“Cupid and my Campaspe playedAt cards for kisses—Cupid paid.He stakes his quiver, bows and arrows,His mother’s doves, and team of sparrows:Loses them too: then down he throwsThe coral of his lip—the RoseGrowing on’s cheek (but none knows how);With these the crystal of his brow,And then the dimple of his chin—All these did my Campaspe win.At last, he set her both his eyes—She won; and Cupid blind did rise.O Love, has she done this to thee?What shall, alas! become of me?”
“Cupid and my Campaspe playedAt cards for kisses—Cupid paid.He stakes his quiver, bows and arrows,His mother’s doves, and team of sparrows:Loses them too: then down he throwsThe coral of his lip—the RoseGrowing on’s cheek (but none knows how);With these the crystal of his brow,And then the dimple of his chin—All these did my Campaspe win.At last, he set her both his eyes—She won; and Cupid blind did rise.O Love, has she done this to thee?What shall, alas! become of me?”
“Cupid and my Campaspe playedAt cards for kisses—Cupid paid.He stakes his quiver, bows and arrows,His mother’s doves, and team of sparrows:Loses them too: then down he throwsThe coral of his lip—the RoseGrowing on’s cheek (but none knows how);With these the crystal of his brow,And then the dimple of his chin—All these did my Campaspe win.At last, he set her both his eyes—She won; and Cupid blind did rise.O Love, has she done this to thee?What shall, alas! become of me?”
“Cupid and my Campaspe played
At cards for kisses—Cupid paid.
He stakes his quiver, bows and arrows,
His mother’s doves, and team of sparrows:
Loses them too: then down he throws
The coral of his lip—the Rose
Growing on’s cheek (but none knows how);
With these the crystal of his brow,
And then the dimple of his chin—
All these did my Campaspe win.
At last, he set her both his eyes—
She won; and Cupid blind did rise.
O Love, has she done this to thee?
What shall, alas! become of me?”
He puts, too, into imitative jingle of words the song of the Nightingale—(as Bryant has done for the Bobolink); and of the strain of the skylark nothing prettier was ever said than Mr. Lyly says:
“How, at Heaven’s gate she claps her wings,The morn not waking—tillshesings.”
“How, at Heaven’s gate she claps her wings,The morn not waking—tillshesings.”
“How, at Heaven’s gate she claps her wings,The morn not waking—tillshesings.”
“How, at Heaven’s gate she claps her wings,
The morn not waking—tillshesings.”
We go away from singing skylarks to find the next character that I shall cull out from these Elizabethan times to set before you: this is Lord Bacon—or, to give him his true title, Lord Verulam—there being, in fact, the same impropriety in saying Lord Bacon (if custom had not “brazed it so”) that there would be in saying Lord D’Israeli for Lord Beaconsfield.
Here was a great mind—a wonderful intellect which everyone admired, and in which everyone of English birth, from Royalty down, took—and ever will take—a national pride; but, withal, few of those amiabilities ever crop out in this great character which make men loved. He can see a poor priest culprit come to the rack without qualms; and could look stolidly on, as Essex, his special benefactor in his youth, walked to the scaffold; yet the misstatement of a truth, with respect to physics, or any matter about which truth or untruth was clearly demonstrable, affected him like a galvanic shock. His biographers, Montagu and Spedding, have padded his angularities into roundness; whilePope and Macaulay have lashed him in the grave. I think we must find the real man somewhere between them; if we credit him with a great straight-thinking, truth-seeking brain, and little or no capacity for affection, the riddle of his strange life will be more easily solved. Spedding,[97]who wrote a voluminous life of Bacon—having devoted a quarter of a century to necessary studies—does certainly make disastrous ripping-up of the seams in Macaulay’s rhetoric; but there remain certain ugly facts relating to the trial of Essex, and the bribe-takings, which will probably always keep alive in the popular mind an under-current of distrust in respect to the great Chancellor.
He was born in London, in 1561, three years before Shakespeare, and at a time when, from his father’shouse in the Strand he could look sheer across the Thames to Southwark, where, before he was thirty, the Globe Theatre was built, in which Shakespeare acted. He was in Paris when his father died; there is no grief-stricken letter upon the event, but a curious mention that he had dreamed two nights before how his father’s house was covered with black mortar—so intent is he on mental processes.
He had a mother who was pious, swift-thoughted, jealous, imperious, unreasonable, with streaks of tenderness.
“Be not speedy of speech,” she says in one of her letters—“nor talk suddenly, but when discretion requireth, and that soberly then. Remember you have no father; and you have little enough—if not too little, regarded your kind,no-simplemother’s wholesome advice.”And again: “Look well to your health; sup not, nor sit not up late; surely I think your drinking near to bedtime hindereth your and your brother’s digestion very much: I never knew any but sickly that used it; besides ill for head and eyes.” And again, in postscript: “I trust you, with yr servants, use prayers twice in a day, having been where reformation is. Omit it not for any.”
“Be not speedy of speech,” she says in one of her letters—“nor talk suddenly, but when discretion requireth, and that soberly then. Remember you have no father; and you have little enough—if not too little, regarded your kind,no-simplemother’s wholesome advice.”
And again: “Look well to your health; sup not, nor sit not up late; surely I think your drinking near to bedtime hindereth your and your brother’s digestion very much: I never knew any but sickly that used it; besides ill for head and eyes.” And again, in postscript: “I trust you, with yr servants, use prayers twice in a day, having been where reformation is. Omit it not for any.”
And he responds with ceremony, waiving much of her excellent advice, and sometimes suggesting some favor she can do him,—
“It may be I shall have occasion to visit the Court this Vacation [he being then at Gray’s Inn], which I have not done this months space. In which respect, because carriage of stuff to and fro spoileth it, I would be glad of that light bed of striped stuff which your Ladyship hath, if you have not otherwise disposed it.”
“It may be I shall have occasion to visit the Court this Vacation [he being then at Gray’s Inn], which I have not done this months space. In which respect, because carriage of stuff to and fro spoileth it, I would be glad of that light bed of striped stuff which your Ladyship hath, if you have not otherwise disposed it.”
