Title: The works of John Dryden, now first collected in eighteen volumes. Volume 11
Author: John Dryden
Editor: Walter Scott
Release date: October 27, 2013 [eBook #44050]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Jane Robins and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
NOW FIRST COLLECTED
IN EIGHTEEN VOLUMES.
ILLUSTRATED
WITH NOTES,
HISTORICAL, CRITICAL, AND EXPLANATORY,
AND
A LIFE OF THE AUTHOR,
BY
WALTER SCOTT, Esq.
VOL. XI.
LONDON:
PRINTED FOR WILLIAM MILLER, ALBEMARLE STREET,
BY JAMES BALLANTYNE AND CO. EDINBURGH.
1808.
| PAGE. | ||
| Epistles. | ||
| Epistle I. | To John Hoddeson, | 3 |
| II. | To Sir Robert Howard, | 5 |
| III. | To Dr Charleton, | 12 |
| IV. | To the Lady Castlemain, | 18 |
| V. | To Mr Lee, | 22 |
| VI. | To the Earl of Roscommon, | 26 |
| VII. | To the Duchess of York, | 31 |
| VIII. | To Mr J. Northleigh, | 35 |
| IX. | To Sir George Etherege, | 38 |
| X. | To Mr Southerne, | 47 |
| XI. | To Henry Higden, Esq. | 52 |
| XII. | To Mr Congreve, | 57 |
| XIII. | To Mr Granville, | 63 |
| XIV. | To Mr Motteux, | 67 |
| XV. | To Mr John Driden, | 71 |
| XVI. | To Sir Godfrey Kneller, | 84 |
| Elegies and Epitaphs. | |
| Upon the Death of Lord Hastings, | 94 |
| To the Memory of Mr Oldham, | 99 |
| To the pious Memory of Mrs Anne Killigrew, | 105 |
| Upon the Death of the Viscount of Dundee, | 115 |
| Eleonora, a panegyrical Poem, to the Memory of | |
| the Countess of Abingdon, | 117 |
| Dedication to the Earl of Abingdon, | 121 |
| On the Death of Amyntas, | 139 |
| On the Death of a very young Gentleman, | 142 |
| Upon young Mr Rogers of Gloucestershire, | 144 |
| On the Death of Mr Purcell, | 145 |
| Epitaph on the Lady Whitmore, | 150 |
| Mrs Margaret Paston, | 151 |
| the Monument of the Marquis of Winchester, | 152 |
| Sir Palmer Fairbones' tomb in Westminster Abbey | 155 |
| The Monument of a fair Maiden Lady, | 158 |
| Inscription under Milton's Picture, | 160 |
| Odes, Songs, and Lyrical Pieces. | |
| The Fair Stranger, | 163 |
| A Song for St Cecilia's Day, | 165 |
| The Tears of Amynta, | 171 |
| A Song, | 173 |
| The Lady's Song, | 175 |
| A Song, | 176 |
| A Song, | 177 |
| Rondelay, | 178 |
| A Song, | 180 |
| A Song to a fair young Lady, | 181 |
| Alexander's Feast, or the power of Music, an Ode, | 183 |
| Veni Creator Spiritus, paraphrased, | 190 |
| Fables.—Tales from Chaucer. | |
| Dedication to the Duke of Ormond, | 195 |
| Preface prefixed to the Fables, | 205 |
| Palamon and Arcite; or the Knight's Tale, | 241 |
| Dedication to the Duchess of Ormond, | 245 |
| The Cock and the Fox; or the Tale of the Nun's Priest, | 327 |
| The Flower and the Leaf; or the Lady in the Arbour, | 356 |
| The Wife of Bath, her Tale, | 377 |
| The Character of a good Parson, | 395 |
| Fables.—Translations from Boccace. | |
| Sigismonda and Guiscardo, | 403 |
| Theodore and Honoria, | 433 |
| Cymon and Iphigenia, | 452 |
TO HIS FRIEND
JOHN HODDESDON,
ON HIS
DIVINE EPIGRAMS.
