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Among the Panegyrical Verses before Coryat's Crudities (1611).

By Michael Drayton

Topics: classic

A briefe Prologue to the verses following.     Deare Tom, thy booke was like to come to light,     Ere I could gaine but one halfe howre to write;     They go before whose wits are at their noones,     And I come after bringing Salt and Spoones.     Many there be that write before thy Booke,     For whom (except here) who could euer looke?     Thrice happy are all wee that had the Grace     To haue our names set in this liuing place.     Most worthy man, with thee it is euen thus,     As men take Dottrels, so hast thou ta'n vs.     Which as a man his arme or leg doth set,     So this fond Bird will likewise counterfeit:     Thou art the Fowler, and doest shew vs shapes     And we are all thy Zanies, thy true Apes.     I saw this age (from what it was at first)     Swolne, and so bigge, that it was like to burst,     Growne so prodigious, so quite out of fashion,     That who will thriue, must hazard his damnation:     Sweating in panges, sent such a horrid mist,     As to dim heauen: I looked for Antichrist     Or some new set of Diuels to sway hell,     Worser then those, that in the Chaos fell:     Wondring what fruit it to the world would bring,     At length it brought forth this: O most strange thing;     And with sore throwes, for that the greatest head     Euer is hard'st to be deliuered.     By thee wise Coryate we are taught to know,     Great, with great men which is the way to grow.     For in a new straine thou com'st finely in,     Making thy selfe like those thou mean'st to winne:     Greatnesse to me seem'd euer full of feare,     Which thou found'st false at thy arriuing there,     Of the Bermudas, the example such,     Where not a ship vntill this time durst touch;     Kep't as suppos'd by hels infernall dogs,     Our Fleet found their most honest wyld courteous hogs.     Liue vertuous Coryate, and for euer be     Lik'd of such wise men, as are most like thee.                     Explicit Michael Drayton.

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"A briefe Prologue to the verses following...."

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Author:Michael Drayton

"A briefe Prologue to the verses following...." by Michael Drayton

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Michael Drayton

About Michael Drayton

Michael Drayton (1563–1631) was an English poet whose "Poly-Olbion" (1612–1622) is a vast topographical poem describing the landscape and legends of England and Wales. His sonnet "Since there's no help" is among the finest of the Elizabethan era.

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