LONDONS Resurrection, Poetically represented, AND HUMBLY PRESENTED To His Most Sacred MAJESTY.
LONDON, Printed by A. M. for S A: GELLIBRAND, in St. Paul's Church-yard, 1669.
LONDON's Resurrection, &c.
MY
Salamander-Muse, which newly sprung
From
London's Fires, her
Mother-Furies sung;
Wreath'd with a
lambent Flame; then view'd the waste,
And in her Arms the dear
Remains embrac'd,
5 A new Birth's pledg; and (lastly) scourg'd the
Crimes
Which mark'd with
London's Brands our dismal Times:
Turn'd
Phoenix now, claps her new-imped Wings,
And the New City's
Resurrection sings.
Would
Orpheus lend me his renowned
Lyre,
10 Or brisk
Amphion's Lute my Song inspire!
Their Airs (perhaps) might turn my
Verse to Charm,
And raise faln
London without
Tool or
Arm.
My mighty Rhimes should quickly (then) remove
Th'
Hercynian Forest, and
Dodona's Grove.
15 From Climes remote, the cap'ring Trees should meet
Within its Gates; and in each ruin'd Street
(
Squar'd by a
Wish) to ev'ry place assign'd
Dispose themselves after the Builder's mind.
This
Quill should dig down
Mountains, and my Muse
20 The list'ning
Marbles from their Beds seduce.
Th' whole
Parian Quarrey should obey her calls,
And march a Voluntier to
London's Walls.
Yea, the glad
Mason should sit by, and play,
Whiles massy Rocks both
square themselves, and
lay
25 But she (poor Girl) such high attempts disclaims,
Content her
Power give measure to her
Aims.
Accept her kindness (though) in what she's skill'd:
To
bless, and
press, is virtually to build.
Words link'd in Numbers, (though they be but
wind)
30 Have help'd to do, what
Force in vain design'd.
Who blows the Trumpet, though he ne're engage,
Governs the
Fight, and
whets the
Fighter's Rage.
Permit (
Great Prince) my
Swan-like Muse to sing
Her
Farwel-Notes under your sacred Wing.
35
Poets, as Cities, hardly e're rise
high,
But under th'
Influence of
Majesty.
London, and
I, equal
Ambitions have
By Your
sole Aspect to survive the
Grave.
Nor let displeasure seize
Your Sacred Breast,
40 'Cause my First Muse to
meaner Names addrest.
Safe flights, as then, doubting her
Wing, she flew;
But meant those lower Perches
Stairs to
You.
So the
young Bird, before she trust the Skye,
From Twig to Twig, doth rather hop than flye.
45 Then, takes a
Neighbour-Tree, till past her flights,
She feels her strength, and dares the
greatest heights.
And, (though
Your Name bespangle all my Verse,
Yet) whiles
Attendant on so sad an
Herse;
Too much like an
illomen 't would have shown,
50 In
mourning Blacks to have approach'd the
Throne.
But now, sith
London springing from her
Tomb,
(Your
Royal Work) my
Royal Theme's become:
Both by an equal Title are Your due,
As both
Her Founder, and her
Poems too.
55
You, when the
City by desponding
flight
Yeelded the
Flames an undisputed Right;
Sounded th'
Alarm, and by a fresh
Array
Renew'd the
ONSET, and restor'd the
Day.
Your prudent
Acts, confounded
Rights decide,
60 And fix the
Bounds to potent Neighbour's
Pride.
Your Three-fold
League all Foreign
Warrs accords,
And We to
Spades and
Tru'ls reform our
Swords.
Janus's Temple now is
triple-barr'd;
Our
Drums are silent whiles our
Laws are heard.
65
Devotion Heav'ns,
Trade Earth's Riches brings:
The
Plow-man whistles, and my
Clio sings.
On, (
Royal Sir) tile
Your own
Bounties o're,
And check our
bashful Hopes by doing
More.
Our
Ruins yet afford Your
Glories ground
70 To
spread themselves, and make Your
Reign renown'd.
Let
next Age add, when they Your
Titles sing,
London's Restorer, to
Great Britain's King.
Till the
old Founder more
obscure is grown,
Not as
out-dated now, but as
out-done.
