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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Andrew Marvell, by Augustine Birrell
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Andrew Marvell
+
+
+Author: Augustine Birrell
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 25, 2005 [eBook #17388]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ANDREW MARVELL***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Irma Spehar, Louise Pryor, and the Project Gutenberg
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/) from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries
+(http://www.archive.org/details/toronto)
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
+ http://www.archive.org/details/andrewmarvell00birruoft
+
+ The caret character (^) indicates that the remainder of the word
+ is superscripted.
+ Italicized words or phrases are placed between underscore (_)
+ marks.
+
+
+
+
+
+English Men of Letters
+Edited by John Morley
+
+ANDREW MARVELL
+
+by
+
+AUGUSTINE BIRRELL
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+The MacMillan Company
+London: MacMillan & Co., Ltd.
+1905
+All rights reserved
+Copyright, 1905,
+By the MacMillan Company.
+
+Set up and electrotyped. Published September, 1905.
+Norwood Press
+J.S. Cushing & Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
+Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+I desire to express my indebtedness to the following editions of
+Marvell's Works:--
+
+ (1) _The Works of Andrew Marvell, Esq., Poetical, Controversial, and
+ Political_: containing many Original Letters, Poems, and Tracts
+ never before printed, with a New Life. By Captain Edward
+ Thompson. In three volumes. London, 1776.
+
+ (2) _The Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Andrew Marvell, M.P._
+ Edited with Memorial-Introduction and Notes by the Rev. Alexander
+ B. Grosart. In four volumes. 1872.
+
+ (_In the Fuller Worthies Library._)
+
+ (3) _Poems and Satires of Andrew Marvell, sometime Member of
+ Parliament for Hull._ Edited by G.A. Aitken. Two volumes.
+ Lawrence and Bullen, 1892.
+
+ _Reprinted_ Routledge, 1905.
+
+Mr. C.H. Firth's Life of Marvell in the thirty-sixth volume of _The
+Dictionary of National Biography_ has, I am sure, preserved me from
+some, and possibly from many, blunders.
+
+ A.B.
+
+3 NEW SQUARE, LINCOLN'S INN,
+ June 3, 1905.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+ PAGE
+EARLY DAYS AT SCHOOL AND COLLEGE 1
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"THE HAPPY GARDEN-STATE" 19
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A CIVIL SERVANT IN THE TIME OF THE COMMONWEALTH 48
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS 75
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+"THE REHEARSAL TRANSPROSED" 151
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+LAST YEARS IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS 179
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+FINAL SATIRES AND DEATH 211
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WORK AS A MAN OF LETTERS 225
+
+
+INDEX 233
+
+
+
+
+ANDREW MARVELL
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+EARLY DAYS AT SCHOOL AND COLLEGE
+
+
+The name of Andrew Marvell ever sounds sweet, and always has, to use
+words of Charles Lamb's, a fine relish to the ear. As the author of
+poetry of exquisite quality, where for the last time may be heard the
+priceless note of the Elizabethan lyricist, whilst at the same moment
+utterance is being given to thoughts and feelings which reach far
+forward to Wordsworth and Shelley, Marvell can never be forgotten in his
+native England.
+
+Lines of Marvell's poetry have secured the final honours, and incurred
+the peril, of becoming "familiar quotations" ready for use on a great
+variety of occasion. We may, perhaps, have been bidden once or twice too
+often to remember how the Royal actor
+
+ "Nothing common did, or mean,
+ Upon that memorable scene,"
+
+or have been assured to our surprise by some self-satisfied worldling
+how he always hears at his back,
+
+ "Time's wingèd chariot hurrying near."
+
+A true poet can, however, never be defiled by the rough usage of the
+populace.
+
+As a politician Marvell lives in the old-fashioned vivacious
+history-books (which if they die out, as they show some signs of doing,
+will carry with them half the historic sense of the nation) as the hero
+of an anecdote of an unsuccessful attempt made upon his political virtue
+by a minister of the Crown, as a rare type of an inflexible patriot, and
+as the last member of the House of Commons who was content to take wages
+from, instead of contributing to the support of, his constituents. As
+the intimate friend and colleague of Milton, Marvell shares some of the
+indescribable majesty of that throne. A poet, a scholar, a traveller, a
+diplomat, a famous wit, an active member of Parliament from the
+Restoration to his death in 1678, the life of Andrew Marvell might _a
+priori_ be supposed to be one easy to write, at all events after the
+fashion in which men's lives get written. But it is nothing of the kind,
+as many can testify. A more elusive, non-recorded character is hardly to
+be found. We know all about him, but very little of him. His parentage,
+his places of education, many of his friends and acquaintances, are all
+known. He wrote nearly four hundred letters to his Hull constituents,
+carefully preserved by the Corporation, in which he narrates with much
+particularity the course of public business at Westminster.
+Notwithstanding these materials, the man Andrew Marvell remains
+undiscovered. He rarely comes to the surface. Though both an author and
+a member of Parliament, not a trace of personal vanity is noticeable,
+and vanity is a quality of great assistance to the biographer. That
+Marvell was a strong, shrewd, capable man of affairs, with enormous
+powers of self-repression, his Hull correspondence clearly proves, but
+what more he was it is hard to say. He rarely spoke during his eighteen
+years in the House of Commons. It is impossible to doubt that such a
+man in such a place was, in Mr. Disraeli's phrase, a "personage." Yet
+when we look for recognition of what we feel sure was the fact, we fail
+to find it. Bishop Burnet, in his delightful history, supplies us with
+sketches of the leading Parliamentarians of Marvell's day, yet to
+Marvell himself he refers but once, and then not by name but as "the
+liveliest droll of the age," words which mean much but tell little. In
+Clarendon's _Autobiography_, another book which lets the reader into the
+very clash and crowd of life, there is no mention of one of the author's
+most bitter and cruel enemies. With Prince Rupert, Marvell was credited
+by his contemporaries with a great intimacy; he was a friend of
+Harrington's; it may be he was a member of the once famous "Rota" Club;
+it is impossible to resist the conviction that wherever he went he made
+a great impression, that he was a central figure in the lobbies of the
+House of Commons and a man of much account; yet no record survives
+either to convince posterity of his social charm or even to convey any
+exact notion of his personal character.
+
+A somewhat solitary man he would appear to have been, though fond of
+occasional jollity. He lived alone in lodgings, and was much immersed in
+business, about a good deal of which we know nothing except that it took
+him abroad. His death was sudden, and when three years afterwards the
+first edition of his poems made its appearance, it was prefaced by a
+certificate signed "Mary Marvell," to the effect that everything in the
+book was printed "according to the copies of my late dear husband."
+Until after Marvell's death we never hear of Mrs. Marvell, and with this
+signed certificate she disappears. In a series of Lives of Poets' Wives
+it would be hard to make much of Mrs. Andrew Marvell. For different but
+still cogent reasons it is hard to write a life of her famous husband.
+
+Andrew Marvell was born at Winestead in Holdernesse, on Easter Eve, the
+31st of March 1621, in the Rectory House, the elder Marvell, also
+Andrew, being then the parson of the parish. No fitter birthplace for a
+garden-poet can be imagined. Roses still riot in Winestead; the
+fruit-tree roots are as mossy as in the seventeenth century. At the
+right season you may still
+
+ "Through the hazels thick espy
+ The hatching throstle's shining eye."
+
+Birds, fruits and flowers, woods, gardens, meads, and rivers still make
+the poet's birthplace lovely.
+
+ "Loveliness, magic, and grace,
+ They are here--they are set in the world!
+ They abide! and the finest of souls
+ Has not been thrilled by them all,
+ Nor the dullest been dead to them quite.
+ The poet who sings them may die,
+ But they are immortal and live,
+ For they are the life of the world."
+
+Holdernesse was not the original home of the Marvells, who would seem to
+have been mostly Cambridgeshire folk, though the name crops up in other
+counties. Whether Cambridge "men" of a studious turn still take long
+walks I do not know, but "some vast amount of years ago" it was
+considered a pleasant excursion, either on foot or on a hired steed,
+from Cambridge to Meldreth, where the Elizabethan manor-house, long
+known as "the Marvells'," agreeably embodied the tradition that here it
+was that the poet's father was born in 1586. The Church Registers have
+disappeared. Proof is impossible. That there were Marvells in the
+neighbourhood is certain. The famous Cambridge antiquary, William Cole,
+perhaps the greatest of all our collectors, has included among his
+copies of early wills those of several Marvells and Mervells of Meldreth
+and Shepreth, belonging to pre-Reformation times, as their pious gifts
+to the "High Altar" and to "Our Lady's Light" pleasingly testify. But
+our Andrew was a determined Protestant.
+
+The poet's father is an interesting figure in our Church history.
+Educated at Emmanuel College, from whence he proceeded a Master of Arts
+in 1608, he took Orders; and after serving as curate at Flamborough, was
+inducted to the living of Winestead in 1614, where he remained till
+1624, in which year he went to Hull as master of the Grammar School and
+lecturer, that is preacher, of Trinity Church. The elder Marvell
+belonged, from the beginning to the end of his useful and even heroic
+life, to the Reformed Church of England, or, as his son puts it, "a
+conformist to the Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England, though
+I confess none of the most over-running and eager in them." The younger
+Marvell, with one boyish interval, belonged all through his life to the
+paternal school of religious thought.
+
+Fuller's account of the elder Marvell is too good to be passed over:--
+
+ "He afterwards became Minister at Hull, where for his lifetime he was
+ well beloved. Most facetious in discourse, yet grave in his carriage,
+ a most excellent preacher who, like a good husband, never broached
+ what he had new brewed, but preached what he had pre-studied some
+ competent time before. Insomuch that he was wont to say that he would
+ cross the common proverb which called Saturday the working-day and
+ Monday the holyday of preachers. It happened that Anno Dom. 1640,
+ Jan. 23, crossing Humber in a Barrow boat, the same was sandwarpt,
+ and he was drowned therein (with Mrs. Skinner, daughter to Sir Edward
+ Coke, a very religious gentlewoman) by the carelessness, not to say
+ drunkenness of the boatmen, to the great grief of all good men. His
+ excellent comment upon St. Peter is daily desired and expected, if
+ the envy and covetousness of private persons _for their own use_
+ deprive not the public of the benefit thereof."[6:1]
+
+This good man, to whom perhaps, remembering the date of his death, the
+words may apply, _Tu vero felix non vitæ tantum claritate sed etiam
+opportunitate mortis_, was married at Cherry Burton, on the 22nd of
+October 1612, to Anne Pease, a member of a family destined to become
+widely known throughout the north of England. Of this marriage there
+were five children, all born at Winestead, viz. three daughters, Anne,
+Mary, and Elizabeth, and two sons, Andrew and John, the latter of whom
+died a year after his birth, and was buried at Winestead on the 20th
+September 1624.
+
+The three daughters married respectively James Blaydes of Sutton,
+Yorkshire, on the 29th of December 1633; Edmund Popple, afterwards
+Sheriff of Hull, on the 18th of August 1636; and Robert More. Anne's
+eldest son, Joseph Blaydes, was Mayor of Hull in 1702, having married
+the daughter of a preceding Mayor in 1698. The descendants of this
+branch still flourish. The Popples also had children, one of whom,
+William Popple, was a correspondent of his uncle the poet's, and a
+merchant of repute, who became in 1696 Secretary to the Board of Trade,
+and the friend of the most famous man who ever sat at the table of that
+Board, John Locke. A son of this William Popple led a very comfortable
+eighteenth-century life, which is in strong contrast with that of his
+grand-uncle, for, having entered the Cofferers' Office about 1730, he
+was made seven years later Solicitor and Clerk of the Reports to the
+Commissioners of Trade and Plantations, and in 1745 became in
+succession to a relative, one Alured Popple, Governor of the Bermudas, a
+post he retained until his death, which occurred not
+
+ "Where the remote Bermudas ride
+ In the ocean's bosom unespied,"
+
+but at his house in Hampstead. So well placed and idle a gentleman was
+almost bound to be a bad poet and worse dramatist, and this William
+Popple was both.
+
+Marvell's third sister, Elizabeth, does not seem to have had issue, a
+certain Thomas More, or Moore, a Fellow of Magdalen College, Cambridge,
+whose name occurs in family records, being her stepson.
+
+In the latter part of 1624 the elder Marvell resigned the living of
+Winestead, and took up the duties of schoolmaster and lecturer, or
+preacher, at Hull. Important duties they were, for the old Grammar
+School of Hull dates back to 1486, and may boast of a long career of
+usefulness, never having fallen into that condition of decay and
+disrepute from which so many similar endowments have been of late years
+rescued by the beneficent and, of course, abused action of the Charity
+Commissioners. Andrew Marvell the elder succeeded to and was succeeded
+by eminent headmasters. Trinity Church, where the poet's father preached
+on Sundays to crowded and interested congregations, was then what it
+still is, though restored by Scott, one of the great churches in the
+north of England.
+
+The Rev. Andrew Marvell made his mark upon Hull. Mr. Grosart, who lacked
+nothing but the curb upon a too exuberant vocabulary, a little less
+enthusiasm and a great deal more discretion, to be a model editor, tells
+us in his invaluable edition of _The Complete Works in Verse and Prose
+of Andrew Marvell, M.P._,[8:1] that he had read a number of the elder
+Marvell's manuscripts, consisting of sermons and miscellaneous papers,
+from which Mr. Grosart proceeds:--
+
+ "I gather three things.
+
+ "(1) That he was a man of a very brave, fearlessly outspoken
+ character. Some of his practical applications in his sermons before
+ the Magistrates are daring in their directness of reproof, and
+ melting in their wistfulness of entreaty.
+
+ "(2) That he was a well-read man. His Sermons are as full of
+ classical and patristic allusions and pat sayings from the most
+ occult literatures as even Bishop Andrewes.
+
+ "(3) That he was a man of tireless activity. Besides the two offices
+ named, he became head of one of the Great Hospitals of the Town
+ (Charter House), and in an address to the Governors placed before
+ them a prescient and statesmanlike plan for the better management of
+ its revenues, and for the foundation of a Free Public Library to be
+ accessible to all."
+
+When at a later day, and in the midst of a fierce controversy, Andrew
+Marvell wrote of the clergy as "the reserve of our Christianity," he
+doubtless had such men as his father in his mind and memory.
+
+It was at the old Grammar School of Hull, and with his father as his
+_Orbilius_, that Marvell was initiated into the mysteries of the Latin
+grammar, and was, as he tells us, put to his
+
+ "Montibus, inquit, erunt; et erant submontibus illis;
+ Risit Atlantiades; et me mihi, perfide, prodis?
+ Me mihi prodis? ait.
+
+ "For as I remember this scanning was a liberal art that we learn'd at
+ Grammar School, and to scan verses as he does the Author's prose
+ before we did or were obliged to understand them."[8:2]
+
+Irrational methods have often amazingly good results, and the Hull
+Grammar School provided its head-master's only son with the rudiments of
+learning, thus enabling him to become in after years what John Milton
+himself, the author of that terrible _Treatise on Education_ addressed
+to Mr. Hartlibb, affirmed Andrew Marvell to be in a written testimonial,
+"a scholar, and well-read in the Latin and Greek authors."
+
+Attached to the Grammar School there was "a great garden," renowned for
+its wall-fruit and flowers; so by leaving Winestead behind, our
+"garden-poet," that was to be, was not deprived of inspiration.
+
+Apart from these meagre facts, we know nothing of Marvell's boyhood at
+Hull. His clerical foe, Dr. Parker, afterwards Bishop of Oxford, writes
+contemptuously of "an hunger-starved whelp of a country vicar," and in
+another passage, which undoubtedly refers to Marvell, he speaks of "an
+unhappy education among Boatswains and Cabin-boys," whose unsavoury
+phrases, he goes on to suggest, Marvell picked up in his childhood. But
+truth need not be looked for in controversial pages. The best argument
+for a married clergy is to be found, for Englishmen at all events, in
+the sixty-seven volumes of the _Dictionary of National Biography_, where
+are recorded the services rendered to religion, philosophy, poetry,
+justice, and the empire by the "whelps" of many a country vicar.
+Parsons' wives may sometimes be trying and hard to explain, but an
+England without the sons of her clergy would be shorn of half her glory.
+
+Marvell's boyhood seems to have been surrounded with the things that
+most make for a child's happiness. A sensible, affectionate, humorous,
+religious father, occupying a position of authority, and greatly
+respected, a mother and three elder sisters to make much of his bright
+wit and early adventures, a comfortable yet simple home, and an
+atmosphere of piety, learning, and good fellowship. What more is wanted,
+or can be desired? The "Boatswains" and "Cabin-boys" of Bishop Parker's
+fancy were in the neighbourhood, no doubt, and as stray companions for a
+half-holiday must have had their attractions; but it is unnecessary to
+attribute Andrew Marvell's style in controversy to his early
+acquaintance with a sea-faring population, for he is far more likely to
+have picked it up from his great friend and colleague, the author of
+_Paradise Lost_.
+
+Marvell's school education over, he went up to Cambridge, not to his
+father's old college, but to the more splendid foundation of Trinity.
+About the date of his matriculation there is a doubt. In Wood's _Athenæ
+Oxonienses_ there is a note to the effect that Marvell was admitted "in
+matriculam Acad. Cant. Coll. Trin." on the 14th of December 1633, when
+the boy was but twelve years old. Dr. Lort, a famous master of Trinity
+in his day, writing in November 1765 to Captain Edward Thompson, of whom
+more later on, told the captain that until 1635 there was no register of
+admissions of ordinary students, or pensioners, as they are called, but
+only a register of Fellows and Foundation Scholars, and in this
+last-named register Marvell's name appears as a Scholar sworn and
+admitted on the 13th of April 1638. As, however, Marvell took his B.A.
+degree in 1639, he must have been in residence long before April 1638.
+Probably Marvell went to Trinity about 1635, just before the register of
+pensioners was begun, as a pensioner, becoming a Scholar in 1638, and
+taking his degree in 1639.
+
+Cambridge undergraduates do not usually keep diaries, nor after they
+have become Masters of Art are they much in the habit of giving details
+as to their academic career. Marvell is no exception to this provoking
+rule. He nowhere tells us what his University taught him or how. The
+logic of the schools he had no choice but to learn. Molineus, Peter
+Ramus, Seton, Keckerman were text-books of reputation, from one or
+another of which every Cambridge man had to master his _simpliciters_,
+his _quids_, his _secundum quids_, his _quales_, and his _quantums_.
+Aristotle's Physics, Ethics, and Politics were "tutor's books," and
+those young men who loved to hear themselves talk were left free to
+discuss, much to Hobbes's disgust, "the freedom of the will, incorporeal
+substance, everlasting nows, ubiquities, hypostases, which the people
+understand not nor will ever care for."
+
+In the life of Matthew Robinson,[11:1] who went up to Cambridge a little
+later than Marvell (June 1645), and was probably a harder reader, we are
+told that "the strength of his studies lay in the metaphysics and in
+those subtle authors for many years which rendered him an irrefragable
+disputant _de quolibet ente_, and whilst he was but senior freshman he
+was found in the bachelor schools, disputing ably with the best of the
+senior sophisters." Robinson despised the old-fashioned Ethics and
+Physics, but with the new Cartesian or Experimental Philosophy he was
+_inter primos_. History, particularly the Roman, was in great favour at
+both Universities at this time, and young men were taught, so old Hobbes
+again grumbles, to despise monarchy "from Cicero, Seneca, Cato and other
+politicians of Rome, and Aristotle of Athens, who seldom spake of kings
+but as of wolves and other ravenous beasts."[12:1] The Muses were never
+neglected at Cambridge, as the University exercises survive to prove,
+whilst modern languages, Spanish and Italian for example, were greedily
+acquired by such an eager spirit as Richard Crashaw, the poet, who came
+into residence at Pembroke in 1631. There were problems to be "kept" in
+the college chapel, lectures to be attended, both public and private,
+declamations to be delivered, and even in the vacations the scholars
+were not exempt from "exercises" either in hall or in their tutors'
+rooms. Earnest students read their Greek Testaments, and even their
+Hebrew Bibles, and filled their note-books, working more hours a day
+than was good for their health, whilst the idle ones wasted their time
+as best they could in an unhealthy, over-crowded town, in an age which
+knew nothing of boating, billiards, or cricket. A tennis-court there was
+in Marvell's time, for in Dr. Worthington's _Diary_, under date 3rd of
+April 1637, it stands recorded that on that day and in that place that
+learned man received "a dangerous blow on the Eye."[12:2]
+
+The only incident we know of Marvell's undergraduate days is remarkable
+enough, for, boy though he was, he seems, like the Gibbon of a later
+day, to have suddenly become a Roman Catholic. This occurrence may serve
+to remind us how, during Marvell's time at Trinity, the University of
+Cambridge (ever the precursor in thought-movements) had a Catholic
+revival of her own, akin to that one which two hundred years afterwards
+happened at Oxford, and has left so much agreeable literature behind it.
+Fuller in his history of the University of Cambridge tells us a little
+about this highly interesting and important movement:--
+
+ "Now began the University (1633-4) to be much beautified in
+ buildings, every college either casting its skin with the snake, or
+ renewing its bill with the eagle, having their courts or at least
+ their fronts and Gatehouses repaired and adorned. But the greatest
+ alteration was in their Chapels, most of them being graced with the
+ accession of organs. And seeing musick is one of the liberal arts,
+ how could it be quarrelled at in an University if they sang with
+ understanding both of the matter and manner thereof. Yet some took
+ great distaste thereat as attendancie to superstition."[13:1]
+
+The chapel at Peterhouse, we read elsewhere, which was built in 1632,
+and consecrated by Bishop White of Ely, had a beautiful ceiling and a
+noble east window. "A grave divine," Fuller tells us, "preaching before
+the University at St. Mary's, had this smart passage in his Sermon--that
+as at the Olympian Games he was counted the Conqueror who could drive
+his chariot wheels nearest the mark yet so as not to hinder his running
+or to stick thereon, so he who in his Sermons could preach _near Popery_
+and yet _no Popery_, _there was your man_. And indeed it now began to be
+the general complaint of most moderate men that many in the University,
+both in the schools and pulpits, approached the opinions of the Church
+of Rome nearer than ever before."
+
+Archbishop Laud, unlike the bishops of Dr. Newman's day, favoured the
+Catholic revival, and when Mr. Bernard, the lecturer of St. Sepulchre's,
+London, preached a "No Popery" sermon at St. Mary's, Cambridge, he was
+dragged into the High Commission Court, and, as the hateful practice
+then was, a practice dear to the soul of Laud, was bidden to subscribe a
+formal recantation. This Mr. Bernard refused to do, though professing
+his sincere sorrow and penitence for any oversights and hasty
+expressions in his sermon. Thereupon he was sent back to prison, where
+he died. "If," adds Fuller, "he was miserably abused in prison by the
+keepers (as some have reported) to the shortening of his life, He that
+maketh inquisition for blood either hath or will be a revenger
+thereof."[14:1]
+
+By the side of this grim story the much-written-about incidents of the
+Oxford Movement seem trivial enough.
+
+Not a few Cambridge scholars of this period, Richard Crashaw among the
+number, found permanent refuge in Rome.
+
+The story of Marvell's conversion is emphatic but vague in its details.
+The "Jesuits," who were well represented in Cambridge at the time, are
+said to have persuaded him to leave Cambridge secretly, and to take
+refuge in one of their houses in London. Thither the elder Marvell
+followed in pursuit, and after search came across his son in a
+bookseller's shop, where he succeeded both in convincing the boy of his
+errors and in persuading him to return to Trinity. An odd story, and
+not, as it stands, very credible; but Mr. Grosart discovered among the
+Marvell papers at Hull a fragment of a letter without signature,
+address, or date, which throws some sort of light on the incident. This
+letter was evidently, as Mr. Grosart surmises, sent to the elder Marvell
+by some similarly afflicted parent. In its fragmentary state the letter
+reads as follows:--
+
+ "Worthy S^r,--M^r Breerecliffe being w^th me to-day, I related vnto
+ him a fearfull passage lately at Cambridg touching a sonne of mine,
+ Bachelor of Arts in Katherine Hall, w^ch was this. He was lately
+ inuited to a supper in towne by a gentlewoman, where was one M^r
+ Nichols a felow of Peterhouse, and another or two masters of arts, I
+ know not directly whether felowes or not: my sonne hauing noe
+ p'ferment, but liuing meerely of my penny, they pressed him much to
+ come to liue at their house, and for chamber and extraordinary bookes
+ they promised farre: and then earnestly moued him to goe to Somerset
+ house, where they could doe much for p'ferring him to some eminent
+ place, and in conclusion to popish arguments to seduce him soe rotten
+ and vnsauory as being ouerheard it was brought in question before the
+ heads of the Uniuersity: _Dr. Cosens_, being _Vice Chancelor_ noe
+ punishment is inioined him: but on Ash-wednesday next a recantation
+ in regent house of some popish tenets Nicols let fall: I p'ceive by
+ M^r Breercliffe some such prank vsed towards y^r sonne: I desire to
+ know what y^u did therin: thinking I cannot doe god better seruice
+ then bring it vppon the stage either in Parliament if it hold: or
+ informing some Lords of the Counsail to whom I stand much oblieged if
+ a bill in Starchamber be meete To terrify others by making these some
+ publique spectacle: for if such fearfull practises may goe vnpunished
+ I take care whether I may send a child ... the lord."[15:1]
+
+The reference to Dr. Cosens, or Cosin, being Vice-Chancellor gives a
+clue to the date, for Cosin was chosen Vice-Chancellor on the 4th of
+November 1639.[15:2]
+
+Though we can know nothing of the elder Marvell's methods of
+re-conversion, they were more successful than the elder Gibbon's, who,
+as we know, packed the future historian off to Lausanne and a Swiss
+pastor's house. What Gibbon became on leaving off his Romanism we can
+guess for ourselves, whereas Marvell, once out of the hands of these
+very shadowy "Jesuits," remained the staunchest of Christian Protestants
+to the end of his days.
+
+This strange incident, and two college exercises or poems, one in
+Greek, the other in Latin, both having reference to an addition to the
+Royal Family, and appearing in the _Musa Cantabrigiensis_ for 1637, are
+all the materials that exist for weaving the story of Marvell, the
+Cambridge undergraduate. The Latin verses, which are Horatian in style,
+contain one pretty stanza, composed apparently before the sex of the
+new-born infant was known at Cambridge.
+
+ "Sive felici Carolum figurâ
+ Parvulus princeps imitetur almae
+ Sive Mariae decoret puellam
+ Dulcis imago."
+
+After taking his Bachelor's degree in 1639, Marvell, being still a
+Scholar of the college, must have gone away, for the Conclusion Book of
+Trinity, under date September 24, 1641, records as follows:--
+
+ "It is agreed by y^e Master and 8 seniors y^t M^r Carter and D^r
+ Wakefields, D^r Marvell, D^r Waterhouse, and D^r Maye in regard y^t
+ some of them are reported to be married and y^t others look not after
+ y^eir days nor Acts shall receave no more benefitt of y^e Coll and
+ shall be out of y^ier places unless y^ei shew just cause to y^e Coll
+ for y^e contrary in 3 months."
+
+Dr. Lort, in his amiable letter of 1765, already mentioned, points out
+that this entry contains no reflection on Marvell's morals, but shows
+that he was given "notice to quit" for non-residence, "then much more
+strictly enjoined than it is now." The days referred to in the entry
+were, so the master obligingly explains, "the certain number allowed by
+statute to absentees," whilst the "acts mean the Exercises also enjoyned
+by the statutes." Dr. Lort adds, "It does not appear, by any subsequent
+entry, whether Marvell did or did not comply with this order." We may
+now safely assume he did not. Marvell's Cambridge days were over.
+
+The vacations, no inconsiderable part of the year, were probably spent
+by Marvell under his father's roof at Hull, where his two elder sisters
+were married and settled. It is not to be wondered at that Andrew
+Marvell should, for so many years, have represented Hull in the House of
+Commons, for both he and his family were well known in the town. The
+elder Marvell added to his reputation as a teacher and preacher the
+character of a devoted servant of his flock in the hour of danger. The
+plague twice visited Hull during the time of the elder Marvell, first in
+1635 and again in 1638. In those days men might well pray to be
+delivered from "plague, pestilence, and famine." Hull suffered terribly
+on both occasions. We have seen, in comparatively recent times, the
+effect of the cholera upon large towns, and the plague was worse than
+the cholera many times over. The Hull preacher, despite the stigma of
+_facetiousness_, which still clings to him, stuck to his post, visiting
+the sick, burying the dead, and even, which seems a little superfluous,
+preaching and afterwards printing "by request" their funeral sermons. A
+brave man, indeed, and one reserved for a tragic end.
+
+In April 1638 the poet's mother died. In the following November the
+elder Marvell married a widow lady, but his own end was close upon him.
+The earliest consecutive account of this strange event is in Gent's
+_History of Hull_ (1735):--"This year, 1640, the Rev. Mr. Andrew
+Marvell, Lecturer of Hull, sailing over the Humber in company with
+Madame Skinner of Thornton College and a young beautiful couple who were
+going to be wedded; a speedy Fate prevented the designed happy union
+thro' a violent storm which overset the boat and put a period to all
+their lives, nor were there any remains of them or the vessel ever after
+found, tho' earnestly sought for on distant shores."
+
+Thus died by drowning a brave man, a good Christian, and an excellent
+clergyman of the Reformed Church of England. The plain narrative just
+quoted has been embroidered by many long-subsequent writers in the
+interests of those who love presentiments and ghostly intimations of
+impending events, and in one of these versions it is recorded, that
+though the morning was clear, the breeze fair, and the company gay, yet
+when stepping into the boat "the reverend man exclaimed, 'Ho for
+Heaven,' and threw his staff ashore and left it to Providence to fulfil
+its awful warning."
+
+So melancholy an occurrence naturally excited great attention, and long
+lingered in local memories. Everybody in Hull knew who was their
+member's father.
+
+There is an obstinate tradition quite unverifiable that Mrs. Skinner,
+the mother of the beautiful young lady who was drowned with the elder
+Marvell, adopted the young Marvell as a son, sending to Cambridge for
+him after his father's death, and providing him with the means of
+travel, and that afterwards she bequeathed him her estate. Whether there
+is any truth in this story cannot now be ascertained. The Skinners were
+a well-known Hull family, one of them, a brother of that Cyriac Skinner
+who was urged by Milton in immortal verse to enjoy himself whilst the
+mood was on him, having been Mayor of Hull. The lady, doubtless, had
+money, and Andrew Marvell was in need of money, and appears to have been
+supplied with it. It is quite possible the tradition is true.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[6:1] Fuller's _Worthies_ (1662), p. 159.
+
+[8:1] "The Fuller Worthies Library," 4 vols., 1872. Hereafter referred
+to as _Grosart_.
+
+[8:2] _Mr. Smirke or the Divine in Mode._--Grosart, iv. 15.
+
+[11:1] _Autobiography of Matthew Robinson_. Edited by J.E.B. Mayor,
+Cambridge, 1856.
+
+[12:1] _Behemoth_, Hobbes' Works (Molesworth), vol. vi., see pp. 168,
+218, 233-6.
+
+[12:2] Worthington's _Diary_, vol. i. p. 5 (Chetham Society).
+
+[13:1] Fuller, _History of Cambridge University_ (1655), p. 167.
+
+[14:1] Fuller, p. 166.
+
+[15:1] Grosart, I., xxviii.
+
+[15:2] See Worthington's _Diary_, vol. i. p. 7.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"THE HAPPY GARDEN-STATE"
+
+
+The seventeenth century was the century of travel for educated
+Englishmen--of long, leisurely travel. Milton's famous Italian tour
+lasted fifteen months. John Evelyn's _Wander-Jahre_ occupied four years.
+Andrew Marvell lived abroad in France, Spain, Holland, and Italy from
+1642 to 1646, and we have Milton's word for it that when the traveller
+returned he was well acquainted with the French, Dutch, Spanish, and
+Italian languages. Andrew Marvell was a highly cultivated man, living in
+a highly cultivated age, in daily converse with scholars, poets,
+philosophers, and men of very considerable scientific attainments. In
+reading Clarendon and Burnet, and whilst turning over Aubrey's
+delightful gossip, it is impossible not to be struck with the width and
+variety of the learning as well as with the wit of the period.
+Intellectually it was a great age.
+
+No record remains of Marvell's travels during these years. Up and down
+his writings the careful reader will come across pleasant references to
+foreign manners and customs, betokening the keen humorous observer, and
+the possession of that wide-eyed faculty that takes a pleasure, half
+contemplative, half the result of animal spirits, in watching the way of
+the world wherever you may chance to be. Of another and an earlier
+traveller, Sir Henry Wotton, we read in "Walton's _Life_."
+
+ "And whereas he was noted in his youth to have a sharp wit and apt to
+ jest, _that_ by time, travel, and conversation was so polished and
+ made useful, that his company seemed to be one of the delights of
+ mankind."
+
+In all Marvell's work, as poet, as Parliamentarian, as controversialist,
+we shall see the travelled man. Certainly no one ever more fully grasped
+the sense of the famous sentence given by Wotton to Milton, when the
+latter was starting on his travels: "_I pensieri stretti ed il viso
+sciolto._"
+
+Marvell was in Rome about 1645. I can give no other date during the
+whole four years. This, our only date, rests upon an assumption. In
+Marvell's earliest satirical poem he gives an account of a visit he paid
+in Rome to the unlucky poetaster Flecknoe, who was not in Rome until
+1645. If, therefore, the poem records an actual visit, it follows that
+the author of the poem was in Rome at the same time. It is not very
+near, but it is as near as we can get.
+
+Richard Flecknoe was an Irish priest of blameless life, with a passion
+for scribbling and for printing. His exquisite reason for both these
+superfluous acts is worth quoting:--
+
+ "I write chiefly to avoid idleness, and print to avoid the imputation
+ (of idleness), and as others do it to live after they are dead, I do
+ it only not to be thought dead whilst I am alive."[20:1]
+
+Such frankness should have disarmed ridicule, but somehow or another
+this amiable man came to be regarded as the type of a dull author, and
+his name passed into a proverb for stupidity, so much so that when
+Dryden in 1682 was casting about how best to give pain to Shadwell, he
+devised the plan of his famous satire, "MacFlecknoe," where in biting
+verse he describes Flecknoe (who was happily dead) as an aged Prince--
+
+ "Who like Augustus young
+ Was called to empire and had governed long;
+ In prose and verse was owned, without dispute,
+ Through all the realms of nonsense absolute."
+
+Dryden goes on to picture the aged Flecknoe,
+
+ "pondering which of all his sons was fit
+ To reign and wage immortal war with Wit,"
+
+and fixing on Shadwell.
+
+ "Shadwell alone my perfect image bears,
+ Mature in dulness from his tender years;
+ Shadwell alone, of all my sons, is he
+ Who stands confirmed in full stupidity:
+ The rest to some faint meaning make pretence,
+ But Shadwell never deviates into sense."
+
+Thus has it come about that Flecknoe, the Irish priest, whom Marvell
+visited in his Roman garret in 1645, bears a name ever memorable in
+literature.
+
+Marvell's own poem, though eclipsed by the splendour of Glorious John's
+resounding lines, has an interest of its own as being, in its roughly
+humorous way, a forerunner of the "Dunciad" and "Grub Street"
+literature, by which in sundry moods 'tis "pleasure to be bound." It
+describes seeking out the poetaster in his lodging "three staircases
+high," at the sign of the Pelican, in a room so small that it seemed "a
+coffin set in the stair's head." No sooner was the rhymer unearthed than
+straightway he began to recite his poetry in dismal tones, much to his
+visitor's dismay:--
+
+ "But I who now imagin'd myself brought
+ To my last trial, in a serious thought
+ Calm'd the disorders of my youthful breast
+ And to my martyrdom preparèd rest.
+ Only this frail ambition did remain,
+ The last distemper of the sober brain,
+ That there had been some present to assure
+ The future ages how I did endure."
+
+To stop the cataract of "hideous verse," Marvell invited the scarecrow
+to dinner, and waits while he dresses. As they turn to leave, for the
+room is so small that the man who comes in last must be the first to go
+out, they meet a friend of the poet on the stairs, who makes a third at
+dinner. After dinner Flecknoe produces ten quires of paper, from which
+the friend proceeds to read, but so infamously as to excite their
+author's rage:--
+
+ "But all his praises could not now appease
+ The provok't Author, whom it did displease
+ To hear his verses by so just a curse
+ That were ill made, condemned to be read worse:
+ And how (impossible!) he made yet more
+ Absurdities in them than were before:
+ For his untun'd voice did fall or raise
+ As a deaf man upon the Viol plays,
+ Making the half-points and the periods run
+ Confus'der than the atoms in the sun:
+ Thereat the poet swell'd with anger full,"
+
+and after violent exclamations retires in dudgeon back to his room. The
+faithful friend is in despair. What is he to do to make peace? "Who
+would commend his mistress now?" Marvell
+
+ "counselled him to go in time
+ Ere the fierce poet's anger turned to rhyme."
+
+The advice was taken, and Marvell, finding himself at last free from
+boredom, went off to St. Peter's to return thanks.
+
+This poem is but an unsatisfactory _souvenir de voyage_, but it is all
+there is.
+
+What Marvell was doing during the stirring years 1646-1650 is not
+known. Even in the most troubled times men go about their business, and
+our poet was always a man of affairs. As for his opinions during these
+years, we can only guess at them from those to which he afterwards gave
+expression. Marvell was neither a Republican nor a Puritan. Like his
+father before him, he was a Protestant and a member of the Reformed
+Church of England. He stood for both King and Parliament. Archbishop
+Laud he distrusted, and it may well be detested, but good churchmen have
+often distrusted and even detested their archbishops. Mr. Gladstone had
+no great regard for Archbishop Tait. Before the Act of Uniformity and
+the repressive legislation that followed upon its heels had driven
+English dissent into its final moulds, it was not doctrine but
+ceremonies that disturbed men's minds; and Marvell belonged to that
+school of English churchmen, by no means the least distinguished school,
+which was not disposed to quarrel with their fellow-Christians over
+white surplices, the ring in matrimony, or the attitude during Holy
+Communion. He shared the belief of a contemporary that no system is bad
+enough to destroy a good man, or good enough to save a bad one.
+
+The Civil War was to Marvell what it was to most wise men not devoured
+by faction--a deplorable event. Twenty years after he wrote in the
+_Rehearsal Transprosed_:--
+
+ "Whether it be a war of religion or of liberty it is not worth the
+ labour to inquire. Whichsoever was at the top, the other was at the
+ bottom; but upon considering all, I think the cause was too good to
+ have been fought for. Men ought to have trusted God--they ought to
+ have trusted the King with that whole matter. The arms of the Church
+ are prayers and tears, the arms of the subject are patience and
+ petitions. The King himself being of so accurate and piercing a
+ judgment would soon have felt it where it stuck. For men may spare
+ their pains when Nature is at work, and the world will not go the
+ faster for our driving. Even as his present Majesty's happy
+ Restoration did itself, so all things else happen in their best and
+ proper time, without any heed of our officiousness."[24:1]
+
+In the face of this passage and many another of the like spirit, it is
+puzzling to find such a man, for example, as Thomas Baker, the ejected
+non-juring Fellow and historian of St. John's College, Cambridge
+(1656-1740), writing of Marvell as "that bitter republican"; and Dryden,
+who probably knew Marvell, comparing his controversial pamphlets with
+those of Martin Marprelate, or at all events speaking of Martin
+Marprelate as "the Marvell of those times."[24:2] A somewhat
+anti-prelatical note runs through Marvell's writings, but it is a
+familiar enough note in the works of the English laity, and by no means
+dissevers its possessor from the Anglican Church. But there are some
+heated expressions in the satires which probably gave rise to the belief
+that Marvell was a Republican.[24:3]
+
+During the Commonwealth Marvell was content to be a civil servant. He
+entertained for the Lord-Protector the same kind of admiration that such
+a loyalist as Chateaubriand could not help feeling for Napoleon. Even
+Clarendon's pedantic soul occasionally vibrates as he writes of Oliver,
+and compares his reputation in foreign courts with that of his own
+royal master. When the Restoration came Marvell rejoiced. Two
+old-established things had been destroyed by Cromwell--Kings and
+Parliaments, and Marvell was glad to see them both back again in
+England.
+
+Some verses of Marvell's attributable to this period (1646-1650) show
+him keeping what may be called Royalist company. With a dozen other
+friends of Richard Lovelace, the Cavalier poet and the author of two of
+the most famous stanzas in English verse, Marvell contributed some
+commendatory lines addressed to his "noble friend, Mr. Richard Lovelace,
+upon his Poems," which appeared with the poems themselves in that year
+of fate, 1649. "After the murder of the King," says Anthony Wood,
+"Lovelace was set at liberty, and having by that time consumed all his
+estate, grew very melancholy, became very poor in body and purse, was
+the object of charity, went in ragged clothes (whereas when he was in
+glory he wore cloth of gold and silver), and mostly lodged in obscure
+and dirty places, more befitting the worst of beggars and poorest of
+servants."
+
+Then it was that _Lucasta_ made its first appearance. When the fortunes
+of the gallant poet were at their lowest and never to revive, Marvell
+seizes the occasion to deplore the degeneracy of the times, a familiar
+theme with poets:--
+
+ "Our civil wars have lost the civic crown,
+ He highest builds who with most art destroys,
+ And against others' fame his own employs."
+
+He then glances scornfully at the new Presbyterian censorship of the
+press:--
+
+ "The barbèd censurers begin to look
+ Like the grim consistory on thy book,
+ And on each line cast a reforming eye,"
+
+and suggests that _Lucasta_ is in danger because in 1642 its author had
+been imprisoned by order of the House of Commons for presenting a
+petition from Kent which prayed for the restoration of the Book of
+Common Prayer. This danger is, however, overcome by the ladies, who rise
+in arms to defend their favourite poet.
+
+ "But when the beauteous Ladies came to know
+ That their dear Lovelace was endangered so,
+ Lovelace that thaw'd the most congealèd breast,
+ He who lov'd best and them defended best,
+ They all in mutiny, though yet undrest,
+ Sally'd."
+
+One of them challenged Marvell as to whether he had not been of the
+poet's traducers, but he answered No!
+
+ "O No, mistake not, I reply'd, for I
+ In your defence or in his cause would die.
+ But he, secure of glory and of time,
+ Above their envy or my aid doth climb.
+ Him, bravest men and fairest nymphs approve,
+ His book in them finds Judgment, with you, Love."
+
+Lovelace did not live to see the Restoration, but died in a mean lodging
+near Shoe Lane in April 1658, and was buried in St. Bridget's Church.
+Let us indulge the hope that the friends who occupied so many of the
+introductory pages of Lovelace's _Lucasta_ occasionally enlivened the
+solitude and relieved the distress of the poet whose praises they had
+once sung with so much vigour. As Marvell was undoubtedly a friendly
+man, and one who loved to be alone with his friends, and had never any
+house of his own to keep up, living for the most part in hired lodgings,
+it would be unkind to doubt that he at least did not forget Lovelace in
+his poverty and depression of spirit.
+
+In 1649 thirty-three poets combined to weep over the early grave of the
+Lord Henry Hastings, the eldest son of the sixth Earl of Huntingdon, who
+died of the smallpox in the twentieth year of his age. Not even this
+plentiful discharge of poets' tears should rob the young nobleman of his
+claim to be regarded as a fine example of the great learning,
+accomplishments, and high spirits of the age. We can still produce the
+thirty-three poets, but what young nobleman is there who can boast such
+erudition as had rewarded the scorned delights and the laborious days of
+this Lord Hastings? We have at least the satisfaction of knowing that
+did such a one exist he probably would not die of the smallpox. Among
+the poets who wept on this occasion were Herrick, Sir John Denham,
+Andrew Marvell, and John Dryden, then a Westminster schoolboy, whose
+description of the smallpox is as bad as the disease.
+
+Marvell's verses begin very prettily and soon introduce a characteristic
+touch:--
+
+ "Go, stand betwixt the Morning and the Flowers,
+ And ere they fall arrest the early showers,
+ Hastings is dead; and we disconsolate
+ With early tears must mourn his early fate."
+
+In 1650 Marvell, then in his twenty-ninth year, went to live with Lord
+Fairfax at Nunappleton House in Yorkshire, as tutor to the only child
+and daughter of the house, Mary Fairfax, aged twelve years (born 30th
+July 1638). This proved to be a great event in Marvell's life as a poet,
+and it happened at an epoch in the distinguished career of the famous
+Parliamentarian general
+
+ "Whose name in arms through Europe rings."
+
+Lord Fairfax, though he had countenanced, if not approved, the trial
+and deposition of the king, had resolutely held himself aloof from the
+proceedings which, beginning on Saturday the 20th of January 1649,
+terminated so dismally on Tuesday the 30th. The strange part played by
+Lady Fairfax on the first day of the so-called trial (though it was no
+greater a travesty of justice than many a real trial both before and
+after) is one of the best-known stories in English history. There are
+several versions of it. Having provided herself with a seat in a small
+gallery in Westminster Hall, just above the heads of the judges, when
+her husband's name was called out as one of the commissioners, the
+intrepid lady (no Cavalier's dame, be it remembered, but a true blue
+Presbyterian), a brave soldier's daughter, cried out, "Lord Fairfax is
+not here; he will never sit among you. You do wrong to name him as a
+sitting Commissioner." This is Rushworth's version, and he was present.
+Clarendon, who was not present, being abroad at the time, reports the
+words as, "He has more wit than to be here."
+
+Later on in the day, when the President Bradshaw interrupted the king
+and peremptorily bade him to answer the charges exhibited against him
+"in the name of the Commons of England assembled, and of the people of
+England," Lady Fairfax again rose to her feet and exclaimed, "It's a
+lie! Not half the people. Where are they and their consents? Oliver
+Cromwell is a traitor."
+
+Lieutenant-Colonel Axtell, who during the trial was in command of a
+regiment in Westminster and charged by his military superior, Lord
+Fairfax himself, with the duty of maintaining order, hearing this
+disturbance, went forward and told Lady Fairfax to hold her tongue,
+sound advice which she appears to have taken. After the Restoration
+Axtell was put to his trial as a "regicide." His defence, which was,
+that as a soldier he obeyed his orders, and was no more guilty than his
+general, Lord Fairfax, was not listened to, and he was sentenced to
+death, a fate which he met like the brave man he was.
+
+Although Fairfax did not immediately resign his command after the king's
+death, from that moment he lost heart in the cause. Lady Fairfax, whose
+loyalty to Charles may have been quickened by her dislike of Oliver, had
+great influence with him, and it may well be that his conscience pricked
+him. The rupture came in June 1650, when Charles's son made his
+appearance in Scotland and his peace with the Presbyterians, subscribing
+with inward emotions it would be unkind to attempt to describe the
+Solemn League and Covenant, and attending services and listening to
+sermons the length of which, at least, he never forgot. War was plainly
+imminent between the two countries. The question was, who should begin?
+Cromwell, who had hurried home from Ireland, Lambert, and Harrison were
+all keen to strike the first blow. Fairfax felt a scruple, and in those
+days scruples counted. Was there, he asked, a just cause for an invasion
+of Scotland? A committee was appointed, consisting of the three warriors
+above-named with St. John and Whitelock, to confer with the Lord-General
+and satisfy him of the lawfulness of the undertaking. The six met, and
+having first prayed--Oliver praying first--they proceeded to a
+discussion which may be read at length in Whitelock's _Memorials_, vol.
+iii. p. 207. The substance of their talk was as follows: Fairfax's
+scruple proved to be that both they and the Scots had joined in the
+Solemn League and Covenant, and that, therefore, until Scotland assumed
+the offensive, there was no cause for an invasion. Cromwell's retort,
+after a preliminary quibble, was practical enough. "War is inevitable.
+Is it better to have it in the bowels of another's country or in one's
+own? In one or other it must be." Fairfax's scruple, however, withstood
+this battery, though it was strongly enforced by Harrison, who, in reply
+to the Lord-General's question, "What was the warrant for the assumption
+that Scotland meant to fall upon England?" inquired, if Scotland did not
+mean to invade England, for whose benefit were levies being made and
+soldiers enlisted.
+
+Fairfax proved immovable. "Every man," said he, "must stand or fall by
+his own conscience"; and as he offered to lay down his command, there
+was nothing for it but to accept the resignation and appoint his
+successor. This was speedily done, and on the 28th of June 1650 "Oliver
+Cromwell, Esquire," was appointed Captain-General and Commander-in-chief
+of all the forces. On 16th July Cromwell crossed the Tweed, and on the
+3rd of September the Lord delivered Leslie into his hands at Dunbar.
+
+It was in these circumstances that Lord Fairfax and his energetic lady
+and only child went back to their Yorkshire home in the midsummer of
+1650, taking Marvell with them to instruct the Lady Mary in the tongues.
+
+Nunappleton House is in the Ainstey of York, a pleasant bit of country
+bounded by the rivers Ouse, Wharfe, and Nidd. The modern traveller, as
+his train rushes north, whilst shut up in his corridor-carriage with his
+rug, his pipe, and his novel, passes at no great distance from the house
+on the way between Selby and York. The old house, as it was in Marvell's
+time, is thus described by Captain Markham, who had a print to help
+him, in his delightful _Life of the Great Lord Fairfax_:--
+
+ "It was a picturesque brick mansion with stone copings and a high
+ steep roof, and consisted of a centre and two wings at right angles,
+ forming three sides of a square, facing to the north. The great hall
+ or gallery occupied the centre between the two wings. It was fifty
+ yards long, and was adorned with thirty shields in wood, painted with
+ the arms of the family. In the three rooms there were chimney-pieces
+ of delicate marble of various colours, and many fine portraits on the
+ walls. The central part of the house was surrounded by a cupola, and
+ clustering chimneys rose in the two wings. A noble park with splendid
+ oak-trees, and containing 300 head of deer, stretched away to the
+ north, while on the south side were the ruins of the old Nunnery, the
+ flower-garden, and the low meadows called _ings_ extending to the
+ banks of the Wharfe. In this flower-garden the General took especial
+ delight. The flowers were planted in masses, tulips, pinks, and
+ roses, each in separate beds, which were cut into the shape of forts
+ with five bastions. General Lambert, whom Fairfax had reared as a
+ soldier, also loved his flowers, and excelled both in cultivating
+ them and in painting them from Nature. Lord Fairfax only went to
+ Denton, the favourite seat of his grandfather, when the floods were
+ out over the _ings_ at Nunappleton, and he also occasionally resorted
+ to his house at Bishop Hill in York."[31:1]
+
+In this garden the muse of Andrew Marvell blossomed like the
+cherry-tree.
+
+Lord Fairfax, though furious in war, and badly wounded in many a fierce
+engagement, was, when otherwise occupied, a man of quiet literary
+tastes, and a good bit of a collector and _virtuoso_. Some of the rare
+books and manuscripts he had around him at Nunappleton are now in the
+Bodleian, the treasures of which he had protected in troubled times. He
+loved to handle medals and coins, and knew the points of old
+engravings. He wrote a history of the Christian Church down to our own
+ill-conducted Reformation, and composed a complete metrical version of
+the Psalms of David and of the Song of Solomon. These and many other
+productions, which he characterised as "The Employment of my Solitude,"
+still remain in his own handwriting. Amongst them, Yorkshire men will
+hear with pleasure, is a "Treatise on the breeding of the Horse."
+
+Of the quality of his wife we have already had a touch. She was one of
+the four daughters of Lord Vere of Tilbury, who came of a fine fighting
+family, and whose daughters had a roughish bringing-up, chiefly in the
+Netherlands. None of the daughters were reckoned beautiful, either in
+face or figure, and it may well be that Lady Fairfax had something about
+her of the old campaigner; but of her courage, sincerity, and goodness
+there can be no question. Her loyalty was no sickly fruit of "Church
+Principles," for her strong intelligence rejected scornfully the slavish
+doctrines, alien to our political constitution, of divine right and
+passive obedience; but a loyalty, none the less, it was, of a very
+valuable kind. She was fond of argument, and with Lady Fairfax at
+Nunappleton there was never likely to be any dearth of sensible talk and
+lively reminiscence. The tragedy of the 30th of January could never be
+forgotten, and it is possible that Marvell's most famous verses, so
+nobly descriptive of the demeanour of the king on that memorable
+occasion, derived their inspiration from discourse at Nunappleton.
+
+Of the Lady Mary, aged twelve, we have no direct testimony. When she
+grew up and had her portrait painted she stands revealed as a stout
+young woman with a plain good-natured face. The poor soul needed all
+the good-nature heaven had bestowed upon her, for she had to bear the
+misery and disgrace which were the inevitable marriage-portion of the
+woman whose ill-luck it was to become the wife of George Villiers,
+second Duke of Buckingham. Somebody seems to have taught her philosophy,
+for she bore her misfortunes as best became a great lady, living as one
+who had sorrow but no grievance. The duke died in 1688; she lived on
+till 1704. She was ever a good friend to another ill-used solitary wife,
+Catherine of Braganza. Marvell had every reason to be proud of his
+pupil.
+
+Beside the actual inmates of the great house, the whole countryside
+swarmed with Fairfaxes. At the Rectory of Bolton Percy was the late
+Lord-General's uncle, Henry Fairfax, and his two sons, Henry, who
+succeeded to the title, and the better-known Brian, the biographer of
+the Duke of Buckingham. At Stenton, four miles off, lived the widow of
+the gallant Sir William Fairfax, who died, covered with wounds, in 1644
+before Montgomery Castle. There were two sons and two daughters at
+Stenton, whilst Charles Fairfax, another uncle, and the lawyer and
+genealogist of the family, lived at no great distance with no less than
+fourteen children. There were also sisters of Lord Fairfax, with
+families of their own, all settled in the same part of the county.
+
+Such were the agreeable surroundings of our poet for two years,
+1650-1652. I must leave it to the imaginations of my readers to fill up
+the picture, for excepting the poems, which we may safely assume were
+written at Nunappleton House, and--who can doubt it?--read aloud to its
+inmates, there is nothing more to be said.
+
+Before considering the Nunappleton poetry, a word must be got in of
+bibliography. College exercises and complimentary verses excepted,
+Marvell printed none of his verse under his own name in his lifetime. So
+far as his themes were political there is no need to wonder at this.
+Indeed, the wonder is how, despite their anonymity, their author kept
+his ears; but why the Nunappleton verse should have remained in
+manuscript for more than thirty years is hard to explain.
+
+Until Pope took his muse to market, poetry, apart from the drama, had no
+direct commercial value, or one too small to be ranked as a motive for
+publication. None the less, the age loved distinction and appreciated
+wit, and to be known as a poet whose verses "numbered good intellects"
+was to gain the _entrée_ to the society of men both of intellect and
+fashion, and also, not infrequently, snug berths in the public service,
+and secretaryships to foreign missions and embassies. Thus there was
+always, in addition to natural vanity, a strong motive for a
+seventeenth-century poet to publish his poems. To-day one would hesitate
+to recommend a young man who wanted to get on in the world to publish a
+volume of verse; but the age of "wit" and "parts" is over.
+
+It was not till 1681--three years after Marvell's death--that the small
+folio appeared with a fine portrait, still dear to the collector, which
+contains for the first time what may be called the "garden-poetry" of
+our author, together with some specimens of his political and satirical
+versification.
+
+Marvell's most famous poem--_The Ode upon Cromwell's Return from
+Ireland_--is not included in the 1681 volume, and remained in manuscript
+until 1776, as also did the poem upon Cromwell's death.
+
+The remainder of the political poems, which had made their first
+appearance as broadsheets, were reprinted after the Revolution in the
+well-known _Collection of Poems on Affairs of State_.[35:1] These verses
+were never owned by Marvell, and it is probable that some of them,
+though attributed to him, are not his at all. We have only tradition to
+go by. In the case of political satires, squibs, epigrams, rough popular
+occasional rhymes flung off both in haste and heat to be sold with old
+ballads in the market-place, we need not seek for better evidence than
+tradition, which indeed is often the only external evidence we have for
+the authorship of much more important things.
+
+Now to return to the Nunappleton poetry.
+
+In a poem of 776 lines Marvell tells the story and describes the charms
+of the house which Lord Fairfax built for himself during the war, and to
+which, as just narrated, he retired in the summer of 1650. The story is
+only too familiar a one, being writ large over many a fine property.
+Appleton House was Church loot. In the time of Henry, "the majestic lord
+that burst the bonds of Rome," the old house at Nunappleton was a
+Cistercian nunnery, a religious house. In 1542 the community was
+suppressed and its property appropriated by the great-grandfather of the
+Lord-General--one Sir Thomas Fairfax. The religious buildings were
+pulled down and a new secular house rose in their place. In these bare
+and sordid facts there is not much room for poetry, but there is a story
+thrown in. Shortly before 1518 a Yorkshire heiress, bearing the
+unromantic name of Isabella Thwaites, was living in the Cistercian
+abbey, under the guardianship of the abbess, the Lady Anna Langton.
+Property under the care of the Church is always supposed to be in
+danger, and the Lady Anna was freely credited with the desire to make a
+nun of her ward, and so keep her broad acres in Wharfedale and her
+messuages in York for the use of Mother Church. None the less, the young
+lady was allowed to go about and visit her neighbours, and whilst so
+doing she fell in love with Sir William Fairfax, or he fell in love with
+her or with her estates. Thereupon, so the story proceeds, the abbess
+kept her ward a close prisoner within the nunnery walls. Legal
+proceedings were taken, but in the end the privacy of the nunnery was
+invaded, and Miss Thwaites was abducted and married to Sir William
+Fairfax at the church of Bolton Percy. The lady abbess had to submit to
+_vis major_, but worse days were in front of her, for she lived on to
+see the nunnery itself despoiled, and the fair domains she had during a
+long life preserved and maintained for religious uses handed over to the
+son of her former ward, Isabella Thwaites.
+
+Our poet begins by referring to the modest dimensions of the house, and
+the natural charms of its surroundings:--
+
+ "The house was built upon the place,
+ Only as for a mark of grace,
+ And for an inn to entertain
+ Its Lord awhile, but not remain.
+ Him Bishop's-hill or Denton may,
+ Or Billborow, better hold than they:
+ But Nature here hath been so free,
+ As if she said, 'Leave this to me.'
+ Art would more neatly have defac'd
+ What she had laid so sweetly waste
+ In fragrant gardens, shady woods,
+ Deep meadows, and transparent floods."
+
+And then starts the story:--
+
+ "While, with slow eyes, we these survey,
+ And on each pleasant footstep stay,
+ We opportunely may relate
+ The progress of this house's fate.
+ A nunnery first gave it birth,
+ (For virgin buildings oft brought forth)
+ And all that neighbour-ruin shows
+ The quarries whence this dwelling rose.
+ Near to this gloomy cloister's gates,
+ There dwelt the blooming virgin Thwaites,
+ Fair beyond measure, and an heir,
+ Which might deformity make fair;
+ And oft she spent the summer's suns
+ Discoursing with the subtle Nuns,
+ Whence, in these words, one to her weav'd,
+ As 'twere by chance, thoughts long conceiv'd:
+ 'Within this holy leisure, we
+ Live innocently, as you see.
+ These walls restrain the world without,
+ But hedge our liberty about;
+ These bars inclose that wilder den
+ Of those wild creatures, callèd men,
+ The cloister outward shuts its gates,
+ And, from us, locks on them the grates.
+ Here we, in shining armour white,
+ Like virgin amazons do fight,
+ And our chaste lamps we hourly trim,
+ Lest the great Bridegroom find them dim.
+ Our orient breaths perfumèd are
+ With incense of incessant prayer;
+ And holy-water of our tears
+ Most strangely our complexion clears;
+ Not tears of grief, but such as those
+ With which calm pleasure overflows;
+ Or pity, when we look on you
+ That live without this happy vow.
+ How should we grieve that must be seen
+ Each one a spouse, and each a queen,
+ And can in heaven hence behold
+ Our brighter robes and crowns of gold!
+ When we have prayèd all our beads,
+ Some one the holy Legend reads,
+ While all the rest with needles paint
+ The face and graces of the Saint;
+ Some of your features, as we sewed,
+ Through every shrine should be bestowed,
+ And in one beauty we would take
+ Enough a thousand Saints to make.
+ And (for I dare not quench the fire
+ That me does for your good inspire)
+ 'Twere sacrilege a man to admit
+ To holy things for heaven fit.
+ I see the angels in a crown
+ On you the lilies showering down;
+ And round about you glory breaks,
+ That something more than human speaks.
+ All beauty when at such a height,
+ Is so already consecrate.
+ Fairfax I know, and long ere this
+ Have marked the youth, and what he is;
+ But can he such a rival seem,
+ For whom you heaven should disesteem?
+ Ah, no! and 'twould more honour prove
+ He your devoto were than Love.
+ Here live belovèd and obeyed,
+ Each one your sister, each your maid,
+ And, if our rule seem strictly penned,
+ The rule itself to you shall bend.
+ Our Abbess, too, now far in age,
+ Doth your succession near presage.
+ How soft the yoke on us would lie,
+ Might such fair hands as yours it tie!
+ Your voice, the sweetest of the choir,
+ Shall draw heaven nearer, raise us higher,
+ And your example, if our head,
+ Will soon us to perfection lead.
+ Those virtues to us all so dear,
+ Will straight grow sanctity when here;
+ And that, once sprung, increase so fast,
+ Till miracles it work at last.'"
+
+What reply was given by the heiress to these arguments, and others of a
+still more seductive hue, the poet does not tell, but turns to the eager
+lover who asks, What should he do? He hints that a nunnery is no place
+for a virtuous maid, and that the nuns (unlike himself, I hope) are only
+thinking of her property. He complains that though the Court has
+authorised him to use either peace or force, the nuns still stand upon
+their guard.
+
+ "Ill-counselled women, do you know
+ Whom you resist or what you do?"
+
+Using a most remarkable poetic licence, the poet refers to the fact that
+this barred-out lover is to be the progenitor of the great Lord Fairfax.
+
+ "Is not this he, whose offspring fierce
+ Shall fight through all the universe;
+ And with successive valour try
+ France, Poland, either Germany,
+ Till one, as long since prophesied,
+ His horse through conquered Britain ride?"
+
+The lover determines to take the place by assault. It was not a very
+heroic enterprise, as Marvell describes it.
+
+ "Some to the breach, against their foes,
+ Their wooden Saints in vain oppose;
+ Another bolder, stands at push,
+ With their old holy-water brush,
+ While the disjointed Abbess threads
+ The jingling chain-shot of her beads;
+ But their loud'st cannon were their lungs,
+ And sharpest weapons were their tongues.
+ But waving these aside like flies,
+ Young Fairfax through the wall does rise.
+ Then the unfrequented vault appeared,
+ And superstition, vainly feared;
+ The relicks false were set to view;
+ Only the jewels there were true,
+ And truly bright and holy Thwaites,
+ That weeping at the altar waits.
+ But the glad youth away her bears,
+ And to the Nuns bequeathes her tears,
+ Who guiltily their prize bemoan,
+ Like gypsies who a child have stol'n."
+
+The poet then goes on to glorify the results of this union and to
+describe happy days spent at Nunappleton by the descendants of Isabella
+Thwaites.
+
+ "At the demolishing, this seat
+ To Fairfax fell, as by escheat;
+ And what both nuns and founders willed,
+ 'Tis likely better thus fulfilled.
+ For if the virgin proved not theirs,
+ The cloister yet remainèd hers;
+ Though many a nun there made her vow,
+ 'Twas no religious house till now.
+ From that blest bed the hero came
+ Whom France and Poland yet does fame;
+ Who, when retirèd here to peace,
+ His warlike studies could not cease;
+ But laid these gardens out, in sport,
+ In the just figure of a fort,
+ And with five bastions it did fence,
+ As aiming one for every sense.
+ When in the east the morning ray
+ Hangs out the colours of the day,
+ The bee through these known alleys hums,
+ Beating the dian with its drums.
+ Then flowers their drowsy eyelids raise,
+ Their silken ensigns each displays,
+ And dries its pan, yet dank with dew,
+ And fills its flask with odours new.
+ These as their Governor goes by
+ In fragrant volleys they let fly,
+ And to salute their Governess
+ Again as great a charge they press:
+ None for the virgin nymph; for she
+ Seems with the flowers a flower to be.
+ And think so still! though not compare
+ With breath so sweet, or cheek so fair!
+ Well shot, ye firemen! Oh, how sweet
+ And round your equal fires do meet,
+ Whose shrill report no ear can tell,
+ But echoes to the eye and smell!
+ See how the flowers, as at parade,
+ Under their colours stand displayed;
+ Each regiment in order grows,
+ That of the tulip, pink and rose.
+ But when the vigilant patrol
+ Of stars walk round about the pole,
+ Their leaves, which to the stalks are curled,
+ Seem to their staves the ensigns furled.
+ Then in some flower's belovèd hut,
+ Each bee, as sentinel, is shut,
+ And sleeps so too, but, if once stirred,
+ She runs you through, nor asks the word.
+
+ Oh, thou, that dear and happy isle,
+ The garden of the world erewhile,
+ Thou Paradise of the four seas,
+ Which heaven planted us to please,
+ But, to exclude the world, did guard
+ With watery, if not flaming sword,--
+ What luckless apple did we taste,
+ To make us mortal, and thee waste?
+ Unhappy! shall we never more
+ That sweet militia restore,
+ When gardens only had their towers
+ And all the garrisons were flowers,
+ When roses only arms might bear,
+ And men did rosy garlands wear?
+ Tulips, in several colours barred,
+ Were then the Switzers of our guard;
+ The gardener had the soldier's place,
+ And his more gentle forts did trace;
+ The nursery of all things green
+ Was then the only magazine;
+ The winter quarters were the stoves,
+ Where he the tender plants removes.
+ But war all this doth overgrow:
+ We ordnance plant, and powder sow.
+
+ The arching boughs unite between
+ The columns of the temple green,
+ And underneath the wingèd quires
+ Echo about their tunèd fires.
+ The nightingale does here make choice
+ To sing the trials of her voice;
+ Low shrubs she sits in, and adorns
+ With music high the squatted thorns;
+ But highest oaks stoop down to hear,
+ And listening elders prick the ear;
+ The thorn, lest it should hurt her, draws
+ Within the skin its shrunken claws.
+ But I have for my music found
+ A sadder, yet more pleasing sound;
+ The stock-doves, whose fair necks are graced
+ With nuptial rings, their ensigns chaste,
+ Yet always, for some cause unknown,
+ Sad pair, unto the elms they moan.
+ O why should such a couple mourn,
+ That in so equal flames do burn!
+ Then as I careless on the bed
+ Of gelid strawberries do tread,
+ And through the hazels thick espy
+ The hatching throstle's shining eye,
+ The heron, from the ash's top,
+ The eldest of its young lets drop,
+ As if it stork-like did pretend
+ That tribute to its lord to send.
+
+ Thus I, easy philosopher,
+ Among the birds and trees confer;
+ And little now to make me, wants,
+ Or of the fowls, or of the plants;
+ Give me but wings as they, and I
+ Straight floating on the air shall fly;
+ Or turn me but, and you shall see
+ I was but an inverted tree.
+ Already I begin to call
+ In their most learn'd original,
+ And where I language want, my signs
+ The bird upon the bough divines,
+ And more attentive there doth sit
+ Than if she were with lime-twigs knit,
+ No leaf does tremble in the wind,
+ Which I returning cannot find.
+ One of these scattered Sibyls' leaves
+ Strange prophecies my fancy weaves,
+ And in one history consumes,
+ Like Mexique paintings, all the plumes;
+ What Rome, Greece, Palestine e'er said,
+ I in this light mosaic read.
+ Thrice happy he, who, not mistook,
+ Hath read in Nature's mystic book!
+ And see how chance's better wit
+ Could with a mask my studies hit!
+ The oak-leaves me embroider all,
+ Between which caterpillars crawl;
+ And ivy, with familiar trails,
+ Me licks and clasps, and curls and hales.
+ Under this Attic cope I move,
+ Like some great prelate of the grove;
+ Then, languishing with ease, I toss
+ On pallets swoln of velvet moss,
+ While the wind, cooling through the boughs,
+ Flatters with air my panting brows.
+ Thanks for your rest, ye mossy banks,
+ And unto you, cool zephyrs, thanks,
+ Who, as my hair, my thoughts too shed,
+ And winnow from the chaff my head!
+
+ How safe, methinks, and strong behind
+ These trees, have I encamped my mind,
+ Where beauty, aiming at the heart,
+ Bends in some tree its useless dart,
+ And where the world no certain shot
+ Can make, or me it toucheth not,
+ But I on it securely play
+ And gall its horsemen all the day.
+ Bind me, ye woodbines, in your twines
+ Curl me about, ye gadding vines,
+ And oh so close your circles lace,
+ That I may never leave this place!
+ But, lest your fetters prove too weak,
+ Ere I your silken bondage break,
+ Do you, O brambles, chain me too,
+ And, courteous briars, nail me through!
+
+ Oh what a pleasure 'tis to hedge
+ My temples here with heavy sedge,
+ Abandoning my lazy side,
+ Stretched as a bank unto the tide,
+ Or to suspend my sliding foot
+ On the osier's underminèd root,
+ And in its branches tough to hang,
+ While at my lines the fishes twang?
+ But now away, my hooks, my quills,
+ And angles, idle utensils!
+ The young MARIA walks to-night;
+
+ 'Tis she that to these gardens gave
+ That wondrous beauty which they have;
+ She straightness on the woods bestows;
+ To her the meadow sweetness owes;
+ Nothing could make the river be
+ So crystal pure, but only she,
+ She yet more pure, sweet, straight, and fair
+ Than gardens, woods, meads, rivers are.
+
+ This 'tis to have been from the first
+ In a domestic heaven nursed,
+ Under the discipline severe
+ Of FAIRFAX, and the starry VERE;
+ Where not one object can come nigh
+ But pure, and spotless as the eye,
+ And goodness doth itself entail
+ On females, if there want a male."
+
+This poem, having a biographical value, I have quoted at, perhaps, too
+great length. Other poems of this garden-period of Marvell's life are
+better known. His own English version of his Latin poem _Hortus_
+contains lovely stanzas:--
+
+ "How vainly men themselves amaze
+ To win the palm, the oak, or bays;
+ And their uncessant labours see
+ Crowned from some single herb or tree,
+ Whose short and narrow-vergèd shade
+ Does prudently their toils upbraid;
+ While all the flowers and trees do close,
+ To weave the garlands of Repose!
+
+ Fair Quiet, have I found thee here,
+ And Innocence, thy sister dear?
+ Mistaken long, I sought you then
+ In busy companies of men.
+ Your sacred plants, if here below,
+ Only among the plants will grow;
+ Society is all but rude
+ To this delicious solitude.
+
+ No white nor red was ever seen
+ So amorous as this lovely green.
+
+ What wond'rous life is this I lead!
+ Ripe apples drop about my head;
+ The luscious clusters of the vine
+ Upon my mouth do crush their wine;
+ The nectarine, and curious peach,
+ Into my hands themselves do reach;
+ Stumbling on melons, as I pass,
+ Insnared with flowers, I fall on grass.
+
+ Meanwhile the mind, from pleasure less,
+ Withdraws into its happiness;--
+ The mind, that ocean where each kind
+ Does straight its own resemblance find;--
+ Yet it creates, transcending these,
+ Far other worlds, and other seas,
+ Annihilating all that's made
+ To a green thought in a green shade."[46:1]
+
+Well known as are Marvell's lines to his Coy Mistress, I have not the
+heart to omit them, so eminently characteristic are they of his style
+and humour:--
+
+ "Had we but world enough and time,
+ This coyness, lady, were no crime.
+ We would sit down and think which way
+ To walk, and pass our long love's day.
+ Thou by the Indian Ganges' side
+ Should'st rubies find: I by the tide
+ Of Humber would complain. I would
+ Love you ten years before the Flood,
+ And you should, if you please, refuse
+ Till the conversion of the Jews.
+ My vegetable love should grow
+ Vaster than empires and more slow.
+ An hundred years should go to praise
+ Thine eyes, and on thy forehead gaze;
+ Two hundred to adore each breast,
+ But thirty thousand to the rest;
+ An age at least to every part,
+ And the last age should show your heart.
+ For, lady, you deserve this state,
+ Nor would I love at lower rate.
+ But at my back I always hear
+ Time's wingèd chariot hurrying near,
+ And yonder all before us lie
+ Deserts of vast eternity.
+ Thy beauty shall no more be found,
+ Nor in thy marble vault shall sound
+ My echoing song; then worms shall try
+ That long-preserved virginity,
+ And your quaint honour turn to dust,
+ And into ashes all my lust.
+ The grave's a fine and private place,
+ But none, I think, do there embrace.
+ Now, therefore, while the youthful hue
+ Sits on thy skin like morning dew,
+ And while thy willing soul transpires
+ At every pore with instant fires,
+ Now, let us sport us while we may;
+ And now, like amorous birds of prey,
+ Rather at once our time devour,
+ Than languish in his slow-chapt power!
+ Let us roll all our strength, and all
+ Our sweetness up into one ball;
+ And tear our pleasures with rough strife,
+ Through the iron gates of life!
+ Thus, though we cannot make our sun
+ Stand still, yet we will make him run."
+
+Mr. Aitken's valuable edition of Marvell's poems and satires can now be
+had of all booksellers for two shillings,[47:1] and with these volumes
+in his possession the judicious reader will be able to supply his own
+reflections whilst life beneath the sun is still his. Poetry is a
+personal matter. The very canons of criticism are themselves literature.
+If we like the _Ars Poetica_, it is because we enjoy reading Horace.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[20:1] For an account of Flecknoe, see Southey's _Omniana_, i. 105. Lamb
+placed some fine lines of Flecknoe's at the beginning of the Essay _A
+Quakers' Meeting_.
+
+[24:1] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 175.
+
+[24:2] _See_ preface to _Religio Laici_, Scott's _Dryden_, vol. x. p.
+27.
+
+[24:3] Jeremy Collier in his _Historical Dictionary_ (1705) describes
+Marvell, to whom he allows more space (though it is but a few lines)
+than he does to Shakespeare, "as to his opinion he was a dissenter." In
+Collier's opinion Marvell may have been no better than a dissenter, but
+in fact he was a Churchman all his life, and it was Collier who lived to
+become a non-juror and a dissenter, and a schismatical bishop to boot.
+
+[31:1] _Life of Lord Fairfax_, by C.R. Markham (1870), p. 365.
+
+[35:1] The fifth edition is dated 1703.
+
+[46:1] Many a reader has made his first acquaintance with Marvell on
+reading these lines in the _Essays of Elia_ (_The Old Benchers of the
+Inner Temple_).
+
+[47:1] _Poems and Satires of Andrew Marvell_, 2 vols. Routledge, 1905.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A CIVIL SERVANT IN THE TIME OF THE COMMONWEALTH
+
+
+When Andrew Marvell first made John Milton's acquaintance is not known.
+They must both have had common friends at or belonging to Cambridge.
+Fairfax may have made the two men known to each other, although it is
+just as likely that Milton introduced Marvell to Fairfax. All we know is
+that when the engagement at Nunappleton House came to an end, Marvell,
+being then minded to serve the State in some civil capacity, applied to
+the Secretary for Foreign Tongues for what would now be called a
+testimonial, which he was fortunate enough to obtain in the form of a
+letter to the Lord-President of the Council, John Bradshaw. Milton seems
+always to have liked Bradshaw, who was not generally popular even on his
+own side, and in the _Defensio Secunda pro populo Anglicano_ extols his
+character and attainments in sonorous latinity. Bradshaw had become in
+February 1649 the first President of the new Council of State, which,
+after the disappearance of the king and the abolition of the House of
+Lords, took over the burden of the executive, and claimed the right to
+scrape men's consciences by administering to anybody it chose an oath
+requiring them to approve of what the House of Commons had done against
+the king, and of their abolition of kingly government and of the House
+of Peers, and that the legislative and supreme power was wholly in the
+House of Commons.
+
+Before the creation of this Council the duties of Latin Secretary to the
+Parliament had been discharged by Georg Rudolph Weckherlin, a German
+diplomat who had married an Englishwoman. He retired in bad health at
+this time, and Milton was appointed to his place in 1649. When, later
+on, the sight of the most illustrious of all our civil servants failed
+him, Weckherlin returned to the office as Milton's assistant. In
+December 1652 ill-health again compelled Weckherlin's retirement.[49:1]
+
+Milton's letter to Bradshaw, who had made his home at Eton, is dated
+February 21, 1653, and is as follows:--
+
+ "MY LORD,--But that it would be an interruption to the
+ public wherein your studies are perpetually employed, I should now
+ and then venture to supply thus my enforced absence with a line or
+ two, though it were onely my business, and that would be no slight
+ one, to make my due acknowledgments of your many favours; which I
+ both do at this time and ever shall; and have this farther, which I
+ thought my part to let you know of, that there will be with you
+ to-morrow upon some occasion of business a gentleman whose name is
+ Mr. Marvile, a man whom both by report and the converse I have had
+ with him of singular desert for the State to make use of, who also
+ offers himself, if there be any employment for him. His father was
+ the Minister of Hull, and he hath spent four years abroad in Holland,
+ France, Italy, and Spain to very good purpose, as I believe, and the
+ gaining of these four languages, besides he is a scholer and
+ well-read in the Latin and Greek authors, and no doubt of an approved
+ conversation, for he now comes lately out of the house of the Lord
+ Fairfax, who was Generall, where he was intrusted to give some
+ instructions in the languages to the Lady, his daughter. If upon the
+ death of Mr. Weckerlyn the Councell shall think that I shall need any
+ assistance in the performance of my place (though for my part I find
+ no encumbrance of that which belongs to me, except it be in point of
+ attendance at Conferences with Ambassadors, which I must confess in
+ my condition I am not fit for) it would be hard for them to find a
+ man so fit every way for that purpose as this gentleman: one who, I
+ believe, in a short time would be able to do them as much service as
+ Mr. Ascan. This, my Lord, I write sincerely without any other end
+ than to perform my duty to the publick in helping them to an humble
+ servant; laying aside those jealousies and that emulation which mine
+ own condition might suggest to me by bringing in such a coadjutor;
+ and remain, my Lord, your most obliged and faithful servant,
+ JOHN MILTON.
+
+ "_Feb. 21, 1652_ (O.S.)."
+
+ Addressed: "For the Honourable the Lord Bradshawe."
+
+No handsomer testimonial than this was ever penned. It was unsuccessful.
+When Milton wrote to Bradshaw, Weckherlin was in fact dead, and on his
+retirement in the previous December, John Thurloe, the very handy
+Secretary of the Council, had for the time assumed Weckherlin's duties,
+and obtained on that score an addition to his salary. No actual vacancy,
+therefore, occurred on Weckherlin's death. None the less, shortly
+afterwards, Philip Meadows, also a Cambridge man, was appointed Milton's
+assistant, and Marvell had to wait four years longer for his place.
+
+When Marvell's connection with Eton first began is not to be
+ascertained. His friend, John Oxenbridge, who had been driven from his
+tutorship at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, by Laud in 1634 to
+
+ "Where the remote Bermudas ride,"
+
+but had returned home, became in 1652 a Fellow of Eton College. Oliver
+St. John, who at this time was Chancellor of the University of
+Cambridge, and had married Oxenbridge's sister, was known to Marvell,
+and may have introduced him to his brother-in-law. At all events Marvell
+frequently visited Eton, where, however, he had the good sense to
+frequent not merely the cloisters, but the poor lodgings where the "ever
+memorable" John Hales, ejected from his fellowship, spent the last years
+of his life.
+
+ "I account it no small honour to have grown up into some part of his
+ acquaintance and conversed awhile with the living remains of one of
+ the clearest heads and best prepared breasts in Christendom."[51:1]
+
+Hales died in 1656, and his _Golden Remains_ were first published three
+years later. Marvell's words of panegyric are singularly well chosen. It
+is a curious commentary upon the confused times of the Civil War and
+Restoration that perhaps never before, and seldom, if ever, since, has
+England contained so many clear heads and well-prepared breasts as it
+did then. Small indeed is the influence of men of thought upon their
+immediate surroundings.
+
+The Lord Bradshaw, we know, had a home in Eton, and on the occasion of
+one of Marvell's evidently frequent visits to the Oxenbridges, Milton
+entrusted him with a letter to Bradshaw and a presentation copy of the
+_Secunda defensio_. Marvell delivered both letter and book, and seems at
+once to have informed the distinguished author that he had done so. But
+alas for the vanity of the writing man! The sublime poet, who in his
+early manhood had composed _Lycidas_, and was in his old age to write
+_Paradise Lost_, demanded further and better particulars as to the
+precise manner in which the chief of his office received, not only the
+book, but the letter which accompanied it. Nobody is now left to think
+much of Bradshaw, but in 1654 he was an excellent representative of the
+class Carlyle was fond of describing as the _alors célèbre_. Prompted by
+this desire, Milton must have written to Marvell hinting, as he well
+knew how to do, his surprise at the curtness of his friend's former
+communication, and Marvell's reply to this letter has come down to us.
+It is Marvell's glory that long before _Paradise Lost_ he recognised the
+essential greatness of the blind secretary, and his letter is a fine
+example of the mode of humouring a great man. Be it remembered, as we
+read, that this letter was not addressed to one of the greatest names in
+literature, but to a petulant and often peevish scholar, living of
+necessity in great retirement, whose name is never once mentioned by
+Clarendon, and about whom the voluminous Thurloe, who must have seen him
+hundreds of times, has nothing to say except that he was "a blind man
+who wrote Latin letters." Odder still, perhaps, Richard Baxter, whose
+history of his own life and times is one of the most informing books in
+the world, never so much as mentions the one and only man whose name
+can, without any violent sense of unfitness, be given to the age about
+which Baxter was writing so laboriously.
+
+ "HONOURED SIR,--I did not satisfie my self in the account I
+ gave you of presentinge your Book to my Lord, although it seemed to
+ me that I writ to you all which the messenger's speedy returne the
+ same night from Eaton would permit me; and I perceive that, by reason
+ of that hast, I did not give you satisfaction neither concerninge the
+ delivery of your Letter at the same time. Be pleased therefore to
+ pardon me and know that I tendered them both together. But my Lord
+ read not the Letter while I was with him, which I attributed to our
+ despatch, and some other businesse tendinge thereto, which I
+ therefore wished ill to, so farr as it hindred an affaire much better
+ and of greater importance, I mean that of reading your Letter. And to
+ tell you truly mine own imagination, I thought that he would not open
+ it while I was there, because he might suspect that I, delivering it
+ just upon my departure, might have brought in it some second
+ proposition like to that which you had before made to him by your
+ Letter to my advantage. However, I assure myself that he has since
+ read it, and you, that he did then witnesse all respecte to your
+ person, and as much satisfaction concerninge your work as could be
+ expected from so cursory a review and so sudden an account as he
+ could then have of it from me. Mr. Oxenbridge, at his returne from
+ London, will, I know, give you thanks for his book, as I do with all
+ acknowledgement and humility for that you have sent me. I shall now
+ studie it even to the getting of it by heart; esteeming it, according
+ to my poore judgment (which yet I wish it were so right in all things
+ else), as the most compendious scale for so much to the height of the
+ Roman Eloquence, when I consider how equally it turnes and rises with
+ so many figures it seems to me a Trajan's columne, in whose winding
+ ascent we see imboss'd the severall monuments of your learned
+ victoryes: And Salmatius and Morus make up as great a triumph as that
+ of Decebalus, whom too, for ought I know, you shall have forced, as
+ Trajan the other, to make themselves away out of a just desperation.
+ I have an affectionate curiousity to know what becomes of Colonell
+ Overton's businesse. And am exceeding glad that Mr. Skynner is got
+ near you, the happinesse which I at the same time congratulate to him
+ and envie, there being none who doth, if I may so say, more jealously
+ honour you then, Honoured Sir, Your most affectionate humble servant,
+ ANDREW MARVELL.
+
+ "Eaton, _June 2, 1654._"
+
+ Addressed: "For my most honoured friend,
+ John Milton, Esquire, Secretarye
+ for the Forrain affaires
+ at his house in Petty France,
+ Westminster."
+
+To conclude Marvell's Eton experiences; in 1657, and very shortly before
+his obtaining his appointment as Milton's assistant in the place of
+Philip Meadows, who was sent on a mission to Lisbon, Marvell was chosen
+by the Lord-Protector to be tutor at Eton to Cromwell's ward, Mr.
+Dutton, and took up his residence with his pupil with the Oxenbridges.
+The following letter, addressed by Marvell to Oliver, will be read with
+interest:--
+
+ "May it please your Excellence,--It might, perhaps, seem fit for me
+ to seek out words to give your Excellence thanks for myself. But,
+ indeed, the only civility which it is proper for me to practice with
+ so eminent a person is to obey you, and to perform honestly the work
+ that you have set me about. Therefore I shall use the time that your
+ Lordship is pleased to allow me for writing, onely for that purpose
+ for which you have given me it; that is, to render you an account of
+ Mr. Dutton. I have taken care to examine him several times in the
+ presence of Mr. Oxenbridge, as those who weigh and tell over money
+ before some witnesse ere they take charge of it; for I thought that
+ there might be possibly some lightness in the coyn, or errour in the
+ telling, which hereafter I should be bound to make good. Therefore,
+ Mr. Oxenbridge is the best to make your Excellency an impartial
+ relation thereof: I shall only say, that I shall strive according to
+ my best understanding (that is, according to those rules your
+ Lordship hath given me) to increase whatsoever talent he may have
+ already. Truly, he is of gentle and waxen disposition; and God be
+ praised, I cannot say he hath brought with him any evil impression;
+ and I shall hope to set nothing into his spirit but what may be of a
+ good sculpture. He hath in him two things that make youth most easy
+ to be managed,--modesty, which is the bridle to vice; and emulation,
+ which is the spur to virtue. And the care which your Excellence is
+ pleased to take of him is no small encouragement and shall be so
+ represented to him; but, above all, I shall labour to make him
+ sensible of his duty to God; for then we begin to serve faithfully,
+ when we consider He is our master. And in this, both he and I owe
+ infinitely to your Lordship, for having placed us in so godly a
+ family as that of Mr. Oxenbridge, whose doctrine and example are like
+ a book and a map, not only instructing the ear, but demonstrating to
+ the eye, which way we ought to travell; and Mrs. Oxenbridge has
+ looked so well to him, that he hath already much mended his
+ complexion; and now she is ordering his chamber, that he may delight
+ to be in it as often as his studys require. For the rest, most of
+ this time hath been spent in acquainting ourselves with him; and
+ truly he is chearfull, and I hope thinks us to be good company. I
+ shall, upon occasion, henceforward inform your Excellence of any
+ particularities in our little affairs, for so I esteem it to be my
+ duty. I have no more at present, but to give thanks to God for your
+ Lordship, and to beg grace of Him, that I may approve myself, Your
+ Excellency's most humble and faithful servant,
+ ANDREW MARVELL.
+
+ "Windsor, _July 28, 1653_.
+
+ "Mr. Dutton[55:1] presents his most humble service to your
+ Excellence."
+
+Something must now be said of Marvell's literary productions during this
+period, 1652-1657. It was in 1653 that he began his stormy career as an
+anonymous political poet and satirist. The Dutch were his first victims,
+good Protestants though they were. Marvell never liked the Dutch, and
+had he lived to see the Revolution must have undergone some qualms.
+
+In 1652 the Commonwealth was at war with the United Provinces. Trade
+jealousy made the war what politicians call "inevitable." This jealousy
+of the Dutch dates back to Elizabeth, and to the first stirring in the
+womb of time of the British navy. This may be readily perceived if we
+read Dr. John Dee's "Petty Navy Royal," 1577, and "A Politic Plat (plan)
+for the Honour of the Prince," 1580, and, somewhat later in date,
+"England's Way to Win Wealth," 1614.[56:1]
+
+These short tracts make two things quite plain--first, the desire to get
+our share of the foreign fishing trade, then wholly in the hands of the
+Dutch; and second, the recognition that England was a sea-empire,
+dependent for its existence upon a great navy manned by the seafaring
+inhabitants of our coasts.
+
+The enormous fishing trade done in our own waters by the Dutch, the
+splendid fleet of fishing craft with twenty thousand handy sailors on
+board, ready by every 1st of June to sail out of the Maas, the Texel,
+and the Vlie, to catch herring in the North Sea, excited admiration,
+envy, and almost despair.
+
+ "O, slothful England and careless countrymen! look but on these
+ fellows that we call the plump Hollanders! Behold their diligence in
+ fishing and our most careless negligence! Six hundred of these
+ fisherships and more be great Busses, some six score tons, most of
+ them be a hundred tons, and the rest three score tons and fifty tons;
+ the biggest of them having four and twenty men, some twenty men, and
+ some eighteen or sixteen men apiece. So there cannot be in this fleet
+ of People no less than twenty thousand sailors.... No king upon the
+ earth did ever see such a fleet of his own subjects at any time, and
+ yet this fleet is there and then yearly to be seen. A most worthy
+ sight it were, if they were my own countrymen, yet have I taken
+ pleasure in being amongst them, to behold the neatness of their ships
+ and fishermen, how every man knoweth his own place, and all labouring
+ merrily together.[57:1]
+
+ "Now, in our sum of fishermen, let us see what vent have we for our
+ fish in other countries, and what commodities and corn is brought
+ into this Kingdom? And what ships are set in work by them whereby
+ mariners are best employed. Not one. It is pitiful! ... This last
+ year at Yarmouth there were three hundred idle men that could get
+ nothing to do, living very poor for lack of employment, which most
+ gladly would have gone to sea in Pinks if there had been any for them
+ to go in.... And this last year the Hollanders did lade 12 sail of
+ Holland ships with red herrings at Yarmouth for Civita Vecchia,
+ Leghorn and Genoa and Marseilles and Toulon. Most of these being
+ laden by the English merchants. So that if this be suffered the
+ English owners of ships shall have but small employment for
+ them."[57:2]
+
+Nor was the other aspect of the case lost sight of. How can a great navy
+necessary for our sea-empire be manned otherwise than by a race of brave
+sea-faring men, accustomed from their infancy to handle boats?
+
+ "Fourthly, how many thousands of soldiers of all degrees would be by
+ these means not only hardened well to brook all rage and disturbance
+ of sea, but also would be well practised and trained to great
+ perfection of understanding all manner of fight and service of sea,
+ so that in time of great need that expert and hardy crew of some
+ thousands of sea-soldiers would be to this realm a treasure
+ incomparable.[58:1]
+
+ "We see the Hollanders being well fed in fishing affairs and stronger
+ and lustier than the sailors who use the long Southern voyages, but
+ these courageous, young, lusty, strong-fed younkers that shall be
+ bred in the Busses, when His Majesty shall have occasion for their
+ service in war against the enemy, will be fellows for the nonce! and
+ will put more strength to an iron crow at a piece of great ordnance
+ in training of a cannon, or culvining with the direction of the
+ experimented master Gunner, then two or three of the forenamed
+ surfeited sailors. And in distress of wind-grown sea and foul
+ winter's weather, for flying forward to their labour, for pulling in
+ a top-sail or a sprit-sail, or shaking off a bonnet in a dark night!
+ for wet or cold cannot make them shrink nor stain, that the North
+ Seas and the Busses and Pinks have dyed in the grain for such
+ purposes."[58:2]
+
+The years, as they went by, only served to increase English jealousy of
+the Dutch, who not only fished our water but did the carrying trade of
+the world. It was no rare sight to see Yarmouth full of Dutch bottoms,
+and Dutch sailors loading them with English goods.
+
+In the early days of the Commonwealth the painfulness of the situation
+was accentuated by the fact that some of our colonies or plantations, as
+they were then called--Virginia and the Barbadoes, for example--stuck to
+the king and gave a commercial preference to the Dutch, shipping their
+produce to all parts of the world exclusively in Dutch bottoms. This was
+found intolerable, and in October 1651 the Long Parliament, nearing its
+violent end, passed the first Navigation Act, of which Ranke says: "Of
+all the acts ever passed in Parliament, it is perhaps the one which
+brought about the most important results for England and the
+world."[59:1]
+
+The Navigation Act provided "that all goods from countries beyond Europe
+should be imported into England in English ships only; and all European
+goods either in English ships or in ships belonging to the countries
+from which these articles originally came."
+
+This was a challenge indeed.
+
+Another perpetual source of irritation was the Right of Search, that is,
+the right of stopping neutral ships and searching their cargoes for
+contraband. England asserted this right as against the Dutch, who, as
+the world's carriers, were most subject to the right, and not
+unnaturally denied its existence.
+
+War was declared in 1652, and made the fame of two great admirals, Blake
+and Van Tromp. Oliver's spirit was felt on the seas, and before many
+months were over England had captured more than a thousand Dutch trading
+vessels, and brought business to a standstill in Amsterdam--then the
+great centre of commercial interests. When six short years afterwards
+the news of Cromwell's death reached that city, its inhabitants greatly
+rejoiced, crowding the streets and crying "the Devil is dead."
+
+Andrew Marvell was impregnated with the new ideas about sea-power. A
+great reader and converser with the best intellects of his time, and a
+Hull man, he had probably early grasped the significance of Bacon's
+illuminating saying in the famous essay on the _True Greatness of
+Kingdoms and Estates_ (first printed in 1612), "that he that commands
+the sea is at great liberty and may take as much and as little of the
+war as he will." Cromwell, though not the creator of our navy, was its
+strongest inspiration until Nelson, and no feature of his great
+administration so excited Marvell's patriotic admiration as the
+Lord-Protector's sleepless energy in securing and maintaining the
+command of the sea.
+
+In Marvell's poem, first published as a broadsheet in 1655, entitled
+_The First Anniversary of the Government under His Highness the
+Lord-Protector_, he describes foreign princes soundly rating their
+ambassadors for having misinformed them as to the energies of the new
+Commonwealth:--
+
+ "'Is this,' saith one, 'the nation that we read
+ Spent with both wars, under a Captain dead!
+ Yet rig a navy while we dress us late
+ And ere we dine rase and rebuild a state?
+ What oaken forests, and what golden mines,
+ What mints of men--what union of designs!
+ ...
+ Needs must we all their tributaries be
+ Whose navies hold the sluices of the sea!
+ _The ocean is the fountain of command_,
+ But that once took, we captives are on land;
+ And those that have the waters for their share
+ Can quickly leave us neither earth nor air.'"
+
+Marvell's aversion to the Dutch was first displayed in the rough lines
+called _The Character of Holland_, published in 1653 during the first
+Dutch War. As poetry the lines have no great merit; they do not even
+jingle agreeably--but they are full of the spirit of the time, and
+breathe forth that "envy, hatred, malice, and all uncharitableness"
+which are apt to be such large ingredients in the compound we call
+"patriotism." They begin thus:--
+
+ "Holland, that scarce deserves the name of land,
+ As but the off-scouring of the British sand,
+ And so much earth as was contributed
+ By English pilots when they heaved the lead,
+ Or what by the ocean's slow alluvion feel
+ Of shipwrecked cockle and the muscle-shell,--
+ This indigested vomit of the sea
+ Fell to the Dutch by just propriety."
+
+The gallant struggle to secure their country from the sea is made the
+subject of curious banter:--
+
+ "How did they rivet with gigantic piles,
+ Thorough the centre their new-catched miles,
+ And to the stake a struggling country bound,
+ Where barking waves still bait the forced ground,
+ Building their watery Babel far more high,
+ To reach the sea, than those to scale the sky!
+ Yet still his claim the injured ocean laid,
+ And oft at leap-frog o'er their steeples played,
+ As if on purpose it on land had come
+ To show them what's their _mare liberum_.
+ A daily deluge over them does boil;
+ The earth and water play at level coil.
+ The fish ofttimes the burgher dispossessed,
+ And sat, not as a meat, but as a guest."
+
+This final conceit greatly tickled the fancy of Charles Lamb, who was
+perhaps the first of the moderns to rediscover both the rare merits and
+the curiosities of our author. Hazlitt thought poorly of the jest.[61:1]
+
+Marvell proceeds with his ridicule to attack the magistrates:--
+
+ "For, as with pygmies, who best kills the crane;
+ Among the hungry, he that treasures grain;
+ Among the blind, the one-eyed blinkard reigns;
+ So rules among the drowned, he that drains:
+ Not who first see the rising sun, commands,
+ But who could first discern the rising lands;
+ Who best could know to pump an earth so leak,
+ Him they their Lord, and Country's Father, speak;
+ To make a bank, was a great plot of state;
+ Invent a shovel, and be a magistrate."[62:1]
+
+When the war-fever was raging such humour as this may well have passed
+muster with the crowd.
+
+The incident--there is always an "incident"--which served as the actual
+excuse for hostilities, is referred to as follows:--
+
+ "Let this one courtesy witness all the rest,
+ When their whole navy they together pressed,
+ Not Christian captives to redeem from bands,
+ Or intercept the western golden sands,
+ No, but all ancient rights and leagues must fail,
+ _Rather than to the English strike their sail_;
+ To whom their weather-beaten province owes
+ Itself."
+
+Two spirited lines describe the discomfiture of Van Tromp:--
+
+ "And the torn navy staggered with him home
+ While the sea laughed itself into a foam."
+
+This first Dutch War came to an end in 1654, when Holland was compelled
+to acknowledge the supremacy of the English flag in the home waters, and
+to acquiesce in the Navigation Act. It is a curious commentary upon the
+black darkness that conceals the future, that Cromwell, dreading as he
+did the House of Orange and the youthful grandson of Charles the First,
+who at the appointed hour was destined to deal the House of Stuart a far
+deadlier stroke than Cromwell had been able to do, either on the field
+of battle or in front of Whitehall, refused to ratify the Treaty of
+Peace with the Dutch until John De Witt had obtained an Act excluding
+the Prince of Orange from ever filling the office of Stadtholder of the
+Province of Holland.
+
+The contrast between the glory of Oliver's Dutch War and the shame of
+Charles the Second's sank deep into Marvell's heart, and lent bitterness
+to many of his later satirical lines.
+
+Marvell's famous _Horatian Ode upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland_ in
+1650 has a curious bibliographical interest. So far as we can tell, it
+was first published in 1776. When it was composed we do not know. At
+Nunappleton House Oliver was not a _persona grata_ in 1650, for he had
+no sooner come back from Ireland than he had stepped into the shoes of
+the Lord-General Fairfax; and there were those, Lady Fairfax, I doubt
+not, among the number, who believed that the new Lord-General thought it
+was high time he should be where Fairfax's "scruple" at last put him. We
+may be sure Cromwell's character was dissected even more than it was
+extolled at Nunappleton. The famous Ode is by no means a panegyric, and
+its true hero is the "Royal actor," whom Cromwell, so the poem suggests,
+lured to his doom. It is not likely that the Ode was composed after
+Marvell had left Nunappleton, though it may have been so before he went
+there. There is an old untraceable tradition that Marvell was among the
+crowd that saw the king die. What deaths have been witnessed, and with
+what strange apparent apathy, by the London crowd! But for this
+tradition one's imagination would trace to Lady Fairfax the most famous
+of the stanzas.
+
+But to return to the history of the Ode. In 1776 Captain Edward
+Thompson, a connection of the Marvell family and a versatile sailor with
+a passion for print, which had taken some odd forms of expression,
+produced by subscription in three quarto volumes the first collected
+edition of Andrew Marvell's works, both verse and prose. Such an edition
+had been long premeditated by Thomas Hollis, one of the best friends
+literature had in the eighteenth century. It was Hollis who gave to
+Sidney Sussex College the finest portrait in existence of Oliver
+Cromwell. Hollis collected material for an edition of Marvell with the
+aid of Richard Barron, an early editor of Milton's prose works, and of
+Algernon Sidney's _Discourse concerning Government_. Barron, however,
+lost zeal as the task proceeded, and complained justly enough "of a want
+of anecdotes," and as the printer, the well-known and accomplished
+Bowyer, doubted the wisdom of the undertaking, it was allowed to drop.
+Barron died in 1766, and Hollis in 1774, but the collections made by the
+latter passed into the hands of Captain Thompson, who, with the
+assistance of Mr. Robert Nettleton, a grandson of one of Marvell's
+sisters, at once began to get his edition ready. On Nettleton's death
+his "Marvell" papers came into Thompson's hands, and among them was, to
+quote the captain's own words, "a volume of Mr. Marvell's poems, some
+written with his own hand and the rest copied by his order."
+
+The _Horatian Ode_ was in this volume, and was printed from it in
+Thompson's edition of 1776.
+
+What has become of this manuscript book? It has disappeared--destroyed,
+so we are led to believe, in a fit of temper by the angry and uncritical
+sea-captain.
+
+This precious volume undoubtedly contained some poems by Marvell, and as
+his handwriting was both well known from many examples, and is highly
+characteristic, we may also be certain that the captain was not mistaken
+in his assertion that some of these poems were in Marvell's own
+handwriting. But, as ill-luck would have it, the volume also contained
+poems written at a later period and in quite another hand. Among these
+latter pieces were Addison's verses, _The Spacious Firmament on High_
+and _When all thy Mercies, O my God_; Dr. Watts' paraphrase _When Israel
+freed from Pharaoh's Hand_; and Mallet's ballad _William and Margaret_.
+The two Addison pieces and the Watts paraphrase appeared for the first
+time in the _Spectator_, Nos. 453, 465, and 461, in 1712, and Mallet's
+ballad was first printed in 1724.
+
+Still there these pieces were, in manuscript, in this volume, and as
+there were circumstances of mystification attendant upon their prior
+publication, what does the captain do but claim them all, _Songs of
+Zion_ and sentimental ballad alike, as Marvell's. This of course brought
+the critics, ever anxious to air their erudition, down upon his head,
+raised his anger, and occasioned the destruction of the book.
+
+Mr. Grosart says that Captain Thompson states that the _Horatian Ode_
+was in Marvell's handwriting. I cannot discover where this statement is
+made, though it is made of other poems in the volume, also published for
+the first time by the captain.
+
+All, therefore, we know is that the Ode was first published in 1776 by
+an editor who says he found it copied in a book, subsequently destroyed,
+which contained (among other things) some poems written in Marvell's
+handwriting, and that this book was given to the editor by a
+grand-nephew of the poet.
+
+Yet I imagine, poor as this evidence may seem to be, no student of
+Marvell's life and character (so far as his life reveals his character),
+and of his verse (so much of it as is positively known), wants more
+evidence to satisfy him that the _Horatian Ode_ is as surely Marvell's
+as the lines upon _Appleton House_, the _Bermudas_, _To his Coy
+Mistress_, and _The Garden_.
+
+The great popularity of this Ode undoubtedly rests on the three
+stanzas:--
+
+ "That thence the royal actor borne,
+ The tragic scaffold might adorn,
+ While round the armèd bands;
+ Did clap their bloody hands:
+
+ He nothing common did, or mean,
+ Upon that memorable scene,
+ But with his keener eye
+ The axe's edge did try;
+
+ Nor called the gods with vulgar spite
+ To vindicate his helpless right,
+ But bowed his comely head
+ Down, as upon a bed."
+
+It is strange that the death of the king should be so nobly sung in an
+Ode bearing Cromwell's name and dedicate to his genius:--
+
+ "So restless Cromwell could not cease
+ In the inglorious arts of peace,
+ But through adventurous war
+ Urgèd his active star;
+
+ ...
+
+ Then burning through the air he went,
+ And palaces and temples rent;
+ And Cæsar's head at last
+ Did through his laurels blast.
+
+ 'Tis madness to resist or blame
+ The force of angry Heaven's flame;
+ And if we would speak true,
+ Much to the man is due,
+
+ Who, from his private gardens, where
+ He lived reservèd and austere,
+ (As if his highest plot
+ To plant the bergamot),
+
+ Could by industrious valour climb
+ To ruin the great work of time,
+ And cast the kingdoms old
+ Into another mould."
+
+The last stanzas of all have much pith and meaning in them:--
+
+ "But thou, the war's and fortune's son,
+ March indefatigably on!
+ And for the last effect,
+ Still keep the sword erect.
+
+ Besides the force it has to fright
+ The spirits of the shady night,
+ The same arts that did gain
+ A power, must it maintain."[67:1]
+
+It is not surprising that this Ode was not published in 1650--if indeed
+it was the work of that, and not of a later year. There is nothing
+either of the courtier or of the partisan about its stately
+versification and sober, solemn thought. Entire self-possession,
+dignity, criticism of a great man and a strange career by one well
+entitled to criticise, are among the chief characteristics of this noble
+poem. It is infinitely refreshing, when reading and thinking about
+Cromwell, to get as far away as possible from the fanatic's scream and
+the fury of the bigot, whether of the school of Laud or Hobbes. Andrew
+Marvell knew Oliver Cromwell alive, and gazed on his features as he lay
+dead--he knew his ambition, his greatness, his power, and where that
+power lay. How much might we unwittingly have lost, if Captain Thompson
+had not printed a poem which for more than a century of years had
+remained unknown, and exposed to all the risks of a single manuscript
+copy!
+
+When Cromwell sent his picture to Queen Christina of Sweden to
+commemorate the peace he concluded with her in 1654, Marvell, though not
+then attached to the public service, was employed to write the Latin
+couplet that accompanied the picture. He discharged his task as
+follows:--
+
+ _In effigiem Oliveri Cromwell_.
+
+ "Hæc est quæ toties inimicos umbra fugavit
+ At sub quâ cives otia lenta terunt."
+
+The authorship of these lines is often attributed to Milton, but there
+is little doubt they are of Marvell's composition. They might easily
+have been better.
+
+Marvell became Milton's assistant in September 1657, and the friendship
+between the two men was thus consolidated by the strong ties of a
+common duty. Milton's blindness making him unfit to attend the reception
+of foreign embassies, Marvell took his place and joined in respectfully
+greeting the Dutch ambassadors. After all he was but a junior clerk,
+still he doubtless rejoiced that his lines on Holland had been published
+anonymously. Literature was strongly represented in this department of
+State just then, for Cromwell's Chamberlain, Sir Gilbert Pickering, who
+represented Northamptonshire in Parliament, had taken occasion to
+introduce his nephew, John Dryden, to the public service, and he was
+attached to the same office as Andrew Marvell. Poets, like pigeons, have
+often taken shelter under our public roofs, but Milton, Marvell, and
+Dryden, all at the same time, form a remarkable constellation. Old Noll,
+we may be sure, had nothing to do with it. Marvell must have known
+Cromwell personally; but there is nothing to show that Milton and
+Cromwell ever met. The popular engraving which represents a theatrical
+Lord-Protector dictating despatches to a meek Milton is highly
+ludicrous. Cromwell could have as easily dictated a book of _Paradise
+Lost_, on the composition of which Milton began to be engaged during the
+last year of the Protectorate, as one of Milton's despatches.
