Зображення сторінки
PDF
ePub

Here, I think, Penn found his title.1

Job.

P. 179. SATAN's account of his employment on earth. A stroke of satire, hardly

to have been looked for here.

185. Alexander.

"Wouldst thou by conquest win more fame

than he?

Subdue thyself; thyself's a world to thee."

But this whole Meditation is impressive as well as characteristic.

206. Meditation 8.

213. "What refuge hast thou then, but to present

A heart inricht with the sad complement Of a true convert, on thy bended knee Before thy God, t'atone thy God and thee."

234. "To Athens, gown'd, he goes, and

from that school

Returns unsped, a more instructed fool."

234. "The swelling of an outward for

tune can

Create a prosperous, not a happy man.
A peaceful conscience is the true content,
And wealth is but her golden ornament."

234. "I am to God, I only seem to man." All these scriptural poems of his are di

The title alluded to is his No Cross no Crown, &c. 1682. 8vo. It is Jeremy Taylor that says (I quote memoriter), "Every person shall in some sort bear his cross, and it is not well with those who do it not."

This is the old sense of the word. I instance the following, not found in NARES' Gloss. or elsewhere,

"Which union must all divers things attone," &c.

LORD BROOKE, Treat. of Monarchie.

"And if some kind wight goe not to attone My surly master with me, wretched maid, I shall be beaten dead."

BROWNE, Britannia's Pastorals.
J. W. W.

[blocks in formation]

278. "her breathless tongue disjoins Her broken words."

282. A catalogue of birds, &c. in the manner of Chaucer and Spenser.

"The cuckoo, ever telling of one tale." 313. Luxuries of the table. Viper-wines mentioned as aphrodisiacs. 327. Some of his oddities in the description of Samson killing the Philistines.

355. "Where Heaven doth please to
ruin, human wit

Must fail, and deeper policy submit;
There wisdom must be fool'd, and strength
of brain

Must work against itself, or work in vain." "the silly ass's bone,

Not worth the spurning."

365. Gold,-why so rarely produced by

nature.

381. Here is Cowley's conceit, speaking of the temple which Samson pulled down, the ruins, he says,

"with an unexpected blow, Gave every one his death and burial too." 382. The concluding Meditation.

Sion's Sonnets.

THIS is a paraphrase of Solomon's Song, cut into shreds of four couplets, in which I | have not found a single line or expression worth noting.

Sion's Elegies, wept by Jeremie the
Prophet.

THIS is a paraphrase of the Lamentations, in elegies of six couplets. And he follows the Hebrew form, by beginning them alphabetically.

[blocks in formation]

"Is wit now went so wandering from thy mind?"

As in the first edition of his "Hundred sundry Flowers, 1572," the account of his

P. 445. "My joys are turn'd to sorrows, shipwreck is called "last voyage into Holbackt with fears,

lie pickled up in tears."

And I, poor
An Alphabet of Elegies upon Dr. Ailmer.
In the same form as the Lamentations,
concluded with an alphabetical epitaph,-
in which, however, he leaves out X and Z,
and makes I and U stand each, as in the
dictionary, for two letters.

Elegy on Dr. Wilson of the Rolls.
THE dedication, to Robert, son of Sir
Julius Cesar, is very striking.

P. 505. "My passion has no April in her
eyes.

I cannot spend in mists; I cannot mizzle;
My fluent brains are too severe to drizzle
Slight drops, my prompted fancy cannot
shower

And shine within an hour."

"let such perfume Suspicious lines with skill, whilst I presume On strength of nature."

Spirit and evil he uses as monosyllables.

Mildreiados. To the Memory of Mildred,
Lady Luckyn.

In this poem he has imitated the manner of Phineas Fletcher.

The epitaph is in shape of an hour-glass.

Gascoigne.

THE affair in which he was taken prisoner must be that which is so misrepresented in Grimestone's History, p. 558. See also P. Bor. i. 504, where, though still with an injurious suspicion, the matter is better explained. And the Commentarios of D. Bernardino de Mendoza, ff. 250.

land in March," it appears that he had visited that country before.

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small]
[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

96. This mutilation of fillies seems no longer to be practised. One is glad to find any barbarous practice fall into disuse.

102. Swans, a part of the live stock, 110. 109. And peacocks.

126. Number of dogs, a plague to the farmer.

131. Use of leeks in March.

132. “No spoon-meat no belly full, labourers think."

138. "Save step for a stile, of the crotch of the bough."

172. "Where chamber is sweeped, and wormwood is strewn,

No flea for his life dare abide to be known."2

181. The saffron plot served for bleach

8. "For best is the best, whatsoever yeing ground in winter.

pay."

28.

"Hog measeled kill,

For Fleming that will."

39." Thy meascled bacon-hog, cow, or

thy boar,

Shut up for to heal, for infecting thy

store;

Or kill it for bacon, or souse it to sell For Fleming, that loves it so daintily well." 41." Be sure of vergis, a gallon at least, So good for the kitchen, so needful for beast."

1 See The Doctor, &c. "The Spaniards think that all who die of chronic diseases, breathe their last during the ebb." P. 207. One volume.-J. W. W.

183. "Grant harvest-lord more by a
penny or two,

To call on his fellows the better to do;
Give gloves to thy reapers, a largess to cry,
And daily to loiterers have a good eye.”

