, a cough forced out the rest.
- 424. UPON FLIMSEY. EPIG.
- Why walks Nick Flimsey like a malcontent!
- Is it because his money all is spent?
- No, but because the dingthrift now is poor,
- And knows not where i' th' world to borrow more.
- 425. UPON SHEWBREAD. EPIG.
- Last night thou didst invite me home to eat;
- And showed me there much plate, but little meat.
- Prithee, when next thou do'st invite, bar state,
- And give me meat, or give me else thy plate.
- 428. UPON ROOTS. EPIG.
- Roots had no money; yet he went o' the score,
- For a wrought purse; can any tell wherefore?
- Say, what should Roots do with a purse in print,
- That had not gold nor silver to put in't?
- 429. UPON CRAW.
- Craw cracks in sirrop; and does stinking say,
- Who can hold that, my friends, that will away?
- 430. OBSERVATION.
- Who to the north, or south, doth set
- His bed, male children shall beget.
- 433. PUTREFACTION.
- Putrefaction is the end
- Of all that nature doth intend.
- 434. PASSION.
- Were there not a matter known,
- There would be no passion.
- 435. JACK AND JILL.
- Since Jack and Jill both wicked be;
- It seems a wonder unto me,
- That they, no better do agree.
- 436. UPON PARSON BEANES.
- Old Parson Beanes hunts six days of the week,
- And on the seventh, he has his notes to seek.
- Six days he hollows so much breath away,
- That on the seventh, he can nor preach or pray.
- 438. SHORT AND LONG BOTH LIKES.
- This lady's short, that mistress she is tall;
- But long or short, I'm well content with all.
- 440. UPON ROOK. EPIG.
- Rook he sells feathers, yet he still doth cry
- Fie on this pride, this female vanity.
- Thus, though the Rook does rail against the sin,
- He loves the gain that vanity brings in.
- 456. UPON SPUNGE. EPIG.
- Spunge makes his boasts that he's the only man
- Can hold of beer and ale an ocean;
- Is this his glory? then his triumph's poor;
- I know the tun of Heidleberg holds more.
- 464. UPON ONE WHO SAID SHE WAS ALWAYS YOUNG.
- You say you're young; but when your teeth are told
- To be but three, black-ey'd, we'll think you old.
- 465. UPON HUNCKS. EPIG.
- Huncks has no money, he does swear or say,
- About him, when the tavern's shot's to pay.
- If he has none in 's pockets, trust me, Huncks
- Has none at home in coffers, desks, or trunks.
- 476. UPON A CHEAP LAUNDRESS. EPIG.
- Feacie, some say, doth wash her clothes i' th' lie
- That sharply trickles from her either eye.
- The laundresses, they envy her good-luck,
- Who can with so small charges drive the buck.
- What needs she fire and ashes to consume,
- Who can scour linens with her own salt rheum?
- _Drive the buck_, wash clothes.
- 482. UPON SKURF.
- Skurf by his nine-bones swears, and well he may:
- All know a fellon eat the tenth away.
- _Fellon_, whitlow.
- 500. UPON JACK AND JILL. EPIG.
- When Jill complains to Jack for want of meat,
- Jack kisses Jill and bids her freely eat:
- Jill says, Of what? says Jack, On that sweet kiss,
- Which full of nectar and ambrosia is,
- The food of poets. So I thought, says Jill,
- That makes them look so lank, so ghost-like still.
- Let poets feed on air, or what they will;
- Let me feed full, till that I fart, says Jill.
- 503. UPON PARRAT.
- Parrat protests 'tis he, and only he
- Can teach a man the art of memory:
- Believe him not; for he forgot it quite,
- Being drunk, who 'twas that can'd his ribs last night.
- 514. KISSING AND BUSSING.
- Kissing and bussing differ both in this;
- We buss our wantons, but our wives we kiss.
- 520. UPON MAGGOT, A FREQUENTER OF ORDINARIES.
- Maggot frequents those houses of good-cheer,
- Talks most, eats most, of all the feeders there.
- He raves through lean, he rages through the fat,
- (What gets the master of the meal by that?)
- He who with talking can devour so much,
- How would he eat, were not his hindrance such?
- 533. ON JOAN.
- Joan would go tell her hairs; and well she might,
- Having but seven in all: three black, four white.
- 534. UPON LETCHER. EPIG.
- Letcher was carted first about the streets,
- For false position in his neighbour's sheets:
- Next, hanged for thieving: now the people say,
- His carting was the prologue to this play.
- 535. UPON DUNDRIGE.
- Dundrige his issue hath; but is not styl'd,
- For all his issue, father of one child.
- 553. WAY IN A CROWD.
