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SOME    LONGER   ELIZABETHAN   POEMS 


ENGLISH 


SOME    LONGER 
ELIZABETHAN    POEMS 

WITH    AN    INTRODUCTION    BY 
A.    H.     BULL  EN 


WESTMINSTER 

ARCHIBALD   CONSTABLE   AND    CO.,  LTD. 

1903 


'     '  I 


PUBLISHERS'    NOTE 

THE  texts  contained  in  the  present  volume  are  re- 
printed with  very  slight  alterations  from  the  English 
Garner  issued  in  eight  volumes  (1877-1890,  London, 
8vo)  by  Professor  Arber,  whose  name  is  sufficient 
guarantee  for  the  accurate  collation  of  the  texts 
with  the  rare  originals,  the  old  spelling  being  in 
most  cases  carefully  modernised.  The  contents  of 
the  original  Garner  have  been  rearranged  and  now 
for  the  first  time  classified,  under  the  general 
editorial  supervision  of  Mr.  Thomas  Seccombe. 
Certain  lacunae  have  been  filled  by  the  interpolation 
of  fresh  matter.  The  Introductions  are  wholly 
new  and  have  been  written  specially  for  this  issue. 


Fxlinburgh  :  T.  and  A.  CONSTABLE,  Printers  to  His  Majesty 


CONTENTS 


PAGE 


Sir  John  Davies— Orchestra,  or  A  Poem  of  Dancing,  1596,.        .          i 

Sir  John  Davies — Nosce  Teipsum  : — 

1.  Of  Human  Knowledge,') 

2.  Of  the  Soul  of  Man,      I'599' 

Sir  John  Davies— Hymns  of  Astraea,  in  Acrostic  Verse,  1599,      .       107 

Six  Idillia,  that  is  six  small  or  petty  poems  or  ^Eglogues  of 
Theocritus  translated  into  English  Verse  (Anon),  Oxford, 
1588,  . 123 

*Richard  Barnfield — The  Affectionate  Shepheard.  Containing 
the  Complaint  of  Daphnis  for  the  love  of  Ganymede, 
1594, 147 

*Richard  Barnfield— Cynthia.     With  Certaine  Sonnets  and  the 

Legend  of  Cassandra,  1595, 187 

*Richard  Barnfield — The  Encomion  of  Lady  Pecunia  :  or  The 

Praise  of  Money,  1598, 227 

*Richard  Barnfield— The  Complaint  of  Poetrie  for  the  Death  of 

Liberalitie,  1598, 241 

*Richard   Barnfield— The   Combat,  betweene  Conscience    and 

Covetousnesse  in  the  minde  of  Man,  1598,          .        .        .      253 

*Richard  Barnfield — Poems  :  in  divers  humors,  1598,          .        .      261 

Astrophel.  A  Pastoral  Elegy  upon  the  death  of  the  most  noble 
and  valorous  Knight,  Sir  Philip  Sidney.  A  group  of 


vi  SOME  LONGER  ELIZABETHAN  POEMS 

PAGE 

elegies    by  Spenser    and    other    hands    printed    as    an 
Appendix  to  Spenser's  Colin  Clouts  come  home  again, 

1595, 27i 

J.  C.— Alcilia  :  Philoparthen's  Loving  Folly,  1595,       .        .        .319 

Antony  Scoloker— Daiphantus,  or  The  Passions  of  Love,  by 
An.  Sc.  Whereunto  is  added  The  Passionate  Man's 
Pilgrimage,  1604,  .  .  .  •  „  .  .  .  .363 

Michael  Drayton — Odes  [drawn  from  Poems  Lyrick  and  Pastorall^ 

1606,  and  the  later  Poems  of  1619], 405 


*  The  items  indicated  by  an  asterisk  are  new  additions  to  An  English  Garner. 


INTRODUCTION 

As  there  is  no  need  to  adopt  a  strictly  chronological 
order  for  the  poems  included  in  the  present  volume,  I 
have  begun  with  the  Orchestra  and  Nosce  Teipsum  of 
Sir  John  Davies  (1569-1626),  who  was  undoubtedly  one 
of  the  most  brilliant  figures  of  the  Elizabethan  Age. 
Well-born  and  gently  bred,  educated  at  Winchester  and 
at  New  College,  Oxford,  Davies  was  exceptionally  fortunate 
in  escaping  the  pecuniary  cares  that  harassed  so  many 

»  Elizabethan  men  of  letters.  From  the  Middle  Temple  he 
was  called  to  the  bar  in  1595  (at  the  age  of  twenty-six). 
In  the  previous  year  Orchestra  had  been  entered  in  the 
Stationers'  Register,  but  the  poem  was  first  published  in 
1596.  From  the  dedicatory  sonnet  to  Richard  Martin 
we  learn  that  it  was  written  in  fifteen  days.  There  are, 
however,  no  signs  of  haste  in  the  writing,  and  it  may  fairly 
be  claimed  that  this  poem  in  praise  of  dancing  is  a  grace- 
ful monument  of  ingenious  fancy.  Lucian  composed  a 
valuable  and  entertaining  treatise  on  dancing,  and  I  suspect 
that  Ile/H  'O/j^o-ea)?  gave  Davies  the  idea  of  writing 
Orchestra. 

In  the  opening  stanzas1  we  are  presented  with  a  pictur- 
esque description  of 

1  The  sovereign  castle  of  the  rockly  isle 
Wherein  Penelope  the  Princess  lay,' 

1  Ben  Jonson  (Conversations  with   William  Drummond  of  Hawthorndeti) 
took  exception  to  the  opening  lines  : — 

4  He  scorned  such  verses  as  could  be  transponed — 
Where  is  the  man  that  never  yett  did  hear 
Of  faire  Penelope,  Ulisses  Queene? 
Of  faire  Penelope  Ulisses  Queene, 
Wher  is  the  man  that  never  yett  did  hear?' 

vii 


viii          SOME  LONGER  ELIZABETHAN  POEMS 

lit  with  a  thousand  lamps  on  a  festal  night  when  the 
suitors  had  assembled,  at  the  queen's  invitation,  to  hear 
the  minstrel  Phcemius  sing  the  praises  of  the  heroes  who 
had  fought  at  Troy.  With  such  beauty  shone  Penelope 
that  the  suitors  were  abashed  at  their  temerity  in  having 
dared  to  woo  her.  But  one  *  fresh  and  jolly  knight,' 
Antinous,  so  far  from  being  dismayed, 

*  boldly  gan  advance 
And  with  fair  manners  wooed  the  Queen  to  dance.' 

She  blushingly  declined,  and  mildly  chided  him  for  trying 
to  persuade  her  to  new-fangled  follies.  Forthwith  he 
launched  into  a  rapturous  disquisition  on  the  antiquity  of 
dancing,  which  began  when  Love  persuaded  the  jarring 
elements — fire,  air,  earth,  and  water — to  cease  from  con- 
flict and  observe  true  measure.  The  sun  and  moon,  the 
fixed  and  wandering  stars,  the  girdling  sea  and  running 
streams,  all  'yield  perfect  forms  of  dancing.'  With  exu- 
berant fancy,  fetching  his  illustrations  from  near  and  far, 
he  pursues  his  theme  through  many  richly-coloured  stanzas. 
It  may  be  worth  while  to  remark  (as  his  editors  have  been 
silent  on  the  subject)  that  Davies  does  not  scruple  to 
borrow  freely  from  Lucian.  Take,  for  instance,  stanza 
80:— 

1  Wherefore  was  Proteus  said  himself  to  change 
Into  a  stream,  a  lion,  and  a  tree, 
And  many  other  forms  fantastic  strange 
As  in  his  fickle  thought  he  wished  to  be  ? 
But  that  he  danced  with  such  facility, 

As,  like  a  lion,  he  could  prance  with  pride, 
Ply  like  a  plant  and  like  a  river  glide.' 

Now  hear  Lucian  : — 

So/cei  -yap  pot  6  TraAatos  fivOos  KOU  HpuTea  rov  hiyvmiov  OVK  aAAo  rt 


INTRODUCTION  ix 


^v  riva  yevea-dai  Aeyeii>,  fjn/j,rjTiKov  avOpotirov  KOI  TT/OOS 

L  Kal  fji€Ta/3d\X.€(rOaL  Svvdptvov,  o>s  KCU  v8aro<s  v 
/u/i€to-$cu  Kal  Trvpos  O^VT^TO,  ev  ry  rfjs  Kiv^crews  (7<^o8/3OT^T6  KCU  Aeovros 
KOI  Tra/oSaAecos  Ovpov  Kal  SevSpov  SoV^a,  /ecu  oA<os  o  TI  KCU 


Here  is  another  example  (Stanza  17):  — 

*  Dancing,  bright  Lady,  then  began  to  be 
When  the  first  seeds  whereof  the  world  did  spring, 
The  Fire,  Air,  Earth,  and  Water  did  agree 
By  Love's  persuasion  (Nature's  mighty  King) 
To  leave  their  first  disordered  combating, 

And  in  a  dance  such  measures  to  observe 

As  all  the  world  their  motion  should  preserve.' 

With  this  compare  Lucian  (as  Englished  by  Jasper  Mayne): 
1  First,  then,  you  plainly  seem  to  me  not  to  know  that 
dancing  is  no  new  invention  or  of  yesterday's  or  the  other 
day's  growth,  or  born  among  our  forefathers  or  their 
ancestors.  But  they  who  most  truly  derive  dancing,  say 
it  sprung  with  the  first  beginning  of  the  universe,  and  had 
a  birth  equally  as  ancient  as  love.'  It  would  be  easy  to 
multiply  instances.  Of  course  Davies'  borrowings  from 
Lucian  do  not  for  a  moment  detract  from  his  poem's  merit  : 
indeed  they  give  an  added  zest. 

In  the  1596  edition  Orchestra  ends  with  a  compliment  to 
Queen  Elizabeth,  and  stanzas  in  praise  of  Spenser,  Daniel, 
and  others.  Davies  had  evidently  intended  to  write 
a  sequel  ;  for,  when  Orchestra  was  republished  in  the 

1  The  passage  is  thus  rendered  by  Jasper  Mayne  (Part  of  Lucian,  made 
English  .  .  .  in  the  year  1638):  —  '  Nor  were  it  amiss,  having  passed  through 
India  and  Aethiopia,  to  draw  our  discourse  down  to  their  neighbouring  Aegypt. 
Where  the  ancient  fiction  which  goes  of  Proteus,  methinks,  signifies  him  only  to 
be  a  certain  dancer  and  mimic  ;  who  could  transform  and  change  himself  into  all 
shapes,  sometimes  acting  the  fluidness  of  water,  sometimes  the  sharpness  of  fire, 
occasioned  by  the  quickness  of  its  aspiring  motion,  sometimes  the  fierceness  of  a 
lion,  and  fury  of  a  libbard,  and  waving  of  an  oak,  and  whatever  he  liked.' 


x  SOME  LONGER  ELIZABETHAN  POEMS 

collective  edition  of  his  poems  (1622),  it  was  described  on 
the  title-page  as  'not  finished/  some  new  stanzas  were 
added,  and  it  ended  abruptly  in  the  middle  of  a  simile. 
The  poem  is  quite  long  enough  as  we  have  it  in  the  1596 
edition,  and  we  need  not  lament  that  Davies  failed  to  carry 
out  his  intention  of  continuing  it :  /j,r)$ev  ayav. 

To  his  youthful  days  belong  the  Epigrams,  which  were 
bound  up  with  Marlowe's  translation  of  Ovid's  Amores 
(with  a  Middleburgh  imprint) :  occasionally  indecorous, 
they  are  seldom  wanting  in  wit  and  pleasantry. 

In  February  1597-8,  Davies  was  disbarred  for  a  breach 
of  discipline.  He  quarrelled  with  Richard  Martin  (after- 
wards Recorder  of  London) — to  whom  he  had  dedicated 
Orchestra — and  assaulted  him  at  dinner  in  the  Middle 
Temple  Hall,  breaking  a  cudgel  over  his  head.  Retiring 
to  Oxford,  he  engaged  in  the  more  peaceful  occupation 
of  composing  Nosce  Teipsum,  a  poem  on  the  immortality 
of  the  soul,  which  was  published  in  1599.  It  was  an 
ambitious  task  that  this  young  disbarred  bencher  took  in 
hand,  but  he  acquitted  himself  ably.  Some  of  his  modern 
admirers  have  exceeded  all  reasonable  bounds  in  their 
praise  of  the  poem.  Rejecting  these  extravagant  eulogies, 
we  may  claim  that  Davies,  while  he  was  leading  the  life 
of  an  inns-of-court  man  of  fashion,  had  remained  a  stead- 
fast lover  of  learning  and  letters ;  that  he  had  stored  his 
mind  richly ;  and  that  his  well-turned  quatrains  have  had 
an  inspiring  influence  on  later  poets.  Young,  in  Night 
Thoughts,  was  under  special  obligation  to  Davies.  Matthew 
Arnold  had  no  enthusiasm  for  Elizabethan  writers ;  but, 
unless  I  am  greatly  mistaken,  he  had  glanced  at  Nosce 
Teipsum.  In  'A  Southern  Night '  Arnold  wrote — 


INTRODUCTION  xi 

.  .  .  'And  see  all  things  from  pole  to  pole,1 

And  glance,  and  nod,  and  bustle  by, 
And  never  once  possess  our  soul 
Before  we  die,' 

—a  stanza  that  bears  a  very  suspicious   resemblance  to 
Davies'  quatrain— 

'  We  that  acquaint  ourselves  with  every  zone, 

And  pass  both  tropics,  and  behold  both  poles ; 
When  we  come  home,  are  to  ourselves  unknown 
And  unacquainted  still  with  our  own  souls.' 

All  the  arguments  for  and  against  the  immortality  of  the 
soul  were  threshed  out  ages  ago,  and  there  is  little  or 
nothing  new  to  say  on  the  subject.  A  poet's  skill  lies  in 
graciously  attiring  the  old  commonplaces ;  in  searching  out 
the  right  persuasive  words  and  uttering  them  so  melodiously 
that  dull  '  approved  verities  ' — sparkling  with  sudden  lustre 
— are  transmuted  into  something  rich  and  strange.  It  is 
idle  to  talk  about  Davies'  'deep  and  original  thinking/ 
Many  stanzas  can  be  brushed  aside  as  tiresome  and  uncouth  ; 
but  something  will  be  left.  In  his  handling  of  the  ten- 
syllabled  quatrain  (with  alternate  rhymes)  Davies  showed 
considerable  deftness.  The  metre  has  weight  and  dignity, 
but  is  apt  to  become  stiff  and  monotonous.  Davies  certainly 
succeeded  in  securing  more  freedom  and  variety  than  might 
have  been  anticipated.  Inspired  by  his  example,  Davenant 
chose  this  metre  for  Gondibert\  and  Davenant  was  followed 
by  Dryden,  who  in  the  preface  to  Annus  Mirabilis  says  all 
that  can  be  said  in  favour  of  the  quatrain  (which  was  seen 
to  best  advantage  in  Gray's  Elegy). 

1  Cf.  also  Arnold's  '  Obermann  once  more ' : — 

1  "  Poor  World,"  she  cried,  "so  deep  accurst, 

That  runn'st  from  pole  to  pole 
To  seek  a  draught  to  quench  thy  thirst, 
Go  seek  it  in  thy  soul." ' 


xii  SOME  LONGER  ELIZABETHAN  POEMS 

Though  few  may  be  at  the  pains  to  read  through  Nosce 
Teipsum  at  a  blow,  it  is  a  poem  that  lends  itself  admirably 
to  quotation.  Towards  the  end  there  is  a  cluster  of  fine 
stanzas  ('  O  ignorant  poor  man,'  etc.)  that  have  found  their 
way  into  many  volumes  of  selected  poetry  ;  and  even  the 
arid  tracts  are  dotted  with  green  oases.  Tennyson,  with 
somewhat  wearisome  iteration,  pleaded  through  stanza  after 
stanza  of  In  Memoriam  that  the  longing  which  most  men 
unquestionably  have  for  immortality  must  needs  be  based 
on  a  sure  foundation  : — 

'  We  think  we  were  not  made  to  die, 
And  Thou  hast  made  us,  Thou  art  just.' 

Davies  sums  up  pithily  in  a  single  line : — 

*  If  Death  do  quench  us  quite,  we  have  great  wrong.' 
A  poet  greater  than  Davies,  greater  than  Tennyson,  the 
august  Lucretius,  in  the  noble  verses  that  he  pondered 
through  the  still  nights  (seeking  to  do  justice  to  the  doctrine 
of  his  Master  Epicurus),  scathingly  checks  our  vaulting 
aspirations.  If  we  have  enjoyed  the  banquet  of  life,  why 
should  we  not  rise  content  and  pass  to  our  dreamless  sleep? 
If  our  life  has  been  wastefully  squandered  and  is  become  a 
weariness  to  us,  why  should  we  hesitate  to  make  an  end  of 
it  ?  '  Aufer  abhinc  lacrimas,  balatro,  et  compesce  querellas  ! ' 

Astrcea,  a  series  of  acrostic  verses  on  Queen  Elizabeth,  is 
merely  a  tour  de  force  of  courtly  ingenuity.  Much  more 
interesting  is  Davies'  group  of  graceful  little  poems,  Twelve 
Wonders  of  the  World,  published  in  the  second  edition 
(1608)  of  Davison's  Poetical  Rhapsody. 

In  1603  Davies  was  appointed  Solicitor-General  for  Ire- 
land, and  in  1606  Attorney-General.  His  letters  to  Cecil 
give  a  valuable  and  vivid  account  of  the  state  of  Ireland  • 


INTRODUCTION  xiii 

and  his  Discovery  of  the  True  Cause  why  Ireland  was  never 
entirely  subdued,  1612,  is  a  treatise  of  the  first  importance. 
Davies'  political  writings  wait  the  attention  of  a  competent 
editor,  who  would  undoubtedly  find  absorbing  interest  in 
his  task. 

It  was  the  poet's  misfortune  to  marry  a  crazy  rhapsodical 
woman  (Eleanor  Touchet,  sister  of  the  notorious  Baron 
Audley),  who  annoyed  him  by  putting  herself  into  mourning 
and  bidding  him  '  within  three  years  to  expect  the  mortal 
blow.'  Three  days  before  his  death  she  *  gave  him  pass  to 
take  his  long  sleep.'  He  resented  these  admonitions,  and 
testily  exclaimed,  '  I  pray  you  weep  not  while  I  am  alive, 
and  I  will  give  you  leave  to  laugh  when  I  am  dead.'  On 
7th  December  1626  he  dined  with  Lord  Keeper  Coventry, 
and  on  the  following  morning  was  found  dead  of  apoplexy. 
It  was  perhaps  fortunate  that  his  life  had  not  been  pro- 
longed, for  his  views  of  kingly  prerogative  were  high.  He 
had  supported  the  king's  demand  for  a  forced  loan,  and 
(when  '  the  mortal  blow '  really  came)  was  about  to  succeed 
Lord  Chief  Justice  Crew,  who  had  been  removed  from  office 
for  refusing  to  affirm  the  legality  of  such  loans. 

Not  much  need  be  said  about  Six  Idillia,  1588,  the  anony- 
mous translations  (pp.  123-146)  from  Theocritus.  It  is  a 
performance  worthy  of  George  Turberville  or  'that  painful 
furtherer  of  learning'  Barnabe  Googe.  On  the  verso  of  the 
title  page  is  the  Horatian  inscription  : — 

<E.  D. 

Libenter  hie  et  omnis  exantlabitur 
Labor,  in  tuae  spem  gratiae.5 

Collier,  misreading  this  dedication,  claimed  the  Idillia  for 
Sir  Edward  Dyer,  and  his  mistake  has  been  followed  by 


xiv         SOME  LONGER  ELIZABETHAN  POEMS 

some  later  bibliographers.  But  in  the  first  place  there  is 
nothing  to  show  that  '  E.  D.'  was  Sir  Edward  Dyer ;  and  in 
the  second  it  is  perfectly  plain  that  the  translations  were 
dedicated  to  *E.  D./  not  written  by  him.  The  rhymed 
fourteen-syllable  lines  are  somewhat  uncouth  and  do  scant 
justice  to  the  liquid  melody  of  Theocritus'  hexameters  ;  but 
though  these  Idillia  have  no  great  literary  value,  the  hardy 
pioneer  is  entitled  to  some  credit  for  breaking  new  ground. 
Only  one  copy  (preserved  in  the  Bodleian  Library)  of  the 
original  edition  is  known.  Some  years  ago  a  small  edition, 
for  private  circulation,  was  issued  from  the  press  of  Rev. 
H.  C.  Daniel. 

Richard  Barnfield  (1574-1627)  had  genuine  poetical  gifts, 
but  seldom  displayed  them  to  advantage.  Born  in  1574  at 
Norbury,  near  Newport,  Shropshire,  he  was  educated  at 
Brasenose  College,  Oxford,  and  is  conjectured  to  have  been 
a  member  of  Gray's  Inn.  He  seems  to  have  spent  most  of 
his  time  in  the  country,  leading  the  life  of  a  country  gentle- 
man. In  1 594  he  published  The  Affectionate  Shepheard  (with 
a  dedication  to  Lady  Penelope  Rich),  and  in  1595  Cynthia. 
His  last  work,  The  Encomion  of  Lady  Pecunia,  followed  in 
1598,  a  second  edition  (with  changes  and  additions)  appear- 
ing in  1605.  He  died  in  March  1626-7,  leaving  a  son  and  a 
grand-daughter.  In  his  will  he  is  described  as  of '  Dorle- 
stone,  in  the  Countie  of  Stafford,  Esquire.' x 

The  Affectionate  Shepheard 'was  inspired  by  Virgil's  Second 
Eclogue.  Though  the  choice  of  subject  was  not  happy,  it 
must  be  allowed  that  in  describing  country  contentment 
and  the  pastimes  of  silly  shepherds  Barnfield  shows  un- 

1  The  poems  of  Barnfield  were  not  in  the  original  Garner  and  are  now  incor- 
porated for  the  first  time. 


INTRODUCTION  xv 

laboured  fluency  and  grace,  with  playful  touches  of  quaint 
extravagance.  The  passage  beginning  'And  when  th'art 
wearie  of  thy  keeping  Sheepe'  (pp.  159,  160)  and  ending 
'Like  Lillyes  in  a  bed  of  roses  shed'  is  a  pleasant  piece  of 
poetical  embroidery.  Barnfield  doubtless  adopted  the  six- 
line  stanza  in  imitation  of  Venus  and  Adonis •,  1593  (which 
had  in  turn  been  modelled  on  Lodge's  Glaucus  and  Scylla, 
1589).  It  has  been  recently  pointed  out — by  Mr.  Charles 
Crawford  in  Notes  and  Queries — that  some  passages  in  The 
Affectionate  Shepheardwts  closely  imitated  from  Marlowe 
and  Nashe's  Dido  (published  in  1594),  and  that  one  line  has 
been  taken  straight  out  of  Marlowe's  Edward  II.  Appended 
to  The  Affectionate  Shepheard  are  The  Complainte  of  Chastitie, 
in  imitation  of  Michael  Drayton,  and  Hellens  Rape — a  copy 
of  'English  Hexameters'  so  atrociously  bad  that  one 
wonders  whether  it  was  written  to  bring  contempt  on  the 
metre  which  Gabriel  Harvey  and  others  were  vainly  striving 
to  popularise. 

To  Cynthia  is  prefixed  a  copy  of  high-flying  commenda- 
tory verses,  from  which  very  little  sense  can  be  extracted, 
by  *T.  T.,'  possibly  Thomas  Thorpe,  the  publisher  of 
Shakespeare's  Sonnets.  In  the  address  to  '  The  Curteous 
Gentlemen  Readers '  Barnfield  claims  indulgence  for  Cynthia 
on  the  ground  that  it  was  the  first  '  imitation  of  the  verse  of 
that  excellent  Poet,  Maister  Spencer,  in  his  Fayrie  Queene? 
The  poem  is  a  compliment  to  Queen  Elizabeth,  who  is 
adjudged  by  Jove  to  have  merited  the  golden  apple  wrongly 
given  by  Paris  to  Venus.  When  Barnfield  mentioned  that  he 
borrowed  the  metre  of  Cynthia  from  Spenser,  he  forgot  to 
add  that  the  matter  was  drawn  from  Peele's  Arraignment  of 
Paris.  To  Cynthia  succeed  twenty  sonnets  extolling,  after  the 


xvi          SOME  LONGER  ELIZABETHAN  POEMS 

fashion  of  the  age,  the  beauty  and  virtues  of  an  imaginary 
youth,  Ganymede.  In  the  last  sonnet  Barnfield  introduces 
compliments  to  Spenser  (Colin)  and  Drayton  (Rowland): — 

'Ah  had  great  Colin,  chiefe  of  sheepheards  all, 
Or  gentle  Rowland,  my  professed  friend, 
Had  they  thy  beautie,  or  my  pennance  pend, 
Greater  had  beene  thy  fame,  and  lesse  my  fall : 
But  since  that  euerie  one  cannot  be  wittie, 
Pardon  I  craue  of  them,  and  of  thee  pitty.' 

The  '  Ode '  that  follows  the  sonnets  runs  trippingly  away  in 
easy  trochaics;  but  Cassandra  is  laboured  and  languid. 

The  Encomion  of  Lady  Pecunia  has  an  *  Address  to  the 
Gentlemen  Readers/  in  which  Barnfield  states  that  he  had 
been  at  much  pains  to  find  an  unhackneyed  subject  for  his 
pen.  After  long  consideration  he  had  determined  to  write 
the  praises  of  money,  a  theme  both  new  (for  none  had 
ventured  upon  it  before)  and  pleasing  (for  money  is  always 
in  esteem).  It  was  in  pursuit  of  money  that  Hawkins  and 
Drake  had  lost  their  lives.  Barnfield  wrote  a  fine  epitaph 
on  Hawkins : — 

'The1  Waters  were  his  Winding  sheete,  the  Sea  was  made  his  Toome; 
Yet  for  his  fame  the  Ocean  Sea  was  not  sufficient  roome.' 

His  lines  on  Drake  are  not  quite  so  happy : — 

*  England  2  his  hart ;  his  Corps  the  Waters  have  ; 
And  that  which  raysed  his  fame,  became  his  grave.' 


1  Prince  in  his  Worthies  of  Devon  (1701)  quotes  this  couplet  as  an  epitaph,  by 
an  anonymous  writer,  on  Drake. 
a  There  is  a  better  epitaph  on  Drake  in  Wits  Recreations  (1640) : — 

1  Sir  Drake,  whom  well  the  world's  end  knew, 

Which  thou  didst  compasse  round, 
And  whom  both  Poles  of  Heaven  once  saw, 

Which  North  and  South  do  bound  : 
The  Stars  above  would  make  thee  known 

If  men  here  silent  were  : 
The  Sun  himselfe  cannot  forget 

His  fellow- passenger.' 


INTRODUCTION  xvii 

The  Encomion  is  smoothly  written,  and  is  not  without 
humour.  A  country  gentleman  in  easy  circumstances, 
Barnfield  could  dally  playfully  with  a  subject  that  had 
for  him  no  terrors.  His  example  probably  led  *  T.  A.J 
(Thomas  Acheley?)  to  write  The  Massacre  of  Money,  1602. 
The  Complaint  of  Poetrie  for  the  Death  of  Liberalitie  seems 
to  be  an  imitation  of  Spenser's  Teares  of  the  Muses.  More 
interesting  are  the  Poems :  in  divers  humors  at  the  end  of 
the  booklet,  for  among  them  are  the  sonnet  *  If  Musique 
and  sweet  Poetrie  agree,'  and  the  '  Ode '  beginning  '  As  it 
fell  upon  a  day,'  which  were  long  ascribed  erroneously  to 
Shakespeare.  In  the  poem  entitled  '  A  Remembrance  of 
some  English  Poets'  Barnfield  praises  Spenser,  Daniel, 
Drayton,  and  Shakespeare.  For  Sir  Philip  Sidney  he  had 
a  deep  admiration,  but  his  '  Epitaph '  was  a  poor  tribute. 
The  verse  with  which  the  tract  ends,  *  A  Comparison  of  the 
Life  of  Man,'  is  distinctly  impressive  : — 

*  Mans  life  is  well  compared  to  a  feast, 
Furnisht  with  choice  of  all  Varietie  : 
To  it  comes  Tyme  ;  and  as  a  bidden  guest 
Hee  sets  him  downe,  in  Pompe  and  Maiestie ; 
The  three-folde  Age  of  Man  the  Waiters  bee  : 
Then  with  an  earthen  voyder  (made  of  clay) 
Comes  Death,  and  takes  the  table  clean  away.* 

We  now  reach  a  group  of  elegies  (pp.  271-318)  by  various 
hands  on  Sii  Philip  Sidney,  printed  as  an  Appendix  to 
Spenser's  Colin  Clouts  Come  Home  Againe,  1595,  with  a 
dedication  to  Sidney's  widow,  who  by  her  second  marriage 
had  become  Countess  of  Essex.  There  was  no  man  more 
generally  beloved  than  Sidney,  and  none  whose  loss  was 
more  sincerely  deplored.  Numberless  were  the  tributes 
paid  in  verse  and  prose  to  his  memory.  The  present 

* 


xviii        SOME  LONGER  ELIZABETHAN  POEMS 

collection  embraces  'Astrophel,'  by  Spenser ;  the  *Dol< 
Lay  of  Clorinda/  by  Sidney's  sister,  the  Countess  of  Pem- 
broke ;  '  The  Mourning  Muse  of  Thestylis  '  and  '  A  Pastorall 
jEglogue,'  both  by  Lodowick  Bryskett;  'An  Elegie,  or 
Friends  Passion,  for  his  Astrophel,'  by  Matthew  Roydon ; 
1  An  Epitaph/  probably  by  Sir  Walter  Ralegh ;  and 
'Another  of  the  same'  (i.e.  on  the  same  subject),  which 
Malone  was  inclined  to  attribute  to  Sir  Edward  Dyer, 
while  Charles  Lamb  ascribed  it  on  internal  evidence  to 
Fulke  Greville.  Although  Colin  Clouts  Come  Home  Againe 
was  first  published  in  1595,  the  dedicatory  epistle  to  Sir 
Walter  Ralegh  is  dated  from  Kilcolman,  2/th  December 
1591.  All  the  elegies  were  doubtless  written  soon  after 
Sidney's  death.  Lodowick  Bryskett's  two  poems  had  been 
entered  in  the  Stationers'  Register  on  22nd  August  1587, 
but  are  not  known  to  have  been  separately  published. 
Matthew  Roydon's  elegy  had  appeared  in  the  Phanix  Nesty 
1593,  where  also  are  found  the  '  Epitaph'  and  *  Another  of 
the  Same.  Excellently  written  by  a  most  woorthy  gentle- 
man.' 

In  The  Ruines  of  Time  (1591)  there  are  some  fine  stanzas 
to  Sidney's  memory ;  but  if  the  literary  public  expected  an 
elaborate  elegy  from  Spenser,  '  Astrophel '  must  have  dis- 
appointed their  hopes.  When  we  recall  Moschus'  lament 
over  Bion,  or  Ovid's  tribute  to  Tibullus,  or  Lycidas,  or 
Adonais,  Spenser's  elegy  on  Sidney  seems  thin  and 
colourless.  Scores  of  poets  who  had  not  a  tithe  of 
Spenser's  genius  have  left  elegies  that  far  transcend 
1  Astrophel.'  Lady  Pembroke's  sisterly  tribute  of  affection 
will  be  read  with  respect ;  but  however  much  we  may 
commend  the  pious  intentions  of  the  naturalised  Italian 


INTRODUCTION  xix 

Ludowick  Bryskett,  it  is  impossible  to  find  a  word  of  praise 
for  such  '  rude  rhymes '  as 

*  Come  forth,  ye  Nymphes,  come  forth,  forsake  your  watry  boures  ! 
Forsake  your  mossy  caves  and  help  me  to  lament ; 
Help  me  to  tune  my  dolefull  notes  to  gurgling  sound 
Of  Liffies  tumbling  streames  ;  come,  let  salt  teares  of  ours 
Mix  with  his  waters  fresh,'  etc. 

Matthew  Roydon's  elegy  is  too  diffuse,  but  has  some  most 
happy  and  memorable  stanzas.  As  we  gaze  at  Isaac 
Oliver's  beautiful  miniature  of  Sidney,  in  the  Windsor 
Palace  collection,  those  oft-quoted  lines  of  Roydon  inevit- 
ably leap  to  the  lips  : — 

'  A  sweet  attractive  kind  of  grace, 
A  full  assurance  given  by  lookes, 
Continuall  comfort  in  a  face, 
The  lineaments  of  Gospell  bookes  : 
I  trowe  that  countenance  cannot  lie 
Whose  thoughts  are  legible  in  the  eie.' 

The  '  Epitaph '  beginning,  *  To  praise  thy  life,  or  waile  thy 
worthie  death,'  appears  to  have  been  written  by  Sir  Walter 
Ralegh.  Sir  John  Harington,  in  the  notes  appended  to  the 
sixteenth  book  of  his  translation  of  Orlando  Furioso  (1591), 
refers  to  'our  English  Petrarke,  Sir  Philip  Sidney,  or  (as 
Sir  Walter  Rawleigh  in  his  Epitaph  worthily  calleth  him) 
the  Scipio  and  the  Petrarke  of  our  time '  (see  the  last  stanza 
of  the  poem).  Harington  had  evidently  seen  the  *  Epitaph ' 
in  MS.  ;  and  there  is  not  the  slightest  reason  for  questioning 
the  accuracy  of  his  ascription,  for  he  was  well  acquainted 
with  the  poets  of  the  time,  and  curious  information  may  be 
gathered  from  his  Notes.  I  find  Ralegh's  elegy  somewhat 
obscure ;  pregnant,  but  harshly  worded.  Nor  can  I  profess 
any  great  admiration  for  '  Another  of  the  same/  where  the 
vehemence  of  the  writer's  grief  choked  his  utterance. 


XX 


SOME  LONGER  ELIZABETHAN  POEMS 


Of  the  first  edition  of  Alcilia :  Philoparthen's  Loving 
Folly,  1595  (pp.  319-362),  only  one  copy  is  known,  preserved 
in  the  public  library  at  Hamburgh.  On  the  last  page  are 
subscribed  the  author's  initials  *J.  C.',  which  have  been 
altered  in  ink  to  *  J.  G.'  in  the  Hamburgh  copy.  The  poem 
was  reprinted  in  London  in  1613,  1619,  and  1628,  being 
accompanied  by  Marston's  Pygmalion's  Image  and  Samuel 
Page's  Amos  and  Laura.  Who  'J.  C.'  may  have  been  is 
unknown  ;  for  the  wild  conjecture  that  he  was  John  Chalk- 
hill,  author  of  Thealma  and  Clear chus  and  friend  of  Izaak 
Walton,  is  chronologically  untenable.  For  the  space  of  two 
years  the  unknown  poet  had  pressed  his  attentions  upon 
the  lady  whom  he  called  Alcilia.  She  finally  rejected  his 
addresses,  and  young  *  J.  C.'  was  not  sorry  to  escape  from 
bondage.  Hardly  a  trace  of  genuine  passion  can  be  found 
in  Alcilia,  which  is  merely  (as  the  author  freely  admits)  a 
collection  of  odds  and  ends  written  '  at  divers  times  and 
upon  divers  occasions.'  It  is  somewhat  surprising  that 
there  was  a  demand  for  new  editions.  'J.  C.'  wrote  with 
elegance  and  facility,  but  the  note  of  originality  is  wanting. 
Had  the  poem  appeared  a  few  years  earlier,  it  would  have 
been  entitled  to  more  consideration  ;  but  the  achievements 
of  Greene,  Lodge,  and  others  had  made  it  possible  in  the 
closing  years  of  the  sixteenth  century  for  any  young  writer 
of  respectable  talents  to  compose  such  verse  as  we  find  in 
Alcilia. 

Daiphantus,  or  The  Passions  of  Love,  1604  (pp.  363-404), 
is  described  on  the  title-page  as  'By  An.  Sc.  Gentleman,' 
assumed  to  stand  for  Antony  Scoloker.  In  the  days  of 
Henry  vill.  there  was  an  Antony  Scoloker,  a  printer  and 
translator,  with  whom  'An.  Sc.'  was  doubtless  connected 


INTRODUCTION  xxi 

In  the  humorous  prose  address  there  is  an  interesting 
reference  to  Shakespeare  : — '  It  should  be  like  the  never-too- 
well-read  Arcadia  where  the  Prose  and  Verse,  Matter  and 
Words,  are  like  his  Mistress  eyes,  one  still  excelling 
another  and  without  corrival ;  or  to  come  home  to  the 
Vulgar's  element,  like  friendly  Shake-speare's  Tragedies, 
where  the  Comedian  rides  when  the  Tragedian  stands  on 
tiptoe.  Faith  it  should  please  all  like  Prince  HAMLET. 
But,  in  sadness,  then  it  were  to  be  feared  he  would  run 
mad.  In  sooth  I  will  not  be  moonsick  to  please,  nor  out  of 
my  wits  though  I  displease  all.  What  ?  Poet,  are  you  in 
passion  or  out  of  Love  ?  This  is  as  strange  as  true.'  In 
the  poem  itself  there  is  another  reference  to  'mad  Hamlet/ 
though  Scoloker  there  seems  to  be  glancing  at  the  older 
play  on  the  subject  of  Hamlet.  For  the  reader's  guidance 
an  'Argument'  is  obligingly  prefixed,  but  it  is  to  be  feared 
that  even  with  the  help  of  this  Argument  he  will  not  find 
the  poem  very  intelligible  or  of  engrossing  interest.  Dai- 
phantus,  of  which  only  one  copy  (in  the  Douce  Collection) 
is  known,  was  perhaps  intended  merely  for  circulation 
among  the  author's  friends,  who  may  have  been  able  to 
read  between  the  lines.  Appended  is  the  fine  poem,  'The 
Passionate  Man's  Pilgrimage,'  beginning  : — 

'  Give  me  my  Scalop  Shell  of  quiet, 
My  Staff  of  faith  to  walk  upon, 
My  Scrip  of  joy,  immortal  diet, 
My  Bottle  of  salvation, 
My  Gown  of  glory,  hope's  true  gage, 
And  thus  I  Jll  take  my  Pilgrimage,'  etc. 

Possibly  the  publisher  tacked  on  these  verses  without 
Scoloker's  knowledge.  It  is  quite  certain  that  they  were 
not  written  by  the  author  of  Daiphantus,  and  there  are 


xxii         SOME  LONGER  ELIZABETHAN  POEMS 

good   reasons  for   assigning  them  to  Sir   Walter   Ralegh 
(see  Hannah's  edition  of  Ralegh's  Poems,  1885). 

The  '  Odes '  of  Michael  Drayton  (pp.  405-441),  drawn  from 
Poems  Lyrick  and  Pastor  all  (1606?),  and  the  later  collection 
of  1619,  contain  some  of  his  best  writing.  There  is  no  need 
to  praise  the  glorious  '  Ballad  of  Agincourt,'  but  it  may  be 
noted  that  Drayton  spent  considerable  pains  over  the 
revision  of  this  poem.  It  was  fine  in  its  original  form,  but 
every  change  found  in  the  later  version  was  a  clear  improve- 
ment. No  signs  of  the  file  are  visible,  and  we  should 
certainly  judge — unless  we  had  evidence  to  the  contrary — 
that  this  imperishable  'ballad'  had  been  thrown  off  at  a 
white  heat.  Only  inferior  to  *  Agincourt '  is  the  stirring 
ode  '  To  the  Virginian  Voyage.'  Professor  Arber,  a  high 
authority,  is  of  opinion  that  it  was  composed  some  time 
before  I2th  August  1606,  on  which  day  the  Plymouth 
Company  despatched  Captain  Henry  Challons'  ship  to 
North  Virginia.  In  this  valedictory  address  Drayton 
writes : — 

'  Your  course  securely  steer, 
West-and-by-South  forth  keep  ! 

Rocks,1  Lee-shores,  nor  Shoals, 

When  ALolus  scowls, 
You  need  not  fear  : 
So  absolute  the  deep.' 

Captain  Challons  sailed  to  Madeira,  St.  Lucia,  Porto  Rico, 

1  On  March  31,  1605,  Captain  George  Weymouth  started  from  the  Downs 
with  a  crew  of  twenty-nine  to  discover  a  North- West  Passage  to  the  East 
Indies.  On  May  14  he  « descries  land  in  41°  30'  N.  in  the  midst  of  dangerous 
rocks  and  shoals.  Upon  which  he  puts  to  sea,  the  wind  blowing  south-south- 
west and  west-south-west  many  days'  (Prince's  New  England  Chronology  ap. 
Garner,  ii.  356).  Drayton  advises  the  Virginian  voyagers  to  keep  the  west-by- 
south  course  and  so  avoid  misadventures.  He  had  not  reckoned  on  the  Spanish 
fleet 


INTRODUCTION 


xxin 


and  thence  towards  North  Virginia.  His  little  ship  of 
fifty-five  tons,  with  a  crew  of  twenty-nine  Englishmen  (and 
two  native  Virginians),  had  the  ill-luck  on  loth  November 
to  fall  in  with  the  Spanish  fleet  of  eight  ships  returning 
from  Havanna.  It  was  captured  by  the  Spaniards  and  the 
crew  were  taken  prisoners  to  Spain. 

In  a  lighter  vein,  the  ode  beginning  '  Maidens,  why  spare 
ye/  was  worthy  to  have  been  set  to  music  by  Robert  Jones. 
The  seventh  ode  was  written  from  the  Peak  in  winter — 


Drayton's  state- 


*  Amongst  the  mountains  bleak, 
Exposed  to  sleet  and  rain ' — 

where  Charles  Cotton  afterwards  resided, 
ment  in  the  ninth  ode — 

'  My  resolution  such 
How  well  and  not  how  much 
To  write ' — 

will  draw  a  smile  from  any  reader  who  has  ever  seriously 
attempted  to  grapple  with  his  multitudinous  works.  But 
in  these  odes,  and  in  the  other  '  lyric  poesies '  added  in  the 
1619  edition,  he  was  careful  to  curb  his  tendency  to  diffuse- 
ness.  He  employed  a  variety  of  metres,  and  his  experiments 
were  not  always  happy.  Ode  5, '  An  Amouret  Anacreontic/ 
cannot  be  unreservedly  commended,  and  Ode  9,  'A 
Skeltoniad/  could  be  spared.  One  of  the  most  attractive 
poems  is  the  address  *  To  his  Rival/  a  capital  piece  of 
good-natured  raillery.  In  his  early  work  Drayton  frequently 
taxes  the  reader's  patience  by  his  disregard  for  grammatical 
proprieties,  and  some  of  these  maturer  Odes  are  so  ineptly 
harsh  that  one  has  to  grope  for  the  writer's  meaning  (while 
one  bans  the  punctuation  of  old  printers  and  modern 
editors  alike).  Hence  it  is  particularly  pleasant  to  meet 


xxiv        SOME  LONGER  ELIZABETHAN  POEMS 

such  a  poem  as  *  To  his  Rival/  which  never  swerves  awry, 
but  runs  on  blithely  without  an  encountering  obstacle. 
The  *  Hymn  to  his  Lady's  Birthplace '  is  a  polished  compli- 
ment, and  very  charming  is  the  canzonet  *  To  his  Coy  Love.' 
I  end  with  expressing  a  hope  that  the  extracts  here  given 
from  Michael  Drayton  may  induce  the  reader  to  make 
further  acquaintance l  with  the  writings  of  one  of  the  most 
lovable  of  our  elder  poets. 

A.  H.  BULLEN. 

1  Several  of  Drayton's  works  have  been  reprinted  by  the  Spenser  Society,  and 
an  excellent  Introduction  to  them  has  been  written  by  Professor  Oliver  Elton 
(1895). 


ORCHESTRA, 


A  Poem  of  Dancing. 

Judicially  proving  the  true 

observation  of  Time  and 

Measure,  in  the  authen- 

tical   and   laudable 

use  of  Dancing. 


OVID,  Art.  Aman.  lib.  I. 

Si  vox  estj  canta  :  si  moll'ia  brachia,  salta  : 
Et  quacunque  potes  dote  placer  e,  place. 


At  London^ 

jjft   Printed  by  J.  R  o  B  A  R  T  s  for  N.  L  I  N  G. 
E»?d  l  5  9  6  • 


[The  following  entries  at  Stationers'  Hall  prove  that  this  Poem,  com- 
posed in  fifteen  days,  was  written  not  later  than  June,  1594 ;  though  it 
did  not  come  to  the  press  till  November,  1 596. 

25  3Iunti  [1594]. 

Master  HARRISON.     Entred  for  his  copie  in  Court  holden  this  day/  a 
Senior.  booke  entituled,  Orchestra^  or  a  poeme  of  Daunsing. 

vjd. 

Transcript  &>c.  ii.  655.  Ed.  1875. 


xxf  JDte  JBoijemfcrtsf  [1596]. 

NICHOLAS  LYNG/  Entered  for  his  copie  under  thfe  h]andes  of  Master 
JACKSON  and  master  Warden  DAWSON,  a  booke 
failed  Orchestra,  or  a  poeme  of  Daundnge.  vjd. 

Transcript  «5>v.  iii.  74.  Ed.  1876.] 


To    his  very    friend, 
Master    RICHARD    MARTIN. 


O  WHOM,  shall  I,  this  Dancing  Poem  send; 
This  sudden ,  rash,  half-capreol  of  my  wit? 
To  you,  first  mover  and  sole  cause  of  it, 
Mine  own- self  s  better  half,  my  dearest  friend  ! 
Oh  would  you,  yet,  my  Muse  some  honey  lend 
From  your  mellifluous  tongue  (whereon  doth  sit 
Suada  in  majesty)  that  I  may  fit 
These  harsh  beginnings  with  a  sweeter  end  I 
You  know  the  modest  sun,  full  fifteen  times, 
Blushing  did  rise,  and  blushing  did  descend, 
While  I,  in  making  of  these  ill  made  rhymes, 
My  golden  hours  unthriftily  did  spend : 

Yet  if,  in  friendship, you  these  Numbers  praise, 
I  will  mispend  another  fifteen  days. 


[The  following  Dedication  was  substituted  in  the  edition  of  1622. 

To    the    Prince. 


[i.e.,  CHARLES,  Prince  of  WALESA 

IR,  whatsoever  You  are  pleased  to  do, 
It  is  your  special  praise,  that  you  are  bent, 
And  sadly  set  your  Princely  mind  thereto : 
Which  makes  You  in  each  thing  so  excellent. 


Hence  is  it,  that  You  came  so  soon  to  be 
A  Man-at-arms  in  every  point  aright, 
The  fairest  flower  of  noble  Chivalry, 
And  of  Saint  GEORGE  his  Band  the  bravest  Knight. 

And  hence  it  is,  that  all  your  youthful  train 
In  activeness  and  grace  You  do  excel, 
When  You  do  Courtly  dancings  entertain : 
Then  Dancing's  praise  may  be  presented  well 

To  You,  whose  action  adds  more  praise  thereto 
Than  all  the  Muses,  with  their  pens  can  do.] 


-^^ 


ORCHESTRA, 

or, 
A  Poem  of  Dancing. 


t. 

HERE  lives  the  man,  that  never  yet  did  hear 
Of  chaste  PENELOPE,  ULYSSES'S  Queen  ? 
Who  kept  her  faith  unspotted  twenty  year; 
Till  he  returned,  that  far  away  had  been, 
And  many  men  and  many  towns  had  seen : 
Ten  year  at  Siege  of  Troy,  he  ling'ring 

lay; 

And  ten  year  in  the  midland  sea  did 
stray. 


2. 

HOMER,  to  whom  the  Muses  did  carouse 
A  great  deep  cup,  with  heavenly  nectar  filled ; 
The  greatest  deepest  cup  in  JOVE'S  great  house 
(For  JOVE  himself  had  so  expressly  willed) : 
He  drank  of  all,  ne  let  one  drop  be  spilled ; 

Since  when,  his  brain,  that  had  before  been  dry, 
Became  the  Wellspring  of  all  Poetry. 


ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [s?ft£7£j: 

3- 

Homer  doth  tell,  in  his  abundant  verse, 

The  long  laborious  travails  of  the  Man  ; 

And  of  his  Lady  too,  he  doth  rehearse, 

How  she  illudes,  with  all  the  art  she  can, 

Th'ungrateful  love  which  other  Lords  began  ; 

For  of  her  Lord,  false  Fame,  long  since,  had  sworn 
That  NEPTUNE'S  monsters  had  his  carcass  torn. 

4- 

All  this  he  tells,  but  one  thing  he  forgot, 
One  thing  most  worthy  his  eternal  Song, 
But  he  was  old,  and  blind,  and  saw  it  not : 
Or  else  he  thought  he  should  ULYSSES  wrong, 
To  mingle  it  his  tragic  acts  among: 

Yet  was  there  not,  in  all  the  world  of  things, 
A  sweeter  burden  for  his  Muse's  wings : 

5- 

The  Courtly  love  ANTINOUS  did  make, 
ANTINOUS,  that  fresh  and  jolly  Knight, 
Which  of  the  Gallants  that  did  undertake 
To  win  the  Widow,  had  most  Wealth  and  Might; 
Wit  to  persuade,  and  Beauty  to  delight : 

The  Courtly  love  he  made  unto  the  Queen, 

HOMER  forgot,  as  if  it  had  not  been. 

6. 

Sing  then,  TERPSICHORE,  my  light  MUSE,  sing 

His  gentle  art  and  cunning  courtesy ! 

You,  Lady,  can  remember  everything, 

For  you  are  daughter  of  Queen  MEMORY  : 

But  sing  a  plain  and  easy  melody, 

For  the  soft  mean  that  warbleth  but  the  ground, 
To  my  rude  ear  doth  yield  the  sweetest  sound. 


CHESTRA,    A    POEM    OF    DANCING. 
7- 

Only  one  night's  Discourse  I  can  report : 
When  the  great  Torchbearer  of  heaven  was  gone 
Down,  in  a  masque,  unto  the  Ocean's  Court, 
To  revel  it  with  TETHYS,  all  alone ; 
ANTINOUS  disguised,  and  unknown, 

Like  to  the  Spring  in  gaudy  ornament, 
Unto  the  Castle  of  the  Princess  went. 

8. 

The  sovereign  Castle  of  the  rocky  isle, 
Wherein  PENELOPE  the  Princess  lay, 
Shone  with  a  thousand  lamps,  which  did  exile 
The  dim  dark  shades,  and  turned  the  night  to  day. 
Not  JOVE'S  blue  tent,  what  time  the  sunny  ray 
Behind  the  bulwark  of  the  earth  retires, 
Is  seen  to  sparkle  with  more  twinkling  fires. 

9- 

That  night,  the  Queen  came  forth  from  far  within, 
And  in  the  presence  of  her  Court  was  seen. 
For  the  sweet  singer  PHCEMIUS  did  begin 
To  praise  the  Worthies  that  at  Troy  had  been  : 
Somewhat  of  her  ULYSSES  she  did  ween, 

In  his  grave  Hymn,  the  heavenly  man  would  sing, 

Or  of  his  wars,  or  of  his  wandering. 

10. 

PALLAS,  that  hour,  with  her  sweet  breath  divine, 

Inspired  immortal  beauty  in  her  eyes, 

That  with  celestial  glory  she  did  shine 

Brighter  than  VENUS,  when  she  doth  arise 

Out  of  the  waters  to  adorn  the  skies. 
The  Wooers,  all  amazed,  do  admire 
And  check  their  own  presumptuous  desire. 


8      ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [s?irjju 


Davieg. 
une  1594. 


II. 

Only  ANTINOUS,  when  at  first  he  viewed 
Her  star-bright  eyes,  that  with  new  honour  shined, 
Was  not  dismayed  ;  but  therewithal  renewed 
The  noblesse  and  the  splendour  of  his  mind : 
And,  as  he  did  fit  circumstances  find, 

Unto  the  throne,  he  boldly  'gan  advance, 

And,  with  fair  manners,  wooed  the  Queen  to  dance. 


12. 

Goddess  of  women  !  sith  your  heavenliness 
Hath  now  vouchsafed  itself  to  represent 
To  our  dim  eyes  ;  which  though  they  see  the  lesst 
Yet  are  they  blest  in  their  astonishment  : 
Imitate  heaven,  whose  beauties  excellent 

A  re  in  continual  motion  day  and  night, 
And  move  thereby  more  wonder  and  delight. 


Lei  me  the  mover  be,  to  turn  about 
Those  glorious  ornaments  that  Youth  and  Love 
Have  fixed  in  you,  every  part  throughout : 
Which  if  you  will  in  timely  measure  move  ; 
Not  all  those  precious  gems  in  heaven  above 
Shall  yield  a  sight  more  pleasing  to  behold 
With  all  their  turns  and  tracings  manifold. 

14. 

With  this,  the  modest  Princess  blushed  and  smiled 
Like  to  a  clear  and  rosy  eventide, 
And  softly  did  return  this  answer  mild  : 
Fair  Sir  !     You  needs  must  fairly  be  denied, 
Where  your  demand  cannot  be  satisfied. 

My  feet,  which  only  Nature  taught  to  go, 
Did  never  yet  the  Art  of  Footing  know. 


Sir. 


CHESTRA,    A    POEM    OF    DANCING.         9 


But  why  persuade  you  me  to  this  new  rage  ? 

For  all  Disorder  and  Misrule  is  new  : 

For  such  misgovernment  informer  Age 

Our  old  divine  forefathers  never  knew  ; 

Who  if  they  lived,  and  did  the  follies  view, 

Which  their  fond  nephews  make  their  chief  affairs, 
Would  hate  themselves,  that  had  begot  such  heirs. 

16. 

Sole  Heir  of  Virtue,  and  of  Beauty  both  I 

Whence  cometh  it,  ANTINOUS  replies, 

That  your  imperious  Virtue  is  so  loath 

To  grant  your  Beauty  her  chief  exercise  ? 

Or  from  what  spring  doth  your  opinion  rise 
That  Dancing  is  a  Frenzy  and  a  Rage, 
First  known  and  used  in  this  new-fangled  Age? 


Dancing,  bright  Lady  !  then,  began  to  bet 
When  the  first  seeds  whereof  the  world  did  spring  ; 
The  Fire,  Air,  Earth,  and  Water  did  agree 
By  LOVE  's  persuasion  (Nature's  mighty  King) 
To  leave  their  first  disordered  combating  ; 

And,  in  a  dance,  such  Measure  to  observe, 
As  all  the  world  their  motion  should  preserve* 

18. 

Since  when,  they  still  are  carried  in  a  round; 
And  changing  come  one  in  another  's  place  : 
Yet  do  they  neither  mingle  nor  confound, 
But  every  one  doth  keep  the  bounded  space, 
Wherein  the  Dance  doth  bid  it  turn  or  trace: 
This  wondrous  miracle  did  LOVE  devise, 
For  Dancing  is  LOVE'S  proper  exercise. 


io    ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING,  [ 

19. 

Like  this,  he  framed  the  gods'  eternal  bower, 
And  of  a  shapeless  and  confused  mass, 
By  his  through-piercing  and  digesting  power, 
The  turning  Vault  of  Heaven  formed  was  ; 
Whose  starry  wheels  he  hath  so  made  to  pass 
As  that  their  movings  do  a  Music  frame, 
And  they  themselves  still  dance  unto  the  same. 

20. 

Orif"  this  All,  which  round  about  we  see? 
As  idle  MORPHEUS  some  sick  brains  hath  taught, 
"  Of  undivided  motes  compacted  be" 
How  was  this  goodly  architecture  wrought  ? 
Or  by  what  means  were  they  together  brought  ? 

They  err,  that  say,  "  they  did  concur  by  Chance  ! 

LOVE  made  them  meet  in  a  well  ordered  Dance  I 


21. 

As  when  AMP  HI  ON  with  his  charming  Lyre 

Begot  so  sweet  a  Siren  of  the  air, 

That,  with  her  rhetoric,  made  the  stones  conspire, 

The  ruins  of  a  city  to  repair 

(A  work  of  Wit  and  Reason's  wise  affair)  : 

So  LOVE'S  smooth  tongue  the  motes  such  measure  taught, 
That  they  joined  hands  ;  and  so  the  world  was  wrought! 

22. 

How  justly  then  is  Dancing  termed  new, 

Which,  with  the  world,  in  point  of  time  began  ? 

Yea  Time  itself  (whose  birth  JOVE  never  knew, 

A  nd  which  is  far  more  ancient  than  the  sun) 

Had  not  one  moment  of  his  age  outrun, 

When  out  leaped  Dancing  from  the  heap  of  things 
And  lightly  rode  upon  his  nimble  wings. 


ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.        n 

23- 

Reason  hath  both  their  pictures  in  her  Treasure ; 

Where  Time  the  Measure  of  all  moving  is, 

And  Dancing  is  a  moving  all  in  measure. 

Now,  if  you  do  resemble  that  to  this, 

And  think  both  One,  I  think  you  think  amiss: 
But  if  you  judge  them  Twins,  together  got, 
And  Time  first  born,  your  judgement  erreth  not. 

24. 

Thus  doth  it  equal  age  with  Age  enjoy, 
And  yet  in  lusty  youth  for  ever  flowers  ; 
Like  LOVE,  his  Sire,  whom  painters  make  a  boy, 
Yet  is  he  Eldest  of  the  Heavenly  Powers; 
Or  like  his  brother  Time,  whose  winged  hours, 

Going  and  coming,  will  not  let  him  die, 

But  still  preserve  him  in  his  infancy. 

25- 

This  said,  the  Queen,  with  her  sweet  lips  divine, 

Gently  began  to  move  the  subtle  air, 

Which  gladly  yielding,  did  itself  incline 

To  take  a  shape  between  those  rubies  fair ; 

And  being  formed,  softly  did  repair, 

With  twenty  doublings  in  the  empty  way, 
Unto  ANTINOUS'  ears,  and  thus  did  say. 

26. 

What  eye  doth  see  the  heaven,  but  doth  admire 

When  it  the  movings  of  the  heavens  doth  see  ? 

Myself,  if  I,  to  heaven  may  once  aspire, 

If  that  be  Dancing,  will  a  dancer  be; 

But  as  for  this,  your  frantic  jollity, 

How  it  began,  or  whence  you  did  it  learn, 
I  never  could,  with  Reason's  eye  discern  ? 


12    ORCHESTRA.  A  POEM  OF  DANCING. 

27- 

ANTINOUS  answered,  Jewel  of  the  earth  ! 

Worthy  you  are,  that  heavenly  Dance  to  lead; 

But  for  you  think  our  Dancing  base  of  birth , 

And  newly  born  but  of  a  brain-sick  head, 

I  will  forthwith  his  antique  gentry  read, 

And  (for  I  love  him)  will  his  herald  be, 
And  blaze  his  arms,  and  draw  his  pedigree. 

28. 

When  LOVE  had  shaped  this  world,  this  great  fair  wight, 
(That  all  wights  else  in  this  wide  womb  contains), 
And  had  instructed  it  to  dance  aright 
A  thousand  measures,  with  a  thousand  strains, 
Which  it  should  practise  with  delightful  pains, 
Until  that  fatal  instant  should  revolve, 
When  all  to  nothing  should  again  resolve  : 

29. 

The  comely  Order  and  Proportion  fair 

On  every  side  did  please  his  wand1  ring  eye; 

Till,  glancing  through  the  thin  transparent  air, 

A  rude  disordered  rout  he  did  espy 

Of  men  and  women,  that  most  spitefully 

Did  one  another  throng  and  crowd  so  sore 
That  his  kind  eye,  in  pity,  wept  therefore. 

30. 

And  swifter  than  the  lightning  down  he  came, 

Another  shapeless  chaos  to  digest. 

He  will  begin  another  world  to  frame 

(For  LOVE,  till  all  be  well,  will  never  rest). 

Then  with  such  words  as  cannot  be  expresst, 
He  cuts  the  troops,  that  all  asunder  fling, 
And  ere  they  wist,  he  casts  them  in  a  ring. 


Srr/u£ait9e4s:l  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.     13 


Then  did  he  rarify  the  Element, 

And  in  the  centre  of  the  ring  appear  ; 

The  beams  that  from  his  forehead  shining  went 

Begot  a  horror  and  religious  fear 

In  all  the  souls  that  round  about  him  were, 
Which  in  their  ears  attentiveness  procures, 
While  he,  with  such  like  sounds,  their  minds  allures. 

32. 

"  How  doth  Confusions^  Mother,  headlong  Chance, 
Put  Reason's  noble  squadron  to  the  rout  ? 
Or  how  should  you,  that  have  the  governance 
Of  Nature's  children,  heaven  and  earth  throughout^ 
Prescribe  them  rules,  and  live  yourselves  without  ? 
Why  should  your  fellowship  a  trouble  be, 
Since  Man's  chief  pleasure  is  Society  ? 

33- 

"  If  Sense  hath  not  yet  taught  you,  learn  of  me 
A  comely  moderation  and  discreet  ; 
That  your  assemblies  may  well  ordered  be, 
When  my  uniting  power  shall  make  you  meet, 
With  heavenly  tunes  it  shall  be  tempered  sweet  ; 
And  be  the  model  of  the  world's  great  frame, 
And  you,  Earth's  children,  Dancing  shall  it  name. 

34- 

"  Behold  the  world,  how  it  is  whirled  round  ! 
And  for  it  is  so  whirled,  is  named  so  : 
In  whose  large  volume,  many  rules  are  found 
Of  this  new  Art,  which  it  doth  fairly  show. 
For  your  quick  eyes  in  wandering  to  and  fro, 

From  East  to  West,  on  no  one  thing  can  glance  ; 

But  (if  you  mark  it  well)  it  seems  to  dance. 


14       ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [ 

35- 

"  First,  you  see  fired,  in  this  huge  mirror  blue, 
Of  trembling  lights  a  number  numberless ; 
Fixed,  they  are  named  but  with  a  name  untrue; 
For  they  are  moved  and  in  a  dance  express 
The  great  long  Year  that  doth  contain  no  less 

Than  threescore  hundreds  of  those  years  in  all, 
Which  the  Sun  makes  with  his  course  natural. 

36. 

"  What  if  to  you  these  sparks  disordered  seem, 

As  if  by  chance  they  had  been  scattered  there  ? 

The  gods  a  solemn  measure  do  it  deem 

And  see  a  just  proportion  everywhere, 

And  know  the  points  ivhence  first  their  movings  were 
To  which  first  points,  when  all  return  again, 
The  Axletree  of  Heaven  shall  break  in  twain. 

37- 

"  Under  that  spangled  sky,  five  wandering  Flames ', 
Besides  the  King  of  Day  and  Queen  of  Night, 
Are  wheeled  around,  all  in  their  sundry  frames. 
And  all  in  sundry  measures  do  delight ; 
Yet  altogether  keep  no  measure  right  ; 
For  by  itself  each  doth  itself  advance, 
And  by  itself  each  doth  a  Galliard  dance. 

38 

"  VENUS  (the  mother  of  that  bastard  LOVE, 
Which  doth  usurp  the  world's  Great  Marshal's  name\ 
Just  with  the  sun,  her  dainty  feet  doth  move ; 
And  unto  him  doth  all  her  gestures  frame 
Now  after,  now  afore,  the  flattering  Dame, 
With  divers  cunning  passages  doth  err, 
Still  him  respecting,  that  respects  not  her. 


vies. 
1594. 


S'J  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.     15 

39- 

"  For  that  brave  SUN,  the  Father  of  the  Day, 
Doth  love  this  EARTH,  the  Mother  of  the  Night, 
And  like  a  reveller,  in  rich  array, 
Doth  dance  his  Galliard  in  his  leman's  sight; 
Both  back,  and  forth,  and  sideways  passing  light. 
His  gallant  grace  doth  so  the  gods  amaze, 
That  all  stand  still,  and  at  his  beauty  gaze. 

40. 

"  But  see  the  EARTH,  when  she  approacheth  near, 

How  she  for  joy  doth  spring  and  sweetly  smile ; 

But  see  again,  her  sad  and  heavy  cheer 

When,  changing  places,  he  retires  a  while ; 

But  those  black  clouds  he  shortly  will  exile, 

And  make  them  all  before  his  presence  fly  , 
As  mists  consumed  before  his  cheerful  eye. 

41. 

"  Who  doth  not  see  the  Measures  of  the  MOON? 

Which  thirteen  times  she  danceth  every  year, 

And  ends  her  Pavin  thirteen  times  as  soon 

As  doth  her  brother,  of  whose  golden  hair 

She  borroweth  part,  and  proudly  doth  it  wear. 
Then  doth  she  coyly  turn  her  face  aside 
That  half  her  cheek  is  scarce  sometimes  descried. 

42. 

"Next  her,  the  pure,  subtle,  and  cleansing  fire 

Is  swiftly  carried  in  a  circle  even  : 

Though  VULCAN  be  pronounced  by  many,  a  liar, 

The  only  halting  god  that  dwells  in  heaven. 

But  that  foul  name  may  be  more  fitly  given 

To  your  false  fire,  that  far  from  heaven  is  fall, 
And  doth  consume,  waste,  spoil,  disorder  all. 


i6    ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [s?ir/u 


Davies. 
une  1594. 


43- 

"  And  now,  behold  your  tender  nurse,  the  Air, 
And  common  neighbour  that  aye  runs  around  ; 
How  many  pictures  and  impressions  fair, 
Within  her  empty  regions  are  there  found, 
Which  to  your  senses,  Dancing  do  propound  ? 

For  what  are  breath,  speech,  echoes,  music,  ivinds 
But  Dancings  of  the  Air,  in  sundry  kinfts  ? 

44- 

"  For  when  you  Breathe,  the  air  in  order  moves  ; 

Now  in,  now  out,  in  time  and  measure  true 

And  when  you  Speak,  so  well  the  Dancing  loves 

That  doubling  oft,  and  oft  redoubling  new, 

With  thousand  forms  she  doth  herself  endue. 

For  all  the  words  that  from  your  lips  repair, 
Are  nought  but  tricks  and  turnings  of  the  Air. 

45- 

"  Hence  is  her  prattling  daughter,  ECHO,  born, 
That  dances  to  all  voices  she  can  hear. 
There  is  no  sound  so  harsh  that  she  doth  scorn  ; 
Nor  any  time,  wherein  she  will  forbear 
The  airy  pavement  with  her  feet  to  wear', 

And  yet  her  hearing  sense  is  nothing  quick, 

For  after  time  she  endeth  every  trick" 

46. 

"  And  thou,  sweet  Music,  Dancing's  only  life, 
The  ear's  sole  happiness,  the  Air's  best  speech, 
Loadstone  of  fellowship,  Charming  rod  of  strife, 
The  soft  mind's  Paradise,  the  sick  minds  Leech, 
With  thine  own  tongue,  thou  trees  and  stones  canst  teach, 
That  when  the  Air  doth  dance  her  finest  measure, 
Then  art  thou  born, the  gods' and  men's  sweet  pleasure" 


O  RCRESTRA,    A    POEM    OF    DANCING         17 

47- 

"  Lastly,  where  keep  the  Winds  their  revelry, 
Their  violent  turnings,  and  wild  whirling  Hayes  ; 
But  in  the  A  ir's  tralucent  gallery  ? 
Where  she  herself  is  turned  a  hundred  ways, 
While  with  those  Maskers,  wantonly  she  plays. 

Yet  in  this  misrule,  they  such  rule  embrace 

As  two,  at  oncet  encumber  not  the  place. 

48. 

"  If  then  Fire,  Air,  Wandering  and  Fixed  Lights, 
In  every  province  of  th  'imperial  sky, 
Yield  perfect  forms  of  Dancing  to  your  sights  ; 
In  vain  I  teach  the  ear,  that  which  the  eye, 
With  certain  view,  already  doth  descry  ; 

But  for  your  eyes  perceive  not  all  they  see, 

In  this,  I  will  your  senses'  master  be 

49- 

"  For  lo,  the  Sea  that  fleets  about  the  land, 
And  like  a  girdle  clips  her  solid  waist, 
Music  and  Measure  both  doth  understand 
For  his  great  Crystal  Eye  is  always  cast 
Up  to  the  Moon,  and  on  her  fixed  fast  ; 

And  as  she  danceth,  in  her  pallid  sphere, 

So  danceth  he  about  the  centre  here 


"Sometimes  his  proud  green  waves,  in  order  set, 

One  after  other,  flow  unto  the  shore  ; 

Which  when  they  have  with  many  kisses  wet, 

They  ebb  away  in  order,  as  before  : 

And  to  make  known  his  Courtly  Love  the  more, 
He  oft  doth  lay  aside  his  three-forked  mace, 
And  with  his  arms  the  timorous  Earth  embrace. 

B  10 


i8       ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [si?r/u 


Davies. 

une  1594. 


"  Only  the  Earth  doth  stand  for  ever  still: 
Her  rocks  remove  not,  nor  her  mountains  meet 
(Although  some  wits  enriched  with  learning's  skill, 
Say  '  Heaven  stands  firm,  and  that  the  Earth  doth  fleet, 
And  swiftly  turneth  underneath  their  feet'); 

Yet,  though  the  Earth  is  ever  steadfast  seen, 
On  her  broad  breast  hath  Dancing  ever  been. 

52. 

"  For  those  blue  veins,  that  through  her  body  spread  ; 
Those  sapphire  streams  which  from  great  hills  do  spring, 
(The  Earth's  great  dugs !  for  every  wight  is  fed 
With  sweet  fresh  moisture  from  them  issuing) 
Observe  a  Dance  in  their  wild  wandering; 

And  still  their  Dance  begets  a  murmur  sweety 
And  still  the  Murmur  with  the  Dance  doth  meet. 

53- 

"  Of  all  their  ways,  I  love  Mczander's  path; 
Which,  to  the  tunes  of  dying  swans,  doth  dance 
Such  winding  slights.     Such  turns  and  tricks  he  hath, 
Such  creeks,  such  wrenches,  aad  such  daliance 
That  (whether  it  be  hap  or  heedless  chance) 
In  his  indented  course  and  wringing  play, 
lie  seems  to  dance  a  perfect  cunning  Hay. 

54- 

"  But  wherefore  do  these  streams  for  ever  run  ? 
To  keep  themselves  for  ever  sweet  and  clear ; 
For  let  their  everlasting  course  be  done, 
They  straight  corrupt  and  foul  with  mud  appear. 
O  ye  sweet  Nymphs,  that  beauty's  loss  do  fear, 

Contemn  the  drugs  that  physic  doth  devise  ; 

And  learn  of  LOVE,  this  dainty  exercise. 


n^Tlgj]  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.        19 

55- 

"  See  how  those  flowers,  that  have  sweet  beauty  too, 
The  only  jeiv  els  that  the  EARTH  doth  wear 
When  the  young  SUN  in  bravery  her  doth  woo) 
As  oft  as  they  the  whistling  wind  do  hear, 
Do  wave  their  tender  bodies  here  and  there  : 

And  though  their  dance  no  perfect  measure  is  ; 

Yet  oftentimes  their  music  makes  them  kiss. 

56. 

"  What  makes  the  Vine  about  the  Elm  to  dance 
With  turnings,  windings,  and  embracements  round  ? 
What  makes  the  loadstone  to  the  North  advance 
His  subtle  point,  as  if  from  thence  he  found 
His  chief  attractive  virtue  to  redound  ? 

Kind  Nature,  first,  doth  cause  all  things  to  love ; 

Love  makes  them  dance,  and  in  just  order  move. 

57- 

"  Hark  how  the  birds  do  sing  !  and  mark  then  how, 
Jump  with  the  modulation  of  their  lays, 
They  lightly  leap,  and  skip  from  bough  to  bough  ; 
Yet  do  the  cranes  deserve  a  greater  praise, 
Which  keep  such  measure  in  their  airy  ways: 

As  when  they  all  in  order  ranked  are, 

They  make  a  perfect  form  triangular. 

58. 

"  In  the  chief  angle,  flies  the  watchful  guide  ; 

A  nd  all  the  followers  their  heads  do  lay 

On  their  foregoers*  backs,  on  either  side : 

But,  for  the  Captain  hath  no  rest  to  stay 

His  head  forwearied  with  the  windy  way, 

He  back  retires  ;  and  then  the  next  behind, 

As  his  Lieutenant,  leads  them  through  the  wind. 


>o       ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [sif j^^; 

59- 

"By  why  relate  I  every  singular? 

Since  all  the  world's  great  fortunes  and  affairs 

Forward  and  backward  rapt  and  whirled  are, 

According  to  the  music  of  the  spheres ; 

And  Chance  herself  her  nimble  feet  upbears 

On  a  round  slippery  wheel,  that  rolleth  aye, 
A  nd  turns  all  states  with  her  impetuous  sway. 

60. 

"  Learn  then  to  dance  you,  that  are  princes  born 

And  lawful  Lords  of  earthly  creatures  all; 

Imitate  them,  and  thereof  take  no  scorn, 

For  this  new  Art  to  them  is  natural. 

And  imitate  the  stars  celestial; 

For  when  pale  Death  your  vital  twist  shall  sever, 
Your  better  parts  must  dance  with  them  for  ever" 

61. 

Thus  LOVE  persuades,  and  all  the  crowd  of  men 
That  stands  around,  doth  make  a  murmuring, 
As  when  the  wind,  loosed  from  his  hollow  den, 
Among  the  trees  a  gentle  bass  doth  sing; 
Or  as  a  brook,  through  pebbles  wandering : 

But  in  their  looks,  they  uttered  this  plain  speech, 

"  That  they  would  learn  to  dance,  if  LOVE  would  teach. 

62. 

Then,  first  of  all,  he  doth  demonstrate  plain, 
The  motions  seven  that  are  in  Nature  found ; 
Upward  and  downward,  forth  and  back  again, 
To  this  side,  and  to  that,  and  turning  round  : 
Whereof  a  thousand  Brawls  lie  doth  compound, 

Which  he  doth  teach  unto  the  multitude; 

And  ever,  with  a  t^trn  they  must  conclude. 


?/>«*»»•]  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.    21 

63- 

As  when  a  Nymph  arising  from  the  land, 

Leadeth  a  dance,  with  her  long  watery  traint 

Down  to  the  sea,  she  wries  to  every  hand, 

A  nd  every  way  doth  cross  the  fertile  plain  ; 

But  when,  at  last,  she  falls  into  the  Main, 
Then  all  her  traverses  concluded  are, 
And  with  the  sea  her  course  is  circular 

64. 

Thus,  when,  at  first,  LOVE  had  them  marshalled, 
(As  erst  he  did  the  shapeless  mass  of  things) 
He  taught  them  Rounds  and  winding  Heyes  to  head, 
And  about  trees  to  cast  themselves  in  rings  ; 
As  the  two  Bears,  whom  the  First  Mover  flings 
With  a  short  turn  about  Heaven's  Axle-tree, 
In  a  round  dance  for  ever  wheeling  be. 

65- 

But  after  these,  as  men  more  civil  grew, 

He  did  more  grave  and  solemn  Measures  frame  ; 

With  such  fair  order  and  proportion  true, 

And  correspondence  every  way  the  same, 

That  no  fault-finding  eye  did  ever  blame  : 
For  every  eye  was  moved  at  the  sight 
With  sober  wondering,  and  with  sweet  delight. 

66. 

Not  those  old  students  of  the  heavenly  book, 

ATLAS  the  great,  PROMETHEUS  the  wise; 

Which  on  the  stars  did  all  their  lifetime  look, 

Could  ever  find  such  measures  in  the  skies, 

So  full  of  change  and  rare  varieties  : 

Yet  all  the  feet  whereon  these  measures  go 
Are  only  Spondees,  solemn,  grave,  and  slow. 


22    ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  or  DANCING.  [s?ir/ 

67. 

But  for  more  divers  and  more  pleasing  show, 
A  swift  and  wandering  dance  She  did  invent; 
With  passages  uncertain,  to  and  fro, 
Yet  with  a  certain  Answer  and  Consent 
To  the  quick  music  of  the  instrument. 

Five  was  the  number  of  the  Music's  feet  ; 

Which  still  the  Dance  did  with  five  paces  meet. 

68. 

A  gallant  Dance !  that  lively  doth  bewray 

A  spirit  and  a  virtue  masculine  ; 

Impatient  that  her  house  on  earth  should  stay. 

Since  she  herself  is  fiery  and  divine. 

Oft  doth  she  make  her  body  upward  flyne 

With  lofty  turns  and  caprioles  in  the  air, 
Which  with  the  lusty  tunes  accordeth  fair. 

69. 

What  shall  I  name  those  current  travasest 
That  on  a  triple  Dactyl  foot,  do  run 
Close  by  the  ground,  with  sliding  passages  ? 
Wherein  that  dancer  greatest  praise  hath  wont 
Which  with  best  order  can  all  orders  shun  ; 
For  everywhere  he  wantonly  must  range, 
And  turn,  and  wind,  with  unexpected  change. 

70. 

Yet  is  there  one,  the  most  delightful  kind, 
A  lofty  jumping,  or  a  leaping  round. 
When,  arm  in  arm,  two  dancers  are  entwined, 
And  whirl  themselves,  with  strict  embracements  bound, 
And  still  their  feet  an  Anapest  do  sound  ; 
An  Anapest  is  all  their  music's  song. 
Whose  first  two  feet  are  short,  and  third  is  long. 


R  CHESTRA>  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.       23 


As  the  victorious  twins  of  L^DA  and  JOVE, 
(  That  taught  the  Spartans  dancing  on  the  sands 
Of  swift  Eurotas)  dance  in  heaven  above, 
Knit  and  united  with  eternal  bands  ; 
Among  the  stars  their  double  image  stands  •, 

Where  both  are  carried  with  an  equal  pace, 
Together  jumping  in  their  turning  race. 

72. 

This  is  the  net  wherein  the  sun's  bright  eye 
VENUS  and  MARS  entangled  did  behold  ; 
For  in  this  dance  their  arms  they  so  imply, 
As  each  doth  seem  the  other  to  enfold. 
What  if  lewd  wits  another  tale  have  told, 

Of  jealous  VULCAN,  and  of  iron  chains  ? 

Yet  this  true  sense  that  forged  lie  contains. 

73- 

These  various  forms  of  dancing  LOVE  did  frame, 
And  besides  these,  a  hundred  millions  moe; 
And  as  he  did  invent,  he  taught  the  same: 
With  goodly  gesture,  and  with  comely  show, 
Now  keeping  state,  now  humbly  honouring  loiv. 
And  ever  for  the  persons  and  the  place, 
He  taught  most  fit,  and  best  according  grace. 

74- 

For  LOVE,  within  his  fertile  working  brain, 

Did  then  conceive  those  gracious  Virgins  threet 

Whose  civil  moderation  did  maintain 

All  decent  order  and  conveniency, 

And  fair  respect,  and  seemly  modesty: 

And  then  he  thought  it  fit  they  should  be  born, 
That  their  sweet  presence  Dancing  might  adorn. 


!4    ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [: 

75- 

Hence  is  it,  that  these  Graces  painted  are 
With  hand  in  hand,  dancing  an  endless  round  ; 
And  with  regarding  eyes,  that  still  beware 
That  there  be  no  disgrace  amongst  them  found : 
With  equal  foot  they  beat  the  flowery  ground, 

Laughing,  or  singing,  as  their  Passions  will ; 

Yet  nothing  that  they  do,  becomes  them  ill- 


Thus  LOVE  taught  men  !  and  men  thus  learned  of  LOVE 
Sweet  Musics  sound  with  feet  to  counterfeit: 
Which  was  long  time  before  high-thundering  JOVE 
Was  lifted  up  to  Heavens  imperial  seat. 
For  though  by  birth  he  were  the  Prince  of  Crete, 

Nor  Crete  nor  Heaven  should  that  young  Prince  have 
If  dancers  with  their  timbrels  had  not  been.       [seen, 

77- 

Since  when  all  ceremonious  mysteries, 

A II  sacred  orgies  and  religious  rites, 

A II  pomps,  and  triumphs,  and  solemnities, 

All  funerals,  nuptials,  and  like  public  sights , 

All  parliaments  of  peace,  and  warlike  fights, 
A II  learned  arts,  and  every  great  affair, 
A  lively  shape  of  Dancing  seems  to  bear. 

78. 

For  what  did  he,  who,  with  his  ten-tongued 

Gave  beasts  and  blocks  an  understanding  ear ; 

Or  rather  into  bestial  minds  and  brutes 

Shed  and  infused  the  beams  of  Reason  clear  ? 

Doubtless,  for  men  that  rude  and  savage  were> 
A  civil  form  of  Dancing  he  devised. 
Wherewith  unto  their  gods  they  sacrificed. 


si?r/i£aivs£:]  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.       25 

79- 

So  did  Mus&us,  so  AMPHION  did, 
And  LINUS  with  his  sweet  enchanting  Song, 
And  he  whose  hand  the  earth  of  monsters  rid, 
And  had  men's  ears  fast  chained  to  his  tongue, 
And  THESEUS  to  his  wood-born  slaves  among, 

Used  Dancing,  as  the  finest  policy 

To  plant  Religion  and  Society. 

80. 

And  therefore,  now,  the  Thracian  ORPHEUS'  lyre 

And  HERCULES  himself  are  stellified, 

And  in  high  heaven,  amidst  the  starry  quire 

Dancing  their  parts,  continually  do  slide. 

So,  on  the  Zodiac,  GANYMEDE  doth  ride, 
And  so  is  HEBE  with  the  Muses  nine, 
For  pleasing  J  OVE  with  dancing,  made  divine. 

81. 

Wherefore  was  PROTEUS  said  himself  to  change 

Into  a  stream,  a  lion,  and  a  tree, 

And  many  other  forms  fantastic  strange, 

As,  in  his  fickle  thought,  he  wished  to  be? 

But  that  he  danced  with  such  facility, 

As,  like  a  lion,  he  could  pace  ivitk  pride, 
Ply  like  a  plant,  and  like  a  river  slide. 

82. 

And  how  was  CCENEUS  made,  at  first,  a  man, 
And  then  a  woman,  then  a  man  again, 
But  in  a  Dance  ?  which  when  he  first  began 
He  the  man's  part  in  measure  did  sustain  : 
But  when  he  changed  into  a  second  strain, 

He  danced  the  woman's  part  another  space; 

And  then  returned  unto  his  former  place. 


Davi 

uue 


26    ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [s}'jju 

83. 

Hence  sprang  the  fable  of  TIRESIAS, 

That  he  the  pleasure  of  both  sexes  tried  ; 

For,  in  a  dance,  he  man  and  woman  was, 

By  often  change  of  place,  from  side  to  side, 

But,  for  the  woman  easily  did  slide, 

And  smoothly  swim  with  cunning  hidden  Art, 
He  took  more  pleasure  in  a  woman's  part. 

84. 

So  to  a  fish  VENUS  herself  did  change, 
And  swimming  through  the  soft  and  yielding  wave, 
With  gentle  motions  did  so  smoothly  range, 
As  none  might  see  where  she  the  water  drave  ; 
But  this  plain  truth  that  falsed  fable  gave, 
That  she  did  dance  with  sliding  easiness, 
Pliant  and  quick  in  wandering  passages. 

85- 

And  merry  BACCHUS  practised  dancing  too, 
And  to  the  Lydian  numbers  Rounds  did  make. 
TJie  like  he  did  in  tti  Eastern  India  do, 
And  taught  them  all,  when  PHCEBUS  did  awake, 
And  ^vhen  at  night  he  did  his  coach  forsake, 

1  o  honour  heaven,  and  heaven's  great  rolling  eye, 
With  turning  dances  and  with  melody. 

86. 

Thus  they  who  first  did  found  a  Common  weal, 
And  they  who  first  Religion  did  ordain, 
By  dancing  first  the  people's  hearts  did  steal: 
Of  whom  we  now  a  thousand  tales  do  feign. 
Yet  do  we  now  their  perfect  rules  retain, 

And  use  them  still  in  such  devices  new  ; 

As  in  the  world,  long  since,  their  withering  grew. 


*t£75.1  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.    27 


87, 

For  after  Towns  and  Kingdoms  founded  were, 
Between  great  states  arose  well-ordered  war, 
Wherein  most  perfect  Measure  doth  appear  : 
Whether  their  well  set  Ranks  respected  are9 
In  quadrant  forms  or  semicircular  ; 

Or  else  the  March,  when  all  the  troops  advance, 
Unto  the  drum  in  gallant  order  dance. 

88. 

And  after  wars,  when  white-winged  Victory 

Is  with  a  glorious  Triumph  beautified  ; 

And  every  one  doth  I&  !  /«  !  cry, 

While  all  in  gold  the  Conqueror  doth  ride  ; 

The  solemn  pomp,  that  fills  the  city  wide, 

Observes  such  Rank  and  Measure  everywhere,, 
As  if  they  altogether  dancing  were. 


The  like  just  order  Mourners  do  observe, 
But  with  unlike  affection  and  attire, 
When  some  great  man,  that  nobly  did  deserve^ 
And  whom  his  friends  impatiently  desire  -, 
Is  brought  with  honour  to  his  latest  fire. 

The  dead  corpse,  too,  in  that  sad  dance  is  moved 
As  if  both  dead  and  living  dancing  loved. 

90. 

A  diverse  cause,  but  like  solemnity  , 

Unto  the  Temple  leads  the  bashful  bride, 

Which  blusheth  like  the  Indian  ivory 

Which  is  with  dip  of  Tyrian  purple  dyed  : 

A  golden  troop  doth  pass  on  every  side, 

Of  flourishing  young  men  and  virgins  gay, 
Which  keep  fair  Measure  all  the  flowery  way. 


28    ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [s?ir/u 

91. 

And  not  alone  the  general  multitude 

But  those  choice  NESTORS,  which  in  counsel  grave 

Of  cities  and  of  kingdoms  do  conclude, 

Most  comely  order  in  their  sessions  have ; 

Wherefore  the  wise  Thessalians  ever  gave 

The  name  of  Leader  of  their  Country's  Dance 
To  him  that  had  their  country's  governance. 

92. 

And  those  great  Masters  of  the  liberal  arts, 
In  all  their  several  Schools,  do  Dancing  teach  ; 
For  humble  Grammar  first  doth  set  the  parts 
Of  congruent  and  well  according  Speech, 
Which  Rhetoric,  whose  state  the  clouds  doth  reach9 
And  heavenly  Poetry  do  forward  lead, 
And  divers  Measures  diversely  do  tread. 

93- 

For  Rhetoric  clothing  Speech  in  rich  array, 
The  looser  numbers  teacheth  her  to  range 
With  twenty  tropes,  and  tun:  :ngs  every  way, 
A  nd  various  figures  and  licentious  change  : 
But  Poetry,  with  rule  and  order  strange, 
So  curiously  doth  move  each  single  pace 
As  all  is  marred  if  she  one  foot  misplace. 

94. 

These  Arts  of  Speech  the  Guides  and  Marshals  are, 
But  Logic  leadeth  Reason  in  a  dance 
(Reason,  the  Cynosure  and  bright  Loadstar 
In  this  world's  sea,  f  avoid  the  rocks  of  Chance), 
For  with  close  following,  and  continuance, 
One  reason  doth  another  so  ensue 
As,  in  conclusion,  still  the  Dance  is  true. 


Davies 
une  1594 


s'- 


SaivJ94.']  ORCHESTRA>  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.       29 

95- 

So  Music  to  her  own  sweet  tunes  doth  trip, 

With  tricks  of  3,  5,  8,  15,  and  more ; 

So  doth  the  Art  of  Numbering  seem  to  skip 

From  Even  to  Odd,  in  her  proportioned  score  ; 

So  do  those  skills,  whose  quick  eyes  do  explore 

The  just  dimension  both  of  earth  and  heaven^ 
In  all  their  rules  observe  a  measure  even. 


Lo,  this  is  Dancing's  true  nobility  ; 

Dancing,  the  Child  of  Music  and  of  Love  ; 

Dancing  itself,  both  Love  and  Harmony  ; 

Where  all  agree,  and  all  in  order  move ; 

Dancing,  the  art  that  all  Arts  doth  approve; 
The  sure  Character  of  the  world's  consent, 
The  heaven's  true  figure,  and  th' earth's  ornament. 

97- 

The  Queen,  whose  dainty  ears  had  borne  too  long 
The  tedious  praise  of  that  she  did  despise, 
Adding  once  more  the  music  of  the  tongue 
To  the  sweet  speech  of  her  alluring  eyes  ; 
Began  to  answer  in  such  winning  wise 

As  that  forthwith  ANTINOUS'  tongue  was  tied, 
His  eyes  fast  fixed,  his  ears  were  open  wide. 

98. 

Forsooth,  quoth  she,  great  glory  you  have  won 
To  your  trim  minion,  Dancing,  all  this  while, 
By  blazing  him  LOVE'S  first  begotten  son, 
Of  every  ill  the  hateful  father  vile, 
That  doth  the  world  with  sorceries  beguile, 
Cunningly  mad,  religiously  profane, 
Wit's  monster,  Reason's  canker,  Sense's  bane. 


30      ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING,  p 

99. 

LOVE  taught  the  mother  that  unkind  desire 

To  wash  her  hands  in  her  own  infant's  blood; 

LOVE  taught  the  daughter  to  betray  her  sire 

Into  most  base  unworthy  servitude ; 

LOVE  taught  the  brother  to  prepare  such  food 
To  feast  his  brothers  that  the  all-seeing  sun, 
Wrapt  in  a  cloud,  the  wicked  sight  did  shun. 

IOO. 

And  even  this  self -same  LOVE  hath  Dancing  taught, 
An  Art  that  shewed  ttildea  of  his  mind 
With  vainness,  frenzy,  and  misorder  fraught ; 
Sometimes  with  blood  and  cruelties  unkind, 
For  in  a  dance  TEREUS'  mad  wife  did  find 
Fit  time  and  place,  by  murdering  her  son, 
T avenge  the  wrong  his  traitorous  sire  had  done. 

101. 

What  mean  the  Mermaids,  when  they  dance  and  sing, 

But  certain  death  unto  the  mariner  ? 

What  tidings  do  the  dancing  Dolphins  bring, 

But  that  some  dangerous  storm  approacheth  near  ? 

Then  since  both  Love  and  Dancing  liveries  bear 
Of  such  ill  hap  unhappy  may  they  prove 
That?  sitting  free,  will  either  dance  or  love  / 

102. 

Yet,  once  again,  ANTINOUS  did  reply, 
Great  Queen  !  condemn  not  LOVE  the  innocent, 
For  this  mischievous  LUST,  which  traitorously 
Usurps  his  Name,  and  steals  his  Ornament ; 
For  that  TRUE  LOVE,  which  Dancing  did  invent, 

Is  he  that  tuned  the  world's  whole  harmony, 

And  linked  all  men  in  sweet  society 


Si?r/un^aIV59e4S:]  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.        31 

103. 

He  first  extracted  from  tti  earth-mingled  mind 

That  heavenly  fire,  or  quintessence  divine, 

Which  doth  such  sympathy  in  Beauty  find 

As  is  between  the  Elm  and  fruitful  Vine, 

And  so  to  Beauty  ever  doth  incline; 

Life's  life  it  is,  and  cordial  to  the  heart, 
And  of  our  better  part  the  better  part. 

104. 

This  is  True  Love,  by  that  true  CUPID  got; 

Which  danceth  Galliards  in  your  amorous  eyes, 

But  to  your  frozen  heart  approacheth  not; 

Only  your  heart  he  dares  not  enterprise, 

And  yet  through  every  other  part  he  flies, 
And  everywhere  he  nimbly  danceth  now, 
Though  in  yourself  yourself  perceive  not  how. 

105. 

For  your  sweet  beauty  daintily  transfused 

With  due  proportion,  throughout  every  part ; 

What  is  it  but  a  dance  where  LOVE  hath  used 

His  finer  cunning,  and  more  curious  Art  ? 

Where  all  the  Elements  themselves  impart, 

And  turn,  and  wind,  and  mingle  with  such  measure 
That  th'  eye  that  sees  it  surfeits  with  the  pleasure. 

106. 

LOVE  in  the  twinkling  of  your  eyelids  danceth, 
LOVE  dances  in  your  pulses  and  your  veins, 
LOVE,  when  you  sew,  your  needle's  point  advanceth, 
A  nd  makes  it  dance  a  thousand  curious  strains 
Of  winding  rounds  ;  whereof  the  form  remains 

To  shew  that  your  fair  hands  can  dance  the  Hey, 
Which  your  fine  feet  would  learn  as  well  as  thev. 


2    ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [ 

107. 

And  when  your  ivory  fingers  touch  the  strings 

Of  any  silver-sounding  instrument, 

LOVE  makes  them  dance  to  those  sweet  murmurings, 

With  busy  skill  and  cunning  excellent! 

O  that  your  feet,  those  tunes  would  represent 
With  artificial  motions  to  and  fro, 
That  LOVE  this  Art  in  every  part  might  shew  I 

108. 

Yet  your  fair  soul,  which  came  from  heaven  above 
To  rule  this  house  (another  heaven  below) 
With  divers  powers  in  harmony  doth  move ; 
And  all  the  virtues  that  from  her  do  flow 
In  a  round  measure,  hand  in  hand  do  go : 

Could  I  now  see,  as  I  conceive  this  dance, 
Wonder  and  Love  would  cast  me  in  a  trance. 

log. 

The  richest  jewel  in  all  the  heavenly  treasure, 
That  ever  yet  unto  the  earth  was  shownt 
Is  Perfect  Concord  th  only  perfect  pleasure ', 
That  wretched  earthborn  men  have  ever  known  : 
For  many  hearts  it  doth  compound  in  one, 

That  what  so  one  doth  will,  or  speak,  or  do> 
With  one  consent  they  all  agree  thereto. 

1 10. 

Concord's  true  picture  shineth  in  this  A  rt 
Where  divers  men  and  women  ranked  be, 
And  every  one  doth  dance  a  several  part, 
Vet  all  as  one  in  measure  do  agree, 
Observing  perfect  uniformity : 

All  turn  together,  all  together  trace, 
And  all  together  honour  and  embrace. 


[Si?r/uiS7s9e4S.'  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.     33 

in. 

//  they  whom  sacred  Love  hath  linked  in  one. 

Do,  as  they  dance,  in  all  their  course  of  life  ; 

Never  shall  burning  grief  nor  bitter  moan, 

Nor  factious  difference,  nor  unkind  strife, 

Arise  between  the  husband  and  the  wife; 

For  whether  forth,  or  back,  or  round  he  go, 
As  doth  the  man,  so  must  the  woman  do. 

112. 

What,  if  by  often  interchange  of  place, 

Sometimes  the  woman  gets  the  upper  hand  ? 

That  is  but  done  for  more  delightful  grace, 

For  on  that  part,  she  doth  not  ever  stand  ; 

But,  as  the  Measures'  law  doth  her  command, 

She  wheels  about,  and,  ere  the  dance  doth  end, 
Into  her  former  place  she  doth  transcend. 

"3; 

But  not  alone  this  correspondence  meet 
And  uniform  consent  doth  Dancing  praise  ; 
For  Comeliness,  the  child  of  Order  sweet, 
Enamels  it  with  her  eye -pleasing  rays : 
Fair  Comeliness,  ten  hundred  thousand  ways. 

Through  Dancing  sheds  itself,  and  makes  it  shin* 
With  glorious  beauty ,  and  with  grace  divine. 

114. 

For  Comeliness  is  a  disposing  fair 

Of  things  and  actions  in  fit  time  and  place  ; 

Which  doth  in  Dancing  shew  itself  most  clear 

When  troops  confused,  which  here  and  there  do  trace, 

Without  distinguishment  or  bounded  space, 

By  dancing  rule,  into  such  ranks  are  brought, 
As  glads  the  eye,  and  ravisheth  the  though L 

C  10 


ORCHESTRA.  A  POEM  OF  DANCING. 


Then  why  should  Reason  judge  that  reasonless 

Which  is  Wit's  Offspring,  and  the  work  of  Art, 

Image  of  Concord,  and  of  Comeliness  ? 

Who  sees  a  clock  moving  in  every  part, 

A  sailing  pinnace,  or  a  wheeling  cart, 

But  thinks  that  Reason,  ere  it  came  to  pass, 
The  first  impulsive  cause  and  mover  was  t 

116. 

Who  sees  an  army  all  in  rank  advance, 

But  deems  a  wise  Commander  is  in  place, 

Which  leadeth  on  that  brave  victorious  dance  ? 

Much  more  in  Dancing's  Art,  in  Dancing's  grace, 

Blindness  itself  may  Reason's  footsteps  trace; 
For  of  Love's  Maze  it  is  the  curious  plot, 
And  of  Man's  Fellowship  the  true-love  knot. 

117. 

But  if  these  eyes  of  yours  (Loadstars  of  Love  ! 

Shewing  the  world's  great  Dance  to  your  mind's  eye) 

Cannot,  with  all  their  demonstrations,  move 

Kind  apprehension  in  your  Phantasy 

Of  Dancing's  virtue  and  nobility  ; 

How  can  my  barbarous  tongue  win  you  thereto, 
Which  heaven's  and  earth's  fair  speech  could  never  do  ? 

118. 

0  LOVE  /  my  King  !    If  all  my  Wit  and  power 

Have  done  you  all  the  service  that  they  can  ; 

0  be  you  present,  in  this  present  hour, 

And  help  your  servant  and  your  true  liegeman! 

End  that  persuasion,  which  I  erst  began  ! 

For  who  in  praise  of  Dancing  can  persuade 

With  such  sweet  force,  as  LOVE,  which  Dancing  made? 


n?^:]  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.     35 

119. 

LOVE  heard  his  prayer ;  and  swifter  than  the  wind, 
(Like  to  a  page  in  habit,  face,  and  speech), 
He  came  ;  and  stood  ANTINOUS  behind, 
And  many  secrets  of  his  thoughts  did  teach. 
At  last  a  crystal  Mirror  he  did  reach 

Unto  his  hands,  that  he  with  one  rash  view 
All  forms  therein  by  LOVE'S  revealing  knew. 

120. 

And  humbly  honouring,  gave  it  to  the  Queen, 

With  this  fair  speech,  See,  fairest  Queen!  quoth  he, 

The  fairest  sight  that  ever  shall  be  seen, 

And  th'only  wonder  oj  posterity  / 

The  richest  work  in  Nature's  treasury  ! 

Which  she  disdains  to  shew  on  this  world's  stage, 
And  thinks  it  far  too  good  for  our  rude  age. 

121. 

But  in  another  world,  divided  far, 

In  the  great  fortunate  triangled  Isle, 

Thrice  twelve  degrees  removed  from  the  North  Star, 

She  will  this  glorious  Workmanship  compile, 

Which  she  hath  been  conceiving  all  this  while 

Since  the  world's  birth  ;  and  will  bring  forth  at  last, 
When  six  and  twenty  hundred  years  are  past. 