These verses were rescued from oblivion by Mr Malone, having escaped the notice of Dryden's former editors. I have disposed them among the Epistles, that being the title which the author seems usually to have given to those copies of verses, which he sent to his friends upon their publications, and which, according to the custom of the time, were prefixed to the works to which they related. They form the second of our author's attempts at poetry hitherto discovered, the "Elegy upon Lord Hastings" being the first. The lines are distinguished by the hard and rugged versification, and strained conceit, which characterised English poetry before the Restoration. The title of Hoddesdon's book is a sufficiently odd one: "Sion and Parnassus, or Epigrams on several Texts of the Old and New Testaments," 8vo, 1650. Dryden was then a student in Trinity College, Cambridge, and about eighteen years old. The nature of the volume which called forth his poetical approbation, may lead us to suppose, that, at this time, he retained the puritanical principles in which he was doubtless educated. The verses are subscribed, J. Dryden of Trin. C.
TO MY HONOURED FRIEND
SIR ROBERT HOWARD,
ON HIS
EXCELLENT POEMS.
This epistle was prefixed to Sir Robert Howard's poems, printed for Herringman, 12mo, 1660, and entered in the Stationers' books on 16th April that year. It was probably written about the commencement of Dryden's intimacy with the author, whose sister he afterwards married. Sir Robert Howard, son to the Earl of Berkshire, a man of quality, a wit, and a cavalier, was able to extend effectual patronage to a rising author; and so willing to do it, that he is even said to have received Dryden into his own house. These lines, therefore, make part of Dryden's grateful acknowledgments, of which more may be found in the prefatory letter to the "Annus Mirabilis," addressed to Sir Robert Howard.[1] The friendship of the brother poets was afterwards suspended for some time, in consequence of Sir Robert's strictures on the "Essay on Dramatic Poetry," and Dryden's contemptuous refutation of his criticism. But there is reason to believe, that this interval of coldness was of short duration; and that, if the warmth of their original intimacy was never renewed, they resumed the usual kindly intercourse of relations and friends.
The epistle itself is earlier in date than the poem called "Astrea Redux," which was probably not published till the summer of 1660 was somewhat advanced. This copy of verses, therefore, is the first avowed production of our author after the Restoration, and may rank, in place and merit, with "Astrea Redux," the "Poem on the Coronation," and the "Address to the Chancellor." There is the same anxiety to turn and point every sentence, and the same tendency to extravagant and unnatural conceit. Yet it is sometimes difficult to avoid admiring the strength of the author's mind, even when employed in wresting ideas the wrong way. It is remarkable, also, that Dryden ventures to praise the verses of his patron, on account of that absence of extravagant metaphor, and that sobriety of poetic composition, for which, to judge by his own immediate practice, he ought rather to have censured them.
Those who may be induced to peruse the works of Sir Robert Howard, by the high commendation here bestowed upon them, will have more reason to praise the gratitude of our author, than the justice of his panegyric. They are productions of a most freezing mediocrity.
TO MY HONOURED FRIEND
DR CHARLETON,
ON HIS
LEARNED AND USEFUL WORKS,
BUT MORE PARTICULARLY HIS TREATISE OF STONEHENGE,
BY HIM RESTORED TO THE TRUE
FOUNDER.