Sharpish words, too, sometimes pass between them; but he is always decorously and untouchingly polite.
Indeed his protestations of undying friendship to all of high station, whom he addresses unctuously, are French in their amplitude, and French, too, in their vanities. He presses sharply always toward the great end of self-advancement—whether by flatteries, or cajolement, or direct entreaty. He believed in the survival of the fittest; and that the fittest should struggle to make the survival good—no matter what weak ones, or timid ones, or confiding ones, or emotional ones should go to the wall, or the bottom, in the struggle. His flatteries, I think, never touched the Queen, though he tried them often and gave a lurid color to his flatteries. She admired his parts as a young man; she had honored his father; she accepted his services with thanks—even the dreadful services which herendered in demonstrating the treason of the gallant and generous, but headstrong Earl of Essex. He never came into full possession of royal confidences, however, until James I. came to the throne: by him he was knighted, by him made Lord Chancellor, by him elevated to the peerage; and it was under him that he was brought to trial for receiving bribes—was convicted, despoiled of his judicial robes, went to prison—though it might be only for a day—and thereafter into that retirement, at once shameful and honorable, where he put the last touches to those broad teachings of “Philosophy,” which the world will always cherish and revere: not the first nor the last instance in which great and fatal weaknesses have been united to great power and great accomplishment.
But lest you may think too hardly of this eminent man, a qualifying word must be said of that stain upon him—of receiving bribes: it was no uncommon thing for high judicial personages to take gifts; no uncommon thing for all high officers of the Government—nay, for the Government itself, as typified in its supreme head. And, strange as it may seem, Bacon’s sense of justicedoes not appear to have been swayed by the gifts he took. Spedding has demonstrated, I think, that no judgment he rendered was ever reversed by subsequent and farther hearing.[98]He was not in the ordinary sense a money-lover; but he did love the importance and consideration which money gave, yet was always in straits; and those unwise receivings of his went to supply the shortcomings in a very extravagant and disorderly home-life. His servants plundered him; his tradespeople fleeced him; nor do I think that the mistress of the Chancellor’s household was either very wary or very winning. Almost the only time there is mention of her in his letters occurs previous to his marriage (which did not take place till he was well in middle age), and then only as “the daughter of an alderman who will bring a good dot” with her. His mother-in-law, too, appears to have been of the stage sort ofmother-in-law, whom he addresses (by letter) in this fashion:—
“Madam,” he says, “you shall with right good-will be made acquainted with anything that concerneth your daughters, if you bear a mind of love and concord: Otherwise you must be content to be a stranger to us. For I may not be so unwise as to suffer you to be an author or occasion of dissension between your daughters and their husbands; having seen so much misery of that kind in yourself.”
“Madam,” he says, “you shall with right good-will be made acquainted with anything that concerneth your daughters, if you bear a mind of love and concord: Otherwise you must be content to be a stranger to us. For I may not be so unwise as to suffer you to be an author or occasion of dissension between your daughters and their husbands; having seen so much misery of that kind in yourself.”
This looks a little as if the mother-in-law found the “grapes sour” in the Bacon gardens. I do not think there was much domesticity about him, even if home influences had encouraged it: he was without children, and not one to read poetry to his wife in a boudoir; yet his essays concerning marriage and concerning children and concerning friendship and concerning extravagance, are full of piquant truths.
Indeed two distinct lines of life ran through the career of this extraordinary man. In one he loved parade, ceremony, glitter; he stooped ungraciously to those who ranked him in factitious distinctions; was profuse and heartless in his adulation; taking great gifts with servile acknowledgment; shunning friends who were falling; courtingenemies who were rising: and yet through all this, and looking out from the same keen inscrutable eyes was the soul of a philosopher cognizant of all humanities, searching sharply after the largest and broadest truths; too indifferent to small ones; weighing his own shortcomings with bitter remorse; alive to everything in science that should help the advancement of the world, and absorbed in high ranges of thinking which the animosities and cares and criminalities and accidents of every-day life did not seem to reach or to disturb.
In such mood he wrote those essays, of some of which I have spoken—wonderfully compact of thought, and as wonderfully compact of language—which one should read and read again. No private library of a hundred English books is complete without a copy of Bacon’s Essays. The keen sagacity and perdurable sense of his observations always engage one. Thus of Travel, he says,—
“Let him [the Traveller] sequester himself from the company of his countrymen, and diet in such places where there is good company of the nation where he travelleth. He that travelleth into a country before he hath some entrance into the language, goeth to school and not to travel.”
“Let him [the Traveller] sequester himself from the company of his countrymen, and diet in such places where there is good company of the nation where he travelleth. He that travelleth into a country before he hath some entrance into the language, goeth to school and not to travel.”
Of Friendship:—“This communicating of a man’s self to his friend, works two contrary efforts; for it redoubleth joys and cutteth griefs in halves.” Again, of the advantages of talk with a friend:—“Certain it is, that whosoever hath his mind fraught with many thoughts, his wits and understanding do clarify and break up, in the communicating and discoursing with another; he tosseth his thoughts more easily; he marshalleth them more orderly; he seeth how they look when they are turned into words; finally, he waxeth wiser than himself: and that more by an hours discourse than by a days meditation.”
Of Friendship:—“This communicating of a man’s self to his friend, works two contrary efforts; for it redoubleth joys and cutteth griefs in halves.” Again, of the advantages of talk with a friend:—“Certain it is, that whosoever hath his mind fraught with many thoughts, his wits and understanding do clarify and break up, in the communicating and discoursing with another; he tosseth his thoughts more easily; he marshalleth them more orderly; he seeth how they look when they are turned into words; finally, he waxeth wiser than himself: and that more by an hours discourse than by a days meditation.”
