COWLEY.

But he could not be always in other worlds; he must sometimes revisit earth, and tell of things visible and known.  When he cannot raise wonder by the sublimity of his mind, he gives delight by its fertility.

Whatever be his subject, he never fails to fill the imagination.  But his images and descriptions of the scenes or operations of nature do not seem to be always copied from original form, nor to have the freshness, raciness, and energy of immediate observation.  He saw nature, as Dryden expresses it, “through the spectacles of books;” and on most occasions calls learning to his assistance.  The garden of Eden brings to his mind the vale of Enna, where Proserpine was gathering flowers.  Satan makes his way through fighting elements, like Argo between the Cyanean rocks, or Ulysses between the two Sicilian whirlpools, when he shunned Charybdis on the larboard.  The mythological allusions have been justly censured, as not being always used with notice of their vanity; but they contribute variety to the narration, and produce an alternate exercise of the memory and the fancy.

His similes are less numerous, and more various, than those of his predecessors.  But he does not confine himself within the limits of rigorous comparison: his great excellence is amplitude; and he expands the adventitious image beyond the dimensions which the occasion required.  Thus, comparing the shield of Satan to the orb of the moon, he crowds the imagination with the discovery of the telescope, and all the wonders which the telescope discovers.

Of his moral sentiments it is hardly praise to affirm that they excel those of all other poets; for this superiority he was indebted to his acquaintance with the sacred writings.  The ancient epic poets, wanting the light of Revelation, were very unskilful teachers of virtue; their principal characters may be great, but they are not amiable.  The reader may rise from their works with a greater degree of active or passive fortitude, and sometimes of prudence; but he will be able to carry away few precepts of justice, and none of mercy.

From the Italian writers it appears that the advantages of even Christian knowledge may be possessed in vain.  Ariosto’s pravity is generally known; and, though the “Deliverance of Jerusalem” may be considered as a sacred subject, the poet has been very sparing of moral instruction.

In Milton every line breathes sanctity of thought, and purity of manners, except when the train of the narration requires the introduction of the rebellious spirits; and even they are compelled to acknowledge their subjection to God, in such a manner as excites reverence and confirms piety.

Of human beings there are but two; but those two are the parents of mankind, venerable before their fall for dignity and innocence, and amiable after it for repentance and submission.  In the first state their affection is tender without weakness, and their piety sublime without presumption.  When they have sinned, they show how discord begins in mutual frailty, and how it ought to cease in mutual forbearance; how confidence of the Divine favour is forfeited by sin, and how hope of pardon may be obtained by penitence and prayer.  A state of innocence we can only conceive, if indeed, in our present misery, it be possible to conceive it; but the sentiments and worship proper to a fallen and offending being, we have all to learn, as we have all to practise.

The poet, whatever be done, is always great.  Our progenitors in their first state conversed with angels; even when folly and sin had degraded them, they had not in their humiliation “the port of mean suitors;” and they rise again to reverential regard, when we find that their prayers were heard.

As human passions did not enter the world before the Fall, there is in the “Paradise Lost” little opportunity for the pathetic; but what little there is has not been lost.  That passion, which is peculiar to rational nature, the anguish arising from the consciousness of transgression, and the horrors attending the sense of the Divine displeasure, are very justly described and forcibly impressed.  But the passions are moved only on one occasion; sublimity is the general and prevailing quality in this poem; sublimity variously modified—sometimes descriptive, sometimes argumentative.

The defects and faults of “Paradise Lost”—for faults and defects every work of man must have—it is the business of impartial criticism to discover.  As, in displaying the excellence of Milton, I have not made long quotations, because of selecting beauties there had been no end, I shall in the same general manner mention that which seems to deserve censure; for what Englishman can take delight in transcribing passages, which, if they lessen the reputation of Milton, diminish in some degree the honour of our country?

The generality of my scheme does not admit the frequent notice of verbal inaccuracies; which Bentley, perhaps better skilled in grammar and poetry, has often found, though he sometimes made them, and which he imputed to the obtrusions of a reviser, whom the author’s blindness obliged him to employ; a supposition rash and groundless, if he thought it true; and vile and pernicious, if, as is said, he in private allowed it to be false.

The plan of “Paradise Lost” has this inconvenience, that it comprises neither human actions nor human manners.  The man and woman who act and suffer are in a state which no other man or woman can ever know.  The reader finds no transaction in which he can be engaged—beholds no condition in which he can by any effort of imagination place himself; he has, therefore, little natural curiosity or sympathy.

We all, indeed, feel the effects of Adam’s disobedience; we all sin like Adam, and like him must all bewail our offences; we have restless and insidious enemies in the fallen angels, and in the blessed spirits we have guardians and friends; in the redemption of mankind we hope to be included; in the description of heaven and hell we are surely interested, as we are all to reside hereafter either in the regions of horror or bliss.

But these truths are too important to be new; they have been taught to our infancy; they have mingled with our solitary thoughts and familiar conversations, and are habitually interwoven with the whole texture of life.  Being therefore not new, they raise no unaccustomed emotion in the mind; what we knew before, we cannot learn; what is not unexpected, cannot surprise.

Of the ideas suggested by these awful scenes, from some we recede with reverence, except when stated hours require their association; and from others we shrink with horror, or admit them only as salutary inflictions, as counterpoises to our interests and passions.  Such images rather obstruct the career of fancy than incite it.

Pleasure and terror are indeed the genuine sources of poetry; but poetical pleasure must be such as human imagination can at least conceive, and poetical terrors such as human strength and fortitude may combat.  The good and evil of eternity are too ponderous for the wings of wit; the mind sinks under them in passive helplessness, content with calm belief and humble adoration.

Known truths, however, may take a different appearance, and be conveyed to the mind by a new train of intermediate images.  This Milton has undertaken and performed with pregnancy and vigour of mind peculiar to himself.  Whoever considers the few radical positions which the Scriptures afforded him, will wonder by what energetic operation he expanded them to such extent, and ramified them to so much variety, restrained as he was by religious reverence from licentiousness of fiction.

Here is a full display of the united force of study and genius—of a great accumulation of materials, with judgment to digest and fancy to combine them: Milton was able to select from nature or from story, from an ancient fable or from modern science, whatever could illustrate or adorn his thoughts.  An accumulation of knowledge impregnated his mind, fermented by study and exalted by imagination.

It has been therefore said, without an indecent hyperbole, by one of his encomiasts, that in reading “Paradise Lost” we read a book of universal knowledge.

But original deficiency cannot be supplied.  The want of human interest is always felt.  “Paradise Lost” is one of the books which the reader admires and lays down, and forgets to take up again.  None ever wished it longer than it is.  Its perusal is a duty rather than a pleasure.  We read Milton for instruction, retire harassed and overburdened, and look elsewhere for recreation; we desert our master, and seek for companions.

Another inconvenience of Milton’s design is, that it requires the description of what cannot be described, the agency of spirits.  He saw that immateriality supplied no images, and that he could not show angels acting but by instruments of action; he therefore invested them with form and matter.  This, being necessary, was therefore defensible; and he should have secured the consistency of his system, by keeping immateriality out of sight, and enticing his reader to drop it from his thoughts.  But he has unhappily perplexed his poetry with his philosophy.  His infernal and celestial powers are sometimes pure spirit, and sometimes animated body.  When Satan walks with his lance upon the “burning marl,” he has a body; when, in his passage between hell and the new world, he is in danger of sinking in the vacuity, and is supported by a gust of rising vapours, he has a body; when he animates the toad, he seems to be more spirit, that can penetrate matter at pleasure; when he “starts up in his own shape,” he has at least a determined form; and when he is brought before Gabriel, he has “a spear and a shield,” which he had the power of hiding in the toad, though the arms of the contending angels are evidently material.

The vulgar inhabitants of Pandæmonium, being “incorporeal spirits,” are “at large, though without number,” in a limited space: yet in the battle, when they were overwhelmed by mountains, their armour hurt them, “crushed in upon their substance, now grown gross by sinning.”  This likewise happened to the uncorrupted angels, who were overthrown the “sooner for their arms, for unarmed they might easily as spirits have evaded by contraction or remove.”  Even as spirits they are hardly spiritual: for “contraction” and “remove” are images of matter; but if they could have escaped without their armour, they might have escaped from it, and left only the empty cover to be battered.  Uriel, when he rides on a sunbeam, is material; Satan is material when he is afraid of the prowess of Adam.

