— m^^^^^MM A- V- •^p A v.. W A" ' ^ - a"*- s ^ - o o N ■•/ V : ; o *< */. vC 1 ^> \V ,y s -u * 8 x° °x. o q x ' ^ A y ^ A^ ^ c^ ,**v, < - -■* iO«L ^ 1 >"" n * 8 I >< "%. c>' r -^ ~ * ^ w ■'**. V*' X' 1 % ^ ■ % ^ ^ ■u * ^ V 0> V ^ '>, $ °«- \v -p. ,^ V ^- <# ' s -N^ ■> v ' * ' ,V> %. W ^ ■$> > .«?, •* V */- V* V « ' s A 'o x . 1 ORIGINAL POEMS, NEVER BEFORE PUBLISHED, BY WILLIAM BROWNE, OF THE INNER TEMPLE, GENT. WITH BY SIR EGERTON BRYDGES, BART. K.J. HOW SIMPLE IS T-HE'STRAIN THAT TELLS OF FIELDS, AND FLOCKS, AND GROVES; AND NATURE STILL IN EVERY AGE THE SAME SWEET NOTES APPROVES. • BY JOHNSON AND WARWICK. 1815. —— i 3a4S it, uuyuy^|^A4£^ ^i^iiiiM^^ WM S: -4M- 3i' W4 ORIGINAL POEMS, ynsxnE& wi£.§<8>is& ^m&m$bW£®> BY WILLIAM BROWNE, THE INNER TEMPLE, GENT. MUTMOffi "BRITANNIA'S PASTORALS, 1613. I :?> IS, IF \t it iP' i i win iMni i ra ^MftaNMX C# •€$£ WWfc&gLQPiZ. T has been said that Anthony Wood, the original biographer of William Browne, knew little of his private history or connections. A mere accident threw in my way, on April 4, 1816, while searching for other things, a record of his descent, if we admit, as I think it is impossible to question, his identity with William Broivne of the Inner Temple, son of Thomas Browne of Tavistock, for whom the genealogy in the following Table is drawn. "And to what," it will be asked, "does this discovery amount? Is it more than the merest of trifles? Are you so weak, as to give it even the im- portance of a notice?" I am so weak: and not ashamed of my weakness ! But not so much because the Poet derives honour from the noble stem and once -flourishing branches of Browne, as because he reflects a lustre upon them. I could say much on this subject, if I had leisure; when I would attempt to give a momentary impulse to the cold blood and groveling minds of those ill-deserving members of the upper orders of society, who possess high birth, high rank, and large estates, without a cor- respondent loftiness and cultivation of intellect and of the heart ! 2 — ^ppcntrix* <.(.«►•.» ••►*.» ut..»»»..>^ <^>M. .<„!..«.,<..<.. 4. M--W Perhaps, however, the waste even of a few minutes' attention on such base wretches, is beneath the dignity of literature, or of the glowing ambition of any tolerably-eloquent pen. wmmmw&M <&$ mm%mm as&oaswiE, ®&?e ^©ie&. EXTRACTED FROM HARL. MSS. 6164. WILLIAM BROWNE, second^ son of Sir Thomas Browne of Beachworth Castle, in Surrey.* ■•►•.»••>••>••►•< John Browne, •»§»■. went to live at Tavistock. \ , daughter of . . . Grills of Devonshire. ..>..»..>..>..» ..»..»..»••>*. Thomas Browne, son and heir of John.^ , daughter of I Carslake of Devonshire. ..►■.►•.*•.>•.>■.,..,..,..►..►..,..*..►..*..>..>..». ■»<«•««■*< William Browne, eldest son, from John Browne, second son.^Mary, daughter of Mr. whom there is issue. Amidas. «.,..>..i..»..>..».i>..»..»..»..».. Thomas Browne of Tavistock.^3oa.ne, daughter of Healen. ..>..»..>..»..»..>..»..».. ..|..|»>*"K John, second son. Elizabeth, married to Jfilliam Browne,\ o/"ATymothy, daughter of Sir Thomas John Polwhield. the Inner Temple, i Eversfield of Den, near Horsham, in London. in Sussex, Knight. ••»••*••►•»►•'►■•>••>••»••►■'»•'►••►>*►••►••>»»••••*"»■•►>•»•• Robert, died an infant. Robert, a second son, also died an infant. * The Brownes of Beachworth were a known branch of the Viscounts Montagu, f Arms. The same as Browne, Viscount Montacute, viz. Sable, three lions between two bendlots Arg. a crescent within a mullet, for difference. Crest. A Griffin's head, erased, Or. OF BROWNE'S POEMS. F my taste is not very erroneous, the following hither- to unpublished poems of a celebrated pastoral author will be deemed a very interesting treasure by the lovers of old English Poetry. It is not, however, my intention, before the whole, or the larger part, of them is printed, to enter into any long criticism on their merits; or to make more than a few brief statements and remarks, which per- haps the reader will expect, before he enters on a perusal of them. William Browne, son of Thomas Browne of Tavistock, in Devonshire, Gent, was born in that town, about 1590, and sent to Exeter College, Oxford, soon after King James I. as- cended the English throne; and thence removed to the Inner Temple, where he published the First Part of his "Britannia's Pastorals" in folio, 1613; and the Second Part in 1616. These Two Parts were reprinted in 8vo. in 1625. He also published "The Shepherd's Pipe, in Seven Eclogues" in 1614, 8vo. In 1624, he returned to Exeter College, as tutor to Robert Dor- mer, afterwards Earl of Caernarvon, who was killed at the battle 2 gltofoertteenunt ..»