Textarchiv - John Denham https://www.textarchiv.com/john-denham Anglo-Irish poet and courtier. Born on 1615 in Dublin, Republic of Ireland. Died 19 March 1669 in London, United Kingdom. de Cooper's Hill https://www.textarchiv.com/john-denham/coopers-hill <div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:text content:encoded"><p>Sure there are poets which did never dream<br /> Upon Parnassus, nor did taste the stream<br /> Of Helicon; we therefore may suppose<br /> Those made not poets, but the poets those,<br /> And as courts make not kings, but kings the court,<br /> So where the Muses and their train resort,<br /> Parnassus stands; if I can be to thee<br /> A poet, thou Parnassus art to me.<br /> Nor wonder, if (advantaged in my flight,<br /> By taking wing from thy auspicious height)<br /> Through untraced ways and airy paths I fly,<br /> More boundless in my fancy than my eye:<br /> My eye which, swift as thought, contracts the space<br /> That lies between, and first salutes the place<br /> Crown&#039;d with that sacred pile, so vast, so high,<br /> That, whether &#039;tis a part of earth or sky,<br /> Uncertain seems, and may be thought a proud<br /> Aspiring mountain, or descending cloud.<br /> Paul&#039;s, the late theme of such a Muse, whose flight<br /> Has bravely reach&#039;d and soar&#039;d above thy height:<br /> Now shalt thou stand, though sword, or time, or fire,<br /> Or zeal more fierce than they, thy fall conspire,<br /> Secure, whilst thee the best of poets sings,<br /> Preserved from ruin by the best of kings.<br /> Under his proud survey the city lies,<br /> And like a mist beneath a hill doth rise;<br /> Whose state and wealth, the business and the crowd,<br /> Seems at this distance but a darker cloud:<br /> And is, to him who rightly things esteems,<br /> No other in effect than what it seems:<br /> Where, with like haste, though sev&#039;ral ways, they run,<br /> Some to undo, and some to be undone;<br /> While luxury and wealth, like war and peace,<br /> Are each the other&#039;s ruin and increase;<br /> As rivers lost in seas some secret vein<br /> Thence reconveys, there to be lost again.<br /> O happiness of sweet retired content!<br /> To be at once secure and innocent.<br /> Windsor the next (where Mars with Venus dwells,<br /> Beauty with strength) above the valley swells<br /> Into my eye, and doth itself present<br /> With such an easy and unforced ascent,<br /> That no stupendous precipice denies<br /> Access, no horror turns away our eyes:<br /> But such a rise as doth at once invite<br /> A pleasure and a rev&#039;rence from the sight:<br /> Thy mighty master&#039;s emblem, in whose face<br /> Sate meekness, heighten&#039;d with majestic grace;<br /> Such seems thy gentle height, made only proud<br /> To be the basis of that pompous load,<br /> Than which, a nobler weight no mountain bears,<br /> But Atlas only, which supports the spheres.<br /> When Nature&#039;s hand this ground did thus advance,<br /> &#039;Twas guided by a wiser power than Chance;<br /> Mark&#039;d out for such an use, as if &#039;twere meant<br /> T&#039; invite the builder, and his choice prevent.<br /> Nor can we call it choice, when what we choose,<br /> Folly or blindness only could refuse.<br /> A crown of such majestic towers doth grace<br /> The gods&#039; great mother, when her heavenly race<br /> Do homage to her, yet she cannot boast,<br /> Among that num&#039;rous and celestial host.<br /> More heroes than can Windsor; nor doth Fame&#039;s<br /> Immortal book record more noble names.<br /> Not to look back so far, to whom this isle<br /> Owes the first glory of so brave a pile,<br /> Whether to Cæsar, Albanact, or Brute,<br /> The British Arthur, or the Danish Knute,<br /> (Though this of old no less contest did move<br /> Than when for Homer&#039;s birth seven cities strove)<br /> (Like him in birth, thou shouldst be like in fame,<br /> As thine his fate, if mine had been his flame),<br /> But whosoe&#039;er it was, Nature design&#039;d<br /> First a brave place, and then as brave a mind;<br /> Not to recount those sev&#039;ral kings, to whom<br /> It gave a cradle, or to whom a tomb;<br /> But thee, great Edward, and thy greater son<br /> (The lilies which his father wore, he won),<br /> And thy Bellona, who the consort came<br /> Not only to thy bed, but to thy fame, so<br /> She to thy triumph led one captive king,<br /> And brought that son, which did the second bring.<br /> Then didst thou found that Order (whether love<br /> Or victory thy royal thoughts did move),<br /> Each was a noble cause, and nothing less<br /> Than the design, has been the great success:<br /> Which foreign kings, and emperors esteem<br /> The second honour to their diadem.