John Dryden - Delphi Poets Series

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John Dryden - Delphi Poets Series Page 10

by John Dryden


  As Armies, unoppos’d, for Prey divide. 940

  236

  One mighty Squadron with a Side-wind sped,

  Through narrow Lanes his cumber’d Fire does haste:

  By pow’rful charms of Gold and Silver led,

  The Lombard Banquers and the Change to waste.

  237

  Another backward to the Tow’r would go, 945

  And slowly eats his way against the Wind:

  But the main body of the marching Foe

  Against th’ Imperial Palace is design’d.

  238

  Now Day appears, and with the day the King,

  Whose early Care had robb’d him of his rest: 950

  Far off the Cracks of Falling houses ring,

  And Shrieks of Subjects pierce his tender Breast.

  239

  Near as he draws, thick harbingers of Smoke

  With gloomy Pillars cover all the place:

  Whose little intervals of Night are broke 955

  By Sparks, that drive against his Sacred Face.

  240

  More than his Guards his Sorrows made him known,

  And pious Tears, which down his Cheeks did show’r:

  The Wretched in his Grief forgot their own;

  (So much the Pity of a King has pow’r.) 960

  241

  He wept the Flames of what he lov’d so well,

  And what so well had merited his love:

  For never Prince in Grace did more excel,

  Or Royal City more in Duty strove.

  242

  Nor with an idle Care did he behold: 965

  (Subjects may grieve, but Monarchs must redress;)

  He chears the Fearful and commends the Bold,

  And makes Despairers hope for good Success.

  243

  Himself directs what first is to be done,

  And orders all the Succours which they bring: 970

  The Helpful and the Good about him run,

  And form an Army worthy such a King.

  244

  He sees the dire Contagion spread so fast

  That where it seizes, all Relief is vain:

  And therefore must unwillingly lay waste 975

  That Country, which would, else, the Foe maintain.

  245

  The Powder blows up all before the Fire:

  Th’ amazed flames stand gather’d on a heap;

  And from the precipices-brink retire,

  Afraid to venture on so large a leap. 980

  246

  Thus fighting Fires a while themselves consume,

  But streight like Turks, forc’d on to win or die,

  They first lay tender Bridges of their fume,

  And o’re the Breach in unctuous vapours flie.

  247

  Part stays for Passage, ‘till a gust of wind 985

  Ships o’re their Forces in a shining Sheet:

  Part, creeping under ground, their Journey blind,

  And, climbing from below, their Fellows meet.

  248

  Thus to some desert Plain, or old Wood-side,

  Dire Night-hags come from far to dance their round: 990

  And o’re broad rivers, on their Fiends, they ride,

  Or sweep in Clouds above the blasted ground.

  249

  No help avails: for, Hydra-like, the Fire

  Lifts up his Hundred heads to aim his way:

  And scarce the wealthy can one half retire, 995

  Before he rushes in to share the Prey.

  250

  The Rich grow suppliant, and the Poor grow proud:

  Those offer mighty gain, and these ask more;

  So void of pity is th’ ignoble Crowd,

  When others Ruin may increase their Store. 1000

  251

  As those who live by Shores with joy behold

  Some wealthy Vessel split or stranded nigh;

  And from the Rocks leap down for ship-wrack’d Gold,

  And seek the Tempest which the others flie:

  252

  So these but wait the Owners last despair, 1005

  And what’s permitted to the flames invade:

  Ev’n from their Jaws they hungry morsels tear,

  And, on their backs, the Spoils of Vulcan lade.

  253

  The days were all in this lost labour spent;

  And when the weary King gave place to Night, 1010

  His Beams he to his Royal Brother lent,

  And so shone still in his reflective Light.

  254

  Night came, but without darkness or repose,

  A dismal Picture of the gen’ral Doom;

  Where Souls distracted when the Trumpet blows, 1015

  And half unready with their Bodies come.

