WILLIAM BROWNE was born at Tavistock, Devon, in the year 1590. From the Grammar School of that town he entered at Exeter College, Oxford, but, without taking a degree, removed to the Inner Temple, where he appears to have preferred the Muse's lore to the sober study of the Law. The poem to which he is chiefly indebted for his reputation must have been written at a very early age-while the impressions left on his mind by the natural beauties of his native county were yet fresh and vivid. The first part of Britannia's Pastorals, published in 1613, was, according to the fashion of the time, heralded by many learned friends, among whom were Selden and Drayton; and on the appearance of part the second, three years afterwards, similar compliments were conferred upon him by Wither and Ben Jonson. Between the issues of these two parts, he printed the Shepherd's Pipe, in seven Eclogues, and wrote the "Inner Temple Masque." He was subsequently appointed tutor to the young Earl of Caernarvon, who was slain at the battle of Newbury, and received the patronage and resided in the family of the Earl of Pembroke, where, according to Wood, "he got wealth and purchased an estate." Of his life little else is known save that he returned to Devonshire, and died at Ottery St. Mary, in 1645,and of his personal appearance it is only recorded that "as he had a little body so a great mind." His great poem, "Britannia's Pastorals," is divided into ten "Songs"-in which a variety of personages, real and fictitious, are introduced; it is built upon a dreamy, but not a systematic adoration of Nature; and resembles a piece of gorgeous tapestry, where the drawing is fine and the colours are gay and vivid, but in which there is a total want of keeping, and an absence of harmony, both in design and execution. He abounds in frivolous comparisons and absurd conceits, and his descriptions are frequently either puerile or extravagant. Yet he was "admired and beloved by all the best writers of his time"-was "reputed a man not only the best versed in the works and beauties of the English Poets, but also in the history of their lives and characters" -the acknowledged sources of his inspiration were the Fairy Queen and the Arcadiaand his had the honor of suggesting Comus and Lycidas. The attentive reader of Britannia's Pastorals will certainly be at no loss to account for the fame of the writer. If he is willing to pass over its defects, he will find it abounding in beauties of the very highest order-beauties perhaps unsurpassed by any author in our language. He is at times full of nerve and fire, his imagination is always rich and fertile, and his mind healthy and vigorous. He is, moreover, one of those whom the Poet of our own age so eloquently describes as "Nature's true friends, The friends of God and Truth." His versification is, for the most part, easy and harmonious, for he had obtained a complete mastery over the English tongue. His great fault is that rüral descriptions form the staple and not the ornaments of his poetry; while his allegories, in which he abounds, are taime and spiritless. The extracts we have given, illustrative both of his character and style, will bear out perhaps higher praise than we have bestowed upon the Poet and the Man. His Shepherd's Pipe is decidedly inferior; but from the Inner Temple Masque, which suggested to Milton the idea of "Comus"- we have given the "Syren's Song '-one of the most perfect examples of his fancy. Although he wore the bays proudly during his life-time, his works soon after his death became extremely scarce-unhappily because they were neglected or forgottenso scarce indeed that in an advertisement to an edition of them it is stated "if the Rev. Mr. Thomas Warton had not lent his own copy to be transcribed, the public might have been deprived of so valuable a treasure." We record, with gratitude, the name of its preserver. Mr. Coleridge, in a MS. note to the life of Browne, states that Ottery St. Mary was the birth-place of the Poet-the town in which Coleridge was himself born. But Prince, in his Worthies of Devon, assigns that honour to Tavistock; and Glanville, speaker of the House of Commons (Charles L.), addresses to Browne a sonnet as to his fellow-townsman of Tavistock. Now as an angler melancholy standing, Upon a greene bancke yeelding roome for landing, A wrigling yealow worme thrust on his hooke, Now in the midst he throwes, then in a nooke: Here pulls his line, there throws it in againe, Mending his croke and baite, but all in vaine, He long stands viewing of the curled streame; At last a hungry pike, or well-growne breame, Snatch at the worme, and hasting fast away He, knowing it a fish of stubborne sway, Puls up his rod, but soft; (as having skill) Wherewith the hooke fast holds the fishe's gill. * * * * * My free-borne Muse will not, like Danae, be Such of the Muses are the able powres, Yeeld more delight; for I have oft possest * * * * * Requests, that with deniall could not meet, " Shall I tell you whom I love ? And if such a woman move As I now shall versifie; As e're yet imbrac'd a hart. "Wit she hath without desire To make knowne how much she hath; Be assur'd, 'tis she, or none VENUS by Adonis' side Crying kist and kissing cryde, "Stay," (quoth she) "O stay and live! On his face, still as he bled "Fair Proserpina" (quoth she) Here she clos'd again. And some NEVERMORE let holy Dee But silent be, and ever know Those were captives. If he say Swell, then, gently swell, ye floods, |