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- Lucasta posthume poems of Richard Lovelace, Esq.
- Lovelace, Richard, 1618-1658.
-
-
-
- 1659
-
-
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- A49294
- Wing L3241_PARTIAL_CANCELLED
- Wing L3237_PARTIAL
- ESTC R3895
- 12967059
- ocm 12967059
- 96122
-
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-
- Lucasta posthume poems of Richard Lovelace, Esq.
- Lovelace, Richard, 1618-1658.
- Lovelace, Dudley Posthumus.
- Faithorne, William, 1616-1691.
-
- [2], [ii], 107, [2], 14 p., [1] leaf of plates : ill., port.
-
- Printed by William Godbid for Clement Darby,
- London :
- 1659.
-
-
- "Elegies sacred to the memory of the author by several of his friends, collected and published by D.P.L." ([2], 14 p. at end) has special t.p. with imprint: London, 1660.
- Engraved t.p. by Faithorne for Elegies on verso of p. 107.
- Dedication signed: Dudley Posthumus-Lovelace.
- Second ed. of Lucasta. Cf. Wing.
- Reproduction of original in Huntington Library.
- Entry for L3241 cancelled in Wing (2nd ed.).
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- LUCASTA.
- Posthume
- POEMS
- OF
- Richard Lovelace
- Esq
-
-
- Those Honours come too late,
- That on our Ashes waite.
- Mart. lib. 1. Epig. 26.
-
- LONDON.
- Printed by William Godbid for
- Clement Darby.
- 1659.
-
-
-
-
- THE DEDICATION.
- To the Right Honorable
- Iohn Lovelace
- Esquire.
-
- SIR,
-
- LUcasta (fair, but hapless Maid!)
- Once flourisht underneath the shade
-
- Of your Illustrious Mother; Now,
- An Orphan grown, she bows to you!
- To YOU, Her vertues noble Heir,
- Oh may she find protection there;
- Nor let her welcome be the less
-
-
- •
- Cause a rough hand makes her Addresse,
-
-
- One (to whom Foes the Muses are)
- Born and Bred up in Rugged War;
- For, Conscious how unfit I am,
- I only have pronounc'd her Name,
-
- To waken pity in your Brest,
- And leave Her Tears to plead the Rest.
-
- SIR,
- Your most obedient
- Servant and Kinsman
- Dudley Posthumus-Lovelace.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- POEMS.
-
- To LVCASTA:
-
- Her Reserved looks.
-
-
- LVcasta frown and let me die,
- But smile and see I live;
- The sad indifference of your Eye
- Both kills, and doth reprieve.
- You hide our fare within its screen,
- We feel our judgment ere we hear:
- So in one Picture I have seen
- An Angel here, the Divel there,
-
-
-
- Lucasta laughing.
- HEark how she laughs aloud,
- Although the world put on its shrowd;
- Wept at by the fantastick Crowd,
- Who cry, One drop let fall
- From her, might save the Universal Ball.
- She laughs again
- At our ridic
- •
- lous pain;
- And at our merry misery
- She laughs until she cry;
- Sages, forbear
- That ill-contrived tear,
- Although your fear,
- Doth barricadoe Hope from your soft Ear,
- That which still makes her mirth to flow,
- Is our sinister-handed woe,
- Which downwards on its head doth go;
- And ere that it is sown, doth grow,
- This makes her spleen contract,
- And her just pleasure feast;
- For the unjustest act
- Is still the pleasant'st jest.
-
-
- SONG.
-
- 1.
- Strive not, vain Lover, to be fine,
- Thy silk's the Silk-worms, and not thine;
- You lessen to a Fly your Mistris Thought,
- To think it may be in a Cobweb caught,
-
- What though her thin transparent lawn
- Thy heart in a strong Net hath drawn?
- Not all the Arms the God of Fire ere made,
- Can the soft Bulwarks of nak'd Love invade.
-
-
- 2.
- Be truly fine then, and your self dress
- In her fair Souls immac'late glass:
- Then by reflection you may have the bliss
- Perhaps to see what a True fineness is;
- When all your Gawderies will fit
- Those only that are poor in wit;
- She that a clinquant outside doth adore,
- Dotes on a gilded Statue, and no more.
-
-
-
- In allusion to the French-Song▪
- N' entendez vous pas ce language.
-
- Cho.
-
- THen understand you not (Fair choice)
- This Language without tongue or voice▪
-
-
-
- 1.
- How often have my Tears
- Invaded your soft Ears,
- And dropt their s
- •
- lent Chimes
- A thousand thousand times,
- Whilst Echo did your eyes,
- And sweetly Sympathize;
- But that the wary Lid
- Their Sluces did forbid
- •
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Cho.
-
- Then understand you not (Fair choice)
- This Language without tongue or voice?
-
-
- 2.
- My Arms did plead my wound,
- Each in the other bound;
- Volleys of Sighs did crowd,
- And ring my griefs alowd;
- Grones, like a Canon Ball,
- Batter'd the Marble Wall,
- That the kind Neighbring Grove,
- Did mutiny for Love.
-
-
-
- Cho.
-
- Then understand you not (Fair Choice)
- This Language witho
- •
- t tongue or voice?
-
-
- 3.
- The Rheth'rick of my Hand
- Woo'd you to understand;
- Nay, in our silent walk
- My very Feet would talk,
- My Knees were eloquent,
- And spake the Love I meant;
- But deaf unto that Ayr,
- They bent, would fall in Prayer.
-
-
-
- Cho.
-
- Yet understand you not (Fair Choice)
- This Language without tongue or voice?
-
-
- 4.
- No? Know then I would melt,
- On every Limb I felt,
- And on each naked part
- Spread my expanded Heart,
- That not a Vein of thee,
- But should be fill'd with mee.
-
-
- Whil'st on thine own Down, I
- Would
- ••
- mble, pant, and dye.
-
-
-
- Cho.
-
- You understand not this (Fair Choice;)
- This Language
- •
- ants both tongue and voice.
-
-
-
-
- Night. To Lucasta.
-
- NIght! loathed Jaylor of the lock'd up Sun,
- And Tyrant-turnkey on committed day;
- Bright Eyes lye fettered in thy Dungeon,
- And Heaven it self doth thy dark Wards obey▪
-
- Thou dost arise our living Hell,
- With thee grones, terrors, furies dwell,
- Untill Lucasta doth awake,
- And with her Beams these heavy chains off shake.
-
-
- Behold, with opening her Almighty Lid
- Bright eyes break rowling, and with lustre spread,
- And captive Day his chariot mounted is;
- Night to her proper Hell is beat,
- And sc
- •
- ued to her Ebon Seat;
- Till th' Earth with play oppressed lies,
- And drawes again the Curtains of her Eyes.
-
-
- But Bondslave, I, know neither Day nor Night;
- Whether she murth'ring sleep or saving wake;
- Now broyl'dith' Zone of her reflected light,
- Then frose my Isicles, not Sinews shake:
- Smile then new Nature, your soft blast
- Doth melt our Ice, and Fires wast:
- Whil'st the scorch'd shiv'ring world new born
- Now feels it all the day one rising morn.
-
-
-
-
- Love Inthron'd.
- Ode.
-
- 1.
- INtroth, I do my self perswade,
- That the wilde Boy is grown a Man;
- And all his Childishnesse off laid,
- E're since Lucasta did his fires Fan;
- H' has left his apish Jigs,
- And whipping Hearts like Gigs;
- For t'other day I heard him swear
- That Beauty should be crown'd in Honours Chair.
-
-
- 2.
- With what a true a
- •
- d heavenly State
- He doth his glorious Darts dispence,
- Now cleans'd from Falshood, Blood, and Hate,
- And newly tipt with Innocence;
- Love Justice is become,
- And doth the Cruel doome:
- Reversed is the old Decree;
- Behold! he sits Inthron'd with Majestie.
-
-
- 3.
- Inthroned in Lucasta's Eye
- He doth our Faith and Hearts Survey;
- Then measures them by Sympathy,
- And each to th' others Breast convey;
- Whilst to his Altars Now
- The frozen Vestals Bow,
-
- And strickt Diana too doth go,
- A hunting with his fear'd, exchanged Bow.
-
-
- 4.
- Th' Imbracing Seas, and Ambient Air,
- Now in his holy fires burn;
- Fish couple, Birds and Beasts in pair,
- Do their own Sacrifices turn▪
-
- This is a Miracle,
- That might Religion swell:
- But she that these and their God awes,
- Her crowned Self submits to her own Laws.
-
-
-
- Her Muffe.
-
- 1.
- 'T Was not for some calm blessing to deceive,
- Thou didst thy polish'd hands in shagg'd
- •
- urs weave,
- It were no blessing thus obtain'd,
- Thou rather would'st a curse have gain'd,
- Then let thy warm driven snow be ever stain
- •
- d.
-
-
- 2.
- Not that you feared the discolo'ring cold,
- Might, alchymize their Silver into Gold;
- Nor could your ten white Nuns so sin,
- That you should thus pennance them in
- Each in her course hair smock of Discipline,
-
-
- 3.
- Nor Her
- •
-
- -like, who on their crest still wore
- A Lyon, Panther, Leopard or a Bore:
-
-
- To look their Enemies in their Herse,
- Thou would'st thy hand should deeper pierce,
- And, in its softness rough, appear more fierce.
-
-
- 4.
- No, no, Lucasta, destiny Decreed
- That Beasts to thee a sacrifice should bleed,
- And strip themselves to make you gay;
- For ne'r yet Herald did display,
- A Coat, where Sables upon Ermin lay.
-
-
- 5.
- This for Lay-Lovers, that must stand at dore,
- Salute the threshold, and admire no more:
- But I, in my Invention tough,
- Rate not this outward bliss enough,
- But still contemplate must the hidden Muffe.
-
-
-
- A Black patch on Lucasta's Face▪
-
- DUll as I was, to think that a Court Fly,
- Presum'd so neer her Eye;
- When 'twas th'industrious Bee
- Mistook her glorious Face for Paradise,
- To summe up all his Chymistry of Spice;
- With a brave pride and honour led,
- Neer both her Suns he makes his bed;
- And though a Spark struggles to rise as red:
- Then Aemulates the gay
- Daughter of Day,
- Acts the Romantick Phoenix fate:
- When now with all his Sweets lay'd out in state,
-
-
- Lucasta scatters but one Heat,
- And all the Aromatick pills do
- ••
- weat,
- And Gums calcin'd, themselves to powder beat;
- Which a fresh gale of Air
- Conveys into her Hair;
- Then chaft he's set on fire,
- And in these holy flames doth glad expire;
- And that black marble Tablet there
- So neer her either Sphere,
- Was pla
- ••
- d; nor foyl, nor Ornament,
- But the sweet little Bees large Monument.
-
-
- Another.
-
- 1.
- AS I beheld a Winters Evening Air,
- Curl'd in her court false locks of living hair,
- Butter'd with Jessamine the Sun left there.
-
-
- 2.
- Galliard and c
- •
- inquant she appear'd to give,
- A Serenade or Ball to us that grieve,
- And teach us Alamode more gently live.
-
-
- 3.
- But as a Moor, who to her Cheeks prefers
- White Spots t'allure her black Idolaters,
- Me thought she look'd all ore bepatch'd with Stars.
-
-
- 4.
- Like the dark front of some Ethiopian Queen,
- Vailed all ore with Gems of Red, Blew, Green;
- Whose
- •
- gly Night seem'd masked with days Skreen.
-
-
-
- 5.
- Whilst the fond people offer'd Sacrifice
- To Saphyrs 'stead of Veins and Arteries,
- And bow'd unto the Diamonds, not her Eyes,
-
-
- 6.
- Behold Lucasta's Face, how't glows like Noon!
- A Sun intire is her complexion,
- And form'd of one whole Constellation.
-
-
- 7.
- So gently shining, so serene, so cleer,
- Her look doth Universal Nature cheer;
- Only a cloud or two hangs here and there.
-
-
-
- To Lucasta.
-
- 1.
- I Laugh and sing, but cannot tell
- Whether the folly on't
- •
- ounds well;
- But then I groan
- Methinks in Tune,
- Whilst Grief, Despair, and Fear, dance to the Air
- Of my despised Prayer.
-
-
- 2.
- A pretty Antick Love does this,
- Then strikes a Galliard with a Kiss;
- As in the end
- The Chords they rend
- •
-
-
- So you but with a touch from your fair Hand,
- Turn all to Saraband.
-
-
-
-
- To Lucasta.
-
- 1.
- LIke to the Sent
- •
- nel Stars, I watch all Night;
- For still the grand round of your Light,
- And glorious Breast
- Awakes in me an East,
- Nor will my rolling Eyes ere know a West.
-
-
- 2.
- Now on my Down I'm toss'd as on a Wave,
- And my repose is made my Grave;
- Fluttering I lye,
- Do beat my Self and dye,
- But for a Resurrection from your eye.
-
-
- 3.
- Ah my fair Murdresse! dost thou cruelly heal,
- With Various pains to make me well?
- Then let me be
- Thy cut Anatomie,
- And in each mangled part my heart you'l see,
-
-
-
- Lucasta at the Bath.
-
- 1.
- I' th' Autumn of a Summers day,
- When all the Winds got leave to play
- •
-
-
-
- Lucasta, that fair Ship, is lanch'd,
-
-
- •
- nd from its crust this Almond blanch'd,
-
-
-
- 2.
- Blow then, unruly Northwind, blow,
- 'Till in their holds your Eyes you stow;
- And swell your Cheeks, bequeath chill Death:
- See! she hath smil'd thee out of Breath.
-
-
- 3.
- Court gentle Zephyr, court and fan
- Her softer breast's carnation'd Wan;
- Your charming Rhethorick of Down
- Flyes scatter'd from before her frown.
-
-
- 4.
- Say, my white Water-Lilly, say,
- How is't those warm streams break away?
- Cut by thy chast cold breast which dwells
- Amidst them arm'd in Isicles.
-
-
- 5.
- And the hot floods more raging grown
- In flames of Thee, then in their own;
- In their distempers wildly glow,
- And kisse thy Pillar of fix'd Snow.
-
-
- 6.
- No Sulphur, through whose each blew Vein
- The thick and lazy Currents strein,
- Can cure the Smarting, nor the fell
- Blisters of Love wherewith they swell.
-
-
- 7.
- These great Physicians of the Blind,
- The Lame, and fatal Blains of Inde,
-
- In every drop themselves now see
- Speckled with a new Leprosie.
-
-
-
- 8.
- As Sick drinks are with old Wine dash'd,
- Foul Waters too with Spirits wash'd;
- Thou greiv'd, perchance, one tea
- •
- let'st fall,
- Which straight did purifie them all.
-
-
- 9.
- And now is cleans'd enough the flood,
- Which since runs cleare, as doth thy blood;
- Of the wet Pearls uncrown thy hair,
- And mantle thee with Ermin Air.
-
-
- 10.
-
- Lucasta, hail! fair Conqueresse
- Of Fire, Air, Earth, and Seas;
- Thou whom all kneel to, yet even thou
- Wilt unto Love, thy captive, bow.
-
-
-
- The Ant.
-
- 1.
- FOrbear thou great good Husband, little Ant
- A little respi
- •
- e from thy flood of sweat;
- Thou, thine own Horse and Cart under this Pla
- •
-
-
- Thy spacious tent, fan thy prodigious heat;
- Down with thy double load of that one grain;
- It is a Granarie for all thy Train.
-
-
- 2.
- Cease large example of wise thrift a while,
- (For thy example is become our Law)
- And teach thy frowns a seasonable smile:
- So Cato sometimes the nak'd Florals saw.
-
-
- And thou almighty foe, lay by thy sting,
- Whilst thy unpay'd Musicians, Crickets, sing.
-
-
- 3.
-
- Lucasta, She that holy makes the Day,
- And 'stills new Life in fields of F
- •
- eillemort:
- Hath back restor'd their Verdure with one Ray,
- And with her Eye bid all to play and sport,
- Ant to work still; Age will Thee Truant call;
- And to save now, th' art worse than prodigal.
-
-
- 4.
-
- Austere and Cynick! not one hour t'allow,
- To lose with pleasure what thou go
- •
- st with pain:
- But drive on sacred Festivals, thy Plow;
- Tearing high-ways with thy ore charged Wain.
- Not all thy life time one poor Minute live,
- And thy o're labour'd Bulk with mirth relieve?
-
-
- 5.
- Look up then miserable Ant, and spie
- Thy fatal foes, for breaking of her Law:
- Hov'ring above thee, Madam, Margaret Pie,
-
- And her fierce Servant, Meagre, Sir Iohn Daw:
-
- Thy Self and Storehouse now they do store up,
- And thy whole Harvest too within their Crop.
-
-
- 6.
- Thus we untrifty thrive within Earths Tomb,
- For some more rav'nous and ambitious Jaw:
- The Grain in th' Ants, the Ants in the Pies womb,
- The Pie in th' Hawks, the Hawks ith' Eagles maw:
- So scattering to hord 'gainst a long Day,
- Thinking to save all, we cast all away.
-
-
-
-
- The Snayl.
- WIse Emblem of our Politick World,
- Sage Snayl, within thine own self curl'd;
- Instruct me softly to make hast,
- Whilst these my Feet go slowly fast.
- Compendious Snayl! thou seem'st to me
- •
-
-
- Large Euclids strickt Epitome;
- And in each Diagram, dost Fling
- Thee from the point unto the Ring,
- A Figure now Triangulare,
- An Oval now, and now a Square;
- And then a Serpentine dost crawl
- Now a straight Line, now crook'd, now all.
- Preventing Rival of the Day,
- Th' art up and openest thy Ray,
- And ere the Morn cradles the Moon,
- Th'art broke into a Beauteous Noon.
- Then when the Sun sups in the Deep,
- Thy Silver Horns e're Cin
- •
- hia's peep;
- And thou from thine own liquid Bed
- New Phoebus heav'st thy pleasant Head.