75 And Thou,
Almighty Architect, whose Call
From
Nothing's Womb produc'd this glorious
All;
Which friendly
Atoms in firm Nuptials ty'd,
Divorcing those which native Jars divide;
Which, from rude
Justles in th'
unbounded space,
80 Marshall'd each Being in its
proper place:
Thou, whose Command we
Christians firmly trust,
Shall
re-compose us out of
crumbled Dust;
When
Limbs, which vastest Distances detain,
Shall travel till they
meet and
hugg again;
85 And mindful
Souls shall once more
know, and
wed
Anew, those very
Bodies whence they
fled:
Thy Suppliants hear. The Work we call thee to,
Not mis-becomes
Omnipotence to do.
Lo, here, a
City to a
Chaos turn'd,
90 Her Ashes scatter'd, and her Bones in urn'd!
Bring a like Power to a like Design;
And
Resurrection with
Creation twine.
Thus, while's on
London's Stage thou shalt present
Our
Faith an
Instance, Hope a President:
95 Ev'n
Atheism shall be disprov'd by
Sense,
And blush to crave a farther Evidence.
Our
Creed's hard knots,
Example shall dissolve,
And what
may be, by what
hath been, resolve.
Joy to my Muse! Heav'n our Requests doth hear,
100 Our Prayers knock not at a bolted Ear.
Oft
hungry Hopes with
slow Reliefs are pin'd;
But we're twice answer'd both in
speed and
kind.
Hark! Th'
Oracle its sacred Veil displays,
And [
London Rise] the potent Whisper says.
105
Hail, Glorious Day; Maist thou be writ in Gold,
Which saw'st the
Scepter'd Hand the
Truel hold,
To lay that
Stone, whence the
Exchange became
Anew entitled to its
Royal Name!
Henceforth,
proud Pillar, to thy Readers view
110 Tell thine
own story, and thy
Founders too.
Fruitful Example! From the
Royal hand
Each Artist now takes
Pattern and
Command.
Hark, how the clatt'ring
Tools confused sound
Divides the Ear! The
Pick-axe rends the ground
To load the
Spade. Its Loads bestow'd between
115 The sifting
Ridder, and the searching
Skreen.
The
Saw the
File, the
Ax the
Grindstone whets;
The knotty Tree this
hews, the other
eats.
The
Arm the
Plane, the
Maul the
Chissel drives.
Through heart of Oak the groaning
Auger dives.
120 The glowing
Steel the weighty
Sledges stroke
Beats into Form; which quench't doth
hiss and
smoak.
Room (next) for
Miracles, profan'd by use;
The Issues of the fam'd
Vitruvian Muse.
And that
grave Architect's whose ominous Hand
125 Drew
learned Eines on
Syracusan Sand.
Whose dying Gore did the
choice Figures drown,
And's dying weight in
their Room stamp'd his
own!
Here
twisted Skrews, whiles planted on the ground,
130 They
worm themselves through a like
wreathed Round,
Prop tott'ring Roofs.
Versatile Rundles there,
By equal Helps their
fellows Burdens bear,
Transferr'd by
clasping Ropes; whence
greatest weights
By a
small force are wound to
greatest heights.
135 The
Balance-Engine next, whose loaded End
The
tenth part of its Burden makes t' ascend.
Nor is't less wondrous, that the vastest
Beams,
On
Cylinders supporting both Extreams,
Tough
Levers roll; whiles every lifting Hand
140
One Interjection jointly doth command.
Thus goes the
Building on. Confused grounds
Just
Verdicts part; and (whiles they fix the bounds
To publique Streets by the
Imperious Line)
Surveyors like unbounded
Sov'raigns reign,
145
Each House clasps with its neighbour; and the
Square
Each Front unto its fellow-wall doth
pair.
And
Sister-Piles, whiles thus they intermarry,
Like
Sister-Faces, uniformly vary.
Lady Enchantress of the
ravisht Ear,
150 Ne're did thy
Art effect what
Chance doth here!
Whiles building
Noises by the pleased Mind
Are into all harmonious
Notes combin'd,
Orpheus to us would grate,
Apollo jarr:
Hammers and
Truels sweeter
Musick are.
By this one
Spell each melancholy breast
155 Is of its
Legion-Devil dispossest.
