Volume Vii Part 11 (1/2)

FINIS.

EPILOGUE.

SPOKEN BY JULIO.

Lo here the sweets of grisly pale despair!

These are the blossoms of this cursed tree, Such are the fruits of too much love and care, O'erwhelmed in the sense of misery.

With violent hands he that his life doth end, His d.a.m.ned soul to endless night doth wend.

Now resteth it that I discharge mine oath, To see th'unhappy lovers and the king Laid in one tomb. I would be very loth You should wait here to see this mournful thing: For I am sure, and do ye all to wit, Through grief wherein the lords of Salerne be, These funerals are not prepared yet: Nor do they think on that solemnity.

As for the fury, ye must understand, Now she hath seen th'effect of her desire, She is departed, and hath left our land.

Granting this end unto her h.e.l.lish ire.

Now humbly pray we, that our English dames May never lead their loves into mistrust; But that their honours may avoid the shames, That follow such as live in wanton l.u.s.t.

We know they bear them on their virtues bold, With blissful chast.i.ty so well content That, when their lives and loves abroad are told, All men admire their virtuous government; Worthy to live where fury never came, Worthy to live where love doth always see, Worthy to live in golden trump of fame, Worthy to live and honoured still to be.

Thus end our sorrows with the setting sun: Now draw the curtains, for our scene is done.

R.W.

THE WOUNDS OF CIVIL WAR.

_EDITION.

The Wounds of Civill War. Lively set forth in the true Tragedies of Marius and Scilla. As it hath beene publiquely plaide in London, by the Right Honourable the Lord high Admirall his Servants. Written by Thomas Lodge, Gent_. O vita! misero longa, faelici brevis. _London, Printed by John Danter, and are to be sold at the signe of the Sunne in Paules Church-yarde_. 1594. 4to.

MR. COLLIER'S PREFACE.[89]

Thomas Lodge, in his ”Alarum against Usurers,” 1584, speaks of his ”birth,” and of ”the offspring from whence he came,” as if he were at least respectably descended; and on the authority of Anthony Wood, it has been a.s.serted by all subsequent biographers that he was of a Lincolns.h.i.+re family. [The fact is, that Lodge was the second son of Sir Thomas Lodge, Lord Mayor of London, who died in 1584, by his wife, the daughter of Sir William Laxton.] Thomas Salter, about the year 1580, dedicated his ”Mirror of Modesty” to [the poet's mother, Lady Anne Lodge].

Langbaine seems to be under a mistake when he states that Lodge was of Cambridge. Wood claims him for the University of Oxford,[90] where he traces him as early as 1573, when he must have been about seventeen years old, if he were born, as is generally supposed, in 1556. We are told by himself that he was a Servitor of Trinity College, and that he was educated under Sir Edward Hoby. At what time and for what cause Lodge left Oxford is not known; but Stephen Gosson, in the dedication of his ”Plays Confuted in Five Actions,” printed about 1582,[91] accuses him of having become ”a vagrant person, visited by the heavy hand of G.o.d,” as if he had taken to the stage, and thereby had incurred the vengeance of heaven. In 1584, when Lodge answered Gosson, he was a student of Lincoln's Inn;[92] and to ”his courteous friends, the Gentlemen of the Inns of Court,” he dedicated his ”Alarum against Usurers.” He afterwards, as he informs Lord Hunsdon, in the epistle before his ”Rosalynde,” 1590, ”fell from books to arms;” and he calls it ”the work of a soldier and a scholar,” adding that he had sailed with Captain Clarke to the islands of Terceras and the Canaries. In 1596, he published his ”Margarite of America,” and he mentions that it was written in the Straits of Magellan, on a voyage with Cavendish. To this species of vagrancy, however, Gosson did not refer.

That Lodge was vagrant in his pursuits we have sufficient evidence; for, after having perhaps been upon the stage, having entered himself at Lincoln's Inn, having become a soldier, and having sailed with Clarke and Cavendish, he went, according to Wood, to study medicine at Avignon.[93] This change, if it took place at all, which may admit of doubt,[94] did not occur until after 1596. In 1595 his ”Fig for Momus”

appeared. Besides Satires, it contains Epistles and Eclogues; and in one of the latter Lodge speaks in his own person, under the character of ”Golde” (the same letters that compose his name), and there states his determination no longer to pursue ill-rewarded poetry--

”Which sound rewards, since this neglected time, Repines to yield to men of high desert, I'll cease to ravel out my wits in rhyme, For such who make so base account of art; And since by wit there is no means to climb, I'll hold the plough awhile, and ply the cart; And if my muse to wonted course return, I'll write and judge, peruse, commend and burn.”

The dedication of his ”Wit's Misery, and the World's Madness,” is dated ”from my house, at Low Layton, 5th November 1596.”

The princ.i.p.al reasons for supposing that Lodge studied medicine are the existence of a ”Treatise of the Plague,” published by ”Thomas Lodge, Doctor in Physic,” in 1603, and of a collection of medical recipes in MS., called ”The Poor Man's Legacy,” addressed to the Countess of Arundel, and sold among the books of the Duke of Norfolk.[95] [There can be little or no question that the physician and poet were one and the same. In ”England's Parna.s.sus,” 1600, he is called indifferently Thomas Lodge and Doctor Lodge.] The author of the ”Treatise of the Plague”

expressly tells the Lord Mayor of London, in the dedication, that he was ”bred and brought up” in the city. Thomas Heywood, in his ”Troja Britannica,” 1609, enumerates the celebrated physicians then living--

”As famous Butler, Pedy, Turner, Poe, Atkinson, Lyster, _Lodge_, who still survive.”--C. 3.