122. 

PENELOPE  the  Queen,  when  she  had  viewed 

The  strange  eye-dazzling  admirable  sight, 

Fain  would  have  praised  the  State  and  Pulchritude  ; 

But  she  was  stricken  dumb  with  wonder  quite, 

Yet  her  sweet  mind  retained  her  thinking  might. 

Her  ravished  mind  in  heavenly  thoughts  did  dwell ; 

But  what  she  thought,  no  mortal  tongue  can  tell. 


36        ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING. 

123. 

You,  Lady  Muse,  whom  JOVE  the  Counsellor 
Begot  of  MEMORY,  Wisdom's  Treasuress, 
To  your  divining  tongue  is  given  a  power 
Of  uttering  secrets,  large  and  limitless  ; 
You  can  PENELOPE'S  strange  thoughts  express; 

Which  she  conceived,  and  then  would  fain  have  told, 
When  she  the  wondrous  Crystal  did  behold. 

124. 

Her  winged  thoughts  bore  up  her  mind  so  high 
As  that  she  weened  she  saw  the  glorious  throne, 
Where  the  bright  Moon  doth  sit  in  Majesty  : 
A  thousand  sparkling  stars  about  her  shone, 
But  she  herself  did  sparkle  more,  alone, 

Than  all  those  thousand  beauties  would  have  done, 
If  they  had  been  confounded  all  in  one. 

125. 

And  yet  she  thought  those  stars  moved  in  such  measure, 
To  do  their  Sovereign  honour  and  delight, 
As  soothed  her  mind  with  sweet  enchanting  pleasure, 
Although  the  various  Change  amazed  her  sight, 
And  her  weak  judgement  did  entangle  quite: 

Besides,  their  moving  made  them  shine  more  clear ; 

As  diamonds  moved  more  sparkling  do  appear. 

126. 

This  was  the  Picture  of  her  wondrous  thought ! 
But  who  can  wonder  that  her  thought  was  so, 
Sith  VULCAN,  King  of  Fire,  that  Mirror  wrought 
(Which  things  to  come,  present,  and  past  doth  know), 
And  there  did  represent  in  lively  show 

Our  glorious  English  Court's  divine  Image, 
As  it  should  be  in  this  our  Golden  Age  ? 


n^T^']  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.       37 

\See  duplicate  ending  from  this  point  on  the  next  pages '.] 

127. 

Away,  TERPSICHORE,  light  Muse,  away  ! 

And  come,  URANIA,  Prophetess  divine ! 

Come,  Muse  of  Heaven,  my  burning  thirst  allay ! 

Even  now,  for  want  of  sacred  drink,  I  pine : 

In  heavenly  moisture  dip  this  pen  of  mine, 
And  let  my  mouth  with  nectar  overflow, 
For  I  must  more  than  mortal  glory  show ! 

128. 

0  that  I  had  HOMER'S  abundant  vein, 

1  would  hereof  another  Ilias  make  ! 

Or  else  the  Man  of  Mantua's  charmed  brain, 

In  whose  large  throat  great  JOVE  the  thunder  spake  ! 

O  that  I  could  old  GEOFFREY'S  Muse  awake, 

Or  borrow  COLIN'S  fair  heroic  style, 

Or  smooth  my  rhymes  with  DELIA'S  servant's  file ! 

129. 

0  could  I,  sweet  Companion,  sing  like  you 
Which  of  a  Shadow,  under  a  shadow  sing ! 
Or  like  fair  SALVES'  sad  lover  true  ! 
Or  like  the  Bay,  the  marigold's  darling, 
Whose  sudden  verse,  Love  covers  with  his  wing! 
O  that  your  brains  were  mingled  all  with  mine, 
T'enlarge  my  Wit  for  this  great  work  divine ! 

130. 

Yet  ASTROPHEL  might  one  for  all  suffice, 
Whose  supple  Muse  camelion-like  doth  change 
Into  all  forms  of  excellent  device  : 
So  might  the  Swallow,  whose  swift  Muse  doth  range 
Through  rare  Idceas  and  inventions  strange, 
And  ever  doth  enjoy  her  joyful  Spring, 
And  Sweeter  than  the  Nightingale  doth  sing. 


38    ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING, 


O  that  I  might  that  singing  Swallow  hear, 
To  whom  I  owe  my  service  and  my  love  ! 
His  sugared  tunes  would  so  enchant  mine  ear, 
And  in  my  mind  such  sacred  fury  move, 
As  I  should  knock  at  heaven's  great  gate  above, 

With  my  proud  rhymes  ;  while,  of  this  heavenly  state, 

I  do  aspire  the  Shadow  to  relate. 

FINIS. 


[In  later  editions  a  different  ending  of  the  poem  was  substituted  for  the 
above,  from  after  Stanza  126,  thus  : 


Here  are  wanting  some  stanzas  describing  Queen 
ELIZABETH. 

Then  follow  these: 

127. 

Her  brighter  dazzling  beams  of  Majesty 
Were  laid  aside  :  for  she  vouchsafed  awhile 
With  gracious,  cheerful,  and  familiar  eye, 
Upon  the  Revels  of  her  Court  to  smile, 
For  so  Time's  journey  she  doth  oft  beguile: 

Like  sight  no  mortal  eye  might  elsewhere  see 

So  full  of  State,  Art,  and  variety. 


[si?juSaivs94-  ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.     39 

128. 

For  of  her  Barons  brave,  and  Ladies  fair 

(Who  had  they  been  elsewhere,  most  fair  had  been), 

Many  an  incomparable  lovely  pair 

With  hand-in-hand  were  interlinked  seen, 

Making  fair  honour  to  their  sovereign  Queen  : 

Forward  they  paced,  and  did  their  pace  apply 
To  a  most  sweet  and  solemn  melody. 

129. 

So  subtle  and  curious  was  the  measure 
With  such  unlooked-for  change  in  every  strain, 
As  that  PENELOPE  rapt  with  sweet  pleasure 
Weened  she  beheld  the  true  proportion  plain 
Of  her  own  web,  weaved  and  unweaved  again  : 

But  that  her  Art  was  somewhat  less,  she  thought, 
And  on  a  mere  ignoble  subject  wrought. 

130. 

For  here,  like  to  the  silkworm's  industry, 

Beauty  itself  out  of  itself  did  weave 

So  rare  a  work,  and  of  such  subtlety, 

As  did  all  eyes  entangle  and  deceive  ; 

And  in  all  minds  a  strange  impression  leave. 
In  this  sweet  labyrinth  did  CUPID  stray, 
And  never  had  the  power  to  pass  away. 


As  when  the  Indians,  neighbours  of  the  Morning, 

In  honour  of  the  cheerful  rising  Sun-> 

With  pearl  and  painted  plumes  themselves  adorning, 

A  solemn  stately  measure  have  begun  ; 

The  god  well  pleased  with  that  fair  honour  done, 
Sheds  forth  his  beams,  and  doth  their  faces  kiss 
With  that  immortal  glorious  face  of  his  : 


40     ORCHESTRA,  A  POEM  OF  DANCING.  [^/^ 

132- 
So       *        *        *        *] 


Nosce   teipsum! 

*This  Oracle  expounded  in  two 
Elegies. 

1.  Of  Human  Knowledge. 

2.  Of  the  Soul  of  Man,  and  the  Immor- 

tality thereof. 


L  O  ND  ON: 

Printed  by  RICHARD  FIELD,  for    JOHN   STANDISH. 

1599. 


[This  work  was  thus  registered  for  publication  at  Stationers'  Hall : 

10  aprilte  [1599]- 

JOHN  STANDYSHE.  Entred  for  his  copie  A  booke  called  Nosce  Teipsum 
The  oracle  expounded  in  two  Elegies,  j.  of  human 
kno\w\ledge.  2.  of  the  soule  of  Man  and  th\e\  im- 
mortality thereof. 

Master  PONSONBYES  This  is  aucthorised  vnder  the  hand  of  the  I  .[ord] 
{the  junior  Warden  Bysshop  of  LONDON  PROVYED  that  yt  must  not  be 
at  the  time']  hand  is  printed  without  his  L[ordships]  hand  to  yt  again. 

tO  yt.  Transcript  &*c.  iii.  142.  Ed,  1876. 


43 


To   my   most   gracious    dread 
Sovereign. 

0  THAT  clear  Majesty  which  in  the  North 
Doth  like  another  sun  in  glory  rise  ; 
Which  standeth  fixt,  yet  spreads  her  heavenly  worth 
Loadstone  to  hearts,  and  loadstar  to  all  eyes  : 

Like  heaven  in  all;  like  th'  earth  in  this  alone. 

That  though  great  States  by  her  support  do  stand, 
Yet  she  herself  supported  is  of  none, 
But  by  the  finger  of  th' Almighty1  s  hand  : 

To  the  divinest  and  the  richest  Mind, 

Both  by  Art's  purchase  and  by  Nature's  dower, 
That  ever  was  from  heaven  to  earth  confined, 
-To  shew  the  utmost  of  a  creature's  power : 

To  that  great  Spirit  which  doth  great  kingdoms  move, 
The  sacred  spring,  whence  Right  and  Honour  streams, 
Distilling  Virtue,  shedding  Peace  and  Love 
In  every  place,  as  CYNTHIA  sheds  her  beams  : 

I  offer  up  some  sparkles  of  that  fire, 

Whereby  we  Reason,  Live,  and  Move,  and  Be. 
These  sparks,  by  nature,  evermore  aspire  ; 
Which  makes  them  to  so  high  a  Highness  flee. 


44        \_DEDICATION  TO  QUEEN  ELIZABETH. 

Pair  Soul,  since  to  the  fairest  body  knit, 

You  give  such  lively  life,  such  quickening  power, 

Such  sweet  celestial  influence  to  it 

As  keeps  it  still  in  youth's  immortal  flower  ; 

(As  where  the  sun  is  present  all  the  year, 
And  never  doth  retire  his  golden  rayt 
Needs  must  the  Spring  be  everlasting  there, 
And  every  season,  like  the  month  of  May) 

O  many,  many  years,  may  you  remain 
A  happy  A  ngel  to  this  happy  land  ! 
Long,  long  may  you  on  earth  our  Empress  reign  ! 
Ere  you  in  heaven,  a  glorious  angel  stand. 

Stay  long,  sweet  Spirit,  ere  thou  to  heaven  depart, 
Which  mak'st  each  place  a  heaven,  wherein  thou  art. 

Her  Majesty's  least  and  unworthiest  subject, 
JOHN    D  A  v  i  E  s. 


45 


Of  Human  Knowledge. 


HY  did  my  parents  send  me  to  the  Schools, 
That  I  with  knowledge  might  enrich  my 

mind  ? 
Since  the  Desire  to  Know  first  made  men 

fools, 
And  did  corrupt  the  root  of  all  mankind. 


For  when  GOD's  hand  had  written  in  the 

hearts 

Of  the  First  Parents,  all  the  rules  of  good  ; 
So  that  their  skill  infused,  did  pass  all  Arts 
That  ever  were,  before,  or  since  the  Flood ; 

And  when  their  Reason's  eye  was  sharp  and  clear, 
And,  as  an  eagle  can  behold  the  sun, 
Could  have  approached  the  Eternal  Light  as  near 
As  th'intellectual  angels  could  have  done  : 

Even  then,  to  them  the  Spirit  of  Lies  suggests 

That  they  were  blind,  because  they  saw  not  111 ; 
And  breathes  into  their  incorrupted  breasts, 
A  curious  Wish,  which  did  corrupt  their  Will. 

For  that  same  111  they  straight  desired  to  know, 
Which  111  (being  nought  but  a  defect  of  Good); 
In  all  GOD's  works,  the  Devil  could  not  show, 
While  Man,  their  Lord,  in  his  perfection  stood. 


46  [HUMAN  KNOWLEDGE.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM ! 

So  that  themselves  were  first  to  do  the  111 

Ere  they  thereof  the  knowledge  could  attain  ; 
Like  him,  that  knew  not  poison's  power  to  kill, 
Until,  by  tasting  it,  himself  was  slain. 

Even  so,  by  tasting  of  that  fruit  forbid, 

Where  they  sought  Knowledge,  they  did  Error  find ; 
111  they  desired  to  know,  and  111,  they  did  ; 
And  to  give  Passion  eyes,  made  Reason  blind. 

For  then  their  minds  did  first  in  Passion  see, 
Those  wretched  Shapes  of  Misery  and  Woe, 
Of  Nakedness,  of  Shame,  of  Poverty, 
Which  then  their  own  experience  made  them  know. 

But  then  grew  Reason  dark,  that  she  no  more 

Could  the  fair  forms  of  Good  and  Truth  discern : 
Bats  they  became,  that  eagles  were  before ; 
And  this  they  got  by  their  Desire  to  Learn. 

But  we,  their  wretched  offspring,  what  do  we? 
Do  not  we  still  taste  of  the  fruit  forbid  ? 
Whiles,  with  fond  fruitless  curiosity, 
In  books  profane  we  seek  for  knowledge  hid? 

What  is  this  Knowledge  but  the  sky-stoFn  fire 

For  which  the  Thief  still  chained  in  ice  doth  sit, 
And  which  the  poor  rude  Satyr  did  admire, 
And  needs  would  kiss,  but  burnt  his  lips  with  it? 

What  is  it,  but  the  cloud  of  empty  rain, 

Which  when  JOVE'S  guest  embraced,  he  monsters  got  ? 
Or  the  false  pails,  which  oft  being  filled  with  pain, 
Received  the  water,  but  retained  it  not? 

Shortly,  what  is  it  but  the  fiery  Coach 

Which  the  Youth  sought,  and  sought  his  death  withal? 
Or  the  Boy's  wings,  which  when  he  did  approach 
The  sun's  hot  beams,  did  melt,  and  let  him  fall  ? 


]  [HUMAN  KNOWLEDGE.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM !    47 

And  yet,  alas,  when  all  our  lamps  are  burned, 
Our  bodies  wasted,  and  our  spirits  spent  ; 
When  we  have  all  the  learned  volumes  turned, 
Which  yield  men's  wits,  both  help  and  ornament : 

What  can  we  know  ?  or  what  can  we  discern  ? 

When  Error  chokes  the  windows  of  the  Mind ; 
The  divers  Forms  of  things  how  can  we  learn, 
That  have  been,  ever  from  our  birthday,  blind? 

When  Reason's  lamp  (which,  like  the  sun  in  sky, 

Throughout  man's  little  world  her  beams  did  spread) 
Is  now  become  a  Sparkle,  which  doth  lie 
Under  the  ashes,  half  extinct,  and  dead  ; 

How  can  we  hope,  that  through  the  Eye  and  Ear, 
This  dying  Sparkle,  in  this  cloudy  place, 
Can  re-collect  these  beams  of  knowledge  clear, 
Which  were  infused  in  the  first  minds,  by  grace? 

So  might  the  heir,  whose  father  hath  in  play 
Wasted  a  thousand  pounds  of  ancient  rent, 
By  painful  earning  of  one  groat  a  day, 
Hope  to  restore  the  patrimony  spent. 

The  wits  that  dived  most  deep,  and  soared  most  high, 

Seeking  man's  powers,  have  found  his  weakness  such; 
"  Skill  comes  so  slow,  and  life  so  fast  doth  fly  ; 
"  We  learn  so  little,  and  forget  so  much." 

For  this,  the  wisest  of  all  moral  men 

Said,  He  knew  nought,  but  that  he  nought  did  know  ! 
And  the  great  mocking  Master,  mocked  not  then, 
When  he  said,  Truth  was  buried  deep  below  / 

For  how  may  we,  to  other's  things  attain, 

When  none  of  us,  his  own  Soul  understands  ? 
For  which,  the  Devil  mocks  our  curious  brain, 
When,  Know  thyself!  his  oracle  commands. 


48    [HUMAN  KNOWLEDGE.]  Noses,  TEIPSUM !  [s}r!priiail£ 

For  why  should  we  the  busy  Soul  believe, 

When  boldly  she  concludes  of  that  and  this? 
When  of  herself,  she  can  no  judgement  give, 
Nor  How,  nor  Whence,  nor  Where,  nor  What  she  is? 

All  things  without,  which  round  about  we  see, 
We  seek  to  know,  and  have  therewith  to  do ; 
But  that,  whereby  we  Reason,  Live,  and  Be, 
Within  ourselves,  we  strangers  are  thereto. 

We  seek  to  know  the  moving  of  each  sphere, 

And  the  strange  cause  of  th'ebbs  and  floods  of  Nile  ; 
But  of  that  Clock,  which  in  our  breasts  we  bear, 
The  subtle  motions  we  forget  the  while  ! 

We  that  acquaint  ourselves  with  every  zone, 

And  pass  both  tropics,  and  behold  both  poles ; 
When  we  come  home,  are  to  ourselves  unknown 
And  unacquainted  still  with  our  own  souls ! 

We  study  Speech,  but  others  we  persuade ; 

We  Leechcraft  learn,  but  others  cure  with  it ; 
We  interpret  Laws  which  other  men  have  made, 
But  read  not  those  which  in  our  hearts  are  writ. 

Is  it  because  the  Mind  is  like  the  Eye, 

(Through  which  it  gathers  knowledge  by  degrees) 
Whose  rays  reflect  not  but  spread  outwardly, 
Not  seeing  itself,  when  other  things  it  sees  ? 

No,  doubtless,  for  the  Mind  can  backward  cast 
Upon  herself,  her  understanding  light ; 
But  she  is  so  corrupt,  and  so  defac't, 
As  her  own  image  doth  herself  affright. 

As  in  the  fable  of  that  Lady  fair, 

Which,  for  her  lust,  was  turned  into  a  cow ; 

When  thirsty  to  a  stream  she  did  repair, 

And  saw  herself  transformed  (she  wist  not  how  ; ) 


S]  [HUMAN  KNOWLEDGE.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM !  49 

At  first,  she  startles  !  then,  she  stands  amazed  ! 
At  last,  with  terror,  she  from  thence  doth  fly, 
And  loathes  the  wat'ry  glass  wherein  she  gazed, 
And  shuns  it  still,  though  she  for  thirst  do  die. 

Even  so,  Man's  Soul,  which  did  God's  Image  bear, 
And  was,  at  first,  fair,  good,  and  spotless  pure ; 
Since  with  her  sins,  her  beauties  blotted  were, 
Doth,  of  all  sights,  her  own  sight  least  endure. 

For  even,  at  first  reflection,  she  espies 

Such  strange  CHIMERAS  and  such  monsters  there  ! 
Such  toys  !  such  antics  !  and  such  vanities  ! 
As  she  retires,  and  shrinks  for  shame  and  fear. 

And  as  the  man  loves  least  at  home  to  be, 

That  hath  a  sluttish  house,  haunted  with  sprites ; 

So  she,  impatient  her  own  faults  to  see, 

Turns  from  herself,  and  in  strange  things  delights. 

For  this,  few  know  themselves !  for  merchants  broke, 
View  their  estate  with  discontent  and  pain  ; 
And  seas  are  troubled,  when  they  do  revoke 
Their  flowing  waves  into  themselves  again. 

And  while  the  face  of  outward  things  we  find, 
Pleasing  and  fair,  agreeable  and  sweet ; 
These  things  transport  and  carry  out  the  mind, 
That  with  herself,  herself  can  never  meet. 

Yet  if  Affliction  once  her  wars  begin, 

And  threat  the  feeble  Sense  with  sword  and  fire  ; 
The  Mind  contracts  herself,  and  shrinketh  in, 
And  to  herself  she  gladly  doth  retire, 

As  spiders  touched,  seek  their  web's  inmost  part; 
As  bees  in  storms,  unto  their  hives  return ; 
As  blood  in  danger,  gathers  to  the  heart  ; 
And  men  seek  towns,  when  foes  the  country  burn, 
D  10 


50    [HUMAN  KNOWLEDGE.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !  [sj 

If  ought  can  teach  us  ought,  Affliction's  looks 
(Making  us  look  into  ourselves  so  near) 
Teach  us  to  know  ourselves,  beyond  all  books, 
Or  all  the  learned  Schools  that  ever  were  ! 


This  Mistress,  lately,  plucked  me  by  the  ear, 
And  many  a  golden  lesson  hath  me  taught, 
Hath  made  my  Senses  quick,  and  Reason  clear, 
Reformed  my  Will,  and  rectified  my  Thought. 

So  do  the  winds  and  thunders  cleanse  the  air; 
So  working  lees  settle  and  purge  the  wine; 
So  lopt  and  pruned  trees  do  flourish  fair; 
So  doth  the  fire  the  drossy  gold  refine. 

Neither  MINERVA,  nor  the  learned  Muse, 

Nor  Rules  of  Art,  nor  Precepts  of  the  Wise, 
Could  in  my  brain,  those  beams  of  skill  infuse, 
As  but  the  glance  of  this  Dame's  angry  eyes. 

She,  within  lists,  my  ranging  mind  hath  brought, 
That  now  beyond  myself  I  list  not  go  ; 
Myself  am  Centre  of  my  circling  thought, 
Only  Myself,  I  study,  learn,  and  know. 

I  know  my  Body's  of  so  frail  a  kind, 

As  force  without,  fevers  within,  can  kill  ; 
I  know  the  heavenly  nature  of  my  Mind  ; 
But  'tis  corrupted,  both  in  Wit  and  Will. 

I  know  my  Soul  hath  power  to  know  all  things, 
Yet  is  she  blind  and  ignorant  in  all  ; 
I  know  I  am  one  of  Nature's  little  kings, 
Yet  to  the  least  and  vilest  things  am  thrall  1 

I  know  my  Life's  a  pain,  and  but  a  span  ; 

I  know  my  Sense  is  mocked  with  every  thing  : 
And  to  conclude,  I  know  myself  a  Man  ; 
Which  is  a  proud,  and  yet  a  wretched  thing  ! 


F.  Davies 
.pril  1599 


Of  the  Soul  of  Man ; 

and  the   Immortality  thereof. 


HE  Lights  of  Heaven,  which  are  the  world's 

fair  eyes, 
Look  down  into  the  world,  the  world  to 

see; 

And  as  they  turn,  or  wander  in  the  skies, 
Survey  all  things,  that  on  this  Centre  be. 


And  yet  the  Lights  which  in  my  Tower  do 

shine, 

Mine  Ej^es !  (which  view  all  objects,  nigh  and  far) 
Look  not  into  this  little  world  of  mine, 
Nor  see  my  face,  wherein  they  fixed  are. 

Since  Nature  fails  us  in  no  needful  thing; 

Why  want  I  means,  mine  inward  self  to  see  ? 
Which  sight,  the  Knowledge  of  Myself  might  bring  ; 
Which,  to  true  wisdom,  is  the  first  degree. 

That  Power  (which  gave  me  eyes,  the  world  to  view) 
To  view  myself,  infused  an  Inward  Light, 
Whereby  my  Soul,  as  by  a  Mirror  true, 
Of  her  own  form,  may  take  a  perfect  sight. 

But  as  the  sharpest  Eye  discerneth  nought, 
Except  the  sunbeams  in  the  air  do  shine ; 
So  the  best  Soul,  with  her  reflecting  thought, 
Sees  not  herself,  without  some  light  Divine. 


52     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !   l 

O  LIGHT !  (which  makest  the  Light,  which  makest  the  Day  ; 
Which  settest  the  Eye  without,  and  Mind  within) 
Lighten  my  spirit,  with  one  clear  heavenly  ray  ! 
Which  now  to  view  itself,  doth  first  begin. 

For  her  true  form,  how  can  my  Spark  discern  ? 
Which  dim  by  Nature,  Art  did  never  clear; 
When  the  great  wits,  of  whom  all  skill  we  learn, 
Are  ignorant,  both  What  She  is !  and  Where ! 

One  thinks  the  Soul  is  Air,  another  Fire, 
Another,  Blood  diffused  about  the  heart; 
Another  saith,  the  Elements  conspire, 
And  to  her  Essence,  each  doth  give  a  part. 

Musicians  think  our  Souls  are  Harmonies; 

Physicians  hold  that  they  Complexions  be ; 
Epicures  make  them  Swarms  of  Atomies, 
Which  do,  by  change,  into  our  bodies  flee  1 

Some  think  one  General  Soul  fills  every  brain, 
As  the  bright  sun  sheds  light  in  every  star ; 
And  others  think  the  name  of  Soul  is  vain, 
And  that  We,  only  Well-mixed  Bodies  are. 

In  judgement  of  her  Substance,  thus  they  vary ; 
And  thus  they  vary  in  judgement  of  her  Seat; 
For  some,  her  chair  up  to  the  Brain  do  carry, 
Some  thrust  it  down  into  the  Stomach's  heat  1 

Some  place  it  in  the  root  of  life,  the  Heart  ; 
Some,  in  the  Liver,  fountain  of  the  veins ; 
Some  say,  "  She  is  all  in  all,  and  all  in  part!  " 
Some  say,  "  She  is  not  contained,  but  all  contains!  " 

Thus  these  great  Clerks  their  little  wisdom  show, 
While  with  their  doctrines,  they  at  hazard  play ; 
Tossing  their  light  opinions  to  and  fro, 
To  mock  the  lewd;  as  learned  in  this,  as  they  ! 


']  [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  f      53 

For  no  crazed  brain  could  ever  yet  propound, 

Touching  the  Soul,  so  vain  and  fond  a  thought ; 
But  some  among  these  Masters,  have  been  found, 
Which  in  their  Schools,  the  selfsame  thing  have  taught: 

GOD,  only- Wise  !  to  punish  Pride  of  Wit, 

Among  men's  wits  hath  this  confusion  wrought ! 
As  the  proud  Tower,  whose  points  the  clouds  did  hit, 
By  Tongues'  Confusion,  was  to  ruin  brought. 

But,  Thou  !  which  didst  Man's  Soul,  of  nothing  make ! 
And  when  to  nothing,  it  was  fallen  again ; 
To  make  it  new,  the  Form  of  Man  didst  take, 
And,  GOD  with  GOD,  becam'st  a  Man  with  men  ! 

Thou  !  that  hast  fashioned  twice,  this  Soul  of  ours, 
So  that  She  is,  by  double  title,  Thine ; 
Thou,  only,  knowest  her  nature  and  her  powers, 
Her  subtle  form,  Thou,  only,  canst  define  ! 

To  judge  herself,  She  must  herself  transcend, 
As  greater  circles  comprehend  the  less  : 
But  She  wants  power,  her  own  powers  to  extend, 
As  fettered  men  cannot  their  strength  express. 

But  Thou,  bright  morning  Star  !  Thou,  rising  Sun  ! 
Which,  in  these  later  times,  has  brought  to  light 
Those  mysteries,  that,  since  the  world  began, 
Lay  hid  in  darkness  and  eternal  night ! 

Thou,  like  the  sun,  doth  with  indifferent  ray, 
Into  the  palace  and  the  cottage  shine ! 
And  showest  the  Soul,  both  to  the  Clerk  and  Lay, 
By  the  clear  Lamp  of  thy  Oracle  Divine  ! 

This  Lamp,  through  all  the  regions  of  my  brain, 

Where  my  Soul  sits,  doth  spread  such  beams  of  grace, 
As  now,  methinks  !  I  do  distinguish  plain 
Each  subtle  line  of  her  immortal  face. 


54      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 


The  Soul,  a  Substance  and  a  Spirit  is, 
what  the   Which  GOD  Himself  doth  in  the  body  make, 
soul  is?     \yhich  makes  the  Man  ;  for  every  man,  from  this, 
The  Nature  of  a  man  and  Name  doth  take. 

And  though  the  Spirit  be  to  the  Body  knit, 
As  an  apt  meane  her  powers  to  exercise  ; 
Which  are  Life,  Motion,  Sense,  and  Will,  and  Wit: 
Yet  she  survives,  although  the  Body  dies. 

She  is  a  Substance,  and  a  real  thing, 

1.  Which  hath,  itself,  an  actual  working  Might, 

2.  Which  neither  from  the  Sense's  power  doth  spring, 
3»  Nor  from  the  Body's  humours  tempered  right. 

She  is  a  Vine,  which  doth  no  propping  need, 

To  make  her  spread  herself,  or  spring  upright  ; 
She  is  a  Star,  whose  beams  do  not  proceed 
From  any  sun,  but  from  a  native  light. 

That'the      For  when  She  sorts  things  present  with  the  past, 
souniatha  And  thereby  things  to  come  doth  oft  foresee  ; 

££Son.  When  She  doth   doubt  at  first,  and  choose  at 

without  the  i       ^  . 

Body.  last  • 

These  acts  her  own,  without  the  Body,  be. 

When  of  the  dew,  which  the  Eye  and  Ear  do  take, 
From  flowers  abroad,  and  bring  into  the  brain ; 
She  doth,  within,  both  wax  and  honey  make  : 
This  work  is  hers,  this  is  her  proper  pain ! 

When  She  from  sundry  acts,  one  Skill  doth  draw ; 
Gathering  from  divers  fights,  one  Art  of  War  ; 
From  many  Cases  like,  one  Rule  of  Law : 
These,  her  collections,  not  the  Sense's,  are. 


s?irAprnaiV59e9s.]   [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TETPSUM  !     55 

When  in  th'Effects,  She  doth  the  Causes  know; 

And  seeing  the  stream,  thinks  where  the  spring  doth 

rise  ; 

And  seeing  the  branch,  conceives  the  root  below : 
These  things  She  views,  without  the  Body's  eyes. 

When  She,  without  a  Pegasus,  doth  fly 

Swifter  than  lightning's  fire,  from  East  to  West ; 
About  the  Centre,  and  above  the  Sky : 
She  travels  then,  although  the  Body  rest. 

When  all  her  works  She  formeth  first  within  ; 
Proportions  them,  and  sees  their  perfect  end, 
Ere  She  in  act,  doth  any  part  begin  : 
What  instruments  doth  then,  the  Body  lend  ? 

When  without  hands,  She  thus  doth  castles  build  ; 
Sees  without  eyes,  and  without  feet  doth  run  ; 
When  She  digests  the  world,  yet  is  not  filled : 
By  her  own  power,  these  miracles  are  done. 

When  She  defines,  argues,  divides,  compounds  ; 
Considers  Virtue,  Vice,  and  General  Things ; 
And  marrying  diverse  principles  and  grounds, 
Out  of  their  match,  a  true  conclusion  brings : 

These  actions,  in  her  closet,  all  alone, 

(Retired  within  herself)  She  doth  fulfil ; 
Use  of  her  Body's  organs,  She  hath  none, 
When  She  doth  use  the  powers  of  Wit  and  Will. 

Yet  in  the  Body's  prison,  so  She  lies, 

As  through  the  Body's  windows  She  must  look, 

Her  divers  powers  of  Sense  to  exercise, 

By  gathering  notes  out  of  the  world's  great  book. 

Nor  can  herself  discourse,  or  judge  of  ought, 

But  what  the  Sense  collects,  and  home  doth  bring, 
And  yet  the  Power  of  her  discoursing  Thought, 
From  these  Collections,  is  a  diverse  thing. 


J.  Davies. 


56     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM !   [s;rlpSa; 

For  though  our  eyes  can  nought  but  colours  see. 

Yet  colours  give  them  not  their  Power  of  Sight ; 
So,  though  these  fruits  of  Sense,  her  objects  be, 
Yet  She  discerns  them  by  her  proper  light. 

The  workman  on  his  stuff,  his  skill  doth  shew, 
And  yet  the  stuff  gives  not  the  man  his  skill ; 
Kings,  their  affairs,  do,  by  their  servants  know, 
But  order  them  by  their  own  royal  will. 

So  though  this  cunning  Mistress,  and  this  Queen 
Doth,  as  her  instruments,  the  Senses  use, 
To  know  all  things  that  are  Felt,  Heard,  or  Seen ; 
Yet  She  herself  doth  only  Judge  and  Choose : 

Even  as  our  great  wise  Empress  (that  now  reigns 
By  sovereign  title  over  sundry  lands) 
Borrows,  in  mean  affairs,  her  subjects'  pains, 
Sees  by  their  eyes,  and  writeth  by  their  hands : 

But  things  of  weight  and  consequence  indeed, 
Herself  doth  in  her  chamber  them  debate  ; 
Where,  all  her  Councillors  she  doth  exceed 
As  far  in  judgement,  as  she  doth  in  State. 

Or  as  the  man,  whom  she  doth  now  advance, 
Upon  her  gracious  Mercy  Seat  to  sit, 
Doth  common  things,  of  course  and  circumstance, 
To  the  Reports  of  common  men  commit  : 

But  when  the  Cause  itself  must  be  decreed, 
Himself  in  person,  in  his  proper  Court, 
To  grave  and  solemn  hearing  doth  proceed, 
Of  every  proof,  and  every  by-report. 

Then,  like  God's  angel,  he  pronounceth  right, 

And  milk  and  honey  from  his  tongue  do  flow : 
Happy  are  they,  that  still  are  in  his  sight, 
To  reap  the  wisdom,  which  his  lips  do  sow. 


SouL  OF  MAN-]  tfosca  TEIPSUM  !     57 


Right  so,  the  Soul,  which  is  a  Lady  free, 

And  doth  the  justice  of  her  State  maintain  ; 
Because  the  Senses,  ready  servants  be, 
Attending  nigh  about  her  Court,  the  Brain  ; 

By  them,  the  forms  of  outward  things  She  learns, 
For  they  return  unto  the  Fantasy, 
Whatever  each  of  them  abroad  discerns  ; 
And  there  enrol  it  for  the  Mind  to  see. 

But  when  She  sits  to  judge  the  good  and  ill, 
And  to  discern  betwixt  the  false  and  true  ; 
She  is  not  guided  by  the  Senses'  skill, 
But  doth  each  thing  in  her  own  mirror  view. 

Then  She  the  Senses  checks  !  which  oft  do  err, 
And  even  against  their  false  reports,  decrees; 
And  oft  She  doth  condemn,  what  they  prefer, 
For  with  a  power  above  the  Sense,  She  sees  : 

Therefore,  no  Sense,  the  precious  joys  conceives, 
Which  in  her  private  contemplations  be  ; 
For  then,  the  ravished  Spirit,  the  Senses  leaves, 
Hath  her  own  powers,  and  proper  actions  free. 

Her  harmonies  are  sweet  and  full  of  skill, 

When  on  the  Body's  instrument  She  plays  : 
But  the  proportions  of  the  Wit  and  Will, 
Those  sweet  accords  are  even  the  angels'  lays. 

These  tunes  of  Reason  are  AMPHION'S  lyre, 
Wherewith  he  did  the  Theban  city  found  ; 
These  are  the  notes,  wherewith  the  heavenly  Quire, 
The  praise  of  Him,  which  spreads  the  heaven,  doth  sound. 

Then  her  self-being  nature  shines  in  this, 

That  She  performs  her  noblest  works  alone  ! 
"  The  work,  the  touchstone  of  the  nature  is  !  " 
And  "  by  their  operations,  things  are  known  !" 


58     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  Noses  TEIPSUM  ! 


'ihe    ArC  thCy  n0t  SenSeleSS  . 

is  e  Nought  but  a  fine  perfection  of  the  Sense, 

Or  of  the  forms  which  Fancy  doth  enrol, 
A  quick  Resulting,  and  a  Consequence? 

the  Sense. 

What  is  it,  then,  that  doth  the  Sense  accuse, 

Both  of  false  judgements,  and  fond  appetites  ? 
Which  makes  us  do,  what  Sense  doth  most  refuse  ? 
Which  oft,  in  torment  of  the  Sense  delights  ? 

Sense  thinks  the  planets'  spheres  not  much  asunder; 
What  tells  us,  then,  their  distance  is  so  far  ? 
Sense  thinks  the  lightning  born  before  the  thunder, 
What  tells  us,  then,  they  both  together  are  ? 

When  men  seem  crows,  far  off  upon  a  tower  ; 

Sense  saith,  "  They  are  crows  !"   What  makes  us  think 

them  men  ? 

When  we,  in  agues,  think  all  sweet  things  sour  ; 
What  makes  usknowour  tongue's  false  judgements  then  ? 

What  power  was  that,  whereby  MEDEA  saw, 

And  well  approved  and  praised  the  better  course, 
When  her  rebellious  Sense  did  so  withdraw 
Her  feeble  powers,  as  she  pursued  the  worst  ? 

Did  Sense  persuade  ULYSSES  not  to  hear 

The  Mermaid's  songs  ?  which  so  his  men  did  please, 
As  they  were  all  persuaded  through  the  ear, 
To  quit  the  ship,  and  leap  into  the  seas. 

Could  any  power  of  Sense  the  Roman  move, 

To  burn  his  own  right  hand,  with  courage  stout  ? 
Could  Sense  make  MARIUS  sit  unbound,  and  prove 
The  cruel  lancing  of  the  knotty  gout  ? 

Doubtless  in  Man,  there  is  a  Nature  found 
Beside  the  senses,  and  above  them  far  ; 
Though  "  most  men  being  in  sensual  pleasures  drowned, 
It  seems  their  souls  but  in  their  senses  are.  " 


[THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM !     59 

If  we  had  nought  but  sense,  then  only  they 

Should  have  sound  minds,  which  have  their  senses  sound  ; 
But  Wisdom  grows,  when  senses  do  decay, 
And  Folly  most,  in  quickest  sense  is  found. 

If  we  had  nought  but  Sense,  each  living  wight, 

Which  we  call  brute,  would  be  more  sharp  than  we ; 
As  having  Sense's  apprehensive  might 
In  a  more  clear  and  excellent  degree. 

But  they  do  want  that  quick  discoursing  Power, 
Which  doth,  in  us,  the  erring  Sense  correct : 
Therefore  the  bee  did  suck  the  painted  flower, 
And  birds,  of  grapes  the  cunning  shadow  peckt. 

Sense,  outsides  knows !  the  Soul,  through  all  things  sees, 
Sense,  circumstance  !  She  doth,  the  substance  view; 
Sense  sees  the  bark  !  but  She,  the  life  of  trees ; 
Sense  hears  the  sounds !  but  She,  the  concords  true. 

But  why  do  I  the  Soul  and  Sense  divide  ? 

When  Sense  is  but  a  power,  which  She  extends, 
Which  being  in  divers  parts  diversified, 
The  divers  Forms  of  objects  apprehends  ? 

This  power  spreads  outward ;  but  the  root  doth  grow 
In  th'inward  Soul,  which  only  doth  perceive ; 
For  the  Eyes  and  Ears,  no  more  their  objects  know, 
Than  glasses  know  what  faces  they  receive. 

For  if  we  chance  to  fix  our  thoughts  elsewhere  ; 
Although  our  eyes  be  ope,  we  do  not  see, 
And  if  one  Power  did  not  both  see  and  hear, 
Our  sights  and  sounds  would  always  double  be. 

Then  is  the  Soul  a  Nature  which  contains 

The  power  of  Sense  within  a  greater  power ; 
Which  doth  employ  and  use  the  senses'  pains, 
But  sits  and  rules  within  her  private  bower. 


60      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 


If  She  doth  then  the  subtle  Sense  excel, 
mofe  Than         Howgross  are  they,  that  drown  her  in  the  blood  ! 
SraTurT          Or  in  the  Body's  humours  tempered  well, 
Humoursof        As  if  in  them,  such  high  perfection  stood. 

the  Body. 

As  if  most  skill  in  that  musician  were, 

Which  had  the  best  and  best-tuned  instrument  ; 
As  if  the  pencil  neat,  and  colours  clear 
Had  power  to  make  the  painter  excellent 

Why  doth  not  Beauty  then  refine  the  Wit  ? 
And  good  Complexion  rectify  the  Will  ? 
Why  doth  not  Health  bring  Wisdom  still  with  it  ? 
Why  doth  not  Sickness  make  men  brutish  still  ? 

Who  can  in  Memory,  or  Wit,  or  Will  ; 

Or  Air  !  or  Fire  !  or  Earth  !  or  Water  find  ! 
What  alchemist  can  draw,  with  all  his  skill, 
The  Quintessence  of  these,  out  of  the  Mind  ? 

If  th'Elements  (which  have,  nor  Life,  nor  Sense) 
Can  breed  in  us  so  great  a  power  as  this  ! 
Why  give  they  not  themselves,  like  excellence, 
Or  other  things  wherein  their  mixture  is  ? 

If  She  were  but  the  Body's  quality 

Then  would  She  be,  with  it,  sick  !  maimed  !  and  blind  ! 
But  we  perceive,  when  these  privations  be, 
A  healthy,  perfect,  and  sharp-sighted  Mind. 

If  She,  the  Body's  nature  did  partake, 

Her  strength  would,  with  the  Body's  strength  decay  ; 
But  when  the  Body's  strongest  sinews  slake, 
Then  is  the  Soul  most  active  !  quick  !  and  gay  I 

If  She  were  but  the  Body's  accident, 
And  her  sole  Being  did  in  it  subsist 
As  white  in  snow  ;  She  might  herself  absent  ! 
And  in  the  Body's  substance  not  the  mist. 


[THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !     61 

But  it  on  Her,  not  She  on  it  depends, 

For  She  the  Body  doth  sustain  and  cherish. 
Such  secret  powers  of  life  to  it,  She  lends ; 
That  when  they  fail,  then  doth  the  Body  perish. 

Since,  then,  the  Soul  works  by  herself  alone, 

Springs  not  from  Sense,  nor  Humours  well  agreeing; 
Her  nature  is  peculiar,  and  her  own. 
She  is  a  Substance  !  and  a  Perfect  Being. 

But  though  this  Substance  be  the  root  of  Sense, 

That  the  Sense  knows  her  not !  (which  doth  but  bodies  know) 

She  is  a  Spirit,  and  a  heavenly  influence  ; 

Which  from  the  fountain  of  GOD's  Spirit  doth  flow. 

She  is  a  Spirit ;  yet  not  like  air,  or  wind, 

Nor  like  the  spirits  about  the  heart  or  brain, 
Nor  like  those  spirits  which  alchemists  do  find, 
When  they,  in  everything,  seek  gold,  in  vain. 

For  She,  all  natures  under  heaven  doth  pass; 

Being  like  those  spirits,  which  GOD's  bright  face  do  see, 
Or  like  Himself !  whose  Image  once  She  was, 
Though  now,  alas,  She  scarce  his  Shadow  be. 

Yet  of  the  forms,  She  holds  the  first  degree, 
That  are  to  gross  material  bodies  knit ; 
Yet  She  herself  is  bodiless  and  free, 
And,  though  confined,  is  almost  infinite. 

Were  She  a  Body,  how  could  She  remain 
That  it     Within  this  body,  which  is  less  than  She  ? 
aaBSdybe  Or  how  could  She,  the  world's  great  shape  contain ; 
And  in  our  narrow  breasts  contained  be  ? 

All  bodies  are  confined  within  some  place  ; 
But  She  all  place  within  herself  confines ; 
All  bodies  have  their  measure  and  their  space ; 
But  who  can  draw  the  Soul's  dimensive  lines  ? 


62      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSVM  / 

No  Body  can,  at  once,  two  forms  admit, 
Except  the  one,  the  other  do  deface ; 
But  in  the  Soul,  ten  thousand  forms  do  sit, 
And  none  intrudes  into  her  neighbour's  place. 

All  bodies  are,  with  other  bodies  filled, 

But  She  receives  both  heaven  and  earth  together, 
Nor  are  their  Forms,  by  rash  encounter,  spilled, 
For  there  they  stand,  and  neither  toucheth  either. 

Nor  can  her  wide  embracements  filled  be ; 

For  they  that  most  and  greatest  things  embrace, 

Enlarge  thereby  their  mind's  capacity, 

As  streams  enlarged,  enlarge  the  channel's  space. 

All  things  received,  do  such  proportion  take, 

As  those  things  have,  wherein  they  are  received : 

So  little  glasses,  little  faces  make ; 

And  narrow  webs,  on  narrow  frames  be  weaved  : 

Then,  what  vast  body  must  we  make  the  Mind  ? 

Wherein  are  men,  beasts,  trees,  towns,  seas,  and  lands, 
And  yet  each  thing  a  proper  place  doth  find, 
And  each  thing  in  the  true  proportion  stands. 

Doubtless,  this  could  not  be,  but  that  She  turns 
Bodies  to  Spirits,  by  sublimation  strange; 
As  fire  converts  to  fire,  the  things  it  burns ; 
As  we,  our  meats  into  our  nature  change. 

From  their  gross  Matter,  she  abstracts  the  Forms, 
And  draws  a  kind  of  Quintessence  from  things, 
Which  to  her  proper  nature,  She  transforms, 
To  bear  them  light  on  her  celestial  wings. 

This  doth  She,  when  from  things  particular, 
She  doth  abstract  the  universal  kinds, 
Which  bodiless  and  immaterial  are, 
And  can  be  lodged  but  only  in  our  minds. 


[THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !     63 

And  thus,  from  divers  accidents  and  acts, 
Which  do  within  her  observation  fall ; 
She,  goddesses  and  Powers  Divine  abstracts, 
As  Nature,  Fortune,  and  the  Virtues  all. 

Again,  how  can  She,  several  bodies  know, 
If  in  herself  a  body's  form  She  bears  ? 
How  can  a  mirror  sundry  faces  show, 
If  from  all  shapes  and  forms  it  be  not  clear  ? 

Nor  could  we  by  our  eyes,  all  colours  learn, 
Except  our  eyes  were,  of  all  colours  void, 
Nor  sundry  tastes  can  any  tongue  discern, 
Which  is  with  gross  and  bitter  humours  cloyed. 

Nor  may  a  man,  of  Passions  judge  aright, 

Except  his  mind  be  from  all  Passions  free ; 
Nor  can  a  Judge,  his  office  well  acquite, 
If  he  possest  of  either  party  be ! 

If,  lastly,  this  quick  power  a  Body  were, 
Were  it  as  swift,  as  is  the  wind  or  fire, 
(Whose  atomies  do,  th'  one  down  sideways  bear} 
And  make  the  other,  in  pyramids  aspire) ; 

Her  nimble  body,  yet  in  time  must  move, 

And  not  in  instants  through  all  places  slide : 
But  She  is  nigh  !  and  far  !  beneath  !  above  ! 
In  point  of  time  which  thought  can  not  divide. 

She's  sent  as  soon  to  China,  as  to  Spain, 

And  thence  returns,  as  soon  as  She  is  sent, 
She  measures  with  one  time  and  with  one  pain, 
An  ell  of  silk,  and  heaven's  wide-spreading  tent. 

As  then,  the  Soul  a  Substance  hath  alone 

Besides  the  Body,  in  which  She  is  confined  ; 
So  hath  She  not  a  body  of  her  own, 
But  is  a  Spirit  and  immaterial  Mind. 


64     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !  [ 

Since  Body  and  Soul  have  such  diversities; 
That  the     Well,  might  we  muse,  how  first  their  match  began, 
S£tei  im-  But  tnat  we  learn,  that  He,  that  spread  the  skies 
mediate^  And  fixed  the  earth,  first  formed  the  Soul  in  Man. 

Zach.  xii.  x« 

This  true  PROMETHEUS,  first,  made  man  of  earth, 
And  shed  in  him  a  beam  of  heavenly  fire  : 
Now,  in  their  mother's  womb,  before  their  birth, 
Doth  in  all  sons  of  men,  their  souls  inspire. 

And  as  MINERVA  is,  in  fables,  said, 

From  JOVE,  without  a  mother,  to  proceed  ; 
So  our  true  JOVE,  without  a  mother's  aid, 
Doth,  daily,  millions  of  MINERVAS  breed. 

Then  neither,  from  Eternity  before, 

?7iSonsUoSf  ^or  fr°m  t^6  time,  when  time's  first  point  began  ; 
°he™?ea-°  Made  He  all  souls  !  which  now  He  keeps  in  store, 
Some  in  the  moon,  and  others  in  the  sun  : 


Nor  in  the  secret  cloister  doth  He  keep, 

These  virgin  spirits  until  their  marriage  day, 
Nor  locks  them  up  in  chambers,  where  they  sleep, 
Till  they  awake  within  these  beds  of  clay. 

Nor  did  He  first  a  certain  number  make, 
Infusing  part  in  beasts,  and  part  in  men, 
And  as  unwilling  farther  pains  to  take, 
Would  make  no  more,  than  those  He  framed  then. 

So  that  the  widow  Soul,  her  Body  dying, 
Unto  the  next  born  Body  married  was  ; 
And  so  by  often  changing  and  supplying, 
Men's  souls  to  beasts,  and  beasts'  to  men  did  pass. 

(These  thoughts  are  fond  !  for  since  the  bodies  born 
Be  more  in  number  far  than  those  that  die  ; 
Thousands  must  be  abortive,  and  forlorn, 
Ere  others'  deaths,  to  them  their  souls  supply.) 


sJrIpriiT]9e9'.]  [THE  SouL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !     65 

But  as  GOD's  handmaid,  Nature,  doth  create 
Bodies,  in  time  distinct  and  order  due  ; 
So  GOD  gives  souls  the  like  successive  date, 
Which  Himself  makes  in  bodies  formed  new. 

Which  Himself  makes,  of  no  material  things, 
For  unto  angels,  He  no  power  hath  given, 
Either  to  form  the  shape,  or  stuff  to  bring, 
From  air,  or  Fire,  or  substance  of  the  heaven. 

Nor  He,  in  this,  doth  Nature's  service  use, 
sounfnot  ^or  th°ugh  fr°m  bodies  she  can  bodies  bring  ; 
traduced0    Yet  could  she  never,  souls  from  souls  traduce, 
As  fire  from  fire,  or  light  from  light  doth  spring. 


Alas  !  that  some  that  were  great  lights  of  old, 

And  in  their  hands  the  Lamp  of  GOD  did  bear, 
Some  reverend  Fathers  did  this  error  hold, 
Having  their  eyes  dimmed  with  religious  fear. 

"  For  when,"  say  they,  "  by  rule  of  faith  we  find, 
That  every  soul  unto  her  body  knit, 
Brings  from  the  mother's  womb,  the  Sin  of  Kind, 
The  root  of  all  the  ill  She  doth  commit.'' 

"  How  can  we  say,  that  GOD,  the  Soul  doth  make, 
But  we  must  make  Him  author  of  her  sin; 
Then  from  man's  soul,  She  doth  beginning  take, 
Since  in  man's  soul,  corruption  did  begin." 

"  For  if  GOD  make  her,  first  he  makes  her  ill, 

(Which  GOD  forbid  !  our  thoughts  should  yield  unto) 
Or  makes  the  body,  her  fair  form  to  spill  ; 
Which,  of  itself,  it  hath  no  power  to  do." 

"  Not  Adam's  Body,  but  his  Soul  did  sin, 
And  so  herself  unto  corruption  brought  : 
But  our  poor  Soul  corrupted  is  within, 
Ere  She  hath  sinned,  either  in  act  or  thought  "  ; 

E  10 


66      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM!  piS 

"  And  yet  we  see  in  her  such  powers  divine, 

As  we  could  gladly  think,  from  GOD  she  came  ; 
Fain  would  we  make  Him  author  of  the  wine, 
If  for  the  dregs,  we  could  some  other  blame." 

Thus  these  good  men,  with  holy  zeal  were  blind, 
The  Answer         When  on  the  other  part  the  truth  did  shine, 
Whereof  we  do  clear  demonstrations  find, 
By  light  of  Nature,  and  by  light  Divine. 

None  are  so  gross,  as  to  contend  for  this, 

That  Souls  from  Bodies  may  traduced  be  ; 
Between  whose  natures  no  proportion  is, 
When  root  and  branch  in  nature  still  agree. 

But  many  subtle  wits  have  justified 

That  Souls  from  Souls,  spiritually  may  spring  ; 
Which  (if  the  nature  of  the  Soul  be  tried) 
Will  even,  in  Nature,  prove  as  gross  a  thing. 

For  all  things  made,  are  either  made  of  nought, 
Reasons  Or  made  of  stuff  that  ready  made  doth  stand  : 

fromed  Of  nought,  no  creature  ever  formed  ought, 

Nature.  por  ^at  is  proper  to  th'Almighty's  hand. 


If  then  the  Soul,  another  soul  do  make  ; 

Because  her  power  is  kept  within  a  bound, 
She  must  some  former  stuff  or  matter  take  ; 
But  in  the  Soul,  there  is  no  matter  found. 

Then  if  her  heavenly  Form  do  not  agree, 

With  any  matter  which  the  world  contains  ; 
Then  She  of  nothing  must  created  be, 
And  to  Create,  to  GOD  alone,  pertains  ! 

Again,  if  Souls  do  other  Souls  beget, 

'Tis  by  themselves,  or  by  the  Body's  power  ! 
If  by  themselves  !  what  doth  their  working  let, 
But  they  might  Souls  engender  every  hour  ? 


s?rApruaivS9e9s:]  [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  Noses  TEIPSUM!      6? 

If  by  the  Body !  how  can  Wit  and  Will, 
Join  with  the  body,  only  in  this  act  ? 
Since  when  they  do  their  other  works  fulfil, 
They  from  the  Body,  do  themselves  abstract ! 

Again,  if  Souls,  of  Souls  begotten  were, 

Into  each  other  they  should  change  and  move, 
And  Change  and  Motion  still  corruption  bear ; 
How  shall  we  then,  the  Soul  immortal  prove  ? 

If,  lastly,  Souls  did  generation  use, 

Then  should  they  spread  incorruptible  seed: 
What  then  becomes  of  that  which  they  to  lose, 
When  the  acts  of  generation  do  not  speed  ? 

And  though  the  Soul  could  cast  spiritual  seed, 
Yet  would  She  not,  because  She  never  dies; 
For  mortal  things  desire,  their  like  to  breed  ; 
That  so  they  may  their  kind  immortalise. 

Therefore  the  angels,  Sons  of  God  are  named, 
And  marry  not,  nor  are  in  marriage  given; 
Their  spirits  and  ours  are  of  one  Substance  framed, 
And  have  one  Father,  even  the  Lord  of  heaven  : 

Who  would  at  first,  that  in  each  other  thing, 

The  earth  and  water,  living  souls  should  breed ; 

But  that  Man's  Soul  (whom  He  would  make  their  king) 

Should  from  Himself  immediately  proceed. 

And  when  He  took  the  woman  from  man's  side, 
Doubtless  Himself  inspired  her  soul  alone; 
For  'tis  not  said,  he  did,  Man's  soul  divide, 
But  took  flesh  of  his  flesh,  bone  of  his  bone. 

Lastly,  GOD,  being  made  Man,  for  man's  own  sake, 
And  being  like  man  in  all,  except  in  sin : 
His  Body,  from  the  Virgin's  womb  did  take ; 
But  all  agree,  GOD  formed  His  soul  within. 


68      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !  [s|r 

Then  is  the  Soul  from  God  ?  So  Pagans  say, 

Which  saw  by  Nature's  light,  her  heavenly  kind, 
Naming  her  "  Kin  to  God  !  "  and  "  GOD's  bright  ray,  " 
"  A  citizen  of  heaven,  to  earth  confined  !  " 

But  now  I  feel  they  pluck  me  by  the  ear, 

(Whom  my  young  Muse  so  boldly  termed  blind) 
And  crave  more  heavenly  light ;  that  cloud  to  clear, 
Which   makes  them  think  GOD  doth  not  make  the 
Mind! 

GOD  doubtless  makes  her !  and  doth  make  her  good ! 
Reasons     And  grafts  her  in  a  Body,  there  to  spring; 
DTvTniST  Which  though  it  be  corrupted,  flesh  and  blood, 
Can  no  way  to  the  Soul,  corruption  bring. 

And  yet  this  Soul  (made  good  by  GOD  at  first, 
And  not  corrupted  by  the  Body's  ill) 
Even  in  the  womb,  is  sinful  and  accurst, 
Ere  she  can  judge  by  Wit,  or  choose  by  Will. 

Yet  is  not  GOD,  the  author  of  her  Sin ; 

Though  author  of  her  Being,  and  being  there; 
And  if  we  dare  to  judge  our  Judge  therein ; 
He  can  condemn  us,  and  Himself  can  clear. 

First,  GOD,  from  infinite  eternity 

Decreed  what  hath  been,  is,  or  shall  be  done ; 
And  was  resolved  that  every  man  should  Be, 
And,  in  his  turn,  his  race  of  life  should  run. 

And  so  did  purpose  all  the  souls  to  make, 

That  ever  have  been  made,  or  ever  shall ; 
And  that  their  Being,  they  should  only  take 
In  human  bodies,  or  not  Be  at  all. 

Was  it  then  fit,  that  such  a  weak  event 

(Weakness,  itself !  the  sin  and  fall  of  Man) 
His  counsel's  execution  should  prevent? 
Decreed  and  fixed  before  the  world  began. 


^ApSTs^:]  [THE  SouL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !     69 

Or  that  one  penal  law,  by  ADAM  broke, 

Should  make  GOD  break  His  own  eternal  law; 

The  settled  order  of  the  world  revoke, 

And  change  all  forms  of  things,  which  He  foresaw. 

Could  EVE'S  weak  hand,  extended  to  the  tree, 
In  sunder  rent  that  Adamantine  Chain, 
Whose  golden  links,  Effects  and  Causes  be ; 
And  which  to  GOD's  own  chair,  doth  fixt  remain  ? 

O  could  we  see !  how  Cause  from  Cause  doth  spring  ! 
How  mutually  they  linked  and  folded  are! 
And  hear  how  oft  one  disagreeing  string, 
The  harmony  doth  rather  make,  than  marl 

And  view  at  once,  how  Death  by  sin  is  brought ! 
And  how  from  Death  a  better  Life  doth  rise ; 
How  this,  GOD's  Justice  and  his  Mercy  taught; 
We,  this  decree,  would  praise,  as  right  and  wise  ! 

But  we  (that  measure  times,  by  First  and  Last) 
The  sight  of  things  successively  do  take; 
When  GOD,  on  all  at  once,  His  view  doth  cast ; 
And  of  all  times,  doth  but  one  instant  make. 

All  in  Himself,  as  in  a  glass,  He  sees, 

And  from  Him,  by  Him,  through  Him,  all  things  be ; 

His  sight  is  not  discursive,  by  degrees ; 

But  seeing  the  whole,  each  single  part  doth  see. 

He  looks  on  ADAM,  as  a  root,  or  well, 

And  on  his  heirs,  as  branches,  and  as  streams ; 
He  sees  all  men  as  one  man !  though  they  dwell 
In  sundry  cities,  and  in  sundry  realms. 

And  as  the  root  and  branch  are  but  one  tree, 

And  well  and  stream  do  but  one  river  make; 

So,  if  the  root  and  well  corrupted  be ; 

The  stream  and  branch  the  same  corruption  take. 


70     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

So  when  the  root  and  fountain  of  Mankind ; 

Did  draw  corruption,  and  GOD's  curse  by  sin  : 
This  was  a  charge  that  all  his  heirs  did  bind ; 
And  all  his  offspring  grew  corrupt  therein  ! 

And  as  when  th'  hand  doth  strike,  the  man  offends, 
(For  part  from  whole,  Law  severs  not  in  this  !) 
So  ADAM'S  sin  to  the  whole  Kind  extends, 
For  all  their  natures  are  but  part  of  his. 

Therefore,  this  sin,  of  Kind,  not  personal ; 
But  real,  and  hereditary  was  : 
The  guilt  whereof,  and  punishment  to  all, 
By  Course  of  Nature,  and  of  Law  doth  pass. 

For  as  that  easy  law  was  given  to  all ! 

To  ancestor  and  heir!  to  first  and  last! 

So  was  the  first  transgression  general ; 

And  All  did  pluck  the  fruit !  and  All  did  taste  ! 

Of  this,  we  find  some  footsteps  in  our  Law, 

Which  doth  her  root  from  GOD  and  Nature  take. 
Ten  thousand  men  she  doth  together  draw, 
And  of  them  all,  one  Corporation  make  ! 

Yet  these  and  their  successors  are  but  One ; 
And  if  they  gain  or  lose  their  liberties ; 
They  harm  or  profit  not  themselves  alone, 
But  such,  as  in  succeeding  time,  shall  rise ! 

And  so  the  ancestor  and  all  his  heirs, 

(Though  they  in  number  pass  the  stars  of  heaven) 
Are  still  but  One  !  His  forfeitures  are  theirs ! 
And  unto  them,  are  his  advancements  given  1 

His  civil  acts  to  bind  and  bar  them  all ! 

And  as  from  ADAM,  all  corruption  take ; 

So  if  the  father's  crime  be  capital ; 

In  all  the  blood,  Law  doth  corruption  make  ! 


[THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  ATOSCE  TEIFSUM  !     71 

Is  it,  then,  just  with  us,  to  disinherit 

The  unborn  nephews,  for  the  father's  fault  ? 
And  to  advance  again,  for  one  man's  merit, 
A  thousand  heirs  that  have  deserved  nought  ? 

And  is  not  GOD's  decree  as  just  as  ours, 
If  He,  for  ADAM'S  sins,  his  sons  deprive 
Of  all  those  native  virtues,  and  those  powers  ; 
Which  He  to  him,  and  to  his  race  did  give  ? 

For  what  is  this  contagious  Sin  of  Kind, 
But  a  privation  of  that  grace  within, 
And  of  that  great  rich  dowry  of  the  mind ; 
Which  all  had  had,  but  for  the  first  man's  sin  ? 

If  then  a  man,  on  light  conditions,  gain 

A  great  estate,  to  him  and  his,  for  ever ; 

If  wilfully,  he  forfeit  it  again  : 

Who  doth  bemoan  his  heir  ?  or  blame  the  giver  ? 

So,  though  GOD  make  the  Soul  good,  rich,  and  fair  ; 
Yet  when  her  form  is  to  the  Body  knit, 
Which  makes  the  Man  :  which  Man  is  ADAM'S  heir ; 
Justly,  forthwith,  he  takes  his  grace  from  it. 

And  then  the  Soul,  being  first  from  nothing  brought, 
When  GOD's  grace  fails  her,  doth  to  nothing  fall; 
And  this  declining  Proneness  unto  nought ', 
Is  even  that  Sin,  that  we  are  born  withal. 

Yet  not,  alone,  the  first  good  qualities, 

Which  in  the  first  Soul  were,  deprived  are ; 
But  in  their  place  the  contrary  do  rise, 
And  real  spots  of  sin,  her  beauty  mar. 

Nor  is  it  strange  that  ADAM'S  ill  desert, 

Should  be  transferred  unto  his  guilty  race ; 
When  CHRIST,  His  grace  and  justice  doth  impart 
To  men  unjust !  and  such  as  have  no  grace ! 


72     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSVM  ! 

Laf.tly,  the  Soul  were  better  so  to  be 

Born  slave  to  sin,  than  not  to  Be  at  all ! 
Since,  if  She  do  believe,  One  sets  her  free, 
That  makes  her  mount  the  higher,  from  her  fall. 

Yet  this,  the  curious  Wits  will  not  content ! 

They  yet  will  know  (since  GOD  foresaw  this  111) 
Why  His  high  providence  did  not  prevent 
The  declination  of  the  first  Man's  will. 

If  by  His  word,  He  had  the  current  stayed, 

Of  Adam's  will,  which  was  by  nature  free  ; 

It  had  been  one  as  if  His  word  had  said, 

"  I  will,  henceforth,  that  man,  no  Man  shall  be !  " 

For  what  is  Man,  without  a  moving  Mind ; 

Which  hath  a  judging  Wit,  and  choosing  Will  ? 
Now,  if  GOD's  power  should  her  election  bind ; 
Her  motions  then  would  cease,  and  stand  all  still. 

And  why  did  GOD  in  Man  this  Soul  infuse ; 

But  that  he  should  his  Maker  know  and  love  ? 
Now  if  love  be  compelled,  and  cannot  choose  ; 
How  can  it  grateful,  or  thankworthy  prove  ? 

Love  must  free  hearted  be,  and  voluntary, 

And  not  enchanted,  or  by  Fate  constrained: 
Not  like  that  love,  which  did  ULYSSES  carry 
To  CIRCE'S  isle,  with  mighty  charms  enchained. 

Besides  !   Were  we  unchangeable  in  Will, 

And  of  a  Wit,  that  nothing  could  misdeem  ; 
Equal  to  GOD  (whose  wisdom  shineth  still, 
And  never  errs)  we  might  ourselves  esteem. 

So  that  if  Man  would  be  unvariable  ; 

He  must  be  GOD  !  or  like  a  rock,  or  tree  ! 
For  even  the  perfect  angels  were  not  stable  ; 
But  had  a  fall,  more  desperate  than  we. 


s?rAPSaiV599-]  [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !      73 

Then  let  us  praise  that  Power,  which  makes  us  be 
Men,  as  we  are !  and  rest  contented  so  ! 
And  knowing  man's  fall  was  Curiosity, 
Admire  GOD's  counsels  !  which  we  cannot  know. 

And  let  us  know  that  GOD,  the  Maker  is 
Of  all  the  Souls,  in  all  the  men  that  be: 
Yet  their  corruption  is  no  fault  of  His ; 
But  the  first  man's,  that  broke  GOD's  first  decree 


This  vSubstance,  and  this  Spirit,  of  God's  own  making, 
why  the       Is  in  the  Body  placed,  and  planted  there  : 
uSled to       Tnat  both  of  GOD,  and  of  the  world  partaking ; 
the  Body.      Of  all  that  is,  Man  might  the  Image  bear  ! 

GOD,  first,  made  Angels  !  bodiless  pure  minds ! 
Then,  other  things,  which  mindless  bodies  be. 
Last,  He  made  Man,  the  Horizon  'twixt  both  kinds, 
In  whom,  we  do  the  World's  Abridgement  see. 

Besides  !  This  world  below  did  need  one  wight, 
Which  might  thereof,  distinguish  every  part ; 
Make  use  thereof,  and  take  therein  delight ; 
And  order  things  with  industry  and  Art. 

Which,  also,  GOD,  might  (in  His  works)  admire, 

And  here,  beneath,  yield  Him  both  prayer  and  praise ; 
As  there,  above,  the  holy  Angels'  Quire 
Doth  spread  His  glory,  with  spiritual  lays. 

Lastly,  the  brute  unreasonable  wights, 

Did  want  a  Visible  King,  on  them  to  reign ; 
And  GOD  Himself,  thus  to  the  world  unites, 
That  so  the  world  might  endless  bliss  obtain. 


But  how  shall  we  this  Union  well  express  ? 
ma^iISV     Nought  ties  the  Soul,  her  subtility  is  such: 

She  moves  the  body,  which  She  doth  possess ; 
the  Body.      Yet  no  part  toucheth,  but  by  virtue's  touch  ! 


74     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

Then  dwells  She  not  therein,  as  in  a  tent, 
Nor  as  a  pilot,  in  his  ship  doth  sit, 
Nor  as  a  spider,  in  her  web  is  pent, 
Nor  as  the  wax  retains  the  print  in  it: 

Nor  as  a  vessel,  water  doth  contain, 
Nor  as  one  liquor,  in  another  shed, 
Nor  as  the  heat  doth  in  the  fire  remain, 
Nor  as  a  voice,  throughout  the  air  is  spread. 

But  as  the  fair  and  cheerful  Morning  Light 

Doth,  here  and  there,  her  silver  beams  impart: 
And,  in  an  instant,  doth  herself  unite 
To  the  transparent  air,  in  all  and  part. 

Still  resting  whole,  when  blows,  the  air  divide, 
Abiding  pure,  when  th'air  is  most  corrupted; 
Throughout  the  air,  her  beams  dispersing  wide ; 
And,  when  the  air  is  tost,  not  interrupted  ! 

So  doth  the  piercing  Soul,  the  Body  fill, 

Being  all  in  all,  and  all  in  part  diffused : 

Indivisible  !  incorruptible  still ! 

Not  forced  !  encountered !  troubled  !  or  confused ! 

And  as  the  Sun  above,  the  light  doth  bring, 
Though  we  behold  it  in  the  air  below  ; 
So  from  th'  Eternal  Light,  the  Soul  doth  spring, 
Though  in  the  body,  She  her  powers  do  show. 

But  as  this  world's  sun  doth  effects  beget, 
Howthe^      Diverse  in  divers  places,  every  day, 

Here,  Autumn's  temperature !  there,  Summer's  heat ! 

Here,  flowery  Spring-tide !  and  there,  Winter  grey  ! 

Body. 

Here,  Even  !  there,  Morn  !  here,  Noon !  there,  Day  !  there, 

Night ! 
Melts  wax  !  dries  clay  !  makes  flowers  some  quick,  some 

dead! 

Makes  the  Moor  black  !  and  th'European,  white  1 
Th'American  tawny  !  and  th'East  Indian  red  ! 


^ApSTJS'l    [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  /     75 

So  in  our  little  world,  this  Soul  of  ours, 
Being  only  One,  and  to  one  Body  tied, 
Doth  use  on  divers  objects,  diverse  powers. 
And  so  are  her  effects  diversified. 


Her  Quick'ning  Power  in  every  living  part, 
The  Doth  as  a  Nurse,  or  as  a  Mother  serve  ; 

^nc*  ^otk  empl°y  ner  economic  art, 
And  busy  care,  her  household  to  preserve. 


Power. 

Here,  She  attracts  !  and  there,  She  doth  retain, 
There,  She  decocts,  and  doth  the  food  prepare, 
There,  She  distributes  it  to  every  vein, 
There,  She  expels,  what  She  may  fitly  spare. 

This  power  to  MARTHA,  may  compared  be, 

Which  busy  was,  the  household  things  to  do  ; 

Or  to  a  Dryas  living  in  a  tree, 

For  even  to  trees,  this  power  is  proper  too, 

And  though  the  Soul  may  not  this  power  extend 
Out  of  the  body,  but  still  use  it  there  ; 
She  hath  a  Power,  which  she  abroad  doth  send, 
Which  views  and  searcheth  all  things  everywhere. 

This  Power  is  Sense,  which  from  abroad  doth  bring, 

The  Colour,  Taste,  and  Touch,  and  Scent,  and  Sound, 

rfhseLTr     The  Quantity,  and  Shape  of  everything 

Within  th'earth's  centre  or  heaven's  circle  found. 

This  Power,  in  parts  made  fit,  fit  objects  takes, 

Yet  not  the  Things,  but  Forms  of  Things  receives  : 
As  when  a  seal  in  wax  impression  makes, 
The  print  therein,  but  not  itself,  it  leaves  : 

And  though  things  sensible  be  numberless, 
But  only  five  the  Sense's  organs  be  ; 
And  in  those  five,  All  Things  their  Forms  express, 
Which  we  can  Touch,  Taste,  Feel,  or  Hear,  or  See. 


76     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

These  are  the  Windows,  through  the  which  She  views 
The  Light  of  Knowledge,  which  is  Life's  Load-star; 
And  yet  whiles  She,  these  spectacles  doth  use, 
Oft,  worldly  things  seem  greater  than  they  are. 

First,  the  two  Eyes,  which  have  the  Seeing  Power, 
Stand  as  one  Watchman,  Spy,  or  Sentinel, 

sight.      Being  placed  aloft  within  the  head's  high  Tower 
And  though  both  see,  yet  both  but  one  thing  tell. 

These  Mirrors  take  into  their  little  space, 

The  Forms  of  moon,  and  sun,  and  every  star ; 

Of  every  body,  and  of  every  place, 

Which,  with  the  world's  wide  arms,  embraced  are. 

Yet  their  best  object,  and  their  noblest  use, 
Hereafter  in  another  world  will  be ; 
When  GOD  in  them,  shall  heavenly  light  infuse, 
That  face  to  face,  they  may  their  Maker  see. 

Here  are  they  guides,  which  do  the  Body  lead, 
Which  else  would  stumble  in  eternal  night : 
Here  in  this  world,  they  do  much  knowledge  read, 
And  are  the  Casements,  which  admit  most  light. 

They  are  her  farthest-reaching  instrument  ; 

Yet  they  no  beams  unto  their  objects  send : 
But  all  the  rays  are  from  their  objects  sent ; 
And  in  the  Eyes,  with  pointed  angles  end. 

If  th'objects  be  far  off,  the  rays  do  meet 

In  a  sharp  point,  and  so  things  seem  but  small ; 

If  they  be  near,  their  rays  do  spread  and  fleet, 

And  make  broad  points,  that  things  seem  great  withal. 

Lastly.    Nine  things  to  Sight  required  are. 

The  Power  to  see  !  the  Light !  the  Visible  thing  ! 
Being  not  too  small !  too  thin  !  too  nigh  !  too  far  ! 
Clear  space  !  and  Time,  the  Form  distinct  to  bring, 


s?irApri?aivs99S.']   [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

Thus  see  we,  how  the  Soul  doth  use  the  Eyes, 
As  instruments  of  her  quick  power  of  sight ; 
Hence  do  th'Arts  Optic,  and  fair  Painting  rise. 
Painting,  which  doth  all  gentle  minds  delight ! 

Now  let  us  hear,  how  She  the  Ears  employs: 

Their  office  is  the  troubled  air  to  take, 

Hea/ing.       Which  in  their  mazes,  forms  a  sound  or  noise ; 
Whereof  herself  doth  true  distinction  make. 

These  Wickets  of  the  Soul  are  placed  on  high, 
Because  all  sounds  do  lightly  mount  aloft; 
And  that  they  may  not  pierce  too  violently  ; 
They  are  delayed  with  turns  and  windings  oft. 

For  should  the  voice  directly  strike  the  brain, 
It  would  astonish  and  confuse  it  much; 
Therefore  these  plaits  and  folds  the  sound  restrain, 
That  it,  the  Organ  may  more  gently  touch ! 

As  streams,  which,  with  their  winding  banks,  do  play, 
Stopt  by  their  creeks,  run  softly  through  the  plain ; 
So  in  the  Ear's  labyrinth,  the  voice  doth  stray, 
And  doth,  with  easy  motion,  touch  the  brain ! 

It  is  the  slowest,  yet  the  daintiest  Sense  ! 

For  even  the  ears  of  such  as  have  no  skill, 
Perceive  a  discord,  and  conceive  offence, 
And  knowing  not  what's  good,  yet  find  the  ill ! 

And  though  this  Sense,  first,  gentle  Music  found  ; 
Her  proper  object  is  the  Speech  of  Man  ! 
But  that  speech  chiefly  which  GOD's  heralds  sound, 
When  their  tongues  utter,  what  his  Spirit  did  pen. 

Our  Eyes  have  lids,  our  Ears  still  ope  we  see ! 
Quickly  to  hear,  how  every  tale  is  proved ; 
Our  Eyes  still  move,  our  Ears  unmoved  be  ! 
That  though  we  hear  quick,  we  be  not  quickly  moved 


78     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

Thus  by  the  organs  of  the  Eye  and  Ear, 

The  Soul  with  knowledge  doth  herself  endue  ! 
Thus  She  her  prison,  may  with  pleasure  bear  ; 
Having  such  prospects,  all  the  world  to  view  I 

These  Conduit  Pipes  of  Knowledge  feed  the  Mind : 
But  th'other  three  attend  the  Body  still  ; 
For  by  their  services  the  Soul  doth  find 
What  things  are  to  the  Body,  good  or  ill. 

The  Body's  life,  with  meats  and  air  is  fed, 

Therefore  the  Soul  doth  use  the  Tasting  power ! 

Taste.          In  veins,  which  through  the  tongue  and  palate  spread, 
Distinguish  every  relish,  sweet  and  sour. 

This  is  the  Body's  Nurse  !   But  since  Man's  wit 
Found  th'art  of  cookery  to  delight  his  Sense  : 
More  bodies  are  consumed  and  killed  with  it ! 
Than  with  the  sword,  famine,  or  pestilence. 

Next,  in  the  nostrils,  She  doth  use  the  Smell, 

As  GOD  the  breath  of  life  in  them  did  give ; 

Smeii.      So  makes  He,  now,  His  power  in  them  to  dwell ; 
To  judge  all  airs,  whereby  we  breath  and  live. 

This  Sense  is  also  mistress  of  an  Art, 

Which  to  soft  people,  sweet  perfumes  doth  sell ; 
Though  this  dear  Art  doth  little  good  impart, 
Since  "  they  smell  best ;  that  do  of  nothing  smell !  " 

And  yet  good  scents  do  purify  the  Brain, 
Awake  the  Fancy,  and  the  Wits  refine. 
Hence  Old  Devotion,  incense  did  ordain, 
To  make  men's  spirits  more  apt  for  thoughts  divine 

Lastly,  the  Feeling  power,  which  is  Life's  Root, 

Through  every  living  part  itself  doth  shed ; 

Feeling.        By  sinews,  which  extend  from  head  to  foot, 
And  like  a  net,  all  o'er  the  Body  spread. 


[THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !     79 

Much  like  a  subtle  spider,  which  doth  sit 

In  middle  of  her  web,  which  spreadeth  wide  ; 
If  ought  do  touch  the  utmost  thread  of  it  ; 
She  feels  it,  instantly,  on  every  side  ! 

By  touch;  the  first  pure  qualities  we  learn, 

Which  quicken  all  things,  Hot,  Cold,  Moist,  and  Dry  ! 
By  touch;  Hard,  Soft,  Rough,  Smooth,  we  do  discern  ! 
By  touch  ;  sweet  Pleasure,  and  sharp  Pain  we  try  ! 

These  are  the  outward  instruments  of  Sense  ! 

These  are  the  Guards,  which  every  thing  must  pass  ; 

Ere  it  approach  the  Mind's  intelligence  ! 

Or  touch  the  Phantasy  "  Wits  Looking  Glass  !  " 

And  yet  these  Porters  which  all  things  admit, 
The  Themselves  perceive  not,  nor  discern  the  things; 

One  Common  Power  doth  in  the  forehead  sit, 


common       Which  all  their  proper  forms  together  brings. 

Sense. 

For  all  those  Nerves,  which  spirits  of  Sense  do  bear, 
And  to  those  outward  organs  spreading  go, 
United  are  as  in  a  centre  there  ! 
And,  there,  this  power,  those  sundry  forms  doth  know  ! 

Those  outward  Organs  present  things  receive  ; 
This  inward  Sense  doth  absent  things  retain  ! 
Yet,  straight,  transmits  all  Forms  she  doth  perceive, 
Unto  a  higher  region  of  the  brain  ; 

Where  Phantasy  (near  handmaid  to  the  Mind  !) 

Sits  and  beholds,  and  doth  discern  them  all  ; 

Phantasy.      Compounds  in  one,  things  diverse  in  their  kind, 

Compares  the  black  and  white,  the  great  and  small. 

Besides  those  single  forms,  She  doth  esteem, 
And  in  her  balance  doth  their  values  try  ; 
Where  some  things  good,  and  some  things  ill  do  seem, 
And  neutral  some  in  her  Phantastic  eye. 


8o     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN."]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !   [ 

This  busy  power  is  working  day  and  night, 

For  when  the  outward  senses  rest  do  take ; 
A  thousand  dreams,  phantastical  and  light, 
With  fluttering  wings,  do  keep  her  still  awake ! 

Yet,  always,  all  may  not  afore  her  be ; 
The  Successively,  she  this,  and  that  intends  : 

senLtive       Therefore  such  forms  as  she  doth  cease  to  see, 
aory*       To  Memory's  large  volume  she  commends  ! 

The  Ledger  Book  lies  in  the  brain  behind, 

Like  JANUS'  eye,  which  in  his  poll  was  set ; 
The  Layman's  Tables !  Storehouse  of  the  Mind  ! 
Which  doth  remember  much,  and  much  forget. 

Here,  Sense's  Apprehensions  end  doth  take; 
As,  when  a  stone  is  into  water  cast, 
One  circle  doth  another  circle  make, 
Till  the  last  circle  touch  the  bank  at  last ! 

But  though  the  Apprehensive  Power  do  pause, 
The  The  Motive  Virtue  then  begins  to  move ! 

Passions       Which  in  the  heart  below,  doth  Passions  cause, 

Joy,  Grief,  and  Fear,  and  Hope,  and  Hate,  and  Love 

These  Passions  have  a  free  commanding  might, 
And  divers  actions  in  our  life  do  breed; 
For  all  acts  done  without  true  Reason's  light, 
Do  from  the  Passion  of  the  Sense  proceed. 

But  sith  the  Brain  doth  lodge  these  powers  of  Sense, 
How  makes  it,  in  the  Heart  those  passions  spring  ? 
The  mutual  love,  the  kind  intelligence 
'Twixt  heart  and  brain,  this  Sympathy  doth  bring. 

From  the  kind  heat,  which  in  the  heart  doth  reign, 
The  spirits  of  Life  do  their  beginning  take  ! 
These  spirits  of  Life  ascending  to  the  brain, 
When  they  come  there,  the  spirits  of  Sense  do  make. 


s?rApr?iTs99.']   [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !     81 

These  spirits  of  Sense  in  Phantasy's  high  court, 
Judge  of  the  Forms  of  Objects,  ill  or  well ! 
And  so,  they  send  a  good  or  ill  report 
Down  to  the  heart,  where  all  Affections  dwell. 

If  the  report  be  good ;  it  causeth  love  ! 

And  longing  hope  !  and  well  assured  joy  ! 

If  it  be  ill ;  then  doth  it  hatred  move  ! 

And  trembling  fear  !  and  vexing  grief's  annoy ! 

Yet  were  these  natural  affections  good 

(For  they  which  want  them,  blocks  or  devils  be  ! ) ; 
If  Reason  in  her  first  perfection  stood, 
That  she  might  Nature's  Passions  rectify. 

Besides,  another  Motive  Power  doth  rise 

Out  of  the  heart :  from  whose  pure  blood  do  spring 
ofLife°t101     The  Vital  Spirits,  which  born  in  arteries, 

Continual  motion  to  all  parts  do  bring. 

This  makes  the  pulses  beat,  and  lungs  respire, 

This  holds  the  sinews,  like  a  bridle's  reins  ; 

And  makes  the  body  to  advance,  retire, 

To  turn  or  stop,  as  she  them  slacks  or  strains ! 

Thus  the  Soul  tunes  the  Body's  instrument ; 

These  harmonies  She  makes  with  Life  and  Sense : 

The  organs  fit,  are  by  the  Body  lent ; 

But  th'actions  flow  from  the  Soul's  influence. 


But  now  I  have  a  Will,  yet  want  a  Wit, 

The  in-        To  express  the  workings  of  the  Wit  and  Will  ; 

peowSaif      Which,  though  their  root  be  to  the  body  knit, 


the  soui.       use  not  the  Body,  when  they  use  their  skill. 

These  powers  the  nature  of  the  Soul  declare, 
For  to  Man's  Soul,  these  only  proper  be  ! 
For  on  the  earth,  no  other  wights  there  are, 
Which  have  these  heavenly  powers,  but  only 


10 


82      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !   [s?ir 

The  Wit  (the  pupil  of  the  Soul's  clear  eye ! 

And  in  Man's  world,  th'only  shining  star !) 
Looks  in  the  Mirror  of  the  Phantasy, 
Where  all  the  gatherings  of  the  senses  are 

From  thence  this  Power,  the  Shapes  of  things  abstracts, 
And  them  within  her  Passive  part  receives  ; 
Which  are  enlightened  by  that  part  which  Acts, 
And  so  the  Forms  of  single  things  perceives. 

But  after,  by  discoursing  to  and  fro, 

Anticipating,  and  comparing  things ; 
She  doth  all  universal  natures  know, 
And  all  Effects  into  their  Causes  brings. 

When  She  rates  things,  and  moves  from  ground  to  ground, 
Reason.        The  name  of  Reason,  She  obtains  by  this  ! 

But  when,  by  reasons,  She  the  truth  hath  found, 
And  standeth  fixt,  She,  Understanding  is ! 


When  her  assent,  She  lightly  doth  incline 
Opinion.       To  either  part,  She  is  Opinion  light ! 

But  when  She  doth  by  principles  define 
judgment.     A  certain  truth,  She  hath  true  Judgement's  sight. 

And  as  from  senses,  Reason's  work  doth  spring ; 
So  many  reasons,  Understanding  gain  : 
And  many  understandings,  Knowledge  bring, 
And  by  much  knowledge,  Wisdom  we  obtain. 

So,  many  stairs  we  must  ascend  upright, 
Ere  we  attain  to  Wisdom's  high  degree  : 
So  doth  this  earth  eclipse  our  Reason's  light, 
Which  else  (in  instants)  would  like  angels  see. 

Yet  hath  the  Soul  a  dowry  natural, 

And  Sparks  of  Light  some  common  things  to  see; 
Not  being  a  blank,  where  nought  is  writ  at  all, 
But  what  the  writer  will,  may  written  be. 


[THE  SouL  OF  MAN-]  NOSCE  TEIPSVM!      83 

For  Nature,  in  man's  heart  her  laws  doth  pen, 

Prescribing  Truth  to  Wit  !  and  Good  to  Will  ! 
Which  do  accuse,  or  else  excuse  all  men, 
For  every  thought  or  practice,  good  or  ill  ! 

And  yet  these  sparks  grow  almost  infinite, 

Making  the  world  and  all  therein,  their  food  ; 
As  fire  so  spreads,  as  no  place  holdeth  it, 
Being  nourished  still  with  new  supplies  of  wood. 

And  though  these  sparks  were  almost  quenched  with  sin, 
Yet  they,  whom  that  Just  One  hath  justified, 
Have  them  increased,  with  Heavenly  Light  within  ! 
And,  like  the  Widow's  oil,  still  multiplied  ! 

And  as  this  Wit  should  goodness  truly  know, 

We  have  a  Wit  which  that  true  good  should  choose  ! 
Chough  Will  do  oft  (when  Wit,  false  Forms  doth  show) 
Take  111,  for  Good  ;  and  Good,  for  111  refuse. 

Will  puts  in  practice  what  the  Wit  deviseth  ; 

The  Will  ever  acts,  and  Wit  contemplates  still  : 

And  as  from  Wit  the  power  of  Wisdom  riseth  ; 

All  other  virtues,  daughters  are  of  Will  ! 


Will  is  the  Prince  !  and  Wit,  the  Councillor  ! 
Which  doth  for  common  good  in  council  sit  ; 
And  when  Wit  is  resolved  ;  Will  lends  her  power 
To  execute  what  is  advised  by  Wit. 

Wit  is  the  Mind's  Chief  Judge  !  which  doth  control, 
Of  Fancy's  Court,  the  judgements  false  and  vain  ! 
Will  holds  the  royal  sceptre  in  the  Soul  ; 
And  on  the  Passions  of  the  Heart  doth  reign  ! 

Will  is  as  free  as  any  Emperor, 

Nought  can  restrain  her  gentle  liberty  ; 
No  tyrant,  nor  no  torment  hath  the  power 
To  make  us  will  ;  when  we  unwilling  be  ! 


84     [THE  SoUL  OF  MAN-]  NOME  TEIPSUM!   [ 

To  these  high  powers,  a  Storehouse  doth  pertain  ; 

The  Where  they,  all  Arts  and  general  reasons  lay  ! 


Which  in  the  Soul  (even  after  death  !)  remain, 
Memory.       ^n(j  no  Lethean  flood  can  wash  away  ! 


This  is  the  Soul  !  and  those,  her  virtues  be  ! 

Which,  though  they  have  their  sundry  proper  ends, 
And  one  exceeds  another  in  degree  ; 
Yet  each  on  other  mutually  depends. 

Our  Wit  is  given,  Almighty  GOD  to  know  ! 

Our  Will  is  given  to  love  Him,  being  known  ! 

But  GOD  could  not  be  'known  to  us  below, 

But  by  His  works,  which  through  the  Sense  are  shown. 

And  as  the  Wit  doth  reap  the  fruits  of  Sense  ; 

So  doth  the  Quick'ning  Power,  the  Senses  feed  ! 
Thus  while  they  do  their  sundry  gifts  dispense, 
The  best,  the  service  of  the  least  doth  need  ! 

Even  so,  the  King,  his  magistrates  do  serve  ; 

Yet  Commons  feed  both  magistrate  and  King  ! 

The  Commons'  peace,  the  magistrates  preserve 

By  borrowed  power,  which  from  the  Prince  doth  spring. 

The  Quickening  Power  would  be,  and  so  would  rest  ! 
The  Sense  would  not  be  only,  be  be  well  \ 
But  Wit's  ambition  longeth  to  be  best  \ 
For  it  desires  in  endless  bliss,  to  dwell. 

And  these  three  Powers,  three  sorts  of  men  do  make. 
For  some,  like  plants,  their  veins  do  only  fill; 
And  some,  like  beasts,  their  senses'  pleasure  take, 
And  some,  like  angels,  do  contemplate  still. 

Therefore  the  fables  turned  some  men  to  flowers, 
And  others,  did  with  brutish  forms  invest  ; 
And  did  of  others,  make  celestial  powers 
Like  angels  !  which  still  travail,  yet  still  rest  ! 


s^pruav599S.']    [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !      85 

Yet  these  three  Powers  are  not  three  Souls  but  one, 
As  one  and  two  are  both  contained  in  three ; 
Three  being  one  number  by  itself  alone. 
A  shadow  of  the  blessed  Trinity  ! 


O  what  is  Man  !  (Great  Maker  of  mankind  !) 

That  Thou  to  him  so  great  respect  dost  bear  ! 

^£a-       That  Thou  adorn'st  him  with  so  bright  a  Mind  ! 
Mak'st  him  a  king  !  and  even  an  angel's  peer  ! 

O  what  a  lively  life  !  what  heavenly  power  ! 

What  spreading  virtue  !  what  a  sparkling  fire  ! 
How  great  !  how  plentiful  !  how  rich  a  dower  ! 
Dost  Thou,  within  this  dying  flesh  inspire  ! 

Thou  leav'st  Thy  Print  in  other  works  of  Thine  ! 

But  Thy  whole  Image,  Thou,  in  Man  hast  writ  ! 
There  cannot  be  a  creature  more  divine  ; 
Except,  (like  Thee  !)  it  should  be  infinite. 

But  it  exceeds  Man's  thought,  to  think  how  high 

GOD  hath  raised  Man,  since  GOD,  a  man  became  : 

The  angels  do  admire  this  mystery, 

And  are  astonished  when  they  view  the  same  ! 


OR  hath  He  given  these  blessings  for  a  day, 
Nor    made    them    on    the    Body's    life 

11  J  That  the 

depend,  soul  is  im- 

The  Soul,  though  made  in  Time,  survives 

for  Aye  ; 
And  though  it  hath  beginning,  sees  no  end 

Her  only  end,  in  never-ending  bliss  ; 

Which  is,  th'  eternal  face  of  GOD  to  see  : 
Who  Last  of  Ends  and  First  of  Causes  is, 
And  to  do  this,  She  must  Eternal  be  ! 


86      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

How  senseless  then,  and  dead  a  Soul  hath  he, 
Which  thinks  his  soul  doth  with  his  body  die 
Or  thinks  not  so,  but  so  would  have  it  be, 
That  he  might  sin  with  more  security ! 

For  though  these  light  and  vicious  persons  say, 
"  Our  Soul  is  but  a  smoke  !  or  airy  blast ! 
Which,  during  life,  doth  in  our  nostrils  play  ; 
And  when  we  die,  doth  turn  to  wind  at  last ! 

Although  they  say,  "  Come,  let  us  eat,  and  drink ! 
Our  life  is  but  a  spark,  which  quickly  dies  !  " 
Though  thus  they  say,  they  know  not  what  to  think, 
But  in  their  minds,  ten  thousand  doubts  arise. 

Therefore  no  heretics  desire  to  spread 

Their  light  opinions,  like  these  Epicures  ; 

For  so  their  staggering  thoughts  are  comforted, 

And  other  men's  assent,  their  doubt  assures. 

Yet  though  these  men  against  their  conscience  strive, 
There  are  some  sparkles  in  their  flinty  breasts, 
Which  cannot  be  extinct,  but  still  revive, 
That  (though  they  would)  they  cannot,  quite  be  beasts 

But  whoso  makes  a  Mirror  of  his  Mind  ; 

And  doth,  with  patience,  view  himself  therein  ; 

His  Soul's  eternity  shall  clearly  find, 

Though  th'other  beauties  be  defaced  with  sin. 

First,  In  man's  mind,  we  find  an  appetite 

To  Learn  and  Know  the  Truth  of  everything: 

Which  is  connatural,  and  born  with  it ; 

^nc*  fr°m  t^ie  essence  of  the  Soul  doth  spring. 

ledge. 

With  this  Desire,  She  hath  a  native  Might, 
To  find  out  every  truth,  if  She  had  time 
Th'  innumerable  effects  to  sort  aright ; 
And,  by  degrees,  from  cause  to  cause  to  climb ! 


s?rAPriiait9e9s:]    [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !     87 

But  since  our  life  so  fast  away  doth  slide ! 

(As  doth  a  hungry  eagle  through  the  wind, 
Or  as  a  ship  transported  with  the  tide  ; 
Which  in  their  passage,  leave  no  print  behind.) 

Of  which  swift  little  time,  so  much  we  spend, 

While  some  few  things,  we,  through  the  Sense,  do  strain ; 
That  our  short  race  of  life  is  at  an  end, 
Ere  we,  the  Principles  of  Skill  attain : 

Or  GOD  (which  to  vain  ends,  hath  nothing  done) 
In  vain,  this  Appetite  and  Power  hath  given ; 
Or  else  our  knowledge,  which  is  here  begun, 
Hereafter  must  be  perfected  in  heaven. 

GOD  never  gave  a  Power  to  one  whole  Kind  ; 
But  most  of  that  Kind  did  use  the  same ! 
Most  eyes  have  perfect  sight !  though  some  be  blind ; 
Most  legs  can  nimbly  run  !  though  some  be  lame. 

But  in  this  life,  no  Soul,  the  Truth  can  know 
So  perfectly,  as  it  hath  power  to  do ! 
If  then  perfection  be  not  found  below, 
A  higher  place  must  make  her  mount  thereto. 

Again,  how  can  She  but  immortal  be  ? 

2  Reason.      When  with  the  motions  of  both  Will  and  Wit, 

f?omwthe        She  still  aspireth  to  Eternity, 

motion  of      And  never  rests,  till  she  attain  to  it. 

the  Soul. 

Water  in  conduit  pipes  can  rise  no  higher 

Than  the  well  head,  from  whence  it  first  doth  spring ! 
Then  since  to  eternal  GOD,  She  doth  aspire; 
She  cannot  be  but  an  eternal  thing. 

"  All  moving  things  to  other  things  do  move 

Of  the  same  kind,"  which  shows  their  natures  such  ; 
So  earth  falls  down,  and  fire  doth  mount  above, 
TiH  both  their  proper  Elements  do  touch. 


88     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

And  as  the  moisture  which  the  thirsty  earth 
The  Soul       Sucks  from  the  sea,  to  fill  her  empty  veins  ; 
compared      From  out  her  womb  at  last  doth  take  a  birth, 
runs>  a  Nvmph  j  along  the  grassy  plains: 


Long  doth  she  stay,  as  loath  to  leave  the  land, 

From  whose  soft  side,  she  first  did  issue  make  : 
She  tastes  all  places  !  turns  to  every  hand  ! 
Her  flow'ry  banks  unwilling  to  forsake  : 

Yet  Nature,  so  her  streams  doth  lead  and  carry, 
As  that  her  course  doth  make  no  final  stay 
Till  she,  herself  unto  the  Ocean  marry  ; 
Within  whose  watry  bosom  first  she  lay. 

Even  so  the  Soul,  which  in  this  earthy  mould, 
The  Spirit  of  GOD  doth  secretly  infuse  ; 
Because,  at  first,  She  doth  the  earth  behold, 
And  only  this  material  world  She  views  ! 

At  first,  our  Mother  Earth,  She  holdeth  dear  ! 

And  doth  embrace  the  World,  and  worldly  things  ! 
She  flies  close  by  the  ground,  and  hovers  here  ! 
And  mounts  not  up  with  her  celestial  wings  ! 

Yet,  under  heaven,  She  cannot  light  on  ought, 
That  with  her  heavenly  nature  doth  agree  : 
She  cannot  rest  !  She  cannot  fix  her  thought  ! 
She  cannot  in  this  world  contented  be  ! 

For  who  did  ever  yet  in  Honour,  Wealth, 

Or  Pleasure  of  the  Sense,  contentment  find  ? 
Who  ever  ceased  to  wish,  when  he  had  Health  ? 
Or  having  Wisdom,  was  not  vext  in  mind  ? 

Then  as  a  bee,  which  among  weeds  doth  fall, 

Which  seem  sweet  flowers,  with  lustre  fresh  and  gay  ; 
She  lights  on  that  !  and  this  !  and  tasteth  all  ; 
But  pleased  with  none,  doth  rise  and  soar  away  ! 


Sir 


[THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !     89 


So,  when  the  Soul  finds  here  no  true  content, 

And,  like  NOAH'S  dove,  can  no  sure  footing  take ; 
She  doth  return  from  whence  She  first  was  sent, 
And  flies  to  Him,  that  first  her  wings  did  make ! 

Wit  seeking  Truth,  from  Cause  to  Cause  ascends  ; 
And  never  rests,  till  it  the  First  attain; 
Will  seeking  Good,  finds  many  middle  Ends, 
But  never  stays,  till  it  the  Last  do  gain. 

Now,  GOD,  the  Truth  !  and  First  of  Causes  is  ! 

GOD  is  the  Last  Good  End!  which  lasteth  still : 
Being  Alpha  and  Omega  named  for  this, 
Alpha  to  Wit !  Omega  to  the  Will ! 

Since  then,  her  heavenly  kind  She  doth  bewray, 
In  that  to  GOD,  She  doth  directly  move  : 
And  on  no  mortal  thing  can  make  her  stay ; 
She  cannot  be  from  hence,  but  from  above. 

And  yet  this  First  True  Cause  and  Last  Good  End, 
She  cannot  hear  so  well,  and  truly  see ; 
For  this  perfection,  She  must  yet  attend, 
Till  to  her  Maker,  She  espoused  be. 

As  a  King's  daughter,  being  in  person  sought 
Of  divers  Princes,  which  do  neighbour  near; 
On  none  of  them  can  fix  a  constant  thought, 
Though  she  to  all  do  lend  a  gentle  ear. 

Yet  can  she  love  a  foreign  Emperor ! 

Whom,  of  great  worth  and  power,  she  hears  to  be ; 
If  she  be  wooed  but  by  Ambassador ; 
Or  but  his  letters,  or  his  picture  see. 

For  well  she  knows,  that  when  she  shall  be  brought 
Into  the  kingdom,  where  her  Spouse  doth  reign  ; 
Her  eyes  shall  see  what  she  conceived  in  thought, 
Himself !  his  State  !  his  glory  !  and  his  train  ! 


go     [_THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  I 

So  while  the  virgin  Soul  on  earth  doth  stay 

She  wooed  and  tempted  is,  ten  thousand  ways, 
By  these  great  Powers,  which  on  the  earth  bear  sway ; 
The  WISDOM  OF  THE  WORLD,  WEALTH,  PLEASURE, 
PRAISE. 

