No. IV. COWLEY'S PREFACE TO HIS POEMS, 1656. Ir has been already observed that Cowley had scarcely opportunity to become acquainted with the early poems of Milton; and his party attachments prevented even a wish for personal intimacy; he was engaged besides on active, sometimes foreign service, and, if he read the "Defensio" of the great republican, in all probability read it with horror. Yet we find on authority not to be questioned, that Milton spoke of Cowley as a poet whom he valued, and named him with Spenser and Shakspeare. This is the more surprising, as Cowley was by ten years the younger man, and his writings had never appeared in body till 1656, when he returned to England from the Continent, and published them in folio. This volume was, there can be no question, read to Milton in his blindness: the congeniality of their studies, and their religious feelings, led him to estimate highly the only rival that Cambridge had bred to him in Latin verse; and though unnoticed in the volume upon his table, the PREFACE spoke to him, as by the inspiration of Urania herself. Let the reader imagine the blind bard listening to the following exquisite admonitions, which he alone fully comprehended; and the expectations which of all mankind he only could gratify; and upon which he was then earnestly and silently meditating: "When I consider how many bright and magnificent subjects the holy Scripture affords and proffers, as it were, to poesy, in the wise managing and illustrating whereof, the glory of God Almighty might be joined with the singular utility and noblest delight of mankind; it is not without grief and indignation that I behold that divine science employing all her inexhaustible riches of wit and eloquence, either in the wicked and beggarly flattery of great persons, or the unmanly idolizing of foolish women, or the wretched affectation of scurril laughter, or at best on the confused antiquated dreams of senseless fables and metamorphoses. Amongst all holy and consecrated things, which the devil ever stole and alienated from the service of the Deity; as altars, temples, sacrifices, prayers, and the like; there is none that he so universally, and so long usurped, as poetry. It is time to recover it out of the tyrant's hands, and to restore it to the kingdom of God, who is the father of it. It is time to baptize it in Jordan, for it will never become clean by bathing in the water of Damascus. There wants, methinks, but the conversion of that, and the Jews, for the accomplishment of the kingdom of Christ. And as men, before their receiving of the faith, do not without some carnal reluctancies apprehend the bonds and fetters of it, but find it afterwards to be the truest and greatest liberty; it will fare no otherwise with this art, after the regeneration of it it will meet with wonderful variety of new, more beautiful, and more delightful objects; neither will it want room, by being confined to heaven. There is not so great a lie to be found in any poet, as the vulgar conceit of men, that lying is essential to good poetry. Were there never so wholesome nourishment to be had (but alas, it breathes nothing but diseases) out of these boasted feasts of love and fables; yet, methinks, the unalterable continuance of the diet should make us nauseate it for it is almost impossible to serve up any new dish of that kind. They are all but the cold meats of the ancients, new-heated, and new set forth. I do not at all wonder that the old poets made some rich crops out of these grounds; the heart of the soil was not then wrought out with continual tillage: but what can we expect now, who come a gleaning, not after the first reapers, but after the very beggars? Besides, though those mad stories of the gods and heroes seem in themselves so ridiculous; yet they were in the whole body (or rather chaos) of the theology of those times. They were believed by all but a few philosophers, and perhaps some atheists, and served to good purpose among the vulgar (as pitiful things as they are), in strengthening the authority of law with the terrors of conscience, and expectation of certain rewards, and unavoidable punishments. There was no other religion; and therefore that was better than none at all: but to us, who have no need of them; to us, who deride their folly, and are wearied with their impertinencies; they ought to appear no better arguments for verse, than those of their worthy successors, the knights errant. What can we imagine more proper for the ornaments of wit or learning in the story of Deucalion than in that of Noah? Why will not the actions of Samson afford as plentiful matter as the labours of Hercules? Why is not Jephthah's daughter as good a woman as Iphigenia? and the friendship of David and Jonathan more worthy celebration than that of Theseus and Pirithous? Does not the passage of Moses and the Israelites into the Holy Land yield incomparably more poetical variety than the voyages of Ulysses or Eneas? Are the obsolete thread-bare tales of Thebes and Troy half so stored with great, heroical, and supernatural actions (since verse will needs find or make such) as the wars of Joshua, of the Judges, of David, and divers others? Can all the transformations of the gods give such copious hints to flourish and expatiate on, as the true miracles