- Who shall a Name for thee create,
- Deep Riddle of Mysterious State:
- Bold Nature that gives common Birth
- To all products of Seas and Earth,
- Of thee, as Earth-quakes, is affraid,
- Nor will thy dire Deliv'ry aid,
-
-
- Thou thine own daughter then, and Sire,
- That Son and Mother art intire,
- That big still with thy self dost go,
- And liv'st an aged Embrio;
- That like the Cubbs of India,
-
- Thou from thy self a while dost play▪
-
- But frighted with a Dog or Gun,
- In thine own Belly thou dost run,
- And as thy House was thine own womb,
- So thine own womb, concludes thy tomb.
- But now I must (analys'd King)
- Thy Oeconomick Virtues sing;
- Thou great stay'd Husband still within,
- Thou, thee, that's thine dost Discipline;
- And when thou art to progress bent,
- Thou mov'st thy self and
- •
- enement,
- As Warlike Scythians travayl'd, you
- Remove your Men and City too;
- Then after a sad Dearth and Rain,
- Thou scatterest thy Silver Train;
- And when the Trees grow nak'd and old,
- Thou cloathest them with Cloth of Gold,
- Which from thy Bowels thou dost spin,
- And draw from the rich Mines within.
- Now hast thou chang'd thee Saint; and made
- Thy self a Fane that's cupula'd;
- And in thy wreathed Clois
- •
- er thou
- Walkest thine own Gray fryer too;
- Strickt, and lock'd up, th'art Hood all ore
- And ne'r Eliminat'st thy Dore.
-
- On Sallads thou dost feed severe,
- And stead of Beads thou drop'st a tear,
- And when to rest, each c
- •
- lls the Bell,
- Thou sleep'st within thy Matble Cell;
- Where in dark contemplation plac'd,
- The sweets of Nature thou dost tast;
- Who now with Time thy days resolve,
- And in a
- ••
- lly thee dissolve.
- Like a sho
- •
-
-
- 〈◊〉
- , which doth repair
- Upward, and
- 〈◊〉
- Air,
-
-
-
-
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- THe Cent
- ••
-
-
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Those
- 〈…〉
- too
- •
-
-
- Nor of the
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Nor the
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Behod, this
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Of Horses, Coa
- ••
-
-
- 〈…〉
-
-
- That moverh
- 〈…〉
-
-
- And doth
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Then when the S
- ••
- the South doth
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- He bai
- •
- s him
- 〈◊〉
- ;
- I heard a grave and
- ••
- tere Clar
- •
- ,
- Resolv'd him Pilot both and Barque
- •
-
-
- That like the fam'd Ship of Trever
- •
- ,
-
- Did on the Shore himself Lavere:
- Yet the Authentick do beleeve,
- Who keep their Judgement in their Sleeve▪
-
-
- That he is his own Double man,
- And sick, still carries his Se
- •
- an:
- Or that like Dames i'th Land of Luyck,
- He wears his ev
- •••
- asting Huyck:
- But banisht, I admire his fate
- Since neither Ostracisme of State,
- Nor a perpet
- •
- al exile,
- Can force this Virtue, change his Soyl;
- For wheresoever he doth go,
- He wanders with his Country too.
-
-
- Courante Monsieur.
-
- THat frown, Aminta now hath drown'd
- Thy bright fronts power, and crown'd
- Me that was bound.
- No, no, deceived Cruel no,
- Loves fiery darts
- Till tipt with kisses, never kindle Hearts.
-
-
- Adieu weak beauteous Tyrant, see!
- Thy angry flames meant me,
- Re
- •
- ort on thee:
- For know, it is decreed, proud fair,
- I ne'r must dye
- By any scorching, but a melting Eye.
-
-
-
-
- A loose Saraband.
-
- 1.
- NAy, prethee Dear, draw nigher,
- yet closer, nigher yet;
- Here is a double Fire,
- A dry one and a wet▪
-
- True lasting Heavenly Fuel
- Puts out the Vestal jewel,
- When once we twining marry
- Mad Love with wilde Canary▪
-
-
-
- 2.
- Off with that crowned Venice
- 'Till all the House doth flame,
- Wee'l quench it straight in Rhe
- ••
- sh,
- Or what we must not name:
- Milk
- •
- ightning still asswageth,
- So when our
- •
- ury rageth,
- As th' only means to cross it,
- Wee'l drown it in Love's posset.
-
-
- 3.
- Love never was Well-willer,
- Unto my Nag or mee,
- Ne'r watter'd us ith' Cellar,
- But the cheap Buttery:
- At th' head of his own Barrells,
- Where broach'd are all his Quarrels,
-
-
- •
- hould a true noble Master
-
-
- •
- till make his Guest his Taster.
-
-
-
- 4.
- See all the World how't staggers,
- More ugly drunk then we,
- As if far gone in daggers,
- And blood it seem'd to be:
- We drink our glass of Roses,
- Which nought but sweets discloses,
- Then in our Loyal Chamber,
- Refresh us with Loves Amber.
-
-
- 5.
- Now tell me, thou fair Cripple,
- That dumb canst scarcely see
- Th' almightinesse of Tipple,
- And
- •
- h' ods 'twixt thee and thee:
- What of Elizium's missing?
- Still Drinking and still Kissing;
- Adoring plump October;
-
- Lord! what is Man and Sober?
-
-
- 6.
- Now, is there such a Tri
- •
- le
- As Honour, the fools Gyant,
- VVhat is there left to rifle,
- When Wine makes all parts plyant.
- Let o
- •
- hers Glory follow,
- In their false riches wallow,
- And with their grief be merry;
- Leave me but Love and Sherry.
-
-
-
-
- The Falcon.
-
- FAir Princesse of the spacious Air,
- That hast vouchsaf'd acquaintance here,
- With
- 〈…〉
- below sta
- •••
- ,
- That can r
- ••
- ch Heav'n with nought but Pray'rs;
- Who when our activ'st wings we try,
- Advance a foot into the Sky.
-
-
- Bright Heir t' th' Bird Imperial,
- From whose avenging penons fall
- Thunder and Lightning twisted Spun;
- Brave Cousin-german to the Sun,
- That didst forsake thy Throne and Sphere,
- To be an humble Pris'ne
- •
- here;
- And for a pirch of her soft hand,
- Resign the Royal Woods command.
-
-
- How often woul'st thoushoot Heav'ns Ark,
- Then mount thy self into a Lark;
- And after our short faint eyes call,
- When now a Fly, now nought at all;
- Then stoop so swift unto our Sence,
- As thouwert sent Intelligence.
-
-
- Free beauteous Slave, thy happy
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- In silver Fetters vervails meet,
-
-
- And trample on that noble Wrist
- The Gods have kneel'd in vain t' have kist:
- But gaze not, bold deceived Spye,
- Too much oth' lustre of her Eye;
- The Sun, thou dost out-stare, alas!
- VVinks at the glory of her Face.
-
-
- Be safe then in thy Velvet helm,
- Her looks are calms that do orewhelm,
- Then the Arabian bird more blest,
- Chafe in the spicery of her breast,
- And loose you in her Breath, a wind
- Sow'rs the delicious gales of Inde.
-
-
-
- But now a quill from thine own Wing
- I pluck, thy lofty fate to sing;
- Whilst we behold the varions fight,
- With mingled pleasure and affright,
- The humbler Hinds do fall to pray'r,
- As when an Army's seen i'th' Air
- And the prophetick Spannels run,
- And howle thy Epicedium.
-
-
-
- The Heron mounted doth appear
- On his own Peg'sus a Lanceer,
- And seems on earth, when he doth hu
- •
- ,
- A proper Halberdier on foot;
- Secure i'th' Moore, about to sup,
- The Dogs have beat his Quarters up.
-
-
- And now he takes
- •
- he open air,
- Drawes up his Wings with Tactick care;
- Whilst th' expert Falcon swist doth climbe,
- In subtle Mazes serpentine;
-
-
-
-
- And to advantage closely twin'd
- She gets the upper Sky and Wind,
- Where she dissembles to invade,
- And lies a pol'tick Ambuscade.
-
-
- The hedg'd-in Heron, whom the Foe
- Awaits above, and Dogs below,
- In his fortification lies,
- And makes him ready for surprize;
- When roused with a shrill alarm,
- Was shouted from beneath, they arm.
-
-
- The Falcon charges at first view
- With her brigade of Talons; through
- Whose Shoots, the wary Heron beat,
- VVith a well counterwheel'd retreat.
- But the bold Gen'ral never lost,
- Hath won again her airy Post;
- VVho wild in this affront, now fryes,
- Then gives a Volley of her Eyes.
-
-
- The desp'rate Heron now contracts▪
-
- In one design all former facts▪
-
- Noble he is resolv'd to fall
- His, aud his En'mies funerall,
- And (to be
- •
- id of her) to dy
- A publick Martyr of the Sky.
-
-
- VVhen now he turns his last to wreak
- The palizadoes of his Beak;
- The raging foe impatient
- Wrack'd with revenge, and fury rent,
-
-
- Swift as the Thunderbolt he strikes,
- Too sure upon the stand of Pikes,
- There she his naked breast doth hit
- And on the case of Rapiers's split.
-
-
- But ev'n in her expiring pangs
- The Heron's pounc'd within her Phangs,
- And so above she stoops to rise
- A Trophee and a Sacrifice;
- VVhilst her own Bells in the sad fall
- Ring out the double Funerall.
-
-
- Ah Victory! unhap'ly wonne,
- VVeeping and Red is set the Sun,
- VVhilst the whole Field floats in one tear,
- And all the Ai
- •
- doth mourning wear:
- Close hooded all thy kindred come
- To pay their Vows upon thy Tombe;
- The Hobby and the Musket too,
- Do march to take their last adieu.
-
-
- The Lanner and the Lanneret,
-
- Thy Colours bear as Banneret;
- The Goshawk and her Terc
- •
- l rows'd,
- VVith Tears attend thee as new bows'd,
- All these are in their dark array
- Led by the various Herald-Iay.
-
-
-
- But thy eternal name shall live
- VVhilst Quills from Ashes fame reprieve,
-
-
- VVhilst open stands Renown's wide dore,
- And VVings are left on which to soar;
- Doctor Robbin, the
- 〈◊〉
-
- Pye,
-
- And the
- 〈◊〉
-
- Swan shall dye,
- Only to
- 〈…〉
- Elegie.
-
-
-
- Love made in the first Age:
- To Chloris.
-
- 1.
- IN the Nativity of time,
-
- Chloris! it was not thought a Crime
- In direct Hebrew for to woe.
- Now wee make Love, as all on fire,
- Ring Retrograde our lowd Desire,
- And Court in English Backward too.
-
-
- 2.
- Thrice happy was that golden Age,
- When Complement was constru'd Rage,
- And fine words in the Center hid;
- When cursed No stain'd no M
- •
- id
- •
-
-
- •
- lisse,
- And all discourse was summ'd in Yes,
-
- And Nought forbad, but to forbid▪
-
-
-
- 1.
- Love then unsti
- •
- ted, Love did
- 〈◊〉
- ,
- And Cherties pluck'd fresh from the Lip,
- On Cheeks and Roses free he
- •
- ed;
- Lasses like Autumne Pl
- •
- m
- •
- did drop,
- And Lads, indifferently did crop
- A Flower, and
- •
- Maiden-head.
-
-
-
- 4.
- Then unconfined each did Tipple
- Wine from the Bunch, Milk from the Nipple,
- Paps tractable as Udders were▪
-
- Then equally the wholsome Jellies,
- Were squeez'd from Olive-Trees, and Bellies,
- Nor Suits of Trespasse did they fear.
-
-
- 5.
- A fragrant Bank of Straw-berries,
- Diaper'd with Violets Eyes,
- Was Table, Table-cloth, and Fare;
- No Pallace to the Clouds did swell,
- Each humble Princesse then did dwell
- In the Piazza of her Hair.
-
-
- 6.
- Both broken Faith, and th' cause of it,
- All damning Gold was damm'd to th' Pit;
- Their Troth seal'd with a Clap and Kisse,
- Lasted untill that extreem day,
- In which they smil'd their Souls away,
- And in each other breath'd new blisse.
-
-
- 7.
- Because no fault, there was no tear;
- No grone did grate the granting Ear;
- No false foul breath their Del'cat smell:
- No Serpent kiss poyson'd the Tast,
- Each touch was naturally Chast,
- And their mere Sense a Miracle.
-
-
-
- 8.
- Naked as their own innocence,
- And unimbroyder'd from Offence
- They went, above, poor Riches, gay;
- On softer than the Cigners Down,
- In beds they tumbled off their own;
- For each within the other lay.
-
-
- 9.
- Thus did they live: Thus did they love,
- Repeating only joyes Above;
- And Angels were, but with Cloaths on,
- Which they would put off cheerfully,
- To bathe them in the Galaxie,
-
- Then gird them with the Heavenly Zone.
-
-
- 10.
- Now, CHLORIS! miserably crave,
- The offer'd blisse you would not have;
- Which evermore I must deny,
- Whilst ravish'd with these Noble Dreams,
- And crowned with
- •
- i
- •
- e own soft Beams,
- Injoying of my sel
- •
- I lye.
-
-
-
- To a Lady withchild that ask'd an
- Old Shirt.
- ANd why an honour'd ragged Shirt, that shows,
- Like tatter'd Ensigns, all its Bodies blows?
- Should it be swathed in a vest so dire,
- It were enough to set the Child on fire;
-
-
- Dishevell'd Queen should strip them of their hair,
- And in it mantle the new rising Heir:
- Nor do I know ought worth to wrap it in,
- Except my parchment upper-coat of Skin:
- And then expect no end of its chast Tears,
- That first was rowl'd in Down now Furs of Bears▪
-
- But
- •
- ince to Ladies't hath a Custome been
- Linnen to send, that travail and lye in▪
-
- To the nine Sempstresses, my former ir
- •
- ends,
- I su'd; but they had nought but shreds and ends.
- At last, the jolli'st of the three times three,
- Rent th' apron from her smock, and gave it me
- 'T was soft and gentle, sub
- •
- 'ly spun: no doubt▪
-
- Pardon my boldness, Madam; Here's the clout.
-
-
-
- SONG.
-
- 1.
- IN mine one Monument I lye,
- And in my Self am buried;
- Sure the quick Lightning of her Eye
- Melted my Soul ith' Scabberd, dead;
- And now like some pale ghost I walk,
-
-
- •
- nd with anothers Spirit talk.
-
-
- 2.
- Nor can her beams a heat convey
- That may my frozen bosome warm,
- Unless her Smiles have pow'r, as they
- That a cross charm can countercharm;
- But this is such a pleasing pain,
- I'm loth to be alive again.
-
-
-
-
- Another.
- I Did believe I was in Heav'n
- When first the Heav'n her self was giv'n,
- That in my heart her beams did passe
- As some the Sun keep in a glasse,
- So that her Beauties thorow me
- Did hurt my Rival-Enemy.
- But fare alass! decreed it so,
- That I was Engine to my woe;
- For as a corner'd Christal Spot
- My heart Diaphanous was not,
- But solid Stuffe, where her Eye flings
- Quick fire upon the catching strings:
- Yet as at Triumphs in the Night,
- You see the Princes Arms in Light;
- So when I once was set on flame,
- I burnt all ore the Letters of her Name.
-
-
- ODE.
-
- 1.
- YOu are deceiv'd; I sooner may dull fair▪
-
- Seat a dark Mo
- •
- r in Cassiopea
- ••
-
- chair,
- Or on the Glow-worms uselesse Light
- Bestow the watching flames of Night,
- Or give the Ro
- •
- es breath
- To executed Death,
- Ere the bright hiew
- Of Verse to you▪
-
-
- It is just Heaven on Beauty s
- •
- amps a fame,
- And we alass! its Triumphs but proclaim▪
-
-
-
- 2.
- What chains but are too light for me, should I
- Say that Lucasta, in strange Arms could lie;
- Or, that Castara were impure,
- Or Saccaris's faith unsure:
- That Chloris Love as hai
- •
- ,
- Embrac'd each En'mies air:
- That all their good
- Ran in their blood;
- 'Tis the same wrong th'unworthy to in
- •
- hrone,
- As from her proper spheret' have vertue thrown.
-
-
- 3.
- That strange force on the ignoble hath renown,
- As Aurum Fulminans, it blows Vice down;
- 'Twere better (heavy one) to crawl
- Forgot, then raised trodon, fall:
- All your defections now
- Are not writ on your brow.
-
- Odes to faults give
- A shame, must live.
- When a fat mist we view, we coughing run;
- But that once Meteor drawn, all cry, undone.
-
-
- 4.
- How bright the fair Paulina did appear,
- When hid in Jewels she did seem a Star:
- But who could soberly behold
- A wicked Owl in Cloath of Gold?
- Or the ridiculous Ape,
-
- In sacred Vest
- •
- s Shape?
-
- So doth agree
- Just Praise with thee;
- For since thy birth gave thee no beauty, know
- No Poets pencil must or can do so.
-
-
-
- The Duell.
-
- 1.
- LOve drunk the other day, knockt at my brest,
- But I, alas! was not within:
- My man, my Ea
- •
- ,
- •
- old me
- 〈◊〉
- attest,
- That without
- 〈◊〉
- had b
- •
- xed him,
- And battered the Windows of mine eyes,
- And took my heart for one of's Nunneries.
-
-
- 2.
- I wondred at the ou
- ••
- g
- •
- f
- •
- se return'd,
- And stormed at the base affront;
- And by a friend of mine bold faith, that burn'd,
- I call'd him to a strict Accompt.
- He said, that by the Law the chal
- •
- eng'd might
- Take the advantage both of Arms, and Fight.
-
-
- 3.
- Two darts of equal length and points he sent,
- And nobly gave the choyce to me;
- Which I not weigh'd, young and indifferent;
- Now full of nought but Victorie.
- So we both met in one of's Mothers Groves,
- The time, at the first murm'ring of her Doves.