- Once on a Lord Mayor's Day, in Cheapside, when
- Skulls could not well pass through that scum of men,
- For quick despatch Skulls made no longer stay
- Than but to breathe, and everyone gave way;
- For, as he breathed, the people swore from thence
- A fart flew out, or a sir-reverence.
- _Sir-reverence_, "save-reverence," the word of apology used for the
- indecency itself.
- 557. UPON ONE-EY'D BROOMSTED. EPIG.
- Broomsted a lameness got by cold and beer:
- And to the bath went, to be cured there:
- His feet were helped, and left his crutch behind;
- But home returned, as he went forth, half blind.
- 563. UPON SIBILLA.
- With paste of almonds, Syb her hands doth scour;
- Then gives it to the children to devour.
- In cream she bathes her thighs, more soft than silk;
- Then to the poor she freely gives the milk.
- 570. UPON TOOLY.
- The eggs of pheasants wry-nosed Tooly sells,
- But ne'er so much as licks the speckled shells:
- Only, if one prove addled, that he eats
- With superstition, as the cream of meats.
- The cock and hen he feeds; but not a bone
- He ever picked, as yet, of anyone.
- _Superstition_, reverence.
- 573. UPON BLANCH. EPIG.
- I have seen many maidens to have hair,
- Both for their comely need and some to spare;
- But Blanch has not so much upon her head
- As to bind up her chaps when she is dead.
- 574. UPON UMBER.
- Umber was painting of a lion fierce,
- And, working it, by chance from Umber's erse
- Flew out a crack, so mighty, that the fart,
- As Umber states, did make his lion start.
- 579. UPON URLES.
- Urles had the gout so, that he could not stand;
- Then from his feet it shifted to his hand:
- When 'twas in's feet, his charity was small;
- Now 'tis in's hand, he gives no alms at all.
- 580. UPON FRANCK.
- Franck ne'er wore silk she swears; but I reply,
- She now wears silk to hide her blood-shot eye.
- 590. UPON A FREE MAID, WITH A FOUL BREATH.
- You say you'll kiss me, and I thank you for it;
- But stinking breath, I do as hell abhor it.
- 591. UPON COONE. EPIG.
- What is the reason Coone so dully smells?
- His nose is over-cool'd with icicles.
- 596. UPON SPALT.
- Of pushes Spalt has such a knotty race,
- He needs a tucker for to burl his face.
- _Pushes_, pimples.
- _Tucker_, a fuller.
- _Burl_, to remove knots from cloth.
- 597. OF HORNE, A COMBMAKER.
- Horne sells to others teeth; but has not one
- To grace his own gums, or of box, or bone.
- 600. UPON A SOUR-BREATH LADY. EPIG.
- Fie, quoth my lady, what a stink is here?
- When 'twas her breath that was the carrionere.
- _Carrionere_, carrion-carrier.
- 612. UPON COCK.
- Cock calls his wife his Hen: when Cock goes to't,
- Cock treads his Hen, but treads her underfoot.
- 632. UPON BRAN. EPIG.
- What made that mirth last night? the neighbours say,
- That Bran the baker did his breech beray:
- I rather think, though they may speak the worst,
- 'Twas to his batch, but leaven laid there first.
- _Beray_, befoul.
- 633. UPON SNARE, AN USURER.
- Snare, ten i' th' hundred calls his wife; and why?
- She brings in much by carnal usury.
- He by extortion brings in three times more:
- Say, who's the worst, th' exactor or the whore?
- 634. UPON GRUDGINGS.
- Grudgings turns bread to stones, when to the poor
- He gives an alms, and chides them from his door.
- 638. UPON GANDER. EPIG.
- Since Gander did his pretty youngling wed,
- Gander, they say, doth each night piss a-bed:
- What is the cause? Why, Gander will reply,
- No goose lays good eggs that is trodden dry.
- 639. UPON LUNGS. EPIG.
- Lungs, as some say, ne'er sets him down to eat
- But that his breath does fly-blow all the meat.
- 650. UPON COB. EPIG.
- Cob clouts his shoes, and, as the story tells,
- His thumb nails par'd afford him sparrables.
- _Sparrables_, "sparrow-bills," headless nails.
- 652. UPON SKOLES. EPIG.
- Skoles stinks so deadly, that his breeches loath
- His dampish buttocks furthermore to clothe;
- Cloy'd they are up with arse; but hope, one blast
- Will whirl about, and blow them thence at last.
- 661. UPON JONE AND JANE.
- Jone is a wench that's painted;
- Jone is a girl that's tainted;
- Yet Jone she goes
- Like one of those
- Whom purity had sainted.
- Jane is a girl that's pretty;
- Jane is a wench that's witty;
- Yet who would think,
- Her breath does stink,
- As so it doth? that's pity.
- 668. UPON ZELOT.
