Daniel, Samuel
A Defence of Ryme
Poems and A Defence of Ryme. Arthur Colby Sprague, ed. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1965
1603
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To all the Worthie Lo-
uers and learned Professors of Ryme,
within his Maisesties Dominions,
S.D.
WOrthie Gentlemen, about a yeare since, upon
the great reproach given to the Professors of
Rime, and the use therof, I wrote a private lette, as
a defence of mine owne undertakings in that kinde, to
a learned Gentleman a great friend of mine, then in
Court. Which I did, rather to confirm my selfe in
mine owne courses, and to hold him from being wonne
from us, then with any desire to publish the same to
the world.
But now, seeing the times to promise a more re-
garde to the present condition of our writings, in re-
spect of our Soveraignes happy inclination this way;
whereby wee are rather to expect an incoragement to
go on with what we do, then that any innouation
should checke us, with a shew of what it would do in
an other kinde, and yet doe nothing but deprave: I
have now given a greater body to the same Argu-
ment. And here present it to your view, under the
patronage of a Noble Earle, who in bloud and nature
is interessed to take our parte in this cause, with
others, who cannot, I know, but holde deare the
monuments that have beene left unto the world in
this manner of composition. And who I trust will
take in good parte this my defence, if not as it is my
particular, yet in respect of the cause I undertake,
which I heere invoke you all to protect.
Sa: D.
TO
WILLIAM HERBERT EARLE
OF PEMBROOKE.
THe Generall Custome, and use of Ryme in this
kingdome, Noble Lord, having beene so long (as
if from a Graunt of Nature) held unquestionable;
made me to imagine that it lay altogither out of the
way of contradiction, and was become so natural, as
we should never have had a thought to cast it off into
reproch, or be made to thinke that it ill-became our
language. But now I see, when there is opposition
made to all things in the world by wordes, wee must
nowe at length likewise fall to contend for words
themselves; and make a question, whether they be
right or not. For we are tolde how that our measures
goe wrong, all Ryming is grosse, vulgare, barbarous,
which if it be so, we have lost much labour to no pur-
pose: and for mine owne particular, I cannot but
blame the fortune of the times and mine owne Genius
that cast me vpon so wrong a course, drawne with
the current of custome, and an vnexamined example.
Hauing beene first incourag'd or fram'd thereunto by
your most Worthy and Honourable Mother, receiu-
ing the first notion for the formall ordering of those
compositions at Wilton, which I must euer acknow-
ledge to haue beene my best Schoole, and thereof al-
wayes am to hold a feeling and gratefull Memory.
Afterward, drawne farther on by the well-liking and
approbation of my worthy Lord, the fosterer of mee
and my Muse, I aduentured to bestow all my whole
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powers therein, perceiuing it agreed so well, both with
the complexion of the times, and mine owne constitu-
tion, as I found not wherein I might better imploy
me. But yet now, vpon the great discouery of these
new measures, threatning to ouerthrow the whole
state of Ryme in this kingdom, I must either stand
out to defend, or else be forced to forsake my selfe,
and giue ouer all. And though irresolution and a
ture, and that the least checke of reprehension, if it
sauour of reason, will as easily shake my resolution
as any mans liuing: yet in this case I know not how I
am growne more resolued, and beatme off from the
station of my profession, which by the law of nature
I am set to defend.
And the rather for that this detractor (whose com-
mendable Rymes albeit now himselfe an enemy to
ryme, haue giuen heretofore to the world the best
notice of his worth) is a man of faire parts, and good
reputation, and therefore the reproach forcibly cast
from such a hand may throw downe more at once
then the labores of many shall in long time build vp
opinion, and the worlds inconstancy, which knowes
not well what it would haue, and:
Discit enim citius, meminitque libentius illud
Quod quis deridet quam quod probat & veneratur.
And he who is thus, become our vnkinde aduer-
sarie, must pardon vs if we be as iealous of our fame
and reputation, as hee is desirous of credite by his
new-old arte, and must consider that we cannot, in a
thing that concernes vs so neere, but haue a feeling of
the wrong done, wherein euery Rymer in this vniuer-
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sall Iland as well as my selfe, stands interressed. So
that if his charitie had equally drawne with his learn-
ing hee would haue forborne to procure the enuie of
so powerfull number vpon him, from whom he can-
not but expect the returne of a like measure of blame,
and onely haue made way to his owne grace, by the
proofe of his abilitie, without the disparaging of vs,
who would haue bin glad to haue stood quietly by
him, & perhaps commended his aduenture, seeing
that euermore of one science and other may be borne,
& that these Salies made out of the quarter of our set
knowledges, are the gallant proffers onely of attemp-
tiue spirits, and commendable though they worke no
other effect than make a Brauado: and I know it
were Indeens, & morosum nimis, alienae industriae,
modum ponere. We could well haue allowed of his
numbers had he not disgraced our Ryme; Which both
Custome and Nature doth most powerfully defend.