-
-
- 4.
- I stript my self naked all o're, as he,
- For so I was best arm'd, when bare;
-
- His
- 〈◊〉
- passe did my Liver rase, yet I
- Made home a falsify too neer;
- For when my Arm to it's true distance came
- I nothing touch'd but a fantastick flame.
-
-
- 5.
- This, this is Love we
- •
- aily quarrel so,
- An idle Don-Quichoterie:
-
- We whip our selves with our own twisted wo,
- And wound the Ayre for a Fly.
- The only way t'undo this Enemy,
- Is to laugh at the Boy, and he will cry.
-
-
-
- CUPID far gone.
-
- 1.
- WHat so beyond all madnesse is the Els,
- Now he hath got out of himsel
- •
-
- ▪
-
- His fatal Enemy the Bee,
-
- Nor his deceiv'd Artillerie;
- His Shackles, not the Roses bough
- Ne'r half so netled him as he is
- •
- ow.
-
-
- 2.
- See! at's own Mother he is offering,
- His Finger now fits any Ring;
- Old Cybele he would enjoy,
- And now the Girl, and now the Boy,
- He pro
- ••
- ers Iove a back Caresse,
- And all his Love in the Antipodes.
-
-
-
- 3.
- Jealous of his chast Psyche, raging he,
- Quarrels the Student Mercurie;
-
-
-
- And with a proud submissive Breath
- Offers to change his Darts with Death.
- He strikes at the bright Eye of Day,
- And Iuno tumbles in her milky way.
-
-
- 4.
- The dear Sweet Secrets of the Gods he tells,
- And with loath'd hate lov'd heaven he swells;
- Now like a fury he belies
- Myriads of pure Virginities;
- And swears, with this false frenzy hurld,
- There's not a vertuous She in all the World.
-
-
- 5.
-
- Olympus he renownces, then descends,
- And makes a friendship with the Fiends▪
-
- Bids Charon be no more a
- •
- lave,
- He Argos rigg'd with Stars shall have;
- And triple Cerberus from below
- Must leash'd t' himself with him a hunting go.
-
-
-
- A Mock-Song.
-
- NOw Whitehalls in the grave,
- And our Head is our slave,
- The bright pearl in his close shell of Oyster;
- Now the Miter is lost,
- The proud Praelates, too, crost,
- And all Rome's confin'd to a Cloyster:
- He that Tarquin was styl'd,
- Our white Land's exil'd,
- Yea unde
- •
- il'd,
- Not a Court Ape's le
- •
- t to confute us:
-
-
- Then let your Voyces rise high,
- As your Colours did fly,
- And flour'shing cry,
- Long live the brave Oliver-Brutus.
-
-
-
- 2.
- Now the Sun is unarm'd,
- And the Moon by us charm'd,
- All the Stars dissolv'd to a Jelly;
- Now the Thighs of the Crown,
- And the Arms are lopp'd down,
- And the Body is all but a Belly:
- Let the Commons go on,
- The Town is our own,
- We'l rule a
- •
- one▪
-
- For the Knights have yielded their Spent-gorge;
- And an order is tane,
- With HONY SOIT profane,
- Shout forth amain,
- For our Dragon hath vanquish'd the St. George.
-
-
-
-
- A Fly caught in a Cobweb.
- SMall type of great ones, that do hum,
- Within this whole World's narrow Room,
- That with a busie hollow Noise
- Catch at the people's vainer Voice,
- And with spread Sails play with their breath,
- Whose very Hails new christen Death.
- Poor Fly caught in an airy net,
- Thy Wings have fetter'd now thy feet;
- Where like a Lyon in a Toyl;
- Howere, thou keep'st a noble Coyl,
-
-
- And beat'st thy gen'rous breast, that ore
- The plains thy fatal buzzes rore,
- Till thy all-belly'd foe (round El
- •
- )
- Hath quarter'd thee within himself.
- Was it not better once to play
- I' th' light of a Majestick Ray,
- Where thou
- •
- h too neer and bold, the fire
- Might sindge thy upper down attire,
- And thou ith' storm to loose an Eye,
- A Wing, or a self-trapping Thigh;
- Yet had
- ••
- thou faln like him, whose Coil
- Made Fishes in the Sea to broyl;
- When now th' ast scap'd the noble Flame,
- Trapp'd basely in a slimy frame;
- And free of Air, thou art become
- Slave to the spawn of Mud and Lome.
- Nor is't enough thy self do'st dresse
- To thy swoln Lord a num'rous messe,
- And by degrees thy thin Veins bleed,
- And piece-meal dost his poyson feed;
- But now devou
- •
- 'd, art like to be
- A Net spun for thy Familie,
- And straight expanded in the Air
- Hang'st for thy issue too a snare.
- Strange witty Death, and cruel ill,
- That killing thee, thou thine dost kill!
- Like Pies in whose intombed ark,
- All Fowl crowd downward to a Lark;
- Thou art thine En'mies Sepulcher,
- And in thee buriest too thine heir.
-
- Yet Fates a glory have reserv'd
- For one so highly hath deserv'd;
- As the Rhinoceros doth dy
- Under his Castle-Enemy,
- As through the Cranes trunk Throat doth speed,
- The Aspe doth on his feeder feed;
- Fall yet triumphant in thy woe,
- Bound with the entrails of thy foe.
-
-
- A Fly about a Glasse of Burnt Claret.
-
- 1.
- FOrbear this liquid Fire, Fly,
-
- It is more fatal then the dry,
- That singly, but embracing, wounds,
- And this at once, both burns and drowns.
-
-
- 2.
- The Salamander that in heat
- And flames doth cool his monstrous sweat;
- Whose fan a glowing cake, is said,
- Of this red furnace is afraid.
-
-
- 3.
- Viewing the Ruby-christal shine,
- Thou tak'st it for Heaven-Christalline;
- Anon thou wilt be taught to groan,
- 'Tis an ascended Acheron.
-
-
-
- 4.
- A Snowball-heart in it let fall,
- And take it out a Fire-ball:
- An Icy breast in it betray'd,
- Breaks a destructive wild Granade.
-
-
-
- 5.
- 'Tis, this, makes Venus Altars shine,
- This kindles frosty Hymen's Pine;
- When the Boy grows old in his desires,
- This Flambeau
-
- 〈…〉
- light his fires.
-
-
-
-
- •
- .
- Though the cold Hermit ever wail,
- Whose sighs do freeze, and
- •
- ears drop hail,
- Once having
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Another
- 〈…〉
-
-
-
-
-
-
- •
- .
- The Vestal drinking
- 〈◊〉
- doth burn,
- Now more
- 〈…〉
- fun'ral Urn;
- Her fires, that
- 〈◊〉
- the Sun kept race,
- Are now ex
- •
- inguish'd by her Face.
-
-
- 8.
- The Chymist, that himself doth still,
-
-
- •
- et him but tast this Limbecks bill,
- And prove this
- ••
- blimated Bowl,
- He'l swear it will calcine a Soul.
-
-
- 9.
- Noble and brave! now thou dost know,
- The false prepared decks below,
- Dost thou the fatal liquor sup,
- One drop alas! thy Barque blowes up.
-
-
- 10.
- What airy Country hast to save,
- Whose plagues thou'lt bury in thy grave?
-
-
- •
- or even now thou seemst to us
-
-
- •
- n this Gulphs brink a Curtius.
-
-
-
-
- 11.
- And now th' art faln (magnanimous Fly)
- In, where thine Ocean doth fry,
- Like the Sun's son who blush'd the flood,
- To a complexion of blood.
-
-
- 12.
- Yet see! my glad Auricular
- Redeems thee (though dissolv'd) a Star,
- Flaggy thy Wings, and scorch'd thy Thighs,
- Thou ly'st a double Sacrifice.
-
-
- 13.
- And now my warming, cooling, breath,
- Shall a new life afford in Death;
- See! in the Hospital of my hand
- Already cur'd, thou fierce do'st stand.
-
-
- 14.
- Burnt In
- •
- ect! dost thou reaspire
- The moist-hot-glasse, and liquid fire?
- I see! 'tis such a pleasing pain,
- Thou would'st be scorch'd, and drown'd again.
-
-
-
- Female Glory.
- 'MOngst the worlds wonders, there doth yet remain
- One greater than the rest, that's all those o're aga
- ••
-
-
- And her own self beside; A Lady whose soft Breast,
- Is with vast Honours Soul, and Virtues Life possest.
-
- Fair, as Original Light, first from the Chaos shot▪
-
- When day in Virgin-beams triumph'd, and Night was not▪
-
-
-
- And as that Breath infus'd in the New-breather Good,
- When Ill unknown was dumb, and Bad not understood;
-
- Chearful, as that Aspect at this world's fi
- •
- ishing,
- When Cherubims clapp'd wings, and th'Sons of Heav'n did sing.
-
- Chast as th' Arabian bird, who all the Ayr denyes,
- And ev'n in Flames expires, when with her self she lyes.
- Oh! she's as kind as drops of new faln April Showers,
- That on each gentle breast, spring fresh perfuming flowers;
- She's Constant, Gen'rous, Fixt, s
- •
- e's Calm, she is the All
-
- We can of Vertue, Honour, Faith, or Glory Call,
- And
- 〈◊〉
- (whom I thus transmit to endless fa
- •
- e)
-
- Mistresse oth' World, and me, & LAURA is her Name.
-
-
- A Dialogue.
- Lute and Voice.
-
- L.
- SIng Laura, sing, whilst silent are the Sphears,
- And all the eyes of Heaven are turn'd to Ears.
-
-
- V.
-
-
- •
- ouch thy dead Wood, and make each living tree,
- Unchain its feet, take arms, and follow thee.
-
- Chorus.
-
- L.
- Sing.
-
-
- V.
- Touch. O Touch.
-
-
- L.
- O Sing,
-
-
- Both,
- It is the Souls, Souls, Sole offering.
-
-
-
- V.
- Touch the Divinity of thy Chords, and make
- Each Heart string tremble, and each Sinew shake.
-
-
- L.
- Whilst with your Voyce you Ratifie the Air.
- None but an host of Angels hover here.
-
- Chorus. Sing. Touch, &c.
-
-
- V.
- Touch thy soft Lute, and in each gentle thread,
- The Lyon and the Panther Captive lead.
-
-
- L.
- Sing, and in Heav'n Inthrone deposed Love,
- Whilst Angels dance and Fiends in order move.
- Double Chorus.
- What sacred Charm may this then be
- In Harmonie,
- That thus can make the Angels wild,
- The Devils mild,
- And teach low Hell to Heav'n to swell,
- And the High Heav'n to stoop to Hell.
-
-
-
- A Mock Charon.
- DIALOGUE,
- Cha. W.
-
- W.
- CHaron! Thou Slave! Thou Fool! Thou Cavaleer
-
-
- Cha.
- A Slave, a Fool, What Traitors voice I Hear?
-
-
-
- W.
- Come bring thy Boat.
-
-
- Ch.
- No Sir.
-
-
- W.
- No sirrah why?
-
-
- Cha.
- The Blest will disagree, and Fiends will mutiny
- At thy, at thy, numbred Treachery.
-
-
- W.
- Villain, I have a Pass, which who disdains,
- I will sequester the Elizian plains.
-
-
- Cha.
- Woes me! Ye gentle shades! where shall I dwell?
- He's come! It is not safe to be in Hell.
- Chorus.
- Thus man, his Honor lost, falls on these Shelves;
- Furies and Fiends are still true to themselves.
-
-
- Cha.
- You must lost Fool come in.
-
-
- W.
- Oh let me in!
- But now I fear thy Boat will sink with my oreweighty sin.
- Where courteous Charon am I now?
-
-
- Cha.
- Vile Rant!
- At th' Gates of thy supreme Judge Rhadamant.
-
- Double Chorus of Divel
- •
- .
- Welcome to Rape, to Theft, to Perju
- •
- ie,
- To all the ills thou wer
- •
- , we canot hope to be;
- Oh pitty us condemn'd! Oh cease to wooe,
- And softly, softly breath, least you infect us too.
-
-
-
- The Toad and Spyder.
- A Duell.
- UPon a Day when the Dog-star
- Unto the World procl
- •
- im'd a War,
-
-
- And poyson bark'd from his black Throat,
- And from his jaws Infection shot,
- Under a deadly Hen-bane shade
- With slime infernal Mists are made;
- Met the two dreaded Enemies,
- Having their Weapons in their Eyes.
- First from his Den rolls forth that Load,
- Of Spite and Hate the speckl'd Toad,
- And from his Chaps a foam doth spawn,
- Such as the loathed three Heads yawn;
- Defies his foe with a fell Spet,
- To wade through Death to meet with it;
- Then in his Self the Lymbeck turns,
- And his Elixir'd poyson Urns.
-
- Arachne once the fear 'oth Maid
- Coelestial, thus unto her pray'd:
- Heaven's blew-ey'd Daughter, thine own Mother!
- The Python-killing Sun's thy Brother.
- Oh! thou from gods that did'st descend,
- With a poor Virgin to contend,
- Shall seed of Earth and Hell ere be
- A Rival in thy Victorie?
-
- Pallus assents! for now long time
- And pity, had clean rins'd her crime;
- When straight she doth with active fire,
- Her many legged foe inspire.
- Have you not
- 〈◊〉
- a Charact lye
- A great Cathedral in the Sea
- Under whose Babylonian Walls,
- A small thin frigot-Alms house stalls;
-
-
- So in his slime the Toad doth float,
- And th' Spyder by▪ but seems his Boat;
- And now the Naumachie Begins
- Close to the Surface, her self spins:
-
- Arachne, when her foe lets flye
- A broad-side of
- •
- is Breath, too high,
- That's over-shot, the wisely stout
- Advised Maid doth tack about,
- And now her pi
- •
- chy barque doth sweat,
- Chaf'd in her own bl
- •
- ck fury wet;
- Lasie and cold before, she brings
- New fires to her contracted S
- •
- ings,
- And with discolour'd Spumes doth blast
- The Herbs that to their Center hast.
- Now to the Neighb'ring Henbane top
-
- Arachne hath her self wound up,
- And thence, from its dilated Leaves,
- By her own cor
- •
- age downwards weaves;
- And doth her Town of Foe Attack,
- And storms the Ram
- •
- iers of his Back;
- Which taken in her Colours spread,
- March to th' Citadel of's Head.
- Now as in witty torturing Spain,
-
- The Brain is vext, to vex the Brain:
- Where Hereticks b
- •
- re Heads are arm'd
- In a close Helm, and in it charm'd
- An overgrown and Meagre R
- •
- t,
- That Peece-meal nibbles himself fat;
- So on the Toads blew-checquer'd Scull
- The Spider gluttons her self full,
-
-
- And Vomiting her Stygian Seeds,
- Her poyson, on his poyson, feeds:
- Thus the invenom'd Toad, now grown
- Big, with more poyson than his own,
- Doth gather all his pow'rs, and shakes
- His Stormer in's Disgorged Lakes;
- And wounded now, apace crawls on
- To his next Plantane Surgeon;
- With whose rich Balm no sooner drest,
- But purged, is his sick swoln Breast;
- And as a glorious Combatant,
- That only rests a while to pant;
- Then with repeated strength, and Scars;
- That smarting, fire him to new Wars,
- Deals Blows that thick themselves prevent,
- As they would gain the time he spent.
- So the disdaining angry Toad,
- That, calls but a thin useless Load;
- His fatal feared self comes back
- With unknown Venome fill'd to crack,
- Th' amased Spider now untwin'd,
- Hath crept up, and her self new lin'd
- With fresh salt foams, and Mists that blast
- The Ambient Air as they past.
- And now me think a Sphyn
- •
- 's wing
- I pluck, and do not write but sting;
- With their black blood, my pale inks blent
- Gall's but a faint Ingredient.
- Th' Pol
- •
- tick Toad doth now withdraw,
- Warn'd, higher in Campania.
-
-
-
- There wisely doth intrenched deep,
- His Body, in a Body keep,
- And leaves a wide and open pass
- T' invite the foe up to his jaws;
- Which there within a foggy blind
- With fourscore fire-arms were lin'd;
- The gen'rous active Spider doubts
- More Ambuscadoes, then Redoubts;
- So within shot she doth pickear,
- Now gall's the Flank, and now the Rear;
- As that the Toad in's own dispite
- Must change the
- 〈◊〉
- o
- •
- his fight,
- Who like a glorious General,
- With one home Charge, lets fly at All.
- Chaf'd with a fourfold ven'mous Foam
- Of Scorn, Revenge, His Foes and's Own;
- He seats him in his loathed Chair,
- New-made him by each Mornings Air,
- With glowing Eyes, he doth survey
- Th' undaunted hoast, he calls his prey;
- Then his dark Spume he gred'ly laps,
- And shows the foe his Grave, his Chaps.
- Whilst the quick wary Amazon
- Of
- •
- vantage takes occasion,
- And with her troop of Leggs Carreers,
- In a full speed with all her Speers;
- Down (as some mountain on a Mouse)
- On her small Cot he flings his house,
- Without the poyson of the Elf,
- The Toad had like t' have burst himself,
-
-
- For sage Arachne with good heed,
- Had stopt herself upon full speed;
- And's body now disorder'd, on
- She falls to Execution.
- The passive Toad now only can
- Contemn, and suffer: Here began
- The wronged Maids ingenious Rage,
- Which his heart venome must Asswage;
- One Eye she hath spet out, strange Smother!
- When one flame doth put out Another,
- And one Eye wittily spar'd, that he
- Might but behold his miserie;
- She on each spot a wound doth print,
- And each speck hath a sting within't;
- Till he but one new Blister is,
- And swells his own Periphrasis;
- Then fainting, sick, and yellow, pale,
- She baths him with her sulph'rous Stale;
- Thus slacked is her Stygian fire,
- And she vouchsafes now to retire;
- Anon the Toad begins to pant,
- Bethinks him of th' Almighty plant,
- And lest he peece-meal should be sped,
- Wisely doth finish himself dead.