With  these,  sometime,  She  doth  her  time  beguile, 
These  do,  by  fits,  her  Phantasy  possess, 
But  She  distastes  them  all,  within  a  while ; 
And  in  the  sweetest,  finds  a  tediousness  : 

But  if,  upon  the  world's  Almighty  King, 

She  once  do  fix  her  humble  loving  thought ; 
Which,  by  his  Picture  drawn  in  everything, 
And  sacred  Messages,  her  love  hath  sought, 

Of  Him,  She  thinks  She  cannot  think  too  much, 
This  honey  tasted,  still  is  ever  sweet ; 
The  pleasure  of  her  ravished  thought  is  such, 
As  almost  here,  She,  with  her  bliss  doth  meet. 

But  when  in  heaven,  She  shall  His  Essence  see, 
This  is  her  Sovereign  Good  !  and  Perfect  Bliss  1 
Her  longings,  wishings,  hopes,  all  finished  be ! 
Her  joys  are  full !  her  motions  rest  in  this  ! 

There,  is  She  crowned  with  Garlands  of  Content, 
There,  doth  She  manna  eat,  and  nectar  drink, 
That  Presence  doth  such  high  delights  present, 
As  never  tongue  could  speak,  nor  heart  could  think! 


3  Reason.  ^or  ^^s  •  the  better  Souls  do  oft  despise 
From  con-      The  body's  death,  and  do  it  oft  desire; 
Shfn        For  when  on  ground,  the  burdened  balance  lie 
lortof"er      T*16  emPtv  Part  is  lifted  up  the  higher ! 

spirits. 

But  if  the  body's  death,  the  Soul  should  kill  ? 
Then  death  must  needs  against  her  nature  be ; 
And  were  it  so,  all  Souls  would  fly  it  still, 
"  For  Nature  hates,  and  shuns  her  contrary." 


[THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !     91 

For  all  things  else,  which  Nature  makes  to  be ; 
Their  Being  to  preserve,  are  chiefly  taught ! 
For  though  some  things  desire  a  change  to  see, 
"  Yet  never  thing  did  long  to  turn  to  nought  \  " 

If  then,  by  death,  the  Soul  were  quenched  quite, 
She  could  not  thus  against  her  nature  run  ! 
Since  every  senseless  thing,  by  Nature's  light, 
Doth  preservation  seek !  destruction  shun  ! 

Nor  could  the  world's  best  spirits  so  much  err, 

(If  Death  took  all !)  that  they  should  all  agree, 

Before  this  life,  their  Honour  to  prefer  ! 

For  what  is  praise,  to  things  that  nothing  be  ? 

Again,  if  by  the  body's  prop,  She  stand  ? 
If  on  the  body's  life,  her  life  depend  ? 
As  MELEAGER'S  on  the  fatal  brand  ! 
The  body's  good,  She  only  would  intend  ! 

We  should  not  find  her  half  so  brave  and  bold, 
To  lead  it  to  the  wars,  and  to  the  seas  ! 
To  make  it  suffer  watchings  !  hunger  !  cold  ! 
When  it  might  feed  with  plenty  !  rest  with  ease ! 

Doubtless,  all  Souls  have  a  surviving  thought ; 

Therefore  of  Death,  we  think  with  quiet  mind ; 
But  if  we  think  of  being  turned  to  nought, 
A  trembling  horror  in  our  Souls  we  find  1 

And  as  the  better  spirit,  when  She  doth  bear 

4.  Reason.     A  scorn  of  death,  doth  shew  She  cannot  die  ; 

So  when  the  wicked  Soul,  Death's  face  doth  fear, 
Even  then,  She  proves  her  own  eternity ! 

souls. 

For,  when  Death's  form  appears,  She  feareth  not 
An  utter  quenching  or  extinguishment ! 
She  would  be  glad  to  meet  with  such  a  lot ! 
That  so  She  might  all  future  ill  prevent. 


92      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

But  She  doth  doubt  what  after  may  befall, 
For  Nature's  law  accuseth  her  within, 
And  saith,  "  'Tis  true,  that  is  affirmed  by  all, 
That  after  death,  there  is  a  pain  for  sin  !  " 

Then  She,  which  hath  been  hoodwinked  from  her  birth, 
Doth  first  herself  within  Death's  Mirror  see ; 
And  when  her  body  doth  return  to  earth, 
She  first  takes  care,  how  She  alone  shall  be. 

Whoever  sees  these  irreligious  men, 

With  burden  of  a  sickness,  weak  and  faint ; 
But  hears  them  talking  of  religion  then, 
And  vowing  of  their  souls  to  every  saint  ? 

When  was  there  ever  cursed  atheist  brought 
Unto  the  gibbet,  but  he  did  adore 
That  blessed  Power !  which  he  had  set  at  nought, 
Scorned,  and  blasphemed,  all  his  life  before  ? 

These  light  vain  persons,  still  are  drunk  and  mad, 
With  surfeitings  and  pleasures  of  their  youth  ; 
But,  at  their  deaths,  they  are  fresh  !  sober !   sad  ! 
Then,  they  discern  !  and  then,  they  speak  the  truth  ! 

If  then,  all  souls,  both  good  and  bad,  do  teach 
With  general  voice,  that  souls  can  never  die; 
'Tis  not  Man's  flattering  Gloss,  but  Nature's  Speech, 
Which,  like  GOD's  Oracle,  can  never  lie. 

Hence,  springs  that  universal  strong  desire, 
5.  Reason.     Which  all  men  have,  of  Immortality  : 
FeSSaihde      ^°^  some  few  spirits  unto  this  thought  aspire, 
«reo?ime-      But  all  men's  minds  in  this,  united  be. 

mortality. 

Then  this  desire  of  Nature  is  not  vain ! 
"  She  covets  not  impossibilities  !  " 
"  Fond  thoughts  may  fall  into  some  idle  brain  ; 
But  one  Assent  of  All,  is  ever  true  !  " 


S?irAprUaiV599S.']     [^HE  SoUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !       93 

From  hence,  that  general  care  and  study  springs, 
That  launching  and  progression  of  the  Mind, 
Which  all  men  have,  so  much  of  Future  things, 
As  they  no  joy,  do  in  the  Present  find. 

From  this  desire,  that  main  Desire  proceeds, 

Which  all  men  have,  surviving  Fame  to  gain ; 
By  tombs,  by  books,  by  memorable  deeds ; 
For  She  that  this  desires,  doth  still  remain. 

Hence,  lastly,  springs  Care  of  Posterities  ! 

For  things,  their  kind  would  everlasting  make  ! 
Hence  is  it,  that  old  men  do  plant  young  trees, 
The  fruit  whereof,  another  age  shall  take ! 

If  we  these  rules  unto  ourselves  apply, 

And  view  them  by  reflection  of  the  mind  ; 

All  these  True  Notes  of  Immortality, 

In  our  hearts'  tables,  we  shall  written  find ! 

And  though  some  impious  wits  do  questions  move, 
FrfmThT  And  doubt  "  if  souls  immortal  be  or  no  ?  " 
verydoubt  That  doubt,  their  immortality  doth  prove  ! 
Sionofu"  Because  they  seem  immortal  things  to  know. 

Immor- 
tality. 

For  he  which  reasons,  on  both  parts  doth  bring, 
Doth  some  things  mortal,  some  immortal  call ; 
Now  if  himself  were  but  a  mortal  thing; 
He  could  not  judge  immortal  things,  at  all  \ 

For  when  we  judge,  our  Minds  we  Mirrors  make , 
And  as  those  glasses,  which  material  be, 
Forms  of  material  things  do  only  take 
(For  Thoughts  or  Minds  in  them,  we  cannot  see) ; 

So  when  we  GOD  and  Angels  do  conceive, 

And  think  of  Truth  (which  is  eternal  too), 
Then  do  our  Minds,  immortal  Forms  receive, 
Which  if  they  mortal  were,  they  could  not  do. 


94      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

And  as  if  beasts  conceived  what  Reason  were, 
And  that  conception  should  distinctly  shew; 
They  should  the  name  of  reasonable  bear 
(For  without  Reason,  none  could  reason  know). 

So  when  the  Soul  mounts  with  so  high  a  wing, 
As  of  eternal  things,  She  doubts  can  move, 
She,  proofs  of  her  eternity  doth  bring ; 
Even  when  She  strives  the  contrary  to  prove. 

For  even  the  thought  of  Immortality, 

Being  an  act  done  without  the  body's  aid, 
Shews,  that  herself  alone  could  move,  and  be, 
Although  the  body  in  the  grave  were  laid. 

And  if  herself  She  can  so  lively  move, 

And  never  need  a  foreign  help  to  take, 
Then  must  her  motion  everlasting  prove, 
"  Because  her  self  She  never  can  forsake.'"1 


"  But  though  Corruption  cannot  touch  the  Mind, 
That  the       By  any  cause,  that  from  itself  may  spring ; 
Stubeadk      Some  Outward  Cause,  Fate  hath  perhaps  designed, 
stroyed.        Which  to  the  Soul,  may  utter  quenching  bring  ?  " 

"Perhaps  her  Cause  may  cease,  and  She  may  die !  " 

Her  cause     GOD  is  her  Cause !  His  WORD,  her  Maker  was  ! 

no?  Which  shall  stand  fixed  for  all  eternity  ! 

When  heaven  and  earth  shall  like  a  shadow  pass. 

"  Perhaps  something  repugnant  to  her  kind, 

she  hath       By  strong  antipathy,  the  Soul  may  kill !  " 

traJ£n~         But  what  can  be  contrary  to  the  Mind, 

Which  holds  all  contraries  in  concord  still  ? 

She  lodgeth  heat,  and  cold  !  and  moist,  and  dry ! 

And  life,  and  death  !  and  peace,  and  war  together  : 
Ten  thousand  fighting  things  in  her  do  lie, 
Yet  neither  troubleth  or  disturbeth  either. 


[THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !      95 

"  Perhaps,  for  want  of  food,  the  Soul  may  pine  !  " 
she  cannot     But  that  were  strange  !  since  all  things  bad  and  good  , 
wan^of        Since  all  GOD's  creatures,  mortal  and  divine; 
food-  Since  GOD  Himself  is  her  eternal  food. 

Bodies  are  fed  with  things  of  mortal  kind, 
And  so  are  subject  to  mortality  ; 
But  Truth,  which  is  eternal,  feeds  the  Mind, 
The  Tree  of  Life,  which  will  not  let  her  die. 

"  Yet  violence  perhaps  the  Soul  destroys, 

violence       As  lightning  or  the  sunbeams  dim  the  sight  ; 

staroy°hedr?"     Or  as  a  thunder-clap  or  cannon's  noise, 

The  power  of  hearing  doth  astonish  quite  ?  " 

But  high  perfection  to  the  Soul  it  brings, 

T'encounter  things  most  excellent  and  high  ; 
For  when  She  views  the  best  and  greatest  things, 
They  do  not  hurt,  but  rather  clear  the  eye. 

Besides  as  HOMER'S  gods  'gainst  armies  stand  ; 
Her  subtle  form  can  through  all  dangers  slide  ; 
Bodies  are  captive,  Minds  endure  no  band, 
"  And  Will  is  free,  and  can  no  force  abide  !  " 

"  But  lastly,  Time  perhaps,  at  last,  hath  power, 

Time  can-      To  spend  her  lively  powers,  and  quench  her  light  ?  'r 

notdestroy 


Doth  cherish  her,  and  still  augment  her  might. 

Heaven  waxeth  old  ;  and  all  the  spheres  above 

Shall,  one  day,  faint,  and  their  swift  motion  stay  ; 
And  Time  itself,  in  time,  shall  cease  to  move, 
Only  the  Soul  survives,  and  lives  for  aye. 

Our  bodies,  every  footstep  that  they  make, 

March  towards  death,  until  at  last  they  die  : 
Whether  we  work,  or  play,  or  sleep,  or  wake, 
Our  life  doth  pass,  and  with  Time's  wings  doth  fly 


96      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

But  to  the  Soul,  time  doth  perfection  give, 
And  adds  fresh  lustre  to  her  beauty  still, 
And  makes  her  in  eternal  youth  to  live, 
Like  her  which  nectar  to  the  gods  doth  fill. 

The  more  She  lives,  the  more  She  feeds  on  Truth  ; 

The  more  She  feeds,  her  Strength  doth  more  increase 
And  what  is  Strength,  but  an  effect  of  Youth  ! 
Which  if  Time  nurse,  how  can  it  ever  cease  ? 


But  now  these  Epicures  begin  to  smile, 

objections     And  say,  "  My  doctrine  is  more  safe,  than  true  !  " 
And  that  "  I  fondly  do  myself  beguile, 
While  these  received  opinions  I  ensue." 


"  For  what  !  "  they  say,  "  doth  not  the  Soul  wax  old  ? 

objection.     How  comes  it,  then,  that  aged  men  do  dote, 

And  that  their  brains  grow  sottish,  dull,  and  cold 
Which  were  in  youth,  the  only  spirits  of  note  ?  " 

"  What  !  are  not  Souls  within  themselves  corrupted  ? 
How  can  there  idiots  then  by  Nature  be  ? 
How  is  it  that  some  wits  are  interrupted, 
That  now  they  dazzled  are,  now  clearly  see  ?  " 

These  questions  make  a  subtle  argument 

Answer.      To  such  as  think  both  Sense  and  Reason  one  : 

To  whom,  nor  Agent,  from  the  Instrument  ; 

Nor  Power  of  Working,  from  the  Work  is  known, 

But  they  that  know  that  Wit  can  show  no  skill, 

But  when  she  things  in  Sense's  glass  doth  view  ; 
Do  know,  if  accident  this  glass  do  spill, 
It  nothing  sees  !  or  sees  the  false  for  true. 

For  if  that  region  of  the  tender  brain, 

Wherein  th'inward  sense  of  Phantasy  should  sit, 
And  th'outward  senses'  gatherings  should  retain, 
By  Nature,  or  by  chance  become  unfit, 


s?rAprnTs9e9sG   [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !      97 

Either  at  first  uncapable  it  is ; 

And  so  few  things  or  none  at  all  receives  ; 
Or  marred  by  accident  which  haps  amiss, 
And  so  amiss  it  everything  perceives ; 

Then  as  a  cunning  Prince  that  useth  spies ; 

If  they  return  no  news,  doth  nothing  know; 
But  if  they  make  advertisement  of  lies, 
The  Prince's  Council  all  awry  do  go. 

Even  so,  the  Soul,  to  such  a  Body  knit, 
Whose  inward  senses  undisposed  be, 
And  to  receive  the  Forms  of  things  unfit ; 
Where  nothing  is  brought  in,  can  nothing  see. 

This  makes  the  Idiot,  which  hath  yet  a  mind, 

Able  to  know  the  Truth,  and  choose  the  Good  ; 
If  she  such  figures  in  the  brain  did  find, 
As  might  be  found,  if  it  in  temper  stood. 

But  if  a  frenzy  do  possess  the  brain  ; 

It  so  disturbs  and  blots  the  forms  of  things, 
As  Phantasy  proves  altogether  vain, 
And  to  the  Wit,  no  true  relation  brings. 

Then  doth  the  Wit,  admitting  all  for  true, 

Build  fond  conclusions  on  those  idle  grounds; 
Then  doth  it  fly  the  Good,  and  111  pursue, 
Believing  all  that  this  false  spy  propounds. 

But  purge  the  humours,  and  the  rage  appease ; 
Which  this  distemper  in  the  Fancy  wrought : 
Then  will  the  Wit,  which  never  had  disease, 
Discourse  and  judge  discreetly,  as  it  ought. 

So  though  the  clouds  eclipse  the  Sun's  fair  light, 
Yet  from  his  face  they  do  not  take  one  beam ; 
So  have  our  eyes  their  perfect  power  of  sight, 
Even  when  they  look  into  a  troubled  stream. 

G  10 


98      [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  ! 

Then  these  defects  in  Sense's  organs  be, 

Not  in  the  Soul,  or  in  her  working  might; 
She  cannot  lose  her  perfect  Power  to  See, 
Though  mists  and  clouds  do  choke  her  window  light. 

These  imperfections  then  we  must  impute, 
Not  to  the  Agent,  but  the  Instrument ; 
We  must  not  blame  APOLLO,  but  his  Lute, 
If  false  accords  from  her  false  strings  be  sent, 

The  Soul,  in  all,  hath  one  intelligence, 

Though  too  much  moisture  in  an  infant's  brain, 
And  too  much  dryness  in  an  old  man's  sense 
Cannot  the  prints  of  outward  things  retain. 

Then  doth  the  Soul  want  work,  and  idle  sit : 
And  this  we  Childishness  and  Dotage  call : 
Yet  hath  She  then  a  quick  and  active  Wit, 
If  She  had  stuff  and  tools  to  work  withal. 

For,  give  her  organs  fit,  and  objects  fair, 

Give  but  the  aged  man,  the  3'oung  man's  sense : 

Let  but  MEDEA,  ^ESON'S  youth  repair, 

And  straight  She  shews  her  wonted  excellence. 

As  a  good  harper,  stricken  far  in  years, 

Into  whose  cunning  hands,  the  gout  is  fall : 
All  his  old  crotchets,  in  his  brain  he  bears, 
But  on  his  harp,  plays  ill,  or  not  at  all. 

But  if  APOLLO  take  his  gout  away, 

That  he,  his  nimble  fingers  may  apply ; 

APOLLO'S  self  will  envy  at  his  play, 

And  all  the  world  applaud  his  minstrelsy ! 

Then  Dotage  is  no  weakness  of  the  Mind, 

But  of  the  Sense  ;  for  if  the  Mind  did  waste  ; 
In  all  old  men,  we  should  this  wasting  find, 
When  they  some  certain  term  of  years  had  past. 


[THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !      99 

But  most  of  them,  even  to  their  dying  hour, 

Retain  a  Mind  more  lively,  quick,  and  strong, 
And  better  use  their  Understanding  Power, 
Than  when  their  brains  were  warm,  and  limbs  were 
young. 

For  though  the  body  wasted  be  and  weak, 

And  though  the  leaden  form  of  earth  it  bears; 
Yet  when  we  hear  that  half-dead  body  speak, 
We  oft  are  ravished  to  the  heavenly  spheres. 

Yet  say  these  men,  "  If  all  her  organs  die, 

2.  objection.  Then  hath  the  Soul  no  power,  her  Powers  to  use  ! 
So  in  a  sort  her  Powers  extinct  do  lie, 
When  into  Act  She  cannot  them  reduce." 

"  And  if  her  Powers  be  dead,  then  what  is  She  ? 

For  since  from  everything,  some  Powers  do  spring, 
And  from  those  Powers  some  Acts  proceeding  be  : 
Then  kill  both  Power  and  Act,  and  kill  the  Thing." 

Doubtless  the  Body's  death,  when  once  it  dies, 
Answer.        The  Instruments  of  Sense  and  Life  doth  kill ; 
So  that  She  cannot  use  those  faculties, 
Although  their  root  rest  in  her  substance  still. 

But  as,  the  Body  living,  Wit  and  Will 

Can  judge  and  choose  without  the  Body's  aid, 
Though  on  such  objects,  they  are  working  still, 
As  through  the  Body's  organs  are  conveyed  : 

So,  when  the  Body  serves  her  turn  no  more, 
And  all  her  Senses  are  extinct  and  gone, 
She  can  discourse  of  what  She  learned  before, 
In  heavenly  contemplations  all  alone. 

So  if  one  man  well  on  the  lute  doth  play, 

And  have  good  horsemanship,  and  learning's  skill : 
Though  both  his  lute  and  horse  we  take  away; 
Doth  he  not  keep  his  former  learning  still  ? 


ioo     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !  [! 

He  keeps  it  doubtless  !  and  can  use  it  too  ! 

And  doth  both  th'other  skills,  in  power  retain ! 
And  can  of  both  the  proper  actions  do, 
If  with  his  Lute,  or  Horse  he  meet  again. 

So,  though  the  instruments  by  which  we  live 

And  view  the  world,  the  Body's  death  doth  kill 
Yet  with  the  Body,  they  shall  all  revive ; 
And  all  their  wonted  offices  fulfil. 


J.  Davies. 

April  1599. 


"But  how,  till  then,  shall  She  herself  employ? 
3.  objection.  Her  spies  are  dead;  which  brought  home  news  before  : 

What  she  hath  got  and  keeps,  she  may  enjoy; 

But  She  hath  means  to  understand  no  more. " 

"  Then  what  do  those  poor  Souls  which  nothing  get? 
Or  what  do  those  which  get  and  nothing  keep, 
Like  buckets  bottomless,  which  all  out  let  ? 
Those  Souls,  for  want  of  exercise,  must  sleep    ' 

See  how  Man's  Soul,  against  itself  doth  strive ; 

Answer.       Why  should  we  not  have  other  means  to  know? 
As  children,  while  within  the  womb  they  live, 
Feed  by  the  navel ;  Here,  they  feed  not  so. 

These  children  (if  they  had  some  use  of  Sense, 

And  should  by  chance  their  mothers  talking,  hear  ; 
That,  in  short  time,  they  shall  come  forth  from  thence) 
Would  fear  their  birth,  more  than  our  death  we  fear. 

They  would  cry  out,  "  If  we,  this  place  shall  leave, 
Then  shall  we  break  our  tender  navel  strings  : 
How  shall  we  then  our  nourishment  receive, 
Since  our  sweet  food,  no  other  conduit  brings?" 

And  if  a  man  should,  to  these  babes  reply, 

That  "  Into  this  fair  world  they  shall  be  brought, 
Where  they  shall  see  the  earth,  the  sea,  the  sky, 
The  glorious  sun,  and  all  that  GOD  hath  wrought : 


s?r/pSazV599-]    [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !  101 

That  there  ten  thousand  dainties  they  shall  meet, 

Which  by  their  mouths  they  shall  with  pleasure  take  ; 
Which  shall  be  cordial  too,  as  well  as  sweet, 
And  of  their  little  limbs,  tall  bodies  make  !  " 

This,  would  they  think  a  fable  !  even  as  we 
Do  think  the  story  of  the  Golden  Age; 
Or  as  some  sensual  spirits  amongst  us  be, 
Which  hold  the  World  to  Come,  "  a  feigned  Stage.  " 

Yet  shall  these  infants,  after,  find  all  true ; 

Though,  then,  thereof,  they  nothing  could  conceive. 
As  soon  as  they  are  born,  the  world  they  view, 
And  with  their  mouths,  the  nurse's  milk  receive. 

So  when  the  Soul  is  born  (for  Death  is  nought 

But  the  Soul's  Birth,  and  so  we  should  it  call!) 
Ten  thousand  things  She  sees,  beyond  her  thought  ; 
And,  in  an  unknown  manner,  knows  them  all. 

Then  doth  She  see  by  spectacles  no  more, 
She  hears  not  by  report  of  double  spies, 
Herself,  in  instants,  doth  all  things  explore. 
For  each  thing  present,  and  before  her  lies. 

But  still  this  Crew,  with  questions  me  pursues ; 

».  objection.  "  If  Souls  deceased,"  say  they,  "  still  living  be, 
Why  do  they  not  return  to  bring  us  news 
Of  that  strange  world,  where  they  such  wonders  see? 

Fond  men  !  if  we  believe  that  men  do  live 
Answer.    Under  the  zenith  of  both  frozen  poles ; 

Though  none  come  thence,  advertisement  to  give  ; 

Why  bear  we  not  the  like  faith  of  our  Souls  ? 

The  Soul  hath,  here  on  earth,  no  more  to  do, 

Than  we  have  business  in  our  mother's  womb ; 
What  child  doth  covet  to  return  thereto  ? 
Although  all  children,  first  from  thence  do  come  ! 


IO2    [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !  [s, 

But  as  Noah's  pigeon  which  returned  no  more, 
Did  shew  she  footing  found,  for  all  the  flood; 
So  when  good  Souls,  departed  through  death's  door, 
Come  not  again ;  it  shews  their  dwelling  good. 

And  doubtless  such  a  Soul  as  up  doth  mount, 
And  doth  appear  before  her  Maker's  face, 
Holds  this  vile  world  in  such  a  base  account, 
As  She  looks  down  and  scorns  this  wretched  place. 

But  such  as  are  detruded  down  to  hell ; 

Either  for  shame,  they  still  themselves  retire, 
Or  tied  in  chains,  they  in  close  prison  dwell, 
And  cannot  come,  although  they  much  desire. 

"  Well,  well,"  say  these  vain  spirits,  "  though  vain  it  is 
s.  objection.    To  think  our  Souls  to  heaven  or  hell  do  go  ; 
Politic  men  have  thought  it  not  amiss, 
To  spread  this  lie,  to  make  men  virtuous  so  ! " 

Do  you,  then,  think  this  moral  Virtue,  good  ? 
\nswer.     I  think  you  do  !  even  for  your  private  gain ; 

For  commonwealths  by  Virtue  ever  stood ; 

And  common  good,  the  private  doth  contain. 

If  then  this  Virtue,  you  do  love  so  well, 

Have  you  no  means,  her  practice  to  maintain  ? 

But  you  this  lie  must  to  the  people  tell, 

"  That  good  Souls  live  in  joy,  and  ill  in  pain." 

Must  Virtue  be  preserved  by  a  lie  ? 

Virtue  and  Truth  do  ever  best  agree. 

By  this,  it  seems  to  be  a  verity, 

Since  the  effects  so  good  and  virtuous  be. 

For  as  the  Devil,  father  is  of  lies, 

So  Vice  and  Mischief  do  his  lies  ensue. 

Then  this  good  doctrine  did  he  not  devise, 

But  made  this  Lie  which  saith,  "  It  is  not  true  ! " 


s?rAprnTs9e9S']  [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM !    103 

For  how  can  that  be  false,  which  every  tongue, 
The          Of  every  mortal  man,  affirms  for  true; 

Consent  of      Whicn  truth  h.ath>  in  a11  ageS>  been  S(>  Strong, 

all.  As  loadstone-like,  all  hearts  it  ever  drew. 

For  not  the  Christian  or  the  Jew  alone  ; 

The  Persian,  or  the  Turk  acknowledge  this : 
This  mystery  to  the  wild  Indian  known, 
And  to  the  Cannibal  and  Tartar,  is. 

This  rich  Assyrian  drug  grows  everywhere, 
As  common  in  the  North,  as  in  the  East ! 
This  doctrine  doth  not  enter  by  the  ear, 
But,  of  itself,  is  native  in  the  breast ! 

None  that  acknowledge  GOD,  or  Providence, 
Their  Soul's  eternity  did  ever  doubt; 
For  all  religion  takes  her  root  from  hence, 
Which  no  poor  naked  nation  lives  without. 

For  since  the  world  for  Man  created  was, 

(For  only  Man,  the  use  thereof  doth  know) 

If  Man  do  perish  like  a  withered  grass, 

How  doth  GOD's  wisdom  order  things  below  ? 

And  if  that  wisdom  still  wise  ends  propound, 

Why  made  He  Man,  of  other  creatures  king  ? 
When  (if  he  perish  here  !)  there  is  not  found, 
In  all  the  world  so  poor  and  vile  a  thing  ? 

If  Death  do  quench  us  quite  ;  we  have  great  wrong; 

Since  for  our  service,  all  things  else  were  wrought : 
That  daws,  and  trees,  and  rocks  should  last  so  long, 
When  we  must  in  an  instant  pass  to  nought. 


But,  blest  be  that  Great  Power !  that  hath  us  blest 
With  longer  life,  than  heaven  or  earth  can  have ; 
Which  hath  infused  into  one  mortal  breast, 
Immortal  Powers,  not  subject  to  the  grave. 


104     [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !  [ 

For  though  the  Soul  do  seem  her  grave  to  bear, 
And  in  this  world  is  almost  buried  quick; 
We  have  no  cause  the  Body's  death  to  fear, 
"  For  when  the  shell  is  broke,  out  comes  a  chick.  " 


For  as  the  Soul's  essential  Powers  are  three, 

Three          ^6  Quick'iiing  Power,  the  Power  of  Sense,  and 

kinds  of  Reason ; 

alterable     Three  kinds  of  Life  to  her  designed  be, 

£weershofee    Which   perfect   these  three   Powers,   in  their  due 

the  SOUL  season. 


The  first  Life  in  the  mother's  womb  is  spent, 

Where  She  her  Nursing  Power  doth  only  use  ; 
Where,  when  She  finds  defect  of  nourishment, 
Sh'  expels  her  body,  and  this  world  She  views. 


This,  we  call  Birth  !  but  if  the  child  could  speak, 
He,  Death  would  call  it !  and  of  Nature,  'plain 
That  She  should  thrust  him  out  naked  and  weak; 
And  in  his  passage,  pinch  him  with  such  pain. 

Yet,  out  he  comes  !  and  in  this  world  is  placed, 
Where  all  his  Senses  in  perfection  be ; 
Where  he  finds  flowers  to  smell,  and  fruits  to  taste, 
And  sounds  to  hear,  and  sundry  forms  to  see. 

When  he  hath  passed  some  time  upon  this  Stage, 
His  Reason,  then,  a  little  seems  to  wake, 
Which  though  She  spring,  when  Sense  doth  fade  with 

age, 
Yet  can  She  here,  no  perfect  practice  make. 

Then  doth  th'  aspiring  Soul,  the  Body  leave, 

Which  we  call  Death.     But  were  it  known  to  all, 
What  Life  our  Souls  do,  by  this  death,  receive  ; 
Men  would  it,  Birth  !  or  Gaol  Delivery !  call. 


s?irApiSaiVs9e9s']    [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !   105 

In  this  third  Life,  Reason  will  be  so  bright, 

As  that  her  Spark  will  like  the  sunbeams  shine; 
And  shall,  of  GOD  enjoy  the  real  sight, 
Being  still  increased  by  influence  divine. 


O  ignorant  poor  Man  !   what  dost  thou  bear, 

An  acclamation !     Locked  up  within  the  casket  of  thy  breast ; 

What  jewels,  and  what  riches  hast  thou  there. 
What  heavenly  treasure  in  so  weak  a  chest  ! 

Look  in  thy  Soul !  and  thou  shalt  beauties  find, 

Like  those  which  drowned  NARCISSUS  in  the  flood; 
Honour  and  Pleasure  both  are  in  thy  Mind, 
And  all  that  in  the  world  is  counted  Good. 

Think  of  her  worth  !  and  think  that  GOD  did  mean 
This  worthy  Mind  should  worthy  things  embrace  ! 
Blot  not  her  beauties,  with  thy  thoughts  unclean ; 
Nor  her,  dishonour  with  thy  Passions  base. 

Kill  not  her  Quick'ning  Power  with  surfeitings  1 
Mar  not  her  Sense  with  sensualities  ! 
Cast  not  her  serious  Wit  on  idle  things  ! 
Make  not  her  free  Will  slave  to  vanities ! 

And  when  thou  thinkest  of  her  Eternity ; 

Think  not  that  Death  against  her  nature  is; 
Think  it  a  Birth!  and,  when  thou  goest  to  die, 
Sing  like  a  swan,  as  if  thou  wentst  to  bliss ! 

And  if  thou,  like  a  child,  didst  fear  before, 

Being  in  the  dark,  when  thou  didst  nothing  see ; 
Now  I  have  brought  thee  Torch-light,  fear  no  more, 
Now,  when  thou  diest;  thou  canst  not  hoodwinked  be. 


io6   [THE  SOUL  OF  MAN.]  NOSCE  TEIPSUM  !    [s?ir, 

And  thou,  my  Soul !  which  turn'st  thy  curious  eye, 
To  view  the  beams  of  thine  own  form  divine; 
Know,  that  thou  canst  know  nothing  perfectly, 
While  thou  are  clouded  with  this  flesh  of  mine. 

Take  heed  of  overweening  \  and  compare 

Thy  peacock's  feet,  with  thy  gay  peacock's  train; 
Study  the  best  and  highest  things  that  are ; 
But  of  thyself,  an  humble  thought  retain  ! 

Cast  down  thyself  !  and  only  strive  to  raise 
The  glory  of  thy  Maker's  sacred  name  ! 
Use  all  thy  powers,  that  Blessed  Power  to  praise, 
Which  gives  thee  power  to  Be,  and  Use  the  same. 

FINIS. 


HYMNS    OF 

ASTR^A,    IN 

ACROSTIC 


VERSE. 


L  OND  ON; 

Printed  for  I.  S. 
1599. 


109 


\_Hymns  of 


HYMN    I. 

Of    A  vS  r  R  M  A. 

E  ARLY,  before  the  day  doth  spring, 
L  et  us  awake,  my  Muse  !  and  sing ! 
I    t  is  no  time  to  slumber ! 
S  o  many  joys  this  Time  doth  bring, 
A  s  time  will  fail  to  number. 


B  ut,  whereto  shall  we  bend  our  Lays  ? 
E  ven  up  to  heaven,  again  to  raise 
T  he  Maid  !  which,  thence  descended, 
H  ath  brought  again  the  Golden  Days 
A   nd  all  the  world  amended. 


R  udeness  itself,  She  doth  refine ! 
E  ven  like  an  Alchemist  divine, 
G  ross  Times  of  Iron  turning 
T    nto  the  purest  form  of  Gold  ; 
N  ot  to  corrupt,  till  heaven  wax  old 
A  nd  be  refined  with  burning. 


no 


HYMNS 


tSir  J.  Davi 
Oct.  15 


Davies. 
1599. 


HYMN    II. 

To      A  S  T  RM  A 

E  TERNAL  Virgin  !  Goddess  true  ! 
L  et  me  presume  to  sing  to  you ! 
I    OVE,  even  great  JOVE  hath  leisure 
S  ometimes,  to  hear  the  vulgar  crew  j 
A  nd  hears  them,  oft,  with  pleasure. 

B  lessed  ASTREA  !  I,  in  part, 
E  njoy  the  blessings  you  impart ! 
T  he  Peace !  the  milk  and  honey ! 
H  umanity  !  and  civil  Art ! 
A  richer  dower  than  money. 

R  ight  glad  am  I,  that  now  I  live, 

E  ven  in  these  days,  whereto  you  give 

G  reat  happiness  and  glory  ! 

I    f  after  you,  I  should  be  born  ; 

N  o  doubt,  I  should  my  birthday  scorn, 

A  dmiring  your  sweet  Story. 


HYMN    III. 

To  the  Spring. 

E  ARTH  now  is  green,  and  heaven  is  blue  ! 

L  ively  Spring,  which  makes  all  new. 

I    oily  Spring  doth  enter. 

S  weet  young  sunbeams  do  subdue 

A  ngry,  aged  Winter. 

B  lasts  are  mild,  and  seas  are  calm  ! 
E  very  meadow  flows  with  balm  ! 
T  he  earth  wears  all  her  riches  ! 
H  armonious  birds  sing  such  a  psalm 
A  s  ear  and  heart  bewitches  ! 

R  eserve,  sweet  Spring  !  this  Nymph  of  ours, 

E  ternal  garlands  of  thy  flowers  ! 

G  reen  garlands  never  wasting  ! 

I    n  her  shall  last  our  State's  fair  Spring, 

N  ow  and  for  ever  flourishing, 

A  s  long  as  heaven  is  lasting. 


•Oct. iS9<>.j      HYMNS    o  F  A  s  T  K  ^F  .A  .  in 

HYMN    IV. 

To  the  month  of  May. 

E  ACH  day  of  thine,  sweet  month  of  May  ! 

L  ove  makes  a  solemn  Holy  Day. 

I    will  perform  like  duty  ! 

S  ince  thou  resemblest,  every  way, 

A  STR^EA,  Queen  of  Beauty. 

B  oth  you,  fresh  beauties  do  partake  ! 
E  ither's  aspect,  doth  Summer  make, 
T  houghts  of  young  Love  awaking ! 
H  earts  you  both,  do  cause  to  ache ; 
A  nd  yet  be  pleased  with  aching. 

R  ight  dear  art  thou  !  and  so  is  She  ! 
E  ven  like  attractive  sympathy 
G  ains  unto  both,  like  dearness. 
I    ween  this  made  Antiquity 
N  ame  thee,  Sweet  May  of  Majesty  ! 
A  s  being  both  like  in  clearness. 

HYMN    V. 

To  the  Lark. 

E  ARLY,  cheerful,  mounting  Lark  ! 

L  ight's  gentle  Usher  !  Morning's  Clerk  f 

I    n  merry  notes  delighting  ; 

S  tint  awhile  thy  song,  and  hark, 

A  nd  learn  my  new  inditing  ! 

B  ear  up  this  Hymn  !  to  heaven,  it  bear ! 
E  ven  up  to  heaven,  and  sing  it  there  ! 
T  o  heaven,  each  morning  bear  it ! 
H  ave  it  set  to  some  sweet  sphere, 
A  nd  Jet  the  angels  hear  it ! 

R  enowned  ASTR^EA,  that  great  name  ! 
(E  xceeding  great  in  worth  and  fame, 
G  reat  worth  hath  so  renowned  it) 
I    t  is  ASTR^EA'S  name,  I  praise  ! 
N  ow  then,  sweet  Lark  !  do  thou  it  raise  ; 
A  nd  in  high  heaven  resound  it ! 


ii2  HYMNS    OF   A  s  T  R  JL  A  .      (^{^.U 

HYMN    VI. 

To  the  Nightingale. 

E  VERY  night,  from  even  till  morn, 
L  ove's  Chorister  amid  the  thorn, 
I    s  now  so  sweet  a  singer ! 
S  o  sweet,  as  for  her  Song,  I  scorn. 
A  POLLO'S  voice  and  finger. 

B  ut,  Nightingale !  sith  you  delight 
E  ver  to  watch  the  starry  night, 
T  ell  all  the  stars  of  heaven  ! 
H  eaven  never  had  a  star  so  bright 
A  s  now  to  earth  is  given  ! 

R  oyal  ASTR^EA  makes  our  day 
E  ternal,  with  her  beams !  nor  may 
G  ross  darkness  overcome  her  ! 
I    now  perceive,  why  some  do  write, 
"  N  o  country  hath  so  short  a  night 
A  s  England  hath  in  summer." 

HYMN     VII. 

To  the  Rose. 

E  YE  of  the  garden  !  Queen  of  Flowers  f 

L  OVE'S  cup,  wherein  he  nectar  pours ! 

I    ngendered  first  of  nectar. 

S  weet  nurse-child  of  the  Spring's  young  Hours  ! 

A  nd  Beauty's  fair  Character  ! 

B  est  jewel  that  the  earth  doth  wear! 

E  ven  when  the  brave  young  sun  draws  near, 

T  o  her  hot  love  pretending ; 

H  imself  likewise,  like  form  doth  bear, 

A  t  rising  and  descending. 

R  ose,  of  the  Queen  of  Love  beloved  ! 
E  ngland's  great  Kings  (divinely  moved) 
G  ave  Roses  in  their  banner  : 
I    t  shewed,  that  Beauty's  Rose  indeed, 
N  ow  in  this  Age  should  them  succeed, 
A  nd  reign  in  more  sweet  manner. 


.]       HYMNS    OF  AST  R^  A.  113 

HYMN    VI  I  I. 

« 

To  all  the  Princes  of  Europe. 

E  UROPE  !  the  Earth's  sweet  Paradise  ! 

L  et  all  thy  Kings  (that  would  be  wise 

I    n  Politic  Devotion) 

S  ail  hither,  to  observe  her  eyes, 

A  nd  mark  her  heavenly  motion  ! 

B  rave  Princes  of  this  civil  Age  ! 
E  nter  into  this  pilgrimage  ! 
T  his  Saint's  tongue  is  an  Oracle ! 
H  er  eye  hath  made  a  Prince  a  page  : 
A  nd  works,  each  day,  a  miracle ! 

R  aise  but  your  looks  to  her,  and  see 
E  ven  the  true  beams  of  Majesty  ! 
G  reat  Princes,  mark  her  duly ! 
I    f  all  the  world  you  do  survey, 
N  o  forehead  spreads  so  bright  a  ray  ; 
A  nd  notes  a  Prince,  so  truly ! 

HYMN    IX. 

To  FLORA. 

E  MPRESS  of  Flowers  !     Tell,  where  away 
L  ies  your  sweet  Court,  this  merry  May  ? 
I    n  Greenwich  garden  alleys  ! 
S   ince  there  the  Heavenly  Powers  do  play, 
A   nd  haunt  no  other  valleys. 

B  EAUTY,  VIRTUE,  MAJESTY, 
E  loquent  MUSES,  three  times  three, 
T  he  new  fresh  HOURS  and  GRACES 
H  ave  pleasure  in  this  place  to  be, 
A  bove  all  other  places. 

R  oses  and  lilies  did  them  draw, 

E  re  they,  divine  ASTR^A  saw : 

G  ay  flowers,  they  sought  for  pleasure. 

I    nstead  of  gathering  Crowns  of  Flowers, 

N  ow,  gather  they  ASTR^EA'S  dowers, 

A  nd  bear  to  heaven,  that  treasure. 

H  10 


HYMNS   OF  ASTRMA 


tSii  J.  Davies. 
Oct.  1599. 


HYMN   X. 

To  the  Month  of  September. 

E  ACH  month  hath  praise  in  some  degree, 
L  et  May  to  others  seem  to  be 
I    n  Sense,  the  sweetest  season ; 
S   eptember !  thou  are  best  to  me  ! 
A   nd  best  doth  please  my  Reason. 

B  ut  neither  for  their  corn,  nor  wine ; 

E  xtol  I,  those  mild  days  of  thine  ! 

T  hough  corn  and  wine  might  praise  thee ; 

H  eaven  gives  thee  honour  more  divine 

A  nd  higher  fortunes  raise  thee  ! 

R  enowned  art  thou,  sweet  Month  !  for  this. 

E  mong  thy  days,  her  birthday  is  ! 

G  race,  Plenty,  Peace,  and  Honour 

I  n  one  fair  hour  with  her  were  born  ! 

N  ow  since,  they  still  her  crown  adorn, 

A  nd  still  attend  upon  her. 


HYMN    XI. 

To  the  Sun. 

E  YE  of  the  world  !  Fountain  of  light ! 
L  ife  of  day,  and  death  of  night ! 
I    humbly  seek  thy  kindness  ! 
S   weet !  dazzle  not  my  feeble  sight, 
A  nd  strike  me  not  with  blindness ! 

B  ehold  me  mildly  from  that  face 

E  ven  where  thou  now  dost  run  thy  race, 

T  he  sphere  where  now  thou  turnest, 

H  aving,  like  PHAETON  changed  thy  place, 

A  nd  yet  hearts  only  burnest. 

R   ed  in  her  right  cheek,  thou  dost  rise 

E   xalted  after,  in  her  eyes  ; 

G   reat  glory,  there,  thou  shewest ! 

I     n  th'other  cheek,  when  thou  descendest, 

N   ew  redness  unto  it  thou  lendest ! 

A   nd  so  thy  Round,  thou  goest ! 


sir Jo2aJJw'.l      HYMNS    OP   ASTR^EA  115 

HYMN   XII. 

To  her  Picture. 

E  XTREME  was  his  audacity, 

L  ittle  his  skill,  that  finished  thee ! 

I  am  ashamed  and  sorry, 

S  o  dull  her  counterfeit  should  be  ; 

A  nd  She,  so  full  of  glory  ! 

B   ut  here  are  colours,  red  and  white ; 
E    ach  line,  and  each  proportion  right : 
T   hese  lines,  this  red  and  whiteness, 
H  ave  wanting  yet  a  life  and  light, 
A   majesty  and  brightness. 

R   ude  counterfeit !  I  then  did  err ; 
E   ven  now,  when  I  would  needs  infer 
G   reat  boldness  in  thy  maker ! 
I    did  mistake  !  He  was  not  bold, 
N   or  durst  his  eyes,  her  eyes  behold  : 
A   nd  this  made  him  mistake  her. 

HYMN    XIII. 

Of  her  Mind. 

E  ARTH,  now  adieu  !  My  ravished  thought 

L  ifted  to  heaven,  sets  thee  at  nought ! 

I    nfinite  is  my  longing, 

S   ecrets  of  angels  to  be  taught, 

A   nd  things  to  heaven  belonging  ! 

B    rought  down  from  heaven,  of  angels'  kind, 

E   ven  now,  do  I  admire  her  Mind ! 

T   his  is  my  contemplation  ! 

H  er  clear  sweet  Spirit,  which  is  refined 

A   bove  humane  creation  ! 

R   ich  sunbeam  of  th'  Eternal  Light ! 
E    xcellent  Soul !  How  shall  I  write  ? 
G    ood  angels  make  me  able  ! 
I    cannot  see  but  by  your  eye  ; 
N   or  but  by  your  tongue,  signify 
A   thing  so  admirable. 


116 


HYMNS 


[Sir  J.  Davies. 
Oct.  1599 


HYMN    XIV. 

Of  the  Sunbeams  of  her  Mind. 

E  XCEEDING  glorious  is  this  Star ! 

L   et  us  behold  her  beams  afar 

I    n  a  side  line  reflected  ! 

S   ight  bears  them  not,  when  near  they  are 

A   nd  in  right  lines  directed. 

B   ehold  her  in  her  virtue's  beams, 
E   xtending  sun-like  to  all  realms  ! 
T   he  sun  none  views  too  nearly. 
H  er  well  of  goodness,  in  these  streams, 
A   ppears  right  well  and  clearly. 

R  adiant  virtues  !  if  your  light 

E  nfeeble  the  best  judgement's  sight; 

G  reat  splendour  above  measure 

I  s  in  the  Mind,  from  whence  you  flow ! 

N  o  wit  may  have  access  to  know 

A  nd  view  so  bright  a  treasure. 

HYMN    XV. 

Of  her  Wit. 

E  YE  of  that  Mind  most  quick  and  clear, 

L  ike  heaven's  Eye,  which  from  his  sphere, 

I    nto  all  things  pryeth ; 

S   ees  through  all  things  everywhere, 

A   nd  all  their  natures  trieth. 

B  right  image  of  an  angel's  wit, 

E  xceeding  sharp  and  swift  like  it, 

T  hings  instantly  discerning ; 

H  aving  a  nature  infinite, 

A  nd  yet  increased  by  learning. 

R  ebound  upon  thyself  thy  light ! 

E  njoy  thine  own  sweet  precious  sight } 

G  ive  us  but  some  reflection  ! 

I  t  is  enough  for  us  if  we, 

N  ow  in  her  speech,  now  policy ; 

A  dmire  thine  high  perfection  ! 


sir  oc?^":]      HYMNS    OF   ASTR^A.  117 

HYMN    XVI. 

Of  her  Will. 

E  VER  well  affected  Will, 

L  oving  goodness,  loathing  ill ! 

I  nestimable  treasure ! 

S  ince  such  a  power  hath  power  to  spill, 

A  nd  save  us,  at  her  pleasure. 

B  e  thou  our  law,  sweet  Will !  and  say 

E  ven  what  thou  wilt,  we  will  obey  ! 

T  his  law,  if  I  could  read  it. 

H  erein  would  I  spend  night  and  day, 

A  nd  study  still  to  plead  it. 

R   oyal  Free  Will,  and  only  free ! 

E   ach  other  will  is  slave  to  thee  ! 

G   lad  is  each  will  to  serve  thee ! 

I    n  thee  such  princely  power  is  seen ; 

N   o  spirit  but  takes  thee,  for  her  Queen  ! 

A   nd  thinks  she  must  observe  thee  1 

HYMN    XVII. 

Of  her  Memory. 

E  XCELLENT  jewels  would  you  see? 
L  ovely  ladies  !  Come  with  me  ! 
I    will  (for  love  I  owe  you) 
S   hew  you  as  rich  a  treasury 
A  s  East  or  West  can  shew  you ! 

B  ehold  !  (if  you  can  judge  of  it) 

E  ven  that  great  Storehouse  of  her  Wit ! 

T  hat  beautiful  large  table, 

H  er  Memory  !  wherein  is  writ 

A  11  knowledge  admirable. 

R  ead  this  fair  book,  and  you  shall  learn 

E  xquisite  skill,  if  you  discern  ; 

G  ain  heaven,  by  this  discerning ! 

I    n  such  a  memory  divine, 

N  ature  did  form  the  Muses  nine, 

A   nd  PALLAS,  Queen  of  Learning. 


u8  HYMNS    opAsTR^A.      [Sir 

HYMN    XVIII. 

Of  her  Phantasy. 

E  XQUISITE  curiosity  ! 

L  ook  on  thyself,  with  judging  eye  ! 

I    f  ought  be  faulty,  leave  it ! 

S   o  delicate  a  Phantasy 

A  s  this,  will  straight  perceive  it, 

B  ecause  her  temper  is  so  fine, 
F  ndued  with  harmonies  divine ; 
T  herefore  if  discord  strike  it, 
H  er  true  proportions  do  repine, 
A   nd  sadly  do  mislike  it. 

R  ight  otherwise,  a  pleasure  sweet, 
E  ver  she  takes  in  actions  meet, 
G  racing  with  smiles  such  meetness  : 
I    n  her  fair  forehead  beams  appear, 
N  o  Summer's  day  is  half  so  clear  ! 
A  domed  with  half  that  sweetness  ! 

HYMN    XIX. 

Of  the  Organs  of  her  Mind. 

E  CLIPSED  She  is,  and  her  bright  rays 
L  ie  under  veils  ;  yet  many  ways 
I    s  her  fair  form  revealed  ! 
S   he  diversely  herself  conveys, 
4.  nd  cannot  be  concealed. 

B  y  instruments,  her  powers  appear 
E  xceedingly  well  tuned  and  clear ! 
T  his  Lute  is  still  in  measure, 
H  olds  still  in  tune,  even  like  a  sphere, 
A  nd  yields  the  world  sweet  pleasure ! 

R  esolve  me,  Muse  !  how  this  thing  is  ? 
E  ver  a  body  like  to  this, 
G  ave  heaven  to  earthly  creature  ? 
I    am  but  fond  this  doubt  to  make  ! 
N  o  doubt,  the  angels,  bodies  take 
A  bove  our  common  nature  ! 


s"Jo£a,1S]      HYMNS    OF  AST  R^  A.  119 

HYMN    XX. 

Of  the   Passions   of  her  Heart. 

£  XAMINE  not  th'  inscrutable  Heart, 

L  ight  Muse  !  of  Her,  though  She  in  part 

I  mpart  it  to  the  subject ! 

S  earch  not !  although  from  heaven  thou  art ! 

A  nd  this  a  heavenly  object. 

B  ut  since  She  hath  a  heart,  we  know 

E  ver  some  Passions  thence  do  flow, 

T  hough  ever  ruled  with  honour. 

H  er  judgement  reigns!     They  wait  below, 

A  nd  fix  their  eyes  upon  her  ! 

R  ectified  so,  they,  in  their  kind, 
E  ncrease  each  virtue  of  her  Mind, 
G  overned  with  mild  tranquility. 
I    n  all  the  regions  under  heaven, 
N  o  State  doth  bear  itself  so  even, 
A  nd  with  so  sweet  facility. 

HYMN    XXI. 

Of  the   innumerable    Virtues   of  her  Mind. 

E  RE  thou  proceed  in  these  sweet  pains, 
L  earn  Muse !  how  many  drops  it  rains 
I    n  cold  and  moist  December  ! 
S   um  up  May  flowers  !  and  August's  grains  ! 
A  nd  grapes  of  mild  September  ! 

B  ear  the  sea's  sand  in  Memory ! 
E  arth's  grasses  !  and  the  stars  in  sky  ! 
T  he  little  moats,  which  mounted 
H  ang  in  the  beams  of  PHCEBUS'  eye, 
A  nd  never  can  be  counted  ! 

R  ecount  these  numbers,  numberless, 
E  re  thou,  her  virtue  canst  express  ! 
G  reat  wits,  this  count  will  cumber  ! 
I    nstruct  thyself  in  numbering  schools  ! 
N  ow  Courtiers  use  to  beg  for  fools ; 
A  11  such  as  cannot  number. 


120  V 

HYMN    XXII. 

Of  her   Wisdom. 

E  AGLE-eyed  Wisdom  !     Life's  loadstar ! 

L  ooking  near,  on  things  afar ! 

I  OVE'S  best  beloved  daughter ! 

S  hews  to  her  spirit  all  that  are  ! 

A  s  JOVE  himself  hath  taught  her. 

B  y  this  straight  rule,  She  rectifies 

E  ach  thought,  that  in  her  heart  doth  rise ; 

T  his  is  her  clear  true  Mirror  ! 

H  er  Looking  Glass,  wherein  She  spies 

A  11  forms  of  Truth  and  Error. 

R  ight  Princely  virtue,  fit  to  reign  ! 

E  nthronised  in  her  spirit  remain, 

G  uiding  our  fortunes  ever  ! 

I    f  we  this  Star  once  cease  to  see ; 

N  o  doubt  our  State  will  shipwrecked  be, 

A  nd  torn  and  sunk  for  ever. 

HYMN    XXIII. 

Of  her  Justice. 

E  XILED  ASTR^A  is  come  again  ! 

L  o  here  She  doth  all  things  maintain 

I  n  number,  weight,  and  measure  ! 

S  he  rules  us,  with  delightful  pain, 

A  nd  we  obey  with  pleasure  ! 

B  y  Love,  She  rules  more  than  by  Law  I 
E  ven  her  great  Mercy  breedeth  awe ; 
T  his  is  her  sword  and  sceptre ! 
H  erewith  She  hearts  did  ever  draw, 
A  nd  this  guard  ever  kept  her. 

R  eward  doth  sit  in  her  right  hand  ! 
E  ach  Virtue,  thence  takes  her  garland, 
G  athered  in  Honour's  garden  ! 
I    n  her  left  hand  (wherein  should  be 
N  ought  but  the  sword)  sits  Clemency  ! 
A  nd  conquers  Vice  with  pardon. 


HYMNS   OP   A  s  T  R  &  A.  121 

HYMN    XXIV. 
Of  her  Magnanimity. 

E  YEN  as  her  State,  so  is  her  Mind 

L  ifted  above  the  vulgar  kind  ! 

I  t  treads  proud  Fortune  under  I 

S  unlike,  it  sits  above  the  wind  ; 

A  bove  the  storms,  and  thunder. 

B  rave  Spirit !  Large  Heart !  admiring  nought ! 

E  steeming  each  thing,  as  it  ought ! 

T  hat  swelleth  not,  nor  shrinketh  ! 

H  onour  is  always  in  her  thought ; 

A  nd  of  great  things,  She  thinketh  ! 

R  ocks,  pillars,  and  heaven's  axletree 

E  xemplify  her  Constancy  ! 

G  reat  changes  never  change  her! 

I  n  her  sex,  fears  are  wont  to  rise ; 

N  ature  permits,  Virtue  denies, 

A  nd  scorns  the  face  of  danger ! 

HYMN    XXV. 

Of   her  Moderation. 

E  MPRESS  of  Kingdoms,  though  She  be  ; 
L  arger  is  her  Sovereignty, 
I    f  She  herself  do  govern  ! 
S   ubject  unto  herself  is  She  ; 
A  nd  of  herself,  true  Sovereign  ! 

B  eauty's  Crown,  though  She  do  wear  ; 
E  xalted  into  Fortune's  Chair ; 
T  hroned  like  the  Queen  of  Pleasure  : 
H  er  virtues  still  possess  her  ear, 
A  nd  counsel  her  to  Measure  ! 

R  eason  (if  She  incarnate  were) 
E  ven  Reason's  self  could  never  bear 
G  reatness  with  Moderation  ! 
I    n  her,  one  temper  still  is  seen. 
N  o  liberty  claims  She  as  Queen ! 
A  nd  shows  no  alteration  ! 


122  HYMNS    OF  ASTR&A 

HYMN    XXVI. 

E  NVY,  go  weep  !     My  Muse  and  I 

L   augh  thee  to  scorn  !     Thy  feeble  eye 

I    s  dazzled  with  the  glory 

S   hining  in  this  gay  Poesy, 

A  nd  little  golden  Story  ! 

B  ehold,  how  my  proud  quill  doth  shed 

E  ternal  nectar  on  her  head  ! 

T  he  pomp  of  Coronation 

H  ath  not  such  power,  her  fame  to  spread, 

A  s  this  my  admiration  ! 

R  espect  my  pen,  as  free  and  frank ; 

E  xpecting  nor  reward,  nor  thank  ! 

G  reat  wonder  only  moves  it ! 

I    never  made  it  mercenary  ! 

N  or  should  my  Muse,  this  burden  carry 

A  s  hired ;  but  that  she  loves  it  1 


TSir  J.  Davies, 
Oct.  1599. 


FINIS. 


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SIX    IDILLIA, 

THAT  IS, 

SIX  SMALL,  OR  PETTY,  POEMS, 
OR  ECLOGUES, 

chosen  out  of  the  right  famous  Sicilian  Poet 

THEOCRITUS, 

And  translated  into  English  verse. 
Dum  defluat  amms. 


55i 


PRINTED 

At  Oxford  by  IOSEPH  BARNES. 
1588. 


E.  D, 

Libenter  hie,  et  omnis  exantlabitur 
Labor,  in  tuae  spem  gratiae. 
[HORACE,  Epodes  i.  23-24.] 


125 


SIX    I DI LLI A 

chosen  out  of  the  famous  Sicilian  Poet 

THEOCRITUS, 
and  translated  into  English  verse. 

THE    EIGHTH    I  D  I  L  L  I  O  N. 

Argument. 

MENALCAS  a  Shepherd  and  DAPHNIS  a  Neatherd,  two  Sicilian  Lads, 
contending  who  should  sing  best,  pawn  their  Whistles  ;  and  choose 
a  Goatherd  to  be  their  Judge  :  who  giveth  sentence  on  DAPHNIS 
his  side.  The  thing  is  imagined  to  be  done  in  the  Isle  of  Sicily,  by 
the  sea-shore.  Of  whose  singing,  this  Idillion  is  called  Bucoliasfa, 
that  is,  "  Singers  of  a  Neatherd's  Song." 

BUCOLIA  ST^E. 
DAPHNIS,  MENALCAS,  Goatherd. 


ITH  lovely  Neatherd  DAPHNIS  on  the  hills, 

they  say, 
Shepherd  MENALCAS  met  upon  a  summer's 

day: 
Both  youthful  striplings,  both  had  yellow 

heads  of  hair ; 
In  whistling  both,  and  both  in  singing 

skilful  were. 


126      THE  EIGHTH  IDYL  OF  THEOCRITUS. 
MENALCAS  first,  beholding  DAPHNIS,  thus  bespake : 

MENALCAS. 

"  Wilt  thou  in  singing,  Neatherd  DAPHNIS,  undertake 
To  strive  with  me  ?     For  I  affirm  that,  at  my  will, 
I  can  thee  pass !  "    Thus  DAPHNIS  answered  on  the  hill. 

DAPHNIS. 

"  Whistler  MENALCAS,  thou  shalt  never  me  excel 
In  singing,  though  to  death  with  singing  thou  should'st  swell ! " 

MENALCAS. 
"  Then  wilt  thou  see,  and  something  for  the  victor  wage  ? " 

DAPHNIS. 
"  I  will  both  see,  and  something  for  the  victor  gage  1 " 

MENALCAS. 
"  What  therefore  shall  we  pawn,  that  for  us  may  be  fit  ?  " 

DAPHNIS. 
"  I'll  pawn  a  calf ;  a  wennell  lamb  lay  thou  to  it ! " 

MENALCAS. 

"  I'll  pawn  no  lamb :  for  both  my  Sire  and  Mother  fell 
Are  very  hard ;  and  all  my  sheep  at  e'en  they  tell." 

DAPHNIS. 
"  What  then  ?     What  shall  he  gain  that  wins  the  victory  ?  " 


B  U  C  O  L  I  A  S  T  &.  127 

MENALCAS. 

"  A  gallant  Whistle  which  I  made  with  notes  thrice  three, 
Joined  with  white  wax,  both  e'en  below  and  e'en  above ; 
This  will  I  lay  !     My  father's  things  I  will  not  move  !  " 

DAPHNIS. 

"  And  I  a  Whistle  have  with  notes  thrice  three  a  row, 
Joined  with  white  wax,  both  e'en  below  and  e'en  above. 
I  lately  framed  it :  for  this  finger  yet  doth  ache 
With  pricking,  which  a  splinter  of  the  reed  did  make. 
But  who  shall  be  our  Judge,  and  give  us  audience  ?  " 

MENALCAS. 

"  What  if  we  call  this  Goatherd  here,  not  far  from  hence, 
Whose  dog  doth  bark  hard  by  the  kids  ?  "     The  lusty  boys 
Did  call  him,  and  the  Goatherd  came  to  hear  their  toys. 
The  lusty  boys  did  sing,  the  Goatherd  judgment  gave. 
MENALCAS  first,  by  lot,  unto  his  Whistle  brave, 
Did  sing  a  Neatherd's  Song ;  and  Neatherd  DAPHNIS  then 
Did  sing,  by  course :  but  first  MENALCAS  thus  began  : 

MENALCAS. 

"  Ye  Groves  and  Brooks  divine,  if  on  his  reed 
MENALCAS  ever  sang  a  pleasant  Lay ; 
Fat  me  these  lambs  !     If  DAPHNIS  here  will  feed 
His  calves,  let  him  have  pasture  too  I  pray !  " 

DAPHNIS. 

"  Ye  pleasant  Springs  and  Plants,  would  DAPHNIS  had 
As  sweet  a  voice  as  have  the  nightingales  ! 
Feed  me  this  herd  !  and  if  the  Shepherd's  lad 
MENALCAS  comes,  let  him  have  all  the  dales  !  " 


128      THE  EIGHTH  IDYL  OF  THEOCRITUS. 

MENALCAS. 

"  Tis  ever  Spring  ;  there  meads  are  ever  gay  ; 
There  strout  the  bags  ;  there  sheep  are  fatly  fed  , 
When  DAPHNE  comes !     Go  she  away ; 
Then  both  the  Shepherd  there,  and  grass  are  dead." 

DAPHNIS. 

"  There  both  the  ewes,  and  goats,  bring  forth  their  twins ; 
There  bees  do  fill  their  hives  ;  there  oaks  are  high  ; 
Where  MlLO  treads  !     When  he  away  begins 
To  go,  both  Neatherd  and  the  neat  wax  dry." 

MENALCAS. 

"  O  husband  of  the  goats  !     O  wood  so  high ! 
O  kids !  come  to  this  brook,  for  he  is  there ! 
Thou  with  the  broken  horns  tell  MlLO  shy, 
That  PROTEUS  kept  sea-calves,  though  god  he  were." 

DAPHNIS. 

"  Nor  PELOPS'  kingdom  may  I  crave,  nor  gold ; 
Nor  to  outrun  the  winds  upon  a  lea : 
But  in  this  cave  I'll  sing,  with  thee  in  hold, 
Both  looking  on  my  sheep,  and  on  the  sea." 

MENALCAS. 

"  A  tempest  marreth  trees ;  and  drought,  a  spring : 
Snares  unto  fowls,  to  beasts  nets,  are  a  smart ; 
Love  spoils  a  man.     O  JOVE,  alone  his  sting 
I  have  not  felt ;  for  thou  a  lover  art ! " 

Thus  sang  these  boys,  by  course,  with  voices  strong ; 
MENALCAS  then  began  a  latter  song : 


BUCOLIASTM. 


MENALCAS. 


129 


"  Wolf,  spare  my  kids  !  and  spare  my  fruitful  sheep  ! 
And  hurt  me  not !  though  but  a  lad,  these  flocks  I  guide. 
Lampur  my  dog,  art  thou  indeed  so  sound  asleep  ? 
Thou  should'st  not  sleep  while  thou  art  by  thy  master's  side  ! 
My  sheep,  fear  not  to  eat  the  tender  grass  at  will ! 
Nor  when  it  springeth  up  again,  see  that  you  fail ! 
Go  to,  and  feed  apace,  and  all  your  bellies  fill ! 
That  part  your  lambs  may  have  ;  and  part,  my  milking  pail." 

Then  DAPHNIS  in  his  turn  sweetly  began  to  sing : 

DAPHNIS. 

"  And  me,  not  long  ago,  fair  DAPHNE  whistly  eyed 
As  I  drove  by ;  and  said,  1  was  a  paragon  : 
Nor  then  indeed  to  her  I  churlishly  replied ; 
But,  looking  on  the  ground,  my  way  still  held  I  on. 
Sweet  is  a  cow-calf s  voice,  and  sweet  her  breath  doth  smell ; 
A  bull  calf,  and  a  cow,  do  low  full  pleasantly. 
'Tis  sweet  in  summer  by  a  spring  abroad  to  dwell ! 
Acorns  become  the  oak  ;  apples,  the  apple-tree  ; 
And  calves,  the  kine  ;  and  kine,  the  Neatherd  much  set  out." 


Thus  sung  these  youths, 
doubt : 


The  Goatherd  thus  did  end  the 


Goatherd. 

"  O  DAPHNIS,  what  a  dulcet  mouth  and  voice  thou  hast ! 
Tis  sweeter  thee  to  hear  than  honey-combs  to  taste ! 
Take  thee  these  Pipes,  for  thou  in  singing  dost  excel ! 
If  me,  a  Goatherd,  thou  wilt  teach  to  sing  so  well ; 
This  broken-horned  goat,  on  thee  bestow  I  will ! 
Which  to  the  very  brim,  the  pail  doth  ever  fill." 

i  10 


130     THE  EIGHTH  IDYL  OF  THEOCRITUS. 

So  then  was  DAPHNIS  glad,  and  lept  and  clapt  his  hands  ; 
And  danced  as  doth  a  fawn,  when  by  the  dam  he  stands. 
MENALCAS  grieved,  the  thing  his  mind  did  much  dismay : 
And  sad  as  Bride  he  was,  upon  the  marriage  day. 


Since  then  among  the  Shepherds,  DAPHNIS  chief  v/as  had! 
And  took  a  Nymph  to  wife  when  he  was  but  a  lad. 


, 


DAPHNIS  his  Emblem. 
Me  tamen  urit  Amor. 

MENALCAS  his  Emblem. 
At  h<zc  DAPHNE  forsan  probet, 

Goatherd's  Emblem. 
Est  minor  nemo  nisi  comparatut 


THE     ELEVENTH     IDILLION. 


Argument. 

THEOCRITUS  wrote  this  Idillion  to  NICIAS  a  learned  Physician : 
wherein  he  sheweth — by  the  example  of  POLYPHEMUS  a  giant  in 
Sicily,  of  the  race  of  the  CYCLOPS,  who  loved  the  Water  Nymph 
GALATEA — that  there  is  no  medicine  so  sovereign  against  Love  as 
is  Poetry.  Of  whose  Love  Song,  as  this  Idillion,  is  termed 
CYCLOPS  ;  so  he  was  called  CYCLOPS,  because  he  had  but  one  eye, 
that  stood  like  a  circle  in  the  midst  of  his  forehead. 


CYCLOPS. 

NlCIAS,  there  is  no  other  remedy  for  Love, 
With  ointing,  or  with  sprinkling  on,  that  ever  I 

could  prove, 
Beside  the  Muses  nine  !     This  pleasant  medicine 

of  the  mind 

Grows  among  men ;  and  seems  but  light,  yet  very  hard  to  find  : 
As  well  I  wote  you  know  ;  who  are  in  physic  such  a  Leech, 
And  of  the  Muses  so  beloved.     The  cause  of  this  my  speech 
A  CYCLOPS  is,  who  lived  here  with  us  right  wealthily ; 
That  ancient  POLYPHEM,  when  first  he  loved  GALATE 
(When,  with  a  bristled  beard,  his  chin  and  cheeks  first  clothed 

were)  : 

He  loved  her  not  with  roses,  apples,  or  with  curled  hair  ; 
But  with  the  Furies'  rage.     All  other  things  he  little  plied. 
Full  often  to  their  fold,  from  pastures  green,  without  a  guide, 
His  sheep  returned  home  :  when  all  the  while  he  singing  lay 
In  honour  of  his  Love,  and  on  the  shore  consumed  away 
From  morning  until  night ;  sick  of  the  wound,  fast  by  the  heart, 
Which  mighty  VENUS  gave,  and  in  his  liver  stuck  the  dart. 


132       THE  ELEVENTH  IDYL  OF  THEOCRITUS. 

For  which,  this  remedy  he  found,  that  sitting  oftentimes 
Upon  a  rock  and  looking  on  the  sea,  he  sang  these  rhymes 


"  O  GALATEA  fair,  why  dost  thou  shun  thy  lover  true  ? 
More  tender  than  a  lamb,  more  white  than  cheese  when  it  is 

new, 

More  wanton  than  a  calf,  more  sharp  than  grapes  unripe,  I  find. 
You  use  to  come  when  pleasant  sleep,  my  senses  all  do  bind  : 
But  you  are  gone  again  when  pleasant  sleep  doth  leave  mine 

eye; 
And  as  a  sheep  you  run,  that  on  the  plain  a  wolf  doth  spy. 

"  I  then  began  to  love  thee,  GAL  ATE,  when  first  of  all 
You,  with  my  mother,  came  to  gather  leaves  of  crowtoe 

\]iyacint}{\  small 

Upon  our  hill ;  when  I,  as  Usher,  squired  you  all  the  way. 
Nor  when  I  saw  thee  first,  nor  afterwards,  nor  at  this  day, 
Since  then  could  I  refrain  :  but  you,  by  Jove !  nought  set 

thereby ! 

"  But  well  I  know,  fair  Nymph,  the  very  cause  why  thus 

you  fly. 

Because  upon  my  front,  one  only  brow,  with  bristles  strong 
From  one  ear  to  the  other  ear  is  stretched  all  along  : 
'Neath  which,  one  eye ;  and  on  my  lips,  a  hugy  nose,  there 

stands. 

Yet  I,  this  such  a  one,  a  thousand  sheep  feed  on  these  lands  ; 
And  pleasant  milk  I  drink,  which  from  the  strouting  bags  is 

presst. 

Nor  want  I  cheese  in  summer,  nor  in  autumn  of  the  best, 
Nor  yet  in  winter  time.     My  cheese  racks  ever  laden  are ; 
And  better  can  I  pipe  than  any  CYCLOPS  may  compare. 
O  apple  sweet !  of  thee,  and  of  myself  1  use  to  sing, 
And  that  at  midnight  oft.      For  thee  !    eleven  fawns  up  I 

bring, 


CYCLOPS.  133 

All  great  with  young  :  and  four  bears'  whelps,  I  nourish  up 

forthee! 

But  come  thou  hither  first,  and  thou  shalt  have  them  all  of  me. 
And  let  the  bluish  coloured  sea  beat  on  the  shore  so  nigh, 
The  nightwith  me  in  cave, thou  shalt  consume  more  pleasantly ! 
There  are  the  shady  bays,  and  there  tall  cypress  trees  do 

sprout : 

And  there  is  ivy  black,  and  fertile  vines  are  all  about. 
Cool  water  there  I  have,  distilled  of  the  whitest  snow, 
A  drink  divine,  which  out  of  woody  Etna  mount  doth  flow. 
In  these  respects,  who  in  the  sea  and  waves  would  rather  be  ? 

"  But  if  I  seem  as  yet  too  rough  and  savage  unto  thee, 
Great  store  of  oaken  wood  I  have,  and  never-quenched  fire  ; 
And  I  can  well  endure  my  soul  to  burn  with  thy  desire, 
With  this  my  only  eye,  than  which  I  nothing  think  more 

trim : 

Now  woe  is  me,  my  mother  bore  me  not  with  fins  to  swim  ! 
That  I  might  dive  to  thee  ;  that  I  thy  dainty  hand  might  kiss, 
If  lips  thou  wouldst  not  let.     Then  would  I  lilies  bring  iwis, 
And  tender  poppy-toe  that  bears  a  top  like  rattles  red  , 
And  these  in  summer  time  :  but  others  are  in  winter  bred, 
So  that  I  cannot  bring  them  all  at  once.     Now  certainly 
I'll  learn  to  swim  of  some  or  other  stranger  passing  by, 
That  I  may  know  what  pleasure  'tis  in  waters  deep  to  dwell. 

"  Come  forth,  fair  GALATE !  and  once  got  out,  forget  thee  well 
(As  I  do,  sitting  on  this  rock)  home  to  return  again  ! 
But  feed  my  sheep  with  me,  and  for  to  milk  them  take  the 

pain  ! 
And  cheese  to  press,  and  in  the  milk  the  rennet  sharp  to 

strain  ! 

My  mother  only  wrongeth  me  ;  and  her  I  blame,  for  she 
Spake  never  yet  to  thee  one  good,  or  lovely,  word  of  me  : 
And  that,  although  she  daily  sees  how  I  away  do  pine. 
But  I  will  say,  'My  head  and  feet  do  ache/  that  she  may 

whine, 


134   THE  ELEVENTH  IDYL  OF  THEOCRITUS. 

And  sorrow  at  the  heart:    because   my  heart  with  grie 
swoll'n. 

"  O  CYCLOPS,  CYCLOPS!  whither  is  thy  wit  and  reason  flown? 
If  thou  would'st  baskets  make  ;  and  cut  down  brouzing  from 

the  tree, 

And  bring  it  to  thy  lambs,  a  great  deal  wiser  thou  should'st  be  ! 
Go,  coy  some  present  Nymph  !     Why  dost  thou  follow  flying 

wind  ? 

Perhaps  another  GALATE,  and  fairer,  thou  shalt  find  ! 
For  many  Maidens  in  the  evening  tide  with  me  will  play,    ^ 
And  all  do  sweetly  laugh,  when  I  stand  heark'ning  what  J 

they  say  : 
And  I  somebody  seem,  and  in  the  earth  do  bear  a  sway."     I 

Thus  POLYPHEMUS  singing,  fed  his  raging  love  of  old  ; 
Wherein  he  sweeter  did,  than  had  he  sent  her  sums  of  gold. 


POLYPHEM'S  Emblem. 
Ubi  Dictamum  inveniam  r 


THE     SIXTEENTH     IDILLION. 


Argument. 

The  style  of  this  Poem  is  more  lofty  than  any  of  the  rest,  and 
THEOCRITUS  wrote  it  to  HIERO,  King  of  Syracuse  in  Sicily. 
Wherein  he  reproveth  the  nigardise  of  Princes  and  Great  Men 
towards  the  Learned,  and  namely  [especially]  Poets  :  in  whose 
power  it  is  to  make  men  famous  to  all  posterity.  Towards  the 
end,  he  praiseth  HlERO  ;  and  prayeth  that  Sicily  may  be 
delivered  by  his  prowess  from  the  invasions  of  the  Carthaginians. 
This  Idillion  is  named  HIERO  in  respect  of  the  person  to  whom  it 
was  written  ;  or  Charites,  that  is,  "  Graces,"  in  respect  of  the  matter 
whereof  it  treateth. 


CHARITES,    or    HIERO. 

| GETS  have  still  this  care,  and  still  the  Muses  have 

this  care  ; 
To  magnify  the  gods  with  Songs,  and  men  that 

worthy  are. 
The  Muses  they  are  goddesses,  and  gods  with  praise  they 

crown  ; 
But  we  are  mortal  men,  and  mortal  men  let  us  renown ! 

But  who,  of  all  the  men  under  the  cope  of  heaven  that  dwell, 
By  opening  of  his  doors,  our  Graces  entertains  so  well 
That  unrewarded  quite  he  doth  not  send  them  back  again  ? 
They  in  a  chafe,  all  barefoot,  home  to  me  return  with  pain  : 
And  me  they  greatly  blame,  and  that  they  went  for  nought 

they  grudge  ; 

And  all  too  weary,  in  the  bottom  of  an  empty  hutch, 
Laying  their  heads  upon  their  knees  full  cold,  they  still  remain : 
Where  they  do  poorly  dwell,  because  they  home  returned  in 
vain. 


136      THE  SIXTEENTH  IDYL  OF  THEOCRITUS. 

Of  all  that  living  are,  who  loves  a  man  that  speaketh  well  ? 
I  know  not  one.  For  now  a  days  for  deeds  that  do  excel 
Men  care  not  to  be  praised  :  but  all  are  overcome  with  gain.  ^ 
For  every  man  looks  round,  with  hand  in  bosom,  whence 

amain 
Coin  he  may  get :  whose  rust  rubbed  off,  he  will  not  give 

again. 
But  straightway  thus  he  says,  "  The  leg  is  further  than  the 

knee, 

Let  me  have  gold  enough  ;  the  gods  to  Poets  pay  their  fee ! " 
Who  would  another  hear,  "  Enough  for  all,  one  HOMER  is ; 
Of  poets  he  is  Prince  :  yet  gets  he  nought  of  me  iwis  !  " 

Madmen,   what  gain  is  this,  to  hoard    up  bags   of  gold 

within? 

This  is  not  money's  use,  nor  hath  to  wise  men  ever  been  ! 
But  part  is  due  unto  ourselves,  part  to  the  Poet's  pen  ; 
And  many  kinsfolk  must  be  pleasured,  and  many  men : 
And  often  to  the  gods  thou  must  do  solemn  sacrifice. 
Nor  must  thou  keep  a  sparing  house  :  but  when,  in  friendly 

wise, 
Thou  hast  received  strangers  at  thy  board  ;  when  they  will 

thence, 

Let  them  depart !  But  chiefly  Poets  must  thou  reverence  ! 
That  after  thou  art  hidden  in  thy  grave,  thou  mayest  hear 

well! 
Nor  basely  mayest  thou  mourn  when  thou  in  Acheron  dost 

dwell ! 
Like  to  some  ditcher  vile,  whose  hands  with  work  are  hard 

and  dry  ; 
Who  from  his  parents  poor,  bewails  his  life  in  beggary. 

In  King  ANTIOCHUS  his  Court,  and  King  ALEVAS'  too 
To  distribute  the  monthly  bread  a  many  had  to  do. 
The  Scopedans  had  many  droves  of  calves,  which  in  their 
stalls 


C  H  A  R  1  T  E  S     Or     H  1  E  R  O.  137 

'Mong  oxen  lowed;    and  shepherds  kept,  in  the  Cranonian 

dales, 
Infinite  flocks  to  bear  the  hospital  [hospitable]  CREONDANV 

charge. 

No  pleasure  should  these  men  enjoy  of  their  expenses  large, 
When  once  their  souls  they  had  embarked  in  the  Infernal 

Barge  ; 

But  leaving  all  this  wealth  behind,  in  wretched  misery 
Among  the  dead,  without  renown,  for  ever  they  should  lie  : 
Had  not  SlMONIDES  the  Chian  Poet,  with  his  pen 
And  with  his  lute  of  many  strings  so  famous  made  these  men 
To  all  posterity.     The  very  horses  were  renowned  ; 
Which,  from  their  races  swift  returned,  with  olive  garlands 

crowned. 
Whoever  should  have  known  the  Lycian  Princes  and  their 

race, 
Or  them  of  Troy,  of  ClGNUS  [Cronus]  with  his  woman's 

coloured  face  : 
Had  not  the  Poets  sung  the  famous  Wars  of  them  of  old  ? 

Nor  yet  ULYSSES  (who,  for  ten  years  space  on  seas  was  rolled, 
By  sundry  sorts  of  men  ;  and  who  at  last  went  down  to  Hell 
As  yet  alive  ;  and  from  the  CYCLOPS'  den  escaped  well) 
Had  got  such  lasting  fame :    and   drowned   should   lie  in 

silence  deep 

Swineherd  EUM^EUS,  and  PHIL^ETUS  who  had  to  keep 
A  herd  of  neat ;  LAERTES  eke  himself  had  been  unknown — 
If  far  and  wide  their  names,  great  HOMER'S  verses  had  not 

blown. 

Immortal  fame  to  mortal  men,  the  Muses  nine  do  give  : 
But  dead  men's  wealth  is  spent  and  quite  consumed  of  them 

that  live. 

But  all  one  pain[s]  it  is,  to  number  waves  upon  the  banks, 
Whereof  great  store,  the  wind  from  sea  doth  blow  to  land  in 

ranks  ; 
Or  for  to  wash  a  brick  with  water  clear  till  it  be  white : 


138      THE  SIXTEENTH  IDYL  OF  THEOCRITUS. 

As  for  to  move  a  man  whom  avarice  doth  once  delight. 
Therefore  "  Adieu  ! "  to  such  a  one  for  me  !  and  let  him  have 
Huge  silver  heaps  at  will,and  more  and  more  still  let  him  crave! 
But  I,  Goodwill  of  Men,  and  Honour,  will  prefer  before 
A  many  mules  of  price,  or  many  horses  kept  in  store. 
Therefore  I  ask,  To  whom  shall  I  be  welcome  with  my  train 
Of  Muses  nine?  whose  ways  are  hard,  if  JOVE  guides  not  the 
rein. 

The  heavens  yet  have  not  left  to  roll  both  months  and  years 

on  reels  ; 

And  many  horses  yet  shall  turn  about  the  Chariot's  wheels : 
The  man  shall  rise  that  shall  have  need  of  me  to  set  him  out ; 
Doing  such  deeds  of  arms  as  AjAX,  or  ACHILLES  stout, 
Did  in  the  field  of  Simois,  where  ILUS*  bones  do  rest. 
And  now  the  Carthaginians,  inhabiting  the  West, 
Who  in  the  utmost  end  of  Liby'  dwell,  in  arms  are  prest : 
And  now  the  Syracuseans  their  spears  do  carry  in  rhe  rest ; 
Whose  left  arms  laden  are  with  targets  made  of  willow  tree. 
'Mongst  whom  King  HlERO,the  ancient  Worthies'  match,  I  see 
In  armour  shine ;  whose  plume  doth  overshade  his  helmet 

bright. 

O  JUPITER,  and  thou  MINERVA  fierce  in  fight, 
And  thou  PROSERPINA  (who,  with  thy  mother,  has  renown 
By  Lysimelia  streams,  in  Ephyra  that  wealthy  town), 
Out  of  our  island  drive  our  enemies,  our  bitter  fate, 
Along  the  Sardine  sea !  that  death  of  friends  they  may  relate 
Unto  their  children  and  their  wives!   and  that  the  towns 

opprest 

By  enemies,  of  th'old  inhabitants  may  be  possesst ! 
That  they  may  till  the  fields  !   and  sheep  upon  the  downs 

may  bleat 

By  thousands  infinite,  and  fat !  and  that  the  herds  of  neat 
As  to  their  stalls  they  go,  may  press  the  ling'ring  traveller ! 
Let  grounds  be  broken  up  for  seed,  what  time  the  grasshopper 


CHARITES    or    H  i  E  R  o. 


139 


Watching  the   shepherds   by  their  flocks,  in  boughs  close 

singing  lies  ! 

And  let  the  spiders  spread  their  slender  webs  in  armories  ; 
So  that  of  War,  the  very  name  may  not  be  heard  again  ! 

But  let  the  Poets  strive,  King  HIERO'S  glory  for  to  strain 
Beyond  the  Scythean  sea  ;  and  far  beyond  those  places  where 
SEMIRAMIS  did  build  those  stately  walls,  and  rule  did  bear. 
'Mongst  whom,  I  will  be  one :  for  many  other  men  beside, 
JOVE'S  daughters  love  ;  whose  study  still  shall  be,  both  far 

and  wide, 

Sicilian  Arethusa,  with  the  people,  to  advance  ; 
And  warlike  HlERO.  Ye  Graces!  (who  keep  resiance  [residence] 
In  the  Thessalian  Mount  Orchomenus  ;  to  Thebes  of  old 
So  hateful,  though  of  you  beloved)  to  stay  I  will  be  bold, 
Where  I  am  bid  to  come  :  and  I  with  them  will  still  remain, 
That  shall  invite  me  to  their  house,  with  all  my  Muses'  train. 
Nor  you,  will  I  forsake  !     For  what  to  men  can  lovely  be 
Without  your  company  ?     The  Graces  always  be  with  me  ! 


Emblem. 
Si  nihil  attuleris,  ibis  HOMER  E  for  as. 


140 


THE     EIGHTEENTH     IDILLION. 


Argument. 


Twelve  noble  Spartan  Virgins  are  brought  in  singing,  in  the  evening,  at 
the  chamber  door  of  MENELAUS  and  HELENA  on  their  Wedding 
Day.  And  first  they  prettily  jest  with  the  Bridegroom,  then  they 
praise  HELENA,  last  they  wish  them  both  joy  of  their  marriage. 
Therefore  this  Idillion  is  entitled  HELEN'S  Epithalamion  that  is 
"  HELEN'S  Wedding  Song." 


HELEN'S  Epithalamion. 

IN  Sparta,  long  ago,  where  MENELAUS  wore  the 

crown, 
Twelve  noble  Virgins,  daughters  to  the  greatest  in 

the  town, 
All   dight   upon   their  hair  in  crowtoe  [hyacinth]  garlands 

fresh  and  green, 

Danced  at  the  chamber  door  of  HELENA  the  Queen  : 
What  time  this  MENELAUS,  the  younger  son  of  ATREUS, 
Did  marry  with  this  lovely  daughter  of  Prince  TYNDARUS  ; 
And  therewithal,  at  eve,  a  Wedding  Song  they  jointly  sang, 
With  such  a  shuffling  of  their  feet  that  all  the  palace  rang. 

"  Fair  Bridegroom,  do  you  sleep  ?  Hath  slumber  all  your^ 

limbs  possesst? 

What,  are  you  drowsy  ?  or  hath  wine  your  body  so  oppresst 
That  you  are  gone  to  bed  ?    For  if  you  needs  would  take 

your  rest, 

You  should  have  ta'en  a  season  meet.  Mean  time,  till  it  be  day 
Suffer  the  Bride  with  us,  and  with  her  mother  dear,  to  play ! 
For,  MENELAUS,  She,  at  evening  and  at  morning  tide. 


HELENAS     Epithalamion.        141 
From  day  to  day,  and  year  to  year,  shall  be  thy  loving  Bride. 

"  O  happy  Bridegroom,  sure  some  honest  man  did  sneeze 

to  thee, 

When  thou  to  Sparta  came,  to  meet  with  such  a  one  as  She  ! 
Among  the  demi-gods  thou  only  art  accounted  meet 
To  be  the  Son-in-law  to  JOVE  !  for  underneath  one  sheet 
His  daughter  lies  with  thee !  Of  all  that  tread  on  ground  with 

feet 
There  is  not  such  a  one  in  Greece !   Now  sure  some  goodly 

thing 
She  will  thee  bear ;  if  it  be  like  the  mother  that  she  bring. 

For  we,  her  peers  in  age,  whose  course  of  life  is  e'en  the  same; 
Who,  at  Eurotas'  streams,  like  men,  are  oiled  to  the  game : 
And   four   times   sixty   Maids,   of  all    the    women    youth 

we  are ; 

Of  these  none  wants  a  fault,  if  her  with  HELEN  we  compare. 
Like  as  the  rising  morn  shews  a  grateful  lightening, 
When  sacred  night  is  past ;  and  Winter  now  lets  loose  the 

Spring : 

So  glittering  HELEN  shined  among  her  Maids,  lusty  and  tall. 
As  is  the  furrow  in  a  field  that  far  outstretcheth  all ; 
Or  in  a  garden  is  a  cypress  tree ;  or  in  a  trace, 
A  steed  of  Thessaly ;  so  She  to  Sparta  was  a  grace. 
No  damsel  with  such  works  as  She,  her  baskets  used  to  fill ; 
Nor  in  a  divers  coloured  web,  a  woof  of  greater  skill 
Doth  cut  off  from  the  loom  ;  nor  any  hath  such  Songs  and 

Lays 

Unto  her  dainty  harp,  in  DIAN'S  and  MINERVA'S  praise, 
As  HELEN  hath :  in  whose  bright  eyes  all  Loves  and  Graces 

be. 

"  O  fair,  O  lovely  Maid  !  a  Matron  is  now  made  of  thee ! 
But  we  will,  every  Spring,  unto  the  leaves  in  meadow  go 
To  gather  garlands  sweet ;  and  there,  not  with  a  little  woe, 


142     THE  EIGHTEENTH  IDYL  OF  THEOCRITUS. 


Will  often  think  of  thee,  O  HELEN  !  as  the  suckling  lambs 
Desire  the  strouting  bags  and  presence  of  their  tender  dams. 
We  all  betimes  for  thee,  a  wreath  of  melitoe  will  knit ; 
And  on  a  shady  plane  for  thee  will  safely  fasten  it. 
And  all  betimes  for  thee,  under  a  shady  plane  below, 
Out  of  a  silver  box  the  sweetest  ointment  will  bestow. 
And  letters  shall  be  written  in  the  bark  that  men  may  see, 
And  read,  DO  HUMBLE  REVERENCE,  FOR  I   AM 
HELEN'S  TREE ! 

"  Sweet  Bride,  good  night !  and  thou,  O  happy  Bridegroom, 

now  good  night ! 

LATONA  send  your  happy  issue !  who  is  most  of  might 
In  helping  youth  ;  and  blissful  VENUS  send  you  equal  love 
Betwixt  you  both  !  and  JOVE  give  lasting  riches  from  above, 
Which  from  your  noble  selves,  unto  your  noble  imps  may 

fall ! 

Sleep  on,  and  breathe  into  your  breasts  desires  mutual ! 
But  in  the  morning,  wake  !  Forget  it  not  in  any  wise ! 
And  we  will  then  return ;  as  soon  as  any  one  shall  rise 
And  in  the  chamber  stir,  and  first  of  all  lift  up  the  head ! 
HYMEN  !  O  HYMEN  !  now  be  gladsome  at  this  marriage 

bed!" 

Emblem. 
Usque  adeo  latet  utilitas. 


THE    TWENTY-FIRST     I  D  I  L  L  I  O  N. 

Argument. 

A  Neatherd  is  brought  chafing  that  EUNICA,  a  Maid  of  the  city,  dis- 
dained to  kiss  him.  Whereby  it  is  thought  that  THEOCRITUS 
seemeth  to  check  them  that  think  this  kind  of  writing  in  Poetry 
to  be  too  base  and  rustical.  And  therefore  this  Poem  is  termed 
Neatherd. 

NBA  THERD. 

|UNICA  scorned  me,  when  her  I  would  have  sweetly 

kist 
And  railing  at  me  said,  "  Go  with  a  mischief, 

where  thou  list ! 
Thinkest  thou,  a  wretched  Neatherd,  me  to  kiss  !  I  have  no  will 
After  the  country  guise  to  smouch  !     Of  city  lips  I  skill ! 
My  lovely  mouth,  so  much  as  in  thy  dream,  thou  shalt  not 

touch ! 
How  dost  thou  look  !    How  dost  thou  talk  !    How  play'st 

thou  the  slouch ! 
How  daintily  thou  speak'st !    What   Courting  words  thou 

bringest  out ! 
How  soft  a  beard  thou  hast !  How  fair  thy  locks  hang  round 

about ! 

Thy  lips  are  like  a  sick  man's  lips !  thy  hands,  so  black  they  be  ! 
And  rankly  thou  dost  smell !  Away,  lest  thou  defilest  me ! " 

Having  thus  said,she  spattered  on  her  bosom  twiceor  thrice; 
And,  still  beholding  me  from  top  to  toe  in  scornful  wise, 
She  muttered  with  her  lips ;  and  with  her  eyes  she  looked  aside, 
And  of  her  beauty  wondrous  coy  she  was  ;  her  mouth  she 

wryed, 
And  proudly  mocked  me  to  my  face.     My  blood  boiled  in 

each  vein, 

And  red  I  wox  for  grief  as  doth  the  rose  with  dewy  rain. 
Thus  leaving  me,  away  she  flang  !    Since  when,  it  vexeth  me 
That  I  should  be  so  scorned  of  such  a  filthy  drab  as  She. 


144    THE  TWENTY-FIRST  IDYL  OF  THEOCRITUS. 

"  Ye  shepherds,  tell  me  true,  am  not  I  as  fair  as  any  swan  ? 
Hath  of  a  sudden  any  god  made  me  another  man  ? 
For  well  I  wot,  before  a  comely  grace  in  me  did  shine, 
Like  ivy  round  about  a  tree,  and  decked  this  beard  of  mine. 
My  crisped  locks,  like  parsley,  on  my  temples  wont  to  spread  ; 
And  on  my  eyebrows  black  a  milk  white  forehead  glistered  : 
More  seemly  were  mine  eyes  than  are  MINERVA'S  eyes,  I  know. 
My  mouth  for  sweetness  passed  cheese  ;  and  from  my  mouth 

did  flow 

A  voice  more  sweet  than  honeycombs.  Sweet  is  my  Roundelay 
When  on  the  whistle,  flute,  or  pipe,  or  cornet  1  do  play. 
And  all  the  women  on  our  hills  do  say  that  I  am  fair, 
And  all  do  love  me  well :  but  these  that  breathe  the  city  air 
Did  never  love  me  yet.    And  why  ?    The  cause  is  this  I  know. 
That  I  a  Neatherd  am.     They  hear  not  how  in  vales  below, 
Fair  BACCHUS  kept  a  herd  of  beasts.     Nor  can  these  nice 

ones  tell 

How  VENUS,  raving  for  a  Neatherd's  love,  with  him  did  dwell 
Upon  the  hills  of  Phrygia  ;  and  how  she  loved  again 
ADONIS  in  the  woods,  and  mourned  in  woods  when  he  was 

slain. 
Who  was  ENDYMION  ?    Was  he  not  a  Neatherd  ?    Yet  the 

Moon 
Did  love  this  Neatherd  so,  that,  from  the  heavens  descending 

soon, 

She  came  to  Latmos  grove  where  with  the  dainty  lad  she  lay. 
And  RHEA,  thou  a  Neatherd  dost  bewail !  and  thou,  all  day, 
O  mighty  JUPITER  !  but  for  a  shepherd's  boy  didst  stray  ! 
EUNICA  only,  deigned  not  a  Neatherd  for  to  love  : 
Better,  forsooth,  than  CYBEL,  VENUS,  or  the  Moon  above  ! 
And  VENUS,  thou  hereafter  must  not  love  thy  fair  ADONE 
In  city,  nor  on  hill !  but  all  the  night  must  sleep  alone  ! " 

Emblem. 
Habitanmt  Dii  quoque  sylvas. 


145 


THE    THIRTY-FIRST    I  D  I  L  L  I  O  N. 


Argument. 

The  conceit  of  this  Idillion  is  very  delicate.  Wherein  it  is  imagined 
how  VENUS  did  send  for  the  Boar  who  in  hunting  slew  ADONIS,  a 
dainty  youth  whom  she  loved  :  and  how  the  Boar  answering  for 
himself  that  he  slew  him  against  his  will,  as  being  enamoured  on 
him,  and  thinking  only  to  kiss  his  naked  thigh  ;  she  forgave  him. 
The  Poet's  drift  is  to  shew  the  power  of  Love,  not  only  in  men,  but 
also  in  brute  beasts  :  although  in  the  last  two  verses,  by  the  burning 
of  the  Boar's  amorous  teeth,  he  intimateth  that  extravagant  and 
unorderly  passions  are  to  be  restrained  by  reason. 


ADONIS. 

HEN  VENUS  first  did  see 

ADONIS  dead  to  be  ; 

With  woeful  tattered  hair 

And  cheeks  so  wan  and  sear, 
The  winged  Loves  she  bade, 
The  Boar  should  straight  be  had. 
Forthwith  like  birds  they  fly, 
And  through  the  wood  they  hie ; 
The  woeful  beast  they  find, 
And  him  with  cords  they  bind. 
One  with  a  rope  before 
Doth  lead  the  captive  Boar : 
Another  on  his  back 
Doth  make  his  bow  to  crack. 
The  beast  went  wretchedly, 
For  VENUS  horribly 
He  feared  ;  who  thus  him  curst : 

"  Of  all  the  beasts  the  worst, 
Didst  thou  this  thigh  so  wound  ? 
Didst  thou  my  Love  confound  ?  '* 

K  10 


146      THE  THIRTY-FIRST  IDYL  OF  THEOCRITUS. 

The  beast  thus  spake  in  fear 
"VENUS,  to  thee  I  swear  ! 
By  thee,  and  husband  thine, 
And  by  these  bands  of  mine, 
And  by  these  hunters  all, 
Thy  husband  fair  and  tall, 
I  minded  not  to  kill ! 
But,  as  an  image  still, 
I  him  beheld  for  love : 
Which  made  me  forward  shove 
His  thigh,  that  naked  was  ; 
Thinking  to  kiss,  alas, 
And  that  hath  hurt  me  thus. 

"  Wherefore  these  teeth,  VENUS  ! 
Or  punish,  or  cut  out : 
Why  bear  I  in  my  snout 
These  needless  teeth  about ! 
If  these  may  not  suffice  ; 
Cut  off  my  chaps  likewise  ! " 

To  ruth  he  VENUS  moves, 
And  she  commands  the  Loves; 
His  bands  for  to  untie. 

After  he  came  not  nigh 
The  wood  ;  but  at  her  will 
He  followed  VENUS  still. 
And  coming  to  the  fire, 
He  burnt  up  his  desire. 

Emblem. 

Raris  forma  virz's,  secula  prospice 
Impunita  fuit. 

FINIS. 


The  Affectionate 

Shepheard. 

Containing  the  Complaint  of  Daphnis  for 
the  loue  of  Ganymede. 

Amor  plus  mellis,  quamfellis,  est. 


LONDON, 

Printed  by  lohn  Danter  for  T.  G.  and  E.  N 

and  are  to  bee  fold  in  Saint  Dunftones 

Church -y card  in  Fleetftreet, 

1594- 


149 


•» 

To   the   Right  Excellent 

and  most  beautifull  Lady,  the  Ladie 
PENELOPE    RITCH. 

Ay  re  louely  Ladie,  whose  Angelique  eyes 
Are  Vestall  Candles  of  sweet  Beauties  Treasure, 
Whose  speech  is  able  to  inchaunt  the  wise, 
Conuertingloyto  Paine,  and  Paine  to  Pleasure-, 
Accept  this  simple  Toy  of  my  Soules  Dutie, 
Which  I  present  vnto  thy  matchles  Beautie. 

And  albeit  the  gift  be  all  too  meane, 
Too  meane  an  Off  ring  for  thine  luorie  Shrine  \ 
Yet  imist  thy  Beautie  my  iust  blame  susteaney 
Since  it  is  mortall,  but  thy  selfe  diuine. 
Then  (Noble  Ladie)  take  in  gentle  worth, 
This  new- borne  Babe  which  here  my  Muse  brings  forth. 

Your  Honours  most  affectionate 

and  perpetually  deuoted  Shepheard  : 

DAPHNIS  . 


The  Teares   of  an 

affectionate  Shepheard  sicke 

for  Loue. 

o  R 

The  Complaint  of  Dap/mis  for  the  Loue 
of  Ganimede. 