Custome that is before all Law, Nature that is aboue
all Arte. Euery language hath her proper number or
measure fitted to vse and delight, which, Custome in-
tertaining by the allowance of the Eare, doth inden-
ize, and make naturall. All verse is butb a frame of
wordes confinde within certaine measure; differing
from the ordinarie speach, and introduced, the better
to expresse mens conceipts, both for delight and
memorie. Which frame of wordes consisting of Rith-
mus and Metrum, Number or Measure, are disposed
into diuers fashions, according to the humour of the
Composer and the set of the time; And these Rhythmi
as Aristotle saith are familiar amongst all Nations,
and e\ naturali & sponte fusa compositione: And they
fall as naturally already in our language as euer Art
can make them; being such as the Eare of it selfe doth
marshall in their proper roomes, and they of them-
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selues will not willingly be put out of their ranke; and
that in such a verse as best comports with the Nature
of our language. And for our Ryme (which is an ex-
cellencei added to this worke of measure, and a Har-
monie, farre happier than any proportion Antiquitie
could euer shew vs) dooth adde more grace, and hath
more of delight than euer bare numbers, howsoeuer
they can be forced to runne in our slow language, can
possibly yeeld. Which, whether it be deriu'd of
Rhythmus, or of Romance which were songs the Bards
& Druydes about Rymes vsed, & therof were caled
Remensi, as some Italians hold; or howsoeuer, it is
likewise nimber and harmonie of words, consisting of
an agreeing sound in the last silables of seuerall
verses, giuing both to the Eare an Eccho of a delight-
full report & to the Memorie a deeper impression of
what is deliuered therin. For as Greeke and Latine
verse consists of the number and quantitie of sil-
lables, so doth the English verse of measure and ac-
cent. And though it doth not strictly obserue long
and short sillables, yet it most religiously respects the
accent: and as the short and the make number,
so the Acute and graue accent yeelde harmonie: And
harmonie is likewise number, so that the English
verse then hath number, measure and harmonie in
the best proportion of Musike. Which being more
certain & more resounding, works that effort of mo-
tion with as happy successe as either the Greek or
Latin. And so naturall a melody is it, & so vniuersall
as it seems to be generally borne with al the nations
of the world, as an hereditary eloquence proper to all
mankind. The vniuersallitie argues the generall
power of it: for if the Barbarian vse it, then it shews
that it swais th'affection of the Barbarian, if ciuil
nations practise it, it proues that it works vpon the
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harts of ciuil nations: If all, then that it hath a power
in nature on all. Georgieuez de Turcarum moribus,
hath an example of the Turkish Rymes iust of the
measure of our verse of eleuen sillables, in feminine
Rymes: neuer begotten I am perswaded by any exam-
ple in Europe, but borne no doubt in Scythia, and
brought ouer Caucasus and Mount Taurus. The
Sclauonian and Arabian tongs acquaint a great part
of Asia and Affrique with it, the Moscouite, Polack,
Hungarian, German, Italian, French, and Spaniard
vse no other harmonie of words. The Irish, Briton,
Scot, Dane, Saxon, English, and all the Inhabiters of
this Iland, either haue hither brought, or here found
the same in vse. And such a force hath it in nature,
or so made by nature, as the Latine numbers notwith-
standing their excellencie, seemed not sufficient to
satitsfie the eare of the world thereunto accustomed,
without this Harmonicall cadence: which made the
most learned of all nations labour with exceeding
trauaile to bring those numbers likewise vnto it:
which many did with that happinesse, as neither their
puritie of tongue, nor their materiall contemplations
are thereby any way disgraced, but rather deserue to
be reuerenced of all gratefull posteritie, with the due
regard of their worth. And for Schola Salerna, and
those Carmina Prouerbialia, who finds not therein
more precepts for vse, concerning diet, health, and
conuersation, then Cato, Theognes, or all the Greekes
and Latines can shew vs in that kinde of teaching:
and that in so few words, both for delight to the eare,
and the hold of memorie, as they are to be imbraced
of all modest readers that studie to know and not to
depraue.
Me thinkes it is a strange imperfection, that men
should thus ouer-runne the estimation of good things
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with so violent a censure, as though it must please
none else, because it like not them. Whereas Oportet
arbitratores esse non contradictores eos qui verum iu-
dicaturi sunt, saith Arist. though he could not ob-
serue it himselfe. And milde Charitie tells vs:
--non ego paucis
Offendor maculis quas aut incuria fudit
Aut himana parum cauet natura. For all men
haue their errors, and we must take the best of their
powers, and leaue the rest as not appertaining vn-
to vs.
Ill customes are to be left, I graunt it: but I see not
howe that can be taken for an ill custome, which na-
ture hath thus ratified, all nations receiued, time so
long confirmed, the effects such as it performes those
offices of motion for which it is imployed; delighting
the eare, stirring the heart, and satisfying the iudge-
ment in such sort as I doubt whether euer single num-
bers will do in our Climate, if they shew no more
worke of wonder then yet we see. And if euer they
prooue to become any thing, it mist be by the ap-
probation of many ages that must giue them their
strength for any operation, or before the world will
feele where the pulse, life, and enargie lies, which now
we are sure where to haue in our Rymes, whose
knowne frame hath those due staies for the minde,
those incounters of touch as makes the motion cer-
taine, though the varietie be infinite. Nor will the
Generall sorte, for whom we write (the wisef being
aboue bookes) taste these laboured measures but as
an orderly prose when wee haue all done. For this
kinde acquaintance and continaull familiaritie euer
had betwixt our eare and this cadence, is growne to
so intimate a friendship, as it will nowe hardly euer
be brought to misse it. For be the verse neuer so
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good, neuer so full, it seemes not to satisfie nor breede
that delight as when it is met and combined with a
like sounding accent. Which seemes as the iointure
without which it hangs loose, and cannot subsist, but
runnes wildely on, like a tedious fancie without a
close: suffer then the world to inioy that which it
knowes, and what it likes. Seeing that whatsoeuer
force of words doth mooue, delight and sway the af-
fections of men, in what Scythian sorte soeuer it be
disposed or vttered: that is true number, measure,
eloquence, and the perfection of speach: which I said,
hath as many shapes as there be tongues or nations
in the world, nor can with all the tyrannicall Rules of
idle Rhetorique be gouerned otherwise then custome,
and present obseruation will allow. And being now
the trym, and fashion of the times, to sute a man
otherwise cannot but giue a touch of singularity, for
when hee hath all done, hee hath but found other
clothes to the same body, and peraduenture not so
fitting as the former. But could our Aduersary here-
by set vp the musicke of our times to a higher note of
iudgement and discretion, or could these new lawes
of words better our imperfections, it were a happy at-
tempt; but when hereby we shall but as it were
change prison, and put off these fetters to receiue
others, what haue we gained, as good still to vse
rymes and a little reason, as neither ryme nor reason,
for no doubt as idle wits will write, in that kinde, as
do now in this, imitation wil after, though it breake
her necke. Scribimus indocti doctique poemata pas-
sim. And this multitude of idle writers can be no dis-
grace to the good, for the same fortune in one pro-
portion or other is proper in a like season to all States
in their turne: and the same vnmeasureable conflu-
ence of Scriblers hapned, when measures were most
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in vse among the Romanes, as we finde by this re-
prehension,
Mutauit mentem populus leuis, & calet vno
Scribendi studio, pueri, patre/sque seueri,
Fronde comas vincti coenant, & carmina dictant.
