This blessed isle doth with that TANIA end, Which there they saw inscribed, and shall extend Wished satisfaction to their best desires. Britania, which the triple world admires, This isle hath now recovered for her name; Where reign those beauties that with so much fame The sacred Muses' sons have honoured, And from bright Hesperus to Eous spread. With that great name Britania, this blest isle Hath won her ancient dignity and style, A WORLD DIVIDED FROM THE WORLD: and tried The abstract of it in his general pride. For were the world with all his wealth a ring, Britania, whose new name makes all tongues sing, Might be a diamant worthy to inchase it, Ruled by a sun that to this height doth grace it: Whose beams shine day and night, and are of force To blanch an Ethiop and revive a corse. 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: We shall have more cause to fear Syrens of the land, than they 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. "Tis to them enough of good, That you give this little hope to gain night grows old, And we are grieved we cannot hold Your bodies in that purer brine And wholesome dew called ros-marine : 1 [Accited to sea. In the Brit. Mus. MS. this stands "provoked from the sea." F. C.] Owed was water, MS. t Whereof bright Venus, beauty's queen, At which, in a dance, they returned to the sea, where they took their shell, and with this full SONG went out. Now Dian, with her burning face, THE QUEEN, Co. OF BEDFORD," LA. HERBERT,3 LA. RICH,5 Co. OF SUFFOLK." By which our waters know To ebb, that late did flow. Back seas, back nymphs; but with a forward grace, Keep still your reverence to the place: And shout with joy of favour you have won, In sight of Albion, Neptune's son. So ended the first Masque; which, beside the singular grace of music and dances, had that success in the nobility of performance as nothing needs to the illustration but the memory by whom it was personated.1 1 By whom it was personated.] Jonson gives us the names of the masquers as they danced on shore in couples, from their splendid shell, together with the symbols which they bore in their hands. Countess of Bedford.] Lucy, the lady of Edward, third Earl of Bedford, and daughter of John, Lord Harrington. She was a munificent patron of genius, and seems to have been peculiarly kind to onson. One of the most exquisite compliments that ever was offered to talents, beauty, and goodness, was paid by the grateful poet to this lady. (Epig. 76.) The biographers are never weary of repeating after one another, that she was "the friend of Donne and Daniel, who wrote verses on her" but of Jonson, who wrote more than both, they preserve a rigid silence. Lady Herbert.] Called by Sir Dudley Carleton, Ann Herbert. She was the daughter of Sir William Herbert, of St. Julian's, Monmouthshire, and a great heiress. This lady was at first intended for her cousin, Philip Herbert, brother of the celebrated Lord Pembroke, the friend of Jonson and of genius; but married Sir Edward, afterwards Lord Herbert of Cherbury. Countess of Derby.] Alice, the daughter of Sir John Spencer, of Althorpe (where Jonson's beautiful Entertainment of The Satyr was represented), and widow of Ferdinando, fifth Earl of Derby. She took for her second husband Lord Keeper Egerton. For this celebrated lady, who appears to have greatly delighted in these elegant and splendid exhibitions, Milton wrote his Arcades, the songs of which are a mere cento from our The Symbols. }.} A golden tree, laden with fruit. 2. The figure Icosaedron of crystal. }3. {A pair of naked feet in a river. 4. {The SALAMANDER simple. author's Masques, of which, in fact, it is a very humble imitation. Lady Rich.] There were two of this name; but the person here meant was probably Penelope, Lady Rich, whose story made some noise at a subsequent period. She parted from her husband, as it was said, by consent, and while he was yet living married Mountjoy, Earl of Devonshire. The match was unfortunate. The King was offended, the Earl miserable, and Laud, who performed the ceremony, passed through many years of obloquy for his officiousness, notwithstanding his pretended ignorance of the lady's former marriage. • Countess of Suffolk.] Catharine, the daughter of Sir Henry Knevit, of Charlton, in Wiltshire, married first to Richard, Lord Rich, and afterwards to Lord Thomas Howard, first Earl of Suffolk. She was more famed for accomplishments than virtues, and is said to have trafficked for more favours than those of her lord. 7 Lady Bevill.] This lady, I believe (for I have but little skill in these matters), was Frances, sister of the Countess of Suffolk, just mentioned. She was the wife of Sir William Bevill, a gentleman of Cornwall; after his death she married Roger, fifth Earl of Rutland, and brought him one daughter, who married the favourite Villiers, Duke of Buckingham. Lady Effingham.] Probably Anne, the daughter of Lord St. John, married in 1597 to William, eldest son of Charles, second Lord Howard of Effingham, Lord High Admiral at the period of the Spanish invasion. The Queen's Second Masque, which was of Beauty. THE MASQUE OF BEAUTY.] "The second Masque (Jonson says), which was of Beauty, was presented in the same Court at Whitehall, on the Sunday night after the Twelfth-night, 1608-9." This masque was published together with the former in 4to, without date, but probably in 1609, and again in fol. 1616. Two years being now past that Her Majesty had intermitted these delights, and the third almost come, it was her highness's pleasure again to glorify the Court, and command that I should think on some fit presentment which should answer the former, still keeping them the same persons, the daughters of Niger, but their beauties varied according to promise, and their time of absence excused, with four more added to their number. To which limits, when I had apted my invention, and being to bring news of them from the sea, I induced BOREAS, one of the winds, as my fittest messenger; presenting him thus: In a robe of russet and white mixt, full and bagged; his hair and beard rough and horrid; his wings gray, and full of snow and icicles; his mantle borne from him with wires, and in several puffs; his feet* ending in serpent's tails; and in his hand a leaveless branch laden with icicles. But before, in midst of the hall, to keep the state of the feast and season, I had placed JANUARY† in a throne of silver; his robe of ash-colour, long, fringed with silver; a white mantle; his wings white, and his buskins; in his hand a laurelbough; upon his head an anademe of *So Paus. in Eliacis reports him to have, as he was carved in arcâ Cipselli. † See Iconolog. di Cesare Ripa. Ovid. Metam. lib. 6, near the end seehorridus irâ, Quæ solita est illi, nimiumque domestica, vento, &c. The nymphs at sea, as they were almost And so, by malice and her magic, tost lost, That floated in the main ;ll where yet she Till on an island they by chance arrived, had gyved Them so in chains of darkness, as no Should loose them thence, but their changed might Whereat the twelve, in piety moved, and sisters' sight. kind, Straight put themselves in act the place to find; Which was the Night's sole trust they so will do, That she with labour might confound them too. For ever since with error hath she held Them wand'ring in the ocean, and so quelled Their hopes beneath their toil, as (despe rate now To give authority to this part of our fiction, Pliny hath a chap. 95 of his 2 book Nat. Hist. de insulis fluctuantibus. Et Card. lib. 1 de rerum vari. &c., cap. 7, reports one to be in his time known in the lake of Lomond, in Scotland. To let pass that of Delos, &c. Athens, whom Boreas ravished away into The daughter of Erectheus, King of Thrace, as she was playing with other virgins by the flood Ilissus: or (as some will) by the fountain Cephisus. |