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To the Honourable EDWARD HOWARD, Esq; Upon his incomparable POEM of the BRITISH PRINCES
  
  
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115

To the Honourable EDWARD HOWARD, Esq; Upon his incomparable POEM of the BRITISH PRINCES

SIR,

You've obliged the British Nation more
Than all their Bards could ever do before,
And at your own Charge, Monuments more hard
Than Brass, or Marble, to their Fame have rear'd:
For as all warlike Nations take delight
To hear how brave their Ancestors could fight,
You have advanc'd to wonder their Renown,
And no less virtuously improv'd your own.
For 'twill be doubted, whether you do write,
Or they have acted at a nobler hight.
You of their ancient Princes have retriev'd
More than the Ages knew, in which they liv'd;
Describ'd their Customs, and their Rites anew,
Better than all their Druids ever knew:
Unriddled their dark Oracles, as well,
As those themselves, that made them, could foretell.
For as the Britons long have hop'd in vain,
Arthur would come to govern them again;
You have fulfill'd that Prophecy alone,
And in this Poem plac'd him on his Throne.
Such magic Pow'r has your prodigious Pen,
To raise the Dead, and give new Life to Men.
Make rival Princes meet in Arms, and Love,
Whom distant Ages did so far remove:
For as Eternity has neither past,
Nor future, (Authors say) nor first, nor last,

116

But is all instant; your eternal Muse
All Ages can to any one reduce.
Then why should you, whose Miracle of Art
Can Life at Pleasure to the Dead impart,
Trouble in vain your better busied Head
T' observe what Time they liv'd in, or were dead?
For since you have such arbitrary Power,
It were defect in Judgment to go lower,
Or stoop to Things so pitifully lewd,
As use to take the vulgar Latitude.
There's no Man fit to read what you have writ,
That holds not some Proportion with your Wit:
As Light can no Way but by Light appear,
He must bring Sense, that understands it here.