So that their plentie seemes to haue bred the same
waste and contempt as ours doth now, though it had
not power to disvalew what was worthy of posterities,
nor keep backe the reputation of excellencies, de-
stined to continue for many ages. For seeing it is
matter that satisfies the iudiciall, appeare it in what
habite it will, all these pretended proportions of
words, howsoeuer placed, can be but words, and per-
aduenture serue but to embroyle our vnderstanding,
whilst seeking to please our eare, we inthrall our iudge-
ment: to delight an exterior sense, wee smoothe vp a
weake confused sense, affecting sound to be vnsound,
and all to seeme Seruum pecus, onely to imitate the
Greekes and Latines, whose felicitie, in this kind,
might be something to themselues, to whome their
owne idioma was naturall, but to vs it can yeeld no
other commoditie then a sound. We admire them
not for their smooth-gliding words, nor their meas-
ures, but for their inuentions: which treasure, if it
were to be found in Welch, and Irish, we should hold
those languages in the same estimation, and they
may thanke their sword that made their tongues so
famous and vniuersall as they are. For to say truth,
their Verse is many times but a confused deliuerer of
their excellent conceits, whose scattered limbs we are
faine to looke out and ioyne together, to discerne the
image of what they represent vnto vs. And euen the
Latines, who professe not to be so licentious as the
Greekes, shew vs many times examples but of strange
crueltie, in torturing and dismembring of wordes in
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the middest, or disioyning such as naturally should
be married and march together, by setting them as
farre asunder, as they can possibly stand: that some-
times, vnlesse the kind reader, out of his owne good
nature, wil stay them vp by their measure, they will
fall downe into flatte prose, and sometimes are no
other indeede in their naturall sound: and then
againe, when you finde them disobedient to their
owne Lawes, you must hold it to be licentia poetica,
and so dispensable. The striuing to shew their
changable measures in the varietie of their Odes, haue
beene very painefull no doubt vnot them, and forced
them thus to disturbe the quiet streame of their
wordes, which by a naturall succession otherwise de-
sire to follow in their due course.
But such affliction doth laboursome curiositie still
lay vpon our best delights (which euer must be made
strange and variable) as if Art were ordained to af-
flict Nature, and that we could not goe but in fetters.
Euery science, euery profession, must be so wrapt vp
in vnnecessary intrications, as if it were not to fash-
ion, but to confound the vnderstanding, which makes
me much to distrust man, and feare that our pre-
sumption goes beyond our abilitie, and our Curiositie
is more than our Iudgement: laboring euer to seeme
to be more then we are, or laying greater burthens
vpon our mindes, then they are well able to beare,
because we would not appeare like other men.
And indeed I haue wished there were not that
multiplicitie of Rymes as is vsed by many in Sonets,
which yet we see in some so happly to secceed, and
hath beene so farre from hindering their inuentions,
as it hath begot conceit beyond expectation, and com-
parabele to the best inuentions of the world: for sure in
an eminent spirit whome Nature hath fitted for that
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mysterie, Ryme is no impediment to his conceit, but
rather giues him wings to mount and carries him, not
out of his course, but as it were beyond his power to a
farre happier flight. Al excellencies being sold vs at
the hard proce of labour, it followes, where we bestow
most thereof, we buy the best sucesse: and Ryme
being farre more laborious then loose measures (what-
soeuer is obiected) must needs, meeting with wit and
industry, breed greater and worthier effects in our
language. So that if our labours haue wrought out a
manumission from bondage, and that wee goe at
libertie, notwithstanding these ties, wee are no longer
the slaues of Rymes, but we make it a most excellent
instrument to serue vs. Nor is this certaine limit ob-
serued in Sonnets, any tyrannicall bounding of the
forme, neither too long for the shortest proiect, nor
too short for the longest, being but onely imployed
for a present passion. For the body of our imagina-
tion, being as an vnformed Chaos without fashion,
without day, if by the diuine power of the spirit it be
wrought into an Orbe of order and forme, is it not
more pleasingt to Nature, that desires a certaintie, and
comports not with that which is infinite, to haue these
clozes, rather than, not to know where to end, or how
farre to goe, especially seeing our passions are often
without measure: and wee finde the best of the latines
many times, either not concluding, or els otherwise
in the end then they began. Besides, is it not most
delightfull to see much excellently ordred in a small
roome, or little, gallantly disposed and made to fill
vp a space of like capacitie, in such sort, that the one
would not appeare so beautifull in a larger circuite,
nor the other do well in a lesse: which often we find to
be so, according to the powers of nature, in the worke-
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man. And these limited proportions, and rests of
Stanzes: consisting of 6.7. or 8. lines are of that hap-
pines, both for the disposition of the matter, the apt
planting the sentence where it may best stand to hit,
the certaine close of delight with the full body of a
iust period well carried, is such, as neither the Greekes
or Latines euer attained vnto. For their boundlesse
running on, often so confounds the Reader, that hau-
ing once lost himselfe, must either giue off vnsatisfied,
or vncertainely cast backe to retriue the escaped
sence, and to find way againe into his matter.
Me thinkes we should not so soone yeeld our con-
sents captiue to the authoritie of Antiquitie, vnlesse
we saw more reason: all our vnderstandings are not
to be built by the square of Greece and Italie. We are
the children of nature as well s they, we are not so
placed out of the way of iudgement, but that the
same Sunne of Discretion shineth vppon vs, wee haue
our portion of the same vertues as well as of the same
vices, Et Catilinam Quocunque in populo videas,
quocunque sub axe. Time and the turne of things
bring about these faculties according to the present
estimation: and, Res temporibus non tempora rebus
seruire opportet. So that we mist veuer rebell against
vse: Wuem penes arbitrium est, & vis & norma lo-
quendi. It is not the obseruing of Trochaicques nor
their Iambicques, that wil make our writings ought
the wiser: All their Poesie, all their Philosophie is
nothing, vnlesse we bring the discerning light of con-
ceipt with vs to apply it to vse. It is not bookes, but
onely that great booke of the world, and the all-ouer-
spreading grace of heauen that makes men truely
iudiciall. Nor can it be but a touch of arrogant igno-
rance, to hold this or that nation Barbarous, these or
those times grosse, considering how this manifold
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creature man, wheresoeuer hee stand in the world,
hath alwayes some disposition of worth, intertaines
the order of societie, affects that which is most in vse,
and is eminient in some one thing or other, that fits
his humour and the times. The Grecians held all
other nations barbarous but themselues, yet Pirrhus
when he saw the will ordered marching of the Ro-
manes, which made them see their presumptuous er-
rour, could say it was no barbarous maner of proceed-
ing. The Gothes, Vandales and Longobards, whose
comming downe like an inundation ouerwhelmed, as
they say, al the glory of learning in Europe, haue yet
left vs still their lawes and customes, as the originalls
of most of the prouinciall constitutions of Christen-
dome; which well considered with their other courses
of gouernement, may serue to cleere them from this
imputation of ignorance. And though the vanqueshed
neuer yet spake well of the Conquerour: yet euen
thorow the vnsound couerings of malediction appeare
those monuments of trueth, as argue wel their worth
and proues them not without iudgement, though
without Greeke and Latine.
