The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume I (of 2), by Richard Crashaw
The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume I
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Title: The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume I
Author: Richard Crashaw
Editor: Alexander Balloch Grosart
Release date: January 12, 2012 [eBook #38549]
Language: English
Credits: E-text prepared by Taavi Kalju, Rory OConor, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries (http://www.archive.org/details/toronto)
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COMPLETE WORKS OF RICHARD CRASHAW, VOLUME I ***
E-text prepared by Taavi Kalju, Rory OConor,
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
from page images generously made available by
Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries
(http://www.archive.org/details/toronto)
Note:
Project Gutenberg also has
Volume II of this work.
THE
COMPLETE WORKS OF RICHARD CRASHAW.
IN TWO VOLUMES.
VOL. I.
MEMORIAL-INTRODUCTION.
STEPS TO THE TEMPLE. CARMEN DEO NOSTRO.
THE DELIGHTS OF THE MUSES. AIRELLES.
LONDON:
ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.
The Fuller Worthies' Library.
THE COMPLETE WORKS
OF
RICHARD CRASHAW.
FOR THE FIRST TIME COLLECTED
AND COLLATED WITH THE ORIGINAL AND EARLY EDITIONS,
AND MUCH ENLARGED WITH
I. Hitherto unprinted and inedited Poems from Archbishop Sancroft's
mss. &c. &c.
II. Translation of the whole of the Poemata et Epigrammata.
III. Memorial-Introduction, Essay on Life and Poetry, and Notes.
IV. In Quarto, reproduction in facsimile of the Author's own Illustrations
of 1652, with others specially prepared.
EDITED BY THE
REV. ALEXANDER B. GROSART,
ST. GEORGE'S, BLACKBURN, LANCASHIRE.
IN TWO VOLUMES.
VOL. I.
PRINTED FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION.
1872.
156 copies printed.
TO
THE VERY REVEREND
JOHN HENRY NEWMAN, D.D.
AS AN EXPRESSION OF GRATITUDE FOR
FUNDAMENTAL INTELLECTUAL AND SPIRITUAL
QUICKENING AND NURTURE
FOUND IN AND SUSTAINED BY HIS WRITINGS
EARLIER AND LATEST,
THIS EDITION
OF A POET HE LOVES AS ENGLISHMAN AND CATHOLIC
IS DEDICATED BY
ALEXANDER B. GROSART.
CONTENTS.
Those marked [*] are printed for the first time from mss.; those marked
[†] have additions for the first time given in their places.
Illustrations, in the illustrated Quarto only: Vol. I.
1.
The Weeper: engraved by W.J. Linton, Esq., after the Author's own Design
4
2.
Sancta Maria Dolorvm; or the Mother of Sorrows
19
3.
The Office of the Holy Crosse
29
4.
The Recommendation
43
5.
To the Name above every name, the Name of Iesus
55
6.
The Hymn of Sainte Thomas
55
7.
The 'irresolute' Locked Heart
55
8.
In the Holy Nativity of ovr Lord God
71
9.
In the gloriovs Epiphanie of ovr Lord God.
79
10.
Head of Satan: drawn and engraved by W.J. Linton, Esq.
95
11.
Sainte Teresa
141
12.
Dies iræ, dies illa
166
13.
Maria Maior, O gloriosa Domina
173
14.
A second Illustration from the Bodleian copy
173
15.
The Dead Nightingale: drawn by Mrs. Blackburn, engraved by W.J. Linton, Esq.
197
Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14 are reproduced in facsimile
from the author's own designs of 1652, by Pouncey of Dorchester,
expressly for our edition of Crashaw. Besides the above
there are a number of head- and tail-pieces by W.J. Linton, Esq.
PREFACE.
I have at last the pleasure of seeing half-fulfilled a long-cherished
wish and intention, by the issue of the present
Volume, being Vol. I. of the first really worthy edition
of the complete Poetry of Richard Crashaw, while
Vol. II. is so well advanced that it may be counted on
for Midsummer (Deo favente).
This Volume contains the whole of the previously-published
English Poems, with the exception of the Epigrams
scattered among the others, which more fittingly
find their place in Vol. II., along with the Latin and
Greek originals, and our translation of all hitherto untranslated.
Here also will be found important, and peculiarly
interesting as characteristic, additions of unprinted
and inedited poems by Crashaw from Archbishop Sancroft's
mss., among the Tanner mss. in the Bodleian.
These I have named 'Airelles,' after the little Alpine
flowers that are dug out beneath the mountain masses of
snow and ice, with abiding touches of beauty and perfume,
as though they had been sheltered within walls and
glass. The formerly printed Poems have been collated and
recollated anxiously with the original and other early and
authoritative editions, the results of which are shown in
Notes and Illustrations at the close of each poem. Manyxii
of the various readings are of rare interest, and collation
has revealed successive additions and revisions altogether
unrecorded by modern editors. In their places I have
pointed out the flagrant carelessness of the last Editor,
W.B. Turnbull, Esq., in Smith's 'Library of Old Authors.'
As was meet, I have adhered to the first titles of
'Steps to the Temple' and 'The Delights of the Muses,'
the former embracing the Sacred, and the latter the
Secular Poems. The original Editor (whoever he was),
not the Author, gave these titles. In the Preface to
'the learned Reader,' he says, 'we stile his sacred Poems,
Steps to the Temple.' At one time I was disposed to
assign the editorship of the volumes of 1646 and 1648
to Sancroft; but inasmuch as both contained Bp. Rainbow's
verses prefixed to Isaacson's 'Chronologie,' while
the piece is not in the Sancroft ms., it seems he could
not have been the editor. His pathetic closing words
reveal much love: 'I will conclude all that I have impartially
writ of this learned young Gent. (now dead to
us) as hee himselfe doth, with the last line of his poem
upon Bishop Andrewes' picture before his Sermons, Verte
paginas—Look on his following leaves, and see him
breath.'
I would now give an account of previous editions
of our Worthy, and our use of them. The earliest of
his publications—excluding minor pieces in University
Collections as recorded in our Essay—was a volume of
Latin Epigrams published at Cambridge in 1634 in a
small 8vo. The name of Crashaw nowhere appears,
but his initials R.C. are appended to the Dedication
to his friend Laney. The title-page was as follows:xiii
'Epigrammatum Sacrorum Liber. Cantabrigiæ, ex Academiæ
celeberrimæ typographo, 1634.' Besides the Epigrams,
this now rare volume contained certain of his
'Poemata' before the Epigrams. A second edition was
published in 1670 with a few additional Epigrams, and
those in Greek. A third edition appeared in 1674.
Fuller details, with collation of each, are given in Vol. II.
in their places.
Nothing more of any considerableness was published
until 1646, two years after the Poet's ejection. Then
appeared a small volume of Poems, chiefly English, arranged
in two distinct classes, Sacred and Secular, the
latter with a separate title-page. In the Note which follows
this Preface, the title-pages of the volume will be
found, along with those of the subsequent editions of
1648 and 1670. With reference to the volume of 1646,
a mistake in the printing was thus pointed out: 'Reader,
there was a sudden mistake ('tis too late to recover
it): thou wilt quickly find it out, and I hope as soone
passe it over; some of the humane Poems are misplaced
amongst the Divine.' These 'humane' poems, that belonged
not to the 'Steps' but the 'Delights of the Muses,'
were fifteen in all. They were assigned their own places
in the new edition of 1648. With two exceptions, we
have adhered to the classification of the 1648 edition:
the exceptions are, that we have placed 'Vexilla Regis'
immediately after the 'Office of the Holy Crosse,' as belonging
properly to that composition; and the 'Apologie'
for the Hymn to Teresa after the first, not after the
second Hymn, seeing the 'Apologie' is only for the first.
The new edition bore on its title-page the announcement:
'The second Edition, wherein are added divers pieces notxiv
before extant.' Our contents of the present Volume (immediately
following our Dedication) shows these additions,
which were important and precious; viz. twenty-nine
new English Poems and eighteen new Latin Poems.
The next edition was published in Paris in 1652.
In our Note (as supra) the title-page is given. This
volume is an elegant one, and is adorned with twelve
dainty engravings after the Author's own designs, though
we possess a copy without the engravings, having blanks
left. This exceedingly rare book contains most of the
Sacred Poems and some of the more serious of the Secular
Poems; but as the contents (as supra) show, there
were large omissions, notably the Sospetto and Musick's
Duel. It was edited by Thomas Car, who prefixes two
poems of his own, as follows:
I. Crashawe, the Anagramme 'He was Car.'
Was Car then Crashawe; or was Crashawe Car,1 Since both within one name combinèd are? Yes, Car's Crashawe, he Car; 'tis loue alone Which melts two harts, of both composing one. So Crashaw's still the same: so much desired5 By strongest witts; so honor'd, so admired; Car was but he that enter'd as a friend With whom he shar'd his thoughtes, and did commend (While yet he liu'd) this worke; they lou'd each other: Sweete Crashawe was his friend; he Crashawe's brother.10 So Car hath title then; 'twas his intent That what his riches pen'd, poore Car should print; Nor feares he checke, praysing that happie one Who was belou'd by all; disprais'd by none: To witt, being pleas'd with all things, he pleas'd all,15 Nor would he giue, nor take offence; befall What might, he would possesse himselfe, and liue As deade (deuoyde of interest) t' all might giue Desease t' his well-composèd mynd; fore-stal'd xvWith heauenly riches; which had wholy call'd20 His thoughts from earth, to liue aboue in th' aire A very bird of paradice. No care Had he of earthly trashe. What might suffice To fitt his soule to heauenly exercise Sufficèd him: and may we guesse his hart25 By what his lipps brings forth, his onely part Is God and godly thoughtes. Leaues doubt to none But that to whom one God is all; all's one. What he might eate or weare he tooke no thought; His needfull foode he rather found then sought.30 He seekes no downes, no sheetes, his bed's still made; If he can find a chaire or stoole, he's layd. When Day peepes in, he quitts his restlesse rest, And still, poore soule, before he's vp, he's dre'st. Thus dying did he liue, yet liued to dye35 In th' Virgin's lappe, to whom he did applye His virgine thoughtes and words, and thence was styld By foes, the chaplaine of the virgine myld, While yet he liued without. His modestie Imparted this to some, and they to me.40 Liue happie then, deare soule! inioy the rest Eternally by paynes thou purchacedst, While Car must liue in care, who was thy friend, Nor cares he how he liue, so in the end He may inioy his dearest Lord and thee;45 And sitt and singe more skilfull songs eternally.[1]
II. An Epigramme
Vpon the Pictures in the following Poemes, which the Authour first
made with his owne hand, admirably well, as may be seene in
his Manuscript dedicated to the Right Honourable Lady the L.
Denbigh.
'Twixt pen and pensill rose a holy strife1 Which might draw Vertue better to the life: Best witts gaue votes to that, but painters swore They neuer saw peeces so sweete beforexvi As thes fruits of pure Nature; where no Art5 Did lead the vntaught pensill, nor had part In th' worke ... The hand growne bold, with witt will needes contest: Doth it preuayle? ah no! say each is best. This to the eare speakes wonders; that will trye10 To speake the same, yet lowder, to the eye. Both in their aymes are holy, both conspire To wound, to burne the hart with heauenly fire. This then's the doome, to doe both parties right: This to the eare speakes best; that, to the sight.15
'Car was but he that enter'd as a friend With whom he shar'd his thoughtes, and did commend (While yet he liu'd) THIS WORKE__________ _______________________________________________ So Car hath title then; 'twas his intent That what his riches pen'd, poore Car should print'—
that the volume of 1652 carries the authority of Crashaw
with it as his own Selection from what he had
written. So that I have had no hesitation in accepting
its text of the Poems previously published (in 1646 and
1648): understanding that the Selection was regulated
by his desire only to offer the Countess of Denbigh
those he himself most valued. There are inevitable misprints
and a chaos of punctuation; but the text as a whole
is a great advance on those preceding, as our Notes and
Illustrations to the several poems prove. There are some
very valuable additions throughout, entirely overlooked
by modern Editors. Our text of all not in 1652 volume
is based on that of 1648 collated with 1646.
The engravings celebrated in the Epigram of Car—of
whom more, and of the origin and purpose of the
Volume, in our Essay—are as follows:
1. 'To the noblest and best of ladyes:' a heart
with an emblematical lock. Beneath is printed 'Non Vi'
( = not by force), and the following lines:
'Tis not the work of force but skill To find the way into man's will. 'Tis loue alone can hearts vnlock: Who knowes the Word, he needs not knock.
2. 'To the name above every name.' 'Numisma
Urbani 6.' A dove under the tiara, surrounded with a
glory. The legend is, 'In unitate Deus est.'
3. 'The Holy Nativity.' The Holy Family at Bethlehem.
Beneath are these lines in French and Latin:
Ton Créateur te faict voir sa naissance Deignant souffrir pour toy des son enfance.
Quem vidistis, Pastores, &c. Natum vidimus, &c.
4. 'The Glorious Epiphanie.' The adoration of the
Magi-kings.
5. 'The Office of the Holy Crosse.' Christ on the
Cross. Beneath (from the Vulgate),
Tradidit semetipsum pro nobis oblationem et hostiam Deo in odorem suavitatis.—Ad Ephe. 5.
6. 'The Recommendation.' The ascended Saviour
looking down toward the Earth. Above, this line,
Expostulatio Jesu Christi cum mundo ingrato.
Beneath, a Latin poem of thirteen lines, which appears
in its place in our Vol. II.
7. 'Sancta Maria Dolorum.' The Virgin Mary underxviii
the Cross with the instruments of the Passion, holding
the dead Saviour in her arms.
8. 'Hymn of St. Thomas.' A Remonstrance. 'Ecce
panis Angelorum.'
9. 'Dies Iræ.' The Last Judgment. 'Dies Iræ,
dies illa.'
10. 'O Gloriosa Domina.' The Virgin Mary and
Child. Angels hold a crown over her head, surmounted
by the Holy Dove. Beneath:
S. Maria Major. Dilectus meus mihi, et ego illi, Qui pascitur inter lilia. Cant.
11. 'The Weeper.' A female head, showing beneath,
a bleeding and burning heart, surrounded by a glory.
This couplet is below:
Lo, where a wounded heart, with bleeding eyes conspire: Is she a flaming fountaine, or a weeping fire?
12. 'Hymn to St. Teresa.' Portrait: scroll above,
inscribed 'Misericors Domini in æternum cantabo.' Beneath,
'La Vray Portraict de Ste. Terese, Fondatrice
des Religieuses et Religieux réformez de l'ordre de N.
Dame de mont Carmel: Décédée le 4e Octo. 1582. Canonisée
le 12e Mars 1622.'
Besides these Twelve, I discovered another in illustration
of 'O Gloriosa Domina,' substituted for No. 10 in
the very fine copy of the volume in the Douce Collection
in the Bodleian. I have the satisfaction of furnishing
admirable reproductions in fac-simile of Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 12, and by the kindness of the
Bodleian Trustees, the unique illustration for No. 10.
No. 11 by my friend W.J. Linton, Esq. The wholexix
of these belong exclusively to our illustrated quarto edition,
and the impressions taken have been strictly limited
thereto, and a very few for my own gift-use.
We have now done with genuine editions; but have
yet to notice a wretched medley which bears the name of
the '2d edition.' Its title-page is given in our Note (as
before). This volume is fairly printed; but whatever
was meant by '2d edition,' whether it was so styled from
ignorance of the edition of 1648 or copying of its title,
or because it was meant for a 2d edition of 1652, it is
a deplorable compilation made out of 1646 and 1652.
It first reprints 1646 and then 1652, omitting in the
second part such poems of 1652 as were in 1646, but
without taking the trouble of correcting any, so as to
bring them into agreement with the better text. Not to
mention well-nigh innumerable misprints and omissions,
so blind is it, that it has twice printed two poems which
in 1652 had their titles altered, not observing that it had
already printed them under the old titles. These were
the poems, On the Death of a Young Gentleman, and in
Praise of Lessius. It contains only the eight Latin
Poems of 1646, and no others. Of this edition Turnbull
says, 'In its text [it is] the most inaccurate of all'—and—What
then? He reprints it! and leaves undetected
its inaccuracies and omissions, and superadds as
many more of his own—as our Notes and Illustrations
demonstrate, albeit we have left many blunders unrecorded,
contenting ourselves with seeing that our own is
correct. And yet this Editor got in a rage with a correspondent
(Professor M'Carthy) of Notes and Queries,
who at the time corrected incidentally a misprinted letter—oblivious
of (literally) hundreds infinitely worse.
Peregrine Phillips in 1785 published a very well-printed
volume of 'Selections' from Crashaw; but, like
Turnbull, he blundered over the (so-called) '2d edition'
of 1670, and seems never to have seen those of 1648
and 1652. Of other more recent editions I shall speak
in our Essay, and, as already stated in our Memorial-Introduction,
notice the University Collections and others,
to which our Poet contributed. In its place, at close of
the present Volume, see account of a hitherto unused
edition of a Verse-Letter to Countess of Denbigh.
Of the Poems now for the first time printed, the present
Volume contains no fewer than fifteen or sixteen
with important additions: Vol. II. will contain very
many more, as well as our Translation of the hitherto
untranslated Poems and Epigrams. The source of all
these erewhile unprinted Poems is Vol. 465 among the
Tanner mss., which is known to be in the handwriting
(mainly) of Archbishop Sancroft. The Volume
is a collection of contemporary Poetry, but as it now
rests in the Bodleian is imperfect, as the Index shows.
The following details will probably interest our readers.
In the Index is first of all the following, 'Mr. Crashaw's
Epigrams, sacra Latina;' but it is erased. Then
underneath is written 'Mr. Crashaw's poems transcrib'd
frō his own copie, before they were printed; amongst
wch are some not printed.' 'Latin, On ye Gospels v p 7.
On other Subiects p 39, 95, 229. English Sacred
Poems p 111. On other Subiects—39, 162, 164 v
167 v 196. 202 v 206. 223. v Suspetto di Herodi,
translated frō Car. Marino p 287 v.' Guided by
this Index—for, though to some 'R. Cr.' is prefixed,
others printed in 1646 and 1648 are left without namexxi
or initials—page 7 to 22 contains Latin Poems and Epigrams
still unpublished. On page 22 is a large letter C
= Crashaw. The pagination then leaps to p. 39 and goes
on to page 64, and consists of Latin Poems and one
in Greek 'On other Subjects,' also wholly unpublished.
Page 66 is blank, and a blank leaf follows. Then there
is a Latin poem by Wallis, and pp. 95-6 contain other
Latin poems by Crashaw, in part published. Pages 97-102
are blank, and the pagination again leaps to p. 111,
where begin the English Sacred Poems, continuing to
page 137, with 'Crashaw' written at end. These pages
(111-137) contain mainly Poems and Epigrams before
published. On page 130 is a short poem 'On Good
Friday' by T. Randolph. On page 135 are two poems
by Dr. Alabaster: then, on page 136, Crashaw's poem
'On the Assumption,' and on page 137, a short poem by
Wotton. Pages 138-142 are blank, and once more the
pagination passes to p. 159, where there is a poem by
Giles Fletcher (pp. 159-160)—printed by us in Appendix
to Poems of Dr. Giles Fletcher in our Fuller
Worthies' Miscellanies. Pages 160-1 have poems
by Corbett (erroneously inserted as Herrick's by Hazlitt
in his edition of Herrick), and a Song by Wotton.
On page 162 'The Faire Ethiopian,' by Crashaw: p.
163, 'Upon Mr. Cl.' [Cleveland?], who made a Song
against the D.D.s—The complaint of a woman with
child [both anonymous]. Then at page 164 'Upon a
gnatt burnt in a candle,' by Crashaw (being entered in
Index as supra), and never published. On pages 165-6,
Love's Horoscope (published): p. 166, Ad Amicam.
T.R. (not by Crashaw, being entered in Index under
Randolph): pp. 167-71, Fidicinis et Philomela Bellumxxii
Musicum, and Upon Herbert's Temple: pp. 172-3, Upon
Isaacson's Frontispiece (the second piece): pp. 173-4, An
invitation to faire weather (all published before). Then
translations from the Latin Poets with 'R. Cr.' above
each, pp. 174-178—all unpublished: pp. 178-9, from
Virgil (published). Next on pp. 180-87 are the following:
'On ye Gunpowder-Treason' (three separate pieces),
and 'Upon the King's Coronation' (two pieces). These
have never been printed until now in our present Vol., and
they are unquestionably Crashaw's, inasmuch as (a) All
entered thus 164 v. 167 are by him, and so these being
entered under his name in Index as 167 v. 196 must
belong to him; (b) 'Upon the King's Coronation' are
renderings in part of his own Latin; (c) As shown in
our Essay (where also their biographic value is shown)
unusual words used by Crashaw occur in them. Pp. 187-90,
'Panegyrick upon the birth of the Duke of York'
(published): pp. 190-2, 'Upon the birth of the Princesse
Elizabeth' (never before printed). Pages 192-196, poems
by Corbett, Wotton, and others. Pages 196-7, Translation
from the Latin Ex Euphormione (not before published),
and on Lessius (published). Then pp. 197-201,
poems by various, in part anonymous: pp. 202-3, An
Elegy on Staninough—not having his name or initials,
but entered in Index under his name—(never before published):
pp. 203-5, In obitum desider. Mri Chambers
(published, but the heading new), and Upon the death
of a friend (not before published): p. 205, 'On a cobler'
(anonymous): p. 206, In obitum Dr Brooke: Epitaphium
Conjug. (published): page 207, poem by Culverwell:
p. 208, blank; and then the pagination passes to p. 223.
Pages 223-229, poems on Herrys [or Harris] (all published,xxiii
but with variations): pp. 229-30, Elegie on Dr.
Porter (never before published, and entered in Index
under Crashaw): from p. 231 to 238, various poems,
but none by Crashaw; then the pagination leaps to p.
238, and goes on to p. 255, with various pieces, but
again none by Crashaw. On pp. 297-8 are eight of
the published English Epigrams. All the other anonymous
and avowed poems being entered in the Index
separately from Crashaw's, and under either their titles
or authors, makes us safe to exclude them from our
Volumes. On the other hand, the Index-entries and
'R.C.' together, assure us that rich and virgin as is the
treasure-trove of unprinted and unpublished Poems—English
and Latin, especially the Latin—it is without a
shadow of doubt Richard Crashaw's, and of supreme
worth. I have also had the good fortune to discover a
Harleian ms. from Lord Somers' Library (6917-18),
which furnishes some valuable readings of some of the
Poems, as recorded and used by us.
Throughout we have endeavoured with all fidelity
to reproduce our Worthy in integrity of text and orthography—diminishing
only (slightly) italics and capitals,
and as usual giving capitals to all divine Names (nouns
and pronouns) and personifications. In Notes and Illustrations
all various readings are recorded, and such
elucidations and filling-in of names and allusions as are
likely to be helpful.
It is now my pleasant duty to return right hearty,
because heartfelt, thanks to many friends and correspondents
who have aided me in a somewhat arduous and
difficult work and 'labour of love.' To the venerablexxiv
and illustrious man whose name by express permission
adorns my Dedication, I owe a debt of gratitude for a
beautiful, a pathetic, a (to me) sacred Letter, that greatly
animated me to go forward. By my admirable friends
Revs. J.H. Clark, M.A., of West Dereham, Norfolk,
and Thomas Ashe, M.A., Ipswich, my edition (as Vol.
II. will evidence) is advantaged in various Translations
for the first time of the Latin poems, valuable in themselves,
and the more valued for the generous enthusiasm
and modesty with which they were offered, not to say
how considerably they have lightened my own work in the
same field. To Dr. Brinsley Nicholson, who retains
in the Army his fine literary culture and acumen; to
W. Aldis Wright, Esq., M.A., Trinity College, Cambridge;
the very Reverend Dr. F.C. Husenbeth, Cossey,
Norwich; the Earl and Countess of Denbigh; Monsignor
Stonor, Rome; to Correspondents at Loretto, Douai,
Paris, &c.; and to Colonel Chester and Mr. W.T.
Brooke, London,—I wish to tender my warmest thanks
for various services most pleasantly rendered; all to the
enrichment of our edition.
The Illustrations (in the 4to) speak for themselves.
I cannot sufficiently express my acknowledgments for
the spontaneous and ever-increasing willinghood of my
artist-poet friend W.J. Linton, Esq., who from his
temporary Transatlantic home has sent me the exquisite
head- and tail-pieces in both volumes, besides cunningly
interpreting the two original Illustrations drawn for me
by Mrs. Hugh Blackburn of Glasgow, and the Poet's
'Weeper.' To Mrs. Blackburn her work is its own
abundant reward; but none the less do I appreciate her
great kindness to me.
Anything else needing to be said will be found in
the Memorial-Introduction and Essay on the Life and
Poetry, and Notes and Illustrations. I cannot better
close our Preface than with the fine tribute of R. Aris
Willmott, in his 'Dream of the Poets,' wherein he
catches up the echo of Cowley across two centuries:
Poet and Saint! thy sky was dark And sad thy lonely vigil here; But thy meek spirit, like the lark Still showered music on the ear, From its own heaven ever clear: No pining mourner thou! thy strain Could breathe a slumber upon Pain, Singing thy tears asleep: not long To stray by Siloa's brook was thine: Yet Time hath never dealt thee wrong, Nor brush'd the sweet bloom from thy line: Thou hast a home in every song, In every Christian heart, a shrine.
Alexander B. Grosart.
15 St. Alban's Place, Blackburn, Lancashire,
4th February 1872.
MEMORIAL-INTRODUCTION.
In a Study of the Life and Poetry of our present Worthy,
which will be found in our Volume II.—thus postponed
in order that the completed Works may be before the student-reader
along with it—I venture to hope new light
will be shed on both, and his character as a Man and
Poet—one of the richest of the minor Poets of England—vindicated
and interpreted as never hitherto they
have been. Some memories cannot bear the 'cruel light'
of close scrutiny, some poetries when tested prove falsetto-noted.
Richard Crashaw grows on us the more
insight we gain. If he were as well known as George
Herbert, he would be equally cherished, while his Poetry
would be recognised as perfumed with all his devoutness
and of a diviner 'stuff' and woven in a grander loom; in
sooth, infinitely deeper and finer in almost every element
of true singing as differenced from pious and gracious versifying.
In this hurrying-scurrying age, only twos-and-threes
take time to hold communion with these ancient
Worthies; and hence my Essay, as with the Fletchers
and Lord Brooke and Henry Vaughan, may win-back
that recognition and love due to Crashaw.
Then, in a much fuller and more adequate Memoir
than hitherto furnished of William Crashaw, B.D.,xxviii
father of our Poet—also in our Volume II.—the usually-given
ancestral details will appear from new and unused
sources. So that here and now I intend to limit myself
to a brief statement of the few outward Facts, i.e. reserving
their relation to the central thing in Richard
Crashaw's life—his passing from Protestantism to
Catholicism, and to contemporaries and inner friends,
and to his Poetry—to our announced Study.
Willmott in his 'Lives of the English Sacred Poets'
(vol. first, 1834, vol. second, 1839), begins his fine-toned
little Notice thus: 'After an anxious search in all the
accessible sources of information, I am able to tell little
of one of whom every lover of poetry must desire to know
much. The time of his birth and of his decease is involved
in equal mystery.'[3] Our 'all' is still 'little' as
compared with what we yearn for; but we do not need
to begin so dolorously as our predecessor, for we have
discovered both the 'time of his birth and of his decease.'
He was born in London in 1612-3; this date being arrived
at from the register-entry of his age on admission
to the University, viz. 18 in 1630-1 (as hereafter stated).
Shakespeare was then retired to his beloved Stratford;
Milton was in the sixth year of his cherub-beauty. His
father being 'Preacher at the Temple' at the date would
have determined London to have been his birthplace;
but his admission to Pembroke and his own signature at
Peterhouse, 'Richardum Crashaw, Londinensem,' prove
it. Who was his mother I have failed to find. The second
Mrs. William Crashaw, celebrated in a remarkablexxix
contemporary poetical tractate printed (if not published)
by her bereaved husband (of which more anon
and elsewhere, as supra), could not have been the Poet's
mother, as she was not married to Crashaw (pater) until
1619. We should gladly have exchanged the 'Honour
of Vertue or the Monument erected by the sorrowfull
Husband and the Epitaphs annexed by learned and
worthy men, to the immortall memory of that worthy
Gentle-woman Mrs.Elizabeth Crashawe. Who dyed
in child-birth, and was buried in Whit-Chappel: Octob.
8. 1620. In the 24 yeare of her age'—for a page on
the first Mrs. Crashaw. Yet is it pleasant to know the
motherless little lad received such a new mother as this
tribute pictures. In 1620 he was in his ninth year. Thus
twice a broad shadow blackened his father's house and
his home. Little more than a year had he his 'second'
mother.
Our after-Memoir of the elder Crashaw shows that
he was a man of no ordinary force of character and influence.
The Epistles-dedicatory to his numerous polemical
books are addressed with evident familiarity to the foremost
in Church and State: and it is in agreement with
this to learn (as we do) that Master Richard gained
admission to the great 'Charterhouse' School through
Sir Henry Yelverton and Sir Randolph Crew—the
former the patron-friend of the saintly Dr. Sibbes, the
latter of Herrick, and both of mark. The Register of
Charterhouse as now extant begins in 1680. So that
we know not the date of young Crashaw's entry on the
'foundation' provided so munificently by Sutton.[4] Asxxx
we shall find, one of the Teachers—Brooke—is gratefully
and characteristically remembered by our Worthy in one
of his Latin poems, none the less gratefully that 'the
rod' is recalled. He was 'Schoolmaster' from 1627-8
to 1643. The age of admission was 10 to 14: the latter
would bring us to 1627-8, or Brooke's first year of office.
Probably, however, he entered sooner; but neither Robert
Grey (1624-26) nor William Middleton, A.M.
(1626-28), nor others of the Masters or celebrities of
the famous School are celebrated by him, with the exception
of (afterwards) Bishop Laney. Francis Beaumont
was Head-Master in June 18, 1624, and I should
have liked to have been able to associate Crashaw with
the Beaumont family. Probably Dr. Joseph Beaumont
of 'Psyche' was a school-fellow.
How long the Charterhouse was attended is unknown;
but renewed researches at Cambridge add to as
well as correct the usual dates of his attendance there.
Willmott states that 'he was elected a scholar of Pembroke
Hall, March 26, 1632,' and remarks, 'and yet we
find him lamenting the premature death of his friend,
William Herrys, a fellow of the same College, which
happened in the October of 1631.'[5] He quotes from the
Cole mss. The original register in the Admission-book
of Pembroke College removes the difficulty, and is
otherwise valuable, as will be seen. It is as follows:
'Julij 6. 1631. Richardus Crashawe, Gulielmi presbyteri
filius, natus Londini annos habens 18, admissus est
ad 2æ mensæ ordinem sub tutela Mri Tourney.'
He was 'matriculated pensioner of Pembroke, March 26,xxxi
1632,' but, as above, his 'admission' preceded. Belonging
to Essex, it is not improbable that Crashaw and
Harris were school-fellows at the Charterhouse. His
'friendships' and associates, so winsomely 'sung' of, will
demand full after-notice. In 1632-3 appeared George
Herbert's 'Temple;' an influential event in our Poet's
history. He took the degree of B.A. in 1634. In 1634
he published anonymously his volume of Latin Epigrams
and other Poems; a very noticeable book from a youth of
20, especially as most must have been composed long
previously. He passed from Pembroke to Peterhouse
in 1636; and again I have the satisfaction to give, for
the first time, the entry in the old College Register. It
is as follows:
'Anno Domini millesimo sexcentesimo tricesimo
sexto vicesimo die mensis Novembris Richardus Crashaw
admissus fuit a Reverendo in Christo Patre ac Dno Dno
Francisco Episcopo Elæcisi ad locum sive societatem
Magistri Simon Smith legitime vacantem in Collegio
sive Domo Sti Petri, et vicesimo secundo die ejusdem
mensis coram Magistro et Sociis ejusdem Collegii personaliter
constitutus, juramentum præstitit quod singulis
Ordinationibus et Statutis Collegii (quantum in ipso est)
reverenter obediret, et specialiter præter hoc de non appellando
contra amotionem suam secundum modum et
formam statutorum prædictorum et de salvando cistam
Magistri Thomæ de Castro Bernardi et Magri Thomæ
Holbrooke (quantum in ipso est) indemnum, quo juramento
præstito admissus fuit a Magistro Collegii in perpetuum
socium ejusdem Collegii et in locum supradictum.
Per me Richardum Crashaw Londinensem.' (p.
500.)
He was made Fellow in 1637, and M.A. in 1638; looking
forward to becoming a 'Minister' of the Gospel.
His Latin Poems in honour of, and in pathetic appeal
regarding Peterhouse, are of the rarest interest, and
suggest much elucidatory of his great 'change' in religious
matters; a change that must have been a sad
shock to his ultra-Protestant father, but in which, beyond
all gainsaying, conscience ruled, if the heart quivered.
While at the University he was called on to
contribute to the various 'Collections' issued from 1631
onward; and it certainly is once more noticeable that
such a mere youth should have been thus recognised.
His Verses—Latin and English—appeared thus with
those of Henry More, Joseph Beaumont, Edward
King ('Lycidas'), Cowley, and others; and more than
hold their own. In 1635 Shelford, 'priest' of Ringsfield,
obtained a laudatory poem from him for his 'Five
Pious and Learned Discourses.' According to Anthony
a-Wood, on the authority of one who knew (not from
the Registers), he took a degree in 1641 at Oxford.[6]
Of his inner Life and experiences during these years
(twelve at least), and the influences that went to shape
his decision and after-course, and his relation to the
Countess of Denbigh, I shall speak fully and I trust
helpfully in our Essay. We need to get at the Facts
and Circumstances to pronounce a righteous verdict.xxxiii
For his great-brained, stout-hearted, iron-willed Father,
the stormy period was congenial: but for his son the
atmosphere was mephitic; as the Editor's 'Preface to
the Learned Reader,' in his 'character' of him, suggests.
Signatures were being put unsolemnly to the Solemn
League and Covenant,' and as a political not a religious
thing, by too many. Richard Crashaw could not do
that, and the crash of 'Ejection' came. Here is the
rescript from the Register of Peterhouse once more
unused hitherto:[7]
'Whereas in pursuite of an ordinance of Parliament
for regulating and reforming of the Universitie of Cambridge,
I have ejected Mr. Beaumont, Mr. Penniman,
Mr. Crashaw, Mr. Holder, Mr. Tyringham, late fellowes
of Peterhouse, in Cambridge. And whereas Mr. Charles
Hotham, Robert Quarles, Howard Becher, Walter Ellis,
Edward Sammes, have been examined and approved by
the Assembly of Divines now sitting at Westminster,
according to the said Ordinance as fitt to be Fellowes:
These are therefore to require you, and every of you,
to receive the said Charles Hotham, Robert Quarles,
Howard Becher, Walter Ellis, Masters of Arts; and
Edward Sammes, Bachr, as fellowes of your Colledge in
room of the said Mr. Beaumont, Mr. Penniman, Mr.
Crashaw, Mr. Holder, Mr. Tyringham, formerly ejected,
and to give them place according to their seniority in the
Universitie, in reference to all those that are or shall
hereafter bee putt in by mee accordinge to the Ordinancexxxiv
of Parliament aforesaid. Given under my hand and
seale the eleaventh day of June anno 1644.
'Manchester.
'To the Master, President, and Fellowes of Peterhouse, in Cambridge.'
(p. 518.)
'The ejection' of 1644, like that larger one of 1662,
brought much sorrow and trial to a number of good and
true souls. To one so gentle, shy, self-introspective as
Crashaw, it must have been as the tearing down of a
nest to a poor bird. His fellow-sufferers went hither and
thither. Our first glimpse of our Worthy after his 'ejection'
is in 1646, when the 'Steps to the Temple' and
'Delights of the Muses' appeared, with its Editor's
touching saying at the close of his Preface 'now dead to
us.' A second edition, with considerable additions, was
published in 1648. Previous to 1646 he had 'gone over'
to Catholicism; for in the 'Steps' of that year is 'An
Apologie' for his 'Hymn'—'In Memory of the Vertuous
and Learned Lady Madre de Teresa, that sought an
early Martyrdome.' In 1646 it is headed simply 'An
Apologie for the precedent Hymne:' in the 'Carmen
Deo Nostro' of 1652 it is more fully inscribed 'An Apologie
for the foregoing Hymn, as hauing been writt
when the author was yet among the Protestantes.' His
two Latin poems, 'Fides quæ sola justificat non est sine
spe et dilectione' and 'Baptismus non tollit futura peccata,'
were first published in 1648. Turnbull was either
ignorant of their existence or intentionally suppressed
them.
Our Worthy did not long remain in England. He
retired to France; and his little genial poem on sending
'two green apricocks' to Cowley sheds a gleam of lightxxxv
on his residence in Paris. Cowley was in the 'gay city'
in 1646 as Secretary to Lord Jermyn; and inasmuch as
the volume of that year contained his own alternate-poem
on 'Hope,' I like to imagine that he carried over a
copy of it to Crashaw, and renewed their old friendship.
Cowley, it is told, found our Poet in great poverty: but
Car's verses somewhat lighten the gloom. The 'Secretary'
of Lord Jermyn introduced his friend to the Queen
of Charles I., who was then a fugitive in Paris. So it
usually runs: but Crashaw had previously 'sung' of
and to her Majesty. From the Queen the Poet obtained
letters of recommendation to Italy; and from a contemporary
notice, hereafter to be used, we learn he became
'Secretary' at Rome to Cardinal Palotta. He appears
to have remained in Rome until 1649-50, and by very
'plain speech' on the moralities, that is immoralities,
of certain ecclesiastics, to have drawn down on himself
Italian jealousy and threats. His 'good' Cardinal provided
a place of shelter in the Lady-chapel of Loretto,
of which he was made a Canon. But his abode there was
very brief; for, by a document sent me from Loretto, I
ascertained that he died of fever after a few weeks' residence
only, and was buried within the chapel there, in
1650.[8]Cowley shed 'melodious tears' over his dear
friend, in which he turns to fine account his 'fever' end:
and with his priceless tribute, of which Dr. Johnsonxxxvi
said, 'In these verses there are beauties which common
authors may justly think not only above their attainment,
but above their ambition,'[9]—I close for the present our
Memoir:
On the Death of Mr. Crashaw.
Poet and Saint! to thee alone are giv'n The two most sacred names of Earth and Heav'n, The hardest, rarest union which can be Next that of godhead with humanity. Long did the Muses banish'd slaves abide, And built vain pyramids to mortal pride; Like Moses thou (tho' spells and charms withstand) Hast brought them nobly home, back to their Holy Land.
Ah, wretched we, Poets of Earth! but thou Wert living, the same Poet which thou'rt now; Whilst angels sing to thee their ayres divine, And joy in an applause so great as thine. Equal society with them to hold, Thou need'st not make new songs, but say the old; And they (kind spirits!) shall all rejoice to see, How little less than they, exalted man may be.
Still the old heathen gods in numbers dwell, The heav'nliest thing on Earth still keeps up Hell: Nor have we yet quite purg'd the Christian land; Still idols here, like calves at Bethel stand. And tho' Pan's death long since all or'cles broke, Yet still in rhyme the fiend Apollo spoke; Nay, with the worst of heathen dotage, we (Vain men!) the monster woman deifie; Find stars, and tie our fates there in a face, And Paradise in them, by whom we lost it, place. What diff'rent faults corrupt our Muses thus? Wanton as girls, as old wives, fabulous.
Thy spotless Muse, like Mary, did contain The boundless Godhead; she did well disdainxxxvii That her eternal verse employ'd should be On a less subject than eternity; And for a sacred mistress scorn'd to take But her whom God Himself scorn'd not His spouse to make: It (in a kind) her miracle did do, A fruitful mother was, and virgin too.
How well (blest Swan) did Fate contrive thy death, And made thee render up thy tuneful breath In thy great mistress's arms! Thou most divine, And richest off'ring of Loretto's shrine! Where, like some holy sacrifice t' expire, A fever burns thee, and Love lights the fire. Angels (they say) brought the fam'd chappel there, And bore the sacred load in triumph thro' the air: 'Tis surer much they brought thee there; and they, And thou, their charge, went singing all the way.
Pardon, my Mother-Church, if I consent That angels led him, when from thee he went; For ev'n in error, sure no danger is, When join'd with so much piety as his. Ah! mighty God, with shame I speak't, and grief; Ah! that our greatest faults were in belief! And our weak reason were ev'n weaker yet, Rather than thus, our wills too strong for it. His faith, perhaps, in some nice tenets might Be wrong; his life, I'm sure, was in the right: And I, myself, a Catholick will be; So far at least, great Saint! to pray to thee.
Hail, Bard triumphant! and some care bestow On us, the Poets militant below: Oppos'd by our old enemy, adverse Chance, Attack'd by Envy and by Ignorance; Enchain'd by Beauty, tortur'd by desires, Expos'd by tyrant-love, to savage beasts and fires. Thou from low Earth in nobler flames didst rise, And like Elijah, mount alive the skies. Elisha-like (but with a wish much less, More fit thy greatness and my littleness;) Lo here I beg (I whom thou once didst prove So humble to esteem, so good to love)xxxviii Not that thy sp'rit might on me doubled be, I ask but half thy mighty sp'rit for me: And when my Muse soars with so strong a wing, 'Twill learn of things divine, and first of thee to sing.[10]
Alexander B. Grosart.
THE
WORKS OF RICHARD CRASHAW.
VOL. I.
ENGLISH POETRY.
NOTE.
The title-pages, with collation, of the original and early editions
of 'Steps to the Temple' and 'The Delights of the Muses'
(1646 to 1670) are here given successively:
1st edition, 1646. (1)
STEPS
TO THE
TEMPLE.
Sacred Poems,
With other Delights of the Muses.
By Richard Crashaw, sometimes
ofPembrokeHall, and
late Fellow of S. Peters Coll.
in Cambridge.
Printed and Published according to Order.
LONDON,
Printed by T.W. for Humphrey Moseley, and
are to be sold at his shop at the Princes
Armes in StPauls Church-yard.
1646.
(2)
THE
DELIGHTS
OF THE
MUSES.
OR,
Other Poems written on
severall occasions.
By Richard Crashaw, sometimes of Pembroke Hall, and late Fellow of St. Peters Colledge in Cambridge.
Mart. Dic mihi quid melius desidiosus agas.
London,
Printed by T.W. for H. Moseley, at
the Princes Armes in S. Pauls
Churchyard, 1646. [12o]
Collation: Title-page; the Preface to the Reader, pp. 6; the
Author's Motto and short Note to Reader, pp. 2 [all unpaged];
'Steps to the Temple,' pp. 99; title-page of 'Delights,' as
supra, and pp. 103-138; the Table, pp. 4.
By Richard Crashaw, sometimes
of Pembroke Hall, and
late fellow of S. Peters Coll.
in Cambridge.
The second Edition wherein are added divers
pieces not before extant.
London,
Printed for Humphrey Moseley, and are to be
sold at his Shop at the Princes Armes
in St. Pauls Church-yard.
1648. [12o]
The title-page to the 'Delights of the Muses' is exactly the
same with that of 1646, except the date '1648.' Collation:
Engraved title-page; title-page (printed); the Preface to the
Reader and the Author's Motto, pp. 6; 'Steps,' pp. 110; the
Table, pp. 4; the 'Delights;' title-page; the Table, pp. 3;
Poems, pp. 71.
3d edition, 1652.
CARMEN
DEO NOSTRO,
Te Decet Hymnvs
Sacred Poems,
Collected,
Corrected,
Avgmented,
Most humbly Presented.
To
My Lady
The Covntesse of Denbigh
By
Her most deuoted Seruant.
R.C.
In heaty [sic] acknowledgment of his immortall
obligation to her Goodnes & Charity.
At Paris
By Peter Targa, Printer to the Archbishope
ef [sic] Paris, in S. Victors streete at
the golden sunne.
M.DC.LII. [8vo]
Collation: Title-page; Verses by Car, pp. 3; Verse-Letter
to Countess of Denbigh, pp. 3 [all unpaged]; the Poems, pp.
131. (See our Preface for more on this and preceding and succeeding
volumes, and for notice of a separate edition of the
Verse-Letter to the Countess of Denbigh.)
By Ric. Crashaw, sometimes Fellow of Pembroke
Hall, and late Fellow of St. Peters
Colledge in Cambridge.
The 2d. Edition.
In the Savoy,
Printed by T.N. for Henry Herringham at the Blew Anchor in the Lower Walk of the New Exchange. 1670. [8vo]
Collation: Engraving of a 'Temple;' title-page; the Preface
to the Reader and the Author's Motto, pp. 8; the Table,
pp. 6 [all unpaged]; 'Steps,' pp. 77; 'Delights,' pp. 81-137;
'Carmen Deo Nostro, Te Decet Hymnvs,' pp. 141-208. For
later editions see our Preface, as before, and for details on all,
early and recent, and Manuscripts; and also our Memorial-Introduction
and Essay. The 'Preface' of 1646 was reprinted in
1648 without change, save a few slight orthographical differences,
and these: p. xlvi. line 3, 'their' for 'its dearest:' p. xlvii.
line 1, 'subburd' for 'suburb:' and ibid, line 19, 'then' for
'than:' 1648 our text. It follows this Note in its own place. G.