<br /> Had thy great destiny but given thee skill<br /> To know, as well as power to act her will,<br /> That from those kings, who then thy captives were,<br /> In after times should spring a royal pair<br /> Who should possess all that thy mighty power,<br /> Or thy desires more mighty, did devour:<br /> To whom their better fate reserves whate&#039;er<br /> The victor hopes for, or the vanquish&#039;d fear;<br /> That blood, which thou and thy great grandsire shed,<br /> And all that since these sister nations bled,<br /> Had been unspilt, had happy Edward known.<br /> That all the blood he spilt had been his own.<br /> When he that patron chose, in whom are join&#039;d<br /> Soldier and martyr, and his arms confin&#039;d<br /> Within the azure circle, he did seem<br /> But to foretell, and prophesy of him,<br /> Who to his realms that azure round hath join&#039;d,<br /> Which Nature for their bound at first design&#039;d;<br /> That bound, which to the world&#039;s extremest ends,<br /> Endless itself, its liquid arms extends.<br /> Nor doth he need those emblems which we paint,<br /> But is himself the soldier and the saint.<br /> Here should my wonder dwell, and here my praise;<br /> But my fix&#039;d thoughts my wand&#039;ring eye betrays,<br /> Viewing a neighb&#039;ring hill, whose top of late<br /> A chapel crown&#039;d, &#039;till in the common fate<br /> Th&#039; adjoining abbey fell. (May no such storm<br /> Fall on our times, when ruin must reform!)<br /> Tell me, my Muse! what monstrous dire offence,<br /> What crime could any Christian king incense<br /> To such a rage? Was&#039;t luxury, or lust?<br /> Was he so temperate, so chaste, so just?<br /> Were these their crimes? They were his own much more;<br /> But wealth is crime enough to him that&#039;s poor,<br /> Who having spent the treasures of his crown,<br /> Condemns their luxury to feed his own.<br /> And yet this act, to varnish o&#039;er the shame<br /> Of sacrilege, must bear devotion&#039;s name.<br /> No crime so bold, but would be understood<br /> A real, or at least a seeming good:<br /> Who fears not to do ill, yet fears the name,<br /> And, free from conscience, is a slave to fame.<br /> Thus he the church at once protects, and spoils:<br /> But princes&#039; swords are sharper than their styles;<br /> And thus to th&#039;ages past he makes amends,<br /> Their charity destroys, their faith defends.<br /> Then did Religion in a lazy cell,<br /> In empty, airy contemplations dwell;<br /> And like the block, unmovèd lay; but ours,<br /> As much too active, like the stork devours.<br /> Is there no temp&#039;rate region can be known,<br /> Betwixt their frigid, and our torrid zone?<br /> Could we not wake from that lethargic dream,<br /> But to be restless in a worse extreme?<br /> And for that lethargy was there no cure,<br /> But to be cast into a calenture?<br /> Can knowledge have no bound, but must advance<br /> So far, to make us wish for ignorance,<br /> And rather in the dark to grope our way,<br /> Than, led by a false guide, to err by day?<br /> Who sees these dismal heaps, but would demand<br /> What barbarous invader sack&#039;d the land?<br /> But when he hears no Goth, no Turk did bring<br /> This desolation, but a Christian king;<br /> When nothing but the name of zeal appears<br /> &#039;Twixt our best actions and the worst of theirs,<br /> What does he think our sacrilege would spare,<br /> When such th&#039;effects of our devotions are?<br /> Parting from thence &#039;twixt anger, shame and fear,<br /> Those for what&#039;s past, and this for what&#039;s too near,<br /> My eye descending from the hill, surveys<br /> Where Thames among the wanton valleys strays.<br /> Thames, the most loved of all the Ocean&#039;s sons<br /> By his old sire, to his embraces runs;<br /> Hasting to pay his tribute to the sea,<br /> Like mortal life to meet eternity.<br /> Though with those streams he no resemblance hold,<br /> Whose foam is amber, and their gravel gold,<br /> His genuine and less guilty wealth t&#039;explore,<br /> Search not his bottom, but survey his shore,<br /> O&#039;er which he kindly spreads his spacious wing,<br /> And hatches plenty for th&#039;ensuing spring;<br /> Nor then destroys it with too fond a stay,<br /> Like mothers which their infants overlay;<br /> Nor with a sudden and impetuous wave,<br /> Like profuse kings, resumes the wealth he gave.<br /> No unexpected inundations spoil<br /> The mower&#039;s hopes, nor mock the ploughman&#039;s toil:<br /> But godlike his unwearied bounty flows;<br /> First loves to do, then loves the good he does.<br /> Nor are his blessings to his banks confined,<br /> But free and common as the sea or wind;<br /> When he, to boast or to disperse his stores,<br /> Full of the tributes of his grateful shores,<br /> Visits the world, and in his flying towers<br /> Brings home to us, and makes both Indies ours;<br /> Finds wealth where &#039;tis, bestows it where it wants,<br /> Cities in deserts, woods in cities plants;<br /> So that to us no thing, no place is strange,<br /> While his fair bosom is the world&#039;s exchange.