Thus I could go on for page after page of citations which you would approve, and which are so put in words that no mending or shortening or deepening of their force seems anyway possible. And yet this book of Essays—with all its sagacities, its ringing terseness, its stanch worldly wisdom—is one we do not warm toward. Even when he talks of friendship or marriage, death or love, a cold line of self-seeking pervades it. Of sacrifice for love’s sake, for friendship’s sake, or for charity’s sake, there is nothing; and in that Essay on “Parents and Children”—what iciness of reflection—of suggestion! A man might talk as Bacon talks there, of the entries in a “Herd-book.”
As for theNovum Organumand theAugmentisScientiarum—you would not read them if I were to suggest it: indeed, there is no need for reading them, except as a literaryexcursus, seeing that they have wrought their work in breaking up old, slow modes of massing knowledge, and in pouring light upon new ways;—in serving, indeed, so far as their reach went, as a great logical lever, by which subsequent inquirers have prised up a thousand hidden knowledges and ways of knowledge to the comprehension and cognizance of the world.
And the two lines of life in Francis Bacon were joined by a strange hyphen at last: He got out of his coach (which was not paid for), and in his silk stockings walked through the snow, to prosecute some scientific post-mortem experiment upon the body of a chicken he had secured by the roadside, near to London. He caught cold—as lesser men would have done; and he died of it. This date of his death (1626) brings us beyond Elizabeth’s time—beyond James’ time, too, and far down to the early years of Charles I. He was born, as I said, three years before Shakespeare, three years after Elizabeth came to the throne; and theNovum Organumwas published in the same year in whichthe Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock—a convenient peg on which to hang the date of two great events.
He was buried in the old town of St. Alban’s, of whose antiquities I have already spoken, and near to which Gorhambury, the country home of Bacon, was situated. The town and region are well worth a visit: and it is one of the few spots whither one can still go by a well-appointed English stage-coach with sleek horses—four-in-hand, which starts every morning in summer from the White Horse Cellar, in Piccadilly, and spins over the twenty miles of intervening beautiful road (much of it identical with the old Roman Watling Street) in less than two hours and a half. The drive is through Middlesex, and into “pleasant Hertfordshire,” where the huge Norman tower of the old abbey buildings, rising from the left bank of the Ver, marks the town of St. Alban’s. The tomb and monument of Bacon are in the Church of St. Michael’s: there is still an Earl of Verulam presiding over a new Gorhambury House; and thereabout, one may find remnants of the old home of the great Chancellor and some portion of the noble gardens in which he took so much delight,and in which he wandered up and down, in peaked hat and in ruff, and with staff—pondering affairs of State—possibly meditating the while upon that most curious and stately Essay of his upon “Gardens,” which opens thus:—
“God Almighty first planted a garden. And, indeed, it is the purest of human pleasures. It is the greatest refreshment to the spirits of man, without which building and palaces are but gross handyworks: and a man shall ever see, that when ages grow to civility and elegancy, men come to build stately, sooner than to garden finely; as if gardening were the greater perfection.”
“God Almighty first planted a garden. And, indeed, it is the purest of human pleasures. It is the greatest refreshment to the spirits of man, without which building and palaces are but gross handyworks: and a man shall ever see, that when ages grow to civility and elegancy, men come to build stately, sooner than to garden finely; as if gardening were the greater perfection.”
Surely, we who grow our own salads and “graff” our own pear-trees may take exaltation from this: and yet I do not believe that the great Chancellor ever put his hand, laboringly, to a rake-stave: but none the less, he snuffed complacently the odor of his musk-roses and his eglantine, and looked admiringly at his clipped walls of hedges.
There used to come sometimes to these gardens of Gorhambury, in Bacon’s day, a young man—twenty years his junior—of a strangely subtlemind, who caught so readily at the great Chancellor’s meaning, and was otherwise so well instructed that he was employed by him in some clerical duties. His name was Thomas Hobbes; and it is a name that should be known and remembered, because it is identified with writings which had as much influence upon the current of thought in the middle of the next century (the seventeenth) as those of Herbert Spencer have now, and for somewhat similar reasons. He was a very free thinker, as well as a deep one; keeping, from motives of policy, nominally within Church lines, yet abhorred and disavowed by Church-teachers; believing in the absolute right of kings, and in self-interest as the nucleus of all good and successful schemes for the conduct of life; weighing relations to the future and a Supreme Good (if existing) with a trader’s prudence, and counting Friendship “a sense of social utility.” His theory of government was—a crystallization of forces, coming about regularly by the prudent self-seeking of individuals. Of divine or spiritual influences he does not take any sympathetic cognizance; hard, cold, calculating; not inspiring, not hopeful; feeding higher appetites on metaphysic husks.
Of his Deism I give this exhibit:—
“Forasmuch as God Almighty is incomprehensible, it followeth that we can have no conception or image of the Deity; and consequently, all his attributes signify our inability and defect of power to conceive anything concerning his nature, and not any conception of the same, except only this—that there is a God. For the effects, we acknowledge naturally, do include a power of their producing, before they were produced; and that power presupposeth something existent that hath such power: and the thing so existing with power to produce, if it were not eternal, must needs have been produced by somewhat before it; and that, again, by something else before that, till we come to an eternal (that is to say, the first) Power of all Powers, and first Cause of all Causes; and this is it which all men conceive by the nameGod, implying eternity, incomprehensibility, and omnipotency. And thus all that will consider may know that God is, though notwhathe is.”
“Forasmuch as God Almighty is incomprehensible, it followeth that we can have no conception or image of the Deity; and consequently, all his attributes signify our inability and defect of power to conceive anything concerning his nature, and not any conception of the same, except only this—that there is a God. For the effects, we acknowledge naturally, do include a power of their producing, before they were produced; and that power presupposeth something existent that hath such power: and the thing so existing with power to produce, if it were not eternal, must needs have been produced by somewhat before it; and that, again, by something else before that, till we come to an eternal (that is to say, the first) Power of all Powers, and first Cause of all Causes; and this is it which all men conceive by the nameGod, implying eternity, incomprehensibility, and omnipotency. And thus all that will consider may know that God is, though notwhathe is.”
