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seem to have been written when he was half awake. Probably he was too impatient to fashion them properly. The construction of a regular play with not enough passion in it to make it flow off at a heat, must have been a heavy task to a man accustomed to the excitement of the gaming-table, and with his hands full of "affairs of the heart." Sir John's most renowned effusion, therefore, was a Ballad on a Wedding; and exquisite of its kind it is. Its only fault is that it commences in language more provincial than it goes on with. Yet times and manners are so altered, that I can only give the two following portraits out of it. The latter fortunately contains the most charming touches in the poem. The bridegroom is said to have been Lord Broghill, the well-known soldier and politician (afterwards Earl of Orrery), and the bride, Lady Margaret Howard, daughter of the Earl of Suffolk.

THE BRIDEGROOM.

I tell thee, Dick, where I have been,
Where I the rarest things have seen;

Oh! things without compare!

Such sights again cannot be found

In any place on English ground,

Be it at wake or fair.

At Charing Cross, hard by the way
Where we (thou know'st) do sell our hay,
There is a house with stairs;

And there did I see, coming down,

Such folks as are not in our town,
Forty at least in pairs.

Amongst the rest, one pest'lent fine
(His beard no bigger though than thine),
Walk'd on before the rest:

Our landlord looks like nothing to him;

The king (God bless him), 't would undo him
Show'd he go still so drest

At Course-a-park, without all doubt,
He should have first been taken out

By all the maids i' th' town;

Though lusty Roger there had been,
Or little George upon the Green,

Or Vincent of the Crown.

THE BRIDE.

Her finger was so small, the ring
Wou'd not stay on, which they did bring;
It was too wide, a peck ;

And to say truth (for out it must)

It look'd like the great collar (just)
About our young colt's neck

Her feet beneath her petticoat

Like little mice, stole in and out,

As if they fear'd the light;

But oh! she dances such a way!

No sun upon an Easter day

Is half so fine a sight.

Her cheeks so rare a white was on,

No daisy bears comparison

(Who sees them is undone),

For streaks of red were mingled there,
Such as are on a Katherine pear,

The side that's next the sun.

Her lips were red, and one was thin
Compar'd to that was next her chin,
Some bee had stung it newly;
But (Dick) her eyes so guard her face,
I durst no more upon them gaze,

Than on the sun in July.'

With the lip described in this stanza all the world has been in love. I used to think that the accent on the first syllable of "Júly" was a pleasant exercise of will on the writer's part, in order to force a rhyme with "truly;" but on turning to the dictionary I find it is the proper one. I suppose we have got the

nabit of calling it July, from a wish to make the distinction the greater between it and June.-I beg pardon of the "lip" for turning from it to this dry bit of criticism. It is impossible to quit the subject without turning again, to give it another glance.

BROME.

BORN, —?—DIED, 1152.

I KNOW nothing of Richard Brome, except that he once acted in some kind of capacity of "servant" to Ben Jonson; that he wrote a number of comedies, which succeeded; and that one of them, the Jovial Crew, or Merry Beggars, was in possession of the stage not long ago. The following laughable fancy is extracted by Charles Lamb into his "Dramatic Specimens." If Brome wrote many such, he deserves to be better known. The second child. hood of the old gentlemen is very ludicrous, especially of the restive one, who tells his young director that he is "none of his father."

There was another Brome, Alexander, a jovial attorney and loyalist during the Civil Wars, whose bacchanalian vein is said to have done good service to his cause. I have looked through his volume, but can find little in it except noise and smartness; though there is a tone of sincerity that does him honor.

There

is nothing so ready to take the will for the deed in matters of wit and song, as conviviality and good-fellowship; and very par donable is the mistake; though the printed consequences are too apt to resemble the dullness "next morning."

OLD MEN GOING TO SCHOOL.

Scene from the comedy of the Antipodes, in which the "world

is turned upside down," servants ruling their masters, children sending their parents to school, &c.

SON, SERVANT, GENTLEMAN, and LADY, natives.

ENGLISH TRAVELLER.

Servant (to his young master). How well you saw Your father to school to-day, knowing how apt

He is to play the truant!

Son.

Yet gone to school?

But is he not

Servant. Stand by, and you shall see.

Enter three OLD MEN, with satchels.

All three (singing). Domine, domine, duster;
Three knaves in a cluster.

Son. O this is gallant pastime! Nay, come on.
Is this your school? was that your lesson, hay?
1st Old Man. Pray now, good son, indeed, indeed-
Son.

You shall to school. Away with him; and take
Their wagships with him, the whole cluster of 'em.

Indeed

2d Old Man. You sha'n't send us now, so you sha'nt3d Old Man. We be none of your father, so we ben't. Son. Away with 'em, I say; and tell their school-mistress What truants they are, and bid her ay 'em soundly.

All three. Oh, oh, oh!

Lady. Alas! will nobody beg pardon for

The poor old boys?

English Traveller. Do men of such fair years

Here go to school?

Gentleman. They would die dunces else.

These were great scholars in their youth; but when
Age grows upon men here, their learning wastes,

And so decays, that if they live until

Threescore, their sons send them to school again;
They'd die as speechless else as new-born children.
English Traveller. 'Tis a wise nation: and the piety
Of the young men most rare and commendable.

Yet give me, as a stranger, leave to beg

Their liberty this day.

Son.

'Tis granted.

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