Will not experience confute vs, if wee shoulde say
the state of China, which neuer heard of Anapes-
tique, Trochies, and Tribracques, were grosse, bar-
barours, and vnciuile? And is it not a most apparant
ignorance, both of the succession of learning in
Europe, and the generall course of things, to say, that
all lay pittifully deformed in those lacke-learning times
from the declining of the Romane Empire, till the light
of the Latine tongue was reuiued by Rewcline, Eramus
and Moore. When for three hundred yeeres before
them about the comming downe of Tamburlaine into
Europe, Franciscus Petrarcha (who then no doubt
likewise found whom to initate) shewed all the best
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notions of learning, in that degree of excellencie, both
in Latin, Prose and Verse, and in the vulgare Italian,
as all the wittes of posteritie haue not yet much ouer-
matched him in all kindes to this day: his great Vol-
umes written in Moral Philosophie, shew his infinite
reading, and most happy power of dispoition: his
twelue AEglogues, his Affrica containing nine Bookes
of the last Punicke warre, with his three Bookes of
Epistles in Latine verse, shew all the transformations
of wit and inuention, that a Spirite naturally borne
to the inheritance of Poetrie & iudiciall knowledge
could expresse: All which notwithstanding wrought
him not that glory & fame with is owne Nation, as
did his Poems in Italian, which they esteeme aboue
al whatsoeuer wit could haue inuented in any other
forme then wherein it is: which questionles they wil
not change with the best measures, Greeks or Latins
can shew them; howsoeuer our Aduersary imagines.
Nor could this very same innouation in Verse, begun
amongst them by C. Tolomaei, but die in the attempt,
and was buried as soome as it came borne, neglected
as a prodigious &vnnaturall issue amongst them:
nor could it neuer induce Tasso the wonder of Italy,
to write that admirable Poem of Ierusalem, compar-
able to the best of the ancients, in any other forme
then the accustomed verse. And with Petrarch liued
his scholer Boccacius, and neere about the same time,
Iohannis Rauenensis, and form these tanquam ex equo
Troiano, semmes to haue issued all those famous
Italian Writers, Leonardus Aretinus, Laurentius
Valla, Poggius, Blondus, and many others. Then
Emanuel Chrysolaras a Constantinopolitan gentle-
man, renowmed for his learning and vertue, being
imployed by Iohn Paleologus Emperour of the East,
to implore the ayde of christian Princes, for the suc-
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couring of perishing Greece: and vnderstanding in the
meane time, how Baiazeth was taken prisoner by
Tamburlan, and his country freed from danger, stayed
still at Venice, and there taught the Greeke tongue,
discontinued before, in these parts the space of seauen
hundred yeeres. Him followed Bessarion, George
Trapezantius, Theodore Gaza, & others, transporting
Philosophie beaten by the Turke our of Greece into
christendome. Hereupon came that mightie conflu-
ence of Learning in these parts, which returning, as
it were per postliminium, and heere meeting then
with the new inuented stampe of Printing, spread it
selfe indeed in a more vniuersall sorte then the world
suer heeretofore had it. When Pomponius Laetus,
AEneas Syluius, Angelus Politianus, Hermolaus
Barbarus, Iohannes Picus de Mirandula the miracle
& Phoenix of the world, adorned Italie, and wakened
vp other Nations likewise with this desire of glory,
long before it brought foorth, Rewclen, Erasmus, and
Moore, worthy men I confesse, and the last a great
ornament to this land, and a Rymer. And yet long
before all these, and likewise with these, was not our
Nation behind in her portion of spirite and worth-
inesse, but concurrent with the best of all this lettered
worlde: witness venerable Bede, that flourished a-
boue a thousand yeeres since: Aldelmus Durotelmus
that liued in the yeere 739. of whom we finde this
commendation registred: Omnium Poetarum sui
temporis facile\ primus, tantae eloquenctiae, maiestatis &
eruditionis homo fuit, vt nunquam satis admirari possim
vnder illi in tam barbara ac rudi ae
usque adeo omnibus numeris tersa, elegans & rotunda,
versus edidit cum antiquitate de palma contendentes.
Witnesse Iosephus Deuonius, who wrote de bello
Troiano, in so excellent manner, and so neere resem-
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bling Antiquitie, as Printing his Worke beyond the
Seas, they haue ascribed it to Cornelius Nepos, one of
the Ancients.
What should I name Walterus Mape, Gulielmus
Nigellus, Geruasius Tilburiensis, Bracton, Bacon,
Ockem, and an infinite Catalogue of excellent men,
most of them liuing about foure hundred yeares since,
and haue left behinde them monuments of most pro-
found iudgement and learning in all sciences. So that
it is but the clowds gathered about our owne iudge-
ment that makes vs thinke all other ages wrapt vp in
mists, and the great distance betwixt vs, that causes
vs to imagine men so farre off, to be so little in respect
of our selues. We must not looke vpon the immense
course of times past, as men ouer-looke spacious and
wide countries, from off high Mountaines and are
neuer the neere to iudge of the true Nature of the
soyle, or the particular syte and face of those terri-
tories they see. Nor must we thinke, viewing the sup-
erficiall figure of a region in a Mappe that wee know
strait the fashion and place as it is. Or reading an
Historie (which is but a Mappe of men, and dooth no
otherwise acquaint vs with the true Substance of Cir-
cumstances, than a superficiall Card dooth the Sea-
man with a Coast neuer seene, which always prooues
other to the eye than the imagination forecast it) that
presently wee know all the world, and can distinctly
iudge of times, men and maners, iust as they were.
