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Research Notes
Map Group DRAYTON 1612
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Drayton 1612
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Map, Dorsetshere and Hampshere ie Dorset and Hampshire, by Michael Drayton,
London, 1612, probably engraved by William Hole; published 1612-22 in 'Poly-olbion'.
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The map illustrates the Second Song of the poem Polyolbion, it shows rivers and forests
and islands with allegorical figures of water nymphs and hunters, and little
else; the map is plain on the reverse; the book size is 7 5/8 x 11 1/2 ins. The map studied is in the Map Collection of
Hampshire CC Museums Service, item HMCMS:KD1996.23.
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MAP FEATURES |
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MAP SCALE |
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POLY-OLBION - introduction |
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THE POEM - for Hampshire |
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REFERENCES |
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ITEMS in the Collection |
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Michael Drayton was born 1563. He was probably at one time a page to Sir Henry Goodere of Powlesworth. Throughout the 16th century he published poetry, such as 'Idea, The Shepherds Garland, in nine Eglogs' 1593, and historical poems such as 'The Tragicall Legend of Robert, Duke of Normandie' in 1596 and the 'Ballad of Agincourt' included in 'Poemes Lyrick and Pastorall' about 1605. He was a friend of Shakespeare. Michael Drayton died 1631.
Poly-Olbion was a long poetic topography of England eventually finished about 1622. It was also published in:-
'Poly-Olbion Or A Chorographicall Description of Tracts,
Rivers, Mountains, Forests, and other Parts of this renowned Isle of Great
Britaine ... Digested in a Poem By Michael Drayton, Esq. ... London. Printed for
Mathew Lownes: J. Browne: J. Helme, and J. Busbie. 1613.'
In the 1613 edition the number of the text page which follows is engraved inside
the top border of the map
'A Chorographicall Description of ... Great Britain ... By
Michael Drayton, Esquire ... London, Printed for John Mariott, John Grismand,
and Thomas Dewe. 1622.'
The 1622 is an enlarged, or rather completed edition of the song and maps. |
| top of page |
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MAP FEATURES |
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These notes are made for Hampshire, including the Christchurch
area, Dorset which was Hampshire, but excluding the rest of
Dorset and the Isle of Wight.
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The map is fantastical; a true product of its age alongside
more serious cartography - tho' perhaps it was regarded just as
seriously. The song 'Polyolbion' is published as high art - just
read the author's introduction. It is, by turns, hilarious and
boring to our ears, 20th century educated; the verse is worse;
the descriptions of streams and woods nonsense.
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orientation
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No indication is given, up is North is assumed.
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scale
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No indication of scale is given. There are no good fixed
points on this map to compare with ground truth. Distances
between river mouths along the Hampshire coast were compared with
'real' positions to estimate a scale about:-
1 to 42000
with a large degree of error, see below.
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sea area
sea moire effect
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The sea is drawn with a moire effect.
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coast line
coast shaded
islands
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The coast line is shaded.
The larger islands:-
Portsey Ile
Haling Ile
Thorney Ile
have a naked nymphs, with wigs or headdresses, hands held
aloft - perhaps dancing? (The Isle of Wight has a more imposing
wench, with a little drapery.)
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coastal defence
castles
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Although there is mention of Hurst and Calshot Castles in the
song that accompanies the map, they are not shown.
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rivers
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Rivers are drawn as grossly broad wiggly lines, form lines
emphasize their meaning.
The major rivers are included, each with a naked naiad, a
nymph of the stream bathing in its waters, named:-
Stowre
Avon
Test
Itchin
Hamble
Tychfelde river
The last is the Meon.
Other rivers are shown, Beaulieu, Lymington, etc, as are
tributaires, but have neither naiad nor name. (A couple of
tributaries in Dorset have a small naiad bathing at the head,
pouring out the stream from a jar.)
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relief
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Relief is mostly not shown - tho' this is part of Drayton's
objectives. Presumably there are no hills in Hampshire that he
feels worth drawing. Some hills are mentioned in his song.
