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- Miscellaneous poems by Andrew Marvell, Esq. ...
- Poems. Selections
- Marvell, Andrew, 1621-1678.
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- 1681
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- Miscellaneous poems by Andrew Marvell, Esq. ...
- Poems. Selections
- Marvell, Andrew, 1621-1678.
-
- [5], 144 p. : port.
-
- Printed for Robert Boulter ...,
- London :
- 1681.
-
-
- First ed. Cf. NUC pre-1956.
- "... Printed according to the exact copies of my late dear husband, under his own hand-writing, being found since his death among his other papers, witness my hand this 15th day of October, 1680. Mary Marvell"--P. [4].
- This British Library copy is unique in that it contains p. 140 to 144 (containing Marvell's three poems upon Cromwell) which were withdrawn for political reasons from the book as it was published. Cf. BM.
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- Cromwell, Oliver, 1599-1658 -- Poetry.
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- Andr. Marvell, Esq.
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- MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.
- BY ANDREW MARVELL,
- Esq Late Member of the Honourable House of Commons.
-
- LONDON, Printed for Robert Boulter, at the Turks-Head in Cornhill. M. DC. LXXXI.
-
-
-
-
- TO THE READER.
- THese are to Certifie every Ingenious Reader, that all these Poems, as also the other things in this Book contained, are Printed according to the exact Copies of my late dear Husband, under his own Hand-Writing, being found since his Death among his other Papers, Witness my Hand this 15th day of October, 1680.
-
- Mary Marvell.
-
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-
- A DIALOGUE, BETWEEN The Resolved Soul, and Created Pleasure.
-
- COurage my Soul, now learn to wield
- The weight of thine immortal Shield.
- Close on thy Head thy Helmet bright.
- Ballance thy Sword against the Fight.
- See where an Army, strong as fair,
- With silken Banners spreads the air.
- Now, if thou bee'st that thing Divine,
- In this day's Combat let it shine:
- And shew that Nature wants an Art
- To conquer one resolved Heart.
-
-
- Pleasure.
- Welcome the Creations Guest,
- Lord of Earth, and Heavens Heir.
- Lay aside that Warlike Crest,
- And of Nature's banquet share:
- Where the Souls of fruits and flow'rs
- Stand prepar'd to heighten yours.
-
-
- Soul.
- I sup above, and cannot stay
- To bait so long upon the way.
-
-
-
-
- Pleasure.
- On these downy Pillows lye,
- Whose soft Plumes will thither fly:
- On these Roses strow'd so plain
- Lest one Leaf thy Side should strain.
-
-
- Soul.
- My gentler Rest is on a Thought,
- Conscious of doing what I ought.
-
-
- Pleasure.
- If thou bee'st with Perfumes pleas'd,
- Such as oft the Gods appeas'd,
- Thou in fragrant Clouds shalt show
- Like another God below.
-
-
- Soul.
- A Soul that knowes not to presume
- Is Heaven's and its own perfume.
-
-
- Pleasure.
- Every thing does seem to vie
- Which should first attract thine Eye:
- But since none deserves that grace,
- In this Crystal view thy face.
-
-
- Soul.
- When the Creator's skill is priz'd,
- The rest is all but Earth disguis'd.
-
-
- Pleasure.
- Heark how Musick then prepares
- For thy Stay these charming Aires;
-
-
- Which the posting Winds recall,
- And suspend the Rivers Fall.
-
-
- Soul.
- Had I but any time to lose,
- On this I would it all dispose.
- Cease Tempter. None can chain a mind
- Whom this sweet Chordage cannot bind.
-
- Chorus.
- Earth cannot shew so brave a Sight
- As when a single Soul does fence
- The Batteries of alluring Sense,
- And Heaven views it with delight.
- Then persevere: for still new Charges sound:
- And if thou overcom'st thou shalt be crown'd.
-
-
-
- Pleasure.
- All this fair, and cost, and sweet,
- Which scatteringly doth shine,
- Shall within one Beauty meet,
- And she be only thine.
-
-
- Soul.
- If things of Sight such Heavens be,
- What Heavens are those we cannot see?
-
-
- Pleasure.
- Where so e're thy Foot shall go
- The minted Gold shall lie;
- Till thou purchase all below,
- And want new Worlds to buy.
-
-
- Soul.
- Wer't not a price who'ld value Gold?
- And that's worth nought that can be sold.
-
-
-
-
- Pleasure.
- Wilt thou all the Glory have
- That War or Peace commend?
- Half the World shall be thy Slave
- The other half thy Friend.
-
-
- Soul.
- What Friends, if to my self untrue?
- What Slaves, unless I captive you?
-
-
- Pleasure.
- Thou shalt know each hidden Cause;
- And see the future Time:
- Try what depth the Centre draws;
- And then to Heaven climb.
-
-
- Soul.
- None thither mounts by the degree
- Of Knowledge, but Humility.
-
- Chorus.
- Triumph, triumph, victorious Soul;
- The World has not one Pleasure more:
- The rest does lie beyond the Pole,
- And is thine everlasting Store.
-
-
-
-
- On a Drop of Dew.
-
- SEe how the Orient Dew,
- Shed from the Bosom of the Morn
- Into the blowing Roses,
- Yet careless of its Mansion new;
- For the clear Region where 'twas born
- Round in its self incloses:
-
-
- And in its little Globes Extent,
- Frames as it can its native Element.
- How it the purple flow'r does slight,
- Scarce touching where it lyes,
- But gazing back upon the Skies,
- Shines with a mournful Light;
- Like its own Tear,
- Because so long divided from the Sphear.
- Restless it roules and unsecure,
- Trembling lest it grow impure:
- Till the warm Sun pitty it's Pain,
- And to the Skies exhale it back again.
- So the Soul, that Drop, that Ray
- Of the clear Fountain of Eternal Day,
- Could it within the humane flow'r be seen,
- Remembring still its former height,
- Shuns the sweat leaves and blossoms green;
- And, recollecting its own Light,
- Does, in its pure and circling thoughts, express
- The greater Heaven in an Heaven less.
- In how coy a Figure wound,
- Every way it turns away:
- So the World excluding round,
- Yet receiving in the Day.
- Dark beneath, but bright above:
- Here disdaining, there in Love.
- How loose and easie hence to go:
- How girt and ready to ascend.
- Moving but on a point below,
- It all about does upwards bend.
- Such did the Manna's sacred Dew destil;
- White, and intire, though congeal'd and chill.
- Congeal'd on Earth: but does, dissolving, run
- Into the Glories of th' Almighty Sun.
-
-
-
-
- Ros.
-
- CErnis ut Eoi descendat Gemmula Roris,
- Inque Rosas roseo transfluat orta sinu.
- Sollicitâ Flores stant ambitione supini,
- Et certant foliis pellicuisse suis.
- Illa tamen patriae lustrans fastigia Sphaerae,
- Negligit hospitii limina picta novi.
- Inque sui nitido conclusa voluminis orbe,
- Exprimit aetherei quâ licet Orbis aquas.
- En ut odoratum spernat generosior Ostrum,
-
- Vixque premat casto mollia strata pede.
- Suspicit at longis distantem obtutibus Axem,
- Inde & languenti lumine pendet amans,
- Tristis, & in liquidum mutata dolore dolorem,
- Marcet, uti roseis Lachryma fusa Genis.
- Ut pavet, & motum tremit irrequieta Cubile,
- Et quoties Zephyro fluctuat Aura, fugit.
- Qualis inexpertam subeat formido Puellam,
- Sicubi nocte redit incomitata domum.
- Sic & in horridulas agitatur Gutta procellas,
- Dum prae virgineo cuncta pudore timet.
- Donec oberrantem Radio clemente vaporet,
- In
-
-
-
- que
- jubar reducem Sol genitale trahat.
- Talis, in humano si possit flore videri,
- Exul ubi longas Mens agit us
-
-
-
- que
- moras;
- Haec quoque natalis meditans convivia Coeli,
- Evertit Calices, purpureosque Thoros.
- Fontis stilla sacri, Lucis scintilla perennis,
- Non capitur Tyria veste, vapore Sabae.
-
- Tota sed in proprii secedens luminis Arcem,
- Colligit in Gyros se sinuosa breves.
- Magnorumque sequens Animo convexa Deorum,
- Sydereum parvo fingit in Orbe Globum.
- Quam bene in aversae modulum contracta figurae
-
-
- Oppositum Mundo claudit ubi
-
-
-
- que
- latus.
- Sed bibit in speculum vadios ornata rotundum;
- Et circumfuso splendet aperta Die.
- Qua Superos spectat rutilans, obscurior infra;
- Caetera dedignans, ardet amore Poli.
- Subsilit, hinc agili Poscens discedere motu,
- Undique coelesti cincta soluta Viae.
- Totaque in aereos extenditur orbita cursus;
- Hinc punctim carpens, mobile stringit iter.
- Haud aliter Mensis exundans Manna beatis
- Deserto jacuit Stilla gelata solo:
- Stilla gelata solo, sed Solibus hausta benignis,
- Ad sua quâ cecidit purior Astra redit.
-
-
-
- The Coronet.
-
- WHen for the Thorns with which I long, too
- With many a piercing wound, (long,
- My Saviours head have crown'd,
- I seek with Garlands to redress that Wrong:
- Through every Garden, every Mead,
- I gather flow'rs (my fruits are only flow'rs)
- Dismantling all the fragrant Towers
- That once adorn'd my Shepherdesses head.
- And now when I have summ'd up all my store,
- Thinking (so I my self deceive)
- So rich a Chaplet thence to weave
- As never yet the king of Glory wore:
- Alas I find the Serpent old
- That, twining in his speckled breast,
- About the flow'rs disguis'd does fold,
- With wreaths of Fame and Interest.
- Ah, foolish Man, that would'st debase with them,
- And mortal Glory, Heavens Diadem!
- But thou who only could'st the Serpent tame,
- Either his slipp'ry knots at once untie,
-
-
- And disintangle all his winding Snare:
- Or shatter too with him my curious frame:
- And let these wither, so that he may die,
- Though set with Skill and chosen out with Care.
- That they, while Thou on both their Spoils dost tread,
- May crown thy Feet, that could not crown thy Head.
-
-
-
- Eyes and Tears.
-
- I.
- HOW wisely Nature did decree,
- With the same Eyes to weep and see!
- That, having view'd the object vain,
- They might be ready to complain.
-
-
- II.
- And, since the Self-deluding Sight,
- In a false Angle takes each hight;
- These Tears which better measure all,
- Like wat'ry Lines and Plummets fall.
-
-
- III.
- Two Tears, which Sorrow long did weigh
- Within the Scales of either Eye,
- And then paid out in equal Poise,
- Are the true price of all my Joyes.
-
-
- IV.
- What in the World most fair appears,
- Yea even Laughter, turns to Tears:
- And all the Jewels which we prize,
- Melt in these Pendants of the Eyes.
-
-
- V.
- I have through every Garden been,
- Amongst the Red, the White, the Green;
-
-
- And yet, from all the flow'rs I saw,
- No Hony, but these Tears could draw.
-
-
- VI.
- So the all-seeing Sun each day
- Distills the World with Chymick Ray;
- But finds the Essence only Showers,
- Which straight in pity back he powers.
-
-
- VII.
- Yet happy they whom Grief doth bless,
- That weep the more, and see the less:
- And, to preserve their Sight more true,
- Bath still their Eyes in their own Dew.
-
-
- VIII.
- * So Magdalen, in Tears more wise
- Dissolv'd those captivating Eyes,
- Whose liquid Chaines could flowing meet
- To fetter her Redeemers feet.
-
-
- IX.
- Not full sailes hasting loaden home,
- Nor the chast Ladies pregnant Womb,
- Nor Cynthia Teeming show's so fair,
- As two Eyes swoln with weeping are.
-
-
- X.
- The sparkling Glance that shoots Desire,
- Drench'd in these Waves, does lose it fire.
- Yea oft the Thund'rer pitty takes
- And here the hissing Lightning slakes.
-
-
- XI.
- The Incense was to Heaven dear,
- Not as a Perfume, but a Tear.
- And Stars shew lovely in the Night,
- But as they seem the Tears of Light.
-
-
-
- XII.
- Ope then mine Eyes your double Sluice,
- And practise so your noblest Use.
- For others too can see, or sleep;
- But only humane Eyes can weep.
-
-
- XIII.
- Now like two Clouds dissolving, drop,
- And at each Tear in distance stop:
- Now like two Fountains trickle down:
- Now like two sloods o'return and drown.
-
-
- XIIII.
- Thus let your Streams o'reflow your Springs,
- Till Eyes and Tears be the same things:
- And each the other's difference bears;
- These weeping Eyes, those seeing Tears.
-
-
- * Magdala, lascivos sic quum dimisit Amantes,
- Fervidaque in castas lumina solvit aquas;
- Haesit in irriguo lachrymarum compede Christus,
-
- Et tenuit sacros uda Catena pedes.
-
-
-
- Bermudas.
-
- WHere the remote Bermudas ride
- In th' Oceans bosome unespy'd,
- From a small Boat, that row'd along,
- The listning Winds receiv'd this Song.
- What should we do but sing his Praise
- That led us through the watry Maze,
- Unto an Isle so long unknown,
- And yet far kinder than our own?
- Where he the huge Sea-Monsters wracks,
- That lift the Deep upon their Backs.
- He lands us on a grassy Stage;
- Safe from the Storms, and Prelat's rage.
-
-
- He gave us this eternal Spring,
- Which here enamells every thing;
- And sends the Fowl's to us in care,
- On daily Visits through the Air.
- He hangs in shades the Orange bright,
- Like golden Lamps in a green Night.
- And does in the Pomgranates close,
- Jewels more rich than Ormus show's.
- He makes the Figs our mouths to meet;
- And throws the Melons at our feet.
- But Apples plants of such a price,
- No Tree could ever bear them twice.
- With Cedars, chosen by his hand,
- From Lebanon, he stores the Land.
- And makes the hollow Seas, that roar,
- Proclaime the Ambergris on shoar.
- He cast (of which we rather boast)
- The Gospels Pearl upon our Coast.
- And in these Rocks for us did frame
- A Temple, where to sound his Name.
- Oh let our Voice his Praise exalt,
- Till it arrive at Heavens Vault:
- Which thence (perhaps) rebounding, may
- Eccho beyond the Mexique Bay.
-
- Thus sung they, in the English boat,
- An holy and a chearful Note,
- And all the way, to guide their Chime,
- With falling Oars they kept the time.
-
-
-
- Clorinda and Damon.
-
- C.
-
- DAmon come drive thy flocks this way.
-
-
- D.
- No: 'tis too late they went astray.
-
-
- C.
- I have a grassy Scutcheon spy'd,
- Where Flora blazons all her pride.
-
-
- The Grass I aim to feast thy Sheep:
- The Flow'rs I for thy Temples keep.
-
-
- D.
- Grass withers; and the Flow'rs too fade.
-
-
- C.
- Seize the short Joyes then, ere they vade.
- Seest thou that unfrequented Cave?
-
-
- D.
- That den?
-
-
- C.
- Loves Shrine.
-
-
- D.
- But Virtue's Grave.
-
-
- C.
- In whose cool bosome we may lye
- Safe from the Sun.
-
-
- D.
- not Heaven's Eye.
-
-
- C.
- Near this, a Fountaines liquid Bell
- Tinkles within the concave Shell.
-
-
- D.
- Might a Soul bath there and be clean,
- Or slake its Drought?
-
-
- C.
- What is't you mean?
-
-
- D.
- These once had been enticing things,
-
- Clorinda, Pastures, Caves, and Springs.
-
-
- C.
- And what late change?
-
-
- D.
- The other day
-
- Pan met me.
-
-
- C.
- What did great Pan say?
-
-
- D.
- Words that transcend poor Shepherds skill,
- But He ere since my Songs does fill:
- And his Name swells my slender Oate.
-
-
- C.
- Sweet must Pan sound in Damons Note.
-
-
- D.
-
- Clorinda's voice might make it sweet.
-
-
- C.
- Who would not in Pan's Praises meet?
-
-
- Chorus.
- Of Pan the flowry Pastures sing,
- Caves eccho, and the Fountains ring.
- Sing then while he doth us inspire;
- For all the World is our Pan's Quire.
-
-
-
- A Dialogue between the Soul and Body.
-
- Soul.
- O Who shall, from this Dungeon, raise
- A Soul inslav'd so many wayes?
- With bolts of Bones, that fetter'd stands
- In Feet; and manacled in Hands.
-
-
- Here blinded with an Eye; and there
- Deaf with the drumming of an Ear.
- A Soul hung up, as 'twere, in Chains
- Of Nerves, and Arteries, and Veins.
- Tortur'd, besides each other part,
- In a vain Head, and double Heart.
-
-
- Body.
- O who shall me deliver whole,
- From bonds of this Tyrannic Soul?
- Which, stretcht upright, impales me so,
- That mine own Precipice I go;
- And warms and moves this needless Frame:
- (A Fever could but do the same.)
- And, wanting where its spight to try,
- Has made me live to let me dye.
- A Body that could never rest,
- Since this ill Spirit it possest.
-
-
- Soul.
- What Magick could me thus confine
- Within anothers Grief to pine?
- Where whatsoever it complain,
- I feel, that cannot feel, the pain.
- And all my Care its self employes,
- That to preserve, which me destroys:
- Constrain'd not only to indure
- Diseases, but, whats worse, the Cure:
- And ready oft the Port to gain,
- Am Shipwrackt into Health again.
-
-
- Body.
- But Physick yet could never reach
- The Maladies Thou me dost teach;
- Whom first the Cramp of Hope does Tear:
- And then the Palsie Shakes of Fear.
-
-
- The Pestilence of Love does heat:
- Or Hatred's hidden Ulcer eat.
- Joy's chearful Madness does perplex:
- Or Sorrow's other Madness vex.
- Which Knowledge forces me to know;
- And Memory will not foregoe.
- What but a Soul could have the wit
- To build me up for Sin so fit?
- So Architects do square and hew,
- Green Trees that in the Forest grew.
-
-
-
- The Nymph complaining for the death of her Faun.
-
-
- THE wanton Troopers riding by
- Have shot my Faun and it will dye.
- Ungentle men! They cannot thrive
- To kill thee. Thou neer didst alive
- Them any harm: alas nor cou'd
- Thy death yet do them any good.
- I'me sure I never wisht them ill;
- Nor do I for all this; nor will:
- But, if my simple Pray'rs may yet
- Prevail with Heaven to forget
- Thy murder, I will Joyn my Tears
- Rather then fail. But, O my fears!
- It cannot dye so. Heavens King
- Keeps register of every thing:
- And nothing may we use in vain.
- Ev'n Beasts must be with justice slain;
- Else Men are made their Deodands.
-
- Though they should wash their guilty hands
- In this warm life blood, which doth part
- From thine, and wound me to the Heart,
- Yet could they not be clean: their Stain
- Is dy'd in such a Purple Grain.
-
-
- There is not such another in
- The World, to offer for their Sin.
-
-
- Unconstant Sylvio, when yet
- I had not found him counterfeit,
- One morning (I remember well)
- Ty'd in this silver Chain and Bell,
- Gave it to me: nay and I know
- What he said then; I'me sure I do.
- Said He, look how your Huntsman here
- Hath taught a Faun to hunt his Dear.
-
- But Sylvio soon had me beguil'd.
- This waxed tame; while he grew wild,
- And quite regardless of my Smart,
- Left me his Faun, but took his Heart.
-
-
- Thenceforth I set my self to play
- My solitary time away,
- With this: and very well content,
- Could so mine idle Life have spent.
- For it was full of sport; and light
- Of foot, and heart; and did invite,
- Me to its game: it seem'd to bless
- Its self in me. How could I less
- Than love it? O I cannot be
- Unkind, t' a Beast that loveth me.
-
-
- Had it liv'd long, I do not know
- Whether it too might have done so
- As Sylvio did: his Gifts might be
- Perhaps as false or more than he.
- But I am sure, for ought that I
- Could in so short a time espie,
- Thy Love was far more better then
- The love of false and cruel men.
-
-
- With sweetest milk, and sugar, first
- I it at mine own fingers nurst.
- And as it grew, so every day
- It wax'd more white and sweet than they.
- It had so sweet a Breath! And oft
- I blusht to see its foot more soft,
-
-
- And white, (shall I say then my hand?)
- NAY any Ladies of the Land.
-
-
- It is a wond'rous thing, how fleet
- 'Twas on those little silver feet.
- With what a pretty skipping grace,
- It oft would challenge me the Race:
- And when 'thad left me far away,
- 'Twould stay, and run again, and stay.
- For it was nimbler much than Hindes;
- And trod, as on the four Winds.
-
-
- I have a Garden of my own,
- But so with Roses over grown,
- And Lillies, that you would it guess
- To be a little Wilderness.
- And all the Spring time of the year
- It onely loved to be there.
- Among the beds of Lillyes, I
- Have sought it oft, where it should lye;
- Yet could not, till it self would rise,
- Find it, although before mine Eyes.
- For, in the flaxen Lillies shade,
- It like a bank of Lillies laid.
- Upon the Roses it would feed,
- Until its Lips ev'n seem'd to bleed:
- And then to me 'twould boldly trip,
- And print those Roses on my Lip.
- But all its chief delight was still
- On Roses thus its self to fill:
- And its pure virgin Limbs to fold
- In whitest sheets of Lillies cold.
- Had it liv'd long, it would have been
- Lillies without, Roses within.
-
-
- O help! O help! I see it faint:
- And dye as calmely as a Saint.
- See how it weeps. The Tears do come
- Sad, slowly dropping like a Gumme.
- So weeps the wounded Balsome: so
- The holy Frankincense doth flow.
-
-
- The brotherless Heliades
-
- Melt in such Amber Tears as these.
-
-
- I in a golden Vial will
- Keep these two crystal Tears; and fill
- It till it do o'reflow with mine;
- Then place it in Diana's Shrine.
-
-
- Now my sweet Faun is vanish'd to
- Whether the Swans and Turtles go:
- In fair Elizium to endure,
- With milk-white Lambs, and Ermins pure.
- O do not run too fast: for I
- Will but bespeak thy Glave, I and dye.
-
-
- First my unhappy Statue shall
- Be cut in Marble; and withal,
- Let it be weeping too: but there
- Th' Engraver sure his Art may spare;
- For I so truly thee bemoane,
- That I shall weep though I be Stone:
- Until my Tears, still dropping, wear
- My breast, themselves engraving there.
- There at my feet shalt thou be laid,
- Of purest Alabaster made:
- For I would have thine Image be
- White as I can, though not as Thee.
-
-
-
- Young Love.
-
- I.
- COme little Infant, Love me now,
- While thine unsuspected years
- Clear thine aged Fathers brow
- From cold Jealousie and Fears.
-
-
- II.
- Pretty surely 'twere to see
- By young Love old Time beguil'd:
-
-
- While our Sportings are as free
- As the Nurses with the Child.
-
-
- III.
- Common Beauties stay fifteen;
- Such as yours should swifter move;
- Whose fair Blossoms are too green
- Yet for Lust, but not for Love.
-
-
- IV.
- Love as much the snowy Lamb
- Or the wanton Kid does prize,
- As the lusty Bull or Ram,
- For his morning Sacrifice.
-
-
- V.
- Now then love me: time may take
- Thee before thy time away:
- Of this Need wee'l Virtue make,
- And learn Love before we may.
-
-
- VI.
- So we win of doubtful Fate;
- And, if good she to us meant,
- We that Good shall antedate,
- Or, if ill, that Ill prevent.
-
-
- VII.
- Thus as Kingdomes, frustrating
- Other Titles to their Crown,
- In the craddle crown their King,
- So all Forraign Claims to drown.
-
-
- VIII.