The confusion of spirit and matter, which pervades the whole narration of the war of heaven, fills it with incongruity; and the book in which it is related is, I believe, the favourite of children, and gradually neglected as knowledge is increased.

After the operation of immaterial agents, which cannot be explained, may be considered that of allegorical persons which have no real existence.  To exalt causes into agents, to invest abstract ideas with form, and animate them with activity, has always been the right of poetry.  But such airy beings are, for the most part, suffered only to do their natural office, and retire.  Thus Fame tells a tale, and Victory hovers over a general, or perches on a standard; but Fame and Victory can do no more.  To give them any real employment, or ascribe to them any material agency, is to make them allegorical no longer, but to shock the mind by ascribing effects to nonentity.  In the “Prometheus” of Æschylus, we see Violence and Strength, and in the “Alcestis” of Euripides we see Death, brought upon the stage, all as active persons of the drama; but no precedents can justify absurdity.

Milton’s allegory of Sin and Death is undoubtedly faulty.  Sin is indeed the mother of Death, and may be allowed to be the portress of hell; but when they stop the journey of Satan, a journey described as real, and when Death offers him battle, the allegory is broken.  That Sin and Death should have shown the way to hell, might have been allowed; but they cannot facilitate the passage by building a bridge, because the difficulty of Satan’s passage is described as real and sensible, and the bridge ought to be only figurative.  The hell assigned to the rebellious spirits is described as not less local than the residence of man.  It is placed in some distant part of space, separated from the regions of harmony and order by a chaotic waste and an unoccupied vacuity; but Sin and Death worked up a “mole of aggravated soil” cemented withasphaltus, a work too bulky for ideal architects.

This unskilful allegory appears to me one of the greatest faults of the poem; and to this there was no temptation but the author’s opinion of its beauty.

To the conduct of the narrative some objections may be made.  Satan is with great expectation brought before Gabriel in Paradise, and is suffered to go away unmolested.  The creation of man is represented as the consequence of the vacuity left in heaven by the expulsion of the rebels; yet Satan mentions it as a report “rife in Heaven” before his departure.

To find sentiments for the state of innocence was very difficult; and something of anticipation perhaps is now and then discovered.  Adam’s discourse of dreams seems not to be the speculation of a new-created being.  I know not whether his answer to the angel’s reproof for curiosity does not want something of propriety; it is the speech of a man acquainted with many other men.  Some philosophical notions, especially when the philosophy is false, might have been better omitted.  The angel, in a comparison, speaks of “timorous deer,” before deer were yet timorous, and before Adam could understand the comparison.

Dryden remarks, that Milton has some flats among his elevations.  This is only to say, that all the parts are not equal.  In every work, one part must be for the sake of others; a palace must have passages; a poem must have transitions.  It is no more to be required that wit should always be blazing, than that the sun should always stand at noon.  In a great work there is a vicissitude of luminous and opaque parts, as there is in the world a succession of day and night.  Milton, when he has expatiated in the sky, may be allowed sometimes to revisit earth; for what other author ever soared so high, or sustained his flight so long?

Milton, being well versed in the Italian poets, appears to have borrowed often from them; and, as every man catches something from his companions, his desire of imitating Ariosto’s levity has disgraced his work with the Paradise of Fools; a fiction not in itself ill-imagined, but too ludicrous for its place.

His play on words, in which he delights too often; his equivocations, which Bentley endeavours to defend by the example of the ancients; his unnecessary and ungraceful use of terms of art; it is not necessary to mention, because they are easily remarked, and generally censured; and at last bear so little proportion to the whole, that they scarcely deserve the attention of a critic.

Such are the faults of that wonderful performance “Paradise Lost;” which he who can put in balance with its beauties must be considered not as nice but as dull, as less to be censured for want of candour than pitied for want of sensibility.

Of “Paradise Regained,” the general judgment seems now to be right, that it is in many parts elegant, and everywhere instructive.  It was not to be supposed that the writer of “Paradise Lost” could ever write without great effusions of fancy, and exalted precepts of wisdom.  The basis of “Paradise Regained” is narrow; a dialogue without action can never please like a union of the narrative and dramatic powers.  Had this poem been written not by Milton, but by some imitator, it would have claimed and received universal praise.

If “Paradise Regained” has been too much depreciated, “Samson Agonistes” has, in requital, been too much admired.  It could only be by long prejudice, and the bigotry of learning, that Milton could prefer the ancient tragedies, with their encumbrance of a chorus, to the exhibitions of the French and English stages; and it is only by a blind confidence in the reputation of Milton that a drama can be praised in which the intermediate parts have neither cause nor consequence, neither hasten nor retard the catastrophe.

In this tragedy are, however, many particular beauties, many just sentiments and striking lines; but it wants that power of attracting the attention which a well connected plan produces.

Milton would not have excelled in dramatic writing; he knew human nature only in the gross, and had never studied the shades of character, nor the combinations of concurring, or the perplexity of contending passions.  He had read much, and knew what books could teach; but had mingled little in the world, and was deficient in the knowledge which experience must confer.

Through all his greater works there prevails a uniform peculiarity ofdiction, a mode and cast of expression which bears little resemblance to that of any former writer; and which is so far removed from common use, that an unlearned reader, when he first opens his book, finds himself surprised by a new language.

This novelty has been, by those who can find nothing wrong in Milton, imputed to his laborious endeavours after words suitable to the grandeur of his ideas.  “Our language,” says Addison, “sank under him.”  But the truth is, that, both in prose and verse, he had formed his style by a perverse and pedantic principle.  He was desirous to use English words with a foreign idiom.  This, in all his prose, is discovered and condemned; for there judgment operates freely, neither softened by the beauty, nor awed by the dignity of his thoughts; but such is the power of his poetry, that his call is obeyed without resistance, the reader feels himself in captivity to a higher and a nobler mind, and criticism sinks in admiration.

Milton’s style was not modified by his subject; what is shown with greater extent in “Paradise Lost” may be found in “Comus.”  One source of his peculiarity was his familiarity with the Tuscan poets; the disposition of his words is, I think, frequently Italian; perhaps sometimes combined with other tongues.  Of him, at last, may be said what Jonson says of Spenser, that “he wrote no language,” but has formed what Butler calls a “Babylonish dialect,” in itself harsh and barbarous, but made by exalted genius and extensive learning the vehicle of so much instruction and so much pleasure, that, like other lovers, we find grace in its deformity.

Whatever be the faults of his diction, he cannot want the praise of copiousness and variety.  He was master of his language in its full extent; and has selected the melodious words with such diligence, that from his book alone the Art of English Poetry might be learned.

After his diction something must be said of hisversification.  Themeasure, he says, “is the English heroic verse without rhyme.”  Of this mode he had many examples among the Italians, and some in his own country.  The Earl of Surrey is said to have translated one of Virgil’s books without rhyme; and, beside our tragedies, a few short poems had appeared in blank verse, particularly one tending to reconcile the nation to Raleigh’s wild attempt upon Guiana, and probably written by Raleigh himself.  These petty performances cannot be supposed to have much influenced Milton, who more probably took his hint from Trissino’s “Italia Liberata;” and, finding blank verse easier than rhyme, was desirous of persuading himself that it is better.

“Rhyme,” he says, and says truly, “is no necessary adjunct of true poetry.”  But, perhaps, of poetry, as a mental operation, metre or music is no necessary adjunct: it is, however, by the music of metre that poetry has been discriminated in all languages; and, in languages melodiously constructed with a due proportion of long and short syllables, metre is sufficient.  But one language cannot communicate its rules to another; where metre is scanty and imperfect, some help is necessary.  The music of the English heroic lines strikes the ear so faintly, that it is easily lost, unless all the syllables of every line co-operate together; this co-operation can only be obtained by the preservation of every verse unmingled with another as a distinct system of sounds; and this distinctness is obtained and preserved by the artifice of rhyme.  The variety of pauses, so much boasted by the lovers of blank verse, changes the measures of an English poet to the periods of a declaimer; and there are only a few skilful and happy readers of Milton, who enable their audience to perceive where the lines end or begin.  “Blank verse,” said an ingenious critic, “seems to be verse only to the eye.”

Poetry may subsist without rhyme, but English poetry will not often please; nor can rhyme ever be safely spared but where the subject is able to support itself.  Blank verse makes some approach to that which is called the “lapidary style;” has neither the easiness of prose, nor the melody of numbers, and therefore tires by long continuance.  Of the Italian writers without rhyme, whom Milton alleges as precedents, not one is popular; what reason could urge in its defence has been confuted by the ear.

