Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Author’s note
- Abbreviations
- Prologue
- 1 Intrat John Cruso
- 2 John Cruso’s school days
- 3 John Cruso’s early adult life
- 4 Cruso’s elegy to Simeon Ruytinck (1622)
- 5 Cruso the English poet
- 6 1632 – Cruso’s annus mirabilis
- 7 Cruso the translator
- 8 Cruso’s 1642 Dutch verses: praise and lamentation
- 9 Cruso and the English Civil Wars
- 10 Cruso the Epigrammatist
- 11 Cruso’s final years
- Epilogue
- Appendix 1 Poems by John Cruso
- Appendix 2 Liminary verses in John Cruso’s English publications
- Bibliography
- Index
- Studies in Renaissance Literature
Appendix 1 - Poems by John Cruso
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Author’s note
- Abbreviations
- Prologue
- 1 Intrat John Cruso
- 2 John Cruso’s school days
- 3 John Cruso’s early adult life
- 4 Cruso’s elegy to Simeon Ruytinck (1622)
- 5 Cruso the English poet
- 6 1632 – Cruso’s annus mirabilis
- 7 Cruso the translator
- 8 Cruso’s 1642 Dutch verses: praise and lamentation
- 9 Cruso and the English Civil Wars
- 10 Cruso the Epigrammatist
- 11 Cruso’s final years
- Epilogue
- Appendix 1 Poems by John Cruso
- Appendix 2 Liminary verses in John Cruso’s English publications
- Bibliography
- Index
- Studies in Renaissance Literature
Summary
(A) THREE ENGLISH ELEGIES TO LAWRENCE HOWLETT
(I) IN OBITUM PII & DOCTISSIMI VIRI D.L. HOWLETT PASTORIS FIDELISSIMI.
(Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, DC: V.a.245, fols 22v–24r)
Were't not for faith and that I firmely trust,
Heavens wayes (how ere obscure) are allwayes iust,
And that all lynes of great’st circumference
Meete in the center of Godes providence;
I should (as others) cladd in sable weed,
Warble sadd ditties on my vntun’d reed,
And curse the fates for cutting of the thredd
Of howlettes life. Howlett they say is dead,
Dead! tis an error. See how sorrow blindes
Our blubbering eyes, and so distractes our myndes,
As passion leades us headlong, and wee deeme
Of thinges not as they are, but as they seeme:
ffor lett but settled reason deeper dive,
The tale proves false and howlett is alive.
‘Tis true, hee is remov’d: for here being pent
In a close dwelling, giving small content
To such a tenant, hee dislik’d his Cell,
Which soone, for want of due repayring, fell
Into the Lordes handes. Finding him thus fledd
(Though to a better house) men thought him dead:
Nor was this th’onely reason which remov’d him,
A patron, which had ever dearly lov’d him,
To a farr better living call’d him hence:
This but depended on benevolence,
A meere impropriated Donative,
Where men thinck nothing due, but what they give,
Is of meere curtesie, so his strongest tye
ffor endles paynes, was meere vncertayntie.
Where now hee is, his labor's nothing such,
Yet his reward most ample: in so much
As nothing can be added: and so sure
As (spight of chances) ever shall endure.
Now to bewayle him seemes no lesse,
Then envye him this height of happines.
Observanti. ergo m.rens posuit I. Cruso.(II) IN PR.MATURAM MORTEM REVERENDI VIRI D:L: HOWLETT. EPICEDIUM.
(Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, DC: V.a.245, fols 22v–24r)
This urne contaynes so much as mortall was
Of reverent Howlett: man thus fades like grasse:
Or like a flower, which while wee gaze upon
With admiration, in a trice ‘tis gon.
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- Information
- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2022