Cribbing his emotional nature (if he ever had any), he yet writes with wonderful directness, perspicacity, andverve—making “Hobbism” talked of, as Spencerism is talked of. Indeed, one does not see clearly how any man, flinging only his bare hook of logic and his sinker of reason into the infinite depths around us, can fish up anything of a helpfully spiritual sort much better than Hobbism now.
He was specially befriended by the Cavendishes, having once been tutor to a younger scion of that distinguished family; and so he came to pass his latest years in their princely home of Chatsworth, humored by the Duke, and treated by the Duchess as a pet bear—to be regularly fed and not provoked; climbing the Derbyshire hills of a morning, dining at mid-day, and at candle-lighting retiring to his private room to smoke his twelve pipes of tobacco (his usual allowance) and to follow through the smoke his winding trails of thought.[99]
He lived to the extreme age of ninety-two, thus coming well down into the times of Charles II., who used to say of him that “he was a bear against whom the Church played her young dogs to exercise them.” He lived and died a bachelor, not relishing society in general, and liking only such shrewd acute friends as could track him in his subtleties, who had the grace to applaud him, and the wise policy of concealing their antagonisms.
He is not much cited now in books, nor has hisname association with any of those felicities of literature which exude perennial perfumes. He was careless of graces; he stirred multitudes into new trains of thought; he fed none of them with any of the minor and gracious delights of learning. Perhaps he is best known in literary ways proper by a close and lucid translation of theHistoryof Thucydides, which I believe is still reckoned by scholars a good rendering of the Greek.[100]
He ventured, too, upon verse in praise of Derbyshire and of the valley of the Derwent, but it is not rich or beautiful. A man who keeps his emotional nature in a strait-jacket—for security or for other purpose—may make catalogues of trees, or of summer days; but he cannot paint the lilies or a sunrise. A translation of Homer which he undertook and accomplished, when over eighty, was just as far from a success, and for kindred reasons.
There was, however, another translation of Homer about those times, or a little earlier, which was of much rarer quality, and which has not lost its rare flavors even now. I speak of George Chapman’s. It is not so true to the Greek as Hobbes’ Thucydides; indeed not true at all to the words, but true to the spirit; and in passages where the translator’s zeal was aflame catching more of the dash, and abounding flow, and brazen resonance of the old Greek poet than Pope, or Cowper, Derby, or Bryant.
The literalists will never like him, of course; he drops words that worry him—whole lines indeed with which he does not choose to grapple; he adds words, too—whole lines, scenes almost; there is vulgarity sometimes, and coarseness; he calls things by their old homely names; there is no fine talk about the chest or the abdomen, but the Greek lances drive straight through the ribs or to the navel, and if a cut be clean and large—we are not told of crimson tides—but the blood gurgles out in great gouts as in a slaughter-house; there may be over-plainness, and over-heat, and over-stress;but nowhere weakness; and his unwieldly, staggering lines—fourteen syllables long—forge on through the ruts which the Homeric chariots have worn, bouncing and heaving and plunging and jolting, but always lunging forward with their great burden of battle, of brazen shields, and ponderous war-gods. I hardly know where to cut into the welter of his long lines for sample, but in all parts his brawny pen declares itself. Take a bit from that skrimmage of the Sixteenth Book where—
“The swift MerionesPursuing flying Acamas, just as he got accessTo horse and chariot—overtook, and dealt him such a blowOn his right shoulder that he left his chariot, and did strowThe dusty earth: life left limbs, and night his eyes possessed.Idomeneus his stern dart at Erymas addressed,As—like to Acamas—he fled; it cut the sundry bonesBeneath his brain, betwixt his neck and foreparts, and so runs,Shaking his teeth out, through his mouth, his eyes all drowned in blood;So through his nostrils and his mouth, that now dart-open stood,He breathed his spirit.”
“The swift MerionesPursuing flying Acamas, just as he got accessTo horse and chariot—overtook, and dealt him such a blowOn his right shoulder that he left his chariot, and did strowThe dusty earth: life left limbs, and night his eyes possessed.Idomeneus his stern dart at Erymas addressed,As—like to Acamas—he fled; it cut the sundry bonesBeneath his brain, betwixt his neck and foreparts, and so runs,Shaking his teeth out, through his mouth, his eyes all drowned in blood;So through his nostrils and his mouth, that now dart-open stood,He breathed his spirit.”
“The swift MerionesPursuing flying Acamas, just as he got accessTo horse and chariot—overtook, and dealt him such a blowOn his right shoulder that he left his chariot, and did strowThe dusty earth: life left limbs, and night his eyes possessed.Idomeneus his stern dart at Erymas addressed,As—like to Acamas—he fled; it cut the sundry bonesBeneath his brain, betwixt his neck and foreparts, and so runs,Shaking his teeth out, through his mouth, his eyes all drowned in blood;So through his nostrils and his mouth, that now dart-open stood,He breathed his spirit.”
“The swift Meriones
Pursuing flying Acamas, just as he got access
To horse and chariot—overtook, and dealt him such a blow
On his right shoulder that he left his chariot, and did strow
The dusty earth: life left limbs, and night his eyes possessed.
Idomeneus his stern dart at Erymas addressed,
As—like to Acamas—he fled; it cut the sundry bones
Beneath his brain, betwixt his neck and foreparts, and so runs,
Shaking his teeth out, through his mouth, his eyes all drowned in blood;
So through his nostrils and his mouth, that now dart-open stood,
He breathed his spirit.”
And again that wonderful duel between Patroclus and the divine Sarpedon:
“Down jumped he from his chariot, down leaped his foe as light,And as, on some far-looking rock, a cast of vultures fight,—Fly on each other, strike and truss—part, meet, and then stick by,Tug, both with crooked beaks and seres, cry, fight, and fight and cry;So fiercely fought these angry kings, and showed as bitter galls.”