Carce  had  the  morning  Starre  hid  from  the 
light  [spangled, 

Heauens  crimson  Canopie  with  stars  be- 
But  I  began  to  rue  th'vnhappy  sight 
Of  that   faire  Boy  that  had  my  hart  in- 
tangled  ; 
Cursing     the      Time,     the     Place,     the 

sense,  the  sin ; 
I  came,  I  saw,  I  viewd,  I  slipped  in. 


If  it  be  sinne  to  loue  a  sweet-fac'd  Boy, 
(Whose  amber  locks  trust  vp  in  golden  tramels 
Dangle  adowne  his  louely  cheekes  with  ioy, 
When  pearle  and  flowers  his  faire  haire  enamels) 

If  it  be  sinne  to  loue  a  louely  Lad ; 

Oh  then  sinne  I,  for  whom  my  soule  is  sad. 

His  luory-white  and  Alabaster  skin 
Is  staind  throughout  with  rare  Vermillion  red, 
Whose  twinckling  starrie  lights  do  neuer  blin 
To  shine  on  louely  Venus  (Beauties  bed  :) 
But  as  the  Lillie  and  the  blushing  Rose, 
So  white  and  red  on  him  in  order  growes. 


152          THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD. 

Vpon  a  time  the  Nymphs  bestird  them-selues 
To  trie  who  could  his  beautie  soonest  win : 
But  he  accounted  them  but  all  as  Elues, 
Except  it  were  the  faire  Queene  Gwendolen, 
Her  he  embrac'd,  of  her  was  beloued, 
With  plaints  he  proued,  and  with  teares  he  moued. 

But  her  an  Old-Man  had  beene  sutor  too, 

That  in  his  age  began  to  doate  againe ; 

Her  would  he  often  pray,  and  often  woo, 

When  through  old-age  enfeebled  was  his  Braine  : 
But  she  before  had  lou'd  a  lustie  youth 
That  now  was  dead,  the  cause  of  all  her  ruth. 

And  thus  it  hapned,  Death  and  Cupid  met 
Vpon  a  time  at  swilling  Bacchus  house, 
Where  daintie  cates  vpon  the  Board  were  set, 
And  Goblets  full  of  wine  to  drinke  carouse  : 
Where  Loue  and  Death  did  loue  the  licor  so, 
That  out  they  fall  and  to  the  fray  they  goe. 

And  hauing  both  their  Quiuers  at  their  backe 
Fild  full  of  Arrows  ;  Th'one  of  fatall  steele, 
The  other  all  of  gold  ;  Deaths  shaft  was  black, 
But  Loues  was  yellow  :  Fortune  turnd  her  wheele ; 
And  from  Deaths  Quiuer  fell  a  fatall  shaft, 
That  vnder  Cupid  by  the  winde  was  waft. 

And  at  the  same  time  by  ill  hap  there  fell 

Another  Arrow  out  of  Cupids  Quiuer ; 

The  which  was  carried  by  the  winde  at  will, 

And  vnder  Death  the  amorous  shaft  did  shiuer : 
They  being  parted,  Loue  tooke  vp  Deaths  dart, 
And  Death  tooke  vp  Loues  Arrow  (for  his  part.) 

Thus  as  they  wandred  both  about  the  world, 
At  last  Death  met  with  one  of  feeble  age  : 
Wherewith  he  drew  a  shaft  and  at  him  hurld 
The  vnknowne  Arrow ;  (with  a  furious  rage) 

Thinking  to  strike  him  dead  with  Deaths  blacke  dart, 
But  he  (alas)  with  Loue  did  wound  his  hart. 


'.]       THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.  153 

This  was  the  doting  foole,  this  was  the  man 
That  lou'd  faire  Guendolena  Queene  of  Beautie ; 
Shee  cannot  shake  him  off,  doo  what  she  can, 
For  he  hath  vowd  to  her  his  soules  last  duety : 

Making  him  trim  vpon  the  holy-daies; 

And  crownes  his  Loue  with  Garlands  made  of  Baies. 

Now  doth  he  stroke  his  Beard ;  and  now  (againe) 

He  wipes  the  driuel  from  his  filthy  chin ; 

Now  offers  he  a  kisse  ;  but  high  Disdaine 

Will  not  permit  her  hart  to  pity  him: 

Her  hart  more  hard  than  Adamant  or  steele, 
Her  hart  more  changeable  than  Fortunes  wheele. 

But  leaue  we  him  in  loue  (vp  to  the  eares) 
And  tell  how  Loue  behau'd  himselfe  abroad  ; 
Who  seeing  one  that  mourned  still  in  teares 
(a  young-man  groaning  vnder  Loues  great  Load) 
Thinking  to  ease  his  Burden,  rid  his  paines : 
For  men  haue  griefe  as  long  as  life  remaines. 

Alas  (the  while)  that  vnawares  he  drue 
The  fatall  shaft  that  Death  had  dropt  before ; 
By  which  deceit  great  harme  did  then  issue, 
Stayning  his  face  with  blood  and  filthy  goare. 
His  face,  that  was  to  Gwendolen  more  deere 
Than  loue  of  Lords,  of  any  lordly  Peere. 

This  was  that  faire  and  beautifull  young-man, 

Whom  Guendolena  so  lamented  for ; 

This  is  that  Loue  whom  she  doth  curse  and  ban, 

Because  she  doth  that  dismall  chaunce  abhor : 
And  if  it  were  not  for  his  Mothers  sake, 
Euen  Ganimede  himselfe  she  would  forsake. 

Oh  would  shee  would  forsake  my  Ganimede, 
Whose  sugred  loue  is  full  of  sweete  delight, 
Vpon  whose  fore-head  you  may  plainely  reade 
Loues  Pleasure,  grau'd  in  yuorie  Tables  bright : 
In  whose  faire  eye-balls  you  may  clearely  see 
Base  Loue  still  staind  with  foule  indignitie. 


154          THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.       [ 

Oh  would  to  God  he  would  but  pitty  mee, 
That  loue  him  more  than  any  mortall  wight ; 
Then  he  and  I  with  loue  would  soone  agree, 
That  now  cannot  abide  his  Sutors  sight. 

0  would  to  God  (so  I  might  haue  my  fee) 
My  iips  were  honey,  and  thy  mouth  a  Bee. 

Then  shouldst  thou  sucke  my  sweete  and  my  faire  flower 
That  now  is  ripe,  and  full  of  honey-berries : 
Then  would  I  leade  thee  to  my  pleasant  Bower 
Fild  full  of  Grapes,  of  Mulberries,  and  Cherries ; 
Then  shouldst  thou  be  my  Waspe  or  else  my  Bee, 

1  would  thy  hiue,  and  thou  my  honey  bee. 

I  would  put  amber  Bracelets  on  thy  wrests, 
Crownets  of  Pearle  about  thy  naked  Armes : 
And  when  thou  sitst  at  swilling  Bacchus  feasts 
My  lips  with  charmes  should  saue  thee  from  all  harmes: 
And  when  in  sleepe  thou  tookst  thy  chiefest  Pleasure, 
Mine  eyes  should  gaze  vpon  thine  eye-lids  Treasure. 

And  euery  Morne  by  dawning  of  the  day, 
When  Phoebus  riseth  with  a  blushing  face, 
Siluanus  Chappel-Clarkes  shall  chaunt  a  Lay, 
And  play  thee  hunts-vp  in  thy  resting  place : 

My  Coote  thy  Chamber,  my  bosome  thy  Bed ; 

Shall  be  appointed  for  thy  sleepy  head. 

And  when  it  pleaseth  thee  to  walke  abroad, 
(Abroad  into  the  fields  to  take  fresh  ayre  :) 
The  Meades  with  Floras  treasure  should  be  strowde, 
(The  mantled  meaddowes,  and  the  fields  so  fayre.) 
And  by  a  siluer  Well  (with  golden  sands) 
He  sit  me  downe,  and  wash  thine  yuory  hands. 

And  in  the  sweltring  heate  of  summer  time, 
I  would  make  Cabinets  for  thee  (my  Loue  :) 
Sweet-smelling  Arbours  made  of  Eglantine 
Should  be  thy  shrine,  and  I  would  be  thy  Doue. 
Coole  Cabinets  of  fresh  greene  Laurell  boughs 
Should  shadow  vs,  ore-set  with  thicke-set  Eughes. 


THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.  155 

Or  if  thou  list  to  bathe  thy  naked  limbs, 

Within  the  Christall  of  a  Pearle-bright  brooke, 

Paued  with  dainty  pibbles  to  the  brims ; 

Or  cleare,  wherein  thyselfe  thy  selfe  mayst  looke ; 
Weele  goe  to  Ladon,  whose  still  trickling  noyse, 
Will  lull  thee  fast  asleepe  amids  thy  ioyes. 

Or  if  thoult  goe  vnto  the  Riuer  side, 
To  angle  for  the  sweet  fresh-water  fish  : 
Arm'd  with  thy  implements  that  will  abide 
(Thy  rod,  hooke,  line)  to  take  a  dainty  dish  ; 
Thy  rods  shall  be  of  cane,  thy  lines  of  silke, 
Thy  hooks  of  siluer,  and  thy  bayts  of  milke. 

Or  if  thou  lou'st  to  heare  sweet  Melodic, 
Or  pipe  a  Round  vpon  an  Oaten  Reede, 
Or  make  thy  selfe  glad  with  some  myrthfull  glee, 
Or  play  them  Musicke  whilst  thy  flocke  doth  feede  ; 
To  Pans  owne  Pipe  lie  helpe  my  louely  Lad, 
(Pans  golden  Pype)  which  he  of  Syrinx  had. 

Or  if  thou  dar'st  to  climbe  the  highest  Trees 
For  Apples,  Cherries,  Medlars,  Pe'ares,  or  Plumbs, 
Nuts,  Walnuts,  Filbeards,  Chest-nuts,  Ceruices, 
The  hoary  Peach,  when  snowy  winter  comes ; 

I  haue  fine  Orchards  full  of  mellowed  frute  ; 

Which  I  will  giue  thee  to  obtain  my  sute. 

Not  proud  Alcynous  himselfe  can  vaunt, 
Of  goodlier  Orchards  or  of  brauer  Trees 
Than  I  haue  planted  ;  yet  thou  wilt  not  graunt 
My  simple  sute ;  but  like  the  honey  Bees 

Thou  suckst  the  flowre  till  all  the  sweet  be  gone ; 

And  lou'st  mee  for  my  Coyne  till  I  haue  none. 

Leaue  Gwendolen  (sweet  hart)  though  she  be  faire 
Yet  is  she  light ;  not  light  in  vertue  shining  : 
But  light  in  her  behauiour,  to  impaire 
Her  honour  in  her  Chastities  declining; 

Trust  not  her  teares,  for  they  can  watonnize.. 

When  teares  in  pearle  are  trickling  from  her  eyes. 


156          THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.        [R-jJ 


Barnfield. 
ov.  1594. 


If  thou  wilt  come  and  dwell  with  me  at  home  ; 
My  sheep-cote  shall  be  strowd  with  new  greene  rushes : 
Weele  haunt  the  trembling  Prickets  as  they  rome 
About  the  fields,  along  the  hauthorne  bushes  ; 

I  haue  a  pie-bald  Curre  to  hunt  the  Hare  : 

So  we  will  Hue  with  daintie  forrest  fare. 

Nay  more  than  this,  I  haue  a  Garden-plot, 
Wherein  there  wants  nor  hearbs,  nor  roots,  nor  flowers ; 
(Flowers  to  smell,  roots  to  eate,  hearbs  for  the  pot,) 
And  dainty  Shelters  when  the  Welkin  lowers  : 
Sweet-smelling  Beds  of  Lillies  and  of  Roses, 
Which  Rosemary  banks  and  Lauender  incloses. 

There  growes  the  Gilliflowre,  the  Mynt,  the  Dayzie 
(Both  red  and  white,)  the  blew-veynd-Violet : 
The  purple  Hyacinth,  the  Spyke  to  please  thee, 
The  scarlet  dyde  Carnation  bleeding  yet ; 

The  Sage,  the  Sauery,  and  sweet  Margerum, 

Isop,  Tyme,  and  Eye-bright,  good  for  the  blinde  and  dumbe. 

The  Pinke,  the  Primrose,  Cowslip,  and  Daifadilly, 
The  Hare-bell  blue,  the  crimson  Cullumbine, 
Sage,  Lettis,  Parsley,  and  the  milke-white  Lilly, 
The  Rose,  and  speckled  flowre  cald  Sops  in  wine, 
Fine  pretie  King-cups,  and  the  yellow  Bootes, 
That  growes  by  Riuers,  and  by  shallow  Brookes. 

And  manie  thousand  moe  (I  cannot  name) 

Of  hearbs  and  flowers  that  in  gardens  grow, 

I  haue  for  thee  ;  and  Con  eyes  that  be  tame, 

Yong  Rabbets,  white  as  Swan,  and  blacke  as  Crow, 
Some  speckled  here  and  there  with  daintie  spots : 
And  more  I  haue  two  mylch  and  milke-white  Goates. 

All  these,  and  more,  He  giue  thee  for  thy  loue  ; 

If  these,  and  more,  may  tyce  thy  loue  away : 

I  haue  a  Pidgeon-house,  in  it  a  Doue, 

Which  I  loue  more  than  mortall  tongue  can  say  : 
And  last  of  all,  He  giue  thee  a  little  Lambe 
To  play  withall,  new  weaned  from  her  Dam. 


THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.          157 

But  if  thou  wilt  not  pittie  my  Complaint, 

My  Teares,  nor  Vowes,  nor  Oathes,  made  to  thy  Beautie : 

What  shall  I  doo  ?  But  languish,  die,  or  faint, 

Since  thou  dost  scorne  my  Teares,  and  my  Soules  Duetie  : 

And  Teares  contemned,  Vowes  and  Oaths  must  faile ; 

For  where  Teares  cannot,  nothing  can  preuaile. 

Compare  the  loue  of  faire  Queene  Guendolin 

With  mine,  and  thou  shalt  [s]ee  how  she  doth  loue  thee : 

I  loue  thee  for  thy  qualities  diuine, 

But  She  doth  loue  another  Swaine  aboue  thee  : 

I  loue  thee  for  thy  gifts,  She  for  hir  pleasure  ; 

I  for  thy  Vertue,  She  for  Beauties  treasure. 

And  alwaies  (I  am  sure)  it  cannot  last, 
But  sometime  Nature  will  denie  those  dimples : 
In  steed  of  Beautie  (when  thy  Blossom's  past) 
Thy  face  will  be  deformed,  full  of  wrinckles : 
Then  She  that  lou'd  thee  for  thy  Beauties  sake, 
When  Age  drawes  on,  thy  loue  will  soone  forsake. 

But  I  that  lou'd  thee  for  thy  gifts  diuine, 

In  the  December  of  thy  Beauties  waning, 

Will  still  admire  (with  ioy)  those  louely  eine, 

That  now  behold  me  with  their  beauties  baning : 
Though  lanuarie  will  neuer  come  againe, 
Yet  Aprill  yeres  will  come  in  showers  of  raine. 

When  will  my  May  come,  that  I  may  embrace  thee  ? 
When  will  the  hower  be  of  my  soules  ioying  ? 
Why  dost  thou  seeke  in  mirthe  still  to  disgrace  mee  ? 
Whose  mirth's  my  health,  whose  griefe's  my  harts  annoying. 

Thy  bane  my  bale,  thy  blisse  my  blessednes, 

Thy  ill  my  hell,  thy  weale  my  welfare  is. 

Thus  doo  I  honour  thee  that  loue  thee  so, 
And  loue  thee  so,  that  so  doo  honour  thee, 
Much  more  than  anie  mortall  man  doth  know, 
Or  can  discerne  by  Loue  or  lealozie  : 

But  if  that  thou  disdainst  my  louing  euer; 

Oh  happie  I,  if  I  had  loued  neuer.     Finis. 

Plus  fellis  quam  mellis  Amor. 


158 


The  second  Dayes  Lamentation  oi 

the  Affectionate  Shepheard. 

Ext  Morning  when  the  golden  Sunne  was  risen, 
And  new  had  bid  good  morrow  to  the  Mountaines; 
When  Night  her  siluer  light  had  lockt  in  prison, 
Which   gaue    a    glimmering    on    the     christall 

Fountaines : 

Then  ended  sleepe :  and  then  my  cares  began, 
Eu'n  with  the  vprising  of  the  siluer  Swan. 

O  glorious  Sunne  quoth  I,  (viewing  the  Sunne) 
That  lightenst  euerie  thing  but  me  alone  : 
Why  is  my  Summer  season  almost  done  ? 
My  Spring-time  past,  and  Ages  Autumne  gone  ? 
My  Haruest's  come,  and  yet  I  reapt  no  corne  : 
My  loue  is  great,  and  yet  I  am  forlorne. 

Witnes  these  watrie  eyes  my  sad  lament 
(Receauing  cisternes  of  my  ceaseles  teares), 
Witnes  my  bleeding  hart  my  soules  intent, 
Witnes  the  weight  distressed  Daphnis  beares  : 

Sweet  Loue,  come  ease  me  of  thy  burthens  paine  ; 

Or  els  I  die,  or  else  my  hart  is  slaine. 

And  thou  loue-scorning  Boy,  cruell,  vnkinde  ; 
Oh  let  me  once  againe  intreat  some  pittie : 
May  be  thou  wilt  relent  thy  marble  minde, 
And  lend  thine  eares  vnto  my  dolefull  Dittie : 

Oh  pittie  him,  that  pittie  craues  so  sweetly  ; 

Or  else  thou  shalt  be  neuer  named  meekly. 

If  thou  wilt  loue  me,  thou  shalt  be  my  Boy, 
My  sweet  Delight,  the  Comfort  of  my  minde, 
My  Loue,  my  Doue,  my  Sollace,  and  my  loy : 
But  if  I  can  no  grace  nor  mercie  finde, 
He  goe  to  Caucasus  to  ease  my  smart, 
And  let  a  Vulture  gnaw  vpon  my  hart. 


THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.  159 

Yet  if  thou  wilt  but  show  me  one  kinde  looke 
(A  small  reward  for  my  so  great  affection) 
lie  graue  thy  name  in  Beauties  golden  Booke, 
And  shrowd  thee  vnder  Hellicons  protection  ; 
Making  the  Muses  chaunt  thy  louely  prayse : 
(For  they  delight  in  Shepheards  lowly  layes.) 

And  when  th'art  wearie  of  thy  keeping  Sheepe 
Vpon  a  louely  Downe,  (to  please  thy  minde) 
He  giue  thee  fine  ruffe-footed  Doues  to  keepe, 
And  pretie  Pidgeons  of  another  kinde  : 

A  Robbin-red-brest  shall  thy  Minstrell  bee, 
Chirping  thee  sweet,  and  pleasant  Melodic. 

Or  if  thou  wilt  goe  shoote  at  little  Birds 

With  bow  and  boult  (the  Thrustle-cocke  and  Sparrow) 

Such  as  our  Countrey  hedges  can  afford's ; 

I  haue  a  fine  bowe,  and  an  yuorie  arrow : 

And  if  thou  misse,  yet  meate  thou  shalt  [not]  lacke, 

He  hang  a  bag  and  bottle  at  thy  backe. 

Wilt  thou  set  springes  in  a  frostie  Night, 
To  catch  the  long-billd  Woodcocke  and  the  Snype  ? 
(By  the  bright  glimmering  of  the  Starrie  light) 
The  Partridge,  Phsesant,  or  the  greedie  Grype  ? 
He  lend  thee  lyme-twigs,  and  fine  sparrow  calls, 
Wherewith  the  Fowler  silly  Birds  inthralls. 

Or  in  a  mystic  morning  if  thou  wilt 
Make  pit-falls  for  the  Larke  and  Pheldifare ; 
Thy  prop  and  sweake  shall  be  both  ouer-guilt ; 
With  Cyparissus  selfe  thou  shalt  compare 

For  gins  and  wyles,  the  Oozels  to  beguile ; 

Whilst  thou  vnder  a  bush  shalt  sit  and  smile. 

Or  with  Hare-pypes  (set  in  a  muset  hole) 

Wilt  thou  deceaue  the  deep-earth-deluing  Coney  ? 

Or  wilt  thou  in  a  yellow  Boxen  bole, 

Taste  with  a  woodden  splent  the  sweet  lythe  honey  ? 

Clusters  of  crimson  Grapes  He  pull  thee  downe ; 

And  with  Vine-leaues  make  thee  a  louely  Crowne. 


i6o          THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD. 

Or  wilt  thou  drinke  a  cup  of  new-made  Wine 
Froathing  at  top,  mixt  with  a  dish  of  Creame ; 
And  Straw-berries,  or  Bil-berries  in  their  prime, 
Bath'd  in  a  melting  Sugar-Candie  streame  : 
Bunnell  and  Perry  I  haue  for  thee  (alone) 
When  Vynes  are  dead,  and  all  the  Grapes  are  gone. 

I  haue  a  pleasant  noted  Nightingale, 
(That  sings  as  sweetly  as  the  siluer  Swan) 
Kept  in  a  Cage  of  bone ;  as  white  as  Whale, 
Which  I  with  singing  of  Philemon  wan  : 
Her  shalt  thou  haue,  and  all  I  haue  beside 
If  thou  wilt  be  my  Boy,  or  else  my  Bride. 

Then  will  I  lay  out  all  my  Lardarie 

(Of  Cheese,  of  Cracknells,  Curds  and  Clowted-creame) 

Before  thy  male-content  ill-pleasing  eye  : 

But  why  doo  I  of  such  great  follies  dreame  ? 

Alas,  he  will  not  see  my  simple  Coate.; 

For  all  my  speckled  Lambe,  nor  milk-white  Goate. 

Against  my  Birth-day  thou  shalt  be  my  guest : 
Weele  haue  Greene-cheeses  and  fine  Silly-bubs  ; 
And  thou  shalt  be  the  chiefe  of  all  my  feast. 
And  I  will  giue  thee  two  fine  pretie  Cubs, 

With  two  young  Whelps,  to  make  thee  sport  withall, 

A  golden  Racket,  and  a  Tennis-ball. 

A  guilded  Nutmeg,  and  a  race  of  Ginger, 
A  silken  Girdle,  and  a  drawn-worke  Band, 
Cuffs  for  thy  wrists,  a  gold  Ring  for  thy  finger, 
And  sweet  Rose-water  for  thy  Lilly-white  hand, 
A  Purse  of  silke,  bespangd  with  spots  of  gold, 
As  braue  a  one  as  ere  thou  didst  behold. 

A  paire  of  Kniues,  a  greene  Hat  and  a  Feather, 
New  Gloues  to  put  vpon  thy  milk-white  hand 
He  giue  thee,  for  to  keep  thee  from  the  weather ; 
With  Phoenix  feathers  shall  thy  Face  be  fand, 

Cooling  those  Cheekes,  that  being  cool'd  wexe  red, 

Like  Lillyes  in  a  bed  of  Roses  shed. 


R.  Barnfield.~|  ^ 

NOV.I594.J        1  HE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.          161 

Why  doo  thy  Corall  lips  disdaine  to  kisse, 
And  sucke  that  Sweete,  which  manie  haue  desired  ? 
That  Baulme  my  Bane,  that  meanes  would  mend  my  misse  : 
Oh  let  me  then  with  thy  sweete  Lips  b'inspired ; 
When  thy  Lips  touch  my  Lips,  my  Lips  will  turne 
To  Corall  too,  and  being  cold  yce  will  burne. 

Why  should  thy  sweete  Loue-locke  hang  dangling  downe, 
Kissing  thy  girdle-steed  with  falling  pride  ? 
Although  thy  Skin  be  white,  thy  haire  is  browne  : 
Oh  let  not  then  thy  haire  thy  beautie  hide ; 

Cut  off  thy  Locke,  and  sell  it  for  gold  wier  : 

(The  purest  gold  is  tryde  in  hottest  fier). 

Faire-long-haire-wearing  Absolon  was  kild, 

Because  he  wore  it  in  a  brauerie  : 

So  that  whiche  gracde  his  Beautie,  Beautie  spild, 

Making  him  subiect  to  vile  slau'erie, 

In  being  hangd  :  a  death  for  him  too  good, 

That  sought  his  owne  shame,  and  his  Fathers  blood. 

Againe,  we  read  of  old  King  Priamus, 

(The  haplesse  syre  of  valiant  Hector  slaine) 

That  his  haire  was  so  long  and  odious 

In  youth,  that  in  his  age  it  bred  his  paine : 
For  if  his  haire  had  not  been  halfe  so  long, 
His  life  had  been,  and  he  had  had  no  wrong. 

For  when  his  stately  Citie  was  destroyd 

(That  Monument  of  great  Antiquitie) 

When  his  poore  hart  (with  grief e  and  sorrow  cloyd) 

Fled  to  his  Wife  (last  hope  in  miserie ;) 

Pyrrhus  (more  hard  than  Adamantine  rockes) 
Held  him  and  halde  him  by  his  aged  lockes. 

These  two  examples  by  the  way  I  show, 
To  proue  th'indecencie  of  mens  long  haire  : 
Though  I  could  tell  thee  of  a  thousand  moe, 
Let  these  suffice  for  thee  (my  louely  Faire) 

Whose  eye's  my  starre  ;  whose  smiling  is  my  Sunne  ; 

Whose  loue  did  ende  before  my  ioys  begunne. 

10 


1 62          THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD. 

Fond  Loue  is  blinde,  and  so  art  thou  (my  Deare) 

For  thou  seest  not  my  Loue,  and  great  desart ; 

Blinde  Loue  is  fond,  and  so  thou  dost  appeare ; 

For  fond,  and  blinde,  thou  greeust  my  greeuing  hart : 
Be  thou  fond-blinde,  blinde-fond,  or  one,  or  all  j 
Thou  art  my  Loue,  and  I  must  be  thy  thrall. 

Oh  lend  thine  yuorie  fore-head  for  Loues  BOOKC, 
Thine  eyes  for  candles  to  behold  the  same ; 
That  when  dim-sighted  ones  therein  shall  looke 
They  may  discerne  that  proud  disdainefull  Dame ; 

Yet  claspe  that  Booke,  and  shut  that  Cazement  light ; 

Lest  th'one  obscurde,  the  other  shine  too  bright. 

Sell  thy  sweet  breath  to  th'daintie  Musk-ball-makers  ; 

Yet  sell  it  so  as  thou  mayst  soone  redeeme  it : 

Let  others  of  thy  beauty  be  pertakers  ; 

Els  none  but  Daphnis  will  so  well  esteeme  it : 

For  what  is  Beauty  except  it  be  well  knowne  ? 

And  how  can  it  be  knowne,  except  first  showne  ? 

Learne  of  the  Gentlewomen  of  this  Age, 

That  set  their  Beauties  to  the  open  view, 

Making  Disdaine  their  Lord,  true  Loue  their  Page  ; 

A  Custome  Zeale  doth  hate,  Desert  doth  rue  : 
Learne  to  looke  red,  anon  waxe  pale  and  wan, 
Making  a  mocke  of  Loue,  a  scorne  of  man. 

A  candle  light,  and  couer'd  with  a  vaile, 
Doth  no  man  good,  because  it  giues  no  light ; 
So  Beauty  of  her  beauty  seemes  to  faile, 
When  being  not  seene  it  cannot  shine  so  bright. 
Then  show  thy  selfe  and  know  thy  selfe  withall, 
Lest  climing  high  thou  catch  too  great  a  fall. 

Oh  foule  Eclipser  of  that  fayre  sun-shine, 

Which  is  intitled  Beauty  in  the  best  ; 

Making  that  mortall,  which  is  els  diuine, 

That  staines  the  fayre  which  Womens  steeme  not  least : 
Get  thee  to  Hell  againe  (from  whence  thou  art) 
And  leaue  the  Center  of  a  Woman's  hart. 


R"Noavni«ll        THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.  163 


Ah  be  not  staind,  (sweet  Boy)  with  this  vilde  spot, 
Indulgence  Daughter,  Mother  of  mischaunce ; 
A  blemish  that  doth  euery  beauty  blot ; 
That  makes  them  loath'd,  but  neuer  doth  aduaunce 

Her  Clyents,  fautors,  friends ;  or  them  that  loue  her ; 

And  hates  them  most  of  all,  that  most  reproue  her. 

Remember  Age,  and  thou  canst  not  be  prowd, 
For  age  puls  downe  the  pride  of  euery  man ; 
In  youthfull  yeares  by  Nature  tis  allowde 
To  haue  selfe-will,  doo  Nurture  what  she  can  ; 
Nature  and  Nurture  once  together  met, 
The  Soule  and  shape  in  decent  order  set. 

Pride  looks  aloft,  still  staring  on  the  starres, 
Humility  looks  lowly  on  the  ground ; 
Th'one  menaceth  the  Gods  with  ciuill  warres, 
The  other  toyles  til  he  haue  Vertue  found : 

His  thoughts  are  humble,  not  aspiring  hye ; 

But  Pride  looks  haughtily  with  scornefull  eye. 

Humillity  is  clad  in  modest  weedes, 

But  Pride  is  braue  and  glorious  to  the  show ; 

Humillity  his  friends  with  kindnes  feedes, 

But  Pride  his  friends  (in  neede)  will  neuer  know: 

Supplying  not  their  wants,  but  them  disdaining; 

Whilst  they  to  pitty  neuer  neede  complayning. 

Humillity  in  misery  is  relieu'd. 
But  Pride  in  neede  of  no  man  is  regarded ; 
Pitty  and  Mercy  weepe  to  see  him  grieu'd 
That  in  distresse  had  them  so  well  rewarded : 
But  Pride  is  scornd,  contemnd,  disdaind,  derided, 
Whilst  Humblenes  of  all  things  is  prouided. 

Oh  then  be  humble,  gentle,  meeke,  and  milde ; 
So  shalt  thou  be  of  euery  mouth  commended ; 
Be  not  disdainfull,  cruell,  proud,  (sweet  childe) 
So  shalt  thou  be  of  no  man  much  condemned ; 

Care  not  for  them  that  Vertue  doo  despise  ; 

Vertue  is  loathde  of  fooles ;  loude  of  the  wise. 


164          THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.       [R  N0avr.nx5e^: 

O  faire  Boy  trust  not  to  thy  Beauties  wings, 
They  cannot  carry  thee  aboue  the  Sunne : 
Beauty  and  wealth  are  transitory  things, 
(For  all  must  ende  that  euer  was  begunne) 

But  Fame  and  Vertue  neuer  shall  decay ; 

For  Fame  is  toombles,  Vertue  Hues  for  aye. 

The  snow  is  white,  and  yet  the  pepper's  blacke, 
The  one  is  bought,  the  other  is  contemned : 
Pibbles  we  haue,  but  store  of  leat  we  lacke  ; 
So  white  comparde  to  blacke  is  much  condemned  : 
We  doo  not  praise  the  Swanne  because  shees  white, 
But  for  she  doth  in  Musique  much  delite. 

And  yet  the  siluer-noted  Nightingale, 
Though  she  be  not  so  white  is  more  esteemed ; 
Sturgion  is  dun  of  hew,  white  is  the  Whale, 
Yet  for  the  daintier  Dish  the  first  is  deemed ; 

What  thing  is  whiter  than  the  milke-bred  Lilly  ? 

Thou  knowes  it  not  for  naught,  what  man  so  silly  ? 

Yea  what  more  noysomer  vnto  the  smell 
Than  Lillies  are  ?  what's  sweeter  than  the  Sage? 
Yet  for  pure  white  the  Lilly  beares  the  Bell 
Till  it  be  faded  through  decaying  Age  ; 

House-Doues  are  white,  and  Oozels  Blacke-birds  bee; 

Yet  what  a  difference  in  the  taste,  we  see. 

Compare  the  Cow  and  Calfe,  with  Ewe  and  Lambe; 

Rough  hayrie  Hydes,  with  softest  downy  Fell ; 

Hecfar  and  Bull,  with  Weather  and  with  Ramme, 

And  you  shall  see  how  far  they  doo  excell ; 

White  Kine  with  blacke,  blacke  Coney-skins  with  gray, 
Kine,  nesh  and  strong;  skin,  deare  and  cheape  alway. 

The  whitest  siluer  is  not  alwaies  best, 
Lead,  Tynne,  and  Pewter  are  of  base  esteeme  ; 
The  yellow  burnisht  gold,  that  comes  from  th'East, 
And  West  (of  late  inuented),  may  beseeme 

The  worlds  ritch  Treasury,  or  Mydas  eye ; 

(The  Ritch  mans  God,  poore  mans  felicitie.) 


AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.  165 

Bugle  and  leat,  with  snow  and  Alablaster 
I  will  compare  :  White  Dammasin  with  blacke ; 
Bullas  and  wheaton  Plumbs,  (to  a  good  Taster,) 
The  ripe  red  Cherries  haue  the  sweetest  smacke ; 

When  they  be  greene  and  young,  th'are  sowre  and  naught ; 

But  being  ripe,  with  eagerness  th'are  baught. 

Compare  the  Wyld-cat  to  the  brownish  Beauer, 

Running  for  life,  with  hounds  pursued  sore  ; 

When  Hunts-men  of  her  pretious  Stones  bereaue  her 

(Which  with  her  teeth  sh'had  bitten  off  before) : 
Restoratiues,  and  costly  curious  Felts 
Are  made  of  them,  and  rich  imbroydred  Belts. 

To  what  vse  serues  a  peece  of  crimbling  Chalke  ? 
The  Agget  stone  is  white,  yet  good  for  nothing : 
Fie,  fie,  I  am  asham'd  to  heare  thee  talke  ; 
Be  not  so  much  of  thine  owne  Image  doating : 

So  faire  Narcissus  lost  his  loue  and  life. 

(Beautie  is  often  with  itselfe  at  strife). 

Right  Diamonds  are  of  a  russet  hieu, 
The  brightsome  Carbuncles  are  red  to  see  too, 
The  Saphyre  stone  is  of  a  watchet  blue, 
(To  this  thou  canst  not  chuse  but  soone  agree  too): 
Pearles  are  not  white  but  gray,  Rubies  are  red : 
In  praise  of  Blacke,  what  can  be  better  sed  ? 

For  if  we  doo  consider  of  each  mortall  thing 
That  flyes  in  welkin,  or  in  waters  swims, 
How  euerie  thing  increaseth  with  the  Spring, 
And  how  the  blacker  still  the  brighter  dims  : 

We  cannot  chuse,  but  needs  we  must  confesse, 

Sable  excels  milk-white  in  more  or  lesse. 

As  for  example,  in  the  christall  cleare 
Of  a  sweete  streame,  or  pleasant  running  Riuer, 
Where  thousand  formes  of  fishes  will  appeare, 
(Whose  names  to  thee  I  cannot  now  deliuer:) 

The  blacker  still  the  brighter  haue  disgrac'd, 

For  pleasant  profit,  and  delicious  taste. 


1 66          THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.       [ 

Salmon  and  Trout  are  of  a  ruddie  colour, 

Whiting  and  Dare  is  of  a  milk-white  hiew  : 

Nature  by  them  (perhaps)  is  made  the  fuller, 

Little  they  nourish,  be  they  old  or  new  : 
Carp,  Loach,  Tench,  Eeles  (though  black  and  bred  in  mud) 
Delight  the  tooth  with  taste,  and  breed  good  blud. 

Innumerable  be  the  kindes,  if  I  could  name  them  ; 
But  I  a  Shepheard,  and  no  Fisher  am  : 
Little  it  skills  whether  I  praise  or  blame  them, 
I  onely  meddle  with  my  Ew  and  Lamb  : 

Yet  this  I  say,  that  blacke  the  better  is, 

In  birds,  beasts,  frute,  stones,  flowres,  herbs,  mettals,  fish. 

And  last  of  all,  in  blacke  there  doth  appeare 
Such  qualities,  as  not  in  yuorie ; 
Black  cannot  blush  for  shame,  looke  pale  for  fear, 
Scorning  to  weare  another  liuorie. 

Blacke  is  the  badge  of  sober  Modestie, 

The  wonted  weare  of  ancient  Grauetie. 

The  learned  vSisters  sute  themselues  in  blacke, 

Learning  abandons  white,  and  lighter  hues : 

Pleasure  and  Pride  light  colours  neuer  lacke ; 

But  true  Religion  doth  such  Toyes  refuse : 
Vertue  and  Grauity  are  sisters  growne, 
Since  blacke  by  both,  and  both  by  blacke  are  knowne. 

White  is  the  colour  of  each  paltry  Miller, 
White  is  the  Ensigne  of  each  comman  Woman  ; 
White,  is  white  Vertues  for  blacke  Vyces  Filler ; 
White  makes  proud  fooles  inferiour  vnto  no  man : 

White,  is  the  white  of  Body,  blacke  of  Minde, 

(Vertue  we  seldome  in  white  Habit  finde.) 

Oh  then  be  not  so  proud  because  th'art  fayre, 

Vertue  is  onely  the  ritch  gift  of  God  : 

Let  not  selfe-pride  thy  vertues  name  impayre, 

Beate  not  greene  youth  with  sharpe  Repentance  Rod  : 

(A  Fiend,  a  Monster,  and  mishapen  Diuel ; 

Vertues  foe,  Vyces  friend,  the  roote  of  euill.) 


R'N0avr.nifise94']       THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.  167 

Apply  thy  minde  to  be  a  vertuous  man, 
Auoyd  ill  company  (the  spoyle  of  youth  ;) 
To  follow  Vertues  Lore  doo  what  thou  can 
(Whereby  great  profit  vnto  thee  ensu[e]th  :) 
Reade  Bookes,  hate  Ignorance,  (the  foe  to  Art, 
The  Damme  of  Errour,  Enuy  of  the  hart). 

Serue  loue  (vpon  thy  knees)  both  day  and  night, 
Adore  his  Name  aboue  all  things  on  Earth  : 
So  shall  thy  vowes  be  gracious  in  his  sight, 
So  little  Babes  are  blessed  in  their  Birth  : 

Thinke  on  no  worldly  woe,  lament  thy  sin ; 

(For  lesser  cease,  when  greater  griefes  begin), 

Sweare  no  vaine  oathes  ;  heare  much,  but  little  say ; 

Speake  ill  of  no  man,  tend  thine  owne  affaires, 

Bridle  thy  wrath,  thine  angrie  mood  delay ; 

(So  shall  thy  minde  be  seldome  cloyd  with  cares :) 
Be  milde  and  gentle  in  thy  speech  to  all, 
Refuse  no  honest  gaine  when  it  doth  fall. 

Be  not  beguild  with  words,  proue  not  vngratefull, 
Releeue  thy  Neighbour  in  his  greatest  need, 
Commit  no  action  that  to  all  is  hatefull, 
Their  want  with  welth,  the  poore  with  plentie  feed: 

Twit  no  man  in  the  teeth  with  what  th'hast  done  ; 

Remember  flesh  is  fraile,  and  hatred  shunne. 

Leaue  wicked  things,  which  Men  to  mischiefe  moue, 
(Least  crosse  mis-hap  may  thee  in  danger  bring,) 
Craue  no  preferment  of  thy  heauenly  loue, 
Nor  anie  honor  of  thy  earthly  King : 

Boast  not  thy  selfe  before  th'Almighties  sight, 
(Who  knowes  thy  hart,  and  anie  wicked  wight). 

Be  not  offensiue  to  the  peoples  eye, 
See  that  thy  praiers  harts  true  zeale  affords, 
Scorne  not  a  man  that's  falne  in  miserie, 
Esteeme  no  tatling  tales,  nor  babling  words; 
That  reason  is  exiled  alwaies  thinke, 
When  as  a  drunkard  rayles  amidst  his  drinke. 


1 68  THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.       [ 

Vse  not  thy  louely  lips  to  loathsome  lyes, 
By  craftie  meanes  increase  no  worldly  wealth  ; 
Striue  not  with  mightie  Men  (whose  fortune  flies) 
With  temp'rate  diet  nourish  wholesome  health  : 

Place  well  thy  words,  leaue  not  thy  frend  for  gold ; 

First  trie,  then  trust ;  in  ventring  be  not  bold. 

In  Pan  repose  thy  trust ;  extoll  his  praise 
(That  neuer  shall  decay,  but  euer  Hues) : 
Honor  thy  Parents  (to  prolong  thy  dayes), 
Let  not  thy  left  hand  know  what  right  hand  giues : 
From  needie  men  turn  not  thy  face  away, 
(Though  Charitie  be  now  yclad  in  clay). 

Heare  Shepheards  oft  (thereby  great  wisdome  growes), 
With  good  aduice  a  sober  answere  make : 
Be  not  remoou'd  with  euery  winde  that  blowes, 
(That  course  doo  onely  sinfull  sinners  take). 

Thy  talke  will  shew  thy  fame  or  els  thy  shame  ; 

(As  pratling  tongue  doth  often  purchase  blame). 

Obtaine  a  faithfull  frend  that  will  not  faile  thee, 
Thinke  on  thy  Mothers  paine  in  her  child-bearing, 
Make  no  debate,  least  quickly  thou  bewaile  thee, 
Visit  the  sicke  with  comfortable  chearing : 
Pittie  the  prisner,  helpe  the  fatherlesse, 
Reuenge  the  Widdowes  wrongs  in  her  distresse. 

Thinke  on  thy  graue,  remember  still  thy  end, 
Let  not  thy  winding-sheete  be  staind  with  guilt, 
Trust  not  a  fained  reconciled  frend, 
More  than  an  open  foe  (that  blood  hath  spilt) 
(Who  tutcheth  pitch,  with  pitch  shalbe  defiled), 
Be  not  with  wanton  companie  beguiled. 

Take  not  a  flattring  woman  to  thy  wife, 
A  shameles  creature,  full  of  wanton  words, 
(Whose  bad,  thy  good ;  whose  lust  will  end  thy  life, 
Cutting  thy  hart  with  sharpe  two  edged  swords :) 
Cast  not  thy  minde  on  her  whose  lookes  allure, 
But  she  that  shines  in  Truth  and  Vertue  pure. 


THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD.  169 

Praise  not  thy  selfe,  let  other  men  commend  thee ; 
Beare  not  a  flattring  tongue  to  glauer  anie, 
Let  Parents  due  correction  not  offend  thee  : 
Rob  not  thy  neighbor,  seeke  the  loue  of  manie ; 

Hate  not  to  heare  good  Counsell  giuen  thee, 

Lay  not  thy  money  vnto  Vsurie. 

Restraine  thy  steps  from  too  much  libertie, 
Fulfill  not  th'enuious  mans  malitious  minde; 
Embrace  thy  Wife,  Hue  not  in  lecherie  ; 
Content  thyselfe  with  what  Fates  haue  assignde  : 

Be  rul'd  by  Reason,  Warning  dangers  saue ; 

True  Age  is  reuerend  worship  to  thy  graue. 

Be  patient  in  extreame  Aduersitie, 

(Man's  chiefest  credit  growes  by  dooing  well,) 

Be  no  high-minded  in  Prosperity  ; 

Falshood  abhorre,  nor  lying  fable  tell. 

Giue  not  thy  selfe  to  Sloth,  (the  sinke  of  Shame, 
The  moath  of  Time,  the  enemie  to  Fame.) 

This  leare  I  learned  of  a  Bel-dame  Trot, 

(When  I  was  yong  and  wylde  as  now  thou  art) : 

But  her  good  counsell  I  regarded  not ; 

I  markt  it  with  my  eares,  not  with  my  hart : 
But  now  I  finde  it  too-too  true  (my  Sonne), 
When  my  Age-withered  Spring  is  almost  done. 

Behold  my  gray  head,  full  of  siluer  haires, 
My  wrinckled  skin,  deepe  furrowes  in  my  face  : 
Cares  bring  Old-Age,  Old-Age  increaseth  cares ; 
My  Time  is  come,  and  I  haue  run  my  Race  : 
Winter  hath  snow'd  vpon  my  hoarie  head, 
And  with  my  Winter  all  my  ioys  are  dead. 

And  thou  loue-hating  Boy,  (whom  once  I  loued), 

Farewell,  a  thousand-thousand  times  farewell; 

My  Teares  the  Marble  Stones  to  ruth  haue  moued ; 

My  sad  Complaints  the  babling  Ecchoes  tell : 

And  yet  thou  wouldst  take  no  compassion  on  mee, 
Scorning  that  crosse  which  Loue  hath  laid  vpon  mee. 


170 


THE  AFFECTIONATE  SHEPHEARD. 


TR.  Barnfield. 
L     Nov.  1594. 


The  hardest  steele  with  fier  doth  mend  his  misse, 
Marble  is  mollify de  with  drops  of  Raine  ; 
But  thou  (more  hard  than  Steele  or  Marble  is) 
Doost  scorne  my  Teares,  and  my  true  loue  disdaine, 

Which  for  thy  sake  shall  euerlasting  bee, 

Wrote  in  the  Annalls  of  Eternitie. 

By  this,  the  Night  (with  darknes  ouer-spred) 
Had  drawne  the  curtaines  of  her  cole-blacke  bed  ; 
And  Cynthia  muffling  her  face  with  a  clowd, 
(Lest  all  the  world  of  her  should  be  too  prowd) 
Had  taken  Conge  of  the  sable  Night, 
(That  wanting  her  cannot  be  halfe  so  bright ;) 

When  I  poore  forlorne  man  and  outcast  creature 
(Despairing  of  my  Loue,  despisde  of  Beautie) 
Grew  male-content,  scorning  his  louely  feature, 
That  had  disdaind  my  euer-zealous  dutie : 

I  hy'd  me  homeward  by  the  Moone-shine  light ; 

Forswearing  Loue,  and  all  his  fond  delight. 

FINIS. 


The  Shepherds  Content 

OR 

The  happines  of  a  harmless  life. 

Written  upon  Occasion  of  the 

former  Subject. 

F  all  the  kindes  of  common  Countrey  life, 
Methinkes  a  Shepheards  life  is  most  Con- 
tent ; 

His  State  is  quiet  Peace,  deuoyd  of  strife  ; 
His   thoughts  are   pure  from   all  impure 

intent, 

His  Pleasures  rate  sits  at  an  easie  rent: 
He  beares  no  mallice  in  his  harmles  hart, 
Malicious  meaning  hath  in  him  no  part. 

He  is  not  troubled  with  th'afflicted  minde, 

His  cares  are  onely  ouer  silly  Sheepe  ; 

He  is  not  vnto  lealozie  inclinde, 

(Thrice  happie  Man)  he  knowes  not  how  to  weepe ; 

Whil'st  I  the  Treble  in  deepe  sorrowes  keepe  ; 
I  cannot  keepe  the  Meane  ;  for  why  (alas) 
Griefes  haue  no  meane,  though  I  for  meane  doe  passe. 

No  Briefes  nor  Semj-Briefes  are  in  my  Songs, 

Because  (alas)  my  griefe  is  seldom e  shoot; 

My  Prick-Song's  alwayes  full  of  Largues  and  Longs, 

(Because  I  neuer  can  obtaine  the  Port 

Of  my  desires :  Hope  is  a  happie  Fort.) 

Prick-song  (indeed)  because  it  pricks  my  hart ; 

And  Song,  because  sometimes  I  ease  my  smart. 


172  THE  SHEPHEARDS  CONTENT. 

The  mightie  Monarch  of  a  royall  Realme, 
Swaying  his  Scepter  with  a  Princely  pompe  ; 
Of  his  desires  cannot  so  steare  the  Healme, 
But  sometime  falls  into  a  deadly  dumpe, 
When  as  he  heares  the  shrilly-sounding  Trumpe 

Of  Forren  Enemies,  or  home-bred  Foes  ; 

His  minde  of  griefe,  his  hart  is  full  of  woes. 

Or  when  bad  subiects  gainst  their  Soueraigne 

(Like  hollow  harts)  vnnaturally  rebell, 

How  carefull  is  he  to  suppresse  againe 

Their  desperate  forces,  and  their  powers  to  quell 

With  loyall  harts,  till  all  (againe)  be  well : 

When  (being  subdu'd)  his  care  is  rather  more 

To  keepe  them  vnder,  than  it  was  before. 

Thus  is  he  neuer  full  of  sweete  Content, 

But  either  this  or  that  his  ioy  debars: 

Now  Noble-men  gainst  Noble-men  are  bent, 

Now  Gentlemen  and  others  fall  at  iarrs : 

Thus  is  his  Countrey  full  of  ciuill  warrs  ; 
He  still  in  danger  sits,  still  fearing  Death  : 
For  Traitors  seeke  to  stop  their  Princes  breath. 

The  whylst  the  other  hath  no  enemie, 
Without  it  be  the  Wolfe  and  cruell  Fates 
(Which  no  man  spare) :  when  as  his  disagree 
He  with  his  sheep-hooke  knaps  them  on  the  pates, 
Schooling  his  tender  Lambs  from  wanton  gates  : 

Beasts  are  more  kinde  then  Men,  Sheepe  seeke  not  blood 
But  countrey  caytiues  kill  their  Countreyes  good. 

The  Courtier  he  fawn's  for  his  Princes  fauour, 

In  hope  to  get  a  Princely  ritch  Reward ; 

His  tongue  is  tipt  with  honey  for  to  glauer ; 

Pride  deales  the  Deck  whilst  Chance  doth  choose  the  Card, 

Then  comes  another  and  his  Game  hath  mard ; 
Sitting  betwixt  him,  and  the  morning  Sun  : 
Thus  Night  is  come  before  the  Day  is  done. 


1%HE  SHEPHEARDS  CONTENT.  173 

Some  Courtiers  carefull  of  their  Princes  health, 

Attends  his  Person  with  all  dilligence 

Whose  hand's  their  hart  ;  whose  welfare  is  their  wealth, 

Whose  safe  Protection  is  their  sure  Defence, 

For  pure  affection,  not  for  hope  of  pence : 

Such  is  the  faithfull  hart,  such  is  the  minde, 

Of  him  that  is  to  Vertue  still  inclinde. 

The  skilfull  Scholler,  and  braue  man  at  Armes, 
First  plies  his  Booke,  last  fights  for  Countries  Peace ; 
Th'one  feares  Obliuion,  th'other  fresh  Alarmes ; 
His  paines  nere  ende,  his  trauailes  neuer  cease  ; 
His  with  the  Day,  his  with  the  Night  increase : 

He  studies  how  to  get  eternall  Fame ; 

The  Souldier  fights  to  win  a  glorious  Name. 

The  Knight,  the  Squire,  the  Gentleman,  the  Clowne, 

Are  full  of  crosses  and  calamities  ; 

Lest  fickle  Fortune  should  begin  to  frowne, 

And  turne  their  mirth  to  extreame  miseries  : 

Nothing  more  certaine  than  incertainties  ; 

Fortune  is  full  of  fresh  varietie  : 

Constant  in  nothing  but  inconstancie. 

The  wealthie  Merchant  that  doth  crosse  the  Seas, 
To  Denmarke,  Poland,  Spaine,  and  Barbaric'; 
For  all  his  ritches,  Hues  not  still  at  ease ; 
Sometimes  he  feares  ship-spoyling  Pyracie, 
Another  while  deceipt  and  treacherie 

Of  his  owne  Factors  in  a  forren  Land ; 

Thus  doth  he  still  in  dread  and  danger  stand. 

Well  is  he  tearmd  a  Merchant-Venturer, 
Since  he  doth  venter  lands,  and  goods,  and  all : 
When  he  doth  trauell  for  his  Traffique  far, 
Little  he  knowes  what  fortune  may  befall, 
Or  rather  what  mis-fortune  happen  shall  : 

Sometimes  he  splits  his  Ship  against  a  rocke ; 

Loosing  his  men,  his  goods,  his  wealth,  his  stocke. 


174 


THE  SHEPHEARDS  CONTENT. 


LR.  BarnfielA 
Nov.  ^594. 


And  if  he  so  escape  with  life  away, 
He  counts  himselfe  a  man  most  fortunate, 
Because  the  waues  their  rigorous  rage  did  stay, 
(When  being  within  their  cruell  powers  of  late, 
The  Seas  did  seeme  to  pittie  his  estate) 
But  yet  he  neuer  can  recouer  health, 
Because  his  ioy  was  drowned  with  his  wealth. 


The  painfull  Plough-swaine,  and  the  Husband-man 
Rise  vp  each  morning  by  the  breake  of  day, 
Taking  what  toyle  and  drudging  paines  they  can, 
And  all  is  for  to  get  a  little  stay  ; 
And  yet  they  cannot  put  their  care  away : 

When  Night  is  come,  their  cares  begin  afresh, 
Thinking  vpon  their  Morrowes  busines. 


Thus  euerie  man  is  troubled  with  vnrest, 
From  rich  to  poore,  from  high  to  low  degree : 
Therefore  I  thinke  that  man  is  truly  blest, 
That  neither  cares  for  wealth  nor  pouertie, 
But  laughs  at  Fortune  and  her  foolerie ; 
That  giues  rich  Churles  great  store  of  golde  and  fee, 
And  lets  poore  Schollers  Hue  in  miserie, 


O  fading  Branches  of  decaying  Bayes 

Who  now  will  water  your  dry- wither' d  Armes  ? 

Or  where  is  he  that  sung  the  louely  Layes 

Of  simple  Shepheards  in  their  Countrey-Farmes  ? 

Ah  he  is  dead,  the  cause  of  all  our  harmes  : 

And  with  him  dide  my  ioy  and  sweete  delight ; 

And  cleare  to  Clowdes,  the  Day  is  turnd  to  Night, 


SYDNEY.  The  Syren  of  this  latter  Age; 
SYDNEY.  The  Biasing- starre  of  England's  glory  ; 
SYDNEY.  The  Wonder  of  wise  and  sage  ; 
SYDNEY.  The  Subiect  of  true  Vertues  story  ; 

This  Syren,  Starre,  this  Wonder,  and  this  Subiect ; 

In  dumbe,  dim,  gone,  and  mard  by  Fortunes  Obiect. 


THE  SHEPHEARDS  CONTENT.  175 

And  thou  my  sweete  Amintas  vertuous  minde, 
Should  I  forget  thy  Learning  or  thy  Loue ; 
Well  might  I  be  accounted  but  vnkinde, 
Whose  pure  affection  I  so  oft  did  proue : 
Might  my  poore  Plaints  hard  stones  to  pitty  moue  ; 
His  losse  should  be  lamented  of  each  Creature, 
So  great  his  Name,  so  gentle  was  his  Nature. 

But  sleepe  his  soule  in  sweet  Elysium, 
(The  happy  Hauen  of  eternall  rest :) 
And  let  me  to  my  former  matter  come, 
Prouing  by  Reason,  Shepheard's  life  is  best, 
Because  he  harbours  Vertue  in  his  Brest ; 

And  is  content  (the  chiefest  thing  of  all) 

With  any  fortune  that  shall  him  befall. 

He  sits  all  Day  lowd-piping  on  a  Hill, 
The  whilst  his  flocke  about  him  daunce  apace, 
His  hart  with  ioy,  his  eares  with  Musique  fill : 
Anon  a  bleating  Weather  beares  the  Bace, 
A  Lambe  the  Treble ;  and  to  his  disgrace 
Another  answers  like  a  middle  Meane : 
Thus  euery  one  to  beare  a  Part  are  faine. 

Like  a  great  King  he  rules  a  little  Land, 

Still  making  Statutes,  and  ordayning  Lawes ; 

Which  if  they  breake,  he  beates  them  with  his  Wand  : 

He  doth  defend  them  from  the  greedy  lawes 

Of  rau'ning  Woolues,  and  Lyons  bloudy  Pawes. 

His  Field,  his  Realme ;  his  Subiects  are  his  Sheepe ; 

Which  he  doth  still  in  due  obedience  keepe. 

First  he  ordaines  by  Act  of  Parlament, 
(Holden  by  custome  in  each  Countrey  Towne), 
That  if  a  sheepe  (with  any  bad  intent) 
Presume  to  breake  the  neighbour  Hedges  downe, 
Or  haunt  strange  Pastures  that  be  not  his  owne ; 
He  shall  be  pounded  for  his  lustines, 
Vntill  his  Master  finde  out  some  redres. 


176      THE  SHEPHEARDS  CONTENT. 

Also  if  any  proue  a  Strageller 
From  his  owne  fellowes  in  a  forraine  field, 
He  shall  be  taken  for  a  wanderer, 
And  forc'd  himselfe  immediatly  to  yeeld, 
Or  with  a  wyde-mouth'd  Mastiue  Curre  be  kild. 
And  if  not  claimd  within  a  twelue-month's  space, 
He  shall  remaine  with  Land-lord  of  the  place. 

Or  if  one  stray  to  feede  far  from  the  rest, 
He  shall  be  pincht  by  his  swift  pye-bald  Curre ; 
If  any  by  his  fellowes  be  opprest, 
The  wronger  (for  he  doth  all  wrong  abhorre) 
Shall  be  well  bangd  so  long  as  he  can  sturre. 
Because  he  did  anoy  his  harmeles  Brother, 
That  meant  not  harme  to  him  nor  any  other. 

And  last  of  all,  if  any  wanton  Weather, 
With  briers  and  brambles  teare  his  fleece  in  twaine, 
He  shall  be  forc'd  t'abide  cold  frosty  weather, 
And  powring  showres  of  ratling  stormes  of  raine, 
Till  his  new  fleece  begins  to  grow  againe  : 
And  for  his  rashnes  he  is  doom'd  to  goe 
without  a  new  Coate  all  the  Winter  throw. 


Thus  doth  he  keepe  them,  still  in  awfull  feare, 
And  yet  allowes  them  liberty  inough  ; 
So  deare  to  him  their  welfare  doth  appeare, 
That  when  their  fleeces  gin  to  waxen  rough, 
He  combs  and  trims  them  with  a  Rampicke  bough, 
Washing  them  in  the  streames  of  siluer  Ladon, 
To  cleanse  their  skinnes  from  all  corruption. 

Another  while  he  wooes  his  Country  Wench, 
(With  Chaplets  crownd,  and  gaudy  girlonds  dight) 
Whose  burning  Lust  her  modest  eye  doth  quench, 
Standing  amazed  at  her  heauenly  sight, 
(Beauty  doth  rauish  Sense  with  sweet  Delight) 
Clearing  Arcadia  with  a  smoothed  Browe 
When  Sun-bright  smiles  melts  flakes  of  driuen  snowe. 


THE  SHEPHEARDS  CONTENT.  177 

Thus  doth  he  frollicke  it  each  day  by  day, 
And  when  Night  comes  drawes  homeward  to  his  Coate, 
Singing  a  ligge  or  merry  Roundelay  ; 
(For  who  sings  commonly  so  merry  a  Noate, 
As  he  that  cannot  chop  or  change  a  groate) 
And  in  the  winter  Nights  (his  chiefe  desire) 
He  turns  a  Crabbe  or  Cracknell  in  the  fire. 

He  leads  his  Wench  a  Country  Horn-pipe  Round, 

About  a  May-pole  on  a  Holy-day ; 

Kissing  his  louely  Lasse  (with  Garlands  Crownd) 

With  whoopping  heigh-ho  singing  Care  away  ; 

Thus  doth  he  passe  the  merry  month  of  May : 
And  all  th'yere  after  in  delight  and  ioy, 
(Scorning  a  King)  he  cares  for  no  annoy. 

What  though  with  simple  cheere  he  homely  fares  ? 
He  Hues  content,  a  King  can  doo  no  more ; 
Nay  not  so  much,  for  Kings  haue  manie  cares  : 
But  he  hath  none  ;  except  it  be  that  sore 
Which  yong  and  old,  which  vexeth  ritch  and  poore, 

The  pangs  of  Loue.     O  !  who  can  vanquish  Loue  ? 

That  conquers  Kingdomes,  and  the  Gods  aboue  ? 

Deepe-wounding  Arrow,  hart-consuming  Fire  ; 
Ruler  of  Reason,  slaue  to  tyraunt  Beautie ; 
Monarch  of  harts,  Fuell  of  fond  desire, 
Prentice  to  Folly,  foe  to  faind  Duetie. 
Pledge  of  true  Zeale,  Affections  moitie  ; 

If  thou  kilst  where  thou  wilt,  and  whom  it  list  thee, 

(Alas)  how  can  a  silly  Soule  resist  thee  ? 

By  thee  great  Collin  lost  his  libertie, 

By  thee  sweet  Astrophel  forwent  his  ioy ; 

By  thee  Amyntas  wept  incessantly, 

By  thee  good  Rowland  liu'd  in  great  annoy ; 

O  cruell,  peeuish,  vylde,  blind-seeing  Boy: 

How  canst  thou  hit  their  harts,  and  yet  not  see  ? 

(If  thou  be  blinde,  as  thou  art  faind  to  bee). 

M  10 


1 78  THE  SHEPHEARDS  CONTENT.          [V^lt 

A  Shepheard  loues  no  ill,  but  onely  thee ; 
He  hath  no  care,  but  onely  by  thy  causing : 
Why  doost  thou  shoot  thy  cruell  shafts  at  mee  ? 
Giue  me  some  respite,  some  short  time  of  pausing : 
Still  my  sweet  Loue  with  bitter  lucke  th'art  sawcing  : 

Oh,  if  thou  hast  a  minde  to  shew  thy  might ; 

Kill  mightie  Kings,  and  not  a  wretched  wight. 

Yet  (O  Enthraller  of  infranchizd  harts) 
At  my  poor  hart  if  thou  wilt  needs  be  ayming, 
Doo  me  the  fauour,  show  me  both  thy  Darts, 
That  I  may  chuse  the  best  for  my  harts  mayming, 
(A  free  consent  is  priuiledgd  from  blaming :) 

Then  pierce  his  hard  hart  with  thy  golden  Arrow, 
That  thou  my  wrong,  that  he  may  rue  my  sorrow. 

But  let  mee  feele  the  force  of  thy  lead  Pyle, 
What  should  I  doo  with  loue  when  I  am  old  ? 
I  know  not  how  to  flatter,  fawne,  or  smyle  ; 
Then  stay  thy  hand,  O  cruell  Bow-man  hold  : 
For  if  thou  strik'st  me  with  thy  dart  of  gold, 
I  sweare  to  thee  (by  loues  immortall  curse) 
I  haue  more  in  my  hart,  than  in  my  purse. 

The  more  I  weepe,  the  more  he  bends  his  Bow, 

For  in  my  hart  a  golden  Shaft  I  finde  : 

(Cruell,  vnkinde)  and  wilt  thou  leaue  me  so  ? 

Can  no  remorce  nor  pittie  moue  thy  minde  ? 

Is  Mercie  in  the  Heauens  so  hard  to  finde  ? 
Oh,  then  it  is  no  meruaile  that  on  earth 
Of  kinde  Remorce  there  is  so  great  a  dearth. 

How  happie  were  a  harmles  Shepheards  life, 
If  he  had  neuer  knowen  what  Loue  did  meane ; 
But  now  fond  Loue  in  euery  place  is  rife, 
Staining  the  purest  Soule  with  spots  vncleane, 
Making  thicke  purses,  thin  :  and  fat  bodies,  leane  : 

Loue  is  a  fiend,  a  fire,  a  heauen,  a  hell ; 

Where  pleasure,  paine,  and  sad  repentance  dwell. 


THE  SHEPHEARDS  CONTENT.      179 

There  are  so  manie  Danaes  nowadayes, 
That  loue  for  lucre  ;  paine  for  gaine  is  sold : 
No  true  affection  can  their  fancie  please, 
Except  it  be  a  loue,  to  raine  downe  gold 
Into  their  laps,  which  they  wyde  open  hold : 
If  legem  pone  comes,  he  is  receau'd, 
When  Vix  hand  habeo  is  of  hope  bereau'd. 

Thus  haue  I  showed  in  my  Countrey  vaine 
The  sweet  Content  that  Shepheards  still  inioy  ; 
The  mickle  pleasure,  and  the  little  paine 
That  euer  doth  awayte  the  Shepheards  Boy  : 
His  hart  is  neuer  troubled  with  annoy. 

He  is  a  King,  for  he  commands  his  Sheepe ; 

He  knowes  no  woe,  for  he  doth  seldome  weepe. 

He  is  a  Courtier,  for  he  courts  his  Loue  : 
He  is  a  Scholler,  for  he  sings  sweet  Ditties : 
He  is  a  Souldier,  for  he  wounds  doth  proue  ; 
He  is  the  fame  of  Townes,  the  shame  of  Citties ; 
He  scornes  false  Fortune,  put  true  Vertue  pitties. 

He  is  a  Gentleman,  because  his  nature 

Is  kinde  and  affable  to  euerie  Creature. 

Who  would  not  then  a  simple  Shepheard  bee, 

Rather  than  be  a  mightie  Monarch  made  ? 

Since  he  inioyes  such  perfect  libertie, 

As  neuer  can  decay,  nor  neuer  fade  : 

He  seldome  sits  in  dolefull  Cypresse  shade, 

But  Hues  in  hope,  in  ioy,  in  peace,  in  blisse  : 

loying  all  ioy  with  this  content  of  his. 

But  now  good-fortune  lands  my  little  Boate 
Vpon  the  shoare  of  his  desired  rest : 
Now  I  must  leaue  (awhile)  my  rurall  noate, 
To  thinke  on  him  whom  my  soule  loueth  best ; 
He  that  can  make  the  most  vnhappie  blest : 

In  whose  sweete  lap  He  lay  me  downe  to  sleepe, 
And  neuer  wake  till  Marble-stones  shall  weepe. 

FINIS. 


i8o 


SONNET. 

OE  here  behold  these  tributarie  Teares 
Paid  to  thy  faire,  but  cruell  tyrant  Eyes  ; 
Loe  here  the  blossome   of  my  youthfull 

yeares, 
Nipt  with  the  fresh  of  thy  Wraths  winter, 

dyes, 

Here  on  Loues  Altar  I  doo  offer  vp 
This  burning  hart  for  my  Soules  sacrifice ; 
Here  I  receaue  this  deadly-poysned  Cu[p] 
Of  Circe  charm'd ;  wherein  deepe  Magicke  lyes. 

Then  Teares  (if  thou  be  happie  Teares  indeed), 
And  Hart  (if  thou  be  lodged  in  his  brest), 
And  Cup  (if  thou  canst  helpe  despaire  with  speed) ; 
Teares,  Hart,  and  Cup  conjoyne  to  make  me  blest : 
Teares  moue,  Hart  win,  Cup  cause,  ruth, loue,  desire, 
In  word,  in  deed,  by  moane,  by  zeale,  by  fire. 

FINIS. 


THE    COMPLAINT 

OF    CHASTITIE. 
Briefely  touching  the  cause  of  the 

death  of  Matilda  Fitzwalters  an  English 
Ladie  ;   sometime  loued  of  King  Io/my 
after  poysoned.     The  Storie  is  at  large 
written  by  Michael  Dreyton. 

Ou  modest  Dames,  inricht  with  Chastitie. 
Maske  your  bright  eyes  with  Vestaes  sable 

Vaile, 

Since  few  are  left  so  faire  or  chast  as  shee  ; 
(Matter  for  me  to  weepe,  you  to  bewaile): 
For  manie  seeming  so,  of  Vertue  faile ; 
Whose    louely   Cheeks    (with    rare  ver- 

million  tainted) 

Can  neuer   blush   because  their  faire  is 
painted. 

0  faire-foule  Tincture,  staine  of  Woman-kinde, 
Mother  of  Mischiefe,  Daughter  of  Deceate, 
False  traitor  to  the  Soule,  blot  to  the  Minde, 
Vsurping  Tyrant  of  true  Beauties  seate, 
Right  Cousner  of  the  eye,  lewd  Follies  baite, 
The  flag  of  filthines,  the  sinke  of  shame, 
The  Diuells  dye,  dishonour  of  thy  name. 


1 82  THE  COMPLAINT  OF  CHASTITIE.         rR>1J!fJnfi!1^ 


1594- 


Monster  of  Art,  Bastard  of  bad  Desier, 
Il-worshipt  Idoll,  false  Imagerie, 
Ensigne  of  Vice,  to  thine  owne  selfe  a  Her, 
Silent  Inchaunter,  mindes  Anatomic, 
Sly  Bawd  to  Lust,  Pandor  to  Infamie, 

Slaunder  of  Truth,  Truth  of  Dissimulation  ; 

Staining  our  Clymate  more  than  anie  Nature. 

What  shall  I  say  to  thee  ?  thou  scorne  of  Nature, 
Blacke  spot  of  sinne,  vylde  lure  of  lecherie  ; 
Iniurious  Blame  to  euerie  faemale  creature, 
Wronger  of  time,  Broker  of  trecherie, 
Trap  of  greene  youth,  false  Womens  witcherie, 

Hand-maid  of  pride,  high-way  to  wickednesse; 

Yet  path-way  to  Repentance,  nere  the  lesse. 

Thou  dost  entice  the  minde  to  dooing  euill, 
Thou  setst  dissention  twixt  the  man  and  wife ; 
A  Saint  in  show,  and  yet  indeed  a  deuill : 
Thou  art  the  cause  of  euerie  common  strife ; 
Thou  art  the  life  of  Death,  the  death  of  Life  ! 
Thou  doost  betray  thyselfe  to  Infamie, 
When  thou  art  once  discernd  by  the  eye. 

Ah,  little  knew  Matilda  of  thy  being, 
Those  times  were  pure  from  all  impure  complection  ; 
Then  Loue  came  at  Desert,  Desert  of  seeing, 
Then  Vertue  was  the  mother  of  Affection, 
(But  Beautie  now  is  vnder  no  subiection), 
Then  women  were  the  same  that  men  did  deeme, 
But  now  they  are  the  same  they  doo  not  seeme. 

What  faamale  now  intreated  of  a  King 
With  gold  and  iewels,  pearles  and  precious  stones, 
Would  willingly  refuse  so  sweete  a  thing  ? 
Onely  for  a  little  show  of  Vertue  ones  ? 
Women  haue  kindnes  grafted  in  their  bones. 

Gold  is  a  deepe-perswading  Orator, 

Especially  where  few  the  fault  abhor. 


R'No™5J£]       THE  COMPLAINT  OF  CHASTITIE.  183 

But  yet  shee  rather  deadly  poyson  chose, 
(Oh  cruell  Bane  of  most  accursed  Clime  ;) 
Than  staine  that  milk-white  Mayden-virgin  Rose, 
Which  shee  had  kept  vnspotted  till  that  time : 
And  not  corrupted  with  this  earthly  slime 

Her  soule  shall  Hue  :  inclosd  eternally, 

In  that  pure  shrine  of  Immortality. 

This  is  my  Doome  :  and  this  shall  come  to  passe, 
For  what  are  Pleasures  but  still-vading  ioyes  ? 
Fading  as  flowers,  brittle  as  a  glasse, 
Or  Potters  Clay  ;  crost  with  the  least  annoyes ; 
All  thinges  in  this  life  are  but  trifling  Toyes  : 
But  Fame  and  Vertue  neuer  shall  decay, 
For  Fame  is  Toomblesse,  Vertue  Hues  for  aye  I 

FINIS. 


184 


Hellens  Rape. 


OR 


A  light  Lanthorne  for  light  Ladies. 

Written  in  English   Hexameters. 


aLasse,  so  loued  a  Lasse,  and  (alas)  such 
a  louing 
Lasse,  for  a  while  (but  a  while)  was  none  such 

a  sweet  bonny  Loue-Lasse 
As  Helen,  Msenelaus  louing,  lou'd,  loulie  a 

loue-lasse, 
Till  spightfull  Fortune  from  a  loue-lasse  made 

her  a  loue-lesse 

Wife.    From  a  wise  woman  to  a  witles  wanton  abandond, 
When  her  mate  (unawares)  made  warres  in  Peloponessus, 
A  dultrous  Paris  (then  a  Boy)  kept  sheepe  as  a  shepheard 
On  Ida  Mountaine,  vnknowne  to  the  King  for  a  Keeper 
Of  sheep,  on  Ida  Mountaine,  as  a  Boy,  as  a  shepheard  : 
Yet  such  sheep  he  kept,  and  was  so  seemelie  a  shepheard, 
Seemlie  a  Boy,  so  seemlie  a  youth,  so  seemlie  a  Younker, 
That  on  Ida  was  not  such  a  Boy,  such  a  youth,  such  a  Younker. 
Sonne  now  reconciled  to  the  Father,  fained  a  letter 
Sent  him  by  lupiter  (the  greatest  God  in  Olympus) 
For  to  repair  e  with  speede  to  the  briuest  Grczcian  Hauen, 


HELENS    RAPE.  185 

And  to  redeeme  againe  Hesyone  latelie  reuolted 

From  Troy  by  Aiax,  whom  she  had  newly  betrothed. 

Well,  so  well  he  told  his  tale  to  his  Aunt  Amaryllis 

That  Amaryllis,  (his  Aunt,)  obtaind  aid  of  his  aged 

Syre,  that  he  sent  him  a  ship,  and  made  Capten  of  Argus. 

Great  store  went  to  Greece  with  lust-bewitched  Alexis, 

Tel  am  our,  and  Tydias  :  with  these  he  sliceth  the  salt  seas, 

The  salt  seas  slicing,  at  length  he  comes  to  the  firme  landt 

Firme  land  an  auntient  Hand  cald  old  Lacedaemon. 

Argus  (eye  full  Earle)  when  first  the  ken  of  a  Castle 

He  had  spide  bespake  :  (to  the  Mate,  to  the  men,  to  the  Mates-man] 

Lo  behold  of  Greece  (quoth  he)  the  great  Cytadella. 

(Ycleaped  Menela)  so  tearmed  of  Deliaes  Husband  : 

Happie  Helen,  Womens  most  woonder,  beautifull  Helen. 

Oh  would  God  (quoth  he)  with  aflattring  Tongue  he  repeated  : 

Oh  would  God  (quoth  he)  that  I  might  deserue  to  be  husband 

To  such  a  happie  huswife,  to  such  a  beautifull  Helen. 

This  he  spake  to  Mice  the  minde  of  a  lecherous  young-man  : 

But  what  spurres  need  now,  for  an  vntam'd  Titt  to  be  trotting  : 

Or  to  add  old  Oile  to  the  flame,  new  flaxe  to  the  fier  : 

Paris  heard  him  hard,  and  gaue  good  eare  to  his  hearkening : 

And  then  his  loue  to  a  lust,  his  lust  was  turnd  to  a  fier, 

Fier  was  turnd  to  aflame,  and  flame  was  turnd  to  a  burning 

Brand  :  and  mothers  Dreame  was  then  most  truelie  resolued. 

Well  so  far  th'are  come,  that  now  th'are  come  to  the  Castle, 

Castle  all  of  stone,  yet  euery  stone  was  a  Castle  : 

Eueriefoote  had  a  Fort,  and  euerie  Fort  had  afountaine, 

Euerie  fountaine  a  spring,  and  euerie  spring  had  a  spurting 

Streame  :  so  strong  without,  within,  so  stately  a  building, 

Neuer  afore  was  scene  ;  If  neuer  afore  Polyphoebe 

Was  seene  :  was  to  be  seene,  if  nere  to  be  scene  was  Olympus. 

Flowers  wereframd  of  flints,  Walls,  Rubies,  Rafters  of  Argent ; 

Pauement  of  Chrisolite,  Windows  contriu'd  of  a  Cristall : 

Vessels  were  of  gold,  with  gold  was  each  thing  adorned  : 

Golden  Webs  more  worth  than  a  wealthy  Souldan  of  Egypt, 

A  nd  her  selfe  more  worth  than  a  wealthy  Souldan  of  Egypt : 


i86 


HELENS    RAPE. 


CR.  Barnfield. 
Nov.  1594. 


A  nd  her  selfc  more  worth  than  all  the  wealth  shee  possessed ; 
Selfe  ?  indeede  such  a  selfe,  as  thundring  loue  in  Olympus, 
Though  he  were  father  could  finde  in  his  hart  to  be  husband. 
Embassage  ended,  to  the  Queene  of  fair  e  Lacedaemon  ; 
(Happie  King  of  a  Queene  so  faire,  of  a  Countrey  so  famous) 
Embassage  ended,  a  Banquet  braue  was  appointed  : 
Sweet  Repast  for  a  Prince,  fine  lunkets  fit  for  a  Kings  sonne. 
Biskets  and  Carrawayes,  Comfets,  Tart,  Plate,  lelley,  Ginger- 
bread, 

Lymons  and  Medlars :  and  Dishes  moe  by  a  thousand. 
First  they  fell  to  the  feast,  and  after  fall  to  a  Dauncing, 
And  from  a  Dance  to  a  Trance,  from  a  Trance  they  fell  to  a  falling, 
Either  in  other  armes,  and  either  in  armes  of  another. 
Pastime  ouer-past,  and  Banquet  duely  prepared, 
Deuoutly  pared  :  Each  one  hies  home  to  his  owne  home, 
Saue  Lord  and  Ladie  ;  Young  Lad,  but  yet  such  an  old  Lad, 
In  such  a  Ladies  lappe,  at  such  a  slipperie  by -blow, 
That  in  a  world  so  wilde,  could  not  be  found  such  a  wilie 
Lad  :  in  an  Age  so  old,  could  not  be  found  such  an  old  lad  : 
Old  lad,  and  bold  lad,  such  a  Boy,  such  a  lustie  luuentus  : 
Well  to  their  vvorke  they  goe,  and  both  they  tumble  in  one  Bed : 
V/orke  so  well  they  like,  that  they  still  like  to  be  working : 
For  Aurora  mounts  before  he  leaues  to  be  mounting  : 
And  Astrsea  fades  before  she  faints  to  befalling  : 
(Helen  a  light  Huswife,  now  a  lightsome  starre  in  Olympus.) 

FINIS. 


Cynthia. 

WITH    CER- 

taine  Sonnets,  and 

the  Legend  of 


Cassandra. 


Sjuod  cupio  nequeo. 


At  London, 


Printed  for  Humfrey 


j  and  are  to  bee 
sold  at  the  West  Hoore 
of  Paules.     1595. 


189 


To  the    Right   Honorable,    and 

most    noble-minded    Lorde, 

William  Stanley,  Earle  of 

Darby,  &c. 

\Ight  Honorable,  the  dutifull  affection  I  beare  to  your 
manis  vertues,  is  came,  that  to  manifest  my  loue  to 
your  Lordship,  I  am  constrained  to  shew  my  simple- 
nes  to  the  world.  Many  are  they  that  admire  your 
worth,  of  the  which  number,  I  (though  the  meanest  in  abilitie,yet 
with  the  formost  in  affection)  am  one  that  most  desire  to  serue,  and 
onely  to  serue  your  Honour. 

Small  is  the  gift,  but  great  is  my  good-will ;  the  which*  by  how 
much  the  lesse  I  am  able  to  expresse  it,  by  so  much  the  more  it  is 
infinite.  Liue  long :  and  inherit  your  Predecessors  vertues,  as 
you  doe  their  dignitie  and  estate.  This  is  my  wish  :  the  which  your 
honorable  excellent  giftes  doe  promise  me  to  obtaine  :  and  whereof 
these  few  rude  and  vnpollished  lines,  are  a  true  (though  an  vn- 
deseruing)  testimony.  If  my  ability  were  better,  the  signes  should 
be  greater ;  but  being  as  it  is,  your  honour  must  take  me  as  I  am, 
not  as  I  should  be.  My  yeares  being  so  young,  my  perfection  can- 
not  be  greater :  But  howsoeuer  it  is,  yours  it  is  ;  and  I  my  selfe  am 
yours ;  in  all  humble  seruice,  most  ready  to  be  commaunded. 

Richard  Barnefeilde. 


190 


"To  the  curteous  Gentlemen   Readers. 

Entlemen ;  the  last  Terme  [i.e.,  November  1594] 
there  came  forth  a  little  toy  of  mine,  intituled, 
The  affectionate  Shepheard :  In  the  which,  his 
Country  Content  found  such  friendly  fauor,  that  it 
hath  incouraged  me  to  publish  my  second  fruites. 
The  affectionate  Shepheard  being  the  first :  howsoeuer  unde- 
seruedly  (I  protest)  I  haue  beene  thought  (of  some)  to  haue 
beene  the  authour  of  two  Books  heretofore.  I  neede  not  to 
name  them,  because  they  are  two-well  knowne  already  :  nor 
will  I  deny  them,  because  they  are  dislik't ;  but  because 
they  are  not  mine.  This  protestation  (I  hope)  will  satisfie 
th'indifferent  :  as  for  them  that  are  maliciously  enuious,  as 
I  cannot,  so  I  care  not  to  please.  Some  there  were,  that 
did  interpret  The  affectionate  Shepheard,  otherwise  then  (in 
truth)  I  meant,  touching  the  subiect  thereof,  to  wit,  the  loue 
of  a  Shepheard  to  a  boy  ;  a  fault,  the  which  I  will  not 
excuse,  because  I  neuer  made.  Onely  this,  I  will  vnshaddow 
my  conceit :  being  nothing  else,  but  an  imitation  of  Virgill, 
in  the  second  Eglogue  of  Alexis.  In  one  or  two  places  (in 
this  Booke)  I  vse  the  name  of  Eliza  pastorally :  wherein, 
lest  any  one  should  misconster  my  meaning  (as  I  hope  none 
will)  I  haue  here  briefly  discouered  my  harmeles  conceipt  as 
concerning  that  name  :  whereof  once  (in  a  simple  Shepheards 
deuice)  I  wrot  this  Epigramme. 

One  name  there  ist  which  name  aboue  all  other 
I  most  esteeme,  as  time  and  place  shall  prone  : 
The  one  is  Vesta,  th'other  Cupids  Mother, 
The  first  my  Goddesse  is,  the  last  my  loue  ; 

Subiect  to  Both  I  am  :  to  that  by  berth  ; 

To  this  for  beaiitie ;  fairest  on  the  earth. 

Thus,  hoping  you  will  beare  with  my  rude  conceit  of 
Cynthia,  (if  for  no  other  cause,  yet,  for  that  it  is  the  first 
imitation  of  the  verse  of  that  excellent  Poet,  Maister 
Spencer,  in  his  Fayrie  Queene)  I  will  leaue  you  to  the  reading 
of  that,  which  I  so  much  desire  may  breed  your  Delight. 

Richard  Batvefeild. 


T.   T.   in  commendation  of  the 

Authour  his  worke. 

Hylom  that  in  a  shepheards  gray  coate  masked, 
(Where  masked  loue  the  nonage  of  his  skill) 
Reares  new  Eagle-winged  pen,  new  tasked, 
To  scale  the  by-clift  Muse  sole-pleasing  hill : 
Dropping  sweete  Nectar  poesie  from  his  quill, 
Admires  faire  CYNTHIA  with  his  iuory  pen 
Faire  CYNTHIA  lou'd,  fear'd,  of  Gods  and  men. 

Downe  sliding  from  that  cloudes  ore-pearing  mounteine  : 
Decking  with  double  grace  the  neighbour  plaines,    [fountain, 
Drawes    christall    dew,   from     P  E  G  A  S  E    foote-sprung 
Whose  flower  set  banks,  delights,  sweet  choice  containes : 
Nere  yet  discouerd  to  the  country  swaines : 

Heere  bud  those  branches,  which  adorne  his  turtle, 
With  loue  made  garlands,  of  heart-bleeding  Mirtle. 

Rays'd  from  the  cynders,  of  the  thrice-sact  towne : 
I  L  L  I  O  N  S  sooth-telling  S  Y  B  I  L  L  I  S  T  appeares, 
Eclipsing  PHOEBUS  loue,  with  scornefull  frowne, 
Whose  tragicke  end,  affords  warme-water  teares, 
(For  pitty-wanting  P  A  C  O  E,  none  forbeares) 
Such  period  haps,  to  beauties  price  ore-priz'd  : 
Where  I  A  N  V  S-faced  loue,  doth  lurke  disguiz'd. 

Nere-waining  CYNTHIA  yeelds  thee  triple  thankes, 
Whose  beames  vnborrowed  darke  the  worlds  faire  eie 
And  as  full  streames  that  euer  fill  their  bankes, 
So  those  rare  Sonnets,  where  wits  ripe  doth  lie, 
With  Troian  Nimph,  doe  scare  thy  fame  to  skie. 
And  those,  and  these,  contend  thy  Muse  to  raise 
(Larke  mounting  Muse)  with  more  then  common  praise. 

ENG.  SCH.  LIB.  No.  14. 


192 


To  his  Mistresse. 


Right  Starre  of  Beauty,  fairest  Faire  aliue, 
Rare  president  of  peerelesse  chastity ; 
(In  whom  the  Muses  and  the  Graces  striue, 
Which  shall  possesse  the  chiefest  part  of  thee : ) 
Oh  let  these  simple  lines  accepted  bee  : 
Which  here  I  offer  at  thy  sacred  shrine : 
Sacred,  because  sweet  Beauty  is  diuine. 

And  though  I  cannot  please  each  curious  eare, 
With  sugred  Noates  of  heauenly  Harmonic : 
Yet  if  my  loue  shall  to  thy  selfe  appeare, 
No  other  Muse  I  will  inuoke  but  thee : 
And  if  thou  wilt  my  faire  Thalia  be, 

He  sing  sweet  Hymnes  and  praises  to  thy  name, 
In  that  cleare  Temple  of  eternall  Fame. 

But  ah  (alas)  how  can  mine  infant  Muse 
(That  neuer  heard  of  Helicon  before) 
Performe  my  promise  past :  when  they  refuse 
Poore  Shepheards  Plaints  ?  yet  will  I  still  adore 
Thy  sacred  Name,  al  though  I  write  no  more  .- 

Yet  hope  I  shall,  if  this  accepted  bee : 

If  not,  in  silence  sleepe  eternally. 


193 


CYNTHIA. 


Ow  was  the  Welkyn  all  inuelloped 

With  duskie  Mantle  of  the  sable  Night : 
And  CYNTHIA  lifting  vp  her  drouping 

head, 
Blusht  at  the  Beautie  of  her  borrowed 

light, 
When     Sleepe    now    summon'd     euery 

mortal  wight. 
Then  loe  (me  thought)  I  saw  or  seem'd  to  see, 
An  heauenly  Creature  like  an  Angell  bright, 
That  in  great  haste  came  pacing  towards  me : 
Was  neuer  mortall  eye  beheld  so  faire  a  Shee. 

Thou  lazie  man  (quoth  she)  what  mak'st  thou  heere 
(Luld  in  the  lap  of  Honours  Enimie  ?) 
I  heere  commaund  thee  now  for  to  appeare 
(By  vertue  of  IOVES  mickle  Maiestie) 
In  yonder  Wood.     (Which  with  her  finger  shee 
Out-poynting)  had  no  sooner  turn'd  her  face, 
And  leauing  mee  to  muze  what  she  should  bee, 
Yuanished  into  some  other  place  : 

But  straite  (me  thought)  I  saw  a  rout  of  heauenlie  Race. 


N 


10 


194  CYNTHIA.  [: 

Downe  in  a  Dale,  hard  by  a  Forrest  side, 
(Vnder  the  shaddow  of  a  loftie  Pine,) 
Not  far  from  whence  a  trickling  streame  did  glide, 
Did  nature  by  her  secret  art  combine, 
A  pleasant  Arbour,  of  a  spreading  Vine  : 
Wherein  Art  stroue  with  nature  to  compaire, 
That  made  it  rather  seeme  a  thing  diuine 
Being  scituate  all  in  the  open  Aire : 

A  fairer  nere  was  scene,  if  any  seene  so  faire. 

There  might  one  see,  and  yet  not  see  (indeede) 
Fresh  Flora  flourishing  in  chiefest  Prime, 
Arrayed  all  in  gay  and  gorgeous  weede, 
The  Primrose  and  sweet-smelling  Eglantine, 
As  fitted  best  beguiling  so  the  time : 
And  euer  as  she  went  she  strewd  the  place, 
Red-roses  mixt  with  Daffadillies  fine, 
For  Gods  and  Goddesses,  that  in  like  case 

In  this  same  order  sat,  with  il-beseeming  grace. 


First,  in  a  royall  Chaire  of  massie  gold, 

(Bard  all  about  with  plates  of  burning  steele) 

Sat  lupiter  most  glorious  to  behold, 

And  in  his  hand  was  placed  Fortunes  wheele : 

The  which  he  often  turn'd,  and  oft  did  reele. 

And  next  to  him,  in  griefe  and  gealouzie, 

(If  sight  may  censure  what  the  heart  doth  feele) 

In  sad  lament  was  placed  Mercuric ; 

That  dying  seem'd  to  weep,  and  weeping  seem'd  to  die. 

On  th'other  side,  aboue  the  other  twaine, 
(Delighting  as  it  seem'd  to  sit  alone) 
Sat  Mulciber ;  in  pride  and  high  disdaine, 
Mounted  on  high  vpon  a  stately  throne, 
And  euen  with  that  I  heard  a  deadly  grone : 
Muzing  at  this,  and  such  an  vncouth  sight, 
(Not  knowing  what  shoulde  make  that  piteous  mone) 
I  saw  three  furies,  all  in  Armour  dight, 

With  euery  one  a  Lampe,  and  euery  one  a  light. 


]  CYNTHIA.  195 

I  deemed  so ;  nor  was  I  much  deceau'd, 
For  poured  forth  in  sensuall  Delight, 
There  might  I  see  of  Sences  quite  bereau'd 
King  Priams  Sonne,  that  Alexander  hight 
(Wrapt  in  the  Mantle  of  eternall  Night.) 
And  vnder  him,  awaiting  for  his  fall, 
Sate  Shame,  here  Death,  and  there  sat  fel  Despight, 
That  with  their  Horrour  did  his  heart  appall : 

Thus  was  his  Blisse  to  Bale,  his  Hony  turn'd  to  gall. 

In  which  delight  feeding  mine  hungry  eye, 
Of  two  great  Goddesses  a  sight  I  had, 
And  after  them  in  wondrous  Jollity, 
(As  one  that  inly  ioy'd,  so  was  she  glad) 
The  Queene  of  Loue  full  royallie  yclad, 
In  glistring  Gold,  and  peerelesse  precious  stone, 
There  might  I  spie :  and  her  Companion  had, 
Proud  Paris,  Nephew  to  Laomedon, 

That  afterward  did  cause  the  Death  of  many  a  one. 

By  this  the  formost  melting  all  in  teares, 
And  rayning  downe  resolued  Pearls  in  showers, 
Gan  to  approach  the  place  of  heauenly  Pheares, 
And  with  her  weeping,  watring  all  their  Bowers, 
Throwing  sweet  Odors  on  those  fading  flowers, 
At  length,  she  them  bespake  thus  mournfullie.     • 
High  loue  (quoth  she)  and  yee  Ccelestiall  powers, 
That  here  in  ludgement  sit  twixt  her  and  mee, 

Now  listen  (for  a  while)  and  iudge  with  equitie. 


Sporting  our  selues  to  day,  as  wee  were  woont 
(I  meane,  I,  Pallas,  and  the  Queene  of  Loue.) 
Intending  with  Diana  for  to  hunt, 
On  Ida  Mountaine  top  our  skill  to  proue, 
A  golden  Ball  was  trindled  from  aboue, 
And  on  the  Rinde  was  writ  this  Poesie, 
PvLCHERiM^Efor  which  a  while  we  stroue, 
Each  saying  shee  was  fairest  of  the  three, 

When  loe  a  shepheards  Swaine  not  far  away  we  see. 


196  CYNTHIA. 


Jan.  1595- 


I  spi'd  him  first,  and  spying  thus  bespake, 
Shall  yonder  Swaine  vnfolde  the  mysterie  ? 
Agreed  (quoth  Venus)  and  by  Stygian  Lake, 
To  whom  he  giues  the  ball  so  shall  it  bee : 
Nor  from  his  censure  will  I  flie,  quoth  shee, 
(Poynting  to  Pallas)  though  I  loose  the  gole. 
Thus  euery  one  yplac'd  in  her  degree, 
The  Shepheard  comes,  whose  partial  eies  gan  role, 

And  on  our  beuties  look't,  and  of  our  beuties  stole. 


I  promised  wealth,  Minerua  promised  wit, 
(Shee  promised  wit  to  him  that  was  vnwise,) 
But  he  (fond  foole)  had  soone  refused  it, 
And  minding  to  bestow  that  glorious  Prize, 
On  Venus,  that  with  pleasure  might  suffize 
His  greedie  minde  in  loose  lasciuiousnes : 
Vpon  a  sudden,  wanting  goode  aduice, 
Holde  heere  (quoth  he)  this  golden  Ball  possesse, 

Which  Paris  giues  to  thee  for  meede  of  worthines, 


Thus  haue  I  shew'd  the  summe  of  all  my  sute, 
And  as  a  Plaintiffe  heere  appeale  to  thee, 
And  to  the  rest.     Whose  folly  I  impute 
To  filthie  lust,  and  partialitie, 
That  made  him  iudge  amisse  :  and  so  doo  we 
(Quoth  Pallas,  Venus,)  nor  will  I  gaine-say, 
Although  it's  mine  by  right,  yet  willinglie, 
I  heere  disclaime  my  title  and  obey : 

When  silence  being  made,  loue  thus  began  to  saie. 


Thou  Venus,  art  my  darling,  thou  my  deare, 
(Minerua,}  shee,  my  sister  and  my  wife : 
So  that  of  all  a  due  respect  I  beare, 
Assign'd  as  one  to  end  this  doubtfull  strife, 
(Touching  your  forme,  your  fame,  your  loue,  your  life) 
Beauty  is  vaine  much  like  a  gloomy  light, 
And  wanting  wit  is  counted  but  a  trife, 
Especially  when  Honour's  put  to  flight  : 

Thus  of  a  louely,  soone  becomes  a  loathly  sight. 


Rl  jBanrn?51s:]  CYNTHIA.  197 

Wit  without  wealth  is  bad,  yet  counted  good, 

wealth  wanting  wisdom's  worse,  yet  deem'd  as  wel, 

From  whence  (for  ay)  doth  flow,  as  from  a  flood, 

A  pleasant  Poyson,  and  a  heauenly  Hell, 

where  mortall  men  do  couet  still  to  dwell. 

Yet  one  there  is  to  Vertue  so  inclin'd, 

That  as  for  Maiesty  she  beares  the  Bell, 

So  in  the  truth  who  tries  her  princelie  minde, 

Both  Wisdom,  Beauty,  Wealth,  and  all  in  her  shall  find. 


In  Westerne  world  amids  the  Ocean  maine, 
In  compleat  Vertue  shining  like  the  Sunne, 
In  great  Renowne  a  maiden  Queene  doth  raigne, 
Whose  royall  Race,  in  Ruine  first  begun, 
Till  Heauens  bright  Lamps  dissolue  shall  nere  be  done 
In  whose  faire  eies  Loue  linckt  with  vertues  been, 
In  euerlasting  Peace  and  Vnion. 
Which  sweet  Consort  in  her  full  well  beseeme 

Of  Bounty,  and  of  Beauty  fairest  Fayrie  Queene. 

And  to  conclude,  the  gifts  in  her  yfound, 
Are  all  so  noble,  royall,  and  so  rare, 
That  more  and  more  in  her  they  doe  abound  ; 
In  her  most  peerelesse  Prince  without  compare, 
Endowing  still  her  minde  with  vertuous  care  : 
That  through  the  world  (so  wide)  the  flying  fame, 
(And  Name  that  Enuies  selfe  cannot  impaire,) 
Is  blown  of  this  faire  Queen,  this  gorgeous  dame, 

Fame  borrowing  al  men's  mouths  to  royalize  the  same. 

And  with  this  sentence  lupiter  did  end, 

This  is  the  Pricke  (quoth  he),  this  is  the  praies, 
To  whom,  this  as  a  Present  I  will  send, 
That  shameth  Cynthia  in  her  siluer  Raies, 
If  so  you  three  this  deed  doe  not  displease. 
Then  one,  and  all,  and  euery  one  of  them, 
To  her  that  is  the  honour  of  her  daies, 
A  second  ludith  in  IERVSALEM. 

To  her  we  send  this  Pearle,  this  lewell,  and  this  lem. 


i98  CYNTHIA.  [ 

Then  call'd  he  vp  the  winged  Mercury, 

(The  mighty  Messenger  of  Gods  enrold,) 

And  bad  him  hither  hastily  to  hie, 

Whom  tended  by  her  Nymphes  he  should  behold, 

(Like  Pearles  ycouched  all  in  shining  gold.) 

And  euen  with  that,  from  pleasant  slumbring  sleepe, 

(Desiring  much  these  wonders  to  vnfold) 

I  wak'ning,  when  Aurora  gan  to  peepe, 
Depriu'd  so  soone  of  my  sweet  Dreame,  gan  almost  weepe. 


The  Conclusion. 

Hus,  sacred  Virgin,  Muse  of  chastitie, 
This  difference  is  betwixt  the  Moone  and  thee  : 
Shee  shines  by  Night ;  but  thou  by  Day  do'st 

shine  : 

Shee  Monthly  changeth ;  thou  dost  nere  decline : 
And  as  the  Sunne,  to  her,  doth  lend  his  light, 
So  hee,  by  thee,  is  onely  made  so  bright : 
Yet  neither  Sun,  nor  Moone,  thou  canst  be  named, 
Because  thy  light  hath  both  their  beauties  shamed  : 
Then,  since  an  heauenly  Name  doth  thee  befall, 
Thou  VIRGO  art :  (if  any  Signe  at  all). 

FINIS. 


i99 


ISO  N  N 


SO  N  N  E  T.   I. 

',  Porting  at  fancie,  setting  light  by  loue, 
There  came  a  theefe,  and  stole  away  my 

heart, 
(And  therefore  robd  me  of  my  chiefest 

part) 

Yet  cannot  Reason  him  a  felon  proue. 
For  why   his   beauty   (my  hearts  thiefe) 

affirmeth, 

Piercing  no  skin  (the  bodies  fensiue  wall) 
And  hauing  leaue,  and  free  consent  withall, 
Himselfe  not  guilty,  from  loue  guilty  tearmeth, 
Conscience  the  ludge,  twelue  Reasons  are  the  lurie, 
They  finde  mine  eies  the  be[a]utie  t'  haue  let  in, 
And  on  this  verdict  giuen,  agreed  they  bin, 
Wherefore,  because  his  beauty  did  allure  yee, 
Your  Doome  is  this :  in  teares  still  to  be  drowned, 
When  his  faire  forehead  with  disdain  is  frowned. 


2oo  [SONNETS. 

SONNET.   II. 

