BookAi 19 0^5 CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH CLASSICS The Writings of Matthew Prior H MATTHEW PRIOR Born 1664 Died 1721 MATTHEW PRIOR POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS THE TEXT EDITED BY A. R. WALLER, M.A. Cambridge : at the University Press 1905 \\ ^ u^ b .V ny .- And glad all Heav'n with Millions Thou hast sav'd. 1 103 MATTHEW PRIOR CARMEN SECULARE, For the Year 1700. TO THE KING. Aspice, venturo latentur ut Omnia S 's Cause Her Favour must be shown : |- And Emma, of Mankind, must Love but Him alone. J While These, in Public, to the Castle came, And by their Grandeur justify'd their Flame : More secret Ways the careful Henry takes ; His Squires, his Arms, and Equipage forsakes. In borrow'd Name, and false Attire, array'd, Oft He finds Means to see the beauteous Maid. When Emma hunts, in Huntsman's Habit drest, Henry on P'oot pursues the bounding Beast. In his right Hand his beachen Pole he bears : And graceful at his Side his Horn he wears. Still to the Glade, where She has bent her Way, With knowing Skill he drives the future Prey. 140 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Bids her decline the Hill, and shun the Brake ; And shews the Path her Steed may safest take. Diredls her Spear to fix the glorious Wound ; Pleas'd, in his Toils, to have her Triumph Ciown'd : And blows her Praises in no common Sound. A Faic'ner Henrv is, when Emma Hawks: With her of Tarsels, and of Lures he talks. Upon his Wrist the tow'ring Merlin stands ; Praftis'd to rise, and stoop, at her Commands. And when Superior now the Bird has flown. And headlong brought the tumbling Qviarry down : With humble Rev'rence he accosts the Fair ; And with the honor'd Feather decks her Hair. Yet still, as from the sportive Field She goes, His down-cast Eye reveals his inward Woes. And by his Look and Sorrow is exprest, A nobler Game pursu'd, than Bird or Beast. A Shepherd now along the Plain he roves ; And, with his jolly Pipe, delights the Groves. The neighb'ring Swains around the Stranger throng, Or to admire, or emulate his Song : While, with soft Sorrow, he renews his Lays, Nor heedful of their Envy, nor their Praise. But soon as Emma's Eyes adorn the Plain, His Notes he raises to a nobler Strain ; With dutiful Respedl, and studious Fear, Lest any careless Sound offend her Ear. A frantick Gipsey, now the House He haunts, And in wild Phrases, speaks dissembled Wants. With the fond Maids in Palmistry he deals : They Tell the Secret first, which he Reveals : Says who shall Wed, and who shall be Beguil'd ; What Groom shall Get, and Squire maintain the Child. But when bright Emma wou'd her P'ortune know ; A softer Look unbends his op'ning Brow. With trembling Awe, he gazes on her Eye ; And in soft Accents, forms the kind Reply ; That She shall prove as Fortunate as Fair, And Hymen's choicest Gifts are All reserv'd for Her. 141 MATTHEW PRIOR Now oft had Henry chang'd his sly Disguise ; Unmark'd by all, but beauteous Emma's Eyes. Oft had found Means alone to see the Dame, And at her Feet to breath his am'rous Elame ; And oft, the Pangs of Absence to remove By Letters, soft Interpreters of Love : 'Till Time and Industry (the mighty Two That bring our Wishes nearer to our View) Made him perceive, that the inclining Fair Receiv'd his Vows with no reluctant Ear ; That Venus had confirm'd her equal Reign, And dealt to Emma's Heart a share of Henry's Pain. While Cupid smil'd, by kind Occasion bless'd, And, with the Secret kept, the Love increas'd ; The am'rous Youth frequents the silent Groves ; And much He meditates ; for much He loves. He loves : 'tis true ; and is belov'd again : Great are his Joys : but will they long remain ? Emma with Smiles receives his present Flame ; But smiling, will She ever be the same ? Beautiful Looks are rul'd by fickle Minds ; And Summer Seas are turn'd by sudden Winds. Another Love may gain her easie Youth: Time changes Thought ; and Flatt'ry conquers Truth. O impotent Estate of human Life ! Where Hope and Fear maintain eternal Strife : Where fleeting Joy does lasting Doubt inspire ; And most We Question, what We most Desire. Amongst thy various Gifts, great Heav'n, bestow Our Cup of Love unmix'd ; forbear to throw Bitter Ingredients in ; nor pall the Draught With nauseous Grief: for our ill-judging Thought Hardly injoys the pleasurable Taste ; Or deems it not sincere ; or fears it cannot last. With Wishes rais'd, with Jealousies opprest (Alternate Tyrants of the Human Breast) By one great Tryal He resolves to prove The Faith of Woman, and the Force of Love. 142 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS If scanning Emma's Virtues, He may find That beauteous Frame inclose a steady Mind ; He'll fix his Hope, of future Joy secure ; And live a Slave to Hymen's happy Pow'r. But if the Fair one, as he fears, is frail ; If pois'd aright in Reason's equal Scale, Light fly her Merits, and her Faults prevail ; His Mind He vows to free from am'rous Care, The latent Mischief from his Heart to tear. Resume his Azure Arms, and shine again in War. South of the Castle, in a verdant Glade, A spreading Beach extends her friendly Shade : Here oft the Nymph His breathing Vows had heard : Here oft Her Silence had Her Heart declar'd. As aftive Spring awalc'd her Infant Buds ; And genial Life inform'd the verdant Woods ; Henry, in Knots involving Emma's Name, Had half express'd, and half conceal'd his Flame Upon This Tree : and as the tender Mark Grew with the Year, and widen'd with the Bark : Venus had heard the Virgin's soft Address, That, as the Wound, the Passion might increase. As potent Nature shed her kindly Show'rs, And deck'd the various Mead with op'ning Flow'rs ; Upon This Tree the Nymph's obliging Care Had left a frequent Wreath for Henry's Hair : Which as with gay Delight the Lover found ; Pleas'd with his Conquest, with her Present crown'd. Glorious thro' all the Plains He oft had gone, And to each Swain the Mystic Honor shown ; The Gift still prais'd, the Giver still unknown. His secret Note the troubled Henry writes, To the known Tree the Lovely Maid invites : Imperfect Words and dubious Terms express. That unforeseen Mischance disturb'd his Peace ; That He must something to Her Ear commend. On which Her Conduit, and His Life depend. 143 MATTHEW PRIOR Soon as the Fair one had the Note receiv'd ; The remnant of the Day alone She griev'd : For difF'rent This from ev'ry former Note, Which Venus dictated, and Henry wrote ; Which told her all his future Hopes were laid On the dear Bosom of his Nut-brown Maid ; Which always bless'd her Eyes, and own'd her Pow'r ; And bid her oft Adieu, yet added more. Now Night advancM. The House in Sleep were laid, The Nurse experienc'd, and the prying Maid ; And last That Sprite, which does incessant haunt The Lover's Steps, the ancient Maiden Aunt. To her dear Henrv Emma wings her Way, With quicken'd Pace repairing forc'd Delay. For Love, fantastic Pow'r, that is afraid To stir abroad 'till Watchfulness be laid ; Undaunted then, o'er Cliffs and Valleys strays ; And leads his Vot'ries safe thro' pathless Ways. Not Argus with his hundred Eyes shall find, Where Cupid goes ; tho' He poor Guide is blind. The Maiden first arriving, sent her Eye, To ask, if yet it's Chief Delight were nigh : With Fear, and with Desire, with Joy, and Pain She sees, and runs to meet Him on the Plain. But oh ! his Steps proclaim no Lover's Haste : On the low Ground his fix'd Regards are cast : His artful Bosom heaves dissembl'd Sighs ; And Tears suborn'd fall copious from his Eyes. With Ease, alas ! we Credit what we Love : His painted Grief does real Sorrow move Li the afflided Fair ; Adown her Cheek Trickling the genuine Tears their Current break. Attentive stood the mournful Nymph : the Man Broke Silence first: the Tale alternate ran. ' HENRT. SINCERE O tell me, hast thou felt a Pain, Emma, beyond what Woman knows to feign ? Has Thy uncertain Bosom ever strove With the first 'I'umults of a real Love ? H4 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Hast Thou now dreaded, and now blest his Sway ; By turns averse, and joyful to obey ? Thy Virgin Softness hast Thou e'er bewail'd. As Reason yielded, and as Love prevail'd ? And wept the potent God's resistless Dart, His killing Pleasure, his Ecstatic Smart, And heav'nly Poison thrilling thro' thy Heart ? If so, with Pity view my wretched State ; At least deplore, and then forget my Fate : To some more happy Knight reserve thy Charms, By Fortune favor'd, and successful Arms : And only, as the Sun's revolving Ray Brings back each Year this melancholy Day ; Permit one Sigh, and set apart one Tear, To an abandon'd Exile's endless Care. For Me, alas ! Out-cast of Human Race, Love's Anger only waits, and dire Disgrace : For lo ! these Hands in Murther are imbru'd ; These trembling Feet by Justice are pursu'd : Fate calls aloud, and hastens me away ; A shameful Death attends my longer Stay ; And I this Night must fly from Thee and Love, Condemn'd in lonely Woods a banish'd Man to rove. EMMA. What is our Bliss, that changeth with the Moon ; And Day of Life, that darkens e'er 'tis Noon ? What is true Passion, if unblest it dies ? And where is Emma's Joy, if Henry flies ? If Love, alas ! be Pain ; the Pain I bear, No Thought can figure, and no Tongue declare. Ne'er faithful Woman felt, nor false one feign'd The Flames, which long have in my Bosom reign'd : The God of Love himself inhabits there. With all his Rage, and Dread, and Grief, and Care, His Complement of Stores, and total War. O ! cease then coldly to suspeil my Love ; And let my Deed, at least, my Faith approve. Alas ! no Youth shall my Endearments share ; Nor Day nor Night shall interrupt my Care : P. K 145 MATTHEW PRIOR No future Story shall with Truth upbraid The cold Indiff'rence of the Nut-brown Maid : Nor to hard Banishment shall Henry run ; While careless Emma sleeps on Beds of Down. View Me resolv'd, where-e'er Thou lead'st, to go, Friend to thy Pain, and Partner of thy Woe : For I attest fair Venus, and her Son, That I, of all Mankind, will love but Thee alone. HENRY. Let Prudence yet obstruct Thy vent'rous Way ; And take good heed, what Men will think and say ; That Beauteous Emma vagrant Courses took ; Her Father's House and civil Life forsook ; That full of youthful Blood, and fond of Man, She to the Wood-land with an Exile ran. Reflect, that lessen'd Fame is ne'er regain'd ; And Virgin Honor once, is always stain'd : Timely advis'd, the coming Evil shun : Better not do the Deed, than weep it done. No Penance can absolve our guilty Fame ; Nor Tears, that wash out Sin, can wash out Shame. Then fly the sad Effec^ts of desp'rate Love ; And leave a banish'd Man thro' lonely Woods to rove. EMMJ. Let Emma's hapless Case be falsely told By the rash Young, or the ill-natur'd Old : Let ev'ry Tongue it's various Censures chuse, Absolve with Coldness, or with Spight accuse : Fair Truth, at last, her radiant Beams will raise ; And Malice vanquish'd heightens Virtue's Praise. Let then thy Favour but indulge my Flight ; O ! let my Presence make thy Travels light ; And potent Venus shall exalt my Name Above the Rumors of censorious Fame : Nor from that busie Demon's restless Pow'r Will ever Emma other Grace implore. Than that this Truth should to the World be known, That I, of all Mankind, have lov'd but Thee alone. 146 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS HENRY. But canst Thou wield the Sword, and bend the Bow ? With a6live Force repel the sturdy Foe ? When the loud Tumult speaks the Battel nigh, And winged Deaths in whistling Arrows fly ; Wilt Thou, tho' wounded, yet undaunted stay, Perform thy Part, and share the dangerous Day ? Then, as thy Strength decays, thy Heart will fail ; Thy Limbs all trembling, and thy Cheeks all pale : With fruitless Sorrow Thou, inglorious Maid, Wilt weep thy Safety by thy Love betray 'd : Then to thy Friend, by Foes o'er-charg'd, deny Thy little useless Aid, and Coward fly : Then wilt thou curse the Chance that made Thee love A banish'd Man, condemn'd in lonely Woods to rove. EMMA. With fatal Certainty Thalestris knew To send the Arrow from the twanging Yew : And great in Arms, and foremost in the War, BoNDUCA brandished high the British Spear. Could Thirst of Vengeance, and Desire of Fame Excite the Female Breast with Martial Flame ? And shall not Love's diviner Pow'r inspire More hardy Virtue, and more gen'rous Fire ? Near Thee, mistrust not, constant I'll abide, And fall, or vanquish, fighting by thy Side. Tho' my Inferior Strength may not allow. That I should bear, or draw the Warrior Bow ; With ready Hand I will the Shaft supply. And joy to see thy Viftor Arrows fly. Touch'd in the Battel by the Hostile Reed, Should'st Thou (but Heav'n avert it !) should'st Thou bleed ; To stop the Wounds my finest Lawn Fd tear ; Wash them with Tears, and wipe them with my Hair : Blest, when my Dangers and my Toils have shown. That I, of all Mankind, could love but Thee alone. HENRT. But canst Thou, tender Maid, canst Thou sustain Afflictive Want, or Hunger's pressing Pain ? K 2 147 MATTHEW PRIOR Those Limbs, in Lawn and softest Silk array'd, From Sun-beams guarded, and of Winds afraid ; Can they bear angry Jove ? Can they resist The parching Dog-star, and the bleak North-East ? When chill'd" by adverse Snows, and beating Rain, We tread with weary Steps the longsome Plain ; When with hard Toil We seek our Ev'ning Food, Berries and Acorns, from the neighb'ring Wood ; And find among the ClifFs no other House, But the thin Covert of some gather'd Boughs ; Wilt Thou not then reluftant send thine Eye Around the dreary Waste ; and weeping try (Tho' then, alas ! that Tryal be too late) '\ To find thy Father's Hospitable Gate, Y And Seats, where Ease and Plenty brooding sate? J Those Seats, whence long excluded Thou must mourn : That Gate, for ever barr'd to thy Return : Wilt Thou not then bewail ill-fated Love, And hate a banish'd Man, condemn'd in Woods to rove? EMMJ. Thy Rise of Fortune did I only wed, From it's Decline determin'd to recede? Did I but purpose to embark with Thee, On the smooth Surface of a Summer's Sea ; While gentle Zephyrs play in prosp'rous^ Gales ; And Fortune's Favour fills the swelling Sails : But would forsake the Ship, and make the Shoar, When the Winds whistle, and the Tempests roar? No, Henry, no: One Sacred Oath has ty'd ^ Our Loves ; One Destiny our Life shall guide ; r Nor Wild, nor Deep our common Way divide. J When from the Cave Thou risest with the Day, To beat the Woods, and rouse the bounding Prey; The Cave with Moss and Branches FU adorn. And chearful sit, to wait my Lord's Return. And when Thou frequent bring'st the smitten Deer; (For seldom, Archers say. Thy Arrows err) ril fetch quick Fewel from the neighb'ring Wood, And strike the sparkling Flint, and dress the Food : 148 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS With humble Duty and officious Haste, I'll cull the furthest Mead for Thy Repast : The choicest Herbs I to Thy Board will bring ; And draw Thy Water from the freshest Spring : And when at Night with weary Toil opprest, Soft Slumbers Thou injoy'st, and wholesome Rest ; Watchful I'll guard Thee, and with Midnight Pray'r Weary the Gods to keep Thee in their Care ; And joyous ask, at Morn's returning Ray, If Thou hast Health, and I may bless the Day. My Thought shall fix, my latest Wish depend On Thee, Guide, Guardian, Kinsman, Father, Friend : By all these sacred Names be Henry known To Emma's Heart : and grateful let Him own. That She, of all Mankind, could love but Him alone. HENRT. Vainly thou tell'st Me, what the Woman's Care Shall in the Wildness of the Wood prepare : Thou, e'er thou goest, unhapp'yest of thy Kind, Must leave the Habit, and the Sex behind. No longer shall thy comely Tresses break In flowing Ringlets on thy snowy Neck ; Or sit behind thy Head, an ample Round, In graceful Breeds with various Ribbon bound : No longer shall the Boddice, aptly lac'd. From thy full Bosome to thy slender Waste, That Air and Harmony of Shape express, Fine by Degrees, and beautifully less : Nor shall thy lower Garments artful Pleat, From thy fair Side dependent to thy Feet, Arm their chaste Beauties with a modest Pride, And double ev'ry Charm they seek to hide. Th'Ambrosial Plenty of Thy shining Hair Cropt ofF and lost, scarce lower than Thy Ear Shall stand uncouth : a Horse-man's Coat shall hide Thy taper Shape, and Comeliness of Side : The short Trunk-Hose shall show Thy Foot and Knee Licentious, and to common Eye-sight free : And with a bolder Stride, and looser Air, Mingl'd with Men, a Man Thou must appear. 149 MATTHEW PRIOR Nor Solitude, nor gentle Peace of Mind, Mistaken Maid, shalt Thou in Forests find : 'Tis long, since Cynthia and her Train were there ; Or Guardian Gods made Innocence their Care. Vagrants and Out-laws shall oftend Thy View ; For such must be my Friends ; a hideous Crew, By adverse Fortune mix'd in Social 111, Train'd to assault, and disciplin'd to kill : Their common Loves, a lewd abandon'd Pack, The Beadle's Lash still flagrant on their Back ; By Sloth corrupted, by Disorder fed, Made bold by Want, and prostitute for Bread : With such must Emma hunt the tedious Day, Assist their Violence, and divide their Prey : With such She must return at setting Light, Tho' not Partaker, Witness of their Night. Thy Ear, inur'd to charitable Sounds, And pitying Love, must feel the hateful Wounds Of Jest obscene, and vulgar Ribaldry, The ill-bred Qiiestion, and the lewd Reply; Brought by long Habitude from Bad to Worse, Must hear the frequent Oath, the direful Curse, That latest Weapon of the Wretches War, And Blasphemy, sad Comrade of Despair. Now, Emma, now the last Reflec^tion make. What Thou would'st follow, what Thou must forsake : By our ill-omen'd Stars, and adverse Heav'n, No middle Objed\ to thy Choice is given. Or yield thy Virtue, to attain thy Love; Or leave a banish'd Man, condemn'd in Woods to rove. EMMA. O Grief of Heart ! that our unhappy Fates Force Thee to suffer what thy Honor hates : Mix Thee amongst the Bad ; or make Thee run Too near the Paths, which Virtue bids Thee shun. Yet with her Henry still let Emma go ; With Him abhor the Vice, but share the Woe : And sure My little Heart can never err Amidst the worst ; if Henry still be there. 150 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Our outward A61 is prompted from within ; And from the Sinner's Mind proceeds the Sin : By her own Choice free Virtue is approv'd ; Nor by the Force of outward Objefts mov'd. Who has assay'd no Danger, gains no Praise. In a small Isle, amidst the widest Seas, Triumphant Constancy has fixM her Seat : In vain the Syrens sing, the Tempests beat : Their Flatt'ry She rejects, nor fears their Threat. For Thee alone these little Charms I drest ; Condemn 'd them, or absolv'd them by thy Test. In comely Figure rang'd, my Jewels shone, Or negligently plac'd, for Thee alone : For Thee again they shall be laid aside : The Woman, Henry, shall put off her Pride For Thee : my Cloaths, my Sex exchang'd for Thee, I'll mingle with the People's wretched Lee ; O Line extream of human Infamy ! Wanting the Scissors, with these Hands I'll tear (If that obstru(^ts my Flight) this load of Hair. Black Soot, or yellow Walnut shall disgrace This little Red and White of Emma's Face. These Nails with Scratches shall deform my Breast, Lest by my Look, or Color be express'd The Mark of ought High-born, or ever better dress'd. Yet in this Commerce, under this Disguise, Let Me be grateful still to Henry's Eyes. Lost to the World, let Me to Him be known : My Fate I can absolve ; if He shall own, That leaving all Mankind, I love but Him alone. HENRT. O wildest Thought of an abandon'd Mind I Name, Habit, Parents, Woman left behind, Ev'n Honor dubious. Thou preferr'st to go Wild to the Woods with Me : Said Emma so ? Or did I dream what Emma never said ? O guilty Error ! and O wretched Maid ! 151 MATTHEW PRIOR Whose roving Fancy would resolve the same \ With Him, who next should tempt her easie Fame ; > And blow with empty Words the susceptible Flame. ) Now why should doubtful Terms thy Mind perplex r Confess thy Frailty, and avow the Sex : No longer loose Desire for constant Love Mistake ; but say, 'tis Man, with whom Thou long'st to rove. EMMJ. Are there not Poisons, Racks, and Flames, and Swords ; That Emma thus must die by Henry's Words ? Yet what could Swords or Poison, Racks or Flame, \ But mangle and disjoint this brittle Frame ? I More fatal Henry's Words ; they murder Emma's Fame, j And fall these Sayings from that gentle Tongue, Where civil Speech, and soft Persuasion hung ; Whose artful Sweetness and harmonious Strain, Courting my Grace, yet courting it in vain, Call'd Sighs, and Tears, and Wishes to it's Aid ; \ And, whilst it Henry's glowing Flame convey 'd, \. Still blam'd the Coldness of the Nut-brown Maid ? ) Let envious Jealousie, and canker'd Spight | Produce my Action to severest Light, > And tax my open Day, or secret Night. ) Did e'er my Tongue speak my unguarded Heart The least inclin'd to play the Wanton's Part ? Did e'er my Eye One inward Thought reveal, Which Angels might not hear, and Virgins tell ? And hast Thou, Henry, in my Condudl known \ One Fault, but That which I must ever own, I That I, of all Mankind, have lov'd but Thee alone .'' ) HENRY. Vainly thou talk'st of loving Mc alone : Each Man is Man ; and all Our Sex is One. False are our Words ; and fickle is our Mind : \ Nor in Love's Ritual can We ever find K Vows made to last, or Promises to bind. j 152 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS By Nature prompted, and for Empire made, Alike by Strength or Cunning We invade : When arm'd with Rage We march against the Foe ; We h'ft the Battel- Ax, and draw the Bow : When fir'd with Passion We attack the Fair ; Delusive Sighs and brittle Vows We bear : Our Falshood and our Arms have equal Use ; As they our Conquest, or Delight produce. The foolish Heart Thou gav'st, again receive, The only Boon departing Love can give. To be less Wretched, be no longer True : What strives to fly Thee, why should'st Thou pursue ? Forget the Present Flame, indulge a New. Single the loveliest of the am'rous Youth ; Ask for his Vow ; but hope not for his Truth. The next Man (and the. next Thou shalt believe) Will pawn his Gods, intending to deceive ; Will kneel, implore, persist, o'ercome, and leave. Hence let Thy Cupid aim his Arrows right ; Be Wise and False, shun Trouble, seek Delight, Change Thou the first, nor wait Thy Lover's Flight. Why should'st Thou weep? let Nature judge our Case I saw Thee Young, and Fair ; pursu'd the Chase Of Youth, and Beauty : I another saw Fairer, and Younger : yielding to the Law Of our all-ruling Mother, I pursu'd More Youth, more Beauty : Blest Vicissitude ! My active Heart still keeps it's pristine Flame ; The Objeil alter'd, the Desire the same. This Younger Fairer pleads her rightful Charms : With present Power compels me to her Arms. And much I fear, from my subjected Mind (If Beauty's Force to constant Love can bind) That Years may roll, e'er in Her turn the Maid Shall weep the Fury of my Love decay'd ; And weeping follow Me, as Thou dost now, With idle Clamours of a broken Vow. 153 MATTHEW PRIOR Nor can the wildness of thy Wishes err So wide, to hope that Thou may'st live with Her. Love, well Thou know'st, no Partnership allows : Cupid averse rejedts divided Vows. Then from tliy foolish Heart, vain Maid, remove A useless Sorrow, and an ill-starr'd Love ; And leave me, with the Fair, at large in Woods to rove. EMMA. Are we in Life thro' one great Error led ? Is each Man perjur'd, and each Nymph betray'd ? Of the Superior Sex art Thou the worst ? Am I of Mine the most compleatly Curst ? Yet let me go with Thee ; and going prove, From what I will endure, how much 1 love. This potent Beauty, this Triumphant Fair, This happy Objeft of our diff'rent Care, Her let me follow ; Her let me attend, A Servant : (She may scorn the Name of Friend.) What She demands, incessant I'll prepare : I'll weave Her Garlands ; and I'll pleat Her Hair : My busie Diligence shall deck Her Board ; (For there, at least, I may approach my Lord.) And when Her Henry's softer Hours advise His Servant's Absence ; with dejefted Eyes Far I'll recede, and Sighs forbid to rise. Yet when encreasing Grief brings slow Disease ; And ebbing Life, on Terms severe as these, Will have it's little Lamp no longer fed ; When HENR-i's Mistress shows him Emma dead ; Rescue my poor Remains from vile Negledt : With Virgin Honors let my Herse be deckt. And decent Emblem ; and at least persuade This happy Nymph, that Emma may be laid. Where Thou, dear Author of my Death, where She With frequent Eye my Sepulchre may see. The Nymph amidst her Joys may haply breath One pious Sigh, refledting on my Death, And the sad Fate which She may one Day prove, Who hopes from Henry's Vows Eternal Love. 154 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS And Thou forsworn, Thou cruel, as Thou art. If Emma's Image ever touch'd thy Heart ; Thou sure must give one Thought, and drop one Tear To Her, whom Love abandon'd to Despair; To Her, who dying, on the wounded Stone Bid it in lasting Charac^ters be known. That, of Mankind, She lov'd but Thee alone. HENRT. Hear, solemn Jove ; and, conscious Venus, hear; And Thou, bright Maid, believe Me, whilst I swear; No Time, no Change, no future Flame shall move The well-plac'd Basis of my lasting Love. O Powerful Virtue ! O Vidlorious Fair ! J At least excuse a Tryal too severe : V Receive the Triumph, and forget the War. ) No banish'd Man, condemn'd in Woods to rove, Intreats thy Pardon, and implores thy Love : No perjur'd Knight desires to quit thy Arms, Fairest Colleilion of thy Sexe's Charms, Crown of my Love, and Honor of my Youth : Henry, thy Henry with Eternal Truth, As Thou may'st wish, shall all his Life imploy. And found his Glory in his Emma's Joy. In Me behold the Potent Edgar's Heir, Illustrious Earl : Him terrible in War Let LoYRE confess ; for She has felt His Sword, And trembling fled before the British Lord. Him great in Peace and Wealth fair Deva knows ; For she amidst his spacious Meadows flows ; Inclines her Urn upon his fatten'd Lands ; And sees his num'rous Herd imprint her Sands. And Thou, my Fair, my Dove, shalt raise thy Thought To Greatness next to Empire ; shalt be brought With solemn Pomp to my Paternal Seat ; Where Peace and Plenty on Thy Word shall wait. Music and Song shall wake the Marriage-Day : \ And while the Priests accuse the Bride's Delay ; \ Myrtles and Roses shall obstruct Her Way. ) 155 MATTHEW PRIOR Friendship shall still Thy Evening Feasts adorn ; And blooming Peace shall ever bless Thy Morn. Succeeding Years their happy Race shall run ; And Age unheeded by Delight come on ; While yet Superior Love shall mock his Pow'r : And when old Time shall turn the fated Hour, Which only can our well-ty'd Knot unfold, What rests of Both, One Sepulchre shall hold. Hence then, for ever, from my Emma's Breast (That Heav'n of Softness, and that Seat of Rest) Ye Doubts and Fears, and All that know to move Tormenting Grief, and All that trouble Love, Scatter'd by Winds recede, and wild in Forests rove. EMMA. O Day the fairest sure that ever rose ! Period and End of anxious Emma's Woes ! Sire of her Joy, and Sovuce of her Delight ; O ! wing'd with Pleasure take thy happy Flight, And give each future Morn a Tinc^ture of thy White. Yet tell thy Votary, potent Queen of Love, Henry, my Henrv, will He never rove ? Will He be ever Kind, and Just, and Good \ And is there yet no Mistress in the Wood ? None, none there is : The Thought was rash and vain A false Idea, and a fancy 'd Pain. Doubt shall for ever quit my strengthen'd Heart, And anxious Jealousie's corroding Smart ; Nor other Inmate shall inhabit there. But soft Belief, young Joy, and pleasing Care. Hence let the Tides of Plenty ebb and flow. And Fortune's various Gale unheeded blow. If at my Feet the Suppliant Goddess stands, And sheds her Treasure with unweary'd Hands ; Her present Favor cautious I'll embrace, And not unthankful use the proffer'd Grace : If She reclaims the Temporary Boon, And tries her Pinions, flutt'ring to be gone j 156 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Secure of Mind I'll obviate her Intent, And unconcern'd return the Goods She lent. Nor Happiness can I, nor Misery feel, From any Turn of her Fantastic Wheel : Friendship's great Laws, and Love's superior Pow'rs Must mark the Colour of my future Hours. From the Events which Thy Commands create I must my Blessings or my Sorrows date ; And Henry's Will must diftate Emma's Fate. Yet while with close Delight and inward Pride (Which from the World my careful Soul shall hide) I see Thee, Lord and End of my Desire, Exalted high as Virtue can reqviire ; With Pow'r invested, and with Pleasure chear'd ; Sought by the Good, by the Oppressor fear'd ; Loaded and blest with all the affluent Store, Which human Vows at smoaking Shrines implore; Grateful and humble grant Me to employ My Life, subservient only to thy Joy ; And at my Death to bless thy Kindness shown To Her, who of Mankind could love but Thee alone. WHILE thus the constant Pair alternate said. Joyful above them and around them play'd Angels and sportive Loves, a numerous Crowd ; Smiling They clapt their Wings, and low They bow'd : They tumbled all their little Qiiivers o'er. To chuse propitious Shafts ; a precious Store : That when their God should take his future Darts, To strike (however rarely) constant Hearts, His happy Skill might proper Arms imploy. All tipt with Pleasure, and all wing'd with Joy : And Those, They vow'd, whose Lives should imitate These Lovers Constancy, should share their Fate. The Queen of Beauty stop'd her bridled Doves ; Approv'd the little Labour of the Loves ; Was proud and pleas'd the mutual Vow to hear ; And to the Triumph call'd the God of War : Soon as She calls, the God is always near. 157 MATTHEW PRIOR Now Mars, she said, let Fame exalt her Voice ; Nor let thy Conquests only be her Choice : But when She sings great Edward from the Field Return'd, the Hostile Spear and Captive Shield In Concord's Temple hung, and Gallia taught to yield. And when, as prudent Saturn shall compleat The Years design 'd to perfect Brlfain's State, The swift-wing'd Power shall take her Trump again. To sing Her Fav'rite Anna's wond'rous Reign ; To recolleft unweary'd Marlbro's Toils, Old RuFUs' Hall unequal to his Spoils ; The British Soldier from his high Command Glorious, and Gaul thrice Vanquish'd by his Hand : Let Her at least perform what I desire ; With second Breath the Vocal Brass inspire : And tell the Nations in no Vulgar Strain, What Wars I manage, and what Wreaths I gain. And when Thy Tumults and Thy Fights are past. And when Thy Lawrels at my Feet are cast ; Faithful may'st Thou like British Henr^' prove. And EMMA-like let me return Thy Love. Renown'd for Truth let all Thy Sons appear ; And constant Beauty shall reward their Care. Mars smil'd, and bow'd ; the Cyprian Deity Turn'd to the glorious Ruler of the Sky : And Thou, She smiling said. Great God of Days And Verse, behold my Deed ; and sing my Praise. As on the British Earth, my Fav'rite Isle, Thy gentle Rays and kindest Influence smile, Thro' all her laughing Fields and verdant Groves, Proclaim with Joy these memorable Loves. From ev'ry annual Course let One great Day, To celebrated Sports and Floral Play Be set aside ; and, in the softest Lays Of Thy Poetic Sons, be solemn Praise, And everlasting Marks of Honour paid. To thf true Lover ^ and the Nut-brown Maid. 158 AN ODE, Humbly Inscrib'd to the QUEEN. ON THE Glorious Success OF Her MAJESTY'S Arms, 1706. Written in Imitation of Spencer's Style. Te non paventis funera Gallias, Dur^que tellus audit Iberias : Te c^ede gaudentes Sicambri Compositis venerantur Armis.. Hor. MATTHEW PRIOR THE PREFACE. WHEN I first thought of IVriting upon this Occasion^ I found the Ideas so great and numerous^ that I judgd them more proper for the JVarmth of an Ode, than for any other sort of Poetry : I therefore set Horace before Me for a Pattern^ and particularly his famous Ode, the Fourth of the Fourth Book^ Qualcm ministrum fulminis Alitem, &c. which He wrote in Praise of Drusus after his Expedition into Germany, and of Augustus upon his happy Choice of That General. And in the following Poem, tho^ I have endeavored to imitate all the great Strokes of that Ode, / have taken the Liberty to go off" from it^ and to add variously^ as the SuhjeSl and my own Imagination carry d Me. As to the Style^ the Choice I made of following the Ode in Latin, determin''d Me in English to the Stanza ; and herein it tvas impossible not to have a Mind to follow our great Countryman Spencer ; which I have done (as well at least as I could) in the Manner of my Expression^ and the Turn of my Number : Having only added one Verse to his Stanza^ which 1 thought made the Number more Harmonious ; and avoided such of his JVords^ as I found too obsolete. I have however retain d soine feiv of them., to make the Colouring look more like Spencer'^ ; Behest, Command; Band, Artny; Prowess, Strength; I weet, / know; I ween, / think; whilom, heretofore; and Tzvo or Three more of that Kind., which I hope the Ladies will pardon wf, and not judge my MusE less handsome., though for once she appears in a Farthingal. I have also., in Spencer'^ Manner^ used Caesar for the Emperor., Boya for Bavaria, Bavar for that Prince^ Ister for Danube, Iberia for Spain, l^c. That noble Part of the Ode which I just now mention d^ Gens, quae creniato Fortis ab Ilio Jadlata Tuscis aequoribus, ^V. 1 60 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS where Horace praises the Romans, as being descended from ^NEAS, / have turned to the Honor of the British Nation^ descended from Brute, likewise a Trojan. That this Brute, Fourth or Fifth from tEneas, settled in England, and built London, which he caWd Troja Nova, or Troynovante, is a Story which (/ think) owes ifs Original^ if not to Geoffry of Monmouth, at least to the Monkish Writers \ yet is not reje£ied by Our great Camden, and is told by Milton, as if {at least) He was pleas' d with it ; though possibly He does not believe it : However it carries a Poetical Authority^ which is sufficient for our Purpose. It is as certain that Brute came into England, as that ^neas zvent into Italy j and upon the Supposition of these FaSfs., Virgil zvrote the best Poem that the World ever read^ and Spencer paid ^leen Elizabeth the greatest Co?npUment. I need not obviate one piece of Criticism^ that I bring my Hero From burning Troy, and Xanthus red with Blood : whereas He was not born., when that City was destroyed. Virgil, in the Case of His otvn tineas relating to Dido, will stand as a sufficient Proof that a Man in his Poetical Capacity is not accountable for a little Fault in Chronology. My Two Great Examples., Horace and Spenser, in many Things resemble each other : Both have a Height of Imagination^ and a Majesty of Expression in describing the Sublime ; and Both know to temper those Talents., and stveeten the Description^ so as to make it Lovely as well as Pompous : Both have equally That agreeable Manner of ynixing Morality with their Story ^ and That Curiosa Felicitas in the Choice of their Didion., which every Writer aims at^ and so very few have reached : Both are particularly Fine in their Images., and Knowing in their Numbers. Leaving therefore our Two Masters to the Consideration and Study of Those., who design to Excel in Poetry^ I only beg Leave to add.. That it is long since I have (or at least ought to have) quitted Parnassus, and all the fow^ry Roads on that Side the Country ; tho" I thought my self indispensably obliged., upon the present Occasion., to take a little journey into Those Parts. P. L i6i MATTHEW PRIOR AN ODE, Humbly Inscrib'd to the QUEEN. I. WHEN Great Augustus govern'd Antient Rome, And sent his Conqu'ring Bands to Foreign Wars ; Abroad when Dreaded, and Belov'd at Home, He saw his Fame encreasing with his Years ; Horace, Great Bard (so Fate ordain'd) arose ; And Bold, as were his Countrymen in Fight, Snatch'd their fair Actions from degrading Prose, And set their Battels in Eternal Light : High as their Trumpets Tune His Lyre he strung ; And with his Prince's Arms He moraliz'd his Song. IL When bright Eliza rul'd Britannia's State, Widely distributing Her high Commands ; And boldly Wise, and fortunately Great, Freed the glad Nations from Tyrannick Bands ; An equal Genius was in Spenser found : To the high Theme He match'd his Noble Lays : He travell'd England o'er on Fairy Ground, In Mystic Notes to Sing his Monarch's Praise : Reciting wond'rous Truths in pleasing Dreams, He deck'd Eliza's Head with Gloriana's Beams. HI. But, Greatest Anna ! while Thy Arms pursue Paths of Renown, and climb Ascents of Fame, Which nor Augustus, nor Eliza knew ; What Poet shall be found to sing Thy Name ? What Numbers shall record, what Tongue shall say Thy Wars on Land, Thy Triumphs on the Main ? 