- So, to make all Rivals vain,
- Now I crown thee with my Love:
-
-
- Crown me with thy Love again;
- And we both shall Monarchs prove.
-
-
-
- To his Coy Mistress.
-
- HAD we but World enough, and Time,
- This coyness Lady were no crime.
- We would sit down, and think which way
- To walk, and pass our long Loves Day.
- Thou by the Indian Ganges side
- Should'st Rubies find: I by the Tide
- Of Humber would complain. I would
- Love you ten years before the Flood:
- And you should if you please refuse
- Till the Conversion of the Jews.
-
- My vegetable Love should grow
- Vaster then Empires, and more slow.
- An hundred years should go to praise
- Thine Eyes, and on thy Forehead Gaze.
- Two hundred to adore each Breast:
- But thirty thousand to the rest.
- An Age at least to every part,
- And the last Age should show your Heart.
- For Lady you deserve this State;
- Nor would I love at lower rate.
-
-
- But at my back I alwaies hear
- Times winged Charriot hurrying near:
- And yonder all before us lye
- Desarts of vast Eternity.
- Thy Beauty shall no more be found;
- Nor, in thy marble Vault, shall sound
- My ecchoing Song: then Worms shall try
- That long preserv'd Virginity:
- And your quaint Honour turn to durst:
- And into ashes all my Lust.
- The Grave's a fine and private place,
- But none I think do there embrace.
-
-
-
-
- Now therefore, while the youthful hew
- Sits on thy skin like morning grew,
- And while thy willing Soul transpires
- At every pore with instant Fires,
- Now let us sport us while we may;
- And now, like am'rous birds of prey,
- Rather at once our Time dev out,
- Than languish in his slow chapt pow'r.
- Let us roll all our Strength, and all
- Our sweetness, up into one Ball
- And tear our Pleasures with rough strife,
- Thorough the Iron gates of Life.
- Thus, though we cannot make our Sun
- Stand still, yet we will make him run.
-
-
-
- The unfortunate Lover.
-
- I.
- ALas, how pleasant are their dayes
- With whom the Infant Love yet playes!
- Sorted by pairs, they still are seen
- By Fountains cool, and Shadows green.
- But soon these Flames do lose their light,
- Like Meteors of a Summers night:
- Nor can they to that Region climb,
- To make impression upon Time.
-
-
- II.
- 'Twas in a Shipwrack, when the Seas
- Rul'd, and the Winds did what they please,
- That my poor Lover ffoting lay,
- And, e're brought forth, was cast away:
- Till at the last the master-Wave
- Upon the Rock his Mother drave;
-
-
- And there she split against the Stone,
- In a Cesarian Section.
-
-
-
- III.
- The Sea him lent these bitter Tears
- Which at his Eyes he alwaies bears.
- And from the Winds the Sighs he bore,
- Which through his surging Breast do roar.
- No Day he saw but that which breaks,
- Through frighted Clouds in forked streaks.
- While round the ratling Thunder hurl'd,
- As at the Fun'ral of the World.
-
-
- IV.
- While Nature to his Birth presents
- This masque of quarrelling Elements;
- A num'rous fleet of Corm'rants black,
- That sail'd insulting o're the
- •
- rack,
- Receiv'd into their cruel Care,
- Th' unfortunate and abject Heir:
- Guardians most fit to entertain
- The Orphan of the Hurricane.
-
-
-
- V.
- They fed him up with Hopes and Air,
- Which soon digested to Despair.
- And as one Corm'rant fed him, still
- Another on his Heart did bill.
- Thus while they famish him, and feast,
- He both consumed, and increast
- And languished with doubtful Breath,
- Th' Amphibium of Life and Death.
-
-
- VI.
- And now, when angry Heaven wou'd
- Behold a spectacle of Blood,
-
-
- Fortune and He are call'd to play
- At sharp before it all the day:
- And Tyrant Love his brest does ply
- With all his wing'd Artillery.
- Whilst he, betwixt the Flames and Waves,
- Like Ajax, the mad Tempest braves.
-
-
- VII.
- See how he nak'd and fierce does stand,
- Cuffing the Thunder with one hand;
- While with the other he does lock,
- And grapple, with the stubborn Rock:
- From which he with each Wave rebounds,
- Torn into Flames, and ragg'd with Wounds.
- And all he saies, a Lover drest
- In his own Blood does relish best.
-
-
- VIII.
- This is the only Banneret
-
- That ever Love created yet:
- Who though, by the Malignant Starrs,
- Forced to live in Storms and Warrs;
- Yet dying leaves a Perfume here,
- And Musick within every Ear:
- And he in Story only rules,
- In a Field Sable a Lover Gides.
-
-
-
-
- The Gallery.
-
- I.
-
- CLora come view my Soul, and tell
- Whether I have contriv'd it well.
- Now all its several lodgings lye
- Compos'd into one Gallery;
-
-
- And the great Arras-hangings, made
- Of various Faces, by are laid;
- That, for all furniture, you'l find
- Only your Picture in my Mind.
-
-
- II.
- Here Thou art painted in the Dress
- Of an Inhumane Murtheress;
- Examining upon our Hearts
- Thy fertile Shop of cruel Arts:
- Engines more keen than ever yet
- Adorned Tyrants Cabinet;
- Of which the most tormenting are
- Black Eyes, red Lips, and curled Hair.
-
-
- III.
- But, on the other side, th' art drawn
- Like to Aurora in the Dawn;
- When in the East she slumb'ring lyes,
- And stretches out her milky Thighs;
- While all the morning Quire does sing,
- And Manna falls, and Roses spring;
- And, at thy Feet, the wooing Doves
- Sit perfecting their harmless Loves.
-
-
- IV.
- Like an Enchantress here thou show'st,
- Vexing thy restless Lover's Ghost;
- And, by a Light obscure, dost rave
- Over his Entrails, in the Cave;
- Divining thence, with horrid Care,
- How long thou shalt continue fair;
- And (when inform'd) them throw'st away,
- To be the greedy Vultur's prey.
-
-
-
- V.
- But, against that, thou sit'st a float
- Like Venus in her pearly Boat.
- The Halcyons, calming all that's nigh,
- Betwixt the Air and Water fly.
- Or, if some rowling Wave appears,
- A Mass of Ambergris it bears.
- Nor blows more Wind than what may well
- Convoy the Perfume to the Smell.
-
-
- VI.
- These Pictures and a thousand more,
- Of Thee, my Gallery dost store;
- In all the Forms thou can'st invent
- Either to please me, or torment:
- For thou alone to people me,
- Art grown a num'rous Colony;
- And a Collection choicer far
- Then or White-hall's, or Mantua's were.
-
-
- VII.
- But, of these Pictures and the rest,
- That at the Entrance likes me best:
- Where the same Posture, and the Look
- Remains, with which I first was took.
- A tender Shepherdess, whose Hair
- Hangs loosely playing in the Air,
- Transplanting Flow'rs from the green Hill,
- To crown her Head, and Bosome fill.
-
-
-
-
- The Fair Singer.
-
- I.
- TO make a final conquest of all me,
- Love did compose so sweet an Enemy,
- In whom both Beauties to my death agree,
- Joyning themselves in fatal Harmony;
- That while she with her Eyes my Heart does bind,
- She with her Voice might captivate my Mind.
-
-
- II.
- I could have fled from One but singly fair:
- My dis-intangled Soul it self might save,
- Breaking the curled trammels of her hair.
- But how should I avoid to be her Slave,
- Whose subtile Art invisibly can wreath
- My Fetters of the very Air I breath?
-
-
- III.
- It had been easie fighting in some plain,
- Where Victory might hang in equal choice.
- But all resistance against her is vain,
- Who has th' advantage both of Eyes and Voice.
- And all my Forces needs must be undone,
- She having gained both the Wind and Sun.
-
-
-
- Mourning.
-
- I.
- YOU, that decipher out the Fate
- Of humane Off-springs from the Skies,
- What mean these Infants which of late
- Spring from the Starrs of Chlora's Eyes?
-
-
-
- II.
- Her Eyes confus'd, and doubled ore,
- With Tears suspended ere they flow;
- Seem bending upwards, to restore.
- To Heaven, whence it came, their Woe.
-
-
- III.
- When, molding of the watry Sphears,
- Slow drops unty themselves away,
- As if she, with those precious Tears,
- Would strow the ground where Strephon lay.
-
-
- IV.
- Yet some affirm, pretending Art,
- Her Eyes have so her Bosome drown'd,
- Only to soften near her Heart
- A place to fix another Wound.
-
-
- V.
- And, while vain Pomp does her restrain
- Within her solitary Bowr,
- She courts her self in am'rous Rain;
- Her self both Danae and the Showr.
-
-
- VI.
- Nay others, bolder, hence esteem
- Joy now so much her Master grown,
- That whatsoever does but seem
- Like Grief, is from her Windows thrown.
-
-
- VII.
- Nor that she payes, while she survives,
- To her dead Love this Tribute due;
- But casts abroad these Donatives,
- At the installing of a new.
-
-
-
- VIII.
- How wide they dream! The Indian Slaves
- That sink for Pearl through Seas profound,
- Would find her Tears yet deeper Waves
- And not of one the bottom sound.
-
-
- IX.
- I yet my silent Judgment keep,
- Disputing not what they believe:
- But sure as oft as Women weep,
- It is to be suppos'd they grieve.
-
-
-
- Daphnis and Chloe.
-
- I.
-
- DAphnis must from Chloe part:
- Now is come the dismal Hour
- That must all his Hopes devour,
- All his Labour, all his Art.
-
-
- II.
- Nature, her own Sexes foe,
- Long had taught her to be coy:
- But she neither knew t'enjoy,
- Nor yet let her Lover go.
-
-
- III.
- But, with this sad News surpriz'd,
- Soon she let that Niceness fall;
- And would gladly yield to all,
- So it had his stay compriz'd.
-
-
-
- IV.
- Nature so her self does use
- To lay by her wonted State,
- Left the World should separate;
- Sudden Parting closer glews.
-
-
- V.
- He, well read in all the wayes
- By which men their Siege maintain,
- Knew not that the Fort to gain
- Better 'twas the Siege to raise.
-
-
- VI.
- But he came so full possest
- With the Grief of Parting thence;
- That he had not so much Sence
- As to see he might be blest.
-
-
- VII.
- Till Love in her Language breath'd
- Words she never spake before;
- But then Legacies no more
- To a dying Man bequeath'd.
-
-
- VIII.
- For, Alas, the time was spent,
- Now the latest minut's run
- When poor Daphnis is undone,
- Between Joy and Sorrow rent.
-
-
- IX.
- At that Why, that Stay my Dear,
-
- His disorder'd Locks he tare;
- And with rouling Eyes did glare,
- And his cruel Fate forswear.
-
-
-
- X.
- As the Soul of one scarce dead,
- With the shrieks of Friends aghast,
- Looks distracted back in hast,
- And then streight again is fled.
-
-
- XI.
- So did wretched Daphnis look,
- Frighting her he loved most.
- At the last, this Lovers Ghost
- Thus his Leave resolved took.
-
-
- XII.
- Are my Hell and Heaven Joyn'd
- More to torture him that dies?
- Could departure not suffice,
- But that you must then grow kind?
-
-
- XIII.
- Ah my Chloe how have I
- Such a wretched minute found,
- When thy Favours should me wound
- More than all thy Cruelty?
-
-
- XIV.
- So to the condemned Wight
- The delicious Cup we fill;
- And allow him all he will,
- For his last and short Delight.
-
-
- XV.
- But I will not now begin
- Such a Debt unto my Foe;
- Nor to my Departure owe
- What my Presence could not win.
-
-
-
- XVI.
- Absence is too much alone:
- Better 'tis to go in peace,
- Than my Losses to increase
- By a late Fruition.
-
-
- XVII.
- Why should I enrich my Fate?
- 'Tis a Vanity to wear,
- For my Executioner,
- Jewels of so high a rate.
-
-
- XVIII.
- Rather I away will pine
- In a manly stubborness
- Than be fatted up express
- For the Canibal to dine.
-
-
- XIX.
- Whilst this grief does thee disarm,
- All th' Enjoyment of our Love
- But the ravishment would prove
- Of a Body dead while warm.
-
-
- XX.
- And I parting should appear
- Like the Gourmand Hebrew dead,
- While he Quailes and Manna fed,
- And does through the Desert err.
-
-
- XXI.
- Or the Witch that midnight wakes
- For the Fern, whose magick Weed
- In one minute casts the Seed,
- And invisible him makes.
-
-
-
- XXII.
- Gentler times for Love are ment:
- Who for parting pleasure strain
- Gather Roses in the rain,
- Wet themselves and spoil their Sent.
-
-
- XXIII.
- Farewel therefore all the fruit
- Which I could from Love receive:
- Joy will not with Sorrow weave,
- Nor will I this Grief pollute.
-
-
- XXIV.
- Fate I come, as dark, as sad,
- As thy Malice could desire;
- Yet bring with me all the Fire
- That Love in his Torches had.
-
-
- XXV.
- At these words away he broke;
- As who long has praying ly'n,
- To his Heads-man makes the Sign,
- And receives the parting stroke.
-
-
- XXVI.
- But hence Virgins all beware.
- Last night he with Phlogis slept;
- This night for Dorinda kept;
- And but rid to take the Air.
-
-
- XXVII.
- Yet he does himself excuse;
- Nor indeed without a Cause.
- For, according to the Lawes,
- Why did Chloe once refuse?
-
-
-
-
- The Definition of Love.
-
- I.
- MY Love is of a birth as rare
- As 'tis for object strange and high:
- It was begotten by despair
- Upon Impossibility.
-
-
- II.
- Magnanimous Despair alone
- Could show me so divine a thing,
- Where feeble Hope could ne'r have flown
- But vainly flapt its Tinsel Wing.
-
-
- III.
- And yet I quickly might arrive
- Where my extended Soul is fixt,
- But Fate does Iron wedges drive,
- And alwaies crouds it self betwixt.
-
-
- IV.
- For Fate with jealous Eye does see
- Two perfect Loves; nor lets them close:
- Their union would her ruine be,
- And her Tyrannick pow'r depose.
-
-
- V.
- And therefore her Decrees of Steel
- Us as the distant Poles have plac'd,
- (Though Loves whole World on us doth wheel)
- Not by themselves to be embrac'd.
-
-
-
- VI.
- Unless the giddy Heaven fall,
- And Earth some new Convulsion tear:
- And, us to joyn, the World should all
- Be cramp'd into a Planisphere.
-
-
-
- VII.
- As Lines so Loves oblique may well
- Themselves in every Angle greet:
- But ours so truly Paralel,
-
- Though infinite can never meet.
-
-
- VIII.
- Therefore the Love which us doth bind,
- But Fate so enviously debarrs,
- Is the Conjunction of the Mind,
- And Opposition of the Stars.
-
-
-
- The Picture of little T. C. in a Prospect of Flowers.
-
- I.
- SEE with what simplicity
- This Nimph begins her golden daies!
- In the green Grass she loves to lie,
- And there with her fair Aspect tames
- The Wilder flow'rs, and gives them names;
- But only with the Roses playes;
- And them does tell
- What Colour best becomes them, and what Smell.
-
-
-
- II.
- Who can foretel for what high cause
- This Darling of the Gods was born!
- Yet this is She whose chaster Laws
- The wanton Love shall one day fear,
- And, under her command severe,
- See his Bow broke and Ensigns tom.
- Happy, who can
- Appease this virtuous Enemy of Man!
-
-
- III.
- O then let me in time compound,
- And parly with those conquering Eyes;
- Ere they have try'd their force to wound,
- Ere, with their glancing wheels, they drive
- In Triumph over Hearts that strive,
- And them that yield but more despise.
- Let me be laid,
- Where I may see thy Glories from some Shade.
-
-
- IV.
- Mean time, whilst every verdant thing
- It self does at thy Beauty charm,
- Reform the errours of the Spring;
- Make that the Tulips may have share
- Of sweetness, seeing they are fair;
- And Roses of their thorns disarm:
- But most procure
- That Violets may a longer Age endure.
-
-
-
- V.
- But O young beauty of the Woods,
- Whom Nature courts with fruits and flow'rs,
- Gather the Flow'rs, but spare the Buds;
- Lest Flora angry at thy crime,
- To kill her Infants in their prime,
- Do quickly make th' Example Yours;
- And, ere we see,
- Nip in the blossome all our hopes and Thee.
-
-
-
- Tom May's Death.
-
- AS one put drunk into the Packet-boat,
-
- Tom May was hurry'd hence and did not know't.
- But was amaz'd on the Elysian side,
- And with an Eye uncertain, gazing wide,
- Could not determine in what place he was,
- For whence in Stevens ally Trees or Grass.
- Nor where the Popes head, nor the Mitre lay,
- Signs by which still he found and lost his way.
- At last while doubtfully he all compares,
- He saw near hand, as he imagin'd Ares.
-
- Such did he seem for corpulence and port,
- But 'twas a man much of another sort;
- 'Twas Ben that in the dusky Laurel shade
- Amongst the Chorus of old Poets laid,
- Sounding of ancient Heroes, such as were
- The Subjects Safety, and the Rebel's Fear.
- But how a double headed Vulture Eats,
-
- Brutus and Cassius the Peoples cheats.
- But seeing May he varied streight his Song,
- Gently to signifie that he was wrong.
- Cups more then civil of Emilthian wine,
- I sing (said he) and the Pharsalian Sign,
- Where the Historian of the Common-wealth
- In his own Bowels sheath'd the conquering health.
-
-
- By this May to himself and them was come,
- He found he was translated, and by whom.
- Yet then with foot as stumbling as his tongue
- Prest for his place among the Learned throng.
- But Ben, who knew not neither foe nor friend,
- Sworn Enemy to all that do pretend,
- Rose more then ever he was seen severe,
- Shook his gray locks, and his own Bayes did tear
- At this intrusion. Then with Laurel wand,
- The awful Sign of his supream command.
- At whose dread Whisk Virgil himself does quake,
- And Horace patiently its stroke does take,
- As he crowds in he whipt him ore the pate
- Like Pembroke at the Masque, and then did rate.
-
-
- Far from these blessed shades tread back agen
- Most servil wit, and Mercenary Pen.
-
- Polydore, Lucan, Allan, Vandale, Goth,
-
- Malignant Poet and Historian both.
- Go seek the novice Statesmen, and obtrude
- On them some Romane cast similitude,
- Tell them of Liberty, the Stories fine,
- Until you all grow Consuls in your wine.
- Or thou Dictator of the glass bestow
- On him the Cato, this the Cicero.
-
- Transferring old Rome hither in your talk,
- As Bethlem's House did to Loretto walk.
- Foul Architect that hadst not Eye to see
- How ill the measures of these States agree.
- And who by Romes example England lay,
- Those but to Lucan do continue May.
-
- But the nor Ignorance nor seeming good
- Misled, but malice fixt and understood.
- Because some one than thee more worthy weares
- The sacred Laurel, hence are all these teares?
- Must therefore all the World be set on flame,
- Because a Gazet writer mist his aim?
- And for a Tankard-bearing Muse must we
- As for the Basket Guelphs and Gibellines be?
-
-
- When the Sword glitters ore the Judges head,
- And fear has Coward Churchmen silenced,
- Then is the Poets time, 'tis then he drawes,
- And single fights forsaken Vertues cause.
- He, when the wheel of Empire, whirleth back,
- And though the World disjointed Axel crack,
- Sings still of ancient Rights and better Times,
- Seeks wretched good, arraigns successful Crimes.
- But thou base man first prostituted hast
- Our spotless knowledge and the studies chast.
- Apostatizing from our Arts and us,
- To turn the Chronicler to Spartacus.
-
- Yet wast thou taken hence with equal fate,
- Before thou couldst great Charles his death relate.
- But what will deeper wound thy little mind,
- Hast left surviving Davenant still behind
- Who laughs to see in this thy death renew'd,
- Right Romane poverty and gratitude.
- Poor Poet thou, and grateful Senate they,
- Who thy last Reckoning did so largely pay.
- And with the publick gravity would come,
- When thou hadst drunk thy last to lead thee home.
- If that can be thy home where Spencer lyes
- And reverend Chaucer, but their dust does rise
- Against thee, and expels thee from their side,
- As th' Eagles Plumes from other birds divide.
- Nor here thy shade must dwell, Return, Return,
- Where Sulphrey Phlegeton does ever burn.
- The Cerberus with all his Jawes shall gnash;
-
- Megaera thee with all her Serpents lash.
- Thou rivited unto Ixion's wheel
- Shalt break, and the perpetual Vulture feel.
- 'Tis just what Torments Poets ere did feign;
- Thou first Historically shouldst sustain.
-
-
- Thus by irrevocable Sentence cast,
-
- May only Master of these Revels past.
- And streight he vanisht in a Cloud of pitch,
- Such as unto the Sabboth bears the Witch.
-
-
-
-
- The Match.
-
- I.
- NAture had long a Treasure made
- Of all her choisest store;
- Fearing, when She should be decay'd,
- To beg in vain for more.
-
-
- II.
- Her Orientest Colours there,
- And Essences most pure,
- With sweetest Perfumes hoarded were,
- All as she thought secure.
-
-
- III.
- She seldom them unlock'd, or us'd,
- But with the nicest care;
- For, with one grain of them diffus'd,
- She could the World repair.
-
-
- IV.
- But likeness soon together drew
- What she did separate lay;
- Of which one perfect Beauty grew,
- And that was Celia.
-
-
-
- V.
- Love wisely had of long fore-seen
- That he must once grow old;
- And therefore stor'd a Magazine,
- To save him from the cold.
-
-
-
- VI.
- He kept the several Cells repleat
- With Nitre thrice refin'd;
- The Naphta's and the Sulphurs heat,
- And all that burns the Mind.
-
-
- VII.
- He fortifi'd the double Gate,
- And rarely thither came;
- For, with one Spark of these, he streight
- All Nature could inflame.
-
-
- VIII.
- Till, by vicinity so long,
- A nearer Way they sought;
- And, grown magnetically strong,
- Into each other wrought.
-
-
- IX.
- Thus all his fewel did unite
- To make one fire high:
- None ever burn'd so hot, so bright:
- And Celia that am I.
-
-
- X.
- So we alone the happy rest,
- Whilst all the World is poor,
- And have within our Selves possest
- All Love's and Nature's store.
-
-
-
-
- The Mower against Gardens.
-
- LUxurious Man, to bring his Vice in use,
- Did after him the World seduce:
- And from the fields the Flow'rs and Plants allure,
- Where Nature was most plain and pure.
- He first enclos'd within the Gardens square
- A dead and standing pool of Air:
- And a more luscious Earth for them did knead,
- Which stupifi'd them while it fed.
- The Pink grew then as double as his Mind;
- The nutriment did change the kind.
- With strange perfumes he did the Roses taint.
- And Flow'rs themselves were taught to paint.
- The Tulip, white, did for complexion seek;
- And learn'd to interline its cheek:
- Its Onion root they then so high did hold,
- That one was for a Meadow sold.
- Another World was search'd, through Oceans new.
- To find the Marvel of Peru.
-
- And yet these Rarities might be allow'd,
- To Man, that sov'raign thing and proud;
- Had he not dealt between the Bark and Tree,
- Forbidden mixtures there to see.
- No Plant now knew the Stock from which it came;
- He grafts upon the Wild the Tame:
- That the uncertain and adult rate fruit
- Might put the Palate in dispute.
- His green Seraglio has its Eunuchs too;
- Lest any Tyrant him out-doe.
- And in the Cherry he does Nature vex,
- To procreate without a Sex.
- 'Tis all enforc'd; the Fountain and the Grot;
- While the sweet Fields do lye forgot:
-
-
- Where willing Nature does to all dispence
- A wild and fragrant Innocence:
- And Fauns and Faryes do the Meadows till,
- More by their presence then their skill.