And where yet falling
London's doleful
Knell
Doth in retentive apprehensions dwell;
By
Sympathetick Cure these joyful sounds
160 With
glad Idea's heal the
Phansies wounds.
The
Fields are busie too. Bold
Miners found
In paunched Hills a
London under ground.
The Realm of
Silence, and eternal
Night,
Is startled at th' approach of
Noise and
Light.
165
Twin-stones long clasped in their
Mother-bed,
Now sever'd, yeeld with Foreign Rocks to wed.
Each polisht
Marble to a
Mirour grows,
Mocks its own Work-man, and
retorts his blows.
Here, the
green Robe pull'd off, the unbowel'd ground
170 Affords a
Clay, which with
chopp'd stubble bound
First, the
Sun fastens; then the brittle
Cakes
The rapid
Furnace to just hardness
bakes:
An hardness that out-stands the fiercest show'rs
Which Heaven from its open'd sluces pow'rs;
175 Which
Winter-Frosts can't
mellow; and the
Flame
It self that did beget it, cannot
tame.
Scarce
Flint or
Marble lasts so long in prime:
This
brittle Stone grind's out the teeth of
Time.
With this th'
Immortal Queen built
Babels Spires,
180 And with
burnt Walls beguiled
future Fires
There, the
Woods Glories fall, and where the
Eye
Of
Heav'n scarce pierc'd, now
mortal sight doth pry.
The
Shades by
Horror hallow'd, th' early dawn
Admitted, doth
illustrate and
profane.
185 The rev'rend
Oaks presumptuous
Axes wound,
Meas'ring their
lengths upon the furrow'd ground.
Whiles ratling
Echo, (as great Talkers do)
Reports at distance every blow for two.
The
Ring Dove sees her lofty Nest o'rethrown,
190 And
Turtles that their Love's bewrayed, moan:
The
Magpy scolds whiles her
arch'd Roof doth fall;
And sharking
Rooks, their
Camp dislodged,
brawl;
The
Hare forsakes her
Form; the rowzed
Deer
Their branch'd heads now above their Thickets rear;
195 And all the
Game tall Forests us'd to shield,
Becomes a facile
prey in th' open field.
The
Trav'ler too, who setting forth, design'd
The
crowned Hills, as
certain Guides, to mind;
At his Return, admires the
shave Coast,
200 And finds his
way, with his
Directors, lost.
Yea,
Foreign Realms contribute,
Spain brings
Steel,
Libanus Cedar sends, and
Denmark Deal:
A
chequer'd Gift the Sun-burnt
India gives,
Whence th'
whitest Tooth, and
blackest Wood arrives:
205 Our
Ireland Oak, on which no
spider builds,
(
Arachne sure hang'd on that Timber) yields.
Marbles come vary'd by their
native grains.
This,
untrod Snow with purer
brightness stains:
That's pitchy black, a lump of
solid Night:
210 There,
bloody Veins creep through a
lovely White:
Some in its
speckled Face, heav'ns pourtrait bears,
An
azure skie bespangled o're with
Stars:
And some, (on which
Medusa's Head did fall),
Wherein her
Snakes seem still to
hiss and
crawl.
215 Nay, (would you think't? or Fame, my Author lies)
London by th' Great in
forreign Lands doth rise.
Whiles the
Dutch Artist takes his Module hence.
And sends us
Houses ready-fram'd from thence.
The
laden Sea foams, and the
tugged Oar
220 Plies hard to towe a
floating Town to shore.
And th'
Eastern Wind (now a
Repairer grown),
Blows up our buildings as it
fir'd them
down.
Whence, (
sound's the
Moral oft, when
Tales are
lame
Some doubt
New London may prove
Amsterdam.
225 Nor think it strange,
Cities should
cross the
Seas.
Wee
Poets can do feats as great as these.
Wee, when the whole
combined Earth beside
Unto a
lab'ring Goddess Room deny'd;
Did float a
Delos to her, and assign
230 A brace of Gods, a
Birth-place and a
Shrine.
From
Naz'reth to
Loretto, (quick as thought)
Our Tribe the
Virgin Mothers Chamber brought:
Whence
Pilgrim-Votaries, (and well they may)
To th'
wandring Temple like Devotions pay.