162 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS O Fairest Model of Imperial Sway ! What Equal Pen shall write Thy wond'rous Reign ? Who shall Attempts and Feats of Arms rehearse, Not yet by Story told, nor parallel'd by Verse ? IV. Me all too mean for such a Task I weet : Yet if the Sovereign Lady deigns to Smile, I'll follow Horace with impetuous Heat, And cloath the Verse in Spenser's Native Style. By these Examples rightly taught to sing, And Smit with Pleasure of my Country's Praise, Stretching the Plumes of an uncommon Wing, High as Olympus I my Flight will raise : And latest Times shall in my Numbers read Anna's Immortal Fame, and Marlbro's hardy Deed. V. As the strong Eagle in the silent Wood, Mindless of warlike Rage, and hostile Care, Plays round the rocky Cliff, or crystal Flood ; 'Till by Jove's high Behests call'd out to War, And charg'd with Thunder of his angry King, His Bosom with the vengeful Message glows : Upward the Noble Bird dire6ls his Wing ; And tow'ring round his Master's Earth-born Foes, Swift He coUefts his fatal Stock of Ire ; Lifts his fierce Talon high, and darts the forked Fire. VI. Sedate and calm thus Vi6lor Marlbro sate. Shaded with Laurels, in his Native Land ; 'Till Anna calls Him from his soft Retreat, And gives Her Second Thunder to his Hand. Then leaving sweet Repose, and gentle Ease, With ardent Speed He seeks the distant Foe : Marching o'er Hills and Vales, o'er Rocks and Seas, He meditates, and strikes the wond'rous Blow. Our Thought flies slower than Our General's Fame : Grasps He the Bolt? (We ask) when He has hurl'd the Flame. L 2 163 MATTHEW PRIOR VII. When fierce Bavar on Judoign's spacious Plain Did from afar the British Chief behold ; Betwixt Despair, and Rage, and Hope, and Pain, Something within his warring Bosom roll'd : He views that Fav'rite of Indulgent Fame, Whom whilom He had met on Ister's Shoar : Too well, alas ! the Man He knows the same. Whose Prowess there repell'd the Boyan Pow'r ; And sent Them trembling thro' the frighted Lands, Swift as the Whirlwind drives Arabia's scatter'd Sands. vni. His former Losses He forgets to grieve ; Absolves his Fate, if with a kinder Ray It now would shine, and only give Him leave To Balance the Account of Blenheim's Day. So the fell Lion in the lonely Glade, His Side still smarting with the Hunter's Spear, Tho' deeply wounded, no way yet dismay 'd. Roars terrible, and meditates new War ; In sullen Fury traverses the Plain, To find the vent'rous Foe, and Battel Him again. IX. Misguided Prince ! no longer urge Thy Fate, Nor tempt the Hero to unequal War ; Fam'd in Misfortune, and in Ruin Great, Confess the Force of Marlbro's stronger Star. Those Laurel Groves (the Merits of thy Youth) Which Thou from Mahomet didst greatly gain, While bold Assertor of resistless Truth, Thy Sword did Godlike Liberty maintain. Must from thy Brow their falling Honors shed ; And their transplanted Wreaths must deck a worthier Head. X. Yet cease the Ways of Providence to blame. And Human Faults with Human Grief confess : 'Tis Thou art chang'd ; while Heav'n is still the same : From Thy ill Councils date Thy ill Success. 164 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Impartial Justice holds Her equal Scales ; 'Till stronger Virtue does the Weight incline : If over Thee thy glorious Foe prevails ; He now Defends the Cause, that once was Thine. Righteous the War, the Champion shall subdue ; For Jove's great Handmaid Power, must Jove's Decrees pursue. XI. Hark ! the dire Trumpets sound their shrill Alarms : Auverquerque, branch'd from the renown'd Nassaws, Hoary in War, and bent beneath his Arms, His Glorious Sword with Dauntless Courage draws. When anxious Britain mourn 'd her parting Lord, And all of William that was Mortal Dy'd ; The faithful Hero had receiv'd This Sword From His expiring Master's much-lov'd Side. Oft from it's fatal Ire has Louis flown, Where-e'er Great William led, or Maese and Sambre run. xn. But brandish'd high, in an ill-omen'd Hour To Thee, proud Gaul, behold thy justest Fear, The Master Sword, Disposer of thy Power : 'Tis That which Caesar gave the British Peer. He took the Gift : Nor ever will I sheath This Steel, (so Anna's high Behests ordain) The General said, unless by Glorious Death Absolv'd, 'till Conquest has confirm'd Your Reign. Returns like these Our Mistress bids us make, When from a Foreign Prince a Gift Her Britons take. XIII. And now fierce Gallia rushes on her Foes, Her Force augmented by the Bo\ an Bands : So Volga's Stream, increas'd by Mountain Snows, Rolls with new Fury down thro' Russia's Lands. Like two great Rocks against the raging Tide, (If Virtue's Force with Nature's We compare) Unmov'd the Two imited Chiefs abide. Sustain the Impulse, and receive the War. Round their firm Sides in vain the Tempest beats ; And still the foaming Wave with lessen'd Pow'r retreats. 165 MATTHEW PRIOR XIV. The Rage dispers'd, the Glorious Pair advance, With mingl'd Anger, and colledled Might, To turn the War, and tell aggressing France, How Britain's Sons and Britain's P>iends can light. On Conquest fix'd, and covetous of Fame, Behold Fhem rushing thro' the Gallic Host. Thro' standing Corn so runs the sudden Flame, Or Eastern Winds along Sicilia's Coast. They deal their Terrors to the adverse Nation : Pale Death attends their Arms, and ghastly Desolation. XV. But while with fiercest Ire Bellona glows. And Europe rather Hopes than Fears Her Fate ; While Britain presses Her afflifted Foes ; What Horror damps the Strong, and quells the Great ? Whence look the Soldiers Cheeks dismay 'd and pale ? Erst ever dreadful, know They now to dread .'' The Hostile Troops, I ween, almost prevail ; And the Pursuers only not recede. Alas ! their lessen'd Rage proclaims their Grief! For anxious, lo ! They croud around their falling Chief! XVI. I thank Thee, Fate, exclaims the fierce Bavar ; Let Boya's Trumpet grateful Jo's sound : I saw Him fall, their Thunderbolt of War : Ever to Vengeance sacred be the Ground Vain Wish ! short Joy ! the Hero mounts again In greater Glory, and with fuller Light : The Ev'ning Star so falls into the Main, To rise at Morn more prevalently bright. He rises safe : but near, too near his Side, A good Man's grievous Loss, a faithful Servant dy'd. XVII. Propitious Mars ! the Battel is regain'd : The Foe with lessen'd Wrath disputes the Field : The Briton fights, by fav'ring Gods sustain'd : Freedom must live ; and lawless Power must yield. i66 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Vain now the Tales which fab'Iing Poets tell, That wav'ring Conquest still desires to rove ! In Marlbro's Camp the Goddess knows to dwell : Long as the Hero's Life remains her Love. Again France flies : again the Duke pursues : And on Ramjllia's Plains He Blenheim's Fame renews. XVIIL Great Thanks, O Captain great in Arms ! receive From thy Triumphant Country's public Voice : Thy Country greater Thanks can only give To Anne, to Her who made those Arms Her Choice. Recording Schellenberg's, and Blenheim's Toils, We dreaded lest Thou should'st those Toils repeat : We view'd the Palace charg'd with Gallic Spoils ; And in those Spoils We thought thy Praise compleat : For never Greek, We deem'd, nor Roman Knight, In Chara6lers like these did e'er his A6ls indite. XIX. Yet mindless still of Ease, Thy Virtue flies A Pitch to Old and Modern Times unknown : Those goodly Deeds which We so highly prize, Imperfect seem, great Chief, to Thee alone. Those Heights, where William's Virtue might have staid. And on the Subject World look'd safely down. By Marlbro pass'd, the Props and Steps were made, Sublimer yet to raise his Queen's Renown : Still gaining more, still slighting what He gain'd. Nought done the Hero deem'd, while ought undone remain'd. XX. When swift-wing'd Rumor told the mighty Gaul, How lessen'd from the Field Bavar was fled ; He wept the Swiftness of the Champion's Fall ; And thus the Royal Treaty-Breaker said : And lives He yet, the Great, the Lost Bavar, Ruin to Gallia, in the Name of Friend ? Tell Me, how far has Fortune been severe ? Has the Foe's Glory, or our Grief an End ? Remains there, of the Fifty Thousand lost. To save our threaten'd Realm, or guard our shatter'd Coast ? 167 MATTHEW PRIOR XXI. To the close Rock the frighted Raven flies, Soon as the rising Eagle cuts the Air : The shaggy Wolf unseen and trembling lyes, When the hoarse Roar proclaims the Lion near. Ill-starr'd did We our Forts and Lines forsake, To dare our British Foes to open Fight : Our Conquest We by Stratagem should make : Our Triumph had been founded in our Flight. 'Tis Our's, by Craft and by Surprize to gain : 'Tis Their's, to meet in Arms, and Battel in the Plain. XXIL The ancient Father of this Hostile Brood, Their boasted Brute, undaunted snatch'd his Gods From burning Troy, and Xanthus red with Blood, And fix'd on Silver Thames his dire Abodes ; And this be Troynovante, He said, the Seat By Heav'n ordain'd, My Sons, Your lasting Place : Superior here to all the Bolts of Fate Live, mindful of the Author of your Race, Whom neither Greece, nor War, nor Want, nor Flame, Nor Great Peleides' Arm, nor Juno's Rage could tame. XXIII. Their Tudor's hence, and Siuart's Off-spring flow : Hence Edward, dreadful with his Sable Shield, Talbot, to Gallia's Pow'r Eternal Foe, And Seymour, fam'd in Council, or in Field : Hence Nevil, Great to Settle or Dethrone, And Drake, and Ca'ndish, Terrors of the Sea : Hence Butler's Sons, o'er Land and Ocean known, Herbert's, and Churchill's Warring Progeny : Hence the long Roll which Gallia should conceal : For, oh ! Who vanquish'd, loves the Vi6lor's Fame to tell ? XXIV. Envy'd Britannia, sturdy as the Oak, Which on her Mountain-Top She proudly bears. Eludes the Ax, and sprouts against the Stroke ; Strong from her Wounds, and greater by her Wars. J 68 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS And as Those Teeth, which Cadmus sow'd in Earth, Produc'd new Youth, and furnish'd fresh Supplies : So with young Vigor, and succeeding Birth, Her Losses more than recompens'd arise ; And ev'ry Age She with a Race is CrownM, For Letters more Polite, in Battels more Renown'd. XXV. Obstinate Pow'r, whom Nothing can repel ; Not the fierce Saxon, nor the cruel Dane, Nor deep Impression of the Norman Steel, Nor Europe's Force amass'd by envious Spain, Nor France on universal Sway intent, Oft breaking Leagues, and oft renewing Wars, Nor (frequent Bane of wealcen'd Government) Their own intestine Feuds, and mutual Jars ; Those Feuds and Jars, in which I trusted more, Than in My Troops, and Fleets, and all the Gallic Pow'r. XXVL To fruitful Rheims, or fair Lutetia's Gate What Tidings shall the Messenger convey ? Shall the loud Herald our Success relate, Or mitred Priest appoint the Solemn Day ? Alas ! my Praises They no more must Sing ; They to my Statue now must Bow no more : Broken, repuls'd is their Immortal King : Fall'n, fall'n for ever is the Gallic Pow'r The JVoman Chief is Master of the War : Earth She has freed by Arms, and vanquish'd Heav'n by Pray'r. XXVII. While thus the ruin'd Foe's Despair commends Thy Council and Thy Deed, Vidorious Queen, What shall Thy Subjefts say, and what Thy Friends ? How shall Thy Triumphs in Our Joy be seen ? Oh ! daign to let the Eldest of the Nine Recite Britannia Great, and Gallia Free: Oh ! with her Sister Sculpture let her join To raise, Great Anne, the Monument to Thee ; To Thee, of all our Good the Sacred Spring ; To Thee, our dearest Dread ; to Thee, our softer King. 169 MATTHEW PRIOR XXVIII. Let Europe sav'd the Column high ere6t, Than Trajan's higher, or than Antonine's ; Where sembHng Art may carve the fair EfFe6l, And full Atchievement of Thy great Designs. In a calm Heav'n, and a serener Air, Sublime the Queen shall on the Summit stand, From Danger far, as far remov'd from Fear, And pointing down to Earth Her dread Command. All Winds, all Storms that threaten Human Woe, Shall sink beneath Her Feet, and spread their Rage below. XXIX. There Fleets shall strive by Winds and Waters tost ; 'Till the young Austrian on Iberia's Strand, Great as JEt^eas on the Latian Coast, Shall fix his Foot : and This, be This the Land, Great Jove, where I for ever will remain (The Empire's other Hope shall say) and here Vanquish'd, Intomb'd I'll lye, or Crown'd I'll Reign O Virtue, to thy British Mother dear ! Like the fam'd Trojan suffer and abide ; For Anne is Thine, I ween, as Venus was His Guide. XXX. There, in Eternal Charadlers engrav'd, Vigo, and Gibraltar, and Barcelone, Their Force destroy 'd, their Privileges sav'd, Shall Anna's Terrors, and Her Mercies own : Spain, from th'Usurper Bourbon's Arms retriev'd, Shall with new Life and grateful Joy appear, Numb'ring the Wonders which That Youth atchiev'd, Whom Anna clad in Arms, and sent to War; Whom Anna sent to claim Iberia's Throne; And made Him more than King, in calling Him Her Son. XXXI. There Ister pleas'd, by Blenheim's glorious Field Rolling, shall bid his Eastern Waves declare Germania sav'd by Britain's ample Shield, And bleeding Gaul affli6ted by her Spear : 170 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Shall bid Them mention Marlbro, on that Shore Leading his Islanders, renown'd in Arms, Thro' Climes, where never British Chief before Or pitch 'd his Camp, or sounded his Alarms : Shall bid Them bless the Queen, who made his Streams Glorious as those of Boyn, and safe as those of Thames. XXXII. Brabantia, clad with Fields, and crown'd with Tow'rs, With decent Joy shall her Deliv'rer meet ; Shall own Thy Arms, Great Queen, and bless Thy Pow'rs, Laying the Keys beneath Thy Subje6l's Feet. Flandria, by Plenty made the Home of War, Shall weep her Crime, and bow to Charles restor'd ; With double Vows shall bless Thy happy Care, In having drawn, and having sheath'd the Sword. From these their Sister Provinces shall know How Anne supports a Friend, and how forgives a Foe. XXXIII. Bright Swords, and crested Helms, and pointed Spears In artful Piles around the Work shall lye ; And Shields indented deep in ancient Wars, Blazon'd with Signs of Gallic Heraldry; And Standards with distinguish'd Honors bright, Marks of high Pow'r and National Command, Which Valois' Sons, and Bourbon's bore in Fight, Or gave to Foix', or Montmorancy's Hand : Great Spoils, which Gallia must to Britain yield, From Cressy's Battel sav'd, to grace Ramillia's Field. XXXIV. And as fine Art the Spaces may dispose. The knowing Thought and curious Eye shall see Thy Emblem, Gracious Queen, the British Rose, Type of sweet Rule, and gentle Majesty : The Northern Thistle, whom no Hostile Hand Unhurt too rudely may provoke, I ween ; Hibernia's Harp, Device of Her Command, And Parent of Her Mirth, shall there be seen : Thy vanquish'd Lillies, France, decay'd and torn, Shall with disorder'd Pomp the lasting Work adorn. 171 MATTHEW PRIOR XXXV. Beneath, Great Queen, oh ! very far beneath, Near to the Ground, and on the humble Base, To save Her self from Darkness, and from Death, That Muse desires the last, the lowest Place ; Who tho' unmeet, yet touch'd the trembling String ; For the fair Fame of Anne and Albion's Land, Who durst of War and Martial Fury Sing : And when Thy Will, and when Thy Subject's Hand Had quell'd those Wars, and bid that Fury cease ; Hangs up her grateful Harp to Conquest, and to Peace. CANTATA. Set by Monsieur Galliard. REGIT. BENEATH a verdant Lawrel's ample Shade, His Lyre to mournful Numbers strung, Horace, immortal Bard, supinely laid, To Venus thus address'd the Sono- : o Ten thousand little Loves around List'ning, dwelt on ev'ry Sound. ARIET. Potent Venus, bid Thy Son Sound no more His dire Alarms. Youth on silent Wings is flown : Graver Years come rolling on. Spare my Age, unfit for Arms : Safe and iiumble let Me rest, From all am'rous Care releas'd. Potent Venus, bid Thy Son Sound no more His dire Alarms. 172 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS REGIT. Yet, Venus, why do I each Morn prepare The fragrant Wreath for Cloe's Hair ? Why, why do I all Day lament, and sigh. Unless the beauteous Maid be nigh ? And why all Night pursue Her in my Dreams, Thro' Flow'ry Meads, and Crystal Streams ? REGIT. Thus sung the Bard; and thus the Goddess spoke Submissive bow to Love's imperious Yoke. Ev'ry State, and ev'ry Age Shall own My Rule, and fear My Rage : Compell'd by Me Thy Muse shall prove, That all the World was born to love. ARIET. Bid Thy destin'd Lyre discover Soft Desire, and gentle Pain : Often praise, and always love Her : Thro' her Ear her Heart obtain. Verse shall please, and Sighs shall move Her : Cupid does with Phoebus reign. Her Right Name. As Nancy at Her Toylet sat. Admiring This, and blaming That ; Tell Me, She said ; but tell Me true ; The Nymph who cou'd your Heart subdue. What Sort of Charms does She possess ? Absolve Me Fair One : I'll confess ; With Pleasure I reply'd. Her Hair, In Ringlets rather dark than fair. Does down her Iv'ry Bosom roll, And hiding Half, adorns the Whole. 173 MATTHEW PRIOR In her high Forehead's fair half-round Love sits in open Triumph crown'd : He in the Dimple of her Chin, In private State by Friends is seen. Her Eyes are neither black, nor grey; Nor fierce, nor feeble is their Ray : Their dubious Lustre seems to show- Something that speaks nor Yes, nor No. Her Lips no living Bard, I weet, May say, how Red, how Round, how Sweet Old Homer only cou'd indite Their vagrant Grace, and soft Delight : They stand Recorded in his Book, When Helen smil'd, and Hebe spoke The Gipsy turning to her Glass, Too plainly show'd. She knew the Face : And which am I most like. She said. Your Cloe, or Your Nut-brown Maidf Written in a7i OVID. OVID is the surest Guide, You can name, to show the Way To any Woman, Maid, or Bride, Who resolves to go astray. A TRUE MAID. No, no ; for my Virginity, When I lose that, says Rose, I'll dye Behind the Elmes, last Night, cry'd Dick, Rose, were You not extreamly Sick ? 174 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS ANOTHER. TEN Months after Florimel happen'd to wed, And was brought in a laudable Manner to Bed ; She warbl'd Her Groans with so charming a Voice, That one half of the Parish was stun'd with the Noise. But when Florimel deign'd to lie privately in, Ten Months before She and her Spouse were a-kin ; She chose with such Prudence her Pangs to conceal. That her Nurse, nay her Midwife, scarce heard her once squeal. Learn, Husbands, from hence, for the Peace of your Lives, That Maids make not half such a Tumult, as Wives. A Reasonable Affliction. ON His Death-Bed poor Lubin lies His Spouse is in Despair : With frequent Sobs, and mutual Cries, They Both express their Care. A diff'rent Cause, says Parson Sly, The same EfFeft may give : Poor Lubin fears, that He shall Die; His Wife, that He may Live. Another Reasonable Affliction. FROM her own Native France as old Alison past, She reproach'd English Nell with Negledt or with Malice, That the Slattern had left, in the Hurry and Hast, Her Lady's Complexion, and Eye-brows at Calais. MATTHEW PRIOR ANOTHER. HER Eye-brow-Box one Morning lost, (The best of Folks are oft'nest crost) Sad Helen thus to Jennv said, Her careless but afflidted Maid ; Put me to Bed then, wretched Jane : Alas ! when shall I rise again ? I can behold no Mortal now : For what's an Eye without a Brow ? 0?2 the same Stibjeft, IN a dark Corner of the House, Poor Helen sits, and sobs and cries She will not see her Loving Spouse, Nor her more dear Picquet-h}^\Q.'=, : Unless She finds her Eye-brows, She'll e'en weep out her Eyes. On the Same. HELEN was just slipt into Bed : Her Eye-brows on the Toilet lay : Away the Kitten with them fled. As Fees belonging to her Prey. For this Misfortune careless Jane, Assure your self, was loudly rated : And Madam getting up again, With her own Hand the Mouse-Trap baited. On little Things, as Sages write. Depends our Human Joy, or Sorrow : If We don't catch a Mouse To-night, Alas ! no Eye-brows for To-morrow. 176 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS PHYLLIS^ AGE. HOW old may Phyllis be, You ask, Whose Beauty thus all Hearts engages ? To Answer is no easie Task ; For She has really two Ages, Stiff in Brocard, and pinch'd in Stays, Her Patches, Paint, and Jewels on ; All Day let Envy view her Face ; And Phyllis is but Twenty-one. Paint, Patches, Jewels laid aside, At Night Astronomers agree. The Evening has the Day bely'd ; And Phyllis is some Forty-three. Forma Bonum Fragile, WHAT a frail Thing is Beauty, says Baron Le Cras, Perceiving his Mistress had one Eye of Glass : And scarcely had He spoke it ; When She more confus'd, as more angry She grew, By a negligent Rage prov'd the Maxim too true : She dropt the Eye, and broke it. H A Critical Moment. OW capricious were Nature and Art to poor Nell ? She was painting her Cheeks at the time her Nose fell. M 177 MATTHEW PRIOR An EPIGRAM. Written to the Duke de Noailles. VAIN the Concern which You express, That uncall'd Alard will possess Your House and Coach, both Day and Night ; And that Mackbeth was haunted less By Banquo's restless Spright. With Fifteen Thousand Pound a Year, Do You complain, You cannot bear An 111, You may so soon retrieve ? Good Alard, faith, is modester By much, than You believe. Lend Him but fifty Louis (Vor^ And You shall never see Him more : Take the Advice ; Probatum est. Why do the Gods indulge our Store, But to secure our Rest ? EPILOGUE TO PHMDRA. Spoken by Mrs. Oldfield, who adied Ismena. E' ADIES, to Night your Pity I implore For One, who never troubled You before : An OxFORD-Man, extreamly read in Greek, Who from Euripides makes Ph-sdra speak ; And comes to Town, to let Us Moderns know, How Women lov'd two thousand Years ago. If that be all, said I, e'en burn your Play : r gad ! We know all that, as well as They : Show Us the youthful, handsome Charioteer, Firm in his Seat, and running his Career ; 178 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Our Souls would kindle with as gen'rous Flames, As e'er inspir'd the antient Grecian Dames : Ev'ry IsMENA would resign her Breast ; And ev'ry dear Hippolytus be blest. But, as it is, Six flouncing Flanders Mares Are e'en as good, as any Two of Theirs ; And if Hippolytus can but contrive To buy the gilded Chariot; John can drive. Now of the Bustle You have seen to Day, And Phj^dra's Morals in this Scholar's Play, Something at least in Justice should be said : But this Hippolytus so fills One's Head Well ! Ph^dra liv'd as chastly as She cou'd. For she was Father Jove's own Flesh and Blood. Her aukward Love indeed was odly fated : She and her Poly were too near related : And yet that Scruple had been laid aside, If honest Theseus had but fairly dy'd: But when He came, what needed He to know, But that all Matters stood in Statu quo ? There was no harm, You see; or grant there were: She might want Conduct ; but He wanted Care. 'Twas in a Husband little less than rude, Upon his Wife's Retirement to intrude He should have sent a Night or two before. That He would come exaft at such an Hour : Then He had turn'd all Tragedy to Jest ; Found ev'ry Thing contribute to his Rest ; The P/c-^M^/-Friend dismiss'd, the Coast all clear, And Spouse alone impatient for her Dear. But if these gay Refledtions come too late, To keep the guilty Ph^dra from her Fate; If your more serious Judgment must condemn The dire Efte6ls of her vmhappy Flame : Yet, Ye chaste Matrons, and Ye tender Fair, Let Love and Innocence engage your Care: My spotless Flames to your Proteftion take ; And spare poor Fh^dra, for Ismena's sake. M 2 179 MATTHEW PRIOR EPILOGUE TO LUCIUS. spoken by Mrs. Horton. THE Female Author who recites to Day, Trusts to her Sex the Merit of her Play. Like Father Bayes securely She sits down : Pitt, Box and Gallery, Gad ! All's our Own. In antient Greece, She says, when Sappho writ, By their Applause the Critics show'd their Wit. They tun'd their Voices to her Lyric String; The' they cou'd All do something more, than Sing. But one Exception to this Fad we find; That Booby Phaon only was unkind, An ill-bred Boat-man, rough as Waves and Wind. From Sappho down thro' all succeeding Ages, And now on French, or on Italian Stages, Rough Satyrs, sly Remarks, ill-natur'd Speeches, Are always aim'd at Poets, that wear Breeches. Arm'd with Longinus, or with Rapin, No Man Drew a sharp Pen upon a Naked Woman. The blust'ring Bully in our neighb'ring Streets, Scorns to attack the Female that He meets : Fearless the Petticoat contemns his Frowns : The Hoop secures, whatever it surrounds. The many-color'd Gentry there above. By turns are rul'd by Tumult, and by Love : And while their Sweet-hearts their Attention fix. Suspend the Din of their damn'd clatt'ring Sticks. Now Sirs To You our Author niakes Her soft Request, Who speak the kindest, and who write the best. Your Sympathetic Hearts She hopes to move. From tender Friendship, and endearing Love. i8o POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS If Petrarch's Muse did Laura's Wit rehearse, And Cowley flatter'd dear Orinda's Verse ; She hopes from You Pox take her Hopes and Fears ; I plead her Sexe's Claim : what matters Hers ? By Our full Pow'r of Beauty We think fit, To damn this Salique Law impos'd on Wit : We'll try the Empire You so long have boasted ; And if We are not Prais'd, We'll not be Toasted. Approve what One of us presents to Night ; Or ev'ry Mortal Woman here shall write : Rural, Pathetic, Narrative, Sublime, We'll write to You, and make You write in Rhime : Female Remarks shall take up all Your Time. Your Time, poor Souls ! we'll take your very Money ; Female Third Days shall come so thick upon Ye. As long as We have Eyes, or Hands, or Breath, We'll Look, or Write, or Talk You All to Death. Unless Ye yield for Better and for Worse : Then the She-PEGASUs shall gain the Course ; And the Grey Mare will prove the better Horse. The THIEF AND THE CORDELIER, A BALLAD. To the Tune of King John, and the Abbot of Canterbury. WHO has e'er been at Paris, must needs know the Greve^ The fatal Retreat of th'unfortunate Brave ; Where Honor and Justice most odly contribute. To ease Hero's Pains by a Halter and Gibbet. Derry down^ down^ hey derry down. i8i MATTHEW PRIOR There Death breaks the Shackles, which Force had put on ; And the Hangman compleats, what the Judge but begun: There the 'Squire of the Pad, and the Knight of the Post, Find their Pains no more balk'd, and their Hopes no more crost. Derry down^ &c. Great Claims are there made, and great Secrets are known; And the King, and the Law, and the Thief has His own : But my Hearers cry out ; What a duce dost Thou ayl ? Cut off thy Reflections ; and give Us thy Tale. Derry doivn^ Sec. 