But, whatever be the advantages of rhyme, I cannot prevail on myself to wish that Milton had been a rhymer; for I cannot wish his work to be other than it is; yet like other heroes, he is to be admired rather than imitated.  He that thinks himself capable of astonishing may write blank verse; but those that hope only to please must condescend to rhyme.

The highest praise of genius is original invention.  Milton cannot be said to have contrived the structure of an epic poem, and therefore owes reverence to that vigour and amplitude of mind to which all generations must be indebted for the art of poetical narration, for the texture of the fable, the variation of incidents, the interposition of dialogue, and all the stratagems that surprise and enchain attention.  But, of all the borrowers from Homer, Milton is perhaps the least indebted.  He was naturally a thinker for himself, confident of his own abilities, and disdainful of help or hindrance: he did not refuse admission to the thoughts or images of his predecessors, but he did not seek them.  From his contemporaries he neither courted nor received support; there is in his writings nothing by which the pride of other authors might be gratified, or favour gained; no exchange of praise, nor solicitation of support.  His great works were performed under discountenance and in blindness; but difficulties vanished at his touch; he was born for whatever is arduous; and his work is not the greatest of heroic poems, only because it is not the first.

TheLife of Cowley, notwithstanding the penury of English biography, has been written by Dr. Sprat, an author whose pregnancy of imagination and elegance of language have deservedly set him high in the ranks of literature; but his zeal of friendship, or ambition of eloquence, has produced a funeral oration rather than a history: he has given the character, not the life, of Cowley; for he writes with so little detail, that scarcely anything is distinctly known, but all is shown confused and enlarged through the mist of panegyric.

Abraham Cowleywas born in the year one thousand sir hundred and eighteen.  His father was a grocer, whose condition Dr. Sprat conceals under the general appellation of a citizen; and, what would probably not have been less carefully suppressed, the omission of his name in the register of St. Dunstan’s parish gives reason to suspect that his father was a sectary.  Whoever he was, he died before the birth of his son, and consequently left him to the care of his mother: whom Wood represents as struggling earnestly to procure him a literary education, and who, as she lived to the age of eighty, had her solicitude rewarded by seeing her son eminent, and, I hope, by seeing him fortunate, and partaking his prosperity.  We know at least, from Sprat’s account, that he always acknowledged her care, and justly paid the dues of filial gratitude.

In the window of his mother’s apartment lay Spenser’s “Fairy Queen,” in which he very early took delight to read, till by feeling the charms of verse, he became, as he relates, irrecoverably a poet.  Such are the accidents which, sometimes remembered, and perhaps sometimes forgotten, produce that particular designation of mind, and propensity for some certain science or employment, which is commonly called Genius.  The true Genius is a mind of large general powers, accidentally determined to some particular direction.  Sir Joshua Reynolds, the great painter of the present age, had the first fondness for his art excited by the perusal of Richardson’s treatise.

By his mother’s solicitation he was admitted into Westminster school, where he was soon distinguished.  He was wont, says Sprat, to relate, “that he had this defect in his memory at that time, that his teachers never could bring it to retain the ordinary rules of grammar.”

This is an instance of the natural desire of man to propagate a wonder.  It is surely very difficult to tell anything as it was heard, when Sprat could not refrain from amplifying a commodious incident, though the book to which he prefixed his narrative contained its confutation.  A memory admitting some things, and rejecting others, an intellectual digestion that concocted the pulp of learning, but refused the husks, had the appearance of an instinctive elegance, of a particular provision made by nature for literary politeness.  But in the author’s own honest relation, the marvel vanishes: he was, he says, such “an enemy to all constraint, that his master never could prevail on him to learn the rules without book.”  He does not tell that he could not learn the rules; but that, being able to perform his exercises without them, and being an “enemy to constraint,” he spared himself the labour.

Among the English poets, Cowley, Milton, and Pope might be said “to lisp in numbers;” and have given such early proofs, not only of powers of language, but of comprehension of things, as to more tardy minds seems scarcely credible.  But of the learned puerilities of Cowley there is no doubt, since a volume of his poems was not only written, but printed in his thirteenth year; containing, with other poetical compositions, “The tragical History of Pyramus and Thisbe,” written when he was ten years old; and “Constantia and Philetus,” written two years after.

While he was yet at school he produced a comedy called “Love’s Riddle,” though it was not published till he had been some time at Cambridge.  This comedy is of the pastoral kind, which requires no acquaintance with the living world, and therefore the time at which it was composed adds little to the wonders of Cowley’s minority.

In 1636 he was removed to Cambridge, where he continued his studies with great intenseness; for he is said to have written, while he was yet a young student, the greater part of his “Davideis;” a work of which the materials could not have been collected without the study of many years, but by a mind of the greatest vigour and activity.

Two years after his settlement at Cambridge, he published “Love’s Riddle,” with a poetical dedication to Sir Kenelm Digby, of whose acquaintance all his contemporaries seem to have been ambitious; and “Naufragium Joculare,” a comedy written in Latin, but without due attention to the ancient models; for it is not loose verse, but mere prose.  It was printed, with a dedication in verse to Dr. Comber, master of the college; but having neither the facility of a popular, nor the accuracy of a learned work, it seems to be now universally neglected.

At the beginning of the civil war, as the prince passed through Cambridge in his way to York, he was entertained with the representation of “The Guardian,” a comedy which Cowley says was neither written nor acted, but rough-drawn by him, and repeated by the scholars.  That this comedy was printed during his absence from his country he appears to have considered as injurious to his reputation; though, during the suppression of the theatres, it was sometimes privately acted with sufficient approbation.

In 1643, being now master of arts, he was, by the prevalence of the Parliament, ejected from Cambridge, and sheltered himself at St. John’s College in Oxford; where, as is said by Wood, he published a satire, called “The Puritan and Papist,” which was only inserted in the last collection of his works; and so distinguished himself by the warmth of his loyalty, and the elegance of his conversation, that he gained the kindness and confidence of those who attended the king, and amongst others of Lord Falkland, whose notice cast a lustre on all to whom it was extended.

About the time when Oxford was surrendered to the Parliament, he followed the Queen to Paris, where he became secretary to the Lord Jermyn, afterwards Earl of St. Albans, and was employed in such correspondence as the royal cause required, and particularly in ciphering and deciphering the letters that passed between the king and queen; an employment of the highest confidence and honour.  So wide was his province of intelligence, that for several years it filled all his days and two or three nights in the week.

In the year 1647, his “Mistress” was published; for he imagined, as he declared in his preface to a subsequent edition, that “poets are scarcely thought freemen of their company, without paying some duties, or obliging themselves to be true to love.”

This obligation to amorous ditties owes, I believe, its original to the fame of Petrarch, who, in an age rude and uncultivated, by his tuneful homage to his Laura refined the manners of the lettered world, and filled Europe with love and poetry.  But the basis of all excellence is truth: he that professes love ought to feel its power.  Petrarch was a real lover, and Laura doubtless deserved his tenderness.  Of Cowley, we are told by Barnes, who had means enough of information, that, whatever he may talk of his own inflammability, and the variety of characters by which his heart was divided, he in reality was in love but once, and then never had resolution to tell his passion.

This consideration cannot but abate in some measure the reader’s esteem for the works and the author.  To love excellence is natural; it is natural likewise for the lover to solicit reciprocal regard by an elaborate display of his own qualifications.  The desire of pleasing has in different men produced actions of heroism, and effusions of wit; but it seems as reasonable to appear the champion as the poet of an airy “nothing,” and to quarrel as to write for what Cowley might have learned from his master Pindar to call “the dream of a shadow.”

It is surely not difficult, in the solitude of a college, or in the bustle of the world, to find useful studies and serious employment.  No man needs to be so burdened with life as to squander it in voluntary dreams of fictitious occurrences.  The man that sits down to suppose himself charged with treason or peculation, and heats his mind to an elaborate purgation of his character from crimes which he was never within the possibility of committing, differs only by the infrequency of his folly from him who praises beauty which he never saw; complains of jealousy which he never felt; supposes himself sometimes invited, and sometimes forsaken; fatigues his fancy, and ransacks his memory for images which may exhibit the gaiety of hope or the gloominess of despair; and dresses his imaginary Chloris or Phyllis sometimes in flowers fading as her beauty, and sometimes in gems lasting as her virtues.