When the best measure of man is to be taken by his
owne foote, bearing euer the neerest proportion to
himself, and is neuer so farre different and vnequall
in his powers, that he hath all in perfection at one
time, and nothing at an other. The distribution of
giftes are vniuerall, and all seasons hath them in
some sort. We must not thinke, but that there were
DanDefR143
Scipioes, Caesars, Catoes and Pompeies, borne else-
where then at Rome, the rest of the world hath euer
had them in the same degree of nature, though not of
state. And it is our weakenesse that makes vs mis-
take, or misconceiue in these deliniations of men the
true figure of their worth. And our passion and be-
liefe is so apt to leade vs beyond truth, that vnlesse
we try them by the iust compasse of humanitie, and
as they were men, we shall cast their figures in the
ayre when we should make their models vpon Earth.
It is not the contexture of words, bnut the effects of
Action that giues glory to the times: we finde they
had mercurium in pectore though not in lingua, and
in all ages, though they were not Ciceronians, they
knew the Art of men, which onely is, Ars Artium, the
great gift of heauen, and the chiefe grace and glory on
earth, they had the learning of Gouernement, and
ordring their State, Eloquence inough to shew their
iudgements. And it seemes the best times followed
Lycurgus councell: Literas ad vsum saltem discebant
reliqua omnis disciplina erat, vt pulchre parerent vt
labores perferrent &c. Had not vnlearned Rome laide
the better foundation, and built the stronger frame of
an admirable state, eloquent Rome had confounded it
vtterly, which we saw, ranne the way of all confusion,
the plaine course of dissolution in her greatest skill:
and though she had not power to vndoe her selfe, yet
wrought she sosthat she cast her selfe quite away
from the glory of a common-wealth, and fell vpon
that forme of state she euer most feared and abhorred
of all other: and then scarse was there seene any
shadowe of pollicie vnder her first Emperours, but the
most horrible and grosse confusion that could bee
conceued, notwithstanding it stil indured, preseruing
not only a Monarchie, lock vp in her own limits,
DanDefR144
but herewithall held vnder her obedience, so many
Nations so farre distant, so ill affected, so disorderly
commanded & vniustly conquerd, as it is not to be at-
tributed to any other fate but to the first frame of
that commonwealth, which was so strongly ioynted
and with such infinite combinations interlinckt, as one
naile or other euer held vp the Maiestie thereof.
There is but one learning, which omnes gentes habent
scriptum in cordibus suis, one and the selfe-same spirit
that worketh in all. We haue but one body of Iustice,
one body of Wisedome throughout the whole world,
which is but apparaled according to the fashion of
euery nation.
Eloquence and gay wordes are not of the Substance
of wit, it is but the garnish of a nice time, the Orna-
ments that doe but decke the house of a State, &
imitatur publicos mores: Hunger is as well satified
with meat serued in pewter as siluer. Discretion is
the best measure, the rightest foote in what habit
soeuer it runne. Erasmus, Rewcline and More, brought
no more wisdome into the world with all their
new reuiued wordes then we finde was before, it
bred not a profounder Diuine than Saint Thomas,
a greater Lawyer then Bartolus, a more accute Logi-
cian than Scotus: nor are the effects of all this great
amasse of eloquence so admirable or of that conse-
quence, but that impexa illa antiquitas can yet com-
pare with them. Let vs go no further, but looke vpon
the wonderfull Architecture of this state of England,
and see whether they were deformed times, that could
giue it such a forme. Where there is no one the least
piller of Maiestie, but was set with most profound
iudgement and borne vp with the iust conueniencie
of Prince and people. No Court of Iustice, but laide
by the Rule and Square of Nature, and the best of the
DanDefR145
best commonwealths that euer were in the world. So
strong and substantial, as it hath stood against al the
storms of factions, both of beliefe & ambition, which
so powerfully beat vpon it, and all the tempestuous
alterations of himorous times whatsoeuer. Being
continually in all ages furnisht with spirites fitte to
maintaine the maiestie of her owne greatnes, and to
match in an equall concurrencie all other kingdomes
round about her with whome it had to incounter. But
this innouation, like a Viper, must euer make way
into the worlds opinion, thorow the bowelles of her
owne breeding, & is always borne with reproch in
her mouth; the disgracing others is the best grace it
can put on, to winne reputation of wit, and yet is it
neuer so wise as it would seeme, nor doth the world
euer so much by it, as it imagineth: which being
so often deceiued, and seeing it neuer performes so
much as it promises, me thinkes men should neuer
giue more credite vnto it. For, let vs change neuer so
often, wee can not change man, our imperfections
must still runne on with vs. And therefore the wiser
Nations haue taught menne alwayes to vse, Moribus
legibusque presentibus etiamsi deteriores sint. The
Lacedemonians, when a Musitian, thincking to
winne him-selfe credite by his new inuention, and be
before his fellowes, had added one string more to his
Crowde, brake his fiddle, and banished him the Cittie,
holding the Innouator, though in the least things,
dangerous to a publike societie. It is but a fantastike
giddimesse to forsake the way of other men, especially
where it lies tollerable: Vbi nunc est respublica, ibi
simus potius quam dum illam veterem sequimur, simus
in nulla. But shal we not tend to perfection? Yes,
and that euer best by going on in the course we are in,
where we haue aduantage, being so farre onward, of
DanDefR146>
him that is but now setting forth. For we shall neuer
proceede, if wee be euer beginning, nor arriue at any
certayne Porte, sayling with all windes that blow:
Non conualescit planta quae saepius transfertur, and
therefore let vs hold on in the course wee haue vnder-
taken, and not still be wandring. Perfection is not the
portion of man, and if it were, why may wee not as
well get to it this way as an othe? and suspect these
great vndertakers, lest they haue conspired with enuy
to betray ou7r proceedings, and put vs by the honor of
our attempts, with casting vs backe vpon an other
course, of purpose to ouerthrow the whole action of
glory when we lay the fairest for it, and were so neere
our hopes? I thanke God that I am none of these
great Schollers, if thus their hie knowledges doe but
giue them more eyes to looke out into vncertaintie
and confusion, accounting my selfe, rather beholding
to my ignorance, that hath set me in so lowe an vnder-
roome of conceipt with other men, and hath giuen
me as much distrust, as it hath done hope, daring not
aduenture to goe alone, but plodding on the plaine
tract I finde beaten by Custome and the Time, con-
tenting me with what I see in vse. And surely mee
thinkes these great wittes should rather seeke to
adorne, than to disgrace the present, bring something
to it, without taking from it what it hath. But it is
euer the misfortune of Learning, to be wounded by
her owne hand. Stimulos dat emula virtus, and when
there is not abilitie to match what is, malice wil finde
out ingines, either to disgrace or ruine it, with a per-
uerse incounter of some new impression: and which
is the greatest misery, it must euer proceed from
the powers of the best reputation, as if the greatest
spirites were ordained to indanger the worlde, as the
grosse are to dishonour it, and that we were to expect
DanDefR147
ab optimis periculum, a\ pessimis dedecus publicum.
