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XXXVIII.

A LITTLE SHRUB GROWING BY. Ask not to know this Man.' If fame should speak

His name in any metal, it would break.
Two letters were enough the plague to tear
Out of his grave, and poison every ear.
A parcel of Court-dirt, a heap and mass
Of all vice hurled together, there he was,
Proud, false, and treacherous, vindictive, all
That thought can add, unthankful, the lay-
stall

Of putrid flesh alive! of blood the sink!
And so I leave to stir him, lest he stink.

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And draw, and conquer all men's love,
This subjects you to love of one,
Wherein you triumph yet; because
'Tis of yourself, and that you use
The noblest freedom, not to choose
Against or faith, or honour's laws.
But who should less expect from you,
In whom alone Love lives agen?
By whom he is restored to men ;
And kept, and bred, and brought up true?
His falling temples you have reared,

The withered garlands ta'en away;
His altars kept from the decay
That envy wished, and nature feared:
And on them burn so chaste a flame,
With so much loyalty's expense,
As Love t' acquit such excellence,
Is gone himself into your name.
And you are he; the deity

To whom all lovers are designed,
That would their better objects find;
Among which faithful troop am I.
Who, as an offering at your shrine,3

Have sung this hymn, and here entreat

1 Ask not to know this Man, &c.] This too is in the style of Donne. It was evidently designed to be a pendant of the former; whoever wrote that wrote this.

2 [Mr. Tennyson must have been familiar with this Elegy before he commenced his In Memoriam.-F. C.]

One spark of your diviner heat To light upon a love of mine. Which, if it kindle not, but scant

Appear, and that to shortest view, Yet give me leave t'adore in you What I, in her am grieved to want.

XL.

AN ELEGY.*

307

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Less were an injury.

Like unstampt gold, I weigh each grace,
So that you may collect
Th' intrinsic value of your face,
Safely from my respect.

And this respect would merit love,
Were not so fair a sight

Payment enough; for who dare move
Reward for his delight?

XLI.

AN ODE.

TO HIMSELF.

Where dost Thou careless lie Buried in ease and sloth?

3 Who, as an offering, &c.] The folio reads offspring. Corrected by Whalley.

4 This little piece, which is not without merit, the old folio, where it is united to "A New is carelessly thrown in towards the conclusion of year's Gift to King Charles!"

Knowledge that sleeps, doth die;
And this security,

It is the common moth

That eats on wits and arts, and [so] destroys them both :'

Are all the Aonian springs

Dried up? lies Thespia waste? Doth Clarius' harp want strings, That not a nymph now sings;

Or droop they as disgraced,

Make not thyself a page

To that strumpet the stage, But sing high and aloof,

Safe from the wolf's black jaw, and the dull ass's hoof.

XLII.

THE MIND OF THE FRONTISPIECE TO A BOOK.3

To see their seats and bowers by chat- From death and dark oblivion (near the

tering pies defaced?

If hence thy silence be,

As 'tis too just a cause;

Let this thought quicken thee:
Minds that are great and free

Should not on fortune pause,

'Tis crown enough to virtue still, her own applause.

What though the greedy fry

Be taken with false baits

Of worded balladry,

And think it poesy

They die with their conceits,

And only piteous scorn upon their folly

waits.

Then take in hand thy lyre,

Strike in thy proper strain,

With Japhet's line aspire

Sol's chariot for new fire,

To give the world again :

same)

The mistress of man's life, grave History, Raising the world to good and evil fame, Doth vindicate it to eternity.

Wise Providence would so that nor the good

Might be defrauded, nor the great se

cured,

But both might know their ways were under. stood,

When vice alike in time with virtue dured:

Which makes that, lighted by the beamy hand

Of Truth, that searcheth the most hidden springs,

And guided by Experience, whose straight wand

Doth mete, whose line doth sound the depth of things;

She cheerfully supporteth what she rears, Assisted by no strengths but are her

own,

Who aided him, will thee, the issue of Some note of which each varied pillar

Jove's brain.

And since our dainty age Cannot indure reproof,

1 That eats on wits and arts, and destroys them both.] A syllable is evidently lost, necessary to complete the measure; I have inserted a monosyllable that helps it out:

Versus fultura cadentis.-WHAL, Whalley's choice fell on quite; I prefer so: the reader, perhaps, may stumble upon a better substitute than either.