235 Rowz'd with th' unwonted Noises, from his Bed,
The
Royal Thames advanc'd his
sindged Head.
At first amaz'd, (for still his troubled breast
With the late dismall Horrors was poslest)
He wildly star'd around the scorched shore:
240 But when he saw it neatly clothed o're
With
rising Structures; ravish'd with delight,
He gorg'd his Eyes with the surprising sight:
And thus he spake:
'O what
Coelestial Powers
'(For nothing less could) did erect these Towers?
245
'Old Troy, two
hired Gods did raise, 'tis said,
'And, though they wrought
by th' Great, by
halves were paid.
'The
Virgin-Goddess built th'
Athenian Town,
'And planted there the
Olive, and the
Gown.
'But such Romantick Tales will better be
250 '(
London) in time, told and believ'd of
Thee.
'Not jolly
Thebes it self, to whose advance
'The merry Stones into the Walls did dance;
'Nor
Dido's Town, in after-times too wide
'To be thought once
encircled with an
Hide;
255 'Nor
Rome, (of old and still, the Scene of wonders)
'Whose
Vatican Tarpejan Jove out-thunders;
'Nor She, that long hath
both Romes Rival been,
'For Beauty, Empire, and the Man of Sin,
'Which (from her
seven Hills too) once Sov'raigns gave
260 'To
half the World, but now the
whole doth crave;
'Nor dirty
Paris, where the muddy
Seine
'Swells big with Envy at the Christal
Rhene;
'Nor
Venice, round which th'
Adriatick roars,
'And limns her Beauties to th'encircling shores;
265 'Nor
stately Florence, (though their Proverb says,
'She's a sight only fit for Holy-days)
'Through which the rapid
Arnus posting, stays,
'And from both Banks doth on her Glories gaze;
'Nor mighty
Millain, with
immortals bread
270 'In former Times by sweet-tongu'd
Ambrose fed;
'Nor royal
Naples, which two mischiefs tire,
'The Spanish
Vapours, and
Vesuvian Fire;
'Shall dare appear in a contest with Thee:
'But like
mean Shrubs to
lofty Oaks shall be,
275 'Let each fair
Nymph exhaust her native Spring,
'And
Royal Ayds to our
Exchequer bring:
'VVith fresh supplies fill up my empty shores,
'Cloath every flat, and lift the grounded Oars.
'See, all the River's overspread with Sails,
280 'And the rude Barge-man jointly
tugs and
rails.
'Here, milk-white Chalk, from the unbowel'd hills
'Transform'd to Lime, the sluggish Lighters fills.
'There, th'easie-wrought Free-stone in western Boats
'Down my obsequious Current smoothly floats.
285 'This
Oxford sends, (the Mother of its Pride)
'To all its noble Palaces ally'd,
'To
Wolsey's vast and
Bodley's lofty Stories,
'And (the great
Prelate-Founders mounting Glories,
'To which ev'n
Roman Grandeur must defer
290 'The Sov'raignty of Art) its
Theater.
'And thee, (
small Island, to the
Dorset-strand
'Stuck, like a
Glass-drop, with a Tongue of sand)
'We'l waft to
Pauls, until again it be
'A taller Mark at
Land, than thou at
Sea.
295 'See! All my shores, one
Timber-wharf are grown.
'And whole Woods ev'ry where on Heaps are thrown.
'My very Banks are peel'd. The Fish bewray'd
'In vain seek Covert from their plundred shade.
'Few
whisp'ring Trees discourse my
purling streams;
300 'Or
daple them with
percolated Beams.
'Yet on,
kind Axe; no Vegetable spare;
'Rifle the
Woods, and
poll the
Mountains bare.
'This
Waste is
Merit; May but
London rise,
'We'l
chide in
Thanks, and count our
Losses Prize.
305 Thus was He saying, when the Sailers shout
(The Timber-Fleet arriving) put him out.
The
Cannons Thundred, and from under ground
The
grateful Ruins did the Joy rebound:
Th'
applaunding Flood repli'd: and the
grave Sire
310 Did, highly-pleas'd, to's
mossy Couch retire.
Mean while, the Streets are fill'd with busie throngs.
Tis doubtful, which sound loudest,
Tools or
Tongues.
Some
pray, some
pay; some
work, and some
advise:
Some use their
Hands, some rule those
Hands with
Eyes.
