Poems of Henry Vaughan Silurist Edited by E

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Poems of Henry Vaughan Silurist Edited by E POEMS OF HENRY VAUGHAN SILURIST EDITED BY E. K. CHAMBERS WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY CANON BEECHING VOL. II. vii page Table Of Contents vii Biographical Note xv Bibliography Of Henry Vaughan's Works lvii Poems With The Tenth Satire Of Juvenal Englished, 1646 1 To all Ingenious Lovers of Poesy 3 To my Ingenuous Friend, R. W. 5 Les Amours 8 To Amoret. The Sigh 10 To his Friend, Being in Love 11 Song: Amyntas go, thou art Undone 12 To Amoret. Walking in a Starry Evening 13 To Amoret Gone from him 15 A Song to Amoret 16 An Elegy 17 A Rhapsodis 18 viii To Amoret, of the Difference 'twixt him and other Lovers, >and what 21 True Love is To Amoret Weeping 23 Upon the Priory Grove, his Usual Retirement 26 Juvenal's Tenth Satire Translated 28 Olor Iscanus. 1651. Ad Posteros 51 To the ... Lord Kildare Digby 53 The Publisher to the Reader 55 Upon the Most Ingenious Pair of Twins, Eugenius Philalethes and the Author 57 of those Poems by T. Powell, Oxoniensis To my Friend the Author upon these his Poems by I. Rowlandson, Oxoniensis 58 Upon the following Poems by Eugenius Philalethes, Oxoniensis 59 Olor Iscanus. To the River Isca 61 The Charnel-House 65 In Amicum Foeneratorem 68 To his Friend —— 70 To his Retired Friend, An Invitation to Brecknock 73 Monsieur Gombauld 77 An Elegy on the Death of Mr. R. W., Slain in the late Unfortunate Differences 79 at Routon Heath, near Chester, 1645 Upon a Cloak lent him by Mr. J. Ridsley 83 Upon Mr. Fletcher's Plays, Published 1647 87 Upon the Poems and Plays of the Ever-Memorable Mr. William Cartwright ix 90 To the Best and Most Accomplished Couple —— 92 An Elegy on the Death of Mr. R. Hall, Slain at Pontefract, 1648 94 To my Learned Friend, Mr. T. Powell, upon his Translation of Malvezzi's 97 Christian Politician To my Worthy Friend, Master T. Lewes 99 To the Most Excellently Accomplished Mrs. K. Philips 100 An Epitaph upon the Lady Elizabeth, Second Daughter to his Late Majesty 102 To Sir William Davenant upon his Gondibert 104 Translations From Ovid. To his Fellow Poets at Rome, upon the Birthday of Bacchus 106 To his Friends—after his Many Solicitations—Refusing to Petition Cæsar for 109 his Releasement To his Inconstant Friend, Translated for the Use of all the Judases of this 112 Touchstone Age To his Wife at Rome, when he was Sick 115 Ausonii. Idyll vi. Cupido Cruci Affixus 119 Translations from Boethius x 125 Translations from Casimirus 144 The Praise of a Religious Life of Mathias Casimirus. In Answer to that Ode of 152 Horace, Beatus Ille Qui Procul Negotiis. Ad Fluvium Iscam 157 Venerabili Viro, Praeceptori Suo Olim Et Semper Colendissimo Magistro 158 Mathaeo Herbert Praestantissimo Viro, Thomae Poëllo In Suum De Elementis Opticae 159 Libellum Ad Echum 160 Thalia Rediviva. 1678. To ... Henry Lord Marquis and Earl of Worcester, &c. by J. W. 163 To the Reader by I. W. 167 To Mr. Henry Vaughan, the Silurist: upon These and his Former Poems. By 169 Orinda Upon the Ingenious Poems of his Learned Friend, Mr. Henry Vaughan, the 171 Silurist. By Tho. Powell, D.D. To the Ingenious Author of Thalia Rediviva By N. W., Jes. Coll., Oxon. 172 To my Worthy Friend Mr. Henry Vaughan, the Silurist. by I. W., A.M., Oxon. 175 Choice Poems On Several Occasions. xi To his Learned Friend and Loyal Fellow-Prisoner, Thomas Powel of Cantreff, 178 Doctor of Divinity The King Disguised 181 The Eagle 184 To Mr. M. L. upon his Reduction of the Psalms into Method 187 To the Pious Memory of Charles Walbeoffe Esquire, Who Finished his Course Here, and Made his Entrance into Immortality upon the 13 of 189 September, in the Year of Redemption, 1653 In Zodiacum Marcelli Palingenii 193 To Lysimachus, the Author Being with him in London 195 On Sir Thomas Bodley's Library, the Author Being Then in Oxford 197 The Importunate Fortune, Written to Dr. Powel, of Cantreff 200 To I. Morgan of Whitehall, Esq., upon his Sudden Journey and Succeeding 204 Marriage Fida; or, The Country Beauty. To Lysimachus 206 Fida Forsaken 209 To the Editor of the Matchless Orinda 211 Upon Sudden News of the Much-Lamented Death of Judge Trevers xii 213 To Etesia for Timander; The First Sight 214 The Character, to Etesia 217 To Etesia Looking from her Casement at the Full Moon 219 To Etesia Parted from Him, and Looking Back 220 In Etesiam Lachrymantem 221 To Etesia Going Beyond Sea 222 Etesia Absent 223 Translations. Some Odes of the Excellent and Knowing Anicius Manlius 224 Severinus Boethius, Englished The Old Man of Verona, out of Claudian 236 The Sphere of Archimedes, out of Claudian 238 The Phoenix, out of Claudian 239 Pious Thoughts And Ejaculations. To his Books 245 Looking Back 247 The Shower 248 Discipline 249 The Eclipse 250 Afflictionxiii 251 Retirement 252 The Revival 254 The Day Spring 255 The Recovery 257 The Nativity 259 The True Christmas 261 The Request 263 Jordanis 265 Servilii Fatum, Sive Vindicta Divina 266 De Salmone 267 The World 268 The Bee 272 To Christian Religion 276 Daphnis 278 Fragments And Translations. 