..(..»..,..) N^*-)S^§<-RKg5>-IS*'»<3eH' of Newbury, Sept. 20, 1643. He then became a retainer to the Earl of Pembroke: and here, says Wood, "he got wealth, and purchased an estate, which is all that I know of him hither- to, only that, as he had a little body, so he had a great mind. In my searches I find one William Browne of Ottery St. Mary, in Devon, died in the winter time, 1645; whether the same with the poet, I am hitherto ignorant." a The few slight facts thus recorded by Wood, will be amply confirmed by the contents of the following Poems. The Uni- versity of Oxford, and the Pembroke family, make a conspicu- ous figure in them. All that we have heard, and conceived, of the character and moral habits of Browne, without possessing the facts on which his cotemporaries probably founded them, is here also amply established: and is a strong illustration of an opinion always entertained by me, that we ought to be very slow, and reluctant, in denying the praises bestowed on individuals, by those who were coeval with the subjects of them, merely because the particulars recorded do not seem to justify the fame con- ferred. Reputation is generally the result of a combination of qualities, and virtues, and performances, many of which having been omitted to be recorded, while familiar to every one, have gra- dually been effaced from memory. Thus the fame of Browne, " Wood's Athence" by Bliss, vol. ii. c. 366. &trbtrtteermM. ..,..,..,. .>..>.....> >€&v9Ww9VT^ < " , " < " < " < " l " < " M " which his known works never seemed to me to authorize, have been partly founded on the smaller poems, now recovered from oblivion. I will not hesitate to say, that I far prefer these latter to his more laboured compositions, which he gave to the world, as the formal efforts on which he chose to rest his honours. This likewise is in conformity with another favourite opinion, with which I have always been impressed. To me the very restraint and artificiality of a work, forced, and polished, and toiled upon, for the public eye, destroys much of the charm, of the ease, and freshness, and vigour, which a mind of high native powers would otherwise give to a composition. Break the natural and un- called chain of ideas; wipe off, or dry up the dew with which the waters of Helicon sprinkle the first shoot of their plants; and the spell is gone! There is a simplicity, a chasteness, a grace, a facility, a sweetness in some of the present short poems, which to me is full of attraction and delight; and is the more surprising when it is contrasted with the corrupt and absurdly -metaphysical style of most of Browne's cotemporaries. George Wither had the same simplicity; and I have formerly, when I had not seen the present poems, set Wither above his friend Browne; but the present pieces prove, that Wither had not the same taste: he wanted selection, and compression. . gfrbertteement* ♦*♦*♦*» ►<^*'@K*S|«»<3>*§»- , ® , <®«' But I wander beyond the limits I had imposed on myself. I will at present expatiate no further on the genius of Browne. On that which seems to have given a colour to the course of his life, I may be allowed in this place to throw out a few senti- ments. Browne's days were enlivened by a patronage, which must have been propitious to his poetical pursuits. Of William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, whose favour it is apparent that he enjoyed, the character is drawn with such extraordinary brilliancy of language by Lord Clarendon, the great historian of human nature, that it must be familiar to every educated English reader. He, whose knowledge of our national story, and whose acquaint- ance with the biography of his country is enlivened by fancy and sentiment, cannot recall the classical bowers of Wilton, or the spacious galleries of Penshurst, without reviving an array of intellectual splendor and glory, that bursts upon the mind with melancholy enchantment. For my part, I have often gazed with a pensive transport, till I have forgot myself, on the full- length portrait, drawn by Cornelius Jansen, of this amiable nobleman, at Penshurst, faded as are its colours, and desolate and neglected as it hangs, amid numbers of illustrious com- panions, upon the walls of those magnificent, but now silent apartments ! The well-known Epitaph of the celebrated Countess, this &&bertteement 5 <^B"' •<••<••«..