+
+In April 1657 Admiral Blake, the first great name in the annals of our
+navy, performed his last feat of arms by destroying the Spanish West
+Indian fleet at Santa Cruz without the loss of an English vessel. The
+gallant sailor died of fever on his way home, and was buried according
+to his deserts in the Abbey. His body, with that of his master, was by a
+vote of Parliament, December 4, 1660, taken from the grave and drawn to
+the gallows-tree, and there hanged and buried under it. Pepys, who was
+to know something of naval administration under the second Charles, has
+his reflections on this unpleasing incident.
+
+Marvell's lines on Blake's victory over the Spaniards are not worthy of
+so glorious an occasion, but our great doings by land and sea have
+seldom been suitably recorded in verse. Drayton's _Song of Agincourt_ is
+imperishable, but was composed nearly two centuries after the battle.
+The wail of Flodden Field still floats over the Border; but Miss
+Elliot's famous ballad was published in 1765. Even the Spanish Armada
+had to wait for Macaulay's spirited fragment. Mr. Addison's _Blenheim_
+stirred no man's blood; no poet sang Chatham's victories.[70:1] Campbell
+at a later day did better. We must be content with what we get.
+
+Marvell's poem contains some vigorous lines, which show he was a good
+hater:--
+
+ "Now does Spain's fleet her spacious wings unfold,
+ Leaves the new world, and hastens for the old;
+ But though the wind was fair, they slowly swum,
+ Freighted with acted guilt, and guilt to come;
+ For this rich load, of which so proud they are,
+ Was raised by tyranny, and raised for war.
+ ...
+ ...
+ For now upon the main themselves they saw
+ That boundless empire, where you give the law."
+
+The Canary Islands are rapturously described--their delightful climate
+and their excellent wine. Obviously they should be annexed:--
+
+ "The best of lands should have the best of Kings."
+
+The fight begins. "Bold Stayner leads" and "War turned the temperate to
+the torrid zone":--
+
+ "Fate these two fleets, between both worlds, had brought
+ Who fight, as if for both those worlds they fought.
+ ...
+ ...
+ The all-seeing sun ne'er gazed on such a sight,
+ Two dreadful navies there at anchor fight,
+ And neither have, or power, or will, to fly;
+ There one must conquer, or there both must die."
+
+Blake sinks the Spanish ships:--
+
+ "Their galleons sunk, their wealth the sea does fill,
+ The only place where it can cause no ill";
+
+and the poet concludes:--
+
+ "Ah! would those treasures which both Indias have
+ Were buried in as large, and deep a grave!
+ War's chief support with them would buried be,
+ And the land owe her peace unto the sea.
+ Ages to come your conquering arms will bless.
+ There they destroyed what had destroyed their peace;
+ And in one war the present age may boast,
+ The certain seeds of many wars are lost."
+
+Good politics, if but second-rate poetry. This was the last time the
+Spanish war-cry _Santiago, y cierra España_ rang in hostility in English
+ears.
+
+Turning for a moment from war to love, on the 19th of November 1657
+Cromwell's third daughter, the Lady Mary Cromwell, was married to
+Viscount, afterwards Earl, Fauconberg. The Fauconbergs took revolutions
+calmly and, despite the disinterment of their great relative, accepted
+the Restoration gladly and lived to chuckle over the Revolution. The
+forgetfulness, no less than the vindictiveness, of men is often
+surprising. Marvell, who played the part of Laureate during the
+Protectorate, produced two songs for the conventionally joyful
+occasion. The second of the two is decidedly pretty for a November
+wedding:--
+
+ "_Hobbinol._ PHILLIS, TOMALIN, away!
+ Never such a merry day,
+ For the northern shepherd's son
+ Has MENALCAS' daughter won.
+
+ _Phillis._ Stay till I some flowers have tied
+ In a garland for the bride.
+
+ _Tomalin._ If thou would'st a garland bring,
+ PHILLIS, you may wait the spring:
+ They have chosen such an hour
+ When she is the only flower.
+
+ _Phillis._ Let's not then, at least, be seen
+ Without each a sprig of green.
+
+ _Hobbinol._ Fear not; at MENALCAS' hall
+ There are bays enough for all.
+ He, when young as we, did graze,
+ But when old he planted bays.
+
+ _Tomalin._ Here she comes; but with a look
+ Far more catching than my hook;
+ 'Twas those eyes, I now dare swear,
+ Led our lambs we knew not where.
+
+ _Hobbinol._ Not our lambs' own fleeces are
+ Curled so lovely as her hair,
+ Nor our sheep new-washed can be
+ Half so white or sweet as she.
+
+ _Phillis._ He so looks as fit to keep
+ Somewhat else than silly sheep.
+
+ _Hobbinol._ Come, let's in some carol new
+ Pay to love and them their due.
+
+ _All._ Joy to that happy pair
+ Whose hopes united banish our despair.
+ What shepherd could for love pretend,
+ Whilst all the nymphs on Damon's choice attend?
+ What shepherdess could hope to wed
+ Before Marina's turn were sped?
+ Now lesser beauties may take place
+ And meaner virtues come in play;
+ While they
+ Looking from high
+ Shall grace
+ Our flocks and us with a propitious eye."
+
+All this merriment came to an end on the 3rd of September 1658, when
+Oliver Cromwell died on the anniversary of Dunbar fight and of the field
+of Worcester. And yet the end, though it was to be sudden, did not at
+once seem likely to be so. There was time for the poets to tune their
+lyres. Waller, Dryden, Sprat, and Marvell had no doubt that "Tumbledown
+Dick" was to sit on the throne of his father and "still keep the sword
+erect," and were ready with their verses.
+
+Westminster Abbey has never witnessed a statelier, costlier funeral than
+that of "the late man who made himself to be called Protector," to quote
+words from one of the most impressive passages in English prose, the
+opening sentences of Cowley's _Discourse by way of Vision concerning the
+Government of Oliver Cromwell_. The representatives of kings,
+potentates, and powers crowded the aisles, and all was done that pomp
+and ceremony could do. Marvell, arrayed in the six yards of mourning the
+Council had voted him on the 7th of September, was, we may be sure, in
+the Abbey, and it may well be that his blind colleague, to whom the same
+liberal allowance had been made, leant on his arm during the service.
+Milton's muse remained silent. The vote of the House of Commons ordering
+the undoing of this great ceremony was little more than two years ahead.
+_O caeca mens hominum!_
+
+Among the poems first printed by Captain Thompson from the old
+manuscript book was one which was written therein in Marvell's own hand
+entitled "A poem upon the Death of his late Highness the Protector." Its
+composition was evidently not long delayed:--
+
+ "We find already what those omens mean,
+ Earth ne'er more glad nor Heaven more serene.
+ Cease now our griefs, calm peace succeeds a war,
+ Rainbows to storms, Richard to Oliver."
+
+The lines best worth remembering in the poem are the following:--
+
+ "I saw him dead: a leaden slumber lies,
+ And mortal sleep over those wakeful eyes;
+ Those gentle rays under the lids were fled,
+ Which through his looks that piercing sweetness shed;
+ That port, which so majestic was and strong,
+ Loose, and deprived of vigour, stretched along;
+ All withered, all discoloured, pale and wan,
+ How much another thing, no more that man!
+ O, human glory vain! O, Death! O, wings!
+ O, worthless world! O, transitory things!
+ Yet dwelt that greatness in his shape decayed,
+ That still though dead, greater than Death he laid,
+ And in his altered face you something feign
+ That threatens Death, he yet will live again."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[49:1] In 1659 Clarendon, then Sir Edward Hyde, and in Brussels, writing
+to Sir Richard Fanshaw, says, "You are the secretary of the Latin tongue
+and I will mend the warrant you sent, and have it despatched as soon as
+I hear again from you, but I must tell you the place in itself, if it be
+not dignified by the person who hath some other qualification, is not to
+be valued. There is no signet belongs to it, which can be only kept by a
+Secretary of State, from whom the Latin Secretary always receives orders
+and prepares no despatches without his direction, and hath only a fee of
+a hundred pound a year. And therefore, except it hath been in the hands
+of a person who hath had some other employment, it hath fallen to the
+fortune of inconsiderable men as Weckerlin was the last" (_Hist. MSS.
+Com._, _Heathcote Papers_, 1899, p. 9).
+
+[51:1] _The Rehearsal Transprosed_.--Grosart, iii. 126.
+
+[55:1] Even Mr. Firth can tell me nothing about this Ward of Cromwell's.
+
+[56:1] For reprints of these tracts, see _Social England Illustrated_,
+Constable and Co., 1903.
+
+[57:1] "England's Way to Win Wealth." See _Social England Illustrated_,
+p. 253.
+
+[57:2] _Ibid._ p. 265.
+
+[58:1] Dr. Dee's "Petty Navy Royal." _Social England Illustrated_, p.
+46.
+
+[58:2] "England's Way to Win Wealth." _Social England Illustrated_, p.
+268.
+
+[59:1] Ranke's _History of England during the Seventeenth Century_, vol.
+iii. p. 68.
+
+[61:1] See Leigh Hunt's _Wit and Humour_ (1846), pp. 38, 237.
+
+[62:1] Butler's lines, _A Description of Holland_, are very like
+Marvell's:--
+
+ "A Country that draws fifty foot of water
+ In which men live as in a hold of nature.
+ ...
+ ...
+ They dwell in ships, like swarms of rats, and prey
+ Upon the goods all nations' fleets convey;
+ ...
+ ...
+ That feed like cannibals on other fishes,
+ And serve their cousin-germans up in dishes:
+ A land that rides at anchor and is moor'd,
+ In which they do not live but go aboard."
+
+Marvell and Butler were rival wits, but Holland was a common butt; so
+powerful a motive is trade jealousy.
+
+[67:1] "To one unacquainted with Horace, this Ode, not perhaps so
+perfect as his are in form, and with occasional obscurities of
+expression, which Horace would not have left, will give a truer notion
+of the kind of greatness which he achieved than could, so far as I know,
+be obtained from any other poem in our language."--_Dean Trench_.
+
+[70:1] "In the last war, when France was disgraced and overpowered in
+every quarter of the globe, when Spain coming to her assistance only
+shared her calamities, and the name of an Englishman was reverenced
+through Europe, no poet was heard amidst the general acclamation; the
+fame of our counsellors and heroes was entrusted to the gazetteer."--Dr.
+Johnson's _Life of Prior_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
+
+
+Cromwell's death was an epoch in Marvell's history. Up to that date he
+had, since he left the University, led the life of a scholar, with a
+turn for business, and was known to many as an agreeable companion and a
+lively wit. He was keenly interested in public affairs, and personally
+acquainted with some men in great place, and for a year before
+Cromwell's death he had been in a branch of the Civil Service; but of
+the wear and tear, the strife and contention, of what are called
+"practical politics" he knew nothing from personal experience.
+
+Within a year of the Protector's death all this was changed and, for the
+rest of his days, with but the shortest of occasional intervals, Andrew
+Marvell led the life of an active, eager member of Parliament, knowing
+all that was going on in the Chamber and hearing of everything that was
+alleged to be going on in the Court; busily occupied with the affairs of
+his constituents in Hull, and daily watching, with an increasingly heavy
+heart and a bitter humour, the corruption of the times, the declension
+of our sea-power, the growing shame of England, and what he believed to
+be a dangerous conspiracy afoot for the undoing of the Reformation and
+the destruction of the Constitution in both Church and State.
+
+"Garden-poetry" could not be reared on such a soil as this. The age of
+Cromwell and Blake was over. The remainder of Marvell's life (save so
+far as personal friendship sweetened it) was spent in politics, public
+business, in concocting roughly rhymed and bitter satirical poems, and
+in the composition of prose pamphlets.
+
+Through it all Marvell remained very much the man of letters, though one
+with a great natural aptitude for business. His was always the critical
+attitude. He was the friend of Milton and Harrington, of the political
+philosophers who invented paper constitutions in the "Rota" Club, and of
+the new race of men whose thoughts turned to Natural Science, and who
+founded the Royal Society. Office he never thought of. He could have had
+it had he chosen, for he was a man of mark, even of distinction, from
+the first. Clarendon has told us how members of the House of Commons
+"got on" in the Long Parliament of Charles the Second. It was full of
+the king's friends, who ran out of the House to tell their shrewd master
+the gossip of the lobbies, "commended this man and discommended another
+who deserved better, and would many times, when His Majesty spoke well
+of any man, ask His Majesty if he would give them leave to let that
+person know how gracious His Majesty was to him, or bring him to kiss
+his hand. To which he commonly consenting, every one of his servants
+delivered some message from him to a Parliament man, and invited him to
+Court, as if the King would be willing to see him. And by this means the
+rooms at Court were always full of the members of the House of Commons.
+This man brought to kiss his hand, and the King induced to confer with
+that man and to thank him for his affection, which could never conclude
+without some general expression of grace or promise, which the poor
+gentleman always interpreted to his own advantage, and expected some
+fruit from it that it could never yield."
+
+The suspicious Clarendon, already shaking to his fall, goes on to add,
+"all which, being contrary to all former order, did the King no good,
+and rendered those unable to do him service who were inclined to
+it."[77:1]
+
+It is a lifelike picture Clarendon draws of the crowded rooms, and of
+the witty king moving about fooling vanity, ambition, and corruption to
+the top of their bent. That the king chose his own ministers is plain
+enough.
+
+Marvell was at the beginning well disposed towards Charles. They had
+some points in common; and among them a quick sense of humour and a turn
+for business. But the member for Hull must soon have recognised that
+there was no place for an honest quick-witted man in any Stuart
+administration.
+
+Marvell and his great chief remained in their offices until the close of
+the year 1659, when the impending Restoration enforced their retirement.
+Milton used his leisure to pour forth excited tracts to prove how easy
+it would still be to establish a Free Commonwealth. Once again, and for
+the last time, he prompted the age to quit its clogs
+
+ "by the known rules of ancient liberty."
+
+These pamphlets of Milton's prove how little that solitary thinker ever
+knew of the real mind and temper of the English people.
+
+The Lord Richard Cromwell was exactly the sort of eldest son a great
+soldier like Oliver, who had put his foot on fortune's neck, was likely
+to have. Richard (1626-1712) was not, indeed, born in the purple, but
+his early manhood was nurtured in it. Religion, as represented by long
+sermons, tiresome treatises, and prayerful exercises, bored him to
+death. Of enthusiasm he had not a trace, nor was he bred to arms. He
+delighted in hunting, in the open air, and the company of sportsmen.
+Whatever came his way easily, and as a matter of right, he was well
+content to take. He bore himself well on State occasions, and could make
+a better speech than ever his father was able to do. But he was not a
+"restless" Cromwell, and had no faith in his destiny. I do not know
+whether he had ever read _Don Quixote_, in Shelton's translation, a very
+popular book of the time; probably not, for, though Chancellor of the
+University of Oxford, Richard was not a reading man, but if he had, he
+must have sympathised with Sancho Panza's attitude of mind towards the
+famous island.
+
+ "If your highness has no mind that the government you promised should
+ be given me, God made me of less, and perhaps it may be easier for
+ Sancho, the Squire, to get to Heaven than for Sancho, the Governor.
+ _In the dark all cats are gray._"
+
+The new Protector took up the reins of power with proper forms and
+ceremonies, and at once proceeded to summon a Parliament, an Imperial
+Cromwellian Parliament, containing representatives both from Scotland
+and Ireland. In this Parliament Andrew Marvell sat for the first time as
+one of the two members for Kingston-upon-Hull. His election took place
+on the 10th of January 1659, being the first county day after the
+sheriff had received the writ. Five candidates were nominated: Thomas
+Strickland, Andrew Marvell, John Ramsden, Henry Smyth, and Sir Henry
+Vane, and a vote being taken in the presence of the mayor, aldermen, and
+many of the burgesses, John Ramsden and Andrew Marvell were declared
+duly elected.
+
+Nobody to-day, glancing his eye over a list of the knights and
+burgesses who made up Richard Cromwell's first and last Parliament,
+would ever guess that it represented an order of things of the most
+recent date which was just about to disappear. On paper it has a solid
+look. The fine old crusted Parliamentary names with which the clerks
+were to remain so long familiar as the members trooped out to divide
+were more than well represented.[79:1] The Drakes of Amersham were
+there; Boscawens, Bullers, and Trelawneys flocked from Cornwall; Sir
+Wilfred Lawson sat for Cumberland, and his son for Cockermouth; a
+Knightly represented Northamptonshire, whilst Lucys from Charlecote
+looked after Warwick, both town and county. Arthur Onslow came from
+Surrey, a Townshend from Norfolk, and, of course, a Bankes from Corfe
+Castle;[79:2] Oxford University, contented, as she occasionally is, to
+be represented by a great man, had chosen Sir Matthew Hale, whilst the
+no less useful and laborious Thurloe sat for the sister University.
+Anthony Ashley Cooper was there, but in opposition, snuffing the morrow.
+Mildmays, Lawleys, Binghams, Herberts, Pelhams, all travelled up to
+London with the Lord-Protector's writs in their pockets. A less
+revolutionary assembly never met, though there was a regicide or two
+among them. But when the members found themselves alone together there
+was some loose talk.
+
+On the 27th of January 1659 Marvell attended for the first time in his
+place, when the new Protector opened Parliament, and made a speech in
+the House of Lords, which was pronounced at the time to be "a very
+handsome oration."
+
+The first business of the Commons was to elect a Speaker, nor was their
+choice a very lucky one, for it first fell on Chaloner Chute, who
+speedily breaking down in health, the Recorder of London was appointed
+his substitute, but the Recorder being on his deathbed at the time, and
+Chute dying very shortly afterwards, Thomas Bampfield was elected
+Speaker, and continued so to be until the Parliament was dissolved by
+proclamation on the 22nd of April. This proclamation was Richard
+Cromwell's last act of State.
+
+Marvell's first Parliament was both short and inglorious. One only of
+its resolutions is worth quoting:--
+
+ "That a very considerable navy be forthwith provided, and put to sea
+ for the safety of the Commonwealth and the preservation of the trade
+ and commerce thereof."
+
+It was, however, the army and not the navy that had to be reckoned
+with--an army unpaid, angry, suspicious, and happily divided. I must not
+trace the history of faction. There is no less exalted page in English
+history since the days of Stephen. Monk is its fitting hero, and Charles
+the Second its expensive saviour of society. The story how the
+Restoration was engineered by General Monk, who, if vulgar, was adroit,
+both on land and sea, is best told from Monk's point of view in the
+concluding chapter of _Baker's Chronicle_ (Sir Roger de Coverley's
+favourite Sunday reading), whilst that old-fashioned remnant, who still
+love to read history for fun, may not object to be told that they will
+find printed in the Report of the Leyborne-Popham Papers (_Historical
+Manuscripts Commission_, 1899, p. 204) a _Narrative of the Restoration_,
+by Mr. John Collins, the Chief Butler of the Inner Temple, proving in
+great and highly diverting detail how this remarkable event was really
+the work not so much of Monk as of the Chief Butler.
+
+Richard Cromwell having slipped the collar, the officers assumed
+command, as they were only too ready to do, and recalled the old,
+dishonoured, but pertinacious Rump Parliament, which, though mustering
+at first but forty-two members, at once began to talk and keep journals
+as if nothing had happened since the day ten years before, when it was
+sent about its business. Old Speaker Lenthall was routed out of
+obscurity, and much against his will, and despite his protests, clapped
+once more into the chair. Dr. John Owen, an old parliamentary preaching
+hand, was once again requisitioned to preach before the House, which he
+did at enormous length one fine Sunday in May.
+
+The Rump did not prove a popular favourite. It was worse than Old Noll
+himself, who could at least thrash both Dutchman and Spaniard, and be
+even more feared abroad than he was hated at home. The City of London,
+then almost an Estate of the Realm, declared for a Free Parliament, and
+it soon became apparent to every one that the whole country was eager to
+return as soon as possible to the old mould. Nothing now stood between
+Charles and his own but half a dozen fierce old soldiers and their
+dubious, discontented, unpaid men.
+
+It was once commonly supposed (it is so no longer), that the Restoration
+party was exclusively composed of dispossessed Cavaliers, bishops in
+hiding, ejected parsons, high-flying _jure divino_ Episcopalians,
+talkative toss-pots, and the great pleasure-loving crowd, cruelly
+repressed under the rule of the saints. Had it been left to these
+ragged regiments, the issue would have been doubtful, and the result
+very different. The Presbyterian ministers who occupied the rectories
+and vicarages of the Church of England and their well-to-do flocks in
+both town and country were, with but few exceptions, all for King
+Charles and a restored monarchy. In this the ministers may have shown a
+sound political instinct, for none of them had any more mind than the
+Anglican bishops to tolerate Papists, Socinians, Quakers, and Fifth
+Monarchy men, but in their management of the business of the Restoration
+these divines exposed themselves to the same condemnation that Clarendon
+in an often-quoted passage passed upon his own clerical allies. When
+read by the light of the Act of "Uniformity," the "Corporation," the
+"Five Mile," and the "Conventicle" Acts, the conduct of the
+Presbyterians seems recklessness itself, whilst the ignorance their
+ministers displayed of the temper of the people they had lived amongst
+all their lives, and whom they adjured to cry _God save the King_, but
+not to drink his Majesty's health (because health-drinking was forbidden
+in the Old Testament), would be startling were it not so eminently
+characteristic.[82:1]
+
+The Rump, amidst the ridicule and contempt of the populace, was again
+expelled by military force on the 13th of October 1659. The officers
+were divided in opinion, some supporting, others, headed by Lambert,
+opposing the Parliament; but _vis major_, or superior cunning, was on
+the side of Lambert, who placed his soldiers in the streets leading to
+Westminster Hall, and when the Speaker came in his coach, his horses
+were turned, and he was conducted very civilly home. The regiments that
+should have resisted, "observing that they were exposed to derision,"
+peaceably returned to their quarters.
+
+Monk, in the meanwhile, was advancing with his army from Edinburgh, and
+affected not to approve of the force put upon Parliament. The feeling
+for a Free Parliament increased in strength and violence every day. The
+Rump was for a third time restored in December by the section of the
+London army that supported its claim. Lenthall was once more in the
+chair, and the journals were resumed without the least notice of past
+occurrences. Monk, having reached London amidst great excitement, went
+down to the House and delivered an ambiguous speech. Up to the last Monk
+seems to have remained uncertain what to do. The temper of the City,
+which was fiercely anti-Rump, may have decided him. At all events he
+invited the secluded, that is the expelled, members of the old Long
+Parliament to take their seats along with the others, and in a formal
+declaration addressed to Parliament, dated the 21st of February 1660, he
+counselled it among other things to dissolve legally "in order to make
+way for a succession of Parliaments." In a word, Monk declared for a
+Free Parliament. Great indeed were the national rejoicings.
+
+On the 16th of March 1660 a Bill was read a third time dissolving the
+Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, 3rd November 1640, and for
+the calling and holding of a Parliament at Westminster on the 25th of
+April 1660. This time an end was really made of the Rump, though for
+many a long day there were parliamentary pedants to be found in the land
+ready to maintain that the Long Parliament had never been legally
+dissolved and still _de jure_ existed; so long, I presume, as any
+single member of it remained alive.
+
+Marvell was not a "Rumper," but on the 2nd of April 1660 he was again
+elected for Hull to sit in what is usually called the Convention
+Parliament. John Ramsden was returned at the head of the poll with 227
+votes, Marvell receiving 141. There were four defeated candidates.
+
+With this Convention Parliament begins Marvell's remarkable
+correspondence, on fine folio sheets of paper, with the corporation of
+Hull, whose faithful servant he remained until death parted them in
+1678.
+
+This correspondence, which if we include in it, as we well may, the
+letters to the Worshipful Society of Masters and Pilots of the Trinity
+House in Hull, numbers upwards of 350 letters, and with but one
+considerable gap (from July 1663 to October 1665) covers the whole
+period of Marvell's membership, is, I believe, unique in our public
+records. The letters are preserved at Hull, where I hope care is taken
+to preserve them from the autograph hunter and the autograph thief.
+Captain Thompson printed a great part of this correspondence in 1776,
+and Mr. Grosart gave the world the whole of it in the second volume of
+his edition of Marvell's complete works.
+
+An admission may as well be made at once. This correspondence is not so
+interesting as it might have been expected to prove. Marvell did not
+write letters for his biographer, nor to instruct posterity, nor to
+serve any party purpose, nor even to exhibit honest emotion, but simply
+to tell his employers, whose wages he took, what was happening at
+Westminster. He kept his reflections either to himself or for his
+political broadsheets, and indeed they were seldom of the kind it would
+have been safe to entrust to the post.
+
+Good Mr. Grosart fusses and frets terribly over Marvell's astonishing
+capacity for chronicling in sombre silence every kind of legislative
+abomination. It is at times a little hard to understand it, for Hull was
+what may be called a Puritan place. No doubt caution dictated some of
+the reticence--but the reserve of Marvell's character is one of the few
+traits of his personality that has survived. He was a satirist, not an
+enthusiast.
+
+I will give the first letter _in extenso_ to serve as a specimen, and a
+very favourable one, of the whole correspondence:--
+
+ "_Nov. 17, 1660._
+
+ "GENTLEMEN, MY WORTHY FRIENDS,--Although during the necessary absence
+ of my partner, Mr. Ramsden, I write with but halfe a penn, and can
+ scarce perswade myselfe to send you so imperfect an account of your
+ own and the publick affairs, as I needs must for want of his
+ assistance; yet I had rather expose mine own defects to your good
+ interpretation, then excuse thereby a totall neglect of my duty, and
+ that trust which is divided upon me. At my late absence out of Town I
+ had taken such order that if you had commanded me any thing, I might
+ soon haue received it, and so returned on purpose to this place to
+ haue obeyed you. But hearing nothing of that nature howeuer, I was
+ present the first day of the Parliament's sitting, and tooke care to
+ write to Mr. Maior what work we had cut out. Since when, we have had
+ little new, but onely been making a progresse in those things I then
+ mentioned. There is yet brought in an Act in which of all others your
+ corporation is the least concerned: that is, where wives shall refuse
+ to cohabit with their husbands, that in such case the husband shall
+ not be liable to pay any debts which she may run into, for clothing,
+ diet, lodging, or other expenses. I wish with all my heart you were no
+ more touched in a vote that we haue made for bringing in an Act of a
+ new Assessment for six moneths, of 70,000li. _per mensem_, to begin
+ next January. The truth is, the delay ere monyes can be got in, eats
+ up a great part of all that is levying, and that growing charge of the
+ Army and Navy doubles upon us. And that is all that can be said for
+ excuse of ourselues to the Country, to whom we had giuen our own hopes
+ of no further sessment to be raised, but must now needs incurre the
+ censure of improvidence before or prodigality now, though it becomes
+ no private member, the resolution having passed the House, to
+ interpose further his own judgment in a thing that can not be
+ remedied; and it will be each man's ingenuity not to grudge an
+ after-payment for that settlement and freedome from Armyes and Navyes,
+ which before he would haue been glad to purchase with his whole
+ fortune. There remain some eight Regiments to be disbanded, but those
+ all horse in a manner, and some seauenteen shipps to be payd of, that
+ haue laid so long upon charge in the harbour, beside fourscore shipps
+ which are reckoned to us for this Winter guard. But after that, all
+ things are to go upon his Majestye's own purse out of the Tunnage and
+ Poundage and his other revenues. But there being so great a provision
+ made for mony, I doubt not but ere we rise, to see the whole army
+ disbanded, and according to the Act, hope to see your Town once more
+ ungarrisond, in which I should be glad and happy to be instrumentall
+ to the uttermost. For I can not but remember, though then a child,
+ those blessed days when the youth of your own town were trained for
+ your militia, and did, methought, become their arms much better than
+ any soldiers that I haue seen there since. And it will not be amisse
+ if you please (now that we are about a new Act of regulating the
+ Militia, that it may be as a standing strength, but not as ill as a
+ perpetuall Army to the Nation) to signify to me any thing in that
+ matter that were according to your ancient custome and desirable for
+ you. For though I can promise little, yet I intend all things for your
+ service. The Act for review of the Poll bill proceeds, and that for
+ making this Declaration of his Majesty a Law in religious matters.
+ Order likewise is giuen for drawing up all the votes made during our
+ last sitting, in the businesse of Sales of Bishops' and Deans' and
+ Chapters' lands into an Act, which I should be glad to see passed. The
+ purchasers the other day offerd the house 600,000li. in ready mony,
+ and to make the Bishops', etc., revenue as good or better then before.
+ But the House thought it not fit or seasonable to hearken to it. We
+ are so much the more concernd to see that great interest of the
+ purchasers satisfyed and quieted, at least in that way which our own
+ votes haue propounded. On Munday next we are to return to the
+ consideration of apportioning 100,000li. per annum upon all the lands
+ in the nation, in lieu of the Court of Wards. The debate among the
+ Countyes, each thinking it self overrated, makes the successe of that
+ businesse something casuall, and truly I shall not assist it much for
+ my part, for it is little reason that your Town should contribute in
+ that charge. The Excise bill for longer continuance (I wish it proue
+ not too long) will come in also next weeke. And I foresee we shall be
+ called upon shortly to effect our vote made the former sitting, of
+ raising his Majestie's revenue to 1,200,000li. per Annum. I do not
+ love to write so much of this mony news. But I think you haue observed
+ that Parliaments have been always made use of to that purpose, and
+ though we may buy gold too deare, yet we must at any rate be glad of
+ Peace, Freedom, and a good Conscience. Mr. Maior tells me, your
+ duplicates of the Poll are coming up. I shall go with them to the
+ Exchequer and make your excuse, if any be requisite. My long silence
+ hath made me now trespasse on the other hand in a long letter, but I
+ doubt not of your good construction of so much familiarity and trouble
+ from, Gentlemen, your most affectionate friend and servant,
+
+ "ANDR: MARVELL.
+
+ "WESTMINSTER, _Nov. 17, 1660._"
+
+Although this first letter of the Hull correspondence is dated the 17th
+of November 1660, the Convention Parliament began its sittings on the
+25th of April.
+
+In composition this Convention Parliament was very like Richard
+Cromwell's, and indeed it contained many of the same members, whose
+loyalty, however, was less restrained than in 1659. All the world knew
+what brought this Parliament together. It was to make the nation's
+peace with its king, either on terms or without terms. "We are all
+Royalists now" are words which must often have been on the lips of the
+members of this House. One can imagine the smiles, half grim, half
+ironical, that would accompany their utterance. Such a right-about-face
+could never be dignified. It is impossible not to be reminded of
+schoolboys at the inevitable end of "a barring out." The sarcastic
+comment of Clarendon has not lost its sting. "From this time there was
+such an emulation and impatience in Lords, Commons, and City, and
+generally over the Kingdom, who should make the most lively expressions
+of their duty and of their joy, that a man could not but wonder where
+those people dwelt who had done all the mischief and kept the King so
+many years from enjoying the comfort and support of such excellent
+subjects."[88:1]
+
+The most significant sentence in Marvell's first letter to his
+constituents is that in which he refers to the Bill for making Charles's
+declaration in religious matters the law of the land. Had the passing of
+any such Bill been possible, how different the history of England would
+have been!
+
+The declaration Marvell is referring to was contained in the famous
+message from Breda, which was addressed by Charles to all his loving
+subjects of what degree or quality, and was expressed as follows:--
+
+ "And because the passion and uncharitableness of the times have
+ produced several opinions in Religion by which men are engaged in
+ parties and animosities against each other (which, when they shall
+ hereafter unite in a freedom of conversation, will be composed or
+ better understood) we do declare a liberty to tender Consciences, and
+ that no man shall be disquieted or called in question for differences
+ of opinion in matters of Religion which do not disturb the peace of
+ the Kingdom; and that we shall be ready to consent to such an Act of
+ Parliament as upon mature deliberation shall be offered to us for the
+ full granting of that indulgence."
+
+It is only doing the king bare justice to say that he was always ready
+and willing to keep this part of his royal word--but it proved an
+impossibility.
+
+A Roman Catholic as a matter of creed, a Hobbist in conversation, a
+sensualist in practice, and the shrewdest though most indolent of cynics
+in council, Charles, in this matter of religious toleration, would
+gladly have kept his word, not indeed because it was his word, for on
+the point of honour he was indifferent, but because it jumped with his
+humour, and would have mitigated the hard lot of the Catholics. Charles
+was not a theorist, all his tastes being eminently practical, not to say
+scientific. He was not a tyrant, but a _de facto_ man from head to heel.
+For the _jure divino_ of the English Episcopate he cared as little as
+Oliver had ever done for the _jure divino_ of the English Crown. Oliver
+once said, and he was not given to _braggadocio_, that he would fire his
+pistol at the king "as soon as at another if he met him in battle," and
+the second Charles would have thought no more of beheading an Anglican
+bishop than he did of sending Sir Harry Vane to the scaffold. Honesty
+and virtue, on the rare occasions Charles encountered them, he admired
+much as a painter admires the colours of a fine sunset. Above everything
+else Charles was determined never again, if he could help it, to be sent
+on his travels, to be snubbed and starved in foreign courts.
+
+Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromartie, the first and best translator of
+Rabelais, is said to have died of laughing on hearing of the
+Restoration; Charles did not die, but he must have laughed inwardly at
+the spectacle that met his eyes everywhere as he made his
+often-described progress from Dover to London, and examined the gorgeous
+beds and quilts, fine linen and carpets, couches, horses and liveries,
+his faithful Commons had been at the pains and at the expense of
+providing for his comfort.
+
+A few years afterwards Marvell wrote the following lines:--
+
+ "Of a tall stature and of sable hue,
+ Much like the son of Kish, that lofty Jew;
+ Twelve years complete he suffered in exile
+ And kept his father's asses all the while.
+ At length, by wonderful impulse of fate,
+ The people called him home to help the state,
+ And what is more they sent him money too
+ To clothe him all from head to foot anew;
+ Nor did he such small favours then disdain,
+ Who in his thirtieth year began his reign."[90:1]
+
+The "small favours" grew in size year by year.
+
+Why it was impossible for Charles to keep his word may be read in
+Clarendon's _Life_, and in the history of the Savoy Conference, and need
+not be restated here. In the opinion of the Anglican clergy, the king's
+divine right stood no higher than their own. They too had suffered in
+exile. They had been "robbed" of their tithes, and turned out of their
+palaces, rectories and vicarages, and excluded from the churches they
+still called "theirs." Their Book of Common Prayer was no longer in
+common use, having been banished by the "Directory of Public Worship"
+since 1645. So late as July 1, 1660, Pepys records attending a service
+in the Abbey, and adds "No Common Prayer yet." If we find ourselves
+wondering why the Anglican party should have been so powerful in 1660,
+our wonder ought not to be greater than is excited by the power of the
+Puritan party when Laud was put to death. Both parties were, on each
+occasion, in a minority. Though England has never been long
+priest-ridden, it has often been priest-led.
+
+The Convention Parliament did all that was expected of it. It was,
+however irregularly summoned, a truly representative assembly. Its
+members all swore--what will not members of Parliament swear?--that the
+king was supreme in Church and State, the only rightful king of the
+realm and of all other his dominions, and that from their hearts they
+abhorred, detested, and abjured the damnable doctrine that princes,
+excommunicated or deprived of the Pope, might be murdered by their
+subjects. They proceeded to pass a very useful Act of Indemnity and
+Oblivion, agreeing to let bygones be bygones, except in certain named
+cases. They ordered Mr. John Milton to be taken into custody, and
+prosecuted (which he never was) by the Attorney-General. Later on the
+poet was released from custody, and we find Mr. Marvell complaining to
+the House that their sergeant had extracted £150 in fees before he would
+let Mr. Milton go. On which Sir Heneage Finch, afterwards Lord
+Chancellor, laconically observed that Milton deserved hanging. He
+certainly got off easily, but, as he lived to publish _Paradise Lost_,
+_Paradise Regained_, and _Samson Agonistes_, he may be said to have
+earned his freedom. All his poetry put together never brought him in a
+third of the sum the sergeant got for letting him out of prison. General
+Monk, the man-midwife, who so skilfully assisted at that great Birth of
+Time, the Restoration, was made a duke, and Cromwell's army, so long the
+force behind the supreme power, was paid its arrears and (two regiments
+excepted) disbanded. "Fifty thousand men," says Macaulay, "accustomed to
+the profession of arms, were thrown upon the world ... in a few months
+there remained not a trace indicating that the most formidable army in
+the world had just been absorbed in the mass of the community."[92:1]
+
+After this the House of Commons fell to discussing religion, and made
+the sad discovery that differences of opinion still existed. In these
+circumstances they decided to refer the matter to their pious king, and
+to such divines as he might choose. They then voted large sums of money
+for the royal establishment, and, it being the very end of August,
+adjourned till the 6th of November. As for making constitutional terms
+with the king, they never attempted it, though Sir Matthew Hale is
+credited with an attempt to induce them to do so. Any proposals of the
+kind must have failed. The people were in no mood for making
+constitutions.
+
+Having met again on the 6th of November, Marvell, in a letter to the
+Mayor and Aldermen of Hull, dated the 27th of the month, reports that
+"the House fell upon the making out of the King's revenue to £1,200,000
+a year." "The Customs are estimated toward £500,000 per annum in the
+revenue. His lands and fee farms £250,000. The Excise of Beer and Ale
+£300,000, the rest arise out of the Post Office, Wine Licenses,
+Stannaries Court, Probate of Wills, Post-fines, Forests, and other
+rights of the Crown. The excise of Foreign Commodities is to be
+continued apart until satisfaction of public debts and engagements
+secured upon the excise."
+
+This settlement of revenue marks "the beginning of a time." Cromwell, as
+Cowley puts it in his _Discourse_, by far the ablest indictment of
+Oliver ever penned, "took armes against two hundred thousand pounds a
+year, and raised them himself to above two millions." It is true.
+Cromwell spent the money honestly and efficiently, and chiefly on a navy
+that enabled him to wrest the command of the sea from the Dutch, to
+secure the carrying trade, and to challenge the world for supremacy in
+the Indies, both East and West. In doing this, he had the instinct of
+the whole nation behind him. But it was expensive.
+
+Had Charles been the most honest and thrifty of men, instead of one of
+the most dishonest and extravagant, he must have found his financial
+position a very difficult one. He was poorer than Cromwell. The feudal
+taxation had fallen into desuetude. To revive wardships, etc., was
+impossible, to recover arrears hopeless. There was nothing for it but
+scientific taxation. One of his first Acts contains a schedule of taxed
+articles extending over fifteen double-columned pages of a quarto
+volume. To raise this revenue was difficult--in fact impossible, and the
+amount actually obtained was always far below the estimates.
+
+Marvell's letter concludes thus:--
+
+ "To-morrow is the Bill for enacting his Majesty's declaration in
+ religious matters and to have its first reading. It is said that on
+ Sunday next Doctor Reynolds shall be created Bishop of Norwich."
+
+The rumour about Reynolds's bishopric proved to be true. The new bishop
+was a very "moderate" Anglican indeed, and his appointment was meant as
+a sop to the Presbyterians. Richard Baxter and Edmund Calamy refused
+similar preferment.
+
+On the 29th of November Marvell's letter contains the following
+passage:--
+
+ "Yesterday the Bill of the King's Declaration in religious matters
+ was read for the first time; but upon the question for a second
+ reading 'twas carried 183 against 157 in the negative, so there is an
+ end of that Bill and for those excellent things therein. We must
+ henceforth rely only upon his Majesty's goodness, who, I must needs
+ say, hath hitherto been more ready to give than we to receive."
+
+It is a noticeable feature of this correspondence that Marvell seldom
+mentions which way he voted himself.
+
+The letter of the 4th of December contains some interesting matter:--
+
+ "GENTLEMEN,--Since my last, upon Thursday, the Bill for Vicarages
+ hath been carryed up to the Lords; and a Message to them from our
+ House that they would expedite the Bill for confirmation of Magna
+ Charta, that for confirmation of marriages, and other bills of
+ publick concernment, which haue laid by them euer since our last
+ sitting, not returned to us. We had then the Bill for six moneths
+ assesment in consideration, and read the Bill for taking away Court
+ of Wards and Purveyance, and establishing the moiety of the Excise
+ of Beere and ale in perpetuum, about which we sit euery afternoon in
+ a Grand Committee. Upon Sunday last were consecrated in the Abby at
+ Westminster, Doctor Cossins, Bishop of Durham, Sterne of Carlile,
+ Gauden of Exeter, Ironside of Bristow, Loyd of Landaffe, Lucy of St.
+ Dauids, Lany, the seuenth, whose diocese I remember not at present,
+ and to-day they keep their feast in Haberdasher's hall, in London.
+ Dr. Reinolds was not of the number, who is intended for Norwich. A
+ Congedelire is gone down to Hereford for Dr. Monk, the Generall's
+ brother, at present Provost of Eaton. 'Tis thought that since our
+ throwing out the Bill of the King's Declaration, Mr. Calamy, and
+ other moderate men, will be resolute in refusing of Bishopricks....
+ To-day our House was upon the Bill of Attainder of those that haue
+ been executed, those that are fled, and of Cromwell, Bradshaw,
+ Ireton, and Pride, and 'tis ordered that the carkasses and coffins
+ of the four last named, shall be drawn with what expedition
+ possible, upon an hurdle to Tyburn, there (to) be hanged up for a
+ while, and then buryed under the gallows....
+
+ "WESTMINSTER, _Dec. 4, 1660_."
+
+Marvell's cool reporting of the hideous indignity inflicted upon his old
+master, and allowing it to pass _sub silentio_, is one of the many
+occasions that stirred Mr. Grosart's wonder. Nerves were tough in those
+days. Pepys tells us unconcernedly enough how, after seeing Lord
+Southampton sworn in at the Court of Exchequer as Lord Treasurer, he
+noticed "the heads of Cromwell, Bradshaw, and Ireton set up at the
+further end of Westminster Hall." It is quite possible Lady Fauconberg
+may have seen the same sight.[95:1]
+
+The Convention Parliament was dissolved on the 29th of December 1660.
+
+On 1st April 1661 Marvell was returned for the third and last time for
+Hull, for Charles the Second's first Parliament was of unconscionable
+long duration, not being dissolved till January 1679, after Marvell's
+death. It is known in history as the Pensionary or Long Parliament. The
+election figures were as below:--
+
+ Colonel Gilbey, 294
+ Mr. Andrew Marvell, 240
+ Mr. Edward Barnard, 195
+ Mr. John Ramsden, 122
+
+Marvell was not present at or before the election, for on the 6th of
+April he writes:--
+
+ "I perceive by Mr. Mayor that you have again (as if it were grown a
+ thing of course) made choice of me now, the third time, to serve for
+ you in Parliament, which as I cannot attribute to anything but your
+ constancy, so shall I, God willing, as in gratitude obliged, with no
+ less constancy and vigour continue to execute your commands and study
+ your service."
+
+A word may here be said about payment of borough members. The members'
+fee was 6s. 8d. for every day the Parliament lasted. The wages were paid
+by the corporation out of the borough funds. It was never a popular
+charge. Burgesses in many places cared as little for M.P.'s as do some
+of their successors for free libraries. Prynne, perhaps the greatest
+parliamentary lawyer that ever lived, told Pepys one day, as they were
+driving to the Temple, that the number of burgesses to be returned to
+Parliament for any particular borough was not, for aught Prynne could
+find, fixed by law, but was at first left to the discretion of the
+sheriff, and that several boroughs had complained of the sheriff's
+putting them to the charge of sending up burgesses.
+
+In August 1661 the corporation paid Marvell £28 for his fee as one of
+their burgesses, being 6s. 8d. a day for eighty-four days, the length of
+the Convention Parliament. Marvell continued to take his wages until the
+end of his days; but it is perhaps a mistake to suppose he was the very
+last member to do so. It was, however, unusual in Marvell's time.[96:1]
+
+This Pensionary Parliament, though of a very decided "Church and King"
+complexion, was not in its original composition a body lacking character
+or independence, but it steadily deteriorated in both respects.
+Vacancies, as they occurred, and they occurred very frequently in those
+days of short lives, were filled up by courtiers and pensioners.
+
+In the small tract, entitled _Flagellum Parliamentum_, which is a highly
+libellous "Dod," often attributed to Marvell, a record is preserved of
+more than two hundred members of this Parliament in 1675. Despite some
+humorous touches, this _Flagellum Parliamentum_ is still disagreeable to
+read. But the most graphic picture we have of this Parliament is to be
+found in one of Lord Shaftesbury's political tracts entitled "A letter
+from a Parliament man to his Friend" (1675):--
+
+ "SIR,--I see you are greatly scandalized at our slow and confused
+ Proceedings. I confess you have cause enough; but were you but
+ within these walls for one half day, and saw the strange make and
+ complexion that this house is of, you would wonder as much that ever
+ you wondered at it; for we are such a pied Parliament, that none can
+ say of what colour we are; for we consist of Old Cavaliers, Old
+ Round-Heads, Indigent-Courtiers, and true Country Gentlemen: the two
+ latter are most numerous, and would in probability bring things to
+ some issue were they not clogged with the numerous uncertainties of
+ the former. For the Old Cavalier, grown aged, and almost past his
+ vice, is damnable godly and makes his doting piety more a plague to
+ the world than his debauchery was, for he is so much a by-got to the
+ B(ishop) that he forces his Loyalty to strike sail to his Religion,
+ and could be content to pare the nails a little of the Civil
+ Government, so you would but let him sharpen the Ecclesiastical
+ Talons: which behaviour of his so exasperates the Round-Head, that
+ he on the other hand cares not what increases the Interest of the
+ Crown receives, so he can but diminish that of the miter: so that
+ the Round-Head had rather enslave the Man than the Conscience: the
+ Cavalier rather the Conscience than the Man; there being a
+ sufficient stock of animosity as proper matter to work upon. Upon
+ these, therefore, the Courtier mutually plays, for if any Ante-court
+ motion be made he gains the Round-Head either to oppose or absent by
+ telling them, If they will join him now he will join them for
+ Liberty of Conscience. And when any affair is started on behalf of
+ the Country he assures the Cavaliers, If they will then stand by him
+ he will then join with them in promoting a Bill against the
+ fanatics. Thus play they on both hands.... Wherefore it were happy
+ that he had neither Round-Head nor Cavalier in the House, for they
+ are each of them so prejudicate against the other that their sitting
+ here signifies nothing but their fostering their old venom and lying
+ at catch to stop every advantage to bear down each other, though it
+ be in the destruction of their country. For if the Round-Heads bring
+ in a good bill the Old Cavalier opposes it, for no other reason but
+ because they brought it in."[98:1]
+
+Such was the theatre of Marvell's public actions for the rest of his
+days, and if at times he may need forgiveness for the savagery of his
+satire, it ought to be found easy to forgive him.
+
+The two members for Hull were soon immersed in matters of much local
+importance. They began by quarrelling with one another, Marvell writing
+"the bond of civility betwixt Col. Gilby and myself being unhappily
+snappt in pieces, and in such manner that I cannot see how it is
+possible ever to knit them again." House of Commons quarrels are usually
+soon made up, and so was this one. The custom was for _both_ members to
+sign these letters, though they are all written in Marvell's hand--but
+if this was for any reason inconvenient, Marvell signed alone. No
+letters, unless in Marvell's writing, are preserved at Hull, which is a
+curious fact.
+
+One of these bits of local business related to a patent alleged to have
+been granted by the Crown to certain persons, authorising them to erect
+and maintain _ballast wharfs_ in the various ports, and to make charges
+in respect of them. This was resented by the members for the ports, and
+on Marvell's motion the matter was referred to the Committee of
+Grievances, before whom the patentees were summoned. When they came it
+appeared that the patent warranted none of the exactions that had been
+demanded, and also that the warrant sent down to Hull naming these
+charges was nothing more than a draft framed by the patentees
+themselves, and not authorised in any way. The patent was at once
+suspended. Marvell, like a true member of Parliament, wishes to get any
+little local credit that may be due for such prompt action, and
+writes:--
+
+ "In this thing (although I count all things I can do for your service
+ to be mere trifles, and not worth taking notice of in respect of what
+ I owe you) I must do myself that right to let you know that I, and I
+ alone, have had the happiness to do that little which hitherto is
+ effected."
+
+The matter required delicate handling, for a reason Marvell gives:
+"Because, if the King's right in placing such impositions should be
+weakened, neither should he have power to make a grant of them to you."
+
+Another much longer business related to a lighthouse, which some
+outsiders were anxious to build in the Humber. The corporation of Hull,
+acting on Marvell's advice, had petitioned the Privy Council, and were
+asked by their business-like member "to send us up a dormant credit for
+an hundred pound, which we yet indeed have no use of, but if need be
+must have ready at hand to reward such as will not otherwise befriend
+your business." Some months later Marvell forwards an account, not of
+the £100, but of the legal expenses about the lighthouse. He wishes it
+were less, but hopes that the "vigorous resistance" will discourage the
+designers from proceeding farther. This it did not do. As a member of
+the bar, I find two or three of the items in this old-world Bill of
+Costs interesting:--
+
+ To Mr. Scroggs to attend the Council, £3 6 0
+ " " " again for the same, 3 6 0
+ Spent on Mr. Scroggs at dinner, 18 0
+ To Mr. Scroggs again, 3 0 0
+ Fees of the Council Table, 1 10 0
+ Fee to Clerk of the Council, 2 0 0
+ For dinner for Mr. Scroggs and wine after, 1 0 0
+ To Mr. Cresset (the Solicitor), 20 0 0
+ To Mr. Scroggs for a dinner, 1 0 0
+
+The barrister who was so frequently "refreshed" by Marvell lived to
+become "the infamous Lord Chief Justice Scroggs" of all school
+histories.
+
+A week before the prorogation of Parliament, which happened on the 19th
+of May 1662, Marvell went to Holland and remained there for nine months,
+for he did not return until the very end of March 1663, more than a
+month after the reassembling of the House.
+
+What took him there nobody knows. Writing to the Trinity House about the
+lighthouse business on the 8th of May 1662, Marvell says:--
+
+ "But that which troubles me is that by the interest of some persons
+ too potent for me to refuse, and who have a great direction and
+ influence upon my counsels and fortune, I am obliged to go beyond
+ sea before I have perfected it (_i.e._ the lighthouse business). But
+ first I do thereby make my Lord Carlisle (who is a member of the
+ Privy Council and one of them to whom your business is referred)
+ absolutely yours. And my journey is but into Holland, from whence I
+ shall weekly correspond as if I were at London with all the rest of
+ my friends, towards the affecting your business. Then I leave Col.
+ Gilbey there, whose ability for business and affection to yours is
+ such that I cannot be wanted though I am missing."
+
+It is plain from this that Lord Carlisle is one of the powerful persons
+referred to--but beyond this we cannot go.
+
+Whilst in Holland Marvell wrote both to the Trinity House and to the
+corporation on business matters.
+
+In March 1663 Marvell came back in a hurry, some complaints having been
+made in Hull about his absence. He begins his first letter after his
+return as follows:--
+
+ "Being newly arrived in town and full of business, yet I could not
+ neglect to give you notice that this day (2nd April 1663) I have been
+ in the House and found my place empty, though it seems, as I now
+ hear, that some persons would have been so courteous as to have
+ filled it for me."
+
+In none of these letters is any reference made to the debates in the
+House on the unhappy Bill of Uniformity, nor does any record of those
+discussions anywhere exist. The Savoy Conference proved a failure, and
+no lay reader of Baxter's account of it can profess wonder. Not a single
+point in difference was settled. In the meantime the restored Houses of
+Convocation, from which the Presbyterian members were excluded, had
+completed their revision of the Book of Common Prayer and presented it
+to Parliament.
+
+In considering the Bill for Uniformity, the House of Lords, where
+Presbyterianism was powerfully represented, showed more regard for those
+"tender consciences" to which the king (by the new Prayer Book called
+for the first time "our most religious King") had referred in his Breda
+Declaration than did the House of Commons. "The Book, the whole Book,
+and nothing but the Book" was, in effect, the cry of the lower House,
+and on the 19th of May, ten days after Marvell had left for the
+Continent, the Act of Uniformity became law, and by the 24th of August
+1662 all beneficed ministers and schoolmasters had to make the
+celebrated subscription and profession, or go out into the wilderness.
+
+There has always been a dispute as to the physical possibility of
+perusing the compilation in question before the day fixed by the
+Statute. The Book was advertised for sale in London on the 6th of
+August, but how many copies were actually available on that day is not
+known.
+
+The Dean and Chapter of Peterborough did not get their copies until the
+17th of August. When the new folios reached the lonely parsonages of
+Cumberland and Durham--who would care to say? The Act required a verbal
+avowal of "unfeigned assent and consent to all and everything contained
+and prescribed in and by the Book of Common Prayer, and administrations
+of the Sacraments and other rites and ceremonies of the Church according
+to the use of the Church of England, together with the Psalter, and the
+form of manner of making, ordaining, and consecrating Bishops, Priests,
+and Deacons" to be made after the service upon "some Lord's day" before
+the Feast of St. Bartholomew, _i.e._ the 24th of August 1662. The Act
+also required subscription within the same time-limit to a declaration
+of (_inter alia_) uniformity to the Liturgy of the Church of England "as
+it is now by law established."
+
+That this haste was indecent no layman is likely to dispute, but that it
+wrought practical wrong is doubtful. The Vicar of Bray needed no time to
+read his new Folio to enable him to make whatever avowal concerning it
+the law demanded; and as for signing the declaration, all he required
+for that purpose was pen and ink. Neither had the incumbent, who was a
+good churchman at heart, any doubts to settle. He rejoiced to know that
+his side was once more uppermost, and that it would be no longer
+necessary for him, in order to retain his living, to pretend to tolerate
+a Presbyterian, or to submit to read in his church the Directory of
+Public Worship. Convocation had approved the new Prayer Book, which was
+in substance the old one, and what more did any churchman require? As
+for the Presbyterians and others who were in possession of livings, the
+failure of the Savoy Conference must have made it plain to them that the
+Church of England had not allowed the king to keep his word, that
+compromise and comprehension had failed, and that if they were to remain
+where they were, it could only be on terms of completely severing
+themselves from all other Protestant bodies in the world, and becoming
+thorough Episcopalians. No Presbyterian of any eminence was prepared to
+make the statutory avowal. Painful as it always must be to give up any
+good thing by a fixed date, it is hard to see what advantage would have
+accrued from delay.
+
+When the day came, some two thousand parsons were turned out of the
+Church of England. Among them were included many of the most devout and
+some of the most learned of our divines. Their "coming in" had been
+irregular, their "going out" was painful.
+
+Save so far as it turned these men out, the Act was a failure. It did
+not procure that uniformity in the public worship of God which it
+declared was so desirable; it prevented no scandal; it arrested no
+decay; it allayed no distemper, and it certainly did not settle the
+peace of the Church. Inside the Church the bishops were supine, the
+parochial clergy indifferent, and the worshippers, if such a name can
+properly be bestowed upon the congregations, were grossly irreverent.
+Nor was any improvement in the conduct of the Church service noticeable
+until after the Revolution, and when legislation had conceded a somewhat
+shabby measure of toleration to those who by that time had become rigid,
+traditional, and hereditary dissenters. Then indeed some attempts began
+to be made to secure a real uniformity of ritual in the public worship
+of the Church of England.[104:1] How far success has rewarded these
+exertions it is not for me to say.
+
+Marvell did not remain long at home after his return from Holland. A
+strange adventure lay before him. He thus introduces it in a letter
+dated 20th June 1663:--
+
+ "GENTLEMEN, MY VERY WORTHY FRIENDS,--The relation I have to your
+ affairs, and the intimacy of that affection I ow you, do both
+ incline and oblige me to communicate to you, that there is a
+ probability I may very shortly have occasion to go beyond sea; for
+ my Lord of Carlisle being chosen by his Majesty, Embassadour
+ Extraordinary to Muscovy, Sweden, and Denmarke, hath used his power,
+ which ought to be very great with me, to make me goe along with him
+ Secretary in those embassages. It is no new thing for Members of our
+ House to be dispens'd with for the service of the King and Nation in
+ forain parts. And you may be sure that I will not stirre without
+ speciall leave of the House; that so you may be freed from any
+ possibility of being importuned or tempted to make any other choice,
+ in my absence. However, I can not but advise also with you, desiring
+ to take your assent along with me, so much esteeme I have both of
+ your prudence and friendship. The time allotted for the embassy is
+ not much above a yeare: probably it may not be much less betwixt our
+ adjournment and next meeting; and, however, you have Colonell Gilby,
+ to whom my presence can make litle addition, so that if I cannot
+ decline this voyage, I shall have the comfort to believe, that, all
+ things considered, you cannot thereby receive any disservice. I
+ shall hope to receive herein your speedy answer...."
+
+What was the "power" Lord Carlisle had over Marvell is not now
+discoverable, but the tie, whatever it may have been, was evidently a
+close one.
+
+A month after this letter Marvell started on his way.
+
+ "GENTLEMEN, MY VERY WORTHY FRIENDS,--Being this day taking barge for
+ Gravesend, there to embark for Archangel, so to Muscow, thence for
+ Sweden, and last of all Denmarke; all of which I hope, by God's
+ blessing, to finish within twelve moneths time: I do hereby, with my
+ last and seriousest thoughts, salute you, rendring you all hearty
+ thanks for your great kindnesse and friendship to me upon all
+ occasions, and ardently beseeching God to keep you all in His
+ gracious protection, to your own honour, and the welfare and
+ flourishing of your Corporation, to which I am and shall ever
+ continue a most affectionate and devoted servant. I undertake this
+ voyage with the order and good liking of his Majesty, and by leave
+ given me from the House and enterd in the Journal; and having
+ received moreover your approbation, I go therefore with more ease
+ and satisfaction of mind, and augurate to myselfe the happier
+ successe in all my proceedings...."
+
+It was Marvell's good fortune to be in Lord Carlisle's frigate which
+made the voyage to Archangel in less than a month, sailing from
+Gravesend on the 22nd of July and arriving at the bar of Archangel on
+the 19th of August. The companion frigate took seven weeks to compass
+the same distance.
+
+Nothing of any importance attaches to this Russian embassy. It cost a
+great deal of money, took up a great deal of time, exposed the
+ambassador and his suite to much rudeness and discomfort, and failed to
+effect its main object, which was to secure a renewal of the privileges
+formerly enjoyed in Muscovy by British merchants.
+
+One of the attendants upon the ambassador made a small book out of his
+travels, which did not get printed till 1669, when it attracted little
+notice. Mr. Grosart was the first of Marvell's many biographers to
+discover the existence of this narrative.[106:1] He found it in the
+first instance, to use his own language, "in one of good trusty John
+Harris' folios of _Travels and Voyages_" (two vols. folio, 1705); but
+later on he made the sad discovery that this "good trusty John Harris"
+had uplifted what he called his "true and particular account" from the
+book of 1669 without any acknowledgment. "For ways that are dark" the
+old compiler of travels was not easily excelled, but why should Mr.
+Grosart have gone out of his way to call an eighteenth-century
+book-maker, about whom he evidently knew nothing, "good and trusty"?
+Harris was never either the one or the other, and died a pauper!
+
+A journey to Moscow in 1663-64 was no joke. Lord Carlisle, who was
+accompanied by his wife and eldest son, although ready to start from
+Archangel by the end of September, was doomed to spend both the 5th of
+November and Christmas Day in the gloomy town of Vologda, which they had
+reached, travelling by water, on the 17th of October. Some of this time
+was spent in quarrelling as to who was to supply the sledges that were
+required to convey the ambassador and all his _impedimenta_ along the
+now ice-bound roads to Moscow. It was one of Marvell's many duties to
+remonstrate with the authorities for their cruel and disrespectful
+indifference; he did so with great freedom, but with no effect, and at
+last the ambassador was obliged to hire two hundred sledges at his own
+charges. Sixty he sent on ahead, following with one hundred and forty on
+the 15th of January 1664. It was an intensely cold journey, and the
+accommodation at night, with one happy exception, proved quite infamous.
+On the 3rd of February Lord Carlisle and his _cortége_ found themselves
+five versts from Moscow. The 5th of February was fixed for their entry
+into the city in all their finery. They were ready on the morning of
+that day, awaiting the arrival of the Tsar's escort, but it never came.
+Lord Carlisle had sent his cooks on to Moscow to prepare the dinner he
+expected to eat in his city-quarters. Nightfall approached, and it was
+not till "half an hour before night" that the belated messengers
+arrived, full of excuses. The ambassador was hungry, cold, and furious,
+nor did his anger abate when told he was not to be allowed to enter
+Moscow that night, as the Tsar and his ladies were very anxious to
+enjoy the spectacle. The return of the cooks from Moscow and the
+preparation of dinner, though a mitigation, was no cure for wounded
+pride, and Lord Carlisle, calling Marvell to his side, and with his
+assistance, concocted a letter in Latin to the Tsar, complaining
+bitterly of their ill-treatment _inter fumosi gurgustii sordes et
+angustias sine cibo aut potu_, and going so far as to assert that had
+anything of the kind happened in England to a foreign ambassador, the
+King of England would never have rested until the offence had been
+atoned for with the blood of the criminals. When, some forty years
+afterwards, Peter the Great asked Queen Anne to chop off the heads of
+the rude men who had arrested his ambassador for debt, he had, perhaps,
+Marvell's letter before him.
+
+On the 6th of February Lord Carlisle and his suite made their public
+entry into Moscow; but so long a time was occupied over the few versts
+they had to travel, that it was dusk before the Kremlin was reached.
+
+The formal reception of the ambassador was on the 11th of February.
+Marvell was in the ambassador's sledge and carried his credentials upon
+a yard of red damask. The titles of the Russian Potentate would, if
+printed here, fill half a page. All the Russias, Great, Little, and
+White, emperies more than one, dukedoms by the dozen, territories,
+countries, and dominions--not all easy to identify on the map, and very
+hard to pronounce--were read out in a loud voice by Marvell. At the end
+of them came the homely title of the Earl and his offices, "his
+Majesty's Lieutenant in the Counties of Cumberland and Westmorland."
+
+The letters read and delivered, the Tsar and his Boyars rose in their
+places simultaneously, and their tissue vests made so strange, loud, and
+unexpected a noise as to provoke the ever too easily moved risibility
+of the Englishmen.[109:1] When Marvell and the rest of them had ceased
+from giggling, the Tsar inquired after the health of the king, but the
+distance between his Imperial Majesty and Lord Carlisle being too great
+for the question to carry, it had to be repeated by those who were
+nearer the ambassador, who gravely replied that when he last saw his
+master, namely on the 20th of July then last past, he was perfectly
+well. To the same question as to the health of "the desolate widow of
+Charles the First," Carlisle returned the same cautious answer. He then
+read a very long speech in English, which his interpreter turned into
+Russian. The same oration was rendered into Latin by Marvell, and
+presented. Over Marvell's Latin trouble arose, for the Russians were
+bent on taking and giving offence. Marvell had styled the Tsar
+_Illustrissimus_ when he ought, so it was alleged, to have called him
+_Serenissimus_. Marvell was not a schoolmaster's son, an old scholar of
+Trinity, and Milton's assistant as Latin Secretary for nothing. He
+prepared a reply which, as it does not lack humour, has a distinct
+literary flavour, and is all that came of the embassy, may here be given
+at length:--
+
+ "I reply, saith he, that I sent no such paper into the
+ Embassy-office, but upon the desire of his Tzarskoy Majesty's
+ Councellor Evan Offonassy Pronchissof, I delivered it to him, not
+ being a paper of State, nor written in the English Language wherein I
+ treat, nor put into the hands of the near Boyars and Councellors of
+ his Tzarskoy majesty, nor subscribed by my self, nor translated into
+ Russe by my Interpreter, but only as a piece of curiosity, which is
+ now restored me, and I am possessed of it; so that herein his
+ Tzarskoy majestie's near Boyars and Councellors are doubtless ill
+ grounded. But again I say concerning the value of the words
+ _Illustrissimus_ and _Serenissimus_ compared together, seeing we must
+ here from affaires of State, fall into Grammatical contests
+ concerning the Latin tongue; that the word _Serenus_ signifieth
+ nothing but still and calm; and, therefore, though of late times
+ adopted into the Titles of great Princes by reason of that benigne
+ tranquility which properly dwells in the majestick countenance of
+ great Princes, and that venerable stillness of all the Attendants
+ that surround them, of which I have seen an excellent example when I
+ was in the presence of his Tzarskoy majesty, yet is more properly
+ used concerning the calmness of the weather, or season. So that even
+ the night is elegantly called _Serena_ by the best Authors, Cicero in
+ Arato 12, Lucretius i. l. 29. '_Serena nox_'; and upon perusing again
+ what I have writ in this paper, I finde that I have out of the
+ customariness of that expression my self near the beginning said, And
+ that most serene night, &c. Whereas on the contrary _Illustris_ in
+ its proper derivation and signification expresseth that which is all
+ resplendent, lightsome, and glorious, as well without as within, and
+ that not with a secondary but with a primitive and original light.
+ For if the Sun be, as he is, the first fountain of light, and Poets
+ in their expressions (as is well known) are higher by much than those
+ that write in Prose, what else is it when Ovid in the 2. of the
+ Metamorphoses saith of Phoebus speaking with Phaëthon, _Qui terque
+ quaterque concutiens Illustre caput_, and the Latin Orators, as
+ Pliny, Ep. 139, when they would say the highest thing that can be
+ exprest upon any subject, word it thus, _Nihil Illustrius dicere
+ possum_. So that hereby may appear to his Tzarskoy Majestie's near
+ Boyars and Counsellors what diminution there is to his Tzarskoy
+ Majesty (which farr be it from my thoughts) if I appropriate
+ _Serenissimus_ to my Master and _Illustrissimus_ to Him than which
+ _nihil dici potest Illustrius_. But because this was in the time of
+ the purity of the Latin tongue, when the word _Serenus_ was never
+ used in the Title of any Prince or Person, I shall go on to deale
+ with the utmost candor, forasmuch as in this Nation the nicety of
+ that most eloquent language is not so perfectly understood, which
+ gives occasion to these mistakes. I confess therefore that indeed in
+ the declination of the Latin tongue, and when there scarce could be
+ found out words enough to supply the modern ambition of Titles,
+ Serenissimus as several other words hath grown in fashion for a
+ compellation of lesser as well as greater Princes, and yet befits
+ both the one and the other. So there is _Serenissima Respublica
+ Veneta_, _Serenitates Electoriæ_, _Serenitates Regiæ_, even as the
+ word Highness or _Celsitudo_ befits a Duke, a Prince, a King, or an
+ Emperour, adjoyning to it the respective quality, and so the word
+ _Illustris_. But suppose it were by modern use (which I deny)
+ depressed from the undoubted superiority that it had of _Serenus_ in
+ the purest antiquity, yet being added in the transcendent degree to
+ the word Emperour, the highest denomination that a Prince is capable
+ of, it becomes of the same value. So that to interpret
+ _Illustrissimus_ unto diminution is to find a positive in a
+ superlative, and in the most orient light to seek for darkness. And I
+ would, seeing the near Boyars and Counsellors of his Tzarskoy Majesty
+ are pleased to mention the Title given to his Tzarskoy Majesty by his
+ Cesarian Majesty, gladly be satisfied by them, whether ever any
+ Cesarian Majesty writ formerly hither in High-Dutch, and whether then
+ they styled his Tzarskoy Majesty Durchluchtigste which is the same
+ with _Illustrissimus_, and which I believe the Cæsar hath kept for
+ Himself. But to cut short, his Royal Majesty hath used the word to
+ his Tzarskoy Majesty in his Letter, not out of imitation of others,
+ although even in the Dutch Letter to his Tzarskoy Majesty of 16 June
+ 1663, I finde Durchlauchtigste the same (as I said) with
+ _Illustrissimus_, but out of the constant use of his own Court,
+ further joyning before it Most High, Most Potent, and adding after it
+ Great Lord Emperour, which is an higher Title than any Prince in the
+ World gives his Tzarskoy Majesty, and as high a Title of honour as
+ can be given to any thing under the Divinity. For the King my Master
+ who possesses as considerable Dominions, and by as high and
+ self-dependent a right as any Prince in the Universe, yet contenting
+ Himself with the easiest Titles, and satisfying Himself in the
+ essence of things, doth most willingly give to other Princes the
+ Titles which are appropriated to them, but to the Tzarskoy Majesties
+ of Russia his Royal Ancestors, and to his present Tzarskoy Majesty
+ his Royal Majesty himself, have usually and do gladly pay Titles even
+ to superfluity out of meer kindness. And upon that reason He added
+ the word most Illustrious, and so did I use it in the Latin of my
+ speech. Yet, that You may find I did not out of any criticisme of
+ honor, but for distinction sake use it as I did, You may see in one
+ place of the same speech _Serenitas_, speaking of his Tzarskoy
+ Majesty: and I would have used _Serenissimus_ an hundred times
+ concerning his Tzarskoy Majesty, had I thought it would have pleased
+ Him better. And I dare promise You that his Majesty will upon the
+ first information from me stile him _Serenissimus_, and I
+ (notwithstanding what I have said) shall make little difficulty of
+ altering the word in that speech, and of delivering it so to You,
+ with that protestation that I have not in using that word
+ _Illustrissimus_ erred nor used any diminution (which God forbid) to
+ his Tzarskoy Majesty, but on the contrary after the example of the
+ King my Master intended and shewed him all possible honor. And so God
+ grant all happiness to His most high, most Potent, most Illustrious,
+ and most Serene Tzarskoy Majesty, and that the friendship may daily
+ increase betwixt His said Majesty and his most Serene Majesty my
+ Master."
+
+On the 19th of February the Tsar invited Lord Carlisle and his suite to
+a dinner, which, beginning at two o'clock, lasted till eleven, when it
+was prematurely broken up by the Tsar's nose beginning to bleed. Five
+hundred dishes were served, but there were no napkins, and the
+table-cloths only just covered the boards. There were Spanish wines,
+white and red mead, Puaz and strong waters. The English ambassador was
+not properly placed at table, not being anywhere near the Tsar, and his
+faithful suite shared his resentment. Time went on, but no diplomatic
+progress was made. The Tsar would not renew the privileges of the
+British merchants; Easter was spent in Moscow, May also--and still
+nothing was done. Carlisle, in a huff, determined to go away, and,
+somewhat to the distress of his followers, refused to accept the costly
+sables sent by the Tzar, not only to the ambassador, Lady Carlisle, and
+Lord Morpeth, but to the secretaries and others. The Tzar thereupon
+returned the plate which our king had sent him, which plate Lord
+Carlisle seems to have appropriated, no doubt with diplomatic
+correctness, as his perquisite in lieu of the sables; but the suite got
+nothing.
+
+The embassy left Moscow on the 24th of June for Novgorod and Riga, and
+after visiting Stockholm and Copenhagen, Lord Carlisle and Marvell
+reached London on the 30th of January 1665.
+
+During Marvell's absence war had been declared with the Dutch. It was
+never difficult to go to war with the Dutch. The king was always in want
+of money, and as no proper check existed over war supplies, he took what
+he wanted out of them. The merchants on 'Change desired war, saying that
+the trade of the world was too little for both England and Holland, and
+that one or the other "must down." The English manufacturers, who felt
+the sting of their Dutch competitors, were always in favour of war. Then
+the growing insolence of the Dutch in the Indies was not to be borne.
+Stories were circulated how the Hollanders had proclaimed themselves
+"Lords of the Southern Seas," and meant to deny English ships the right
+of entry in that quarter of the globe. A baronet called on Pepys and
+pulled out of his pocket letters from the East Indies, full of sad tales
+of Englishmen having been actually thrashed inside their own factory at
+Surat by swaggering Dutchmen, who had insulted the flag of St. George,
+and swore they were going to be the masters "out there." Pepys, who
+knew a little about the state of the royal navy, listened sorrowfully
+and was content to hope that the war would not come until "we are more
+ready for it."
+
+In the House of Commons the prudent men were against the war, and were
+at once accused of being in the pay of the Dutch. The king's friends
+were all for the war, and nobody doubted that some of the money voted
+for it would find its way into their pockets, or at all events that
+pensions would reward their fidelity. A third group who favoured the war
+were supposed to do so because their disloyalty and fanaticism always
+disposed them to trouble the waters in which they wished to fish.
+
+The war began in November 1664, and on the 24th of that month the king
+opened Parliament and demanded money. He got it. Clarendon describes how
+Sir Robert Paston from Norfolk, a back-bench man, "who was no frequent
+speaker, but delivered what he had a mind to say very clearly," stood up
+and proposed a grant of two and a half million pounds, to be spread over
+three years. So huge a sum took the House by surprise. Nobody spoke;
+"they sat in amazement." Somebody at last found his voice and moved a
+much smaller sum, but no one seconded him. Sir Robert Paston ultimately
+found supporters, "no man who had any relation to the Court speaking a
+word." The Speaker put Sir Robert Paston's motion as the question, "and
+the affirmative made a good sound, and very few gave their negative
+aloud." But Clarendon adds, "it was notorious very many sat silent."
+
+The war was not in its early stages unpopular, being for the control of
+the sea, for the right of search, for the fishing trade, for mastery of
+the "gorgeous East." The Admiralty had been busy, and a hundred
+frigates, well gunned, were ready for the blue water by February 1665.
+The Duke of York, who took the command, was a keen sailor, though his
+unhappy notions as to patronage, and its exercise, were fatal to an
+efficient service. On the 3rd of June the duke had his one victory; it
+was off the roadstead of Harwich, and the roar of his artillery was
+heard in Westminster. It was a fierce fight; the king's great friend,
+Charles Berkeley, just made a peer and about to be made a duke, Lord
+Muskerry and young Richard Boyle, all on the duke's ship the _Royal
+Charles_, were killed by one shot, their blood and brains flying in the
+duke's face. The Earls of Marlborough and Portland were killed. The
+gallant Lawson, who rose from the ranks in Cromwell's time, an
+Anabaptist and a Republican, but still in high command, received on
+board his ship, the _Royal Oak_, a fatal wound. On the other side the
+Dutch admiral, Opdam, was blown into the air with his ship and crew. The
+Dutch fleet was scattered, and fled, after a loss estimated at
+twenty-four ships and eight thousand men killed and wounded; England
+lost no ship and but six hundred men.
+
+The victory was not followed up. Some say the duke lost nerve. Tromp was
+allowed to lead a great part of the fleet away in safety, and when the
+great De Ruyter was recalled from the West Indies he was soon able to
+assume the command of a formidable number of fighting craft.
+
+In less than ten days after this great engagement the plague appeared in
+London, a terrible and a solemnising affliction, lasting the rest of the
+year. It was at its worst in September, when in one week more than seven
+thousand died of it. The total number of its dead is estimated at
+sixty-eight thousand five hundred and ninety-six.
+
+On account of the plague Parliament was summoned to meet at Oxford in
+October 1665.
+
+Marvell must have reached Oxford in good time, for the Admission Book of
+the Bodleian records his visit to the library on the last day of
+September. His first letter from Oxford is dated 15th October, and in it
+he tells the corporation that the House, "upon His Majesty's
+representation of the necessity of further supplies in reference to the
+Dutch War and probability of the French embracing their interests, hath
+voted the King £1,250,000 additional to be levied in two years." The
+king, who was the frankest of mortals in speech, though false as Belial
+in action, told the House that he had already spent all the money
+previously voted and must have more, especially if France was to prefer
+the friendship of Holland to his. Amidst loud acclamations the money was
+voted. The French ambassadors, who were in Oxford, saw for themselves
+the temper of Parliament.
+
+Notwithstanding the terrible plight of the capital, Oxford was gaiety
+itself. The king was accompanied by his consort, who then was hopeful of
+an heir, and also by Lady Castlemaine and Miss Stewart. Lady Castlemaine
+did not escape the shaft of University wit, for a stinging couplet was
+set up during the night on her door, for the discovery of the authorship
+of which a reward of £1000 was offered. It may very well have been
+Marvell's.[116:1]
+
+The Duke of Monmouth gave a ball to the queen and her ladies, where,
+after the queen's retirement, "Mrs. Stewart was extraordinary merry,"
+and sang "French songs with great skill."[116:2]
+
+Ten Acts of Parliament received the royal assent at Oxford, of which
+but one is still remembered in certain quarters--the Five Mile Act,
+which Marvell briefly describes as an Act "for debarring ejected
+Nonconformists from living in or near Corporations (where they had
+formerly pursued their callings), unless taking the new Oath and
+Declaration." Parliament was prorogued at the end of October.
+
+Another visitation of Providence was soon to befall the capital. On
+Sunday morning, the 2nd of September, Pepys was aroused by one of his
+maid-servants at 3 A.M. to look at a fire. He could not make out much
+about it and went to bed again, but when he rose at seven o'clock it was
+still burning, so he left his house and made his way to the Tower, from
+whence he saw London Bridge aflame, and describes how the poor pigeons,
+loth to leave their homes, fluttered about the balconies, until with
+singed wings they fell into the flames. After gazing his fill he went to
+Whitehall and had an interview with the king, who at once ordered his
+barge and proceeded downstream to his burning City, and to the
+assistance of a distracted Lord Mayor.
+
+The fire raged four days, and made an end of old London, a picturesque
+and even beautiful City. St. Paul's, both the church and the school, the
+Royal Exchange, Ludgate, Fleet Street as far as the Inner Temple, were
+by the 7th of the month smoking ruins. Four hundred streets, eighty-nine
+churches (just a church an hour, so the curious noted), warehouses
+unnumbered with all their varied contents, whole editions of books,
+valuable and the reverse of valuable, were wiped out of existence. Rents
+to an enormous amount ceased to be represented any longer by the houses
+that paid them. How was the king to get his chimney-money? How were
+merchants to meet their obligations? The parsons on Sunday, the 9th of
+September, ought to have had no difficulty in finding texts for their
+sermons. Pepys went to church twice, but without edification, and
+certainly Dean Harding, whom he heard complaining in the evening "that
+the City had been reduced from a folio to a duo decimo," hardly rose to
+the dignity of the occasion.
+
+Strange to say, not a life was actually lost in the fire,[118:1] though
+some old Londoners (among them Edmund Calamy's grandfather) died of
+grief, and others (and among them Shirley the dramatist and his wife)
+from exposure and exhaustion. One hysterical foreigner, who insisted
+that he lit the flame, was executed, though no sensible man believed
+what he said. It was long the boast of the merchants of London that no
+one of their number "broke" in consequence of the great fire.
+
+Unhappily the belief was widespread, as that "tall bully," the monument,
+long testified, that the fire was the work of the Roman Catholics, and
+aliens, suspected of belonging to our old religion, found it dangerous
+to walk the streets whilst the embers still smoked, which they continued
+to do for six months.
+
+The meeting of Parliament was a little delayed in consequence of this
+national disaster, and when it did meet at the end of the month, Marvell
+reports the appointment of two Committees, one "about the Fire of
+London," and the other "to receive informations of the insolence of the
+Popish priests and Jesuits, and of the increase of Popery." The latter
+Committee almost at once reported to the House, to quote from Marvell's
+letter of the 27th of October, "that his Majesty be desired to issue out
+his proclamation that all Popish priests and Jesuits, except such as not
+being natural-born subjects, or belong to the Queen Mother and Queen
+Consort, be banished in thirty days or else the law be executed upon
+them, that all Justices of Peace and officers concerned put the laws in
+execution against Papists and suspected Papists in order to their
+execution, and that all officers, civil or military, not taking the
+Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance within twenty days be displaced."
+
+In a very real sense the great fire of London continued to smoke for
+many a weary year, and to fill the air with black suspicions and civil
+discord.
+
+Parliament had not sat long before it was discovered that a change had
+taken place in its temper and spirit. The plague and the fire had
+contributed to this change. The London clergy had not exhibited great
+devotion during the former affliction. Many of the incumbents deserted
+their flocks, and their empty pulpits had been filled by zealots, who
+preached "Woe unto Jerusalem." The profligacy of the Court, and the
+general decay of manners, when added to the severity of the legislation
+against the Nonconformists, gave the ejected clergy opportunities for a
+renewal of their spiritual ministrations, and as usual their labours,
+_pro salute animarum_, aroused political dissatisfaction. Some of the
+more outrageous supporters of the royal prerogative, the renegade May
+among them, professed to see in the fire a punishment upon the spirit of
+freedom, for which the City had once been famous, and urged the king not
+to suffer it to be rebuilt again "to be a bit in his mouth and a bridle
+upon his neck, but to keep it all open," and that his troops might enter
+whenever he thought necessary, "there being no other way to govern that
+rude multitude but by force."
+
+Rabid nonsense of this kind had no weight with the king, who never
+showed his native good sense more conspicuously than in the pains he
+took over the rebuilding of London; but none the less it had its effect
+in getting rid once and for ever of that spirit of excessive (besotted
+is Hallam's word) loyalty which had characterised the Restoration.
+
+The king, of course, wanted money, nor was Parliament disposed to refuse
+it, we being still at war with Holland; but to the horror of that
+elderly pedant, Lord Clarendon, the Commons passed a Bill appointing a
+commission of members of both Houses "to inspect"--I am now quoting
+Marvell--"and examine thoroughly the former expense of the £2,800,000,
+of the £1,250,000 of the Militia money, of the prize goods, etc." In an
+earlier letter Marvell attributes the new temper of Parliament, "not to
+any want of ardour to supply the public necessities, but out of our
+House's sense also of the burden to be laid upon the subject." Clarendon
+was so alarmed that he advised a dissolution. Charles was alarmed, too,
+knowing well that both Carteret, the Treasurer of the Navy, and Lord
+Ashley, the Treasurer of the Prize Money, issued out many sums upon the
+king's warrant, for which no accounts could be produced, but he was
+still more frightened of a new Parliament. In the present Parliament he
+had, so Clarendon admits, "a hundred members of his own menial servants
+and their near relations." The bishops were also against a dissolution,
+dreading the return of Presbyterian members, so Clarendon's advice was
+not followed, and the king very reluctantly consented to the commission,
+about which Pepys has so much to say. It did not get appointed at once,
+but when it did Pepys rejoices greatly that its secretary, Mr. Jessopp,
+was "an old fashioned Cromwell man"; in other words, both honest and
+efficient.
+
+The shrewd Secretary of the Navy Office here puts his finger on the
+real plague-spot of the Restoration. Our Puritan historians write rather
+loosely about "the floodgates of dissipation," etc., having been flung
+open by that event as if it had wrought a sudden change in human nature.
+Mr. Pepys, whose frank Diary begins during the Protectorate, underwent
+no such change. He was just the same sinner under Cromwell as he was
+under Charles. Sober, grave divines may be found deploring the growing
+profligacy of the times long before the 29th of May 1660. An era of
+extravagance was evidently to be expected. No doubt the king's return
+assisted it. No country could be anything but the worse for having
+Charles the Second as its "most religious King." The Restoration of the
+Stuarts was the best "excuse for a glass" ever offered to an Englishman.
+He availed himself of it with even more than his accustomed freedom. But
+it cannot be said that the king's debauchery was ever approved of even
+in London. Both the mercurial Pepys and the grave Evelyn alike deplore
+it. The misfortune clearly attributable to the king's return was the
+substitution of a corrupt, inefficient, and unpatriotic administration
+for the old-fashioned servants of the public whom Cromwell had gathered
+round him.
+
+Parliament was busy with new taxes. In November 1666 Marvell writes:--
+
+ "The Committee has prepared these votes. All persons shall pay one
+ shilling per poll, all aliens two, all Nonconformists and papists
+ two, all servants one shilling in the pound of their wages, all
+ personal estates shall pay for so much as is not already taxed by the
+ land-tax, after twenty shillings in the hundred. Cattle, corn, and
+ household furniture shall be excepted, and all such stock-in-trade as
+ is already taxed by the land-tax, but the rest to be liable."
+
+Stringent work! Later on we read:--
+
+ "Three shillings in the pound for all offices and public employments,
+ except military; lawyers and physicians proportionate to their
+ practice."
+
+Here is the income-tax long before Mr. Pitt.
+
+The House of Lords, trembling on the verge of a breach of privilege,
+altered this Poll Bill. Marvell writes in January 1667:--
+
+ "We have not advanced much this week; the alterations of the Lords
+ upon the Poll Bill have kept us busy. We have disagreed in most.
+ Aliens we adhere to pay double. Nonconformists we agree with them
+ _not_ to pay double (126 to 91), to allow no exemptions from patents
+ to free from paying, we adhere; and we also rejected a long clause
+ whereby they as well as the Commoners pretend distinctly to give to
+ the King, and to-day we send up our reasons."
+
+The Lords agreed, and the Bill passed.
+
+Ireland supplied a very stormy measure. I am afraid Marvell was on the
+wrong side, but owing to his reserve I am not sure. An Irish Cattle Bill
+was a measure very popular in the House of Commons, its object being to
+prevent Ireland from sending over live beasts to be fattened, killed,
+and consumed in England. You can read all about it in Clarendon's _Life_
+(vol. iii. pp. 704-720, 739), and think you are reading about Canadian
+cattle to-day. The breeders (in a majority) were on one side, and the
+owners of pasture-land on the other. The breeders said the Irish cattle
+were bred in Ireland for nothing and transported for little, that they
+undersold the English-bred cattle, and consequently "the breed of Cattle
+in the Kingdom was totally given over," and rents fell. Other members
+contended in their places "that their countries had no land bad enough
+to breed, and that their traffic consisted in buying lean cattle and
+making them fat, and upon this they paid their rent." Nobody, except the
+king, gave a thought to Ireland. He, in this not unworthy of his great
+Tudor predecessor, Henry the Eighth, declared he was King of Ireland no
+less than of England, and would do nothing to injure one portion of his
+dominions for the benefit of another. But as usual he gave way, being in
+great straits for money. The House of Lords was better disposed towards
+Ireland than the House of Commons, but they too yielded to selfish
+clamour, and the Bill, which had excited great fury, became law, and
+proved ineffective, owing (as was alleged) to that corruption which
+restrictions on trade seem to have the trick of breeding.[123:1]
+
+It is always agreeable to be reminded that however large a part of our
+history is composed of the record of passion, greed, delusion, and
+stupidity, yet common-sense, the love of order and of justice (in
+matters of business), have usually been the predominant factors in our
+national life, despite priest, merchant, and party.
+
+Nowhere is this better illustrated than by two measures to which Marvell
+refers as Bills "for the prevention of lawsuits between landlord and
+tenant" and for "the Rebuilding of London." Both these Bills became law
+in February 1668, within five months of the great catastrophe that was
+their occasion. Two more sensible, well-planned, well-drawn, courageous
+measures were never piloted through both Houses. King, Lords and
+Commons, all put their heads together to face a great emergency and to
+provide an immediate remedy.
+
+The Bill to prevent lawsuits is best appreciated if we read its
+preamble:--
+
+ "Whereas the greatest part of the houses in the City of London having
+ been burnt by the dreadful and dismal fire which happened in
+ September last, many of the Tenants, under-tenants, and late
+ occupiers are liable unto suits and actions to compel them to repair
+ and to rebuild the same, and to pay their rents as if the same had
+ not been burnt, and are not relievable therefor in any ordinary
+ course of law; and great differences are likely to arise concerning
+ the Repairs and rebuilding the said houses, and payment of rents
+ which, if they should not be determined with speed and without
+ charge, would much obstruct the rebuilding of the s^d City. And for
+ that it is just that everyone concerned should bear a proportionate
+ share of this loss according to their several interests wherein in
+ respect of the multitude of cases, varying in their circumstances, no
+ certain general rule can be prescribed."
+
+After this recital it was enacted that the judges of the King's Bench
+and Common Pleas and the Barons of the Exchequer, or any three or more
+of them, should form a Court of Record to hear and determine every
+possible dispute or difference arising out of the great fire, whether
+relating to liability to repair, and rebuild, or to pay rent, or for
+arrears of rent (other than arrears which had accrued due before the 1st
+of September) or otherwise howsoever. The proceedings were to be by
+summary process, _sine forma et figura judicii_ and without court fees.
+The judges were to be bound by no rules either of law or equity, and
+might call for what evidence they chose, including that of the
+interested parties, and try the case as it best could be tried. Their
+orders were to be final and not (save in a single excepted case) subject
+to any appeal. All persons in remainder and reversion were to be bound
+by these orders, although infants, married women, idiots, beyond seas,
+or under any other disability. A special power was given to order the
+surrender of existing leases, and to grant new ones for terms not
+exceeding forty years. The judges gave their services for nothing, and,
+for once, released from all their own trammels, set to work to do
+substantial justice between landlord and tenant, personalty and realty,
+the life interest and the remainder, covenantor and covenantee, after a
+fashion which excited the admiration and won the confidence of the whole
+City. The ordinary suitor, still left exposed to the pitfalls of the
+special pleader, the risks (owing to the exclusion of evidence) of a
+non-suit and the costly cumbersomeness of the Court of Chancery, must
+often have wished that the subject-matter of his litigation had perished
+in the flames of the great fire.
+
+This court sat in Clifford's Inn, and was usually presided over by Sir
+Matthew Hale, whose skill both as an arithmetician and an architect
+completed his fitness for so responsible a position. Within a year the
+work was done.
+
+The Act for rebuilding the City is an elaborate measure of more than
+forty clauses, and aimed at securing "the regularity, safety,
+conveniency and beauty" of the new London that was to be. The buildings
+were classified according to their position and character, and had to
+maintain a prescribed level of quality. The materials to be employed
+were named. New streets were to be of certain widths, and so on. This is
+the Act that contains the first Betterment Clause: "And forasmuch as the
+Houses now remaining and to be rebuilt will receive more or less
+advantage in the value of the rents by the liberty of air and free
+recourse for trade," it was enacted that a jury might be sworn to
+assess upon the owners and others interested of and in the said houses,
+such sum or sums of money with respect of their several interests "in
+consideration of such improvement and melioration as in reason and good
+conscience they shall think fit."
+
+It takes nothing short of a catastrophe to suspend in England, even for
+a few months, those rules of evidence that often make justice
+impossible, and those rights of landlords which for centuries have
+appropriated public expenditure to private gain.[126:1]
+
+The moneys required to pay for the land taken under the Act to widen
+streets and to accomplish the other authorised works were raised, as
+Marvell informs his constituents, by a tax of twelve pence on every
+chaldron of coal coming as far as Gravesend. Few taxes have had so
+useful and so harmless a life.
+
+All this time the Dutch War was going on, but the heart was out of it.
+Nothing in England is so popular as war, except the peace that comes
+after it. The king now wanted peace, and the merchants on 'Change had
+glutted their ire. In February 1667 the king told the Houses of
+Parliament that all "sober" men would be glad to see peace. Unluckily,
+it seems to have been assumed that we could have peace whenever we
+wanted it, and the fatal error was committed of at once "laying up" the
+first-and second-rate ships. It thus came about that, whilst still at
+war, England had no fleet to put to sea. It did not at first seem likely
+that the overtures for peace would present much difficulty, when
+suddenly arose the question of Poleroone. It is amazing how few
+Englishmen have ever heard of Poleroone, or even of the Banda Islands,
+of which group it is one. Indeed, a more insignificant speck in the
+ocean it would be hard to find. To discover it on an atlas is no easy
+task. Yet, but for Poleroone, the Dutch would never have taken
+Sheerness, or broken the chain at Gillingham, or carried away with them
+to the Texel the proud vessel that had brought back Charles the Second
+to an excited population.
+
+Poleroone is a small nutmeg-growing island in the Indian Archipelago,
+not far from the eastern extremity of New Guinea. King James the First
+imagined he had some right to it, and, at any rate, Oliver Cromwell,
+when he made peace with the Dutch, made a great point of Poleroone. Have
+it he would for the East India Company. The Dutch objected, but gave
+way, and by an article in the treaty with Oliver bound themselves to
+give up Poleroone to the Company. All, in fact, that they did do, was to
+cut down the nutmeg trees, and so make the island good for nothing for
+many a long year. Physical possession was never taken. For some
+unaccountable reason Charles, who had sold Oliver's Dunkirk to the
+French for half a million of money, stuck out for Poleroone. What
+Cromwell had taken he was not going to give up! On the other hand,
+neither would the Dutch give up Poleroone. This dispute, about a barren
+island, delayed the settlement of the peace preliminaries; but
+eventually the British plenipotentiaries did get out to Breda, in May
+1667. Our sanguine king expected an immediate cessation of hostilities,
+and that his unpreparedness would thus be huddled up. All of a sudden,
+at the beginning of June, De Ruyter led out his fleet, and with a fair
+wind behind him stood for the Thames. All is fair in war. England was
+caught napping. The doleful history reads like that of a sudden
+piratical onslaught, and reveals the fatal inefficiency of the
+administration. Sheerness was practically defenceless. "There were a
+Company or two of very good soldiers there under excellent officers, but
+the fortifications were so weak and unfinished, and all other provisions
+so entirely wanting, that the Dutch Fleet no sooner approached within a
+distance but with their cannon they beat all the works flat and drove
+all the men from the ground, which, as soon as they had done with their
+Boats, they landed men and seemed resolved to fortify and keep
+it."[128:1] Capture of Sheerness by the Dutch! No need of a halfpenny
+press to spread this news through a London still in ruins. What made
+matters worse, the sailors were more than half-mutinous, being paid with
+tickets not readily convertible into cash. Many of them actually
+deserted to the Dutch fleet, which made its leisurely way upstream,
+passing Upnor Castle, which had guns but no ammunition, till it was
+almost within reach of Chatham, where lay the royal navy. General Monk,
+who was the handy man of the period, and whose authority was always
+invoked when the king he had restored was in greater trouble than usual,
+had hastily collected what troops he could muster, and marched to
+protect Chatham; but what were wanted were ships, not troops. The Dutch
+had no mind to land, and after firing three warships (the _Royal James_,
+the _Royal Oak_, and the _London_), and capturing the _Royal Charles_,
+"they thought they had done enough, and made use of the ebb to carry
+them back again."[129:1] These events occupied the tenth to the
+fifteenth of June, and for the impression they produced on Marvell's
+mind we are not dependent upon his restrained letters to his
+constituents, but can turn to his longest rhymed satire, which is
+believed to have been first printed, anonymously of course, as a
+broadsheet in August 1667.
+
+This poem is called _The Last Instructions to a Painter about the Dutch
+Wars_, 1667. The title was derived from Waller's panegyric poem on the
+occasion of the Duke of York's victory over the Dutch on the 3rd of June
+1665, when Opdam, the Dutch admiral, was blown up with his ship.[129:2]
+Sir John Denham, a brother satirist of Marvell's, and with as good an
+excuse for hating the Duke of York as this world affords, had seized
+upon the same idea and published four satirical poems on these same
+Dutch Wars, entitled _Directions to a Painter_ (see _Poems on Affairs of
+State_, 1703, vol. i.).
+
+Marvell's satire, which runs to 900 lines, is essentially a House of
+Commons poem, and could only have been written by a member. It is
+intensely "lobbyish" and "occasional." To understand its allusions, to
+appreciate its "pain-giving" capacity to the full, is now impossible.
+Still, the reader of Clarendon's _Life_, Pepys's _Diary_, and Burnet's
+_History_, to name only popular books, will have no difficulty in
+entering into the spirit of the performance. As a poem it is rough in
+execution, careless, breathless. A rugged style was then in vogue. Even
+Milton could write his lines to the Cambridge Carrier somewhat in this
+manner. Marvell has nothing of the magnificence of Dryden, or of the
+finished malice of Pope. He plays the part, and it is sincerely played,
+of the old, honest member of Parliament who loves his country and hates
+rogues and speaks right out, calling spades spades and the king's women
+what they ought to be called. He is conversational, and therefore
+coarse. The whole history of the events that resulted in the national
+disgrace is told.
+
+ "The close cabal marked how the Navy eats
+ And thought all lost that goes not to the cheats;
+ So therefore secretly for peace decrees,
+ Yet for a War the Parliament would squeeze,
+ And fix to the revenue such a sum
+ Should Goodricke silence and make Paston dumb.
+ ...
+ Meantime through all the yards their orders were
+ To lay the ships up, cease the keels begun.
+ The timber rots, the useless axe does rust,
+ The unpractised saw lies buried in the dust,
+ The busy hammer sleeps, the ropes untwine."
+
+Parliament is got rid of to the joy of Clarendon.
+
+ "Blither than hare that hath escaped the hounds,
+ The house prorogued, the chancellor rebounds.
+ What frosts to fruits, what arsenic to the rat,
+ What to fair Denham mortal chocolate,[130:1]
+ What an account to Carteret, that and more,
+ A parliament is to the chancellor."
+
+De Ruyter makes his appearance, and Monk
+
+ "in his shirt against the Dutch is pressed.
+ Often, dear Painter, have I sat and mused
+ Why he should be on all adventures used.
+ Whether his valour they so much admire,
+ Or that for cowardice they all retire,
+ As heaven in storms, they call, in gusts of state,
+ On Monk and Parliament--yet both do hate.
+ ...
+ Ruyter, the while, that had our ocean curbed,
+ Sailed now amongst our rivers undisturbed;
+ Surveyed their crystal streams and banks so green,
+ And beauties ere this never naked seen."
+
+His flags fly from the topmasts of his ships, but where is the enemy?
+
+ "So up the stream the Belgic navy glides,
+ And at Sheerness unloads its stormy sides."
+
+Chatham was but a few miles further up.
+
+ "There our sick ships unrigged in summer lay,
+ Like moulting fowl, a weak and easy prey,
+ For whose strong bulk earth scarce could timber find,
+ The ocean water, or the heavens wind.
+ Those oaken giants of the ancient race,
+ That ruled all seas, and did our channel grace;
+ The conscious stag, though once the forest's dread,
+ Flies to the wood, and hides his armless head.
+ Ruyter forthwith a squadron doth untack;
+ They sail securely through the river's track.
+ An English pilot too (O, shame! O, sin!)
+ Cheated of 's pay, was he that showed them in."
+
+The chain at Gillingham is broken, to the dismay of Monk, who
+
+ "from the bank that dismal sight does view;
+ Our feather gallants, who came down that day
+ To be spectators safe of the new play,
+ Leave him alone when first they hear the gun,
+ (Cornbury,[131:1] the fleetest) and to London run.
+ Our seamen, whom no danger's shape could fright,
+ Unpaid, refuse to mount their ships for spite,
+ Or to their fellows swim on board the Dutch,
+ Who show the tempting metal in their clutch."
+
+Upnor Castle avails nought.
+
+ "And Upnor's Castle's ill-deserted wall
+ Now needful does for ammunition call."
+
+The _Royal Charles_ is captured before Monk's face.
+
+ "That sacred Keel that had, as he, restored
+ Its excited sovereign on its happy board,
+ Now a cheap spoil and the mean victor's slave
+ Taught the Dutch colours from its top to wave."
+
+Horrors accumulate.
+
+ "Each doleful day still with fresh loss returns,
+ The loyal _London_ now a third time burns,
+ And the true _Royal Oak_ and _Royal James_,
+ Allied in fate, increase with theirs her flames.
+ Of all our navy none shall now survive,
+ But that the ships themselves were taught to dive,
+ And the kind river in its creek them hides.
+ Freighting their pierced keels with oozy tides."
+
+The situation was indeed serious enough. One wiseacre in command in
+London declared his belief that the Tower was no longer "tenable."
+
+ "And were not Ruyter's maw with ravage cloyed,
+ Even London's ashes had been then destroyed."
+
+But the Dutch admiral returns the way he came.
+
+ "Now nothing more at Chatham's left to burn,
+ The Holland squadron leisurely return;
+ And spite of Ruperts and of Albemarles,
+ To Ruyter's triumph led the captive _Charles_.
+ The pleasing sight he often does prolong,
+ Her mast erect, tough cordage, timber strong,
+ Her moving shape, all these he doth survey,
+ And all admires, but most his easy prey.
+ The seamen search her all within, without;
+ Viewing her strength, they yet their conquest doubt;
+ Then with rude shouts, secure, the air they vex,
+ With gamesome joy insulting on her decks.
+ Such the feared Hebrew captive, blinded, shorn,
+ Was led about in sport, the public scorn."
+
+The poet then indulges himself in an emotional outburst.
+
+ "Black day, accursed! on thee let no man hail
+ Out of the port, or dare to hoist a sail,
+ Or row a boat in thy unlucky hour!
+ Thee, the year's monster, let thy dam devour,
+ And constant Time, to keep his course yet right,
+ Fill up thy space with a redoubled night.
+ When agèd Thames was bound with fetters base,
+ And Medway chaste ravished before his face,
+ And their dear offspring murdered in their sight,
+ Thou and thy fellows saw the odious light.
+ Sad change, since first that happy pair was wed,
+ When all the rivers graced their nuptial bed;
+ And father Neptune promised to resign
+ His empire old to their immortal line;
+ Now with vain grief their vainer hopes they rue,
+ Themselves dishonoured, and the gods untrue;
+ And to each other, helpless couple, moan,
+ As the sad tortoise for the sea does groan:
+ But most they for their darling Charles complain,
+ And were it burned, yet less would be their pain.
+ To see that fatal pledge of sea-command,
+ Now in the ravisher De Ruyter's hand,
+ The Thames roared, swooning Medway turned her tide,
+ And were they mortal, both for grief had died."
+
+A scapegoat had, of course, to be at once provided. He was found in Mr.
+Commissioner Pett, the most skilful shipbuilder of the age.
+
+ "After this loss, to relish discontent,
+ Some one must be accused by Parliament.
+ All our miscarriages on Pett must fall,
+ His name alone seems fit to answer all.
+ Whose counsel first did this mad war beget?
+ Who all commands sold through the navy? Pett.
+ Who would not follow when the Dutch were beat?
+ Who treated out the time at Bergen? Pett.
+ Who the Dutch fleet with storms disabled met?
+ And, rifling prizes, them neglect? Pett.
+ Who with false news prevented the Gazette?
+ The fleet divided? writ for Rupert? Pett.
+ Who all our seamen cheated of their debt,
+ And all our prizes who did swallow? Pett.
+ Who did advise no navy out to set?
+ And who the forts left unprepared? Pett.
+ Who to supply with powder did forget
+ Languard, Sheerness, Gravesend, and Upnor? Pett.
+ Who all our ships exposed in Chatham net?
+ Who should it be but the fanatic Pett?"
+
+This outburst can hardly fail to remind the reader of a famous outburst
+of Mr. Micawber's on the subject of Uriah Heep.
+
+The satire concludes with the picture of the king in the dead shades of
+night, alone in his room, startled by loud noises of cannons, trumpets,
+and drums, and then visited by the ghost of his father.
+
+ "And ghastly Charles, turning his collar low,
+ The purple thread about his neck does show."
+
+The pensive king resolves on Clarendon's disgrace, and on rising next
+morning seeks out Lady Castlemaine, Bennet, and Coventry, who give him
+the same advice. He knows them all three to be false to one another and
+to him, but is for the moment content to do what they wish.
+
+I have omitted, in this review of a long poem, the earlier lines which
+deal with the composition of the House of Commons. All its parties are
+described, one after another--the old courtiers, the pension-hunters,
+the king's procurers, then almost a department of State.
+
+ "Then the Procurers under Prodgers filed
+ Gentlest of men, and his lieutenant mild
+ Bronkard, love's squire; through all the field arrayed,
+ No troop was better clad, nor so well paid."
+
+Clarendon had his friends, soon sorely to be needed, and after them,
+
+ "Next to the lawyers, sordid band, appear,
+ Finch in the front and Thurland in the rear."
+
+Some thirty-three members are mentioned by their names and habits. The
+Speaker, Sir Edward Turner, is somewhat unkindly described. Honest men
+are usually to be found everywhere, and they existed even in Charles the
+Second's pensionary Parliament:--
+
+ "Nor could all these the field have long maintained
+ But for the unknown reserve that still remained;
+ A gross of English gentry, nobly born,
+ Of clear estates, and to no faction sworn,
+ Dear lovers of their king, and death to meet
+ For country's cause, that glorious thing and sweet;
+ To speak not forward, but in action brave,
+ In giving generous, but in council grave;
+ Candidly credulous for once, nay twice;
+ But sure the devil cannot cheat them thrice."
+
+No member of Parliament's library is complete without Marvell, who did
+not forget the House of Commons smoking-room:--
+
+ "Even iron Strangways chafing yet gave back
+ Spent with fatigue, to breathe awhile tabac."
+
+Charles hastened to make peace with Holland. He was not the man to
+insist on vengeance or to mourn over lost prestige. De Ruyter had gone
+after suffering repulses at Portsmouth, Plymouth, and Torbay. Peace was
+concluded at Breda on the 21st of July. We gave up Poleroone. _Per
+contra_ we gained a more famous place, New Amsterdam, rechristened New
+York in honour of the duke. All prisoners were to be liberated, and the
+Dutch, despite Sheerness and the _Royal Charles_, agreed to lower their
+flag to all British ships of war.
+
+The fall, long pending, of Clarendon immediately followed the peace.
+Men's tempers were furious or sullen. Hyde had no more bitter, no more
+cruel enemy than Marvell. Why this was has not been discovered, but
+there was nothing too bad for Marvell not to believe of any member of
+Clarendon's household. All the scandals, and they were many and
+horrible, relating to Clarendon and his daughter, the Duchess of York,
+find a place in Marvell's satires and epigrams. To us Lord Clarendon is
+a grave and thoughtful figure, the statesman-author of _The History of
+the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England_, that famous, large book,
+loftily planned, finely executed, full of life and character and the
+philosophy of human existence; and of his own _Autobiography_, a
+production which, though it must, like Burnet's _History_, be read with
+caution, unveils to the reader a portion of that past which usually is
+as deeply shrouded from us as the future. If at times we are reminded in
+reading Clarendon's _Life_ of the old steward in Hogarth's plate, who
+lifts up his hands in horror over the extravagance of his master, if his
+pedantry often irritates, and his love of place displeases, we recognise
+these but as the shades of the character of a distinguished and
+accomplished public servant. But to Marvell Clarendon was rapacious,
+ambitious, and corrupt, a man who had sold Oliver's Dunkirk to the
+French, and shared the price; who had selected for the king's consort a
+barren woman, so that his own damaged daughter might at least chance to
+become Queen of England, who hated Parliaments and hankered after a
+standing army, who took money for patents, who sold public offices, who
+was bribed by the Dutch about the terms of peace, who swindled the
+ruined cavaliers of the funds subscribed for their benefit, and had by
+these methods heaped together great wealth which he ostentatiously
+displayed. Even darker crimes than these are hinted at. That Marvell was
+wrong in his estimate of Clarendon's character now seems certain;
+Clarendon did not get a penny of the Dunkirk money. The case made
+against him by the House of Commons in their articles of impeachment was
+felt even at the time to be flimsy and incapable of proof, and in the
+many records that have come to light since Clarendon's day nothing has
+been discovered to give them support. And yet Marvell was a singularly
+well-informed member of Parliament, a shrewd, level-headed man of
+affairs, who knew Lord Clarendon in the way we know men we have to see
+on business matters, whose speeches we can listen to, and whose conduct
+we discuss and criticise. "Gently scan your brother-man" is a precept
+Marvell never took to heart; nor is the House of Commons a place where
+it is either preached or practised.