  255

  Those who have Homes, when Home they do repair,

  To a last Lodging call their wand’ring Friends:

  Their short uneasie Sleeps are broke with Care,

  To look how near their own Destruction tends. 1020

  256

  Those who have none, sit round where once it was,

  And with full Eyes each wonted Room require:

  Haunting the yet warm Ashes of the place,

  As murder’d Men walk where they did expire.

  257

  Some stir up Coals, and watch the Vestal fire, 1025

  Others in vain from sight of Ruin run;

  And, while through burning Lab’rinths they retire,

  With loathing Eyes repeat what they would shun.

  258

  The most in Feilds like herded Beasts lie down,

  To Dews obnoxious on the grassie Floor; 1030

  And while their Babes in Sleep their Sorrows drown,

  Sad Parents watch the remnants of their Store.

  259

  While by the Motion of the Flames they guess

  What Streets are burning now, and what are near,

  An infant waking to the Paps would press, 1035

  And meets, instead of Milk, a falling Tear.

  260

  No thought can ease them but their Sovereign’s Care,

  Whose Praise th’ afflicted as their Comfort sing;

  Ev’n those, whom Want might drive to just despair,

  Think Life a Blessing under such a King. 1040

  261

  Mean time he sadly suffers in their Grief,

  Out-weeps an Hermite, and out-prays a Saint:

  All the long night he studies their relief,

  How they may be suppli’d, and he may want.

  262

  O God, said he, thou Patron of my Days, 1045

  Guide of my Youth in Exile and Distress!

  Who me unfriended brought’st by wondrous ways,

  The Kingdom of my Fathers to possess:

  263

  Be thou my Judge, with what unwearied Care

  I since have labour’d for my People’s good; 1050

  To bind the Bruises of a Civil War,

  And stop the Issues of their wasting Blood.

  264

  Thou, who hast taught me to forgive the Ill,

  And recompense, as Friends, the Good misled:

  If Mercy be a Precept of thy Will, 1055

  Return that Mercy on thy Servants head.

  265

  Or, if my heedless Youth has stept astray,

  Too soon forgetful of thy gracious hand;

  On me alone thy just Displeasure lay,

  But take thy Judgments from this mourning Land. 1060

  266

  We all have sinn’d, and thou hast laid us low,

  As humble Earth from whence at first we came:

  Like flying Shades before the Clouds we shew,

  And shrink like Parchment in consuming Flame.

  267

  O let it be enough what thou hast done; 1065

  When spotted Deaths ran arm’d thro’ every Street,

  With poison’d Darts whi
ch not the Good could shun,

  The Speedy could out-flie, or Valiant meet.

  268

  The living few, and frequent Funerals then,

  Proclaim’d thy Wrath on this forsaken place: 1070

  And now those few, who are return’d agen,

  Thy searching Judgments to their dwellings trace.

  269

  O pass not, Lord, an absolute Decree,

  Or bind thy Sentence unconditional:

  But in thy Sentence our Remorse foresee, 1075

  And, in that foresight, this thy Doom recall.

  270

  Thy Threatings, Lord, as thine thou maist revoke:

  But, if immutable and fix’d they stand,

  Continue still thy self to give the stroke,

  And let not Foreign-foes oppress Thy Land. 1080

  271

  Th’ Eternal heard, and from the Heav’nly Quire

  Chose out the Cherub with the flaming Sword:

  And bad him swiftly drive th’ approaching Fire

  From where our Naval Magazins were stor’d.

  272

  The blessed Minister his Wings displai’d, 1085

  And like a shooting Star he cleft the night;

  He charg’d the Flames, and those that disobey’d

  He lash’d to duty with his Sword of light.

  273

  The fugitive Flames, chastis’d, went forth to prey

  On pious Structures, by our Fathers rear’d; 1090

  By which to Heav’n they did affect the way,

  Ere Faith in Church-men without Works was heard.

  274

  The wanting Orphans saw with watry Eyes

  Their Founders Charity in Dust laid low,

  And sent to God their ever-answer’d cries, 1095

  (For he protects the Poor, who made them so.)