(.•«.■«■•<■ .«•- Earl's mother, has been generally ascribed to Ben Jonson. The first stanza is printed in "Jonson's Poe?ns." But it is to be found in the MS. volume of "Browne's Poems;" and on this evidence may, I think, be fairly appropriated to him. I repeat it here, in the words of the MS. that the reader may form his own opinion. ON THE COUNTESS DOWAGER OF PEMBROKE. "Underneath this sable hearse Lies the subject of all verse; Sydney's Sister, Pembroke's Mother! Death, e'er thou hast slain another, Fair, and learn 'd, and good as she, Time shall throw a dart at thee ! Marble piles let no man raise To her name for after-days; Some kind woman, born as she, Reading this, like Niobe, Shall turn marble, and become Both her mourner, and her tomb." Then follows a long Elegy on the Countess, beginning thus: " Time hath a long course run, since thou wert clay." gttrtertteement Her son, Earl William, has had the fame of a poet, but his right to the poems ascribed to him, has been questioned, as standing on no adequate authority. The following Song occurs, with his name subscribed to it, at the end of the MS. b of these Poems of Browne; and may, therefore, be taken to be his, on the authority of one who had the best means of ascertaining it. BY THE EARL OF PEMBROKE. " Soul's joy, when I am gone, And you alone, Which cannot be, Since I must leave myself with thee, And carry thee with me. Yet when unto our eyes Absence denies Each other's sight, And makes to us a constant night, When others change to light. b The same MS. appropriates to Sir Walter Raleigh the poem containing the famous stanza, beginning, " Wrong not, sweet Emp'ress of my Soul." and also the lines " De Seipso," beginning, " E'en such is Time, that takes on trust." ^aberttenrnnt 7 O give no way to grief, But let belief Of mutual love This wonder to the vulgar prove; Our bodies, not we, move. Let not thy wit beweep Wounds, but sense deep; For while we miss By distance, our lip -joining bliss, E'en then our souls shall kiss. Fools have no means to meet But by their feet; Why should our day Over our spirits so much sway, To tie us to that way." It had been long supposed that some MS. Poems of Browne were among the Collections of fVarhirton, the Herald. The MS. from which the present Poems are copied, is in the British Mu- seum, among the Lansdoivne MSS. which contain a portion of Wdrburton's Papers; and thence, I take for granted, came this very valuable volume. s. E. B. August 3, 1815. : ©©Nra:ra&- ■■«S>«fr$K@§^i~ Page. Behold, O God! **************************** 4 The Happy Life ************~*************** 5 Lidford Journey ^^^„^,^,^„ ****** ,. „ „ 9 Love! when I met her first ^-^•^^^.*»^rs^-^^r. 17 On a Lady's Yellow Hair Powdered with White 19 Not long agone ************** ,, .****,*.,*** 21 Love who will ************ *, ** ** ************ ib. Shall I love again ^^^^^r^w^^iw^M 22 Deep are the wounds ********************** 24 Tell me, Pyrrha **************************** ib. Yet one day's rest ************************** 26 Poor silly fool ! ****** ************** *, *** £4. Welcome, welcome *,******,.*.***, ********** 30 Caelia (14) Sonnets 1. Lo I the man*^^^^. 