+
+When Clarendon was well nigh at the height of his great unpopularity, he
+built himself a fine big house on a site given him by the king where now
+is Albemarle Street. Where did he get the money from? He employed, in
+building it, the stones of St. Paul's Cathedral. True, he bought the
+stones from the Dean and Chapter, but if the man you hate builds a great
+house out of the ruins of a church, is it likely that so trivial a fact
+as a cash payment for the materials is going to be mentioned? Splendid
+furniture and noble pictures were to be seen going into the new
+palace--the gifts, so it was alleged, of foreign ambassadors. What was
+the consideration for these donations? England's honour! Clarendon House
+was at once named Dunkirk House, Holland House, Tangiers House.
+
+Here is Marvell upon it:--
+
+ UPON HIS HOUSE
+
+ "Here lie the sacred bones
+ Of Paul beguilèd of his stones:
+ Here lie golden briberies,
+ The price of ruined families;
+ The cavalier's debenture wall,
+ Fixed on an eccentric basis:
+ Here's Dunkirk-Town and Tangier-Hull,
+ The Queen's marriage and all,
+ The Dutchman's _templum pacis_."
+
+Clarendon's fall was rapid. He knew the house of Stuart too well to
+place any reliance upon the king. Evelyn visited him on the 27th of
+August 1667 after the seals had been taken away from him, and found him
+"in his bed-chamber very sad." His enemies were numerous and powerful,
+both in the House of Commons and at Court, where all the buffoons and
+ladies of pleasure hated him, because--so Evelyn says--"he thwarted some
+of them and stood in their way." In November Evelyn called again and
+found the late Lord-Chancellor in the garden of his new-built palace,
+sitting in his gout wheel-chair and watching the new gates setting up
+towards the north and the fields. "He looked and spoke very
+disconsolately. After some while deploring his condition to me, I took
+my leave. Next morning I heard he was gone."[139:1]
+
+The news was true; on Saturday, the 29th of November, he drove to Erith,
+and after a terrible tossing on the nobly impartial Channel the weary
+man reached Calais, and died seven years later in Rouen, having well
+employed his leisure in completing his history. His palace was sold for
+half what it cost to the inevitable Monk, Duke of Albemarle.
+
+On the 3rd of December Marvell writes that the House, having heard that
+Lord Clarendon had "withdrawn," forthwith ordered an address to his
+Majesty "that care might be taken for securing all the sea ports lest he
+should pass there." Marvell adds grimly, "I suppose he will not trouble
+you at Hull." The king took good care that his late Lord-Chancellor
+should escape. An act of perpetual banishment was at once passed,
+receiving the royal assent on the 19th of December.
+
+Marvell was kept very busy during the early months of 1668, inquiring,
+as our English fashion is, into the "miscarriages of the late war." The
+House more than once sat from nine in the morning till eight at night,
+finding out all it could. "What money, arising by the poll money, had
+been applied to the use of the war?" This was an awkward inquiry. The
+House voted that the not prosecuting the first victory of June 1665 was
+a miscarriage, and one of the greatest: a snub to the Duke of York. The
+not furnishing the Medway with a sufficient guard of ships, though the
+king had then 18,000 men in his pay, was another great miscarriage. The
+paying of the fleet with tickets, without money, was a third great
+miscarriage. All this time Oliver Cromwell's skull was grinning on its
+perch in Westminster Hall.
+
+Besides the honour of England, that of Hull had to be defended by its
+member. A young Lieutenant Wise, one of the Hull garrison, had in some
+boisterous fashion affronted the corporation and the mayor. On this
+correspondence ensues; and Marvell waits upon the Duke of Albemarle, the
+head of the army, to obtain reparation.
+
+ "I waited yesterday upon my Lord General--and first presented your
+ usual fee which the General accepted, but saying that it was
+ unnecessary and that you might have bin pleased to spare it, and he
+ should be so much more at liberty to show how voluntary and
+ affectionate he was toward your corporation. I returned the civilest
+ words I could coin on for the present, and rendered him your humble
+ thanks for his continued patronage of you ... and told him that you
+ had further sent him up a small tribute of your Hull liquor. He
+ thanked you again for all these things which you might--he said--have
+ spared, and added that if the greatest of your military officers
+ should demean himself ill towards you, he would take a course with
+ him."
+
+A mealy-mouthed Lord-General drawing near his end.[140:1]
+
+Wise was removed from the Hull garrison. The affronted corporation was
+not satisfied, and Marvell had to argue the point.
+
+ "And I hope, Sir, you will incline the Bench to consider whether I am
+ able or whether it be fit for me to urge it beyond that point. Yet it
+ is not all his (Wise's) Parliament men and relations that have
+ wrought me in the least, but what I simply conceive as the state of
+ things now to be possible and satisfactory. What would you have more
+ of a soldier than to run away and have him cashiered as to any
+ command in your garrison? The first he hath done and the second he
+ must submit to. And I assure you whatsoever he was among you, he is
+ here a kind of decrepit young gentleman and terribly crest-fallen."
+
+The letter concludes thus:--
+
+ "For I assure you they use all the civility imaginable to you, and as
+ we sat there drinking a cup of sack with the General, Colonel
+ Legge[141:1] chancing to be present, there were twenty good things
+ said on all hands tending to the good fame, reputation, and advantage
+ of the Town, an occasion that I was heartily glad of."
+
+Corporations may not have souls to save and bodies to kill, but
+evidently they have vanities to tickle.
+
+In November 1669 the House is still busy over the accounts. Sir George
+Carteret was Treasurer of the Navy. Marvell refers to him in _The Last
+Instructions to a Painter_ as:--
+
+ "Carteret the rich did the accountants guide
+ And in ill English all the world defied."
+
+The following letter of Marvell's gives an excellent account of House of
+Commons business, both how it is conducted, and how often it gets
+accidentally interrupted by other business unexpectedly cropping up:--
+
+ "_November 20, 1669._
+
+ "GENTLEMEN, MY VERY WORTHY FRIENDS,--Returning after our adjournment
+ to sit upon Wednesday, the House having heard what Sir G. Cartaret
+ could say for himselfe, and he then commended to withdraw, after a
+ considerable debate, put it to the question, whether he were guilty
+ of misdemeanour upon the Commissioners first observation, the words
+ of which were, That all monyes received by him out of His Majesty's
+ Exchequer are by the privy seales assigned for particular services,
+ but no such thing observed or specified in his payments, whereby he
+ hath assumed to himselfe a liberty to make use of the King's
+ treasure for other uses then is directed. The House dividing upon
+ the question, the ayes went out, and wondered why they were kept out
+ so extraordinary a time. The ayes proved 138 and the noes 129; and
+ the reason of the long stay then appeared; the tellers for the ayes
+ chanced to be very ill reckoners, so that they were forced to tell
+ severall times over in the House, and when at last the tellers for
+ the ayes would have agreed the noes to be 142, the noes would needs
+ say that they were 143, whereupon those for the ayes would tell once
+ more and then found the noes to be indeed but 129; and the ayes then
+ coming in proved to be 138; whereas if the noes had been content
+ with the first error of the tellers, Sir George had been quit upon
+ that observation. This I have told you so minutely because it is the
+ second fatall and ominous accident that hath fain out in the
+ divisions about Sir G. Cartaret. Thursday was ordered for the second
+ observation, the words of which are, Two hundred and thirty thousand
+ seven hundred thirty and one thousand pounds thirteen shillings and
+ ninepence, claimed as payd, and deposited for security of interest,
+ and yet no distinct specification of time appeares either on his
+ receits or payments, whereby no judgment can be made how interest
+ accrues; so that we cannot yet allow the same. But this day was
+ diverted and wholy taken up by a speciall report orderd by the
+ Committee for the Bill of Conventicles, that the House be informed
+ of severall Conventicles in Westminster which might be of dangerous
+ consequences. From hence arose much discourse; also of a report that
+ Ludlow was in England, that Commonwealths-men flock about the town,
+ and there were meetings said to be, where they talkt of New Modells
+ of Government; so that the House ordered a Committee to receive
+ informations both concerning Conventicles and these other dangerous
+ meetings; and then entered a resolution upon their books without
+ putting it to the question, That this House will adhere to His
+ Majesty, and the Government of Church and State as now established,
+ against all its enemyes. Friday having bin appointed, as I told you
+ in my former letter, for the House to sit in a grand Committee upon
+ the motion for the King's supply, was spent wholy in debate, whether
+ they should do so or no, and concluded at last in a consent, that
+ the sitting in a grand Committee upon the motion for the King's
+ supply should be put of till Friday next, and so it was ordered. The
+ reason of which kind of proceeding, lest you should thinke to arise
+ from an indisposition of the House, I shall tell you as they appeare
+ to me, to have been the expectation of what Bill will come from the
+ Lords in stead of that of ours which they threw out, and a desire to
+ redresse and see thoroughly into the miscarriages of mony before any
+ more should be granted. To-day the House hath bin upon the second
+ observation, and after a debate till foure a'clock, have voted him
+ guilty also of misdemeanor in that particular. The Commissioners are
+ ordered to attend the House again on Munday, which is done
+ constantly for the illustration of any matter in their report,
+ wherein the House is not cleare. And to say the truth, the House
+ receives great satisfaction from them, and shows them extraordinary
+ respect. These are the things of principall notice since my last."
+
+Carteret eventually was censured and suspended and dismissed.
+
+The sudden incursion of religion during a financial debate is highly
+characteristic of the House of Commons.
+
+Whilst Queen Elizabeth and her advisers did succeed in making some sort
+of a settlement of religion having regard to the questions of her time,
+the Restoration bishops, an inferior set of men, wholly failed. The
+repressive legislation that followed upon the Act of Uniformity,
+succeeded in establishing and endowing (with voluntary contributions)
+what is sometimes called, absurdly enough, Political Dissent. On
+points, not of doctrine, but of ceremony, and of church government, one
+half of the religiously-minded community were by oaths and declarations,
+and by employing the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper as "a picklock to a
+place," drawn out of the service of the State. Excluded from Parliament
+and from all corporate bodies, from grammar-schools and universities,
+English Dissent learned to live its own life, remote from the army, the
+navy, and the civil service, quite outside of what perhaps may be fairly
+called the main currents of the national life. Nonconformists venerated
+their own divines, were reared in their own academies and colleges, read
+their own books, went, when the modified law permitted it, to their own
+conventicles in back streets, and made it their boast that they had
+never entered their parish churches, for the upkeep of which they were
+compelled to subscribe--save for the purpose of being married. The
+nation suffered by reason of this complete severance. Trade excepted,
+there was no community of interest between Church and Dissent. Sobriety,
+gravity, a decent way of life, the sense of religious obligation (even
+when united with the habit of _extempore_ prayer, and a hereditary
+disrespect for bishops' aprons), are national assets, as the expression
+now goes, which cannot be disregarded with impunity.
+
+The Conventicle Act Marvell refers to was a stringent measure, imposing
+pecuniary fines upon any persons of sixteen years of age or upwards who
+"under pretence of religion" should be present at any meeting of more
+than five persons, or more than those of the household, "in other manner
+than allowed by the Liturgy and practice of the Church of England."
+Heavier fines were imposed upon the preachers. The poet Waller, who was
+"nursed in Parliaments," having been first returned from Amersham in
+1621, made a very sensible remark on the second reading: "Let them alone
+and they will preach against each other; by this Bill they will
+incorporate as being all under one calamity."[145:1] But by 144 to 78
+the Bill was read, though it did not become law until the following
+session. An indignant Member of Parliament once told Cromwell that he
+would take the "sense" of the House against some proposal. "Very well,"
+said Cromwell, "you shall take the 'sense' of the House, and I will take
+the 'nonsense,' and we will see who tells the most votes."
+
+In February 1670 the king opened a new session, and in March Marvell
+wrote a private letter to a relative at Bordeaux, in which he "lends his
+mind out," after a fashion forbidden him in his correspondence with his
+constituents:--
+
+ "DEAR COUSIN,-- ... You know that we having voted the King, before
+ Christmas, four hundred thousand pounds, and no more; and enquiring
+ severely into ill management, and being ready to adjourn ourselves
+ till February, his Majesty, fortified by some undertakers of the
+ meanest of our House, threw up all as nothing, and prorogued us from
+ the first of December till the fourteenth of February. All that
+ interval there was great and numerous caballing among the courtiers.
+ The King also all the while examined at council the reports from the
+ Commissioners of Accounts, where they were continually
+ discountenanced, and treated rather as offenders than judges. In
+ this posture we met, and the King, being exceedingly necessitous for
+ money, spoke to us _stylo minaci et imperatorio_; and told us the
+ inconveniences which would fall on the nation by want of a supply,
+ should not ly at his door; that we must not revive any discord
+ betwixt the Lords and us; that he himself had examined the accounts,
+ and found every penny to have been employed in the war; and he
+ recommended the Scotch union. The Garroway party appeared with the
+ usual vigour, but the country gentlemen appeared not in their true
+ number the first day: so, for want of seven voices, the first blow
+ was against them. When we began to talk of the Lords, the King sent
+ for us alone, and recommended a rasure of all proceedings. The same
+ thing you know that we proposed at first. We presently ordered it,
+ and went to tell him so the same day, and to thank him. At coming
+ down, (a pretty ridiculous thing!) Sir Thomas Clifford carryed
+ Speaker and Mace, and all members there, into the King's cellar, to
+ drink his health. The King sent to the Lords more peremptoryly, and
+ they, with much grumbling, agreed to the rasure. When the
+ Commissioners of Accounts came before us, sometimes we heard them
+ _pro formâ_, but all falls to dirt. The terrible Bill against
+ Conventicles is sent up to the Lords; and we and the Lords, as to
+ the Scotch busyness, have desired the King to name English
+ Commissioners to treat, but nothing they do to be valid, but on a
+ report to Parliament, and an act to confirm. We are now, as we
+ think, within a week of rising. They are making mighty alterations
+ in the Conventicle Bill (which, as we sent up, is the quintessence
+ of arbitrary malice), and sit whole days, and yet proceed but by
+ inches, and will, at the end, probably affix a Scotch clause of the
+ King's power in externals. So the fate of the Bill is uncertain, but
+ must probably pass, being the price of money. The King told some
+ eminent citizens, who applyed to him against it, that they must
+ address themselves to the Houses, that he must not disoblige his
+ friends; and if it had been in the power of their friends, he had
+ gone without money. There is a Bill in the Lords to encourage people
+ to buy all the King's fee-farm rents; so he is resolved once more to
+ have money enough in his pocket, and live on the common for the
+ future. The great Bill begun in the Lords, and which makes more ado
+ than ever any Act in this Parliament did, is for enabling Lord Ros,
+ long since divorced in the spiritual court, and his children
+ declared illegitimate by Act of Parliament, to marry again. Anglesey
+ and Ashly, who study and know their interests as well as any
+ gentlemen at court, and whose sons have marryed two sisters of Ros,
+ inheritrixes if he has no issue, yet they also drive on the Bill
+ with the greatest vigour. The King is for the Bill: the Duke of
+ York, and all the Papist Lords, and all the Bishops, except Cosins,
+ Reynolds, and Wilkins, are against it. They sat all Thursday last,
+ without once rising, till almost ten at night, in most solemn and
+ memorable debate, whether it should be read the second time, or
+ thrown out. At last, at the question, there were forty-two persons
+ and six proxys against it, and forty-one persons and fifteen proxys
+ for it. If it had not gone for it, the Lord Arlington had a power in
+ his pocket from the King to have nulled the proxys, if it had been
+ to the purpose. It was read the second time yesterday, and, on a
+ long debate whether it should be committed, it went for the Bill by
+ twelve odds, in persons and proxys. The Duke of York, the bishops,
+ and the rest of the party, have entered their protests, on the first
+ day's debate, against it. Is not this fine work? This Bill must come
+ down to us. It is my opinion that Lauderdale at one ear talks to the
+ King of Monmouth, and Buckingham at the other of a new Queen. It is
+ also my opinion that the King was never since his coming in, nay,
+ all things considered, no King since the Conquest, so absolutely
+ powerful at home, as he is at the present; nor any Parliament, or
+ places, so certainly and constantly supplyed with men of the same
+ temper. In such a conjuncture, dear Will, what probability is there
+ of my doing any thing to the purpose? The King would needs take the
+ Duke of Albemarle out of his son's hand to bury him at his own
+ charges. It is almost three months, and he yet lys in the dark
+ unburyed, and no talk of him. He left twelve thousand pounds a year,
+ and near two hundred thousand pounds in money. His wife dyed some
+ twenty days after him; she layed in state, and was buryed, at her
+ son's expence, in Queen Elizabeth's Chapel. And now,
+
+ "Disce, puer, virtutem ex me verumque laborem,
+ Fortunam ex aliis.
+
+ "_March 21, 1670._"
+
+This remarkable letter lets us into many secrets.
+
+The Conventicle Bill is "the price of money." The king's interest in
+the Roos divorce case was believed to be due to his own desire to be
+quit of a barren and deserted wife.[148:1] Our most religious king had
+nineteen bastards, but no lawful issue. It may seem strange that so high
+a churchman as Bishop Cosin should have taken the view he did, but Cosin
+had a strong dash of the layman in his constitution, and was always an
+advocate of divorce, with permission to re-marry, in cases of adultery.
+
+A further and amending Bill for rebuilding the city was before the
+House--one of eighty-four clauses, "the longest Bill, perhaps, that ever
+past in Parliament," says Marvell; but the Roos Divorce Bill and the
+Conventicle Bill proved so exciting in the House of Lords that they had
+little time for anything else. Union with Scotland, much desired by the
+king, but regarded with great suspicion by all Parliamentarians, fell
+flat, though Commissioners were appointed.
+
+The Conventicle Bill passed the Lords, who tagged on to it a proviso
+Marvell refers to in his next letter, which the Lower House somewhat
+modified by the omission of certain words. Lord Roos was allowed to
+re-marry. The big London Bill got through.
+
+Another private letter of Marvell's, of this date, is worth reading:--
+
+ "DEAREST WILL,--I wrote to you two letters, and payd for them from
+ the posthouse here at Westminster; to which I have had no answer.
+ Perhaps they miscarryed. I sent on an answer to the only letter I
+ received from Bourdeaux, and having put it into Mr. Nelthorp's hand,
+ I doubt not but it came to your's. To proceed. The same day (March
+ 26th letter) my letter bore date, there was an extraordinary thing
+ done. The King, about ten o'clock, took boat, with Lauderdale only,
+ and two ordinary attendants, and rowed awhile as towards the bridge,
+ and soon turned back to the Parliament stairs, and so went up into
+ the House of Lords, and took his seat. Almost all of them were
+ amazed, but all seemed so; and the Duke of York especially was very
+ much surprized. Being sat, he told them it was a privilege he
+ claimed from his ancestors to be present at their deliberations.
+ That therefore, they should not, for his coming, interrupt their
+ debates, but proceed, and be covered. They did so. It is true that
+ this has been done long ago, but it is now so old, that it is new,
+ and so disused, that at any other but so bewitched a time as this,
+ it would have been looked on as an high usurpation, and breach of
+ privilege. He indeed sat still, for the most part, and interposed
+ very little; sometimes a word or two. But the most discerning
+ opinion was, that he did herein as he rowed for having had his face
+ first to the Conventicle Bill, he turned short to the Lord Ross's.
+ So that, indeed, it is credible, the King, in prospect of diminishing
+ the Duke of York's influence in the Lord's House, in this, or any
+ future matter, resolved, and wisely enough at present, to weigh up
+ and lighten the Duke's efficacy, by coming himself in person. After
+ three or four days continuance, the Lords were very well used to the
+ King's presence, and sent the Lord Steward and Lord Chamberlain, to
+ him, when they might wait, as an House on him, to render their
+ humble thanks for the honour he did them. The hour was appointed
+ them, and they thanked him, and he took it well. So this matter, of
+ such importance on all great occasions, seems riveted to them, and
+ us, for the future, and to all posterity. Now the Lord Ross's Bill
+ came in order to another debate, and the King present. Nevertheless
+ the debate lasted an entire day; and it passed by very few voices.
+ The King has ever since continued his session among them, and says
+ it is better than going to a play. In this session the Lords sent
+ down to us a proviso[149:1] for the King, that would have restored
+ him to all civil or ecclesiastical prerogatives which his ancestors
+ had enjoyed at any time since the Conquest. There was never so
+ compendious a piece of absolute universal tyranny. But the Commons
+ made them ashamed of it, and retrenched it. The Parliament was never
+ embarrassed, beyond recovery. We are all venal cowards, except some
+ few. What plots of State will go on this interval I know not. There
+ is a new set of justices of peace framing through the whole kingdom.
+ The governing cabal, since Ross's busyness, are Buckingham,
+ Lauderdale, Ashly, Orrery, and Trevor. Not but the other cabal too
+ have seemingly sometimes their turn. Madam,[150:1] our King's
+ sister, during the King of France's progress in Flanders, is to come
+ as far as Canterbury. There will doubtless be family counsels then.
+ Some talk of a French Queen to be then invented for our King. Some
+ talk of a sister of Denmark; others of a good virtuous Protestant
+ here at home. The King disavows it; yet he has sayed in publick, he
+ knew not why a woman may not be divorced for barrenness, as a man
+ for impotency. The Lord Barclay went on Monday last for Ireland, the
+ King to Newmarket. God keep, and increase you, in all
+ things.--Yours, etc.
+
+ "_April 14, 1670._"
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[77:1] Clarendon's _Life_, vol. ii. p. 442.
+
+[79:1] The clerks, however, only _counted_ the members who voted, and
+kept no record of their _names_. Mr. Gladstone remembered the alteration
+being made in 1836, and how unpopular it was. The change was a greater
+revolution than the Reform Bill. See _The Unreformed House of Commons_
+by Edward Posselt, vol. i. p. 587.
+
+[79:2]
+
+ "And a Parliament had lately met
+ Without a single Bankes."--_Praed_.
+
+[82:1] See Dr. Halley's _Lancashire--its Puritanism and Nonconformity_,
+vol. ii. pp. 1-140, a most informing book.
+
+[88:1] Clarendon's _History_, vol. vi. p. 249.
+
+[90:1] An Historical Poem.--Grosart, vol. i. p. 343.
+
+[92:1] Macaulay's _History_, vol. i. p. 154.
+
+[95:1] I am acquainted with the romantic story which would have us
+believe that Lady Fauconberg, foretelling the time to come, had caused
+some other body than her father's to be buried in the Abbey (see _Notes
+and Queries_, 5th October 1878, and Waylen's _House of Cromwell_, p.
+341).
+
+[96:1] See _The Unreformed House of Commons_, by Edward Porritt, vol. i.
+p. 51. Marvell's old enemy, Parker, Bishop of Oxford, in his _History of
+his own Time_, composed after Marvell's death, reviles his dead
+antagonist for having taken this payment which, the bishop says, was
+made by a custom which "had a long time been antiquated and out of
+date." "Gentlemen," says the bishop, "despised so vile a stipend," yet
+Marvell required it "for the sake of a bare subsistence, although in
+this mean poverty he was nevertheless haughty and insolent." In Parker's
+opinion poor men should be humble.
+
+[98:1] _Parliamentary History_, vol. iv., App. No. III.
+
+[104:1] Mr. Gladstone's testimony is that no real improvement was
+effected until within the period of his own memory. 'Our services were
+probably without a parallel in the world for their debasement.' (See
+_Gleanings_, vi. p. 119.)
+
+[106:1] There is a copy in the library of the _Athenæum_, London: "A
+Relation of Three Embassies from his sacred Majestie Charles II. to the
+Great Duke of Muscovie, the King of Sweden, and the King of Denmark.
+Performed by the Right Ho^ble the Earle of Carlisle in the Years 1663
+and 1664. Written by an Attendant on the Embassies, and published with
+his Lordship's approbation. London. Printed for John Starkie at the
+Miter in Fleet Street, near Temple Barr, 1669."
+
+[109:1] "I have mentioned the dignity of his manners.... He was at his
+very best on occasion of Durbars, investitures, and the like.... It
+irritated him to see men giggling or jeering instead of acting their
+parts properly."--_Life of Lord Dufferin_, vol. ii. p. 317.
+
+[116:1] _Hist. MSS. Com., Portland Papers_, vol. iii. p. 296.
+
+[116:2] See above, vol. iii. p. 294.
+
+[118:1] Sir Walter Besant doubted this. See his _London_.
+
+[123:1] Mr. Goldwin Smith says this was the first pitched battle between
+Protection and Free Trade in England.--_The United Kingdom_, vol. ii. p.
+25.
+
+[126:1] Being curious to discover whether no "property" man raised his
+voice against these measures, I turned to that true "home of lost
+causes," the Protests of the House of Lords; and there, sure enough, I
+found one solitary peer, Henry Carey, Earl of Dover, entering his
+dissent to both Bills--to the Judicature Bill because of the unlimited
+power given to the judges, to the Rebuilding Bill because of the
+exorbitant powers entrusted to the Lord Mayor and Aldermen to give away
+or dispose of the property of landlords.
+
+[128:1] Clarendon's _Life_, vol. iii. p. 796.
+
+[129:1] Clarendon's _Life_, vol. iii. p. 798.
+
+[129:2] "Instructions to a Painter for the drawing of the Posture and
+Progress of His Majesty's forces at Sea under the command of His
+Highness Royal: together with the Battel and Victory obtained over the
+Dutch, June 3, 1665."--Waller's _Works_, 1730, p. 161.
+
+[130:1] Sir John Denham's wife was reported to have been poisoned by a
+dish of chocolate, at the bidding of the Duchess of York.
+
+[131:1] Clarendon's eldest son.
+
+[139:1] It is disconcerting to find Evelyn recording this, his last
+visit to Clarendon, in his Diary under date of the 9th December, by
+which time the late Chancellor was in Rouen. One likes notes in a diary
+to be made contemporaneously and not "written-up" afterwards. Evelyn
+makes the same kind of mistake about Cromwell's funeral, misdating it a
+month.
+
+[140:1] The duke died in 1670 and had a magnificent funeral on the 30th
+of April. See _Hist. MSS. Com., Duke of Portland's Papers_, vol. iii. p.
+314. His laundress-Duchess did not long survive him.
+
+[141:1] Afterwards Lord Dartmouth, a great friend of James the Second,
+but one who played a dubious part at the Revolution.
+
+[145:1] The poet Waller was one of the wittiest speakers the House of
+Commons has ever known.
+
+[148:1] For a full account of this remarkable case, see Clarendon's
+_Life_, iii. 733-9.
+
+[149:1] "Provided, etc., that neither this Act nor anything therein
+contained shall extend to invalidate or avoid his Majesty's supremacy in
+ecclesiastical affairs [or to destroy any of his Majesty's rights powers
+or prerogatives belonging to the Imperial Crown of this realm or at any
+time exercised by himself or any of his predecessors Kings or Queens of
+England] but that his Majesty his heirs and successors may from time to
+time and at all times hereafter exercise and enjoy all such powers and
+authorities aforesaid as fully and amply as himself or any of his
+predecessors have or might have done the same anything in this Act (or
+any other law statute or usage to the contrary) notwithstanding." The
+words in brackets were rejected by the Commons. See _Parliamentary
+History_, iv. 446-7.
+
+[150:1] Madame's business is now well known. The secret Treaty of Dover
+was the result of this visit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+"THE REHEARSAL TRANSPROSED"
+
+
+It is never easy for ecclesiastical controversy to force its way into
+literature. The importance of the theme will be questioned by few. The
+ability displayed in its illumination can be denied by none. It is the
+temper that usually spoils all. A collection in any way approaching
+completeness, of the pamphlets this contention has produced in England,
+would contain tens of thousands of volumes; full of curious learning and
+anecdotes, of wide reading and conjecture, of shrewdness and wit; yet
+these books are certainly the last we would seek to save from fire or
+water. Could they be piled into scales of moral measurement a single
+copy of the _Imitatio_, of the _Holy Dying_, of the _Saint's Rest_,
+would outweigh them all. Man may not be a religious animal, but he
+recognises and venerates the spirit of religion whenever he perceives
+it, and it is a spirit which is apt to evaporate amidst the strife of
+rival wits. Who can doubt the sincerity of Milton, when he exclaimed
+with the sad prophet Jeremy, "Woe is me my Mother that thou hast borne
+me a man of strife and contention."
+
+Marvell's chief prose work, the two parts of _The Rehearsal
+Transprosed_, is a very long pamphlet indeed, composed by way of reply
+to certain publications of Samuel Parker, afterwards Bishop of Oxford.
+Controversially Marvell's book was a great success.[152:1] It amused the
+king, delighted the wits, was welcomed, if not read, by the pious folk
+whose side it espoused, whilst its literary excellence was sufficient to
+win, in after years, the critical approval of Swift, whose style, though
+emphatically his own, bears traces of its master having given, I will
+not say his days and nights, but certainly some profitable hours, to the
+study of Marvell's prose.
+
+Biographers of controversialists seldom do justice to the other side.
+Possibly they do not read it, and Parker has been severely handled by my
+predecessors. He was not an honour to his profession, being, perhaps, as
+good or as bad a representative of the seamy side of State Churchism as
+there is to be found. He was the son of a Puritan father, and whilst at
+Wadham lived by rule, fasting and praying. He took his degree in the
+early part of 1659, and migrating to Trinity came under the influence of
+Dr. Bathurst, then Senior Fellow, to whom, so he says in one of his
+dedications, "I owe my first rescue from the chains and fetters of an
+unhappy education."[152:2] Anything Parker did he did completely, and
+we next hear of him in London in 1665, a nobleman's chaplain, setting
+the table in a roar by making fun of his former friends, "a mimical way
+of drolling upon the puritans." "He followed the town-life, haunted the
+best companies and, to polish himself from any pedantic roughness, he
+read and saw the plays with much care and more preparing than most of
+the auditory." In 1667 the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Sheldon, a very
+mundane person indeed, made Parker his chaplain, and three years later
+Archdeacon of Canterbury. He reached many preferments, so that, says
+Marvell, "his head swell'd like any bladder with wind and vapour." He
+had an active pen and a considerable range of subject. In 1670 he
+produced "A Discourse of Ecclesiastical Politie wherein the Authority of
+the Civil Magistrate over the Consciences of Subjects in Matters of
+External Religion is Asserted; The Mischiefs and Inconveniences of
+Toleration are represented and all Pretenses pleaded in behalf of
+_Liberty of Conscience_ are fully answered." Some one instantly took up
+the cudgels in a pamphlet entitled _Insolence and Impudence Triumphant_,
+and the famous Dr. Owen also protested in _Truth and Innocence
+Vindicated_. Parker replied to Owen in _A Defence and Continuation of
+Ecclesiastical Politie_, and in the following year, 1672, reprinted a
+treatise of Bishop Bramholl's with a preface "shewing what grounds there
+are of Fears and Jealousies of Popery."
+
+This was the state of the controversy when Marvell entered upon it with
+his _Rehearsal Transprosed_, a fantastic title he borrowed for no very
+good reasons from the farce of the hour, and a very good farce too, the
+Duke of Buckingham's _Rehearsal_, which was performed for the first time
+at the Theatre Royal on the 7th of November 1671, and printed early in
+1672. Most of us have read Sheridan's _Critic_ before we read
+Buckingham's _Rehearsal_, which is not the way to do justice to the
+earlier piece. It is a matter of literary tradition that the duke had
+much help in the composition of a farce it took ten years to make.
+Butler, Sprat, and Clifford, the Master of Charterhouse, are said to be
+co-authors. However this may be, the piece was a great success, and both
+Marvell and Parker, I have no doubt, greatly enjoyed it, but I cannot
+think the former was wise to stuff his plea for Liberty of Conscience so
+full as he did with the details of a farce. His doing so should, at all
+events, acquit him of the charge of being a sour Puritan. In the
+_Rehearsal_ Bayes (Dryden), who is turned by Sheridan in his adaptation
+of the piece into Mr. Puff, is made to produce out of his pocket his
+book of _Drama Commonplaces_, and the play proceeds (_Johnson_ and
+_Smith_ being _Sheridan's_ Dangle and Sneer):
+
+ "_Johnson._ _Drama Commonplaces_! pray what's that?
+
+ _Bayes._ Why, Sir, some certain helps, that we men of Art have found
+ it convenient to make use of.
+
+ _Johnson._ How, Sir, help for Wit?
+
+ _Bayes._ I, Sir, that's my position. And I do here averr, that no man
+ yet the Sun e'er shone upon, has parts sufficient to furnish out a
+ Stage, except it be with the help of these my rules.
+
+ _Johnson._ What are those Rules, I pray?
+
+ _Bayes._ Why, Sir, my first Rule is the Rule of Transversion, or
+ _Regula Duplex_, changing Verse into Prose, or Prose into Verse,
+ _alternative_ as you please.
+
+ _Smith._ How's that, Sir, by a Rule, I pray?
+
+ _Bayes._ Why, thus, Sir; nothing more easy when understood: I take a
+ Book in my hand, either at home, or elsewhere, for that's all one,
+ if there be any Wit in 't, as there is no Book but has some, I
+ Transverse it; that is, if it be Prose, put it into Verse (but
+ that takes up some time), if it be Verse, put it into Prose.
+
+ _Johnson._ Methinks, Mr. _Bayes_, that putting Verse into Prose
+ should be called Transprosing.
+
+ _Bayes_. By my troth, a very good Notion, and hereafter it shall be
+ so."
+
+Marvell must be taken to have meant by his title that he saw some
+resemblance between Parker and Bayes, and, indeed, he says he does, and
+gives that as one of his excuses for calling Parker Bayes all through:--
+
+ "But before I commit myself to the dangerous depths of his Discourse
+ which I am now upon the brink of, I would with his leave, make a
+ motion; that instead of Author I may henceforth indifferently well
+ call him Mr. Bayes as oft as I shall see occasion. And that first
+ because he has no name, or at least will not own it, though he
+ himself writes under the greatest security, and gives us the first
+ letters of other men's names before he be asked them. Secondly,
+ because he is, I perceive, a lover of elegancy of style and can
+ endure no man's tautologies but his own; and therefore I would not
+ distaste him with too frequent repetition of one word. But chiefly
+ because Mr. Bayes and he do very much symbolise, in their
+ understandings, in their expressions, in their humour, in their
+ contempt and quarrelling of all others, though of their own
+ profession."
+
+But justice must be done even to Parker before handing him over to the
+Tormentor. What were his positions? He was a coarse-fibred, essentially
+irreligious fellow, the accredited author of the reply to the question
+"What is the best body of Divinity?" "That which would help a man to
+keep a Coach and six horses," but he is a lucid and vigorous writer,
+knowing very well that he had to steer his ship through a narrow and
+dangerous channel, avoiding Hobbism on the one side and tender
+consciences on the other. Each generation of State Churchmen has the
+same task. The channel remains to-day just as it ever did, with Scylla
+and Charybdis presiding over their rocks as of old. Hobbes's _Leviathan_
+appeared in 1651, and in 1670 both his philosophy and his statecraft
+were fashionable doctrine. All really pious people called Hobbes an
+Atheist. Technically he was nothing of the sort, but it matters little
+what he was technically, since no plain man who can read can doubt that
+Hobbes's enthronement of the State was the dethronement of God:--
+
+ "Seeing then that in every Christian commonwealth the civil sovereign
+ is the supreme factor to whose charge the whole flock of his subjects
+ is commuted, and consequently that it is by his authority that all
+ other pastors are made and have power to teach and perform all other
+ pastoral offices, it followeth also that it is from the civil
+ sovereign that all other pastors derive their right of teaching,
+ preaching and other functions pertaining to that office, and that
+ they are but his ministers in the same way as the magistrates of
+ towns, judges in Court of Justice and commanders of assizes are all
+ but ministers of him that is the magistrate of the whole
+ commonwealth, judge of all causes and commander of the whole militia,
+ which is always the Civil Sovereign. And the reason hereof is not
+ because they that teach, but because they that are to learn, are his
+ subjects."--(_The Leviathan_, Hobbes's _English Works_ (Molesworth's
+ Edition), vol. iii. p. 539.)
+
+Hobbes shirks nothing, and asks himself the question, What if a king, or
+a senate or other sovereign person forbid us to believe in Christ? The
+answer given is, "such forbidding is of no effect; because belief and
+unbelief never follow men's commands." But suppose "we be commanded by
+our lawful prince to say with our tongue we believe not, must we obey
+such command?" Here Hobbes a little hesitates to say outright "Yes, you
+must"; but he does say "whatsoever a subject is compelled to do in
+obedience to his own Sovereign, and doth it not in order to his own
+mind, but in order to the laws of his country, that action is not his,
+but his Sovereign's--nor is it that he in this case denieth Christ
+before men, but his Governor and the law of his country." Hobbes then
+puts the case of a Mahomedan subject of a Christian Commonwealth who is
+required under pain of death to be present at the Divine Service of the
+Christian Church--what is he to do? If, says Hobbes, you say he ought
+to die, then you authorise all private men to disobey their princes in
+maintenance of their religion, true or false, and if you say the
+Mahomedan ought to obey, you admit Hobbes's proposition and ought to
+consent to be yourself bound by it. (See Hobbes's _English Works_, iii.
+493.)
+
+The Church of England, though anxious both to support the king and
+suppress the Dissenters, could not stomach Hobbes; but if it could not,
+how was it to deal with Hobbes's question, "if it is _ever_ right to
+disobey your lawful prince, who is to determine _when_ it is right?"
+
+Parker seeks to grapple with this difficulty. He disowns Hobbes.
+
+ "When men have once swallowed this principle, that Mankind is free
+ from all obligations antecedent to the laws of the Commonwealth, and
+ that the Will of the Sovereign Power is the only measure of Good and
+ Evil, they proceed suitably to its consequences to believe that no
+ Religion can obtain the force of law till it is established as such
+ by supreme authority, that the Holy Scriptures were not laws to any
+ man till they were enjoyn'd by the Christian Magistrate, and that if
+ the Sovereign Power would declare the Alcoran to be Canonical
+ Scripture, it would be as much the Word of God as the Four Gospels.
+ (See _Hobbes_, vol. iii. p. 366.) So that all Religions are in
+ reality nothing but Cheats and impostures to awe the common people to
+ obedience. And therefore although Princes may wisely make use of the
+ foibles of Religion to serve their own turns upon the silly
+ multitude, yet 'tis below their wisdom to be seriously concerned
+ themselves for such fooleries." (Parker's _Ecc. Politie_, p. 137.)
+
+As against this fashionable Hobbism, Parker pleads Conscience.
+
+ "When anything that is apparently and intrinsically evil is the
+ Matter of a Human Law, whether it be of a Civil or Ecclesiastical
+ concern, here God is to be obeyed rather than Man."
+
+He forcibly adds:--
+
+ "Those who would take off from the Consciences of Men all obligations
+ antecedent to those of Human Laws, instead of making the power of
+ Princes Supreme, Absolute and Uncontrollable, they utterly enervate
+ all their authority, and set their subjects at perfect liberty from
+ all their commands. For if we once remove all the antecedent
+ obligations of Conscience and Religion, Men will no further be bound
+ to submit to their laws than only as themselves shall see convenient,
+ and if they are under no other restraint it will be their wisdom to
+ rebel as oft as it is their interest." (_Ecc. Politie_, pp. 112-113.)
+
+But though when dealing with Hobbes, Parker thinks fit to assert the
+claims of conscience so strongly, when he has to grapple with those who,
+like the immortal author of _The Pilgrim's Progress_, "devilishly and
+perniciously abstained from coming to Church," and upheld "unlawful
+Meetings and Conventicles," his tone alters, and it is hard to
+distinguish his position from that of the philosopher of Malmesbury.
+
+Parker's argument briefly stated, and as much as possible in his own
+vigorous language, comes to this:
+
+There is and always must be a competition between the prerogative of
+the Prince or State and that of Conscience, which on this occasion is
+defined as "every private man's own judgment and persuasion of things."
+"Do subjects rebel against their Sovereign? 'Tis Conscience that takes
+up arms. Do they murder Kings? 'Tis under the conduct of Conscience. Do
+they separate from the communion of the Church? 'Tis Conscience that is
+the Schismatick. Everything that a man has a mind to is his Conscience."
+(_Ecc. Politie_, p. 6.)
+
+How is this competition to be resolved? Parker answers in exact language
+which would have met with John Austin's warm approval.
+
+ "The Supreme Government of every Commonwealth, wherever it is lodged,
+ must of necessity be universal, absolute and uncontrollable. For if
+ it be limited, it may be controlled, but 'tis a thick and palpable
+ contradiction to call such a power supreme in that whatever controls
+ it must as to that case be its Superior. And therefore affairs of
+ Religion being so strongly influential upon affairs of State, they
+ must be as uncontrollably subject to the Supreme Power as all other
+ Civil concerns." (_Ecc. Politie_, p. 27.)
+
+If the magistrate may make penal laws against swearing and blasphemy,
+why not as to rites and ceremonies of public worship? (39.) Devotion
+towards God is a virtue akin to gratitude to man; religion is a branch
+of morality. The Puritans' talk about grace is a mere imposture, (76)
+which extracts from Parker vehement language. What is there to make such
+a fuss about? he cries. Why cannot you come to Church? You are left free
+to _think_ what you like. Your secret thoughts are your own, but living
+as you do in society, and knowing as you must how, unless the law
+interferes, "every opinion must make a sect, and every sect a faction,
+and every faction when it is able, a war, and every war is the cause of
+God, and the cause of God can never be prosecuted with too much
+violence" (16), why cannot you conform to a form of worship which,
+though it does not profess to be prescribed in all particulars, contains
+nothing actually forbidden in the Scriptures? What authority have
+Dissenters for singing psalms in metre? "Where has our Saviour or his
+Apostles enjoined a directory for public worship? What Scripture command
+is there for the _three_ significant ceremonies of the Solemn League and
+Covenant, viz. that the whole congregation should take it (1) uncovered,
+(2) standing, (3) with their right hand lift up bare" (184), and so on.
+
+In answer to the objection that the civil magistrate might establish a
+worship in its own nature sinful and sensual, Parker replies it is not
+in the least likely, and the risk must be run. "Our enquiry is to find
+out the best way of settling the world that the state of things admit
+of--if indeed mankind were infallible, this controversy were at an end,
+but seeing that all men are liable to errors and mistakes, and seeing
+that there is an absolute necessity of a supreme power in all public
+affairs, our question (I say) is, What is the most prudent and expedient
+way of settling them, not that possibly might be, but that really is.
+And this (as I have already sufficiently proved) is to devolve their
+management on the supreme civil power which, though it may be imperfect
+and liable to errors and mistakes, yet 'tis the least so, and is a much
+better way to attain public peace and tranquillity than if they were
+left to the ignorance and folly of every private man" (212).
+
+I now feel that at least I have done Parker full justice, but as so far
+I have hardly given an example of his familiar style, I must find room
+for two or three final quotations. The thing Parker hated most in the
+world was a _Tender Conscience_. He protests against the weakness which
+is content with passing penal laws, but does not see them carried out
+for fear of wounding these trumpery tender consciences. "Most men's
+minds or consciences are weak, silly and ignorant things, acted by fond
+and absurd principles and imposed upon by their vices and their
+passions." (7.) "However, if the obligation of laws must yield to that
+of a tender conscience, how impregnably is every man that has a mind to
+disobey armed against all the commands of his superiors. No authority
+shall be able to govern him farther than he himself pleases, and if he
+dislike the law he is sufficiently excused (268). A weak conscience is
+the product of a weak understanding, and he is a very subtil man that
+can find the difference between a tender head and a tender conscience
+(269). It is a glorious thing to suffer for a tender conscience, and
+therefore it is easy and natural for some people to affect some little
+scruples against the commands of authority, thereby to make themselves
+obnoxious to some little penalties, and then what godly men are they
+that are so ready to be punished for a good conscience" (278). "The
+voice of the publick law cannot but drown the uncertain whispers of a
+tender conscience; all its scruples are hushed and silenced by the
+commands of authority. It dares not whimper when that forbids, and the
+nod of a prince awes it into silence and submission. But if they dare to
+murmur, and their proud stomachs will swell against the rebukes of their
+superiors, then there is no remedy but the rod and correction. They must
+be chastised out of their peevishness and lashed into obedience (305).
+The doctor concludes his treatise with the words always dear to men of
+fluctuating opinions, 'What I have written, I have written'" (326).
+
+Whilst Parker was writing this book in his snug quarters in the
+Archbishop's palace at Lambeth, Bunyan was in prison in Bedford for
+refusing to take the communion on his knees in his parish church; and
+Dr. Manton, who had been offered the Deanery of Rochester, was in the
+Gate House Prison under the Five Mile Act.
+
+The first part of _The Rehearsal Transprosed_, though its sub-title is
+"Animadversions upon a late book intituled a Preface shewing what
+grounds there are of Fears and Jealousies of Popery," deals after
+Marvell's own fashion with all three of Parker's books, the
+_Ecclesiastical Politie_, the _Bramhall Preface_, and the _Defence of
+the Ecclesiastical Politie_. It is by no means so easy to give a fair
+notion of the _Rehearsal Transprosed_ in a short compass, as it was of
+Parker's line of argument. The parson wrote more closely than the Member
+of Parliament. I cannot give a better description of Marvell's method
+than in Parker's own words in his preface to his _Reproof to the
+Rehearsal Transprosed_, which appeared in 1673 and gave rise to
+Marvell's second part:--
+
+ "When," writes Parker, "I first condemned myself to the drudgery of
+ this Reply, I intended nothing but a serious prosecution of my
+ Argument, and to let the World see that it is not reading Histories
+ or Plays or Gazettes, nor going on pilgrimage to Geneva, nor learning
+ French and Italian, nor passing the Alps, nor being a cunning
+ Gamester that can qualify a man to discourse of Conscience and
+ Ecclesiastical Policy; in that it is not capping our Argument with a
+ story that will answer it, nor clapping an apothegm upon an assertion
+ that will prove it, nor stringing up Proverbs and Similitudes upon
+ one another that will make up a Coherent Discourse."
+
+Allowing for bias this is no unfair account of Marvell's method, and it
+was just because this was Marvell's method that he succeeded so well in
+amusing the king and in pleasing the town, and that he may still be read
+by those who love reading with a fair measure of interest and enjoyment.
+
+Witty and humorous men are always at a disadvantage except on the stage.
+The hum-drum is the style for Englishmen. Bishop Burnet calls Marvell "a
+droll," Parker, who was to be a bishop, calls him "a buffoon." Marvell
+is occasionally humorous and not infrequently carries a jest beyond the
+limits of becoming mirth; but he is more often grave. Yet when he is,
+his gravity was treated either as one of his feebler jokes or as an
+impertinence. But as it is his wit alone that has kept him alive he need
+not be pitied overmuch.
+
+The substance of Marvell's reply to Parker, apart altogether from its
+by-play, is to be found in passages like the following:--
+
+ "Here it is that after so great an excess of wit, he thinks fit to
+ take a julep and re-settle his brain and the government. He grows as
+ serious as 'tis possible for a madman, and pretends to sum-up the
+ whole state of the controversy with the Nonconformists. And to be
+ sure he will make the story as plausible for himself as he may; but
+ therefore it was that I have before so particularly quoted and bound
+ him up with his own words as fast as such a Proteus could be
+ pinion'd. For he is as waxen as the first matter, and no form comes
+ amiss to him. Every change of posture does either alter his opinion
+ or vary the expression by which we should judge of it; and sitting he
+ is of one mind, and standing of another. Therefore I take myself the
+ less concern'd to fight with a windmill like Quixote; or to whip a
+ gig as boyes do; or with the lacqueys at Charing-Cross or
+ Lincoln's-Inn-Fields to play at the Wheel of Fortune; lest I should
+ fall into the hands of my Lord Chief-Justice, or Sir Edmond Godfrey.
+ The truth is, in short, and let Bayes make more or less of it if he
+ can, Bayes had at first built-up such a stupendous magistrate as
+ never was of God's making. He had put all princes upon the rack to
+ stretch them to his dimension. And as a straight line continued grows
+ a circle, he had given them so infinite a power, that it was extended
+ unto impotency. For though he found it not till it was too late in
+ the cause, yet he felt it all along (which is the understanding of
+ brutes) in the effect. For hence it is that he so often complains
+ that princes know not aright that supremacy over consciences, to
+ which they were so lately, since their deserting the Church of Rome,
+ restored; that in most Nations government was not rightly understood,
+ and many expressions of that nature: whereas indeed the matter is,
+ that princes have always found that uncontroulable government over
+ _conscience_ to be both unsafe and impracticable. He had run himself
+ here to a stand, and perceived that there was a God, there was
+ Scripture; the magistrate himself had a conscience, and must 'take
+ care that he did not enjoyn things apparently evil.' But after all,
+ he finds himself again at the same stand here, and is run up to the
+ wall by an angel. God, and Scripture, and conscience will not let him
+ go further; but he owns, that if the magistrate enjoyns things
+ apparently evil, the subject may have liberty to remonstrate. What
+ shall he do, then? for it is too glorious an enterprize to be
+ abandoned at the first rebuffe. Why, he gives us a new translation of
+ the Bible, and a new commentary! He saith, that tenderness of
+ conscience might be allowed in a Church to be constituted, not in a
+ Church constituted already. That tenderness of conscience and scandal
+ are ignorance, pride, and obstinacy. He saith, the Nonconformists
+ should communicate with him till they have clear evidence that it is
+ evil. This is a civil way indeed of gaining the question, to perswade
+ men that are unsatisfied, to be satisfied till they be dissatisfied.
+ He threatens, he rails, he jeers them, if it were possible, out of
+ all their consciences and honesty; and finding that will not do, he
+ calls out the magistrate, tells him these men are not fit to live;
+ there can be no security of government while they are in being. Bring
+ out the pillories, whipping-posts, gallies (=galleys), rods, and
+ axes (which are _ratio ultima cleri_, a clergyman's last argument, ay
+ and his first too), and pull in pieces all the Trading Corporations,
+ those nests of Faction and Sedition. This is a faithful account of
+ the sum and intention of all his undertaking, for which, I confess,
+ he was as pick'd a man as could have been employed or found out in a
+ whole kingdome; but it is so much too hard a task for any man to
+ atchieve, that no goose but would grow giddy with it."[165:1]
+
+In reply to what Parker had written about the unreasonable fuss made by
+the Dissenters over the "two or three symbolical ceremonies" called
+sacraments, Marvell says:--
+
+ "They (the Nonconformists) complain that these things should be
+ imposed on them with so high a penalty as want nothing of a
+ sacramental nature but divine institution. And because a human
+ institution is herein made of equal force to a divine institution
+ therefore it is that they are aggrieved.... For without the sign of
+ the Cross our Church will not receive any one in Baptism; as also
+ without kneeling no man is suffered to come to the Communion.... But
+ here, I say, then is their (the Nonconformists') main exception that
+ things indifferent and that have no proper signature or significancy
+ to that purpose should by command be made conditions of
+ Church-communion. I have many times wished for peaceableness' sake
+ that they had a greater latitude, but if, unless they should stretch
+ their consciences till they tear again, they cannot conform, what
+ remedy? For I must confess that Christians have a better right and
+ title to the Church and to the ordinances of God there, than the
+ Author hath to his surplice.... Bishop Bramhall saith, 'I do profess
+ to all the world that the transforming of indifferent opinions into
+ necessary articles of faith hath been that _insana laurus_ or cursed
+ bay tree, the cause of all our brawling and contention.' That which
+ he saw in matter of doctrine, he would not discern in discipline....
+ It is true and very piously done that our Church doth declare that
+ the kneeling at the Lord's Supper is not enjoined for adoration of
+ those elements and concerning the other ceremonies as before. But
+ the Romanists (from whom we have them and who said of old we would
+ come to feed on their meat as well as eat of their porridge) do offer
+ us here many a fair declaration and distinction in very weighty
+ matters to which nevertheless the conscience of our Church hath not
+ complyed. But in this particular matter of kneeling which came in
+ first with the doctrine of transubstantiation, the Romish Church do
+ reproach us with flat idolatry, in that we, not believing the real
+ presence in the bread and wine, yet do pay to something or other the
+ same adoration. Suppose the ancient pagans had declared to the
+ primitive Christians that the offerings of some grains of incense was
+ only to perfume the room--do you think the Christians would have
+ palliated so far and colluded with their consciences? Therefore
+ although the Church do consider herself so much as not to alter her
+ mode unto the fashion of others, yet I cannot see why she ought to
+ exclude those from communion whose weaker consciences cannot, for
+ fear of scandal, step further."[166:1]
+
+With Parker's thunders and threats of the authority of princes and
+states, Marvell deals more in the mood of a statesman than of a
+philosopher, more as a man of affairs than as a jurist. He deplores the
+ferocity of Parker's tone and that of a certain number of the clergy.
+
+ "Why is it," he asks, "that this kind of clergy should always be and
+ have been for the most precipitate, brutish, and sanguinary counsels?
+ The former Civil War cannot make them wise, nor his Majesty's happy
+ return good-natured, but they are still for running things up unto
+ the same extremes. The softness of the Universities where they have
+ been bred, the gentleness of Christianity, in which they have been
+ nurtured, hath but exasperated their nature, and they seem to have
+ contracted no idea of wisdom but what they learnt at school--the
+ pedantry of Whipping. For whether it be or no that the clergy are not
+ so well fitted by education as others for political affairs I know
+ not, though I should rather think they have advantage above others,
+ and even if they would but keep to their Bibles, might make the best
+ Ministers of State in the world; yet it is generally observed that
+ things miscarry under their government. If there be any council more
+ precipitate, more violent, more extreme than other, it is theirs.
+ Truly, I think the reason that God does not bless them in affairs of
+ State is because he never intended them for that employment."[167:1]
+
+Of Archbishop Laud and Charles the First, Marvell says:--
+
+ "I am confident the Bishop studied to do both God and his Majesty
+ good service; but alas, how utterly was he mistaken. Though so
+ learned, so pious, so wise a man, he seem'd to know nothing beyond
+ Ceremonies, Armenianism, and Mainwaring. With that he begun, with
+ that ended, and thereby deform'd the whole reign of the best prince
+ that ever wielded the English sceptre. For his late Majesty, being a
+ prince truly pious and religious, was therefore the more inclined to
+ esteem and favour the clergy. And thence, though himself of a most
+ exquisite understanding, yet he could not trust it better than in
+ their treatment. Whereas every man is best at his own post, and so
+ the preacher in the pulpit."[167:2]
+
+Kings, Marvell points out to Parker, must take wider views than parsons.
+
+ "'Tis not with them as with you. You have but one cure of souls, or
+ perhaps two as being a nobleman's chaplain, to look after, and if you
+ made conscience of discharging them as you ought, you would find you
+ had work sufficient without writing your 'Ecclesiastical Policies.'
+ But they are the incumbents of whole kingdoms, and the rectorship of
+ the common people, the nobility, and even of the clergy. The care I
+ say of all this rests on them, so that they are fain to condescend to
+ many things for peace sake and the quiet of mankind that your proud
+ heart would break before it would bend to. They do not think fit to
+ require any thing that is impossible, unnecessary or wanton of their
+ people, but are fain to consider the very temper of the climate in
+ which they live, the constitution and laws under which they have been
+ formerly bred, and upon all occasions to give them good words and
+ humour them like children. They reflect upon the histories of former
+ times and the present transactions to regulate themselves by in every
+ circumstance.... They (Kings) do not think fit to command things
+ unnecessary."[168:1]
+
+These extracts, however fatal to Marvell's traditional reputation in the
+eighteenth century as a Puritan and a Republican, call for no apology.
+
+An example of Marvell's Interludes ought to be given. There are many to
+choose from.
+
+ "There was a worthy divine, not many years dead, who in his younger
+ time, being of a facetious and unlucky humour, was commonly known by
+ the name of Tom Triplet; he was brought up at Paul's school under a
+ severe master, Dr. Gill, and from thence he went to the University.
+ There he took liberty (as 'tis usual with those that are emancipated
+ from School) to tel tales and make the discipline ridiculous under
+ which he was bred. But not suspecting the doctor's intelligence,
+ coming once to town he went in full school to give him a visite and
+ expected no less than to get a play day for his former acquaintances.
+ But instead of that he found himself hors'd up in a trice, though he
+ appeal'd in vain to the priviledges of the University, pleaded
+ _adultus_ and invoked the mercy of the spectators. Nor was he let
+ down till the master had planted a grove of birch in his back-side
+ for the terrour and publick example of all waggs that divulge the
+ secrets of Priscian and make merry with their teachers. This stuck so
+ with Triplet that all his life-time he never forgave the doctor, but
+ sent him every New Year's tide an anniversary ballad to a new tune,
+ and so in his turn avenged himself of his jerking pedagogue."[168:2]
+
+Marvell's game of picquet with a parson plays such a part in Parker's
+_Reproof_ to the _Rehearsal Transprosed_ that it deserves to be
+mentioned:--
+
+ "'Tis not very many years ago that I used to play at picket; there
+ was a gentleman of your robe, a dignitory of Lincoln, very well
+ known and remembered in the ordinaries, but being not long since
+ dead, I will save his name. Now I used to play pieces, and this
+ gentleman would always go half-a-crown with me; and so all the while
+ he sate on my hand he very honestly '_gave the sign_' so that I was
+ always sure to lose. I afterwards discovered it, but of all the money
+ that ever I was cheated of in my life, none ever vexed me so as what
+ I lost by his occasion."[169:1]
+
+There is no need to pursue the controversy further. It is still
+unsettled.
+
+Parker's _Reproof_, published in 1673, is less argumentative and
+naturally enough more personal than the _Ecclesiastical Politie_. Any
+use I now make of it will be purely biographical. Let us see Andrew
+Marvell depicted by an angry parson--not in passages of mere abuse, as
+_e.g._ "Thou dastard Craven, thou Swad, thou Mushroom, thou coward in
+heart, word and deed, thou Judas, thou Crocodile"; for epithets such as
+these are of no use to a biographer--but in places where Marvell is at
+least made to sit for the portrait, however ill-natured.
+
+ "And if I would study revenge I could easily have requited you with
+ the Novels of a certain Jack Gentleman, that was born of pure parents
+ and bred among cabin-boys, and sent from school to the University and
+ from the University to the Gaming Ordinaries, but the young man,
+ being easily rooked by the old Gamesters, he was sent abroad to gain
+ courage and experience, and beyond sea saw the Bears of Berne and the
+ large race of Capons at Geneva, and a great many fine sights beside,
+ and so returned home as accomplished as he went out, tries his
+ fortune once more at the Ordinaries, plays too high for a gentleman
+ of his private condition, and so is at length cheated of all at
+ Picquet." ... "And now to conclude; is it not a sad thing that a
+ well-bred and fashionable gentleman that has frequented Ordinaries,
+ that has worn Perukes and Muffs and Pantaloons and was once Master of
+ a Watch, that has travelled abroad and seen as many men and
+ countries as the famous Vertuosi, Sorbier and Coriat, that has heard
+ the City Lions roar, that has past the Alps and seen all the
+ Tredescin rarities and old stones of Italy, that has sat in the
+ Porphyric Chair at Rome, that can describe the methods of the
+ Elections of Popes and tell stories of the tricks of Cardinals, that
+ has been employed in Embassies abroad and acquainted with Intrigues
+ of State at home, that has read Plays and Histories and Gazettes;
+ that I say a Gentleman thus accomplished and embellished within and
+ without and all over, should ever live to that unhappy dotage as at
+ last to dishonour his grey hairs and his venerable age with such
+ childish and impotent endeavours at wit and buffoonery."--(_Reproof_,
+ pp. 270, 274-5.)[170:1]
+
+Marvell was very little over fifty years of his age at this time, nor is
+Parker's portrait to be regarded as truthful in any other
+particular--yet something of a man's character may be discovered by
+noticing the way he is abused by those who want to abuse him.
+
+Marvell, though no orator, or even debater, was the stuff of which
+controversialists are made. In a letter, printed in the Duke of
+Portland's papers, and dated May 3, 1673, he writes:--
+
+ "Dr. Parker will be out the next week. I have seen it--already three
+ hundred and thirty pages and it will be much more. (It was five
+ hundred twenty-eight pages.) I perceive by what I have read that it
+ is the rudest book, one or other, that ever was published, I may say
+ since the first invention of printing. Although it handles me so
+ roughly, yet I am not at all amated by it. But I must desire the
+ advice of some few friends to tell me whether it will be proper for
+ me and in what way to answer it. However I will for mine own private
+ satisfaction forthwith draw up an answer that shall have as much of
+ spirit and solidity in it as my ability will afford and the age we
+ live in will endure. I am, if I may say it with reverence, drawn in I
+ hope by a good Providence to intermeddle on a noble and high
+ argument. But I desire that all the discourse of my friends may run
+ as if no answer ought to be expected to so scurrilous a
+ book."--(_Hist. MSS. Comm., Portland Papers_, iii. 337.)
+
+The title-page of the Second Part of the _Rehearsal Transprosed_ is a
+curiosity:--
+
+ THE
+ REHEARSALL
+ TRANSPROS'D:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE SECOND PART.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Occasioned by Two Letters: The first Printed
+ by a nameless Author, Intituled, A
+ Reproof, etc.
+
+ The Second Letter left for me at a Friends
+ House, Dated Nov. 3, 1673. Subscribed
+ J.G. and concluding with these words;
+ If thou darest to Print or Publish any
+ Lie or Libel against Doctor Parker, By
+ the Eternal God I will cut thy Throat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Answered by ANDREW MARVEL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON,
+
+ Printed for Nathaniel Ponder at the Peacock
+ in Chancery Lane near Fleet-Street, 1673.
+
+The _Second Part_ is an exceedingly witty though too lengthy a
+performance. Marvell's "companion picture" of Parker is full of matter,
+and of the very spirit of the times. Some of it must be given:--
+
+ "But though he came of a good mother, he had a very ill sire. He was
+ a man bred toward the Law, and betook himself, as his best practice,
+ to be a sub-committee-man, or, as the stile ran, one of the Assistant
+ Committee in Northamptonshire. In the rapine of that employment, and
+ what he got by picking the teeth of his masters, he sustain'd himself
+ till he had raked together some little estate. And then, being a man
+ for the purpose, and that had begun his fortune out of the
+ sequestration of the estates of the King's Party, he, to perfect it
+ the more, proceeded to take away their lives; not in the hot and
+ military way (which diminishes always the offence), but in the cooler
+ blood and sedentary execution of an High Court of Justice.
+ Accordingly he was preferr'd to be one of that number that gave
+ sentence against the three Lords, Capel, Holland, and Hamilton, who
+ were beheaded. By this learning in the Law he became worthy of the
+ degree of a serjeant, and sometimes to go the Circuit, till for
+ misdemeanor he was petition'd against. But for a taste of his
+ abilities, and the more to reingratiate himself, he printed, in the
+ year 1650, a very remarkable Book, called 'The Government of the
+ People of England, precedent and present the same. _Ad subscribentes
+ confirmandum, Dubitantes informandum, Opponentes convincendum_; and
+ underneath _Multa videntur quae non sunt, multa sunt quae non
+ videntur_. Under that ingraven two hands joyn'd, with the motto, _Ut
+ uniamur_; and beneath a sheaf of arrows, with this device, _Vis unita
+ fortior_; and to conclude, _Concordia parvae res crescunt discordia
+ dilabuntur_.' A most hieroglyphical title, and sufficient to have
+ supplied the mantlings and atchievements of the family! By these
+ parents he was sent to Oxford, with intention to breed him up to the
+ ministry. There in a short time he enter'd himself into the company
+ of some young students who were used to fast and pray weekly
+ together; but for their refection fed sometimes on broth, from whence
+ they were commonly called Grewellers; only it was observed that he
+ was wont still to put more graves than all the rest in his porridge.
+ And after that he pick'd acquaintance not only with the brotherhood
+ at Wadham Colledge, but with the sisterhood too, at another old
+ Elsibeth's, one Elizabeth Hampton's, a plain devout woman, where he
+ train'd himself up in hearing their sermons and prayers, receiving
+ also the Sacrament in the house, till he had gain'd such proficience,
+ that he too began to exercise in that Meeting, and was esteem'd one
+ of the preciousest young men in the University. But when thus, after
+ several years' approbation, he was even ready to have taken the
+ charge, not of an 'admiring drove or heard,' as he now calls them,
+ but of a flock upon him, by great misfortune the King came in by the
+ miraculous providence of God, influencing the distractions of some,
+ the good affections of others, and the weariness of all towards that
+ happy Restauration, after so many sufferings, to his regal crown and
+ dignity. Nevertheless he broke not off yet from his former habitudes;
+ and though it were now too late to obviate this inconvenience, yet he
+ persisted as far as in him was--that is, by praying, caballing, and
+ discoursing--to obstruct the restoring of the episcopal government,
+ revenues, and authority. Insomuch that, finding himself
+ discountenanced on those accounts by the then Warden of Wadham, he
+ shifted colledges to Trinity, and, when there, went away without his
+ degree, scrupling, forsooth, the Subscription then required. From
+ thence he came to London, where he spent a considerable time in
+ creeping into all corners and companies, horoscoping up and down
+ concerning the duration of the Government; not considering anything
+ as best, but as most lasting and most profitable. And after having
+ many times cast a figure, he at last satisfyed himself that the
+ Episcopal Government would endure as long as this King lived; and
+ from thence forward cast about how to be admitted into the Church of
+ England, and find the highway to her preferments. In order to this he
+ daily enlarged, not only his conversation, but his conscience, and
+ was made free of some of the town-vices; imagining, like Muleasses
+ King of Tunis (for I take witness that on all occasions I treat him
+ rather above his quality than otherwise), that by hiding himself
+ among the onions, he should escape being traced by his perfumes.
+ Ignorant and mistaken man, that thought it necessary to part with any
+ virtue to get a living; or that the Church of England did not require
+ and incourage more sobriety than he could ever be guilty of; whereas
+ it hath alwayes been fruitful of men who, together with obedience to
+ that discipline, have lived to the envy of the Nonconformists in
+ their conversation, and without such could never either have been
+ preserved so long, or after so long a dissipation have ever
+ recover'd. But neither was this yet, in his opinion, sufficient; and
+ therefore he resolv'd to try a shorter path, which some few men had
+ trod not unsuccessfully; that is, to print a Book; if that would not
+ do, a second; if not that, a third of an higher extraction, and so
+ forward, to give experiment against their former party of a keen
+ stile and a ductile judgment. His first proof-piece was in the year
+ 1665, the _Tentamina Physico-Theologica_; a tedious transcript of his
+ common-place book, wherein there is very little of his own, but the
+ arrogance and the unparalleled censoriousness that he exercises over
+ all other Writers. When he had cook'd up these musty collections, he
+ makes his first invitation to his 'old acquaintance' my lord
+ Archbishop of Canterbury, who had never seen before nor heard of him.
+ But I must confess he furbishes-up his Grace in so glorious an
+ Epistle, that had not my Lord been long since proof against the most
+ spiritual flattery, the Dedication only, without ever reading the
+ Book, might have serv'd to have fix'd him from that instant as his
+ favourite. Yet all this I perceive did not his work, but his Grace
+ was so unmindful, or rather so prudent, that the gentleman thought it
+ necessary to spur-up again the next year with another new Book, to
+ show more plainly what he would be at. This he dedicates to Doctor
+ Bathurst; and to evidence from the very Epistle that he was ready to
+ renounce that very education, the civility of which he is so tender
+ of as to blame me for disordering it, he picks occasion to tell him:
+ 'to your prevailing advice, Sir, do I owe my first rescue from the
+ chains and fetters of an unhappy education.' But in the Book, which
+ he calls 'A free and impartial Censure of the Platonick Philosophy'
+ (censure 'tis sure to be, whatsoever he writes), he speaks out, and
+ demonstrates himself ready and equipp'd to surrender not only the
+ Cause, but betray his Party without making any conditions for them,
+ and to appear forthwith himself in the head of the contrary interest.
+ Which, supposing the dispute to be just, yet in him was so mercenary,
+ that none would have descended to act his part but a divine of
+ fortune. And even lawyers take themselves excused from being of
+ counsel for the King himself, in a cause where they have been
+ entertain'd and instructed by their client. But so flippant he was
+ and forward in this book, that in despight of all chronology, he
+ could introduce Plato to inveigh against Calvin, and from the
+ Platoniques he could miraculously hook-in a Discourse against the
+ Nonconformists. (_Cens. Plat. Phil._, pp. 26, 27, 28, etc.) After
+ this feat of activity he was ready to leap over the moon; no scruple
+ of conscience could stand in his way, and no preferment seemed too
+ high for him; for about this time, I find that having taken a turn at
+ Cambridge to qualifie himself, he was received within doors to be my
+ Lord Archbishop's other chaplain, and into some degree of favour;
+ which, considering the difference of their humours and ages, was
+ somewhat surprizing. But whether indeed, in times of heat and
+ faction, the most temperate spirits may sometimes chance to take
+ delight in one that is spightful, and make some use of him; or
+ whether it be that even the most grave and serious persons do for
+ relaxation divert themselves willingly by whiles with a creature that
+ is unlucky, inimical, and gamesome,--so it was. And thenceforward the
+ nimble gentleman danced upon bell-ropes, vaulted from steeple to
+ steeple, and cut capers out of one dignity to another. Having thus
+ dexterously stuck his groat in Lambeth wainscot, it may easily be
+ conceived he would be unwilling to lose it; and therefore he
+ concern'd himself highly, and even to jealousie, in upholding now
+ that palace, which, if falling, he would out of instinct be the first
+ should leave it. His Majesty about that time labouring to effect his
+ constant promises of Indulgence to his people, the Author therefore
+ walking with his own shadow in the evening, took a great fright lest
+ all were agoe. And in this conceit being resolv'd to make good his
+ figure, and that one government should not last any longer than the
+ other, he set himself to write those dangerous Books which I have now
+ to do with; wherein he first makes all that he will to be Law, and
+ then whatsoever is Law to be Divinity."[176:1]
+
+The Second Part is not all raillery. There is much wisdom in it and a
+trace of Machiavelli:--
+
+ "But because you are subject to misconstrue even true English, I will
+ explain my self as distinctly as I can, and as close as possible,
+ what is mine own opinion in this matter of the magistrate and
+ government; that, seeing I have blamed you where I thought you
+ blame-worthy, you may have as fair hold of me too, if you can find
+ where to fix your accusation.
+
+ "The power of the magistrate does most certainly issue from the
+ divine authority. The obedience due to that power is by divine
+ command; and subjects are bound, both as men and as Christians, to
+ obey the magistrate actively in all things where their duty to God
+ intercedes not, and however passively, that is, either by leaving
+ their countrey, or if they cannot do that (the magistrate, or the
+ reason of their own occasions hindring them), then by suffering
+ patiently at home, without giving the least publick disturbance. But
+ the dispute concerning the magistrate's power ought to be
+ superfluous; for that it is certainly founded upon his commission
+ from God, and for the most part sufficiently fortified with all
+ humane advantages. There are few soveraign princes so abridged, but
+ that, if they be not contented, they may envy their own fortune. But
+ the modester question (if men will needs be medling with matters
+ above them) would be, how far it is advisable for a prince to exert
+ and push the rigour of that power which no man can deny him; for
+ princes, as they derive the right of succession from their ancestors,
+ so they inherit from that ancient and illustrious extraction a
+ generosity that runs in the blood above the allay of the rest of
+ mankind. And being moreover at so much ease of honour and fortune,
+ that they are free from the gripes of avarice and twinges of
+ ambition, they are the more disposed to an universal benignity
+ toward their subjects. What prince that sees so many millions of men,
+ either labouring industriously toward his revenue, or adventuring
+ their lives in his service, and all of them performing his commands
+ with a religious obedience, but conceives at the same time a
+ relenting tenderness over them, whereof others out of the narrowness
+ of their minds cannot be capable? But whoever shall cast his eye
+ thorow the history of all ages, will find that nothing has alwayes
+ succeeded better with princes then the clemency of government; and
+ that those, on the contrary, who have taken the sanguinary course,
+ have been unfortunate to themselves and the people, the consequences
+ not being separable. For whether that royal and magnanimous
+ gentleness spring from a propensity of their nature, or be acquired
+ and confirmed by good and prudent consideration, it draws along with
+ it all the effects of Policy. The wealth of a shepherd depends upon
+ the multitude of his flock, the goodness of their pasture, and the
+ quietness of their feeding; and princes, whose dominion over mankind
+ resembles in some measure that of men over other creatures, cannot
+ expect any considerable increase to themselves, if by continual
+ terrour they amaze, shatter, and hare their people, driving them into
+ woods, and running them upon precipices. If men do but compute how
+ charming an efficacy one word, and more, one good action has from a
+ superior upon those under him, it can scarce be reckon'd how powerful
+ a magick there is in a prince who shall, by a constant tenour of
+ humanity in government, go on daily gaining upon the affections of
+ his people. There is not any privilege so dear, but it may be
+ extorted from subjects by good usage, and by keeping them alwayes up
+ in their good humour. I will not say what one prince may compass
+ within his own time, or what a second, though surely much may be
+ done; but it is enough if a great and durable design be accomplish'd
+ in the third life; and supposing an hereditary succession of any
+ three taking up still where the other left, and dealing still in that
+ fair and tender way of management, it is impossible but that, even
+ without reach or intention upon the prince's part, all should fall
+ into his hand, and in so short a time the very memory or thoughts of
+ any such thing as publick liberty would, as it were by consent,
+ expire and be for ever extinguish'd. So that whatever the power of
+ the magistrate be in the institution, it is much safer for them not
+ to do that with the left hand which they may do with the right, nor
+ by an extraordinary, what they may effect by the ordinary, way of
+ government. A prince that goes to the top of his power is like him
+ that shall go to the bottom of his treasure."[178:1]
+
+And as for the "common people" he has this to say:--
+
+ "Yet neither do they want the use of reason, and perhaps their
+ aggregated judgment discerns most truly the errours of government,
+ forasmuch as they are the first, to be sure, that smart under them.
+ In this only they come to be short-sighted, that though they know the
+ diseases, they understand not the remedies; and though good patients,
+ they are ill physicians. The magistrate only is authorized,
+ qualified, and capable to make a just and effectual Reformation, and
+ especially among the Ecclesiasticks. For in all experience, as far as
+ I can remember, they have never been forward to save the prince that
+ labour. If they had, there would have been no Wickliffe, no Husse, no
+ Luther in history. Or at least, upon so notable an emergency as the
+ last, the Church of Rome would then in the Council of Trent have
+ thought of rectifying itself in good earnest, that it might have
+ recover'd its ancient character; whereas it left the same divisions
+ much wider, and the Christian people of the world to suffer,
+ Protestants under Popish governors, Popish under Protestants, rather
+ than let go any point of interested ambition."[178:2]
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[152:1] "But the most virulent of all that writ against the sect was
+Parker, afterwards made Bishop of Oxford by King James: who was full of
+satirical vivacity and was considerably learned, but was a man of no
+judgment and of as little virtue, and as to religion rather impious:
+after he had for some years entertained the nation with several virulent
+books writ with much life, he was attacked by the liveliest droll of the
+age, who writ in a burlesque strain but with so peculiar and
+entertaining a conduct that from the King down to the tradesman his
+books were read with great pleasure, that not only humbled Parker but
+the whole party, for the author of the _Rehearsal Transprosed_ had all
+the men of wit (or as the French phrase it all the laughers) on his
+side."--Burnet's _History of his Own Time_.
+
+[152:2] See the dedication to _A Free and Impartial Censure of the
+Plutonick Philosophy_, by Sam Parker, A.M., Oxford 1666. Parker was a
+man of some taste, and I have in my small collection a beautifully bound
+copy of this treatise presented by the author to Seth Ward, then Bishop
+of Exeter, and afterwards of Salisbury.
+
+[165:1] Grosart, vol. iii. pp. 145-8.
+
+[166:1] Grosart, vol. iii. pp. 155-9.
+
+[167:1] Grosart, vol. iii. pp. 170, 210-1.
+
+[167:2] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 211.
+
+[168:1] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 171.
+
+[168:2] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 63.
+
+[169:1] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 198.
+
+[170:1] For a still more unfriendly sketch of Andrew Marvell by the same
+spiteful hand, see Parker's _History of his Own Time_, a posthumous
+work, first published in Latin in 1726, and in an English Translation by
+_Thomas Newlin_ in 1727. This book contains an interesting enumeration
+of the numerous conspiracies against the life and throne of Charles the
+Second during the earlier part of his reign, a panegyric upon Archbishop
+Sheldon and plentiful abuse of Andrew Marvell. Parker died in unhappy
+circumstances (see Macaulay's _History_, vol. ii. p. 205), but he left
+behind him a pious nonjuring son, and his grandson founded the famous
+publishing firm at Oxford.
+
+[176:1] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 284.
+
+[178:1] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 370.
+
+[178:2] _Ibid._, p. 382.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+LAST YEARS IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
+
+
+Marvell's last ten years in the House of Commons were made miserable by
+the passionate conviction that there existed in high quarters of the
+State a deep, dangerous, and well-considered plot to subvert the
+Protestant faith and to destroy by armed force Parliamentary Government
+in England. Marvell was not the victim of a delusion. Such a plot, plan,
+or purpose undoubtedly existed, though, as it failed, it is now easy to
+consider the alarm it created to have been exaggerated.
+
+Marvell was, of all public men then living, the one most deeply imbued
+with the spirit of our free constitution. Its checks and balances jumped
+with his humour. His nature was without any taint of fanaticism, nor was
+he anything of the doctrinaire. He was neither a Richard Baxter nor a
+John Locke. He had none of the pure Erastianism of Selden, who tells us
+in his inimitable, cold-blooded way that "a King is a King men have made
+for their own sakes, for quietness' sake." "Just as in a family one man
+is appointed to buy the meat," and that "there is no such thing as
+spiritual jurisdiction; all is civil, the Church's is the same with the
+Lord Mayor's. The Pope he challenges jurisdiction over all; the Bishops
+they pretend to it as well as he; the Presbyterians they would have it
+to themselves, but over whom is all this, the poor layman" (see Selden's
+_Table Talk_).
+
+This may be excellent good sense but it does not represent Marvell's
+way of looking at things. He thought more nobly of both church and king.
+
+In Marvell's last book, his famous pamphlet "_An Account of the Growth
+of Popery and Arbitrary Government in England," printed at Amsterdam and
+recommended to the reading of all English Protestants_, 1678, which made
+a prodigious stir and (it is sad to think) paved the way for the "Popish
+Plot," Marvell sets forth his view of our constitution in language as
+lofty as it is precise. I know no passage in any of our institutional
+writers of equal merit.
+
+ "For if first we consider the State, the kings of England rule not
+ upon the same terms with those of our neighbour nations, who, having
+ by force or by address usurped that due share which their people had
+ in the government, are now for some ages in the possession of an
+ arbitrary power (which yet no prescription can make legal) and
+ exercise it over their persons and estates in a most tyrannical
+ manner. But here the subjects retain their proportion in the
+ Legislature; the very meanest commoner of England is represented in
+ Parliament, and is a party to those laws by which the Prince is sworn
+ to govern himself and his people. No money is to be levied but by the
+ common consent. No man is for life, limb, goods, or liberty, at the
+ Sovereign's discretion: but we have the same right (modestly
+ understood) in our propriety that the prince hath in his regality:
+ and in all cases where the King is concerned, we have our just remedy
+ as against any private person of the neighbourhood, in the Courts of
+ Westminster Hall or in the High Court of Parliament. His very
+ Prerogative is no more than what the Law has determined. His Broad
+ Seal, which is the legitimate stamp of his pleasure, yet is no longer
+ currant, than upon the trial it is found to be legal. He cannot
+ commit any person by his particular warrant. He cannot himself be
+ witness in any cause: the balance of publick justice being so
+ delicate, that not the hand only but even the breath of the Prince
+ would turn the scale. Nothing is left to the King's will, but all is
+ subjected to his authority: by which means it follows that he can do
+ no wrong, nor can he receive wrong; and a King of England keeping to
+ these measures, may without arrogance, be said to remain the onely
+ intelligent Ruler over a rational People. In recompense therefore and
+ acknowledgment of so good a Government under his influence, his
+ person is most sacred and inviolable; and whatsoever excesses are
+ committed against so high a trust, nothing of them is imputed to him,
+ as being free from the necessity or temptation; but his ministers
+ only are accountable for all, and must answer it at their perils. He
+ hath a vast revenue constantly arising from the hearth of the
+ Householder, the sweat of the Labourer, the rent of the Farmer, the
+ industry of the Merchant, and consequently out of the estate of the
+ Gentleman: a large competence to defray the ordinary expense of the
+ Crown, and maintain its lustre. And if any extraordinary occasion
+ happen, or be but with any probable decency pretended, the whole Land
+ at whatsoever season of the year does yield him a plentiful harvest.
+ So forward are his people's affections to give even to superfluity,
+ that a forainer (or Englishman that hath been long abroad) would
+ think they could neither will nor chuse, but that the asking of a
+ supply were a meer formality, it is so readily granted. He is the
+ fountain of all honours, and has moreover the distribution of so many
+ profitable offices of the Household, of the Revenue, of State, of
+ Law, of Religion, of the Navy and (since his present Majestie's time)
+ of the Army, that it seems as if the Nation could scarce furnish
+ honest men enow to supply all those imployments. So that the Kings of
+ England are in nothing inferiour to other Princes, save in being more
+ abridged from injuring their own subjects: but have as large a field
+ as any of external felicity, wherein to exercise their own virtue,
+ and so reward and incourage it in others. In short, there is nothing
+ that comes nearer in Government to the Divine Perfection, than where
+ the Monarch, as with us, injoys a capacity of doing all the good
+ imaginable to mankind, under a disability to all that is
+ evil."[181:1]
+
+This was the constitution which Marvell, whose means of information
+were great and whose curiosity was insatiable, believed to be in danger.
+No wonder he was agitated.
+
+The politics in which Marvell was immersed during his last years are
+difficult to unravel and still more difficult to illuminate, for they
+had their dim origin in the secret thoughts and wavering purposes of the
+king.
+
+Charles the Second, like many another Englishman guiltless of Stuart
+blood in his veins, was mainly governed by his dislikes, his pleasures,
+and his financial necessities. To suppose, as some hasty moralisers have
+done, that Charles cared for nothing but his women is to misread his
+character. He had many qualifications to be the chief magistrate of a
+nation of shopkeepers. He was ever alive to the supreme importance of
+English trade upon the high seas. His thoughts were often turned in the
+direction of the Indies, east and west. He took a constant, though not
+always an honest, interest in the navy. He hated Holland for more
+reasons than one, but among these reasons was his hatred of England's
+most formidable and malicious trade competitor. He also disliked her
+arid and ugly Protestantism, and blood being thicker than water, he
+hated Holland for what he considered her shabby treatment of his
+youthful nephew, whose ultimate destiny was happily hidden from
+Whitehall. Among Charles's many dislikes must be included the Anglican
+bishops, who had prevented him from keeping his word, and foiled his
+purpose of a wide toleration. He envied his brother of France the wide
+culture, the literature and art of Catholicism. He regretted the
+Reformation, and would have been best pleased to see the English Church
+in communion with Rome and in possession of "Anglican liberties" akin
+to those enjoyed by the Gallican Church. Charles was also jealous of
+Louis the Fourteenth, and in many moods had no mind to play perpetually
+a second fiddle. He longed for a navy to sweep the seas, for an army
+strong enough to keep his Parliament in check, and for liberty for
+himself and for all those of his subjects who were so minded, to hear
+Mass on Sundays. Behind, and above, and always surrounding these desires
+and dislikes, was an ever-present, ever-pressing need for money. Like a
+royal Becky Sharp, Charles might have found it easy to be a patriotic
+king on five millions a year.
+
+The king was his own Foreign Minister, and being what he was, and swayed
+by the considerations I have imperfectly described, his foreign policy
+was necessarily tortuous and perplexing. As Ranke says, "Charles was
+capable of proposing offensive alliances to the three neighbouring
+powers, to the Dutch against France, to the French against Spain and
+Holland, to the Spaniards against France to the detriment of Holland,
+but in these propositions two fundamental views always recur--demands
+for money, and assurance of world-wide commerce for England."[183:1]
+
+Charles first allowed Sir William Temple, a cool, prudent man, to form,
+in a famous five days' negotiation, the defensive treaty with Holland,
+which, after Sweden had joined it, became known as the Triple Alliance
+(1668). This alliance had for its objects mutual promises between the
+contracting parties to come to each other's assistance by sea and land
+if attacked by any power (France being here intended), to force Spain to
+make peace with France on the terms already offered, and to compel
+France to keep those terms when agreed to by Spain.
+
+The Triple Alliance was not only very popular in England, but was good
+diplomacy, for it was quite within the range of practical politics that
+France and Holland might have combined against England; nor could it
+easily be maintained that the alliance was hostile to France, as it
+provided that Spain should be forced to accept the terms France had
+already proposed.
+
+What wrecked the Triple Alliance and prepared the way for the secret
+Treaty of Dover (1670), was the impossibility of settling those
+religious difficulties which, despite the Act of Uniformity, were more
+rampant than ever. The king wanted to patch up peace, and to secure some
+working plan of comprehension or composure, under cover of which the
+Catholic religion should be tolerated and Presbyterianism formally
+recognised. But, king though he was, he could not get his way. The
+Church and the House of Commons, full as the latter was of his pimps and
+pensioners, were as obstinate as mules in this matter of toleration.
+They would neither favour Papists nor Dissenters, protested against
+Indulgences as unconstitutional, and clamoured for a rigorous
+administration of that penal legislation against Nonconformists which
+they had purchased with so many and such lavish supplies. As a matter of
+fact, these penal laws were very fitfully enforced. In London they were
+often totally disregarded, and we read of congregations numbering two
+thousand openly attending Presbyterian services. The Lord Mayor for the
+time being took his orders direct from the king.
+
+What was Charles to do? After the fall of Clarendon, the king's
+favourite privy councillors, called the "Cabal," because the initial
+letters of their names formed a word which for some time previously had
+been in common use, represent only too faithfully the confusion and
+corruption of the times. Clifford was a zealous Roman, Arlington a
+cautious one, Buckingham a free-thinker and mocker, friendly to France
+and on good terms with the more advanced English sectaries; Ashley made
+no pretence to be a Christian, but favoured philosophic toleration;
+whilst Lauderdale, one of the most learned ministers that ever sat in
+council (so Ranke says[185:1]), was, as a matter of profession, a
+Presbyterian, but in reality a man wholly and slavishly devoted to the
+king's interests, and prepared at any moment to pour into the kingdom
+soldiers from Scotland to purge or suppress all Free Institutions.
+
+Irritated, disgusted, thwarted, and annoyed, the king, acting, it well
+may be, under the influence of his accomplished sister, the beautiful
+and ill-fated Duchess of Orleans, struck up, to use Marvell's own words,
+"an invisible league with France." The negotiations were either by word
+of mouth or by letters which have been burnt. Dr. Lingard in his history
+gives an interesting account of this mysterious transaction. Two things
+are apparent as the objects of the Treaty of Dover. The Dutch Republic
+is to be destroyed, and the cause of Catholicism in England is to be
+promoted and maintained. It was this latter object that seems most to
+have excited the hopes of the Duchess of Orleans. A woman's hand is
+traceable throughout. Charles promised to profess himself openly a Roman
+Catholic at the time that should appear to be most expedient, and
+subsequently to that profession he was to join with Louis in making war
+upon the Dutch Republic. At the date of this bewildering agreement, it
+was high treason by statute even to _say_ that Charles was a Roman
+Catholic. In case the king's public conversion should lead to
+disturbances, Louis promised an "aid" of two millions of _livres_ and an
+armed force of six thousand men. He also agreed to pay the whole cost of
+the Dutch War _on land_, and to contribute thirty men-of-war to the
+English fleet. Holland once crushed, England's share of the plunder was
+to be Walcheren, Sluys, and Cadsand. A remarkable conversion! It is
+difficult to suppose that either Charles or Louis were quite serious
+over this part of the business. Yet there it is. The Catholic provisions
+of the secret Treaty of Dover were only known to Clifford, whose soul
+was fired by them, and to Arlington, who did not share the confident
+hopes of his co-religionist. Clifford thought there were thousands of
+Englishmen "of light and leading" among the English Catholics who would
+be both willing and able to assume the burdens of the State and to rally
+round a Catholic king. Arlington thought otherwise.
+
+The king's public conversion never took place. No hint was given of any
+such impending event. Parliament met on the 24th of October 1670, and
+after hearing a good deal about the Triple Alliance and voting large
+sums of money, was prorogued in April 1671, and did not meet again till
+February 1673.
+
+To pick a quarrel with the Dutch was never difficult. Marvell tells us
+how it was done. "A sorry yacht, but bearing the English Jack, in August
+1671 sails into the midst of the Dutch fleet, singles out the Admiral,
+shooting twice as they call it, sharp upon him. Which must sure have
+appeared as ridiculous and unnatural as for a lark to dare the hobby."
+The Dutch admiral asking "Why," was told "because he and his whole fleet
+had failed to strike sail to his small craft." The Dutch commander then
+"civilly excused it as a matter of the first instance, and in which he
+could have no instruction, therefore proper to be referred to their
+masters, and so they parted. The yacht having thus acquitted itself,
+returned fraught with the quarrel she was sent for."[187:1] Surinam was
+a perpetual _casus belli_. Some offence against the law of nations was
+always happening there. A third matter, very full of gunpowder, was made
+great use of by the promoters of the war already agreed upon. A picture
+had been hung at Dort representing De Witt sailing up the Medway very
+much in the manner described in Marvell's poem. Medals also had been
+struck and distributed in commemoration of the same event. War was
+declared against Holland by England and France in March 1672. The
+Declaration of War was preceded by the Declaration of Indulgence,
+whereby, wrote Marvell, "all the penal laws against Papists for which
+former Parliaments had given so many supplies, and against
+Nonconformists for which this Parliament had paid more largely, were at
+one instant suspended in order to defraud the nation of all that
+religion which they had so dearly purchased, and for which they ought at
+least, the bargain being broke, to have been reimbursed."[187:2]
+
+The unconstitutional suspension of bad laws put lovers of freedom in a
+predicament. Marvell was what he calls a "composure," that is a
+"comprehension," man. In the _Growth of Popery_ he sorrowfully admits
+that it is the gravest reproach of human wisdom that no man seems able
+or willing to find out the due temper of Government in divine matters.
+
+ "Insomuch that it is no great adventure to say, that the world was
+ better ordered under the ancient monarchies and commonwealths, that
+ the number of virtuous men was then greater, and that the Christians
+ found fairer quarter under those than among themselves, nor hath
+ there any advantage accrued unto mankind from that most perfect and
+ practical model of humane society, except the speculation of a better
+ way to future happiness, concerning which the very guides disagree,
+ and of those few that follow, it will suffer no man to pass without
+ paying at their turnpikes." (Vol. iv. p. 280.)
+
+The French Alliance made the war, though with Holland, unpopular.
+Writers had to be hired to defend it. France was supposed to look on
+with much composure as her two maritime competitors battered each
+other's fleets. At sea the honours were divided between the Dutch and
+the English. On land Louis had it all his own way. Besides, rumours got
+abroad of an uncomfortable plot to restore Popery. Jesuits seemed to
+abound. Roman Catholics asserted themselves, the laws being suspended.
+An army was collected at Blackheath. The Treasury was closed. Charles
+had been badly bled by the goldsmiths or bankers, who had charged him
+£12 per cent.; but in commercial centres Acts of Bankruptcy are seldom
+popular, and though the bankers were compelled to be content with £6 per
+cent., the closing of the Treasury brought ruin into many homes.
+
+When Parliament met in February 1673, its temper was bad. It would have
+nothing to do with the Declaration of Indulgence, and though the king
+had told them, in the round set terms he could so well command, that he
+was resolved to stick to his declaration, he had to give way and to see
+the House busy itself with a Test Bill that drove all Roman Catholics,
+from the Duke of York (who had "gone over" in the spring of 1672)
+downwards, out of office. The only effect of Charles's policy was to
+mitigate the hostility of the House of Commons to Protestant Dissenters,
+and to drive it to concentrate its jealousy upon the Catholics. Any
+lurking idea of the king declaring himself a Romanist had to be
+abandoned. His hatred of Parliament increased. He lost all sense of
+shame, and frankly became a pensioner of France. In 1676 he concluded a
+second secret treaty, whereby both Louis and himself bound themselves to
+enter into no engagements with other powers without consent, and in case
+of rebellion within their realms to come to each other's assistance.
+Louis agreed to make Charles an annual allowance of a hundred thousand,
+afterwards increased to two hundred thousand _livres_. This money was
+largely spent in bribing the House of Commons. The French ambassador was
+allowed an extra grant of a thousand crowns a month to keep a table for
+hungry legislators.[189:1] Did not Marvell do well to be angry?
+
+Some of Marvell's letters belonging to this gloomy period are full of
+interest.
+
+
+ _To William Ramsden, Esq._
+ "_Nov. 28, 1670._
+
+ "DEAR WILL,--I need not tell you I am always thinking of you. All
+ that has happened, which is remarkable, since I wrote, is as
+ follows: The Lieutenancy of London, chiefly Sterlin the Mayor, and
+ Sir J. Robinson, alarmed the King continually with the Conventicles
+ there. So the King sent them strict and large powers. The Duke of
+ York every Sunday would come over thence to look to the peace. To
+ say truth, they met in numerous open assemblys, without any dread of
+ government. But the train bands in the city, and soldiery in
+ Southwark and suburbs, harassed and abused them continually; they
+ wounded many, and killed some Quakers especially, while they took
+ all patiently. Hence arose two things of great remark. The
+ Lieutenancy, having got orders to their mind, pick out Hays and
+ Jekill, the innocentist of the whole party, to show their power on.
+ They offer them illegal bonds of five thousand pounds a man, which
+ if they would not enter into, they must go to prison. So they were
+ committed, and at last (but it is a very long story) got free. Some
+ friends engaged for them. The other was the tryal of Pen and Mead,
+ quakers, at the Old Baily. The jury not finding them guilty, as the
+ Recorder and Mayor would have had them, they were kept without meat
+ or drink some three days, till almost starved, but would not alter
+ their verdict; so fined and imprisoned. There is a book out which
+ relates all the passages, which were very pertinent, of the
+ prisoners, but prodigiously barbarous by the Mayor and Recorder. The
+ Recorder, among the rest, commended the Spanish Inquisition, saying
+ it would never be well till we had something like it. The King had
+ occasion for sixty thousand pounds. Sent to borrow it of the city.
+ Sterlin, Robinson, and all the rest of that faction, were at it many
+ a week, and could not get above ten thousand. The fanatics under
+ persecution, served his Majesty. The other party, both in court and
+ city, would have prevented it. But the King protested mony would be
+ acceptable. So the King patched up, out of the Chamber, and other
+ ways, twenty thousand pounds. The fanatics, of all sorts, forty
+ thousand. The King, though against many of his council, would have
+ the Parliament sit this twenty-fourth of October. He, and the Keeper
+ spoke of nothing but to have mony. Some one million three hundred
+ thousand pounds, to pay off the debts at interest; and eight hundred
+ thousand for a brave navy next Spring. Both speeches forbid to be
+ printed, for the King said very little, and the Keeper, it was
+ thought, too much in his politic simple discourse of foreign
+ affairs. The House was thin and obsequious. They voted at first they
+ would supply him according to his occasions, _Nemine_, as it was
+ remarked, _contradicente_; but few affirmatives, rather a silence as
+ of men ashamed and unwilling. Sir R. Howard, Seymour, Temple, Car,
+ and Hollis, openly took leave of their former party, and fell to
+ head the King's busyness. There is like to be a terrible Act of
+ Conventicles. The Prince of Orange here is much made of. The King
+ owes him a great deal of mony. The Paper is full.--I am yours," etc.
+
+The trial of William Penn and William Mead at the Old Bailey for a
+tumultuous assembly, written by themselves, may be read in the _State
+Trials_, vol. vi. The trial was the occasion of Penn's famous remark to
+the Recorder of London, who, driven wellnigh distracted by Penn's
+dialectics, exclaimed, "If I should suffer you to ask questions till
+to-morrow morning you would never be the wiser." "That," replied Penn,
+"would be according as the answers are."
+
+
+ _To William Ramsden, Esq._
+ (Undated.)
+
+ "DEAR WILL,--The Parliament are still proceeding, but not much
+ advanced on their eight hundred thousand pounds Bill on money at
+ interest, offices, and lands; and the Excise Bills valued at four
+ hundred thousand pounds a year. The first for the navy, which scarce
+ will be set out. The last to be for paying one million three hundred
+ thousand pounds, which the King owes at interest, and perhaps may be
+ given for four, five, or six years, as the House chances to be in
+ humour. But an accident happened which liked to have spoiled all:
+ Sir John Coventry having moved for an imposition on the playhouses,
+ Sir John Berkenhead, to excuse them, sayed they had been of great
+ service to the King. Upon which Sir John Coventry desired that
+ gentleman to explain whether he meant the men or the women players.
+ Hereupon it is imagined, that, the House adjourning from Tuesday
+ before till Thursday after Christmas-day, on the very Tuesday night
+ of the adjournment, twenty-five of the Duke of Monmouth's troop, and
+ some few foot, layed in wait from ten at night till two in the
+ morning, by Suffolk-street, and as he returned from the Cock, where
+ he supped, to his own house, they threw him down, and with a knife
+ cut off almost the end of his nose; but company coming made them
+ fearful to finish it, so they marched off. Sir Thomas Sands,
+ lieutenant of the troop, commanded the party; and O'Brian, the Earl
+ of Inchequin's son, was a principal actor. The Court hereupon
+ sometimes thought to carry it with a high hand, and question Sir
+ John for his words, and maintain the action. Sometimes they flagged
+ in their counsels. However, the King commanded Sir Thomas Clarges,
+ and Sir W. Pultney, to release Wroth and Lake, who were two of the
+ actors, and taken. But the night before the House met they
+ surrendered them again. The House being but sullen the next day, the
+ Court did not oppose adjourning for some days longer till it was
+ filled. Then the House went upon Coventry's busyness, and voted that
+ they would go upon nothing else whatever till they had passed a
+ Bill, as they did, for Sands, O'Brian, Parry, and Reeves, to come in
+ by the sixteenth of February, or else be condemned, and never to be
+ pardoned, but by an express Act of Parliament, and their names
+ therein inserted, for fear of being pardoned in some general act of
+ grace. Farther of all such actions, for the future on any man,
+ felony, without clergy; and who shall otherwise strike or wound any
+ parliament-man, during his attendance, or going or coming,
+ imprisonment for a year, treble damages, and incapacity. This Bill
+ having in some few days been dispatched to the Lords, the House has
+ since gone on in grand Committee upon the first eight hundred
+ thousand pounds Bill, but are not yet half way. But now the Lords,
+ instead of the sixteenth of February, put twenty-five days after the
+ King's royal assent, and that registered in their journal; they
+ disagree in several other things, but adhere in that first, which is
+ most material. Adhere, in this place, signifies not to be retracted,
+ and excludes a free conference. So that this week the Houses will be
+ in danger of splitting, without much wisdom or force. For
+ considering that Sir Thomas Sands was the very person sent to
+ Clarges and Pultney, that O'Brian was concealed in the Duke of
+ Monmouth's lodgings, that Wroth and Lake were bayled at the sessions
+ by order from Mr. Attorney, and that all persons and things are
+ perfectly discovered, that act will not be passed without great
+ consequence. George's father obliges you much in Tangier. Prince
+ Edgar is dying. The Court is at the highest pitch of want and
+ luxury, and the people full of discontent, Remember me to
+ yourselves."
+
+
+ _To William Ramsden, Esq._
+ (Undated.)
+
+ "DEAR WILL,--I think I have not told you that, on our Bill of
+ Subsidy, the Lord Lucas made a fervent bold speech against our
+ prodigality in giving, and the weak looseness of the government, the
+ King being present; and the Lord Clare another to persuade the King
+ that he ought not to be present. But all this had little
+ encouragement, not being seconded. Copys going about everywhere, one
+ of them was brought into the Lords' House, and Lord Lucas was asked
+ whether it was his. He sayd part was, and part was not. Thereupon
+ they took advantage, and sayed it was a libel even against Lucas
+ himself. On this they voted it a libel, and to be burned by the
+ hangman. Which was done; but the sport was, the hangman burned the
+ Lords' order with it. I take the last quarrel betwixt us and the
+ Lords to be as the ashes of that speech. Doubtless you have heard,
+ before this time, how Monmouth, Albemarle, Dunbane, and seven or
+ eight gentlemen, fought with the watch, and killed a poor bedle.
+ They have all got their pardons, for Monmouth's sake; but it is an
+ act of great scandal. The King of France is at Dunkirke. We have no
+ fleet out, though we gave the Subsidy Bill, valued at eight hundred
+ thousand pounds, for that purpose. I believe, indeed, he will
+ attempt nothing on us, but leave us to dy a natural death. For
+ indeed never had poor nation so many complicated, mortal, incurable,
+ diseases. You know the Dutchess of York is dead. All gave her for a
+ Papist. I think it will be my lot to go on an honest fair employment
+ into Ireland. Some have smelt the court of Rome at that distance.
+ There I hope I shall be out of the smell of our.... --Yours," etc.
+
+
+ _To a Friend in Persia._
+ "_August 9, 1671._
+
+ "DEAR SIR,--I have yours of the 12th of October 1670, which was in
+ all respects most welcome to me, except when I considered that to
+ write it you endured some pain, for you say your hand is not yet
+ recovered. If I could say any thing to you towards the advancement
+ of your affairs, I could, with a better conscience, admit you should
+ spend so much of your precious time, as you do, upon me. But you
+ know how far those things are out of my road, tho', otherwise, most
+ desirous in all things to be serviceable to you. God's good
+ providence, which hath through so dangerous a disease and so many
+ difficultys preserved and restored you, will, I doubt not, conduct
+ you to a prosperous issue, and the perfection of your so laudable
+ undertakings. And, under that, your own good genius, in conjunction
+ with your brother here, will, I hope, though at the distance of
+ England and Persia, in good time operate extraordinary effects; for
+ the magnetism of two souls, rightly touched, works beyond all
+ natural limits, and it would be indeed too unequal, if good nature
+ should not have at least as large a sphere of activity, as malice,
+ envy, and detraction, which are, it seems, part of the returns from
+ Gombroon and Surat. All I can say to you in that matter is, that you
+ must, seeing it will not be better, stand upon your guard; for in
+ this world a good cause signifys little, unless it be as well
+ defended. A man may starve at the feast of good conscience. My
+ fencing master in Spain, after he had instructed me all he could,
+ told me, I remember, there was yet one secret, against which there
+ was no defence, and that was, to give the first blow. I know your
+ maxim, _Qui festinat ditescere, non erit innocens_. Indeed while you
+ preserve that mind, you will have the blessing both of God and man.
+ In general I perceive, and am very glad of it, that by your good
+ management, your friends here get ground, and the flint in your
+ adversarys' hearts begins to be mollifyed. Now after my usual
+ method, leaving to others what relates to busyness, I address
+ myself, which is all I am good for, to be your gazettier. I am sorry
+ to perceive that mine by the Armenian miscarryed. Tho' there was
+ nothing material in it, the thoughts of friends are too valuable to
+ fall into the hands of a stranger. I wrote the last February at
+ large, and wish it a better passage. In this perhaps I may interfere
+ something with that, chusing rather to repeat than omit. The King
+ having, upon pretence of the great preparations of his neighbours,
+ demanded three hundred thousand pounds for his navy (though in
+ conclusion he hath not set out any) and that the Parliament should
+ pay his debts, which the ministers would never particularize to the
+ House of Commons, our House gave several bills. You see how far
+ things were stretched, though beyond reason, there being no
+ satisfaction how those debts were contracted, and all men foreseeing
+ that what was given would not be applyed to discharge the debts,
+ which I hear are at this day risen to four millions, but diverted as
+ formerly. Nevertheless such was the number of the constant courtiers
+ increased by the apostate patriots, who were bought off, for that
+ turn, some at six, others ten, one at fifteen thousand pounds in
+ money, besides what offices, lands, and reversions, to others, that
+ it is a mercy they gave not away the whole land, and liberty, of
+ England. The Earl of Clare made a very bold and rational harangue,
+ the King being present, against the King's sitting among the Lords,
+ contrary to former precedents, during their debates; but he was not
+ seconded. The King had this April prorogued, upon the Houses
+ cavilling, and their harsh conferences concerning some bills, the
+ Parliament from this April till the 16th of April 1672. Sir John
+ Coventry's Bill against Cutting Noses passed, and O'Brian and Sir
+ Thomas Sands, not appearing at the Old Baily by the time limited,
+ stand attainted and outlawed, without possibility of pardon. The
+ Duke of Buckingham is again one hundred and forty thousand pounds in
+ debt, and, by this prorogation, his creditors have time to tear all
+ his lands in pieces. The House of Commons has run almost to the end
+ of their line, and are grown extreme chargeable to the King, and
+ odious to the people. Lord St. John, Marquess of Westminster's son,
+ one of the House of Commons, Sir Robert Howard, Sir John Benet, Lord
+ Arlington's brother, Sir William Bucknoll, the brewer, all of the
+ House, in fellowship with some others of the city, have farmed the
+ old customs, with the new act of Imposition upon Wines, and the Wine
+ Licenses, at six hundred thousand pounds a year, to begin this
+ Michaelmas. You may be sure they have covenants not to be losers.
+ They have signed and sealed ten thousand pounds a year more to the
+ Duchess of Cleveland, who has likewise near ten thousand pounds a
+ year out of the new farm of the country excise of Beer and Ale, five
+ thousand pounds a year out of the Post Office, and, they say, the
+ reversion of all the King's leases, the reversion of places all in
+ the Custom House, the green wax, and indeed, what not? All
+ promotions, spiritual and temporal, pass under her cognizance.
+ Buckingham runs out of all with the Lady Shrewsbury, by whom he
+ believes he had a son, to whom the King stood godfather; it dyed,
+ young Earl of Coventry, and was buryed in the sepulchre of his
+ fathers. The King of France made a warlike progresse this summer
+ through his conquests of Flanders, but kept the peace there, and
+ detains still the Dutchy of Lorain, and has stired up the German
+ Princes against the free towns. The Duke of Brunswick has taken the
+ town of Brunswick; and now the Bishop of Cullen is attacking the
+ city of Colen. We truckle to France in all things, to the prejudice
+ of our honour. Barclay is still Lieutenant of Ireland; but he was
+ forced to come over to pay ten thousand pounds rent to his Landlady
+ Cleveland. My Lord Angier, who bought of Sir George Carteret for
+ eleven thousand pounds, the Vice-treasurership of Ireland, worth
+ five thousand pounds a year, is, betwixt knavery and foolery, turned
+ out. Dutchess of York and Prince Edgar, dead. None left but
+ daughters. One Blud, outlawed for a plot to take Dublin Castle, and
+ who seized on the Duke of Ormond here last year, and might have
+ killed him, a most bold, and yet sober fellow, some months ago
+ seized the crown and sceptre in the Tower, took them away, and if he
+ had killed the keeper, might have carried them clear off. He, being
+ taken, astonished the King and Court, with the generosity, and
+ wisdom, of his answers. He, and all his accomplices, for his sake,
+ are discharged by the King, to the wonder of all.--Yours," etc.
