Examen poeticum being the third part of miscellany poems containing variety of new translations of the ancient poets, together with many original copies by the most eminent hands.
About this Item
Title
Examen poeticum being the third part of miscellany poems containing variety of new translations of the ancient poets, together with many original copies by the most eminent hands.
Publication
London :: Printed by R.E. for Jacob Tonson,
1693.
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Subject terms
Syphilis -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A36624.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Examen poeticum being the third part of miscellany poems containing variety of new translations of the ancient poets, together with many original copies by the most eminent hands." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A36624.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 20, 2025.
Pages
descriptionPage 84
THE FABLE OF ACIS, POLYPHEMUS, AND GALATEA, From the Thirteenth Book of the Metamorphoses,
By Mr. DRYDEN.
GALATEA relates the Story.
ACIS, the Lovely Youth, whose loss I mourn,From Faunus and the Nymph Symethis born,Was both his Parents pleasure: but, to meWas all that Love cou'd make a Lover be.
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The Gods our Minds in mutual Bands did joyn;I was his only Joy, as he was mine.Now sixteen Summers the sweet Youth had seen;And doubtful Down, began to shade his Chin:When Polyphemus first disturb'd our Joy;And lov'd me fiercely, as I lov'd the Boy.Ask not which passion in my Soul was high'r,My last Aversion, or my first Desire:Nor this the greater was, nor that the less:Both were alike; for both were in excess.Thee, Venus, thee, both Heav'n and Earth obey;Immense thy Pow'r, and boundless is thy Sway.The Cyclops, who desi'd th' AEtherial Throne,And thought no Thunder louder than his own,The terrour of the Woods, and wilder farThan Wolves in Plains, or Bears in Forrests are,Th' Inhumane Host, who made his bloody FeastsOn mangl'd Members, of his butcher'd Guests,
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Yet felt the force of Love, and fierce Desire,And burnt for me, with unrelenting Fire.Forgot his Caverns, and his woolly care,Assum'd the softness of a Lover's Air;And comb'd, with Teeth of Rakes, his rugged hair.Now with a crooked Sythe his Beard he sleeks;And mows the stubborn Stubble of his Cheeks:Now, in the Crystal Stream he looks, to tryHis Simagres, and rowls his glaring eye.His Cruelty and thirst of Blood are lost;And Ships securely sail along the Coast.
The Prophet Telemus (arriv'd by chanceWhere AEtna's Summets to the Seas advance,Who mark'd the Tracts of every Bird that flew,And sure Presages from their flying drew,)Foretold the Cyclops, that Ulysses handIn his broad eye, shou'd thrust a flaming Brand.
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The Giant, with a scornful grin reply'd,Vain Augur, thou hast falsely prophesi'd;Already Love, his flaming Brand has tost;Looking on two fair Eyes, my sight I lost.Thus, warn'd in vain, with stalking pace he strode,And stamp'd the Margine of the briny Flood,With heavy steps: and weary, sought agen,The cool Retirement of his gloomy Den.
A Promontory sharp'ning by degrees,Ends in a Wedge, and over-looks the Seas:On either side, below, the water flows;This airy walk, the Giant Lover chose.Here, on the midst he sate: his Flocks, unled,Their Shepherd follow'd, and securely fed.A Pine so burly, and of length so vast,That sailing Ships requir'd it for a Mast,
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He weilded for a Staff; his steps to guide:But laid it by, his Whistle while he try'd.A hundred Reeds, of a prodigious growth,Scarce made a Pipe, proportion'd to his mouth:Which, when he gave it wind, the Rocks around,And watry Plains, the dreadful hiss resound.I heard the Ruffian-Shepherd rudely blowWhere, in a hollow Cave, I sat below;On Acis bosom I my head reclin'd:And still preserve the Poem in my mind.
Oh lovely Galatea, whiter farThan falling Snows, and rising Lillies are;More flowry than the Meads, as Crystal bright,Erect as Alders, and of equal height:More wanton than a Kid, more sleek thy SkinThan Orient Shells, that on the Shores are seen.
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Than Apples fairer, when the boughs they lade,Pleasing as Winter Suns or Summer Shade:More grateful to the sight, than goodly Planes;And softer to the touch, than down of Swans;Or Curds new turn'd: and sweeter to the tasteThan swelling Grapes, that to the Vintage haste:More clear than Ince, or running Streams, that strayThrough Garden Plots, but ah more swift than they.
Yet, Galatea, harder to be broke,Than Bullocks, unreclaim'd to bear the Yoke,And far more stubborn, than the knotted Oak:Like sliding Streams, impossible to hold;Like them fallacious, like their Fountains cold.More warping than the Willow, to declineMy warm Embrace, more brittle than the Vine;Immoveable and fixt in thy disdain;Rough as these Rocks, and of a harder grain.
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More violent than is the rising Flood;And the prais'd Peacock is not half so proud.Fierce as the Fire, and sharp as Thistles are,And more outragious than a Mother-Bear:Deaf as the billows to the Vows I make;And more revengeful, than a trodden Snake.In swiftness fleeter, than the flying Hind;Or driven Tempests, or the driving Wind.All other faults, with patience I can bear;But swiftness is the Vice I only fear.
Yet if you knew me well, you wou'd not shunMy Love, but to my wish'd Embraces run:Wou'd languish in your turn, and court my stay;And much repent of your unwise delay.