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forests
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The greater forests are show; each has a clothed dryad
carrying a hunting weapon, long bow and arrows, cross bow, or
spear. In the song these are referred to as dryads; a note says
that dryads are the goddesses of oak trees. The forests included
are:-
Buckholt fo:
Chute fo:
Pamber fo:
Eastbere fo:
The New fo:
Westbere fo:
Waltham fo:
Wulmer fo:
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county
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There is no county boundary. The map is labelled with
names:-
DORSET / SHERE
HAMP / SHERE
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The term 'nymph' is a very general term for semi divine
beautiful maidens who inhabit the seas. rivers, hills, trees, etc
in classical mythology. There are specific terms for some sorts
of nymphs; dryads are tree nymphs, naiads are nymphs of rivers
and springs, nereids are sea nymphs, oreads are mymphs of
mountains and hills, etc.
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| top of page |
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MAP SCALE |
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A table of distances for half a dozen river mouths was
constructed measuring from Drayton's map and calculating from
grid references:-
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Test |
Itchen |
Hamble |
Meon |
Pmth harbour |
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XCh harbour |
62 |
66 |
67 |
77 |
93 |
SZ182915 |
28.7 |
31.2 |
33.5 |
36.8 |
45.2 |
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46300 |
47400 |
50100 |
47800 |
46700 |
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Test |
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17 |
41 |
54 |
74 |
SU368134 |
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7.1 |
14.3 |
20.0 |
29.6 |
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41800 |
34800 |
37000 |
40000 |
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Itchen |
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24 |
38 |
57 |
SU432103 |
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9.6 |
13.0 |
22.5 |
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40100 |
34100 |
39400 |
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Hamble |
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15 |
34 |
SU487055 |
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5.7 |
15.4 |
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37900 |
45300 |
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Meon |
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21 |
SU534023 |
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9.9 |
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47000 |
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Pmth harbour |
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SU628993 |
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(The three figures are distance in Km, distance in mm from
map, the scale.)
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The plain average of the scales is about 1 to 420000 plus/minus a lot!
about 7 miles to 1 inch.
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| top of page |
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POLY-OLBION |
- introduction |
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These notes are made from a copy of the Hampshire parts of the
poem Polyolbion by Michaeol Drayton, 1613. The text of the song
used is Hooper's edition, in Birmingham Central Library, which
probably has some spelling changes from the original; Drayton's
atlas is also in that library, call number Q094/1613/3, which has
been used for making notes about the preliminary pages. Since
making the transcription a copy of the book, without title page
and maps, has come into the Map Collection of Hampshire CC
Museums Service, item HMCMS:FA2004.4. Some more text has been
transcribed from this copy.
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Frontispiece Page
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(From the original) Written on the Frontispice is:-
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THrough a Triumphant Arch, see Albion plas't,
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In Happy sight, in Neptune's armes embras't,
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In Power and Plenty, on hir Cleevy Throne
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Circled with Nature's Ghirlands, being alone
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Stil'd th'Oceans Island. On the Columnes beene
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(As Trophies raiz'd) what Princes Time hath seene
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Ambitious of her. In hir yonger years.
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Vast Earth-bread Giants woo'd her: but, who bears
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In Golden field the Lion passant red,
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AEneas Nephew (Brute) them conquered.
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Next Laureate Caesar, as a Philtre, brings,
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On's shield his Grandame Venus: Him hir Kings
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Withstood. At length, the Roman, by long sute,
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Gain'd her (most Part) from th'ancient race of Brute.
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Divors't from Him, the Saxon sable Horse,
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Borne by Sterne Hengist, wins her: but through force
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Garding the Norman Leopards bathed in Gules,
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She chang'd hir Love to Him, whose Line yet Rules.
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Title Page
(From the original):-
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POLY-OLBION / GREAT BRITAINE / By / Michael Drayton / Esq[i]: /
London printed for M Lownes, I Browne, I Helme, I Busbie /
Ingrave by W Hole
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and the next page:-
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POLYOLBION. / Or / A Chorographicall Description of Tracts,
Rivers, / Mountaines, Forests, and other Parts of this renowned
Isle / of Great Britaine, / With intermixture of the most
remarquable Stories, Antiquities, Wonders, / Rarityes, Pleasures,
and Commodities of / the same: / Digested in a Poem / By /
MICHAEL DRAYTON, / Esq. / With a Table added, for direction to
those occurrences of Stories and Antiquitie, / whereunto the
Course of the Volume easily leades not.
