The Penguin Book of English Verse
Page 37
Now Lycidas the Shepherds weep no more;
Henceforth thou art the Genius of the shore,
In thy large recompense, and shalt be good
To all that wander in that perilous flood.
Thus sang the uncouth Swain to th’Okes and rills,
While the still morn went out with Sandals gray,
He touch’d the tender stops of various Quills,
With eager thought warbling his Dorick lay:
And now the Sun had stretch’d out all the hills,
And now was dropt into the Western bay;
At last he rose, and twitch’d his Mantle blew:
To morrow to fresh Woods, and Pastures new.
1640 BEN JONSON from A Celebration of Charis, in Ten Lyrick Peeces
Her Triumph
See the Chariot at hand here of Love,
Wherein my Lady rideth!
Each that drawes, is a Swan, or a Dove,
And well the Carre Love guideth.
As she goes, all hearts doe duty
Unto her beauty;
And enamour’d, doe wish, so they might
But enjoy such a sight,
That they still were to run by her side,
Thorough Swords, thorough Seas, whether she would ride.
Doe but looke on her eyes, they doe light
All that Loves world compriseth!
Doe but looke on her Haire, it is bright
As Loves starre when it riseth!
Doe but marke, her forehead’s smoother
Then words that sooth her!
And from her arched browes, such a grace
Sheds it selfe through the face,
As alone there triumphs to the life
All the Gaine, all the Good, of the Elements strife.
Have you seene but a bright Lillie grow,
Before rude hands have touch’d it?
Have you mark’d but the fall o’the Snow
Before the soyle hath smutch’d it?
Have you felt the wooll o’ the Bever?
Or Swans Downe ever?
Or have smelt o’the bud o’the Brier?
Or the Nard i’ the fire?
Or have tasted the bag o’the Bee?
O so white! O so soft! O so sweet is she!
BEN JONSON [A Fragment of Petronius Arbiter]
Doing, a filthy pleasure is, and short;
And done, we straight repent us of the sport:
Let us not then rush blindly on unto it,
Like lustfull beasts, that onely know to doe it:
For lust will languish, and that heat decay.
But thus, thus, keeping endlesse Holy-day,
Let us together closely lie, and kisse,
There is no labour, nor no shame in this;
This hath pleas’d, doth please, and long will please; never
Can this decay, but is beginning ever.
SIDNEY GODOLPHIN
Faire Friend, ’tis true, your beauties move
My heart to a respect:
Too little to bee paid with love,
Too great for your neglect.
I neither love, nor yet am free,
For though the flame I find
Be not intense in the degree,
’Tis of the purest kind.
It little wants of love, but paine,
Your beautie takes my sense,
And lest you should that price disdaine,
My thoughts, too, feele the influence.
’Tis not a passions first accesse
Readie to multiply,
But like Loves calmest State it is
Possest with victorie.
It is like Love to Truth reduc’d,
All the false values gone,
Which were created, and induc’d
By fond imagination.
’Tis either Fancie, or ’tis Fate,
To love you more then I;
I love you at your beauties rate,
Lesse were an Injurie.
Like unstamp’d Gold, I weigh each grace,
So that you may collect
Th’intrinsique value of your face
Safely from my respect.
And this respect would merit love,
Were not so faire a sight
Payment enough; for, who dare move
Reward for his delight?
SIDNEY GODOLPHIN
Lord when the wise men came from Farr
Ledd to thy Cradle by A Starr,
Then did the shepheards too rejoyce,
Instructed by thy Angells voyce,
Blest were the wisemen in their skill,
And shepheards in their harmelesse will.
Wisemen in tracing Natures lawes
Ascend unto the highest cause,
Shepheards with humble fearefulnesse
Walke safely, though their light be lesse,
Though wisemen better know the way
It seemes noe honest heart can stray:
Ther is noe merrit in the wise
But love, (the shepheards sacrifice)
Wisemen all wayes of knowledge past,
To ’th shepheards wonder come at last,
To know, can only wonder breede,
And not to know, is wonders seede.
A wiseman at the Alter Bowes
And offers up his studied vowes
And is received, may not the teares,
Which spring too from a shepheards feares,
And sighs upon his fraylty spent,
Though not distinct, be eloquent.
Tis true, the object sanctifies
All passions which within us rise,
But since noe creature comprehends
The cause of causes, end of ends,
Hee who himselfe vouchsafes to know
Best pleases his creator soe.
When then our sorrowes wee applye
To our owne wantes and poverty,
When wee looke up in all distresse
And our owne misery confesse
Sending both thankes and prayers above
Then though wee doe not know, we love.
(1906)
HENRY KING An Exequy to His Matchlesse Never to be Forgotten Freind
Accept thou Shrine of my Dead Saint,
Instead of Dirges this Complaint,
And for sweet flowres to crowne thy Hearse
Receive a strew of weeping verse
From thy griev’d Friend; whome Thou might’st see
Quite melted into Teares for Thee
Deare Losse, since thy untimely fate
My task hath beene to meditate
On Thee, on Thee: Thou art the Book
The Library whereon I look
Though almost blind. For Thee (Lov’d Clay)
I Languish out, not Live the Day,
Using no other Exercise
But what I practise with mine Eyes.
By which wett glasses I find out
How lazily Time creepes about
To one that mournes: This, only This
My Exercise and bus’nes is:
So I compute the weary howres
With Sighes dissolved into Showres.