315 Thus, hast'ned
Buildings th'
Owners vote out grow,
And to their
Speed our very
Hopes are
slow.
So, the
new Hive the
active Swarm divides.
Some, with their Teeth file the uneven sides;
Some clear the Rubbish; others, by the Line
320 Here, a
Whitehall, a
Cheapside there, assign.
The
humming Troop surveys the fragrant fields,
And from each Flow'r a
gummy Birdlime peels:
Others, with joy receive their welcome load;
Which with
warm breath bedew'd, they spread abroad;
325 Then, with smooth
Tongues they lick th'obsequious mass
Into a
Form which
Reasons Art doth pass.
Thus, when th'
industrious Ants design to dwell
In an old Oak, or Moles forsaken Cell,
The Field with
little Myrmidons is sown;
330 And each
clod crawls around the rising Town.
Here, strict
Surveyors walk the destin'd round;
There,
Pioneers level th' uneven Ground;
Whiles (like a routed Troop with
shatter'd Spears)
Advanced
Straws a scatter'd Squadron bears;
335 Which, cropp'd to fitting lengths, their fellows match,
And some for
Rafters, some they lay for
Thatch.
Their
Shoulders some, some contribute their
Skill,
Till to a
Cone they mount the hollow Hill;
Whose chequer'd Fabrick, mixt of close and wide,
340 Admits the
Wind, but turns the
Shower beside.
On, gallant
Londoners. Husband your Fate,
And clothe your Ruins with a Robe of State.
Prove
Death the nobler
Lise: and stamp't a Truth,
Nature may circulate through
Age to
Youth.
345 Till they, who by the
Old, New London Size,
Confess their
Thoughts confuted by their
Eyes:
As old Acquaintance, when mens Fortunes mend,
Find him a
Courtier whom they left a
Friend.
Till
Citizens themselves, returned,
stray
350 In the new-modul'd Streets, and
lose their
way:
Yea,
London, whiles 'mong
Stars she sows her
Spires,
No less her
self, then
others Her, admires.
Thus, when the
Gauls old
Rome in Ashes laid,
And
Jove himself in a false
Balance weigh'd:
355 The
valiant Exile built the City new,
And with her
walls advanc'd her
Glories too.
Whence she, that till then, (for so long a while)
Retain'd the Reliques of her
base Asyle;
Whose
Shepherds sheds with
sorry Temples blended,
360 Reproach'd the
meanness whence she was
descended
Whose each prime street some
Hovell did avow,
VVhence a
Dictator drove his
Teem to plow;
VVhose
wooden Gods by their own Altars flame
Themselves (well-nigh) a
Sacrifice became;
365 VVhere
Numa's Chappel had a Roof of Thatch,
And
Vesta's Nuns her Harth with fear did watch:
Made then an
youthful salley from her Grave,
And nought but
wrinkles unto Death she gave.
Yea, (thanks to th'
Gallick Conflagration) grew
370 More
rich in after-times, and
splendid too.
Mud-walls gave place to
Marbles, and (compar'd)
Her golden Tops the Neighbour-Stars out-glar'd,
That by meer
Beauties Right, she might have been
VVithout a Rival, th'
Ʋniverses Queen.
375 May
London copy all her Glories out:
Rise as
Magnificent, nor less
devout:
Religion, best, Cities foundations layes:
Be
Rome therein her
Pattern, as my
Praise.
There, (not content, the cheap and sordid way,
380 In
private Corners sacred Rites to pay)
As fast their
Temples as their
Homes they built,
And as themselves, their gods in
Cedar dwelt,
Yea, statelier too. The
Thund'rer cas'd in gold,
(Lately his Ransome) held his rescu'd hold.
385 Bright
Phoebus's
gilt beams out-glar'd his
own,
And in
white Metal
Silver-Phoebe shone.
Now Marble Walls did
Vesta's fires surround:
And
Ears of richest yellow
Ceres crown'd.
Old
Saturn Sent'nell sate on golden Bars,
390 Queen
Juno's Roof, like Heav'n, was ciel'd with Stars.
Snakes scal'd with Pearl the
Virgin-Champion bare,
And
Venus was as fine as she was fair.