STEPS TO THE TEMPLE, &c.
THE PREFACE TO THE READER.
Learned Reader,
The Author's friend will not usurpe much upon thy
eye: This is onely for those whom the name of our divine
Poet hath not yet seized[11] into admiration. I dare undertake
that what Jamblicus[12] (in vita Pythagoræ) affirmeth of
his Master, at his contemplations, these Poems can, viz.
They shall lift thee, Reader, some yards above the ground:
and, as in Pythagoras Schoole, every temper was first
tuned into a height by severall proportions of Musick, and
spiritualiz'd for one of his weighty lectures; so maist thou
take a poem hence, and tune thy soule by it, into a heavenly
pitch;[13] and thus refined and borne up upon the
wings of meditation, in these Poems thou maist talke freely
of God, and of that other state.
Here's Herbert's[14] second, but equall, who hath retriv'd
Poetry of late, and return'd it up to its primitive use; letxlvi
it bound back to heaven gates, whence it came. Thinke
yee St. Augustine would have steyned his graver learning
with a booke of Poetry, had he fancied its dearest end to
be the vanity of love-sonnets and epithalamiums? No,
no, he thought with this our Poet, that every foot in a
high-borne verse, might helpe to measure the soule into
that better world. Divine Poetry, I dare hold it in position,
against Suarez on the subject, to be the language of the
angels; it is the quintessence of phantasie and discourse
center'd in Heaven; 'tis the very out-goings of the soule;
'tis what alone our Author is able to tell you, and that in
his owne verse.
It were prophane but to mention here in the Preface
those under-headed Poets, retainers to seven shares and a
halfe;[15] madrigall fellowes, whose onely businesse in verse,xlvii
is to rime a poore six-penny soule, a suburb-sinner[16] into
Hell:—May such arrogant pretenders to Poetry vanish,
with their prodigious issue of tumorous[17] heats and flashes
of their adulterate braines, and for ever after, may this our
Poet fill up the better roome of man. Oh! when the generall
arraignment of Poets shall be, to give an accompt of
their higher soules, with what a triumphant brow shall our
divine Poet sit above, and looke downe upon poore Homer,
Virgil, Horace, Claudian, &c.? who had amongst them the
ill lucke to talke out a great part of their gallant genius,
upon bees, dung, froggs, and gnats, &c., and not as himself
here, upon Scriptures, divine graces, martyrs and angels.
Reader, we stile his Sacred Poems, Steps to the Temple,
and aptly, for in the Temple of God, under His wing, he
led his life, in St. Marie's Church neere St. Peter's Colledge:
there he lodged under Tertullian's roofe of angels;
there he made his nest more gladly than David's swallow
neere the house of God, where like a primitive saint, he
offered more prayers in the night than others usually offer
in the day; there he penned these Poems, STEPS for happy
soules to climbe heaven by. And those other of his pieces,
intituled The Delights of the Muses, (though of a more humane
mixture) are as sweet as they are innocent.
The praises that follow, are but few of many that might
be conferr'd on him: he was excellent in five languages
(besides his mother tongue), vid. Hebrew, Greek, Latin,
Italian, Spanish, the two last whereof he had little helpe
in, they were of his own acquisition.
Amongst his other accomplishments in accademick (as
well pious as harmlesse arts) he made his skill in Poetry,
Musick, Drawing, Limming, Graving (exercises of his curious
invention and sudden fancy) to be but his subservientxlviii
recreations for vacant houres, not the grand businesse of
his soule.
To the former qualifications I might adde that which
would crowne them all, his rare moderation in diet (almost
Lessian temperance[18]); he never created a Muse out of distempers,
nor (with our Canary scribblers[19]) cast any strange
mists of surfets before the intellectuall beames of his mind
or memory, the latter of which he was so much a master
of, that he had there under locke and key in readinesse,
the richest treasures of the best Greek and Latine poets,
some of which Authors hee had more at his command
by heart, than others that onely read their works, to retaine
little, and understand lesse.
Enough Reader, I intend not a volume of praises larger
than his booke, nor need I longer transport thee to think
over his vast perfections: I will conclude all that I have
impartially writ of this learned young Gent. (now dead to
us) as he himselfe doth, with the last line of his poem
upon Bishop Andrews' picture before his Sermons: Verte
paginas,
'Look on his following leaves, and see him breath.'[20]
THE AUTHOR'S MOTTO.
Live Iesus, live, and let it bee
My life, to dye for love of Thee.
Heauens thy fair eyes be; Heauens of euer-falling starres. 'Tis seed-time still with thee; And starres thou sow'st, whose haruest dares10 Promise the Earth, to counter-shine Whateuer makes heaun's forehead fine.
III.
But we' are deceiuèd all: Starres indeed they are too true; For they but seem to fall,15 As heaun's other spangles doe: It is not for our Earth and vs To shine in things so pretious.
IV.
Vpwards thou dost weep: Heaun's bosome drinks the gentle stream.20 Where th' milky riuers creep, Thine floates aboue, and is the cream. Waters aboue th' heauns, what they be We' are taught best by thy teares and thee.
V.
Euery morn from hence,25 A brisk cherub something sippes, Whose sacred influence Addes sweetnes to his sweetest lippes;5 Then to his musick; and his song Tasts of this breakfast all day long.30
VI.
When some new bright guest Takes vp among the starres a room, And Heaun will make a feast: phialsAngels with crystall violls come And draw from these full eyes of thine,35 Their Master's water, their own wine.
VII.
The deaw no more will weep The primrose's pale cheek to deck: The deaw no more will sleep Nuzzel'd in the lilly's neck;40 Much rather would it be thy tear, And leaue them both to tremble here.
VIII.
Not the soft gold which Steales from the amber-weeping tree, Makes Sorrow halfe so rich45 As the drops distil'd from thee. Sorrowe's best iewels lye in these Caskets, of which Heaven keeps the keyes.
IX.
When Sorrow would be seen 6In her brightest majesty:50 (For she is a Queen): Then is she drest by none but thee. Then, and only then, she weares Her proudest pearles: I mean, thy teares.
X.
Not in the Euening's eyes,55 When they red with weeping are For the Sun that dyes; Sitts Sorrow with a face so fair. Nowhere but here did ever meet Sweetnesse so sad, sadnesse so sweet.60
XI.
Sadnesse all the while Shee sits in such a throne as this, Can doe nought but smile, Nor beleeves she Sadnesse is: Gladnesse it selfe would be more glad,65 To bee made soe sweetly sad.
XII.
There's no need at all, That the balsom-sweating bough So coyly should let fall His med'cinable teares; for now70 Nature hath learnt to' extract a deaw More soueraign and sweet, from you. 7
XIII.
Yet let the poore drops weep (Weeping is the ease of Woe): Softly let them creep,75 Sad that they are vanquish't so. They, though to others no releife, Balsom may be for their own greife.
XIV.
Golden though he be, Golden Tagus murmures though.80 Were his way by thee, Content and quiet he would goe; Soe much more rich would he esteem Thy syluer, then his golden stream.
XV.
Well does the May that lyes85 Smiling in thy cheeks, confesse The April in thine eyes; Mutuall sweetnesse they expresse. No April ere lent kinder showres, Nor May return'd more faithfull flowres.90
XVI.
O cheeks! Bedds of chast loues, By your own showres seasonably dash't. Eyes! Nests of milky doues, In your own wells decently washt.8 O wit of Loue! that thus could place95 Fountain and garden in one face.
XVII.
O sweet contest! of woes With loues; of teares with smiles disputing! O fair and freindly foes, Each other kissing and confuting!100 While rain and sunshine, cheekes and eyes Close in kind contrarietyes.
XVIII.
But can these fair flouds be Freinds with the bosom-fires that fill thee! Can so great flames agree105 Æternal teares should thus distill thee! O flouds! O fires! O suns! O showres! Mixt and made freinds by Loue's sweet powres.
XIX.
'Twas his well-pointed dart That digg'd these wells, and drest this wine;110 And taught the wounded heart The way into these weeping eyn. Vain loues auant! bold hands forbear! The Lamb hath dipp't His white foot here.
XX.
And now where'ere He strayes,115 Among the Galilean mountaines,9 Or more vnwellcome wayes; He's follow'd by two faithfull fountaines; Two walking baths, two weeping motions, Portable, and compendious oceans.120
XXI.
O thou, thy Lord's fair store! In thy so rich and rare expenses, Euen when He show'd most poor He might prouoke the wealth of princes. What prince's wanton'st pride e'er could125 Wash with syluer, wipe with gold?
XXII.
Who is that King, but He Who calls 't His crown, to be call'd thine, That thus can boast to be Waited on by a wandring mine,130 A voluntary mint, that strowes Warm, syluer showres wher're He goes?
XXIII.
O pretious prodigall! Fair spend-thrift of thy-self! thy measure (Mercilesse loue!) is all.135 thesaurus, Latin.Euen to the last pearle in thy threasure: All places, times, and obiects be Thy teares' sweet opportunity.
Does the day-starre rise? Still thy teares doe fall and fall.140 Does Day close his eyes? Still the fountain weeps for all. Let Night or Day doe what they will, Thou hast thy task: thou weepest still.
XXV.
Does thy song lull the air?145 Thy falling teares keep faithfull time. Does thy sweet-breath'd praire Vp in clouds of incense climb? Still at each sigh, that is, each stop, A bead, that is, a tear, does drop.150
XXVI.
At these thy weeping gates (Watching their watry motion), Each wingèd moment waits: Takes his tear, and gets him gone. By thine ey's tinct enobled thus,155 Time layes him vp; he's pretious.
XXVII.
Time, as by thee He passes, Makes thy ever-watry eyes His hower-glasses. 11By them His steps He rectifies.160 The sands He us'd, no longer please, For His owne sands Hee'l use thy seas.
XXVIII.
Not, 'so long she liuèd,' Shall thy tomb report of thee; But, 'so long she grieuèd:'165 Thus must we date thy memory. Others by moments, months, and yeares Measure their ages; thou, by teares.
XXIX.
So doe perfumes expire, So sigh tormented sweets, opprest170 With proud vnpittying fire. Such teares the suffring rose, that's vext With vngentle flames, does shed, Sweating in a too warm bed.
XXX.
Say, ye bright brothers,175 The fugitiue sons of those fair eyes, Your fruitfull mothers! What make you here? what hopes can 'tice You to be born? what cause can borrow You from those nests of noble sorrow?180
XXXI.
Whither away so fast? For sure the sluttish earth12 Your sweetnes cannot tast, Nor does the dust deserve your birth. Sweet, whither hast you then? O say185 Why you trip so fast away?
XXXII.
We goe not to seek The darlings of Aurora's bed, The rose's modest cheek, Nor the violet's humble head.190 Though the feild's eyes too Weepers be, Because they want such teares as we.
XXXIII.
Much lesse mean we to trace The fortune of inferior gemmes, Preferr'd to some proud face,195 Or pertch't vpon fear'd diadems: Crown'd heads are toyes. We goe to meet A worthy object, our Lord's feet.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
With some shortcomings—superficial rather than substantive—'The
Weeper' is a lovely poem, and well deserves its
place of honour at the commencement of the 'Steps to the
Temple,' as in editions of 1646, 1648, and 1670. Accordingly
we have spent the utmost pains on our text of it, taking for
basis that of 1652. The various readings of the different editions
and of the Sancroft ms. are given below for the capable
student of the ultimate perfected form. I have not hesitated13
to correct several misprints of the text of 1652 from the earlier
editions.
The present poem appears very imperfectly in the first
edition (1646), consisting there of only twenty-three stanzas
instead of thirty-three (and so too in 1670 edition). The stanzas
that are not given therein are xvi. to xxix. (on the last see
onward). But on the other hand, exclusive of interesting variations,
the text of 1646 supplies two entire stanzas (xi. and
xxvii.) dropped out in the editions of 1648 and 1652, though
both are in 1670 edition and in the Sancroft ms. Moreover I
accept the succession of the stanzas in 1646, so far as it goes,
confirmed as it is by the Sancroft ms. A third stanza in 1652
edition (st. xi. there) as also in 1648 edition, I omit, as it belongs
self-revealingly to 'The Teare,' and interrupts the metaphor
in 'The Weeper.' Another stanza (xxix.) might seem to
demand excision also, as it is in part repeated in 'The Teare;'
but the new lines are dainty and would be a loss to 'The
Weeper.' Our text therefore is that of 1652, as before, with
restorations from 1646.
The form of the stanza in the editions of 1646, 1648 and
1670 is thus:
but I have made all uniform, and agreeably to above of 1652.
I would now submit variations, illustrations and corrections,
under the successive stanzas and lines.
Couplet on the engraving of 'The Weeper.' In 1652 'Sainte'
is misprinted 'Sanite,' one of a number that remind us that the14
volume was printed in Paris, not London. In all the other editions
the heading 'Sainte Mary Magdalene' is omitted.
St. i. line 2. 1646, 1648 and 1670 editions read 'silver-forded.'
Were it only for the reading of the text of 1652 'silver-footed,'
I should have been thankful for it; and I accept it
the more readily in that the Sancroft ms. from Crashaw's own
copy, also reads 'silver-footed.' The Homeric compound epithet
occurs in Herrick contemporarily in his Hesperides,
'I send, I send here my supremest kiss To thee, my silver-footed Thamasis'
[that is, the river Thames]. William Browne earlier, has
'faire silver-footed Thetis' (Works by Hazlitt, i. p. 188). Cf.
also the first line of the Elegy on Dr. Porter in our 'Airelles'—printed
for the first time by us: 'Stay silver-footed Came.'
With reference to the long-accepted reading 'silver-forded,'
the epithet is loosely used not for in the state of being
forded, but for in a state to be forded, or fordable, and hence
shallow. The thought is not quite the same as that intended
to be conveyed by such a phrase as 'silver stream of Thames,'
but pictures the bright, pellucid, silvery whiteness of a clear
mountain rill. As silver-shallow—a meaning which, as has
been said, cannot be fairly obtained from it—can it alone be
taken as a double epithet. In any other sense the hyphen is
only an attempt to connect two qualities which refuse to be
connected. All difficulty and obscurity are removed by 'silver-footed.'
St. iii. line 1. The. 'we'' may be = wee, as printed in 1646,
but in 1648 it is 'we are,' and in 1670 'we're,' and in the last,
line 2, 'they're.' The Sancroft ms. in line 2, reads 'they are
indeed' for 'indeed they are.'
St. iv. line 4, 1646 and 1670 have 'crawles' and 'crawls' respectively,
for 'floates,' as in 1648 and our text. The Sancroft
ms. also reads 'crawles.' In line 3, 1646 and 1670 'meet'
is inadvertently substituted for 'creep.'
Lines 5 and 6, 1646 and 1670 read
'Heaven, of such faire floods as this, Heaven the christall ocean is.'
So too the Sancroft ms., save that for 'this' it has 'these.'
St. v. line 2. 'Brisk' is = active, nimble. So—and something
more—Shakespeare: 'he made me mad, to see him shine
so brisk' (1 Henry IV. 3).
Line 3. 1646, 1670 and Sancroft ms. read 'soft' for 'sacred'
of 1652 and 1648.
Line 6, 'Breakfast.' See our Essay on this and similar
homely words, with parallels. 1648 reads 'his' for 'this breakfast.'
St. vi. line 4, 'violls' = 'phials' or small bottles. The reading
in 1646 and 1670 is 'Angels with their bottles come.' So
also in the Sancroft ms.
St. vii. line 4. 'Nuzzeld' = nestled or nourished. In quaint
old Dr. Worship's Sermons, we have 'dew cruzzle on his cheek'
(p. 91).
Lines 1 and 3, 'deaw' = 'dew.' This was the contemporary
spelling, as it was long before in Sir John Davies, the Fletchers
and others in our Fuller Worthies' Library, s.v.
Lines 5 and 6. 1646, 1670 and Sancroft ms. read
'Much rather would it tremble heere And leave them both to bee thy teare.'
1648 is as our text (1652).
St. ix. A hasty reader may judge this stanza to have been
displaced by the xith, but a closer examination reveals a new
vein (so-to-say) of the thought. It is characteristic of Crashaw
to give a first-sketch, and afterwards fill in other details
to complete the scene or portraiture.
St. xi. Restored from 1646.
St. xii. line 1. 1646, 1648 and 1670 read 'There is.'
Line 4, 'med'cinable teares.' So Shakespeare (nearly):
'their medicinal gum' (Othello, v. 2).
St. xiii. line 2. 1646 and 1670 unhappily misprint 'case;'
and Turnbull passed the deplorable blunder and perpetuated it.
Line 5. Our text (1652) misprints 'draw' for 'deaw' = dew,
as before.
Turnbull misses the rhythmical play in the first and second
'though,' and punctuates the second so as to read with next
line. I make a full-stop as in the Sancroft ms.
Line 4, ib. read
'Content and quiet would he goe.'
So the Sancroft ms.
Line 5, ib. read
'Richer far does he esteeme.'
So the Sancroft ms.
St. xv. lines 5 and 6, ib. read
'No April e're lent softer showres, Nor May returned fairer flowers.'
'Faithful' looks deeper: but the Sancroft ms. agrees with '46
and '70.
St. xvii. line 2, in 1648 misreads
'With loves and tears, and smils disputing.'
Turnbull, without the slightest authority, seeing not even in
1670 are the readings found, has thus printed lines 2 and 4,
'With loves, of tears with smiles disporting' ... 'Each other
kissing and comforting'!!
St. xviii. line 2 in 1648 misreads
'Friends with the balsome fires that fill thee.'
The 'balsome' is an evident misprint, but 'thee' is preferable
to 'fill you' of our text (1652), and hence I have adopted it.
Line 3 in 1648 reads
'Cause great flames agree.'
St. xix. line 3, 1648, reads 'that' for 'the.'
Line 4, ib. 'those' for 'these.'
Line 6. cf. Revelations xiv. 5, 'These are they which follow
the Lamb whithersoever He goeth.'
St. xxi. line 6. 'wipe with gold,' refers to Mary Magdalene's
golden tresses, as also in st. xxii. 'a voluntary mint.'
Line 4. 'prouoke' = challenge.
St. xxii. line 2. Curiously enough, 1648 edition leaves a
blank where we read 'calls 't' as in our text (1652). Turnbull
prints 'call'st,' but that makes nonsense. It is calls't as = calls
it. So too the Sancroft ms. Probably the copy for 1648 was
illegible.
Line 2. Our text (1652) misprints 'starres' for 'teares' of
1646, 1648 and 1670.
Line 3. 1646 and 1670 read
'Does Night loose her eyes?'
The Sancroft ms. reads line 139 'Does the Night arise?' and
line 141, 'Does Niget loose her eyes?'
St. xxv. line 2. 1646 and 1670 read
'Thy teares' just cadence still keeps time.'
So the Sancroft ms.
Line 3. Our text (1652) misprints 'paire' for 'praire.'
'Sweet-breath'd' should probably be pronounced as the adjectival
of the substantive, not as the participle of the verb.
Line 6. 1646, 1648 and 1670 read 'doth' for 'does.'
St. xxvi. lines 1 and 2. 1646 and 1670 read
'Thus dost thou melt the yeare Into a weeping motion. Each minute waiteth heere.'
So the Sancroft ms.
St. xxvii. Restored from 1646 edition. The Sancroft ms.
in line 168 miswrites 'teares.'
St. xxviii. line 5. reads in 1646 and 1670
'Others by dayes, by monthes, by yeares.'
So also the Sancroft ms., wherein this st. follows our st. xv.
St. xxix. line 3. Our text (1652) misprints 'fires' for 'fire'
of 1648.
St. xxx. line 1. Our text (1652) misprints 'Say the bright
brothers.' 1646 and 1670 read 'Say watry Brothers.' So Sancroft
ms. 1648 gives 'ye,' which I have adopted. The misprint
of 'the' in 1652 originated doubtless in the printer's reading
'ye,' the usual mode of writing 'the.'
Line 2. 1646 and 1670 read
'Yee simpering ...'
So the Sancroft ms.
Line 3, ib. 'fertile' for 'fruitfull.'
Line 4, ib. 'What hath our world that can entice.' So the
Sancroft ms.18
Lines 5 and 6, ib.
'what is't can borrow You from her eyes, swolne wombes of sorrow.'
So the Sancroft ms.
St. xxxi. line 2. 1646 and 1670 read
'O whither? for the sluttish Earth:'
and I accept 'sluttish' for 'sordid,' which is also confirmed by
Sancroft ms.
Line 4, ib. 'your' for 'their;' and as this is also the reading
of 1648 and Sancroft ms., I have accepted it.
Line 5. 1646 and 1670 omit 'Sweet.'
Line 6, ib. read 'yee' for 'you.'
St. xxxii. and xxxiii. In 1646 and 1670 these two stanzas
are thrown into one, viz. 23 (there), which consists of the first
four lines of xxxii. and the two closing lines of xxxiii. as follows,
'No such thing; we goe to meet A worthier object, our Lords feet.'
In the Sancroft ms. also, and reads as last line 'A worthy object,
our Lord Jesus feet.' On the closing lines of st. xxxii. cf.
Sospetto d'Herode, st. xlviii.
I have not thought it needful, either in these Notes or hereafter,
to record the somewhat arbitrary variations of mere
orthography in the different editions, as 'haile' for 'hail,' 'syluer'
for 'silver,' 'hee' for 'he,' and the like. But I trust it will
be found that no different wording has escaped record. G.
A patheticall Descant vpon the deuout Plainsong of
Stabat Mater Dolorosa.[23]
I.
In shade of Death's sad tree Stood dolefull shee. Ah she! now by none other Name to be known, alas, but Sorrow's Mother. Before her eyes,5 Her's, and the whole World's ioyes, Hanging all torn she sees; and in His woes And paines, her pangs and throes: Each wound of His, from euery part, All, more at home in her one heart.10
What kind of marble, than, Is that cold man Who can look on and see, Nor keep such noble sorrowes company? Sure eu'en from you15 (My flints) some drops are due, To see so many unkind swords contest So fast for one soft brest: While with a faithfull, mutuall floud, Her eyes bleed teares, His wounds weep blood.20
III.
O costly intercourse Of deaths, and worse— Diuided loues. While Son and mother Discourse alternate wounds to one another, Quick deaths that grow25 And gather, as they come and goe: His nailes write swords in her, which soon her heart Payes back, with more then their own smart. Her swords, still growing with His pain, Turn speares, and straight come home again.30
IV.
She sees her Son, her God, Bow with a load21 Of borrow'd sins; and swimme In woes that were not made for Him. Ah! hard command35 Of loue! Here must she stand, Charg'd to look on, and with a stedfast ey See her life dy: Leauing her only so much breath As serues to keep aliue her death.40
V.
O mother turtle-doue! Soft sourse of loue! That these dry lidds might borrow Somthing from thy full seas of sorrow! O in that brest45 Of thine (the noblest nest Both of Loue's fires and flouds) might I recline This hard, cold heart of mine! The chill lump would relent, and proue Soft subject for the seige of Loue.50
VI.
O teach those wounds to bleed In me; me, so to read This book of loues, thus writ In lines of death, my life may coppy it With loyall cares.55 O let me, here, claim shares!22 Yeild somthing in thy sad prærogatiue (Great queen of greifes), and giue Me, too, my teares; who, though all stone, Think much that thou shouldst mourn alone.60
VII.
Yea, let my life and me Fix here with thee, And at the humble foot Of this fair tree, take our eternall root. That so we may65 At least be in Loue's way; And in these chast warres, while the wing'd wounds flee So fast 'twixt Him and thee, My brest may catch the kisse of some kind dart, Though as at second hand, from either heart.70
VIII.
O you, your own best darts, Dear, dolefull hearts! Hail! and strike home, and make me see That wounded bosomes their own weapons be. Come wounds! come darts!75 Nail'd hands! and peircèd hearts! Come your whole selues, Sorrow's great Son and mother! Nor grudge a yonger brother Of greifes his portion, who (had all their due) One single wound should not haue left for you.80 23
IX.
Shall I, sett there So deep a share (Dear wounds), and onely now In sorrows draw no diuidend with you? O be more wise,85 If not more soft, mine eyes! Flow, tardy founts! and into decent showres Dissolue my dayes and howres. And if thou yet (faint soul!) desert To bleed with Him, fail not to weep with her.90
X.
Rich queen, lend some releife; At least an almes of greif To' a heart who by sad right of sin Could proue the whole summe (too sure) due to him. By all those stings95 Of Loue, sweet-bitter things, Which these torn hands transcrib'd on thy true heart; O teach mine too the art To study Him so, till we mix Wounds, and become one crucifix.100
XI.
O let me suck the wine So long of this chast Vine,24 Till drunk of the dear wounds, I be A lost thing to the world, as it to me. O faithfull friend105 Of me and of my end! Fold vp my life in loue; and lay't beneath My dear Lord's vitall death. Lo, heart, thy hope's whole plea! her pretious breath Pour'd out in prayrs for thee; thy Lord's in death.110
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
St. i. line 10. In 1648 the reading is
'Are more at home in her Owne heart.'
In 1670. 'All, more at home in her own heart.' I think 'all'
and 'one' of our text (1652) preferable. There is a world of
pathos in the latter. Cf. st. ii. line 8.
St. ii. line 1. On the change of orthography for rhyme, see
our Phineas Fletcher, vol. ii. 206; and our Lord Brooke,
Vaughan, &c. &c., show 'then' and 'than' used as in Crashaw.
St. vi. line 3. In 1648 the reading is 'love;' 1670 as our
text (1652). The plural includes the twofold love of Son and
mother.
Line 7, ib. 'to' for 'in.'
Line 9, ib. 'Oh give' at commencement. 1670, 'to' for
'too.'
St. vii. and viii. These two stanzas do not appear in 1648
edition, but appear in 1670.
St. vii. line 4. By 'tree' the Cross is meant. Cf. st. i. line 1.
St. ix. line 1. 1648 edition supplies the two words required
by the measure of the other stanzas, 'in sins.' They are dropped
inadvertently in 1652 and 1670. Turnbull failed as usual to
detect the omission.
Lines 5 and 6. I have accepted correction of our text (1652)
from 1648 edition, in line 6, of 'If' for 'Is,' which is also the
reading of 1670. 1648 substitutes 'just' for 'soft;' but 1670
does not adopt it, nor can I.
St. x. line 1. 1648 reads 'Lend, O lend some reliefe.'
Line 9 reads 'To studie thee so.'
St. xi. line 3, ib. reads 'thy' for 'the.'
Line 8, ib. reads 'Thy deare lost vitall death.'
Line 10. I have adopted from 1648 'in thy Lord's death'
for 'thy lord's in death' of our text (1652).
Turnbull has some sad misprints in this poem: e.g. st. ii.
line 4, 'sorrow's' for 'sorrows;' st. iii. line 2, 'death's' for
'deaths;' st. vi. line 9, 'Me to' for 'Me, too;' st. x. line 2, 'in'
for 'an,' and line 3, 'a' mis-inserted before 'sad.' Except in
the 'Me to' of st. vi., he had not even the poor excuse of following
the text of 1670. G.
What bright-soft thing is this, Sweet Mary, thy faire eyes' expence? A moist sparke it is, A watry diamond; from whence The very tearme, I think, was found,5 The water of a diamond.
O, 'tis not a teare: 'Tis a star about to dropp From thine eye, its spheare; The sun will stoope and take it up:10 Proud will his sister be, to weare This thine eyes' iewell in her eare.
III.
O, 'tis a teare, Too true a teare; for no sad eyne, How sad so 'ere,15 Raine so true a teare, as thine; Each drop leaving a place so deare, Weeps for it self; is its owne teare.
IV.
Such a pearle as this is, Slipt from Aurora's dewy brest—20 The rose-bud's sweet lipp kisses; And such the rose it self that's vext With ungentle flames, does shed, Sweating in a too warm bed.
V.
Such the maiden gem,25 By the purpling vine put on, Peeps from her parent stem, And blushes on the bridegroom sun;27 The watry blossome of thy eyne Ripe, will make the richer wine.30
VI.
Faire drop, why quak'st thou so? 'Cause thou streight must lay thy head In the dust? O, no! The dust shall never be thy bed: A pillow for thee will I bring,35 Stuft with downe of angel's wing.
VII.
Thus carried up on high (For to Heaven thou must goe), Sweetly shalt thou lye, And in soft slumbers bath thy woe,40 Till the singing orbes awake thee, And one of their bright chorus make thee.
VIII.
There thy selfe shalt bee An eye, but not a weeping one; Yet I doubt of thee,45 Whether th' had'st rather there have shone An eye of heaven; or still shine here, In the heaven of Marie's eye, a TEARE. 28
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
It is to be re-noted that st. v. is identical in all save 'watry'
for 'bridegroom' with st. xi. of 'The Weeper' as given in text
of 1652, and that st. iv. has two lines from st. xxix. of the same
poem. Neither of these stanzas appear in 'The Weeper' of
1646. As stated in relative foot-note, I have withdrawn the
former from 'The Weeper.' We may be sure it was inadvertently
inserted in 1652, seeing that the very next stanza closes
with the same word 'wine' as in it: a fault which our Poet
never could have passed. It is to be noticed too that 'The
Teare' did not appear in the edition of 1652. By transferring
the stanza to 'The Teare' as in 1646, 1648 and 1670 editions,
a blemish is removed from 'The Weeper,' while in 'The Teare'
it is a vivid addition. The 'such' of line 1 links it naturally
on to st. iv. with its 'such.'
Our text follows that of 1648 except in st. v. line 4, where
I adopt the reading of 1652 in 'The Weeper' (there st. xi.) of
'bridegroom' (misprinted 'bridegrooms') for 'watry,' and that
I correct in st. vii. line 6, the misprint 'the' for 'thee,'—the
latter being found in 1646 and 1670. With reference to st. v.
again, in line 5 in 'The Weeper' of 1648 the reading is 'balsome'
for 'blossom.' The 'ripe' of line 6 settles (I think) that
'blossom' is the right word, as the ripe blossom is = the grape,
to the rich lucent-white drops of which the Weeper's tears are
likened. 'Balsome' doesn't make wine. I have adopted from
st. xi. of 'The Weeper' of 1652 the reading 'the purpling vine'
for 'the wanton Spring' of 1646, 1648 and 1670. The Sancroft
ms. in st. i. line 2, reads 'expends' for 'expence;' st. iv. line 4,
'that's' for 'when;' st. v. line 4, 'manly sunne' for 'bridegroome,'
and line 5, 'thine' for 'thy;' st. viii. line 6, 'I' th''
for 'In th'.' G.
Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the H[oly] Ghost. As it was in the beginning, is now, and euer10 shall be, world without end. Amen.
The Hymn.
The wakefull Matines hast to sing The unknown sorrows of our King: The Father's Word and Wisdom, made Man for man, by man's betraid;15 The World's price sett to sale, and by the bold Merchants of Death and Sin, is bought and sold: Of His best freinds (yea of Himself) forsaken; By His worst foes (because He would) beseig'd and taken.
The Antiphona.
All hail, fair tree,20 Whose fruit we be! What song shall raise Thy seemly praise, Who broughtst to light Life out of death, Day out of Night!25
The Versicle.
Lo, we adore Thee, Dread Lamb! and bow thus low before Thee: 31
The Responsor.
'Cause, by the couenant of Thy crosse, Thou hast sau'd at once the whole World's losse.
The Prayer.
O Lord Iesv-Christ, Son of the liuing God!30 interpose, I pray Thee, Thine Own pretious death, Thy crosse and passion, betwixt my soul and Thy iudgment, now and in the hour of my death. And vouchsafe to graunt vnto me Thy grace and mercy; vnto all quick and dead, remission and rest; to Thy35 Church, peace and concord; to vs sinners, life and glory euerlasting. Who liuest and reignest with the Father, in the vnity of the Holy Ghost, one God, world without end. Amen.
For the Hour of Prime.
The Versicle.
Lord, by Thy sweet and sailing sign!40
The Responsor.
Defend vs from our foes and Thine. V. Thou shalt open my lips, O Lord. R. And my mouth shall shew forth Thy praise. V. O God, make speed to save me. R. O Lord, make hast to help me.45 V. Glory be to, &c. R. As it was in the, &c. 32
The Hymn.
The early Prime blushes to say She could not rise so soon, as they Call'd Pilat vp; to try if he50 Could lend them any cruelty. Their hands with lashes arm'd, their toungs with lyes And loathsom spittle, blott those beauteous eyes, The blissfull springs of ioy; from whose all-chearing ray The fair starrs fill their wakefull fires, the sun himself drinks day. 55
The Antiphona.
Victorious sign That now dost shine, Transcrib'd aboue Into the land of light and loue; O let vs twine60 Our rootes with thine, That we may rise Vpon thy wings, and reach the skyes.
The Versicle.
Lo, we adore Thee, Dread Lamb! and fall65 Thus low before Thee. 33
The Responsor.
'Cause by the couenant of Thy crosse Thou hast sau'd at once the whole World's losse.
The Prayer.
O Lord Iesv-Christ, Son of the liuing God! interpose, I pray Thee, Thine Own pretious death,70 Thy crosse and passion, betwixt my soul and Thy iudgment, now and in the hour of my death. And vouchsafe to graunt vnto me Thy grace and mercy; vnto all quick and dead, remission and rest; to Thy Church, peace and concord; to vs sinners,75 life and glory euerlasting. Who liuest and reignest with the Father, in the vnity of the Holy Ghost, one God, world without end. Amen.
The Third.
The Versicle.
Lord, by Thy sweet and sauing sign,
The Responsor.
Defend vs from our foes and Thine.80 V. Thou shalt open my lips, O Lord. R. And my mouth shall shew forth Thy praise. V. O God, make speed to save me. R. O Lord, make hast to help me. V. Glory be to, &c.85 R. As it was in the, &c. 34
The Hymn.
The third hour's deafen'd with the cry Of crucify Him, crucify. So goes the vote (nor ask them, why?), Liue Barabbas! and let God dy.90 But there is witt in wrath, and they will try A hail more cruell then their crucify. For while in sport He weares a spitefull crown The serious showres along His decent Face run sadly down.
The Antiphona.
Christ when He dy'd95 Deceiu'd the Crosse; And on Death's side Threw all the losse. The captiue World awak't and found The prisoners loose, the iaylor bound.100
The Versicle.
Lo, we adore Thee, Dread Lamb, and fall Thus low before Thee.
The Responsor.
'Cause by the couenant of Thy crosse Thou hast sau'd at once the whole World's losse.105 35
The Prayer.
O Lord Iesv-Christ, Son of the liuing God! interpose, I pray Thee, Thine Own pretious death, Thy crosse and passion, betwixt my soul and Thy iudgment, now and in the hour of my death. And vouchsafe to graunt vnto me Thy grace and mercy;110 vnto all quick and dead, remission and rest; to Thy Church, peace and concord; to vs sinners, life and glory everlasting. Who liuest and reignest with the Father, in the vnity of the Holy Ghost, one God, world without end. Amen.115
The Sixt.
The Versicle.
Lord, by Thy sweet and sauing sign!
The Responsor.
Defend vs from our foes and Thine.
V. Thou shalt open my lips, O Lord.
R. And my mouth shall shew forth Thy praise.
V. O God, make speed to save me!120
R. O Lord, make hast to help me!
V. Glory be to, &c.
R. As it was in the, &c.
The Hymn.
Now is the noon of Sorrow's night: 36High in His patience, as their spite,125 Lo, the faint Lamb, with weary limb Beares that huge tree which must bear Him! That fatall plant, so great of fame For fruit of sorrow and of shame, Shall swell with both, for Him, and mix130 All woes into one crucifix. Is tortur'd thirst itselfe too sweet a cup? Gall, and more bitter mocks, shall make it vp. Are nailes, blunt pens of superficiall smart? Contempt and scorn can send sure wounds to search the inmost heart.135
The Antiphona.
O deare and sweet dispute 'Twixt Death's and Loue's farr different fruit! Different as farr As antidotes and poysons are. By that first fatall tree140 Both life and liberty Were sold and slain; By this they both look vp, and liue again.
The Versicle.
Lo, we adore Thee, Dread Lamb! and bow thus low before Thee.145
The Responsor.
'Cause by the couenant of Thy crosse, Thou hast sau'd the World from certain losse. 37
The Prayer.
O Lord Iesv-Christ, Son of the liuing God! interpose, I pray Thee, Thine Own pretious death, Thy crosse and passion, betwixt my soul and Thy150 iudgment, now and in the hour of my death. And vouchsafe to graunt vnto me Thy grace and mercy; vnto all quick and dead, remission and rest; to Thy Church, peace and concord; to vs sinners, life and glory euerlasting. Who liuest and reignest155 with the Father, in the vnity of the Holy Ghost, one God, world without end. Amen.
The Ninth.
The Versicle.
Lord, by Thy sweet and sauing sign,
The Responsor.
Defend vs from our foes and Thine. V. Thou shalt open my lips, O Lord.160 R. And my mouth shall shew forth Thy praise. V. O God, make speed to save me! R. O Lord, make hast to help me! V. Glory be to, &c. R. As it was in the, &c.165
The Hymn.
The ninth with awfull horror hearkened to those groanes Which taught attention eu'n to rocks and stones.38 Hear, Father, hear! Thy Lamb (at last) complaines Of some more painfull thing then all His paines. Then bowes His all-obedient head, and dyes170 His own lou's and our sins' GREAT SACRIFICE. The sun saw that, and would haue seen no more; The center shook: her vselesse veil th' inglorious Temple tore.
The Antiphona.
O strange, mysterious strife Of open Death and hidden Life!175 When on the crosse my King did bleed, Life seem'd to dy, Death dy'd indeed.[26]
The Versicle.
Lo, we adore Thee, Dread Lamb! and fall Thus low before Thee.180
The Responsor.
'Cause by the couenant of Thy crosse Thou hast sau'd at once the whole World's losse.
The Prayer.
O Lord Iesv-Christ, Son of the liuing God! interpose, I pray Thee, Thine Own pretious death,
Thy crosse and passion, betwixt my soul and Thy185 iudgment, now and in the hour of my death. And vouchsafe to graunt vnto me Thy grace and mercy; vnto all quick and dead, remission and rest; to Thy Church, peace and concord; to vs sinners, life and glory euerlasting. Who liuest and reignest190 with the Father, in the vnity of the Holy Ghost, one God, world without end. Amen.
Evensong.
The Versicle.
Lord, by Thy sweet and sauing sign!
The Responsor.
Defend vs from our foes and Thine. V. Thou shalt open my lips, O Lord!195 R. And my mouth shall shew forth Thy praise. V. O God, make speed to save me! R. O Lord, make hast to help me! V. Glory be to, &c. R. As it was in the, &c.200
The Hymn.
But there were rocks would not relent at this: Lo, for their own hearts, they rend His; Their deadly hate liues still, and hath A wild reserve of wanton wrath; Superfluous spear! But there's a heart stands by205 Will look no wounds be lost, no deaths shall dy.40 Gather now thy Greif's ripe fruit, great mother-maid! Then sitt thee down, and sing thine eu'nsong in the sad tree's shade.
The Antiphona.
O sad, sweet tree! Wofull and ioyfull we210 Both weep and sing in shade of thee. When the dear nailes did lock And graft into thy gracious stock The hope, the health, The worth, the wealth215 Of all the ransom'd World, thou hadst the power (In that propitious hour) To poise each pretious limb, And proue how light the World was, when it weighd with Him. Wide maist thou spred220 Thine armes, and with thy bright and blissfull head O'relook all Libanus. Thy lofty crown The King Himself is, thou His humble throne, Where yeilding and yet conquering He Prou'd a new path of patient victory:225 When wondring Death by death was slain, And our Captiuity His captiue ta'ne. 41
The Versicle.
Lo, we adore Thee, Dread Lamb! and bow thus low before Thee.
The Responsor.
'Cause by the couenant of Thy crosse230 Thou hast sau'd the World from certain losse.
The Prayer.
O Lord Iesv-Christ, Son of the liuing, &c.
Compline.
The Versicle.
Lord, by Thy sweet and sauing sign!
The Responsor.
Defend vs from our foes and Thine. V. Thou shalt open my lips, O Lord!235 R. And my mouth shall shew forth Thy praise. V. O God, make speed to save me! R. O Lord, make hast to help me! V. Glory be to, &c. R. As it was in the, &c.240
The Hymn.
The Complin hour comes last, to call Vs to our own lives' funerall.42 Ah hartlesse task! yet Hope takes head, And liues in Him that here lyes dead. Run, Mary, run! Bring hither all the blest245 Arabia, for thy royall phœnix' nest; Pour on thy noblest sweets, which, when they touch This sweeter body, shall indeed be such. But must Thy bed, Lord, be a borrow'd graue Who lend'st to all things all the life they haue.250 O rather vse this heart, thus farr a fitter stone, 'Cause, though a hard and cold one, yet it is Thine own. Amen.
The Antiphona.
O saue vs then, Mercyfull King of men! Since Thou wouldst needs be thus255 A Saviour, and at such a rate, for vs; Saue vs, O saue vs, Lord. We now will own no shorter wish, nor name a narrower word; Thy blood bids vs be bold, Thy wounds giue vs fair hold,260 Thy sorrows chide our shame: Thy crosse, Thy nature, and Thy name Aduance our claim, And cry with one accord Saue them, O saue them, Lord!265 43
These Houres, and that which houers o're my end, Into Thy hands and hart, Lord, I commend.
Take both to Thine account, that I and mine In that hour, and in these, may be all Thine.
That as I dedicate my deuoutest breath270 To make a kind of life for my Lord's death,
So from His liuing and life-giuing death, My dying life may draw a new and neuer fleeting breath.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In the original edition of this composition, as supra (1648),
it is entitled simply 'Vpon our B[lessed] Saviour's Passion.'
What in our text (1652) constitute the Hymns, were originally
numbered as seven stanzas. A few various readings from 1648
will be found below. Our text is given in full in 1670 edition,
but not very accurately.
Various readings of the Hymns in 1648 'Steps.'
I. Line 1. 'The wakefull dawning hast's to sing.' " 2. The allusion is to the petition in the old Litanies,
'By all Thine unknown sorrows, good Lord, deliver us.' " 8. 'betray'd' for 'beseigd:' the former perhaps superior. II. " 1. 'The early Morne.' " 2. 'It' for 'she.' III. " 5. 'ther's' for 'there is.' IV. " 6. 'The fruit' instead of 'for'—a misprint. V. " 6. 'our great sins' sacrifice.' VII. " 1. 'The Nightening houre'—a curious coinage. 44
In the 'Prayer,' 'unto all quick and dead' is dropped, and
reads 'the,' not 'Thy,' Church. In line 55 Turnbull reads
'weakful,' and, line 243, 'heed' for 'head,'—two of a number
of provoking blunders in his text. G.
Look vp, languisting soul! Lo, where the fair1 Badge of thy faith calls back thy care, And biddes thee ne're forget Thy life is one long debt Of loue, to Him, Who on this painfull tree5 Paid back the flesh He took for thee.
II.
Lo, how the streames of life, from that full nest Of loues, Thy Lord's too liberall brest, Flow in an amorous floud Of water wedding blood.10 With these He wash't thy stain, transferred thy smart, And took it home to His own heart.
III.
But though great Love, greedy of such sad gain, Vsurpt the portion of thy pain,45 And from the nailes and spear15 Turn'd the steel point of fear: Their vse is chang'd, not lost; and now they moue Not stings of wrath, but wounds of loue.
IV.
Tall tree of life! thy truth makes good What was till now ne're understood,20 Though the prophetick king Struck lowd his faithfull string: It was thy wood he meant should make the throne For a more than Salomon.
V.
Large throne of Loue! royally spred25 With purple of too rich a red: Thy crime is too much duty; Thy burthen, too much beauty; Glorious or greiuous more? thus to make good Thy costly excellence with thy King's own blood.30
VI.
Euen ballance of both worlds! our world of sin, And that of grace, Heaun-way'd in Him: Vs with our price thou weighed'st; Our price for vs thou payed'st, Soon as the right-hand scale reioyc't to proue35 How much Death weigh'd more light then Loue. 46
VII.
Hail, our alone hope! let thy fair head shoot Aloft, and fill the nations with thy noble fruit: The while our hearts and we Thus graft our selues on thee,40 Grow thou and they. And be thy fair increase The sinner's pardon and the iust man's peace.
Liue, O for euer liue and reign The Lamb Whom His own loue hath slain! And let Thy lost sheep liue to inherit45 That kingdom which this Crosse did merit. Amen.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
These variations &c. as between 1648 and 1652, deserve
record:
St. i. line 1. 'Languishing,' which is the reading in 1648.
Ib. line 2. Here, and in v. line 1, I have added 'e' to
'badg' and 'larg' respectively from 1648.
St. vi. line 2. Our text (1652) corrects a manifest blunder
of 1648, which reads 'wag'd' for 'way'd' = weighed. In 1648,
lines 3-4 read
'Both with one price were weighed, Both with one price were paid.'
St. vii. appeared for the first time in our text (1652). In
the closing four lines, line 4, 1648, reads noticeably
'That Kingdome which Thy blessed death did merit.'