34 2 . Why might I not for once 35 3. Fairest, whenbytherules 36 4. So sat the Muses ****** 37 5. Wert not for you ****** 38 6. Sing soft, ye pretty birds 39 7. Fairest, when I am gone 40 8. As oft as I meet one ** ib. 9. Tell me, my thoughts ** 41 10. To get a Love ******** 42 1 1 . Fair Laurel ********** 43 12. Had not the soil ****** 44 13. Night, steal not on too fast 45 14. Divinest Caelia ,^*^^, 46 Visions ********** 1. Sitting one day ******** 47 2.1 saw a silver swan **** ib. 3. Within the compass ****■ 48 4. A rose as fair^,*,^*^*-^- 49 5. Down in a valley ****** 50 6. Gentle shepherd ****** 54 Thou, who to look for Rome **************** 52 A sigh from Oxford ************************** 57 On an Hour-glass ************************** 68 An Epitaph on Mr. John Smyth, Chaplain to the Earl of Pembroke ************** ib. An Elegy on Mr. William Hopton ************ 69 On Mrs. Anne Prideaux, daughter of Mr. Doctor Prideaux, Regius Professor m^^^ 72 Page. An Epitaph on Mr. William Hopton ******** 73 On the Countess of Somerset's Picture *.*.*.*. ib. An Epitaph on Sir John Prowde, slain at the Siege of Grol, and buried at Zutpben, 1627 74 In Obitum MS. 10 Maii, 161 1 ************** ib. On Mr. Vaux, the Physician **************** 75 On one Drowned in the Snow **************** 76 An Epistle on the Ringing of the Papists' Dells on the Eve of All Saints' Day ********** 77 An Elegy on the Countess Dowager of Pembroke 81 On an Infant unborn, and the Mothei dying in travel wm .„ m ,„ MM <,<, nM „„ 90 On Mr. John Deane, of New College ********** 92 An Epistle thrown into a River in a Ball of Wax 93 On John Tooth **************************** .94 To Don Antonio, King of Portugal ********** ib. On Mr. Francis Lee, of the Temple, Gent. **** $.] My own Epitaph **************************** 101 An Epitaph on his Wife ********************** 102 On the Countess of Montgomery ************** 103 On Lord Herbert of Cardiff and Sherland **** ib. An Epiced on Mr. Fishbourne **************** 106 An Elegy on Sir Thomas Overbury, Prisoner in the Tower of London ************** 1 1 1 An Elegy on Mr. Thomas Ayleworth, slain at Croydon, and there buried ************ ib. An Epitaph on him ************************** 1 16 An Epitaph on Mrs. EL. Y. ****************** ib. On Mr. Turner of St. Mary's Hall ******** 117 On Goodman Hurst of the George, at Hor>ham, dying suddenly while the Earl of Nutting- ham lay there ************************ 118 A Pastoral Elegy on Mr. Thomas Manwood **** ib. Like to a silkworm ************************** 128 Give me three kisses, Pbillis ****************** 131 Here lies kind Tom ************************ ib. Fido, an Epistle to Fidelia ****************** 133 On one Born Blind ************************** 148 On a Rope-maker Hanged ******************** 151 On a Twin at two Years old, Dead of a Con- POEMS, BY WILLIAM BROWNE. AN ODE. ^WWAKE, fair Muse; for I intend i[S§|HB These everlasting lines to thee! JEptliMf And, honour'd Drayton, come and lend An ear to this sweet melody: For on my harp's most high and silver string, To those Nine Sisters whom I love, I sing. This man through death and horror seeks Honour, by the victorious steel; Another in unmapped creeks For jewels moors his winged keel. The clamorous Bar wins some, and others bite At looks thrown from a mushroom favourite. SSrofottt's 1$otm&. „..,.., >">»>»>"Kgg>*^c^|y>)S)(..&."»"M^-$'^§|<^g>»!»-$-<^<..< «..«..«. EH OLD, O God! in rivers of my tears I come to thee! bow down thy blessed ears To hear me, wretch, and let thine eyes (which sleep Did never close) behold a sinner weep : Let not, O God, my God, my faults though great, And numberless, between thy mercy's seat And my poor soul be thrown! since we are taught, Thou, Lord, remember' st thine, if thou be sought. I come not, Lord, with any other merit Than what I by my Saviour Christ inherit: Be then his wounds my balm; his stripes my bliss; My crown his thorns; my death be lost in his. And thou, my blest Redeemer, Saviour, God, Quit my accounts, withhold the vengeful rod! O beg for me! my hopes on thee are set; And Christ forgive, as well as pay the debt. &rotone'0 Ifrotms 5 >.»••»• .)