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LONDON. / Printed by H. L. for Mathew Lownes: I. Browne, I.
Helme, / and I. Busbie. 1613.
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Dedication
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There are two pages of dedication, to Henry, Prince of
Wales.
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(From the HMCMS copy) page 1:-
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TO THE HIGH AND MIGHTIE, HENRIE, Prince of Wales.
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THis first part of my intended Poeme I consecrate to your
Highness: in whom (beside my particular zeale) there is a
naturall interest in my Worke; as the hopefull Heyre of the
kingdoms of this Great Britaine: ... ... To your HIGHNESS, the
most humbly devoted, MICHAEL DRAYTON.
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And page 2, a poem:-
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BRitaine, behold here portray'd, to thy sight, / Henry, thy best
hope, and the world's delight; / Ordain'd to make thy eight Great
Henries, nine: / Who, by that vertue in the trebble Trine, / To
his owne goodnesse (in his Being) brings / These severall Glories
of th'eight English Kings; / Deep Knowledge, greatnes, long Life,
Policy, / Courage, Zeale, Fortune, awfull Majestie. / He like
great Neptune on three Seas shall rove, / And rule three Realms,
with triple power, like Jove; / Thus in soft Peace, thus in
tempestuous warres, / Till from his foote, his Fame shall strike
the starres.
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Henry was the first son of James VI and I, king of England
1603-25, and Anne of Denmark. Henry was popular and charming, but
died in his youth, in 1612. James I was succeeded by Charles I,
his second son.
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Introduction
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(From Hooper's edition):-
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TO THE GENERAL READER.
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IN publishing this Essay of my Poem, there is this great
disadvantage against me; that it cometh out at this time, when
verses are wholly deduced to chambers, and nothing esteemed in
this lunatic Age but what is kept in cabinets, and must only pass
by transcription. In such a season, when the idle humorous world
must hear of nothing that either savours of antiquity, or may
awake it to seek after more than dull and slothful ignorance may
easily reach unto, these, I say, make much against me; and
especially in a Poem, from any example, either of Ancient or
Modern, that have proved in this kind, whose unusual tract may
perhaps seem difficult to the female sex; yea, and, I fear, to
some that think themselves not meanly learned, being not rightly
inspired by the Muses: such I mean, as had rather read the
fantasies of foreign inventions, than to see the Rarities and
History of their own Country delivered by a true native Muse.
Then, whosoever thou be, possest with such stupidity and dulness,
that, rather than thou wilt take pain to search into ancient and
noble things, chosest to remain in the thick fogs and mists of
ignorance, as near the common lay-stall of a city, refusing to
walk forth into the Tempe and field of the Muses, where through
most delightful groves the angelic harmony of birds shall steal
thee to the top of an easy hill, where, in artificial caves, cut
out of the most natural rock, thou shalt see the ancient people
of this Isle deliver thee in their lively images: from whose
height thou mayest behold both the old and later times, as in thy
prospect, lying far under thee; then conveying thee down by a
soul-pleasing descent through delicate embrodered Meadows, often
veined with gentle gliding Brooks; in which thou mayest fully
view the dainty Nymphs in their simple naked beauties, bathing
them in crystalline streams; which shall lead thee to most
pleasant Downs, where harmless Shepherds are, some exercising
their pipes, some singing roundelays to their grazing flocks. If,
as I say, thou hadst rather (because it asks thy labour) remain
where thou wert, than strain thyself to walk forth with the
Muses, the fault proceeds from thy idleness, not from any want in
my industry. And to any that shall demand wherefore having
promised this Poem of the general Island so many years, I now
publish only this part of it; I plainly answer that many times I
have determined with myself to have left it off, and have
neglected my papers sometimes two years together, finding the
times since his Majesty's happy coming-in to fall so heavily upon
my distressed fortunes, after my zealous soul had laboured so
long in that which, with the general happiness of the kingdom,
seemed not then impossible somewhat also to have advanced me. But
I instantly saw all my long-nourished hopes even buried alive
before my face: so uncertain (in this world) be the ends of our
clearest endeavours. And whatever is herein that tastes of a free
spirit, I thankfully confess it to proceed from the continual
bounty of my truly noble friend Sir Walter Aston; which hath
given me the best of those hours, whose leisure hath effected
this which I now publish. Sundry other Songs I have also, though
not yet so perfect that I dare commit them to public censure; and
the rest I determine to go forward with, God enabling me, may I
find means to assist my endeavour. Now, Reader, for the further
understanding of my Poem, thou hast three especial helps: First,
the Argument to direct thee still where thou art, and through
what Shires the Muse makes her journey, and what she chiefly
handles in the Song thereto belonging. Next, the Map, lively
delineating to thee every Mountain, Forest, River, and Valley;
expressing, in their sundry postures, their loves, delights, and
natural situations. Then hast thou the illustration of this
learned Gentleman, my friend, to explain every hard matter of
history, that, lying far from the way of common reading, may
(without question) seem difficult unto thee. Thus wishing thee
thy heart's desire, and committing my Poem to thy charitable
censure, I take my leave.
