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The pastor quits the slothful sleep,
And passes forth with speed,
His little camow-nosed sheep,
And rowting kye1 to feed.

ing the classical fame, no less than in establishing the
moral reputation of their country, the Scottish clergy
have exerted a primary influence; and whatever Pres-
byterian eloquence might onee be, the voice of enlight-
ened principles and universal charity is nowhere to be
heard more distinctly than at the present hour from
their pulpits. • For shaded. b Scotticè for than.
d Which.
e Largest and smallest.
i Uprises.

• Then.

f Abroad.

¡Early.

Emboldened.

b Shining.

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*

The misty reek m, the clouds of rain
From tops of mountain skails",
Clear are the highest hills and plain,
The vapours take the vales.

q

Begaired is the sapphire pend P With spraings of scarlet hue; And preciously from end to end, Damasked white and blue.

The ample heaven, of fabric sure,
In clearness does surpass
The crystal and the silver, pure
As clearest polish'd glass.

The time so tranquil is and clear,
That no where shall ye find,
Save on a high and barren hill,
The air of passing wind.

All trees and simples, great and small,
That balmy leaf do bear,

Than they were painted on a wall,
No more they move or steir".

The rivers fresh, the callours streams,
O'er rocks can swiftly rin',

The water clear like crystal beams,
And makes a pleasant din.

*

*

*

*

Calm is the deep and purple sea,
Yea, smoother than the sand;
The waves, that woltering" wont to be,
Are stable like the land.

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THOMAS NASH.

[Born, 1560? Died about 1600-4.]

THOMAS NASH was born at Lowestoft in Suffolk, was bred at Cambridge, and closed a calamitous life of authorship at the age, it is said, of forty-two. Dr. Beloe has given a list of his works, and Mr. Disraeli + an account of his shifts and miseries. Adversity seems to have whetted his genius, as his most tolerable verses are those which describe his own despair; and in the midst of his woes, he exposed to just derision the profound fooleries of the astrologer Harvey, who, in the year 1582, had thrown the whole kingdom into consternation by his predictions of the probable effects of the junction of

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DESPAIR OF A POOR SCHOLAR.

FROM PIERCE PENNILESS.

WHY is't damnation to despair and die,
When life is my true happiness' disease?
My soul, my soul, thy safety makes me fly
The faulty means that might my pain appease :
Divines and dying men may talk of hell,
But in my heart her several torments dwell.

Ah, worthless wit! to train me to this woe:
Deceitful arts! that nourish discontent :
Ill thrive the folly that bewitch'd me so!
Vain thoughts, adieu ! for now I will repent,—
And yet my wants persuade me to proceed,
For none take pity of a scholar's need.

* Anecdotes of Scarce Books. † Calamities of Authors.

Forgive me, God, although I curse my birth,
And ban the air wherein I breathe a wretch,
Since misery hath daunted all my mirth,
And I am quite undone through promise breach;
Ah friends!-no friends that then ungentle frown,
When changing fortune casts us headlong down.

Without redress complains my careless verse,
And Midas' ears relent not at my moan;
In some far land will I my griefs rehearse,
'Mongst them that will be moved when I shall
groan.

England, adieu! the soil that brought me forth,
Adieu! unkind, where skill is nothing worth.

EDWARD VERE, EARL OF OXFORD.

[Born, 1534. Died, 1604.]

able traits of his character are to be found in the

THIS nobleman sat as Great Chamberlain of England upon the trial of Mary Queen of history of his life§. Scots. In the year of the Armada, he distinguished his public spirit by fitting out some ships at his private cost. He had travelled in Italy in his youth, and is said to have returned the most accomplished coxcomb of his age. The story of his quarrel with Sir Philip Sydney, as it is related by Collins, gives us a most unfavourable idea of his manners and temper, and shows to what a height the claims of aristocratical privilege were at that time carried. Some still more discredit

The Earl of Oxford being one day in the tennis-court with Sir Philip Sydney, on some offence which he had

taken, ordered him to leave the room, and, on his refusal,
gave him the epithet of a puppy. Sir Philip retorted the
lie on his lordship, and left the place, expecting to be
followed by the peer. But Lord Oxford neither followed
him nor noticed his quarrel, till her majesty's council
had time to command the peace. The queen interfered,
reminding Sir Philip of the difference between" earls
and gentlemen," and of the respect which inferiors
owed their superiors. Sydney, boldly but respectfully,
stated to her majesty, that rank among freemen could
claim no other homage than precedency, and did not
obey her commands to make submission to Oxford. For
a fuller statement of this anecdote, vide the quotation
from Collins, in the British Bibliographer, vol. i. p. 83.
§ By Mr. Park, in the Cat. of Royal and Noble Authors.

