That lockes" nor loseth, [nor] holdeth me in prison. I fede me in sorow, and laugh in all my paine. It was from the capricious and over-strained invention of the Italian poets, that Wyat was taught to torture the passion of love by prolix and intricate comparisons, and unnatural allusions. At one time his love is a galley steered by cruelty through stormy seas and dangerous rocks; the sails torn by the blast of tempestuous sighs, and the cordage consumed by incessant showers of tears: a cloud of grief envelops the stars, reason is drowned, and the haven is at a distance". At another, it is a spring trickling from the summit of the Alps, which gathering force in its fall, at length overflows all the plain beneath. Sometimes it is a gun, which being overcharged, expands the flame within itself, and bursts in pieces. Some I mount to heaven, yet lye I stil on the ground, I nothing hold, yet I compasse all. Love will not let me live, nor let me dye, I want both eyes and tongue, yetere I cry, At the selfe time I both lament and joy, times a boy, Twixt death and life small difference I make, I live her bond, which neither is my All this (deere dame) endure I for your foe, Nor friend, nor holds me fast, nor lets me goe. sake. times it is like a prodigious mountain, which is perpetually weeping in copious fountains, and sending forth sighs from its forests: which bears more leaves than fruits: which breeds wild-beasts, the proper emblems of rage, and harbours birds that are always singing. In another of his sonnets, he says, that all nature sympathises with his passion. The woods resound his elegies, the rivers stop their course to hear him complain, and the grass weeps in dew. These thoughts are common and fantastic. But he adds an image which is new, and has much nature and sentiment, although not well expressed. The hugy okes have rored in the winde, F.che thing, methought, complayning in theyr kinde. This is a touch of the pensive. And the apostrophe which follows is natural and simple. O stony hart, who hath thus framed thee So cruel, that art cloked with beauty! And there is much strength in these lines of the lover to his bed. The place of slepe, wherein I do but wake, Besprent with teares, my bed, I thee forsake!" But such passages as these are not the general characteristics of Wyat's poetry. They strike us but seldom, amidst an impracticable mass of forced reflections, hyperbolical metaphors, and complaints that move no compassion. But Wyat appears a much more pleasing writer, when he moralises on the felicities of retirement, and attacks the vanities and vices of a court, with the honest indignation of an independent philosopher, and the freedom and pleasantry of Horace. Three of his poetical epistles are professedly written in this strain, two to John Poines, and the other to sir Francis Bryan: and we must regret, that he has not left more pieces in a style of composition for which he seems to have been eminently qua 'Fol. 36. t Fol. 24. "Fol. 25. He seems to have been a person about the court. See LIFE of Sir Thomas Pope, p. 46. lified. In one of the epistles to Poines on the life of a courtier, are these spirited and manly reflections. Myne owne John Poins, since ye delite to know And flee the prease of courtes, where so they go*; Of lordly lokes, wrapped within my cloke; It is not that, because I scorne or mocke In pursuit of this argument, he declares his indisposition and inability to disguise the truth, and to flatter, by a variety of instances. Among others, he protests he cannot prefer Chaucer's TALE of SIR THOPAS to his PALAMON AND ARCITE. Praise SIR TOPAS for a noble tale, And scorne the STORY that the KNIGHT tolde; I mention this circumstance about Chaucer, to shew the esteem in which the KNIGHT'S TALE, that noble epic poem of the dark ages, was held in the reign of Henry the Eighth, by men of taste. The poet's execration of flatterers and courtiers is contrasted with the following entertaining picture of his own private life and rural enjoyments at Allingham-castle in Kent. This is the cause that I could never yet Hang on their sleeves, that weigh, as thou maist se, And of these newes I fele nor weale nor woe: That I may leape both hedge and dyke ful wele. Among the Muses, where I reade and ryme; In another epistle to John Poines, on the security and happiness of a moderate fortune, he versifies the fable of the City and Country Mouse with much humour. son. My mother's maides, when they do sowe and spinne, In large fields, over fruitful grounds. [Rather "in pleasant meads," says RitBut this emendation is disputed by a writer in the Gent. Mag. for Dec. 1782, p. 574, who cites the following passage from Shakspeare, to evince that leas and meads were distinct. Thy turfy mountains, where live nib- And flat meads thatched with stover, &c. с Probably he alludes to some office which he still held at court; and which sometimes recalled him, but not too frequently, from the country. d Fol. 47. This fable appositely suggests a train of sensible and pointed observations on the weakness of human conduct, and the delusive plans of life. Alas, my Poins, how men do seke the best, O wretched mindes! There is no golde that may And thou shalt finde, when lust doth most thee please, It irketh straght, and by itselfe doth fade. A small thing is it, that may thy minde appease? To seke for grapes on brambles or on breeres; The thing that thou hast sought so long before, [From Horace; Submovet lictor.ASHBY.] halbert. A parade of guards, &c. The classical allusion is obvious. So read, instead of bryars. h free. * assigned. + [Nec te quæsiveris extra.-ASHBY.] |