For music, heavy sighs; My walk an inward woe; And I myself am he That doth with none compare, Let no man ask my name, Nor what else I should be; XXII. MONTANUS' FANCY GRAVEN UPON THE BARK OF A TALL BEECH TREE.1 (By Thomas Lodge. Born 1555? died 1625.) IRST shall the heavens want starry light; graves; The April flowers and leaf and tree, 1 From Lodge's Rosalind; Euphues' Golden Legacy," 1590, 1592, &c. Reprinted in Collier's "Shakespeare's Library," 1843. First shall the tops of highest hills And fish forsake the water glide, First direful Hate shall turn to Peace, And Pleasure mourn, and Sorrow smile, First Time shall stay his stayless race, And Winter bless his brows with corn, And snow bemoisten July's face, And Winter spring, and Summer mourn, Before my pen, by help of Fame, Cease to recite thy sacred name. "Phoenix Nest," 1593, p. 95; " England's Helicon," 1600, sign. T, signed "Ignoto." Thence in Brydges' and the Oxford editions of Raleigh's "Poems." Upon the gentle wing of some calm-breathing wind That plays amidst the plain; If, by the favour of propitious stars, you gain And when her warmth your moisture forth doth wear, You, pretty daughters of the earth and sun,With mild and seemly breathing straight display My bitter sighs, that have my heart undone! Vermilion roses, that, with new day's rise The rich adorned rays of roseate rising morn; Do pluck your pure ere Phoebus view the land, And veil your gracious pomp in lovely Nature's scorn; If chance my mistress traces Fast by your flowers to take the summer's air; And tell love's torments, sorrowing for her friend, XXIV. THERE IS NONE, O, NONE BUT YOU!! (By Robert Earl of Essex. Born 1567; HERE is none, O, none but you, And chained ears hear with delight. Others' beauties others move: In you I all the graces find; Such are the effects of love, To make them happy that are kind. Women in frail beauty trust; Dear, afford me then your sight! That, surveying all your looks, Endless volumes I may write, And fill the world with envied books, Which when after ages view, All shall wonder and despair,— Women, to find a man so true, And men, a woman half so fair! 'Printed from Aubrey's MSS. by Dr. Bliss, edit. of Wood's "Fasti," vol. i. p. 245. XXV. A PASSION OF MY LORD OF ESSEX.1 APPY were he could finish forth his fate In some unhaunted desert, most obscure From all societies, from love and hate Of worldly folk; then might he sleep secure; Then wake again, and ever give God praise, Content with hips and haws and bramble-berry; In contemplation spending all his days, And change of holy thoughts to make him merry; Where, when he dies, his tomb may be a bush, Where harmless robin dwells with gentle thrush. XXVI. VERSES MADE BY THE EARL OF ESSEX IN HIS TROUBLE.2 HE ways on earth have paths and turnings known; The ways on sea are gone by needle's light; MS. Ashm. 781, p. 83, as "Certain Verses made by Lord Essex;" and Chetham MS. 8012, p. 86, with the title given above. It is said to have been enclosed in a letter to the Queen from Ireland, in 1599, and has been frequently printed. 2 Printed from a Brit. Mus. MS. by Ellis, "Specimens," vol. ii. p. 361, edit. 1811; and Devereux, "Earls of Essex," vol. ii. p. 111. N |