Luster and Horror
Mars's Arms combin'd,
And old
Quirinus like his City shin'd.
395 Convinc'd, a second Fire they well might fear,
If their
Shops statelier than their
Altars were.
Yea,
Memphis-self claims in my Song a place.
Glorious her Temples, though her Gods were base.
Here,
Ibis vested in a Room of State:
400 And there, inthron'd, an
ugly Monkey sate:
In richest Shrines the hallow'd
Bull did bellow;
From like Roofs answer'd by his Female Fellow.
And shall not We a nobler Zeal express?
Sith more our
Light, why should our
Love be less?
405 Shame on our baseness if those
Dunghil-gods
With great
Jehovah vye and have the
odds!
If
Curr-Anubis Heaven's Lord excell;
And the
true Thund'rer more obscurely dwell!
Say not, th'
Eternal Mind delights to come
410 Into the
pure Heart, not the
Gaudy Room.
That th'
Who, in Worship, sanctifie the
Where:
And make a
Barn, or
Booth, an
House of Prayer.
Thus
Satan in a
Samuel's Mantle sneaks,
Whiles
Avarice Religious Language speaks!
415 But Wranglers, learn, He will in
both reside,
Who (equally remov'd from
Need and
Pride)
Expects the
best, scorns not the
meanest Treat;
Val'uing in both the
Welcome, not the
Meat;
Gifts by the
Mind, the
Mind by
them he weighs;
420 And as men give, by a like scale repays.
Ill Parsimony Purity pretends:
Nor is the worship
Pure, where
foul the Ends.
At least with thee,
brave City, in whose frame
Both
Art and
Cost equally court a name,
425 Let
Int'rest sway; lay not a train of
Guilt,
Once more to
blow up what thy
Wealth hath
built.
'Tis an affront too daring to be born,
When th' object of our
Worship grows our
Scorn.
Who
shames, disclaims his God; whiles (meanly plac'd)
430 His House is by its Neighbouring Pomp disgrac'd.
Our
Fathers (sure) were of a nobler strain,
VVhose Times we treat 'twixt
Pity and
Disdain.
Their
Twilight-Zeal rais'd us the
Churches, where
Those
Lights have shin'd that made our
Day so clear.
435 O let's not tempt Posterity to call
Those the
worse Christians that let 'em fall!
And (sith
Church-founding's now my Muses Aim)
Thou
Rev'rend Pauls her first Essay maist claim.
VVhether the
Royal Charles in Thee design
440 To crown the Glories of his Princely Line;
Or some Successor,
Maurice, in thy seat,
Rival thy Honours with a mind as great;
Or grateful Piety thy
Sons engage
VVith thy
Revenues to restore thine Age;
445 Or
private Breasts a glorious zeal inspire;
Or
publique work a publick Purse require;
Or
all these
helps be neeeful: Pity 'twere
Thy sacred walls alone should want Repair.
And whiles they overlook all round 'em new,
450
Threaten the City and
reproach it too.
True, 'tis a work of Ages, and
our Days
May well despair to grasp so
vast a
Praise:
But yet we may
begin, and part the glory
Bet wixt
our own, and
our Descendants story,
455 The
ancient'st Christian Monument we have
To have redeemed from its fatal Grave.
You, whose, full Chests with smother'd Gold are cram'd,
At once to
Rust and
second darkness damn'd:
Rescue your
Treasure from your
Heirs Excess.
460 A
Part thus spent will the
Remainder bless.
Or would you
propagate your VVealth by
Ʋse?
Cajole the Law, and
Cent per
Cent produce?
Trust Him that's most Responsible, and add
(Besides the
Gain) a
Credit to your Trade?
465 No
Ʋsury like this you can devise,
VVhere
God's the
Debtor, Heav'n at Mortgage lies.
And you, whose
Riches most in
Wishes are,
(The
Poets Tribe) assist with
Verse and
Pray'r.
Old Bards did thus build Cities, Churches We;
470 Though better Founders,
Pauls, we wish to Thee:
Until (great
Doctor of the
Gentiles) thine
Become the Envy of the
Fishers shrine.
These Verses and divers that follow are to be referred to the time when the Latin Poem (of which this is a Version) was written,
viz. Feb. 1667. when the Winter was remarkably dry and calm.
