[Page] THE ANSVVER OF Mr. Wallers PAINTER, To His many new ADVISERS.
London, Printed by A. Maxwell 1667.
THE ANSWER OF Mr. WALLER'S PAINTER, To his many new ADVISERS.
GOOD Sirs be
civil: Can
one man (d'ye think)
As fast
lay Colours, as you all
spill Ink?
At what a
pass am I! a
thousand hands
I
need, if I must be at all
Commands.
Thy
sparkling Fancy (Waller) first design'd
A
Stately Piece, true
Picture of thy
Mind.
But (how
Conceits engender!) on thy
Wit
Each Scribler
new Advices doth beget;
And so the
Breed's embas'd, that now 'tis grown
Like
Royal Blood when mixed with the
Clown.
But these their
Brandy from its
dreggs distill:
Or, like
false Vintners, they
adulterate
Thy
Nectar with a poysonous
Sublimate.
Without thy
Muse, thy
Fancy they
purloyn;
And
Bastard Cions to thy
stock they joyn.
Thus in
dead Bodies, Satan acts a
soul;
And
Virgils self's travesty'd to a
Droll.
I shall
forswear my
Art, if I must be
Thus
School'd by
Bunglers, whiles I
paint for
Thee.
Or if I must each
new Adviser please;
Jumble our
World with the
Antipodes;
And mix the
Firmament and
Stygian Lake;
A
Chaos, not a
Picture I shall make:
And then, (as
he that marr'd a
noble Draught,
By
alt'ring it as each
Spectator taught)
I shall forswear the
Piece too, and write by,
This Monster my Advisers made, not I.
However, Sirs, my
Colours will not do;
And therefore I must be
supply'd by
you.
I have no
mixtures to paint
Treason's Face
So fair, for
Loyalty to make it
pass.
None that will
blemish Princes on
report;
Which
none dares
own, to make the
Rabble sport.
Besides,
Slander's a
fading Colour, though
It
stick a
while, it will not
long do so:
When it
decays, my
work will prove me
Knave.
Yea,
Princes (Sirs) are
Gods, as they'r
above;
Though as
Men, in a
Mortal Sphere they
move.
As
Gods, 'tis
Sacrilegious to
present
Them in such
Shapes as may bespeak
contempt.
And who allows 'em
Men, does therewithal
Allow 'em
Possibility to fall.
Yet
Paint not their
Infirmities. Would
you
In each
foul Posture be expos'd to
view?
Baulk not the
Noble Rule, and let
them have
The
charity (at least) that
you would
crave.
My
Colours will not alter
Forms of
State
After the
Whimsies of each
Crowing Pate.
What
Paint will draw
Utopia's? or where
Shall th'
Groundwork be for
Castles in the
Air?
What
Colours wears the
Man i'th' Moon? who can
Limn an
Oceana, or
Leviathan?
Rob the
Chameleon, Sirs, or
Polypus,
For
Colours, if you mean t' imploy me thus.
Fie! At the
Old Play still! what have we
got,
By
Rota's,
Ballots, and I know not what?
VVho
cheats me
once, he
fools me; but 'tis plain,
I
fool my
self to
deal with
him again.
Bought Wit is best, 'tis said; but who
buys oft,
Shall never
sell it at the
rates he
bought.
Creditors, falls short of the
Debtor's
Page;
Unhinge not
Governments, except you could
Supply us
better, e're you
change the
old.
You would have all
amended, so would I;
Yet not
deface each
Piece where
faults I
spy.
'Tis
true, I could find
Colours to
expose
Faulty Grandees, and
over-paint a
Rose.
But this
checks me, that (whatsoe're is
aim'd)
Few such are
mended by being
proclaim'd.
Publick disgrace oft
smaller sinners scares;
But
Vice with
greatness arm'd, no
Colours fears;
Besides, the
Rout grows
insolent hereby,
And
slights the once
disgrac'd Authority.
VVhence, to
Paint all our
Betters Faults, would be,
To
hang up
Order in
Effigie:
Leave such then, to their
Masters, and the
Laws;
VVho
play with
Lions, at last
feel their
pawes.
But
one word more, Sirs; Grant I
yield to
you,
Am I
secure, I have no
more to
do?
If thus
Advices spawn, your
three or
four
May shortly
propagate to
half a
score;
And those by
hundreds multiply'd, may
make
A task,
Briareus would not undertake.
Besides the
Clash; Dash out that line, says
one;
Another,
Alter this, Let
that alone.
An
heap unlike the
Project that they
laid.
Pray leave
Advising then, for (never crave it)
No
Art can
Paint a
World as
all would have
it.
Or, if you're
set upon't; to fitt your mind,
I'le tell you where a
Painter you may find.
Look out some
Canvas-stayner, whose
cheap skill
With
Rhythmes and
Stories Ale-house-walls doth fill.
Such men will do your
work best: (sorry
Elves)
They
paint all
Kings and
Princes like
themselves.
So with
Jack-wheels upon their
heads, they
slander
Arthur, and
Godfrey, and great
Alexander.
Here
David stands with's
Harp of
whipcord-strings;
And
Solomon's
Wives, who (sure) lov'd no
such things.
Yea
Ahab, and Queen
Jezabel, who ne're
Painted her
self, as she is
painted there.
Thus th'
Royal Oak in
Country Signes is found,
In a
Park Copy'd from the
Neighbour-Pound:
And
Royal Charles his
head looks
peeping through,
Much in the
posture that's the
Dawbers due.
Imploy these then, not
me; Except you please
To use my
Art on your own
Visages.
Those, I know
who would
thank me for; and then
Your
Faces might be
famous as your
Pen.
And (lastly) that done,
three large
dashes by,
(I doubt) would serve to
paint your
Destiny.
FINIS.