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And blushing evening, when she goes to bed;

Yet such as shall outshine the glimmering light,

With which all stars shall gild the follow ing night,

Nor think it much (since all thy eaglets may

Endure the sunny trial) if we say

This hath the stronger wing, or that doth shine,

Tricked up in fairer plumes, since all are thine:

Who hath his flock of cackling geese compared

With thy tuned quire of swans? or else who dared

To call thy births deformed? but if thou bind,

By city custom or by gavel-kind

In equal shares thy love on all thy race, We may distinguish of their sex and place;

Though one hand form them, and though one brain strike

Souls into all, they are not all alike. Why should the follies then of this dull age

Draw from thy pen such an immodest rage,

As seems to blast thy else-immortal bays, When thine own tongue proclaims thy itch of praise?

Such thirst will argue drought. No, let be hurled

Upon thy works, by the detracting world, What malice can suggest: let the rout say,

"The running sands that, ere thou make a play,

Count the slow minutes, might a Godwin frame,

"

To swallow, when thou hast done, thy shipwrecked name.' Let them the dear expense of oil upbraid, Sucked by thy watchful lamp, "that bath betrayed

To theft the blood of martyred authors, spilt

Into thy ink, whilst thou grow'st pale with guilt."

Repine not at the tapers thrifty waste,

too valuable to be kept from the readers of Shakspeare, and therefore they are treated with it by Messrs. Steevens and Malone in a hundred different places.

ODE TO BEN JONSON, UPON HIS ODE TO HIMSELF.

That sleeks thy terser poems; nor is haste

Praise, but excuse; and if thou overcome A knotty writer, bring the booty home: Nor think it theft if the rich spoils, so torn From conquered authors, be as trophies

worn.

Let others glut on the extorted praise
Of vulgar breath, trust thou to after days:
Thy laboured works shall live, when Time
devours

The abortive offspring of their hasty hours. Thou art not of their rank; the quarrel lies

Within thine own verge: then let this suffice,

The wiser world doth greater thee confess Than all men else, than thyself only less.

ODE TO BEN JONSON,
Upon his Ode to Himself.
(BY J. CLEVELAND.)

PROCEED in thy brave rage,
Which hath raised up our stage
Unto that height, as Rome in all her state,
Or Greece might emulate;

Whose greatest senators did silent sit,

Hear and applaud the wit,
Which those more temperate times,
Used when it taxed their crimes :
Socrates stood, and heard with true delight,
All that the sharp Athenian Muse could
write

Against his supposed fault;
And did digest the salt

That from that full vein did so freely flow:
And though that we do know

The Graces jointly strove to make that breast

A temple for their rest,1

We must not make thee less Than Aristophanes :

389

He got the start of thee in time and place, But thou hast gained the goal in art and grace.

But if thou make thy feasts

For the high-relished guests,

And that a cloud of shadows shall break in, It were almost a sin

To think that thou shouldst equally delight
Each several appetite ;

Though Art and Nature strive
Thy banquets to contrive:

Thou art our whole Menander,2 and dost look3

Like the old Greek; think, then, but on his Cook.4

If thou thy full cups bring
Out of the Muses' spring,

And there are some foul mouths had rather drink

Out of the common sink; There let them seek to quench th' hydropic thirst,

Till the swoln humour burst.
Let him who daily steals

From thy most precious meals,

Since thy strange plenty finds no loss by it, Feed himself with the fragments of thy wit.

And let those silken men

That know not how or when

To spend their money, or their time, maintain

With their consumed no-brain, Their barbarous feeding on such gross base stuff

As only serves to puff
Up the weak empty mind,
Like bubbles, full with wind,

And strive t' engage the scene with their damned oaths,

As they do with the privilege of their clothes.

1 This alludes to the well-known distich of ture we have of Menander, taken from an ancient Plato, which is thus rendered by Scaliger:

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Invenêre tuum pectus, Aristophanes."

2" Cæsar called Terence' Menander halfed,' because he wanted so much of his grace and sharpness. Ben Jonson may well be called our Menander whole, or more: exceeding him as much in sharpness and grace, as Terence wanted of him."-I. C.

medal."-I. C.

Comedies, makes his cook speak after this man"Menander in a fragment of one of his

ner of the diversity of tastes, viz. :

What is his usual fare?
What countryman is he?

These things 'tis meet the cook should scan:
For such nice guests as in the isles are bred,
In salt meat take little or no delight,
With various sorts of fresh fish nourished,

"Ben Jonson s said to be very like the pic-But taste them with fastidious appetite.”—I. C.

390

ODE TO BEN JONSON, UPON HIS ODE TO HIMSELF.

Whilst thou tak'st that high spirit,

Well purchased by thy merit :

Great Prince of Poets, though thy head be

gray,

Crown it with Delphic bay,

Sing, English Horace, sing
The wonders of thy King;

Whilst his triumphant chariot runs his whole

Bright course about each pole:

And from the chief [pin] in Apollo's quire, Sing down the Roman harper; he shall

Take down thy best tuned lyre,
Whose sound shall pierce so far

It shall strike out the star,

Which fabulous Greece durst fix in heaven, whilst thine,

With all due glory, here on earth shall shine.