••»• .t..f>«H^& The living fount, the life, the way, I know, And but to thee, O whither should I go? All other helps are vain : grant thine to me, For in thy cross my saving health must be. O hearken then what I with faith implore, Lest Sin and Death sink me for evermore. Lastly, O God! my ways direct and guide; In death defend me, that I never slide; And at the doom let me be raised then, To live with thee; sweet Jesus, say Amen! THE HAPPY LIFE. BLESSED man! who, homely bred, In lowly cell can pass his days, Feeding on his well gotten bread; And hath his God's, not others' ways. 6 . . . . asrofone'g ^oems. ••►••►"►••►*•>••►»►">•< K^» That doth into a prayer wake, And rising (not to bribes or bands) The power that doth him happy make, Hath both his knees, as well as hands: His threshold he doth not forsake, Or for the city's cates, or trim ; His plough, his flock, his sithe, and rake, Do physic, clothe, and nourish him. By some sweet stream, clear as his thought, He seats him with his book and line; And though his hand have nothing caught, His mind hath whereupon to dine: He hath a table furnish'd strong, To feast a friend, or flattering snare, And hath a judgment and a tongue, That know to welcome and beware. Ifrofamc'* ^oemst 7 "l"Kg£> A ROUND. All. OW that the Spring hath fill'd our veins With kind and active fire, And made green liveries for the plains, And every grove a choir. Sing we a song of merry glee, And Bacchus fill the bowl : 1. Then here's to thee; 2. And thou to me, And every thirsty soul. Nor Care nor Sorrow ere paid debt, Nor never shall do mine; I have no cradle going yet, Nor I by this good wine. No wife at home to send for me, No hogs are in my ground, aSrofoiu's ^oentg. ••• H.i«>..|..|.»^r4.A»^|.»"»..w»..k^A.||JH£5«fc5W>^.A.,^><..| «..«..<..«..«. They have a castle on a hill ; I took it for an old windmill, The vanes blown off by weather; To lie therein one night, 'tis guess'd, 'Twere better to be ston'd and press'd, Or hang'd, now choose you whether. Ten men less room within this cave, Than five mice in a lanthorn have, The keepers they are sly ones: If any could devise by art, To get it up into a cart, 'Twere fit to carry lions. When I beheld it, Lord! thought I, What Justice and what Clemency Hath Lidford, when I saw all! I know none gladly there would stay, But rather hang out of the way, Than tarry for a trial. aSrohme's ^oemg 1 1 ..»..>..»..»,. »..».,».. H^g> <3£,«.-1'H"«- -«"«.. <..<•-«•. The Prince a hundred pounds hath sent, To mend the leads and planchings rent, Within this living tomb: Some forty-five pounds more had paid, The debts of all that shall be laid There, 'till the day of Doom. One lies there for a seam of malt, Another for three pecks of salt, Two sureties for a noble; If this be true, or else false news, You may go ask of Master Crewes, John Vaughan, or John Doble. b The Steward. Attorneys of the Court. Near to the men that lie in lurch, There is a bridge, there is a church, Seven ashes, and one oak; Three houses standing, and ten down; They say the parson hath a gown, But I saw ne'er a cloak. i2 — Brofone's; Pmns* Whereby you may consider well, That plain Simplicity doth dwell At Lidford, without bravery; For in that town, both young and grave Do love the naked truth, and have No cloaks to hide their knavery. The people all, within this clime, Are frozen in the winter time, For sure I do not feign; And when the summer is begun, They lie like silk- worms, in the sun, And come to life again. One told me in King Caesar's time, The town was built with stone and lime, But sure the walls were clay: For they are fall'n, for ought I see, And since the houses are got free, The town is run away! &rofotu'0 l^oemst 13 Oh! Caesar, if thou there did'st reign, While one house stands, come there again; Come quickly while there is one: If thou but stay a little fit, But five years more, they may commit The whole town into prison. To see it thus, much griev'd was I, The proverb says, Sorrow is dry; So was I at this matter: When by great chance, I know not how, There thither came a strange stray'd cow, And we had milk and water. Sure I believe it then did rain A cow or two from Charles his wain, For none alive did see Such kind of creatures there before, Nor shall from house for ever more, Save pris'ners, geese, and we. 14 — asrofotte's 3posmg* «►*•*• •»••*• '»«>«k«K^^ To nine good stomachs with our wig, At last we got a tything pig; This diet was our bounds : And that was just as if 'twere known, One pound of butter had been thrown Amongst a pack of hounds. One glass of drink I got by chance, 'Twas claret when it was in France; But now from that nought wider: I think a man might make as good With green crabs, boil'd with Brazil wood, And half a pint of cider. I kiss'd the Mayor's hand of the town, Who, though he wear no scarlet gown, Honours the rose and thistle: A piece of coral to the mace, Which there I saw to serve the place, Would make a good child's whistle. asrofone'g ^oemg. — 15 r .»M,..