- Their Statues polish'd by some ancient hand,
- May to adorn the Gardens stand:
- But howso'ere the Figures do excel,
- The Gods themselves with us do dwell.
-
-
-
-
- Damon the Mower.
-
- I.
- HEark how the Mower Damon Sung,
- With love of Juliana stung!
- While ev'ry thing did seem to paint
- The Scene more fit for his complaint.
- Like her fair Eyes the day was fair;
- But scorching like his am'rous Care.
- Sharp like his Sythe his Sorrow was,
- And wither'd like his Hopes the Grass.
-
-
- II.
- Oh what unusual Heats are here,
- Which thus our Sun-burn'd Meadows sear!
- The Grass-hopper its pipe gives ore;
- And hamstring'd Frogs can dance no more.
- But in the brook the green Frog wades;
- And Grass-hoppers seek out the shades.
- Only the Snake, that kept within,
- Now glitters in its second skin.
-
-
- III.
- This heat the Sun could never raise,
- Nor Dog-star so inflame's the dayes.
-
-
- It from an higher Beauty grow'th,
- Which burns the Fields and Mower both:
- Which made the Dog, and makes the Sun
- Hotter then his own Phaeton.
-
- Not July causeth these Extremes,
- But Juliana's scorching beams.
-
-
- IV.
- Tell me where I may pass the Fires
- Of the hot day, or hot desires.
- To what cool Cave shall I descend,
- Or to what gelid Fountain bend?
- Alas! I look for Ease in vain,
- When Remedies themselves complain.
- No moisture but my Tears do rest,
- Nor Cold but in her Icy Breast.
-
-
- V.
- How long wilt Thou, fair Shepheardess,
- Esteem me, and my Presents less?
- To Thee the harmless Snake I bring,
- Disarmed of its teeth and sting.
- To Thee Chameleons changing-hue,
- And Oak leaves tipt with hony due.
- Yet Thou ungrateful hast not sought
- Nor what they are, nor who them brought.
-
-
- VI.
- I am the Mower Damon, known
- Through all the Meadows I have mown.
- On me the Morn her dew distills
- Before her darling Daffadils.
- And, if at Noon my toil me heat,
- The Sun himself lick's off my Sweat.
- While, going home, the Ev'ning sweet
- In cowslip-water bathes my feet.
-
-
-
- VII.
- What, though the piping Shepherd stock
- The plains with an unnum'red Flock,
- This Sithe of mine discovers wide
- More ground then all his Sheep do hide.
- With this the golden fleece I shear
- Of all these Closes ev'ry Year.
- And though in Wooll more poor then they,
- Yet am I richer far in Hay.
-
-
- VIII.
- Nor am I so deform'd to sight,
- If in my Sithe I looked right;
- In which I see my Picture done,
- As in a crescent Moon the Sun.
- The deathless Fairyes take me oft
- To lead them in their Danses soft:
- And, when I tune my self to sing,
- About me they contract their Ring.
-
-
- IX.
- How happy might I still have mow'd,
- Had not Love here his Thistles sow'd!
- But now I all the day complain,
- Joyning my Labour to my Pain;
- And with my Sythe cut down the Grass,
- Yet still my Grief is where it was:
- But, when the Iron blunter grows,
- Sighing I whet my Sythe and Woes.
-
-
- X.
- While thus he threw his Elbow round,
- Depopulating all the Ground,
- And, with his whistling Sythe, does cut
- Each stroke between the Earth and Root,
-
-
- The edged Stele by careless chance
- Did into his own Ankle glance;
- And there among the Grass fell down,
- By his own Sythe, the Mower mown.
-
-
- XI.
- Alas! said He, these hurts are slight
- To those that dye by Loves despight.
- With Shepherds-purse, and Clowns-all-heal,
- The Blood I stanch, and Wound I seal.
- Only for him no Cure is found,
- Whom Julianas Eyes do wound.
- 'Tis death alone that this must do:
- For Death thou art a Mower too.
-
-
-
- The Mower to the Glo-Worms.
-
- I.
- YE living Lamps, by whose dear light
- The Nightingale does sit so late,
- And studying all the Summer-night,
- Her matchless Songs does meditate;
-
-
- II.
- Ye Country Comets, that portend
- No War, nor Princes funeral,
- Shining unto no higher end
- Then to presage the Grasses sall;
-
-
- III.
- Ye Glo-worms, whose officious Flame
- To wandring Mowers shows the way,
- That in the Night have lost their aim,
- And after foolish Fires do stray;
-
-
-
- IV.
- Your courteous Lights in vain you wast,
- Since Juliana here is come,
- For She my Mind hath so displac'd
- That I shall never find my home.
-
-
-
- The Mower's Song.
-
- I.
- MY Mind was once the true survey
- Of all these Medows fresh and gay;
- And in the greenness of the Grass
- Did see its Hopes as in a Glass;
- When Juliana came, and She
- What I do to the Grass, does to my Thoughts and Me.
-
-
- II.
- But these, while I with Sorrow pine,
- Grew more luxuriant still and fine;
- That not one Blade of Grass you spy'd,
- But had a Flower on either side;
- When Juliana came, and She
- What I do to the Grass, does to my Thoughts and Me.
-
-
- III.
- Unthankful Medows, could you so
- A fellowship so true forego,
- And in your gawdy May-games meet,
- While I lay trodden under feet?
- When Juliana came, and She
- What I do to the Grass, does to my Thoughts and Me.
-
-
-
- IV.
- But what you in Compassion ought,
- Shall now by my Revenge be wrought:
- And Flow'rs, and Grass, and I and all,
- Will in one common Ruine fall.
- For Juliana comes, and She
- What I do to the Grass, does to my Thoughts and Me.
-
-
- V.
- And thus, ye Meadows, which have been
- Companions of my thoughts more green,
- Shall now the Heraldry become
- With which I shall adorn my Tomb;
- For Juliana comes, and She
- What I do to the Grass, does to my Thoughts and Me.
-
-
-
- Ametas and Thestylis making Hay-Ropes.
-
-
- I.
- Ametas.
- THink'st Thou that this Love can stand,
- Whilst Thou still dost say me nay?
- Love unpaid does soon disband:
- Love binds Love as Hay binds Hay.
-
-
- II.
- Thestylis.
- Think'st Thou that this Rope would twine
- If we both should turn one way?
- Where both parties so combine,
- Neither Love will twist nor Hay.
-
-
-
- III.
- Ametas.
- Thus you vain Excuses find,
- Which your selve and us delay:
- And Love tyes a Womans Mind
- Looser then with Ropes of Hay.
-
-
- IV.
- Thestylis.
- What you cannot constant hope
- Must be taken as you may.
-
-
- V.
- Ametas.
- Then let's both lay by our Rope,
- And go kiss within the Hay.
-
-
-
- Musicks Empire.
-
- I.
- FIrst was the World as one great Cymbal made,
- Where Jarring Windes to infant Nature plaid.
- All Musick was a solitary sound,
- To hollow Rocks and murm'ring Fountains bound.
-
-
- II.
-
- Jubal first made the wilder Notes agree;
- And Jubal tun'd Musicks Jubilee:
-
- He call'd the Ecchoes from their sullen Cell,
- And built the Organs City where they dwell.
-
-
-
- III.
- Each sought a consort in that lovely place;
- And Virgin Trebles wed the manly Base.
- From whence the Progeny of numbers new
- Into harmonious Colonies withdrew.
-
-
- IV.
- Some to the Lute, some to the Viol went,
- And others chose the Cornet eloquent.
- These practising the Wind, and those the Wire,
- To sing Mens Triumphs, or in Heavens quire.
-
-
- V.
- Then Musick, the Mosaique of the Air,
- Did of all these a solemn noise prepare:
- With which She gain'd the Empire of the Ear,
- Including all between the Earth and Sphear.
-
-
- VII.
- Victorious sounds▪ yet here your Homage do
- Unto a gentler Conqueror then you;
- Who though He flies the Musick of his praise,
- Would with you Heavens Hallelujahs raise.
-
-
-
- The Garden.
-
- I.
- HOW vainly men themselves amaze
- To win the Palm, the Oke, or Bayes;
- And their uncessant Labours see
- Crown'd from some single Herb or Tree,
- Whose short and narrow verged Shade
- Does prudently their Toyles upbraid;
-
-
- While all Flow'rs and all Trees do close
- To weave the Garlands of repose.
-
-
- II.
- Fair quiet, have I found thee here,
- And Innocence thy Sister dear!
- Mistaken long, I sought you then
- In busie Companies of Men.
- Your sacred Plants, if here below,
- Only among the Plants will grow.
- Society is all but rude,
- To this delicious Solitude.
-
-
- III.
- No white nor red was ever seen
- So am'rous as this lovely green.
- Fond Lovers, cruel as their Flame,
- Cut in these Trees their Mistress name.
- Little, Alas, they know, or heed,
- How far these Beauties Hers exceed!
- Fair Trees! where s'eer you barkes I wound,
- No Name shall but your own be found.
-
-
- IV.
- When we have run our Passions heat,
- Love hither makes his best retreat.
- The Gods, that mortal Beauty chase,
- Still in a Tree did end their race.
-
- Apollo hunted Daphne so,
- Only that She might Laurel grow.
- And Pan did after Syrinx speed,
- Not as a Nymph, but for a Reed.
-
-
- V.
- What wond'rous Life in this I lead!
- Ripe Apples drop about my head;
-
-
- The Luscious Clusters of the Vine
- Upon my Mouth do crush their Wine;
- The Nectaren, and curious Peach,
- Into my hands themselves do reach;
- Stumbling on Melons, as I pass,
- Insnar'd with Flow'rs, I fall on Grass.
-
-
- VI.
- Mean while the Mind, from pleasure less,
- Withdraws into its happiness:
- The Mind, that Ocean where each kind
- Does streight its own resemblance find;
- Yet it creates, transcending these,
- Far other Worlds, and other Seas;
- Annihilating all that's made
- To a green Thought in a green Shade.
-
-
- VII.
- Here at the Fountains sliding foot,
- Or at some Fruit-trees mossy root,
- Casting the Bodies Vest aside,
- My Soul into the boughs does glide:
- There like a Bird it sits, and sings,
- Then whets, and combs its silver Wings;
- And, till prepar'd for longer flight,
- Waves in its Plumes the various Light.
-
-
- VIII.
- Such was that happy Garden-state,
- While Man there walk'd without a Mate:
- After a Place so pure, and sweet,
- What other Help could yet be meet!
- But 'twas beyond a Mortal's share
- To wander solitary there:
- Two Paradises 'twere in one
- To live in Paradise alone.
-
-
-
- IX.
- How well the skilful Gardner drew
- Of flow'rs and herbes this Dial new;
- Where from above the milder Sun
- Does through a fragrant Zodiack run;
- And, as it works, th' industrious Bee
- Computes its time as well as we.
- How could such sweet and wholsome Hours
- Be reckon'd but with herbs and flow'rs!
-
-
-
-
- Hortus.
-
- QUisnam adeo, mortale genus, praecordia versat?
- Heu Palmae, Laurique furor, vel simplieis Herbae!
- Arbor ut indomitos ornet vix una labores;
- Tempora nec foliis praecingat tota malignis.
- Dum simul implexi, tranquillae ad serta Quiaetis,
- Omnigeni coeunt Flores, integraque Sylva.
-
-
- Alma Quies, teneo te! & te Germana Quietis
- Simplicitas! Vos ergo diu per Templa, per urbes,
- Quaesivi, Regum per que alta Palatia frustra.
- Sed vos Hotrorum per opaca silentia longe
- Celarant Plantae virides, & concolor Umbra.
-
-
- O! mihi si vestros liceat violasse recessus.
- Erranti, lasso, & vitae melioris anhelo,
- Municipem servate novum, votoque potitum,
- Frondosae Cives optate in florea Regna.
-
-
- Me quoque, vos Musae, &, te conscie testor Apollo,
-
- Non Armenta juvant hominum, Circique boatus,
- Mugitusve Fori; sed me Penetralia veris,
- Horroresque trahunt muti, & Consortia sola.
-
-
- Virgineae quem non suspendit Gratia formae?
- Quam candore Nives vincentum, Ostrumque rubore,
- Vestra tamen viridis superet (me judice) Virtus.
- Nec foliis certare Comae, nec Brachia ramis,
-
-
- Nec possint tremulos voces aequare susurros.
-
-
- Ab quoties saevos vidi (quis credat?) Amantes
- Sculpentes Dominae potiori in cortice nomen?
- Nec puduit truncis inscribere vulner a sacris.
- Ast Ego, si vestras unquam temer a vero stirpes,
- Nulla Neaera, Chloe, Faustina, Corynna, legetur
- In proprio sed quaeque libro signabitur Arbos.
- O charae Platanus, Cyparissus, Populus, Ulnus!
-
-
-
- Hic Amor, exutis crepidatus inambulat alis,
- Enerves arcus & stridula tela reponens,
- Invertitque faces, nec se cupit usque timeri;
- Aut experrectus jacet, indormitque pharetrae;
- Non auditurus quanquam Cytherea vocarit;
- Nequitias referuut nec somnia vana priores.
-
-
- Laetantur Superi, defer vescente Tyranno,
- Et licet experti toties Nymphasque Deasque,
-
-
- Arbore nunc melius potiuntur quisque cupita.
-
- Jupiter annosam, neglecta conjuge, Quercum
-
- Deperit; haud alia doluit sic pellice Juno.
-
-
- Lemniacum temerant vestigia nulla Cubile,
- Nec Veneris Mavors meminit si Fraxinus adsit.
- Formosae pressit Daphnes vestigia Phaebus
-
- Ut fieret Laurus; sed nil quaesiverat ultra.
- Capripes & peteret quòd Pan Syringa fugacem,
- Hoc erat ut Calamum posset reperire Sonorum.
-
-
-
- Desunt multa
- Nec tu, Opifex horti, grato sine carmine abibis:
- Qui brevibus plantis, & laeto flore, notasti
- Crescentes horas, atque intervalla diei.
- Sol ibi candidior fragrantia Signa pererrat;
- Proque truci Tauro, stricto pro forcipe Cancri,
-
- Securis violaeque rosaeque allabitur umbris.
- Sedula quin & Apis, mellito intenta labori,
- Horologo sua pensa thymo Signare videtur.
- Temporis O suaves lapsus! O Otia sana!
- O Herbis dignae numerari & Floribus Horae!
-
-
-
-
- To a Gentleman that only upon the sight of the Author's writing, had given a Character of his Person and Judgment of his Fortune.
-
- Illustrissimo Vero Domino Lanceloto Josepho de Maniban Grammatomantis.
-
- QUis posthac chartae committat sensa loquaci,
- Si sua crediderit Fata subesse stylo?
- Conscia si prodat Seribentis Litera sortem,
- Quicquid & in vita plus latuisse velit?
- Flexibus in calami tamen omnia sponte leguntur:
- Quod non significant Verba, Figura notat.
-
- Bellerophonteas signat sibi quisque Tabellas;
- Ignaramque Manum Spiritus intus agit.
- Nil praeter solitum sapiebat Epistola nostra,
- Exemplumque meae Simplicitatis erat.
- Fabula jucundos qualis delectat Amicos;
- Urbe, lepore, novis, carmine tota scatens.
- Hic tamen interpres quo non securior alter,
- (Non res, non voces, non ego notus ei)
- Rimatur fibras notularum cautus Aruspex,
- Scripturaeque inhians consulit extameae.
- Inde statim vitae casus, animique recessus
- Explicat; (haud Genio plura liquere putem.)
- Distribuit totum nostris eventibus orbem,
- Et quo me rapiat cardine Sphaera docet.
- Quae Sol oppositus, quae Mars adversa minetur,
-
- Jupiter aut ubi me, Luna, Venusque juvent.
- Ut trucis intentet mihi vulnera Cauda Draconis;
-
- Vipereo levet ut vulnera more Caput.
- Hinc mihi praeteriti rationes atque futuri
- Elicit; Astrologus certior Astronomo.
-
-
-
- Ut conjecturas nequeam discernere vero,
- Historiae superet sed Genitura fidem.
- Usque adeo caeli respondet pagina nostrae,
- Astrorum & nexus syllaba scripta refert.
- Scilicet & toti subsunt Oracula mundo,
- Dummodo tot foliis una Sibylla foret.
- Partum, Fortunae mater Natura, propinquum
- Mille modis monstrat mille per indicia:
- Ingentemque Uterum qua mole Puerpera solvat;
- Vivit at in praesens maxima pars hominum.
- Ast Tu sorte tuâ gaude Celeberrime Vatum;
- Scribe, sed haud superest qui tua fata legat.
- Nostra tamen si fas praesagia jungere vestris,
- Quo magis inspexti sydera spernis humum.
- Et, nisi stellarum fueris divina propago,
-
- Naupliada credam te Palamede satum.
- Qui dedit ex avium scriptoria signa volatu,
- Sydereaque idem nobilis arte fuit.
- Hinc utriusque tibi cognata scientia crevit,
- Nec minus augurium Litera quam dat Avis.
-
-
-
-
-
- Fleckno, an English Priest at Rome.
-
-
- OBlig'd by frequent visits of this man,
- Whom as Priest, Poet, and Musician,
- I for some branch of Melchizedeck took,
- (Though he derives himself from my Lord Brooke)
-
- I sought his Lodging; which is at the Sign
- Of the sad Pelican; Subject divine
- For Poetry: There three Stair-Cases high,
- Which signifies his triple property,
- I found at last a Chamber, as 'twas said,
- But seem'd a Coffin set on the Stairs head.
- Not higher then Seav'n, nor larger then three feet;
- Only there was nor Seeling, nor a Sheet,
-
-
- Save that th' ingenious Door did as you come
- Turn in, and shew to Wainscot half the Room.
- Yet of his State no man could have complain'd;
- There being no Bed where he entertain'd:
- And though within one Cell so narrow pent,
- He'd Stanza's for a whole Appartement.
-
-
-
- Straight without further information,
- In hideous verse, he, and a dismal tone,
- Begins to exercise; as if I were
- Possest; and sure the Devil brought me there.
- But I, who now imagin'd my self brought
- To my last Tryal, in a serious thought
- Calm'd the disorders of my youthful Breast,
- And to my Martyrdom prepared Rest.
- Only this frail Ambition did remain,
- The last distemper of the sober Brain,
- That there had been some present to assure
- The future Ages how I did indure:
- And how I, silent, turn'd my burning Ear
- Towards the Verse; and when that could n
- Held him the other; and unchanged yet,
- Ask'd still for more, and pray'd him to repeat:
- Till the Tyrant, weary to persecute,
- Left off, and try'd t' allure me with his Lute.
-
-
- Now as two Instruments, to the same key
- Being tun'd by Art, if the one touched be
- The other opposite as soon replies,
- Mov'd by the Air and hidden Sympathies;
- So while he with his gouty Fingers craules
- Over the Lute, his murmuring Belly calls,
- Whose hungry Guts to the same streightness twin'd
- In Echo to the trembling Strings repin'd.
-
-
- I, that perceiv'd now what his Musick ment,
- Ask'd civilly if he had eat this Lent.
- He answered yes; with such, and such an one.
- For he has this of gen'rous, that alone
- He never feeds; save only when he tryes
- With gristly Tongue to dart the passing Flyes.
-
-
- I ask'd if he eat flesh. And he, that was
- So hungry that though ready to say Mass
-
- Would break his fast before, said he was Sick,
- And th' Ordinance was only Politick.
- Nor was I longer to invite him: Scant
- Happy at once to make him Protestant,
- And Silent. Nothing now Dinner stay'd
- But till he had himself a Body made.
- I mean till he were drest: for else so thin
- He stands, as if he only fed had been
- With consecrated Wafers: and the Host
-
- Hath sure more flesh and blood then he can boast.
- This Basso Relievo of a Man,
- Who as a Camel tall, yet easly can
- The Needles Eye thread without any stich,
- (His only impossible is to be rich)
- Lest his too suttle Body, growing rare,
- Should leave his Soul to wander in the Air,
- He therefore circumscribes himself in rimes;
- And swaddled in's own papers seaven times,
- Wears a close Jacket of poetick Buff,
- With which he doth his third Dimension Stuff.
- Thus armed underneath, he over all
- Does make a primitive Sotana fall;
- And above that yet casts an antick Cloak,
- Worn at the first Counsel of Antioch;
-
- Which by the Jews long hid, and Disesteem'd,
- He heard of by Tradition, and redeem'd.
- But were he not in this black habit deck't,
- This half transparent Man would soon reflect
- Each colour that he past by; and be seen,
- As the Chamelion, yellow, blew, or green.
-
-
- He drest, and ready to disfurnish now
- His Chamber, whose compactness did allow
- No empty place for complementing doubt,
- But who came last is forc'd first to go out;
- I meet one on the Stairs who made me stand,
- Stopping the passage, and did him demand:
-
-
- I answer'd he is here Sir; but you see
- You cannot pass to him but thorow me.
- He thought himself affronted; and reply'd,
- I whom the Pallace never has deny'd
- Will make the way here; I said Sir you'l do
- Me a great favour, for I seek to go.
- He gathring fury still made sign to draw;
- But himself there clos'd in a Scabbard saw
- As narrow as his Sword's; and I, that was
- Delightful, said there can no Body pass
- Except by penetration hither, where
- Two make a crowd, nor can three Persons here
- Consist but in one substance. Then, to fit
- Our peace, the Priest said I too had some wit:
- To prov't, I said, the place doth us invite
- But its own narrowness, Sir, to unite.
- He ask'd me pardon; and to make me way
- Went down, as I him follow'd to obey.
- But the propitiatory Priest had straight
- Oblig'd us, when below, to celebrate
- Together our attonement: so increas'd
- Betwixt us two the Dinner to a Feast.
-
-
- Let it suffice that we could eat in peace;
- And that both Poems did and Quarrels cease
- During the Table; though my new made Friend
- Did, as he threatned, ere 'twere long intend
- To be both witty and valiant: I loth,
- Said 'twas too late, he was already both.
-
-
- But now, Alas, my first Tormentor came,
- Who satisfy'd with eating, but not tame
- Turns to recite; though Judges most severe
- After th' Assizes dinner mild appear,
- And on full stomach do condemn but few:
- Yet he more strict my sentence doth renew;
- And draws out of the black box of his Breast
- Ten quire of paper in which he was drest.
- Yet that which was a greater cruelty
- Then Nero's Poem he calls charity:
-
-
- And so the Pelican at his door hung
- Picks out the tender bosome to its young.
-
-
- Of all his Poems there he stands ungirt
- Save only two foul copies for his shirt:
- Yet these he promises as soon as clean.
- But how I loath'd to see my Neighbour glean
- Those papers, which he pilled from within
- Like white fleaks rising from a Leaper's skin!
- More odious then those raggs which the French youth
- At ordinaries after dinner show'th,
- When they compare their Chancres and Poulains.
-
- Yet he first kist them, and after takes pains
- To read; and then, because he understood (good.
- Not one Word, thought and swore that they were
- But all his praises could not now appease
- The provok't Author, whom it did displease
- To hear his Verses, by so just a curse,
- That were ill made condemn'd to be read worse:
- And how (impossible) he made yet more
- Absurdityes in them then were before.
- For he his untun'd voice did fall or raise
- As a deaf Man upon a Viol playes,
- Making the half points and the periods run
- Confus'der then the atomes in the Sun.
- Thereat the Poet swell'd, with anger full,
- And roar'd out, like Perillus in's own Bull;
-
-
- Sir you read false. That any one but you
- Should know the contrary. Whereat, I, now
- Made Mediator, in my room, said, Why?
- To say that you read false Sir is no Lye.
- Thereat the waxen Youth relented straight;
- But saw with sad dispair that was too late.
- For the disdainful Poet was retir'd
- Home, his most furious Satyr to have fir'd
- Against the Rebel; who, at this struck dead,
- Wept bitterly as disinherited.