  275

  Nor could thy Fabrick, Paul’s, defend thee long,

  Though thou wert Sacred to thy Makers praise:

  Though made Immortal by a Poet’s Song,

  And Poets Songs the Theban walls could raise. 1100

  276

  The daring Flames peep’t in, and saw from far

  The awful Beauties of the Sacred Quire:

  But, since it was prophan’d by Civil War,

  Heav’n thought it fit to have it purg’d by fire.

  277

  Now down the narrow Streets it swiftly came, 1105

  And, widely opening, did on both sides prey:

  This benefit we sadly owe the Flame,

  If only Ruin must enlarge our way.

  278

  And now four days the Sun had seen our Woes;

  Four nights the Moon beheld th’ incessant fire; 1110

  It seem’d as if the Stars more sickly rose,

  And farther from the feav’rish North retire.

  279

  In th’ Empyrean Heav’n (the Bless’d abode,)

  The Thrones and the Dominions prostrate lie.

  Not daring to behold their angry God: 1115

  And an hush’d silence damps the tuneful Sky.

  280

  At length th’ Almighty cast a pitying Eye,

  And Mercy softly touch’d his melting Breast:

  He saw the Towns one half in Rubbish lie,

  And eager flames drive on to storm the rest. 1120

  281

  An hollow chrystal Pyramid he takes,

  In firmamental Waters dipt above;

  Of it a broad Extinguisher he makes

  And hoods the Flames that to their quarry strove.

  282

  The vanquish’d Fires withdraw from every place, 1125

  Or, full with feeding, sink into a sleep:

  Each household Genius shows again his face,

  And, from the hearths, the little Lares creep.

  283

  Our King this more than natural change beholds;

  With sober Joy his heart and eyes abound: 1130

  To the All-good his lifted hands he folds,

  And thanks him low on his redeemed ground.

  284

  As when sharp Frosts had long constrain’d the earth,

  A kindly Thaw unlocks it with mild Rain,

  And first the tender Blade peeps up to birth, 1135

  And streight the Green fields laugh with promis’d grain:

  285

  By such degrees the spreading Gladness grew

  In every heart, which Fear had froze before:

  The standing Streets with so much joy they view,

  That with less grief the Perish’d they deplore. 1140

  286

  The Father of the People open’d wide

  His Stores, and all the Poor with Plenty fed:

  Thus God’s Anointed God’s own place suppli’d,

  And fill’d the Empty with his daily Bread.

  287

  This Royal bounty brought its own Reward, 1145

  And, in their Minds, so deep did print the sense;

  That if their Ruins sadly they regard,

  Tis but with fear the sight might drive him thence.

  288

  But so may he live long, that Town to sway,

  Which by his Auspice they will nobler make, 1150

  As he will hatch their Ashes by his stay,

  And not their humble Ruins now forsake.

  289

  They have not lost their Loyalty by Fire;

  Nor is their Courage or their Wealth so low,

  That from his Wars they poorly would retire, 1155

  Or beg the Pity of a vanquish’d Foe.

  290

  Not with more Constancy the Jews of old,

  By Cyrus from rewarded Exile sent,

  Their Royal City did in Dust behold,

  Or with more vigour to rebuild it went. 1160

  291

  The utmost Malice of their Stars is past,

  And two dire Comets, which have scourg’d the Town

  In their own Plague and Fire have breath’d their last,

  Or, dimly, in their sinking sockets frown.

  292

  Now frequent Trines the happier lights among, 1165

  And high rais’d Jove from his dark Prison freed,

  (Those Weights took off that on his Planet hung,)

  Will gloriously the new-laid Works succeed.

  293

  Me-thinks already, from this Chymick flame,

  I see a city of more precious mold: 1170

  Rich as the town which gives the Indies name,

  With Silver pav’d, and all divine with Gold.

  294

  Already labouring with a mighty fate,

  She shakes the Rubbish from her mounting Brow,

  And seems to have renew’d her Charters date, 1175

  Which Heav’n will to the death of time allow.