- Is Zelot pure? he is: yet! see he wears
- The sign of circumcision in his ears.
- 670. UPON MADAM URSLY. EPIG.
- For ropes of pearl, first Madam Ursly shows
- A chain of corns picked from her ears and toes;
- Then, next, to match Tradescant's curious shells,
- Nails from her fingers mew'd she shows: what else?
- Why then, forsooth, a carcanet is shown
- Of teeth, as deaf as nuts, and all her own.
- _Tradescant_, a collector of curiosities. See Note.
- _Mew'd_, moulted.
- _Deaf as nuts._ _Cf._ De Quincey, "a deaf nut offering no kernel."
- 705. UPON TRIGG. EPIG.
- Trigg having turn'd his suit, he struts in state,
- And tells the world he's now regenerate.
- 706. UPON SMEATON.
- How could Luke Smeaton wear a shoe, or boot,
- Who two-and-thirty corns had on a foot.
- 714. LAXARE FIBULAM.
- To loose the button is no less,
- Than to cast off all bashfulness.
- 730. UPON FRANCK.
- Franck would go scour her teeth; and setting to 't
- Twice two fell out, all rotten at the root.
- 733. UPON PAUL. EPIG.
- Paul's hands do give; what give they, bread or meat,
- Or money? no, but only dew and sweat.
- As stones and salt gloves use to give, even so
- Paul's hands do give, nought else for ought we know.
- 734. UPON SIBB. EPIG.
- Sibb, when she saw her face how hard it was,
- For anger spat on thee, her looking-glass:
- But weep not, crystal; for the same was meant
- Not unto thee, but that thou didst present.
- 755. UPON SLOUCH.
- Slouch he packs up, and goes to several fairs,
- And weekly markets for to sell his wares:
- Meantime that he from place to place does roam,
- His wife her own ware sells as fast at home.
- 797. UPON BICE.
- Bice laughs, when no man speaks; and doth protest.
- It is his own breech there that breaks the jest.
- 798. UPON TRENCHERMAN.
- Tom shifts the trenchers; yet he never can
- Endure that lukewarm name of serving-man:
- Serve or not serve, let Tom do what he can,
- He is a serving, who's a trencher-man.
- 801. UPON COMELY, A GOOD SPEAKER BUT AN ILL SINGER. EPIG.
- Comely acts well; and when he speaks his part,
- He doth it with the sweetest tones of art:
- But when he sings a psalm, there's none can be
- More curs'd for singing out of tune than he.
- 802. ANY WAY FOR WEALTH.
- E'en all religious courses to be rich
- Hath been rehers'd by Joel Michelditch:
- But now perceiving that it still does please
- The sterner fates, to cross his purposes;
- He tacks about, and now he doth profess
- Rich he will be by all unrighteousness;
- Thus if our ship fails of her anchor hold
- We'll love the divel, so he lands the gold.
- 803. UPON AN OLD WOMAN.
- Old Widow Prouse, to do her neighbours evil,
- Would give, some say, her soul unto the devil.
- Well, when she's kill'd that pig, goose, cock, or hen,
- What would she give to get that soul again?
- 804. UPON PEARCH. EPIG.
- Thou writes in prose how sweet all virgins be;
- But there's not one, doth praise the smell of thee.
- 818. UPON LOACH.
- Seal'd up with night-gum, Loach each morning lies,
- Till his wife licking, so unglues his eyes.
- No question then, but such a lick is sweet,
- When a warm tongue does with such ambers meet.
- 824. UPON NODES.
- Wherever Nodes does in the summer come,
- He prays his harvest may be well brought home.
- What store of corn has careful Nodes, think you,
- Whose field his foot is, and whose barn his shoe?
- 831. UPON TAP.
- Tap, better known than trusted, as we hear,
- Sold his old mother's spectacles for beer:
- And not unlikely; rather too than fail,
- He'll sell her eyes, and nose, for beer and ale.
- 834. UPON PUNCHIN. EPIG.
- Give me a reason why men call
- Punchin a dry plant-animal.
- Because as plants by water grow,
- Punchin by beer and ale spreads so.
- 836. UPON BLINKS. EPIG.
- Tom Blinks his nose is full of weals, and these
- Tom calls not pimples, but pimpleides;
- Sometimes, in mirth, he says each whelk's a spark,
- When drunk with beer, to light him home i' th' dark.
- 837. UPON ADAM PEAPES. EPIG.
- Peapes he does strut, and pick his teeth, as if
- His jaws had tir'd on some large chine of beef.
- But nothing so: the dinner Adam had,
- Was cheese full ripe with tears, with bread as sad.
- _Sad_, heavy: "watery cheese and ill-baked bread".
- 844. HANCH, A SCHOOLMASTER. EPIG.
- Hanch, since he lately did inter his wife,
- He weeps and sighs, as weary of his life.
