LORD THURLOW. The whilst full quires around Then I believe, that at thy birth was set a A SONG TO SIR PHILIP SIDNEY. Spirit, whose bliss beyond this cloudy sphere Is with the rising, and the setting light, Who, far remov'd from all that grieves us here, For ever happy, and for ever bright, Yet lookest down with pity from on high, 'Midst airs of immortality: 0, with what pure and never-ending song, Song, that uplift upon the wings of love, May gain access to that celestial throng, Shall I now soar above, And in the silver flood of morning play, And view thy face, and brighten into day? Forgive me, then, O love-enlarged soul, Or love itself in pure felicity, If, questioning my nature's fast controul, I slip my bonds, and wander unto thee; But, ah! too well I know That this may not be so, Till that prefixed doom from heav'n be spent: Then for a little while, If measure may beguile, Let thy sweet deeds become my argument; That all the wide hereafter may behold Thy mind more perfect than refined gold. But this is to enlarge the liberal air, And pour fresh light into the diamond, To herald that the fragrant rose is fair, And that the sun in beauty doth abound; So vain, and so excessful is the thought To add to Sidney aught: Yet cannot I forego the sweet delight, More sweet to me than music or the spring, Or than the starry beams of summer's night, Thy sweetest praise, O Astrophel, to sing ; Till the wide woods, to which I teach the same, Shall echo with thy name; And ev'ry fount that in the valley flows, Shall stay it's fall, and murmur at the close. Nor yet shall time, a thing not understood, Nor weary space forbid me my desire; The nimble mind can travel where it would, More swift than winds, or than the greedy fire; So shall my thoughts aspire To that eternal seat, where thou art laid In brightness without shade; Thy golden locks, that in wide splendour flow, Crowned with lilies, and with violets, And amaranth, which that good angel sets With joy upon thy radiant head to blow; (Soft flow'rs, unknown to woe, That in the blissful meads of heav'n are found ;) ZERBINO INSTRUCTED BY THE MUSE. The daffodils did in the meads appear, Such pleasure did his face to him convey. As well by beauty, as his virtue's charm, That on itself still gazes to this hour. Unless sad herbs have in its wave been thrown And say, “ Go, fool, and to thy image talk.” For Itys did with weeping song complain ; m So swiftly from the impious king she fled, “ I tell you, you shall walk the shades of night, And swiftly has e'er since pursu'd her flight, And hear the song, that can turn back the day, Still weeping for the cruel rage, that shed For hell, Zerbino, opens to my might, The guiltless soul of Itys, in despite And upward to the morning I can stray: Of that vile king ;-but whither am I led The muse I am, that offer to your sight In soft description from the wand'ring knight? The banks of Lethe, and the starry way: Zerbino through the valley took his way: No harm shall meet you on your sacred road; The zephyrs with his golden crest did play, For virtue in all worlds hath her abode. As much delighted with the beauteous fruit, “ 'Tis virtue, not your golden arms, can save That, like a banquet, on his helm y-shone, Your soul from Evil, that with wand'ring flight When joyous marriage doth with parents suit, Doth journey on the wing of Care, and brave And the sweet music is so touch'd, and blown The fine perdition of the beamy light; From shawm, and trumpet, dulcimer, and lute, For rest is not her consort, by the wave That Jealousy with love doth look thereon ; Of Stygian darkness, or the crystal height; And Hymen with a golden song doth tell, But with an iron plume she beats the air, How the pure marriage doth with angels dwell! Incessant on her journey of despair: “ Not feared by the mind, whose beauteous thought The shrill cicada deafen'd with her song Is dear to angels, and with angel's wing The sultry air, and made the hills to quake; O'er - shadow'd, when to depths of darkness The fishes to the depth of rivers throng, brought, The birds within the leaves a descant make; The heat doth do their pretty music wrong: And fed with nectar of immortal spring: Now, quitting the cold woods, the speckled snake, Then come, Zerbino, without fear of aught, As Virgil did of old, the poet's king, Exulting in the burning light, displays Ascend with me into the crystal air, His forked tongue, and revels in the blaze. And see what love, and what delights are there. Enduring not the flashing beams of day, “ I will you show the palace of the moon, The knight betook him to a flow'ry shade, Wherein in gentle slumber as he lay, And take you in the track of Phæbus' car, The restless fancy such amusement made, In all his glorious altitude at noon; With revel in his thoughts, and elfish play, Where you may wonder, how each little star, It seem'd he wander'd in a beauteous glade, Like pearl, upon the milky air is strewn; And see the world diminish'd from afar: Awake, Zerbino, for the sun is high, And we ere night must to Olympus fly. He deem'd he heard, and so he truly did, “ Awake, Zerbino!" and the knight awoke, A song, of sweetness to ascend the sky, And saw before him, on the flow'ry ground, And rest amid the bliss to us forbid, The beauteous Muse, that like an angel spoke, Until indeed our latest moments fly, More soft than is in spring the thunder's sound: And all, that to our earthly sight was hid, A golden plume from each fair shoulder broke, In radiant prospect doth before us lie; And with a laurel leaf her hair was bound; He deem'd he heard a tender virgin sing Her hair, that like Italian harvest shone, This song of love, and anthem for a king. When burning Ætna flameth them upon! “ O youthful guest, whose lineaments divine She stood in height as stately, and as tall, Bespeak you of the blood of kings to be, As some fair temple, to Diana dear, That softly wander on these shores of mine, On which the golden light of Heav'n doth fall, Where all things of delight you well may see, That staineth with its face the silver year: If to diviner wisdom you incline, Round which, when Jove doth to his daughter call, And thirst for fruit of immortality, The golden-hoofed harts do start for fear, Zerbino, to your sight I will declare And Ay into the sacred woods again: What wonders are in earth, in sea, in air. So stood the Muse upon the flow'ry plain. “ The silv'ry dragons to the team of thought, That feed upon the pleasure of the air, And in her hand a myrtle branch she bore, With bud and blossom beauteously adorn'd, Op whatso forehead she that myrtle laid, Methinks, already on my reeds I blow, In yet unpractis'd youth, and flow'ring age, And charm the world with glory of my song; That sacred head was by her counsel sway'd: For winter now is gone, and with it woe, Nor can he in the foaming chase engage, And sparkling summer will be here ere long; Nor practise yet the gainful merchant's trade, Then cast I here away the winter's wrong: Nor seek of mighty war the iron rage, This day I call the fairest of the year, Nor yet to love can yield his spirit pure; That shows the soft delights of spring are near. But is her pupil, and must so endure. MENALCAS. But wisest kings, that with a sacred eye Behold their subjects, and allot to each By great example of the times of old. And bless him with the fat of venison; So then upon the stringed harp he sings A song, that may delight Olympian Jove, I know not, Thenot, sith thy speech is so, A DIALOGUE OF TWO SHEPHERDS. THENOT. The softer season now will soon be here, For now, the bitter cold of winter past, So said the Shepherd to his younger peer, This glorious index of a heav'nly book, Not seldom, as in youthful years he stood, Divinest Spenser would admiring look; And, framing thence high wit and pure desire, Imagin’d deeds, that set the world on fire! SONG. TO MAY. May, queen of blossoms, And fulfilling flowers, With what pretty music Shall we charm the hours ? Wilt thou have pipe and reed, Blown in the open mead ? Or to the lute give heed In the green bowers ! Or pipe or wire, Ripen'd with fire; With new desire. How oft, O Moon, in thy most tragic face, of mournful history, Some record of long-perish'd woe I trace, Fetch'd from old kings' moth-eaten memory ; Which thou, perhaps, didst in its acting see, The perturbation of its doleful birth, Then crawling on to sad maturity, And it's last sleep in the forgetful earth : But if, in style proportion’d to its worth, We raise it up, to shake the world again, To madness we shall turn heart-easing mirth, With horror laying waste the minds of men: 0, marble is the flesh, unmov'd can be, When it beholds so fearful tragedy! I grieve to think, so often as I muse, Musing on sweet and bitter argument, How many souls posterity doth lose, In that they leave behind no monument: Souls, that have fed upon divinest thought, Yet lacking utt'rance of their music's store, To us, that breathe hereafter, are as nought, Or question'd but as names, that dwelt before: Were it sad chance, that them of fame bereft, Love, grief, or sickness, or resentful woe, Or abstinence of virtue made a theft Of that, which virtue to itself doth owe; The cause unknown, their worth unwritten too, Let the world weep, for they are pity's due! T'hou hast thy mighty herds, Tame, and free livers; Doubt not, thy music too, In the deep rivers; And the whole plumy flight, Warbling the day and night; Up at the gates of light, See, the lark quivers ! When with the jacinth Coy fountains are tressed ; And for the mournful bird Green woods are dressed, That did for Tereus pine; Then shall our songs be tbine, To whom our hearts incline: May, be thou blessed! The nightingale is mute, and so art thou, Whose voice is sweeter than the nightingale: While ev'ry idle scholar makes a vow, Above thy worth and glory to prevail : Yet shall not envy to that level bring The true precedence, which is born in thee; Thou art no less the prophet of the Spring, Though in the woods thy voice now silent be: For silence may impair, but cannot kill The music, that is native to thy soul; Upon thy purest honour have controul: SONNETS. ON BEHOLDING THE PORTRAITURE OF SIR PHILIP SIDNEY, IN THE GALLERY