With Japhet's line aspire

Sol's chariot for new fire.] He means Promethens, the son of Japetus, who, as the poets say, was assisted by Minerva in the formation of his man, whom he animated with fire taken from the chariot of the Sun.-WHAL.

This spirited Ode was probably among our author's early performances. A part of the concluding stanza we have already had in the "Apologetical Dialogue" at the conclusion of The Poetaster; and the whole might be written

bears,

By which, as proper titles, she is known Time's witness, herald of Antiquity, The light of Truth, and life of Memory.

about the period of the appearance of that drama. Jonson's dislike to the stage here breaks out; but, in truth, this is not the only passage from which we are authorized to collect that necessity alone led him to write for the theatres.

Raleigh's History of the World, fol. 1614: they 3 These lines are prefixed to Sir Walter are descriptive of the ornamental figures in the serious frontispiece to that volume, and can scarcely be understood without a reference to the plate itself. Jonson assisted Raleigh in this great work; and indeed there were not many literary undertakings of importance in his days to which "the envious Ben" did not liberally afford his aid.

The folio has been corrected from Raleigh's copy. It seems that Whalley was not acquainted with the purport of this little piece, or with its appearance in any volume previously to that of 1641.

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[There is no XLIII. in Gifford's edition, and it has been thought convenient to adhere to his numbering.-F. Č.]

2 One of our author's earliest pieces. "It was written," (the folio says,) "in Queen Elizabeth's time, since lost, and recovered."

This earl was, I believe, the son of Gerald, sixteenth Earl of Desmond, a most powerful nobleman, and a formidable rebel, who gave Elizabeth a world of uneasiness. He was, however, mastered at length, and his vast possessions, which extended over several counties, were in 1582 forfeited to the crown. His son James, the person, I presume, to whom this ode was addressed, was restored in blood and honour, in 1600. From the allusions to his state of disfavour, and the call upon him to

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1 As yet it is not mute, &c.] From Horace:
Spirat adhuc amor,

Vivuntque commissi calores
Eolia fidibus puellæ.

Nec si quid olim lusit Anacreon,
Delevit atas, &c.

XLVI.

AN ODE.

Helen, did Homer never see

Thy beauties, yet could write of thee?
Did Sappho, on her seven-tongued lute,
So speak, as yet it is not mute,'
Of Phaon's form? or doth the boy,
In whom Anacreon once did joy,
Lie drawn to life in his soft verse,
As he whom Maro did rehearse?
Was Lesbia sung by learn'd Catullus,
Or Delia's graces by Tibullus?
Doth Cynthia, in Propertius' song,
Shine more than she the stars among?
Is Horace his each love so high
Rapt from the earth as not to die;
With bright Lycoris, Gallus' choice,
Whose fame hath an eternal voice?
Or hath Corinna, by the name
Her Ovid gave her, dimmed the fame
Of Cæsar's daughter, and the line
Which all the world then styled divine?
Hath Petrarch since his Laura raised
Equal with her? or Ronsart praised
His new Cassandra 'bove the old,
Which all the fate of Troy foretold?
Hath our great Sidney, Stella set
Where never star shone brighter yet?
Or Constable's ambrosiac muse
Made Dian not his notes refuse ?2
Have all these done--and yet I miss
The swan so relished Pancharis-3
And shall not I my Celia bring,
Where men may see whom I do sing?
Though I, in working of my song,
Come short of all this learned throng,

Antony's taste in poetry was not very refined, and he did not therefore discover that his author (Edmund Bolton) had unluckily fixed upon one of Constable's worst sonnets. The Diana of which Jonson speaks, was published in 1594.. Constable seems to have been the most voluminous sonnet-writer of those son

neteering times; and to have acquired a reputation rather more than equal to his merits: since, besides Jonson, he is mentioned with praise by others of his contemporaries, and placed immediately after Spenser by Judicio, in the Return from Parnassus:

"Sweet Constable doth take the wondering ear, And lays it up in willing prisonment."

