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Tuned to his accents, that in beasts breathe minds.

What fowls, what floods, what earth, what air, what winds,

What fires ethereal, what the Gods conclude

In all their counsels, his Muse makes indued

With varied voices that even rocks have
moved.

And yet for all this, naked Virtue loved,
Honours without her he as abject prizes,
And foolish Fame, derived from thence,
despises.

When from the vulgar taking glorious
bound

Up to the mountain where the Muse is crown'd,

He sits and laughs to see the jaded rabble Toil to his hard heights, tall access unable, &c.1

rate and pompous that the poor plain ground-work, considered together, may seem the naturally rich womb to it, and produce it needfully. Much wondered at, therefore, is the censure of Dionysius Longinus (a man otherwise affirmed grave and of elegant judgment), comparing Homer in his Iliads to the Sun rising, in his Odysses to his descent or setting, or to the ocean robbed of his æsture; many tributary floods and rivers of excellent ornament withheld from their observance. When this his work so far exceeds the ocean, with all his court and concourse, that all his sea is only a serviceable stream to it. Nor can it be compared to any one power to be named in nature; being an entirely well-sorted and digested confluence of all; where the most solid and grave is made as nimble and fluent as the most airy and fiery, the nimble and fluent as firm and well-bounded as the most grave and solid. And, taking all together, of so tender impression, and of such command to the voice of the Muse, that they knock heaven with her breath, and discover their foundations as low as hell. Nor is this allcomprising Poesy fantastic or mere fictive; but the most material and doctrinal illations of truth, both for all manly information of manners in the young, all prescription of justice, and even Christian piety, in the most grave and high governed. To illustrate both which, in both kinds, with all height of expression, the Poet creates both a body and a soul in them. Wherein, if the body (being the letter or history) seems fictive, and beyond possibility to bring into act, the sense then and allegory, which is the soul, is to be sought, which intends a more eminent expressure of Virtue for her loveliness, and of Vice for her ugliness, in their several effects, going beyond the life, than any art within life can possibly delineate. Why then is fiction to this end so hateful to our true ignorants? Or why should a poor chronicler of a Lord Mayor's naked truth (that peradventure will last his year) include more worth with our modern wizards than Homer for his naked Ulysses clad in eternal fiction? But this proser Dionysius, and the rest of these grave and reputatively learned, that dare undertake for their gravities the headstrong censure of all things; and challenge the understanding of these toys in their childhoods; when even these childish vanities 'Thus far Angel. Politianus, for the most retain deep and most necessary learning part, translated.

And that your Lordship may in his face take view of his mind, the first word of his Iliads is unviv, wrath; the first word of his Odysses, avopa, man: contracting in either word his each work's proposition. In one, predominant perturbation; in the other, overruling wisdom. In one, the body's fervour and fashion of outward fortitude to all possible height of heroical action; in the other, the mind's inward, constant, and unconquered empire, unbroken, unaltered, with any most insolent and tyrannous infliction. To many most sovereign praises is this Poem entitled; but to that grace, in chief, which sets on the crown both of poets and orators ; τὸ τὰ μικρὰ μεγάλως, καὶ Tà KOLà Kaivws: that is, Parva magnè dicere; pervulgata novè; jejuna plenè.-To speak things little greatly; things common rarely; things barren and empty fruitfully and fully. The return of a man into his country is his whole scope and object; which in itself, your Lordship may well say, is jejune and fruitless enough, affording nothing feastful, nothing magnificent. And yet even this doth the divine inspiration render vast, illustrious, and of miraculous composure. And for this, my Lord, is this poem preferred to his Iliads; for therein much magnificence, both of person and action, gives great aid to his industry; but in this are these helps exceeding sparing, or nothing; and yet is the structure so elabo

enough in them to make them children in

their ages, and teach them while they live; are not in these absolutely divine infusions allowed either voice or relish: for, Qui petuas ad fores accedit, &c. (says the d..ne philosopher) he that knocks at the gates of the Muses, sine Musarum furore, is neither to be admitted entry, nor a touch at their thresholds; his opinion of entry, ridiculous, and his presumption impious. Nor must Poets themselves (might I a little insist on these contempts, not tempting too far your Lordship's Ulyssean patience) presume to these doors, without the truly genuine and peculiar induction. There ing in Poesy a twofold rapture (or alienation of soul, as the above-said teacher terms it) one insania, a disease of the mind, and a mere madness, by which the infected is thrust beneath all the degrees of humanity: et ex homine, brutum quodammodò redditur: (for which poor Poesy, in this diseased and impostorous age, is so barbarously vilified); the other is, divinus furor, by which the sound and divinely healthful, suprà hominis naturam erigitur, et in Deum transit. One a perfection directly infused from God; the other an infection obliquely and degenerately proceeding from man. Of the divine fury, my Lord, your Homer hath ever been both first and last instance; being pronounced absolutely, τὸν σοφώτατον, καὶ τὸν θειότατον ποιητήν, most wise and most divine poet." Against whom whosoever shall open his profane mouth may worthily receive answer with this of his divine defender (Empedocles, Heraclitus, Protagoras, Epicharmus, &c., being of Homer's part) Tis ovv, &c.; who against such an army, and the general Homer, dares attempt the assault, but he must be reputed ridiculous? And yet against this host, and this invincible commander, shall we have every besogne and fool a leader. The common herd, I assure myself, ready to receive it on their horns. Their infected leaders,