“Down jumped he from his chariot, down leaped his foe as light,And as, on some far-looking rock, a cast of vultures fight,—Fly on each other, strike and truss—part, meet, and then stick by,Tug, both with crooked beaks and seres, cry, fight, and fight and cry;So fiercely fought these angry kings, and showed as bitter galls.”
“Down jumped he from his chariot, down leaped his foe as light,And as, on some far-looking rock, a cast of vultures fight,—Fly on each other, strike and truss—part, meet, and then stick by,Tug, both with crooked beaks and seres, cry, fight, and fight and cry;So fiercely fought these angry kings, and showed as bitter galls.”
“Down jumped he from his chariot, down leaped his foe as light,
And as, on some far-looking rock, a cast of vultures fight,
—Fly on each other, strike and truss—part, meet, and then stick by,
Tug, both with crooked beaks and seres, cry, fight, and fight and cry;
So fiercely fought these angry kings, and showed as bitter galls.”
What a description this old Chapman would have made of a tug at foot-ball!
Another fragment I take from the Twenty-first Book, where the River God roars and rages in the waters of Scamander against Achilles:
——“Then swell’d his waves, then rag’d, then boil’d againAgainst Achilles, up flew all, and all the bodies slainIn all his deeps, of which the heaps made bridges to his wavesHe belch’d out, roaring like a bull. The unslain yet he savesIn his black whirl-pits, vast and deep. A horrid billow stoodAbout Achilles. On his shield the violence of the FloodBeat so, it drove him back, and took his feet up, his fair palmEnforc’d to catch into his stay a broad and lofty elm,Whose roots he tossed up with his hold, and tore up all the shore.”
——“Then swell’d his waves, then rag’d, then boil’d againAgainst Achilles, up flew all, and all the bodies slainIn all his deeps, of which the heaps made bridges to his wavesHe belch’d out, roaring like a bull. The unslain yet he savesIn his black whirl-pits, vast and deep. A horrid billow stoodAbout Achilles. On his shield the violence of the FloodBeat so, it drove him back, and took his feet up, his fair palmEnforc’d to catch into his stay a broad and lofty elm,Whose roots he tossed up with his hold, and tore up all the shore.”
——“Then swell’d his waves, then rag’d, then boil’d againAgainst Achilles, up flew all, and all the bodies slainIn all his deeps, of which the heaps made bridges to his wavesHe belch’d out, roaring like a bull. The unslain yet he savesIn his black whirl-pits, vast and deep. A horrid billow stoodAbout Achilles. On his shield the violence of the FloodBeat so, it drove him back, and took his feet up, his fair palmEnforc’d to catch into his stay a broad and lofty elm,Whose roots he tossed up with his hold, and tore up all the shore.”
——“Then swell’d his waves, then rag’d, then boil’d again
Against Achilles, up flew all, and all the bodies slain
In all his deeps, of which the heaps made bridges to his waves
He belch’d out, roaring like a bull. The unslain yet he saves
In his black whirl-pits, vast and deep. A horrid billow stood
About Achilles. On his shield the violence of the Flood
Beat so, it drove him back, and took his feet up, his fair palm
Enforc’d to catch into his stay a broad and lofty elm,
Whose roots he tossed up with his hold, and tore up all the shore.”
When any of us can make as spirited a translation as that, I think we can stand a scolding from the teachers for not being literal. George Chapman lived a very long life, and did other things worthily; wrote a mass of dramas[101]—but not of the very best; they belong to the class of plays those people talk of who want to talk of things nobody has read. I think better and richer things are before us.
Did it ever happen to you to read upon a summer’s day that delightful old book—of a half century later—calledThe Complete Angler; and do you remember how, on a certain evening when the quiet Angler had beguiled himself with loitering under beech-trees and watching the lambs and listening to the birds, he did encounter, in an adjoining field, a handsome milkmaid, who lifted upher voice—which was like a nightingale’s—to an old-fashioned song, beginning?—
“Come live with me and be my love,And we will all the pleasures proveThat valleys, groves, or hills, or fieldOr woods, or steepy mountains yield—And I will make thee beds of rosesAnd then a thousand fragrant posiesA cap of flowers and a kirtleEmbroidered all with leaves of myrtle.”
“Come live with me and be my love,And we will all the pleasures proveThat valleys, groves, or hills, or fieldOr woods, or steepy mountains yield—And I will make thee beds of rosesAnd then a thousand fragrant posiesA cap of flowers and a kirtleEmbroidered all with leaves of myrtle.”
“Come live with me and be my love,And we will all the pleasures proveThat valleys, groves, or hills, or fieldOr woods, or steepy mountains yield—
“Come live with me and be my love,
And we will all the pleasures prove
That valleys, groves, or hills, or field
Or woods, or steepy mountains yield—
And I will make thee beds of rosesAnd then a thousand fragrant posiesA cap of flowers and a kirtleEmbroidered all with leaves of myrtle.”
And I will make thee beds of roses
And then a thousand fragrant posies
A cap of flowers and a kirtle
Embroidered all with leaves of myrtle.”
Well, that song of the milkmaid, with its setting of verdant meads and silver streams and honeysuckle hedges keeps singing itself in a great many ears to-day: And it was written by Christopher Marlowe,[102]one of the most harum-scarum young dare-devils of Elizabethan times. He was born in the same year with Shakespeare—down in Canterbury, or near by (whither we saw St. Augustine carrying Christian crosses)—was son of a shoemaker who lived thereabout, yet came somehow to be a Cambridge man, drifted thereafter to London—full of wit and words of wantonness; developing early; known for a tragedy that caught the earof the town six years before Shakespeare had published the “Venus and Adonis.” He was an actor, too, as so many of the dramatic wits of that day were—maybe upon the same boards where Shakespeare was then certainly a mender, if not a maker of parts. Did they hobnob together? Did they compare plots? If we only knew: but we do not.