^h4-.H.K^**aHG^^H*'»'^"<..«..<...... h.. At six o'clock I came away, And pray'd for those that were to stay, Within a place so arrant: Wild and ope, to winds that roar, By God's grace I'll come there no more, Unless by some Tin Warrant. W. B. EPIGRAMS. T happened lately at a fair, or wake, (After a pot or two, or such mistake) Two iron-soled clowns, and bacon-sided, Grumbled: then left the farms which they bestrided, And with their crab -tree cudgels, as appears, Thrash'd (as they use) at one anothers' ears: A neighbour near, both to their house and drink, (Who though he slept at sermons) could not wink i6 — asrofon'g ^oong* |..1">. .»..». .>"»»>^B>^-«S»t@«»-»' At this dissention, with a spirit bold As was the ale that arm'd them, strong and old, Stept in and parted them; but Fortune's frown Was such, that there our neighbour was knock'd down ! For they, to recompence his pains at full, Since he had broke their quarrel, broke his scull! People came in, and rais'd him from his swound; A chirurgeon then was call'd to search the wound, Who op'ning it, more to endear his pains, Cry'd out, "Alas! look, you may see his brains!" "Nay," quoth the wounded man, "I tell you free, Good Master Surgeon, that can never be; For I should ne'er have meddled with this brawl, If I had had but any brains at all." asrofoiu'je; $oem$ 17 ••>-•►•. ►-•.••(••.■•►^•^•■lehes^^A. -a, ^^,..,. .«..). OVE! when I met her first, whose slave I am, To make her mine, why had I not thy flame? Or else thy blindness not to see that day? Or if I needs must look on her rare parts, Love! why to wound her had I not thy darts? Since I had not thy wings to fly away! Winter was gone, and by the lovely spring Each pleasant grove a merry choir became, Where day and night the careless birds did sing; Love! when I met her first, whose slave I am. She sate and listen'd; for she loves the strain Of one whose songs would make a tiger tame; Which made me sigh and cry, O happy Swain, To make her mine, why had I not thy flame? is — asrohme'g ^oemis. ••»»|»»* •>••»•>»»•••»•'»<& I vainly sought my passion to controul, And therefore since she loves the learned lay, Homer! I should have brought with me thy soul, Or else thy blindness not to see that day! Yet would I not, mine eyes, my days out-run In gazing (could I help it or the Arts) Like him that did with looking on the sun ; Or, if I needs, must look on her rare parts. Those, seen of one who every herb would try, And what the blood of elephants imparts To cool his flame; yet would he (forced) cry, Love! why to wound her had I not thy darts? O Daedalus! the labyrinth fram'd by thee Was not so intricate as where I stray! There have I lost my dearest liberty, Since I had not thy wings tojly away! >.»»»••>••»••»• •t»i»»» ON A LADY'S YELLOW HAIR POWDERED WITH WHITE, WRITTEN IN THE DISSOLVING OF A SNOW. AY, why on your hair yet stays That snow, resembling white; Since the Sun's less powerful rays Thaw'd that, which fell last night? Sure to hinder those extremes Of Love, they might bestow; Art hath hid your golden beams Within a fleece of snow. Yet as on a cloth of gold, With silver flowers wrought o'er, We do now and then behold A radiant wire or more: 20 — l&rofottt'g ^osmg* So sometimes the amorous air Doth with your fair locks play, And unclouds a golden hair ; And then breaks forth the day. On your cheeks the rosy morn We plainly then descry; And a thousand Cupids borne, And playing in each eye. Now we all are at a stay, And know not where to turn us; If we wish that snow away, Those glorious beams would burn us. If it should not fall amain, And cloud your loveful eyes, Each gentle heart would soon be slain, And made their sacrifice. a&rofone'g ^oems 21 , > .. > ..>-.f t ..t^ > 43^4. .