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Thine, as thou art mine,
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MICHAEL DRAYTON.
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| top of page |
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THE POEM |
- for Hampshire |
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The notes given are from the second song which accompanies the
map of, roughly, Dorset and Hampshire. The Dorset parts of the
song are not transcribed.
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THE SECOND SONG
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(Hooper's text)
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THE ARGUMENT.
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The Muse from Marshwood way commands,
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Along the shore throuh Chesill's sands:
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Where, overtoil'd, her heat to cool,
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She bathes her in the pleasant Poole:
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Thence, over-land again doth scour,
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To fetch in Froome, and bring down Stoure;
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Falls with New-forest, as she sings
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The wanton Wood-Nymphs' revellings.
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Whilst Itchin, in her lofty lays,
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Chants Bevis of South-hampton's praise,
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She Southward with her active flight
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Is wafted to the Isle of Wight,
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To see the rutte the Sea-gods keep:
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There swaggering in the Solent deep.
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Thence Hampshire-ward her way she bends;
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And visiting her Forest-friends,
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Near Salisbury her rest doth take:
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Which she her second pause doth make.
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[the song]
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MARCH strongly forth my Muse, whilst yet the temperate air
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Invites us, eas'ly on to hasten our repair.
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Thou powerful God of flames (in verse divinely great)
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Touch my invention so with thy true genuine heat,
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That high and noble things I slightly may not tell,
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Nor light and idle toys my lines may vainly swell;
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But as my subject serves, so high or low to strain,
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And to the varying earth so suit my varying vein,
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That Nature in my work thou may'st thy power avow;
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That as thou first found'st Art, and didst her rules allow,
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So I, to thine own self that gladly near would be,
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May here in do the best, in imitating thee:
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As thou hast here a hill, a vale there, there a flood,
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A mead here, there a heath, and now and then a wood,
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These things so in my Song I naturally may show;
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Now, as the mountain high; then, as the valley low;
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Here, fruitful as the mead; there as the heath be bare;
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Then, as the gloomy wood, I may be rough, though rare. [Dorset
parts]
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... When down from Sarum's Plains
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Clear Avon coming in, her sister Stour doth call,
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And at New-forest's foot into the sea do fall,
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Which every day bewail that deed so full of dread
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Whereby she (now so proud) became first forested:
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She now who for her sight even boundless seem'd to lie,
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Her being that receiv'd by William's tyranny;
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Providing laws to keep those beasts here planted then,
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Whose lawless will from hence before had driven men;
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That where the hearth was warm'd with Winter's feasting fires,
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The melancholy hare is form'd in brakes and briars:
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The aged ranpick trunk where plow-men cast their seed,
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And churches overwhelm'd with nettles, fern, and weed,
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By Conquering William first cut off from every trade,
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That here the Norman still might enter to invade;
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That on this vacant place, and unfrequented shore,
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New forces still might land, to aid those here before.
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But she, as by a King and Conqueror made so great,
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By whom she was allow'd and limited her seat,
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Into her own-self praise most insolently brake,
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And her less fellow-Nymphs, New-forest thus bespake:
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Thou Buckholt, bow to me, so let thy sister Bere;
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[The forests of Hampshire with their situations.]
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Chute, kneel thou at my name on this side of the Shiere:
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Where, for their goddess, me the Dryads shall adore,
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[Dryads - Nymphs that live and die with oaks.]