188. "The better thou thrivest, the gladder am I."

190. Lent-provision: salt fish, and"Go, stack it up dry, With pease-straw between it, the safer to lie."

? See Second Series, p. 637.-J. W. W.

The Fletchers.

GILES FLETCHER (the father I suppose) was involved in some factious opposition to Dr. Goad, the Provost of King's College; and confessed the slander and falsehood of the charges he had assisted in bringing against him. There are several letters upon this matter among the Lansdowne MS. p. 46, No. 23, 19 and seq.

Ib. p. 122, No. 65, 59. Dr. Fletcher to Lord Burghley, of his intention to write in Latin the history of the Queen's times, with a sketch of it.

Ib. p. 216, No. 112, 39. Some merchants, trading to Russia, represent that if some passages in Dr. Fletcher's History of Russia are not expunged, their trade will be ruined. The book was accordingly suppressed.

Some good remarks on both by Sir Egerton Brydges in the Preface to his Genevan edition of the Theatrum Poetarum.1

There also he observes, and I think justly, that Kirke White seems sometimes to have come nearest to the manner of Giles Fletcher.

DRAYTON.

In the original preface to the Heroical Epistles, he gives his reason why he observes not the person's dignity in the dedication of each couple: "Seeing none to whom I have dedicated any two epistles, but have their states overmatched by them who are made to speak in the epistles, however the order is in dedication, yet in respect of their degrees in my devotion, and the cause before recited, I hope they suffer no disparagement, seeing every one is the first in their particular interest, having in some sort sorted the complexion of the epistles to the character of their judgments to whom I dedicate them, excepting only the blamefulness of the person's passion, in

Geneva. From the press of Bonnant, 1824. In the copy before me, Southey has carefully marked this Preface.-J. W. W.

[blocks in formation]

The dedications, of which he speaks, are in a very affected style. From that to Edward, Earl of Bedford, we learn that he was first bequeathed to the noble lady, his countess, "by that learned and accomplished gentleman, Sir Henry Goodere (not long since deceased), whose I was whilest he was, whose patience pleased to bear with the imperfections of my heedless and unstayed youth. That excellent and matchless gentleman was the first cherisher of my muse, which had been by his death left a poor orphan to the world, had he not before bequeathed it to that lady whom he so dearly loved."

Mary, the French Queen, was dedicated to Sir H. Goodere: and then to "the happy and generous family of the Goodere's " he "confesses" himself " to be beholding for the most part of his education."

To his most dear friend, Master Henry Lucas, son to Edward Lucas, Esq. he says, "Sir, to none have I been more beholding than to your kind parents, far (I must truly confess) above the measure of my deserts. Many there be in England of whom, for some particularity, I might justly challenge greater merit, had I not been born in so evil an hour, as to be poisoned with that gall of ingratitude." This seems to mean that he had met with unkind or ungrateful treatment.

"YET these mine own; I wrong not other

men.

Nor traffic farther than this happy clime,

[blocks in formation]

In the debate upon sending Mr. Howard to the Tower, for the letter which he had circulated (1675), Mr. Mallett said, "There is another precedent, of Withers the poet, which if true does us justice.”—Parl. Hist. vol. 4. p. 749.

Compare his conduct during the Plague with Van Helmont's, an enthusiast of a different kind. See p. 12.

"WHOEVER," says PHILLIPS," shall go about to imitate his lofty style, may boldly venture to ride post and versify."

Ben Jonson (vol. 8, p. 7-9) satirizes George Wither, and in a way which shows him to have been a popular writer at that time.

The plates in his emblems, first appeared in a book with this title; "Gab. Rollenhagii Emblematum Centuriæ," 2 vols. Cologne, 1613. M'Pherson's Catalogue.3

George Wither.

"THE Great Assizes holden in Parnassus, 1643," a squib upon the Diurnals and Mercuries, is ascribed to him, for " its good sense and heavy versification."-D'ISRAELI'S Quarrels of Authors, vol. 2, p. 254.

"PLEASE your Majesty," said SIR JOHN DENHAM," do not hang G. Wither, that it may not be said I am the worst poet alive!"

Lansdowne's MS. No. 846. "A petition of George Wither to the House of Commons, that he might be restored to liberty, and appointed searcher of Dover." Though bound up with MS. this petition is printed.

1 Southey has put a quære, with Des Portes in the margin. No doubt the French poet, Philip des Portes, is alluded to.-J. W. W. 2 Quære? reduced.-R. S.

[ocr errors]

SIR WILLIAM DAVENANT.

QUARRELS of Authors," vol. 2, p. 212. An account of the Attacks on Gondibert, in which D'Israeli has committed two extraordinary blunders: he speaks of the poem as published when Charles's Court gave the law-and supposes Dr. Donne to have been one of his four ironical vindicators.— p. 230-1.

There are some verses by Charles Cotton (Chalmers, vol. 6, p. 748) in answer to some in the Seventh Canto of the Third Book of Gondibert, directed to his Father. This canto has not been published, but seven stanzas of it are prefixed to these verses of Cottons.

Gondibert, p. 92. An irreverent allusion to the Resurrection, not in accord with the feeling of the poem.

3 I may observe here, that Southey had a long cherished wish of editing a collected edition of Wither's Poems. He expressed himself to this intent on the imperfect republication of them by Gutch.-J. W. W.

« НазадПродовжити »