- Say, is't for real grief he mourns? not so;
- Tears have their springs from joy, as well as woe.
- 845. UPON PEASON. EPIG.
- Long locks of late our zealot Peason wears,
- Not for to hide his high and mighty ears;
- No, but because he would not have it seen
- That stubble stands where once large ears have been.
- 880. KISSES LOATHSOME.
- I abhor the slimy kiss,
- Which to me most loathsome is.
- Those lips please me which are placed
- Close, but not too strictly laced:
- Yielding I would have them; yet
- Not a wimbling tongue admit:
- What should poking-sticks make there,
- When the ruffe is set elswhere?
- 881. UPON REAPE.
- Reape's eyes so raw are that, it seems, the flies
- Mistake the flesh, and fly-blow both his eyes;
- So that an angler, for a day's expense,
- May bait his hook with maggots taken thence.
- 882. UPON TEAGE.
- Teage has told lies so long that when Teage tells
- Truth, yet Teage's truths are untruths, nothing else.
- 884. UPON TRUGGIN.
- Truggin a footman was; but now, grown lame,
- Truggin now lives but to belie his name.
- 886. UPON SPENKE.
- Spenke has a strong breath, yet short prayers saith;
- Not out of want of breath, but want of faith.
- 888. UPON LULLS.
- Lulls swears he is all heart; but you'll suppose
- By his proboscis that he is all nose.
- 897. SURFEITS.
- Bad are all surfeits; but physicians call
- That surfeit took by bread the worst of all.
- 898. UPON NIS.
- Nis he makes verses; but the lines he writes
- Serve but for matter to make paper kites.
- 905. UPON PRICKLES. EPIG.
- Prickles is waspish, and puts forth his sting
- For bread, drink, butter, cheese; for everything
- That Prickles buys puts Prickles out of frame;
- How well his nature's fitted to his name!
- 945. UPON BLISSE.
- Blisse, last night drunk, did kiss his mother's knee;
- Where will he kiss, next drunk, conjecture ye.
- 946. UPON BURR.
- Burr is a smell-feast, and a man alone,
- That, where meat is, will be a hanger on.
- 947. UPON MEG.
- Meg yesterday was troubled with a pose,
- Which, this night harden'd, sodders up her nose.
- _Pose_, rheum, cold in the head.
- 961. UPON RALPH.
- Ralph pares his nails, his warts, his corns, and Ralph
- In sev'rall tills and boxes, keeps 'em safe;
- Instead of hartshorn, if he speaks the troth,
- To make a lusty-jelly for his broth.
- 966. UPON VINEGAR.
- Vinegar is no other, I define,
- Than the dead corps, or carcase of the wine.
- 967. UPON MUDGE.
- Mudge every morning to the postern comes,
- His teeth all out, to rinse and wash his gums.
- 971. UPON LUPES.
- Lupes for the outside of his suit has paid;
- But for his heart, he cannot have it made;
- The reason is, his credit cannot get
- The inward garbage for his clothes as yet.
- 972. RAGS.
- What are our patches, tatters, rags, and rents,
- But the base dregs and lees of vestiments?
- 974. UPON TUBBS.
- For thirty years Tubbs has been proud and poor;
- 'Tis now his habit, which he can't give o'er.
- 984. UPON SPOKES.
- Spokes, when he sees a roasted pig, he swears
- Nothing he loves on't but the chaps and ears:
- But carve to him the fat flanks, and he shall
- Rid these, and those, and part by part eat all.
- 988. UPON FAUNUS.
- We read how Faunus, he the shepherds' god,
- His wife to death whipped with a myrtle rod.
- The rod, perhaps, was better'd by the name;
- But had it been of birch, the death's the same.
- 989. THE QUINTELL.
- Up with the quintell, that the rout,
- May fart for joy, as well as shout:
- Either's welcome, stink or civit,
- If we take it, as they give it.
- 999. UPON PENNY.
- Brown bread Tom Penny eats, and must of right,
- Because his stock will not hold out for white.
- 1013. UPON BUGGINS.
- Buggins is drunk all night, all day he sleeps;
- This is the level-coil that Buggins keeps.
- 1027. UPON BOREMAN. EPIG.
- Boreman takes toll, cheats, natters, lies; yet Boreman,
- For all the devil helps, will be a poor man.
- 1068. UPON GORGONIUS.
- Unto Pastillus rank Gorgonius came
- To have a tooth twitched out of's native frame;
- Drawn was his tooth, but stank so, that some say,
- The barber stopped his nose, and ran away.
- 1079. UPON GRUBS.
- Grubs loves his wife and children, while that they
- Can live by love, or else grow fat by play;
- But when they call or cry on Grubs for meat,
- Instead of bread Grubs gives them stones to eat.