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With Waltham, and the Bere, that on the sea-worn shore,
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See at the Southern Isles the tides at tilt to run;
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And Woolmer placed hence upon the rising sun,
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With Ashholt thine ally (my Wood-Nymphs) and with you,
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Proud Pamber tow'rds the North ascribe me worship due.
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Before my princely state let your poor greatness fall;
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And vail your tops to me, your Sov'reign of you all.
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Amongst the Rivers, so, great discontent there fell.
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Th'efficient cause whereof (as loud report doth tell)
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Was, that the sprightly Test arising up in Chute,
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To Itchin, her ally, great weakness should impute,
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That she, to her own wrong, and every other's grief,
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Would needs be telling things exceeding all belief:
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For, she had given it out South-Hampton should not lose
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Her famous Bevis so, wer't in her power to choose;
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And, for great Arthur's seat, her Winchester prefers,
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Whose old Round-table yet she vaunteth to be hers:
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And swore, th'inglorious time should bereave her right:
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But what it could obscure, she would reduce to light.
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For, from that wondrous Pond whence she derives her head,
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[A pool near unto Alresford, yielding an unusual
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abundance of water.]
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And places by the way, by which she's honored;
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(Old Winchester, that stands near in her middle way,
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And Hampton, at her fall into the Solent sea)
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She thinks in all the Isle not any such as she,
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And for a demi-god she would related be.
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Sweet sister mine (quoth Test) advise you what you do;
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Think this: For each of us, the Forests here are two:
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Who, if you speak a thing whereof they hold can take,
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Be't little, or be't much, they double will it make:
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Whom Hamble helpeth out; a handsome proper Flood,
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In courtesy well-skill'd, and one that knew her good.
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Consider, quoth this Nymph, the times be curious now,
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And nothing of that kind will any way allow.
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Besides, the Muse hath next the British cause in hand,
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About things later done that now she cannot stand.
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The more they her persuade, the more she doth persist;
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Let them say what they will, she will do what she list.
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She styles herself their Chief, and swears she will command;
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And, whatsoe'er she saith, for oracles must stand.
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Which when the Rivers heard, they further speech forbare.
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And she (to please herself that only seem'd to care)
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To sing th' achievement great of Bevis thus began:
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Redoubted Knight (quoth she); O most renowned man!
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Who, when thou wert but young, thy mother durst reprove
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(Most wickedly seduc'd by the unlawful love
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Of Mordure, at that time the Almain Emperor's son)
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That she thy sire to death disloyally had done.
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Each circumstance whereof she largely did relate;
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Then, in her song persu'd his mother's deadly hate;
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And how (by Saber's hand) when she suppos'd him dead,
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Where long upon the Downs a shepherd's life he lead;
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Till by the great recourse, he came at length to know
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The country there-about could hardly hold the show
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His mother's marriage to fair South-hampton drew,
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Being wedded to that lord who late her husband slew:
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Into his noble breast which pierc'd so wondrous deep,
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The (in the poor attire he us'd to tend the sheep,
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And in his hand his hook) unto the town he went;
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As having in his heart a resolute intent
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Or manfully to die, or to revenge his wrong:
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Where pressing at the gate the multitude among,
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The porter at that place his entrance that forbad
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(supposing him some swain, some boist'rous country-lad)
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Upon the head he lent so violent a stroke,
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That the poor empty skull some thin potsherd broke,
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The brains and mingled blood were spertled on the wall.
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Then hasting on he came into the upper hall,
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Where murderous Mordure sate embraced by his bride:
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Who (guilty in himself) had not he Bevis spied,
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His bones had with a blow been shatt'red: but, by chance
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(He shifting from his place, while Bevis did advance
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His hand, with greater strength his deadly foe to hit,
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And missing him) his chair he all to shivers split:
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Which strook his mother's breast with strange and sundry fears,
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That Bevis, being then but of tender years,
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Durst yet attempt a thing so full of death and doubt.
