[Footnote 3: ‘Statius:’ author of ‘Thebaid’ and the ‘Achilleid;’ the latter translated by Sir Robert Howard.]
[Footnote 4: ‘With Monk you end,’ &c.: alluding to a poem of this gentleman’s on General Monk.]
[Footnote 5: ‘Rufus:’ a Roman consul, banished to Smyrna through intrigues, but greatly respected.]LE II.
* * * * *
EPISTLE II
TO MY HONOURED FRIEND DR CHARLETON, ON HIS LEARNED AND USEFUL WORKS; BUT MORE PARTICULARLY HIS TREATISE OF STONEHENGE,[6] BY HIM RESTORED TO THE TRUE FOUNDER.
The longest tyranny that ever sway’d,
Was that wherein our ancestors betray’d
Their free-born reason to the Stagyrite,
And made his torch their universal light.
So truth, while only one supplied the
state,
Grew scarce, and dear, and yet sophisticate.
Still it was bought, like empiric wares,
or charms,
Hard words seal’d up with Artistotle’s
arms.
Columbus was the first that shook his
throne,
And found a temperate in a torrid zone,
10
The feverish air fann’d by a cooling
breeze,
The fruitful vales set round with shady
trees:
And guiltless men, who danced away their
time,
Fresh as their groves, and happy as their
clime.
Had we still paid that homage to a name,
Which only God and nature justly claim,
The western seas had been our utmost bound,
Where poets still might dream the sun
was drown’d:
And all the stars that shine in southern
skies,
Had been admired by none but savage eyes.
20
Among the asserters of free
reason’s claim,
Our nation’s not the least in worth
or fame.
The world to Bacon does not only owe
Its present knowledge, but its future
too.
Gilbert[7] shall live, till loadstones
cease to draw,
Our British fleets the boundless ocean
awe.
And noble Boyle, not less in nature seen,
Than his great brother read in states
and men.
The circling streams, once thought but
pools, of blood
(Whether life’s fuel, or the body’s
food) 30
From dark oblivion Harvey’s[8] name
shall save;
While Ent[9] keeps all the honour that
he gave.
Nor are you, learned friend, the least
renown’d,
Whose fame, not circumscribed with English
ground,
Flies like the nimble journeys of the
light;
And is, like that, unspent too in its
flight.
Whatever truths have been, by art or chance,
Redeem’d from error, or from ignorance,
Thin in their authors, like rich veins
of ore,
Your works unite, and still discover more.
40
Such is the healing virtue of your pen,
To perfect cures on books, as well as
men.
Nor is this work the least: you well
may give
To men new vigour, who make stones to