'Twas there, then, in civil Respeft to harsh Laws, And for want of false Witness, to back a bad Cause, A Norman, tho' late, was oblig'd to appear : And Who to assist, but a grave Cordelier ? Derry down, &c. The 'Squire, whose good Grace was to open the Scene, Seem'd not in great Haste, that the Show shou'd begin : Now fitted the Halter, now travers'd the Cart ; And often took Leave ; but was loath to Depart. Derry down, &c. What frightens You thus, my good Son ? says the Priest : You Murther'd, are Sorry, and have been Confest. O Father ! My Sorrow will scarce save my Bacon : For 'twas not that I Murther'd, but that I was Taken. Derry dotvn, &c. Pough ! pr'ythee ne'er trouble thy Head with such Fancies: Rely on the Aid You shall have from Saint Francis : If the Money You promis'd be brought to the Chest ; You have only to Dye : let the Church do the rest. Derry doivn, &c. And what will Folks say, if they see You afraid ? It reflects upon Me ; as I knew not my Trade : Courage, Friend ; To-day is your Period of Sorrow ; And Things will go better, believe Me, To-morrow. Derry down, &c. 182 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS To-morrow ? our Hero reply'd in a Fright : He that's hang'd before Noon, ought to think of To-night. Tell your Beads, quoth the Priest, and be fairly truss'd up: For You surely To-night shall in Paradise Sup. Derry down^ &c. Alas ! quoth the 'Squire, howe'er sumptuous the Treat, Parblew, I shall have little Stomach to Eat : I should therefore esteem it great Favor, and Grace ; Wou'd You be so kind, as to go in my Place. Derry down^ &c. That I w^ou'd, quoth the Father, and thank you to boot; But our Aftions, You know, with our Duty must suit. The Feast, I propos'd to You, I cannot taste : For this Night, by our Order, is mark'd for a Fast. Derry doiun^ Sec. Then turning about to the Hangman, He said j Dispatch me, I pr'ythee, this troublesome Blade : For Thy Cord, and My Cord both equally tie ; And We Live by the Gold, for which other Men Dye. Derry down, Sec. An EPITAPH. Stet quicunque volet potens Aula culmine lubrico, &c. Senec. INTERR'D beneath this Marble Stone, Lie Saunt'ring Jack, and Idle Joan. While rolling Threescore Years and One Did round this Globe their Courses run ; If Human Things went 111 or Well ; If changing Empires rose or fell ; The Morning past, the Evening came. And found this Couple still the same. 183 MATTHEW PRIOR They Walk'd and Eat, good Folks : What then ? Why then They Walk'd and Eat again : They soundly slept the Nigiit away: They did just Nothing all the Day: And having bury'd Children Four, Wou'd not take Pains to try for more. Nor Sister either had, nor Brother : They seem'd just Tally'd for each other. Their Moral and Oeconomy Most perfe6lly They made agree : Each Virtue kept it's proper Bound, Nor Trespass'd on the other's Ground. Nor Fame, nor Censure They regarded : They neither Punish'd, nor Rewarded. He car'd not what the Footmen did : Her Maids She neither prais'd, nor chid : So ev'ry Servant took his Course ; And bad at First, They all grew worse. Slothful Disorder fiU'd His Stable; And sluttish Plenty deck'd Her Table. Their Beer was strong ; Their Wine was Port ; Their Meal was large ; Their Grace was short. They gave the Poor the Remnant-meat, Just when it grew not fit to eat. They paid the Church and Parish-Rate ; And took, but read not the Receit : For which They claim'd their Sunday''s Due, Of slumb'ring in an upper Pew. No Man's Defefts sought They to know ; So never made Themselves a Foe. No Man's good Deeds did They commend ; So never rais'd Themselves a Friend. Nor chcrish'd They Relations poor : That might decrease Their present Store : Nor Barn nor House did they repair : That might oblige Their future Heir. 184 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS They neither Added, nor Confounded : They neither Wanted, nor Abounded. Each Chr'ist7nas They Accompts did clear ; And wound their Bottom round the Year. Nor Tear, nor Smile did They imploy At News of Public Grief, or Joy. When Bells were Rung, and Bonfires made ; If ask'd. They ne'er deny'd their Aid : Their Jugg was to the Ringers carry'd ; Who ever either Dy'd, or Marry'd. Their Billet at the Fire was found ; Who ever was Depos'd, or Crown'd. Nor Good, nor Bad, nor Fools, nor Wise j They wou'd not learn, nor cou'd advise : Without Love, Hatred, Joy, or Fear, They led a kind of as it were : Nor Wish'd, nor Car'd, nor Laugh'd, nor Cry'd : And so They liv'd ; and so They dy'd. Horace Lib. L Epist. IX. Septimius, Claudi^ nimirum intelligit unus^ Quanti me facias : &c. Imitated. To the Right Honorable Mr. HARLET. DEAR Dick, hov/ e'er it comes into his Head, Believes, as firmly as He does his Creed, That You and I, Sir, are extremely great ; Tho' I plain Mat, You Minister of State. One Word from JVIe, without all doubt. He says, Wou'd fix his Fortune in some little Place. 185 MATTHEW PRIOR Thus better than My self, it seems, He knows. How far my Interest with my Patron goes ; And answering all Objeftions I can make. Still plunges deeper in his dear Mistake. From this wild Fancy, Sir, there may proceed One wilder yet, which I foresee, and dread ; That I, in FacSt, a real Interest have. Which to my own Advantage I wou'd save. And, with the usual Courtier's Trick, intend To serve My self, forgetful of my Friend. To shun this Censure, I all Shame lay by; And make my Reason with his Will comply; Hoping, for my Excuse, 'twill be confest, That of two Evils I have chose the least. So, Sir, with this Epistolary Scroll, Receive the Partner of my inmost Soul : Him you will find in Letters, and in Laws Not unexpert, firm to his Country's Cause, Warm in the Glorious Interest You pursue. And, in one Word, a Good Man and a True. To Mr. HARLEY. Wounded by Guiscard. 171 i -ah ipso Duett opes animumque ferro. Hor. I. IN one great Now^ Superior to an Age, The full Extremes of Nature's Force We find How Heav'nly Virtue can exalt; or Rage Infernal, how degrade the Human Mind. 186 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS 11. While the fierce Monk does at his Tryal stand ; He chews Revenge, abjuring his Offence : Guile in his Tongue, and Murther in his Hand, He stabs his Judge, to prove his Innocence. HI. The guilty Stroke and Torture of the Steel Infix'd, our dauntless Briton scarce perceives : The Wounds His Countrey from His Death must feel. The Patriot views ; for those alone He grieves, IV. The barb'rous Rage that durst attempt Thy Life, Harley, great Counsellor, extends Thy Fame : And the sharp Point of cruel Guiscard's Knife, In Brass and Marble carves Thy deathless Name. V. Faithful Assertor of Thy Country's Cause, Britain with Tears shall bath Thy glorious Wound : She for thy Safety shall enlarge Her Laws ; And in Her Statutes shall Thy Worth be found. VL Yet 'midst Her Sighs She Triumphs, on the Hand Refle6ling, that diffus'd the Publick Woe ; A Stranger to her Altars, and her Land : No Son of Her's could meditate this Blow. VII. Mean Time Thy Pain is gracious Anna's Care : Our Queen, our Saint, with sacrificing Breath Softens Thy Anguish : In Her pow'rful Pray'r She pleads Thy Service, and forbids Thy Death. VIII. Great as Thou art. Thou canst demand no more, O Breast bewail'd by Earth, preserv'd by Heav'n ! No higher can aspiring Virtue soar : Enough to Thee of Grief, and Fame is giv'n. MATTHEW PRIOR An Exte7npore Invitation TO THE EARL of OXFORD, Lord High Treasurer. 17 12 O My LORD, UR Weekly Friends To-morrow meet At Matthew's Palace, iir Duke-street ; To try for once, if They can Dine On Bacon-Ham, and Mutton-chine : If weary'd with the great Affairs, Which Britain trusts to Harlev's Cares, Thou, humble Statesman, may'st descend, Thy Mind one Moment to unbend ; To see Thy Servant from his Soul Crown with Thy Health the sprightly Bowl Among the Guests, which e'er my House Receiv'd, it never can produce Of Honor a more glorious Proof Tho' Dorset us'd to bless the Roof. Erie ROBERT'S MICE. hi ChaucerV Stile, TWAY Mice, full Blythe and Amicable, Batten beside Erie Robert's Table. Lies there ne Trap their Necks to catch, Ne old black Cat their Steps to watch. Their Fill they eat of Fowl and Fish ; Feast-lyche as Heart of Mouse mote wish. 188 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS As Guests sat Jovial at the Board, Forth leap'd our Mice : Eftsoons the Lord Of BoLiNG, whilome John the Saint, Who maketh oft Propos full queint, Laugh'd jocund, and aloud He cry'd, To Matthew seated on t'oth' side ; To Thee, lean Bard, it doth partain To understand these Creatures Tweine. Come frame Us now some clean Device, Or playsant Rhime on yonder Mice : They seem, God shield Me, Mat. and Charles. Bad as Sir Topaz, or 'Squire Quarles (Matthew did for the nonce reply) At Emblem, or Device am I : But could I Chaunt, or Rhyme, pardie. Clear as Dan Chaucer, or as Thee ; Ne Verse from Me (so God me shrive) On Mouse, or other Beast alive. Certes, I have these many Days Sent myne Poetic Herd to graze. Ne Armed Knight ydrad in War With Lyon fierce will I compare : Ne Judge unjust, with furred Fox, Harming in Secret Guise the Flocks : Ne Priest unworth of Goddess Coat, To Swine ydrunk, or filthy Stoat. Elk Simile farwell for aye. From Elephant, I trow, to Flea. Reply'd the friendlike Peer, I weene, Matthew is angred on the Spleen. Ne so, quoth Mat. ne shall be e'er. With Wit that falleth all so fair : Eftsoons, well weet Ye, mine Intent Boweth to your Commaundement. If by these Creatures Ye have seen, Pourtrayed Charles and Matthew been ; Behoveth neet to wreck my Brain, The rest in Order to explain. 189 MATTHEW PRIOR That Cup- board, where the Mice disport, I liken to St.* Stephen's Court : Therein is Space enough, I trow, For elke Comrade to come and goe : And therein eke may Both be fed With Shiver of the Wheaten Bread. And when, as these mine Eyen survey. They cease to skip, and squeak, and play ; Return they may to different Cells, Auditing One, whilst t'other Tells. Dear Robert, quoth the Saint, whose Mind In Bounteous Deed no Mean can bind ; Now as I hope to grow devout, I deem this Matter well made out. Laugh I, whilst thus I serious Pray ? | Let that be wrought which Mat. doth say : Yea, quoth the ERLE ; but not to Day. ) I 71 the same Style. FULL oft doth Mat. with Topaz dine, Eateth bak'd Meats, drinketh Greek Wine : But Topaz his own Werke rehearseth ; And Mat. mote praise what Topaz verseth. Now sure as Priest did e'er shrive Sinner, Full hardly earneth Mat. his Dinner. /;/ tJje same Style. FAIR Susan did her Wif-hede well menteine, Algates assaulted sore by Letchours tweine ; Now, and I read aright that Auncient Song, Olde were the Paramours, the Dame full yong. Had thilke same Tale in other Guise been tolde ; Had They been Yong (pardie) and She been Olde ; That, by S' Kit, had wrought much sorer Tryal : Full merveillous, I wote, were swilk Denyal. * Exchequer. 190 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS A FLOWER, Painted by SIMON VARELSr. WHEN fam'd Varelst this little Wonder drew j Flora vouchsaf'd the growing Work to view : Finding the Painter's Science at a Stand, The Goddess snatch'd the Pencil from his Hand ; And finishing the Piece, She smiling said ; Behold One Work of Mine, that ne'er shall fade. TO THE Lady Elizabeth Harley, Si7tce Marchioness of Carmarthen, On a Column of Her Drawing. WHEN future Ages shall with Wonder view These glorious Lines, which Harley's Daughter drew; They shall confess, that Britain could not raise A fairer Column to the Father's Praise. Protogenes and Apelles. WHEN Poets wrote, and Painters drew, As Nature pointed out the View : E'er Gothic Forms were known in Greece, To spoil the well-proportion'd Piece : And in our Verse e'er Monkish Rhimes Had jangl'd their fantastic Chimes : 191 MATTHEW PRIOR E'er on the flow'ry Lands of Rhodes Those Knights had fix'd their dull Abodes, Who knew not much to paint or write, Nor car'd to pray, nor dar'd to fight : Protogenes, Historians note, Liv'd there, a Burgess Scot and Lot ; And, as old Pliny's Writings show, Apelles did the same at Co. Agreed these Points of Time, and Place, Proceed We in the present Case. Picqu'd by Protogenes's Fame, From Co to Rhodes, Apelles came ; To see a Rival and a Friend, Prepar'd to Censure, or Commend, Here to absolve, and there obje6f, As Art with Candor might direct. He sails. He lands. He comes. He rings : His Servants follow with the Things : Appears the Governante of th'House : (For such in Greece were much in use.) If Young or Handsom, Yea or No, Concerns not Me, or Thee to know. Does 'Squire Protogenes live here ? Yes, Sir, says She with gracious Air, And Curt'sey low ; but just call'd out By Lords peculiarly devout ; Who came on purpose. Sir, to borrow Our Venus, for the Feast To-morrow, To grace the Church: 'tis Venus' Day: I hope, Sir, You intend to stay. To see our Venus : 'tis the Piece The most renown'd throughout all Greece, So like th'Original, they say : But I have no great Skill that Way. But, Sir, at Six ('tis now past Three) Dromo must make my Master's Tea : At Six, Sir, if You please to come. You'll find my Master, Sir, at Home. 192 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Tea, says a Critic big with Laughter, Was found some twenty Ages after : Authors, before they write, shou'd read : 'Tis very true ; but We'll proceed. And, Sir, at present wou'd you please To leave your Name Fair Maiden, yes : Reach me that Board. No sooner spoke But done. With one judicious Stroke, On the plain Ground Apelles drew A Circle regularly true : And will you please. Sweet-heart, said He, To shew your Master this from Me ? By it He presently will know. How Painters write their Names at Co. He gave the Pannel to the Maid. Smiling and Curt'sing, Sir, She said, I shall not fail to tell my Master : And, Sir, for fear of all Disaster, I'll keep it my own self: Safe bind. Says the old Proverb, and Safe find. So, Sir, as sure as Key or Lock Your Servant Sir at Six a Clock. Again at Six Apelles came ; Found the same prating civil Dame. Sir, that my Master has been here. Will by the Board it self appear. If from the perfe6l Line He found, He has presum'd to swell the Round, Or Colors on the Draught to lay ; 'Tis thus (He order'd me to say) Thus write the Painters of this Isle : Let those of Co remark the Style. She said ; and to his Hand restor'd The rival Pledge, the Missive Board. Upon the happy Line were laid Such obvious Light, and easie Shade ; That Paris' Apple stood confest. Or Leda's Egg, or Cloe's Breast. 193 MATTHEW PRIOR Apelles view'd the finish'd Piece ; And Live, said He, the Arts of Greece ! Howe'er Protogenes and I May in our Rival Talents vie ; Howe'er our Works may have express'd, Who truest drew, or color'd best ; When He beheld my flowing Line ; He found at least I cou'd design : And from his artful Round, I grant, That He with perfeft Skill can paint. The dullest Genius cannot fail To find the Moral of my Tale : That the distinguish'd Part of Men, With Compass, Pencil, Sword, or Pen, Shou'd in Life's Visit leave their Name, Li Charafters, which may proclaim That They with Ardor strove to raise At once their Arts, and Countrey's Praise And in their Working took great Care, That all was Full, and Round, and Fair. Democritus aiid Heraclitus. DEMOCRITUS, dear Droll, revisit Earth, And with our Follies glut Thy heighten'd Mirth Sad Heraclitus, serious Wretch, return, In louder Grief our greater Crimes to mourn. Between You both I unconcern'd stand by : Hurt, can I laugh ? and Honest, need I cry ? For my own To77ib-st07ie. TO Me 'twas giv'n to die : to Thee 'tis giv'n To live : Alas ! one Moment sets us ev'n. Mark ! how impartial is the Will of Heav'n ? 194 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS GUALTERUS DANISTONUS. Ad Amicos. DUM Studeo fungi fallentis munere vitae, Adfe6loque viam sedibus Elysiis, Arctoa florens Sophia, Samiisque superbus Discipulis, Animas morte carere cano. Has ego corporibiis profugas ad sidera mitto ; Sideraque ingressis otia blanda dico : Qualia conveniunt Divis, queis fata volebant Vitai faciles molliter ire vias : Vinaque Ccelicolis media inter gaudia libo ; Et me quid majus suspicor esse viro. Sed fuerint nulli forsan, quos spondeo, coeli ; NuUaque sint DiTis Numina, nulla Jovis : Fabiila sit terris agitur quas vita reliftis; Quique superstes, Homo ; qui nihil, esto Deus. Attamen esse hilares, & inanes mittere curas Proderit, ac vitae commoditate fi"ui, Et festos agitasse dies, sevique fugacis Tempora perpetuis detinuisse jocis. His me parentem praeceptis occupet Orcus, Et Mors ; seu Divum, seu nihil esse velit : Nam Sophia Ars ilia est, quas fallere suaviter horas Admonet, atque Orci non timuisse minas. IMITATED. STUDIOUS the busie Moments to deceive, That fleet betw^een the Cradle and the Grave, I credit vi^hat the Greecian Dictates say, And Samian Sounds o'er Scotia's Hills convey. When mortal Man resigns his transient Breath ; The Body only I give o'er to Death. The Parts dissolv'd, and broken Frame I mourn : What came from Earth, I see to Earth return. The Immaterial Part, th'^thereal Soul, Nor can Change vanquish, nor can Death controul. Glad I release it from it's Partner's Cares ; And bid good Angels waft it to the Stars. N 2 19^ MATTHEW PRIOR Then in the flowing Bowl I drown those Sighs, Which, Spight of Wisdom, from our Weakness rise. The Draught to the Dead's Mem'ry I commend. And offer to the now immortal Friend. But if oppos'd to what my Thoughts approve, Nor Pluto's Rage there be, nor Pow'r of Jove ; On it's dark Side if Thou the Prospeft take ; Grant all forgot beyond black Lethe's Lake : In total Death suppose the Mortal lye, No new Hereafter, nor a future Sky : Yet bear thy Lot content ; yet cease to grieve : Why, e'er Death comes, dost Thou forbear to live ? Th° little Time Thou hast, 'twixt Instant Now And Fate's Approach, is All the Gods allow : And of this little hast Thou ought to spare To sad Refle6lion, and corroding Care ? The Moments past, if Thou art wise, retrieve With pleasant Mem'ry of the Bliss they gave. The present Hours in present Mirth imploy ; And bribe the Future with the Hopes of Joy. The Future (i'ew or more, how e'er they be) Were destin'd e'rst; nor can by Fate's Decree Be now cut off, betwixt the Grave and Thee. THE FIRST HYMN OF CALLIMACHUS. TO JUPITER. WHILE we to Jove seleft the holy Vi6lim ; Whom apter shall we sing, than Jove himself, The God for ever Great, for ever King ; Who slew the Earth-born Race, and measures Right 196 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS To Heav'n's great Habitants ? Dict^an hear'st Thou More joyful, or Lyc^an, long Dispute And various Thought has trac'd. On Ida's Mount, Or DiCTE, studious of his Country's Praise, The Cretan boasts Thy Natal Place : but oft He meets Reproof deserv'd : for He presumptuous Has built a Tomb for Thee, who never know^'st To die, but liv'st the same To-day and Ever. Arcadian therefore be Thy Birth : Great Rhea Pregnant to hio-h Parrhasia's ClifFs retir'd. And vi^ild Lyc^us, black with shading Pines : Holy Retreat ! Sithence no Female hither, Conscious of Social Love and Nature's Rites, Must dare approach, from the inferior Reptile To Woman, Form Divine. There the blest Parent Ungirt her spacious Bosom, and discharg'd The pond'rous Birth : She sought a neighb'ring Spring, To wash the recent Babe : In vain : Arcadia, (However streamy now) adust and dry, Deny'd the Goddess Water : where deep Melas, And rocky Cratis flow, the Chariot smoak'd. Obscure with rising Dust : the thirsty Trav'ler In vain requir'd the Current, then imprison'd In subterranean Caverns : Forests grew Upon the barren Hollows, high o'ershading The Haunts of Savage Beasts, where now Iaon, And Erimanth incline their friendly Urns. Thou too, O Earth, great Rhea said, bring forth ; And short shall be thy Pangs : She said ; and high She rear'd her Arm, and with her Scepter struck The yawning ClifF: from it's disparted Height Adown the Mount the gushing Torrent ran. And chear'd the Vallies : There the Heav'nly Mother Bath'd, mighty King, Thy tender Limbs : She wrapt them In purple Bands : She gave the precious Pledge To prudent Neda, charging her to guard Thee, Careful and secret : Neda of the Nymphs That tended the great Birth, next Philyre And Styx, the eldest. Smiling She receiv'd Thee, 197 MATTHEW PRIOR And conscious of the Grace, absolv'd her Trust : Not unrewarded ; since the River bore The Fav'rite Virgin's Name : fair Neda rowls By Leprion's ancient Walls, a fruitful Stream. Fast by her flow'ry Bank the Sons of Arcas, Fav'rites of Heav'n, with happy Care prote6l Their fleecy Charge ; and joyous drink her Wave. Thee, God, to Cnossus Neda brought : the Nymphs And CoRVBANTES Thee their sacred Charge Receiv'd ; Adraste rock'd Thy golden Cradle : The Goat, now bright amidst her fellow-Stars, Kind Amalthea, reach'd her Tett distent With Milk, Thy early Food : the sedulous Bee Distill'd her Honey on Thy purple Lips. Around, the fierce Curetes (Order solemn To thy foreknowing Mother !) trod tumultuous Their Mystic Dance, and clang'd their sounding Arms ; Industrious with the warlike Din to quell Thy Infant-Cries, and mock the Ear of Saturn. Swift Growth and wond'rous Grace, O heav'nly Jove, Waited Thy blooming Years : Inventive Wit, And perfeft Judgment crown'd Thy youthful At\. That Saturn's Sons receiv'd the three-fold Empire Of Heav'n, of Ocean, and deep Hell beneath. As the dark Urn and Chance of Lot determin'd, Old Poets mention, fabling. Things of Moment Well nigh equivalent and neighb'ring Value By Lot are parted : But high Heav'n, Thy Share, In equal Balance laid 'gainst Sea or Hell, Flings up the adverse Scale, and shuns Proportion. Wherefore not Chance, but Pow'r, above Thy Brethren Exalted Thee, their King. When Thy great Will Commands Thy Chariot forth ; impetuous Strength, And fiery Swiftness wing the rapid Wheels, Incessant ; high the Eagle flies before Thee. And oh ! as I and mine consult Thy Augur, Grant the glad Omen ; let Thy Fav'rite rise Propitious, ever soaring from the Right. 1(^8 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Thou to the lesser Gods hast well assign'd Their proper Shares of Pow'r ; Thy own, great JoVE, Boundless and universal. Those who labor The sweaty Forge, who edge the crooked Scythe, Bend stubborn Steel, and harden gleening Armor, Acknowledge Vulcan's Aid. The early Hunter Blesses Diana's Hand, who leads Him safe O'er hanging Cliffs ; who spreads his Net successful, And guides the Arrow through the Panther's Heart. The Soldier from successful Camps returning, With Laurel wreath'd, and rich with hostile Spoil, Severs the Bull to Mars. The skilful Bard, Striking the Thracian Harp, invokes Apollo, To make his Hero and Himself Immortal. Those, mighty Jove, mean time. Thy glorious Care, Who model Nations, publish Laws, announce Or Life or Death, and found or change the Empire. Man owns the Pow'r of Kings ; and Kings of JovE. And as their Aftions tend subordinate To what Thy Will designs. Thou giv'st the Means Proportion 'd to the Work ; Thou see'st impartial. How They those Means imploy. Each Monarch rules His different Realm, accountable to Thee, Great Ruler of the World : These only have To speak and be obey'd ; to Those are giv'n Assistant Days to ripen the Design ; To some whole Months ; revolving Years to some : Others, ill fated, are condemn'd to toil Their tedious Life, and mourn their Purpose blasted With fruitless A61, and Impotence of Council. Hail ! greatest Son of Saturn, wise Disposer Of ev'ry Good : Thy Praise what Man yet born Has sung ? or who that may be born shall sing ? Again, and often hail ! indulge ovir Prayer, Great Father ! grant us Virtue, grant us Wealth : For without Virtue, Wealth to Man avails not ; And Virtue without Wealth exerts less Pow'r, And less diffuses Good. Then grant us. Gracious, Virtue, and Wealth ; for both are of Thy Gift. 199 MATTHEW PRIOR THE SECOND HYMN OF CALLIMACHUS. TO APOLLO, HAH ! how the Laurel, great Apollo's Tree, And all the Cavern shakes ! far off, far off, The Man that is unhallow'd : for the God, The God approaches. Hark ! He knocks : the Gates Feel the glad Impulse : and the sever'd Bars Submissive clink against their brazen Portals. Why do the Delian Palms incline their Boughs, Self-mov'd : and hov'ring Swans, their Throats releas'd From native Silence, carol Sounds harmonious .'' Begin, young Men, the Hymn : let all your Harps Break their inglorious Silence ; and the Dance, In mystic Numbers trod, explain the Music. But hrst by ardent Pray'r, and clear Lustration Purge the contagious Spots of Human Weakness : Impure no Mortal can behold Apollo. So may Ye flourish, favor'd by the God, In Youth with happy Nuptials, and in Age With silver Hairs, and fair Descent of Children ; So lay Foundations for aspiring Cities, And bless your spreading Colonies Encrease. Pay sacred Rev'rence to Apollo's Song ; Lest wrathful the far-shooting God emitt His fatal Arrows. Silent Nature stands ; And Seas subside, obedient to the Sound Of lo, lo Pean ! nor dares Thetis Longer bewail Her lov'd Achilles' Death : 200 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS For Phoebus was his Foe. Nor must sad Niobe In fruitless Sorrow persevere, or weep Ev'n thro' the Phrygian Marble, Hapless Mother ! Whose Fondness cou'd compare her Mortal Off-spring To those which fair Latona bore to Jove. lo ! again repeat Ye, lo Pean ! Against the Deity 'tis hard to strive. He that resists the Power of Ptolemy, Resists the Pow'r of Heav'n : for Pow'r from Heav'n Derives ; and Monarchs rule by Gods appointed. Recite Apollo's Praise, 'till Night draws on. The Ditty still unfinish'd ; and the Day Unequal to the Godhead's Attributes Various, and Matter copious of your Songs. Sublime at Jove's right Hand Apollo sits, And thence distributes Honor, gracious King, And Theme of Verse perpetual. From his Robe Flows Light ineffable : his Harp, his Quiver, And LiCTiAN Bow are Gold : with golden Sandals His Feet are shod ; how rich ! how beautiful ! Beneath his Steps the yellow Min'ral rises ; And Earth reveals her Treasures. Youth and Beauty Eternal deck his Cheek : from his fair Head Perfumes distill their Sweets ; and chearful Health, His dutious Handmaid, thro' the Air improv'd, With lavish Hand diffuses Scents Ambrosial. The Spear-man's Arm by Thee, great God, diredled, Sends forth a certain Wound. The Laurel'd Bard, Inspir'd by Thee, composes Verse Immortal. Taught by thy Art Divine, the sage Physician Eludes the Urn ; and chains, or exiles Death. Thee Nomian We adore ; for that from Heav'n Descending, Thou on fair Amphrysus' Banks Did'st guard Admetus' Herds. Sithence the Cow Produc'd an ampler Store of Milk ; the She-Goat Not without Pain dragg'd her distended Udder ; And Ewes, that erst brought forth but single Lambs, Now drop'd their Two-fold Burdens. Blest the Cattle, On which Apollo cast his fav'ring Eye ! 201 MATTHEW PRIOR But, Phoebus, Thou to Man beneficent, Delight'st in building Cities. Bright Diana, Kind Sister to thy infant-Deity New-wean'd, and just arising from the Cradle, Brought hunted wild Goats-Heads, and branching Antlers Of Stags, The Fruit and Honor of her Toil. These with discerning Hand Thou knew'st to range, (Young as Thou wast) and in the well-fram'd Models, With Emblematic Skill, and mystic Order, Thou shew'dst, where Towers, or Battlements should rise ; Where gates should open; or where Walls should compass: While from thy childish Pastime Man receiv'd The future Strength, and Ornament of Nations. Battus, our great Progenitor, now touch'd The Lybian Strand ; when the fore-boding Crow Flew on the Right before the People, marking The Country destin'd the auspicious Seat Of future Kings, and Favor of the God, Whose Oath is sure, and Promise stands Eternal. Or Boedromian hear'st Thou pleas'd, or Clarian, Phoebus, great King ? for diff'rent are Thy Names, As Thy kind Hand has founded many Cities, Or dealt benign Thy various Gifts to Man. Carnean let Mc call Thee ; for my Country Calls Thee Carnean : the fair Colony Thrice by Thy gracious Guidance was transported. E'er settl'd in Cyrene ; there W'appointed Thy annual Feasts, kind God, and bless thy Altars Smoakinp; with Hecatombs of slaughter'd Bulls ; As Carnus, thy High-Priest, and favor'd Friend, Had er'st ordain'd ; and with mysterious Rites, Our great Forefathers taught their Sons to worship, lo Carnean Phoebus ! lo Pean ! The yellow Crocus there, and fair Narcissus Reserve the Honors of their Winter-Store, To deck Thy Temple ; 'till returning Spring Diffuses Nature's various Pride ; and Flow'rs Innumerable, by the soft South-west Open'd, and gather'd by Religious Hands, 202 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Rebound their Sweets from th'odorif rous Pavement. Perpetual Fires shine hallow 'd on Thy Altars. When Annual the Carnean Feast is held, The warlike Libyans clad in Armor, lead The Dance, with clanging Swords and Shields They beat The dreadful Measure : in the Chorus join Their Women, Brown but Beautiful : such Rites To Thee well-pleasing. Nor had yet Thy Votaries, From Greece transplanted, touch'd Gyrene's Banks, And Lands determin'd for their last Abodes ; But wander'd thro' Azius' horrid Forrest Dispers'd ; when from Myrtusa's craggy Brow, Fond of the Maid, auspicious to the City, Which must hereafter bear her favor'd Name, Thou Gracious deign'st to let the Fair One view Her Typic People ; Thou with Pleasure taught'st Her To draw the Bow, to slay the shaggy Lyon, And stop the spreading Ruin of the Plains. Happy the Nymph, who honor'd by Thy Passion, Was aided by thy Pow'r ! The monstrous Python Durst tempt Thy Wrath in vain : for dead He fell. To thy great Strength, and golden Arms unequal. lo ! while Thy unerring Hand elanc'd Another, and another Dart ; The People Joyful repeated, lo ! lo Pean ! Elance the Dart, Apollo : for the Safety, And Health of Man, gracious Thy Mother bore Thee. Envy Thy latest Foe suggested thus : Like Thee I am a Pow'r Immortal ; therefore To Thee dare speak. How can'st Thou favor partial Those Poets who write little ? Vast and Great Is what I Love: The far extended Ocean To a small Riv'let I prefer. Apollo Spurn'd Envy with His Foot ; and thus the God : D^MON, the head-long Current of Euphrates, Assyrian River, copious runs, but Muddy ; And carries forward with his stupid Force Polluting Dirt ; His Torrent still augmenting, His Wave still more defil'd : mean while the Nymphs 203 MATTHEW PRIOR Melissan, Sacred and Recluse to Ceres, Studious to have their Off'rings well receiv'd, And fit for Heav'nly Use, from little Urns Pour Streams sele6l, and Purity of Waters. lo ! Apollo, mighty King, let Envy Ill-judging and Verbose, from Lethe's Lake Draw Tons unmeasurable ; while Thy Favor Administers to my ambitious Thirst The wholesome Draught from Aganippe's Spring Genuine, and with soft Murmurs gently rilling Adown the Mountains, where Thy Daughters haunt. CHARITY. A PARAPHRASE On the Thii'teenth Chapter of the First Epistle TO THE CORINTHIANS. DID sweeter Sounds adorn my flowing Tongue, Than ever Man pronounc'd, or Angel sung : Had I all Knowledge, Human and Divine, That Thought can reach, or Science can define ; And had I Pow'r to give that Knowledge Birth, In all the Speeches of the babling Earth : Did Shadrach's Zeal my glowing Breast inspire, To weary Tortures, and rejoice in Fire : Or had I Faith like That which Israel saw. When Moses gave them Miracles, and Law : 204 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Yet, gracious Charity, indulgent Guest, Were not Thy Pow'r exerted in my Breast ; Those Speeches would send up unheeded Pray'r : That Scorn of Life would be but wild Despair : A Tymbal's Sound were better than my Voice : My Faith were Form : my Eloquence were Noise. Charity, decent, modest, easy, kind, Softens the high, and rears the abje6l Mind ; Knows with just Reins, and gentle Hand to guide, Betwixt vile Shame, and arbitrary Pride. Not soon provok'd, She easily forgives ; And much She suffers, as She much believes. Soft Peace She brings where-ever She arrives : She builds our Quiet, as She forms our Lives ; Lays the rough Paths of peevish Nature ev'n ; And opens in each Heart a little Heav'n. Each other Gift, which GOD on Man bestows. It's proper Bounds, and due Restri6lion knows ; To one fixt Purpose dedicates it's Pow'r ; And finishing it's A61, exists no more. Thus, in Obedience to what Heav'n decrees. Knowledge shall fail, and Prophecy shall cease : But lasting Charity's more ample Sway, Nor bound by Time, nor subjeil to Decay, In happy Triumph shall for ever live. And endless Good diffuse, and endless Praise receive. As thro' the Artist's intervening Glass, Our Eye observes the distant Planets pass ; A little v/e discover ; but allow. That more remains unseen, than Art can show : So whilst our Mind it's Knowledge wou'd improve ; (It's feeble Eye intent on Things above) High as We may. We lift our Reason up. By Faith dire6led, and confirm'd by Hope : Yet are We able only to survey Dawnings of Beams, and Promises of Day. Heav'n's fuller Effluence mocks our dazl'd Sight ; Too great it's Swiftness, and too strong it's Light. 