[31] [Some of the old copies read make.]
[32] Old copy, furens.
[33] Old copy, lanching.
[34] [Old copies, is.]
[35] [It is probably well known that on the early stage vinegar was used where there was a necessity for representing bloodshed. Compare the passage in Preston’s “Cambyses,” iv. 217.]
[36] Old copy, utensilies.
[37] Old copy, sly.
[38] Old copy, soure.
[39] [Old copy, clear the vsuall, &c.]
[40] “Belvidere; or, The Garden of the Muses,” 8vo, 1600, in which are quoted sentences out of Spenser, Constable, and the rest, digested under a commonplace. [Another edition in 1610. It is a book of no value or interest.]
[41] [Left blank in the old copy. The ostensible editor of “Belvidere” was John Bodenham, but he is evidently not the person referred to here.]
[42] [Alluding to the device on the title of the volume.]
[43] [Two of the old copies read swifter.]
[44] [Some copies read S.D.]
[45] As the works of some of the poets here cited are become obscure, it may not be unacceptable to the reader to see a few specimens of their several abilities. Constable was esteemed the first sonneteer of his time, and the following sonnet, prefixed to King James I.’s “Poetical Exercises” was the most admired—
TO THE KING OF SCOTLAND.
“When others hooded
with blind love do fly
Low on the ground with buzzard
Cupid’s wings,
A heavenly love from love
of love thee brings,
And makes thy Muse to mount
above the sky:
Young Muses be
not wont to fly so high,
Age school’d by time
such sober ditties sings,
But thy love flies from love
of youthful things,
And so the wings of time doth
overfly.
Thus thou disdain’st
all worldly wings as slow,
Because thy Muse with angels’
wings doth leave
Time’s wings behind,
and Cupid’s wings below;
But take thou heed, lest Fame’s
wings thee deceive,
With all thy speed
from fame thou canst not flee,—
But more thou
flees, the more it follows thee.”
[46] Lodge was a physician as well as a poet; he was the author of two plays, and eminent, in his day, for writing elegant odes, pastoral songs, sonnets, and madrigals. His “Euphues’ Golden Legacy” was printed 4to, 1590, from which some suppose Shakespeare took his “As You Like It.” Description of spring by Lodge—
“The earth late choak’d
with showers,
Is now array’d
in green,
Her bosom springs with flowers,
The air dissolves
her teen;
The woods are deck’d
with leaves,
And trees are
clothed gay,
And Flora, crown’d with
sheaves,
With oaken boughs
doth play;
The birds upon the trees
Do sing with pleasant
voices,
And chant, in their degrees,
Their loves and
lucky choices.”