The allusion in st. iv. is to the old reading of Psalm xcvi.
10: 'Tell it among the heathen that the Lord reigneth from
the tree.' The reference to Solomon points to the mediæval
mystical interpretations of Canticles iii. 9-10.
I place 'Vexilla Regis' immediately after the 'Office of the
Holy Crosse,' as really belonging to it, and not to be separated
as in 1648. G.
'Neither durst any man from that day aske Him any more questions.'
St. Matthew xxii.
Mid'st all the darke and knotty snares,1 Black wit or malice can, or dares, Thy glorious wisedome breaks the nets, And treds with uncontroulèd steps; Thy quell'd foes are not onely now5 Thy triumphs, but Thy trophies too: They both at once Thy conquests bee, And Thy conquests' memorie. Stony amazement makes them stand Wayting on Thy victorious hand,10 Like statues fixèd to the fame Of Thy renoune, and their own shame, As if they onely meant to breath To be the life of their own death. 'Twas time to hold their peace, when they15 Had ne're another word to say;48 Yet is their silence unto Thee, The full sound of Thy victorie; Their silence speaks aloud, and is Thy well pronounc'd panegyris.20 While they speak nothing, they speak all Their share, in Thy memoriall. While they speake nothing, they proclame Thee, with the shrillest trump of Fame. To hold their peace is all the wayes25 These wretches have to speak Thy praise.
OUR B[LESSED] LORD IN HIS CIRCUMCISION
TO HIS FATHER.[30]
1. To Thee these first-fruits of My growing death1 (For what else is My life?), lo! I bequeath:
2. Tast this, and as Thou lik'st this lesser flood Expect a sea; My heart shall make it good.
O, these wakefull wounds of Thine!1 Are they mouthes? or are they eyes? Be they mouthes, or be they eyne, Each bleeding part some one supplies.
Lo! a mouth! whose full-bloom'd lips5 At too dear a rate are roses: Lo! a blood-shot eye! that weeps, And many a cruell teare discloses.
O, thou that on this foot hast laid Many a kisse, and many a teare;10 Now thou shalt have all repaid, What soe're thy charges were.
This foot hath got a mouth and lips To pay the sweet summe of thy kisses; To pay thy teares, an eye that weeps,15 Instead of teares, such gems as this is.51
The difference onely this appeares, (Nor can the change offend) The debt is paid in ruby-teares Which thou in pearles did'st lend.20
Iiesu, no more! It is full tide: From Thy head and from Thy feet, From Thy hands and from Thy side All the purple riuers meet.
II.
What need Thy fair head bear a part In showres, as if Thine eyes had none? What need they help to drown Thy heart, That striues in torrents of it's own?
III.
Water'd by the showres they bring, The thornes that Thy blest browe encloses (A cruell and a costly spring) Conceiue proud hopes of proving roses.
Thy restlesse feet now cannot goe For vs and our eternall good, As they were euer wont. What though? They swimme, alas! in their own floud.
V.
Thy hand to giue Thou canst not lift; Yet will Thy hand still giuing be. It giues, but O itself's the gift: It giues though bound; though bound 'tis free.
VI.
But O Thy side, Thy deep-digg'd side! That hath a double Nilus going: Nor euer was the Pharian tide Half so fruitfull, half so flowing.
VII.
No hair so small, but payes his riuer To this Red Sea of Thy blood; Their little channells can deliuer Somthing to the generall floud.
VIII.
But while I speak, whither are run All the riuers nam'd before? I counted wrong: there is but one; But O that one is one all ore. 53
IX.
Rain-swoln riuers may rise proud, Bent all to drown and overflow; But when indeed all's ouerflow'd, They themselues are drownèd too.
X.
This Thy blood's deluge (a dire chance, Dear Lord, to Thee) to vs is found A deluge of deliuerance; A deluge least we should be drown'd. lest N'ere wast Thou in a sense so sadly true, The well of liuing waters, Lord, till now.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The title in 1646 is 'On the bleeding wounds of our crucified
Lord:' in 1648 has 'body' for 'wounds:' in 1670 as 1646. I
record these variations, &c.:
St. i. lines 2 and 3, in 1646 and 1670 read
'From Thy hands and from Thy feet, From Thy head and from Thy side.'
So the Sancroft ms.
St. ii. In 1646 and 1670 this stanza is the 5th, and in line 2
has 'teares' for 'showres.'
St. iii. This stanza, by some strange oversight, is wholly
dropped in 1652. St. iii. not in Sancroft ms., and our st. ii. is
the last. On one of the fly-leaves of the copy of 1646 edition
in Trinity College, Cambridge, is the following contemporary
ms. epigram, which embodies the sentiment of the stanza:
'In caput Xti spinis coronatum. Cerno Caput si Christe tuum mihi vertitur omne In spinis illud, quod fuit ante rosa.'
Turnbull gives the stanza, but misplaces it after our st. vi.,
overlooking that our st. ii. is in 1646 edition st. v.
I sing the name which none can say1 But touch't with an interiour ray: The name of our new peace; our good: Our blisse: and supernaturall blood: The name of all our liues and loues.5 Hearken, and help, ye holy doues! The high-born brood of Day; you bright Candidates of blissefull light, The heirs elect of Loue, whose names belong Vnto the euerlasting life of song;10 All ye wise sovles, who in the wealthy brest Of this vnbounded name, build your warm nest.56 Awake, my glory, Sovl (if such thou be, And that fair word at all referr to thee), Awake and sing,15 And be all wing; Bring hither thy whole self; and let me see What of thy parent Heavn yet speakes in thee. O thou art poore Of noble powres, I see,20 And full of nothing else but empty me: Narrow, and low, and infinitely lesse Then this great morning's mighty busynes. One little world or two (Alas) will neuer doe;25 We must haue store. Goe, Sovl, out of thy self, and seek for more. Goe and request Great Natvre for the key of her huge chest Of Heauns, the self-inuoluing sett of sphears30 (Which dull mortality more feeles then heares). Then rouse the nest Of nimble Art, and trauerse round The aiery shop of soul-appeasing sound: And beat a summons in the same35 All-soueraign name, To warn each seuerall kind And shape of sweetnes, be they such As sigh with supple wind 57Or answer artfull touch;40 That they conuene and come away loveTo wait at the loue-crowned doores of this illustrious day. Shall we dare this, my Soul? we'l doe't and bring No other note for't, but the name we sing. Wake lvte and harp, and euery sweet-lipp't thing45 That talkes with tunefull string; Start into life, and leap with me Into a hasty fitt-tun'd harmony. Nor must you think it much T' obey my bolder touch;50 I haue authority in Love's name to take you, And to the worke of Loue this morning wake you. Wake, in the name Of Him Who neuer sleeps, all things that are, Or, what's the same,55 Are musicall; Answer my call And come along; Help me to meditate mine immortal song. Come, ye soft ministers of sweet sad mirth,60 Bring all your houshold stuffe of Heaun on earth; O you, my Soul's most certain wings, Complaining pipes, and prattling strings, Bring all the store
Of sweets you haue; and murmur that you haue no more.65 Come, ne're to part, Nature and Art! Come; and come strong, To the conspiracy of our spatious song. Bring all the powres of praise,70 Your prouinces of well-vnited worlds can raise; Bring all your lvtes and harps of Heavn and Earth; Whatere cooperates to the common mirthe: Vessells of vocall ioyes, Or you, more noble architects of intellectuall noise,75 Cymballs of Heau'n, or humane sphears, Solliciters of sovles or eares; And when you are come, with all That you can bring or we can call: O may you fix80 For euer here, and mix Your selues into the long And euerlasting series of a deathlesse song; Mix all your many worlds aboue, And loose them into one of loue.85 Chear thee my heart! For thou too hast thy part And place in the Great Throng Of this vnbounded all-imbracing song. Powres of my soul, be proud!90 And speake lowd To all the dear-bought Nations, this redeeming Name, And in the wealth of one rich word, proclaim59 New similes to Nature. May it be no wrong Blest Heauns, to you and your superiour song,95 That we, dark sons of dust and sorrow, A while dare borrow The name of your dilights, and our desires, And fitt it to so farr inferior lyres. Our murmurs haue their musick too,100 Ye mighty Orbes, as well as you; Nor yeilds the noblest nest Of warbling Seraphim to the eares of Loue, A choicer lesson then the ioyfull brest Of a poor panting turtle-doue.105 And we, low wormes, haue leaue to doe The same bright busynes (ye Third Heavens) with you. Gentle spirits, doe not complain! We will haue care To keep it fair,110 And send it back to you again. Come, louely Name! Appeare from forth the bright Regions of peacefull light; Look from Thine Own illustrious home, Fair King of names, and come:115 Leaue all Thy natiue glories in their gorgeous nest, And giue Thy Self a while the gracious Guest Of humble soules, that seek to find The hidden sweets Which man's heart meets120 When Thou art Master of the mind.60 Come louely Name; Life of our hope! Lo, we hold our hearts wide ope! Vnlock Thy cabinet of Day, Dearest Sweet, and come away.125 Lo, how the thirsty Lands Gasp for Thy golden showres! with long-stretcht hands Lo, how the laboring Earth That hopes to be All Heauen by Thee,130 Leapes at Thy birth! The' attending World, to wait Thy rise, First turn'd to eyes; And then, not knowing what to doe, Turn'd them to teares, and spent them too.135 Come royall Name! and pay the expence Of all this pretious patience; O come away And kill the death of this delay! O, see so many worlds of barren yeares140 Melted and measur'd out in seas of teares: O, see the weary liddes of wakefull Hope (Love's eastern windowes) all wide ope With curtains drawn, To catch the day-break of Thy dawn.145 O, dawn at last, long-lookt for Day! Take Thine own wings, and come away. Lo, where aloft it comes! It comes, among The conduct of adoring spirits, that throng61 Like diligent bees, and swarm about it.150 O, they are wise, And know what sweetes are suck't from out it: It is the hiue, By which they thriue, Where all their hoard of hony lyes.155 Lo, where it comes, vpon the snowy Dove's Soft back; and brings a bosom big with loues: Welcome to our dark world, Thou womb of Day! Vnfold Thy fair conceptions, and display The birth of our bright ioyes, O Thou compacted160 Body of blessings: Spirit of soules extracted! O, dissipate Thy spicy powres, (Cloud of condensèd sweets) and break vpon vs In balmy showrs! O, fill our senses, and take from vs all force of so prophane a fallacy,165 To think ought sweet but that which smells of Thee! Fair, flowry Name, in none but Thee And Thy nectareall fragrancy, Hourly there meetes An vniuersall synod of all sweets;170 By whom it is definèd thus, That no perfume For euer shall presume To passe for odoriferous, But such alone whose sacred pedigree175 Can proue itself some kin (sweet Name!) to Thee.62 Sweet Name, in Thy each syllable A thousand blest Arabias dwell; A thousand hills of frankincense, Mountains of myrrh, and beds of spices180 And ten thousand paradises, The soul that tasts Thee takes from thence. How many vnknown worlds there are Of comforts, which Thou hast in keeping! How many thousand mercyes there185 In Pitty's soft lap ly a-sleeping! Happy he who has the art To awake them, And to take them Home, and lodge them in his heart.190 O, that it were as it was wont to be! When Thy old freinds of fire, all full of Thee, Fought against frowns with smiles; gaue glorious chase To persecutions; and against the face Of Death and feircest dangers, durst with braue195 And sober pace, march on to meet A GRAVE. On their bold brests, about the world they bore Thee, And to the teeth of Hell stood vp to teach Thee; In center of their inmost soules, they wore Thee, Where rackes and torments striu'd, in vain, to reach Thee.200 Little, alas, thought they Who tore the fair brests of Thy freinds,63 Their fury but made way For Thee, and seru'd them in Thy glorious ends. What did their weapons but with wider pores205 Inlarge Thy flaming-brested louers, More freely to transpire That impatient fire, The heart that hides Thee hardly couers? What did their weapons but sett wide the doores210 For Thee? fair, purple doores, of Loue's deuising; The ruby windowes which inricht the East Of Thy so oft-repeated rising! Each wound of theirs was Thy new morning, And reinthron'd Thee in Thy rosy nest,215 With blush of Thine Own blood Thy day adorning: It was the witt of Loue oreflowd the bounds Of Wrath, and made Thee way through all those wovnds. Wellcome, dear, all-adorèd Name! For sure there is no knee220 That knowes not Thee: Or, if there be such sonns of shame, Alas! what will they doe When stubborn rocks shall bow And hills hang down their heaun-saluting heads225 To seek for humble beds Of dust, where in the bashfull shades of Night64 Next to their own low Nothing, they may ly, And couch before the dazeling light of Thy dread majesty. They that by Loue's mild dictate now230 Will not adore Thee, Shall then, with just confusion bow And break before Thee.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The title in 1648 'Steps' is simply 'On the name of Jesus.'
In 1670 it is 'To the Name above every Name, the Name of
Jesus, a Hymn,' and throughout differs from our text (1652)
only in usual modernisation of orthography. The text of 1648
yields these readings:
Line 7, 'the bright.' " 42, 'of th's.' " 49, 'Into a habit fit of self tun'd Harmonie.' " 79, 'you're.' " 92, 'aloud.' " 105, 'Seraphins.' " 106, 'loyall' for 'joyfull.' " 132, 'heavens.' " 182 spells 'sillabell.' " 187, 'The soules tastes thee takes from thence.' " 202, 'bare.' " 204, 'ware.' " 209, 'For Thee: And serv'd therein thy glorious ends.'
See our Essay for critical remarks on the measure and
rhythm of this poem as printed in our text (1652). G.
Happy me! O happy sheepe!1 Whom my God vouchsafes to keepe; Even my God, even He it is, That points me to these paths of blisse; On Whose pastures cheerefull Spring,5 All the yeare doth sit and sing, And rejoycing, smiles to see Their green backs weare His liverie: Pleasure sings my soul to rest, Plentie weares me at her brest,10 Whose sweet temper teaches me Nor wanton, nor in want to be. At my feet, the blubb'ring mountaine Weeping, melts into a fountaine; Whose soft, silver-sweating streames15 Make high-noon forget his beames: When my wayward breath is flying, He calls home my soul from dying;66 Strokes and tames my rabid griefe, And does wooe me into life:20 When my simple weaknes strayes, (Tangled in forbidden wayes) He (my Shepheard) is my guide, Hee's before me, on my side, And behind me, He beguiles25 Craft in all her knottie wiles: He expounds the weary wonder Of my giddy steps, and under Spreads a path, cleare as the day, Where no churlish rub says nay30 To my joy-conducted feet, Whilst they gladly goe to meet Grace and Peace, to learne new laies, Tun'd to my great Shepheard's praise. Come now all ye terrors sally,35 Muster forth into the valley, Where triumphant darknesse hovers With a sable wing, that covers Brooding horror. Come, thou Death, Let the damps of thy dull breath40 Over-shadow even that shade, And make Darknes' selfe afraid; There my feet, even there, shall find Way for a resolvèd mind. Still my Shepheard, still my God,45 Thou art with me; still Thy rod,67 And Thy staffe, whose influence Gives direction, gives defence. At the whisper of Thy word Crown'd abundance spreads my boord:50 While I feast, my foes doe feed Their ranck malice not their need, So that with the self-same bread They are starv'd and I am fed. How my head in ointment swims!55 How my cup o'relooks her brims! So, even so still may I move, By the line of Thy deare love; Still may Thy sweet mercy spread A shady arme above my head,60 About my paths; so shall I find, The faire center of my mind, Thy temple, and those lovely walls Bright ever with a beame, that falls Fresh from the pure glance of Thine eye,65 Lighting to Eternity. There I'le dwell for ever; there Will I find a purer aire To feed my life with, there I'le sup Balme and nectar in my cup;70 And thence my ripe soule will I breath Warme into the armes of Death. 68
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In the Sancroft ms. this is headed 'Ps. 23 (Paraphrasia).'
In line 4 it reads 'paths' for 'wayes,' which I accept; line 27
'weary' for 'giddy,' and line 28 'giddy' for 'weary,' both
adopted; line 29 reads as we have printed instead of 'Spreads
a path as cleare as day;' line 33, 'learne' for 'meet,' adopted;
line 41, 'that' for 'the,' adopted. Only orthographic further
variations. In line 30 'rub' = obstruction, reminds of Shakespeare's
'Now every rub is smoothèd in our way' (Henry V.
ii. 2), and elsewhere. G.
On the proud banks of great Euphrates' flood,1 There we sate, and there we wept: Our harpes, that now no musick understood, Nodding, on the willowes slept: While unhappy captiv'd wee,5 Lovely Sion, thought on thee. They, they that snatcht us from our countrie's breast, Would have a song carv'd to their eares In Hebrew numbers, then (O cruell jest!) 69When harpes and hearts were drown'd in teares:10 Come, they cry'd, come sing and play One of Sion's songs to-day. Sing? play? to whom (ah!) shall we sing or play, If not, Jerusalem, to thee? Ah! thee Jerusalem! ah! sooner may15 This hand forget the masterie Of Musick's dainty touch, than I The musick of thy memory. Which when I lose, O may at once my tongue Lose this same busie-speaking art,20 Vnpearch't, her vocall arteries unstrung, No more acquainted with my heart, On my dry pallat's roof to rest A wither'd leaf, an idle guest. No, no, Thy good Sion, alone, must crowne25 The head of all my hope-nurst joyes. But Edom, cruell thou! thou cryd'st downe, downe Sinke Sion, downe and never rise, Her falling thou did'st urge and thrust, And haste to dash her into dust:30 Dost laugh? proud Babel's daughter! do, laugh on, Till thy ruine teach thee teares, Even such as these; laugh, till a venging throng Of woes, too late, doe rouze thy feares: Laugh, till thy children's bleeding bones35 Weepe pretious teares upon the stones. 70
Come, we shepheards, whose blest sight1 Hath mett Loue's noon in Nature's night; Come, lift we vp our loftyer song And wake the svn that lyes too long.
To all our world of well-stoln joy5 He slept; and dreamt of no such thing. While we found out Heaun's fairer ey And kis't the cradle of our King. Tell him He rises now, too late To show vs ought worth looking at.10
Tell him we now can show him more Then he e're show'd to mortall sight; Then he himselfe e're saw before, Which to be seen needes not his light.71 Tell him, Tityrus, where th' hast been,15 Tell him Thyrsis, what th' hast seen.
Tityrus.
Gloomy night embrac't the place Where the noble Infant lay. The Babe look't vp and shew'd His face; In spite of darknes, it was day.20 It was Thy day, Sweet! and did rise Not from the East, but from Thine eyes.
Chorus. It was Thy day, Sweet.
Thyrsis.
Winter chidde aloud, and sent The angry North to wage his warres.25 The North forgott his feirce intent, And left perfumes in stead of scarres. By those sweet eyes' persuasiue powrs Where he mean't frost, he scatter'd flowrs.
Chorus. By those sweet eyes.30
Both.
We saw Thee in Thy baulmy-nest, Young dawn of our æternall Day! We saw Thine eyes break from their East And chase the trembling shades away. We saw Thee; and we blest the sight,35 We saw Thee by Thine Own sweet light. 72
Tityrus.
Poor world (said I), what wilt thou doe To entertain this starry Stranger? Is this the best thou canst bestow? A cold, and not too cleanly, manger?40 Contend, the powres of Heau'n and Earth, To fitt a bed for this huge birthe?
Chorus. Contend the powers.
Thyrsis.
Proud world, said I, cease your contest And let the mighty Babe alone.45 The phænix builds the phænix' nest, Lov's architecture is his own. The Babe whose birth embraues this morn, Made His Own bed e're He was born.
Chorus. The Babe whose....50
Tityrus.
I saw the curl'd drops, soft and slow, Come houering o're the place's head; Offring their whitest sheets of snow To furnish the fair Infant's bed: Forbear, said I; be not too bold,55 Your fleece is white but 'tis too cold.
Chorus. Forbear, sayd I.
Thyrsis.
I saw the obsequious Seraphims Their rosy fleece of fire bestow.73 For well they now can spare their wing,60 Since Heavn itself lyes here below. Well done, said I; but are you sure Your down so warm, will passe for pure?
Chorus. Well done, sayd I.
Tityrus.
No, no! your King's not yet to seeke65 Where to repose His royall head; See, see! how soon His new-bloom'd cheek Twixt's mother's brests is gone to bed. Sweet choise, said we! no way but so Not to ly cold, yet sleep in snow.70
Chorus. Sweet choise, said we.
Both.
We saw Thee in Thy baulmy nest, Bright dawn of our æternall Day! We saw Thine eyes break from their East And chase the trembling shades away.75 We saw Thee: and we blest the sight, We saw Thee, by Thine Own sweet light.
Chorus. We saw Thee, &c.
Fvll Chorvs.
Wellcome, all wonders in one sight! Æternity shutt in a span!80 Sommer in Winter, Day in Night! Heauen in Earth, and God in man!74 Great, little One! Whose all-embracing birth Lifts Earth to Heauen, stoopes Heau'n to Earth.
Wellcome, though not to gold nor silk,85 To more then Cæsar's birth-right is; Two sister-seas of virgin-milk, With many a rarely-temper'd kisse, That breathes at once both maid and mother, Warmes in the one, cooles in the other.90 Shee sings Thy tears asleep, and dips Her kisses in Thy weeping eye; She spreads the red leaves of Thy lips, That in their buds yet blushing lye; She 'gainst those mother-diamonds, tries95 The points of her young eagle's eyes. Wellcome, though not to those gay flyes, Guilded i' th' beames of earthly kings; Slippery soules in smiling eyes; But to poor shepheards' home-spun things;100 Whose wealth's their flock; whose witt, to be Well-read in their simplicity. Yet when young April's husband-showrs Shall blesse the fruitfull Maja's bed, We'l bring the first-born of her flowrs105 To kisse Thy feet and crown Thy head. To Thee, dread Lamb! Whose loue must keep The shepheards, more then they the sheep. 75
To Thee, meek Majesty! soft King Of simple Graces and sweet Loves:110 Each of vs his lamb will bring, Each his pair of sylver doues: Till burnt at last in fire of Thy fair eyes, Ourselues become our own best sacrifice.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In the Sancroft ms. the heading is simply 'A Hymne of the
Nativitie sung by the Shepheards.' It furnishes these various
readings, though it wants a good deal of our text (1652):
Lines 1 to 4,
'who haue seene Daie's King deposèd by night's Queene. Come lift we up our lofty song, To wake the sun that sleeps too long.'
" 5 to 7,
'Hee (in this our generall joy) Slept . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . the faire-ey'd boy.'
" 24, 'Winter chid the world . . . .' " 32, 'Bright dawne . . . . ' " 58 to 63,
'I saw the officious angells bring The downe that their soft breasts did strow: For well they now can spare their wings, When heauen itselfe lies here below. Faire youth (said I) be not too rough, Thy downe (though soft)'s not soft enough.'
'Officious' = ready to do good offices: 'obsequious' = obedient,
eager to serve.
Lines 65 to 68,
'The Babe noe sooner 'gan to seeke Where to lay His louely head; But streight His eyes advis'd His cheeke 'Twixt's mother's breasts to goe to bed.'
" 79, 'Welcome to our wond'ring sight.' " 83, 'glorious birth.' " 85, 'not to gold' for 'nor to gold:' adopted. " 96, 'points' = pupils (?).
Rise, thou best and brightest morning! Rosy with a double red; With thine own blush thy cheeks adorning, And the dear drops this day were shed.
All the purple pride, that laces The crimson curtains of thy bed, Guilds thee not with so sweet graces, Nor setts thee in so rich a red.
Of all the fair-cheek't flowrs that fill thee, None so fair thy bosom strowes, As this modest maiden lilly Our sins haue sham'd into a rose.77
Bid thy golden god, the sun, Burnisht in his best beames rise, Put all his red-ey'd rubies on; These rubies shall putt out their eyes.
Let him make poor the purple East, Search what the world's close cabinets keep, Rob the rich births of each bright nest That flaming in their fair beds sleep.
Let him embraue his own bright tresses With a new morning made of gemmes; And wear, in those his wealthy dresses, Another day of diadems.
When he hath done all he may To make himselfe rich in his rise, All will be darknes to the day That breakes from one of these bright eyes.
And soon this sweet truth shall appear, Dear Babe, ere many dayes be done; The Morn shall come to meet Thee here, And leaue her own neglected sun.
Here are beautyes shall bereaue him Of all his eastern paramours. His Persian louers all shall leaue him, And swear faith to Thy sweeter powres; Nor while they leave him shall they lose the sun, But in Thy fairest eyes find two for one. 78
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
St. ii. line 1,
'All the purple pride that laces;'
the reference is to the empurpled lighter and lace- (or gauze-)
like clouds of the morning. The heavier clouds are the 'crimson
curtains,' the 'purple laces' the fleecy, lace-like, and empurpled
streakings of the lighter and dissolving clouds, which
the Poet likens to the lace that edged the coverlet, and possibly
other parts of the bed and bedstead. Shakespeare describes a
similar appearance with the same word, but uses it in the sense
of inter or cross lacing, when he makes Juliet say (iii. 5),
'look, love, what envious streaks Do lace the severing clouds in yonder East.'
So too in stanza v. 'each sparkling nest,' the flame-coloured
clouds are intended. 'Nest,' like 'bud,' is a favourite word
with Crashaw, and he uses it freely. In 1648 edition, st. iii.
line 2 reads 'showes;' stanza v. line 2, 'cabinets;' stanza viii.
line 5, 'and meet;' stanza ix. 'paramours' = lovers, wooers, not
as now signifying loose love. G.
1 Kinge. Bright Babe! Whose awfull beautyes make1 The morn incurr a sweet mistake;
2 Kinge. For Whom the officious Heauns deuise To disinheritt the sun's rise:
3 Kinge. Delicately to displace5 The day, and plant it fairer in Thy face.
1 Kinge. O Thou born King of loues!
2 Kinge. Of lights!
3 Kinge. Of ioyes!
Chorus. Look vp, sweet Babe, look vp and see10 For loue of Thee, Thus farr from home The East is come To seek her self in Thy sweet eyes.80
1 Kinge. We, who strangely went astray,15 Lost in a bright Meridian night.
2 Kinge. A darknes made of too much day.
3 Kinge. Becken'd from farr By Thy fair starr,20 Lo, at last haue found our way.
Chorus. To Thee, Thou Day of Night! Thou East of West! Lo, we at last haue found the way To Thee, the World's great vniuersal East, The generall and indifferent Day.25
2 Kinge. Whose full and all-vnwrinkled face Nor sinks nor swells with time or place;
3 Kinge. But euery where and euery while30 Is one consistent, solid smile:
1 Kinge. Not vext and tost
2 Kinge. 'Twixt Spring and frost;
3 Kinge. Nor by alternate shredds of light, Sordidly shifting hands with shades and Night.35
Chorus. O little all! in Thy embrace The World lyes warm, and likes his place; Nor does his full globe fail to be Kist on both his cheeks by Thee. Time is too narrow for Thy year,40 Nor makes the whole World Thy half-sphear.81
1 Kinge. To Thee, to Thee From him we flee.
2 Kinge. From him, whom by a more illustrious ly, The blindnes of the World did call the eye.45
3 Kinge. To Him, Who by these mortall clouds hast made Thyself our sun, though Thine Own shade.
1 Kinge. Farewell, the World's false light! Farewell, the white Ægypt; a long farewell to thee50 Bright idol, black idolatry: The dire face of inferior darknes, kis't And courted in the pompus mask of a more specious mist.
2 Kinge. Farewell, farewell The proud and misplac't gates of Hell,55 Pertch't in the Morning's way perched. And double-guilded as the doores of Day: The deep hypocrisy of Death and Night More desperately dark, because more bright.
3 Kinge. Welcome, the World's sure way!60 Heavn's wholsom ray.
Chorus. Wellcome to vs; and we (Sweet!) to our selues, in Thee.
1 Kinge. The deathles Heir of all Thy Father's day!
2 Kinge. Decently born!65 Embosom'd in a much more rosy Morn: The blushes of Thy all-vnblemisht mother.82
3 Kinge. No more that other Aurora shall sett ope Her ruby casements, or hereafter hope70 From mortall eyes To meet religious welcomes at her rise.
Chorus. We (pretious ones!) in you haue won A gentler Morn, a iuster sun.
1 Kinge. His superficiall beames sun-burn't our skin;75
2 Kinge. But left within
3 Kinge. The Night and Winter still of Death and Sin.
Chorus. Thy softer yet more certaine darts Spare our eyes, but peirce our harts:
1 Kinge. Therfore with his proud Persian spoiles80
2 Kinge. We court Thy more concerning smiles.
3 Kinge. Therfore with his disgrace We guild the humble cheek of this chast place;
Chorus. And at Thy feet powr forth his face.
1 Kinge. The doating Nations now no more85 Shall any day but Thine adore.
2 Kinge. Nor—much lesse—shall they leaue these eyes For cheap Ægyptian deityes.
3 Kinge. In whatsoe're more sacred shape Of ram, he-goat, or reuerend ape;90 Those beauteous rauishers opprest so sore The too-hard-tempted nations.
1 Kinge. Neuer more83 By wanton heyfer shall be worn
2 Kinge. A garland, or a guilded horn:95 The altar-stall'd ox, fatt Osyris now With his fair sister cow
3 Kinge. Shall kick the clouds no more; but lean and tame,
Chorus. See His horn'd face, and dy for shame: And Mithra now shall be no name.100
1 Kinge. No longer shall the immodest lust Of adulterous godles dust
2 Kinge. Fly in the face of Heau'n; as if it were The poor World's fault that He is fair.105
3 Kinge. Nor with peruerse loues and religious rapes Reuenge Thy bountyes in their beauteous shapes; And punish best things worst; because they stood Guilty of being much for them too good.
1 Kinge. Proud sons of Death! that durst compell110 Heau'n it self to find them Hell:
2 Kinge. And by strange witt of madnes wrest From this World's East the other's West.
3 Kinge. All-idolizing wormes! that thus could crowd And vrge their sun into Thy cloud;115 Forcing His sometimes eclips'd face to be A long deliquium to the light of Thee.
Chorus. Alas! with how much heauyer shade The shamefac't lamp hung down his head84 For that one eclipse he made,120 Then all those he suffered!
1 Kinge. For this he look't so bigg; and euery morn With a red face confes't his scorn. Or hiding his vex't cheeks in a hir'd mist Kept them from being so vnkindly kis't.125
2 Kinge. It was for this the Day did rise So oft with blubber'd eyes: For this the Evening wept; and we ne're knew But call'd it deaw.
3 Kinge. This dayly wrong130 Silenc't the morning-sons, and damp't their song:
Chorus. Nor was't our deafnes, but our sins, that thus Long made th' harmonious orbes all mute to vs.
1 Kinge. Time has a day in store When this so proudly poor135 And self-oppressèd spark, that has so long By the loue-sick World bin made Not so much their sun as shade: Weary of this glorious wrong From them and from himself shall flee140 For shelter to the shadow of Thy tree:
Chorus. Proud to haue gain'd this pretious losse And chang'd his false crown for Thy crosse.
2 Kinge. That dark Day's clear doom shall define 85Whose is the master Fire, which sun should shine:145 That sable judgment-seat shall by new lawes Decide and settle the great cause Of controuerted light:
Chorus. And Natur's wrongs rejoyce to doe Thee right.
3 Kinge. That forfeiture of Noon to Night shall pay150 All the idolatrous thefts done by this Night of Day; And the great Penitent presse his own pale lipps With an elaborate loue-eclipse: To which the low World's lawes Shall lend no cause,155
Chorus. Saue those domestick which He borrowes From our sins and His Own sorrowes.
1 Kinge. Three sad hours' sackcloth then shall show to vs His penance, as our fault, conspicuous:
2 Kinge. And He more needfully and nobly proue160 The Nations' terror now then erst their loue.
3 Kinge. Their hated loues changd into wholsom feares:
Chorus. The shutting of His eye shall open their's.
1 Kinge. As by a fair-ey'd fallacy of Day Miss-ledde, before, they lost their way;165 So shall they, by the seasonable fright Of an vnseasonable Night, Loosing it once again, stumble on true Light:
2 Kinge. And as before His too-bright eye 86Was their more blind idolatry;170 So his officious blindnes now shall be Their black, but faithfull perspectiue of Thee:
3 Kinge. His new prodigious Night, Their new and admirable light, The supernaturall dawn of Thy pure Day;175 While wondring they (The happy conuerts now of Him Whom they compell'd before to be their sin) Shall henceforth see To kisse him only as their rod,180 Whom they so long courted as God.
Chorus. And their best vse of him they worship't, be To learn of him at last, to worship Thee.
1 Kinge. It was their weaknes woo'd his beauty; But it shall be185 Their wisdome now, as well as duty, To injoy his blott; and as a large black letter Vse it to spell Thy beautyes better; And make the Night it self their torch to Thee.
2 Kinge. By the oblique ambush of this close night190 Couch't in that conscious shade The right-ey'd Areopagite Shall with a vigorous guesse inuade And catch Thy quick reflex; and sharply see On this dark ground195 To descant Thee.
3 Kinge. O prize of the rich Spirit! with what feirce chase87 Of his strong soul, shall he Leap at thy lofty face, And seize the swift flash, in rebound200 From this obsequious cloud, Once call'd a sun, Till dearly thus vndone;
Chorus. Till thus triumphantly tam'd (O ye two Twinne svnnes!) and taught now to negotiate you.205
1 Kinge. Thus shall that reuerend child of Light,
2 Kinge. By being scholler first of that new Night, Come forth great master of the mystick Day;
3 Kinge. And teach obscure mankind a more close way By the frugall negatiue light210 Of a most wise and well-abusèd Night To read more legible Thine originall ray;
Chorus. And make our darknes serue Thy Day: Maintaining 'twixt Thy World and oures A commerce of contrary powres,215 A mutuall trade 'Twixt sun and shade, By confederat black and white Borrowing Day and lending Night.219
1 Kinge. Thus we, who when with all the noble powres That (at Thy cost) are call'd, not vainly, ours: We vow to make braue way Vpwards, and presse on for the pure intelligentiall prey;88 2 Kinge. At least to play The amorous spyes225 And peep and proffer at Thy sparkling throne;
3 Kinge. In stead of bringing in the blissfull prize And fastening on Thine eyes: Forfeit our own And nothing gain230 But more ambitious losse at last, of brain;
Chorus. Now by abasèd liddes shall learn to be Eagles; and shutt our eyes that we may see.
The Close.
[Chorus.] Therfore to Thee and Thine auspitious ray235 (Dread Sweet!) lo thus At last by vs, The delegated eye of Day Does first his scepter, then himself, in solemne tribute pay. Thus he vndresses240 His sacred vnshorn tresses; At Thy adorèd feet, thus he layes down
1 Kinge. His gorgeous tire Of flame and fire,
2 Kinge. His glittering robe. 3 Kinge. His sparkling crown;245
1 Kinge. His gold: 2 Kinge. His mirrh: 3 Kinge. His frankincense.
Chorus. To which he now has no pretence:89 For being show'd by this Day's light, how farr He is from sun enough to make Thy starr, His best ambition now is but to be250 Somthing a brighter shadow, Sweet, of Thee. Or on Heaun's azure forhead high to stand Thy golden index; with a duteous hand Pointing vs home to our own sun The World's and his Hyperion.255
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The title in 1648 edition is simply 'A Hymne for the Epiphanie.
Sung as by the three Kings.' Except the usual slight
changes of orthography, the following are all the variations between
the two texts necessary to record: and I give with them
certain corrective and explanatory notes:
line 25, 'indifferent' is = impartial, not as now 'unconcerned.'
Line 52, 1648 edition misprints 'his't' for 'kis't.' In the
51st line the 'bright idol' is the sun.
Line 83, ib. reads 'thy' for 'this.' " 95, 'a guilded horn.' Cf. Juvenal, Satire x. " 99, ib. is given to 3d King. Throughout we have corrected
a number of slips of the Paris printer in his figures.
Line 108, ib. spells 'to' for 'too.' " 117, 'deliquium' = swoon, faint. In chemistry = melting. " 122, 1648 edition reads 'his' for 'this;' and I have
adopted it.
Line 143, ib. reads 'deere:' a misprint. " 155, ib. reads 'domesticks.' " 180, ib. reads 'the' for 'their.' " 186, ib. drops 'it.' " 195, ib. reads 'what' for 'that,' and in next line 'his'
for 'this,' of 1652: both adopted.
Line 212, 'legible' is = legibly. " 224 and onward, in 1648 is printed 'least,' in our text
(1652) 'lest.' Except in line 224 it is plainly = last, and so I
read it in 231st and 237th.
See our Essay for Miltonic parallels with lines in this remarkable
composition. Line 46, 'these mortal clouds,' i.e. of
infant flesh. Cf. Sosp. d' Herode, stanza xxiii.
'That He whom the sun serves should faintly peep Through clouds of infant flesh.'
Line 114, 'And urge their sun into Thy cloud,' i.e. into becoming
Thy cloud, forcing him to become 'a long deliquium to the
light of thee.' Line 189, our text (1652) misprints 'in self.' Line
190, 'By the oblique ambush,' &c. The Kings continuing in the
spirit of prophecy, and with words not to be understood till their
fulfilment, pass on from the dimming of the sun at the Crucifixion
to a second dimming, but this time through the splendour of a
brighter light, at the conversion of him who was taken to preach
to the Gentiles in the court of the Areopagites. The speaker, or
rather Crashaw, takes the view which at first sight may seem to
be implied in the gospel narrative, that the light brighter than
midday shone round about Saul and his companions but not on
them, they being couched in the conscious shade of the daylight.
Throughout, there is a double allusion to this second
dimming of the sun as manifesting Christ to St. Paul and the
Gentiles, and to the dimming of the eyes, and the walking in darkness
for a time of him who as a light on Earth was to manifest
the True Light to the world. Throughout, too, there is a
kind of parallelism indicated between the two lesser lights. Both
rebellions were to be dimmed and brought into subjection, and
then to shine forth 'right-eyed' in renewed and purified splendour
as evidences of the Sun of Righteousness. Hence at the
close, the chorus calls them 'ye twin-suns,'—and the words,
'Till thus triumphantly tamed' refer equally to both. The
punctuation to make this clear should be '... sun, ... undone;
...' 'To negotiate you' (both word and metaphor being
rather unhappily chosen) means, to pass you current as the
true-stamped image of the Deity. 'O price of the rich Spirit'
(line 197) may be made to refer to 'thee [O Christ], price of the
rich spirit' of Paul, but 'may be' is almost too strong to apply
to such an interpretation. It is far more consonant to the structure
and tenor of the whole passage, to read it as an epithet
applied to St. Paul: 'O prize of the rich Spirit of grace.' I
have also without hesitation changed 'of this strong soul' into
'of his strong soul.' 'Oblique ambush' may refer to the oblique
rays of the sun now rays of darkness, but the primary91
reference is to the indirect manner and 'vigorous guess,' by
which St. Paul, mentally glancing from one to the other light,
learned through the dimming of the sun to believe in the Deity
of Him who spake from out the dimming brightness. The
same thought, though with a strained and less successful effort
of expression, appears in the song of the third King, 'with that
fierce chase,' &c.
Line 251. 'Somthing a brighter shadow (Sweet) of Thee.' Apparently
a remembrance of a passage which Thomas Heywood,
in his 'Hierarchie of the Angels,' gives from a Latin translation
of Plato, 'Lumen est umbra Dei et Deus est Lumen
Luminis.' On which see our Essay. Perhaps the same gave
rise to the thought that the sun eclipsed God, or shut Him out
as a cloud or shade, or made night, e.g.
'And urge their sun . . . . . . . . . . eclipse he made:' (lines 115-120). 'Not so much their sun as shade . . . . by this night of day:' (lines 138-151). G.
Madame,1 'Mongst those long rowes of crownes that guild your race, These royall sages sue for decent place: The day-break of the Nations; their first ray, When the dark World dawn'd into Christian Day,5 And smil'd i' th' Babe's bright face; the purpling bud And rosy dawn of the right royall blood; Fair first-fruits of the Lamb! sure kings in this, They took a kingdom while they gaue a kisse. But the World's homage, scarse in these well blown,10 We read in you (rare queen) ripe and full-grown.92 For from this day's rich seed of diadems Does rise a radiant croppe of royalle stemms, A golden haruest of crown'd heads, that meet And crowd for kisses from the Lamb's white feet:15 In this illustrious throng, your lofty floud Swells high, fair confluence of all high-born bloud: With your bright head, whole groues of scepters bend Their wealthy tops, and for these feet contend. So swore the Lamb's dread Sire: and so we see't,20 Crownes, and the heads they kisse, must court these feet. Fix here, fair majesty! May your heart ne're misse To reap new crownes and kingdoms from that kisse; Nor may we misse the ioy to meet in you The aged honors of this day still new.25 May the great time, in you, still greater be, While all the year is your epiphany; While your each day's deuotion duly brings Three kingdomes to supply this day's three kings.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In 1648 the title is 'To the Queene's Majestie upon his
dedicating to her the foregoing Hymne, viz. "A Hymne for the
Epiphanie,"' which there precedes, but in 1652 follows, the
dedicatory lines to the Queen. 1648 furnishes these variations:
line 7 misprints 'down' for 'dawn:' line 11 reads 'deare' for
'rare:' line 14 'royall' for 'golden:' line 18 corrects our text's
misprint of 'whose' for 'whole,' which I have accepted: line 20
reads 'great' for 'dread.'
We know that the King on Twelfth-day presented gold, frankincense
and myrrh, and so perhaps did the Queen. But these
gifts were not presented to the magi-kings, and Crashaw seems
to sue on behalf of 'these royall sages.' The explanation doubtless
is that this was a verse-letter to the Queen, enclosing as
a gift his Epiphany Hymn 'sung as by the three Kings.'
In line 5 'the purpling bud,' &c. requires study. Led by
the (erroneous) punctuation (face,) I supposed this clause to
refer to the 'Babe.' But would our Poet have said that the
'dawn of the world smiled on the Babe's face,' and in the same
breath have called the face a 'rosy dawn'? Looking to this,
and his rather profuse employment of 'bud,' I now believe the
clause to be another description of the kings, and punctuate
(face;). The rhythm of the passage is certainly improved
thereby and made more like that of Crashaw, and the words
'right royall blood,' which may be thought to become difficult,
can be thus explained. The races of the heathen kings were
not 'royal,' their authority being usurped and falsely derived
from false gods, and the kingly blood first became truly royal
when the kings recognised the supreme sovereignty of the King
of kings and the derivation of their authority from Him, and
when they were in turn recognised by Him. Hence the use of
the epithet 'purpling,' the Christian or Christ-accepting kings
being the first who were truly 'born in the purple,' or 'right
royall blood.'
In lines 15-18, as punctuated in preceding editions, the
Poet is made to arrange his words after a fashion hardly to
be called English, and to jumble his metaphors like a poetaster
or 4th of July orator in America. But both sense and poetry
are restored by taking the (!) after 'blood' as at least equal to
(:), and by replacing 'whose' by 'whole,' as in 1648. This
seems to us restoration, not change. Even thus read, however,
the passage is somewhat cloudy; but the construction is—the
groves of sceptres of your high-born ancestors bend with you
their wealthy tops, when you bow down your head. Our Poet is
fond of inversions, and they are sometimes more obscure than
they ought to be. Line 20 = Psalm i., and cf. Philip. ii. 11. G.
Rise heire of fresh Eternity1 From thy virgin tombe! Rise mighty Man of wonders, and Thy World with Thee! Thy tombe the uniuersall East, Nature's new wombe,5 Thy tombe, fair Immortalitie's perfumèd nest.
Of all the glories make Noone gay, This is the Morne; This Rock buds forth the fountaine of the streames of Day; In Joye's white annalls live this howre10 When Life was borne; No cloud scoule on His radiant lids, no tempest lower.
Life, by this Light's nativity All creatures have; Death onely by this Daye's just doome is forc't to dye,15 Nor is Death forc't; for may he ly Thron'd in Thy grave, Death will on this condition be content to dye.
Casting the times with their strong signes, Death's master his owne death divines: Strugling for helpe, his best hope is Herod's suspition may heale his. Therefore he sends a fiend to wake foolishThe sleeping tyrant's fond mistake; Who feares (in vaine) that He Whose birth Meanes Heav'n, should meddle with his Earth.
I.
Muse, now the servant of soft loves no more, Hate is thy theame, and Herod, whose unblest Hand (O what dares not jealous greatnesse?) tore A thousand sweet babes from their mothers' brest:96 The bloomes of martyrdome. O be a dore Of language to my infant lips, yee best Of confessours: whose throates answering his swords, Gave forth your blood for breath, spoke soules for words.
II.
Great Anthony! Spain's well-beseeming pride, Thou mighty branch of emperours and kings; The beauties of whose dawne what eye may bide? Which with the sun himselfe weigh's equall wings; Mappe of heroick worth! whom farre and wide To the beleeving world, Fame boldly sings: Deigne thou to weare this humble wreath, that bowes To be the sacred honour of thy browes.
III.