of Christ, or of his prophets and apostles? What do I instance in these few particulars? All the books of the Bible are either already most admirable and exalted pieces of poesy, or are the best materials in the world for it. Yet, though they be in themselves so proper to be made use of for this purpose; none but a good artist will know how to do it: neither must we think to cut and polish diamonds with so little pains and skill as we do marble: for if any man design to compose a sacred poem, by only turning a story of the scripture, like Mr. Quarles's, or some other godly matter, like Mr. Heywood of angels, into rhyme; he is so far from elevating of poesy, that he only abases divinity. In brief, he who can write profane poem well, may write a divine one better; but he who can do that but ill, will do this much worse. The same fertility of invention; the same wisdom of disposition; the same judgment in observance of decencies; the same lustre and vigour of elocution; the same modesty and majesty of number; briefly, the same kind of habit is required to both: only this latter allows better stuff, and therefore would look more deformedly ill dressed in it. I am far from assuming to myself to have fulfilled the duty of this weighty undertaking: but sure I am, there is nothing yet in our language (nor perhaps in any) that is in any degree answerable to the idea that I conceive of it. And I shall be ambitious of no other fruit from this weak and imperfect attempt of mine, but the opening of a way to the courage and industry of some other persons, who may be better able to perform it thoroughly and successfully." Such were the suggestions of that amiable and excellent writer, and such the soil on which this broad-cast of celestial seed was thrown. What a subject of regret that he should have died, without seeing the work he was so modest as to expect from another and superior Muse! He died on the 28th of July, 1667, in the 49th year of his age; and the "Paradise Lost" was then just issuing from the press. SELECTED ENCOMIASTIC LINES. Qui legis Amissam Paradisum, grandia magni Et sine fine magis, si quid magis est sine fine, Et quæ * In Paradisum Amissam Summi Poetæ Johannis Miltoni. Quantus in æthereis, tollit se Lucifer armis ! Et flammæ vibrant, et vera tonitrua rauco Excidit attonitis mens omnis, et impetus omnis, Ad poenas fugiunt; et, ceu foret Orcus asylum ANDREW MARVELL.* WHEN I beheld the poet blind, yet bold, Heaven, hell, earth, chaos, all; the argument I liked his project, the success did fear; Through that wide field how he his way should find O'er which lame faith leads understanding blind; Lest he perplex'd the things he would explain, And what was easy he should render vain. Or if a work so infinite he spann'd, Jealous I was, that some less skilful hand Might hence presume the whole Creation's day Thou hast not miss'd one thought that could be fit, So that no room is here for writers left, But to detect their ignorance or theft. That majesty which through thy work doth reign, Draws the devout, deterring the profane: And things divine thou treat'st of in such state, At once delight and horror on us seize, Thou sing'st with so much gravity and ease; * Address to Milton on reading Paradise Lost. And above human flight dost soar aloft Where couldst thou words of such a compass find? Well mightst thou scorn thy readers to allure And, while I meant to praise thee, must commend: In number, weight, and measure, needs not rhyme. DRYDEN.* THREE Poets, in three distant ages born, ADDISON.† BUT Milton next, with high and haughty stalks, No vulgar hero can his Muse engage, Nor earth's wide scene confine his hallow'd rage. Shakes Heaven's eternal throne with dire alarms, What sound of brazen wheels, with thunder, scare With fear my spirits and my blood retire, But when, with eager steps, from hence I rise, And view the first gay scene of Paradise; What tongue, what words of rapture, can express THOMSON. FOR lofty sense, Creative fancy, and inspection keen Through the deep windings of the human heart, Is not wild Shakspeare thine and Nature's boast? Is not each great, each amiable Muse * Epigram on Milton. From an Account of the Greatest English Poets. The Seasons-"Summer." h Of classic ages in thy MILTON met? Of blowing Eden fair; as Heaven sublime! GRAY.* NOR second HE that rode sublime Upon the seraph-wings of ecstacy; He pass'd the flaming bounds of place and time: He saw; but, blasted with excess of light, COLLINS.+ HIGH on some cliff, to Heaven up-piled, Its glooms embrown, its springs unlock; An Eden, like HIS OWN, lies spread; I view that oak the fancied glades among, By which, as MILTON lay, his evening ear, From many a cloud that dropp'd ethereal dew, Nigh sphered in Heaven, its native strains could hear, From Waller's myrtle shades retreating, With many a vow from Hope's aspiring tongue, In vain : Of all the sons of Soul was known; And Heaven and Fancy, kindred Powers, Or curtain'd close such scene from every future view. MASON. RISE, hallow'd MILTON! rise and say, How, at thy gloomy close of day; How, when "depress'd by age, beset with wrongs;" When Darkness, brooding on thy sight, Exiled the sovereign lamp of light; Say, what could then one cheering hope diffuse? * Progress of Poesy. + Ode on the Poetical Character. Ode to Memory. |