205 MATTHEW PRIOR But soon the mediate Clouds shall be dispell'd ; The Sun shall soon be Face to Face beheld, In all His Robes, with all His Glory on, Seated sublime on His Meridian Throne. Then constant Faith, and holy Hope shall dye, One lost in Certainty, and One in Joy : Whilst Thou, more happy Pow'r, fair Charity, Triumphant Sister, greatest of the Three, Thy Office, and Thy Nature still the same, Lasting thy Lamp, and unconsum'd thy Flame, Shalt still survive Shalt stand before the Host of Heav'n confest, For ever blessing, and for ever blest. Engraven on a COLUMN In the Church of Halstead i7t Essex, T^he spire oj which, burnt down by Lightning, was rebuilt at the Expense of Mr. Samuel Fiske, 1717. VIEW not this Spire by Measure giv'n To Buildings rais'd by common Hands : That Fabric rises high as Heav'n, Whose Bails on Devotion stands. While yet We draw this vital Breath, We can our Faith and Hope declare : But Charity beyond our Death, Will ever in our Works appear. Best be He call'd among good Men, Who to his GOD this Column rais'd : Tho' Lightning strike the Dome again ; The Man, who built it, shall be prais'd. Yet Spires and Towers in Dust shall lye, The weak Efforts of Human Pains : And Faith, and Hope themselves shall dye j While Deathless Charity remains. 206 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Written in Montaigne's Essays^ Given to the Duke of Shrewsbury in France, after the Peace ^ 1713- DICTATE, O mighty Judge, what Thou hast seen Of Cities, and of Courts, of Books, and Men ; And deign to let Thy Servant hold the Pen. Thro' Ages thus I may presume to live ; And from the Transcript of Thy Prose receive, What my own short-liv'd Verse can never give. Thus shall fair Britain with a gracious Smile Accept the Work ; and the instrufted Isle, For more than Treaties made, shall bless my Toil. Nor longer hence the Gallic Style preferr'd, Wisdom in English Idiom shall be heard ; While Talbot tells the World, where Montaigne err'd. Jn EPISTLE, Desiring the Queen's Picture. Written at Paris, i 7 i 4. But left unfinished by the sudden News of Her Majesty's Death. THE Train of Equipage and Pomp of State, The shining Side-board, and the burnish'd Plate Let other Ministers, Great Anne, require ; And partial fall Thy Gift to their Desire. To the fair Portrait of my Sov'reign Dame, To That alone, eternal be my Claim. 207 MATTHEW PRIOR My bright Defender, and my dread Delight, If ever I found Favor in Thy Sight ; If all the Pains that for Thy Britain's Sake My past has took, or future Life may take, Be grateful to my Queen ; permit my Pray'r, And with This Gift reward my total Care. Will Thy indulgent Hand, fair Saint, allow The Boon ? and will Thy Ear accept the Vow ? That in despight of Age, of impious Flame, And eating Time, Thy Picture like Thy Fame Entire may last ; that as their Eyes survey The semblant Shade, Men yet unborn may say ; Thus Great, thus Gracious look'd Britannia's Qiieen ; Her Brow thus smooth. Her Look was thus serene ; When to a Low, but to a Loyal Hand The mighty Empress gave Her high Command, That He to Hostile Camps, and Kings shou'd haste, To speak Her Vengeance as Their Danger past ; To say, She Wills detested Wars to cease ; She checks Her Conquest, for Her Subjects Ease ; And bids the World attend Her Terms of Peace. Thee, Gracious Anne, Thee present I adore, Thee, Ql'een of Peace If Time and Fate have Pow'r Higher to raise the Glories of thy Reign ; In Words sublimer, and a nobler Strain, May future Bards the mighty Theme rehearse. Here, Stator Jove, and Phoebus King of Verse, The Votive Tablet I suspend * * * * 208 ALMA: OR, THE PROGRESS OF THE MIND. In Three Cantos. UdvTa yeXftJS, koI TrdvTa k6vl■ And Hony-making Flow'rs their opening Buds disclose. J 267 MATTHEW PRIOR How from the thicken'd Mist, and setting Sun Finds She the Labor of her Day is done ? Who taught Her against Winds and Rains to strive, To bring her Burden to the certain Hive, And thro' the liquid Fields again to pass Dutious, and hark'ning to the sounding Brass? And, O Thou Sluggard, tell me why the Ant 'Midst Summer's Plenty thinks of Winter's Want : By constant Journeys careful to prepare Her Stores ; and bringing home the Corny Ear, By what Instru6tion does She bite the Grain, Lest hid in Earth, and taking Root again, It might elude the Foresight of her Care? Distind: in either Lisedt's Deed appear The marks of Thought, Contrivance, Hope, and Fear. Fix thy corporeal, and internal Eye On the Young Gnat^ or new-engender'd Fly ; On the vile Worni^ that Yesterday began To crawl ; Thy Fellow-Creatures, abjeft Man ! Like Thee they breath, they move, they tast, they see. They show their Passions by their Afts like Thee : Darting their Stings, they previously declare Design'd Revenge, and fierce intent of War : Laying their Eggs, they evidently prove The Genial Pow'r, and full Effect of Love. Each then has Organs to digest his Food, One to beget, and one receive the Brood: Has Limbs and Sinews, Blood and Heart, and Brain, Life, and her proper Fun6tions to sustain ; Tho' the whole Fabric smaller than a Grain. What more can our penurious Reason grant To the large JVhale^ or Castled Elephant^ To those enormous Terrors of the Nile, The crested Snake^ and long-tail'd Crocodile^ Than that all differ but in Shape and Name, Each destin'd to a less, or larger Frame ? For potent Nature loves a various Adt, Prone to enlarge, or studious to contract : 268 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Now forms her Work too small, now too immense, And scorns the Measures of our feeble Sense. The Objeft spread too far, or rais'd too high, Denies it's real Image to the Eye : Too little, it eludes the dazl'd Sight ; Becomes mixt Blackness, or unparted Light. Water and Air the varied Form confound ; The Strait looks crooked, and the Square grows round. Thus while with fruitless Hope, and weary Pain, We seek great Nature's Pow'r, but seek in vain ; Safe sits the Goddess in her dark Retreat; Around Her, Myriads of Ideas wait, And endless Shapes, which the Mysterious Queen Can take or quit, can alter or retain : As from our lost Pursuit She wills to hide Her close Decrees, and chasten human Pride. Untam'd and fierce the Tiger still remains: He tires his Life in biting on his Chains : For the kind Gifts of Water, and of Food, Ungrateful, and returning 111 for Good, He seeks his Keeper's Flesh, and thirsts his Blood : While the strong Gamely and the gen'rous Horse^ Restrain'd and aw'd by Man's inferior Force, Do to the Rider's Will their Rage submit. And answer to the Spur, and own the Bit ; Stretch their glad Mouths to meet the Feeder's Hand, Pleas'd with his Weight, and proud of his Command. Again : the lonely Fox roams far abroad, On secret Rapin bent, and Midnight Fraud ; Now haunts the ClifF, now traverses the Lawn ; And flies the hated Neighborhood of Man : While the kind Spaniel^ and the faithful Houndy Likest that Fox in Shape and Species found, Refuses thro' these Cliffs and Lawns to roam ; Pursues the noted Path, and covets home ; Does with kind Joy Domestic Faces meet ; Takes what the glutted Child denies to eat ; And dying, licks his long-lov'd Master's Feet. 269 MATTHEW PRIOR By what immediate Cause They are inchn'd, In many A6ls, 'tis hard, I own, to find. I see in others, or I think I see, That strift their Principles, and our's agree. Evil like Us they shun, and covet Good ; Abhor the Poison, and receive the Food. Like Us they love or hate : like Us they know, To joy the Friend, or grapple with the Foe. With seeming Thought their Action they intend, And use the A4eans proportion'd to the End. Then vainly the Philosopher avers. That Reason guides our Deed, and Instind: their's. How can V/e justly different Causes frame. When the Effedls entirely are the same ? Instin(!:t and Reason how can we divide? 'Tis the Fool's Ign'rance, and the Pedant's Pride. With the same Folly sure, Man vaunts his Sway ; If the brute Beast refuses to Obey. For tell me, when the empty Boaster's Word Proclaims himself the Universal Lord ; Does He not tremble, lest the Lions Paw Should join his Plea against the fancy'd Law ? Would not the Learned Coward leave the Chair ; If in the Schools or Porches should appear The fierce Hya:na^ or the foaming Bear^ The Combatant too late the Field declines ; When now the Sword is girded to his Loins. When the swift Vessel flies before the Wind ; Too late the Sailor views the Land behind. And 'tis too late now back again to bring Enquiry, rais'd and tow'ring on the Wintj ; Forward She strives, averse to be with-held From nobler Objedls, and a larger Field. Consider with me this i^thcrial Space, Yielding to Earth and Sea the middle Place. Anxious I ask Ye, how the Pensile Ball Should never strive to rise, nor fear to fall. When I refle<^l, how the revolving Sun Does round our Globe his crooked Journies run ; 270 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS I doubt of many Lands, if they contain Or Herd of Beast, or Colony of Man : If any Nations pass their destin'd Days Beneath the neighb'ring Sun's diredler Rays : If any suffer on the Polar Coast, The Rage of Arctos, and eternal Frost. May not the Pleasure of Omnipotence To each of These some secret Good dispense ? Those who amidst the Torrid Regions live, May they not Gales unknown to us receive ; See daily Show'rs rejoice the thirsty Earth, And bless the flow'ry Buds succeeding Birth ? May they not pity Us, condemn'd to bear The various Heav'n of an obliquer Sphere ; While by fix'd Laws, and with a just Return, They feel twelve Hours that shade, for twelve that burn ; And praise the neighb'ring Sun, whose constant Flame Enlightens them with Seasons still the same ? And may not Those, whose distant Lot is cast North beyond Tartary's extended Waste, Where thro' the Plains of one continual Day, Six shining Months pursue their even Way ; And Six succeeding urge their dusky Flight, Obscur'd with Vapors and o'erwhelm'd in Night ; May not, I ask, the Natives of these Climes (As Annals may inform succeeding Times) To our Qiiotidian Change of Heav'n prefer | Their one Vicissitude, and equal Share [• Of Day and Night, disparted thro' the Year r j May they not scorn our Sun's repeated Race, To narrow bounds prescrib'd, and little space, Hast'ning from Morn, and headlong driv'n from Noon, Half of our Daily Toil yet scarcely done ? May they not justly to our Climes upbraid Shortness of Night, and Penury of Shade ; That e'er our weary 'd Limbs are justly blest With wholesom Sleep, and necessary Rest ; Another Sun demands return of Care, The remnant Toil of Yesterday to bear f 271 MATTHEW PRIOR Whilst, when the Solar Beams salute their Sight, Bold and secure in half a Year of Light, Uninterrupted Voyages they take To the remotest Wood, and farthest Lake ; Manage the Fishing, and pursue the Course With more extended Nerves, and more continu'd Force. And when declining Day forsakes their Sky ; When gath'ring Clouds speak gloomy Winter nigh ; With Plenty for the coming Season blest. Six solid Months (an Age) they live, releas'd From all the Labor, Process, Clamor, Woe, Which our sad Scenes of daily Action know : They light the shining Lamp, prepare the Feast, And with full Mirth receive the welcome Guest ; Or tell their tender Loves (the only Care Which now they suffer) to the list'ning Fair ; And rais'd in Pleasure, or repos'd in Ease (Grateful Alternates of substantial Peace) They bless the long Nocturnal Lifluence shed On the crown'd Goblet, and the Genial Bed. In foreign Isles which our Discov'rers find, Far from this length of Continent disjoin'd, The rugged Bears^ or spotted Lynx's brood ; Frighten the Vallies, and infest the Wood : The hungry Crocodile^ and hissing Snake Lurk in the troubl'd Stream and fenny Brake : And Man untaught, and rav'nous as the Beast, Does Valley, Wood, and Brake, and Stream infest. Deriv'd these Men and Animals their Birth From Trunk of Oak, or pregnant Womb of Earth ? Whence then the Old Belief, that All began In Eden's Shade, and one created Man ? Or grant, this Progeny was wafted o'er By coasting Boats from next adjacent Shoar : Would Those, from whom We will suppose they spring, Slaughter to harmless Lands, and Poyson bring ? Would they on Board or Bears, or Lynxes take, Feed the She-Jdeler, and the brooding Snake ? Or could they think the new Discover'd Isle Pleas'd to receive a pregnant Cr-ocodile ? 272 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS And since the Savage Lineage we must trace From Noah sav'd, and his distinguish'd Race ; How should their Fathers happen to forget The Arts which Noah taught, the Rules He set, To sow the Glebe, to plant the gen'rous Vine, And load with grateful Flames the Holy Shrine ? While the great Sire's unhappy Sons are found, Unpress'd their Vintage, and untill'd their Ground, Stragling o'er Dale and Hill in quest of Food, And rude of Arts, of Virtue, and of God. How shall We next o'er Earth and Seas pursue The vary'd Forms of ev'ry thing we view ; That all is chang'd, tho' all is still the same, Fluid the Parts, yet durable the Frame ? Of those Materials, which have been confess'd The pristine Springs, and Parents of the rest. Each becomes other. Water stop'd gives Birth To Grass and Plants, and thickens into Earth : DifFus'd it rises in a higher Sphere ; Dilates it's Drops, and softens into Air : Those finer Parts of Air again aspire ; Move into Warmth, and brighten into Fire : That Fire once more by thicker Air o'ercome. And downward forc'd, in Earth's capacious Womb Alters it's Particles ; is Fire no more ; But lies resplendent Dust, and Shining Oar : Or running thro' the mighty Mother's Veins, Changes it's Shape ; puts off it's old Remains ; With wat'ry Parts it's lessen'd Force divides ; Flows into Waves, and rises into Tides. Disparted Streams shall from their Chanels fly. And deep surcharg'd by sandy Mountains lye. Obscurely sepulcher'd. By eating Rain, And furious Wind, down to the distant Plain The Hill, that hides his Head above the Skies, Shall fall : The Plain by slow Degrees shall rise Higher than er'st had stood the Summit-Hill : For Time must Nature's great Behests fulfill. p. s 273 MATTHEW PRIOR Thus by a length of Years, and Change of Fate, All Things are light or heavy, small or great ; Thus Jordan's Waves shall future Clouds appear ; And Egypt's Pyramids refine to Air. Thus later Age shall ask for Pison's Flood ; And Travellers enquire, where Babel stood. Now where we see these Changes often fall. Sedate we pass them by, as Natural : Where to our Eye more rarely they appear, The Pompous Name of Prodigy they bear : Let active Thought these close Maanden trace : Let Human Wit their dubious Bound'ries place. Are all Things Miracle ; or nothing such .? And prove We not too little, or too much ? For that a Branch cut off, a wither'd Rod Should at a Word pronounc'd revive and bud : Is this more strange, than that the Mountain's Brow, Strip'd by Decembers Frost, and white with Snow, Should push, in Spring, ten thousand thousand Buds ; And boast returning Leaves, and blooming Woods ? That each successive Night from opening Heav'n The Food of Angels should to Man be giv'n ; Is this more strange, than that with common Bread Our fainting Bodies every Day are fed ; Than that each Grain and Seed consum'd in Earth, Raises it's Store, and multiplies it's Birth ; And from the handful, which the Tiller sows. The labour'd Fields rejoice, and future Harvest flows ? Then from whate'er We can to Sense produce Common and plain, or wond'rous and abstruse. From Nature's constant or Eccentric Laws, The thoughtful Soul this gen'ral Influence draws, That an Efle6t must presuppose a Cause. And while She does her upward Flight sustain. Touching each Link of the continu'd Chain, At length she is oblig'd and forc'd to see A First, a Source, a Life, a Deity ; What has for ever been, and must for ever be. 274 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS This great Existence thus by Reason found, Blest by all Pow'r, with all Perfeftion crown'd ; How can we bind or limit His Decree, By what our Ear has heard, or Eye may see ? Say then : Is all in Heaps of Water lost, Beyond the Islands, and the Mid-land Coast ? Or has that God, who gave our World it's Birth, Sever'd those Waters by some other Earth, Countries by future Plow-shares to be torn, And Cities rais'd by Nations yet unborn ? E'er the progressive Course of restless Age Performs Three thousand times it's Annual Stage ; May not our Pow'r and Learning be supprest; And Arts and Empire learn to travel West ? Where, by the Strength of this Idea charm'd, Lighten'd with Glory, and with Rapture warm'd. Ascends my Soul? what sees She White and Great Amidst subje6led Seas? An Isle, the Seat Of Pow'r and Plenty; Her Imperial Throne, For Justice and for Mercy sought and known ; Virtues Sublime, great Attributes of Heav'n, From thence to this distinguish'd Nation given. Yet farther West the Western Isle extends Her happy Fame; her Armed Fleets She sends To Climates folded yet from human Eye; And Lands, which We imagine Wave and Sky. From Pole to Pole She hears her Afts resound. And rules an Empire by no Ocean bound ; Knows her Ships anchor 'd, and her Sails unfurl'd In other Indies, and a second World. Long shall Britannia (That must be her Name) Be first in Conquest, and preside in Fame : Long shall her favor'd Monarchy engage The Teeth of Envy, and the Force of Age : Rever'd and Happy She shall long remain. Of human Things least changeable, least vain. Yet All must with the gen'ral Doom comply ; And this Great Glorious Pow'r, tho' last, must dye. s 2 275 MATTHEW PRIOR Now let us leave this Earth, and lift our Eye To the large Convex of yon' Azure Sky : Behold it like an ample Curtain spread, Now streak'd and glowing with the Morning Red ; Anon at Noon in flaming Yellow bright. And chusing Sable for the peaceful Night. Ask Reason now, whence Light and Shade were giv'n. And whence this great Variety of Heav'n : Reason our Guide, what can She more reply, Than that the Sun illuminates the Sky ; Than that Night rises from his absent Ray, And his returning Lustre kindles Day? But we expeft the Morning Red in vain : 'Tis hid in Vapors, or obscur'd by Rain. The Noontyde Yellow we in vain require : 'Tis black in Storm, or red in Light'ning Fire. Pitchy and dark the Night sometimes appears, Friend to our Woe, and Parent of our Fears : Our Joy and Wonder sometimes She excites. With Stars unnumber'd, and eternal Lights. Send forth, Ye Wise, send forth your lab'ring Thought: Let it return with empty Notions fraught. Of airy Columns every Moment broke. Of circling Whirlpools, and of Spheres of Smoke: Yet this Solution but once more affords New Change of Terms, and scaffolding of Words: In other Garb my Question I receive; And take the Doubt the very same I gave. Lo ! as a Giant strong the lusty Sun Multiply'd Rounds in one great Round does run, Twofold his Course, yet constant his Career, Changing the Day, and finishing the Year. Again when his descending Orb retires. And Earth perceives the Absence of his Fires ; The Moon affords us Her alternate Ray, And with kind Beams distributes fainter Day : Yet keeps the Stages of her Monthly Race, Various her Beams, and changeable her Face. 276 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Each Planet shining in his proper Sphere, Does with just Speed his radiant Voyage steer: Each sees his Lamp with difFrent Lustre crown'd : Each knows his Course with diff'rent Periods bound ; And in his Passage thro' the liquid Space, Nor hastens, nor retards his Neighbor's Race. Now shine these Planets with substantial Rays? Does innate Lustre gild their measur'd Days? Or do they (as your Schemes, I think, have shown) Dart furtive Beams, and Glory not their own, All Servants to that Source of Light, the Sun ? Again I see ten thousand thousand Stars, Nor cast in Lines, in Circles, nor in Squares : (Poor Rules, with which our bounded Mind is fill'd, When We would plant, or cultivate, or build) But shining with such vast, such various Light, As speaks the Hand, that form'd them. Infinite : How mean the Order and Perfection sought Li the best Produdt of the human Thought, Compar'd to the great Harmony that reigns In what the Spirit of the World ordains ! Now if the Sun to Earth transmits his Ray, Yet does not scorch us with too fierce a Day; How small a Portion of his Pow'r is giv'n To Orbs more distant, and remoter Heav'n? And of those Stars, which our imperfect Eye Has doom'd, and fix'd to one Eternal Sky, Each by a native stock of Honor great, May dart strong Influence, and diffuse kind Heat, It self a Sun ; and with transmissive Light Enliven Worlds deny'd to human Sight : Around the Circles of their ambient Skies New Moons may grow or wane, may set or rise; And other Stars may to those Suns be Earths ; Give their own Elements their proper Births; Divide their Climes, or elevate their Pole; See their Lands flourish, and their Oceans roll ; Yet these great Orbs thus radically bright, Primitive Founts, and Origins of Light, 277 MATTHEW PRIOR May each to other (as their diff'rent Sphere Makes or their Distance, or their Height appear) Be seen a nobler, or inferior Star; And in that Space, which We call Air and Sky, Myriads of Earths, and Moons, and Suns may lye Unmeasur'd, and unknown by human Eye. In vain We measure this amazing Sphere, And find and fix it's Centre here or there ; Whilst it's Circumf'rence, scorning to be brought Ev'n into fancy'd Space, illudes our vanquish 'd Thought. Where then are all the radiant Monsters driv'n, With which your Guesses fill'd the frighten'd Heaven.-' Where will their fidlious Images remain ? In paper Schemes, and the Chaldean's Brain. This Problem yet, this Offspring of a Guess, Let Us for once a Child of Truth confess; That these fair Stars, these Objeils of Delight, And Terror, to our searching dazl'd Sight, Are Worlds immense, unnumber'd, infinite. But do these Worlds display their Beams, or guide Their Orbs, to serve thy Use, to please thy Pride? Thy self but Dust, thy Stature but a Span, A Moment thy Duration ; foolish Man ! As well may the minutest Emmet say. That Caucasus was rais'd, to pave his Way : The Snail, that Lebanon's extended Wood Was destin'd only for his Walk, and Food : The vilest Cockle, gaping on the Coast That rounds the ample Seas, as well may boast, The craggy Rock projects above the Sky, That He in Safety at it's Foot may lye; And the whole Ocean's confluent Waters swell, Only to quench his Thirst, or move and blanch his Shel A higher Flight the vent'rous Goddess tries. Leaving material Worlds, and local Skies: Enquires, what are the Beings, where the Space, That form'd and held the Angels ancient Race. 278 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS For Rebel Lucifer with Michael fought : (I offer only what Tradition taught:) Embattl'd Cherub against Cherub rose; ] Did Shield to Shield, and Pow'r to Pow'r oppose : I Heav'n rung with Triumph : Hell was fill'd with Woes. ) What were these Forms, of which your Volumes tell. How some fought great, and others recreant fell ? These bound to bear an everlasting Load, Durance of Chain, and Banishment of God : By fatal Turns their wretched Strength to tire ; To swim in sulph'rous Lakes, or land on solid Fire: While Those exalted to primaeval Light, Excess of Blessing, and Supreme Delight, Only perceive some little Pause of Joys In those great Moments, when their God imploys Their Ministry, to pour his threaten'd Hate On the proud King, or the Rebellious State : Or to reverse Jehovah's high Command, And speak the Thunder falling from his Hand, When to his Duty the proud King returns ; And the Rebellious State in Ashes mourns. How can good Angels be in Heav'n confin'd ; Or view that Presence, which no Space can bind .? Is GOD above, beneath, or yon', or here? He who made all, is He not ev'ry where? O how can wicked Angels find a Night "\ So dark, to hide 'em from that piercing Light, l Which form'd the Eye, and gave the Pow'r of Sight ? J What mean I now of Angel, when I hear Firm Body, Spirit pure, or fluid Air? Spirits to A6tion spiritual confin'd. Friends to our Thought, and Kindred to our Mind, Should only a6t and prompt us from within. Nor by external Eye be ever seen. Was it not therefore to our Fathers known, That these had Appetite, and Limb, and Bone? Else how could Abram wash their weary'd Feet ; Or Sarah please their Taste with sav'ry Meat ? Whence should they fear? or why did Lot engage To save their bodies from abusive Rage ? 279 MATTHEW PRIOR And how could Jacob, in a real Fight, Feel or resist the wrestling Angel's Might? How could a Form it's Strength with Matter try ? Or how a Spirit touch a Mortal's Thigh ? Now are they Air condens'd, or gather'd Rays? How guide they then our Pray'r, or keep our Ways, By stronger Blasts still subjedl; to be tost, By Tempests scatter'd, and in Whirlwinds lost ? Have they again (as Sacred Song proclaims) Substances real, and existing Frames ? How comes it, since with them we jointly share The great Effeft of one Creator's Carcj That whilst our Bodies sicken, and decay, Their's are for ever healthy, young, and gay? Why, whilst We struggle in this Vale beneath, With Want and Sorrow, with Disease and Death ; Do They more bless'd perpetual Life employ On Songs of Pleasure, and in Scenes of Joy? Now when my Mind has all this World survey 'd, And found, that Nothing by it self was made; When Thought has rais'd it self by just Degrees, From Vallies crown'd with Flow'rs, and Hills with Trees; From smoaking Min'rals, and from rising Streams; From fatt'ning Nilus, or victorious Thames; From all the Living, that four-footed move Along the Shoar, the Meadow, or the Grove; From all that can with Finns, or Feathers fly Thro' the Aerial, or the Wat'ry Sky ; From the poor Reptile with a reas'ning Soul, That miserable Master of the Whole ; From this great Obje(!:t of the Body's Eye, This fair Half-round, this ample azure Sky, Terribly large, and wonderfully bright With Stars unnumber'd, and unmeasur'd Light ; From Essences unseen, Celestial Names, Enlight'ning Spirits, and ministerial Flames, Angels, Dominions, Potentates, and Thrones, All that in each Degree the name of Creature owns : 280 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Lift we our Reason to that Sov'reign Cause, Who blest the whole with Life, and bounded it with Laws ; Who forth from Nothing call'd this comely Frame, His Will and Ad:, His Word and Work the same ; To whom a thousand Years are but a Day ; "j Who bad the Light her genial Beams display ; I And set the Moon, and taught the Sun his Way : j Who waking Time, his Creature, from the Source Primaeval, order'd his predestin'd Course : Himself, as in the Hollow of His Hand, Holding, obedient to His high Command, The deep Abyss, the long continu'd Store, ^ Where Months, and Days, and Hours, and Minutes pour l Their floating Parts, and thenceforth are no more. j This Alpha and Omega, First and Last, Who like the Potter in a Mould has cast The World's great Frame, commanding it to be Such as the Eyes of Sense and Reason see ; Yet if He wills, may change or spoil the whole ; "j May take yon' beauteous, mystic, starry Roll, I And burn it, like an useless parchment Scroll : J May from it's Basis in one Moment pour This melted Earth Like liquid Metal, and like burning Oar : Who sole in Pow'r, at the Beginning said ; Let Sea, and Air, and Earth, and Heav'n be made : And it was so And when He shall ordain In other Sort, has but to speak again. And They shall be no more : Of this great Theme, This Glorious, Hallow'd, Everlasting Name, This GOD, I would discourse The learned Elders sat appall'd, amaz'd ; And each with mutual Look on other gaz'd. Nor Speech They meditate, nor Answer frame : Too plain, alas ! their Silence spake their Shame : 'Till One, in whom an outward Mien appear'd, And Turn superior to the vulgar Herd, Began ; that Human Learning's furthest Reach Was but to note the Doctrines I could teach ; 281 MATTHEW PRIOR That Mine to Speak, and Their's was to Obey : For I in Knowledge more, than Pow'r did sway ; And the astonish'd World in Me beheld Moses eclips'd, and Jesse's Son excell'd. Humble a Second bow'd, and took the Word ; Foresaw my Name by future Age ador'd. O Live, said He, Thou Wisest of the Wise ! As None has equall'd, None shall ever rise Excelling Thee Parent of wicked. Bane of honest Deeds, Pernicious Flatt'ry ! Thy malignant Seeds In an ill Hour, and by a fatal Hand Sadly difFus'd o'er Virtue's Gleby Land, With rising Pride amidst the Corn appear. And choak the Hopes and Harvest of the Year. And now the whole perplex'd ignoble Crowd Mute to my Questions, in my Praises loud, Echo'd the Word : whence Things arose, or how They thus exist, the Aptest nothing know : What yet is not, but is ordain'd to be, All Veil of Doubt apart, the Dullest see. My Prophets, and my Sophists finish'd here Their Civil EfForts of the Verbal War : Not so my Rabbins^ and Logicians yield : Retiring still they combat : from the Field Of open Arms unwilling they depart, And sculk behind the Subterfuge of Art. To speak one Thing mix'd Dialec^ls they join ; Divide the Simple, and the Plain define ; Fix fancy 'd Laws, and form imagin'd Rules, Terms of their Art, and Jargon of their Schools, 111 grounded Maxims by false Gloss enlarg'd. And captious Science against Reason charg'd. Soon their crude Notions with each other fought The adverse Se6l deny'd, what This had taught ; And He at length the amplest Triumph gain'd, Who contradicted what the last maintain'd. 282 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS O wretched Impotence of human Mind ! "\ We erring still Excuse for Error find ; I And darkling grope, not knowing We are blind. J Vain Man ! since first thy blushing Sire essay'd His Folly with conne6led Leaves to shade ; How does the Crime of thy resembling Race With like Attempt that pristine Error trace ? Too plain thy Nakedness of Soul espy'd, 1 Why dost Thou strive the conscious Shame to hide I By Masks of Eloquence, and Veils of Pride ? j With outward Smiles their Flatt'ry I receiv'd ; Own'd my Sick Mind by their Discourse reliev'd ; But bent and inward to my Self again Perplex'd, these Matters I revolv'd ; in vain. My Search still tir'd, my Labor still renew'd, At length I Ignorance, and Knowledge view'd, Impartial ; Both in equal Balance laid : Light flew the knowing Scale ; the doubtful Heavy weigh 'd. Forc'd by refledlive Reason I confess, That human Science is uncertain Guess. Alas ! We grasp at Clouds, and beat the Air, Vexing that Spirit We intend to clear. Can Thought beyond the Bounds of Matter climb ? Or who shall tell Me, what is Space or Time ? In vain We lift up our presumptuous Eyes 1 To what our Maker to their Ken denies : l The Searcher follows fast ; the Objeft faster flies. J The little which imperfeftly We find, ^ Seduces only the bewilder'd Mind l To fruitless Search of Something yet behind. J Various Discussions tear our heated Brain : S Opinions often turn ; still Doubts remain ; I And who indulges Thought, increases Pain. J How narrow Limits were to Wisdom giv'n ? Earth She surveys : She thence would measure Heav'n : Thro' Mists obscure, now wings her tedious Way ; Now wanders dazl'd with too bright a Day ; 283 MATTHEW PRIOR And from the Summit of a pathless Coast Sees Infinite, and in that Sight is lost. Remember, that the curs'd Desire to know, OfF-spring of Adam, was thy Source of Woe. Why wilt Thou then renew the vain Pursuit, And rashly catch at the forbidden Fruit ? With empty Labor and eluded Strife Seeking, by Knowledge, to attain to Life ; For ever from that fatal Tree debarr'd, Which flaming Swords and angry Cherubs guard. 284 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS PLEASURE: THE SECOND BOOK. The ARGUMENT. SOLOMON again seeking Happiness^ enquires if Wealth and Greatness can produce it : begins with the Magnificence of Gardens and Buildings^ the Luxury of Music and Feasting ; and proceeds to the Hopes and Desires of Love. In two Episodes are shewn the Follies and Troubles of that Passion. Solomon still disappointed^ falls under the 'Temptations of Libertinism and Idolatry ; recovers his Thought^ reasons aright^ and concludes^ that as to the Pursuit of Pleasure^ and sensual Delight, All is Vanity and Vexation of Spirit. 