<br /> Oh, could I flow like thee, and make thy stream<br /> My great example, as it is my theme!<br /> Though deep, yet clear; though gentle, yet not dull;<br /> Strong without rage, without o&#039;erflowing full.<br /> Heaven her Eridanus no more shall boast,<br /> Whose fame in thine, like lesser current, &#039;s lost;<br /> Thy nobler streams shall visit Jove&#039;s abodes,<br /> To shine among the stars, and bathe the gods.<br /> Here Nature, whether more intent to please<br /> Us or herself with strange varieties,<br /> (For things of wonder give no less delight<br /> To the wise maker&#039;s, than beholder&#039;s sight;<br /> Though these delights from sev&#039;ral causes move;<br /> For so our children, thus our friends, we love),<br /> Wisely she knew the harmony of things,<br /> As well as that of sounds, from discord springs.<br /> Such was the discord, which did first disperse<br /> Form, order, beauty, through the universe;<br /> While dryness moisture, coldness heat resists,<br /> All that we have, and that we are, subsists;<br /> While the steep, horrid roughness of the wood<br /> Strives with the gentle calmness of the flood,<br /> Such huge extremes when Nature doth unite,<br /> Wonder from thence results, from thence delight.<br /> The stream is so transparent, pure, and clear,<br /> That had the self-enamour&#039;d youth gazed here,<br /> So fatally deceived he had not been,<br /> While he the bottom, not his face had seen.<br /> But his proud head the airy mountain hides<br /> Among the clouds; his shoulders and his sides<br /> A shady mantle clothes; his curlèd brows<br /> Frown on the gentle stream, which calmly flows,<br /> While winds and storms his lofty forehead beat:<br /> The common fate of all that&#039;s high or great.<br /> Low at his foot a spacious plain is placed,<br /> Between the mountain and the stream embraced,<br /> Which shade and shelter from the hill derives,<br /> While the kind river wealth and beauty gives,<br /> And in the mixture of all these appears<br /> Variety, which all the rest endears.<br /> This scene had some bold Greek or British bard<br /> Beheld of old, what stories had we heard<br /> Of fairies, satyrs, and the nymphs their dames,<br /> Their feasts, their revels, and their am&#039;rous flames?<br /> &#039;Tis still the same, although their airy shape<br /> All but a quick poetic sight escape.<br /> There Faunus and Sylvanus keep their courts,<br /> And thither all the horned host resorts<br /> To graze the ranker mead; that noble herd<br /> On whose sublime and shady fronts is rear&#039;d<br /> Nature&#039;s great masterpiece; to show how soon,<br /> Great things are made, but sooner are undone.<br /> Here have I seen the King, when great affairs<br /> Gave leave to slacken, and unbend his cares,<br /> Attended to the chase by all the flower<br /> Of youth whose hopes a nobler prey devour:<br /> Pleasure with praise and danger they would buy,<br /> And wish a foe that would not only fly.<br /> The stag now conscious of his fatal growth,<br /> At once indulgent to his fear and sloth,<br /> To some dark covert his retreat had made,<br /> Where nor man&#039;s eye, nor heaven&#039;s should invade<br /> His soft repose; when th&#039;unexpected sound<br /> Of dogs, and men, his wakeful ears does wound.<br /> Roused with the noise, he scarce believes his ear,<br /> Willing to think th&#039;illusions of his fear<br /> Had given this false alarm, but straight his view<br /> Confirms that more than all he fears is true.<br /> Betray&#039;d in all his strengths, the wood beset;<br /> All instruments, all arts of ruin met;<br /> He calls to mind his strength and then his speed,<br /> His winged heels, and then his armed head;<br /> With these t&#039;avoid, with that his fate to meet:<br /> But fear prevails, and bids him trust his feet.<br /> So fast he flies, that his reviewing eye<br /> Has lost the chasers, and his ear the cry;<br /> Exulting, till he finds their nobler sense<br /> Their disproportion&#039;d speed doth recompense;<br /> Then curses his conspiring feet, whose scent<br /> Betrays that safety which their swiftness lent;<br /> Then tries his friends; among the baser herd,<br /> Where he so lately was obey&#039;d and fear&#039;d,<br /> His safety seeks; the herd, unkindly wise,<br /> Or chases him from thence, or from him flies;<br /> Like a declining statesman, left forlorn<br /> To his friends&#039; pity, and pursuers&#039; scorn,<br /> With shame remembers, while himself was one<br /> Of the same herd, himself the same had done.