The Whole Works of William Browne of Tavistock ... Now first collected and edited, with a memoir of the poet, and notes, by W. Carew Hazlitt, of the Inner Temple |
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The Whole Works of William Browne | ||
156
[Commendatory Verses.]
To the most ingenious Author Mr. W. Browne.
Ingenious Swaine! that highly dost adorneClear Tauy! on whose brinck we both were borne!
Iust Praise in me would ne're be thought to moue
From thy sole Worth, but from my partiall Loue.
Wherefore I will not doe thee so much wrong,
As by such mixture to allay thy Song.
But while kinde strangers rightly praise each Grace
Of thy chaste Muse; I (from the happy Place
That brought thee forth, and thinkes it not vnfit
To boast now that it earst bred such a Wit;)
Would onely haue it knowne I much reioyce;
To heare such Matters, sung by such a Voyce.
Iohn Glanvill.
To his Friend Mr. Browne.
All that doe reade thy Workes, and see thy face,(Where scarce a haire growes vp, thy chin to grace)
Doe greatly wonder how so youthfull yeares
Could frame a Work, where so much worth appears.
To heare how thou describ'st a Tree, a Dale,
A Groue, a Greene, a solitary Vale,
157
The golden Mountaines, and the siluer Streames,
How smooth thy Verse is, and how sweet thy Rimes,
How sage, and yet how pleasant are thy Lines;
What more or lesse can there be said by men,
But, Muses rule thy Hand, and guide thy Pen.
Tho. Wenman, è Societate Inter. Templi.
To his worthily-affected Friend Mr. VV. Browne.
Awake
sad Muse, and thou my sadder spright,
Made so by Time, but more by Fortunes spight,
Awake, and hie vs to the Greene,
There shall be seene
The quaintest Lad of all the time
For neater Rime:
Whose free and vnaffected straines
Take all the Swaines
That are not rude and ignorant,
Or Enuy want.
Made so by Time, but more by Fortunes spight,
Awake, and hie vs to the Greene,
There shall be seene
The quaintest Lad of all the time
For neater Rime:
Whose free and vnaffected straines
Take all the Swaines
That are not rude and ignorant,
Or Enuy want.
And Enuy lest it's hate discouered be
A Courtly Loue and Friendship offers thee:
The Shepherdesses blithe and faire
For thee despaire.
And whosoe're depends on Pan
Holds him a man
Beyond themselues, (if not compare,)
He is so rare,
So innocent in all his wayes
As in his Layes.
He masters no low soule who hopes to please
The Nephew of the braue Philisides.
A Courtly Loue and Friendship offers thee:
The Shepherdesses blithe and faire
For thee despaire.
And whosoe're depends on Pan
Holds him a man
Beyond themselues, (if not compare,)
He is so rare,
So innocent in all his wayes
As in his Layes.
He masters no low soule who hopes to please
The Nephew of the braue Philisides.
158
Another to the same.
Were all mens enuies fixt in one mans lookes,That monster that would prey on safest Fame,
Darst not once checke at thine, nor at thy Name:
Se he who men can reade as well as Bookes
Attest thy Lines; thus tride, they show to vs
As Scæua's Shield, thy Selfe Emeritus.
W. Herbert.
[To my Browne, yet brightest Swaine]
To my Browne, yet brightest Swaine
That woons, or haunts or Hill or Plaine.
That woons, or haunts or Hill or Plaine.
Poeta nascitur.
Pipe on, sweet Swaine, till Ioy, in Blisse, sleepe waking;
Hermes, it seemes, to thee, of all the Swaines,
Hath lent his Pipe and Art: For thou art making
With sweet Notes (noted) Heau'n of Hils and Plaines!
Nay, if as thou beginst, thou dost hold on,
The totall Earth thine Arcadie will bee;
And Neptunes Monarchy thy Helicon:
So, all in both will make a God of thee.