  295

  More great than human now, and more August,

  New deified she from her Fires does rise:

  Her widening Streets on new Foundations trust,

  And, opening, into larger parts she flies. 1180

  296

  Before, she like some Shepherdess did shew,

  Who sate to bathe her by a River’s side;

  Not answering to her fame, but rude and low,

  Nor taught the beauteous Arts of Modern pride.

  297

  Now, like a Maiden Queen, she will behold, 1185

  From her high Turrets, hourly Sutors come:

  The East with Incense, and the West with Gold,

  Will stand, like Suppliants, to receive her Doom.

  298

  The silver Thames, her own domestick Floud,

  Shall bear her Vessels, like a sweeping Train, 1190

  And often wind (as of his Mistress proud,)

  With longing eyes to meet her Face again.

  299

  The wealthy Tagus, and the wealthier Rhine,

  The glory of their Towns no more shall boast,
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  And Sein, that would with Belgian Rivers join, 1195

  Shall find her Lustre stain’d, and Traffick lost.

  300

  The vent’rous Merchant who design’d more far,

  And touches on our hospitable Shore,

  Charm’d with the Splendour of this Northern Star,

  Shall here unlade him, and depart no more. 1200

  301

  Our pow’rful Navy shall no longer meet,

  The wealth of France or Holland to invade:

  The beauty of this Town without a Fleet,

  From all the World shall vindicate her Trade.

  302

  And, while this fam’d Emporium we prepare, 1205

  The British Ocean shall such Triumphs boast,

  That those, who now disdain our Trade to share,

  Shall rob like Pyrats on our wealthy Coast.

  303

  Already we have conquer’d half the War,

  And the less dang’rous part is left behind: 1210

  Our Trouble now is but to make them dare,

  And not so great to Vanquish as to Find.

  304

  Thus to the Eastern wealth through Storms we go,

  But now, the Cape once doubled, fear no more:

  A constant Trade-wind will securely blow, 1215

  And gently lay us on the Spicy shore.

  MAC FLECKNOE

  Among Dryden’s greatest achievements are his satiric verse, including his mock-heroic MacFlecknoe, a more personal product of his Laureate years. This lampoon was circulated in manuscript as an attack on the playwright Thomas Shadwell. Dryden’s main goal in the work was to “satirize Shadwell, ostensibly for his offenses against literature but more immediately we may suppose for his habitual badgering of him on the stage and in print.”

  Written about 1678, the poem was not published until 1682 and was the outcome of a series of disagreements between Shadwell and Dryden. Their quarrel developed from disagreements over the genius of Ben Jonson, especially as Shadwell believed Dryden undervalued Jonson’s poetry. Shadwell and Dryden were separated not only by literary grounds, but also by political ones as Shadwell was a Whig, while Dryden was an outspoken supporter of the Stuart monarchy.

  MacFlecknoe illustrates Shadwell as the heir to a kingdom of poetic dullness, represented by his association with Richard Flecknoe, an earlier poet Dryden disliked, but he does not use belittling techniques to satirise him, opting instead for a much subtler approach. The multiplicity of allusions to 17th Century literary works and to classic Greek and Roman literature, with which the poem is riddled, demonstrates Dryden’s complex approach to satire and the fact that he satirises his own work shows his mastery over and respect towards the mock-heroic style in which the poem is written.

  The satire begins in the tone of an epic work, presenting Shadwell’s defining characteristic as dullness, just as every epic hero has a defining characteristic: Odysseus’ is cunning; Achilles’ is wrath; the hero of Spenser’s The Faerie Queene is of holiness; whilst Satan in Paradise Lost has the defining characteristic of pride. Therefore, Dryden subverts the theme of the defining characteristic by giving Shadwell a negative characteristic as his only virtue. Dryden uses the mock-heroic through his use of the heightened language of the epic to treat the trivial subjects such as poorly written and largely dismissible poetry. The juxtaposition of the lofty style with unexpected nouns such as ‘dullness’ provides an ironic contrast and makes the satiric point by the obvious disparity. In this, it works at the verbal level, with the language being carried by strong compelling rhythms and rhymes.

 

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