- Who should commend his Mistress now? Or who
- Praise him? both difficult indeed to do
-
-
- With truth. I counsell'd him to go in time,
- Ere the fierce Poets anger turn'd to rime.
-
-
- He hasted; and I, finding my self free,
- As one scap't strangely from Captivity,
- Have made the Chance be painted; and go now
- To hang it in Saint Peter's for a Vow.
-
-
-
- Dignissimo suo Amico Doctori Wittie. De Translatione Vulgi Errorum D. Primrosii.
-
-
- NEmpe sic innumero succrescunt agmine libri,
- Saepia vix toto ut jam natet una mari.
- Fortius assidui surgunt a vulnere proeli:
- Quoque magis pressa est, auctior Hydra redit.
- Heu quibus Anticyris, quibus est sanabilis herbis
- Improba scribendi pestis, avarus amor!
- India sola tenet tanti medicamina morbi,
- Dicitur & nostris ingemuisse malis.
- Utile Tabacci dedit illa miserta venenum,
- Acci veratro quod meliora potest.
- Jamque vides olidas libris fumare popinas:
- Naribus O doctis quam pretiosus odor!
- Hâc ego praecipua credo herbam dote placere,
- Hinc tuus has nebulas Doctor in astra vehit.
- Ah mea quid tandem facies timidissima charta?
- Exequias Siticen jam parat usque tuas.
- Hunc subeas librum Sansti ceu limen asyli,
- Quem neque delebit flamma, nec ira Jovis.
-
-
-
- To his worthy Friend Doctor Witty upon his Translation of the Popular Errors.
-
- SIT further, and make room for thine own fame,
- Where just desert enrolles thy honour'd Name
-
-
- The good Interpreter. Some in this task
- Take of the Cypress vail, but leave a mask,
- Changing the Latine, but do more obscure
- That sence in English which was bright and pure.
- So of Translators they are Authors grown,
- For ill Translators make the Book their own.
- Others do strive with words and forced phrase
- To add such lustre, and so many rayes,
- That but to make the Vessel shining, they
- Much of the precious Metal rub away.
- He is Translations thief that addeth more,
- As much as he that taketh from the Store
- Of the first Author. Here he maketh blots
- That mends; and added beauties are but spots.
-
-
-
- Caelia whose English doth more richly flow
- Then Tagus, purer then dissolved snow,
- And sweet as are her lips that speak it, she
- Now learns the tongues of France and Italy;
-
- But she is Caelia still: no other grace
- But her own smiles commend that lovely face;
- Her native beauty's not Italianated,
- Nor her chast mind into the French translated:
- Her thoughts are English, though her sparkling wit
- With other Language doth them fitly fit.
-
-
- Translators learn of her: but stay I slide
- Down into Error with the Vulgar tide;
- Women must not teach here: the Doctor doth
- Stint them to Cawdles Almond-milk, and Broth.
- Now I reform, and surely so will all
- Whose happy Eyes on thy Translation fall,
- I see the people hastning to thy Book,
- Liking themselves the worse the more they look,
- And so disliking, that they nothing see
- Now worth the liking, but thy Book and thee.
- And (if I Judgment have) I censure right;
- For something guides my hand that I must write.
- You have Translations statutes best fulfil'd.
- That handling neither sully nor would guild.
-
-
-
-
- On Mr. Milton's Paradise lost.
-
- WHen I beheld the Poet blind, yet bold,
- In slender Book his vast Design unfold,
-
- Messiah Crown'd, Gods Reconcil'd Decree,
- Rebelling Angels, the Forbidden Tree,
- Heav'n, Hell, Earth, Chaos, All; the Argument
- Held me a while misdoubting his Intent,
- That he would ruine (for I saw him strong)
- The sacred Truths to Fable and old Song,
- (So Sampson groap'd the Temples Posts in spight)
- The World o'rewhelming to revenge his Sight.
-
-
- Yet as I read, soon growing less severe,
- I lik'd his Project, the success did fear;
- Through that wide Field how he his way should find
- O're which lame Faith leads Understanding blind;
- Lest he perplext the things he would explain,
- And what was easie he should render vain.
-
-
- Or if a Work so infinite he spann'd,
- Jealous I was that some less skilful hand
- (Such as disquiet alwayes what is well,
- And by ill imitating would excell)
- Might hence presume the whole Creations day
- To change in Scenes, and show it in a Play.
-
-
- Pardon me, mighty Poet, nor despise
- My causeless, yet not impious, surmise.
- But I am now convinc'd, and none will dare
- Within thy Labours to pretend a Share.
- Thou hast not miss'd one thought that could be fit,
- And all that was improper dost omit:
- So that no room is here for Writers left,
- But to detect their Ignorance or Theft.
-
-
- That Majesty which through thy Work doth Reign
- Draws the Devout, deterring the Profane.
-
-
- And things divine thou treats of in such state
- As them preserves, and Thee inviolate.
- At once delight and horrour on us seize,
- Thou singst with so much gravity and ease;
- And above humane flight dost soar aloft,
- With Plume so strong, so equal, and so soft.
- The Bird nam'd from that Paradise you sing
- So never Flags, but alwaies keeps on Wing.
-
-
- Where couldst thou Words of such a compass find?
- Whence furnish such a vast expense of Mind?
- Just Heav'n Thee, like Tiresias, to requite,
- Rewards with Prophesie thy loss of Sight.
-
-
- Well might thou scorn thy Readers to allure
- With tinkling Rhime, of thy own Sense secure;
- While the Town-Bays writes all the while and spells,
- And like a Pack-Horse tires without his Bells.
- Their Fancies like our bushy Points appear,
- The Poets tag them; we for fashion wear.
- I too transported by the Mode offend,
- And while I meant to Praise thee, must Commend.
- Thy verse created like thy Theme sublime,
- In Number, Weight, and Measure, needs not Rhime.
-
-
-
-
- Inscribenda Luparae.
-
- COnsurgit Luparae Dum non imitabile culmen,
-
- Escuriale ingens uritur invidia.
-
-
- Aliter.
- Regibus haec posuit Ludovicus Templa futuris;
- Gratior ast ipsi Castra fuere Domus.
-
-
- Aliter.
- Hanc sibi Sydeream Ludovicus condidit Aulam;
- Nec se propterea credidit esse Deum.
-
-
-
-
- Aliter.
- Atria miraris, summotumque Aethera fecto;
- Nec tamen in toto est arctior Orbe Casa.
-
-
- Aliter.
- Instituente domum Ludovico, prodiit Orbis;
- Sic tamen angustos incolit ille Lares.
-
-
- Aliter.
- Sunt geminae Jani Portae, sunt Tecta Tonantis;
-
- Nec deerit Numen dum Ludovicus adect.
-
-
-
- Upon an Eunuch; a Poet.
-
- Fragment.
- NEC sterilem te crede; licet, mulieribus exul,
- Falcem virginiae nequeas immitere messi,
- Et nostro peccare modo. Tibi Fama perennè
- Praegnabit; rapiesque novem de monse Sorores;
- Et pariet modulos Echo repetita Nepotes.
-
-
-
- In the French translation of Lucan, by Monsieur De Brebeuf are these Verses.
-
- C'Est de luy que nous vient cet Art ingenieux
- De peindre la Parole, et deparler aua Yeux;
- Et, parles traits divers de figures tracees,
- Donner de la couleur et du corps aux pensees.
-
-
-
- Translated.
- Facundis dedit ille notis, interprete plumas
- Insinuare sonos oculis, & pingere voces,
- Et mentem chartis, oculis impertiit aurem.
-
-
-
- Senec. Traged. ex Thyeste Chor. 2.
-
- Stet quicunque volet potens
- Aulae culmine lubrico &c.
-
-
-
- Translated.
- CLimb at Court for me that will
- Tottering favors Pinacle;
- All I seek is to lye still.
- Settled in some secret Nest
- In calm Leisure let me rest;
- And far of the publick Stage
- Pass away my silent Age.
- Thus when without noise, unknown,
- I have liv'd out all my span,
- I shall dye, without a groan,
- An old honest Country man.
- Who expos'd to others Ey's,
- Into his own Heart ne'r pry's,
- Death to him's a Strange surprise
-
-
-
-
- Janae Oxenbrigiae Epitaphium.
-
- JUxta hoc Marmor, breve Mortalitatis speculum, Exuviae jacent Janae Oxenbrigiae. Quae nobili, si id dixisse attinet, paterno Butleriorum, materno Claveringiorum genere orta, Johanni Oxenbrigio Collegii hujus socio nupsit. Prosperorum deinceps et adversorum ei Consors fidelissima. Quem, Religionis causa oberrantem, Usque ad incertam Bermudae Insulam secuta: Nec Mare vastum, nec tempestates horridas exhorruit: sed, delicato Corpore, quos non Labores ex antlavit? quae non, obivit Itinera? Tantum Mariti potuit Amor, sed magis Dei. Tandem cum, (redeunte conscientiarum libertate) in patriam redua, magnam partem Angliae cum Marito pervagata; qui laetus undequaque de novo disseminabat Evangelium. Ipsa maximum ministerii sui decus, & antiqua modestia eandem animarum capturam domi, quam ille foris exercens, hic tandem divino nutu cum illo consedit: Ubi pietatis erga Deum, conjugalis & materni affectus, erga proximos charitatis, omnium denique Virtutum Christianarum Exemplum degebat inimitabile. Donec quinque annorum hydrope laborans, per lenta incrementa ultra humani corporis modum intumuit. Anima interim spei plena, fidei ingens; Stagnanti humorum diluvio tranquille vehebatur. Et tandem, post 37. peregrinationis annos, 23 Apr. Anno 1658. Evolavit ad Coelos, tanquam Columba ex Arca Corporis: Cujus semper dulci, semper amarae memoriae, Moerens Maritus posuit. Flentibus juxta quatuor liberis, Daniele, Bathshua, Elizabetha, Maria.
-
-
-
- Johannis Trottii Epitaphium.
-
- Charissimo Filio &c.
-
- Pater & Mater &c.
-
- funebrem tabulam curavimus.
-
-
- AGe Marmor, & pro solita tua humanitate,
- (Ne inter Parentum Dolorem & Modestiam
- Supprimantur praeclari Juvenis meritae laudes)
- Effare Johannis Trotii breve Elogium.
- Erat ille totus Candidus, Politus, Solidus,
- Ultra vel Parii Marmoris metaphoram,
- Et Gemmâ Sculpi dignus, non Lapide:
- E Schola Wintoniensi ad Academiam Oxonii,
-
- Inde ad Interioris Templi Hospitium gradum fecerat:
- Summae Spei, Summae Indolis, ubique vestigia reliquit;
- Supra Sexum Venustus,
- Supra Aetatem Doctus,
- Ingeniosus supra Fidem.
- Et jam vicesimum tertium annum inierat,
- Pulcherrimo undequaque vitae prospectu,
- Quem Mors immatura obstruxit.
- Ferales Pustulae Corpus tam affabre factum
- Ludibrio habuere, & vivo incrustarunt sepulchro.
- Anima evasit Libera, Aeterna, Faelix,
- Et morti insultans
- Mortalem Sortem cum Foenore accipiet.
- Nos interim, meri vespillones,
- Parentes Filia extra ordinem Parentantes,
- Subtus in gentilitio crypta reliquias composuimus,
- Ipsi eandem ad Dei nutum subituri.
- Natus est &c. Mortuus &c. reviviscet
- Primo Resurrectionis.
-
-
-
-
- TO Sir John Trott,
-
- Honoured Sir,
-
- I Have not that vanity to believe, if you weigh your late Loss by the common ballance, that any thing I can write to you should lighten your resentments: nor if you measure things by the rule of Christianity, do I think it needful to comfort you in your own duty and your Sons happiness. Only having a great esteem and affection for you, and the grateful memory of him that is departed being still green and fresh upon my Spirit, I cannot forbear to inquire how you have stood the second shock at your sad meeting of Friends in the Country. I know that the very sight of those who have been witnesses of our better Fortune, doth but serve to reinforce a Calamity. I know the contagion of grief, and infection of Tears, and especially when it runs in a blood. And I my self could sooner imitate then blame those innocent relentings of Nature, so that they spring from tenderness only and humanity, not from an implacable sorrow. The Tears of a family may flow together like those little drops that compact the Rainbow, and if they be plac'd with the same advantage towards Heaven as those are to the Sun, they too have their splendor; and like that bow while they unbend into seasonable showers, yet they promise that there shall not be a second flood. But the dissoluteness of grief, the prodigality of sorrow is neither to be indulg'd in a mans self, nor comply'd within others. If that were allowable in these cases, Eli's was the readiest way and highest complement of
- mourning, who fell back from his seat and broke his neck. But neither does that precedent hold. For though he had been Chancellor, and in effect King of Israel, for so many years; and such men value as themselves so their losses at an higher rate then other; yet when he heard that Israel was overcome, that his two Sons Hophni and Phineas were slain in one day, and saw himself so without hope of Issue, and which imbittered it further without succession to the Government, yet he fell not till the News that the Ark of God was taken. I pray God that we may never have the same paralel perfected in our publick concernments. Then we shall need all the strength of Grace and Nature to support us. But upon a private loss, and sweetned with so many circumstances as yours, to be impatient, to be uncomfortable, would be to dispute with God and beg the question. Though in respect of an only gourd an only Son be inestimable, yet in comparison to God man bears a thousand times less proportion: so that it is like Jonah's sin to be angry at God for the withering of his Shadow. Zipporah, though the delay had almost cost her husband his life, yet when he did but circumcise her Son, in a womanish pevishness reproacht Moses as a bloody husband. But if God take the Son himself, but spare the Father, shall we say that he is a bloody God. He that gave his own Son, may he not take ours? 'Tis pride that makes a Rebel. And nothing but the over-weening of our selves and our own things that raises us against divine Providence. Whereas Abraham's obedience was better then Sacrifice. And if God please to accept both, it is indeed a farther Tryal, but a greater honour. I could say over upon this beaten occasion most of those lessons of morality and religion that have been so often repeated and are as soon forgotten. We abound with precept, but we want examples. You, Sir, that have all these things in your memory, and the clearness of whose Judgment is not to be obscured by any greater
- interposition, it remains that you be exemplary to others in your own practice. 'Tis true, it is an hard task to learn and teach at the same time. And, where your self are the experiment, it is as if a man should dissect his own body and read the Anatomy Lecture. But I will not heighten the difficulty while I advise the attempt. Only, as in difficult things, you will do well to make use of all that may strengthen and assist you. The word of God: The society of good men: and the books of the Ancients. There is one way more, which is by diversion, business, and activity; which are also necessary to be used in their season. But I my self, who live to so little purpose, can have little authority or ability to advise you in it, who are a Person that are and may be much more so generally useful. All that I have been able to do since, hath been to write this sorry Elogie of your Son, which if it be as good as I could wish, it is as yet no undecent imployment. However I know you will take any thing kindly from your very affectionate friend and most humble Servant.
-
-
- Edmundi Trotii Epitaphium.
-
- Charissimo Filio
-
- Edmundo Trotio
-
- Posuimus Pater & Mater
- Frustra superstites.
-
-
- LEgite Parentes, vanissimus hominum ordo,
- Figuli Filiorum, Substructores Hominum,
- Fartores Opum, Longi Speratores,
- Et nostro, si fas, sapite infortunio.
- Fuit Edmundus Trottius.
-
- E quatuor masculae stirpis residuus,
- Statura justa, Forma virili, specie eximio,
-
-
- Medio juventutis Robore simul & Flore,
- Aspectu, In cessu, sermone juxta amabilis,
- Et siquid ultra Cineri pretium addit.
- Honesta Disciplina domi imbutus,
- Peregre profectus
- Generosis Artibus Animum
- Et exercitiis Corpus firmaverat.
- Circaeam Insulam, Scopulos Sirenum
-
- Praeternavigavit,
- Et in hoc naufragio morum & saeculi
- Solus perdiderat nihil, auxit plurimum.
- Hinc erga Deum pietate,
- Erga nos Amore & Obsequio,
- Comitate erga Omnes, & intra se Modestia
- Insignis, & quantaevis fortunae capax:
- Delitiae Aequalium, Senum Plausus,
- Oculi Parentum, (nunc, ah, Lachrymae)
- In eo tandem peccavit quòd mortalis.
- Et fatali Pustularum morbo aspersus,
- Factus est
- (Ut verae Laudis Invidiam ficto Convitio levemus)
- Proditor Amicorum, Parricida Parentum,
- Familiae Spongia:
- Et Naturae invertens ordinem
- Nostri suique Contemptor,
- Mundi Desertor, defecit ad Deum.
-
- Undecimo Augusti; Aerae Christae 1667.
- Talis quum fuerit Calo non invidemus.
-
-
-
- An Epitaph upon—
- HEre under rests the body of
- 〈◊〉
- , who in his life-time reflected all the lustre he derived from his Family, and recompens'd the Honour of his Descent by his Virtue. For being of an excellent Nature, he cultivated it nevertheless by all the best means
- of improvement: nor left any spot empty for the growth of Pride, or Vanity. So that, although he was polished to the utmost perfection, he appeared only as a Mirrour for others, not himself to look in. Chearful without Gall, Sober without Formality, Prudent without Stratagem; and Religious without Affectation. He neither neglected, nor yet pretended to Business: but as he loved not to make work, so not to leave it imperfect. He understood, but was not enamour'd of Pleasure. He never came before in Injury, nor behind in Courtesie: nor found sweetness in any Revenge but that of Gratitude. He so studiously discharged the obligations of a Subject, a Son, a Friend, and an Husband, as if those relations could have consisted only on his part. Having thus walked upright, and easily through this World, nor contributed by any excess to his Mortality; yet Death took him: wherein therefore, as his last Duty, he signaliz'd the more his former Life with all the Decency and Recumbence of a departing Christian.
-
-
- An Epitaph upon—
-
- ENough: and leave the rest to Fame.
- 'Tis to commend her but to name.
- Courtship, which living she declin'd,
- When dead to offer were unkind.
- Where never any could speak ill,
- Who would officious Praises spill?
- Nor can the truest Wit or Friend,
- Without Detracting, her commend.
- To say she liv'd a Virgin chast,
- In this Age loose and all unlac't;
- Nor was, when Vice is so allow'd,
- Of Virtue or asham'd, or proud;
-
-
- That her Soul was on Heaven so bent
- No Minute but it came and went;
- That ready her last Debt to pay
- She summ'd her Life up ev'ry day;
- Modest as Morn; as Mid-day bright;
- Gentle as Ev'ning; cool as Night;
- 'Tis true: but all so weakly said;
- 'Twere more Significant, She's Dead.
-
-
-
-
- Epigramma in Duos montes Amosclivum Et Bilboreum. Farfacio.
-
-
- CErnis ut ingenti distinguant limite campum
- Montis Amos clivi Bilboreique juga!
- Ille stat indomitus turritis undique saxis:
- Cingit huic laetum Fraxinus alta Caput.
- Illi petra minax rigidis cervicibus horret:
- Huic quatiunt virides lenia colla jubas.
- Fulcit Atlanteo Rupes ea vertice coelos:
- Collis at hic humeros subjicit Herculeos.
-
- Hic ceu carceribus visum sylvaque coercet:
- Ille Oculos alter dum quasi meta trahit.
- Ille Giganteum surgit ceu Pelion Ossa:
-
- Hic agit ut Pindi culmine Nympha choros.
- Erectus, praeceps, salebrosus, & arduus ille:
- Aeclivis, placidus, mollis, amoenus bic est.
- Dissimilis Domino coiit Natura sub uno;
-
- Farfaciaque tremunt sub ditione pares.
- Dumque triumphanti terras perlabitur Axe,
- Praeteriens aequa stringit utrumque Rota.
- Asper in adversos, facilis cedentibus idem;
- Ut credas Montes extimulasse suos.
- Hi sunt Alcidae Borealis nempe Columnae,
- Quos medio scindit vallis opaca freto.
- An potius longe fic prona cacumina nutant,
-
- Parnassus cupiant esse Maria tuus.
-
-
-
-
- Upon the Hill and Grove at Bill-borow. To the Lord Fairfax.
-
-
- I.
- SEE how the arched Earth does here
- Rise in a perfect Hemisphere!
- The stiffest Compass could not strike
- A Line more circular and like;
- Nor softest Pensel draw a Brow
- So equal as this Hill does bow.
- It seems as for a Model laid,
- And that the World by it was made.
-
-
- II.
- Here learn ye Mountains more unjust,
- Which to abrupter greatness thrust,
- That do with your hook-shoulder'd height
- The Earth deform and Heaven frght.
- For whose excrescence ill design'd,
- Nature must a new Center find,
- Learn here those humble steps to tread,
- Which to securer Glory lead.
-
-
- III.
- See what a soft access and wide
- Lyes open to its grassy side;
- Nor with the rugged path deterrs
- The feet of breathless Travellers.
- See then how courteous it ascends,
- And all the way ir rises bends;
- Nor for it self the height does gain,
- But only strives to raise the Plain.
-
-
-
- IV.
- Yet thus it all the field commands,
- And in unenvy'd Greatness stands,
- Discerning furthe then the Cliff
- Of Heaven-daring Teneriff.
-
- How glad the weary Seamen hast
- When they salute it from the Mast!
- By Night the Northern Star their way
- Directs, and this no less by Day.
-
-
- V.
- Upon its crest this Mountain grave
- A Plum of aged Trees does wave.
- No hostile hand durst ere invade
- With impious Steel the sacred Shade.
- For something alwaies did appear
- Of the great Masters terrour there:
- And Men could hear his Armour still
- Ratling through all the Grove and Hill.
-
-
- VI.
- Fear of the Master, and respect
- Of the great Nymph did it protect;
-
- Vera the Nymph that him inspir'd,
- To whom he often here retir'd,
- And on these Okes ingrav'd her Name;
- Such Wounds alone these Woods became:
- But ere he well the Barks could part
- 'Twas writ already in their Heart.
-
-
- VII.
- For they ('tis credible) have sense,
- As We, of Love and Reverence,
- And underneath the Courser Rind
- The Genius of the house do bind.
-
-
- Hence they successes seem to know,
- And in their Lord's advancement grow;
- But in no Memory were seen
- As under this so streight and green.
-
-
- VIII.
- Yet now no further strive to shoot,
- Contented if they fix their Root.
- Nor to the winds uncertain gust,
- Their prudent Heads too far intrust.
- Onely sometimes a flutt'ring Breez
- Discourses with the breathing Trees;
- Which in their modest Whispers name
- Those Acts that swell'd the Cheek of Fame.
-
-
- IX.
- Much other Groves, say they, then these
- And other Hills him once did please.
- Through Groves of Pikes he thunder'd then,
- And Mountains rais'd of dying Men.
- For all the Civick Garlands due
- To him our Branches are but few.
- Nor are our Trunks enow to bear
- The Trophees of one fertile Year.
-
-
- X.
- 'Tis true, the Trees nor ever spoke
- More certain Oracles in Oak.
- But Peace (if you his favour prize)
- That Courage its own Praises flies.
- Therefore to your obscurer Seats
- From his own Brightness he retreats:
- Nor he the Hills without the Groves,
- Nor Height but with Retirement loves.
-
-
-
-
- Upon Appleton House, to my Lord Fairfax.
-
-
- I.
- WIthin this sober Frame expect
- Work of no Forrain Architect;
-
- That unto Caves the Quarries drew,
- And Forrests did to Pastures hew;
- Who of his great Design in pain
- Did for a Model vault his Brain,
- Whose Columnes should so high be rais'd
- To arch the Brows that on them gaz'd.
-
-
- II.
- Why should of all things Man unrul'd
- Such unproportion'd dwellings build?