285 MATTHEW PRIOR TEXTS chiefly alluded to i7i this Book. I said in my own Heart, go to now, I will prove thee with Mirth ; therefore enjoy Pleasure. Ecclesiastes, Chap. II. Vers. I. I made me great Works, I builded me Houses, I planted me Vineyards. Vers. 4. I made me Gardens and Orchards ; and I planted Trees in them of all kind of Fruits. Vers, 5. I made me Pools of Water, to water therewith the Wood that bringeth forth Trees. Vers. 6, Then I looked on all the Works that my Hands had wrought, and on the Labour that I had laboured to do : And behold, all was Vanity, and Vexation of Spirit ; and there was no Profit under the Sun. Vers. 11. I gat me Men-Singers and Women-Singers, and the Delights of the Sons of Men, as Musical Instruments, and that of all Sorts. Vers. 8. I sought in mine Heart to give my self unto Wine (yet acquainting mine Heart with Wisdom) and to lay hold on Folly, 'till I might see what was that Good for the Sons of Men, which they should do under Heaven, all the Days of their Life. Vers, 3. Then I said in my Heart, as it happeneth unto the Fool, so it happeneth even unto Me ; and why was I then more Wise ? Then I said in my Heart, that this also is Vanity. Vers. 15. Therefore I hated Life, because the Work that is wrought under the Sun is grievous unto me. Chap. II. Vers, 27. Dead Flies cause the Oyntmcnt to send forth a stinking Savour : so doth the little Folly him that is in Reputation for Wisdom and Honour. Chap. X. Vers. i. The Memory of the Just is blessed, but the Memory of the Wicked shall rot. Proverbs, Chap, X. Verse. 7. 286 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS PLEASURE : THE SECOND BOOK. TRY then, O Man, the Moments to deceive. That from the Womb attend Thee to the Grave : For w^eary'd Nature find some apter Scheme : Health be thy Hope ; and Pleasure be thy Theme : From the perplexing and unequal Ways, Where Study brings Thee ; from the endless Maze, Which Doubt persuades to run, forewarn'd recede, To the gay Field, and flow^'ry Path, that lead To jocund Mirth, soft Joy, and careless Ease : Forsake what may instrudi, for w^hat may please : Essay amusing Art, and proud Expence ; And make thy Reason subje6l to thy Sense. I commun'd thus : the Pov/'r of Wealth I try'd, And all the various Luxe of costly Pride. Artists and Plans reliev'd my solemn Hours : I founded Palaces, and planted Bovi^'rs. Birds, Fishes, Beasts of each Exotic Kind I to the Limits of my Court confin'd. To Trees transferr'd I gave a second Birth ; And bid a foreign Shade grace Judah's Earth. Fish-ponds were made, where former Forrests grew ; And Hills were levell'd to extend the View. Rivers diverted from their Native Course, And bound with Chains of Artificial Force, From large Cascades in pleasing Tumult roll'd ; Or rose thro' figur'd Stone, or breathing Gold. From furthest Africa's tormented Womb The Marble brought ere6ls the spacious Dome ; Or forms the Pillars long-extended Rows, On which the planted Grove, and pensile Garden grows. 287 MATTHEW PRIOR The Workmen here obey the Master's Call, To gild the Turret, and to paint the Wall ; To mark the Pavement there with various Stone ; And on the Jasper Steps to rear the Throne : The spreading Cedar^ that an Age had stood. Supreme of Trees, and Mistress of the Wood, Cut down and carv'd, my shining Roof adorns ; And Lebanon his ruin'd Honor mourns. A thousand Artists shew their cunning Pow'r, To raise the Wonders of the Iv'ry Tow'r. A thousand Maidens ply the purple Loom, To weave the Bed, and deck the Regal Room ; 'Till Tyre confesses her exhausted Store, That on her Coast the Murex is no more ; 'Till from the Parian Isle, and Lybia's Coast, The Mountains grieve their hopes of Marble lost ; And India's Woods return their just Complaint, Their Brood decay 'd, and want of Elephant. My full Design with vast Expence atchiev'd, I came, beheld, admir'd, refledled, griev'd. I chid the Folly of my thoughtless Hast : For, the Work perfected, the Joy was past. To my new Courts sad Thought did still repair And round my gilded Roofs hung hov'ring Care. In vain on silken Beds I sought Repose ; And restless oft' from purple Couches rose : Vexatious Thought still found my flying Mind Nor bound by Limits, nor to Place conhn'd ; Haunted my Nights, and terrify'd my Days ; Stalk'd thro' my Gardens, and pursu'd my Ways, Nor shut from artful Bow'r, nor lost in winding Maze. Yet take thy Bent, my Soul ; another Sense Indulge ; add Music to Magnificence : Essay, if Harmony may Grief control! ; Or Pow'r of Sound prevail upon the Soul. Often our Seers and Poets have confest, That Music's Force can tame the furious Beast ; 288 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Can make the Wolf, or foaming Boar restrain His Rage ; the Lion drop his crested Mane, Attentive to the Song : the Lynx forget His Wrath to Man, and lick the Minstrel's Feet. Are we, alas 1 less savage yet than these ? Else Music sure may human Cares appease. I spake my Purpose ; and the chearful Choir Parted their shares of Harmony : the Lyre Soften'd the Timbrel's Noise : the Trumpet's Sound Provok'd the Dorian Flute (both sweeter found When mix'd :) the Fife the Viol's Notes refin'd ; And ev'ry Strength with ev'ry Grace was join'd. Each Morn they wak'd Me with a sprightly Lay : Of opening Heav'n they Sung, and gladsome Day. Each Evening their repeated Skill- express'd Scenes of Repose, and Images of Rest : Yet still in vain : for Music gather'd Thought : But how unequal the Effects it brought? The soft Ideai of the chearful Note, Lightly receiv'd, were easily forgot. The solemn Violence of the graver Sound Knew to strike deep, and leave a lasting Wound. And now reflecting, I with Grief descry The sickly Lust of the fantastic Eye ; How the weak Organ is with Seeing cloy'd, Flying e'er Night what it at Noon enjoy'd. And now (unhappy Search of Thought !) I found The fickle Ear soon glutted with the Sound, Condemn'd eternal Changes to pursue, Tir'd with the last, and eager of the New. I bad the Virgins and the Youth advance, To temper Music with the sprightly Dance. In Vain ! too low the Mimic-Motions seem : What takes our Heart, must merit our Esteem. Nature, I thought, perform'd too mean a Part, Forming her Movements to the Rules of Art ; And vex'd I found, that the Musician's Hand Had o'er the Dancer's Mind too great Command. P. T 289 MATTHEW PRIOR I drank ; I lik'd it not : 'twas Rage ; 'twas Noise ; An airy Scene of transitory Joys. In vain I trusted, that the flowing Bowl Would banish Sorrow, and enlarge the Soul. To the late Revel, and protrafted Feast Wild Dreams succeeded, and disorder'd Rest ; And as at Dawn of Morn fair Reason's Light Broke thro' the Fumes and Phantoms of the Night ; What had been said, I ask'd my Soul, what done ; How flow'd our Mirth, and whence the Source begun ? Perhaps the Jest that charm'd the sprightly Croud, And made the Jovial Table laugh so loud. To some false Notion ow'd it's poor Pretence, To an ambiguous Word's perverted Sense, To a wild Sonnet, or a wanton Air, Offence and Torture to the sober Ear. Perhaps, alas ! the pleasing Stream was brought From this Man's Error, from another's Fault ; From Topics which Good-nature would forget, And Prudence mention with the last Regret. Add yet unnumber'd Ills, that lye unseen In the pernicious Draught ; the Word obscene, Or harsh, which once elanc'd must ever fly Irrevocable ; the too prompt Reply, Seed of severe Distrust, and fierce Debate ; What We should shun, and what We ought to hate. Add too the Blood impoverish'd, and the Course Of Health suppress'd, by Wine's continu'd Force. Unhappy Man ! whom Sorrow thus and Rage To diff'rent Ills alternately engage. Who drinks, alas ! but to forget ; nor sees, 'I'hat melancholy Sloath, severe Disease, Mem'ry confus'd, and interrupted Thought, Death's Harbingers, lye latent in the Draught : And in the Flow'rs that wreath the sparkling Bowl, Fell Adders hiss, and poys'nous Serpents roll. 290 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Remains there Ought untry'd, that may remove Sickness of Mind, and heal the Bosom ? Love, Love yet remains : Indulge his genial Fire, Cherish fair Hope, solicit young Desire, And boldly bid thy anxious Soul explore This last great Remedy's Mysterious Pow'r. Why therefore hesitates my doubtful Breast ? Why ceases it one Moment to be blest ? Fly swift, my Friends; my Servants, fly; imploy Your instant Pains to bring your Master Joy. Let all my Wives and Concubines be dress'd : Let them to Night attend the Royal Feast ; All Israel's Beauty, all the foreign Fair, The Gifts of Princes, or the Spoils of War. Before their Monarch They shall singly pass ; And the most Worthy shall obtain the Grace. I said : the Feast vv^as serv'd : the Bovs^l was crown'd ; To the King's Pleasure went the mirthful Round : The Women came : as Custom wills, they past : On One (O that distinguish'd One !) I cast The fav'rite Glance : O ! yet my Mind retains That fond Beginning of my infant Pains. Mature the Virgin was of Egypt's Race : Grace shap'd her Limbs ; and Beauty deck'd her Face : Easy her Motion seem'd, serene her Air : Full, tho' unzon'd, her Bosom rose : her Hair Unty'd, and ignorant of artful Aid, ) Adown her Shoulders loosely lay display'd ; V And in the Jetty Curls ten thousand Cupids play'd. ) Fix'd on her Charms, and pleas'd that I could love, Aid me my Friends, contribute to improve Your Monarch's Bliss, I said ; fresh Roses bring To strow my Bed ; 'till the impov'rish'd Spring Confess her Want ; around my am'rous Head Be dropping Myrrhe, and liquid Amber shed, 'Till Arab has no more. From the soft Lyre, Sweet Flute, and ten-string'd Instrument, require T 2 291 MATTHEW PRIOR Sounds of Delight : and Thou, fair Nymph, draw nigh ; Thou, in whose graceful Form, and potent Eye Thy Master's Joy long sought at length is found ; And as thy Brow, let my Desires be crown'd ; O fav'rite Virgin, that hast warm'd the Breast, Whose sov'reign Diftates subjugate the East ! I said ; and sudden from the golden Throne With a submissive Step I hasted down. The glowing Garland from my Hair I took, Love in my Heart, Obedience in my Look ; Prepar'd to place it on her comely Head : O fav'rite Virgin ! (yet again I said) Receive the Honors destin'd to thy Brow ; And O above thy Fellows happy Thou ! Their Duty must thy sov'reign Word obey. Rise up, my Love ; my fair One, come away. What Pang, alas ! what Ecstasy of Smart Tore up my Senses, and transfix'd my Heart ; When She with modest Scorn the Wreath return'd, Reclin'd her beauteous Neck, and inward mourn'd ? Forc'd by my Pride, I my Concern suppress'd Pretended Drowsiness, and Wish of Rest ; And sullen I forsook th'Imperfedl Feast : Ordering the Eunuchs, to whose proper Care Our Eastern Grandeur gives th'imprison'd Fair, To lead Her forth to a distinguish'd Bow'r, And bid her dress the Bed, and wait the Hour. Restless I foUow'd this obdurate Maid : (Swift are the Steps that Love and Anger tread :) Approach'd her Person, courted her Embrace, Renew'd my Flame, repeated my Disgrace : By Turns put on the Suppliant and the Lord ; Threaten'd this Moment, and the next implor'd ; OfFer'd again the unaccepted Wreath, And Choice of happy Love, or instant Death. Averse to all her am'rous King desir'd, Far as She might, She decently retir'd j 292 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS And darting Scorn, and Sorrow from her Eyes, What means, said She, King Solomon the Wise ? This wretched Body trembles at your Pow'r : Thus far could Fortune : but She can no more. Free to her Self my potent Mind remains ; Nor fears the Viftor's Rage, nor feels his Chains. 'Tis said, that Thou can'st plausibly dispute. Supreme of Seers, of Angel, Man, and Brute ; Can'st plead, with subtil Wit and fair Discourse, Of Passion's Folly, and of Reason's Force. That to the Tribes attentive Thou can'st show, Whence their Misfortunes, or their Blessings flow. That Thou in Science, as in Pow'r art great ; And Truth and Honor on Thy Edi6ls wait. Where is that Knowledge now, that regal Thought, With just Advice, and timely Counsel fraught ? Where now, O Judge of Israel, does it rove ? What in one Moment dost Thou offer ? Love Love ? why 'tis Joy or Sorrow, Peace or Strife : 'Tis all the Color of remaining Life : And Human Mis'ry must begin or end. As He becomes a Tyrant, or a Friend. Would David's Son, religious, just, and grave. To the first Bride-bed of the World receive A Foreigner, a Heathen, and a Slave ? Or grant, Thy Passion has these Names destroy 'd ; That Love, like Death, makes all Distin6tion void j Yet in his Empire o'er Thy abjeft Breast, His Flames and Torments only are exprest : His Rage can in my Smiles alone relent ; And all his Joys solicit my Consent. Soft Love, spontaneous Tree, it's parted Root Must from two Hearts with equal Vigour shoot : Whilst each delighted, and delighting, gives The pleasing Ecstasy, which each receives : Cherish'd with Hope, and fed with Joy it grows : It's chearful Buds their opening Bloom disclose ; And round the happy Soil diff\isive Odor flows. 293 MATTHEW PRIOR If angry Fate that mutual Care denies ; The fading Plant bewails it's due Supplies : Wild with Despair, or sick with Grief, it dies. By Force Beasts aft, and are by Force restrain'd ; The Human Mind by gentle Means is gain'd. Thy useless Strength, mistaken King, employ : Sated with Rage, and ignorant of Joy, Thou shalt not gain what I deny to yield ; Nor reap the Harvest, tho' Thou spoil'st the Field. Know, Solomon, Thy poor Extent of Sway ; Contrail thy Brow, and Israel shall obey: But wilful Love Thou must with Smiles appease ; Approach his awful Throne by just Degrees ; And if Thou would'st be Happy, learn to please. Not that those Arts can here successful prove : For I am destin'd to another's Love. Beyond the cruel Bounds of Thy Command, To my dear Equal, in my Native Land, My plighted Vow I gave : I His receiv'd : Each swore with Truth : with Pleasure each believ'd. The mutual Contrail was to Heav'n convey 'd : In equal Scales the busy Angels weigh'd It's solemn Force, and clap'd their Wings, and spread The lasting Roll, recording what We said. Now in my Heart behold Thy Poynard stain'd : Take the sad Life which I have long disdain'd : End, in a dying Virgin's wretched Fate, Thy ill-starr'd Passion, and My steadfast Hate. For long as Blood informs these circling Veins ; Or fleeting Breath it's latest Pow'r retains ; Hear Me to Egypt's vengeful Gods declare, Hate is My Part : be Thine, O King, Despair. Now strike. She said, and open'd bare her Breast : Stand it in Judah's Chronicles confest. That David's Son, by impious Passion mov'd. Smote a She-Slave, and murder'd what He lov'd. 294 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Asham'd, confus'd I started from the Bed ; And to my Soul yet uncollefted said : Into Thy self, fond Solomon, return ; Refleft again, and Thou again shalt mourn. When I through number'd Years have Pleasure sought ; And in vain Hope the wanton Phantom caught ; To mock my Sense, and mortify my Pride, 'Tis in another's Pow'r, and is deny'd. Am I a King, great Heav'n ! does Life or Death Hang on the Wrath, or Mercy of My Breath ; While kneeling I My Servant's Smiles implore ; And One mad Dam'sel dares dispute My Pow'r ? To Ravish Her ? That Thought was soon depress'd. Which must debase the Monarch to the Beast. To send Her back ? O whither, and to whom ? To Lands where Solomon must never come ; To that Insulting Rival's happy Arms, For whom, disdaining Me, She keeps her Charms. Fantastic Tyrant of the am'rous Heart ; How hard Thy Yoke ! how cruel is Thy Dart ! Those 'scape Thy Anger, who refuse Thy Sway ; And those are punish'd most, who most Obey. See Judah's King revere thy greater Pow'r : What can'st Thou covet, or how triumph more ? Why then, O Love, with an obdurate Ear Does this proud Nymph rejeft a Monarch's Pray'r ? Why to some simple Shepherd does She run. From the fond Arms of David's Fav'rite Son ? Why flies She from the Glories of a Court, Where Wealth and Pleasure may Thy Reign support. To some poor Cottage on the Mountain's Brow, Now bleak with Winds, and cover'd now with Snow, Where pinching Want must curb her warm Desires, And Household Cares suppress Thy Genial Fires ? Too aptly the afflidled Heathens prove The Force, while they ere6l the Shrines of Love. His Mystic Form the Artizans of Greece In wounded Stone, or molten Gold express : 295 MATTHEW PRIOR And Cyprus to his Godhead pays her Vow : Fast in his Hand the Idol holds his Bow ; A Quiver by his Side sustains a Store Of pointed Darts ; sad Emblems of his Pow'r ; A pair of Wings He has, which He extends Now to be gone ; which now again He bends Prone to return, as best may serve his wanton Ends. Entirely thus I find the Fiend pourtray'd, Since first, alas ! I saw the beauteous Maid : I felt Him strike ; and now I see Him fly : Curs'd Daemon ! O ! for ever broken lye Those fatal Shafts, by which I inward bleed ! ! can my Wishes yet o'ertake thy Speed ! Tir'd may'st Thou pant, and hang thy flagging Wing ; Except Thou turn'st Thy Course, resolv'd to bring The Dam'sel back, and save the Love-sick King. My Soul thus strugling in the fatal Net, Unable to enjoy, or to forget ; 1 reason'd much, alas ! but more I lov'd ; Sent and recall'd, ordain'd and disapprov'd : 'Till hopeless plung'd in an Abyss of Grief, I from Necessity receiv'd Relief: Time gently aided to asswage my Pain ; And Wisdom took once more the slacken'd Rein. But O how short My Interval of Woe ! Our Griefs how swift ; our Remedies how slow ! Another Nymph (for so did Heav'n ordain. To change the Manner, but renew the Pain) Another Nymph, amongst the many Fair, That made My softer Hours their solemn Care, Before the rest afFe6ted still to stand ; And watch'd My Eye, preventing My Command. Abra, She so was call'd, did soonest hast To grace my Presence : Abra went the last : Abra was ready e'er I call'd her Name ; And tho' I call'd another, Abra came. Her Equals first observ'd her growing Zeal ; And laughing gloss'd, that Abra serv'd so well. 296 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS To Me her A6lions did unheeded dye, Or were remark'd but with a common Eye ; 'Till more appris'd of what the Rumor said, More I observ'd peculiar in the Maid. The Sun declin'd had shot his Western Ray ; When tir'd with Bus'ness of the solemn Day, I purpos'd to unbend the Evening Hours, And banquet private in the Women's Bow'rs. I call'd, before I sat, to wash My Hands : For so the Precept of the Law commands. Love had ordain'd, that it was Abra's Turn To mix the Sweets, and minister the Urn. With awful Homage, and submissive Dread The Maid approach'd, on my declining Head To pour the Oyls : She trembled as She pour'd ; With an unguarded Look She now devour'd My nearer Face ; and now recall'd her Eye, And heav'd, and strove to hide a sudden Sigh. And whence, said I, canst Thou have Dread, or Pain ? What can thy Imag'ry of Sorrow mean ? Secluded from the World, and all it's Care, Hast Thou to grieve or joy, to hope or fear ? For sure, I added, sure thy little Heart Ne'er felt Love's Anger, or receiv'd his Dart. Abash 'd She blush'd, and with Disorder spoke : Her rising Shame adorn'd the Words it broke. If the great Master will descend to hear The humble Series of His Hand-maid's Care ; O ! while She tells it, let him not put on The Look, that awes the Nations from the Throne : O ! let not Death severe in Glory lye Li the King's Frown, and Terror of his Eye. Mine to obey ; Thy Part is to ordain : And tho' to mention, be to sufFer Pain ; If the King smiles, whilst I my Woe recite ; \ If weeping I find Favour in His Sight ; l Flow fast my Tears, full rising his Delight. J 297 MATTHEW PRIOR O ! Witness Earth beneath, and Heav'n above ; For can I hide it ? I am sick of Love : If Madness may the Name of Passion bear ; Or Love be call'd, what is indeed Despair. Thou Sov'reign Pow'r, vs^hose secret Will controlls The inward Bent and Motion of our Souls ! Why hast Thou plac'd such infinite Degrees Between the Cause and Cure of my Disease ? The mighty Obje6t of that raging Fire, In which unpity'd Abra must expire, Had He been born some simple Shepherd's Heir, The lowing Herd, or fleecy Sheep his Care ; At Morn with him I o'er the Hills had run, \ Scornful of Winter's Frost, and Summer's Sun, I Still asking, where He made his Flock to rest at Noon. ) For him at Night, the dear expefted Guest, I had with hasty Joy prepar'd the Feast ; And from the Cottage, o'er the distant Plain, Sent forth my longing Eye to meet the Swain ; Wav'ring, impatient, toss'd by Hope and Fear ; \ Till He and Joy together should appear ; v And the lov'd Dog declare his Master near. | On my declining Neck, and open Breast, I should have lull'd the lovely Youth to Rest ; And from beneath his Head, at dawning Day, With softest Care have stol'n my Arm away ; To rise, and from the Fold release the Sheep, Fond of his Flock, indulgent to his Sleep. Or if kind Heav'n propitious to my Flame (For sure from Heav'n the faithful Ardor came) Had blest my Life, and deck'd my natal Hour With Height of Title, and Extent of Pow'r : Without a Crime my Passion had aspir'd. Found the lov'd Prince, and told what I desir'd. Then 1 had come, preventing Sheba's Queen, To see the comeliest of the Sons of Men ; To hear the charming Poet's am'rous Song, And gather Honey falling from his Tongue ; 298 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS To take the fragrant Kisses of his Mouth, Sweeter than Breezes of her native South ; Likening his Grace, his Person, and his Mien To all that Great or Beauteous I had seen. Serene and bright his Eyes, as solar Beams Reflefting temper'd Light from Crystal Streams ; Ruddy as Gold his Cheek ; his Bosom fair As Silver ; the curl'd Ringlets of his Hair Black as the Raven's Wing ; his Lip more red, Than Eastern Coral, or the scarlet Thread ; Even his Teeth, and white, like a young Flock "j Coeval, newly shorn, from the clear Brook >• Recent, and blanching on the Sunny Rock. ) Iv'ry with Saphirs interspers'd, explains How white his Hands, how blue the Manly Veins. Columns of polish'd Marble firmly set On golden Bases, are his Legs, and Feet. His Stature all Majestic, all Divine, / Strait as the Palmtree, strong as is the Pine. Saffron and Myrrhe are on his Garments shed : And everlasting Sweets bloom round his Head. What utter I ? where am I ? wretched Maid ! Dye, Abra, dye : too plainly hast Thou said Thy Soul's Desire to meet His high Embrace, And Blessings stamp'd upon thy future Race ; To bid attentive Nations bless thy Womb, With unborn Monarchs charg'd, and Solomons to come. Here o'er her Speech her flowing Eyes prevail. O foolish Maid ! and O unhappy Tale ! My suff'ring Heart for ever shall defy New Wounds, and Danger from a future Eye. O ! yet my tortur'd Senses deep retain | The wretched Mem'ry of my former Pain, V The dire Affront, and my Egyptian Chain. ) As Time, I said, may happily efface That cruel Image of the King's Disgrace ; Imperial Reason shall resume her Seat ; And Solomon once fall'n, again be great. 299 MATTHEW PRIOR Betray'd by Passion, as subdu'd in War, We wisely should exert a double Care, Nor ever ought a second time to Err. This Abra then I saw Her ; 'twas Humanity : it gave Some Respite to the Sorrows of my Slave. Her fond Excess proclaim'd her Passion true ; And generous Pity to that Truth was due. Well I intreated Her, who well deserv'd ; I call'd Her often ; for She always serv'd. Use made her Person easy to my Sight ; And Ease insensibly produc'd Delight. Whene'er I revell'd in the Women's Bow'rs ; (For first I sought Her but at looser Hours :) The Apples She had gather'd smelt most sweet : The Cake She kneaded was the sav'ry Meat : But Fruits their Odor lost, and Meats their Taste ; If gentle Abra had not deck'd the Feast. Dishonor'd did the sparkling Goblet stand, Unless receiv'd from gentle Abra's Hand : And when the Virgins form'd the Evening Choir, Raising their Voices to the Master-Lyre ; Too flat I thought This Voice, and That too shrill ; One show'd too much, and one too little Skill : Nor could my Soul approve the Music's Tone ; 'Till all was hush'd, and Abra Sung alone. Fairer She seem'd, distinguish'd from the rest ; And better Mein disclos'd, as better drest. A bright Tiara round her Forehead ty'd. To juster Bounds confin'd it's rising Pride : The blushing Ruby on her snowy Breast, Render'd it's panting Whiteness more confess'd : Bracelets of Pearl gave Roundness to her Arm ; And ev'ry Gem augmented ev'ry Charm. Her Senses pleas'd, her Beauty still improv'd ; And She more lovely grew, as more belov'd. And now I could behold, avow, and blame The several Follies of my former Flame ; 300 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Willing my Heart for Recompence to prove The certain Joys that lye in prosp'rous Love. For what, said I, from Abra can I fear, Too humble to insult, too soft to be severe ? The Dam'sel's sole Ambition is to please : With Freedom I may like, and quit w^ith Ease : She sooths, but never can enthrall my Mind : Why may not Peace and Love for once be join'd ? Great Heav'n ! how^ frail thy Creature Man is made ! Hovv^ by Himself insensibly betray'd ! In our own Strength unhappily secure, Too little cautious of the adverse Povv^'r ; And by the Blast of Self-opinion mov'd. We w^ish to charm, and seek to be belov'd. On Pleasure's flow^ing Brink We idly stray. Masters as yet of our returning Way : Seeing no Danger, We disarm our Mind ; And give our Conduft to the Waves and Wind : Then in the flovi^'ry Mead, or verdant Shade To wanton Dalliance negligently laid. We weave the Chaplet, and We crown the Bowl ; And smiling see the nearer Waters roll ; 'Till the strong Gusts of raging Passion rise ; 'Till the dire Tempest mingles Earth and Skies ; And swift into the boundless Ocean born. Our foolish Confidence too late We mourn : Round our devoted Heads the Billows beat ; And from our troubl'd View the lessen'd Lands retreat. O mighty Love ! from thy unbounded Pow'r How shall the human Bosom rest secure ? How shall our Thought avoid the various Snare ? Or Wisdom to our caution'd Soul declare The difF'rent Shapes, Thou pleasest to imploy. When bent to hurt, and certain to destroy ? The haughty Nymph in open Beauty drest, To-Day encounters our unguarded Breast : She looks with Majesty, and moves with State : Unbent her Soul, and in Misfortune great. She scorns the World, and dares the Rage of Fate. 301 MATTHEW PRIOR Here whilst we take stern Manhood for our Guide, And guard our Condu6l with becoming Pride ; Charm'd with the Courage in her A6lion shown, We praise her Mind, the Image of our own. She that can please, is certain to perswade : To-day belov'd, To-morrow is obey'd. We think we see thro' Reason's Optics right ; Nor find, how Beauty's Rays elude our Sight : Struck with her Eye whilst We applaud her Mind ; And when We speak Her great. We wish Her kind. To-morrow, cruel Pow'r, Thou arm'st the Fair With flowing Sorrow, and dishevel'd Hair: Sad her Complaint, and humble is her Tale, Her Sighs explaining where her Accents fail. Here gen'rous Softness warms the honest Breast : We raise the sad, and succour the distress'd : And whilst our Wish prepares the kind Relief; Whilst Pity mitigates her rising Grief: We sicken soon from her contagious Care ; Grieve for her Sorrows, groan for her Despair ; And against Love too late those Bosoms arm. Which Tears can soften, and which Sighs can warm. Against this nearest cruelest of Foes, What shall Wit meditate, or Force oppose ? Whence, feeble Nature, shall We summon Aid ; If by our Pity, and our Pride betray'd ? External Remedy shall We hope to find, When the close Fiend has gain'd our treach'rous Mind ; Insulting there does Reason's Pow'r deride ; And blind Himself, conducts the dazl'd Guide ? My Conqueror now, my Lovely Abra held My Freedom in her Chains : my Heart was fill'd With Her, with Her alone : in Her alone It sought it's Peace and Joy : while She was gone. It sigh'd, and griev'd, impatient of her Stay : \ Return'd, She chas'd those Sighs, that Grief away : | Her Absence made the Night: her Presence brought the] Day. J 302 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS The Ball, the Play, the Mask by Turns succeed. For Her I make the Song : the Dance with Her I lead. I court Her various in each Shape and Dress, That Luxury may form, or Thought express. To-day beneath the Palm-tree on the Plains In Deborah's Arms and Habit Abra reigns : The Wreath denoting Conquest guides her Brow : And low, like Barak, at her Feet I bow. The Mimic Chorus sings her prosp'rous Hand ; As She had slain the Foe, and sav'd the Land. To-morrow She approves a softer Air ; Forsakes the Pomp and Pageantry of War ; The Form of peaceful Abigail assumes ; And from the Village with the Present comes : The Youthful Band depose their glitt'ring Arms ; Receive her Bounties, and recite her Charms ; Whilst I assume my Father's Step and Mein, To meet with due Regard my future Queen. If hap'ly Abra's Will be now inclin'd To range the Woods, or chace the flying Hind ; Soon as the Sun awakes, the sprightly Court Leave their Repose, and hasten to the Sport. In lessen'd Royalty, and humble State, Thy King, Jerusalem, descends to wait, 'Till Abra comes. She comes : a Milk-white Steed, Mixture of Persia's, and Arabia's Breed, Sustains the Nymph : her Garments flying loose (As the Sydonian Maids, or Thracian use) And half her Knee, and half her Breast appear, By Art, like Negligence, disclos'd, and bare. Her left Hand guides the hunting Courser's Flight : A Silver Bow She carries in her Right : And from the golden Quiver at her Side, Rustles the Ebon Arrow's feather'd Pride. Saphirs and Diamonds on her Front display An artificial Moon's increasing Ray. Diana, Huntress, Mistress of the Groves, The fav'rite Abra speaks, and looks, and moves. 