Nor needs my Muse a blush, or these bright flowers Other than what their owne blest beauties bring:97 They were the smiling sons of those sweet bowers That drink the deaw of life, whose deathlesse spring, Nor Sirian flame nor Borean frost deflowers: From whence heav'n-labouring bees with busie wing, Suck hidden sweets, which well-digested proves Immortall hony for the hive of loves.
IV.
Thou, whose strong hand with so transcendent worth, Holds high the reine of faire Parthenope, That neither Rome nor Athens can bring forth A name in noble deeds rivall to thee! Thy fame's full noise, makes proud the patient Earth, Farre more then, matter for my Muse and mee. The Tyrrhene Seas and shores sound all the same And in their murmurs keepe thy mighty name.
V.
Below the bottome of the great Abysse, There where one center reconciles all things: The World's profound heart pants; there placèd is Mischiefe's old master. Close about him clings A curl'd knot of embracing snakes, that kisse His correspondent cheekes: these loathsome strings Hold the perverse prince in eternall ties Fast bound, since first he forfeited the skies.
VI.
The judge of torments and the king of teares, He fills a burnisht throne of quenchlesse fire:98 And for his old faire roabes of light, he weares A gloomy mantle of darke flames; the tire That crownes his hated head on high appeares: Where seav'n tall hornes (his empire's pride) aspire. And to make up Hell's majesty, each horne Seav'n crested Hydras, horribly adorne.
VII.
His eyes, the sullen dens of Death and Night, Startle the dull ayre with a dismall red: Such his fell glances, as the fatall light Of staring comets, that looke kingdomes dead. From his black nostrills, and blew lips, in spight Of Hell's owne stinke, a worser stench is spread. His breath Hell's lightning is: and each deepe groane Disdaines to think that Heav'n thunders alone.
VIII.
His flaming eyes' dire exhalation, Vnto a dreadfull pile gives fiery breath; Whose unconsum'd consumption preys upon The never-dying life of a long death. In this sad house of slow destruction, (His shop of flames) hee fryes himself, beneath A masse of woes; his teeth for torment gnash, While his steele sides sound with his tayle's strong lash. 99
IX.
Three rigourous virgins waiting still behind, Assist the throne of th' iron-sceptred king. With whips of thornes and knotty vipers twin'd They rouse him, when his ranke thoughts need a sting. Their lockes are beds of uncomb'd snakes that wind About their shady browes in wanton rings. Thus reignes the wrathfull king, and while he reignes, His scepter and himselfe both he disdaines.
X.
Disdainefull wretch! how hath one bold sinne cost Thee all the beauties of thy once bright eyes! How hath one black eclipse cancell'd, and crost The glories that did gild thee in thy rise! Proud morning of a perverse day! how lost Art thou unto thy selfe, thou too selfe-wise Narcissus! foolish Phaeton! who for all Thy high-aym'd hopes, gaind'st but a flaming fall.
XI.
From Death's sad shades to the life-breathing ayre, This mortall enemy to mankind's good, Lifts his malignant eyes, wasted with care, To become beautifull in humane blood. Where Iordan melts his chrystall, to make faire The fields of Palestine, with so pure a flood, There does he fixe his eyes: and there detect New matter, to make good his great suspect. 100
XII.
He calls to mind th' old quarrell, and what sparke Set the contending sons of Heav'n on fire: Oft in his deepe thought he revolves the darke Sibill's divining leaves: he does enquire Into th' old prophesies, trembling to marke How many present prodigies conspire, To crowne their past predictions, both he layes Together, in his pondrous mind both weighs.
XIII.
Heaven's golden-wingèd herald, late he saw To a poore Galilean virgin sent: How low the bright youth bow'd, and with what awe Immortall flowers to her faire hand present. He saw th' old Hebrewe's wombe, neglect the law Of age and barrennesse, and her babe prevent anticipate His birth by his devotion, who began Betimes to be a saint, before a man.
XIV.
He saw rich nectar-thawes, release the rigour Of th' icy North; from frost-bound Atlas hands, His adamantine fetters fall: green vigour Gladding the Scythian rocks and Libian sands. He saw a vernall smile, sweetly disfigure Winter's sad face, and through the flowry lands Of faire Engaddi, hony-sweating fountaines With manna, milk, and balm, new-broach the mountaines. 101
XV.
He saw how in that blest Day-bearing Night, The Heav'n-rebukèd shades made hast away; How bright a dawne of angels with new light Amaz'd the midnight world, and made a Day Of which the Morning knew not. Mad with spight He markt how the poore shepheards ran to pay Their simple tribute to the Babe, Whose birth Was the great businesse both of Heav'n and Earth.
XVI.
He saw a threefold Sun, with rich encrease Make proud the ruby portalls of the East. He saw the Temple sacred to sweet Peace, Adore her Prince's birth, flat on her brest. He saw the falling idolls, all confesse A comming Deity: He saw the nest Of pois'nous and unnaturall loves, Earth-nurst, Toucht with the World's true antidote, to burst.
XVII.
He saw Heav'n blossome with a new-borne light, On which, as on a glorious stranger gaz'd The golden eyes of Night: whose beame made bright The way to Beth'lem and as boldly blaz'd, (Nor askt leave of the sun) by day as night. By whom (as Heav'ns illustrious hand-maid) rais'd, Three kings (or what is more) three wise men went Westward to find the World's true orient. 102
XVIII.
Strucke with these great concurrences of things, Symptomes so deadly unto Death and him; Faine would he have forgot what fatall strings Eternally bind each rebellious limbe. He shooke himselfe, and spread his spatious wings: Which like two bosom'd sailes, embrace the dimme Aire, with a dismall shade; but all in vaine: Of sturdy adamant is his strong chaine.
XIX.
While thus Heav'n's highest counsails, by the low Footsteps of their effects, he trac'd too well, He tost his troubled eyes: embers that glow Now with new rage, and wax too hot for Hell: With his foule clawes he fenc'd his furrowed brow, And gave a gastly shreeke, whose horrid yell Ran trembling through the hollow vaults of Night, The while his twisted tayle he gnaw'd for spight.
XX.
Yet on the other side, faine would he start Above his feares, and thinke it cannot be. He studies Scripture, strives to sound the heart And feele the pulse of every prophecy; He knows (but knowes not how, or by what art) The Heav'n-expecting ages hope to see A mighty Babe, Whose pure, unspotted birth From a chast virgin wombe, should blesse the Earth. 103
XXI.
But these vast mysteries his senses smother, And reason (for what's faith to him?) devoure. How she that is a maid should prove a mother, Yet keepe inviolate her virgin flower; How God's eternall Sonne should be Man's brother, Poseth his proudest intellectuall power. How a pure Spirit should incarnate bee, And Life it selfe weare Death's fraile livery.
XXII.
That the great angell-blinding Light should shrinke His blaze, to shine in a poore shepherd's eye: That the unmeasur'd God so low should sinke, As pris'ner in a few poore rags to lye: That from His mother's brest He milke should drinke, Who feeds with nectar Heav'n's faire family: That a vile manger His low bed should prove, Who in a throne of stars thunders above.
XXIII.
That He Whom the sun serves, should faintly peepe Through clouds of infant flesh: that He the old Eternall Word should be a child, and weepe: That He Who made the fire, should feare the cold: That Heav'n's high Majesty His court should keepe In a clay-cottage, by each blast control'd: That Glorie's Self should serve our griefs and feares, And free Eternity, submit to yeares. 104
XXIV.
And further, that the Lawe's eternall Giver Should bleed in His Owne Lawe's obedience: And to the circumcising knife deliver Himselfe, the forfet of His slave's offence: That the unblemisht Lambe, blessèd for ever, Should take the marke of sin, and paine of sence. These are the knotty riddles, whose darke doubt Intangles his lost thoughts, past getting out.
XXV.
While new thoughts boyl'd in his enragèd brest, His gloomy bosome's darkest character Was in his shady forehead seen exprest: The forehead's shade in Griefe's expression there, Is what in signe of joy among the blest The face's lightning, or a smile is here. Those stings of care that his strong heart opprest, A desperate, Oh mee! drew from his deepe brest.
XXVI.
Oh mee! (thus bellow'd he) Oh mee! what great Portents before mine eyes their powers advance? And serves my purer sight, onely to beat Downe my proud thought, and leave it in a trance? Frowne I: and can great Nature keep her seat? And the gay starrs lead on their golden dance? Can His attempts above still prosp'rous be, Auspicious still, in spight of Hell and me? 105
XXVII.
Hee has my Heaven (what would He more?) whose bright And radiant scepter this bold hand should beare: And for the never-fading fields of light, My faire inheritance, He confines me here To this darke house of shades, horrour and night, To draw a long-liv'd death, where all my cheere Is the solemnity my sorrow weares, That mankind's torment waits upon my teares.
XXVIII.
Darke, dusky Man, He needs would single forth, To make the partner of His Owne pure ray: And should we powers of Heav'n, spirits of worth, Bow our bright heads before a king of clay? It shall not be, said I, and clombe the North, Where never wing of angell yet made way: What though I mist my blow? yet I strooke high, And to dare something, is some victory.
XXIX.
Is He not satisfied? meanes He to wrest Hell from me too, and sack my territories? Vile humane nature means He not t' invest (O my despight!) with His divinest glories? And rising with rich spoiles upon His brest With His faire triumphs fill all future stories? Must the bright armes of Heav'n, rebuke these eyes? Mocke me, and dazle my darke mysteries? 106
XXX.
Art thou not Lucifer? he to whom the droves Of stars that gild the Morne, in charge were given? The nimblest of the lightning-wingèd loves, The fairest, and the first-borne smile of Heav'n? Looke in what pompe the mistrisse planet moves Rev'rently circled by the lesser seaven: Such, and so rich, the flames that from thine eyes, Opprest the common-people of the skyes.
XXXI.
Ah wretch! what bootes thee to cast back thy eyes, Where dawning hope no beame of comfort showes? While the reflection of thy forepast joyes, Renders thee double to thy present woes: Rather make up to thy new miseries, And meet the mischiefe that upon thee growes. If Hell must mourne, Heav'n sure shall sympathize, What force cannot effect, fraud shall devise.
XXXII.
And yet whose force feare I? have I so lost My selfe? my strength too with my innocence? Come try who dares, Heav'n, Earth, what ere doth boast A borrowed being, make thy bold defence. Come thy Creator too: What though it cost Me yet a second fall? wee'd try our strengths: Heav'n saw us struggle once; as brave a fight Earth now should see, and tremble at the sight. 107
XXXIII.
Thus spoke th' impatient prince, and made a pause: His foule hags rais'd their heads, and clapt their hands, And all the powers of Hell in full applause Flourisht their snakes, and tost their flaming brands. We (said the horrid sisters) wait thy lawes, Th' obsequious handmaids of thy high commands: Be it thy part, Hell's mighty lord, to lay On us thy dread command, our's to obey.
XXXIV.
What thy Alecto, what these hands can doe, Thou mad'st bold proofe upon the brow of Heav'n, Nor should'st thou bate in pride, because that now To these thy sooty kingdomes thou art driven. Let Heav'n's Lord chide above lowder than thou In language of His thunder, thou art even With Him below: here thou art lord alone, Boundlesse and absolute: Hell is thine owne.
XXXV.
If usuall wit, and strength will doe no good, Vertues of stones, nor herbes: use stronger charmes, Anger and love, best hookes of humane blood. If all faile, wee'l put on our proudest armes, And pouring on Heav'n's face the Sea's huge flood Quench His curl'd fires: wee'l wake with our alarmes Ruine, where e're she sleepes at Nature's feet: And crush the World till His wide corners meet. 108
XXXVI.
Reply'd the proud king, O my crowne's defence, Stay of my strong hopes, you of whose brave worth, The frighted stars tooke faint experience, When 'gainst the Thunder's mouth we marchèd forth: Still you are prodigall of your Love's expence In our great projects, both 'gainst Heav'n and Earth: I thanke you all, but one must single out: Cruelty, she alone shall cure my doubt.
XXXVII.
Fourth of the cursèd knot of hags is shee, Or rather all the other three in one; Hell's shop of slaughter shee do's oversee, And still assist the execution. But chiefly there do's she delight to be, Where Hell's capacious cauldron is set on: And while the black soules boile in their own gore, To hold them down, and looke that none seeth o're.
XXXVIII.
Thrice howl'd the caves of Night, and thrice the sound, Thundring upon the bankes of those black lakes, Rung through the hollow vaults of Hell profound: At last her listning eares the noise o're takes, She lifts her sooty lampes, and looking round, A gen'rall hisse from the whole tire of snakes Rebounding, through Hell's inmost cavernes came, In answer to her formidable name. 109
XXXIX.
'Mongst all the palaces in Hell's command, No one so mercilesse as this of her's. The adamantine doors, for ever stand Impenetrable, both to prai'rs and teares; The walls inexorable steele, no hand Of Time, or teeth of hungry Ruine feares. Their ugly ornaments are the bloody staines Of ragged limbs, torne sculls, and dasht-out braines.
XL.
There has the purple Vengeance a proud seat Whose ever-brandisht sword is sheath'd in blood: About her Hate, Wrath, Warre and Slaughter sweat; Bathing their hot limbs in life's pretious flood: There rude impetuous Rage do's storme and fret, And there as master of this murd'ring brood, scytheSwinging a huge sith stands impartiall Death: With endlesse businesse almost out of breath.
XLI.
For hangings and for curtaines, all along The walls (abominable ornaments!) Are tooles of wrath, anvills of torments hung; Fell executioners of foule intents, Nailes, hammers, hatchets sharpe, and halters strong, Swords, speares, with all the fatall instruments Of Sin and Death, twice dipt in the dire staines Of brothers' mutuall blood, and fathers' braines. 110
XLII.
The tables furnisht with a cursèd feast Which Harpyes, with leane Famine feed upon, Vnfill'd for ever. Here among the rest, Inhumane Erisicthon too makes one; Tantalus, Atreus, Progne, here are guests: Wolvish Lycaon here a place hath won. The cup they drinke in is Medusa's scull, Which mixt with gall and blood they quaffe brim-full.
XLIII.
The foule queen's most abhorrèd maids of honour, Medæa, Jezabell, many a meager witch, With Circe, Scylla, stand to wait upon her: But her best huswife's are the Parcæ, which Still worke for her, and have their wages from her: They prick a bleeding heart at every stitch. Her cruell cloathes of costly threds they weave, Which short-cut lives of murdred infants leave.
XLIV.
hearsedThe house is hers'd about with a black wood, Which nods with many a heavy-headed tree: Each flowers a pregnant poyson, try'd and good, Each herbe a plague. The wind's sighes timèd bee By a black fount, which weeps into a flood. Through the thick shades obscurely might you see Minotaures, Cyclopses, with a darke drove Of Dragons, Hydraes, Sphinxes, fill the grove.
Here Diomed's horses, Phereus' dogs appeare, With the fierce lyons of Therodamas. Busiris has his bloody altar here: Here Sylla his severest prison has: The Lestrigonians here their table reare: Here strong Procrustes plants his bed of brasse: Here cruell Scyron boasts his bloody rockes And hatefull Schinis his so fearèd oakes.
XLVI.
What ever schemes of blood, fantastick Frames Of death, Mezentius or Geryon drew; Phalaris, Ochus, Ezelinus: names Mighty in mischiefe; with dread Nero too; Here are they all, here all the swords or flames Assyrian tyrants or Egyptian knew. Such was the house, so furnisht was the hall, Whence the fourth Fury answer'd Pluto's call.
XLVII.
Scarce to this monster could the shady king The horrid summe of his intentions tell; But shee (swift as the momentary wing Of lightning, or the words he spoke) left Hell. She rose, and with her to our World did bring Pale proofe of her fell presence; th' aire too well With a chang'd countenance witnest the sight, And poore fowles intercepted in their flight. 112
XLVIII.
Heav'n saw her rise, and saw Hell in the sight: The fields' faire eyes saw her, and saw no more, But shut their flowry lids for ever: Night And Winter strow her way: yea, such a sore Is she to Nature, that a generall fright, An universal palsie spreading o're The face of things, from her dire eyes had run, Had not her thick snakes hid them from the sun.
XLIX.
Now had the Night's companion from her dew, Where all the busie day she close doth ly, With her soft wing wipt from the browes of men Day's sweat; and by a gentle tyranny And sweet oppression, kindly cheating them Of all their cares, tam'd the rebellious eye Of Sorrow, with a soft and downy hand, Sealing all brests in a Lethæan band.
L.
When the Erinnys her black pineons spread, And came to Bethlem, where the cruell king Had now retyr'd himselfe, and borrowed His brest a while from Care's unquiet sting; Such as at Thebes' dire feast she shew'd her head, Her sulphur-breathèd torches brandishing: Such to the frighted palace now she comes, And with soft feet searches the silent roomes. 113
LI.
By Herod___________________now was borne The scepter, which of old great David swaid; lineageWhose right by David's linage so long worne, Himselfe a stranger to, his owne had made; And from the head of Judah's house quite torne The crowne, for which upon their necks he laid A sad yoake, under which they sigh'd in vaine, And looking on their lost state sigh'd againe.
LII.
Vp, through the spatious pallace passèd she, To where the king's proudly-reposèd head (If any can be soft to Tyranny And selfe-tormenting sin) had a soft bed. She thinkes not fit, such, he her face should see, As it is seene in Hell, and seen with dread. To change her face's stile she doth devise, And in a pale ghost's shape to spare his eyes.
LIII.
Her selfe a while she layes aside, and makes Ready to personate a mortall part. Ioseph, the king's dead brother's shape, she takes: What he by nature was, is she by art. She comes to th' king, and with her cold hand slakes His spirits (the sparkes of life) and chills his heart, Life's forge; fain'd is her voice, and false too, be Her words: 'sleep'st thou, fond man? sleep'st thou?' said she. 114
LIV.
So sleeps a pilot, whose poore barke is prest With many a mercylesse o're-mastring wave; For whom (as dead) the wrathfull winds contest Which of them deep'st shall digge her watry grave. Why dost thou let thy brave soule lye supprest In death-like slumbers, while thy dangers crave A waking eye and hand? looke vp and see The Fates ripe, in their great conspiracy.
LV.
Know'st thou not how of th' Hebrewes' royall stemme (That old dry stocke) a despair'd branch is sprung: A most strange Babe! Who here conceal'd by them In a neglected stable lies, among Beasts and base straw: Already is the streame Quite turn'd: th' ingratefull rebells, this their young Master (with voyce free as the trumpe of Fame) Their new King, and thy Successour proclame.
LVI.
What busy motions, what wild engines stand On tiptoe in their giddy braynes! th' have fire Already in their bosomes, and their hand Already reaches at a sword; they hire Poysons to speed thee; yet through all the Land What one comes to reveale what they conspire? Goe now, make much of these; wage still their wars And bring home on thy brest, more thanklesse scarrs. 115
LVII.
Why did I spend my life, and spill my blood, That thy firme hand for ever might sustaine A well-pois'd scepter? does it now seeme good Thy brother's blood be spilt, life spent in vaine? 'Gainst thy owne sons and brothers thou hast stood In armes, when lesser cause was to complaine: And now crosse Fates a watch about thee keepe, Can'st thou be carelesse now? now can'st thou sleep?
LVIII.
Where art thou man? what cowardly mistake Of thy great selfe, hath stolne king Herod from thee? O call thy selfe home to thy self, wake, wake, And fence the hanging sword Heav'n throws upon thee. Redeeme a worthy wrath, rouse thee, and shake Thy selfe into a shape that may become thee. Be Herod, and thou shalt not misse from mee Immortall stings to thy great thoughts, and thee.
LIX.
So said, her richest snake, which to her wrist For a beseeming bracelet she had ty'd (A speciall worme it was as ever kist The foamy lips of Cerberus) she apply'd To the king's heart: the snake no sooner hist, But Vertue heard it, and away she hy'd: Dire flames diffuse themselves through every veine: This done, home to her Hell she hy'd amaine. 116
LX.
He wakes, and with him (ne're to sleepe) new feares: His sweat-bedewed bed hath now betraid him To a vast field of thornes; ten thousand speares All pointed in his heart seem'd to invade him: So mighty were th' amazing characters With which his feeling dreame had thus dismay'd him, He his owne fancy-framèd foes defies: In rage, My armes, give me my armes, he cryes.
LXI.
As when a pile of food-preparing fire, The breath of artificiall lungs embraves, The caldron-prison'd waters streight conspire And beat the hot brasse with rebellious waves; He murmurs, and rebukes their bold desire; Th' impatient liquor frets, and foames, and raves, Till his o're-flowing pride suppresse the flame Whence all his high spirits and hot courage came.
LXII.
So boyles the firèd Herod's blood-swolne brest, Not to be slak't but by a sea of blood: His faithlesse crowne he feeles loose on his crest, Which a false tyrant's head ne're firmely stood. The worme of jealous envy and unrest To which his gnaw'd heart is the growing food, Makes him, impatient of the lingring light, Hate the sweet peace of all-composing Night. 117
LXIII.
A thousand prophecies that talke strange things Had sowne of old these doubts in his deepe brest. And now of late came tributary kings, Bringing him nothing but new feares from th' East, More deepe suspicions, and more deadly stings, With which his feav'rous cares their cold increast. And now his dream (Hel's fireband) still more bright, Shew'd him his feares, and kill'd him with the sight.
LXIV.
No sooner therefore shall the Morning see (Night hangs yet heavy on the lids of Day) But all the counsellours must summon'd bee, To meet their troubled lord: without delay Heralds and messengers immediately Are sent about, who poasting every way To th' heads and officers of every band, Declare who sends, and what is his command.
LXV.
Why art thou troubled, Herod? what vaine feare Thy blood-revolving brest to rage doth move? Heaven's King, Who doffs Himselfe weak flesh to weare, Comes not to rule in wrath, but serve in love. Nor would He this thy fear'd crown from thee teare, But give thee a better with Himselfe above. Poor jealousie! why should He wish to prey Vpon thy crowne, Who gives His owne away? 118
LXVI.
Make to thy reason, man, and mock thy doubts, Looke how below thy feares their causes are; Thou art a souldier, Herod; send thy scouts, See how Hee's furnish't for so fear'd a warre? What armour does He weare? A few thin clouts. His trumpets? tender cries; His men to dare So much? rude shepheards: what His steeds? alas Poore beasts! a slow oxe and a simple asse.
Il fine del primo Libro.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
See our Essay for critical remarks on the original and Crashaw's
interpretation. These things may be recorded:
St. viii. line 6. '(His shop of flames) he fries himself.'
This verb 'fries,' like 'stick' and some others, had not in Elizabethan
times and later, that colloquial, and therefore in such
a context ludicrous, sound that it has to us. In Marlowe's
or Jonson's translation of Ovid's fifteenth elegy (book i.) the
two lines which originally ran thus,
'Lofty Lucretius shall live that hour That Nature shall dissolve this earthly bower,'
were afterwards altered by Jonson himself to,
'Then shall Lucretius' lofty numbers die, When earth and seas in fire and flame shall frie.'
In another way one of our most ludicrous-serious experiences
of printers' errors was in a paper contributed by us to an American
religious periodical. The subject was Affliction, and we
remarked that God still, as of old with the 'three children' (so-called)
permits His people to be put into the furnace of 'fiery
trials,' wherein He tries them whether they be ore or dross.
To our horror we found the t changed into f, and so read sensationally
'fries'—all the worse that some might think it the
author's own word.
St. xxviii. and xxx. The star Lucifer or Phosporos, to whom
'the droves of stars that guild the morn, in charge were given,'119
can never climb the North or reach the zenith, being conquered
by the effulgence of the sun of day. When did the fable of the
angel Lucifer, founded on an astronomical appearance, mingle
itself as it has done here, and grandly in Milton, and in the
popular mind generally, with the biblical history of Satan?
St. xxxvi. line 2. Turnbull perpetuates the misprint of
'whose' for 'my' from 1670.
St. li. line 3, 'linage' = 'lineage.' For once 1670 is correct
in reading 'linage' for the misprint 'image' of 1646 and 1648.
The original is literally as follows:
'Herod the liege of Augustus, a man now agèd, Then ruled over the royal courts of David: Not of the royal line ...'
St. lix. line 3, 'a special worm:' so Shakespeare (Ant. and
Cleopatra, v. 2), 'the pretty worm' and 'the worm.'
St. lx. Every one will be reminded of the tent-scene in
Richard III.
At end of this translation Peregrine Phillips adds 'cetera
desunt—heu! heu!'
Marino and Crashaw have left proper names in the poem unannotated.
They are mostly trite; but these may be noticed: st.
xlii. l. 4, Erisichton (see Ovid, Met. viii. 814 &c.); he offended
Ceres, and was by her punished with continual hunger, so that he
devoured his own limbs: line 5, Tantalus the fabled son of Zeus
and Pluto, whose doom in the 'lower world,' has been celebrated
from Homer (Od. xi. 582) onward: ib. Atreus, grandson of
Tantalus, immortalised in infamy with his brother Thyestes: ib.
Progne = Procne, wife of Tereus, who was metamorphosed into
a swallow (Apollod. iii. 14, 8): l. 6, Lycaon, like Tantalus, with
his sons changed by Zeus into wolves (Ovid; Paus. viii. 3, § 1):
st. xliii. line 2, Medea, most famous of the mythical sorcerers:
ib. Jezebel, 2 Kings ix. 10, 36: line 3, Circe, another mythical
sorceress: Scylla, daughter of Typho and rival of Circe, who
transformed her (Ovid, Met. xiv. 1-74); cf. Paradise Lost:
line 4, the Paræ = the Fates, ever spinning: st. xliv. lines 7-8,
all classic monsters: st. xlv. line 1, 'Diomed's horses' = the
fabled 'mares' fed on human flesh (Apollod. ii. 5, § 8): 'Phereus'
dogs,' or Fereus of mythical celebrity: line 2, Therodamas
or Theromedon, king of Scythia, who fed lions with human
blood (Ovid, Ibis 385, Pont. i. 2, 121): line 3, Busiris, associated
with Osiris of Egypt; but Herodotus denies that the Egyptians120
ever offered human sacrifices: line 4, Sylla = Sulla: line
5, Lestrigonians, ancient inhabitants of Sicily who fed on human
flesh (Ovid, Met. xiv. 233, &c.): line 6, Procrustes, i.e. the
Stretcher, being a surname of the famous robber Damastes
(Ovid, Met. vii. 438): line 7, Scyron, or Sciron (Ovid, Met. vii.
444-447), who threw his captives from the rocks: line 8, Schinis,
more accurately Sinis or Sinnis, a celebrated robber, his name
being connected with [Greek: σίνομαι], expressing the manner in which he
tore his victims to pieces by tying them to branches of two
trees, which he bent together and then let go (Ovid, Met. vii.
440); according to some he was surnamed Procrustes, but Marino
and Crashaw distinguish the two: st. xlvi. line 2, Mezentius, a
mythical king of the Etruscans (Virgil, Æneid, viii. 480, &c.);
he put men to death by tying them to a corpse: ib. Geryon, a
fabulous king of Hesperia (Apollod. ii. 5, § 10); under this
name the very reverend Dr. J.H. Newman has composed one
of his most remarkable poems: line 3, Phalaris, the tyrant of
Sicily, whose 'brazen bull' of torture gave point to Cicero's
words concerning him, as 'crudelissimus omnium tyrannorum'
(in Verr. iv. 33): ib. Ochus = Artaxerxes III. a merciless king
of Persia: ib. Ezelinus or Ezzelinus, another wicked tyrant.
With all the powres my poor heart hath1 Of humble loue and loyall faith, Thus lowe (my hidden life!) I bow to Thee Whom too much loue hath bow'd more low for me. Down, down, proud Sense! discourses dy!5 Keep close, my soul's inquiring ey! Not touch, nor tast, must look for more But each sitt still in his own dore.
Your ports are all superfluous here, Saue that which lets in Faith, the eare.10 Faith is my skill: Faith can beleiue As fast as Loue new lawes can giue. Faith is my force: Faith strength affords To keep pace with those powrfull words. And words more sure, more sweet then they,15 Loue could not think, Truth could not say.
O let Thy wretch find that releife Thou didst afford the faithful theife.122 Plead for me, Loue! alleage and show That Faith has farther here to goe20 thenAnd lesse to lean on: because than Though hidd as God, wounds with Thee man: Thomas might touch, none but might see At least the suffring side of Thee; And that too was Thy self which Thee did couer,25 But here eu'n that's hid too which hides the other.
Sweet, consider then, that I Though allow'd nor hand nor eye To reach at Thy lou'd face; nor can Tast Thee God, or touch Thee man,30 Both yet beleiue; and witnesse Thee My Lord too and my God, as lowd as he.
Help, Lord, my faith, my hope increase, And fill my portion in Thy peace: Giue loue for life; nor let my dayes35 Grow, but in new powres to Thy name and praise.
O dear memoriall of that Death Which liues still, and allowes vs breath! Rich, royall food! Bountyfull bread! Whose vse denyes vs to the dead;40 Whose vitall gust alone can giue The same leaue both to eat and liue; Liue euer bread of loues, and be My life, my soul, my surer-selfe to mee.
O soft self-wounding Pelican!45 Whose brest weepes balm for wounded man:123 Ah! this way bend Thy benign floud To a bleeding heart that gaspes for blood. That blood, whose least drops soueraign be To wash my worlds of sins from me.50
Come Loue! come Lord! and that long day For which I languish, come away. When this dry soul those eyes shall see, And drink the vnseal'd sourse of Thee: When Glory's sun, Faith's shades shall chase,55 And for Thy veil giue me Thy face. Amen.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The original title is 'A Hymne to our Saviour by the Faithfull
Receiver of the Sacrament.' As before in the title of 'The
Weeper' 'Sainte' is misspelled 'Sanite.'
Line 1 in 1648 reads 'power.' " 8, 'sitt still in his own dore.' " 9, 'ports' = openings or gates. So in Edinburgh the
'West-port' = a gate of the city in the old west wall.
Line 21, 'than' = 'then.' See our Phineas Fletcher, as
before.
Line 29, Turnbull leaves undetected the 1670 misprint of
'teach' for 'reach.'
Line 33, 1648 supplies 'my faith,' which in our text is inadvertently
dropped; 1670 continues the error, which of course
Turnbull repeated.
Line 36, 1670 edition reads 'Grow, but in new pow'rs to
name thy Praise.'
Lines 37-38 are inadvertently omitted in 1648 edition.
Our text, as will be seen, is arranged in stanzas of irregular
form. In 1648 edition it is one continuous poem thus printed:
—————————— —————————— —————————— —————————— G. 124
Rise, royall Sion! rise and sing Thy soul's kind shepheard, thy hart's King. Stretch all thy powres; call if you can Harpes of heaun to hands of man. This soueraign subject sitts aboue The best ambition of thy loue.
II.
Lo, the Bread of Life, this day's incitesTriumphant text, prouokes thy prayse: The liuing and life-giuing bread To the great twelue distributed; When Life, Himself, at point to dy Of loue, was His Own legacy.
III.
Come, Loue! and let vs work a song Lowd and pleasant, sweet and long; Let lippes and hearts lift high the noise Of so iust and solemn ioyes, Which on His white browes this bright day Shall hence for euer bear away.
Lo, the new law of a new Lord, With a new Lamb blesses the board: The agèd Pascha pleads not yeares But spyes Loue's dawn, and disappeares. Types yield to truthes; shades shrink away; And their Night dyes into our Day.
V.
But lest that dy too, we are bid Euer to doe what He once did: And by a mindfull, mystick breath That we may liue, reuiue His death; With a well-bles't bread and wine, Transsum'd and taught to turn diuine.
VI.
The Heaun-instructed house of Faith Here a holy dictate hath, That they but lend their form and face;— Themselues with reuerence leaue their place, Nature, and name, to be made good, By a nobler bread, more needfull blood.
VII.
Where Nature's lawes no leaue will giue, Bold Faith takes heart, and dares beleiue In different species: name not things, Himself to me my Saviovr brings;126 As meat in that, as drink in this, But still in both one Christ He is.
VIII.
The receiuing mouth here makes Nor wound nor breach in what he takes. Let one, or one thovsand be Here diuiders, single he Beares home no lesse, all they no more, Nor leaue they both lesse then before.
IX.
Though in it self this soverain Feast Be all the same to euery guest, Yet on the same (life-meaning) Bread The child of death eates himself dead: Nor is't Loue's fault, but Sin's dire skill That thus from Life can death distill.
X.
When the blest signes thou broke shalt see Hold but thy faith intire as He Who, howsoe're clad, cannot come Lesse then whole Christ in euery crumme. In broken formes a stable Faith Vntouch't her precious totall hath.
XI.
So the life-food of angells then Bow'd to the lowly mouths of men!127 The children's Bread, the Bridegroom's Wine; Not to be cast to dogges, or swine.
XII.
Lo, the full, finall Sacrifice On which all figures fix't their eyes: The ransom'd Isack, and his ramme; The manna, and the paschal lamb.
XIII.
Iesv Master, iust and true! Our food, and faithfull Shephard too! O by Thy self vouchsafe to keep, As with Thy selfe Thou feed'st Thy sheep.
XIV.
O let that loue which thus makes Thee Mix with our low mortality, Lift our lean soules, and sett vs vp Con-victors of Thine Own full cup, Coheirs of saints. That so all may Drink the same wine; and the same way: Nor change the pastvre, but the place, To feed of Thee, in Thine Own face. Amen.
NOTES.
In 1648, line 3 has 'thou' for 'you:' line 4 'and' for 'to:'
line 6, 'ambitious:' line 19, 'Lord' is misprinted 'Law:' line
39, 'names:' line 42 spells 'one' as 'on:' line 55, our text
(1652) misprints 'shall:' line 75, 1648 reads 'mean' for 'lean.'
G.
AN ODE WHICH WAS PRÆFIXED TO A LITTLE PRAYER-BOOK
GIVEN TO A YOUNG GENTLE-WOMAN.[44]
Lo here a little volume, but great book!1 (Feare it not, sweet, It is no hipocrit) Much larger in itselfe then in its looke. A nest of new-born sweets;5 Whose natiue fires disdaining To ly thus folded, and complaining Of these ignoble sheets, Affect more comly bands (Fair one) from thy kind hands;10 And confidently look To find the rest Of a rich binding in your brest. It is, in one choise handfull, Heauvn; and all 129Heaun's royall host; incampt thus small15 To proue that true, Schooles vse to tell, Ten thousand angels in one point can dwell. It is Loue's great artillery Which here contracts it self, and comes to ly19 Close-couch't in your white bosom; and from thence As from a snowy fortresse of defence, Against the ghostly foes to take your part, And fortify the hold of your chast heart. It is an armory of light; Let constant vse but keep it bright,25 You'l find it yields To holy hands and humble hearts More swords and sheilds Then sin hath snares, or Hell hath darts. Only be sure30 The hands be pure That hold these weapons; and the eyes, Those of turtles, chast and true; Wakefull and wise: Here is a freind shall fight for you;35 Hold but this book before your heart, Let prayer alone to play his part; But O the heart That studyes this high art Must be a sure house-keeper:40 And yet no sleeper. Dear soul, be strong! Mercy will come e're long130 And bring his bosome fraught with blessings, Flowers of neuer-fading graces45 To make immortall dressings For worthy soules, whose wise embraces Store vp themselues for Him, Who is alone The Spovse of virgins and the virgin's Son. But if the noble Bridegroom, when He come,50 Shall find the loytering heart from home; Leauing her chast aboad To gadde abroad Among the gay mates of the god of flyes; To take her pleasure, and to play55 And keep the deuill's holyday; To dance in th' sunshine of some smiling But beguiling Spheare of sweet and sugred lyes; Some slippery pair60 Of false, perhaps, as fair, Flattering but forswearing, eyes; Doubtlesse some other heart Will gett the start Meanwhile, and stepping in before65 Will take possession of that sacred store Of hidden sweets and holy ioyes; Words which are not heard with eares (Those tumultuous shops of noise) Effectuall whispers, whose still voice70 The soul it selfe more feeles then heares;131 Amorous languishments; luminous trances; Sights which are not seen with eyes; Spirituall and soul-peircing glances Whose pure and subtil lightning flyes75 Home to the heart, and setts the house on fire, And melts it down in sweet desire Yet doth not stay To ask the windows' leaue, to passe that way; Delicious deaths; soft exalations80 Of soul; dear and diuine annihilations; A thousand vnknown rites Of ioyes and rarefy'd delights; A hundred thousand goods, glories, and graces: And many a mystick thing85 Which the diuine embraces Of the deare Spouse of spirits, with them will bring, For which it is no shame That dull mortality must not know a name. Of all this hidden store90 Of blessings, and ten thousand more (If when He come He find the heart from home) Doubtlesse He will vnload Himself some other where,95 And poure abroad His pretious sweets On the fair soul whom first He meets. O fair, O fortunate! O riche! O dear!132 O happy and thrice-happy she100 Deare silver-breasted dove Who ere she be, Whose early loue With wingèd vowes Makes hast to meet her morning Spouse,105 And close with His immortall kisses. Happy indeed, who neuer misses To improue that pretious hour, And euery day Seize her sweet prey,110 All fresh and fragrant as He rises, Dropping with a baulmy showr, A delicious dew of spices; O let the blissfull heart hold it fast Her heaunly arm-full; she shall tast115 At once ten thousand paradises; She shall haue power To rifle and deflour The rich and roseall spring of those rare sweets Which with a swelling bosome there she meets:120 Boundles and infinite ___________ ___________ Bottomles treasures Of pure inebriating pleasures. Happy proof! she shal discouer What ioy, what blisse,125 How many heau'ns at once it is To haue her God become her Lover. 133
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The text of 1648 corresponds pretty closely, except in the
usual changes of orthography, with our text (1652): and 1670,
in like manner, follows that of 1646. 1646 edition furnishes
some noticeable variations:
Line 1, 'large' for 'great.' " 2-4 restored to their place here. Turnbull gives them
in a foot-note with this remark: 'So in the Paris edition of
1652. In all the others,
Fear it not, sweet, It is no hypocrite, Much larger in itself, than in its book.'
This is a mistake. The only edition that omits the lines (5-13)
besides the first (1646) and substitutes these three is that of 1670.
Lines 5-13 not in 1646 edition: first appeared in 1648 edition. " 14, 'choise' for 'rich.' " 15, 'hoasts' for 'host.' " 17, 'Ten thousand.' " 20. Our text (1652) here and elsewhere misreads 'their:'
silently corrected.
Line 22. Our text (1652) misprints 'their' for 'the:' as
'the' is the reading of 1648 and 1670, I have adopted it.
Line 24, 'the' for 'an.' " 27, 'hand' for 'hands.' " 37, 1648 edition has 'its' for 'his.' " 44. Our text (1652) oddly misprints 'besom' for 'bosome:'
the latter reading in 1646, 1648 and 1670 vindicates
itself. 1646 reads 'her' and 1648 'its' for 'his.'
Line 50, 'comes' for 'come.' " 51, 'wandring' for 'loytering.' " 54. The allusion is to one of the names of Satan, viz.
Baal-zebub = fly-god, dunghill-god.
Line 55, 'pleasures.' " 57. Our text (1652) inadvertently drops 'in.' 1648
has 'i' th'.'
Line 59. Our text misprints 'spheares:' 1648 adopts
'spheare' from 1646 edition. 1670 misprints 'spear.'
Line 62, 'forswearing:' a classic word. " 64, 'git' is the spelling. " 65. All the editions save our text (1652) omit 'meanwhile.' 134
Line 66, 'the' for 'that.' " 69, 'These' for 'Those,' by mistake. " 78, 'doth' for 'does' I have adopted here. " 83, 1648, by misprint, has 'O' for 'Of.' " 84, 'An hundred thousand loves and graces.' " 90. I have accepted 'hidden' before 'store' from 1646
edition.
Line 101. I have also adopted this characteristic line from
1646 edition. In all the others (except 1670) it is 'Selected
dove.'
Line 107, 'soule' for 'indeed.' " 114, 'that' for 'the.' " 121-122. In 1648 printed as supra, the lines probably
indicating a blank where the ms. was illegible. In our text
(1652) we have two lines, but no blank indicated.
Line 124, 'soul' for 'proof.' " 127, 'a' for 'her.' G.
Dear, Heaun-designèd sovl!1 Amongst the rest Of suters that beseige your maiden brest, Why may not I My fortune try5 And venture to speak one good word, Not for my self, alas! but for my dearer Lord? You have seen allready, in this lower sphear Of froth and bubbles, what to look for here:135 Say, gentle soul, what can you find10 But painted shapes, Peacocks and apes; Illustrious flyes, Guilded dunghills, glorious lyes; Goodly surmises15 And deep disguises, Oathes of water, words of wind? Trvth biddes me say 'tis time you cease to trust Your soul to any son of dust. 'Tis time you listen to a brauer loue,20 Which from aboue Calls you vp higher And biddes you come And choose your roome Among His own fair sonnes of fire;25 Where you among The golden throng That watches at His palace doores May passe along, And follow those fair starres of your's;30 Starrs much too fair and pure to wait vpon The false smiles of a sublunary sun. Sweet, let me prophesy that at last t'will proue Your wary loue Layes vp his purer and more pretious vowes,35 And meanes them for a farre more worthy Spovse136 Then this World of lyes can giue ye: Eu'n for Him with Whom nor cost, Nor loue, nor labour can be lost; Him Who neuer will deceiue ye.40 Let not my Lord, the mighty Louer Of soules, disdain that I discouer The hidden art Of His high stratagem to win your heart: It was His heaunly art45 Kindly to cross you In your mistaken loue; That, at the next remoue Thence, He might tosse you And strike your troubled heart50 Home to Himself; to hide it in His brest: The bright ambrosiall nest Of Loue, of life, and euerlasting rest. Happy mystake! That thus shall wake55 Your wise soul, neuer to be wonne Now with a loue below the sun. Your first choyce failes; O when you choose agen May it not be amongst the sonnes of men.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The first line, 'To Mistress M.R. Dear, Heav'n-designed soul,'
as in 1670, is not to be considered as an unrhymed line, but as137
the address or superscription, though so contrived as not to interfere
with the metre, but to make a five-foot line with the two
feet of the true first line of the poem. So Parolles prefaces
his verse with
'Dian, the count's a fool and full of gold.'
(All's Well that ends Well, iv. 3.)
and Longaville (Love's Labour Lost) prefixes to his sonnet,
'O sweet Maria, empress of my love.'
In fact, it is the 'Madam' of a poetical epistle brought into
metrical harmony with the verse. G.
DESCRIPTION OF A RELIGIOVS HOVSE
AND CONDITION OF LIFE.
No roofes of gold o're riotous tables shining1 Whole dayes and suns, deuour'd with endlesse dining. No sailes of Tyrian sylk, proud pauements sweeping, Nor iuory couches costlyer slumber keeping; False lights of flairing gemmes; tumultuous ioyes;5 Halls full of flattering men and frisking boyes; What'ere false showes of short and slippery good Mix the mad sons of men in mutuall blood. But walkes, and vnshorn woods; and soules, iust so Vnforc't and genuine; but not shady tho.10 Our lodgings hard and homely as our fare, That chast and cheap, as the few clothes we weare.138 Those, course and negligent, as the naturall lockes Of these loose groues; rough as th' vnpolish't rockes. A hasty portion of præscribèd sleep;15 Obedient slumbers, that can wake and weep, And sing, and sigh, and work, and sleep again; Still rowling a round spear of still-returning pain. Hands full of harty labours; paines that pay And prize themselves: doe much, that more they may,20 And work for work, not wages; let to-morrow's New drops, wash off the sweat of this daye's sorrows. A long and dayly-dying life, which breaths A respiration of reuiuing deaths. But neither are there those ignoble stings25 That nip the blossome of the World's best things, And lash Earth-labouring souls.... No cruell guard of diligent cares, that keep Crown'd woes awake, as things too wise for sleep: But reuerent discipline, and religious fear,30 And soft obedience, find sweet biding here; Silence, and sacred rest; peace, and pure ioyes; Kind loues keep house, ly close, make no noise; And room enough for monarchs, while none swells Beyond the kingdomes of contentfull cells.35 The self-remembring sovl sweetly recouers Her kindred with the starrs; not basely houers Below: but meditates her immortall way Home to the originall sourse of Light and intellectuall day 139
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In 1648 the heading is simply 'Description of a religious
house.' The original occurs in Barclay'sArgenis, book v.
These variations include one important correction of a long-standing
blunder:
Line 3, 1648 misprints 'weeping' for 'sweeping.' " 4, 'costly' for 'costlyer.' " 6, 'flatt'ring' for 'flattering.' " 19-20. Our text (1652), followed by 1670, strangely confuses
this couplet by printing,
'Hands full of harty labours; doe much, that more they may.'
Turnbull, as usual, unintelligently repeats the blunder. Even
in using the text of 1652 exceptionally, if only he found it confirmed
by 1670, there was no vigilance. The reading of 1648
puts all right.
Line 23. Our text misspells 'ding.' " 26. Misprinted 'bosome' in all the editions, and perpetuated
by Turnbull. Line 27 that follows is a break (unrhymed).
Line 33. 1648 misreads 'keep no noise.' G.
ON MR. GEORGE HERBERT'S BOOKE INTITULED
THE TEMPLE OF SACRED POEMS.