At Paris, as secretary to Lord Jermyn, he was engaged in transacting things of real importance with real men and real women, and at that time did not much employ his thoughts upon phantoms of gallantry.  Some of his letters to Mr. Bennet, afterwards Earl of Arlington, from April to December, in 1650, are preserved in “Miscellanea Aulica,” a collection of papers published by Brown.  These letters, being written like those of other men whose minds are more on things than words, contribute no otherwise to his reputation, than as they show him to have been above the affectation of unseasonable elegance, and to have known that the business of a statesman can be little forwarded by flowers of rhetoric.

One passage, however, seems not unworthy of some notice.  Speaking of the Scotch treaty then in agitation:

“The Scotch treaty,” says he, “is the only thing now in which we are vitally concerned; I am one of the last hopers, and yet cannot now abstain from believing that an agreement will be made; all people upon the place incline to that opinion.  The Scotch will moderate something of the rigour of their demands; the mutual necessity of an accord is visible; the king is persuaded of it.  And to tell you the truth (which I take to be an argument above all the rest), Virgil has told me something to that purpose.”

This expression, from a secretary of the present time, would be considered as merely ludicrous, or at most as an ostentatious display of scholarship; but the manners of that time were so tinged with superstition, that I cannot but suspect Cowley of having consulted on this great occasion the Virgilian lots, and to have given some credit to the answer of his oracle.

Some years afterwards, “business,” says Sprat, “passed of course into other hands;” and Cowley, being no longer useful at Paris, was in 1656 sent back into England, that, “under pretence of privacy and retirement, he might take occasion of giving notice of the posture of things in this nation.”

Soon after his return to London, he was seized by some messengers of the usurping powers, who were sent out in quest of another man; and being examined, was put into confinement, from which he was not dismissed without the security of a thousand pounds given by Dr. Scarborough.

This year he published his poems, with a preface, in which he seems to have inserted something suppressed in subsequent editions, which was interpreted to denote some relaxation of his loyalty.  In this preface he declares, that “his desire had been for some days past, and did still very vehemently continue, to retire himself to some of the American plantations, and to forsake this world for ever.”

From the obloquy which the appearance of submission to the usurpers brought upon him, his biographer has been very diligent to clear him, and indeed it does not seem to have lessened his reputation.  His wish for retirement we can easily believe to be undissembled; a man harassed in one kingdom, and persecuted in another, who, after a course of business that employed all his days and half his nights, in ciphering and deciphering, comes to his own country and steps into a prison, will be willing enough to retire to some place of quiet and of safety.  Yet let neither our reverence for a genius, nor our pity for a sufferer, dispose us to forget, that, if his activity was virtue, his retreat was cowardice.

He then took upon him the character of physician, still, according to Sprat, with intention “to dissemble the main design of his coming over;” and, as Mr. Wood relates, “complying with the men then in power (which was much taken notice of by the royal party), he obtained an order to be created doctor of physic; which being done to his mind (whereby he gained the ill-will of some of his friends), he went into France again, having made a copy of verses on Oliver’s death.”

This is no favourable representation; yet even in this not much wrong can be discovered.  How far he complied with the men in power is to be inquired before he can be blamed.  It is not said that he told them any secrets, or assisted them by intelligence or any other act.  If he only promised to be quiet, that they in whose hands he was might free him from confinement, he did what no law of society prohibits.

The man whose miscarriage in a just cause has put him in the power of his enemy, may, without any breach of his integrity, regain his liberty, or preserve his life, by a promise of neutrality: for the stipulation gives the enemy nothing which he had not before.  The neutrality of a captive may be always secured by his imprisonment or death.  He that is at the disposal of another may not promise to aid him in any injurious act, because no power can compel active obedience.  He may engage to do nothing, but not to do ill.

There is reason to think that Cowley promised little.  It does not appear that his compliance gained him confidence enough to be trusted without security, for the bond of his bail was never cancelled; nor that it made him think himself secure, for, at that dissolution of government which followed the death of Oliver, he returned into France, where he resumed his former station, and stayed till the restoration.

“He continued,” says his biographer, “under these bonds till the general deliverance;” it is therefore to be supposed that he did not go to France, and act again for the king, without the consent of his bondsman: that he did not show his loyalty at the hazard of his friend, but by his friend’s permission.

Of the verses on Oliver’s death, in which Wood’s narrative seems to imply something encomiastic, there has been no appearance.  There is a discourse concerning his government, indeed, with verses intermixed, but such as certainly gained its author no friends among the abettors of usurpation.

A doctor of physic, however, he was made at Oxford in December, 1657; and in the commencement of the Royal Society, of which an account has been published by Dr. Birch, he appears busy among the experimental philosophers with the title of Doctor Cowley.

There is no reason for supposing that he ever attempted practice: but his preparatory studies have contributed something to the honour of his country.  Considering botany as necessary to a physician, he retired into Kent to gather plants; and as the predominance of a favourite study affects all subordinate operations of the intellect, botany in the mind of Cowley turned into poetry.  He composed, in Latin, several books on plants, of which the first and second display the qualities of herbs, in elegiac verse; the third and fourth, the beauties of flowers, in various measures; and the fifth and sixth, the use of trees, in heroic numbers.

At the same time were produced, from the same university, the two great poets, Cowley and Milton, of dissimilar genius, of opposite principles, but concurring in the cultivation of Latin poetry; in which the English, till their works and May’s poem appeared, seemed unable to contest the palm with any other of the lettered nations.

If the Latin performances of Cowley and Milton be compared (for May I hold to be superior to both), the advantage seems to lie on the side of Cowley.  Milton is generally content to express the thoughts of the ancients in their language; Cowley, without much loss of purity or elegance, accommodates the diction of Rome to his own conceptions.

At the Restoration, after all the diligence of his long service, and with consciousness, not only of the merit of fidelity, but of the dignity of great abilities, he naturally expected ample preferments; and, that he might not be forgotten by his own fault, wrote a song of triumph.  But this was a time of such general hope, that great numbers were inevitably disappointed; and Cowley found his reward very tediously delayed.  He had been promised, by both Charles the First and Second, the mastership of the Savoy; “but he lost it,” says Wood, “by certain persons, enemies to the Muses.”

The neglect of the court was not his only mortification; having by such alteration as he thought proper, fitted his old comedy of “The Guardian” for the stage, he produced it under the title of “The Cutter of Coleman Street.”  It was treated on the stage with great severity, and was afterwards censured as a satire on the king’s party.

Mr. Dryden, who went with Mr. Sprat to the first exhibition, related to Mr. Dennis, “that, when they told Cowley how little favour had been shown him, he received the news of his ill success, not with so much firmness as might have been expected from so great a man.”

What firmness they expected, or what weakness Cowley discovered, cannot be known.  He that misses his end will never be as much pleased as he that attains it, even when he can impute no part of his failure to himself; and when the end is to please the multitude, no man perhaps has a right, in things admitting of gradation and comparison, to throw the whole blame upon his judges, and totally to exclude diffidence and shame, by a haughty consciousness of his own excellence.

For the rejection of this play it is difficult now to find the reason: it certainly has, in a very great degree, the power of fixing attention and exciting merriment.  From the charge of disaffection he exculpates himself in his preface, by observing how unlikely it is, that, having followed the royal family through all their distresses, “he should choose the time of their restoration to begin a quarrel with them.”  It appears, however, from the theatrical register of Downes the prompter, to have been popularly considered as a satire on the royalists.

That he might shorten this tedious suspense, he published his pretensions and his discontent in an ode called “The Complaint;” in which he styles himself themelancholyCowley.  This met with the usual fortune of complaints, and seems to have excited more contempt than pity.

These unlucky incidents are brought, maliciously enough, together in some stanzas, written about that time on the choice of a laureate; a mode of satire, by which, since it was first introduced by Suckling, perhaps every generation of poets has been teased.

Savoy-missing Cowley came into the court,Making apologies for his bad play;Every one gave him so good a report,That Apollo gave heed to all he could say:Nor would he have had, ’tis thought, a rebuke,Unless he had done some notable folly;Writ verses unjustly in praise of Sam Tuke,Or printed his pitiful Melancholy.

