Part 58 (1/2)

Horace is called on to swear, after Asinius had sworn to give up his ”Ningle.”

”Now, master Horace, you must be a more horrible swearer; for your oath must be, like your wits, of many colours; and like a broker's book, of many parcels.”

Horace offers to swear till his hairs stand up on end, to be rid of this sting. ”Oh, this sting!” alluding to the nettles. ”'Tis not your sting of conscience, is it?” asks one. In the inventory of his oaths, there is poignant satire, with strong humour; and it probably exhibits some foibles in the literary habits of our bard.

He swears ”Not to hang himself, even if he thought any man could write plays as well as himself; not to bombast out a new play with the old linings of jests stolen from the _Temple's Revels_; not to sit in a gallery, when your comedies have entered their actions, and there make vile and bad faces at every line, to make men have an eye to you, and to make players afraid; not to venture on the stage, when your play is ended, and exchange courtesies and compliments with gallants to make all the house rise and cry--'That's Horace that's he that pens and purges humours.' When you bid all your friends to the marriage of a poor couple, that is to say, your Wits and Necessities--_alias_, a poet's Whitsun-ale--you shall swear that, within three days after, you shall not abroad, in bookbinders' shops, brag that your viceroys, or tributary-kings, have done homage to you, or paid quarterage.

Moreover, when a knight gives you his pa.s.sport to travel in and out to his company, and gives you money for G.o.d's sake--you will swear not to make scald and wry-mouthed jests upon his knighthood. When your plays are misliked at court, you shall not cry Mew! like a puss-cat, and say, you are glad you write out of the courtier's element; and in brief, when you sup in taverns, amongst your betters, you shall swear not to dip your manners in too much sauce; nor, at table, to fling epigrams or play-speeches about you.”

The king observes, that

--------------------He whose pen Draws both corrupt and clear blood from all men Careless what vein he p.r.i.c.ks; let him not rave When his own sides are struck; blows, blows do crave.

Such were the bitter apples which Jonson, still in his youth, plucked from the tree of his broad satire, that branched over all ranks in society. That even his intrepidity and hardiness felt the incessant attacks he had raised about him, appears from the close of the Apologetical Epilogueto ”The Poetaster;” where, though he replies with all the consciousness of genius, and all its haughtiness, he closes with a determination to give over the composition of comedies! This, however, like all the vows of a poet, was soon broken; and his masterpieces were subsequently produced.

_Friend._ Will you not answer then the libels?

_Author._ No.

_Friend._ Nor the Untrussers.

_Author._ Neither.

_Friend._ You are undone, then.

_Author._ With whom?

_Friend._ The world.

_Author._ The bawd!

_Friend._ It will be taken to be stupidity or tameness in you.

_Author._ But they that have incensed me, can in soul Acquit me of that guilt. They know I dare To spurn or baffle them; or squirt their eyes With ink or urine: or I could do worse, Arm'd with Archilochus' fury, write iambicks, Would make the desperate lashers hang themselves.--

His Friend tells him that he is accused that ”all his writing is mere railing;” which Jonson n.o.bly compares to ”the salt in the old comedy;”

that they say, that he is slow, and ”scarce brings forth a play a year.”

_Author._ ------------'Tis true, I would they could not say that I did that.

He is angry that their

------------Base and beggarly conceits Should carry it, by the mult.i.tude of voices, Against the most abstracted work, opposed To the stufft nostrils of the drunken rout.--

And then exclaims with admirable enthusiasm--

O this would make a learn'd and liberal soul To rive his stained quill up to the back, And d.a.m.n his long-watch'd labours to the fire; Things, that were born, when none but the still night, And the dumb candle, saw his pinching throes.

And again, alluding to these mimics--