P

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Doth either Time or Age bring him into decay? No, no, Desire both lives and dies a thousand times a day.

Then, fond Desire, farewell! thou art no mate for me:

I should, methinks, be loth to dwell with such a one as thee.

LINES ATTRIBUTED TO THE EARL OF
OXFORD.

IN A MS. OF THE BODLEIAN LIBRARY.

IF women could be fair, and yet not fond,
Or that their love were firm, not fickle still,
I would not marvel that they make me bond,
By service long, to purchase their good-will;
But when I see how frail those creatures are,
I muse that men forget themselves so far.

To mark the choice they make, and how they change,
How oft from Phoebus they do flee to Pan;
Unsettled still, like haggards wild they range,
These gentle birds that fly from man to man ;
Who would not scorn and shake them from the fist,
And let them fly, fair fools, where'er they list?

Yet, for disport, we fawn and flatter both,
To pass the time when nothing else can please,
And train them to our lure with subtil oath,
Till, weary of their wiles, ourselves we ease;
And then we say, when we their fancy try,
To play with fools, oh, what a fool was I !

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BISHOP HALL, who for his ethical eloquence has been sometimes denominated the Christian Seneca, was also the first who gave our language an example of epistolary composition in prose. He wrote besides a satirical fiction, entitled Mundus alter et idem, in which, under pretence of describing the Terra Australis Incognita, he reversed the plan of Sir Thomas More's Utopia, and characterized the vices of existing nations. Of our satirical poetry, taking satire in its moral and dignified sense, he claims, and may be allowed, to be the founder: for the ribaldry of Skelton, and the crude essays of the graver Wyat, hardly entitle them to that appellation*. Though he lived till beyond the middle of the seventeenth century, his satires were written before, and his Mundus alter et idem about, the year 1600 so that his antiquity, no less than his strength, gives him an important place in the formation of our literaturet.

In his Satires, which were published at the age of twenty-three, he discovered not only the early vigour of his own genius, but the powers and pliability of his native tongue. Unfortunately, perhaps unconsciously, he caught, from studying Juvenal and Persius as his models, an ellip

[* Donne appears to have been the first in order of composition-though Hall and Marston made their appearance in print before him.]

+ His name is therefore placed in these Specimens with a variation from the general order, not according to the date of his death, but about the time of his appearance as a poet.

tical manner and an antique allusion, which cast obscurity over his otherwise spirited and amusing traits of English manners; though the satirist himself was so far from anticipating this objection, that he formally apologises for "too much stooping to the low reach of the vulgar." But in many instances he redeems the antiquity of his allusions by their ingenious adaptation to modern manners; and this is but a small part of his praise; for in the point, and volubility, and vigour of Hall's numbers, we might frequently imagine ourselves perusing Dryden‡. This may be exemplified in the harmony and picturesqueness of the following description of a magnificent rural mansion, which the traveller approaches in the hopes of reaching the seat of ancient hospitality, but finds it deserted by its selfish owner.

Beat the broad gates, a goodly hollow sound,
With double echoes, doth again rebound;

The satire which I think contains the most vigorous and musical couplets of this old poet, is the first of Book 3rd, beginning,

Time was, and that was term'd the time of gold, When world and time were young, that now are old.

I preferred, however, the insertion of others as examples of his poetry, as they are more descriptive of English manners than the fanciful praises of the golden age which that satire contains. It is flowing and fanciful, but conveys only the insipid moral of men decaying by the progress of civilisation; a doctrine not unlike that which Gulliver found in the book of the old woman of Brobdignag, whose author lamented the tiny size of the modern Brobdignagdians compared with that of their

ancestors.

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