303 MATTHEW PRIOR Her, as the present Goddess, I obey : Beneath her Feet the captive Game I lay. The mingl'd Chorus sings Diana's Fame : Clarions and Horns in louder Peals proclaim Her Mystic Praise : the vocal Triumphs bound Against the Hills : the Hills refleft the Sound. If tir'd this Evening with the hunted Woods, To the large Fish-pools, or the glassy Floods Her Mind To-morrow points ; a thousand Hands To-night employ'd, obey the King's Commands. Upon the wat'ry Beach an artful Pile Of Planks is join'd, and forms a moving Isle. A golden Chariot in the Midst is set ; And silver Cygnets seem to feel it's Weight. Abra, bright Queen, ascends her gaudy Throne, In semblance of the Grecian Venus known : Tritons and Sea-green Naiads round Her move ; And sing in moving Strains the Force of Love : Whilst as th'approaching Pageant does appear ; And echoing Crouds speak mighty Venus near ; I, her Adorer, too devoutly stand Fast on the utmost Margin of the Land, With Arms and Hopes extended, to receive The fancy'd Goddess rising from the Wave. O subjedf Reason ! O imperious Love ! Whither yet further would My Folly rove ? Is it enough, that Abra should be great In the wall'd Palace, or the Rural Seat ? That masking Habits, and a borrow'd Name Contrive to hide my Plenitude of Shame ? No, no : Jerusalem combin'd must see My open Fault, and Regal Infamy. Solemn a Month is destin'd for the Feast : Abra Invites : the Nation is the Guest. To have the Honor of each Day sustain'd. The Woods are travers'd ; and the Lakes are drain'd Arabia's Wilds, and Ecjvin-'s are cxplor'd : The Edible Creation decks the Board : Hardly the Pha-nix 'scapes 304 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS The Men their Lyres, the Maids their Voices raise, To sing my Happiness, and Abra's Praise. And slavish Bards our mutual Loves rehearse In lying Strains, and ignominious Verse : While from the Banquet leading forth the Bride, Whom prudent Love from public Eyes should hide ; 1 show Her to the World, confess'd and known Queen of my Heart, and Part'ner of my Throne. And now her Friends and Flatt'rers fill the Court : From Dan, and from Beersheba They resort : They barter Places, and dispose of Grants, Whole Provinces unequal to their Wants. They teach Her to recede, or to debate ; With Toys of Love to mix Affairs of State; By pra6tis'd Rules her Empire to secure ; And in my Pleasure make my Ruin sure. They gave, and She transferr'd the curs'd Advice, That Monarchs should their inward Soul disguise. Dissemble, and command ; be false, and wise ; By ignominious Arts for servile Ends Should compliment their Foes, and shun their Friends. And now I leave the true and just Supports Of Legal Princes, and of honest Courts, Barzillai's, and the fierce Benaiah's Heirs ; Whose Sires, Great Part'ners in my Father's Cares, Saluted their young King at Hebron crown'd, Great by their Toil, and glorious by their Wound. And now, unhappy Council, I prefer Those whom my Follies only made me fear. Old Corah's Brood, and taunting Shimei's Race ; Miscreants who ow'd their Lives to David's Grace ; Tho' they had spurn'd his Rule, and curs'd Him to his Face. Still Abra's Pow'r, my Scandal still increas'd ; Justice submitted to what A bra pleas'd : Her Will alone could settle or revoke ; And Law was fix'd by what She latest spoke. Israel neglected, Abra was my Care : I only ailed, thought, and liv'd for Her. p. u 305 MATTHEW PRIOR I durst not reason with my wounded Heart. A BR A possess'd ; She was it's better Part. O ! had I now review'd the famous Cause, Which gave my righteous Youth so just Applause ; In vain on the dissembl'd Mother's Tongue Had cunning Art, and sly Perswasion hung ; And real Care in vain, and native Love In the true Parent's panting Breast had strove ; While both deceiv'd had seen the destin'd Child Or slain, or sav'd, as Abra frown'd or smil'd. Unknowing to command, proud to obey, A life-less King, a Royal Shade I lay. Unhear'd the injur'd Orphans now complain : The Widow's Cries address the Throne in vain. Causes unjudg'd disgrace the loaded File ; And sleeping Laws the King's Negledt revile. No more the Elders throng'd around my Throne, To hear My Maxims, and reform their own. No more the Young Nobility were taught. How MosES govern'd, and how David fought. Loose and vmdisciplin'd the Soldier lay ; Or lost in Drink, and Game, the solid Day : Porches and Scholes, design'd for public Good, Uncover'd, and with Scaffolds cumber'd stood. Or nodded, threat'ning Ruin Half Pillars wanted their expec^led Height ; And Roofs imperfeft prejudic'd the Sight. The Artists grieve ; the lab'ring People droop : My Father's Legacy, my Country's Hope, God's Temple lies unfinish'd The Wise and Grave deplor'd their Monarch's Fate, And future Mischiefs of a sinking State. Is this, the Serious said, is this the Man, Whose adtive Soul thro' every Science ran ? Who by just R.ule and elevated Skill Prescrib'd the dubious Bounds of Good and 111 .? Whose Golden Sayings, and Immortal Wit, On large Phyhii-lcries expressive writ. Were to the Forehead of the Rahhins ty'd, POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Our Youth's Instruftion, and our Age's Pride ? Could not the Wise his wild Desires restrain ? Then was our Hearing, and his Preaching vain : What from his Life and Letters were we taught, But that his Knowledge aggravates his Fault ? In lighter Mood the Humorous and the Gay, As crown'd with Roses at their Feasts they lay ; Sent the full Goblet, charg'd with Abra's Name, And Charms superior to their Master's Fame : Laughing some praise the King, who let 'em see. How aptly Luxe and Empire might agree : Some gloss'd, how Love and Wisdom were at Strife ; And brought my Proverbs to confront my Life. However, Friend, here's to the King, one cries : To Him who was the King, the Friend replies. The King, for Judah's, and for Wisdom's Curse, To Abra yields : could I, or Thou do worse ? Our looser Lives let Chance or Folly steer; If thus the Prudent and Determin'd err. Let Dinah bind with Flowers her flowing Hair ; And touch the Lute, and sound the wanton Air : Let Us the Bliss without the Sting receive. Free, as We will, or to injoy, or leave. Pleasures on Levity's smooth Surface flow : Thought brings the Weight, that sinks the Soul to Woe. Now be this Maxim to the King convey 'd. And added to the Thousand He has made. Sadly, O Reason, is thy Pow'r express'd, Thou gloomy Tyrant of the frighted Breast ! And harsh the Rules, which We from Thee receive ; j If for our Wisdom We our Pleasure give ; > And more to think be only more to grieve. ) If Judah's King at thy Tribunal try'd. Forsakes his Joy to vindicate his Pride ; And changing Sorrows, I am only found Loos'd from the Chains of Love, in Thine more striftly bound. But do I call Thee Tyrant, or complain, How hard thy Laws, how absolute thy Reign ? u 2 307 MATTHEW PRIOR While Thou, alas ! art but an empty Name, To no Two Men, who e'er discours'd, the same ; The idle Product of a troubled Thought, In borrow'd Shapes, and airy Colors wrought ; A fancy'd Line, and a reflefted Shade ; A Chain which Man to fetter Man has made. By Artifice impos'd, by Fear obey'd. Yet, wretched Name, or Arbitrary Thing, Whence ever I thy cruel Essence bring, I own thy Influence ; for I feel thy Sting. Reluctant I perceive thee in my Soul, Form'd to command, and destin'd to control. Yes ; thy insulting Dictates shall be heard : Virtue for once shall be Her own Reward : Yes ; Rebel Israel, this unhappy Maid Shall be dismiss'd : the Crowd shall be obey'd : The King his Passion, and his Rule shall leave, No longer Abra's, but the People's Slave. My Coward Soul shall bear it's wayward Fate : I will, alas ! be wretched, to be great ; And sigh in Royalty, and grieve in State. I said : resolv'd to plunge into my Grief At once so far, as to expe(i;t Relief From my Despair alone I chose to write the Thing I durst not speak, To Her I lov'd ; to Her I must forsake. The harsh Epistle labour'd much to prove, How inconsistent Majesty, and Love. I always should. It said, esteem Her well ; But never see her more : It bid Her feel No future Pain for Me ; but instant wed A Lover more proportion'd to her Bed ; And quiet dedicate her remnant Life To the just Duties of an humble Wife. She read ; and forth to Me She wildly ran. To Me, the Ease of all her former Pain. She kneel'd intreatcd, struggl'd, threaten'd, cry'd ; 308 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS And with alternate Passion liv'd, and dy'd : 'Till now deny'd the Liberty to mourn, And by rude Fury from my Presence torn, This only Obje61: of my real Care, Cut ofF from Hope, abandon'd to Despair, In some few posting fatal Hours is hurl'd From Wealth, from Pow'r, from Love, and from the World. Here tell Me, if Thou dar'st, my conscious Soul, What difF'rent Sorrows did within Thee roll : What Pangs, what Fires, what Racks didst Thou sustain. What sad Vicissitudes of smarting Pain ? How oft from Pomp and State did I remove, \ To feed Despair, and cherish hopeless Love ? How oft, all Day, recall'd I Abra's Charms, Her Beauties press'd, and panting in my Arms ? How oft, with Sighs, view'd every Female Face, Where mimic Fancy might her Likeness trace ? How oft desir'd to fly from Israel's Throne, And live in Shades with Her and Love alone ? How oft, all Night, pursu'd Her in my Dreams, O'er flow'ry Vallies, and thro' Crystal Streams ; And waking, view'd with Grief the rising Sun, And fondly mourn'd the dear Delusion gone ? When thus the gather'd Storms of wretched Love In my swoln Bosom, with long War had strove ; At length they broke their Bounds : at length their Force Bore down whatever met it's stronger Course : Lay'd all the Civil Bonds of Manhood waste ; And scatter'd Ruin as the Torrent past. So from the Hills, whose hollow Caves contain The congregated Snow, and swelling Rain ; 'Till the full Stores their antient Bounds disdain ; Precipitate the furious Torrent flows : In vain would Speed avoid, or Strength oppose :' Towns, Forests, Herds, and Men promiscuous drown'd. With one great Death deform the dreary Ground ; The echo'd Woes from distant Rocks resound. MATTHEW PRIOR And now what impious Ways my Wishes took ; How they the Monarch, and the Man forsook ; And how I follow'd an abandon'd Will, Thro' crooked Paths, and sad Retreats of 111 ; How Judah's Daughters now, now foreign Slaves, By turns my prostituted Bed receives. Thro' Tribes of Women how I loosely rang'd Impatient ; lik'd To-night, To-morrow chang'd ; And by the Instinct of capricious Lust, Enjoy'd, disdain'd, was grateful, or unjust : O, be these Scenes from human Eyes conceal'd, In Clouds of decent Silence justly veil'd ! O, be the wanton Images convey'd To black Oblivion, and eternal Shade ! Or let their sad Epitome alone, And outward Lines to future Age be known. Enough to propagate the sure Belief, That Vice engenders Shame ; and Folly broods o'er Grief. Bury'd in Sloth, and lost in Ease I lay : The Night I revell'd ; and I slept the Day. New Heaps of Fewel damp'd my kindling Fires ; And daily Change extinguish'd young Desires. By its own Force destroy'd. Fruition ceas'd ; And always weary'd, I was never pleas'd. No longer now does my negleiled Mind It's wonted Stores, and old Ideas find. Fix'd Judgment there no longer does abide, To take the True, or set the False aside. No longer does swift Mem'ry trace the Cells, Where springing Wit, or young Invention dwells. Frequent Debauch to Habitude prevails : Patience of Toil, and Love of Virtue fails. By sad Degrees impair'd my Vigor dyes ; Till I Command no longer ev'n in Vice. The Women on my Dotage build their Sway : They ask ; I grant : They threaten ; I obey. In Regal Garments now I gravely stride, Aw'd by the Persian Dam'sel's haughty Pride. 310 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Now with the looser Syrian dance, and sing, In Robes tuck'd up, opprobrious to the King. Charm'd by their Eyes, their Manners I acquire ; And shape my Foolishness to their Desire. Seduc'd and aw'd by the Philistine Dame, At Dagon's Shrine I kindle impious Flame. With the Chaldean's Charms her Rites prevail ; And curling Frankincense ascends to Baal. To each new Harlot I new Altars dress ; And serve Her God, whose Person I caress. Where, my deluded Sense, was Reason flown ? Where the high Majesty of David's Throne ? Where all the Maxims of Eternal Truth, With which the Living GOD inform 'd my Youth ? When with the lewd Egyptian I adore Vain Idols, Deities that ne'er before In Israel's Land had fix'd their dire Abodes, Beastly Divinities, and Droves of Gods : Osiris, Apis, Pow'rs that chew the Cud, And Dog Anubis, Flatt'rer for his Food : When in the Woody Hill's forbidden Shade I carv'd the Marble, and invok'd it's Aid : When in the Fens to Snakes and Flies, with Zeal Unworthy human Thought, I prostrate fell ; To Shrubs and Plants my vile Devotion paid ; And set the bearded Leek, to which I pray'd : When to all Beings Sacred Rites were giv'n ; Forgot the Arbiter of Earth and Heav'n. Thro' these sad Shades, this Cbaos in my Soul, Some Seeds of Light at length began to roll. The rising Motion of an Infant Ray Shot glimm'ring thro' the Cloud, and promis'd Day. And now one Moment able to refleft, ] I found the King abandon'd to Negledt, |- Seen without Awe, and serv'd without Respeft. ) I found my Subjects amicably joyn. To lessen their Defefts, by citing Mine. 3" MATTHEW PRIOR The Priest with Pity pray'd for David's Race ; And left his Text, to dwell on my Disgrace. The Father, whilst he warn'd his erring Son, The sad Examples which He ought to shun, Describ'd, and only nam'd not, Solomon. Each Bard, each Sire did to his Pupil sing, A Wise Child better than a Foolish King. Into My self my Reason's Eye I turn'd ; And as I much reflected, much I mourn'd. A Mighty King I am, an Earthly God : Nations obey my Word, and wait my Nod. I raise or sink, imprison or set free ; And Life or Death depends on My Decree. Fond the Idea^ and the Thought is vain : O'er Judah's King ten thousand Tyrants reign. Legions of Lust, and various Pow'rs of 111 Insult the Master's Tributary Will : And He, from whom the Nations should receive Justice, and Freedom, lyes Himself a Slave, Tortur'd by cruel Change of wild Desires, Lash'd by mad Rage, and scorch'd by brutal Fires. O Reason ! once again to Thee I call : Accept my Sorrow, and retrieve my Fall. Wisdom, Thou say'st, from Heav'n receiv'd her Birth ; Her Beams transmitted to the subject Earth. Yet this great Empress of the human Soul Does only with imagin'd Pow'r controul ; If restless Passion by Rebellious Sway Compells the weak Usurper to obey. O troubled, weak, and Coward, as thou art ! Without thy poor Advice the lab'ring Heart To worse Extremes with swifter Steps would run, Not sav'd by Virtue, yet by Vice undone. Oft have I said, the Praise of doing well Is to the Ear, as Oyntment to the Smell. Now if some Flies perchance, however small, Into the Alabaster Urn should fall ; 312 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS The Odors of the Sweets inclos'd would dye ; And Stench corrupt (sad Change !) their Place supply. So the least Faults, if mix'd with fairest Deed, Of future 111 become the fatal Seed : Into the Balm of purest Virtue cast, Annoy all Life with one contagious Blast. Lost Solomon ! pursue this Thought no more : Of thy past Errors recolleft the Store : And silent weep, that while the Deathless Muse Shall sing the Just ; shall o'er their Head diffuse Perfumes with lavish Hand ; She shall proclaim Thy Crimes alone ; and to Thy evil Fame Impartial, scatter Damps, and Poysons on thy Name. Awaking therefore, as who long had dream'd. Much of my Women, and their Gods asham'd, From this Abyss of exemplary Vice Resolv'd, as Time might aid my Thought, to rise ; Again I bid the mournful Goddess write The fond Pursuit of fugitive Delight : Bid her exalt her melancholy Wing, And rais'd from Earth, and sav'd from Passion, sing Of human Hope by cross Event destroy'd, Of useless Wealth, and Greatness unenjoy'd, Of Lust and Love, with their fantastic Train, Their Wishes, Smiles, and Looks deceitful all, and vain. 313 MATTHEW PRIOR POJVER; THE THIRD BOOK. The ARGUMENT. SOLOMON considers Man through the several Stages and Conditions of Life ; and condudes in general^ that IVe are all Miserable. He reflects more particularly upon the Trouble and Uncertainty of Greatness and Power; gives some Instances thereof from Adam down to Himself; and still concludes that All is Vanity. He reasons again upon Life^ Death^ and a future Being; finds Human Wisdom too imperfeti to resolve his Doubts ; has Recourse to Religion ; is informed by an Angel^ what shall happen to Himself^ his Family^ and his Kingdom^ ^till the Redemption of Israel : and^ upon the whole^ resolves to submit his Enquiries and Anxieties to the JVill of his Creator. 314 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS TEXTS chiefly alluded to in this Book, Or ever the Silver Cord be loosed, or the golden Bowl be broken, or the Pitcher be broken at the Fountain, or the Wheel broken at the Cistern. Ecclesiastes, Chap. XII. Vers. 6. The Sun ariseth, and the Sun goeth down, and hasteth to his Place where He arose. Ecclesiastes, Chap. I. Vers. 5. The Wind goeth towards the South, and turneth about unto the North. It whirleth about continually; and the Wind returneth again according to his Circuit. Vers. 6. All the Rivers run into the Sea : yet the Sea is not full. Unto the Place from whence the Rivers come, thither they return again. Vers. 7. Then shall the Dust return to the Earth, as it was : and the Spirit shall return unto God who gave it. Ecclesiastes, Chap. XII. Vers. 7. Now when Solomon had made an End of Praying, the Fire came down from Heaven, and consumed the Burnt- offering, and the Sacrifices ; and the Glory of the Lord filled the House. II Chronicles, Chap. VII. Vers. i. By the Rivers of Babylon, there We sat down ; Yea We wept, when We remembred Sion ^c. Psalm CXXXVII. Vers. I. I said of Laughter, it is mad ; and of Mirth, what doeth it ? Ecclesiastes, Chap. II. Vers. 2. No Man can find out the Work that God maketh, from the Beginning to the End. Ecclesiastes, Chap. III. Vers. II. Whatsoever God doeth, it shall be for ever : nothing can be put to it, nor any thing taken from it : and God doeth it, that Men should fear before Him. Vers. 14. Let us hear the Conclusion of the whole Matter ; Fear God, and keep his Commandments ; for this is the whole Duty of Man, Ecclesiastes, Chap. XII. Verse. 13. 315 MATTHEW PRIOR POWER; THE THIRD BOOK. COME then, my Soul : I call Thee by that Name, Thou busie Thing, from whence I know I am : For knowing that I am, I know Thou art j Since That must needs exist, which can impart. But how Thou cam'st to be, or whence Thy Spring : For various of Thee Priests and Poets sing. Hear'st Thou submissive, but a lowly Birth, Some sep'rate Particles of finer Earth, A plain Effeft, which Nature must beget, As Motion orders, and as Atoms meet ; Companion of the Body's Good or 111, From Force of Instin6t more than Choice of Will ; Conscious of Fear or Valor, Joy or Pain, As the wild Courses of the Blood ordain ; Who as Degrees of Heat and Cold prevail, In Youth dost flourish, and with Age shalt fail ; 'Till mingl'd with thy Part'ner's latest Breath Thou fly'st, dissolv'd in Air, and lost in Death. Or if Thy great Existence would aspire To Causes more sublime ; of Heav'nly Fire Wer't Thou a Spark struck ofi-', a sep'rate Ray, Ordain'd to mingle with Terrestrial Clay ; With it condemn'd for certain Years to dwell. To grieve it's Frailties, and it's Pains to feel ; To teach it Good and 111, Disgrace or Fame ; Pale it with Rage, or redden it with Shame : To guide it's A(^tions with informing Care, In Peace to Judge, to Conquer in the War ; 316 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Render it Agile, Witty, Valiant, Sage, As fits the various Course of human Age ; Till as the Earthly Part decays and falls, The Captive breaks Her Prison's mould'ring Walls ; Hovers a-while upon the sad Remains, Which now the Pile, or Sepulchre contains j And thence w^ith Liberty unbounded flies, Impatient to regain Her native Skies. Whate'er Thou art, v^here-e'er ordain'd to go : (Points which We rather may dispute, than know) Come on, Thou little Inmate of this Breast, Which for Thy Sake from Passions I divest : For these. Thou say'st, raise all the stormy Strife, Which hinder Thy Repose, and trouble Life. Be the fair Level of Thy Aftions laid, As Temp'rance wills, and Prudence may perswade ; Be Thy Affections undisturb'd and clear, Guided to what may Great or Good appear ; And try if Life be worth the Liver's Care. Amass'd in Man there justly is beheld What thro' the whole Creation has excell'd : The Life and Growth of Plants, of Beasts the Sense, The Angel's Forecast and Intelligence : Say from these glorious Seeds what Harvest flows ; Recount our Blessings, and compare our Woes. In it's true Light let clearest Reason see The Man dragg'd out to A61, and forc'd to Be ; Helpless and Naked on a Woman's Knees \ To be expos'd or rear'd as She may please ; >• Feel her Negleft, and pine from her Disease. ) His tender Eye by too direct a Ray Wounded, and flying from unpraftis'd Day ; His Heart assaulted by invading Air, And beating fervent to the vital War ; To his Young Sense how various Forms appear j That strike his Wonder, and excite his Fear ? By his Distortions he reveals his Pains ; He by his Tears, and by his Sighs complains ; MATTHEW PRIOR 'Till Time and Use assist the Infant Wretch, By broken Words, and Rudiments of Speech, His Wants in plainer Characters to show, And paint more perfeft Figures of his Woe. Condemn'd to sacrifice his childish Years To babling Ign'rance, and to empty Fears ; To pass the riper Period of his Age, A6ling his Part upon a crowded Stage ; To lasting Toils expos'd, and endless Cares, To open Dangers, and to secret Snares ; To Malice which the vengeful Foe intends, And the more dangerous Love of seeming Friends. His Deeds examin'd by the People's Will, Prone to forget the Good, and blame the 111 : Or sadly censur'd in their curs'd Debate, Who in the Scorner's, or the Judge's Seat Dare to condemn the Virtue which They hate. Or would he rather leave this frantic Scene ; And Trees and Beasts prefer to Courts and Men ? In the remotest Wood and lonely Grott Certain to meet that worst of Evils, Thought ; DifF'rent Ideas to his Mem'ry brought : Some intricate, as are the pathless Woods ; Impetuous some, as the descending Floods : With anxious Doubts, with raging Passions torn. No sweet Companion near with whom to mourn ; He hears the Echoing Rock return his Sighs ; And from himself the frighted Hermit flies. Thus, thro' what Path soe'er of Life We rove. Rage companies our Hate, and Grief our Love : Vex'd with the present Moment's heavy Gloom, Why seek We Brightness from the Years to come ? Disturb'd and broken like a sick Man's Sleep, Our troubl'd Thoughts to distant Prospers leap ; Desirous still what flies us to o'ertake : For Hope is but the Dream of Those that wake : But looking back, We see the dreadful Train Of Woes, a-new which were We to sustain. We should refuse to tread the Path again. POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Still adding Grief, still counting from the first ; Judging the latest Evils still the worst ; And sadly finding each progressive Hour Heighten their Number, and augment their Pow'r ; Till by one countless Sum of Woes opprest, Hoary with Cares, and Ignorant of Rest, We find the vital Springs relax'd and worn : Compell'd our common Impotence to mourn. Thus, thro' the Round of Age, to Childhood We return j Reflecting find, that naked from the Womb We yesterday came forth ; that in the Tomb Naked again We must To-morrow lye, Born to lament, to labor, and to dye. Pass We the Ills, which each Man feels or dreads, The Weight or fall'n, or hanging o'er our Heads ; The Bear, The Lyon, Terrors of the Plain, The Sheepfold scatter'd, and the Shepherd slain ; The frequent Errors of the pathless Wood, The giddy Precipice, and the dang'rous Flood : The noisom Pest'lence, that in open War Terrible, marches thro' the Mid-day Air, And scatters Death ; the Arrow that by Night Cuts the dank Mist, and fatal wings it's Flight ; The billowing Snow, and Violence of the Show'r, That from the Hills disperse their dreadful Store, And o'er the Vales collected Ruin pour ; The Worm that gnaws the ripening Fruit, sad Guest, Canker or Locust hurtful to infest The Blade ; while Husks elude the Tiller's Care, And Eminence of Want distinguishes the Year. Pass we the slow Disease, and subtil Pain, Which our weak Frame is destin'd to sustain ; The cruel Stone, with congregated War Tearing his bloody Way; the cold Catarrh, With frequent Impulse, and continu'd Strife, Weak'ning the wasted Seats of irksom Life ; The Gout's fierce Rack, the burning Feaver's Rage, The sad Experience of Decay ; and Age, MATTHEW PRIOR Her self the soarest 111 ; while Death, and Ease, Oft and in vain invok'd, or to appease, Or end the Grief, with hasty Wings receed From the vext Patient, and the sickly Bed. Nought shall it profit, that the charming Fair, Angelic, softest Work of Heav'n, draws near To the cold shaking paralytic Hand, Senseless of Beauty's Touch, or Love's Command, Nor longer apt, or able to fulfill The Didates of it's feeble Master's Will. Nought shall the Psaltry, and the Harp avail, The pleasing Song, or well repeated Tale, When the quick Spirits their warm March forbear ; And numbing Coldness has unbrac'd the Ear. The verdant Rising of the flow'ry Hill, The Vale enamell'd, and the Crystal Rill, The Ocean rolling, and the shelly Shoar, Beautiful Objefts, shall delight no more ; When the lax'd Sinews of the weaken'd Eye In wat'ry Damps, or dim Suffusion lye. Day follows Night ; the Clouds return again After the falling of the later Rain : But to the Aged-blind shall ne'er return Grateful Vicissitude: He still must mourn The Sun, and Moon, and ev'ry Starry Light Eclips'd to Him, and lost in everlasting Night. Behold where Age's wretched Vidim lies : See his Head trembling, and his half-clos'd Eyes : Frequent for Breath his panting Bosom heaves : To broken Sleeps his remnant Sense He gives ; And only by his Pains, awaking finds He Lives. Loos'd by devouring Time the Silver Cord Dissever'd lies : unhonor'd from the Board The Crystal Urn, when broken, is thrown by ; And apter Utensils their Place supply. These Things and Thou must share One equal Lot ; Dye and be lost, corrupt and be forgot ; 320 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS While still another, and another Race Shall now supply, and now give up the Place. From Earth all came, to Earth must all return ; Frail as the Cord, and brittle as the Urn. But be the Terror of these Ills suppress'd : And view We Man with Health and Vigor blest. Home He returns with the declining Sun, His destin'd Task of Labor hardly done j Goes forth again with the ascending Ray, \ Again his Travel for his Bread to pay, V And find the 111 sufficient to the Day. ) Hap'ly at Night He does with Horror shun A widow'd Daughter, or a dying Son : His Neighbor's Off^-spring He To-morrow sees ; And doubly feels his Want in their Increase : The next Day, and the next he must attend His Foe triumphant, or his buried Friend. In ev'ry Aft and Turn of Life he feels Public Calamities, or Household Ills : The due Reward to just Desert refus'd : The Trust betray'd, the Nuptial Bed abus'd : The Judge corrupt, the long depending Cause, And doubtful Issue of misconstru'd Laws : The crafty Turns of a dishonest State, And violent Will of the wrong-doing Great : The Venom'd Tongue injurious to his Fame, Which nor can Wisdom shun, nor fair Advice reclaim. Esteem We these, my Friends, Event and Chance, Produc'd as Atoms form their flutt'ring Dance ? Or higher yet their Essence may We draw From destin'd Order, and Eternal Law ? Again, my Muse, the cruel Doubt repeat : Spring they, I say, from Accident, or Fate ? Yet such. We find, they are, as can controll The servile Aftions of our wav'ring Soul ; Can fright, can alter, or can chain the Will ; Their Ills all built on Life, that fundamental 111. O fatal Search ! in which the lab'ring Mind, Still press'd with Weight of Woe, still hopes to find P. X 321 MATTHEW PRIOR A Shadow of Delight, a Dream of Peace, From Years of Pain, one Moment of Release ; Hoping at least She may Her self deceive, \ Against Experience willing to believe, > Desirous to rejoice, condemn'd to grieve. ) Happy the Mortal Man, who now at last Has thro' this doleful Vale of Mis'ry past ; Who to his destin'd Stage has carry'd on The tedious Load, and laid his Burden down ; Whom the cut Brass, or wounded Marble shows Viftor o'er Life, and all Her Train of Woes. He happyer yet, who privileg'd by Fate To shorter Labor, and a lighter Weight, Receiv'd but Yesterday the Gift of Breath, Order'd To-morrow to return to Death. But O ! beyond Description happyest He, Who ne'er must roll on Life's tumultuous Sea ; Who with bless'd Freedom from the gen'ral Doom \ Exempt, must never force the teeming Womb, l Nor see the Sun, nor sink into the Tomb. ) Who breaths, must suffer; and who thinks, must mourn; And He alone is bless'd, who ne'er was born. "Yet in thy turn. Thou frowning Preacher, hear: "Are not these general Maxims too severe? "Say: cannot Pow'r secure it's Owner's Bliss? \ "And is not Wealth the potent Sire of Peace? \ "Are Victors bless'd with Fame, or Kings with Ease? j I tell Thee, Life is but one common Care ; And Man was born to suffer, and to fear. "But is no Rank, no Station, no Degree "From this contagious Taint of Sorrow free? None, Mortal, None : Yet in a bolder Strain Let Me this melancholy Truth maintain : But hence. Ye Worldly, and Prophane, retire : For I adapt my Voice, and raise my Lyre To Notions not by Vulgar Ear receiv'd : Ye still must covet Life, and be deceiv'd : 322 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Your very Fear of Death shall make Ye try To catch the Shade of Immortality ; Wishing on Earth to linger, and to save Part of it's Prey from the devouring Grave ; To those who may survive Ye, to bequeath Something entire, in spight of Time, and Death ; A fancy'd Kind of Being to retrieve. And in a Book, or from a Building live. False Hope ! vain Labor ! let some Ages fly : The Dome shall moulder, and the Volume dye : Wretches, still taught, still will Ye think it strange, That all the Parts of this great Fabric change ; Quit their old Station, and Primaeval Frame ; And lose their Shape, their Essence, and their Name ? Reduce the Song : our Hopes, our Joys are vain : Our Lot is Sorrow; and Our Portion Pain. What Pause from Woe, what Hopes of Comfort bring The Name of Wise or Great, of Judge or King ? What is a King ? A Man condemn'd to bear The public Burden of the Nation's Care ; Now crown'd some angry Faction to appease ; Now falls a Viftim to the People's Ease : From the first blooming of his ill-taught Youth, Nourish'd in Flatt'ry, and estrang'd from Truth : At Home surrounded by a servile Crowd, Prompt to abuse, and in Detraftion loud : Abroad begirt with Men, and Swords, and Spears ; His very State acknowledging his Fears : Marching amidst a thousand Guards, He shows His secret Terror of a thousand Foes ; In War however Prudent, Great, or Brave, To blind Events, and fickle Chance a Slave : Seeking to settle what for ever flies ; Sure of the Toil, uncertain of the Prize. But He returns with Conquest on his Brow; Brings up the Triumph, and absolves the Vow: The Captive Generals to his Carr are ty'd : The Joyful Citizens tumultuous Tyde Echoing his Glory, gratify his Pride. X2 323 MATTHEW PRIOR What is this Triumph ? Madness, Shouts, and Noise, One great Colleftion of the People's Voice. The Wretches he brings back, in Chains relate, What may To-morrow be the Viftor's Fate. The Spoils and Trophies born before Him, show National Loss, and Epidemic Woe, Various Distress, which He and His may know. Does He not mourn the valiant Thousands slain ; The Heroes, once the Glory of the Plain, Left in the Conflict of the Fatal Day, Or the Wolve's Portion, or the Vulture's Prey ? Does He not weep the Lawrel, which he wears, Wet with the Soldier's Blood, and Widow's Tears ^ See, where He comes, the Darling of the War ! See Millions crowding round the gilded Car ! In the vast Joys of this Ecstatic Hour, And full Fruition of successful Pow'r, One Moment and one Thought might let Him scan The various Turns of Life, and fickle State of Man. Are the dire Images of sad Distrust, And Popular Change, obscur'd a-mid the Dust, That rises from the Vi(Jtor's rapid Wheel ? Can the loud Clarion, or shrill Fife repel The inward Cries of Care .? can Nature's Voice Plaintive be drown'd, or lessen'd in the Noise ; Tho' Shouts as Thunder loud afflict: the Air ; Stun the Birds now releas'd, and shake the Iv'ry Chair ? Yon' Crowd (He might reflec^t) yon' joyful Crowd, Pleas'd with my Honors, in my Praises loud, (Should fleeting Vift'ry to the Vanquish'd go ; Should She depress my Arms, and raise the Foe ;) Would for That Foe with equal Ardor wait At the high Palace, or the crowded Gate ; With restless Rage would pull my Statues down ; And cast the Brass a-new to His Renown. O impotent Desire of Worldly Sway ! That I, who make the Triumph of To-day, 324 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS May of To-morrow's Pomp one Part appear, Ghastly with Wounds, and lifeless on the Bier ! Then (Vileness of Mankind !) then of all These, Whom my dilated Eye with Labor sees. Would one, alas ! repeat Me Good, or Great ? Wash my pale Body, or bewail my Fate ? Or, march'd I chain'd behind the Hostile Carr, The Viftor's Pastime, and the Sport of War; Would One, would One his pitying Sorrow lend. Or be so poor, to own He was my Friend ? Avails it then, O Reason, to be Wise ? To see this cruel Scene with quicker Eyes ? To know with more Distinction to complain. And have superior Sense in feeling Pain ? Let us revolve that Roll with strictest Eye, Where safe from Time distinguish'd Aftions lye ; And judge if Greatness be exempt from Pain, Or Pleasure ever may with Pow'r remain. Adam, great Type^ for whom the World was made, The fairest Blessing to his Arms convey'd, A charming Wife ; and Air, and Sea, and Land, And all that move therein, to his Command Render'd obedient : say, my Pensive Muse, What did these golden Promises produce ? Scarce tasting Life, He was of Joy bereav'd : One Day, I think, in Paradise He liv'd ; Destin'd the next His Journey to pursue. Where wounding Thorns, and cursed Thistles grew. E'er yet He earns his Bread, a-down his Brow, Inclin'd to Earth, his lab'ring Sweat must flow : His Limbs must ake, with daily Toils oppress'd ; E'er long-wish'd Night brings necessary Rest : Still viewing with Regret his Darling Eve, He for Her Follies, and His own must grieve. Bewailing still a-fresh their hapless Choice ; His Ear oft frighted with the imag'd Voice Of Heav'n, when first it thunder'd ; oft his View A-ghast, as when the Lifant Light'ning flew ; 325 MATTHEW PRIOR A.nd the stern Cherub stop'd the fatal Road, Arni'd with the Flames of an Avenging GOD. His Younger Son on the polluted Ground, First Fruit of Death, lies Plaintif of a Wound Giv'n by a Brother's Hand : His Eldest Birth Flies, marlc'd by Heav'n, a Fugitive o'er Earth. Yet why these Sorrows heap'd upon the Sire, Becomes nor Man, nor Angel to enquire. Each Age sinn'd on ; and Guilt advanc'd with Time : The Son still added to the Father's Crime ; 'Till God arose, and great in Anger said : Lo ! it repenteth Me, that Man was made. Withdraw thy Light, Thou Sun ! be dark, Ye Skies ! And from your deep Abyss, Ye Waters, rise ! The frighted Angels heard th'Almighty Lord ; ] And o'er the Earth from wrathful Viols pour'd [■ Tempests and Storm, obedient to His Word. ) Mean time, His Providence to Noah gave The Guard of All, that He design'd to save. Exempt from general Doom the Patriarch stood ; Contemn'd the Waves, and triumph'd o'er the Flood. The Winds fall silent ; and the Waves decrease : The Dove brings Qiiiet, and the Olive Peace : Yet still His Heart does inward Sorrow feel, Which Faith alone forbids Him to reveal. If on the backward World his Views are cast ; 'Tis Death diffus'd, and universal Waste. Present (sad Prospe6l !) can He Ought descry, But (what aft'efts his melancholy Eye) The Beauties of the Antient Fabric lost, In Chains of craggy Hill, or Lengths of dreary Coast? While to high Heav'n his pious Breathings turn'd. Weeping He hop'd, and Sacrificing mourn 'd ; When of GOD's Image only Eight He found Snatch'd from the Wat'ry Grave, and sav'd from Nations drown'd ; And of three Sons, the future Hopes of Earth, The Seed, whence Empires must receive their Birth, 326 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS One He foresees excluded Heav'nly Grace, And mark'd with Curses, fatal to his Race. Abraham, Potent Prince, the Friend of GOD, Of Human Ills must bear the destin'd Load ; By Blood and Battles must his Pow'r maintain, And slay the Monarchs, e'er He rules the Plain ; Must deal just Portions of a servile Life To a proud handmaid, and a peevish Wife ; Must with the Mother leave the weeping Son, In Want to wander, and in Wilds to groan ; Must take his other Child, his Age's Hope To trembling Moriam's melancholy Top, Order'd to drench his Knife in filial Blood ; Destroy his Heir, or disobey his GOD. Moses beheld that GOD ; but how beheld ? The Deity in radiant Beams conceal'd, And clouded in a deep Abyss of Light ; While present, too severe for Human Sight, Nor staying longer than one swift-wing'd Night. The following Days, and Months, and Years decreed To fierce Encounter, and to toilsome Deed. His Youth with Wants and Hardships must engage : Plots and Rebellions must disturb his Age. Some Corah still arose, some Rebel Slave, Prompter to sink the State, than He to save : And Israel did his Rage so far provoke. That what the God-head wrote, the Prophet broke. His Voice scarce heard, his Dictates scarce believ'd. In Camps, in Arms, in Pilgrimage, He liv'd ; And dy'd obedient to severest Law, Forbid to tread the promis'd Land, He saw. My Father's Life was one long Line of Care, A Scene of Danger, and a State of War. Alarm'd, expos'd, his Childhood must engage The Bear's rough Gripe, and foaming Lion's Rage. By various Turns his threaten'd Youth must fear Goliah's lifted Sword, and Saul's emitted Spear. 