The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) eBook

Theodore Watts-Dunton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 353 pages of information about The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753).

The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) eBook

Theodore Watts-Dunton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 353 pages of information about The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753).

All ages past record, all countries now,
In various kinds such equal beauties show,
That ev’n judge Paris would not know
On whom the golden apple to bestow,
Though goddesses to his sentence did submit,
Women and lovers would appeal from it: 
Nor durst he say, of all the female race,
This is the sovereign face. 
And some (tho’ these be of a kind that’s rare,
That’s much, oh! much less frequent than the fair)
So equally renown’d for virtue are,
That is the mother of the gods might pose,
When the best woman for her guide she chose. 
But if Apollo should design
A woman Laureat to make,
Without dispute he would Orinda take,
Though Sappho and the famous nine
Stood by, and did repine. 
To be a Princess or a Queen
Is great; but ’tis a greatness always seen;
The world did never but two women know,
Who, one by fraud, th’other by wit did rise
To the two tops of spiritual dignities,
One female pope of old, one female poet now.

III.

Of female poets, who had names of old,
Nothing is shown, but only told,
And all we hear of them perhaps may be
Male-flatt’ry only, and male-poetry. 
Few minutes did their beauties light’ning waste,
The thunder of their voice did longer last,
But that too soon was past. 
The certain proofs of our Orinda’s wit,
In her own lasting characters are writ,
And they will long my praise of them survive,
Though long perhaps too that may live,
The trade of glory manag’d by the pen
Though great it be, and every where is found. 
Does bring in but small profit to us men;
’Tis by the number of the sharers drown’d. 
Orinda on the female coasts of fame,
Ingrosses all the goods of a poetic name. 
She does no partner with her see,
Does all the business there alone, which we
Are forc’d to carry on by a whole company.

IV.

But wit’s like a luxuriant vine;
Unless to virtue’s prop it join,
Firm and erect towards Heav’n bound;
Tho’ it with beauteous leaves and pleasant fruit be crown’d,
It lyes deform’d, and rotting on the ground. 
Now shame and blushes on us all,
Who our own sex superior call! 
Orinda does our boasting sex out do,
Not in wit only, but in virtue too. 
She does above our best examples rise,
In hate of vice, and scorn of vanities. 
Never did spirit of the manly make,
And dipp’d all o’er in learning’s sacred lake,
A temper more invulnerable take. 
No violent passion could an entrance find,
Into the tender goodness of her mind;
Through walls of stone those furious bullets may
Force their impetuous way,
When her soft breast they hit, damped and dead they lay.

V.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.