- He raves, he rends, and while he thus doth tear,
- His wife and children fast to death for fear.
- 1080. UPON DOLL.
- No question but Doll's cheeks would soon roast dry,
- Were they not basted by her either eye.
- 1081. UPON HOG.
- Hog has a place i' the' kitchen, and his share,
- The flimsy livers and blue gizzards are.
- 1087. UPON GUT.
- Science puffs up, says Gut, when either pease
- Make him thus swell, or windy cabbages.
- 1101. UPON SPUR.
- Spur jingles now, and swears by no mean oaths,
- He's double honour'd, since he's got gay clothes:
- Most like his suit, and all commend the trim;
- And thus they praise the sumpter, but not him:
- As to the goddess, people did confer
- Worship, and not to th' ass that carried her.
- 1108. UPON RUMP.
- Rump is a turn-broach, yet he seldom can
- Steal a swoln sop out of a dripping-pan.
- 1109. UPON SHOPTER.
- Old Widow Shopter, whensoe'er she cries,
- Lets drip a certain gravy from her eyes.
- 1110. UPON DEB.
- If felt and heard, unseen, thou dost me please;
- If seen, thou lik'st me, Deb, in none of these.
- 1112. UPON CROOT.
- One silver spoon shines in the house of Croot;
- Who cannot buy or steal a second to't.
- 1114. UPON FLOOD OR A THANKFUL MAN.
- Flood, if he has for him and his a bit,
- He says his fore and after grace for it:
- If meat he wants, then grace he says to see
- His hungry belly borne on legs jail-free.
- Thus have, or have not, all alike is good
- To this our poor yet ever patient Flood.
- 1115. UPON PIMP.
- When Pimp's feet sweat, as they do often use,
- There springs a soap-like lather in his shoes.
- 1116. UPON LUSK.
- In Den'shire Kersey Lusk, when he was dead,
- Would shrouded be and therewith buried.
- When his assigns asked him the reason why,
- He said, because he got his wealth thereby.
- 1117. FOOLISHNESS.
- In's Tusc'lans, Tully doth confess,
- No plague there's like to foolishness.
- 1118. UPON RUSH.
- Rush saves his shoes in wet and snowy weather;
- And fears in summer to wear out the leather;
- This is strong thrift that wary Rush doth use
- Summer and winter still to save his shoes.
- 1124. THE HAG.
- The staff is now greas'd;
- And very well pleas'd,
- She cocks out her arse at the parting,
- To an old ram goat
- That rattles i' th' throat,
- Half-choked with the stink of her farting.
- In a dirty hair-lace
- She leads on a brace
- Of black boar-cats to attend her:
- Who scratch at the moon,
- And threaten at noon
- Of night from heaven for to rend her.
- A-hunting she goes,
- A cracked horn she blows,
- At which the hounds fall a-bounding;
- While th' moon in her sphere
- Peeps trembling for fear,
- And night's afraid of the sounding.
- _Lace_, leash.
- _Boar-cat_, tom-cat.
- NOTES TO APPENDIX.
- 64. _To him that has, etc._ The quotation is not from the Bible, but
- from Martial, v. 81:--
- "Semper pauper eris, si pauper es, Aemiliane.
- Dantur opes nulli nunc nisi divitibus."
- Cp. also Davison's Poet. Rhap., i. 95. Ed. Bullen.
- 126. _Upon Scobble._ Dr. Grosart quotes an Ellis Scobble [_i.e._,
- Scobell], baptised at Dean Priory in 1632, and Jeffery Scobble buried in
- 1654.
- 200. _Upon Gubbs._ Printed in _Witts Recreations_, 1650, without
- alteration. To save repetition we may give here a list of the other
- Epigrams in this Appendix which are printed in _Witt's Recreations_,
- reserving variations of reading for special notes:--206, _Upon Bounce_;
- 239, _Upon Guess_; 311, _Upon Sneap_; 357, _Long and Lazy_; 379, _Upon
- Doll_; 380, _Upon Screw_; 381, _Upon Linnit_; 400, _Upon Rasp_; 410,
- _Upon Skinns_; 429, _Upon Craw_; 435, _Jack and Jill_; 574, _Upon
- Umber_; 639, _Upon Lungs_; 650, _Upon Cob_; 652, _Upon Skoles_; 668,
- _Upon Zelot_; 705, _Upon Trigg_; 797, _Upon Bice_; 798, _Upon
- Trencherman_; 834, _Upon Punchin_; 888, _Upon Lulls_; 1027, _Upon
- Boreman_; 1087, _Upon Gut_; 1108, _Upon Rump_.
