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From you our swords take edge, our heart grows

bold;

From you in fee their lives your liegemen hold.

These groves your kingdom, and our laws your will;
Smile, and we spare; but if you frown, we kill.
Bless then the hour

That gives the power

In which you may,
At bed and board,
Embrace your lord

Both night and day.

Welcome, thrice welcome to this shady green,
Our long-wished Cynthia, the forest's queen!

JOHN FORD.

1586-16-.

[WHILE Massinger was fighting against the ills and mortifications of a precarious pursuit, his contemporary Ford, two years his junior, was persevering in the profession of the law, filling up his leisure hours with dramatic poetry, and making an independence, which at last enabled him to marry (if the pleasant tradition may be trusted), and to spend the last years of his life at ease in his native place. He was descended from a family long settled in the north of Devonshire, was born in Islington in 1586, and is supposed to have died about 1640. In the poem on the Times' Poets, already quoted, he is described in a characteristic couplet:

'Deep in a dump John Ford was alone got,
With folded arms and melancholy hat.'

Whether the melancholy hat' really conveys a faithful image of the character of the man is questionable, for in the roll of worthies enumerated by Heywood in his Hierarchy of Angels, we are told that he was always called by the familiar name of Jack Ford, which argues a more social and genial nature.]

THE DRAMATISTS.

14

THE SUN'S DARLING.* 1623.

THE REAL AND THE IDEAL.

FA

ANCIES are but streams
Of vain pleasure;

They, who by their dreams
True joys measure,

Feasting starve, laughing weep,
Playing smart; whilst in sleep
Fools,, with shadows smiling,
Wake and find

Hopes like wind,

Idle hopes, beguiling.

Thoughts fly away; Time hath passed them:
Wake now, awake! see and taste them!

WHA

BIRDS' SONGS.

HAT bird so sings, yet so does wail?
"Tis Philomel, the nightingale;

Jugg, jugg, jugg, terue she cries,
And, hating earth, to heaven she flies.

Ha, ha! hark, hark! the cuckoos sing
Cuckoo! to welcome in the Spring.
Brave prick-song! who is't now we hear?
'Tis the lark's silver leer-a-leer.
Chirrup the sparrow flies away;
For he fell to't ere break of day.

Ha, ha! hark, hark! the cuckoos sing
Cuckoo! to welcome in the Spring.†

LIVE WITH ME.

LIVE with me still, and all the measures,

Played to by the spheres, I'll teach thee;

Let's but thus dally, all the pleasures

The moon beholds, her man shall reach thee.

* In this play Ford was joined by Dekker.

+ Imitated from a song in Lyly's Alexander and Campaspe.-See ante, p. 50.

2

Dwell in mine arms, aloft we'll hover,
And see fields of armies fighting:
Oh, part not from me! I'll discover
There all, but books of fancy's writing.
Be but my darling, age to free thee
From her curse, shall fall a-dying;
Call me thy empress; Time to see thee
Shall forget his art of flying.

THE DEATH OF SPRING.

HERE lies the blithe Spring,

Who first taught birds to sing; Yet in April herself fell a crying: Then May growing hot,

A sweating sickness she got, And the first of June lay a-dying.

Yet no month can say,

But her merry daughter May

Stuck her coffins with flowers great plenty: The cuckoo sung in verse

An epitaph o'er her hearse,

But assure you the lines were not dainty.

SUMMER SPORTS.

HAYMAKERS, rakers, reapers,

Wait on your Summer-queen;

and mowers,

Dress up with musk-rose her eglantine bowers,

Daffodils strew the green;

Sing, dance, and play,

'Tis holiday;

The Sun does bravely shine

On our ears of corn.

Rich as a pearl

Comes every girl,

This is mine, this is mine, this is mine;

Let us die, ere away they be borne.

Bow to the Sun, to our queen, and that fair one
Come to behold our sports:

Each bonny lass here is counted a rare one,
As those in a prince's courts.
These and we
With country glee,

Will teach the woods to resound,
And the hills with echoes hollow:
Skipping lambs

Their bleating dams,

'Mongst kids shall trip it round; For joy thus our wenches we follow.

Wind, jolly huntsmen, your neat bugles shrilly,
Hounds make a lusty cry;

Spring up, you falconers, the partridges freely,
Then let your brave hawks fly.
Horses amain,

Over ridge, over plain,

The dogs have the stag in chase:
'Tis a sport to content a king.

So ho ho! through the skies
How the proud bird flies,

And sousing kills with a grace!
Now the deer falls; hark; how they ring!

DRINKING SONG.

CAST away care; he that loves sorrow

Lengthens not a day, nor can buy to-morrow;
Money is trash; and he that will spend it,
Let him drink merrily, Fortune will send it.
Merrily, merrily, merrily, Oh, ho!
Play it off stiffly, we may not part so.

Wine is a charm, it heats the blood too,
Cowards it will arm, if the wine be good too;

Quickens the wit, and makes the back able,
Scorns to submit to the watch or constable.

Pots fly about, give us more liquor,

Merrily, &c.

Brothers of a rout, our brains will flow quicker; Empty the cask; score up, we care not;

Fill all the pots again; drink on, and spare not.

THE LOVER'S MELANCHOLY.

FLY HENCE, SHADOWS!

FLY hence, shadows, that do keep

Merrily, &c.

1628.

Watchful sorrows, charmed in sleep!
Though the eyes be overtaken,
Yet the heart doth ever waken

Thoughts, chained up in busy snares

Of continual woes and cares:
Love and griefs are so expressed,
As they rather sigh than rest.
Fly hence, shadows, that do keep
Watchful sorrows, charmed in sleep.

THE BROKEN HEART. 1633.

BEAUTY BEYOND THE REACH OF ART.

CAN you paint a thought? or number
Every fancy in a slumber?

Can you count soft minutes roving
From a dial's point by moving?
Can you grasp a sigh? or, lastly,
Rob a virgin's honour chastely?
No, oh no! yet you may

Sooner do both that and this,
This and that, and never miss,
Than by any praise display

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