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lucasta-第38部分

小说: lucasta 字数: 每页4000字

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 thee fairer right; And from the characters divide my sight。 Untill it (dimmer) a new torrent swells; And what obscur'd it; falls my spectacles   Let the luxurious floods impulsive rise; As they would not be wept; but weep the eyes; The while earth melts; and we above it lye But the weak bubbles of mortalitie; Until our griefs are drawn up by the Sun; And that (too) drop the exhalation。 How in thy dust we humble now our pride; And bring thee a whole people mortifi'd! For who expects not death; now thou art gone; Shows his low folly; not religion。   Can the poetick heaven still hold on The golden dance; when the first mover's gon? And the snatch'd fires (which circularly hurl'd) In their strong rapture glimmer to the world; And not stupendiously rather rise The tapers unto these solemnities?   Can the chords move in tune; when thou dost dye; At once their universal harmony? But where Apollo's harp (with murmur) laid; Had to the stones a melody convey'd; They by some pebble summon'd would reply In loud results to every battery; Thus do we come unto thy marble room; To eccho from the musick of thy tombe。   May we dare speak thee dead; that wouldest be In thy remove only not such as we? No wonder; the advance is from us hid; Earth could not lift thee higher then it did! And thou; that didst grow up so ever nigh; Art but now gone to immortality! So near to where thou art; thou here didst dwell; The change to thee is less perceptible。   Thy but unably…comprehending clay; To what could not be circumscrib'd; gave way; And the more spacious tennant to return; Crack'd (in the two restrain'd estate) its urn。 That is but left to a successive trust; The soul's first buried in his bodies dust。   Thou more thy self; now thou art less confin'd; Art not concern'd in what is left behind; While we sustain the losse that thou art gone; Un…essenc'd in the separation; And he that weeps thy funerall; in one Is pious to the widdow'd nation。   And under what (now) covert must I sing; Secure as if beneath a cherub's wing; When thou hast tane thy flight hence; and art nigh In place to some related hierarchie; Where a bright wreath of glories doth but set Upon thy head an equal coronet; And thou; above our humble converse gon; Canst but be reach'd by contemplation。   Our lutes (as thine was touch'd) were vocall by; And thence receiv'd the soul by sympathy; That did above the threds inspiring creep; And with soft whispers broke the am'rous sleep; Which now no more (mov'd with the sweet surprise) Awake into delicious rapsodies; But with their silent mistress do comply; And fast in undisturbed slumbers lye。   How from thy first ascent thou didst disperse A blushing warmth throughout the universe; While near the morns Lucasta's fires did glow; And to the earth a purer dawn did throw。 We ever saw thee in the roll of fame Advancing thy already deathless name; And though it could but be above its fate; Thou would'st; however; super…errogate。   Now as in Venice; when the wanton State Before a Spaniard spread their crowded plate; He made it the sage business of his eye To find the root of the wild treasury; So learn't from that exchequer but the more To rate his masters vegetable ore。 Thus when the Greek and Latin muse we read; As but the cold inscriptions of the dead; We to advantage then admired thee; Who did'st live on still with thy poesie; And in our proud enjoyments never knew The end of the unruly wealth that grew。 But now we have the last dear ingots gain'd; And the free vein (however rich) is drein'd; Though what thou hast bequeathed us; no space Of this worlds span of time shall ere embrace。 But as who sometimes knew not to conclude Upon the waters strange vicissitude; Did to the ocean himself commit; That it might comprehend what could not it; So we in our endeavours must out…done Be swallowed up within thy Helicon。   Thou; who art layd up in thy precious cave; And from the hollow spaces of thy grave; We still may mourn in tune; but must alone Hereafter hope to quaver out a grone; No more the chirping sonnets with shrill notes Must henceforth volley from our treble throtes; But each sad accent must be humour'd well To the deep solemn organ of thy cell。   Why should some rude hand carve thy sacred stone; And there incise a cheap inscription? When we can shed the tribute of our tears So long; till the relenting marble wears; Which shall such order in their cadence keep; That they a native epitaph shall weep; Untill each letter spelt distinctly lyes; Cut by the mystick droppings of our eyes。                          El。 Revett。

 Original has THE BUT。

 Original has OW。

 I have already pointed out; that the author of these truly wretched lines was probably the same person; on whose MORAL AND DIVINE POEMS Lovelace has some verses in the LUCASTA。 The poems of E。 R。 appear to be lost; which; unless they were far superior to the present specimen; cannot be regarded as a great calamity。



