"Le Prince d' Amour," 1660, 8vo.-Francis Davison, editor of the poems above referred to, was son of that unfortunate secretary of state, who suffered so much from the affair of Mary Q. of Scots. These poems, he tells us in his preface, were written by himself, by his brother [Walter]; who was, a soldier in the wars of the Low Countries, and by some dear friends " anonymoi." Among them are found some pieces by Sir J. Davis, the Countess of Pembroke, Sir Philip Sidney, Spenser, and other wits of those times. In the fourth vol. of I`ryden's Miscellanies, this poem is attributed to Sydney Godolphin, Esq.; but erroneously, being probably written before he was born. One edit. of Davison's book was published in 1608. Godolphin was born in 1610, and died in 1642-3. Ath. Ox. II. 23. Ir chanc'd of late a shepherd swain, Her golden hair o'erspred her face ; The shepherd stood and gaz'd his fill; The crafty boy that sees her sleep, Whom if she wak'd he durst not see; Behind her closely seeks to creep, Before her nap should ended bee. There come, he steals her shafts away, But, ere she wakes, hies thence apace. Scarce was he gone, but she awakes, And spies the shepherd standing by: Her bended bow in haste she takes, And at the simple swain lets flye. Forth flew the shaft, and pierc'd his heart, Yet up again forthwith he start, And to the nymph he ran amain. Amazed to see so strange a sight, She shot, and shot, but all in vain ; The more his wounds, the more his might, Her angry eyes were great with tears, She blames her hand, she blames her skill; The bluntness of her shafts she fears, And try them on herself she will. Take heed, sweet nymph, trye not thy shaft, Each little touch will pierce thy heart: Alas! thou know'st not Cupids craft; Revenge is joy; the end is smart. Yet try she will, and pierce some bare; That made the shepherd senseless stand. 40 That breast she pierc'd; and through that breast 45 Love found an entry to her heart; At feeling of this new-come guest, Lord! how this gentle nymph did start? She runs not now; she shoots no more; She seeks for what she shunn'd before, Though mountains meet not, lovers may : The god of love sate on a tree, 50 55 XI. THE CHARACTER OF A HAPPY LIFE. This little moral poem was writ by Sir Henry WOTTON, who died Provost of Eaton in 1639. Æt. 72. It is printed from a little collection of his pieces, entitled, RELIQUIE WOTTONIANE, 1651, 12mo; compared with one or two other copies. How happy is he born or taught, Whose passions not his masters are; Not ty'd unto the world with care Of princes ear, or vulgar breath : Who hath his life from rumours freed; Whose state can neither flatterers feed, Nor ruine make oppressors great : Who envies none, whom chance doth raise, 10 15 5. Nor rules of state, but rules of good; Who Who God doth late and early pray With a well-chosen book or friend. This man is freed from servile bands 20 XII. GILDEROY was a famous robber, who lived about the middle of the last century, if we may credit the histories and story-books of highwaymen, which relate many improbable feats of him, as his robbing Cardinal Richlieu, Oliver Cromwell, &c. But these stories have probably no other authority, than the records of Grub-street: At least the GILDEROY, who is the hero of Scottish Songsters, seems to have lived in an earlier age; for, in Thompson's Orpheus Caledonius, vol. ii. 1733, 8vo, is a copy of this ballad, which, though corrupt and interpolated, contains some lines that appear to be of genuine antiquity: in these he is represented as contemporary with Mary Q. of Scots: ex. gr. "The Queen of Scots possessed nought, These |