And ever close the burden of the song, Still to have such a Charles, but this Charles long. The wish is great; but where the prince is such, What prayers, people, can you think too much! XCI. ON THE RIGHT HONOURABLE AND VIRTUOUS Lord Weston, LORD HIGH TREASURER OF ENGLAND, UPON THE DAY HE WAS MADE EARL OF PORTLAND, FEB. 17, MDCXXXII. TO THE ENVIOUS. 8 COOK Hath raised to be the PORT unto his LAND! Thou sluggish spawn, that canst, but wilt not see! 8 To the Envious.] Weston had many enemies, and his sudden rise was not seen without jealousy. Charles appears to have entertained an extraordinary regard for him, probably on account of his being warmly recommended by the duke of Buckingham, whose favour, however, he is said to have outlived. The treasurer seems to have been an imprudent, improvident man; with considerable talents for business, but fickle and irresolute. He died, lord Clarendon says, without being lamented, "bitterly mentioned by those who never pretended to love him, and severely censured by those who expected most from him and deserved best of him." Dream thou couldst hurt it, but before thou wake To effect it, feel thou'st made thine own heart ache. XCII. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE HIEROME, LORD WESTON, AN ODE GRATULATORY, FOR HIS RETURN FROM HIS EMBASSY, MDCXXXII. UCH pleasure as the teeming earth When she puts forth the life of every thing; She lies deliver'd without pain, Of the prime beauty of the year, the Spring. As all the wealth of season there was spread, In making soft her aromatic bed. 9 The eldest son of the earl of Portland; a young man of amiable manners, and of talents and worth. 1 Doth shew the Graces and the Hours.] The Hours are the poetical goddesses, which in common language mean only the seasons; but our poet has the authority of his Greek and Roman predecessors. WHAL. I do not quite understand what was meant to be said in this note; but I will venture to add to it, that there is a great deal of grace and beauty in this little compliment. Such joys, such sweets, doth your return Bring all your friends, fair lord, that burn With love, to hear your modesty relate, The business of your blooming wit, With all the fruit shall follow it, Both to the honour of the king and state. O how will then our court be pleas'd, To see great Charles of travail eas'd, When he beholds a graft of his own hand, Shoot up an olive, fruitful, fair, To be a shadow to his heir, And both a strength and beauty to his land! EPITHALAMION. OR A SONG, Celebrating the NUPTIALS of that noble Gentleman, Mr. HIEROME WESTON, Son and heir of the lord WESTON, Lord High Treasurer of England, with the lady FRANCES STEWART, daughter of ESME duke of Lenox, deceased, and sister of the surviving duke of the same name. EPITHALAMION, &c.] Jerome returned from his embassy in 1632, and became earl of Portland in 1634, so that this poem was probably written in the intermediate year. This marriage was much forwarded by Charles, in compliment (lord Clarendon says) to the treasurer; the bride, who was distantly related to the king, was the youngest daughter of Esme, third duke of Lenox, the friend and patron of Jonson; she is celebrated for her beauty and amiable qualities, and was happy in a husband, altogether worthy of her. In her issue she was less fortunate; her only son, whom lord Clarendon mentions (in his "Life") as a young man of excellent parts, being killed in the action with the Dutch fleet under Opdam in 1665. "He died fighting very bravely." The title fell to his uncle, who died without issue, when it became extinct: and thus was verified the pious and prophetic hope of that rancorous puritan sir Antony Weldon, that "God would reward Weston, and that he and his posterity, which, like a Jonah's gourd, sprang up suddenly from a beggarly estate to much honour and great fortunes, would shortly wither!" Court of King Charles, p. 43. |