Know you, faire, on what you looke?1 Divinest love lyes in this booke: Expecting fier from your faire eyes, To kindle this his sacrifice.140 When your hands untie these strings,5 Think, yo' have an angell by the wings; One that gladly would be nigh, To waite upon each morning sigh; To flutter in the balmy aire Of your well-perfumèd praier;10 These white plumes of his hee'l lend you, Which every day to Heaven will send you: To take acquaintance of each spheare, And all your smooth-fac'd kindred there. And though Herbert's name doe owe15 These devotions; fairest, know While I thus lay them on the shrine Of your white hand, they are mine.
A HYMN TO THE NAME AND HONOR OF
THE ADMIRABLE SAINTE TERESA:
Fovndresse of the Reformation of the discalced Carmelites,
both men and women; a Woman for angelicall heigth of
speculation, for masculine courage of performance more
then a woman: who yet a child, out-ran maturity, and
durst plott a Martyrdome;
Misericordias Domini in Æternvm cantabo.
Le Vray portraict de Ste Terese, Fondatrice des Religieuses et
Religieux reformez de l'ordre de N. Dame du mont Carmel:
Decedee le 4e Octo. 1582. Canonisee le 12e Mars. 1622.[48]
The Hymne.
Loue, thou art absolute, sole lord1 Of life and death. To proue the word Wee'l now appeal to none of all Those thy old souldiers, great and tall, Ripe men of martyrdom, that could reach down5 With strong armes, their triumphant crown; Such as could with lusty breath Speak lowd into the face of death,142 Their great Lord's glorious name, to none Of those whose spatious bosomes spread a throne10 For Love at large to fill; spare blood and sweat: And see him take a priuate seat, Making his mansion in the mild And milky soul of a soft child. Scarse has she learn't to lisp the name15 Of martyr; yet she thinks it shame Life should so long play with that breath Which spent can buy so braue a death. She neuer vndertook to know What Death with Loue should haue to doe;20 Nor has she e're yet vnderstood Why to show loue, she should shed blood, Yet though she cannot tell you why She can love, and she can dy. Scarse has she blood enough to make25 A guilty sword blush for her sake; Yet has she a heart dares hope to proue How much lesse strong is Death then Love. Be Loue but there; let poor six yeares Be pos'd with the maturest feares30 Man trembles at, you straight shall find Love knowes no nonage, nor the mind; 'Tis love, not yeares or limbs that can Make the martyr, or the man. Love touch't her heart, and lo it beates35 High, and burnes with such braue heates;143 Such thirsts to dy, as dares drink vp A thousand cold deaths in one cup. Good reason: for she breathes all fire; Her white brest heaues with strong desire40 Of what she may with fruitles wishes Seek for amongst her mother's kisses. Since 'tis not to be had at home She'l trauail to a martyrdom. No home for hers confesses she45 But where she may a martyr be. MoorsShe'l to the Moores; and trade with them For this vnualued diadem: She'l offer them her dearest breath, With Christ's name in't, in change for death:50 She'l bargain with them; and will giue Them God; teach them how to liue In Him: or, if they this deny, For Him she'l teach them how to dy: So shall she leaue amongst them sown55 leastHer Lord's blood; or at lest her own. Farewel then, all the World! adieu! Teresa is no more for you. Farewell, all pleasures, sports, and ioyes (Never till now esteemèd toyes)60 Farewell, what ever deare may bee, Mother's armes or father's knee: Farewell house, and farewell home! She's for the Moores, and martyrdom.144 Sweet, not so fast! lo thy fair Spouse65 Whom thou seekst with so swift vowes; Calls thee back, and bidds thee come T'embrace a milder martyrdom. Blest powres forbid, thy tender life Should bleed vpon a barbarous knife:70 Or some base hand haue power to raze Thy brest's chast cabinet, and vncase A soul kept there so sweet: O no, Wise Heaun will neuer have it so. Thou art Love's victime; and must dy75 A death more mysticall and high: Into Loue's armes thou shalt let fall A still-suruiuing funerall. His is the dart must make the death Whose stroke shall tast thy hallow'd breath;80 A dart thrice dip't in that rich flame Which writes thy Spouse's radiant name Vpon the roof of Heau'n, where ay It shines; and with a soueraign ray Beates bright vpon the burning faces85 Of soules which in that Name's sweet graces Find euerlasting smiles: so rare, So spirituall, pure, and fair Must be th' immortall instrument Vpon whose choice point shall be sent90 A life so lou'd: and that there be Fitt executioners for thee,145 The fair'st and first-born sons of fire Blest seraphim, shall leaue their quire, And turn Loue's souldiers, vpon thee95 To exercise their archerie. O how oft shalt thou complain Of a sweet and subtle pain: Of intolerable ioyes: Of a death, in which who dyes100 Loues his death, and dyes again And would for euer so be slain. And liues, and dyes; and knowes not why To liue, but that he thus may neuer leaue to dy. How kindly will thy gentle heart105 Kisse the sweetly-killing dart! And close in his embraces keep Those delicious wounds, that weep Balsom to heal themselves with: thus When these thy deaths, so numerous110 Shall all at last dy into one, And melt thy soul's sweet mansion; Like a soft lump of incense, hasted By too hott a fire, and wasted Into perfuming clouds, so fast115 Shalt thou exhale to Heaun at last In a resoluing sigh, and then O what? Ask not the tongues of men; Angells cannot tell; suffice 146Thy selfe shall feel thine own full ioyes,120 And hold them fast for euer there. So soon as thou shalt first appear, The moon of maiden starrs, thy white Mistresse, attended by such bright Soules as thy shining self, shall come125 And in her first rankes make thee room; Where 'mongst her snowy family Immortall wellcomes wait for thee. O what delight, when reueal'd Life shall stand, And teach thy lipps Heaun with His hand;130 On which thou now maist to thy wishes Heap vp thy consecrated kisses. What ioyes shall seize thy soul, when she, Bending her blessed eyes on Thee, (Those second smiles of Heau'n,) shall dart135 Her mild rayes through Thy melting heart. Angels, thy old friends, there shall greet thee Glad at their own home now to meet thee. All thy good workes which went before And waited for thee, at the door,140 Shall own thee there; and all in one Weaue a constellation Of crowns, with which the King thy Spouse Shall build vp thy triumphant browes. All thy old woes shall now smile on thee,145 And thy paines sitt bright vpon thee, All thy sorrows here shall shine, All thy svfferings be diuine:147 Teares shall take comfort, and turn gemms And wrongs repent to diademms.150 Eu'n thy death shall liue; and new- Dresse the soul that erst he slew. Thy wounds shall blush to such bright scarres As keep account of the Lamb's warres. Those rare workes where thou shalt leaue writt155 Loue's noble history, with witt Taught thee by none but Him, while here They feed our soules, shall clothe thine there. Each heaunly word, by whose hid flame Our hard hearts shall strike fire, the same160 Shall flourish on thy browes, and be Both fire to vs and flame to thee; Whose light shall liue bright in thy face By glory, in our hearts by grace. Thou shalt look round about, and see165 Thousands of crown'd soules throng to be Themselues thy crown: sons of thy vowes The virgin-births with which thy soueraign Spouse Made fruitfull thy fair soul. Goe now And with them all about thee, bow170 To Him; put on (Hee'l say) put on (My rosy loue) that thy rich zone Sparkling with the sacred flames Of thousand soules, whose happy names Heau'n keep vpon thy score: (Thy bright175 Life brought them first to kisse the light,148 That kindled them to starrs,) and so Thou with the Lamb, thy Lord, shalt goe, And whereso'ere He setts His white Stepps, walk with Him those wayes of light,180 Which who in death would liue to see, Must learn in life to dy like thee.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The original edition (1646) has this title, 'In memory of
the Vertuous and Learned Lady Madre de Teresa, that sought
an early Martyrdome;' and so also in 1648. 1670 agrees with
1652; only the Latin line above the portrait and the French
verses are omitted.
The text of 1646 furnishes a number of variations corrective
in part of all the subsequent editions. These are recorded
below. 1648 agrees substantially with 1652: but a few unimportant
readings peculiar to it are also given in these Notes.
Various readings from 1646 edition.
Line 3, 'Wee need to goe to none of all.' " 4, 'stout' for 'great.' " 5, 'ripe and full growne.' " 8, 'unto' for 'into;' the latter preferable. " 10, 'Of those whose large breasts built a throne.' " 11-13,
'For Love their Lord, glorious and great Weel see Him take a private seat, And make ...'
I have hesitated whether this ought not to have been adopted
as our text; but it is a characteristic of Crashaw to introduce
abruptly long and short lines as in our text, and to carry a
thought or metaphor through a number of lines.
Line 15, 'had' for 'has,' and 'a' for 'the.' " 21, 'hath,' and so in 1648 edition. " 23, our text (1652) misprints 'enough:' I correct from 1648. " 25, 'had,' 1648 'hath.' " 27, 1648, 'hath.' 149" 31, 'wee' for 'you.'
Line 37, 'thirst' for 'thirsts,' and 'dare' for 'dares.' " 38 spells 'coled.' " 40, 'weake' for 'white;' the latter a favourite epithet
with Crashaw: 1648 'weake.'
Line 43, 1648 drops 'at' inadvertently. " 44 spells 'travell:' 1648 has 'for' instead of 'to.' " 45, 'her,' by misprint for 'her's.' " 47, 1648 has 'try' for 'trade.' " 49, 'Shee offers.' 57 spells 'adeiu.' " 61, this line is by oversight dropped from our text
(1652).
Line 70, spelled 'barborous' in our text, but I have adopted
'a' from 1646 and 1648.
Line 71, 'race' for 'raze;' a common contemporary spelling. " 77, 'hand' for 'armes.' " 93, 'The fairest, and the first borne Loves of fire.' " 94, 'Seraphims,' the usual misspelling of the plural
of seraph in our English Bible.
Line 104, 'To live, but that he still may dy.' " 106, our text (1652) misreads 'sweetly-kissing.' I
have adopted 'sweetly-killing' from 1646, 1648 and 1670.
Line 108, 1648 has 'thine' for 'his.' " 118, 'disolving.' " 123, our text (1652) inadvertently drops 'shalt,' and
misreads 'you' for 'thou.' I accept the text of 1646, 1648
and 1670.
Line 129, 'on.' " 130, 'shee' for 'reueal'd Life;' and in next line 'her'
for 'His.' Our text (1652) is preferable, as pointing to Christ
the Life, our Life. See under lines 11-13.
Line 133, 'joy.' " 146, 'set;' a common contemporary spelling. " 147, this line, dropped inadvertently from our text
(1652), is restored from 1646, 1648 and 1670.
Line 148, 'And' for 'All.' " 151, 'Even thy deaths.' " 152, 'Dresse the soul that late they slew.' " 167 misprints 'nowes;' corrected in 1648, but not in
1670. " 168 drops 'soueraign.' See under lines 11-13. " 175, 'keeps.' " 178, 'shall.' Cf. Rev. xiv. 5, as before. G.
AS HAUING BEEN WRITT WHEN THE AUTHOR WAS YET
AMONG THE PROTESTANTS.[49]
Thus haue I back again to thy bright name1 (Fair floud of holy fires!) transfus'd the flame I took from reading thee: 'tis to thy wrong I know, that in my weak and worthlesse song Thou here art sett to shine where thy full day5 Scarse dawnes. O pardon, if I dare to say Thine own dear bookes are guilty. For from thence I learn't to know that Loue is eloquence. That hopefull maxime gaue me hart to try If, what to other tongues is tun'd so high,10 Thy praise might not speak English too: forbid (By all thy mysteryes that here ly hidde) Forbid it, mighty Loue! let no fond hate Of names and wordes, so farr præiudicate. Souls are not Spaniards too: one freindly floud15 Of baptism blends them all into a blood. Christ's faith makes but one body of all soules, And Loue's that body's soul; no law controwlls151 Our free traffique for Heau'n; we may maintaine Peace, sure, with piety, though it come from Spain.20 What soul so e're, in any language, can Speak Heau'n like her's, is my soul's country-man. O 'tis not Spanish, but 'tis Heau'n she speaks! 'Tis Heau'n that lyes in ambush there, and breaks From thence into the wondring reader's brest;25 Who feels his warm heart hatcht into a nest Of little eagles and young loues, whose high Flights scorn the lazy dust, and things that dy. There are enow whose draughts (as deep as Hell) Drink vp all Spain in sack. Let my soul swell30 With the strong wine of Loue: let others swimme In puddles; we will pledge this seraphim Bowles full of richer blood then blush of grape Was euer guilty of. Change we our shape (My soul) some drink from men to beasts, O then35 Drink we till we proue more, not lesse, then men, And turn not beasts but angels. Let the King Me euer into these His cellars bring, Where flowes such wine as we can haue of none But Him Who trod the wine-presse all alone:40 Wine of youth, life, and the sweet deaths of Loue; Wine of immortall mixture; which can proue Its tincture from the rosy nectar; wine That can exalt weak earth; and so refine Our dust, that at one draught, Mortality45 May drink it self vp, and forget to dy. 152
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The title in 1646 'Steps' is 'An Apologie for the precedent
Hymne:' in 1648 the 'Flaming Heart' also precedes the 'Apologie,'
and its title, 'Hymnes on Teresa,' is added. 1670 has
'was yet a Protestant.'
Various readings from 1646.
Line 2, 'sea.' " 9, 'heavenly.' " 12, 'there' for 'here.' " 14, 'prejudicate.' " 16, 'one' for 'a:' 1670 has 'one.' " 18, 1648 spells 'comptrolls.' " 20, 'dwell in' for 'come from.' " 21, 'soever.' " 26, 'finds' for 'feels:' our text (1652) drops 'hatcht,'
which we have restored after 1646 and 1648; 1670 reads 'hatch,'
and Turnbull follows blindly.
Line 29, our text (1652) misreads 'now:' we restore 'enow,'
after the editions as in No. 9.
Line 34, our text misreads 'too' after 'we:' I omit it, as
in 1646 and 1670. 1648 has 'to.'
Line 41, 'Wine of youth's Life.' " 45, 'in' for 'at.' As the 'Apologie' refers only to
the Hymn preceding, and not to what follows, I have placed it
after the former, not (as in 1648) the latter, which would make
it refer to both. G.
THE FLAMING HEART:
VPON THE BOOK AND PICTURE OF THE SERAPHICAL SAINT TERESA,
AS SHE IS VSVALLY EXPRESSED WITH A SERAPHIM BISIDE HER.[50]
Wel-meaning readers! you that come as freinds1 And catch the pretious name this peice pretends;153 Make not too much hast to admire That fair-cheek't fallacy of fire. That is a seraphim, they say5 And this the great Teresia. Readers, be rul'd by me; and make Here a well-plact and wise mistake: You must transpose the picture quite, And spell it wrong to read it right;10 Read him for her, and her for him, And call the saint the seraphim. Painter, what didst thou vnderstand To put her dart into his hand? See, euen the yeares and size of him15 Showes this the mother seraphim. This is the mistresse flame; and duteous he Her happy fire-works here, comes down to see. O most poor-spirited of men! Had thy cold pencil kist her pen,20 Thou couldst not so vnkindly err To show vs this faint shade for her. Why, man, this speakes pure mortall frame; And mockes with female frost Loue's manly flame. One would suspect thou meant'st to paint25 Some weak, inferiour, woman-saint. But had thy pale-fac't purple took Fire from the burning cheeks of that bright booke, Thou wouldst on her haue heap't vp all 154That could be found seraphicall;30 What e're this youth of fire, weares fair, Rosy fingers, radiant hair, Glowing cheek, and glistering wings, All those fair and fragrant things But before all, that fiery dart35 Had fill'd the hand of this great heart. Doe then, as equall right requires, Since his the blushes be, and her's the fires, Resume and rectify thy rude design, Vndresse thy seraphim into mine;40 Redeem this iniury of thy art, Giue him the vail, giue her the dart. Giue him the vail; that he may couer The red cheeks of a riuall'd louer. Asham'd that our world now can show45 Nests of new seraphims here below. Giue her the dart, for it is she (Fair youth) shootes both thy shaft, and thee; Say, all ye wise and well-peirc't hearts That liue and dy amidst her darts,50 What is't your tastfull spirits doe proue In that rare life of her, and Loue? Say, and bear witnes. Sends she not A seraphim at euery shott? What magazins of immortall armes there shine!55 Heaun's great artillery in each loue-spun line. Giue then the dart to her who giues the flame; Giue him the veil, who giues the shame.155 But if it be the frequent fate Of worst faults to be fortunate;60 If all's præscription; and proud wrong Hearkens not to an humble song; For all the gallantry of him, Giue me the suffring seraphim. His be the brauery of all those bright things,65 The glowing cheekes, the glistering wings; The rosy hand, the radiant dart; Leaue her alone the flaming heart. Leaue her that; and thou shalt leaue her Not one loose shaft but Loue's whole quiver.70 For in Loue's feild was neuer found A nobler weapon then a wovnd. Loue's passiues are his actiu'st part, The wounded is the wounding heart. O heart! the æquall poise of Loue's both parts75 Bigge alike with wound and darts. Liue in these conquering leaues; liue all the same, And walk through all tongues one triumphant flame. Liue here, great heart; and loue and dy and kill; And bleed and wound; and yeild and conquer still.80 Let this immortall life wherere it comes Walk in a crowd of loues and martyrdomes. Let mystick deaths wait on't; and wise soules be The loue-slain wittnesses of this life of thee. O sweet incendiary! shew here thy art,85 Vpon this carcasse of a hard, cold hart;156 Let all thy scatter'd shafts of light, that play Among the leaues of thy larg books of day. Combin'd against this brest at once break in And take away from me my self and sin;90 This gratious robbery shall thy bounty be, And my best fortunes such fair spoiles of me. O thou vndanted daughter of desires! By all thy dowr of lights and fires; By all the eagle in thee, all the doue;95 By all thy liues and deaths of loue; By thy larg draughts of intellectuall day, And by thy thirsts of loue more large then they; By all thy brim-fill'd bowles of feirce desire, By thy last morning's draught of liquid fire;100 By the full kingdome of that finall kisse That seiz'd thy parting soul, and seal'd thee His; By all the Heau'n thou hast in Him (Fair sister of the seraphim!) By all of Him we have in thee;105 Leaue nothing of my self in me. Let me so read thy life, that I Vnto all life of mine may dy.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The title in 1648 omits the words 'the seraphical saint,' and
the text there lacks the last twenty-four lines.
Various readings from 1648.
Line 3, 'so' for 'too.' " 11, 'And' for 'read.' 157" 18, 'happier.'
Line 31 misreads 'But e're,' and 'were' for 'weares.' " 33, 'cheekes.' " 34 flagrantly misreads 'flagrant' for 'fragrant,' which
Turnbull as usual blindly repeats.
Line 48, 'shafts.' " 58 reads '... kindly tells the shame.' It is a characteristic
of Crashaw to vary his measures, else I should have
adopted this reading from 1648. The line is somewhat obscure
through the conceitful repetition of 'gives.' The sense is,
who, being pictured red, shows the blushing shamefacedness
of being outdone in his own seraphic nature by an earthly
saint. G.
Lord, when the sense of Thy sweet grace1 Sends vp my soul to seek Thy face, Thy blessed eyes breed such desire, I dy in Loue's delicious fire. O Loue, I am thy sacrifice!5 Be still triumphant, blessed eyes! Still shine on me, fair suns! that I Still may behold, though still I dy.
SECOND PART.
Though still I dy, I liue again; 158Still longing so to be still slain;10 So gainfull is such losse of breath, I dy euen in desire of death. Still liue in me this longing strife Of liuing death and dying life; For while Thou sweetly slayest me15 Dead to my selfe, I liue in Thee.
IN THE GLORIOVS ASSVMPTION OF OVR
BLESSED LADY.[52]
The Hymn.
Hark! she is call'd, the parting houre is come;1 Take thy farewell, poor World! Heaun must go home. A peice of heau'nly earth; purer and brighter Then the chast starres, whose choise lamps come to light her, Whil'st through the crystall orbes, clearer then they5 She climbes; and makes a farre more Milkey Way. She's call'd! Hark, how the dear immortall Doue Sighes to His syluer mate, 'Rise vp, my loue'! Rise vp, my fair, my spotlesse one! The Winter's past, the rain is gone;10 The Spring is come, the flowrs appear, No sweets, (save thou,) are wanting here.159 Come away, my loue! Come away, my doue! Cast off delay;15 The court of Heau'n is come To wait vpon thee home; Come, come away! The flowrs appear, Or quickly would, wert thou once here.20 The Spring is come, or if it stay 'Tis to keep time with thy delay. The rain is gone, except so much as we Detain in needfull teares to weep the want of thee. The Winter's past,25 Or if he make lesse hast, His answer is, why she does so, If Sommer come not, how can Winter goe? Come away, come away! The shrill winds chide, the waters weep thy stay;30 The fountains murmur, and each loftyest tree Bowes low'st his leauy top, to look for thee. Come away, my loue! Come away, my doue &c. She's call'd again. And will she goe?35 When Heau'n bidds come, who can say no? Heau'n calls her, and she must away, Heau'n will not, and she cannot stay. Goe then; goe, gloriovs on the golden wings 160Of the bright youth of Heau'n, that sings40 Vnder so sweet a burthen. Goe, Since thy dread Son will haue it so. And while thou goest, our song and we Will, as we may, reach after thee. Hail, holy queen of humble hearts!45 We in thy prayse will haue our parts. And though thy dearest lookes must now give light To none but the blest heavens, whose bright Beholders, lost in sweet delight, Feed for ever their faire sight50 With those divinest eyes, which we And our darke world noe more shall see; Though our poore eyes are parted soe, Yet shall our lipps never lett goe Thy gracious name, but to the last55 Our loving song shall hold it fast. Thy pretious name shall be Thy self to vs; and we With holy care will keep it by vs. We to the last60 Will hold it fast, And no Assvmption shall deny vs. All the sweetest showres Of our fairest flowres Will we strow vpon it.65 Though our sweets cannot make It sweeter, they can take Themselues new sweetness from it.161 Maria, men and angels sing, Maria, mother of our King.70 Live, rosy princesse, live! and may the bright Crown of a most incomparable light Embrace thy radiant browes. O may the best Of euerlasting ioyes bath thy white brest. Live, our chast loue, the holy mirth75 Of Heau'n; the humble pride of Earth. Liue, crown of woemen; queen of men; Liue, mistresse of our song. And when Our weak desires haue done their best, Sweet angels come, and sing the rest.80
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The heading in the Sancroft ms. is 'On the Assumption of
the Virgin Marie.' In line 5 it reads 'whil'st,' and so in line
43: line 7, 'againe th' immortal Dove:' line 12, our text (1652)
reads 'but;' we prefer 'saue' of 1648 and the ms.: line 30, our
text (1652) misprints 'heauy' for 'leavy' of 1648: line 42, the
ms. reads 'great:' line 47, 'give' for 'be;' adopted: line 53,
'eyes' for 'ioyes;' adopted: line 57, 'sacred:' line 76, 'bragg:'
line 77, 'praise of women, pride of men.'
By an unaccountable inadvertence, our text (1652) omits
lines 47-56. They are restored from 1648: they also appear
in 1670. Line 18 in 1648 reads 'Come, come away:' in 1670
it is 'Come away, come away;' but this edition strangely, but
characteristically, omits lines 19-34; and Turnbull, following
it, though pronounced by himself 'the most inaccurate of all'
(Preliminary Observations, p. xi. of his edition), has overlooked
them. Confer, for a quaint parallel with these lines
(19-34), our Joseph Fletcher. It may also be noted here that
Turnbull betrays his habitual use of his self-condemned text
of 1670 by misreading in line 12, 'No sweets since thou art
wanting here;' so converting the fine compliment into ungrammatical162
nonsense. Earlier also (line 3) he similarly reads,
after the same text, 'light' for 'earth.' So too in line 7 he
reads 'She's call'd again; hark! how th' immortall dove:' and
line 42, for the favourite 'dread' of our Poet the weaker 'great,'
as supra: and the following line 63 omits 'the:' line 64, 'our:'
line 65 reads 'We'll:' line 76, 'and' for 'the.' On lines 9-10,
cf. Song of Solomon, ii. 10-13. G.
Rise, then, immortall maid! Religion, rise!1 Put on thy self in thine own looks: t' our eyes Be what thy beauties, not our blots, have made thee; Such as (ere our dark sinnes to dust betray'd thee) Heav'n set thee down new drest; when thy bright birth5 Shot thee like lightning to th' astonisht Earth.163 From th' dawn of thy fair eyelids wipe away Dull mists and melancholy clouds: take Day And thine own beams about thee: bring the best Of whatsoe're perfum'd thy Eastern nest.10 Girt all thy glories to thee: then sit down, Open this book, fair Queen, and take thy crown. These learnèd leaves shall vindicate to thee Thy holyest, humblest, handmaid, Charitie; She'l dresse thee like thy self, set thee on high15 Where thou shalt reach all hearts, command each eye. Lo! where I see thy altars wake, and rise From the pale dust of that strange sacrifice Which they themselves were; each one putting on A majestie that may beseem thy throne.20 The holy youth of Heav'n, whose golden rings Girt round thy awfull altars; with bright wings Fanning thy fair locks, (which the World beleeves As much as sees) shall with these sacred leaves Trick their tall plumes, and in that garb shall go25 If not more glorious, more conspicuous tho. ————Be it enacted then, By the fair laws of thy firm-pointed pen, God's services no longer shall put on Pure sluttishnesse for pure religion:30 No longer shall our Churches' frighted stones Lie scatter'd like the burnt and martyr'd bones Of dead Devotion; nor faint marbles weep In their sad ruines; nor Religion keep164 A melancholy mansion in those cold35 Urns: Like God's sanctuaries they lookt of old; Now seem they Temples consecrate to none, Or to a new god, Desolation. No more the hypocrite shall th' upright be Because he's stiffe, and will confesse no knee:40 While others bend their knee, no more shalt thou, (Disdainfull dust and ashes!) bend thy brow; Nor on God's altar cast two scorching eyes, Bak't in hot scorn, for a burnt sacrifice: But (for a lambe) thy tame and tender heart,45 New struck by Love, still trembling on his dart; Or (for two turtle-doves) it shall suffice To bring a pair of meek and humble eyes. This shall from henceforth be the masculine theme Pulpits and pennes shall sweat in; to redeem50 Vertue to action, that life-feeding flame That keeps Religion warm: not swell a name Of Faith; a mountain-word, made up of aire, With those deare spoils that wont to dresse the fair And fruitfull Charitie's full breasts (of old),55 Turning her out to tremble in the cold. What can the poore hope from us, when we be Uncharitable ev'n to Charitie? Nor shall our zealous ones still have a fling At that most horrible and hornèd thing,60 Forsooth the Pope: by which black name they call The Turk, the devil, Furies, Hell and all,165 And something more. O he is Antichrist: Doubt this, and doubt (say they) that Christ is Christ: Why, 'tis a point of Faith. What e're it be,65 I'm sure it is no point of Charitie. In summe, no longer shall our people hope, To be a true Protestant's but to hate the Pope.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
I have taken the text of this poem as it originally appeared,
because in all the editions of the Poems wherein it is given
the last ten lines are omitted. Turnbull discovered this after
his text of the Poems was printed off, and so had to insert
them in a Postscript, wherein his genius for blundering describes
Shelford's volume as 'Five ... Poems.' These slight variations
may be recorded:
The title in all is 'On a Treatise of Charity.'
Line 12, 1648 has 'thy' for 'this.' " 16, ib. 'shall' for 'shalt.' " 17, all the editions 'off'rings' for 'altars.' " 30, ib. 'A' for the first 'pure.' " 36, our text misprints 'look' for 'look't.'
The poem is signed in Shelford's volume 'Rich. Crashaw,
Aul. Pemb. A.B.' It appeared in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 86-8),
1648 (pp. 101-2), 1670 (pp. 68-70). G.
Horror of Nature, Hell, and Death! When a deep groan from beneath Shall cry, We come, we come, and all The caues of Night answer one call.
V.
O that Book! whose leaues so bright Will sett the World in seuere light. O that Iudge! Whose hand, Whose eye None can indure; yet none can fly.
VI.
Ah then, poor soul, what wilt thou say? And to what patron chuse to pray? When starres themselues shall stagger; and The most firm foot no more then stand.
VII.
But Thou giu'st leaue (dread Lord!) that we Take shelter from Thy self, in Thee; And with the wings of Thine Own doue Fly to Thy scepter of soft loue.
VIII.
Dear, remember in that Day Who was the cause Thou cam'st this way. Thy sheep was stray'd; and Thou wouldst be Euen lost Thyself in seeking me. 168
IX.
Shall all that labour, all that cost Of loue, and eu'n that losse, be lost? And this lou'd soul, iudg'd worth no lesse Then all that way, and wearyness.
X.
Iust mercy then, Thy reckning be With my Price, and not with me; 'Twas pay'd at first with too much pain, To be pay'd twice; or once, in vain.
XI.
Mercy (my Iudge), mercy I cry With blushing cheek and bleeding ey: The conscious colors of my sin Are red without and pale within.
XII.
O let Thine Own soft bowells pay Thy self; and so discharge that day. If Sin can sigh, Loue can forgiue: O say the word, my soul shall liue.
XIII.
Those mercyes which Thy Mary found, Or who Thy crosse confes't and crown'd; Hope tells my heart, the same loues be Still aliue, and still for me. 169
XIV.
Though both my prayres and teares combine, Both worthlesse are; for they are mine. But Thou Thy bounteous Self still be; And show Thou art, by sauing me.
XV.
O when Thy last frown shall proclaim The flocks of goates to folds of flame, And all Thy lost sheep found shall be; Let 'Come ye blessed,' then call me.
XVI.
When the dread 'Ite' shall diuide Those limbs of death, from Thy left side; Let those life-speaking lipps command That I inheritt Thy right hand.
XVII.
O hear a suppliant heart, all crush't And crumbled into contrite dust. My hope, my fear! my Iudge, my Freind! Take charge of me, and of my end.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In st. vi. line 4, 'then' is = than, on which cf. our Phineas
Fletcher, as before: in st. xvi. line 1, 'Ite' = 'go ye' of the
Vulgate. 1670, st. ii. line 3, misprints 'these' for 'those:'
st. viii. line 3, 'And Thou would'st be,' i.e. didst will to be,—not
merely wished to be, but carried out Thy intent. G.
Lord, what is man? why should he coste Thee1 So dear? what had his ruin lost Thee? Lord, what is man? that thou hast ouerbought So much a thing of nought?
Loue is too kind, I see; and can5 Make but a simple merchant-man. 'Twas for such sorry merchandise, Bold painters haue putt out his eyes.
Alas, sweet Lord, what wer't to Thee If there were no such wormes as we?10 Heau'n ne're the lesse still Heau'n would be, Should mankind dwell In the deep Hell: What haue his woes to doe with Thee?
Let him goe weep15 O're his own wounds; Seraphims will not sleep Nor spheares let fall their faithfull rounds.171 Still would the youthfull spirits sing; And still Thy spatious palace ring;20 Still would those beauteous ministers of light Burn all as bright.
And bow their flaming heads before Thee: Still thrones and dominations would adore Thee; Still would those euer-wakefull sons of fire25 Keep warm Thy prayse Both nights and dayes, And teach Thy lou'd name to their noble lyre.
Let froward dust then doe it's kind; And giue it self for sport to the proud wind.30 Why should a peice of peeuish clay plead shares In the æternity of Thy old cares? Why shouldst Thou bow Thy awfull brest to see What mine own madnesses haue done with me?
Should not the king still keepe his throne35 Because some desperate fool's vndone? Or will the World's illustrious eyes Weep for euery worm that dyes.
Will the gallant sun E're the lesse glorious run?40 Will he hang down his golden head Or e're the sooner seek his Western bed, Because some foolish fly Growes wanton, and will dy?172
If I were lost in misery,45 What was it to Thy Heaun and Thee? What was it to Thy pretious blood If my foul heart call'd for a floud?
What if my faithlesse soul and I Would needs fall in50 With guilt and sin; What did the Lamb, that He should dy? What did the Lamb, that He should need, When the wolf sins, Himself to bleed?
If my base lust,55 Bargain'd with Death and well-beseeming dust: Why should the white Lamb's bosom write The purple name Of my sin's shame?60 Why should His vnstaind brest make good My blushes with His Own heart-blood?
O my Saviovr, make me see How dearly Thou hast payd for me, That lost again my life may proue,65 As then in death, so now in loue.
Hail, most high, most humble one!1 Aboue the world, below thy Son; Whose blush the moon beauteously marres And staines the timerous light of stares. He that made all things, had not done5 Till He had made Himself thy Son: The whole World's host would be thy guest And board Himself at thy rich brest. O boundles hospitality! The Feast of all things feeds on thee.10 The first Eue, mother of our Fall, E're she bore any one, slew all. Of her vnkind gift might we haue Th' inheritance of a hasty grave: Quick-burye'd in the wanton tomb15 Of one forbidden bitt; Had not a better frvit forbidden it. Had not thy healthfull womb174 The World's new eastern window bin, And giuen vs heau'n again, in giuing Him.20 Thine was the rosy dawn, that spring the Day Which renders all the starres she stole away. Let then the agèd World be wise, and all Proue nobly here vnnaturall; 'Tis gratitude to forgett that other25 And call the maiden Eue their mother. Yee redeem'd nations farr and near, Applaud your happy selues in her; (All you to whom this loue belongs) And keep't aliue with lasting songs.30 Let hearts and lippes speak lowd; and say Hail, door of life: and sourse of Day! The door was shut, the fountain seal'd; Yet Light was seen and Life reueal'd. The door was shut, yet let in day,35 The fountain seal'd, yet life found way. Glory to Thee, great virgin's Son In bosom of Thy Father's blisse. The same to Thee, sweet Spirit be done; As euer shall be, was, and is. Amen.40
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The heading in 1648 is simply 'The Virgin-Mother:' in
1670 it is 'The Hymn, O Gloriosa Domina.'
Line 2, 1648 reads 'the Son.' " 10, our text (1652) misprints 'the' for 'thee.' 175
Line 21, I follow here the text of 1648. 1652 reads
'Thine was the rosy dawn that sprung the day.'
and this is repeated in 1670 and, of course, by Turnbull.
Line 26, 1648 has 'your' for 'their.' " 35 is inadvertently dropped in our text (1652), though
the succeeding line (with which it rhymes) appears. I restore
it. 1670 also drops it; and so again Turnbull!
Lines 43-44, 'Because some foolish fly.' This metaphorical
allusion to the Fall and its results (as described by Milton and
others) is founded on the dying of various insects after begetting
their kind. G.
Hope, whose weak beeing ruin'd is1 Alike if it succeed or if it misse! Whom ill and good doth equally confound, And both the hornes of Fate's dilemma wound. Vain shadow; that dost vanish quite5 Both at full noon and perfect night! The starres haue not a possibility Of blessing thee. If thinges then from their end we happy call, 'Tis Hope is the most hopelesse thing of all.10
Hope, thou bold taster of delight! Who in stead of doing so, deuourst it quite.176 Thou bringst vs an estate, yet leau'st vs poor By clogging it with legacyes before. The ioyes which we intire should wed15 Come deflour'd-virgins to our bed. Good fortunes without gain imported be Such mighty custom's paid to thee For ioy, like wine kep't close, doth better tast; If it take air before, his spirits wast.20
Hope, Fortun's cheating lottery, Where for one prize, an hundred blankes there be. Fond anchor, Hope! who tak'st thine aime so farr That still or short or wide thine arrows are; Thinne empty cloud which th' ey deceiues25 With shapes that our own fancy giues. A cloud which gilt and painted now appeares But must drop presently in teares: When thy false beames o're reason's light preuail, By ignes fatvi for North starres we sail.30
Brother of Fear, more gaily clad, The merryer fool o' th' two, yet quite as mad. Sire of Repentance, child of fond desire That blow'st the chymick's and the louer's fire. Still leading them insensibly on35 With the strong witchcraft of 'anon.' By thee the one does changing nature, through Her endlesse labyrinths pursue;177 And th' other chases woman; while she goes More wayes and turnes then hunted Nature knowes.40
M. Cowley.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In all the editions save that of 1652 the respective portions
of Cowley and Crashaw are alternated as Question and Answer,
after a fashion of the day exemplified by Pembroke and Rudyard
and others. The heading in 1646, 1648 and 1670 accordingly
is 'On Hope, by way of Question and Answer, between
A. Cowley and R. Crashaw.'
Various readings from 1646 edition.
Line 3, 'and' for 'or,' and 'doth' for 'does.' " 7, 'Fates' for 'starres:' but as Fate occurs in line 4,
'starres' seems preferable.
Line 9, 'ends' for 'end.' " 18, 'so' for 'such.' " 19, 'doth' for 'does;' adopted. " 20, 'its' for 'his;' the personification warrants 'his.' " 25. All the other editions misread
'Thine empty cloud, the eye it selfe deceives.'
There can be no question that 'thinne' not 'thine' was the
poet's word. Cf. Crashaw's reference in his Answer. Turnbull
perpetuates the error.
Line 30, 'not' for 'for.' " 33, 'shield' in all the editions save 1652 by mistake. " 34, 'blows' and 'chymicks' for 'chymick;' the latter
adopted.
Line 37, as in line 19. " 38, spelled 'laborinths.'
In our Essay see critical remarks showing that Cowley and
Crashaw revised their respective portions. It seems to have
escaped notice that Cowley himself wrote another poem 'For
Hope,' as his former was 'Against Hope.' See it in our Study
of Crashaw's Life and Poetry. G.
Dear Hope! Earth's dowry, and Heaun's debt!1 The entity of things that are not yet. Subtlest, but surest beeing! thou by whom Our nothing has a definition! Substantiall shade! whose sweet allay5 Blends both the noones of Night and Day: Fates cannot find out a capacity Of hurting thee. From thee their lean dilemma, with blunt horn, Shrinkes, as the sick moon from the wholsome morn.10
Rich hope! Loue's legacy, vnder lock Of Faith! still spending, and still growing stock! Our crown-land lyes aboue, yet each meal brings A seemly portion for the sonnes of kings. Nor will the virgin ioyes we wed15 Come lesse vnbroken to our bed, Because that from the bridall cheek of Blisse Thou steal'st vs down a distant kisse. Hope's chast stealth harmes no more Ioye's maidenhead 179Then spousal rites preiudge the marriage bed.20
Fair hope! Our earlyer Heau'n! by thee Young Time is taster to Eternity: Thy generous wine with age growes strong, not sowre, Nor does it kill thy fruit, to smell thy flowre. Thy golden, growing head neuer hangs down25 Till in the lappe of Loue's full noone It falls; and dyes! O no, it melts away As doth the dawn into the Day: As lumpes of sugar loose themselues, and twine Their subtile essence with the soul of wine.30
Fortune? alas, aboue the World's low warres Hope walks; and kickes the curld heads of conspiring starres. Her keel cutts not the waues where these winds stirr, Fortune's whole lottery is one blank to her. Her shafts and shee, fly farre above,35 And forage in the fields of light and love. Sweet Hope! kind cheat! fair fallacy! by thee We are not where nor what we be, But what and where we would be. Thus art thou Our absent presence, and our future now.40
Faith's sister! nurse of fair desire! Fear's antidote! a wise and well-stay'd fire! Temper 'twixt chill Despair, and torrid Ioy! Queen regent in yonge Loue's minority! Though the vext chymick vainly chases45 His fugitiue gold through all her faces;180 Though Loue's more feirce, more fruitlesse, fires assay: One face more fugitiue then all they; True Hope's a glorious huntresse, and her chase, The God of Nature in the feilds of grace.50
NOTES.
Various readings from 1646 edition.
Line 2, 'things' for 'those;' adopted. But in Harleian
ms. 6917-18, it is 'those.' As this ms. supplies in poems onward
various excellent readings (e.g. 'Wishes'), it may be noted
that the Collection came from Lord Somers' Library of mss.,
and is accordingly authoritative.
Lines 5-6 read
'Faire cloud of fire, both shade and light Our life in death, our day in night.'
Our text (1652) seems finer and deeper, and to put the thought
with more concinnity.
Line 9, 'thinne' for 'lean.' " 10, 'like' for 'as.' " 11, 'Rich hope' dropped in all the other editions; but
as it is parallel with the 'dear Hope' and 'fair Hope' of the
preceding and succeeding stanzas, I have restored the words.
The line reads elsewhere,
'Thou art Love's Legacie under lock'
and the next,
'Of Faith: the steward of our growing stock.'
Line 13, 'crown-lands lye.' " 18, ' a distant kisse.' " 19, 'Hope's chaste kisse wrongs.'... " 24, 'Nor need wee.'... " 25, 'growing' is dropped. " 28, 'doth' for 'does;' adopted. " 30, 'subtile' for 'supple;' adopted: but in Harleian
ms. as before, it is 'supple.'
Lines 31-32. This couplet is oddly misprinted in all the other
editions,
'Fortune, alas, above the world's law warres, Hope kicks the curld'....
In 1670 there is a capital L to Law: but 'low' yields the evident181
meaning intended. Alas is = exclamation simply, not in
our present limitation of it to sorrow. See Epitaph of Herrys
onward, lines 49-52.
Line 33, 'our' for 'these;' the latter necessary in its relation
to 'low' not 'law,' the 'winds' being those of the 'warres'
of our world.
Line 34, 'And Fate's' for 'Fortune's.' " 35-36 dropped by our text (1652) inadvertently. " 36, 'or' for 'nor.' " 45, 'And' for 'Though.' " 47, 'huntresse' for 'hunter;' adopted. " 48, 'field' for 'fields.' " 49. I prefer 'huntresse' of 1646, 1648 and 1670, to
'hunter' of our text (1652). G.
Sacred Poetry.
II.
AIRELLES.
FROM UNPUBLISHED MSS.
NOTE.
See our Preface for explanation of the title. 'Airelles' to
these and other hitherto unprinted and unpublished Poems
from the Tanner mss. of Archbishop Sancroft: and our Essay
for the biographic interest of the poems on the Gunpowder-Plot.
I adhere strictly throughout to the orthography of the
ms. G.
MARY SEEKING JESUS WHEN LOST.
St. Luke ii. 41-52: Quærit Jesum suum Maria, &c. (v. 44.)
And is He gone, Whom these armes held but now? Their hope, their vow! Did euer greife and joy in one poore heart Soe soone change part? Hee's gone! The fair'st flower that e're bosome drest; My soule's sweet rest. My wombe's chast pride is gone, my heauen-borne boy; And where is joy? Hee's gone! and His lou'd steppes to wait vpon, My joy, is gone. My joyes, and Hee are gone; my greife, and I Alone must ly. Hee's gone! not leaving with me, till He come, One smile at home. Oh come then, bring Thy mother her lost joy: Oh come, sweet boy! Make hast, and come, or e're my greife and I Make hast, and dy. Peace, heart! The heauens are angry, all their spheres Rivall thy teares. I was mistaken, some faire sphere or other Was Thy blest mother.186 What but the fairest heauen, could owne the birth Of soe faire earth? Yet sure Thou did'st lodge heere: this wombe of mine Was once call'd Thine! Oft haue these armes Thy cradle envied, Beguil'd Thy bed. Oft to Thy easy eares hath this shrill tongue Trembled, and sung. Oft haue I wrapt Thy slumbers in soft aires, And stroak't Thy cares. Oft hath this hand those silken casements kept, While their sunnes slept. Oft haue my hungry kisses made Thine eyes Too early rise. Oft haue I spoild my kisses' daintiest diet, To spare Thy quiet. Oft from this breast to Thine, my loue-tost heart Hath leapt, to part. Oft my lost soule haue I bin glad to seeke On Thy soft cheeke. Oft haue these armes—alas!—show'd to these eyes Their now lost joyes. Dawne then to me, Thou morne of mine owne day, And lett heauen stay. Oh, would'st Thou heere still fixe Thy faire abode, My bosome God: What hinders, but my bosome still might be Thy heauen to Thee? 187
THE WOUNDS OF THE LORD JESUS.
IN CICATRICES DOMINI JESU.