The critics of the days closely succeeding said he would have rivalled Shakespeare if he had lived: Doubtless he would have brought more learning to the rivalry; perhaps an equal wit—maybe an even greater rhythmic faculty and as dauntless and daring imaginative power; but dignity and poise of character were not in him. He died—stabbed—in a drunken brawl before he was thirty.[103]In his tragedies—if you read them—you will find the beat and flow and rhythm—to which a greatmany of the best succeeding English tragedies were attuned. He scored first upon British theatre-walls, with fingers made tremulous by tavern orgies, a great sampler of dramatic story, by which scores of succeeding play-writers set their copy; but into these copies many and many a one of lesser power put a grace, a tenderness, and a dignity which never belonged to the half-crazed and short-lived Marlowe. You will remember him best perhaps as the author of the pleasant little madrigal of which I cited a verselet; and if you value the delicatest of description, you will relish still more his unfinished version of the Greek story of “Hero and Leander”—a pregnant line of which—
“who ever loved that loved not at first sight”
“who ever loved that loved not at first sight”
“who ever loved that loved not at first sight”
“who ever loved that loved not at first sight”
—has the abiding honor of having been quoted by Shakespeare in his play of “As You Like It.”
I leave Marlowe—citing first a beautiful bit of descriptive verse from his “Hero and Leander:”—
“At Sestos Hero dwelt: Hero the fair,Whom young Apollo courted for her hair,And offered as a dower his burning throne,Where she should sit for men to gaze upon.The outside of her garments were of lawn,—The lining purple silk, with gilt stars drawn.Upon her head she wore a myrtle wreathFrom thence her veil reached to the ground beneath;Her veil was artificial flowers and leaves,Whose workmanship both man and beast deceives;Many would praise the sweet smell, as she past,When ’twas the odor that her breath forth cast;And thereforhoney-bees have sought in vainAnd beat from thence, have lighted there again.About her neck hung chains of pebble stone,Which, lighted by her neck, like diamonds shone.She wore no gloves; for neither sun nor windWould burn or parch her hands, but, to her mind;Or warm, or cool them; for they took delightTo play upon those hands, they were so white.Some say, for her the fairest Cupid pin’dAnd, looking in her face, was strooken blind.But this is true; so like was one the other,As he imagined Hero was his mother:And often-times into her bosom flew,About her naked neck his bare arms threw,And laid his childish head upon her breastAnd, with still panting rock’t, there took his rest.”
“At Sestos Hero dwelt: Hero the fair,Whom young Apollo courted for her hair,And offered as a dower his burning throne,Where she should sit for men to gaze upon.The outside of her garments were of lawn,—The lining purple silk, with gilt stars drawn.Upon her head she wore a myrtle wreathFrom thence her veil reached to the ground beneath;Her veil was artificial flowers and leaves,Whose workmanship both man and beast deceives;Many would praise the sweet smell, as she past,When ’twas the odor that her breath forth cast;And thereforhoney-bees have sought in vainAnd beat from thence, have lighted there again.About her neck hung chains of pebble stone,Which, lighted by her neck, like diamonds shone.She wore no gloves; for neither sun nor windWould burn or parch her hands, but, to her mind;Or warm, or cool them; for they took delightTo play upon those hands, they were so white.Some say, for her the fairest Cupid pin’dAnd, looking in her face, was strooken blind.But this is true; so like was one the other,As he imagined Hero was his mother:And often-times into her bosom flew,About her naked neck his bare arms threw,And laid his childish head upon her breastAnd, with still panting rock’t, there took his rest.”
“At Sestos Hero dwelt: Hero the fair,Whom young Apollo courted for her hair,And offered as a dower his burning throne,Where she should sit for men to gaze upon.The outside of her garments were of lawn,—The lining purple silk, with gilt stars drawn.
“At Sestos Hero dwelt: Hero the fair,
Whom young Apollo courted for her hair,
And offered as a dower his burning throne,
Where she should sit for men to gaze upon.
The outside of her garments were of lawn,
—The lining purple silk, with gilt stars drawn.
Upon her head she wore a myrtle wreathFrom thence her veil reached to the ground beneath;Her veil was artificial flowers and leaves,Whose workmanship both man and beast deceives;Many would praise the sweet smell, as she past,When ’twas the odor that her breath forth cast;And thereforhoney-bees have sought in vainAnd beat from thence, have lighted there again.About her neck hung chains of pebble stone,Which, lighted by her neck, like diamonds shone.She wore no gloves; for neither sun nor windWould burn or parch her hands, but, to her mind;Or warm, or cool them; for they took delightTo play upon those hands, they were so white.
Upon her head she wore a myrtle wreath
From thence her veil reached to the ground beneath;
Her veil was artificial flowers and leaves,
Whose workmanship both man and beast deceives;
Many would praise the sweet smell, as she past,
When ’twas the odor that her breath forth cast;
And thereforhoney-bees have sought in vain
And beat from thence, have lighted there again.
About her neck hung chains of pebble stone,
Which, lighted by her neck, like diamonds shone.
She wore no gloves; for neither sun nor wind
Would burn or parch her hands, but, to her mind;
Or warm, or cool them; for they took delight
To play upon those hands, they were so white.
Some say, for her the fairest Cupid pin’dAnd, looking in her face, was strooken blind.But this is true; so like was one the other,As he imagined Hero was his mother:And often-times into her bosom flew,About her naked neck his bare arms threw,And laid his childish head upon her breastAnd, with still panting rock’t, there took his rest.”
Some say, for her the fairest Cupid pin’d
And, looking in her face, was strooken blind.
But this is true; so like was one the other,
As he imagined Hero was his mother:
And often-times into her bosom flew,
About her naked neck his bare arms threw,
And laid his childish head upon her breast
And, with still panting rock’t, there took his rest.”
I think all will agree that this is very delicately done.
But let us not forget where we are, and where we are finding such men and such poems: we are in London and are close upon the end of the sixteenth century; there are no morning newspapers; these came long afterward; but the story of such a death as that of Marlowe, stabbed in the eye—maybe by his own dagger—would spread from tongue to tongue; (possibly one of his horrific dramas had been played that very day): certainly the knowledge of it would come quick to all his boon friends—actors, writers, wits—who were used to meet, maybe at the Falcon on Bankside, or possibly at the Mermaid Tavern.