- The Beasts are by their Denns exprest:
- And Birds contrive an equal Nest;
- The low roof'd Tortoises do dwell
- In cases fit of Tortoise-shell:
- No Creature loves an empty space;
- Their Bodies measure out their Place.
-
-
- III.
- But He, superfluously spread,
- Demands more room alive then dead.
- And in his hollow Palace goes
- Where Winds as he themselves may lose.
- What need of all this Marble Crust
- T'impark the wanton Mose of Dust,
- That thinks by Breadth the World t'unite
- Though the first Builders fail'd in Height?
-
-
-
- IV.
- But all things are composed here
- Like Nature, orderly and near:
- In which we the Dimensions find
- Of that more sober Age and Mind,
- When larger sized Men did stoop
- To enter at a narrow loop;
- As practising, in doors so strait,
- To strain themselves through Heavens Gate.
-
-
-
- V.
- And surely when the after Age
- Shall hither come in Pilgrimage,
-
- These sacred Places to adore,
- By Vere and Fairfax trod before,
- Men will dispute how their Extent
- Within such dwarfish Confines went:
- And some will smile at this, as well
- As Romulus his Bee-like Cell.
-
-
- VI.
-
- Humility alone designs
- Those short but admirable Lines,
- By which, ungirt and unconstrain'd,
- Things greater are in less contain'd.
- Let others vainly strive t'immure
- The Circle in the Quadrature!
-
- These holy Mathematicks can
- In ev'ry Figure equal Man.
-
-
- VII.
- Yet thus the laden House does sweat,
- And scarce indures the Master great:
- But where he comes the swelling Hall
- Stirs, and the Square grows Spherical;
-
-
-
- More by his Magnitude distrest,
- Then he is by its straitness prest:
- And too officiously it slights
- That in it self which him delights.
-
-
- VIII.
- So Honour better Lowness bears,
- Then That unwonted Greatness wears.
- Height with a certain Grace does bend,
- But low Things clownishly ascend.
- And yet what needs there here Excuse▪
-
- Where ev'ry Thing does answer Use?
- Where neatness nothing can condemn,
- Nor Pride invent what to contemn?
-
-
- IX.
- A Stately Frontispice of Poor
-
- Adorns without the open Door:
- Nor less the Rooms within commends.
- Daily new Furniture of Friends.
-
- The House was built upon the Place
- Only as for a Mark of Grace;
-
- And for an Inn to entertain
- Its Lord a while, but not remain.
-
-
- X.
- Him Bishops-Hill, or Denton may,
- Or Bilbrough, better hold then they:
- But Nature here hath been so free
- As if she said leave this to me.
- Art would more neatly have defac'd
- What she had laid so sweetly wast;
- In fragrant Gardens, shaddy Woods,
- Deep Meadows, and transparent Floods.
-
-
-
- XI.
- While with slow Eyes we these survey,
- And on each pleasant footstep stay,
- We opportunly may relate
- The Progress of this Houses Fate.
- A Nunnery first gave it birth.
- For Virgin Buildings oft brought forth.
- And all that Neighbour-Ruine shows
- The Quarries whence this dwelling rose.
-
-
- XII.
- Near to this gloomy Cloysters Gates
- There dwelt the blooming Virgin Thwates;
-
- Fair beyond Measure, and an Heir
- Which might Deformity make fair.
- And oft She spent the Summer Suns
- Discoursing with the Suttle Nunns.
-
- Whence in these Words one to her weav'd,
- (As 'twere by Chance) Thoughts long conceiv'd.
-
-
- XIII.
- 'Within this holy leisure we
- 'Live innocently as you see.
- 'These Walls restrain the World without,
- 'But hedge our Liberty about.
- 'These Bars inclose that wider Den
- 'Of those wild Creatures, called Men.
- 'The Cloyster outward shuts its Gates,
- 'And, from us, locks on them the Grates.
-
-
- XIV.
- 'Here we, in shining Armour white,
- 'Like Virgin Amazons do fight.
- 'And our chast Lamps we hourly trim,
- 'Lest the great Bridegroom find them dim.
-
-
- 'Our Orient Breaths perfumed are
- 'With insense of incessant Pray'r.
- 'And Holy-water of our Tears
- 'Most strangly our Complexion clears.
-
-
- XV.
- 'Not Tears of Grief; but such as those
- 'With which calm Pleasure overflows;
- 'Or Pity, when we look on you
- 'That live without this happy Vow.
- 'How should we grieve that must be seen
- 'Each one a Spouse, and each a Queen;
-
- 'And can in Heaven hence behold
- 'Our brighter Robes and Crowns of Gold?
-
-
- XVI.
- 'When we have prayed all our Beads,
- 'Some One the holy Legend reads;
- 'While all the rest with Needles paint
- 'The Face and Graces of the Saint.
-
- 'But what the Linnen can't receive
- 'They in their Lives do interweave.
- 'This Work the Saints best represents;
- 'That serves for Altar's Ornaments.
-
-
-
- XVII.
- 'But much it to our work would add
- 'If here your hand, your Face we had:
- 'By it we would our Lady touch;
- 'Yet thus She you resembles much.
- 'Some of your Features, as we sow'd,
- 'Through ev'ry Shrine should be bestow'd.
- 'And in one Beauty we would take
- 'Enough a thousand Saints to make.
-
-
-
- XVIII.
- 'And (for I dare not quench the Fire
- 'That me does for your good inspire)
- ''Twere Sacriledge a Mant t'admit
- 'To holy things, for Heaven fit.
- 'I see the Angels in a Crown
- 'On you the Lillies show'ring down:
- 'And round about you Glory breaks,
- 'That something more then humane speaks.
-
-
- XIX.
- 'All Beauty, when at such a height,
- 'Is so already consecrate.
-
- 'Fairfax I know; and long ere this
- 'Have mark'd the Youth, and what he is.
- 'But can he such a Rival seem
- 'For whom you Heav'n should disesteem?
- 'Ah, no! and 'twould more Honour prove
- 'He your Devoto were, then Love.
-
-
-
- XX.
- 'Here live beloved, and obey'd:
- 'Each one your Sister, each your Maid.
- 'And, if our Rule seem strictly pend,
- 'The Rule it self to you shall bend.
- 'Our Abbess too, now far in Age,
- 'Doth your succession near presage.
- 'How soft the yoke on us would lye,
- 'Might such fair Hands as yours it tye!
-
-
- XXI.
- 'Your voice, the sweetest of the Quire,
- 'Shall draw Heav'n nearer, raise us higher.
- 'And your Example, if our Head,
- 'Will soon us to perfection lead.
-
-
- 'Those Virtues to us all so dear,
- 'Will straight grow Sanctity when here:
- 'And that, once sprung, increase so fast
- 'Till Miracles it work at last.
-
-
- XXII.
- 'Nor is our Order yet so nice,
- 'Delight to banish as a Vice.
- 'Here Pleasure Piety doth meet;
- 'One perfecting the other Sweet.
- 'So through the mortal fruit we boyl
- 'The Sugars uncorrupting Oyl:
- 'And that which perisht while we pull,
- 'Is thus preserved clear and full.
-
-
- XXIII.
- 'For such indeed are all our Arts;
- 'Still handling Natures finest Parts.
- 'Flow'rs dress the Altars; for the Clothes,
- 'The Sea-born Amber we compose;
- 'Balms for the griv'd we draw; and Pasts
- 'We mold, as Baits for curious tasts.
- 'What need is here of Man? unless
- 'These as sweet Sins we should confess.
-
-
- XXIV.
- 'Each Night among us to your side
- 'Appoint a fresh and Virgin Bride;
- 'Whom if our Lord at midnight find,
- 'Yet Neither should be left behind.
- 'Where you may lye as chast in Bed,
- 'As Pearls together billeted.
- 'All Night embracing Arm in Arm,
- 'Like Chrystal pure with Cotton warm.
-
-
-
- XXV.
- 'But what is this to all the store
- 'Of Joys you see, and may make more!
- 'Try but a while, if you be wise:
- 'The Tryal neither Costs, nor Tyes.
- Now Fairfax seek her promis'd faith:
- Religion that dispensed hath;
- Which She hence forward does begin;
- The Nuns smooth Tongue has suckt her in.
-
-
- XXVI.
- Oft, though he knew it was in vain,
- Yet would he valiantly complain.
- 'Is this that Sanctity so great,
- 'An Art by which you finly'r cheat?
- 'Hypocrite Witches, hence avant,
-
- 'Who though in prison yet inchant!
- 'Death only can such Theeves make fast,
- 'As rob though in the Dungeon cast.
-
-
- XXVII.
- 'Were there but, when this House was made,
- 'One Stone that a just Hand had laid,
- 'It must have fall'n upon her Head
- 'Who first Thee from thy Faith misled.
- 'And yet, how well soever ment,
- 'With them 'twould soon grow fraudulent:
- 'For like themselves they alter all,
- 'And vice infects the very Wall.
-
-
- XXVIII.
- 'But sure those Buildings last not long,
- 'Founded by Folly, kept by Wrong.
- 'I know what Fruit their Gardens yield,
- 'When they it think by Night conceal'd.
-
-
- 'Fly from their Vices. 'Tis thy state,
- 'Not Thee, that they would consecrate.
- 'Fly from their Ruine. How I fear
- 'Though guiltless lest thou perish there.
-
-
- XXIX.
- What should he do? He would respect
- Religion, but not Right neglect:
- For first Religion taught him Right,
- And dazled not but clear'd his sight.
- Sometimes resolv'd his Sword he draws,
- But reverenceth then the Laws:
- For Justice still that Courage led;
- First from a Judge, then Souldier bred.
-
-
- XXX.
- Small Honour would be in the Storm.
- The Court him grants the lawful Form;
- Which licens'd either Peace or Force,
- To hinder the unjust Divorce.
- Yet still the Nuns his Right debar'd,
- Standing upon their holy Guard.
- Ill-counsell'd Women, do you know
- Whom you resist, or what you do?
-
-
- XXXI.
- Is not this he whose Offspring fierce
- Shall fight through all the Universe;
-
- And with successive Valour try
-
- France, Poland, either Germany;
-
- Till one, as long since prophecy'd,
- His Horse through conquer'd Britain ride?
- Yet, against Fate, his Spouse they kept;
- And the great Race would intercept.
-
-
-
- XXXII.
- Some to the Breach against their Foes
- Their Wooden Saints in vain oppose.
- Another bolder stands at push
- With their old Holy-Water Brush.
-
- While the disjointed Abbess threads
- The gingling Chain-shot of her Beads.
-
- But their lowd'st Cannon were their Lungs;
- And sharpest Weapons were their Tongues.
-
-
- XXXIII.
- But, waving these aside like Flyes,
- Young Fairfax through the Wall does rise.
- Then th' unfrequented Vault appear'd,
- And superstitions vainly fear'd.
- The Relicks false were set to view;
- Only the Jewels there were true.
- But truly bright and holy Thwaites
-
- That weeping at the Altar waites.
-
-
- XXXIIII.
- But the glad Youth away her bears,
- And to the Nuns bequeaths her Tears:
- Who guiltily their Prize bemoan,
- Like Gipsies that a Child hath stoln.
- Thenceforth (as when th' Inchantment ends
- The Castle vanishes or rends)
- The wasting Cloister with the rest
- Was in one instant dispossest.
-
-
- XXXV.
- At the demolishing, this Seat
- To Fairfax fell as by Escheat.
- And what both Nuns and Founders will'd
- 'Tis likely better thus fulfill'd.
-
-
- For if the Virgin prov'd not theirs,
- The Cloyster yet remained hers.
- Though many a Nun there made her Vow,
- 'Twas no Religious House till now.
-
-
- XXXVI.
- From that blest Bed the Heroe came,
- Whom France and Poland yet does fame:
- Who, when retired here to Peace,
- His warlike Studies could not cease;
- But laid these Gardens out in sport
- In the just Figure of a Fort;
- And with five Bastions it did sence,
- As aiming one for ev'ry Sense.
-
-
- XXXVII.
- When in the East the Morning Ray
- Hangs out the Colours of the Day,
- The Bee through these known Allies hums,
- Beating the Dian with its Drumms.
-
- Then Flow'rs their drowsie Eylids raise,
- Their Silken Ensigns each displayes,
- And dries its Pan yet dank with Dew,
- And fills its Flask with Odours new.
-
-
- XXXVIII.
- These, as their Governour goes by,
- In fragrant Vollyes they let fly;
- And to salute their Governess
-
- Again as great a charge they press:
- None for the Virgin Nymph; for She
- Seems with the Flow'rs a Flow'r to be.
- And think so still! though not compare
- With Breath so sweet, or Cheek so faire.
-
-
-
- XXXIX.
- Well shot ye Firemen! Oh how sweet,
- And round your equal Fires do meet;
- Whose shrill report no Ear can tell,
- But Ecchoes to the Eye and smell.
- See how the Flow'rs, as at Parade,
-
- Under their Colours stand displaid:
- Each Regiment in order grows,
- That of the Tulip Pinke and Rose.
-
-
- XL.
- But when the vigilant Patroul
-
- Of Stars walks round about the Pole,
-
- Their Leaves, that to the stalks are curl'd,
- Seem to their Staves the Ensigns furl'd.
- Then in some Flow'rs beloved Hut
- Each Bee as Sentinel is shut;
- And sleeps so too: but, if once stir'd,
- She runs you through, or askes the Word.
-
-
-
- XLI.
- Oh Thou, that dear and happy Isle
- The Garden of the World ere while,
- Thou Puradise of four Seas,
- Which Heaven planted us to please,
- But, to exclude the World, did guard
- With watry if not flaming Sword;
- What luckless Apple did we tast,
- To make us Mortal, and The Wast?
-
-
- XLII.
- Unhappy! shall we never more
- That sweet Milltia restore,
- When Gardens only had their Towrs,
- And all the Garrisons were Flowrs,
-
-
- When Roses only Arms might bear,
- And Men did rosie Garlands wear?
- Tulips, in several Colours barr'd,
- Were then the Switzers of our Guard.
-
-
-
- XLIII.
- The Gardiner had the Souldiers place,
- And his more gentle Forts did trace.
- The Nursery of all things green
- Was then the only Magazeen.
-
- The Winter Quarters were the Stoves,
- Where he the tender Plants removes.
- But War all this doth overgrow:
- We Ord'nance Plant and Powder sow.
-
-
- XLIV.
- And yet their walks one on the Sod
- Who, had it pleased him and God,
-
- Might once have made our Gardens spring
- Fresh as his own and flourishing.
- But he preferr'd to the Cinque Ports
-
- These five imaginary Forts:
- And, in those half-dry Trenches, spann'd
- Pow'r which the Ocean might command.
-
-
- XLV.
- For he did, with his utmost Skill,
-
- Ambition weed, but Conscience till.
-
- Conscience, that Heaven-nursed Plant,
- Which most our Earthly Gardens want.
- A prickling leaf it bears, and such
- As that which shrinks at ev'ry touch;
- But Flowrs eternal, and divine,
- That in the Crowns of Saints do shine.
-
-
-
- XLVI.
- The sight does from these Bastions ply,
- Th' invisible Artilery;
-
- And at proud Cawood Castle seems
- To point the Battery of its Beams.
- As if it quarrell'd in the Seat
- Th' Ambition of its Prelate great.
- But ore the Meads below it plays,
- Or innocently seems to gaze.
-
-
- XLVII.
- And now to the Abbyss I pass
- Of that unfathomable Grass,
- Where Men like Grashoppers appear,
- But Grashoppers are Gyants there:
- They, in there squeking Laugh, contemn
- Us as we walk more low then them:
- And, from the Precipices tall
- Of the green spir's, to us do call.
-
-
- XLVIII.
- To see Men through this Meadow Dive,
- We wonder how they rise alive.
- As, under Water, none does know
- Whether he fall through it or go.
- But, as the Marriners that sound,
- And show upon their Lead the Ground,
- They bring up Flow'rs so to be seen,
- And prove they've at the Bottom been.
-
-
- XLIX.
- No Scene that turns with Engines strange
- Does oftner then these Meadows change.
- For when the Sun the Grass hath vext,
- The tawny Mowers enter next;
-
-
- Who seem like Israaliies to be,
- Walking on foot through a green Sea.
- To them the Grassy Deeps divide,
- And crowd a Lane to either Side.
-
-
- L.
- With whistling Sithe, and Elbow strong,
- These Massacre the Grass along:
- While one, unknowing, carves the Rail,
-
- Whose yet unfeather'd Quils her fail.
- The Edge all bloody from its Breast
- He draws, and does his stroke detest;
- Fearing the Flesh untimely mow'd
- To him a Fate as black forebode.
-
-
- LI.
- But bloody Thestylis, that waites
- To bring the mowing Camp their Cates,
- Greedy as Kites has trust it up,
- And forthwith means on it to sup:
- When on another quick She lights,
- And cryes, he call'd us Israelites;
-
- But now, to make his saying true,
- Rails rain for Quails, for Manna Dew.
-
-
- LII.
- Unhappy Birds! what does it boot
- To build below the Grasses Root;
- When Lowness is unsafe as Hight,
- And Chance o'retakes what scapeth spight?
- And now your Orphan Parents Call
- Sounds your untimely Funeral.
- Death-Trumpets creak in such a Note,
- And 'tis the Sourdine in their Throat.
-
-
-
- LIII.
- Or sooner hatch or higher build:
- The Mower now commands the Field;
- In whose new Traverse seemeth wrought
- A Camp of Battail newly fought:
- Where, as the Meads with Hay, the Plain
- Lyes quilted ore with Bodies slain:
- The Women that with forks it fling,
- Do represent the Pillaging.
-
-
- LIV.
- And now the careless Victors play,
- Dancing the Triumphs of the Hay;
- Where every Mowers wholesome Heat
- Smells like an Alexanders sweat.
-
- Their Females fragrant as the Mead
- Which they in Fairy Circles tread:
- When at their Dances End they kiss,
- Their new-made Hay not sweeter is.
-
-
- LV.
- When after this 'tis pil'd in Cocks,
- Like a calm Sea it shews the Rocks:
- We wondring in the River near
- How Boats among them safely steer.
- Or, like the Desert Memphis Sand,
-
- Short Pyramids of Hay do stand.
- And such the Roman Camps do rise
- In Hills for Soldiers Obsequies.
-
-
- LVI.
- This Scene again withdrawing brings
- A new and empty Face of things;
- A levell'd space, as smooth and plain,
- As Clothes for Lilly strecht to stain.
-
-
- The World when first created sure
- Was such a Table rase and pure.
- Or rather such is the Toril
-
- Ere the Bulls enter at Madril.
-
-
- LVII.
- For to this naked equal Flat,
- Which Levellers take Pattern at,
- The Villagers in common chase
- Their Cattle, which it closer rase;
- And what below the Sith increast
- Is pincht yet nearer by the Breast.
- Such, in the painted World, appear'd
-
- Davenant with th' Universal Heard.
-
-
- LVIII.
- They seem within the polisht Grass
- A Landskip drawen in Looking-Glass.
- And shrunk in the huge Pasture show
- As Spots, so shap'd, on Faces do.
- Such Fleas, ere they approach the Eye,
- In Multiplying Glasses lye.
- They feed so wide, so slowly move,
- As Constellations do above.
-
-
- LIX.
- Then, to conclude these pleasant Acts,
-
- Denton sets ope its Cataracts;
-
- And makes the Meadow truly be
- (What it but seem'd before) a Sea.
- For, jealous of its Lords long stay,
- It try's t'invite him thus away.
- The River in it self is drown'd,
- And Isl's th' astonish Cattle round.
-
-
-
- LX.
- Let others tell the Paradox,
-
- How Eels now bellow in the Ox;
- How Horses at their Tails do kick,
- Turn'd as they hang to Leeches quick;
- How Boats can over Bridges sail;
- And Fishes do the Stables scale.
- How Salmons trespassing are found;
- And Pikes are taken in the Pound.
-
-
- LXI.
- But I, retiring from the Flood,
- Take Sanctuary in the Wood;
- And, while it lasts, my self imbark
- In this yet green, yet growing Ark;
- Where the first Carpenter might best
- Fit Timber for his Keel have Prest.
- And where all Creatures might have shares,
- Although in Armies, not in Paires.
-
-
- LXII.
- The double Wood of ancient Stocks
- Link'd in so thick, an Union locks,
- It like two Pedigrees appears,
- On one hand Fairfax, th' other Veres:
-
- Of whom though many fell in War,
- Yet more to Heaven shooting are:
- And, as they Natures Cradle deckt,
- Will in green Age her Hearse expect.
-
-
- LXIII.
- When first the Eye this Forrest sees
- It seems indeed as Wood not Trees:
-
- As if their Neighbourhood so old
- To one great Trunk them all did mold.
-
-
- There the huge Bulk takes place, as ment
- To thrust up a Fifth Element;
-
- And stretches still so closely wedg'd
- As if the Night within were hedg'd.
-
-
- LXIV.
- Dark all without it knits; within
- It opens passable and thin;
- And in as loose an order grows,
- As the Corinthean Porticoes.
-
- The arching Boughs unite between
- The Columnes of the Temple green;
- And underneath the winged Quires
- Echo about their tuned Fires.
-
-
- LXV.
- The Nightingale does here make choice
- To sing the Tryals of her Voice.
- Low Shrubs she sits in, and adorns
- With Musick high the squatted Thorns.
- But highest Oakes stoop down to hear,
- And listning Elders prick the Ear.
- The Thorn, lest it should hurt her, draws
- Within the Skin its shrunken claws.
-
-
- LXVI.
- But I have for my Musick found
- A Sadder, yet more pleasing Sound:
- The Stock-doves, whose fair necks are grac'd
- With Nuptial Rings their Ensigns chast;
- Yet always, for some Cause unknown,
- Sad pair unto the Elms they moan.
- O why should such a Couple mourn,
- That in so equal Flames do burn!
-
-
-
- LXVII.
- Then as I carless on the Bed
- Of gelid Straw-berryes do tread,
- And through the Hazles thick espy
- The hatching Thrastles shining Eye,
- The Heron from the Ashes top,
- The eldest of its young lets drop,
- As if it Stork-like did pretend
- That Tribute to its Lord to send.
-
-
- LXVIII.
- But most the Hewel's wonders are,
- Who here has the Holt-felsters care.
- He walks still upright from the Root,
- Meas'ring the Timber with his Foot;
- And all the way, to keep it clean,
- Doth from the Bark the Wood-moths glean.
- He, with his Beak, examines well
- Which fit to stand and which to fell.
-
-
- LXIX.
- The good he numbers up, and hacks;
- As if he mark'd them with the Ax.
- But where he, tinkling with his Beak,
- Does find the hollow Oak to speak,
- That for his building he designs,
- And through the tainted Side he mines.
- Who could have thought the tallest Oak
-
- Should fall by such a feeble Strok'!
-
-
-
- LXX.
- Nor would it, had the Tree not fed.
- A Traitor-worm, within it bred.
- (As first our Flesh corrupt within
- Tempts impotent and bashful Sin.
-
-
-
- And yet that Worm triumphs not long,
- But serves to feed the Hewels young.
-
- While the Oake seems to fall content,
- Viewing the Treason's Punishment.
-
-
- LXXI.
- Thus I, easie Philosopher,
-
- Among the Birds and Trees confer:
- And little now to make me, wants
- Or of the Fowles, or of the Plants.
-
- Give me but Wings as they, and I
- Streight floting on the Air shall fly:
- Or turn me but, and you shall see
- I was but an inverted Tree.
-
-
- LXXII.
- Already I begin to call
- In their most learned Original:
- And where I Language want, my Signs
- The Bird upon the Bough divines;
- And more attentive there doth sit
- Then if She were with Lime-twigs knit.
- No Leaf does tremble in the Wind
- Which I returning cannot find.
-
-
- LXXIII.
