University of Virginia Library

To my Noble Friend, Sir T. H. Knight.

An Ode in pure Iämbick feet.

I knew before thy dainty tuch,
Vpon the Lordly Violl:
But of thy Lyre who knew so much
Before this happy triall?
So tuned is thy sacred Harpe,
To make her eccho sweetly sharpe.
I wote not how to praise inough
Thy Musick and thy Muses:
Thy Glosse so smooth, the Text so tough,
Be Iudge, who both peruses.
Thy choice of Odes is also chaste,
No want it hath, it hath no waste.
A grace it is for any Knight,
A stately Steed to stable:
But vnto Pegasus the light
Is any comparable?
No Courser of so comly Course,
Was euer as the winged Horse.

S. Phi. Sidney.

That Astrophill, of Arts the life,

A Knight was, and a Poët:

S. Geof. Chaucer.

So was the Man, who tooke to wife

The Daughter of La-Roët.
So Thou that hast reseru'd a parte,
To rouze my Iohnson, and his Arte.
Receiue the while my lowly Verse
to waite vpon thy Muses:
Who cannot halfe thy worth reherse,
My braine that height refuses.
Beneath thy Meede is all my praise;
That, asks a Crowne of holy Baies.
Hugh Holland.