Savoy-missing Cowley came into the court,Making apologies for his bad play;Every one gave him so good a report,That Apollo gave heed to all he could say:Nor would he have had, ’tis thought, a rebuke,Unless he had done some notable folly;Writ verses unjustly in praise of Sam Tuke,Or printed his pitiful Melancholy.

His vehement desire of retirement now came again upon him.  “Not finding,” says the morose Wood, “that preferment conferred upon him which he expected, while others for their money carried away most places, he retired discontented into Surrey.”

“He was now,” says the courtly Sprat, “weary of the vexations and formalities of an active condition.  He had been perplexed with a long compliance to foreign manners.  He was satiated with the arts of a court; which sort of life, though his virtue made it innocent to him, yet nothing could make it quiet.  Those were the reasons that moved him to follow the violent inclination of his own mind, which, in the greatest throng of his former business, had still called upon him, and represented to him the true delights of solitary studies, of temperate pleasures, and a moderate revenue below the malice and flatteries of fortune.”

So differently are things seen! and so differently are they shown!  But actions are visible, though motives are secret.  Cowley certainly retired; first to Barn Elms, and afterwards to Chertsey, in Surrey.  He seems, however, to have lost part of his dread of thehum of men.  He thought himself now safe enough from intrusion, without the defence of mountains and oceans; and, instead of seeking shelter in America, wisely went only so far from the bustle of life as that he might easily find his way back when solitude should grow tedious.  His retreat was at first but slenderly accommodated; yet he soon obtained, by the interest of the Earl of St. Alban’s, and the Duke of Buckingham, such lease of the queen’s lands as afforded him an ample income.

By the lovers of virtue and of wit it will be solicitously asked, if he now was happy.  Let them peruse one of his letters accidentally preserved by Peck, which I recommend to the consideration of all that may hereafter pant for solitude.

“To Dr. Thomas Sprat,“Chertsey,May21, 1665.“The first night that I came hither I caught so great a cold, with a defluxion of rheum, as made me keep my chamber ten days.  And, two after, had such a bruise on my ribs with a fall, that I am yet unable to move or turn myself in my bed.  This is my personal fortune here to begin with.  And, besides, I can get no money from my tenants, and have my meadows eaten up every night by cattle put in by my neighbours.  What this signifies, or may come to in time, God knows; if it be ominous, it can end in nothing less than hanging.  Another misfortune has been, and stranger than all the rest, that you have broke your word with me and failed to come, even though you told Mr. Bois that you would.  This is what they callmonstri simile.  I do hope to recover my late hurt so far within five or six days (though it be uncertain yet whether I shall ever recover it) as to walk about again.  And then, methinks, you and I and the dean might be very merry upon St. Ann’s Hill.  You might very conveniently come hither the way of Hampton Town, lying there one night.  I write this in pain, and can say no more:verbum sapienti.”

“To Dr. Thomas Sprat,

“Chertsey,May21, 1665.

“The first night that I came hither I caught so great a cold, with a defluxion of rheum, as made me keep my chamber ten days.  And, two after, had such a bruise on my ribs with a fall, that I am yet unable to move or turn myself in my bed.  This is my personal fortune here to begin with.  And, besides, I can get no money from my tenants, and have my meadows eaten up every night by cattle put in by my neighbours.  What this signifies, or may come to in time, God knows; if it be ominous, it can end in nothing less than hanging.  Another misfortune has been, and stranger than all the rest, that you have broke your word with me and failed to come, even though you told Mr. Bois that you would.  This is what they callmonstri simile.  I do hope to recover my late hurt so far within five or six days (though it be uncertain yet whether I shall ever recover it) as to walk about again.  And then, methinks, you and I and the dean might be very merry upon St. Ann’s Hill.  You might very conveniently come hither the way of Hampton Town, lying there one night.  I write this in pain, and can say no more:verbum sapienti.”

He did not long enjoy the pleasure or suffer the uneasiness of solitude; for he died at the Porch-house in Chertsey, in 1667 [28th July], in the forty-ninth year of his age.

He was buried with great pomp near Chaucer and Spenser; and King Charles pronounced, “That Mr. Cowley had not left behind him a better man in England.”  He is represented by Dr. Sprat as the most amiable of mankind; and this posthumous praise may safely be credited, as it has never been contradicted by envy or by faction.

Such are the remarks and memorials which I have been able to add to the narrative of Dr. Sprat; who, writing when the feuds of civil war were yet recent, and the minds of either party were easily irritated, was obliged to pass over many transactions in general expressions, and to leave curiosity often unsatisfied.  What he did not tell cannot, however, now be known; I must therefore recommend the perusal of his work, to which my narration can be considered only as a slender supplement.

Cowley, like other poets who have written with narrow views, and, instead of tracing intellectual pleasure to its natural sources in the minds of men, paid their court to temporary prejudices, has been at one time too much praised, and too much neglected at another.

Wit, like all other things subject by their nature to the choice of man, has its changes and fashions, and at different times takes different forms.  About the beginning of the seventeenth century appeared a race of writers that may be termed the metaphysical poets; of whom, in a criticism on the works of Cowley, it is not improper to give some account.

The metaphysical poets were men of learning, and to show their learning was their whole endeavour; but, unluckily resolving to show it in rhyme, instead of writing poetry they only wrote verses, and very often such verses as stood the trial of the finger better than of the ear; for the modulation was so imperfect, that they were only found to be verses by counting the syllables.

If the father of criticism had rightly denominated poetry τéχνη μιμητικὴ,an imitative art, these writers will, without great wrong, lose their right to the name of poets; for they cannot be said to have imitated anything; they neither copied nature nor life; neither painted the forms of matter, nor represented the operations of intellect.

Those, however, who deny them to be poets, allow them to be wits.  Dryden confesses of himself and his contemporaries, that they fall below Donne in wit; but maintains that they surpass him in poetry.

If wit be well described by Pope, as being “that which has been often thought, but was never before so well expressed,” they certainly never attained, nor ever sought it; for they endeavoured to be singular in their thoughts, and were careless of their diction.  But Pope’s account of wit is undoubtedly erroneous; he depresses it below its natural dignity, and reduces it from strength of thought to happiness of language.

If by a more noble and more adequate conception, that be considered as wit which is at once natural and new, that which, though not obvious, is, upon its first production, acknowledged to be just; if it be that which he that never found it, wonders how he missed; to wit of this kind the metaphysical poets have seldom risen.  Their thoughts are often new, but seldom natural; they are not obvious, but neither are they just; and the reader, far from wondering that he missed them, wonders more frequently by what perverseness of industry they were ever found.

But wit, abstracted from its effects upon the hearer, may be more rigorously and philosophically considered as a kind ofdiscordia concors; a combination of dissimilar images, or discovery of occult resemblances in things apparently unlike.  Of wit, thus defined, they have more than enough.  The most heterogeneous ideas are yoked by violence together; nature and art are ransacked for illustrations, comparisons, and allusions; their learning instructs, and their subtlety surprises; but the reader commonly thinks his improvement dearly bought, and though he sometimes admires, is seldom pleased.

From this account of their compositions it will be readily inferred that they were not successful in representing or moving the affections.  As they were wholly employed on something unexpected and surprising, they had no regard to that uniformity of sentiment which enables us to conceive and to excite the pains and the pleasure of other minds: they never inquired what, on any occasion, they should have said or done; but wrote rather as beholders than partakers of human nature; as beings looking upon good and evil, impassive and at leisure; as epicurean deities, making remarks on the actions of men, and the vicissitudes of life, without interest and without emotion.  Their courtship was void of fondness, and their lamentation of sorrow.  Their wish was only to say what they hoped had been never said before.

Nor was the sublime more within their reach than the pathetic; for they never attempted that comprehension and expanse of thought which at once fills the whole mind, and of which the first effect is sudden astonishment, and the second rational admiration.  Sublimity is produced by aggregation, and littleness by dispersion.  Great thoughts are always general, and consist in positions not limited by exceptions, and in descriptions not descending to minuteness.  It is with great propriety that subtlety, which in its original import means exility of particles, is taken in its metaphorical meaning for nicety of distinction.  Those writers who lay on the watch for novelty, could have little hope of greatness; for great things cannot have escaped former observation.  Their attempts were always analytic; they broke every image into fragments; and could no more represent, by their slender conceits and laboured particularities, the prospects of nature, or the scenes of life, than he who dissects a sunbeam with a prism can exhibit the wide effulgence of a summer noon.