327 MATTHEW PRIOR Forlorn He must, and persecuted fly ; \ Climb the steep Mountain, in the Cavern lye ; v And often ask, and be refus'd to dye. j For ever, from His manly Toils, are known The Weight of Pow'r, and Anguish of a Crown. What Tongue can speak the restless Monarch's Woes ; When GOD, and Nathan were declar'd his Foes ? When ev'ry Objedl his Offence revil'd, \ The Husband murder'd, and the Wife defil'd, > The Parent's Sins impress'd upon the dying Child ? ) What Heart can think the Grief which He sustain'd ; When the King's Crime brought Vengeance on the Land; And the inexorable Prophet's Voice Gave Famine, Plague, or War ; and bid him fix his Choice ? He dy'd ; and Oh ! may no Refleftion shed It's poys'nous Venom on the Royal Dead : Yet the unwilling Truth must be express'd ; Which long has labor'd in this pensive Breast : Dying He added to my Weight of Care : He made Me to his Crimes undoubted Heir : Left his unfinish'd Murder to his Son, And Joab's Blood intail'd on Judah's Crown. Young as I was, I hasted to fulfill The cruel Didates of My Parent's Will. Of his fair Deeds a distant View I took; But turn'd the Tube upon his Faults to look ; Forgot his Youth, spent in his Country's Cause, His Care of Right, his Rev'rence to the Laws : But could with Joy his Years of Folly trace. Broken and old in Bathsheba's Embrace ; Could follow Him, where e'er He stray'd from Good, ) And cite his sad Example ; whilst I trod > Paths open to Deceit, and track'd with Blood. ) Soon docile to the secret A6\s of 111, With Smiles I could betray, with Temper kill : Soon in a Brother could a Rival view ; Watch all his Adls, and all his Ways pursue. 328 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS In vain for Life He to the Altar fled : Ambition and Revenge have certain Speed. Ev'n there, My Soul, ev'n there He should have fell ; But that my Interest did my Rage conceal. Doubling my Crime, I promise, and deceive ; Purpose to slay, whilst swearing to forgive. Treaties, Perswasions, Sighs, and Tears are vain : With a mean Lie curs'd Vengeance I sustain ; Joyn Fraud to Force, and Policy to Pow'r ; 'Till of the destin'd Fugitive secure, In solemn State to Parricide I rise ; And, as GOD lives, this Day my Brother dies. Be Witness to my Tears, Celestial Muse ! In vain I would forget, in vain excuse Fraternal Blood by my Direftion spilt ; In vain on Joab's Head transfer the Guilt : The Deed was a6led by the Subje6l's Hand ; The Sword was pointed by the King's Command. Mine was the Murder : it was Mine alone ; Years of Contrition must the Crime attone : Nor can my guilty Soul expert Relief, But from a long Sincerity of Grief. With an imperfeft Hand, and trembling Heart, Her Love of Truth superior to her Art, Already the reflefting Muse has trac'd The mournful Figures of my AcSlion past. The pensive Goddess has already taught, How vain is Hope, and how vexatious Thought ; From growing Childhood to declining Age, How tedious ev'ry Step, how gloomy ev'ry Stage. This Course of Vanity almost compleat, Tir'd in the Field of Life, I hope Retreat In the still Shades of Death : for Dread and Pain, And Grief will find their Shafts elanc'd in vain. And their Points broke, retorted from the Head, Safe in the Grave, and free among the Dead, Yet tell Me, frighted Reason ! what is Death ? Blood only stopp'd, and interrupted Breath ? 329 MATTHEW PRIOR The utmost Limit of a narrow Span, And End of Motion which with Life began ? As smoke that rises from the kindling Fires Is seen this Moment, and the next expires : As empty Clouds by rising Winds are tost, Their fleeting Forms scarce sooner found than lost : So vanishes our State : so pass our Days : So Life but opens now, and now decays : The Cradle and the Tomb, alas ! so nigh ; To live is scarce distinguish'd from to dye. Cure of the Miser's Wish, and Coward's Fear, Death only shews Us, what We knew was near. With Courage therefore view the pointed Hour; Dread not Death's Anger; but expeft his Pow'r; Nor Nature's Law with fruitless Sorrow mourn ; But dye, O Mortal Man ! for Thou wast born. Cautious thro' Doubt ; by Want of Courage, Wise, To such Advice, the Reas'ner still replies. Yet measuring all the long continu'd Space, Ev'ry successive Day's repeated Race, Since Time first started from his pristin Goal, 'Till He had reach'd that Hour, wherein my Soul Joyn'd to my Body sweli'd the Womb; I was, (At least I think so) Nothing: must I pass Again to Nothing, when this vital Breath Ceasing, consigns Me o'er to Rest, and Death ? Must the whole Man, amazing Tliought ! return To the cold Marble, or contra6led Urn? And never shall those Particles agree. That were in Life this Individual He.? But sever'd, must They join the general Mass, Thro' other Forms, and Shapes ordain'd to pass; Nor Thought nor Image kept of what He was? Does the great Word that gave him Sense, ordain, That Life shall never wake that Sense again ? And will no Pow'r his sinking Spirits save From the dark Caves of Death, and Chambers of the Grave ? POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Each Evening I behold the setting Sun With down-ward Speed into the Ocean run : Yet the same Light (pass but some fleeting Hours) Exerts his Vigor, and renews his Pow'rs ; Starts the bright Race again : His constant Flame Rises and sets, returning still the Same. I mark the various Fury of the Winds : These neither Seasons guide, nor Order binds: They now dilate, and now contradt their Force: Various their Speed, but endless is their Course. From his first Fountain and beginning Ouze, Down to the Sea each Brook, and Torrent flows : Tho' sundry Drops or leave, or swell the Stream; The Whole still runs, with equal Pace, the Same. Still other Waves supply the rising Urns; And the eternal Floud no Want of Water mourns. Why then must Man obey the sad Decree, Which subje6ls neither Sun, nor Wind, nor Sea? A Flow'r, that does with opening Morn arise. And flourishing the Day, at Evening dyes; A Winged Eastern Blast, just skimming o'er The Ocean's Brow, and sinking on the Shore ; A Fire, whose Flames thro' crackling Stubble fly ; A Meteor shooting from the Summer Sky; A Bowl a-down the bending Mountain roll'd ; A Bubble breaking, and a Fable told; A Noon-tide Shadow, and a Mid-night Dream ; Are Emblems, which with Semblance apt proclaim Our Earthly Course : But, O my Soul ! so fast Must Life run off; and Death for ever last? This dark Opinion, sure, is too confin'd : Else whence this Hope, and Terror of the Mind ? Does Something still, and Somewhere yet remain. Reward or Punishment, Delight or Pain ? Say: shall our Relicks second Birth receive? Sleep We to wake, and only dye to live ? When the sad Wife has clos'd her Husband's Eyes, And pierc'd the Echoing Vault with doleful Cries; 331 MATTHEW PRIOR Lyes the pale Corps not yet entirely Dead ? The Spirit only from the Body fled, The grosser Part of Heat and Motion void, To be by Fire, or Worm, or Time destroy'd; The Soul, immortal Substance, to remain, Conscious of Joy, and capable of Pain ? And if Her A6ls have been dire(5led well. While with her friendly Clay She deign'd to dwell; Shall She with Safety reach her pristine Seat? Find her Rest endless, and her Bliss compleat? And while the buried Man We idly mourn ; Do Angels joy to see His better Half return ? But if She has deform'd this Earthly Life With murd'rous Rapine, and seditious Strife; Amaz'd, repuls'd, and by those Angels driv'n From the ^^therial Seat, and blissful Heav'n, In everlasting Darkness must She lye. Still more unhappy, that She cannot dye ? Amid Two Seas on One small Point of Land Weary'd, uncertain, and amaz'd We stand : On either Side our Thoughts incessant turn : Forward We dread ; and looking back We mourn. Losing the Present in this dubious Hast; And lost Our selves betwixt the Future, and the Past. These cruel Doubts contending in my Breast, My Reason stagg'ring, and my Hopes oppress'd, Once more I said : once more I will enquire, What is this little, agile, pervious Fire, This flutt'ring Motion, which We call the Mind? How does She a6l? and where is She confin'd? Have We the Pow'r to guide Her, as We please ? Whence then those Evils, that obstrudl our Ease ? We Happiness pursue ; We fly from Pain ; Yet the Pursuit, and yet the Flight is vain : And, while poor Nature labors to be blest. By Day with Pleasure, and by Night with Rest; Some stronger Pow'r eludes our sickly Will ; Dashes our rising Hope with certain 111 ; POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS And makes Us with refleftive Trouble see, That all is destin'd, which We fancy free. That Pow'r superior then, which rules our Mind, Is His Decree by Human Pray'r inclin'd. Will He for Sacrifice our Sorrows ease ? And can our Tears reverse His firm Decrees? Then let Religion aid, where Reason fails: Throw loads of Incense in, to turn the Scales; And let the silent Sanftuary show, What from the babling Scholes We may not know, How Man may shun, or bear his destin'd Part of Woe. What shall amend, or what absolve our Fate? Anxious We hover in a mediate State, Betwixt Infinity and Nothing; Bounds, Or boundless Terms, whose doubtful Sense confounds Unequal Thought ; whilst All We apprehend, \ Is, that our Hopes must rise, our Sorrows end ; > As our Creator deigns to be our Friend. ) I said ; and instant bad the Priests prepare The ritual Sacrifice, and solemn Pray'r. Seleft from vulgar Herds, with Garlands gay, A hundred Bulls ascend the Sacred Way. The artful Youth proceed to form the Choir; They breath the Flute, or strike the vocal Wire. The Maids in comely Order next advance ; They beat the Tymbrel, and instru6l the Dance. Follows the chosen Tribe from Levi sprung. Chanting by just Return the Holy Song. Along the Choir in Solemn State they past. The Anxious King came last. The Sacred Hymn perform'd, my promis'd Vow I paid; and bowing at the Altar low. Father of Heav'n ! I said, and Judge of Earth ! Whose Word call'd out this Universe to Birth; By whose kind Pow'r and influencing Care The various Creatures move, and live, and are ; But, ceasing once that Care ; withdrawn that Pow'r ; They move (alas !) and live, and are no more : 333 MATTHEW PRIOR Omni-scient Master, Omni-present King, To Thee, to Thee, my last Distress I bring. Thou, that can'st Still the Raging of the Seas, Chain up the Winds, and bid the Tempests cease; Redeem my ship-wreck'd Soul from raging Gusts Of cruel Passion, and deceitful Lusts: From Storms of Rage, and dang'rous Rocks of Pride, Let Thy strong Hand this little Vessel guide (It was Thy Hand that made it) thro' the Tide Impetuous of this Life : let Thy Command Direct my Course, and bring me safe to Land. If, while this weary'd Flesh draws fleeting Breath, Not satisfy'd with Life, afraid of Death, It hap'ly be Thy Will, that I should know Glimpse of Delight, or Pause from anxious Woe; From Now^ from instant Noiv^ great Sire, dispell The Clouds that press my Soul ; from Noiu reveal A gracious Beam of Light ; from Nozv inspire My Tongue to sing, my Hand to touch the Lyre : My open'd Thought to joyous Prospers raise; And, for Thy Mercy, let me sing Thy Praise. Or, if Thy Will ordains, I still shall wait Some New Here-after^ and a future State ; Permit me Strength, my Weight of Woe to bear; And raise my Mind superior to my Care. Let Me, howe'er unable to explain The secret Lab'rynths of Thy Ways to Man, With humble Zeal confess Thy awful Pow'r; Still weeping Hope, and wond'ring still Adore. So in my Conquest be Thy Might declar'd : And, for Thy Justice, be Thy Name rever'd. My Pray'r scarce ended, a stupendous Gloom Darkens the Air; loud Thunder shakes the Dome: To the beginning Miracle succeed An awful Silence, and religious Dread. Sudden breaks forth a mure than common Day : The sacred Wood, which on the Altar lay, 334 POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Untouch'd, unlighted glows- Ambrosial Odor, such as never flows From Arab's Gum, or the Sab^an Rose, Does round the Air evolving Scents diffuse : The holy Ground is wet with Heav'nly Dews : Celestial Music (such Jessides' Lyre, Such Miriam's Timbrel would in vain require) Strikes to my Thought thro' my admiring Ear, With Ecstasy too fine, and Pleasure hard to bear. And lo ! what sees my ravish'd Eye ? what feels My wond'ring Souli* an opening Cloud reveals An Heav'nly Form embody 'd and array'd With Robes of Light. I heard : the Angel said : Cease, Man of Woman born, to hope Relief From daily Trouble, and continu'd Grief. Thy Hope of Joy deliver to the Wind : Suppress thy Passions; and prepare thy Mind. Free and familiar with Misfartune grow : Be us'd to Sorrow, and inur'd to Woe. By weak'ning Toil, and hoary Age o'ercome. See thy Decrease ; and hasten to thy Tomb. Leave to thy Children Tumult, Strife, and War, Portions of Toil, and Legacies of Care. Send the Successive Ills thro' Ages down; And let each weeping Father tell his Son, That deeper struck, and more distinctly griev'd, He must augment the Sorrows He receiv'd. The Child to whose Success thy Hope is bound, E'er thou art scarce Interr'd, or he is Crown'd ; To Lust of Arbitrary Sway inclin'd, (That cursed Poyson to the Prince's Mind!) Shall from thy Dictates and his Duty rove. And lose his great Defence, his People's Love. Ill Counsell'd, Vanquish'd, Fugitive, Disgrac'd, Shall mourn the Fame of Jacob's Strength effac'd. Shall sigh, the King diminish'd, and the Crown With lessen'd Rays descending to his Son. 335 MATTHEW PRIOR Shall see the Wreaths, His Grandsire knew to reap By aftive Toil, and Military Sweat, Pining incline their sickly Leaves, and shed Their falling Honors from His giddy Head. By Arms, or Pray'r unable to asswage Domestic Horror, and intestine Rage, Shall from the Viftor, and the Vanquish'd fear. From Israel's Arrow, and from Judah's Spear : Shall cast his weary'd Limbs on Jordan's Floud, By Brother's Arms disturb'd, and stain'd with Kindred-Blood. Hence lab'ring Years shall weep their destin'd Race Charg'd with ill Omens ; suUy'd with Disgrace. Time by Necessity compell'd, shall go Thro' Scenes of War, and Epocha's of Woe. The Empire lessen'd in a parted Stream, Shall lose it's Course Indulge thy Tears : the Heathen shall blaspheme : Judah shall fall, oppress'd by Grief and Shame ; And Men shall from her Ruins know her Fame. New i^GYPTS yet, and second Bonds remain, A harsher Pharaoh, and a heavyer Chain. Again obedient to a dire Command, Thy Captive Sons shall leave the promis'd Land. Their Name more low, their Servitude more vile. Shall, on Euphrates' Bank, renew the Grief of Nile. These pointed Spires that wound the ambient Sky Inglorious Change ! shall in Destrudlion lye Low, levell'd with the Dust ; their Heights unknown, Or measur'd by their Ruin. Yonder Throne, For lasting Glory built, design'd the Seat Of Kings for ever blest, for ever great, Remov'd by the Invader's barb'rous Hand, Shall grace his Triumph in a foreign Land. The Tyrant shall demand yon' sacred Load Of Gold and Vessels set a-part to GOD, Then by vile Hands to common Use debas'd ; Shall send them flowing round his drunken Feast, With sacrilegious Taunt, and impious Jest. POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS Twice fourteen Ages shall their Way complete : Empires by various Turns shall rise and set ; While Thy abandon'd Tribes shall only know A difF'rent Master, and a Change of Woe : With down-cast Eye-lids, and with Looks a-ghast, Shall dread the Future, or bewail the Past. Afflifted Israel shall sit weeping down, Fast by the Streams, where Babel's Waters run ; Their Harps upon the neighb'ring Willows hung, Nor joyous Hymn encouraging their Tongue, Nor chearful Dance their Feet ; with Toil oppress'd. Their weary 'd Limbs aspiring but to Rest. In the reflective Stream the sighing Bride, Viewing her Charms impair'd, abash'd shall hide Her pensive Head ; and in her languid Face \ The Bridegroom shall fore-see his sickly Race : > While pond'rous Fetters vex their close Embrace. ) With irksome Anguish then your Priests shall mourn Their long-negle6led Feasts despair'd Return, And sad Oblivion of their solemn Days. Thenceforth their Voices They shall only raise, Louder to weep. By Day your frighted Seers Shall call for Fountains to express their Tears ; And wish their Eyes were Flouds : by Night from Dreams Of opening Gulphs, black Storms, and raging Flames, Starting amaz'd, shall to the People show Emblems of Heav'nly Wrath, and Mystic Types of Woe. The Captives, as their Tyrant shall require. That They should breath the Song, and touch the Lyre, Shall say : can Jacob's servile Race rejoice, Untun'd the Music, and disus'd the Voice ? What can We play ? (They shall discourse) how sing In foreign Lands, and to a Barb'rous King ? We and our Fathers from our Childhood bred To watch the cruel Victor's Eye, to dread The arbitrary Lash, to bend, to grieve ; (Out-cast of Mortal Race !) can We conceive Image of ought delightful, soft, or gay ? Alas ! when We have toyl'd the longsome Day ; P. Y 337 MATTHEW PRIOR The fullest Bliss our Hearts aspire to know, Is but some Interval from aftive Woe ; In broken Rest, and startling Sleep to mourn ; 'Till Morn, the Tyrant, and the Scourge return. Bred up in Grief, can Pleasure be our Theme ? Our endless Anguish does not Nature claim ? Reason, and Sorrow are to Us the Same. Alas ! with wild Amazement We require. If Idle Folly was not Pleasure's Sire : Madness, We fancy, gave an Ul-tim'd Birth To grinning Laughter, and to frantic Mirth. This is the Series of perpetual Woe, Which Thou, alas ! and Thine are born to know. Illustrious Wretch, repine not, nor reply : View not, what Heav'n ordains, with Reason's Eye ; Too bright the Obje6l is : the Distance is too high. The Man who would resolve the Work of Fate, May limit Number, and make Crooked Strait : Stop Thy Enquiry then ; and curb Thy Sense ; Nor let Dust argue with Omnipotence. 'Tis GOD who must dispose, and Man sustain, Born to endure, forbidden to complain. Thy Sum of Life must His Decrees fulfill : What derogates from His Command, is 111 ; And that alone is Good, which centers in His Will. Yet that thy Lab'ring Senses may not droop. Lost to Delight, and destitute of Hope ; Remark what I, GOD's Messenger, aver From Him, who neither can deceive, nor err. The Land at length redeem'd, shall cease to mourn ; Shall from her sad Captivity return. SiON shall raise her long-dejefted Head ; And in her Courts the Law again be read. Again the glorious Temple shall arise. And with new Lustre pierce the neighb'ring Skies. The promis'd Seat of Empire shall again Cover the Mountain, and command the Plain, And from Thy Race distinguish'd, One shall spring. Greater in Adt than Viftor, more than King POEMS ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS In Dignity and Pow'r, sent down from Heav'n, To succour Earth. To Him, to Him 'tis giv'n, Passion, and Care, and Anguish to destroy. Thro' Him soft Peace, and Plenitude of Joy Perpetual o'er the World redeem'd shall flow. No more may Man inquire, nor Angel know. Now, Solomon, rememb'ring Who thou art, Aft thro' thy remnant Life the decent Part. Go forth : Be strong : With Patience, and with Care Perform, and Suffer : To Thy self severe. Gracious to Others, Thy Desires suppress'd, Diffus'd Thy Virtues, First of Men, be Best. Thy Sum of Duty let Two Words contain ; O may they graven in thy Heart remain ! Be Humble, and be Just. The Angel said : With upward Speed His agile Wings He spread j Whilst on the holy Ground I prostrate lay. By various Doubts impell'd, or to obey. Or to obje6l : at length (my mournful Look Heav'n-ward ere6l) determin'd, thus I spoke : Supreme, Allwise, Eternal Potentate ! Sole Author, Sole Disposer of our Fate ! Enthron'd in Light, and Immortality, Whom no Man fully sees, and none can see ! Original of Beings ! Pow'r Divine ! Since that I Live, and that I Think, is Thine ; Benign Creator, let Thy plastic Hand Dispose it's own Effect. Let Thy Command Restore, Great Father, Thy Instru6led Son ; And in My Aft may Thy great Will be done. Y2 339 NOTES A = the 'unauthorised' edition of 1707; B = the edition of 1709; C=:the 'unauthorised' edition of 1716; D = the text of 1718, adopted in the present edition; E = the version as it first appeared in Dryden's Miscellanies. When necessary, words from the present text are attacked to each variant to indicate ivhere the difference begins or ends. Titles of poems and numbers of verses are included in numbering the lines. p. XXV, 1. 10. D misprints'\ the. p. I, 11. 4 — 7. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 3, ' Examen Poeticum,' 1693 (second edition, 1706), where it is divided into six stanzas only. 1. 5. A and E] A Pindaric Ode. 1. 15. A] Yet much cans't thou discern. A and E] and much impart. 1. 18. B and E] art Dust. 1. 19. A and E] Wisdom her Oars, and Wit her Sails may lend. 1. 26. A and E] Loses itself, and its increasing Way. p. 2, 1. 3. A and E] You boast your Doubts resolv'd. 1. 8. A] That Nothing, less than Nothing, you. 1. 12. A] delightful. 1. 13. A] of his. 1. 16. B and D] Command. 11. 16 — 20. A and E] Prepar'd to meet his [E its] High Command [E Commands] ; And with diffus'd Obedience, spread Their op'ning Banks [E Ranks] o'er Earth's submissive Head; And march, thro' diff'rent Paths, to different Lands? 1. 21. A] shou'd the. 1. 22. A] Journey. 1. 26. A and E] And, filling A] her wan'd. 1. 27. E] Power. 1. 29. A and E] Why shou'd. 1. 30. A] it's Sphere. 1. 31. A and E] Why shou'd. 11. 33, 34. A and E] To keep in Order, and gird-up the Regulated Year ? p. 3, 1. II. E] Lines, new Circles. 11. 12 — 17. A and E] On t'other's Ruin rears his Throne : And shewing his Mistakes, maintains his own. Well then ! from this New Toil what Knowledge flows ! Just as much, perhaps, as shows, That former Searchers were but Bookish-Tools [E Fools]. Their Choice Remarks, their Darling-Rules, But Canting Error all, and Jargon of the Schools. 1. 19. A and E] Thro' the Aerial-Seas, and Watry-Skies. 1- 31- A and E] And tell us how. 11. 32, 33. A and E] Vain Man ! that Pregnant Word sent forth again, Thro' either Ocean. 1. 35. A] And for each Drop call forth a Sea, a Heav'n for ev'ry Star. NOTES p. 4, 1. 6. B] Sustaining how. 11. 6 — 9. A and E] By telling thee, Perfection suffer'd Pain, An ETERNAL ESSENCE Dy'd ! Death'' s Vanquisher, by Vanquished Death was Slain; The Promised Earth Proplian'd with Deicide. 1. 16. A and E] And to see HEAV'N. 1. 20. A] And Grace's Preference. I. 21. A and E] shall know. 11. 25—30. A and E] So lit as Jacob's Ladder was, to Scale the distant SKY. p. 5, 11. I — 3. Published in E, 1693, where it is called 'To a Lady of Quality's Playing...' A] On Celia's Playing upon the Lute. 1. 6. A and E] the Subject of our Daring Song. 11. 7 and 8 are omitted in A and E. II. 9— II. A and E] But when you pleas'd to show the Lab'ring Muse, What Greater Themes your Music could produce, Our Babling Praises we repeat no more. 1. 19. A and E] That ^'ou in Beauty and in Birth excel. p. 6, 1. 2. A and E] Our Inmost Thoughts and sanctifies. 1. 5. A and E] beyond both. 1. 18. A and E] So, whilst. 1- 23. A and E] Viewing your. 1. 24. A, B and E] The Reigning. 1. 25. A] Celia's. 1. 28. A and E] had rais'd. 1. 29. A and E] a fairer Town. p. 8, 1. r. Published in E, 1693. A] To His Mistress. 1. 4. A and E] In all thy Looks and Gestures .Shine. 1. 6. A and E] To Rule this destin'd Heart of Mine. 1. 7. E] what your. 1. 8. E] and you. 1. 10. A and E] then rely. 1. 12. A and E] 'Tis but a. 1. 13- A and E] To do. 1. 15. A, B and E] and but. 1. 18. A and E] Time equally with Love is. 1. 28. A and E] Even Kindness then too. 1. 29. A and E] the Ghost of my Departed Love. p. 9, 1. 16. A and E] whilst Love invites. 1. 17. A] Obey soft Cupid's gentle Voice. E] 01>ey the Godhead's gentle Voice. 1. 21. E] art Kindness all. 1. 24. A and E] Your. ..your. ..your. 1. 32. E] And thinking. 1- 35- A and E] we'll wake. p. 10, 11. I — 5. For the earlier Epistle, see the companion volume to the present text. This poem was published in ' Miscellany Poems upon Several Occasions : Consisting of Original Poems by The late Duke of Buckinghamf Mr Cowl}', Mr Milton, Mr Prior... Vrmied for Peter Buck, at the Sign of the Temple, near Temple-Bar, in Fleetstreet, 1692.' Variations in this version are lettered F, below. It is also printed in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, 1702 ( = E below), where it is dated Burleigh, Aug. 10, 1690. A] A Second Epistle to Sir Fleetwood Shephard. E] A Letter to. 1. 8. A, E and F] Whom some call Pope, some Antichrist. 1. 9. F] Spani.sh Monarch sends a. 1. 18. F] the Sea. 1. 23. A and E] bump one's. p. II, 1. 12. A] he shou'd. 1. 28. A] A Beau. 1. 34. A] prompted. 1. 36. F] Pettys. p. 12, 1. 14. F] in the Belly. 1. 22. F] form'd all. 1. 29. A] ty'd [possibly correct, though in both authorised editions it is altered to ' try'd ']. p. 13, 1. 5. F] a Writer. 1. 8. F] Authors. 1. 13. F] I thought at first. 1. 14. F] since that. 11. 19, 20. A and F] So when [F where] I've with my Granam gon, At Sacred Barne of pure Noncon. 1. 19 is omitted in P2. 1. 21. A and F] has sifted. 1. 23. F] The Rogue has cough'd up to'ther Hour, And to apply, etc. 34-2 NOTES 1. 24. A, E and F] Villain Stuff. 11. 25, 26. A, E and F] first, I hear [F then, I hear] A very good Account of Her. 11.33-38. A, EandF] For if their fame be justly high, who Wou'd never treat the Pope's Nuncio. That his is higher, we must grant. Who will treat Nuncio's Protestant. p. 14, 1. 15. A] I rise to read. E and F] I rise to Read, perhaps to Breakfast. 1. 26. A] Ceylon. 1. 29. A] Lauzone. F] Better, perhaps, than Count Lausune. p. 15, 11. II — 13. A, E and F] Thus, far from Pleasure, Sir, or Grief, I fool away an Idle Life, Till Mr. Matdwell cease to Teach, Then I'll Jerk [A and E ferk] Youth, and say In speech; Or Shadivell from the Town retires. 1. 15. A and F] Woods. p. 16, 11. I — 3. Published in E, 1694 (second edition, 1708), where it is entitled ' To my Lady Dursley On her Reading Milton's Paradise Lost.' 1. 7. E] Small is that part. 1. 9. E] your Race. 1. lo. E] the Features took. 1. II. E] Heavn's own Work, in Eve's. 1. 13. E] Whilst scarce one actual Guilt. 1. 14. E] your Mind vain Triumphs. 11. 16 — 19. E] With equal Virtue had frail Eve been arm'd, In vain the Fruit had blush'd, the Serpent charm'd: Our Bliss by Penitence had neer been bought ; Adam had never fain, or Milton wrote. p. 17, 11. I — 4. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, \iqi\\, where it is called ' To a Boy Playing with his Cat.' 11. 11 to end. E] And potent of his Vows and Joys, He thank'd the Gods, and blest his Choice. Ah ! Beauteous Boy, take care least thou Renew the fondness of his Vow, Take care to think the Queen of Love Will e're thy Fav'rites Charms improve; Shoud'st thou prefer so rash a Pray'r, The Queen of Love wou'd never hear. Ah ! rather from her Altars run. Least thou be griev'd and she undone. The Queen of Love will quickly see Her own Adonis live in thee; And glances thrown upon a Beast, Which well might make a Goddess blest. Will lightly her first Love deplore. Will easily forgive the Boar, And on her Tabby Rival's Face, Enrag'd will mark her new Disgrace. p. 19, 1. I. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, 1703/4. The Despairing Shepherd was reprinted in 1717 in 'A Collection of the Best English Poetry, by Several Hands,' in two 8vo. vols. ' Printed and Sold by T. Warner, at the Black Boy in Pater-Noster-Row,' the imprint of 343 NOTES that part of the book in which the poem occurs being ' H. Hills, in Black Fryars, near the Water-side, 1709.' 11. 16, 17. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, 1703/4 ( = E). 1. 19. E] and sprightly. p. 20, 1. 3. E] She too a kind. 1. -21. E] But yet. 11. 22, 23. E] Provided you will ne'er again Declare your, etc. 11. 25, 26. Published in E, 1693. A] Heraclitus. E] In a Letter To, etc. 1. 29. A and E] Fate's Fantastick Mazes. I- 31- A] real Fears. p. 21, 1. 1. A and E] we pursue. 11. 4, 5. A and E] And like the doating Artist, woo The Image we our selves have wrought. 1. 7. A and E] we believe. 1. 8. A] Argue against. E] And argue. 1. 9. A and E] Pleased, that we can our selves deceive. 1. 10. A and E] our... our. 1. 18. A and E] former fled. 1. 20. A and E] he's dead. I. 24. A and E] But all the Pleasure. 1. 25. A and E] Is a-far-off to. 11. 27 — 35. A and E] VII. The worthless Prey but only shows. The Joys [E Joy] consisted in the Strife; What-e'er we take, as soon we lose; In Homer's Riddle, and in Life. VIII, So whilst in Feverish Sleeps, we think We taste, what waking we desire : The Dream is better than the Drink, Which only feeds the Sickly-Fire. IX. To the Mind's Eye, Things will [E well] appear At distance, thro' an Artful-Glass; Bring but the Flattering-Object [E Objects] near. They're all a Senseless-Gloomy-Mass. p. 22, 1. 2. A and E] Seeing aright, we. 1. 5. B] And Sorrow from our being wise. 1. 9. A and E] but stinking. 11. 11 — 14. A] An Ode to the Returning Sun, Intended to be Sung before Their late Majesties, on New-Year's-Day 169!, (but here Printed with Alterations; as it was per- formed lately at a Consort of Musick, by the most Eminent Masters.) E 1694, second edition, 1708] For the New Year: to the Sun. Intended to be Sung... 1693/4. Written by Mr. Prior at the Hague. 11. 18, 19. A and E] And as the Radiant Journey's run. Where e'er thy Beams are spread, where e'er thy Power is known, Thro' all the distant Nations own. 1. 