With which sufficiently bad verses Loyalty passed on, while my Lady Bath hinted to Sir Richard, not without reason, that the poet, in trying to exalt both parties, had very sufficiently snubbed both, and intimated that it was “hardly safe for country wits to attempt that euphuistic, antithetical, and delicately conceited vein, whose proper fountain was in Whitehall.” However, on went Loyalty, very well pleased with himself, and next, amid much cheering, two great tinsel fish, a salmon and a trout, symbolical of the wealth of Torridge, waddled along, by means of two human legs and a staff apiece, which protruded from the fishes’ stomachs. They drew (or seemed to draw, for half the ’prentices in the town were shoving it behind, and cheering on the panting monarchs of the flood) a car wherein sate, amid reeds and river-flags, three or four pretty girls in robes of gray-blue spangled with gold, their heads wreathed one with a crown of the sweet bog-myrtle, another with hops and white convolvulus, the third with pale heather and golden fern. They stopped opposite Amyas; and she of the myrtle wreath, rising and bowing to him and the company, began with a pretty blush to say her say:—
“Hither from my
moorland home,
Nymph of Torridge, proud
I come;
Leaving fen and furzy
brake,
Haunt of eft and spotted
snake,
Where to fill mine urns
I use,
Daily with Atlantic
dews;
While beside the reedy
flood
Wild duck leads her
paddling brood.
For this morn, as Phoebus
gay
Chased through heaven
the night mist gray,
Close beside me, prankt
in pride,
Sister Tamar rose, and
cried,
’Sluggard, up!
’Tis holiday,
In the lowlands far
away.
Hark! how jocund Plymouth
bells,
Wandering up through
mazy dells,
Call me down, with smiles
to hail,
My daring Drake’s
returning sail.’
‘Thine alone?’
I answer’d. ’Nay;
Mine as well the joy
to-day.
Heroes train’d
on Northern wave,
To that Argo new I gave;
Lent to thee, they roam’d
the main;
Give me, nymph, my sons
again.’
‘Go, they wait
Thee,’ Tamar cried,
Southward bounding from
my side.
Glad I rose, and at
my call,
Came my Naiads, one
and all.
Nursling of the mountain
sky,
Leaving Dian’s
choir on high,
Down her cataracts laughing
loud,
Ockment leapt from crag
and cloud,
Leading many a nymph,
who dwells
Where wild deer drink
in ferny dells;
While the Oreads as
they past
Peep’d from Druid
Tors aghast.
By alder copses sliding
slow,
Knee-deep in flowers
came gentler Yeo
And paused awhile her
locks to twine
With musky hops and
white woodbine,
Then joined the silver-footed
band,
Which circled down my
golden sand,
By dappled park, and
harbor shady,