Come braue soldjers, come and see Mighty Loue's artillery. This was the conquering dart; and loe There shines His quiuer, there His bow. These the passiue weapons are, That made great Loue, a man of warre. The quiver that He bore, did bide Soe neare, it prov'd His very side: In it there sate but one sole dart, A peircing one—His peirced heart. His weapons were nor steele, nor brasse, The weapon that He wore, He was. For bow His vnbent hand did serue, Well strung with many a broken nerue. Strange the quiver, bow and dart! A bloody side, and hand, and heart! But now the feild is wonne; and they (The dust of Warre cleane wip'd away) The weapons now of triumph be, That were before of Victorie. 188
I sing Impiety beyond a name: Who stiles it any thinge, knowes not the same. Dull, sluggish Ile! what more than lethargy Gripes thy cold limbes soe fast, thou canst not fly, And start from of[f] thy center? hath Heauen's loue Stuft thee soe full with blisse, thou can'st not moue? If soe, oh Neptune, may she farre be throwne By thy kind armes to a kind world vnknowne: Lett her surviue this day, once mock her fate, And shee's an island truely fortunate. Lett not my suppliant breath raise a rude storme To wrack my suite: O keepe Pitty warme In thy cold breast, and yearely on this day Mine eyes a tributary streame shall pay. Dos't thou not see an exhalation Belch'd from the sulph'ry lungs of Phlegeton? A living comet, whose pestiferous breath Adulterates the virgin aire? with death It laboures: stif'led Nature's in a swound, Ready to dropp into a chaos, round About horror's displai'd; It doth portend, That earth a shoure of stones to heauen shall send,189 And crack the christall globe; the milkly streame Shall in a siluer raine runne out, whose creame Shall choake the gaping earth, wch then shall fry In flames, & of a burning feuer dy. That wonders may in fashion be, not rare, A Winter's thunder with a groane shall scare, And rouze the sleepy ashes of the dead, Making them skip out of their dusty bed. Those twinckling eyes of heauen, wch eu'n now shin'd, Shall with one flash of lightning be struck blind. The sea shall change his youthfull greene, & slide Along the shore in a graue purple tide. It does præsage, that a great Prince shall climbe, And gett a starry throne before his time. To vsher in this shoale of prodigies, Thy infants, Æolus, will not suffice. Noe, noe, a giant wind, that will not spare To tosse poore men like dust into the aire; Justle downe mountaines: Kings courts shall be sent, Like bandied balles, into the firmament. Atlas shall be tript vpp, Ioue's gate shall feele The weighty rudenes of his boysterous heele. All this it threats, & more: Horror, that flies To th' empyræum of all miseries. Most tall hyperbole's cannot descry it; Mischeife, that scornes expression should come nigh it. All this it only threats: the meteor ly'd; It was exhal'd, a while it hung, & dy'd.190 Heauen kickt the monster downe: downe it was throwne, The fall of all things it præsag'd, its oune It quite forgott: the fearfull earth gaue way, And durst not touch it, heere it made noe stay. At last it stopt at Pluto's gloomy porch; He streightway lighted vpp his pitchy torch. Now to those toiling soules it giues its light, Wch had the happines to worke ith' night. They banne the blaze, & curse its curtesy, For lighting them vnto their misery. Till now Hell was imperfect; it did need Some rare choice torture; now 'tis Hell indeed. Then glutt thy dire lampe with the warmest blood, That runnes in violett pipes: none other food It can digest, then watch the wildfire well, Least it breake forth, & burne thy sooty cell.
Upon the Gunpowder-Treason.
Reach me a quill, pluckt from the flaming wing Of Pluto's Mercury, that I may sing Death to the life. My inke shall be the blood Of Cerberus, or Alecto's viperous brood. Vnmated malice! Oh vnpeer'd despight! Such as the sable pinions of the night Neuer durst hatch before: extracted see The very quintessence of villanie: I feare to name it; least that he, wch heares, Should haue his soule frighted beyond the spheres.191 Heauen was asham'd, to see our mother Earth Engender with the Night, & teeme a birth Soe foule, one minute's light had it but seene, The fresh face of the morne had blasted beene. Her rosy cheekes you should haue seene noe more Dy'd in vermilion blushes, as before: But in a vaile of clouds mufling her head A solitary life she would haue led. Affrighted Phœbus would haue lost his way, Giving his wanton palfreys leaue to play Olympick games in the' Olympian plaines, His trembling hands loosing the golden raines. The Queene of night gott the greene sicknes then, Sitting soe long at ease in her darke denne, Not daring to peepe forth, least that a stone Should beate her headlong from her jetty throne. Ioue's twinckling tapers, that doe light the world, Had beene puft out, and from their stations hurl'd: Æol kept in his wrangling sonnes, least they With this grand blast should haue bin blowne away. Amazèd Triton, with his shrill alarmes Bad sporting Neptune to pluck in his armes, And leaue embracing of the Isles, least hee Might be an actor in this Tragedy. Nor should wee need thy crispèd waues, for wee An Ocean could haue made t' haue drownèd thee. Torrents of salt teares from our eyes should runne, And raise a deluge, where the flaming sunne192 Should coole his fiery wheeles, & neuer sinke Soe low to giue his thirsty stallions drinke; Each soule in sighes had spent its dearest breath, As glad to waite vpon their King in death. Each wingèd chorister would swan-like sing A mournfull dirge to their deceasèd king. The painted meddowes would haue laught no more For ioye of their neate coates; but would haue tore Their shaggy locks, their flowry mantles turn'd Into dire sable weeds, & sate, & mourn'd. Each stone had streight a Niobe become, And wept amaine; then rear'd a costly tombe, T' entombe the lab'ring earth. For surely shee Had died just in her deliuery. But when Ioue's wingèd heralds this espied, Vpp to th' Almighty thunderer they hied, Relating this sad story. Streight way hee The monster crusht, maugre their midwiferie. And may such Pythons neuer liue to see The Light's faire face, but still abortiue bee.
Upon the Gunpowder-Treason.
Grow plumpe, leane Death; his Holinesse a feast Hath now præpar'd, & you maist be his guest. Come grimme Destruction, & in purple gore Dye seu'n times deeper than they were before Thy scarlet robes: for heere you must not share A com̄on banquett: noe, heere's princely fare.193 And least thy blood-shott eyes should lead aside This masse of cruelty, to be thy guide Three coleblack sisters, (whose long sutty haire, And greisly visages doe fright the aire; When Night beheld them, shame did almost turne Her sable cheekes into a blushing morne, To see some fowler than herselfe) these stand, Each holding forth to light the aery brand, Whose purer flames tremble to be soe nigh, And in fell hatred burning, angry dy. Sly, lurking treason is his bosome freind, Whom faint, & palefac't Feare doth still attend. These need noe invitation, onely thou Black dismall Horror, come; make perfect now Th' epitome of Hell: oh lett thy pinions Be a gloomy canopy to Pluto's minions. In this infernall Majesty close shrowd Your selues, you Stygian states; a pitchy clowd Shall hang the roome, & for your tapers bright, Sulphureous flames, snatch'd from æternall night. But rest, affrighted Muse; thy siluer wings May not row neerer to these dusky rings.[60] Cast back some amorous glances on the cates, That heere are dressing by the hasty Fates, Nay stopp thy clowdy eyes, it is not good, To drowne thy selfe in this pure pearly flood.194 But since they are for fire-workes, rather proue A phenix, & in chastest flames of loue Offer thy selfe a virgin sacrifice To quench the rage of hellish deities. But dares Destruction eate these candid breasts, The Muses, & the Graces sugred neasts? Dares hungry Death snatch of one cherry lipp? Or thirsty Treason offer once to sippe One dropp of this pure nectar, wch doth flow In azure channells warme through mounts of snow? The roses fresh, conseruèd from the rage, And cruell ravishing of frosty age, Feare is afraid to tast of: only this, He humbly crau'd to banquett on a kisse. Poore meagre horror streightwaies was amaz'd, And in the stead of feeding stood, & gaz'd. Their appetites were gone at th' uery sight; But yet theire eyes surfett with sweet delight. Only the Pope a stomack still could find; But yett they were not powder'd to his mind. Forth-with each god stept from his starry throne, And snatch'd away the banquett; euery one Convey'd his sweet delicious treasury To the close closet of æternity: Where they will safely keepe it, from the rude, And rugged touch of Pluto's multitude.
For the title-page of 'The Delights of the Muses' see Note
immediately before the original Preface, and our Preface on
the classification of the several poems. G.
Now Westward Sol had spent the richest beams1 Of Noon's high glory, when hard by the streams Of Tiber, on the sceane of a greene plat, Vnder protection of an oake, there sate A sweet Lute's-master; in whose gentle aires5 He lost the daye's heat, and his owne hot cares. Close in the covert of the leaves there stood A Nightingale, come from the neighbouring wood: (The sweet inhabitant of each glad tree, Their Muse, their Syren—harmlesse Syren she!)10 There stood she listning, and did entertaine The musick's soft report, and mold the same In her owne murmures, that what ever mood His curious fingers lent, her voyce made good:198 The man perceiv'd his rivall, and her art;15 Dispos'd to give the light-foot lady sport, Awakes his lute, and 'gainst the fight to come Informes it in a sweet præludium Of closer straines, and ere the warre begin, He lightly skirmishes on every string,20 Charg'd with a flying touch: and streightway she Carves out her dainty voyce as readily, Into a thousand sweet distinguish'd tones, And reckons up in soft divisions, Quicke volumes of wild notes; to let him know25 By that shrill taste, she could do something too. His nimble hands' instinct then taught each string A capring cheerefullnesse; and made them sing To their owne dance; now negligently rash He throwes his arme, and with a long drawne dash30 Blends all together; then distinctly tripps From this to that; then quicke returning skipps And snatches this again, and pauses there. Shee measures every measure, every where Meets art with art; sometimes as if in doubt35 Not perfect yet, and fearing to be out, Trayles her plaine ditty in one long-spun note, Through the sleeke passage of her open throat, A cleare unwrinckled song; then doth shee point it With tender accents, and severely joynt it40 By short diminutives, that being rear'd In controverting warbles evenly shar'd,199 With her sweet selfe shee wrangles. Hee amazed That from so small a channell should be rais'd The torrent of a voyce, whose melody45 Could melt into such sweet variety, Straines higher yet; that tickled with rare art The tatling strings (each breathing in his part) Most kindly doe fall out; the grumbling base In surly groans disdaines the treble's grace;50 The high-perch't treble chirps at this, and chides, Vntill his finger (Moderatour) hides And closes the sweet quarrell, rowsing all, Hoarce, shrill at once; as when the trumpets call Hot Mars to th' harvest of Death's field, and woo55 Men's hearts into their hands: this lesson too Shee gives him back, her supple brest thrills out Sharpe aires, and staggers in a warbling doubt Of dallying sweetnesse, hovers o're her skill, And folds in wav'd notes with a trembling bill60 The plyant series of her slippery song; Then starts shee suddenly into a throng Of short, thicke sobs, whose thundring volleyes float And roule themselves over her lubrick throat In panting murmurs, 'still'd out of her breast,65 That ever-bubling spring; the sugred nest Of her delicious soule, that there does lye Bathing in streames of liquid melodie; Musick's best seed-plot, whence in ripen'd aires 200A golden-headed harvest fairely reares70 His honey-dropping tops, plow'd by her breath, Which there reciprocally laboureth In that sweet soyle; it seemes a holy quire Founded to th' name of great Apollo's lyre, Whose silver-roofe rings with the sprightly notes75 Of sweet-lipp'd angel-imps, that swill their throats In creame of morning Helicon, and then Preferre soft-anthems to the eares of men, To woo them from their beds, still murmuring That men can sleepe while they their mattens sing:80 (Most divine service) whose so early lay, Prevents the eye-lidds of the blushing Day! There you might heare her kindle her soft voyce, In the close murmur of a sparkling noyse, And lay the ground-worke of her hopefull song,85 Still keeping in the forward streame, so long, Till a sweet whirle-wind (striving to get out) Heaves her soft bosome, wanders round about, And makes a pretty earthquake in her breast, Till the fledg'd notes at length forsake their nest,90 Fluttering in wanton shoales, and to the sky Wing'd with their owne wild ecchos, pratling fly. Shee opes the floodgate, and lets loose a tide Of streaming sweetnesse, which in state doth ride On the wav'd backe of every swelling straine,95 Rising and falling in a pompous traine. And while she thus discharges a shrill peale Of flashing aires; she qualifies their zeale201 With the coole epode of a graver noat, Thus high, thus low, as if her silver throat100 Would reach the brazen voyce of War's hoarce bird; Her little soule is ravisht: and so pour'd Into loose extasies, that she is plac't Above her selfe, Musick's Enthusiast. Shame now and anger mixt a double staine105 In the Musitian's face; yet once againe (Mistresse) I come; now reach a straine my lute Above her mocke, or be for ever mute; Or tune a song of victory to me, Or to thy selfe, sing thine own obsequie:110 So said, his hands sprightly as fire, he flings And with a quavering coynesse tasts the strings. The sweet-lip't sisters, musically frighted, Singing their feares, are fearefully delighted, Trembling as when Appolo's golden haires115 Are fan'd and frizled, in the wanton ayres Of his own breath: which marryed to his lyre Doth tune the spheares, and make Heaven's selfe looke higher. From this to that, from that to this he flyes. Feeles Musick's pulse in all her arteryes;120 Caught in a net which there Apollo spreads, His fingers struggle with the vocall threads. Following those little rills, he sinkes into A sea of Helicon; his hand does goe Those pathes of sweetnesse which with nectar drop,125 Softer than that which pants in Hebe's cup.202 The humourous strings expound his learnèd touch, By various glosses; now they seeme to grutch, And murmur in a buzzing dinne, then gingle In shrill-tongu'd accents: striving to be single.130 Every smooth turne, every delicious stroake Gives life to some new grace; thus doth h' invoke Sweetnesse by all her names; thus, bravely thus (Fraught with a fury so harmonious) The lute's light genius now does proudly rise,135 Heav'd on the surges of swolne rapsodyes, Whose flourish (meteor-like) doth curle the aire With flash of high-borne fancyes: here and there Dancing in lofty measures, and anon Creeps on the soft touch of a tender tone;140 Whose trembling murmurs melting in wild aires Runs to and fro, complaining his sweet cares, Because those pretious mysteryes that dwell In Musick's ravish't soule, he dares not tell, But whisper to the world: thus doe they vary145 Each string his note, as if they meant to carry Their Master's blest soule (snatcht out at his eares By a strong extasy) through all the spheares Of Musick's heaven; and seat it there on high In th' empyræum of pure harmony.150 At length (after so long, so loud a strife Of all the strings, still breathing the best life Of blest variety, attending on His fingers fairest revolution203 In many a sweet rise, many as sweet a fall)155 A full-mouth'd diapason swallowes all. This done, he lists what she would say to this, And she, (although her breath's late exercise Had dealt too roughly with her tender throate,) Yet summons all her sweet powers for a noate.160 Alas! in vaine! for while (sweet soule!) she tryes To measure all those wild diversities Of chatt'ring strings, by the small size of one Poore simple voyce, rais'd in a naturall tone; She failes, and failing grieves, and grieving dyes.165 She dyes: and leaves her life the Victor's prise, Falling upon his lute: O, fit to have (That liv'd so sweetly) dead, so sweet a grave!
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In our Essay we give the original Latin of this very remarkable
poem, that the student may see how Crashaw has
ennobled and transfigured Strada. Still further to show how
much we owe to our Poet, I print here (a) An anonymous translation,
which I discovered at the British Museum in Additional
mss. 19.268; never before printed. (b) Sir Francis Wortley's
translation from his 'Characters and Elegies' (1646). In the
former I have been obliged to leave one or two words unfilled-in
as illegible in the ms.
(a) The Musicke Warre between ye Fidler and the Nightingale.
Nowe had greate Sol ye middle orbe forsooke When as a fidler by a slidinge brooke With shadie bowers was guarded from ye aire And on his fidle plaid away his care. A nightingale hid in the leaues there stood The muse and harmeles Syren of the wood;204 Shee snatcht ye soundes and with an echo prates: What his hand playde her voice reiterates. Perceavinge how ye listninge bird did sit Ye fidler faine would make some sport with it, And neately stroke ye lute; then she began And through those notes ran glib division; Then with quicke hand he strikes ye tremblinge strings, Now with a skilfull negligence he flings His carelesse armes, then softly playes his part: Then shee begins and answers art with art, And now as if vncertaine how to singe Lengthens her notes and choisest art doth bringe, And interminglinge softer notes with shrill Daintily quavers through her trembling bill. Ye fidler wonders such melodious notes Shold haue proceedinges from soe slender throats; Tryes her againe, then loudly spoke ye.... Sometimes graue were ye tones, sometimes.... Then high, then lowe againe, yn sweetly iarrs Just like a trumpet callinge men to warrs. Thus did ye dainty Philomela doe And with hoarse voice sange an alarme too. The fidler blusht, and al in ragg [i.e. rage] he went About to breake his conquerèd instrument, But yet suspectinge lest ambitious shee Shold to the woods warble her victory; Strikes with inimitable blowes And flies through all the strings, now these, now those, Then tryes the notes, labours in each strayne And then expects if shee replyed agayne. The poore harmonious bird now almost dombe, But impatient, to be overcome Calls her sweet strength together all in vayne, For while shee thinkes to imitate each strayne In pure and natiue language, in this strife And dayntie musicke warre shee left her life, And yeldinge to the gladsome conquerour Falls in his fidle: a fit sepulchere. 205
(b) From 'Characters and Elegies.' By Francis Wortley, knight and
baronet: 1646 (p. 66). A Paraphrase upon the Verses which
Famianus Strada made of the Lutanist and Philomell in Contestation.
'When past the middle orbe the parching sun Had downward nearer our horizon run A Lutenist neare Tiber's streames had found Where the eccho did resound. Under a holme a shady bower he made To ease his cares, his severall phancies play'd; The philomell no sooner did the musicke hear But straight-wayes she drew neare. The harmlesse Syren, musicke of the wood, Hid in a leavy-bush, she hearking stood, She ruminates upon the ayers he plaid, And to him answers made. With her shirl voyce doth all his paines requite Lost not one note, but to his play sung right; Well pleased to heare her skil, and envy, he Tryes his variety. And dares her with his severall notes, runs throw Even all the strains his skill could reach unto: A thousand wayes he tryes: she answers all, And for new straynes dares call. He could not touch a string in such a straine, To which she warble and not sung it plaine; His fingers could not reach to greater choice, Then she did with her voyce. The Lutenist admired her narrow throat Could reach so high or fall to any note: But that which he did thinke in her most strange, She instantly could change. Or sharpe or flat, or meane, or quicke, or slow, What ere he plaid, she the like skill would show: And if he inward did his notes recall, She answer made to all. Th' inraged Lutenist, he blusht for shame That he could not this weake corrivall tame: If thou canst answer this I'le breake my lute, And yeild in the dispute.206 He said no more, but aimes at such a height Of skill, he thought she could not imitate: He shows the utmost cunning of his hand And all he could command. He tryes his strength, his active fingers flye To every string and stop, now low, now high, And higher yet he multiplyes his skill, Then doth his chorus fill. Then he expecting stands to try if she His envy late would yeeld the victory: She would not yeeld, but summons all her force Though tyrèd out and hoarse. She strives with various strings the lute's bast chest The spirit of man, one narrow throat and chest: Unequal matches, yet she's pleased that she Concludes victoriously. Her spirit was such she would not live to heare The Lutenist bestow on her a jeere, But broken-hearted fall upon the tombe She choose the sweet lute's wombe. The warbling lutes doe yet their triumphs tell (With mournfull accents) of the philomell, And have usurpt the title ever since, Of harmony the prince. The morall this, by emulation wee May much improve both art and industry, Though she deserve the name of Philomell Yet men must her excell.'
A third (anonymous) translation, with the Latin on the
opposite pages, I came on in Lansdowne mss. 3910, Pl. lxvi.
from which extracts will be found in our Essay.
In the Sancroft ms. the heading is 'Fidicinis et Philomelæ
Bellum Musicum. R. Cr.' It reads in line 79 'whence' for
'where;' adopted: line 125, 'pathes' for 'parts;' adopted:
other variations only orthographic, as is the case with the different
editions. I note these: in 1670, line 83 reads 'might
you:' line 99, 1646 misprints 'grave:' line 156, our text misprints
'full-mouth,' and so 1646; I adopt 'full-mouth'd' from
1670 and Sancroft ms. G.
All trees, all leavy groves confesse the Spring1 Their gentlest friend; then, then the lands begin To swell with forward pride, and feed desire To generation; Heaven's Almighty Sire Melts on the bosome of His love, and powres5 Himselfe into her lap in fruitfull showers. And by a soft insinuation, mixt With Earth's large masse, doth cherish and assist Her weake conceptions. No lone shade but rings With chatring birds' delicious murmurings;10 Then Venus' mild instinct (at set times) yields The herds to kindly meetings, then the fields (Quick with warme Zephyre's lively breath) lay forth Their pregnant bosomes in a fragrant birth. Each body's plump and jucy, all things full15 Of supple moisture: no coy twig but will208 Trust his beloved blossome to the sun (Growne lusty now): no vine so weake and young That feares the foule-mouth'd Auster or those stormes That the Southwest-wind hurries in his armes,20 But hasts her forward blossomes, and layes out Freely layes out her leaves: nor doe I doubt But when the world first out of chaos sprang So smil'd the dayes, and so the tenor ran Of their felicity. A Spring was there,25 An everlasting Spring, the jolly yeare Led round in his great circle; no wind's breath As then did smell of Winter or of Death. When Life's sweet light first shone on beasts, and when From their hard mother Earth, sprang hardy men,30 When beasts tooke up their lodging in the Wood, Starres in their higher chambers: never cou'd The tender growth of things endure the sence Of such a change, but that the Heav'ns indulgence Kindly supplyes sick Nature, and doth mold35 A sweetly-temper'd meane, nor hot nor cold.
I paint so ill, my peece had need to be1 Painted againe by some good poesie.209 I write so ill, my slender line is scarce So much as th' picture of a well-lim'd verse: Yet may the love I send be true, though I5 Send not true picture, nor true poesie. Both which away, I should not need to feare, My love, or feign'd or painted should appeare.
Goe now, with some dareing drugg,1 Baite thy disease, and while they tugg, Thou, to maintaine their cruell strife Spend the deare treasure of thy life: Goe take physicke, doat upon5 Some big-nam'd composition,— The oraculous doctors' mistick bills, Certain hard words made into pills; And what at length shalt get by these? 210Onely a costlyer disease.10 Goe poore man, thinke what shall bee Remedie 'gainst thy remedie. That which makes us have no need Of phisick, that's phisick indeed. Heark hither, Reader: would'st thou see15 Nature her own physician be? Would'st see a man all his own wealth, His own musick, his own health? A man, whose sober soul can tell How to wear her garments well?20 Her garments, that upon her sit, (As garments should do) close and fit? A well-clothed soul, that's not opprest Nor choked with what she should be drest? Whose soul's sheath'd in a crystall shrine,25 Through which all her bright features shine? As when a piece of wanton lawn, A thin aërial vail is drawn, O're Beauty's face; seeming to hide, More sweetly shows the blushing bride:30 A soul, whose intellectuall beams No mists do mask, no lazie steams? A happie soul, that all the way To Heav'n, hath a Summer's day? Would'st see a man whose well-warm'd bloud35 Bathes him in a genuine floud? A man, whose tunèd humours be A set of rarest harmonie?211 Would'st see blithe looks, fresh cheeks beguile Age? Would'st see December smile?40 Would'st see a nest of roses grow In a bed of reverend snow? Warm thoughts, free spirits, flattering Winter's self into a Spring? In summe, would'st see a man that can45 Live to be old, and still a man? Whose latest, and most leaden houres, Fall with soft wings, stuck with soft flowres; And when Life's sweet fable ends, His soul and bodie part like friends:50 No quarrels, murmures, no delay: A kisse, a sigh, and so away? This rare one, Reader, would'st thou see, Heark hither: and thyself be he.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
Besides the reprint of 1646 as supra, this poem appeared in
1648 (pp. 8, 9), 1652 (pp. 126-8), where it is entitled 'Temperance.
Of the Cheap Physitian, vpon the Translation of Lessivs
(pp. 126-8):' and 1670 (pp. 108-9 and pp. 207-8, being inadvertently
printed twice). These variations are noticeable:
Line 1, in 1648 and 1652, 'Goe now and with....' " 2, in 1670, 'the' for 'thy;' and Turnbull, as usual,
repeats the error.
Line 3, in 1648 'pretious' for 'cruel:' so 1670 in 2d copy. " 9, ib. 'last' for 'length,' and 1670 'gaine' for 'get'
in 2d copy.
Lines 11, 12, this couplet is inadvertently dropped in 1648.
I adopt ''gainst' for 'against' from Sancroft ms. in line 12.
Line 15, ib. 'wilt' for 'wouldst.' 212" 18, 'physick' in 1646, 1648 and 1670 (1st copy); but
'musick' is assuredly the finer reading, as in Hygiasticon and
1670 (in 2d copy). Cf. lines 19, 20, onward, which show that
'music' was intended.
Line 25, in all the three editions 'a' for 'whose:' in 1670
(2d copy) 'A soul sheath'd....'
Line 34, in 1646 'hath' for 'rides in,' and so in 1670 (1st
copy): 'hath' seems the simpler and better.
Line 35, 1646 and 1670 misinsert 'thou' before 'see.' " 38, 'set' for 'seat' in the three editions (1670, 1st copy);
adopted.
Line 41, in 1648 'Would'st see nests of new roses grow:'
so 1670 (2d copy).
Line 46, 1646 and 1670 end here.
Leonard Lessius was a learned Jesuit, born 1st October 1554,
and died 15th January 1623-4. He was professor of theology in
the University of Louvaine. His 'Hygiasticon, seu vera ratio
valetudinis bonæ et vitæ' is still readable and quick. G.
The smiling Morne had newly wak't the Day,1 And tipt the mountaines with a tender ray: When on a hill (whose high imperious brow Lookes downe, and sees the humble Nile below213 Licke his proud feet, and haste into the seas5 Through the great mouth that's nam'd from Hercules) A band of men, rough as the armes they wore Look't round, first to the sea, then to the shore. The shore that shewed them, what the sea deny'd, Hope of a prey. There to the maine-land ty'd10 A ship they saw; no men she had, yet prest Appear'd with other lading, for her brest Deep in the groaning waters wallowed Vp to the third ring: o're the shore was spread Death's purple triumph; on the blushing ground15 Life's late forsaken houses all lay drown'd In their owne blood's deare deluge: some new dead; Some panting in their yet warme ruines bled, While their affrighted soules, now wing'd for flight Lent them the last flash of her glimmering light.20 Those yet fresh streames which crawlèd every where Shew'd that sterne Warre had newly bath'd him there. Nor did the face of this disaster show Markes of a fight alone, but feasting too: A miserable and a monstruous feast,25 Where hungry Warre had made himself a guest: And comming late had eat up guests and all, Who prov'd the feast to their owne funerall &c. 214
Love is lost, nor can his mother1 Her little fugitive discover: She seekes, she sighes, but no where spyes him; Love is lost: and thus shee cryes him. O yes! if any happy eye,5 This roaving wanton shall descry; Let the finder surely know Mine is the wagge; 'tis I that owe The wingèd wand'rer; and that none May thinke his labour vainely gone,10 The glad descryer shall not misse, To tast the nectar of a kisse From Venus lipps. But as for him That brings him to me, he shall swim In riper joyes: more shall be his15 (Venus assures him) than a kisse. But lest your eye discerning slide, These markes may be your judgement's guide;215 His skin as with a fiery blushing High-colour'd is; his eyes still flushing20 With nimble flames; and though his mind Be ne're so curst, his tongue is kind: For never were his words in ought Found the pure issue of his thought. The working bees' soft melting gold,25 That which their waxen mines enfold, Flow not so sweet as doe the tones Of his tun'd accents; but if once His anger kindle, presently It boyles out into cruelty,30 And fraud: he makes poor mortalls' hurts The objects of his cruell sports. With dainty curles his froward face Is crown'd about: But O what place, What farthest nooke of lowest Hell35 Feeles not the strength, the reaching spell Of his small hand? Yet not so small As 'tis powerfull therewithall. Though bare his skin, his mind he covers, And like a saucy bird he hovers40 With wanton wing, now here, now there, 'Bout men and women, nor will spare Till at length he perching rest, In the closet of their brest. His weapon is a little bow,45 Yet such a one as—Jove knows how216— Ne're suffred, yet his little arrow, Of Heaven's high'st arches to fall narrow. The gold that on his quiver smiles, Deceives men's feares with flattering wiles.50 But O—too well my wounds can tell— With bitter shafts 'tis sauc't too well. He is all cruell, cruell all, His torch imperious though but small Makes the sunne—of flames the sire—55 Worse than sun-burnt in his fire. Wheresoe're you chance to find him Ceaze him, bring him—but first bind him— Pitty not him, but feare thy selfe Though thou see the crafty elfe,60 Tell down his silver-drops unto thee: They'r counterfeit, and will undoe thee. With baited smiles if he display His fawning cheeks, looke not that way. If he offer sugred kisses,65 Start, and say, the serpent hisses. Draw him, drag him, though he pray Wooe, intreat, and crying say Prethee, sweet, now let me go, Here's my quiver, shafts and bow,70 I'le give thee all, take all; take heed Lest his kindnesse make thee bleed. What e're it be Loue offers, still presume That though it shines, 'tis fire and will consume. 217
VPON BISHOP ANDREWS' PICTURE BEFORE
HIS SERMONS.[67]
This reverend shadow cast that setting sun,1 Whose glorious course through our horrizon run, Left the dimme face of this dull hemispheare, All one great eye, all drown'd in one great teare. Whose faire, illustrious soule, led his free thought5 Through Learning's vniverse, and (vainly) sought Room for her spatious selfe, untill at length Shee found the way home, with an holy strength; Snatch't her self hence to Heaven: fill'd a bright place, 'Mongst those immortall fires, and on the face10 Of her great Maker fixt her flaming eye, There still to read true, pure divinity.218 And now that grave aspect hath deign'd to shrinke Into this lesse appearance: If you thinke 'Tis but a dead face, Art doth here bequeath:15 Looke on the following leaves, and see him breath.
Faithlesse and fond Mortality!1 Who will ever credit thee? Fond, and faithlesse thing! that thus, In our best hopes beguilest us. What a reckoning hast thou made,5 Of the hopes in him we laid! For life by volumes lengthenèd, A line or two to speake him dead. For the laurell in his verse, crapeThe sullen cypresse o're his herse10 For soe many hopèd yeares Of fruit, soe many fruitles teares:219 For a silver-crownèd head A durty pillow in Death's bed. For so deare, so deep a trust,15 Sad requitall, thus much dust! Now though the blow that snatch him hence, Stopt the mouth of Eloquence: Though shee be dumbe e're since his death, Not us'd to speake but in his breath;20 Leaving his death vngarnishèd Therefore, because hee is dead Yet if at least shee not denyes, The sad language of our eyes, Wee are contented: for then this25 Language none more fluent is. Nothing speakes our griefe so well As to speak nothing. Come then tell Thy mind in teares who e're thou be, That ow'st a name to misery.30 Eyes are vocall, teares have tongues, And there be words not made with lungs; Sententious showres: O let them fall, Their cadence is rhetoricall. Here's a theame will drinke th' expence,35 Of all thy watry eloquence. Weepe then! onely be exprest Thus much, 'he's dead:' and weep the rest.
A plant of noble stemme, forward and faire,1 As ever whisper'd to the morning aire, Thriv'd in these happie grounds; the Earth's just pride; Whose rising glories made such haste to hide His head in cloudes, as if in him alone5 Impatient Nature had taught motion To start from Time, and cheerfully to fly Before, and seize upon Maturity. Thus grew this gratious tree, in whose sweet shade The sunne himselfe oft wisht to sit, and made10 The morning Muses perch like birds, and sing Among his branches: yea, and vow'd to bring His owne delicious phœnix from the blest Arabia, there to build her virgin nest, To hatch her selfe in; 'mongst his leaves, the Day15 Fresh from the rosie East, rejoyc't to play;221 To them shee gave the first and fairest beame That waited on her birth: she gave to them The purest pearles, that wept her evening death; The balmy Zephirus got so sweet a breath20 By often kissing them. And now begun Glad Time to ripen Expectation: The timorous maiden-blossomes on each bough Peept forth from their first blushes; so that now A thousand ruddy hopes smil'd in each bud,25 And flatter'd every greedy eye that stood Fixt in delight, as if already there Those rare fruits dangled, whence the golden Yeare His crowne expected: when, (O Fate! O Time! That seldome lett'st a blushing youthfull prime30 Hide his hot beames in shade of silver age, So rare is hoary Vertue) the dire rage Of a mad storme these bloomy joyes all tore, Ravisht the maiden blossoms, and downe bore The trunke. Yet in this ground his pretious root35 Still lives, which when weake Time shall be pour'd out Into Eternity, and circular joyes Dance in an endlesse round, again shall rise The faire son of an ever-youthfull Spring, To be a shade for angels while they sing;40 Meane while who e're thou art that passest here, O doe thou water it with one kind teare. 222
VPON THE DEATH OF THE MOST DESIRED
MR. HERRYS.[70]
Death, what dost? O, hold thy blow,1 What thou dost thou dost not know. Death, thou must not here be cruell, This is Nature's choycest iewell: This is hee, in whose rare frame5 Nature labour'd for a name: And meant to leave his pretious feature The patterne of a perfect creature. Ioy of Goodnesse, love of Art, Vertue weares him next her heart.10 Him the Muses love to follow, Him they call their vice-Apollo. Apollo, golden though thou bee, Th' art not fairer than is hee, Nor more lovely lift'st thy head15 (Blushing) from thine Easterne bed. The glories of thy youth ne're knew Brighter hopes than his can shew.223 Why then should it e're be seen That his should fade, while thine is green?20 And wilt thou (O, cruell boast!) Put poore Nature to such cost? O, twill undoe our common mother, To be at charge of such another. What? thinke me to no other end25 Gracious heavens do use to send Earth her best perfection, But to vanish, and be gone? Therefore onely given to day To-morrow to be snatch't away?30 I've seen indeed the hopefull bud Of a ruddy rose that stood Blushing, to behold the ray Of the new-saluted Day: (His tender toppe not fully spread)35 The sweet dash of a shower new shead, Invited him, no more to hide Within himselfe the purple pride Of his forward flower; when lo, While he sweetly 'gan to show His swelling gloryes, Auster spide him,40 Cruell Auster thither hy'd him, And with the rush of one rude blast, Sham'd not, spitefully to wast All his leaves, so fresh, so sweet, 224And lay them trembling at his feet.45 I've seen the Morning's lovely ray Hover o're the new-borne Day, With rosie wings so richly bright, As if she scorn'd to thinke of Night; When a rugged storme, whose scowle50 Made heaven's radiant face looke foule Call'd for an untimely night, To blot the newly-blossom'd light. But were the rose's blush so rare, Were the Morning's smile so faire,55 As is he, nor cloud, nor wind, But would be courteous, would be kind. Spare him Death, ah! spare him then, Spare the sweetest among men: And let not Pitty, with her teares60 Keepe such distance from thine eares. But O, thou wilt not, can'st not spare, Haste hath never time to heare. Therefore if he needs must go, And the Fates will have it so;65 Softly may he be possest Of his monumentall rest. Safe, thou darke home of the dead, Safe, O hide his lovèd head: Keepe him close, close in thine armes,70 Seal'd vpp with a thousand charmes. For Pittie's sake, O, hide him quite From his mother Nature's sight;225 Lest for griefe his losse may move All her births abortive proue.75
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
See our Essay for notice of 'Mr. Herrys.' In the Sancroft
ms. the heading is 'An Elegie on Mr. Herris. R. Cr.' It offers
these variations: lines 1 and 2, 'doest:' line 18, 'his' for 'he;'
adopted: line 29, 'given' for 'give;' adopted: line 36, 'new' for
'now;' adopted from 1648: line 50, the ms. reads 'rugged' for
'ruddy;' adopted: line 58, 'ah' for 'O;' adopted: line 60,
'And let:' lines 70-71 added from the ms., where in the margin
is written 'not printed.' G.
If ever Pitty were acquainted1 With sterne Death; if e're he fainted, Or forgot the cruell vigour Of an adamantine rigour; Here, O, here we should have knowne it,5 Here, or no where, hee'd have showne it. For hee, whose pretious memory Bathes in teares of every eye; Hee, to whom our Sorrow brings All the streames of all her springs;10 Was so rich in grace, and nature, In all the gifts that blesse a creature;226 The fresh hopes of his lovely youth Flourish't in so faire a growth; So sweet the temple was, that shrin'd15 The sacred sweetnesse of his mind; That could the Fates know to relent, Could they know what mercy meant, Or had ever learnt to beare The soft tincture of a teare;20 Teares would now have flow'd so deepe, As might have taught Griefe how to weepe. Now all their steely operation Would quite have lost the cruell fashion. Sicknesse would have gladly been25 Sick himselfe to have sav'd him; And his feaver wish'd to prove, Burning onely in his love. Him when Wrath it selfe had seen, Wrath it selfe had lost his spleen.30 Grim Destruction here amaz'd, In stead of striking, would have gaz'd. Even the iron-pointed pen, That notes the tragick doomes of men, Wet with teares, 'still'd from the eyes35 Of the flinty Destinies, Would have learn't a softer style, And have been asham'd to spoyle His live's sweet story, by the hast 227Of a cruell stop, ill plac't.40 In the darke volume of our fate, Whence each lease of life hath date, Where in sad particulars The totall summe of man appeares, And the short clause of mortall breath,45 Bound in the period of Death: In all the booke if any where Such a tearme as this, 'Spare here,' Could been found, 'twould have been read, Writ in white letters o're his head:50 Or close unto his name annext, The faire glosse of a fairer text. In briefe, if any one were free Hee was that one, and onely hee. But he, alas! even hee is dead,55 And our hope's faire harvest spread In the dust. Pitty, now spend All the teares that Griefe can lend. Sad Mortality may hide In his ashes all her pride;60 With this inscription o're his head, 'All hope of never dying here is dead.'
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS
The Sancroft ms. furnishes these variations: line 1, 'was:'
line 26, 't' have:' line 34, 'quotes' for 'notes:' l. 42, 'lease' for
'leafe;' adopted: line 49 omits rightly the first 'have' and spells
'bin;' the former adopted: line 50, 'wrote:' line 62, 'is' for 'lyes;'
adopted: line 23, 'steely' = hard as steel, or, as we say, iron-hearted.
The Sancroft ms. writes the two poems as one. G.
Passenger, who e're thou art1 Stay a while, and let thy heart Take acquaintance of this stone, Before thou passest further on. This stone will tell thee, that beneath,5 Is entomb'd the crime of Death; The ripe endowments of whose mind Left his yeares so much behind, That numbring of his vertues' praise, Death lost the reckoning of his dayes;10 And believing what they told, Imagin'd him exceeding old. In him Perfection did set forth The strength of her united worth. Him his wisdome's pregnant growth15 Made so reverend, even in youth, That in the center of his brest (Sweet as is the phœnix' nest)229 Every reconcilèd Grace Had their generall meeting-place.20 In him Goodnesse joy'd to see Learning learne Humility. The splendor of his birth and blood Was but the glosse of his owne good. The flourish of his sober youth25 Was the pride of naked truth. In composure of his face, Liv'd a faire, but manly grace. His mouth was Rhetorick's best mold, His tongue the touchstone of her gold.30 What word so e're his breath kept warme, Was no word now but a charme: For all persuasive Graces thence Suck't their sweetest influence. His vertue that within had root,35 Could not chuse but shine without. And th' heart-bred lustre of his worth, At each corner peeping forth, Pointed him out in all his wayes, Circled round in his owne rayes:40 That to his sweetnesse, all men's eyes Were vow'd Love's flaming sacrifice. Him while fresh and fragrant Time Cherisht in his golden prime; E're Hebe's hand had overlaid45 His smooth cheekes with a downy shade;230 The rush of Death's unruly wave, Swept him off into his grave. Enough, now (if thou canst) passe on, For now (alas!) not in this stone50 (Passenger who e're thou art) Is he entomb'd, but in thy heart.
To these, whom Death again did wed,1 This grave's their second marriage-bed; For though the hand of Fate could force 'Twixt sovl and body, a diuorce, It could not sunder man and wife,5 'Cause they both liuèd but one life. Peace, good Reader, Doe not weep. Peace, the louers are asleep. They, sweet turtles, folded ly In the last knott that Loue could ty.10 And though they ly as they were dead, Their pillow stone, their sheetes of lead;231 (Pillow hard, and sheetes not warm) Loue made the bed; they'l take no harm; Let them sleep: let them sleep on,15 Till this stormy night be gone, And the æternall morrow dawn; Then the curtaines will be drawn And they wake into a light, Whose Day shall neuer sleepe in Night.20
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In the Sancroft ms. the heading is 'Epitaphium Conjugum
vnà mortuor. et sepultor. R. Cr.' It was reprinted in 1648
'Delights' (p. 26), where it is entitled as supra, and 1670 (p. 95).
Our text is that of 1648, which yields the five lines (11-14), and
which Ellis in his 'Specimens' (iii. 208, 1845) introduced from
a ms. copy, but as doubtful from not having appeared in any of
the editions; a mistake on his part, as the lines appear in 1648
and 1652. His note is, nevertheless, 'The lines included in
brackets are in no printed edition: they were found in a ms.
copy, and are perhaps not Crashaw's.' As usual, Turnbull
overlooked them. I add a few slight various readings from
1646.
Line 2, 'the.' " 5, 'sever.' " 6, 'Because they both liv'd but one life.' " 10, I accept 'that' in 1646 and Sancroft ms. as it is
confirmed by Harleian ms. 6917-18, as before.
Line 17, I adopt 'And' for 'Till' from 1648. " 19, 'waken with that Light,' and so Sancroft ms.:
1648 reads 'And they wake into that Light:' Harleian ms. as
before, 'And they waken with.'
Line 20, 'sleep' for 'dy,' which I adopt as agreeing with the
'wake,' and as being confirmed by Harleian ms. as before. G.232
DEATH'S LECTVRE AND THE FVNERAL OF
A YOVNG GENTLEMAN.[74]
Dear reliques of a dislodg'd sovl, whose lack1 Makes many a mourning paper put on black! O stay a while, ere thou draw in thy head And wind thy self vp close in thy cold bed. Stay but a little while, vntill I call5 A summon's worthy of thy funerall. Come then, Youth, Beavty, Blood! all ye soft powres, Whose sylken flatteryes swell a few fond howres Into a false æternity. Come man; Hyperbolizèd nothing! know thy span;10 Take thine own measure here, down, down, and bow Before thy self in thine idæa; thou Huge emptynes! contract thy bulke; and shrinke All thy wild circle to a point. O sink Lower and lower yet; till thy leane size15 Call Heaun to look on thee with narrow eyes.233 Lesser and lesser yet; till thou begin To show a face, fitt to confesse thy kin, Thy neighbourhood to Nothing! Proud lookes, and lofty eyliddes, here putt on20 Your selues in your vnfaign'd reflexion; Here, gallant ladyes! this vnpartiall glasse (Through all your painting) showes you your true face. These death-seal'd lippes are they dare giue the ly To the lowd boasts of poor Mortality;25 These curtain'd windows, this retirèd eye Outstares the liddes of larg-look't Tyranny. This posture is the braue one, this that lyes Thus low, stands vp (me thinkes) thus and defies The World. All-daring dust and ashes! only you30 Of all interpreters read Nature true.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
These various readings are worthy of record:
Line 7 in our text (1652) is misprinted as two lines, the first
ending with 'blood,' a repeated blunder of the Paris printer.
It reads also 'the' for 'ye' of 1646. I adopt the latter. I have
also cancelled 'and' before 'blood' as a misprint.
Line 8 in 1652 is misprinted 'svlken' for 'sylken.' " 12, ib. 'thy self,' and so in 1648 and 1670: 'bulke' from
1646 is preferable, and so adopted.
Line 15, 1646 has 'small' for 'lean,' which is inferior. " 16, our text (1652) misspells 'norrow.' " 19, in 1646 the readings here are,
'Thy neighbourhood to nothing I here put on Thy selfe in this unfeign'd reflection.'
1648 and our text as given. 'Nothing' is intended to rhyme
with 'kin' and 'begin,' and so to form a triplet. 234
Line 23, our text (1652), 1648 and 1670 read 'Though ye
be painted:' 1646 reads 'Through all your painting,' which is
much more powerful, and therefore adopted by us. It reminds
us (from line 22, 'gallant ladyes') of Hamlet's apostrophe to
the skull of poor Yorick.
Line 25, 1646 reads poorly,
'To the proud hopes of poor Mortality.'
" 26, in 1646 reads curiously, 'this selfe-prison'd eye.' G.
A Brooke, whose streame so great, so good,1 Was lov'd, was honour'd, as a flood: Whose bankes the Muses dwelt upon, More than their owne Helicon; Here at length, hath gladly found5 A quiet passage under ground; Meane while his lovèd bankes, now dry The Muses with their teares supply.