2 Or Constable's ambrosiac muse Made Dian not his notes refuse?] This author, though honoured with so ample a testimony from Jonson, is almost unknown in this age. "Henry Constable," in the words of Antony Wood, "was a great master of the English tongue; and there was no gentleman of our nation who had a more pure, quick, and higher delivery of conceit than he witness, among all others, that sonnet of his before the poetical translation called the Furies, made by King James the First of England, while he was The swan so relished Pancharis.] This was King of the Scots. He hath also several the French poet Bonefons, or Bonefonius; sonnets extant, written to Sir Philip Sidney; who, in imitation of Secundus, wrote Basia, some of which are set before the Apology for in the praise of his mistress Pancharis. He Poetry, written by the said knight." This has a character for tenderness and delicacy.author flourished in the reign of Queen Eliza- | WHAL. beth.-WHAL.

8 And yet I miss

Yet sure my tunes will be the best, So much my subject drowns the rest.

XLVII.

A SONNET

TO THE NOBLE LADY, THE LADY
MARY WROTH.

I that have been a lover, and could shew it, Though not in these, in rhymes not wholly dumb,

Since I exscribe your sonnets, 'am become A better lover and much better poet. Nor is my Muse or I ashamed to owe it To those true numerous graces, whereof

some

But charm the senses, others overcome Both brains and hearts; and mine now best do know it:

For in your verse all Cupid's armory,

His flames, his shafts, his quiver, and his bow,

His very eyes are yours to overthrow. But then his mother's sweets you so apply, Her joys, her smiles, her loves, as readers take

For Venus' ceston every line you make.

XLVIII.

A FIT OF RHYME AGAINST RHYME.

Rhyme, the rack of finest wits,
That expresseth but by fits

The

1 Since I exscribe your sonnets, &c.] allusion is probably to Lady Wroth's Urania, a pastoral romance published in 1621. This, in imitation of her uncle's (Sir Philip Sidney's) Arcadia, is interspersed with songs, sonnets, and other little pieces of poetry, which our author, who seems to have been favoured with the MS., was permitted to copy. The Urania has long been forgotten, and no revolution in taste or manners can ever revive its memory; yet it was once in considerable vogue; it did not, perhaps, like Tetrachordon, number good intellects, yet it certainly counted many bright eyes, among its admirers. The poetical part of Urania is rather above than below the usual standard of ladies rhymes, and though the chariest maid of these times may read it without the smallest peril (except of her patience), it was looked upon as inflammatory by the combustible damsels of James's days:

"The Lady Wroth's Urania is complete

With elegancies; but too full of heat," Sir Aston Cokayne says; and he was not singular in his opinion. The following sonnet may serve as a specimen of the poetry which our author exscribed: it is neither the best nor the worst of the collection:

True conceit,

Spoiling senses of their treasure, Cozening judgment with a measure, But false weight;

Wresting words from their true calling;
Propping verse for fear of falling
To the ground;

Jointing syllabes, drowning letters,
Fastening vowels, as with fetters
They were bound!

Soon as lazy thou wert known,
All good poetry hence was flown,
And art banished:
For a thousand years together,
All Parnassus' green did wither,
And wit vanished!
Pegasus did fly away,
At the wells no Muse did stay,
But bewailed,

So to see the fountain dry,
And Apollo's music die,

All light failed!
Starveling rhymes did fill the stage,
Not a poet in an age

Worthy crowning.
Not a work deserving bays,
Nor a line deserving praise,
Pallas frowning:

Greek was free from rhyme's infection,
Happy Greek, by this protection,
Was not spoiled.

Whilst the Latin, queen of tongues,
Is not yet free from rhyme's wrongs,
But rests foiled.

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"Late in the forest I did Cupid see,

Cold, wet, and crying, he had lost his way; And being blind was farther like to stray: Which sight a kind compassion bred in me, I gently took and dried him, while that he, Poor child, complained he starved was with stay,

And pined for want of his accustomed prey; For none in that wild place his host would be. I glad was of his finding, thinking sure This service should my freedom still procure;

And to my breast I took him then unharmed, Carr'ing him safe unto a myrtle bower: But in the way he made me feel his power, Burning my heart, who had him kindly warmed."

Sir Robert Wroth, the husband of this celebrated lady, was also a poet: fortunately his genius was turned to wit, as hers to love; so that the respective pursuits of this tuneful pair did not clash, and the domestic harmony con tinued unbroken to the end:

Felices ter et amplius

Quos irrupta tenet copula, nec malis
Divulsus querimoniis
Suprema citius solvet amor die l

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