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And, once before deceiv'd, she newly cast about
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To rid him out of sight; and, with a mighty wage,
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Won such, themselves by oath as deeply durst ingage,
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To execute her will: who shipping him away
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(And making forth their course into the mid-land sea)
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As they had got before, so now again for gold
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To an Armenian there that young Alcides sold:
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Of all his gotten prize, who (as the worthiest thing,
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And fittest where-withal to gratify his king)
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Presented that brave youth; the splendour of whose eye
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A wondrous mixture show'd of grace and majesty:
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Whose more than man-like shape, and matchless stature, took
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The king; and often us'd with great delight to look
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Upon that English Earl. But though the love he bore
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To Bevis might be much, his daughter ten times more
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Admir'd the god-like man: who, from the hour that first
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His beauty she beheld, felt her soft bossom pierc'd
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With Cupid's deadliest shaft; that Josian, to her guest,
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Already had resign'd possession of her breast.
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Then sang she; in the fields how as he went to sport,
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And those damn'd Paynims heard, who in despiteful sort
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Derided Christ the Lord; for his Redeemer's sake
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He on those heathen hounds did there such slaughter make,
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That whilst in their black mouths their blasphemies they drew,
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They headlong went to hell. As also how he slew
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That cruel Boar, whose tusks turn'd up whole fields of grain,
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(And, rooting, raised hills upon the level plain;
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Digg'd caverns in the earth so dark and wond'rous deep
|
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As that, into whose mouth the desperate Roman leap):
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[Roman - Curtius, that for his country's sake so lavished
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his life.]
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And cutting off his head, a trophy thence to bear;
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The forester that came to intercept it there,
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How he their scalps and trunks in chips and pieces cleft,
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And in the fields (like beasts) their mangled bodies left.
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As to his further praise, how for that dangerous fight
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The great Armenian King made noble Bevis Knight:
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And having raised pow'r, Damascus to invade,
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The General of his force this English hero made.
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Then, how fair Josian gave him Arundell his steed,
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And Morglay his good sword, in many a gallant deed
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Which manfully he tried. Next, in a buskin'd strain,
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[buskin'd - lofty]
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Sung how himself he bore upon Damascus' Plain
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(That dreadful battle) where the Bradamond he fought;
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And with his sword and steed such earthly wonders wrought,
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As even amongst his foes him admiration won;
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Incount'ring in the throng with mighty Radison;
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And lopping off his arms, th' imperial standard took.
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At whose prodigious fall, the conquer'd foe forsook
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The field; where, in one day so many peers they lost,
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So brave commanders, and so absolute an host,
|
|
As to the humbled earth took proud Damascus down,
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Then tributary made to the Armenian Crown.
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And how at his return, the king (for service done,
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The honour to his reign, and to Armenia won)
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In marriage to this Earl the Princess Josian gave;
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As into what distress him Fortune after drave,
|
|
To great Damascus sent ambassador again;
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When, in revenge of theirs, before by Bevis slain,
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(And now, at his return, for that he so despis'd
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Those idols unto whom they daily sacrific'd:
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|
Which he to pieces hew'd and scatt'red in the dust)
|
|
They, rising, him by strength into a dungeon thrust;
|
|
In whose black bottom, long two serpents had remain'd
|
|
(Bred in the common sewer that all the city drain'd)
|
|
Empois'ning with their smell; which seiz'd him for their prey:
|
|
With whom in struggling long (besmear'd with blood and clay)
|
|
He rent their squalid chaps, and from the prison 'scap'd.
|
|
As how adult'rous Joure, the king of Mambrant, rap'd
|
|
Fair Josian his dear love, his noble sword and steed:
|
|
Which afterward by craft, he in a palmer's weed
|
|
Recover'd, and with him from Mambrant bare away.
|
|
And with two lions how he held a desperate fray,
|
|
Assailing him at once, that fiercely on him flew:
|
|
Which first he tam'd with wounds, then by the necks them drew,
|
|
And 'gainst the hard'ned earth their jaws and shoulders burst;
|
|
And that (Goliah-like) great Ascupart inforc'd
|
|
To serve him for a slave, and by his horse to run.
|
|
At Colcin as again the glory that he won
|
|
On that huge Dragon, like the country to destroy;
|
|
Whose sting strook like a lance: whose venom did destroy
|
|
As doth a general plague: his scales like shields of brass;
|
|
His body, when he mov'd, like some unwieldy mass,
|
|
Even bruis'd the solid earth. Which boldy having song,
|
|
With all the sundry turns that might thereto belong,
|
|
Whilst yet she shapes her course how he came back to show
|
|
What pow'rs he got abroad, how them he did bestow;
|
|
In England here again, how he by dint of sword
|
|
Unto his ancient lands and titles was restor'd,
|
|
New-forest cried, enough: and Waltham with the Bere,
|
|
Both bade her hold her peace; for they no more would hear.