E[a]uty  and  Maiesty  are  falne  at  ods, 

Th'one   claimes   his   cheeke,  the  other  claimes 

his  chin ; 

Then  Vertue  comes,  and  puts  her  title  in. 
(Quoth  she)  I  make  him  like  th'immortall  Gods. 
(Quoth  Maiestie)  I  owne  his  lookes,  his  Brow, 
His  lips,  (quoth  Loue)  his  eies,  his  faire  is  mine. 
And  yet  (quoth  Maiesty)  he  is  not  thine, 
I  mixe  Disdaine  with  Loues  congealed  Snow. 
I,  but  (quoth  Loue)  his  lockes  are  mine  (by  right) 
His  stately  gate  is  mine  (quoth  Maiestie,) 
And  mine  (quoth  Vertue)  is  his  Modestie. 
Thus  as  they  striue  about  this  heauenly  wight, 
At  last  the  other  two  to  Vertue  yeeld, 
The  lists  of  Loue,  fought  in  faire  Beauties  field. 


SON  N  E  T.   III. 

He  Stoicks  thinke,  (and  they  come  neere  the  truth,) 
That  vertue  is  the  chiefest  good  of  all, 
The  Academicks  on  Idea  call. 
The  Epicures  in  pleasure  spend  their  youth, 
The  Perrepatetickes  iudge  felicitie, 

To  be  the  chiefest  good  aboue  all  other, 
One  man,  thinks  this :  and  that  conceaues  another  : 
So  that  in  one  thing  very  few  agree. 
Let  Stoicks  haue  their  Vertue  if  they  will, 
And  all  the  rest  their  chiefe- supposed  good, 
Let  cruell  Martialists  delight  in  blood, 
And  Mysers  ioy  their  bags  with  gold  to  fill : 
My  chiefest  good,  my  chiefe  felicity, 
Is  to  be  gazing  on  my  loues  faire  eie. 


R'f^593-  SONNETS.]  201 

SO  N  N  E  T.    1 1 1 1. 

stars  there  are  in  one  faire  firmament, 
(Of  some  intitled  Ganymedes  sweet  face), 
Which  other  stars  in  brightnes  doe  disgrace, 
As  much  as  Po  in  clearenes  passeth  Trent. 
Nor  are  they  common  natur'd  stars  :  for  why, 

These  stars  when  other  shine  vaile  their  pure  light, 
And  when  all  other  vanish  out  of  sight, 
They  adde  a  glory  to  the  worlds  great  eie. 
By  these  two  stars  my  life  is  onely  led, 

In  them  I  place  my  ioy,  in  them  my  pleasure, 
Loue's  piercing  Darts,  and  Natures  precious  treasure 
With  their  sweet  foode  my  fainting  soule  is  fed  : 
Then  when  my  sunne  is  absent  from  my  sight 
How  can  it  chuse  (with  me)  but  be  dark  night  ? 


SO  N  N  E  T.    V. 

T  is  reported  of  faire  Thetis  Sonne, 
(Achilles  famous  for  his  chiualry, 
His  noble  minde  and  magnanimity,) 
That  when  the  Troian  wars  were  new  begun, 
Whos'euer  was  deepe-wounded  with  his  speare, 
Could  neuer  be  recured  of  his  maime, 
Nor  euer  after  be  made  whole  againe  : 
Except  with  that  speares  rust  he  holpen  were. 
Euen  so  it  fareth  with  my  fortune  now, 
Who  being  wounded  with  his  piercing  eie, 
Must  either  thereby  finde  a  remedy, 
Or  els  to  be  releeu'd,  I  know  not  how. 
Then  if  thou  hast  a  minde  still  to  annoy  me, 
Kill  me  with  kisses,  if  thou  wilt  destroy  me. 


202  [SONNETS.  R-  j£^ 

S  O  N  N  E  T.    VI. 

Weet  Corrall  lips,  where  Nature's  treasure  lies, 
The  balme  of  blisse,   the  soueraigne    salue  of 

sorrow, 

The  secret  touch  of  loues  heart-burning  arrow, 
Come  quench  my  thirst  or  els  poor  DapTmis  dies. 
One  night  I  dream'd  (alas  twas  but  a  Dreame) 
That  I  did  feele  the  sweetnes  of  the  same, 
Where-with  inspir'd,  I  young  againe  became, 
And  from  my  heart  a  spring  of  blood  did  streame, 
But  when  I  wak't,  I  found  it  nothing  so, 

Saue  that  my  limbs  (me  thought)  did  waxe  more  strong 
And  I  more  lusty  far,  and  far  more  yong. 
This  gift  on  him  rich  Nature  did  bestow. 
Then  if  in  dreaming  so,  I  so  did  speede, 
What  should  I  doe,  if  I  did  so  indeede  ? 


SON  N  E  T  .    VII. 

Weet  Thames  I  honour  thee,  not  for  thou  art 
The  chiefest  Riuer  of  the  fairest  He, 
Nor  for  thou  dost  admirers  eies  beguile, 
But  for  thou  hold'st  the  keeper  of  my  heart, 
For  on  thy  waues,  (thy  Christal-billow'd  waues,) 
My  fairest  faire,  my  siluer  Swan  is  swimming  : 
Against  the  sunne  his  pruned  feathers  trimming: 
Whilst  Neptune  his  faire  feete  with  water  laues, 
Neptune,  I  feare  not  thee,  not  yet  thine  eie, 
And  yet  (alas)  Apollo  lou'd  a  boy, 
And  Cyparissus  was  Siluanus  ioy. 
No,  no,  I  feare  none  but  faire  Thetis,  I, 
For  if  she  spie  my  Loue,  (alas)  aie  me, 
My  mirth  is  turn'd  to  extreame  miserie. 


SONNETS.]  203 

SO  N  N  E  T.    VIII. 

Ometimes  I  wish  that  I  his  pillow  were, 

So  might  I  steale  a  kisse,  and  yet  not  scene, 
So  might  I  gaze  vpon  his  sleeping  eine, 
Although  I  did  it  with  a  panting  feare : 
But  when  I  well  consider  how  vaine  my  wish  is, 
Ah  foolish  Bees  (thinke  I)  that  doe  not  sucke 
His  lips  for  hony ;  but  poore  flowers  doe  plucke 
Which  haue  no  sweet  in  them  :  when  his  sole  kisses, 
Are  able  to  reuiue  a  dying  soule. 

Kisse  him,  but  sting  him  not,  for  if  you  doe, 
His  angry  voice  your  flying  will  pursue  : 
But  when  they  heare  his  tongue,  what  can  controule, 
Their  back-returne  ?  for  then  they  plaine  may  see, 
How  hony -combs  from  his  lips  dropping  bee. 


SON  N  E  T.     IX. 

\Iana  (on  a  time)  walking  the  wood, 

To  sport  herselfe,  of  her  faire  traine  forlorne, 
Chaunc't  for  to  pricke  her  foote  against  a  thorne, 
And  from  thence  issu'd  out  a  streame  of  blood. 
No  sooner  shee  was  vanisht  out  of  sight, 

But  loues  faire  Queen  came  there  away  by  chance, 
And  hauing  of  this  hap  a  glym'ring  glance, 
She  put  the  blood  into  a  christall  bright, 
When  being  now  come  vnto  mount  Rhodope, 

With  her  faire  hands  she  formes  a  shape  of  Snow, 
And  blends  it  with  this  blood ;  from  whence  doth  grow 
A  louely  creature,  brighter  than  the  Dey. 
And  being  christned  in  faire  Paphos  shrine, 
She  call'd  him  Ganymede :  as  all  diuine. 


204  [SONNETS.  R'^5»t 

S  0  N  N  E  T.    X. 

Hus  was  my  loue,  thus  was  my  Ganymed, 

(Heauens  ioy,  worlds  wonder,  natures   fairest 

work, 
In  whose  aspect  Hope  and  Dispaire  doe  lurke) 

Made  of  pure  blood  in  whitest  snow  yshed, 

And  for  sweete  Venus  only  form'd  his  face, 
And  his  each  member  delicately  framed, 
And  last  of  all  faire  Ganymede  him  named, 

His  limbs  (as  their  Creatrix)  her  imbrace. 

But  as  for  his  pure,  spotles,  vertuous  minde, 
Because  it  sprung  of  chaste  Dianaes  blood, 
(Goddesse  of  Maides,  directresse  of  all  good,) 

Hit  wholy  is  to  chastity  inclinde. 
And  thus  it  is  :  as  far  as  I  can  proue, 
He  loues  to  be  beloued,  but  not  to  loue. 


SON  N  E  T   XI. 

Ighing,  and  sadly  sitting  by  my  Loue, 

He  ask't  the  cause  of  my  hearts  sorrowing, 
Coniuring  me  by  heauens  eternall  King 
To  tell  the  cause  which  me  so  much  did  moue. 
Compeird  :  (quoth  I)  to  thee  will  I  confesse, 
Loue  is  the  cause ;  and  only  loue  it  is 
That  doth  depriue  me  of  my  heauenly  blisse. 
Loue  is  the  paine  that  doth  my  heart  oppresse. 
And  what  is  she  (quoth  he)  whom  thou  dos't  loue  ? 
Looke  in  this  glasse  (quoth  I)  there  shalt  thou  see 
The  perfect  forme  of  my  faslicitie. 
When,  thinking  that  it  would  strange  Magique  proue. 
He  open'd  it :  and  taking  of  the  couer, 
He  straight  perceau'd  himselfe  to  be  my  Louer. 


R'jBan.t£  SONNETS.]  205 

SONNET.    XII. 

Ome  talke  of  Ganymede  th'  Idalian  Boy, 

And  some  of  faire  A  donis  make  their  boast, 
Some  talke  of  him  whom  louely  Leeda  lost, 
And  some  of  Ecchoes  loue  that  was  so  coy. 
They  speake  by  heere-say,  I  of  perfect  truth, 
They  partially  commend  the  persons  named, 
And  for  them,  sweet  Encomions  haue  framed  : 
I  onely  t'him  haue  sacrificed  my  youth. 
As  for  those  wonders  of  antiquitie, 

And  those  whom  later  ages  haue  inioy'd, 
(But  ah  what  hath  not  cruell  death  destroide  ? 
Death,  that  enuies  this  worlds  felicitie), 
They  were  (perhaps)  lesse  faire  then  Poets  write. 
But  he  is  fairer  then  I  can  indite. 


SO  N  N  E  T  .    XIII. 

Peake  Eccho,  tell ;  how  may  I  call  my  loue  ?  Loue. 
But  how  his  Lamps  that  are  so  christa- 

line  ?  Eyne. 

Oh  happy  starrs  that  make  your  heauens  diuine : 
And  happy  lems  that  admiration  moue. 
How  tearm'st  his  golden  tresses  wau'd  with  aire  ?     Haire. 
Oh  louely  haire  of  your  more-louely  Maister, 
Image  of  loue,  faire  shape  of  Alablaster, 
Why  do'st  thou  driue  thy  Louer  to  dispaire  ? 
How  do'st  thou  cal  the  bed  wher  beuty  grows  ?          Rose. 
Faire  virgine-Rose,  whose  mayden  blossoms  couer 
The  milke-white  Lilly,  thy  imbracing  Louer : 
Whose  kisses  makes  thee  oft  thy  red  to  lose. 

And  blushing  oft  for  shame,  when  he  hath  kist  thee, 
He  vades  away,  and  thou  raing'st  where  it  list  thee. 


206  [SONNETS. 

SONNET.    XIIII. 

Ere,  hold  this  gioue  (this  milk-white  cheueril  gloue) 
Not  quaintly  ouer-wrought  with  curious  knots, 
Not  deckt  with  golden  spangs,  nor  siluer  spots, 
Yet  wholsome  for  thy  hand  as  thou  shalt  proue. 
Ah  no;  (sweet  boy)  place  this  gloue  neere  thy  heart, 
Weare  it,  and  lodge  it  still  within  thy  brest, 
So  shalt  thou  make  me  (most  vnhappy,)  blest. 
So  shalt  thou  rid  my  paine,  and  ease  my  smart : 
How  can  that  be  (perhaps)  thou  wilt  reply, 
A  gloue  is  for  the  hand  not  for  the  heart, 
Nor  can  it  well  be  prou'd  by  common  art, 
Nor  reasons  rule.     To  this,  thus  answere  I : 
If  thou  from  gloue  do'st  take  away  the  g, 
Then  gloue  is  loue :  and  so  I  send  it  thee9. 


SONNET.    XV. 

[H]  fairest  Ganymede,  disdaine  me  not, 

Though  silly  Sheepeheard  I,  presume  to  loue  thee, 
Though  my  harsh  songs   and  Sonnets  cannot 

moue  thee, 
Yet  to  thy  beauty  is  my  loue  no  blot. 
Apollo,  loue,  and  many  Gods  beside, 

S'  daind  not  the  name  of  cuntry  shepheards  swains. 
Nor  want  we  pleasure,  though  we  take  some  pains, 
We  liue  contentedly  :  a  thing  call'd  pride, 
Which  so  corrupts  the  Court  and  euery  place, 

(Each  place  I  meane  where  learning  is  neglected, 
And  yet  of  late,  euen  learnings  selfe's  infected) 
I  know  not  what  it  meanes,  in  any  case  : 
Wee  onely  (when  Molorchus  gins  to  peepe) 
Learne  for  to  folde,  and  to  vnfold  our  sheepe, 


R.  Barnfield. 
Jan   1595. 


SONNETS.] 
SONNET.     XVI. 


207 


Ong  haue  I  long'd  to  see  my  Loue  againe, 

Still  haue  I  wisht,  but  neuer  could  obtaine  it ; 
Rather  than  all  the  world  (if  I  might  gaine  it) 
Would  I  desire  my  loues  sweet  precious  gaine. 
Yet  in  my  soule  I  see  him  euerie  day, 

See  him,  and  see  his  still  sterne  countenaunce, 
But  (ah)  what  is  of  long  continuance, 
Where  Maiestie  and  Beautie  beares  the  sway? 
Sometimes,  when  I  imagine  that  I  see  him, 
(As  loue  is  full  of  foolish  fantasies) 
Weening  to  kisse  his  lips,  as  my  loues  fee's, 
I  feele  but  Aire  :  nothing  but  Aire  to  bee  him. 
Thus  with  Ixion,  kisse  I  clouds  in  vaine : 
Thus  with  Ixion,  feele  I  endles  paine. 


SONNET.    XVII. 

Herry-lipt  Adonis  in  his  snowie  shape, 

Might  not  compare  with  his  pure  luorie  white, 
On  whose  faire  front  a  Poets  pen  may  write, 
Whose  rosiate  red  excels  the  crimson  grape, 

His  loue-enticing  delicate  soft  limbs; 

Are  rarely  fram'd  t'intrap  poore  gazing  eies  : 
His  cheekes,  the  Lillie  and  Carnation  dies, 

With  louely  tincture  which  Apolloes  dims. 

His  lips  ripe  strawberries  in  Nectar  wet, 

His  mouth  a  Hiue,  his  tongue  a  hony-combe, 
Where  Muses  (like  Bees)  make  their  mansion. 

His  teeth  pure  Pearle  in  blushing  Correll  set. 
Oh  how  can  such  a  body  sinne-procuring, 
Be  slow  to  loue,  and  quicke  to  hate,  enduring  ? 


2o8  [SONNETS. 

SON  N  E  T.    X  VIII. 

Ot  Megabytes  nor  Cleonymus, 

(Of  whom  great  Plutarch  makes  such  mention, 
Praysing  their  faire  with  rare  inuention) 
As  Ganymede  were  halfe  so  beauteous. 
They  onely  pleas'd  the  eies  of  two  great  Kings, 
But  all  the  worlde  at  my  loue  stands  amazed, 
Nor  one  that  on  his  Angels  face  hath  gazed, 
But  (rauisht  with  delight)  him  Presents  brings. 
Some  weaning  Lambs,  and  some  a  suckling  Kyd, 
Some  Nuts,  and  fil-beards,  others  Peares  and  Plums, 
Another  with  a  milk-white  Heyfar  comes  ; 
As  lately  JEgons  man  (Damcetas)  did  : 

But  neither  he,  nor  all  the  Nymphs  beside, 
Can  win  my  Ganymede,  with  them  t 'abide. 


SON  N  E  T.    XIX. 

H  no  ;  nor  I  my  selfe :  though  my  pure  loue 

(Sweete  Ganymede)  to  thee  hath  still  beene  pure, 
And  euen  till  my  last  gaspe  shall  aie  endure, 
Could  euer  thy  obdurate  beuty  moue  : 
Then  cease  oh  Goddesse  sonne  (for  sure  thou  art, 
A  Goddesse  sonne  that  canst  resist  desire) 
Cease  thy  hard  heart,  and  entertaine  loues  fire, 
Within  thy  sacred  breast :  by  Natures  art. 
And  as  I  loue  thee  more  then  any  Creature, 
(Loue  thee,  because  thy  beautie  is  diuine  ; 
Loue  thee,  because  my  selfe,  my  soule  is  thine : 
Wholie  deuoted  to  thy  louelie  feature), 
Euen  so  of  all  the  vowels,  I  and  V, 
Are  dearest  vnto  me,  as  doth  ensue. 


R-jBaT*5fs:  SONNETS.]  209 

SONNET.    XX. 

Ut  now  my  Muse  toyld  with  continuall  care, 
Begins  to  faint,  and  slacke  her  former  pace, 
Expecting  fauour  from  that  heauenly  grace, 
That  maie  (in  time)  her  feeble  strength  repaire. 
Till  when  (sweete  youth)  th'essence  of  my  soule, 
(Thou  that  dost  sit  and  sing  at  my  hearts  griefe. 
Thou  that  dost  send  thy  shepheard  no  reliefe) 
Beholde,  these  lines ;  the  sonnes  of  Teares  and  Dole. 
Ah  had  great  Colin  chiefe  of  sheepheards  all, 
Or  gentle  Rowland,  my  professed  friend, 
Had  they  thy  beautie,  or  my  pennance  pend, 
Greater  had  beene  thy  fame,  and  lesse  my  fall : 
But  since  that  euerie  one  cannot  be  wittie, 
Pardon  I  craue  of  them,  and  of  thee,  pitty. 

FINIS. 


10 


210 


AN    ODE, 


Ights  were  short,  and  daies  were  long ; 
Blossoms  on  the  Hauthorn's  hung : 
Philomczle  (Night-Musiques-King) 
Tolde  the  comming  of  the  spring. 
Whose  sweete  siluer-sounding  voice 
Made  the  little  birds  reioice : 
Skipping  light  from  spray  to  spray, 
Till  Aurora  shew'd  the  day. 
Scarce  might  one  see,  when  I  might  see 
(For  such  chaunces  sudden  bee) 
By  a  well  of  Marble-stone 
A  Shepheard  lying  all  alone. 
Weepe  he  did  ;  and  his  weeping 
Made  the  fading  flowers  spring. 
Daphnis  was  his  name  (I  weene) 
Youngest  Swaine  of  Summers  Queene. 
When  Aurora  saw  'twas  he. 
Weep€  she  did  for  companie  : 
Weepe  she  did  for  her  sweete  sonne 
That  (when  antique  Troy  was  wonne) 
Suffer'd  death  by  lucklesse  fate, 
Whom  she  now  laments  too  late  : 
And  each  morning  (by  Cocks  crew) 
Showers  downe  her  siluer  dew. 
Whose  teares  (falling  from  their  spring) 
Giue  moysture  to  each  liuing  thing, 
That  on  earth  increase  and  grow, 


R.  Barnfield. 

jan.  1595 


.~l  A    XT      C\  T\  T- 

J  A  N    (J  D  E. 

Through  power  of  their  friendlie  foe. 

Whose  effect  when  Flora  felt, 

Teares,  that  did  her  bosome  melt, 

(For  who  can  resist  teares  often, 

But  Shee  whom  no  teares  can  soften  ?) 

Peering  straite  aboue  the  banks, 

Shew'd  herselfe  to  giue  her  thanks. 

Wondring  thus  at  Natures  worke, 

(Wherein  many  maruailes  lurke) 

Me  thought  I  heard  a  dolefull  noise, 

Consorted  with  a  mournfull  voice, 

Drawing  nie  to  heare  more  plaine, 

Heare  I  did,  vnto  my  paine, 

(For  who  is  not  pain'd  to  heare 

Him  in  griefe  whom  heart  holdes  dearepj 

Silly  swaine  (with  griefe  ore-gone) 

Thus  to  make  his  piteous  mone. 

Loue  I  did,  (alas  the  while) 

Loue  I  did,  but  did  beguile 

My  deare  loue  with  louing  so, 

(Whom  as  then  I  did  not  know.) 

Loue  I  did  the  fairest  boy, 

That  these  fields  did  ere  enioy. 

Loue  I  did,  fair  Ganymed  ; 

(Venus  darling,  beauties  bed  :) 

Him  I  thought  the  fairest  creature  ; 

Him  the  quintessence  of  Nature  : 

But  yet  (alas)  I  was  deceiu'd, 

(Loue  of  reason  is  bereau'd) 

For  since  then  I  saw  a  Lasse, 

(Lasse)  that  did  in  beauty  passe, 

(Passe)  faire  Ganymede  as  farre 

As  Phcebus  doth  the  smallest  starre. 

Loue  commaunded  me  to  loue  ; 

Fancy  bade  me  not  remoue 

My  affection  from  the  swaine 


211 


212  AN    ODE.  lR-fern5?ld. 


595' 


Which  he  cannot  graunt  the  crauer  ?) 
Loue  at  last  (though  loath)  preuailde ; 
(Loue)  that  so  my  heart  assailde ; 
Whom  I  neuer  could  obtaine  : 
(For  who  can  obtaine  that  fauour, 
Wounding  me  with  her  faire  eies, 
(Ah  how  Loue  can  subtelize, 
And  deuize  a  thousand  shifts, 
How  to  worke  men  to  his  drifts.) 
Her  it  is,  for  whom  I  mourne  ; 
Her,  for  whom  my  life  I  scorne ; 
Her,  for  whom  I  weepe  all  day ; 
Her,  for  whom  I  sigh,  and  say, 
Either  She,  or  els  no  creature, 
Shall  enioy  my  loue  :  whose  feature 
Though  I  neuer  can  obtaine, 
Yet  shall  my  true  loue  remaine  : 
Till  (my  body  turn'd  to  clay) 
My  poore  soule  must  passe  away, 
To  the  heauens  ;  where  (I  hope) 
Hit  shall  finde  a  resting  scope : 
Then  since  I  loued  thee  (alone) 
Remember  me  when  I  am  gone. 
Scarce  had  he  these  last  words  spoken, 
But  me  thought  his  heart  was  broken  ; 
With  great  griefe  that  did  abound, 
(Cares  and  griefe  the  heart  confound) 
In  whose  heart  (thus  riu'd  in  three) 
ELIZA  written  I  might  see  : 
In  Caracters  of  crimson  blood, 
(Whose  meaning  well  I  vnderstood.) 
Which,  for  my  heart  might  not  behold, 
I  hyed  me  home  my  sheep  to  folde. 

FINIS. 


213 


CASSANDRA. 


PON  a  gorgious  gold  embossed  bed,    [sunne, 
With  Tissue  curtaines  drawne  against  the 
(Which  gazers  eies  into  amazement  led, 
So  curiously  the  workmanship  was  done,) 
Lay  faire  Cassandm,in  her  snowie  smocke, 
Whose  lips  the  Rubies  and  the  pearles 
did  locke. 


And  from  her  luory  front  hung  dangling  downe, 

A  bush  of  long  and  louely  curled  haire  ; 

Whose  head  impalled  with  a  precious  Crowne 

Of  orient  Pearle,  made  her  to  seeme  more  faire  : 
And  yet  more  faire  she  hardly  could  be  thought, 
Then  Loue  and  Nature  in  her  face  had  wrought. 

By  this,  young  Phcebus  rising  from  the  East, 
Had  tane  a  view  of  this  rare  Paragon  : 
Wherewith  he  soone  his  radiant  beames  addresst, 
And  with  great  ioy  her  (sleeping)  gazed  vpon  : 

Til  at  the  last,  through  her  light  cazements  cleare. 

He  stole  a  kisse ;  and  softly  call'd  her  Deare. 

Yet  not  so  softly  but  (therwith  awak't,) 
Shee  gins  to  open  her  faire  christall  couers, 
Wherewith  the  wounded  God,  for  terror  quakt, 
(Viewing  those  darts  that  kill  disdained  louers  :) 
And  blushing  red  to  see  himselfe  so  shamed 
He  scorns  his  Coach,  and  his  owne  beauty  blamed. 


214  CASSANDRA.  [R> 

Now  with  a  trice  he  leaues  the  azure  skies, 
(As  whilome  loue  did  at  Europaes  rape,) 
And  rauisht  with  her  loue-a[l] luring  eies, 
He  turns  himselfe  into  a  humane  shape  : 
And  that  his  wish  the  sooner  might  ensue, 
He  sutes  himselfe  like  one  of  Venus  crew. 

Vpon  his  head  he  wore  a  Hunters  hat 
Of  crimson  veluet,  spangd  with  stars  of  gold, 
Which  grac'd  his  louely  face  :  and  ouer  that 
A  siluer  hatband  ritchly  to  behold  : 

On  his  left  shoulder  hung  a  loose  Tyara, 

As  whilome  vs'd  faire  Penthesilea. 

Faire  Penthesilea  th' Amazonian  Queene, 
When  she  to  Troy  came  with  her  warlike  band, 
Of  braue  Viragoes  glorious  to  be  scene ; 
Whose  manlike  force  no  power  might  withstand : 
So  look't  Apollo  in  his  louely  weedes, 
As  he  vnto  the  Troian  Damzell  speedes. 

Not  faire,  Adonis  in  his  chiefest  pride, 
Did  seeme  more  faire,  then  young  Apollo  seemed, 
When  he  through  th'aire  inuisibly  did  glide, 
T'obtaine  his  Loue,  which  he  Angelike  deemed  ; 
Whom  rinding  in  her  chamber  all  alone, 
He  thus  begins  t'expresse  his  piteous  mone. 

O  fairest,  faire,  aboue  all  faires  (quoth  hee) 
If  euer  Loue  obtained  Ladies  fauour, 
Then  shew  thy  selfe  compassionate  to  me, 
Whose  head  surpriz'd  with  thy  diuine  behauior, 
Yeelds  my  selfe  captiue  to  thy  conqu'ring  eies : 
O  then  shew  mercy,  do  not  tyrannize. 

Scarce  had  Apollo  vtter'd  these  last  words 
(Rayning  downe  pearle  from  his  immortall  eies) 
When  she  for  answere,  naught  but  feare  affords, 
Filling  the  place  with  lamentable  cries : 
But  Phoebus  fearing  much  these  raging  fits, 
With  sugred  kisses  sweetely  charm'd  her  lips. 


R*  jSffsSfr]  CASSANDRA  215 

(And  tells  her  softly  in  her  softer  eare) 
That  he  a  God  is,  and  no  mortall  creature : 
Wherewith  abandoning  all  needlesse  feare, 
(A  common  frailtie  of  weake  womans  nature) 
She  boldly  askes  him  of  his  deitie, 
Gracing  her  question  with  her  wanton  eie. 

Which  charge  to  him  no  sooner  was  assignde, 

But  taking  faire  Cassandra  by  the  hand 

(The  true  bewraier  of  his  secrete  minde) 

He  first  begins  to  let  her  vnderstand, 
That  he  from  Demogorgon  was  descended : 
Father  of  th'Earth,  of  Gods  and  men  commended. 

The  tenor  of  which  tale  he  now  recites, 
Closing  each  period  with  a  rauisht  kisse : 
Which  kindnes,  she  vnwillingly  requites, 
Conioyning  oft  her  Corrall  lips  to  his  : 

Not  that  she  lou'd  the  loue  of  any  one  ; 

But  that  she  meant  to  cozen  him  anone. 

Hee  briefly  t'her  relates  his  pedegree  : 
The  sonne  of  loue,  sole  guider  of  the  sunne, 
He  that  slue  Python  so  victoriouslie, 
He  that  the  name  of  wisdomes  God  hath  wonne, 
The  God  of  Musique,  and  of  Poetry  : 
Of  Phisicke,  Learning,  and  Chirurgery. 

All  which  he  eloquently  reckons  vp, 
That  she  might  know  how  great  a  God  he  was : 
And  being  charm'd  with  Cupid's  golden  cup 
He  partiallie  vnto  her  praise  doth  passe, 

Calling  her  tipe  of  honour,  Queen  of  beauty  : 

To  whom  all  eies  owe  tributary  duety. 

I  loued  once,  (quoth  hee)  aie  me  I  lou'd, 
As  faire  a  shape  as  euer  nature  framed  : 
Had  she  not  been  so  hard  t'haue  beene  remou'd, 
By  birth  a  sea-Nymph  ;  cruell  Daphne  named  : 
Whom,  for  shee  would  not  to  my  will  agree, 
The  Gods  transform'd  into  a  Laurell  tree. 


/r  /^*    xc-o    /<    ar  r->    r>    .«  I~R'  Barnfield. 

ID  LASSANDRA.  [_    Jan. IS9S. 

Ah  therefore  be  not,  (with  that  word  he  kist  her) 
Be  not  (quot  [h]  he)  so  proud  as  Daphne  was  : 
Ne  care  thou  for  the  anger  of  my  sister, 
She  cannot,  nay  she  shall  not  hurt  my  Cass : 

For  if  she  doe,  I  vow  (by  dreadfull  night) 

Neuer  againe  to  lend  her  of  my  light. 

This  said  :  he  sweetly  doth  imbrace  his  loue, 
Yoaking  his  armes  about  her  luory  necke : 
And  calls  her  wanton  Venus  milk-white  Doue, 
Whose  ruddie  lips  the  damaske  roses  decke. 
And  euer  as  his  tongue  compiles  her  praise, 
Loue  daintie  Dimples  in  her  cheekes  doth  raise. 

And  meaning  now  to  worke  her  stratagem 

Vpon  the  silly  God,  that  thinks  none  ill, 

She  hugs  him  in  her  armes,  and  kisses  him  ; 

(Th'easlyer  to  intice  him  to  her  will.) 
And  being  not  able  to  maintaine  the  feeld, 
Thus  she  begins  (or  rather  seemes)  to  yeeld. 

Woon  with  thy  words,  and  rauisht  with  my  beauty, 

Loe  here  Cassandra  yeelds  her  selfe  to  thee, 

Requiring  nothing  for  thy  vowed  duety, 

But  only  firmnesse,  Loue,  and  secrecy : 

Which  for  that  now  (euen  now)  I  meane  to  try  thee, 
A  boone  I  crave  ;  which  thou  canst  not  deny  me. 

Scarce  were  these  honywords  breath'd  from  her  lips, 
But  he,  supposing  that  she  ment  good-faith, 
Her  filed  tongues  temptations  interceps ; 
And  (like  a  Nouice,)  thus  to  her  he  saith  : 

Aske  what  thou  wilt,  and  I  will  giue  it  thee ; 

Health,  wealth,  long  life,  wit,  strt,  or  dignitie. 

Here-with  she  blushing  red,  (for  shame  did  ydde 
A  crimson  tincture  to  her  palish  hew,) 
Seeming  in  outward  semblance  passing  glad, 
(As  one  that  th'end  of  her  petition  knew) 
She  makes  him  sWeare  by  vgly  Acheron, 
That  he  his  promise  should  performe  anon. 


K>jBaanr.nise9ds:]  CASSANDRA.  217 

Which  done  :  relying  on  his  sacred  oath, 

She  askes  of  him  the  gift  of  prophecie  : 

He  (silent)  giues  consent :  though  seeming  loath 

To  grant  so  much  to  fraile  mortalitie  : 

But  since  that  he  his  vowes  maie  not  recall, 
He  giues  to  her  the  sp'rite  propheticall. 

But  she  no  sooner  had  obtain'd  her  wish, 
When  straite  vnpris'ning  her  lasciuiuous  armes 
From  his  softe  bosom  (th'aluary  of  blisse) 
She  chastely  counterchecks  loues  hote  alarmes : 
And  fearing  lest  his  presence  might  offend  her, 
She  slips  aside ;  and  (absent)  doth  defend  her. 

(Muliere  ne  credas,  ne  moriuce  quidem.) 

Looke  how  a  brightsome  Planet  in  the  skie, 
(Spangling  the  Welkin  with  a  golden  spot) 
Shootes  suddenly  from  the  beholders  eie, 
And  leaues  him  looking  there  where  she  is  not : 
Euen  so  amazed  Phoebus  (to  descrie  her) 
Lookes  all  about,  but  no  where  can  «spie  her. 

Not  th'hungry  Lyon,  hauing  lost  his  pray, 
With  greater  furie  runneth  through  the  wood, 
(Making  no  signe  of  momentarie  staie, 
Till  he  haue  satisfied  himslfe  with  blood,) 
Then  angry  Phcebus  mounts  into  the  skie  : 
Threatning  the  world  with  his  hot-burning  eie. 

Now  nimbly  to  his  glist'ring  Coach  he  skips, 
And  churlishlie  ascends  his  loftie  chaire, 
Yerking  his  head  strong  lades  with  yron  whips, 
Whose  fearefull  neighing  ecchoes  through  the  aire, 
Snorting  out  fierie  Sulphure  from  theire  nosethrils : 
Whose  deadly  damp  the  worlds  poore  people  kils. 

Him  leaue  me  (for  a  while)  amids  the  heauens, 
Wreaking  his  anger  on  his  sturdie  steedes  : 
Whose  speedful  course  the  day  and  night  now  eeuens, 
(The  earth  dis-robed  of  her  summer  weedes) 

And  nowe  black-mantled  night  with  her  browne  vaile, 
Couers  each  thing  that  all  the  world  might  quaile. 


218  CASSANDRA. 

When  loe,  Cassandra  lying  at  her  rest, 
(Her  rest  were  restlesse  thoughts  :)  it  so  befell, 
Her  minde  with  multitude  of  cares  opprest, 
Required  some  sleepe  her  passions  to  expell  : 
Which  when  sad  Morpheus  will  did  vnderstand, 
He  clos'd  her  eie-lids  with  his  leaden  hand. 

Now  sleepeth  shee  :  and  as  shee  sleepes,  beholde ; 
Shee  seemes  to  see  the  God  whom  late  shee  wronged 
Standing  before  her ;  whose  fierce  looks  vnfold, 
His  hidden  wrath  (to  whom  iust  ire  belonged) 
Seeing,  shee  sighs,  and  sighing  quak't  for  feare, 
To  see  the  shaddow  of  her  shame  appeare. 

Betwixt  amaze  and  dread  as  shee  thus  stands, 
The  fearefull  vision  drew  more  neere  vnto  her  : 
Aud  pynioning  her  armes  in  captiue  bands 
So  sure,  that  mortall  wight  may  not  vndoe  her, 
He  with  a  bloudy  knife  (oh  cruell  part,) 
With  raging  fury  stabd  her  to  the  heart. 

Heerewith  awaking  from  her  slumbring  sleepe, 
(For  feare,  and  care,  are  enemies  to  rest :) 
At  such  time  as  Aurora  gins  to  peepe 
And  shew  her  selfe  ;  far  orient  in  the  East : 

Shee  heard  a  voice  which  said  :  O  wicked  woman, 
Why  dost  thou  stil  the  gods  to  vengeance  summon  ? 

Thou  shalt  (indeede)  fore-tell  of  things  to  come ; 

And  truely,  too  ;  (for  why  my  vowes  are  past) 

But  heare  the  end  of  loues  eternall  doome : 

Because  thy  promise  did  so  little  last, 

Although  thou  tell  the  truth,  (this  gift  I  giue  thee) 
Yet  for  thy  falsebood,  no  man  shall  beleeue  thee. 

And  (for  thy  sake)  this  pennance  I  impose 

Vpon  the  remnant  of  all  woman  kinde, 

For  that  they  be  such  truth  professed  foes ; 

A  constant  woman  shall  be  hard  to  finde : 

And  that  all  flesh  at  my  dread  name  may  tremble, 
When  they  weep  most,  then  shall  they  most  dissemble. 


Jan. 


CASSANDRA.  219 

This  said  Apollo  then  :  And  since  that  time 
His  words  haue  proved  true  as  Oracles : 
Whose  turning  thoughtes  ambitiously  doe  clime 
To  heauens  height ;  and  world  with  lightnes  tils : 

Whose  sex  are  subject  to  inconstancie, 

As  other  creatures  are  to  destinie. 

Yet  famous  Sabrine  on  thy  banks  doth  rest 
The  fairest  Maide  that  euer  world  admired  : 
Whose  constant  minde,  with  heauenly  gifts  possest 
Makes  her  rare  selfe  of  all  the  world  desired. 

In  whose  chaste  thoughts  no  vanitie  doth  enter; 

So  pure  a  minde  Endymions  Love  hath  lent  her. 

Queene  of  my  thoughts,  but  subiect  of  my  verse, 
(Divine  Eliza)  pardon  my  defect : 
Whose  artlesse  pen  so  rudely  doth  reherse 
Thy  beauties  worth  ;  (for  want  of  due  respect) 

Oh  pardon  thou  the  follies  of  my  youth ; 

Pardon  my  faith,  my  loue,  my  zeale,  my  truth. 

But  to  Cassandra  now  :  who  hauing  heard 

The  cruell  sentence  of  the  threatning  voice  ; 

At  length  (too  late)  begins  to  waxe  affeard, 

Lamenting  much  her  vnrepentant  choice  : 
And  seeing  her  hard  hap  without  reliefe, 
She  sheeds  salt  teares  in  token  of  her  griefe. 

Which  when  Aurora  saw,  and  saw  t'was  shee, 
Euen  shee  her  selfe  whose  far-renowmed  fame 
Made  all  the  world  to  wonder  at  her  beauty, 
It  mou'd  compassion  in  this  ruthfull  Dame  : 
And  thinking  on  her  Sonnes  sad  destinie, 
With  mournfull  teares  she  beares  her  companie. 

Great  was  the  mone,  which  faire  Cassandra  made : 
Greater  the  kindnesse,  which  Aurora  shew'd  : 
Whose  sorrow  with  the  sunne  began  to  fade, 
And  her  moist  teares  on  th'earths  green  grasse  bestow'd : 
Kissing  the  flowers  with  her  sillier  dew, 
Whose  fading  beautie,  seem'd  her  case  to  rew. 


220  CASSANDRA.  [R>  j^jJ 

Scarce  was  the  louely  Easterne  Queene  departed, 
From  stately  Ilion  (whose  proud-reared  wals 
Seem'd  to  controule  the  cloudes,  till  Vulcan  darted 
Against  their  Tower  his  burning  fier-bals) 

When  sweet  Cassandra  (leauing  her  soft  bed) 

In  seemely  sort  her  selfe  apparelled. 

And  hearing  that  her  honourable  Sire, 
(Old  princely  Pryamus  Troy's  aged  King) 
Was  gone  into  loues  Temple,  to  conspire 
Against  the  Greekes,  (whom  he  to  war  did  bring) 
Shee,  (like  a  Furie),  in  a  bedlam  rage, 
Runs  gadding  thither,  his  fell  wrath  t'assuage. 

But  not  preuailing  :  truely  she  fore-tolde 
The  fall  of  Troy  (with  bold  erected  face  :) 
They  count  her  hare-brain'd,  mad,  and  ouer-bold, 
To  presse  in  presence  in  so  graue  a  place  : 

But  in  meane  season  Paris  he  is  gone, 

To  bring  destruction  on  faire  Ilion. 

What,  ten-yeeres  siedge  by  force  could  not  subuert, 

That,  two  false  traitors  in  one  night  destroi'd  ; 

Who  richly  guerdon'd  for  their  bad  desert, 

Was  of  jEneas  but  small  time  inioi'd  : 
Who,  for  concealement  of  Achilles  loue, 
Was  banished ;  from  Ilion  to  remoue. 

King  Pry  am  dead  and  all  the  Troians  slaine ; 
(His  sonnes,  his  friends  and  deere  confederates) 
And  lots  now  cast  for  captiues  that  remaine, 
(Whom  Death  hath  spared  for  more  cruell  fates) 
Cassandra  then  to  Agamemnon  fell, 
With  whom  a  Lemman  she  disdain'd  to  dwell. 

She,  weepes  ;  he,  wooes  ;  he  would,  but  she  would  not 
He,  tell's  his  birth  ;  shee,  pleades  virginitie  : 
He  saith,  selfe-pride  doth  rarest  beauty  blot : 
(And  with  that  word  he  kist  her  louingly :) 
Shee,  yeeldingly  resists ;  he  faines  to  die  : 
Shee,  fall's  for  feare  ;  he,  on  her  feareleslie. 


isgt]  CASSANDRA.  221 

But  this  braue  generall  of  all  the  Greekes, 

Was  quickly  foyled  at  a  womans  hands, 

For  who  so  rashly  such  incounters  seekes, 

Of  hard  mis-hap  in  danger  euer  stands  : 

Onely  chaste  thoughts,  vertuous  abstinence, 
Gainst  such  sweet  poyson  is  the  sur'st  defence. 

But  who  can  shun  the  force  of  beauties  blow  ? 
Who  is  not  rauisht  with  a  louely  looke  ? 
Grac'd  with  a  wanton  eie,  (the  hearts  dumb  show) 
Such  fish  are  taken  with  a  siluer  hooke : 

And  when  true  loue  cannot  these  pearles  obtaine 

Vnguentum  Album  is  the  only  meane. 

Farre  be  it  from  my  thought  (diuinest  Maid) 

To  haue  relation  to  thy  heauenly  hew, 

(In  whose  sweete  voice  the  Muses  are  imbaid) 

No  pen  can  paint  thy  commendation  due : 
Saue  only  that  pen,  which  no  pen  can  be, 
An  Angels  quill,  to  make  a  pen  for  thee. 

But  to  returne  to  these  vnhappie  Louers, 

(Sleeping  securely  in  each  others  armes) 

VVhose  sugred  ioies  nights  sable  mantle  couers, 

Little  regarding  their  ensuing  harmes : 

Which  afterward  they  iointlie  both  repented : 
"  Fate  is  fore-seene,  but  neuer  is  preuented." 

Which  saying  to  be  true,  this  lucklesse  Dame 
Approued  in  the  sequele  of  her  story : 
Now  waxing  pale,  now  blushing  red  (for  shame), 
She  scales  her  lips  with  silence  (womens  glory) 

Till  Agamemnon  vrging  her  replies, 

Thus  of  his  death  she  truely  prophecies. 

The  day  shall  come,  (quoth  she)  O  dismal  daie! 

When  thou  by  false  JEgistus  shalt  be  slaine : 

Heere  could  she  tell  no  more ;  but  made  a  stay. 

(From  further  speech  as  willing  to  refraine  :) 
Not  knowing  then,  nor  little  did  she  thinke, 
That  she  with  him  of  that  same  cup  must  drinke 


222  CASSANDRA.  [R'ST?» 

But  what  ?  (fond  man)  he  laughs  her  skil  to  scorne, 

And  iesteth  at  her  diuination  : 

Ah  to  what  vnbeliefe  are  Princes  borne  ? 

(The  onely  ouer-throw  of  many  a  Nation  :) 
And  so  it  did  befall  this  lucklesse  Prince, 
Whom  all  the  world  hath  much  lamented  since. 

Insteede  of  teares,  he  smileth  at  her  tale  : 
Insteede  of  griefe,  he  makes  great  shew  of  gladnes  : 
But  after  blisse,  there  euer  followes  bale  ; 
And  after  mirth,  there  alwaies  commeth  sadnes : 

But  gladnesse,  blisse,  and  mirth  had  so  possest  him, 
That  sadnes,  bale,  and  griefe  could  not  molest  him. 

Oh  cruell  Parcce  (quoth  Cassandra  then) 

Why  are  you  Parcce,  yet  not  mou'd  with  praier  ? 

Oh  small  security  of  mortall  men, 

That  Hue  on  earth,  and  breathe  this  vitall  aire : 

When  we  laugh  most,  then  are  we  next  to  sorrow ; 

The  Birds  feede  vs  to-day,  we  them  to-morrow. 

But  if  the  first  did  little  moue  his  minde, 
Her  later  speeches  lesse  with  him  preuailed ; 
Who  beinge  wholy  to  selfe-will  inclinde, 
Deemes  her  weake  braine  with  lunacy  assailed : 
And  still  the  more  shee  councels  him  to  stay, 
The  more  he  striueth  to  make  haste  away. 

How  on  the  Seas  he  scap'd  stormes,  rocks  and  sholes, 
(Seas  that  enuide  the  conquest  he  had  wone, 
Gaping  like  hell  to  swallow  Greekish  soules,) 
I  heere  omit ;  onely  suppose  it  done  : 

His  storm-tyrde  Barke  safely  brings  him  to  shore, 
His  whole  Fleete  els,  or  suncke  or  lost  before. 

Lift  vp  thy  head,  thou  ashie-cyndred  Troy, 
See  the  commaunder  of  thy  traitor  foes, 
That  made  thy  last  nights  woe,  his  first  daies  ioie, 
Now  gins  his  night  of  ioy  and  daie  of  woes : 
His  fall  be  thy  delight,  thine  was  his  pride : 
As  he  thee  then,  so  now  thou  him  deride. 


R.  Barnfield."!  f^A^c'Anrr^jA  «/•»«•» 

Jan.  1595.  J  (CASSANDRA.  22$ 

He  and  Cassandra  now  are  set  on  shore, 
Which  he  salutes  with  ioy,  she  greetes  with  teares, 
Currors  are  sent  that  poast  to  Court  before, 
Whose  tidings  fill  th'adultrous  Queene  with  feares, 
Who  with  ^Egisttis  in  a  lust-staind  bed, 
Her  selfe,  her  King,  her  State  dishonored. 

She  wakes  the  lecher  with  a  loud-strain'd  shrike, 
Loue-toies  they  leaue,  now  doth  lament  begin : 
He  flie  (quoth  he)  but  she  doth  that  mislike, 
Guilt  vnto  guilt,  and  sinne  she  ads  to  sinne : 

Shee  meanes  to  kill  (immodest  loue  to  couer) 

A  kingly  husband,  for  a  caytiue  louer. 

The  peoples  ioies,  conceiued  at  his  returne, 
Their  thronging  multitudes  :  their  gladsome  cries, 
Their  gleeful  hymnes,  whiles  piles  of  incense  burne  : 
Their  publique  shewes,  kept  at  solemnities  : 

We  passe :  and  tell  how  King  and  Queene  did  meet. 

Where  he  with  zeale,  she  him  with  guile  did  greet. 

He  (noble  Lord)  fearelesse  of  hidden  treason, 
Sweetely  salutes  this  weeping  Crocodile  : 
Excusing  euery  cause  with  instant  reason 
That  kept  him  from  her  sight  so  long  a  while  : 
She,  faintly  pardons  him ;  smiling  by  Art  : 
(For  life  was  in  her  lookes,  death  in  her  hart.) 

For  pledge  that  I  am  pleas'd  receiue  (quoth  shee) 
This  rich  wrought  robe,  thy  Clytemnestras  toile : 
Her  ten  yeeres  worke  this  day  shall  honour  thee, 
For  ten  yeeres  war,  and  one  daies  glorious  spoile  : 
Whil'st  thou  contendedst  there,  I  heere  did  this : 
Weare  it  my  loue,  my  life,  my  ioy,  my  blisse. 

Scarce  had  the  Syren  said  what  I  haue  write, 

But  he  (kind  Prince)  by  her  milde  words  misled, 

Receiu'd  the  robe,  to  trie  if  it  were  fit ; 

(The  robe)  that  had  no  issue  for  his  head ; 
Which,  whilst  he  vainly  hoped  to  haue  found, 
JSgistus  pierst  him  with  a  mortal  wound. 


224  CASSANDRA.  [R- 

Oh  how  the  Troyan  Damzell  was  amazed 
To  see  so  fell  and  bloudy  a  Tragedie, 
Performed  in  one  Act ;  she  naught  but  gazed, 
Vpon  the  picture ;  whom  shee  dead  did  see, 
Before  her  face  :  whose  body  she  emballms, 
With  brennish  teares,  and  sudden  deadly  qualms. 

Faine  would  she  haue  fled  backe  on  her  swift  horse 
But  Clytemnestra  bad  her  be  content, 
Her  time  was  com'n  :  now  bootelesse  vsd  she  force, 
Against  so  many ;  whom  this  Tygresse  sent 
To  apprehend  her :  who  (within  one  hower 
Brought  backe  againe)  was  lockt  within  a  Tower. 

Now  is  she  ioylesse,  friendlesse,  and  (in  fine) 
Without  all  hope  of  further  libertie  : 
Insteed  of  cates,  cold  water  was  her  wine, 
And  Agamemnons  corps  her  meate  must  be, 
Or  els  she  must  for  hunger  starue  (poore  sole) 
What  could  she  do  but  make  great  mone  and  dole. 

So  darke  the  dungeon  was,  wherein  she  was, 
That  neither  Sunne  (by  day)  nor  Mone  (by  night) 
Did  shew  themselues :  and  thus  it  came  to  passe. 
The  Sunne  denide  to  lend  his  glorious  light 

To  such  a  periur'd  wight,  or  to  be  scene ; 

(What  neede  she  light,  that  ouer-light  had  bin  ?) 

Now  silent  night  drew  on ;  when  all  things  sleepe, 
Saue  theeves,  and  cares ;  and  now  stil  mid-night  came 
When  sad  Cassandra  did  naught  els  but  weepe ; 
Oft  calling  on  her  Agamemnons  name. 
But  seeing  that  the  dead  did  not  replie, 
Thus  she  begins  to  mourne,  lament,  and  crie. 

Oh  cruell  Fortune  (mother  of  despaire,) 
Well  art  thou  christen'd  with  a  cruell  name : 
Since  thou  regardest  not  the  wise,  or  faire, 
But  do'st  bestow  thy  riches  (to  thy  shame) 
On  fooles  and  lowly  swaines,  that  care  not  for  thee  : 
And  yet  I  weepe,  and  yet  thou  do'st  abhorre  me. 


R.  Barnfield."!  /"'^no^nr^^ 

jan.  i595  J  CASSANDRA.  225 

Fie  on  ambition,  fie  on  filthy  pride, 
The  roote  of  ill,  the  cause  of  all  my  woe  : 
On  whose  fraile  yce  my  youth  first  slipt  aside  : 
And  falling  downe,  receiu'd  a  fatall  blow. 

Ah  who  hath  liu'd  to  see  such  miserie 

As  I  haue  done,  and  yet  I  cannot  die  ? 

I  liu'd  (quoth  she)  to  see  Troy  set  on  fire : 

I  liu'd  to  see,  renowned  Hector  slaine : 

I  liu'd  to  see,  the  shame  of  my  desire : 

And  yet  I  Hue,  to  feel  my  grieuous  paine  : 
Let  all  young  maides  example  take  by  me, 
To  keepe  their  oathes,  and  spotlesse  chastity. 

Happy  are  they,  that  neuer  liu'd  to  know 

What  'tis  to  Hue  in  this  world  happily : 

Happy  are  they  which  neuer  yet  felt  woe : 

Happy  are  they,  that  die  in  infancie : 

Whose  sins  are  cancell'd  in  their  mothers  wombe : 
Whose  cradle  is  their  graue,  whose  lap  their  tomb. 

Here  ended  shee ;  and  then  her  teares  began, 
That  (Chorus-like)  at  euery  word  downe  rained. 
Which  like  a  paire  of  christall  fountaines  ran, 
Along  her  louely  cheekes  :  with  roses  stained  : 
Which  as  they  wither  still  (for  want  of  raine) 
Those  siluer  showers  water  them  againe. 

Now  had  the  poore-mans  clock  (shrill  chauntcleare) 
Twice  giuen  notice  of  the  Mornes  approach, 
(That  then  began  in  glorie  to  appeare, 
Drawne  in  her  stately  colour'd  saffron-Coach) 

When  shee  (poore  Lady)  almost  turn'd  to  teares, 
Began  to  teare  and  rend  her  golden  haires. 

Lie  there  (quoth  shee)  the  workers  of  my  woes 
You  trifling  toies,  which  my  Hues  staine  haue  bin  : 
You,  by  whose  meanes  our  coines  chiefly  growes, 
Clothing  the  backe  with  pride,  the  soule  with  sin  : 

Lie  there  (quoth  shee)  the  causers  of  my  care; 

This  said,  her  robes  she  all  in  pieces  tare. 

p  10 


226  CASSANDRA. 

Here-with,  as  weary  of  her  wretched  life, 
(Which  shee  inioy'd  with  small  felicitie) 
She  ends  her  fortune  with  a  fatall  knife ; 
(First  day  of  ioy,  last  day  of  miserie :) 
Then  why  is  death  accounted  Nature's  foe, 
Since  death  (indeed)  is  but  the  end  of  woe  ? 


For  as  by  death,  her  bodie  was  released 
From  that  strong  prison  made  of  lime  and  stone  ; 
Euen  so  by  death  her  purest  soule  was  eased, 
From  bodies  prison,  and  from  endlesse  mone : 
Where  now  shee  walkes  in  sweete  Elysium 
(The  place  for  wrongful  Death  and  Martirdum.) 


FINIS. 


CR.  Barnfield. 
Jan.  1595. 


The  Encomion  of  Lady  Pecunia  : 

OR 

The  praife  of  Money. 

qucerenda  pecunia  primum  est, 
Virtus  post  nummos.     Horace. 

By  Richard  Barnfeild^  Graduate  in  Oxford. 


LONDON, 

Printed  by  G.  S.  for  lohn  laggard,  and  are 

to  be  sold  at  his  shoppe  neere  Temple -barre, 

at  the  Signe  of  the  Hand  and  starre. 

1598. 


229 


To  the   Gentlemen   Readers. 


Entlemen,  being  incouraged  through  your  gentle 
acceptance  of  my  Cynthia,  I  haue  once  more  ad- 
uentured  on  your  Curtesies  :  hoping  to  finde  you 
(as  I  haue  done  heretofore)  friendly.  Being 
determined  to  write  of  somthing,  and  yet  not 
resolued  of  any  thing,  I  considered  with  my  selfe,  if  one 
should  write  of  Loue  (they  will  say)  why,  euery  one  writes  of 
Loue  :  if  of  Vertue,  why,  who  regards  Vertue  ?  To  be  short, 
I  could  thinke  of  nothing,  but  either  it  was  common,  or  not  at 
all  in  request.  At  length  I  bethought  my  selfe  of  a  Subiect, 
both  new  (as  hauing  neuer  beene  written  vpon  before)  and 
pleasing  (as  I  thought)  because  Mans  Nature  (commonly) 
loues  to  heare  that  praised,  with  whose  pressence,  hee  is  most 
pleased. 

Erasmus  (the  glory  of  Netherland,  and  the  refiner  of  the 
Latin  Tongue)  wrote  a  whole  Booke,  in  the  prayse  of  Folly. 
Then  if  so  excellent  a  Scholler,  writ  in  praise  of  Vanity,  why 
may  not  I  write  in  praise  of  that  which  is  profitable  ?  There 
are  no  two  Countreys,  where  Gold  is  esteemed,  lesse  than  in 
India,  and  more  then  in  England  :  the  reason  is,  because  the 
Indians  are  barbarous,  and  our  Nation  ciuill. 

I  have  giuen  Pecunia  the  title  of  a  Woman,  Both  for  the 
termination  of  the  Word,  and  because  (as  Women  are)  shee 
is  lov'd  of  men.  The  brauest  Voyages  in  the  World,  haue 
beene  made  for  Gold :  for  it,  men  haue  venterd  (by  Sea)  to 
the  furthest  parts  of  the  Earth  :  In  the  Pursute  whereof, 
Englands  Nestor  and  Neptune  (Haukins  and  Drake)  lost  their 


230     To  THE  GENTLEMEN  READERS.   [R- 

Hues.     Vpon  the  Deathes  of  the  which  two,  of  the  first  I 
writ  this  : 

The  Waters  were  his  Winding  sheete,  the  Sea  was  made  his  Toome  ; 
Yet  for  his  fame  the  Ocean  Sea,  was  not  sufficient  roome. 

Of  the  latter  this  : 

England  his  hart ;  his  Corps  the  Waters  haue  ; 
And  that  which  raysd  his  fame,  became  his  grave. 

The  Prcztorians  (after  the  death  of  Pertinax)  in  the  election 
of  a  new  Emperour,  more  esteemed  the  money  of  lulianus, 
then  either  the  vertue  of  Seuerus,  or  the  Valour  of  Pessennius. 
Then  of  what  great  estimation  and  account,  this  Lady 
Pecunia,  both  hath  beene  in  the  Worlde,  and  is  at  this  present, 
I  leaue  to  your  Judgement.  But  what  speake  I  so  much  of 
her  praise  in  my  Epistle,  that  haue  commended  her  so  at 
large  in  my  Booke  ?  To  the  reading  wherof,  (Gentlemen)  I 
referre  you. 


[THE    AUTHORS    FIRST    EPISTLE- 
DEDICATORY  (1605). 

[Collated  with  the  Bridgwater  House  copy.] 

Ed  by  the  swift  report  of  winged  Fame, 

With  siluer  trumpet,  sounding  forth  your  name 
To  you  I  dedicate  this  merry  Muse, 
And  for  my  Patron,  I  your  fauour  chuse  : 
She  is  a  Lady,  she  must  be  respected : 
She  is  a  Queene,  she  may  not  be  neglected. 
This  is  the  shadow,  you  the  substance  haue, 
Which  substance  now  this  shadow  seems  to  craue. 

RICHARD    BARNFIELD.] 


231 


The  prayse   of  Lady  Pecunia. 


Sing  not  of  Angellica  the  faire, 

(For  whom  the  Palladine  of  Fraunce  fell 

mad) 

Nor  of  sweet  Rosamond,  olde  Cliffords  heire, 
(Whose  death  did  make  the  second  Henry 

sad) 

But  of  the  fairest  Faire  Pecunia, 
The  famous  Queene  of  rich  America. 


Goddesse  of  Golde,  great  Empresse  of  the  Earth, 
O  thou  that  canst  doe  all  Thinges  vnder  Heauen : 
That  doost  conuert  the  saddest  minde  to  Mirth  ; 
(Of  whom  the  elder  Age  was  quite  bereauen) 

Of  thee  He  sing,  and  in  thy  Prayse  He  write ; 

You  golden  Angels  helpe  me  to  indite. 

You,  you  alone,  can  make  my  Muse  to  speake ; 

And  tell  a  golden  Tale,  with  siluer  Tongue  : 

You  onely  can  my  pleasing  silence  breake ; 

And  adde  some  Musique,  to  a  merry  Songue : 
But  amongst  all  the  flue,  in  Musicks  Art, 
I  would  not  sing  the  Counter-ienor  part. 

The  Meane  is  best,  and  that  I  meane  to  keepe ; 

So  shall  I  keepe  my  selfe  from  That  I  meane  : 

Lest  with  some  Others,  I  be  forc'd  to  weepe, 

And  cry  Peccaui,  in  a  dolefull  Scsene. 
But  to  the  matter  which  I  haue  in  hand, 
The  Lady  Regent,  both  by  Sea  and  Land. 


232  THE  PRAYSE  OF  LADY  PECUNIA.       [R- Barnfield 


1598. 


When  Saturne  liu'd,  and  wore  the  Kingly  Crowne, 
(And  loue  was  yet  vnborne,  but  not  vnbred) 
This  Ladies  fame  was  then  of  no  renowne  ; 
(For  Golde  was  then,  no  more  esteem'd  then  Lead) 

Then  Truth  and  Honesty  were  onely  vs'd, 

Siluer  and  Golde  were  vtterly  refus'd. 

But  when  the  Worlde  grew  wiser  in  Conceit, 
And  saw  how  Men  in  manners  did  decline, 
How  Charitie  began  to  loose  her  heate, 
And  One  did  at  anothers  good  repine, 

Then  did  the  Aged,  first  of  all  respect  her ; 

And  vowd  from  thenceforth,  neuer  to  reiect  her. 

Thus  with  the  Worlde,  her  beauty  did  increase  ; 
And  manie  Suters  had  she  to  obtaine  her : 
Some  sought  her  in  the  Wars,  and  some  in  peace ; 
But  few  of  youthfull  age,  could  euer  gaine  her : 

Or  if  they  did,  she  soone  was  gone  againe ; 

And  would  with  them,  but  little  while  remaine. 

For  why  against  the  Nature  of  her  Sexe, 

(That  commonlie  dispise  the  feeble  Olde) 

Shee,  loues  olde  men  ;  but  young  men  she  reiects  ; 

Because  to  her,  their  Loue  is  quicklie  colde : 

Olde  men  (like  Husbands  iealous  of  their  Wiues) 
Lock  her  vp  fast,  and  keepe  her  as  their  Liues. 

The  young  man  carelesse  to  maintaine  his  life, 
Neglects  her  Loue  (as  though  he  did  abhor  her) 
Like  one  that  hardly  doeth  obtaine  a  wife, 
And  when  he  hath  her  once,  he  cares  not  for  her : 
Shee,  seeing  that  the  young  man  doeth  despyse  her, 
Leaues  the  franke  heart,  and  flies  vnto  the  Myser. 

Hee  intertaines  her,  with  a  ioyfull  hart ; 

And  seemes  to  rue  her  vndeserued  wrong  : 

And  from  his  Pressence,  she  shall  neuer  part ; 

Or  if  shee  doo,  he  thinkes  her  Absence  long : 
And  oftentimes  he  sends  for  her  againe, 
Whose  life  without  her,  cannot  long  remaine. 


R.  Barnfieid.-j        ^HE   PRAYSE    OF    LADY    PfiCUNIA.  233 

And  when  he  hath  her,  in  his  owne  possession, 

He  locks  her  in  an  iron-barred  Chest, 

And  doubting  somewhat,  of  the  like  Transgression, 

He  holds  that  iron-walled  Prison  best. 

And  least  some  rusty  sicknesse  should  infect  her, 
He  often  visits  her,  and  doeth  respect  her. 

As  for  the  young  man  (subiect  vnto  sinne) 
No  maruell  though  the  Diuell  doe  distresse  him  ; 
To  tempt  mans  frailtie,  which  doth  neuer  linne, 
Who  many  times,  hath  not  a  Crosse  to  blesse  him  : 
But  how  can  hee  incurre  the  Heauens  Curse, 
That  hath  so  many  Crosses  in  his  Purse  ? 

Hee  needes  not  feare  those  wicked  sprights,  that  waulke 
Vnder  the  Couerture  of  cole-blacke  Night ; 
For  why  the  Diuell  still,  a  Crosse  doeth  baulke, 
Because  on  it,  was  hangd  the  Lorde  of  Light : 
But  let  not  Mysers  trust  to  siluer  Crosses, 
Least  in  the  End,  their  gaines  be  turnd  to  losses. 

But  what  care  they,  so  they  may  hoorde  vp  golde  ? 

Either  for  God,  or  Diuell,  or  Heauen,  or  Hell  ? 

So  they  may  faire  Pecuniaes  face  behold  ; 

And  euery  Day,  their  Mounts  of  Money  tell. 
What  tho  to  count  their  Coyne,  they  neuer  blin, 
Count  they  their  Coyne,  and  counts  not  God  their  sin  ? 

But  what  talke  I  of  sinne,  to  Vsurers  ? 

Or  looke  for  mendment,  at  a  Mysers  hand  ? 

Pecunia,  hath  so  many  followers, 

Bootlesse  it  is,  her  Power  to  with-stand. 
King  Couetise,  and  Warinesse  his  Wife, 
The  Parents  were,  that  first  did  giue  her  Life. 

But  now  vnto  her  Praise  I  will  proceede, 
Which  is  as  ample,  as  the  Worlde  is  wide : 
What  great  Contentment  doth  her  Pressence  breede 
In  him,  that  can  his  wealth  with  Wysdome  guide  ? 
She  is  the  Soueraigne  Queene,  of  all  Delights  : 
For  her  the  Lawyer  pleades  ;  the  Souldier  fights. 


234  THE  PRAYSE  OF  LADY  PECUNIA.       [R- 

For  her,  the  Merchant  venters  on  the  Seas : 

For  her,  the  Scholler  studdies  at  his  Booke  : 

For  her,  the  Vsurer  (with  greater  ease) 

For  sillie  fishes,  layes  a  siluer  hooke  : 

For  her,  the  Townsman  leaues  the  Countrey  Village  : 
For  her,  the  Plowman  giues  himselle  to  Tillage. 

For  her,  the  Gentlemen  doeth  raise  his  rents  : 
For  her,  the  Seruingman  attends  his  maister : 
For  her,  the  curious  head  new  toyes  inuents  : 
For  her,  to  Sores,  the  Surgeon  layes  his  plaister. 
In  fine  for  her,  each  man  in  his  Vocation, 
Applies  himselfe,  in  euerie  sev'rall  Nation. 

What  can  thy  hart  desire,  but  thou  mayst  haue  it, 
If  thou  hast  readie  money  to  disburse  ? 
Then  thanke  thy  Fortune,  that  so  freely  gaue  it ; 
For  of  all  friends,  the  surest  is  thy  purse. 

Friends  may  proue  false,  and  leaue  thee  in  thy  need ; 

But  still  thy  Purse  will  bee  thy  friend  indeed. 

Admit  thou  come,  into  a  place  vnknowne  ; 
And  no  man  knowes,  of  whence,  or  what  thou  art : 
If  once  thy  faire  Pecunia,  shee  be  showne, 
Thou  art  esteem'd  a  man  of  great  Desart : 

And  placed  at  the  Tables  vpper  ende ; 

Not  for  thine  owne  sake,  but  thy  faithfull  frende. 

But  if  you  want  your  Ladies  louely  grace, 
And  haue  not  wherewithall  to  pay  your  shot, 
Your  Hostis  pressently  will  step  in  Place, 
You  are  a  Stranger  (Sir)  I  know  you  not : 

By  trusting  Diuers,  I  am  run  in  Det ; 

Therefore  of  mee,  nor  meate  nor  Bed  you  get. 

O  who  can  then,  expresse  the  worthie  praise, 

Which  faire  Pecunia  iustly  doeth  desarue  ? 

That  can  the  meanest  man,  to  Honor  raise ; 

And  feed  the  soule,  that  ready  is  to  starue. 
Affection,  which  was  wont  to  bee  so  pure, 
Against  a  golden  Siege,  may  not  endure. 


R.  Barnfield-J  JH£    pRAYSE    OF     LADY     PECUNIA.  235 

Witnesse  the  trade  of  Mercenary  sinne ; 

(Or  Occupation,  if  thou  list  to  tearme  it) 

Where  faire  Pecunia  must  the  suite  beginne ; 

(As  common-tride  Experience  doeth  confirme  it) 
Not  Mercury  himselfe,  with  siluer  Tongue, 
Can  so  inchaunt,  as  can  a  golden  Songue. 

When  nothing  could  subdue  the  Phrygian  Troy, 
(That  Citty  through  the  world  so  much  renowned) 
Pecunia  did  her  vtterly  destroy  : 
And  left  her  fame,  in  darke  Obliuion  drowned. 
And  many  Citties  since,  no  lesse  in  fame, 
For  Loue  of  her,  haue  yeelded  to  their  shame. 

What  Thing  is  then,  so  well  belou'd  as  money  ? 
It  is  a  speciall  Comfort  to  the  minde  ; 
More  faire  then  Women  are  ;  more  sweet  then  honey : 
Easie  to  loose,  but  very  harde  to  finde. 

In  fine,  to  him,  whose  Purse  beginns  to  faint, 

Golde  is  a  God,  and  Siluer  is  a  Saint. 

The  Tyme  was  once,  when  Honestie  was  counted 
A  Demy  god ;  and  so  esteem'd  of  all : 
But  now  Pecunia  on  his  Seate  is  mounted ; 
Since  Honestie  in  great  Disgrace  did  fall. 

No  state,  no  Calling  now,  doeth  him  esteeme ; 

Nor  of  the  other  ill,  doeth  any  deeme. 

The  reason  is,  because  he  is  so  poore : 
(And  who  respects  the  poore,  and  needie  Creature  ?) 
Still  begging  of  his  almes,  from  Doore  to  Doore  : 
All  ragd,  and  torne  ;  and  eeke  deformed  in  feature. 

In  Countinance  so  changde,  that  none  can  know  him; 

So  weake,  and  euery  vice  doeth  ouerthrow  him. 

But  faire  Pecunia,  (most  diuinely  bred) 

For  sundrie  shapes,  doth  Proteus  selfe  surpasse : 

In  one  Lande,  she  is  suted  all  in  Lead ; 

And  in  another,  she  is  clad  in  Brasse : 

But  still  within  the  Coast  of  Albion, 

She  euer  puts,  her  best  Apparell  on. 


236  THE  PRAYSE  OF  LADY  PECUNIA.       [R- Barnfield- 


1598. 


Siluer  and  Golde,  and  nothing  else  is  currant, 
In  Englands,  in  faire  Englands  happy  Land : 
All  baser  sorts  of  Mettalls,  haue  no  Warrant ; 
Yet  secretly  they  slip,  from  hand  to  hand. 

If  any  such  be  tooke,  the  same  is  lost, 

And  pressently  is  nayled  on  a  Post. 

Which  with  Quick-siluer,  being  flourisht  ouer, 
Seemes  to  be  perfect  Siluer,  to  the  showe  : 
As  Woemens  paintings,  their  defects  doe  couer, 
Vnder  this  false  attyre,  so  doe  they  goe. 
If  on  a  woollen  Cloth,  thou  rub  the  same, 
Then  will  it  straight  beginne  to  blush,  for  shame. 

If  chafed  on  thy  haire,  till  it  be  hot, 
If  it  good  Siluer  bee,  the  scent  is  sweete  : 
If  counterfeit,  thy  chafing  hath  begot 
A  ranke-smelt  sauour ;  for  a  Queene  vnmeete : 
Pecunia  is  a  Queene,  for  her  Desarts, 
And  in  the  Decke,  may  goe  for  Queene  of  harts. 

The  Queene  of  harts,  because  she  rules  all  harts  ; 
And  hath  all  harts,  obedient  to  her  Will : 
Whose  Bounty,  fame  vnto  the  Worlde  imparts ; 
And  with  her  glory,  all  the  Worlde  doeth  fill : 

The  Queene  of  Diamonds,  she  cannot  bee ; 

There  is  but  one,  ELIZA,  thou  art  shee. 

And  thou  art  shee,  O  sacred  Soueraigne ; 
Whom  God  hath  helpt  with  his  Al-mighty  hand : 
Blessing  thy  People,  with  thy  peacefull  raigne ; 
And  made  this  little  Land,  a  happy  Land : 

May  all  those  Hue,  that  wish  long  life  to  thee, 

And  all  the  rest,  perish  eternally. 

Thy  tyme  was  once,  when  faire  Pecunia,  here 
Did  basely  goe  attyred  all  in  Leather : 
But  since  her  raigne,  she  neuer  did  appeere 
But  richly  clad  ;  in  Golde,  or  Siluer  either : 
Nor  reason  is  it,  that  her  Golden  raigne 
With  baser  Coyne,  eclypsed  should  remaine. 


R.  Bamfield.-         TRE    pRAYSE    OF    LADY    PECUNIA.  237 


And  as  the  Coyne,  she  hath  repurifyde, 
From  baser  substance,  to  the  purest  Mettels  : 
Religion  so,  hath  shee  refinde  beside, 
From  Papistrie,  to  Truth  ;  which  daily  settles 

Within  her  Peoples  harts  ;  though  some  there  bee, 
That  cleaue  vnto  their  wonted  Papistrie. 

No  flocke  of  sheepe,  but  some  are  still  infected  : 
No  peece  of  Lawne  so  pure,  but  hath  some  fret  : 
All  buildings  are  not  strong,  that  are  erected  : 
All  Plants  proue  not,  that  in  good  ground  are  set  : 
Some  tares  are  sowne,  amongst  the  choicest  seed  : 
No  garden  can  be  cleansd  of  euery  Weede. 

But  now  to  her,  whose  praise  is  her  pretended, 
(Diuine  Pecunia)  fairer  then  the  morne  : 
Which  cannot  be  sufficiently  commended  ; 
Whose  Sun-bright  Beauty  doeth  the  Worlde  adorne, 

Adorns  the  World,  but  specially  the  Purse  ; 

Without  whose  pressence,  nothing  can  be  worse. 

Not  faire  Hasione  (King  of  Priams  sister) 
Did  euer  showe  more  Beauty,  in  her  face, 
Then  can  this  louely  Lady,  if  it  list  her 
To  showe  her  selfe  ;  admir'd  for  comely  grace  : 

Which  neither  Age  can  weare,  nor  Tyme  conclude  ; 

For  why,  her  Beauty  yeerely  is  renude. 

New  Coyne  is  coynd  each  yeare,  within  the  Tower  ; 
So  that  her  Beauty  neuer  can  decay  : 
Which  to  resist,  no  mortall  man  hath  Power, 
When  as  she  doeth  her  glorious  Beames  display. 
Nor  doeth  Pecunia,  onely  please  the  eie, 
But  charms  the  eare,  with  heauenly  Harmonic. 

Lyke  to  an  other  Orpheus,  can  she  play 
Vpon  her  treble  Harpe,  whose  siluer  sound 
Inchaunts  the  eare,  and  steales  the  hart  away  : 
Nor  hardly  can  deceit,  therein  be  found. 
Although  such  Musique,  some  a  Shilling  cost, 
Yet  is  it  worth  but  Nine-pence,  at  the  most.  * 


238  THE  PRAYSE  OF  LADY  PECUNIA.      [R- 

Had  I  the  sweet  inchaunting  Tongue  of  Tully, 

That  charmd  the  hearers,  lyke  the  Syrens  Song ; 

Yet  could  I  not  describe  the  Prayses  fully, 

Which  to  Pecunia  iustly  doe  belong. 
Let  it  suffice,  her  Beauty  doeth  excell : 
Whose  praise  no  Pen  can  paint,  no  Tongue  can  tell. 

Then  how  shall  I  describe,  with  artlesse  Pen, 
The  praise  of  her,  whose  praise,  all  praise  surmounteth  ? 
Breeding  amazement,  in  the  mindes  of  men  : 
Of  whom,  this  pressent  Age  to  much  accounteth. 
Varietie  of  Words,  would  sooner  want, 
Then  store  of  plentious  matter,  would  be  scant. 

Whether  yee  list,  to  looke  into  the  Citty : 
(Where  money  tempts  the  poore  Beholders  eye) 
Or  to  the  Countrey  Townes,  deuoyde  of  Pitty  : 
(Where  to  the  poore,  each  place  doeth  almes  denye) 
All  Thinges  for  money  now,  are  bought  and  solde, 
That  either  hart  can  thinke,  or  eie  beholde. 

Nay  more  for  money  (as  report  doeth  tell) 
Thou  mayst  obteine  a  Pardon  for  thy  sinnes  : 
The  Pope  of  Rome,  for  money  will  it  sell ; 
(Whereby  thy  soule,  no  small  saluation  winnes) 
But  how  can  hee,  (of  Pride  the  chiefe  Beginner) 
Forgiue  thy  sinnes,  that  is  himselfe  a  sinner  ? 

Then,  sith  the  Pope  is  subiect  vnto  sinne, 
No  maruell  tho,  diuine  Pecunia  tempt  him, 
With  her  faire  Beauty ;  whose  good-will  to  winne, 
Each  one  contends ;  and  shall  we  then  exempt  him, 
Did  neuer  mortall  man,  yet  looke  vpon  her, 
But  straightwaies  he  became,  enamourd  on  her. 

Yet  would  I  wish,  the  Wight  that  loues  her  so, 
And  hath  obtained,  the  like  good-will  againe, 
To  vse  her  wisely,  lest  she  proue  his  foe ; 
And  so,  in  stead  of  Pleasure,  breed  his  paine. 
She  may  be  kyst ;  but  shee  must  not  be  clypt : 
Lest  such  Delight  in  bitter  gall  be  dypt. 


R.  Barnfield.J       ^HE    pRAYSE    OF    LADY    PECUNIA.  239 

The  iuyce  of  grapes,  which  is  a  soueraigne  Thing 
To  cheere  the  hart,  and  to  reuiue  the  spirits ; 
Being  vsde  immoderatly  (in  surfetting) 
Rather  Dispraise,  then  commendation  merits : 

Euen  so  Pecunia,  is,  as  shee  is  vsed ; 

Good  of  her  selfe,  but  bad  if  once  abused. 

With  her,  the  Tenant  payes  his  Landlords  rent : 

On  her,  depends  the  stay  of  euery  state : 

To  her,  rich  Pressents  euery  day  are  sent : 

In  her,  it  rests  to  end  all  dire  Debate  : 
Through  her,  to  Wealth,  is  raisd  the  Countrey  Boore  : 
From  her,  proceedes  much  proffit  to  the  poore. 

Then  how  can  I,  sufficiently  commend, 
Her  Beauties  worth,  which  makes  the  World  to  wonder  ? 
Or  end  her  prayse,  whose  prayses  haue  no  End  ? 
Whose  absence  brings  the  stoutest  stomack  vnder : 

Let  it  suffice,  Pecunia  hath  no  peere ; 

No  Wight,  no  Beauty  held ;  more  faire,  more  deere. 

FINIS. 


His  Prayer  to   Pecunia. 

Reat  Lady,  sith  I  haue  complyde  thy  Prayse, 
(According  to  my  skill  and  not  thy  merit :) 
And  sought  thy  Fame  aboue  the  starrs  to  rayse  ; 
(Had  I  sweete  Ovids  vaine,  or  Virgils  spirit) 
I  craue  no  more  but  this,  for  my  good  will, 
That  in  my  Want,  thou  wilt  supplye  me  still. 


THE 

Complaint   of  Poetrie, 

for  the  Death  of  Liberalitie. 

Viuit  post  funera  virtus. 


LONDON, 

Printed  by  G.  S.  for  lohn  laggard,  and  are 

to  be  solde  at  his  shoppe  neere  Temple-barre, 

at  the  Signe  of  the  Hand  and  starre. 

I  598. 

Q  10 


243 


To  his   Worshipfull  wel-willer,  Maister 

Edward  Leigh,  of  Grayes  Inne. 

Mage  of  that,  whose  losse  is  here  lamented  ; 

(In  whom,  so  many  vertues  are  containd) 

Daine  to  accept,  what  I  haue  now  presented. 

Though  Bounties  death,  herein  be  not  fained, 
In  your  mind,  she  not  reuiue  (with  speed) 
Then  will  I  sweare,  that  shee  is  dead  indeed. 


244 


THE  COMPLAINT  OF 

Poetrie,  for  the  Death  of  Liberalise. 


Eepe  Heauens  now,  for  you  haue  lost  your 

light  ; 
Ye  Sunne  and  Moone,  beare  witnes  of  my 

mone : 
The  cleere  is  turnd  to  clouds ;  the  day  to 

night ; 

And  all  my  hope,  and  all  my  ioy  is  gone  : 
Bounty  is  dead,  the  cause  of  my  annoy  ; 
Bounty  is  dead,  and  with  her  dide  my  ioy. 


0  who  can  comfort  my  afflicted  soule  ? 

Or  adde  some  ende  to  my  increasing  sorrowes  ? 
Who  can  deliuer  me  from  endlesse  dole  ? 
(Which  from  my  hart  eternall  torment  borrowes.) 

When  Bounty  liu'd,  I  bore  the  Bell  away ; 

When  Bounty  dide,  my  credit  did  decay. 

1  neuer  then,  did  write  one  verse  in  vaine ; 
Nor  euer  went  my  Poems  vnregarded  : 
Then  did  each  Noble  breast,  me  intertaine, 
And  for  my  Labours  I  was  well  rewarded  : 

But  now  Good  wordes,  are  stept  in  Bounties  place, 
Thinking  thereby,  her  glorie  to  disgrace. 


R.  Barnfield.J  ^HE    COMPLAINT    OF    PoETRIE.  245 

But  who  can  Hue  with  words,  in  these  hard  tymes  ? 
(Although  they  came  from  lupiter  himselfe  ?) 
Or  who  can  take  such  Paiment,  for  his  Rymes  ? 
(When  nothing  now,  is  so  esteem'd  as  Pelfe  ?) 

Tis  not  Good  wordes,  that  can  a  man  maintaine ; 

Wordes  are  but  winde  ;  and  winde  is  all  but  vaine. 

Where  is  Meccznas,  Learnings  noble  Patron  ? 

(That  Maroes  Muse,  with  Bountie  so  did  cherish  ?) 

Or  faire  Zenobia,  that  worthy  Matron  ? 

(Whose  name,  for  Learnings  Loue,  shall  neuer  perish) 
What  tho  their  Bodies,  lie  full  lowe  in  graue, 
Their  fame  the  worlde;  their  souls  the  Heauens  haue. 

Vile  Auaricia,  how  hast  thou  inchaunted 
The  Noble  mindes,  of  great  and  mightie  Men  ? 
Or  what  infernall  furie  late  hath  haunted 
Their  niggard  purses  ?  (to  the  learned  pen) 
Was  it  Augustus  wealth,  or  noble  minde, 
That  euerlasting  fame,  to  him  assinde  ? 

If  wealth  ?     Why  Croesus  was  more  rich  then  hee  ; 

(Yet  Croesus  glorie,  with  his  life  did  end) 

It  was  his  Noble  mind,  that  moued  mee 

To  write  his  praise,  and  eeke  his  Acts  commend. 
Who  ere  had  heard,  of  Alexanders  fame, 
If  Quintus  Curtius  had  not  pend  the  same  ? 

Then  sith  by  mee,  their  deedes  haue  been  declared, 
(Which  else  had  perisht  with  their  Hues  decay) 
Who  to  augment  their  glories,  haue  not  spared 
To  crowne  their  browes,  with  neuer-fading  Bay  : 

What  Art  deserues  such  Liberalitie, 

As  doeth  the  peerlesse  Art  of  Poetrie  ? 

But  Liberalitie  is  dead  and  gone  : 

And  Auarice  vsurps  true  Bounties  seat. 

For  her  it  is,  I  make  this  endlesse  mone, 

(Whose  praises  worth  no  men  can  well  repeat. 
Sweet  Liberalitie  adiew  for  euer, 
For  Poetrie  againe,  shall  see  thee  neuer. 


246  THE  COMPLAINT  OF  POETRIE,        [ 

Neuer  againe,  shall  I  thy  presence  see : 
Neuer  againe,  shal  I  thy  bountie  tast : 
Neuer  againe,  shal  I  accepted  bee : 
Neuer  againe,  shall  I  be  so  embrac't : 

Neuer  againe,  shall  I  the  bad  recall : 

Neuer  againe,  shall  I  be  lou'd  of  all : 

Thou  wast  the  Nurse,  whose  Bountie  gaue  me  sucke  : 
Thou  wast  the  Sunne,  whose  beames  did  lend  me  light 
Thou  wast  the  Tree,  whose  fruit  I  still  did  plucke  : 
Thou  wast  the  Patron,  to  maintaine  my  right : 

Through  thee  I  liu'd ;  on  thee  I  did  relie ; 

In  thee  I  ioy'd ;  and  now  for  thee  I  die. 

What  man,  hath  lately  lost  a  faithfull  frend  ? 
Or  Husband,  is  depriued  of  his  Wife  ? 
But  doth  his  after-daies  in  dolour  spend  ? 
(Leading  a  loathsome,  discontented  life  ?) 

Dearer  then  friend,  or  wife,  haue  I  forgone ; 

Then  maruell  not,  although  I  make  such  mone. 

Faire  Philomela,  cease  thy  sad  complaint  ; 
And  lend  thine  eares,  vnto  my  dolefull  Ditty : 
(Whose  soule  with  sorrowe,  now  begins  to  faint, 
And  yet  I  cannot  moue  mens  hearts  to  pitty  :) 
Thy  woes  are  light,  compared  vnto  mine  : 
You  waterie  Nymphes,  to  mee  your  plaints  resigne. 

And  thou  Melpomene,  (the  Muse  of  Death) 
That  neuer  sing'st,  but  in  a  dolefull  straine ; 
Sith  cruell  Destinie  hath  stopt  her  breath, 
(Who  whilst  she  liu'd,  was  Vertues  Soueraigne 
Leaue  Hellicon,  (whose  bankes  so  pleasant  bee) 
And  beare  a  part  of  sorrowe  now  with  mee. 

The  Trees  (for  sorrowe)  shead  their  fading  Leaues, 
And  weepe  out  gum,  in  stead  of  other  teares  ; 
Comfort  nor  ioy,  no  Creature  now  conceiues, 
To  chirpe  and  sing,  each  little  bird  forbeares. 

The  sillie  Sheepe,  hangs  downe  his  drooping  head, 
And  all  because,  that  Bounty  she  is  dead. 


R.  BarnfieMJ         rQR    TH£     DEATH     QF     LlBERALITIE.  247 


The  greater  that  I  feele  my  griefe  to  be, 

The  lesser  able,  am  I  to  expresse  it  ; 

Such  is  the  nature  of  extremitie, 

The  heart  it  som-thing  eases,  to  confesse  it. 

Therefore  He  wake  my  muse,  amidst  her  sleeping, 
And  what  I  want  in  wordes,  supplie  with  weeping. 

Weepe  still  mine  eies,  a  Riuer  full  of  Teares, 
To  drowne  my  Sorrowe  in,  that  so  molests  me  ; 
And  rid  my  head  of  cares  ;  my  thoughts  of  feares  : 
Exiling  sweet  Content,  that  so  detests  me. 
But  ah  (alas)  my  Teares  are  almost  dun, 
And  yet  my  griefe,  it  is  but  new  begun. 

Euen  as  the  Sunne,  when  as  it  leaues  our  sight, 
Doth  shine  with  those  Antipodes,  beneath  vs  ; 
Lending  the  other  worlde  her  glorious  light, 
And  dismall  Darknesse,  onely  doeth  bequeath  vs  : 
Euen  so  sweet  Bountie,  seeming  dead  to  mee, 
Liues  now  to  none,  but  smooth-Tongd  Flatterie. 

O  Adulation,  Canker-worme  of  Truth  ; 
The  flattring  Glasse  of  Pride,  and  Self-conceit  : 
(Making  olde  wrinkled  Age,  appeare  like  youth) 
Dissimulations  Maske,  and  follies  Beate  : 
Pittie  it  is,  that  thou  art  so  rewarded, 
Whilst  Truth  and  Honestie,  goe  vnregarded. 

O  that  Nobilitie,  it  selfe  should  staine, 
In  being  bountifull,  to  such  vile  Creatures  : 
Who,  when  they  flatter  most,  then  most  they  faine  ; 
Knowing  what  humor  best,  will  fit  their  Natures. 
What  man  so  mad,  that  knowes  himselfe  but  pore, 
And  will  beleeue  that  he  hath  riches  store. 

Vpon  a  time,  the  craftie  Foxe  did  "flatter 
The  foolish  Pye  (whose  mouth  was  full  of  meate) 
The  Pye  beleeuing  him,  began  to  chatter, 
And  sing  for  ioy,  (not  hauing  list  to  eate) 

And  whil'st  the  foolish  Pye,  her  meate  let  fall, 
The  craftie  Foxe,  did  runne  awaie  with  all. 


248  THE  COMPLAINT  OF  POETRIE,       [R- 

Terence  describeth  vnder  Gnatoes  name, 
The  right  conditions  of  a  Parasyte  : 
(And  with  such  Eloquence,  sets  foorth  the  same, 
As  doeth  the  learned  Reader  much  delyght) 
Shewing,  that  such  a  Sycophant  as  Gnato, 
In  more  esteem'd,  then  twentie  such  a  Plato. 

Bounty  looke  backe,  vpon  thy  goods  mispent ; 

And  thinke  how  ill,  thou  hast  bestow'd  thy  mony : 

Consider  not  their  wordes,  but  their  intent ; 

Their  hearts  are  gall,  although  their  tongues  be  hony 
They  speake  not  as  they  thinke,  but  all  is  fained, 
And  onely  to  th'intent  to  be  maintained. 

And  herein  happie,  I  arcade  the  poore ; 
No  flattring  Spanyels,  fawne  on  them  for  meate : 
The  reason  is,  because  the  Countrey  Boore 
Hath  little  enough,  for  himselfe  to  eate : 

No  man  will  flatter  him,  except  himselfe  ; 

And  why  ?  because  hee  hath  no  store  of  wealth. 

But  sure  it  is  not  Liberalitie 

That  doeth  reward  these  fawning  smel-feasts  so  : 

It  is  the  vice  of  Prodigalitie, 

That  doeth  the  Bankers  of  Bounty  over-flo  : 

Bounty  is  dead :  yea  so  it  needes  must  bee  ; 

Or  if  aliue,  yet  is  shee  dead  to  mee. 

Therefore  as  one,  whose  friend  is  lately  dead, 
I  will  bewaile  the  death,  of  my  deere  frend  ; 
Vppon  whose  Tombe,  ten  thousand  Teares  lie  shead, 
Till  drearie  Death,  of  mee  shall  make  an  end  : 
Or  if  she  want  a  Toombe,  to  her  desart, 
Oh  then,  He  burie  her  within  my  hart. 

But  (Bounty)  if  thou  loue  a  Tombe  of  stone, 
Oh  then  seeke  out,  a  hard  and  stonie  hart : 
For  were  mine  so,  yet  would  it  melt  with  mone, 
And  all  because,  that  I  with  thee  must  part. 

Then,  if  a  stonie  hart  must  thee  interr, 

Goe  finde  a  Step-dame,  or  a  Vsurer. 


R.  B»"field.J        FQR    TRE    DEATH    OF    LlBERALITIE.  249 


And  sith  there  dies  no  Wight,  of  great  account, 

But  hath  an  Epitaph  compos'd  by  mee, 

Bounty,  that  did  all  other  far  surmount, 

Vpon  her  Tombe,  this  Epitaph  shall  bee  : 

Here  lies  the  Wight,  that  Learning  did  maintainef 
And  at  the  last,  by  AVARICE  was  slaine. 

Vile  Auarice,  why  hast  thou  kildd  my  Deare  ? 

And  robd  the  World,  of  such  a  worthy  Treasure  ? 

In  whome  no  sparke  of  goodnesse  doth  appeare, 

So  greedie  is  thy  mind,  without  all  measure, 
Thy  death,  from  Death  did  merit  to  release  her  : 
The  Murtherers  deseru'd  to  die,  not  Caesar. 

The  Merchants  wife  ;  the  Tender-hearted  Mother 
That  leaues  her  loue  ;  whose  Sonne  is  prest  for  warre  ; 
(Resting,  the  one  ;  as  woefull  as  the  other  ;) 
Hopes  met  at  length,  when  ended  is  the  iarre, 

To  see  her  Husband  ;  see  her  Sonne  again  ; 

"Were  it  not  then  for  Hope,  the  hart  were  slaine." 

But  I,  whose  hope  is  turned  to  despaire 
Nere  looke  to  see  my  dearest  Deare  againe  : 
Then  Pleasure  sit  thou  downe,  in  Sorrowes  Chaire, 
And  (for  a  while)  thy  wonted  Mirth  refraine. 

Bounty  is  dead,  that  whylome  was  my  Treasure, 
Bounty  is  dead,  my  joy  and  onely  pleasure. 

If  Pythias  death,  of  Damon  were  bewailed  ; 

Or  Pillades  did  rue,  Orestes  ende  : 

If  Hercules,  for  Hylas  losse  were  quailed  ; 

Or  Theseus,  for  Pyrithous  Teares  did  spende  : 
When  doe  I  mourne  for  Bounty,  being  dead  : 
Who  liuing,  was  my  hand,  my  hart,  my  head. 

My  hand,  to  helpe  mee,  in  my  greatest  need  : 
My  hart,  to  comfort  mee,  in  my  distresse  : 
My  head,  whom  onely  I  obeyd,  indeed  : 
If  she  were  such,  how  can  my  griefe  be  lesse  ? 

Perhaps  my  wordes,  may  pierce  the  Parcel's  eares  ; 

If  not  with  wordes,  He  moue  them  with  my  teares. 


250  THE  COMPLAINT  OF  POETRIE,        [R* 

But  ah  (alas)  my  Teares  are  spent  in  vaine, 
(For  she  is  dead,  and  I  am  left  aliue) 
Teares  cannot  call,  sweet  Bounty  backe  againe  ; 
Then  why  doe  I,  gainst  Fate  and  Fortune  striue  ? 

And  for  her  death,  thus  weepe,  lament,  and  crie; 

Sith  euery  mortall  wight,  is  borne  to  die. 

But  as  the  woefull  mother  doeth  lament, 
Her  tender  babe,  with  cruell  Death  opprest : 
Whose  life  was  spotlesse,  pure,  and  innocent, 
(And  therefore  sure,  it[s]  soule  is  gone  to  rest) 
So  Bountie,  which  her  selfe  did  vpright  keepe, 
Yet  for  her  losse,  loue  cannot  chuse  but  weepe. 

The  losse  of  her,  is  losse  to  many  a  one  : 
The  losse  of  her,  is  losse  vnto  the  poore  : 
And  therefore  not  a  losse,  to  mee  alone, 
But  vnto  such,  as  goe  from  Doore  to  Doore. 

Her  losse,  is  losse  vnto  the  fatherlesse ; 

And  vnto  all,  that  are  in  great  distresse. 

The  maimed  Souldier,  comming  from  the  warre , 

The  woefull  wight,  whose  house  was  lately  burnd ; 

The  sillie  soule  ;  the  wofull  Traueylar ; 

And  all,  whom  Fortune  at  her  feet  hath  spurnd  ; 
Lament  the  losse  of  Liberalise  : 
"Its  ease,  to  haue  in  griefe  some  Companie." 

The  Wife  of  Hector  (sad  Andromache) 
Did  not  bewaile,  her  husbands  death  alone  : 
But  (sith  he  was  the  Troians  onely  stay) 
The  wiues  of  Troy  (for  him)  made  aequall  mone. 
Shee,  shead  the  teares  of  Loue  ;  and  they  of  pittie  : 
Shee,  for  her  deare  dead  Lord ;  they,  for  their  Cittie. 

Nor  is  the  Death  of  Liberalitie, 

(Although  my  griefe  be  greater  than  the  rest) 

Onely  lamented,  and  bewaild  of  mee  ; 

(And  yet  of  mee,  she  was  beloued  best) 
But,  sith  she  was  so  bountifull  to  all, 
She  is  lamented,  both  of  great  and  small. 


R.  Barnfield/j       FQR     TH£    DEATH     QF     LlBERALITIE.  25! 


O  that  my  Teares  could  moue  the  powres  diuine, 
That  Bountie  might  be  called  from  the  dead  : 
As  Pitty  pierc'd  the  hart  of  Proserpine  ; 
Who  (moued  with  the  Teares  Admetus  shead) 

Did  sende  him  backe  againe,  his  louing  Wife  ; 

Who  lost  her  owne,  to  saue  her  husbands  life. 

Impartiall  Parcce,  will  no  prayers  moue  you  ? 
Can  Creatures  so  diuine,  haue  stony  harts? 
Haplesse  are  they,  whose  hap  it  is  to  proue  you, 
For  you  respect  no  Creatures  good  Desarts. 

0  A  tropos,  (the  cruelst  of  the  three) 

Why  hast  thou  tane,  my  faithfull  friend  from  mee  ? 

But  ah,  she  cannot  (or  shee  will  not)  heare  me, 
Or  if  shee  doo,  yet  may  not  she  repent  her  : 
Then  come  (sweet  Death)  O  why  doest  thou  forbeare  me  ? 
Aye  mee  !  thy  Dart  is  blunt,  it  will  not  enter. 
Oh  now  I  knowe  the  cause,  and  reason  why  ; 

1  am  immortall,  and  I  cannot  dye. 

So  Cyiheraa  would  haue  dide,  but  could  not  ; 
When  faire  Adonis  by  her  side  lay  slaine  : 
So  I  desire  the  Sisters,  what  I  should  not  ; 
For  why  (alas)  I  wish  for  Death  in  vaine  ; 

Death  is  their  seruant,  and  obeys  their  will  ; 

And  if  they  bid  him  spare,  he  cannot  kill. 

Oh  would  I  were,  as  other  Creatures  are  ; 

Then  would  I  die,  and  so  my  griefe  were  ended  : 

But  Death  (against  my  will)  my  life  doeth  spare  ; 

(So  little  with  the  fates  I  am  befrended) 

Sith,  when  I  would,  thou  doost  my  sute  denie, 
Vile  Tyrant,  when  thou  wilt,  I  will  not  die. 

And  Bounty,  though  her  body  thou  hast  slaine, 
Yet  shall  her  memorie  remaine  for  euer  : 
For  euer,  shall  her  memorie  remaine  ; 
Whereof  no  spitefull  Fortune  can  bereaue  her. 

Then  Sorrowe  cease,  and  wipe  thy  weeping  eye  ; 

For  Fame  shall  Hue,  when  all  the  World  shall  dye. 

FINIS. 


THE 


Combat,    betweene 

Conscience  and  Couetousnesse, 
in  the  minde  of  Man. 


quid  non  mortalia  feet  or  a  cog  is 
Auri  sacra  fames  ?     Virgil. 


LONDON, 

Printed  by  G.  S.  for  lohn  laggard,  and  are 

to  be  solde  at  his  shoppe  neere  Temple- barre, 

at  the  Signe  of  the  Hand  and  starre. 

1598. 


255 


To  his  Worshipfull  good  friend, 

Maister  lohn  Steuenton,  of  Dothill,  in  the  County 
of  Salop,  Esquire. 


Ith  Conscience  (long  since)  is  exilde  the  Citty, 
O  let  her  in  the  Countrey,  finde  some  Pitty  : 
But  if  she  be  exilde,  the  Countrey  too, 
O  let  her  finde,  some  fauour  yet  of  you. 


The  Combat  betweene  Conscience 

and  Couetousnesse  in  the 
mind  of  Man. 

Ow  had  the  cole-blacke  steedes,  of  pitchie 

Night, 

(Breathing  out  Darknesse)  banisht  cheer- 
full  Light, 

And  sleepe  (the  shaddowe  of  eternall  rest) 
My  seuerall  senses,  wholy  had  possest. 
When  loe,  there  was  presented  to  my  view, 
A  vision  strange,  yet  not  so  strange,  as  true. 
Conscience  (me  thought)  appeared  vnto  mee, 
Cloth'd  with  good  Deedes,  with  Trueth  and  Honestie, 
Her  countinance  demure,  and  sober  sad, 
Nor  any  other  Ornament  shee  had. 
Then  Couetousnesse  did  incounter  her, 
Clad  in  a  Cassock,  lyke  a  Vsurer, 
The  Cassock,  it  was  made  of  poore-mens  skinnes, 
Lac'd  here  and  there,  with  many  seuerall  sinnes : 
Nor  was  it  furd,  with  any  common  furre ; 
Or  if  it  were,  himselfe  hee  was  the  fur. 
A  Bag  of  money,  in  his  hande  he  helde, 
The  which  with  hungry  eie,  he  still  behelde. 
The  place  wherein  this  vision  first  began, 
(A  spacious  plaine)  was  cald  The  Minde  of  Man. 
The  Carle  no  sooner,  Conscience  had  espyde, 
But  swelling  lyke  a  Toade,  (puft  vp  with  pryde) 


R.  BamfieM.-j       CONSCIENCE    AND    CoUETOUSNESSE.  257 

He  straight  began  against  her  to  inuey  : 

These  were  the  wordes,  which  Couetise  did  sey. 