<•-<•>«• •4»««4»4-1-- OT long agone a youthful swain, Much wronged by a maid's disdain, Before Love's Altar came; and did implore That he might like her less, or she love more. The God him heard, and she began To doat on him, he (foolish man) Cloy'd with much sweets, thus chang'd his note before, O let her love one less, or I like more. OVE who will, for I'll love none, There's fools enough beside me: Yet if each woman have not one. Come to me where I hide me. And if she can the place attain, For once I'll be her fool again. 22 — &roftme'0 ^ocmjs* It is an easy place to find, And women sure should know it; Yet thither serves not every wind, Nor many men can show it: It is the storehouse, where doth lie All women's truth and constancy. If the journey be so long, No woman will adventure; But dreading her weak vessel's wrong, The voyage will not enter: Then may she sigh and lie alone, In love with all, yet lov'd of none. HALL I love again, and try If I still must love to lose, And make weak mortality Give new birth unto my woes? asrofone'g ^oemg 23 No, let me ever live from Love's enclosing, Rather than love to live in fear of losing. One, whom hasty Nature gives To the world, without his sight, Not so discontented lives, As a man depriv'd of light: Tis knowledge that give vigour to our woe, And not the want, but loss that pains us so. With the Arabian Bird then be, Both the lover and belov'd; Be thy lines thy progeny, By some gracious fair approv'd; So may'st thou live, and be belov'd of many, Without the fear of loss, or want of any. 24 — ISrofcme'g HJonns* ..n.mM'>'*>'i>»>n>»> ■ |EEP are the wounds which strike a virtuous name; Sharp are the darts Revenge still sets on wing: Consuming, Jealousy's abhorred flame ! Deadly the frowns of an enraged King ! Yet all these to Disdain's heart- searching string (Deep, sharp, consuming, deadly) nothing be, Whose darts, wounds, flames, and frowns, meet all in me! ELL me, Pyrrha, what fine youth, All perfum'd and crown'd with roses, To thy chamber thee pursu'th, And thy wanton arm encloses? What is he thou now hast got, Whose more long and golden tresses Into many a curious knot Thy more curious fingers dresses? Brofone's %$otm$ 25 ••«s> How much will he wail his trust, And (forsook) begin to wonder, When black winds shall billows thrust, And break all his hopes in sunder? Fickleness of winds he knows, Very little that doth love thee; Miserable are all those, That affect thee ere they prove thee. I as one from shipwreck free To the Ocean's mighty ranger. Consecrate my dropping weed, And in freedom think of danger. 26 — ^rofone's: IPotm** <<.4..«..*.<..4«f*. ET one day's rest for all my cries, One hour among so many! Springs have their sabbaths, my poor eyes Yet never met with any. He that doth but one woe miss, O Death! to make him thine; I would to God that I had his, Or else that he had mine. OOR silly fool ! thou striv'st in vain to know If I enjoy, or love whom thou lov'st so; Since my affection ever secret tried, Blooms like the fern, and seeds still unespied. And as the subtle flames of heaven, that wound The inward part, yet leave the outward sound: asrofoiu'g ^oemg. — 27 My love wars on my heart, kills that within, When merry are my looks, and fresh my skin. Of yellow jaundice lovers as you be, Whose faces straight proclaim their melody, Think not to find me one; who know full well, That none but French and fools love now and tell. His griefs are sweet, his joys (O) heavenly move, Who from the world conceals his honest love; Nay, lets his mistress know his passion's source, Rather by reason, than by his discourse. This is my way, and in this language new Shewing my merit, it demands my due ; And hold this maxim, spite of all dispute, He asks enough that serves well and is mute. AN* EPISTLE. EAR soul the time is come, and we must part, Yet, ere I go, in these lines read my heart; A heart so just, so loving, and so true, So full of sorrow and so full of you, That all I speak, or write, or pray, or mean, And (which is all I can) all that I dream, Is *not without a sigh, a thought for you, And as your beauties are, so are they true. Seven summers now are fully spent and gone, Since first I lov'dj lov'd you, and you alone; And shall mine eyes as many hundreds see, Yet none but you shall claim a right in me; 3Srofone';3 ^onttg* — 29 v(»c»i-N5>*)5tG,(»*<5tA®<..<.*H..<..4..