<br /> Thence to the coverts and the conscious groves,<br /> The scenes of his past triumphs and his loves;<br /> Sadly surveying where he ranged alone<br /> Prince of the soil, and all the herd his own,<br /> And like a bold knight-errant did proclaim.<br /> Combat to all, and bore away the dame,<br /> And taught the woods to echo to the stream<br /> His dreadful challenge, and his clashing beam;<br /> Yet faintly now declines the fatal strife;<br /> So much his love was dearer than his life.<br /> Now every leaf, and every moving breath<br /> Presents a foe, and every foe a death.<br /> Wearied, forsaken, and pursued, at last<br /> All safety in despair of safety placed,<br /> Courage he thence resumes, resolved to bear<br /> All their assaults, since &#039;tis in vain to fear.<br /> And now, too late, he wishes for the fight<br /> That strength he wasted in ignoble flight:<br /> But when he sees the eager chase renew&#039;d,<br /> Himself by dogs, the dogs by men pursued,<br /> He straight revokes his bold resolve, and more<br /> Repents his courage than his fear before;<br /> Finds that uncertain ways unsafest are,<br /> And doubt a greater mischief than despair.<br /> Then to the stream, when neither friends, nor force,<br /> Nor speed, nor art, avail, he shapes his course;<br /> Thinks not their rage so desperate to assay<br /> An element more merciless than they.<br /> But fearless they pursue, nor can the flood<br /> Quench their dire thirst; alas! they thirst for blood.<br /> So t&#039;wards a ship the oar-finn&#039;d galleys ply,<br /> Which, wanting sea to ride, or wind to fly,<br /> Stands but to fall revenged on those that dare<br /> Tempt the last fury of extreme despair.<br /> So fares the stag, among th&#039;enraged hounds,<br /> Repels their force, and wounds returns for wounds;<br /> And as a hero, whom his baser foes<br /> In troops surround, now these assails, now those,<br /> Though prodigal of life, disdains to die<br /> By common hands; but if he can descry<br /> Some nobler foe approach, to him he calls,<br /> And begs his fate, and then contented falls.<br /> So when the king a mortal shaft lets fly<br /> From his unerring hand, then glad to die,<br /> Proud of the wound, to it resigns his blood,<br /> And stains the crystal with a purple flood.<br /> This a more innocent, and happy chase,<br /> Than when of old, but in the selfsame place,<br /> Fair Liberty pursued, and meant a prey<br /> To lawless power, here turn&#039;d, and stood at bay;<br /> When in that remedy all hope was placed<br /> Which was, or should have been at least, the last.<br /> Here was that charter seal&#039;d, wherein the crown<br /> All marks of arbitrary power lays down:<br /> Tyrant and slave, those names of hate and fear,<br /> The happier style of king and subject bear:<br /> Happy, when both to the same centre move,<br /> When kings give liberty, and subjects love.<br /> Therefore not long in force this charter stood;<br /> Wanting that seal, it must be seal&#039;d in blood.<br /> The subjects arm&#039;d, the more their princes gave,<br /> Th&#039; advantage only took the more to crave;<br /> Till kings by giving, give themselves away,<br /> And e&#039;en that power, that should deny, betray.<br /> &#039;Who gives constrain&#039;d, but his own fear reviles,<br /> Not thank&#039;d, but scorn&#039;d; nor are they gifts, but spoils.&#039;<br /> Thus kings, by grasping more than they could hold,<br /> First made their subjects, by oppression, bold:<br /> And popular sway, by forcing kings to give<br /> More than was fit for subjects to receive,<br /> Ran to the same extremes; and one excess<br /> Made both, by striving to be greater, less.<br /> When a calm river, raised with sudden rains,<br /> Or snows dissolved, o&#039;erflows th&#039;adjoining plains,<br /> The husbandmen with high raised banks secure<br /> Their greedy hopes, and this he can endure;<br /> But if with bays and dams they strive to force<br /> His channel to a new, or narrow course;<br /> No longer then within his banks he dwells,<br /> First to a torrent, then a deluge, swells;<br /> Stronger and fiercer by restraint he roars,<br /> And knows no bound, but makes his power his shores.</p> </div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-author field-type-taxonomy-term-reference field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" rel="schema:author"><a href="/john-denham" typeof="skos:Concept" property="schema:name" datatype="">John Denham</a></div></div></div><span rel="schema:url" resource="/john-denham/coopers-hill" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span><span property="schema:name" content="Cooper&#039;s Hill" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span> Mon, 16 Jan 2017 21:42:10 +0000 mrbot 5923 at https://www.textarchiv.com