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My Palace, in the living Rock, is madeBy Nature's hand; a spacious pleasing Shade:Which neither heat can pierce, nor cold invade.My Garden fill'd with Fruits you may behold,And Grapes in clusters, imitating Gold;Some blushing Bunches of a purple hue:And these and those, are all reserv'd for you.Red Strawberries, in shades, expecting stand,Proud to be gather'd by so white a hand.Autumnal Cornels, latter Fruit provide;And Plumbs to tempt you, turn their glossy side:Not those of common kinds; but such aloneAs in Phoeacian Orchards might have grown:Nor Chestnuts shall be wanting to your Food,Nor Garden-fruits, nor Wildings of the Wood;The laden Boughs for you alone shall bear;And yours shall be the product of the Year.
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The Flocks you see, are all my own; besideThe rest that Woods, and winding Vallies hide;And those that folded in the Caves abide.Ask not the numbers of my growing Store;Who knows how many, knows he has no more.Nor will I praise my Cattel, trust not me;But judge your self, and pass your own decree:Behold their swelling Dugs; the sweepy weightOf Ews that sink beneath the Milky fraight;In the warm Folds, their tender Lambkins lye;Apart from Kids, that call with humane cry.New Milk in Nut-brown Bowls, is duely serv'dFor daily Drink; the rest for Cheese reserv'd.Nor are these House-hold Dainties all my Store:The Fields and Forrests will afford us more;The Deer, the Hare, the Goat, the Salvage Boar.
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All sorts of Ven'son; and of Birds the best;A pair of Turtles taken from the Nest.I walk'd the Mountains, and two Cubs I found,(Whose Dam had left 'em on the naked ground,)So like, that no distinction cou'd be seen:So pretty, they were Presents for a Queen;And so they shall; I took 'em both away;And keep, to be Companions of your Play.
Oh raise, fair Nymph, your Beauteous Face aboveThe Waves; nor scorn my Presents, and my Love.Come, Galatea, come, and view my face;I late beheld it, in the watry Glass;And found it lovelier than I fear'd it was.Survey my towring Stature, and my Size:Not Jove, the Jove you dream that rules the SkiesBears such a bulk, or is so largely spread:My Locks, (the plenteous Harvest of my head)
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Hang o're my Manly Face; and dangling downAs with a shady Grove, my shoulders crown.Nor think, because my limbs and body bearA thick set underwood of bristling hair,My shape deform'd; what fouler sight can beThan the bald Branches of a leafless Tree?Foul is the Steed, without a flowing Main:And Birds without their Feathers and their Train.Wool decks the Sheep; and Man receives a GraceFrom bushy Limbs, and from a bearded Face.My forehead, with a single eye is fill'd,Round as a Ball, and ample as a Shield.The Glorious Lamp of Heav'n, the Radiant SunIs Nature's eye; and is content with one.Add, that my Father sways your Seas, and ILike you am of the watry Family.I make you his, in making you my own;You I adore; and kneel to you alone:
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Jove, with his Fabled Thunder I despise,And only fear the lightning of your eyes.Frown not, fair Nymph; yet I cou'd bear to beDisdain'd, if others were disdain'd with me.But to repulse the Cyclops, and preferThe Love of Acis, (Heav'ns) I cannot bear.But let the Stripling please himself; nay more,Please you, tho' that's the thing I most abhor,The Boy shall find, if e're we cope in Fight,These Giant Limbs, endu'd with Giant Might.His living Bowels, from his Belly torn,And scatter'd Limbs, shall on the Flood be born:Thy Flood, ungrateful Nymph, and fate shall findThat way for thee, and Acis to be joyn'd.For oh I burn with Love, and thy DisdainAugments at once my Passion, and my pain.Translated AEtna flames within my Heart,And thou, Inhumane, wilt not ease my smart.
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Lamenting thus in vain, he rose, and strodeWith furious paces to the Neighb'ring Wood:Restless his feet, distracted was his walk;Mad were his motions, and confus'd his talk.Mad as the vanquish'd Bull, when forc'd to yieldHis lovely Mistress, and forsake the Field.
Thus far unseen I saw: when fatal chanceHis looks directing, with a sudden glance,Acis and I, were to his sight betray'd;Where nought suspecting we securely play'd.From his wide mouth, a bellowing cry he castI see, I see; but this shall be your last:A roar so loud made AEtna to rebound;And all the Cyclops labour'd in the sound.Affrighted with his monstrous Voice, I fled,And in the Neighb'ring Ocean, plung'd my head.
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Poor Acis turn'd his back, and help, he cry'a;Help, Galatea, help, my Parent Gods,And take me dying, to your deep Abodes.The Cyclops follow'd: but he sent beforeA Rib, which from the living Rock he tore,Though but an Angle reach'd him of the Stone,The mighty Fragment was enough aloneTo crush all Acis; 'twas too late to save,But what the Fates allow'd to give, I gave:That Acis to his Lineage should return;And rowl, among the River Gods, his Urn.Straight issu'd from the Stone, a Stream of blood;Which lost the Purple, mingling with the Flood.Then, like a troubl'd Torrent, it appear'd:The Torrent too, in little space was clear'd.The Stone was cleft, and through the yawning chink,New Reeds arose on the new River's brink.
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The Rock, from out its hollow Womb, disclos'dA sound like Water in its course oppos'd.When, (wondrous to behold,) full in the Flood,Up starts a Youth, and Navel high he stood.Horns from his Temples rise; and either HornThick Wreaths of Reeds (his Native growth) adorn.Were not his Stature taller than before,His bulk augmented, and his beauty more:His colour blue, for Acis he might pass:And Acis chang'd into a Stream he was.But mine no more; he rowls along the PlainsWith rapid motion, and his Name retains.
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