Emulation the strongest pulse that beates in high
mindes, is oftentimes a winde, but of the worst effect:
For whilst the Soule comes disappoynted of the obiect
it wrought on, it presently forges an other, and euen
cozins it selfe, and crosses all the world, rather than
it wil stay to be vnder hir desires, falling out with all
it hath, to flatter and make faire that which it would
haue. So that it is the ill successe of our longings that
with Xerxes makes vs to whippe the Sea, and send a
cartel of defiance to mount Athos: and the fault laide
vpon others weakenesse, is but a presumptuous opin-
ion of our owne strength, who must not seeme to be
maistered. But had our Aduersary taught vs by his
owne proceedings, this way of perfection, and therein
fram'd vs a Poeme of that excellencie as should haue
put downe all, and beene the maister-peece of these
times, we should all haue admired him. But to de-
praue the present forme of writing, and to bring
vs nothing but a few loose and vncharitable Epi-
grammes, and yet would make vs belieue those num-
bers were come to raise the glory of our language,
giueth vs cause to suspect the performance, and to
examine whether this new Arte, constat sibi, or, aliquid
sit dictum quod non sit dictum prius.
First we must heere imitate the Greekes and Lat-
ines, and yet we are heere shewed to disobey them,
euen in their owne numbers and quantities: taught to
produce what they make short, and make short what
they produce: made beleeue to be shewd measures in
that forme we haue not seene, and no such matter:
tolde that heere is the perfect Art of versifying, which
in conclusion is yet confessed to be vnperfect, as if our
Aduersary to be opposite to vs, were become vnfaith-
full of himselfe, and seeking to leade vs out of the way
DanDefR148
of reputation, hath aduentured to intricate and con-
found him in his owne courses, running vpon most vn-
euen groundes, with imperfect rules, weake proofes,
and vnlowfull lawes. Whereunto the world, I am
perswaded, is not so vnreasonable as to subscribe,
considering the vniust authoritie of the Law-giuer.
For who hath constiuted him to be the Radaman-
thus thus to torture sillable, and adiudge them their
perpetuall doome, setting his Theta or marke of con-
demnation vppon them to indure the appoynted
sentence of his crueltie, as hee shall dispose. As
though there were that disobedience in our wordes,
as they would not be ruled or stand in order without
so many intricate Lawes, which would argue a great
peruersenesse amongst them, according to that, in
pessima republica plurimae leges: or, that they were so
farre gone frome the quiet freedome of nature, that
they must thus be brought backe againe by force.
And now in what case were this poore state of words,
if in like sorte another tyrant the next yeere should
arise and abrogate these lawes and ordaine others
cleane contrary according to his humor, and say that
they were onely right, the others vniust, what dis-
turbance were there here, to whome should we obey?
Were it not farre better to holde vs fast to our old cus-
tome, than to stand thus distracted with vncertaine
Lawes, wherein right shal haue as many faces as it
pleases Passion to make it, that wheresoeuer mens
affections stand, it shall still looke that way. What
trifles doth our vnconstant curiositie cal vp to con-
tend for, what colours are there laid vpon indifferent
things to make them seeme other then they are, as if
it were but only to intertaine contestation amongst
men; who standing according to the prospectiue of
their owne humour, seeme to see the selfe same things
DanDefR149
to appeare otherwise to them, than either they doe to
other, or are indeede in themselues, being but all one
in nature. For what a doe haue we heere, what
strange precepts of Arte about the framing of an
Iambique verse in our language, which when all is
done, reaches not by a foote, but falleth out to be the
plaine ancient verse consisting of tenne sillables or
fiue feete, which hath euer beene vsed amongest vs
time out of minde. And for all this cunning and coun-
terfeit name can or will be any other in nature then
it hath beene euer heretofore: and this new Dimeter
is but the halfe of this verse diuided in two, and no
other then the Caesura or breathing place in the mid-
dest thereof, and therefore it had bene as good to haue
put two lones in one, but only to make them seeme
diuerse. Nay it had beene much better for the true
English reading and pronouncing thereof, without
violating the accent, which now oru Aduersarie hath
heerein most vnkindely doone: for, being, as wee are
to sound it, according to our English March, we must
make a rest, and raise the last sillable, which falles
out very vnnaturall in Desolate, Funerall, Elizabeth,
Prodigall, and in all the rest sauing the Monosillables.
Then followes the English Trochaicke, which is saide
to bee a simple verse, and so indeede it is, being with-
out Ryme; hauing here no other grace then that in
sound it runnes like the knowne measure of our former
ancient Verse, ending (as we terme it according to the
French) in a feminine foote, sauing that it is shorter
by one sillable at the beginning, which is not much
missed, by reason it falles full at the last. Next comes
the Elegiacke, being the fourth kinde, and that like-
wise is no other then our old accustomed measure of
fiue feete, if there be any difference, it must be made
in the reading, and therein wee must stand bound to
DanDefR150
stay where often we would not, and sometimes either
breake the accent, or the due course of the word. And
now for the other foure kinds of numbers, which are
to be employed for Odes, they are either of the same
measure, or such as haue euer beene familiarly vsed
amongst vs. So that of all these eight seuerall kindes
of new promised numbers you see what he haue.