Walter Charleton, M.D. was born in 1619, and educated at Oxford to the profession of physic, in which he became very eminent. During the residence of King Charles I. at Oxford, in the civil wars, Charleton became one of the physicians in ordinary to his majesty. He afterwards settled in London; and, having a strong bent towards philosophical and historical investigation, became intimate with the most learned and liberal of his profession, particularly with Ent and Harvey. He wrote several treatises in the dark period preceding the Restoration, when, the government being in the hands of swordsmen equally ignorant and fanatical, a less ardent mind would have been discouraged from investigations, attended neither by fame nor profit. These essays were upon physical, philosophical, and moral subjects. After the Restoration, Charleton published the work upon which he is here congratulated by our author. Its full title is, "Chorea Gigantum, or the most famous antiquity of Great Britain, Stonehenge, standing on Salisbury Plain, restored to the Danes. By Walter Charleton, M.D., and Physician in Ordinary to his Majesty. London, 1663, 4to." The opinion which Dr Charleton had formed concerning the origin of this stupendous monument is strengthened by the information which he received from the famous northern antiquary, Olaus Wormius. But it is nevertheless hypothetical, and inconsistent with evidence; for Stonehenge is expressly mentioned by Nennius, who wrote two hundred years before the arrival of the Danes in Britain. If it be true, which is alleged by some writers, that it was anciently called Stan-Hengist, or, indeed, whether that be true or no, the monument seems likely to have been a Saxon erection, during their days of paganism; for it is neither mentioned by Cæsar nor Tacitus, who were both likely to have noticed a structure of so remarkable an appearance. Leaving the book to return to the author, I am sorry to add, that this learned man, after being president of the College of Physicians, and thus having attained the highest honours of his profession, in 1691 fell into embarrassed circumstances, which forced him shortly after to take refuge in the island of Jersey. It is uncertain if Dr Charleton ever returned from this sort of exile; but his death took place in 1707, at the advanced age of eighty-eight years.
Dr Charleton's hypothesis concerning Stonehenge was but indifferently received. It was considered as a personal attack on Inigo Jones, who had formed a much more fantastic opinion upon the subject, conceiving the stones to form a temple, dedicated, by the Romans, to the god Cælus, or Cælum. To the disgrace of that great architect's accuracy, it seems probable that he never had seen the monument which he attempts to describe; for he has converted an irregular polygon into a regular hexagon, in order to suit his own system. Dryden sided with Charleton in his theory; and, in the following elegant epistle, compliments him as having discovered the long-forgotten cause of this strange monument. The verses are not only valuable for the poetry and numbers, but for the accurate and interesting account which they present of the learning and philosophers of the age. It was probably written soon before the publication of Charleton's book in 1663. Sir Robert Howard also favoured Dr Charleton with a copy of recommendatory verses. Both poems are prefixed to the second edition of the "Chorea Gigantum," which is the only one I have seen. That of Dryden seems to have been afterwards revised and corrected.
TO THE
LADY CASTLEMAIN,
UPON HER ENCOURAGING HIS FIRST PLAY,
THE WILD GALLANT,
ACTED IN 1662-3.
Barbara Villiers, heiress of William Viscount Grandison, in Ireland, and wife of Roger Palmer, Esq., was the first favourite, who after the Restoration of Charles II. enjoyed the power and consequence of a royal mistress. It is even said, that the king took her from her husband, upon the very day of his landing, and raised him, in compensation, to the rank and title of Earl of Castlemain. The lady herself was created Lady Nonsuch, Countess of Southampton, and finally Duchess of Cleveland. She bore the king three sons and three daughters, and long enjoyed a considerable share of his favour.
It would seem, that, in 1662-3, while Lady Castlemain was in the very height of her reign, she extended her patronage to our author, upon his commencing his dramatic career. In the preface to his first play, "The Wild Gallant," he acknowledges, that it met with very indifferent success, and had been condemned by the greater part of the audience. But he adds, "it was well received at court, and was more than once the divertisement of his majesty by his own command."[20] These marks of royal favour were doubtless owing to the intercession of Lady Castlemain. If we can trust the sarcasm thrown out by a contemporary satirist, our author piqued himself more on this light and gallant effusion, than its importance deserved.[21] The verses abound with sprightly and ingenious turns; and the conceits, which were the taste of the age, shew to some advantage on such an occasion. There is, however, little propriety in comparing the influence of the royal mistress to the virtue of Cato.