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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
ODE ALLEGORIC, by BEN JONSON Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: Who saith our times nor have, nor can Last Line: Set out a like, or second to our swan. | |||
Who saith our times nor have, nor can Produce us a black swan? Behold, where one doth swim, Whose note, and hue, Besides the other swans admiring him, Betray it true: A gentler bird, than this, Did never dint the breast of Tamesis. Mark, mark, but when his wing he takes, How fair a flight he makes! How upward, and direct! Whilst pleased Apollo Smiles in his sphere, to see the rest affect, In vain to follow: This swan is only his, And Phoebus's love cause of his blackness is. He showed him first the hoof-cleft spring, Near which, the Thespiads sing; The clear Dircaean fount Where Pindar swam; The pale Pyrene, and the forked mount: And, when they came To brooks, and broader streams, From Zephyr's rape would close him with his beams. This changed his down; till this, as white As the whole herd in sight, And still is in the breast: That part nor wind, Nor sun could make to vary from the rest, Or alter kind. So much doth virtue hate, For style of rareness, to degenerate. Be then both rare, and good; and long Continue thy sweet song. Nor let one river boast Thy tunes alone; But prove the air, and sail from coast to coast: Salute old Mone, But first to Cluid stoop low, The vale, that bred thee pure, as her hills snow. From thence, display thy wing again Over Ierna main, To the Eugenian dale; There charm the rout With thy soft notes, and hold them within pale That late were out. Music hath power to draw, Where neither force can bend, nor fear can awe. Be proof, the glory of his hand, (Charles Montjoy) whose command Hath all been harmony: And more hath won Upon the kern, and wildest Irishry, Than time hath done, Whose strength is above strength; And conquers all things, yea itself, at length. Whoever sipped at Baphyre river, That heard but spite deliver His far-admired acts, And is not rapt With entheate rage, to publish their bright tracts? (But this more apt When him alone we sing) Now must we ply our aim; our swan's on wing. Who (see) already hath o'er-flown The Hebrid Isles, and known The scattered Orcades; From thence is gone To utmost Thule: whence, he backs the seas To Caledon, And over Grampius' mountain, To Lomond Lake, and Tweed's black-springing fountain. Haste, haste, sweet singer: nor to Tyne, Humber, or Ouse, decline; But over land to Trent: There cool thy plumes, And up again, in skies, and air to vent Their reeking fumes; Till thou at Thames alight, From whose proud bosom, thou began'st thy flight. Thames, proud of thee, and of his fate In entertaining late The choice of Europe's pride; The nimble French; The Dutch whom wealth (not hatred) doth divide; The Danes that drench Their cares in wine; with sure Though slower Spain; and Italy mature. All which, when they but hear a strain Of thine, shall think the main Hath sent her mermaids in, To hold them here: Yet, looking in thy face, they shall begin To lose that fear; And (in the place) envy So black a bird, so bright a quality. But should they know (as I) that this, Who warbleth Pancharis, Were Cycnus, once high flying With Cupid's wing; Though, now by love transformed, and daily dying: (Which makes him sing With more delight, and grace) Or thought they, Leda's white adulterer's place Among the stars should be resigned To him, and he there shrined; Or Thames be rapt from us To dim and drown In Heaven the sign of old Eridanus: How they would frown! But these are mysteries Concealed from all but clear prophetic eyes. It is enough, their grief shall know At their return, nor Po, Iberus, Tagus, Rhine, Scheldt, nor the Maas, Slow Arar, nor swift Rhone; the Loire, nor Seine, With all the race Of Europe's waters can Set out a like, or second to our swan. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A CELEBRATION OF CHARIS: 4. HER TRIUMPH by BEN JONSON A CELEBRATION OF CHARIS: 5. HIS DISCOURSE WITH CUPID by BEN JONSON A FIT OF RHYME AGAINST RHYME [OR, RIME] by BEN JONSON A NYMPH'S PASSION by BEN JONSON A SONNET, TO THE NOBLE LADY, THE LADY MARY WROTH by BEN JONSON AN ODE TO HIMSELF by BEN JONSON ANSWER TO MASTER WITHER'S SONG, 'SHALL I, WASTING IN DESPAIR?' by BEN JONSON EPICOENE; OR, THE SILENT WOMAN: FREEDOM IN DRESS by BEN JONSON EPIGRAM: 118. ON GUT by BEN JONSON |
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