Poems and translations with the Sophy / written by the Honourable Sir John Denham, Knight of the Bath.

About this Item

Title
Poems and translations with the Sophy / written by the Honourable Sir John Denham, Knight of the Bath.
Author
Denham, John, Sir, 1615-1669.
Publication
London :: Printed for H. Herringman ...,
1668.
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Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A35654.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Poems and translations with the Sophy / written by the Honourable Sir John Denham, Knight of the Bath." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A35654.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed April 28, 2025.

Pages

On Mr John Fletchers Works.

SO shall we joy, when all whom Beasts and Worms Had turn'd to their own substances and forms, Whom Earth to Earth, or Fire hath chang'd to Fire, We shall behold more then at first entire; As now we do, to see all thine thy own In this thy Muses Resurrection, Whose scatter'd parts, from thy own race, more wounds Hath suffer'd, then Acteon from his Hounds;

Page 117

Which first their Brains, and then their Bellie, fed, And from their excrements new Poets bred. But now thy Muse enraged from her Urn Like Ghosts of Murdered bodies does return T' accuse the Murderers, to right the Stage, And undeceive the long abused Age, Which casts thy praise on them, to whom thy wit Gives not more Gold then they give dross to it: Who not content like Felons to Purloyn, Adde treason to it, and debase thy Coyn. But whither am I straid? I need not raise Trophies to thee from other mens dispraise; Nor is thy Fame on lesser ruines built, Nor needs thy juster Title the soul guilt Of Eastern Kings, who to secure their reign, Must have their Brothers, Sons, and Kindred slain.

Page 118

Then was wits Empire at the Fatal height, When labouring and sinking with its weight, From thence a Thousand lesser Poets sprung Like petty Princes▪ from the fall of Rome; When Iohnson, Shakespear, and thy self did sit, And sway'd in the triumvirate of wit— Yet what from Iohnson's oyl and sweat did flow, Or what more easie Nature did bestow On Shakespear's gentler Muse, in thee full grown Their graces both appear, yet so, that none Can say here Nature ends, and Art begins, But mixt like th' Elements and born like twins, So interweav'd, so like, so much the same, None, this meer Nature, that meer Art can name: 'Twas this the Antients mean't; Nature and Skill Are the two tops of their Parnassus Hill.
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