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Or staid but where the friar and

you

first met,

Who from the devil's arse did guns beget;
Or fixt in the Low Countries, where you might
On both sides do your mischief with delight:
Blow up and ruin, mine and countermine,
Make your petards and granades, all your fine
Engines of murder, and enjoy the praise
Of massacring mankind so many ways!
We ask your absence here, we all love peace,
And pray the fruits thereof and the encrease;
So doth the king, and most of the king's men
That have good places: therefore once agen,
Pox on thee, Vulcan! thy Pandora's pox,
And all the ills that flew out of her box
Light on thee! or, if those plagues will not do,
Thy wife's pox on thee, and Bess Broughton's too!

W

LXII.

A SPEECH, ACCORDING TO HORACE.

HY yet, my noble hearts, they cannot say,
But we have powder still for the king's day,
And ordnance too: so much as from the
Tower,

T' have wak'd, if sleeping, Spain's ambassadour,
Old Æsop Gundomar: the French can tell,
For they did see it the last tilting well,
That we have trumpets, armour, and great horse,
Lances and men, and some a breaking force.

Old Esop Gundomar.] Gundomar appears not to have owed many obligations to nature: he was however a shrewd politician, and a bold and able negotiator. He was dreaded by the court, and disliked by the people, of which we have sufficient proof in the repeated attacks made upon him by the dramatic poets, the true mirrors of their times.

They saw too store of feathers, and more may,
If they stay here but till St. George's day.
All ensigns of a war are not yet dead,

Nor marks of wealth so from a nation fled,
But they may see gold chains and pearl worn then,
Lent by the London dames to the Lords' men:
Withal, the dirty pains those citizens take,
To see the pride at Court, their wives do make;
And the return those thankful courtiers yield,
To have their husbands drawn forth to the field,
And coming home to tell what acts were done
Under the auspice of young Swinnerton.
What a strong fort old Pimlico had been!
How it held out! how, last, 'twas taken in !—
Well, I say, thrive, thrive, brave Artillery-yard,
Thou seed-plot of the war! that hast not spar'd
Powder or paper to bring up the youth
Of London, in the military truth,

These ten years day; as all may swear that look
But on thy practice, and the posture book.

He that but saw thy curious captain's drill,
Would think no more of Flushing or the Brill,
But give them over to the common ear,
For that unnecessary charge they were.
Well did thy crafty clerk and knight, Sir Hugh,
Supplant bold Panton, and brought there to view
Translated Ælian's tactics to be read,

And the Greek discipline, with the modern, shed
So in that ground, as soon it grew to be
The city-question, whether Tilly or he
Were now the greater captain? for they saw
The Berghen siege, and taking in Bredau,
So acted to the life, as Maurice might,

And Spinola have blushed at the sight.

8 Young Swinnerton.] Sir John Swinnerton was mayor of London in 1612. This aspiring and heroic youth was probably his son. The father had endeared himself to the citizens by many benefactions.

O happy art! and wise epitome
Of bearing arms! most civil soldiery!

Thou canst draw forth thy forces, and fight dry
The battles of thy aldermanity;

Without the hazard of a drop of blood;

More than the surfeits in thee that day stood.
Go on, increas'd in virtue and in fame,
And keep the glory of the English name
Up among nations. In the stead of bold
Beauchamps and Nevills, Cliffords, Audleys old,
Insert thy Hodges, and those newer men,

As Stiles, Dike, Ditchfield, Millar, Crips, and Fen: That keep the war, though now 't be grown more

tame,

Alive yet in the noise, and still the same,

And could, if our great men would let their sons
Come to their schools, shew them the use of
guns;
And there instruct the noble English heirs
In politic and military affairs.

But he that should persuade to have this done
For education of our lordlings, soon
Should he [not] hear of billow, wind, and storm
From the tempestuous grandlings, who'll inform
Us, in our bearing, that are thus and thus,
Born, bred, allied? what's he dare tutor us?
Are we by book-worms to be aw'd? must we
Live by their scale, that dare do nothing free?
Why are we rich or great, except to show
All license in our lives? what need we know
More than to praise a dog, or horse? or speak
The hawking language? or our day to break
With citizens? let clowns and tradesmen breed
Their sons to study arts, the laws, the creed :
We will believe like men of our own rank,
In so much land a year, or such a bank,
That turns us so much monies, at which rate
Our ancestors imposed on prince and state.

Let poor nobility be virtuous: we,
Descended in a rope of titles, be

From Guy, or Bevis, Arthur, or from whom
The herald will: our blood is now become
Past any need of virtue. Let them care,
That in the cradle of their gentry are,

To serve the state by councils and by arms :
We neither love the troubles nor the harms.

What love you then? your whore; what study? gait,
Carriage, and dressing. There is up of late
The Academy, where the gallants meet-

What! to make legs? yes, and to smell most sweet:
All that they do at plays. O but first here
They learn and study; and then practise there.
But why are all these irons in the fire,

Of several makings? Helps, helps, to attire
His lordship; that is for his band, his hair
This, and that box his beauty to repair;
This other for his eye-brows: hence, away,
I may no longer on these pictures stay,
These carcases of honour; tailors' blocks
Cover'd with tissue, whose prosperity mocks
The fate of things; whilst tatter'd virtue holds
Her broken arms up to their empty moulds!

LXIII.

AN EPISTLE

TO MASTER ARTHUR SQUIB.

HAT I am not, and what I fain would be,
Whilst I inform myself, I would teach thee,
My gentle Arthur, that it might be said
One lesson we have both learn'd, and well
read.

I neither am, nor art thou one of those

That hearkens to a jack's pulse, when it goes

Nor ever trusted to that friendship yet,
Was issue of the tavern or the spit :

Much less a name would we bring up, or nurse,
That could but claim a kindred from the purse.
Those are poor ties depend on those false ends,
'Tis virtue alone, or nothing, that knits friends.
And as within your office you do take
No piece of money, but you know, or make
Inquiry of the worth; so must we do,

First weigh a friend, then touch and try him too:
For there are many slips and counterfeits.'
Deceit is fruitful: Men have masks and nets;
But these with wearing will themselves unfold,
They cannot last. No lie grew ever old.
Turn him, and see his threads; look if he be
Friend to himself that would be friend to thee.
For that is first required, a man be his own :
But he that's too much that, is friend of none.
Then rest, and a friend's value understand,
It is a richer purchase than of land.

9 And as within your office, &c.] It appears that this gentleman was one of the principal clerks in the Exchequer. I find several of his name, in succession, in the books of that office.

For there are many slips and counterfeits.] For these terms, see vol. vi. p. 71.

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