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With courage and success you the bold work begin;

Your cradle has not idle been :

None e'er, but Hercules and you, would be

At five years age worthy a history.

And ne'er did Fortune better yet

Th' historian to the story fit:

As

you from all old errors free
And purge the body of Philosophy;
So from all modern follies he
Has vindicated Eloquence and Wit.

His candid style like a clean stream does slide,
And his bright fancy, all the way,
Does like the sun-shine in it play;
It does, like Thames, the best of rivers! glide,
Where the God does not rudely overturn,

But gently pour, the crystal urn,

And with judicious hand does the whole current guide:

"T has all the beauties Nature can impart,

And all the comely dress, without the paint, of Art.

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SIR FRANCIS DRAKE'S SHIP,

Presented to the University Library of Oxford by
John Davis, of Deptford, Esquire.

To this great ship, which round the globe has run,
And match'd in race the chariot of the sun,
This Pythagorean ship (for it may claim
Without presumption so deserv'd a name,
By knowledge once, and transformation now)
In her new shape, this sacred port allow.
Drake and his ship could not have wish'd from Fate

A more blest station, or more blest estate;

For, lo! a seat of endless rest is given
To her in Oxford, and to him in heaven.

PROLOGUE

TO THE

CUTTER OF COLMAN STREET.

AS, when the midland sea is no-where clear
From dreadful fleets of Tunis and Argier-
Which coast about, to all they meet with foes,
And upon which nought can be got but blows—

The merchant-ships so much their passage doubt,
That, though full-freighted, none dares venture out,
And trade decays, and scarcity ensues;

Just so the timorous wits of late refuse,
Though laded, to put forth upon the stage,
Affrighted by the criticks of this age.

It is a party numerous, watchful, bold;

They can from nought, which sails in sight, withhold;

Nor do their cheap, though mortal, thunder spare ; They shoot, alas! with wind-guns charg'd with air. But yet, gentlemen-criticks of Argier,

For your own interest I'd advise

ye here, To let this little forlorn-hope go by

Safe and untouch'd, "That must not be" (you'll cry).

If ye be wise, it must; I'll tell you why.

There are seven, eight, nine-stay-there are behind

miss;

Ten plays at least, which wait but for a wind,
And the glad news that we the enemy
And those are all your own, if

you spare this.

Some are but new trimm'd up, others quite new ;
Some by known shipwrights built, and others too
By that great author made, whoe'er he be,
That styles himself "Person of Quality :"
All these, if we miscarry here to-day,
Will rather till they rot in th' harbour stay;

Nay, they will back again, though they were come
Ev'n to their last safe road, the tyring-room.

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Therefore again I say, If you be wise,
Let this for once pass free; let it suffice
That we, your sovereign power here to avow,
Thus humbly, ere we pass, strike sail to you.

ADDED AT COURT.

STAY, gentlemen; what I have said was all
But forc'd submission, which I now recall.
Ye're all but pirates now again; for here
Does the true sovereign of the seas appear,
The sovereign of these narrow seas of wit;
"T is his own Thames; he knows and governs it.
"T is his dominion and domain; as he
Pleases, 't is either shut to us, or free.
Not only, if his passport we obtain,
We fear no little rovers of the main;
But, if our Neptune his calm visage show,
No wave shall dare to rise or wind to blow.

NOTES.

THE MOTTO.-PAGE 27.

Dr. HURD has omitted in his Text the Lines from
I shall, like beasts or common people, die,

to

Hence all the flattering vunities, that lay

PAGE 28.

He conquer'd th' earth; the whole world, you.

Earth,

means this habitable globe; world, the system of universal nature. But the compliment is not a little extravagant! like that of Mr. Pope to Newton

"God said, Let Newton be, and all was light" -for which the Poet is very justly reprehended by his learn. ed Commentator.

only he,

Who best can praise thee, next must be. i. e. he must be only next; for none but Cicero himself was equal to the subject. The poet glances at what Livy said of the great Roman orator-" vir magnus, acer, memorabilis, et in cujus laudes sequendas Cicerone laudatore opus fuerit." A fragment, preserved by the elder Seneca.

Whose verse walks highest, but not flies. i. e. which keeps within the limits of nature, and is sublime without being extravagant. Virgil's epic Muse is here justly characterized: the Lyric, is a swan of another species, of which the poet says nobly, elsewhere

"Lo, how th' obsequious wind and swelling air

"The Theban swan does upwards bear "Into the walks of clouds, where he does play, "And with extended wings open his liquid way." Pindaric Odes. The Praise of Pindar.

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