ON A FOULE MORNING, BEING THEN TO
TAKE A JOURNEY.[76]
Where art thou Sol, while thus the blind-fold Day1 Staggers out of the East, loses her way Stumbling on Night? Rouze thee illustrious youth, And let no dull mists choake thy Light's faire growth. Point here thy beames: O glance on yonder flocks,5 And make their fleeces golden as thy locks. Vnfold thy faire front, and there shall appeare Full glory, flaming in her owne free spheare. Gladnesse shall cloath the Earth, we will instile The face of things, an universall smile.10 Say to the sullen Morne, thou com'st to court her; And wilt command proud Zephirus to sport her With wanton gales: his balmy breath shall licke The tender drops which tremble on her cheeke; Which rarified, and in a gentle raine15 On those delicious bankes distill'd againe, Shall rise in a sweet Harvest, which discloses Two ever-blushing bed[s] of new-borne roses.236 Hee'l fan her bright locks, teaching them to flow, And friske in curl'd mæanders: hee will throw20 A fragrant breath suckt from the spicy nest O' th' pretious phœnix, warme upon her breast. Hee with a dainty and soft hand will trim And brush her azure mantle, which shall swim In silken volumes; wheresoe're shee'l tread,25 Bright clouds like golden fleeces shall be spread. Rise then (faire blew-ey'd maid!) rise and discover Thy silver brow, and meet thy golden lover. See how hee runs, with what a hasty flight, Into thy bosome, bath'd with liquid light.30 Fly, fly prophane fogs, farre hence fly away, Taint not the pure streames of the springing Day, With your dull influence; it is for you To sit and scoule upon Night's heavy brow, Not on the fresh cheekes of the virgin Morne,35 Where nought but smiles, and ruddy joyes are worne. Fly then, and doe not thinke with her to stay; Let it suffice, shee'l weare no maske to day.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In the Sancroft ms. this is headed 'An Invitation to faire
weather. In itinere adurgeretur matutinum cœlum tali carmine
invitabatur serenitas. R. Cr.' In line 12 the ms. reads 'smooth'
for 'proud' (Turnbull here, after 1670, as usual misreads 'demand'
for 'command'): line 18 corrects the misreading of all
the editions, which is 'To every blushing...:' line 23 reads
'soft and dainty:' line 36, 'is' for 'are:' other orthographic differences
only.
The opening lines of this poem seem to be adapted from remembrance
of the Friar's in Romeo and Juliet:
'The grey-eyed Morn smiles on the frowning Night . . . . . . And flecked Darkness like a drunkard reels From forth Day's path and Titan's burning wheels.' (ii. 3.)
Line 4, in Harleian ms. 6917-18 reads, as I have adopted,
'thy' for 'the.'
Line 5, ib. 'on yond faire.' " 7, ib. 'Unfold thy front and then....' " 9, instile is = instill, used in Latinate sense of drop
into or upon: Harleian ms., as before, is 'enstile.'
Line 14, Harleian ms., as before, 'thy' for 'her.' " 16, ib. 'these.' " 17-18, ib.
What succour can I hope my Muse shall send1 Whose drowsinesse hath wrong'd the Muses' friend? What hope, Aurora, to propitiate thee, Vnlesse the Muse sing my apologie? O in that morning of my shame! when I5 Lay folded up in Sleepe's captivity, How at the sight did'st thou draw back thine eyes, Into thy modest veyle? how didst thou rise238 Twice dy'd in thine owne blushes! and did'st run To draw the curtaines, and awake the sun!10 Who, rowzing his illustrious tresses, came, And seeing the loath'd object, hid for shame His head in thy faire bosome, and still hides Mee from his patronage; I pray, he chides: And pointing to dull Morpheus, bids me take15 My owne Apollo, try if I can make His Lethe be my Helicon: and see If Morpheus have a Muse to wait on mee. Hence 'tis, my humble fancie finds no wings, No nimble rapture starts to Heaven, and brings20 Enthusiasticke flames, such as can give Marrow to my plumpe genius, make it live Drest in the glorious madnesse of a Muse, Whose feet can walke the milky way, and chuse Her starry throne; whose holy heats can warme25 The grave, and hold up an exalted arme To lift me from my lazy vrne, to climbe Vpon the stoopèd shoulders of old Time, And trace Eternity—But all is dead, All these delicious hopes are buried30 In the deepe wrinckles of his angry brow, Where Mercy cannot find them: but O thou Bright lady of the Morne! pitty doth lye So warme in thy soft brest, it cannot dye. Have mercy then, and when he next shall rise35 O meet the angry God, invade his eyes,239 And stroake his radiant cheekes; one timely kisse Will kill his anger, and revive my blisse. So to the treasure of thy pearly deaw, Thrice will I pay three teares, to show how true40 My griefe is; so my wakefull lay shall knocke At th' orientall gates, and duly mocke The early larkes' shrill orizons, to be An anthem at the Daye's nativitie. And the same rosie-finger'd hand of thine,45 That shuts Night's dying eyes, shall open mine. But thou, faint God of Sleepe, forget that I Was ever known to be thy votary. No more my pillow shall thine altar be, Nor will I offer any more to thee50 My selfe a melting sacrifice; I'me borne Againe a fresh child of the buxome Morne, Heire of the sun's first beames. Why threat'st thou so? Why dost thou shake thy leaden scepter? goe, Bestow thy poppy upon wakefull Woe,55 Sicknesse, and Sorrow, whose pale lidds ne're know Thy downie finger; dwell upon their eyes, Shut in their teares: shut out their miseries.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In 1646, line 1, for 'shall' reads 'will:' ib. in Harleian ms.
as before, 'my' for 'the Muse;' which I adopt here, but not in
next line: line 9, ib. 'thy:' line 11, illustrious is = lustrous,
radiant: Harleian ms. as before, line 19, 'this my humble:'
line 20, 1646 misprints 'raptures:' line 27, 1670 has 'and240
climb:' line 28, 1646 has 'stooped' for 'stooping' of 1648; infinitely
superior, and therefore adopted: 1670 misprints 'stopped:'
the Sancroft ms. has 'stooping:' line 45, Harleian ms. as
before, 'thy altar.' Further: in the Sancroft ms. this poem
is headed 'Ad Auroram Somnolentiæ expiatio. R. Cr.,' and it
supplies these various readings: line 1, 'will:' line 7, 'call
back:' line 16, 'my' for 'mine;' line 20-21, 'winge' and
'bringe:' line 40, 'treasures:' other orthographic differences
only. See Essay, as in last poem. G.
Love, brave Vertue's younger brother,1 Erst hath made my heart a mother; Shee consults the conscious spheares To calculate her young son's yeares. Shee askes, if sad, or saving powers,5 Gave omen to his infant howers; Shee askes each starre that then stood by, If poore Love shall live or dy.
Ah, my heart, is that the way? Are these the beames that rule thy day?10 Thou know'st a face in whose each looke, Beauty layes ope Love's fortune-booke; On whose faire revolutions wait The obsequious motions of man's fate:241 Ah, my heart, her eyes, and shee,15 Have taught thee new astrologie. How e're Love's native houres were set, What ever starry synod met, 'Tis in the mercy of her eye, If poore Love shall live or dye.20
If those sharpe rayes putting on Points of death, bid Love be gon: (Though the Heavens in counsell sate To crowne an uncontroulèd fate, Though their best aspects twin'd upon25 The kindest constellation, Cast amorous glances on his birth, And whisper'd the confederate Earth To pave his pathes with all the good, That warmes the bed of youth and blood)30 Love hath no plea against her eye: Beauty frownes, and Love must dye.
But if her milder influence move, And gild the hopes of humble Love: (Though Heaven's inauspicious eye35 Lay blacke on Love's nativitie; Though every diamond in Love's crowne Fixt his forehead to a frowne:) Her eye, a strong appeale can giue, 242Beauty smiles, and Love shall live.40
O, if Love shall live, O, where But in her eye, or in her eare, In her brest, or in her breath, Shall I hide poore Love from Death? For in the life ought else can give,45 Love shall dye, although he live.
Or, if Love shall dye, O, where But in her eye, or in her eare, In her breath, or in her breast, Shall I build his funerall nest?50 While Love shall thus entombèd lye, Love shall live, although he dye.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
In line 16 the heavens are the planets. To 'crown' his fate
is to invest it with regal power, and so place it beyond control.
It is doubtful whether 'uncontrouled' expresses that state or
result of crowning, or whether the clause is hyperbolical, and
means to put further beyond control an already uncontrolled
fate. 'Twin'd' seems a strange word to use, but refers, I presume,
to the apparently irregular and winding-like motions of
the planets through the constellations until they result in the
favourable aspects mentioned. According to astrology, the
beneficence or maleficence of the planetary aspects varies with
the nature of the constellation in which they occur. Henry
Vaughan, Silurist, uses 'wind' very much as Crashaw uses
'twin'd:' see s.v. in our edition.
In line 14 we have accepted the reading 'man's' for 'Loves'
from the Sancroft ms.243
To thy lover Deere, discover That sweet blush of thine that shameth —When those roses It discloses— All the flowers that Nature nameth.
In free ayre, Flow thy haire; That no more Summer's best dresses, Bee beholden For their golden Locks, to Phœbus' flaming tresses.
O deliver Love his quiver; From thy eyes he shoots his arrowes: Where Apollo Cannot follow: Featherd with his mother's sparrowes.244
O envy not —That we dye not— Those deere lips whose doore encloses All the Graces In their places, Brother pearles, and sister roses.
From these treasures Of ripe pleasures One bright smile to cleere the weather. Earth and Heaven Thus made even, Both will be good friends together.
The aire does wooe thee, Winds cling to thee; Might a word once fly from out thee, Storme and thunder Would sit under, And keepe silence round about thee.
But if Nature's Common creatures, So deare glories dare not borrow: Yet thy beauty Owes a duty, To my loving, lingring sorrow,
When to end mee Death shall send mee245 All his terrors to affright mee: Thine eyes' Graces Gild their faces, And those terrors shall delight mee.
When my dying Life is flying, Those sweet aires that often slew mee Shall revive mee, Or reprive mee, And to many deaths renew mee.
OUT OF THE ITALIAN.
Love now no fire hath left him,1 We two betwixt us have divided it. Your eyes the light hath reft him, The heat commanding in my heart doth sit.[80] O that poore Love be not for ever spoyled,5 Let my heat to your light be reconciled.
So shall these flames, whose worth Now all obscurèd lyes: —Drest in those beames—start forth 246And dance before your eyes.10
Or else partake my flames (I care not whither) And so in mutuall names Of Love, burne both together.
OUT OF THE ITALIAN.
Would any one the true cause find1 How Love came nak't, a boy, and blind? 'Tis this: listning one day too long, So th' Syrens in my mistris' song, The extasie of a delight5 So much o're-mastring all his might, To that one sense, made all else thrall, And so he lost his clothes, eyes, heart and all.
VPON THE FRONTISPEECE OF MR. ISAACKSON'S
CHRONOLOGIE.[81]
Let hoary Time's vast bowels be the grave1 To what his bowels' birth and being gave;247 Let Nature die, (Phœnix-like) from death Revivèd Nature takes a second breath; If on Time's right hand, sit faire Historie,5 If from the seed of emptie Ruine, she Can raise so faire an harvest; let her be Ne're so farre distant, yet Chronologie (Sharp-sighted as the eagle's eye, that can Out-stare the broad-beam'd daye's meridian)10 Will have a perspicill to find her out, And, through the night of error and dark doubt, Discerne the dawne of Truth's eternall ray, As when the rosie Morne budds into Day. Now that Time's empire might be amply fill'd,15 Babel's bold artists strive (below) to build Ruine a temple; on whose fruitfull fall History reares her pyramids, more tall Than were th' Aegyptian (by the life these give, 248Th' Egyptian pyramids themselves must live):20 On these she lifts the world; and on their base Showes the two termes, and limits of Time's race: That, the creation is; the judgement, this; That, the World's morning; this, her midnight is.
NOTE.
As explained in preceding Note, I add here the poem so long
misassigned to Crashaw.
ON THE FRONTISPIECE OF ISAACSON'S
CHRONOLOGIE EXPLAINED.
BY DR. EDWARD RAINBOW, BISHOP OF CARLISLE.
If with distinctive eye, and mind, you looke1 Vpon the Front, you see more than one Booke. Creation is God's Booke, wherein He writ Each creature, as a letter filling it. History is Creation's Booke; which showes5 To what effects the Series of it goes. Chronologie's the Booke of Historie, and beares The just account of Dayes, Moneths, and Yeares. But Resurrection, in a later Presse, And New Edition, is the summe of these.10 The Language of these Bookes had all been one, Had not th' aspiring Tower of Babylon Confus'd the tongues, and in a distance hurl'd As farre the speech, as men, o' th' new fill'd world.249 Set then your eyes in method, and behold15 Time's embleme, Saturne; who, when store of gold Coyn'd the first age, devour'd that birth, he fear'd; Till History, Time's eldest child appear'd; And Phœnix-like, in spight of Saturne's rage, Forc'd from her ashes, heyres in every age.20 From th' Rising Sunne, obtaining by just suit, A Spring's ingender, and an Autumne's fruit. Who in those Volumes at her motion pend, Vnto Creation's Alpha doth extend. Againe ascend, and view Chronology,25 By optick skill, pulling farre History Neerer; whose Hand the piercing Eagle's eye Strengthens, to bring remotest objects nigh. Vnder whose feet, you see the Setting Sunne, From the darke Gnomon, o're her volumes runne,30 Drown'd in eternall night, never to rise, Till Resurrection show it to the eyes Of Earth-worne men; and her shrill trumpet's sound Affright the Bones of mortals from the ground. The Columnes both are crown'd with either Sphere,35 To show Chronology and History beare, No other Culmen than the double Art, Astronomy, Geography, impart. 250
The modest front of this small floore,1 Beleeve me, Reader, can say more Than many a braver marble can; Here lyes a truly honest man. One whose conscience was a thing,5 That troubled neither Church nor King. One of those few that in this towne, Honour all Preachers, heare their owne. Sermons he heard, yet not so many As left no time to practise any.10 He heard them reverendly, and then His practice preach'd them o're agen. His Parlour-Sermons rather were Those to the eye, then to the eare. His prayers took their price and strength,15 Not from the lowdnesse, nor the length. He was a Protestant at home, Not onely in despight of Rome. He lov'd his Father; yet his zeale 251Tore not off his Mother's veile.20 To th' Church he did allow her dresse, True Beauty, to true Holinesse. Peace, which he lov'd in life, did lend Her hand to bring him to his end. When Age and Death call'd for the score,25 No surfets were to reckon for. Death tore not—therefore—but sans strife Gently untwin'd his thread of life. What remaines then, but that thou Write these lines, Reader, in thy brow,30 And by his faire example's light, Burne in thy imitation bright. So while these lines can but bequeath A life perhaps unto his death; His better Epitaph shall bee,35 His life still kept alive in thee.
Come and let us live my deare,1 Let us love and never feare, What the sowrest fathers say: Brightest Sol that dyes to day252 Lives againe as blith to morrow;5 But if we darke sons of sorrow Set: O then how long a Night Shuts the eyes of our short light! Then let amorous kisses dwell On our lips, begin and tell10 A thousand, and a hundred score, An hundred and a thousand more, Till another thousand smother That, and that wipe of[f] another. Thus at last when we have numbred15 Many a thousand, many a hundred, Wee'l confound the reckoning quite, And lose our selves in wild delight: While our joyes so multiply, As shall mocke the envious eye.20
1. Who ere she be,1 That not impossible she That shall command my heart and me;253
2. Where ere she lye, Lock't up from mortall eye,5 In shady leaves of Destiny;
3. Till that ripe birth Of studied Fate stand forth, And teach her faire steps tread our Earth;
4. Till that divine10 Idæa, take a shrine Of chrystall flesh, through which to shine;
5. Meet you her, my wishes, Bespeake her to my blisses, And be ye call'd, my absent kisses.15
6. I wish her, beauty That owes not all its duty To gaudy tire or glistring shoo-ty.
7. Something more than Taffata or tissew can,20 Or rampant feather, or rich fan.
8. More than the spoyle Of shop, or silkeworme's toyle, Or a bought blush, or a set smile.
9. A face that's best25 By its owne beauty drest, And can alone commend the rest.254
10. A face made up, Out of no other shop Than what Nature's white hand sets ope.30
11. A cheeke where Youth, And blood, with pen of Truth Write, what their reader sweetly ru'th.
12. A cheeke where growes More than a morning rose:35 Which to no boxe his being owes.
13. Lipps, where all day A lover's kisse may play, Yet carry nothing thence away.
14. Lookes that oppresse40 Their richest tires, but dresse Themselves in simple nakednesse.
15. Eyes, that displace The neighbour diamond, and out-face That sunshine, by their own sweet grace.45
16. Tresses, that weare Iewells, but to declare How much themselves more pretious are.
17. Whose native ray, Can tame the wanton day50 Of gems, that in their bright shades play.255
18. Each ruby there, Or pearle that dares appeare, Be its own blush, be its own teare.
19. A well tam'd heart,55 For whose more noble smart, Love may be long chusing a dart.
20. Eyes, that bestow Full quivers on Love's bow; Yet pay lesse arrowes than they owe.60
21. Smiles, that can warme The blood, yet teach a charme, That Chastity shall take no harme.
22. Blushes, that bin The burnish of no sin,65 Nor flames of ought too hot within.
23. Ioyes, that confesse, Vertue their mistresse, And have no other head to dresse.
24. Feares, fond, and flight,70 As the coy bride's, when Night First does the longing lover right.
25. Teares, quickly fled, And vaine, as those are shed 256For a dying maydenhead.75
26. Dayes, that need borrow, No part of their good morrow, From a fore-spent night of sorrow.
27. Dayes, that in spight Of darknesse, by the light80 Of a cleere mind are day all night.
28. Nights, sweet as they, Made short by lovers play, Yet long by th' absence of the day.
29. Life, that dares send85 A challenge to his end, And when it comes say, Welcome friend!
30. Sydnæan showers Of sweet discourse, whose powers Can crown old Winter's head with flowers.90
31. Soft silken hours; Open sunnes; shady bowers; 'Bove all, nothing within that lowers.
32. What ere delight Can make Daye's forehead bright,95 Or give downe to the wings of Night.
33. In her whole frame, Haue Nature all the name, Art and ornament the shame.257
34. Her flattery,100 Picture and Poesy, Her counsell her owne vertue be.
35. I wish her store Of worth may leave her poore Of wishes; and I wish——no more.105
36. Now if Time knowes That her, whose radiant browes Weave them a garland of my vowes;
37. Her whose just bayes, My future hopes can raise,110 A trophie to her present praise.
38. Her that dares be, What these lines wish to see: I seeke no further: it is she.
39. 'Tis she, and here115 Lo I uncloath and cleare, My wishes cloudy character.
40. May she enjoy it, Whose merit dare apply it, But Modesty dares still deny it.120
41. Such worth as this is Shall fixe my flying wishes, And determine them to kisses.258
42. Let her full glory, My fancyes, fly before ye,125 Be ye my fictions; but her story.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The Harleian ms. 6917-18, as before, gives an admirable
reading, corrective of all the editions in st. 3, line 3. Hitherto
it has run, 'And teach her faire steps to our Earth:' the ms. as
given by us 'tread' for 'to:' ib. st. 5, line 1, reads 'Meete her
my wishes;' perhaps preferable: st. 6, I accept 'its' for 'his'
from 1670 edition: st. 7, 'than'=then, and is spelled 'then'
here and elsewhere in 1646 and 1670: st. 8, line 3, Harleian
ms. reads 'Or a bowe, blush, or a set smile;' inferior: st. 9, ib.
reads 'commend' for 'command;' adopted: st. 11, ib. 'their' for
'the;' adopted: st. 14, ib. spells 'tyers,' and line 3 reads as we
print for 'And cloath their simplest nakednesse,' which is
clumsy and poor: st. 15: Here, as in the poem, 'On the bleeding
wounds of our crucified Lord' (st. 6), where we read 'The
thorns that Thy blest brows encloses,' and elsewhere, we have
an example of the Elizabethan use of 'that' as a singular (referring
to and thus made a collective plural) taken as the governing
nominative to the verb. So in this poem of 'Wishes'
we have 'Eyes that bestow,' 'Joys that confess,' 'Tresses that
wear.' But it must be stated that the Harleian ms., as before,
reads not as in 1646 and 1648 'displaces,' 'out-faces' and
'graces,' but as printed by us on its authority; certainly the
rhythm is improved thereby: st. 18, line 2, ib. 'dares' for 'dare;'
adopted: st. 24, looking to 'tears quickly fled' of next stanza,
I think 'flight' is correct, and not a misprint for 'slight.' Accordingly
I have punctuated with a comma after fond, flight
being = the shrinking-away of the bride, like the Horatian fair
lady, a fugitive yet wishful of her lover's kiss: st. 31, Harleian
ms. as before, 'Open sunn:' st. 42, line 3, 'be you my
fictions, she my story.' G.
AN APOLOGIE FOR THE LENGTH OF THE FOLLOWING PANEGYRICK.[85]
When you are mistresse of the song,1 Mighty queen, to thinke it long, Were treason 'gainst that majesty Your Vertue wears. Your modesty Yet thinks it so. But ev'n that too5 —Infinite, since part of you— New matter for our Muse supplies, And so allowes what it denies. Say then dread queen, how may we doe To mediate 'twixt your self and you?10 That so our sweetly temper'd song Nor be too sort, nor seeme to[o] long. Needs must your noble prayses' strength That made it long excuse the length.
Britain! the mighty Ocean's lovely bride!1 Now stretch thy self, fair isle, and grow: spread wide Thy bosome, and make roome. Thou art opprest With thine own glories, and art strangely blest Beyond thy self: for (lo!) the gods, the gods5 Come fast upon thee; and those glorious ods Swell thy full honours to a pitch so high As sits above thy best capacitie. Are they not ods? and glorious? that to thee Those mighty genii throng, which well might be10 Each one an Age's labour? that thy dayes Are gilded with the union of those rayes Whose each divided beam would be a sunne To glad the sphere of any Nation? Sure, if for these thou mean'st to find a seat,15 Th' hast need, O Britain, to be truly Great. And so thou art; their presence makes thee so: They are thy greatnesse. Gods, where-e're they go,261 Bring their Heav'n with them: their great footsteps place An everlasting smile upon the face20 Of the glad Earth they tread on: while with thee Those beames that ampliate mortalitie, And teach it to expatiate and swell To majestie and fulnesse, deign to dwell, Thou by thy self maist sit, (blest Isle) and see25 How thy great mother Nature dotes on thee. Thee therefore from the rest apart she hurl'd, And seem'd to make an Isle, but made a World.
Time yet hath dropt few plumes since Hope turn'd Joy, And took into his armes the princely boy,30 Whose birth last blest the bed of his sweet mother, And bad us first salute our prince, a brother.
The Prince and Duke of York.
Bright Charles! thou sweet dawn of a glorious Day! Centre of those thy grandsires (shall I say, Henry and James? or, Mars and Phœbus rather?35 If this were Wisdome's god, that War's stern father; 'Tis but the same is said: Henry and James Are Mars and Phœbus under diverse names): O thou full mixture of those mighty souls Whose vast intelligences tun'd the poles40 Of Peace and War; thou, for whose manly brow Both lawrels twine into one wreath, and woo262 To be thy garland: see (sweet prince), O see, Thou, and the lovely hopes that smile in thee, Art ta'n out and transcrib'd by thy great mother:45 See, see thy reall shadow; see thy brother, Thy little self in lesse: trace in these eyne The beams that dance in those full stars of thine. From the same snowy alabaster rock Those hands and thine were hewn; those cherries mock50 The corall of thy lips: thou wert of all This well-wrought copie the fair principall.
Lady Mary.
Iustly, great Nature, didst thou brag, and tell How ev'n th' hadst drawn that faithfull parallel, And matcht thy master-piece. O then go on,55 Make such another sweet comparison. Seest thou that Marie there? O teach her mother To shew her to her self in such another. Fellow this wonder too; nor let her shine Alone; light such another star, and twine60 Their rosie beams, that so the Morn for one Venus, may have a constellation.
Lady Elizabeth.
These words scarce waken'd Heaven, when—lo!—our vows Sat crown'd upon the noble infant's brows.263 Th' art pair'd, sweet princesse: in this well-writ book65 Read o're thy self; peruse each line, each look. And when th' hast summ'd up all those blooming blisses, Close up the book, and clasp it with thy kisses. So have I seen (to dresse their mistresse May) Two silken sister-flowers consult, and lay70 Their bashfull cheeks together: newly they Peep't from their buds, show'd like the garden's eyes Scarce wak't: like was the crimson of their joyes; Like were the tears they wept, so like, that one Seem'd but the other's kind reflexion.75
The new-borne Prince.
And now 'twere time to say, sweet queen, no more. Fair source of princes, is thy pretious store Not yet exhaust? O no! Heavens have no bound, But in their infinite and endlesse round Embrace themselves. Our measure is not their's;80 Nor may the pov'rtie of man's narrow prayers Span their immensitie. More princes come: Rebellion, stand thou by; Mischief, make room: War, blood, and death—names all averse from Ioy— Heare this, we have another bright-ey'd boy:85 That word's a warrant, by whose vertue I Have full authority to bid you dy. Dy, dy, foul misbegotten monsters! dy: Make haste away, or e'r the World's bright eye264 Blush to a cloud of bloud. O farre from men90 Fly hence, and in your Hyperborean den Hide you for evermore, and murmure there Where none but Hell may heare, nor our soft aire Shrink at the hatefull sound. Mean while we bear High as the brow of Heaven, the noble noise95 And name of these our just and righteous joyes, Where Envie shall not reach them, nor those eares Whose tune keeps time to ought below the spheres. But thou, sweet supernumerary starre, Shine forth; nor fear the threats of boyst'rous Warre.100 The face of things has therefore frown'd a while On purpose, that to thee and thy pure smile The World might ow an universall calm; While thou, fair halcyon, on a sea of balm Shalt flote; where while thou layst thy lovely head,105 The angry billows shall but make thy bed: Storms, when they look on thee, shall straigt relent; And tempests, when they tast thy breath, repent To whispers, soft as thine own slumbers be, Or souls of virgins which shall sigh for thee.110 Shine then, sweet supernumerary starre, Nor feare the boysterous names of bloud and warre: Thy birth-day is their death's nativitie; They've here no other businesse but to die. 265
To the Queen.
But stay; what glimpse was that? why blusht the Day?115 Why ran the started aire trembling away? Who's this that comes circled in rayes that scorn Acquaintance with the sun? what second morn At midday opes a presence which Heaven's eye Stands off and points at? Is't some deity120 Stept from her throne of starres, deignes to be seen? Is it some deity? or is't our queen? 'Tis she, 'tis she: her awfull beauties chase The Day's abashèd glories, and in face Of noon wear their own sunshine. O thou bright125 Mistresse of wonders! Cynthia's is the Night; But thou at noon dost shine, and art all day (Nor does thy sun deny't) our Cynthia. Illustrious sweetnesse! in thy faithfull wombe, That nest of heroes, all our hopes find room.130 Thou art the mother-phenix, and thy brest Chast as that virgin honour of the East, But much more fruitfull is; nor does, as she, Deny to mighty Love, a deitie. Then let the Eastern world brag and be proud135 Of one coy phenix, while we have a brood, A brood of phenixes: while we have brother And sister-phenixes, and still the mother. And may we long! Long may'st thou live t'increase 266The house and family of phenixes.140 Nor may the life that gives their eye-lids light E're prove the dismall morning of thy night: Ne're may a birth of thine be bought so dear To make his costly cradle of thy beer. O may'st thou thus make all the year thine own,145 And see such names of joy sit white upon The brow of every month! and when th' hast done, Mayst in a son of his find every son Repeated, and that son still in another, And so in each child, often prove a mother.150 Long may'st thou, laden with such clusters, lean Vpon thy royall elm (fair vine!) and when The Heav'ns will stay no longer, may thy glory And name dwell sweet in some eternall story!
Pardon (bright Excellence,) an untun'd string,155 That in thy eares thus keeps a murmuring. O speake a lowly Muse's pardon, speake Her pardon, or her sentence; onely breake Thy silence. Speake, and she shall take from thence Numbers, and sweetnesse, and an influence160 Confessing thee. Or (if too long I stay,) O speake thou, and my pipe hath nought to say: For see Apollo all this while stands mute, Expecting by thy voice to tune his lute.
But gods are gracious; and their altars make165 Pretious the offrings that their altars take.267 Give then this rurall wreath fire from thine eyes, This rurall wreath dares be thy sacrifice.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
This poem was originally entitled (as supra) 'Upon the Duke
of York's Birth.' As new children were born additions were made
to it and the title altered. Cf. the Latin poem in our vol. ii. ad
Reginam.
The children celebrated were the following: Charles James,
born May 13, 1628, died the same day; the Queen's first child:
Charles II., born May 29, 1630: James, who is placed before
his sister Mary, who was older than he; born Oct. 14, 1633;
afterwards James II.: Princess Mary, born Nov. 4, 1631, afterwards
mother of William III.: Princess Elizabeth, born Dec.
28, 1635; died of grief at her father's tragical end, Sept. 8,
1650; was buried in the church at Newport, Isle of Wight,
where her remains were found in 1793. Vaughan the Silurist
has a fine poem to her memory (our edition, vol. ii. pp. 115-17):
Anne, born March 17, 1636-7; she died Dec. 8, 1640 (Crashaw
from first to last keeps Death out of his poem): Henry, born
July 8, 1640, afterwards Duke of Gloucester and Earl of Cambridge.
Henrietta Anne, born June 16, 1644, is not named.
The title in 1646 is 'Vpon the Duke of Yorke his Birth: a
Panegyricke;' and so in 1670, which throughout agrees with
that very imperfect text, except in one deplorable blunder of
its own left uncorrected by Turnbull, as noted below. The
heading in the Sancroft ms. is 'A Panegyrick vpon the birth
of the Duke of Yorke. R. Cr.'
Line 7, in 1646 'glories' for 'honours.' In the Sancroft
ms. line 8 reads 'As sitts alone ....'
Line 15, ib. 'O' for 'Sure.' " 16, ib. 'Th' art.' " 29-32 restored from 1648. Not in Sancroft ms. " 33. These headings here and onward omitted hitherto. " 34, in 1646 'great' for 'bright.' " 43, our text (1648) misprints 'owne' for 'one' of Voces
Votivæ. 268Line 50, 1646 oddly misprints 'these Cherrimock.'
Line 52, 1646, 'art' for 'wert.' " 54, ib. 'may'st' for 'did'st.' " 55, ib. 'th' art' for 'th' hadst.' " 64-70 restored from 1648. Not in Sancroft ms. " 74, 1646, 'pearls' for 'tears.' So the Sancroft ms. " 78-118, all these lines—most characteristic—restored
from 1648. Turnbull overlooked them. Not in the Sancroft
ms.
Line 140, 1670 drops a line here, and thus confuses,
'A brood of phenixes, and still the mother: And may we long: long may'st thou live t' encrease The house,' &c.
Peregrine Phillips in his selections from Crashaw (1785), following
the text of 1670, says in a foot-note, 'A line seems
wanting, but is so in the original copy.' Turnbull follows
suit and says, 'Here a line seems deficient.' If either had consulted
the 'original' editions, which both professed to know, it
would have saved them from this and numerous kindred blunders.
Line 145, 1646, 'light' for 'life.' " 151, ib. 'that's.' " 170, ib. 'their' for 'the offerings.'
In line 27 'Thee therefore &c.' is a thought not unfrequent
with the panegyrists of James. Ben Jonson makes use of it
at least twice. In the Masque of Blackness we have,
'With that great name Britannia, this blest isle Hath won her ancient dignity and style; A world divided from a world, and tried The abstract of it, in his general pride.'
Shakespeare used the same thought more nobly when he made
it the theme of that glorious outburst of patriotism from the
lips of the dying Gaunt. G.
VPON TWO GREENE APRICOCKES SENT TO
COWLEY BY SIR CRASHAW.[87]
Take these, Time's tardy truants, sent by me1 To be chastis'd (sweet friend) and chide by thee. Pale sons of our Pomona! whose wan cheekes Have spent the patience of expecting weekes, Yet are scarce ripe enough at best to show5 The redd, but of the blush to thee they ow. By thy comparrison they shall put on More Summer in their shame's reflection, Than ere the fruitfull Phœbus' flaming kisses Kindled on their cold lips. O had my wishes10 And the deare merits of your Muse, their due, The yeare had found some fruit early as you; Ripe as those rich composures Time computes Blossoms, but our blest tast confesses fruits. How does thy April-Autumne mocke these cold15 Progressions 'twixt whose termes poor Time grows old!270 With thee alone he weares no beard, thy braine Gives him the morning World's fresh gold againe. 'Twas only Paradice, 'tis onely thou, Whose fruit and blossoms both blesse the same bough.20 Proud in the patterne of thy pretious youth, Nature (methinks) might easily mend her growth. Could she in all her births but coppie thee, Into the publick yeares proficiencie, No fruit should have the face to smile on thee25 (Young master of the World's maturitie) But such whose sun-borne beauties what they borrow Of beames to day, pay back again to morrow, Nor need be double-gilt. How then must these Poor fruites looke pale at thy Hesperides!30 Faine would I chide their slownesse, but in their Defects I draw mine own dull character. Take them, and me in them acknowledging, How much my Summer waites upon thy Spring.
THE COMPLAINT OF THE FORSAKEN WIFE OF SAINTE ALEXIS.[88]
The First Elegie.
I late the Roman youth's loud prayse and pride,1 Whom long none could obtain, though thousands try'd; Lo, here am left (alas!) For my lost mate T' embrace my teares, and kisse an vnkind fate. Sure in my early woes starres were at strife,5 And try'd to make a widow ere a wife. Nor can I tell (and this new teares doth breed) In what strange path, my lord's fair footsteppes bleed. O knew I where he wander'd, I should see Some solace in my sorrow's certainty:10 I'd send my woes in words should weep for me, (Who knowes how powerfull well-writt praires would be.) Sending's too slow a word; myselfe would fly. Who knowes my own heart's woes so well as I?272 But how shall I steal hence? Alexis thou,15 Ah thou thy self, alas! hast taught me how. Loue too that leads the way would lend the wings To bear me harmlesse through the hardest things. And where Loue lends the wing, and leads the way, What dangers can there be dare say me nay?20 If I be shipwrack't, Loue shall teach to swimme: If drown'd, sweet is the death indur'd for him: The noted sea shall change his name with me, I'mongst the blest starres, a new name shall be. And sure where louers make their watry graues,25 The weeping mariner will augment the waues. For who so hard, but passing by that way Will take acquaintance of my woes, and say Here 'twas the Roman maid found a hard fate, While through the World she sought her wandring mate30 Here perish't she, poor heart; Heauns, be my vowes As true to me, as she was to her spouse. O liue, so rare a loue! liue! and in thee The too frail life of femal constancy. Farewell; and shine, fair soul, shine there aboue35 Firm in thy crown, as here fast in thy loue. There thy lost fugitiue th' hast found at last: Be happy; and for euer hold him fast.
The Second Elegie.
Though all the ioyes I had, fled hence with thee,1 Vnkind! yet are my teares still true to me:273 I'm wedded o're again since thou art gone; Nor couldst thou, cruell, leaue me quite alone. Alexis' widdow now is Sorrow's wife,5 With him shall I weep out my weary life. Wellcome, my sad-sweet mate! Now haue I gott At last a constant Loue, that leaues me not: Firm he, as thou art false; nor need my cryes Thus vex the Earth and teare the beauteous skyes.10 For him, alas! n'ere shall I need to be Troublesom to the world thus as for thee: For thee I talk to trees; with silent groues Expostulate my woes and much-wrong'd loues; Hills and relentlesse rockes, or if there be15 Things that in hardnesse more allude to thee, To these I talk in teares, and tell my pain, And answer too for them in teares again. How oft haue I wept out the weary sun! My watry hour-glasse hath old Time's outrunne.20 O I am learnèd grown: poor Loue and I Haue study'd ouer all Astrology; I'm perfect in Heaun's state; with euery starr My skillfull greife is grown familiar. Rise, fairest of those fires; what'ere thou be25 Whose rosy beam shall point my sun to me. Such as the sacred light that e'rst did bring The Eastern princes to their infant King, O rise, pure lamp! and lend thy golden ray That weary Loue at last may find his way.30
Rich, churlish Land! that hid'st so long in thee1 My treasures; rich, alas! by robbing mee. Needs must my miseryes owe that man a spite Who e're he be was the first wandring knight. O had he nere been at that cruell cost5 Natvre's virginity had nere been lost; Seas had not bin rebuk't by sawcy oares But ly'n lockt vp safe in their sacred shores; Men had not spurn'd at mountaines; nor made warrs With rocks, nor bold hands struck the World's strong barres,10 Nor lost in too larg bounds, our little Rome Full sweetly with it selfe had dwell't at home. My poor Alexis, then, in peacefull life Had vnder some low roofe lou'd his plain wife; But now, ah me! from where he has no foes15 He flyes; and into willfull exile goes. Cruell, return, O tell the reason why Thy dearest parents have deseru'd to dy. And I, what is my crime, I cannot tell, Vnlesse it be a crime t' haue lou'd too well.20 If heates of holyer loue and high desire, Make bigge thy fair brest with immortall fire, What needes my virgin lord fly thus from me, Who only wish his virgin wife to be? Witnesse, chast Heauns! no happyer vowes I know25 Then to a virgin grave vntouch't to goe.275 Loue's truest knott by Venus is not ty'd, Nor doe embraces onely make a bride. The queen of angels (and men chast as you) Was maiden-wife and maiden-mother too.30 Cecilia, glory of her name and blood, With happy gain her maiden-vowes made good: The lusty bridegroom made approach; young man Take heed (said she) take heed, Valerian! My bosome's guard, a spirit great and strong,35 Stands arm'd, to sheild me from all wanton wrong; My chastity is sacred; and my Sleep Wakefull, her dear vowes vndefil'd to keep. Pallas beares armes, forsooth; and should there be No fortresse built for true Virginity?40 No gaping Gorgon, this: none, like the rest Of your learn'd lyes. Here you'll find no such iest. I'm your's: O were my God, my Christ so too, I'd know no name of Loue on Earth but you. He yeilds, and straight baptis'd, obtains the grace45 To gaze on the fair souldier's glorious face. Both mixt at last their blood in one rich bed Of rosy martyrdome, twice married. O burn our Hymen bright in such high flame, Thy torch, terrestriall Loue, haue here no name.50 How sweet the mutuall yoke of man and wife, When holy fires maintain Loue's heaunly life! But I (so help me Heaun my hopes to see) When thousands sought my loue, lou'd none but thee.276 Still, as their vain teares my firm vowes did try,55 Alexis, he alone is mine (said I). Half true, alas! half false, proues that poor line, Alexis is alone; but is not mine.
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.
The heading in 1648 omits 'Sainte.' These variations from
1648 are interesting:
1st Elegy: Line 9, 'would' for 'should.'
Line 17, our text (1652) drops 'way' inadvertently. Turnbull
tinkers it by reading 'thee' for 'the,' instead of collating
the texts.
Line 23, 'its' for 'his.' " 25, 'when' for 'where.' " 37, I have adopted 'th'' for 'thou' of our text (1652).
2d Elegy: Line 1, our text (1652) misspells 'fleed.'
Line 3, ib. misprints 'I' am.' " 10, ib. drops 'beauteous' inadvertently. Turnbull,
for a wonder, wakes up here to notice a deficient word; but
again, instead of collating his texts, inserts without authority
'lofty.' Had he turned to 1648 edition, he would have found
'beauteous.'
Line 20, I have adopted 'Time's' for 'Time.' " 23, as in line 17 in 1st Elegy. " 30, a reference to the 'Love will find out the way,'
in the old song 'Over the mountain.' 'Weary' is misprinted
'Wary' in 1670.
3d Elegy: Line 7, 'with' for 'by.'
Line 17, our text (1652) misprints 'Or' for 'O.' " 20, I accept 't'' for 'to.' " 29, 'The Blessed Virgin' for 'The queen of angels.' " 41, 'facing' for 'gaping.' " 43, as in line 17 in 1st Elegy. " 50, 'hath' for 'haue.' " 51, 'sweet's' for 'sweet.' 277" 54, our text (1652) misprints 'thousand.' G.
Sound forth, cœlestiall organs, let heauen's quire Ravish the dancing orbes, make them mount higher With nimble capers, & force Atlas tread Vpon his tiptoes, e're his siluer head Shall kisse his golden curthen. Thou glad Isle, That swim'st as deepe in joy, as seas, now smile; Lett not thy weighty glories, this full tide Of blisse, debase thee; but with a just pride Swell: swell to such an height, that thou maist vye With heauen itselfe for stately majesty. Doe not deceiue mee, eyes: doe I not see In this blest earth heauen's bright epitome, Circled with pure refinèd glory? heere I view a rising sunne in this our sphere, Whose blazing beames, maugre the blackest night, And mists of greife, dare force a joyfull light. The gold, in wch he flames, does well præsage A precious season, & a golden age. Doe I not see joy keepe his revels now, And sitt triumphing in each cheerfull brow?280 Vnmixt felicity with siluer wings Broodeth this sacred place: hither Peace brings The choicest of her oliue-crownes, & praies To haue them guilded with his courteous raies. Doe I not see a Cynthia, who may Abash the purest beauties of the day? To whom heauen's lampes often in silent night Steale from their stations to repaire their light. Doe I not see a constellation, Each little beame of wch would make a sunne? I meane those three great starres, who well may scorn Acquaintance with the vsher of the morne. To gaze vpon such starres each humble eye Would be ambitious of astronomie Who would not be a phœnix, & aspire To sacrifice himselfe in such sweet fire? Shine forth, ye flaming sparkes of Deity, Yee perfect emblemes of divinity. Fixt in your spheres of glory, shed from thence, The treasures of our liues, your influence, For if you sett, who may not justly feare, The world will be one ocean, one great teare.
UPON THE KING'S CORONATION.
Strange metamorphosis! It was but now The sullen heauen had vail'd its mournfull brow281 With a black maske: the clouds with child by Greife Traueld th' Olympian plaines to find releife. But at the last (having not soe much power As to refraine) brought forth a costly shower Of pearly drops, & sent her numerous birth (As tokens of her greife) vnto the Earth. Alas, the Earth, quick drunke with teares, had reel'd From of her center, had not Ioue vpheld The staggering lumpe: each eye spent all its store, As if heereafter they would weepe noe more: Streight from this sea of teares there does appeare Full glory naming in her owne free sphere. Amazèd Sol throwes of his mournfull weeds, Speedily harnessing his fiery steeds, Vp to Olympus' stately topp he hies, From whence his glorious rivall hee espies. Then wondring starts, & had the curteous night Withheld her vaile, h' had forfeited his sight. The joy full sphæres with a delicious sound Afright th' amazèd aire, and dance a round To their owne musick, nor (untill they see This glorious Phœbus sett) will quiet bee. Each aery Siren now hath gott her song, To whom the merry lambes doe tripp along The laughing meades, as joy full to behold Their winter coates couer'd with naming gold. Such was the brightnesse of this Northerne starre, It made the virgin phœnix come from farre282 To be repair'd: hither she did resort, Thinking her father had remou'd his Court. The lustre of his face did shine soe bright, That Rome's bold egles now were blinded quite; The radiant darts shott from his sparkling eyes, Made euery mortall gladly sacrifice A heart burning in loue; all did adore This rising sunne; their faces nothing wore, But smiles, and ruddy joyes, and at this day All melancholy clouds vanisht away.
Bright starre of Majesty, oh shedd on mee, A precious influence, as sweet as thee. That with each word, my loaden pen letts fall, The fragrant Spring may be perfum'd withall. That Sol from them may suck an honied shower, To glutt the stomack of his darling flower. With such a sugred livery made fine, They shall proclaime to all, that they are thine. Lett none dare speake of thee, but such as thence Extracted haue a balmy eloquence.283 But then, alas, my heart! oh how shall I Cure thee of thy delightfull tympanie? I cannot hold; such a spring-tide of joy Must haue a passage, or 'twill force a way. Yet shall my loyall tongue keepe this com̄and: But giue me leaue to ease it with my hand. And though these humble lines soare not soe high, As is thy birth; yet from thy flaming eye Drop downe one sparke of glory, & they'l proue A præsent worthy of Apollo's loue. My quill to thee may not præsume to sing: Lett th' hallowed plume of a seraphick wing Bee consecrated to this worke, while I Chant to my selfe with rustick melodie. Rich, liberall heauen, what hath yor treasure store Of such bright angells, that you giue vs more? Had you, like our great sunne, stampèd but one For earth, t' had beene an ample portion. Had you but drawne one liuely coppy forth, That might interpret our faire Cynthia's worth, Y' had done enough to make the lazy ground Dance, like the nimble spheres, a joyfull round. But such is the cœlestiall excellence, That in the princely patterne shines, from whence The rest pourtraicted are, that 'tis noe paine To ravish heauen to limbe them o're againe. Wittnesse this mapp of beauty; euery part 284Of wch doth show the quintessence of art. See! nothing's vulgar, every atome heere Speakes the great wisdome of th' artificer. Poore Earth hath not enough perfection, To shaddow forth th' admirèd paragon. Those sparkling twinnes of light should I now stile Rich diamonds, sett in a pure siluer foyle; Or call her cheeke a bed of new-blowne roses; And say that ivory her front composes; Or should I say, that with a scarlet waue Those plumpe soft rubies had bin drest soe braue; Or that the dying lilly did bestow Vpon her neck the whitest of his snow; Or that the purple violets did lace That hand of milky downe; all these are base; Her glories I should dimme with things soe grosse, And foule the cleare text with a muddy glosse. Goe on then, Heauen, & limbe forth such another, Draw to this sister miracle a brother; Compile a first glorious epitome Of heauen, & Earth, & of all raritie; And sett it forth in the same happy place, And I'le not blurre it with my paraphrase.
VPON A GNATT BURNT IN A CANDLE.
