The Works of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher in Ten Volumes eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 68 pages of information about The Works of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher in Ten Volumes.

The Works of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher in Ten Volumes eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 68 pages of information about The Works of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher in Ten Volumes.
  These workes proclaime which thou didst write retired
  From Beaumont, by none but thy selfe inspired;
  Where we see ’twas not chance that made them hit,
  Nor were thy Playes the Lotteries of wit,
  But like to
Durers Pencill, which first knew
  The lawes of faces, and then faces drew: 
  Thou knowst the aire, the colour, and the place,
  The simetry, which gives a Poem grace: 
  Parts are so fitted unto parts, as doe
  Shew thou hadst wit, and Mathematicks too: 
  Knewst where by line to spare, where to dispence,
  And didst beget just Comedies from thence: 
  Things unto which thou didst such life bequeath,
  That they (their owne Black-Friers) unacted breath.

  Johnson hath writ things lasting, and divine,
  Yet his Love-Scenes,
Fletcher, compar’d to thine,
  Are cold and frosty, and exprest love so,
  As heat with Ice, or warme fires mixt with Snow;
  Thou, as if struck with the same generous darts,
  Which burne, and raigne in noble Lovers hearts,
  Hast cloath’d affections in such native tires,
  And so describ’d them in their owne true fires;
  Such moving sighes, suc[h] undissembled teares,
  Such charmes of language, such hopes mixt with feares,
  Such grants after denialls, such pursuits
  After despaire, such amorous recruits,
  That some who sate spectators have confest
  Themselves transformed to what they saw exprest,
  And felt such shafts steale through their captiv’d sence,
  As made them rise Parts, and goe Lovers thence. 
  Nor was thy stile wholly compos’d of Groves,
  Or the soft straines of Shepheards and their Loves;
  When thou wouldst Comick be, each smiling birth
  In that kinde, came into the world all mirth,
  All point, all edge, all sharpnesse; we did sit
  Sometimes five Acts out in pure sprightfull wit,
  Which flowed in such true salt, that we did doubt
  In which Scene we laught most two shillings out.

  Shakespeare to thee was dull, whose best jest lyes
  I’th Ladies questions, and the Fooles replyes;
  Old fashioned wit, which walkt from town to town
  In turn’d Hose, which our fathers call’d the Clown;
  Whose wit our nice times would obsceannesse call,
  And which made Bawdry passe for Comicall:

  Nature was all his Art, thy veine was free
  As his, but without his scurility;
  From whom mirth came unforced, no jest perplext,
  But without labour cleane, chast, and unvext. 
  Thou wert not like some, our small Poets who
  Could not be Poets, were not we Poets too;
  Whose wit is pilfring, and whose veine and wealth
  In Poetry lyes meerely in their stealth;
  Nor didst thou feele their drought, their pangs, their qualmes,
  Their rack in writing, who doe write for almes,
  Whose wretched Genius, and dependent fires,
  But to their Benefactors dole aspires. 
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The Works of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher in Ten Volumes from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.