Conscience  (quoth  hee)  how  dar'st  thou  bee  so  bold, 

To  claime  the  place,  that  I  by  right  doe  hold  ? 

Neither  by  right,  nor  might,  thou  canst  obtaine  it : 

By  might  (thou  knowst  full  well)  thou  canst  not  gaine  it 

The  greatest  Princes  are  my  followars, 

The  King  in  Peace,  the  Captaine  in  the  Warres  : 

The  Courtier,  and  the  simple  Countrey-man : 

The  ludge,  the  Merchant,  and  the  Gentleman : 

The  learned  Lawyer,  and  the  Politician  : 

The  skilfull  Surgeon,  and  the  fine  Physician : 

In  briefe,  all  sortes  of  men  mee  entertaine, 

And  hold  mee,  as  their  Soules  sole  Soueraigne, 

And  in  my  quarrell,  they  will  fight  and  die, 

Rather  then  I  should  suffer  iniurie. 

And  as  for  title,  interest,  and  right, 

He  proue  its  mine  by  that,  as  well  as  might, 

Though  Couetousnesse,  were  vsed  long  before, 

Yet  ludas  Treason,  made  my  Fame  the  more; 

When  Christ  he  caused,  crucifyde  to  bee, 

For  thirtie  pence,  man  solde  his  minde  to  mee  : 

And  now  adaies,  what  tenure  is  more  free, 

Than  that  which  purchas'd  is,  with  Gold  and  fee  ? 

Conscience. 

With  patience,  haue  I  heard  thy  large  Complaint, 
Wherein  the  Diuell,  would  be  thought  a  Saint : 
But  wot  ye  what,  the  Saying  is  of  olde  ? 
One  tale  is  good,  vntill  anothers  tolde. 
Truth  is  the  right,  that  I  must  stand  vpon, 
(For  other  title,  hath  poore  Conscience  none) 
First  I  will  proue  it,  by  Antiquitie, 
That  thou  art  but  an  vp-start,  vnto  mee ; 
Before  that  thou  wast  euer  thought  vpon, 
The  minde  of  Man,  belongd  to  mee  alone. 
For  after  that  the  Lord,  hath  Man  created, 
And  him  in  blisse-full  Paradice  had  seated ; 
(Knowing  his  Nature  was  to  vice  inclynde) 
God  gaue  me  vnto  man,  to  rule  his  mynde, 
And  as  it  were,  his  Gouernour  to  bee, 

R  10 


258  THE  COMBAT,  BETWEENE  [R- Barnfield 


1593 


To  guide  his  minde,  in  Trueth,  and  Honestie. 

And  where  thou  sayst,  that  man  did  sell  his  soule ; 

That  Argument,  I  quicklie  can  controule  : 

It  is  a  fayned  fable,  thou  doost  tell, 

That,  which  is  not  his  owne,  he  cannot  sell ; 

No  man  can  sell  his  soule,  altho  he  thought  it : 

Mans  soule  is  Christs,  for  hee  hath  dearely  bought  it. 

Therefore  vsurping  Couetise,  be  gone. 

For  why,  the  minde  belongs  to  mee  alone. 

Couetousnesse. 

Alas  poore  Conscience,  how  thou  art  deceav'd  ? 

As  though  of  senses,  thou  wert  quite  bereaud. 

What  wilt  thou  say  (that  thinkst  thou  canst  not  erre) 

If  I  can  proue  my  selfe  the  ancienter  ? 

Though  into  Adams  minde,  God  did  infuse  thee, 

Before  his  fall,  yet  man  did  neuer  vse  thee. 

What  was  it  else,  but  Aurice  in  Eue, 

(Thinking  thereby,  in  greater  Blisse  to  Hue) 

That  made  her  taste,  of  the  forbidden  fruite  ? 

Of  her  Desier,  was  not  I  the  roote  ? 

Did  she  not  couet  ?  (tempted  by  the  Deuill) 

The  Apple  of  the  Tree,  of  good  and  euill  ? 

Before  man  vsed  Conscience,  she  did  couet: 

Therefore  by  her  Transgression,  here  I  proue  it, 

That  Couetousnesse  possest  the  minde  of  man, 

Before  that  any  Conscience  began. 

Conscience. 

Euen  as  a  counterfeited  precious  stone, 

Seemes  to  bee  far  more  rich,  to  looke  vpon, 

Then  doeth  the  right  :  But  when  a  man  comes  neere, 

His  baseness  then,  doeth  euident  appeere  : 

So  Couetise,  the  Reasons  thou  doost  tell, 

Seeme  to  be  strong,  but  being  weighed  well, 

They  are  indeed,  but  onely  meere  Illusions, 

And  doe  inforce  but  very  weake  Conclusions. 

When  as  the  Lord  (fore-knowing  his  offence) 

Had  giuen  man  a  Charge,  of  Abstinence, 

And  to  refraine,  the  fruite  of  good  and  ill : 

Man  had  a  Conscience,  to  obey  his  will, 


R.  Barn^id.~j     CONSCIENCE  AND  COUETOUSNESSE.  259 

And  neuer  would  be  tempted  thereunto, 

Vntill  the  Woeman,  shee,  did  worke  man  woe. 

And  make  him  breake,  the  Lords  Commaundement, 

Which  all  Mankinde,  did  afterward  repent : 

So  that  thou  seest,  thy  Argument  is  vaine, 

And  I  am  prov'd,  the  elder  of  the  twaine. 

Couetousnesse. 

Fond  Wretch,  it  was  not  Conscience,  but  feare, 

That  made  the  first  man  (Adam)  to  forbeare 

To  tast  the  fruite,  of  the  forbidden  Tree, 

Lest,  if  offending  hee  were  found  to  bee, 

(According  as  lehouah  saide  on  hye, 

For  his  so  great  Transgression,  hee  should  dye.) 

Feare  curbd  his  minde,  it  was  not  Conscience  then, 

(For  Conscience  freely,  rules  the  harts  of  men) 

And  is  a  godly  motion  of  the  mynde, 

To  euerie  vertuous  action  inclynde, 

And  not  enforc'd,  through  feare  of  Punishment, 

But  is  to  vertue,  voluntary  bent : 

Then  (simple  Trul)  be  packing  presentlie, 

For  in  this  place,  there  is  no  roome  for  thee. 

Conscience. 

Aye  mee  (distressed  Wight)  what  shall  I  doe  ? 
Where  shall  I  rest  ?  Or  whither  shall  I  goe  ? 
Vnto  the  rich  ?  (woes  mee)  they,  doe  abhor  me  : 
Vnto  the  poore  ?  (alas)  they,  care  not  for  me  : 
Vnto  the  Olde-man  ?  hee ;  hath  mee  forgot : 
Vnto  the  Young-man  ?  yet  hee,  knowes  me  not : 
Vnto  the  Prince  ?  hee  ;  can  dispence  with  me  : 
Vnto  the  Magistrate  ?  that,  may  not  bee  : 
Vnto  the  Court  ?  for  it,  I  am  too  base  : 
Vnto  the  Countrey  ?  there,  I  haue  no  place  : 
Vnto  the  Citty  ?  thence  ;  I  am  exilde  : 
Vnto  the  Village  ?  there  ;  I  am  reuilde  : 
Vnto  the  Barre  ?  the  Lawyer  there,  is  bribed  ? 
Vnto  the  Warre  ?  there,  Conscience  is  derided  : 
Vnto  the  Temple  ?  there,  I  am  disguised  : 
Vnto  the  Market  ?  there,  I  am  dispised  : 
Thus  both  the  young  and  olde,  the  rich  and  poore, 


260  CONSCIENCE  AND  COUETOUSNESSE.    [R- Barnfield- 


1598. 


Against  mee  (silly  Creature)  shut  their  doore. 
Then,  sith  each  one  seekes  my  rebuke  and  shame, 
He  goe  againe  to  Heauen  (from  whence  I  came.) 

This  saide  (me  thought)  making  exceeding  mone, 
She  went  her  way,  and  left  the  Carle  alone, 
Who  vaunting  of  his  late-got  victorie, 
Aduanc'd  himselfe  in  pompe  and  Maiestie  : 
Much  like  a  Cocke,  who  hauing  kild  his  foe, 
Brisks  vp  himselfe,  and  then  begins  to  crow. 
So  Couetise,  when  Conscience  was  departed, 
Gan  to  be  proud  in  minde,  and  hauty  harted : 
And  in  a  stately  Chayre  of  state  he  set  him, 
(For  Conscience  banisht)  there  are  none  to  let  him. 
And  being  but  one  entrie,  to  this  Plaine, 
(Whereof  as  king  and  Lord,  he  did  remaine) 
Repentance  cald,  he  causd  that  to  be  kept, 
Lest  Conscience  should  returne,  whilst  as  he  slept : 
Wherefore  he  causd  it,  to  be  watcht  and  warded 
Both  night  and  Day,  and  to  be  strongly  guarded  : 
To  keepe  it  safe,  these  three  he  did  intreat, 
Hardnesse  of  hart,  with  Falshood  and  Deceat : 
And  if  at  any  time,  she  chaunc'd  to  venter, 
Hardnesse  of  hart,  denide  her  still  to  enter. 
When  Conscience  was  exilde  the  minde  of  Man, 
Then  Couetise,  his  gouernment  began. 
This  once  being  scene,  what  I  had  scene  before, 
(Being  onely  scene  in  sleepe)  was  scene  no  more  ; 
For  with  the  sorrowe,  which  my  Soule  did  take 
At  sight  hereof,  foorthwith  I  did  awake. 

FINIS. 


Poems  : 

In  diuers  humors. 

Trahit  sua  quemque  voluptas.     Virgil. 


LONDON, 

Printed  by  G.  S.  for  lohn  laggard,  and  are 

to  be  solde  at  his  shoppe  neere  Temple-barre, 

at  the  Signe  of  the  Hand  and  starre. 

1598. 


263 


To  the  learned,  and  accomplish t  Gentleman, 

Maister  Nicholas  Blackleech, 
of  Grayes  Inne. 

O  you,  that  know  the  tuch  of  true  Conceat ; 
(Whose  many  gifts  I  neede  not  to  repeat) 
I  write  these  Lines  ;  fruits  of  vnriper  yeares  ; 
Wherein  my  Muse  no  harder  censure  feares : 
Hoping  in  gentle  Worth,  you  will  them  take  ; 
Not  for  the  gift,  but  for  the  giuers  sake. 


r^fe*  ra\^>  **&*  "SJ*  rz&e*  f*fe^  **&?>  «\f ir\  f*fc?>  rzfyn  r*&*  «a^j£?>  r*fcn  «^->  ns|^>  «^^>  «M^  «^fe>  ti&*  ri&et 


264 


SONNET.     I. 

To  his  friend  Maister  R.  L.     In  praise  of 
Musique  and  Poetrie. 

F  Musique  and  sweet  Poetrie  agree, 
As  they  must  needes  (the  Sister  and  the 

Brother) 
Then  must  the  Loue  be  great,  twixt  thee 

and  mee, 
Because  thou  lou'st  the  one,  and  I  the 

other. 

Dowland  to  thee  is  deare ;  whose  heauenly  tuch 
Vpon  the  Lute,  doeth  rauish  humaine  sense  : 
Spenser  to  mee  ;  whose  deepe  Conceit  is  such, 
As  passing  all  Conceit,  needs  no  defence. 
Thou  lou'st  to  heare  the  sweete  melodious  sound, 
That  Phoebus  Lute  (the  Queene  of  Musique)  makes : 
And  I  in  deepe  Delight  am  chiefly  drownd, 
When  as  himselfe  to  singing  he  betakes. 
One  God  is  God  of  Both  (as  Poets  faigne) 
One  Knight  loues  Both,  and  Both  in  thee  remaiae. 


265 

SON  N  E  T.     I  I. 

Against  the  Dispraysers  of  Poetrie. 

Haucer  is  dead  ;  and  Gower  lyes  in  grave  ; 

The  Earle  of  Surrey,  long  agoe  is  gone  ; 

Sir  Philip  Sidneis  soule,  the  Heauens  haue  ; 

George  Gascoigne  him  beforne,  was  tomb'd  in  stone, 
Yet,  tho  their  Bodies  lye  full  low  in  ground, 

(As  euery  thing  must  dye,  that  earst  was  borne) 

Their  liuing  fame,  no  Fortune  can  confound  ; 

Nor  euer  shall  their  Labours  be  forlorne. 
And  you,  that  discommend  sweete  Poetrie, 

(So  that  the  Subiect  of  the  same  be  good) 

Here  may  you  see,  your  fond  simplicitie  ; 

Sith  Kings  haue  fauord  it,  of  royall  Blood. 
The  King  of  Scots  (now  liuing)  is  a  Poet, 
As  his  Lepanto,  and  his  Furies  shoe  it. 


A  Remembrance  of  some  English  Poets. 

lue  Spenser  euer,  in  thy  Fairy  Queene  : 
Whose  like  (for  deepe  Conceit)  was  neuer  scene. 
Crownd  mayst  thou  bee,  vnto  thy  more  renowne, 
(As  King  of  Poets)  with  a  Lawrell  Crowne. 

And  Darnell,  praised  for  thy  sweet-chast  Verse  : 
Whose  Fame  is  grav'd  on  Rosamonds  blacke  Herse. 
Still  mayst  thou  Hue  :  and  still  be  honored, 
For  that   rare  Worke,  The  White  Rose  and  the  Red. 

And  Drayton,  whose  wel-written  Tragedies, 
And  sweete  Epistles,  scare  thy  fame  to  skies. 
Thy  learned  Name,  is  aequall  with  the  rest  ;    . 
Whose  stately  Numbers  are  so  well  addrest. 


266 

And  Shakespeare  thou,  whose  hony-flowing  Vaine, 
(Pleasing  the  World)  thy  Praises  doth  obtaine. 
Whose  Venus,  and  whose  Lucrece  (sweete,  and  chaste) 
Thy  Name  in  fames  immortall  Booke  haue  plac't. 
Liue  euer  you,  at  least  in  Fame  Hue  euer : 
Well  may  the  Bodye  dye,  but  Fame  dies  neuer. 


An   Ode. 

S  it  fell  vpon  a  Day, 
In  the  merrie  Month  of  May, 
Sitting  in  a  pleasant  shade, 
Which  a  groue  of  Myrtles  made, 
Beastes  did  leape,  and  Birds  did  sing, 
Trees  did  grow,  and  Plants  did  spring : 
Euery  thing  did  banish  mone, 
Saue  the  Nightingale  alone. 
Shee  (poore  Bird)  as  all  forlorne, 
Leand  her  Breast  vp-till  a  Thorne, 
And  there  sung  the  dolefulst  Ditty, 
That  to  heare  it  was  great  Pitty. 
Fie,  fie,  fie,  now  would  she  cry 
Teru  Teru,  by  and  by : 
That  to  heare  her  so  complaine, 
Scarce  I  could  from  Teares  refraine  : 
For  her  griefes  so  liuely  showne, 
Made  me  thinke  vpon  mine  owne. 
Ah  (thought  I)  thou  mournst  in  vaine; 
None  takes  Pitty  on  thy  paine  : 
Senslesse  Trees,  they  cannot  heere  thee  ; 
Ruthlesse  Beares,  they  wil  not  cheer  thee. 
King  Pandion,  hee  is  dead  : 
All  thy  friends  are  lapt  in  Lead. 
All  thy  fellow  Birds  doe  singe, 
Carelesse  of  thy  sorrowing. 


267 

Whilst  as  fickle  Fortune  smilde, 
Thou  and  I,  were  both  beguilde. 
Euerie  one  that  flatters  thee, 
Is  no  friend  in  miserie  : 
Words  are  easie,  like  the  winde  ; 
Faithfull  friends  are  hard  to  finde  : 
Euerie  man  will  bee  thy  friend, 
Whilst  thou  hast  wherewith  to  spend  : 
But  if  store  of  Crownes  be  scant, 
No  man  will  supply  thy  want. 
If  that  one  be  prodigal!, 
Bountifull,  they  will  him  call. 
And  with  such-like  flattering, 
Pitty  but  hee  were  a  King. 
If  hee  bee  adict  to  vice, 
Quickly  him,  they  will  intice. 
If  to  Woemen  hee  be  bent, 
They  haue  at  Commaundement. 
But  if  Fortune  once  doe  frowne, 
Then  farewell  his  great  renowne  : 
They  that  fawnd  on  him  before, 
Vse  his  company  no  more. 
Hee  that  is  thy  friend  indeed, 
Hee  will  helpe  thee  in  thy  neede: 
If  thou  sorrowe,  hee  will  weepe ; 
If  thou  wake,  hee  cannot  sleepe : 
Thus  of  euerie  griefe,  in  hart, 
Hee,  with  thee,  doeth  beare  a  Part. 
These  are  certaine  Signes,  to  knowe 
Faithfull  friend,  from  flatt'ring  foe. 


268 
Written,  at  the  Request  of  a  Gentleman, 

vnder  a  Gentlewoman's  Picture. 

'Uen   as    Apelles   could   not    paint    Campaspes  face 

aright : 
Because   Campaspes   Sun-bright   eyes   did   dimme 

Apelles  sight : 
Euen  so,  amazed  at  her  sight,  her  sight,  all  sights 

excelling, 

Like  Nyobe  the  Painter  stoode,  her  sight  his  sight  expelling, 
Thus  Art  and  Nature  did  contend,  who  should  the  Victor  bee, 
Till  Art  by  Nature  was  supprest,  as  all  the  worlde  may  see. 


An  Epitaph  vpon  the  Death,  of  Sir  Philip 

Sidney,  Knight ;  Lord-gouernour  of  Vlissing. 

,Hat  England  lost,  that  Learning  lov'd,  that  euery 

mouth  commended, 
That  fame  did  prayse,  that  Prince  did  rayse,  that 

Countrey  do  defended, 
Here  lyes  the  man  :  lyke  to  the  Swan,  who  know- 
ing shee  shall  die, 

Doeth  tuneher  voice  vnto  the  Spheares,  and  scornes  Mortalitie. 
Two  worthie  Earls  his  vncles  were  ;  a  Lady  was  his  Mother  ; 
A  Knight  his  father  ;  and  himselfe  a  noble  Countesse  Brother. 
Belov'd,  bewaild;  aliue,  now  dead;  of  all,  with  Tearesfor  euer; 
Here  lyes  Sir  Philip  Sidneis  Corps,  "Whom  cruell  Death  did 

seuer, 

He  liv'd  for  her,  hee  dyde  for  her  ;  for  whom  he  dyde,  he  liued  : 
O  graunt  (O  God)  that  wee  of  her,  may  neuer  be  depriued. 


269 
An  Epitaph  vpon  the  Death  of  his  Aunt, 

Mistresse  Elizabeth  Skrymsher. 

e  here  beholde  the  certaine  Ende,  of  euery  liuing 

wight : 
No   Creature   is   secure  from    Death,  for  Death 

will  haue  his  Right. 
He   spareth    none:    both   rich   and   poore,   both 

young  and  olde  must  die  ; 
So  fraile  is  flesh,  so  short  is  Life,  so  sure  Mortalitie. 
When  first  the  Bodye  Hues  to  Life,  the  soule  first  dies  to 

sinne  : 
And  they  that  loose  this  earthly  Life,  a  heauenly  Life  shall 

winne, 

If  they  Hue  well:  as  well  she  Hv'd,  that  lyeth  Vnder  heere ; 
Whose  Vertuous  Life  to  all  the  Worlde,  most  plainly  did 

appeere. 

Good  to  the  poore,  friend  to  the  rich,  and  foe  to  no  Degree : 
A  President  of  modest  Life,  and  peerelesse  Chastitie. 
Who  louing  more,  Who  more  belov'd  of  euerie  honest  mynde? 
Who  more  to  Hospitalitie,  and  Clemencie  inclinde 
Then   she  ?  that  being   buried   here,    lyes   wrapt  in   Earth 

below ; 
From  whence  we  came,  to  whom  wee  must,  and  bee  as  shee 

is  now, 
A  Clodd  of  Clay :  though  her  pure  soule  in  endlesse  Blisse 

doeth  rest ; 

loying  all  loy,  the  Place  of  Peace,  prepared  for  the  blest : 
Where  holy  Angells  sit  and  sing,  before  the  King  of  Kings; 
Not  mynding  worldly  Vanities,  but  onely  heavenly  Things. 
Vnto  which  loy,  Vnto  which  Blisse,  Vnto  which  Place  of 

Pleasure, 
God  graunt  that  wee  may  come  at  last,  t'  inioy  that  heauenly 

Treasure. 

Which  to  obtaine,  to  Hue  as  shee  hath  done  let  us  endeuor ; 
That  wee  may  Hue  with  Christ  himselfe,  (above)  that  Hues 

for  euer. 


270 


A  Comparison  of  the  Life 
of  Man. 


Ans  life  is  well  compared  to  a  feast, 
Furnish!  with  choice  of  all  Varietie  : 
To  it  comes  Tyme  ;  and  as  a  bidden  guest 
Hee  sets  him  downe,  in  Pompe  and  Maiestie  ; 
The  three-folde  Age  of  Man,  the  Waiters  bee, 
Then  with  an  earthen  voyder  (made  of  clay) 
Comes   Death,  and   takes  the  table  clean 
away. 

FINIS. 


ASTROPHEL. 
A   Pastoral  Elegy  upon 

the    death    of  the     most    noble 
and     valorous      Knight, 
Sir  PHILIP  SIDNEY. 

Dedicated 

to  the  most  beautiful  and  virtuous  Lady 
the  Countess  of  ESSEX. 

[By    EDMUND  SPENSER,    the    Countess 
of  PEMBROKE,  and  others.] 


[Printed  as  an  Appendix  to  COLIN  CLOUT'S  come  home  again,  first  printed  in  1595  ; 
but  the  epistle  of  which  is  dated  "From  my  house  of  Kilcolman,  the  27  of 
December,  1591."] 


272 


Astrophel. 


HEPHERDS  that  wont,  on  pipes  of  oaten  reed, 
Of  Mimes  to  plain  your  love's  concealed  smart ; 
And  with  your  piteous  lays  have  learned  to  breed 
Compassion  in  a  country  lass's  heart : 
Hearken,  ye  gentle  shepherds,  to  my  song ! 
And  place  my  doleful  plaint,  your  plaints  emong. 


To  you  alone,  I  sing  this  mournful  verse, 
The  mournful 'st  verse  that  ever  man  heard  tell : 
To  you  whose  softened  hearts  it  may  empierce 
With  dolour's  dart,  for  death  of  ASTROPHEL. 
To  you  I  sing,  and  to  none  other  wight, 
For  well  I  wot  my  rhymes  been  rudely  dight. 

Yet  as  they  been,  if  any  nicer  wit 
Shall  hap  to  hear,  or  covet  them  to  read : 
Think  he,  that  such  are  for- such  ones  most  fit, 
Made  not  to  please  the  living  but  the  dead  : 
And  if  in  him,  found  pity  ever  place  ; 
Let  him  be  moved  to  pity  such  a  case. 


273 


ASTROPHEL. 

A  Pastoral  Elegy  upon  the  death  of 

the  most  noble  and  valorous  Knight, 

Sir  PHILIP   SIDNEY. 


GENTLE  shepherd  born  in  Arcady, 

Of  gentlest  race  that  ever  shepherd  bore ; 

About  the  grassy  banks  of  Hoemony, 

Did  keep  his  sheep,  his  little  stock  and  store. 

Full  carefully  he  kept  them  day  and  night 

In  fairest  fields ;  and  ASTROPHEL  he  hight. 


Young  ASTROPHEL  !  the  pride  of  shepherds'  praise. 

Young  ASTROPHEL  !  the  rustic  lasses'  love. 

Far  passing  all  the  pastors  of  his  days 

In  all  that  seemly  shepherd  might  behove. 

In  one  thing  only  failing  of  the  best ; 

That  he  was  not  so  happy  as  the  rest. 


274  As  TROPHEL,  A   PASTORAL    ELEGY.     FE'  Spenser' 


For  from  the  time  that  first  the  nymph  his  mother 

Him  forth  did  bring ;  and  taught,  her  lambs  to  feed 

A  slender  swain,  excelling  far  each  other 

In  comely  shape,  like  her  that  did  him  breed : 

He  grew  up  fast  in  goodness  and  in  grace  ; 

And  doubly  fair  wox  both  in  mind  and  face. 

Which  daily  more  and  more  he  did  augment 
With  gentle  usage  and  demeanour  mild  ; 
That  all  men's  hearts  with  secret  ravishment 
He  stole  away,  and  wittingly  beguiled. 
Ne  Spite  itself — that  all  good  things  doth  spill — 
Found  ought  in  him,  that  she  could  say  was  ill. 

His  sports  were  fair,  his  joyance  innocent, 
Sweet  without  sour,  and  honey  without  gall ; 
And  he  himself  seemed  made  for  merriment, 
Merrily  masking  both  in  bower  and  hall. 
There  was  no  pleasure  nor  delightful  play 
When  ASTROPHEL  so  ever  was  away. 

For  he  could  pipe,  and  dance,  and  carol  sweet ; 
Emongst  the  shepherds  in  their  shearing  feast : 
As  summer's  lark  that  with  her  song  doth  greet 
The  dawning  day,  forth  coming  from  the  East. 
And  lays  of  love  he  also  would  compose. 
Thrice  happy  she !  whom  he  to  praise  did  choose. 


AsTROPHEL,K  PASTORAL  ELEGY.  275 


Full  many  maidens  often  did  him  woo, 

Them  to  vouchsafe,  emongst  his  rhymes  to  name  : 

Or  make  for  them,  as  he  was  wont  to  do, 

For  her  that  did  his  heart  with  love  inflame  ; 

For  which  they  promised  to  dight  for  him, 

Gay  chaplets  of  flowers  and  garlands  trim. 

And  many  a  nymph,  both  of  the  wood  and  brook, 

Soon  as  his  oaten  pipe  began  to  shrill ; 

Both  crystal  wells  and  shady  groves  forsook, 

To  hear  the  charms  of  his  enchanting  skill : 

And  brought  him  presents ;  flowers,  if  it  were  prime  ; 

Or  mellow  fruit,  if  it  were  harvest  time. 

But  he  for  none  of  them  did  care  a  whit ; 
Yet  wood-gods  for  them  oft  sighed  sore  : 
Ne  for  their  gifts  unworthy  of  his  wit, 
Yet  not  unworthy  of  the  country's  store. 
For  One  alone  he  cared,  for  One  he  sighed 
His  life's  treasure,  and  his  dear  love's  delight. 

STELLA  the  fair !  the  fairest  star  in  sky : 

As  fair  as  VENUS,  or  the  fairest  fair. 

A  fairer  star  saw  never  living  eye, 

Shot  her  sharp  pointed  beams  through  purest  air. 

Her,  he  did  love  ;  her,  he  alone  he  did  honour ; 

His  thoughts,  his  rhymes,  his  songs  were  all  upon  her. 


276    A  STROP  H EL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.     [E- Spenser. 


To  her,  he  vowed  the  service  of  his  days ; 
On  her,  he  spent  the  riches  of  his  wit  ; 
For  her,  he  made  hymns  of  immortal  praise  : 
Of  only  her  ;  he  sang,  he  thought,  he  writ. 
Her,  and  but  her,  of  love  he  worthy  deemed  : 
For  all  the  rest,  but  little  he  esteemed. 

Ne  her  with  idle  words  alone  he  vowed, 
And  verses  vain — yet  verses  are  not  vain  : 
But  with  brave  deeds,  to  her  sole  service  vowed  ; 
And  bold  achievements,  her  did  entertain. 
For  both  in  deeds  and  words  he  nurtured  was. 
Both  wise  and  hardy — too  hardy,  alas  ! 

In  wrestling,  nimble  ;  and  in  running,  swift ; 
In  shooting,  steady  ;  and  in  swimming,  strong  : 
Well  made  to  strike,  to  throw,  to  leap,  to  lift, 
And  all  the  sports  that  shepherds  are  emong. 
In  every  one,  he  vanquished  every  one, 
He  vanquished  all,  and  vanquished  was  of  none. 

Besides,  in  hunting  such  felicity 

Or  rather  infelicity,  he  found  ; 

That  every  field  and  forest  far  away 

He  sought,  where  savage  beasts  do  most  abound. 

No  beast  so  savage,  but  he  could  it  kill  : 

No  chase  so  hard,  but  he  therein  had  skill. 


E.spenser.j  AsTROPHEL,^  PASTORAL  ELEGY.  277 


Such  skill,  matched  with  such  courage  as  he  had, 
Did  prick  him  forth  with  proud  desire  of  praise ; 
To  seek  abroad,  of  danger  nought  y'drad, 
His  mistress'  name  and  his  own  fame  to  raise. 
What  need,  peril  to  be  sought  abroad  ? 
Since  round  about  us,  it  doth  make  abode. 

It  fortuned  as  he,  that  perilous  game 
In  foreign  soil  pursued,  far  away  ; 
Into  a  forest  wide  and  waste,  he  came, 
Where  store  he  heard  to  be  of  savage  prey. 
So  wide  a  forest  and  so  waste  as  this, 
Nor  famous  Ardenne,  nor  foul  Arlo  is. 

There  his  well-woven  toils  and  subtle  trains 
He  laid,  the  brutish  nation  to  enwrap  : 
So  well  he  wrought  with  practice  and  with  pains, 
That  he  of  them,  great  troops  did  soon  entrap. 
Full  happy  man  !  misweening  much,  was  he  ; 
So  rich  a  spoil  within  his  power  to  see. 

Eftsoons,  all  heedless  of  his  dearest  hale, 

Full  greedily  into  the  herd  he  thrust 

To  slaughter  them  and  work  their  final  bale, 

Lest  that  his  toil  should  of  their  troops  be  burst. 

Wide  wounds  emongst  them,  many  one  he  made  ; 

Now  with  his  sharp  boar  spear,  now  with  his  blade. 


278  ASTROPHEL,  A   PASTORAL    ELEGY.    [E- Spenser' 


His  care  was  all,  how  he  them  all  might  kill  ; 

That  none  might  'scape,  so  partial  unto  none. 

Ill  mind  !  so  much  to  mind  another's  ill, 

As  to  become  unmindful  of  his  own. 

But  pardon  that  unto  the  cruel  skies, 

That  from  himself  to  them,  withdrew  his  eyes. 

So  as  he  raged  emongst  that  beastly  rout ; 

A  cruel  beast  of  most  accursed  brood, 

Upon  him  turned — despair  makes  cowards  stout  ; 

And  with  fell  tooth,  accustomed  to  blood, 

Launched  his  thigh  with  so  mischievous  might, 

That  it  both  bone  and  muscle  rived  quite. 

So  deadly  was  the  dint,  and  deep  the  wound, 
And  so  huge  streams  of  blood  thereout  did  flow ; 
That  he  endured  not  the  direful  stound 
But  on  the  cold  dear  earth,  himself  did  throw. 
The  whiles  the  captive  herd  his  nets  did  rend, 
And  having  none  to  let ;  to  wood  did  wend. 

Ah,  where  were  ye  this  while,  his  shepherd  peers  ? 
To  whom  alive  was  nought  so  dear  as  he. 
And  ye  fair  maids,  the  matches  of  his  years  ! 
Which  in  his  grace,  did  boast  you  most  to  be  ? 
And  where  were  ye,  when  he  of  you  had  need, 
To  stop  his  wound  that  wondrously  did  bleed  ? 


.-j  AsTROFHEL,\  PASTORAL  ELEGY.  279 


Ah,  wretched  boy !  the  shape  of  drearihead  ! 
And  sad  ensample  of  man's  sudden  end  ! 
Full  little  faileth,  but  thou  shalt  be  dead  ; 
Unpitied,  unplained  of  foe  or  friend  : 
Whilst  none  is  nigh,  thine  eyelids  up  to  close ; 
And  kiss  thy  lips  like  faded  leaves  of  rose. 

A  sort  of  shepherds  suing  of  the  chase, 
As  they  the  forest  ranged  on  a  day ; 
By  fate  or  fortune  came  unto  the  place, 
Whereas  the  luckless  boy  yet  bleeding  lay. 
Yet  bleeding  lay,  and  yet  would  still  have  bled, 
Had  not  good  hap  those  shepherds  thither  led. 

They  stopped  his  wound — too  late  to  stop,  it  was, 
And  in  their  arms  then  softly  did  him  rear  : 
Tho,  as  he  willed,  unto  his  loved  lass, 
His  dearest  love,  him  dolefully  did  bear. 
The  doleful'st  bier  that  ever  man  did  see 
Was  ASTROPHEL,  but  dearest  unto  me. 

She,  when  she  saw  her  love  in  such  a  plight, 
With  curdled  blood  and  filthy  gore  deformed ; 
That  wont  to  be  with  flowers  and  garlands  dight, 
And  her  dear  favours  dearly  well  adorned. 
Her  face,  the  fairest  face  that  eye  might  see, 
She  likewise  did  deform,  like  him  to  be. 


280        AsTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.         [E>  Spenser 


Her  yellow  locks  that  shone  so  bright  and  long, 
As  sunny  beams  in  fairest  summer's  day  ; 
She  fiercely  tore :  and  with  outrageous  wrong, 
From  her  red  cheeks,  the  roses  rent  away. 
And  her  fair  breast,  the  treasury  of  joy  ; 
She  spoiled  thereof,  and  filled  with  annoy. 

His  pallid  face,  impictured  with  death ; 

She  bathed  oft  with  tears  and  dried  oft : 

And  with  sweet  kisses,  sucked  the  wasting  breath 

Out  of  his  lips,  like  lilies  pale  and  soft. 

And  oft  she  called  to  him,  who  answered  nought ; 

But  only  by  his  looks  did  tell  his  thought. 

The  rest  of  her  impatient  regret 
And  piteous  moan,  the  which  she  for  him  made ; 
No  tongue  can  tell,  nor  any  forth  can  set : 
But  he  whose  heart,  like  sorrow  did  invade. 
At  last,  when  pain  his  vital  powers  had  spent, 
His  wasted  life  her  weary  lodge  forewent. 

Which  when  she  saw,  she  stayed  not  a  whit, 
But  after  him,  did  make  untimely  haste  : 
Forthwith  her  ghost  out  of  her  corps  did  flit, 
And  followed  her  mate,  like  turtle  chaste. 
To  prove  that  death,  their  hearts  cannot  divide ; 
Which  living  were  in  love  so  firmly  tied. 


AsTROPHEL,  A  PASTORAL  ELEGY.      281 


The  gods,  which  all  things  see,  this  same  beheld. 
And  pitying  this  pair  of  lovers  true ; 
Transformed  them,  there  lying  on  the  field, 
Into  one  flower  that  is  both  red  and  blue. 
It  first  grows  red,  and  then  to  blue  doth  fade ; 
Like  ASTROPHEL,  which  thereinto  was  made. 

And  in  the  midst  thereof  a  star  appears, 
As  fairly  formed  as  any  star  in  sky ; 
Resembling  STELLA  in  her  freshest  years, 
Forth  darting  beams  of  beauty  from  her  eyes  : 
And  all  the  day  it  standeth  full  of  dew, 
Which  is  the  tears  that  from  her  eyes  did  flow. 

That  herb  of  some,  "  Starlight  "  is  called  by  name  ; 

Of  others  Penthia,  though  not  so  well : 

But  thou  wherever  thou  dost  find  the  same, 

From  this  day  forth  do  call  it  Astrophel. 

And  whensoever  thou  it  up  dost  take ; 

Do  pluck  it  softly,  for  that  shepherd's  sake. 

Hereof  when  tidings  far  abroad  did  pass, 
The  shepherds  all  which  loved  him  full  dear — 
And  sure,  full  dear  of  all  he  loved  was — 
Did  thither  flock  to  see  what  they  did  hear. 
And  when  that  piteous  spectacle  they  viewed, 
The  same  with  bitter  tears  they  all  bedewed. 


?82  A  S  TROPHEL,  A  ?AS  TOR  AL    ELEGY.     fE"  sPenser- 


And  every  one  did  make  exceeding  moan, 
With  inward  anguish  and  great  grief  opprest ; 
And  every  one  did  weep  and  wail  and  moan, 
And  means  devised  to  show  his  sorrow  best. 
That  from  that  hour  since  first  on  grassy  green, 
Shepherds  kept  sheep ;  was  not  like  mourning  seen. 

But  first  his  sister  that  CLORINDA  hight, 
The  gentlest  shepherdess  that  lives  this  day ; 
And  most  resembling  both  in  shape  and  sprite, 
Her  brother  dear,  began  this  doleful  lay. 
Which  lest  I  mar  the  sweetness  of  the  verse, 
In  sort  as  she  it  sung,  I  will  rehearse. 

YE  me  !  to  whom  shall  I,  my  case  complain, 
That  may  compassion  my  impatient  grief  ? 
Or  where  shall  I  unfold  my  inward  pain 
That  my  enriven  heart  may  find  relief? 
Shall  I  unto  the  heavenly  powers  it  show, 
Or  unto  earthly  men  that  dwell  below  ?  " 

11  To  heavens  !     Ah,  they,  alas,  the  authors  were 
And  workers  of  my  unremedied  woe  ; 
For  they  foresee  what  to  us  happens  here, 
And  they  foresaw,  yet  suffered  this  be  so. 

From  them  comes  good,  from  them  comes  also  ill ; 

That  which  they  made,  who  can  them  warn  to  spill  ?  " 


Lady  PEMBROKE.]  AsTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.      283 


"  To  men  !     Ah,  they,  alas,  like  wretched  be 
And  subject  to  the  heaven's  ordinance  ; 
Bound  to  abide  whatever  they  decree, 
Their  best  redress,  is  their  best  sufferance. 

How  then  can  they,  like  wretched,  comfort  me  ? 

The  which  no  less,  need  comforted  to  be." 

"  Then  to  myself,  will  I  my  sorrow  mourn, 

Sith  none  alive  like  sorrowful  remains  ; 

And  to  myself,  my  plaints  shall  back  return, 

To  pay  their  usury  with  doubled  pains. 

The  woods,  the  hills,  the  rivers  shall  resound 
The  mournful  accent  of  my  sorrow's  ground." 

"  Woods,  hills  and  rivers  now  are  desolate; 

Sith  he  is  gone  the  which  them  all  did  grace  : 

And  all  the  fields  do  wail  their  widow-state; 

Sith  death,  their  fairest  flower  did  late  deface. 
The  fairest  flower  in  field  that  ever  grew, 
Was  ASTROPHEL:  that  'was,'  we  all  may  rue." 

"  What  cruel  hand  of  cursed  foe  unknown, 

Hath  cropped  the  stalk  which  bore  so  fair  a  flower  ? 

Untimely  cropped,  before  it  well  were  grown, 

And  clean  defaced  in  untimely  hour. 
Great  loss  to  all  that  ever  him  see, 
Great  loss  to  all,  but  greatest  loss  to  me." 


284    ASTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.  [Lady 


PEMBROKE 


"  Break  now  your  garlands,  O  ye  shepherds'  lasses  ! 
Sith  the  fair  flower,  which  them  adorned,  is  gone : 
The  flower,  which  them  adorned,  is  gone  to  ashes, 
Never  again  let  lass  put  garland  on. 

Instead  of  garland,  wear  sad  cypress  now ; 

And  bitter  elder,  broken  from  the  bough." 

"  Ne  ever  sing  the  love-lays  which  he  made  ; 

Whoever  made  such  lays  of  love  as  he  ? 

Ne  ever  read  the  riddles,  which  he  said 

Unto  yourselves,  to  make  you  merry  glee. 
Your  merry  glee  is  now  laid  all  abed, 
Your  merry-maker  now,  alas  !  is  dead." 

"  Death  !   the  devourer  of  all  world's  delight, 
Hath  robbed  you,  and  reft  from  me  my  joy ; 
Both  you  and  me  and  all  the  world,  he  quite 
Hath  robbed  of  joyance;  and  left  sad  annoy. 

Joy  of  the  world  !  and  shepherds'  pride  was  he 
Shepherds  hope  never,  like  again  to  see." 


"  Oh,  Death  !  that  hast  us  of  such  riches  reft, 

Tell  us  at  least,  What  hast  thou  with  it  done  ? 

What  is  become  of  him,  whose  flower  here  left ; 

Is  but  the  shadow  of  his  likeness  gone. 

Scarce  like  the  shadow  of  that  which  he  was  : 
Nought  like,  but  that  he,  like  a  shade,  did  pass." 


A     PASTORAL     ELEGY.       285 


"  But  that  immortal  spirit,  which  was  deckt 
With  all  the  dowries  of  celestial  grace ; 
By  sovereign  choice  from  th'  heavenly  quires  select, 
And  lineally  derived  from  angels'  race  : 

O  what  is  now  of  it  become  aread  ? 

Aye  me  !  can  so  divine  a  thing  be  dead  ?  " 

"  Ah,  no  !     It  is  not  dead,  nor  can  it  die ; 
But  lives  for  aye  in  blissful  Paradise : 
Where  like  a  new-born  babe  it  soft  doth  lie 
In  bed  of  lilies,  wrapped  in  tender  wise  : 

And  compassed  all  about  with  roses  sweet, 
And  dainty  violets  from  head  to  feet." 

"There,  thousand  birds,  all  of  celestial  brood, 

To  him  do  sweetly  carol  day  and  night  ; 

And  with  strange  notes,  of  him  well  understood, 

Lull  him  asleep  in  angelic  delight : 

Whilst  in  sweet  dream,  to  him  presented  be 
Immortal  beauties,  which  no  eye  may  see." 

"  But  he  them  sees,  and  takes  exceeding  pleasure 
Of  their  divine  aspects,  appearing  plain ; 
And  kindling  love  in  him  above  all  measure 
Sweet  love,  still  joyous,  never  feeling  pain. 

For  what  so  goodly  form  he  there  doth  see, 
He  may  enjoy,  from  jealous  rancour  free." 


286     ASTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    £  L E G Y .  FLady  PEMBROKE- 


"  There  liveth  he  in  everlasting  bliss, 
Sweet  spirit !  never  fearing  more  to  die  : 
Ne  dreading  harm  from  any  foes  of  his, 
Ne  fearing  savage  beast's  more  cruelty. 

Whilst  we  here,  wretches  !  wail  his  private  lack ; 

And  with  vain  vows  do  often  call  him  back." 

"  But  live  thou  there  still  happy,  happy  spirit ! 

And  give  us  leave,  thee  here  thus  to  lament : 

Not  thee,  that  dost  thy  heaven's  joy  inherit  ; 

But  our  own  selves,  that  here  in  dole  are  drent. 
Thus  do  we  weep  and  wail,  and  wear  our  eyes, 
Mourning  in  others,  our  own  miseries." 


Which  when  she  ended  had,  another  swain, 
Of  gentle  wit  and  dainty  sweet  device; 
Whom  ASTROPHEL  full  dear  did  entertain 
Whilst  here  he  lived,  and  held  in  passing  price 
Hight  THESTYLIS,  began  his  mournful  tourn, 
And  made  the  Muses  in  his  song  to  mourn. 


And  after  him,  full  many  other  moe, 
As  every  one  in  order  loved  him  best ; 


L.  Bry.skett.-j       AsTROPHEL,   A    PASTORAL    ELEGY          287 


'Gan  dight  themselves  t'express  their  inward  woe 

With  doleful  lays  unto  the  tune  addrest. 

The  which  I  here  in  order  will  rehearse, 

As  fittest  flowers  to  deck  his  mournful  hearse. 


The  mourning  Muse  ^/THESTYLIS. 

|OME  FORTH  ye  nymphs !  come  forth  !  forsake  your 
watery  bowers  ! 

Forsake  your  mossy  caves ;  and  help  me  to  lament. 

Help  me  to  tune  my  doleful  notes  to  gurgling  sound 
Of  JLift'ey's  tumbling  streams.     Come  let  salt  tears  of  ours, 
Mix  with  his  waters  fresh.     O  come  let  one  consent 
Join  us  to  mourn  with  wailful  plaints  the  deadly  wound 
Which  fatal  clap  hath  made,  decreed  by  higher  powers  ; 
The  dreary  day  in  which  they  have  from  us  yrent 
The  noblest  plant  that  might  from  East  to  West  be  found. 
Mourn !  mourn  great  PHILIP'S  fall !   mourn  we  his  woeful  end, 
Whom  spiteful  death  hath  plucked  untimely  from  the  tree  ; 
While  yet  his  years  in  flower  did  promise  worthy  fruit. 
Ah,  dreadful  MARS  !  why  didst  thou  not  thy  knight  defend  ? 
What  wrathful  mood,  what  fault  of  ours  hath  moved  thee, 
Of  such  a  shining  light  to  leave  us  destitute  ? 
Thou  with  benign  aspect  sometime  didst  us  behold. 
Thou  hast  in  Britons'  valour  ta'en  delight  of  old, 


288        ASTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.       [L- Bryskett. 


And  with  thy  presence  oft  vouchsafed  to  attribute 

Fame  and  renown  to  us,  for  glorious  martial  deeds  : 

But  now  their  ireful  beams  have  chilled  our  hearts  with  cold. 

Thou  hast  estranged  thyself  and  deignest  not  our  land : 

Far  off  to  others  now,  thy  favour,  honour  breeds ; 

And  high  disdain  doth  cause  thee  shun  our  clime,  I  fear. 

For  hadst  thou  not  been  wroth,  or  that  time  near  at  hand  ; 

Thou  wouldst  have  heard  the  cry  that  woeful  England  made : 

Eke  Zealand's  piteous  plaints,  and  Holland's  toren  hair 

Would  haply  have  appeased  thy  divine  angry  mind. 

Thou  shouldst  have  seen  the  trees  refuse  to  yield  their  shade 

And  wailing  to  let  fall  the  honour  of  their  head, 

And  birds  in  mournful  tunes  lamenting  in  their  kind. 

Up  from  his  tomb,  the  mighty  CORINEUS  rose, 

Who  cursing  oft  the  fates  that  this  mishap  had  bred, 

His  hoary  locks  he  tare,  calling  the  heavens  unkind. 

The  Thames  was  heard  to  roar,  the  Rhine,  and  eke  the  Meuse, 

The  Scheldt,  the  Danow  self  this  great  mischance  did  rue : 

With  torment  and  with  grief,  their  fountains  pure  and  clear 

Were  troubled ;  and  with  swelling  floods  declared  their  woes. 

The  Muses  comfortless,  the  nymphs  with  pallid  hue ; 

The  sylvan  gods  likewise  came  running  far  and  near ; 

And  all,  with  hearts  bedewed,  and  eyes  cast  up  on  high, 

"  O  help  !  O  help,  ye  gods !  "  they  ghastly  'gan  to  cry, 

"  O  change  the  cruel  fate  of  this  so  rare  a  wight 

And  grant  that  nature's  course  may  measure  out  his  age  !  " 

The  beasts  their  food  forsook,  and  trembling  fearfully, 


L.  Bryskett.j       AsTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.        289 


Each  sought  his  cave  or  den.     This  cry  did  them  so  fright. 
Out  from  amid  the  waves,  by  storm  then  stirred  to  rage, 
This  cry  did  cause  to  rise  th'old  father  OCEAN  hoar, 
Who  grave  with  eld,  and  full  of  majesty  in  sight, 
Spake  in  this  wise,  "Refrain,"  quoth  he,  "your  tears  and 

plaints ! 

Cease  these  your  idle  words  !     Make  vain  requests  no  more  ! 
No  humble  speech  nor  moan  may  move  the  fixed  stint 
Of  destiny  or  death.     Such  is  His  will  that  paints 
The  earth  with  colours  fresh,  the  darkest  skies  with  store 
Of  starry  lights  :  and  though  your  tears  a  heart  of  flint 
Might  tender  make  ;  yet  nought  herein  will  they  prevail." 
Whiles  thus  he  said,  the  noble  Knight,  who  'gan  to  feel 
His  vital  force  to  faint,  and  death  with  cruel  dint 
Of  direful  dart  his  mortal  body  to  assail : 
With  eyes  lift  up  to  heaven,  and  courage  frank  as  steel ; 
With  cheerful  face  where  valour  lively  was  exprest, 
But  humble  mind,  he  said,  "  O  LORD  !  if  ought  this  frail 
And  earthly  carcass  have  Thy  service  sought  t'advance ; 
If  my  desire  have  been  still  to  relieve  th'opprest ; 
If  Justice  to  maintain,  that  valour  I  have  spent 
Which  Thou  me  gav'st ;  or  if  henceforth  I  might  advance 
Thy  name,   Thy  truth:  then   spare  me,  LORD!    if  Thou 

think  best ; 

Forbear  these  unripe  years  !  But  if  Thy  will  be  bent, 
If  that  prefixed  time  be  come  which  Thou  hast  set : 
Through  pure  and  fervent  faith.  I  hope  now  to  be  placed 


ASTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.        [L>  Bryskett 


In  th'everlasting  bliss  ;  which  with  Thy  precious  blood 

Thou  purchase  didst  for  us."     With  that  a  sigh  he  fet, 

And  straight  a  cloudy  mist  his  senses  overcast. 

His  lips  waxed  pale  and  wan,  like  damask  rose's  bud 

Cast  from  the  stalk ;  or  like  in  field  to  purple  flower 

Which  languisheth,  being  shred  by  culter  as  it  past. 

A  trembling  chilly  cold  ran  through  their  veins,  which  were 

With  eyes  brimful  of  tears  to  see  his  fatal  hour : 

Whose  blustering  sighs  at  first  their  sorrow  did  declare ; 

Next,  murmuring  ensued ;  at  last  they  not  forbear 

Plain  outcries ;  all  against  the  heavens  that  enviously 

Deprived  us  of  a  sprite  so  perfect  and  so  rare. 

The  sun  his  lightsome  beams  did  shroud,  and  hide  his  face 

For  grief ;  whereby  the  earth  feared  night  eternally  : 

The  mountains  eachwhere  shook,  the   rivers    turned  their 

streams ; 

And  th'air  'gan  winter-like  to  rage  and  fret  apace  : 
And  grisly  ghosts  by  night  were  seen ;  and  fiery  gleams 
Amid  the  clouds  with  claps  of  thunder,  that  did  seem 
To  rent  the  skies  ;  and  made  both  man  and  beast  afraid  : 
The  birds  of  ill  presage  this  luckless  chance  foretold 
By  dernful  noise ;  and  dogs  with  howling  made  man  deem 
Some  mischief  was  at  hand  :  for  such  they  do  esteem 
As  tokens  of  mishap  ;  and  so  have  done  of  old. 

Ah,  that  thou  hadst  but  heard  his  lovely  STELLA  plain 
Her  grievous  loss,  or  seen  her  heavy  mourning  cheer; 
Whilst  she,  with  woe  oppressed,  her  sorrows  did  unfold. 


L.  Bryskett.]        AsTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.         291 


Her  hair  hung  loose  neglect  about  her  shoulders  twain  : 
And  from  those  two  bright  stars  to  him  sometime  so  dear, 
Her  heart  sent  drops  of  pearl ;  which  fell  in  foison  down 
'Twixt  lily  and  the  rose.     She  wrung  her  hands  with  pain 
And  piteously  'gan  say,  "  My  true  and  faithful  pheer! 
Alas,  and  woe  is  me!  why  should  my  fortune  frown 
On  me  thus  frowardly  to  rob  me  of  my  joy  ? 
What  cruel  envious  hand  hath  taken  thee  away ; 
And  with  thee,  my  content,  my  comfort  and  my  stay  ? 
Thou  only  wast  the  ease  of  trouble  and  annoy : 
When  they  did  me  assail,  in  thee  my  hopes  did  rest. 
Alas,  what  now  is  left  but  grief  that  night  and  day 
Afflicts  this  woeful  life,  and  with  continual  rage 
Torments  ten  thousand  ways  my  miserable  breast  ? 

0  greedy  envious  heaven  !  what  needed  thee  to  have 
Enriched  with  such  a  jewel  this  unhappy  age  ; 

To  take  it  back  again  so  soon  ?     Alas,  when  shall 

Mine  eyes  see  ought  that  may  content  them,  since  thy  grave 

My  only  treasure  hides,  the  joy  of  my  poor  heart  ? 

As  here  with  thee  on  earth  I  lived,  even  so  equal 

Methinks  it  were,  with  thee  in  heaven  I  did  abide  : 

And  as  our  troubles  all,  we  here  on  earth  did  part ; 

So  reason  would  that  there,  of  thy  most  happy  state 

1  had  my  share.     Alas,  if  thou  my  trusty  guide 
Were  wont  to  be  :  how  canst  thou  leave  me  thus  alone 
In  darkness  and  astray ;  weak,  weary,  desolate, 
Plunged  in  a  world  of  woe — refusing  for  to  take 


292        ASTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.       .  [L- Bryskett 


Me  with  thee,  to  the  place  of  rest  where  thou  art  gone  ?  " 
This  said,  she  held  her  peace,  for  sorrow  tied  her  tongue  : 
And  instead  of  more  words,  seemed  that  her  eyes  a  lake 
Of  tears  had  been,  they  flowed  so  plenteously  therefrom : 
And  with  her  sobs  and  sighs  th'air  round  about  her  rung. 

If  VENUS  when  she  wailed  her  dear  ADONIS  slain, 
Ought  moved  in  thy  fierce  heart,  compassion  of  her  woe: 
His  noble  sister's  plaints,  her  sighs  and  tears  emong; 
Would  sure  have  made  thee  mild,  and  inly  rue  her  pain. 
AURORA  half  so  fair,  herself  did  never  show ; 
When  from  old  TITHON'S  bed,  she  weeping  did  arise. 
The  blinded  archer-boy,  like  lark  in  shower  of  rain, 
Sat  bathing  of  his  wings,  and  glad  the  time  did  spend 
Under  those  crystal  drops  which  fell  from  her  fair  eyes ; 
And  at  their  brightest  beams  him  proined  in  lovely  wise. 
Yet  sorry  for  her  grief,  which  he  could  not  amend  ; 
The  gentle  boy  'gan  wipe  her  eyes,  and  clear  those  lights : 
Those  lights  through  which  his  glory  and  his  conquests  shine. 
The  Graces  tuckt  her  hair,  which  hung  like  threads  of  gold 
Along  her  ivory  breast,  the  treasure  of  delights. 
All  things  with  her  to  weep,  it  seemed  did  incline  ; 
The  trees,  the  hills,  the  dales,  the  caves,  the  stones  so  cold. 
The  air  did  help  them  mourn,  with  dark  clouds,  rain  and 

mist; 

Forbearing  many  a  day  to  clear  itself  again  : 
Which  made  them  eftsoons  fear  the  days  of  PYRRHA  should 
Of  creatures  spoil  the  earth,  their  fatal  threads  untwist. 


L.  Bryskett."] 


ASTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.        293 


For  PHCEBUS'  gladsome  rays  were  wished  for  in  vain, 
And  with  her  quivering  light  LATONA'S  daughter  fair ; 
And  Charles'  Wain  eke  refused  to  be  the  shipman's  guide. 
On  NEPTUNE,  war  was  made  by  MOLUS  and  his  train. 
Who  letting  loose  the  winds,  tost  and  tormented  th'air, 
So  that  on  every  coast,  men  shipwreck  did  abide, 
Or  else  were  swallowed  up  in  open  sea  with  waves : 
And  such  as  came  to  shore  were  beaten  with  despair. 
The  Medway's  silver  streams  that  wont  so  still  to  slide, 
Were  troubled  now  and  wroth ;  whose  hidden  hollow  caves 
Along  his  banks,  with  fog  then  shrouded  from  man's  eye, 
Aye  "PHILIP  "  did  resound,  aye  "  PHILIP  "  they  did  cry. 
His   nymphs   were  seen  no  more,  though   custom   still    it 

craves, 

With  hair  spread  to  the  wind,  themselves  to  bathe  or  sport ; 
Or  with  the  hook  or  net,  barefooted  wantonly 
The  pleasant  dainty  fish  to  entangle  or  deceive. 
The  shepherds  left  their  wonted  places  of  resort, 
Their  bagpipes  now  were  still,  their  lovely  merry  lays 
Were  quite  forgot ;  and  now  their  flocks,  men  might  perceive 
To  wander  and  to  stray,  all  carelessly  neglect : 
And  in  the  stead  of  mirth  and  pleasure,  nights  and  days 
Nought    else  was  to  be  heard,  but  woes,   complaints  and 

moan. 

But  thou,  O  blessed  soul !  dost  haply  not  respect 
These  tears  we  shed,  though  full  of  loving  pure  affect ; 
Having  affixt  thine  eyes  on  that  most  glorious  throne, 


294       ASTROPHEL,    A    PASTORAL    ELEGY.        [L>  Brysket 


Where  full  of  majesty,  the  high  Creator  reigns. 
In  whose  bright  shining  face  thy.  joys  are  all  complete, 
Whose  love  kindles  thy  sprite,  where  happy  always  one, 
Thou  liv'st  in  bliss  that  earthly  passion  never  stains ; 
Where  from  the  purest  spring  the  sacred  nectar  sweet 
Is  thy  continual  drink  :  where  thou  dost  gather  now 
Of  well-employed  life,  th'estimable  gains. 
There  VENUS  on  thee  smiles,  APOLLO  gives  thee  place ; 
And  MARS  in  reverent  wise  doth  to  thy  virtue  bow, 
And  decks  his  fiery  sphere,  to  do  thee  honour  most. 
In  highest  part  whereof,  thy  valour  for  to  grace, 
A  chair  of  gold  he  sets  to  thee,  and  there  doth  tell 
Thy  noble  acts  arew ;  whereby  even  they  that  boast 
Themselves  of  ancient  fame,  as  PYRRHUS,  HANNIBAL, 
SCIPIO  and  CAESAR,  with  the  rest  that  did  excel 
In  martial  prowess  ;  high  thy  glory  do  admire. 

All  hail !  therefore,  O  worthy  PHILIP  immortal ! 
The  flower  of  SIDNEY'S  race,  the  honour  of  thy  name. 
Whose  worthy  praise  to  sing,  my  Muses  not  aspire. 
But  sorrowful  and  sad  these  tears  to  thee  let  fall : 
Yet  wish  their  verses  might  so  far  and  wide  thy  fame 
Extend,  that  ENVY'S  rage  nor  time  might  end  the  same. 


L.  Bryskett.j     ^  PASTORAL  EcLOGUE  ON  SlR   P.  SlDNEY.     295 


A  pastoral  Eclogue  upon  the  death  of  Sir 
PHILIP  SIDNET,  Knight, 


Lycon. 


Colin. 


Lycon. 


things 


IOLIN  !  well   fits   thy   sad   cheer  this  sad 

stound, 
This   woeful  stound,  wherein  all 

complain 

This  great  mishap,  this  grievous  loss  of  ours. 
Hear'st  thou  the  Grown  ?     How  with  hollow  sound 
He  slides  away,  and  murmuring  doth  plain, 
And  seems  to  say  unto  the  fading  flowers 
Along  his  banks,  unto  the  bared  trees  ; 
PHILLISIDES  is  dead.     Up,  jolly  swain  ! 
Thou  that  with  skill  canst  tune  a  doleful  lay  ; 
Help  him  to  mourn  !     My  heart  with  grief  doth  freeze ; 
Hoarse  is  my  voice  with  crying,  else  a  part 
Sure  would  I  bear,  though  rude  :  but  as  I  may, 
With  sobs  and  sighs  I  second  will  thy  song ; 
And  so  express  the  sorrows  of  my  heart. 


296  A  PASTORAL  ECLOGUE  ON  SIR  P.  SIDNEY. 


Colin.  Ah  LYCON  !  LYCON  !  what  need  skill  to  teach 
A  grieved  mind  pour  forth  his  plaints  ?     How  long 
Hath  the  poor  turtle  gone  to  school,  weenest  thou, 
To  learn  to  mourn  her  lost  make  ?     No,  no,  each 
Creature  by  nature  can  tell  how  to  wail. 
Seest  not  these  flocks  ;  how  sad  they  wander  now  ? 
Seemeth  their  leader's  bell,  their  bleating  tunes 
In  doleful  sound.     Like  him,  not  one  doth  fail, 
With  hanging  head  to  show  a  heavy  cheer. 
What  bird,  I  pray  thee,  hast  thou  seen  that  prunes 
Himself  of  late  ?     Did  any  cheerful  note 
Come  to  thine  ears,  or  gladsome  sight  appear 
Unto  thine  eyes,  since  that  same  fatal  hour  ? 
Hath  not  the  air  put  on  his  mourning  coat, 
And  testified  his  grief  with  flowing  tears  ? 
Sith  then,  it  seemeth  each  thing  to  his  power, 
Doth  us  invite  to  make  a  sad  consort : 
Come  let  us  join  our  mournful  song  with  theirs ! 
Grief  will  indite,  and  sorrow  will  enforce 
Thy  voice ;  and  ECHO  will  our  words  report. 

Lycon.  Though  my  rude  rhymes,  ill  with  thy  verses 
That  others  far  excel :  yet  will  I  force  [frame, 

Myself  to  answer  thee  the  best  I  can  ; 
And  honour  my  base  words  with  his  high  name. 
But  if  my  plaints  annoy  thee  where  thou  sit 
In  secret  shade  or  cave ;  vouchsafe,  O  PAN  ! 


L.  Bryskett.]      A  PASTORAL  ECLOGUE  ON  SlR  P.  SlDNEY.    297 


To  pardon  me  ;  and  hear  this  hard  constraint 
With  patience,  while  I  sing ;  and  pity  it. 
And  eke  ye  rural  Muses,  that  do  dwell 
In  these  wild  woods  :  if  ever  piteous  plaint 
We  did  indite,  or  taught  a  woeful  mind 
With  words  of  pure  affect,  his  grief  to  tell ; 
Instruct  me  now  !     Now  COLIN  then  go  on ; 
And  I  will  follow  thee,  though  far  behind. 

Colin,  PHILLISIDES  is  dead  !     O  harmful  death  ! 
O  deadly  harm  !     Unhappy  Albion  ! 
When  shalt  thou  see  emong  thy  shepherds  ail 
Any  so  sage,  so  perfect  ?     Whom  uneath 
Envy  could  touch  for  virtuous  life  and  skill ; 
Courteous,  valiant,  and  liberal.  , 
Behold  the  sacred  PALES  !  where  with  hair 
Untrusst,  she  sits  in  shade  of  yonder  hill  ; 
And  her  fair  face  bent  sadly  down,  doth  send 
A  flood  of  tears  to  bathe  the  earth  :  and  there 
Doth  call  the  heavens  despiteful,  envious ; 
Cruel  his  fate,  that  made  so  short  an  end 
Of  that  same  life,  well  worthy  to  have  been 
Prolonged  with  many  years,  happy  and  famous. 
The  Nymphs  and  Oreades  her  round  about 
Do  sit  lamenting  on  the  grassy  green ; 
And  with  shrill  cries,  beating  their  whitest  breasts, 
Accuse  the  direful  dart  that  DEATH  sent  out 


EgssfmEstsm&rastBtBragsfi^^ 


298  A  PASTORAL  ECLOGUE  ON  SIR  P.  SIDNEY. 


L- 


To  give  the  fatal  stroke.     The  stars  they  blame  ; 
That  deaf  or  careless  seem  at  their  request. 
The  pleasant  shade  of  stately  groves  they  shun. 
They  leave  their  crystal  springs,  where  they  wont  frame 
Sweet  bowers  of  myrtle  twigs  and  laurel  fair  ; 
To  sport  themselves  free  from  the  scorching  sun. 
And  now  the  hollow  caves,  where  HORROR  dark 
Doth  dwell,  whence  banished  is  the  gladsome  air 
They  seek ;  and  there  in  mourning  spend  their  time 
With  wailful  tunes ;  whiles  wolves  do  howl  and  bark, 
And  seem  to  bear  a  bourdon  to  their  plaint. 

Lycon.  PHILLISIDES  is  dead !    O  doleful  rhyme ! 
Why  should  my  tongue  express  thee  ?     Who  is  left 
Now  to  uphold  thy  hopes,  when  they  do  faint ; 
LYCON  unfortunate  ?     What  spiteful  fate  ? 
What  luckless  destiny  hath  thee  bereft 
Of  thy  chief  comfort,  of  thy  only  stay  ? 
Where  is  become  thy  wonted  happy  state  ? 
Alas,  wherein  through  many  a  hill  and  dale, 
Through  pleasant  woods,  and  many  an  unknown  way, 
Along  the  banks  of  many  silver  streams, 
Thou  with  him  yodest ;  and  with  him  did  scale 
The  craggy  rocks  of  th'Alps  and  Appennine  ? 
Still  with  the  Muses  sporting,  while  those  beams 
Of  virtue  kindled  in  his  noble  breast ; 
Which  after  did  so  gloriously  forth  shine  ? 


L.  Bry.kett.-j   A   pASTQRAL  EcLOGUE  ON  SlR   P.  SlDNEY.    299 


But,  woe  is  me,  they  now  yquenched  are 

All  suddenly,  and  death  hath  them  oppressed, 

Lo,  father  NEPTUNE  !  with  sad  countenance, 

How  he  sits  mourning  on  the  strond  now  bare 

Yonder ;  where  th'OcEAN  with  his  rolling  waves 

The  white  feet  washeth,  wailing  this  mischance, 

Of  Dover  cliffs.     His  sacred  skirt  about 

The  sea  gods  all  are  set ;  from  their  moist  caves, 

All  for  his  comfort  gathered  there  they  be. 

The  Thamis  rich,  the  Humber  rough  and  stout, 

The  fruitful  Severn,  with  the  rest ;  are  come 

To  help  their  lord  to  mourn,  and  eke  to  see 

The  doleful  sight,  and  sad  pomp  funeral 

Of  the  dead  corps  passing  through  his  kingdom  ; 

And  all  their  heads  with  cypress  garlands  crowned  : 

With  woeful  shrieks  salute  him,  great  and  small. 

Eke  wailful  ECHO,  forgetting  her  dear 

NARCISSUS,  their  last  accents  doth  resound. 

Colin.  PHILLISIDES  is  dead  !     O  luckless  age  ! 
O  widow  world  !     O  brooks  and  fountains  clear ! 
O  hills  !     O  dales !     O  woods  that  oft  have  rung 
With  his  sweet  carolling,  which  could  assuage 
The  fiercest  wrath  of  tiger  or  of  bear  ! 
Ye  sylvans,  fawns  and  satyrs,  that  emong 
These  thickets  oft  have  danced  after  his  pipe  ! 
Ye  Nymphs  and  Naiads  with  golden  hair 


3oo  A  PASTORAL  ECLOGUE  ON  SIR  P.  SIDNEY.    [L-  BrysketL 


That  oft  have  left  your  purest  crystal  springs 
To  hearken  to  his  lays,  that  coulden  wipe 
Away  all  grief  and  sorrow  from  your  hearts ! 
Alas  !  who  now  is  left  that  like  him  sings  ? 
When  shall  you  hear  again  like  harmony  ? 
So  sweet  a  sound,  who  to  you  now  imparts  ? 
Lo  where  engraved  by  his  hand  yet  lives 
The  name  of  STELLA  in  yonder  bay  tree. 
Happy  name  !   happy  tree  !     Fair  may  you  grow 
And  spread  your  sacred  branch,  which  honour  gives, 
To  famous  emperors  ;  and  poets  crown. 
Unhappy  flock  !  that  wander  scattered  now. 
What  marvel  if  through  grief,  ye  woxen  lean, 
Forsake  your  food,  and  hang  your  heads  adown  ? 
For  such  a  shepherd  never  shall  you  guide ; 
Whose  parting,  hath  of  weal  bereft  you  clean. 

Lycon.  PHILLISIDES  is  dead  !      O  happy  sprite  ! 
That  now  in  heaven  with  blessed  souls  dost  bide. 
Look  down  awhile  from  where  thou  sitt'st  above, 
And  see  how  busy  shepherds  be  to  indite 
Sad  songs  of  grief,  their  sorrows  to  declare  ; 
And  grateful  memory  of  their  kind  love. 
Behold  myself  with  COLIN  gentle  swain, 
Whose  learned  Muse  thou  cherisht  most  whilere, 
Where  we  thy  name  recording,  seek  to  ease 
The  inward  torment  and  tormenting  pain 


L.  Bryskett.-j    ^  PASTORAL  ECLOGUE  ON  SIR  P.  SIDNEY.   301 
*^^ 


That  thy  departure  to  us  both  hath  bred ; 

Ne  can  each  other's  sorrow  yet  appease. 

Behold  the  fountains  now  left  desolate, 

And  withered  grass  with  cypress  boughs  bespread  ! 

Behold  these  flowers  which  on  thy  grave  we  strew ! 

Which  faded,  show  the  givers'  faded  state ; 

(Though  eke  they  show  their  fervent  zeal  and  pure) 

Whose  only  comfort  on  thy  welfare  grew. 

Whose  prayers  importune  shall  the  heavens  for  aye, 

That  to  thy  ashes,  rest  they  may  assure  ; 

That  learnedst  shepherds  honour  may  thy  name 

With  yearly  praises ;  and  the  nymphs  alway, 

Thy  tomb  may  deck  with  fresh  and  sweetest  flowers ; 

And  that  for  ever  may  endure  thy  fame. 

Colin.  The  sun,  lo,  hastened  hath  his  face  to  steep 
In  western  waves,  and  th'air  with  stormy  showers, 
Warns  us  to  drive  homewards  our  silly  sheep. 
LYCON  !  let's  rise,  and  take  of  them  good  keep. 


Virtute  summa  ;  ccetera  fortuna. 


L.  B. 


mW'rattlW^lTS'^Jtt^^ 


302     AN    ELEGY    FOR 


ASTRO  PHIL  .      [M- Roydon- 


An  Rlegy^  or  Friends  Passion 

for  his  ASTROPHIL. 

Written   upon   the  death   of  the   Right 

Honourable  Sir  PHILIP  SIDNET, 

Knight,  Lord  Governor 

of  Flushing. 


S  THEN,  no  wind  at  all  there  blew, 
No  swelling  cloud  accloyed  the  air, 
The  sky,  like  grass  of  watchet  hue, 
Reflected  PHOEBUS'  golden  hair; 
The  garnished  tree  no  pendant  stirred, 
No  voice  was  heard  of  any  bird. 


There  might  you  see  the  burly  bear, 

The  lion  king,  the  elephant. 

The  maiden  unicorn  was  there, 

So  was  ACTION'S  horned  plant : 

And  what  of  wild  or  tame  are  found, 
Were  couched  in  order  on  the  ground. 


M.  Roydon. 


]      AN    ELEGY    FOR    ASTRO  PHIL.     303 


ALCIDES'  speckled  poplar  tree  ; 

The  palm  that  monarchs  do  obtain; 

With  love  juice  stained,  the  mulberry, 

The  fruit  that  dews  the  poet's  brain ; 
And  PHILLIS'  filbert  there  away 
Compared  with  myrtle  and  the  bay  : 

The  tree  that  coffins  doth  adorn, 
With  stately  height  threatening  the  sky, 
And  for  the  bed  of  love  forlorn, 
The  black  and  doleful  ebony : 

All  in  a  circle  compassed  were 

Like  to  an  amphitheatre. 

Upon  the  branches  of  those  trees, 

The  air-winged  people  sat, 

Distinguished  in  odd  degrees  ; 

One  sort  is  this,  another  that. 

Here  PHILOMEL  that  knows  full  well 
What  force  and  wit  in  love  doth  dwell, 

The  sky-bred  eagle,  royal  bird, 
Perched  there  upon  an  oak  above ; 
The  turtle  by  him  never  stirred, 
Example  of  immortal  love. 

The  swan  that  sings  about  to  die ; 

Leaving  MEANDER,  stood  thereby. 


304     AN    ELEGY    FOR    ASTRO  PHIL.      [M< 


*°ydon. 


And  that  which  was  of  wonder  most, 

The  Phoenix  left  sweet  Araby  ; 

And  on  a  cedar  in  this  coast, 

Built  up  her  tomb  of  spicery. 

As  I  conjecture  by  the  same, 
Prepared  to  take  her  dying  flame. 

In  midst  and  centre  of  this  plot, 

I  saw  one  grovelling  on  the  grass ; 

A  man  or  stone,  I  knew  not  what. 

No  stone  ;  of  man,  the  figure  was. 

And  yet  I  could  not  count  him  one, 
More  than  the  image  made  of  stone. 

At  length  I  might  perceive  him  rear 
His  body  on  his  elbows'  end  : 
Earthly  and  pale  with  ghastly  cheer, 
Upon  his  knees  he  upward  tend  ; 

Seeming  like  one  in  uncouth  stound, 
To  be  ascending  out  the  ground. 

A  grievous  sigh  forthwith  he  throws, 
As  might  have  torn  the  vital  strings ; 
Then  down  his  cheeks  the  tears  so  flows 
As  doth  the  stream  of  many  springs. 

So  thunder  rends  the  cloud  in  twain, 
And  makes  a  passage  for  the  rain. 


3KK9K3Smt&9ifiB&CBiSE^^ 


M.Roydon.- 


ELEGY     FOR     AsTROPHIL.       305 


Incontinent  with  trembling  sound, 

He  woefully  'gan  to  complain ; 

Such  were  the  accents  as  might  wound, 

And  tear  a  diamond  rock  in  twain. 

After  his  throbs  did  somewhat  stay, 
Thus  heavily  he  'gan  to  say. 

"  O  sun  !  "  said  he,  seeing  the  sun, 
"  On  wretched  me,  why  dost  thou  shine  ? 
My  star  is  fallen,  my  comfort  done ; 
Out  is  the  apple  of  my  eyen. 

Shine  upon  those  possess  delight, 
And  let  me  live  in  endless  night !  " 

"  O  grief!  that  liest  upon  my  soul, 
As  heavy  as  a  mount  of  lead; 
The  remnant  of  my  life  control, 
Consort  me  quickly  with  the  dead! 

Half  of  this  heart,  this  sprite  and  will, 
Died  in  the  breast  of  ASTROPHIL." 

"  And  you  compassionate  of  my  woe, 
Gentle  birds,  beasts,  and  shady  trees  ! 
I  am  assured  ye  long  to  know 
What  be  the  sorrows  me  aggrieves ; 
Listen  ye  then  to  what  ensu'th, 
And  hear  a  tale  of  tears  and  ruth." 


10 


306     AN    ELEGY    FOR    ASTRO  PHIL.      [M-  R°ydon- 


"  You  knew,  who  knew  not  ASTROPHIL  ? 
(That  I  should  live  to  say  I  knew, 
And  have  not  in  possession  still !) 
Things  known,  permit  me  to  renew : 
Of  him  you  know,  his  merit  such, 
I  cannot  say,  you  hear  too  much." 

"  Within  these  woods  of  Arcady, 
His  chief  delight  and  pleasure  took  : 
And  on  the  mountain  Partheny, 
Upon  the  crystal  liquid  brook, 

The  Muses  met  him  every  day ; 

That  taught  him  sing,  to  write,  and  say." 

"  When  he  descended  down  the  mount, 
His  personage  seemed  most  divine ; 
A  thousand  graces  one  might  count 
Upon  his  lovely  cheerful  eyen : 

To  hear  him  speak,  and  sweetly  smile ; 

You  were  in  Paradise  the  while." 

"  A  sweet  attractive  kind  of  grace ; 
A  full  assurance  given  by  looks ; 
Continual  comfort  in  a  face, 
The  lineaments  of  Gospel  books. 

I  trow  that  countenance  cannot  lie, 
Whose  thoughts  are  legible  in  the  eye." 


"  Was  ever  eye  did  see  that  face ; 

Was  never  ear  did  hear  that  tongue  ; 

Was  never  mind  did  mind  his  grace  ; 

That  ever  thought  the  travail  long  : 

But  eyes  and  ears  and  every  thought, 
Were  with  his  sweet  perfections  caught. 

"  0  GOD  !  that  such  a  worthy  man, 
In  whom  so  rare  deserts  did  reign  ; 
Desired  thus,  must  leave  us  then  : 
And  we  to  wish  for  him  in  vain. 

O  could  the  stars  that  bred  that  wit, 
In  force  no  longer  fixed  sit." 

"  Then  being  filled  with  learned  dew, 
The  Muses  willed  him  to  love  : 
That  instrument  can  aptly  show, 
How  finely  our  conceits  will  move. 

As  BACCHUS  opes  dissembled  hearts, 
So  LOVE  sets  out  our  better  parts." 

"  STELLA,  a  nymph  within  this  wood, 
Most  rare,  and  rich  of  heavenly  bliss  ; 
The  highest  in  his  fancy  stood, 
And  she  could  well  demerit  this. 

'Tis  likely,  they  acquainted  soon  : 
He  was  a  sun,  and  she  a  moon." 


308     AN     ELEGY    FOR    ASTROPHIL. 


"  Our  ASTROPHIL  did  STELLA  love. 
O  STELLA  !  vaunt  of  ASTROPHIL  ! 
Albeit  thy  graces  gods  may  move  ; 
Where  wilt  thou  find  an  ASTROPHIL  ? 

The  rose  and  lily  have  their  prime ; 

And  so  hath  beauty  but  a  time," 

"  Although  thy  beauty  do  exceed 
In  common  sight  of  every  eye; 
Yet  in  his  poesies  when  we  read, 
It  is  apparent  more  thereby. 

He  that  hath  love  and  judgment  too, 
Sees  more  than  any  others  do." 

"  iThen  ASTROPHIL  hath  honoured  thee. 

For  when  thy  body  is  extinct, 

Thy  graces  shall  eternal  be. 

And  live  by  virtue  of  his  ink. 

For  by  his  verses  he  doth  give 
To  shortlived  beauty  aye  to  live." 

"  Above  all  others  this  is  he, 
Which  erst  approved  in  his  song 
That  love  and  honour  might  agree, 
And  that  pure  love  will  do  no  wrong. 
Sweet  saints!  it  is  no  sin  nor  blame 
To  love  a  man  of  virtuous  name." 


M.  Roydon. 


j        ^N      ELEGY      FOR     AsTROPHIL.       309 


"  Did  never  love  so  sweetly  breathe 
In  any  mortal  breast  before  ? 
Did  never  Muse  inspire  beneath, 
A  poet's  brain  with  finer  store  ? 

He  wrote  of  love  with  high  conceit ; 

And  beauty  reared  above  her  height." 

"  Then  PALLAS  afterward  attired 
Our  ASTROPHIL  with  her  device, 
Whom  in  his  armour  heaven  admired, 
As  of  the  nation  of  the  skies  : 

He  sparkled  in  his  arms  afar, 

As  he  were  dight  with  fiery  stars." 

"  The  blaze  whereof,  when  MARS  beheld 
(An  envious  eye  doth  see  afar) 
1  Such  majesty,'  quoth  he,  '  is  seld. 
Such  majesty,  my  mart  may  mar. 
Perhaps  this  may  a  suitor  be 
To  set  MARS  by  his  deity.'  " 

"  In  this  surmise,  he  made  with  speed 
An  iron  can,  wherein  he  put 
The  thunders  that  in  clouds  do  breed ; 
The  flame  and  bolt  together  shut, 

With  privy  force  burst  out  again  ; 
And  so  our  ASTROPHIL  was  slain." 


3io     AN    ELEGY    FOR    ASTROPHIL.      [M- 


Roydon 


His  word,  "  was  slain,"  straightway  did  move, 

And  Nature's  inward  life-strings  twitch, 

The  sky  immediately  above, 

Was  dimmed  with  hideous  clouds  of  pitch. 

The  wrastling  winds,  from  out  the  ground 
Filled  all  the  air  with  rattling  sound. 

The  bending  trees  expressed  a  groan, 

And  sighed  the  sorrow  of  his  fall ; 

The  forest  beasts  made  ruthful  moan ; 

The  birds  did  tune  their  mourning  call, 
And  PHILOMEL  for  ASTROPHIL, 
Unto  her  notes,  annexed  a  "  phil." 

The  turtle  dove  with  tones  of  ruth, 

Showed  feeling  passion  of  his  death ; 

Methought  she  said  "  I  tell  thee  truth, 

Was  never  he  that  drew  in  breath, 
Unto  his  love  more  trusty  found, 
Than  he  for  whom  our  griefs  abound." 

The  swan  that  was  in  presence  here, 

Began  his  funeral  dirge  to  sing  ; 

"  Good  things,"  quoth  he,  "  may  scarce  appear; 

But  pass  away  with  speedy  wing. 

This  mortal  life  as  death  is  tried, 
\nd  death  gives  life,  and  so  he  died." 


M.Roydon.1 


ASTROPHIL. 


The  general  sorrow  that  was  made 

Among  the  creatures  of  kind, 

Fired  the  Phoenix  where  she  laid, 

Her  ashes  flying  with  the  wind. 
So  as  I  might  with  reason  see 
That  such  a  Phoenix  ne'er  should  be. 

Haply,  the  cinders  driven  about, 
May  breed  an  offspring  near  that  kind  ; 
But  hardly  a  peer  to  that,  I  doubt : 
It  cannot  sink  into  my  mind 

That  under  branches  e'er  can  be, 

Of  worth  and  value  as  the  tree. 

The  eagle  marked  with  piercing  sight 
The  mournful  habit  of  the  place  ; 
And  parted  thence  with  mounting  flight, 
To  signify  to  JOVE  the  case  : 

What  sorrow  Nature  doth  sustain, 

For  ASTROPHIL,  by  ENVY  slain. 

And  while  I  followed  with  mine  eye 

The  flight  the  eagle  upward  took ; 

All  things  did  vanish  by  and  by, 

And  disappeared  from  my  look. 

The  trees,  beasts,  birds  and  grove  were  gone 
So  was  the  friend  that  made  this  moan. 


312     AN     ELEGY    FOR    ASTRO  PHIL. 


This  spectacle  had  firmly  wrought 
A  deep  compassion  in  my  sprite  ; 
My  molten  heart  issued,  methought, 
In  streams  forth  at  mine  eyes  aright : 

And  here  my  pen  is  forced  to  shrink ; 

My  tears  discolour  so  mine  ink. 


Sir  Walterl 
Ralegh.   J 


EPITAPH   UPON   SIR   P.    SIDNEY.    313 


An  Epitaph  upon  the  Right  Honourable 

Sir  PHILIP  SID  NET,  Knight  ^  Lord 

Governor  of  Flushing. 


O  PRAISE  thy  life  or  wail  thy  worthy  death ; 
And  want  thy  wit,  thy  wit  pure,  high,  divine  : 
Is  far  beyond  the  power  of  mortal  line, 
Nor  any  one  hath  worth  that  draweth  breath. 


Yet  rich  in  zeal,  though  poor  in  learning's  lore; 
And  friendly  care  obscured  in  secret  breast, 
And  love  that  envy  in  thy  life  supprest, 
Thy  dear  life  done,  and  death  hath  doubled  more. 


And  I,  that  in  thy  time  and  living  state, 
Did  only  praise  thy  virtues  in  my  thought ; 
As  one  that  seld  the  rising  sun  hath  sought : 
With  words  and  tears  now  wail  thy  timeless  fate. 


AN   EPITAPH  UPON  SIR    P.   SIDNEY. 


Drawn  was  thy  race  aright  from  princely  line, 
Nor  less  than  such  (by  gifts  that  Nature  gave, 
The  common  mother  that  all  creatures  have) 
Doth  virtue  show,  and  princely  lineage  shine. 

A  King  gave  thee  thy  name  ;  a  kingly  mind 
That  GOD  thee  gave  :  who  found  it  now  too  dear 
For  this  base  world ;  and  hath  resumed  it  near, 
To  sit  in  skies,  and  'sort  with  powers  divine. 

Kent,  thy  birthdays  ;  and  Oxford  held  thy  youth. 

The  heavens  made  haste,  and  stayed  nor  years  nor  time ; 

The  fruits  of  age  grew  ripe  in  thy  first  prime  : 

Thy  will,  thy  words ;  thy  words,  the  seals  of  truth. 

Great  gifts  and  wisdom  rare  employed  thee  thence, 
To  treat  from  kings,  with  those  more  great  than  kings. 
Such  hope  men  had  to  lay  the  highest  things 
On  thy  wise  youth,  to  be  transported  thence. 


Whence  to  sharp  wars,  sweet  Honour  did  thee  call, 
Thy  country's  love,  religion,  and  thy  friends  : 
Of  worthy  men,  the  marks,  the  lives  and  ends ; 
And  her  defence,  for  whom  we  labour  all. 


er]  AN   EPITAPH   UPON  SIR   P.  SIDNEY.     315 


These  didst  thou  vanquish  shame  and  tedious  age, 
Grief,  sorrow,  sickness  and  base  fortune's  might. 
Thy  rising  day  saw  never  woeful  night, 
But  passed  with  praise  from  off  this  worldly  stage. 

Back  to  the  camp,  by  thee  that  day  was  brought 
First,  thine  own  death  ;  and  after,  thy  long  fame  ; 
Tears  to  the  soldiers  ;  the  proud  Castilians'  shame ; 
Virtue  expressed ;  and  honour  truly  taught. 

What  hath  he  lost  ?  that  such  great  grace  hath  won. 
Young  years,  for  endless  years ;  and  hope  unsure 
Of  fortune's  gifts,  for  wealth  that  still  shall  'dure. 
O  happy  race  !  with  so  great  praises  run. 

England  doth  hold  thy  limbs,  that  bred  the  same  ; 
Flanders,  thy  valour  :  where  it  last  was  tried. 
The  camp,  thy  sorrow  ;  where  thy  body  died. 
Thy  friends,  thy  want ;  the  world,  thy  virtue's  fame. 


Nations,  thy  wit ;  our  minds  lay  up  thy  love. 
Letters,  thy  learning ;  thy  loss,  years  long  to  come. 
In  worthy  hearts,  sorrow  hath  made  thy  tomb  ; 
Thy  soul  and  sprite  enrich  the  heavens  above. 


316   AN   EPITAPH   UPON   SIR   P.    SIDNEY. 


iltei 


Thy  liberal  heart  embalmed  in  grateful  tears, 
Young  sighs,  sweet  sighs,  sage  sighs  bewail  thy  fall. 
ENVY,  her  sting ;  and  SPITE,  hath  left  her  gall. 
MALICE  herself,  a  mourning  garment  wears. 

That  day  their  HANNIBAL  died,  our  SCIPIO  fell : 
SCIPIO,  CICERO,  and  PETRARCH  of  our  time  : 
Whose  virtues,  wounded  by  my  worthless  rhyme, 
Let  angels  speak  ;  and  heaven,  thy  praises  tell. 


Another  of  the  same. 


ILENCE  augmenteth  grief!  writing  increaseth  rage  | 
Staid   are  my  thoughts,  which  loved  and  lost  the 

wonder  of  our  age. 
Yet  quickened  now  with  fire,  though  dead  with  frost 

ere  now, 
Enraged  I  write,  I  know  not  what,     Dead,  quick, 

I  know  not  how. 


Hard-hearted  minds  relent,  and  RIGOUR'S  tears  abound, 
And  ENVY  strangely  rues  his  end.   in  whom  no  fault  she 
found ; 


?  F.  Greviiie.j    ANOTHER  EPITAPH  ON  SIR  P.  SIDNEY.  317 


KNOWLEDGE  her  light   hath  lost;  VALOUR  hath  slain  her 

Knight : 
SIDNEY  is  dead  !    Dead  is  my  friend !    Dead  is  the  world's 

delight. 

PLACE  pensive  wails  his  fall,  whose  presence  was  her  pride. 
TIME  crieth  out  "my  ebb  is  come;  his  life  was  my  springtide." 
FAME  mourns  in  that  she  lost  the  ground  of  her  reports. 
Each  living  wight  laments  his  lack,  and  all  in  sundry  sorts. 

He  was  (woe  worth  that  word !)  to  each  well-thinking  mind, 
A  spotless  friend,  a  matchless  man,  whose  virtue  ever  shined : 
Declaring  in  his  thoughts,  his  life,  and  that  he  writ ; 
Highest  conceits,  longest  foresights,  and  deepest  works  of 
wit. 

He  only  like  himself,  was  second  unto  none, 

Whose  death  (though  life)  we  rue,  and  wrong,  and  all  in 

vain  do  moan. 

Their  loss,  not  him  ;  wail  they,  that  fill  the  world  with  cries. 
DEATH  slew  not  him ;  but  he  made  death  his  ladder  to  the 

skies. 

Now  sink  of  sorrow  I,  who  live,  the  more  the  wrong, 

Who  wishing  death,  whom  death  denies,  whose  thread  is  all 

too  long; 

Who  tied  to  wretched  life,  who  looks  for  no  relief, 
Must  spend  my  ever-dying  days  in  never-ending  grief. 


3 1 8  ANOTHER  EPITAPH  ON  SIR  P.  SIDNEY.    [ ?  F- Grevllle 


Heartsease  and  only  I  like  parallels  run  on, 

Whose  equal  length  keep  equal  breadth,  and  never  meet  in 

one : 

Yet  for  not  wronging  him,  my  thoughts,  my  sorrows'  cell, 
Shall  not  run  out;  though  leak  they  will,  for  liking  him  so 

well. 

Farewell  to  you !  my  hopes,  my  wonted  waking  dreams. 
Farewell  sometimes  enjoyed  joy  !  Eclipsed  are  thy  beams. 
Farewell    self-pleasing   thoughts!    which    quietness   brings 

forth. 
And  farewell  friendship's  sacred  league  !    uniting  minds  of 

worth. 


And  farewell,  merry  heart !  the  gift  of  guiltless  minds  ; 
And  all  sports !  which  for  life's  restore,  variety  assigns. 
Let  all  that  sweet  is,  void !    In  me  no  mirth  may  dwell. 
PHILIP,  the  cause  of  all  this  woe,  my  life's  content,  farewell  ! 

Now  rhyme,  the  son  of  rage,  which  art  no  kin  to  skill ; 
And  endless  grief  which  deads  my  life,  yet  knows  not  how 

to  kill : 

Go,  seek  that  hapless  tomb  !  which  if  ye  hap  to  find  ; 
Salute  the  stones  that  keep  the  limbs  that  held  so  good  a 

mind. 

FINIS. 


ALCJL1A : 


P  HI  L  O  PA  R  T  H  E  N  9s 


Loving  Folly. 


Non   Deus   (ut  perhibent]  amnr  est^  Std 
amaror,  et  error. 


AT   LONDON. 

Printed  by  R.  R.  for  William  Mattes, 

dwelling  in  Fleet  street,  at  the  sign  of  the 

Hand  and  Plough. 

'595- 


[The  only  copy  ot  the  1595  edition,  at  present  known,  is  in  the  City 
Library,  at  Hamburg. 

It  was  recovered,  and  reprinted  in  1875  by  Herr  WILHELM  WAGNER, 
Ph.D.,  in  Vol.  X.  of  the  Deutschen  Shakespeare-Gesellschaft  Jahrbuch  ; 
copies  of  this  particular  text  being  also  separately  printed. 

A  limited  Subscription  edition,  of  fifty-one  copies,  was  printed  by  Rev.  A. 
B.  GROSART,  LL.D.,  F.S.A.,  of  Blackburn,  in  1879 :  with  a  fresh  collation 
of  the  text  by  B.  S.  LEESON,  Esq.,  of  Hamburg. 

The  present  modernized  text  is  based  on  a  comparison  of  the  above 
two  reprints  of  the  1595  edition  with  the  text  of  the  London  edition  of 
1613  in  which  some  headings  (herein  inserted  between  [  ],  on  pp.  256, 
276,  278)  first  occur.] 


321 


A  Letter  written  by  a  Gentleman  to  the 
Author ',  his  friend. 

FRIEND    PHILOPARTHEN, 

|N  PERUSING  your  Loving  Folly,  and  your  Declining 
from  it;  I  do  behold  Reason  conquering  Passion. 
The  infirmity  of  loving  argueth  you  are  a  man  ; 
the  firmness  thereof,  discovereth  a  good  wit  and 
the  best  nature :  and  the  falling  from  it,  true  virtue.  Beauty 
was  always  of  force  to  mislead  the  wisest ;  and  men  of 
greatest  perfection  have  had  no  power  to  resist  Love.  The 
best  are  accompanied  with  vices,  to  exercise  their  virtues ; 
whose  glory  shineth  brightest  in  resisting  motives  of  pleasure, 
and  in  subduing  affections.  And  though  I  cannot  altogether 
excuse  your  Loving  Folly ;  yet  I  do  the  less  blame  you,  in 
that  you  loved  such  a  one  as  was  more  to  be  commended  for 
her  virtue,  than  beauty  :  albeit  even  for  that  too,  she  was  so 
well  accomplished  with  the  gifts  of  Nature  as  in  mine  conceit 
(which,  for  good  cause,  I  must  submit  as  inferior  to  yours) 
there  was  nothing  wanting,  either  in  the  one  or  the  other, 
that  might  add  more  to  her  worth,  except  it  were  a  more 
due  and  better  regard  of  your  love ;  which  she  requited  not 
according  to  your  deserts,  nor  answerable  to  herself  in  her 
other  parts  of  perfection.  Yet  herein  it  appeareth  you  have 
made  good  use  of  Reason  ;  that  being  heretofore  lost  in 
youthful  vanity,  have  now,  by  timely  discretion,  found  yourself! 

x  10 


322   [A   LETTER  FROM   PHILARETES.] 

Let  me  entreat  you  to  suffer  these  your  Passionate  Sonnets 
to  be  published  !  which  may,  peradventure,  make  others, 
possessed  with  the  like  Humour  of  Loving,  to  follow  your 
example,  in  leaving ;  and  move  other  ALCILIAS  (if  there  be 
any)  to  embrace  deserving  love,  while  they  may  ! 

Hereby,  also,  she  shall  know,  and,  it  may  be,  inwardly 
repent  the  loss  of  your  love,  and  see  how  much  her  per- 
fections are  blemished  by  ingratitude  ;  which  will  make  your 
happiness  greater  by  adding  to  your  reputation,  than  your 
contentment  could  have  been  in  enjoying  her  love.  At  the 
least  wise,  the  wiser  sort,  however  in  censuring  them,  they 
may  dislike  of  your  errors ;  yet  they  cannot  but  commend 
and  allow  of  your  reformation  :  and  all  others  that  shall  with 
indifferency  read  them,  may  reap  thereby  some  benefit,  or 
contentment. 

Thus  much  I  have  written  as  a  testimony  of  the  good  will 
I  bear  you  !  with  whom  I  do  suffer  or  rejoice  according  to 
the  quality  of  your  misfortune  or  good  hap.  And  so  I  take 
my  leave ;  resting,  as  always, 

Yours  most  assured, 

PHILAKETES. 


323 


Author    ipse 

libellum     suum. 


ad 


ARVE  liber  Domini  vanos  dicture  labor  es, 

Insomnes  nodes,  sollicitosque  dies, 
Errores  varios,  languentis  tcedia  vita, 

Marores  certos,  gaudia  certa  minus, 
Peruigiles  curas,  suspiria,  vota,  querelas, 

Et  quczcunque  pati  dura  coegit  amor. 
I  precor  intrepidus,  duram  comiterque  salutans 

Hcec  me  ejus  causa  sustinuisse  refer. 
Te  grato  excipiet  vultu  rubicundula,  nomen 

Cum  titulo  inscriptum  viderit  esse  suum. 
Forsitan  et  nostri  miserebitur  ilia  doloris, 

Dicet  et,  ah  quantum  deseruisse  dolet : 
Seque  nimis  scevam,  crudelemque  ipsa  vocabit, 

Cuinon  est  fidei  debita  cur  a  mea  ; 
Quod  siquidem  eveniet,  Domino  solaminis  illud, 

Et  tibi  supremi  muneris  instar  erit. 
Si  quis  (ut  est  cequum)  fatuos  damnaverit  ignes^ 

Pigriticz  fructus  ingeniique  levis : 
Tu  Dominum  cczcis  tenebris  errasse,  sed  ipsum 

Erroris  tandem  panituisse  sui, 
Me  quoque  re  vera  nee  tot,  nee  tanta  tuhsse, 

Sedficta  ad  placitum  multa  fuisse  refer. 


324     [AUTHOR  AD  LIZELLUM  SUUM^\ 

A  b  quanta  satius  (nisi  mens  mihi  vana)  fuisset 

Ista  meo  penitus  delituisse  sinu  : 
Quam  levia  in  lucem  prodire,  aut  luce  carentis 

Insanam  Domini  prodere  stultitiam. 
Nil  amor  est  aliud,  quam  mentis  morbus  et  error. 

Nil  sapienter  agit,  nil  bene,  quisquis  amat. 
Sed  non  cuique  datur  sapere,  aut  melioribus  uti, 

Forte  erit  alterius,  qui  mem  error  erat. 
Cautior  incedit,  qui  nunquam  labiturt  atqui 

Jam  proprio  evadam  cautior  ipse  malo. 
Si  cui  delicto  gravior  mea  pcena  videtur  ; 

Illius  in  laudes  officiosus  eris. 
Te  si  quis  simili  qui  carpitur  igne  videbit, 

Ille  suam  sortem  flebit,  et  ille  meam. 
ALCILI&  obsequium  supplex  prcestare  memento. 

Non  minima  officii  pars  erit  ilia  tui. 
Te  fortasse  sua  secura  recondet  in  area, 

Et  Solis  posthac  luminis  or  bus  eris. 
Nil  refer  et,  fateor  me  non  prudenter  amasse  ; 

Ultima  deceptcz  sors  erit  ilia  spei. 
Bis  proprio  PHOSBUS  cursu  lustraverat  orbem, 

Conscius  erroris,  stultiticeque  mece, 
A  quo  primus  amor  ccepit  penetrare  medullas, 

Et  falsa  accensos  nutriit  arte  focos. 
Desino  jam  nugas  amplecti,  seria  posthcec 

(Ut  Ratio  monet)  ac  utiliora  sequor. 


Am  or  is  Prceludium. 
\Vel,  Epistola  ad  Amicam.~\ 

O  THEE,  ALCILIA  !  solace  of  my  youth  ! 
These  rude  and  scattered  rhymes  I  have  addressed! 
The  certain  Witness  of  my  Love  and  Truth, 
That  truly  cannot  be  in  words  expressed : 
Which,  if  I  shall  perceive  thou  tak'st  in  gree, 
I  will,  from  henceforth,  write  of  none  but  thee ! 