+
+
+ _To William Ramsden, Esq._
+ "_June 1672._
+
+ "DEAR WILL,--Affairs begin to alter, and men talk of a peace with
+ Holland, and taking them into our protection; and it is my opinion
+ it will be before Michaelmas, for some reasons, not fit to write. We
+ cannot have a peace with France and Holland both. The Dutch are now
+ brought very low; but Amsterdam, and some other provinces, are
+ resolved to stand out till the last. De-wit is stabbed, and dead of
+ his wounds. It was at twelve a clock at night, the 11th of this
+ month, as he came from the council at the Hague. Four men wounded
+ him with their swords. But his own letter next morning to the States
+ says nothing appeared mortal. The whole Province of Utrecht is
+ yielding up. No man can conceive the condition of the State of
+ Holland, in this juncture, unless he can at the same time conceive
+ an earthquake, an hurricane, and the deluge. France is potent and
+ subtle. Here have been several fires of late. One at St.
+ Catherine's, which burned about six score or two hundred houses, and
+ some seven or eight ships. Another in Bishopsgate-street. Another in
+ Crichet Fryars. Another in Southwark; and some elsewhere. You may be
+ sure all the old talk is hereupon revived. There was the other day,
+ though not on this occasion, a severe proclamation issued out
+ against all who shall vent false news, or discourse ill concerning
+ affairs of state. So that in writing to you I run the risque of
+ making a breech in the commandment.--Yours," etc.
+
+The following letter deals with another matter of human concern than
+politics, for it seeks to condole with a father who has lost an only
+son.
+
+
+ _To Sir John Trott_
+ (Undated.)
+
+ "HONOURED SIR,--I have not that vanity to believe, if you weigh your
+ late loss by the common ballance, that any thing I can write to you
+ should lighten your resentments: nor if you measure things by the
+ rules of christianity, do I think it needful to comfort you in your
+ duty and your son's happyness. Only having a great esteem and
+ affection for you, and the grateful memory of him that is departed
+ being still green and fresh upon my spirit, I cannot forbear to
+ inquire, how you have stood the second shock at your sad meeting of
+ friends in the country. I know that the very sight of those who have
+ been witnesses of our better fortune, doth but serve to reinforce a
+ calamity. I know the contagion of grief and infection of tears, and
+ especially when it runs in a blood. And I myself could sooner imitate
+ than blame those innocent relentings of nature, so that they spring
+ from tenderness only and humanity, not from an implacable sorrow. The
+ tears of a family may flow together like those little drops that
+ compact the rainbow, and if they be placed with the same advantage
+ towards Heaven as those are to the sun, they too have their
+ splendour; and like that bow, while they unbend into seasonable
+ showers, yet they promise, that there shall not be a second flood.
+ But the dissoluteness of grief, the prodigality of sorrow, is neither
+ to be indulged in a man's self, nor complyed with in others. If that
+ were allowable in these cases, Eli's was the readyest way and highest
+ compliment of mourning, who fell back from his seat and broke his
+ neck. But neither does that precedent hold. For though he had been
+ Chancellor, and in effect King of Israel, for so many years (and such
+ men value, as themselves, their losses at an higher rate than
+ others), yet, when he heard that Israel was overcome, that his two
+ sons Hophni and Phineas were slain in one day, and saw himself so
+ without hope of issue, and which imbittered it farther, without
+ succession to the government, yet he fell not till the news that the
+ ark of God was taken. I pray God that we may never have the same
+ parallel perfected in our publick concernments. Then we shall need
+ all the strength of grace and nature to support us. But on a private
+ loss, and sweetened with so many circumstances as yours, to be
+ impatient, to be uncomfortable would be to dispute with God. Though
+ an only son be inestimable, yet it is like Jonah's sin, to be angry
+ at God for the withering of his shadow. Zipporah, though the delay
+ had almost cost her husband his life, yet, when he did but circumcise
+ her son, in a womanish peevishness reproached Moses as a bloody
+ husband. But if God take the son himself, but spare the father, shall
+ we say that He is a bloody God? He that gave His own son, may He not
+ take ours? It is pride that makes a rebel; and nothing but the
+ over-weening of ourselves and our own things that raises us against
+ Divine Providence. Whereas Abraham's obedience was better than
+ sacrifice. And if God please to accept both, it is indeed a farther
+ tryal, but a greater honour. I could say over upon this beaten
+ occasion most of those lessons of morality and religion which have
+ been so often repeated, and are as soon forgotten. We abound with
+ precept, but we want examples. You, sir, that have all these things
+ in your memory, and the clearness of whose judgment is not to be
+ obscured by any greater interposition, should be exemplary to others
+ in your own practice. 'Tis true, it is an hard task to learn and
+ teach at the same time. And, where yourselves are the experiment, it
+ is as if a man should dissect his own body, and read the anatomy
+ lecture. But I will not heighten the difficulty while I advise the
+ attempt. Only, as in difficult things, you would do well to make use
+ of all that may strengthen and assist you; the word of God; the
+ society of good men; and the books of the ancients; there is one way
+ more, which is by diversion, business, and activity; which are also
+ necessary to be used in their season. But I myself, who live to so
+ little purpose, can have little authority or ability to advise you in
+ it, who are a person that are and may be much more so, generally
+ useful. All that I have been able to do since, hath been to write
+ this sorry Elogy of your son, which if it be as good as I could wish,
+ it is as yet no indecent employment. However, I know you will take
+ any thing kindly from your very affectionate friend, and most humble
+ servant."
+
+Milton died on the 8th of November 1674. Marvell remained among the
+poet's intimate friends until the end, and intended to write his life.
+It is idle to mourn the loss of an unwritten book, but Marvell's life of
+Milton would have been a treasure.[199:1]
+
+When Parliament met on the 13th of April 1675, members found in their
+places a mock-speech from the throne. They _knew_ the hand that had
+penned it. It was a daring production and ran as follows:--
+
+ _His Majesty's Most Gracious Speech to Both Houses of Parliament_.
+
+ "MY LORDS AND GENTLEMEN,--I told you at our last meeting, the winter
+ was the fittest time for business, and truly I thought so, till my
+ Lord Treasurer assured me the spring was the best season for sallads
+ and subsidies. I hope therefore that April will not prove so
+ unnatural a month, as not to afford some kind showers on my parched
+ exchequer, which gapes for want of them. Some of you, perhaps, will
+ think it dangerous to make me too rich; but I do not fear it; for I
+ promise you faithfully, whatever you give me I will always want; and
+ although in other things my word may be thought a slender authority,
+ yet in that, you may rely on me, I will never break it.
+
+ "MY LORDS AND GENTLEMEN,--I can bear my straits with patience; but my
+ Lord Treasurer does protest to me, that the revenue, as it now
+ stands, will not serve him and me too. One of us must pinch for it,
+ if you do not help me. I must speak freely to you: I am under bad
+ circumstances, for besides my harlots in service, my reformado
+ concubines lye heavy upon me. I have a passable good estate, I
+ confess, but, God's-fish, I have a great charge upon 't. Here's my
+ Lord Treasurer can tell, that all the money designed for next
+ summer's guards must, of necessity, be applyed to the next year's
+ cradles and swadling-cloths. What shall we do for ships then? I hint
+ this only to you, it being your busyness, not mine. I know, by
+ experience, I can live without ships. I lived ten years abroad
+ without, and never had my health better in my life; but how you will
+ be without, I leave to yourselves to judge, and therefore hint this
+ only by the bye: I do not insist upon it. There's another thing I
+ must press more earnestly, and that is this:--It seems a good part of
+ my revenue will expire in two or three years, except you will be
+ pleased to continue it. I have to say for 't, pray, why did you give
+ me so much as you have done, unless you resolve to give on as fast as
+ I call for it? The nation hates you already for giving so much, and
+ I'll hate you too, if you do not give me more. So that if you stick
+ not to me, you must not have a friend in England. On the other hand,
+ if you will give me the revenue I desire, I shall be able to do those
+ things for your religion and liberty, that I have had long in my
+ thoughts, but cannot effect them without a little more money to carry
+ me through. Therefore look to 't and take notice that if you do not
+ make me rich enough to undo you, it shall lie at your doors. For my
+ part I wash my hands on 't. But that I may gain your good opinion,
+ the best way is to acquaint you what I have done to deserve it, out
+ of my royal care for your religion and your property. For the first,
+ my proclamation is a true picture of my mind, He that cannot, as in a
+ glass, see my zeal for the Church of England, does not deserve any
+ farther satisfaction, for I declare him wilful, abominable, and not
+ good. Some may, perhaps, be startled, and cry, how comes this sudden
+ change? To which I answer, I am a changling, and that's sufficient, I
+ think. But to convince men farther, that I mean what I say, there are
+ these arguments:--
+
+ "First, I tell you so, and you know I never break my word.
+
+ "Secondly, My Lord Treasurer says so, and he never told a lye in
+ his life.
+
+ "Thirdly, My Lord Lauderdale will undertake it for me; and I
+ should be loath, by any act of mine, he should forfeit the
+ credit he has with you.
+
+ "If you desire more instances of my zeal, I have them for you. For
+ example, I have converted my natural sons from Popery; and I may say,
+ without vanity, it was my own work, so much the more peculiarly mine
+ than the begetting them. 'Twould do one's heart good to hear how
+ prettily George can read already in the Psalter. They are all fine
+ children, God bless 'em, and so like me in their understandings. But,
+ as I was saying, I have, to please you, given a pension to your
+ favourite my Lord Lauderdale; not so much that I thought he wanted
+ it, as that you would take it kindly. I have made Carwell dutchess of
+ Portsmouth, and marryed her sister to the Earl of Pembroke. I have,
+ at my brother's request, sent my Lord Inchequin into Barbary, to
+ settle the Protestant Religion among the Moors, and an English
+ Interest at Tangier. I have made Crew Bishop of Durham, and, at the
+ first word of my Lady Portsmouth, Prideaux Bishop of Chichester. I
+ know not, for my part, what factious men would have; but this I am
+ sure of, my predecessors never did anything like this, to gain the
+ good will of their subjects. So much for your religion, and now for
+ your property. My behaviour to the Bankers is a publick instance; and
+ the proceedings between Mrs. Hyde and Mrs. Sutton for private ones,
+ are such convincing evidences, that it will be needless to say any
+ more to 't.
+
+ "I must now acquaint you, that, by my Lord Treasurer's advice, I have
+ made a considerable retrenchment upon my expenses in candles and
+ charcoal, and do not intend to stop there, but will, with your help,
+ look into the late embezzlements of my dripping-pans and
+ kitchen-stuff; of which, by the way, upon my conscience, neither my
+ Lord Treasurer nor my Lord Lauderdale are guilty. I tell you my
+ opinion; but if you should find them dabling in that busyness, I tell
+ you plainly, I leave 'em to you; for, I would have the world to know,
+ I am not a man to be cheated.
+
+ "My Lords and Gentlemen, I desire you to believe me as you have found
+ me; and I do solemnly promise you, that whatsoever you give me shall
+ be specially managed with the same conduct, trust, sincerity, and
+ prudence, that I have ever practised, since my happy
+ restoration."[202:1]
+
+Mock King's Speeches have often been made, but this is the first, and I
+think still the best of them all.
+
+There was no shaking off religion from the debates of those days. A new
+Oaths Bill suddenly appeared in the House of Lords, where it gave rise
+to one of the greatest debates that assembly has ever witnessed,
+lasting seventeen days. The bishops were baited by the peers with great
+spirit, and the report of the proceedings may still be read with gusto.
+
+Marvell, in his _Growth of Popery_, thus describes what happened:--
+
+ "While these things were upon the anvil, the 10th of November was
+ come for the Parliament's sitting, but that was put off till the 13th
+ of April 1675. And in the meantime, which fell out most opportune for
+ the conspirators, these counsels were matured, and something further
+ to be contrived, that was yet wanting; the Parliament accordingly
+ meeting, and the House of Lords, as well as that of the Commons,
+ being in deliberation of several wholesome bills, such as the present
+ state of the nation required, the great design came out in a bill
+ unexpectedly offered one morning in the House of Lords, whereby all
+ such as injoyed any beneficial office, or imployment, ecclesiastical,
+ civil, or military, to which was added privy counsellors, justices of
+ the peace, and members of Parliament, were under a penalty to take
+ the oath, and make the declaration, and abhorrence, insuring:--
+
+ 'I A.B. do declare, that it is not lawful upon any pretence
+ whatsoever to take up arms against the King, and that I do
+ abhor that traiterous position of taking arms by his authority
+ against his person, or against those that are commissioned by
+ him in pursuance of such commission. And I do swear, that I
+ will not at any time indeavour the alteration of the government
+ either in Church or State. So help me God.'
+
+ "This same oath had been brought into the House of Commons in the
+ plague year at Oxford, to have been imposed upon the nation, but
+ there, by the assistance of those very same persons that now
+ introduce it, 'twas thrown out, for fear of a general infection of
+ the vitals of this kingdom; and though it passed then in a particular
+ bill, known by the name of the Five Mile Act, because it only
+ concerned the non-conformist preachers, yet even in that, it was
+ thoroughly opposed by the late Earl of Southampton, whose judgement
+ might well have been reckoned for the standard of prudence and
+ loyalty."[204:1]
+
+Of the proposed oath Marvell says, "No Conveyancer could ever in more
+compendious or binding terms have drawn a dissettlement of the whole
+birthright of England."
+
+This was no mere legal quibbling.
+
+ "These things are no niceties, or remote considerations (though in
+ making of laws, and which must come afterwards under construction of
+ judges, _durante bene placito_, all cases are to be put and imagined)
+ but there being an act in Scotland for 20,000 men to march into
+ England upon call, and so great a body of English soldiery in France,
+ within summons, besides what foreigners may be obliged by treaty to
+ furnish, and it being so fresh in memory, what sort of persons had
+ lately been in commission among us, to which add the many books then
+ printed by license, writ, some by men of the black, one of the green
+ cloth, wherein the absoluteness of the English monarchy is against
+ all law asserted.
+
+ "All these considerations put together were sufficient to make any
+ honest and well advised man to conceive indeed, that upon the passing
+ of this oath and declaration, the whole sum of affairs depended.
+
+ "It grew therefore to the greatest contest, that has perhaps ever
+ been in Parliament, wherein those Lords, that were against this oath,
+ being assured of their own loyalty and merit, stood up now for the
+ English liberties with the same genius, virtue, and courage, that
+ their noble ancestors had formerly defended the great Charter of
+ England, but with so much greater commendation, in that they had here
+ a fairer field and a more civil way of decision; they fought it out
+ under all the disadvantages imaginable; they were overlaid by
+ numbers; the noise of the House, like the wind, was against them, and
+ if not the sun, the fireside was always in their faces; nor being so
+ few, could they, as their adversaries, withdraw to refresh themselves
+ in a whole day's ingagement: yet never was there a clearer
+ demonstration how dull a thing is humane eloquence, and greatness
+ how little, when the bright truth discovers all things in their
+ proper colours and dimensions, and shining, shoots its beams thorow
+ all their fallacies. It might be injurious, where all of them did so
+ excellently well, to attribute more to any one of those Lords than
+ another, unless because the Duke of Buckingham and the Earl of
+ Shaftesbury, have been the more reproached for this brave action, it
+ be requisite by a double proportion of praise to set them two on
+ equal terms with the rest of their companions in honour. The
+ particular relation in this debate, which lasted many days, with
+ great eagerness on both sides, and the reasons but on one, was in the
+ next Session burnt by order of the Lords, but the sparks of it will
+ eternally fly in their adversaries' faces."[205:1]
+
+In a letter to his constituents, dated April 22, 1675, Marvell was
+content to say: "The Lords sate the whole day yesterday till ten at
+night without rising (and the King all the while but of our addresses
+present) upon their Bill of Test in both houses and are not yet come to
+the question of committing it."
+
+After prolonged discussion the Oath Bill was sent to the Commons, where
+doubtless it must have passed, had not a furious privilege quarrel over
+Sir John Fagg's case made prorogation in June almost a necessity. In
+October Parliament met again, and at once resolved itself into a
+Committee upon Religion to prevent the growth of Popery. This time the
+king made almost an end of the Parliament by a prorogation which lasted
+from November 1675 until February 1677--a period of fifteen months.
+
+On the re-assembling of Parliament the Duke of Buckingham fathered the
+argument much used during the long recess, that a prorogation extending
+beyond twelve months was in construction of law a dissolution.
+
+For the expression of this opinion and the refusal to recant it the
+Duke of Buckingham and three other lords were ordered to the Tower, the
+king being greatly angered by the duke's request that his cook might be
+allowed to wait on him. On this incident Marvell remarks: "Thus a
+prorogation without precedent was to be warranted by an imprisonment
+without example. A sad instance! Whereby the dignity of Parliament and
+especially of the House of Peers did at present much suffer and may
+probably more for the future, _for nothing but Parliament can destroy
+Parliament_. If a House shall once be felon of itself and stop its own
+breath, taking away that liberty of speech which the King verbally, and
+of course, allows them (as now they had done in both houses) to what
+purpose is it coming thither?"[206:1]
+
+The character of this House of Commons did not improve with age.
+
+Marvell writes in the _Growth of Popery_:--
+
+ "In matters of money they seem at first difficult, but having been
+ discoursed with in private, they are set right, and begin to
+ understand it better themselves, and to convert their brethren: for
+ they are all of them to be bought and sold, only their number makes
+ them cheaper, and each of them doth so overvalue himself, that
+ sometimes they outstand or let slip their own market.
+
+ "It is not to be imagined, how small things, in this case, even
+ members of great estates will stoop at, and most of them will do as
+ much for hopes as others for fruition, but if their patience be tired
+ out, they grow at last mutinous, and revolt to the country, till some
+ better occasion offer.
+
+ "Among these are some men of the best understanding were they of
+ equal integrity, who affect to ingross all business, to be able to
+ quash any good motion by parliamentary skill, unless themselves be
+ the authors, and to be the leading men of the House, and for their
+ natural lives to continue so. But these are men that have been once
+ fooled, most of them, and discovered, and slighted at Court, so that
+ till some turn of State shall let them in their adversaries' place,
+ in the mean time they look sullen, make big motions, and contrive
+ specious bills for the subject, yet only wait the opportunity to be
+ the instruments of the same counsels which they oppose in others.
+
+ "There is a third part still remaining, but as contrary in themselves
+ as light and darkness; those are either the worst, or the best of
+ men; the first are most profligate persons, they have neither
+ estates, consciences, nor good manners, yet are therefore picked out
+ as the necessary men, and whose votes will go furthest; the charges
+ of their elections are defrayed, whatever they amount to, tables are
+ kept for them at Whitehall, and through Westminster, that they may be
+ ready at hand, within call of a question: all of them are received
+ into pension, and know their pay-day, which they never fail of:
+ insomuch that a great officer was pleased to say, 'That they came
+ about him like so many jack-daws for cheese at the end of every
+ Session.' If they be not in Parliament, they must be in prison, and
+ as they are protected themselves, by privilege, so they sell their
+ protections to others, to the obstruction so many years together of
+ the law of the land, and the publick justice; for these it is, that
+ the long and frequent adjournments are calculated, but all whether
+ the court, or the monopolizers of the country party, or those that
+ profane the title of old cavaliers, do equally, though upon differing
+ reasons, like death apprehend a dissolution. But notwithstanding
+ these, there is an handful of salt, a sparkle of soul, that hath
+ hitherto preserved this gross body from putrefaction, some gentlemen
+ that are constant, invariable, indeed Englishmen; such as are above
+ hopes, or fears, or dissimulation, that can neither flatter, nor
+ betray their king or country: but being conscious of their own
+ loyalty and integrity, proceed throw good and bad report, to acquit
+ themselves in their duty to God, their prince, and their nation;
+ although so small a scantling in number, that men can scarce reckon
+ of them more than a _quorum_; insomuch that it is less difficult to
+ conceive how fire was first brought to light in the world than how
+ any good thing could ever be produced out of an House of Commons so
+ constituted, unless as that is imagined to have come from the rushing
+ of trees, or battering of rocks together, by accident, so these, by
+ their clashing with one another, have struck out an useful effect
+ from so unlikely causes. But whatsoever casual good hath been wrought
+ at any time by the assimilation of ambitious, factious and
+ disappointed members, to the little, but solid, and unbiassed party,
+ the more frequent ill effects, and consequences of so unequal a
+ mixture, so long continued, are demonstrable and apparent. For while
+ scarce any man comes thither with respect to the publick service, but
+ in design to make and raise his fortune, it is not to be expressed,
+ the debauchery, and lewdness, which, upon occasion of election to
+ Parliaments, are now grown habitual thorow the nation. So that the
+ vice, and the expence, are risen to such a prodigious height, that
+ few sober men can indure to stand to be chosen on such conditions.
+ From whence also arise feuds, and perpetual animosities, over most of
+ the counties and corporations, while gentlemen of worth, spirit, and
+ ancient estates and dependances, see themselves overpowered in their
+ own neighbourhood by the drunkness and bribery, of their competitors.
+ But if nevertheless any worthy person chance to carry the election,
+ some mercenary or corrupt sheriff makes a double return, and so the
+ cause is handed to the Committee of elections, who ask no better, but
+ are ready to adopt his adversary into the House if he be not
+ legitimate. And if the gentleman agrieved seek his remedy against the
+ sheriff in Westminster-Hall, and the proofs be so palpable, that the
+ King's Bench cannot invent how to do him injustice, yet the major
+ part of the twelve judges shall upon better consideration vacate the
+ sheriff's fine and reverse the judgement; but those of them that dare
+ dissent from their brethren are in danger to be turned off the bench
+ without any cause assigned. While men therefore care not thus how
+ they get into the House of Commons, neither can it be expected that
+ they should make any conscience of what they do there, but they are
+ only intent how to reimburse themselves (if their elections were at
+ their own charge) or how to bargain their votes for a place or a
+ pension. They list themselves straightways into some Court faction,
+ and it is as well-known among them, to what Lord each of them
+ retain, as when formerly they wore coats and badges. By this long
+ haunting so together, they are grown too so familiar among
+ themselves, that all reverence of their own Assembly is lost, that
+ they live together not like Parliament men, but like so many good
+ fellows met together in a publick house to make merry. And which is
+ yet worse, by being so thoroughly acquainted, they understand their
+ number and party, so that the use of so publick a counsel is
+ frustrated, there is no place for deliberation, no perswading by
+ reason, but they can see one another's votes through both throats and
+ cravats before they hear them.
+
+ "Where the cards are so well known, they are only fit for a cheat,
+ and no fair gamester but would throw them under the table."[209:1]
+
+It is a melancholy picture.
+
+Here, perhaps, may be best inserted the story about the proffered bribe.
+The story is entitled to small credit, but as helping to swell and
+maintain a tradition concerning an historical character about whom
+little is positively known, it can hardly escape mention in any
+biography of Marvell. A pamphlet printed in Ireland (1754) supplies an
+easy flowing version of the tale.
+
+ "The borough of Hull, in the reign of Charles II., chose Andrew
+ Marvell, a young gentleman of little or no fortune, and maintained
+ him in London for the service of the public. His understanding,
+ integrity, and spirit, were dreadful to the then infamous
+ administration. Persuaded that he would be theirs for properly
+ asking, they sent his old school-fellow, the Lord Treasurer Danby, to
+ renew acquaintance with him in his garret. At parting, the Lord
+ Treasurer, out of _pure affection_, slipped into his hand an order
+ upon the treasury for £1000, and then went to his chariot. Marvell,
+ looking at the paper, calls after the Treasurer, 'My Lord, I request
+ another moment.' They went up again to the garret, and Jack, the
+ servant boy, was called. 'Jack, child, what had I for dinner
+ yesterday?' 'Don't you remember, sir? you had the little shoulder of
+ mutton that you ordered me to bring from a woman in the market.'
+ 'Very right, child.' 'What have I for dinner to-day?' 'Don't you
+ know, sir, that you bid me lay by the _blade-bone to broil_.' ''Tis
+ so, very right, child, go away.' 'My Lord, do you hear that? Andrew
+ Marvell's dinner is provided; there's your piece of paper. I want it
+ not. I knew the sort of kindness you intended. I live here to serve
+ my constituents: the ministry may seek men for their purpose; _I am
+ not one_.'"[210:1]
+
+One more letter remains to be quoted:--
+
+
+ _To William Ramsden, Esq._
+ "_June 10, 1678._
+
+ "DEAR WILL,--I have time to tell you thus much of publick matters.
+ The patience of the Scots, under their oppressions, is not to be
+ paralleled in any history. They still continue their extraordinary
+ and numerous, but peaceable, field conventicles. One Mr. Welch is
+ their arch-minister, and the last letter I saw tells, people were
+ going forty miles to hear him. There came out, about Christmas last,
+ here, a large book concerning the growth of popery and arbitrary
+ government. There have been great rewards offered in private, and
+ considerable in the Gazette, to any one who could inform of the
+ author or printer, but not yet discovered. Three or four printed
+ books since have described, as near as it was proper to go, the man
+ being a Member of Parliament, Mr. Marvell, to have been the author;
+ but if he had, surely he should not have escaped being questioned in
+ Parliament or some other place. My good wishes attend you."
+
+The last letter Andrew Marvell wrote to his constituents is dated July
+6, 1678. The member for Hull died in August 1678. The Parliament in
+which he had sat continuously for eighteen years was at last dissolved
+on the 30th of December in the year of his death.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[181:1] Grosart, vol. iv. p. 248.
+
+[183:1] Ranke's _History of England_, vol. iii. p. 471.
+
+[185:1] Ranke, vol. iii. p. 520.
+
+[187:1] Grosart, vol. iv. (_Growth of Popery_), p. 275.
+
+[187:2] _Ibid._, p. 279.
+
+[189:1] See note to Dr. Airy's edition of Burnet's _History_, vol. ii.
+p. 73.
+
+[199:1] Marvell's commendatory verses on "Mr. Milton's Paradise Lost"
+(so entitled in the volume of 1681) were first printed in the Second
+Edition (1674) of Milton's great poem. Marvell did not agree with Dryden
+in thinking that _Paradise Lost_ would be improved by rhyme, and says so
+in these verses.
+
+[202:1] Printed in Captain Thompson's edition, vol. i. p. 432.
+
+[204:1] Grosart, vol. iv. p. 304.
+
+[205:1] Grosart, vol. iv. p. 308.
+
+[206:1] Grosart, vol. iv. p. 322.
+
+[209:1] Grosart, vol. iv. p. 327.
+
+[210:1] This story is first told in a balder form by Cooke in his
+edition of 1726. It may be read as Cooke tells it in the _Dictionary of
+National Biography_, xxxvi., p. 329. There was probably some foundation
+for it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+FINAL SATIRES AND DEATH
+
+
+Marvell was no orator or debater, and though a member of Parliament for
+nearly eighteen years, but rarely opened his mouth in the House of
+Commons. His old enemy, Samuel Parker, whilst venting his posthumous
+spite upon the author of the _Rehearsal Transprosed_, would have us
+believe "that our Poet could not speak without a sound basting:
+whereupon having frequently undergone this discipline, he learnt at
+length to hold his tongue." There is no good reason for believing the
+Bishop of Oxford, but it is the fact that, however taught, Marvell had
+learnt to hold his tongue. His longest reported speech will be found in
+the _Parliamentary History_, vol. iv. p. 855.[211:1] When we remember
+how frequently in those days Marvell's pet subjects were under fierce
+discussion, we must recognise how fixed was his habit of
+self-repression.
+
+On one occasion only are we enabled to catch a glimpse of Marvell
+"before the Speaker." It was in March 1677, and is thus reported in the
+_Parliamentary History_, though no mention of the incident is made in
+the Journals of the House:--
+
+ "_Debate on Mr. Andrew Marvell's striking Sir Philip Harcourt, March
+ 29._--Mr. Marvell, coming up the house to his place, stumbling at Sir
+ Philip Harcourt's foot, in recovering himself, seemed to give Sir
+ Philip a box on the ear. The Speaker acquainting the house 'That he
+ saw a box on the ear given, and it was his duty to inform the house
+ of it,' this debate ensued.
+
+ "Mr. _Marvell_. What passed was through great acquaintance and
+ familiarity betwixt us. He neither gave him an affront, nor intended
+ him any. But the Speaker cast a severe reflection upon him yesterday,
+ when he was out of the house, and he hopes that, as the Speaker keeps
+ us in order, he will keep himself in order for the future.
+
+ "Sir _John Ernly_. What the Speaker said yesterday was in Marvell's
+ vindication. If these two gentlemen are friends already, he would not
+ make them friends, and would let the matter go no further.
+
+ "Sir _Job. Charlton_ is sorry a thing of this nature has happened,
+ and no more sense of it. You in the Chair, and a stroke struck!
+ Marvell deserves for his reflection on you, Mr. Speaker, to be called
+ in question. You cannot do right to the house unless you question it;
+ and moves to have Marvell sent to the Tower.
+
+ "The _Speaker_. I saw a blow on one side, and a stroke on the other.
+
+ "Sir _Philip Harcourt_. Marvell had some kind of a stumble, and mine
+ was only a thrust; and the thing was accidental.
+
+ "Sir _H. Goodrick_. The persons have declared the thing to be
+ accidental, but if done in jest, not fit to be done here. He believes
+ it an accident, and hopes the house thinks so too.
+
+ "Mr. Sec. _Williamson_. This does appear, that the action for that
+ time was in some heat. He cannot excuse Marvell who made a very
+ severe reflection on the Speaker, and since it is so enquired,
+ whether you have done your duty, he would have Marvell withdraw, that
+ you may consider of it.
+
+ "Col. _Sandys_. Marvell has given you trouble, and instead of
+ excusing himself, reflects upon the Speaker: a strange confidence, if
+ not an impudence!
+
+ "Mr. _Marvell_. Has so great a respect to the privilege, order, and
+ decency, of the house, that he is content to be a sacrifice for it.
+ As to the casualty that happened, he saw a seat empty, and going to
+ sit in it, his friend put him by, in a jocular manner, and what he
+ did was of the same nature. So much familiarity has ever been between
+ them, that there was no heat in the thing. He is sorry he gave an
+ offence to the house. He seldom speaks to the house, and if he commit
+ an error, in the manner of his speech, being not so well tuned, he
+ hopes it is not an offence. Whether out or in the house, he has a
+ respect to the Speaker. But he has been informed that the Speaker
+ resumed something he had said, with reflection. He did not think fit
+ to complain of Mr. Seymour to Mr. Speaker. He believes that is not
+ reflective. He desires to comport himself with all respect to the
+ house. This passage with Harcourt was a perfect casualty, and if you
+ think fit, he will withdraw, and sacrifice himself to the censure of
+ the house.
+
+ "Sir _Henry Capel_. The blow given Harcourt was with his hat; the
+ Speaker cast his eye upon both of them, and both respected him. He
+ would not aggravate the thing. Marvell submits, and he would have you
+ leave the thing as it is.
+
+ "_Sir Robert Holmes_ saw the whole action. Marvell flung about three
+ or four times with his hat, and then gave Harcourt a box on the ear.
+
+ "Sir _Henry Capel_ desires, now that his honour is concerned, that
+ Holmes may explain, whether he saw not Marvell with his hat only give
+ Harcourt the stroke 'at that time.' Possibly 'at another time' it
+ might be.
+
+ "The _Speaker_. Both Holmes and Capel are in the right. But Marvell
+ struck Harcourt so home, that his fist, as well as his hat, hit him.
+
+ "Sir _R. Howard_ hopes the house will not have Harcourt say he
+ received a blow, when he has not. He thinks what has been said by
+ them both sufficient.
+
+ "Mr. _Garraway_ hopes, that by the debate we shall not make the thing
+ greater than it is. Would have them both reprimanded for it.
+
+ "Mr. Sec. _Williamson_ submits the honour of the house to the house.
+ Would have them made friends, and give that necessary assurance to
+ the house, and he, for his part, remains satisfied.
+
+ "Sir _Tho. Meres_. By our long sitting together, we lose, by our
+ familiarity and acquaintance, the decencies of the house. He has seen
+ 500 in the house, and people very orderly; not so much as to read a
+ letter, or set up a foot. One could scarce know anybody in the house,
+ but him that spoke. He would have the Speaker declare that order
+ ought to be kept; but as to that gentleman (Marvell) to rest
+ satisfied."
+
+The general impression left upon the mind is that of a friendly-familiar
+but choleric gentleman, full of likes and dislikes, readier with his
+tongue in the lobby than with "set" speeches in the Chamber. A solitary
+politician with a biting pen. Satirists must not complain if they have
+enemies.
+
+Marvell's vein of satire was never worked out, and the political poems
+of his last decade are fuller than ever of a savage humour. How he kept
+his ears is a repeated wonder. He is said to have been on terms of
+intimate friendship with Prince Rupert, and it is a steady tradition
+that the king was one of his amused readers. It is hard to believe that
+even Charles the Second could have seen any humour, good or bad, in such
+a couplet:--
+
+ "The poor Priapus King, led by the nose,
+ Looks as a thing set up to scare the crows."
+
+Nor can the following verses have been read with much pleasure, either
+at Whitehall or in a punt whilst fishing at Windsor. Their occasion was
+the setting up in the stocks-market in the City of London of a statue of
+the king by Sir Robert Viner, a city knight, to whom Charles was very
+heavily in debt. Sir Robert, having a frugal mind, had acquired a statue
+of John Sobieski trampling on the Turk, which, judiciously altered, was
+made to pass muster so as to represent the Pensioner of Louis the
+Fourteenth and the Vendor of Dunkirk trampling on Oliver Cromwell.
+
+ "As cities that to the fierce conqueror yield
+ Do at their own charges their citadels build;
+ So Sir Robert advanced the King's statue in token
+ Of bankers defeated, and Lombard Street broken.
+
+ Some thought it a knightly and generous deed,
+ Obliging the city with a King and a steed;
+ When with honour he might from his word have gone back;
+ He that vows in a calm is absolved by a wrack.
+
+ But now it appears, from the first to the last,
+ To be a revenge and a malice forecast;
+ Upon the King's birthday to set up a thing
+ That shows him a monkey much more than a King.
+
+ When each one that passes finds fault with the horse,
+ Yet all do affirm that the King is much worse;
+ And some by the likeness Sir Robert suspect
+ That he did for the King his own statue erect.
+
+ Thus to see him disfigured--the herb-women chid,
+ Who up on their panniers more gracefully rid;
+ And so loose in his seat--that all persons agree,
+ E'en Sir William Peak[215:1] sits much firmer than he.
+
+ But Sir Robert affirms that we do him much wrong;
+ 'Tis the 'graver at work, to reform him, so long;
+ But, alas! he will never arrive at his end,
+ For it is such a King as no chisel can mend.
+
+ But with all his errors restore us our King,
+ If ever you hope in December for spring;
+ For though all the world cannot show such another,
+ Yet we'd rather have him than his bigoted brother."
+
+Of a more exalted vein of satire the following extract may serve as an
+example:--
+
+ BRITANNIA AND RALEIGH
+
+ "_Brit._ Ah! Raleigh, when thou didst thy breath resign
+ To trembling James, would I had quitted mine.
+ Cubs didst thou call them? Hadst thou seen this brood
+ Of earls, and dukes, and princes of the blood,
+ No more of Scottish race thou would'st complain,
+ Those would be blessings in this spurious reign.
+ Awake, arise from thy long blessed repose,
+ Once more with me partake of mortal woes!
+
+ _Ral._ What mighty power has forced me from my rest?
+ Oh! mighty queen, why so untimely dressed?
+
+ _Brit._ Favoured by night, concealed in this disguise,
+ Whilst the lewd court in drunken slumber lies,
+ I stole away, and never will return,
+ Till England knows who did her city burn;
+ Till cavaliers shall favourites be deemed,
+ And loyal sufferers by the court esteemed;
+ Till Leigh and Galloway shall bribes reject;
+ Thus Osborne's golden cheat I shall detect:
+ Till atheist Lauderdale shall leave this land,
+ And Commons' votes shall cut-nose guards disband:
+ Till Kate a happy mother shall become,
+ Till Charles loves parliaments, and James hates Rome.
+
+ _Ral._ What fatal crimes make you for ever fly
+ Your once loved court, and martyr's progeny?
+
+ _Brit._ A colony of French possess the Court,
+ Pimps, priests, buffoons, i' the privy-chamber sport.
+ Such slimy monsters ne'er approached the throne
+ Since Pharaoh's reign, nor so defiled a crown.
+ I' the sacred ear tyrannic arts they croak,
+ Pervert his mind, his good intentions choke;
+ Tell him of golden Indies, fairy lands,
+ Leviathan, and absolute commands.
+ Thus, fairy-like, the King they steal away,
+ And in his room a Lewis changeling lay.
+ How oft have I him to himself restored.
+ In's left the scale, in 's right hand placed the sword?
+ Taught him their use, what dangers would ensue
+ To those that tried to separate these two?
+ The bloody Scottish chronicle turned o'er,
+ Showed him how many kings, in purple gore,
+ Were hurled to hell, by learning tyrant lore?
+ The other day famed Spenser I did bring,
+ In lofty notes Tudor's blest reign to sing;
+ How Spain's proud powers her virgin arms controlled,
+ And golden days in peaceful order rolled;
+ How like ripe fruit she dropped from off her throne,
+ Full of grey hairs, good deeds, and great renown.
+ ...
+
+ _Ral._ Once more, great queen, thy darling strive to save,
+ Snatch him again from scandal and the grave;
+ Present to 's thoughts his long-scorned parliament,
+ The basis of his throne and government.
+ In his deaf ears sound his dead father's name:
+ Perhaps that spell may 's erring soul reclaim:
+ Who knows what good effects from thence may spring?
+ 'Tis godlike good to save a falling king.
+
+ _Brit._ Raleigh, no more, for long in vain I've tried
+ The Stuart from the tyrant to divide;
+ As easily learned virtuosos may
+ With the dog's blood his gentle kind convey
+ Into the wolf, and make his guardian turn
+ To the bleating flock, by him so lately torn:
+ If this imperial juice once taint his blood,
+ 'Tis by no potent antidote withstood.
+ Tyrants, like lep'rous kings, for public weal
+ Should be immured, lest the contagion steal
+ Over the whole. The elect of the Jessean line
+ To this firm law their sceptre did resign;
+ And shall this base tyrannic brood invade
+ Eternal laws, by God for mankind made?
+
+ To the serene Venetian state I'll go,
+ From her sage mouth famed principles to know;
+ With her the prudence of the ancients read,
+ To teach my people in their steps to tread;
+ By their great pattern such a state I'll frame,
+ Shall eternize a glorious lasting name.
+ Till then, my Raleigh, teach our noble youth
+ To love sobriety, and holy truth;
+ Watch and preside over their tender age,
+ Lest court corruption should their souls engage;
+ Teach them how arts, and arms, in thy young days,
+ Employed our youth--not taverns, stews, and plays;
+ Tell them the generous scorn their race does owe
+ To flattery, pimping, and a gaudy show;
+ Teach them to scorn the Carwells, Portsmouths, Nells,
+ The Clevelands, Osbornes, Berties, Lauderdales:
+ Poppaea, Tigelline, and Arteria's name,
+ All yield to these in lewdness, lust, and fame.
+ Make them admire the Talbots, Sydneys, Veres,
+ Drake, Cavendish, Blake, men void of slavish fears,
+ True sons of glory, pillars of the state,
+ On whose famed deeds all tongues and writers wait.
+ When with fierce ardour their bright souls do burn,
+ Back to my dearest country I'll return."
+
+The dialogue between the two horses, which bore upon their respective
+backs the stone effigies of Charles the First at Charing Cross and
+Charles the Second at Wool-Church, is, in its own rough way, masterly
+satire for the popular ear.
+
+ "If the Roman Church, good Christians, oblige ye
+ To believe man and beast have spoken in effigy,
+ Why should we not credit the public discourses,
+ In a dialogue between two inanimate horses?
+ The horses I mean of Wool-Church and Charing,
+ Who told many truths worth any man's hearing,
+ Since Viner and Osborn did buy and provide 'em
+ For the two mighty monarchs who now do bestride 'em.
+ The stately brass stallion, and the white marble steed,
+ The night came together, by all 'tis agreed;
+ When both kings were weary of sitting all day,
+ They stole off, incognito, each his own way;
+ And then the two jades, after mutual salutes,
+ Not only discoursed, but fell to disputes."
+
+The dialogue is too long to be quoted. Charles the Second's steed
+boldly declares:--
+
+ "De Witt and Cromwell had each a brave soul,
+ I freely declare it, I am for old Noll;
+ Though his government did a tyrant resemble,
+ He made England great, and his enemies tremble."
+
+Mr. Hollis, when he sent the picture of Cromwell by Cooper to Sidney
+Sussex College, is said to have written beneath it the lines just
+quoted.
+
+The satire ends thus:--
+
+ "_Charing Cross._ But canst them devise when things will be mended?
+
+ _Wool-Church._ When the reign of the line of the Stuarts is ended.
+
+ _Charing Cross._ Then England, rejoice, thy redemption draws nigh;
+ Thy oppression together with kingship shall die.
+
+ _Chorus._ A Commonwealth, a Commonwealth we proclaim to the nation,
+ For the gods have repented the King's restoration."
+
+These probably are the lines which spread the popular, but mistaken,
+belief that Marvell was a Republican.
+
+Andrew Marvell died in his lodgings in London on the 16th of August
+1678. Colonel Grosvenor, writing to George Treby, M.P. (afterwards Chief
+of the Common Pleas), on the 17th of August, reports "Andrew Marvell
+died yesterday of apoplexy." Parliament was not sitting at the time.
+What was said of the elder Andrew may also be said of the younger: he
+was happy in the moment of his death. The one just escaped the Civil
+War, the other the Popish Plot.
+
+Marvell was thought to have been poisoned. Such a suspicion in those bad
+times was not far-fetched. His satires, rough but moving, had been
+widely read, and his fears for the Constitution, his dread of
+
+ "The grim Monster, Arbitrary Power,
+ The ugliest Giant ever trod the earth,"
+
+infested many breasts, and bred terror.
+
+ "Marvell, the Island's watchful sentinel,
+ Stood in the gap and bravely kept his post."
+
+The post was one of obvious danger, and
+
+ "Whether Fate or Art untwin'd his thread
+ Remains in doubt."[220:1]
+
+The doubt has now been dissipated by the research of an accomplished
+physician, Dr. Gee, who in 1874 communicated to the _Athenæum_ (March 7,
+1874) an extract from Richard Morton's {Greek: Pyretologia} (1692),
+containing a full account of Marvell's sickness and death. Art "untwin'd
+his thread," but it was the doctor's art. Dr. Gee's translation of
+Morton's medical Latin is as follows:--
+
+ "In this manner was that most famous man Andrew Marvell carried off
+ from amongst the living before his time, to the great loss of the
+ republic, and especially the republic of letters; through the
+ ignorance of an old conceited doctor, who was in the habit on all
+ occasions of raving excessively against Peruvian bark, as if it were
+ a common plague. Howbeit, without any clear indication, in the
+ interval after a third fit of regular tertian ague, and by way of
+ preparation (so that all things might seem to be done most
+ methodically), blood was copiously drawn from the patient, who was
+ advanced in years." [Here follow more details of treatment, which I
+ pass over.] "The way having been made ready after this fashion, at
+ the beginning of the next fit, a great febrifuge was given, a
+ draught, that is to say, of Venice treacle, etc. By the doctor's
+ orders, the patient was covered up close with blankets, say rather,
+ was buried under them; and composed himself to sleep and sweat, so
+ that he might escape the cold shivers which are wont to accompany the
+ onset of the ague-fit. He was seized with the deepest sleep and
+ colliquative sweats, and in the short space of twenty-four hours from
+ the time of the ague-fit, he died comatose. He died, who, had a
+ single ounce of Peruvian bark been properly given, might easily have
+ escaped, in twenty-four hours, from the jaws of the grave and the
+ disease: and so burning with anger, I informed the doctor, when he
+ told me this story without any sense of shame."
+
+Marvell was buried on the 18th of August, "under the pews in the south
+side of St. Giles's Church in the Fields, under the window wherein is
+painted on glass a red lion." So writes the invaluable Aubrey, who tells
+us he had the account from the sexton who made the grave.
+
+In 1678 St. Giles's Church was a brick structure built by Laud. The
+present imposing church was built on the site of the old one in 1730-34.
+
+In 1774 Captain Thompson, so he tells us, "visited the grand mausoleum
+under the church of St. Giles, to search for the coffin in which Mr.
+Marvell was placed: in this vault were deposited upwards of a thousand
+bodies, but I could find no plate of an earlier date than 1722; I do
+therefore suppose the new church is built upon the former burial place."
+
+The poet's grand-nephew, Mr. Robert Nettleton, in 1764 placed on the
+north side of the present church, upon a black marble slab, a long
+epitaph, still to be seen, recording the fact that "near to this place
+lyeth the body of Andrew Marvell, Esquire." At no great distance from
+this slab is the tombstone, recently brought in from the graveyard
+outside, of _Georgius Chapman, Poeta_, a fine Roman monument, prepared
+by the care and at the cost of the poet's friend, Inigo Jones. Still
+left exposed, in what is now a doleful garden (not at all Marvellian),
+is the tombstone of Richard Penderel of Boscobel, one of the five yeomen
+brothers who helped Charles to escape after Worcester. Lord Herbert of
+Cherbury, in 1648, and Shirley the dramatist, in 1666, had been carried
+to the same place of sepulture.
+
+Aubrey describes Marvell "as of middling stature, pretty strong-set,
+roundish faced, cherry-cheeked, hazell eye, brown hair. He was, in his
+conversation, very modest, and of very few words. Though he loved wine,
+he would never drink hard in company, and was wont to say that he would
+not play the good fellow in any man's company in whose hands he would
+not trust his life. He kept bottles of wine at his lodgings, and many
+times he would drink liberally by himself and to refresh his spirit and
+exalt his muse. James Harrington (author of _Oceana_) was his intimate
+friend; J. Pell, D.D., was one of his acquaintances. He had not a
+general acquaintance."
+
+Dr. Pell, one may remark, was a great friend of Hobbes.
+
+In March 1679 joint administration was granted by the Prerogative Court
+of Canterbury, _Mariæ Marvell relictæ et Johni Greni Creditori_. This is
+the first time we hear of there being any wife in the case. A creditor
+of a deceased person could not obtain administration without citing the
+next of kin, but a widow was entitled, under a statute of Henry
+VIII., as of right, to administration, and it may be that Mr.
+Green thought the quickest way of being paid his debt was to invent a
+widow. The practice of the court required an affidavit from the widow
+deposing that she was the lawful relict of the deceased, but this
+assertion on oath seems in ordinary cases to have been sufficient, if
+the customary fees were forthcoming. Captain Thompson roundly asserts
+that the alleged Mary Marvell was a cheat, and no more than the
+lodging-house keeper where he had last lived--and Marvell was a
+migratory man.[223:1] Mary Marvell's name appears once again, in the
+forefront of the first edition of Marvell's _Poems_ (1681), where she
+certifies all the contents to be her husband's works. This may have been
+a publisher's, as the affidavit may have been a creditor's, artifice. As
+against this, Mr. Grosart, who believed in Mary Marvell, reminds us that
+Mr. Robert Boulter, the publisher of the poems, was a most respectable
+man, and a friend both of Milton's and Marvell's, and not at all likely
+either to cheat the public with a falsely signed certificate, or to be
+cheated by a London lodging-house keeper. Whatever "Mary Marvell" may
+have been, "widow, wife, or maid," she is heard of no more.
+
+Hull was not wholly unmindful of her late and (William Wilberforce
+notwithstanding) her most famous member. "On Thursday the 26th of
+September 1678, in consideration of the kindness the Town and Borough
+had for Andrew Marvell, Esq., one of the Burgesses of Parliament for the
+same Borough (lately deceased), and for his great merits from the
+Corporation. It is this day ordered by the Court that Fifty pounds be
+paid out of the Town's Chest towards the discharge of his funerals
+(_sic_), and to perpetuate his memory by a gravestone" (_Bench Books of
+Hull_).
+
+The incumbent of Trinity Church is said to have objected to the erection
+of any monument. At all events there is none. Marvell had many enemies
+in the Church. Sharp, afterwards Archbishop of York, was a Yorkshire
+man, and had been domestic chaplain to Sir Heneage Finch, a
+lawyer-member, much lashed by Marvell's bitter pen. Sharp had also taken
+part in the quarrel with the Dissenters, and is reported to have been
+very much opposed to any Hull monument to Marvell. Captain Thompson says
+"the Epitaph which the Town of Hull caused to be erected to Marvell's
+memory was torn down by the Zealots of the King's party." There is no
+record of this occurrence.
+
+There are several portraits of Marvell in existence--one now being in
+the National Portrait Gallery. A modern statue in marble adorns the Town
+Hall of Hull.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[211:1] In reading the early volumes of the _Parliamentary History_ the
+question has to be asked, What authority is there for the reports of
+speeches? In Charles the Second's time some of the speakers, both in the
+Lords and Commons, evidently communicated their orations to the press.
+
+[215:1] Lord Mayor, 1667.
+
+[220:1] See _Marvell's Ghost_, in _Poems on Affairs of State_.
+
+[223:1] The cottage at Highgate, long called 'Marvell's Cottage,' has
+now disappeared. Several of Marvell's letters were written from
+Highgate.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WORK AS A MAN OF LETTERS
+
+
+Marvell's work as a man of letters easily divides itself into the
+inevitable three parts. _First_, as a poet properly so called; _Second_,
+as a political satirist using rhyme; and _Third_, as a writer of prose.
+
+Upon Marvell's work as a poet properly so called that curious, floating,
+ever-changing population to whom it is convenient to refer as "the
+reading public," had no opportunity of forming any real opinion until
+after the poet's death, namely, when the small folio of 1681 made its
+appearance. This volume, although not containing the _Horatian Ode upon
+Cromwell's Return from Ireland_ or the lines upon Cromwell's death, did
+contain, saving these exceptions, all the best of Marvell's verse.
+
+How this poetry was received, to whom and to how many it gave pleasure,
+we have not the means of knowing. The book, like all other good books,
+had to take its chance. Good poetry is never exactly unpopular--its
+difficulty is to get a hearing, to secure a _vogue_. I feel certain that
+from 1681 onwards many ingenuous souls read _Eyes and Tears_, _The
+Bermudas_, _The Nymph complaining for the Death of her Fawn_, _To his
+Coy Mistress_, _Young Love_, and _The Garden_ with pure delight. In 1699
+the poet Pomfret, of whose _Choice_ Dr. Johnson said in 1780, "perhaps
+no composition in our language has been oftener perused," and who
+Southey in 1807 declared to be "the most popular of English poets"; in
+1699, I say, this poet Pomfret says in a preface, sensibly enough, "to
+please everyone would be a New Thing, and to write so as to please no
+Body would be as New, for even Quarles and Wythers (_sic_) have their
+Admirers." So liable is the public taste to fluctuations and reversals,
+that to-day, though Quarles and Wither are not popular authors, they
+certainly number many more readers than Pomfret, Southey's "most popular
+of English poets," who has now, it is to be feared, finally disappeared
+even from the Anthologies. But if Quarles and Wither had their admirers
+even in 1699, the poet Marvell, we may be sure, had his also.
+
+Marvell had many poetical contemporaries--five-and-twenty at
+least--poets of mark and interest, to most of whom, as well as to some
+of his immediate predecessors, he stood, as I must suppose, in some
+degree of poetical relationship. With Milton and Dryden no comparison
+will suggest itself, but with Donne and Cowley, with Waller and Denham,
+with Butler and the now wellnigh forgotten Cleveland, with Walker and
+Charles Cotton, with Rochester and Dorset, some resemblances, certain
+influences, may be found and traced. From the order of his mind and his
+prose style, I should judge Marvell to have been both a reader and a
+critic of his contemporaries in verse and prose--though of his
+criticisms little remains. Of Butler he twice speaks with great respect,
+and his sole reference to the dead Cleveland is kindly. Of Milton we
+know what he thought, whilst Aubrey tells us that he once heard Marvell
+say that the Earl of Rochester was the only man in England that had the
+true vein of satire.
+
+Be these influences what they may or must have been, to us Marvell
+occupies, as a poet, a niche by himself. A finished master of his art he
+never was. He could not write verses like his friend Lovelace, or like
+Cowley's _Chronicle_ or Waller's lines "On a Girdle." He had not the
+inexhaustible, astonishing (though tiresome) wit of Butler. He is often
+clumsy and sometimes almost babyish. One has frequently occasion to
+wonder how a man of business could allow himself to be tickled by such
+obvious straws as are too many of the conceits which give him pleasure.
+To attribute all the conceits of this period to the influence of Dr.
+Donne is but a poor excuse after all. The worst thing that can be said
+against poetry is that there is so much tedium in it. The glorious
+moments are all too few. It is his honest recognition of this woeful
+fact that makes Dr. Johnson, with all his faults lying thick about him,
+the most consolatory of our critics to the ordinary reading man.
+"Tediousness is the most fatal of all faults.... Unhappily this
+pernicious failure is that which an author is least able to discover. We
+are seldom tiresome to ourselves.... Perhaps no man ever thought a line
+superfluous when he wrote it" (_Lives of the Poets_. Under _Prior_--see
+also under _Butler_).
+
+That Marvell is never tiresome I will not assert. But he too has his
+glorious moments, and they are all his own. In the whole compass of our
+poetry there is nothing quite like Marvell's love of gardens and woods,
+of meads and rivers and birds. It is a love not learnt from books, not
+borrowed from brother-poets. It is not indulged in to prove anything. It
+is all sheer enjoyment.
+
+ "Bind me, ye woodbines, in your twines,
+ Curb me about, ye gadding vines,
+ And oh, so close your circles lace,
+ That I may never leave this place!
+ But, lest your fetters prove too weak,
+ Ere I your silken bondage break,
+ Do you, O brambles, chain me too,
+ And, courteous briars, nail me through.
+ ...
+ Here at the fountain's sliding foot,
+ Or at some fruit-tree's mossy root,
+ Casting the body's vest aside,
+ My soul into the boughs does glide;
+ There, like a bird, it sits and sings."
+
+No poet is happier than Marvell in creating the impression that he made
+his verses out of doors.
+
+ "He saw the partridge drum in the woods;
+ He heard the woodcock's evening hymn;
+ He found the tawny thrush's broods,
+ And the shy hawk did wait for him.
+ What others did at distance hear
+ And guessed within the thicket's gloom
+ Was shown to this philosopher,
+ And at his bidding seemed to come."
+
+ (From Emerson's _Wood Notes_.)
+
+Marvell's immediate fame as a true poet was, I dare say, obscured for a
+good while both by its original note (for originality is always
+forbidding at first sight) and by its author's fame as a satirist, and
+his reputation as a lover of "liberty's glorious feast." It was as one
+of the poets encountered in the _Poems on Affairs of State_ (fifth
+edition, 1703) that Marvell was best known during the greater part of
+the eighteenth century. As Milton's friend Marvell had, as it were, a
+side-chapel in the great Miltonic temple. The patriotic member of
+Parliament, who refused in his poverty the Lord-Treasurer Danby's
+proffered bribe, became a character in history before the exquisite
+quality of his garden-poetry was recognised. There was a cult for
+Liberty in the middle of the eighteenth century, and Marvell's name was
+on the list of its professors. Wordsworth's sonnet has preserved this
+tradition for us.
+
+ "Great men have been among us; hands that penn'd
+ And tongues that utter'd wisdom, better none:
+ The later Sydney, Marvell, Harrington."
+
+In 1726 Thomas Cooke printed an edition of Marvell's works which
+contains the poetry that was in the folio of 1681, and in 1772 Cooke's
+edition was reprinted by T. Davies. It was probably Davies's edition
+that Charles Lamb, writing to Godwin on Sunday, 14th December 1800, says
+he "was just going to possess": a notable addition to Lamb's library,
+and an event in the history of the progress of Marvell's poetical
+reputation. Captain Thompson's edition, containing the _Horatian Ode_
+and other pieces, followed in 1776. In the great Poetical Collection of
+the Booksellers (1779-1781) which they improperly[229:1] called
+"Johnson's _Poets_" (improperly, because the poets were, with four
+exceptions, the choice not of the biographer but of the booksellers,
+anxious to retain their imaginary copyright), Marvell has no place. Mr.
+George Ellis, in his _Specimens_ of the early English poets first
+published in 1803, printed from Marvell _Daphne and Chloe_ (in part) and
+_Young Love_. When Mr. Bowles, that once famous sonneteer, edited Pope
+in 1806, he, by way of belittling Pope, quoted two lines from Marvell,
+now well known, but unfamiliar in 1806:--
+
+ "And through the hazels thick espy
+ The hatching throstle's shining eye."
+
+He remarked upon them, "the last circumstance is new, highly poetical,
+and could only have been described by one who was a real lover of
+nature and a witness of her beauties in her most solitary retirement."
+On this Mark Pattison makes the comment that the lines only prove that
+Marvell when a boy went bird-nesting (_Essays_, vol. ii. p. 374), a
+pursuit denied to Pope by his manifold infirmities. The poet Campbell,
+in his _Specimens_ (1819), gave an excellent sketch of Marvell's life,
+and selected _The Bermudas_, _The Nymph and Fawn_, and _Young Love_.
+Then came, fresh from talk with Charles Lamb, Hazlitt, with his _Select
+Poets_ (1825), which contains the _Horatian Ode_, _Bermudas_, _To his
+Coy Mistress_, _The Nymph and Fawn_, _A Drop of Dew_, _The Garden_, _The
+Gallery_, _Upon the Hill and Grove at Billborow_. In this choice we may
+see the hand of Charles Lamb, as Tennyson's may be noticed in the
+selection made in Palgrave's _Golden Treasury_ (1863). Dean Trench in
+his _Household Book of English Poetry_ (1869) gives _Eyes and Tears_,
+the _Horatian Ode_, and _A Drop of Dew_. In Mr. Ward's _English Poets_
+(1880) Marvell is represented by _The Garden_, _A Drop of Dew_, _The
+Bermudas_, _Young Love_, the _Horatian Ode_, and the _Lines on Paradise
+Lost_. Thanks to these later Anthologies and to the quotations from _The
+Garden_ and _Upon Appleton House_ in the _Essays of Elia_, Marvell's
+fame as a true poet has of recent years become widespread, and is now,
+whatever vicissitudes it may have endured, well established.
+
+As a satirist in rhyme Marvell has shared the usual and not undeserved
+fate of almost all satirists of their age and fellow-men. The authors of
+lines written in heat to give expression to the anger of the hour may
+well be content if their effusions give the pain or teach the lesson
+they were intended to give or teach. If you lash the age, you do so
+presumably for the benefit of the age. It is very hard to transmit even
+a fierce and genuine indignation from one age to another. Marvell's
+satires were too hastily composed, too roughly constructed, too redolent
+of the occasion, to enter into the kingdom of poetry. To the careful and
+character-loving reader of history, particularly if he chance to have a
+feeling for the House of Commons, not merely as an institution, but as a
+place of resort, Marvell's satirical poems must always be intensely
+interesting. They strike me as honest in their main intention, and never
+very wide of the mark. Hallam says, in his lofty way, "We read with
+nothing but disgust the satirical poetry of Cleveland, Butler, Oldham,
+Marvell," and he adds, "Marvell's satires are gross and stupid."[231:1]
+Gross they certainly occasionally are, but stupid they never are.
+Marvell was far too well-informed a politician and too shrewd a man ever
+to be stupid.
+
+As a satirist Marvell had, if he wanted them, many models of style, but
+he really needed none, for he just wrote down in rough-and-ready rhyme
+whatever his head or his spleen suggested to his fancy. Every now and
+again there is a noble outburst of feeling, and a couplet of great
+felicity. I confess to taking great pleasure in Marvell's satires.
+
+As a prose writer Marvell has many merits and one great fault. He has
+fire and fancy and was the owner and master of a precise vocabulary well
+fitted to clothe and set forth a well-reasoned and lofty argument. He
+knew how to be both terse and diffuse, and can compress himself into a
+line or expand over a paragraph. He has touches of a grave irony as well
+as of a boisterous humour. He can tell an anecdote and elaborate a
+parable. Swift, we know, had not only Butler's _Hudibras_ by heart, but
+was also (we may be sure) a close student of Marvell's prose. His great
+fault is a very common one. He is too long. He forgets how quickly a
+reader grows tired. He is so interested in the evolutions of his own
+mind that he forgets his audience. His interest at times seems as if it
+were going to prove endless. It is the first business of an author to
+arrest and then to retain the attention of the reader. To do this
+requires great artifice.
+
+Among the masters of English prose it would be rash to rank Marvell, who
+was neither a Hooker nor a Taylor. None the less he was the owner of a
+prose style which some people think the best prose style of all--that of
+honest men who have something to say.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[229:1] "Indecently" is the doctor's own expression.
+
+[231:1] See Hallam's _History of Literature_, vol. iv. pp. 433, 439.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+A
+
+"_Account of the Growth of Popery and Arbitrary Government in England_,"
+180-1, 187;
+ quoted, 188.
+
+Act of Uniformity, 143, 184.
+
+Addison, 65.
+
+Aitken, Mr., 47.
+
+Amersham, 145.
+
+Amsterdam, 59, 197.
+
+Angier, Lord, 196.
+
+_Appleton House_, 66.
+
+Arlington, 185, 186.
+
+_Ars Poetica_, 47.
+
+Ashley, Lord, 120, 150, 185.
+
+_Athenæ Oxonienses_, 10.
+
+Aubrey, 222.
+
+Austin, John, 159.
+
+_Autobiography_ (Clarendon), 136.
+
+_Autobiography of Matthew Robinson_, 11 _n._
+
+Axtell, Lieut.-Colonel, 28, 29.
+
+
+B
+
+_Baker's Chronicle_, 80.
+
+Baker, Thomas, 24.
+
+Bampfield, Thomas, 80.
+
+Banda Islands, 127.
+
+Barbadoes, 58.
+
+Barnard, Edward, 95.
+
+Barron, Richard, 64.
+
+Baxter, Richard, 52, 93, 179.
+
+Bedford, 162.
+
+Bench Books of Hull, 223.
+
+Bennet, Sir John, 195.
+
+Berkeley, Charles, 115.
+
+Berkenhead, Sir John, 191.
+
+_Bermudas, The_, 66, 225, 230.
+
+Besant, Sir Walter, 118 _n._
+
+Bill for "the Rebuilding of London," 123, 124, 125, 126 _n._;
+ amended, 148.
+
+Bill of Conventicles, 142, 146, 147, 148.
+
+Bill of Subsidy, 193.
+
+Bill of Test, 205.
+
+Bill of Uniformity, 101.
+
+"_Bind me, ye woodbines_," 227.
+
+Blackheath, 188.
+
+Blake, Admiral, 59, 69, 71, 75.
+
+Blaydes, James, 6.
+
+---- Joseph, 6.
+
+_Blenheim_ (Addison), 70.
+
+Blood, Colonel, 196.
+
+Bodleian Library, 31, 116.
+
+Boulter, Robert, 223.
+
+Bowles, 229.
+
+Bowyer, 64.
+
+Boyle, Richard, 115.
+
+Bradshaw, John, Lord-President of the Council, 28, 48, 52, 94, 95.
+
+Braganza, Catherine of, 33.
+
+_Bramhall Preface_, 162.
+
+Breda, 88;
+ Declaration, 102, 127, 136.
+
+"_Britannia and Raleigh_," 216 _seq._
+
+Brunswick, Duke of, 196.
+
+Buckingham, Duke of, 150, 185, 196, 205, 206.
+
+Bucknoll, Sir William, 195.
+
+Bunyan, 162.
+
+Burnet, Bishop, 3, 163.
+
+Butler, 62 _n._, 154, 226.
+
+
+C
+
+"Cabal," 184.
+
+Cadsand, 186.
+
+Calamy, Edmund, 93, 94.
+
+Cambridge, 48, 175.
+
+Canary Islands, 70.
+
+Canterbury, Prerogative Court of, 222.
+
+Capel, 172.
+
+Carey, Henry, 126 _n._
+
+Carlisle, Lady, 113.
+
+---- Lord, 101, 108, 113.
+
+Carteret, Sir George (Treasurer of Navy), 120, 141, 143.
+
+Castlemaine, Lady, 134.
+
+_Character of Holland, The_, 60.
+
+Charles I., 29, 167.
+
+Charles II., 76, 80, 81, 90, 93, 95, 127, 182, 184, 185, 186, 188, 189,
+195, 196, 203, 205, 206, 214, 222.
+
+Chateaubriand, 24.
+
+Chatham, 128.
+
+Cherry Burton, 6.
+
+_Choice_ (Pomfret), 225.
+
+_Chronicle_ (Cowley), 227.
+
+Chute, Chaloner, 80.
+
+Civil War, 23, 219.
+
+Clare, Lord, 193, 195.
+
+Clarendon, Earl of, 28, 52, 77, 82;
+ _History_, 88, 114, 120;
+ _Life_, 129, 134, 135, 136, 138, 148 _n._
+
+Cleveland, Duke of, 226.
+
+---- Duchess of, 196.
+
+Clifford, 154, 185, 186.
+
+Clifford's Inn, 125.
+
+Cole, William, 5.
+
+_Collection of Poems on Affairs of State_, 35.
+
+_Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Andrew Marvell, M.P., The_, 8.
+
+Conventicle Act, 144.
+
+Convention Parliament, 87, 91, 95.
+
+Cooke, Thomas, 229.
+
+Cooper, 219.
+
+Copenhagen, 113.
+
+Cosin, Dr., Bishop of Durham, 94, 148.
+
+Cotton, Charles, 226.
+
+Council of Trent, 178.
+
+Court of Chancery, 125.
+
+Coventry, Sir John, 191.
+
+Cowley, 226.
+
+Crew, Bishop of Durham, 202.
+
+_Critic_ (Sheridan), 154.
+
+Cromwell, Oliver, 24, 25, 28, 29, 30, 59, 60, 63, 64, 68, 73, 75, 77,
+89, 92, 93, 94, 95, 127, 137, 140, 145, 215, 219.
+
+---- Lord Richard, 77, 79, 80, 81.
+
+---- the Lady Mary, 71.
+
+
+D
+
+Danby, Lord-Treasurer, 209, 228.
+
+_Daphne and Chloe_, 229.
+
+Dartmouth, Lord (Colonel Legge), 141 _n._
+
+Davies, T., 229.
+
+"_Debate on Mr. Andrew Marvell's striking Sir Philip Harcourt,
+March 29_," etc., 212.
+
+Declaration of Indulgence, 187, 188.
+
+Declaration of War, The, 187.
+
+_Defence and Continuation of Ecclesiastical Politie, A_ (Parker), 153.
+
+_Defensio Secunda pro populo Anglicano_ (Milton), 48.
+
+Denham, Sir John, 27, 129, 226.
+
+De Ruyter, 115, 128, 136.
+
+"_Description of Holland, A_" (Butler), 62.
+
+De Witt, John, 63, 187, 197.
+
+_Dialogue between two horses, Charles I. at Charing Cross, and
+Charles II. at Wool Church_, 218, 219.
+
+_Dictionary of National Biography_, 9, 210 _n._
+
+_Directions to a Painter_ (Denham), 129.
+
+Directory of Public Worship, 90, 103.
+
+_Discourse by Way of Vision concerning the Government of Oliver
+Cromwell_ (quoted), 73, 92.
+
+_Discourse concerning Government_ (Sidney), 64.
+
+"_Discourse of Ecclesiastical Politie wherein the Authority of the
+Civil Magistrate over the Consciences of Subjects in matters of
+external Religion is asserted_," etc., 153.
+
+Donne, Dr., 226, 227.
+
+_Don Quixote_ (Shelton's translation), 78.
+
+Dorset, 226.
+
+Dort, 187.
+
+Dover, 90.
+
+_Drama Commonplaces_, 154.
+
+_Drop of Dew, A_, 230.
+
+Dryden, John, 20, 24, 27, 69, 130.
+
+Dublin Castle, 196.
+
+_Dunciad_, 21.
+
+Dunkirk, 127, 137, 193, 215.
+
+Dutch War, 126.
+
+Dutton, Mr. (Cromwell's ward), 54.
+
+
+E
+
+East India Company, 127.
+
+_Ecclesiastical Politie_ (quoted), 157-8, 159-60.
+
+Edgar, Prince, 196.
+
+Elizabeth (Queen), 143.
+
+"Employment of my Solitude, The" (Fairfax), 32.
+
+"England's Way to Win Wealth," 56;
+ quoted, 56, 57, 58.
+
+Erith, 139.
+
+_Essays of Elia_, 230.
+
+Eton College, 51.
+
+Evelyn, John, 19, 121, 138, 139 _n._
+
+_Eyes and Tears_, 225, 230.
+
+
+F
+
+Fagg, Sir John, 205.
+
+Fairfax, Lady Mary, 27, 28, 32, 63.
+
+---- Lord, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 48, 50, 63.
+
+---- Sir William, 33, 36.
+
+Fanshaw, Sir Richard, 49 _n._
+
+Fauconberg, Lady, 95.
+
+---- Viscount (afterwards Earl), 71.
+
+Finch, Sir Heneage, 91, 224.
+
+_First Anniversary of the Government under His Highness the
+Lord-Protector, The_, 60.
+
+Five Mile Act, 117, 162, 203.
+
+_Flagellum Parliamentum_, 97.
+
+Flanders, 196.
+
+Flecknoe, Richard, 20, 21.
+
+France, 183, 184, 197, 204.
+
+"_Free Impartial Censure of the Platonick Philosophy, A_"
+(Parker), 152 _n._, 174.
+
+French Alliance, 188.
+
+
+G
+
+_Gallery, The_, 230.
+
+"Garden Poetry," 75.
+
+_Garden, The_, 66, 225.
+
+Gee, Dr., 220.
+
+Gilbey. Colonel, 95, 98, 101.
+
+Gillingham, 127.
+
+Gladstone, 23, 104 _n._
+
+_Golden Remains_ (Hales), 51.
+
+_Golden Treasury_ (1863), (Palgrave), 230.
+
+Gombroon, 194.
+
+_Government of the People of England_, etc. (Parker), 172.
+
+Green, Mr., 222.
+
+Grosart, Mr., 7, 65, 84, 85, 106, 165-9 _n._, 176 _n._, 178 _n._,
+181 _n._, 187 _n._, 204-6 _n._, 209 _n._, 223.
+
+Grosvenor, Colonel, 219.
+
+_Growth of Popery_ (quoted), 203, 206.
+
+
+H
+
+Hague, The, 197.
+
+Hale, Sir Matthew, 92, 125.
+
+Hales, John, 51.
+
+Hallam, 231.
+
+Hamilton, 172.
+
+Harding, Dean, 118.
+
+Harrington, James, 76, 222.
+
+Harrison, 29, 30.
+
+Harwich, 115.
+
+Hastings, Lord Henry, 27.
+
+Hazlitt, 61, 239.
+
+Herrick, 27.
+
+_His Majesty's most Gracious Speech to Both Houses of Parliament_, 200.
+
+_Historical Dictionary_ (Jeremy Collier), 24 _n._
+
+_History of England_ (Ranke), 59, 183, 185 _n._
+
+_History of His Own Time_ (Burnet), 129, 136, 152 _n._, 189 _n._
+
+_History of His Own Time_ (Parker), 96 _n._, 170 _n._
+
+_History of Literature_ (Hallam), 231 _n._
+
+_History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England, The_, 136.
+
+Hobbes, 11, 12, 156, 157.
+
+Holland, 120, 135, 182-4, 186, 197.
+
+---- Lord, 172.
+
+Hollis, Thomas, 64, 219.
+
+_Holy Dying_, 151.
+
+_Horatian Ode upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland_, 63, 66, 225, 229, 230.
+
+_Hortus_ (quoted), 45-6.
+
+_Household Book of English Poetry_ (1809) (Dean Trench), 230.
+
+Houses of Convocation, 101.
+
+Howard, Sir Robert, 195.
+
+_Hudibras_ (Butler), 231.
+
+Hull, 2, 5, 8, 17, 18, 50, 59, 84, 95, 98, 99, 101, 209, 223, 224;
+ Town Hall, 224.
+
+_Hull, History of_ (Gent), 17.
+
+Humber, The, 99.
+
+Hyde, Mrs., 202.
+
+---- Sir Edward (Earl of Clarendon), 49 _n._
+
+
+I
+
+Imposition upon wines, 196.
+
+Indies, East and West, 93.
+
+Inigo Jones, 221-2.
+
+_Insolence and Impudence Triumphant_, 153.
+
+Ireland, 122, 196, 209.
+
+Irish Cattle Bill, 122.
+
+
+J
+
+Jessopp, Mr., 120.
+
+Johnson, Dr., 225, 227.
+
+"Johnson's _Poets_," 229.
+
+
+K
+
+Kremlin, 108.
+
+
+L
+
+Lamb, William, 20, 61.
+
+Lambert, General, 29, 31, 82.
+
+Lambeth, 175.
+
+_Last Instructions to a Painter about the Dutch Wars, The_, 129;
+ quoted, 130 _seq._, 135.
+
+Laud, Archbishop, 91, 167, 221.
+
+Lauderdale, Lord, 150, 185, 201, 202.
+
+Lawson, Admiral, 115.
+
+Lenthall, Speaker, 81, 83.
+
+"Letter from a Parliament Man to his Friend" (Shaftesbury), 97.
+
+_Leviathan_ (Hobbes), 156.
+
+_Life of the Great Lord Fairfax_ (Markham) (quoted), 31.
+
+_Lines on Paradise Lost_, 230.
+
+Locke, John, 6, 179.
+
+London, 90;
+ Great Fire of, 17, 119, 209;
+ Great Plague of, 115, 116, 119.
+
+Lort, Dr. (Master of Trinity), 10.
+
+Louis XIV., 183, 185, 186, 188, 189, 193, 196, 215.
+
+Lovelace, Richard, 25, 26, 227.
+
+_Lucasta_, 25, 26.
+
+
+M
+
+Macaulay, 70, 92.
+
+"MacFlecknoe" (quoted), 21.
+
+Manton, Dr., 162.
+
+_Mariæ Marvell relictæ et Johni Greni Creditori_, 222.
+
+Marlborough, Earl of, 115.
+
+Martin Marprelate, 24.
+
+Marvell, Andrew, born 1621, 4;
+ ancestry, 4-5;
+ Hull Grammar School, 8;
+ school days, 8-9;
+ goes to Trinity College, Cambridge, 10;
+ life at Cambridge, 11-12;
+ becomes a Roman Catholic, 12;
+ recantation and return to Trinity, 14;
+ life at Cambridge ends, 17;
+ death of mother, 17;
+ abroad in France, Spain, Holland, and Italy, 19;
+ acquainted with French, Dutch, and Spanish languages, 19;
+ poet, parliamentarian, and controversialist, 20;
+ in Rome (1645), 20;
+ invites Flecknoe to dinner, 22;
+ neither a Republican nor a Puritan, 23;
+ a Protestant and a member of the Reformed Church of England, 23;
+ stood for both King and Parliament, 23;
+ considered by Collier a dissenter, 24 _n._;
+ civil servant during Commonwealth, 24;
+ rejoices at Restoration, 25;
+ keeps Royalist company (1646-50), 25;
+ contributes commendatory lines to Richard Lovelace in poems published
+ 1649, 25;
+ defends Lovelace, 26;
+ loved to be alone with his friends, lived for the most part in a hired
+ lodging, 26;
+ one of thirty-three poets who wept for the early death of Lord H.
+ Hastings, 27;
+ went to live with Lord Fairfax at Nunappleton House as tutor to only
+ child and daughter of the house (1650), 27;
+ anonymity of verses, 34;
+ small volume containing "The Garden Poetry" (1681), 34;
+ tells story of Nunappleton House, 36-45;
+ applies to Secretary for Foreign Tongues for a testimonial, 48;
+ recommended by Milton to Bradshaw for post of Latin Secretary, 50;
+ appointed four years later, 51:
+ frequently visits Eton, 51;
+ Milton intrusts him with a letter and copy of _Secunda defensio_ to
+ Bradshaw, 52;
+ appointed by the Lord-Protector tutor to Mr. Dutton, 54;
+ resides with Oxenbridges, 54;
+ letters, 53, 54-5, 85-7, 92-3, 94-6, 99, 100-1, 104, 105, 109-12, 121,
+ 122, 140, 141-3, 145-7, 148-50, 189-91, 191 _seq._, 210;
+ begins his career as anonymous political poet and satirist (1653), 56;
+ dislike of the Dutch, 56;
+ impregnated with the new ideas about sea power, 59;
+ reported to have been among crowd which witnessed Charles I.'s death, 64;
+ first collected edition of works, verse and prose, produced by
+ subscription in three volumes, 64;
+ became Milton's assistant (1657), 68;
+ friendship with Milton, 69;
+ takes Milton's place in receptions at foreign embassies, 69;
+ plays part of Laureate during Protector's life, 71;
+ produces two songs on marriage of Lady Mary Cromwell, 72-3;
+ attends Cromwell's funeral, 73;
+ is keenly interested in public affairs, 75;
+ becomes a civil servant for a year, 75;
+ M.P. for Hull, 75;
+ friend of Milton and Harrington, 76;
+ well disposed towards Charles II., 77;
+ remains in office till end of year (1659), 77;
+ elected with Ramsden M.P. for Kingston-upon-Hull, 78;
+ attended opening of Parliament (1659), 80;
+ is not a "Rumper," 84;
+ again elected for Hull (1660), 84;
+ begins his remarkable correspondence with the Corporation of Hull, 84;
+ a satirist, not an enthusiast, 85;
+ lines on Restoration, 90;
+ complains to House of exaction of £150 for release of Milton, 91;
+ elected for third, and last, time member for Hull, 95;
+ receives fee from Corporation of Hull for attendance at House, 96;
+ reviled by Parker for taking this payment, 96;
+ _Flagellum Parliamentum_ attributed to, 97;
+ goes to Holland, 100;
+ is recalled, 101;
+ while in Holland writes to Trinity House and to the Corporation of Hull
+ on business matters, 101;
+ goes as secretary to Lord Carlisle on an embassy to Sweden and
+ Denmark, 106;
+ public entry into Moscow, 108;
+ assists at formal reception of Lord Carlisle as English ambassador, 109;
+ renders oration to Czar into Latin, 109;
+ Russians object to terms of oration, 109;
+ replies, 109-12;
+ returns from embassy, 113;
+ reaches London, 113;
+ attends Parliament at Oxford, 116;
+ _The Last Instructions to a Painter about the Dutch Wars_, 129-35;
+ bitter enemy of Hyde, 136;
+ lines upon Clarendon House, 138;
+ inquires into "miscarriages of the late war," 139;
+ _The Rehearsal Transprosed_, 151;
+ its great success, 152;
+ literary method described by Parker, 162;
+ called "a droll," "a buffoon," 163;
+ replies to Parker, 163 _seq._;
+ intercedes, 168;
+ abused by Parker in _History of His Own Time_, 170 _n._;
+ _The Rehearsall Transpros'd_ (second part), 171-2;
+ pictures Parker, 172 _seq._;
+ latterly fears subversion of Protestant faith, 179;
+ his famous pamphlet, _An Account of the Growth of Popery and Arbitrary
+ Government in England_, 180-1, 203-5, 206-8;
+ gives account of quarrel with Dutch, 186-7;
+ commendatory verses on "_Mr. Milton's Paradise Lost_" (1674), 199 _n._;
+ mock speech, _His Majesty's Most Gracious Speech to Both Houses of
+ Parliament_, 200-2;
+ story of proffered bribe, 209-10;
+ last letter to constituents, 210;
+ rarely speaks in the House of Commons, 211;
+ longest reported speech, 211;
+ speech reported in _Parliamentary History_ (1677), 211;
+ "_Debate on Mr. Andrew Marvell's striking Sir Philip Harcourt_,"
+ etc., 212-14;
+ friend of Prince Rupert, 214;
+ lines on setting up of king's statue, 214-15;
+ "Britannia and Raleigh," 216-19;
+ dies, 219;
+ thought to have been poisoned, 219;
+ this suspicion dissipated, 220;
+ account of sickness and death, 220-1;
+ burial, 221;
+ obsequies, 223;
+ epitaph, 221;
+ humour and wit, 163;
+ not a fanatic, 179;
+ insatiable curiosity, 182;
+ power of self-repression, 211;
+ as poet, 225-30;
+ as satirist, 228, 230-1;
+ as prose writer, 231-2;
+ love of gardens, 227;
+ appearance described, 232;
+ Hull's most famous member, 223;
+ enemies, 224;
+ portraits of, 224;
+ statue of, 224;
+ editions of works, 229.
+
+Marvell, Rev. Andrew (father), 7.
+
+---- Mary (wife), 3, 222-3.
+
+"Marvell's Cottage," 223 _n._
+
+_Marvell's Ghost_ (in _Poems on Affairs of State_), 220 _n._
+
+May, 119.
+
+Mead, William, 191.
+
+Meadows, Philip, 51, 54.
+
+Medway, 139, 187.
+
+_Memorials_ (Whitelock), 29.
+
+Milton, John, 2, 19, 20, 21, 48, 49, 52, 64, 68, 69, 73, 76, 77, 91,
+129, 151, 199, 223, 226, 228.
+
+Monk, General, Duke of Albemarle, 80, 83, 91, 128, 139, 140.
+
+---- Dr., Provost of Eton. 94.
+
+Monmouth, Duke of, 116, 191.
+
+Monument ("tall bully"), 118.
+
+More (Moore), Thomas, 7.
+
+More, Robert, 6.
+
+Morpeth, Lord, 113.
+
+Moscow, 105, 107.
+
+"Mr. Milton's Paradise Lost" (Marvell), 199 _n._
+
+_Musa Cantabrigiensis_, 16.
+
+Muskerry, Lord, 115.
+
+
+N
+
+Napoleon, 24.
+
+_Narrative of the Restoration_ (Collins), 81.
+
+National Portrait Gallery, 224.
+
+Navigation Act, 59, 63.
+
+Nettleton, Robert, 64;
+ (Marvell's grand-nephew), 221.
+
+New Amsterdam, 136.
+
+New Guinea, 127.
+
+Novgorod, 113.
+
+Nunappleton House, 63.
+
+_Nymph and Fawn, The_, 230.
+
+_Nymph complaining for the Death of her Fawn, The_, 225.
+
+
+O
+
+Oaths Bill, 202, 205.
+
+_Oceana_ (James Harrington), 222.
+
+_Ode upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland, The_, 34.
+
+_Omniana_ (Southey), 20 _n._
+
+Opdam, Admiral, 115, 129.
+
+Orleans, Duchess of, 185.
+
+Ormond, Duke of, 196.
+
+Orrery, 150.
+
+Owen, Dr. John, 81.
+
+Oxenbridge, John, 51.
+
+Oxford, 116.
+
+
+P
+
+_Paradise Lost_, 10, 52, 69, 91.
+
+_Paradise Regained_, 91.
+
+Parker, Dr. Samuel, 9, 151-3, 155, 157, 159-60, 162-3, 167, 171-2, 211.
+
+_Parliamentary History_, 211.
+
+Paston, Sir Robert, 114.
+
+Pattison, Mark, _Essays_, 230.
+
+Peak, Sir William, 215.
+
+Pease, Anne, 6.
+
+Pelican (Inn), 21.
+
+Pell, J., D.D., 222.
+
+Pembroke, Earl of, 202.
+
+Penderel, Richard, 222.
+
+Penn, William, 191.
+
+Pensionary or Long Parliament, 95, 96, 135.
+
+Pepys, Samuel, 69, 90, 95, 96, 113, 117, 118, 120, 121;
+ _Diary_, 129.
+
+Pett, Mr. Commissioner, 133.
+
+"Petty Navy Royal" (Dee), 56;
+ (quoted), 57, 58.
+
+Pickering, Sir Gilbert, 69.
+
+_Pilgrim's Progress, The_, 158.
+
+Plymouth, 136.
+
+"_Poem upon the Death of his late Highness the Protector, A_," 74.
+
+_Poems_ (1081), 223.
+
+_Poems and Satires of Andrew Marvell_, 47 _n._
+
+_Poems on Affairs of State_, 228.
+
+Poleroone, 127, 136.
+
+"_Politic Plat (plan) for the Honour of the Prince, A_," 56.
+
+Poll Bill, 122.
+
+Ponder, Nathaniel, 171.
+
+Pope, 34, 130, 229.
+
+Popish Plot, 219.
+
+Popple, Edmund, 6.
+
+---- William, 6.
+
+_Portland Papers_, 116 _n._
+
+Portsmouth, 136.
+
+Pride, Colonel, 94.
+
+Prince of Orange, 63.
+
+Prynne, 96.
+
+{Greek: Pyretologia} (Richard Morton), 220.
+
+
+Q
+
+Quarles, 226.
+
+
+R
+
+Ramsden, John, 78, 84, 95.
+
+---- William. 189, 210.
+
+_Rehearsal_ (Duke of Buckingham), 154;
+ quoted, 154-5.
+
+_Rehearsal Transprosed, The_ (quoted), 23-4, 51 _n._, 151, 152n., 162;
+ (second part), 171;
+ quoted, 172-8, 211.
+
+_Religio Laici_, 24 _n._
+
+_Reproof to the Rehearsal Transprosed_ (quoted), 162, 168, 169 _seq._
+
+Reynolds, Dr., Bishop of Norwich, 93.
+
+Riga, 113.
+
+Robinson, Matthew, 11.
+
+Rochester, Earl of, 226.
+
+Rome, 193.
+
+Roos Divorce Bill, 148, 149.
+
+"Rota" Club, 3, 76.
+
+Rouen, 139, 139 _n._
+
+_Royal Charles, The_, 115, 136.
+
+Rump Parliament, 81, 82, 83.
+
+Rupert, Prince, 3, 214.
+
+Rushworth, 28.
+
+
+S
+
+St. Giles's Church in the Fields, 221.
+
+St. John, Oliver, 51.
+
+_Saint's Rest_ (Baxter), 151.
+
+_Samson Agonistes_, 91.
+
+Santa Cruz, 69.
+
+Savoy Conference, 90, 101, 103, 104.
+
+Scotland, 204.
+
+Scroggs, Lord Chief Justice, 100.
+
+_Secunda defensio_, 52.
+
+_Select Poets_ (Hazlitt), 230.
+
+Shadwell, 20, 21.
+
+Shaftesbury, Earl of, 205.
+
+Sharp, Archbishop, 224.
+
+Sheerness, 127, 128, 136.
+
+Sheldon, Dr., Archbishop of Canterbury, 153.
+
+Shirley (dramatist), 118, 222.
+
+Shrewsbury, Lady, 196.
+
+Sidney Sussex College, 219.
+
+Skinner, Mrs., 18.
+
+Skynner, Mr., 54.
+
+Sluys, 186.
+
+Smith, Mr. Goldwin, 123 _n._
+
+Sobieski, John, 214.
+
+_Social England Illustrated_, 56 _n._
+
+Solemn League and Covenant, 29.
+
+_Song of Agincourt_ (Drayton), 70.
+
+Southampton, Lord, 95, 203.
+
+Southey, 226.
+
+Spain, 183, 184.
+
+Specimens (Campbell), 230.
+
+_Specimens_ of Early English Poets (Mr. George Ellis), 229.
+
+_State Trials_, 191.
+
+Sterne, Bishop of Carlisle, 94.
+
+Stockholm, 113.
+
+Surat, 113, 194.
+
+Surinam, 187.
+
+Sutton, Mrs., 202.
+
+Swift, Benjamin, 152, 231. {Transcriber's note: Referred to by surname
+ only in the text. Probably means Jonathan.}
+
+
+T
+
+_Table Talk_ (Selden), 179.
+
+Tait, Archbishop, 23.
+
+Temple, Sir William, 183.
+
+_Tender Conscience_, 161;
+ quoted, 161-2.
+
+_Tentamina Physico-Theologica_ (Parker), 174.
+
+Test Bill, 188.
+
+Texel, 127.
+
+Thompson, Captain Edward, 10, 64, 68, 73, 84, 202 _n._, 221, 223, 224, 229.
+
+Thurloe, John, 50, 52.
+
+_To his Coy Mistress_, 66, 225, 230.
+
+Torbay, 136.
+
+Tower, The, 206.
+
+_Travels and Voyages_ (Harris), 106.
+
+_Treatise on Education_ (Milton), 9.
+
+"Treatise on the breeding of the Horse," 32.
+
+Treaty of Dover, 184, 150 _n._, 186.
+
+Treby, George, M.P., 219.
+
+Trench, Dean, 67 _n._
+
+Trevor, 150.
+
+Trinity Church, Hull, 223.
+
+---- College, Cambridge, 10.
+
+---- House, 100.
+
+Triple Alliance, The, 183, 184, 186.
+
+Trot, Sir John, 197.
+
+_True Greatness of Kingdoms and Estates, The_ (Bacon), 60.
+
+_Truth and Innocence Vindicated_ (Owen), 153.
+
+Turner, Sir Edward, 135.
+
+
+U
+
+_Unreformed House of Commons, The_ (Porritt), 96 _n._
+
+Upnor Castle, 128.
+
+"Upon His House," 138.
+
+_Upon Appleton House_, 230.
+
+_Upon the Hill and Grove of Billborow_, 230.
+
+Urquhart, Sir Thomas, 89.
+
+
+V
+
+Vane, Sir Harry, 89.
+
+Van Tromp, 59, 61, 63, 115.
+
+Vere, Lord, 32.
+
+Villiers, George, Duke of Buckingham, 33.
+
+Viner, Sir Robert, 214, 215.
+
+Virginia, 58.
+
+
+W
+
+Walcheren, 186.
+
+Walker, 226.
+
+Waller, 73, 144, 145 _n._, 226.
+
+"Walton's _Life_" (Wotton), 19;
+ quoted, 20.
+
+Ward, Seth, 153 _n._ {Transcriber's Note: 152}
+
+Watts, Dr., 65.
+
+Weckerlin, Georg Rudolph, 49;
+ Latin Secretary to Parliament, 49 _n._, 50.
+
+Welch, Mr., 210.
+
+Westminster Hall, 140.
+
+---- Parliament of, 83.
+
+White, Bishop of Ely, 13.
+
+Whitehall, 117.
+
+Whitelock's _Memorials_, 29.
+
+_William and Margaret_ (Mallet), 65.
+
+Wine Licenses, 196.
+
+Winestead, 4.
+
+Wise, Lieutenant, 140.
+
+Wither, 226.
+
+Wood, Anthony, 25.
+
+Wordsworth, 229.
+
+Worshipful Society of Masters and Pilots of Trinity House, 84.
+
+
+Y
+
+Yarmouth, 58.
+
+York, Duchess of, 193, 196.
+
+---- Duke of, 115, 188, 189.
+
+_Young Love_, 225, 229, 230.
+
+
+
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+*****************************************************************/
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Andrew Marvell, by Augustine Birrell</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p class="pg">Title: Andrew Marvell</p>
+<p class="pg">Author: Augustine Birrell</p>
+<p class="pg">Release Date: December 25, 2005 [eBook #17388]</p>
+<p class="pg">Language: English</p>
+<p class="pg">Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p class="pg">***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ANDREW MARVELL***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4>E-text prepared by Irma Spehar, Louise Pryor,<br />
+ and <a href="http://www.pgdp.net/">the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team</a><br />
+ from images generously made available by<br />
+ <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/toronto">The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries</a></h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;" cellpadding="10">
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Note:
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
+ <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/andrewmarvell00birruoft">
+ http://www.archive.org/details/andrewmarvell00birruoft</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>EDITED BY JOHN MORLEY</i></p>
+
+<p class="center big"><i>ANDREW MARVELL</i></p>
+
+
+<div class="center biggap bbox" style="width: 80%; margin-left: 10%;">
+<p class="center bb" style="padding: 1.5em;"><i>ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS</i></p>
+
+
+
+<h1>ANDREW MARVELL</h1>
+
+<p class="center">BY</p>
+
+<p class="center big">AUGUSTINE BIRRELL</p>
+
+
+<p class="center biggap">New York<br />
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+
+LONDON: MACMILLAN &amp; CO., <span class="smcap">Ltd.</span><br />
+
+1905</p>
+
+<p class="center gapbelow"><i>All rights reserved</i>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center biggap little"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1905,</span>
+<span class="smcap">By</span> THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.</p>
+
+<hr class="between" />
+
+<p class="center little">Set up and electrotyped. Published September, 1905.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center biggap little">Norwood Press<br />
+J.&nbsp;S. Cushing &amp; Co.&mdash;Berwick &amp; Smith Co.<br />
+Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pgv" id="pgv"></a><span class="pagenum">v</span>PREFACE</h2>
+
+
+<p>I desire to express my indebtedness to the following editions of
+Marvell&rsquo;s Works:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p style="padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;">(1) <i>The Works of Andrew Marvell, Esq., Poetical, Controversial, and
+Political</i>: containing many Original Letters, Poems, and Tracts
+never before printed, with a New Life. By Captain Edward
+Thompson. In three volumes. London, 1776.</p>
+
+<p class="nogapbelow" style="padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;">(2) <i>The Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Andrew Marvell, M.P.</i>
+Edited with Memorial-Introduction and Notes by the Rev. Alexander
+B. Grosart. In four volumes. 1872.</p>
+
+<p class="nogapabove" style="padding-left: 2em;">(<i>In the Fuller Worthies Library.</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="nogapbelow" style="padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;">(3) <i>Poems and Satires of Andrew Marvell, sometime Member of
+Parliament for Hull.</i> Edited by G.&nbsp;A. Aitken. Two volumes.
+Lawrence and Bullen, 1892.</p>
+
+<p class="nogapabove" style="padding-left: 2em;"><i>Reprinted</i> Routledge, 1905.</p></div>
+
+<p>Mr. C.&nbsp;H. Firth&rsquo;s Life of Marvell in the thirty-sixth volume of <i>The
+Dictionary of National Biography</i> has, I am sure, preserved me from
+some, and possibly from many, blunders.</p>
+
+<p class="toright">
+A.&nbsp;B.</p>
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">3 New Square, Lincoln&rsquo;s Inn,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">June 3, 1905.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="pgvii" id="pgvii"></a><span class="pagenum">vii</span><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+<div class="TOC">
+
+<p class="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_I" >CHAPTER I</a></p>
+<p class="little"><span class="tocright">PAGE</span></p>
+<p><span class="tocwords">Early Days at School and College</span> <span class="tocright">1</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_II" >CHAPTER II</a></p>
+<p><span class="tocwords">&ldquo;The Happy Garden-State&rdquo;</span> <span class="tocright">19</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_III" >CHAPTER III</a></p>
+<p><span class="tocwords">A Civil Servant in the Time of the Commonwealth</span> <span class="tocright">48</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV" >CHAPTER IV</a></p>
+<p><span class="tocwords">In the House of Commons</span> <span class="tocright">75</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_V" >CHAPTER V</a></p>
+<p><span class="tocwords">&ldquo;The Rehearsal Transprosed&rdquo;</span> <span class="tocright">151</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI" >CHAPTER VI</a></p>
+<p><span class="tocwords">Last Years in the House of Commons</span> <span class="tocright">179</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII" >CHAPTER VII</a></p>
+<p><span class="tocwords">Final Satires and Death</span> <span class="tocright">211</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII" >CHAPTER VIII</a></p>
+<p><span class="tocwords">Work as a Man of Letters</span> <span class="tocright">225</span></p>
+
+<p><a href="#INDEX" >Index</a> <span class="tocright">233</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg1" id="pg1"></a><span class="pagenum">1</span><a name="ANDREW_MARVELL" id="ANDREW_MARVELL"></a>ANDREW MARVELL</h2>
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<p class="center">EARLY DAYS AT SCHOOL AND COLLEGE</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> name of Andrew Marvell ever sounds sweet, and always has, to use
+words of Charles Lamb&rsquo;s, a fine relish to the ear. As the author of
+poetry of exquisite quality, where for the last time may be heard the
+priceless note of the Elizabethan lyricist, whilst at the same moment
+utterance is being given to thoughts and feelings which reach far
+forward to Wordsworth and Shelley, Marvell can never be forgotten in his
+native England.</p>
+
+<p>Lines of Marvell&rsquo;s poetry have secured the final honours, and incurred
+the peril, of becoming &ldquo;familiar quotations&rdquo; ready for use on a great
+variety of occasion. We may, perhaps, have been bidden once or twice too
+often to remember how the Royal actor</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Nothing common did, or mean,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Upon that memorable scene,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>or have been assured to our surprise by some self-satisfied worldling
+how he always hears at his back,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Time&rsquo;s wing&egrave;d chariot hurrying near.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>A true poet can, however, never be defiled by the rough usage of the
+populace.</p>
+
+<p>As a politician Marvell lives in the old-fashioned <a name="pg2" id="pg2"></a><span class="pagenum">2</span>vivacious
+history-books (which if they die out, as they show some signs of doing,
+will carry with them half the historic sense of the nation) as the hero
+of an anecdote of an unsuccessful attempt made upon his political virtue
+by a minister of the Crown, as a rare type of an inflexible patriot, and
+as the last member of the House of Commons who was content to take wages
+from, instead of contributing to the support of, his constituents. As
+the intimate friend and colleague of Milton, Marvell shares some of the
+indescribable majesty of that throne. A poet, a scholar, a traveller, a
+diplomat, a famous wit, an active member of Parliament from the
+Restoration to his death in 1678, the life of Andrew Marvell might <i>a
+priori</i> be supposed to be one easy to write, at all events after the
+fashion in which men&rsquo;s lives get written. But it is nothing of the kind,
+as many can testify. A more elusive, non-recorded character is hardly to
+be found. We know all about him, but very little of him. His parentage,
+his places of education, many of his friends and acquaintances, are all
+known. He wrote nearly four hundred letters to his Hull constituents,
+carefully preserved by the Corporation, in which he narrates with much
+particularity the course of public business at Westminster.
+Notwithstanding these materials, the man Andrew Marvell remains
+undiscovered. He rarely comes to the surface. Though both an author and
+a member of Parliament, not a trace of personal vanity is noticeable,
+and vanity is a quality of great assistance to the biographer. That
+Marvell was a strong, shrewd, capable man of affairs, with enormous
+powers of self-repression, his Hull correspondence clearly proves, but
+what more he was it is hard to say. He rarely spoke during his eighteen
+years in the House of Commons. It is impossible to doubt <a name="pg3" id="pg3"></a><span class="pagenum">3</span>that such a
+man in such a place was, in Mr. Disraeli&rsquo;s phrase, a &ldquo;personage.&rdquo; Yet
+when we look for recognition of what we feel sure was the fact, we fail
+to find it. Bishop Burnet, in his delightful history, supplies us with
+sketches of the leading Parliamentarians of Marvell&rsquo;s day, yet to
+Marvell himself he refers but once, and then not by name but as &ldquo;the
+liveliest droll of the age,&rdquo; words which mean much but tell little. In
+Clarendon&rsquo;s <i>Autobiography</i>, another book which lets the reader into the
+very clash and crowd of life, there is no mention of one of the author&rsquo;s
+most bitter and cruel enemies. With Prince Rupert, Marvell was credited
+by his contemporaries with a great intimacy; he was a friend of
+Harrington&rsquo;s; it may be he was a member of the once famous &ldquo;Rota&rdquo; Club;
+it is impossible to resist the conviction that wherever he went he made
+a great impression, that he was a central figure in the lobbies of the
+House of Commons and a man of much account; yet no record survives
+either to convince posterity of his social charm or even to convey any
+exact notion of his personal character.</p>
+
+<p>A somewhat solitary man he would appear to have been, though fond of
+occasional jollity. He lived alone in lodgings, and was much immersed in
+business, about a good deal of which we know nothing except that it took
+him abroad. His death was sudden, and when three years afterwards the
+first edition of his poems made its appearance, it was prefaced by a
+certificate signed &ldquo;Mary Marvell,&rdquo; to the effect that everything in the
+book was printed &ldquo;according to the copies of my late dear husband.&rdquo;
+Until after Marvell&rsquo;s death we never hear of Mrs. Marvell, and with this
+signed certificate she disappears. In a series of Lives of Poets&rsquo; Wives
+it would be hard to make much of Mrs. Andrew Marvell. For different but
+still cogent <a name="pg4" id="pg4"></a><span class="pagenum">4</span>reasons it is hard to write a life of her famous husband.</p>
+
+<p>Andrew Marvell was born at Winestead in Holdernesse, on Easter Eve, the
+31st of March 1621, in the Rectory House, the elder Marvell, also
+Andrew, being then the parson of the parish. No fitter birthplace for a
+garden-poet can be imagined. Roses still riot in Winestead; the
+fruit-tree roots are as mossy as in the seventeenth century. At the
+right season you may still</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Through the hazels thick espy<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The hatching throstle&rsquo;s shining eye.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Birds, fruits and flowers, woods, gardens, meads, and rivers still make
+the poet&rsquo;s birthplace lovely.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Loveliness, magic, and grace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They are here&mdash;they are set in the world!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They abide! and the finest of souls<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Has not been thrilled by them all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor the dullest been dead to them quite.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The poet who sings them may die,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But they are immortal and live,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For they are the life of the world.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Holdernesse was not the original home of the Marvells, who would seem to
+have been mostly Cambridgeshire folk, though the name crops up in other
+counties. Whether Cambridge &ldquo;men&rdquo; of a studious turn still take long
+walks I do not know, but &ldquo;some vast amount of years ago&rdquo; it was
+considered a pleasant excursion, either on foot or on a hired steed,
+from Cambridge to Meldreth, where the Elizabethan manor-house, long
+known as &ldquo;the Marvells&rsquo;,&rdquo; agreeably embodied the tradition that here it
+was that the poet&rsquo;s father was born in 1586. The Church Registers have
+disappeared. Proof is impossible. That there were Marvells in the
+neighbourhood is certain. The famous Cambridge <a name="pg5" id="pg5"></a><span class="pagenum">5</span>antiquary, William Cole,
+perhaps the greatest of all our collectors, has included among his
+copies of early wills those of several Marvells and Mervells of Meldreth
+and Shepreth, belonging to pre-Reformation times, as their pious gifts
+to the &ldquo;High Altar&rdquo; and to &ldquo;Our Lady&rsquo;s Light&rdquo; pleasingly testify. But
+our Andrew was a determined Protestant.</p>
+
+<p>The poet&rsquo;s father is an interesting figure in our Church history.
+Educated at Emmanuel College, from whence he proceeded a Master of Arts
+in 1608, he took Orders; and after serving as curate at Flamborough, was
+inducted to the living of Winestead in 1614, where he remained till
+1624, in which year he went to Hull as master of the Grammar School and
+lecturer, that is preacher, of Trinity Church. The elder Marvell
+belonged, from the beginning to the end of his useful and even heroic
+life, to the Reformed Church of England, or, as his son puts it, &ldquo;a
+conformist to the Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England, though
+I confess none of the most over-running and eager in them.&rdquo; The younger
+Marvell, with one boyish interval, belonged all through his life to the
+paternal school of religious thought.</p>
+
+<p>Fuller&rsquo;s account of the elder Marvell is too good to be passed over:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;He afterwards became Minister at Hull, where for his lifetime he was
+well beloved. Most facetious in discourse, yet grave in his carriage,
+a most excellent preacher who, like a good husband, never broached
+what he had new brewed, but preached what he had pre-studied some
+competent time before. Insomuch that he was wont to say that he would
+cross the common proverb which called Saturday the working-day and
+Monday the holyday of preachers. It happened that Anno Dom. 1640,
+Jan. 23, crossing Humber in a Barrow boat, the same was sandwarpt,
+and he was drowned therein (with Mrs. Skinner, daughter to Sir Edward
+Coke, a very religious <a name="pg6" id="pg6"></a><span class="pagenum">6</span>gentlewoman) by the carelessness, not to say
+drunkenness of the boatmen, to the great grief of all good men. His
+excellent comment upon St. Peter is daily desired and expected, if
+the envy and covetousness of private persons <i>for their own use</i>
+deprive not the public of the benefit thereof.&rdquo;<a name="fnm1_61" id="fnm1_61"></a><a href="#fn1_61" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>This good man, to whom perhaps, remembering the date of his death, the
+words may apply, <i>Tu vero felix non vit&aelig; tantum claritate sed etiam
+opportunitate mortis</i>, was married at Cherry Burton, on the 22nd of
+October 1612, to Anne Pease, a member of a family destined to become
+widely known throughout the north of England. Of this marriage there
+were five children, all born at Winestead, viz. three daughters, Anne,
+Mary, and Elizabeth, and two sons, Andrew and John, the latter of whom
+died a year after his birth, and was buried at Winestead on the 20th
+September 1624.</p>
+
+<p>The three daughters married respectively James Blaydes of Sutton,
+Yorkshire, on the 29th of December 1633; Edmund Popple, afterwards
+Sheriff of Hull, on the 18th of August 1636; and Robert More. Anne&rsquo;s
+eldest son, Joseph Blaydes, was Mayor of Hull in 1702, having married
+the daughter of a preceding Mayor in 1698. The descendants of this
+branch still flourish. The Popples also had children, one of whom,
+William Popple, was a correspondent of his uncle the poet&rsquo;s, and a
+merchant of repute, who became in 1696 Secretary to the Board of Trade,
+and the friend of the most famous man who ever sat at the table of that
+Board, John Locke. A son of this William Popple led a very comfortable
+eighteenth-century life, which is in strong contrast with that of his
+grand-uncle, for, having entered the Cofferers&rsquo; Office about 1730, he
+was made seven years later Solicitor and Clerk of the Reports to the
+Commissioners of Trade and Plantations, and in<a name="pg7" id="pg7"></a><span class="pagenum">7</span> 1745 became in
+succession to a relative, one Alured Popple, Governor of the Bermudas, a
+post he retained until his death, which occurred not</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Where the remote Bermudas ride<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In the ocean&rsquo;s bosom unespied,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>but at his house in Hampstead. So well placed and idle a gentleman was
+almost bound to be a bad poet and worse dramatist, and this William
+Popple was both.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s third sister, Elizabeth, does not seem to have had issue, a
+certain Thomas More, or Moore, a Fellow of Magdalen College, Cambridge,
+whose name occurs in family records, being her stepson.</p>
+
+<p>In the latter part of 1624 the elder Marvell resigned the living of
+Winestead, and took up the duties of schoolmaster and lecturer, or
+preacher, at Hull. Important duties they were, for the old Grammar
+School of Hull dates back to 1486, and may boast of a long career of
+usefulness, never having fallen into that condition of decay and
+disrepute from which so many similar endowments have been of late years
+rescued by the beneficent and, of course, abused action of the Charity
+Commissioners. Andrew Marvell the elder succeeded to and was succeeded
+by eminent headmasters. Trinity Church, where the poet&rsquo;s father preached
+on Sundays to crowded and interested congregations, was then what it
+still is, though restored by Scott, one of the great churches in the
+north of England.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Andrew Marvell made his mark upon Hull. Mr. Grosart, who lacked
+nothing but the curb upon a too exuberant vocabulary, a little less
+enthusiasm and a great deal more discretion, to be a model editor, tells
+us in his invaluable edition of <i>The Complete<a name="pg8" id="pg8"></a><span class="pagenum">8</span> Works in Verse and Prose
+of Andrew Marvell, M.P.</i>,<a name="fnm2_81" id="fnm2_81"></a><a href="#fn2_81" class="fnnum">1</a> that he had read a number of the elder
+Marvell&rsquo;s manuscripts, consisting of sermons and miscellaneous papers,
+from which Mr. Grosart proceeds:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I gather three things.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;(1) That he was a man of a very brave, fearlessly outspoken
+character. Some of his practical applications in his sermons before
+the Magistrates are daring in their directness of reproof, and
+melting in their wistfulness of entreaty.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;(2) That he was a well-read man. His Sermons are as full of
+classical and patristic allusions and pat sayings from the most
+occult literatures as even Bishop Andrewes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;(3) That he was a man of tireless activity. Besides the two offices
+named, he became head of one of the Great Hospitals of the Town
+(Charter House), and in an address to the Governors placed before
+them a prescient and statesmanlike plan for the better management of
+its revenues, and for the foundation of a Free Public Library to be
+accessible to all.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>When at a later day, and in the midst of a fierce controversy, Andrew
+Marvell wrote of the clergy as &ldquo;the reserve of our Christianity,&rdquo; he
+doubtless had such men as his father in his mind and memory.</p>
+
+<p>It was at the old Grammar School of Hull, and with his father as his
+<i>Orbilius</i>, that Marvell was initiated into the mysteries of the Latin
+grammar, and was, as he tells us, put to his</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Montibus, inquit, erunt; et erant submontibus illis;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Risit Atlantiades; et me mihi, perfide, prodis?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Me mihi prodis? ait.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;For as I remember this scanning was a liberal art that we learn&rsquo;d at
+Grammar School, and to scan verses as he does the Author&rsquo;s prose
+before we did or were obliged to understand them.&rdquo;<a name="fnm3_82" id="fnm3_82"></a><a href="#fn3_82" class="fnnum">2</a></p></div>
+
+<p><a name="pg9" id="pg9"></a><span class="pagenum">9</span>Irrational methods have often amazingly good results, and the Hull
+Grammar School provided its head-master&rsquo;s only son with the rudiments of
+learning, thus enabling him to become in after years what John Milton
+himself, the author of that terrible <i>Treatise on Education</i> addressed
+to Mr. Hartlibb, affirmed Andrew Marvell to be in a written testimonial,
+&ldquo;a scholar, and well-read in the Latin and Greek authors.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Attached to the Grammar School there was &ldquo;a great garden,&rdquo; renowned for
+its wall-fruit and flowers; so by leaving Winestead behind, our
+&ldquo;garden-poet,&rdquo; that was to be, was not deprived of inspiration.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from these meagre facts, we know nothing of Marvell&rsquo;s boyhood at
+Hull. His clerical foe, Dr. Parker, afterwards Bishop of Oxford, writes
+contemptuously of &ldquo;an hunger-starved whelp of a country vicar,&rdquo; and in
+another passage, which undoubtedly refers to Marvell, he speaks of &ldquo;an
+unhappy education among Boatswains and Cabin-boys,&rdquo; whose unsavoury
+phrases, he goes on to suggest, Marvell picked up in his childhood. But
+truth need not be looked for in controversial pages. The best argument
+for a married clergy is to be found, for Englishmen at all events, in
+the sixty-seven volumes of the <i>Dictionary of National Biography</i>, where
+are recorded the services rendered to religion, philosophy, poetry,
+justice, and the empire by the &ldquo;whelps&rdquo; of many a country vicar.