1641-1661. 287 From Eucharistica Oxoniensia 1641 289 From Of the Benefit we may get by our Enemies 1651 291 From Of the Diseases of the Mind and the Body 1651 293 From The Mount of Olives 1652 294 From Man in Glory 1652 298 From Flores Solitudinis 1654 299 From Of Temperance and Patience 1654 300 From Of Life and Death 1654 305 From Primitive Holiness 1654 307 From Hermetical Physic 1655 xiv 322 From Cerbyd Fechydwiaeth 1657 323 From Humane Industry 1661 324 Notes To Vol. II 329 List Of First Lines 355 Xv BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE. Recent inquiries into the life of Henry Vaughan have added but little to the information already contained in the memoirs of Mr. Lyte and Dr. Grosart. I have, however, been enabled to put together a few notes on this somewhat obscure subject, which may be taken as supplementary to Mr. Beeching's Introduction in Vol. I. It will be well to preface them by reprinting the account of Anthony à Wood, our chief original authority Ath. Oxon., ed. Bliss, 1817, iv. 425: "Henry Vaughan, called the Silurist from that part of Wales whose inhabitants were in ancient times called Silures, brother twin but elder1 to Eugenius Philalethes, alias Tho. Vaughan ... was born at Newton S. Briget, lying on the river Isca, commonly called Uske, in Brecknockshire, educatedxvi in grammar learning in his own country for six years under one Matthew Herbert, a noted schoolmaster of his time, made his first entry into Jesus College in Mich. term 1638, aged 17 years; where spending two years or more in logicals under a noted tutor, was taken thence and designed by his father for the obtaining of some knowledge in the municipal laws at London. But soon after the civil war beginning, to the horror of all good men, he was sent for home, followed the pleasant paths of poetry and philology, became noted for his ingenuity, and published several specimens thereof, of which his Olor Iscanus was most valued. Afterwards applying his mind to the study of physic, became at length eminent in his own country for the practice thereof, and was esteemed by scholars an ingenious person, but proud and humorous.... A list of Vaughan's works follows. ... He died in the latter end of April about the 29th day in sixteen hundred ninety and five, and was buried in the parish church of Llansenfreid, about two miles distant from Brecknock, in Brecknockshire." Anthony à Wood seems to have had some personal acquaintance with the poet, for in his account of Thomas Vaughan Ath. Oxon. iii. 725 he says that "Olor Iscanus sent me a catalogue of his brother's works."xvii a THE VAUGHAN GENEALOGY. Henry Vaughan's descent from the Vaughans of Tretower, County Brecon, has been accurately traced by Dr. Grosart and others. Little has been hitherto known about his immediate family. Theophilus Jones, in his History of Brecknockshire 1805-9, ii. 544, says: "Henry Vaughan died in 1695, aged 75,2 leaving by his first wife two sons and three daughters, and by his second a daughter Rachel, who married John Turberville. His grand- daughter, Denys, or Dyenis, a corruption or abbreviation of Dyonisia, who was the daughter of Jenkin Jones of Trebinshwn, by Luce his wife, died single in 1780, aged 92, and is buried in the Priory churchyard.3 What became of the remainder of his family, or whether they are extinct, I know not." To this statement Mr. Lyte added nothing but some errors, and Dr. Grosart nothing but the following hypothesis:— "I am inclined to think that William Vaughan, censor of the College of Physicians, physician to William IIId., was one of the sons of our worthy mentioned by Mr. Lyte.... William Vaughan's 'age 20' in 1668 represents 1648 as the birth-date,xviii and that fits in with the love-verse of the Poems of 1646." Mr. G. T. Clark, in his Genealogies of Glamorgan, p. 240, gives the following account:— Henry Vaughan, ob. 1695, æt. 75, father by first wife of 1 a son, s. p.; 2 Lucy ob. 29 Aug., 1780, æt. 92,4 m. Jenkin Jones of Trebinshwn. Their d. Denise Jones, died single, 1780, æt. 92. By second wife 3 Rachel, m. John Turberville; 4 Edmund; 5 Alexander, ob.
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