                  AN ELEGIE。

Me thinks; when kings; prophets; and poets dye; We should not bid men weep; nor ask them why; But the great loss should by instinct impair The nations; like a pestilential ayr; And in a moment men should feel the cramp Of grief; like persons poyson'd with a damp。 All things in nature should their death deplore; And the sun look less lovely than before; The fixed stars should change their constant spaces; And comets cast abroad their flagrant faces。 Yet still we see princes and poets fall Without their proper pomp of funerall; Men look about; as if they nere had known The poets lawrell or the princes crown; Lovelace hath long been dead; and he can be Oblig'd to no man for an elegie。 Are you all turn'd to silence; or did he Retain the only sap of poesie; That kept all branches living? must his fall Set an eternal period upon all? So when a spring…tide doth begin to fly From the green shoar; each neighbouring creek grows dry。 But why do I so pettishly detract An age that is so perfect; so exact? In all things excellent; it is a fame Or glory to deceased Lovelace name: For he is weak in wit; who doth deprave Anothers worth to make his own seem brave; And this was not his aim: nor is it mine。 I now conceive the scope of their designe; Which is with one consent to bring and burn Contributary incence on his urn; Where each mans love and fancy shall be try'd; As when great Johnson or brave Shakespear dyed。 Wits must unite: for ignorance; we see; Hath got a great train of artillerie: Yet neither shall nor can it blast the fame And honour of deceased Lovelace name; Whose own LUCASTA can support his credit Amongst all such who knowingly have read it; But who that praise can by desert discusse Due to those poems that are posthumous? And if the last conceptions are the best; Those by degrees do much transcend the rest; So full; so fluent; that they richly sute With Orpheus lire; or with Anacreons lute; And he shall melt his wing; that shall aspire To reach a fancy or one accent higher。 Holland and France have known his nobler parts; And found him excellent in arms and arts。 To sum up all; few men of fame but know; He was TAM MARTI; QUAM MERCURIO。

 Burning。

 Original has WE。

 A fine image!

 The motto originally employed by George Gascoigne; who; like Lovelace; wielded both the sword and the pen。



                 TO HIS   NOBLE FRIEND CAPT。 DUDLEY LOVELACE UPON HIS EDITION OF HIS BROTHERS POEMS。

  Thy pious hand; planting fraternal bayes; Deserving is of most egregious praise; Since 'tis the organ doth to us convey From a descended sun so bright a ray。 Clear spirit! how much we are bound to thee For this so great a liberalitie; The truer worth of which by much exceeds The western wealth; which such contention breeds! Like the Infusing…God; from the well…head Of poesie you have besprinkled Our brows with holy drops; the very last; Which from your Brother's happy pen were cast: Yet as the last; the best; such matchlesse skill From his divine alembick did distill。 Your honour'd Brother in the Elyzian shade Will joy to know himself a laureat made By your religious care; and that his urn Doth him on earth immortal life return。 Your self you have a good physician shown To his much grieved friends and to your own; In giving this elixir'd medecine; For greatest grief a soveraign anodine。   Sir; from your Brother y' have convey'd us bliss; Now; since your genius so concurs with his; Let your own quill our next enjoyments frame; All must be rich; that's grac'd with Lovelace name。                Symon Ognell M。D。 Coningbrens。

 This person is not mentioned in Munk's Roll of the Royal College of Physicians; 1861。



                       ON THE       TRULY HONOURABLE COLL。 RICHARD LOVELACE; OCCASIONED BY THE PUBLICATION OF HIS POSTHUME…POEMS。

                       ELEGIE。

Great son of Mars; and of Minerva too! With what oblations must we come to woo Thy sacred soul to look down from above; And see how much thy memory we love; Whose happy pen so pleased amorous ears; And; lifting bright LUCASTA to the sphears; Her in the star…bespangled orb did set Above fair Ariadnes coronet; Leaving a pattern to succeeding wits; By which to sing forth their Pythonick fits。 Shall we bring tears and sighs? no; no! then we Should but bemone our selves for loosing thee; Or else thy happiness seem to deny; Or to repine at thy felicity。 Then; whilst we chant out thine immortal praise; Our offerings shall be onely sprigs of bays; And if our tears will needs their brinks out…fly; We'l weep them forth into an elegy; To tell the world; how deep fates wounded wit; When Atropos the lovely Lovelace hit! How th' active fire; which cloath'd thy gen'rous mind; Consum'd the water; and the earth calcin'd Untill a stronger heat by death was given; Which sublimated thy poor soul to heaven。 Thou knew'st right well to guide the warlike steed; And yet could'st court the Muses with full speed And such success; that the inspiring Nine Have fill'd their Thespian fountain so with brine。 Henceforth we can expect no lyrick lay; But biting satyres through the world must stray。 Bellona joyns with fair Erato too; And with the Destinies do keep adoe; Whom thus she queries: coul

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