To whom they will exhibit Sacrifice
Of richest Loue and Praise; and enuious Swaines
(Charm'd with thine Accents) shall thy Notes agnize
To reach aboue great Pans in all thy Straines.
Then, ply this Veyne: for, it may well containe
The richest Morals vnder poorest Shroud;
And sith in thee the Past'rall spirit doth raigne,
On such Wits-Treasures let it sit abrood:
Till it hath hatch'd such Numbers as may buy
The rarest Fame that e're enriched Ayre;
Or fann'd the Way faire, to Æternity,
To which vnsoil'd, thy Glory shall repaire!
Where (with the Gods that in faire Starres doe dwell,
When thou shalt, blazing, in a Starre abide)
Thou shalt be stil'd the Shepherds-Starre, to tell
Them many Mysteries; and be their Guide.
Hermes, it seemes, to thee, of all the Swaines,
Hath lent his Pipe and Art: For thou art making
With sweet Notes (noted) Heau'n of Hils and Plaines!
Nay, if as thou beginst, thou dost hold on,
The totall Earth thine Arcadie will bee;
And Neptunes Monarchy thy Helicon:
So, all in both will make a God of thee.
To whom they will exhibit Sacrifice
Of richest Loue and Praise; and enuious Swaines
(Charm'd with thine Accents) shall thy Notes agnize
To reach aboue great Pans in all thy Straines.
Then, ply this Veyne: for, it may well containe
The richest Morals vnder poorest Shroud;
And sith in thee the Past'rall spirit doth raigne,
On such Wits-Treasures let it sit abrood:
Till it hath hatch'd such Numbers as may buy
The rarest Fame that e're enriched Ayre;
Or fann'd the Way faire, to Æternity,
To which vnsoil'd, thy Glory shall repaire!
159
When thou shalt, blazing, in a Starre abide)
Thou shalt be stil'd the Shepherds-Starre, to tell
Them many Mysteries; and be their Guide.
Thus, doe I spurre thee on with sharpest praise,
To vse thy Gifts of Nature, and of Skill,
To double-gilde Apollos Browes, and Bayes,
Yet make great Natvre Arts true Sou'raigne still.
So, Fame shall euer say, to thy renowne,
The Shepherds-Star, or bright'st in Skie, is Browne!
To vse thy Gifts of Nature, and of Skill,
To double-gilde Apollos Browes, and Bayes,
Yet make great Natvre Arts true Sou'raigne still.
So, Fame shall euer say, to thy renowne,
The Shepherds-Star, or bright'st in Skie, is Browne!
The true Louer of thine Art and Nature, Iohn Davies of Heref.
To my noble Friend the Author.
A perfect Pen, it selfe will euer praise.
So pipes our Shepherd in his Roundelayes,
That who could iudge, of Musickes sweetest straine,
Would sweare thy Muse were in a heauenly vaine.
A Worke of worth, showes what the Worke-man is:
When as the fault, that may be found amisse,
(To such at least, as haue iudicious eyes)
Nor in the Worke, nor yet the Worke-man lyes.
So pipes our Shepherd in his Roundelayes,
That who could iudge, of Musickes sweetest straine,
Would sweare thy Muse were in a heauenly vaine.
160
When as the fault, that may be found amisse,
(To such at least, as haue iudicious eyes)
Nor in the Worke, nor yet the Worke-man lyes.
Well worthy thou, to weare the Lawrell wreath:
When frō thy brest, these blessed thoughts do breath;
That in thy gracious Lines such grace doe giue,
It makes thee, euerlastingly to liue.
Thy words well coucht, thy sweet inuention show,
A perfect Poet, that could place them so.
When frō thy brest, these blessed thoughts do breath;
That in thy gracious Lines such grace doe giue,
It makes thee, euerlastingly to liue.
Thy words well coucht, thy sweet inuention show,
A perfect Poet, that could place them so.
Vnton Croke, è Societate Inter. Templi.
To the Author.
That
priuiledge which others claime,
To flatter with their Friends
With thee (Friend) shall not be mine ayme,
My Verse so much pretends.