- Out of these scatter'd Sibyls Leaves
- Strange Prophecies my Phancy weaves:
- And in one History consumes,
- Like Mexique Paintings, all the Plumes.
-
- What Rome, Greece, Palestine, ere said
- I in this light Mosaick read.
- Thrice happy he who, not mistook,
- Hath read in Natures mystick Book.
-
-
-
-
- LXXIV.
- And see how Chance's better Wit
- Could with a Mask my studies hit!
- The Oak-Leaves me embroyder all,
- Between which Caterpillars crawl:
- And Ivy, with familiar trails,
- Me licks, and clasps, and curles, and hales.
- Under this antick Cope I move
- Like some great Prelate of the Grove,
-
-
-
- LXXV.
- Then, languishing with ease, I toss
- On Pallets swoln of Velvet Moss;
- While the Wind, cooling through the Boughs,
- Flatters with Air my panting Brows.
- Thanks for my Rest ye Mossy Banks,
-
- And unto you cool Zephyr's Thanks,
- Who, as my Hair, my Thoughts too shed,
- And winnow from the Chaff my Head.
-
-
- LXXVI.
- How safe, methinks, and strong, behind
- These Trees have I incamp'd my Mind;
- Where Beauty, aiming at the Heart,
- Bends in some Tree its useless Dart;
- And where the World no certain Shot
- Can make, or me it toucheth not.
- But I on it securely play,
- And gaul its Horsemen all the Day.
-
-
- LXXVII.
- Bind me ye Woodbines in your 'twines,
- Curle me about ye gadding Vines,
-
- And Oh so close your Circles lace,
- That I may never leave this Place:
-
-
- But, lest your Fetters prove too weak,
- Ere I your Silken Bondage break,
- Do you, O Brambles, chain me too,
- And courteous Briars nail me through.
-
-
- LXXVIII.
- Here in the Morning tye my Chain,
- Where the two Woods have made a Lane;
- While, like a Guard on either side,
- The Trees before their Lord divide;
- This, like a long and equal Thread,
- Betwixt two Labyrinths does lead.
- But, where the Floods did lately drown,
- There at the Ev'ning stake me down.
-
-
- LXXIX.
- For now the Waves are fal'n and dry'd,
- And now the Meadows fresher dy'd;
- Whose Grass, with moister colour dasht,
- Seems as green Silks but newly washt.
- No Serpent new nor Crocodile
-
- Remains behind our little Nile;
-
- Unless it self you will mistake,
- Among these Meads the only Snake.
-
-
- LXXX.
- See in what wanton harmless folds
- It ev'ry where the Meadow holds;
- And its yet muddy back doth lick,
- Till as a Chrystal Mirrour slick;
- Where all things gaze themselves, and doubt
- If they be in it or without.
- And for his shade which therein shines,
-
- Narcissus like, the Sun too pines.
-
-
-
- LXXXI.
- Oh what a Pleasure tis to hedge
- My Temples here with heavy sedge;
- Abandoning my lazy Side,
- Stretcht as a Bank unto the Tide;
- Or to suspend my sliding Foot
- On the Osiers undermined Root,
- And in its Branches tough to hang,
- While at my Lines the Fishes twang!
-
-
- LXXXII.
- But now away my Hooks, my Quills,
- And Angles, idle Utensils.
- The young Maria walks to night:
- Hide trifling Youth thy Pleasures slight.
- 'Twere shame that such judicious Eyes
- Should with such Toyes a Man surprize;
-
- She that already is the Law
-
- Of all her Sex, her Ages Aw.
-
-
-
- LXXXIII.
- See how loose Nature, in respect
- To her, it self doth recollect;
- And every thing so whisht and fine,
- Starts forth with to its Bonne Mine.
-
- The Sun himself, of Her aware,
- Seems to descend with greater Care;
- And lest She see him go to Bed,
- In blushing Clouds conceales his Head.
-
-
- LXXXIV.
- So when the Shadows laid asleep
- From underneath these Banks do creep;
- And on the River as it flows
- With
-
- 〈◊〉
- Shuts begin to close;
-
-
- The modest Halcyon comes in sight,
- Flying betwixt the Day and Night;
- And such an horror calm and dumb,
-
- Admiring Nature does benum.
-
-
- LXXXV.
- The viscous Air, wheres'ere She fly,
- Follows and sucks her Azure dy;
- The gellying Stream compacts below,
- If it might fix her shadow so;
- The stupid Fishes hang, as plain
- As Flies in Chrystal overt'ane;
- And Men the silent Scene assist,
- Charm'd with the Saphir-winged Mist.
-
-
-
- LXXXVI.
-
- Maria such, and so doth hush
- The World, and through the Ev'ning rush.
- No new-born Comet such a Train
- Draws through the Skie, nor Star new-slain.
- For streight those giddy Rockets fail,
- Which from the putrid Earth exhale,
- But by her Flames, in Heaven try'd,
-
- Nature is wholly vitrifi'd.
-
-
-
- LXXXVII.
- 'Tis She that to these Gardens gave
- That wondrous Beauty which they have;
-
- She streightness on the Woods bestows;
- To Her the Meadow sweetness owes;
- Nothing could make the River be
- So Chrystal-pure but only She;
-
-
- She yet more Pure, Sweet, Streight, and Fa
- •
-
-
- Then Gardens, Woods, Meads, Rivers are.
-
-
-
- LXXXVIII.
- Therefore what first She on them spent,
- They gratefully again present.
- The Meadow Carpets where to tread;
- The Garden Flow'rs to Crown Her Head;
- And for a Glass the limpid Brook,
- Where She may all her Beautyes look;
- But, since She would not have them seen,
- The Wood about her draws a Skreen.
-
-
- LXXXIX.
- For She, to higher Beauties rais'd,
- Disdains to be for lesser prais'd.
-
- She counts her Beauty to converse
- In all the Languages as hers;
-
- Nor yet in those her self imployes
- But for the Wisdome, not the Noyse;
-
- Nor yet that Wisdome would affect,
- But as 'tis Heavens Dialect.
-
-
-
- LXXXX.
-
- Blest Nymph! that couldst so soon prevent
- Those Trains by Youth against thee meant;
- Tears (watry Shot that pierce the Mind;)
- And Sighs (Loves Cannon charg'd with Wind;)
-
- True Praise (That breaks through all defence;)
- And feign'd complying Innocence;
-
- But knowing where this Ambush lay,
- She scap'd the safe, but roughest Way.
-
-
- LXXXXI.
- This 'tis to have been from the first
- In a Domestick Heaven nurst,
- Under the Discipline severe
- Of Fairfax, and the starry Vere;
-
-
-
- Where not one object can come nigh
- But pure, and spotless as the Eye;
- And Goodness doth it self intail
- On Females, if there want a Male.
-
-
-
- LXXXXII.
- Go now fond Sex that on your Face
- Do all your useless Study place,
- Nor once at Vice your Brows dare knit
- Lest the smooth Forehead wrinkled sit:
- Yet your own Face shall at you grin,
- Thorough the Black-bag of your Skin;
- When knowledge only could have fill'd
- And Virtue all those Furrows till'd.
-
-
-
- LXXXXIII.
- Hence She with Graces more divine
- Supplies beyond her Sex the Line;
-
- And, like a sprig of Misleto,
-
- On the Fairfacian Oak does grow;
- Whence, for some universal good,
- The Priest shall cut the sacred Bud;
- While her glad Parents most rejoice,
- And make their Destiny their Choice.
-
-
-
- LXXXXIV.
- Mean time ye Fields, Springs, Bushes, Flow'rs,
- Where yet She leads her studious Hours,
- (Till Fate her worthily translates,
- And find a Fairfax for our Thwaites)
-
- Employ the means you have by Her,
- And in your kind your selves preferr;
- That, as all Virgins She preceds,
- So you all Woods, Streams, Gardens, Meads.
-
-
-
-
- LXXXXV.
- For you Thessalian Tempe's Seat
-
- Shall now be scorn'd as obsolete;
-
- Aranjeuz, as less, disdain'd;
- The Bel-Retiro as constrain'd;
- But name not the Idalian Grove,
-
- For 'twas the Seat of wanton Love;
- Much less the Dead's Elysian Fields,
-
- Yet nor to them your Beauty yields.
-
-
- LXXXXVI.
- 'Tis not, what once it was, the World;
-
- But a rude heap together hurl'd;
- All negligently overthrown,
- Gulfes, Deserts, Precipices, Stone.
- Your lesser World contains the same.
- But in more decent Order tame;
-
- You Heaven's Center, Nature's Lap.
-
-
- And Paradice's only Map.
-
-
-
- LXXXXVII.
- But now the Salmon-Fishers moist
- Their Leathern Boats begin to hoist;
- And, like Antipodes in Shoes,
- Have shod their Heads in their Canoos.
-
- How Tortoise like, but not so slow,
- These rational Amphibii go?
- Let's in: for the dark Hemisphere
-
- Does now like one of them appear.
-
-
-
-
- On the Victory obtained by Blake over the Spaniards, in the Bay of Sanctacruze, in the Island of Teneriff. 1657.
-
-
- NOW does Spains Fleet her spatious wings unfold,
- Leaves the new World and hastens for the old:
- But though the wind was fair, they slowly swoome
- Frayted with acted Guilt, and Guilt to come:
- For this rich load, of which so proud they are,
- Was rais'd by Tyranny, and rais'd for War;
- Every capatious Gallions womb was fill'd,
- With what the Womb of wealthy Kingdomes yield,
- The new Worlds wounded Intails they had tore,
- For wealth wherewith to wound the old once more.
- Wealth which all others Avarice might cloy,
- But yet in them caus'd as much fear, as Joy.
- For now upon the Main, themselves they saw,
- That boundless Empire, where you give the Law,
- Of winds and waters rage, they fearful be,
- But much more fearful are your Flags to see.
- Day, that to those who sail upon the deep,
- More wish't for, and more welcome is then sleep,
- They dreaded to behold, Least the Sun's light,
- With English Streamers, should salute their sight:
- In thickest darkness they would choose to steer,
- So that such darkness might suppress their fear;
- At length theirs vanishes, and fortune smiles;
- For they behold the sweet Canary Isles;
- One of which doubtless is by Nature blest
- Above both Worlds, since 'tis above the rest.
- For least some Gloominess might stain her sky,
- Trees there the duty of the Clouds supply;
- O noble Trust which Heaven on this Isle poures,
- Fertile to be, yet never need her showres.
-
-
- A happy People, which at once do gain
- The benefits without the ills of rain.
- Both health and profit, Fate cannot deny;
- Where still the Earth is moist, the Air still dry;
- The jarring Elements no discord know,
- Fewel and Rain together kindly grow;
- And coolness there, with heat doth never fight,
- This only rules by day, and that by Night.
- Your worth to all these Isles, a just right brings,
- The best of Lands should have the best of Kings.
- And these want nothing Heaven can afford,
- Unless it be, the having you their Lord;
- But this great want, will not along one prove,
- Your Conquering Sword will soon that want remove.
- For Spain had better, Shee'l ere long confess,
- Have broken all her Swords, then this one Peace,
- Casting that League off, which she held so long,
- She cast off that which only made her strong.
- Forces and art, she soon will feel, are vain,
- Peace, against you, was the sole strength of Spain.
-
- By that alone those Islands she secures,
- Peace made them hers, but War will make them yours;
- There the indulgent Soil that rich Grape breeds,
- Which of the Gods the fancied drink exceeds;
- They still do yield, such is their pretious mould,
- All that is good, and are not curst with Gold.
- With fatal Gold, for still where that does grow,
- Neither the Soyl, nor People quiet know.
- Which troubles men to raise it when 'tis Oar,
- And when 'tis raised, does trouble them much more.
- Ah, why was thither brought that cause of War,
- Kind Nature had from thence remov'd so far.
- In vain doth she those Islands free from Ill,
- If fortune can make guilty what she will.
- But whilst I draw that Scene, where you ere long,
- Shall conquests act, your present are unsung.
- For Sanctacruze the glad Fleet takes her way,
- And safely there casts Anchor in the Bay.
-
-
- Never so many with one joyful cry,
- That place saluted, where they all must dye.
- Deluded men! Fate with you did but sport,
- You scap't the Sea, to perish in your Port.
- 'Twas more for Englands fame you should dye there,
- Where you had most of strength, and least of fear.
-
-
- The Peek's proud height, the Spaniards all admire,
- Yet in their brests, carry a pride much higher.
- Onely to this vast hill a power is given,
- At once both to Inhabit Earth and Heaven.
- But this stupendious Prospect did not neer,
- Make them admire, so much as as they did fear.
-
-
- For here they met with news, which did produce,
- A grief, above the cure of Grapes best juice.
- They learn'd with Terrour, that nor Summers heat,
- Nor Winters storms, had made your Fleet retreat.
- To fight against such Foes, was vain they knew,
- Which did the rage of Elements subdue.
- Who on the Ocean that does horror give,
- To all besides, triumphantly do live.
-
-
- With hast they therefore all their Gallions moar,
- And flank with Cannon from the Neighbouring shore.
- Forts, Lines, and Sconces all the Bay along,
- They build and act all that can make them strong.
-
-
- Fond men who know not whilst such works they raise,
- They only Labour to exalt your praise.
- Yet they by restless toyl, became at Length,
- So proud and confident of their made strength.
- That they with joy their boasting General heard,
- Wish then for that assault he lately fear'd.
- His wish he has, for now undaunted Blake,
-
- With winged speed, for Sanctacruze does make.
- For your renown, his conquering Fleet does ride,
- Ore Seas as vast as is the Spaniards pride.
- Whose Fleet and Trenches view'd, he soon did say,
- We to their Strength are more obilg'd then they.
- Wer't not for that, they from their Fate would run,
- And a third World seek out our Armes to shun.
-
-
- Those Forts, which there, so high and strong appear,
- Do not so much suppress, as shew their fear.
- Of Speedy Victory let no man doubt,
- Our worst works past, now we have found them out.
- Behold their Navy does at Anchor lye,
- And they are ours, for now they cannot fly.
-
-
- This said, the whole Fleet gave it their applause,
- And all assumes your courage, in your cause.
- That Bay they enter, which unto them owes,
- The noblest wreaths, that Victory bestows.
- Bold Stainer Leads, this Fleets design'd by fate,
- To give him Lawrel, as the Last did Plate.
-
-
- The Thund'ring Cannon now begins the Fight,
- And though it be at Noon, creates a Night.
- The Air was soon after the fight begun,
- Far more enflam'd by it, then by the Sun.
- Never so burning was that Climate known,
- War turn'd the temperate, to the Torrid Zone.
-
-
- Fate these two Fleets, between both Worlds had brought.
- Who fight, as if for both those Worlds they fought.
- Thousands of wayes, Thousands of men there dye,
- Some Ships are sunk, some blown up in the skie.
- Nature never made Cedars so high a Spire,
- As Oakes did then, Urg'd by the active fire.
- Which by quick powders force, so high was sent,
- That it return'd to its own Element.
- Torn Limbs some leagues into the Island fly,
- Whilst others lower, in the Sea do lye.
- Scarce souls from bodies sever'd are so far,
- By death, as bodies there were by the War.
- Th' all-seeing Sun, neer gaz'd on such a sight,
- Two dreadful Navies there at Anchor Fight.
- And neitheir have, or power, or will to fly,
- There one must Conquer, or there both must dye.
- Far different Motives yet, engag'd them thus,
- Necessity did them, but Choice did us.
-
-
- A choice which did the highest
- ••
- rth express,
- And was attended by as high success.
-
-
- For your resistless genious there did Raign,
- By which we Laurels reapt ev'n on the Mayn.
- So prosperous Stars, though absent to the sence,
- Bless those they shine for, by their Influence.
-
-
- Our Cannon now tears every Ship and Sconce,
- And o're two Elements Triumphs at once.
- Their Gallions sunk, their wealth the Sea does fill,
- The only place where it can cause no Ill,
-
-
- Ah would those Treasures which both Indies have,
- Were buryed in as large, and deep a grave,
- Wars chief support with them would buried be,
- And the Land owe her peace unto the Sea.
- Ages to come, your conquering Arms will bless,
- There they destroy, what had destroy'd their Peace.
- And in one War the present age may boast,
- The certain seeds of many Wars are lost,
-
-
- All the Foes Ships destroy'd, by Sea or fire,
- Victorious Blake, does from the Bay retire,
- His Seige of Spain he then again pursues,
- And there first brings of his success the news;
- The saddest news that ere to Spain was brought,
- Their rich Fleet sunk, and ours with Lawrel fraught.
- Whilst fame in every place, her Trumpet blowes,
- And tells the World, how much to you it owes.
-
-
-
-
- A Dialogue between Thyrsis and Dorinda.
-
-
- Dorinda.
- WHen Death, shall snatch us from these
- And shut up our divided Lids, (Kids,
- Tell me Thrisis, prethee do,
- Whither thou and I must go.
-
-
- Thyrsis.
- To the Elizium: (Dorinda) oh where i'st?
-
-
- Thyrsis.
- A Chast Soul, can never mis't.
-
-
- Dorinda.
- I know no way, but one, our home
- Is our Elizium?
-
-
- Thyrsis.
- Cast thine Eye to yonder Skie,
- There the milky way doth lye;
- 'Tis a sure but rugged way,
- That leads to Everlasting day.
-
-
- Dorinda.
- There Birds may nest, but how can I,
- That have no wings and cannot fly.
-
-
- Thyrsis.
- Do not sigh (fair Nimph) for fire
- Hath no wings, yet doth aspire
- Till it hit, against the pole,
- Heaven's the Center of the Soul.
-
-
- Dorinda.
- But in Elizium how do they
- Pass Eternity away.
-
-
- Thyrsis.
- Ho, ther's, neither hope nor fear
- Ther's no Wolf, no Fox, no Bear.
- No need of Dog to fetch our stray,
- Our Lightfoot we may give away,
- And there most sweetly thine Ear
- May feast with Musick of the Sphear.
-
-
- How I my future state
- By silent thinking, Antidate:
- I preethe let us spend, our time come,
- In talking of Elizium.
-
-
-
- Thyrsis.
- Then I'le go on: There, sheep are full
- Of softest grass, and softest wooll;
- There, birds sing Consorts, garlands grow,
- Cold winds do whisper, springs do flow.
- There, alwayes is, a rising Sun,
- And day is ever, but begun.
- Shepheards there, bear equal sway,
- And every Nimph's a Queen of May.
-
-
-
- Dorinda.
- Ah me, ah me.
-
-
- Thyrsis.
-
- Dorinda, why do'st Cry?
-
-
- Dorinda.
- I'm sick, I'm sick, and fain would dye:
- Convinc't me now, that this is true;
- By bidding, with mee, all adieu
- I cannot live, without thee, I
- Will for thee, much more with thee dye.
-
-
- Dorinda.
- Then let us give Corellia charge o'th Sheep,
- And thou and I'le pick poppies and them steep
- In wine, and drink on't even till we weep,
- So shall we smoothly pass away in sleep.
-
-
-
-
- The Character of Holland.
-
-
-
- HOlland, that scarce deserves the name of Land,
-
- As but th'Off-scouring of the Brittish Sand;
-
- And so much Earth as was contributed
- By English Pilots when they heav'd the Lead;
- Or what by th'Oceans slow alluvion fell,
- Of shipwrackt Cockle and the Muscle-shell;
- This indigested vomit of the Sea
- Fell to the Dutch by just Propriety.
-
-
- Glad then, as Miners that have found the Oar,
- They with mad labour fish'd the Land to Shoar;
-
- And div'd as desperately for each piece
- Of Earth, as if't had been of Ambergreece;
-
- Collecting anxiously small Loads of Clay,
- Less then what building Swallows bear away;
- Or then those Pills which sordid Beetles roul,
- Tranfusing into them their Dunghil Soul.
-
-
- How did they rivet, with Gigantick Piles,
- Thorough the Center their new-catched Miles;
- And to the stake a strugling Country bound,
- Where barking Waves still bait the forced Ground;
- Building their watry Babel far more high
- To reach the Sea, then those to scale the Sky.
-
-
-
- Yet still his claim the Injur'd Ocean laid,
- And oft at Leap-frog ore their Steeples plaid:
- As if on purpose it on Land had come
- To shew them what's their Mare Liberum.
-
- A daily deluge over them does boyl;
- The Earth and Water play at Level-coyl;
-
- The Fish oft-times the Burger dispossest;
- And sat not as a Meat but as a Guest;
- And oft the Tritons and the Sea-Nymphs saw
- Whole sholes of Dutch serv'd up for Cabillau;
-
-
-
- Or as they over the new Level rang'd
- For pickled Herring, pickled Heeren chang'd.
- Nature, it seem'd, asham'd of her mistake,
- Would throw their Land away at Duck and Drake.
-
-
-
- Therefore Necessity, that first made Kings,
-
- Something like Government among them brings.
- For as with Pygmees who best kills the Crane,
-
- Among the hungry he that treasures Grain,
-
- Among the blind the one-ey'd blinkard reigns,
- So rules among the drowned he that draines.
-
- Not who first see the rising Sun commands,
- But who could first discern the rising Lands.
-
- Who best could know to pump an Earth so leak
- Him they their Lord and Country's Father speak.
- To make a Bank was a great Plot of State;
-
- Invent a Shov'l and be a Magistrate.
-
- Hence some small Dyke-grave unperceiv'd invades
- The Pow'r, and grows as 'twere a King of Spades.
-
- But for less envy some joynt States endures,
- Who look like a Commission of the Sewers.
-
- For these Half-anders, half wet, and half dry,
- Nor bear strict service, nor pure Liberty.
-
-
-
- 'Tis probable Religion after this
- Came next in order; which they could not miss.
- How could the Dutch but be converted, when
- Th' Apostles were so many Fishermen?
- Besides the Waters of themselves did rise,
- And, as their Land, so them did re-baptize.
- Though Herring for their God few voices mist,
- And Poor-John to have been th' Evangelist.
-
-
- Faith, that could never. Twins conceive before,
- Never so fertile, spawn'd upon this shore:
- More pregnant then their Marg'ret, that laid down
- For Hans-in-Kelder of a whole Hans-Town.
-
-
-
- Sure when Religion did it self imbark,
- And from the East would Westward steer its Ark,
- It struck, and splitting on this unknown ground,
- Each one thence pillag'd the first piece he found:
-
-
- Hence Amsterdam, Turk-Christian-Pagan-Jew,
-
- Staple of Sects and Mint of Schisme grew;
- That Bank of Conscience, where not one so strange
- Opinion but finds Credit, and Exchange.
- In vain for Catholicks our selves we bear;
- The universal Church is onely there.
- Nor can Civility there want for Tillage,
-
- Where wisely for their Court they chose a Village.
-
- How fit a Title clothes their Governours,
-
- Themselves the Hogs as all their Subjects Bores!
-
-
-
- Let it suffice to give their Country Fame
- That it had one Civilis call'd by Name,
- Some Fifteen hundred and more years ago;
- But surely never any that was so.
-
-
- See but their Mairmaids with their Tails of Fish,
-
- Reeking at Church over the Chasing-Dish.
-
- A vestal Turfenshrin'd in Earthen Ware
- Fumes through the loop-holes of wooden Square.
- Each to the Temple with these Altars tend,
- But still does place it at her Western End:
-
- While the fat steam of Female Sacrifice
-
- Fills the Priests Nostrils and puts out his Eyes.
-
-
-
- Or what a Spectacle the Skipper gross,
-
-
- A Water-Hercules Butter-Coloss,
-
-
- Tunn'd up with all their sev'ral Towns of Beer;
-
- When Stagg'ring upon some Land, Snick and Sneer,
-
- They try, like Statuaries, if they can,
- Cut out each others Athos to a Man:
- And carve in their large Bodies, where they please,
- The Armes of the United Provinces.
-
-
-
- But when such Amity at home is show'd;
- What then are their confederacies abroad?
