Niger. To do a kind and careful father's part, In satisfying every pensive heart Of these my daughters, my most loved birth : Read Diod. Sicul. lib. iii. It is a conjecture of the old ethnics, that they which dwell under the south, were the first begotten of the earth. "Notissima fabula, Ovid. Met. lib. ii. Alluding to that of Juvenal, Satyr. v. Et cui per mediam nolis occurrere noctem. Which, when my daughters heard, (as women are Most jealous of their beauties) fear and care Possess'd them whole; yea, and believing them,P They wept such ceaseless tears into my stream, That it hath thus far overflow'd his shore To seek them patience: who have since, e'ermore On their scorch'd cheeks with such intemperate fires, That they a land must forthwith seek, Sounds TANIA; where bright Sol, that heat Their bloods, doth never rise or set," But in his journey passeth by, And leaves that climate of the sky, To comfort of a greater light, Who forms all beauty with his sight. In search of this, have we three princedoms past, P The poets. 9 A custom of the Æthiops, notable in Herod. and Diod. Sic. See Plin. Nat. Hist. lib. v. cap. 8. Plin. ibid. • Consult with Tacitus, in vita Agric. and the Paneg. ad Constant. Swarth Lusitania; next we did descry Rich Aquitania and yet cannot find The place unto these longing nymphs design'd. Ocea. This land, that lifts into the temperate air His snowy cliff, is Albion the fair; So call'd of Neptune's son," who ruleth here : At this the Moon was discovered in the upper part of the house, triumphant in a silver throne, made in figure of a pyramis. Her garments white and silver, the dressing of her head antique, and crowned with a luminary, or sphere of light: which striking on the clouds, and heightened with silver, reflected as natural clouds do by the splendour of the moon. The heaven about her was vaulted with blue silk, and set with stars of silver, which had in them their several lights burning. The sudden sight of which made NIGER to interrupt OCEANUS with this present passion. O see, our silver star! Whose pure, auspicious light greets us thus far! t Orpheus, in his Argonaut. calls it Aɛvкaïov xéρoov. Alluding to the right of styling princes after the name of their princedoms: so is he still Albion, and Neptune's son that governs. As also his being dear to Neptune, in being so embraced by him. * The Ethiopians worshipped the moon by that surname. See Step. περὶ πόλεων, in voce ΑΙΘΙΟΠΙΟΝ. Which long their longings urg'd their eyes to see, Æthi. Niger, be glad: resume thy native cheer. A WORLD DIVIDED FROM THE WORLD: and tried For were the world, with all his wealth, a ring, Ruled by a sun, that to this height doth grace it: Which skill Pythagoras First taught to men, by a reverberate glass.] The allusion is to what is told us by the scholiast on Aristophanes, that Pythagoras discovered a method of writing with blood on a speculum, or polished mirror; and this being held opposite to the moon, what was written on the glass would be reflected on the orb of the moon, and would appear to be written thereon. Nub. v. 750. WHAL. Indent the land, with those pure traces All things on which his radiance shines. Here the Tritons sounded, and they danced on shore, every couple, as they advanced, severally presenting their fans: in one of which were inscribed their mixt names, in the other a mute hieroglyphic, expressing their mixed qualities. Their own single dance ended, as they were about to make choice of their men: one, from the sea, was heard to call them with this CHARM, sung by a tenor voice. Come away, come away, We grow jealous of your stay: Here they danced with their men several measures and corantos. All which ended, they were again accited to sea, with a SONG of two trebles, whose cadences were iterated by a double echo from several parts of the land. Daughters of the subtle flood, Do not let earth longer entertain you; I Ech. Let earth longer entertain you. 2 Ech. Longer entertain you. Which manner of symbol I rather chose, than imprese, as well for strangeness, as relishing of antiquity, and more applying to that original doctrine of sculpture, which the Egyptians are said first to have brought from the Ethiopians. Diod. Sicul. Herod. |