+Parsons&rsquo; wives may sometimes be trying and hard to explain, but an
+England without the sons of her clergy would be shorn of half her glory.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s boyhood seems to have been surrounded with the things that
+most make for a child&rsquo;s happiness. A sensible, affectionate, humorous,
+religious father, occupying a position of authority, and greatly
+respected, a mother and three elder sisters to make much of his <a name="pg10" id="pg10"></a><span class="pagenum">10</span>bright
+wit and early adventures, a comfortable yet simple home, and an
+atmosphere of piety, learning, and good fellowship. What more is wanted,
+or can be desired? The &ldquo;Boatswains&rdquo; and &ldquo;Cabin-boys&rdquo; of Bishop Parker&rsquo;s
+fancy were in the neighbourhood, no doubt, and as stray companions for a
+half-holiday must have had their attractions; but it is unnecessary to
+attribute Andrew Marvell&rsquo;s style in controversy to his early
+acquaintance with a sea-faring population, for he is far more likely to
+have picked it up from his great friend and colleague, the author of
+<i>Paradise Lost</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s school education over, he went up to Cambridge, not to his
+father&rsquo;s old college, but to the more splendid foundation of Trinity.
+About the date of his matriculation there is a doubt. In Wood&rsquo;s <i>Athen&aelig;
+Oxonienses</i> there is a note to the effect that Marvell was admitted &ldquo;in
+matriculam Acad. Cant. Coll. Trin.&rdquo; on the 14th of December 1633, when
+the boy was but twelve years old. Dr. Lort, a famous master of Trinity
+in his day, writing in November 1765 to Captain Edward Thompson, of whom
+more later on, told the captain that until 1635 there was no register of
+admissions of ordinary students, or pensioners, as they are called, but
+only a register of Fellows and Foundation Scholars, and in this
+last-named register Marvell&rsquo;s name appears as a Scholar sworn and
+admitted on the 13th of April 1638. As, however, Marvell took his B.A.
+degree in 1639, he must have been in residence long before April 1638.
+Probably Marvell went to Trinity about 1635, just before the register of
+pensioners was begun, as a pensioner, becoming a Scholar in 1638, and
+taking his degree in 1639.</p>
+
+<p>Cambridge undergraduates do not usually keep <a name="pg11" id="pg11"></a><span class="pagenum">11</span>diaries, nor after they
+have become Masters of Art are they much in the habit of giving details
+as to their academic career. Marvell is no exception to this provoking
+rule. He nowhere tells us what his University taught him or how. The
+logic of the schools he had no choice but to learn. Molineus, Peter
+Ramus, Seton, Keckerman were text-books of reputation, from one or
+another of which every Cambridge man had to master his <i>simpliciters</i>,
+his <i>quids</i>, his <i>secundum quids</i>, his <i>quales</i>, and his <i>quantums</i>.
+Aristotle&rsquo;s Physics, Ethics, and Politics were &ldquo;tutor&rsquo;s books,&rdquo; and
+those young men who loved to hear themselves talk were left free to
+discuss, much to Hobbes&rsquo;s disgust, &ldquo;the freedom of the will, incorporeal
+substance, everlasting nows, ubiquities, hypostases, which the people
+understand not nor will ever care for.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In the life of Matthew Robinson,<a name="fnm4_111" id="fnm4_111"></a><a href="#fn4_111" class="fnnum">1</a> who went up to Cambridge a little
+later than Marvell (June 1645), and was probably a harder reader, we are
+told that &ldquo;the strength of his studies lay in the metaphysics and in
+those subtle authors for many years which rendered him an irrefragable
+disputant <i>de quolibet ente</i>, and whilst he was but senior freshman he
+was found in the bachelor schools, disputing ably with the best of the
+senior sophisters.&rdquo; Robinson despised the old-fashioned Ethics and
+Physics, but with the new Cartesian or Experimental Philosophy he was
+<i>inter primos</i>. History, particularly the Roman, was in great favour at
+both Universities at this time, and young men were taught, so old Hobbes
+again grumbles, to despise monarchy &ldquo;from Cicero, Seneca, Cato and other
+politicians of Rome, and Aristotle of Athens, who seldom spake of kings
+but as of wolves and other ravenous <a name="pg12" id="pg12"></a><span class="pagenum">12</span>beasts.&rdquo;<a name="fnm5_121" id="fnm5_121"></a><a href="#fn5_121" class="fnnum">1</a> The Muses were never
+neglected at Cambridge, as the University exercises survive to prove,
+whilst modern languages, Spanish and Italian for example, were greedily
+acquired by such an eager spirit as Richard Crashaw, the poet, who came
+into residence at Pembroke in 1631. There were problems to be &ldquo;kept&rdquo; in
+the college chapel, lectures to be attended, both public and private,
+declamations to be delivered, and even in the vacations the scholars
+were not exempt from &ldquo;exercises&rdquo; either in hall or in their tutors&rsquo;
+rooms. Earnest students read their Greek Testaments, and even their
+Hebrew Bibles, and filled their note-books, working more hours a day
+than was good for their health, whilst the idle ones wasted their time
+as best they could in an unhealthy, over-crowded town, in an age which
+knew nothing of boating, billiards, or cricket. A tennis-court there was
+in Marvell&rsquo;s time, for in Dr. Worthington&rsquo;s <i>Diary</i>, under date 3rd of
+April 1637, it stands recorded that on that day and in that place that
+learned man received &ldquo;a dangerous blow on the Eye.&rdquo;<a name="fnm6_122" id="fnm6_122"></a><a href="#fn6_122" class="fnnum">2</a></p>
+
+<p>The only incident we know of Marvell&rsquo;s undergraduate days is remarkable
+enough, for, boy though he was, he seems, like the Gibbon of a later
+day, to have suddenly become a Roman Catholic. This occurrence may serve
+to remind us how, during Marvell&rsquo;s time at Trinity, the University of
+Cambridge (ever the precursor in thought-movements) had a Catholic
+revival of her own, akin to that one which two hundred years afterwards
+happened at Oxford, and has left so much agreeable literature behind it.
+Fuller in his history of the University of Cambridge tells us a <a name="pg13" id="pg13"></a><span class="pagenum">13</span>little
+about this highly interesting and important movement:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Now began the University (1633-4) to be much beautified in
+buildings, every college either casting its skin with the snake, or
+renewing its bill with the eagle, having their courts or at least
+their fronts and Gatehouses repaired and adorned. But the greatest
+alteration was in their Chapels, most of them being graced with the
+accession of organs. And seeing musick is one of the liberal arts,
+how could it be quarrelled at in an University if they sang with
+understanding both of the matter and manner thereof. Yet some took
+great distaste thereat as attendancie to superstition.&rdquo;<a name="fnm7_131" id="fnm7_131"></a><a href="#fn7_131" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>The chapel at Peterhouse, we read elsewhere, which was built in 1632,
+and consecrated by Bishop White of Ely, had a beautiful ceiling and a
+noble east window. &ldquo;A grave divine,&rdquo; Fuller tells us, &ldquo;preaching before
+the University at St. Mary&rsquo;s, had this smart passage in his Sermon&mdash;that
+as at the Olympian Games he was counted the Conqueror who could drive
+his chariot wheels nearest the mark yet so as not to hinder his running
+or to stick thereon, so he who in his Sermons could preach <i>near Popery</i>
+and yet <i>no Popery</i>, <i>there was your man</i>. And indeed it now began to be
+the general complaint of most moderate men that many in the University,
+both in the schools and pulpits, approached the opinions of the Church
+of Rome nearer than ever before.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Archbishop Laud, unlike the bishops of Dr. Newman&rsquo;s day, favoured the
+Catholic revival, and when Mr. Bernard, the lecturer of St. Sepulchre&rsquo;s,
+London, preached a &ldquo;No Popery&rdquo; sermon at St. Mary&rsquo;s, Cambridge, he was
+dragged into the High Commission Court, and, as the hateful practice
+then was, a practice dear to the soul of Laud, was bidden to subscribe a
+<a name="pg14" id="pg14"></a><span class="pagenum">14</span>formal recantation. This Mr. Bernard refused to do, though professing
+his sincere sorrow and penitence for any oversights and hasty
+expressions in his sermon. Thereupon he was sent back to prison, where
+he died. &ldquo;If,&rdquo; adds Fuller, &ldquo;he was miserably abused in prison by the
+keepers (as some have reported) to the shortening of his life, He that
+maketh inquisition for blood either hath or will be a revenger
+thereof.&rdquo;<a name="fnm8_141" id="fnm8_141"></a><a href="#fn8_141" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>By the side of this grim story the much-written-about incidents of the
+Oxford Movement seem trivial enough.</p>
+
+<p>Not a few Cambridge scholars of this period, Richard Crashaw among the
+number, found permanent refuge in Rome.</p>
+
+<p>The story of Marvell&rsquo;s conversion is emphatic but vague in its details.
+The &ldquo;Jesuits,&rdquo; who were well represented in Cambridge at the time, are
+said to have persuaded him to leave Cambridge secretly, and to take
+refuge in one of their houses in London. Thither the elder Marvell
+followed in pursuit, and after search came across his son in a
+bookseller&rsquo;s shop, where he succeeded both in convincing the boy of his
+errors and in persuading him to return to Trinity. An odd story, and
+not, as it stands, very credible; but Mr. Grosart discovered among the
+Marvell papers at Hull a fragment of a letter without signature,
+address, or date, which throws some sort of light on the incident. This
+letter was evidently, as Mr. Grosart surmises, sent to the elder Marvell
+by some similarly afflicted parent. In its fragmentary state the letter
+reads as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Worthy S<sup>r</sup>,&mdash;M<sup>r</sup> Breerecliffe being w<sup>th</sup> me to-day, I related vnto
+him a fearfull passage lately at Cambridg touching a sonne of mine,
+Bachelor of Arts in Katherine Hall, w<sup>ch</sup><a name="pg15" id="pg15"></a><span class="pagenum">15</span> was this. He was lately
+inuited to a supper in towne by a gentlewoman, where was one M<sup>r</sup>
+Nichols a felow of Peterhouse, and another or two masters of arts, I
+know not directly whether felowes or not: my sonne hauing noe
+p&rsquo;ferment, but liuing meerely of my penny, they pressed him much to
+come to liue at their house, and for chamber and extraordinary bookes
+they promised farre: and then earnestly moued him to goe to Somerset
+house, where they could doe much for p&rsquo;ferring him to some eminent
+place, and in conclusion to popish arguments to seduce him soe rotten
+and vnsauory as being ouerheard it was brought in question before the
+heads of the Uniuersity: <i>Dr. Cosens</i>, being <i>Vice Chancelor</i> noe
+punishment is inioined him: but on Ash-wednesday next a recantation
+in regent house of some popish tenets Nicols let fall: I p&rsquo;ceive by
+M<sup>r</sup> Breercliffe some such prank vsed towards y<sup>r</sup> sonne: I desire to
+know what y<sup>u</sup> did therin: thinking I cannot doe god better seruice
+then bring it vppon the stage either in Parliament if it hold: or
+informing some Lords of the Counsail to whom I stand much oblieged if
+a bill in Starchamber be meete To terrify others by making these some
+publique spectacle: for if such fearfull practises may goe vnpunished
+I take care whether I may send a child ... the lord.&rdquo;<a name="fnm9_151" id="fnm9_151"></a><a href="#fn9_151" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>The reference to Dr. Cosens, or Cosin, being Vice-Chancellor gives a
+clue to the date, for Cosin was chosen Vice-Chancellor on the 4th of
+November 1639.<a name="fnm10_152" id="fnm10_152"></a><a href="#fn10_152" class="fnnum">2</a></p>
+
+<p>Though we can know nothing of the elder Marvell&rsquo;s methods of
+re-conversion, they were more successful than the elder Gibbon&rsquo;s, who,
+as we know, packed the future historian off to Lausanne and a Swiss
+pastor&rsquo;s house. What Gibbon became on leaving off his Romanism we can
+guess for ourselves, whereas Marvell, once out of the hands of these
+very shadowy &ldquo;Jesuits,&rdquo; remained the staunchest of Christian Protestants
+to the end of his days.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg16" id="pg16"></a><span class="pagenum">16</span>This strange incident, and two college exercises or poems, one in
+Greek, the other in Latin, both having reference to an addition to the
+Royal Family, and appearing in the <i>Musa Cantabrigiensis</i> for 1637, are
+all the materials that exist for weaving the story of Marvell, the
+Cambridge undergraduate. The Latin verses, which are Horatian in style,
+contain one pretty stanza, composed apparently before the sex of the
+new-born infant was known at Cambridge.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Sive felici Carolum figur&acirc;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Parvulus princeps imitetur almae<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sive Mariae decoret puellam<br /></span>
+<span class="i18">Dulcis imago.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>After taking his Bachelor&rsquo;s degree in 1639, Marvell, being still a
+Scholar of the college, must have gone away, for the Conclusion Book of
+Trinity, under date September 24, 1641, records as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;It is agreed by y<sup>e</sup> Master and 8 seniors y<sup>t</sup> M<sup>r</sup> Carter and D<sup>r</sup>
+Wakefields, D<sup>r</sup> Marvell, D<sup>r</sup> Waterhouse, and D<sup>r</sup> Maye in regard y<sup>t</sup>
+some of them are reported to be married and y<sup>t</sup> others look not after
+y<sup>eir</sup> days nor Acts shall receave no more benefitt of y<sup>e</sup> Coll and
+shall be out of y<sup>ier</sup> places unless y<sup>ei</sup> shew just cause to y<sup>e</sup> Coll
+for y<sup>e</sup> contrary in 3 months.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Lort, in his amiable letter of 1765, already mentioned, points out
+that this entry contains no reflection on Marvell&rsquo;s morals, but shows
+that he was given &ldquo;notice to quit&rdquo; for non-residence, &ldquo;then much more
+strictly enjoined than it is now.&rdquo; The days referred to in the entry
+were, so the master obligingly explains, &ldquo;the certain number allowed by
+statute to absentees,&rdquo; whilst the &ldquo;acts mean the Exercises also enjoyned
+by the statutes.&rdquo; Dr. Lort adds, &ldquo;It does not appear, by any subsequent
+entry, whether Marvell did or did not comply with this order.&rdquo; We may
+<a name="pg17" id="pg17"></a><span class="pagenum">17</span>now safely assume he did not. Marvell&rsquo;s Cambridge days were over.</p>
+
+<p>The vacations, no inconsiderable part of the year, were probably spent
+by Marvell under his father&rsquo;s roof at Hull, where his two elder sisters
+were married and settled. It is not to be wondered at that Andrew
+Marvell should, for so many years, have represented Hull in the House of
+Commons, for both he and his family were well known in the town. The
+elder Marvell added to his reputation as a teacher and preacher the
+character of a devoted servant of his flock in the hour of danger. The
+plague twice visited Hull during the time of the elder Marvell, first in
+1635 and again in 1638. In those days men might well pray to be
+delivered from &ldquo;plague, pestilence, and famine.&rdquo; Hull suffered terribly
+on both occasions. We have seen, in comparatively recent times, the
+effect of the cholera upon large towns, and the plague was worse than
+the cholera many times over. The Hull preacher, despite the stigma of
+<i>facetiousness</i>, which still clings to him, stuck to his post, visiting
+the sick, burying the dead, and even, which seems a little superfluous,
+preaching and afterwards printing &ldquo;by request&rdquo; their funeral sermons. A
+brave man, indeed, and one reserved for a tragic end.</p>
+
+<p>In April 1638 the poet&rsquo;s mother died. In the following November the
+elder Marvell married a widow lady, but his own end was close upon him.
+The earliest consecutive account of this strange event is in Gent&rsquo;s
+<i>History of Hull</i> (1735):&mdash;&ldquo;This year, 1640, the Rev. Mr. Andrew
+Marvell, Lecturer of Hull, sailing over the Humber in company with
+Madame Skinner of Thornton College and a young beautiful couple who were
+going to be wedded; a speedy Fate prevented the designed happy union
+thro&rsquo; a violent storm which <a name="pg18" id="pg18"></a><span class="pagenum">18</span>overset the boat and put a period to all
+their lives, nor were there any remains of them or the vessel ever after
+found, tho&rsquo; earnestly sought for on distant shores.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Thus died by drowning a brave man, a good Christian, and an excellent
+clergyman of the Reformed Church of England. The plain narrative just
+quoted has been embroidered by many long-subsequent writers in the
+interests of those who love presentiments and ghostly intimations of
+impending events, and in one of these versions it is recorded, that
+though the morning was clear, the breeze fair, and the company gay, yet
+when stepping into the boat &ldquo;the reverend man exclaimed, &lsquo;Ho for
+Heaven,&rsquo; and threw his staff ashore and left it to Providence to fulfil
+its awful warning.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>So melancholy an occurrence naturally excited great attention, and long
+lingered in local memories. Everybody in Hull knew who was their
+member&rsquo;s father.</p>
+
+<p>There is an obstinate tradition quite unverifiable that Mrs. Skinner,
+the mother of the beautiful young lady who was drowned with the elder
+Marvell, adopted the young Marvell as a son, sending to Cambridge for
+him after his father&rsquo;s death, and providing him with the means of
+travel, and that afterwards she bequeathed him her estate. Whether there
+is any truth in this story cannot now be ascertained. The Skinners were
+a well-known Hull family, one of them, a brother of that Cyriac Skinner
+who was urged by Milton in immortal verse to enjoy himself whilst the
+mood was on him, having been Mayor of Hull. The lady, doubtless, had
+money, and Andrew Marvell was in need of money, and appears to have been
+supplied with it. It is quite possible the tradition is true.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn1_61" id="fn1_61"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm1_61">6:1</a></span> Fuller&rsquo;s <i>Worthies</i> (1662), p. 159.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn2_81" id="fn2_81"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm2_81">8:1</a></span> &ldquo;The Fuller Worthies Library,&rdquo; 4 vols., 1872. Hereafter
+referred to as <i>Grosart</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn3_82" id="fn3_82"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm3_82">8:2</a></span> <i>Mr. Smirke or the Divine in Mode.</i>&mdash;Grosart, iv. 15.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn4_111" id="fn4_111"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm4_111">11:1</a></span> <i>Autobiography of Matthew Robinson</i>. Edited by J.&nbsp;E.&nbsp;B.
+Mayor, Cambridge, 1856.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn5_121" id="fn5_121"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm5_121">12:1</a></span> <i>Behemoth</i>, Hobbes&rsquo; Works (Molesworth), vol. vi., see
+pp. 168, 218, 233-6.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn6_122" id="fn6_122"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm6_122">12:2</a></span> Worthington&rsquo;s <i>Diary</i>, vol. i. p. 5 (Chetham Society).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn7_131" id="fn7_131"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm7_131">13:1</a></span> Fuller, <i>History of Cambridge University</i> (1655), p.
+167.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn8_141" id="fn8_141"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm8_141">14:1</a></span> Fuller, p. 166.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn9_151" id="fn9_151"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm9_151">15:1</a></span> Grosart, I., xxviii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn10_152" id="fn10_152"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm10_152">15:2</a></span> See Worthington&rsquo;s <i>Diary</i>, vol. i. p. 7.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="pg19" id="pg19"></a><span class="pagenum">19</span><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<p class="center">&ldquo;THE HAPPY GARDEN-STATE&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> seventeenth century was the century of travel for educated
+Englishmen&mdash;of long, leisurely travel. Milton&rsquo;s famous Italian tour
+lasted fifteen months. John Evelyn&rsquo;s <i>Wander-Jahre</i> occupied four years.
+Andrew Marvell lived abroad in France, Spain, Holland, and Italy from
+1642 to 1646, and we have Milton&rsquo;s word for it that when the traveller
+returned he was well acquainted with the French, Dutch, Spanish, and
+Italian languages. Andrew Marvell was a highly cultivated man, living in
+a highly cultivated age, in daily converse with scholars, poets,
+philosophers, and men of very considerable scientific attainments. In
+reading Clarendon and Burnet, and whilst turning over Aubrey&rsquo;s
+delightful gossip, it is impossible not to be struck with the width and
+variety of the learning as well as with the wit of the period.
+Intellectually it was a great age.</p>
+
+<p>No record remains of Marvell&rsquo;s travels during these years. Up and down
+his writings the careful reader will come across pleasant references to
+foreign manners and customs, betokening the keen humorous observer, and
+the possession of that wide-eyed faculty that takes a pleasure, half
+contemplative, half the result of animal spirits, in watching the way of
+the world wherever you may chance to be. Of another and an earlier
+traveller, Sir Henry Wotton, we read in &ldquo;Walton&rsquo;s <i>Life</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="pg20" id="pg20"></a><span class="pagenum">20</span></p>
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And whereas he was noted in his youth to have a sharp wit and apt to
+jest, <i>that</i> by time, travel, and conversation was so polished and
+made useful, that his company seemed to be one of the delights of
+mankind.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>In all Marvell&rsquo;s work, as poet, as Parliamentarian, as controversialist,
+we shall see the travelled man. Certainly no one ever more fully grasped
+the sense of the famous sentence given by Wotton to Milton, when the
+latter was starting on his travels: &ldquo;<i>I pensieri stretti ed il viso
+sciolto.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Marvell was in Rome about 1645. I can give no other date during the
+whole four years. This, our only date, rests upon an assumption. In
+Marvell&rsquo;s earliest satirical poem he gives an account of a visit he paid
+in Rome to the unlucky poetaster Flecknoe, who was not in Rome until
+1645. If, therefore, the poem records an actual visit, it follows that
+the author of the poem was in Rome at the same time. It is not very
+near, but it is as near as we can get.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Flecknoe was an Irish priest of blameless life, with a passion
+for scribbling and for printing. His exquisite reason for both these
+superfluous acts is worth quoting:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I write chiefly to avoid idleness, and print to avoid the imputation
+(of idleness), and as others do it to live after they are dead, I do
+it only not to be thought dead whilst I am alive.&rdquo;<a name="fnm11_201" id="fnm11_201"></a><a href="#fn11_201" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Such frankness should have disarmed ridicule, but somehow or another
+this amiable man came to be regarded as the type of a dull author, and
+his name passed into a proverb for stupidity, so much so that when
+Dryden in 1682 was casting about how best to give pain to Shadwell, he
+devised the plan of his famous <a name="pg21" id="pg21"></a><span class="pagenum">21</span>satire, &ldquo;MacFlecknoe,&rdquo; where in biting
+verse he describes Flecknoe (who was happily dead) as an aged Prince&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">&ldquo;Who like Augustus young<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Was called to empire and had governed long;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In prose and verse was owned, without dispute,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Through all the realms of nonsense absolute.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Dryden goes on to picture the aged Flecknoe,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">&ldquo;pondering which of all his sons was fit<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To reign and wage immortal war with Wit,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and fixing on Shadwell.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Shadwell alone my perfect image bears,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mature in dulness from his tender years;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shadwell alone, of all my sons, is he<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who stands confirmed in full stupidity:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The rest to some faint meaning make pretence,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But Shadwell never deviates into sense.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Thus has it come about that Flecknoe, the Irish priest, whom Marvell
+visited in his Roman garret in 1645, bears a name ever memorable in
+literature.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s own poem, though eclipsed by the splendour of Glorious John&rsquo;s
+resounding lines, has an interest of its own as being, in its roughly
+humorous way, a forerunner of the &ldquo;Dunciad&rdquo; and &ldquo;Grub Street&rdquo;
+literature, by which in sundry moods &rsquo;tis &ldquo;pleasure to be bound.&rdquo; It
+describes seeking out the poetaster in his lodging &ldquo;three staircases
+high,&rdquo; at the sign of the Pelican, in a room so small that it seemed &ldquo;a
+coffin set in the stair&rsquo;s head.&rdquo; No sooner was the rhymer unearthed than
+straightway he began to recite his poetry in dismal tones, much to his
+visitor&rsquo;s dismay:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;But I who now imagin&rsquo;d myself brought<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To my last trial, in a serious thought<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Calm&rsquo;d the disorders of my youthful breast<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And to my martyrdom prepar&egrave;d rest.<br /></span>
+<a name="pg22" id="pg22"></a><span class="pagenum">22</span>
+<span class="i0">Only this frail ambition did remain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The last distemper of the sober brain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That there had been some present to assure<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The future ages how I did endure.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>To stop the cataract of &ldquo;hideous verse,&rdquo; Marvell invited the scarecrow
+to dinner, and waits while he dresses. As they turn to leave, for the
+room is so small that the man who comes in last must be the first to go
+out, they meet a friend of the poet on the stairs, who makes a third at
+dinner. After dinner Flecknoe produces ten quires of paper, from which
+the friend proceeds to read, but so infamously as to excite their
+author&rsquo;s rage:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;But all his praises could not now appease<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The provok&rsquo;t Author, whom it did displease<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To hear his verses by so just a curse<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That were ill made, condemned to be read worse:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And how (impossible!) he made yet more<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Absurdities in them than were before:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For his untun&rsquo;d voice did fall or raise<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As a deaf man upon the Viol plays,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Making the half-points and the periods run<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Confus&rsquo;der than the atoms in the sun:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thereat the poet swell&rsquo;d with anger full,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and after violent exclamations retires in dudgeon back to his room. The
+faithful friend is in despair. What is he to do to make peace? &ldquo;Who
+would commend his mistress now?&rdquo; Marvell</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">&ldquo;counselled him to go in time<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ere the fierce poet&rsquo;s anger turned to rhyme.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The advice was taken, and Marvell, finding himself at last free from
+boredom, went off to St. Peter&rsquo;s to return thanks.</p>
+
+<p>This poem is but an unsatisfactory <i>souvenir de voyage</i>, but it is all
+there is.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg23" id="pg23"></a><span class="pagenum">23</span>What Marvell was doing during the stirring years 1646-1650 is not
+known. Even in the most troubled times men go about their business, and
+our poet was always a man of affairs. As for his opinions during these
+years, we can only guess at them from those to which he afterwards gave
+expression. Marvell was neither a Republican nor a Puritan. Like his
+father before him, he was a Protestant and a member of the Reformed
+Church of England. He stood for both King and Parliament. Archbishop
+Laud he distrusted, and it may well be detested, but good churchmen have
+often distrusted and even detested their archbishops. Mr. Gladstone had
+no great regard for Archbishop Tait. Before the Act of Uniformity and
+the repressive legislation that followed upon its heels had driven
+English dissent into its final moulds, it was not doctrine but
+ceremonies that disturbed men&rsquo;s minds; and Marvell belonged to that
+school of English churchmen, by no means the least distinguished school,
+which was not disposed to quarrel with their fellow-Christians over
+white surplices, the ring in matrimony, or the attitude during Holy
+Communion. He shared the belief of a contemporary that no system is bad
+enough to destroy a good man, or good enough to save a bad one.</p>
+
+<p>The Civil War was to Marvell what it was to most wise men not devoured
+by faction&mdash;a deplorable event. Twenty years after he wrote in the
+<i>Rehearsal Transprosed</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Whether it be a war of religion or of liberty it is not worth the
+labour to inquire. Whichsoever was at the top, the other was at the
+bottom; but upon considering all, I think the cause was too good to
+have been fought for. Men ought to have trusted God&mdash;they ought to
+have trusted the King with that whole matter. The arms of the Church
+are prayers <a name="pg24" id="pg24"></a><span class="pagenum">24</span>and tears, the arms of the subject are patience and
+petitions. The King himself being of so accurate and piercing a
+judgment would soon have felt it where it stuck. For men may spare
+their pains when Nature is at work, and the world will not go the
+faster for our driving. Even as his present Majesty&rsquo;s happy
+Restoration did itself, so all things else happen in their best and
+proper time, without any heed of our officiousness.&rdquo;<a name="fnm12_241" id="fnm12_241"></a><a href="#fn12_241" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>In the face of this passage and many another of the like spirit, it is
+puzzling to find such a man, for example, as Thomas Baker, the ejected
+non-juring Fellow and historian of St. John&rsquo;s College, Cambridge
+(1656-1740), writing of Marvell as &ldquo;that bitter republican&rdquo;; and Dryden,
+who probably knew Marvell, comparing his controversial pamphlets with
+those of Martin <ins class="correction" title="Mar-Prelate in original">Marprelate</ins>, or at all events speaking of Martin
+<ins class="correction" title="Mar-Prelate in original">Marprelate</ins> as &ldquo;the Marvell of those times.&rdquo;<a name="fnm13_242" id="fnm13_242"></a><a href="#fn13_242" class="fnnum">2</a> A somewhat
+anti-prelatical note runs through Marvell&rsquo;s writings, but it is a
+familiar enough note in the works of the English laity, and by no means
+dissevers its possessor from the Anglican Church. But there are some
+heated expressions in the satires which probably gave rise to the belief
+that Marvell was a Republican.<a name="fnm14_243" id="fnm14_243"></a><a href="#fn14_243" class="fnnum">3</a></p>
+
+<p>During the Commonwealth Marvell was content to be a civil servant. He
+entertained for the Lord-Protector the same kind of admiration that such
+a loyalist as Chateaubriand could not help feeling for Napoleon. Even
+Clarendon&rsquo;s pedantic soul occasionally vibrates as he writes of Oliver,
+and compares his reputation in <a name="pg25" id="pg25"></a><span class="pagenum">25</span>foreign courts with that of his own
+royal master. When the Restoration came Marvell rejoiced. Two
+old-established things had been destroyed by Cromwell&mdash;Kings and
+Parliaments, and Marvell was glad to see them both back again in
+England.</p>
+
+<p>Some verses of Marvell&rsquo;s attributable to this period (1646-1650) show
+him keeping what may be called Royalist company. With a dozen other
+friends of Richard Lovelace, the Cavalier poet and the author of two of
+the most famous stanzas in English verse, Marvell contributed some
+commendatory lines addressed to his &ldquo;noble friend, Mr. Richard Lovelace,
+upon his Poems,&rdquo; which appeared with the poems themselves in that year
+of fate, 1649. &ldquo;After the murder of the King,&rdquo; says Anthony Wood,
+&ldquo;Lovelace was set at liberty, and having by that time consumed all his
+estate, grew very melancholy, became very poor in body and purse, was
+the object of charity, went in ragged clothes (whereas when he was in
+glory he wore cloth of gold and silver), and mostly lodged in obscure
+and dirty places, more befitting the worst of beggars and poorest of
+servants.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Then it was that <i>Lucasta</i> made its first appearance. When the fortunes
+of the gallant poet were at their lowest and never to revive, Marvell
+seizes the occasion to deplore the degeneracy of the times, a familiar
+theme with poets:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Our civil wars have lost the civic crown,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He highest builds who with most art destroys,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And against others&rsquo; fame his own employs.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He then glances scornfully at the new Presbyterian censorship of the
+press:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The barb&egrave;d censurers begin to look<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like the grim consistory on thy book,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And on each line cast a reforming eye,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><a name="pg26" id="pg26"></a><span class="pagenum">26</span>and suggests that <i>Lucasta</i> is in danger because in 1642 its author had
+been imprisoned by order of the House of Commons for presenting a
+petition from Kent which prayed for the restoration of the Book of
+Common Prayer. This danger is, however, overcome by the ladies, who rise
+in arms to defend their favourite poet.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;But when the beauteous Ladies came to know<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That their dear Lovelace was endangered so,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Lovelace that thaw&rsquo;d the most congeal&egrave;d breast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He who lov&rsquo;d best and them defended best,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They all in mutiny, though yet undrest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sally&rsquo;d.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>One of them challenged Marvell as to whether he had not been of the
+poet&rsquo;s traducers, but he answered No!</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;O No, mistake not, I reply&rsquo;d, for I<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In your defence or in his cause would die.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But he, secure of glory and of time,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Above their envy or my aid doth climb.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Him, bravest men and fairest nymphs approve,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His book in them finds Judgment, with you, Love.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Lovelace did not live to see the Restoration, but died in a mean lodging
+near Shoe Lane in April 1658, and was buried in St. Bridget&rsquo;s Church.
+Let us indulge the hope that the friends who occupied so many of the
+introductory pages of Lovelace&rsquo;s <i>Lucasta</i> occasionally enlivened the
+solitude and relieved the distress of the poet whose praises they had
+once sung with so much vigour. As Marvell was undoubtedly a friendly
+man, and one who loved to be alone with his friends, and had never any
+house of his own to keep up, living for the most part in hired lodgings,
+it would be unkind to doubt that he at least did not forget Lovelace in
+his poverty and depression of spirit.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg27" id="pg27"></a><span class="pagenum">27</span>In 1649 thirty-three poets combined to weep over the early grave of the
+Lord Henry Hastings, the eldest son of the sixth Earl of Huntingdon, who
+died of the smallpox in the twentieth year of his age. Not even this
+plentiful discharge of poets&rsquo; tears should rob the young nobleman of his
+claim to be regarded as a fine example of the great learning,
+accomplishments, and high spirits of the age. We can still produce the
+thirty-three poets, but what young nobleman is there who can boast such
+erudition as had rewarded the scorned delights and the laborious days of
+this Lord Hastings? We have at least the satisfaction of knowing that
+did such a one exist he probably would not die of the smallpox. Among
+the poets who wept on this occasion were Herrick, Sir John Denham,
+Andrew Marvell, and John Dryden, then a Westminster schoolboy, whose
+description of the smallpox is as bad as the disease.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s verses begin very prettily and soon introduce a characteristic
+touch:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Go, stand betwixt the Morning and the Flowers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And ere they fall arrest the early showers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hastings is dead; and we disconsolate<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With early tears must mourn his early fate.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In 1650 Marvell, then in his twenty-ninth year, went to live with Lord
+Fairfax at Nunappleton House in Yorkshire, as tutor to the only child
+and daughter of the house, Mary Fairfax, aged twelve years (born 30th
+July 1638). This proved to be a great event in Marvell&rsquo;s life as a poet,
+and it happened at an epoch in the distinguished career of the famous
+Parliamentarian general</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Whose name in arms through Europe rings.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Lord Fairfax, though he had countenanced, if not <a name="pg28" id="pg28"></a><span class="pagenum">28</span>approved, the trial
+and deposition of the king, had resolutely held himself aloof from the
+proceedings which, beginning on Saturday the 20th of January 1649,
+terminated so dismally on Tuesday the 30th. The strange part played by
+Lady Fairfax on the first day of the so-called trial (though it was no
+greater a travesty of justice than many a real trial both before and
+after) is one of the best-known stories in English history. There are
+several versions of it. Having provided herself with a seat in a small
+gallery in Westminster Hall, just above the heads of the judges, when
+her husband&rsquo;s name was called out as one of the commissioners, the
+intrepid lady (no Cavalier&rsquo;s dame, be it remembered, but a true blue
+Presbyterian), a brave soldier&rsquo;s daughter, cried out, &ldquo;Lord Fairfax is
+not here; he will never sit among you. You do wrong to name him as a
+sitting Commissioner.&rdquo; This is Rushworth&rsquo;s version, and he was present.
+Clarendon, who was not present, being abroad at the time, reports the
+words as, &ldquo;He has more wit than to be here.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Later on in the day, when the President Bradshaw interrupted the king
+and peremptorily bade him to answer the charges exhibited against him
+&ldquo;in the name of the Commons of England assembled, and of the people of
+England,&rdquo; Lady Fairfax again rose to her feet and exclaimed, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a
+lie! Not half the people. Where are they and their consents? Oliver
+Cromwell is a traitor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant-Colonel Axtell, who during the trial was in command of a
+regiment in Westminster and charged by his military superior, Lord
+Fairfax himself, with the duty of maintaining order, hearing this
+disturbance, went forward and told Lady Fairfax to hold her tongue,
+sound advice which she appears to have <a name="pg29" id="pg29"></a><span class="pagenum">29</span>taken. After the Restoration
+Axtell was put to his trial as a &ldquo;regicide.&rdquo; His defence, which was,
+that as a soldier he obeyed his orders, and was no more guilty than his
+general, Lord Fairfax, was not listened to, and he was sentenced to
+death, a fate which he met like the brave man he was.</p>
+
+<p>Although Fairfax did not immediately resign his command after the king&rsquo;s
+death, from that moment he lost heart in the cause. Lady Fairfax, whose
+loyalty to Charles may have been quickened by her dislike of Oliver, had
+great influence with him, and it may well be that his conscience pricked
+him. The rupture came in June 1650, when Charles&rsquo;s son made his
+appearance in Scotland and his peace with the Presbyterians, subscribing
+with inward emotions it would be unkind to attempt to describe the
+Solemn League and Covenant, and attending services and listening to
+sermons the length of which, at least, he never forgot. War was plainly
+imminent between the two countries. The question was, who should begin?
+Cromwell, who had hurried home from Ireland, Lambert, and Harrison were
+all keen to strike the first blow. Fairfax felt a scruple, and in those
+days scruples counted. Was there, he asked, a just cause for an invasion
+of Scotland? A committee was appointed, consisting of the three warriors
+above-named with St. John and Whitelock, to confer with the Lord-General
+and satisfy him of the lawfulness of the undertaking. The six met, and
+having first prayed&mdash;Oliver praying first&mdash;they proceeded to a
+discussion which may be read at length in Whitelock&rsquo;s <i>Memorials</i>, vol.
+iii. p. 207. The substance of their talk was as follows: Fairfax&rsquo;s
+scruple proved to be that both they and the Scots had joined in the
+Solemn League and Covenant, and that, therefore, until Scotland <a name="pg30" id="pg30"></a><span class="pagenum">30</span>assumed
+the offensive, there was no cause for an invasion. Cromwell&rsquo;s retort,
+after a preliminary quibble, was practical enough. &ldquo;War is inevitable.
+Is it better to have it in the bowels of another&rsquo;s country or in one&rsquo;s
+own? In one or other it must be.&rdquo; Fairfax&rsquo;s scruple, however, withstood
+this battery, though it was strongly enforced by Harrison, who, in reply
+to the Lord-General&rsquo;s question, &ldquo;What was the warrant for the assumption
+that Scotland meant to fall upon England?&rdquo; inquired, if Scotland did not
+mean to invade England, for whose benefit were levies being made and
+soldiers enlisted.</p>
+
+<p>Fairfax proved immovable. &ldquo;Every man,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;must stand or fall by
+his own conscience&rdquo;; and as he offered to lay down his command, there
+was nothing for it but to accept the resignation and appoint his
+successor. This was speedily done, and on the 28th of June 1650 &ldquo;Oliver
+Cromwell, Esquire,&rdquo; was appointed Captain-General and Commander-in-chief
+of all the forces. On 16th July Cromwell crossed the Tweed, and on the
+3rd of September the Lord delivered Leslie into his hands at Dunbar.</p>
+
+<p>It was in these circumstances that Lord Fairfax and his energetic lady
+and only child went back to their Yorkshire home in the midsummer of
+1650, taking Marvell with them to instruct the Lady Mary in the tongues.</p>
+
+<p>Nunappleton House is in the Ainstey of York, a pleasant bit of country
+bounded by the rivers Ouse, Wharfe, and Nidd. The modern traveller, as
+his train rushes north, whilst shut up in his corridor-carriage with his
+rug, his pipe, and his novel, passes at no great distance from the house
+on the way between Selby and York. The old house, as it was in Marvell&rsquo;s
+time, is thus described by Captain Markham, who had <a name="pg31" id="pg31"></a><span class="pagenum">31</span>a print to help
+him, in his delightful <i>Life of the Great Lord Fairfax</i><span class="together">:&mdash;</span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;It was a picturesque brick mansion with stone copings and a high
+steep roof, and consisted of a centre and two wings at right angles,
+forming three sides of a square, facing to the north. The great hall
+or gallery occupied the centre between the two wings. It was fifty
+yards long, and was adorned with thirty shields in wood, painted with
+the arms of the family. In the three rooms there were chimney-pieces
+of delicate marble of various colours, and many fine portraits on the
+walls. The central part of the house was surrounded by a cupola, and
+clustering chimneys rose in the two wings. A noble park with splendid
+oak-trees, and containing 300 head of deer, stretched away to the
+north, while on the south side were the ruins of the old Nunnery, the
+flower-garden, and the low meadows called <i>ings</i> extending to the
+banks of the Wharfe. In this flower-garden the General took especial
+delight. The flowers were planted in masses, tulips, pinks, and
+roses, each in separate beds, which were cut into the shape of forts
+with five bastions. General Lambert, whom Fairfax had reared as a
+soldier, also loved his flowers, and excelled both in cultivating
+them and in painting them from Nature. Lord Fairfax only went to
+Denton, the favourite seat of his grandfather, when the floods were
+out over the <i>ings</i> at Nunappleton, and he also occasionally resorted
+to his house at Bishop Hill in York.&rdquo;<a name="fnm15_311" id="fnm15_311"></a><a href="#fn15_311" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>In this garden the muse of Andrew Marvell blossomed like the
+cherry-tree.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Fairfax, though furious in war, and badly wounded in many a fierce
+engagement, was, when otherwise occupied, a man of quiet literary
+tastes, and a good bit of a collector and <i>virtuoso</i>. Some of the rare
+books and manuscripts he had around him at Nunappleton are now in the
+Bodleian, the treasures of which he had protected in troubled times. He
+loved <a name="pg32" id="pg32"></a><span class="pagenum">32</span>to handle medals and coins, and knew the points of old
+engravings. He wrote a history of the Christian Church down to our own
+ill-conducted Reformation, and composed a complete metrical version of
+the Psalms of David and of the Song of Solomon. These and many other
+productions, which he characterised as &ldquo;The Employment of my Solitude,&rdquo;
+still remain in his own handwriting. Amongst them, Yorkshire men will
+hear with pleasure, is a &ldquo;Treatise on the breeding of the Horse.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Of the quality of his wife we have already had a touch. She was one of
+the four daughters of Lord Vere of Tilbury, who came of a fine fighting
+family, and whose daughters had a roughish bringing-up, chiefly in the
+Netherlands. None of the daughters were reckoned beautiful, either in
+face or figure, and it may well be that Lady Fairfax had something about
+her of the old campaigner; but of her courage, sincerity, and goodness
+there can be no question. Her loyalty was no sickly fruit of &ldquo;Church
+Principles,&rdquo; for her strong intelligence rejected scornfully the slavish
+doctrines, alien to our political constitution, of divine right and
+passive obedience; but a loyalty, none the less, it was, of a very
+valuable kind. She was fond of argument, and with Lady Fairfax at
+Nunappleton there was never likely to be any dearth of sensible talk and
+lively reminiscence. The tragedy of the 30th of January could never be
+forgotten, and it is possible that Marvell&rsquo;s most famous verses, so
+nobly descriptive of the demeanour of the king on that memorable
+occasion, derived their inspiration from discourse at Nunappleton.</p>
+
+<p>Of the Lady Mary, aged twelve, we have no direct testimony. When she
+grew up and had her portrait painted she stands revealed as a stout
+young woman <a name="pg33" id="pg33"></a><span class="pagenum">33</span>with a plain good-natured face. The poor soul needed all
+the good-nature heaven had bestowed upon her, for she had to bear the
+misery and disgrace which were the inevitable marriage-portion of the
+woman whose ill-luck it was to become the wife of George Villiers,
+second Duke of Buckingham. Somebody seems to have taught her philosophy,
+for she bore her misfortunes as best became a great lady, living as one
+who had sorrow but no grievance. The duke died in 1688; she lived on
+till 1704. She was ever a good friend to another ill-used solitary wife,
+Catherine of Braganza. Marvell had every reason to be proud of his
+pupil.</p>
+
+<p>Beside the actual inmates of the great house, the whole countryside
+swarmed with Fairfaxes. At the Rectory of Bolton Percy was the late
+Lord-General&rsquo;s uncle, Henry Fairfax, and his two sons, Henry, who
+succeeded to the title, and the better-known Brian, the biographer of
+the Duke of Buckingham. At Stenton, four miles off, lived the widow of
+the gallant Sir William Fairfax, who died, covered with wounds, in 1644
+before Montgomery Castle. There were two sons and two daughters at
+Stenton, whilst Charles Fairfax, another uncle, and the lawyer and
+genealogist of the family, lived at no great distance with no less than
+fourteen children. There were also sisters of Lord Fairfax, with
+families of their own, all settled in the same part of the county.</p>
+
+<p>Such were the agreeable surroundings of our poet for two years,
+1650-1652. I must leave it to the imaginations of my readers to fill up
+the picture, for excepting the poems, which we may safely assume were
+written at Nunappleton House, and&mdash;who can doubt it?&mdash;read aloud to its
+inmates, there is nothing more to be said.</p>
+
+<p>Before considering the Nunappleton poetry, a word <a name="pg34" id="pg34"></a><span class="pagenum">34</span>must be got in of
+bibliography. College exercises and complimentary verses excepted,
+Marvell printed none of his verse under his own name in his lifetime. So
+far as his themes were political there is no need to wonder at this.
+Indeed, the wonder is how, despite their anonymity, their author kept
+his ears; but why the Nunappleton verse should have remained in
+manuscript for more than thirty years is hard to explain.</p>
+
+<p>Until Pope took his muse to market, poetry, apart from the drama, had no
+direct commercial value, or one too small to be ranked as a motive for
+publication. None the less, the age loved distinction and appreciated
+wit, and to be known as a poet whose verses &ldquo;numbered good intellects&rdquo;
+was to gain the <i>entr&eacute;e</i> to the society of men both of intellect and
+fashion, and also, not infrequently, snug berths in the public service,
+and secretaryships to foreign missions and embassies. Thus there was
+always, in addition to natural vanity, a strong motive for a
+seventeenth-century poet to publish his poems. To-day one would hesitate
+to recommend a young man who wanted to get on in the world to publish a
+volume of verse; but the age of &ldquo;wit&rdquo; and &ldquo;parts&rdquo; is over.</p>
+
+<p>It was not till 1681&mdash;three years after Marvell&rsquo;s death&mdash;that the small
+folio appeared with a fine portrait, still dear to the collector, which
+contains for the first time what may be called the &ldquo;garden-poetry&rdquo; of
+our author, together with some specimens of his political and satirical
+versification.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s most famous poem&mdash;<i>The Ode upon Cromwell&rsquo;s Return from
+Ireland</i>&mdash;is not included in the 1681 volume, and remained in manuscript
+until 1776, as also did the poem upon Cromwell&rsquo;s death.</p>
+
+<p>The remainder of the political poems, which had made their first
+appearance as broadsheets, were <a name="pg35" id="pg35"></a><span class="pagenum">35</span>reprinted after the Revolution in the
+well-known <i>Collection of Poems on Affairs of State</i>.<a name="fnm16_351" id="fnm16_351"></a><a href="#fn16_351" class="fnnum">1</a> These verses
+were never owned by Marvell, and it is probable that some of them,
+though attributed to him, are not his at all. We have only tradition to
+go by. In the case of political satires, squibs, epigrams, rough popular
+occasional rhymes flung off both in haste and heat to be sold with old
+ballads in the market-place, we need not seek for better evidence than
+tradition, which indeed is often the only external evidence we have for
+the authorship of much more important things.</p>
+
+<p>Now to return to the Nunappleton poetry.</p>
+
+<p>In a poem of 776 lines Marvell tells the story and describes the charms
+of the house which Lord Fairfax built for himself during the war, and to
+which, as just narrated, he retired in the summer of 1650. The story is
+only too familiar a one, being writ large over many a fine property.
+Appleton House was Church loot. In the time of Henry, &ldquo;the majestic lord
+that burst the bonds of Rome,&rdquo; the old house at Nunappleton was a
+Cistercian nunnery, a religious house. In 1542 the community was
+suppressed and its property appropriated by the great-grandfather of the
+Lord-General&mdash;one Sir Thomas Fairfax. The religious buildings were
+pulled down and a new secular house rose in their place. In these bare
+and sordid facts there is not much room for poetry, but there is a story
+thrown in. Shortly before 1518 a Yorkshire heiress, bearing the
+unromantic name of Isabella Thwaites, was living in the Cistercian
+abbey, under the guardianship of the abbess, the Lady Anna Langton.
+Property under the care of the Church is always supposed to be in
+danger, and the Lady Anna was freely credited with the desire to make a
+nun of <a name="pg36" id="pg36"></a><span class="pagenum">36</span>her ward, and so keep her broad acres in Wharfedale and her
+messuages in York for the use of Mother Church. None the less, the young
+lady was allowed to go about and visit her neighbours, and whilst so
+doing she fell in love with Sir William Fairfax, or he fell in love with
+her or with her estates. Thereupon, so the story proceeds, the abbess
+kept her ward a close prisoner within the nunnery walls. Legal
+proceedings were taken, but in the end the privacy of the nunnery was
+invaded, and Miss Thwaites was abducted and married to Sir William
+Fairfax at the church of Bolton Percy. The lady abbess had to submit to
+<i>vis major</i>, but worse days were in front of her, for she lived on to
+see the nunnery itself despoiled, and the fair domains she had during a
+long life preserved and maintained for religious uses handed over to the
+son of her former ward, Isabella Thwaites.</p>
+
+<p>Our poet begins by referring to the modest dimensions of the house, and
+the natural charms of its surroundings:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The house was built upon the place,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Only as for a mark of grace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And for an inn to entertain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Its Lord awhile, but not remain.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Him Bishop&rsquo;s-hill or Denton may,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or Billborow, better hold than they:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But Nature here hath been so free,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As if she said, &lsquo;Leave this to me.&rsquo;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Art would more neatly have defac&rsquo;d<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What she had laid so sweetly waste<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In fragrant gardens, shady woods,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Deep meadows, and transparent floods.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And then starts the story:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;While, with slow eyes, we these survey,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And on each pleasant footstep stay,<br /></span>
+<a name="pg37" id="pg37"></a><span class="pagenum">37</span>
+<span class="i0">We opportunely may relate<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The progress of this house&rsquo;s fate.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A nunnery first gave it birth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">(For virgin buildings oft brought forth)<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And all that neighbour-ruin shows<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The quarries whence this dwelling rose.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Near to this gloomy cloister&rsquo;s gates,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There dwelt the blooming virgin Thwaites,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fair beyond measure, and an heir,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which might deformity make fair;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And oft she spent the summer&rsquo;s suns<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Discoursing with the subtle Nuns,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whence, in these words, one to her weav&rsquo;d,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As &rsquo;twere by chance, thoughts long conceiv&rsquo;d:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">&lsquo;Within this holy leisure, we<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Live innocently, as you see.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">These walls restrain the world without,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But hedge our liberty about;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">These bars inclose that wilder den<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of those wild creatures, call&egrave;d men,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The cloister outward shuts its gates,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, from us, locks on them the grates.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Here we, in shining armour white,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like virgin amazons do fight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And our chaste lamps we hourly trim,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Lest the great Bridegroom find them dim.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our orient breaths perfum&egrave;d are<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With incense of incessant prayer;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And holy-water of our tears<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Most strangely our complexion clears;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Not tears of grief, but such as those<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With which calm pleasure overflows;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or pity, when we look on you<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That live without this happy vow.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How should we grieve that must be seen<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Each one a spouse, and each a queen,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And can in heaven hence behold<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our brighter robes and crowns of gold!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When we have pray&egrave;d all our beads,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Some one the holy Legend reads,<br /></span>
+<a name="pg38" id="pg38"></a><span class="pagenum">38</span>
+<span class="i0">While all the rest with needles paint<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The face and graces of the Saint;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Some of your features, as we sewed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Through every shrine should be bestowed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And in one beauty we would take<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Enough a thousand Saints to make.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And (for I dare not quench the fire<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That me does for your good inspire)<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">&rsquo;Twere sacrilege a man to admit<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To holy things for heaven fit.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I see the angels in a crown<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On you the lilies showering down;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And round about you glory breaks,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That something more than human speaks.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All beauty when at such a height,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is so already consecrate.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fairfax I know, and long ere this<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Have marked the youth, and what he is;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But can he such a rival seem,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For whom you heaven should disesteem?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ah, no! and &rsquo;twould more honour prove<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He your devoto were than Love.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Here live belov&egrave;d and obeyed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Each one your sister, each your maid,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, if our rule seem strictly penned,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The rule itself to you shall bend.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our Abbess, too, now far in age,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Doth your succession near presage.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How soft the yoke on us would lie,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Might such fair hands as yours it tie!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your voice, the sweetest of the choir,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall draw heaven nearer, raise us higher,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And your example, if our head,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Will soon us to perfection lead.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Those virtues to us all so dear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Will straight grow sanctity when here;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And that, once sprung, increase so fast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till miracles it work at last&rsquo;&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><a name="pg39" id="pg39"></a><span class="pagenum">39</span>What reply was given by the heiress to these arguments, and others of a
+still more seductive hue, the poet does not tell, but turns to the eager
+lover who asks, What should he do? He hints that a nunnery is no place
+for a virtuous maid, and that the nuns (unlike himself, I hope) are only
+thinking of her property. He complains that though the Court has
+authorised him to use either peace or force, the nuns still stand upon
+their guard.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Ill-counselled women, do you know<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whom you resist or what you do?&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Using a most remarkable poetic licence, the poet refers to the fact that
+this barred-out lover is to be the progenitor of the great Lord Fairfax.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Is not this he, whose offspring fierce<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall fight through all the universe;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And with successive valour try<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">France, Poland, either Germany,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till one, as long since prophesied,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His horse through conquered Britain ride?&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The lover determines to take the place by assault. It was not a very
+heroic enterprise, as Marvell describes it.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Some to the breach, against their foes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Their wooden Saints in vain oppose;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Another bolder, stands at push,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With their old holy-water brush,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While the disjointed Abbess threads<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The jingling chain-shot of her beads;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But their loud&rsquo;st cannon were their lungs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And sharpest weapons were their tongues.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But waving these aside like flies,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Young Fairfax through the wall does rise.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then the unfrequented vault appeared,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And superstition, vainly feared;<br /></span><a name="pg40" id="pg40"></a><span class="pagenum">40</span>
+<span class="i0">The relicks false were set to view;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Only the jewels there were true,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And truly bright and holy Thwaites,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That weeping at the altar waits.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the glad youth away her bears,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And to the Nuns bequeathes her tears,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who guiltily their prize bemoan,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like gypsies who a child have stol&rsquo;n.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The poet then goes on to glorify the results of this union and to
+describe happy days spent at Nunappleton by the descendants of Isabella
+Thwaites.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;At the demolishing, this seat<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To Fairfax fell, as by escheat;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And what both nuns and founders willed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">&rsquo;Tis likely better thus fulfilled.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For if the virgin proved not theirs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The cloister yet remain&egrave;d hers;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Though many a nun there made her vow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">&rsquo;Twas no religious house till now.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From that blest bed the hero came<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whom France and Poland yet does fame;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who, when retir&egrave;d here to peace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His warlike studies could not cease;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But laid these gardens out, in sport,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In the just figure of a fort,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And with five bastions it did fence,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As aiming one for every sense.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When in the east the morning ray<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hangs out the colours of the day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The bee through these known alleys hums,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Beating the dian with its drums.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then flowers their drowsy eyelids raise,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Their silken ensigns each displays,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And dries its pan, yet dank with dew,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And fills its flask with odours new.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">These as their Governor goes by<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In fragrant volleys they let fly,<br /></span><a name="pg41" id="pg41"></a><span class="pagenum">41</span>
+<span class="i0">And to salute their Governess<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Again as great a charge they press:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">None for the virgin nymph; for she<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Seems with the flowers a flower to be.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And think so still! though not compare<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With breath so sweet, or cheek so fair!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Well shot, ye firemen! Oh, how sweet<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And round your equal fires do meet,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whose shrill report no ear can tell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But echoes to the eye and smell!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">See how the flowers, as at parade,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Under their colours stand displayed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Each regiment in order grows,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That of the tulip, pink and rose.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But when the vigilant patrol<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of stars walk round about the pole,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Their leaves, which to the stalks are curled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Seem to their staves the ensigns furled.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then in some flower&rsquo;s belov&egrave;d hut,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Each bee, as sentinel, is shut,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And sleeps so too, but, if once stirred,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She runs you through, nor asks the word.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh, thou, that dear and happy isle,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The garden of the world erewhile,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou Paradise of the four seas,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which heaven planted us to please,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But, to exclude the world, did guard<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With watery, if not flaming sword,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What luckless apple did we taste,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To make us mortal, and thee waste?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Unhappy! shall we never more<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That sweet militia restore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When gardens only had their towers<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And all the garrisons were flowers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When roses only arms might bear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And men did rosy garlands wear?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Tulips, in several colours barred,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Were then the Switzers of our guard;<br /></span><a name="pg42" id="pg42"></a><span class="pagenum">42</span>
+<span class="i0">The gardener had the soldier&rsquo;s place,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And his more gentle forts did trace;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The nursery of all things green<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Was then the only magazine;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The winter quarters were the stoves,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where he the tender plants removes.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But war all this doth overgrow:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We ordnance plant, and powder sow.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The arching boughs unite between<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The columns of the temple green,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And underneath the wing&egrave;d quires<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Echo about their tun&egrave;d fires.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The nightingale does here make choice<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To sing the trials of her voice;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Low shrubs she sits in, and adorns<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With music high the squatted thorns;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But highest oaks stoop down to hear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And listening elders prick the ear;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The thorn, lest it should hurt her, draws<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Within the skin its shrunken claws.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But I have for my music found<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A sadder, yet more pleasing sound;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The stock-doves, whose fair necks are graced<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With nuptial rings, their ensigns chaste,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet always, for some cause unknown,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sad pair, unto the elms they moan.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">O why should such a couple mourn,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That in so equal flames do burn!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then as I careless on the bed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of gelid strawberries do tread,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And through the hazels thick espy<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The hatching throstle&rsquo;s shining eye,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The heron, from the ash&rsquo;s top,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The eldest of its young lets drop,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As if it stork-like did pretend<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That tribute to its lord to send.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Thus I, easy philosopher,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Among the birds and trees confer;<br /></span><a name="pg43" id="pg43"></a><span class="pagenum">43</span>
+<span class="i0">And little now to make me, wants,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or of the fowls, or of the plants;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Give me but wings as they, and I<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Straight floating on the air shall fly;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or turn me but, and you shall see<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I was but an inverted tree.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Already I begin to call<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In their most learn&rsquo;d original,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And where I language want, my signs<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The bird upon the bough divines,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And more attentive there doth sit<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than if she were with lime-twigs knit,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No leaf does tremble in the wind,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which I returning cannot find.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">One of these scattered Sibyls&rsquo; leaves<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Strange prophecies my fancy weaves,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And in one history consumes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like Mexique paintings, all the plumes;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What Rome, Greece, Palestine e&rsquo;er said,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I in this light mosaic read.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thrice happy he, who, not mistook,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hath read in Nature&rsquo;s mystic book!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And see how chance&rsquo;s better wit<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Could with a mask my studies hit!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The oak-leaves me embroider all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Between which caterpillars crawl;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And ivy, with familiar trails,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Me licks and clasps, and curls and hales.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Under this Attic cope I move,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like some great prelate of the grove;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then, languishing with ease, I toss<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On pallets swoln of velvet moss,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While the wind, cooling through the boughs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Flatters with air my panting brows.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thanks for your rest, ye mossy banks,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And unto you, cool zephyrs, thanks,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who, as my hair, my thoughts too shed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And winnow from the chaff my head!<br /></span><a name="pg44" id="pg44"></a><span class="pagenum">44</span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">How safe, methinks, and strong behind<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">These trees, have I encamped my mind,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where beauty, aiming at the heart,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bends in some tree its useless dart,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And where the world no certain shot<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Can make, or me it toucheth not,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But I on it securely play<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And gall its horsemen all the day.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bind me, ye woodbines, in your twines<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Curl me about, ye gadding vines,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And oh so close your circles lace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That I may never leave this place!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But, lest your fetters prove too weak,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ere I your silken bondage break,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Do you, O brambles, chain me too,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, courteous briars, nail me through!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh what a pleasure &rsquo;tis to hedge<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My temples here with heavy sedge,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Abandoning my lazy side,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Stretched as a bank unto the tide,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or to suspend my sliding foot<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On the osier&rsquo;s undermin&egrave;d root,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And in its branches tough to hang,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While at my lines the fishes twang?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But now away, my hooks, my quills,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And angles, idle utensils!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The young <span class="smcap">Maria</span> walks to-night;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&rsquo;Tis she that to these gardens gave<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That wondrous beauty which they have;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She straightness on the woods bestows;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To her the meadow sweetness owes;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nothing could make the river be<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So crystal pure, but only she,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She yet more pure, sweet, straight, and fair<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than gardens, woods, meads, rivers are.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">This &rsquo;tis to have been from the first<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In a domestic heaven nursed,<br /></span><a name="pg45" id="pg45"></a><span class="pagenum">45</span>
+<span class="i0">Under the discipline severe<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of <span class="smcap">Fairfax</span>, and the starry <span class="smcap">Vere</span>;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where not one object can come nigh<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But pure, and spotless as the eye,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And goodness doth itself entail<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On females, if there want a male.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This poem, having a biographical value, I have quoted at, perhaps, too
+great length. Other poems of this garden-period of Marvell&rsquo;s life are
+better known. His own English version of his Latin poem <i>Hortus</i>
+contains lovely stanzas:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;How vainly men themselves amaze<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To win the palm, the oak, or bays;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And their uncessant labours see<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Crowned from some single herb or tree,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whose short and narrow-verg&egrave;d shade<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Does prudently their toils upbraid;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While all the flowers and trees do close,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To weave the garlands of Repose!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Fair Quiet, have I found thee here,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Innocence, thy sister dear?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mistaken long, I sought you then<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In busy companies of men.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your sacred plants, if here below,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Only among the plants will grow;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Society is all but rude<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To this delicious solitude.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">No white nor red was ever seen<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So amorous as this lovely green.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">What wond&rsquo;rous life is this I lead!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ripe apples drop about my head;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The luscious clusters of the vine<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon my mouth do crush their wine;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The nectarine, and curious peach,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Into my hands themselves do reach;<br /></span><a name="pg46" id="pg46"></a><span class="pagenum">46</span>
+<span class="i0">Stumbling on melons, as I pass,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Insnared with flowers, I fall on grass.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Meanwhile the mind, from pleasure less,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Withdraws into its happiness;&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The mind, that ocean where each kind<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Does straight its own resemblance find;&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet it creates, transcending these,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Far other worlds, and other seas,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Annihilating all that&rsquo;s made<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To a green thought in a green shade.&rdquo;<a name="fnm17_461" id="fnm17_461"></a><a href="#fn17_461" class="fnnum">1</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Well known as are Marvell&rsquo;s lines to his Coy Mistress, I have not the
+heart to omit them, so eminently characteristic are they of his style
+and humour:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Had we but world enough and time,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">This coyness, lady, were no crime.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We would sit down and think which way<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To walk, and pass our long love&rsquo;s day.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou by the Indian Ganges&rsquo; side<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Should&rsquo;st rubies find: I by the tide<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of Humber would complain. I would<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Love you ten years before the Flood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And you should, if you please, refuse<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till the conversion of the Jews.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My vegetable love should grow<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Vaster than empires and more slow.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">An hundred years should go to praise<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thine eyes, and on thy forehead gaze;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Two hundred to adore each breast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But thirty thousand to the rest;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">An age at least to every part,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the last age should show your heart.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For, lady, you deserve this state,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor would I love at lower rate.<br /></span><a name="pg47" id="pg47"></a><span class="pagenum">47</span>
+<span class="i1">But at my back I always hear<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Time&rsquo;s wing&egrave;d chariot hurrying near,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And yonder all before us lie<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Deserts of vast eternity.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy beauty shall no more be found,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor in thy marble vault shall sound<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My echoing song; then worms shall try<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That long-preserved virginity,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And your quaint honour turn to dust,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And into ashes all my lust.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The grave&rsquo;s a fine and private place,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But none, I think, do there embrace.<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Now, therefore, while the youthful hue<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sits on thy skin like morning dew,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And while thy willing soul transpires<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">At every pore with instant fires,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now, let us sport us while we may;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And now, like amorous birds of prey,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rather at once our time devour,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than languish in his slow-chapt power!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let us roll all our strength, and all<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our sweetness up into one ball;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And tear our pleasures with rough strife,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Through the iron gates of life!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thus, though we cannot make our sun<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Stand still, yet we will make him run.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Mr. Aitken&rsquo;s valuable edition of Marvell&rsquo;s poems and satires can now be
+had of all booksellers for two shillings,<a name="fnm18_471" id="fnm18_471"></a><a href="#fn18_471" class="fnnum">1</a> and with these volumes
+in his possession the judicious reader will be able to supply his own
+reflections whilst life beneath the sun is still his. Poetry is a
+personal matter. The very canons of criticism are themselves literature.
+If we like the <i>Ars Poetica</i>, it is because we enjoy reading Horace.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn11_201" id="fn11_201"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm11_201">20:1</a></span> For an account of Flecknoe, see Southey&rsquo;s <i>Omniana</i>, i.
+105. Lamb placed some fine lines of Flecknoe&rsquo;s at the beginning of the
+Essay <i>A Quakers&rsquo; Meeting</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn12_241" id="fn12_241"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm12_241">24:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iii. p. 175.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn13_242" id="fn13_242"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm13_242">24:2</a></span> <i>See</i> preface to <i>Religio Laici</i>, Scott&rsquo;s <i>Dryden</i>, vol.
+x. p. 27.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn14_243" id="fn14_243"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm14_243">24:3</a></span> Jeremy Collier in his <i>Historical Dictionary</i> (1705)
+describes Marvell, to whom he allows more space (though it is but a few
+lines) than he does to Shakespeare, &ldquo;as to his opinion he was a
+dissenter.&rdquo; In Collier&rsquo;s opinion Marvell may have been no better than a
+dissenter, but in fact he was a Churchman all his life, and it was
+Collier who lived to become a non-juror and a dissenter, and a
+schismatical bishop to boot.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn15_311" id="fn15_311"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm15_311">31:1</a></span> <i>Life of Lord Fairfax</i>, by C.&nbsp;R. Markham (1870), p. 365.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn16_351" id="fn16_351"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm16_351">35:1</a></span> The fifth edition is dated 1703.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn17_461" id="fn17_461"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm17_461">46:1</a></span> Many a reader has made his first acquaintance with
+Marvell on reading these lines in the <i>Essays of Elia</i> (<i>The Old
+Benchers of the Inner Temple</i>).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn18_471" id="fn18_471"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm18_471">47:1</a></span> <i>Poems and Satires of Andrew Marvell</i>, 2 vols.
+Routledge, 1905.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg48" id="pg48"></a><span class="pagenum">48</span><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<p class="center">A CIVIL SERVANT IN THE TIME OF THE COMMONWEALTH</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Andrew Marvell first made John Milton&rsquo;s acquaintance is not known.
+They must both have had common friends at or belonging to Cambridge.
+Fairfax may have made the two men known to each other, although it is
+just as likely that Milton introduced Marvell to Fairfax. All we know is
+that when the engagement at Nunappleton House came to an end, Marvell,
+being then minded to serve the State in some civil capacity, applied to
+the Secretary for Foreign Tongues for what would now be called a
+testimonial, which he was fortunate enough to obtain in the form of a
+letter to the Lord-President of the Council, John Bradshaw. Milton seems
+always to have liked Bradshaw, who was not generally popular even on his
+own side, and in the <i>Defensio Secunda pro populo Anglicano</i> extols his
+character and attainments in sonorous latinity. Bradshaw had become in
+February 1649 the first President of the new Council of State, which,
+after the disappearance of the king and the abolition of the House of
+Lords, took over the burden of the executive, and claimed the right to
+scrape men&rsquo;s consciences by administering to anybody it chose an oath
+requiring them to approve of what the House of Commons had done against
+the king, and of their abolition of kingly government and of the House
+of<a name="pg49" id="pg49"></a><span class="pagenum">49</span> Peers, and that the legislative and supreme power was wholly in the
+House of Commons.</p>
+
+<p>Before the creation of this Council the duties of Latin Secretary to the
+Parliament had been discharged by Georg Rudolph Weckherlin, a German
+diplomat who had married an Englishwoman. He retired in bad health at
+this time, and Milton was appointed to his place in 1649. When, later
+on, the sight of the most illustrious of all our civil servants failed
+him, Weckherlin returned to the office as Milton&rsquo;s assistant. In
+December 1652 ill-health again compelled Weckherlin&rsquo;s retirement.<a name="fnm19_491" id="fnm19_491"></a><a href="#fn19_491" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>Milton&rsquo;s letter to Bradshaw, who had made his home at Eton, is dated
+February 21, 1653, and is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="nogapbelow">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">My Lord</span>,&mdash;But that it would be an interruption to the
+public wherein your studies are perpetually employed, I should now
+and then venture to supply thus my enforced absence with a line or
+two, though it were onely my business, and that would be no slight
+one, to make my due acknowledgments of your many favours; which I
+both do at this time and ever shall; and have this farther, which I
+thought my part to let you know of, that there will be with you
+to-morrow <a name="pg50" id="pg50"></a><span class="pagenum">50</span>upon some occasion of business a gentleman whose name is
+Mr. Marvile, a man whom both by report and the converse I have had
+with him of singular desert for the State to make use of, who also
+offers himself, if there be any employment for him. His father was
+the Minister of Hull, and he hath spent four years abroad in Holland,
+France, Italy, and Spain to very good purpose, as I believe, and the
+gaining of these four languages, besides he is a scholer and
+well-read in the Latin and Greek authors, and no doubt of an approved
+conversation, for he now comes lately out of the house of the Lord
+Fairfax, who was Generall, where he was intrusted to give some
+instructions in the languages to the Lady, his daughter. If upon the
+death of Mr. Weckerlyn the Councell shall think that I shall need any
+assistance in the performance of my place (though for my part I find
+no encumbrance of that which belongs to me, except it be in point of
+attendance at Conferences with Ambassadors, which I must confess in
+my condition I am not fit for) it would be hard for them to find a
+man so fit every way for that purpose as this gentleman: one who, I
+believe, in a short time would be able to do them as much service as
+Mr. Ascan. This, my Lord, I write sincerely without any other end
+than to perform my duty to the publick in helping them to an humble
+servant; laying aside those jealousies and that emulation which mine
+own condition might suggest to me by bringing in such a coadjutor;
+and remain, my Lord, your most obliged and faithful servant, </p>
+<p class="signature">John Milton.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Feb. 21, 1652</i> (O.S.).&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Addressed: &ldquo;For the Honourable the Lord Bradshawe.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>No handsomer testimonial than this was ever penned. It was unsuccessful.
+When Milton wrote to Bradshaw, Weckherlin was in fact dead, and on his
+retirement in the previous December, John Thurloe, the very handy
+Secretary of the Council, had for the time assumed Weckherlin&rsquo;s duties,
+and obtained on that score an addition to his salary. No actual vacancy,
+therefore, occurred on Weckherlin&rsquo;s <a name="pg51" id="pg51"></a><span class="pagenum">51</span>death. None the less, shortly
+afterwards, Philip Meadows, also a Cambridge man, was appointed Milton&rsquo;s
+assistant, and Marvell had to wait four years longer for his place.</p>
+
+<p>When Marvell&rsquo;s connection with Eton first began is not to be
+ascertained. His friend, John Oxenbridge, who had been driven from his
+tutorship at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, by Laud in 1634 to</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Where the remote Bermudas ride,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>but had returned home, became in 1652 a Fellow of Eton College. Oliver
+St. John, who at this time was Chancellor of the University of
+Cambridge, and had married Oxenbridge&rsquo;s sister, was known to Marvell,
+and may have introduced him to his brother-in-law. At all events Marvell
+frequently visited Eton, where, however, he had the good sense to
+frequent not merely the cloisters, but the poor lodgings where the &ldquo;ever
+memorable&rdquo; John Hales, ejected from his fellowship, spent the last years
+of his life.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I account it no small honour to have grown up into some part of his
+acquaintance and conversed awhile with the living remains of one of
+the clearest heads and best prepared breasts in Christendom.&rdquo;<a name="fnm20_511" id="fnm20_511"></a><a href="#fn20_511" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Hales died in 1656, and his <i>Golden Remains</i> were first published three
+years later. Marvell&rsquo;s words of panegyric are singularly well chosen. It
+is a curious commentary upon the confused times of the Civil War and
+Restoration that perhaps never before, and seldom, if ever, since, has
+England contained so many clear heads and well-prepared breasts as it
+did then. Small indeed is the influence of men of thought upon their
+immediate surroundings.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg52" id="pg52"></a><span class="pagenum">52</span>The Lord Bradshaw, we know, had a home in Eton, and on the occasion of
+one of Marvell&rsquo;s evidently frequent visits to the Oxenbridges, Milton
+entrusted him with a letter to Bradshaw and a presentation copy of the
+<i>Secunda defensio</i>. Marvell delivered both letter and book, and seems at
+once to have informed the distinguished author that he had done so. But
+alas for the vanity of the writing man! The sublime poet, who in his
+early manhood had composed <i>Lycidas</i>, and was in his old age to write
+<i>Paradise Lost</i>, demanded further and better particulars as to the
+precise manner in which the chief of his office received, not only the
+book, but the letter which accompanied it. Nobody is now left to think
+much of Bradshaw, but in 1654 he was an excellent representative of the
+class Carlyle was fond of describing as the <i>alors c&eacute;l&egrave;bre</i>. Prompted by
+this desire, Milton must have written to Marvell hinting, as he well
+knew how to do, his surprise at the curtness of his friend&rsquo;s former
+communication, and Marvell&rsquo;s reply to this letter has come down to us.
+It is Marvell&rsquo;s glory that long before <i>Paradise Lost</i> he recognised the
+essential greatness of the blind secretary, and his letter is a fine
+example of the mode of humouring a great man. Be it remembered, as we
+read, that this letter was not addressed to one of the greatest names in
+literature, but to a petulant and often peevish scholar, living of
+necessity in great retirement, whose name is never once mentioned by
+Clarendon, and about whom the voluminous Thurloe, who must have seen him
+hundreds of times, has nothing to say except that he was &ldquo;a blind man
+who wrote Latin letters.&rdquo; Odder still, perhaps, Richard Baxter, whose
+history of his own life and times is one of the most informing books in
+the world, never so much as mentions the one and only man whose name
+<a name="pg53" id="pg53"></a><span class="pagenum">53</span>can, without any violent sense of unfitness, be given to the age about
+which Baxter was writing so laboriously.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="nogapbelow">&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Honoured Sir</span>,&mdash;I did not satisfie my self in the account I
+gave you of presentinge your Book to my Lord, although it seemed to
+me that I writ to you all which the messenger&rsquo;s speedy returne the
+same night from Eaton would permit me; and I perceive that, by reason
+of that hast, I did not give you satisfaction neither concerninge the
+delivery of your Letter at the same time. Be pleased therefore to
+pardon me and know that I tendered them both together. But my Lord
+read not the Letter while I was with him, which I attributed to our
+despatch, and some other businesse tendinge thereto, which I
+therefore wished ill to, so farr as it hindred an affaire much better
+and of greater importance, I mean that of reading your Letter. And to
+tell you truly mine own imagination, I thought that he would not open
+it while I was there, because he might suspect that I, delivering it
+just upon my departure, might have brought in it some second
+proposition like to that which you had before made to him by your
+Letter to my advantage. However, I assure myself that he has since
+read it, and you, that he did then witnesse all respecte to your
+person, and as much satisfaction concerninge your work as could be
+expected from so cursory a review and so sudden an account as he
+could then have of it from me. Mr. Oxenbridge, at his returne from
+London, will, I know, give you thanks for his book, as I do with all
+acknowledgement and humility for that you have sent me. I shall now
+studie it even to the getting of it by heart; esteeming it, according
+to my poore judgment (which yet I wish it were so right in all things
+else), as the most compendious scale for so much to the height of the
+Roman Eloquence, when I consider how equally it turnes and rises with
+so many figures it seems to me a Trajan&rsquo;s columne, in whose winding
+ascent we see imboss&rsquo;d the severall monuments of your learned
+victoryes: And Salmatius and Morus make up as great a triumph as that
+of Decebalus, whom too, for ought I know, you shall have forced, as
+Trajan the other, to make themselves away <a name="pg54" id="pg54"></a><span class="pagenum">54</span>out of a just desperation.
+I have an affectionate curiousity to know what becomes of Colonell
+Overton&rsquo;s businesse. And am exceeding glad that Mr. Skynner is got
+near you, the happinesse which I at the same time congratulate to him
+and envie, there being none who doth, if I may so say, more jealously
+honour you then, Honoured Sir, Your most affectionate humble servant,</p>
+<p class="signature">Andrew Marvell.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Eaton, <i>June 2, 1654.</i>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>
+Addressed: &ldquo;For my most honoured friend,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">John Milton, Esquire, Secretarye</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">for the Forrain affaires</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 9.5em;">at his house in Petty France,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Westminster.&rdquo;</span><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>To conclude Marvell&rsquo;s Eton experiences; in 1657, and very shortly before
+his obtaining his appointment as Milton&rsquo;s assistant in the place of
+Philip Meadows, who was sent on a mission to Lisbon, Marvell was chosen
+by the Lord-Protector to be tutor at Eton to Cromwell&rsquo;s ward, Mr.
+Dutton, and took up his residence with his pupil with the Oxenbridges.
+The following letter, addressed by Marvell to Oliver, will be read with
+interest:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="nogapbelow">&ldquo;May it please your Excellence,&mdash;It might, perhaps, seem fit for me
+to seek out words to give your Excellence thanks for myself. But,
+indeed, the only civility which it is proper for me to practice with
+so eminent a person is to obey you, and to perform honestly the work
+that you have set me about. Therefore I shall use the time that your
+Lordship is pleased to allow me for writing, onely for that purpose
+for which you have given me it; that is, to render you an account of
+Mr. Dutton. I have taken care to examine him several times in the
+presence of Mr. Oxenbridge, as those who weigh and tell over money
+before some witnesse ere they take charge of it; for I thought that
+there might be possibly some lightness in the coyn, or errour in the
+telling, which hereafter I should be bound to make good. Therefore,
+Mr. Oxenbridge is the best to make your Excellency an <a name="pg55" id="pg55"></a><span class="pagenum">55</span>impartial
+relation thereof: I shall only say, that I shall strive according to
+my best understanding (that is, according to those rules your
+Lordship hath given me) to increase whatsoever talent he may have
+already. Truly, he is of gentle and waxen disposition; and God be
+praised, I cannot say he hath brought with him any evil impression;
+and I shall hope to set nothing into his spirit but what may be of a
+good sculpture. He hath in him two things that make youth most easy
+to be managed,&mdash;modesty, which is the bridle to vice; and emulation,
+which is the spur to virtue. And the care which your Excellence is
+pleased to take of him is no small encouragement and shall be so
+represented to him; but, above all, I shall labour to make him
+sensible of his duty to God; for then we begin to serve faithfully,
+when we consider He is our master. And in this, both he and I owe
+infinitely to your Lordship, for having placed us in so godly a
+family as that of Mr. Oxenbridge, whose doctrine and example are like
+a book and a map, not only instructing the ear, but demonstrating to
+the eye, which way we ought to travell; and Mrs. Oxenbridge has
+looked so well to him, that he hath already much mended his
+complexion; and now she is ordering his chamber, that he may delight
+to be in it as often as his studys require. For the rest, most of
+this time hath been spent in acquainting ourselves with him; and
+truly he is chearfull, and I hope thinks us to be good company. I
+shall, upon occasion, henceforward inform your Excellence of any
+particularities in our little affairs, for so I esteem it to be my
+duty. I have no more at present, but to give thanks to God for your
+Lordship, and to beg grace of Him, that I may approve myself, Your
+Excellency&rsquo;s most humble and faithful servant,</p>
+<p class="signature">Andrew Marvell.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Windsor, <i>July 28, 1653</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Dutton<a name="fnm21_551" id="fnm21_551"></a><a href="#fn21_551" class="fnnum">1</a> presents his most humble service to your
+Excellence.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Something must now be said of Marvell&rsquo;s literary productions during this
+period, 1652-1657. It was in<a name="pg56" id="pg56"></a><span class="pagenum">56</span> 1653 that he began his stormy career as an
+anonymous political poet and satirist. The Dutch were his first victims,
+good Protestants though they were. Marvell never liked the Dutch, and
+had he lived to see the Revolution must have undergone some qualms.</p>
+
+<p>In 1652 the Commonwealth was at war with the United Provinces. Trade
+jealousy made the war what politicians call &ldquo;inevitable.&rdquo; This jealousy
+of the Dutch dates back to Elizabeth, and to the first stirring in the
+womb of time of the British navy. This may be readily perceived if we
+read Dr. John Dee&rsquo;s &ldquo;Petty Navy Royal,&rdquo; 1577, and &ldquo;A Politic Plat (plan)
+for the Honour of the Prince,&rdquo; 1580, and, somewhat later in date,
+&ldquo;England&rsquo;s Way to Win Wealth,&rdquo; 1614.<a name="fnm22_561" id="fnm22_561"></a><a href="#fn22_561" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>These short tracts make two things quite plain&mdash;first, the desire to get
+our share of the foreign fishing trade, then wholly in the hands of the
+Dutch; and second, the recognition that England was a sea-empire,
+dependent for its existence upon a great navy manned by the seafaring
+inhabitants of our coasts.</p>
+
+<p>The enormous fishing trade done in our own waters by the Dutch, the
+splendid fleet of fishing craft with twenty thousand handy sailors on
+board, ready by every 1st of June to sail out of the Maas, the Texel,
+and the Vlie, to catch herring in the North Sea, excited admiration,
+envy, and almost despair.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;O, slothful England and careless countrymen! look but on these
+fellows that we call the plump Hollanders! Behold their diligence in
+fishing and our most careless negligence! Six hundred of these
+fisherships and more be great Busses, some six score tons, most of
+them be a hundred tons, and the rest three score tons and fifty tons;
+the biggest of them <a name="pg57" id="pg57"></a><span class="pagenum">57</span>having four and twenty men, some twenty men, and
+some eighteen or sixteen men apiece. So there cannot be in this fleet
+of People no less than twenty thousand sailors.... No king upon the
+earth did ever see such a fleet of his own subjects at any time, and
+yet this fleet is there and then yearly to be seen. A most worthy
+sight it were, if they were my own countrymen, yet have I taken
+pleasure in being amongst them, to behold the neatness of their ships
+and fishermen, how every man knoweth his own place, and all labouring
+merrily together.<a name="fnm23_571" id="fnm23_571"></a><a href="#fn23_571" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, in our sum of fishermen, let us see what vent have we for our
+fish in other countries, and what commodities and corn is brought
+into this Kingdom? And what ships are set in work by them whereby
+mariners are best employed. Not one. It is pitiful! ... This last
+year at Yarmouth there were three hundred idle men that could get
+nothing to do, living very poor for lack of employment, which most
+gladly would have gone to sea in Pinks if there had been any for them
+to go in.... And this last year the Hollanders did lade 12 sail of
+Holland ships with red herrings at Yarmouth for Civita Vecchia,
+Leghorn and Genoa and Marseilles and Toulon. Most of these being
+laden by the English merchants. So that if this be suffered the
+English owners of ships shall have but small employment for
+them.&rdquo;<a name="fnm24_572" id="fnm24_572"></a><a href="#fn24_572" class="fnnum">2</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Nor was the other aspect of the case lost sight of. How can a great navy
+necessary for our sea-empire be manned otherwise than by a race of brave
+sea-faring men, accustomed from their infancy to handle boats?</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Fourthly, how many thousands of soldiers of all degrees would be by
+these means not only hardened well to brook all rage and disturbance
+of sea, but also would be well practised and trained to great
+perfection of understanding all manner of fight and service of sea,
+so that in time of great <a name="pg58" id="pg58"></a><span class="pagenum">58</span>need that expert and hardy crew of some
+thousands of sea-soldiers would be to this realm a treasure
+incomparable.<a name="fnm25_581" id="fnm25_581"></a><a href="#fn25_581" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We see the Hollanders being well fed in fishing affairs and stronger
+and lustier than the sailors who use the long Southern voyages, but
+these courageous, young, lusty, strong-fed younkers that shall be
+bred in the Busses, when His Majesty shall have occasion for their
+service in war against the enemy, will be fellows for the nonce! and
+will put more strength to an iron crow at a piece of great ordnance
+in training of a cannon, or culvining with the direction of the
+experimented master Gunner, then two or three of the forenamed
+surfeited sailors. And in distress of wind-grown sea and foul
+winter&rsquo;s weather, for flying forward to their labour, for pulling in
+a top-sail or a sprit-sail, or shaking off a bonnet in a dark night!
+for wet or cold cannot make them shrink nor stain, that the North
+Seas and the Busses and Pinks have dyed in the grain for such
+purposes.&rdquo;<a name="fnm26_582" id="fnm26_582"></a><a href="#fn26_582" class="fnnum">2</a></p></div>
+
+<p>The years, as they went by, only served to increase English jealousy of
+the Dutch, who not only fished our water but did the carrying trade of
+the world. It was no rare sight to see Yarmouth full of Dutch bottoms,
+and Dutch sailors loading them with English goods.</p>
+
+<p>In the early days of the Commonwealth the painfulness of the situation
+was accentuated by the fact that some of our colonies or plantations, as
+they were then called&mdash;Virginia and the Barbadoes, for example&mdash;stuck to
+the king and gave a commercial preference to the Dutch, shipping their
+produce to all parts of the world exclusively in Dutch bottoms. This was
+found intolerable, and in October 1651 the Long Parliament, nearing its
+violent end, passed the first Navigation Act, of <a name="pg59" id="pg59"></a><span class="pagenum">59</span>which Ranke says: &ldquo;Of
+all the acts ever passed in Parliament, it is perhaps the one which
+brought about the most important results for England and the
+world.&rdquo;<a name="fnm27_591" id="fnm27_591"></a><a href="#fn27_591" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>The Navigation Act provided &ldquo;that all goods from countries beyond Europe
+should be imported into England in English ships only; and all European
+goods either in English ships or in ships belonging to the countries
+from which these articles originally came.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This was a challenge indeed.</p>
+
+<p>Another perpetual source of irritation was the Right of Search, that is,
+the right of stopping neutral ships and searching their cargoes for
+contraband. England asserted this right as against the Dutch, who, as
+the world&rsquo;s carriers, were most subject to the right, and not
+unnaturally denied its existence.</p>
+
+<p>War was declared in 1652, and made the fame of two great admirals, Blake
+and Van Tromp. Oliver&rsquo;s spirit was felt on the seas, and before many
+months were over England had captured more than a thousand Dutch trading
+vessels, and brought business to a standstill in Amsterdam&mdash;then the
+great centre of commercial interests. When six short years afterwards
+the news of Cromwell&rsquo;s death reached that city, its inhabitants greatly
+rejoiced, crowding the streets and crying &ldquo;the Devil is dead.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Andrew Marvell was impregnated with the new ideas about sea-power. A
+great reader and converser with the best intellects of his time, and a
+Hull man, he had probably early grasped the significance of Bacon&rsquo;s
+illuminating saying in the famous essay on <a name="pg60" id="pg60"></a><span class="pagenum">60</span>the <i>True Greatness of
+Kingdoms and Estates</i> (first printed in 1612), &ldquo;that he that commands
+the sea is at great liberty and may take as much and as little of the
+war as he will.&rdquo; Cromwell, though not the creator of our navy, was its
+strongest inspiration until Nelson, and no feature of his great
+administration so excited Marvell&rsquo;s patriotic admiration as the
+Lord-Protector&rsquo;s sleepless energy in securing and maintaining the
+command of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>In Marvell&rsquo;s poem, first published as a broadsheet in 1655, entitled
+<i>The First Anniversary of the Government under His Highness the
+Lord-Protector</i>, he describes foreign princes soundly rating their
+ambassadors for having misinformed them as to the energies of the new
+Commonwealth:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;&lsquo;Is this,&rsquo; saith one, &lsquo;the nation that we read<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Spent with both wars, under a Captain dead!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet rig a navy while we dress us late<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And ere we dine rase and rebuild a state?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What oaken forests, and what golden mines,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What mints of men&mdash;what union of designs!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Needs must we all their tributaries be<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whose navies hold the sluices of the sea!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>The ocean is the fountain of command</i>,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But that once took, we captives are on land;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And those that have the waters for their share<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Can quickly leave us neither earth nor air.&rsquo;&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s aversion to the Dutch was first displayed in the rough lines
+called <i>The Character of Holland</i>, published in 1653 during the first
+Dutch War. As poetry the lines have no great merit; they do not even
+jingle agreeably&mdash;but they are full of the spirit of the time, and
+breathe forth that &ldquo;envy, hatred, malice, and all uncharitableness&rdquo;
+which are apt to <a name="pg61" id="pg61"></a><span class="pagenum">61</span>be such large ingredients in the compound we call
+&ldquo;patriotism.&rdquo; They begin thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Holland, that scarce deserves the name of land,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As but the off-scouring of the British sand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And so much earth as was contributed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By English pilots when they heaved the lead,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or what by the ocean&rsquo;s slow alluvion feel<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of shipwrecked cockle and the muscle-shell,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">This indigested vomit of the sea<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fell to the Dutch by just propriety.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The gallant struggle to secure their country from the sea is made the
+subject of curious banter:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;How did they rivet with gigantic piles,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thorough the centre their new-catched miles,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And to the stake a struggling country bound,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where barking waves still bait the forced ground,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Building their watery Babel far more high,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To reach the sea, than those to scale the sky!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet still his claim the injured ocean laid,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And oft at leap-frog o&rsquo;er their steeples played,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As if on purpose it on land had come<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To show them what&rsquo;s their <i>mare liberum</i>.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A daily deluge over them does boil;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The earth and water play at level coil.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The fish ofttimes the burgher dispossessed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And sat, not as a meat, but as a guest.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This final conceit greatly tickled the fancy of Charles Lamb, who was
+perhaps the first of the moderns to rediscover both the rare merits and
+the curiosities of our author. Hazlitt thought poorly of the jest.<a name="fnm28_611" id="fnm28_611"></a><a href="#fn28_611" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>Marvell proceeds with his ridicule to attack the magistrates:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;For, as with pygmies, who best kills the crane;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Among the hungry, he that treasures grain;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Among the blind, the one-eyed blinkard reigns;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So rules among the drowned, he that drains:<br /></span><a name="pg62" id="pg62"></a><span class="pagenum">62</span>
+<span class="i0">Not who first see the rising sun, commands,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But who could first discern the rising lands;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who best could know to pump an earth so leak,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Him they their Lord, and Country&rsquo;s Father, speak;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To make a bank, was a great plot of state;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Invent a shovel, and be a magistrate.&rdquo;<a name="fnm29_621" id="fnm29_621"></a><a href="#fn29_621" class="fnnum">1</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>When the war-fever was raging such humour as this may well have passed
+muster with the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>The incident&mdash;there is always an &ldquo;incident&rdquo;&mdash;which served as the actual
+excuse for hostilities, is referred to as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Let this one courtesy witness all the rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When their whole navy they together pressed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Not Christian captives to redeem from bands,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or intercept the western golden sands,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No, but all ancient rights and leagues must fail,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Rather than to the English strike their sail</i>;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To whom their weather-beaten province owes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Itself.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><a name="pg63" id="pg63"></a><span class="pagenum">63</span>Two spirited lines describe the discomfiture of Van Tromp:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;And the torn navy staggered with him home<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While the sea laughed itself into a foam.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This first Dutch War came to an end in 1654, when Holland was compelled
+to acknowledge the supremacy of the English flag in the home waters, and
+to acquiesce in the Navigation Act. It is a curious commentary upon the
+black darkness that conceals the future, that Cromwell, dreading as he
+did the House of Orange and the youthful grandson of Charles the First,
+who at the appointed hour was destined to deal the House of Stuart a far
+deadlier stroke than Cromwell had been able to do, either on the field
+of battle or in front of Whitehall, refused to ratify the Treaty of
+Peace with the Dutch until John De Witt had obtained an Act excluding
+the Prince of Orange from ever filling the office of Stadtholder of the
+Province of Holland.</p>
+
+<p>The contrast between the glory of Oliver&rsquo;s Dutch War and the shame of
+Charles the Second&rsquo;s sank deep into Marvell&rsquo;s heart, and lent bitterness
+to many of his later satirical lines.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s famous <i>Horatian Ode upon Cromwell&rsquo;s Return from Ireland</i> in
+1650 has a curious bibliographical interest. So far as we can tell, it
+was first published in 1776. When it was composed we do not know. At
+Nunappleton House Oliver was not a <i>persona grata</i> in 1650, for he had
+no sooner come back from Ireland than he had stepped into the shoes of
+the Lord-General Fairfax; and there were those, Lady Fairfax, I doubt
+not, among the number, who believed that the new Lord-General thought it
+was high time he should be where Fairfax&rsquo;s &ldquo;scruple&rdquo; at last put him. We
+may be sure Cromwell&rsquo;s character was dis<a name="pg64" id="pg64"></a><span class="pagenum">64</span>sected even more than it was
+extolled at Nunappleton. The famous Ode is by no means a panegyric, and
+its true hero is the &ldquo;Royal actor,&rdquo; whom Cromwell, so the poem suggests,
+lured to his doom. It is not likely that the Ode was composed after
+Marvell had left Nunappleton, though it may have been so before he went
+there. There is an old untraceable tradition that Marvell was among the
+crowd that saw the king die. What deaths have been witnessed, and with
+what strange apparent apathy, by the London crowd! But for this
+tradition one&rsquo;s imagination would trace to Lady Fairfax the most famous
+of the stanzas.</p>
+
+<p>But to return to the history of the Ode. In 1776 Captain Edward
+Thompson, a connection of the Marvell family and a versatile sailor with
+a passion for print, which had taken some odd forms of expression,
+produced by subscription in three quarto volumes the first collected
+edition of Andrew Marvell&rsquo;s works, both verse and prose. Such an edition
+had been long premeditated by Thomas Hollis, one of the best friends
+literature had in the eighteenth century. It was Hollis who gave to
+Sidney Sussex College the finest portrait in existence of Oliver
+Cromwell. Hollis collected material for an edition of Marvell with the
+aid of Richard Barron, an early editor of Milton&rsquo;s prose works, and of
+Algernon Sidney&rsquo;s <i>Discourse concerning Government</i>. Barron, however,
+lost zeal as the task proceeded, and complained justly enough &ldquo;of a want
+of anecdotes,&rdquo; and as the printer, the well-known and accomplished
+Bowyer, doubted the wisdom of the undertaking, it was allowed to drop.
+Barron died in 1766, and Hollis in 1774, but the collections made by the
+latter passed into the hands of Captain Thompson, who, with the
+assistance of Mr. Robert Nettleton, a grandson of one of Marvell&rsquo;s
+sisters, at once began to get <a name="pg65" id="pg65"></a><span class="pagenum">65</span>his edition ready. On Nettleton&rsquo;s death
+his &ldquo;Marvell&rdquo; papers came into Thompson&rsquo;s hands, and among them was, to
+quote the captain&rsquo;s own words, &ldquo;a volume of Mr. Marvell&rsquo;s poems, some
+written with his own hand and the rest copied by his order.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Horatian Ode</i> was in this volume, and was printed from it in
+Thompson&rsquo;s edition of 1776.</p>
+
+<p>What has become of this manuscript book? It has disappeared&mdash;destroyed,
+so we are led to believe, in a fit of temper by the angry and uncritical
+sea-captain.</p>
+
+<p>This precious volume undoubtedly contained some poems by Marvell, and as
+his handwriting was both well known from many examples, and is highly
+characteristic, we may also be certain that the captain was not mistaken
+in his assertion that some of these poems were in Marvell&rsquo;s own
+handwriting. But, as ill-luck would have it, the volume also contained
+poems written at a later period and in quite another hand. Among these
+latter pieces were Addison&rsquo;s verses, <i>The Spacious Firmament on High</i>
+and <i>When all thy Mercies, O my God</i>; Dr. Watts&rsquo; paraphrase <i>When Israel
+freed from Pharaoh&rsquo;s Hand</i>; and Mallet&rsquo;s ballad <i>William and Margaret</i>.
+The two Addison pieces and the Watts paraphrase appeared for the first
+time in the <i>Spectator</i>, Nos. 453, 465, and 461, in 1712, and Mallet&rsquo;s
+ballad was first printed in 1724.</p>
+
+<p>Still there these pieces were, in manuscript, in this volume, and as
+there were circumstances of mystification attendant upon their prior
+publication, what does the captain do but claim them all, <i>Songs of
+Zion</i> and sentimental ballad alike, as Marvell&rsquo;s. This of course brought
+the critics, ever anxious to air their erudition, down upon his head,
+raised his anger, and occasioned the destruction of the book.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Grosart says that Captain Thompson states that <a name="pg66" id="pg66"></a><span class="pagenum">66</span>the <i>Horatian Ode</i>
+was in Marvell&rsquo;s handwriting. I cannot discover where this statement is
+made, though it is made of other poems in the volume, also published for
+the first time by the captain.</p>
+
+<p>All, therefore, we know is that the Ode was first published in 1776 by
+an editor who says he found it copied in a book, subsequently destroyed,
+which contained (among other things) some poems written in Marvell&rsquo;s
+handwriting, and that this book was given to the editor by a
+grand-nephew of the poet.</p>
+
+<p>Yet I imagine, poor as this evidence may seem to be, no student of
+Marvell&rsquo;s life and character (so far as his life reveals his character),
+and of his verse (so much of it as is positively known), wants more
+evidence to satisfy him that the <i>Horatian Ode</i> is as surely Marvell&rsquo;s
+as the lines upon <i>Appleton House</i>, the <i>Bermudas</i>, <i>To his Coy
+Mistress</i>, and <i>The Garden</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The great popularity of this Ode undoubtedly rests on the three
+stanzas:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;That thence the royal actor borne,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The tragic scaffold might adorn,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">While round the arm&egrave;d bands;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Did clap their bloody hands:<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">He nothing common did, or mean,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon that memorable scene,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But with his keener eye<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The axe&rsquo;s edge did try;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Nor called the gods with vulgar spite<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To vindicate his helpless right,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But bowed his comely head<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Down, as upon a bed.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It is strange that the death of the king should be so nobly sung in an
+Ode bearing Cromwell&rsquo;s name and dedicate to his genius:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"><a name="pg67" id="pg67"></a><span class="pagenum">67</span>
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;So restless Cromwell could not cease<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In the inglorious arts of peace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But through adventurous war<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Urg&egrave;d his active star;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Then burning through the air he went,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And palaces and temples rent;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And C&aelig;sar&rsquo;s head at last<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Did through his laurels blast.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&rsquo;Tis madness to resist or blame<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The force of angry Heaven&rsquo;s flame;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And if we would speak true,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Much to the man is due,<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Who, from his private gardens, where<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He lived reserv&egrave;d and austere,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">(As if his highest plot<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To plant the bergamot),<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Could by industrious valour climb<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To ruin the great work of time,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And cast the kingdoms old<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Into another mould.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The last stanzas of all have much pith and meaning in them:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;But thou, the war&rsquo;s and fortune&rsquo;s son,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">March indefatigably on!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And for the last effect,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Still keep the sword erect.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Besides the force it has to fright<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The spirits of the shady night,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The same arts that did gain<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A power, must it maintain.&rdquo;<a name="fnm30_671" id="fnm30_671"></a><a href="#fn30_671" class="fnnum">1</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><a name="pg68" id="pg68"></a><span class="pagenum">68</span>It is not surprising that this Ode was not published in 1650&mdash;if indeed
+it was the work of that, and not of a later year. There is nothing
+either of the courtier or of the partisan about its stately
+versification and sober, solemn thought. Entire self-possession,
+dignity, criticism of a great man and a strange career by one well
+entitled to criticise, are among the chief characteristics of this noble
+poem. It is infinitely refreshing, when reading and thinking about
+Cromwell, to get as far away as possible from the fanatic&rsquo;s scream and
+the fury of the bigot, whether of the school of Laud or Hobbes. Andrew
+Marvell knew Oliver Cromwell alive, and gazed on his features as he lay
+dead&mdash;he knew his ambition, his greatness, his power, and where that
+power lay. How much might we unwittingly have lost, if Captain Thompson
+had not printed a poem which for more than a century of years had
+remained unknown, and exposed to all the risks of a single manuscript
+copy!</p>
+
+<p>When Cromwell sent his picture to Queen Christina of Sweden to
+commemorate the peace he concluded with her in 1654, Marvell, though not
+then attached to the public service, was employed to write the Latin
+couplet that accompanied the picture. He discharged his task as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i3"><i>In effigiem Oliveri Cromwell</i>.<br /></span>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;H&aelig;c est qu&aelig; toties inimicos umbra fugavit<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">At sub qu&acirc; cives otia lenta terunt.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The authorship of these lines is often attributed to Milton, but there
+is little doubt they are of Marvell&rsquo;s composition. They might easily
+have been better.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell became Milton&rsquo;s assistant in September 1657, and the friendship
+between the two men was <a name="pg69" id="pg69"></a><span class="pagenum">69</span>thus consolidated by the strong ties of a
+common duty. Milton&rsquo;s blindness making him unfit to attend the reception
+of foreign embassies, Marvell took his place and joined in respectfully
+greeting the Dutch ambassadors. After all he was but a junior clerk,
+still he doubtless rejoiced that his lines on Holland had been published
+anonymously. Literature was strongly represented in this department of
+State just then, for Cromwell&rsquo;s Chamberlain, Sir Gilbert Pickering, who
+represented Northamptonshire in Parliament, had taken occasion to
+introduce his nephew, John Dryden, to the public service, and he was
+attached to the same office as Andrew Marvell. Poets, like pigeons, have
+often taken shelter under our public roofs, but Milton, Marvell, and
+Dryden, all at the same time, form a remarkable constellation. Old Noll,
+we may be sure, had nothing to do with it. Marvell must have known
+Cromwell personally; but there is nothing to show that Milton and
+Cromwell ever met. The popular engraving which represents a theatrical
+Lord-Protector dictating despatches to a meek Milton is highly
+ludicrous. Cromwell could have as easily dictated a book of <i>Paradise
+Lost</i>, on the composition of which Milton began to be engaged during the
+last year of the Protectorate, as one of Milton&rsquo;s despatches.</p>
+
+<p>In April 1657 Admiral Blake, the first great name in the annals of our
+navy, performed his last feat of arms by destroying the Spanish West
+Indian fleet at Santa Cruz without the loss of an English vessel. The
+gallant sailor died of fever on his way home, and was buried according
+to his deserts in the Abbey. His body, with that of his master, was by a
+vote of Parliament, December 4, 1660, taken from the grave and drawn to
+the gallows-tree, and there hanged and buried under it. Pepys, who was
+to know something of <a name="pg70" id="pg70"></a><span class="pagenum">70</span>naval administration under the second Charles, has
+his reflections on this unpleasing incident.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s lines on Blake&rsquo;s victory over the Spaniards are not worthy of
+so glorious an occasion, but our great doings by land and sea have
+seldom been suitably recorded in verse. Drayton&rsquo;s <i>Song of Agincourt</i> is
+imperishable, but was composed nearly two centuries after the battle.