The

Such men as sideling ride the ambling Muse,

Whose saddle is as frequent as the stews. Whose raptures are in every pageant seen, In every wassail-rhyme and dancinggreen;

When he that writes by any beam of truth

Must dive as deep as he, past shallow youth.

Truth dwells in gulfs, whose deeps hide shades so rich,

That Night sits muffled there in clouds of pitch,

More dark than Nature made her; and

requires,

To clear her tough mists, heaven's great fire of fires,

To whom the Sun itself is but a beam. For sick souls then (but rapt in foolish dream)

To wrestle with these heaven-strong mysteries, What madness is it! when their light serves

eyes

That are not worldy in their least aspect, But truly pure, and aim at heaven direct. Yet these none like but what the brazen head

Blatters abroad, no sooner born but dead.

Holding, then, in eternal contempt, my Lord, those short-lived bubbles, eternize your virtue and judgment with the Grecian monarch; esteeming not as the least of your new-year's presents,

Homer, three thousand years dead, now revived,

Even from that dull death that in life he lived;

When none conceited him, none understood

That so much life in so much death as blood

Conveys about it, could mix. But when Death

Drunk up the bloody mist that human breath

Pour'd round about him (poverty and spite

Thickening the hapless vapour) then Truth's light

Glimmer'd about his poem; the pinch'd soul (Amidst the mysteries it did enrol) Brake powerfully abroad. And as we see The sun all hid in clouds, at length got free,

Through some forced covert, over all the ways,

Near and beneath him, shoots his vented rays

Far off, and sticks them in some little glade;

All woods, fields, rivers, left besides in shade:

So your Apollo, from that world of light Closed in his Poem's body, shot to sight Some few forced beams, which near him,

were not seen

(As in his life or country), Fate and spleen

Clouding their radiance; which when Death had clear'd,

To far-off regions his free beams appear'd;

In which all stood and wonder'd ; striving which

His birth and rapture should in right enrich.

Twelve labours of your Thespian Hercules

I now present your Lordship; do but please

To lend life means till th' other twelve receive

Equal achievement; and let Death then

reave

My life now lost in our patrician loves, That knock heads with the herd; in whom there moves

One blood, one soul, both drown'd in one set height

Of stupid envy and mere popular spite. Whose loves with no good did my least vein fill;

And from their hates I fear as little ill. Their bounties nourish not, when most they feed,

But, where there is no merit or no need, Rain into rivers still, and are such showers As bubbles spring, and overflow the flowers. Their worse parts and worst men their best suborns,

Like winter cows whose milk runs to their horns.

And as litigious clients' books of law
Cost infinitely; taste of all the awe
Bench'd in our kingdom's policy, piety,

state;

Earn all their deep explorings; satiate

All sorts there thrust together by the heart With thirst of wisdom, spent on either part; Horrid examples made of Life and Death From their fine stuff woven; yet when once the breath

Of sentence leaves them, all their worth is drawn

As dry as dust, and wears like cobweb lawn:

So these men set a price upon their worth, That no man gives but those that trot it forth

Through Need's foul ways, feed Humours with all cost

Though Judgment sterves in them; Rout, State engross'd

(At all tobacco-benches, solemn tables, Where all that cross their envies are their fables)

In their rank faction; shame and death approved

Fit penance for their opposites; none loved

But those that rub them; not a reason heard

That doth not soothe and glorify their preferr'd

Bitter opinions. When, would Truth

resume

The cause to his hands, all would fly in fume

Before his sentence; since the innocent mind

Just God makes good, to whom their worst is wind.

For, that I freely all my thoughts express, My conscience is my thousand witnesses: And to this stay my constant comforts vow, You for the world I have, or God for you.

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swell the womb

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To the Reader.*

T with foul hands you touch these holy Glad Scipio, viewing well this prince of rites,

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ghosts,

Said: "O, if Fates would give this poet

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