University of Virginia Library

VIII.—John Taylor, the Water-Poet.

[_]

From Taylor's ‘Vrania, or His Heauenly Muse.’ 1615: quarto edition.

In laudem Authoris.

To the Helliconian Water-Poet, my honest friend, Iohn Taylor.

In euery Art, saue Poetry, the meane
Is praisd: but therein meanely-well to do
Is base, too base: then Iudgment cannot leane
On whats too base, but base it must be too.
Then each man that his Reputation huggs
For Iudgment, praise no lines of but meane Reach:
And laude but what drawes dry Mineruaes duggs,
Lest they their Iudgments might thereby impeach.
Then is my Iudgment Iack, perplext in thee;
For thou dost write so well with meanes so ill
That thine Admirer I confesse to be,
Much rather then the Iudger of thy skill:
Art makes not Poetry, thou dost plainly proue,
But supernaturall bountie from aboue.
Iohn Dauis.