What they wanted, however, of the sublime they endeavoured to supply by hyperbole; their amplifications had no limits; they left not only reason but fancy behind them; and produced combinations of confused magnificence, that not only could not be credited, but could not be imagined.

Yet great labour, directed by great abilities, is never wholly lost; if they frequently threw away their wit upon false conceits, they likewise sometimes struck out unexpected truth; if their conceits were far fetched, they were often worth the carriage.  To write on their plan, it was at least necessary to read and think.  No man could be born a metaphysical poet, nor assume the dignity of a writer, by descriptions copied from descriptions, by imitations borrowed from imitations, by traditional imagery, and hereditary similes, by readiness of rhyme, and volubility of syllables.

In perusing the works of this race of authors, the mind is exercised either by recollection or inquiry; something already learned is to be retrieved, or something new is to be examined.  If their greatness seldom elevates, their acuteness often surprises; if the imagination is not always gratified, at least the powers of reflection and comparison are employed; and in the mass of materials which ingenious absurdity has thrown together, genuine wit and useful knowledge may be sometimes found buried perhaps in grossness of expression, but useful to those who know their value; and such as, when they are expanded to perspicuity and polished to elegance, may give lustre to works which have more propriety though less copiousness of sentiment.

This kind of writing, which was, I believe, borrowed from Marino and his followers, had been recommended by the example of Donne, a man of very extensive and various knowledge, and by Jonson, whose manner resembled that of Donne more in the ruggedness of his lines than in the cast of his sentiments.

When their reputation was high, they had undoubtedly more imitators than time has left behind.  Their immediate successors, of whom any remembrance can be said to remain, were Suckling, Waller, Denham, Cowley, Clieveland, and Milton.  Denham and Waller sought another way to fame, by improving the harmony of our members.  Milton tried the metaphysic style only in his lines upon Hobson the carrier.  Cowley adopted it, and excelled his predecessors, having as much sentiment and more music.  Suckling neither improved versification nor abounded in conceits.  The fashionable style remained chiefly with Cowley; Suckling could not reach it, and Milton disdained it.

Critical remarks are not easily understood without examples; and I have therefore collected instances of the modes of writing by which this species of poets (for poets they were called by themselves and their admirers) was eminently distinguished.

As the authors of this race were perhaps more desirous of being admired than understood, they sometimes drew their conceits from recesses of learning not very much frequented by common readers of poetry.  Thus, Cowley on Knowledge:

The sacred tree ’midst the fair orchard grew;The phœnix truth did on it rest,And built his perfumed nest,That right Porphyrian tree which did true logic show.Each leaf did learned notions give,And the apples were demonstrative;So clear their colour and divine,The very shads they cast did other lights outshine.

The sacred tree ’midst the fair orchard grew;The phœnix truth did on it rest,And built his perfumed nest,That right Porphyrian tree which did true logic show.Each leaf did learned notions give,And the apples were demonstrative;So clear their colour and divine,The very shads they cast did other lights outshine.

On Anacreon continuing a lover in his old age:

Love was with thy life entwined,Close as heat with fire is join’d;A powerful brand prescribed the dateOf thine, like Meleager’s fate.Th’ antiperistasis of ageMore enflam’d thy amorous rage.

Love was with thy life entwined,Close as heat with fire is join’d;A powerful brand prescribed the dateOf thine, like Meleager’s fate.Th’ antiperistasis of ageMore enflam’d thy amorous rage.

In the following verses we have an allusion to a rabbinical opinion concerning manna:

Variety I ask not: give me oneTo live perpetually upon.The person Love does to us fit,Like manna, has the taste of all in it.

Variety I ask not: give me oneTo live perpetually upon.The person Love does to us fit,Like manna, has the taste of all in it.

Thus Donne shows his medicinal knowledge in some encomiastic verses:

In everything there naturally growsA balsamum to keep it fresh and new,If ’twere not injured by extrinsic blows:Your youth and beauty are this balm in you.But you, of learning and religion,And virtue and such ingredients, have madeA mithridate, whose operationKeeps off, or cures what can be done or said.

In everything there naturally growsA balsamum to keep it fresh and new,If ’twere not injured by extrinsic blows:Your youth and beauty are this balm in you.But you, of learning and religion,And virtue and such ingredients, have madeA mithridate, whose operationKeeps off, or cures what can be done or said.

Though the following lines of Donne, on the last night of the year, have something in them too scholastic, they are not inelegant:

This twilight of two years, not past nor next,Some emblem is of me, or I of this,Who, meteor-like, of stuff and form perplext,Whose what and where in disputation is,If I should call me anything, should miss.I sum the years and me, and find me notDebtor to th’ old, nor creditor to th’ new.That cannot say, my thanks I have forget,Nor trust I this with hopes; and yet scarce trueThis bravery is, since these times show’d me you.—Donne.

This twilight of two years, not past nor next,Some emblem is of me, or I of this,Who, meteor-like, of stuff and form perplext,Whose what and where in disputation is,If I should call me anything, should miss.I sum the years and me, and find me notDebtor to th’ old, nor creditor to th’ new.That cannot say, my thanks I have forget,Nor trust I this with hopes; and yet scarce trueThis bravery is, since these times show’d me you.—Donne.

Yet more abstruse and profound is Donne’s reflection upon man as a microcosm:

If men be worlds, there is in every oneSomething to answer in some proportion;All the world’s riches; and in good men, thisVirtue, our form’s form, and our soul’s soul, is

If men be worlds, there is in every oneSomething to answer in some proportion;All the world’s riches; and in good men, thisVirtue, our form’s form, and our soul’s soul, is

Of thoughts so far-fetched, as to be not only unexpected, but unnatural, all their books are full.

To a lady, who wrote posies for rings:

They, who above do various circles find,Say, like a ring, th’ equator Heaven does bindWhen Heaven shall be adorned by thee,(Which then more Heaven than ’tis will be)’Tis thou must write the poesy there,For it wanteth one as yet,Then the sun pass through’t twice a year,The sun, which is esteem’d the god of wit.—Cowley.

They, who above do various circles find,Say, like a ring, th’ equator Heaven does bindWhen Heaven shall be adorned by thee,(Which then more Heaven than ’tis will be)’Tis thou must write the poesy there,For it wanteth one as yet,Then the sun pass through’t twice a year,The sun, which is esteem’d the god of wit.—Cowley.

The difficulties which have been raised about identity in philosophy are by Cowley, with still more perplexity applied to love:

Five years ago (says story) I loved you,For which you call me most inconstant now;Pardon me, madam, you mistake the man;For I am not the same that I was then:No flesh is now the same ’twas then in me,And that my mind is changed yourself may see.The same thoughts to retain still, and intentsWere more inconstant far; for accidentsMust of all things most strangely inconstant prove,If from one subject they t’ another move;My members then the father members were,From whence these take their birth, which now are hereIf then this body love what th’ other did,’Twere incest, which by nature is forbid.

Five years ago (says story) I loved you,For which you call me most inconstant now;Pardon me, madam, you mistake the man;For I am not the same that I was then:No flesh is now the same ’twas then in me,And that my mind is changed yourself may see.The same thoughts to retain still, and intentsWere more inconstant far; for accidentsMust of all things most strangely inconstant prove,If from one subject they t’ another move;My members then the father members were,From whence these take their birth, which now are hereIf then this body love what th’ other did,’Twere incest, which by nature is forbid.

The love of different women is, in geographical poetry, compared to travels through different countries:

Hast thou not found each woman’s breast(The land where thou hast travelled)Either by savages possest,Or wild, and uninhabited?What joy could’st take, or what repose,In countries so uncivilis’d as those?Lust, the scorching dog-star, hereRages with immoderate heat;Whilst Pride, the ragged northern bear,In others makes the cold too great.And where these are temperate known,The soil’s all barren sand, or rocky stone.—Cowley.

Hast thou not found each woman’s breast(The land where thou hast travelled)Either by savages possest,Or wild, and uninhabited?What joy could’st take, or what repose,In countries so uncivilis’d as those?Lust, the scorching dog-star, hereRages with immoderate heat;Whilst Pride, the ragged northern bear,In others makes the cold too great.And where these are temperate known,The soil’s all barren sand, or rocky stone.—Cowley.

A lover, burnt up by his affection, is compared to Egypt:

The fate of Egypt I sustain,And never feel the dew of rain,From clouds which in the head appear;But all my too-much moisture eweTo overflowings of the heart below.—Cowley.

