University of Virginia Library



To my Beloved Friend and Fellow Mr. HENRY LAWES,

On his Books of AYRES, lately Published.

Now I have view'd this Book of thine,
And find sweet Language, Notes more fine
And see thy Fuges wrought in the chime,
Thy Weaving far excells the Rhime;
And still thy choice of Lines are good,
Not like to those who get their Food
As Beggars Rags from Dunghills take,
(Such as comes next) ill Songs to make;
Who by a witty blind pretense
Take words that creep half way to sense;
Hippocrates or Galen's Feet,
And sing them too with Notes as meet;
Songs as all th'way to Gammut tend,
But in F Fa ut make an end;
With killing notes which ever must

Coriat.

Squeez the Spheres, and intimate the Dust:

These with their brave Chromaticks bring
Noise to the Ear, but mean No-thing:
Yet these will censure, when indeed
Shew them good Lines, They cannot read;
Or read them so, that in the close
You'll hardly judge them Rhime from Prose.
But why do I write this to Thee?
This is for shop-sale Frippery;
Thy richer store hath truly hit
The whole Age for their want of wit:
Live freely, and thy Phansie please,
We shall be censur'd by such Things as these.
John Wilson, Doct. in Musick.