Here  may  you  find  the  wounds  yourself  have  made  ! 
The  many  sorrows,  I  have  long  sustained  ! 
Here  may  you  see  that  LOVE  must  be  obeyed  I 
How  much  I  hoped,  how  little  I  have  gained  I 
That  as  for  you,  the  pains  have  been  endured ; 
Even  so  by  you,  they  may,  at  length,  be  cured  1 


I  will  not  call  for  aid  to  any  Muse 

(It  is  for  learned  Poets  so  to  do) : 

Affection  must,  my  want  of  Art  excuse, 

My  works  must  have  their  patronage  from  You  ! 

Whose  sweet  assistance,  if  obtain  I  might ! 

I  should  be  able  both  to  speak  and  write. 


326  A  MORIS    PR^LUDIUM.          [1/595 

Meanwhile,  vouchsafe  to  read  this,  as  assigned 
To  no  man's  censure  ;  but  to  yours  alone  ! 
Pardon  the  faults,  that  you  therein  shall  find  ; 
And  think  the  writer's  heart  was  not  his  own  ! 
Experience  of  examples  daily  prove 
"That  no  man  can  be  well  advised,  and  love!" 


And  though  the  work  itself  deserve  it  not 

(Such  is  your  Worth,  with  my  great  Wants  compared  !); 

Yet  may  my  love  unfeigned,  without  spot, 

Challenge  so  much  (if  more  cannot  be  spared  ! ). 

Then,  lovely  Virgin  !  take  this  in  good  part ! 

The  rest,  unseen,  is  sealed  up  in  the  heart. 

Judge  not  by  this,  the  depth  of  my  affection  ! 
Which  far  exceeds  the  measure  of  my  skill ; 
But  rather  note  herein  your  own  perfection  ! 
So  shall  appear  my  want  of  Art,  not  will : 
Wherefore,  this  now,  as  part  in  lieu  of  greater, 
I  offer  as  an  insufficient  debtor  1 


327 


Sic  incipit  Stultorum  Tragicomedies. 

T  WAS  my  chance,  unhappy  chance  to  me  ! 
As,  all  alone,  I  wandered  on  my  way ; 
Void  of  distrust,  from  doubt  of  dangers  free, 
To  pass  a  grove  where  LOVE  in  ambush  lay 
Who  aiming  at  me  with  his  feathered  dart, 
Conveyed  it  by  mine  eye  unto  my  heart. 


Where,  retchless  boy  !  he  let  the  arrow  stick, 
When  I,  as  one  amazed,  senseless  stood. 
The  hurt  was  great,  yet  seemed  but  a  prick ! 
The  wound  was  deep,  and  yet  appeared  no  blood  ! 
But  inwardly  it  bleeds.     Proof  teacheth  this. 
When  wounds  do  so,  the  danger  greater  is. 


Pausing  a  while,  and  grieved  with  my  wound, 
I  looked  about,  expecting  some  relief : 
Small  hope  of  help,  no  ease  of  pain  I  found. 
Like,  all  at  once,  to  perish  in  my  grief : 
When  hastily,  I  plucked  forth  the  dart ; 
But  left  the  head  fast  fixed  in  my  heart. 


328  A  MORIS     PR&LUDIUM.  [  ?  ££ 

Fast  fixed  in  my  heart,  I  left  the  head, 

From  whence  I  doubt  it  will  not  be  removed. 

Ah,  what  unlucky  chance  that  way  me  led  ? 

O  LOVE!  thy  force  thou  might'st  elsewhere  have  proved! 

And  shewed  thy  power,  where  thou  art  not  obeyed  1 

"  The  conquest's  small,  where  no  resist  is  made." 


But  nought,  alas,  avails  it  to  complain  ; 

I  rest  resolved,  with  patience  to  endure. 

The  fire  being  once  dispersed  through  every  vein, 

It  is  too  late  to  hope  for  present  cure. 

Now  PHILOPARTHEN  must  new  follies  prove, 

And  learn  a  little,  what  it  is  to  love  ! 


t: 


329 


These  Sonnets  following  were  written  by  the  Author 

(whogiveth  himself  this  feigned  name  of  PHILOPARTHEK 

as  his  accidental  attribute),  at  divers  times,  and  upon 

divers  occasions ;  and  therefore  in  the  form  and 

matter  they  differ,  and  sometimes  are  quite 

contrary  one  to  another :  which  ought  not  to 

be  misliked,  considering  the  very  nature 

and   quality  of  Love  ;  which   is 

a  Passion  full  of  variety ', 

and  contrariety 

in  itself. 

I. 

[NHAPPY  Eyes!  that  first  my  heart  betrayed, 
Had  you  not  seen,  my  grief  had  not  been  such! 
And  yet,  how  may  I,  justly,  you  upbraid ! 
Since  what  I  saw  delighted  me  so  much  ? 
But  hence,  alas,  proceedeth  all  my  smart : 
Unhappy   Eyes !   that   first   betrayed  my 
heart !  ut  vidi, «/  pern, 

vt  me  mains 
abstulit  error. 
I   I. 

To  seek  adventures,  as  Fate  hath  assigned, 

My  slender  Bark  now  floats  upon  the  main  ; 

Each  troubled  thought,  an  Oar ;  each  sigh,  a  Wind, 

Whose  often  puffs  have  rent  my  Sails  in  twain. 

LOVE  steers  the  Boat,  which  (for  that  sight,  he  lacks) 

Is  still  in  danger  of  ten  thousand  wracks. 

II  I. 

What  sudden  chance  hath  changed  my  wonted  cheer, 
Which  makes  me  other  than  I  seem  to  be  ? 
My  days  of  joy,  that  once  were  bright  and  clear, 
Are  turned  to  nights  !  my  mirth,  to  misery  ! 
Ah,  well  I  ween  that  somewhat  is  amiss ; 
But,  sooth  to  say,  I  know  not  what  it  is  ! 


330  A  L  CILIA. 

I  V. 

What,  am  I  dead  ?     Then  could  I  feel  no  smart ! 
But  still  in  me  the  sense  of  grief  reviveth. 
Am  I  alive  ?     Ah,  no  !     I  have  no  heart ; 
For  she  that  hath  it,  me  of  life  depriveth. 

0  that  she  would  restore  my  heart  again ; 
Or  give  me  hers,  to  countervail  my  pain  ! 

V. 

If  it  be  Love,  to  waste  long  hours  in  grief; 

If  it  be  Love,  to  wish,  and  not  obtain ; 

If  it  be  Love,  to  pine  without  relief; 

If  it  be  Love,  to  hope  and  never  gain ; 

Then  may  you  think  that  he  hath  truly  loved, 

Who,  for  your  sake  !  all  this  and  more,  hath  proved  ! 

V  I. 

If  that,  in  ought,  mine  eyes  have  done  amiss ; 

Let  them  receive  deserved  punishment ! 

For  so  the  perfect  rule  of  Justice  is, 

Each  for  his  own  deeds,  should  be  praised,  or  shent. 

Then,  doubtless,  is  it  both  'gainst  Law  and  Sense, 

My  Heart  should  suffer  for  mine  Eyes'  offence. 

VI  I. 

1  am  not  sick,,  and  yet  I  am  not  sound  ; 

I  eat  and  sleep,  and  yet,  methinks,  I  thrive  not. 

I  sport  and  laugh,  and  yet  my  griefs  abound  ; 

I  am  not  dead,  and  yet,  methinks,  I  live  not. 

"  What  uncouth  cause  hath  these  strange  passions  bred, 

To  make  at  once,  sick,  sound,  alive,  and  dead  ? " 

VIII. 

Something  I  want ;  but  what,  I  cannot  say. 

O,  now  I  know !  It  is  myself  I  want ! 

My  Love,  with  her,  hath  ta'en  my  heart  away  ; 

Yea,  heart  and  all,  and  left  me  very  scant. 

"  Such  power  hath  Love,  and  nought  but  Love  alone, 

To  make  divided  creatures  live  in  one." 


A  LCI  LI  A. 


331 


IX. 

PHILOPAR-  "  Come,  gentle  Death  !  and  strike  me  with  thy 
THEN.  dart  ! 

Life  is  but  loathsome  to  a  man  opprest." 
DEATH.        "  How  can  I  kill  thee!  when  thou  hast  no  heart  ? 
That  which  thou  hadst,  is  in  another's  breast  !  " 
PHILOPAR-    "Then,    must     I    live,    and  languish   still   in 

THEN.  pain  ?  " 

DEATH.        "  Yea,  till  thy  Love  restore  thy  heart  again  !  " 

X. 

Were  Love  a  Fire,  my  tears  might  quench  it  lightly  ; 
Or  were  it  Water,  my  hot  heart  might  dry  it. 
If  Air,  then  might  it  pass  away  more  slightly  ; 
Or  were  it  Earth,  the  world  might  soon  descry  it. 
If  Fire  nor  Water,  Air  nor  Earth  it  be  ; 
What  then  is  it,  that  thus  tormenteth  me  ? 

XL 

To  paint  her  outward  shape  and  gifts  of  mind, 

It  doth  exceed  my  wit  and  cunning  far. 

She  hath  no  fault,  but  that  she  is  unkind. 

All  other  parts  in  her  so  complete  are, 

That  who,  to  view  them  throughly  would  devise, 

Must  have  his  body  nothing  else  but  eyes. 

XII. 

Fair  is  my  Love  !  whose  parts  are  so  well  framed, 
By  Nature's  special  order  and  direction; 
That  She  herself  is  more  than  half  ashamed, 
In  having  made  a  work  of  such  perfection. 
And  well  may  Nature  blush  at  such  a  feature  ; 
Seeing  herself  excelled  in  her  creature. 

XIII. 

Her  body  is  straight,  slender,  and  upright  ; 
Her  visage  comely,  and  her  looks  demure 
Mixt  with  a  cheerful  grace  that  yields  delight  ; 
Her  eyes,  like  stars,  bright,  shining,  clear  and  pure  : 
Which  I  describing,  LOVE  bids  stay  my  pen, 
And  says,  "  It's  not  a  work  for  mortal  men  !  " 


332  A  L  CILIA.  [,JS£ 

XI  V. 

The  ancient  poets  write  of  Graces  three, 
Which  meeting  all  together  in  one  creature, 
In  all  points,  perfect  make  the  Frame  to  be  ; 
For  inward  virtues,  and  for  outward  feature 
But  smile,  ALCILIA  !  and  the  world  shall  see 
That  in  thine  eyes,  a  hundred  Graces  be ! 

XV  . 

As  LOVE  had  drawn  his  bow,  ready  to  shoot, 

Aiming  at  me,  with  resolute  intent ; 

Straight,  bow  and  shaft  he  cast  down  at  his  foot, 

And  said,  "  Why,  needless,  should  one  shaft  be  spent  ? 

I'll  spare  it  then,  and  now  it  shall  suffice 

Instead  of  shafts,  to  use  ALCILIA'S  eyes." 

XVI. 

Blush  not,  my  Love  !  for  fear  lest  PHCEBUS  spy  ! 
Which  if  he  do,  then,  doubtless,  he  will  say, 
"  Thou  seek'st  to  dim  his  clearness  with  thine  eye  !  " 
That  clearness,  which,  from  East,  brings  gladsome  day : 
But  most  of  all,  lest  JOVE  should  see,  I  dread ; 
And  take  thee  up  to  heaven  like  GANYMEDE. 

XVII. 

PHILOPARTHEN.  "  What  is  the  cause  ALCILIA  is  displeased?" 
LOVE.  "  Because    she  wants  that  which   should 

most  content  her."  [eased !  " 

PHILOPARTHEN.  "  O   did  I   know  it,   soon   should  she    be 
LOVE.  "  Perhaps,  thou  dost !  and  that  doth  most 

torment  her." 

PHILOPARTHEN.  "  Yet,  let  her  ask !  what  she  desires  to  have." 
LOVE.  "  Guess,  by  thyself !    For  maidens  must  not 

crave !  " 

XVIII. 

My  Love,  by  chance,  her  tender  finger  pricked ; 

As,  in  the  dark,  I  strived  for  a  kiss : 

Whose  blood,  I  seeing,  offered  to  have  licked, 

But  half  in  anger,  she  refused  this. 

O  that  she  knew  the  difference  of  the  smart 

'Twixt  her  pricked  finger,  and  my  pierced  heart  ! 


ifeS:]  A  LCI  LI  A.  333 

XIX. 

PHILOPAR-  "  I  pray  thee,  tell !    What  makes  my  heart  to 
THEN.  tremble, 

When,  on  a  sudden,  I,  ALCILIA  spy  ?  " 
LOVE.  "  Because  thy  heart  cannot  thy  joy  dissemble  ! 

Thy  life  and  death  are  both  lodged  in  her  eye." 
PHILOPAR-  "  Dost  thou    not  her,    with   self-same    passion 

THEN.  strike  ?  " 

LOVE.  "  O,  no  !  Her  heart  and  thine  are  not  alike." 

XX. 

Such  are  thy  parts  of  body  and  of  mind ; 

That  if  I  should  not  love  thee  as  I  do, 

I  should  too  much  degenerate  from  Kind, 

And  think  the  world  would  blame  my  weakness  too. 

For  he,  whom  such  perfections  cannot  move, 

Is  either  senseless,  or  not  born  to  love. 

XXI  . 

ALCILIA'S  eyes  have  set  my  heart  on  fire, 
The  pleasing  object  that  my  pain  doth  feed : 
Yet  still  to  see  those  eyes  I  do  desire, 
As  if  my  help  should  from  my  hurt  proceed. 
Happy  were  I,  might  there  in  her  be  found 
A  will  to  heal,  as  there  was  power  to  wound. 

XXII. 

Unwise  was  he,  that  painted  LOVE  a  boy  ; 
Who,  for  his  strength,  a  giant  should  have  been. 
It's  strange  a  child  should  work  so  great  annoy  ; 
Yet  howsoever  strange,  too  truly  seen. 
"  But  what  is  he  ?  that  dares  at  LOVE  repine  ; 
Whose  works  are  wonders,  and  himself  divine  !  " 

XXIII. 

My  fair  ALCILIA  !  gladly  would  I  know  it, 
If  ever  Loving  Passion  pierced  thy  heart  ? 
O,  no!  For,  then,  thy  kindness  soon  would  show  it ! 
And  of  my  pains,  thyself  wouldst  bear  some  part. 
Full  little  knoweth  he  that  hath  not  proved, 
What  hell  it  is  to  love,  and  not  be  loved. 


334  A  L  c i L  i A. 

XXIV. 

LOVE  !  Art  thou  blind  ?  Nay,  thou  canst  see  too  well ! 
And  they  are  blind  that  so  report  of  thee  ! 
That  thou  dost  see,  myself  by  proof  can  tell ; 
(A  hapless  proof  thereof  is  made  by  me) ; 
For  sure  I  am,  hadst  thou  not  had  thy  sight, 
Thou  never  couldst  have  hit  my  heart  so  right. 

XXV. 

Long  have  I  languished,  and  endured  much  smart 
Since  hapless  I,  the  Cruel  Fair  did  love  ; 
And  lodged  her  in  the  centre  of  my  heart. 
Who,  there  abiding,  Reason  should  her  move. 
Though  of  my  pains  she  no  compassion  take  ; 
Yet  to  respect  me,  for  her  own  sweet  sake. 

XX  VI  . 

In  midst  of  winter  season,  as  the  snow, 

Whose  milk  white  mantle  overspreads  the  ground  ; 

In  part,  the  colour  of  my  love  is  so. 

Yet  their  effects,  I  have  contrary  found  : 

For  when  the  sun  appears,  snow  melts  anon  ; 

But  I  melt  always  when  my  sun  is  gone. 

XXVI  I  . 

The  sweet  content,  at  first,  I  seemed  to  prove 
(While  yet  Desire  unfledged,  could  scarcely  fly), 
Did  make  me  think  there  was  no  life  to  Love  ; 
Till  all  too  late,  Time  taught  the  contrary. 
For,  like  a  fly,  I  sported  with  the  flame ; 
Till,  like  a  fool,  I  perished  in  the  same. 

XXVIII. 

After  dark  night,  the  cheerful  day  appeareth  ; 
After  an  ebb,  the  river  flows  again  ; 
After  a  storm,  the  cloudy  heaven  cleareth: 
All  labours  have  their  end,  or  ease  of  pain. 
Each  creature  hath  relief  and  rest,  save  I, 
Who  only  dying,  live  ;  and  living,  die  ! 


i59?.]  A  L  CILIA.  335 

XXIX. 

Sometimes  I  seek  for  company  to  sport, 
Whereby  I  might  my  pensive  thoughts  beguile ; 
Sometimes,  again,  I  hide  me  from  resort, 
And  muse  alone  :  but  yet,  alas,  the  while 
In  changing  place,  I  cannot  change  my  mind  ; 
For  wheresoe'er  I  fly,  myself  I  find. 

XXX. 

Fain  would  I  speak,  but  straight  my  heart  doth  tremble, 

And  checks  my  tongue  that  should  my  griefs  reveal : 

And  so  I  strive  my  Passions  to  dissemble, 

Which  all  the  art  I  have,  cannot  conceal. 

Thus  standing  mute,  my  heart  with  longing  starveth  ! 

"  It  grieves  a  man  to  ask,  what  he  deserveth."     Meritum 

fetere  grave 

XXXI. 

Since  you  desire  of  me  the  cause  to  know, 
For  which  these  divers  Passions  I  have  proved  ; 
Look  in  your  glass !  which  will  not  fail  to  show 
The  shadowed  portrait  of  my  best  beloved. 
If  that  suffice  not,  look  into  my  heart ! 
Where  it's  engraven  by  a  new  found  art. 

XXXII. 

The  painful  ploughman  hath  his  heart's  delight; 
Who,  though  his  daily  toil  his  body  tireth, 
Yet  merrily  comes  whistling  home  at  night, 
And  sweetly  takes  the  ease  his  pain  requireth : 
But  neither  days  nor  nights  can  yield  me  rest ; 
Born  to  be  wretched,  and  to  live  opprest ! 

XXXIII. 

O  well  were  it,  if  Nature  would  devise 

That  men  with  men  together  might  engender, 

As  grafts  of  trees,  one  from  another  rise ; 

Then  nought,  of  due,  to  women  should  we  render  ! 

But,  vain  conceit !  that  Nature  should  do  this  ; 

Since,  well  we  know,  herself  a  woman  is  ! 


336  A  L  CILIA.  [,££ 

XXXIV. 

Upon  the  altar  where  LOVE'S  fires  burned, 

My  Sighs  and  Tears  for  sacrifice  I  offered  ; 

When  LOVE,  in  rage,  from  me  his  countenance  turned, 

And  did  reject  what  I  so  humbly  proffered. 

If  he,  my  heart  expect,  alas,  it's  gone  ! 

"  How  can  a  man  give  that,  is  not  his  own  ?  " 

XXXV. 

ALCILIA  said,  "  She  did  not  know  my  mind, 

Because  my  words  did  not  declare  my  love  ! " 

Thus,  where  I  merit  most,  least  help  I  find  ; 

And  her  unkindness  all  too  late  I  prove. 

Grant,  LOVE  !  that  She,  of  whom  thou  art  neglected, 

May  one  day  love,  and  little  be  respected  ! 

XXXVI. 

The  Cynic  *  being  asked,  "  When  he  should  love  ?"  ^DIOGENES. 

Made  answer,  "  When  he  nothing  had  to  do ; 

For  Love  was  Sloth  !  "     But  he  did  never  prove 

By  his  experience,  what  belonged  thereto.  Anlor  es* 

r*        lit  ii  i  -r  otiosorum 

For  had  he  tasted  but  so  much  as  I,  neeotium. 

He  would  have  soon  reformed  his  heresy. 

XXXVII. 

0  judge  me  not,  sweet  Love,  by  outward  show 
Though  sometimes  strange  I  seem,  and  to  neglect  thee ! 
Yet  didst  thou,  but  my  inward  Passions  know, 

Thou  shouldst  perceive  how  highly  I  respect  thee  ! 

"  When  looks  are  fixed,  the  heart  ofttimes  doth  tremble  ! ' 

"  Little  loves  he,  that  cannot  much  dissemble  !  " 

XXXVIII. 

Parting  from  thee  !  even  from  myself  I  part. 
Thou  art  the  star,  by  which  my  life  is  guided ! 

1  have  the  body,  but  thou  hast  the  heart ! 
The  better  part  is  from  itself  divided. 
Thus  do  I  live,  and  this  I  do  sustain, 
Till  gracious  Fortune  make  us  meet 


££]  A  L  CILIA.  337 

XXXI  X. 

Open  the  sluices  of  my  feeble  eyes, 
And  let  my  tears  have  passage  from  their  fountain  ! 
Fill  all  the  earth,  with  plaints  !  the  air,  with  cries  ! 
Which  may  pierce  rocks,  and  reach  the  highest  mountain 
That  so,  LOVE'S  wrath,  by  these  extremes  appeased  ; 
My  griefs  may  cease,  and  my  poor  heart  be  eased. 

XL. 

"  After  long  sickness,  health  brings  more  delight." 

"  Seas  seem  more  calm,  by  storms  once  overblown." 

"  The  day  more  cheerful,  by  the  passed  night." 

"  Each  thing  is,  by  his  contrary  best  known." 

"  Continual  ease  is  pain  :  Change  sometimes  meeter." 

"  Discords  in  music  make  music  sweeter." 

XLI. 

Fear  to  offend  forbids  my  tongue  to  speak, 
And  signs  and  sighs  must  tell  my  inward  woe  : 
But  (ay  the  while)  my  heart  with  grief  doth  break, 
And  she,  by  signs,  my  sorrow  will  not  know. 
"  The  stillest  streams  we  see  in  deepest  fords ; 
And  Love  is  greatest,  when  it  wanteth  words." 

XLI  I. 

"  No  pain  so  great  but  may  be  eased  by  Art.' 
"Though  much  we  suffer,  yet  despair  we  should  not." 
"  In  midst  of  griefs,  Hope  always  hath  some  part ; 
And  Time  may  heal,  what  Art  and  Reason  could  not.' 
O  what  is  then  this  Passion  I  endure, 
Which  neither  Reason,  Art,  nor  Time  can  cure  ? 

XLI  I  I. 

Pale  Jealousy  !  Fiend  of  the  eternal  Night ! 
Misshapen  creature,  born  before  thy  time  ! 
The  Imp  of  Horror  !     Foe  to  sweet  Delight ! 
Making  each  error  seem  an  heinous  crime. 
Ah,  too  great  pity  !  (were  there  remedy), 
That  ever  Love  should  keep  Thee  company  ! 

Y  10 


338  A  L  CILIA. 

XLI  V. 

The  days  are  now  come  to  their  shortest  date  ;  ^oistit:  brumal. 
And  must,  in  time,  by  course,  increase  again.  SSwtSSS 
But  only  I  continue  at  one  state,  sth?vcarday  °J 

Void  of  all  hope  of  help,  or  ease  of  pain  ; 
For  days  of  joy  must  still  be  short  with  me, 
And  nights  of  sorrow  must  prolonged  be. 

XLV. 

Sleep  now,  my  Muse !  and  henceforth  take  thy  rest ! 
Which  all  too  long  thyself  in  vain  hath  wasted. 
Let  it  suffice  I  still  must  live  opprest ; 
And  of  my  pains,  the  fruit  must  ne'er  be  tasted. 
Then  sleep,  my  Muse  !    "  Fate  cannot  be  withstood.*' 
"  It's  better  sleep  ;  than  wake,  and  do  no  good." 

XLVI. 

Why  should  I  love,  since  She  doth  prove  ungrateful : 

Since,  for  reward,  I  reap  nought  but  disdain. 

Love  thus  to  be  requited,  it  is  hateful ! 

And  Reason  would,  I  should  not  love  in  vain. 

Yet  all  in  vain,  when  all  is  out  of  season, 

For  "  Love  hath  no  society  with  Reason." 

XLVII. 

Heart's  Ease  and  I  have  been  at  odds,  too  long ! 

I  follow  fast,  but  still  he  flies  from  me ! 

I  sue  for  grace,  and  yet  sustain  the  wrong ; 

So  gladly  would  I  reconciled  be. 

LOVE  !  make  us  one !     So  shalt  thou  work  a  wonder ; 

Uniting  them,  that  were  so  far  asunder. 

XL  V  I  I  I. 

"  Uncouth,  unkist,"  our  ancient  Poet  *  said.          *  CHAUCER. 

And  he  that  hides  his  wants,  when  he  hath  need, 

May,  after,  have  his  want  of  wit  bewrayed  ; 

And  fail  of  his  desire,  when  others  speed. 

Then  boldly  speak  !  "  The  worst  is  at  first  entering  !  " 

"  Much  good  success  men  miss,  for  lack  of  venturing !  " 


A  L  c  i  L  i  A  .  339 

XLI  X. 

Declare  the  griefs  wherewith  thou  art  opprest, 
And  let  the  world  be  witness  of  thy  woes  ! 
Let  not  thy  thoughts  lie  buried  in  thy  breast ; 
But  let  thy  tongue,  thy  discontents  disclose  ! 
For  "  who  conceals  his  pain  when  he  is  grieved, 
May  well  be  pitied,  but  no  way  relieved." 

L. 

Wretched  is  he  that  loving,  sets  his  heart 

On  her,  whose  love,  from  pure  affection  swerveth  ; 

Who  doth  permit  each  one  to  have  a  part 

Of  that,  which  none  but  he  alone  deserveth. 

Give  all,  or  none  !     For  once,  of  this  be  sure ! 

"  Lordship  and  Love  no  partners  may  endure." 


LI. 

Who  spends  the  weary  day  in  pensive  thought, 

And  night  in  dreams  of  horror  and  affright ; 

Whose  wealth  is  want ;  whose  hope  is  come  to  nought ; 

Himself,  the  mark  for  Love's  and  Fortune's  spite  : 

Let  him  appear,  if  any  such  there  be  ! 

His  case  and  mine  more  fitly  will  agree. 

LI  I  . 

Fair  tree,  but  fruitless!  sometimes  full  of  sap  ! 
Which  now  yields  nought  at  all,  that  may  delight  me  ! 
Some  cruel  frost,  or  some  untimely  hap 
Hath  made  thee  barren,  only  to  despite  me  ! 
Such  trees,  in  vain,  with  hope  do  feed  Desire; 
And  serve  for  fuel  to  increase  Love's  fire. 

LI  I  I. 

In  company  (whiles  sad  and  mute  I  sit, 

My  thoughts  elsewhere,  than  there  I  seem  to  be) 

Possessed  with  some  deep  melancholy  fit ; 

One  of  my  friends  observes  the  same  in  me, 

And  says  in  jest,  which  I  in  earnest  prove, 

"  He  looks  like  one,  that  had  lost  his  First  Love ! " 


340  ALCILIA.  [,£ 

LI  V. 

'Twixt  Hope  and  Fear,  in  doubtful  balance  peazed, 
My  fate,  my  fortune,  and  my  love  depends. 
Sometimes  my  Hope  is  raised,  when  LOVE  is  pleased ; 
Which  Fear  weighs  down,  when  ought  his  will  offends. 
The  heavens  are  sometimes  clear,  and  sometimes  lower ; 
And  "  he  that  loves,  must  taste  both  sweet  and  sour  1  " 

LV. 

Retire,  my  wandering  Thoughts  !   unto  your  rest ! 
Do  not,  henceforth,  consume  yourselves  in  vain  ! 
No  mortal  man,  in  all  points,  can  be  blest ; 
What  now  is  mine,  may  be  another's  pain. 
The  watery  clouds  are  clear,  when  storms  are  past ; 
And  "  things,  in  their  extremes,  long  cannot  last." 

LVI. 

The  fire  of  Love  is  first  bred  in  the  Eye, 

And  thence  conveys  his  heat  unto  the  Heart, 

Where  it  lies  hid,  till  time  his  force  descry. 

The  Tongue  thereto  adds  fuel  for  his  part ;  Tact™. 

The  touch  of  Lips,  which  doth  succeed  the  same, 

Kindles  the  rest,  and  so  it  proves  a  flame. 

LVI  I. 

The  tender  Sprigs  that  sprouted  in  the  field, 
And  promised  hope  of  fruit  to  him  that  planted  ; 
Instead  of  fruit,  doth  nought  but  blossoms  yield, 
Though  care,  and  pain  to  prune  them  never  wanted  : 
Even  so,  my  hopes  do  nought  but  blossoms  prove, 
And  yield  no  fruits  to  recompense  my  love. 

LVI I  I  . 

Though  little  sign  of  love  in  show  appear ; 
Yet  think,  True  Love,  of  colours  hath  no  need  ! 
It's  not  the  glorious  garments,  which  men  wear, 
That  makes  them  other  than  they  are  indeed : 
"  In  meanest  show,  the  most  affection  dwells ; 
And  richest  pearls  are  found  in  simplest  shells." 


A  L  CILIA.  341 

LI  X. 

Let  not  thy  tongue,  thy  inward  thoughts  disclose ! 

Or  tell  the  sorrows  that  thy  heart  endures ! 

Let  no  man's  ears  be  witness  of  thy  woes  ! 

Since  pity,  neither  help  nor  ease  procures  :  MARTIAL. 

And  "only  he  is,  truly,  said  to  moan,  "er^uisitu 

Whose  griefs  none  knoweth  but  himself  alone."     t€stt9<but. 

LX. 

A  thousand  times ;  I  curse  these  idle  rhymes, 
Which  do  their  Maker's  follies  vain  set  forth  ; 
Yet  bless  I  them  again,  as  many  times, 
For  that  in  them,  I  blaze  ALCILIA'S  worth. 
Meanwhile,  I  fare,  as  doth  the  torch  by  night, 

TTTI    •    i  •          i/»*  •     •  *  ••    « 

Which  wastes  itself  in  giving  others  light. 

LXI  . 

Enough  of  this  !  For  all  is  nought  regarded  ! 

And  She,  not  once,  with  my  complaints  is  moved. 

Die,  hapless  love  !  since  thou  art  not  rewarded ; 

Yet  ere  thou  die,  to  witness  that  I  loved  ! 

Report  my  truth  !  and  tell  the  Fair  unkind, 

That  "  She  hath  lost,  what  none  but  She  shall  find !  " 

LXI  I  . 

Lovers,  lament !  You  that  have  truly  loved  ! 
For  PHILOPARTHEN,  now,  hath  lost  his  love: 
The  greatest  loss  that  ever  lover  proved. 
O  let  his  hard  hap  some  compassion  move  ! 
Who  had  not  rued  the  loss  of  her  so  much ; 
But  that  he  knows  the  world  yields  no  more  such. 

LXI  I  I  . 

Upon  the  ocean  of  conceited  error, 

My  weary  spirits,  many  storms  have  past ; 

Which  now  in  harbour,  free  from  wonted  terror, 

Joy  the  possession  of  their  rest  at  last. 

And,  henceforth,  safely  may  they  lie  at  road  ! 

And  never  rove  for  "  Had  I  wist !  "  abroad  ! 


342 


L  o  VE* s  Accusation  at  the  Judgement  Seat 

of  REASON-  wherein  the  Author's  whole 

success  in  his  love  is  covertly 

deciphered. 

[Compare  this,  with  GASCOIGNE'S  poem,  Vol.  I.  p.  63.] 

|N    REASON'S    Court,    myself    being    Plaintiff 

there, 

LOVE  was,  by  process,  summoned  to  appear. 
That  so  the  wrongs,  which  he  had  done  to  me, 
Might  be   made   known;     and   all  the  world 

might  see  : 

And  seeing,  rue  what  to  my  cost  I  proved ; 
While  faithful,  but  unfortunate  I  loved. 

After  I  had  obtained  audience  ; 
I  thus  began  to  give  in  evidence. 

\The  Authors  Evidence  against  LOVE."] 

"  Most  sacred  Queen  !  and  Sovereign  of  man's  heart ! 
Which  of  the  mind  dost  rule  the  better  part ! 
First  bred  in  heaven,  and  from  thence,  hither  sent 
To  guide  men's  actions  by  thy  regiment ! 
Vouchsafe  a  while  to  hear  the  sad  complaint 
Of  him  that  LOVE  hath  long  kept  in  restraint ; 


xs9Cs:]  ALCILIA.  343 

And,  as  to  you  it  properly  belongs, 
Grant  justice  of  my  undeserved  wrongs ! 

It's  now  two  years,  as  I  remember  well, 
Since  first  this  wretch,  (sent  from  the  nether  hell, 
To  plague  the  world  with  new-found  cruelties), 
Under  the  shadow  of  two  crystal  Eyes, 
Betrayed  my  Sense ;  and,  as  I  slumbering  lay, 
Feloniously  conveyed  my  heart  away ; 
Which  most  unjustly  he  detained  from  me, 
And  exercised  thereon  strange  tyranny. 

Sometime  his  manner  was,  in  sport  and  game, 
With  briars  and  thorns,  to  raze  and  prick  the  same ; 
Sometime  with  nettles  of  Desire  to  sting  it  ; 
Sometime  with  pincons*  of  Despair  to  wring  it ; 
Sometime  again,  he  would  anoint  the  sore, 
And  heal  the  place  that  he  had  hurt  before  : 
But  hurtful  helps  !  and  ministered  in  vain  1 
Which  served  only  to  renew  my  pain. 
For,  after  that,  more  wounds  he  added  still  5 
Which  pierced  deep,  but  had  no  power  to  kill. 
Unhappy  medicine !  which,  instead  of  cure, 
Gives  strength  to  make  the  patient  more  endure ! 

But  that  which  was  most  strange  of  all  the  rest 
(Myself  being  thus  'twixt  life  and  death  distrest), 
Ofttimes,  when  as  my  pain  exceeded  measure, 
He  would  persuade  me  that  the  same  was  pleasure ; 
My  solemn  sadness,  but  contentment  meet ; 
My  travail,  rest ;  and  all  my  sour,  sweet ; 
My  wounds,  but  gentle  strokes  :  whereat  he  smiled, 
And  by  these  slights,  my  careless  youth  beguiled. 

Thus  did  I  fare,  as  one  that  living  died, 
(For  greater  pains,  I  think,  hath  no  man  tried) 


344  A  L  CILIA.  [,J- 

Disquiet  thoughts,  like  furies  in  my  breast 
Nourished  the  poison  that  my  spirits  possesst. 
Now  Grief,  then  Joy ;  now  War,  then  Peace  unstable, 
Nought  sure  I  had,  but  to  be  miserable. 

I  cannot  utter  all,  I  must  confess. 
Men  may  conceive  more  than  they  can  express ! 
But  (to  be  short),  which  cannot  be  excused, 
With  vain  illusions,  LOVE,  my  hope  abused ; 
Persuading  me  I  stood  upon  firm  ground 
When,  unawares,  myself  on  sands  I  found. 
This  is  the  point  which  most  I  do  enforce ! 
That  Love,  without  all  pity  or  remorse, 
Did  suffer  me  to  languish  still  in  grief 
Void  of  contentment,  succour,  or  relief: 
And  when  I  looked  my  pains  should  be  rewarded, 
I  did  perceive,  that  they  were  nought  regarded. 

For  why  ?     Alas,  these  hapless  eyes  did  see 
ALCILIA  loved  another  more  than  me  ! 
So  in  the  end,  when  I  expected  most ; 
My  hope,  my  love,  and  fortune  thus  were  crost." 

Proceeding  further,  REASON  bad  me  stay 
For  the  Defendant  had  some  thing  to  say. 
Then  to  the  Judge,  for  justice,  loud  I  cried  1 
And  so  I  paused  :  and  LOVE  thus  replied. 

[LOVE'S  Reply  to  the  Author ^\ 

"  Since  REASON  ought  to  lend  indifferent  ears 
Unto  both  parties,  and  judge  as  truth  appears  ; 
Most  gracious  Lady !  give  me  leave  to  speak, 
And  answer  his  Complaint,  that  seeks  to  wreak 
His  spite  and  malice  on  me,  without  cause ; 


:]  A  L  CILIA.  345 

In  charging  me  to  have  transgressed  thy  laws  ! 

Of  all  his  follies,  he  imputes  the  blame 

To  me,  poor  LOVE  !  that  nought  deserves  the  same. 

Himself  it  is,  that  hath  abused  me! 

As  by  mine  answer,  shall  well  proved  be. 

Fond  youth  !  thou  knowest  what  I  for  thee  effected  ! 
Though,  now,  I  find  it  little  be  respected. 
I  purged  thy  wit,  which  was  before  but  gross. 
The  metal  pure,  I  severed  from  the  dross, 
And  did  inspire  thee  with  my  sweetest  fire 
That  kindled  in  thee  Courage  and  Desire : 
Not  like  unto  those  servile  Passions 
Which  cumber  men's  imaginations 
With  Avarice,  Ambition>  and  Vainglory  ; 
Desire  of  things  fleeting  and  transitory. 
No  base  conceit,  but  such  as  Powers  above 
Have  known  and  felt,  I  mean,  th'  Instinct  of  Love ; 
Which  making  men,  all  earthly  things  despise, 
Transports  them  to  a  heavenly  paradise. 

Where  thou  complain'st  of  sorrows  in  thy  heart, 
Who  lives  on  earth  but  therein  hath  his  part  ? 
Are  these  thy  fruits  ?     Are  these  thy  best  rewards 
For  all  the  pleasing  glances,  sly  regards, 
The  sweet  stol'n  kisses,  amorous  conceits, 
So  many  smiles,  so  many  fair  intreats, 
Such  kindness  as  ALCILIA  did  bestow 
All  for  my  sake  !  as  welt  thyself  dost  know  ? 
That  LOVE  should  thus  be  used,  it  is  hateful ! 
But  *  all  is  lost,  that's  done  for  one  ungrateful.' 

Where  he  allegeth  that  he  was  abused 
In  that  he  truly  loving,  was  refused  : 
That's  most  untrue  !  and  plainly  may  be  tried. 


346  A  L  CILIA.  [?J- 

Who  never  asked,  could  never  be  denied  ! 
But  he  affected  rather  single  life, 
Than  yoke  of  marriage,  matching  with  a  wife. 
And  most  men,  now,  make  love  to  none  but  heires[ses] 
Poor  love  !  GOD  wot  !  that  poverty  empairs. 
Worldly  respects,  LOVE  little  doth  regard. 
'  Who  loves,  hath  only  love  for  his  reward  !  ' 
He  merits  a  lover's  name,  indeed  ! 


That  casts  no  doubts,  which  vain  suspicion  foolhardy 

Lovtr. 

breed  : 

But  desperately  at  hazard,  throws  the  dice, 
Neglecting  due  regard  of  friends'  advice  ; 
That  wrestles  with  his  fortune  and  his  fate, 
Which  had  ordained  to  better  his  estate  ; 
That  hath  no  care  of  wealth,  no  fear  of  lack, 
But  ventures  forward,  though  he  see  his  wrack  ; 
That  with  Hope's  wings,  like  ICARUS  doth  fly, 
Though  for  his  rashness,  he  like  fortune  try  ; 
That,  to  his  fame,  the  world  of  him  may  tell 
How,  while  he  soared  aloft,  adown  he  fell. 
And  so  True  Love  awarded  him  his  doom 
In  scaling  heaven,  to  have  made  the  sea  his  tomb; 
That  making  shipwreck  of  his  dearest  fame, 
Betrays  himself  to  poverty  and  shame  ; 
That  hath  no  sense  of  sorrow,  or  repent, 
No  dread  of  perils  far  or  imminent  ; 
But  doth  prefer  before  all  pomp  or  pelf, 
The  sweet  of  love  as  dearer  than  himself. 
Who,  were  his  passage  stopped  by  sword  and  fire, 
Would  make  way  through,  to  compass  his  Desire. 
For  which  he  would  (though  heaven  and  earth  forbad  it) 
Hazard  to  lose  a  kingdom,  if  he  had  it. 


;.]  ALCILIA.  347 

These  be  the  things  wherein  I  glory  most, 
Whereof,  this  my  Accuser  cannot  boast : 
Who  was  indifferent  to  his  loss  or  gain ; 
And  better  pleased  to  fail,  than  to  obtain. 
All  qualified  affections,  LOVE  doth  hate ! 
And  likes  him  best  that's  most  intemperate. 
But  hence,  proceeds  his  malice  and  despite ; 
While  he  himself  bars  of  his  own  delight. 
For  when  as  he,  ALCILIA  first  affected, 
(Like  one  in  show,  that  love  little  respected) 
He  masqued,  disguised,  and  entertained  his  thought 
With  hope  of  that,  which  he  in  secret  sought ; 
And  still  forbare  to  utter  his  desire, 
Till  his  delay  receive  her  worthy  hire. 
And  well  we  know,  what  maids  themselves  would  have, 
Men  must  sue  for,  and  by  petition  crave. 
But  he  regarding  more  his  Wealth,  than  Will ; 
Hath  little  care  his  Fancy  to  fulfil. 
Yet  when  he  saw  ALCILIA  loved  another  ; 
The  secret  fire,  which  in  his  breast  did  smother, 
Began  to  smoke,  and  soon  had  proved  a  flame: 
If  Temperance  had  not  allayed  the  same. 
Which,  afterward,  so  quenched  he  did  not  find 
But  that  some  sparks  remained  still  behind. 
Thus,  when  time  served,  he  did  refuse  to  crave  it ; 
And  yet  envied  another  man  should  have  it ! 

As  though,  fair  maids  should  wait,  at  young  men's 

pleasure, 

Whilst  they,  'twixt  sport  and  earnest,  love  at  leisure. 
Nay,  at  the  first !  when  it  is  kindly  proffered  ! 
Maids  must  accept ;  least  twice,  it  be  not  offered ! 
Else  though  their  beauty  seem  their  good  t'importune, 


348  A  LCI  LI  A.  [?J-£ 

Yet  may  they  lose  the  better  of  their  fortune. 

Thus,  as  this  Fondling  coldly  went  about  it ; 
So  in  the  end,  he  clearly  went  without  it. 
For  while  he,  doubtful,  seemed  to  make  a  stay, 
A  Mongrel  stole  the  maiden's  heart  away ; 
For  which,  though  he  lamented  much  in  shew, 
Yet  was  he,  inward,  glad  it  fell  out  so. 

Now,  REASON  !  you  may  plainly  judge  by  this, 
Not  I,  but  he,  the  false  dissembler  is : 
Who,  while  fond  hope  his  lukewarm  love  did  feed, 
Made  sign  of  more  than  he  sustained  indeed  : 
And  filled  his  rhymes  with  fables  and  with  lies, 
Which,  without  Passion,  he  did  oft  devise ; 
So  to  delude  the  ignorance  of  such 
That  pitied  him,  thinking  he  loved  too  much. 
And  with  conceit,  rather  to  shew  his  Wit, 
Than  manifest  his  faithful  Love  by  it. 

Much  more  than  this,  could  I  lay  to  his  charge ; 
But  time  would  fail  to  open  all  at  large. 
Let  this  suffice  to  prove  his  bad  intent, 
And  prove  that  LOVE  is  clear  and  innocent." 

Thus,  at  the  length,  though  late,  he  made  an  end, 
And  both  of  us  did  earnestly,  attend 
The  final  judgement,  REASON  should  award : 
When  thus  she  'gan  to  speak.     "  With  due  regard, 
The  matter  hath  been  heard,  on  either  side. 
For  judgement,  you  must  longer  time  abide  ! 
The  cause  is  weighty,  and  of  great  import." 
And  so  she,  smiling,  did  adjourn  the  Court. 

Little  availed  it,  then,  to  argue  more  ; 
So  I  returned  in  worse  case  than  before. 


A  LCI  LI  A.  349 

LOVE  Deciphered. 

OVE  and  I  are  now  divided, 

Conceit,  by  Error,  was  misguided. 

ALCILIA  hath  my  love  despised  ! 

"  No  man  loves,  that  is  advised." 
"  Time  at  length,  hath  Truth  detected." 
LOVE  hath  missed  what  he  expected. 
Yet  missing  that,  which  long  he  sought ; 
I  have  found  that,  I  little  thought. 
"  Errors,  in  time,  may  be  redrest," 
"  The  shortest  follies  are  the  best." 


Love  and  Youth  are  now  asunder  5 

Reason's  glory,  Nature's  wonder. 

My  thoughts,  long  bound,  are  now  enlarged ; 

My  Folly's  penance  is  discharged : 

Thus  Time  hath  altered  my  estate. 

"  Repentance  never  comes  too  late." 

Ah,  well  I  find  that  Love  is  nought 

But  folly,  and  an  idle  thought. 

The  difference  is  'twixt  LOVE  and  me, 

That  he  is  blind,  and  I  can  see. 

Love  is  honey  mixed  with  gall ! 

A  thraldom  free,  a  freedom  thrall ! 

A  bitter  sweet,  a  pleasant  sour ! 

Got  in  a  year,  lost  in  an  hour  ! 

A  peaceful  war,  a  warlike  peace ! 

Whose  wealth  brings  want ;  whose  want,  increase  ! 

Full  long  pursuit,  and  little  gain  ! 

Uncertain  pleasure,  certain  pain  ! 

Regard  of  neither  right  nor  wrong  1 

For  short  delights,  repentance  long  ! 


350  A  L  CILIA. 

Love  is  the  sickness  of  the  thought ! 
Conceit  of  pleasure,  dearly  bought ! 
A  restless  Passion  of  the  mind  ! 
A  labyrinth  of  errors  blind  ! 
A  sugared  poison  !  fair  deceit ! 
A  bait  for  fools  !  a  furious  heat ! 
A  chilling  cold  !  a  wondrous  passion 
Exceeding  man's  imagination ! 
Which  none  can  tell  in  whole,  or  part, 
But  only  he  that  feels  the  smart. 


Love  is  sorrow  mixt  with  gladness ! 

Fear,  with  hope !  and  hope,  with  madness  ! 

Long  did  I  love,  but  all  in  vain ; 

I  loving,  was  not  loved  again  : 

For  which  my  heart  sustained  much  woe. 

It  fits  not  maids  to  use  men  so  ! 

Just  deserts  are  not  regarded, 

Never  love  so  ill  rewarded  ! 

But  "  all  is  lost  that  is  not  sought !  " 

"  Oft  wit  proves  best,  that's  dearest  bought ! 


Women  were  made  for  men's  relief; 
To  comfort,  not  to  cause  their  grief. 
Where  most  I  merit,  least  I  find : 
No  marvel !  since  that  love  is  blind. 
Had  She  been  kind,  as  She  was  fair, 
My  case  had  been  more  strange  and  rare. 
But  women  love  not  by  desert ! 
Reason  in  them  hath  weakest  part ! 
Then,  henceforth,  let  them  love  that  list, 
I  will  beware  of  "  Had  I  wist !  " 


i59Cs'.]  A  L  OIL  I  A.  351 


These  faults  had  better  been  concealed, 
Than  to  my  shame  abroad  revealed. 
Yet  though  my  youth  did  thus  miscarry, 
My  harms  may  make  others  more  wary. 
Love  is  but  a  youthful  fit, 
And  some  men  say  "  It's  sign  of  wit !  " 
But  he  that  loves  as  I  have  done ; 
To  pass  the  day,  and  see  no  sun  : 
Must  change  his  note,  and  sing  Erravi  I 
Or  else  may  chance  to  cry  Peccavi ! 


The  longest  day  must  have  his  night, 

Reason  triumphs  in  Love's  despite. 

I  follow  now  Discretion's  lore  ; 

"  Henceforth  to  like  ;  but  love  no  more  !  " 

Then  gently  pardon  what  is  past ! 

For  LOVE  draws  onwards  to  his  last. 

"  He  walks,"  they  say,  "  with  wary  eye ; 

Whose  footsteps  never  tread  awry  ! " 

My  Muse  a  better  work  intends : 

And  here  my  Loving  Folly  ends. 


After  long  storms  and  tempests  past, 
I  see  the  haven  at  the  last ; 
Where  I  must  rest  my  weary  bark, 
And  there  unlade  my  care  and  cark. 
My  pains  and  travails  long  endured, 
And  all  my  wounds  must  there  be  cured. 
Joys,  out  of  date,  shall  be  renewed ; 
To  think  of  perils  past  eschewed. 
When  I  shall  sit  full  blithe  and  jolly, 
And  talk  of  lovers  and  their  folly. 


352  ALCILIA. 

Then  LOVE  and  FOLLY,  both  adieu  1 
Long  have  I  been  misled  by  you. 
FOLLY  may  new  adventures  try ! 
But  REASON  says  that  "  LOVE  must  die  !  " 
Yea,  die  indeed,  although  grieve  him ; 
For  my  cold  heart  cannot  relieve  him  ! 
Yet  for  her  sake,  whom  once  I  loved, 
(Though  all  in  vain,  as  time  hath  proved) 
I'll  take  the  pain,  if  She  consent ! 
To  write  his  Will  and  Testament. 


LOVE'S  last   Will  and  Testament. 

Y  SPIRIT,  I  bequeath  unto  the  air! 

My  Body  shall  unto  the  earth  repair  ! 
My  Burning  Brand,  unto  the  Prince  of  Hell ; 
T'increase   men's   pains  that  there  in  darkness 

dwell ! 

For  well  I  ween,  above  nor  under  ground, 
A  greater  pain  than  that,  may  not  be  found. 

My  sweet  Conceits  of  Pleasure  and  Delight, 
To  EREBUS  !  and  to  Eternal  Night ! 

My  Sighs,  my  Tears,  my  Passions,  and  Laments, 
Distrust,  Despair ;  all  these  my  hourly  rents, 
With  other  plagues  that  lovers'  minds  enthral : 
Unto  OBLIVION,  I  bequeath  them  all ! 

My  broken  Bow,  and  Shafts,  I  give  to  REASON  ! 
My  Cruelties,  my  Slights,  and  forged  Treason, 
To  Womankind  !  and  to  their  seed,  for  aye ! 
To  wreak  their  spite,  and  work  poor  men's  decay. 
Reserving  only  for  ALCILIA'S  part, 
Small  kindness,  and  less  care  of  lovers'  smart. 


A  L  CILIA.  353 

For  She  is  from  the  vulgar  sort  excepted  ; 
And  had  She,  PHILOPARTHEN'S  love  respected, 
Requiting  it  with  like  affection, 
She  might  have  had  the  praise  of  all  perfection. 

This  done  ;  if  I  have  any  Faith  and  Troth  ; 
To  PHILOPARTHEN,  I  assign  them  both  ! 
For  unto  him,  of  right,  they  do  belong 
Who  loving  truly,  suffered  too  much  wrong. 

TIME  shall  be  sole  Executor  of  my  will ; 
Who  may  these  things,  in  order  due  fulfil, 

To  warrant  this  my  Testament  for  good  ; 
I  have  subscribed  it,  with  my  dying  blood." 

And  so  he  died,  that  all  this  bale  had  bred. 
And  yet  my  heart  misdoubts  he  is  not  dead : 
For,  sure,  I  fear,  should  I  ALCILIA  spy ; 
She  might,  eftsoons,  revive  him  with  her  eye  ! 
Such  power  divine  remaineth  in  her  sight  ; 
To  make  him  live  again,  in  Death's  despite. 


10 


354 


The  Sonnets  following  were   written   by  the  Aiithor, 

after  he  began  to  decline  from  his  Passionate 

Affection;  and  in  them,  he  seemeth  to 

please  himself  with  describing  the 

Vanity  of  Love,  the  Frailty 

of  Beauty,  and  the 

sour  fruits  of 

Repentance. 


I. 

Ow  have  I  spun  the  web  of  my  own  woes, 
And  laboured  long  to  purchase  my  own  loss. 
Too  late  I  see,  I  was  beguiled  with  shows. 
And  that  which  once   seemed  gold,  now 

proves  but  dross. 

Thus  am  I,  both  of  help  and  hope  bereaved. 
"  He  never  tried  that  never  was  deceived. 


I  I 


Chi  -non  si 
fida,  non  viene 
ingannato. 


Once  did  I  love,  but  more  than  once  repent ; 
When  vintage  came,  my  grapes  were  sour,  or  rotten. 
Long  time  in  grief  and  pensive  thoughts  I  spent ; 
And  all  for  that,  which  Time  hath  made  forgotten. 
O  strange  eifects  of  time  !  which,  once  being  lost, 
Make  men  secure  of  that  they  loved  most. 


III. 

Thus  have  I  long  in  th'air  of  Error  hovered, 
And  run  my  ship  upon  Repentance's  shelf. 
Truth  hath  the  veil  of  Ignorance  uncovered, 
And  made  me  see ;  and  seeing,  know  myself. 
Of  former  follies,  now,  I  must  repent, 
And  count  this  work,  part  of  my  time  ill  spent. 


i^:]  A  L  OIL  i A.  355 

IV. 

What  thing  is  LOVE  ?     "  A  tyrant  of  the  Mind  !  " 
"  Begot  by  heat  of  Youth  ;  brought  forth  by  Sloth  ; 

Nursed  with  vain  Thoughts,  and  changing  as  the  wind ! '' 
"  A  deep  Dissembler,  void  of  faith  and  troth  !  " 
"  Fraught  with  fond  errors,  doubts,  despite,  disdain, 

And  all  the  plagues  that  earth  and  hell  contain !  " 

V  . 

Like  to  a  man  that  wanders  all  the  day 
Through  ways  unknown,  to  seek  a  thing  of  worth, 
And,  at  the  night,  sees  he  hath  gone  astray; 
As  near  his  end,  as  when  he  first  set  forth  : 
Such  is  my  case,  whose  hope  untimely  crost, 
After  long  errors,  proves  my  labour  lost. 

VI. 

Failed  of  that  hap,  whereto  my  hope  aspired, 
Deprived  of  that  which  might  have  been  mine  own : 
Another,  now,  must  have  what  I  desired; 
And  things  too  late,  by  their  events  are  known. 
Thus  do  we  wish  for  that  cannot  be  got ; 
And  when  it  may,  then  we  regard  it  not. 

VII. 

Ingrateful  LOVE  !  since  thou  hast  played  thy  part ! 

(Enthralling  him,  whom  Time  hath  since  made  free) 

It  rests  with  me,  to  use  both  Wit  and  Art, 

That  of  my  wrongs  I  may  revenged  be  : 

And  in  those  eyes,  where  first  thou  took'st  thy  fire ! 

Thyself  shalt  perish,  through  my  cold  desire. 

VIII. 

r*  Grieve  not  thyself,  for  that  cannot  be  had  ! 

And  things,  once  cureless,  let  them  cureless  rest  I  " 

"  Blame  not  thy  fortune,  though  thou  deem  it  bad ! 

What's  past  and  gone  will  never  be  redrest." 

"  The  only  help,  for  that  cannot  be  gained, 

Is  to  forget  it  might  have  been  obtained." 

ENG.  GAR.  IV.  19 


356  A  L  CILIA. 

IX. 

How  happy,  once,  did  I  myself  esteem ! 

While  Love  with  Hope,  my  fond  Desire  did  cherish 

My  state  as  blissful  as  a  King's  did  seem, 

Had  I  been  sure  my  joys  should  never  perish. 

"  The  thoughts  of  men  are  fed  with  expectation." 

"  Pleasures  themselves  are  but  imagination." 

X. 

Why  should  we  hope  for  that  which  is  to  come, 
Where  the  event  is  doubtful,  and  unknown  ? 
Such  fond  presumptions  soon  receive  their  doom, 
When  things  expected  we  count  as  our  own  ; 
Whose  issue,  ofttimes,  in  the  end  proves  nought 
But  hope !  a  shadow,  and  an  idle  thought. 

XI  . 

In  vain  do  we  complain  our  life  is  short, 
(Which  well  disposed,  great  matters  might  effect) 
While  we  ourselves,  in  toys  and  idle  sport, 
Consume  the  better  part  without  respect. 
And  careless  (as  though  time  should  never  end  it) 
Twixt  sleep,  and  waking,  prodigally  spend  it. 

XII. 

Youthful  Desire  is  like  the  summer  season 
That  lasts  not  long ;  for  winter  must  succeed  : 
And  so  our  Passions  must  give  place  to  Reason  ; 
And  riper  years,  more  ripe  effects  must  breed. 
Of  all  the  seed,  Youth  sowed  in  vain  desires, 
I  reaped  nought,  but  thistles,  thorns,  and  briars. 

XIII. 

"To  err  and  do  amiss,  is  given  to  men  by  Kind." 

"  Who  walks  so  sure,  but  sometimes  treads  awry  ? 

But  to  continue  still  in  errors  blind, 

A  bad  and  bestial  nature  doth  descry. 

"  Who  proves  not ;  fails  not ;  and  brings  nought 

to  end  : 
Who  proves  and  fails,  may,  afterward,  amend." 


S£]  A  L  CILIA. 

X  I  V. 

There  was  but  One,  and  doubtless  She  the  best  ! 
Whom  I  did  more  than  all  the  world  esteem  : 
She  having  failed,  I  disavow  the  rest  ; 
For,  now,  I  find  "  things  are  not  as  they  seem." 
"  Default  of  that,  wherein  our  will  is  crost, 
Ofttimes,  unto  our  good  availeth  most." 

XV. 

I  fare  like  him  who,  now  his  land-hope  spent, 

By  unknown  seas,  sails  to  the  Indian  shore  ; 

Returning  thence  no  richer  than  he  went, 

Yet  cannot  much  his  fortune  blame  therefore.       c/«  «*, 

Since  "  Whoso  ventures  forth  upon  the  Main, 

Makes  a  good  mart,  if  he  return  again." 


357 


XVI. 

Lovers'  Conceits  are  like  a  flatt'ring  Glass, 

That  makes  the  lookers  fairer  than  they  are  ; 

Who,  pleased  in  their  deceit,  contented  pass. 

Such  once  was  mine,  who  thought  there  was  none  fair, 

None  witty,  modest,  virtuous  but  She  ; 

Yet  now  I  find  the  Glass  abused  me. 

XVII. 

Adieu,  fond  Love  !  the  Mother  of  all  Error  ! 
Replete  with  hope  and  fear,  with  joy  and  pain. 
False  fire  of  Fancy  !  full  of  care  and  terror. 
Shadow  of  pleasures  fleeting,  short,  and  vain  ! 
Die,  loathed  Love  !     Receive  thy  latest  doom  ! 
"  Night  be  thy  grave  !  and  Oblivion  be  thy  tomb  !" 

XVIII. 

Who  would  be  rapt  up  into  the  third  heaven 
To  see  a  world  of  strange  imaginations  ? 
Who,  careless,  would  leave  all  at  six  and  seven, 
To  wander  in  a  labyrinth  of  Passions  ? 
Who  would,  at  once,  all  kinds  of  folly  prove  ; 
When  he  hath  nought  to  do,  then  let  him  love 


358  A  L  OIL 

XI  X. 

What  thing  is  Beauty  ?     "  Nature's  dearest  Minion !  " 
"  The  Snare  of  Youth  !  like  the  inconstant  moon 
Waxing  and  waning  !  "     "  Error  of  Opinion  !  " 
"  A  Morning's  Flower,  that  withereth  ere  noon  ! " 
"A  swelling  Fruit !  no  sooner  ripe,  than  rotten  !  " 
"  Which  sickness  makes  forlorn,  and  time  forgotten  !  " 

XX. 

The  Spring  of  Youth,  which  now  is  in  his  prime ; 
Winter  of  Age,  with  hoary  frosts  shall  nip  ! 
Beauty  shall  then  be  made  the  prey  of  Time ! 
And  sour  Remorse,  deceitful  Pleasures  whip  ! 
Then,  henceforth,  let  Discretion  rule  Desire ! 
And  Reason  quench  the  flame  of  CUPID'S  fire! 

XXI. 

0  what  a  life  was  that  sometime  I  led ! 

When  Love  with  Passions  did  my  peace  encumber ; 
While,  like  a  man  neither  alive  nor  dead, 

1  was  rapt  from  myself,  as  one  in  slumber : 
Whose  idle  senses,  charmed  with  fond  illusion, 
Did  nourish  that  which  bred  their  own  confusion. 

XXII. 

The  child,  for  ever  after,  dreads  the  fire ; 

That  once  therewith  by  chance  his  finger  burned. 

Water  of  Time  distilled  doth  cool  Desire. 

"  And  far  he  ran,"  they  say,  "  that  never  turned." 

After  long  storms,  I  see  the  port  at  last. 

Farewell,  Folly  !  For  now  my  love  is  past ! 

XXI  IL 

Base  servile  thoughts  of  men,  too  much  dejected, 
That  seek,  and  crouch,  and  kneel  for  women's  grace ! 
Of  whom,  your  pain  and  service  is  neglected ; 
Yourselves,  despised  ;  rivals,  before  your  face  ! 
The  more  you  sue,  the  less  you  shall  obtain  ! 
The  less  you  win,  the  more  shall  be  your  gain  ! 


££]  ALCILIA.  359 

XXIV. 

In  looking  back  unto  my  follies  past ; 

While  I  the  present,  with  times  past  compare, 

And  think  how  many  hours  I  then  did  waste 

Painting  on  clouds,  and  building  in  the  air : 

I  sigh  within  myself,  and  say  in  sadness, 

"This  thing  which  fools  call  Love,  is  nought  but  Madness!" 

XXV. 

"  The  things  we  have,  we  most  of  all  neglect; 
And  that  we  have  not,  greedily  we  crave. 
The  things  we  may  have,  little  we  respect ; 
And  still  we  covet,  that  we  cannot  have. 
Yet,  howsoe'er,  in  our  conceit,  we  prize  them ; 
No  sooner  gotten,  but  we  straight  despise  them." 

XXVI. 

Who  seats  his  love  upon  a  woman's  will, 
And  thinks  thereon  to  build  a  happy  state ; 
Shall  be  deceived,  when  least  he  thinks  of  ill, 
And  rue  his  folly  when  it  is  too  late. 
He  ploughs  on  sand,  and  sows  upon  the  wind, 
That  hopes  for  constant  love  in  Womankind. 

XXVII. 

I  will  no  longer  spend  my  time  in  toys ! 

Seeing  Love  is  Error,  Folly,  and  Offence; 

An  idle  fit  for  fond  and  reckless  boys, 

Or  else  for  men  deprived  of  common  sense. 

'Twixt  Lunacy  and  Love,  these  odds  appear ; 

Th'  one  makes  fools,  monthly ;  th'  other,  all  the  year. 

XXVIII. 

While  season  served  to  sow,  my  plough  stood  still ; 
My  graffs  unset,  when  other's  trees  did  bloom. 
I  spent  the  Spring  in  sloth,  and  slept  my  fill ; 
But  never  thought  of  Winter's  cold  to  come  ; 
Till  Spring  was  past,  the  Summer  well  nigh  gone  ; 
When  I  awaked,  and  saw  my  harvest  none. 


360  A  L  C  I  L  I  A  . 

XXIX. 

Now  LOVE  sits  all  alone,  in  black  attire  ; 
His  broken  bow,  and  arrows  lying  by  him  ; 
His  fire  extinct,  that  whilom  fed  Desire ; 
Himself  the  scorn  of  lovers  that  pass  by  him  : 
Who,  this  day,  freely  may  disport  and  play ; 
For  it  is  PHILOPARTHEN'S  Holiday. 

XXX. 

Nay,  think  not  LOVE  !  with  all  thy  cunning  slight, 
To  catch  me  once  again  !     Thou  com'st  too  late  ! 
Stern  Industry  puts  Idleness  to  flight : 
And  Time  hath  changed  both  my  name  and  state. 
Then  seek  elsewhere  for  mates,  that  may  befriend 

thee! 
For  I  am  busy,  and  cannot  attend  thee ! 

XXXI. 

Loose  Idleness !  the  Nurse  of  fond  Desire  ! 

Root  of  all  ills  that  do  our  youth  betide  ; 

That,  whilom,  didst,  through  love,  my  wrack  conspire : 

I  banish  thee  !  and  rather  wish  t'abide 

All  austere  hardness,  and  continual  pain ; 

Than  to  revoke  thee  !  or  to  love  again ! 

XXXI  I. 

The  time  will  come  when,  looking  in  a  glass, 
Thy  rivelled  face,  with  sorrow  thou  shalt  see ! 
And  sighing,  say,  "It  is  not  as  it  was ! 
These  cheeks  were  wont  more  fresh  and  fair  to  be  ! 
But  now,  what  once  made  me  so  much  admired 
Is  least  regarded,  and  of  none  desired  !  " 

XXXIII. 

Though  thou  be  fair,  think  Beauty  but  a  blast  I 

A  morning's  dew  !  a  shadow  quickly  gone  ! 

A  painted  flower,  whose  colour  will  not  last ! 

Time  steals  away,  when  least  we  think  thereon. 

Most  precious  time  !  too  wastefully  expended  ;        Tempo™  soh 

Of  which  alone,  the  sparing  is  commended. 


J.C. 

*  1595- 


;:]  A  L  OIL  i  A  .  361 


XXXIV. 

How  vain  is  Youth  that,  crossed  in  his  Desire, 

Doth  fret  and  fume,  and  inwardly  repine  ; 

As  though  'gainst  heaven  itself,  he  would  conspire  ; 

And  with  his  fraility,  'gainst  his  fate  combine, 

Who  of  itself  continues  constant  still  ; 

And  doth  us  good,  ofttimes  against  our  will. 

XXXV. 

In  prime  of  Youth,  when  years  and  Wit  were  ripe, 

Unhappy  Will,  to  ruin  led  the  way. 

Wit  danced  about,  when  Folly  'gan  to  pipe  ; 

And  Will  and  he  together  went  astray. 

Nought  then  but  Pleasure,  was  the  good  they  sought  ! 

Which  now  Repentance  proves  too  dearly  bought. 

XXXVI. 

He  that  in  matters  of  delight  and  pleasure, 
Can  bridle  his  outrageous  affection; 
And  temper  it  in  some  indifferent  measure, 
Doth  prove  himself  a  man  of  good  direction. 

iiT'Ti     i  M    •         i  Est  virtus 

In  conquering  Will,  true  courage  most  is  shown  ; 
And  sweet  temptations  makes  men's  virtues  known. 


XXXVII. 

Each  natural  thing,  by  course  of  Kind,  we  see, 
In  his  perfection  long  continueth  not. 
Fruits  once  full  ripe,  will  then  fall  from  the  tree  ; 
Or  in  due  time  not  gathered,  soon  will  rot. 

_  111  r  T^.  •     •  to.torum  sertet 

It  is  decreed,  by  doom  of  Powers  Divine,  summisque 

Things  at  their  height,  must  thence  again  decline.  *£„*** 

XXXVIII. 

Thy  large  smooth  forehead,  wrinkled  shall  appear  ! 
Vermillion  hue,  to  pale  and  wan  shall  turn  ! 
Time  shall  deface  what  Youth  has  held  most  dear  ! 
Yea,  these  clear  Eyes  (which  once  my  heart  did  burn) 
Shall,  in  their  hollow  circles,  lodge  the  night  ; 
And  yield  more  cause  of  terror,  than  delight  ! 


362  ALCILIA. 

XXXIX. 

Lo  here,  the  Record  of  my  follies  past, 

The  fruits  of  Wit  unstaid,  and  hours  misspent ! 

Full  wise  is  he  that  perils  can  forecast, 

And  so,  by  others'  harms,  his  own  prevent. 

All  Worldly  Pleasure  that  delights  the  Sense, 

Is  but  a  short  Sleep,  and  Time's  vain  expense  ! 

XL. 

The  sun  hath  twice  his  annual  course  performed, 
Since  first  unhappy  I,  began  to  love ; 
Whose  errors  now,  by  Reason's  rule  reformed, 
Conceits  of  Love  but  smoke  and  shadows  prove. 
Who,  of  his  folly,  seeks  more  praise  to  win ; 
Where  I  have  made  an  end,  let  him  begin  ! 

jf.C. 
FINIS. 


DAIPHANTUS, 

O  R 

The  Passions  of  Love. 

Comical  to  read, 

But  Tragical  to  act: 

As    full   of  Wit,   as   Experience. 

By  AN.  Sc.  Gentleman. 

F&lix  quern  faciunt  aliena  fericula  cautum. 

Whereunto  is  added, 

The  Passionate  Marfs  Pilgrimage. 


LONDON: 

Printed  by  T.  C.  for  WILLIAM  COTTON:  and  are 
to  be  sold  at  his  shop,  near  Ludgate.      1604. 


365 


The  Argument. 


IAIPHANTUS,  a  younger  brother,  very  honourably 
descended,  brought  up  but  not  born  in  Venice ; 
naturally  subject  to  Courting,  but  not  to  Love ; 
reputed  a  man  rather  full  of  compliment,  than  of 
true  courtesy;  more  desirous  to  be  thought  honest,  than 
so  to  be  wordish  beyond  discretion ;  promising  more  to  all, 
than  friendship  could  challenge ;  mutable  in  all  his  actions, 
but  his  affections  aiming  indeed  to  gain  opinion  rather  than 
goodwill ;  challenging  love  from  greatness,  not  from  merit ; 
studious  to  abuse  his  own  wit,  by  the  common  sale  of  his 
infirmities ;  lastly,  under  the  colour  of  his  natural  affection 
(which  indeed  was  very  pleasant  and  delightful)  coveted  to 
disgrace  every  other  to  his  own  discontent :  a  scourge  to 
Beauty,  a  traitor  to  Women,  and  an  infidel  to  Love. 

This  He,  this  creature,  at  length,  falls  in  love  with  two  at 
one  instant ;  yea,  two  of  his  nearest  allies  :  and  so  indifferently 
[equally]  yet  outrageously,  as  what  was  commendable  in  the 
one,  was  admirable  in  the  other.  By  which  means,  as  not 
despised,  not  regarded !  if  not  deceived,  not  pitied  !  They 
esteemed  him  as  he  was  in  deed,  not  words.  He  protested, 
they  jested  !  He  swore  he  loved  in  sadness ;  they  in  sooth 
believed,  but  seemed  to  give  no  credence  to  him  :  thinking 


366  THE   ARGUMENT. 

him  so  humorous  as  no  resolution  could  be  long  good  ;  and 
holding  this  his  attestation  to  them  of  affection  in  that 
kind,  [no]  more  than  his  contesting  against  it  before  time. 

Thus  overcome  of  that  he  seemed  to  conquer,  he  became 
a  slave  to  his  own  fortunes.  Laden  with  much  misery,  utter 
mischief  seized  upon  him.  He  fell  in  love  with  another, 
a  wedded  Lady.  Then  with  a  fourth,  named  VITULLIA. 
And  so  far  was  he  imparadised  in  her  beauty  (She  not  re- 
comforting  him)  that  he  fell  from  Love  to  Passion,  so  to 
Distraction,  then  to  Admiration  [wonderment]  and  Con- 
templation, lastly  to  Madness.  Thus  did  he  act  the  Tragical 
scenes,  who  only  penned  the  Comical :  became,  if  not  as 
brutish  as  ACTION,  as  furious  as  ORLANDO.  Of  whose 
Humours  and  Passions,  I  had  rather  you  should  read  them, 
than  I  act  them  ! 

In  the  end,  by  one,  or  rather  by  all,  he  was  recovered. 
A  Voice  did  mad  him  ;  and  a  Song  did  recure  him  !  Four 
in  one  sent  him  out  of  this  world ;  and  one  with  four 
redeemed  him  to  the  world.  To  whose  unusual  strains  in 
Music,  and  emphatical  emphasis  in  Love ;  I  will  leave  you 
to  turn  over  a  new  leaf  ! 

This  only  I  will  end  with : 

Who,  of  Love  should  better  write, 
Than  he  that  Love  learns  to  indite  ? 


367 


To  the  mighty,  learned,  and  ancient  Poten- 
tate, QUISQUIS,  Emperor  of  ®,  King  of 
Great  and  Little  A.,  Prince  of  B.  C.  and 
D.,  &c. ;    ALIQUIS    wisheth  the   much 
increase  of  true  subjects,  free  from 
Passion,  spleen,  and  melancholy  ; 
and    endued    with    virtue, 
wisdom,   and   mag- 
nanimity. 

Or  to  the  Reader. 

V  EPISTLE  to  the  Reader !  Why  !  that  must  have 
his  Forehead  or  first  entrance  like  a  Courtier,  fair- 
spoken  and  full  of  expectation  ;  his  Middle  or  centre 
like  your  citizen's  warehouse,  beautified  with  enticing 
vanities,  though  the  true  riches  consist  of  bald  commodi- 
ties ;  his  Rendezvous  or  conclusion  like  the  lawyer's  case,  able 
to  pocket  up  any  matter  ;  but  let  good  words  be  your  best  evidence  ! 
In  the  General  or  foundation,  he  must  be  like  Paul's  Church,  re- 
solved to  let  every  Knight  and  Gull  travel  upon  him  :  yet  his  Par- 
ticulars or  lineaments  may  be  Royal  as  the  Exchange,  with  ascending 
steps,  promising  new  biit  costly  devices  and  fashions.  It  must  have 
Teeth  like  a  Satyr,  Eyes  like  a  critic  ;  and  yet  may  your  Tongue 
speak  false  Latin,  like  your  panders  and  bawds  of  poetry.  Your 
Genius  and  Species  should  march  in  battle  array  with  our  politi- 
cians :  yet  your  Genius  ought  to  live  with  an  honest  soul  indeed. 
It  should  be  like  the  never-too-well-read  Arcadia,  where  the 
Prose  and  Verse,  Matter  and  Words,  are  like  his  [SIDNEY'S] 
Mistress's  eyes  !  one  still  excelling  another,  and  without  cor- 
rival !  or  to  come  home  to  the  vulgar's  element,  like  friendly 
SHAKE-SPE ARE'S  Tragedies,  where  the  Comedian  rides,  when 
the  Tragedian  stands  on  tiptoe.  Faith,  it  should  please  all,  like 
Prince  HAMLET  /  But,  in  sadness,  then  it  were  to  be  feared, 
he  would  run  mad.  In  sooth,  I  will  not  be  moonsick,  to  please  ! 
nor  out  of  my  wits,  though  I  displease  all !  What  ?  Poet !  are 
you  in  Passion,  or  out  of  Love  ?  This  is  as  strange  as  true  I 


368  To    THE     READER. 

Well,  well  !  if  I  seem  mystical  or  tyrannical ;  whether  I  be 
a  fool  or  a  Lord's-Ingle  ;  all's  one  !  If  you  be  angry,  you  are  not 
well  advised  !  I  will  tell  you,  it  is  an  Indian  humour  I  have 
snuffed  up  from  Divine  Tobacco  !  and  it  is  most  gentlemanlike, 
to  puff  it  out  at  any  place  or  person  ! 

Pll  no  Epistle  /  It  were  worse  than  one  of  HERCULES' 
labours  !  but  will  conclude  honesty  is  a  man's  best  virtue.  And 
but  for  the  Lord  Mayor  and  the  two  Sheriffs,  the  Inns  of  Court, 
and  many  Gallants  elsewhere,  this  last  year  might  have  been  burned! 
As  for  MOMUS  (carp  and  bark  who  will  !),  if  the  noble  Ass  bray 
not,  I  am  as  good  a  Knight  Poet,  as  ^Etatis  suss,  Master  An. 
Dom.'s  son-in-law. 

Let  your  critic  look  to  the  rowels  of  his  spurs,  the  pad  of  his 
saddle,  and  the  jerk  of  his  wand  !  then  let  him  ride  me  and  my 
rhymes  down,  as  hotly  as  he  would.  I  care  not !  We  shall  meet 
and  be  friends  again,  with  the  breaking  of  a  spear  or  two  !  and 
who  would  do  less,  for  a  fair  Lady  ? 

There  I  leave  you,  where  you  shall  ever  find  me ! 


Passionate  DAIPHANTUS,  your  loving  subject, 
Gives  you  to  understand,  he  is  a  Man  in  Print,  and  it  is  enough 
he  hath  undergone  a  Pressing,  though  for  your  sakes  and  for 
Ladies :  protesting  for  this  poor  infant  of  his  brain,  as  it  was  the 
price  of  his  virginity,  born  into  the  world  with  tears :  so  (but  for  a 
many  his  dear  friends  that  took  much  pains  for  if)  it  had  died, 
and  never  been  laughed  at !  and  that  if  Truth  have  wrote  less  than 
Fiction  ;  yet  it  is  better  to  err  in  Knowledge  than  in  Judgement ! 
A  Iso,  if  he  have  caught  up  half  a  line  of  any  other's,  it  was  out  of 
his  memory,  not  of  any  ignorance  ! 

Why  he  dedicates  it  to  All,  and  not  to  any  Particular,  as  his 
Mistress  or  so?  His  answer  is,  He  is  better  born,  than  to  creep  into 
women's  favours,  and  ask  their  leave  afterwards. 

A  Iso  he  desireth  you  to  help  to  correct  such  errors  of  the  Printer, 
which  (because  the  A  uthor  is  dead,  or  was  out  of  the  City)  hath  been 
committed.  And  it  was  his  folly,  or  the  Stationer's,  you  had  not 
an  Epistle  to  the  purpose. 

Thus  like  a  lover,  wooes  he  for  your  favour  ; 
Which,  if  you  grant,  then  Omnia  vincit  Amor. 


369 


DA  I  P  HANTUS. 
Proem 


SING  the  old  World  in  an  infant  story ! 
I  sing  the  new  World  in  an  ancient  ditty  ! 
I  sing  this  World  ;  yes,  this  World's  shame 

and  glory  ! 
I  sing  a  Medley  of  rigour  and  of  pity  ! 

I  sing  the  Court's,  City's,  and  the  Country's  fashions  ! 
Yet  sing  I  but  of  Love  and  her  strange  Passions  ! 

I  sing  that  anthem  lovers  sigh  in  sadness  ! 

I  sing  sweet  times  of  joys  in  wo[e]-ven  verses  ! 

I  sing  those  lines,  I  once  did  act  in  madness ! 

I  sing  and  weep  !  (tears  follow  birth  and  hearses !) 

I  sing  a  Dirge  \  a  Fury  did  indite  it ! 

I  sing  Myself !  whilst  I  myself  do  write  it. 


2  A 


10 


370  D  A  I  P  H  A  N  T>t?  S'S  -  /* £  -P  £  JT .          [_A'6ll 

I  invocate,  to  grace  my  Artless  labour, 

The  faithful  goddess,  men  call  MEMORY 

(True  Poet's  treasure,  and  their  Wit's  best  favour)  ; 

To  deck  my  Muse  with  truest  poesy ! 

Though  Love  write  well,  yet  Passion  blinds  th'affection. 

Man  neer  rules  right,  that's  in  the  least  subjection. 

Sweet  Memory !  Soul's  life,  new  life  increasing  ! 
The  Eye  of  Justice  !  Tongue  of  Eloquence  ! 
The  Lock  of  Learning  !   Fountain  never  ceasing ! 
The  Cabinet  of  Secrets  !  Caske[t]  of  Sense ! 

Which  governest  Nature,  teacheth  Man  his  awe  ! 

That  art  all  Conscience,  and  yet  rul'st  by  Law ! 

Bless  thou,  this  Love  Song- Air  of  my  best  wishes  ! 
(Thou  art  the  Parent  nourisheth  Desire  !) 
Blow,  gentle  winds !  safe  land  me  at  my  blisses  ! 
Love  still  mounts  high,  though  lovers  not  aspire. 

My  Poem  's  Truth !  Fond  poets  feign  at  pleasure ! 

A  loving  subject  is  a  Prince's  treasure. 


S 


THE    PASSIONS   OF 
LOVE. 


N  VENICE  fair,  the  city  most  admired ; 
Their  lived  a  Gallant,  who  DAIPHANTUS  hight, 
Right  nobly  born,  well  lettered,  loved,  desired 
Of  every  Courtier  in  their  most  delight : 
So  full  of  pleasance,  that  he  seemed  to  be 
A  man  begot  in  VENUS'  infancy. 


His  face  was  fair,  full  comely  was  his  feature  r 
Lipped  like  the  cherry,  with  a  wanton's  eye  : 
A  MARS  in  anger,  yet  a  VENUS'  creature ; 
Made  part  of  CYNTHIA,  most  of  MERCURY  : 
A  pitied  soul,  so  made  of  Love  and  Hate, 
Though  still  beloved,  in  love  unfortunate. 

Thus  made  by  Nature,  Fortune  did  conspire 

To  balance  him,  with  weight  of  CUPID'S  wings ; 

Passant  in  Love,  yet  oft  in  great  Desire  ; 

Sudden  in  Love,  not  staid  in  anything. 

He  courted  all,  not  loved  :   and  much  did  strive 
To  die  for  Love,  yet  never  meant  to  wive ! 


372  \_DAIPHANTUS]  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE. 

As  Nature  made  him  fair,  so  likewise  witty ; 
(She  not  content)  his  thoughts  thus  very  fickle. 
Fortune  that  gained  him,  placed  him  in  this  city, 
To  wheel  his  head,  which  she  had  made  most  tickle. 

Fortune  made  him  beloved,  and  so  distraught  him  ! 

His  reins  let  forth,  he  fell ;  and  CUPID  caught  him 


Not  far  from  Venice,  in  an  Abbey  fair, 
Well  walled  about,  two  worthy  Ladies  dwelt : 
Who  virgins  were,  so  sweet  and  debonair, 
The  ground  they  trod  on,  of  their  odour  smelt. 
Two  virgin  Sisters,  matchless  in  a  phere, 
Had  lived  virgins  well  nigh  eighteen  year. 

EURIAL^E,  the  elder  sister  's  named ; 

The  other  was  URANIA  the  wise. 

Nature  for  making  them  was  surely  blamed  : 

VENUS  herself,  by  them  all  did  despise  ! 

Such  beauties  with  such  virtue  !  so  combined, 
That  all  exceeds,  yet  nought  excels  their  mind. 

EURIALJB  so  shows  as  doth  the  sun, 

When  mounted  on  the  continent  of  heaven : 

Yet  oft  she  's  clouded  ;  but  when  her  glory  's  come, 

Two  suns  appear  !  to  make  her  glory  even. 

Her  smiles  send  brightness  when  the  sun  's  not  bright ! 

Her  looks  give  beauty,  when  the  sun  lends  light ! 

Modest  and  humble,  of  nature  mild  and  sweet ; 
Unmatched  beauty  with  her  virtue  meeting : 
Proud  that  her  lowly  'beisance  doth  re-greet 
With  her  chaste  silence.     Virtue  ever  keeping. 

This  is  the  sun,  that  sets  before  it  rise  ! 

This  is  a  star !  no  less  are  both  her  eyes  ! 


*£;]  \_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.    373 

Her  beauty  peerless  !  peerless  is  her  mind  ! 

Her  body  matchless  !  matchless  are  her  thoughts ! 

Herself  but  one  !  but  one  like  her,  we  find ! 

Her  wealth  's  her  virtue  !     Such  virtue  is  not  bought ! 

This  is  a  heaven  on  earth,  makes  her  divine  ! 

This  is  the  sun,  obscures  where  it  doth  shine ! 


URANIA  next.     O  that  I  had  that  Art 
Could  write  her  worth  !  her  worth  no  eye  may  see ! 
Or  that  her  tongue  (O  heaven  !)  were  now  my  heart, 
What  silver  lines  in  showers  should  drop  from  me  ! 

My  heart  she  keeps !  how  can  I  then  indite  ? 

No  heart-less  creature  can  Love  Passions  write  1 

As  a  black  veil  upon  the  wings  of  morn, 
Brings  forth  a  day  as  clear  as  VENUS'  face ; 
Or  a  fair  jewel,  by  an  Ethiope  worn, 
Enricheth  much  the  eye,  which  it  doth  grace : 

Such  is  her  beauty,  if  it  well  be  told  ! 

Placed  in  a  jetty  chariot  set  with  gold. 

Her  hair,  Night's  canopy  in  mourning  weeds 
Is  still  enthroned,  when  locked  within  is  seen 
A  Deity,  drawn  by  a  pair  of  steeds 
Like  VENUS'  eyes  !     And  if  the  like  have  been, 

Her  eyes  two  radiant  stars,  but  yet  divine ! 

Her  face  day's  sun  (heaven  all !)  if  once  they  shine ! 

Upon  the  left  side  of  this  heavenly  feature, 

In  curious  work,  Nature  hath  set  a  seal, 

Wherein  is  writ,  This  is  a  matchless  creature ! 

Where  Wit  and  Beauty  strives  for  the  appeal : 
The  Judges  choosed  are  Love  and  Fancy.     They  rise, 
And  looking  on  her,  with  her,  left  their  eyes ! 


374    \DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.    [A^ 

Her  Wit  and  Beauty  were  at  many  frays, 

"  Whether  the  deep  impressions  did  cause  ?  " 

"  Nature  !  "  said  Beauty ;  Art,  her  Wit  did  praise  : 

Love  thought  her  Face  ;  her  tongue  had  Truth's  applause. 

Whilst  they  contend,  Which  was  the  better  part  ? 

I  lent  an  eye ;  She  robbed  me  of  my  heart ! 


Sisters  these  two  are,  like  the  Day  and  Night : 
Their  glories,  by  their  virtues  they  do  merit, 
One  as  the  Day  to  see  the  other's  might ; 
The  other's  Night  to  shadow  a  high  spirit. 

If  all  were  Day,  how  could  a  lover  rest  ? 

Or  if  all  Night,  lovers  were  too  much  blest ! 

Both  fair ,  as  eke  their  bodies  tall  and  slender  : 
Both  wise,  yet  silence  shews  their  modesty  : 
Both  grave,  although  they  both  are  young  and  tender : 
Both  humble  hearted,  not  in  policy. 

So  fair,  wise,  grave,  and  humble  are  esteemed ; 

Yet  what  men  see,  the  worst  of  them  is  deemed ! 

Nature  that  made  them  fair,  doth  love  perfection. 
What  Youth  counts  wisdom,  Age  doth  bring  to  trial. 
Grave  years  in  Youth,  in  Age  needs  no  direction. 
A  humble  heart  deserves,  finds,  no  denial. 

Fairs  ring  their  knells,  and  yet  Fame  never  dies  ! 

True  judgement  's  from  the  heart,  not  from  the  eyes ! 

These  two,  two  sisters,  cousins  to  this  lover ; 

He  often  courts,  as  was  his  wonted  fashion. 

Who  swears  all  's  fair,  yet  hath  no  heart  to  prove  her, 

Seems  still  in  Love  or  in  a  lover's  Passion, 

Now  learns  this  lesson  !  and  love-scoffers  find  it ! 

CUPID  hits  rightest,  when  Lovers  do  least  mind  it  ! 


Ai6o4.']    \_DAIFHANTUS\  TH*S  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.    375 

Although  his  guise  were  fashioned  to  his  mind, 
And  wording  Love,  as  compliment  he  used ; 
Seemed  still  to  jest  at  Love  and  lovers'  kind, 
Never  obtained,  but  where  he  was  refused : 

Yet  now,  his  words  with  wit  so  are  rewarded ; 

He  loves  !  loves  two  !  loves  all !  of  none  regarded. 

Now  he  that  laughed  to  hear  true  lovers  sigh, 

Can  bite  his  lips,  until  his  heart  doth  bleed  ! 

Who  jibed  at  all,  loves  all !  each  day  's  his  night ! 

Who  scorned,  now  weeps  and  howls !  writes  his  own  meed  ! 

He  that  would  bandy  Love,  is  now  the  ball ! 

Who  feared  no  hazard,  himself  hath  ta'en  the  fall ! 

Beauty  and  Virtue,  who  did  praise  the  fashion  ; 
Who,  Love  and  Fancy  thought  a  comedy : 
Now  is  turned  Poet !  and  writes  Love  in  Passion  ! 
His  verses  fit  the  bleeding  Tragedy  ! 

In  willow  weeds,  right  well  he  acts  his  part ! 

His  Scenes  are  tears,  whose  embryon  was  his  heart ! 

He  loves,  where  Love  to  all  doth  prove  disaster ! 
His  eyes  no  sooner  see,  but  he  's  straight  blind ! 
His  kindred,  friends,  or  foes,  he  follows  faster 
Than  his  own  good  !     He  's  now  but  too  too  kind  ! 

He  that  spent  all,  would  fain  find  out  Love's  treasure  ! 

Extremities  are,  for  extremes  the  measure. 

Thus  thinks  he,  of  the  words  he  spent  in  vain  ; 

And  wishes  now,  his  tongue  had  eloquence  ! 

He  's  dumb  !  all  motion  that  a  world  could  gain, 

A  centre  now  without  circumference  ! 

CUPID,  with  words  who  fought !  would  teach  him  Art, 
Hath  lost  his  tongue ;  and  with  it,  left  his  heart ! 


376    [DAIPHANTUS]  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE. 

He  swears  he  loves  !  (the  heat  doth  prove  the  fire !) 
He  weeps  his  Love,  his  tears  shew  his  Affection. 
He  writes  his  Love,  his  lines  plead  his  Desire. 
He  sings  his  Love,  the  ditty  mourns  the  action. 

He  sings,  writes,  weeps,  and  swears  that  he  's  in  sadness! 

It  is  believed,  Not  cured,  Love  turns  to  madness ! 


Love  once  dissembled,  oaths  are  a  grace  most  slender ! 
Tears  oft  are  heard,  Ambassadors  for  Beauty ! 
Words  writ  in  gold,  an  iron  heart  may  render ! 
A  Passion  Song  shews  much  more  hope  than  duty ! 

Oaths  spoke  in  tears  ;  words,  song ;  prove  no  true  ditty 

A  feigned  Love  must  find  a  feigned  Pity  ! 

Thus  is  the  good  DAIPHANTUS  like  the  fly, 
Who  playing  with  the  candle  feels  the  flame. 
The  smiles  of  scorn  are  lovers'  misery  : 
That  soul 's  most  vex't,  is  grieved  with  his  name. 

Though  kind  DAIPHANTUS  do  most  love  protest ; 

Yet  is  his  cross,  still  to  be  thought  in  jest ! 

Poor  tortured  lover !     Like  a  perjured  soul, 

Swears  till  he  's  hoarse,  yet  never  is  believed ! 

(Who  's  once  a  villain,  still  is  counted  foul !) 

O  woful  pity  !  when  with  wind  relieved, 

Learns  this  by  wrote,  Though  Love  unconstant  be, 
They  must  prove  constant,  will  her  comforts  see  ! 

Now  to  the  humble  heart  of  his  dread  Saint, 
BURIALS,  he  kneels  ;  but  's  not  regarded  ! 
Then  to  URANIA  sighs,  till  he  grows  faint  : 
Such  is  her  Wit,  in  silence  he  's  rewarded ! 

His  humble  voice,  BURIALS  accuseth  ! 

His  sighing  Passion,  URANIA  refuseth  ! 


A.  Sc.' 


\PAIPHANJUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.    377 


Then  lifts  he  up  his  eyes,  but  Heaven  frowneth  J 

Bows  down  his  head,  Earth  is  a  mass  of  sorrow ! 

Runs  to  the  seas ;  the  sea,  it  storms  and  howleth  ! 

Hies  to  the  woods,  the  birds  sad  tunes  do  borrow ! 

Heaven,  Earth,  sea,  woods,  and  all  things  do  conspire 
He  burn  in  Love,  yet  freeze  in  his  Desire ! 

The  Ladies  jest !  command  him  to  feign  still ! 
Tell  him,  how,  one  day,  he  may  be  in  love ! 
That  lover's  reason  hath  not  Love's  free  will ! 
Smile  in  disdain,  to  think  of  that  he  proves  ! 

(O  me,  DAIPHANTUS  !  how  art  thou  advised  ? 

When  he  's  less  pitied,  then  he  is  despised  !) 

They  hold  this  but  his  humour !  seem  so  wise  ! 
And  many  lovers'  stories  forth  do  bring ! 
Court  him  with  shadows,  whilst  he  catcheth  flies, 
Biting  his  fingers  till  the  blood  forth  spring ! 

Then  do  they  much  commend  his  careless  Passion ! 

Call  him  "  a  lover  of  our  Courtiers'  fashion  !  " 


All  this  they  do  in  modesty ;  yet  free 
From  thinking  him  so  honest,  as  in  truth  : 
Much  less  so  kind,  as  to  love  two  or  three, 
Him  near  allied  ;  and  he  himself  a  youth  ! 
Till  with  the  sweat,  which  from  his  sufferings  rise, 
His  face  is  pearled,  like  the  lights  his  eyes. 

Then  with  his  look  down-cast,  and  trembling  hand, 
A  High  Dutch  colour,  and  a  tongue  like  ice, 
Apart  with  this  EURIAL^E  to  stand 
Endeavours  he.     This  was  his  last  device, 

Yet  in  so  humble  strains,  this  Gallant  courts  her ; 

The  wind  being  high,  his  breath  it  never  hurts  her  ! 


378    [DAIPHANTUS]  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE 

Speechless  thus  stands  he,  till  She  feared  him  dead, 
And  rubs  his  temples,  calls  and  cries  for  aid. 
Water  is  fetched  and  spunged  into  his  head  : 
Who  then  starts  up ;  from  dreaming,  as  he  said, 
And  craving  absence  of  all,  but  this  Saint, 
He  'gan  to  court  her,  but  with  a  heart  right  faint. 


"  Bright  Star  of  PHCEBUS  !  Goddess  of  my  thought ! 
Behold  thy  vassal,  humbled  on  his  knee  ! 
Behold  for  thee,  what  gods  and  Art  hath  wrought, 
A  man  adoring !  of  Love,  the  lowest  degree. 

I  love  !  I  honour  thee  !  "  No  more  ;  there  stayed 

As  if  foresworn ;  even  so,  was  he  afraid  ! 

BURIALS  now  spake,  yet  seemed  in  wonder, 
Her  lips  when  parting,  heaven  did  ope  his  treasure, 
"  O  do  not,  do  not  love  !     I  will  not  sunder 
A  heart  in  two !     Love  hath  nor  height  nor  measure  ! 
Live  still  a  virgin  !     Then  I'll  be  thy  lover  !  " 
Heaven  here  did  close.     No  tongue  could  after  move  her. 

As  if  in  heaven,  he  was  ravished  so. 
O  love  !  O  voice  !  O  face  !  which  is  the  glory? 
O  day!  O  night !  O  Age  !  O  worlds  of  joy  ! 
Of  every  part,  true  love  might  write  a  story. 

Convert  my  sighs,  O  to  some  angel's  tongue. 

To  die  for  Love  is  life !     Death  is  best  young ! 

She  gone,  URANIA  came.     He,  on  the  flower, 
But  sight  of  her  revived  his  noble  fire  : 
And  as  if  MARS  did  thunder,  words  did  shower! 
(Love  speaks  in  heat,  when  'tis  in  most  Desire) 

She  made  him  mad,  whose  sight  had  him  revived; 

Now  speaks  he  plainly !     Storms  past,  the  air  is  glide. 


g;]  [DAIPHANTUS]  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.   379 

"  Why  was  I  made,  to  bear  such  woe  and  grief? 
Why  was  I  born,  but  in  Love  to  be  nourished  ? 
Why  then  for  Love  (Love,  of  all  virtues  chief), 
And  I  not  pitied,  though  I  be  not  cherished  ? 

What !  did  my  eyes  offend  in  virtue  seeing  ? 

O  no !  True  Virtue  is  the  lover's  being  ! 

"  Beauty  and  Virtue  are  the  twins  of  life ; 
Love  is  the  mother  which  them  forth  doth  bring. 
Wit  with  discretion  ends  the  lover's  strife. 
Patience  with  silence  is  a  glorious  thing. 

Love  crowns  a  man,  Love  gives  to  all  due  merit ; 

Men  without  love  are  bodies  without  spirit. 

"  Love  to  a  mortal  is  both  life  and  treasure. 
Love  changed  to  Wedlock  doubleth  in  her  glory. 
Love  is  the  gem,  whose  worth  is  without  measure. 
Fame  dies,  if  not  entombed  within  Love's  story. 

Man  that  lives,  lives  not,  if  he  wants  Content. 

Man  that  dies,  dies  not,  if  with  Love's  consent." 

Thus  spake  DAIPHANTUS,  and  thus  spake  he  well ; 

Which  wise  URANIA  well  did  understand : 

So  well  she  like  it,  as  it  did  excel. 

Now  graced  she  him  with  her  white  slender  hand, 
With  words  most  sweet,  a  colour  fresh  and  fair, 
In  heavenly  speech,  she  'gan  his  woes  declare. 


"  My  good  DAIPHANTUS  !  Love,  it  is  no  toy  ! 

CUPID,  though  blind,  yet  strikes  the  heart  at  last. 

His  force,  you  feel !  whose  power  must  breed  your  joy  ; 

This  is  the  meed  for  scoffs,  you  on  him  cast ! 

You  love,  who  scorned  !  your  love,  with  scorn  is  quite 
You  love,  yet  want !  your  love*  with  want  is  spite  ! 


380  \DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE. 

"  Love  plays  the  wanton,  where  she  means  to  kill. 
Love  rides  the  fool,  and  spurs  without  direction. 
Love  weeps  like  you,  yet  laughs  at  your  good  will. 
Love  is,  of  all  things,  but  the  true  confection. 

Love  is  of  everything  ;  yet  itself 's  but  one  thing. 

Love  is  anything,  yet  indeed  is  nothing. 


"  We  virgins  know  this,  though  not  the  force  of  Love. 

For  we  two  sisters  live  as  in  a  cell : 

Nor  do  we  scorn  it,  though  we  it  not  approve  ; 

By  prayer  we  hope,  her  charms  for  to  repell ! 
And  thus  adieu !  But  you,  in  Progress  go, 
To  find  fit  place  to  warble  forth  your  woe. 

"  Who  first  seeks  mercy,  is  the  last  for  grief," 
Thus  did  She  part ;  whose  image  stayed  behind. 
He  in  a  trance  stands  mute,  finds  no  relief 
(For  She  was  absent,  whose  tongue  pleased  his  mind), 

But  like  a  heartless  and  a  hurtless  creature, 

In  admiration  of  so  sweet  a  feature. 

At  length  looked  up,  his  shadow  only  seeing, 
Sighs  to  himself  and  weeps,  yet  silent  stands ; 
Kneels,  riseth,  walks,  all  this  without  True  Being, 
Sure  he  was  there,  though  fettered  in  Love's  bands. 
His  lips  departed,  parted  were  his  blisses  : 
Yet  for  pure  love,  each  lip  the  other  kisses. 

Revived  by  this,  or  else  Imagination, 

Recalls  things  past,  the  time  to  come  laments ; 

Records  his  love,  but  with  an  acclamation  ! 

Repents  himself  and  all  these  accidents. 

Now  with  the  wings  of  Love,  he  'gins  to  raise, 
His  Love  to  gain,  this  woman  he  doth  praise. 


so!;:]  \_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  381 

"  Women  than  Men  are  purer  creatures  far ! 

The  Soul  of  souls  !  the  blessed  Gift  of  Nature  ! 

To  men,  a  heaven  !  to  men,  the  brightest  star  ! 

The  pearl  that 's  matchless  !  high,  without  all  stature ! 
So  full  of  goodness,  that  Bounty  waiteth  still 
Upon  their  trencher !  feeds  them  with  free  will ! 