The fate of Egypt I sustain,And never feel the dew of rain,From clouds which in the head appear;But all my too-much moisture eweTo overflowings of the heart below.—Cowley.

The lover supposes his lady acquainted with the ancient laws of augury and rites of sacrifice:

And yet this death of mine, I fear,Will ominous to her appear:When, sound in every other part,Her sacrifice is found without an heart.For the last tempest of my deathShall sigh out that too, with my breath.

And yet this death of mine, I fear,Will ominous to her appear:When, sound in every other part,Her sacrifice is found without an heart.For the last tempest of my deathShall sigh out that too, with my breath.

That the chaos was harmonised, has been recited of old; but whence the different sounds arose remained for a modern to discover:

Th’ ungovern’d parts no correspondence knew;An artless war from thwarting motions grew;Till they to number and fixed rules were brought.Water and air he for the tenor chose,Earth made the base; the treble flame arose.—Cowley.

Th’ ungovern’d parts no correspondence knew;An artless war from thwarting motions grew;Till they to number and fixed rules were brought.Water and air he for the tenor chose,Earth made the base; the treble flame arose.—Cowley.

The tears of lovers are always of great poetical account; but Donne has extended them into worlds.  If the lines are not easily understood, they may be read again:

On a round ballA workman, that hath copies by, can layAn Europe, Afric, and an Asia,And quickly make that which was nothing, all.So doth each tear,Which thee doth wear,A globe, yea world, by that impression grow,Till thy tears mixed with mine do overflowThis world, by waters sent from thee my heaven dissolved so.

On a round ballA workman, that hath copies by, can layAn Europe, Afric, and an Asia,And quickly make that which was nothing, all.So doth each tear,Which thee doth wear,A globe, yea world, by that impression grow,Till thy tears mixed with mine do overflowThis world, by waters sent from thee my heaven dissolved so.

On reading the following lines, the reader may perhaps cry out “Confusion worse confounded.”

Hers lies a she sun, and a he moon here,She gives the best light to his sphere,Or each is both, and all, and so,They unto one another nothing owe.—Donne.

Hers lies a she sun, and a he moon here,She gives the best light to his sphere,Or each is both, and all, and so,They unto one another nothing owe.—Donne.

Who but Donne would have thought that a good man is a telescope?

Though God be our true glass through which we seeAll, since the being of all things is He,Yet are the trunks, which do to us deriveThings in proportion fit, by perspectiveDeeds of good men; for by their living here,Virtues, indeed remote, seem to be near.

Though God be our true glass through which we seeAll, since the being of all things is He,Yet are the trunks, which do to us deriveThings in proportion fit, by perspectiveDeeds of good men; for by their living here,Virtues, indeed remote, seem to be near.

Who would imagine it possible that in a very few lines so many remote ideas could be brought together?

Since ’tis my doom, love’s undershrieve,Why this reprieve?Why doth my she advowson flyIncumbency?To sell thyself dust thou intendBy candles end,And hold the contract thus in doubt,Life’s taper out?Think but how soon the market fails,Your sex lives faster than the males;And if to measure age’s span,The sober Julian were th’ account of man,Whilst you live by the fleet Gregorian.—Cleveland.

Since ’tis my doom, love’s undershrieve,Why this reprieve?Why doth my she advowson flyIncumbency?To sell thyself dust thou intendBy candles end,And hold the contract thus in doubt,Life’s taper out?Think but how soon the market fails,Your sex lives faster than the males;And if to measure age’s span,The sober Julian were th’ account of man,Whilst you live by the fleet Gregorian.—Cleveland.

Of enormous and disgusting hyperboles, these may be examples:

By every wind that comes this way,Send me at least a sigh or two,Such and so many I’ll repayAs shall themselves make winds to get to you.—Cowley.In tears I’ll waste these eyes,By love so vainly fed:So lust of old the deluge punished.—Cowley.All arm’d in brass, the richest dress of war,(A dismal glorious sight!) he shone afar.The sun himself started with sudden fright,To see his beams return so dismal bright.—Cowley.

By every wind that comes this way,Send me at least a sigh or two,Such and so many I’ll repayAs shall themselves make winds to get to you.—Cowley.

In tears I’ll waste these eyes,By love so vainly fed:So lust of old the deluge punished.—Cowley.

All arm’d in brass, the richest dress of war,(A dismal glorious sight!) he shone afar.The sun himself started with sudden fright,To see his beams return so dismal bright.—Cowley.

A universal consternation:

His bloody eyes he hurls round, his sharp pawsTear up the ground; then runs he wild about,Lashing his angry tail and roaring out.Beasts creep into their dens, and tremble there;Trees, though no wind is stirring, shake with fear;Silence and horror fill the place around;Echo itself dares scarce repeat the sound.—Cowley.

His bloody eyes he hurls round, his sharp pawsTear up the ground; then runs he wild about,Lashing his angry tail and roaring out.Beasts creep into their dens, and tremble there;Trees, though no wind is stirring, shake with fear;Silence and horror fill the place around;Echo itself dares scarce repeat the sound.—Cowley.

Their fictions were often violent and unnatural.

Of his mistress bathing:

The fish around her crowded, as they doTo the false light that treacherous fishers show,And all with as much ease might taken be,As she at first took me;For ne’er did light so clearAmong the waves appear,Though every night the sun himself set there.—Cowley.

The fish around her crowded, as they doTo the false light that treacherous fishers show,And all with as much ease might taken be,As she at first took me;For ne’er did light so clearAmong the waves appear,Though every night the sun himself set there.—Cowley.

The poetical effect of a lover’s name upon glass:

My name engraved hereinBoth contribute my firmness to this glass:Which, ever since that charm, hath beenAs hard as that which graved it was.—Donne.

My name engraved hereinBoth contribute my firmness to this glass:Which, ever since that charm, hath beenAs hard as that which graved it was.—Donne.

Their conceits were sometimes slight and trifling.  On an inconstant woman:

He enjoys the calmy sunshine now,And no breath stirring hears,In the clear heaven of thy browNo smallest cloud appears.He sees thee gentle, fair and gay,And trusts the faithless April of thy May.—Cowley.

He enjoys the calmy sunshine now,And no breath stirring hears,In the clear heaven of thy browNo smallest cloud appears.He sees thee gentle, fair and gay,And trusts the faithless April of thy May.—Cowley.

Upon a paper written with the juice of lemon, and read by the fire:

Nothing yet in thee is seen,But when a genial heat warms thee within,A new-born wood of various lines there grows;Hers buds an L, and there a B,Here sprouts a V, and there a T,And all the flourishing letters stand in rows.—Cowley.

Nothing yet in thee is seen,But when a genial heat warms thee within,A new-born wood of various lines there grows;Hers buds an L, and there a B,Here sprouts a V, and there a T,And all the flourishing letters stand in rows.—Cowley.

As they sought only for novelty, they did not much inquire whether their allusions were to things high or low, elegant or gross; whether they compared the little to the great, or the great to the little.

Physic and chirurgery for a lover:

Gently, ah gently, madam, touchThe wound, which you yourself have made;That pain must needs be very muchWhich makes me of your hand afraid.Cordials of pity give me now,For I too weak of purgings grow.—Cowley.

Gently, ah gently, madam, touchThe wound, which you yourself have made;That pain must needs be very muchWhich makes me of your hand afraid.Cordials of pity give me now,For I too weak of purgings grow.—Cowley.

The world and a clock

Mahol th’ inferior world’s fantastic faceThrough all the turns of matter’s maze did trace;Great Nature’s well-set clock in pieces took;On all the springs and smallest wheels did lookOf life and motion, and with equal artMade up the whole again of every part.—Cowley.

Mahol th’ inferior world’s fantastic faceThrough all the turns of matter’s maze did trace;Great Nature’s well-set clock in pieces took;On all the springs and smallest wheels did lookOf life and motion, and with equal artMade up the whole again of every part.—Cowley.

A coal-pit has not often found its poet; but, that it may not want its due honour, Cleveland has paralleled it with the sun:

The moderate value of our guiltless oreMakes no man atheist, and no woman whore;Yet why should hallow’d vestal’s sacred shrineDeserve more honour than a flaming mine?These pregnant wombs of heat would fitter be,Than a few embers, for a deity.Had he our pits, the Persian would admireNo sun, but warm’s devotion at our fire:He’d leave the trotting whipster, and preferOur profound Vulcan ’bove that waggoner.For wants he heat, or light? or would have storeOf both? ’tis here: and what can suns give more?Nay, what’s the sun but, in a different name,A coal-pit rampant, or a mine on flame?Then let this truth reciprocally run,The sun’s heaven’s coalery, and coals our sun.