Mean while,
calm Winter thanks, young
Londons friend,Ne're was the Sky to better purpose kind.
475 How Divine Favour rocks the
Storms to
Rest,
To give her space to build her
Halcion-Nest!
Whiles
February laughs that us'd to mourn,
And
galloping Spring out-post's the
Suns Return.
Whiles no
hard Frosts lock up the
costive ground,
480 Nor
snowy Fleeces sever'd Rights confound,
Nor
Icy-drops the Truel double-glaze,
Nor the
cold ferment lodged Bricks doth raise,
Nor
hasty rains with an impetuous Dash
Into a bog the
mellow buildings quash.
485 Hail,
Heav'ns great
Fav'rite-City! For thy ends,
The
Course of
Things and
Law of Nature bends:
El'ments commute, and the
inverted year
Her
Summer-Months on
Winter doth confer.
What glorious Fabricks may we (then) expect
190 The
Vernal Sun advanced shall erect!
When the unequal
Ram with equal Rage
The chafed
Bull in Combat shall engage:
When from the
Martial Twins the fiery Carr
Retreats into the
retrogressive Starr:
195 When
Nemea's Lion roars, and a cold sweat
Bathes the
scar'd maid amidst her flagrant Heat:
If the
decrepit year such
Issues shew,
And
London thus under
dull Planets grow.
Then, sure, (as when the Earth hath quaffed up
500
Joves Tankard-bearers overflowing Cup,
And tepid
Zephyr thawing Winters cold
Makes
sprouting Trees their
closed Buds unfold;
Whiles the returning
Sap with want on heat
Swelling
each Bud, new
Blossoms each beget:)
505 Thy
Ruins shall prove
Vegetable too:
And thy scorch't
Stump to a
new City grow.
Whose adverse Fronts at equidistant space,
As Lines drawn Parallel, their Fellows face.
Each noble Street
detaining with delight,
510 VVhiles it gives
Passage to th' admiring sight:
Till intercepted by no Envious bound,
It find it self in Heav'ns vast Ocean drown'd.
Thus, whiles the
Quin cunx curious Orchards throws
Into a thousand subdivided rows;
515 Its several
Walks are
loop'd to th'
Hemisphere,
And each
end-twig not
Fruit but
Stars doth bear.
And where
Commerce in
crowded Throngs was pent,
Or
Fires coop'd up had rag'd for want of
vent:
VVhere
obscure Lanes obscurer Facts did hide:
520 And
Pests by being straitned, spread more wide:
Traffique in spacious Streets shall now be free,
And
Flames soon
spent, or soon
supprest shall be.
Day's Eye each where shall
skulking Sinners trace,
And
transient Air infectious steams shall chase.
525 Yea, (though
Front-buildings shall be
backward thrust,
T'enlage each Passage to dimensions just)
London, thou shalt not
less by
lessening grow;
Whiles each House gains
above what's lost
below,
Its breadth
squeez'd into
Height; and from the
skies
530
Stealing the room the cramped
Ground denies,
Thus thy own
Thames both robs and makes amends:
VVhiles it
pays this shore what from that it
rends.
Happp thy
Poet, if his friendly Fates
Spare him to
see what he
prognosticates!
535 No mean content would such a prospect bring
Unto his
Autumn to behold thy
Spring.
Nor will his
Muse (born for thy service) pine,
If, thy Turn's serv'd, her stock of wit decline.
On
other Themes to
flag less must her grieve,
540 Secure enough by thy
sole Name to
live.
And you (
Great Sir) who toil'd in vain to save
A
dying London from her dismal Grave:
Shall less repent your unsuccessful pain,
VVhen, worthy you, by you, she lives again.
545 Yea, after-times, that mourning read her
Fall;
VVith equal Joy shall read her
Rise withall.
And all her
past misfortunes from your story
Shall be expung'd by her
succeeding Glory.
VVhence she (
Augusta hight in days of
Eald
550 Though much beyond her
State her
Title swell'd)
By this improvement, with a fairer claim
Into her
own shall
graft your greater Name.
Yea, could she
now state on a just account,
How much her
Gain her
Loss shall
then surmount.
555 'Tis thought, she'd
thank her
Flames, and count it
Prize,
Ev'n
so to
die, that
so she might
arise.
FINIS.