The Works of Michael Drayton | ||
347
TO HIMSELFE, AND THE HARPE.
And why not I, as hee
That's greatest, if as free,
(In sundry strains that strive,
Since there so many be)
Th'old Lyrick kind revive?
That's greatest, if as free,
(In sundry strains that strive,
Since there so many be)
Th'old Lyrick kind revive?
I will, yea, and I may;
Who shall oppose my way?
For what is he alone,
That of himselfe can say,
Hee's Heire of Helicon?
Who shall oppose my way?
For what is he alone,
That of himselfe can say,
Hee's Heire of Helicon?
Apollo, and the Nine,
Forbid no Man their Shrine,
That commeth with hands pure;
Else they be so divine,
They will him not indure.
Forbid no Man their Shrine,
That commeth with hands pure;
Else they be so divine,
They will him not indure.
For they be such coy Things,
That they care not for Kings,
And dare let them know it;
Nor may he touch their Springs,
That is not borne a Poet.
That they care not for Kings,
And dare let them know it;
Nor may he touch their Springs,
That is not borne a Poet.
The Phocean it did prove,
Whom when foule Lust did move,
Those Mayds unchaste to make,
Fell, as with them he strove,
His Neck and justly brake.
Whom when foule Lust did move,
Those Mayds unchaste to make,
Fell, as with them he strove,
His Neck and justly brake.
That instrument ne'r heard,
Strooke by the skilfull Bard,
It strongly to awake;
But it th'infernalls skard,
And made Olympus quake.
Strooke by the skilfull Bard,
It strongly to awake;
But it th'infernalls skard,
And made Olympus quake.
348
As those Prophetike strings
Whose sounds with fiery Wings,
Drave Fiends from their abode,
Touch'd by the best of Kings,
That sang the holy Ode.
Whose sounds with fiery Wings,
Drave Fiends from their abode,
Touch'd by the best of Kings,
That sang the holy Ode.
So his, which Women slue,
And it int' Hebrus threw,
Such sounds yet forth it sent,
The Bankes to weepe that drue,
As downe the Streame it went.
And it int' Hebrus threw,
Such sounds yet forth it sent,
The Bankes to weepe that drue,
As downe the Streame it went.
That by the Tortoyse shell,
To Mayas Sonne it fell,
The most thereof not doubt
But sure some Power did dwell,
In Him who found it out.
To Mayas Sonne it fell,
The most thereof not doubt
But sure some Power did dwell,
In Him who found it out.
The Wildest of the field,
And Ayre, with Rivers t'yeeld,
Which mov'd; that sturdy Glebes,
And massie Oakes could weeld,
To rayse the pyles of Thebes.
And Ayre, with Rivers t'yeeld,
Which mov'd; that sturdy Glebes,
And massie Oakes could weeld,
To rayse the pyles of Thebes.
And diversly though Strung,
So anciently We sung
To it, that Now scarce knowne,
If first it did belong
To Greece, or if our Owne.
So anciently We sung
To it, that Now scarce knowne,
If first it did belong
To Greece, or if our Owne.
The Druydes imbrew'd,
With Gore, on Altars rude
With Sacrifices crown'd,
In hollow Woods bedew'd,
Ador'd the Trembling sound.
With Gore, on Altars rude
With Sacrifices crown'd,
In hollow Woods bedew'd,
Ador'd the Trembling sound.
Though wee be All to seeke,
Of Pindar that Great Greeke,
To Finger it aright,
The Soule with power to strike,
His hand retayn'd such Might.
Of Pindar that Great Greeke,
To Finger it aright,
The Soule with power to strike,
His hand retayn'd such Might.
349
Or him that Rome did grace,
Whose Ayres we all imbrace,
That scarcely found his Peere,
Nor giveth Phœbus place,
For Strokes divinely cleere.
Whose Ayres we all imbrace,
That scarcely found his Peere,
Nor giveth Phœbus place,
For Strokes divinely cleere.
The Irish I admire,
And still cleave to that Lyre,
As our Musike's Mother,
And thinke, till I expire,
Apollo's such another.
And still cleave to that Lyre,
As our Musike's Mother,
And thinke, till I expire,
Apollo's such another.
As Britons, that so long
Have held this Antike Song,
And let all our Carpers
Forbeare their fame to wrong,
Th'are right skilfull Harpers.
Have held this Antike Song,
And let all our Carpers
Forbeare their fame to wrong,
Th'are right skilfull Harpers.
Southerne, I long thee spare,
Yet wish thee well to fare,
Who me pleased'st greatly,
As first, therefore more rare,
Handling thy Harpe neatly.
Yet wish thee well to fare,
Who me pleased'st greatly,
As first, therefore more rare,
Handling thy Harpe neatly.
To those that with despight
Shall terme these Numbers slight,
Tell them their Judgement's blind,
Much erring from the right,
It is a Noble kind.
Shall terme these Numbers slight,
Tell them their Judgement's blind,
Much erring from the right,
It is a Noble kind.
The Works of Michael Drayton | ||