+The wail of Flodden Field still floats over the Border; but Miss
+Elliot&rsquo;s famous ballad was published in 1765. Even the Spanish Armada
+had to wait for Macaulay&rsquo;s spirited fragment. Mr. Addison&rsquo;s <i>Blenheim</i>
+stirred no man&rsquo;s blood; no poet sang Chatham&rsquo;s victories.<a name="fnm31_701" id="fnm31_701"></a><a href="#fn31_701" class="fnnum">1</a> Campbell
+at a later day did better. We must be content with what we get.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s poem contains some vigorous lines, which show he was a good
+hater:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Now does Spain&rsquo;s fleet her spacious wings unfold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Leaves the new world, and hastens for the old;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But though the wind was fair, they slowly swum,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Freighted with acted guilt, and guilt to come;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For this rich load, of which so proud they are,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Was raised by tyranny, and raised for war.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For now upon the main themselves they saw<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That boundless empire, where you give the law.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Canary Islands are rapturously described&mdash;their delightful climate
+and their excellent wine. Obviously they should be annexed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The best of lands should have the best of Kings.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><a name="pg71" id="pg71"></a><span class="pagenum">71</span>The fight begins. &ldquo;Bold Stayner leads&rdquo; and &ldquo;War turned the temperate to
+the torrid zone&rdquo;:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Fate these two fleets, between both worlds, had brought<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who fight, as if for both those worlds they fought.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The all-seeing sun ne&rsquo;er gazed on such a sight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Two dreadful navies there at anchor fight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And neither have, or power, or will, to fly;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There one must conquer, or there both must die.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Blake sinks the Spanish ships:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Their galleons sunk, their wealth the sea does fill,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The only place where it can cause no ill&rdquo;;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and the poet concludes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Ah! would those treasures which both Indias have<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Were buried in as large, and deep a grave!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">War&rsquo;s chief support with them would buried be,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the land owe her peace unto the sea.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ages to come your conquering arms will bless.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There they destroyed what had destroyed their peace;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And in one war the present age may boast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The certain seeds of many wars are lost.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Good politics, if but second-rate poetry. This was the last time the
+Spanish war-cry <i>Santiago, y cierra Espa&ntilde;a</i> rang in hostility in English
+ears.</p>
+
+<p>Turning for a moment from war to love, on the 19th of November 1657
+Cromwell&rsquo;s third daughter, the Lady Mary Cromwell, was married to
+Viscount, afterwards Earl, Fauconberg. The Fauconbergs took revolutions
+calmly and, despite the disinterment of their great relative, accepted
+the Restoration gladly and lived to chuckle over the Revolution. The
+forgetfulness, no less than the vindictiveness, of men is often
+surprising. Marvell, who played the part of Laureate during the
+Protectorate, produced two songs for the <a name="pg72" id="pg72"></a><span class="pagenum">72</span>conventionally joyful
+occasion. The second of the two is decidedly pretty for a November
+wedding:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: .5em;">&ldquo;<i>Hobbinol.</i></span> <span class="smcap">Phillis</span>, <span class="smcap">Tomalin</span>, away!<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Never such a merry day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">For the northern shepherd&rsquo;s son<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Has <span class="smcap">Menalcas</span>&rsquo; daughter won.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 2em;"><i>Phillis.</i></span> Stay till I some flowers have tied<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">In a garland for the bride.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 1.25em;"><i>Tomalin.</i></span> If thou would&rsquo;st a garland bring,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5"><span class="smcap">Phillis</span>, you may wait the spring:<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">They have chosen such an hour<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">When she is the only flower.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 2em;"><i>Phillis.</i></span> Let&rsquo;s not then, at least, be seen<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Without each a sprig of green.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: .75em;"><i>Hobbinol.</i></span> Fear not; at <span class="smcap">Menalcas</span>&rsquo; hall<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">There are bays enough for all.<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">He, when young as we, did graze,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">But when old he planted bays.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 1.25em;"><i>Tomalin.</i></span> Here she comes; but with a look<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Far more catching than my hook;<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">&rsquo;Twas those eyes, I now dare swear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Led our lambs we knew not where.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: .75em;"><i>Hobbinol.</i></span> Not our lambs&rsquo; own fleeces are<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Curled so lovely as her hair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Nor our sheep new-washed can be<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Half so white or sweet as she.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 2em;"><i>Phillis.</i></span> He so looks as fit to keep<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Somewhat else than silly sheep.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: .75em;"><i>Hobbinol.</i></span> Come, let&rsquo;s in some carol new<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Pay to love and them their due.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 3.5em;"><i>All.</i></span> Joy to that happy pair<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Whose hopes united banish our despair.<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">What shepherd could for love pretend,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Whilst all the nymphs on Damon&rsquo;s choice attend?<br /></span><a name="pg73" id="pg73"></a><span class="pagenum">73</span>
+<span class="i5">What shepherdess could hope to wed<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Before Marina&rsquo;s turn were sped?<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Now lesser beauties may take place<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">And meaner virtues come in play;<br /></span>
+<span class="i9">While they<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">Looking from high<br /></span>
+<span class="i9">Shall grace<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Our flocks and us with a propitious eye.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>All this merriment came to an end on the 3rd of September 1658, when
+Oliver Cromwell died on the anniversary of Dunbar fight and of the field
+of Worcester. And yet the end, though it was to be sudden, did not at
+once seem likely to be so. There was time for the poets to tune their
+lyres. Waller, Dryden, Sprat, and Marvell had no doubt that &ldquo;Tumbledown
+Dick&rdquo; was to sit on the throne of his father and &ldquo;still keep the sword
+erect,&rdquo; and were ready with their verses.</p>
+
+<p>Westminster Abbey has never witnessed a statelier, costlier funeral than
+that of &ldquo;the late man who made himself to be called Protector,&rdquo; to quote
+words from one of the most impressive passages in English prose, the
+opening sentences of Cowley&rsquo;s <i>Discourse by way of Vision concerning the
+Government of Oliver Cromwell</i>. The representatives of kings,
+potentates, and powers crowded the aisles, and all was done that pomp
+and ceremony could do. Marvell, arrayed in the six yards of mourning the
+Council had voted him on the 7th of September, was, we may be sure, in
+the Abbey, and it may well be that his blind colleague, to whom the same
+liberal allowance had been made, leant on his arm during the service.
+Milton&rsquo;s muse remained silent. The vote of the House of Commons ordering
+the undoing of this great ceremony was little more than two years ahead.
+<i>O caeca mens hominum!</i></p>
+
+<p>Among the poems first printed by Captain Thomp<a name="pg74" id="pg74"></a><span class="pagenum">74</span>son from the old
+manuscript book was one which was written therein in Marvell&rsquo;s own hand
+entitled &ldquo;A poem upon the Death of his late Highness the Protector.&rdquo; Its
+composition was evidently not long delayed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;We find already what those omens mean,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Earth ne&rsquo;er more glad nor Heaven more serene.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Cease now our griefs, calm peace succeeds a war,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rainbows to storms, Richard to Oliver.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The lines best worth remembering in the poem are the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;I saw him dead: a leaden slumber lies,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And mortal sleep over those wakeful eyes;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Those gentle rays under the lids were fled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which through his looks that piercing sweetness shed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That port, which so majestic was and strong,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Loose, and deprived of vigour, stretched along;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All withered, all discoloured, pale and wan,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How much another thing, no more that man!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">O, human glory vain! O, Death! O, wings!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">O, worthless world! O, transitory things!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet dwelt that greatness in his shape decayed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That still though dead, greater than Death he laid,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And in his altered face you something feign<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That threatens Death, he yet will live again.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn19_491" id="fn19_491"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm19_491">49:1</a></span> In 1659 Clarendon, then Sir Edward Hyde, and in
+Brussels, writing to Sir Richard Fanshaw, says, &ldquo;You are the secretary
+of the Latin tongue and I will mend the warrant you sent, and have it
+despatched as soon as I hear again from you, but I must tell you the
+place in itself, if it be not dignified by the person who hath some
+other qualification, is not to be valued. There is no signet belongs to
+it, which can be only kept by a Secretary of State, from whom the Latin
+Secretary always receives orders and prepares no despatches without his
+direction, and hath only a fee of a hundred pound a year. And therefore,
+except it hath been in the hands of a person who hath had some other
+employment, it hath fallen to the fortune of inconsiderable men as
+Weckerlin was the last&rdquo; (<i>Hist. MSS. Com.</i>, <i>Heathcote Papers</i>, 1899, p.
+9).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn20_511" id="fn20_511"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm20_511">51:1</a></span> <i>The Rehearsal Transprosed</i>.&mdash;Grosart, iii. 126.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn21_551" id="fn21_551"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm21_551">55:1</a></span> Even Mr. Firth can tell me nothing about this Ward of
+Cromwell&rsquo;s.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn22_561" id="fn22_561"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm22_561">56:1</a></span> For reprints of these tracts, see <i>Social England
+Illustrated</i>, Constable and Co., 1903.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn23_571" id="fn23_571"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm23_571">57:1</a></span> &ldquo;England&rsquo;s Way to Win Wealth.&rdquo; See <i>Social England
+Illustrated</i>, p. 253.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn24_572" id="fn24_572"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm24_572">57:2</a></span> <i>Ibid.</i> p. 265.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn25_581" id="fn25_581"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm25_581">58:1</a></span> Dr. Dee&rsquo;s &ldquo;Petty Navy Royal.&rdquo; <i>Social England
+Illustrated</i>, p. 46.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn26_582" id="fn26_582"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm26_582">58:2</a></span> &ldquo;England&rsquo;s Way to Win Wealth.&rdquo; <i>Social England
+Illustrated</i>, p. 268.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn27_591" id="fn27_591"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm27_591">59:1</a></span> Ranke&rsquo;s <i>History of England during the Seventeenth
+Century</i>, vol. iii. p. 68.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn28_611" id="fn28_611"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm28_611">61:1</a></span> See Leigh Hunt&rsquo;s <i>Wit and Humour</i> (1846), pp. 38, 237.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn29_621" id="fn29_621"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm29_621">62:1</a></span> Butler&rsquo;s lines, <i>A Description of Holland</i>, are very
+like Marvell&rsquo;s:&mdash;
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;A Country that draws fifty foot of water<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In which men live as in a hold of nature.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They dwell in ships, like swarms of rats, and prey<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon the goods all nations&rsquo; fleets convey;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That feed like cannibals on other fishes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And serve their cousin-germans up in dishes:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A land that rides at anchor and is moor&rsquo;d,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In which they do not live but go aboard.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+Marvell and Butler were rival wits, but Holland was a common butt; so
+powerful a motive is trade jealousy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn30_671" id="fn30_671"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm30_671">67:1</a></span> &ldquo;To one unacquainted with Horace, this Ode, not perhaps
+so perfect as his are in form, and with occasional obscurities of
+expression, which Horace would not have left, will give a truer notion
+of the kind of greatness which he achieved than could, so far as I know,
+be obtained from any other poem in our language.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Dean Trench</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn31_701" id="fn31_701"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm31_701">70:1</a></span> &ldquo;In the last war, when France was disgraced and
+overpowered in every quarter of the globe, when Spain coming to her
+assistance only shared her calamities, and the name of an Englishman was
+reverenced through Europe, no poet was heard amidst the general
+acclamation; the fame of our counsellors and heroes was entrusted to the
+gazetteer.&rdquo;&mdash;Dr. Johnson&rsquo;s <i>Life of Prior</i>.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg75" id="pg75"></a><span class="pagenum">75</span><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<p class="center">IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Cromwell&rsquo;s</span> death was an epoch in Marvell&rsquo;s history. Up to that date he
+had, since he left the University, led the life of a scholar, with a
+turn for business, and was known to many as an agreeable companion and a
+lively wit. He was keenly interested in public affairs, and personally
+acquainted with some men in great place, and for a year before
+Cromwell&rsquo;s death he had been in a branch of the Civil Service; but of
+the wear and tear, the strife and contention, of what are called
+&ldquo;practical politics&rdquo; he knew nothing from personal experience.</p>
+
+<p>Within a year of the Protector&rsquo;s death all this was changed and, for the
+rest of his days, with but the shortest of occasional intervals, Andrew
+Marvell led the life of an active, eager member of Parliament, knowing
+all that was going on in the Chamber and hearing of everything that was
+alleged to be going on in the Court; busily occupied with the affairs of
+his constituents in Hull, and daily watching, with an increasingly heavy
+heart and a bitter humour, the corruption of the times, the declension
+of our sea-power, the growing shame of England, and what he believed to
+be a dangerous conspiracy afoot for the undoing of the Reformation and
+the destruction of the Constitution in both Church and State.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Garden-poetry&rdquo; could not be reared on such a soil as this. The age of
+Cromwell and Blake was over.<a name="pg76" id="pg76"></a><span class="pagenum">76</span> The remainder of Marvell&rsquo;s life (save so
+far as personal friendship sweetened it) was spent in politics, public
+business, in concocting roughly rhymed and bitter satirical poems, and
+in the composition of prose pamphlets.</p>
+
+<p>Through it all Marvell remained very much the man of letters, though one
+with a great natural aptitude for business. His was always the critical
+attitude. He was the friend of Milton and Harrington, of the political
+philosophers who invented paper constitutions in the &ldquo;Rota&rdquo; Club, and of
+the new race of men whose thoughts turned to Natural Science, and who
+founded the Royal Society. Office he never thought of. He could have had
+it had he chosen, for he was a man of mark, even of distinction, from
+the first. Clarendon has told us how members of the House of Commons
+&ldquo;got on&rdquo; in the Long Parliament of Charles the Second. It was full of
+the king&rsquo;s friends, who ran out of the House to tell their shrewd master
+the gossip of the lobbies, &ldquo;commended this man and discommended another
+who deserved better, and would many times, when His Majesty spoke well
+of any man, ask His Majesty if he would give them leave to let that
+person know how gracious His Majesty was to him, or bring him to kiss
+his hand. To which he commonly consenting, every one of his servants
+delivered some message from him to a Parliament man, and invited him to
+Court, as if the King would be willing to see him. And by this means the
+rooms at Court were always full of the members of the House of Commons.
+This man brought to kiss his hand, and the King induced to confer with
+that man and to thank him for his affection, which could never conclude
+without some general expression of grace or promise, which the poor
+gentleman always interpreted to his own advan<a name="pg77" id="pg77"></a><span class="pagenum">77</span>tage, and expected some
+fruit from it that it could never yield.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The suspicious Clarendon, already shaking to his fall, goes on to add,
+&ldquo;all which, being contrary to all former order, did the King no good,
+and rendered those unable to do him service who were inclined to
+it.&rdquo;<a name="fnm32_771" id="fnm32_771"></a><a href="#fn32_771" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>It is a lifelike picture Clarendon draws of the crowded rooms, and of
+the witty king moving about fooling vanity, ambition, and corruption to
+the top of their bent. That the king chose his own ministers is plain
+enough.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell was at the beginning well disposed towards Charles. They had
+some points in common; and among them a quick sense of humour and a turn
+for business. But the member for Hull must soon have recognised that
+there was no place for an honest quick-witted man in any Stuart
+administration.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell and his great chief remained in their offices until the close of
+the year 1659, when the impending Restoration enforced their retirement.
+Milton used his leisure to pour forth excited tracts to prove how easy
+it would still be to establish a Free Commonwealth. Once again, and for
+the last time, he prompted the age to quit its clogs</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;by the known rules of ancient liberty.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>These pamphlets of Milton&rsquo;s prove how little that solitary thinker ever
+knew of the real mind and temper of the English people.</p>
+
+<p>The Lord Richard Cromwell was exactly the sort of eldest son a great
+soldier like Oliver, who had put his foot on fortune&rsquo;s neck, was likely
+to have. Richard (1626-1712) was not, indeed, born in the purple, but
+his early manhood was nurtured in it.<a name="pg78" id="pg78"></a><span class="pagenum">78</span> Religion, as represented by long
+sermons, tiresome treatises, and prayerful exercises, bored him to
+death. Of enthusiasm he had not a trace, nor was he bred to arms. He
+delighted in hunting, in the open air, and the company of sportsmen.
+Whatever came his way easily, and as a matter of right, he was well
+content to take. He bore himself well on State occasions, and could make
+a better speech than ever his father was able to do. But he was not a
+&ldquo;restless&rdquo; Cromwell, and had no faith in his destiny. I do not know
+whether he had ever read <i>Don Quixote</i>, in Shelton&rsquo;s translation, a very
+popular book of the time; probably not, for, though Chancellor of the
+University of Oxford, Richard was not a reading man, but if he had, he
+must have sympathised with Sancho Panza&rsquo;s attitude of mind towards the
+famous island.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;If your highness has no mind that the government you promised should
+be given me, God made me of less, and perhaps it may be easier for
+Sancho, the Squire, to get to Heaven than for Sancho, the Governor.
+<i>In the dark all cats are gray.</i>&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>The new Protector took up the reins of power with proper forms and
+ceremonies, and at once proceeded to summon a Parliament, an Imperial
+Cromwellian Parliament, containing representatives both from Scotland
+and Ireland. In this Parliament Andrew Marvell sat for the first time as
+one of the two members for Kingston-upon-Hull. His election took place
+on the 10th of January 1659, being the first county day after the
+sheriff had received the writ. Five candidates were nominated: Thomas
+Strickland, Andrew Marvell, John Ramsden, Henry Smyth, and Sir Henry
+Vane, and a vote being taken in the presence of the mayor, aldermen, and
+many of the burgesses, John Ramsden and Andrew Marvell were declared
+duly elected.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg79" id="pg79"></a><span class="pagenum">79</span>Nobody to-day, glancing his eye over a list of the knights and
+burgesses who made up Richard Cromwell&rsquo;s first and last Parliament,
+would ever guess that it represented an order of things of the most
+recent date which was just about to disappear. On paper it has a solid
+look. The fine old crusted Parliamentary names with which the clerks
+were to remain so long familiar as the members trooped out to divide
+were more than well represented.<a name="fnm33_791" id="fnm33_791"></a><a href="#fn33_791" class="fnnum">1</a> The Drakes of Amersham were
+there; Boscawens, Bullers, and Trelawneys flocked from Cornwall; Sir
+Wilfred Lawson sat for Cumberland, and his son for Cockermouth; a
+Knightly represented Northamptonshire, whilst Lucys from Charlecote
+looked after Warwick, both town and county. Arthur Onslow came from
+Surrey, a Townshend from Norfolk, and, of course, a Bankes from Corfe
+Castle;<a name="fnm34_792" id="fnm34_792"></a><a href="#fn34_792" class="fnnum">2</a> Oxford University, contented, as she occasionally is, to
+be represented by a great man, had chosen Sir Matthew Hale, whilst the
+no less useful and laborious Thurloe sat for the sister University.
+Anthony Ashley Cooper was there, but in opposition, snuffing the morrow.
+Mildmays, Lawleys, Binghams, Herberts, Pelhams, all travelled up to
+London with the Lord-Protector&rsquo;s writs in their pockets. A less
+revolutionary assembly never met, though there was a regicide or two
+among them. But when the members found themselves alone together there
+was some loose talk.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg80" id="pg80"></a><span class="pagenum">80</span>On the 27th of January 1659 Marvell attended for the first time in his
+place, when the new Protector opened Parliament, and made a speech in
+the House of Lords, which was pronounced at the time to be &ldquo;a very
+handsome oration.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The first business of the Commons was to elect a Speaker, nor was their
+choice a very lucky one, for it first fell on Chaloner Chute, who
+speedily breaking down in health, the Recorder of London was appointed
+his substitute, but the Recorder being on his deathbed at the time, and
+Chute dying very shortly afterwards, Thomas Bampfield was elected
+Speaker, and continued so to be until the Parliament was dissolved by
+proclamation on the 22nd of April. This proclamation was Richard
+Cromwell&rsquo;s last act of State.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s first Parliament was both short and inglorious. One only of
+its resolutions is worth quoting:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;That a very considerable navy be forthwith provided, and put to sea
+for the safety of the Commonwealth and the preservation of the trade
+and commerce thereof.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>It was, however, the army and not the navy that had to be reckoned
+with&mdash;an army unpaid, angry, suspicious, and happily divided. I must not
+trace the history of faction. There is no less exalted page in English
+history since the days of Stephen. Monk is its fitting hero, and Charles
+the Second its expensive saviour of society. The story how the
+Restoration was engineered by General Monk, who, if vulgar, was adroit,
+both on land and sea, is best told from Monk&rsquo;s point of view in the
+concluding chapter of <i>Baker&rsquo;s Chronicle</i> (Sir Roger de Coverley&rsquo;s
+favourite Sunday reading), whilst that old-fashioned remnant, who still
+love to read history for fun, may not object to be told that they will
+find printed in the Report of the<a name="pg81" id="pg81"></a><span class="pagenum">81</span> Leyborne-Popham Papers (<i>Historical
+Manuscripts Commission</i>, 1899, p. 204) a <i>Narrative of the Restoration</i>,
+by Mr. John Collins, the Chief Butler of the Inner Temple, proving in
+great and highly diverting detail how this remarkable event was really
+the work not so much of Monk as of the Chief Butler.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Cromwell having slipped the collar, the officers assumed
+command, as they were only too ready to do, and recalled the old,
+dishonoured, but pertinacious Rump Parliament, which, though mustering
+at first but forty-two members, at once began to talk and keep journals
+as if nothing had happened since the day ten years before, when it was
+sent about its business. Old Speaker Lenthall was routed out of
+obscurity, and much against his will, and despite his protests, clapped
+once more into the chair. Dr. John Owen, an old parliamentary preaching
+hand, was once again requisitioned to preach before the House, which he
+did at enormous length one fine Sunday in May.</p>
+
+<p>The Rump did not prove a popular favourite. It was worse than Old Noll
+himself, who could at least thrash both Dutchman and Spaniard, and be
+even more feared abroad than he was hated at home. The City of London,
+then almost an Estate of the Realm, declared for a Free Parliament, and
+it soon became apparent to every one that the whole country was eager to
+return as soon as possible to the old mould. Nothing now stood between
+Charles and his own but half a dozen fierce old soldiers and their
+dubious, discontented, unpaid men.</p>
+
+<p>It was once commonly supposed (it is so no longer), that the Restoration
+party was exclusively composed of dispossessed Cavaliers, bishops in
+hiding, ejected parsons, high-flying <i>jure divino</i> Episcopalians,
+talkative toss-pots, and the great pleasure-loving crowd, cruelly
+<a name="pg82" id="pg82"></a><span class="pagenum">82</span>repressed under the rule of the saints. Had it been left to these
+ragged regiments, the issue would have been doubtful, and the result
+very different. The Presbyterian ministers who occupied the rectories
+and vicarages of the Church of England and their well-to-do flocks in
+both town and country were, with but few exceptions, all for King
+Charles and a restored monarchy. In this the ministers may have shown a
+sound political instinct, for none of them had any more mind than the
+Anglican bishops to tolerate Papists, Socinians, Quakers, and Fifth
+Monarchy men, but in their management of the business of the Restoration
+these divines exposed themselves to the same condemnation that Clarendon
+in an often-quoted passage passed upon his own clerical allies. When
+read by the light of the Act of &ldquo;Uniformity,&rdquo; the &ldquo;Corporation,&rdquo; the
+&ldquo;Five Mile,&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Conventicle&rdquo; Acts, the conduct of the
+Presbyterians seems recklessness itself, whilst the ignorance their
+ministers displayed of the temper of the people they had lived amongst
+all their lives, and whom they adjured to cry <i>God save the King</i>, but
+not to drink his Majesty&rsquo;s health (because health-drinking was forbidden
+in the Old Testament), would be startling were it not so eminently
+characteristic.<a name="fnm35_821" id="fnm35_821"></a><a href="#fn35_821" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>The Rump, amidst the ridicule and contempt of the populace, was again
+expelled by military force on the 13th of October 1659. The officers
+were divided in opinion, some supporting, others, headed by Lambert,
+opposing the Parliament; but <i>vis major</i>, or superior cunning, was on
+the side of Lambert, who placed his soldiers in the streets leading to
+Westminster Hall, and when the Speaker came in his coach, his horses
+<a name="pg83" id="pg83"></a><span class="pagenum">83</span>were turned, and he was conducted very civilly home. The regiments that
+should have resisted, &ldquo;observing that they were exposed to derision,&rdquo;
+peaceably returned to their quarters.</p>
+
+<p>Monk, in the meanwhile, was advancing with his army from Edinburgh, and
+affected not to approve of the force put upon Parliament. The feeling
+for a Free Parliament increased in strength and violence every day. The
+Rump was for a third time restored in December by the section of the
+London army that supported its claim. Lenthall was once more in the
+chair, and the journals were resumed without the least notice of past
+occurrences. Monk, having reached London amidst great excitement, went
+down to the House and delivered an ambiguous speech. Up to the last Monk
+seems to have remained uncertain what to do. The temper of the City,
+which was fiercely anti-Rump, may have decided him. At all events he
+invited the secluded, that is the expelled, members of the old Long
+Parliament to take their seats along with the others, and in a formal
+declaration addressed to Parliament, dated the 21st of February 1660, he
+counselled it among other things to dissolve legally &ldquo;in order to make
+way for a succession of Parliaments.&rdquo; In a word, Monk declared for a
+Free Parliament. Great indeed were the national rejoicings.</p>
+
+<p>On the 16th of March 1660 a Bill was read a third time dissolving the
+Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, 3rd November 1640, and for
+the calling and holding of a Parliament at Westminster on the 25th of
+April 1660. This time an end was really made of the Rump, though for
+many a long day there were parliamentary pedants to be found in the land
+ready to maintain that the Long Parliament had never been legally
+dissolved and still <i>de jure</i> existed; so <a name="pg84" id="pg84"></a><span class="pagenum">84</span>long, I presume, as any
+single member of it remained alive.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell was not a &ldquo;Rumper,&rdquo; but on the 2nd of April 1660 he was again
+elected for Hull to sit in what is usually called the Convention
+Parliament. John Ramsden was returned at the head of the poll with 227
+votes, Marvell receiving 141. There were four defeated candidates.</p>
+
+<p>With this Convention Parliament begins Marvell&rsquo;s remarkable
+correspondence, on fine folio sheets of paper, with the corporation of
+Hull, whose faithful servant he remained until death parted them in
+1678.</p>
+
+<p>This correspondence, which if we include in it, as we well may, the
+letters to the Worshipful Society of Masters and Pilots of the Trinity
+House in Hull, numbers upwards of 350 letters, and with but one
+considerable gap (from July 1663 to October 1665) covers the whole
+period of Marvell&rsquo;s membership, is, I believe, unique in our public
+records. The letters are preserved at Hull, where I hope care is taken
+to preserve them from the autograph hunter and the autograph thief.
+Captain Thompson printed a great part of this correspondence in 1776,
+and Mr. Grosart gave the world the whole of it in the second volume of
+his edition of Marvell&rsquo;s complete works.</p>
+
+<p>An admission may as well be made at once. This correspondence is not so
+interesting as it might have been expected to prove. Marvell did not
+write letters for his biographer, nor to instruct posterity, nor to
+serve any party purpose, nor even to exhibit honest emotion, but simply
+to tell his employers, whose wages he took, what was happening at
+Westminster. He kept his reflections either to himself or for his
+political broadsheets, and indeed they were seldom of the kind it would
+have been safe to entrust to the post.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg85" id="pg85"></a><span class="pagenum">85</span>Good Mr. Grosart fusses and frets terribly over Marvell&rsquo;s astonishing
+capacity for chronicling in sombre silence every kind of legislative
+abomination. It is at times a little hard to understand it, for Hull was
+what may be called a Puritan place. No doubt caution dictated some of
+the reticence&mdash;but the reserve of Marvell&rsquo;s character is one of the few
+traits of his personality that has survived. He was a satirist, not an
+enthusiast.</p>
+
+<p>I will give the first letter <i>in extenso</i> to serve as a specimen, and a
+very favourable one, of the whole correspondence:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="toright">&ldquo;<i>Nov. 17, 1660.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Gentlemen, my worthy Friends</span>,&mdash;Although during the
+necessary absence of my partner, Mr. Ramsden, I write with but halfe
+a penn, and can scarce perswade myselfe to send you so imperfect an
+account of your own and the publick affairs, as I needs must for want
+of his assistance; yet I had rather expose mine own defects to your
+good interpretation, then excuse thereby a totall neglect of my duty,
+and that trust which is divided upon me. At my late absence out of
+Town I had taken such order that if you had commanded me any thing, I
+might soon haue received it, and so returned on purpose to this place
+to haue obeyed you. But hearing nothing of that nature howeuer, I was
+present the first day of the Parliament&rsquo;s sitting, and tooke care to
+write to Mr. Maior what work we had cut out. Since when, we have had
+little new, but onely been making a progresse in those things I then
+mentioned. There is yet brought in an Act in which of all others your
+corporation is the least concerned: that is, where wives shall refuse
+to cohabit with their husbands, that in such case the husband shall
+not be liable to pay any debts which she may run into, for clothing,
+diet, lodging, or other expenses. I wish with all my heart you were
+no more touched in a vote that we haue made for bringing in an Act of
+a new Assessment for six moneths, of 70,000li. <i>per mensem</i>, to begin
+next January. The truth is, the delay ere monyes can be got <a name="pg86" id="pg86"></a><span class="pagenum">86</span>in, eats
+up a great part of all that is levying, and that growing charge of
+the Army and Navy doubles upon us. And that is all that can be said
+for excuse of ourselues to the Country, to whom we had giuen our own
+hopes of no further sessment to be raised, but must now needs incurre
+the censure of improvidence before or prodigality now, though it
+becomes no private member, the resolution having passed the House, to
+interpose further his own judgment in a thing that can not be
+remedied; and it will be each man&rsquo;s ingenuity not to grudge an
+after-payment for that settlement and freedome from Armyes and
+Navyes, which before he would haue been glad to purchase with his
+whole fortune. There remain some eight Regiments to be disbanded, but
+those all horse in a manner, and some seauenteen shipps to be payd
+of, that haue laid so long upon charge in the harbour, beside
+fourscore shipps which are reckoned to us for this Winter guard. But
+after that, all things are to go upon his Majestye&rsquo;s own purse out of
+the Tunnage and Poundage and his other revenues. But there being so
+great a provision made for mony, I doubt not but ere we rise, to see
+the whole army disbanded, and according to the Act, hope to see your
+Town once more ungarrisond, in which I should be glad and happy to be
+instrumentall to the uttermost. For I can not but remember, though
+then a child, those blessed days when the youth of your own town were
+trained for your militia, and did, methought, become their arms much
+better than any soldiers that I haue seen there since. And it will
+not be amisse if you please (now that we are about a new Act of
+regulating the Militia, that it may be as a standing strength, but
+not as ill as a perpetuall Army to the Nation) to signify to me any
+thing in that matter that were according to your ancient custome and
+desirable for you. For though I can promise little, yet I intend all
+things for your service. The Act for review of the Poll bill
+proceeds, and that for making this Declaration of his Majesty a Law
+in religious matters. Order likewise is giuen for drawing up all the
+votes made during our last sitting, in the businesse of Sales of
+Bishops&rsquo; and Deans&rsquo; and Chapters&rsquo; lands into an Act, which I should
+be glad to see passed. The purchasers the other day offerd the <a name="pg87" id="pg87"></a><span class="pagenum">87</span>house
+600,000li. in ready mony, and to make the Bishops&rsquo;, etc., revenue as
+good or better then before. But the House thought it not fit or
+seasonable to hearken to it. We are so much the more concernd to see
+that great interest of the purchasers satisfyed and quieted, at least
+in that way which our own votes haue propounded. On Munday next we
+are to return to the consideration of apportioning 100,000li. per
+annum upon all the lands in the nation, in lieu of the Court of
+Wards. The debate among the Countyes, each thinking it self
+overrated, makes the successe of that businesse something casuall,
+and truly I shall not assist it much for my part, for it is little
+reason that your Town should contribute in that charge. The Excise
+bill for longer continuance (I wish it proue not too long) will come
+in also next weeke. And I foresee we shall be called upon shortly to
+effect our vote made the former sitting, of raising his Majestie&rsquo;s
+revenue to 1,200,000li. per Annum. I do not love to write so much of
+this mony news. But I think you haue observed that Parliaments have
+been always made use of to that purpose, and though we may buy gold
+too deare, yet we must at any rate be glad of Peace, Freedom, and a
+good Conscience. Mr. Maior tells me, your duplicates of the Poll are
+coming up. I shall go with them to the Exchequer and make your
+excuse, if any be requisite. My long silence hath made me now
+trespasse on the other hand in a long letter, but I doubt not of your
+good construction of so much familiarity and trouble from, Gentlemen,
+your most affectionate friend and servant,</p>
+
+<p class="signature">&ldquo;Andr: Marvell.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Westminster</span>, <i>Nov. 17, 1660.</i>&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Although this first letter of the Hull correspondence is dated the 17th
+of November 1660, the Convention Parliament began its sittings on the
+25th of April.</p>
+
+<p>In composition this Convention Parliament was very like Richard
+Cromwell&rsquo;s, and indeed it contained many of the same members, whose
+loyalty, however, was less restrained than in 1659. All the world knew
+what brought this Parliament together. It was to make <a name="pg88" id="pg88"></a><span class="pagenum">88</span>the nation&rsquo;s
+peace with its king, either on terms or without terms. &ldquo;We are all
+Royalists now&rdquo; are words which must often have been on the lips of the
+members of this House. One can imagine the smiles, half grim, half
+ironical, that would accompany their utterance. Such a right-about-face
+could never be dignified. It is impossible not to be reminded of
+schoolboys at the inevitable end of &ldquo;a barring out.&rdquo; The sarcastic
+comment of Clarendon has not lost its sting. &ldquo;From this time there was
+such an emulation and impatience in Lords, Commons, and City, and
+generally over the Kingdom, who should make the most lively expressions
+of their duty and of their joy, that a man could not but wonder where
+those people dwelt who had done all the mischief and kept the King so
+many years from enjoying the comfort and support of such excellent
+subjects.&rdquo;<a name="fnm36_881" id="fnm36_881"></a><a href="#fn36_881" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>The most significant sentence in Marvell&rsquo;s first letter to his
+constituents is that in which he refers to the Bill for making Charles&rsquo;s
+declaration in religious matters the law of the land. Had the passing of
+any such Bill been possible, how different the history of England would
+have been!</p>
+
+<p>The declaration Marvell is referring to was contained in the famous
+message from Breda, which was addressed by Charles to all his loving
+subjects of what degree or quality, and was expressed as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And because the passion and uncharitableness of the times have
+produced several opinions in Religion by which men are engaged in
+parties and animosities against each other (which, when they shall
+hereafter unite in a freedom of conversation, will be composed or
+better understood) we do declare a liberty to tender Consciences, and
+that no man shall be disquieted or called in question for differences
+of opinion in <a name="pg89" id="pg89"></a><span class="pagenum">89</span>matters of Religion which do not disturb the peace of
+the Kingdom; and that we shall be ready to consent to such an Act of
+Parliament as upon mature deliberation shall be offered to us for the
+full granting of that indulgence.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>It is only doing the king bare justice to say that he was always ready
+and willing to keep this part of his royal word&mdash;but it proved an
+impossibility.</p>
+
+<p>A Roman Catholic as a matter of creed, a Hobbist in conversation, a
+sensualist in practice, and the shrewdest though most indolent of cynics
+in council, Charles, in this matter of religious toleration, would
+gladly have kept his word, not indeed because it was his word, for on
+the point of honour he was indifferent, but because it jumped with his
+humour, and would have mitigated the hard lot of the Catholics. Charles
+was not a theorist, all his tastes being eminently practical, not to say
+scientific. He was not a tyrant, but a <i>de facto</i> man from head to heel.
+For the <i>jure divino</i> of the English Episcopate he cared as little as
+Oliver had ever done for the <i>jure divino</i> of the English Crown. Oliver
+once said, and he was not given to <i>braggadocio</i>, that he would fire his
+pistol at the king &ldquo;as soon as at another if he met him in battle,&rdquo; and
+the second Charles would have thought no more of beheading an Anglican
+bishop than he did of sending Sir Harry Vane to the scaffold. Honesty
+and virtue, on the rare occasions Charles encountered them, he admired
+much as a painter admires the colours of a fine sunset. Above everything
+else Charles was determined never again, if he could help it, to be sent
+on his travels, to be snubbed and starved in foreign courts.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromartie, the first and best translator of
+Rabelais, is said to have died of laughing on hearing of the
+Restoration; Charles did not die, but he must have laughed inwardly at
+the <a name="pg90" id="pg90"></a><span class="pagenum">90</span>spectacle that met his eyes everywhere as he made his
+often-described progress from Dover to London, and examined the gorgeous
+beds and quilts, fine linen and carpets, couches, horses and liveries,
+his faithful Commons had been at the pains and at the expense of
+providing for his comfort.</p>
+
+<p>A few years afterwards Marvell wrote the following lines:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Of a tall stature and of sable hue,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Much like the son of Kish, that lofty Jew;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Twelve years complete he suffered in exile<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And kept his father&rsquo;s asses all the while.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">At length, by wonderful impulse of fate,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The people called him home to help the state,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And what is more they sent him money too<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To clothe him all from head to foot anew;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor did he such small favours then disdain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who in his thirtieth year began his reign.&rdquo;<a name="fnm37_901" id="fnm37_901"></a><a href="#fn37_901" class="fnnum">1</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;small favours&rdquo; grew in size year by year.</p>
+
+<p>Why it was impossible for Charles to keep his word may be read in
+Clarendon&rsquo;s <i>Life</i>, and in the history of the Savoy Conference, and need
+not be restated here. In the opinion of the Anglican clergy, the king&rsquo;s
+divine right stood no higher than their own. They too had suffered in
+exile. They had been &ldquo;robbed&rdquo; of their tithes, and turned out of their
+palaces, rectories and vicarages, and excluded from the churches they
+still called &ldquo;theirs.&rdquo; Their Book of Common Prayer was no longer in
+common use, having been banished by the &ldquo;Directory of Public Worship&rdquo;
+since 1645. So late as July 1, 1660, Pepys records attending a service
+in the Abbey, and adds &ldquo;No Common Prayer yet.&rdquo; If we find ourselves
+wondering why the Anglican party should have been so powerful in<a name="pg91" id="pg91"></a><span class="pagenum">91</span> 1660,
+our wonder ought not to be greater than is excited by the power of the
+Puritan party when Laud was put to death. Both parties were, on each
+occasion, in a minority. Though England has never been long
+priest-ridden, it has often been priest-led.</p>
+
+<p>The Convention Parliament did all that was expected of it. It was,
+however irregularly summoned, a truly representative assembly. Its
+members all swore&mdash;what will not members of Parliament swear?&mdash;that the
+king was supreme in Church and State, the only rightful king of the
+realm and of all other his dominions, and that from their hearts they
+abhorred, detested, and abjured the damnable doctrine that princes,
+excommunicated or deprived of the Pope, might be murdered by their
+subjects. They proceeded to pass a very useful Act of Indemnity and
+Oblivion, agreeing to let bygones be bygones, except in certain named
+cases. They ordered Mr. John Milton to be taken into custody, and
+prosecuted (which he never was) by the Attorney-General. Later on the
+poet was released from custody, and we find Mr. Marvell complaining to
+the House that their sergeant had extracted &pound;150 in fees before he would
+let Mr. Milton go. On which Sir Heneage Finch, afterwards Lord
+Chancellor, laconically observed that Milton deserved hanging. He
+certainly got off easily, but, as he lived to publish <i>Paradise Lost</i>,
+<i>Paradise Regained</i>, and <i>Samson Agonistes</i>, he may be said to have
+earned his freedom. All his poetry put together never brought him in a
+third of the sum the sergeant got for letting him out of prison. General
+Monk, the man-midwife, who so skilfully assisted at that great Birth of
+Time, the Restoration, was made a duke, and Cromwell&rsquo;s army, so long the
+force behind the supreme power, was paid its arrears and (two regi<a name="pg92" id="pg92"></a><span class="pagenum">92</span>ments
+excepted) disbanded. &ldquo;Fifty thousand men,&rdquo; says Macaulay, &ldquo;accustomed to
+the profession of arms, were thrown upon the world ... in a few months
+there remained not a trace indicating that the most formidable army in
+the world had just been absorbed in the mass of the community.&rdquo;<a name="fnm38_921" id="fnm38_921"></a><a href="#fn38_921" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>After this the House of Commons fell to discussing religion, and made
+the sad discovery that differences of opinion still existed. In these
+circumstances they decided to refer the matter to their pious king, and
+to such divines as he might choose. They then voted large sums of money
+for the royal establishment, and, it being the very end of August,
+adjourned till the 6th of November. As for making constitutional terms
+with the king, they never attempted it, though Sir Matthew Hale is
+credited with an attempt to induce them to do so. Any proposals of the
+kind must have failed. The people were in no mood for making
+constitutions.</p>
+
+<p>Having met again on the 6th of November, Marvell, in a letter to the
+Mayor and Aldermen of Hull, dated the 27th of the month, reports that
+&ldquo;the House fell upon the making out of the King&rsquo;s revenue to &pound;1,200,000
+a year.&rdquo; &ldquo;The Customs are estimated toward &pound;500,000 per annum in the
+revenue. His lands and fee farms &pound;250,000. The Excise of Beer and Ale
+&pound;300,000, the rest arise out of the Post Office, Wine Licenses,
+Stannaries Court, Probate of Wills, Post-fines, Forests, and other
+rights of the Crown. The excise of Foreign Commodities is to be
+continued apart until satisfaction of public debts and engagements
+secured upon the excise.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This settlement of revenue marks &ldquo;the beginning of a time.&rdquo; Cromwell, as
+Cowley puts it in his <i>Dis<a name="pg93" id="pg93"></a><span class="pagenum">93</span>course</i>, by far the ablest indictment of
+Oliver ever penned, &ldquo;took armes against two hundred thousand pounds a
+year, and raised them himself to above two millions.&rdquo; It is true.
+Cromwell spent the money honestly and efficiently, and chiefly on a navy
+that enabled him to wrest the command of the sea from the Dutch, to
+secure the carrying trade, and to challenge the world for supremacy in
+the Indies, both East and West. In doing this, he had the instinct of
+the whole nation behind him. But it was expensive.</p>
+
+<p>Had Charles been the most honest and thrifty of men, instead of one of
+the most dishonest and extravagant, he must have found his financial
+position a very difficult one. He was poorer than Cromwell. The feudal
+taxation had fallen into desuetude. To revive wardships, etc., was
+impossible, to recover arrears hopeless. There was nothing for it but
+scientific taxation. One of his first Acts contains a schedule of taxed
+articles extending over fifteen double-columned pages of a quarto
+volume. To raise this revenue was difficult&mdash;in fact impossible, and the
+amount actually obtained was always far below the estimates.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s letter concludes thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;To-morrow is the Bill for enacting his Majesty&rsquo;s declaration in
+religious matters and to have its first reading. It is said that on
+Sunday next Doctor Reynolds shall be created Bishop of Norwich.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>The rumour about Reynolds&rsquo;s bishopric proved to be true. The new bishop
+was a very &ldquo;moderate&rdquo; Anglican indeed, and his appointment was meant as
+a sop to the Presbyterians. Richard Baxter and Edmund Calamy refused
+similar preferment.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg94" id="pg94"></a><span class="pagenum">94</span>On the 29th of November Marvell&rsquo;s letter contains the following
+passage:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Yesterday the Bill of the King&rsquo;s Declaration in religious matters
+was read for the first time; but upon the question for a second
+reading &rsquo;twas carried 183 against 157 in the negative, so there is an
+end of that Bill and for those excellent things therein. We must
+henceforth rely only upon his Majesty&rsquo;s goodness, who, I must needs
+say, hath hitherto been more ready to give than we to receive.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>It is a noticeable feature of this correspondence that Marvell seldom
+mentions which way he voted himself.</p>
+
+<p>The letter of the 4th of December contains some interesting matter:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Gentlemen</span>,&mdash;Since my last, upon Thursday, the Bill for
+Vicarages hath been carryed up to the Lords; and a Message to them
+from our House that they would expedite the Bill for confirmation of
+Magna Charta, that for confirmation of marriages, and other bills of
+publick concernment, which haue laid by them euer since our last
+sitting, not returned to us. We had then the Bill for six moneths
+assesment in consideration, and read the Bill for taking away Court
+of Wards and Purveyance, and establishing the moiety of the Excise of
+Beere and ale in perpetuum, about which we sit euery afternoon in a
+Grand Committee. Upon Sunday last were consecrated in the Abby at
+Westminster, Doctor Cossins, Bishop of Durham, Sterne of Carlile,
+Gauden of Exeter, Ironside of Bristow, Loyd of Landaffe, Lucy of St.
+Dauids, Lany, the seuenth, whose diocese I remember not at present,
+and to-day they keep their feast in Haberdasher&rsquo;s hall, in London.
+Dr. Reinolds was not of the number, who is intended for Norwich. A
+Congedelire is gone down to Hereford for Dr. Monk, the Generall&rsquo;s
+brother, at present Provost of Eaton. &rsquo;Tis thought that since our
+throwing out the Bill of the King&rsquo;s Declaration, Mr. Calamy, and
+other moderate men, will be resolute in refusing of Bishopricks....
+To-day our House was upon the Bill of Attainder of those that haue
+been executed, those that are fled, and of Cromwell, Bradshaw,
+Ireton, and Pride, and<a name="pg95" id="pg95"></a><span class="pagenum">95</span> &rsquo;tis ordered that the carkasses and coffins
+of the four last named, shall be drawn with what expedition possible,
+upon an hurdle to Tyburn, there (to) be hanged up for a while, and
+then buryed under the gallows....</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Westminster</span>, <i>Dec. 4, 1660</i>.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s cool reporting of the hideous indignity inflicted upon his old
+master, and allowing it to pass <i>sub silentio</i>, is one of the many
+occasions that stirred Mr. Grosart&rsquo;s wonder. Nerves were tough in those
+days. Pepys tells us unconcernedly enough how, after seeing Lord
+Southampton sworn in at the Court of Exchequer as Lord Treasurer, he
+noticed &ldquo;the heads of Cromwell, Bradshaw, and Ireton set up at the
+further end of Westminster Hall.&rdquo; It is quite possible Lady Fauconberg
+may have seen the same sight.<a name="fnm39_951" id="fnm39_951"></a><a href="#fn39_951" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>The Convention Parliament was dissolved on the 29th of December 1660.</p>
+
+<p>On 1st April 1661 Marvell was returned for the third and last time for
+Hull, for Charles the Second&rsquo;s first Parliament was of unconscionable
+long duration, not being dissolved till January 1679, after Marvell&rsquo;s
+death. It is known in history as the Pensionary or Long Parliament. The
+election figures were as below:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table summary="Election figures">
+<tr><td>Colonel Gilbey,</td><td> 294</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Mr. Andrew Marvell,</td><td> 240</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Mr. Edward Barnard,</td><td> 195</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Mr. John Ramsden,</td><td> 122</td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Marvell was not present at or before the election, for on the 6th of
+April he writes:&mdash;</p>
+<p><a name="pg96" id="pg96"></a><span class="pagenum">96</span></p>
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I perceive by Mr. Mayor that you have again (as if it were grown a
+thing of course) made choice of me now, the third time, to serve for
+you in Parliament, which as I cannot attribute to anything but your
+constancy, so shall I, God willing, as in gratitude obliged, with no
+less constancy and vigour continue to execute your commands and study
+your service.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>A word may here be said about payment of borough members. The members&rsquo;
+fee was 6s. 8d. for every day the Parliament lasted. The wages were paid
+by the corporation out of the borough funds. It was never a popular
+charge. Burgesses in many places cared as little for M.P.&rsquo;s as do some
+of their successors for free libraries. Prynne, perhaps the greatest
+parliamentary lawyer that ever lived, told Pepys one day, as they were
+driving to the Temple, that the number of burgesses to be returned to
+Parliament for any particular borough was not, for aught Prynne could
+find, fixed by law, but was at first left to the discretion of the
+sheriff, and that several boroughs had complained of the sheriff&rsquo;s
+putting them to the charge of sending up burgesses.</p>
+
+<p>In August 1661 the corporation paid Marvell &pound;28 for his fee as one of
+their burgesses, being 6s. 8d. a day for eighty-four days, the length of
+the Convention Parliament. Marvell continued to take his wages until the
+end of his days; but it is perhaps a mistake to suppose he was the very
+last member to do so. It was, however, unusual in Marvell&rsquo;s time.<a name="fnm40_961" id="fnm40_961"></a><a href="#fn40_961" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p><a name="pg97" id="pg97"></a><span class="pagenum">97</span>This Pensionary Parliament, though of a very decided &ldquo;Church and King&rdquo;
+complexion, was not in its original composition a body lacking character
+or independence, but it steadily deteriorated in both respects.
+Vacancies, as they occurred, and they occurred very frequently in those
+days of short lives, were filled up by courtiers and pensioners.</p>
+
+<p>In the small tract, entitled <i>Flagellum Parliamentum</i>, which is a highly
+libellous &ldquo;Dod,&rdquo; often attributed to Marvell, a record is preserved of
+more than two hundred members of this Parliament in 1675. Despite some
+humorous touches, this <i>Flagellum Parliamentum</i> is still disagreeable to
+read. But the most graphic picture we have of this Parliament is to be
+found in one of Lord Shaftesbury&rsquo;s political tracts entitled &ldquo;A letter
+from a Parliament man to his Friend&rdquo; (1675):&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;I see you are greatly scandalized at our slow and
+confused Proceedings. I confess you have cause enough; but were you
+but within these walls for one half day, and saw the strange make and
+complexion that this house is of, you would wonder as much that ever
+you wondered at it; for we are such a pied Parliament, that none can
+say of what colour we are; for we consist of Old Cavaliers, Old
+Round-Heads, Indigent-Courtiers, and true Country Gentlemen: the two
+latter are most numerous, and would in probability bring things to
+some issue were they not clogged with the numerous uncertainties of
+the former. For the Old Cavalier, grown aged, and almost past his
+vice, is damnable godly and makes his doting piety more a plague to
+the world than his debauchery was, for he is so much a by-got to the
+B(ishop) that he forces his Loyalty to strike sail to his Religion,
+and could be content to pare the nails a little of the Civil
+Government, so you <a name="pg98" id="pg98"></a><span class="pagenum">98</span>would but let him sharpen the Ecclesiastical
+Talons: which behaviour of his so exasperates the Round-Head, that he
+on the other hand cares not what increases the Interest of the Crown
+receives, so he can but diminish that of the miter: so that the
+Round-Head had rather enslave the Man than the Conscience: the
+Cavalier rather the Conscience than the Man; there being a sufficient
+stock of animosity as proper matter to work upon. Upon these,
+therefore, the Courtier mutually plays, for if any Ante-court motion
+be made he gains the Round-Head either to oppose or absent by telling
+them, If they will join him now he will join them for Liberty of
+Conscience. And when any affair is started on behalf of the Country
+he assures the Cavaliers, If they will then stand by him he will then
+join with them in promoting a Bill against the fanatics. Thus play
+they on both hands.... Wherefore it were happy that he had neither
+Round-Head nor Cavalier in the House, for they are each of them so
+prejudicate against the other that their sitting here signifies
+nothing but their fostering their old venom and lying at catch to
+stop every advantage to bear down each other, though it be in the
+destruction of their country. For if the Round-Heads bring in a good
+bill the Old Cavalier opposes it, for no other reason but because
+they brought it in.&rdquo;<a name="fnm41_981" id="fnm41_981"></a><a href="#fn41_981" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Such was the theatre of Marvell&rsquo;s public actions for the rest of his
+days, and if at times he may need forgiveness for the savagery of his
+satire, it ought to be found easy to forgive him.</p>
+
+<p>The two members for Hull were soon immersed in matters of much local
+importance. They began by quarrelling with one another, Marvell writing
+&ldquo;the bond of civility betwixt Col. Gilby and myself being unhappily
+snappt in pieces, and in such manner that I cannot see how it is
+possible ever to knit them again.&rdquo; House of Commons quarrels are usually
+soon made up, and so was this one. The custom was for <i>both</i> members to
+sign these letters, though they are <a name="pg99" id="pg99"></a><span class="pagenum">99</span>all written in Marvell&rsquo;s hand&mdash;but
+if this was for any reason inconvenient, Marvell signed alone. No
+letters, unless in Marvell&rsquo;s writing, are preserved at Hull, which is a
+curious fact.</p>
+
+<p>One of these bits of local business related to a patent alleged to have
+been granted by the Crown to certain persons, authorising them to erect
+and maintain <i>ballast wharfs</i> in the various ports, and to make charges
+in respect of them. This was resented by the members for the ports, and
+on Marvell&rsquo;s motion the matter was referred to the Committee of
+Grievances, before whom the patentees were summoned. When they came it
+appeared that the patent warranted none of the exactions that had been
+demanded, and also that the warrant sent down to Hull naming these
+charges was nothing more than a draft framed by the patentees
+themselves, and not authorised in any way. The patent was at once
+suspended. Marvell, like a true member of Parliament, wishes to get any
+little local credit that may be due for such prompt action, and
+writes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;In this thing (although I count all things I can do for your service
+to be mere trifles, and not worth taking notice of in respect of what
+I owe you) I must do myself that right to let you know that I, and I
+alone, have had the happiness to do that little which hitherto is
+effected.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>The matter required delicate handling, for a reason Marvell gives:
+&ldquo;Because, if the King&rsquo;s right in placing such impositions should be
+weakened, neither should he have power to make a grant of them to you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Another much longer business related to a lighthouse, which some
+outsiders were anxious to build in the Humber. The corporation of Hull,
+acting on Marvell&rsquo;s advice, had petitioned the Privy Council, <a name="pg100" id="pg100"></a><span class="pagenum">100</span>and were
+asked by their business-like member &ldquo;to send us up a dormant credit for
+an hundred pound, which we yet indeed have no use of, but if need be
+must have ready at hand to reward such as will not otherwise befriend
+your business.&rdquo; Some months later Marvell forwards an account, not of
+the &pound;100, but of the legal expenses about the lighthouse. He wishes it
+were less, but hopes that the &ldquo;vigorous resistance&rdquo; will discourage the
+designers from proceeding farther. This it did not do. As a member of
+the bar, I find two or three of the items in this old-world Bill of
+Costs interesting:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center"><table summary="List of expenses featuring Mr. Scroggs">
+<tr><td>To Mr. Scroggs to attend the Council,</td><td class="toright">&pound;3&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&rdquo;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rdquo;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rdquo;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; again for the same,</td><td class="toright"> 3&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Spent on Mr. Scroggs at dinner, </td><td class="toright">18&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>To Mr. Scroggs again, </td><td class="toright">3&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Fees of the Council Table, </td><td class="toright">1&nbsp;10&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Fee to Clerk of the Council, </td><td class="toright">2&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>For dinner for Mr. Scroggs and wine after, </td><td class="toright">1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>To Mr. Cresset (the Solicitor), </td><td class="toright">20&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>To Mr. Scroggs for a dinner, </td><td class="toright">1&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0&nbsp;&nbsp;0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>The barrister who was so frequently &ldquo;refreshed&rdquo; by Marvell lived to
+become &ldquo;the infamous Lord Chief Justice Scroggs&rdquo; of all school
+histories.</p>
+
+<p>A week before the prorogation of Parliament, which happened on the 19th
+of May 1662, Marvell went to Holland and remained there for nine months,
+for he did not return until the very end of March 1663, more than a
+month after the reassembling of the House.</p>
+
+<p>What took him there nobody knows. Writing to the Trinity House about the
+lighthouse business on the 8th of May 1662, Marvell says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;But that which troubles me is that by the interest of some persons
+too potent for me to refuse, and who have a great direction and
+influence upon my counsels and fortune,<a name="pg101" id="pg101"></a><span class="pagenum">101</span> I am obliged to go beyond
+sea before I have perfected it (<i>i.e.</i> the lighthouse business). But
+first I do thereby make my Lord Carlisle (who is a member of the
+Privy Council and one of them to whom your business is referred)
+absolutely yours. And my journey is but into Holland, from whence I
+shall weekly correspond as if I were at London with all the rest of
+my friends, towards the affecting your business. Then I leave Col.
+Gilbey there, whose ability for business and affection to yours is
+such that I cannot be wanted though I am missing.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>It is plain from this that Lord Carlisle is one of the powerful persons
+referred to&mdash;but beyond this we cannot go.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst in Holland Marvell wrote both to the Trinity House and to the
+corporation on business matters.</p>
+
+<p>In March 1663 Marvell came back in a hurry, some complaints having been
+made in Hull about his absence. He begins his first letter after his
+return as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Being newly arrived in town and full of business, yet I could not
+neglect to give you notice that this day (2nd April 1663) I have been
+in the House and found my place empty, though it seems, as I now
+hear, that some persons would have been so courteous as to have
+filled it for me.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>In none of these letters is any reference made to the debates in the
+House on the unhappy Bill of Uniformity, nor does any record of those
+discussions anywhere exist. The Savoy Conference proved a failure, and
+no lay reader of Baxter&rsquo;s account of it can profess wonder. Not a single
+point in difference was settled. In the meantime the restored Houses of
+Convocation, from which the Presbyterian members were excluded, had
+completed their revision of the Book of Common Prayer and presented it
+to Parliament.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg102" id="pg102"></a><span class="pagenum">102</span>In considering the Bill for Uniformity, the House of Lords, where
+Presbyterianism was powerfully represented, showed more regard for those
+&ldquo;tender consciences&rdquo; to which the king (by the new Prayer Book called
+for the first time &ldquo;our most religious King&rdquo;) had referred in his Breda
+Declaration than did the House of Commons. &ldquo;The Book, the whole Book,
+and nothing but the Book&rdquo; was, in effect, the cry of the lower House,
+and on the 19th of May, ten days after Marvell had left for the
+Continent, the Act of Uniformity became law, and by the 24th of August
+1662 all beneficed ministers and schoolmasters had to make the
+celebrated subscription and profession, or go out into the wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>There has always been a dispute as to the physical possibility of
+perusing the compilation in question before the day fixed by the
+Statute. The Book was advertised for sale in London on the 6th of
+August, but how many copies were actually available on that day is not
+known.</p>
+
+<p>The Dean and Chapter of Peterborough did not get their copies until the
+17th of August. When the new folios reached the lonely parsonages of
+Cumberland and Durham&mdash;who would care to say? The Act required a verbal
+avowal of &ldquo;unfeigned assent and consent to all and everything contained
+and prescribed in and by the Book of Common Prayer, and administrations
+of the Sacraments and other rites and ceremonies of the Church according
+to the use of the Church of England, together with the Psalter, and the
+form of manner of making, ordaining, and consecrating Bishops, Priests,
+and Deacons&rdquo; to be made after the service upon &ldquo;some Lord&rsquo;s day&rdquo; before
+the Feast of St. Bartholomew, <i>i.e.</i> the 24th of August 1662. The Act
+also required subscription within the same time-<a name="pg103" id="pg103"></a><span class="pagenum">103</span>limit to a declaration
+of (<i>inter alia</i>) uniformity to the Liturgy of the Church of England &ldquo;as
+it is now by law established.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>That this haste was indecent no layman is likely to dispute, but that it
+wrought practical wrong is doubtful. The Vicar of Bray needed no time to
+read his new Folio to enable him to make whatever avowal concerning it
+the law demanded; and as for signing the declaration, all he required
+for that purpose was pen and ink. Neither had the incumbent, who was a
+good churchman at heart, any doubts to settle. He rejoiced to know that
+his side was once more uppermost, and that it would be no longer
+necessary for him, in order to retain his living, to pretend to tolerate
+a Presbyterian, or to submit to read in his church the Directory of
+Public Worship. Convocation had approved the new Prayer Book, which was
+in substance the old one, and what more did any churchman require? As
+for the Presbyterians and others who were in possession of livings, the
+failure of the Savoy Conference must have made it plain to them that the
+Church of England had not allowed the king to keep his word, that
+compromise and comprehension had failed, and that if they were to remain
+where they were, it could only be on terms of completely severing
+themselves from all other Protestant bodies in the world, and becoming
+thorough Episcopalians. No Presbyterian of any eminence was prepared to
+make the statutory avowal. Painful as it always must be to give up any
+good thing by a fixed date, it is hard to see what advantage would have
+accrued from delay.</p>
+
+<p>When the day came, some two thousand parsons were turned out of the
+Church of England. Among them were included many of the most devout and
+some of the most learned of our divines. Their<a name="pg104" id="pg104"></a><span class="pagenum">104</span> &ldquo;coming in&rdquo; had been
+irregular, their &ldquo;going out&rdquo; was painful.</p>
+
+<p>Save so far as it turned these men out, the Act was a failure. It did
+not procure that uniformity in the public worship of God which it
+declared was so desirable; it prevented no scandal; it arrested no
+decay; it allayed no distemper, and it certainly did not settle the
+peace of the Church. Inside the Church the bishops were supine, the
+parochial clergy indifferent, and the worshippers, if such a name can
+properly be bestowed upon the congregations, were grossly irreverent.
+Nor was any improvement in the conduct of the Church service noticeable
+until after the Revolution, and when legislation had conceded a somewhat
+shabby measure of toleration to those who by that time had become rigid,
+traditional, and hereditary dissenters. Then indeed some attempts began
+to be made to secure a real uniformity of ritual in the public worship
+of the Church of England.<a name="fnm42_1041" id="fnm42_1041"></a><a href="#fn42_1041" class="fnnum">1</a> How far success has rewarded these
+exertions it is not for me to say.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell did not remain long at home after his return from Holland. A
+strange adventure lay before him. He thus introduces it in a letter
+dated 20th June 1663:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Gentlemen, my very worthy Friends</span>,&mdash;The relation I have to
+your affairs, and the intimacy of that affection I ow you, do both
+incline and oblige me to communicate to you, that there is a
+probability I may very shortly have occasion to go beyond sea; for my
+Lord of Carlisle being chosen by his Majesty, Embassadour
+Extraordinary to Muscovy, Sweden, and Denmarke, hath used his power,
+which ought to be very <a name="pg105" id="pg105"></a><span class="pagenum">105</span>great with me, to make me goe along with him
+Secretary in those embassages. It is no new thing for Members of our
+House to be dispens&rsquo;d with for the service of the King and Nation in
+forain parts. And you may be sure that I will not stirre without
+speciall leave of the House; that so you may be freed from any
+possibility of being importuned or tempted to make any other choice,
+in my absence. However, I can not but advise also with you, desiring
+to take your assent along with me, so much esteeme I have both of
+your prudence and friendship. The time allotted for the embassy is
+not much above a yeare: probably it may not be much less betwixt our
+adjournment and next meeting; and, however, you have Colonell Gilby,
+to whom my presence can make litle addition, so that if I cannot
+decline this voyage, I shall have the comfort to believe, that, all
+things considered, you cannot thereby receive any disservice. I shall
+hope to receive herein your speedy answer....&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>What was the &ldquo;power&rdquo; Lord Carlisle had over Marvell is not now
+discoverable, but the tie, whatever it may have been, was evidently a
+close one.</p>
+
+<p>A month after this letter Marvell started on his way.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Gentlemen, my very worthy Friends</span>,&mdash;Being this day taking
+barge for Gravesend, there to embark for Archangel, so to Muscow,
+thence for Sweden, and last of all Denmarke; all of which I hope, by
+God&rsquo;s blessing, to finish within twelve moneths time: I do hereby,
+with my last and seriousest thoughts, salute you, rendring you all
+hearty thanks for your great kindnesse and friendship to me upon all
+occasions, and ardently beseeching God to keep you all in His
+gracious protection, to your own honour, and the welfare and
+flourishing of your Corporation, to which I am and shall ever
+continue a most affectionate and devoted servant. I undertake this
+voyage with the order and good liking of his Majesty, and by leave
+given me from the House and enterd in the Journal; and having
+received moreover your approbation, I go therefore with more ease and
+satisfaction of mind, and augurate to myselfe the happier successe in
+all my proceedings....&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p><a name="pg106" id="pg106"></a><span class="pagenum">106</span>It was Marvell&rsquo;s good fortune to be in Lord Carlisle&rsquo;s frigate which
+made the voyage to Archangel in less than a month, sailing from
+Gravesend on the 22nd of July and arriving at the bar of Archangel on
+the 19th of August. The companion frigate took seven weeks to compass
+the same distance.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing of any importance attaches to this Russian embassy. It cost a
+great deal of money, took up a great deal of time, exposed the
+ambassador and his suite to much rudeness and discomfort, and failed to
+effect its main object, which was to secure a renewal of the privileges
+formerly enjoyed in Muscovy by British merchants.</p>
+
+<p>One of the attendants upon the ambassador made a small book out of his
+travels, which did not get printed till 1669, when it attracted little
+notice. Mr. Grosart was the first of Marvell&rsquo;s many biographers to
+discover the existence of this narrative.<a name="fnm43_1061" id="fnm43_1061"></a><a href="#fn43_1061" class="fnnum">1</a> He found it in the
+first instance, to use his own language, &ldquo;in one of good trusty John
+Harris&rsquo; folios of <i>Travels and Voyages</i>&rdquo; (two vols. folio, 1705); but
+later on he made the sad discovery that this &ldquo;good trusty John Harris&rdquo;
+had uplifted what he called his &ldquo;true and particular account&rdquo; from the
+book of 1669 without any acknowledgment. &ldquo;For ways that are dark&rdquo; the
+old compiler of travels was not easily excelled, but why should Mr.
+Grosart have gone out of his way to call an <a name="pg107" id="pg107"></a><span class="pagenum">107</span>eighteenth-century
+book-maker, about whom he evidently knew nothing, &ldquo;good and trusty&rdquo;?
+Harris was never either the one or the other, and died a pauper!</p>
+
+<p>A journey to Moscow in 1663-64 was no joke. Lord Carlisle, who was
+accompanied by his wife and eldest son, although ready to start from
+Archangel by the end of September, was doomed to spend both the 5th of
+November and Christmas Day in the gloomy town of Vologda, which they had
+reached, travelling by water, on the 17th of October. Some of this time
+was spent in quarrelling as to who was to supply the sledges that were
+required to convey the ambassador and all his <i>impedimenta</i> along the
+now ice-bound roads to Moscow. It was one of Marvell&rsquo;s many duties to
+remonstrate with the authorities for their cruel and disrespectful
+indifference; he did so with great freedom, but with no effect, and at
+last the ambassador was obliged to hire two hundred sledges at his own
+charges. Sixty he sent on ahead, following with one hundred and forty on
+the 15th of January 1664. It was an intensely cold journey, and the
+accommodation at night, with one happy exception, proved quite infamous.
+On the 3rd of February Lord Carlisle and his <i>cort&eacute;ge</i> found themselves
+five versts from Moscow. The 5th of February was fixed for their entry
+into the city in all their finery. They were ready on the morning of
+that day, awaiting the arrival of the Tsar&rsquo;s escort, but it never came.
+Lord Carlisle had sent his cooks on to Moscow to prepare the dinner he
+expected to eat in his city-quarters. Nightfall approached, and it was
+not till &ldquo;half an hour before night&rdquo; that the belated messengers
+arrived, full of excuses. The ambassador was hungry, cold, and furious,
+nor did his anger abate when told he was not to be allowed to enter
+Moscow that night, as the Tsar and his ladies were very <a name="pg108" id="pg108"></a><span class="pagenum">108</span>anxious to
+enjoy the spectacle. The return of the cooks from Moscow and the
+preparation of dinner, though a mitigation, was no cure for wounded
+pride, and Lord Carlisle, calling Marvell to his side, and with his
+assistance, concocted a letter in Latin to the Tsar, complaining
+bitterly of their ill-treatment <i>inter fumosi gurgustii sordes et
+angustias sine cibo aut potu</i>, and going so far as to assert that had
+anything of the kind happened in England to a foreign ambassador, the
+King of England would never have rested until the offence had been
+atoned for with the blood of the criminals. When, some forty years
+afterwards, Peter the Great asked Queen Anne to chop off the heads of
+the rude men who had arrested his ambassador for debt, he had, perhaps,
+Marvell&rsquo;s letter before him.</p>
+
+<p>On the 6th of February Lord Carlisle and his suite made their public
+entry into Moscow; but so long a time was occupied over the few versts
+they had to travel, that it was dusk before the Kremlin was reached.</p>
+
+<p>The formal reception of the ambassador was on the 11th of February.
+Marvell was in the ambassador&rsquo;s sledge and carried his credentials upon
+a yard of red damask. The titles of the Russian Potentate would, if
+printed here, fill half a page. All the Russias, Great, Little, and
+White, emperies more than one, dukedoms by the dozen, territories,
+countries, and dominions&mdash;not all easy to identify on the map, and very
+hard to pronounce&mdash;were read out in a loud voice by Marvell. At the end
+of them came the homely title of the Earl and his offices, &ldquo;his
+Majesty&rsquo;s Lieutenant in the Counties of Cumberland and Westmorland.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The letters read and delivered, the Tsar and his Boyars rose in their
+places simultaneously, and their tissue vests made so strange, loud, and
+unexpected a noise as to provoke the ever too easily moved risibility
+<a name="pg109" id="pg109"></a><span class="pagenum">109</span>of the Englishmen.<a name="fnm44_1091" id="fnm44_1091"></a><a href="#fn44_1091" class="fnnum">1</a> When Marvell and the rest of them had ceased
+from giggling, the Tsar inquired after the health of the king, but the
+distance between his Imperial Majesty and Lord Carlisle being too great
+for the question to carry, it had to be repeated by those who were
+nearer the ambassador, who gravely replied that when he last saw his
+master, namely on the 20th of July then last past, he was perfectly
+well. To the same question as to the health of &ldquo;the desolate widow of
+Charles the First,&rdquo; Carlisle returned the same cautious answer. He then
+read a very long speech in English, which his interpreter turned into
+Russian. The same oration was rendered into Latin by Marvell, and
+presented. Over Marvell&rsquo;s Latin trouble arose, for the Russians were
+bent on taking and giving offence. Marvell had styled the Tsar
+<i>Illustrissimus</i> when he ought, so it was alleged, to have called him
+<i>Serenissimus</i>. Marvell was not a schoolmaster&rsquo;s son, an old scholar of
+Trinity, and Milton&rsquo;s assistant as Latin Secretary for nothing. He
+prepared a reply which, as it does not lack humour, has a distinct
+literary flavour, and is all that came of the embassy, may here be given
+at length:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I reply, saith he, that I sent no such paper into the
+Embassy-office, but upon the desire of his Tzarskoy Majesty&rsquo;s
+Councellor Evan Offonassy Pronchissof, I delivered it to him, not
+being a paper of State, nor written in the English Language wherein I
+treat, nor put into the hands of the near Boyars and Councellors of
+his Tzarskoy majesty, nor subscribed by my self, nor translated into
+Russe by my Interpreter, but only as a piece of curiosity, which is
+now restored me, and I <a name="pg110" id="pg110"></a><span class="pagenum">110</span>am possessed of it; so that herein his
+Tzarskoy majestie&rsquo;s near Boyars and Councellors are doubtless ill
+grounded. But again I say concerning the value of the words
+<i>Illustrissimus</i> and <i>Serenissimus</i> compared together, seeing we must
+here from affaires of State, fall into Grammatical contests
+concerning the Latin tongue; that the word <i>Serenus</i> signifieth
+nothing but still and calm; and, therefore, though of late times
+adopted into the Titles of great Princes by reason of that benigne
+tranquility which properly dwells in the majestick countenance of
+great Princes, and that venerable stillness of all the Attendants
+that surround them, of which I have seen an excellent example when I
+was in the presence of his Tzarskoy majesty, yet is more properly
+used concerning the calmness of the weather, or season. So that even
+the night is elegantly called <i>Serena</i> by the best Authors, Cicero in
+Arato 12, Lucretius i. l. 29. &lsquo;<i>Serena nox</i>&rsquo;; and upon perusing again
+what I have writ in this paper, I finde that I have out of the
+customariness of that expression my self near the beginning said, And
+that most serene night, &amp;c. Whereas on the contrary <i>Illustris</i> in
+its proper derivation and signification expresseth that which is all
+resplendent, lightsome, and glorious, as well without as within, and
+that not with a secondary but with a primitive and original light.
+For if the Sun be, as he is, the first fountain of light, and Poets
+in their expressions (as is well known) are higher by much than those
+that write in Prose, what else is it when Ovid in the 2. of the
+Metamorphoses saith of Ph&oelig;bus speaking with Pha&euml;thon, <i>Qui terque
+quaterque concutiens Illustre caput</i>, and the Latin Orators, as
+Pliny, Ep. 139, when they would say the highest thing that can be
+exprest upon any subject, word it thus, <i>Nihil Illustrius dicere
+possum</i>. So that hereby may appear to his Tzarskoy Majestie&rsquo;s near
+Boyars and Counsellors what diminution there is to his Tzarskoy
+Majesty (which farr be it from my thoughts) if I appropriate
+<i>Serenissimus</i> to my Master and <i>Illustrissimus</i> to Him than which
+<i>nihil dici potest Illustrius</i>. But because this was in the time of
+the purity of the Latin tongue, when the word <i>Serenus</i> was never
+used in the Title of any Prince or Person, I shall go on to deale
+with the utmost candor, forasmuch as in this Nation the nicety of
+that most eloquent <a name="pg111" id="pg111"></a><span class="pagenum">111</span>language is not so perfectly understood, which
+gives occasion to these mistakes. I confess therefore that indeed in
+the declination of the Latin tongue, and when there scarce could be
+found out words enough to supply the modern ambition of Titles,
+Serenissimus as several other words hath grown in fashion for a
+compellation of lesser as well as greater Princes, and yet befits
+both the one and the other. So there is <i>Serenissima Respublica
+Veneta</i>, <i>Serenitates Electori&aelig;</i>, <i>Serenitates Regi&aelig;</i>, even as the
+word Highness or <i>Celsitudo</i> befits a Duke, a Prince, a King, or an
+Emperour, adjoyning to it the respective quality, and so the word
+<i>Illustris</i>. But suppose it were by modern use (which I deny)
+depressed from the undoubted superiority that it had of <i>Serenus</i> in
+the purest antiquity, yet being added in the transcendent degree to
+the word Emperour, the highest denomination that a Prince is capable
+of, it becomes of the same value. So that to interpret
+<i>Illustrissimus</i> unto diminution is to find a positive in a
+superlative, and in the most orient light to seek for darkness. And I
+would, seeing the near Boyars and Counsellors of his Tzarskoy Majesty
+are pleased to mention the Title given to his Tzarskoy Majesty by his
+Cesarian Majesty, gladly be satisfied by them, whether ever any
+Cesarian Majesty writ formerly hither in High-Dutch, and whether then
+they styled his Tzarskoy Majesty Durchluchtigste which is the same
+with <i>Illustrissimus</i>, and which I believe the C&aelig;sar hath kept for
+Himself. But to cut short, his Royal Majesty hath used the word to
+his Tzarskoy Majesty in his Letter, not out of imitation of others,
+although even in the Dutch Letter to his Tzarskoy Majesty of 16 June
+1663, I finde Durchlauchtigste the same (as I said) with
+<i>Illustrissimus</i>, but out of the constant use of his own Court,
+further joyning before it Most High, Most Potent, and adding after it
+Great Lord Emperour, which is an higher Title than any Prince in the
+World gives his Tzarskoy Majesty, and as high a Title of honour as
+can be given to any thing under the Divinity. For the King my Master
+who possesses as considerable Dominions, and by as high and
+self-dependent a right as any Prince in the Universe, yet contenting
+Himself with the easiest Titles, and satisfying Himself in the
+essence of things, doth most willingly give to other Princes the
+Titles <a name="pg112" id="pg112"></a><span class="pagenum">112</span>which are appropriated to them, but to the Tzarskoy Majesties
+of Russia his Royal Ancestors, and to his present Tzarskoy Majesty
+his Royal Majesty himself, have usually and do gladly pay Titles even
+to superfluity out of meer kindness. And upon that reason He added
+the word most Illustrious, and so did I use it in the Latin of my
+speech. Yet, that You may find I did not out of any criticisme of
+honor, but for distinction sake use it as I did, You may see in one
+place of the same speech <i>Serenitas</i>, speaking of his Tzarskoy
+Majesty: and I would have used <i>Serenissimus</i> an hundred times
+concerning his Tzarskoy Majesty, had I thought it would have pleased
+Him better. And I dare promise You that his Majesty will upon the
+first information from me stile him <i>Serenissimus</i>, and I
+(notwithstanding what I have said) shall make little difficulty of
+altering the word in that speech, and of delivering it so to You,
+with that protestation that I have not in using that word
+<i>Illustrissimus</i> erred nor used any diminution (which God forbid) to
+his Tzarskoy Majesty, but on the contrary after the example of the
+King my Master intended and shewed him all possible honor. And so God
+grant all happiness to His most high, most Potent, most Illustrious,
+and most Serene Tzarskoy Majesty, and that the friendship may daily
+increase betwixt His said Majesty and his most Serene Majesty my
+Master.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>On the 19th of February the Tsar invited Lord Carlisle and his suite to
+a dinner, which, beginning at two o&rsquo;clock, lasted till eleven, when it
+was prematurely broken up by the Tsar&rsquo;s nose beginning to bleed. Five
+hundred dishes were served, but there were no napkins, and the
+table-cloths only just covered the boards. There were Spanish wines,
+white and red mead, Puaz and strong waters. The English ambassador was
+not properly placed at table, not being anywhere near the Tsar, and his
+faithful suite shared his resentment. Time went on, but no diplomatic
+progress was made. The Tsar would not renew the privileges of the
+British merchants; Easter was spent <a name="pg113" id="pg113"></a><span class="pagenum">113</span>in Moscow, May also&mdash;and still
+nothing was done. Carlisle, in a huff, determined to go away, and,
+somewhat to the distress of his followers, refused to accept the costly
+sables sent by the Tzar, not only to the ambassador, Lady Carlisle, and
+Lord Morpeth, but to the secretaries and others. The Tzar thereupon
+returned the plate which our king had sent him, which plate Lord
+Carlisle seems to have appropriated, no doubt with diplomatic
+correctness, as his perquisite in lieu of the sables; but the suite got
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>The embassy left Moscow on the 24th of June for Novgorod and Riga, and
+after visiting Stockholm and Copenhagen, Lord Carlisle and Marvell
+reached London on the 30th of January 1665.</p>
+
+<p>During Marvell&rsquo;s absence war had been declared with the Dutch. It was
+never difficult to go to war with the Dutch. The king was always in want
+of money, and as no proper check existed over war supplies, he took what
+he wanted out of them. The merchants on &rsquo;Change desired war, saying that
+the trade of the world was too little for both England and Holland, and
+that one or the other &ldquo;must down.&rdquo; The English manufacturers, who felt
+the sting of their Dutch competitors, were always in favour of war. Then
+the growing insolence of the Dutch in the Indies was not to be borne.
+Stories were circulated how the Hollanders had proclaimed themselves
+&ldquo;Lords of the Southern Seas,&rdquo; and meant to deny English ships the right
+of entry in that quarter of the globe. A baronet called on Pepys and
+pulled out of his pocket letters from the East Indies, full of sad tales
+of Englishmen having been actually thrashed inside their own factory at
+Surat by swaggering Dutchmen, who had insulted the flag of St. George,
+and swore they were going to be the masters &ldquo;out there.&rdquo; Pepys, <a name="pg114" id="pg114"></a><span class="pagenum">114</span>who
+knew a little about the state of the royal navy, listened sorrowfully
+and was content to hope that the war would not come until &ldquo;we are more
+ready for it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In the House of Commons the prudent men were against the war, and were
+at once accused of being in the pay of the Dutch. The king&rsquo;s friends
+were all for the war, and nobody doubted that some of the money voted
+for it would find its way into their pockets, or at all events that
+pensions would reward their fidelity. A third group who favoured the war
+were supposed to do so because their disloyalty and fanaticism always
+disposed them to trouble the waters in which they wished to fish.</p>
+
+<p>The war began in November 1664, and on the 24th of that month the king
+opened Parliament and demanded money. He got it. Clarendon describes how
+Sir Robert Paston from Norfolk, a back-bench man, &ldquo;who was no frequent
+speaker, but delivered what he had a mind to say very clearly,&rdquo; stood up
+and proposed a grant of two and a half million pounds, to be spread over
+three years. So huge a sum took the House by surprise. Nobody spoke;
+&ldquo;they sat in amazement.&rdquo; Somebody at last found his voice and moved a
+much smaller sum, but no one seconded him. Sir Robert Paston ultimately
+found supporters, &ldquo;no man who had any relation to the Court speaking a
+word.&rdquo; The Speaker put Sir Robert Paston&rsquo;s motion as the question, &ldquo;and
+the affirmative made a good sound, and very few gave their negative
+aloud.&rdquo; But Clarendon adds, &ldquo;it was notorious very many sat silent.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The war was not in its early stages unpopular, being for the control of
+the sea, for the right of search, for the fishing trade, for mastery of
+the &ldquo;gorgeous East.&rdquo; The Admiralty had been busy, and a hundred
+<a name="pg115" id="pg115"></a><span class="pagenum">115</span>frigates, well gunned, were ready for the blue water by February 1665.
+The Duke of York, who took the command, was a keen sailor, though his
+unhappy notions as to patronage, and its exercise, were fatal to an
+efficient service. On the 3rd of June the duke had his one victory; it
+was off the roadstead of Harwich, and the roar of his artillery was
+heard in Westminster. It was a fierce fight; the king&rsquo;s great friend,
+Charles Berkeley, just made a peer and about to be made a duke, Lord
+Muskerry and young Richard Boyle, all on the duke&rsquo;s ship the <i>Royal
+Charles</i>, were killed by one shot, their blood and brains flying in the
+duke&rsquo;s face. The Earls of Marlborough and Portland were killed. The
+gallant Lawson, who rose from the ranks in Cromwell&rsquo;s time, an
+Anabaptist and a Republican, but still in high command, received on
+board his ship, the <i>Royal Oak</i>, a fatal wound. On the other side the
+Dutch admiral, Opdam, was blown into the air with his ship and crew. The
+Dutch fleet was scattered, and fled, after a loss estimated at
+twenty-four ships and eight thousand men killed and wounded; England
+lost no ship and but six hundred men.</p>
+
+<p>The victory was not followed up. Some say the duke lost nerve. Tromp was
+allowed to lead a great part of the fleet away in safety, and when the
+great De Ruyter was recalled from the West Indies he was soon able to
+assume the command of a formidable number of fighting craft.</p>
+
+<p>In less than ten days after this great engagement the plague appeared in
+London, a terrible and a solemnising affliction, lasting the rest of the
+year. It was at its worst in September, when in one week more than seven
+thousand died of it. The total number of its dead is estimated at
+sixty-eight thousand five hundred and ninety-six.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg116" id="pg116"></a><span class="pagenum">116</span>On account of the plague Parliament was summoned to meet at Oxford in
+October 1665.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell must have reached Oxford in good time, for the Admission Book of
+the Bodleian records his visit to the library on the last day of
+September. His first letter from Oxford is dated 15th October, and in it
+he tells the corporation that the House, &ldquo;upon His Majesty&rsquo;s
+representation of the necessity of further supplies in reference to the
+Dutch War and probability of the French embracing their interests, hath
+voted the King &pound;1,250,000 additional to be levied in two years.&rdquo; The
+king, who was the frankest of mortals in speech, though false as Belial
+in action, told the House that he had already spent all the money
+previously voted and must have more, especially if France was to prefer
+the friendship of Holland to his. Amidst loud acclamations the money was
+voted. The French ambassadors, who were in Oxford, saw for themselves
+the temper of Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the terrible plight of the capital, Oxford was gaiety
+itself. The king was accompanied by his consort, who then was hopeful of
+an heir, and also by Lady Castlemaine and Miss Stewart. Lady Castlemaine
+did not escape the shaft of University wit, for a stinging couplet was
+set up during the night on her door, for the discovery of the authorship
+of which a reward of &pound;1000 was offered. It may very well have been
+Marvell&rsquo;s.<a name="fnm45_1161" id="fnm45_1161"></a><a href="#fn45_1161" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>The Duke of Monmouth gave a ball to the queen and her ladies, where,
+after the queen&rsquo;s retirement, &ldquo;Mrs. Stewart was extraordinary merry,&rdquo;
+and sang &ldquo;French songs with great skill.&rdquo;<a name="fnm46_1162" id="fnm46_1162"></a><a href="#fn46_1162" class="fnnum">2</a></p>
+
+<p><a name="pg117" id="pg117"></a><span class="pagenum">117</span>Ten Acts of Parliament received the royal assent at Oxford, of which
+but one is still remembered in certain quarters&mdash;the Five Mile Act,
+which Marvell briefly describes as an Act &ldquo;for debarring ejected
+Nonconformists from living in or near Corporations (where they had
+formerly pursued their callings), unless taking the new Oath and
+Declaration.&rdquo; Parliament was prorogued at the end of October.</p>
+
+<p>Another visitation of Providence was soon to befall the capital. On
+Sunday morning, the 2nd of September, Pepys was aroused by one of his
+maid-servants at 3 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> to look at a fire. He could not make
+out much about it and went to bed again, but when he rose at seven
+o&rsquo;clock it was still burning, so he left his house and made his way to
+the Tower, from whence he saw London Bridge aflame, and describes how
+the poor pigeons, loth to leave their homes, fluttered about the
+balconies, until with singed wings they fell into the flames. After
+gazing his fill he went to Whitehall and had an interview with the king,
+who at once ordered his barge and proceeded downstream to his burning
+City, and to the assistance of a distracted Lord Mayor.</p>
+
+<p>The fire raged four days, and made an end of old London, a picturesque
+and even beautiful City. St. Paul&rsquo;s, both the church and the school, the
+Royal Exchange, Ludgate, Fleet Street as far as the Inner Temple, were
+by the 7th of the month smoking ruins. Four hundred streets, eighty-nine
+churches (just a church an hour, so the curious noted), warehouses
+unnumbered with all their varied contents, whole editions of books,
+valuable and the reverse of valuable, were wiped out of existence. Rents
+to an enormous amount ceased to be represented any longer by the houses
+that paid them. How was the king <a name="pg118" id="pg118"></a><span class="pagenum">118</span>to get his chimney-money? How were
+merchants to meet their obligations? The parsons on Sunday, the 9th of
+September, ought to have had no difficulty in finding texts for their
+sermons. Pepys went to church twice, but without edification, and
+certainly Dean Harding, whom he heard complaining in the evening &ldquo;that
+the City had been reduced from a folio to a duo decimo,&rdquo; hardly rose to
+the dignity of the occasion.</p>
+
+<p>Strange to say, not a life was actually lost in the fire,<a name="fnm47_1181" id="fnm47_1181"></a><a href="#fn47_1181" class="fnnum">1</a> though
+some old Londoners (among them Edmund Calamy&rsquo;s grandfather) died of
+grief, and others (and among them Shirley the dramatist and his wife)
+from exposure and exhaustion. One hysterical foreigner, who insisted
+that he lit the flame, was executed, though no sensible man believed
+what he said. It was long the boast of the merchants of London that no
+one of their number &ldquo;broke&rdquo; in consequence of the great fire.</p>
+
+<p>Unhappily the belief was widespread, as that &ldquo;tall bully,&rdquo; the monument,
+long testified, that the fire was the work of the Roman Catholics, and
+aliens, suspected of belonging to our old religion, found it dangerous
+to walk the streets whilst the embers still smoked, which they continued
+to do for six months.</p>
+
+<p>The meeting of Parliament was a little delayed in consequence of this
+national disaster, and when it did meet at the end of the month, Marvell
+reports the appointment of two Committees, one &ldquo;about the Fire of
+London,&rdquo; and the other &ldquo;to receive informations of the insolence of the
+Popish priests and Jesuits, and of the increase of Popery.&rdquo; The latter
+Committee almost at once reported to the House, to quote from Marvell&rsquo;s
+letter of the 27th of October, &ldquo;that his Majesty be desired to issue out
+his proclamation that all Popish priests and Jesuits, except such as not
+being <a name="pg119" id="pg119"></a><span class="pagenum">119</span>natural-born subjects, or belong to the Queen Mother and Queen
+Consort, be banished in thirty days or else the law be executed upon
+them, that all Justices of Peace and officers concerned put the laws in
+execution against Papists and suspected Papists in order to their
+execution, and that all officers, civil or military, not taking the
+Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance within twenty days be displaced.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In a very real sense the great fire of London continued to smoke for
+many a weary year, and to fill the air with black suspicions and civil
+discord.</p>
+
+<p>Parliament had not sat long before it was discovered that a change had
+taken place in its temper and spirit. The plague and the fire had
+contributed to this change. The London clergy had not exhibited great
+devotion during the former affliction. Many of the incumbents deserted
+their flocks, and their empty pulpits had been filled by zealots, who
+preached &ldquo;Woe unto Jerusalem.&rdquo; The profligacy of the Court, and the
+general decay of manners, when added to the severity of the legislation
+against the Nonconformists, gave the ejected clergy opportunities for a
+renewal of their spiritual ministrations, and as usual their labours,
+<i>pro salute animarum</i>, aroused political dissatisfaction. Some of the
+more outrageous supporters of the royal prerogative, the renegade May
+among them, professed to see in the fire a punishment upon the spirit of
+freedom, for which the City had once been famous, and urged the king not
+to suffer it to be rebuilt again &ldquo;to be a bit in his mouth and a bridle
+upon his neck, but to keep it all open,&rdquo; and that his troops might enter
+whenever he thought necessary, &ldquo;there being no other way to govern that
+rude multitude but by force.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Rabid nonsense of this kind had no weight with the king, who never
+showed his native good sense more <a name="pg120" id="pg120"></a><span class="pagenum">120</span>conspicuously than in the pains he
+took over the rebuilding of London; but none the less it had its effect
+in getting rid once and for ever of that spirit of excessive (besotted
+is Hallam&rsquo;s word) loyalty which had characterised the Restoration.</p>
+
+<p>The king, of course, wanted money, nor was Parliament disposed to refuse
+it, we being still at war with Holland; but to the horror of that
+elderly pedant, Lord Clarendon, the Commons passed a Bill appointing a
+commission of members of both Houses &ldquo;to inspect&rdquo;&mdash;I am now quoting
+Marvell&mdash;&ldquo;and examine thoroughly the former expense of the &pound;2,800,000,
+of the &pound;1,250,000 of the Militia money, of the prize goods, etc.&rdquo; In an
+earlier letter Marvell attributes the new temper of Parliament, &ldquo;not to
+any want of ardour to supply the public necessities, but out of our
+House&rsquo;s sense also of the burden to be laid upon the subject.&rdquo; Clarendon
+was so alarmed that he advised a dissolution. Charles was alarmed, too,
+knowing well that both Carteret, the Treasurer of the Navy, and Lord
+Ashley, the Treasurer of the Prize Money, issued out many sums upon the
+king&rsquo;s warrant, for which no accounts could be produced, but he was
+still more frightened of a new Parliament. In the present Parliament he
+had, so Clarendon admits, &ldquo;a hundred members of his own menial servants
+and their near relations.&rdquo; The bishops were also against a dissolution,
+dreading the return of Presbyterian members, so Clarendon&rsquo;s advice was
+not followed, and the king very reluctantly consented to the commission,
+about which Pepys has so much to say. It did not get appointed at once,
+but when it did Pepys rejoices greatly that its secretary, Mr. Jessopp,
+was &ldquo;an old fashioned Cromwell man&rdquo;; in other words, both honest and
+efficient.</p>
+
+<p>The shrewd Secretary of the Navy Office here puts <a name="pg121" id="pg121"></a><span class="pagenum">121</span>his finger on the
+real plague-spot of the Restoration. Our Puritan historians write rather
+loosely about &ldquo;the floodgates of dissipation,&rdquo; etc., having been flung
+open by that event as if it had wrought a sudden change in human nature.
+Mr. Pepys, whose frank Diary begins during the Protectorate, underwent
+no such change. He was just the same sinner under Cromwell as he was
+under Charles. Sober, grave divines may be found deploring the growing
+profligacy of the times long before the 29th of May 1660. An era of
+extravagance was evidently to be expected. No doubt the king&rsquo;s return
+assisted it. No country could be anything but the worse for having
+Charles the Second as its &ldquo;most religious King.&rdquo; The Restoration of the
+Stuarts was the best &ldquo;excuse for a glass&rdquo; ever offered to an Englishman.
+He availed himself of it with even more than his accustomed freedom. But
+it cannot be said that the king&rsquo;s debauchery was ever approved of even
+in London. Both the mercurial Pepys and the grave Evelyn alike deplore
+it. The misfortune clearly attributable to the king&rsquo;s return was the
+substitution of a corrupt, inefficient, and unpatriotic administration
+for the old-fashioned servants of the public whom Cromwell had gathered
+round him.</p>
+
+<p>Parliament was busy with new taxes. In November 1666 Marvell writes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The Committee has prepared these votes. All persons shall pay one
+shilling per poll, all aliens two, all Nonconformists and papists
+two, all servants one shilling in the pound of their wages, all
+personal estates shall pay for so much as is not already taxed by the
+land-tax, after twenty shillings in the hundred. Cattle, corn, and
+household furniture shall be excepted, and all such stock-in-trade as
+is already taxed by the land-tax, but the rest to be liable.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p><a name="pg122" id="pg122"></a><span class="pagenum">122</span>Stringent work! Later on we read:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Three shillings in the pound for all offices and public employments,
+except military; lawyers and physicians proportionate to their
+practice.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Here is the income-tax long before Mr. Pitt.</p>
+
+<p>The House of Lords, trembling on the verge of a breach of privilege,
+altered this Poll Bill. Marvell writes in January 1667:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;We have not advanced much this week; the alterations of the Lords
+upon the Poll Bill have kept us busy. We have disagreed in most.
+Aliens we adhere to pay double. Nonconformists we agree with them
+<i>not</i> to pay double (126 to 91), to allow no exemptions from patents
+to free from paying, we adhere; and we also rejected a long clause
+whereby they as well as the Commoners pretend distinctly to give to
+the King, and to-day we send up our reasons.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>The Lords agreed, and the Bill passed.</p>
+
+<p>Ireland supplied a very stormy measure. I am afraid Marvell was on the
+wrong side, but owing to his reserve I am not sure. An Irish Cattle Bill
+was a measure very popular in the House of Commons, its object being to
+prevent Ireland from sending over live beasts to be fattened, killed,
+and consumed in England. You can read all about it in Clarendon&rsquo;s <i>Life</i>
+(vol. iii. pp. 704-720, 739), and think you are reading about Canadian
+cattle to-day. The breeders (in a majority) were on one side, and the
+owners of pasture-land on the other. The breeders said the Irish cattle
+were bred in Ireland for nothing and transported for little, that they
+undersold the English-bred cattle, and consequently &ldquo;the breed of Cattle
+in the Kingdom was totally given over,&rdquo; and rents fell. Other members
+contended in their places &ldquo;that <a name="pg123" id="pg123"></a><span class="pagenum">123</span>their countries had no land bad enough
+to breed, and that their traffic consisted in buying lean cattle and
+making them fat, and upon this they paid their rent.&rdquo; Nobody, except the
+king, gave a thought to Ireland. He, in this not unworthy of his great
+Tudor predecessor, Henry the Eighth, declared he was King of Ireland no
+less than of England, and would do nothing to injure one portion of his
+dominions for the benefit of another. But as usual he gave way, being in
+great straits for money. The House of Lords was better disposed towards
+Ireland than the House of Commons, but they too yielded to selfish
+clamour, and the Bill, which had excited great fury, became law, and
+proved ineffective, owing (as was alleged) to that corruption which
+restrictions on trade seem to have the trick of breeding.<a name="fnm48_1231" id="fnm48_1231"></a><a href="#fn48_1231" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>It is always agreeable to be reminded that however large a part of our
+history is composed of the record of passion, greed, delusion, and
+stupidity, yet common-sense, the love of order and of justice (in
+matters of business), have usually been the predominant factors in our
+national life, despite priest, merchant, and party.</p>
+
+<p>Nowhere is this better illustrated than by two measures to which Marvell
+refers as Bills &ldquo;for the prevention of lawsuits between landlord and
+tenant&rdquo; and for &ldquo;the Rebuilding of London.&rdquo; Both these Bills became law
+in February 1668, within five months of the great catastrophe that was
+their occasion. Two more sensible, well-planned, well-drawn, courageous
+measures were never piloted through both Houses. King, Lords and
+Commons, all put their <a name="pg124" id="pg124"></a><span class="pagenum">124</span>heads together to face a great emergency and to
+provide an immediate remedy.</p>
+
+<p>The Bill to prevent lawsuits is best appreciated if we read its
+preamble:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Whereas the greatest part of the houses in the City of London having
+been burnt by the dreadful and dismal fire which happened in
+September last, many of the Tenants, under-tenants, and late
+occupiers are liable unto suits and actions to compel them to repair
+and to rebuild the same, and to pay their rents as if the same had
+not been burnt, and are not relievable therefor in any ordinary
+course of law; and great differences are likely to arise concerning
+the Repairs and rebuilding the said houses, and payment of rents
+which, if they should not be determined with speed and without
+charge, would much obstruct the rebuilding of the s<sup>d</sup> City. And for
+that it is just that everyone concerned should bear a proportionate
+share of this loss according to their several interests wherein in
+respect of the multitude of cases, varying in their circumstances, no
+certain general rule can be prescribed.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>After this recital it was enacted that the judges of the King&rsquo;s Bench
+and Common Pleas and the Barons of the Exchequer, or any three or more
+of them, should form a Court of Record to hear and determine every
+possible dispute or difference arising out of the great fire, whether
+relating to liability to repair, and rebuild, or to pay rent, or for
+arrears of rent (other than arrears which had accrued due before the 1st
+of September) or otherwise howsoever. The proceedings were to be by
+summary process, <i>sine forma et figura judicii</i> and without court fees.
+The judges were to be bound by no rules either of law or equity, and
+might call for what evidence they chose, including that of the
+interested parties, and try the case as it best could be tried. Their
+orders were to be final and not (save in a single excepted case) subject
+to any appeal. All <a name="pg125" id="pg125"></a><span class="pagenum">125</span>persons in remainder and reversion were to be bound
+by these orders, although infants, married women, idiots, beyond seas,
+or under any other disability. A special power was given to order the
+surrender of existing leases, and to grant new ones for terms not
+exceeding forty years. The judges gave their services for nothing, and,
+for once, released from all their own trammels, set to work to do
+substantial justice between landlord and tenant, personalty and realty,
+the life interest and the remainder, covenantor and covenantee, after a
+fashion which excited the admiration and won the confidence of the whole
+City. The ordinary suitor, still left exposed to the pitfalls of the
+special pleader, the risks (owing to the exclusion of evidence) of a
+non-suit and the costly cumbersomeness of the Court of Chancery, must
+often have wished that the subject-matter of his litigation had perished
+in the flames of the great fire.</p>
+
+<p>This court sat in Clifford&rsquo;s Inn, and was usually presided over by Sir
+Matthew Hale, whose skill both as an arithmetician and an architect
+completed his fitness for so responsible a position. Within a year the
+work was done.</p>
+
+<p>The Act for rebuilding the City is an elaborate measure of more than
+forty clauses, and aimed at securing &ldquo;the regularity, safety,
+conveniency and beauty&rdquo; of the new London that was to be. The buildings
+were classified according to their position and character, and had to
+maintain a prescribed level of quality. The materials to be employed
+were named. New streets were to be of certain widths, and so on. This is
+the Act that contains the first Betterment Clause: &ldquo;And forasmuch as the
+Houses now remaining and to be rebuilt will receive more or less
+advantage in the value of the rents by the liberty of air and free
+<a name="pg126" id="pg126"></a><span class="pagenum">126</span>recourse for trade,&rdquo; it was enacted that a jury might be sworn to
+assess upon the owners and others interested of and in the said houses,
+such sum or sums of money with respect of their several interests &ldquo;in
+consideration of such improvement and melioration as in reason and good
+conscience they shall think fit.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It takes nothing short of a catastrophe to suspend in England, even for
+a few months, those rules of evidence that often make justice
+impossible, and those rights of landlords which for centuries have
+appropriated public expenditure to private gain.<a name="fnm49_1261" id="fnm49_1261"></a><a href="#fn49_1261" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>The moneys required to pay for the land taken under the Act to widen
+streets and to accomplish the other authorised works were raised, as
+Marvell informs his constituents, by a tax of twelve pence on every
+chaldron of coal coming as far as Gravesend. Few taxes have had so
+useful and so harmless a life.</p>
+
+<p>All this time the Dutch War was going on, but the heart was out of it.
+Nothing in England is so popular as war, except the peace that comes
+after it. The king now wanted peace, and the merchants on &rsquo;Change had
+glutted their ire. In February 1667 the king told the Houses of
+Parliament that all &ldquo;sober&rdquo; men would be glad to see peace. Unluckily,
+it seems to have been assumed that we could have peace whenever we
+wanted it, and the fatal error was committed of at once &ldquo;laying up&rdquo; the
+first-and second-rate ships. It <a name="pg127" id="pg127"></a><span class="pagenum">127</span>thus came about that, whilst still at
+war, England had no fleet to put to sea. It did not at first seem likely
+that the overtures for peace would present much difficulty, when
+suddenly arose the question of Poleroone. It is amazing how few
+Englishmen have ever heard of Poleroone, or even of the Banda Islands,
+of which group it is one. Indeed, a more insignificant speck in the
+ocean it would be hard to find. To discover it on an atlas is no easy
+task. Yet, but for Poleroone, the Dutch would never have taken
+Sheerness, or broken the chain at Gillingham, or carried away with them
+to the Texel the proud vessel that had brought back Charles the Second
+to an excited population.</p>
+
+<p>Poleroone is a small nutmeg-growing island in the Indian Archipelago,
+not far from the eastern extremity of New Guinea. King James the First
+imagined he had some right to it, and, at any rate, Oliver Cromwell,
+when he made peace with the Dutch, made a great point of Poleroone. Have
+it he would for the East India Company. The Dutch objected, but gave
+way, and by an article in the treaty with Oliver bound themselves to
+give up Poleroone to the Company. All, in fact, that they did do, was to
+cut down the nutmeg trees, and so make the island good for nothing for
+many a long year. Physical possession was never taken. For some
+unaccountable reason Charles, who had sold Oliver&rsquo;s Dunkirk to the
+French for half a million of money, stuck out for Poleroone. What
+Cromwell had taken he was not going to give up! On the other hand,
+neither would the Dutch give up Poleroone. This dispute, about a barren
+island, delayed the settlement of the peace preliminaries; but
+eventually the British plenipotentiaries did get out to Breda, in May
+1667. Our sanguine king expected an immediate cessation of hostilities,
+and that <a name="pg128" id="pg128"></a><span class="pagenum">128</span>his unpreparedness would thus be huddled up. All of a sudden,
+at the beginning of June, De Ruyter led out his fleet, and with a fair
+wind behind him stood for the Thames. All is fair in war. England was
+caught napping. The doleful history reads like that of a sudden
+piratical onslaught, and reveals the fatal inefficiency of the
+administration. Sheerness was practically defenceless. &ldquo;There were a
+Company or two of very good soldiers there under excellent officers, but
+the fortifications were so weak and unfinished, and all other provisions
+so entirely wanting, that the Dutch Fleet no sooner approached within a
+distance but with their cannon they beat all the works flat and drove
+all the men from the ground, which, as soon as they had done with their
+Boats, they landed men and seemed resolved to fortify and keep
+it.&rdquo;<a name="fnm50_1281" id="fnm50_1281"></a><a href="#fn50_1281" class="fnnum">1</a> Capture of Sheerness by the Dutch! No need of a halfpenny
+press to spread this news through a London still in ruins. What made
+matters worse, the sailors were more than half-mutinous, being paid with
+tickets not readily convertible into cash. Many of them actually
+deserted to the Dutch fleet, which made its leisurely way upstream,
+passing Upnor Castle, which had guns but no ammunition, till it was
+almost within reach of Chatham, where lay the royal navy. General Monk,
+who was the handy man of the period, and whose authority was always
+invoked when the king he had restored was in greater trouble than usual,
+had hastily collected what troops he could muster, and marched to
+protect Chatham; but what were wanted were ships, not troops. The Dutch
+had no mind to land, and after firing three warships (the <i>Royal James</i>,
+the <i>Royal Oak</i>, and the <i>London</i>), and capturing the <i>Royal Charles</i>,
+&ldquo;they thought they had done enough, and made use of the ebb to carry
+them <a name="pg129" id="pg129"></a><span class="pagenum">129</span>back again.&rdquo;<a name="fnm51_1291" id="fnm51_1291"></a><a href="#fn51_1291" class="fnnum">1</a> These events occupied the tenth to the
+fifteenth of June, and for the impression they produced on Marvell&rsquo;s
+mind we are not dependent upon his restrained letters to his
+constituents, but can turn to his longest rhymed satire, which is
+believed to have been first printed, anonymously of course, as a
+broadsheet in August 1667.</p>
+
+<p>This poem is called <i>The Last Instructions to a Painter about the Dutch
+Wars</i>, 1667. The title was derived from Waller&rsquo;s panegyric poem on the
+occasion of the Duke of York&rsquo;s victory over the Dutch on the 3rd of June
+1665, when Opdam, the Dutch admiral, was blown up with his ship.<a name="fnm52_1292" id="fnm52_1292"></a><a href="#fn52_1292" class="fnnum">2</a>
+Sir John Denham, a brother satirist of Marvell&rsquo;s, and with as good an
+excuse for hating the Duke of York as this world affords, had seized
+upon the same idea and published four satirical poems on these same
+Dutch Wars, entitled <i>Directions to a Painter</i> (see <i>Poems on Affairs of
+State</i>, 1703, vol. i.).</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s satire, which runs to 900 lines, is essentially a House of
+Commons poem, and could only have been written by a member. It is
+intensely &ldquo;lobbyish&rdquo; and &ldquo;occasional.&rdquo; To understand its allusions, to
+appreciate its &ldquo;pain-giving&rdquo; capacity to the full, is now impossible.