Nor wonder if my time goe thus
Backward and most præposterous;
Thou hast Benighted mee. Thy Sett
This Eve of blacknes did begett
Who wast my Day (though overcast
Before thou hadst thy Noon-tide past)
And I remember must in teares,
Thou scarce hadst seene so many Yeeres
As Day tells Howres; By thy cleere Sunne
My Love and Fortune first did run;
But Thou wilt never more appeare
Folded within my Hemispheare:
Since both thy Light and Motion
Like a fledd Starr is fall’n and gone,
And ’twixt mee and my Soule’s deare wish
The Earth now interposed is,
Which such a straunge Ecclipse doth make
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As ne’re was read in Almanake.
I could allow Thee for a time
To darken mee and my sad Clime,
Were it a Month, a Yeere, or Ten,
I would thy Exile live till then;
And all that space my mirth adjourne
So Thou wouldst promise to returne,
And putting off thy ashy Shrowd
At length disperse this Sorrowes Cloud.
But woe is mee! the longest date
To narrowe is to calculate
These empty hopes. Never shall I
Be so much blest as to descry
A glympse of Thee, till that Day come
Which shall the Earth to cinders doome,
And a fierce Feaver must calcine
The Body of this World like Thine,
(My Little World!) That fitt of Fire
Once off, our Bodyes shall aspire
To our Soules blisse: Then wee shall rise,
And view our selves with cleerer eyes
In that calme Region, where no Night
Can hide us from each others sight.
Meane time, thou hast Hir Earth: Much good
May my harme doe thee. Since it stood
With Heaven’s will I might not call
Hir longer Mine; I give thee all
My short liv’d right and Interest
In Hir, whome living I lov’d best.
With a most free and bounteous grief,
I give thee what I could not keep.
Be kind to Hir: and prethee look
Thou write into thy Doomsday book
Each parcell of this Rarity
Which in thy Caskett shrin’d doth ly:
See that thou make thy reck’ning streight,
And yeeld Hir back againe by weight.
For thou must Auditt on thy trust
Each Grane and Atome of this Dust,
As thou wilt answere Him that leant,
Not gave thee, my deare Monument.
So close the ground, and ’bout hir shade
Black Curtaines draw, My Bride is lay’d.
Sleep on my Love in thy cold bed
Never to be disquieted.
My last Good-night! Thou wilt not wake
Till I Thy Fate shall overtake:
Till age, or grief, or sicknes must
Marry my Body to that Dust
It so much loves; and fill the roome
My heart keepes empty in Thy Tomb.
Stay for mee there: I will not faile
To meet Thee in that hollow Vale.
And think not much of my delay,
I am already on the way,
And follow Thee with all the speed
Desire can make, or Sorrowes breed.
Each Minute is a short Degree,
And e’ry Howre a stepp towards Thee.
At Night when I betake to rest,
Next Morne I rise neerer my West
Of Life, almost by eight Howres sayle,
Then when Sleep breath’d his drowsy gale.
Thus from the Sunne my Bottome steares,
And my Dayes Compasse downward beares.
Nor labour I to stemme the Tide
Through which to Thee I swiftly glide.
Tis true, with shame and grief I yeild,
Thou like the Vann, first took’st the Field,
And gotten hast the Victory
In thus adventuring to Dy
Before Mee; whose more yeeres might crave
A just præcedence in the Grave.
But hark! My Pulse, like a soft Drum
Beates my Approach; Tells Thee I come;
And slowe howe’re my Marches bee,
I shall at last sitt downe by Thee.
The thought of this bids mee goe on,
And wait my dissolution
With Hope and Comfort. Deare (forgive
The Crime) I am content to live
Divided, with but half a Heart,
Till wee shall Meet, and Never part.
(1657)
THOMAS CAREW Song. Celia singing
Harke how my Celia, with the choyce
Musique of her hand and voyce
Stills the loude wind; and makes the wilde
Incensed Bore, and Panther milde!
Marke how those statues like men move,
Whilst men with wonder statues prove!
This stiffe rock bends to worship her,
That Idoll turnes Idolater.
Now see how all the new inspir’d
Images, with love are fir’d!
Harke how the tender Marble grones,
And all the late transformed stones,
Court the faire Nymph with many a teare,
Which she (more stony then they were)
Beholds with unrelenting mind;
Whilst they amaz’d to see combin’d
Such matchlesse beautie, with disdaine,
Are all turn’d into stones againe.
THOMAS CAREW Epitaph on the Lady Mary Villers
The Lady Mary Villers lyes
Under this stone; with weeping eyes
The Parents that first gave her birth,
And their sad Friends, lay’d her in earth:
If any of them (Reader) were
Knowne unto thee, shed a teare,
Or if thyselfe possesse a gemme,
As deare to thee, as this to them;
Though a stranger to this place,
Bewayle in theirs, thine owne hard case;
For thou perhaps at thy returne
Mayest find thy Darling in an Urne.
THOMAS CAREW Maria Wentworth, Thomæ Comitis Cleveland, filia præmortua prima Virgineam animam exhalavit An. Dom. 1632 Æt. suæ 18.
And here the precious dust is layd;
Whose purely-tempered Clay was made
So fine, that it the guest betray’d.
Else the soule grew so fast within,
It broke the outward shell of sinne,
And so was hatch’d a Cherubin.
In heigth, it soar’d to God above;
In depth, it did to knowledge move,
And spread in breadth to generall love.
Before, a pious duty shind
To Parents, courtesie behind,
On either side an equall mind,