- 305. _Fearing to break the king's commandement._ In 1608 there was
- issued a proclamation containing "Orders conceived by the Lords of his
- Maiestie's Privie Counsell and by his Highnesse speciall direction,
- commanded to be put in execution for the restraint of killing and eating
- of flesh the next Lent". This was re-issued ten years later (there is no
- intermediate issue at the British Museum), and from 1619 onwards became
- annual under James and Charles in the form of "A proclamation for
- restraint of killing, dressing, and eating of Flesh in Lent, or on Fish
- dayes, appointed by the Law, to be hereafter strictly observed by all
- sorts of people".
- 420. _Upon Bridget_. Loss of teeth is the occasion of more than one of
- Martial's epigrams.
- 456. _The tun of Heidelberg_: in the cellar under the castle at
- Heidelberg is a great cask supposed to be able to hold 50,000 gallons.
- 574. _As Umber states_: "as Umber _swears_".--W. R.
- 639. _His breath does fly-blow_: "doth" for "does".--W. R.
- 652. _One blast_: "and" for "one".--W. R.
- 668. _Yet! see_: "ye see".--W. R.
- 670. _Tradescant's curious shells_: John Tradescant was a Dutchman,
- born towards the close of the sixteenth century. He was appointed
- gardener to Charles II. in 1629, and he and his son naturalised many
- rare plants in England. Besides botanical specimens he collected all
- sorts of curiosities, and opened a museum which he called "Tradescant's
- Ark". In 1656, four years after his death, his son published a catalogue
- of the collection under the title, "Museum Tradescantianum: or, a
- collection of rarities preserved at South Lambeth, near London, by John
- Tradescant". After the son's death the collection passed into the hands
- of Ashmole, and became the nucleus of the present Ashmolean Museum at
- Oxford.
- 802. _Any way for Wealth._ A variation on Horace's theme: "Rem facias,
- rem, si possis, recte, si non quocunque modo, rem". 1 Epist. i. 66.
- _The Portrait of a Woman_: I subjoin here the four passages found in
- manuscript versions of this poem, alluded to in the previous note. As
- said before, they do not improve the poem. After l. 45, "Bearing aloft
- this rich round world of wonder," we have these four lines:
- In which the veins implanted seem to lie
- Like loving vines hid under ivory,
- So full of claret, that whoso pricks this vine
- May see it spout forth streams like muscadine.
- Twelve lines later, after "Riphean snow," comes a longer passage:
- Or else that she in that white waxen hill
- Hath seal'd the primrose of her utmost skill.
- But now my muse hath spied a dark descent
- From this so precious, pearly, permanent,
- A milky highway that direction yields
- Unto the port-mouth of the Elysian fields:
- A place desired of all, but got by these
- Whom love admits to the Hesperides;
- Here's golden fruit, that doth exceed all price,
- Growing in this love-guarded paradise;
- Above the entrance there is written this:
- This is the portal to the bower of bliss,
- Through midst whereof a crystal stream there flows
- Passing the sweet sweet of a musky rose.
- With plump, soft flesh, of metal pure and fine,
- Resembling shields, both pure and crystalline.
- Hence rise those two ambitious hills that look
- Into th' middle, sweet, sight-stealing crook,
- Which for the better beautifying shrouds
- Its humble self 'twixt two aspiring clouds
- The third addition is four lines from the end, after "with a pearly
- shell":
- Richer than that fair, precious, virtuous horn
- That arms the forehead of the unicorn.
- The last four lines are joined on at the end of all:
- Unto the idol of the work divine
- I consecrate this loving life of mine,
- Bowing my lips unto that stately root
- Where beauty springs; and thus I kiss her foot.
- INDEX OF FIRST LINES.
- An old, old widow, Greedy needs would wed, 383.
- Bad are all surfeits; but physicians call, 403.
- Bar close as you can, and bolt fast too your door, 380.
- Batt he gets children, not for love to rear 'em, 379.
- Bice laughs, when no man speaks; and doth protest, 399.
- Blanch swears her husband's lovely; when a scald, 376.
- Blisse, last night drunk, did kiss his mother's knee, 404.
- Boreman takes toll, cheats, flatters, lies! yet Boreman, 406.
- Broomsted a lameness got by cold and beer, 392.
- Brown bread Tom Pennie eats, and must of right, 406.
- Buggins is drunk all night, all day he sleeps, 406.
- Bungy does fast; looks pale; puts sackcloth on, 382.
- Burr is a smell-feast, and a man alone, 404.
- Center is known weak sighted, and he sells, 386.
- Cob clouts his shoes, and as the story tells, 396.
- Cock calls his wife his hen; when cock goes to 't, 395.
- Comely acts well; and when he speaks his part, 399.
- Craw cracks in sirrop; and does stinking say, 388.
- Crooked you are, but that dislikes not me, 381.
- Cuffe comes to church much; but he keeps his bed, 377.