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The Magnetic Lady; or, Humours
Reconciled.

"It

THE MAGNETIC LADY.] This comedy was brought out at the Black Friars in 1632, the licence for performing it bearing date the 12th October of that year. was generally accounted (Langbaine says) an excellent play, though in the poet's days it found some enemies." So indeed did everything written by Jonson: for "the envious Ben" (who was nevertheless more liberal, not to say lavish, of his praise than any writer before or since his time), was unremittingly pursued by a hostile party who sickened at his triumphs and insulted over his calamities.

Among Howell's Letters there is one to our author, which notices this play.

"Father Ben.-Nullum fit magnum ingenium sine mixtura dementia; there's no great wit without some mixture of madness, so saith the philosopher, nor was he a fool who answered, Nec parvum sine mixtura stultitiæ; nor small wit without some allay of foolishness. Touching the first it is verified in you, for I find that you have been oftentimes mad: you were mad when you writ your Fox, and madder when you writ your Alchemist; you were mad when you writ Catiline, and stark mad when you writ Sejanus; but when you writ your Epigrams and the Magnetic Lady you were not so mad. Insomuch that I perceive there be degrees of madness in you. Excuse me that I am so free with you. The madness I mean is that divine fury, that heating and heightening spirit which Ovid speaks of."

This letter, which is dated West., 27th Jan. 1629, nearly two years previous to the date already assigned to the Magnetic Lady, might contribute to weaken our confidence in the official documents of Sir H. Herbert, were not the discrepancy satisfactorily accounted for by Oldys. He tells us in his manuscript notes to Langbaine, that Howell first published his letters without any dates, and that when he attempted to subjoin them in his subsequent editions he confounded the time: "hence," says he, "so many errors in their dates."

There is yet another circumstance to be mentioned respecting this play. On its first appearance it gave great offence by its oaths. For these the actors were called before the High Commission Court, and severely censured. As the author was sick in bed, they boldly laid the fault on him; Jonson, however, completely justified himself from this atrocious charge, as did the Master of the Revels, on whom they had next the audacity to lay it; and the players then "humbly confessed that they had themselves interpolated the offensive passages." For this curious circumstance, which is important on many accounts, we are indebted to the Office-book of Sir Henry Herbert.-See Shak. vol. ii. p. 380.

The Magnetic Lady was first published in the second fol., and bears date 1640, three years at least after Jonson's death: when the editor, as I should have remarked of all the plays collected in that volume, had forgotten how the author spelt his name. It had originally this motto subjoined to the title, to which it is not ill adapted:

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DRAMATIS

Compass, a scholar mathematic.
Captain Ironside, his brother, a soldier.
Parson Palate, prelate of the parish.
Rut, physician to Lady Loadstone.
'Tim Item, his apothecary.

Sir Diaphanous Silkworm, a courtier.
Practice, a lawyer.

Sir Moth Interest, an usurer, or money-
bawd,

PERSONE.

Bias, a vi-politic, or sub-secretary.
Needle, the lady's steward and tailor.

Lady Loadstone, the Magnetic Lady.
Polish, her gossip and she-parasite.
Placentia, her niece.

Pleasance, her waiting-woman.
Keep, the niece's nurse.
Chair, the midwife.

Servant to Sir Moth, Serjeants, &c.

The Chorus (Probee, Damplay, and Boy of the house) by way of Induction.
SCENE, London.

The Induction, or Chorus.

The Stage.

Enter Master Probee and Master Damplay,

met by a Boy of the house.

Dam. And tie us two to you for the gentle office.

Pro. We are a pair of public persons (this gentleman and myself) that are sent thus coupled unto you upon state business. Boy. It concerns but the state of the stage, I hope.

Boy. What do you lack,' gentlemen, what is't you lack? any fine fancies, figures, humours, characters, ideas, definitions of Dam. O, you shall know that by lords and ladies? Waiting-women, para-degrees, boy. No man leaps into a busisites, knights, captains, courtiers, lawyers?ness of state without fording first the state what do you lack? of the business.

Pro. A pretty prompt boy for the poetic shop!

Dam. And a bold! Where's one of your masters, sirrah, the poet?

Boy. Which of them, sir? we have divers that drive that trade now: poets, poetaccios, poetasters, poetitos

Dam. And all haberdashers of small wit, presume; we would speak with the poet of the day, boy.

Boy. Sir, he is not here. But I have the dominion of the shop for this time, under him, and can shew you all the variety the stage will afford for the present. Pro. Therein you will express your own good parts, boy.

What do you lack ?] The boy uses the language of the petty traders of the time, and the others continue the allusion.

* Sir, he is not here.] Jonson always attended

Pro. We are sent unto you, indeed, from the people.

Boy. The people! which side of the

people?

Dam. The venison side, if you know it,

boy.

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