<.. A right so plac'd that time shall never hear Of one so vow'd, or any lov'd so dear. When I am gone (if ever prayers mov'd you) Relate to none that I so well have lov'd you; For all that know your beauty and desert, Would swear that he never lov'd, that knew to part. Why part we then ? that spring which but this day Met some sweet river, in his bed can play, And with a dimple cheek smile at their bliss, Who never know what separation is. The amorous vine with wanton interlaces Clips still the rough elm in her kind embraces : Doves with their doves sit billing in the groves, And woo the lesser birds to sing their loves; Whilst hapless we in griefful absence sit, Yet dare not ask a hand to lessen it. 3o — aSrofotw'g 3poemg* ..>.. »»»..». .>..»<3£> ..<.,4H-<-f>4M ELCOME, welcome, do I sing, Far more welcome than the spring; He that parteth from you never, Shall enjoy a spring forever. Love, that to the voice is near, Breaking from your ivory pale, Need not walk abroad to hear The delightful nightingale. Welcome, welcome, then I sing, Far more welcome than the spring; He that parteth from you never, Shall enjoy a spring forever. Love, that looks still on your eyes, Though the winter have begun To benumb our arteries, Shall not want the summer's sun. Welcome, welcome, then I sing, Sfc. a&rofone'g ^oemg 31 ..>..»..».,»..>..»..>..>.. >< ^> Love, that still may see your cheeks, Where all rareness still reposes, Is a fool, if ere he seeks Other lillies, other roses. Welcome, welcome, tyc. Love, to whom your soft lips yields, And perceives your breath in kissing, All the odours of the fields, Never, never shall be missing. Welcome, welcome, fyc. Love that question would anew What fair Eden was of old, Let him rightly study you, And a brief of that behold. Welcome, welcome, Sfc. |E merry birds leave off to sing, And lend your ears awhile to me; Or if you needs will court the spring With your enticing harmony, Fly from this grove, leave me alone; Your mirth cannot befit my moan. But if that any be inclin'd To sing a song so sad as I; Let that sad bird be now so kind, As stay and bear me company: And we will strive which shall outgo Love's heavy strains, or my sad woe. Ye Nymphs of Thames, if any swan Be ready now her last to sing; Brofone'g ^otm$* — 33 O bring her hither, if ye can, And sitting by us in a ring, Spend each a sigh, while she and I Together sing, together die. Alas! how much I err, to call More sorrow, where there is such store; Ye gentle birds, come not at all, And I sis' Nymphs forbear the shore. My sighs as groves of mandrakes be, And would kill any one but me. To me my griefs none other are, Than poison is to one, that long Had fed on it without impair Unto his health, or Nature's wrong; What others' lives would quickly spill, I take, but cannot take to kill. 34 — ^rotun^jB! $o*mg* ,..,..,..,.., >»»..>^&*4a«es«9«3»'* **••<• •<••«••<•• ISrofotte's ^oemjsi* — 35 Not to make good, that poets never can Long time without a chosen mistress be, Do I sing thus; or my affections ran Within the maze of mutability ; What best I lov'd, was beauty of the mind, And that lodg'd in a temple truly fair, Which ruin'd now by death, if I can find The saint that liv'd therein some otherwhere, I may adore it there, and love the cell For entertaining what I lov'd so well. HY might I not for once be of that sect, Which hold that souls, when Nature hath her right, Some other bodies to themselves elect; And sun-like make the day, and license night? That soul, whose setting in one hemisphere Was to enlighten straight another part; 36 ... . asrofone'g ^osmg* .««..«.. «•■«"<■'<■. <•■<-. In that horizon, if I see it there, Calls for my first respect and its desert ; Her virtue is the same and may be more; For as the sun is distant, so his power In operation differs, and the store Of thick clouds interpos'd make him less our. And verily I think her climate such, Since to my former flame it adds so much. . AIREST, when by the rules of palmistry You took my hand to try if you could guess, By lines therein, if any wight there be Ordain'd to make me know some happiness; I wish'd that those characters could explain, Whom will I never wrong with hope to win; Or that by them a copy might be seen, By you, O love, what thoughts I have within. JSrofone's ^oemg 37 ■■tG&>$"