- Curse not the mice, no grist of thine they eat, 384.
- Dunridge his issue hath; but is not styl'd, 392.
- Doll, she so soon began the wanton trade, 385.
- E'en all religious courses to be rich, 399.
- Eeles winds and turns, and cheats and steals; yet Eeles, 386.
- Feacie, some say, doth wash her clothes i' th' lie, 390.
- Fie, quoth my lady, what a stink is here, 395.
- First, Jolly's wife is lame; then next loose-hip'd, 378.
- Flood, if he has for him and his a bit, 409.
- Fone says, those mighty whiskers he does wear, 377.
- For ropes of pearl, first Madam Ursly shows, 397.
- For second course, last night a custard came, 378.
- For thirty years Tubbs has been proud and poor, 405.
- Franck ne'er wore silk she swears; but I reply, 394.
- Franck would go scour her teeth; and setting to 't, 398.
- Give me a reason why men call, 401.
- Goes the world now, it will with thee go hard, 376.
- Glasco had none, but now some teeth has got, 377.
- Glass, out of deep, and out of desp'rate want, 386.
- Groynes, for his fleshly burglary of late, 381.
- Grubs loves his wife and children, while that they, 407.
- Grudgings turns bread to stones, when to the poor, 395.
- Gryll eats, but ne'er says grace: to speak the truth, 378.
- Gubbs calls his children kitlings: and would bound, 380.
- Guess cuts his shoes, and limping, goes about, 381.
- Hanch, since he lately did inter his wife, 402.
- Hog has a place i' th' kitchen, and his share, 407.
- Horne sells to others teeth; but has not one, 394.
- How could Luke Smeaton wear a shoe or boot, 398.
- Huncks has no money, he does swear or say, 390.
- I abhor the slimy kiss, 402.
- I dream't this mortal part of mine, 375.
- If felt and heard, unseen, thou dost me please, 408.
- If thou dislik'st the piece thou light'st on first, 375.
- If wounds in clothes, Cuts calls his rags, 'tis clear, 385.
- I have seen many maidens to have hair, 393.
- In Den'shire Kersey Lusk when he was dead, 409.
- In's Tusc'lans, Tully doth confess, 409.
- Is Zelot pure? he is: yet, see he wears, 397.
- Jone is a wench that's painted, 396.
- Joan would go tell her hairs; and well she might, 392.
- Jolly and Jilly bite and scratch all day, 387.
- Kissing and bussing differ both in this, 391.
- Last night thou didst invite me home to eat, 388.
- Letcher was carted first about the streets, 392.
- Linnet plays rarely on the lute, we know, 385.
- Long locks of late our zealot Peason wears, 402.
- Leech boasts he has a pill, that can alone, 383.
- Luggs, by the condemnation of the bench, 378.
- Lulls swears he is all heart; but you'll suppose, 403.
- Lungs, as some say, ne'er sets him down to eat, 396.
- Lupes for the outside of his suit has paid, 405.
- Maggot frequents those houses of good cheer, 391.
- Mease brags of pullets which he eats; but Mease, 384.
- Meg yesterday was troubled with a pose, 404.
- Money thou ow'st me; prethee fix a day, 380.
- Moon is a usurer, whose gain, 384.
- Much-more provides and hoards up like an ant, 379.
- Mudge every morning to the postern comes, 405.
- Nis he makes verses; but the lines he writes, 403.
- No question but Doll's cheeks would soon roast dry, 407.
- Now Patrick with his footmanship has done, 387.
- Of flanks and chines of beef doth Gorrell boast, 380.
- Of four teeth only Bridget was possest, 387.
- Of pushes Spalt has such a knotty race, 394.
- Old Parson Beanes hunts six days of the week, 389.
- Old Widow Prouse, to do her neighbours evil, 400.
- Old Widow Shopter, whensoe'er she cries, 408.
- Once on a Lord Mayor's day, in Cheapside, when, 392.
- One silver spoon shines in the house of Croot, 408.
- Pagget, a schoolboy, got a sword, and then, 378.
- Parrat protests, 'tis he, and only he, 401.
- Paske, though his debt be one upon the day, 384.
- Paul's hands do give; what give they, bread or meat, 398.
- Peapes, he does strut, and pick his teeth, as if, 401.
- Pievish doth boast that he's the very first, 387.
- Prickles is waspish, and puts forth his sting, 404.
- Prigg, when he comes to houses oft doth use, 384.
- Prig now drinks water, who before drank beer, 379.
- Putrefaction is the end, 388.
- Ralph pares his nails, his warts, his corns, and Ralph, 404.
- Rasp plays at nine-holes; and 'tis known he gets, 386.
- Reape's eyes so raw are that, it seems, the flies, 402.
- Rook he sells feathers, yet he still doth cry, 389.