- Whilst the gay Girl, as was her fate,
- Doth wanton and luxuriate,
- And crowns her conqu'ring head all ore
- With fatall Leaves of Hellebore,
-
- Not guessing at the pretious Aid
- Was lent her by the Heavenly Maid.
-
-
- The neer expiring Toad now rowls
- Himself in lazy bloody Scrowls,
- To th' sov'raign Salve of all his ills,
- That only life and health distills.
- But loe! a Terror above all
- That ever yet did him befall!
-
- Pallas still mindful of her foe,
- (Whilst they did with each fires glow)
- Had to the place the Spiders Lar,
-
- Dispath'd before the Ev'nings Star;
- He learned was in Natures Laws,
- Of all her foliage knew the cause,
- And 'mongst the rest in his choice want
- Unplanted had this Plantane plant.
- The all-confounded Toad doth see
- His life fled with his Remedie,
- And in a glorious Despair
- First burst himself, and next the Air;
- Then with a Dismal Horred yell,
- Beats down his loathsome Breath to Hell.
- But what inestimable bliss
- This to the
- •
- a
- •
- ed Virgin is,
- Who as before of her fiend foe,
- Now full is of her Goddess too;
- She from her fertile womb hath spun
- Her stateliest Pavillion,
- Whilst all her silken Flags display,
- And her triumphant Banners play;
- Where Pallas she ith' midst doth praise,
- And counterfeits her Brothers Rayes,
-
-
- Nor will she her dear Lar forget,
- Victorious by his Benefit;
- Whose Roof inchanted she doth free,
- From haunting Gnat, and goblin Bee,
- Who trapp'd in her prepared Toyle,
- To their destrnction keep a coyle.
- Then she unlocks the Toad's dire Head,
- Within whose cell is treasured
- That pretious stone, which she doth call
- A noble recompence for all,
- And to her Lar doth it present,
- Of his fair Aid a Monument.
-
-
-
-
- The Triumphs
- OF
- PHILAMORE and AMORET.
- To the Noblest of our Youth
- And Best of Friends,
- CHARLES COTTON
- Esquire.
- Being at Berisford, at his house in Staffordshire.
- From LONDON.
- A POEM.
- SIR your sad absence I complain, as Earth (birth
-
-
- •
- er long hid Spring, that gave her verdures
-
-
- •
- ho now her cheerful Aromatick Head
-
-
- •
- hrinks in her cold and dismal widow'd bed;
-
- Whilst the false Sun her Lover doth him move
- Below, and to th' Antipodes make Love.
- What Fate was mine, when in mine obscure Cave
- (Shut up almost close Prisoner in a Grave)
- Your Beams could reach me through this Va
- •••
- O▪ Night,
- And Canton the dark Dungeon with Light!
-
-
- Whence me (as gen'rous Spahy's) you unbound,
- Whilst I now know my self both Free and Crown'd,
- But as at Moecha's tombe, the Devout blind
-
- Pilgrim (great Husband of his Sight and Mind)
- Pays to no other Object this chast prise,
- Then with hot Earth anoynts out both his Eyes;
- So having seen your dazling Glories store;
- It is enough, and sin for to see more?
- Or, do you thus those pretious Rayes withdraw
- To whet my dull Beams, keep my Bold in aw?
- Or, are you gentle and compassionate,
- You will not reach me Regulus his Fate?
- Brave Prince who Eagle-ey'd of Eagle kind,
- Wert blindly damn'd to look thine own self blind!
- But oh return those Fires, too Cruel Nice!
- For whilst you fear me Cindars, See! I'm Ice;
- A nummed speaking clod, and mine own show,
- My Self congeal'd, a Man cut out in Snow:
- Return those living Fires, Thou who that vast
- Double advantage from one ey'd Heav'n hast;
- Look with one Sun, though't but Obliquely be,
- And if not shine, vouchsafe to wink on me.
- Percieve you not a gentle, gliding heat,
- And quickning warmth that makes the Stat
- •
- a swea
- •
- ;
- As rev'rend
-
- 〈◊〉
-
- back-flung stone,
- Whose rough o
- ••
- -side softens to Skin, anon
- Each crusty Vein with wet red is suppli'd,
- Whilst nought of Stone but in its heart doth 'bide.
- So from the rugged North, where your soft stay
- Hath stampt them a Meridian, and kind day;
-
-
- Where now each a la Mode Inhabitant,
- Himself and's Manners both do pay you rent,
- And 'bout your house (your Pallace) doth resort
- And 'spite of Fate and War creates a Court.
- So from the taught North, when you shall return
- To glad those Looks that ever since did mourn,
- When men uncloathed of themselves you'l see,
- Then start new made, fit, what they ought to be;
- Hast! hast! you that your Eyes on rare Sights feed,
- For thus the golden Triumph is decreed.
- The twice-born God, still gay and ever young,
- With Ivie crown'd, first leads the glorious Throng:
- He Ariadnes starry Coronet
- Designs for th' brighter Beams of Amoret;
-
- Then doth he broach his Throne; and singing quaff
- Unto her Health his pipe of God-head off.
- Him follow the recanting, vexing Nine,
- Who, wise, now sing thy lasting Fame in Wine;
- Whilst Phoebus not from th'East, your Feast t'adorn,
- But from th' inspir'd Canaries rose this morn.
- Now you are come, Winds in their Caverns sit,
- And nothing breaths, but new inlarged Wit;
- Hark! One proclaims it Piacle to be sad,
- And the people call't Religion to be Mad.
- But now, as at a Coronation
- VVhen noyse, the guard, and trumpets are oreblown,
- The silent Commons mark their Princes way,
- And with still Reverence both look, and pray;
- So they amaz'd, expecting do adore,
- And count the rest but Pageantry before.
-
-
- Behold! an Hoast of Virgins, pure as th
- •
- Air,
- In her first face, ere Mists durst vayl her hair;
- Their snowy Vests, VVhite as their whi
- •
- ter Skin,
- Or their far chaster whiter Thoughts within:
- Roses they breath'd and strew'd, as if the fine
- Heaven, did to Earth his VVreath of swets resigne;
- They sang aloud! Thrice, Oh Thrice happy They
-
- That can like these in Love both yield and sway.
- Next Herald Fame (a Purple Clowd her bea
- •
- s)
- In an imbroider'd Coat of Eyes and Ears,
- Proclaims the Triumph, and these Lovers glory;
- Then in a book of Steel Records the Story.
- And now a Youth of more than God-like form,
- Did th'inward minds of the dumb Throng Alarm;
- All nak'd, each part betray'd unto the Eye,
- Chastly, for neither Sex ow'd he or she.
- And this was Heav'nly Love; by his bright hand,
- A Boy of worse than earthly stuffe did stand;
- His Bow broke, his Fires out, and his Wings clipt,
- And the black Slave from all his false flames stript;
- Whose Eyes were new restor'd, but to confesse
- Th
- •
- days bright bl
- ••
- se, and his own wre
- •
- chednesse;
- Who swell'd with envy, bur
- ••
- ing with disda
- •
- n,
- Did cry to cry, and weep them out again.
- And now what
- 〈◊〉
- must I invade, what Sphere
- Rifle of all her Stars t'inthrone her there?
- No Phoebus by thy Boys fate we beware,
- Th' unruly flames
- 〈◊〉
- 'firebrand, thy Carr;
- Although she there once plac'd thou Sun shouldst see
- Thy day both Nobler governed and thee,
-
-
- Drive on Bootes thy
- 〈◊〉
- heavy wayn,
- Then grease thy VVhee
- •
- with Amber in the Main,
- And Neptune, thou to thy false Thetis gallop,
-
- Appollo's set within thy Bed of Scallop:
- VVhilst Amôret on the reconciled VVinds
- Mounted, and drawn by six Caelestial Minds,
- She armed was with Innocence, and fire
- That did not burn, for it was Chast Desire;
-
- VVhilst a new Light doth gild the standers by;
- Behold! it was a Da
- •
- shot from her Eye;
- Chafing perfumes oth' East did throng and sweat,
- But by her breath, they melting back were beat,
- A Crown of Yet-nere-lighted stars she wote,
- In her soft hand a bleeding Heart she bore,
- And round her lay Millions of broken more;
- Then a wing'd Crier thrice aloud did call,
- Let Fame proclaim this one great Prise for all.
- By her a Lady that might be call'd fair,
- And justly, but that Amoret was there,
- VVas Pris'ner led, th'unvalewed Robe she wore,
- Made infinite Lay Lovers to adore,
- VVho vainly tempt her Resc
- •
- e (
- •
- adly bold)
- Chained in sixteen thousand links of gold;
-
- Chrysetta thus (Loaden with treasures) Slave
- Did strow the pass with Pearls, and her way pave.
- But loe! the glorious Cause of all this high
- True heav'nly state, Brave Philamore draws nigh!
- VVho not himself, more seems himself to be,
- And with a sacred Ex
- •
- asie doth see;
-
-
- Fixt and unmov'd on's Pillars he doth stay,
- And Joy transforms him his own Statua;
-
- Nor hath he pow'r to breath, or strength to greet
- The gentle Offers of his Amoret,
-
- VVho now amaz'd at's noble Breast doth knock,
- And with a Kiss his gen'rous heart unlock;
- VVhilst she and the whole pomp doth enter there,
- VVhence Her not Time nor Fate shall ever tear.
- But whether am I hurld! ho! Back! Awake
- From thy glad Trance; to thine old Sorrow take!
- Thus, after view of all the Indies store,
- The Slave returns unto his Chain and Oar;
- Thus Poets who all Night in blest Heav'ns dwell,
- Are call'd next morn to their true living Hell;
-
- So I unthrifty, to my self untrue,
- Rise cloath'd with real wants, 'cause wanting you,
- And what substantial Riches I possesse,
- I must to these unvalued Dreams confesse.
- But all our Clowds shall be oreblown, when thee
- In our Horizon, bright, once more we see;
- VVhen thy dear presence shall our Souls new dress,
- And spring an universal cheerfulnesse;
- VVhen we shall be orewhelm'd in Joy, like they
- That change their Night, for a vast half-years day.
- Then shall the wretched Few, that do repine,
- See; and recant their Blasphemies in VVine;
- Then shall they grieve that thought I've sung to free
- High and aloud of thy true worth and Thee,
- And their fowl Heresies and Lips submit
- To th' all-forgiving Breath of Amoret,
-
-
-
- And me alone their angers Object call,
- That from my height so miserably did fall;
- And crie out my Invention thin and poor,
- VVho have said nought, since I could say no more.
-
-
-
- Advice to my best Brother.
- Coll: Francis Lovelace.
-
-
- FRank, wil't live unhandsomely? trust not too far
- Thy self to waving Seas, for what thy star
- Calculated by sure event must be,
- Look in the Glassy-epithire and see.
-
-
- Yet settle here your rest, and take your state,
- And in calm Halcyon's nest ev'n build your Fa
- •
- e;
- Prethee lye down securely, Frank, and keep
- VVith as much no noyse the inconstant Deep
- As its Inhabitants; nay stedfast stand,
- As if discover'd were a New-found-land
- Fit for Plantation here; dream, dream still,
- Lull'd in Dione's cradle, dream, untill
- Horr
- ••
- r awake your sense, and you now find
- Your self a bubled pastime for the VVind;
- And in loose Thetis blankets torn and tost,
-
- Frank to undo thy self why art at cost?
-
-
- Nor be too confident, fix'd on the shore,
- For even that too borrows from the store
- Of her rich Neighbour, since now wisest know,
- (And this to Galileo's) j
- •
- dgement ow)
- The palsie Earth it self is every jot
- As frail, inconstant, waveing as that blot
-
-
- VVe lay upon the Deep, That sometimes lies
- Chang'd, you would think, with's b
- ••
- oms properties
- But this eternal
- 〈…〉
- wheel
- Of giddy earth, ne'
- •
- whi
- •
- ling leaves to reel
- Till all things a
- •
- e inver
- •
- ed, till they are
- Tu
- •
- n'd
- •
- o that
- 〈…〉
- state they were.
-
-
- VVho loves the golden mean, doth safely want
- A cobwebb'd Cot, and wrongs entail'd npon't;
- He
- •
- ichly needs a Pallace for to breed
- Vipers and Moths, that on their feeder feed.
- The toy that we (too tr
- •
- e) a Mistress call,
- VVhose Looking-glass and feather weighs up all;
- And Cloaths which L
- •
- rks
- 〈◊〉
- play with, in the Sun,
- That mock him in the Night when's
- 〈…〉
- .
-
-
- To
- 〈…〉
-
-
- That envy should
- •
- not reach it with her eye▪
-
- Nay with a thought come
- 〈◊〉
- it, would
- 〈◊〉
- thou know
- How such a Structure should be raisd? build low.
- The blu
- •••
- ing winds invisible rough stroak,
- More often shakes the
- ••
- ubborn'st, prop'rest Oak,
- And in proud Turrets we behold withal,
-
-
- ••
- is the Imperial top declines to fall,
- Nor does Heav'ns lightning strike the humble Vales
- But high aspiring Mounts batters and
- 〈◊〉
- .
-
-
- A breast of proof de
- •
- ies all Shocks of Fate,
- Fears in the best, hopes in the worser state;
- Heaven forbid that, as of old, Time ever
-
-
- •
- lourish'd in Spring, so contrary, now never:
-
-
- That mighty breath which blew foul Winter hither,
- Can eas'ly puffe it to a fairer weather.
- VVhy dost despair then, Franck, Aeolus has
- A Zephyrus as well as Boreas.
-
-
-
- 'Tis a false Sequel, Soloecisme, 'gainst those
- Precepts by fortune giv'n us, to suppose
- That cause it is now ill, 't will ere be so;
-
- Apollo doth not always bend his Bow;
- But oft uncrowned of his Beams divine,
- VVith his soft harp awakes the sleeping Nine.
-
-
- Instrictest things magnanimous appear,
- Greater in hope, howere thy fate, then fear:
- Draw all your Sails in quickly, though no storm
- Threaten your ruine with a sad alarm;
- For tell me how they differ, tell me pray,
- A cloudy tempest, and a too fair day.
-
-
-
-
- An Anniversary
- On the Hymeneals of my noble Kinsman
- Tho. Stanley Esquire.
-
- 1
- THe day is curl'd about agen
- To view the splendor she was in;
- When first with hallow'd hands
- The holy man knit the mysterious bands;
- When you two your contracted Souls did move,
- Like Cherubim
- •
-
- above,
- And did make Love;
- As your un-understanding issue now
- In a glad sigh, a smile, a
- •
- ear, a Vow.
-
-
- 2.
- Tell me, O self-reviving Sun,
- In thy Perigrination!
- Hast thou beheld a pair
- Twist their soft beams like these in their chast air;
- As from bright numberlesse imbracing rayes
- Are sprung th' industrious dayes;
- So when they gaze,
- And change their fertile Eyes with the new morn,
- A beauteous Offspring is shot forth, not born.
-
-
-
- 3.
- Be witness then, all-seeing Sun,
- Old Spy, thou that thy race ha
- ••
- run,
- In full five thousand Rings;
- To thee were ever pu
- •
- er Offerings
- Sent on the Wings of Faith, and thou of Night
- Curtain of their delight,
- By these made bright,
- Have you not marked their Coeles
- •
- ial play,
- And no more peek'd the gayeties of day.
-
-
- 4.
- Come then pale Virgins, Roses strow,
- Mingled with Io's as you go;
- The snowy Oxe is kill'd,
- The Fane with pros'lite Lads and Lasses fill'd,
- You too may hope the same seraphick joy,
- Old time cannot destroy,
- Nor fulnesse cloy,
- When like these, you shall stamp by Sympathies,
- Thousands of new-born-loves with your chast eyes.
-
-
-
-
- Paris's second Iudgement,
- Vpon the three Daughters of my Dear
- Brother Mr. R. Caesar.
- BEhold! three Sister wonders, in whom met,
- Distinct and chast, the Splendors coun
- •
- erfeit
- Of Iuno, Venus, and the warlike Maid,
- Each in their three Divinities
- 〈◊〉
- !
- The Majesty and State of Heav'ns great Queen,
- And when she treats the gods, her noble
- 〈◊〉
- ;
- The sweet
- •
- ictorious beauties, and desires
- O' th' Sea-born Princess, Empresse too of Fires;
- The sacred Arts, and glorious
- ••
- wrels,
- •
- orn
- From the fair brow o' th'
- 〈◊〉
- Father-born;
- All these were quarte
- •
- 'd in each snowy coat,
- With canton'd honours of their own
- 〈◊〉
-
- ▪
-
-
- Paris by Fate new-wak'd
- 〈◊〉
- his dead Cell,
- Is charg'd to give his doom impossible.
- He views in each the brav'ry of all Ide;
-
- Whilst one, as once three, doth his Soul divide,
- Then sighs! so equally they're glorious all,
- What pity the whole World is but one Ball.
-
-
-
- Peinture.
- A Panegyrick to the best Picture of
- Friendship Mr. Pet. Lilly.
- IF Pliny Lord High Treasurer of all
- Natures exchequer shuffled in this our ball;
-
- Pincture, her richer Rival, did admire,
- And cry'd she wrought with more almighty fire,
- That judg'd the unnumbered issue of her Scrowl,
- Infinite and various as her Mother Soul,
- That contemplation into matter brought,
- Body'd Idaea's, and could form a thought:
- VVhy do I pause to couch the Cataract,
- And the grosse pearls from our dull eyes abstract,
- That pow'rful Lilly now awakened, we
- This new Creation may behold by thee.
- To thy victorious pencil, all that Eyes
- And minds can reach, do bow; the Deities
- Bold Poets first but feign'd, you do, and make,
- And from your awe they our Devotion take.
- Your beauteous Pallet first defin'd Loves Queen,
- And made her in her heav'nly colours seen;
- You strung the Bow of the Bandite her Son,
- And tipp'd his Arrowes with Religion.