21. A] The Mildest Prince. 1. 22. A and E] That ever Sav'd a People, ever Grac'd a Throne. 1. 28. A, B and E] Its. 1. 29. A] Marlbro's. p. 23, 1. I. A, B and E] Its. 1.2. A] round Anna's. E] Mary's. 1. 3. A] From thy blessings she shall know. E] They shall know. 1. 5. A] She governs and enlightens. 1. 13- A and E] with all. 1. 18. A and E] Yxom. Ancient Times, Historic Stores. 1. 20. A and E] All that with. 1. 22. A and E] All that with. 11. 23—26. A and E] His Great Fore-Fathers Pious Cares; All that story have Recorded ; Sacred to Marlbro's [E Nassau's] long Renown, For Countries Sack'd, and Battels Won. 1. 31. A] Marlbro's Fame. 344 NOTES p. 24, 1. 4, A] for Anna's sake. E] for Mary's Sake. 1. 6. A and E] with lucky. 1. 8. A and E] have glad. 1. 10. A and E] many Lustres. 1. 14. A] which Anna should. E] The fuller Bliss which Mary should. I. 16. A and E] the Graver. 1. 19. A and E] the Eastern. A, B and E] Travel. 11. 22, 23. A and E] To ease the Cares, which for Her Subjects sake, The Pious Queen does with Glad Practice [E Patience] take. Cho. To let her all the Blessings knotu, Which from those Cares upon Her Subjects Jloiv. 1. 28. A] Marlbro's Name. 1. 30. A and E] Take Anna's [E Mary's] goodness for their Theme. 1. 32. A] Anna's... Marlbro's. E] Mary's Praise. 1. 33. A and E] Subjects. 11. 36, 37. A and E] 'Till thou shalt shine no more, p. 25, 11. I, 2. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, 1703/4 ( = E), where its sub-title is 'in Imitation of a Greek Idyllium.' 11. 9 — 14. E] The Prospect and the Nymph were gay, With silent Joy I heard her say, That we shou'd walk there ev'ry Day. 1. 15. E] grew. 11. 21, 22. E] she. ..Will press the Shore or see the Main. 1. 23. E] Look back at least once more, said L p. 28, 11. I — 4. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, 1703/4 ( = E). 1. 7. E] Corinna's and so throughout. 1. 18. E] Heart beat. I. 21. E] May Cytherea make her Conquest sure. 1. 22. E] And let. II. 25— J7. E] ^ Yet, if amidst the Series of these Joj's, One sad Reflection should by chance arise. Give it, in Pity, to the wretched Swain. 1. 29. E] Felt. 1. 30. E] And dy'd. The version of Mrs Singer's Pastoral, given in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, differs considerably from the text printed by Prior in 1718 and reprinted here, but I have not thought it needful to give a list of these variations. p. 29, 11. I — 4. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, 1703/4 ( = E), where it is entitled 'Disputing with a Lady, Who left me in the Argument.' 1. 22. E] On Force thus formidably join'd? p. 30, verses v. — viii. E] But quicker Arts of Death you use. Traverse your Ground to gain the Field, And, whilst my Argument pursues, With sudden Silence bid me yield. So when the Parthian turn'd his Steed, And from the Hostile Camp withdrew, He backward sent the Fatal Reed; Secure of Conquest as he flew. Daunted, I dropt my useless Arms, When you no longer deign'd to Fight, Then Triumph deck'd in all its Charms, Appear'd less beautiful than Flight. Oh ! trace again the Flostile Plains, My Troops were wounded in the War, But whilst this fiercer Silence reigns They suffer, famish'd by Despair. 345 NOTES Capricious Author of my Smart, Let War ensue, or Silence cease, Unless you find my Coward Heart Is yielding to a separate Peace. 1. 7. B] the Gift. 1. 11. B] she shuns [probably a misprint in D]. p. 31, 1. 9. B] half-clos'd. 11. 20 — 22. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, 1703/4 ( = E). p. 32, 1. 5. B and E] from its. 1. 19. E] Great Minute. 1. 32. B and E] some Beauty. 1. 33. B and E] little Lustre. 1. 38. E] And with indented Furrows mark his sad extent of Sway. p. 33, 1. 10. E] And Custom call you forth to distant Arms. 1. 18. E] with Jolly. 1. 23. E] Honour fills. 1. 25. E] find you landed on. B] my Lover. 1. 26. B and E] Fill'd with new. p. 34, 1. 12. E] from its. 1. 23. B and E] and soon the. 11. 25, 26. E] Must Celia be undone for loving you ? p. 35. Published separately in 1695, title-page as follows: — To the King, an Ode on His Majesty's arrival in Holland, 1695. By Mr Prior. Quis desiderio sit piidor ant Modus Tarn Chari capitis? Hor. London, Printed iox Jacob Tonson ■iX \.\\t Judge's -Head y\&3.x \.\iq htner-Temple- Gate in Fleetstreet. 1695. The following are readings from the 1695 text, which consists of 40 verses instead of 41 as in the later and considerably altered text. 11. 10 — 23] On Mary's Tomb thro rowling Years, The Mournful Graces all shall weep; And, with fresh Lamps and flowing Tears, The Virtues endless Vigils keep. For Mary distant Lands shall Mourn When late Records Her Deeds relate. Ages to come, and Men unborn, Shall Bless Her Name, and Sigh Her Fate. 1. 25] watchful Trust. 1. 28] To Cloath it in its full. p. 36, 1. 2] King forsake. 11. 7 — 10] The Lovely Dead, whom He regrets, Can know no Fear, can feel no Grief; The living World, whom He forgets. Would perish without His Relief. In vain the British Lyons roar. While prest by Grief their Monarch stoops; The Belgic Darts will wound no more. If He, whose Hand sustain'd them, droops. 1. 15] Europe's. 11. 27 — 35] Oh ! give the Mourning Nations Joy, Break forth, great Sun with usual Light : And let thy stronger Beams destroy Those Clouds, which keep Thee from our sight. Advance in thy Meridian Course, And, since thy Mary's Light is gone, Rejoyce the World with double Force, Thy Beams all fixt in Thee alone. NOTES p. 37, 11- 7—10] Her fair Delight, Her softer Half, Cold in the Grave with Mary lies, Unless in Thee her strength is safe, The frighted Nation wholly dies. 1. n] our Land. 11. 14, 15] Lest rais'd and rescu'd by thy Hand, She bend and sink beneath thy Woe. I. 32] is Britain's. 1. 24] where that excess. 1. 28] Thee. ..thy. 1. 32] gone.-.chang'd. p. 38, 1. 2] Martial Sounds. 1. 13] her Darts. 1. 14] That she could strike. 1. 16] But that with which she struck the Queen. Between verses xxi. and xxii. the 1695 text has verse xxx. of present text and then adds] Envy shall calm that useless Rage, By which Thy Glory brighter grows, And Death, Thy Sorrows to asswage, Shall turn her wrath, and wound Thy Foes. II. 19, 20] She hated Hope, She scorned Relief, And triumph'd, Proud in full Despair. 11. 22 — 28] Her echo'd Wailings pierc't the Skyes, To Earth her bended Forehead bow'd. The Tears unbounded from her Eyes, As Waters from her Sluices flow'd. But soon as Thou her Lord return'd. Her Head is rear'd, her Eyes are dry'd. She smiles, etc. PP- 38, 39, between verses xxv. and xxvi.] Dissembling Ease, and forcing Joy, She begs her Lord his Tears to dry : Did Belgia e're her prayers employ. And Orange stand regardless by? p* 39, 1. 10] pious Father. 11. 12 — 15] A second William's Bloom could tell How Heroes rise, how Patriots set : As Theirs did Others Deeds excel. Excelling Theirs be Thine compleat. 1. 20] As glorious as thy Mary died. PP- 39> 4O) 11- 21 et seqq. For stanza xxx. see note to p. 38 above. Verses xxxi. — xxxvii. of the present text take the place of the four following verses in 1695] That Thou canst live for Belgia's sake, Pierc'd by her Griefs forget Thy own; New Toyls endure, new Conquests make To give her Ease, tho Thou hast None. To keep from treach'rous Foes Her store, Tho all Thy Wealth be robb'd by Death; To vanquish, tho She lives no more Whose Hands prepar'd the Victor's Wreath. Oh, could Thy Griefs obdurate prove To Belgia's Cries, to Britain's Fears, Yet let them yield to Mary's Love, 347 NOTES To Nassau's Glory joyn'd in Her's. If Mary could so well command, It was by long obeying Thee ; Her Scepter, guided by Thy Hand, Preserv'd the Isles and rul'd the Sea. p. 40, 1. 5. B] turn'd aside. 1. 30] To fix His Name amidst the Stars. 1. 34] Glories. p. 41, 11. 7—10] And to Thy Fame alone 'tis given Unbounded thro all Worlds to go, While Mary reigns a Saint in Heaven, And Thou a Demi-God below. p. 47, 11. 23 et seqq. Published in 1695 under the following title: 'An English Ballad : In Answer to Mr. Despreaux's Pindarique Ode On the Taking of Namure. Dulce est desipere in loco. London, Printed for Jacob Tonsoit, at the Judge'' s Head nts-x the Inner Temple Gate in Fleetstreet.'' The variants that follow are, unless otherwise indicated, from the 1695 edition. p. 47, 11. 30—33, p. 48, 11. 1—4] Was you not drunk, and did not know it, When you thought F/iwhus gave you Law? Or was it not, good Brother Poet, The chaste Nymph iMainfenott you saw? She charm'd you sure, or what's the matter. That Oaks must come from Thrace to dance? If Stocks must needs be taught to flatter You'll find enough of them in France. p. 48, 11. 12 — 17] Des Freaicx, a Vulture only flies Where sordid Interest seeks the Prey. When once the Poet's Conscience ceases, His Measures soon from Truth will rove; Give Boilcati but Five Hundred Pieces, And Louis takes the Wall oi Jove. 11. 22 — 26] At Trianon the wondrous Plan. Such Walls these three wise Gods agreed By Human Force could ne'er be shaken ; But, Boileau, we who Homer read. Find Gods as well as Men mistaken. 11- 35—^9] Yet they march'd but like other Men. Cannons above and Mines below Did Death and Tombs for Us contrive, Yet William order'd matters so. That few were there but are alive, p. 49, verse v.] Why is Namure compar'd to Troyl Are we then braver than the Greeks} Their Siege did Ten long Years employ, We've done our bus'ness in Ten Weeks. What Godhead does so fast advance? What Power Divine those Hills regain? 348 NOTES 'Tis Btitain's King, the Scourge of France, No Godhead, but the first of Men. His Arm shall i^eep your Victor under. And Eu7-ope's Liberty restore; Your Jupiter must quit his Thunder, And fright the injur'd World no more. I. 3. B] excell. 11. 15 — 22] Whilst William trembles at Namure, Great Villeroy who ne'er afraid is, To Bruxels marches on secure. To Bomb the Monks and scare the Ladies. Add to this Glorious Expedition One more, and then thy Fame is Crown'd, Perform thy Mastei-'s high Commission, For William ne'er will stand his Ground. Verse vii.] He comes, this mighty Marshal comes. But finds a River in his way; He waves his Colours, beats his Drums, Yet thinks it Prudence there to stay. Ban and Arriereban, all appear Great Armies, would they march but faster; But VilProy moves so slowly here, One would have thought it was his Master. p. 50, 11. 3, 4] Disguise a General's Disgrace; No Torrents swell this low Mehayne. II. 6 — 13] The Water-Nymphs are all unkind. We hope the Land-Nymphs are not so : Or Fortune sure with Love has join'd To fail a General and a Beau. I. 10. B] are all. 1. 12. B] These Ebb alas ! fly they? II. 17 — 26] Nations combin'd may bless his Name, And France in secret own his Glory. Yet, Boileau, we'll take t'other Strain In Honour of that greater Prince, Who lost Na/mtre the same Campaign He bought Dixnniyd, and conquer'd Deynse. Verse x.] Tis done. Great Louis, Troops advance, Mars speaks thro' Cannons Mouths in Fire ; That is, one Mareschal of France Tells t'other, he dare come no nigher. p- 51, n. .3—12] For you that saw it best can say The Steps by which Namure was lost. Think not what Reasons to produce From Louis to conceal your Fear; He'll own the Strength of your Excuse, Tell him that William was but there. Verse xii.] But where is now great Louis Feather, That wav'd so glorious from afar? The Generals could not come together, Without the Lustre of that Star. 349 NOTES Ah, Poet, thou hadst been discreeter, Since thou would 'st hang his Hat so high, If thou had'st call'd it but a Meteor, That blaz'd a while, and then God b'y. 11. 23—28] To animate the doubtful Fight, The World in vain expects that Ray ; In vain France hopes the Sickly Light May equal William's fuller Day. Safe Louis shines, knows his own Station, He likes not any Foreign Sphere. 1. 27. B] He likes Versailles, his. 1. i^. B] William left an open way. p. 52, 11. 10 — 14; verse xiv. was added later] Of Death, Pikes, Rocks, Arms, Bricks, and Fire, We'll play three Stanza's, and have done; The Castle yields, the French retire. So keep your Powder in your Gun. Namure by William's Arms is freed. 1. 19 to end] March, Foes of France, march on thro' Flanders, Divide to Bruxelles, or to Liege; Nor fear the least these fierce Commanders, Wlio neither fight, nor raise the Siege. Losing Namui-c, Finance gains a Peer; Let William's Armies but advance, Botiffier's shall lose Dinant next Year, And be made Constable of France. The following additional French verse is given in the 1695 edition : — Pour moy, que Phebus anime De ses transports les plus doux, Rempli de ce Dieu sublime, Je vais, plus hardi que vous, Montrer que sur le Parnasse, Des bois frequentes d'Horace Ma Muse dans son declin, S9ait encor les avenues Et des sources inconnues A L'Auteur du Saint Paulin*. * Poem Heroique du sieur F***. P- 53> 1- 16. B] bid alternate. 1. 19. B] dread you. p. 55, 1. 18. B] mark, and surly Drums. 11. 20, 21 transposed in B, which also reads] Behold the Soldier. 1. 21. D] A full-stop replaces a comma at the end of the line. 1. 23. B] your pristin. p. 56, 1. 5. B] But drop the Head, and hang the Wing. 11. 20 — 23] not in B. 1. 26. B] Mistress to the Painter sat. p. 57, 1. 18. B] O Howard. 1. 24. B] unhappy Youth. 1. 27. B] to evince. P- 59) 1- 27. B] Banks. p. 62, 1. 2. B] keener Darts. 1. 18. B] Aimed at his. 1. 19. B] With certain Speed the Arrow. NOTES p. 64. The Dove, A Poem, was published in 171 7, ' London: Printed for J. Roberts, near the Oxford-Arms in Wanvick-Lane.'' The following are variations noted in a copy of the 171 7 issue. 1. 7] dares. 1. 29] Subaltern Loves. p. 68, 1. 12] But O, I. 20] I'm sure I touch the. p. 69, 1. 7. D] Lethe'. p. 76, 1. 21. D] XIL p. 78. Pallas and Venus. Published in 1706, 'London: Printed {ox John Nuttnez.x Stationers-Hall [Price id.).' The following are variations noted in a copy of the 1706 issue. 11. 23 — 26] From Head to Foot she view'd, etc. And tauntingly the wanton Goddess said; Alas, since naked I cou'd vanquish Thee, How more successful Pallas, shall I be. 1. 27] When to. ..I come. 1. 29] with a Smile. 1. 33] To be more Strong abandon ev'ry Dress. p. 79, 11. I — 4. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, 1703/4 ( = E). Sub-title in A] A Poesy for a Wedding-Ring. 1. 7. A, B and E] Chloe or Cloe, and so throughout. 1. 14. A] Th' uneasie. 1. 21. A] hated Head. p. 80, 1. 4. A] since were. 1. 7. A] shall find. 11. 12 — 17. A and E] Can suffer Shipwreck [E Racks and], run thro' Flame, Still contented, still the same. Then trace me some unheard-of Way, How I thy constant Ardour might repay; [E Thy constant Ardour to repay] For I my Sense of it wou'd shew, In something more than Woman e'er cou'd do. [E In more, etc.] 1. 30. A and E] Happy these. 1. 31. A and E] But Oh ! how soon. 1. 37. A and E] As soon as ever he. 1. 39. A] all the while. p. 81, 1. 4. A and E] Our Sex will be inur'd to Lye, And their's instructed to Reply. 1. 10. A] The. 1. 12. A] The forward Dame, when fair and young. 1. 19. A] And acted Vigorous and. 1. 31. A] less Owners. p. 82, 1. I. A and B] who does. A] does the Fair One. 1. 9. A and B] has that. 1. 14. A] She wishes, she. 1. 19. A] Darling see. II. 31 — 34. A] I lock her fast, I keep the key; The key-hole, — Fool ! That take away. 1. 35. A] what may. p. 83, 1. 4. A] A Steeple. 1. 5. A] False Fears. 1. 14. A] those monstrous ills. 1. 15. A] She should. 1. 23. A] Then clap. 1. 24. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, 1703/4 ( = E). A, B and E] Monsieur De La Fontaine's Hans Carvel Imitated. p. 84, 1. 3. A and E] To spill a hated Rival's. 1. 9. A] first in. 1. 12. A] Slipt often out to Mistress Hoddy's. 1. 14. A and E] What else o' [E in] God's Name could she mean? 1. 31. A, B and E] Wives... Husbands. 1. 32. A] rowl in. 1. 33. A] durst not. 1. 35. A] to's Wife. NOTES p. 85, 11. 3, 4. E] Cares... Pray 'rs. 1. 6. A] While Taylor, Scot and. 1. 7. A] us to. 1. 8. A, B and E] Lay unmolested. 1. 11. A] The Trade continued still the same. p. 86, 1. 10. A] down some. 1. 17. A] about a. 1. 21. A] Nice Ratafia for. E] Modish Ratafia for. 1. •24. A] Dame went. 1. 33. E] view the. p. 87, 1. I. A] But .such. 1. 9. A] says. 1. 17. A] beyond the. P- 9°» '• 35- ^] all which. p. 91, 1. II. B] Those beat. p. 92, 1. 4. B] Up from her Ladyship to. p. 93, 11. I, -2. Published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, 1703/4 ( = E). Sub-title in A] Li Imitation of Mons. De la Fontaine's Hans Carvel. 1. 10. A and E] from pleasure as from. 1. 13. A] or rise. 1. t6. A and E] dangerous and. p. 94, 1. 13. E] no Medium. 1. 14. A full-stop has been supplied at the end of the line. 1. 28. A and E] might please. P- 95) !• 3- A and E] For Hills before and Woods behind. 1. 4. A] Kept off the Rain, and broke the Wind. 1. 5. A and E] Fat Oxen. 1. II. A] live so. 1. 17. A] Sometimes, My Rogue! sometimes, My Darling! 1. 22. A] The Farmer. p. 96, 1. 5. A and E] Wou'd gloriously in verse appear. 1. 7. A] 'Twou'd grieve me should I have. 1. 9. A and E] my Epic very. 1. 32. A] Is all. 1. 36. A] arse. p. 97, 1. 14. A and E] Some Parts. 1. 19. A and E] dare. E] the gotten. p. 99, 11. 8, 9. B] Reading Mezeray's. p. 100, 1. 8. B] the Book called. pp. 100, loi. ' Adriani Morientis, etc., Imitated' was published in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, Part 5, 1703/4 ( = E below). 1. 4. E] thy doubtful, 1. 7. E] Lyes interrupted and forgot. p. 102, 11. I — 5. Published in E, 1693, where Dr Sherlock is described as ' Dean of St Paul's.' 1. 12. E] her Numbers to that blest. 1. 16. B and E] Who, likc.wert sent. 1. 17. E] To be the Voice, and bid. I. 24. E] Philip's Son, shall sit and view. 1. 25. E] This sordid. p. 103, 1. I. E] to that height. 1. 6. B and E] beyond the. 1. 12. E] various Deaths. I. 13. E] kind Works. 1. 30. B and E] dreaded. 1. 33. E] their hidden way. 1. 37. E] and Worlds. 1. 38. B] those that. p. 104. Carmen Scculare was published in 1700, 'London, Printed for lacob Tonson, at Gmys-Iiin-Gate in Grays-Inn-Lane.' The following variants are from a copy of the 1700 issue, save where otherwise noted. 1. 12] Call out the, 1. 20] comely order march each. 11. 21, 22] Mark ev'ry Act with its intrinsic Worth : Then hast the Mighty Parallels to bring. p. 105, 1. 2, omit\ Thy Native. 1. 6] Turn hither the fair. 1. 8] of the. 1. 10] let fair Proof my bold Affection grace. 1. 12] If Mars son reduc'd. 1. 14, omit\ But yet. 1. 16] Strict Religion Numa knew. 11. 20, 21] Sealing his Justice with his Childrens Blood Stern Brutus was with too much Horror good. NOTES 1. 26J How dang'rous Lusts must be. 1. 28] But scarce. 1. 33] Too many Patriots. 1. 34] And the'. 1. 37] Let their Deserts with mighty Praise be drest. B] With equal. p. 106, 1. i] rowling like. 1. 2] Its rapid Force design'd their. 1. 5. B] So with. 1. 6] Some small allaying Tincture. 1. 20] And in fierce Battels Bloody Laurels won. 1. 23] Illustrious Heroes. 1. 31] Afflicted Britain. '• 35] The fruitful... Great Nassaw's Race. p. 107, 1. i] Next see. 1. 5] Then call the. 1. 23] forth altered to fresh. 1. 27] blooming Life. 11. 28 — 30] His Infant Patience calming Factious Strife, Quelling the Snakes that round his Cradle ran, For William thus, Alcides thus began. 1. 34] Vanquish'd, not. 1. 36. 1700 and B] Maria. p. 108, I. 10] And happy Pow'r. 1. 16] By Moderation greater than. 1. 18] His Life enforcing what. 1. 22] By equal Virtues all the Piece is. 1. 36] To future. 1. 37] Bid Her. 1. 38] Trace every Toil and mention {i.e. omit To). p. 109, I. 2] In shining Characters. 11. 3 — 27] Fair to be read, when all that we can give To make our Master's Glory live, Does of its self insensibly decay, When Time the Marble and the Brass devours, And envious Winters in sure Ruin lay The Pride of Namur's Towers. Namur's Towers which War had arm'd, Against what human Force cou'd do. By William's Valour were alarm'd. Were subdu'd by William's Blow : William mounted Nainurs Towers, Second him Jove, and Pallas, Mighty Powers ; He flew like Perseus thro' the Air, The utmost dreadful height to gain. William and the God of War Can only Toils like these sustain; Rocks, Rivers, Mountains, Armies, Fire, To stop his Glorious Course conspire : Why will they conspire in vain? What can William's Force restrain? 1. 31] France dismay'd. 1. 32] William from... survey 'd. I. 33] He order'd War and Rage to cease. p. 110, 1. 3] how Grace made Clemency. 1. 4] And how. 1. 6] Confessing him less Great than Good. 1. 7] fair Glory. 1. 10] Virtue proclaim'd...and Fame the Best of Kings. 1. 12, add'\ Whither is wild Fancy brought? Whither, etc. 1. 26] pursues her Godhke King. 1. 33] his adventrous. p. Ill, 11. 2 — 4] Anon in Irish Camps she finds her Theme. 11. 11 — 24] She thence to Albion does the Victor bring, Albion with lo's greets her happy King; But he declines the Altars she wou'd raise, Accepts the Zeal, tho' he rejects the Praise. Again she follows him thro' Belgians Land, And Nations often sav'd by William's hand, P. z 353 NOTES Ranges Confederate Armies on the Plains, And in pitch'd Battles bleeding Conquest gains ; Thence to the Points of armed Rocks aspires, O'er hollow Mountains bellowing hidden Fires, Beholds the Rocks submit, the Mountains bow, And willing Nations Crown the Common Victor's Brow. 1. 34. 1700 and B] Eastward, to Danube. p. 112, I. 4] To Him. 1. 6] Him all Religions, Him all Nations trust. I. 16. 1700 and B] his violent. 1. 17] meets its. 11. 19 — 21] Serene, yet Strong, exempt from all Extreams, And with fair Speed devolving fmitful vStreams. II. 24-27] Round either Bank the Vales their Sweets disclose, Fresh Flowers for ever rise, and fruitful Harvest grows. Whither wou'd the Goddess go. 1. 31] Her daring. 1. 35, 0}?iit'\ Yet. p. 113, 1. 3] in ample. 11. 10, 11] Too bold the Strong, the Hero was too Great; She chuses rather thus to die. 1. 18. B] his bolted. 1700 and B] Temples. 1. 32] Rampart. 1. 34] The Oaken. 11. 35—38] Can to Victorious William's Name Augmented Honours give: His is an ample Plenitude of Fame, Incapable Addition to receive, p. 114, 1. I. B and 1700] Mystic Gate. 1. 10] Command the laughing Hours. 1. 12] Distribute Years. 1. 13] And Times from better. 1. 17] From other. 1. 19] Of which no portion she shall bear. 1. 22] with ripen'd. 1. 26. B and 1700] And let Eternal Sweets. In the 1700 version, verses xxvii.- — xxxii. of the present text follow, with many variations, verse xxxv. pp. 114, 115, verses xxvii. to 1. 4, inclusive, of verse xxx.] From the wild Ruins of the Ancient Court, Let a new Phoenix her young Columns rear, As may the Greatness of this Reign support. An Object worthy William's Care; Open, yet Solid, as the Builder's Mind, Be her spacious Rooms design'd ; Let every Sacred Pillar bear Trophies of Arms, and Monuments of War: Then shall the King in Parian Marble Breath, His Shoulder bleeding fresh, and at His Feet Disarm'd and Stopt shall lie the threatn'd Death, (For so was saving Jove^s Decree compleat) His Genius plac'd behind defends the Blow; Disembled Waters from the Basis flow, And Boyn^s Triumphant Flood is known, For ever in the Wounded Stone. Before the Palace, Thaiiws shall softly glide. With dear Affection forming long delay, Unwilling to be forc'd away, Tho' all the Sister- Rivers chide, Fond of Her Lord, forgetful of Her Tide. 354 NOTES And thou Imperious Windsor stand enlarg'd, With all the Stores of Britain'' s Honour charg'd: Thou the fair Heaven that dost the Stars enclose, Which William's Bosom wears, His Hand bestows, To the Great Champions that support His Throne, And Virtues nearest to His own ; Round Ormond's Knee, thou tyest the Mystic String That makes the Knight Companion to the King ; Returning Glorious from the Foreign Field, In Thee he pays his Vows, and hangs his Shield. Thou smiling see'st Great Dorset's Worth confest ; ) Transcendent Goodness in just Honours drest, I The Ray distinguishing the Patriot's Breast. j p. 115, 1. 16. B and 1700] To the... that support. p. 116, verses xxxi., xxxii.] In Thee Great Cavendish Name shall long be known. The Father's Light transmitted to the Son. In Thee the Sey»nnirs, and the Talbois Line, With high Preheminence shall ever shine. And if a God these lucky Numbers guide, If sure Apollo o'er the Song preside, Jersey, Belov'd by All as well as Me Shall at thy Altars bow, shall own to Thee The fairest Mark of Favour and of Fame, Familiar to the Villiers Name. Verses xxxiii. — xxxv. follow xxvi. in the edition of 1700. 1. 26] By hardy Feats. 1. 27] To stimulate Desert with Thirst. 1. 36] Give all the... and midst the. 1. 37] Draw the sure Sword {omit To). p. 117, 11. 2, 3] To plant Societies for peaceful Arts, Increase our Learning and unite our Hearts. 1. 10. 1700 and B] That distant Realms may from our Authors know. I. 17] guard Great Agamemnon's. 1. 24] The mutual Obligation hide. 1. 28. 1700 and B] The Song with Him. 1. 32] shall ever chase the. p. 118, 1. 10] and William's Fleets. 11. 30, 31] His own Stupendious Victories restrain'd. And o'er the Righted World Eternal Triumph gain'd. p. 119, 1. 3] a perfect. 1. 7] calls our. 1. 19] And Man, that knows his Course, adores his Light. 1. 23] That {omit Above) Sun shou'd cease his Destin'd Way to go. 1. 24] to Govern all below. 1. 26] were born. The 1700 version, from this line, concludes as follows : Her absent Lord Britannia once must mourn, And of the Demi- God the Earthly-half must die: Yet if our Incense can excite your Care, If Heavenly Wills relent to Human Pray'r, Exert Great God thy Interest in the Sky, Gain ev'ry Tutelary Deity; That Conquer'd by the Public Vow, They keep the dismal Mischief long away. And far as lengthn'd Nature may allow. Reject with happy Power the threatn'd Day. z2 355 NOTES Into the Ocean for his Life design'd, Throw, bounteous Heav'n, innumerable Hours, And that stern Fate its strict Account may find, Make up that loss by taking them from Ours. Deep in this Age let Him extend His Sway, And our late Sons with chearful Awe obey. On His sure Virtue long let Earth rely, ] And late let the Imperial Eagle fly, >• To bear the Hero through His Father's .Sky. J To Great /Eneas, to Thcmistocles, To Pollux, Theseus, Hercules, And all the Radiant Names above, Rever'd by Men and Dear to Jove ; Late let the New-born Nassaw-Star With dawning Majesty appear, To Triumph over vanquish'd Night, And Guide the British Mariner, With everlasting Beams of Friendly Light. 1. 34. B and 1700] long away. 1. 35. B and 1700] far as. p. 121, 1. 5. The date does not appear in B. 1. 29. B] directs the. p. 124. Published in 1704. 'London: Printed for Jacob Tonson.' The 1 704 version is identical with the version in the ' unauthorised ' edition of Prior's poems, 1707, save that on p. 124, 1. 31, of the present edition it agrees with the later reading ' a Woman,' and in (11. 8, 9, p. 125 of) the 1707 version quoted below it reads ' execute ' for ' exercise ' and ' meantime ' for ' mean- while.' 1. I. A] A Prologue. 1. 9. A] kind Star, whose Tutelary. 1. 10. A] Guided the future Monarch's. 1. 12. A] Only less bless'd than Cynthia. 1. 17. A] For what can Virtue more to man express. 1. 19. A] What further thought of Blessing can we frame. 1. 20. A] Than that, that Virtue should be still. 1. 31. A] a Female. p. 125, 1. I. A] Gives Glorious. 11. 7 — 10. A] Told him how Barb'rous Rage should be restrain'd. And bid him exercise what she ordain'd. Meanwhile, the Deity in Temples sat, Fond of her native Grecian's future Fate. 1. 13. A] Thus whilst the Goddess did her Pow'r dispose. 1. 15. A] and Athens rose. II. 16 et seqq. This 'Letter ' was published in 1704. 'London. Printed {ox Jacob Tonson, within Grays-Init-Gate n&\i Grays- Inn Lane.'' The variants of the 1704 are those given below save where otherwise stated. 1. 19. B omits\ Despreaux. 1. 29] thy servant. 1. 30] a happy. p. 126, 1. 8] Must certainly be Fortune's lasting Fault. 1. 11] And darted Rays. 1. 12] Some erring Deities disturb'd the. 1. 13] And Fate. 1. 25] Louis or. 11. 30 — 34] Hamilton, Luuiley, Palmes, or Ingoldsby, May tolerably well with Verse agree. And Marlbro, Poet, Marlbro has a Name | Which thou and all thy Breth'ren may proclaim, > Elected to immortal Lays, and sure of endless Fame. j p. 127, 1. 2] And generous Sylvius stand. 11. 3 — 6] And Churchil if that rough Sound offend the Strain Be true to Glorious Worth, and sing the Dane. NOTES 1. 23— p. 128, 1. 9] Ave Apollo ! — Sir — one Moment's Ease. Tell me, is this to reckon or rehearse? A Commissary's List or Poet's Verse? Why Faith Depreaux there's Sense in what you say, I told you where my Difficulty lay; He that can make the rough Recital chime, Or bring the Sum of Lewis' Loss to Rhime, May make Arithmetic and Epic meet, And Newton's Books in Dryden's Stile repeat. O Boileau, had it been Apollo's Will That I had shar'd a Portion of thy Skill, Had this poor Breast receiv'd the Heav'nly Beam, And were my Numbers equal to my Theam, To noblest Strains I'd raise my serious Voice, And calling ev'ry Muse to bless my Choice, Arms and a Queen I'd sing; who Great and Good. 1. 32. B] Louis' Loss. p. 128, 1. 13] To vindicate a sinking Empire's Cause. 1. 15] I'd place the Queen in. 1. 18] These prompt to fix Her Joys, those to. 1. 20] And as Her Looks may dissipate their. 11. 21, 22] With active Dance shou'd please Her Eye, with Vocal Shells her Ear (one line). 1. 27] With Pious Speech the River shou'd. 1. 28] blesses Anna's careful. p. 129, 1. 2] Nor names Her Bounty, nor proclaims his Worth. 1. 18] Counted by Men below, and bless'd by Gods above. 1. 26] 'Tis Anna's Glory, and Thou shalt be Great. 1. 29] I'll visit Thee again. 11. 30, 31] And sit propitious on Thy Helm in Blenheim's glorious Plain {one line). I. 34] Commission thro' the land is known. 1. 35] thronging Countries. p. 130, 1. i] her Coast. 11. 2 — 8] And almost ceases to weep William lost. Since that Great He7-cnles resign'd to Fate, The Atlas This, who must support her State. II. 10 — 12] He sees half Germany combin'd with France; Combin'd in vain— He draws the fatal Sword, The Troops obedient \n2.\\. the Master Word. 1. II. B] English General. 1. 13] charging Gen'ral. 1. 16] threat'ning Armies. 11. 22 — 25] The Roman Eagle on the Danube Shears Hears how the British Lion Victor roars, She claps her joyful Wings, and high to Julian Glory soars. 1. 28. B] British Muse. 1. 31] But, Goddess, change. 1. 38] As we have Victors. 1. 39 omitted. p. 131, 11. 7—11] Our Muses as our Armies can agree. To humble Lewis, and reply to Thee. Nor shall we want just Subject for our Strains, Whilst Marlbro's Arm eternal Lawrel gains. And in the Land where Spencer sung, a new Elisa reigns. 1. 15. B] The Queen's Effigies on a. p. 132, 1. 13. B] (G — d knows) is fit. p. 133, 1. 12. B] writ on. 357 NOTES p. 134, 1. 29. A] in this. 1. 31- A] turns. p. 139, 1. 22. B] Had brought. 1. 27. B] softly past. p. 140, 1. 17. B] Deed. p. 144, 1. II. B] Spirit which does closest. p. 146, 1- 5- B] Behold me fix'd. 1. 27. B] Censure. p- 147, 1. 9. B] Cheek. p. 148, 1- 3- B] Will... Will. p- 151, 1. 19. B] and my Hands shall tear. p. 152, 1- 33- B] all the. p- 154, 1. 6. B] An useless. 1. 37. B] A pious. p- 155, 1. 31. B] Herds. p- 156, 1- 33- B] Treasures. P- i57> 11. 5, 6. B] Pow'r...Hour. p. 159. Published in 1706. 'London: Printed {ox Jacob Tonson,\\\i\ivi\ Grays- Inn- Gate next Grays-Inn Lane.' The following variations are from the 1706 version, save where otherwise noted. 1. 6] Late Glorious. p. 160, 1. 9. 1706 and B] writ in. 1. 13. 1706 and B] and add variously. 1. 13] as my Subject and Imagination. I. 14] the matter of Style. 1. 19. 1706 and B] Numbers. 1. 19] only chang'd one Verse in his. 1. 20, otnit^ which... Harmonious. 11. 20, 21] and avoided his Obsolete Words. 1. 30. 1706 and B] Ode L p. 161, 1. 6. 1706 and B ot?nf\ if not. I. 7. 1706 and B] Monmouth and the. 11. 7, 8] yet Our Great Cambden does not reject it, and Milton tells it. I. 10. B and 1700] It carries, however. 1. 13. B] writ. 1. 13] Virgil writ one of the best Poems. 1. 14] Elizabeth one of the greatest Compliments. II. 15 — 20 inclusive are not in 1706. 1. 21] Spencer, do I think, in. 1. 29] So leaving our. 1- 31- 1706 and B] to add, as to my own part. 1. 32, omit] at least. 1. 34] self obliged. After 1. 35 B adds] AWy ift/ie Reader 7vill be good enough to Pai'don me this Excursion , I declare I will not trouble him again in this kind, 'till my Lord Duke of Marlborough gains another Victory, greater than those