The Poetaster eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 208 pages of information about The Poetaster.

The Poetaster eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 208 pages of information about The Poetaster.

Cris.  ’Tis true.

Hor.  I hope the hour of my release be come:  he will, upon this consideration, discharge me, sure.

Cris.  Troth, I am doubtful what I may best do, whether to leave thee or my affairs, Horace.

Hor.  O Jupiter! me, sir, me, by any means; I beseech you, me, sir.

Cris.  No, faith, I’ll venture those now; thou shalt see I love thee—­some, Horace.

Hor.  Nay, then I am desperate:  I follow you, sir.  ’Tis hard contending with a man that overcomes thus.

Cris.  And how deals Mecaenas with thee? liberally, ha? is he open handed? bountiful?

Hor.  He’s still himself, sir.

Cris.  Troth, Horace, thou art exceeding happy in thy friends and acquaintance; they are all most choice spirits, and of the first rank of Romans:  I do not know that poet, I protest, has used his fortune more prosperously than thou hast.  If thou wouldst bring me known to Mecaenas, I should second thy desert well; thou shouldst find a good sure assistant of me, one that would speak all good of thee in thy absence, and be content with the next place, not envying thy reputation with thy patron.  Let me not live, but I think thou and I, in a small time, should lift them all out of favour, both Virgil, Varius, and the best of them, and enjoy him wholly to ourselves.

Hor. 
   Gods, you do know it, I can hold no longer;
   This brize has prick’d my patience.  Sir, your silkness
   Clearly mistakes Mecaenas and his house,
   To think there breathes a spirit beneath his roof,
   Subject unto those poor affections
   Of undermining envy and detraction,
   Moods only proper to base grovelling minds. 
   That place is not in Rome, I dare affirm,
   More pure or free from such low common evils. 
   There’s no man griev’d, that this is thought more rich,
   Or this more learned; each man hath his place,
   And to his merit his reward of grace,
   Which, with a mutual love, they all embrace.

Cris.  You report a wonder:  ’tis scarce credible, this.

Hor. l am no torturer to enforce you to believe it; but it is so

Cris.  Why, this inflames me with a more ardent desire to be his, than before; but I doubt I shall find the entrance to his familiarity somewhat more than difficult, Horace.

Hor.  Tut, you’ll conquer him, as you have done me; there’s no standing out against you, sir, I see that:  either your importunity, or the intimation of your good parts, or

Cris.  Nay, I’ll bribe his porter, and the grooms of his chamber; make his doors open to me that way first, and then I’ll observe my times.  Say he should extrude me his house to-day, shall I there-fore desist, or let fall my suit to-morrow?  No; I’ll attend him, follow him, meet him in the street, the highways, run by his coach, never leave him.  What! man hath nothing given him in this life without much labour

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The Poetaster from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.