-
-
- Neptune, as
- •
- nknown as his Fish might dwell,
- But that you seat him in his throne of Shell.
- The thunderers Artillery, and brand
- You fancied Rome in his fantastick hand.
- And the pale frights, the pains and fears of Hell,
- First from your sullen Melancholy fell.
- Who cleft th' infernal Dog's loath'd head in three,
- And spun out Hydra's fifty necks? by thee
- As prepossess'd w' enjoy th' Elizian plain,
- VVhich but before was flatter'd in our brain.
- VVho ere yet view'd Airs child invisible,
- A hollow Voice, but in thy subtile skill?
- Faint stamm'ring Eccho, you so draw, that we
- Th
- •
- very repercussion do see.
- Cheat Hocus-pocus-Nature an Essay
- O' th'Spring affords us, Praesto and away;
- You all the year do chain her, and her fruits,
- Roots to their Beds, and flowers to their Roots▪
-
- Have not mine eyes feasted i' th' frozen Zone,
-
- Upon a fresh new-grown Collation
- Of Apples, unknown sweets, that seem'd to me
- Hanging to tempt as on the fatal Tree;
- So delicately limn'd I vow'd to try
- My appetite impos'd upon my Eye.
- You Sir alone, Fame and all-conqu'ring Rime,
- Files the set teeth of all devouring time.
- VVhen Beauty once thy vertuous paint hath on,
- Age needs not call her to Vermi
- •
- ion;
- Her beams nere shed or change like th' hair of day,
- She scatters fresh her everlasting Ray;
-
-
- Nay, from her ashes her fair Virgin fire
- Ascends, that doth new massacres conspire,
- Whilst we wipe off the num'rous s
- •
- ore of years,
- And do behold our Grandsire as our peers,
- With the first Father of our House, compare
- We do the features of our new-born Heir;
- For though each coppied a Son, they all
- Meet in thy first and true Original.
- Sacred Luxurious! what Princesse not
- But comes to you to have her self begot?
- As when first man was kneaded, from his side
- Is born to's hand a ready made up Bride.
- He husband to his issue then doth play,
- And for more Wives remove the obstructed way:
- So by your Art you spring up in two noons
- What could not else be form'd by fifteen
- 〈◊〉
- ;
- Thy Skill doth an'mate the prolifick flood,
- And thy red Oyl assimilates to blood.
- Where then when all the world pays its respect,
- Lies our transalpine barbarous Neglect?
- When the chast hands of pow'rful Titian,
-
- Had drawn the Scourges of our God and Man,
- And now the top of th' Altar did ascend,
- To crown the heav'nly piece with a bright end;
- Whilst he who to seven Languages gave Law,
- And always like the Sun his Subjects saw;
- Did in his Robes Imperial and gold,
- The basis of the doubtful Ladder hold.
- O Charls! A nobler monument then that,
- Which thou thine own Executor wert at;
-
-
- When to our buffling Henry there complain'd
- A grieved Earl, that thought his honor stain'd;
- Away (frown'd he) for your own safeties, hast
- In one cheap hour ten Coronets I'l cast:
- But Holbeen's noble and prodigious worth,
- Onely the pangs of an whole Age brings forth,
-
- Henry! a word so princely saving said,
- It might new raise the ruines thou hast made.
- O sacred Pei
- •
- cture! that dost fairly draw
- What but in Mists deep inward Poets saw;
- 'Twixt thee and an Intelligence no ods,
- That art of privy Council to the Gods,
- By thee unto our eyes they do prefer
- A stamp of their abstracted Character;
- Thou that in frames eternity dost bind,
- And art a written and a body'd mind;
- To thee is Ope the Iuneto o' th' Abysse,
- And its conspiracy detected is;
- Whilest their Cabal thou to our sense dost show,
- And in thy square paint'st what they threat below.
- Now my best Lilly let's walk hand in hand,
- And smile at this un-understanding land;
- Let them their own dull counterfeits adore,
- Their Rainbow-cloaths admire, and no more;
- Within one shade of thine more substance is
- Than all their varnish'd Idol-Mistresses:
- Whilst great Vasari and Vermander shall
-
-
- •
- nterpret the deep mystery of all,
-
-
- And I unto our modern Picts shall show,
- What due renown to thy fair Art they owe;
- In the delineated lives of those,
- By whom this everlasting Lawrel grows:
- Then if they will not gently apprehend,
- Let one great blot give to their fame an end;
- Whilst no Poetick flower their Herse doth dresse,
- But perish they and their Effigies.
-
-
-
- To my Dear Friend Mr. E. R. On his
- Poems Moral and Divine.
- CLeft, as the top of the inspired Hill,
- Struggles the Soul of my divided Quill,
- Whilst this foot doth the watry mount aspire,
- That Sinai's living and enlivening fire,
- Behold my pow'rs storm'd by a twisted light
- O' th' Sun, and his, first
- 〈…〉
- Sight,
- And my lost thoughts
- 〈…〉
- of day,
- My right to th' Spring of
- 〈…〉
- pray,
- Say happy youth,
- 〈…〉
- ray
- Of the first Flame, and
- 〈…〉
- ,
- Inform my Soul in Labour to begin,
-
-
- 〈◊〉
- or Authems,
-
- 〈◊〉
- or a
- 〈◊〉
- ,
- Shall I a Hecatombe on thy
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Or my devotions at thy Al
- •
- ar pay?
- While which t' adore th' amaz'd World cannot tell
- The sublime
- 〈◊〉
- or deep Oracle.
- Heark ho
- •
- the moving chords
- •
- emper our brain,
- As when
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Old Ocean
-
- 〈…〉
- front,
- And Nereids do
- 〈…〉
- on't;
- Whilst th'Air puts
- 〈…〉
- face;
- And each doth turn
- 〈…〉
- Looking-glasse;
-
-
- •
- o by the sinewy
- 〈…〉
-
-
-
-
- •
- nto soft calms all
- 〈…〉
-
-
-
-
- And former thundering and lightning Lines,
- And Verse, now in its native lustre shines.
- How wert thou hid within thy self! how shut!
- Thy pretious Iliads lock'd up in a Nut!
- Not hea
- •
- ing of thee thou dost break out strong,
- Invading forty thousand men in Song;
- And we secure in our thin empty heat,
- Now find ourselves at once surpris'd and beat,
- Whilst the most valiant of our Wits now sue,
- Fling down their arms, ask Quarter too of you.
- So cabin'd up in its disguis'd course rust,
- And Scurs'd all ore with its unseemly crust.
- The Diamond, from 'midst the humbler stones,
- Sparkling, shoots forth the price of Nations,
- Ye safe unridlers of the Stars, pray tell,
- By what name shall I stamp my miracle?
- Thou strange inverted Aesm, that leap'st ore,
- From thy first Infancy into fourscore,
- That to thine own self hast the Midwife play'd,
- And from thy brain spring'st forth the heav'nly maid
- Thou Staffe of him, bore him, that bore our sins,
- Which b
- •
- t set down to bloom, and bear begins.
- Thou Rod of Aaron with one motion hurl'd,
- Bud'st a perfume of Flowers through the World.
- Thou strange calcined Seeds within a glass,
- Each Species Idaea spring'st as 't was;
- Bright Vestal Flame, that kindled but ev'n now,
- For ever dost thy sacred fires throw.
- Thus the repeated Acts of Nestor's Age,
- That now had three times ore out-liv'd the Stage:
-
-
- And all those beams contracted into one,
-
- Alcides in his Cradle hath out done.
- But all these flour'shing hiews with which I
- •
- dy
- Thy Virgin Paper, now are
- 〈◊〉
- ;
- For 'bove the Poets Heav'n th' art taught to shine,
- And move, as in thy proper Christalline;
- Whence that Mole-hill Parnass
- •
- i thou dost view,
- And us small Ants there dabling in its dew;
- Whence thy Seraphick Soul such Hymns doth play,
- As those to which first danced the first day,
- Where with a thorn from the world-ransoming wreath
-
- Thou stung
- •
- dost Antiphons and Anthems breath;
- Where with an Angels quil dip'd i' th' Lambs blood,
- Thou sing'st our Pelicans all-saving Flood,
- And bath'st thy thoughts in everliving streams
- Rench'd from Earth's tainted, fat, and heavy steams.
- There move tra
- •
- lated youth inroll'd i' th' Quire,
- That only doth w
- ••
- h wholy lays inspire;
- To whom his burning Coach Eliah sent,
- And th' royal Prophet-priest his Harp h
- •
- th sent,
- Which thou dost tune in consort, unto those
- Clap Wings for ever at each hal
- •
- ow'd close▪
-
- Whilst we now weak and fainting in our praise;
- Sick, Eccho ore thy Halleluiahs.
-
-
-
-
- To my Noble Kinsman T. S. Esq
- On his Lyrick POEMS composed
- by Mr. J. G.
-
- 1.
- WHat means this stately Tablature,
- The Ballance of thy streins?
- Which seems, in stead of sifting pure,
- T' ext
- •
- nd and rack thy veins;
- Thy Odes first their own Harmony did break,
- For singing troth is but in tune to speak.
-
-
- 2.
- Nor thus thy golden Feet and Wings,
- May it be thought false Melody
- T' ascend to heav'n by silver strings,
- This is Urania's Heraldry:
- Thy royal Poem now we may extol,
- And truly Luna Blazon'd upon Sol.
-
-
-
- 3.
- As when Amphion first did call
- Each listning stone from's Den;
- And with the Lute did form his Wall,
- But with his words the men;
- So in your twisted Numbers now, you thus▪
-
- Not only stocks perswade, but ravish us.
-
-
-
- 4.
- Thus do your Ayrs Eccho o're
- The Notes and Anthems of the
- 〈◊〉
- ,
- And their whole Consort back
- 〈◊〉
- ,
- As if Earth too would blesse
- 〈…〉
-
-
- But yet the Spoaks by which
- 〈…〉
-
-
-
- Gamble hath wisely laid of
- 〈…〉
- .
-
-
-
- On the Best, last, and only remaining
- Comedy of Mr. Fletcher.
- The Wild Goose Chase.
- I'M un-ore-clowded too! free from the
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- The Blind and late Heavens-eyes great
- 〈◊〉
- ,
-
- Obscured with the false
- •
- ires of His S
- •
- eme,
- Not half those Souls are lightned by this Theme.
- Unhappy Murmurers, that still repine,
- (After th' Eclipse our Sun doth brighter shine)
- Recant your false grief and your true
- 〈…〉
- ,
- Your blisse is endlesse, as you fear'd your Woe!
- What fort'nate Flood is this? what Storm of
- 〈◊〉
-
- ▪
-
- Oh who would live and not ore-whelm'd in it?
- No more a fatal Deluge shall be hurl'd,
- This inundation hath sav'd the world.
- Once more the mighty Fletcher doth arise
- Ro
- •
- b'd in a vest, studded with Stars and Eyes
-
-
- Of all his former Glories; His last worth
- Imbroidered with what yet light ere brought forth,
- See! in this glad farewel he doth appear
- Stuck with the Consteilations of his Sphere,
-
- Fearing we Numm'd fear'd no Flagration,
- Hath curled all his Fires in this one On
- •
- ;
-
- Which (as they guard his hallowed chast Urn)
- The dull aproaching Hereticks do burn.
-
- Fletcher at his adieu carouses thus,
- To the Luxurious Ingenious.
- As Cleopatra did of old out-vie,
- Th'unn-umbred dishes of her Anthony,
-
- When he (at th' empty board a wonderer)
- Smilings he calls for Pearl and Vineger;
- First pledges him in's Breath, then at one Draught
- Swallows Three Kingdomes off To his best Thought.
-
- Hear oh ye valiant Writers, and subscribe;
- (His force set by) y' are conquer'd by this Bribe.
- Though you hold out your selves, He doth commit
- In this a sacred Treason in your wit:
- Although in Poems desperately stout,
- Give up; This Overture must Buy you out.
- Thus with some prodigal Us'rer't doth fare
- That keeps his gold still Vayl'd, his Steel-breast bare▪
-
-
- That doth exceed his Coffers all but's Eye,
-
- And his eyes Idol the wing'd Deity:
-
- That cannot lock his Mines with half the Art
- As some rich Beauty doth his wretched Heart;
-
- Wild at his real Poverty, and so wise
-
-
- To win her, turns himself into a prise.
-
- First startles her with th' Emerald Mad-lover
-
- The Ruby Arcas, least she should recover
- Her d
- •
- z'led Thought a Diamo
- •
- d he throws,
- Splendid in all the bright Aspatia's woes;
- Then to sum up the Abstract of his store,
- He flings a rope of Pearl of forty more.
- Ah see! the stagg'ring Virtue faints! which he
- Beholding, darts his Wealths Epitome;
-
- And now, to consummate her wished fall,
- Shews this one Carbuacie that Darkens all.
-
-
- To Dr. F. B. On his Book of Chesse.
- SIR, now untravell'd is the Golden Fleece:
- Men that could only fool at Fox and Geese,
- Are new made Polititians by thy Book,
- And both can judge and conquer with a Look.
- The hidden fate of Princes you unfold;
- Court, Clergy, Commons, by your Law control'd;
- Strange, Serious Wantoning, all that they
- Bluster'd, and clutter'd for, you play.
-
-
-
-
- To the Genius of Mr. John Hall
- On his exxct Translation of Hierocles
- his Comment upon the golden Verses
- of Pythagoras.
- TIs not from cheap thanks thinly to repay
- Th
- •
- Immortal Grove of thy fair order'd bay,
- Thou planted'st round my humble Fane, that I
- Stick on thy Hearse this Sprig of Elegie:
-
- Nor that your Soul so fast was link'd in me,
- That now I've both since'
- •
- has forsaken thee:
- That thus I stand a Swisse before thy gate,
- And dare for such another time and fate.
- Alas! our Faiths made different Essays,
- Our Minds and Merits brake two several ways;
- Justice commands, I wake thy learned Dust
- And truth, in whom all causes center must.
- Behold! when but a Youth thou fierce didst whi
- •
-
-
- Upright the crooked Age, and gilt Vice s
- •
- ip;
- A Senator praeteat. t, that knew'
- •
- to sway
- The fasces, yet under the Ferula;
- Rank'd with the Sage ere blossome did thy Chin
- Sleeked without, and Hair all ore within;
- Who in the School could'st argue as in Schools,
- Thy Lessons were ev'n Academie rules.
-
-
- So that
- 〈…〉
-
-
- At once
- 〈…〉
- .
- At
- 〈…〉
- we beheld!
- That well might have the Book of Dogma'
- •
-
- swell'd;
- Tough Paradoxes, such as
-
- •
- ully's thou
- Didst heat thee with, when snowy was thy Brow,
- When thy undown'd face mov'd the Nine to shake,
- And of the Muse
- •
- did a Decad make;
- What shall I say, by what Allusion bold,
- None but the Sun was ere so young and old.
- Young reverend shade, ascend an while! whilst we
- Now celebrate this Posthume Victorie,
- This Victory that doth contract in Death
- Ev'n all the pow'rs and labours of thy breath;
- Like the Iudean Hero, in thy fall
- Thou pull'st the house of Learning on us all.
- And as that Soldier Conquest doubted not,
- Who but one Splinter had of Cas
- •
- riot,
- But would assault ev'n death so strongly charmd,
- And naked oppose rocks with this bone arm'd;
- So we secure in this fair Relique stand,
- The Slings and Darts shot by each profane Hand,
- These Soveraign leaves thou le
- ••
- d us are become
-
- Sear clothes against all Times Infection.
- Sacred Hier
- •
- cles! whose heav'nly thought,
- First acted ore this Comment ere it wrought;
- Thou hast so spirited, eli
- ••
- r'd, we
- Conceive there is a noble Alchymie,
- That's turning of this Gold, to something more
- Pretious then Gold we never knew before▪
-
-
-
- Who now shall doubt the Me
- •
- empsychosis,
- Of the great Author, that shall peruse this?
- Let others Dream thy shadow wandering strays
- In th' Elizian Mazes, hid with bays;
- Or that snatcht up in th' upper Region
- 'Tis kindled there a Constellation;
- I have inform'd me, and Declare with ease,
- Thy Soul is fled into Hierocles.
-
-
- On Sanazar's being honoured with six
- hundred Duckets by the Clarissimi
- of Venice, for composing an
- Eligiack Hexastick of
- The City.
- A SATYRE.
- T' Was a blith Prince e
- ••
- hang'd five hundred Crowns
- For a fair Turnip; Dig, Dig on, O Clowns!
- But how this comes about, Fates can you tell,
- This more then Maid of Meurs, this miracle?
- Let me not live, if I think not St. Mark
-
- Has all the Oar, as well as Beasts in's Ark;
- No wonder 'tis he marries the rich Sea,
- But to betro
- •
- h him to nak'd Poesie,
- And with a bankrupt Muse to merchandise,
- His treasures beams sure have put out his eyes.
-
-
- His Conquest at Lepanto I'l let pass,
- When the sick Sea with Turbants Night-cap'd was:
- And now at Candie his full Courage shown,
- That wain'd to a wan line the half-half Moon;
- This is a wreath, this is a Victorie,
-
- Caesar himself would have look'd pale to see,
- And in the height of all his Triumphs, feel
- Himself but chain'd to such a mighty wheel.
- And now me thinks we ape Augustus state,
- So ugly we his high worth imitate,
- Monkey his Godlike glories; so that we
- Keep light and form, with such deformi
- •
- ie,
- As I have seen an arrogant Baboo
- •
-
-
- With a small piece of Glasse Z
- •
- ny the Sun.
-
- Rome to her Bard, who did her battails
- 〈◊〉
- ,
- Indifferent gave to Poet and to King;
- VVith the same Lawrells were his Temples
- 〈◊〉
-
- ▪
-
- VVho best had written, and who best had fought▪
-
- The Self same fame they equal
- •
- y did feel,
- One's style ador'd as much a
- •
- th' other's Steel.
