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By this time all were stolen aside
To counsel and undress the bride;

But that he must not know:

But yet 'twas thought he guessed her mind,
And did not mean to stay behind

Above an hour or so.

When in he came, Dick, there she lay,
Like new-fallen snow melting away:

"Twas time, I trow, to part:

Kisses were now the only stay,

Which soon she gave, as who would say,
Good bye, with all my heart.

But, just as heavens would have to cross it,
In came the bride-maids with the posset:
The bride-groom ate in spite;

For, had he left the women to 't,
It would have cost two hours to do 't,
Which were too much that night.

DENHAM.

To this date belongs a remarkable poem, the Cooper's Hill of Sir John Denham, first published in 1642. It immediately drew universal attention. Denham, however, had the year before made himself known as a poet by his tragedy of The Sophy, on the appearance of which Waller remarked that he had broken out like the Irish rebellion, threescore thousand strong, when nobody was aware or in the least suspected it. Cooper's Hill may be considered as belonging in point of composition to the same school with Sir John Davies's Nosce Teipsum; and, if it has not all the concentration of that poem, it is equally pointed, correct, and stately, with, partly owing to the subject, a warmer tone of imagination and feeling, and a fuller swell of verse. The spirit of the same classical style pervades both; and they are the two greatest poems in that style which had been produced down to the date at which we are now arrived. Denham is the author of a number of other compositions in verse, and especially of some songs and other shorter pieces, several of which are very spirited; but the fame of his principal poem has thrown everything else he has written into the shade. It is remarkable that

many biographical notices of this poet make him to have survived nearly till the Revolution, and relate various stories of the miseries of his protracted old age; when the fact is, that he died in 1668, at the age of fifty-three.*

CLEVELAND.

But, of all the cavalier poets, the one who did his cause the heartiest and stoutest service, and who, notwithstanding much carelessness or ruggedness of execution, possessed perhaps, even considered simply as a poet, the richest and most various faculty, was John Cleveland, the most popular verse-writer of his own day, the most neglected of all his contemporaries ever since. Among the one hundred and sixty-one poets, from Robert of Gloucester to Sir Francis Fane, whose choicest relics furnish out Ellis's three volumes of Specimens, the name of Cleveland does not occur. Nor is his poetry included either in Anderson's or in Chalmers's collection. Yet for nearly twenty years he was held to be the greatest among living English poets. Cleveland was the eldest son of the Rev. Thomas Cleveland, vicar of Hinckley and rector of Stoke, in Leicestershire, and he was born at Loughborough in that county in 1613. Down to the breaking out of the civil war, he resided at St. John's College, Cambridge, of which he was a Fellow, and seems to have distinguished himself principally by his Latin poetry. But, when every man took his side, with whatever weapons he could wield, for king or parliament, Anthony Wood tells us that Cleveland was the first writer who came forth as a champion of the royal cause in English verse. To that cause he adhered till its ruin; at last in 1655, after having led for some years a fugitive life, he was caught and thrown into prison at Yarmouth; but, after a detention of a few months, Cromwell, on his petition, allowed him to go at large. The transaction was honourable to both parties. Cleveland's character, which may be mistaken by those who

* The readers of the Mémoires de Grammont will remember the figure he makes in that work, where he is described as "Le Chevalier Denham, comblé de richesses, aussi bien que d'années," and as having for the first time entered into the marriage state, at the age of seventy-nine, with Miss Brook, a famous court beauty, then only eighteen. The fact is, that this was a second marriage, and that, whatever was the lady's age, Denham himself was then only about fifty. His load of riches is probably as much exaggerated by the lively historian of the Comte de Grammont as his load of years.

know him only from some of his unscrupulous pasquinades or
other poetry, cannot be better painted than it is by himself in
his address to the Protector: "I am induced," he said, "to
believe that, next to my adherence to the royal party, the cause
of my confinement is the narrowness of my estate; for none stand
committed whose estates can bail them. I only am the prisoner,
who have no acres to be my hostage. Now, if my poverty be
criminal (with reverence be it spoken), I implead your Highness,
whose victorious arms have reduced me to it, as accessory to my
guilt. Let it suffice, my Lord, that the calamity of the war hath
made us poor: do not punish us for it."
I beseech your
Highness," he goes on," put some bounds to the overthrow, and
do not pursue the chase to the other world. Can your thunder
be levelled so low as to our grovelling condition? Can your
towering spirit, which hath quarried upon kingdoms, make a
stoop at us, who are the rubbish of these ruins? Methinks I
hear your former achievements interceding with you not to sully
your glories with trampling upon the prostrate, nor clog the
wheel of your chariot with so degenerous a triumph. The
most renowned heroes have ever with such tenderness cherished
their captives that their swords did but cut out work for their
courtesies." And again :-" For the service of his Majesty, if it be
objected, I am so far from excusing it, that I am ready to allege
it in my vindication. I cannot conceit that my fidelity to my
prince should taint me in your opinion; I should rather expect
it should recommend me to your favour. . . . You see, my Lord,
how much I presume upon the greatness of your spirit, that dare
present my indictment with so frank a confession, especially in
this, which I may so safely deny that it is almost arrogancy in
me to own it; for the truth is, I was not qualified enough to serve
him all I could do was to bear a part in his sufferings, and to
give myself to be crushed with his fall." "My Lord," he con-
cludes, "you see my crimes; as to my defence, you bear it about
you. I shall plead nothing in my justification but your High-
ness's clemency, which, as it is the constant inmate of a valiant
breast, if you graciously be pleased to extend it to your suppliant,
in taking me out of this withering durance, your Highness will
find that mercy will establish you more than power, though all
the days of your life were as pregnant with victories as your
twice auspicious Third of September." There is no artful
fiattery or coaxing in this: Cromwell would read in it some-