Onely what was our owne before, and the same but
apparelled in forraine Titles, which had they come in
their kinde and naturall attire of Ryme, wee should
neuer haue suspected that they had affected to be
other, or sought to degenerate into strange manners,
which now we see was the cause why they were turnd
out of their proper habite, and brought in as Aliens,
onely to induce men to admire them as farre-com-
mers. But see the power of Nature, it is not all the
artificiall couerings of wit that can hide their natiue
and originall condition which breakes out thorow the
strongest bandes of affection, and will be it selfe,
doe Singularitie what it can. And as for those imag-
ined quantities of sillables, which haue bin euer held
free and indifferent in our language, who can inforce
vs to take knowlege of them, being in nullius verba
iurati, & owing fealty to no forraine inuention; es-
pecilly in such a case where there is no necessitie in
Nature, or that it imports either the matter of forme,
whether it be so, or otherwise. But euery Versifier
that wel obserues his worke, findes in our language,
without all these vnnecessary precepts, what num-
ber best fitte the Nature of her Idiome, and the
proper places destined to such accents, as she will not
let in, to any other roomes then into those for which
they were borne. As for example, you cannot make
this fall into the right sound of a Verse,
None thinkes reward rendred worthly his worth:
vnlesse you thus misplace the accent vppon Rendre\d
and Worthi\e, contrary to the nature of these wordes:
which sheweth that two feminine numbers (or Tro-
chies, if so you wil call them) will not succeede in the
third and fourth place of the Verse. And so likewise
in this case,
Though Death doth consume, yet Virtue preserues,
it wil not be a Verse, though it hath the iust sillables,
without the same number in the second, and the al-
tering of the fourth place, in this sorte:
Though Death doth ruine, Virtue yet preserues.
Againe, who knowes not that we cannot kindely an-
swere a feminine with a masculine Ryme, or
(if you will so terme it) a Trochei with a Sponde,
as Weakenes with Confesse, Nature and Indure, onely
for that thereby wee shall wrong the accent, the chiefe
Lord and graue Gouernour of Numbers. Also you
cannot in a Verse of foure feete, place a Trochei in the
first, without the like offence, as,
Yearely out of his watry Cell:
for so you shall sound it Yearelie\ which is vnnaturall.
And other such like obseruations vsually occurre,
which Nature and a iudiciall eare, of themselues teach
vs readily to auoyle.
But now for whom hath our Aduersary taken all
this paines? For the Learned, or for the Ignorant, or
for himselfe, to shew his owne skill? If for the Learned,
it was to no purpose, for euerie Grammarain in
this land hath learned his Prosodia, and alreadie
knowes all this Arte of Numbers: if for the Ignorant,
it was vaine: For if they become Versifiers, wee are
like to haue leane Numbers, instede of fat Ryme: and
if Tully would haue his Orator skilld in all the know-
ledges appertaining to God and man, what should
they haue, who would be a degree aboue Orators?
DanDefR152
Why then it was to shew his owne skill, and what him-
selfe had obserued: so he might well haue done, with-
out doing wrong to the honor of the dead, wrong to
the fame of the liuing, and wrong to England, in seek-
ing to lay reproach vppon her natiue ornaments, and
to turne the faire streame and full course of her ac-
cents, into the shallow current of a loose vncertaintie,
cleane out of the way of her knowne delight. And I
had thought it could neuer haue proceeded from the
pen of a Scholler (who sees no profession free from the
impure mouth of the scorner) to say the reproach of
others idle tongues is the curse of Nature vpon vs,
when it is rather her curse vpon him, that knowes not
how to vse his tongue. What, doth he think himselfe
is now gotten so farre out of the way of contempt,
that his numbers are gone beyond the reach of oblo-
quie, and that how friuolous, or idle soeuer they shall
runne, they shall be protected from disgrace, as
though that light rymes and light numbers did not
weigh all alike in the graue opinion of the wise. And
that it is not Ryme, but our ydle Arguments that
hath brought downe to so base a recking, the price
and estimation of writing in this kinde. When the
few good things of this age, by comming together in
one throng and presse with the many bad, are dis-
cerned from them, but ouer-looked with them, and
all taken to be alike. But when after-times shall
make a quest of inquiries, to examine the best of this
Age, peraduenture there will be found in the now con-
temned recordes of Rymes, matter not vnfitting the
grauest Diuine, and seuerest Lawyer in this king-
dome. But these things must haue the date of Anti-
quitie, to make them reuered and authentical: For
euer in the collation of Writers, men rather weigh
their age then their merite, & legunt priscos cum re-
DanDefR153
uerentia, quando coetaneos non possunt sine inuidia.
And let no writer in Ryme be any way discouraged in
his endeuour by this braue allarum, but rather ani-
mated to bring vp all the best of their powers, and
charge with all the strength of nature and industrie
vpon contempt, that the shew of their reall forces
may turne backe insolencie into her owne holde. For,
be sure that innouation neuer workes any ouerthrow,
but vpon the aduantage of a carelesse idlenesse. And
let this make vs looke the better to our feete, the bet-
ter to our matter, better to our maners. Let the Ad-
uersary that thought to hurt vs, bring more profit and
honor, by being against vs, then if he had stoode still
on our side. For that (next to the awe of heauen) the
best reine, the strongst hand to make men keepe their
way, is that which their enemy beares vpon them: and
let this be the benefite wee make by being oppugned,
and the meanes to redeeme backe the good opinion,
vanitie and idlenesse haue sufferedto be wonne from
vs; which, nothing but substance and matter can ef-
fect. For
Scribendi recte\ sapere est & principium & fons.
When we heare Musicke, we must be in our eare,
in the vtter-roome of sense, but when we intertaine
iudgement, we retire into the cabinet and innermost
withdrawing chamber of the soule: And it is but as
Musicke for the eare,
Verba sequi fidibus modulanda Latinis,
but it is a worke of power for the soule,
Numero/sque modo/sque ediscere vitae.