- Let this one court'sie witness all the rest;
- When their whole Navy they together prest,
- Not Christian Captives to redeem from Bands:
- Or intercept the Western golden Sands:
- No, but all ancient Rights and Leagues must vail,
- Rather then to the English strike their fail;
-
-
- To whom their weather-beaten Province ows
- It self, when as some greater Vessel tows
- A Cock-boat tost with the same wind and fate;
- We buoy'd so often up their sinking State.
-
-
-
- Was this Jus Belli & Pacis; could this be
- Cause why their Burgomaster of the Sea
-
- Ram'd with Gun-powder, flaming with Brand wine,
- Should raging hold his Linstock to the Mine?
- While, with feign'd Treaties, they invade by stealth
- Our sore new circumcised Common wealth.
-
-
-
- Yet of his vain Attempt no more he sees
- Then of Case-Butter shot and Bullet-Cheese.
-
- And the torn Navy stagger'd with him home,
- While the Sea laught it self into a foam,
- 'Tis true since that (as fortune kindly sports,)
- A wholesome Danger drove us to our Ports.
- While half their banish'd keels the Tempest tost,
- Half bound at home in Prison to the frost:
- That ours mean time at leizure might careen,
- In a calm Winter, under Skies Serene.
- As the obsequious Air and Waters rest,
- Till the dear Halcyon hatch out all its nest.
- The Common wealth doth by its losses grow;
- And, like its own Seas, only Ebbs to flow.
- Besides that very Agitation laves,
- And purges out the corruptible waves.
-
-
- And now again our armed Bucentore
-
- Doth yearly their Sea-Nuptials restore.
- And how the Hydra of seaven Provinces
-
- Is strangled by our Infant Hercules.
-
- Their Tortoise wants its vainly stretched neck;
- Their Navy all our Conquest or our Wreck:
- Or, what is left, their Carthage overcome
- Would render fain unto our better Rome.
-
- Unless our Senate, lest their Youth disuse,
- The War, (but who would) Peace if begg'd refuse.
-
-
- For now of nothing may our State despair,
- Darling of Heaven, and of Men the Care;
-
-
- Provided that they be what they have been,
- Watchful abroad, and honest still within.
- For while our Neptune doth a Trident shake, (Blake,
-
- Steel'd with those piercing Heads, Dean, Monck and
- And while Jove governs in the highest Sphere,
- Vainly in Hell let Pluto domineer.
-
-
-
- An Horation Ode upon Cromwel's Return from Ireland.
-
-
- THE forward Youth that would appear
- Must now forsake his Muses dear,
- Nor in the Shadows sing
- His Numbers languishing.
- 'Tis time to leave the Books in dust,
- And oyl th' unused Armours rust:
- Removing from the Wall
- The Corslet of the Hall.
- So restless Cromwel could not cease
- In the inglorious Arts of Peace,
- But through adventrous War
- Urged his active Star.
- And, like the three-fork'd Lightning, first
- Breaking the Clouds where it was nurst,
- Did through his own Side
- His fiery way divide.
- For 'tis all one to Courage high
- The Emulous or Enemy;
- And with such to inclose
- Is more then to oppose.
- Then burning through the Air he went,
- And Pallaces and Temples rent:
- And Caesars head at last
- Did through his Laurels blast.
- 'Tis Madness to resist or blame
- The force of angry Heavens flame:
-
-
- And, if we would speak true,
- Much to the Man is due.
- Who, from his private Gardens, where
- He liv'd reserved and austere,
- As if his hightest plot
- To plant the Bergamot,
- Could by industrious Valour climbe
- To ruine the great Work of Time,
- And cast the Kingdome old
- Into another Mold.
- Though Justice against Fate complain,
- And plead the antient Rights in vain:
- But those do hold or break
- As Men are strong or weak.
- Nature that hateth emptiness,
- Allows of penetration less:
- And therefore must make room
- Where greater Spirits come.
- What Field of all the Civil Wars,
- Where his were not the deepest Scars?
- And Hampton shows what part
- He had of wiser Art.
- Where, twining subtile fears with hope,
- He wove a Net of such a scope,
- That Charles himself might chase
- To Caresbrooks narrow case.
- That thence the Royal Actor born
- The Tragick Scaffold might adorn:
- While round the armed Bands
- Did clap their bloody hands.
-
- He nothing common did or mean
- Upon that memorable Scene:
- But with his keener Eye
- The Axes edge did try:
- Nor call'd the Gods with vulgar spight
- To vindicate his helpless Right,
- But bow'd his comely Head,
- Down as upon a Bed.
-
-
- This was that memorable Hour
- Which first assur'd the forced Pow'r.
- So when they did design
- The Capitols first Line,
- A bleeding Head where they begun,
- Did fright the Architects to run;
- And yet in that the State
-
- Foresaw it's happy Fate.
- And now the Irish are asham'd
- To see themselves in one Year tam'd:
- So much one Man can do,
- That does both act and know.
- They can affirm his Praises best,
- And have, though overcome, confest
- How good he is, how just,
- And fit for highest Trust:
- Nor yet grown stiffer with Command,
- But still in the Republick's hand:
- How fit he is to sway
- That can so well obey.
- He to the Common Feet presents
- A Kingdome, for his first years rents:
- And, what he may, forbears
- His Fame to make it theirs:
- And has his Sword and Spoyls ungirt,
- To lay them at the Publick's skirt.
- So when the Falcon high
- Falls heavy from the Sky,
- She, having kill'd, no more does search,
- But on the next green Bow to pearch;
- Where, when he first does lure,
- The Falckner has her sure.
- What may not then our Isle presume
- While Victory his Crest does plume!
- What may not others fear
- If thus he crown each Year!
- A Caesar he ere long to Gaul,
-
- To Italy an Hannibal,
-
-
-
- And to all States not free
- Shall Clymacterick be.
- The Pict no shelter now shall find
- Within his party-colour'd Mind;
- But from this Valour sad
- Shrink underneath the Plad:
- Happy if in the tufted brake
- The English Hunter him mistake;
- Nor lay his Hounds in near
- The Caledonian Deer.
- But thou the Wars and Fortunes Son
- March indefatigably on;
- And for the last effect
- Still keep thy Sword erect:
- Besides the force it has to fright
- The Spirits of the shady Night,
- The same Arts that did gain
-
- A Pow'r must it maintain.
-
-
-
-
-
- THE FIRST ANNIVERSARY Of the Government under O. C.
-
- LIke the vain Curlings of the Watry maze, (raise;
- Which in smooth streams a sinking Weight does
- So Man, declining alwayes, disappears
- In the weak Circles of increasing Years;
- And his short Tumults of themselves Compose,
- While flowing Time above his Head does close.
-
-
-
- Cromwell alone with greater Vigour runs,
- (Sun-like) the Stages of succeeding Suns:
- And still the Day which he doth next restore,
- Is the just Wonder of the Day before.
-
- Cromwell alone doth with new Lustre spring,
- And shines the Jewel of the yearly Ring.
-
-
- 'Tis he the force of scatter'd Time contracts,
- And in one Year the work of Ages acts:
- While heavy Monarchs make a wide Return,
- Longer, and more Malignant then Saturn:
-
- And though they all Platonique years should raign,
- In the same Posture would be found again.
- Their earthy Projects under ground they lay;
- More slow and brittle then the China clay:
- Well may they strive to leave them to their Son,
- For one Thing never was by one King don.
- Yet some more active for a Frontier Town
- Took in by Proxie, beggs a false Renown;
-
-
- Another triumphs at the publick Cost,
- And will have Wonn, if he no more have Lost;
- They fight by Others, but in Person wrong,
- And only are against their Subjects strong;
- Their other Wars seem but a feign'd contest,
- This Common Enemy is still opprest;
- If Conquerors, on them they turn their might;
- If Conquered, on them they wreak their Spight:
- They neither build the Temple in their dayes,
- Nor Matter for succeeding Founders raise;
- Nor sacred Prophecies consult within,
- Much less themselves to perfect them begin;
- No other care they bear of things above,
- But with Astrologers divine, and Jove,
-
- To know how long their Planet yet Reprives
- From the deserved Fate their guilty lives:
- Thus (Image-like) and useless time they tell,
- And with vain Scepter strike the hourly Bell;
- Nor more contribute to the state of Things,
- Then wooden Heads unto the Viols strings.
-
-
- While indefatigable Cromwell hyes,
- And cuts his way still nearer to the Skyes,
- Learning a Musique in the Region clear,
- To tune this lower to that higher Sphere.
-
-
- So when Amphion did the Lute command,
- Which the God gave him, with his gentle hand,
- The rougher Stones, unto his Measures hew'd,
- Dans'd up in order from the Quarreys rude;
- This took a Lower, that an Higher place,
- As he the Treble alter'd, or the Base:
- No Note he struck, but a new Story lay'd,
- And the great Work ascended while he play'd.
-
-
- The listning Structures he with Wonder ey'd,
- And still new Stopps to various Time apply'd:
- Now through the Strings a Martial rage he throws,
- And joyng streight the Theban Tow'r arose;
- Then as he strokes them with a Touch more sweet,
- The flocking Marbles in a Palace meet;
-
-
- But, for he most the graver Notes did try,
- Therefore the Temples rear'd their Columns high:
- Thus, ere he ceas'd, his sacred Lute creates
- Th'harmonious City of the seven Gates.
-
-
- Such was that wondrous Order and Consent,
- When Cromwell tun'd the ruling Instrument;
- While tedious Statesmen many years did hack,
- Framing a Liberty that still went back;
- Whose num'rous Gorge could swallow in an hour
- That Island, which the Sea cannot devour:
- Then our Amphion issues out and sings,
- And once he struck, and twice, the pow'rful Strings.
-
-
- The Commonwealth then first together came,
- And each one enter'd in the willing Frame;
- All other Matter yields, and may be rul'd;
- But who the Minds of stubborn Men can build?
- No Quarry bears a Stone so hardly wrought,
- Nor with such labour from its Center brought;
- None to be sunk in the Foundation bends,
- Each in the House the highest Place contends,
- And each the Hand that lays him will direct,
- And some fall back upon the Architect;
- Yet all compos'd by his attractive Song,
- Into the Animated City throng. (all
-
-
- The Common-wealth does through their Centers
- Draw the Circumf'rence of the publique Wall;
- The crossest Spirits here do take their part,
- Fast'ning the Contignation which they thwart;
- And they, whose Nature leads them to divide,
- Uphold, this one, and that the other Side;
- But the most Equal still sustein the Height,
- And they as Pillars keep the Work upright;
- While the resistance of opposed Minds,
- The Fabrick as with Arches stronger binds,
- Which on the Basis of a Senate free,
- Knit by the Roofs Protecting weight agree.
-
-
- When for his Foot he thus a place had found,
- He hurles e'r since the World about him round;
-
-
- And in his sev'ral Aspects, like a Star,
- Here shines in Peace, and thither shoots a War.
- While by his Beams observing Princes steer,
- And wisely court the Influence they fear;
- O would they rather by his Pattern won.
- Kiss the approaching, nor yet angry Son;
- And in their numbred Footsteps humbly tread
- The path where holy Oracles do lead;
- How might they under such a Captain raise
- The great Designes kept for the latter Dayes!
- But mad with Reason, so miscall'd, of State
- They know them not, and what they know not, hate
- Hence still they sing Hosanna to the Whore,
- And her whom they should Massacre adore:
- But Indians whom they should convert, subdue;
- Nor teach, but traffique with, or burn the Jew.
-
-
- Unhappy Princes, ignorantly bred,
- By Malice some, by Errour more misled;
- If gracious Heaven to my Life give length,
- Leisure to Time, and to my Weakness Strength,
- Then shall I once with graver Accents shake
- Your Regal sloth, and your long Slumbers wake:
- Like the shrill Huntsman that prevents the East,
- Winding his Horn to Kings that chase the Beast.
-
-
- Till then my Muse shall hollow far behind
- Angelique Cromwell who outwings the wind;
- And in dark Nights, and in cold Dayes alone
- Pursues the Monster thorough every Throne:
- Which shrinking to her Roman Den impure,
- Gnashes her Goary teeth; nor there secure.
-
-
- Hence oft I think, if in some happy Hour
- High Grace should meet in one with highest Pow'r,
- And then a seasonable People still
- Should bend to his, as he to Heavens will,
- What we might hope, what wonderful Effect
- From such a wish'd Conjuncture might reflect.
- Sure, the mysterious Work, where none withstand,
- Would forthwith finish under such a Hand:
-
-
- Fore-shortned Time its useless Course would stay,
- And soon precipitate the latest Day.
- But a thick Cloud about that Morning lyes,
- And intercepts the Beams of Mortal eyes,
- That 'tis the most which we determine can,
- If these the Times, then this must be the Man.
- And well he therefore does, and well has guest,
- Who in his Age has always forward prest:
- And knowing not where Heavens choice may light,
- Girds yet his Sword, and ready stands to fight;
- But Men alas, as if they nothing car'd,
- Look on, all unconcern'd, or unprepar'd;
- And Stars still fall, and still the Dragons Tail
- Swinges the Volumes of its horrid Flail.
- For the great Justice that did first suspend
- The World by Sin, does by the same extend.
- Hence that blest Day still counterpoysed wastes,
- The Ill delaying, what th'Elected hastes;
- Hence landing Nature to new Seas is tost,
- And good Designes still with their Authors lost.
-
-
- And thou, great Cromwell, for whose happy birth
- A Mold was chosen out of better Earth;
- Whose Saint-like Mother we did lately see
- Live out an Age, long as a Pedigree;
- That she might seem, could we the Fall dispute,
- T'have smelt the Blossome, and not eat the Fruit;
- Though none does of more lasting Parents grow,
- But never any did them Honor so;
- Though thou thine Heart from Evil still unstain'd,
- And always hast thy Tongue from fraud refrain'd;
- Thou, who so oft through Storms of thundring Lead
- Hast born securely thine undaunted Head,
- Thy Brest through ponyarding Conspiracies,
- Drawn from the Sheath of lying Propheoies;
- Thee proof beyond all other Force or Skill,
- Our Sins endanger, and shall one day kill.
-
-
- How near they fail'd, and in thy sudden Fall
- At once assay'd to overturn us all.
-
-
- Our brutish fury strugling to be Free,
- Hurry'd thy Horses while they hurry'd thee.
- When thou hadst almost quit thy Mortal cares,
- And soyl'd in Dust thy Crown of silver Hairs.
- Let this one Sorrow interweave among
- The other Glories of our yearly Song.
- Like skilful Looms which through the costly threed
- Of purling Ore, a shining wave do shed:
- So shall the Tears we on past Grief employ,
- Still as they trickle, glitter in our Joy.
- So with more Modesty we may be True,
- And speak as of the Dead the Praises due:
- While impious Men deceiv'd with pleasure short,
- On their own Hopes shall find the Fall retort.
- But the poor Beasts wanting their noble Guide,
- What could they more? shrunk guiltily aside.
- First, winged Fear transports them far away,
- And leaden Sorrow then their flight did stay.
- See how they each his towring Crest abate,
- And the green Grass, and their known Mangers hate,
- Nor through wide Nostrils snuffe the wanton air,
- Nor their round Hoofs, or curled Mane'scompare;
- With wandring Eyes, and restless Ears theystood,
- And with shrill Neighings ask'd him of the Wood.
- Thou Cromwell falling, not a stupid Tree,
- Or Rock so savage, but it mourn'd for thee:
- And all about was heard a Panique groan,
- As if that Natures self were overthrown.
- It seem'd the Earth did from the Center tear;
- It seem'd the Sun was faln out of the Sphere:
- Justice obstructed lay, and Reason fool'd;
- Courage disheartned, and Religion cool'd.
- A dismal Silence through the Palace went,
- And then loud Shreeks the vaulted Marbles rent.
- Such as the dying Chorus sings by turns,
- And to deaf Seas, and ruthless Tempests mourns,
- When now they sink, and now the plundring Streams
- Break up each Deck, and rip the Oaken seams.
-
-
-
-
- But thee triumphant hence the firy Carr,
- And firy Steeds had born out of the Warr,
- From the low World, and thankless Men above,
- Unto the Kingdom blest of Peace and Love:
- We only mourn'd our selves, in thine Ascent,
- Whom thou hadst left beneath with Mantle rent.
-
-
- For all delight of Life thou then didst lose,
- When to Command, thou didst thy self Depose;
- Resigning up thy Privacy so dear,
- To turn the headstrong Peoples Charioteer;
- For to be Cromwell was a greater thing,
- Then ought below, or yet above a King:
- Therefore thou rather didst thy Self depress,
- Yielding to Rule, because it made thee Less.
-
-
- For, neither didst thou from the first apply
- Thy sober Spirit unto things too High,
- But in thine own Fields exercisedst long,
- An healthful Mind within a Body strong;
- Till at the Seventh time thou in the Skyes,
- As a small Cloud, like a Mans hand didst rise;
- Then did thick Mists and Winds the air deform,
- And down at last thou pow'rdst the fertile Storm;
- Which to the thirsty Land did plenty bring,
- But though forewarn'd, o'r-took and wet the King.
-
-
- What since he did, an higher Force him push'd
- Still from behind, and it before him rush'd,
- Though undiscern'd among the tumult blind,
- Who think those high Decrees by Man design'd.
- 'Twas Heav'n would not that his Pow'r should cease,
- But walk still middle betwixt War and Peace;
- Choosing each Stone, and poysing every weight,
- Trying the Measures of the Bredth and Height;
- Here pulling down, and there erecting New,
- Founding a firm State by Proportions true.
-
-
- When Gideon so did from the War retreat,
- Yet by the Conquest of two Kings grown great,
- He on the Peace extends a Warlike power,
- And Is'rel silent saw him rase the Tow'r;
-
-
- And how he Succoths Elders durst suppress,
- With Thorns and Briars of the Wilderness.
- No King might ever such a Force have done;
- Yet would not he be Lord, nor yet his Son.
-
-
- Thou with the same strength, and an Heart as plain,
- Didst (like thine Olive) still refuse to Reign;
- Though why should others all thy Labor spoil,
- And Brambles be anointed with thine Oyl,
- Whose climbing Flame, without a timely stop,
- Had quickly Levell'd every Cedar's top.
- Therefore first growing to thy self a Law,
- Th'ambitious Shrubs thou in just time didstaw.
-
-
- So have I seen at Sea, when whirling Winds,
- Hurry the Bark, but more the Seamens minds,
- Who with mistaken Course salute the Sand,
- And threat'ning Rocks misapprehend for Land;
- While baleful Tritons to the shipwrack guide.
- And Corposants along the Tacklings slide.
- The Passengers all wearyed out before,
- Giddy, and wishing for the fatal Shore;
- Some lusty Mate, who with more careful Eye
- Counted the Hours, and ev'ry Star did spy,
- The Helm does from the artless Steersman strain,
- And doubles back unto the safer Main.
- What though a while they grumble discontent,
- Saving himself he does their loss prevent.
-
-
- 'Tis not a Freedome, that where All command;
- Nor Tyranny, where One does them withstand:
- But who of both the Bounders knows to lay
- Him as their Father must the State obey.
-
-
- Thou, and thine House, like Noah's Eight did rest,
- Left by the Wars Flood on the Mountains crest:
- And the large Vale lay subject to thy Will,
- Which thou but as an Husbandman would Till:
- And only didst for others plant the Vine
- Of Liberty, not drunken with its Wine.
-
-
- That sober Liberty which men may have,
- That they enjoy, but more they vainly crave:
-
-
- And such as to their Parents Tents do press,
- May shew their own, not see his Nakedness.
-
-
- Yet such a Ch
- •
- mmish issue still does rage,
- The Shame and Plague both of the Land and Age,
- Who warch'd thy halting, and thy Fall deride,
- Rejoycing when thy Foot had slipt aside;
- That their new King might the fifth Scepter shake,
- And make the World, by his Example, Quake:
- Whose frantique Army should they want for Men
- Might muster Heresies, so one were ten.
- What thy Misfortune, they the Spirit call,
- And their Religion only is to Fall.
- Oh Mahomet!. now couldst thou rise again,
- Thy Falling-sickness should have made thee Reign,
- While Feake and Simpson would in many a Tome,
- Have writ the Comments of thy sacred Foame:
- For soon thou mightst have past among their Rant
- Wer't but for thine unmoved Tulipant;
- As thou must needs have own'd them of thy band
- For prophecies fit to be Alcorand.
-
-
-
- Accursed Locusts, whom your King does spit
- Out of the Center of th'unbottom'd Pit;
- Wand'rers, Adult'rers, Lyers, Munser's rest,
- Sorcerers, Atheists, Jesuites, Possest;
- You who the Scriptures and the Laws deface
- With the same liberty as Points and Lace;
- Oh Race most hypocritically strict!
- Bent to reduce us to the ancient Pict;
- Well may you act the Adam and the Eve;
-
- Ay, and the Serpent too that did deceive.
-
-
- But the great Captain, now the danger's ore,
- Makes you for his sake Tremble one fit more;
- And, to your spight, returning yet alive
- Does with himself all that is good revive.
-
-
- So when first Man did through the Morning new
- See the bright Sun his shining Race pursue,
- All day he follow'd with unwearied sight,
- Pleas'd with that other World of moving Light;
-
-
- But thought him when he miss'd his setting beams,
- Sunk in the Hills, or plung'd below the Streams.
- While dismal blacks hung round the Universe,
- And Stars (like Tapers) burn'd upon his Herse:
- And Owls and Ravens with their screeching noyse
- Did make the Fun'rals sadder by their Joyes.
- His weeping Eyes the doleful Vigils keep,
- Not knowing yet the Night was made for sleep:
- Still to the West, where he him lost, he turn'd,
- And with such accents, as Despairing, mourn'd:
- Why did mine Eyes once see so bright a Ray;
- Or why Day last no longer then a Day?
- When streight the Sun behind him he descry'd,
- Smiling serenely from the further side.
-
-
- So while our Star that gives us Light and Heat,
- Seem'd now along and gloomy Night to threat,
- Up from the other World his Flame he darts,
- And Princes shining through their windows starts;
- Who their suspected Counsellors refuse,
- And credulous Ambassadors accuse.
-
-
- 'Is this, saith one, the Nation that we read
- 'Spent with both Wars, under a Captain dead?
- 'Yet rig a Navy while we dress us late;
- 'And ere we Dine, rase and rebuild our State.
- 'What Oaken Forrests, and what golden Mines!
- 'What Mints of Men, what Union of Designes!
- 'Unless their Ships, do, as their Fowle proceed
- 'Os shedding Leaves, that with their Ocean breed.
- 'Theirs are not Ships, but rather Arks of War,
- 'And beaked Promontories sail'd from far;
- 'Of floting Islands a new Hatched Nest;
- 'A Fleet of Worlds, of other Worlds in quest;
- 'An hideous shole of wood-Leviathans,
- 'Arm'd with three Tire of brazen Hurricans;
- 'That through the Center shoot their thundring side
- 'And sink the Earth that does at Anchor ride.
- 'What refuge to escape them can be found,
- 'Whose watry Leaguers all the world surround▪
-
-
-
- 'Needs must we all their Tributaries be,
- 'Whose Navies hold the Sluces of the Sea.
- 'The Ocean is the Fountain of Command,
- 'But that once took, we Captives are on Land.
- 'And those that have the Waters for their share,
- 'Can quickly leave us neither Earth nor Air.
- 'Yet if through these our Fears could find a pass;
- 'Through double Oak, & lin'd with treble Brass;
- 'That one Man still, although but nam'd, alarms
- 'More then all Men, all Navies, and all Arms.
- 'Him, all the Day, Him, in late Nights I dread,
- 'And still his Sword seems hanging o're my head.
- 'The Nation had been ours, but his one Soul
- 'Moves the great Bulk, and animates the whole.