This Mermaid Tavern was a famous place in those and in succeeding days. It stood on Cheapside (between Friday and Bread Streets) gorgeous with three ranges of Elizabethan windows, that gave look-out upon an array of goldsmiths’ shops which shone across the way. It was almost in the shadow of the Church of St. Mary le Bow, burned in the great fire, but having its representative tower and spire—a good work of ChristopherWren—standing thereabout in our time, and still holding out its clock over the sidewalk.
And the literary friends who would have gathered in such a place to talk over the sad happening to Kit Marlowe are those whom it behoves us to know, at least by name. There, surely would be Thomas Lodge,[104]who was concerned in the writing of plays; wrote, too, much to his honor, a certain novel (if we may call it so) entitledRosalynde, from which Shakespeare took the hint and much of the pleasant machinery for his delightful drama of “As You Like It.” This Lodge was in his youth hail fellow with actors who gathered at taverns; and—if not actor himself—was certainly a lover of their wild ways and their feastings. He admiredEuphuesovermuch, was disposed to literary affectations and alliteration—writing, amongst other things,A Nettle for Nice Noses. He was, too, a man of the world and wide traveller; voyaged with Cavendish, and was said to be engaged in a British raid upon the Canaries. In later years he became a physician of soberly habits and much credit, dying of the plague in 1625.
Nashe[105]also would have been good mate-fellow with Marlowe; a Cambridge man this—though possibly “weaned before his time;” certainly most outspoken, hard to govern, quick-witted, fearless, flinging his fiery word-darts where he would. Gabriel Harvey, that priggish patron of Spenser, to whom I have alluded, found this to his cost. Indeed this satirist came to have the name of the English Aretino—as sharp as he, and as wild-living, and wild-loving as he.
Nashe was a native of Lowestoft, on the easternmost point of English shore, in Suffolk, not far from those potteries (of Gurton) whose old quaint products collectors still seek for and value. Dr. Grosart, in the Huth Library, has built a wordy monument to his memory; we do not say it is undeserved; certainly he had a full brain, great readiness, graphic power, and deep love for his friends. Like Lodge, he travelled: like him took to his wits to pay tavern bills; a sharp fellow every way. He lent a hand, and a strong one, to that tedious, noisy, brawling ecclesiastic controversy of his day—called theMar-Prelateone; a controversy full ofa great swash of those prickly, sharp-tasted, biting words—too often belonging to church quarrels—and which men hardly approach for comment, even in our time, without getting themselves pricked by contact into wrathful splutter of ungracious language.
One may get a true taste (and I think a surfeit) of his exuberance in epithet, and of his coarse but rasping raillery in hisPierce Penilesse. Here is one of his pleasant lunges at some “Latinless” critic:—“Let a scholar write and he says—‘Tush, I like not these common fellows’; let him write well, and he says—‘Tush, it’s stolen out of some book.’”
Then there was Robert Greene[106]—a Reverend, but used to tavern gatherings, and whose story is a melancholy one, and worth a little more than mere mention. He was a man of excellent family, well nurtured, as times went; native of the old city of Norwich, in Norfolk; probably something older than either Marlowe or Shakespeare; studied at St.John’s, Cambridge—“amongst wags”—he says in hisRepentance—“as lewd as myself;” was a clergyman (after a sort); pretty certainly had a church at one time; married a charming wife in the country, but going up to that maelstrom of London fell into all evil ways: wrote little poems a saint might have written, and cracked jokes with his tongue that would make a saint shudder; deserted his wife and child; became a red-bearded bully, raging in the taverns, with unkempt hair: Yet even thus and there (as if all England in those Elizabethan times bloomed with lilies and lush roses, which lent their perfume to all verse the vilest might write) inditing poems having a tender pathos, which will live. Take these verselets for instance; and as you read them, remember that he had deserted his pure, fond, loving wife and his prattling boy, and was more deeply sunk in ways of debauchery than any of his fellows; ’tis a mother’s song to her child:—
“Weep not, my wanton, smile upon my knee,When thou art old, there’s grief enough for thee.Streaming tears that never stint,Like pearl-drops from a flint,Fell by course from his eyes,That one another’s place supplies.Thus he grieved in every part,Tears of blood fell from his heartWhen he left his pretty boy,Father’s sorrow—father’s joy.The wanton smiled, father wept,Mother cried, baby leapt;More he crowed more we cried,Nature could not sorrow hide;He must go, he must kissChild and mother—baby bless—For he left his pretty boy,Father’s sorrow, father’s joy.Weep not, my wanton, smile upon my knee,When thou art old, there’s grief enough for thee.”
“Weep not, my wanton, smile upon my knee,When thou art old, there’s grief enough for thee.Streaming tears that never stint,Like pearl-drops from a flint,Fell by course from his eyes,That one another’s place supplies.Thus he grieved in every part,Tears of blood fell from his heartWhen he left his pretty boy,Father’s sorrow—father’s joy.The wanton smiled, father wept,Mother cried, baby leapt;More he crowed more we cried,Nature could not sorrow hide;He must go, he must kissChild and mother—baby bless—For he left his pretty boy,Father’s sorrow, father’s joy.Weep not, my wanton, smile upon my knee,When thou art old, there’s grief enough for thee.”
“Weep not, my wanton, smile upon my knee,When thou art old, there’s grief enough for thee.Streaming tears that never stint,Like pearl-drops from a flint,Fell by course from his eyes,That one another’s place supplies.Thus he grieved in every part,Tears of blood fell from his heartWhen he left his pretty boy,Father’s sorrow—father’s joy.The wanton smiled, father wept,Mother cried, baby leapt;More he crowed more we cried,Nature could not sorrow hide;He must go, he must kissChild and mother—baby bless—For he left his pretty boy,Father’s sorrow, father’s joy.Weep not, my wanton, smile upon my knee,When thou art old, there’s grief enough for thee.”
