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Whoever writes of thee, and in a style
Unworthy such a theme, does but revile

Thy precious dust, and wakes a learned spirit,
Which may revenge his rapes upon thy merit.
For all a low-pitched fancy can devise
Will prove at best but hallowed injuries.

Thou, like the dying swan, didst lately sing
Thy mournful dirge in audience of the king;
When pale looks and faint accents of thy breath
Presented so to life that piece of death,
That it was feared and prophesied by all
Thou thither cam'st to preach thy funeral.
Oh! hadst thou in an elegiac knell
Rung out unto the world thine own farewell,
And in thy high, victorious numbers beat
The solemn measures of thy grieved retreat,
Thou might'st the poet's service now have missed,
As well as then thou didst prevent the priest :
And never to the world beholden be,

So much as for an epitaph for thee.

I do not like the office: nor is 't fit

Thou, who didst lend our age such sums of wit,
Shouldst now reborrow from her bankrupt mine
That ore to bury thee which first was thine;
Rather still leave us in thy debt; and know,
Exalted soul! more glory 't is to owe
Thy memory, what we can never pay,
Than with embased coin those rites defray.

Commit we then thee to thyself, nor blame
Our drooping loves, that thus to thine own fame

Leave thee executor, since but thine own
No pen could do thee justice, nor bays crown
Thy vast deserts; save that we nothing can
Depute to be thy ashes' guardian.

So jewellers no art or metal trust

To form the diamond, but the diamond's dust.

H. K.

AN ELEGY ON DOCTOR DONNE.

OUR Donne is dead! and we may sighing say,
We had that man where language chose to stay,
And show her utmost power. I would not praise
That and his great wit, which in our vain days
Make others proud; but as these served to unlock
That cabinet, his mind, where such a stock
Of knowledge was reposed, that I lament
Our just and general cause of discontent.

And I rejoice I am not so severe,
But as I write a line, to weep a tear
For his decease. Such sad extremities
Can make such men as I write elegies.

And wonder uot; for when so great a loss
Falls on a nation, and they slight the cross,
God hath raised prophets to awaken them
From their dull lethargy; witness my pen,

Not used to upbraid the world, though now it must Freely and boldly, for the cause is just.

Dull age! oh, I would spare thee, but thou 'rt worse:
Thou art not only dull, but hast a curse

Of black ingratitude: If not, couldst thou
Part with this matchless man, and make no vow
For thee and thine successively to pay
Some sad remembrance to his dying day?

Did his youth scatter poetry, wherein
Lay love's philosophy? Was every sin
Pictured in his sharp satires, made so foul

That some have feared Sin's shapes, and kept their

soul

Safer by reading verse? Did he give days,
Past marble monuments, to those whose praise
He would perpetuate? Did he (I fear

Envy will doubt) these at his twentieth year?

But, more matured, did his rich soul conceive,
And in harmonious, holy numbers weave
A crown of sacred sonnets, fit t' adorn
A dying martyr's brow, or to be worn
On that blest head of Mary Magdalen,

After she wiped Christ's feet, but not till then?
Did he (fit for such penitents as she
And he to use) leave us a Litany

Which all devout men love, and doubtless shall,
As times grow better, grow more classical?
Did he write hymns, for piety and wit,
Equal to those great grave Prudentius writ?

Spake he all languages? Knew he all laws?
The grounds and use of physic - (but because
"T was mercenary waved it)? went to see
That happy place of Christ's nativity?

Did he return and preach him? preach him so,
As, since St. Paul, none ever did? they know
Those happy souls that heard him, know this truth.
Did he confirm thy ag'd, convert thy youth?
Did he these wonders? and is his dear loss
Mourn'd by so few ?-few for so great a cross.

But sure the silent are ambitious all
To be close mourners at his funeral.
If not; in common pity they forbear,
By repetitions, to renew our care:

Or knowing grief conceived and hid, consumes
Man's life insensibly (as poison's fumes

Corrupt the brain), take silence for the way T'enlarge the soul from these walls, mud and clay (Materials of this body), to remain

With him in heaven, where no promiscuous pain Lessons those joys we have; for with him all Are satisfied with joys essential.

Dwell on these joys, my thoughts!-Oh! do not call
Grief back, by thinking on his funeral.

Forget he loved me. Waste not my swift years
Which haste to David's seventy, filled with fears
And sorrows for his death. Forget his parts,
They find a living grave in good men's hearts:
And, for my first is daily paid for sin,
Forget to pay my second sigh for him:

Forget his powerful preaching; and forget
I am his convert. Oh my frailty! let
My flesh be no more heard; it will obtrude
This lethargy: So should my gratitude,
My vows of gratitude should be so broke,
Which can no more be, than his virtues, spoke
By any but himself.
For which cause I

Write no encomiums, but this elegy;

Which, as a free-will offering, I here give

Fame and the world; and, parting with it, grieve I want abilities fit to set forth

A monument as matchless as his worth.

APRIL 7, 1631.

IZ. WA.

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