- Root's had no money; yet he went o' the score, 388.
- Rump is a turn-broach, yet he seldom can, 408.
- Rush saves his shoes in wet and snowy weather, 409.
- Science puffs up, says Gut, when either pease, 407.
- Scobble for whoredom whips his wife and cries, 377.
- Seal'd up with night-gum Loach, each morning lies, 400.
- Shark when he goes to any public feast, 382.
- Shift now has cast his clothes: got all things new, 385.
- Sibb, when she saw her face how hard it was, 398.
- Since Gander did his pretty youngling wed, 396.
- Since Jack and Jill both wicked be, 389.
- Skinns, he dined well to-day; how do you think, 386.
- Skoles stinks so deadly, that his breeches loath, 396.
- Skrew lives by shifts; yet swears by no small oaths, 385.
- Skurf by his nine-bones swears, and well he may, 390.
- Slouch he packs up, and goes to several fairs, 399.
- Snare, ten i' th' hundred calls his wife; and why? 395.
- Sneape has a face so brittle that it breaks, 383.
- Spenke has a strong breath, yet short prayers saith, 403.
- Spokes, when he sees a roasted pig, he swears, 405.
- Spunge makes his boasts that he's the only man, 389.
- Spur jingles now, and swears by no mean oaths, 408.
- Strutt, once a foreman of a shop we knew, 378.
- Sudds launders bands in piss, and starches them, 381.
- Tap, better known than trusted as we hear, 401.
- Teage has told lies so long that when Teage tells, 403.
- That was the proverb. Let my mistress be, 383.
- The eggs of pheasants wry-nosed Tooly sells, 393.
- The staff is now greas'd, 410.
- This lady's short, that mistress she is tall, 389.
- To cleanse his eyes, Tom Brock makes much ado, 382.
- To loose the button is no less, 398.
- To paint the fiend, Pink would the devil see, 381.
- Thou writes in prose how sweet all virgins be, 400.
- Tom Blinks his nose is full of weals, and these, 401.
- Tom shifts the trenchers; yet he never can, 399.
- Trigg, having turn'd his suit, he struts in state, 397.
- Truggin a footman was; but now, grown lame, 403.
- Umber was painting of a lion fierce, 393.
- Unto Pastillus rank Gorgonius came, 407.
- Up with the quintell, that the rout, 406.
- Urles had the gout so, that he could not stand, 394.
- Vinegar is no other, I define, 405.
- We read how Faunus, he the shepherds' god, 406.
- Were there not a matter known, 388.
- What are our patches, tatters, rags, and rents, 405.
- What is the reason Coone so dully smells, 394.
- What made that mirth last night, the neighbours say, 395.
- When Jill complains to Jack for want of meat, 391.
- When others gain much by the present cast, 385.
- When Pimp's feet sweat, as they do often use, 409.
- Wherever Nodes does in the summer come, 400.
- Who to the north, or south, doth set, 388.
- Who with thy leaves shall wipe, at need, 375.
- Why walks Nick Flimsey like a malcontent! 387.
- Wither'd with years, bed-rid Mamma lies, 380.
- With paste of almonds, Syb her hands doth scour, 393.
- Y'ave laughed enough, sweet, vary now your text, 382.
- You say, you love me; that I thus must prove, 383.
- You say you're young; but when your teeth are told, 390.
- You say you'll kiss me, and I thank you for it, 394.
- Transcriber's Endnotes
- Numeration Errors in the Hesperides:
- Without an obvious solution to a discrepancy the numbers remain as
- originally printed, however the following alterations have been made
- to ensure any details in the NOTES section apply to the relevant
- poem.
- Page 290. Note to 923. "924" changed to _923_.
- "923. _Revenge_. Tacitus, _Hist_. iv."
- Page 295. Note to 967. "726" changed to _724_.
- "967. _Upon his spaniel, Tracy._ Cp. _supra_, 724."
- Page 297. Note to 1035. "664" changed to _662_.
- "... writing to Endymion Porter (662), and earlier ..."
- Page 298. Note to 1045. "406" changed to _405_.
- "... Herrick addressed the poem (405) ..."
- Typographical Errors:
- Page 177. 33. AN ODE OF.... "disposses" corrected to _dispossess_.
- "And as we dispossess Thee ..."
- Page 318. Appendix I. "arious" corrected to _various_.
- "... all the various articles spread throughout ..."
- Page 379. 199. UPON LUGG. "LUGG" corrected to _LUGGS_.
- "199. UPON LUGGS."
- Page 382. 277. LAUGH AND DIE DOWN. "DIE" corrected to _LIE_.
- "277. LAUGH AND LIE DOWN."
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hesperides & Noble Numbers: Vol. 1 and 2,
- by Robert Herrick
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