“Weep not, my wanton, smile upon my knee,
When thou art old, there’s grief enough for thee.
Streaming tears that never stint,
Like pearl-drops from a flint,
Fell by course from his eyes,
That one another’s place supplies.
Thus he grieved in every part,
Tears of blood fell from his heart
When he left his pretty boy,
Father’s sorrow—father’s joy.
The wanton smiled, father wept,
Mother cried, baby leapt;
More he crowed more we cried,
Nature could not sorrow hide;
He must go, he must kiss
Child and mother—baby bless—
For he left his pretty boy,
Father’s sorrow, father’s joy.
Weep not, my wanton, smile upon my knee,
When thou art old, there’s grief enough for thee.”
And the poet who wrote this—putting tenderness into poems of the affections, and a glowing color into pastoral verse, and point and delicacy into his prose—wrote alsoA Groates worth of Wit, bought with a Million of Repentance, and he died of a surfeit of pickled herring and Rhenish wine.
In that ‘Groat’s worth of Wit’ (published after his death) there is a memorable line or two—being probably the first contemporary notice of Shakespeare that still has currency; and it is in the form of a gibe:—
“There is an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers, that with his Tygres heart wrapt in a players hide, supposes hee is as well able to bombast out a blanke-verse as the best of you; and, being an absolute Johannes-fac-totum, is in his owne conceyt the onely Shake-Scene in a countrey.”
“There is an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers, that with his Tygres heart wrapt in a players hide, supposes hee is as well able to bombast out a blanke-verse as the best of you; and, being an absolute Johannes-fac-totum, is in his owne conceyt the onely Shake-Scene in a countrey.”
How drolly it sounds—to hear this fine fellow, broken up with drink and all bedevilments, making his envious lunge at the great master who has perhaps worried him by theft of some of his dramatic methods or schemes, and who gives to poor Greene one of his largest titles to fame in having been the subject of his lampoon!
It gives added importance, too, to this gibe, to know that it was penned when the writer, impoverished, diseased, deserted by patrons, saw death fronting him; and it gives one’s heart a wrench to read how this debauched poet—whose work has given some of the best color to the “Winter’s Tale” of Shakespeare—writes with faltering hand, begging his “gentle” wife’s forgiveness, and that she would see that the charitable host, who has taken him in, for his last illness, shall suffer no loss—then, toying with the sheets, and “babbling o’ green fields,” he dies.
Keen critics of somewhat later days said Shakespearehad Greene’s death in mind when he told the story of Falstaff’s.
It is quite possible that all these men I have named will have encountered, off and on, at their tavern gatherings, the lithe, youngish fellow, large browed and with flashing eyes, who loves Rhenish too in a way, but who loves the altitudes of poetic thought better; who is just beginning to be known poet-wise by his “Venus and Adonis”—whose name is William Shakespeare—and who has great aptitude at fixing a play, whether his own or another man’s; and with Burbage for the leading parts, can make them take wonderfully well.
Possibly, too, in these tavern gatherings would be the young, boyish Earl of Southampton, who is associated with some of the many enigmas respecting Shakespeare’s Sonnets, and whom we Americans ought to know of, because he became interested thereafter in schemes for colonizing Virginia, and has left his name of Southampton to one of the Virginia counties; and, still better, is associated with that beautiful reach of the Chesapeake waters which we now call “Hampton Roads.”
In that company too—familiar with Londontaverns in later Elizabethan years—the beefy Ben Jonson was sure to appear, with his great shag of hair, and his fine eye, and his coarse lip, bubbling over with wit and with Latin: he, quite young as yet; perhaps just now up from Cambridge; ten years the junior of Shakespeare; and yet by his bulky figure and doughty air dominating his elders, and sure to call the attention of all idlers who hung about the doors of the Mermaid. He may be even now plotting his first play of “Every Man in his Humour,” or that new club of his and Raleigh’s devising, which is to have its meeting of jolly fellows in the same old Cheapside tavern, and to make its rafters shake with their uproarious mirth. For the present we leave them all there—with a May sun struggling through London fogs, and gleaming by fits and starts upon the long range of jewellers’ shops, for which Cheapside was famous—upon the White Cross and Conduit, whereat the shop-girls are filling their pails—upon the great country wains coming in by Whitechapel Road—upon the tall spire of St. Mary le Bow, and upon the diamond panes of the Mermaid tavern, to whose recesses we have just seen the burly figure of Ben Jonson swagger in.
In opening the preceding chapter I spoke of that dainty John Lyly, who first set a fashion in letters, and whose daintiness hid much of the strength and cleverness that were in him: I spoke of the wonderful twin development of the Lord Chancellor Bacon—selfish and ignoble as a man, serene and exalted as a philosopher; and I tried to fasten in the reader’s mind the locality of his tomb and home at the old town of St. Alban’s—a short coach-ride away from London, down in “pleasant Hertfordshire:” I spoke of Hobbes (somewhat before his turn) whose free-thinking—of great influence in its day, and the sharply succeeding days—is supplemented by more acute and subtle, if not more far-reaching, free-thinking now. I quoted the Homer of Chapman, under whose long and staggering lines there burned always true Homeric fire. I cited Marlowe, because his youth and powerpromised so much, and the promise so soon ended in an early and inglorious death. Then came Lodge, Nashe, and Greene, mates of Marlowe, all well-bred, all having an itch for penwork, and some of them for the stage; all making rendezvous—what time they were in London—at some tavern of Bankside, or at the Mermaid, where we caught a quick glimpse of Ben Jonson, and another of the Stratford player.
I might, however, have added to the lesser names that decorated the closing years of the sixteenth century that of George Peele,[107]of Devonshire birth, but, like so many of his fellows, a university man: he came to be a favorite in London; loved taverns and wine as unwisely as Greene; was said to have great tact for the ordering of showy pageants; did win upon Queen Elizabeth by his “Arraignment of Paris” (half masque and half play) represented by the children of the Chapel Royal—and carrying luscious flattery to the ready ears of Eliza, Queen of—