To flatter with their Friends
With thee (Friend) shall not be mine ayme,
My Verse so much pretends.
The generall Vmpire of best wit
In this will speake thy fame.
The Muses Minions as they sit,
Will still confirme the same.
In this will speake thy fame.
The Muses Minions as they sit,
Will still confirme the same.
Let me sing him that merits best,
Let others scrape for fashion;
Their buzzing prate thy worth will iest,
And sleight such commendation.
Let others scrape for fashion;
Their buzzing prate thy worth will iest,
And sleight such commendation.
Anth. Vincent.
161
To his worthy Friend Mr. W. Browne, on his Booke.
That Poets are not bred so, but so borne,Thy Muse it proues; for in her ages morne
She hath stroke enuy dumbe, and charm'd the loue
Of eu'ry Muse whose birth the Skies approue.
Goe on; I know thou art too good to feare.
And may thy earely straines affect the eare
Of that rare Lord, who iudge and guerdon can
The richer gifts which doe aduantage man!
Iohn Morgan, è Societate Inter. Templi.
To his Friend the Authour.
Sometimes (deare friend) I make thy Booke my meat,And then I iudge 'tis Hony that I eat.
Sometimes my drinke it is, and then I thinke
It is Apollo's Nectar, and no drinke.
And being hurt in minde, I keepe in store
Thy Booke, a precious Balsame for the sore.
'Tis Hony, Nectar, Balsame most diuine:
Or one word for them all; my Friend, 'tis thine.
Tho. Heygate, è Societate Inter. Templi.
To his Friend the Author.
If antique Swaines wanne such immortall praise,Though they alone with their melodious Layes,
Did onely charme the Woods and flowry Lawnes:
Satyres, and Floods, and Stones, and hairy Fawnes:
162
That charm'st not thē but men with thy sweet Songs?
Avgvstvs Cæsar, è Societate Inter. Templi.
To the Authour.
Tis knowne I scorne to flatter (or commend)What merits not applause though in my Friend:
Which by my censure should now more appeare,
Were this not full as good as thou art deare:
But since thou couldst not (erring) make it so,
That I might my impartiall humour show
By finding fault; Nor one of these friends tell
How to shew loue so ill, that I as well
Might paint out mine: I feele an enuious touch,
And tell thee Swaine: that at thy fame I grutch,
Wishing the Art that makes this Poeme shine,
And this thy Worke (wert not thou wronged) mine.
For when Detraction shal forgotten be,
This will continue to eternize thee;
And if hereafter any busie wit
Should, wronging thy conceit, miscensure it,
Though seeming learn'd or wise: here he shall see,
Tis prais'd by wiser and more learn'd then hee.
G. Wither.
To Mr. Browne.
Were there a thought so strange as to denyThat happy Bayes doe some mens Births adorne,
Thy worke alone might serue to iustifie,
That Poets are not made so, but so borne.
163
Hadst thou not Lawrell in thy Cradle worne?
Thy Birth o'er tooke thy Youth: And it doth make
Thy youth (herein) thine elders ouer-take.
W. B.
To my truly-belou'd Friend M. Browne, on his Pastorals.
Some men, of Bookes or Friends not speaking right,May hurt them more with praise, then Foes with spight.
But I haue seene thy Worke, and I know thee:
And, if thou list thy selfe, what thou canst bee.
For, though but early in these paths thou tread,
I finde thee write most worthy to be read.
It must be thine owne iudgement, yet that sends
This thy worke forth: that iudgement mine commends.
And, where the most reade bookes, on Authors fames,
Or, like our Money-brokers, take vp names
On credit, and are couzen'd; see, that thou
By offring not more sureties, then enow,
Hold thine owne worth vnbroke: which is so good
Vpon th' Exchange of Letters, as I wou'd
More of our Writers would like thee, not swell
With the how much they set forth, but th' how well.
Ben. Ionson.
The Whole Works of William Browne | ||