- A chain or fasces she could then afford
- The Sons of Phoebus, we an Ax
- •
- , or
- 〈◊〉
-
- ▪
-
- Sometimes a Coroner was her renown,
- And ours the dear preroga
- ••••
- of a Crown.
- In marble statu'd walks great Lucan lay.
- And now we walk our own pale Sta
- ••
- a:
-
- They the whole yee
- •
- with roses crownd woul
- •
- din▪
-
- And we in all December know no wine▪
-
- Disciplin'd, dieted, sure there hath bin
- Ods 'twixt a Poet and a Capuchin.
-
-
- Of Princes, Women, VVine, to sing I see
- Is no Apocrypha, for to rise high
- Commend this Olio of this Lord 'tis
- •
- it,
- Nay ten to one but you have part of it;
- There is that justice left, since you maintain
- His table, he should coun
- •••
- -
- 〈…〉
- .
- Then write how well he
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Straight there'
- •
- a Bo
- ••
- le to you
- •
-
-
- 〈◊〉
- roll'd.
- Or with embroidered wo
- •
- ds
- 〈…〉
-
- French Suit,
- Month hence 'tis yours, with his
- 〈…〉
- boot;
- Or but appla
- •
- d his
- 〈…〉
- to non
- •
- ,
- But he most nobly doth give
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Or spin an Elegie on his
- 〈…〉
-
-
- 'Tis well he cries, but living hair is dear;
- Yet say that out of order ther's one curl,
- And all the hopes of your reward you
- 〈◊〉
-
- ▪
-
- VVrite a deep epick Po
- •
- m, and you may
- As soon delight them as the Opera,
-
- VVhere they Diogenes thou
- •••
- in his Tub,
- Never so sowre did look, so sweet? club.
- You that do suck for thirst you
- •
- bl
- •
- ck quil's blood,
- And chaw your labour'd papers for your
- •
- ood,
- I will inform you how and what to praise,
- Then skiny' in Satin as young Lovelace plaies.
- Beware, as you would your fie
- •
- ce gaests, your lice,
- To strip the cloath of Gold from c
- •
- erish'd vice;
- Rather stand off with awe and reverend fear,
- Hang a poetick pendant in her
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- Court her as her Adore
- ••
- do
- 〈…〉
- ,
- Though that as much of a
- 〈…〉
- has,
-
-
- VVhilst all the gall from your wild ink you drain,
- The beauteous Sweets of Vertues Cheeks to slain;
- And in your Livery let her be known,
- As poor and tattered as in her own.
- Nor write, nor speak you more of sacred writ,
- But what shall force up your arrested wit.
- Be chast Religion, and her Priests your scorn,
- VVhilst the vain Fanes of Iditos you adorn,
- It is a mortal errour you must know,
- O
- •
- any to speak good, if he be so.
- Ray I till your edged breath flea your raw throat▪
-
- And burn all marks on all of g
- •
- n'rous note;
- Each verse be an inditement▪
-
- 〈◊〉
- , not free,
- Sanctity 't self from thy Scurrility.
-
- Libel your Father, and your Dam
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- The Noblest Matrons of the Isle L
- ••
- poon,
-
- VVhilst Aretine and's bodies you dispute,
- And in your sheets your Sister prostitute.
- Yet there belongs a Sweetnesse, softnesse too,
- VVhich you must pay, but first pray know to who▪
-
- There is a Creature, (if I may so call
- That unto a which they do all prostrate fall)
- Term'd Mistress, when they'r angry, but pleas'd
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- It is a Princesse, Saint, Divinity.
- To this they sacrifice the whole days light,
- Then lye with their Devotion all night;
- For this you are to dive to the Abysse,
- And rob for Pearl the Closet of some Fish.
-
- Arabia and Sabaea you must strip
- Of all their Sweets, for to supply her Lip▪
-
-
-
- And steal new fire from Heav'n for to repair
- Her unfledg'd Scalp with Berenice's hair;
- Then seat her in Cassiopeia's Chair,
- As now you're in your Coach. Save you bright Sir
- (O spare your thanks) is not this finer far
- Then walk un-hided, when that every Stone
- Has knock'd acquaintance with your Anckle bone?
- VVhen your wing'd papers, like the last dove, nere
- Return'd to quit you of your hope or fear,
- But left you to the mercy of your Host,
- And your days fare, a fortified Toast.
- How many battels sung in Epick strain,
- Would have procur'd your head thatch from the rain?
-
- Not all the arms of Thebes and Troy would get
- One knife but to anatomize your meat,
- A funeral Elegy with a sad boon
- Might make you (hei) sip wine like Maccaroon;
- But if perchance there did a Riband come,
- Not the Train-band so fierce with all its drum;
- Yet with your torch you homeward would retire▪
-
- And heart'ly wish your bed your fun'ral Pyre.
- With what a fury have I known you feed,
- Upon a Contract, and the hopes't might speed;
- Not the fair Bride, impatient of delay,
- Doth wish like you the Beauties of that day;
- Hotter than all the rosted Cooks you sat
- To dresse the fricace of your Alphabet,
- Which sometimes would be drawn dough Anagrame,
- Sometimes Acrostick parched in the Flame;
-
-
- Then Pos
- •
- es stew'd with Sippets, motto's by,
- Of minced Verse a miserable Pye.
- How many knots slip'd ere you twist their name,
- With th'old device, as both their Heart's the same:
- Whilst like to drills the Feast in your false
- •
- aw,
- You would transmit at leasure to your Maw;
- Then after all your fooling, fat, and wine,
- Glutton'd at last, return at home to pine.
- Tell me, O Sun, since first your beams did play
- To Night, and did awake the sleepi
- •
- g day;
- Since first your steeds of Light their race did start,
- Did you ere blush as now? Oh thou that art
- The common Father to the base Pissmire,
- As well as great Alcide
- •
- , did the fire,
- From thine owne Altar which the gods adore,
- Kindle the Souls of Gnats and Wasps before?
- Who would delight in his chast eyes to see,
- Dormise to strike
- 〈◊〉
- Lights of Poesie?
- Faction and Envy now is downright Rage,
- Once a five knotted whip there was, the Stage,
- The Beadle and the
- •
- xec
- •
- tioner,
- To whip small Errors, and the great ones tear.
- Now as er'e Nimrod the first King, he w
- •
- i
- •
- es,
- That's strongest, th'ablest deepest bites.
- The Muses weeping fly their Hill, to see
- Their noblest Sons of peace in Mutinie.
- Could there nought else this civil war compleat,
- But Poets raging with Poetick heat,
- Tearing themselves and th endl
- •
- sse wrea
- •
- h, as though
- Immortal they, their wrath should be so too;
-
-
- And doubly fir'd Apollo burns to see
- In silent Helicon a Naumachie.
-
- Parnassus hears these as his first alarms,
- Never till now Minerva was in arms.
- O more then Conqu'ror of the World great Rome!
-
- Thy Hero's did with gentleness or'e come
- Thy Foes themselves, but one another first,
- Whilst Envy stript, alone was left, and burst.
- The learn'd Decemviri, 'tis true did strive,
- But to add flames to keep their fame alive;
- Whilst the eternal Lawrel hung ith' Air;
- Nor of these ten Sons was there found one Heir,
- Like to the golden Tripod it did pass,
- From this to this, till't came to him whose 'twas:
-
- Caesar to Gallus trundled it, and he
- To Maro, Maro, Naso, unto thee;
-
- Naso to his Tibullus flung the wreath,
- He to Catullus thus did each bequeath,
- This glorious Circle to another round,
- At last the Temples of their God it bound.
- I might believe, at least, that each might have
- A quiet fame contented in his Grave,
- Envy the living not the dead,Ov. El. 15. doth bite,
- For after death all men receave their right.
- If it be Sacriledge for to profane
- Their Holy Ashes, what is't then their Flame?
- He does that wrong unwee
- •
- ing or in Ire,
- As if one should put out the Vestal fire.
- Let Earths four quarters speak, and thou Sun bear
- Now witnesse for thy Fellow-Traveller,
-
-
- I was ally'd dear Vncle unto thee
- In blood, but thou alas not unto me;
- Your vertues, pow'rs, and mine differ'd at best,
- As they whose Springs you saw, the East and West:
- Let me a while be twisted in thy Shine,
- And pay my due devotions at thy Shrine.
- Might learned Waynman rise, who went with thee
- In thy Heav'ns work beside Divinity,
- I should sit still; or might
- •
-
- Fal
- •
- land stand,
- To justifie with breath his pow'rful hand;
- The glory that doth circle your pa
- •
- 'Urn
- Might hallow'd still and undefiled
- •
- urn;
- But I forbear; Flames that ate wildl thrown
- At sacred heads,
- •
- urie back u
- •
- on their own;
- Sleep heav'nly Sands, whilst
- 〈◊〉
- they do or write,
- Is to give God himself and you your right.
- There is not in my mind one sullen Fate
- Of old, but is concentred in our state.
- Vandall ore-runners, Goths in Literature,
- Ploughmen that would Parnassus n
- •
- w manure:
- Ringers of Verse that All-in chime,
- And toll the changes upon ever
- •
- Rhime.
- A Mercer now by th'yard does measure ore
- An Ode which was but by the foot before;
- De
- •
- ls you an Ell of Epigram, and swears
- It is the strongest and the finest Wears.
- No wonder if a Drawer Verses Rack,
- If 'tis not his 't may be the Spir't of Sack,
- Whilst the Fair Bar-maid stroaks the Muses teat,
- For milk to make the Posset up complea
- •
- .
-
-
- Arise thou rev'rend shade, great Iohnson rise!
- Break through thy marble natural disguise;
- Behold a mist of Insects, whose meer Breath,
- Will melt thy hallow'd lead
- •
- n house of Death.
- What was Crispinus that you should defie
- The Age for him, he durst not look so high
- As your immortal Rod, He still did stand
- Honour'd, and held his forehead to thy brand.
- These Scorpions with which we have to do,
- Are Fiends, not only small but deadly too.
- Well mightst thou rive thy Quill up to the Back
- And scrue thy Lyre's grave chords untill they crack.
- For though once Hell resented Musick, these
- Divels will not, but are in worse disease.
- How would thy masc'line Spirit, Father Ben,
-
- Sweat to behold basely deposed men,
- Justled from the Prerog'tive of their Bed,
- Whilst wives are pe
- •
- 'vig'd with their husbands head.
-
- Each snatches the male quill from his faint hand
- And must both nobler write and understand,
- He to her fury the soft plume doth bow,
- OPen, nere truely justly slit till now!
- Now as her self a Poem she doth dresse,
- And curls a Line as she would do a tresse;
- Powders a Sonnet as she does her hair,
- Then prostitutes them both to publick Aire
- Nor is't enough that they their faces blind
- With a false dye, but they must paint their mind;
- In meeter scold, and in scann'd order brawl,
- Yet there's one Sapho left may s
- •
- ve them all.
-
-
- But now let me
- •
- ecal my passion,
- Oh (from a noble Father, nobler Son!)
- You that alone are the Clarissimi,
-
- And the whole gen'rous state of Venice be,
- It shall not be recorded Sanazar
-
- Shall boa
- •
- t inthron'd alone this new made star;
- You whose correcting Sweetnesse hath sorbad
- Shame to the good▪ and glory to the bad,
- Whose honour hath
- 〈◊〉
- into
- 〈◊〉
- tam'd,
- These Swarms that now so angerly I nam'd.
- Forgive what thus distemper'd Iindite,
- For it is hard a Satyre not to write.
- Yet as a Virgin that heats all her blood,
- At the first motion of bad understood
- Then at meer thought of fai
- •
- chastity,
- Straight cools again the Tempests of her Sea;
- So when to you I my devotions raise,
- All wrath and storms do end in calms and praise.
-
-
-
-
- TRANSLATIONES.
- Sanazari Hexasticon.
-
- VIderat Adriacis quondam Neptunus in undis
- Stare Vrbem, & toto ponere Iura mari:
- Nunc mihi Tarpeias quantumvis Iupiter Arces
- Objice & illa mihi moenia Martis, ait,
- Seu pelago Tibrim Praefers, Urbem a spice utramque,
- Illam homines dices, hanc posuisse D
- •
- os.
-
-
- In Virgilium. Pentadii
- Pastor, Arator, Eques; pavi, colui, superavi;
- Capras, Rus, Hostes; fronde, ligone, manu.
-
-
- De Scaevola.
- Lictorem pro Rege necans nunc Mutius ultro
- Sacrifico propriam concrcmat igne manum:
- Miratur Porsenna virum, paenamque relaxans
- Maxima cum obscessis faedera victor in it,
- Plus flammis patriae confert quam fortibus armis,
- Una dom
- •
- ns bellum funere dextera suâ.
-
-
- De Catone.
- Invictus victis in partibus omnia Caelar
-
- Vincere qui potuit, te Cato non p
- •
- tuit.
-
-
-
- Item.
- Ictu non potuit primo Cato solvere vitam;
- Defecit tanto vulnere victa manus:
- Altius inseruit digitos, qua spiritus inge
- •
- s
- Exiret magnum dextera fecit iter.
- Opposuit fortuna moram, involvitque Catonis
- Scires, ut ferro plus valuisse manum.
-
-
- Item.
- Iussa manus sacri pectus violare Catonis
- Haesit, & inceptum victa reliquit opus.
- Ille ait infesto contra sua vulnera vultu,
- Estné aliquid magnus quod Cato non potuit?
-
-
- Item.
- Dextra quid dubitas? durum est jugulare Catonem;
- Sed modo liber erit, jam put
- •
- non dubitas:
- Fas non est vivo quenquam servire Catone,
- Nedum ipsum vincit nunc Cato simoritur.
-
-
- Pantadii.
- Non est, falleri
- •
-
- ▪ haec beata non est
- Quod v
- •
- s crediti
- •
- esse, vita non est,
- Fulgentes manibus videre gemmas
- Et Testudireo jacere lecto,
- Aut pluma latus abdidisse molli,
- Aut auro bibere, aut cubare cocco,
- Regales dapibus gravare mensas,
- Et quicquid Lybico sec
- •
- tur arvo,
- Non unâ positum tenera cella:
- Sed nullos trepidum timere casus,
-
- Nec vano populi favore tangi,
- Et stricto nihil aestuare ferro:
- Hoc quisquis poterit, licebit illi
- Fortunam moveat loco superbus.
-
-
- Ad M. T. Ciceronem.
- Catul. Ep. 50.
- Disertissime Romuli nepotum
- Quot sunt, quo
- •
- que fuere Marce Tulli,
- Quotque post alios erunt in annos,
- Gratias tibi maximas Catullus
- Agit pessimus omnium Poeta,
- Tanto pessimus omnium Poeta;
- Quanto tu optimus omnium Patronus.
-
-
- Ad Iuvencium. Cat. Ep. 49.
- Mellitos oculos tuos Iuvenci
- Si quis me sinat usque basiare,
- Usque ad millia basiem trecenta;
- Nec unquam videat satur futurus;
- Non si densior aridis aristis,
- Sit nostrae s
- •
- ges Osculationis.
-
-
- De Puero & Praecon
- •
- . Catul.
- Cum puero bello praecontem qui videt esse,
- Quid credat? nisi se vendere discupere.
-
-
- Portii Licinii.
- Si Phoebi Soror es mando tibi Delia causam,
- Scilicet ut fratri quae peto verba feras:
-
-
- Marmore Sicanio struxi tibi Delphice templum,
- Et levibus calamis candida verba dedi.
- Nunc si nos audis-atque es divinus Apollo,
- Dic mihi qui nummos non habet unde petat.
-
-
- Senecae ex Cleanthe.
- Duc me Parens celsique Dominator poli
- Quocunque placuit, nulla parendi mora est
- Adsum impiger, fac nolle, comitabor gemens,
- Malusque patiar facere, quod licuit bono
- Ducunt volentem Fata, nolentem trahunt.
-
-
- Quin
- •
- i Catuli.
- Constiter am exorientem Aurorem forte salutans
- Cum subitò á laevâ Roscius exoritur.
- Pace mihi liceat, coelestes dicere ves
- •
- râ
- Mortalis Visu pulchrior esse Deo.
- Blanditur puero Satyrus vultuque manuque,
- Nolenti similis retrahit or a puer:
- Quem non commoveat qnamvis de marmore? fnndit
- Penè preces Satyru
- •
- ; penè puer Lachrymas.
-
-
- Floridi. de Ebrioso.
- Phaebus me in somnis v
- •
- tuit potare Lyaeum,
- Pareo praeceptis, tunc bibo cum vigilo.
-
-
- De Asino qui dentibus Aeneidem consumpsit.
- Carminis Iliaci libros consumpsit Asellus,
- Hoc Fatum Troiae est, aut Equus aut Asinus.
-
-
-
- Auso. lib. Epig.
- Trinarii quodam currentem in littoris or a
- Ante canes laporem Caeruleu
- •
- rapuit;
- At lepus! in me omnis terrae pelagique rapina est
- Forsitan & coeli, si canis astra tenet.
-
-
- Auso lib. Epig.
- Polla, potenta, tribon, baculus, scyphus, arcta supe
- ••
- ex
- Haec fuerant Cinici, sed putat hanc nimiam:
- Namque cavis manibus cernens p
- •
- tare bubulcum,
- Cur, s
- •
- yphe, te, dixit, gusto supervacuum?
-
-
- Auso. lib. 1. Epig.
- The sanro invento qui limina mortis inibat,
- Liquit ovans laqueum quo periturus erat,
- At qui quod terrae abdiderat non repperit aurum,
- Quem laqu
- ••
- m inve
- •
- it nexuit & periit.
-
-
- A la Chabot.
- Object adorable et charmant,
- Mes souspirs & mes pleur tesmoignent mon torment,
- Mais m
- •
- s respects m' emp
- •
- che de parier;
- Ah! que peine dissimuler
- Et que
- •
- e souffre de martyre
- D' aimer et d
- •
- n' oser le dire.