"  Where  seek  we  Virtue,  learn  true  Art  or  Glory; 
Where  find  we  Joy  that  lasteth,  still  is  spending, 
But  in  sweet  Women  ?  of  man's  life,  the  Story  ! 
Alpha,  they  are  !  Omega  is  their  ending  ! 

Their  virtues  shine  with  such  a  sun  of  brightness  ! 

Yet  he 's  unwise,  that  looks  in  them  for  lightness  !  " 


(O  let  my  pen  relate  mine  own  decay ! 

There  are,  which  are  not,  or  which  should  not  be, 

Some  shaped  like  Saints,  whose  steps  are  not  the  way. 

O  let  my  Verse  not  name  their  infamy  ! 
These  hurt  not  all,  but  even  the  wandering  eye, 
Which  fondly  gapes  for  his  own  misery. 

These  do  not  harm  the  honest  or  the  just, 

The  faithful  lover,  or  the  virtuous  dame ; 

But  those  whose  souls  be  only  given  to  lust, 

Care  more  for  pleasure,  than  for  worthy  fame. 
But  peace,  my  Muse !  For  now,  methinks  I  hear 
An  angel's  voice  come  warbling  in  my  ear  !) 

Not  distant  far,  within  a  garden  fair, 

The  sweet  ARTESIA  sang  unto  her  lute, 

Her  voice  charmed  CUPID,  and  perfumed  the  air, 

Made  beasts  stand  still,  and  birds  for  to  be  mute. 

Her  voice  and  beauty  proved  so  sad  a  ditty ; 

Who  saw,  was  blind !  who  heard,  soon  sued  for  pity ! 


382  \_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE 

This  Lady  was  no  virgin  like  the  rest, 
Yet  near  allied.     By  Florence  city  dwelling 
(Nature  and  Art ;  within  her  both  were  blest ; 
Music  in  her,  and  Love  had  his  excelling). 

To  visit  her  fair  cousins  oft  she  came ; 

Perhaps  more  jocund,  but  no  whit  to  blame. 


Fortune  had  crossed  her  with  a  churlish  Mate, 

Who  STRYMON  hight.     A  Palmer  was  his  sire, 

Full  nobly  born  and  of  a  wealthy  state ; 

His  son  a  child  not  born  to  his  Desire. 
Thus  was  she  crossed,  which  caused  her  thereby, 
DAIPHANTUS'  grief  to  mourn,  by  sympathy. 

DAIPHANTUS  hearing  such  a  swan-tuned  voice, 

Was  ravished,  as  with  angels'  melody ; 

Though  in  this  labyrinth  blest,  could  not  rejoice, 

Nor  yet  could  see  what  brought  this  harmony. 
At  length,  this  goddess  ceased;  began  draw  near, 
Who,  when  he  saw ;  he  saw  not,  'twas  her  sphere  ! 

Away  then  crept  he  on  his  hands  and  knees, 

To  hide  himself :  thought  VENUS  came  to  plague  him 

Which  she  espying,  like  the  sun  she  stands ; 

As  with  her  beams,  she  thought  for  to  assuage  him. 

But  like  the  sun,  which  gazed  on  blinds  the  eye, 

So  he  by  her !  and  so  resolved  to  die. 

At  this,  in  wonder  softly  did  she  pace  it ; 

Yet  suddenly  was  stayed.     His  verses  seized  her, 

Which  he  late  writ,  forgot.     Thus  was  he  graced. 

She  read  them  over,  and  the  writing  pleased  her. 
For  CUPID  framed  two  mottoes  in  her  heart : 
The  one  as  DIAN'S,  the  other,  for  his  dart. 


Az6c,!;:]  \_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.   383 

She  read  and  pitied  ;  reading,  Pity  taught. 

She  loved  and  hated;  hate  to  Love  did  turn. 

She  smiled  and  wept ;  her  weeping  Smiling  brought. 

She  hoped  and  feared ;  her  Hopes  in  fear  did  mourn. 
She  read,  loved,  smiled,  and  hoped ;  but  'twas  in  vain  : 
Her  tears,  still  dread  ;  and  pity,  hate  did  gain. 

She  could  have  loved  him,  such  true  verses  making ; 
She  might  have  loved  him,  and  yet  love  beguiling. 
She  would  have  kissed  him,  but  feared  his  awaking ; 
She  might  have  kissed  him,  and  sleep  sweetly  smiling. 

She  thus  afeared,  did  fear  what  she  most  wished. 

He  thus  in  hope,  still  hoped  for  that  he  missed. 


He  looked  !  They  two,  long  each  on  other  gazed  ! 
Sweet  silence  pleaded  what  each  other  thought. 
Thus  Love  and  Fancy  both  alike  amazed, 
As  if  their  tongues  and  hearts  had  been  distraught. 

ARTESIA'S  voice  thus  courted  him  at  length. 

The  more  she  spake,  the  greater  was  his  strength  ! 

"  Good  gentle  Sir  !  your  fortunes  I  bemoan, 

And  wish  my  state  so  happy  as  to  ease  you  ! 

But  She  that  grieved  you,  She  it  is  alone, 

Whose  breath  can  cure,  and  whose  kind  words  appease  you  ! 
Were  I  that  She,  heaven  should  my  star  extinguish, 
If  you  but  loved  me,  ere  I  would  relinquish. 

"  Yet,  noble  Sir!  I  can  no  love  protest, 

For  I  am  wedded  (0  word  full  fraught  with  woe  ! ) 

But  in  such  manner  as  good  love  is  blest, 

In  honest  kindness,  I'll  not  prove  your  foe ! 

Mine  own  experience  doth  my  counsel  prove, 

I  know  to  pity,  yet  not  care  to  love ! 


384   \_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  [A; 

"  A  sister,  yet  Nature  hath  given  me, 

A  virgin  true,  right  fair,  and  sweetly  kind. 

I  for  her  good,  Fortune  hath  driven  me 

To  be  a  comfort.     Your  heart  shall  be  her  mind. 
My  woes  yet  tell  me,  she  is  best  a  maid  !  " 
And  here  she  stopped  her  tears,  her  words  thus  stayed. 

DAIPHANTUS  then,  in  number  without  measure, 

Began  her  praises,  which  no  pen  can  end. 

"  O  Saint  !  0  sun  of  heaven,  and  earth  the  treasure  ! 

Who  lives,  if  not  thy  honour  to  defend  ? 

Ah  me  !  what  mortal  can  be  in  love  so  strange, 
That  wedding  Virtue  will  a  wand'ring  range  ? 

"  She,  like  the  morning,  is  still  fresh  and  fair. 
The  Elements,  of  her,  they  all  do  borrow  ; 
The  Earth,  the  Fire,  the  Waters,  and  the  Air  ; 
Their  strength,  heat,  moisture,  liveliness.     No  sorrow 

Can  Virtue  change  !  Beauty  hath  but  one  place. 

The  heart  's  still  perfect  ;  though  empaled  the  face. 

"  O  eyes  !  no  eyes,  but  stars  still  clearly  shining  ! 
O  face  !  no  face  but  shape  of  angels'  fashion  ! 
O  lips  !  no  lips,  but  bliss  by  kiss  refining  ! 
O  heart  !  no  heart,  but  of  true  love  right  Passion  ! 

O  eyes,  face,  lips,  and  heart,  if  not  too  cruel  ; 

To  see,  feel,  taste,  and  love  earth's  rarest  jewel." 


This  said,  he  paused,  new  praises  now  devising, 
Kneels  to  APOLLO  for  his  skill  and  Art  : 
When  came  the  Ladies  !   At  which,  he  arising, 
'Twixt  lip  and  lip,  he  had  nor  lips  nor  heart. 
His  eyes,  their  eyes  so  sweetly  did  incumber  : 
Although  awaked,  yet  in  a  golden  slumber. 


A;&£]  \DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  385 

Most  like  a  lion  raised  from  slumbering  ease, 

He  cast  his  looks,  fall  grimly  them  among. 

At  length,  he  firmly  knit  what  might  appease 

His  brow ;  looked  stedfastly  and  long 
At  one,  till  all  their  eyes  with  his  eyes  met  alike 
On  fair  VITULLIA,  who  his  heart  did  strike. 

VITULLIA  fair,  yet  brown  ;  as  mixed  together 

As  Art  and  Nature  strove  which  was  the  purest. 

So  sweet  her  smilings  were,  a  grace  to  either  ! 

That  heaven's  glory  in  that  face  seemed  truest. 
VENUS,  excepted  when  the  god  her  wooed, 
Was  ne'er  so  fair !  so  tempting,  yet  so  good  ! 

Wonder  not,  mortals,  though  the  Poets  feign  ! 

The  Muses'  graces  were  in  this  She's  favour : 

Nor  wonder,  though  She  strove  his  tongue  to  gain  ! 

For  I  lose  mine,  in  thinking  of  his  labour. 

"  Well  may  he  love,"  I  write,  "  and  all  Wits  praise  her, 
She  's  so  all  humble,  Learning  cannot  raise  her !  " 

DAIPHANTUS  oft  sighed  :  "  Oh  !  "  oft  said  "  Fair !  " 
Then  looks  and  sighs,  and  then  cries  wonderful ; 
Thus  did  he  long,  and  truly  'twas  not  rare : 
The  object  was  !  which  made  his  mind  so  dull. 
Pray  pardon  him  !  for  better  to  cry  "  Oh  !  " 
Than  feel  that  Passion  which  caused  him  sigh  so. 


Now,  all  were  silent,  not  alone  this  Lover, 

Till  came  ISMENIO,  brother  to  this  Saint, 

Whose  haste  made  sweat,  his  tongue  he  could  not  prove  her, 

For  this  against  him,  that  his  heart  was  faint : 
Thus  all  amazed,  none  knowing  any  cause, 
ISMENIO  breathless,  here  had  time  to  pause. 

2B  10 


386  [DAIPHANTUS]  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  rAx* 

At  length,  ISMENIO,  who  had  wit  and  skill, 

Questioned  the  reason  of  this  strong  effect : 

£t  last  related,  haste  outwent  his  will, 

He  told  them,  "He  was  sent,  them  to  direct, 
Where  hunting  sports,  their  eyes  should  better  please  I  " 
Who  first  went  forth,  DAIPHANTUS  most  did  ease. 


They  gone,  DAIPHANTUS  to  his  standish  highs ! 
Thinks,  in  his  writs  VITULLIA'S  beauties  were  : 
But  what  he  wrote,  his  Muse  not  justifies, 
Bids  him  take  time  !  "Love  badly  writes  in  fear! 
Her  worthy  praise,  if  he  would  truly  write, 
Her  kisses'  nectar  must  the  same  indite." 

"  Art,  and  sweet  Nature !  Let  your  influence  drop 
From  me  like  rain  !  Yes,  yes,  in  golden  showers ! 
(Whose  end  is  Virtue,  let  him  never  stop  !) 
But  fall  on  her,  like  dew  on  sprinkling  flowers ! 
That  both  together  meeting,  may  beget 
An  ORPHEUS  !  two  gems  in  a  soil  richly  set !  " 

Thus  ravished,  then  distracted,  as  was  deemed, 
Not  taught  to  write  of  Love  in  this  extreme  ; 
In  love,  in  fear ;  yea,  trembling  (as  it  seemed), 
If  praising  her,  he  should  not  keep  the  mean  ! 
Thus  vexed,  he  wept !  His  tears  intreated  pity, 
But  Love  unconstant,  tunes  a  woful  ditty. 

Now  kneels  to  VENUS.     Faithfulness  protested 
To  this,  none  else  !     This  was  his  only  Saint ! 
Vowed  e'er  his  service,  or  to  be  arrested 
To  VENUS'  censure !     Thus  he  left  to  faint. 

His  love  brought  Wit,  and  Wit  engendered  Spirit ; 

True  Love  and  Wit  thus  learned  him  to  indite. 


^;]  [DAIPHANTUS]  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  387 

"  As  the  mild  lamb  runs  forth  from  shepherd's  fold, 
By  ravenous  wolves  is  caught  and  made  a  prey : 
So  is  my  Sense,  by  which  Love  taketh  hold, 
Tormented  more  than  any  tongue  can  say. 

The  difference  is,  they  tortured  so,  do  die  ! 

I  feed  the  torment  breeds  my  misery. 


"  Consumed  by  her  I  live,  such  is  her  glory  ! 

Despised  of  her  I  love,  I  more  adore  her ! 

I'll  ne'er  write  ought,  but  of  her  virtue's  story ! 

Beauty  unblasted  is  the  eye's  rich  storer, 

If  I  should  die,  O  who  would  ring  love's  knell  ?  " 
Faint  not,  DAIPHANTUS  !  Wise  men  love  not  so  well ! 

"  Like  heaven's  artist,  the  astronomer, 
Gazing  on  stars,  oft  to  the  earth  doth  fall : 
So  I,  DAIPHANTUS,  now  Lover's  Harbinger, 
Am  quite  condemned  to  Love's  funeral ! 

Who  falls  by  women,  by  them  oft  doth  rise ; 

Ladies  have  lips  to  kiss,  as  well  as  eyes !  " 

But  tush,  thou  fool !  thou  lov'st  all  thou  seest. 

Who  once  thou  lovest,  thou  should'st  change  her  never ! 

Constant  in  love,  DAIPHANTUS,  see  thou  beest ! 

It  thou  hope  comfort,  Love  but  once,  and  ever! 

"  Fortune !  O  be  so  good  to  let  me  find 

A  lady  living,  of  this  constant  mind  !  " 


"  O,  I  would  wear  her  in  my  heart's  heart-gore  ! 
And  place  her  on  the  continent  of  stars  ! 
Think  heaven  and  earth,  like  her  had  not  one  more  ! 
Would  fight  for  her  till  all  my  face  were  scars  ! 

But  if  that  women  be  such  fickle  Shees ; 

Men  may  be  like  them  in  infirmities  ! " 


388  [DAIPHANTUS]  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  [A 

O  no,  DAIPHANTUS  !     Women  are  not  so 
'Tis  but  their  shadows,  pictures  merely  painted  ! 
Then  turn  poor  lover !     "  O  heaven  !  not  to  my  woe  ! 
Then  to  VITULLIA  !  "     With  that  word,  he  fainted. 

Yet  she  that  wounds,  did  heal.     Like  her,  no  heaven. 

Odds  in  a  man,  a  woman  can  make  even ! 


"  O  my  VITULLIA  !    Let  me  write  that  down  ! 

O  sweet  VITULLIA  !  Nature  made  thee  sweet ! 

O  kind  VITULLIA  !  Truth  hath  the  surest  ground  ! 

I'll  weep  or  laugh,  so  that  our  hearts  may  meet !  " 
Love  is  not  always  merry,  nor  still  weeping : 
A  drop  of  each,  Love's  joys  are  sweets  in  sleeping. 

"  Her  name,  in  golden  letters,  on  my  breast  I'll  'grave! 
Around  my  temples,  in  a  garland  wear ! 
My  Art  shall  be,  her  favour  for  to  have  ! 
My  Learning  still  her  honour  high  to  rear ! 

My  lips  shall  close  but  to  her  sacred  name ! 

My  tongue  be  silent  but  to  spread  her  fame ! 

"  In  woods,  groves,  hills,  VITULLIA'S  name  shall  ring ! 
In  meadows,  orchards,  gardens,  sweetest  and  fair ! 
I'll  learn  the  birds  her  name  alone  to  sing ! 
All  quires  shall  chant  it  in  a  heavenly  air ! 

The  Day  shall  be  her  Usher !  Night,  her  Page ! 

Heaven,  her  Palace  !  and  this  Earth,  her  Stage! 

"  Virgin's  pure  chasteness,  in  her  eyes  shall  be  ! 

Women,  true  love,  from  her  true  mind  shall  learn  ! 

Widows,  their  mourning  in  her  face  shall  see  ! 

Children,  their  duty  in  her  speech  discern ! 
And  all  of  them  in  love  with  each,  but  I  : 
Who  fear  her  love,  will  make  me  fear  to  die ! 


A.  Sc/ 


[DAipprAN7us\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.   389 


"  My  Orisons  are  still  to  please  this  creature ! 
My  Valour  sleeps  but  when  She  is  defended ! 
My  Wits  still  jaded  but  when  I  praise  her  feature  ! 
My  Life  is  hers  ;  in  her  begun  and  ended  ! 

O  happy  day  wherein  I  wear  not  willow ! 

Thrice  blessed  night,  wherein  her  breast's  my  pillow ! 

"  I'll  serve  her,  as  the  Mistress  of  all  Pleasure  1 

I'll  love  her,  as  the  Goddess  of  my  soul  ! 

I'll  keep  her,  as  the  Jewel  of  all  treasure  ! 

I'll  live  with  her,  yet  out  of  LOVE'S  control ! 
That  all  may  know,  I  will  not  from  her  part, 
I'll  double  lock  her  in  my  lips  and  heart ! 

If  e'er  I  sigh,  it  shall  be  for  her  pity  ! 
If  e'er  I  mourn,  her  funeral  draws  near! 
If  e'er  I  sing,  her  virtue  is  the  ditty  ! 
If  e'er  I  smile,  her  beauty  is  the  sphere  ! 

All  that  I  do,  is  that  I  may  admire  her ! 

All  that  I  wish,  is  that  I  still  desire  her !  " 

But  peace,  DAIPHANTUS  !     Music  is  only  sweet, 

When  without  discord.     A  consort  makes  a  heaven. 

The  ear  is  ravished  when  true  voices  meet. 

Odds,  but  in  music,  never  makes  things  even. 
In  voices'  difference  breeds  a  pleasant  ditty, 
In  Love,  a  difference  brings  a  scornful  pity. 

Whose  was  the  tongue,  EURIAL^E  defended  ? 

Whose  was  the  wit,  URANIA  did  praise  ? 

Whose  were  the  lips,  ARTESIA'S  voice  commended  ? 

Whose  was  the  heart  loved  all  ?  all  crowned  with  bays  ? 

"  Sure  'twas  myself!     What  did  I  ?     O  I  tremble  ! 

Yet  I'll  not  weep  !     Wise  men  may  love  dissemble. 


PA.  Sc. 
L  1604. 


39°  \_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE. 

"  Fie,  no  !     Fond  Love  hath  ever  his  reward  1 
A  sea  of  tears !  a  world  of  sighs  and  groans ! 
Ah  me !  VITULLIA  will  have  no  regard 
To  ease  my  grief,  and  cure  me  of  my  moans ; 
If  once  her  ear  should  hearken  to  that  voice, 
Relates  my  fortunes  in  Love's  fickle  choice. 


But  now,  I  will,  their  worth  with  hers  declare, 
That  Truth  by  Error  may  have  her  true  being ; 
Things  good  are  lessened  by  the  thing  that  's  rare. 
Beauty  increaseth  by  a  blackness  seeing. 

Whoso  is  fair  and  chaste,  they,  sure,  are  best ! 

Such  is  VITULLIA  !  such  are  all  the  rest ! 

"  But  she  is  fair,  and  chaste,  and  wise."     What  then, 

So  are  they  all,  without  a  difference  ! 

"  She  's  fair,  chaste,  wise,  and  kind,  yes,  to  all  men." 

The  rest  are  so  !     Number  makes  Excellence. 

"  She  's  fair,  chaste,  wise,  kind,  rich,  yet  humble.*' 
They  three,  her  equal !  Virtue  can  never  stumble. 

"  VITULLIA  is  the  sun  ;  they  stars  of  night !  " 
Yet  night  is  the  bosom  wherein  the  sun  doth  rest. 
"  The  moon  herself  borrows  ol  the  sun's  light," 
All  by  the  stars  take  counsel  to  be  blest. 

The  day  's  the  sun,  yet  Cupid  can  it  blind ; 

The  stars  at  night,  Sleep  cures  the  troubled  mind. 

"  She  is  a  rose,  the  fairer,  so  the  sweeter  ! 
She  is  a  lute,  whose  belly  tunes  the  music ! 
She  is  my  prose,  yet  makes  me  speak  all  metre  ! 
She  is  my  life,  yet  sickens  me  with  physic  ! 

She  is  a  virgin,  that  makes  her  a  jewel ! 

She  will  not  love  me,  therein  She  is  cruel ! 


A.  Sc/ 


\_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  391 


"  EURIAL^E  is  like  Sleep  when  one  is  weary 
URANIA  is  like  a  golden  Slumber. 
ARTESIA'S  voice,  like  Dreams  that  make  men  merry. 
VITULLIA,  like  a  Bed,  all  these  encumber. 

i.  Sleep,  2.  Slumber,  3.  Dreams  upon  a  4.  Bed  are  best ; 

First,  Second,  Third,  but  in  the  Fourth  is  blest. 

"  O  but  VITULLIA,  what  ?  She  's  wondrous  pretty  ! 
O  I,  and  what  ?  so  is  She  very  fair  ! 
O  yes,  and  what  ?     She  's  like  herself  most  witty  ! 
And  yet,  what  is  She  ?     She  is  all  but  air  ! 

What  can  earth  be,  but  earth  ?     So  we  are  all ! 

Peace,  then,  my  Muse  !     Opinion  oft  doth  fall ! 

"  EURIAL.E,  I  honour  for  humility  I 

URANIA,  I  reverence  for  her  wit ! 

ARTESIA,  I  adore  for  true  agility  ! 

Three  Graces  for  the  goddesses  most  fit. 
Each  of  these  gifts  are  blessed  in  their  faces, 
O,  what's  VITULLIA,  who  hath  all  these  Graces  ?  " 

She  is  but  a  Lady  !  So  are  all  the  rest. 
As  pure,  as  sweet,  as  modest,  yea  as  loyal ; 
Yes,  She  's  the  Shadow  (shadows  are  the  least !), 
Which  tells  the  Hour  of  Virtue  by  her  dial. 

By  her,  men  see  there  is  on  earth  a  heaven  ! 

By  them,  men  know  her  virtues  are  matched  even ! 

In  praising  all,  much  time  he  vainly  spent, 

Yet  thought  none  worthy  but  VITULLIA  ; 

Then  called  to  mind,  he  could  not  well  repent 

The  love  he  bare  the  wise  URANIA. 

EURIAL^E,  ARTESIA,  all,  such  beauties  had, 

Which  as  they  pleased  him,  made  him  well  nigh  mad. 


392  \DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE. 

EURIAL^E,  her  beauty,  his  eyesight  harmed  ! 

URANIA,  her  wit,  his  tongue  incensed  ! 

ARTESIA,  her  voice,  his  ears  had  charmed ! 

Thus  poor  DAiPHANTUSwas,  with  love  tormented. 
VITULLIA'S  beauty,  as  he  did  impart, 
The  others'  virtues  vanquished  his  heart. 


At  length,  he  grew  as  in  an  ecstasy 

'Twixt  Love  and  Love,  Whose  beauty  was  the  truer  ? 

His  thoughts  thus  diverse,  as  in  a  lunacy, 

He  starts  and  stares,  to  see  Whose  was  the  purer  ? 
Oft  treads  a  maze,  runs,  suddenly  then  stays, 
Thus  with  himself,  himself  makes  many  frays. 

Now  with  his  fingers,  like  a  barber  snaps ! 

Plays  with  the  fire-pan,  as  it  were  a  lute  ! 

Unties  his  shoe-strings  !  Then  his  lips,  he  laps  ! 

Whistles  awhile,  and  thinks  it  is  a  flute  ! 
At  length,  a  glass  presents  it  to  his  sight, 
Where  well  he  acts  fond  Love  in  Passions  right. 

His  chin  he  strokes  !  swears  "  beardless  men  kiss  best ! 
His  lips  anoints,  says  "  Ladies  use  such  fashions  !  " 
Spits  on  his  napkin,  terms  that  "the  bathing  jest." 
Then  on  the  dust,  describes  the  Courtiers'  Passion. 

Then  humble  calls,  "  Though  they  do  still  aspire ; 

Ladies  then  fall,  when  Lords  rise  by  desire." 

Then  straddling  goes,  says,  "  Frenchmen  fear  no  bears ! 
Vows  "  he  will  travel  to  the  Siege  of  Brest !  " 
Swears,  "  Captains,  they  do  all  against  the  hair !  " 
Protests  "  Tobacco  is  a  smoke-dried  jest !  " 
Takes  up  his  pen  for  a  tobacco  pipe, 
Thus  all  besmeared,  each  lip,  the  other  wipe. 


A. 


]  \_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  393 

His  breath,  he  thinks  the  smoke  !  his  tongue,  a  coal ! 

Then  runs  for  bottle-ale  to  quench  his  thirst ; 

Runs  to  his  ink-pot,  drinks  !  then  stops  the  hole  ! 

And  thus  grows  madder  than  he  was  at  first. 
TASSO  he  finds,  by  that  of  HAMLET  thinks 
Terms  him  a  madman,  then  of  his  inkhorn  drinks ! 


Calls  players  "  fools  !     The  Fool,  he  judgeth  wiseth, 
Will  learn  them  action  out  of  Chaucer's  Pander, 
Proves  of  their  poets  bawds,  even  in  the  highest, 
Then  drinks  a  health !  and  swears  it  is  no  slander." 

Puts  off  his  clothes  !  his  shirt  he  only  wears  ! 

Much  like  mad  HAMLET,  thus,  as  Passion  tears ! 

"  Who  calls  me  forth,  from  my  distracted  thought  ? 
O  Cerberus  !  if  thou  ?  I  prithee  speak  ! 
Revenge,  if  thou  ?  I  was  thy  rival  ought ! 
In  purple  gores,  I'll  make  the  ghosts  to  reek  ! 

VITULLIA  !  O  VITULLIA,  be  thou  still ! 

I'll  have  revenge,  or  harrow  up  my  will ! 

"  I'll  fallow  up  the  wrinkles  of  the  earth  ! 
Go  down  to  hell,  and  knock  at  PLUTO'S  gate ! 
I'll  turn  the  hills  to  valleys  !  make  a  dearth 
Of  virtuous  honour  to  eternal  Fate  ! 

I'll  beat  the  winds,  and  make  the  tides  keep  back! 

Reign  in  the  sea,  that  lovers  have  no  wrack ! 

"  Yes,  tell  the  Earth,  '  It  is  a  murderer  ! 
Hath  slain  VITULLIA  ! '     O  VITULLIA'S  dead  1 
I'll  count  blind  CUPID  for  a  conjurer, 
And  with  wild  horses  will  I  rend  his  head  ! 

I,  with  a  pickaxe,  will  pluck  out  his  brains ! 

Laugh  at  this  boy  !  ease  lovers  of  much  pains ! 


394  \DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF 

"  O  then,  I'll  fly!  I'll  swim  !  yet  stay,  and  then 
I'll  ride  the  moon,  and  make  the  clouds  my  horse  ! 
Make  me  a  ladder  of  the  heads  of  men, 
Climb  up  to  heaven  !  Yes,  my  tongue  will  force 
To  gods  and  angels  !  0,  I'll  never  end, 
Till  for  VITULLIA,  all  my  cries  I  spend  ! 


"  Then  I,  like  a  Spirit  of  pure  Innocence, 

I'll  be  all  white  !  and  yet  behold  I'll  cry 

'  Revenge ! '  O  lovers  !  this  my  sufference  ; 

Or  else  for  love,  for  love,  a  soul  must  die ! 
EURIAL^E  !  URANIA  !  ARTESIA  !  so  !  — " 
Heart  rent  in  sunder,  with  these  words  of  woe. 

"  But  soft,  here  comes  !  Who  comes  ?  and  not  calls  out 

Of  rape  and  murder,  love  and  villainy  ? 

Stay,  wretched  man  !  Who  runs  ?  doth  never  doubt 

It  is  thy  soul !  thy  Saint !  thy  deity ! 
Then  call  the  birds  to  ring  a  mourning  Knell, 
For  mad  DAIPHANTUS,  who  doth  love  so  well  ! 

"  O  sing  a  song,  parted  in  parcels  three, 
I'll  bear  the  burden  still  of  all  your  grief; 
Who  is  all  Woe,  can  tune  his  misery 
To  discontents ;  but  not  to  his  relief. 

0  kiss  her  !  kiss  her  !  And  yet  do  not  do  so  ! 

They  bring  some  joy,  but  with  short  joys,  long  woe ! 

Upon  his  knees,  "  O  goddesses  behold 

A  caitiff  wretch  bemoaning  his  mishap  ! 

If  ever  pity  were  hired  without  gold, 

Lament  DAIPHANTUS,  once  in  Fortune's  lap ! 
Lament  DAIPHANTUS,  whose  good  deeds  now  slumber 
Lament  a  lover, whose  woe  no  tongue  can  number ! 


A.  Sc. 
1604 


;]  \DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  395 

"  My  woes—"  There  did  he  stay,  fell  to  the  ground, 
Rightly  divided  into  blood  and  tears, 
As  if  those  words  had  given  a  mortal  wound, 
So  lay  he  foaming,  with  the  weight  of  cares. 
Who  this  had  seen,  and  seeing  had  not  wept, 
Their  hearts  were,  sure,  from  crosses  ever  kept ! 


The  Ladies  all,  who  late  from  hunting  came, 
Untimely  came  to  view  this  Map  of  Sorrow. 
Surely  all  wept !  and  sooth  it  was  no  shame, 
For,  from  his  grief,  the  world  might  truly  borrow  : 

As  he  lay  speechless  grovelling,  all  undressed ; 

So  they  stood  weeping,  Silence  was  their  best. 

ISMENIO  with  these  Ladies  bare  a  part, 

And  much  bemoaned  him,  though  he  knew  not  why ; 

But  kind  compassion  struck  him  to  the  heart, 

To  see  him  mad.     Much  better  see  one  die ! 
Thus  walks  ISMENIO,  and  yet  oft  did  pause, 
At  length,  a  writing  made  him  know  the  cause. 

He  read,  till  words,  like  thunder,  pierced  his  heart ; 
He  sighed,  till  Sorrow  seemed  itself  to  mourn  ; 
He  wept  till  tears  like  ysacles  [icicles]  did  part, 
He  pitied  so,  that  pity,  hate  did  scorn. 

He  read  to  sigh,  and  weep  for  pity's  sake ; 

The  less  he  read,  the  less  his  heart  did  quake. 

At  length  resolved,  he  up  the  writing  takes 
And  to  the  Ladies  travails  as  with  child  ; 
The  birth  was  Love,  such  love  as  discord  makes, 
The  midwife  Patience ;  thus  in  words  full  mild, 
He  writ  with  tears  that  which  with  blood  was  writ 
The  more  he  read,  the  more  they  pitied  it. 


396  [DAIPHANTUS]  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  [ 

They  look  upon  DAIPHANTUS,  he  not  seeing  : 
And  wondered  at  him,  but  his  sense  was  parted. 
They  loved  him  much,  though  little  was  his  being, 
And  sought  to  cure  him,  though  he  was  faint-hearted, 

ISMENIO  thus,  with  speed  resolves  to  ease  him ; 

By  a  sweet  song,  his  sister  should  appease  him  ' 


ISMENIO  was  resolved  he  would  be  eased, 
And  was  resolved  of  no  means  but  by  Music, 
Which  is  so  heavenly  that  it  hath  released 
The  danger  oft,  not  to  be  cured  by  physic. 
Her  tongue  and  hand  thus  married  together, 
Could  not  but  please  him,  who  so  loved  either. 

But  first  before  his  madness  were  allayed, 
They  offered  incense  at  DIANA'S  shrine, 
And  much  besought  her,  now  to  be  apaid  ; 
Which  was  soon  granted  to  these  saints  divine : 

Yet  so,  that  mad  DAIPHANTUS  must  agree 

Never  to  love,  but  live  in  chastity. 

Thus  they  adjured  him,  by  the  gods  on  high, 
Never  henceforth  to  shoot  with  CUPID'S  quiver! 
Nor  love  to  feign :  for  there  's  no  remedy, 
If  once  relapsed,  then  was  he  mad  for  ever ! 

Tortured  DAIPHANTUS,  now  a  sign  did  make; 

And  kind  ISMENIO  this  did  undertake. 

Then  'gan  ARTESIA  to  play  upon  her  lute, 
Whose  voice  sang  sweetly,  now  a  mourning  ditty ; 
LOVE  her  admired,  though  he  that  loved  were  mute, 
CUPID  himself  feared  he  should  sue  for  pity. 

O  wondrous  virtue  !     Words  spoken  are  but  wind ; 

But  sung  to  Prick  Song,  they  are  joys  divine ! 


A.  Sc.' 


]  \_DAIFHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  397 

I  heard  her  sing,  but  still  methought  I  dreamed. 

I  heard  her  play,  but  I  methought  did  sleep. 

The  Day  and  Night,  till  now,  were  never  weaned. 

VENUS  and  DIAN  ravished,  both  did  weep. 
They  which  each  hated,  now  agreed  to  say 
This  was  the  goddess  both  of  night  and  day. 


My  heart  and  ears,  so  ravished  with  the  voice 
I  still  forgot,  what  still  I  heard  her  sing : 
The  tune,  surely,  of  Sonnets,  this  was  all  the  choice. 
Poets  do  keep  it  as  a  charming  thing. 
What  think  you  of  the  joys  that  DAIPHANTUS  had, 
When  for  such  music,  I  would  still  be  mad ! 

The  birds  came  chirping  to  the  windows  round, 
And  so  stood  still,  as  if  they  ravished  were ; 
Beasts  forth  the  forest  came,  brought  with  the  sound ; 
The  lion  laid  him  down  as  if  in  fear. 

The  fishes  in  fresh  rivers  swam  to  shore  ; 

Yea,  had  not  Nature  stayed  them,  had  done  more. 

This  was  a  sight,  whose  eyes  had  never  seen ; 

This  was  a  voice,  such  music  ne'er  was  heard  ; 

This  Paradise  was  it,  where  who  had  been, 

Might  well  have  thought  of  hell,  and  not  afeard. 
Sure,  hell  itself  was  heaven,  in  this  sphere, 
Madmen,  wild  beasts,  and  all  here  tamed  were. 

Like  as  a  king,  his  chair  of  state  ascendeth, 
Being  newly  made  a  god  upon  the  earth, 
In  state  amounts,  till  step  by  step  he  endeth, 
Thinks  it  to  heaven  a  true-ascending  birth. 
So  hies  DAIPHANTUS,  on  his  legs  and  feet, 
As  if  DAIPHANTUS  now  some  god  should  meet. 


398  \_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE 

He  looks  upon  himself,  not  without  wonder. 

He  wonders  at  himself,  what  he  might  be. 

He  laughs  unto  himself:  thinks  he  's  aslumber. 

He  weeps  unto  himself,  himself  to  see. 
And  sure  to  hear  and  see  what  he  had  done 
Might  make  him  swear  but  now  the  world  begun. 


Fully  revived,  at  last  ARTESIA  ceased, 
When  birds  and  beasts  so  hideous  noise  did  make, 
That  almost  all  turned  fury,  fear  was  the  least ; 
Yea,  such  a  fear  as  forced  them  cry  and  quake ; 
Till  that  DAIPHANTUS,  more  of  reason  had 
Than  they  which  moaned  him,  lately  being  mad. 

He  with  more  joy  than  words  could  well  declare, 
And  with  more  words  than  his  new  tongue  could  tell, 
Did  strive  to  speak  (such  was  his  love  and  care 
Thus  to  be  thankful) ;  but  yet  knew  not  well 
Whether  his  tongue  (not  tuned  unto  his  heart), 
Or  modest  silence,  would  best  act  his  part  ? 

But  speak  he  will !     Then  give  attentive  ear 

To  hear  him  tell  a  woful  lover's  story ! 

His  hands  and  eyes  to  heaven  up  did  he  rear, 

Grief  taught  him  speech,  though  he  to  speak  were  sorry, 
But  whatsoever  be  a  Lover's  Passion, 
DAIPHANTUS  speaks  his,  in  a  mourning  fashion. 

As  o'er  the  mountains  walks  the  wandering  soul, 

Seeking  for  rest  in  his  unresting  spirit, 

So  good  DAIPHANTUS,  thinking  to  enrol 

Himself  in  grace,  by  telling  of  Love's  merit 
Was  so  distracted,  how  he  should  commend  it, 
Where  he  began,  he  wished  still  to  end  it. 


A.Sc. 


i&4.]  \_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  399 

"  BURIALS,  my  eyes  are  hers  in  right ! 

URANIA,  my  tongue  is  as  her  due  ! 

ARTESIA,  my  ears  to  her  I  'dite  ! 

My  heart  to  each  !  and  yet  my  heart  to  you, 
To  you,  VITULLIA  !  to  you,  and  all  the  rest, 
Who  once  me  cursed,  now  to  make  me  blest ! 


"  i  Beauty  and  2  Wit,  did  i  wound  and  2  pierce  my  heart, 

3  Music  and  4  Favour,  3  gained  and  4  kept  it  sure : 

Love  led  by  Fancy  to  the  4  last  I  part, 

Love  led  by  Reason  to  the  I  first  is  truer. 

i  Beauty  and  2  Wit  first  conquered,  made  me  yield, 
3  Music  and  4  Favour  rescued  got  the  field. 

"To  2  Wit  and  i  Beauty,  my  first  love  I  give  ! 
3  Music  and  4  Favours,  my  second  love  have  gained  ! 
All  made  me  mad,  and  all  did  me  relieve, 
Though  one  recured  me,  when  I  was  sustained. 

Thus,  troth  to  say,  to  All  I  love  did  owe ; 

Therefore  to  All  my  love  I  ever  vow !  " 

Thus  to  the  first  i  and  2,  his  right  hand  he  did  tender : 
His  left  hand  to  the  3  and  4 ;  last  most  lovingly  4. 
His  tongue  kind  thanks,  first  to  the  last  did  render, 
The  whiles  his  looks  were  bent  indifferently. 

Thus  he  salutes  All :  and  to  increase  his  blisses, 

From  lip  to  lip,  each  Lady  now  he  kisses. 

ISMENIO  in  humble  wise  salutes  he, 
With  gracious  language  he  returns  his  heart, 
His  words  so  sweetly  to  his  tongue  now  suits  he, 
As  what  he  speaks  shew  Learning  with  good  Art. 

ISMENIO  pleased  DAIPHANTUS,  DAIPHANTUS  All ; 

When  love  gains  love  for  love,  this  Love  we  call ! 


400  \DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE, 

URANIA  now  bethought  what  was  protested 
By  young  ISMENIO  at  DIANA'S  shrine, 
Conjured  DAIPHANTUS  that,  no  more  he  jested 
With  Love  or  Fancy  !  for  they  were  Divine  : 
And  if  he  did,  that  there  they  all  would  pray 
He  still  might  live  in  love,  both  night  and  day ! 


This  grieved  him  much  (but  folly  'twere  to  grieve !) 

His  now  obedience  shewed  his  own  free  will. 

He  swore  "  he  would  not  love,  in  shew,  achieve ! 

But  live  a  virgin,  chaste  and  spotless  still. 
Which  said,  such  music  suddenly  delighted, 
As  all  were  ravished,  and  yet  all  affrighted. 

Here  parted  all,  not  without  joy  and  sadness. 
Some  wept,  some  smiled  ;  a  world  it  was  to  hear  them  ! 
Both  springs  here  met.    Woe  here  was  clothed  with  gladness, 
Heaven  was  their  comfort.     It  alone  did  cheer  them. 

DAIPHANTUS  from  these  springs,  some  fruit  did  gather. 

Experience  is  an  infant,  though  an  ancient  father  ! 

"  Sweet  Lady !  know  the  Soul  looks  through  our  eyesights  ! 
Content  lives  not  in  shews  or  beauty  seeing  ! 
Peace,  not  from  number,  nor  strength  in  high  spirits ! 
Joy  dies  with  Virtue,  yet  lives  in  Virtue's  being ! 

Beauty  is  masked,  where  Virtue  is  not  hidden ! 

Man  still  desires  that  fruit,  he 's  most  forbidden  ! 

"  Jewels,  for  virtue,  not  for  beauty  prized  ! 
What 's  seldom  seen  breeds  wonder,  we  admire  it ! 
King's  lines  are  rare,  and  therefore  well  advised. 
Wise  men,  not  often  talk,  Fools  still  desire  it. 

Women  are  books  !  Kept  close/they  hold  much  treasure  ; 

Unclasped,  sweet  ills !  Most  woe  lies  hid  in  pleasure. 


Ai<5'.]  \_DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE.  401 

"  Who  studies  Arts  alike,  can  he  prove  Doctor  ? 

Who  surfeits,  hardly  lives  !  drunkards  recover ! 

Whose  will  's  his  law,  that  conscience  needs  no  Proctor ! 

When  men  turn  beasts,  look  there  for  brutish  lovers  ! 
Those  eyes  are  pore-blind,  look  equally  on  any 
Though  't  be  a  virtue  to  hinder  one  by  many. 

"  Who  gains  by  travel,  lose  Lordships  for  their  Manors, 
Must  TARQUIN  ravish  some  ?     Hell  on  that  glory  ! 
Whose  life  's  in  healths,  death  soonest  gains  those  banners ! 
Lust  still  is  punished,  though  Treason  write  the  story  ! 

A  rolling  eye,  a  globe,  new  worlds  discover  ! 

Who  still  wheels  round  is  but  a  damned  lover. 


"  Doth  Faith  and  Troth  lie  bathing  ?     Is  Lust,  pleasure  ? 

Can  commons  be  as  sweet  as  land  enclosed  ? 

Then  virgin  sin  may  well  be  counted  pleasure  ! 

Where  such  lords  rule,  who  lives  not  ill-disposed  1 
True  Love 's  a  Phoenix,  but  One  until  it  dies : 
Lust  is  a  Cockatrice  in  all,  but  in  her  eyes." 

Here  did  he  end  more  blessed  than  his  wishes. 
(Fame  's  at  the  high,  when  Love  indites  the  Story) 
The  private  life  brings  with  it  heavenly  blisses. 
Sweet  Contemplation  much  increaseth  glory. 

I'll  leave  him  to  the  learning  of  Love's  spell  ! 

"  Better  part  friends,  that  follow  fiends  to  hell !  " 

ISMENIO,  with  VITULLIA  went  together, 

Perhaps  both  wounded  with  blind  CUPID'S  dart ; 

Yet  durst  they  not  relate  their  love  to  either, 

Love  if  once  pitied,  pierceth  to  the  heart : 
But,  sure,  VITULLIA  is  so  fair  a  mark, 
CUPID  would  court  her,  though  but  by  the  dark. 

2C  10 


402  \DAIPHANTUS\  THE  PASSIONS  OF  LOVE. 

ARTESIA,  she  must  go,  the  more  She  *s  grieved, 
To  churlish  STRYMON,  her  adopted  Mate  ; 
CUPID,  though  blind,  yet  pitied  and  relieved 
This  modest  Lady  with  some  happy  fate. 

For  what  but  Virtue,  which  doth  all  good  nourish, 
Could  brook  her  fortunes,  much  less  love  and  cherish, 

EURIAL^E,  with  good  URANIA  stayed, 
Where  Virtue  dwells,  they  only  had  their  being ; 
Beauty  and  Wit  still  fear,  are  not  dismayed, 
For  where  they  dwell,  Love  ever  will  be  prying. 

These  two  were  one.     All  good,  each  could  impart. 

One  was  their  fortune,  and  one  was  their  heart. 

Beauty  and  Virtue  were  true  friends  to  either. 

Heaven  is  the  sphere  where  all  men  seek  for  glory. 

Earth  is  the  grave  where  sinners  join  together. 

Hell  keeps  the  book,  enrols  each  lustful  story. 
Live  as  we  will,  Death  makes,  of  all  conclusion : 
Die  then  to  live  !  or  life  is  thy  confusion. 

Beauty  and  Wit  in  these,  fed  on  Affection. 

Labour  and  Industry  were  their  twins  of  life. 

Love  and  True  Bounty  were  in  their  subjection, 

Their  bodies,  with  their  spirits,  had  no  strife. 
Such  were  these  two,  as  grace  did  them  defend  : 
Such  are  these  two,  as  with  these  two  I  end. 


FINIS. 

Non  Amori  sed  Virtuti, 


1604 


403 

The  Passionate  Mans   Pilgrimage, 

Supposed  to  be  written  by  one  at 
the  point  of  death. 

IVE  me  my  Scalop  Shell  of  quiet, 
My  Staff  of  faith  to  walk  upon, 
My  Scrip  of  joy,  immortal  diet ! 
My  Bottle  of  salvation, 
My  Gown  of  glory,  hope's  true  gage, 
And  thus  I'll  take  my  Pilgrimage ! 

Blood  must  be  my  body's  balmer, 

No  other  balm  will  there  be  given ! 

Whilst  my  Soul,  like  a  white  Palmer, 

Travels  to  the  land  of  heaven, 

Over  the  silver  mountains, 

Where  spring  the  nectar  fountains : 

And  there  I'll  kiss 

The  bowl  of  bliss, 

And  drink  my  eternal  fill 

On  every  milken  hill ! 

My  Soul  will  be  a  dry  before ; 

But,  after  it,  will  ne'er  thirst  more  ! 

And  by  the  happy  blissful  way, 

More  peaceful  pilgrims  I  shall  see 

That  have  shook  off  their  gowns  of  clay, 

And  go  apparelled  fresh  like  me. 

I'll  bring  them  first 

To  slake  their  thirst, 

And  then  to  taste  those  nectar  suckets 

At  the  clear  wells 

Where  sweetness  dwells, 

Drawn  up  by  Saints  in  crystal  buckets. 


404    THE  PASSIONAJE  MAN'S  PILGRIMAGE. 

And  when  our  bottles  and  all  we, 
Are  filled  with  immortality, 
Then  the  holy  paths  we'll  travel, 
Strewed  with  rubies  thick  as  gravel, 
Ceilings  of  diamonds,  sapphire  floors, 
High  walls  of  coral,  and  pearl  bowers. 

From  thence,  to  Heaven's  bribeless  Hall, 
Where  no  corrupted  voices  brawl. 
No  conscience  molten  into  gold  ; 
Nor  torged  accusers  bought  and  sold. 
No  cause  del  erred,  nor  vain  spent  journey  ; 
For  there,  CHRIST  is  the  King's  Attorney, 
Who  pleads  lor  all  without  degrees  ; 
And  he  hath  angels,  but  no  fees  ! 
When  the  grand  twelve  million  Jury, 
Of  our  sins  and  sinful  fury, 
'Gainst  our  souls,  black  verdicts  give  : 
CHRIST  pleads  his  death,  and  then  we  live ! 
Be  thou,  my  speaker,  taintless  Pleader  ! 
Unblotted  Lawyer  !  true  Proceeder  ! 
Thou  movest  salvation,  even  for  alms ! 
Not  with  a  bribed  lawyer's  palms. 

And  this  is  my  eternal  Plea, 

To  Him  that  made  heaven,  earth,  and  sea ; 

Seeing  my  flesh  must  die  so  soon, 

And  want  a  head  to  dine  next  noon  ; 

Just  at  the  stroke,  when  my  veins  start  and  spread, 

Set  on  my  Soul,  an  everlasting  head ! 

Then  am  I  ready,  like  a  Palmer  fit 

To  tread  those  blest  paths,  which  before  I  writ. 

FINIS. 


405 


MICHAEL     DRAYTON, 

Odes. 

[i6o65  and    1619.] 
To  the  Reader. 


[DES  I  have  called  these,  the  first  of  my  few  Poems  ; 
which  how  happy  soever  they  prove,  yet  Criti- 
cism itself  cannot  say,  That  the  name  is  wrong- 
fully usurped.  For  (not  to  begin  with  Definitions, 
against  the  Rule  of  Oratory  ;  nor  ab  ovo,  against 
the  Prescript  of  Poetry  in  a  poetical  argument :  but  some- 
what only  to  season  thy  palate  with  a  slight  descrip- 
tion) an  Ode  is  known  to  have  been  properly  a  Song 
moduled  to  the  ancient  harp :  and  neither  too  short- 
breathed,  as  hastening  to  the  end  ;  nor  composed  of  [the] 
longest  verses,  as  unfit  for  the  sudden  turns  and  lofty  tricks 
with  which  APOLLO  used  to  menage  it. 
They  are,  as  the  Learned  say,  divers  : 
Some  transcendently  lofty  ;  and  far  more  high  than  the 
Epic,  commonly  called  the  Heroic,  Poem — witness  those  of  the 
inimitable  PlNDARUS  consecrated  to  the  glory  and  renown 


406         THE  EPISTLE  TO  THE  READER.         [M'Dra?6o6: 

of    such    as    returned   in    triumph   from   [the    Games    at] 
Olympus,  Elis,  Isthmus,  or  the  like. 

Others,  among  the  Greeks,  are  amorous,  soft,  and  made 
for  chambers  ;  as  others  for  theatres  :  as  were  ANACREON'S, 
the  very  delicacies  of  the  Grecian  ERATO  ;  which  Muse 
seemed  to  have  been  the  Minion  of  that  Teian  old  man, 
which  composed  them. 

Of  a  mixed  kind  were  HORACE'S.     And  [we]  may  truly 
therefore  call  these  mixed  ;  whatsoever  else  are  mine :  little 
partaking  of  the  high  dialect  of  the  first 
Though  we  be  all  to  seek 
Of  PINDAR,  that  great  Greek, 

nor  altogether  of  AN  ACREON ;  the  Arguments  being  amorous, 
moral,  or  what  else  the  Muse  pleaseth. 

To  write  much  in  this  kind  neither  know  I  how  it  will 
relish :  nor,  in  so  doing,  can  I  but  injuriously  presuppose 
ignorance  or  sloth  in  thee ;  or  draw  censure  upon  myself 
for  sinning  against  the  decorum  of  a  Preface,  by  reading  a 
Lecture,  where  it  is  enough  to  sum  the  points.  New  they 
are,  and  the  work  of  Playing  Hours  :  but  what  other  com- 
mendation is  theirs,  and  whether  inherent  in  the  subject, 
must  be  thine  to  judge. 

But  to  act  the  Go-Between  of  my  Poems  and  thy  applause, 
is  neither  my  modesty  nor  confidence:  that,  oftener  than 
once,  have  acknowledged  thee,  kind  ;  and  do  not  doubt 
hereafter  to  do  somewhat  in  which  I  shall  not  fear  thee, 
just.  And  would,  at  this  time,  also  gladly  let  thee  under- 
stand what  I  think,  above  the  rest,  of  the  last  Ode  of  the 
number  ;  or,  if  thou  wilt,  Ballad  in  my  book.  For  both 
the  great  Master  of  Italian  rymes  PETRARCH,  and  our 
CHAUCER,  and  others  of  the  Upper  House  of  the  Muses, 
have  thought  their  Canzons  honoured  in  the  title  of  a  Ballad : 
which  for  that  I  labour  to  meet  truly  therein  with  the  old 
English  garb,  I  hope  as  ably  to  justify  as  the  learned  COLIN 
CLOUT  his  Roundelay. 

Thus  requesting  thee,  in  thy  better  judgment,  to  correct 
such  faults  as  have  escaped  in  the  printing ;  I  bid  thee 
farewell. 

[M.  DRAYTON.] 


407 


ODES. 

[1606.] 

ODE    I. 

To  Himself,  and  the  Harp. 


ND  why  not  I,  as  he 
That 's  greatest,  if  as  free, 

(In  sundry  strains  that  strive, 
Since  there  so  many  be), 

Th'  old  Lyric  kind  revive  ? 


I  will,  yea  ;  and  I  may  : 
Who  shall  oppose  my  way  ? 

For  what  is  he  alone, 
That  of  himself  can  say, 

He  's  Heir  of  Helicon. 


APOLLO  and  the  Nine 
Forbid  no  man  their  shrine, 

That  cometh  with  hands  purej 
Else,  they  be  so  divine, 

They  will  not  him  endure. 

For  they  be  such  coy  things ; 
That  they  care  not  for  Kings, 

And  dare  let  them  know  it : 
Nor  may  he  touch  their  Springs 

That  is  not  born  a  Poet. 

The  Phocean  it  did  prove, 
Whom  when  foul  lust  did  move 

Those  Maids,  unchaste  to  make ; 
Fell  as  with  them  he  strove, 

His  neck  and  justly  brake. 


PVRENJEUS, 

King  of  Phocis 
attempting  to 
ravish  the 
Muses. 


4o8 


ODES. 


:M.  Drayton. 
1606. 


i  Samuel  xvi. 


ORPHEUS  the 
Thracian  Poet. 
Caput,  Hebre, 
lyramque 
cxcipis,  &c. 
OVID. 
Metant.  xi. 


MERCURY, 
inventor  of  the 
harp.as  HORACE. 
Ode  10,  Lib.  I., 
cut-vague  lyree 
parentem. 


That  instrument  ne'er  heard, 
Struck  by  the  skilful  Bard, 

It  strongly  to  awake  ; 
But  it  th'  internals  scared, 

And  made  Olympus  quake. 

As  those  prophetic  strings, 
Whose  sounds  with  fiery  wings 

Drave  fiends  from  their  abode ; 
Touched  by  the  best  of  Kings, 

That  sang  the  holy  Ode. 

So  his,  which  women  slew  : 
And  it  int'  Hebrus  threw; 

Such  sounds  yet  forth  it  sent, 
The  banks  to  weep  that  drew, 

As  down  the  stream  it  went 

That  by  the  tortoise  shell, 
To  MAYA'S  son  it  fell, 

The  most  thereof  not  doubt : 
But  sure  some  Power  did  dwell 

In  him  who  found  it  out. 


Thebes  feigned 
to  have  been 
raised  by  music. 


The  ancient 
British  Priests, 
so  called  of  their 
abode  in  woods. 


The  wildest  of  the  field, 
And  air,  with  rivers  t'  yield, 

Which  moved;  that  sturdy  glebes, 
And  mossy  oaks  could  wield, 

To  raise  the  piles  of  Thebes. 

And  diversely  though  strung, 
So  anciently  We  sung 

To  it;  that  now  scarce  known, 
If  first  it  did  belong 

To  Greece,  or  if  our  own. 

The  Druids  embrued 
With  gore,  on  altars  rude 

With  sacrifices  crowned, 
In  hollow  woods  bedewed, 

Adored  the  trembling  sound. 


M.  Drayton."] 
i6o6.J 


ODES. 


409 


Though  we  be  all  to  seek 
Of  PINDAR,  that  great  Greek, 

To  finger  it  aright; 
The  soul  with  power  to  strike : 

His  hand  retained  such  might. 

Or  him  that  Rome  did  grace, 
Whose  Airs  we  all  embrace  : 

That  scarcely  found  his  peer ; 
Nor  giveth  PHGEBUS  place, 

For  strokes  divinely  clear. 

The  Irish  I  admire, 

And  still  cleave  to  that  Lyre 

As  our  Music's  mother : 
And  think,  till  I  expire, 

APOLLO'S  such  another. 


PINDAR,  Prince 
of  the  Greek 
Lyrics,  of  whom 
HORACE, 
FIND  ARUM 
guisquis  studet, 
&>c.    Ode  2,  Lib. 
IV. 


HORACE,  first  of 
the  Romans  in 
that  kind. 


The  Irish  Harp. 


As  Britons  that  so  long 
Have  held  this  antique  Song ; 

And  let  all  our  carpers 
Forbear  their  fame  to  wrong  : 

Th'are  right  skilful  harpers. 

SOOWTHERN,  I  long  thee  spare  ; 
Yet  wish  thee  well  to  fare, 

Who  me  pleasedst  greatly  : 
As  first,  therefore  more  rare, 

Handling  thy  harp  neatly. 

To  those  that  with  despite 
Shall  term  these  Numbers  slight ; 

Tell  them,  Their  judgment 's  blind 
Much  erring  from  the  right. 

It  is  a  noble  kind. 

Nor  is  't  the  Verse  doth  make, 
That  giveth,  or  doth  take : 

'Tis  possible  to  climb, 
To  kindle,  or  to  slake  ; 

Although  in  SKELTON's  rhyme. 


SOOWTHERN,  an 
English  Lyric. 
[His 

PANDOXA 
was  published  in 
1584.] 


An  old  English 
Rhymer. 


4io 


ODES. 


M.  Drayton. 
1606. 


ODE    2. 

To  the  New  Year. 

ICH  statue  double  faced  ! 
With  marble  temples  graced, 

To  raise  thy  godhead  higher  ; 
In  flames  where,  altars  shining, 
Before  thy  Priests  divining, 
Do  od'rous  fumes  expire. 

Great  JANUS,  I  thy  pleasure, 
With  all  the  Thespian  treasure, 

Do  seriously  pursue  : 
To  th'  passed  year  returning, 
As  though  the  Old  adjourning ; 

Yet  bringing  in  the  New. 

Thy  ancient  Vigils  yearly, 
I  have  observed  clearly ; 

Thy  Feasts  yet  smoking  be  ! 
Since  all  thy  store  abroad  is ; 
Give  something  to  my  goddess, 

As  hath  been  used  by  thee ! 

Give  her  th'  Eoan  Brightness  ! 
Winged  with  that  subtle  lightness 

That  doth  transpierce  the  air; 
The  Roses  of  the  Morning  ! 
The  rising  heaven  adorning, 

To  mesh  with  flames  of  hair ; 

Those  ceaseless  Sounds,  above  all, 
Made  by  those  orbs  that  move  all ; 

And  ever  swelling  there : 
Wrapped  up  in  Numbers  flowing, 
Them  actually  bestowing 

For  jewels  at  her  ear. 


M'DiaSS]  ODES. 

O  rapture  great  and  holy, 
Do  thou  transport  me  wholly 

So  well  her  form  to  vary  ! 
That  I  aloft  may  bear  her 
Where  as  I  will  insphere  her 

In  regions  high  and  starry. 

And  in  my  choice  Composures, 
The  soft  and  easy  Closures 

So  amorously  shall  meet, 
That  every  lively  Ceasure 
Shall  tread  a  perfect  measure, 

Set  on  so  equal  feet. 

That  spray  to  fame  so  fert'le, 
The  lover-crowning  myrtle, 

In  wreaths  of  mixed  boughs; 
Within  whose  shades  are  dwelling 
Those  beauties  most  excelling, 

Enthroned  upon  her  brows. 

Those  parallels  so  even, 
Drawn  on  the  face  of  heaven, 

That  curious  Art  supposes ; 
Direct  those  gems,  whose  clearness 
Far  off  amaze  by  nearness, 

Each  globe  such  fire  encloses. 

Her  bosom  full  of  blisses, 
By  Nature  made  for  kisses ; 

So  pure  and  wondrous  clear : 
Where  as  a  thousand  Graces 
Behold  their  lovely  faces, 

As  they  are  bathing  there. 

O  thou  self-little  Blindness ! 
The  kindness  of  unkindness, 

Yet  one  of  those  Divine  : 
Thy  Brands  to  me  were  lever, 
Thy  Fascia,  and  thy  Quiver, 

And  thou  this  Quill  of  mine. 


411 


412  ODES.  [M- Dr 

This  heart  so  freshly  bleeding, 
Upon  its  own  self  feeding ; 

Whose  wounds  still  dropping  be : 
O  Love,  thyself  confounding, 
Her  coldness  so  abounding, 

And  yet  such  heat  in  me. 

Yet,  if  I  be  inspired, 

I'll  leave  thee  so  admired 

To  all  that  shall  succeed  ; 
That  were  they  more  than  many, 
'Mongst  all  there  is  not  any 

That  Time  so  oft  shall  read. 

Nor  adamant  ingraved, 

That  hath  been  choicely  saved, 

IDEA'S  name  outwears : 
So  large  a  dower  as  this  is ; 
The  greatest  often  misses, 

The  diadem  that  bears. 


ayton. 
1606. 


ODE  3. 

[To  CUPID.] 

AIDEKS,  why  spare  ye? 
Or  whether  not  dare  ye 

Correct  the  blind  Shooter?" 
"  Because  wanton  VENUS, 
So  oft  that  doth  pain  us, 

Is  her  son's  tutor. 


"  Now  in  the  Spring, 
He  proveth  his  wing ; 
The  field  is  his  Bower: 


M.  Drayton.-i  /~v  _ 

1606.  J  ODES.  4x3 

And  as  the  small  bee, 
About  flyeth  he, 

From  flower  to  flower. 


"  And  wantonly  roves 
Abroad  in  the  groves, 

And  in  the  air  hovers  ; 
Which  when  it  him  deweth, 
His  feathers  he  meweth 

In  sighs  of  true  Lovers. 

"  And  since  doomed  by  Fate 
(That  well  knew  his  hate) 

That  he  should  be  blind  ; 
For  very  despite, 
Our  eyes  be  his  White : 

So  wayward  his  kind  ! 

"  If  his  shafts  losing 
(111  his  mark  choosing) 

Or  his  bow  broken  ; 
The  moan  VENUS  maketh, 
And  care  that  she  taketh, 

Cannot  be  spoken. 

"  To  VULCAN  commending 
Her  love  ;  and  straight  sending 

Her  doves  and  her  sparrows, 
With  kisses,  unto  him  : 
And  all  but  to  woo  him 

To  make  her  son  arrows. 

"  Telling  what  he  hath  done  ; 
Saith  she, '  Right  mine  own  son  ! ' 

In  her  arms  she  him  closes. 
Sweets  on  him  fans, 
Laid  in  down  of  her  swans  ; 

His  sheets,  leaves  of  roses. 


414  ODES.  [M- 

"  And  feeds  him  with  kisses  ; 
Which  oft  when  he  misses, 

He  ever  is  froward. 
The  mother's  o'erjoying 
Makes,  by  much  coying, 

The  child  so  untoward." 

Yet  in  a  fine  net, 
That  a  spider  set, 

The  Maidens  had  caught  him. 
Had  she  not  been  near  him, 
And  chanced  to  hear  him  ; 

More  good  they  had  taught  him! 


Drayton. 

1606. 


To  my  worthy  friend  Master  JOHN  SAVAGE 
of  the  Inner  Temple. 

ODE  4. 


PON  this  sinful  earth, 

If  Man  can  happy  be, 
And  higher  than  his  birth, 
Friend,  take  him  thus  of  me : 

Whom  promise  not  deceives, 
That  he  the  breach  should  rue ; 

Nor  constant  reason  leaves 
Opinion  to  pursue. 

To  raise  his  mean  estate, 

That  soothes  no  Wanton  s  sin  : 

Doth  that  preferment  hate, 
That  virtue  doth  not  win 


M'DraS:]  ODES. 


Nor  bravery  doth  admire  : 
Nor  doth  more  love  profess 

To  that  he  doth  desire, 
Than  that  he  doth  possess. 

Loose  humour  nor  to  please, 
That  neither  spares  nor  spends  ; 

But  by  discretion  weighs 
What  is  to  needful  ends. 

To  him  deserving  not, 

Not  yielding  :  nor  doth  hold 

What  is  not  his  :  doing  what 
He  ought,  not  what  he  could. 

Whom  the  base  tyrants'  will 
So  much  could  never  awe 

As  him,  for  good  or  ill, 
From  honesty  to  draw. 

Whose  constancy  doth  rise 

'Bove  undeserved  spite ; 
Whose  valuers  to  despise 

That  most  doth  him  delight. 

That  early  leave  doth  take 

Of  th'  World,  though  to  his  pain, 

For  Virtue's  only  sake ; 

And  not  till  need  constrain. 

No  man  can  be  so  free, 
Though  in  imperial  seat ; 

Nor  eminent :  as  he 

That  deemeth  nothing  great. 


4 1 6  ODES.  TM- 

L  1606. 

ODE  5. 
[An  Amouret  Anacreontic^ 

|OST  good!  most  fair! 
Or  thing  as  rare ! 
To  call  you  's  lost ; 
For  all  the  cost 
Words  can  bestow 
So  poorly  show 
Upon  your  praise, 
That  all  the  ways 
Sense  hath,  come  short. 
Whereby  Report 
Falls  them  under : 
That  when  Wonder 
More  hath  seized ; 
Yet  not  pleased 
That  it,  in  kind, 
Nothing  can  find, 
You  to  express. 
Nevertheless 
As  by  globes  small 
This  mighty  ALL 
Is  shewed,  though  far 
From  life ;  each  star 
A  World  being : 
So  we  seeing 
You,  like  as  that, 
Only  trust  what 
Art  doth  us  teach. 
And  when  I  reach 
At  Moral  Things, 
And  that  my  strings 
Gravely  should  strike ; 
Straight  some  mislike 
Blotteth  mine  Ode ; 
As,  with  the  Load, 
The  Steel  we  touch  : 
Forced  ne'er  so  much ; 


M.  Drayton.  1  f-\ 

i6o6,  UDES. 


Yet  still  removes 
To  that  it  loves, 
Till  there  it  stays. 
So  to  your  praise 
I  turn  ever  : 
And  though  never 
From  you  moving  ; 
Happy  so  loving. 


ODE  6. 

[Love's  Conquest."] 

ER  JT  granted  me  to  choose, 
How  I  would  end  my  days, 

Since  I  this  life  must  lose; 
It  should  be  in  your  praise : 
For  there  are  no  Bays 
Can  be  set  above  You. 

S'  impossibly  I  love  You ; 
And  for  You  sit  so  high 

(Whence  none  may  remove  You) 
In  my  clear  Poesy, 
That  I  oft  deny 

You  so  ample  merit. 

The  freedom  of  my  spirit 
Maintaining,  still,  my  cause ; 

Your  sex  not  to  inherit, 
Urging  the  Salic  Laws  : 
But  your  virtue  draws 

From  me  every  due. 

Thus  still  You  me  pursue, 
That  nowhere  I  can  dwell ; 
By  fear  made  just  to  You, 

2D  I0 


418  ODES.  [ 

Who  naturally  rebel ; 
Of  You  that  excel 

That  should  I  still  endite. 

Yet  will  You  want  some  rite. 
That  lost  in  your  high  praise, 

I  wander  to  and  fro ; 
As  seeing  sundry  ways  : 
Yet  which  the  right  not  know 

To  get  out  of  this  Maze. 


IM.  Drayton. 
1606. 


ODE  7. 

[An  Ode  written  in  the  Peak.] 

His  while  we  are  abroad, 

Shall  we  not  touch  our  Lyre  ? 

Shall  we  not  sing  an  Ode  ? 
Shall  that  holy  fire, 

In  us  that  strongly  glowed, 
In  this  cold  air  expire  ? 

Long  since  the  Summer  laid 

Her  lusty  bravery  down ; 
The  Autumn  half  is  weighed, 

And  BOREAS  'gins  to  frown  : 
Since  now  I  did  behold 

Great  BRUTE'S  first  builded  town. 

Though  in  the  utmost  Peak, 

A  while  we  do  remain ; 
Amongst  the  mountains  bleak, 

Exposed  to  sleet  and  rain  : 
No  sport  our  hours  shall  break, 

To  exercise  our  vein. 


M.  Drayton.1  Cl  T\  TP  o 

1606. J  U  D  E  S.  419 

What  though  bright  PHCEBUS*  beams 

Refresh  the  southern  ground ; 
And  though  the  princely  Thames 

With  beauteous  Nymphs  abound ; 
And  by  old  Camber's  streams 

Be  many  wonders  found  : 

Yet  many  rivers  clear 

Here  glide  in  silver  swathes ; 
And  what  of  all  most  dear, 

Buxton's  delicious  baths, 
Strong  ale,  and  noble  cheer, 

Tassuage  breem  Winter's  scathes. 

Those  grim  and  horrid  caves, 

Whose  looks  affright  the  day ; 
Wherein  nice  Nature  saves 

What  she  would  not  bewray : 
Our  better  leisure  craves, 

And  doth  invite  our  Lay. 

In  places  far,  or  near, 

Or  famous,  or  obscure ; 
Where  wholesome  is  the  air, 

Or  where  the  most  impure ; 
All  times,  and  everywhere, 

The  Muse  is  still  in  ure. 


ODE  8. 

ING  we  the  Rose! 
Than  which  no  flower  there  grows 

Is  sweeter ; 

And  aptly  her  compare 
With  what  in  that  is  rare : 
A  parallel  none  meeter. 


420  ODES.  [M- 

Or  made  posies, 
Of  this  that  encloses 

Such  blisses : 
That  naturally  flusheth, 

As  she  blusheth 
When  she  is  robbed  of  kisses. 

Or  if  strewed, 
When  with  the  mor  ing  dewed  ; 

Or  stilling ; 

Or  how  to  sense  exposed : 
All  which  in  her  enclosed, 
Each  place  with  sweetness  filling. 

That  most  renowned 
By  Nature  richly  crowned 

With  yellow ; 
Of  that  delicious  lair : 
And  as  pure  her  hair, 
Unto  the  same  the  fellow. 

Fearing  of  harm ; 
Nature  that  flower  doth  arm 

From  danger : 

The  touch  gives  her  offence, 
But  with  reverence 
Unto  herself,  a  stranger. 

The  red,  or  white, 
Or  mixed,  the  sense  delight, 

Beholding, 
In  her  complexion : 
All  which  perfection, 
Such  harmony  infolding, 

That  divided, 
Ere  it  was  decided 

Which  most  pure, 
Began  the  grievous  War 
Of  YORK  and  LANCASTER, 
That  did  many  years  endure. 


Drayton. 
1606. 


M.  Drayton.n  C\  T\  IT  c 

i6o6.J  LJ  D  E  S.  421 

Conflicts  as  great 
As  were  in  all  that  heat, 

I  sustain  : 

By  her,  as  many  hearts 
As  men  on  either  parts, 
That  with  her  eyes  hath  slain. 

The  Primrose  flower, 
The  first  of  FLORA'S  bower 

Is  placed  : 

So  is  She  first,  as  best : 
Though  excellent  the  rest ; 
All  gracing,  by  none  graced. 


ODE   9. 

[A  Skeltoniad.'] 

HE  Muse  should  be  sprightly; 
Yet  not  handling  lightly 
Things  grave  :  as  much  loath 
Things  that  be  slight,  to  cloathe 
Curiously.     To  retain 
The  Comeliness  in  mean 
Is  true  Knowledge  and  Wit. 
Nor  me  forced  rage  doth  fit, 
That  I  thereto  should  lack 
Tobacco,  or  need  Sack  ; 
Which  to  the  colder  brain 
Is  the  true  Hippocrene. 
Nor  did  I  ever  care 
For  Great  Fools,  nor  them  spare. 
Virtue,  though  neglected, 
Is  not  so  dejected 
As  vilely  to  descend 
To  low  baseness,  their  end  : 
Neither  each  rhyming  slave 


422  ODES.  [M'Drai6o!s' 

Deserves  the  name  to  have 

Of  Poet.     So,  the  rabble 

Of  Fools,  for  the  table, 

That  have  their  jests  by  heart, 

As  an  Actor  his  part, 

Might  assume  them  chairs 

Amongst  the  Muses'  heirs. 

Parnassus  is  not  clomb 

By  every  such  Mome  : 

Up  whose  steep  side  who  swerves, 

It  behoves  t'  have  strong  nerves. 

My  resolution  such 

How  well,  and  not  how  much, 

To  write.     Thus  do  I  fare 

Like  some  few  good,  that  care 

(The  evil  sort  among) 

How  well  to  live,  and  not  how  long. 


ODE  10. 
[His  Defence  against  the  idle  Critic.} 

HE  Ryme  nor  mars,  nor  makes  ; 
Nor  addeth  it,  nor  takes, 

From  that  which  we  propose  : 
Things  imaginary 
Do  so  strangely  vary 

That  quickly  we  them  lose. 

And  what 's  quickly  begot, 
As  soon  again  is  not ; 

This  do  I  truly  know. 
Yea,  and  what 's  born  with  pain ; 
That,  Sense  doth  long'st  retain, 

Gone  with  a  greater  flow. 


M.  Drayton.l  (~\  ~  ,-,  0 

1606.  UDES. 


1606.  J 


Yet  this  Critic  so  stern, 

(But  whom,  none  must  discern 

Nor  perfectly  have  seeing) 
Strangely  lays  about  him, 
As  nothing  without  him 

Were  worthy  of  being, 

That  I  myself  betray 

To  that  most  public  way  ; 

Where  the  World's  old  bawd 
Custom,  that  doth  humour, 
And  by  idle  rumour, 

Her  dotages  applaud. 

That  whilst  she  still  prefers 
Those  that  be  wholly  hers, 

Madness  and  Ignorance  ; 
I  creep  behind  the  Time, 
From  spertling  with  their  crime  ; 

And  glad  too  with  my  chance. 

O  wretched  World  the  while, 
When  the  evil  most  vile 

Beareth  the  fairest  face  ; 
And  inconstant  lightness, 
With  a  scornful  slightness, 

The  best  things  doth  disgrace  ! 

Whilst  this  strange  knowing  beast, 
Man  ;  of  himself  the  least, 

His  envy  declaring, 
Makes  Virtue  to  descend, 
Her  title  to  defend 

Against  him  ;  much  preparing. 

Yet  these  me  not  delude, 
Nor  from  my  place  extrude, 

By  their  resolved  hate  ; 
Their  vileness  that  do  know  : 
Which  to  myself  I  show, 

To  keep  above  my  fate. 


424  ODES.  [M'Dra^S 


ODE  ii. 

To  the  Virginian  Voyage. 

Ou  brave  heroic  minds, 
Worthy  your  country's  name, 

That  Honour  still  pursue  ; 

Go  and  subdue ! 
Whilst  loitering  hinds 

Lurk  here  at  home  with  shame. 


Britans,  you  stay  too  long  ; 

Quickly  aboard  bestow  you  ! 
And  with  a  merry  gale 
Swell  your  stretched  sail ! 

With  vows  as  strong 

As  the  winds  that  blow  you. 

Your  course  securely  steer, 
West-and-by-South  forth  keep ! 

Rocks,  Lee-shores,  nor  Shoals, 

When  EOLUS  scowls, 
You  need  not  fear  ! 
So  absolute  the  deep. 

And  cheerfully  at  sea, 
Success  you  still  entice, 

To  get  the  pearl  and  gold  ; 

And  ours  to  hold, 
Virginia, 
Earth's  only  Paradise. 

Where  Nature  hath  in  store 
Fowl,  venison,  and  fish  : 

And  the  fruitful  soil ; 

Without  your  toil, 
Three  harvests  more, 
All  greater  than  your  wish. 


M.  Drayton.T  C\  n  V  o 

1606.  J  U  D  E  S.  425 

And  the  ambitious  vine 
Crowns,  with  his  purple  mass, 

The  cedar  reaching  high 

To  kiss  the  sky. 
The  cypress,  pine, 
And  useful  sassafras. 

To  whose,  the  Golden  Age 
Still  Nature's  laws  doth  give  : 

No  other  cares  that  tend, 

But  them  to  defend 
From  winter's  age, 
That  long  there  doth  not  live. 

When  as  the  luscious  smell 
Of  that  delicious  land, 

Above  the  seas  that  flows, 

The  clear  wind  throws, 
Your  hearts  to  swell, 
Approaching  the  dear  strand. 

In  kenning  of  the  shore 
(Thanks  to  GOD  first  given  ! ) 

O  you,  the  happiest  men, 

Be  frolic  then ! 
Let  cannons  roar ! 
Frightening  the  wide  heaven. 

And  in  regions  far, 

Such  heroes  bring  ye  forth 

As  those  from  whom  We  came ! 

And  plant  our  name 
Under  that  Star 
Not  known  unto  our  North  ! 

And  as  there  plenty  grows 
Of  laurel  everywhere, 

APOLLO'S  sacred  tree ; 

You  it  may  see 
A  Poet's  brows 
To  crown,  that  may  sing  there. 


426 


ODES. 

Thy  Voyages  attend, 
Industrious  HAKLUYT  ! 

Whose  reading  shall  inflame 

Men  to  seek  fame  ; 
And  much  commend 
To  after  Times  thy  wit. 


.  Drayton. 
r6o6. 


ODE  12. 

To  the  Cambro-Britans  and  their  Harp,  his 
Ballad  of  Agincourt. 

[Besides  this  Ballad  :  MICHAEL  DRAYTON  published,  in  1627,  a  much 
longer  Poem  upon  this  celebrated  Battle.] 

AlR  stood  the  wind  for  France, 
When  we  our  sails  advance  ; 
Nor  now  to  prove  our  chance 

Longer  will  tarry. 
But  putting  to  the  main  ; 
At  Caux,  the  mouth  of  Seine, 
With  all  his  martial  train 
Landed  King  HARRY. 

And  taking  many  a  fort 
Furnished  in  warlike  sort, 
Marcheth  towards  Agincourt 

In  happy  hour ; 
Skirmishing,  day  by  day, 
With  those  that  stopped  his  way, 
Where  the  French  General  lay 

With  all  his  Power. 

Which,  in  his  height  of  pride, 
King  HENRY  to  deride ; 
His  ransom  to  provide, 

To  the  King  sending. 


1"8X]  ODES.  427 

Which  he  neglects  the  while, 
As  from  a  nation  vile  ; 
Yet,  with  an  angry  smile, 
Their  fall  portending. 

And  turning  to  his  men, 
Quoth  our  brave  HENRY  then : 
"  Though  they  to  one  be  ten 

Be  not  amazed ! 
Yet  have  we  well  begun  : 
Battles  so  bravely  won 
Have  ever  to  the  sun 

By  Fame  been  raised  ! " 

"  And  for  myself,"  quoth  he, 
"  This  my  full  rest  shall  be  : 
England  ne'er  mourn  for  me, 

Nor  more  esteem  me ! 
Victor  I  will  remain, 
Or  on  this  earth  lie  slain  : 
Never  shall  She  sustain 

Loss  to  redeem  me  ! 

"  Poitiers  and  Cressy  tell, 
When  most  their  pride  did  swell, 
Under  our  swords  they  fell. 

No  less  our  skill  is. 
Than  when  our  Grandsire  great, 
Claiming  the  regal  seat, 
By  many  a  warlike  feat 

Lopped  the  French  lillies." 

The  Duke  of  YORK  so  dread 
The  eager  Vanward  led  ; 
With  the  Main,  HENRY  sped 

Amongst  his  henchmen : 
EXETER  had  the  Rear, 
A  braver  man  not  there ! 
O  Lord,  how  hot  they  were 

On  the  false  Frenchmen ! 


428  ODE  s.  [M 

They  now  to  fight  are  gone  ; 
Armour  on  armour  shone  ; 
Drum  now  to  drum  did  groan  : 

To  hear,  was  wonder. 
That,  with  cries  they  make, 
The  very  earth  did  shake  ; 
Trumpet,  to  trumpet  spake  ; 

Thunder,  to  thunder. 

Well  it  thine  age  became, 
O  noble  ERPINGHAM  ! 
Which  didst  the  signal  aim 

To  our  hid  forces  : 
When,  from  a  meadow  by, 
Like  a  storm  suddenly, 
The  English  Archery 

Stuck  the  French  horses. 

With  Spanish  yew  so  strong ; 
Arrows  a  cloth-yard  long, 
That  like  to  serpents  stung, 

Piercing  the  weather. 
None  from  his  fellow  starts  ; 
But,  playing  manly  parts, 
And  like  true  English  hearts, 

Stuck  close  together. 

When  down  their  bows  they  threw ; 
And  forth  their  bilbowes  [swords']  drew 
And  on  the  French  they  flew  : 

Not  one  was  tardy. 
Arms  were  from  the  shoulders  sent 
Scalps  to  the  teeth  were  rent, 
Down  the  French  peasants  went  : 

Our  men  were  hardy. 

This  while  our  noble  King, 
His  broad  sword  brandishing, 
Down  the  French  host  did  ding 
As  to  o'erwhelm  it. 


ODES.  429 


And  many  a  deep  wound  lent ; 
His  arms  with  blood  besprent, 
And  many  a  cruel  dent 
Bruised  his  helmet. 

GLOUCESTER  that  Duke  so  good, 
Next  of  the  royal  blood, 
For  famous  England  stood 

With  his  brave  brother. 
CLARENCE,  in  steel  so  bright, 
Though  but  a  Maiden  Knight; 
Yet  in  that  furious  fight, 

Scarce  such  another ! 

WARWICK,  in  blood  did  wade ; 
OXFORD,  the  foe  invade, 
And  cruel  slaughter  made, 

Still  as  they  ran  up. 
SUFFOLK  his  axe  did  ply ; 
BEAUMONT  and  WILLOUGHBY 
Bare  them  right  doughtily  : 

FERRERS,  and  FANHOPE. 

Upon  Saint  CRISPIN'S  Day, 
Fought  was  this  noble  Fray ; 
Which  Fame  did  not  delay 

To  England  to  carry. 
O  when  shall  English  men 
With  such  acts  fill  a  pen  ? 
Or  England  breed  again 

Such  a  King  HARRY  ? 


FINIS. 


PREFACE  TO  THE  ADDITIONAL  ODES  OF  1619. 

To  the  worthy  Knight,  and  my  noble  friend, 

Sir  HENRY  GOOD  ERE,  a  Gentleman  of 

His  Majesty's  Privy  Chamber. 

HESE  Lyric  pieces,  short,  and  few, 
Most  worthy  Sir,  I  send  to  you  ; 

To  read  them  be  not  weary ! 
They  may  become  JOHN  HEWES  his  lyre, 
Which  oft,  at  Poles  worth,*  by  the  fire, 
Hath  made  us  gravely  merry. 

Believe  it,  he  must  have  the  trick 
Of  Ryming,  with  Invention  quick, 

That  should  do  Lyrics  well : 
But  how  I  have  done  in  this  kind, 
Though  in  myself  I  cannot  find, 

Your  judgment  best  can  tell. 

Th'  old  British  Bards  (upon  their  harps 
For  falling  Flats,  and  rising  Sharps, 

That  curiously  were  strung) 
To  stir  their  Youth  to  warlike  rage, 
Or  their  wild  fury  to  assuage, 

In  these  loose  Numbers  sung. 

No  more  I,  for  fools'  censure  pass, 
Than  for  the  braying  of  an  ass  ; 

Nor  once  mine  ear  will  lend  them  : 
If  you  but  please  to  take  in  gree 
These  Odes,  sufficient  'tis  to  me : 

Your  liking  can  commend  them. 

Yours, 

MICHAEL  DRAYTON. 

*  In  Warwickshire. 


ODES,  431 

WITH   OTHER   LYRIC   POESIES. 

To  his  Valentine. 

USE,  bid  the  Morn  awake ! 

Sad  Winter  now  declines, 
Each  bird  doth  choose  a  Make ; 

This  day  's  Saint  VALENTINE'S. 
For  that  good  Bishop's  sake 
Get  up,  and  let  us  see 
What  Beauty  it  shall  be 

That  Fortune  us  assigns  ! 

But,  lo,  in  happy  hour, 

The  place  wherein  she  lies ; 
In  yonder  climbing  Tower, 

Gilt  by  the  glitt'ring  Rise. 
O,  JOVE,  that  in  a  shower 
(As  once  that  Thunderer  did, 
When  he  in  drops  lay  hid) 

That  I  could  her  surprise ! 

Her  canopy  I'll  draw, 

With  spangled  plumes  bedight : 
No  mortal  ever  saw 

So  ravishing  a  sight ; 
That  it  the  Gods  might  awe, 
And  pow'rfully  transpierce 
The  globy  Universe, 

Outshooting  every  light. 

My  lips  I'll  softly  lay 

Upon  her  heavenly  cheek, 
Dyed  like  the  dawning  day, 

As  polished  ivory  sleek  ; 
And  in  her  ear  I'll  say : 
"  O  thou  bright  Morning  Star ! 
'Tis  I,  that  come  so  far, 

My  Valentine  to  seek. 

"  Each  little  bird,  this  tide, 

Doth  choose  her  loved  pheere ; 


432       ODES,  WITH  OTHER  LYRIC  POESIES. 

Which  constantly  abide 
In  wedlock  all  the  year, 

As  Nature  is  their  guide  ; 

So  may  we  Two  be  true 

This  year,  nor  change  for  new ; 
As  turtles  coupled  were. 

"  The  sparrow,  swan,  the  dove, 
Though  VENUS'  birds  they  be ; 

Yet  are  they  not  for  love, 
So  absolute  as  we ! 

For  reason  us  doth  move ; 

But  they  by  billing  woo. 

Then  try  what  we  can  do ! 
To  whom  each  sense  is  free. 

"  Which  we  have  more  than  they, 
By  livelier  organs  swayed  ; 

Our  Appetite  each  way 
More  by  our  Sense  obeyed. 

Our  Passions  to  display, 

This  season  us  doth  fit ; 

Then  let  us  follow  it, 
As  Nature  us  doth  lead ! 

"  One  kiss  in  two  let 's  breathe ! 

Confounded  with  the  touch, 
But  half  words  let  us  speak ! 

Our  lips  employed  so  much, 
Until  we  both  grow  weak  : 
With  sweetness  of  thy  breath, 
O  smother  me  to  death ! 

Long  let  our  joys  be  such  ! 

"  Let 's  laugh  at  them  that  choose 
Their  Valentines  by  lot ; 

To  wear  their  names  that  use, 
Whom  idly  they  have  got." 

Saint  VALENTINE,  befriend ! 

We  thus  this  Morn  may  spend : 
Else,  Muse,  awake  her  not ! 


M'Drai60i£]     ODES,  WITH  OTHER  LYRIC  POESIES.      433 

The  Heart. 

F  thus  we  needs  must  go ; 
What  shall  our  one  Heart  do, 
This  One  made  of  our  Two  ? 

Madam,  two  Hearts  we  brake ; 
And  from  them  both  did  take 
The  best,  one  Heart  to  make. 

Half  this  is  of  your  Heart, 
Mine  in  the  other  part ; 
Joined  by  an  equal  Art. 

Were  it  cemented,  or  sewn  ; 
By  shreds  or  pieces  known, 
We  might  each  find  our  own. 

But  'tis  dissolved  and  fixed  ; 
And  with  such  cunning  mixed, 
No  difference  that  betwixt. 

But  how  shall  we  agree, 
By  whom  it  kept  shall  be : 
Whether  by  you  or  me  ? 

It  cannot  two  breasts  fill ; 
One  must  be  heart-less  still, 
Until  the  other  will. 

It  came  to  me  to-day  : 
When  I  willed  it  to  say, 
With  Whether  would  it  stay? 

It  told  me,  "In  your  breast; 
Where  it  might  hope  to  rest : 
For  if  it  were  my  guest, 

"  For  certainty,  it  knew 
That  I  would  still  anew 
Be  sending  it  to  you  ! " 

2E  10 


434      ODES,  WITH  OTHER  LYRIC  POESIES. 

Never,  I  think,  had  two 
Such  work,  so  much,  to  do  : 
A  Unity  to  woo  ! 

Yours  was  so  cold  and  chaste  : 
Whilst  mine  with  zeal  did  waste  ; 
Like  Fire  with  Water  placed. 

How  did  my  Heart  intreat  ! 
How  pant  !  How  did  it  beat, 
Till  it  could  give  yours  heat  ! 

Till  to  that  temper  brought, 
Through  our  perfection  wrought, 
That  blessing  cither's  thought. 

In  such  a  height  it  lies 

From  this  base  World's  dull  eyes  ; 

That  Heaven  it  not  envies. 


All  that  this  Earth  can  show, 
Our  Heart  shall  not  once  know  ! 
For  it's  too  vile  and  low. 


The  Sacrifice  to  APOLLO. 

RIESTS  of  APOLLO,  sacred  be  the  room 
For  this  learned  meeting!  Let  no  barbarous  groom , 

How  brave  soe'er  he  be, 

Attempt  to  enter ! 

But  of  the  Muses  free, 

None  here  may  venture  ! 
This  for  the  Delphian  Prophets  is  prepared  : 
The  profane  Vulgar  are  from  hence  debarred  ! 


M.  Drayton." 


ODES,  WITH  OTHER  LYRIC  POESIES.      435 


And  since  the  Feast  so  happily  begins  ; 
Call  up  those  fair  Nine,  with  their  violins ! 

They  are  begot  by  JOVE. 

Then  let  us  place  them 

Where  no  clown  in  may  shove, 

That  may  disgrace  them  : 
But  let  them  near  to  young  APOLLO  sit ; 
So  shall  his  foot-pace  overflow  with  wit. 

Where  be  the  Graces  ?     Where  be  those  fair  Three  ? 
In  any  hand,  they  may  not  absent  be ! 

They  to  the  Gods  are  dear : 

And  they  can  humbly 

Teach  us,  ourselves  to  bear, 

And  do  things  comely. 

They,  and  the  Muses,  rise  both  from  one  stem : 
They  grace  the  Muses ;  and  the  Muses,  them. 

Bring  forth  your  flagons,  filled  with  sparkling  wine 
(Whereon  swollen  BACCHUS,  crowned  with  a  vine, 

Is  graven) ;  and  fill  out ! 

It  well  bestowing 

To  every  man  about, 

In  goblets  flowing ! 

Let  not  a  man  drink,  but  in  draughts  profound ! 
To  our  god  PHOEBUS,  let  the  Health  go  round ! 

Let  your  Jests  fly  at  large ;  yet  therewithal 
See  they  be  Salt,  but  yet  not  mixed  with  Gall ! 

Not  tending  to  disgrace : 

But  fairly  given, 

Becoming  well  the  place, 

Modest  and  even, 

That  they,  with  tickling  pleasure,  may  provoke 
Laughter  in  him  on  whom  the  Jest  is  broke. 

Or  if  the  deeds  of  Heroes  ye  rehearse : 
Let  them  be  sung  in  so  well-ordered  Verse, 

That  each  word  have  its  weight, 

Yet  run  with  pleasure ! 


436    ODES,  WITH  OTHER  LYRIC  POESIES.       [J 

Holding  one  stately  height 

In  so  brave  measure 

That  they  may  make  the  stiffest  storm  seem  weak  ; 
And  damp  JOVE's  thunder,  when  it  loud'st  doth  speak. 

And  if  ye  list  to  exercise  your  vein, 

Or  in  the  Sock,  or  in  the  Buskined  strain  ; 

Let  Art  and  Nature  go 

One  with  the  other ! 

Yet  so,  that  Art  may  show 

Nature  her  mother : 

The  thick-brained  audience  lively  to  awake, 
Till  with  shrill  claps  the  Theatre  do  shake. 

Sing  Hymns  to  BACCHUS  then,  with  hands  upreared  ! 
Offer  to  JOVE,  who  most  is  to  be  feared ! 

From  him  the  Muse  we  have. 

From  him  proceedeth 

More  than  we  dare  to  crave. 

Tis  he  that  feedeth 

Them,  whom  the  World  would  starve.    Then  let  the  lyre 
Sound !  whilst  his  altars  endless  flames  expire. 


To  his  Rival. 

ER  loved  I  most, 

By  thee  that 's  lost, 
Though  she  were  won  with  leisure ; 

She  was  my  gain  : 

But  to  my  pain, 
Thou  spoilest  me  of  my  treasure. 


The  ship  full  fraught 

With  gold,  far  sought, 
Though  ne'er  so  wisely  helmed, 

May  suffer  wrack 

In  sailing  back, 
By  tempest  overwhelmed. 


ODES,  WITH  OTHER  LYRIC  POESIES.      437 

But  She,  good  Sir! 

Did  not  prefer 
You,  for  that  I  was  ranging : 

But  for  that  She 

Found  faith  in  me, 
And  She  loved  to  be  changing. 

Therefore  boast  not 

Your  happy  lot ; 
Be  silent  now  you  have  her ! 

The  time  I  knew 

She  slighted  you, 
When  I  was  in  her  favour. 

None  stands  so  fast 

But  may  be  cast 
By  Fortune,  and  disgraced : 

Once  did  I  wear 

Her  garter  there, 
Where  you  her  glove  have  placed. 

I  had  the  vow 

That  thou  hast  now, 
And  glances  to  discover 

Her  love  to  me ; 

And  She  to  thee, 
Reads  but  old  lessons  over. 

She  hath  no  smile 

That  can  beguile ; 
But,  as  my  thought,  I  know  it ! 

Yea  to  a  hair, 

Both  when,  and  where, 
And  how,  she  will  bestow  it 

What  now  is  thine 

Was  only  mine, 
And  first  to  me  was  given ; 

Thou  laugh'st  at  me ! 

I  laugh  at  thee ! 
And  thus  we  two  are  even, 
2  E  2 


438      ODES,  WITH  OTHER  LYRIC  POESIES.     [M- 

But  I'll  not  mourn, 

But  stay  my  turn  ; 
The  wind  may  come  about,  Sir ! 

And  once  again 

May  bring  me  in  ; 
And  help  to  bear  you  out,  Sir  ! 


1619. 


The  Crier. 

OOD  folk,  for  gold  or  hire, 
But  help  me  to  a  Crier ! 
For  my  poor  Heart  is  run  astray 
After  two  Eyes,  that  passed  this  way. 

Oh  yes  !  O  yes  !  O  yes ! 
If  there  be  any  man, 
In  town  or  country,  can 
Bring  me  my  Heart  again ; 
I'll  please  him  for  his  pain. 

And  by  these  marks,  I  will  you  show 
That  only  I  this  Heart  do  owe  \pwn\  : 

It  is  a  wounded  Heart, 

Wherein  yet  sticks  the  dart. 
Every  piece  sore  hurt  throughout  it : 
Faith  and  Troth  writ  round  about  it. 
It  was  a  tame  Heart,  and  a  dear  ; 

And  never  used  to  roam  : 
But  having  got  this  haunt,  I  fear 

'Twill  hardly  stay  at  home 

For  God's  sake,  walking  by  the  way, 
If  you  my  Heart  do  see ; 

Either  impound  it  for  a  Stray, 
Or  send  it  back  to  me ! 


M.Drayton.J  QDES, 

To  his  coy  Love. 
A  Canzonet. 

PRAY  thee  leave !     Love  me  no  more ! 

Call  home  the  heart  you  gave  me ! 
I  but  in  vain  that  Saint  adore 

That  can,  but  will  not,  save  me. 
These  poor  half  kisses  kill  me  quite ! 

Was  ever  man  thus  served  ? 
Amidst  an  ocean  of  delight, 

For  pleasure  to  be  starved. 

Show  me  no  more  those  snowy  breasts 

With  azure  riverets  branched  ! 
Where  whilst  mine  Eye  with  plenty  feeds, 

Yet  is  my  thirst  not  staunched. 
O  TANTALUS,  thy  pains  ne'er  tell ! 

By  me  thou  art  prevented : 
'Tis  nothing  to  be  plagued  in  Hell ; 

But,  thus,  in  Heaven,  tormented  ! 

Clip  me  no  more  in  those  dear  arms ; 

Nor  thy  "  Life's  Comfort "  call  me  ! 
O  these  are  but  too  powerful  charms ; 

And  do  but  more  enthrall  me. 
But  see  how  patient  I  am  grown, 

In  all  this  coil  about  thee ! 
Come,  nice  Thing,  let  thy  heart  alone ! 

I  cannot  live  without  thee ! 


A  Hymn  to  his  Lady's  Birth-place. 

OVENTRY,  that  dost  adorn 
The  country  [County']  wherein  I  was  born : 
Yet  therein  lies  not  thy  praise ; 
Why  I  should  crown  thy  Towers  with  bays  ? 
'Tis  not  thy  Wall,  me  to  thee  weds ;       Coventry 
Thy  Ports  ;  nor  thy  proud  Pyramids  ;     *»»*  walled- 


440     ODES,  WITH  OTHER  LYRIC  POESIES.     [M> 


Drayton. 
1619. 


The  shoulder- 


bigness. 


Two  famous 
Pilgrimages : 
one  in  Norfolk, 
the  other  in 
Kent. 

GODIVA,  Duke 
LEOFRIC'S 
•wife,  who 
obtained  the 
freedom  of  the 
city  of  her  hus- 
band, by  riding 
through  it 
naked. 


Que«n 
ELIZABETH. 


Nor  thy  trophies  of  the  Boar : 
But  that  She  which  I  adore, 
(Which  scarce  Goodness's  self  can  pair) 
First  there  breathing,  blest  thy  air. 

IDEA  ;  in  which  name  I  hide 

Her,  in  my  heart  deified. 

For  what  good,  Man's  mind  can  see ; 

Only  her  ideas  be  : 

She,  in  whom  the  Virtues  came 

In  Woman's  shape,  and  took  her  name. 

She  so  far  past  imitation 

As  (but  Nature  our  creation 

Could  not  alter)  she  had  aimed 

More  than  Woman  to  have  framed. 

She  whose  truly  written  story, 

To  thy  poor  name  shall  add  more  glory, 

Than  if  it  should  have  been  thy  chance 

T'  have  bred  our  Kings  that  conquered  France. 

Had  she  been  born  the  former  Age, 
That  house  had  been  a  Pilgrimage ; 
And  reputed  more  Divine 
Than  Walsingham,  or  BECKET'S  Shrine. 

That  Princess,  to  whom  thou  dost  owe 
Thy  Freedom  (whose  clear  blushing  snow 
The  envious  sun  saw ;  when  as  she 
Naked  rode  to  make  thee  free), 
Was  but  her  type :  as  to  foretell 
Thou  shouldst  bring  forth  One  should  excel 
Her  bounty ;  by  whom  thou  shouldst  have 
More  Honour,  than  she  Freedom  gave. 

And  that  great  Queen,  which  but  of  late 
Ruled  this  land  in  peace  and  State, 
Had  not  been  ;  but  Heaven  had  sworn 
A  Maid  should  reign  when  She  was  born. 

Of  thy  streets,  which  thou  hold'st  best, 
And  most  frequent  of  the  rest ; 


M'Draj6°9'.]     ODES,  WITH  OTHER  LYRIC  POESIES.       441 
Happy  Mich  Park  I     Every  year,  A  noted  street 

OS.      T"          A.-L.       e    A  ,1  in  Coventry, 

n  the  Fourth  of  August  there,  His  Mistress's 

Let  thy  Maids,  from  FLORA'S  bowers,     birthday- 
With  their  choice  and  daintiest  flowers 
Deck  thee  up !  and  from  their  store, 
With  brave  garlands  crown  that  door ! 

The  old  man  passing  by  that  way, 
To  his  son,  in  time,  shall  say : 
"  There  was  that  Lady  born  :  which 
Long  to  after  Ages  shall  be  sung." 
Who,  unawares  being  passed  by, 
Back  to  that  house  shall  cast  his  eye ; 
Speaking  my  verses  as  he  goes, 
And  with  a  sigh  shut  every  Close. 

Dear  City  !  travelling  by  thee, 
When  thy  rising  Spires  I  see, 
Destined  her  Place  of  Birth  ; 
Yet  methinks  the  very  earth 
Hallowed  is,  so  far  as  I 
Can  thee  possibly  descry. 
Then  thou,  dwelling  in  this  place, 
(Hearing  some  rude  hind  disgrace 
Thy  city,  with  some  scurvy  thing 
Which  some  Jester  forth  did  bring) 
Speak  these  Lines,  where  thou  dost  come, 
And  strike  the  slave  for  ever  dumb. 


Edinburgh  :  T.  and  A.  CONSTABLE,  Printers  to  His  Majesty 


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