AT PENSHURST. The man that looks, sweet Sidney, in thy face, Beholding there love's truest majesty, And the soft image of departed grace, Shall fill his mind with magnanimity : There may he read unfeign'd humility, And golden pity, born of heav'nly brood, Unsullied thoughts of immortality, And musing virtue, prodigal of blood : Yes, in this map of what is fair and good, The largest reign of silence yet bath sway In beauty, which is music to the soul; The lily hath no voice, yet shames the day ; Nay, the sweet air is liken'd in controul : The silver Moon, more paler than desire, That with unvoiced wheel doth climb on high, In meditation's ear is as a quire, That leads th' o'er-visioned Night along the sky: All silence in it's pleasure hath a voice, If balanc'd in the fine esteem of thought; TO THE MUSE. : Then let dumb nature in that plea rejoice, Of age have robb’d thee of thy warlike charms, But be not thou to that dominion brought: And plac'd thee here, an image in my rhyme; For speech in thee, some men’s disparagement, The owl now haunts thee, and, oblivion's plant, Thy purer gifts with glory shall augment. The creeping ivy, has o’er-veil'd thy towers; And Rother, looking up with eye askant, In Parian marble of divinest price, Recalling to his mind thy brighter hours, In fairest gems, in silver and in gold, Laments the time, when, fair and elegant, In flow'ry sweets, that have been steeped thrice Beauty first laugh'd from out thy joyous bowers! In Phæbus' beams, and now his image hold, In fountains, and in woods, in beauteous meads, In palaces of pomp, and love withal, THE TEMPLES OF VENUS AND MARS. In scooped chariots, and in fiery steeds, I am, indeed, most rich and prodigal ! First, in the chapel of the Paphian queen, The Sun cannot behold a greater lord, Wrought on the wall, there may by you be seen Nor doth the eye of Jove survey a man, A sight indeed full piteous to behold, Whose fortune can such boundless wealth afford, The broken sleep; and the sighs deadly cold; E'er since the artificial world began : The sacred tears; the wailings, a whole quire; Thy face, which faults Olympus, is to me The fiery strokes of the unrein'd desire ; All, that love's servants in this world endure; Pleasure; and hope ; desire ; fool-hardiness; Daughter of Jove, encircled by the Hours, Beauty; and youth; and purchas'd wantonness; The warbling Spring comes dancing from the gate Gold; charms; and force; and lies; and flattery: Of Heaven, and, ripe in majesty and state, And waste expense; bus'ness; and jealousy, Pours from her golden ewer the purpling flowers Upon whose head a golden sun-flower bland, On mead, on mountain, on the hallow'd marge And the false cuckoo sate upon her hand; Of sacred rivers ; and the Mermaid chants Feasts; instruments; and carols; and ripe dances; The seas into a calm ; and the wood-haunts Lust; and array; and all the circumstances Of coy Diana 'echo all at large Of Love; that I may reckon, and reckon on With the smooth songs of Philomel : awake, Till the mid-summer, and yet ne'er have done; Daughter of Heaven, and blameless memory; All these were painted the fresh wall upon, Put on thy flowery sandals, and uptake And more than I can tell to any one; Thy golden rod, beloved of the Sky! For Mount Cithæron was depicted there, And with a tongue, like vernal thunder, make Where Venus hath her princely dwelling fair. Virtue the heir of immortality! All the world glow'd with the delightful place, The fount, eye, soul of passion and of grace; TO A BIRD THAT HAUNTED THE WATERS OF LAKEN There was the garden, and the lustiness: Be sure they not forgot the porter, Idleness; O melancholy bird, a winter's day, Nor fair Narcissus, that from love is gone; Nor yet the folly of King Solomon; Nor Circe, nor Medea's charmed cup; Nor Turnus, and his hard and fiery rage; And giv’n thyself a lesson to the fool Nor golden Cræsus in the Persian cage: Unthrifty, to submit to moral rule, By which it may be seen, that neither gold, And his unthinking course by thee to weigh. Nor stronger wisdom, nor the courage bold, There need not schools, nor the professor's chair, Nor strength, nor art, nor beauty's powerful face, Though these be good, true wisdom to impart: Can hold with Venus any equal pace : He, who has not enough for these to spare, What party in her realm have they, who rules Of time, or gold, may yet amend his heart, The rolling world, and makes all people fools; And teach his soul by brooks and rivers fair: Such as these were, who in her snare were caught, Nature is always wise in every part. And often cried, “ Alas!" and all for nought: Ten thousands more may date from her their woe. The froth-born Goddess, ravishing to see, O thou, brave ruin of the passed time, Was naked, fleeting in the ample sea; When glorious spirits shone in burning arms, And, downwards from the waist, was hid from sight And the brave trumpet, with its sweet alarms, By the green waves, as any crystal bright: A citole in her right hand softly held; And thy full vigour, and the eating harms And blush'd like fire, aad like all Eden smellid, IN THE WINTER. |