+Still, the reader of Clarendon&rsquo;s <i>Life</i>, Pepys&rsquo;s <i>Diary</i>, and Burnet&rsquo;s
+<i>History</i>, to name only popular books, will have no difficulty in
+entering into the spirit of the performance. As a poem it is rough in
+execution, careless, breathless. A rugged style was then in vogue. Even
+Milton could write his lines to the<a name="pg130" id="pg130"></a><span class="pagenum">130</span> Cambridge Carrier somewhat in this
+manner. Marvell has nothing of the magnificence of Dryden, or of the
+finished malice of Pope. He plays the part, and it is sincerely played,
+of the old, honest member of Parliament who loves his country and hates
+rogues and speaks right out, calling spades spades and the king&rsquo;s women
+what they ought to be called. He is conversational, and therefore
+coarse. The whole history of the events that resulted in the national
+disgrace is told.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The close cabal marked how the Navy eats<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And thought all lost that goes not to the cheats;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So therefore secretly for peace decrees,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet for a War the Parliament would squeeze,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And fix to the revenue such a sum<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Should Goodricke silence and make Paston dumb.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Meantime through all the yards their orders were<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To lay the ships up, cease the keels begun.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The timber rots, the useless axe does rust,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The unpractised saw lies buried in the dust,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The busy hammer sleeps, the ropes untwine.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Parliament is got rid of to the joy of Clarendon.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Blither than hare that hath escaped the hounds,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The house prorogued, the chancellor rebounds.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What frosts to fruits, what arsenic to the rat,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What to fair Denham mortal chocolate,<a name="fnm53_1301" id="fnm53_1301"></a><a href="#fn53_1301" class="fnnum">1</a><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What an account to Carteret, that and more,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A parliament is to the chancellor.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>De Ruyter makes his appearance, and Monk</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i3">&ldquo;in his shirt against the Dutch is pressed.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Often, dear Painter, have I sat and mused<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Why he should be on all adventures used.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whether his valour they so much admire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or that for cowardice they all retire,<br /></span><a name="pg131" id="pg131"></a><span class="pagenum">131</span>
+<span class="i0">As heaven in storms, they call, in gusts of state,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On Monk and Parliament&mdash;yet both do hate.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ruyter, the while, that had our ocean curbed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sailed now amongst our rivers undisturbed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Surveyed their crystal streams and banks so green,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And beauties ere this never naked seen.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>His flags fly from the topmasts of his ships, but where is the enemy?</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;So up the stream the Belgic navy glides,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And at Sheerness unloads its stormy sides.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Chatham was but a few miles further up.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;There our sick ships unrigged in summer lay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like moulting fowl, a weak and easy prey,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For whose strong bulk earth scarce could timber find,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The ocean water, or the heavens wind.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Those oaken giants of the ancient race,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That ruled all seas, and did our channel grace;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The conscious stag, though once the forest&rsquo;s dread,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Flies to the wood, and hides his armless head.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ruyter forthwith a squadron doth untack;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They sail securely through the river&rsquo;s track.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">An English pilot too (O, shame! O, sin!)<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Cheated of &rsquo;s pay, was he that showed them in.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The chain at Gillingham is broken, to the dismay of Monk, who</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i3">&ldquo;from the bank that dismal sight does view;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our feather gallants, who came down that day<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To be spectators safe of the new play,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Leave him alone when first they hear the gun,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">(Cornbury,<a name="fnm54_1311" id="fnm54_1311"></a><a href="#fn54_1311" class="fnnum">1</a> the fleetest) and to London run.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our seamen, whom no danger&rsquo;s shape could fright,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Unpaid, refuse to mount their ships for spite,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or to their fellows swim on board the Dutch,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who show the tempting metal in their clutch.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><a name="pg132" id="pg132"></a><span class="pagenum">132</span>Upnor Castle avails nought.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;And Upnor&rsquo;s Castle&rsquo;s ill-deserted wall<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now needful does for ammunition call.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The <i>Royal Charles</i> is captured before Monk&rsquo;s face.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;That sacred Keel that had, as he, restored<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Its excited sovereign on its happy board,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now a cheap spoil and the mean victor&rsquo;s slave<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Taught the Dutch colours from its top to wave.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Horrors accumulate.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Each doleful day still with fresh loss returns,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The loyal <i>London</i> now a third time burns,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the true <i>Royal Oak</i> and <i>Royal James</i>,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Allied in fate, increase with theirs her flames.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of all our navy none shall now survive,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But that the ships themselves were taught to dive,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the kind river in its creek them hides.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Freighting their pierced keels with oozy tides.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The situation was indeed serious enough. One wiseacre in command in
+London declared his belief that the Tower was no longer &ldquo;tenable.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;And were not Ruyter&rsquo;s maw with ravage cloyed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Even London&rsquo;s ashes had been then destroyed.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But the Dutch admiral returns the way he came.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Now nothing more at Chatham&rsquo;s left to burn,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Holland squadron leisurely return;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And spite of Ruperts and of Albemarles,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To Ruyter&rsquo;s triumph led the captive <ins class="correction" title="Unitalicised 'Charles in original"><i>Charles</i></ins>.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The pleasing sight he often does prolong,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Her mast erect, tough cordage, timber strong,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Her moving shape, all these he doth survey,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And all admires, but most his easy prey.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The seamen search her all within, without;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Viewing her strength, they yet their conquest doubt;<br /></span><a name="pg133" id="pg133"></a><span class="pagenum">133</span>
+<span class="i0">Then with rude shouts, secure, the air they vex,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With gamesome joy insulting on her decks.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Such the feared Hebrew captive, blinded, shorn,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Was led about in sport, the public scorn.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The poet then indulges himself in an emotional outburst.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Black day, accursed! on thee let no man hail<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Out of the port, or dare to hoist a sail,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or row a boat in thy unlucky hour!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thee, the year&rsquo;s monster, let thy dam devour,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And constant Time, to keep his course yet right,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fill up thy space with a redoubled night.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When ag&egrave;d Thames was bound with fetters base,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Medway chaste ravished before his face,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And their dear offspring murdered in their sight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou and thy fellows saw the odious light.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sad change, since first that happy pair was wed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When all the rivers graced their nuptial bed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And father Neptune promised to resign<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His empire old to their immortal line;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now with vain grief their vainer hopes they rue,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Themselves dishonoured, and the gods untrue;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And to each other, helpless couple, moan,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As the sad tortoise for the sea does groan:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But most they for their darling Charles complain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And were it burned, yet less would be their pain.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To see that fatal pledge of sea-command,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now in the ravisher De Ruyter&rsquo;s hand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Thames roared, swooning Medway turned her tide,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And were they mortal, both for grief had died.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>A scapegoat had, of course, to be at once provided. He was found in Mr.
+Commissioner Pett, the most skilful shipbuilder of the age.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;After this loss, to relish discontent,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Some one must be accused by Parliament.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All our miscarriages on Pett must fall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His name alone seems fit to answer all.<br /></span><a name="pg134" id="pg134"></a><span class="pagenum">134</span>
+<span class="i0">Whose counsel first did this mad war beget?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who all commands sold through the navy? Pett.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who would not follow when the Dutch were beat?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who treated out the time at Bergen? Pett.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who the Dutch fleet with storms disabled met?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, rifling prizes, them neglect? Pett.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who with false news prevented the Gazette?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The fleet divided? writ for Rupert? Pett.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who all our seamen cheated of their debt,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And all our prizes who did swallow? Pett.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who did advise no navy out to set?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And who the forts left unprepared? Pett.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who to supply with powder did forget<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Languard, Sheerness, Gravesend, and Upnor? Pett.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who all our ships exposed in Chatham net?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who should it be but the fanatic Pett?&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This outburst can hardly fail to remind the reader of a famous outburst
+of Mr. Micawber&rsquo;s on the subject of Uriah Heep.</p>
+
+<p>The satire concludes with the picture of the king in the dead shades of
+night, alone in his room, startled by loud noises of cannons, trumpets,
+and drums, and then visited by the ghost of his father.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;And ghastly Charles, turning his collar low,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The purple thread about his neck does show.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The pensive king resolves on Clarendon&rsquo;s disgrace, and on rising next
+morning seeks out Lady Castlemaine, Bennet, and Coventry, who give him
+the same advice. He knows them all three to be false to one another and
+to him, but is for the moment content to do what they wish.</p>
+
+<p>I have omitted, in this review of a long poem, the earlier lines which
+deal with the composition of the House of Commons. All its parties are
+described, <a name="pg135" id="pg135"></a><span class="pagenum">135</span>one after another&mdash;the old courtiers, the pension-hunters,
+the king&rsquo;s procurers, then almost a department of State.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Then the Procurers under Prodgers filed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Gentlest of men, and his lieutenant mild<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bronkard, love&rsquo;s squire; through all the field arrayed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No troop was better clad, nor so well paid.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Clarendon had his friends, soon sorely to be needed, and after them,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Next to the lawyers, sordid band, appear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Finch in the front and Thurland in the rear.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Some thirty-three members are mentioned by their names and habits. The
+Speaker, Sir Edward Turner, is somewhat unkindly described. Honest men
+are usually to be found everywhere, and they existed even in Charles the
+Second&rsquo;s pensionary Parliament:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Nor could all these the field have long maintained<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But for the unknown reserve that still remained;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A gross of English gentry, nobly born,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of clear estates, and to no faction sworn,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dear lovers of their king, and death to meet<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For country&rsquo;s cause, that glorious thing and sweet;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To speak not forward, but in action brave,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In giving generous, but in council grave;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Candidly credulous for once, nay twice;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But sure the devil cannot cheat them thrice.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>No member of Parliament&rsquo;s library is complete without Marvell, who did
+not forget the House of Commons smoking-room:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Even iron Strangways chafing yet gave back<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Spent with fatigue, to breathe awhile tabac.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Charles hastened to make peace with Holland. He <a name="pg136" id="pg136"></a><span class="pagenum">136</span>was not the man to
+insist on vengeance or to mourn over lost prestige. De Ruyter had gone
+after suffering repulses at Portsmouth, Plymouth, and Torbay. Peace was
+concluded at Breda on the 21st of July. We gave up Poleroone. <i>Per
+contra</i> we gained a more famous place, New Amsterdam, rechristened New
+York in honour of the duke. All prisoners were to be liberated, and the
+Dutch, despite Sheerness and the <i>Royal Charles</i>, agreed to lower their
+flag to all British ships of war.</p>
+
+<p>The fall, long pending, of Clarendon immediately followed the peace.
+Men&rsquo;s tempers were furious or sullen. Hyde had no more bitter, no more
+cruel enemy than Marvell. Why this was has not been discovered, but
+there was nothing too bad for Marvell not to believe of any member of
+Clarendon&rsquo;s household. All the scandals, and they were many and
+horrible, relating to Clarendon and his daughter, the Duchess of York,
+find a place in Marvell&rsquo;s satires and epigrams. To us Lord Clarendon is
+a grave and thoughtful figure, the statesman-author of <i>The History of
+the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England</i>, that famous, large book,
+loftily planned, finely executed, full of life and character and the
+philosophy of human existence; and of his own <i>Autobiography</i>, a
+production which, though it must, like Burnet&rsquo;s <i>History</i>, be read with
+caution, unveils to the reader a portion of that past which usually is
+as deeply shrouded from us as the future. If at times we are reminded in
+reading Clarendon&rsquo;s <i>Life</i> of the old steward in Hogarth&rsquo;s plate, who
+lifts up his hands in horror over the extravagance of his master, if his
+pedantry often irritates, and his love of place displeases, we recognise
+these but as the shades of the character of a distinguished and
+accomplished public servant. But to Marvell Clarendon was rapacious,
+ambitious, and corrupt, a man who had <a name="pg137" id="pg137"></a><span class="pagenum">137</span>sold Oliver&rsquo;s Dunkirk to the
+French, and shared the price; who had selected for the king&rsquo;s consort a
+barren woman, so that his own damaged daughter might at least chance to
+become Queen of England, who hated Parliaments and hankered after a
+standing army, who took money for patents, who sold public offices, who
+was bribed by the Dutch about the terms of peace, who swindled the
+ruined cavaliers of the funds subscribed for their benefit, and had by
+these methods heaped together great wealth which he ostentatiously
+displayed. Even darker crimes than these are hinted at. That Marvell was
+wrong in his estimate of Clarendon&rsquo;s character now seems certain;
+Clarendon did not get a penny of the Dunkirk money. The case made
+against him by the House of Commons in their articles of impeachment was
+felt even at the time to be flimsy and incapable of proof, and in the
+many records that have come to light since Clarendon&rsquo;s day nothing has
+been discovered to give them support. And yet Marvell was a singularly
+well-informed member of Parliament, a shrewd, level-headed man of
+affairs, who knew Lord Clarendon in the way we know men we have to see
+on business matters, whose speeches we can listen to, and whose conduct
+we discuss and criticise. &ldquo;Gently scan your brother-man&rdquo; is a precept
+Marvell never took to heart; nor is the House of Commons a place where
+it is either preached or practised.</p>
+
+<p>When Clarendon was well nigh at the height of his great unpopularity, he
+built himself a fine big house on a site given him by the king where now
+is Albemarle Street. Where did he get the money from? He employed, in
+building it, the stones of St. Paul&rsquo;s Cathedral. True, he bought the
+stones from the Dean and Chapter, but if the man you hate builds a great
+<a name="pg138" id="pg138"></a><span class="pagenum">138</span>house out of the ruins of a church, is it likely that so trivial a fact
+as a cash payment for the materials is going to be mentioned? Splendid
+furniture and noble pictures were to be seen going into the new
+palace&mdash;the gifts, so it was alleged, of foreign ambassadors. What was
+the consideration for these donations? England&rsquo;s honour! Clarendon House
+was at once named Dunkirk House, Holland House, Tangiers House.</p>
+
+<p>Here is Marvell upon it:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i3">UPON HIS HOUSE<br /></span></div>
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Here lie the sacred bones<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of Paul beguil&egrave;d of his stones:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Here lie golden briberies,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The price of ruined families;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The cavalier&rsquo;s debenture wall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fixed on an eccentric basis:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Here&rsquo;s Dunkirk-Town and Tangier-Hull,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Queen&rsquo;s marriage and all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Dutchman&rsquo;s <i>templum pacis</i>.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Clarendon&rsquo;s fall was rapid. He knew the house of Stuart too well to
+place any reliance upon the king. Evelyn visited him on the 27th of
+August 1667 after the seals had been taken away from him, and found him
+&ldquo;in his bed-chamber very sad.&rdquo; His enemies were numerous and powerful,
+both in the House of Commons and at Court, where all the buffoons and
+ladies of pleasure hated him, because&mdash;so Evelyn says&mdash;&ldquo;he thwarted some
+of them and stood in their way.&rdquo; In November Evelyn called again and
+found the late Lord-Chancellor in the garden of his new-built palace,
+sitting in his gout wheel-chair and watching the new gates setting up
+towards the north and the fields. &ldquo;He looked and spoke very
+disconsolately. After some while deploring his condition <a name="pg139" id="pg139"></a><span class="pagenum">139</span>to me, I took
+my leave. Next morning I heard he was gone.&rdquo;<a name="fnm55_1391" id="fnm55_1391"></a><a href="#fn55_1391" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>The news was true; on Saturday, the 29th of November, he drove to Erith,
+and after a terrible tossing on the nobly impartial Channel the weary
+man reached Calais, and died seven years later in Rouen, having well
+employed his leisure in completing his history. His palace was sold for
+half what it cost to the inevitable Monk, Duke of Albemarle.</p>
+
+<p>On the 3rd of December Marvell writes that the House, having heard that
+Lord Clarendon had &ldquo;withdrawn,&rdquo; forthwith ordered an address to his
+Majesty &ldquo;that care might be taken for securing all the sea ports lest he
+should pass there.&rdquo; Marvell adds grimly, &ldquo;I suppose he will not trouble
+you at Hull.&rdquo; The king took good care that his late Lord-Chancellor
+should escape. An act of perpetual banishment was at once passed,
+receiving the royal assent on the 19th of December.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell was kept very busy during the early months of 1668, inquiring,
+as our English fashion is, into the &ldquo;miscarriages of the late war.&rdquo; The
+House more than once sat from nine in the morning till eight at night,
+finding out all it could. &ldquo;What money, arising by the poll money, had
+been applied to the use of the war?&rdquo; This was an awkward inquiry. The
+House voted that the not prosecuting the first victory of June 1665 was
+a miscarriage, and one of the greatest: a snub to the Duke of York. The
+not furnishing the Medway <a name="pg140" id="pg140"></a><span class="pagenum">140</span>with a sufficient guard of ships, though the
+king had then 18,000 men in his pay, was another great miscarriage. The
+paying of the fleet with tickets, without money, was a third great
+miscarriage. All this time Oliver Cromwell&rsquo;s skull was grinning on its
+perch in Westminster Hall.</p>
+
+<p>Besides the honour of England, that of Hull had to be defended by its
+member. A young Lieutenant Wise, one of the Hull garrison, had in some
+boisterous fashion affronted the corporation and the mayor. On this
+correspondence ensues; and Marvell waits upon the Duke of Albemarle, the
+head of the army, to obtain reparation.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I waited yesterday upon my Lord General&mdash;and first presented your
+usual fee which the General accepted, but saying that it was
+unnecessary and that you might have bin pleased to spare it, and he
+should be so much more at liberty to show how voluntary and
+affectionate he was toward your corporation. I returned the civilest
+words I could coin on for the present, and rendered him your humble
+thanks for his continued patronage of you ... and told him that you
+had further sent him up a small tribute of your Hull liquor. He
+thanked you again for all these things which you might&mdash;he said&mdash;have
+spared, and added that if the greatest of your military officers
+should demean himself ill towards you, he would take a course with
+him.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>A mealy-mouthed Lord-General drawing near his end.<a name="fnm56_1401" id="fnm56_1401"></a><a href="#fn56_1401" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>Wise was removed from the Hull garrison. The affronted corporation was
+not satisfied, and Marvell had to argue the point.</p>
+<p><a name="pg141" id="pg141"></a><span class="pagenum">141</span></p>
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And I hope, Sir, you will incline the Bench to consider whether I am
+able or whether it be fit for me to urge it beyond that point. Yet it
+is not all his (Wise&rsquo;s) Parliament men and relations that have
+wrought me in the least, but what I simply conceive as the state of
+things now to be possible and satisfactory. What would you have more
+of a soldier than to run away and have him cashiered as to any
+command in your garrison? The first he hath done and the second he
+must submit to. And I assure you whatsoever he was among you, he is
+here a kind of decrepit young gentleman and terribly crest-fallen.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>The letter concludes thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;For I assure you they use all the civility imaginable to you, and as
+we sat there drinking a cup of sack with the General, Colonel
+Legge<a name="fnm57_1411" id="fnm57_1411"></a><a href="#fn57_1411" class="fnnum">1</a> chancing to be present, there were twenty good things
+said on all hands tending to the good fame, reputation, and advantage
+of the Town, an occasion that I was heartily glad of.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Corporations may not have souls to save and bodies to kill, but
+evidently they have vanities to tickle.</p>
+
+<p>In November 1669 the House is still busy over the accounts. Sir George
+Carteret was Treasurer of the Navy. Marvell refers to him in <i>The Last
+Instructions to a Painter</i> as:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Carteret the rich did the accountants guide<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And in ill English all the world defied.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The following letter of Marvell&rsquo;s gives an excellent account of House of
+Commons business, both how it is conducted, and how often it gets
+accidentally interrupted by other business unexpectedly cropping up:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="toright">&ldquo;<i>November 20, 1669.</i></p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Gentlemen, my very worthy friends</span>,&mdash;Returning after our
+adjournment to sit upon Wednesday, the House <a name="pg142" id="pg142"></a><span class="pagenum">142</span>having heard what Sir
+G. Cartaret could say for himselfe, and he then commended to
+withdraw, after a considerable debate, put it to the question,
+whether he were guilty of misdemeanour upon the Commissioners first
+observation, the words of which were, That all monyes received by him
+out of His Majesty&rsquo;s Exchequer are by the privy seales assigned for
+particular services, but no such thing observed or specified in his
+payments, whereby he hath assumed to himselfe a liberty to make use
+of the King&rsquo;s treasure for other uses then is directed. The House
+dividing upon the question, the ayes went out, and wondered why they
+were kept out so extraordinary a time. The ayes proved 138 and the
+noes 129; and the reason of the long stay then appeared; the tellers
+for the ayes chanced to be very ill reckoners, so that they were
+forced to tell severall times over in the House, and when at last the
+tellers for the ayes would have agreed the noes to be 142, the noes
+would needs say that they were 143, whereupon those for the ayes
+would tell once more and then found the noes to be indeed but 129;
+and the ayes then coming in proved to be 138; whereas if the noes had
+been content with the first error of the tellers, Sir George had been
+quit upon that observation. This I have told you so minutely because
+it is the second fatall and ominous accident that hath fain out in
+the divisions about Sir G. Cartaret. Thursday was ordered for the
+second observation, the words of which are, Two hundred and thirty
+thousand seven hundred thirty and one thousand pounds thirteen
+shillings and ninepence, claimed as payd, and deposited for security
+of interest, and yet no distinct specification of time appeares
+either on his receits or payments, whereby no judgment can be made
+how interest accrues; so that we cannot yet allow the same. But this
+day was diverted and wholy taken up by a speciall report orderd by
+the Committee for the Bill of Conventicles, that the House be
+informed of severall Conventicles in Westminster which might be of
+dangerous consequences. From hence arose much discourse; also of a
+report that Ludlow was in England, that Commonwealths-men flock about
+the town, and there were meetings said to be, where they talkt of New
+Modells of Government; so that the House ordered a Committee to
+receive informations both concerning Conventicles and these <a name="pg143" id="pg143"></a><span class="pagenum">143</span>other
+dangerous meetings; and then entered a resolution upon their books
+without putting it to the question, That this House will adhere to
+His Majesty, and the Government of Church and State as now
+established, against all its enemyes. Friday having bin appointed, as
+I told you in my former letter, for the House to sit in a grand
+Committee upon the motion for the King&rsquo;s supply, was spent wholy in
+debate, whether they should do so or no, and concluded at last in a
+consent, that the sitting in a grand Committee upon the motion for
+the King&rsquo;s supply should be put of till Friday next, and so it was
+ordered. The reason of which kind of proceeding, lest you should
+thinke to arise from an indisposition of the House, I shall tell you
+as they appeare to me, to have been the expectation of what Bill will
+come from the Lords in stead of that of ours which they threw out,
+and a desire to redresse and see thoroughly into the miscarriages of
+mony before any more should be granted. To-day the House hath bin
+upon the second observation, and after a debate till foure a&rsquo;clock,
+have voted him guilty also of misdemeanor in that particular. The
+Commissioners are ordered to attend the House again on Munday, which
+is done constantly for the illustration of any matter in their
+report, wherein the House is not cleare. And to say the truth, the
+House receives great satisfaction from them, and shows them
+extraordinary respect. These are the things of principall notice
+since my last.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Carteret eventually was censured and suspended and dismissed.</p>
+
+<p>The sudden incursion of religion during a financial debate is highly
+characteristic of the House of Commons.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst Queen Elizabeth and her advisers did succeed in making some sort
+of a settlement of religion having regard to the questions of her time,
+the Restoration bishops, an inferior set of men, wholly failed. The
+repressive legislation that followed upon the Act of Uniformity,
+succeeded in establishing and endowing (with voluntary contributions)
+what is sometimes called, <a name="pg144" id="pg144"></a><span class="pagenum">144</span>absurdly enough, Political Dissent. On
+points, not of doctrine, but of ceremony, and of church government, one
+half of the religiously-minded community were by oaths and declarations,
+and by employing the Sacrament of the Lord&rsquo;s Supper as &ldquo;a picklock to a
+place,&rdquo; drawn out of the service of the State. Excluded from Parliament
+and from all corporate bodies, from grammar-schools and universities,
+English Dissent learned to live its own life, remote from the army, the
+navy, and the civil service, quite outside of what perhaps may be fairly
+called the main currents of the national life. Nonconformists venerated
+their own divines, were reared in their own academies and colleges, read
+their own books, went, when the modified law permitted it, to their own
+conventicles in back streets, and made it their boast that they had
+never entered their parish churches, for the upkeep of which they were
+compelled to subscribe&mdash;save for the purpose of being married. The
+nation suffered by reason of this complete severance. Trade excepted,
+there was no community of interest between Church and Dissent. Sobriety,
+gravity, a decent way of life, the sense of religious obligation (even
+when united with the habit of <i>extempore</i> prayer, and a hereditary
+disrespect for bishops&rsquo; aprons), are national assets, as the expression
+now goes, which cannot be disregarded with impunity.</p>
+
+<p>The Conventicle Act Marvell refers to was a stringent measure, imposing
+pecuniary fines upon any persons of sixteen years of age or upwards who
+&ldquo;under pretence of religion&rdquo; should be present at any meeting of more
+than five persons, or more than those of the household, &ldquo;in other manner
+than allowed by the Liturgy and practice of the Church of England.&rdquo;
+Heavier fines were imposed upon the preachers. The poet Waller, who was
+&ldquo;nursed in Parliaments,&rdquo; having been first returned <a name="pg145" id="pg145"></a><span class="pagenum">145</span>from Amersham in
+1621, made a very sensible remark on the second reading: &ldquo;Let them alone
+and they will preach against each other; by this Bill they will
+incorporate as being all under one calamity.&rdquo;<a name="fnm58_1451" id="fnm58_1451"></a><a href="#fn58_1451" class="fnnum">1</a> But by 144 to 78
+the Bill was read, though it did not become law until the following
+session. An indignant Member of Parliament once told Cromwell that he
+would take the &ldquo;sense&rdquo; of the House against some proposal. &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo;
+said Cromwell, &ldquo;you shall take the &lsquo;sense&rsquo; of the House, and I will take
+the &lsquo;nonsense,&rsquo; and we will see who tells the most votes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In February 1670 the king opened a new session, and in March Marvell
+wrote a private letter to a relative at Bordeaux, in which he &ldquo;lends his
+mind out,&rdquo; after a fashion forbidden him in his correspondence with his
+constituents:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Dear Cousin</span>,&mdash; ... You know that we having voted the King,
+before Christmas, four hundred thousand pounds, and no more; and
+enquiring severely into ill management, and being ready to adjourn
+ourselves till February, his Majesty, fortified by some undertakers
+of the meanest of our House, threw up all as nothing, and prorogued
+us from the first of December till the fourteenth of February. All
+that interval there was great and numerous caballing among the
+courtiers. The King also all the while examined at council the
+reports from the Commissioners of Accounts, where they were
+continually discountenanced, and treated rather as offenders than
+judges. In this posture we met, and the King, being exceedingly
+necessitous for money, spoke to us <i>stylo minaci et imperatorio</i>; and
+told us the inconveniences which would fall on the nation by want of
+a supply, should not ly at his door; that we must not revive any
+discord betwixt the Lords and us; that he himself had examined the
+accounts, and found <a name="pg146" id="pg146"></a><span class="pagenum">146</span>every penny to have been employed in the war;
+and he recommended the Scotch union. The Garroway party appeared with
+the usual vigour, but the country gentlemen appeared not in their
+true number the first day: so, for want of seven voices, the first
+blow was against them. When we began to talk of the Lords, the King
+sent for us alone, and recommended a rasure of all proceedings. The
+same thing you know that we proposed at first. We presently ordered
+it, and went to tell him so the same day, and to thank him. At coming
+down, (a pretty ridiculous thing!) Sir Thomas Clifford carryed
+Speaker and Mace, and all members there, into the King&rsquo;s cellar, to
+drink his health. The King sent to the Lords more peremptoryly, and
+they, with much grumbling, agreed to the rasure. When the
+Commissioners of Accounts came before us, sometimes we heard them
+<i>pro form&acirc;</i>, but all falls to dirt. The terrible Bill against
+Conventicles is sent up to the Lords; and we and the Lords, as to the
+Scotch busyness, have desired the King to name English Commissioners
+to treat, but nothing they do to be valid, but on a report to
+Parliament, and an act to confirm. We are now, as we think, within a
+week of rising. They are making mighty alterations in the Conventicle
+Bill (which, as we sent up, is the quintessence of arbitrary malice),
+and sit whole days, and yet proceed but by inches, and will, at the
+end, probably affix a Scotch clause of the King&rsquo;s power in externals.
+So the fate of the Bill is uncertain, but must probably pass, being
+the price of money. The King told some eminent citizens, who applyed
+to him against it, that they must address themselves to the Houses,
+that he must not disoblige his friends; and if it had been in the
+power of their friends, he had gone without money. There is a Bill in
+the Lords to encourage people to buy all the King&rsquo;s fee-farm rents;
+so he is resolved once more to have money enough in his pocket, and
+live on the common for the future. The great Bill begun in the Lords,
+and which makes more ado than ever any Act in this Parliament did, is
+for enabling Lord Ros, long since divorced in the spiritual court,
+and his children declared illegitimate by Act of Parliament, to marry
+again. Anglesey and Ashly, who study and know their interests as well
+as any gentlemen at court, and whose sons <a name="pg147" id="pg147"></a><span class="pagenum">147</span>have marryed two sisters
+of Ros, inheritrixes if he has no issue, yet they also drive on the
+Bill with the greatest vigour. The King is for the Bill: the Duke of
+York, and all the Papist Lords, and all the Bishops, except Cosins,
+Reynolds, and Wilkins, are against it. They sat all Thursday last,
+without once rising, till almost ten at night, in most solemn and
+memorable debate, whether it should be read the second time, or
+thrown out. At last, at the question, there were forty-two persons
+and six proxys against it, and forty-one persons and fifteen proxys
+for it. If it had not gone for it, the Lord Arlington had a power in
+his pocket from the King to have nulled the proxys, if it had been to
+the purpose. It was read the second time yesterday, and, on a long
+debate whether it should be committed, it went for the Bill by twelve
+odds, in persons and proxys. The Duke of York, the bishops, and the
+rest of the party, have entered their protests, on the first day&rsquo;s
+debate, against it. Is not this fine work? This Bill must come down
+to us. It is my opinion that Lauderdale at one ear talks to the King
+of Monmouth, and Buckingham at the other of a new Queen. It is also
+my opinion that the King was never since his coming in, nay, all
+things considered, no King since the Conquest, so absolutely powerful
+at home, as he is at the present; nor any Parliament, or places, so
+certainly and constantly supplyed with men of the same temper. In
+such a conjuncture, dear Will, what probability is there of my doing
+any thing to the purpose? The King would needs take the Duke of
+Albemarle out of his son&rsquo;s hand to bury him at his own charges. It is
+almost three months, and he yet lys in the dark unburyed, and no talk
+of him. He left twelve thousand pounds a year, and near two hundred
+thousand pounds in money. His wife dyed some twenty days after him;
+she layed in state, and was buryed, at her son&rsquo;s expence, in Queen
+Elizabeth&rsquo;s Chapel. And now,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">"Disce, puer, virtutem ex me verumque laborem,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Fortunam ex aliis.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>March 21, 1670.</i>&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>This remarkable letter lets us into many secrets.</p>
+
+<p>The Conventicle Bill is &ldquo;the price of money.&rdquo; The <a name="pg148" id="pg148"></a><span class="pagenum">148</span>king&rsquo;s interest in
+the Roos divorce case was believed to be due to his own desire to be
+quit of a barren and deserted wife.<a name="fnm59_1481" id="fnm59_1481"></a><a href="#fn59_1481" class="fnnum">1</a> Our most religious king had
+nineteen bastards, but no lawful issue. It may seem strange that so high
+a churchman as Bishop Cosin should have taken the view he did, but Cosin
+had a strong dash of the layman in his constitution, and was always an
+advocate of divorce, with permission to re-marry, in cases of adultery.</p>
+
+<p>A further and amending Bill for rebuilding the city was before the
+House&mdash;one of eighty-four clauses, &ldquo;the longest Bill, perhaps, that ever
+past in Parliament,&rdquo; says Marvell; but the Roos Divorce Bill and the
+Conventicle Bill proved so exciting in the House of Lords that they had
+little time for anything else. Union with Scotland, much desired by the
+king, but regarded with great suspicion by all Parliamentarians, fell
+flat, though Commissioners were appointed.</p>
+
+<p>The Conventicle Bill passed the Lords, who tagged on to it a proviso
+Marvell refers to in his next letter, which the Lower House somewhat
+modified by the omission of certain words. Lord Roos was allowed to
+re-marry. The big London Bill got through.</p>
+
+<p>Another private letter of Marvell&rsquo;s, of this date, is worth reading:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Dearest Will</span>,&mdash;I wrote to you two letters, and payd for
+them from the posthouse here at Westminster; to which I have had no
+answer. Perhaps they miscarryed. I sent on an answer to the only
+letter I received from Bourdeaux, and having put it into Mr.
+Nelthorp&rsquo;s hand, I doubt not but it came to your&rsquo;s. To proceed. The
+same day (March 26th letter) my letter bore date, there was an
+extraordinary thing <a name="pg149" id="pg149"></a><span class="pagenum">149</span>done. The King, about ten o&rsquo;clock, took boat,
+with Lauderdale only, and two ordinary attendants, and rowed awhile
+as towards the bridge, and soon turned back to the Parliament stairs,
+and so went up into the House of Lords, and took his seat. Almost all
+of them were amazed, but all seemed so; and the Duke of York
+especially was very much surprized. Being sat, he told them it was a
+privilege he claimed from his ancestors to be present at their
+deliberations. That therefore, they should not, for his coming,
+interrupt their debates, but proceed, and be covered. They did so. It
+is true that this has been done long ago, but it is now so old, that
+it is new, and so disused, that at any other but so bewitched a time
+as this, it would have been looked on as an high usurpation, and
+breach of privilege. He indeed sat still, for the most part, and
+interposed very little; sometimes a word or two. But the most
+discerning opinion was, that he did herein as he rowed for having had
+his face first to the Conventicle Bill, he turned short to the Lord
+Ross&rsquo;s. So that, indeed, it is credible, the King, in prospect of
+diminishing the Duke of York&rsquo;s influence in the Lord&rsquo;s House, in
+this, or any future matter, resolved, and wisely enough at present,
+to weigh up and lighten the Duke&rsquo;s efficacy, by coming himself in
+person. After three or four days continuance, the Lords were very
+well used to the King&rsquo;s presence, and sent the Lord Steward and Lord
+Chamberlain, to him, when they might wait, as an House on him, to
+render their humble thanks for the honour he did them. The hour was
+appointed them, and they thanked him, and he took it well. So this
+matter, of such importance on all great occasions, seems riveted to
+them, and us, for the future, and to all posterity. Now the Lord
+Ross&rsquo;s Bill came in order to another debate, and the King present.
+Nevertheless the debate lasted an entire day; and it passed by very
+few voices. The King has ever since continued his session among them,
+and says it is better than going to a play. In this session the Lords
+sent down to us a proviso<a name="fnm60_1491" id="fnm60_1491"></a><a href="#fn60_1491" class="fnnum">1</a> for the King, <a name="pg150" id="pg150"></a><span class="pagenum">150</span>that would have
+restored him to all civil or ecclesiastical prerogatives which his
+ancestors had enjoyed at any time since the Conquest. There was never
+so compendious a piece of absolute universal tyranny. But the Commons
+made them ashamed of it, and retrenched it. The Parliament was never
+embarrassed, beyond recovery. We are all venal cowards, except some
+few. What plots of State will go on this interval I know not. There
+is a new set of justices of peace framing through the whole kingdom.
+The governing cabal, since Ross&rsquo;s busyness, are Buckingham,
+Lauderdale, Ashly, Orrery, and Trevor. Not but the other cabal too
+have seemingly sometimes their turn. Madam,<a name="fnm61_1501" id="fnm61_1501"></a><a href="#fn61_1501" class="fnnum">1</a> our King&rsquo;s sister,
+during the King of France&rsquo;s progress in Flanders, is to come as far
+as Canterbury. There will doubtless be family counsels then. Some
+talk of a French Queen to be then invented for our King. Some talk of
+a sister of Denmark; others of a good virtuous Protestant here at
+home. The King disavows it; yet he has sayed in publick, he knew not
+why a woman may not be divorced for barrenness, as a man for
+impotency. The Lord Barclay went on Monday last for Ireland, the King
+to Newmarket. God keep, and increase you, in all things.&mdash;Yours, etc.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>April 14, 1670.</i>&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn32_771" id="fn32_771"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm32_771">77:1</a></span> Clarendon&rsquo;s <i>Life</i>, vol. ii. p. 442.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn33_791" id="fn33_791"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm33_791">79:1</a></span> The clerks, however, only <i>counted</i> the members who
+voted, and kept no record of their <i>names</i>. Mr. Gladstone remembered the
+alteration being made in 1836, and how unpopular it was. The change was
+a greater revolution than the Reform Bill. See <i>The Unreformed House of
+Commons</i> by Edward Posselt, vol. i. p. 587.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn34_792" id="fn34_792"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm34_792">79:2</a></span>
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;And a Parliament had lately met<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Without a single Bankes.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Praed</i>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn35_821" id="fn35_821"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm35_821">82:1</a></span> See Dr. Halley&rsquo;s <i>Lancashire&mdash;its Puritanism and
+Nonconformity</i>, vol. ii. pp. 1-140, a most informing book.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn36_881" id="fn36_881"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm36_881">88:1</a></span> Clarendon&rsquo;s <i>History</i>, vol. vi. p. 249.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn37_901" id="fn37_901"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm37_901">90:1</a></span> An Historical Poem.&mdash;Grosart, vol. i. p. 343.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn38_921" id="fn38_921"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm38_921">92:1</a></span> Macaulay&rsquo;s <i>History</i>, vol. i. p. 154.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn39_951" id="fn39_951"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm39_951">95:1</a></span> I am acquainted with the romantic story which would
+have us believe that Lady Fauconberg, foretelling the time to come, had
+caused some other body than her father&rsquo;s to be buried in the Abbey (see
+<i>Notes and Queries</i>, 5th October 1878, and Waylen&rsquo;s <i>House of Cromwell</i>,
+p. 341).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn40_961" id="fn40_961"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm40_961">96:1</a></span> See <i>The Unreformed House of Commons</i>, by Edward
+Porritt, vol. i. p. 51. Marvell&rsquo;s old enemy, Parker, Bishop of Oxford,
+in his <i>History of his own Time</i>, composed after Marvell&rsquo;s death,
+reviles his dead antagonist for having taken this payment which, the
+bishop says, was made by a custom which &ldquo;had a long time been antiquated
+and out of date.&rdquo; &ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; says the bishop, &ldquo;despised so vile a
+stipend,&rdquo; yet Marvell required it &ldquo;for the sake of a bare subsistence,
+although in this mean poverty he was nevertheless haughty and insolent.&rdquo;
+In Parker&rsquo;s opinion poor men should be humble.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn41_981" id="fn41_981"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm41_981">98:1</a></span> <i>Parliamentary History</i>, vol. iv., App. No. III.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn42_1041" id="fn42_1041"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm42_1041">104:1</a></span> Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s testimony is that no real improvement
+was effected until within the period of his own memory. &lsquo;Our services
+were probably without a parallel in the world for their debasement.&rsquo;
+(See <i>Gleanings</i>, vi. p. 119.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn43_1061" id="fn43_1061"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm43_1061">106:1</a></span> There is a copy in the library of the <i>Athen&aelig;um</i>,
+London: &ldquo;A Relation of Three Embassies from his sacred Majestie Charles
+<span class="smcap">ii</span>. to the Great Duke of Muscovie, the King of Sweden, and the
+King of Denmark. Performed by the Right Ho<sup>ble</sup> the Earle of Carlisle in
+the Years 1663 and 1664. Written by an Attendant on the Embassies, and
+published with his Lordship&rsquo;s approbation. London. Printed for John
+Starkie at the Miter in Fleet Street, near Temple Barr, 1669.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn44_1091" id="fn44_1091"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm44_1091">109:1</a></span> &ldquo;I have mentioned the dignity of his manners.... He was
+at his very best on occasion of Durbars, investitures, and the like....
+It irritated him to see men giggling or jeering instead of acting their
+parts properly.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Life of Lord Dufferin</i>, vol. ii. p. 317.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn45_1161" id="fn45_1161"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm45_1161">116:1</a></span> <i>Hist. MSS. Com., Portland Papers</i>, vol. iii. p. 296.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn46_1162" id="fn46_1162"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm46_1162">116:2</a></span> See above, vol. iii. p. 294.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn47_1181" id="fn47_1181"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm47_1181">118:1</a></span> Sir Walter Besant doubted this. See his <i>London</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn48_1231" id="fn48_1231"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm48_1231">123:1</a></span> Mr. Goldwin Smith says this was the first pitched
+battle between Protection and Free Trade in England.&mdash;<i>The United
+Kingdom</i>, vol. ii. p. 25.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn49_1261" id="fn49_1261"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm49_1261">126:1</a></span> Being curious to discover whether no &ldquo;property&rdquo; man
+raised his voice against these measures, I turned to that true &ldquo;home of
+lost causes,&rdquo; the Protests of the House of Lords; and there, sure
+enough, I found one solitary peer, Henry Carey, Earl of Dover, entering
+his dissent to both Bills&mdash;to the Judicature Bill because of the
+unlimited power given to the judges, to the Rebuilding Bill because of
+the exorbitant powers entrusted to the Lord Mayor and Aldermen to give
+away or dispose of the property of landlords.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn50_1281" id="fn50_1281"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm50_1281">128:1</a></span> Clarendon&rsquo;s <i>Life</i>, vol. iii. p. 796.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn51_1291" id="fn51_1291"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm51_1291">129:1</a></span> Clarendon&rsquo;s <i>Life</i>, vol. iii. p. 798.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn52_1292" id="fn52_1292"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm52_1292">129:2</a></span> &ldquo;Instructions to a Painter for the drawing of the
+Posture and Progress of His Majesty&rsquo;s forces at Sea under the command of
+His Highness Royal: together with the Battel and Victory obtained over
+the Dutch, June 3, 1665.&rdquo;&mdash;Waller&rsquo;s <i>Works</i>, 1730, p. 161.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn53_1301" id="fn53_1301"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm53_1301">130:1</a></span> Sir John Denham&rsquo;s wife was reported to have been
+poisoned by a dish of chocolate, at the bidding of the Duchess of York.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn54_1311" id="fn54_1311"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm54_1311">131:1</a></span> Clarendon&rsquo;s eldest son.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn55_1391" id="fn55_1391"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm55_1391">139:1</a></span> It is disconcerting to find Evelyn recording this, his
+last visit to Clarendon, in his Diary under date of the 9th December, by
+which time the late Chancellor was in Rouen. One likes notes in a diary
+to be made contemporaneously and not &ldquo;written-up&rdquo; afterwards. Evelyn
+makes the same kind of mistake about Cromwell&rsquo;s funeral, misdating it a
+month.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn56_1401" id="fn56_1401"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm56_1401">140:1</a></span> The duke died in 1670 and had a magnificent funeral on
+the 30th of April. See <i>Hist. MSS. Com., Duke of Portland&rsquo;s Papers</i>,
+vol. iii. p. 314. His laundress-Duchess did not long survive him.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn57_1411" id="fn57_1411"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm57_1411">141:1</a></span> Afterwards Lord Dartmouth, a great friend of James the
+Second, but one who played a dubious part at the Revolution.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn58_1451" id="fn58_1451"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm58_1451">145:1</a></span> The poet Waller was one of the wittiest speakers the
+House of Commons has ever known.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn59_1481" id="fn59_1481"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm59_1481">148:1</a></span> For a full account of this remarkable case, see
+Clarendon&rsquo;s <i>Life</i>, iii. 733-9.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn60_1491" id="fn60_1491"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm60_1491">149:1</a></span> &ldquo;Provided, etc., that neither this Act nor anything
+therein contained shall extend to invalidate or avoid his Majesty&rsquo;s
+supremacy in ecclesiastical affairs [or to destroy any of his Majesty&rsquo;s
+rights powers or prerogatives belonging to the Imperial Crown of this
+realm or at any time exercised by himself or any of his predecessors
+Kings or Queens of England] but that his Majesty his heirs and
+successors may from time to time and at all times hereafter exercise and
+enjoy all such powers and authorities aforesaid as fully and amply as
+himself or any of his predecessors have or might have done the same
+anything in this Act (or any other law statute or usage to the contrary)
+notwithstanding.&rdquo; The words in brackets were rejected by the Commons.
+See <i>Parliamentary History</i>, iv. 446-7.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn61_1501" id="fn61_1501"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm61_1501">150:1</a></span> Madame&rsquo;s business is now well known. The secret Treaty
+of Dover was the result of this visit.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg151" id="pg151"></a><span class="pagenum">151</span><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<p class="center">&ldquo;THE REHEARSAL TRANSPROSED&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is never easy for ecclesiastical controversy to force its way into
+literature. The importance of the theme will be questioned by few. The
+ability displayed in its illumination can be denied by none. It is the
+temper that usually spoils all. A collection in any way approaching
+completeness, of the pamphlets this contention has produced in England,
+would contain tens of thousands of volumes; full of curious learning and
+anecdotes, of wide reading and conjecture, of shrewdness and wit; yet
+these books are certainly the last we would seek to save from fire or
+water. Could they be piled into scales of moral measurement a single
+copy of the <i>Imitatio</i>, of the <i>Holy Dying</i>, of the <i>Saint&rsquo;s Rest</i>,
+would outweigh them all. Man may not be a religious animal, but he
+recognises and venerates the spirit of religion whenever he perceives
+it, and it is a spirit which is apt to evaporate amidst the strife of
+rival wits. Who can doubt the sincerity of Milton, when he exclaimed
+with the sad prophet Jeremy, &ldquo;Woe is me my Mother that thou hast borne
+me a man of strife and contention.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s chief prose work, the two parts of <i>The Rehearsal
+Transprosed</i>, is a very long pamphlet indeed, composed by way of reply
+to certain publications of Samuel Parker, afterwards Bishop of Oxford.<a name="pg152" id="pg152"></a><span class="pagenum">152</span>
+Controversially Marvell&rsquo;s book was a great success.<a name="fnm62_1521" id="fnm62_1521"></a><a href="#fn62_1521" class="fnnum">1</a> It amused the
+king, delighted the wits, was welcomed, if not read, by the pious folk
+whose side it espoused, whilst its literary excellence was sufficient to
+win, in after years, the critical approval of Swift, whose style, though
+emphatically his own, bears traces of its master having given, I will
+not say his days and nights, but certainly some profitable hours, to the
+study of Marvell&rsquo;s prose.</p>
+
+<p>Biographers of controversialists seldom do justice to the other side.
+Possibly they do not read it, and Parker has been severely handled by my
+predecessors. He was not an honour to his profession, being, perhaps, as
+good or as bad a representative of the seamy side of State Churchism as
+there is to be found. He was the son of a Puritan father, and whilst at
+Wadham lived by rule, fasting and praying. He took his degree in the
+early part of 1659, and migrating to Trinity came under the influence of
+Dr. Bathurst, then Senior Fellow, to whom, so he says in one of his
+dedications, &ldquo;I owe my first rescue from the chains and fetters of an
+unhappy education.&rdquo;<a name="fnm63_1522" id="fnm63_1522"></a><a href="#fn63_1522" class="fnnum">2</a> Anything Parker did he <a name="pg153" id="pg153"></a><span class="pagenum">153</span>did completely, and
+we next hear of him in London in 1665, a nobleman&rsquo;s chaplain, setting
+the table in a roar by making fun of his former friends, &ldquo;a mimical way
+of drolling upon the puritans.&rdquo; &ldquo;He followed the town-life, haunted the
+best companies and, to polish himself from any pedantic roughness, he
+read and saw the plays with much care and more preparing than most of
+the auditory.&rdquo; In 1667 the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Sheldon, a very
+mundane person indeed, made Parker his chaplain, and three years later
+Archdeacon of Canterbury. He reached many preferments, so that, says
+Marvell, &ldquo;his head swell&rsquo;d like any bladder with wind and vapour.&rdquo; He
+had an active pen and a considerable range of subject. In 1670 he
+produced &ldquo;A Discourse of Ecclesiastical Politie wherein the Authority of
+the Civil Magistrate over the Consciences of Subjects in Matters of
+External Religion is Asserted; The Mischiefs and Inconveniences of
+Toleration are represented and all Pretenses pleaded in behalf of
+<i>Liberty of Conscience</i> are fully answered.&rdquo; Some one instantly took up
+the cudgels in a pamphlet entitled <i>Insolence and Impudence Triumphant</i>,
+and the famous Dr. Owen also protested in <i>Truth and Innocence
+Vindicated</i>. Parker replied to Owen in <i>A Defence and Continuation of
+Ecclesiastical Politie</i>, and in the following year, 1672, reprinted a
+treatise of Bishop Bramholl&rsquo;s with a preface &ldquo;shewing what grounds there
+are of Fears and Jealousies of Popery.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This was the state of the controversy when Marvell entered upon it with
+his <i>Rehearsal Transprosed</i>, a fantastic title he borrowed for no very
+good reasons <a name="pg154" id="pg154"></a><span class="pagenum">154</span>from the farce of the hour, and a very good farce too, the
+Duke of Buckingham&rsquo;s <i>Rehearsal</i>, which was performed for the first time
+at the Theatre Royal on the 7th of November 1671, and printed early in
+1672. Most of us have read Sheridan&rsquo;s <i>Critic</i> before we read
+Buckingham&rsquo;s <i>Rehearsal</i>, which is not the way to do justice to the
+earlier piece. It is a matter of literary tradition that the duke had
+much help in the composition of a farce it took ten years to make.
+Butler, Sprat, and Clifford, the Master of Charterhouse, are said to be
+co-authors. However this may be, the piece was a great success, and both
+Marvell and Parker, I have no doubt, greatly enjoyed it, but I cannot
+think the former was wise to stuff his plea for Liberty of Conscience so
+full as he did with the details of a farce. His doing so should, at all
+events, acquit him of the charge of being a sour Puritan. In the
+<i>Rehearsal</i> Bayes (Dryden), who is turned by Sheridan in his adaptation
+of the piece into Mr. Puff, is made to produce out of his pocket his
+book of <i>Drama Commonplaces</i>, and the play proceeds (<i>Johnson</i> and
+<i>Smith</i> being <i>Sheridan&rsquo;s</i> Dangle and Sneer):</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="drama">&ldquo;<i>Johnson.</i> <i>Drama Commonplaces!</i> pray what&rsquo;s that?</p>
+
+<p class="drama"><i>Bayes.</i> Why, Sir, some certain helps, that we men of Art have found
+it convenient to make use of.</p>
+
+<p class="drama"><i>Johnson.</i> How, Sir, help for Wit?</p>
+
+<p class="drama"><i>Bayes.</i> I, Sir, that&rsquo;s my position. And I do here averr, that no man
+yet the Sun e&rsquo;er shone upon, has parts sufficient to furnish out a
+Stage, except it be with the help of these my rules.</p>
+
+<p class="drama"><i>Johnson.</i> What are those Rules, I pray?</p>
+
+<p class="drama"><i>Bayes.</i> Why, Sir, my first Rule is the Rule of Transversion, or
+<i>Regula Duplex</i>, changing Verse into Prose, or Prose into Verse,
+<i>alternative</i> as you please.</p>
+
+<p class="drama"><i>Smith.</i> How&rsquo;s that, Sir, by a Rule, I pray?</p>
+
+<p class="drama"><i>Bayes.</i> Why, thus, Sir; nothing more easy when understood: I take a
+Book in my hand, either at home, or <a name="pg155" id="pg155"></a><span class="pagenum">155</span>elsewhere, for that&rsquo;s all one,
+if there be any Wit in &rsquo;t, as there is no Book but has some, I
+Transverse it; that is, if it be Prose, put it into Verse (but that
+takes up some time), if it be Verse, put it into Prose.</p>
+
+<p class="drama"><i>Johnson.</i> Methinks, Mr. <i>Bayes</i>, that putting Verse into Prose
+should be called Transprosing.</p>
+
+<p class="drama"><i>Bayes</i>. By my troth, a very good Notion, and hereafter it shall be
+so.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Marvell must be taken to have meant by his title that he saw some
+resemblance between Parker and Bayes, and, indeed, he says he does, and
+gives that as one of his excuses for calling Parker Bayes all through:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;But before I commit myself to the dangerous depths of his Discourse
+which I am now upon the brink of, I would with his leave, make a
+motion; that instead of Author I may henceforth indifferently well
+call him Mr. Bayes as oft as I shall see occasion. And that first
+because he has no name, or at least will not own it, though he
+himself writes under the greatest security, and gives us the first
+letters of other men&rsquo;s names before he be asked them. Secondly,
+because he is, I perceive, a lover of elegancy of style and can
+endure no man&rsquo;s tautologies but his own; and therefore I would not
+distaste him with too frequent repetition of one word. But chiefly
+because Mr. Bayes and he do very much symbolise, in their
+understandings, in their expressions, in their humour, in their
+contempt and quarrelling of all others, though of their own
+profession.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>But justice must be done even to Parker before handing him over to the
+Tormentor. What were his positions? He was a coarse-fibred, essentially
+irreligious fellow, the accredited author of the reply to the question
+&ldquo;What is the best body of Divinity?&rdquo; &ldquo;That which would help a man to
+keep a Coach and six horses,&rdquo; but he is a lucid and vigorous writer,
+knowing very well that he had to steer his ship through a narrow and
+dangerous channel, <a name="pg156" id="pg156"></a><span class="pagenum">156</span>avoiding Hobbism on the one side and tender
+consciences on the other. Each generation of State Churchmen has the
+same task. The channel remains to-day just as it ever did, with Scylla
+and Charybdis presiding over their rocks as of old. Hobbes&rsquo;s <i>Leviathan</i>
+appeared in 1651, and in 1670 both his philosophy and his statecraft
+were fashionable doctrine. All really pious people called Hobbes an
+Atheist. Technically he was nothing of the sort, but it matters little
+what he was technically, since no plain man who can read can doubt that
+Hobbes&rsquo;s enthronement of the State was the dethronement of God:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Seeing then that in every Christian commonwealth the civil sovereign
+is the supreme factor to whose charge the whole flock of his subjects
+is commuted, and consequently that it is by his authority that all
+other pastors are made and have power to teach and perform all other
+pastoral offices, it followeth also that it is from the civil
+sovereign that all other pastors derive their right of teaching,
+preaching and other functions pertaining to that office, and that
+they are but his ministers in the same way as the magistrates of
+towns, judges in Court of Justice and commanders of assizes are all
+but ministers of him that is the magistrate of the whole
+commonwealth, judge of all causes and commander of the whole militia,
+which is always the Civil Sovereign. And the reason hereof is not
+because they that teach, but because they that are to learn, are his
+subjects.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>The Leviathan</i>, Hobbes&rsquo;s <i>English Works</i> (Molesworth&rsquo;s
+Edition), vol. iii. p. 539.)</p></div>
+
+<p>Hobbes shirks nothing, and asks himself the question, What if a king, or
+a senate or other sovereign person forbid us to believe in Christ? The
+answer given is, &ldquo;such forbidding is of no effect; because belief and
+unbelief never follow men&rsquo;s commands.&rdquo; But suppose &ldquo;we be commanded by
+our lawful prince to say with our tongue we believe not, must we obey
+such command?&rdquo; Here Hobbes a little hesitates to <a name="pg157" id="pg157"></a><span class="pagenum">157</span>say outright &ldquo;Yes, you
+must&rdquo;; but he does say &ldquo;whatsoever a subject is compelled to do in
+obedience to his own Sovereign, and doth it not in order to his own
+mind, but in order to the laws of his country, that action is not his,
+but his Sovereign&rsquo;s&mdash;nor is it that he in this case denieth Christ
+before men, but his Governor and the law of his country.&rdquo; Hobbes then
+puts the case of a Mahomedan subject of a Christian Commonwealth who is
+required under pain of death to be present at the Divine Service of the
+Christian Church&mdash;what is he to do? If, says Hobbes, you say he ought
+to die, then you authorise all private men to disobey their princes in
+maintenance of their religion, true or false, and if you say the
+Mahomedan ought to obey, you admit Hobbes&rsquo;s proposition and ought to
+consent to be yourself bound by it. (See Hobbes&rsquo;s <i>English Works</i>, iii.
+493.)</p>
+
+<p>The Church of England, though anxious both to support the king and
+suppress the Dissenters, could not stomach Hobbes; but if it could not,
+how was it to deal with Hobbes&rsquo;s question, &ldquo;if it is <i>ever</i> right to
+disobey your lawful prince, who is to determine <i>when</i> it is right?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Parker seeks to grapple with this difficulty. He disowns Hobbes.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;When men have once swallowed this principle, that Mankind is free
+from all obligations antecedent to the laws of the Commonwealth, and
+that the Will of the Sovereign Power is the only measure of Good and
+Evil, they proceed suitably to its consequences to believe that no
+Religion can obtain the force of law till it is established as such
+by supreme authority, that the Holy Scriptures were not laws to any
+man till they were enjoyn&rsquo;d by the Christian Magistrate, and that if
+the Sovereign Power would declare the Alcoran to be Canonical
+Scripture, it would be as much the Word of<a name="pg158" id="pg158"></a><span class="pagenum">158</span> God as the Four Gospels.
+(See <i>Hobbes</i>, vol. iii. p. 366.) So that all Religions are in
+reality nothing but Cheats and impostures to awe the common people to
+obedience. And therefore although Princes may wisely make use of the
+foibles of Religion to serve their own turns upon the silly
+multitude, yet &rsquo;tis below their wisdom to be seriously concerned
+themselves for such fooleries.&rdquo; (Parker&rsquo;s <i>Ecc. Politie</i>, p. 137.)</p></div>
+
+<p>As against this fashionable Hobbism, Parker pleads Conscience.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;When anything that is apparently and intrinsically evil is the
+Matter of a Human Law, whether it be of a Civil or Ecclesiastical
+concern, here God is to be obeyed rather than Man.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>He forcibly adds:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Those who would take off from the Consciences of Men all obligations
+antecedent to those of Human Laws, instead of making the power of
+Princes Supreme, Absolute and Uncontrollable, they utterly enervate
+all their authority, and set their subjects at perfect liberty from
+all their commands. For if we once remove all the antecedent
+obligations of Conscience and Religion, Men will no further be bound
+to submit to their laws than only as themselves shall see convenient,
+and if they are under no other restraint it will be their wisdom to
+rebel as oft as it is their interest.&rdquo; (<i>Ecc. Politie</i>, pp. 112-113.)</p></div>
+
+<p>But though when dealing with Hobbes, Parker thinks fit to assert the
+claims of conscience so strongly, when he has to grapple with those who,
+like the immortal author of <i>The Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress</i>, &ldquo;devilishly and
+perniciously abstained from coming to Church,&rdquo; and upheld &ldquo;unlawful
+Meetings and Conventicles,&rdquo; his tone alters, and it is hard to
+distinguish his position from that of the philosopher of Malmesbury.</p>
+
+<p>Parker&rsquo;s argument briefly stated, and as much as possible in his own
+vigorous language, comes to this:</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg159" id="pg159"></a><span class="pagenum">159</span>There is and always must be a competition between the prerogative of
+the Prince or State and that of Conscience, which on this occasion is
+defined as &ldquo;every private man&rsquo;s own judgment and persuasion of things.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Do subjects rebel against their Sovereign? &rsquo;Tis Conscience that takes
+up arms. Do they murder Kings? &rsquo;Tis under the conduct of Conscience. Do
+they separate from the communion of the Church? &rsquo;Tis Conscience that is
+the Schismatick. Everything that a man has a mind to is his Conscience.&rdquo;
+(<i>Ecc. Politie</i>, p. 6.)</p>
+
+<p>How is this competition to be resolved? Parker answers in exact language
+which would have met with John Austin&rsquo;s warm approval.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The Supreme Government of every Commonwealth, wherever it is lodged,
+must of necessity be universal, absolute and uncontrollable. For if
+it be limited, it may be controlled, but &rsquo;tis a thick and palpable
+contradiction to call such a power supreme in that whatever controls
+it must as to that case be its Superior. And therefore affairs of
+Religion being so strongly influential upon affairs of State, they
+must be as uncontrollably subject to the Supreme Power as all other
+Civil concerns.&rdquo; (<i>Ecc. Politie</i>, p. 27.)</p></div>
+
+<p>If the magistrate may make penal laws against swearing and blasphemy,
+why not as to rites and ceremonies of public worship? (39.) Devotion
+towards God is a virtue akin to gratitude to man; religion is a branch
+of morality. The Puritans&rsquo; talk about grace is a mere imposture, (76)
+which extracts from Parker vehement language. What is there to make such
+a fuss about? he cries. Why cannot you come to Church? You are left free
+to <i>think</i> what you like. Your secret thoughts are your own, but living
+as you do in society, and knowing as you must how, unless the law
+interferes, &ldquo;every opinion must make <a name="pg160" id="pg160"></a><span class="pagenum">160</span>a sect, and every sect a faction,
+and every faction when it is able, a war, and every war is the cause of
+God, and the cause of God can never be prosecuted with too much
+violence&rdquo; (16), why cannot you conform to a form of worship which,
+though it does not profess to be prescribed in all particulars, contains
+nothing actually forbidden in the Scriptures? What authority have
+Dissenters for singing psalms in metre? &ldquo;Where has our Saviour or his
+Apostles enjoined a directory for public worship? What Scripture command
+is there for the <i>three</i> significant ceremonies of the Solemn League and
+Covenant, viz. that the whole congregation should take it (1) uncovered,
+(2) standing, (3) with their right hand lift up bare&rdquo; (184), and so on.</p>
+
+<p>In answer to the objection that the civil magistrate might establish a
+worship in its own nature sinful and sensual, Parker replies it is not
+in the least likely, and the risk must be run. &ldquo;Our enquiry is to find
+out the best way of settling the world that the state of things admit
+of&mdash;if indeed mankind were infallible, this controversy were at an end,
+but seeing that all men are liable to errors and mistakes, and seeing
+that there is an absolute necessity of a supreme power in all public
+affairs, our question (I say) is, What is the most prudent and expedient
+way of settling them, not that possibly might be, but that really is.
+And this (as I have already sufficiently proved) is to devolve their
+management on the supreme civil power which, though it may be imperfect
+and liable to errors and mistakes, yet &rsquo;tis the least so, and is a much
+better way to attain public peace and tranquillity than if they were
+left to the ignorance and folly of every private man&rdquo; (212).</p>
+
+<p>I now feel that at least I have done Parker full justice, but as so far
+I have hardly given an example <a name="pg161" id="pg161"></a><span class="pagenum">161</span>of his familiar style, I must find room
+for two or three final quotations. The thing Parker hated most in the
+world was a <i>Tender Conscience</i>. He protests against the weakness which
+is content with passing penal laws, but does not see them carried out
+for fear of wounding these trumpery tender consciences. &ldquo;Most men&rsquo;s
+minds or consciences are weak, silly and ignorant things, acted by fond
+and absurd principles and imposed upon by their vices and their
+passions.&rdquo; (7.) &ldquo;However, if the obligation of laws must yield to that
+of a tender conscience, how impregnably is every man that has a mind to
+disobey armed against all the commands of his superiors. No authority
+shall be able to govern him farther than he himself pleases, and if he
+dislike the law he is sufficiently excused (268). A weak conscience is
+the product of a weak understanding, and he is a very subtil man that
+can find the difference between a tender head and a tender conscience
+(269). It is a glorious thing to suffer for a tender conscience, and
+therefore it is easy and natural for some people to affect some little
+scruples against the commands of authority, thereby to make themselves
+obnoxious to some little penalties, and then what godly men are they
+that are so ready to be punished for a good conscience&rdquo; (278). &ldquo;The
+voice of the publick law cannot but drown the uncertain whispers of a
+tender conscience; all its scruples are hushed and silenced by the
+commands of authority. It dares not whimper when that forbids, and the
+nod of a prince awes it into silence and submission. But if they dare to
+murmur, and their proud stomachs will swell against the rebukes of their
+superiors, then there is no remedy but the rod and correction. They must
+be chastised out of their peevishness and lashed into obedience (305).
+The doctor concludes his treatise <a name="pg162" id="pg162"></a><span class="pagenum">162</span>with the words always dear to men of
+fluctuating opinions, &lsquo;What I have written, I have written&rsquo;&rdquo; (326).</p>
+
+<p>Whilst Parker was writing this book in his snug quarters in the
+Archbishop&rsquo;s palace at Lambeth, Bunyan was in prison in Bedford for
+refusing to take the communion on his knees in his parish church; and
+Dr. Manton, who had been offered the Deanery of Rochester, was in the
+Gate House Prison under the Five Mile Act.</p>
+
+<p>The first part of <i>The Rehearsal Transprosed</i>, though its sub-title is
+&ldquo;Animadversions upon a late book intituled a Preface shewing what
+grounds there are of Fears and Jealousies of Popery,&rdquo; deals after
+Marvell&rsquo;s own fashion with all three of Parker&rsquo;s books, the
+<i>Ecclesiastical Politie</i>, the <i>Bramhall Preface</i>, and the <i>Defence of
+the Ecclesiastical Politie</i>. It is by no means so easy to give a fair
+notion of the <i>Rehearsal Transprosed</i> in a short compass, as it was of
+Parker&rsquo;s line of argument. The parson wrote more closely than the Member
+of Parliament. I cannot give a better description of Marvell&rsquo;s method
+than in Parker&rsquo;s own words in his preface to his <i>Reproof to the
+Rehearsal Transprosed</i>, which appeared in 1673 and gave rise to
+Marvell&rsquo;s second part:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;When,&rdquo; writes Parker, &ldquo;I first condemned myself to the drudgery of
+this Reply, I intended nothing but a serious prosecution of my
+Argument, and to let the World see that it is not reading Histories
+or Plays or Gazettes, nor going on pilgrimage to Geneva, nor learning
+French and Italian, nor passing the Alps, nor being a cunning
+Gamester that can qualify a man to discourse of Conscience and
+Ecclesiastical Policy; in that it is not capping our Argument with a
+story that will answer it, nor clapping an apothegm upon an assertion
+that will prove it, nor stringing up Proverbs and Similitudes upon
+one another that will make up a Coherent Discourse.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Allowing for bias this is no unfair account of<a name="pg163" id="pg163"></a><span class="pagenum">163</span> Marvell&rsquo;s method, and it
+was just because this was Marvell&rsquo;s method that he succeeded so well in
+amusing the king and in pleasing the town, and that he may still be read
+by those who love reading with a fair measure of interest and enjoyment.</p>
+
+<p>Witty and humorous men are always at a disadvantage except on the stage.
+The hum-drum is the style for Englishmen. Bishop Burnet calls Marvell &ldquo;a
+droll,&rdquo; Parker, who was to be a bishop, calls him &ldquo;a buffoon.&rdquo; Marvell
+is occasionally humorous and not infrequently carries a jest beyond the
+limits of becoming mirth; but he is more often grave. Yet when he is,
+his gravity was treated either as one of his feebler jokes or as an
+impertinence. But as it is his wit alone that has kept him alive he need
+not be pitied overmuch.</p>
+
+<p>The substance of Marvell&rsquo;s reply to Parker, apart altogether from its
+by-play, is to be found in passages like the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Here it is that after so great an excess of wit, he thinks fit to
+take a julep and re-settle his brain and the government. He grows as
+serious as &rsquo;tis possible for a madman, and pretends to sum-up the
+whole state of the controversy with the Nonconformists. And to be
+sure he will make the story as plausible for himself as he may; but
+therefore it was that I have before so particularly quoted and bound
+him up with his own words as fast as such a Proteus could be
+pinion&rsquo;d. For he is as waxen as the first matter, and no form comes
+amiss to him. Every change of posture does either alter his opinion
+or vary the expression by which we should judge of it; and sitting he
+is of one mind, and standing of another. Therefore I take myself the
+less concern&rsquo;d to fight with a windmill like Quixote; or to whip a
+gig as boyes do; or with the lacqueys at Charing-Cross or
+Lincoln&rsquo;s-Inn-Fields to play at the Wheel of Fortune; lest I should
+fall into the hands of my Lord Chief-Justice, or Sir Edmond Godfrey.
+The truth <a name="pg164" id="pg164"></a><span class="pagenum">164</span>is, in short, and let Bayes make more or less of it if he
+can, Bayes had at first built-up such a stupendous magistrate as
+never was of God&rsquo;s making. He had put all princes upon the rack to
+stretch them to his dimension. And as a straight line continued grows
+a circle, he had given them so infinite a power, that it was extended
+unto impotency. For though he found it not till it was too late in
+the cause, yet he felt it all along (which is the understanding of
+brutes) in the effect. For hence it is that he so often complains
+that princes know not aright that supremacy over consciences, to
+which they were so lately, since their deserting the Church of Rome,
+restored; that in most Nations government was not rightly understood,
+and many expressions of that nature: whereas indeed the matter is,
+that princes have always found that uncontroulable government over
+<i>conscience</i> to be both unsafe and impracticable. He had run himself
+here to a stand, and perceived that there was a God, there was
+Scripture; the magistrate himself had a conscience, and must &lsquo;take
+care that he did not enjoyn things apparently evil.&rsquo; But after all,
+he finds himself again at the same stand here, and is run up to the
+wall by an angel. God, and Scripture, and conscience will not let him
+go further; but he owns, that if the magistrate enjoyns things
+apparently evil, the subject may have liberty to remonstrate. What
+shall he do, then? for it is too glorious an enterprize to be
+abandoned at the first rebuffe. Why, he gives us a new translation of
+the Bible, and a new commentary! He saith, that tenderness of
+conscience might be allowed in a Church to be constituted, not in a
+Church constituted already. That tenderness of conscience and scandal
+are ignorance, pride, and obstinacy. He saith, the Nonconformists
+should communicate with him till they have clear evidence that it is
+evil. This is a civil way indeed of gaining the question, to perswade
+men that are unsatisfied, to be satisfied till they be dissatisfied.
+He threatens, he rails, he jeers them, if it were possible, out of
+all their consciences and honesty; and finding that will not do, he
+calls out the magistrate, tells him these men are not fit to live;
+there can be no security of government while they are in being. Bring
+out the pillories, whipping-posts, gallies (=galleys), rods, <a name="pg165" id="pg165"></a><span class="pagenum">165</span>and
+axes (which are <i>ratio ultima cleri</i>, a clergyman&rsquo;s last argument, ay
+and his first too), and pull in pieces all the Trading Corporations,
+those nests of Faction and Sedition. This is a faithful account of
+the sum and intention of all his undertaking, for which, I confess,
+he was as pick&rsquo;d a man as could have been employed or found out in a
+whole kingdome; but it is so much too hard a task for any man to
+atchieve, that no goose but would grow giddy with it.&rdquo;<a name="fnm64_1651" id="fnm64_1651"></a><a href="#fn64_1651" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>In reply to what Parker had written about the unreasonable fuss made by
+the Dissenters over the &ldquo;two or three symbolical ceremonies&rdquo; called
+sacraments, Marvell says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;They (the Nonconformists) complain that these things should be
+imposed on them with so high a penalty as want nothing of a
+sacramental nature but divine institution. And because a human
+institution is herein made of equal force to a divine institution
+therefore it is that they are aggrieved.... For without the sign of
+the Cross our Church will not receive any one in Baptism; as also
+without kneeling no man is suffered to come to the Communion.... But
+here, I say, then is their (the Nonconformists&rsquo;) main exception that
+things indifferent and that have no proper signature or significancy
+to that purpose should by command be made conditions of
+Church-communion. I have many times wished for peaceableness&rsquo; sake
+that they had a greater latitude, but if, unless they should stretch
+their consciences till they tear again, they cannot conform, what
+remedy? For I must confess that Christians have a better right and
+title to the Church and to the ordinances of God there, than the
+Author hath to his surplice.... Bishop Bramhall saith, &lsquo;I do profess
+to all the world that the transforming of indifferent opinions into
+necessary articles of faith hath been that <i>insana laurus</i> or cursed
+bay tree, the cause of all our brawling and contention.&rsquo; That which
+he saw in matter of doctrine, he would not discern in discipline....
+It is true and very piously done that our Church doth declare that
+the kneeling at the Lord&rsquo;s Supper is not enjoined for adoration of
+those elements and concerning <a name="pg166" id="pg166"></a><span class="pagenum">166</span>the other ceremonies as before. But
+the Romanists (from whom we have them and who said of old we would
+come to feed on their meat as well as eat of their porridge) do offer
+us here many a fair declaration and distinction in very weighty
+matters to which nevertheless the conscience of our Church hath not
+complyed. But in this particular matter of kneeling which came in
+first with the doctrine of transubstantiation, the Romish Church do
+reproach us with flat idolatry, in that we, not believing the real
+presence in the bread and wine, yet do pay to something or other the
+same adoration. Suppose the ancient pagans had declared to the
+primitive Christians that the offerings of some grains of incense was
+only to perfume the room&mdash;do you think the Christians would have
+palliated so far and colluded with their consciences? Therefore
+although the Church do consider herself so much as not to alter her
+mode unto the fashion of others, yet I cannot see why she ought to
+exclude those from communion whose weaker consciences cannot, for
+fear of scandal, step further.&rdquo;<a name="fnm65_1661" id="fnm65_1661"></a><a href="#fn65_1661" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>With Parker&rsquo;s thunders and threats of the authority of princes and
+states, Marvell deals more in the mood of a statesman than of a
+philosopher, more as a man of affairs than as a jurist. He deplores the
+ferocity of Parker&rsquo;s tone and that of a certain number of the clergy.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Why is it,&rdquo; he asks, &ldquo;that this kind of clergy should always be and
+have been for the most precipitate, brutish, and sanguinary counsels?
+The former Civil War cannot make them wise, nor his Majesty&rsquo;s happy
+return good-natured, but they are still for running things up unto
+the same extremes. The softness of the Universities where they have
+been bred, the gentleness of Christianity, in which they have been
+nurtured, hath but exasperated their nature, and they seem to have
+contracted no idea of wisdom but what they learnt at school&mdash;the
+pedantry of Whipping. For whether it be or no that the clergy are not
+so well fitted by education as others for political affairs I know
+not, though I should rather think they have advantage above others,
+and <a name="pg167" id="pg167"></a><span class="pagenum">167</span>even if they would but keep to their Bibles, might make the best
+Ministers of State in the world; yet it is generally observed that
+things miscarry under their government. If there be any council more
+precipitate, more violent, more extreme than other, it is theirs.
+Truly, I think the reason that God does not bless them in affairs of
+State is because he never intended them for that employment.&rdquo;<a name="fnm66_1671" id="fnm66_1671"></a><a href="#fn66_1671" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Of Archbishop Laud and Charles the First, Marvell says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;I am confident the Bishop studied to do both God and his Majesty
+good service; but alas, how utterly was he mistaken. Though so
+learned, so pious, so wise a man, he seem&rsquo;d to know nothing beyond
+Ceremonies, Armenianism, and Mainwaring. With that he begun, with
+that ended, and thereby deform&rsquo;d the whole reign of the best prince
+that ever wielded the English sceptre. For his late Majesty, being a
+prince truly pious and religious, was therefore the more inclined to
+esteem and favour the clergy. And thence, though himself of a most
+exquisite understanding, yet he could not trust it better than in
+their treatment. Whereas every man is best at his own post, and so
+the preacher in the pulpit.&rdquo;<a name="fnm67_1672" id="fnm67_1672"></a><a href="#fn67_1672" class="fnnum">2</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Kings, Marvell points out to Parker, must take wider views than parsons.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis not with them as with you. You have but one cure of souls, or
+perhaps two as being a nobleman&rsquo;s chaplain, to look after, and if you
+made conscience of discharging them as you ought, you would find you
+had work sufficient without writing your &lsquo;Ecclesiastical Policies.&rsquo;
+But they are the incumbents of whole kingdoms, and the rectorship of
+the common people, the nobility, and even of the clergy. The care I
+say of all this rests on them, so that they are fain to condescend to
+many things for peace sake and the quiet of mankind that your proud
+heart would break before it would bend to. They do not think fit to
+require any thing that is impossible, unnecessary or wanton of their
+people, but are fain to consider the very temper of the climate in
+which they live, the constitution and laws under which they have been
+formerly <a name="pg168" id="pg168"></a><span class="pagenum">168</span>bred, and upon all occasions to give them good words and
+humour them like children. They reflect upon the histories of former
+times and the present transactions to regulate themselves by in every
+circumstance.... They (Kings) do not think fit to command things
+unnecessary.&rdquo;<a name="fnm68_1681" id="fnm68_1681"></a><a href="#fn68_1681" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>These extracts, however fatal to Marvell&rsquo;s traditional reputation in the
+eighteenth century as a Puritan and a Republican, call for no apology.</p>
+
+<p>An example of Marvell&rsquo;s Interludes ought to be given. There are many to
+choose from.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;There was a worthy divine, not many years dead, who in his younger
+time, being of a facetious and unlucky humour, was commonly known by
+the name of Tom Triplet; he was brought up at Paul&rsquo;s school under a
+severe master, Dr. Gill, and from thence he went to the University.
+There he took liberty (as &rsquo;tis usual with those that are emancipated
+from School) to tel tales and make the discipline ridiculous under
+which he was bred. But not suspecting the doctor&rsquo;s intelligence,
+coming once to town he went in full school to give him a visite and
+expected no less than to get a play day for his former acquaintances.
+But instead of that he found himself hors&rsquo;d up in a trice, though he
+appeal&rsquo;d in vain to the priviledges of the University, pleaded
+<i>adultus</i> and invoked the mercy of the spectators. Nor was he let
+down till the master had planted a grove of birch in his back-side
+for the terrour and publick example of all waggs that divulge the
+secrets of Priscian and make merry with their teachers. This stuck so
+with Triplet that all his life-time he never forgave the doctor, but
+sent him every New Year&rsquo;s tide an anniversary ballad to a new tune,
+and so in his turn avenged himself of his jerking pedagogue.&rdquo;<a name="fnm69_1682" id="fnm69_1682"></a><a href="#fn69_1682" class="fnnum">2</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s game of picquet with a parson plays such a part in Parker&rsquo;s
+<i>Reproof</i> to the <i>Rehearsal Transprosed</i> that it deserves to be
+mentioned:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis not very many years ago that I used to play at picket; there
+was a gentleman of your robe, a dignitory of<a name="pg169" id="pg169"></a><span class="pagenum">169</span> Lincoln, very well
+known and remembered in the ordinaries, but being not long since
+dead, I will save his name. Now I used to play pieces, and this
+gentleman would always go half-a-crown with me; and so all the while
+he sate on my hand he very honestly &lsquo;<i>gave the sign</i>&rsquo; so that I was
+always sure to lose. I afterwards discovered it, but of all the money
+that ever I was cheated of in my life, none ever vexed me so as what
+I lost by his occasion.&rdquo;<a name="fnm70_1691" id="fnm70_1691"></a><a href="#fn70_1691" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>There is no need to pursue the controversy further. It is still
+unsettled.</p>
+
+<p>Parker&rsquo;s <i>Reproof</i>, published in 1673, is less argumentative and
+naturally enough more personal than the <i>Ecclesiastical Politie</i>. Any
+use I now make of it will be purely biographical. Let us see Andrew
+Marvell depicted by an angry parson&mdash;not in passages of mere abuse, as
+<i>e.g.</i> &ldquo;Thou dastard Craven, thou Swad, thou Mushroom, thou coward in
+heart, word and deed, thou Judas, thou Crocodile&rdquo;; for epithets such as
+these are of no use to a biographer&mdash;but in places where Marvell is at
+least made to sit for the portrait, however ill-natured.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;And if I would study revenge I could easily have requited you with
+the Novels of a certain Jack Gentleman, that was born of pure parents
+and bred among cabin-boys, and sent from school to the University and
+from the University to the Gaming Ordinaries, but the young man,
+being easily rooked by the old Gamesters, he was sent abroad to gain
+courage and experience, and beyond sea saw the Bears of Berne and the
+large race of Capons at Geneva, and a great many fine sights beside,
+and so returned home as accomplished as he went out, tries his
+fortune once more at the Ordinaries, plays too high for a gentleman
+of his private condition, and so is at length cheated of all at
+Picquet.&rdquo; ... &ldquo;And now to conclude; is it not a sad thing that a
+well-bred and fashionable gentleman that has frequented Ordinaries,
+that has worn Perukes and Muffs and Pantaloons and was once Master of
+a Watch, that has <a name="pg170" id="pg170"></a><span class="pagenum">170</span>travelled abroad and seen as many men and
+countries as the famous Vertuosi, Sorbier and Coriat, that has heard
+the City Lions roar, that has past the Alps and seen all the
+Tredescin rarities and old stones of Italy, that has sat in the
+Porphyric Chair at Rome, that can describe the methods of the
+Elections of Popes and tell stories of the tricks of Cardinals, that
+has been employed in Embassies abroad and acquainted with Intrigues
+of State at home, that has read Plays and Histories and Gazettes;
+that I say a Gentleman thus accomplished and embellished within and
+without and all over, should ever live to that unhappy dotage as at
+last to dishonour his grey hairs and his venerable age with such
+childish and impotent endeavours at wit and buffoonery.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Reproof</i>,
+pp. 270, 274-5.)<a name="fnm71_1701" id="fnm71_1701"></a><a href="#fn71_1701" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Marvell was very little over fifty years of his age at this time, nor is
+Parker&rsquo;s portrait to be regarded as truthful in any other
+particular&mdash;yet something of a man&rsquo;s character may be discovered by
+noticing the way he is abused by those who want to abuse him.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell, though no orator, or even debater, was the stuff of which
+controversialists are made. In a letter, printed in the Duke of
+Portland&rsquo;s papers, and dated May 3, 1673, he writes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;Dr. Parker will be out the next week. I have seen it&mdash;already three
+hundred and thirty pages and it will be much more. (It was five
+hundred twenty-eight pages.) I perceive by what I have read that it
+is the rudest book, one or other, <a name="pg171" id="pg171"></a><span class="pagenum">171</span>that ever was published, I may say
+since the first invention of printing. Although it handles me so
+roughly, yet I am not at all amated by it. But I must desire the
+advice of some few friends to tell me whether it will be proper for
+me and in what way to answer it. However I will for mine own private
+satisfaction forthwith draw up an answer that shall have as much of
+spirit and solidity in it as my ability will afford and the age we
+live in will endure. I am, if I may say it with reverence, drawn in I
+hope by a good Providence to intermeddle on a noble and high
+argument. But I desire that all the discourse of my friends may run
+as if no answer ought to be expected to so scurrilous a
+book.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Hist. MSS. Comm., Portland Papers</i>, iii. 337.)</p></div>
+
+<p>The title-page of the Second Part of the <i>Rehearsal Transprosed</i> is a
+curiosity:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot gaplet" style="margin-left: 15%; width: 19em;">
+<p class="little center">THE</p>
+<p class="center">REHEARSALL</p>
+<p class="center">TRANSPROS&rsquo;D:</p>
+
+
+<p class="center bt bb"><span class="smcap">The Second Part.</span></p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;">Occasioned by Two Letters: The first Printed <br />
+by a nameless Author, Intituled, A<br />
+Reproof, etc.</p>
+<p style="margin-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;">The Second Letter left for me at a Friends<br />
+House, Dated Nov. 3, 1673. Subscribed<br />
+J.&nbsp;G. and concluding with these words;<br />
+If thou darest to Print or Publish any<br />
+Lie or Libel against Doctor Parker, By<br />
+the Eternal God I will cut thy Throat.</p>
+
+<p class="center bt bb">Answered by <span class="smcap">Andrew Marvel.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">LONDON,</p>
+
+<p class="center gapbelow">Printed for Nathaniel Ponder at the Peacock<br />
+in Chancery Lane near Fleet-Street, 1673.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The <i>Second Part</i> is an exceedingly witty though too lengthy a<a name="pg172" id="pg172"></a><span class="pagenum">172</span>
+performance. Marvell&rsquo;s &ldquo;companion picture&rdquo; of Parker is full of matter,
+and of the very spirit of the times. Some of it must be given:&mdash;
+</p>
+<div class="blockquot"><p>
+&ldquo;But though he came of a good mother, he had a very ill sire. He was
+a man bred toward the Law, and betook himself, as his best practice,
+to be a sub-committee-man, or, as the stile ran, one of the Assistant
+Committee in Northamptonshire. In the rapine of that employment, and
+what he got by picking the teeth of his masters, he sustain&rsquo;d himself
+till he had raked together some little estate. And then, being a man
+for the purpose, and that had begun his fortune out of the
+sequestration of the estates of the King&rsquo;s Party, he, to perfect it
+the more, proceeded to take away their lives; not in the hot and
+military way (which diminishes always the offence), but in the cooler
+blood and sedentary execution of an High Court of Justice.
+Accordingly he was preferr&rsquo;d to be one of that number that gave
+sentence against the three Lords, Capel, Holland, and Hamilton, who
+were beheaded. By this learning in the Law he became worthy of the
+degree of a serjeant, and sometimes to go the Circuit, till for
+misdemeanor he was petition&rsquo;d against. But for a taste of his
+abilities, and the more to reingratiate himself, he printed, in the
+year 1650, a very remarkable Book, called &lsquo;The Government of the
+People of England, precedent and present the same. <i>Ad subscribentes
+confirmandum, Dubitantes informandum, Opponentes convincendum</i>; and
+underneath <i>Multa videntur quae non sunt, multa sunt quae non
+videntur</i>. Under that ingraven two hands joyn&rsquo;d, with the motto, <i>Ut
+uniamur</i>; and beneath a sheaf of arrows, with this device, <i>Vis unita
+fortior</i>; and to conclude, <i>Concordia parvae res crescunt discordia
+dilabuntur</i>.&rsquo; A most hieroglyphical title, and sufficient to have
+supplied the mantlings and atchievements of the family! By these
+parents he was sent to Oxford, with intention to breed him up to the
+ministry. There in a short time he enter&rsquo;d himself into the company
+of some young students who were used to fast and pray weekly
+together; but for their refection fed sometimes on broth, from whence
+they were commonly called Grewellers; only it was observed that he<a name="pg173" id="pg173"></a><span class="pagenum">173</span>
+was wont still to put more graves than all the rest in his porridge.
+And after that he pick&rsquo;d acquaintance not only with the brotherhood
+at Wadham Colledge, but with the sisterhood too, at another old
+Elsibeth&rsquo;s, one Elizabeth Hampton&rsquo;s, a plain devout woman, where he
+train&rsquo;d himself up in hearing their sermons and prayers, receiving
+also the Sacrament in the house, till he had gain&rsquo;d such proficience,
+that he too began to exercise in that Meeting, and was esteem&rsquo;d one
+of the preciousest young men in the University. But when thus, after
+several years&rsquo; approbation, he was even ready to have taken the
+charge, not of an &lsquo;admiring drove or heard,&rsquo; as he now calls them,
+but of a flock upon him, by great misfortune the King came in by the
+miraculous providence of God, influencing the distractions of some,
+the good affections of others, and the weariness of all towards that
+happy Restauration, after so many sufferings, to his regal crown and
+dignity. Nevertheless he broke not off yet from his former habitudes;
+and though it were now too late to obviate this inconvenience, yet he
+persisted as far as in him was&mdash;that is, by praying, caballing, and
+discoursing&mdash;to obstruct the restoring of the episcopal government,
+revenues, and authority. Insomuch that, finding himself
+discountenanced on those accounts by the then Warden of Wadham, he
+shifted colledges to Trinity, and, when there, went away without his
+degree, scrupling, forsooth, the Subscription then required. From
+thence he came to London, where he spent a considerable time in
+creeping into all corners and companies, horoscoping up and down
+concerning the duration of the Government; not considering anything
+as best, but as most lasting and most profitable. And after having
+many times cast a figure, he at last satisfyed himself that the
+Episcopal Government would endure as long as this King lived; and
+from thence forward cast about how to be admitted into the Church of
+England, and find the highway to her preferments. In order to this he
+daily enlarged, not only his conversation, but his conscience, and
+was made free of some of the town-vices; imagining, like Muleasses
+King of Tunis (for I take witness that on all occasions I treat him
+rather above his quality than otherwise), that by hiding himself<a name="pg174" id="pg174"></a><span class="pagenum">174</span>
+among the onions, he should escape being traced by his perfumes.
+Ignorant and mistaken man, that thought it necessary to part with any
+virtue to get a living; or that the Church of England did not require
+and incourage more sobriety than he could ever be guilty of; whereas
+it hath alwayes been fruitful of men who, together with obedience to
+that discipline, have lived to the envy of the Nonconformists in
+their conversation, and without such could never either have been
+preserved so long, or after so long a dissipation have ever
+recover&rsquo;d. But neither was this yet, in his opinion, sufficient; and
+therefore he resolv&rsquo;d to try a shorter path, which some few men had
+trod not unsuccessfully; that is, to print a Book; if that would not
+do, a second; if not that, a third of an higher extraction, and so
+forward, to give experiment against their former party of a keen
+stile and a ductile judgment. His first proof-piece was in the year
+1665, the <i>Tentamina Physico-Theologica</i>; a tedious transcript of his
+common-place book, wherein there is very little of his own, but the
+arrogance and the unparalleled censoriousness that he exercises over
+all other Writers. When he had cook&rsquo;d up these musty collections, he
+makes his first invitation to his &lsquo;old acquaintance&rsquo; my lord
+Archbishop of Canterbury, who had never seen before nor heard of him.
+But I must confess he furbishes-up his Grace in so glorious an
+Epistle, that had not my Lord been long since proof against the most
+spiritual flattery, the Dedication only, without ever reading the
+Book, might have serv&rsquo;d to have fix&rsquo;d him from that instant as his
+favourite. Yet all this I perceive did not his work, but his Grace
+was so unmindful, or rather so prudent, that the gentleman thought it
+necessary to spur-up again the next year with another new Book, to
+show more plainly what he would be at. This he dedicates to Doctor
+Bathurst; and to evidence from the very Epistle that he was ready to
+renounce that very education, the civility of which he is so tender
+of as to blame me for disordering it, he picks occasion to tell him:
+&lsquo;to your prevailing advice, Sir, do I owe my first rescue from the
+chains and fetters of an unhappy education.&rsquo; But in the Book, which
+he calls &lsquo;A free and impartial Censure of the Platonick Philosophy&rsquo;
+(censure &rsquo;tis sure to be, whatsoever he writes), he speaks out, and<a name="pg175" id="pg175"></a><span class="pagenum">175</span>
+demonstrates himself ready and equipp&rsquo;d to surrender not only the
+Cause, but betray his Party without making any conditions for them,
+and to appear forthwith himself in the head of the contrary interest.
+Which, supposing the dispute to be just, yet in him was so mercenary,
+that none would have descended to act his part but a divine of
+fortune. And even lawyers take themselves excused from being of
+counsel for the King himself, in a cause where they have been
+entertain&rsquo;d and instructed by their client. But so flippant he was
+and forward in this book, that in despight of all chronology, he
+could introduce Plato to inveigh against Calvin, and from the
+Platoniques he could miraculously hook-in a Discourse against the
+Nonconformists. (<i>Cens. Plat. Phil.</i>, pp. 26, 27, 28, etc.) After
+this feat of activity he was ready to leap over the moon; no scruple
+of conscience could stand in his way, and no preferment seemed too
+high for him; for about this time, I find that having taken a turn at
+Cambridge to qualifie himself, he was received within doors to be my
+Lord Archbishop&rsquo;s other chaplain, and into some degree of favour;
+which, considering the difference of their humours and ages, was
+somewhat surprizing. But whether indeed, in times of heat and
+faction, the most temperate spirits may sometimes chance to take
+delight in one that is spightful, and make some use of him; or
+whether it be that even the most grave and serious persons do for
+relaxation divert themselves willingly by whiles with a creature that
+is unlucky, inimical, and gamesome,&mdash;so it was. And thenceforward the
+nimble gentleman danced upon bell-ropes, vaulted from steeple to
+steeple, and cut capers out of one dignity to another. Having thus
+dexterously stuck his groat in Lambeth wainscot, it may easily be
+conceived he would be unwilling to lose it; and therefore he
+concern&rsquo;d himself highly, and even to jealousie, in upholding now
+that palace, which, if falling, he would out of instinct be the first
+should leave it. His Majesty about that time labouring to effect his
+constant promises of Indulgence to his people, the Author therefore
+walking with his own shadow in the evening, took a great fright lest
+all were agoe. And in this conceit being resolv&rsquo;d to make good his
+figure, and that one government should not last any longer than the<a name="pg176" id="pg176"></a><span class="pagenum">176</span>
+other, he set himself to write those dangerous Books which I have now
+to do with; wherein he first makes all that he will to be Law, and
+then whatsoever is Law to be <span class="together">Divinity.&rdquo;<a name="fnm72_1761" id="fnm72_1761"></a><a href="#fn72_1761" class="fnnum">1</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>The Second Part is not all raillery. There is much wisdom in it and a
+trace of Machiavelli:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>
+&ldquo;But because you are subject to misconstrue even true English, I will
+explain my self as distinctly as I can, and as close as possible,
+what is mine own opinion in this matter of the magistrate and
+government; that, seeing I have blamed you where I thought you
+blame-worthy, you may have as fair hold of me too, if you can find
+where to fix your accusation.</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The power of the magistrate does most certainly issue from the
+divine authority. The obedience due to that power is by divine
+command; and subjects are bound, both as men and as Christians, to
+obey the magistrate actively in all things where their duty to God
+intercedes not, and however passively, that is, either by leaving
+their countrey, or if they cannot do that (the magistrate, or the
+reason of their own occasions hindring them), then by suffering
+patiently at home, without giving the least publick disturbance. But
+the dispute concerning the magistrate&rsquo;s power ought to be
+superfluous; for that it is certainly founded upon his commission
+from God, and for the most part sufficiently fortified with all
+humane advantages. There are few soveraign princes so abridged, but
+that, if they be not contented, they may envy their own fortune. But
+the modester question (if men will needs be medling with matters
+above them) would be, how far it is advisable for a prince to exert
+and push the rigour of that power which no man can deny him; for
+princes, as they derive the right of succession from their ancestors,
+so they inherit from that ancient and illustrious extraction a
+generosity that runs in the blood above the allay of the rest of
+mankind. And being moreover at so much ease of honour and fortune,
+that they are free from the gripes of avarice and twinges of
+ambition, they are the more disposed to an universal benignity<a name="pg177" id="pg177"></a><span class="pagenum">177</span>
+toward their subjects. What prince that sees so many millions of men,
+either labouring industriously toward his revenue, or adventuring
+their lives in his service, and all of them performing his commands
+with a religious obedience, but conceives at the same time a
+relenting tenderness over them, whereof others out of the narrowness
+of their minds cannot be capable? But whoever shall cast his eye
+thorow the history of all ages, will find that nothing has alwayes
+succeeded better with princes then the clemency of government; and
+that those, on the contrary, who have taken the sanguinary course,
+have been unfortunate to themselves and the people, the consequences
+not being separable. For whether that royal and magnanimous
+gentleness spring from a propensity of their nature, or be acquired
+and confirmed by good and prudent consideration, it draws along with
+it all the effects of Policy. The wealth of a shepherd depends upon
+the multitude of his flock, the goodness of their pasture, and the
+quietness of their feeding; and princes, whose dominion over mankind
+resembles in some measure that of men over other creatures, cannot
+expect any considerable increase to themselves, if by continual
+terrour they amaze, shatter, and hare their people, driving them into
+woods, and running them upon precipices. If men do but compute how
+charming an efficacy one word, and more, one good action has from a
+superior upon those under him, it can scarce be reckon&rsquo;d how powerful
+a magick there is in a prince who shall, by a constant tenour of
+humanity in government, go on daily gaining upon the affections of
+his people. There is not any privilege so dear, but it may be
+extorted from subjects by good usage, and by keeping them alwayes up
+in their good humour. I will not say what one prince may compass
+within his own time, or what a second, though surely much may be
+done; but it is enough if a great and durable design be accomplish&rsquo;d
+in the third life; and supposing an hereditary succession of any
+three taking up still where the other left, and dealing still in that
+fair and tender way of management, it is impossible but that, even
+without reach or intention upon the prince&rsquo;s part, all should fall
+into his hand, and in so short a time the very memory or thoughts of
+any such thing as publick liberty would, as it were by consent,<a name="pg178" id="pg178"></a><span class="pagenum">178</span>
+expire and be for ever extinguish&rsquo;d. So that whatever the power of
+the magistrate be in the institution, it is much safer for them not
+to do that with the left hand which they may do with the right, nor
+by an extraordinary, what they may effect by the ordinary, way of
+government. A prince that goes to the top of his power is like him
+that shall go to the bottom of his treasure.&rdquo;<a name="fnm73_1781" id="fnm73_1781"></a><a href="#fn73_1781" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>And as for the &ldquo;common people&rdquo; he has this to say:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>
+&ldquo;Yet neither do they want the use of reason, and perhaps their
+aggregated judgment discerns most truly the errours of government,
+forasmuch as they are the first, to be sure, that smart under them.
+In this only they come to be short-sighted, that though they know the
+diseases, they understand not the remedies; and though good patients,
+they are ill physicians. The magistrate only is authorized,
+qualified, and capable to make a just and effectual Reformation, and
+especially among the Ecclesiasticks. For in all experience, as far as
+I can remember, they have never been forward to save the prince that
+labour. If they had, there would have been no Wickliffe, no Husse, no
+Luther in history. Or at least, upon so notable an emergency as the
+last, the Church of Rome would then in the Council of Trent have
+thought of rectifying itself in good earnest, that it might have
+recover&rsquo;d its ancient character; whereas it left the same divisions
+much wider, and the Christian people of the world to suffer,
+Protestants under Popish governors, Popish under Protestants, rather
+than let go any point of interested ambition.&rdquo;<a name="fnm74_1782" id="fnm74_1782"></a><a href="#fn74_1782" class="fnnum">2</a></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn62_1521" id="fn62_1521"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm62_1521">152:1</a></span> &ldquo;But the most virulent of all that writ against the
+sect was Parker, afterwards made Bishop of Oxford by King James: who was
+full of satirical vivacity and was considerably learned, but was a man
+of no judgment and of as little virtue, and as to religion rather
+impious: after he had for some years entertained the nation with several
+virulent books writ with much life, he was attacked by the liveliest
+droll of the age, who writ in a burlesque strain but with so peculiar
+and entertaining a conduct that from the King down to the tradesman his
+books were read with great pleasure, that not only humbled Parker but
+the whole party, for the author of the <i>Rehearsal Transprosed</i> had all
+the men of wit (or as the French phrase it all the laughers) on his
+side.&rdquo;&mdash;Burnet&rsquo;s <i>History of his Own Time</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn63_1522" id="fn63_1522"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm63_1522">152:2</a></span> See the dedication to <i>A Free and Impartial Censure of
+the Plutonick Philosophy</i>, by Sam Parker, A.M., Oxford 1666. Parker was
+a man of some taste, and I have in my small collection a beautifully
+bound copy of this treatise presented by the author to Seth Ward, then
+Bishop of Exeter, and afterwards of Salisbury.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn64_1651" id="fn64_1651"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm64_1651">165:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iii. pp. 145-8.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn65_1661" id="fn65_1661"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm65_1661">166:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iii. pp. 155-9.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn66_1671" id="fn66_1671"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm66_1671">167:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iii. pp. 170, 210-1.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn67_1672" id="fn67_1672"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm67_1672">167:2</a></span> Grosart, vol. iii. p. 211.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn68_1681" id="fn68_1681"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm68_1681">168:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iii. p. 171.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn69_1682" id="fn69_1682"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm69_1682">168:2</a></span> Grosart, vol. iii. p. 63.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn70_1691" id="fn70_1691"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm70_1691">169:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iii. p. 198.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn71_1701" id="fn71_1701"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm71_1701">170:1</a></span> For a still more unfriendly sketch of Andrew Marvell by
+the same spiteful hand, see Parker&rsquo;s <i>History of his Own Time</i>, a
+posthumous work, first published in Latin in 1726, and in an English
+Translation by <i>Thomas Newlin</i> in 1727. This book contains an
+interesting enumeration of the numerous conspiracies against the life
+and throne of Charles the Second during the earlier part of his reign, a
+panegyric upon Archbishop Sheldon and plentiful abuse of Andrew Marvell.
+Parker died in unhappy circumstances (see Macaulay&rsquo;s <i>History</i>, vol. ii.
+p. 205), but he left behind him a pious nonjuring son, and his grandson
+founded the famous publishing firm at Oxford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn72_1761" id="fn72_1761"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm72_1761">176:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iii. p. 284.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn73_1781" id="fn73_1781"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm73_1781">178:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iii. p. 370.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn74_1782" id="fn74_1782"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm74_1782">178:2</a></span> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 382.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg179" id="pg179"></a><span class="pagenum">179</span><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<p class="center">LAST YEARS IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Marvell&rsquo;s</span> last ten years in the House of Commons were made miserable by
+the passionate conviction that there existed in high quarters of the
+State a deep, dangerous, and well-considered plot to subvert the
+Protestant faith and to destroy by armed force Parliamentary Government
+in England. Marvell was not the victim of a delusion. Such a plot, plan,
+or purpose undoubtedly existed, though, as it failed, it is now easy to
+consider the alarm it created to have been exaggerated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marvell was, of all public men then living, the one most deeply imbued
+with the spirit of our free constitution. Its checks and balances jumped
+with his humour. His nature was without any taint of fanaticism, nor was
+he anything of the doctrinaire. He was neither a Richard Baxter nor a
+John Locke. He had none of the pure Erastianism of Selden, who tells us
+in his inimitable, cold-blooded way that &ldquo;a King is a King men have made
+for their own sakes, for quietness&rsquo; sake.&rdquo; &ldquo;Just as in a family one man
+is appointed to buy the meat,&rdquo; and that &ldquo;there is no such thing as
+spiritual jurisdiction; all is civil, the Church&rsquo;s is the same with the
+Lord Mayor&rsquo;s. The Pope he challenges jurisdiction over all; the Bishops
+they pretend to it as well as he; the Presbyterians they would have it
+to themselves, but over whom is all this, the poor layman&rdquo; (see Selden&rsquo;s
+<i>Table Talk</i>).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This may be excellent good sense but it does not represent Marvell&rsquo;s<a name="pg180" id="pg180"></a><span class="pagenum">180</span>
+way of looking at things. He thought more nobly of both church and king.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Marvell&rsquo;s last book, his famous pamphlet &ldquo;<i>An Account of the Growth
+of Popery and Arbitrary Government in England,&rdquo; printed at Amsterdam and
+recommended to the reading of all English Protestants</i>, 1678, which made
+a prodigious stir and (it is sad to think) paved the way for the &ldquo;Popish
+Plot,&rdquo; Marvell sets forth his view of our constitution in language as
+lofty as it is precise. I know no passage in any of our institutional
+writers of equal merit.
+</p>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>
+&ldquo;For if first we consider the State, the kings of England rule not
+upon the same terms with those of our neighbour nations, who, having
+by force or by address usurped that due share which their people had
+in the government, are now for some ages in the possession of an
+arbitrary power (which yet no prescription can make legal) and
+exercise it over their persons and estates in a most tyrannical
+manner. But here the subjects retain their proportion in the
+Legislature; the very meanest commoner of England is represented in
+Parliament, and is a party to those laws by which the Prince is sworn
+to govern himself and his people. No money is to be levied but by the
+common consent. No man is for life, limb, goods, or liberty, at the
+Sovereign&rsquo;s discretion: but we have the same right (modestly
+understood) in our propriety that the prince hath in his regality:
+and in all cases where the King is concerned, we have our just remedy
+as against any private person of the neighbourhood, in the Courts of
+Westminster Hall or in the High Court of Parliament. His very
+Prerogative is no more than what the Law has determined. His Broad
+Seal, which is the legitimate stamp of his pleasure, yet is no longer
+currant, than upon the trial it is found to be legal. He cannot
+commit any person by his particular warrant. He cannot himself be
+witness in any cause: the balance of publick justice being so
+delicate, that not the hand only but even the breath of the Prince
+would turn the scale. Nothing is left to the King&rsquo;s will, but all is<a name="pg181" id="pg181"></a><span class="pagenum">181</span>
+subjected to his authority: by which means it follows that he can do
+no wrong, nor can he receive wrong; and a King of England keeping to
+these measures, may without arrogance, be said to remain the onely
+intelligent Ruler over a rational People. In recompense therefore and
+acknowledgment of so good a Government under his influence, his
+person is most sacred and inviolable; and whatsoever excesses are
+committed against so high a trust, nothing of them is imputed to him,
+as being free from the necessity or temptation; but his ministers
+only are accountable for all, and must answer it at their perils. He
+hath a vast revenue constantly arising from the hearth of the
+Householder, the sweat of the Labourer, the rent of the Farmer, the
+industry of the Merchant, and consequently out of the estate of the
+Gentleman: a large competence to defray the ordinary expense of the
+Crown, and maintain its lustre. And if any extraordinary occasion
+happen, or be but with any probable decency pretended, the whole Land
+at whatsoever season of the year does yield him a plentiful harvest.
+So forward are his people&rsquo;s affections to give even to superfluity,
+that a forainer (or Englishman that hath been long abroad) would
+think they could neither will nor chuse, but that the asking of a
+supply were a meer formality, it is so readily granted. He is the
+fountain of all honours, and has moreover the distribution of so many
+profitable offices of the Household, of the Revenue, of State, of
+Law, of Religion, of the Navy and (since his present Majestie&rsquo;s time)
+of the Army, that it seems as if the Nation could scarce furnish
+honest men enow to supply all those imployments. So that the Kings of
+England are in nothing inferiour to other Princes, save in being more
+abridged from injuring their own subjects: but have as large a field
+as any of external felicity, wherein to exercise their own virtue,
+and so reward and incourage it in others. In short, there is nothing
+that comes nearer in Government to the Divine Perfection, than where
+the Monarch, as with us, injoys a capacity of doing all the good
+imaginable to mankind, under a disability to all that is
+evil.&rdquo;<a name="fnm75_1811" id="fnm75_1811"></a><a href="#fn75_1811" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+This was the constitution which Marvell, whose means of information<a name="pg182" id="pg182"></a><span class="pagenum">182</span>
+were great and whose curiosity was insatiable, believed to be in danger.