-
-
-
- Theophile being deny'd his addresses to King
- James, turned the Affront, to his own
- glory, in this Epigram.
- Si Iaques le Roy du scavoir
- Ne trouue bon de me voir
- Voila la cause infallible,
- Car ravy de mon escrit
- Il creut que
- •
- 'estois tout esprit
- Et par consequent invisible.
-
-
- Ausonius.
- Van
- •
- quid affect as faciem mihi ponere pict
- •
- r
- Ignotamque oculis solicitare manu?
- Aeris & Venti sum filia, mater inanis
- Indicii; vocem quae sine mente gero.
- Auribus in vestris habi
- •
- o penetrabilis Echo;
- Si mihi vis similem p
- ••
- gere, pinge sonos.
-
-
- Auson.
- Toxica Zelotypo dedit uxor maecha mari
- •
- o,
- Nec satis ad mortem credidit esse datum;
- Miscuit argenti lethalia pondera vivi
- Ut celeret certam vis geminata necem.
- Ergo inter sese dum noxiapocula certant
- Cessit lethalis noxa sal
- •
- uiferi
-
-
- Protinus in vacuos alvi petiere recessus,
- Lubrica dejecti quae via nota cibis.
- Quàm pia cura D
- •
- ûm! prodest crudelior uxor,
- Sic cùm fata volunt, bina venena
- •
- uvant.
-
-
- Auson. Epig.
- Emptis quod libris tibi Bibliotheca referta est,
- Doctum & Grammaticum te Philomuse putas?
- Quine iam Cytharas, chordas & b
- •
- rbita cond
- •
- ,
- Mercator hodie, cra
- •
- citharoedus eris.
-
-
- Avieni v. c. ad amicos.
- Rure morans, quid agam, respondi pauca rogatus,
- Mane deum exoro famulos post arvaque viso,
- Part
- •
- usque meis justo, indico labores.
- Inde lego, Phoebumque cio, Musamque l
- •
- cesso.
- Tunc o
- •
- eo corpus fingo mollique palae
- ••
- a
- Siringo libe
- ••
- animo g
- •
- u
- •••
- sque ac
- •
- oenore liber
- Prandeo, poto,
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- •
- udo
- 〈◊〉
- cae
- •
- o, quiesco.
-
-
- Ad Fabullum, Catul. lib. 1. Ep. 13.
- Caenabis bene mi Fabulle apud me
- Paucis, si dii
- •
- ibi favent, diebus,
- Sitecum attuleris bonam atque magnam
- Caenam, non sine candida pue
- ••
- a,
- Et vin
- •
- & sale & omnibus cachinnis.
- Haec si inquam attuleris Fabulle noster
- Caenaebis bene, nam tui Catulli
- Plenus sacculus est aranearum.
- Sed contra accipies meros amore
- •
- ,
- Seu quod suavius elegantiusve est:
-
-
- Nam unguentum dabo quod me ae puella
- •
-
-
- Donarunt Veneres C
- •
- pidinesque;
- Quod tu cum olfacies, Deos rogabis
- Totum te faciant Fabulle nasum.
-
-
- Mart. lib. 1. Epi. 14.
- Casta suo gladium cum traderet Arria Paeto,
- Quem de viscer
- •
- bus traxer at ipsa suis:
- Si qua fides, Vulnus, quod feci, non dolet, inquit:
- Sed quod tu facies, hoc mihi, Paete, dolet.
-
-
- Mart. Epi. 43. lib. 1.
- Conjugis audîsset fatum cum Portia Bruti,
- Et substracta sibi quaereret arma dolor:
- Nondum scitis, ait, mortem non posse negari,
- Credideram satis hoc vos docuisse patrem.
- Dixit, & ardentes avido bibitore favillas.
- I nunc, & ferrum turba molest a nega.
-
-
- Mart. Ep. 15. lib. 6.
- Dum Phaetontea formica vagatur in Umbra,
- Impli
- •
- uit tenuem succina gutta feram,
- Dignum tantorum pretium tulit illa laborum:
- Credibile est ipsam sic voluisse mori.
-
-
- Mar. lib. 4. Ep. 33.
- Et latet & lucet Phaetontide condita gutta
- Vt videatur apis Nectare clausa suo:
- Sic modo quae fuera
- •
- vitâ contempta manente
- Fun
- •
- ribus facta est j
- •
- m preciosa suis.
-
-
-
- Mar. lib. 8. Ep. 19.
- Pauper videri Cinna vult, & est pauper.
-
-
- Out of the Anthologie.
-
-
- 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉
-
-
-
-
- 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉
- .
-
-
- In Rufum, Catul. Ep. 57.
- Noli admirari quare tibi foemina nulla
- Rufe velit tenerum supposuisse femur;
- Non ullam rarae labefactes munere vestis,
- Aut pellucidulis deliciis lapidi
- •
- .
- Laedit te quaedam mala fabula▪ quâ tibi fertur
- Valle sub alarum tru
- •
- habitare c
- •
- per.
- Hunc metuunt omnes, neque mirum nam mala valde est
- Bestia, nec quicum bella puella cubet.
- Quare aut crudelem nasorum interfice pestem,
- Aut admir ari desine cur fugiant.
-
-
- Catul. Ep. 71.
- De Inconstant
- •
- a foeminei amor
- •
- s.
- Nulli so dicit mulier mea nubere velle
- Quàm mihi, non si Iupiter ipse petat:
- Dicit, sed mulier cupid
- •
- quod dicit amanti,
- In vento & rapidâ scribere oportet aqu
- •
- .
-
-
- Ad Lesbiam, (at. Ep. 73.
- Dicebas quondam solum te nosse Catullum,
- Lesbia, nec prae me
- •
- elle tenere Iove
- •
- ;
-
-
- Dilexi tum te, non tantum
- •
- t vulgus amicam
- Sed pater ut gnatos diligit & generos.
- Nunc te cognovi, quare & impensius ur or,
- Multo mi tamenes vilior & levior.
- Qui potis est inquis? quod amantem injuria talis
- Cogat amare magis, sed b
- •
- ne velle minus.
- Odi & amo, quare id faciam fortasse requiris,
- Nescio, sed fieri sentio & excrucior.
-
-
- In Lesbiam Cat. Ep. 76.
- Huc est mens deducta tuâ mea Lesbia culpâ
- Atque it a se officio perdidit ipsa suo;
- Ut jam nec bene velle queam tibi, si optima fias
- Nec desistere amare omnia si fácias.
-
-
- Ad Quintium Cat. Ep. 83.
- Quinti si tibi vis oculos debere Catnllum,
- Aut aliud si quid carius est oculis;
- Eripere ei noli multo quod carius illi
- Est oculis, seu quid carius est oculis.
-
-
- De Quintia & Le
- •
- bia. Ep. 87.
- Quintia formosa est multis, mihi Candida, longa,
- Recta est, haec ego si
- •
- singula confiteor:
- T
- •
- ta illud formosa nego: nam multa venustas;
- Nulla in tam magno est corpore mica salis.
- Lesbia formosa est, quae cum pulcherrima tota est,
- Tum omnibus una omneis surripuit veneres.
-
-
-
-
-
- TRANSLATIONS Sanazar's Hexastick.
- IN Adriatick waves when Neptune saw,
- The City
- ••
- and, and give the Seas a Law,
- Now i'th T
- •
- rpei
- •
- n tow'rs Iove rival me,
- And Mars his Wa
- •
- ls imp
- •
- egnable,
- ••
- id he;
- Let Seas to Tyh
- •
- r yield, vie
- •
- both their ods,
- You'l grant that built by Men, but this by Gods.
-
-
- In English.
- A Swain, Hind, Knight; I fed, till'd, did command
- Goats, Fields, my Foes; with leaves, a spade, my hand.
-
-
- Englished.
- The hand by which no King but Serjeant dies,
-
- Mutiu
- •
-
- in fire doth freely Sacrifice;
- The Prince admires the Hero, quits his pains,
- And Victor from the seige peace entertains;
-
- Romes more oblig'd to Flames, than Arms or pow'r,
- When one burnt hand shall the whole war devour.
-
-
- Of Cato.
- The World ore come, victorious Caesar, he
- That conquer'd all; great Cato, could not thee.
-
-
-
- Another.
- One stabbe could not fierce Cato's Life unty;
- Onely his hand of all that wound did dy;
- Deeper his Fingers tear to make a way
- Open, through which his mighty Soul might stray.
- Fortune made this delay to let us know,
- That Cato's hand more then his Sword could do.
-
-
- Another.
- The hand of sacred Cato bad to tear
- His brea
- •
- t, did start, and the made wound forbear,
- Then to the ga
- •
- h he said with angry brow,
- And is there ought great Cato cannot do?
-
-
- Another.
- What doubt'st thou hand? sad Cato 'tis to kill;
- But he'l be free, sure hand thou doubt'st not still;
-
- Cato alive 'tis just all men be free,
- Nor conquers he himself now if he die.
-
-
- Englished.
- It is not, y'are deceav'd, it is not blisse
- What you conceave a happy living is▪
-
- To have your hands with Rubies bright to glow,
- Then on your Tortoise-bed your body throw,
- And sink your self in Down, to drink in gold,
- And have your looser self in purple roll'd;
- With Royal fare to make the Tables groan,
- Or else with what from Lybick fields is mown,
- Nor in one vault hoard all your Magazine,
- But at no Cowards fate t'have frighted bin,
-
- Nor with the peoples breath to be swol'n great,
- Nor at a drawn Stil
- •
- tto basely swear.
- He that dares this, nothing to him's unfit,
- But proud o' th' top of Fortunes wheel may sit.
-
-
- To Marcus T. Cicero.
- In an English Pentastick.
-
- Tully to thee Rome's eloquent Sole Heir,
- The best of all that are, shall be, and were:
- I the worst Poet send my best thanks and pray'r,
- Ev'n by how much the worst of Poets I
- By so much you the best of Patrones be.
-
-
- To Iuvencius.
-
- Iuvencius thy fair sweet Eyes,
- If to my fill that I may kisse,
- Three hundred thousand times I'de kisse,
- Nor future age should cloy this Blisse;
- No not if thicker than ripe ears,
- The harvest of our kisses bears.
-
-
- Catul.
- With a fair boy a Cryer we behold.
- What should we think? but he would not be sold.
-
-
- Englished.
- If you are Phoebus Sister Delia
- •
-
- pr
- •
- y
- This my request unto the Sun convay:
-
- O Delphick God, I built thy marble Fane,
- And sung thy praises with a gentle Cane,
- Now if thou art divine Apollo, tell,
- Where he whose purse is empty may go fill.
-
-
- Englished.
- Parent and Prince of Heav'n O lead I pray,
- Where ere you please; I follow and obey;
- Active I go, sighing if you gainsay,
- And suffer bad what to the good was law,
- Fates lead the willing, but unwilling draw.
-
-
- Englished.
- As once I bad good morning to the day,
- O'th' sudden Rosciu
- •
-
- breaks in a bright Ray;
- Gods with your
- •
- avour, I've presum
- •
- d to see,
- A mortal fai
- •
- er then a Deitie.
- With looks and hands a Satyre courts the b
- •
- y,
- Who draws back his unwilling Cheek as coy.
- Although of Marble
- 〈◊〉
- , whom move nor they?
- The Boy Ev'n seems to weep the Satyre pray.
-
-
- Of a Drunkard.
-
- Phoebus a sleep for bad me Wine to take,
- I yield; and now am only drunk awake.
-
-
- The Asse eating the Ae
- •
- eids.
- A wretched Asse the Aeneids did destroy,
- A Horse or Asse is still the fate of Troy.
-
-
-
- Englished.
- On the Scicilian strand a Hare well wrought
- Before the Hounds was by a Dog-fish caught;
- Quoth she; all rape of Sea and Earth's on me
- Perhaps of Heav'n, if there a Dog-star be.
-
-
- Englished.
- The Cynicks narrow houshold stuffe of Crutch,
- A
- •
- tool and dish, was lumber thought too much;
- For whilst a Hind drinks out on's palms, o'th'strand
- He flings his dish, cries, I've one in my hand.
-
-
- Englished.
- A treasure found one entring at death's gate,
- Triumphing, leaves that cord was meant his fate,
- But he the gold missing which he did hide,
- The Halter which he found, he knit, so dy'd.
-
-
- To the same Ayre in
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- Object adorable of charms
- My sighs and tea
- •
- s may testifie my harms
- But my respect forbids
- 〈◊〉
- reve
- •
- l;
- Ah what a pain 'tis to
- 〈◊〉
- ,
- And how I suffer wor
- ••
- then Hell,
- To love and not to
- 〈◊〉
- to tell.
-
-
-
- Lineally Translated out of the
- FRENCH.
- If Iames the King of wit
- To see me thought not fit,
- Sure this the cause hath been,
- That ravish'd with my merit,
- He thought I was all spirit,
- And so not to be seen.
-
-
- In English.
- Vain Painter why dost strive my face to draw,
- With busy hands a Goddesse eyes nere saw:
- Daughter of Air and Wind; I do rejoyce
- In empty shouts (without a mind) a Voice.
- Within your ears shrill echo I rebound,
- And if you'l paint me like, then paint a sound.
-
-
- In English.
- Her jealous Husband an Adultresse gave
- Cold poysons, which to weak she thought for's grave
- A fatal dose of Quicksilver, then she
- Mingles to hast his double destinie;
- Now whilst within themselves they are at strife,
- The deadly potion yields to that of Life,
-
- And straight from th'hollow stomack both retreat,
- To th'slipp'ry pipes known to digested meat.
- Strange care o'th' Gods! the Murth'resse doth avail
- So when fates please ev'n double poysons heal.
-
-
- In English.
- Because with bought books, Sir, your study's fraught
- A learned Grammarian you would fain be thought,
- Nay then buy Lutes and strings so you may play
- The Merchant now, the Fidler the next day.
-
-
- Englished.
- Ask'd in the Country, what I did, I said
- I view my men and meads, first having pray'd;
- Then each of mine hath his just task outlay'd.
- I read, Apollo court, I rouse my Muse
- Then I anoynt me, and stript willing loose
- My self on a soft plat, from us 'ry blest
- I dine, drink, sing, play, bath, I sup, I rest.
-
-
- Englished.
-
- Fabullus I will treat you handsomely
- Shortly, if the kind gods will favour thee.
- If thou dost bring with thee a del'cate messe,
- An Olio or so, a pretty Lass,
- Brisk wine, sharp tales, all sorts of Drolle
- •
- y,
- These if thou bringst (I say) along with thee
- You shall feed highly friend, for know the ebbs
- Of my lank purse are full of Spiders webs,
- But then again you shall receive clear love
- Or what more grateful or more sweet may prove,
-
- For with an oi
- •
- tment I will favour thee,
- My Venus's and Cupids gave to me,
-
- Of which once smelt, the gods thou wilt implore
- Fabullus that they'd make thee nose all ore.
-
-
-
- Englished.
- When brave chast Arria to her Poetus gave
- The Sword from her own breast did bleeding wave,
- If there be faith, this wound smarts not said she,
- But what you'l make, ah that will murder me.
-
-
- In English.
- When Portia her dear Lord's sad fate did hear,
- And noble grief sought arms were hid from her,
- Know you not yet no hinderance of death is,
-
- Cato I thought enough had taught you this,
- So said, her thirsty lips drink flaming coales,
- Go now deny me steel officious fools.
-
-
- Englished.
- Whilst in an Amber-shade the Ant doth feast
- A gummy drop ensnares the small wild beast,
- A full reward of all her toyls hath she,
- 'Tis to be thought she would her self so die.
-
-
- In English.
- Both lurks and shines hid in an Amber-tear
- The Bee in her own Nectar prisoner;
- So she who in her life time was contemn'd
- Ev'n in her very funerals is gemm'd,
-
-
-
- In English,
-
- Cinna seems poo
- •
- in show,
- And he is so.
-
-
- In an English Distick.
- A Fool much bit by fleas put out the light,
- You shall not see me now (quoth he) good night.
-
-
- To Rufus.
- That no fair woman will, wonder not why
- Clap (Rufus) under thine her tender thigh;
- Not a
- •
- ilk gown shall once melt one of the
- •
- ,
- No
- •
- the delights of a transparent
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- A scu
- •
- vy
- •
- tory kills thee, which
- 〈◊〉
- tell
- That in
- •
- hine
- 〈…〉
- dwell,
- Him they all fear
- 〈◊〉
- of an ugly stinch,
- Nor's
- 〈…〉
- with a handsome wench;
-
-
- 〈…〉
- cursed plague first crush,
- Or
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- •
- onder why they fly you thus.
-
-
- Female Inconstan
- •
- y.
- My Mistresse sayes she'll marry none but me,
- No no
- •
- if Iove himself a Suitor be:
- She sayes so; but what women say to kind
- Lovers, we write in rapid streams a
- •
- d wind.
-
-
- Englished.
- That me alone you lov'd, you once did say,
- Not should I to the King of gods give way,
-
- Then I lov'd thee not as a common dear,
- But as a Father doth his children chear;
- Now thee I know, more bitterly I smart,
- Yet thou to me more light and cheaper art.
- What pow'r is this? that such a wrong should press
- Me to love more, yet wish thee well much lesse.
- I hate and love, wouldst thou the reason know?
- I know not, but I burn and feel it so.
-
-
- Englished.
- By thy fault is my mind brought to that pass,
- That it it's Office quite forgotten has;
- For be'est thou best, I cannot wish thee well,
- And be'est thou worst, yet must I love thee still,
-
-
- To Quintius.
-
- Quintius if you'll endear Catullus eyes,
- Or what he dearer then his eyes doth prize,
- Ravish not what is dearer then his eyes,
- Or what he dearer then his eyes doth prize.
-
-
- Englished.
