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Du Bartas

His Divine Weekes And Workes with A Compleate Collectio[n] of all the other most delight-full Workes: Translated and written by yt famous Philomusus: Iosvah Sylvester

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EPIGRAM. To M. Iosuah Sylvester.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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EPIGRAM. To M. Iosuah Sylvester.

If to admire were to commend, my Praise
Might then both thee, thy work and merit raise:
But, as it is (the Childe of Ignorance,
And vtter stranger to all ayre of France)
How can I speak of thy great paines, but erre?
Since they can only iudge, that can confer.
Behold! the reverend Shade of Bartas stands
Before my thought, and (in thy right) commands
That to the world I publish, for him, This;
Bartas doth wish thy English now were His.
So well in that are his inventions wrought,
As His will now be the Translation thought,
Thine the Originall; and France shall boast,
No more, those mayden glories she hath lost.
B. Iohnson.