|
|
And for she was a flood, her fellows naught would say;
|
|
But slipping to their banks, slid silently away.
|
|
When as the pliant Muse, with fair and even flight,
|
|
Betwixt her silver wings is wafted to the Wight:
|
|
That Isle, which jutting out into the sea so far,
|
|
Her offspring traineth up in exercise of war;
|
|
Those pirates to put back that oft purloin her trade,
|
|
Or Spaniards, or the French attempting to invade.
|
|
Of all the Southern Isles she holds the highest place,
|
|
And ever more hath been the great'st in Britain's grace:
|
|
Not one of all her Nymphs her sov'reign favoreth thus,
|
|
Imbraced in the arms of old Oceanus.
|
|
For none of her account so near her bosom stand,
|
|
'Twixt Penwith's furthest point ad Goodwin's queachy sand,
|
|
[Penwith/Goodwin - the forelands of Cornwall and Kent.]
|
|
Both for her seat and soil, that far before the other,
|
|
Most justly may account great Britain for her mother.
|
|
A finer fleece than hers not Lemster's self can boast,
|
|
Nor Newport for her mart, o'er match'd by any coast.
|
|
To these, the gentle South, with kisses smooth and soft,
|
|
Doth in her bosom breath, and seems to court her oft.
|
|
Besides, her little rills, her in-lands that do feed,
|
|
Which with their lavish streams do furnish every need:
|
|
And meads, that with their fine soft grassy towels stand
|
|
To wipe away the drops and moisture from her hand,
|
|
And to the North, betwixt the fore-land and the firm,
|
|
She hath that narrow Sea, which we the Solent term:
|
|
Where those rough ireful tides, as in her straits they meet,
|
|
With boist'rous shocks and roars each other rudely greet:
|
|
Which fiercely when they charge, and sadly make retreat,
|
|
Upon the bulwark'd forts of Hurst and Calshot beat,
|
|
[Two castles in the sea]
|
|
Then to South-hampton run: which by her shores supplied
|
|
(As Portsmouth by her strength) doth vilify their pride;
|
|
Both roads that with our best may boldly hold their plea,
|
|
Nor Plimmouth's self hath borne more braver ships than they;
|
|
That from their anchoring bays have travailed to find
|
|
Large China's wealthy realms, and view'd the either Ind,
|
|
The pearly rich Peru; and with as prosperous fate,
|
|
Have borne their full-spread sails upon the streams of Plate:
|
|
Whose pleasant harbours oft the seaman's hope renew,
|
|
To rig his late-craz'd bark, to spread a wanton clue;
|
|
Where they with lusty sack, and mirthful sailors' songs,
|
|
Defy their passed storms, and laugh at Neptune's wrongs:
|
|
The danger quite forgot wherein they were of late;
|
|
Who half so merry now as master and his mate?
|
|
And victualling again, with brave and man-like minds
|
|
To seaward cast their eyes, and pray for happy winds.
|
|
But, partly by the floods sent hither from the shore,
|
|
And Islands that are set the bord'ring coast before:
|
|
As one amongst the rest, a brave and lusty dame
|
|
Call'd Portsey, whence that Bay of Portsmouth hath her name:
|
|
By her, two little Isles, her handmaids (which compar'd
|
|
With those within the Poole, for deftness not out-dar'd)
|
|
The greater Hayling hight: and fairest though by much,
|
|
Yet Thorney very well, but somewhat rough in touch.
|
|
Whose beauties far and near divulged by report,
|
|
And by the Tritons told in mighty Neptune's court,
|
|
[Tritons - Neptune's Trumpeters.]
|
|
Old Proteus hath been known to leave his finny herd,
|
|
[Proteus, a Sea-god, changing himself into any shape.]