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thing of a spirit akin to his own. But Cleveland did not long survive his release; he died in April, 1658, a few months before the Protector himself-like his brother loyalist poet Lovelace, who ended his days about the same time, snatched away just when the hated dominion that had been so fatal to his fortunes was about to break up and vanish from the land for ever.

Cleveland is commonly regarded as a mere dealer in satire and invective, and as having no higher qualities than a somewhat rude force and vehemence. His prevailing fault is a straining after vigour and concentration of expression; and few of his pieces are free from a good deal of obscurity, harshness, or other disfigurement, occasioned by this habit or tendency, working in association with an alert, ingenious, and fertile fancy, a neglect of and apparently a contempt for neatness of finish, and the turn for quaintness and quibbling characteristic of the school to which he belongs for Cleveland must be considered as essentially one of the old wit poets. Most of his poems seem to have been thrown off in haste, and never to have been afterwards corrected or revised. There are, however, among them some that are not without vivacity and sprightliness; and others of his more solemn verses have all the dignity that might be expected from his prose letter to Cromwell.*

* Many poems, it is to be noted, are found in the common editions of Cleveland's works which are known not to be his. Thus, in the edition before us, 8vo. Lon. 1687, what are entitled the Additions, from p. 200 to 265, including A Lenten Litany, Content, A Sing-song on Clarinda's Wedding, Vituperium Uxoris, and other remarkable pieces, are, it seems, copied verbatim from a volume entitled Ex Otio Negotium, or Martial his Epigrams Translated, with Sundry Poems and Fancies; by R. Fletcher. 8vo. Lon. 1656. And other pieces in the same Second Part of the Collection, entitled John Cleveland's Revived Poems, Orations, Epistles, and other of his genuine incomparable pieces, now at last published from his original copies by some of his intrusted friends, are by Denham, J. Hall, Jasper Mayne, Thomas Weaver, and others. See A Select Collection of Poems, with Notes Biographical and Historical, by J. Nichols, 1780-1-2; vol. vii. pp. 50 and 376. Several of Cleveland's poems are reprinted in his seventh volume by Mr. Nichols, who has there (pp. 10-13), and in vol. viii. pp. 308-311, given an account of the old poet; with whom, in the Dedication of his Collection to Dr. Percy (the editor of the Reliques), he claims a relationship, stating at the same time that Percy's grandmother by the father's side was a niece of Cleveland's. The original edition of Cleveland's works is dedicated to Francis Turner, D.D., Master of St. John's College, Cambridge (afterwards bishop first of Rochester and then of Ely), by the editors J. L. and S. D., who appear to have been John Lake, D.D., vicar of Leeds (afterwards bishop of Chichester), who had been a pupil of Cleveland's at Cambridge, and Dr. Drake, vicar of Pontefract.

The following stanzas are entitled The General Eclipse:

Ladies, that gild the glittering noon,
And by reflection mend his ray;
Whose beauty makes the sprightly sun
To dance, as upon Easter-day;1
What are you, now the Queen's away?

Courageous eagles, who have whet

Your eyes upon majestic light,
And thence derived such martial heat

That still your looks maintain the fight;

What are you, since the King's good night?

Cavalier buds, whom nature teems

As a reserve for England's throne;
Spirits whose double edge redeems

The last age, and adorns your own;
What are you, now the Prince is gone?

As an obstructed fountain's head

Cuts the entail off from the streams,
And brooks are disinherited;

Honour and beauty are mere dreams,
Since Charles and Mary lost their beams.

Criminal valours! who commit

Your gallantry; whose paan brings

A psalm of mercy after it;

In this sad solstice of the king's,

Your victory hath mewed her wings.

The following epitaph on Ben Jonson is the shortest and best of several tributes to the memory of that poet, with whose masculine genius that of Cleveland seems to have strongly sympathised:

The Muses' fairest light in no dark time;
The wonder of a learned age; the line

Which none can pass; the most proportioned wit
To nature; the best judge of what was fit;
The deepest, plainest, highest, clearest pen;
The voice most echoed by consenting men;

1 See note on Suckling's Ballad of The Wedding, ante, p. 20.

2 We still use the term commit only in connexion with something wrong, as to commit a crime, or an error; but it is applied much more extensively by our old writers, though also always in a bad sense.

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