- 'He Secrecy with Number hath inchas'd,
- 'Courage with Age, Maturity with Hast:
- 'The Valiants Terror, Riddle of the Wise;
- 'And still his Fauchion all our Knots unties.
- 'Where did he learn those Arts that cost us dear?
- 'Where below Earth, or where above the Sphere?
- 'He seems a King by long Succession born,
- 'And yet the same to be a King does scorn.
- 'Abroad a King he seems, and something more,
- 'At Home a Subject on the equal Floor.
- 'O could I once him with our Title see,
- 'So should I hope yet he might Dye as wee.
- 'But let them write his Praise that love him best;
- 'It grieves me sore to have thus much confest.
-
-
- Pardon, great Prince, if thus their Fear or Spight
- More then our Love and Duty do thee Right.
- I yield, nor further will the Prize contend;
- So that we both alike may miss our End:
- While thou thy venerable Head dost raise
- As far above their Malice as my Praise.
- And as the Angel of our Commonweal,
- Troubling the Waters, yearly mak'st them Heal.
-
-
-
-
- In Legationem Domini Oliveri St. John ad Provincias Foederatas.
-
- INgeniosa Viris contingunt Nomina magnis,
- Ut dubites Casu vel Ratione data.
- Nam Sors, caeca licet, tamen est praesaga futuri;
-
- Et sub fatidico Nomine vera premit.
- Et Tu, cui soli voluit Respublica credi,
- Foedera seu Belgis seu nova Bella feras;
- Haud frustra cecidit tibi Compellatio fallax,
- Ast scriptum ancipiti Nomine Munus erat;
- Scilicet hoc Martis, sed Pacis Nuntius illo:
- Clavibus his Jani ferrea Claustra regis.
- Non opus Arcanos Chartis committere Sensus,
- Et varia licitos condere Fraude Dolos.
-
- Tu quoque si taceas tamen est Legatio Nomen
-
- Et velut in Scytale publica verba refert.
- Vultis Oliverum, Batavi, Sanctumve Johannem?
-
-
- Antiochus gyro non breviore stetit.
-
-
-
- A Letter to Doctor Ingelo, then with my Lord Whitlock, Ambassador from the Protector to the Queen of Sweden.
-
-
- QUid facis Arctoi charissime transfuga coeli,
-
- Ingele, proh sero cognite, rapte cito?
- Num satis Hybernum defendis pellibus Astrum,
- Qui modo tam mollis nec bene firmus eras?
- Quae Gentes Hominum, quae sit Natura Locorum,
- Sint Homines, potius dic ibi sintne Loca?
- Num gravis horrisono Polus obruit omnia lapsu,
- Jungitur & praeceps Mundus utraque nive?
-
-
- An melius canis horrescit Campus Aristis,
- Annuus Agricolis & redit Orbe labor?
- Incolit, ut fertur, saevam Gens mitior Oram,
- Pace vigil, Bello strenua, justa Foro.
- Quin ibi sunt Urbes, atque alta Palatia Regum,
-
-
- Musarumque domus, & sua Templa Deo.
-
- Nam regit Imperio populum Christina ferocem,
- Et dare jura potest regia Virgo viris.
- Utque trahit rigidum Magnes Aquilone Metallum,
- Gaudet eam Soboles ferrea sponte sequi.
- Dic quantum liceat fallaci credere Famae,
- Invida num taceat plura, sonetve loquax.
- At, si vera fides, Mundi melioris ab ortu,
- Saecula Christinae nulla tulere parem.
- Ipsa licet redeat (nostri decus orbis) Eliza,
-
- Qualis nostra tamen quantaque Eliza fuit.
- Vidimus Effigiem, mistasque Coloribus Umbras:
- Sic quoque Sceptripotens, sic quoque visa Dea.
-
- Augustam decorant (raro concordia) frontem
-
- Majestas & Amor, Forma Pudorque simul.
- Ingens Virgineo spirat Gustavus in ore:
- Agnoscas animos, fulmineumque Patrem.
- Nulla suo nituit tam lucida Stella sub Axe;
- Non Ea quae meruit Crimine Nympha Polum.
- Ah quoties pavidum demisit conscia Lumen,
- Utque suae timuit Parrhasis Ora Deae!
-
- Et, simulet falsa ni Pictor imagine Vultus,
-
- Delia tam similis nec fuit ipsa sibi.
- Ni quod inornati Triviae sint sorte Capilli,
- Sollicita sed huic distribuantur Acu.
- Scilicet ut nemo est illa reverentior aequi;
- Haud ipsas igitur▪ fert sine Lege Comas.
- Gloria sylvarum pariter communis utrique
- Est, & perpetuae Virginitatis Honos.
- Sic quoque Nympharum supereminet Agmina collo,
- Fertque Choros Cynthi per Juga, per Nives.
- Haud aliter pariles Ciliorum contrahit Arcus
- Acribus ast Oculis tela subesse putes.
-
-
- Luminibus dubites an straverit illa Sagittis
- Quae foret exuviis ardua colla Feram.
-
- Alcides humeros coopertus pelle Nemaea
-
- Haud ita labentis sustulit Orbis Onus.
- Heu quae Cervices subnectunt Pectora tales,
- Frigidiora Gelu, candidiora Nive.
- Caetera non licuit, sed vix ea tota, videre;
- Nam clau si rigido stant Adamante Sinus.
- Seu Chlamys Artifici nimium succurrerit auso,
- Sicque imperfectum fugerit impar Opus:
- Sive tribus spernat Victrix certare Deabus,
-
- Et pretium formae nec spoliata ferat.
-
- Junonis properans & clara Trophaea Minervae;
-
- Mollia nam Veneris praemia nosse piget.
- Hinc neque consuluit fugitivae prodiga Formae,
- Nectimuit seris invigilasse Libris.
- Insomnem quoties Nymphae monuere sequaces
- Decedet roseis heu color ille Genis.
- Jamque vigil leni cessit Philomela sopori,
- Omnibus & Sylvis conticuere Ferae.
- Aerior illa tamen pergit, Curasque fatigat:
- Tanti est doctorum volvere scripta Virum.
- Et liciti quae sint moderamina discere Regni,
- Quid fuerit, quid sit, noscere quicquid erit.
- Sic quod in ingenuas Gothus peccaverit Artes
- Vindicat, & studiis expiat Una suis.
- Exemplum dociles imitantur nobile Gentes,
- Et geminis Infans imbuit Ora sonis.
- Transpositos Suecis credas migrasse Latinos,
-
-
- Carmine Romuleo sic strepit omne Nemus.
-
- Upsala nec priscis impar memoratur Athenis,
-
-
- Aegidaque & Currus hic sua Pallas habet.
- Illinc O quales liceat sperasse Liquores,
- Quum Dea praesideat fontibus ipsa sacris!
- Illic Lacte ruant illic & flumina Melle,
- Fulvaque inauratam tingat Arena Salam.
-
-
- Upsalides Musae nunc & majora canemus,
- Quaeque mihi Famae non levis Aura tulit.
-
-
- Creditur haud ulli Christus signasse suorum
- Occultam gemma de meliore Notam.
- Quemque tenet charo descriptum Nomine semper,
- Non minus exculptum Pectore fida refert.
- Sola haec virgineas depascit Flamma Medullas,
- Et licito pergit solvere corda foco.
- Tu quoque Sanctorum fastos Christina sacrabis,
- Unica nec Virgo Volsiniensis erit.
- Discite nunc Reges (Majestas proxima coelo)
-
- Discite proh magnos hinc coluisse Deos.
-
- Ah pudeat Tantos puerilia fingere coepta,
- Nugas nescio quas, & male quaerere Opes.
- Acer Equo cunctos dum praeterit illa Britanno,
-
- Et pecoris spolium nescit inerme sequi.
- Ast Aquilam poscit Germano pellere Nido,
-
- Deque Palatino Monte fugare Lupam.
-
- Vos etiam latos in praedam jungite Campos,
-
- Impiaque arctatis cingite Lustra Plagis.
-
- Victor Oliverus nudum Caput exerit Armis,
- Ducere sive sequi nobile laetus Iter.
- Qualis jam Senior Solymae Godfredus ad Arces,
- Spina cui canis floruit alba Comis.
- Et Lappos Christina potest & solvere Finnos,
-
- Ultima quos Boreae carcere Claustra premunt.
-
- Aeoliis quales Venti fremuere sub antris,
- Et tentant Montis corripuisse moras.
- Hanc Dea si summa demiserit Arce procellam
- Quam gravis Austriacis Hesperiisque cadat!
- Omnia sed rediens olim narraveris Ipse;
- Nec reditus spero tempora longa petit.
- Non ibi lenta pigro stringuntur frigore Verba,
- Solibus, & tandem Vere liquanda novo.
- Sed radiis hyemem Regina potentior urit;
- Haecque magis solvit, quam ligat illa Polum.
- Dicitur & nostros moerens audisse Labores,
- Fortis & ingenuam Gentis amasse Fidem.
- Oblatae Batavam nec paci commodat Aurem;
-
- Nec versat Danos insidiosa dolos.
-
-
-
- Sed pia festinat mutatis Foedera rebus,
- Et Libertatem quae dominatur amat.
- Digna cui Salomon meritos retulisset honores,
- Et Saba concretum Thure cremasset Iter.
- Hanc tua, sed melius, celebraverit, Ingele, Musa;
-
- Et labor est vestrae debitus ille Lyrae.
- Nos sine te frustra Thamisis saliceta subimus,
- Sparsaque per steriles Turba vagamur Agros.
- Et male tentanti querulum respondet Avena:
- Quin & Rogerio dissiluere fides.
- Haec tamen absenti memores dictamus Amico,
-
- Grataque speramus qualiacumque fore.
-
-
-
- In Effigiem Oliveri Cromwell.
-
-
- HAec est quae toties Inimicos Umbra fugavit,
- At sub qua Cives Otia lenta terunt.
-
-
- In eandem Reginae Sueciae transmissam
-
- Bellipotens Virgo, septem Regina Trionum.
- Christina, Arctoi lucida stella Poli;
- Cernis quas merui dura sub Casside Rugas;
- Sicque Senex Armis impiger Ora fero;
- Invia Fatorum dum per Vestigia nitor,
- Exequor & Populi fortia Jussa Manu.
- At tibi submittit frontem reverentior Umbra,
-
- Nec sunt hi Vultus Regibus usque truces.
-
-
-
-
-
- Two Songs at the Marriage of the Lord Fauconberg and the Ludy Mary Cromwell.
-
-
- First.
-
- Chorus.
- Endymion.
- Luna.
-
-
- Chorus.
- TH' Astrologers own Eyes are set,
- And even Wolves the Sheep forget;
- Only this Shepheard, late and soon,
- Upon this Hill outwakes the Moon.
-
- Heark how he sings, with sad delight,
- Thorough the clear and silent Night.
-
-
- Endymion.
-
- Cynthia, O Cynthia, turn thine Ear,
- Nor scorn Endymions plaints to hear.
- As we our Flocks, so you command
- The fleecy Clouds with silver wand.
-
-
- Cynthia.
- If thou a Mortal, rather sleep;
- Or if a Shepheard, watch thy Sheep.
-
-
- Endymion.
- The Shepheard, since he saw thine Eyes,
- And Sheep are both thy Sacrifice.
-
- Nor merits he a Mortal's name,
- That burns with an immortal Flame.
-
-
-
-
-
- Cynthia.
- I have enough for me to do,
- Ruling the Waves that Ebb and flow.
-
-
- Endymion.
- Since thou disdain'st not then to share
- On Sublunary things thy care;
- Rather restrain these double Seas,
- Mine Eyes uncessant deluges.
-
-
- Cynthia.
- My wakeful Lamp all night must move,
- Securing their Repose above.
-
-
- Endymion.
- If therefore thy resplendent Ray
- Can make a Night more bright then Day;
- Shine thorough this obscurer Brest,
- With shades of deep Despair opprest.
-
-
- Chorus.
- Courage, Endymion, boldly Woo,
-
- Anchises was a Shepheard too:
- Yet is her younger Sister laid
- Sporting with him in Ida's shade:
-
- And Cynthia, though the strongest,
- Seeks but the honour to have held out longest.
-
-
- Endymion.
- Here unto Latmos Top I climbe:
- How far below thine Orbe sublime?
- O why, as well as Eyes to see,
- Have I not Armes that reach to thee?
-
-
-
-
- Cynthia.
- 'Tis needless then that I refuse,
- Would you but your own Reason use.
-
-
- Endymion.
- Though I so high may not pretend,
- It is the same so you descend.
-
-
- Cynthia.
-
- These Stars would say I do them wrong,
- Rivals each one for thee too strong.
-
-
- Endymion.
-
- The Stars are fix'd unto their Sphere,
-
- And cannot, though they would, come near.
- Less Loves set of each others praise,
- While Stars Eclypse by mixing Rayes.
-
-
- Cynthia.
- That Cave is dark.
-
-
- Endymion
- Then none can spy:
- Or shine Thou there and 'tis the Sky.
-
-
- Chorus.
- Joy to Endymion,
-
- For he has Cynthia's favour won.
- And Jove himself approves
- With his serenest influence their Loves.
- For he did never love to pair
- His Progeny above the Air;
- But to be honest, valiant, wise,
- Makes Mortals matches fit for Deityes.
-
-
-
-
-
- Second Song.
-
- Hobbinol.
- Phillis.
- Tomalin.
-
-
- Hobbinol.
-
- PHillis, Tomalin, away:
- Never such a merry day.
- For the Northern Shepheards Son
-
- Has Menalca's daughter won.
-
-
- Phillis.
- Stay till I some flow'rs ha' ty'd
- In a Garland for the Bride.
-
-
- Tomalin.
- If thou would'st a Garland bring,
-
- Phillis you may wait the Spring:
- They ha' chosen such an hour
- When She is the only flow'r.
-
-
- Phillis.
- Let's not then at least be seen
- Without each a Sprig of Green.
-
-
- Hobbinol.
- Fear not; at Menalca's Hall
-
- There is Bayes enough for all.
- He when Young as we did graze,
- But when Old he planted Bayes.
-
-
- Tomalin.
- Here She comes; but with a Look
- Far more catching then my Hook.
-
-
- 'Twas those Eyes, I now dare swear,
- Led our Lambs we knew not where.
-
-
- Hobbinol.
- Not our Lambs own Fleeces are
- Curl'd so lovely as her Hair:
- Nor our Sheep new Wash'd can be
- Half so white or sweet as She.
-
-
-
- Phillis.
-
- He so looks as fit to keep
- Somewhat else then silly Sheep.
-
-
-
- Hobbinol.
- Come, lets in some Carol new
- Pay to Love and Them their due.
-
-
- All.
- Joy to that happy Pair,
-
- Whose Hopes united banish our Despair.
- What Shephear'd could for Love pretend,
- Whil'st all the Nymphs on Damon's choice attend?
- What Shepherdess could hope to wed
- Before Marina's turn were sped?
- Now lesser Beauties may take place,
- And meaner Virtues come in play;
- While they,
- Looking from high,
- Shall grace
- Our Flocks and us with a propitious Eye.
- But what is most, the gentle Swain
- No more shall need of Love complain;
- But Virtue shall be Beauties hire,
- And those be equal that have equal Fire.
-
- Marina yields. Who dares be coy?
- Or who despair, now Damon does enjoy?
- Joy to that happy Pair,
- Whose Hopes united banish our Despair.
-
-
-
-
-
- A Poem upon the Death of O. C.
-
-
- THat Providence which had so long the care
- Of Cromwell's head, and numbred ev'ry hair,
- Now in its self (the Glass where all appears)
- Had seen the period of his golden Years:
- And thenceforth onely did attend to trace,
- What death might least so sair a Life deface.
-
-
- The People, which what most they fear esteem,
- Death when more horrid so more noble deem;
- And blame the last Act, like Spectators vain,
- Unless the Prince whom they applaud be slain.
- Nor Fate indeed can well refuse that right
- To those that liv'd in War, to dye in Fight.
-
-
- But long his Valour none had left that could
- Indanger him, or Clemency that would.
- And he whom Nature all for Peace had made,
- But angry Heaven unto War had sway'd,
- And so less useful where he most desir'd,
- For what he least affected was admir'd,
- Deserved yet an End whose ev'ry part
- Should speak the wondrous softness of his Heart.
-
-
- To Love and Grief the fatal Writ was sign'd;
- (Those nobler weaknesses of humane Mind,
- From which those Powers that issu'd the Decree,
- Although immortal, found they were not free.)
- That they, to whom his Breast still open lyes,
- In gentle Passions should his Death disguise:
- And leave succeeding Ages cause to mourn,
- As long as Grief shall weep, or Love shall burn.
-
-
- Streight does a slow and languishing Disease
-
- Eliza, Natures and his darling, seize.
- Her when an infant, taken with her Charms,
- He oft would flourish in his mighty Arms;
-
-
- And, lest their force the tender burthen wrong,
- Slacken the vigour of his Muscles strong;
- Then to the Mothers brest her softly move,
- Which while she drain'd of Milk she fill'd with Love:
- But as with riper Years her Virtue grew,
- And ev'ry minute adds a Lustre new;
- When with meridian height her Beauty shin'd,
- And thorough that sparkled her fairer Mind;
- When She with Smiles serene and Words discreet
- His hidden Soul at ev'ry turn could meet;
- Then might y' ha' daily his Affection spy'd,
- Doubling that knot which Destiny had ty'd.
- While they by sence, not knowing, comprehend
- How on each other both their Fates depend.
- With her each day the pleasing Hours he shares,
- And at her Aspect calms her growing Cares;
- Or with a Grandsire's joy her Children sees
- Hanging about her neck or at his knees.
- Hold fast dear Infants, hold them both or none;
- This will not stay when once the other's gone.
-
-
- A silent fire now wasts those Limbs of Wax,
- And him within his tortur'd Image racks.
- So the Flowr with'ring which the Garden crown'd,
- The sad Root pines in secret under ground.
- Each Groan he doubled and each Sigh he sigh'd,
- Repeated over to the restless Night.
- No trembling String compos'd to numbers new,
- Answers the touch in Notes more sad more true.
- She lest He grieve hides what She can her pains,
- And He to lessen hers his Sorrow feigns:
- Yet both perceiv'd, yet both conceal'd their Skills,
- And so diminishing increast their ills:
- That whether by each others grief they fell,
- Or on their own redoubled, none can tell.
-
-
- And now Eliza's purple Locks were shorn,
- Where She so long her Fathers fate had worn:
- And frequent lightning to her Soul that flyes,
- Devides the Air, and opens all the Skyes:
-
-
- And now his Life, suspended by her breath,
- Ran out impetuously to hasting Death.
- Like polish'd Mirrours, so his steely Brest
- Had ev'ry figure of her woes exprest;
- And with the damp of her last Gasps obscur'd,
- Had drawn such staines as were not to be cur'd.
- Fate could not either reach with single stroke,
- But the dear Image fled the Mirrour broke.
-
-
- Who now shall tell us more of mournful Swans,
- Of Halcyons kind, or bleeding Pelicans?
- No downy breast did ere so gently beat,
- Or fan with airy plumes so soft an heat.
- For he no duty by his height excus'd,
- Nor though a Prince to be a Man refus'd:
- But rather then in his Eliza's pain
- Not love, not grieve, would neither live nor reign:
- And in himself so oft immortal try'd,
- Yet in compassion of another dy'd.
-
-
- So have I seen a Vine, whose lasting Age
- Of many a Winter hath surviv'd the rage.
- Under whose shady tent Men ev'ry year
- At its rich bloods expence their Sorrows chear,
- If some dear branch where it extends its life
- Chance to be prun'd by an untimely knife,
- The Parent-Tree unto the Grief succeeds,
- And through the Wound its vital humour bleeds;
- Trickling in watry drops, whose flowing shape
- Weeps that it falls ere fix'd into a Grape.
- So the dry Stock, no more that spreading Vine,
- Frustrates the Autumn and the hopes of Wine.
-
-
- A secret Cause does sure those Signs ordain
- Fore boding Princes falls, and seldom vain.
- Whether some Kinder Pow'rs, that wish us well,
- What they above cannot prevent, foretell;
- Or the great World do by consent presage,
- As hollow Seas with future Tempests rage:
- Or rather Heav'n, which us so long foresees,
- Their fun'rals celebrate while it decrees.
-
-
- But never yet was any humane Fate
- By nature solemniz'd with so much state.
- He unconcern'd the dreadful passage crost;
- But oh what pangs that Death did Nature cost!
- First the great Thunder was shot off, and sent
- The Signal from the starry Battlement.
- The Winds receive it, and its force out-do,
- As practising how they could thunder too:
- Out of the Binders Hand the Sheaves they tore,
- And thrash'd the Harvest in the airy floore;
- Or of huge Trees, whose growth with his did rise,
- The deep foundations open'd to the Skyes.
- Then heavy Showres the winged Tempests dead,
- And pour the Deluge ore the Chaos head.
- The Race of warlike Horses at his Tomb
- Offer themselves in many an Hecatomb;
-
- With pensive head towards the ground they fall,
- And helpless languish at the tainted Stall.
- Numbers of Men decrease with pains unknown,
- And hasten not to see his Death their own.
- Such Tortures all the Elements unfix'd,
- Troubled to part where so exactly mix'd.
- And as through Air his wasting Spirits flow'd,
- The Universe labour'd beneath their load.
-
-
- Nature it seem'd with him would Nature vye;
- He with Eliza, It with him would dye.
-
-
- He without noise still travell'd to his End,
- As silent Suns to meet the Night descend.
- The Stars that for him fought had only pow'r
- Left to determine now his fatal Hour;
- Which, since they might not hinder, yet they cast
- To chuse it worthy of his Glories past.
-
-
- No part of time but bore his mark away
- Of honour; all the Year was Cromwell's day
- But this, of all the most auspicious found,
- Twice had in open field him Victor crown'd:
- When up the armed Mountains of Dunbar
-
- He march'd, and through deep Severn ending war.
-
-
- What day should him eternize but the same
- That had before immortaliz'd his Name?
-
- That so who ere would at his Death have joy'd,
- In their own Griefs might find themselves imploy'd;
- But those that sadly his departure griev'd,
- Yet joy'd remembring what he once atchiev'd.
- And the last minute his victorious Ghost
-
- Gave chase to Ligny on the Belgick Coast.
-
- Here ended all his mortal toyles: He lay'd
- And slept in Peace under the Lawrel shade.
-
-
-
-
- O Cromwell, Heavens Favorite! To none
- Have such high honours from above been shown:
- For whom the Elements we Mourners see,
- And Heav'n it self would the great Herald be,
- Which with more Care set forth his Obsequies
- Then those of Moses hid from humane Eyes;
- As jealous only here lost all be less,
- That we could to his Memory express.
-
-
- Then let us to our course of Mourning keep:
- Where Heaven leads, tis Piety to weep.
- Stand back ye Seas, and shrunk beneath the vail
- Of your Abysse, with cover'd Head be wail
- Your Monarch: We demand not your supplies
- To compass in our Isle; our Tears suffice;
- Since him away the dismal Tempest rent,
- Who once more joyn'd us to the Continent▪
-
- Who planted England on the Flandrick shoar,
-
- And stretch'd our frontire to the Indian Ore;
-
- Whose greater Truths obscure the Fables old,
- Whether of Brittish Saints or Wortby's told▪
-
- And in a valour less'ning Arthur's deeds,
- For Holyness the Confessor exceeds.
-
-
- He first put Armes into Religions hand▪
-
- And tim'rous Conscience unto Courage
-
- 〈◊〉
- :
- The Souldier taught that inward Mail to wear▪
-
- And fearing God how they should nothing fear▪
-
-
- Those Strokes he said will pierce through all below▪
-
- Where those that strike from Heaven fetch their
- 〈◊〉
- .
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