|
|
And in their sight to sponge his foam-bespawled beard
|
|
The sea-gods, which about the wat'ry kingdom keep,
|
|
Have often for their sakes abandoned the deep;
|
|
That Thetis many a time to Neptune hath complain'd,
|
|
How for those wanton Nymphs her ladies were disdain'd:
|
|
And there arose such rut th' unruly rout among,
|
|
That soon the noise thereof through all the ocean rong.
|
|
When Portsey, weighing well the ill to her might grow,
|
|
In that their mighty stirs might be her overthrow,
|
|
She strongly strait'neth-in the entrance to her Bay;
|
|
That, of their haunt debarr'd, and shut out to the sea
|
|
[A poetical description of the Solent Sea.]
|
|
(Each small conceived wrong helps on distemper'd rage.)
|
|
No counsel could be heard their choler to assuage:
|
|
When every one suspects the next that is in place
|
|
To be the only cause and means of his disgrace.
|
|
Some coming from the East, some from the setting sun,
|
|
The liquid mountains still together mainly run;
|
|
Wave woundeth wave again; and billow billow gores;
|
|
And topsy-turvy so, fly tumbling to the shores.
|
|
From hence the Solent sea, as some men thought, might stand
|
|
Amongst those things which we call Wonders of our Land.
|
|
When towing up that stream, so negligent of fame,
|
|
[that stream - Tichfield River.]
|
|
As till this very day she yet concealed her name;
|
|
By Bert (sic) and Waltham both that's equally imbrac'd,
|
|
And lastly, at her fall, by Tichfield highly grac'd.
|
|
Whence, from old Windsor hill, and from the aged Stone,
|
|
[Stone - Another little hill in Hampshire.]
|
|
The Muse those Countries sieze, which call her to be gone.
|
|
The Forest took their leave: Bere, Chute, and Buckholt, bid
|
|
Adieu; so Wolmer, and so Ashholt, kindly did.
|
|
And Pamber shook her head, as grieved at the heart;
|
|
When far upon her way, and ready to depart,
|
|
As now the wand'ring Muse so sadly went along,
|
|
To her last farewell, the goodly Forests sung.
|
|
Dear Muse, to plead our right, whom time at last hath brought,
|
|
Which else forlorn had lain, and banish'd every thought,
|
|
When thou ascend'st the hills, and from their rising shrouds
|
|
Our sisters shalt command, whose tops once touch'd the clouds;
|
|
Old Arden when thou meet'st, or dost fair Sherwood see,
|
|
[Arden - The great and ancient forest of Warwickshire.]
|
|
[Sherwood - The goodly Forest by Nottingham.]
|
|
Tell them, that as they waste, so every day do we:
|
|
Wish them, we of our griefs may be each other's heirs;
|
|
Let them lament our fall, and we will mourn for theirs.
|
|
Then turning from the South which lies in public view,
|
|
The Muse an oblique course doth seriously pursue:
|
|
And pointing to the Plains, she thither takes her way;
|
|
For which, to gain her breath she makes a little stay.
|
|
|
|
Old Hampshire Mapped has a similar transcription.
|
| top of page |
|
|
REFERENCES |
|
|
Drayton, Michael: 1612: Poly-Olbion: M Lownes, J Browne, J Helme, J Busbie
(London) |
|
Drayton, Michael: 1613: Poly-Olbion: H L Mathew, J Browne, J Helme, J Busbie
(London) |
|
Drayton, Michael: 1622: Poly-Olbion: John Marriot, John Grismand, Thomas Dewe
(London) |
|
Drayton, Michael: 1890 (reprint from 1622 edition): Poly-Olbion: Spencer
Society |
|
Hebel, J W (ed): 1933=1941: Works of Michael Drayton, The: (Oxford) |
|
Hooper, Richard, Rev: 1876: Complete Works of Michael Drayton, The: Smith, John Russell (Soho
Square, London) |
|
Cope, Gilbert: 1981: Puzzling Aspects of Drayton's Polyolbion: Map Collector: no.17: pp.16-20
|
| top of page |
|
|
ITEMS |
in HMCMS Map Collection and Private Collections (scanned item in bold)
|
|
HMCMS:FA2002.24 -- map
|
|
HMCMS:FA2004.4 -- book
|
|
HMCMS:KD1996.23 -- map
|
|
private collection (42) -- title page
|
| top of page |
|
|
All Old Hampshire Mapped Resources |