The most iudiciall and worthy spirites of this Land
are not so delicate, or will owe so much to their eare,
as to rest vpponthe out-side of wordes, and be inter-
tained with sound: seeing that both Number, Meas-
ure, and Ryme, is but as the ground or seate, where-
DanDefR154
upon is raised the work that commends it, and which
may be easily at the first found out by any shallow
conceipt: as wee see some fantasticke to beginne a
fashion, which afterwards grauity it selfe is faine to
put on, because it will not be out of the weare of other
men, and Recti apud nos locum tenet error vbi publicus
factus est. And power and strength that can plant it
selfe any where, hauing built within this compasse,
and reard it of so high a respect, wee now imbrace it
as the fittest dwelling for our inuention, and haue
thereon bestowed all the substance of our vnderstand-
ing to furnish it as it is: and therefore heere I stand
foorth, onelie to make good the place we haue thus
taken vp, and to defend the secred monuments erect-
ed therein, which containe the honour of the dead,
the fame of the liuing, the glory of peace, and the best
power of our speach, and wherin so many honorable
spirits haue sacrified to Memorie their dearest pas-
sions, shewing by what diuine influence they haue
beene moued, and vnder what starres they liued.
But yet now notwithstanding all this which I haue
heere deliuered in the defence of Ryme, I am not so
farre in loue with mine owne mysterie, or will seeme
so froward, as to bee against the reformation, and the
better setling these measures of ours. Wherein there
be many things, I could wish were more certaine and
better ordered, though my selfe dare not take vpon
me to be a teacher therein, hauing so much neede to
learne of others. And I must confesse, that to mine
owne eare, those continued Poemes, are very tyresome,
and vnpleasing, by reason that still, me thinks, they
runne on with a sound of one nature, and a kinde of
certaintie which stuffs the delight rather then inter-
taines it. But yet notwithstanding, I must not out of
DanDefR155
mine owne daintinesse, condemme this kinde of writ-
ing, which peraduenture to another may seeme most
delightfull, and many worthy compositions we see to
haue passed with commendation in that kinde. Be-
sides, me thinkes sometimes, to beguile the eare, with
a running out, and passing ouer the Ryme, as no
bound to stay vs in the line where the violence of the
matter will breake thorow, is rather gracefull then
otherwise. Wherein I finde my Homer-Lucan, as if he
gloried to seeme to haue no bounds, albeit hee were
confined within his measures, to be in my conceipt
most happy. For so thereby, they who care not for
Verse or Ryme, may passe it ouer without taking
notice thereof, and please themselues with a well-
measured Prose. And I must confesse my Aduersary
hath wrought this much vpon me, that I thinke a
Tragedie would indeede best comporte with a blank
Verse, and dispence wth Ryme, sauing in the Chorus
or where a sentence shall require a couplet. And to
auoyde this ouer-glutting the eare with that alwayes
certaine, and ful incounter of Ryme, I haue assaid in
some of my Epistle to alter the vsuall place fo meet-
ing, and to sette it further off by one Verse, to trie
how I could disuse my owne eare and to ease it of this
continuall burthen, which indeede seemes to sur-
charge it a little too much, but as yet I cannot come
to please my selfe therein: this alternate or crosse
Ryme holding still the best place in my affection.
Besides, to me this charge of number in a Poem of
one nature sits not so wel, as to mixe vncertainly,
feminine Rymes with masculine, which, euer since I
was warned of that deformitie by my kinde friend and
countriman Maister Hugh Samford, I haue alwayes
so auoyed it, as there are not aboue two couplettes
in that kinde in all my Poems of the Ciuill warres: and
DanDefR156
I would willingly if I coulde, haue altered it in all the
rest, holding feminine Rymes to be fittest for Ditties,
and either to be set certaine, or else by themselues.
But in these things, I say, I dare not take vpon mee
to teach that they ought to be so, in respect my selfe
holdes them to be so, or that I thinke it right; for in-
deede there is no right in these things that are con-
tinually in a wandring motion, carried with the vio-
lence of our vncertaine likings, being but onely the
time that giues them their power. For if this right, or
truth, should be no other thing then that wee make it,
we shall shape it into to thousand figures, seeing this
excellent painter Man, can so well lay the colours
which himselfe grindes in his owne affections, as that
hee will make them serue for any shadow, and any
counterfeit. But the greatest hinderer to our pro-
ceedings, and the reformation of our errours, is this
Self-loue, whereunto we Versifiers are euer noted to
be especially subiect; a disease of all other, the most
dangerous, and incurable, being once seated in the
spirits, for which there is no cure, but onely by a
spirituall remedy. Multos puto, ad sapientiam potu-
isse peruenire, nisi putassent se peruenisse: and this
opinion of our sufficiencie makes so great a cracke in
our iudgement, as it wil hardly euer holde any thing
of worth, Coecus amor sui, and though it would seeme
to see all without it, yet certainely it discernes but lit-
tle within. For there is not the simplest writer that
will euer tell himselfe, he doth ill, but as if he were the
parasite onely to sooth his owne doings, perswades
him that his lines can not but please others, which so
much delight himselfe:
Suffenus est quisque sibi. --neque idem vnquam.
AEque est beatus, ac poema cum scribit,
Tam gaudet in se tamque se ipse miratur.
DanDefR157
And the more to shew that he is so, we shall see him
euermore in all places, and to all persons repeating
his owne compositions: and,
Quem vero arripuit, tenet occidi/tque legendo.
Next to this deformitie stands our affection,
wherein we alwayes bewray our selues to be both vn-
kinde, and vnnaturall to our owne natiue language,
in disguising or forging strange or vnvuall wordes, as
if it were to make our verse seeme an other kind of
speach out of the ccourse of our vsuall practise, dis-
placing our wordes, or investing new, onely vpon a
singularitie: when our owne accustomed phrase, set
in the due place, would expresse vs more familiarly
and to better delight, than all this idle affectation of
antiquitie, or noueltie can euer doe. And I can not
but wonder at the strange presumption of some men
that dare so audaciously aduenture to introduce any
whatsoeuer forraine wordes, be they neuer so strange;
and of themselues as it were, without a Parliament,
without any consent, or allowance, establish them as
Free-denizens in our language. But this is but a Char-
acter of that perpetuall reuolution which wee see to
be in all things that neuer remaine the same, and we
must heerin be content to submit our selues to the
law of time, which in few yeeres wil make al that, for
which we now contend, Nothing.
FINIS