Little, buzzing, wanton elfe Perish there, and thanke thy selfe.285 Thou deseru'st thy life to loose, For distracting such a Muse. Was it thy ambitious aime By thy death to purchase fame? Didst thou hope he would in pitty Haue bestow'd a funerall ditty On thy ghoast? and thou in that To haue outliuèd Virgill's gnatt? No! The treason thou hast wrought Might forbid thee such a thought. If that Night's worke doe miscarry, Or a syllable but vary; A greater foe thou shalt me find, The destruction of thy kind. Phœbus, to revenge thy fault, In a fiery trapp thee caught; That thy wingèd mates might know it, And not dare disturbe a poet. Deare and wretched was thy sport, Since thyselfe was crushèd for't; Scarcely had that life a breath, Yet it found a double death; Playing in the golden flames, Thou fell'st into an inky Thames; Scorch'd and drown'd. That petty sunne A pretty Icarus hath vndone. 286
The bird that's fetch't from Phasis floud, Or choicest hennes of Africk-brood; These please our palates; and why these? 'Cause they can but seldome please. Whil'st the goose soe goodly white, And the drake, yeeld noe delight, Though his wings' conceited hewe Paint each feather, as if new. These for vulgar stomacks be, And rellish not of rarity. But the dainty Scarus, sought In farthest clime; what e're is bought With shipwrack's toile, oh, that is sweet, 'Cause the quicksands hansell'd it. The pretious barbill, now growne rife, Is cloying meat. How stale is wife? Deare wife hath ne're a handsome letter, Sweet mistris sounds a great deale better. Rose quakes at name of cinnamon. Unlesse't be rare, what's thought vpon?
Shame of thy mother soyle! ill-nurtur'd tree! Sett, to the mischeife of posteritie! That hand (what e're it wer) that was thy nurse, Was sacrilegious (sure) or somewhat worse. Black, as the day was dismall, in whose sight Thy rising topp first stain'd the bashfull light. That man--I thinke—wrested the feeble life From his old father, that man's barbarous knife Conspir'd with darknes 'gainst the strangers throate; (Whereof the blushing walles tooke bloody note) Huge high-floune poysons, eu'n of Colchos breed, And whatsoe're wild sinnes black thoughts doe feed, His hands haue padled in; his hands, that found Thy traiterous root a dwelling in my ground. Perfidious totterer! longing for the staines Of thy kind Master's well-deseruing braines. Man's daintiest care, & caution cannot spy The subtile point of his coy destiny, Wch way it threats. With feare the merchant's mind Is plough'd as deepe, as is the sea with wind, (Rowz'd in an angry tempest), Oh the sea! Oh! that's his feare; there flotes his destiny:288 While from another (vnseene) corner blowes The storme of fate, to wch his life he owes; By Parthians bow the soldier lookes to die, (Whose hands are fighting, while their feet doe flie.) The Parthian starts at Rome's imperiall name, Fledg'd with her eagle's wing; the very chaine Of his captivity rings in his eares. Thus, ô thus fondly doe wee pitch our feares Farre distant from our fates, our fates, that mocke Our giddy feares with an vnlook't for shocke. A little more, & I had surely seene Thy greisly Majesty, Hell's blackest Queene; And Œacus on his tribunall too, Sifting the soules of guilt; & you, (oh you!) You euer-blushing meads, where doe the blest Farre from darke horrors home appeale to rest. There amorous Sappho plaines vpon her lute Her loue's crosse fortune, that the sad dispute Runnes murmuring on the strings. Alcæus there In high-built numbers wakes his golden lyre To tell the world, how hard the matter went, How hard by sea, by warre, by banishment. There these braue soules deale to each wondring eare Such words, soe precious, as they may not weare Without religious silence; aboue all Warre's ratling tumults, or some tyrant's fall. The thronging clotted multitude doth feast: What wonder? when the hundred-headed beast289 earsHangs his black lugges, stroakt with those heavenly lines; The Furies' curl'd snakes meet in gentle twines, And stretch their cold limbes in a pleasing fire. Prometheus selfe, and Pelops stervèd sire Are cheated of their paines; Orion thinkes Of lions now noe more, or spotted linx.
EX EUPHORMIONE.
O Dea, siderei seu tu stirpe alma tonantis, &c.
Bright goddesse (whether Joue thy father be, Or Jove a father will be made by thee) Oh crowne these praiers (mov'd in a happy bower) But with one cordiall smile for Cloe. That power Of Loue's all-daring hand, that makes me burne, Makes me confess't. Oh, doe not thou with scorne, Great nymph, o'relooke my lownesse. Heau'n you know And all their fellow-deities will bow Eu'n to the naked'st vowes. Thou art my fate; To thee the Parcæ haue given vp of late My threds of life: if then I shall not live By thee, by thee yet lett me die; this giue, High Beautie's soveraigne, that my funerall flames May draw their first breath from thy starry beames. The phœnix' selfe shall not more proudly burne, That fetcheth fresh life from her fruitfull vrne. 290
Hath aged winter, fledg'd with feathered raine, To frozen Caucasus his flight now tane? Doth hee in downy snow there closely shrowd His bedrid limmes, wrapt in a fleecy clowd? Is th' Earth disrobèd of her apron white, Kind Winter's guift, & in a greene one dight? Doth she beginne to dandle in her lappe Her painted infants, fedd with pleasant pappe, Wch their bright father in a pretious showre From heaven's sweet milky streame doth gently poure Doth blith Apollo cloath the heavens with joye, And with a golden waue wash cleane away Those durty smutches, wch their faire fronts wore, And make them laugh, wch frown'd, & wept before? If heaven hath now forgot to weepe; ô then What meane these shoures of teares amongst vs men? These cataracts of griefe, that dare eu'n vie With th' richest clowds their pearly treasurie?291 If Winters gone, whence this vntimely cold, That on these snowy limmes hath laid such hold? What more than winter hath that dire art found, These purple currents hedg'd with violets round. To corrallize, wch softly wont to slide In crimson waueletts, & in scarlet tide? If Flora's darlings now awake from sleepe, And out of their greene mantletts dare to peepe O tell me then, what rude outragious blast Forc't this prime flowre of youth to make such hast? To hide his blooming glories, & bequeath His balmy treasure to the bedd of death? 'Twas not the frozen zone; one sparke of fire, Shott from his flaming eye, had thaw'd its ire, And made it burne in loue: 'twas not the rage, And too vngentle nippe of frosty age: 'Twas not the chast, & purer snow, whose nest Was in the mōdest nunnery of his brest: Noe, none of these ravish't those virgin roses, The Muses, & the Graces fragrant posies. Wch, while they smiling sate vpon his face, They often kist, & in the sugred place Left many a starry teare, to thinke how soone The golden harvest of our joyes, the noone Of all our glorious hopes should fade, And be eclipsèd with an envious shade. Noe 'twas old doting Death, who stealing by, Dragging his crooked burthen, look't awry,292 And streight his amorous syth (greedy of blisse) Murdred the Earth's just pride with a rude kisse. A wingèd herald, gladd of soe sweet a prey, Snatch't vpp the falling starre, soe richly gay, And plants it in a precious perfum'd bedd, Amongst those lillies, wch his bosome bredd. Where round about hovers with siluer wing A golden Summer, an æternall Spring. Now that his root such fruit againe may beare, Let each eye water't with a courteous teare.
UPON THE DEATH OF A FREIND.
Hee's dead! Oh what harsh musick's there Vnto a choyce, and curious eare! Wee must that Discord surely call, Since sighs doe rise and teares doe fall. Teares fall too low, sighes rise too high, How then can there be harmony? But who is he? him may wee know That jarres and spoiles sweet consort soe? O Death, 'tis thou: you false time keepe, And stretch'st thy dismall voice too deepe. Long time to quavering Age you giue, But to large Youth, short time to liue. You take vpon you too too much, In striking where you should not touch.293 How out of tune the world now lies, Since youth must fall, when it should rise! Gone be all consort, since alone He that once bore the best part's gone. Whose whole life, musick was; wherein Each vertue for a part came in. And though that musick of his life be still, The musick of his name yett soundeth shrill.
Stay, silver-footed Came, striue not to wed Thy maiden streames soe soone to Neptune's bed; Fixe heere thy wat'ry eyes upon these towers, Vnto whose feet in reuerence of the powers, That there inhabite, thou on euery day With trembling lippes an humble kisse do'st pay. See all in mourning now; the walles are jett, With pearly papers carelesly besett. Whose snowy cheekes, least joy should be exprest, The weeping pen with sable teares hath drest. Their wrongèd beauties speake a tragœdy, Somewhat more horrid than an elegy. Pure, & vnmixèd cruelty they tell, Wch poseth Mischeife's selfe to parallel. Justice hath lost her hand, the law her head; Peace is an orphan now; her father's dead.294 Honestie's nurse, Vertue's blest guardian, That heauenly mortall, that seraphick man. Enough is said, now, if thou canst crowd on Thy lazy crawling streames, pri'thee be gone, And murmur forth thy woes to euery flower, That on thy bankes sitts in a uerdant bower, And is instructed by thy glassy waue To paint its perfum'd face wth colours braue. In vailes of dust their silken heads they'le hide, As if the oft-departing sunne had dy'd. Goe learne that fatall quire, soe sprucely dight In downy surplisses, & vestments white, To sing their saddest dirges, such as may Make their scar'd soules take wing, & fly away. Lett thy swolne breast discharge thy strugling groanes To th' churlish rocks; & teach the stubborne stones To melt in gentle drops, lett them be heard Of all proud Neptune's siluer-sheilded guard; That greife may crack that string, & now vntie Their shackled tongues to chant an elegie. Whisper thy plaints to th' Ocean's curteous eares, Then weepe thyselfe into a sea of teares. A thousand Helicons the Muses send In a bright christall tide, to thee they send, Leaving those mines of nectar, their sweet fountaines, They force a lilly path through rosy mountaines. Feare not to dy with greife; all bubling eyes Are teeming now with store of fresh supplies. 295
To the volume of 1652 ('Carmen Deo Nostro' &c.) was prefixed
a Verse-letter to the Countess of Denbigh, illustrated
with an engraving of a 'locked heart,' as reproduced in our
quarto edition. In 1653 ('Sept. 23, 1653'), as appears from a
contemporary marking in the unique copy in the British Museum,
the following was printed: 'A Letter from Mr. Crashaw
to the Countess of Denbigh. Against Irresolution and Delay in
matters of Religion. London, n.d.'(4to). Collation: title-page
and 3 pages, page 1st on reverse of title-page (British Museum
E. 220. 2.). The Paris copy is very imperfect from some unexplained
reason (68 as against 90 lines), and it would seem
that some friend of the deceased poet, dissatisfied with it,
and having in his (or her) possession a fuller ms., printed, if
not published it. We give the enlarged text—never before
noticed, having been only named, without taking the trouble
to consult and compare it, by Turnbull; and for the student
add the abbreviated form from 1652 'Carmen,' as it, in turn,
has lines and words not in the other. See our Essay for more
on this most characteristic poem, and relative to the Countess
of Denbigh. G.
AGAINST IRRESOLUTION AND DELAY IN
MATTERS OF RELIGION.
What Heav'n-besiegèd heart is this1 Stands trembling at the Gate of Blisse: Holds fast the door, yet dares not venture Fairly to open and to enter? Whose definition is, A Doubt5 'Twixt life and death, 'twixt In and Out. Ah! linger not, lov'd soul: a slow And late consent was a long No. Who grants at last, a great while try'de And did his best, to have deny'de10 What magick-bolts, what mystick barrs Maintain the Will in these strange warrs? What fatall, yet fantastick, bands Keep the free heart from his own hands? Say, lingring Fair, why comes the birth15 Of your brave soul so slowly forth? Plead your pretences (O you strong In weaknesse!) why you chuse so long In labour of your self to ly, 298Not daring quite to live nor die.20 So when the Year takes cold we see Poor waters their own prisoners be: Fetter'd and lock'd up fast they lie In a cold self-captivity. Th' astonish'd Nymphs their Floud's strange fate deplore,25 find themselves their own severer shoar. Love, that lends haste to heaviest things, In you alone hath lost his wings. Look round and reade the World's wide face, The field of Nature or of Grace;30 Where can you fix, to find excuse Or pattern for the pace you use? Mark with what faith fruits answer flowers, And know the call of Heav'n's kind showers: Each mindfull plant hasts to make good35 The hope and promise of his bud. Seed-time's not all; there should be harvest too. Alas! and has the Year no Spring for you? Both winds and waters urge their way, And murmure if they meet a stay.40 Mark how the curl'd waves work and wind, All hating to be left behind. Each bigge with businesse thrusts the other, And seems to say, Make haste, my brother. pureThe aiery nation of neat doves, 45 That draw the chariot of chast Loves, Chide your delay: yea those dull things, Whose wayes have least to doe with wings,299 Make wings at least of their own weight, And by their love controll their Fate.50 So lumpish steel, untaught to move, Learn'd first his lightnesse by his love. What e're Love's matter be, he moves By th' even wings of his own doves, Lives by his own laws, and does hold55 In grossest metalls his own gold. All things swear friends to Fair and Good Yea suitours; man alone is wo'ed, Tediously wo'ed, and hardly wone: Only not slow to be undone.60 As if the bargain had been driven So hardly betwixt Earth and Heaven; Our God would thrive too fast, and be Too much a gainer by't, should we Our purchas'd selves too soon bestow65 On Him, who has not lov'd us so. When love of us call'd Him to see If wee'd vouchsafe His company, He left His Father's Court, and came Lightly as a lambent flame,70 Leaping upon the hills, to be The humble king of you and me. Nor can the cares of His whole crown (When one poor sigh sends for Him down) Detain Him, but He leaves behind75 The late wings of the lazy wind,300 Spurns the tame laws of Time and Place, And breaks through all ten heav'ns to our embrace. Yield to His siege, wise soul, and see Your triumph in His victory.80 Disband dull feares, give Faith the day: To save your life, kill your Delay. 'Tis cowardise that keeps this field; And want of courage not to yield. Yield then, O yield, that Love may win85 The Fort at last, and let Life in. Yield quickly, lest perhaps you prove Death's prey, before the prize of Love. This fort of your fair self if't be not wone, He is repuls'd indeed, but you'r undone.90
''Tis not the work of force but skill To find the way into man's will. 'Tis loue alone can hearts unlock; Who knowes the Word, he needs not knock.'
To the noblest and best of Ladyes, the Countesse of Denbigh,
perswading her to Resolution in Religion, and to render
her selfe without further delay into the Communion of the
Catholick Church.
What heau'n-intreated heart is this1 Stands trembling at the gate of blisse? Holds fast the door, yet dares not venture Fairly to open it, and enter. Whose definition is a doubt5 'Twixt life and death, 'twixt in and out. Say, lingring Fair! why comes the birth Of your brave soul so slowly forth? Plead your pretences (O you strong In weaknes!) why you choose so long10 In labor of your selfe to ly, Nor daring quite to liue nor dy? Ah! linger not, lou'd soul! a slow And late consent was a long no; Who grants at last, long time try'd15 And did his best to haue deny'd:302 What magick bolts, what mystick barres Maintain the will in these strange warres? What fatall yet fantastick, bands Keep the free heart from its own hands?20 So when the year takes cold, we see Poor waters their own prisoners be: Fetter'd and lockt vp they ly In a sad selfe-captivity. The astonisht nymphs their flood's strange fate deplore,25 To see themselues their own seuerer shore. Thou that alone canst thaw this cold, And fetch the heart from its strong-hold; Allmighty Love! end this long warr, And of a meteor make a starr.30 O fix this fair Indefinite! And 'mongst Thy shafts of soueraign light Choose out that sure decisiue dart Which has the key of this close heart, Knowes all the corners of't, and can controul35 The self-shutt cabinet of an vnsearcht soul. O let it be at last, Loue's hour! Raise this tall trophee of Thy powre; Come once the conquering way; not to confute But kill this rebell-word 'irresolute,'40 That so, in spite of all this peeuish strength Of weaknes, she may write 'resolv'd' at length. Vnfold at length, vnfold fair flowre And vse the season of Loue's showre!303 Meet His well-meaning wounds, wise heart,45 And hast to drink the wholsome dart. That healing shaft, which Heaun till now Hath in Loue's quiuer hid for you. O dart of Loue! arrow of light! O happy you, if it hitt right!50 It must not fall in vain, it must Not mark the dry, regardless dust. Fair one, it is your fate; and brings Æternal worlds upon its wings. Meet it with wide-spread armes, and see55 Its seat your soul's iust center be. Disband dull feares; giue faith the day; To saue your life, kill your delay. It is Loue's seege, and sure to be Your triumph, though His victory.60 'Tis cowardise that keeps this feild And want of courage not to yeild. Yeild then, O yeild, that Loue may win The fort at last, and let life in. Yeild quickly, lest perhaps you proue65 Death's prey, before the prize of Loue. This fort of your faire selfe, if't be not won, He is repulst indeed; but you are vndone.
END OF VOL. I.
LONDON: ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.
FOOTNOTES:
[1]Turnbull in line 19 misprints 'Diseased his ...' making
nonsense. Disease is = dis-ease, discompose, as used by Phineas
Fletcher: cf. vol. iii. p. 194 et alibi.
[2]Turnbull again misprints in line 3 'But' for 'Best,' once more
making nonsense.
[3] Edition of 1834, p. 295; of 1839, vol. i. p. 301. Turnbull adds
not one iota to our knowledge, and repeats all Willmott's erroneous
dates, &c.
[4] The present eminent Head of 'Charterhouse,' Dr. Haig-Brown,
strove to find earlier documents in vain for me.
[6] I feel disposed to think that it must have been some other
Richard Crashaw, albeit attendance at both Universities was not
uncommon. Wood's words are, that he was 'incorporated' in 1641
at Oxford; and his authority 'the private observation of a certain
Master of Arts, that was this year living in the University;' and
he adds, 'afterwards he was Master of Arts, in which degree it is
probable he was incorporated' (Fasti, s. n.).
[7] I owe very hearty thanks to my good friend Mr. W. Aldis
Wright, M.A., Trinity College, Cambridge, and to the Masters and
other authorities of Pembroke and Peterhouse, for unfailing attention
to my inquiries and the most zealous aid throughout.
[8] My 'document' was an extract from an old Register of the
Church. I lent it to the late Mr. Robert Bell (who intended to
include Crashaw in his 'Poets'), and somehow it got astray. My
priest-correspondent at Loretto was dead when I applied for another
copy, and the Register has disappeared. Of the fact, however, that
Crashaw died in 1650 there can be no doubt.
[10] Works, vol. i. (1707) pp. 44-7. Line 3 by a strange oversight is
misprinted in all the editions I have seen 'The hard, and rarest....'
I accept Willmott's correction.
[11] Query, the legal term 'seized' = taken possession of? So Vaughan,
Silurist,
'O give it ful obedience, that so seiz'd Of all I have, I may not move thy wrath' (i. 154),
and
'Thou so long seiz'd of my heart' (ib. p. 289). G.
[12] = Iamblichus, the celebrated Neo-Platonic philosopher, author
of [Greek: περὶ Πυθαγόρου αἱρέσευς], concerning the Philosophy of Pythagoras. G.
[14] See our Memorial-Introduction and Essay, for remarks on Herbert's
relation to Crashaw. G.
[15] 'Seven shares and a halfe.' The same phrase occurs in Ben
Jonson's Poetaster. The player whom Captain Tucca bullied and
fleeced, was one of Henslowe's company, as shown by Tucca's stinging
taunt that they had 'fortune and the good year on their side;'
the facts being that the Fortune theatre had just been built, and
that the year had been an exceptionally bad one with the hitherto
prosperous players. To call attention tacitly to the allusion 'fortune'
is, in the original editions, printed in italics. Various other players
having been mimicked, ridiculed, and reviled, Tucca then bids farewell
to his new acquaintance with—'commend me to seven shares
and a half;' a remark which by its position seems to point to the
chief men of the company. But a great part of the office of a manager
like Henslowe was, as exhibited in Henslowe's own Diary, just
such as is depreciatingly described in our text. He had various
dramatic authors, poetasters, and others in his pay and debt. Hence
as the Poetaster was written in 1601, and this preface in 1646, it
may be concluded, that 'seven shares and a half' was the established
proportion taken by, and therefore a theatrical cant name for, the
Manager. It follows also that as the Player was one of Henslowe's
company, the seven shares and a half alluded to by Jonson was
Henslowe himself, from whom he had seceded, and with whom he
had probably quarrelled. The question, however, yet remains open,
whether seven shares and a half was the proportion received by a
manager, or that taken by a proprietor-manager, such as Henslowe
was. Malone has conjectured that Henslowe drew fifteen shares; if
so, the other seven and a half may have been as rent, and out of
one of the two halves may have come the general expenses of the
house. G.
[16] 'Sixpenny soule, a suburb sinner.' This was the ordinary town
courtesan, who, eschewing the penny and twopenny rabble of the pit
and gallery, frequented the cheapest of the better-class seats, or main
body of the house. G.
[20] On the authorship of this Preface see our Preface. G.
[21] This couplet appeared first in 1648 edition of the 'Steps to the
Temple;' but it properly belongs to the engraving in 'Carmen Deo
Nostro' of 1652, which is reproduced in our illustrated 4to edition. G.
[22] 'The Weeper' appeared originally in the 'Steps' of 1646 (pp.
1-5): was reprinted in editions of 1648 (pp. 1-6), 1652 (pp. 85-92),
1670 (pp. 1-5). For reasons stated in our Preface, our text follows
that of 1652; but see Notes and Illustrations at close of the poem
for details of various readings, &c. &c., and our Essay for critical
remarks on it from Pope to Dr. George Macdonald. G.
[23] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 7-9): reprinted in
1652 and 1670. As before, our text is that of 1652 (pp. 55-61); but
see Notes and Illustrations at close. The illustration, engraved by
Mesager, is reproduced in our illustrated quarto edition. G.
[24] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 6-7): reprinted in
1648 (pp. 9-11) and 1670 editions. As it does not appear in 'Carmen
Deo Nostro,' &c. (1652), our text follows that of 1648; but see Notes
and Illustrations at close of the poem. G.
[25] Most of 'The Office of the Holy Crosse' appeared in the 'Steps'
of 1648, but in a fragmentary form. First came a piece 'Upon our
B. Saviour's Passion,' which included all the Hymns. Then 'the
Antiphona,' which was the last so called here; then 'the Recommendation
of the precedent Hymn;' then 'a Prayer;' and lastly,
'Christ's Victory,' including three other of the verses, called 'the
Antiphona.' Our text is from 'Carmen Deo Nostro' &c. of 1652, as
before (pp. 31-48)—the engraving in which is reproduced in our
illustrated quarto edition. See Notes and Illustrations at close of
this composition. G.
Mors et vita duello Conflixero mirando: Dux vitæ mortuus, regnat vivus.
Latin Sequence 12th-13th century: Vict. Pasch. G.
[27] The engraving of our text (1652) here, is reproduced in our illustrated
quarto edition. For the Latin 'Expostulatio' belonging
thereto, see our vol. ii. G.
[28] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 30-1): reprinted in
1652 (pp. 49-51) and 1670 (pp. 174-6). Our text is that of 1652, as
before. See Notes and Illustrations at close of the poem. G.
[29] Originally appeared in 'Steps' of 1646 (p. 15): was reprinted
in editions 1648 (pp. 21-2) and 1670 (p. 15). Our text is that of
1648: but there are only slight orthographic differences in the
others. G.
[30] Appeared originally in the 'Steps' of 1646 (p. 21): was reprinted
in 1648 (p. 29) and 1670 (p. 22). Our text is that of 1648,
but the others are the same except in the usual changes of orthography.
The Sancroft ms. in line 7 reads 'Then shall He drink;'
line 9, 'My paines are in their nonage: my young feares;' line 10
I have adopted, instead of 'Are yet both in their hopes, not come to
yeares,' which isn't English; line 12, 'are tender;' line 14, 'a towardnesse.'
I have arranged these poems in numbered couplets as
in the Sancroft ms. I insert 'd,' dropped by misprint in 1648, but
found in 1646 (line 13). G.
[31] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 21, 22): was reprinted
in editions of 1648 (pp. 29, 30) and 1670 (pp. 22, 23). Our
text is that of 1648; but all agree save in usual orthographic slight
changes. In 1646 stanza ii. line 2 spells 'too' as 'two.' The Sancroft
ms. varies only, as usual, in the orthography. G.
[32] Appeared originally in the 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 23, 24): was reprinted
in editions of 1648 (pp. 32, 33), 1652 (pp. 61-63) and 1670
(pp. 24, 25). Our text is that of 1652, as before, but with an entire
stanza from 1646 overlooked. See Notes and Illustrations at close of
the poem. G.
[33] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 33-40); was reprinted
in 1652 (pp. 1-9) and 1670 (pp. 146-153). Our text is that
of 1652, as before, and its engraving here is reproduced in our illustrated
4to edition. See Notes and Illustrations at close of the
poem. G.
[34] Appeared originally in the 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 25-27): was reprinted
in editions of 1648 (pp. 40-42) and 1670 (pp. 26-28). Our
text is that of 1648: but see Notes and Illustrations at close of the
poem. G.
[35] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 27, 28): reprinted
in editions of 1648 (pp. 42, 43) and 1670 (pp. 28, 29). Our text is
that of 1648, with which the others agree, except in usual slight
changes of orthography, and the following adopted from the Sancroft
ms.: line 7, a second 'they' inserted; line 17, 'than' for
'then;' line 21 'vnpearch't' = without perch or support. G.
[36] Appeared originally in the 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 28-31): reprinted
in editions of 1648 (pp. 43-47), 1652 (pp. 10-16) and 1670
(pp. 29-32). Our text is that of 1652, as before, and its engraving
here, is reproduced in our illustrated quarto edition. See Notes and
Illustrations at close of this composition. G.
[37] Appeared originally in the 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 94, 95), where it
is headed 'An Himne for the Circumcision day of our Lord:' reprinted
in edition of 1648 (pp. 47, 48) with 'A' for 'An' in heading,
and in the 'Carmen &c.' of 1652 (pp. 17, 18), being there entitled
simply 'New Year's Day,' and in the edition of 1670 (pp. 72-74).
Our text is that of 1652, as before, but there are only slight differences
besides the usual orthographical ones, in any. See Notes and
Illustrations at close of the poem. G.
[38] Appeared originally in the 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 48-55), reprinted
in 'Carmen' &c. of 1652 (pp. 19-28) and in 1670 (pp. 153-161). Our
text is that of 1652, as before: but see close for Notes and Illustrations.
In our illustrated quarto edition we reproduce the engraving
here of 1652. G.
[39] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 55, 56): reprinted
in editions of 1652 (pp. 29, 30) and 1670 (pp. 161, 162). Our text is
that of 1652, as before: but see Notes at close of the poem. G.
[40] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 22, 23): reprinted
in 1648 (pp. 56, 57) and in 1670 (pp. 23, 24). Our text is that of
1648, with the exception of reading in line 10, 'live' for 'lives,' from
1646 (and so in 1670). Other slight differences are simply in orthography,
and not noted. In the Sancroft ms. the heading is 'Vpon
Christ's Resurrection.' G.
[41] For critical remarks on the present very striking expansion and
interpretation rather than translation of Marino, the Reader is referred
to our Essay. The Sancroft ms. must have contained this
poem, for it is inserted in the index; but unfortunately the pages of
the ms. containing it have disappeared. It was first published in
the 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 51-73), and was reprinted in the editions of
1648 and 1670: and separately, with a brief introduction, a few years
since. Our text is that of 1648 (pp. 57-74); but it differs from the
edition of 1646 only in slight changes of spelling, e.g. 'hee' for 'he,'
'guild' for 'gild,' and the like—not calling for record. The edition
of 1670, in st. i. line 3, misprints 'so what' for 'O what,' and Turnbull
repeats the error, and of himself misreads in st. xxii. 'Who
thunders on a throne of stars above' for 'Who in a throne of stars
thunders above,' and in like manner in st. xxiv. line 8 substitutes
'getting' for 'finding,' and in st. xxvi. line 3 'serve' for 'serves.'
Again in st. li. first line of which is left partially blank, from (probably)
the illegibility of Crashaw's ms., Turnbull tacitly fills in,
'By proud usurping Herod now was borne,' and in line 3 misprints
'lineage' for 'image'—fetching it from the 'linage' of 1670—a plausible
reading, yet scarcely in keeping with the verb 'worn.' So too,
besides lesser orthographic alterations, in st. xxxvi. line 2 he does
not detect the stupid misprint 'whose' for 'my,' nor that of 'fight'
for 'sight' in st. xlvii. line 8, while in st. lxi. he drops 'all,' which
even the 1670 edition does not do, any more than is it responsible for
a tithe of Turnbull's mistakes here and throughout. G.
[42] Appeared first in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 74-75): was reprinted in
1652 (pp. 66-69) and 1670 (pp. 185-187). Our text is that of 1652:
but see Notes and Illustrations at close of the poem, and our Essay
for critical remarks. The engraving of 1652 is reproduced in our
illustrated quarto edition. G.
[43] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 76-78), where the
title is 'A Hymne on the B. Sacrament:' reprinted in 1652 (pp. 70-73)
and 1670 (pp. 187-190). Our text is that of 1652; but see Notes
at close of the poem. G.
[44] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 74-78), where it is
headed 'On a prayer booke sent to Mrs. M.R.:' was reprinted in 1648
(pp. 78-82), where the title differs from that of 1652 (pp. 108-112) in
leaving out 'Prayer' and 'little,' and in 1670 as in 1646. Our text
is that of 1652; but see Notes and Illustrations at close and on
M.R. in our Essay. G.
[45] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 82-84), and was reprinted
in 1670 (pp. 198-200). Our text is that of 1648; but see
Notes and Illustrations at close of the poem. G.
[46] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 84-5): reprinted in
1652 (pp. 121-2) and 1670 (pp. 204-5). Out text is that of 1652, as
before; but see Notes at close of the poem. G.
[47] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (p. 78): reprinted in editions
of 1648 (pp. 88-9) and 1670 (p. 60). Our text is that of 1648,
with a few adopted readings as noted onward. See our Essay on
Crashaw's relation to Herbert. In the Sancroft ms. the heading
is 'Vpon Herbert's Temple, sent to a Gentlewoman. R. Cr.' Line 3
in the ms. spells 'fire,' and has 'faire' before 'eyes;' adopted: line
5th, books were used to be tied with strings: line 6th, 1646, 'you
have ... th':' line 7th, ms. reads 'would' for 'will;' adopted: line
8th, 'to waite on your chast.' G.
[48] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 79-84): reprinted in
editions of 1648 (pp. 89-94), 1652 (pp. 93-100), and 1670 (pp. 61-67).
Our text is that of 1652, as before, and its engraving of the Saint's
portrait, and French lines here, are reproduced in our illustrated
quarto edition. See Notes and Illustrations at close of the poem, and
our Essay on Teresa and Crashaw. G.
[49] Appeared originally in the 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 85-6): reprinted
in editions of 1648 (pp. 97-8) and 1670 (pp. 67-8). Our text is that
of 1648. See our Essay for the biographic interest of this poem,
and also Notes at its close. G.
[50] Appeared originally in 1648 'Steps' (pp. 94-6): reprinted in
editions of 1652 (pp. 103-107) and 1670 (pp. 194-7). Our text is that
of 1652, as before. G.
[51] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (p. 98): reprinted in 1652
(p. 107) and 1670 (pp. 197-8). Our text is that of 1652, as before;
but the only difference in the others is (except the usual slight
changes in orthography), that in 1648, 2d part, line 5 reads 'longing'
for 'louing,' which I have adopted, as pointing back to the 'longing'
of the 1st part, line 2. The title I take from 1648, as in 1652 it is
simply 'A Song.' G.
[52] Appeared originally in the 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 90-1): reprinted
in 1648 (pp. 99-101), 1652 (pp. 81-3), 1670 (pp. 70-2). Our text is
that of 1652, as before; but see Notes and Illustrations at close of
the poem. G.
1. A Sermon shewing how we ought to behave our selves in
God's house.
2. A Sermon preferring holy Charity before Faith, Hope and
Knowledge.
3. A Treatise shewing that God's Law now qualified by the
Gospel of Christ, is possible, and ought to be fulfilled of
us in this life.
4. A Treatise of the Divine attributes.
5. A Treatise shewing the Antichrist not to be yet come.
By Robert Shelford, of Ringsfield in Suffolk, Priest. Printed by
the printers to the Universitie of Cambridge. 1635 [quarto].' See
Note at close of the poem, and our Essay, for more on Shelford. G.
[54] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 106-7), where it is
headed 'A Hymne in Meditation of the Day of Judgement:' reprinted
1652 (pp. 74-78), 1670 (pp. 191-4). Our text is that of 1652,
and its engraving here is reproduced in our illustrated quarto edition.
See our Essay for critical remarks on this great version of a
supreme hymn. G.
[55] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 107-9): reprinted
1652 (pp. 52-54) and 1670 (pp. 176-8). Our text is that of 1652, as
before. In 1648 lines 1 and 2 read 'you' for 'thee;' and line 33
'Thou' for 'you,' the latter adopted. G.
[56] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1648 (pp. 109-110): reprinted
1652 (pp. 79-80) and 1670 (pp. 194-5). Our text is that of 1652, as
before, and its engraving here is reproduced in our illustrated quarto
edition in two forms (one hitherto unknown) from the Bodleian
copy. G.
[57] Appeared first in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 96-9): reprinted in 1648
(pp. 111-113), 1652 (pp. 128-131), and 1670 (pp. 74-77). Our text is
that of 1652, as before; with the exception of better readings from
1646, as noted below. See our Memorial Introduction and Essay for
notices of the friendship of Cowley and Crashaw. G.
[58] As with Cowley's lines: see foot-note ante. G.
[59] See our Essay for critical remarks on this and related poems. G.
[61] Appeared originally in 'Delights' of 1646 (pp. 103-7): was reprinted
in 1648 (pp. 1-5), and 1670 (pp. 81-6). Our text is that of
1648, as before; but all agree. See Notes and Illustrations at close
of this poem for other two earlier translations, and our Essay for the
original Latin, with critical remarks. In our illustrated quarto edition
will be found a pathetic and daintily-rendered illustration, done
expressly for us by Mrs. Blackburn of Glasgow, and engraved by
W.J. Linton, Esq. G.
[62] Appeared originally in the 'Delights' of 1646 (pp. 110-1), and
was reprinted in editions 1648 (pp. 7-8) and 1670 (pp. 106-7). Our
text is that of 1648, as before, with the exception of 'gentlest' for
'gentle' from 1646 edition (line 2d), which is confirmed by the Sancroft
ms. The ms. in line 10 reads 'chatting:' line 16, I have
corrected the usual reading of 'bosome' by 'blosome,' from the Sancroft
ms. The heading of the ms. is 'E Virg. Georg. particula.
In laudem Veris. R. Cr.' i.e. Georg. ii. 323-345. G.
[63] Appeared originally in the 'Delights' of 1646 (pp. 111): was reprinted
in 1648 (p. 8) and 1670 (p. 107). Our text is that of 1648,
as before; but all agree. G.
[64] Our text is from the 'Hygiasticon' of Lessius in the English
translation of 1636, the title-page of which is as follows: 'Hygiasticon:
or the right course of preserving Life and Health unto
extream old Age: Together with soundnesse and integritie of the
Senses, Iudgement, and Memorie. Written in Latine by Leonard
Lessius, and now done into English. The third Edition. Cambridge,
1636.' [42mo.] It is there entitled 'To the Reader, upon
the Book's intent,' and begins at line 15; these opening lines being
taken from the 'Delights' of 1646 (pp. 112-3). See our Essay for
remarks on this poem, and at close Notes and various readings. G.
[65] Appeared originally in 'Delights' of 1646 (p. 114): was reprinted
in 1648 (p. 10) and 1670 (pp. 109-110). Our text is that of
1648; but all agree. Our Poet has turned the prose of the original
into verse (Æthiopica, lib. i. cap. 1). There was an early English
translation of the whole, as follows: 'Heliodorus, his Æthiopian
History: Done out of Greeke, and compared with other Translations.
1622' [quarto]. In line 2, 1646 and 1670 read 'in' for 'with:' line
7, 1646 misprints 'thy' for 'they.' The heading in the Sancroft
ms. is 'The faire Æthiopian, R. Cr.' Turnbull perpetuates 1670's
misprint of 'in' for 'with' in line 2, and adds one of his own in line
26, by misprinting 'guest' for 'guests.' G.
[66] Appeared originally in the 'Delights' of 1646 (pp. 115-117):
was reprinted 1648 (pp. 11-13) and 1670 (pp. 110-112). Our text is
that of 1648; but all agree, save as follows: 1646 misprints 'cease'
for 'ceaze' = seize, in line 17 from end; and 1670, line 8 from beginning,
misprints 'own' for 'owe;' the latter perpetuated by Turnbull.
The poem is an interpretation of the first Idyll of Moschus.
Line 5, 'O yes' = the legal oyiez: line 8, 'owe' = own. G.
[67] The first edition of Bishop Andrewes' Sermons was published
in 1629. Its title was 'XCVI Sermons by the Right Honourable and
Reverend Father in God, Launcelot Andrewes, late Lord Bishop of
Winchester.' It is dedicated to the King by Laud and Buckeridge,
Bishop of Ely, the latter adding a funeral sermon. It has no frontispiece.
Lowndes, as other bibliographers, does not seem to have
known the edition of 1629. He calls that of 1631 the first, while it
was the second; and he says it had a frontispiece, which is incorrect,
if I may judge from a number of copies personally examined.
The third edition (1635) I have not seen: but in the quarto (1641)
appears a frontispiece-portrait, having the lines above, but no name
or initials. Line 8 Turnbull misprints 'and, with holy.' G.
[68] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 31-2): was reprinted
in 1648 'Delights' (pp. 18-19) and 1670 (pp. 86-7). Our text is that
of 1648; but all agree. The Sancroft ms. gives us the name of the
'gentleman' celebrated, being thus headed, 'In obitum desideratissimi
Mri Chambers, Coll. Reginal. Socij. R. Cr.;' and in the margin in the
archbishop's hand, 'The title and Name not in ye print.' The same
ms. supplies us with lines 11-12 and 21-22, never before printed.
This ms. in line 23 reads 'If yet at least he' ... and in line 32,
'are' for 'be.' Only other slight orthographic differences. G.
[69] Appeared originally in the 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 32-3): was reprinted
in 1648 'Delights' (pp. 19-20) and 1670 (pp. 87-9). Our
text is that of 1648; but all agree. See our Essay, as before, for
notice of Herrys or Harris. In the Sancroft ms. the heading is
'In ejusdem præmatur. obitu. Allegoricum. R. Cr.;' and line 9 reads
'tree' for 'plant;' adopted. For a short Latin poem added here, see
our vol. ii. G.
[70] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 33-5): was reprinted
in 1648 'Delights' (pp. 20-2) and 1670 (pp. 89-91). Our text is that
of 1648, as before; but see Notes and Illustrations at close of the
poem. G.
[71] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 36-7): was reprinted
in 1648 'Delights' (pp. 23-4) and 1670 (pp. 91-3). Our text is that
of 1648; but see Notes and Illustrations at close of the poem. G.
[72] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 38-9): was reprinted
in 1648 'Delights' (pp. 24-6) and 1670 (93-4). Our text is
that of 1648; but all agree. The Sancroft ms. is headed 'Epitaphium
in eundem R. Cr.' Line 31, Turnbull misprints 'breast' for
'breath.' G.
[73] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 39-40), where it is
headed 'An Epitaph vpon Husband and Wife, which died and were
buried together.' G.
[74] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 40-1), where it is
headed 'Vpon Mr. Staninough's Death:' was reprinted in the 'Delights'
of 1648 (p. 27), with the simple inscription, 'At the Funerall
of a young Gentleman,' and in 1652 (pp. 24-5), as 'Death's Lectvre
and the Fvneral of a yovng Gentleman,' and in 1670 (bis), viz. p. 96
and pp. 206-7. Our text is that of 1652, as before; but see Notes
at close of the poem. G.
[75] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (p. 40): was reprinted
in 1648 'Delights' (p. 28) and 1670 (p. 95). Our text is that of
1648; but all agree. In the Sancroft ms. the heading is 'In obitum
Dris Brooke. R. Cr.' It reads 'banck' for 'bankes' in line 7. See
our Essay for notice of Dr. Brooke. G.
[76] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 45-6): was reprinted
in 'Delights' of 1648 (pp. 28-9) and 1670 (pp. 101-2). Our text is
that of 1648, as before; but see Notes and Illustrations at close of the
poem. G.
[77] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 47-8): was reprinted
in 1648 'Delights' (pp. 30-1) and 1670 (pp. 102-4). Our text is
that of 1648, as before; but see Notes and Illustrations at close of
the poem. G.
[78] Appeared originally in 'Steps' of 1646 (pp. 49-50): was reprinted
in 'Delights' of 1648 (pp. 32-3) and 1670 (pp. 104-6). Our
text is that of 1648, as before; but see Notes and Illustrations at
close of the poem. G.
[79] Appeared originally in the 'Delights' of 1646 (pp. 123-4), along
with the other two (pp. 125-6): reprinted in 1648 (pp. 35-7) and 1670
(pp. 117-19). Our text is that of 1648; but all agree. G.
[80]Turnbull glaringly misprints 'The heart commanding in my
heart,' and in line 15, 'O love;' the latter after 1670 as usual, the
former his own. G.
[81] Appeared originally, without signature, in the work celebrated,
which is a great folio. It was preceded by another, which, having
been inserted in the 'Steps' of 1646 and the other editions (1652
excepted), has been continued to be reprinted as Crashaw's. It
really belonged to Dr. Edward Rainbow, Bishop of Carlisle, for
whom, so late as 1688, it was first claimed by his biographer, Banks.
This was pointed out in Notes and Queries by Rev. J.E.B. Mayor,
M.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge (2d s. vol. iv. p. 286). One is
thankful to have the claim confirmed by the non-presence of the
poem in the Sancroft ms., where only the above shorter one appears
as by Crashaw. Lines 5-8 of Rainbow's poem it was simply impossible
for our singer to have written. I add the other at close of
Crashaw's, as some may be curious to read it: but as the details
of the grotesque 'Frontispiece' are celebrated by Rainbow, not Crashaw,
I have departed from my intention of reproducing it in our
illustrated quarto edition, the more readily in that I have much
increased otherwise therein the reproductions announced. Rainbow
contributed to the University Collections along with Crashaw,
More, Beaumont, E. King, &c. &c. See our Essay on Life and
Poetry. G.
[82] Appeared originally in 'Delights' of 1646 (pp. 130-1): was reprinted
in 1648 (pp. 40-1) and 1670 (pp. 122-3). Our text is that
of 1648, as before; but all agree. G.
[83] Appeared originally in 'Delights' of 1646 (pp. 132-3), and was
reprinted in 1648 (p. 42); but not in 1670. Our text is that of 1648;
but all agree. The original is found in Carm. v. = 2. The Sancroft
m.s. reads line 4 'Blithest:' line 9 'numerous:' line 12 'A:' line 17
'our.' G.
[84] Appeared originally in 'Delights' of 1646 (pp. 134-8): was
reprinted in 1648 (pp. 43-7) and 1670 (pp. 124-8). Our text is that
of 1648, as before; but see Notes and Illustrations at close of the
poem. G.
[85] Appeared originally in 'Voces Votivæ ab Academicis Cantabrigiensibus
pro novissimo Carolo et Mariæ principe filio emissæ.
Cantabrigiæ: apud Rogerum Daniel. MDCXL.' This poem did not
appear in the edition of 1646; but it did in that of 1648 (p. 48).
Not having been reprinted in 1670, it was overlooked by Turnbull.
Our text is from 1648; but the only variation from the original in
'Voces Votivæ' is in line 7, 'to' instead of 'for.' G.
[86] Appeared as in last piece: 1648 (pp. 49-53), 1670 (pp. 97-100).
Our text is that of 1648, as before, which corrects Turnbull in
many places as well in errors of commission as of omission; the
latter extending to no fewer than forty-nine entire lines, in addition
to the 'Apologie' of fourteen lines. See Notes and Illustrations at
close of the poem. G.
[87] Appeared originally in 1648 'Delights;' but is not given in
1670 edition. Line 14 is an exquisitely-turned allusion to Cowley's
title-page of his juvenile Poems, 'Poetical Blossoms,' 1633. 'Apricocks'
= apricots. So Herrick in the 'Maiden Blush,'
'So cherries blush, and kathern peares, And apricocks, in youthfull yeares.'
(Works, by Hazlitt, vol. ii. p. 287.) G.
[88] Appeared originally in the 'Delights' of 1648 (pp. 67-8): was
reprinted in 1652 (pp. 115-120) and 1670 (pp. 200-4). Our text is
that of 1652, as before; but see various readings at close of the
poems. See also our Essay for critical remarks. Our poet translates
from the Latin of Francis Remond. G.
[89] Charles I. See our Essay on this and kindred poems, and their
relation to the Latin royal poems. G.
[90] See our Notes to Panegyric on the Queen's 'numerous progenie.'
G.
[92] See notice of Staninough in our Essay, as before. G.
[93] See our Essay, as before, for notice of Porter. G.
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