The moderate value of our guiltless oreMakes no man atheist, and no woman whore;Yet why should hallow’d vestal’s sacred shrineDeserve more honour than a flaming mine?These pregnant wombs of heat would fitter be,Than a few embers, for a deity.Had he our pits, the Persian would admireNo sun, but warm’s devotion at our fire:He’d leave the trotting whipster, and preferOur profound Vulcan ’bove that waggoner.For wants he heat, or light? or would have storeOf both? ’tis here: and what can suns give more?Nay, what’s the sun but, in a different name,A coal-pit rampant, or a mine on flame?Then let this truth reciprocally run,The sun’s heaven’s coalery, and coals our sun.

Death, a voyage:

No familyE’er rigg’d a soul for Heaven’s discovery,With whom more venturers might boldly dareVenture their stakes with him in joy to share.—Donne.

No familyE’er rigg’d a soul for Heaven’s discovery,With whom more venturers might boldly dareVenture their stakes with him in joy to share.—Donne.

Their thoughts and expressions were sometimes grossly absurd, and such as no figures or licence can reconcile to the understanding.

A lover neither dead nor alive:

Then down I laid my headDown on cold earth; and for a while was dead,And my freed soul to a strange somewhere fled.Ah, sottish soul, said I,When back to its cage again I saw it fly;Fool to resume her broken chain,And row her galley here again!Fool, to that body to returnWhere it condemned and destined is to burn!Once dead, how can it be,Death should a thing so pleasant seem to thee,That thou should’st come to live it o’er again in me?—Cowley.

Then down I laid my headDown on cold earth; and for a while was dead,And my freed soul to a strange somewhere fled.Ah, sottish soul, said I,When back to its cage again I saw it fly;Fool to resume her broken chain,And row her galley here again!Fool, to that body to returnWhere it condemned and destined is to burn!Once dead, how can it be,Death should a thing so pleasant seem to thee,That thou should’st come to live it o’er again in me?—Cowley.

A lover’s heart, a hand grenado:

Woe to her stubborn heart, if once mine comeInto the self same room;’Twill tear and blow up all within,Like a grenade shot into a magazine.Then shall Love keep the ashes and torn parts,Of both our broken hearts;Shalt out of both one new one make;From hers th’ allay, from mine the metal take.—Cowley.

Woe to her stubborn heart, if once mine comeInto the self same room;’Twill tear and blow up all within,Like a grenade shot into a magazine.Then shall Love keep the ashes and torn parts,Of both our broken hearts;Shalt out of both one new one make;From hers th’ allay, from mine the metal take.—Cowley.

The poetical propagation of light:

The prince’s favour is diffused o’er all,From which all fortunes names, and natures fall:Then from those wombs of stars, the Bride’s bright eyes,At every glance a constellation flies,And sows the court with stars, and doth preventIn light and power, the all-ey’d firmament:First her eye kindles other ladies’ eyes,Then from their beams their jewels’ lustres rise;And from their jewels torches do take fire,And all is warmth, and light, and good desire.—Donne.

The prince’s favour is diffused o’er all,From which all fortunes names, and natures fall:Then from those wombs of stars, the Bride’s bright eyes,At every glance a constellation flies,And sows the court with stars, and doth preventIn light and power, the all-ey’d firmament:First her eye kindles other ladies’ eyes,Then from their beams their jewels’ lustres rise;And from their jewels torches do take fire,And all is warmth, and light, and good desire.—Donne.

They were in very little care to clothe their notions with elegance of dress, and therefore miss the notice and the praise which are often gained by those who think less, but are more diligent to adorn their thoughts.

That a mistress beloved is fairer in idea than in reality is by Cowley thus expressed:

Thou in my fancy dost much higher standThan woman can be placed by Nature’s hand;And I must needs, I’m sure, a loser be,To change thee as thou’rt there, for very thee.

Thou in my fancy dost much higher standThan woman can be placed by Nature’s hand;And I must needs, I’m sure, a loser be,To change thee as thou’rt there, for very thee.

That prayer and labour should co-operate are thus taught by Donne:

In none but us are such mix’d engines found,As hands of double office; for the groundWe till with them; and them to heaven we raiseWho prayerless labours, or, without this, prays,Doth but one half, that’s none.

In none but us are such mix’d engines found,As hands of double office; for the groundWe till with them; and them to heaven we raiseWho prayerless labours, or, without this, prays,Doth but one half, that’s none.

By the same author, a common topic, the danger of procrastination, is thus illustrated:

That which I should have begunIn my youth’s morning, now late must be done;And I, as giddy travellers must do,Which stray or sleep all day, and having lostLight and strength, dark and tired, must then ride post.

That which I should have begunIn my youth’s morning, now late must be done;And I, as giddy travellers must do,Which stray or sleep all day, and having lostLight and strength, dark and tired, must then ride post.

All that man has to do is to live and die; the sum of humanity is comprehended by Donne in the following lines:

Think in how poor a prison thou didst lieAfter enabled but to suck and cry.Think, when ’twas grown to most, ’twas a poor inn,A province pack’d up in two yards of skin,And that usurp’d, or threaten’d with a rageOf sicknesses or their true mother, age.But think that death hath now enfranchised thee;Thou hast thy expansion now, and liberty;Think, that a rusty piece discharged is flownIn pieces, and the bullet is his own,And freely flies: this to thy soul allow,Think thy shell broke, think thy soul hatch’d but now.

Think in how poor a prison thou didst lieAfter enabled but to suck and cry.Think, when ’twas grown to most, ’twas a poor inn,A province pack’d up in two yards of skin,And that usurp’d, or threaten’d with a rageOf sicknesses or their true mother, age.But think that death hath now enfranchised thee;Thou hast thy expansion now, and liberty;Think, that a rusty piece discharged is flownIn pieces, and the bullet is his own,And freely flies: this to thy soul allow,Think thy shell broke, think thy soul hatch’d but now.

They were sometimes indelicate and disgusting.  Cowley thus apostrophises beauty:

Thou tyrant which leav’st no man free!Thou subtle thief, from whom nought safe can be!Thou murtherer, which has kill’d, and devil, which would’st damn me!

Thou tyrant which leav’st no man free!Thou subtle thief, from whom nought safe can be!Thou murtherer, which has kill’d, and devil, which would’st damn me!

Thus he addresses his mistress:

Thou who, in many a propriety,So truly art the sun to me,Add one more likeness, which I’m sure you can,And let me and my sun beget a man.

Thou who, in many a propriety,So truly art the sun to me,Add one more likeness, which I’m sure you can,And let me and my sun beget a man.

Thus he represents the meditations of a lover:

Though in thy thoughts scarce any tracts have beenSo much as of original sin,Such charms thy beauty wears, as mightDesires in dying confest saints excite.Thou with strange adulteryDost in each breast a brothel keep;Awake all men do lust for thee,And some enjoy thee when they sleep.

Though in thy thoughts scarce any tracts have beenSo much as of original sin,Such charms thy beauty wears, as mightDesires in dying confest saints excite.Thou with strange adulteryDost in each breast a brothel keep;Awake all men do lust for thee,And some enjoy thee when they sleep.

The true taste of tears:

Hither with crystal vials, lovers, come,And take my tears, which are love’s wine,And try your mistress’ tears at home;For all are false, that taste not just like mine.—Donne.

Hither with crystal vials, lovers, come,And take my tears, which are love’s wine,And try your mistress’ tears at home;For all are false, that taste not just like mine.—Donne.

This is yet more indelicate:

As the sweet sweat of roses in a still,As that which from chas’d musk-cat’s pores doth trill,As th’ almighty balm of th’ early east;Such are the sweet drops of my mistress’ breast.And on her neck her skin such lustre sets,They seem no sweat drops, but pearl coronets:Rank, sweaty froth thy mistress’ brow defiles.—Donne.

As the sweet sweat of roses in a still,As that which from chas’d musk-cat’s pores doth trill,As th’ almighty balm of th’ early east;Such are the sweet drops of my mistress’ breast.And on her neck her skin such lustre sets,They seem no sweat drops, but pearl coronets:Rank, sweaty froth thy mistress’ brow defiles.—Donne.


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