-
- Quintia i
- •
- handsome, fair, tall, straight, all these
- Very particulars I grant with ease:
- But she all ore's not handsome; here's her fault
- In all that bulk, there's not one come of salt,
- Whilst Le
- •
- bia fair and handsome too all ore
- All graces and all wit from all hath bore.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ELEGIES
- SACRED
- To the Memory of the
- AUTHOR:
- By several of his Friends.
- Collected and Published
- BY
- D. P. L.
-
-
- Nunquam ego te vitâ frater amabilior
- Adspiciam posthac; at certè semper amabo.
- Catullus.
-
-
- London, Printed 1660.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ELEGIES.
-
- To the Memory of my Worthy
- Friend, Coll. Richard Lovelace.
-
- TO pay my Love to thee, and pay it so;
- As Honest men should what they justly owe,
- Were to write better of thy Life then can
- The assured'st Pen of the most worthy man:
- Such was thy composition, such thy mind
- Improv'd from vertue, and from vice ref
- •
- n'd
- Thy Youth an abstr
- •
- ct of the World best parts,
- Invr'd to Arms and exerci
- •
- d to Arts;
- Which with the Vigour of a man, bec
- •
- me
- Thi
- •
- e and thy Countrie, Piramid
- •
- of
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- Two glorious Light, to guide our hopeful
- •••
- th,
- Into the path's of Honour and of
- 〈◊〉
- .
- These parts (so rarely met) made
- 〈…〉
-
-
- What man
- ••
- ould in his full perfection be;
- So s
- •
- rect a Temper into every sence
- And each
- •
- ffection breathd an
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- As smooth'd them to a Calme, which still
- 〈…〉
-
-
- The ruffling passions of untamed
- 〈◊〉
- ,
- Without a Wrinckle in thy face,
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Thy stable brest could no disturbance know
-
-
- In Fortune humble, constant in mischance
- Expert in both, and both serv'd to advance
- Thy Name by various Trialls of thy Spirit,
- And give the Testimony of thy merit;
- Valiant to envy of the bravest men
- And learned to an undisputed Pen,
- Good as the best in Both, and great, but Yet.
- No dangerons Courage nor offensive Wit:
- These ever serv'd the one for to d
- •
- fend
- The other Nobly to advance thy friend,
- Under which title I have found my name
- Fix'd in the living Chronicle of Fame,
- To times succeeding; Yet I hence must go
- Displeas'd, I cannot celebrate thee so;
- But what respect acknowledgement and love,
- What these, together when improv'd improve
- Call it by any Name (so it express
- Ought like a Tribute to thy Worthyness
- And may my bounden gratitude become)
-
- LOVELACE I offer at thy Honour'd Tomb.
- And though thy Vertues many friends have bred
- To love thee liveing, and lament thee Dead
- In Characters far better couch'd then these
- Mine will not blott thy Fame nor theirs encrease,
- 'Twas by thine own great merits rais'd so high,
- That Ma
- •
- gre time, and Fate, it shall not dye.
-
- Sic flevit.
- Charles Cotton.
-
-
-
- Upon the Posthume and precious
- Poems of the nobly extracted
- Gentleman Mr. R. L.
- T
- •
- e Rose and other
- •
- ragra
- •
- t Flowers smell
- •
- est
-
-
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- •
- hey are pluckd and worn in
- •
- and or
- •
- rest,
- So th
- •
- fair flow'r of Vertue
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Of
- 〈◊〉
- smell now as fre
- •
- as
- 〈…〉
- stood;
-
-
- 〈…〉
-
- Posthume-Poems
- 〈…〉
-
-
- He on the
- 〈◊〉
- of Helicon did grow:
- The beauty of his Soul did Correspond
- VVith his sweet out-side, nay, it went beyond;
-
- LOVE
- •
- ACE, the Minion of the Thespian Dames,
-
- A
- •
- ollo's darling-born with Enthean flames,
- VVhich in his Numbers
- •
- ave, and shine so clear
- As Spark
- •
- refracted in rich gemmes appear;
- Such flam
- ••
- that may inspir
- •
- , and Atom
- •
- cast
- To make new Poets, not like him in h
- •
- st.
- Jam. Howell.
-
-
-
- AN ELEGIE,
- Sacred to the Memory of my late
- Honoured Friend, Collonell
- Richard Lovelace.
- PArdon (blest shade) that I thus crowd t. be
- 'Mong those that sin unto thy memory;
- And that I think unvalu'd Reliques spread;
- And am the first that pillages the dead:
- Since who would be thy mourner as befits,
- But an officicus sacriledge commits.
- How my tears strive to do th
- •
- e fairer right!
- And from the Characters divide my sight.
- Vntill it (dimmer) a new torrent swells,
- And what obscur'd it falls my spectacles.
- Let the luxurious floods (impulsive) rise
- As they would not be wept, but weep the eyes,
- The while earth melts, and we above it lye,
- But the weak bubbles of Mortalitie;
- Until our griefs are drawn up by the Sun,
- And that (too) drop the exhalation.
- How in thy dust we humble now our pride,
- And bring thee a whole people mortifi'd!
- For, who expects not death, now thou art gone,
- Shows his low folly, not Religion.
- Can the Poetick heaven still hold on
-
-
- 〈◊〉
- golden dance when the first mover's gon?
-
-
- And the snatch'd fires (while circularly hurl'd)
- In their strong Rapture glimmer to the VVorld?
- And not stupendiously rather rise,
- The tapers unto these Solemnities?
- Can the Chords move in tune, when thou dost dye
- At once their universal Harmony?
- But where Apollo's harp (with murmur) laid
- •
-
-
- Had to
- •
- he stones
- 〈◊〉
- elody convey'd;
- They by some peb
- •
- le summon'd would reply
- In loud results to every battery;
- Thus do we come unto thy m
- •
- rble room,
- To eccho f
- •
- om the musick of thy tombe.
- May we dare speak thee dead that wouldest be
- In thy Remove only not such a
- •
- we?
- No wonder the advance i
- •
- from us hid,
- Earth could not lift thee higher then it did!
- And thou that did'st grow up so ever nigh,
- Art but now gone to immortality:
- "So near to where thou art thou here didst dwell,
- The change to thee is less perceptible.
- Thy but unably-comprehending clay,
- To what c
- •
- uld not be circumscrib'd gave way.
- And the more spacious tennant to return,
- Crack'd (in the t
- •
- o restrain'd estate) its urn.
- That is but left to a sucessive trust,
- The Soul's first buried in his bodies dust.
- Thou more thy self now thou art less confin'd
- Art no
- •
- concern'd in what is left behind;
- While we sustain the losse that thou art gone
- Vn-essenc'd in the separation;
-
-
- And he that weeps thy funerall, in one,
- Is piou to the widdow'd Nation.
- And under what (now) Covert must I sing
- Secure as if beneath a Cherub's wing:
- VVhen thou h
- •
- s
- •
- tane thy flight hence and art nigh
- In place to some related Hierarchie,
- VVhere a bright wreath of glories doth but set
- Upon thy h
- •
- ad an equal Coronet;
- And thou above our humble converse gon,
- Canst but be reach'd by contemplation.
- Our L
- •
- re
- •
- (as thine was touch'd) were vocall by,
- And thence receiv'd the soul by sympathy;
- That did abo
- •
- e the threds inspir
- •
- g creep,
- And with
- 〈…〉
- broke
- •
- he
- 〈…〉
-
-
- VVhich now no more (mov'd
- 〈◊〉
- the sweet surprise)
- Aw
- ••
- e
- •
- nto delicious R
- •
- psodies.
- But with
- 〈◊〉
- silem Mistres
- •
- do comply,
- And fast in und'sturbed slumber
- •
- lye.
- How from thy first ascent
- 〈…〉
- disperse
- A blushing warmth
- 〈◊〉
- universe,
- VVhile near the mor
- •
- s
- 〈…〉
- did glow,
- And to the earth a purer d
- •
- wn did throw,
- VVe ever saw thee in the Roll of fame
- Advancing thy already deathless name;
- And though it could but be above its fate,
- Thou would'st however super-errog
- ••
- e.
- Now as in Venice, wh
- •
- n the wanton state,
- Before a Spaniard spread
- •
- heir crowded plate;
- He made it the sage business of his eye,
- To find the Root of the wild treasury.
-
-
- So learn't from that Exchequer
- •
- but the more
- To rate his Mas
- •
- ers v
- •
- getable Ore:
- Thus when the Greek and Latin Muse we read
- As the but cold inscriptions of the dead;
- VVe to advantage th
- •
- n admired t
- •
- ee
- VVho did'st live on still with thy Poesie:
- And in our proud en
- •
- oyment
- •
-
- ▪ never knew
- The end of the unruly wealth that grew:
- But now we have the last dear
- 〈◊〉
- gain'd,
- And the free vein (however rich) is dr
- •
- in'd,
- Though what thou
- 〈…〉
- us no
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- Of this worlds span of
- 〈…〉
-
-
- But as who sometime, knew not to
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- Upon the waters strange
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Did to the Ocean himse
- ••
-
-
- 〈…〉
-
-
- That it might compre
- •••
-
-
- 〈…〉
-
-
- Be swallowed up
- •
- wthin
- 〈…〉
- .
- Thou ow art
- 〈◊〉
- up
- 〈…〉
- pr
- •
- ciou cave,
- And from the hollow space of thy
- 〈◊〉
- ,
- VVe still may mourn in tune but must alone
- Hereafter hope to quaver out
- 〈…〉
-
-
- No more the chirping
- 〈…〉
- .
- Must benceforth
- •
- olley fro
- •
- our
- 〈…〉
- .
- But each sad accont must
- 〈…〉
- well,
- To the deep solemn Organ of thy Cell.
- Why should some rude hand carve thy sacred
- 〈◊〉
- ,
- And there incise a cheap inscription:
- When we can shed the tribute of our tears
- So long, till the relenting marble wears?
-
-
- Which shall such order in their cadence keep.
- That they a native Epitaph shall weep;
- Untill each Letter spelt distinctly lyes,
- Cut by the mystick droppings of our eyes.
- El. Revett.
-
-
- AN ELEGIE.
- ME thinks when Kings, Prophets, and Poets dye,
- We should not bid men weep, nor ask them why,
- But the great loss should by instinct impair
- The Nations like a pestilential ayr.
- And in a moment men should feel the Cramp,
- Of grief like person
- •
- poyson'd with a damp:
- All thing▪ in nature should their death deplore,
- And the Sun look less l
- •
- vely th
- •
- n before,
- The fixed Stares should change
- •
- heir constant spaces,
- And Comets cast abroad their
- •
- lagrant faces;
- Yet still we see
- •
- rinces and Poets fall
- Without
- •
- heir proper pomp of funerall,
- Men look about as if they
- •
- ere had known
- The Poets Lawrell, or the Princes Crown;
-
- Lovelace hath long been dead, and we can be
- Oblig'd to man for an Elegie.
- Are you all turn'd to silence or did he
- Retain the only sap of Poesie,
- Th
- •
- t kept all branches living, must his fall
- Set an eternal period upon all:
- So when a Spring-tide doth begin to fly
- From the green shoar, each neighbouring creek grows dry
- But why do! so pettishly detract
- An age that is so perfect, so exact,
-
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- 〈…〉
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- 〈…〉
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- 〈…〉
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- Hath got a great train of Artillerie,
- Yet neither shall, nor can it blest the Fame
- And honour of deceased Lovelace Name,
- Whose own Lucasta can support his credit:
- Amongst all such who knowi
- ••
- ly have read it,
- But who that Praise can by desert discusse
- Due to those Poems that are Posthumous;
- And if the l
- •
- st conception
- •
- are the best,
- Those by degrees do much transcend the rest,
- So full, so fluent, that they richly
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- With Orpheus Li
- •
- e, or with
- 〈◊〉
- Lu
- •
- e,
- And he shall melt his wing that shall aspire
- To reach a Fancy or one accent hig
- •
- er.
-
- Holland and France have known his nobler part
- •
- ,
- And found him excellent in Arms▪ and
- 〈◊〉
-
- ▪
-
- To sum up all, f
- ••
- Men of Fame but know
-
- He was tam Marti, quam Mercurio.
-
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- To his noble friend Capt. Dudl
- •
- y Lovelace
- upon his Edition of his Brothers Poems.
- THy pious hand pl
- •
- nting fratern
- ••
- bayes,
- Deserving is of most egregious praise;
- Since 'tis the o
- •
- gan doth to us convey,
- From a descended
- •
- un, so bright a Ray.
- Clear Spirit, how much we are bound to thee,
- For this so great a Liberalitie,
- The truer worth of which by much exceeds
- The Western Wealth which such contention bre
- •
- ds,
- Like the Infusing-God, from the Well-head
- Of Poesie you have be sprinkled
- Our brows with holy drops, the very last
- Which from your Brother's haypy Pen were cast;
- Yet as the last the best, such matchlesse skill
- From his divine alembick did d
- •
- still,
- Your honour'd Brother in the Elyzian shade
- Will joy to know himself a Laureat made
- By your religious care, and that his Urn,
- Doth him on Earth immortal life return.
- Your self you have a good Physician shown,
- To his much grieved friends, and to your own,
- In giving thi
- •
- elixir'd Medecine,
- For greatest grief a soveraign anodine.
- Sir, from your Brother y' have convey'd us bliss;
- Now, since your Genius so concurs with his,
- Let your own quill our next enjoyments frame,
- All must be rich that's grac'd with Lovelace name.
- Symon Og
- •
- ell M. D. Coningbrens.
-
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-
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- On the truly Honorable Coll. Richard
- Lovelace, occasioned by the Publication
- Of his Posthume-Poems.
- ELEGIE.
- GReat Son of Mars! and of Minerva too
- •
-
-
- With what oblations must we come to woo
- Thy sacred soul to loo
- •
- down from above,
- And see how much th
- •
- memory we love,
- Whose happy pen so pleased amorous Ears,
- And lifting bright
- 〈…〉
- ,
- Her in the Star-be spangled or
- •
- did set,
- Above fair Ariadnes
-
- 〈◊〉
-
-
- Leaving a pattern to succeeding
- 〈◊〉
-
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- By which to sing forth their
- 〈…〉
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- Shall we bring tears awd
- 〈◊〉
- no, no, then w
- •
-
-
- Should but bemone our selves for loosing thee,
- Or else thy happiness seem to deny,
- Or to repi
- •
- e at thy felicity:
- Then whilst we chant out thine immortal praise,
- Our offerings shall be onely Sprig
- •
- of Bays;
- And if our tears will needs their brinks out-fly,
- We'l weep them forth into an Elegy,
-
- To tell the World how deep Fates wounded wit,
- When Atropos the lovely Lovelace hit;
- How th' active fire which cloath'd thy gen'rous
- 〈◊〉
- ,
- Consum'd the water and the earth
- 〈◊〉
- ,
-
-
- Vntill a stronger heat by death was given,
- Which sublimated thy poor soul to heaven.
- Thou knew'st right well to guide the warlike st
- •
- ed,
- And yet could'st court the Muses with full speed,
- And such success, that the inspiring nine
- Have fill'd their Thespian fountain so with brin
- •
- ,
- Hen
- •
- eforth we can expect no Lyrick lay,
- But biting Satyres through the world must stray.
-
- Bellona joyns with fair Erato too,
- And with the Destinies do keep▪ doe,
- Whom thus she querie
- •
- ; Could not you a while
- Reprieve his life until another file
- Of Poems such as these, had been
- 〈◊〉
- up?
- The fates r
- •
- ply'd; that, Thou wert taken up
- A Sacrifice unto the Deities:
- Since things most perfect please their
- •
- oly eyes,
- And that no other Victim could be found,
- With so much Learning and true Virtue crown'd.
- Since it is so in peace for ever rest:
- 'Tis very just that God should have the best.
- Sym. Ognell M. D. Coningbrens.
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-
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- On My Brother.
- LOVELACE is dead! then let the World return
-
-
- •
- o its first Chaos; Mus
- •
- ed in its Urn;
- The Stars and Elements together lye
- Drench'd in perpetual obscurity;
- And the whole Machine in confusion be,
- As immethodick as an Anarchie;
- May the Great Eye of Day weep out his light,
- Pale Cynthia leave the Reg
- •
- ment of Night,
- The Galaxia all in Sables Dight,
- Send forth no corruscations to our Sight,
- The Sister-graces, and the sacred Nine
-
- Statu'd with grief, attend upon his shrine.
- Whose worth, whose loss, should we but truly rate
- 'Twould Puzzle our Arithmetick, to state
- Th' accompt of vertu's so transcendent high,
- Number and Value reach Infinity.
- Did
- •
- pronounce him dead! no no▪ he lives,
- And from his Aromatique Cell he gives
- Spi
- •
- s-breathed Fume
- •
-
-
- 〈◊〉
- Oderiferous scent
- (In Zephre-
- •
- ales which never can be spent)
- Doth spread it self abroad and muc
- •
- out-vies,
- The Eastern Bird in her self-Sacrifice:
- Or Father-Phoebus wh
- •
- to
- 〈◊〉
- World Derives
- Such various and such multiformed Liv
- ••
- ,
- Took notice that brave LOVELACE did inspire,
- The Universe with his Promethean Fire,
- And snatcht him hence before his Thred was spun,
- Env'ing that here should be another Sun,
-
-
-
- On the Death of my
- Dear Brother.
- EPITAPH.
- TRead (Reader) gently, gently ore
- The happy Dust beneath this floor:
- For, in this narrow Vault is set
- An Alablaster Cabinet,
- Wherein both Arts and Arms were put,
- Like Homers Iliads in a Nut;
- Till Death with slow and easie pace,
- Snatcht the bright Iowell from th
- •
- Case.
- And now, transform'd, he doth arise
- A Constellation in the Skies,
- Teaching the blinded World the way,
- Through Night, to startle into Day:
- And shipwrackt shades, with steady hand
- He steers unto th' Elizian Land.
- Dudley Posthumus-Lovelace,
- FINIS.
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