+No wonder he was agitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The politics in which Marvell was immersed during his last years are
+difficult to unravel and still more difficult to illuminate, for they
+had their dim origin in the secret thoughts and wavering purposes of the
+king.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Charles the Second, like many another Englishman guiltless of Stuart
+blood in his veins, was mainly governed by his dislikes, his pleasures,
+and his financial necessities. To suppose, as some hasty moralisers have
+done, that Charles cared for nothing but his women is to misread his
+character. He had many qualifications to be the chief magistrate of a
+nation of shopkeepers. He was ever alive to the supreme importance of
+English trade upon the high seas. His thoughts were often turned in the
+direction of the Indies, east and west. He took a constant, though not
+always an honest, interest in the navy. He hated Holland for more
+reasons than one, but among these reasons was his hatred of England&rsquo;s
+most formidable and malicious trade competitor. He also disliked her
+arid and ugly Protestantism, and blood being thicker than water, he
+hated Holland for what he considered her shabby treatment of his
+youthful nephew, whose ultimate destiny was happily hidden from
+Whitehall. Among Charles&rsquo;s many dislikes must be included the Anglican
+bishops, who had prevented him from keeping his word, and foiled his
+purpose of a wide toleration. He envied his brother of France the wide
+culture, the literature and art of Catholicism. He regretted the
+Reformation, and would have been best pleased to see the English Church
+in communion with Rome and in possession of &ldquo;Anglican liberties&rdquo; akin<a name="pg183" id="pg183"></a><span class="pagenum">183</span>
+to those enjoyed by the Gallican Church. Charles was also jealous of
+Louis the Fourteenth, and in many moods had no mind to play perpetually
+a second fiddle. He longed for a navy to sweep the seas, for an army
+strong enough to keep his Parliament in check, and for liberty for
+himself and for all those of his subjects who were so minded, to hear
+Mass on Sundays. Behind, and above, and always surrounding these desires
+and dislikes, was an ever-present, ever-pressing need for money. Like a
+royal Becky Sharp, Charles might have found it easy to be a patriotic
+king on five millions a year.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king was his own Foreign Minister, and being what he was, and swayed
+by the considerations I have imperfectly described, his foreign policy
+was necessarily tortuous and perplexing. As Ranke says, &ldquo;Charles was
+capable of proposing offensive alliances to the three neighbouring
+powers, to the Dutch against France, to the French against Spain and
+Holland, to the Spaniards against France to the detriment of Holland,
+but in these propositions two fundamental views always recur&mdash;demands
+for money, and assurance of world-wide commerce for England.&rdquo;<a name="fnm76_1831" id="fnm76_1831"></a><a href="#fn76_1831" class="fnnum">1</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Charles first allowed Sir William Temple, a cool, prudent man, to form,
+in a famous five days&rsquo; negotiation, the defensive treaty with Holland,
+which, after Sweden had joined it, became known as the Triple Alliance
+(1668). This alliance had for its objects mutual promises between the
+contracting parties to come to each other&rsquo;s assistance by sea and land
+if attacked by any power (France being here intended), to force Spain to
+make peace with France on the terms already offered, and to compel
+France to keep those terms when agreed to by Spain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Triple Alliance was not only very popular in England, but was good<a name="pg184" id="pg184"></a><span class="pagenum">184</span>
+diplomacy, for it was quite within the range of practical politics that
+France and Holland might have combined against England; nor could it
+easily be maintained that the alliance was hostile to France, as it
+provided that Spain should be forced to accept the terms France had
+already proposed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What wrecked the Triple Alliance and prepared the way for the secret
+Treaty of Dover (1670), was the impossibility of settling those
+religious difficulties which, despite the Act of Uniformity, were more
+rampant than ever. The king wanted to patch up peace, and to secure some
+working plan of comprehension or composure, under cover of which the
+Catholic religion should be tolerated and Presbyterianism formally
+recognised. But, king though he was, he could not get his way. The
+Church and the House of Commons, full as the latter was of his pimps and
+pensioners, were as obstinate as mules in this matter of toleration.
+They would neither favour Papists nor Dissenters, protested against
+Indulgences as unconstitutional, and clamoured for a rigorous
+administration of that penal legislation against Nonconformists which
+they had purchased with so many and such lavish supplies. As a matter of
+fact, these penal laws were very fitfully enforced. In London they were
+often totally disregarded, and we read of congregations numbering two
+thousand openly attending Presbyterian services. The Lord Mayor for the
+time being took his orders direct from the king.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What was Charles to do? After the fall of Clarendon, the king&rsquo;s
+favourite privy councillors, called the &ldquo;Cabal,&rdquo; because the initial
+letters of their names formed a word which for some time previously had
+been in common use, represent only too faithfully the confusion and<a name="pg185" id="pg185"></a><span class="pagenum">185</span>
+corruption of the times. Clifford was a zealous Roman, Arlington a
+cautious one, Buckingham a free-thinker and mocker, friendly to France
+and on good terms with the more advanced English sectaries; Ashley made
+no pretence to be a Christian, but favoured philosophic toleration;
+whilst Lauderdale, one of the most learned ministers that ever sat in
+council (so Ranke says<a name="fnm77_1851" id="fnm77_1851"></a><a href="#fn77_1851" class="fnnum">1</a>), was, as a matter of profession, a
+Presbyterian, but in reality a man wholly and slavishly devoted to the
+king&rsquo;s interests, and prepared at any moment to pour into the kingdom
+soldiers from Scotland to purge or suppress all Free Institutions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Irritated, disgusted, thwarted, and annoyed, the king, acting, it well
+may be, under the influence of his accomplished sister, the beautiful
+and ill-fated Duchess of Orleans, struck up, to use Marvell&rsquo;s own words,
+&ldquo;an invisible league with France.&rdquo; The negotiations were either by word
+of mouth or by letters which have been burnt. Dr. Lingard in his history
+gives an interesting account of this mysterious transaction. Two things
+are apparent as the objects of the Treaty of Dover. The Dutch Republic
+is to be destroyed, and the cause of Catholicism in England is to be
+promoted and maintained. It was this latter object that seems most to
+have excited the hopes of the Duchess of Orleans. A woman&rsquo;s hand is
+traceable throughout. Charles promised to profess himself openly a Roman
+Catholic at the time that should appear to be most expedient, and
+subsequently to that profession he was to join with Louis in making war
+upon the Dutch Republic. At the date of this bewildering agreement, it
+was high treason by statute even to <i>say</i> that Charles was a Roman<a name="pg186" id="pg186"></a><span class="pagenum">186</span>
+Catholic. In case the king&rsquo;s public conversion should lead to
+disturbances, Louis promised an &ldquo;aid&rdquo; of two millions of <i>livres</i> and an
+armed force of six thousand men. He also agreed to pay the whole cost of
+the Dutch War <i>on land</i>, and to contribute thirty men-of-war to the
+English fleet. Holland once crushed, England&rsquo;s share of the plunder was
+to be Walcheren, Sluys, and Cadsand. A remarkable conversion! It is
+difficult to suppose that either Charles or Louis were quite serious
+over this part of the business. Yet there it is. The Catholic provisions
+of the secret Treaty of Dover were only known to Clifford, whose soul
+was fired by them, and to Arlington, who did not share the confident
+hopes of his co-religionist. Clifford thought there were thousands of
+Englishmen &ldquo;of light and leading&rdquo; among the English Catholics who would
+be both willing and able to assume the burdens of the State and to rally
+round a Catholic king. Arlington thought otherwise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king&rsquo;s public conversion never took place. No hint was given of any
+such impending event. Parliament met on the 24th of October 1670, and
+after hearing a good deal about the Triple Alliance and voting large
+sums of money, was prorogued in April 1671, and did not meet again till
+February 1673.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To pick a quarrel with the Dutch was never difficult. Marvell tells us
+how it was done. &ldquo;A sorry yacht, but bearing the English Jack, in August
+1671 sails into the midst of the Dutch fleet, singles out the Admiral,
+shooting twice as they call it, sharp upon him. Which must sure have
+appeared as ridiculous and unnatural as for a lark to dare the hobby.&rdquo;
+The Dutch admiral asking &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; was told &ldquo;because he and his whole fleet
+had failed to strike sail to his small craft.&rdquo; The Dutch commander then<a name="pg187" id="pg187"></a><span class="pagenum">187</span>
+&ldquo;civilly excused it as a matter of the first instance, and in which he
+could have no instruction, therefore proper to be referred to their
+masters, and so they parted. The yacht having thus acquitted itself,
+returned fraught with the quarrel she was sent for.&rdquo;<a name="fnm78_1871" id="fnm78_1871"></a><a href="#fn78_1871" class="fnnum">1</a> Surinam was
+a perpetual <i>casus belli</i>. Some offence against the law of nations was
+always happening there. A third matter, very full of gunpowder, was made
+great use of by the promoters of the war already agreed upon. A picture
+had been hung at Dort representing De Witt sailing up the Medway very
+much in the manner described in Marvell&rsquo;s poem. Medals also had been
+struck and distributed in commemoration of the same event. War was
+declared against Holland by England and France in March 1672. The
+Declaration of War was preceded by the Declaration of Indulgence,
+whereby, wrote Marvell, &ldquo;all the penal laws against Papists for which
+former Parliaments had given so many supplies, and against
+Nonconformists for which this Parliament had paid more largely, were at
+one instant suspended in order to defraud the nation of all that
+religion which they had so dearly purchased, and for which they ought at
+least, the bargain being broke, to have been reimbursed.&rdquo;<a name="fnm79_1872" id="fnm79_1872"></a><a href="#fn79_1872" class="fnnum">2</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The unconstitutional suspension of bad laws put lovers of freedom in a
+predicament. Marvell was what he calls a &ldquo;composure,&rdquo; that is a
+&ldquo;comprehension,&rdquo; man. In the <i>Growth of Popery</i> he sorrowfully admits
+that it is the gravest reproach of human wisdom that no man seems able
+or willing to find out the due temper of Government in divine matters.</p>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>
+<a name="pg188" id="pg188"></a><span class="pagenum">188</span>
+&ldquo;Insomuch that it is no great adventure to say, that the world was
+better ordered under the ancient monarchies and commonwealths, that
+the number of virtuous men was then greater, and that the Christians
+found fairer quarter under those than among themselves, nor hath
+there any advantage accrued unto mankind from that most perfect and
+practical model of humane society, except the speculation of a better
+way to future happiness, concerning which the very guides disagree,
+and of those few that follow, it will suffer no man to pass without
+paying at their turnpikes.&rdquo; (Vol. iv. p. 280.)</p></div>
+
+
+<p>
+The French Alliance made the war, though with Holland, unpopular.
+Writers had to be hired to defend it. France was supposed to look on
+with much composure as her two maritime competitors battered each
+other&rsquo;s fleets. At sea the honours were divided between the Dutch and
+the English. On land Louis had it all his own way. Besides, rumours got
+abroad of an uncomfortable plot to restore Popery. Jesuits seemed to
+abound. Roman Catholics asserted themselves, the laws being suspended.
+An army was collected at Blackheath. The Treasury was closed. Charles
+had been badly bled by the goldsmiths or bankers, who had charged him
+&pound;12 per cent.; but in commercial centres Acts of Bankruptcy are seldom
+popular, and though the bankers were compelled to be content with &pound;6 per
+cent., the closing of the Treasury brought ruin into many homes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Parliament met in February 1673, its temper was bad. It would have
+nothing to do with the Declaration of Indulgence, and though the king
+had told them, in the round set terms he could so well command, that he
+was resolved to stick to his declaration, he had to give way and to see
+the House busy itself with a Test Bill that drove all Roman Catholics,
+from the Duke of York (who had &ldquo;gone over&rdquo; in the spring of 1672)<a name="pg189" id="pg189"></a><span class="pagenum">189</span>
+downwards, out of office. The only effect of Charles&rsquo;s policy was to
+mitigate the hostility of the House of Commons to Protestant Dissenters,
+and to drive it to concentrate its jealousy upon the Catholics. Any
+lurking idea of the king declaring himself a Romanist had to be
+abandoned. His hatred of Parliament increased. He lost all sense of
+shame, and frankly became a pensioner of France. In 1676 he concluded a
+second secret treaty, whereby both Louis and himself bound themselves to
+enter into no engagements with other powers without consent, and in case
+of rebellion within their realms to come to each other&rsquo;s assistance.
+Louis agreed to make Charles an annual allowance of a hundred thousand,
+afterwards increased to two hundred thousand <i>livres</i>. This money was
+largely spent in bribing the House of Commons. The French ambassador was
+allowed an extra grant of a thousand crowns a month to keep a table for
+hungry legislators.<a name="fnm80_1891" id="fnm80_1891"></a><a href="#fn80_1891" class="fnnum">1</a> Did not Marvell do well to be angry?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some of Marvell&rsquo;s letters belonging to this gloomy period are full of
+interest.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot gaplet">
+<p class="center">
+<i>To William Ramsden, Esq.</i></p>
+
+<p class="toright">&ldquo;<i>Nov. 28, 1670.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Dear Will</span>,&mdash;I need not tell you I am always thinking of
+you. All that has happened, which is remarkable, since I wrote, is as
+follows: The Lieutenancy of London, chiefly Sterlin the Mayor, and
+Sir J. Robinson, alarmed the King continually with the Conventicles
+there. So the King sent them strict and large powers. The Duke of
+York every Sunday would come over thence to look to the peace. To say
+truth, they met in numerous open assemblys, without any dread of
+government. But the train bands in the city, and <a name="pg190" id="pg190"></a><span class="pagenum">190</span>soldiery in
+Southwark and suburbs, harassed and abused them continually; they
+wounded many, and killed some Quakers especially, while they took all
+patiently. Hence arose two things of great remark. The Lieutenancy,
+having got orders to their mind, pick out Hays and Jekill, the
+innocentist of the whole party, to show their power on. They offer
+them illegal bonds of five thousand pounds a man, which if they would
+not enter into, they must go to prison. So they were committed, and
+at last (but it is a very long story) got free. Some friends engaged
+for them. The other was the tryal of Pen and Mead, quakers, at the
+Old Baily. The jury not finding them guilty, as the Recorder and
+Mayor would have had them, they were kept without meat or drink some
+three days, till almost starved, but would not alter their verdict;
+so fined and imprisoned. There is a book out which relates all the
+passages, which were very pertinent, of the prisoners, but
+prodigiously barbarous by the Mayor and Recorder. The Recorder, among
+the rest, commended the Spanish Inquisition, saying it would never be
+well till we had something like it. The King had occasion for sixty
+thousand pounds. Sent to borrow it of the city. Sterlin, Robinson,
+and all the rest of that faction, were at it many a week, and could
+not get above ten thousand. The fanatics under persecution, served
+his Majesty. The other party, both in court and city, would have
+prevented it. But the King protested mony would be acceptable. So the
+King patched up, out of the Chamber, and other ways, twenty thousand
+pounds. The fanatics, of all sorts, forty thousand. The King, though
+against many of his council, would have the Parliament sit this
+twenty-fourth of October. He, and the Keeper spoke of nothing but to
+have mony. Some one million three hundred thousand pounds, to pay off
+the debts at interest; and eight hundred thousand for a brave navy
+next Spring. Both speeches forbid to be printed, for the King said
+very little, and the Keeper, it was thought, too much in his politic
+simple discourse of foreign affairs. The House was thin and
+obsequious. They voted at first they would supply him according to
+his occasions, <i>Nemine</i>, as it was remarked, <i>contradicente</i>; but few
+affirmatives, rather a silence as of men ashamed and unwilling. Sir
+R. Howard,<a name="pg191" id="pg191"></a><span class="pagenum">191</span> Seymour, Temple, Car, and Hollis, openly took leave of
+their former party, and fell to head the King&rsquo;s busyness. There is
+like to be a terrible Act of Conventicles. The Prince of Orange here
+is much made of. The King owes him a great deal of mony. The Paper is
+full.&mdash;I am yours,&rdquo; etc.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The trial of William Penn and William Mead at the Old Bailey for a
+tumultuous assembly, written by themselves, may be read in the <i>State
+Trials</i>, vol. vi. The trial was the occasion of Penn&rsquo;s famous remark to
+the Recorder of London, who, driven wellnigh distracted by Penn&rsquo;s
+dialectics, exclaimed, &ldquo;If I should suffer you to ask questions till
+to-morrow morning you would never be the wiser.&rdquo; &ldquo;That,&rdquo; replied Penn,
+&ldquo;would be according as the answers are.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot gaplet">
+<p class="center">
+<i>To William Ramsden, Esq.</i></p>
+
+<p class="toright">(Undated.)
+</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Dear Will</span>,&mdash;The Parliament are still proceeding, but not
+much advanced on their eight hundred thousand pounds Bill on money at
+interest, offices, and lands; and the Excise Bills valued at four
+hundred thousand pounds a year. The first for the navy, which scarce
+will be set out. The last to be for paying one million three hundred
+thousand pounds, which the King owes at interest, and perhaps may be
+given for four, five, or six years, as the House chances to be in
+humour. But an accident happened which liked to have spoiled all: Sir
+John Coventry having moved for an imposition on the playhouses, Sir
+John Berkenhead, to excuse them, sayed they had been of great service
+to the King. Upon which Sir John Coventry desired that gentleman to
+explain whether he meant the men or the women players. Hereupon it is
+imagined, that, the House adjourning from Tuesday before till
+Thursday after Christmas-day, on the very Tuesday night of the
+adjournment, twenty-five of the Duke of Monmouth&rsquo;s troop, and some
+few foot, layed in wait from ten at night till two in the morning, by
+Suffolk-street, and as he returned <a name="pg192" id="pg192"></a><span class="pagenum">192</span>from the Cock, where he supped,
+to his own house, they threw him down, and with a knife cut off
+almost the end of his nose; but company coming made them fearful to
+finish it, so they marched off. Sir Thomas Sands, lieutenant of the
+troop, commanded the party; and O&rsquo;Brian, the Earl of Inchequin&rsquo;s son,
+was a principal actor. The Court hereupon sometimes thought to carry
+it with a high hand, and question Sir John for his words, and
+maintain the action. Sometimes they flagged in their counsels.
+However, the King commanded Sir Thomas Clarges, and Sir W. Pultney,
+to release Wroth and Lake, who were two of the actors, and taken. But
+the night before the House met they surrendered them again. The House
+being but sullen the next day, the Court did not oppose adjourning
+for some days longer till it was filled. Then the House went upon
+Coventry&rsquo;s busyness, and voted that they would go upon nothing else
+whatever till they had passed a Bill, as they did, for Sands,
+O&rsquo;Brian, Parry, and Reeves, to come in by the sixteenth of February,
+or else be condemned, and never to be pardoned, but by an express Act
+of Parliament, and their names therein inserted, for fear of being
+pardoned in some general act of grace. Farther of all such actions,
+for the future on any man, felony, without clergy; and who shall
+otherwise strike or wound any parliament-man, during his attendance,
+or going or coming, imprisonment for a year, treble damages, and
+incapacity. This Bill having in some few days been dispatched to the
+Lords, the House has since gone on in grand Committee upon the first
+eight hundred thousand pounds Bill, but are not yet half way. But now
+the Lords, instead of the sixteenth of February, put twenty-five days
+after the King&rsquo;s royal assent, and that registered in their journal;
+they disagree in several other things, but adhere in that first,
+which is most material. Adhere, in this place, signifies not to be
+retracted, and excludes a free conference. So that this week the
+Houses will be in danger of splitting, without much wisdom or force.
+For considering that Sir Thomas Sands was the very person sent to
+Clarges and Pultney, that O&rsquo;Brian was concealed in the Duke of
+Monmouth&rsquo;s lodgings, that Wroth and Lake were bayled at the sessions
+by order from Mr. Attorney, and that all persons and <a name="pg193" id="pg193"></a><span class="pagenum">193</span>things are
+perfectly discovered, that act will not be passed without great
+consequence. George&rsquo;s father obliges you much in Tangier. Prince
+Edgar is dying. The Court is at the highest pitch of want and luxury,
+and the people full of discontent, Remember me to yourselves.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="center gaplet">
+<i>To William Ramsden, Esq.</i></p>
+
+<p class="toright">(Undated.)
+</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Dear Will</span>,&mdash;I think I have not told you that, on our Bill
+of Subsidy, the Lord Lucas made a fervent bold speech against our
+prodigality in giving, and the weak looseness of the government, the
+King being present; and the Lord Clare another to persuade the King
+that he ought not to be present. But all this had little
+encouragement, not being seconded. Copys going about everywhere, one
+of them was brought into the Lords&rsquo; House, and Lord Lucas was asked
+whether it was his. He sayd part was, and part was not. Thereupon
+they took advantage, and sayed it was a libel even against Lucas
+himself. On this they voted it a libel, and to be burned by the
+hangman. Which was done; but the sport was, the hangman burned the
+Lords&rsquo; order with it. I take the last quarrel betwixt us and the
+Lords to be as the ashes of that speech. Doubtless you have heard,
+before this time, how Monmouth, Albemarle, Dunbane, and seven or
+eight gentlemen, fought with the watch, and killed a poor bedle. They
+have all got their pardons, for Monmouth&rsquo;s sake; but it is an act of
+great scandal. The King of France is at Dunkirke. We have no fleet
+out, though we gave the Subsidy Bill, valued at eight hundred
+thousand pounds, for that purpose. I believe, indeed, he will attempt
+nothing on us, but leave us to dy a natural death. For indeed never
+had poor nation so many complicated, mortal, incurable, diseases. You
+know the Dutchess of York is dead. All gave her for a Papist. I think
+it will be my lot to go on an honest fair employment into Ireland.
+Some have smelt the court of Rome at that distance. There I hope I
+shall be out of the smell of our.... &mdash;Yours,&rdquo; etc.</p>
+
+<p class="center gaplet"><a name="pg194" id="pg194"></a><span class="pagenum">194</span><i>To a Friend in Persia.</i></p>
+
+<p class="toright">&ldquo;<i>August 9, 1671.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>,&mdash;I have yours of the 12th of October 1670, which
+was in all respects most welcome to me, except when I considered that
+to write it you endured some pain, for you say your hand is not yet
+recovered. If I could say any thing to you towards the advancement of
+your affairs, I could, with a better conscience, admit you should
+spend so much of your precious time, as you do, upon me. But you know
+how far those things are out of my road, tho&rsquo;, otherwise, most
+desirous in all things to be serviceable to you. God&rsquo;s good
+providence, which hath through so dangerous a disease and so many
+difficultys preserved and restored you, will, I doubt not, conduct
+you to a prosperous issue, and the perfection of your so laudable
+undertakings. And, under that, your own good genius, in conjunction
+with your brother here, will, I hope, though at the distance of
+England and Persia, in good time operate extraordinary effects; for
+the magnetism of two souls, rightly touched, works beyond all natural
+limits, and it would be indeed too unequal, if good nature should not
+have at least as large a sphere of activity, as malice, envy, and
+detraction, which are, it seems, part of the returns from Gombroon
+and Surat. All I can say to you in that matter is, that you must,
+seeing it will not be better, stand upon your guard; for in this
+world a good cause signifys little, unless it be as well defended. A
+man may starve at the feast of good conscience. My fencing master in
+Spain, after he had instructed me all he could, told me, I remember,
+there was yet one secret, against which there was no defence, and
+that was, to give the first blow. I know your maxim, <i>Qui festinat
+ditescere, non erit innocens</i>. Indeed while you preserve that mind,
+you will have the blessing both of God and man. In general I
+perceive, and am very glad of it, that by your good management, your
+friends here get ground, and the flint in your adversarys&rsquo; hearts
+begins to be mollifyed. Now after my usual method, leaving to others
+what relates to busyness, I address myself, which is all I am good
+for, to be your gazettier. I am sorry to perceive that mine by the
+Armenian miscarryed. Tho&rsquo;<a name="pg195" id="pg195"></a><span class="pagenum">195</span> there was nothing material in it, the
+thoughts of friends are too valuable to fall into the hands of a
+stranger. I wrote the last February at large, and wish it a better
+passage. In this perhaps I may interfere something with that, chusing
+rather to repeat than omit. The King having, upon pretence of the
+great preparations of his neighbours, demanded three hundred thousand
+pounds for his navy (though in conclusion he hath not set out any)
+and that the Parliament should pay his debts, which the ministers
+would never particularize to the House of Commons, our House gave
+several bills. You see how far things were stretched, though beyond
+reason, there being no satisfaction how those debts were contracted,
+and all men foreseeing that what was given would not be applyed to
+discharge the debts, which I hear are at this day risen to four
+millions, but diverted as formerly. Nevertheless such was the number
+of the constant courtiers increased by the apostate patriots, who
+were bought off, for that turn, some at six, others ten, one at
+fifteen thousand pounds in money, besides what offices, lands, and
+reversions, to others, that it is a mercy they gave not away the
+whole land, and liberty, of England. The Earl of Clare made a very
+bold and rational harangue, the King being present, against the
+King&rsquo;s sitting among the Lords, contrary to former precedents, during
+their debates; but he was not seconded. The King had this April
+prorogued, upon the Houses cavilling, and their harsh conferences
+concerning some bills, the Parliament from this April till the 16th
+of April 1672. Sir John Coventry&rsquo;s Bill against Cutting Noses passed,
+and O&rsquo;Brian and Sir Thomas Sands, not appearing at the Old Baily by
+the time limited, stand attainted and outlawed, without possibility
+of pardon. The Duke of Buckingham is again one hundred and forty
+thousand pounds in debt, and, by this prorogation, his creditors have
+time to tear all his lands in pieces. The House of Commons has run
+almost to the end of their line, and are grown extreme chargeable to
+the King, and odious to the people. Lord St. John, Marquess of
+Westminster&rsquo;s son, one of the House of Commons, Sir Robert Howard,
+Sir John Benet, Lord Arlington&rsquo;s brother, Sir William Bucknoll, the
+brewer, all of the House, in fellowship with some <a name="pg196" id="pg196"></a><span class="pagenum">196</span>others of the
+city, have farmed the old customs, with the new act of Imposition
+upon Wines, and the Wine Licenses, at six hundred thousand pounds a
+year, to begin this Michaelmas. You may be sure they have covenants
+not to be losers. They have signed and sealed ten thousand pounds a
+year more to the Duchess of Cleveland, who has likewise near ten
+thousand pounds a year out of the new farm of the country excise of
+Beer and Ale, five thousand pounds a year out of the Post Office,
+and, they say, the reversion of all the King&rsquo;s leases, the reversion
+of places all in the Custom House, the green wax, and indeed, what
+not? All promotions, spiritual and temporal, pass under her
+cognizance. Buckingham runs out of all with the Lady Shrewsbury, by
+whom he believes he had a son, to whom the King stood godfather; it
+dyed, young Earl of Coventry, and was buryed in the sepulchre of his
+fathers. The King of France made a warlike progresse this summer
+through his conquests of Flanders, but kept the peace there, and
+detains still the Dutchy of Lorain, and has stired up the German
+Princes against the free towns. The Duke of Brunswick has taken the
+town of Brunswick; and now the Bishop of Cullen is attacking the city
+of Colen. We truckle to France in all things, to the prejudice of our
+honour. Barclay is still Lieutenant of Ireland; but he was forced to
+come over to pay ten thousand pounds rent to his Landlady Cleveland.
+My Lord Angier, who bought of Sir George Carteret for eleven thousand
+pounds, the Vice-treasurership of Ireland, worth five thousand pounds
+a year, is, betwixt knavery and foolery, turned out. Dutchess of York
+and Prince Edgar, dead. None left but daughters. One Blud, outlawed
+for a plot to take Dublin Castle, and who seized on the Duke of
+Ormond here last year, and might have killed him, a most bold, and
+yet sober fellow, some months ago seized the crown and sceptre in the
+Tower, took them away, and if he had killed the keeper, might have
+carried them clear off. He, being taken, astonished the King and
+Court, with the generosity, and wisdom, of his answers. He, and all
+his accomplices, for his sake, are discharged by the King, to the
+wonder of all.&mdash;Yours,&rdquo; etc.</p>
+
+<p class="center gaplet">
+<a name="pg197" id="pg197"></a><span class="pagenum">197</span><i>To William Ramsden, Esq.</i></p>
+
+<p class="toright">&ldquo;<i>June 1672.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Dear Will</span>,&mdash;Affairs begin to alter, and men talk of a peace
+with Holland, and taking them into our protection; and it is my
+opinion it will be before Michaelmas, for some reasons, not fit to
+write. We cannot have a peace with France and Holland both. The Dutch
+are now brought very low; but Amsterdam, and some other provinces,
+are resolved to stand out till the last. De-wit is stabbed, and dead
+of his wounds. It was at twelve a clock at night, the 11th of this
+month, as he came from the council at the Hague. Four men wounded him
+with their swords. But his own letter next morning to the States says
+nothing appeared mortal. The whole Province of Utrecht is yielding
+up. No man can conceive the condition of the State of Holland, in
+this juncture, unless he can at the same time conceive an earthquake,
+an hurricane, and the deluge. France is potent and subtle. Here have
+been several fires of late. One at St. Catherine&rsquo;s, which burned
+about six score or two hundred houses, and some seven or eight ships.
+Another in Bishopsgate-street. Another in Crichet Fryars. Another in
+Southwark; and some elsewhere. You may be sure all the old talk is
+hereupon revived. There was the other day, though not on this
+occasion, a severe proclamation issued out against all who shall vent
+false news, or discourse ill concerning affairs of state. So that in
+writing to you I run the risque of making a breech in the
+commandment.&mdash;Yours,&rdquo; etc.</p></div>
+
+<p>The following letter deals with another matter of human concern than
+politics, for it seeks to condole with a father who has lost an only
+son.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot gaplet">
+<p class="center">
+<i>To Sir John Trott</i></p>
+<p class="toright">(Undated.)
+</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Honoured Sir</span>,&mdash;I have not that vanity to believe, if you
+weigh your late loss by the common ballance, that any thing I can
+write to you should lighten your resentments: nor if you measure
+things by the rules of christianity, do I think it needful to comfort
+you in your duty and your son&rsquo;s happyness.<a name="pg198" id="pg198"></a><span class="pagenum">198</span> Only having a great
+esteem and affection for you, and the grateful memory of him that is
+departed being still green and fresh upon my spirit, I cannot forbear
+to inquire, how you have stood the second shock at your sad meeting
+of friends in the country. I know that the very sight of those who
+have been witnesses of our better fortune, doth but serve to
+reinforce a calamity. I know the contagion of grief and infection of
+tears, and especially when it runs in a blood. And I myself could
+sooner imitate than blame those innocent relentings of nature, so
+that they spring from tenderness only and humanity, not from an
+implacable sorrow. The tears of a family may flow together like those
+little drops that compact the rainbow, and if they be placed with the
+same advantage towards Heaven as those are to the sun, they too have
+their splendour; and like that bow, while they unbend into seasonable
+showers, yet they promise, that there shall not be a second flood.
+But the dissoluteness of grief, the prodigality of sorrow, is neither
+to be indulged in a man&rsquo;s self, nor complyed with in others. If that
+were allowable in these cases, Eli&rsquo;s was the readyest way and highest
+compliment of mourning, who fell back from his seat and broke his
+neck. But neither does that precedent hold. For though he had been
+Chancellor, and in effect King of Israel, for so many years (and such
+men value, as themselves, their losses at an higher rate than
+others), yet, when he heard that Israel was overcome, that his two
+sons Hophni and Phineas were slain in one day, and saw himself so
+without hope of issue, and which imbittered it farther, without
+succession to the government, yet he fell not till the news that the
+ark of God was taken. I pray God that we may never have the same
+parallel perfected in our publick concernments. Then we shall need
+all the strength of grace and nature to support us. But on a private
+loss, and sweetened with so many circumstances as yours, to be
+impatient, to be uncomfortable would be to dispute with God. Though
+an only son be inestimable, yet it is like Jonah&rsquo;s sin, to be angry
+at God for the withering of his shadow. Zipporah, though the delay
+had almost cost her husband his life, yet, when he did but circumcise
+her son, in a womanish peevishness reproached Moses as a bloody
+husband. But if God take the son himself, but spare the father, shall
+we say that He is a bloody God?<a name="pg199" id="pg199"></a><span class="pagenum">199</span> He that gave His own son, may He not
+take ours? It is pride that makes a rebel; and nothing but the
+over-weening of ourselves and our own things that raises us against
+Divine Providence. Whereas Abraham&rsquo;s obedience was better than
+sacrifice. And if God please to accept both, it is indeed a farther
+tryal, but a greater honour. I could say over upon this beaten
+occasion most of those lessons of morality and religion which have
+been so often repeated, and are as soon forgotten. We abound with
+precept, but we want examples. You, sir, that have all these things
+in your memory, and the clearness of whose judgment is not to be
+obscured by any greater interposition, should be exemplary to others
+in your own practice. &rsquo;Tis true, it is an hard task to learn and
+teach at the same time. And, where yourselves are the experiment, it
+is as if a man should dissect his own body, and read the anatomy
+lecture. But I will not heighten the difficulty while I advise the
+attempt. Only, as in difficult things, you would do well to make use
+of all that may strengthen and assist you; the word of God; the
+society of good men; and the books of the ancients; there is one way
+more, which is by diversion, business, and activity; which are also
+necessary to be used in their season. But I myself, who live to so
+little purpose, can have little authority or ability to advise you in
+it, who are a person that are and may be much more so, generally
+useful. All that I have been able to do since, hath been to write
+this sorry Elogy of your son, which if it be as good as I could wish,
+it is as yet no indecent employment. However, I know you will take
+any thing kindly from your very affectionate friend, and most humble
+servant.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Milton died on the 8th of November 1674. Marvell remained among the
+poet&rsquo;s intimate friends until the end, and intended to write his life.
+It is idle to mourn the loss of an unwritten book, but Marvell&rsquo;s life of
+Milton would have been a treasure.<a name="fnm81_1991" id="fnm81_1991"></a><a href="#fn81_1991" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p><a name="pg200" id="pg200"></a><span class="pagenum">200</span>When Parliament met on the 13th of April 1675, members found in their
+places a mock-speech from the throne. They <i>knew</i> the hand that had
+penned it. It was a daring production and ran as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot gaplet"><p class="center"><i>His Majesty&rsquo;s Most Gracious Speech to Both Houses of Parliament</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">My Lords and Gentlemen</span>,&mdash;I told you at our last meeting,
+the winter was the fittest time for business, and truly I thought so,
+till my Lord Treasurer assured me the spring was the best season for
+sallads and subsidies. I hope therefore that April will not prove so
+unnatural a month, as not to afford some kind showers on my parched
+exchequer, which gapes for want of them. Some of you, perhaps, will
+think it dangerous to make me too rich; but I do not fear it; for I
+promise you faithfully, whatever you give me I will always want; and
+although in other things my word may be thought a slender authority,
+yet in that, you may rely on me, I will never break it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">My Lords and Gentlemen</span>,&mdash;I can bear my straits with
+patience; but my Lord Treasurer does protest to me, that the revenue,
+as it now stands, will not serve him and me too. One of us must pinch
+for it, if you do not help me. I must speak freely to you: I am under
+bad circumstances, for besides my harlots in service, my reformado
+concubines lye heavy upon me. I have a passable good estate, I
+confess, but, God&rsquo;s-fish, I have a great charge upon &rsquo;t. Here&rsquo;s my
+Lord Treasurer can tell, that all the money designed for next
+summer&rsquo;s guards must, of necessity, be applyed to the next year&rsquo;s
+cradles and swadling-cloths. What shall we do for ships then? I hint
+this only to you, it being your busyness, not mine. I know, by
+experience, I can live without ships. I lived ten years abroad
+without, and never had my health better in my life; but how you will
+be without, I leave to yourselves to judge, and therefore hint this
+only by the bye: I do not insist upon it. There&rsquo;s another thing I
+must press more earnestly, and that is this:&mdash;It seems a good part of
+my revenue will expire <a name="pg201" id="pg201"></a><span class="pagenum">201</span>in two or three years, except you will be
+pleased to continue it. I have to say for &rsquo;t, pray, why did you give
+me so much as you have done, unless you resolve to give on as fast as
+I call for it? The nation hates you already for giving so much, and
+I&rsquo;ll hate you too, if you do not give me more. So that if you stick
+not to me, you must not have a friend in England. On the other hand,
+if you will give me the revenue I desire, I shall be able to do those
+things for your religion and liberty, that I have had long in my
+thoughts, but cannot effect them without a little more money to carry
+me through. Therefore look to &rsquo;t and take notice that if you do not
+make me rich enough to undo you, it shall lie at your doors. For my
+part I wash my hands on &rsquo;t. But that I may gain your good opinion,
+the best way is to acquaint you what I have done to deserve it, out
+of my royal care for your religion and your property. For the first,
+my proclamation is a true picture of my mind, He that cannot, as in a
+glass, see my zeal for the Church of England, does not deserve any
+farther satisfaction, for I declare him wilful, abominable, and not
+good. Some may, perhaps, be startled, and cry, how comes this sudden
+change? To which I answer, I am a changling, and that&rsquo;s sufficient, I
+think. But to convince men farther, that I mean what I say, there are
+these arguments:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;First, I tell you so, and you know I never break my word.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Secondly, My Lord Treasurer says so, and he never told a lye in
+his life.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thirdly, My Lord Lauderdale will undertake it for me; and I
+should be loath, by any act of mine, he should forfeit the
+credit he has with you.</p></div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you desire more instances of my zeal, I have them for you. For
+example, I have converted my natural sons from Popery; and I may say,
+without vanity, it was my own work, so much the more peculiarly mine
+than the begetting them. &rsquo;Twould do one&rsquo;s heart good to hear how
+prettily George can read already in the Psalter. They are all fine
+children, God bless &rsquo;em, and so like me in their understandings. But,
+as I was saying, I have, to please you, given a pension to your
+favourite my Lord Lauderdale; not so much that I thought he wanted<a name="pg202" id="pg202"></a><span class="pagenum">202</span>
+it, as that you would take it kindly. I have made Carwell dutchess of
+Portsmouth, and marryed her sister to the Earl of Pembroke. I have, at
+my brother&rsquo;s request, sent my Lord Inchequin into Barbary, to settle
+the Protestant Religion among the Moors, and an English Interest at
+Tangier. I have made Crew Bishop of Durham, and, at the first word of
+my Lady Portsmouth, Prideaux Bishop of Chichester. I know not, for my
+part, what factious men would have; but this I am sure of, my
+predecessors never did anything like this, to gain the good will of
+their subjects. So much for your religion, and now for your property.
+My behaviour to the Bankers is a publick instance; and the proceedings
+between Mrs. Hyde and Mrs. Sutton for private ones, are such
+convincing evidences, that it will be needless to say any more to &rsquo;t.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must now acquaint you, that, by my Lord Treasurer&rsquo;s advice, I have
+made a considerable retrenchment upon my expenses in candles and
+charcoal, and do not intend to stop there, but will, with your help,
+look into the late embezzlements of my dripping-pans and
+kitchen-stuff; of which, by the way, upon my conscience, neither my
+Lord Treasurer nor my Lord Lauderdale are guilty. I tell you my
+opinion; but if you should find them dabling in that busyness, I tell
+you plainly, I leave &rsquo;em to you; for, I would have the world to know,
+I am not a man to be cheated.</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My Lords and Gentlemen, I desire you to believe me as you have found
+me; and I do solemnly promise you, that whatsoever you give me shall
+be specially managed with the same conduct, trust, sincerity, and
+prudence, that I have ever practised, since my happy
+restoration.&rdquo;<a name="fnm82_2021" id="fnm82_2021"></a><a href="#fn82_2021" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Mock King&rsquo;s Speeches have often been made, but this is the first, and I
+think still the best of them all.</p>
+
+<p>There was no shaking off religion from the debates of those days. A new
+Oaths Bill suddenly appeared in the House of Lords, where it gave rise
+to one of the greatest debates that assembly has ever witnessed,
+<a name="pg203" id="pg203"></a><span class="pagenum">203</span>lasting seventeen days. The bishops were baited by the peers with great
+spirit, and the report of the proceedings may still be read with gusto.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell, in his <i>Growth of Popery</i>, thus describes what happened:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;While these things were upon the anvil, the 10th of November was
+come for the Parliament&rsquo;s sitting, but that was put off till the 13th
+of April 1675. And in the meantime, which fell out most opportune for
+the conspirators, these counsels were matured, and something further
+to be contrived, that was yet wanting; the Parliament accordingly
+meeting, and the House of Lords, as well as that of the Commons,
+being in deliberation of several wholesome bills, such as the present
+state of the nation required, the great design came out in a bill
+unexpectedly offered one morning in the House of Lords, whereby all
+such as injoyed any beneficial office, or imployment, ecclesiastical,
+civil, or military, to which was added privy counsellors, justices of
+the peace, and members of Parliament, were under a penalty to take
+the oath, and make the declaration, and abhorrence, insuring:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&lsquo;I A.&nbsp;B. do declare, that it is not lawful upon any pretence
+whatoever to take up arms against the King, and that I do
+abhor that traiterous position of taking arms by his authority
+against his person, or against those that are commissioned by
+him in pursuance of such commission. And I do swear, that I
+will not at any time indeavour the alteration of the government
+either in Church or State. So help me God.&rsquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This same oath had been brought into the House of Commons in the plague
+year at Oxford, to have been imposed upon the nation, but there, by the
+assistance of those very same persons that now introduce it, &rsquo;twas
+thrown out, for fear of a general infection of the vitals of this
+kingdom; and though it passed then in a particular bill, known by the
+name of the Five Mile Act, because it only concerned the non-conformist
+preachers, yet even in that, it was thoroughly opposed by the late Earl
+of Southampton, whose judgement might well have been reckoned for the
+<a name="pg204" id="pg204"></a><span class="pagenum">204</span>standard of prudence and loyalty.&rdquo;<a name="fnm83_2041" id="fnm83_2041"></a><a href="#fn83_2041" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>Of the proposed oath Marvell says, &ldquo;No Conveyancer could ever in more
+compendious or binding terms have drawn a dissettlement of the whole
+birthright of England.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This was no mere legal quibbling.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;These things are no niceties, or remote considerations (though in
+making of laws, and which must come afterwards under construction of
+judges, <i>durante bene placito</i>, all cases are to be put and imagined)
+but there being an act in Scotland for 20,000 men to march into
+England upon call, and so great a body of English soldiery in France,
+within summons, besides what foreigners may be obliged by treaty to
+furnish, and it being so fresh in memory, what sort of persons had
+lately been in commission among us, to which add the many books then
+printed by license, writ, some by men of the black, one of the green
+cloth, wherein the absoluteness of the English monarchy is against
+all law asserted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All these considerations put together were sufficient to make any
+honest and well advised man to conceive indeed, that upon the passing
+of this oath and declaration, the whole sum of affairs depended.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It grew therefore to the greatest contest, that has perhaps ever
+been in Parliament, wherein those Lords, that were against this oath,
+being assured of their own loyalty and merit, stood up now for the
+English liberties with the same genius, virtue, and courage, that
+their noble ancestors had formerly defended the great Charter of
+England, but with so much greater commendation, in that they had here
+a fairer field and a more civil way of decision; they fought it out
+under all the disadvantages imaginable; they were overlaid by
+numbers; the noise of the House, like the wind, was against them, and
+if not the sun, the fireside was always in their faces; nor being so
+few, could they, as their adversaries, withdraw to refresh themselves
+in a whole day&rsquo;s ingagement: yet never was there a clearer
+demonstration how dull a thing is humane <a name="pg205" id="pg205"></a><span class="pagenum">205</span>eloquence, and greatness
+how little, when the bright truth discovers all things in their
+proper colours and dimensions, and shining, shoots its beams thorow
+all their fallacies. It might be injurious, where all of them did so
+excellently well, to attribute more to any one of those Lords than
+another, unless because the Duke of Buckingham and the Earl of
+Shaftesbury, have been the more reproached for this brave action, it
+be requisite by a double proportion of praise to set them two on
+equal terms with the rest of their companions in honour. The
+particular relation in this debate, which lasted many days, with
+great eagerness on both sides, and the reasons but on one, was in the
+next Session burnt by order of the Lords, but the sparks of it will
+eternally fly in their adversaries&rsquo; faces.&rdquo;<a name="fnm84_2051" id="fnm84_2051"></a><a href="#fn84_2051" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>In a letter to his constituents, dated April 22, 1675, Marvell was
+content to say: &ldquo;The Lords sate the whole day yesterday till ten at
+night without rising (and the King all the while but of our addresses
+present) upon their Bill of Test in both houses and are not yet come to
+the question of committing it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>After prolonged discussion the Oath Bill was sent to the Commons, where
+doubtless it must have passed, had not a furious privilege quarrel over
+Sir John Fagg&rsquo;s case made prorogation in June almost a necessity. In
+October Parliament met again, and at once resolved itself into a
+Committee upon Religion to prevent the growth of Popery. This time the
+king made almost an end of the Parliament by a prorogation which lasted
+from November 1675 until February 1677&mdash;a period of fifteen months.</p>
+
+<p>On the re-assembling of Parliament the Duke of Buckingham fathered the
+argument much used during the long recess, that a prorogation extending
+beyond twelve months was in construction of law a dissolution.</p>
+
+<p>For the expression of this opinion and the refusal to <a name="pg206" id="pg206"></a><span class="pagenum">206</span>recant it the
+Duke of Buckingham and three other lords were ordered to the Tower, the
+king being greatly angered by the duke&rsquo;s request that his cook might be
+allowed to wait on him. On this incident Marvell remarks: &ldquo;Thus a
+prorogation without precedent was to be warranted by an imprisonment
+without example. A sad instance! Whereby the dignity of Parliament and
+especially of the House of Peers did at present much suffer and may
+probably more for the future, <i>for nothing but Parliament can destroy
+Parliament</i>. If a House shall once be felon of itself and stop its own
+breath, taking away that liberty of speech which the King verbally, and
+of course, allows them (as now they had done in both houses) to what
+purpose is it coming thither?&rdquo;<a name="fnm85_2061" id="fnm85_2061"></a><a href="#fn85_2061" class="fnnum">1</a></p>
+
+<p>The character of this House of Commons did not improve with age.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell writes in the <i>Growth of Popery</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;In matters of money they seem at first difficult, but having been
+discoursed with in private, they are set right, and begin to
+understand it better themselves, and to convert their brethren: for
+they are all of them to be bought and sold, only their number makes
+them cheaper, and each of them doth so overvalue himself, that
+sometimes they outstand or let slip their own market.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It is not to be imagined, how small things, in this case, even
+members of great estates will stoop at, and most of them will do as
+much for hopes as others for fruition, but if their patience be tired
+out, they grow at last mutinous, and revolt to the country, till some
+better occasion offer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Among these are some men of the best understanding were they of
+equal integrity, who affect to ingross all business, to be able to
+quash any good motion by parliamentary skill, unless themselves be
+the authors, and to be the leading men of the House, and for their
+natural lives to continue so. But <a name="pg207" id="pg207"></a><span class="pagenum">207</span>these are men that have been once
+fooled, most of them, and discovered, and slighted at Court, so that
+till some turn of State shall let them in their adversaries&rsquo; place,
+in the mean time they look sullen, make big motions, and contrive
+specious bills for the subject, yet only wait the opportunity to be
+the instruments of the same counsels which they oppose in others.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There is a third part still remaining, but as contrary in themselves
+as light and darkness; those are either the worst, or the best of
+men; the first are most profligate persons, they have neither
+estates, consciences, nor good manners, yet are therefore picked out
+as the necessary men, and whose votes will go furthest; the charges
+of their elections are defrayed, whatever they amount to, tables are
+kept for them at Whitehall, and through Westminster, that they may be
+ready at hand, within call of a question: all of them are received
+into pension, and know their pay-day, which they never fail of:
+insomuch that a great officer was pleased to say, &lsquo;That they came
+about him like so many jack-daws for cheese at the end of every
+Session.&rsquo; If they be not in Parliament, they must be in prison, and
+as they are protected themselves, by privilege, so they sell their
+protections to others, to the obstruction so many years together of
+the law of the land, and the publick justice; for these it is, that
+the long and frequent adjournments are calculated, but all whether
+the court, or the monopolizers of the country party, or those that
+profane the title of old cavaliers, do equally, though upon differing
+reasons, like death apprehend a dissolution. But notwithstanding
+these, there is an handful of salt, a sparkle of soul, that hath
+hitherto preserved this gross body from putrefaction, some gentlemen
+that are constant, invariable, indeed Englishmen; such as are above
+hopes, or fears, or dissimulation, that can neither flatter, nor
+betray their king or country: but being conscious of their own
+loyalty and integrity, proceed throw good and bad report, to acquit
+themselves in their duty to God, their prince, and their nation;
+although so small a scantling in number, that men can scarce reckon
+of them more than a <i>quorum</i>; insomuch that it is less difficult to
+conceive how fire was first brought to light in the world than how
+any good thing could ever be produced out of an House of Com<a name="pg208" id="pg208"></a><span class="pagenum">208</span>mons so
+constituted, unless as that is imagined to have come from the rushing
+of trees, or battering of rocks together, by accident, so these, by
+their clashing with one another, have struck out an useful effect
+from so unlikely causes. But whatsoever casual good hath been wrought
+at any time by the assimilation of ambitious, factious and
+disappointed members, to the little, but solid, and unbiassed party,
+the more frequent ill effects, and consequences of so unequal a
+mixture, so long continued, are demonstrable and apparent. For while
+scarce any man comes thither with respect to the publick service, but
+in design to make and raise his fortune, it is not to be expressed,
+the debauchery, and lewdness, which, upon occasion of election to
+Parliaments, are now grown habitual thorow the nation. So that the
+vice, and the expence, are risen to such a prodigious height, that
+few sober men can indure to stand to be chosen on such conditions.
+From whence also arise feuds, and perpetual animosities, over most of
+the counties and corporations, while gentlemen of worth, spirit, and
+ancient estates and dependances, see themselves overpowered in their
+own neighbourhood by the drunkness and bribery, of their competitors.
+But if nevertheless any worthy person chance to carry the election,
+some mercenary or corrupt sheriff makes a double return, and so the
+cause is handed to the Committee of elections, who ask no better, but
+are ready to adopt his adversary into the House if he be not
+legitimate. And if the gentleman agrieved seek his remedy against the
+sheriff in Westminster-Hall, and the proofs be so palpable, that the
+King&rsquo;s Bench cannot invent how to do him injustice, yet the major
+part of the twelve judges shall upon better consideration vacate the
+sheriff&rsquo;s fine and reverse the judgement; but those of them that dare
+dissent from their brethren are in danger to be turned off the bench
+without any cause assigned. While men therefore care not thus how
+they get into the House of Commons, neither can it be expected that
+they should make any conscience of what they do there, but they are
+only intent how to reimburse themselves (if their elections were at
+their own charge) or how to bargain their votes for a place or a
+pension. They list themselves straightways into some Court faction,
+<a name="pg209" id="pg209"></a><span class="pagenum">209</span>and it is as well-known among them, to what Lord each of them
+retain, as when formerly they wore coats and badges. By this long
+haunting so together, they are grown too so familiar among
+themselves, that all reverence of their own Assembly is lost, that
+they live together not like Parliament men, but like so many good
+fellows met together in a publick house to make merry. And which is
+yet worse, by being so thoroughly acquainted, they understand their
+number and party, so that the use of so publick a counsel is
+frustrated, there is no place for deliberation, no perswading by
+reason, but they can see one another&rsquo;s votes through both throats and
+cravats before they hear them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where the cards are so well known, they are only fit for a cheat,
+and no fair gamester but would throw them under the table.&rdquo;<a name="fnm86_2091" id="fnm86_2091"></a><a href="#fn86_2091" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>It is a melancholy picture.</p>
+
+<p>Here, perhaps, may be best inserted the story about the proffered bribe.
+The story is entitled to small credit, but as helping to swell and
+maintain a tradition concerning an historical character about whom
+little is positively known, it can hardly escape mention in any
+biography of Marvell. A pamphlet printed in Ireland (1754) supplies an
+easy flowing version of the tale.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;The borough of Hull, in the reign of Charles II., chose Andrew
+Marvell, a young gentleman of little or no fortune, and maintained
+him in London for the service of the public. His understanding,
+integrity, and spirit, were dreadful to the then infamous
+administration. Persuaded that he would be theirs for properly
+asking, they sent his old school-fellow, the Lord Treasurer Danby, to
+renew acquaintance with him in his garret. At parting, the Lord
+Treasurer, out of <i>pure affection</i>, slipped into his hand an order
+upon the treasury for &pound;1000, and then went to his chariot. Marvell,
+looking at the paper, calls after the Treasurer, &lsquo;My Lord, I request
+another moment.&rsquo; They went up again to the garret, and Jack, the
+servant boy, was called. &lsquo;Jack, child, what had I <a name="pg210" id="pg210"></a><span class="pagenum">210</span>for dinner
+yesterday?&rsquo; &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t you remember, sir? you had the little shoulder of
+mutton that you ordered me to bring from a woman in the market.&rsquo;
+&lsquo;Very right, child.&rsquo; &lsquo;What have I for dinner to-day?&rsquo; &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t you
+know, sir, that you bid me lay by the <i>blade-bone to broil</i>.&rsquo; &lsquo;&rsquo;Tis
+so, very right, child, go away.&rsquo; &lsquo;My Lord, do you hear that? Andrew
+Marvell&rsquo;s dinner is provided; there&rsquo;s your piece of paper. I want it
+not. I knew the sort of kindness you intended. I live here to serve
+my constituents: the ministry may seek men for their purpose; <i>I am
+not one</i>.&rsquo;&rdquo;<a name="fnm87_2101" id="fnm87_2101"></a><a href="#fn87_2101" class="fnnum">1</a></p></div>
+
+<p>One more letter remains to be quoted:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot gaplet">
+<p class="center">
+<i>To William Ramsden, Esq.</i></p>
+
+<p class="toright">&ldquo;<i>June 10, 1678.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Dear Will</span>,&mdash;I have time to tell you thus much of publick
+matters. The patience of the Scots, under their oppressions, is not
+to be paralleled in any history. They still continue their
+extraordinary and numerous, but peaceable, field conventicles. One
+Mr. Welch is their arch-minister, and the last letter I saw tells,
+people were going forty miles to hear him. There came out, about
+Christmas last, here, a large book concerning the growth of popery
+and arbitrary government. There have been great rewards offered in
+private, and considerable in the Gazette, to any one who could inform
+of the author or printer, but not yet discovered. Three or four
+printed books since have described, as near as it was proper to go,
+the man being a Member of Parliament, Mr. Marvell, to have been the
+author; but if he had, surely he should not have escaped being
+questioned in Parliament or some other place. My good wishes attend
+you.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>The last letter Andrew Marvell wrote to his constituents is dated July
+6, 1678. The member for Hull died in August 1678. The Parliament in
+which he had sat continuously for eighteen years was at last dissolved
+on the 30th of December in the year of his death.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn75_1811" id="fn75_1811"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm75_1811">181:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iv. p. 248.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn76_1831" id="fn76_1831"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm76_1831">183:1</a></span> Ranke&rsquo;s <i>History of England</i>, vol. iii. p. 471.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn77_1851" id="fn77_1851"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm77_1851">185:1</a></span> Ranke, vol. iii. p. 520.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn78_1871" id="fn78_1871"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm78_1871">187:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iv. (<i>Growth of Popery</i>), p. 275.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn79_1872" id="fn79_1872"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm79_1872">187:2</a></span> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 279.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn80_1891" id="fn80_1891"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm80_1891">189:1</a></span> See note to Dr. Airy&rsquo;s edition of Burnet&rsquo;s <i>History</i>,
+vol. ii. p. 73.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn81_1991" id="fn81_1991"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm81_1991">199:1</a></span> Marvell&rsquo;s commendatory verses on &ldquo;Mr. Milton&rsquo;s Paradise
+Lost&rdquo; (so entitled in the volume of 1681) were first printed in the
+Second Edition (1674) of Milton&rsquo;s great poem. Marvell did not agree with
+Dryden in thinking that <i>Paradise Lost</i> would be improved by rhyme, and
+says so in these verses.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn82_2021" id="fn82_2021"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm82_2021">202:1</a></span> Printed in Captain Thompson&rsquo;s edition, vol. i. p. 432.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn83_2041" id="fn83_2041"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm83_2041">204:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iv. p. 304.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn84_2051" id="fn84_2051"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm84_2051">205:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iv. p. 308.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn85_2061" id="fn85_2061"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm85_2061">206:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iv. p. 322.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn86_2091" id="fn86_2091"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm86_2091">209:1</a></span> Grosart, vol. iv. p. 327.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn87_2101" id="fn87_2101"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm87_2101">210:1</a></span> This story is first told in a balder form by Cooke in
+his edition of 1726. It may be read as Cooke tells it in the <i>Dictionary
+of National Biography</i>, xxxvi., p. 329. There was probably some
+foundation for it.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg211" id="pg211"></a><span class="pagenum">211</span><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<p class="center">FINAL SATIRES AND DEATH</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Marvell</span> was no orator or debater, and though a member of Parliament for
+nearly eighteen years, but rarely opened his mouth in the House of
+Commons. His old enemy, Samuel Parker, whilst venting his posthumous
+spite upon the author of the <i>Rehearsal Transprosed</i>, would have us
+believe &ldquo;that our Poet could not speak without a sound basting:
+whereupon having frequently undergone this discipline, he learnt at
+length to hold his tongue.&rdquo; There is no good reason for believing the
+Bishop of Oxford, but it is the fact that, however taught, Marvell had
+learnt to hold his tongue. His longest reported speech will be found in
+the <i>Parliamentary History</i>, vol. iv. p. 855.<a name="fnm88_2111" id="fnm88_2111"></a><a href="#fn88_2111" class="fnnum">1</a> When we remember
+how frequently in those days Marvell&rsquo;s pet subjects were under fierce
+discussion, we must recognise how fixed was his habit of
+self-repression.</p>
+
+<p>On one occasion only are we enabled to catch a glimpse of Marvell
+&ldquo;before the Speaker.&rdquo; It was in March 1677, and is thus reported in the
+<i>Parliamentary History</i>, though no mention of the incident is made in
+the Journals of the House:&mdash;</p>
+<p><a name="pg212" id="pg212"></a><span class="pagenum">212</span></p>
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;<i>Debate on Mr. Andrew Marvell&rsquo;s striking Sir Philip Harcourt, March
+29.</i>&mdash;Mr. Marvell, coming up the house to his place, stumbling at Sir
+Philip Harcourt&rsquo;s foot, in recovering himself, seemed to give Sir
+Philip a box on the ear. The Speaker acquainting the house &lsquo;That he
+saw a box on the ear given, and it was his duty to inform the house
+of it,&rsquo; this debate ensued.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. <i>Marvell</i>. What passed was through great acquaintance and
+familiarity betwixt us. He neither gave him an affront, nor intended
+him any. But the Speaker cast a severe reflection upon him yesterday,
+when he was out of the house, and he hopes that, as the Speaker keeps
+us in order, he will keep himself in order for the future.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir <i>John Ernly</i>. What the Speaker said yesterday was in Marvell&rsquo;s
+vindication. If these two gentlemen are friends already, he would not
+make them friends, and would let the matter go no further.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir <i>Job. Charlton</i> is sorry a thing of this nature has happened,
+and no more sense of it. You in the Chair, and a stroke struck!
+Marvell deserves for his reflection on you, Mr. Speaker, to be called
+in question. You cannot do right to the house unless you question it;
+and moves to have Marvell sent to the Tower.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The <i>Speaker</i>. I saw a blow on one side, and a stroke on the other.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir <i>Philip Harcourt</i>. Marvell had some kind of a stumble, and mine
+was only a thrust; and the thing was accidental.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir <i>H. Goodrick</i>. The persons have declared the thing to be
+accidental, but if done in jest, not fit to be done here. He believes
+it an accident, and hopes the house thinks so too.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Sec. <i>Williamson</i>. This does appear, that the action for that
+time was in some heat. He cannot excuse Marvell who made a very
+severe reflection on the Speaker, and since it is so enquired,
+whether you have done your duty, he would have Marvell withdraw, that
+you may consider of it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Col. <i>Sandys</i>. Marvell has given you trouble, and instead of
+excusing himself, reflects upon the Speaker: a strange confidence, if
+not an impudence!</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg213" id="pg213"></a><span class="pagenum">213</span>&ldquo;Mr. <i>Marvell</i>. Has so great a respect to the privilege, order, and
+decency, of the house, that he is content to be a sacrifice for it.
+As to the casualty that happened, he saw a seat empty, and going to
+sit in it, his friend put him by, in a jocular manner, and what he
+did was of the same nature. So much familiarity has ever been between
+them, that there was no heat in the thing. He is sorry he gave an
+offence to the house. He seldom speaks to the house, and if he commit
+an error, in the manner of his speech, being not so well tuned, he
+hopes it is not an offence. Whether out or in the house, he has a
+respect to the Speaker. But he has been informed that the Speaker
+resumed something he had said, with reflection. He did not think fit
+to complain of Mr. Seymour to Mr. Speaker. He believes that is not
+reflective. He desires to comport himself with all respect to the
+house. This passage with Harcourt was a perfect casualty, and if you
+think fit, he will withdraw, and sacrifice himself to the censure of
+the house.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir <i>Henry Capel</i>. The blow given Harcourt was with his hat; the
+Speaker cast his eye upon both of them, and both respected him. He
+would not aggravate the thing. Marvell submits, and he would have you
+leave the thing as it is.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Sir Robert Holmes</i> saw the whole action. Marvell flung about three
+or four times with his hat, and then gave Harcourt a box on the ear.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir <i>Henry Capel</i> desires, now that his honour is concerned, that
+Holmes may explain, whether he saw not Marvell with his hat only give
+Harcourt the stroke &lsquo;at that time.&rsquo; Possibly &lsquo;at another time&rsquo; it
+might be.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The <i>Speaker</i>. Both Holmes and Capel are in the right. But Marvell
+struck Harcourt so home, that his fist, as well as his hat, hit him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir <i>R. Howard</i> hopes the house will not have Harcourt say he
+received a blow, when he has not. He thinks what has been said by
+them both sufficient.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. <i>Garraway</i> hopes, that by the debate we shall not make the thing
+greater than it is. Would have them both reprimanded for it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Sec. <i>Williamson</i> submits the honour of the house to the house.
+Would have them made friends, and give that <a name="pg214" id="pg214"></a><span class="pagenum">214</span>necessary assurance to
+the house, and he, for his part, remains satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir <i>Tho. Meres</i>. By our long sitting together, we lose, by our
+familiarity and acquaintance, the decencies of the house. He has seen
+500 in the house, and people very orderly; not so much as to read a
+letter, or set up a foot. One could scarce know anybody in the house,
+but him that spoke. He would have the Speaker declare that order
+ought to be kept; but as to that gentleman (Marvell) to rest
+satisfied.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>The general impression left upon the mind is that of a friendly-familiar
+but choleric gentleman, full of likes and dislikes, readier with his
+tongue in the lobby than with &ldquo;set&rdquo; speeches in the Chamber. A solitary
+politician with a biting pen. Satirists must not complain if they have
+enemies.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s vein of satire was never worked out, and the political poems
+of his last decade are fuller than ever of a savage humour. How he kept
+his ears is a repeated wonder. He is said to have been on terms of
+intimate friendship with Prince Rupert, and it is a steady tradition
+that the king was one of his amused readers. It is hard to believe that
+even Charles the Second could have seen any humour, good or bad, in such
+a couplet:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The poor Priapus King, led by the nose,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Looks as a thing set up to scare the crows.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Nor can the following verses have been read with much pleasure, either
+at Whitehall or in a punt whilst fishing at Windsor. Their occasion was
+the setting up in the stocks-market in the City of London of a statue of
+the king by Sir Robert Viner, a city knight, to whom Charles was very
+heavily in debt. Sir Robert, having a frugal mind, had acquired a statue
+of John Sobieski trampling on the Turk, which, judiciously altered, was
+made to pass muster so as to represent the Pensioner <a name="pg215" id="pg215"></a><span class="pagenum">215</span>of Louis the
+Fourteenth and the Vendor of Dunkirk trampling on Oliver Cromwell.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;As cities that to the fierce conqueror yield<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Do at their own charges their citadels build;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So Sir Robert advanced the King&rsquo;s statue in token<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of bankers defeated, and Lombard Street broken.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Some thought it a knightly and generous deed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Obliging the city with a King and a steed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When with honour he might from his word have gone back;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He that vows in a calm is absolved by a wrack.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But now it appears, from the first to the last,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To be a revenge and a malice forecast;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Upon the King&rsquo;s birthday to set up a thing<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That shows him a monkey much more than a King.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">When each one that passes finds fault with the horse,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet all do affirm that the King is much worse;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And some by the likeness Sir Robert suspect<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That he did for the King his own statue erect.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Thus to see him disfigured&mdash;the herb-women chid,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who up on their panniers more gracefully rid;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And so loose in his seat&mdash;that all persons agree,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">E&rsquo;en Sir William Peak<a name="fnm89_2151" id="fnm89_2151"></a><a href="#fn89_2151" class="fnnum">1</a> sits much firmer than he.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But Sir Robert affirms that we do him much wrong;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">&rsquo;Tis the &rsquo;graver at work, to reform him, so long;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But, alas! he will never arrive at his end,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For it is such a King as no chisel can mend.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But with all his errors restore us our King,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If ever you hope in December for spring;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For though all the world cannot show such another,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet we&rsquo;d rather have him than his bigoted brother.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Of a more exalted vein of satire the following extract may serve as an
+example:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5"><a name="pg216" id="pg216"></a><span class="pagenum">216</span>BRITANNIA AND RALEIGH</span>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: .75em;">&ldquo;<i>Brit.</i></span> Ah! Raleigh, when thou didst thy breath resign<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">To trembling James, would I had quitted mine.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Cubs didst thou call them? Hadst thou seen this brood<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Of earls, and dukes, and princes of the blood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">No more of Scottish race thou would&rsquo;st complain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Those would be blessings in this spurious reign.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Awake, arise from thy long blessed repose,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Once more with me partake of mortal woes!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 1.25em;"><i>Ral.</i></span> What mighty power has forced me from my rest?<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Oh! mighty queen, why so untimely dressed?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 1em;"><i>Brit.</i></span> Favoured by night, concealed in this disguise,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Whilst the lewd court in drunken slumber lies,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">I stole away, and never will return,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Till England knows who did her city burn;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Till cavaliers shall favourites be deemed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">And loyal sufferers by the court esteemed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Till Leigh and Galloway shall bribes reject;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Thus Osborne&rsquo;s golden cheat I shall detect:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Till atheist Lauderdale shall leave this land,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">And Commons&rsquo; votes shall cut-nose guards disband:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Till Kate a happy mother shall become,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Till Charles loves parliaments, and James hates Rome.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 1.25em;"><i>Ral.</i></span> What fatal crimes make you for ever fly<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Your once loved court, and martyr&rsquo;s progeny?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 1em;"><i>Brit.</i></span> A colony of French possess the Court,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Pimps, priests, buffoons, i&rsquo; the privy-chamber sport.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Such slimy monsters ne&rsquo;er approached the throne<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Since Pharaoh&rsquo;s reign, nor so defiled a crown.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">I&rsquo; the sacred ear tyrannic arts they croak,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Pervert his mind, his good intentions choke;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Tell him of golden Indies, fairy lands,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Leviathan, and absolute commands.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Thus, fairy-like, the King they steal away,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">And in his room a Lewis changeling lay.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">How oft have I him to himself restored.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">In&rsquo;s left the scale, in &rsquo;s right hand placed the sword?<br /></span><a name="pg217" id="pg217"></a><span class="pagenum">217</span>
+<span class="i3">Taught him their use, what dangers would ensue<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">To those that tried to separate these two?<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The bloody Scottish chronicle turned o&rsquo;er,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Showed him how many kings, in purple gore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Were hurled to hell, by learning tyrant lore?<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The other day famed Spenser I did bring,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">In lofty notes Tudor&rsquo;s blest reign to sing;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">How Spain&rsquo;s proud powers her virgin arms controlled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">And golden days in peaceful order rolled;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">How like ripe fruit she dropped from off her throne,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Full of grey hairs, good deeds, and great renown.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">...<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 1.25em;"><i>Ral.</i></span> Once more, great queen, thy darling strive to save,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Snatch him again from scandal and the grave;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Present to &rsquo;s thoughts his long-scorned parliament,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The basis of his throne and government.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">In his deaf ears sound his dead father&rsquo;s name:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Perhaps that spell may &rsquo;s erring soul reclaim:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Who knows what good effects from thence may spring?<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">&rsquo;Tis godlike good to save a falling king.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 1em;"><i>Brit.</i></span> Raleigh, no more, for long in vain I&rsquo;ve tried<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The Stuart from the tyrant to divide;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">As easily learned virtuosos may<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">With the dog&rsquo;s blood his gentle kind convey<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Into the wolf, and make his guardian turn<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">To the bleating flock, by him so lately torn:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">If this imperial juice once taint his blood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">&rsquo;Tis by no potent antidote withstood.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Tyrants, like lep&rsquo;rous kings, for public weal<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Should be immured, lest the contagion steal<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Over the whole. The elect of the Jessean line<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">To this firm law their sceptre did resign;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">And shall this base tyrannic brood invade<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Eternal laws, by God for mankind made?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">To the serene Venetian state I&rsquo;ll go,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">From her sage mouth famed principles to know;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">With her the prudence of the ancients read,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">To teach my people in their steps to tread;<br /></span><a name="pg218" id="pg218"></a><span class="pagenum">218<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">By their great pattern such a state I&rsquo;ll frame,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Shall eternize a glorious lasting name.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Till then, my Raleigh, teach our noble youth<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">To love sobriety, and holy truth;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Watch and preside over their tender age,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Lest court corruption should their souls engage;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Teach them how arts, and arms, in thy young days,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Employed our youth&mdash;not taverns, stews, and plays;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Tell them the generous scorn their race does owe<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">To flattery, pimping, and a gaudy show;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Teach them to scorn the Carwells, Portsmouths, Nells,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The Clevelands, Osbornes, Berties, Lauderdales:<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Poppaea, Tigelline, and Arteria&rsquo;s name,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">All yield to these in lewdness, lust, and fame.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Make them admire the Talbots, Sydneys, Veres,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Drake, Cavendish, Blake, men void of slavish fears,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">True sons of glory, pillars of the state,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">On whose famed deeds all tongues and writers wait.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">When with fierce ardour their bright souls do burn,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Back to my dearest country I&rsquo;ll return.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The dialogue between the two horses, which bore upon their respective
+backs the stone effigies of Charles the First at Charing Cross and
+Charles the Second at Wool-Church, is, in its own rough way, masterly
+satire for the popular ear.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i3">&ldquo;If the Roman Church, good Christians, oblige ye<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">To believe man and beast have spoken in effigy,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Why should we not credit the public discourses,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">In a dialogue between two inanimate horses?<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The horses I mean of Wool-Church and Charing,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Who told many truths worth any man&rsquo;s hearing,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Since Viner and Osborn did buy and provide &rsquo;em<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">For the two mighty monarchs who now do bestride &rsquo;em.<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The stately brass stallion, and the white marble steed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The night came together, by all &rsquo;tis agreed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">When both kings were weary of sitting all day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">They stole off, incognito, each his own way;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">And then the two jades, after mutual salutes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Not only discoursed, but fell to disputes.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><a name="pg219" id="pg219"></a><span class="pagenum">219</span>The dialogue is too long to be quoted. Charles the
+Second&rsquo;s steed boldly declares:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+
+<span class="i3">&ldquo;De Witt and Cromwell had each a brave soul,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">I freely declare it, I am for old Noll;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Though his government did a tyrant resemble,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">He made England great, and his enemies tremble.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Mr. Hollis, when he sent the picture of Cromwell by Cooper to Sidney
+Sussex College, is said to have written beneath it the lines just
+quoted.</p>
+
+<p>The satire ends thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 0.25em;">&ldquo;<i>Charing Cross.</i></span> But canst them devise when things will be mended?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 1em;"><i>Wool-Church.</i></span> When the reign of the line of the Stuarts is ended.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 0.6em;"><i>Charing Cross.</i></span> Then England, rejoice, thy redemption draws nigh;<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">Thy oppression together with kingship shall die.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><span style="margin-right: 3.5em;"><i>Chorus.</i></span> A Commonwealth, a Commonwealth we proclaim to the nation,<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">For the gods have repented the King&rsquo;s restoration.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>These probably are the lines which spread the popular, but mistaken,
+belief that Marvell was a Republican.</p>
+
+<p>Andrew Marvell died in his lodgings in London on the 16th of August
+1678. Colonel Grosvenor, writing to George Treby, M.P. (afterwards Chief
+of the Common Pleas), on the 17th of August, reports &ldquo;Andrew Marvell
+died yesterday of apoplexy.&rdquo; Parliament was not sitting at the time.
+What was said of the elder Andrew may also be said of the younger: he
+was happy in the moment of his death. The one just escaped the Civil
+War, the other the Popish Plot.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell was thought to have been poisoned. Such a suspicion in those bad
+times was not far-fetched.<a name="pg220" id="pg220"></a><span class="pagenum">220</span> His satires, rough but moving, had been
+widely read, and his fears for the Constitution, his dread of</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;The grim Monster, Arbitrary Power,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The ugliest Giant ever trod the earth,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>infested many breasts, and bred terror.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Marvell, the Island&rsquo;s watchful sentinel,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Stood in the gap and bravely kept his post.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The post was one of obvious danger, and</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Whether Fate or Art untwin&rsquo;d his thread<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Remains in doubt.&rdquo;<a name="fnm90_2201" id="fnm90_2201"></a><a href="#fn90_2201" class="fnnum">1</a></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The doubt has now been dissipated by the research of an accomplished
+physician, Dr. Gee, who in 1874 communicated to the <i>Athen&aelig;um</i> (March 7,
+1874) an extract from Richard Morton&rsquo;s <span title="Pyretologia">&#928;&#965;&#961;&#949;&#964;&#959;&#955;&#959;&#947;&#7985;&#945;</span> (1692),
+containing a full account of Marvell&rsquo;s sickness and death. Art &ldquo;untwin&rsquo;d
+his thread,&rdquo; but it was the doctor&rsquo;s art. Dr. Gee&rsquo;s translation of
+Morton&rsquo;s medical Latin is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&ldquo;In this manner was that most famous man Andrew Marvell carried off
+from amongst the living before his time, to the great loss of the
+republic, and especially the republic of letters; through the
+ignorance of an old conceited doctor, who was in the habit on all
+occasions of raving excessively against Peruvian bark, as if it were
+a common plague. Howbeit, without any clear indication, in the
+interval after a third fit of regular tertian ague, and by way of
+preparation (so that all things might seem to be done most
+methodically), blood was copiously drawn from the patient, who was
+advanced in years.&rdquo; [Here follow more details of treatment, which I
+pass over.] &ldquo;The way having been made ready after this fashion, at
+the beginning of the next fit, a great febrifuge was given, a
+draught, that is to say, of Venice treacle, etc. By the doctor&rsquo;s
+orders, the patient was covered up close with blankets, <a name="pg221" id="pg221"></a><span class="pagenum">221</span>say rather,
+was buried under them; and composed himself to sleep and sweat, so
+that he might escape the cold shivers which are wont to accompany the
+onset of the ague-fit. He was seized with the deepest sleep and
+colliquative sweats, and in the short space of twenty-four hours from
+the time of the ague-fit, he died comatose. He died, who, had a
+single ounce of Peruvian bark been properly given, might easily have
+escaped, in twenty-four hours, from the jaws of the grave and the
+disease: and so burning with anger, I informed the doctor, when he
+told me this story without any sense of shame.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Marvell was buried on the 18th of August, &ldquo;under the pews in the south
+side of St. Giles&rsquo;s Church in the Fields, under the window wherein is
+painted on glass a red lion.&rdquo; So writes the invaluable Aubrey, who tells
+us he had the account from the sexton who made the grave.</p>
+
+<p>In 1678 St. Giles&rsquo;s Church was a brick structure built by Laud. The
+present imposing church was built on the site of the old one in 1730-34.</p>
+
+<p>In 1774 Captain Thompson, so he tells us, &ldquo;visited the grand mausoleum
+under the church of St. Giles, to search for the coffin in which Mr.
+Marvell was placed: in this vault were deposited upwards of a thousand
+bodies, but I could find no plate of an earlier date than 1722; I do
+therefore suppose the new church is built upon the former burial place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The poet&rsquo;s grand-nephew, Mr. Robert Nettleton, in 1764 placed on the
+north side of the present church, upon a black marble slab, a long
+epitaph, still to be seen, recording the fact that &ldquo;near to this place
+lyeth the body of Andrew Marvell, Esquire.&rdquo; At no great distance from
+this slab is the tombstone, recently brought in from the graveyard
+outside, of <i>Georgius Chapman, Poeta</i>, a fine Roman monument, prepared
+by the care and at the cost of the poet&rsquo;s friend, Inigo<a name="pg222" id="pg222"></a><span class="pagenum">222</span> Jones. Still
+left exposed, in what is now a doleful garden (not at all Marvellian),
+is the tombstone of Richard Penderel of Boscobel, one of the five yeomen
+brothers who helped Charles to escape after Worcester. Lord Herbert of
+Cherbury, in 1648, and Shirley the dramatist, in 1666, had been carried
+to the same place of sepulture.</p>
+
+<p>Aubrey describes Marvell &ldquo;as of middling stature, pretty strong-set,
+roundish faced, cherry-cheeked, hazell eye, brown hair. He was, in his
+conversation, very modest, and of very few words. Though he loved wine,
+he would never drink hard in company, and was wont to say that he would
+not play the good fellow in any man&rsquo;s company in whose hands he would
+not trust his life. He kept bottles of wine at his lodgings, and many
+times he would drink liberally by himself and to refresh his spirit and
+exalt his muse. James Harrington (author of <i>Oceana</i>) was his intimate
+friend; J. Pell, D.D., was one of his acquaintances. He had not a
+general acquaintance.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Pell, one may remark, was a great friend of Hobbes.</p>
+
+<p>In March 1679 joint administration was granted by the Prerogative Court
+of Canterbury, <i>Mari&aelig; Marvell relict&aelig; et Johni Greni Creditori</i>. This is
+the first time we hear of there being any wife in the case. A creditor
+of a deceased person could not obtain administration without citing the
+next of kin, but a widow was entitled, under a statute of Henry
+<span class="smcap">viii</span>., as of right, to administration, and it may be that Mr.
+Green thought the quickest way of being paid his debt was to invent a
+widow. The practice of the court required an affidavit from the widow
+deposing that she was the lawful relict of the deceased, but this
+assertion on oath seems in ordinary cases to have been sufficient, <a name="pg223" id="pg223"></a><span class="pagenum">223</span>if
+the customary fees were forthcoming. Captain Thompson roundly asserts
+that the alleged Mary Marvell was a cheat, and no more than the
+lodging-house keeper where he had last lived&mdash;and Marvell was a
+migratory <span class="together">man.<a name="fnm91_2231" id="fnm91_2231"></a><a href="#fn91_2231" class="fnnum">1</a></span> Mary Marvell&rsquo;s name appears once again, in the
+forefront of the first edition of Marvell&rsquo;s <i>Poems</i> (1681), where she
+certifies all the contents to be her husband&rsquo;s works. This may have been
+a publisher&rsquo;s, as the affidavit may have been a creditor&rsquo;s, artifice. As
+against this, Mr. Grosart, who believed in Mary Marvell, reminds us that
+Mr. Robert Boulter, the publisher of the poems, was a most respectable
+man, and a friend both of Milton&rsquo;s and Marvell&rsquo;s, and not at all likely
+either to cheat the public with a falsely signed certificate, or to be
+cheated by a London lodging-house keeper. Whatever &ldquo;Mary Marvell&rdquo; may
+have been, &ldquo;widow, wife, or maid,&rdquo; she is heard of no more.</p>
+
+<p>Hull was not wholly unmindful of her late and (William Wilberforce
+notwithstanding) her most famous member. &ldquo;On Thursday the 26th of
+September 1678, in consideration of the kindness the Town and Borough
+had for Andrew Marvell, Esq., one of the Burgesses of Parliament for the
+same Borough (lately deceased), and for his great merits from the
+Corporation. It is this day ordered by the Court that Fifty pounds be
+paid out of the Town&rsquo;s Chest towards the discharge of his funerals
+(<i>sic</i>), and to perpetuate his memory by a gravestone&rdquo; (<i>Bench Books of
+Hull</i>).</p>
+
+<p>The incumbent of Trinity Church is said to have objected to the erection
+of any monument. At all <a name="pg224" id="pg224"></a><span class="pagenum">224</span>events there is none. Marvell had many enemies
+in the Church. Sharp, afterwards Archbishop of York, was a Yorkshire
+man, and had been domestic chaplain to Sir Heneage Finch, a
+lawyer-member, much lashed by Marvell&rsquo;s bitter pen. Sharp had also taken
+part in the quarrel with the Dissenters, and is reported to have been
+very much opposed to any Hull monument to Marvell. Captain Thompson says
+&ldquo;the Epitaph which the Town of Hull caused to be erected to Marvell&rsquo;s
+memory was torn down by the Zealots of the King&rsquo;s party.&rdquo; There is no
+record of this occurrence.</p>
+
+<p>There are several portraits of Marvell in existence&mdash;one now being in
+the National Portrait Gallery. A modern statue in marble adorns the Town
+Hall of Hull.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn88_2111" id="fn88_2111"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm88_2111">211:1</a></span> In reading the early volumes of the <i>Parliamentary
+History</i> the question has to be asked, What authority is there for the
+reports of speeches? In Charles the Second&rsquo;s time some of the speakers,
+both in the Lords and Commons, evidently communicated their orations to
+the press.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn89_2151" id="fn89_2151"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm89_2151">215:1</a></span> Lord Mayor, 1667.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn90_2201" id="fn90_2201"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm90_2201">220:1</a></span> See <i>Marvell&rsquo;s Ghost</i>, in <i>Poems on Affairs of State</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn91_2231" id="fn91_2231"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm91_2231">223:1</a></span> The cottage at Highgate, long called &lsquo;Marvell&rsquo;s
+Cottage,&rsquo; has now disappeared. Several of Marvell&rsquo;s letters were written
+from Highgate.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="pg225" id="pg225"></a><span class="pagenum">225</span><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<p class="center">WORK AS A MAN OF LETTERS</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Marvell&rsquo;s</span> work as a man of letters easily divides itself into the
+inevitable three parts. <i>First</i>, as a poet properly so called; <i>Second</i>,
+as a political satirist using rhyme; and <i>Third</i>, as a writer of prose.</p>
+
+<p>Upon Marvell&rsquo;s work as a poet properly so called that curious, floating,
+ever-changing population to whom it is convenient to refer as &ldquo;the
+reading public,&rdquo; had no opportunity of forming any real opinion until
+after the poet&rsquo;s death, namely, when the small folio of 1681 made its
+appearance. This volume, although not containing the <i>Horatian Ode upon
+Cromwell&rsquo;s Return from Ireland</i> or the lines upon Cromwell&rsquo;s death, did
+contain, saving these exceptions, all the best of Marvell&rsquo;s verse.</p>
+
+<p>How this poetry was received, to whom and to how many it gave pleasure,
+we have not the means of knowing. The book, like all other good books,
+had to take its chance. Good poetry is never exactly unpopular&mdash;its
+difficulty is to get a hearing, to secure a <i>vogue</i>. I feel certain that
+from 1681 onwards many ingenuous souls read <i>Eyes and Tears</i>, <i>The
+Bermudas</i>, <i>The Nymph complaining for the Death of her Fawn</i>, <i>To his
+Coy Mistress</i>, <i>Young Love</i>, and <i>The Garden</i> with pure delight. In 1699
+the poet Pomfret, of whose <i>Choice</i> Dr. Johnson said in 1780, &ldquo;perhaps
+no composition in our language has been oftener <a name="pg226" id="pg226"></a><span class="pagenum">226</span>perused,&rdquo; and who
+Southey in 1807 declared to be &ldquo;the most popular of English poets&rdquo;; in
+1699, I say, this poet Pomfret says in a preface, sensibly enough, &ldquo;to
+please everyone would be a New Thing, and to write so as to please no
+Body would be as New, for even Quarles and Wythers (<i>sic</i>) have their
+Admirers.&rdquo; So liable is the public taste to fluctuations and reversals,
+that to-day, though Quarles and Wither are not popular authors, they
+certainly number many more readers than Pomfret, Southey&rsquo;s &ldquo;most popular
+of English poets,&rdquo; who has now, it is to be feared, finally disappeared
+even from the Anthologies. But if Quarles and Wither had their admirers
+even in 1699, the poet Marvell, we may be sure, had his also.</p>
+
+<p>Marvell had many poetical contemporaries&mdash;five-and-twenty at
+least&mdash;poets of mark and interest, to most of whom, as well as to some
+of his immediate predecessors, he stood, as I must suppose, in some
+degree of poetical relationship. With Milton and Dryden no comparison
+will suggest itself, but with Donne and Cowley, with Waller and Denham,
+with Butler and the now wellnigh forgotten Cleveland, with Walker and
+Charles Cotton, with Rochester and Dorset, some resemblances, certain
+influences, may be found and traced. From the order of his mind and his
+prose style, I should judge Marvell to have been both a reader and a
+critic of his contemporaries in verse and prose&mdash;though of his
+criticisms little remains. Of Butler he twice speaks with great respect,
+and his sole reference to the dead Cleveland is kindly. Of Milton we
+know what he thought, whilst Aubrey tells us that he once heard Marvell
+say that the Earl of Rochester was the only man in England that had the
+true vein of satire.</p>
+
+<p><a name="pg227" id="pg227"></a><span class="pagenum">227</span>Be these influences what they may or must have been, to us Marvell
+occupies, as a poet, a niche by himself. A finished master of his art he
+never was. He could not write verses like his friend Lovelace, or like
+Cowley&rsquo;s <i>Chronicle</i> or Waller&rsquo;s lines &ldquo;On a Girdle.&rdquo; He had not the
+inexhaustible, astonishing (though tiresome) wit of Butler. He is often
+clumsy and sometimes almost babyish. One has frequently occasion to
+wonder how a man of business could allow himself to be tickled by such
+obvious straws as are too many of the conceits which give him pleasure.
+To attribute all the conceits of this period to the influence of Dr.
+Donne is but a poor excuse after all. The worst thing that can be said
+against poetry is that there is so much tedium in it. The glorious
+moments are all too few. It is his honest recognition of this woeful
+fact that makes Dr. Johnson, with all his faults lying thick about him,
+the most consolatory of our critics to the ordinary reading man.
+&ldquo;Tediousness is the most fatal of all faults.... Unhappily this
+pernicious failure is that which an author is least able to discover. We
+are seldom tiresome to ourselves.... Perhaps no man ever thought a line
+superfluous when he wrote it&rdquo; (<i>Lives of the Poets</i>. Under <i>Prior</i>&mdash;see
+also under <i>Butler</i>).</p>
+
+<p>That Marvell is never tiresome I will not assert. But he too has his
+glorious moments, and they are all his own. In the whole compass of our
+poetry there is nothing quite like Marvell&rsquo;s love of gardens and woods,
+of meads and rivers and birds. It is a love not learnt from books, not
+borrowed from brother-poets. It is not indulged in to prove anything. It
+is all sheer enjoyment.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Bind me, ye woodbines, in your twines,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Curb me about, ye gadding vines,<br /></span><a name="pg228" id="pg228"></a><span class="pagenum">228</span>
+<span class="i0">And oh, so close your circles lace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That I may never leave this place!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But, lest your fetters prove too weak,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ere I your silken bondage break,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Do you, O brambles, chain me too,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, courteous briars, nail me through.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Here at the fountain&rsquo;s sliding foot,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or at some fruit-tree&rsquo;s mossy root,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Casting the body&rsquo;s vest aside,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My soul into the boughs does glide;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There, like a bird, it sits and sings.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>No poet is happier than Marvell in creating the impression that he made
+his verses out of doors.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;He saw the partridge drum in the woods;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He heard the woodcock&rsquo;s evening hymn;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He found the tawny thrush&rsquo;s broods,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the shy hawk did wait for him.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What others did at distance hear<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And guessed within the thicket&rsquo;s gloom<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Was shown to this philosopher,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And at his bidding seemed to come.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 10em;">
+(From Emerson&rsquo;s <i>Wood Notes</i>.)
+</p>
+
+<p>Marvell&rsquo;s immediate fame as a true poet was, I dare say, obscured for a
+good while both by its original note (for originality is always
+forbidding at first sight) and by its author&rsquo;s fame as a satirist, and
+his reputation as a lover of &ldquo;liberty&rsquo;s glorious feast.&rdquo; It was as one
+of the poets encountered in the <i>Poems on Affairs of State</i> (fifth
+edition, 1703) that Marvell was best known during the greater part of
+the eighteenth century. As Milton&rsquo;s friend Marvell had, as it were, a
+side-chapel in the great Miltonic temple. The patriotic member of
+Parliament, who refused in his poverty the Lord-Treasurer Danby&rsquo;s
+proffered bribe, became a character in history before the exquisite
+quality of <a name="pg229" id="pg229"></a><span class="pagenum">229</span>his garden-poetry was recognised. There was a cult for
+Liberty in the middle of the eighteenth century, and Marvell&rsquo;s name was
+on the list of its professors. Wordsworth&rsquo;s sonnet has preserved this
+tradition for us.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Great men have been among us; hands that penn&rsquo;d<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And tongues that utter&rsquo;d wisdom, better none:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The later Sydney, Marvell, Harrington.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In 1726 Thomas Cooke printed an edition of Marvell&rsquo;s works which
+contains the poetry that was in the folio of 1681, and in 1772 Cooke&rsquo;s
+edition was reprinted by T. Davies. It was probably Davies&rsquo;s edition
+that Charles Lamb, writing to Godwin on Sunday, 14th December 1800, says
+he &ldquo;was just going to possess&rdquo;: a notable addition to Lamb&rsquo;s library,
+and an event in the history of the progress of Marvell&rsquo;s poetical
+reputation. Captain Thompson&rsquo;s edition, containing the <i>Horatian Ode</i>
+and other pieces, followed in 1776. In the great Poetical Collection of
+the Booksellers (1779-1781) which they improperly<a name="fnm92_2291" id="fnm92_2291"></a><a href="#fn92_2291" class="fnnum">1</a> called
+&ldquo;Johnson&rsquo;s <i>Poets</i>&rdquo; (improperly, because the poets were, with four
+exceptions, the choice not of the biographer but of the booksellers,
+anxious to retain their imaginary copyright), Marvell has no place. Mr.
+George Ellis, in his <i>Specimens</i> of the early English poets first
+published in 1803, printed from Marvell <i>Daphne and Chloe</i> (in part) and
+<i>Young Love</i>. When Mr. Bowles, that once famous sonneteer, edited Pope
+in 1806, he, by way of belittling Pope, quoted two lines from Marvell,
+now well known, but unfamiliar in 1806:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;And through the hazels thick espy<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The hatching throstle&rsquo;s shining eye.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He remarked upon them, &ldquo;the last circumstance is new, highly poetical,
+and could only have been de<a name="pg230" id="pg230"></a><span class="pagenum">230</span>scribed by one who was a real lover of
+nature and a witness of her beauties in her most solitary retirement.&rdquo;
+On this Mark Pattison makes the comment that the lines only prove that
+Marvell when a boy went bird-nesting (<i>Essays</i>, vol. ii. p. 374), a
+pursuit denied to Pope by his manifold infirmities. The poet Campbell,
+in his <i>Specimens</i> (1819), gave an excellent sketch of Marvell&rsquo;s life,
+and selected <i>The Bermudas</i>, <i>The Nymph and Fawn</i>, and <i>Young Love</i>.
+Then came, fresh from talk with Charles Lamb, Hazlitt, with his <i>Select
+Poets</i> (1825), which contains the <i>Horatian Ode</i>, <i>Bermudas</i>, <i>To his
+Coy Mistress</i>, <i>The Nymph and Fawn</i>, <i>A Drop of Dew</i>, <i>The Garden</i>, <i>The
+Gallery</i>, <i>Upon the Hill and Grove at Billborow</i>. In this choice we may
+see the hand of Charles Lamb, as Tennyson&rsquo;s may be noticed in the
+selection made in Palgrave&rsquo;s <i>Golden Treasury</i> (1863). Dean Trench in
+his <i>Household Book of English Poetry</i> (1869) gives <i>Eyes and Tears</i>,
+the <i>Horatian Ode</i>, and <i>A Drop of Dew</i>. In Mr. Ward&rsquo;s <i>English Poets</i>
+(1880) Marvell is represented by <i>The Garden</i>, <i>A Drop of Dew</i>, <i>The
+Bermudas</i>, <i>Young Love</i>, the <i>Horatian Ode</i>, and the <i>Lines on Paradise
+Lost</i>. Thanks to these later Anthologies and to the quotations from <i>The
+Garden</i> and <i>Upon Appleton House</i> in the <i>Essays of Elia</i>, Marvell&rsquo;s
+fame as a true poet has of recent years become widespread, and is now,
+whatever vicissitudes it may have endured, well established.</p>
+
+<p>As a satirist in rhyme Marvell has shared the usual and not undeserved
+fate of almost all satirists of their age and fellow-men. The authors of
+lines written in heat to give expression to the anger of the hour may
+well be content if their effusions give the pain or teach the lesson
+they were intended to give or teach. If you lash the age, you do so
+presumably for the benefit of the age. It is very hard to transmit even
+a fierce <a name="pg231" id="pg231"></a><span class="pagenum">231</span>and genuine indignation from one age to another. Marvell&rsquo;s
+satires were too hastily composed, too roughly constructed, too redolent
+of the occasion, to enter into the kingdom of poetry. To the careful and
+character-loving reader of history, particularly if he chance to have a
+feeling for the House of Commons, not merely as an institution, but as a
+place of resort, Marvell&rsquo;s satirical poems must always be intensely
+interesting. They strike me as honest in their main intention, and never
+very wide of the mark. Hallam says, in his lofty way, &ldquo;We read with
+nothing but disgust the satirical poetry of Cleveland, Butler, Oldham,
+Marvell,&rdquo; and he adds, &ldquo;Marvell&rsquo;s satires are gross and stupid.&rdquo;<a name="fnm93_2311" id="fnm93_2311"></a><a href="#fn93_2311" class="fnnum">1</a>
+Gross they certainly occasionally are, but stupid they never are.
+Marvell was far too well-informed a politician and too shrewd a man ever
+to be stupid.</p>
+
+<p>As a satirist Marvell had, if he wanted them, many models of style, but
+he really needed none, for he just wrote down in rough-and-ready rhyme
+whatever his head or his spleen suggested to his fancy. Every now and
+again there is a noble outburst of feeling, and a couplet of great
+felicity. I confess to taking great pleasure in Marvell&rsquo;s satires.</p>
+
+<p>As a prose writer Marvell has many merits and one great fault. He has
+fire and fancy and was the owner and master of a precise vocabulary well
+fitted to clothe and set forth a well-reasoned and lofty argument. He
+knew how to be both terse and diffuse, and can compress himself into a
+line or expand over a paragraph. He has touches of a grave irony as well
+as of a boisterous humour. He can tell an anecdote and elaborate a
+parable. Swift, we know, had not only Butler&rsquo;s <i>Hudibras</i> by heart, but
+was also (we may be sure) a close student of Marvell&rsquo;s prose. His great
+<a name="pg232" id="pg232"></a><span class="pagenum">232</span>fault is a very common one. He is too long. He forgets how quickly a
+reader grows tired. He is so interested in the evolutions of his own
+mind that he forgets his audience. His interest at times seems as if it
+were going to prove endless. It is the first business of an author to
+arrest and then to retain the attention of the reader. To do this
+requires great artifice.</p>
+
+<p>Among the masters of English prose it would be rash to rank Marvell, who
+was neither a Hooker nor a Taylor. None the less he was the owner of a
+prose style which some people think the best prose style of all&mdash;that of
+honest men who have something to say.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn92_2291" id="fn92_2291"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm92_2291">229:1</a></span> &ldquo;Indecently&rdquo; is the doctor&rsquo;s own expression.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="fn93_2311" id="fn93_2311"></a><span class="label"><a href="#fnm93_2311">231:1</a></span> See Hallam&rsquo;s <i>History of Literature</i>, vol. iv. pp. 433,
+439.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="pg233" id="pg233"></a><span class="pagenum">233</span><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</h2>
+
+
+<div class="index">
+<p><a id="IX_A" name="IX_A"></a>A</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+
+<li>&ldquo;<i>Account of the Growth of Popery and Arbitrary Government in England</i>,&rdquo; <a href="#pg180">180-1</a>, <a href="#pg187">187</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li>quoted, <a href="#pg188">188</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Act of Uniformity, <a href="#pg143">143</a>, <a href="#pg184">184</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Addison, <a href="#pg65">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aitken, Mr., <a href="#pg47">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Amersham, <a href="#pg145">145</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Amsterdam, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Angier, Lord, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Appleton House</i>, <a href="#pg66">66</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Arlington, <a href="#pg185">185</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Ars Poetica</i>, <a href="#pg47">47</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ashley, Lord, <a href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href="#pg150">150</a>, <a href="#pg185">185</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Athen&aelig; Oxonienses</i>, <a href="#pg10">10</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Aubrey, <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Austin, John, <a href="#pg159">159</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Autobiography</i> (Clarendon), <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Autobiography of Matthew Robinson</i>, <a href="#fn4_111">11 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Axtell, Lieut.-Colonel, <a href="#pg28">28</a>, <a href="#pg29">29</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_B" name="IX_B"></a>B</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li><i>Baker&rsquo;s Chronicle</i>, <a href="#pg80">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Baker, Thomas, <a href="#pg24">24</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bampfield, Thomas, <a href="#pg80">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Banda Islands, <a href="#pg127">127</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barbadoes, <a href="#pg58">58</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barnard, Edward, <a href="#pg95">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Barron, Richard, <a href="#pg64">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Baxter, Richard, <a href="#pg52">52</a>, <a href="#pg93">93</a>, <a href="#pg179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bedford, <a href="#pg162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bench Books of Hull, <a href="#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bennet, Sir John, <a href="#pg195">195</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berkeley, Charles, <a href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Berkenhead, Sir John, <a href="#pg191">191</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Bermudas, The</i>, <a href="#pg66">66</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Besant, Sir Walter, <a href="#fn47_1181" >118 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Bill for &ldquo;the Rebuilding of London,&rdquo; <a href="#pg123">123</a>, <a href="#pg124">124</a>, <a href="#pg125">125</a>, <a href="#fn49_1261" >126 <i>n.</i></a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li>amended, <a href="#pg148">148</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Bill of Conventicles, <a href="#pg142">142</a>, <a href="#pg146">146</a>, <a href="#pg147">147</a>, <a href="#pg148">148</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bill of Subsidy, <a href="#pg193">193</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bill of Test, <a href="#pg205">205</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bill of Uniformity, <a href="#pg101">101</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;<i>Bind me, ye woodbines</i>,&rdquo; <a href="#pg227">227</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blackheath, <a href="#pg188">188</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blake, Admiral, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg69">69</a>, <a href="#pg71">71</a>, <a href="#pg75">75</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blaydes, James, <a href="#pg6">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Joseph, <a href="#pg6">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Blenheim</i> (Addison), <a href="#pg70">70</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Blood, Colonel, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bodleian Library, <a href="#pg31">31</a>, <a href="#pg116">116</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Boulter, Robert, <a href="#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bowles, <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bowyer, <a href="#pg64">64</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Boyle, Richard, <a href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bradshaw, John, Lord-President of the Council, <a href="#pg28">28</a>, <a href="#pg48">48</a>, <a href="#pg52">52</a>, <a href="#pg94">94</a>, <a href="#pg95">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Braganza, Catherine of, <a href="#pg33">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Bramhall Preface</i>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Breda, <a href="#pg88">88</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li>Declaration, <a href="#pg102">102</a>, <a href="#pg127">127</a>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;<i>Britannia and Raleigh</i>,&rdquo; <a href="#pg216">216</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Brunswick, Duke of, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Buckingham, Duke of, <a href="#pg150">150</a>, <a href="#pg185">185</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>, <a href="#pg205">205</a>, <a href="#pg206">206</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bucknoll, Sir William, <a href="#pg195">195</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Bunyan, <a href="#pg162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Burnet, Bishop, <a href="#pg3">3</a>, <a href="#pg163">163</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Butler, <a href="#fn29_621" >62 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#pg154">154</a>, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_C" name="IX_C"></a>C</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>&ldquo;Cabal,&rdquo; <a href="#pg184">184</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cadsand, <a href="#pg186">186</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Calamy, Edmund, <a href="#pg93">93</a>, <a href="#pg94">94</a>.<a name="pg234" id="pg234"></a><span class="pagenum">234</span></li>
+
+<li>Cambridge, <a href="#pg48">48</a>, <a href="#pg175">175</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Canary Islands, <a href="#pg70">70</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Canterbury, Prerogative Court of, <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Capel, <a href="#pg172">172</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carey, Henry, <a href="#fn49_1261" >126 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Carlisle, Lady, <a href="#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Lord, <a href="#pg101">101</a>, <a href="#pg108">108</a>, <a href="#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Carteret, Sir George (Treasurer of Navy), <a href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href="#pg141">141</a>, <a href="#pg143">143</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Castlemaine, Lady, <a href="#pg134">134</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Character of Holland, The</i>, <a href="#pg60">60</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charles I., <a href="#pg29">29</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Charles II., <a href="#pg76">76</a>, <a href="#pg80">80</a>, <a href="#pg81">81</a>, <a href="#pg90">90</a>, <a href="#pg93">93</a>, <a href="#pg95">95</a>, <a href="#pg127">127</a>, <a href="#pg182">182</a>, <a href="#pg184">184</a>, <a href="#pg185">185</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>, <a href="#pg188">188</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>, <a href="#pg195">195</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>, <a href="#pg203">203</a>, <a href="#pg205">205</a>, <a href="#pg206">206</a>, <a href="#pg214">214</a>, <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chateaubriand, <a href="#pg24">24</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chatham, <a href="#pg128">128</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cherry Burton, <a href="#pg6">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Choice</i> (Pomfret), <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Chronicle</i> (Cowley), <a href="#pg227">227</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Chute, Chaloner, <a href="#pg80">80</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Civil War, <a href="#pg23">23</a>, <a href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clare, Lord, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href="#pg195">195</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clarendon, Earl of, <a href="#pg28">28</a>, <a href="#pg52">52</a>, <a href="#pg77">77</a>, <a href="#pg82">82</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li><i>History</i>, <a href="#pg88">88</a>, <a href="#pg114">114</a>, <a href="#pg120">120</a>;</li>
+ <li><i>Life</i>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>, <a href="#pg134">134</a>, <a href="#pg135">135</a>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>, <a href="#pg138">138</a>, <a href="#fn59_1481" >148 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Cleveland, Duke of, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Duchess of, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clifford, <a href="#pg154">154</a>, <a href="#pg185">185</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Clifford&rsquo;s Inn, <a href="#pg125">125</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cole, William, <a href="#pg5">5</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Collection of Poems on Affairs of State</i>, <a href="#pg35">35</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Andrew Marvell, M.P., The</i>, <a href="#pg8">8</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Conventicle Act, <a href="#pg144">144</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Convention Parliament, <a href="#pg87">87</a>, <a href="#pg91">91</a>, <a href="#pg95">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cooke, Thomas, <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cooper, <a href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Copenhagen, <a href="#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cosin, Dr., Bishop of Durham, <a href="#pg94">94</a>, <a href="#pg148">148</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cotton, Charles, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Council of Trent, <a href="#pg178">178</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Court of Chancery, <a href="#pg125">125</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Coventry, Sir John, <a href="#pg191">191</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cowley, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li><ins class="correction" title="Crew in text">Crewe</ins>, Bishop of Durham, <a href="#pg202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Critic</i> (Sheridan), <a href="#pg154">154</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Cromwell, Oliver, <a href="#pg24">24</a>, <a href="#pg25">25</a>, <a href="#pg28">28</a>, <a href="#pg29">29</a>, <a href="#pg30">30</a>, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg60">60</a>, <a href="#pg63">63</a>, <a href="#pg64">64</a>, <a href="#pg68">68</a>, <a href="#pg73">73</a>, <a href="#pg75">75</a>, <a href="#pg77">77</a>, <a href="#pg89">89</a>, <a href="#pg92">92</a>, <a href="#pg93">93</a>, <a href="#pg94">94</a>, <a href="#pg95">95</a>, <a href="#pg127">127</a>, <a href="#pg137">137</a>, <a href="#pg140">140</a>, <a href="#pg145">145</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>, <a href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Lord Richard, <a href="#pg77">77</a>, <a href="#pg79">79</a>, <a href="#pg80">80</a>, <a href="#pg81">81</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; the Lady Mary, <a href="#pg71">71</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_D" name="IX_D"></a>D</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Danby, Lord-Treasurer, <a href="#pg209">209</a>, <a href="#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Daphne and Chloe</i>, <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dartmouth, Lord (Colonel Legge), <a href="#fn57_1411" >141 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Davies, T., <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;<i>Debate on Mr. Andrew Marvell&rsquo;s striking Sir Philip Harcourt, March 29</i>,&rdquo; etc., <a href="#pg212">212</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Declaration of Indulgence, <a href="#pg187">187</a>, <a href="#pg188">188</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Declaration of War, The, <a href="#pg187">187</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Defence and Continuation of Ecclesiastical Politie, A</i> (Parker), <a href="#pg153">153</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Defensio Secunda pro populo <ins class="correction" title="Anglicano in text">Anglicana</ins></i> (Milton), <a href="#pg48">48</a>. </li>
+
+<li>Denham, Sir John, <a href="#pg27">27</a>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li>De Ruyter, <a href="#pg115">115</a>, <a href="#pg128">128</a>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;<i>Description of Holland, A</i>&rdquo; (Butler), <a href="#pg62">62</a>.</li>
+
+<li>De Witt, John, <a href="#pg63">63</a>, <a href="#pg187">187</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Dialogue between two horses, Charles I. at Charing Cross, and Charles II. at Wool Church</i>, <a href="#pg218">218</a>, <a href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Dictionary of National Biography</i>, <a href="#pg9">9</a>, <a href="#fn87_2101" >210 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>Directions to a Painter</i> (Denham), <a href="#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Directory of Public Worship, <a href="#pg90">90</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Discourse by Way of Vision concerning the Government of Oliver Cromwell</i> (quoted), <a href="#pg73">73</a>, <a href="#pg92">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Discourse concerning Government</i> (Sidney), <a href="#pg64">64</a>.<a name="pg235" id="pg235"></a><span class="pagenum">235</span></li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;<i>Discourse of Ecclesiastical Politie wherein the Authority of the Civil Magistrate over the Consciences of Subjects in matters of external Religion is asserted</i>,&rdquo; etc., <a href="#pg153">153</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Donne, Dr., <a href="#pg226">226</a>, <a href="#pg227">227</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Don Quixote</i> (Shelton&rsquo;s translation), <a href="#pg78">78</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dorset, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dort, <a href="#pg187">187</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dover, <a href="#pg90">90</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Drama Commonplaces</i>, <a href="#pg154">154</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Drop of Dew, A</i>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dryden, John, <a href="#pg20">20</a>, <a href="#pg24">24</a>, <a href="#pg27">27</a>, <a href="#pg69">69</a>, <a href="#pg130">130</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dublin Castle, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Dunciad</i>, <a href="#pg21">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dunkirk, <a href="#pg127">127</a>, <a href="#pg137">137</a>, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dutch War, <a href="#pg126">126</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Dutton, Mr. (Cromwell&rsquo;s ward), <a href="#pg54">54</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_E" name="IX_E"></a>E</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>East India Company, <a href="#pg127">127</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Ecclesiastical Politie</i> (quoted), <a href="#pg157">157-8</a>, <a href="#pg159">159-60</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Edgar, Prince, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Elizabeth (Queen), <a href="#pg143">143</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Employment of my Solitude, The&rdquo; (Fairfax), <a href="#pg32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;England&rsquo;s Way to Win Wealth,&rdquo; <a href="#pg56">56</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li>quoted, <a href="#pg56">56</a>, <a href="#pg57">57</a>, <a href="#pg58">58</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Erith, <a href="#pg139">139</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Essays of Elia</i>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Eton College, <a href="#pg51">51</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Evelyn, John, <a href="#pg19">19</a>, <a href="#pg121">121</a>, <a href="#pg138">138</a>, <a href="#fn55_1391" >139 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>Eyes and Tears</i>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_F" name="IX_F"></a>F</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Fagg, Sir John, <a href="#pg205">205</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fairfax, Lady Mary, <a href="#pg27">27</a>, <a href="#pg28">28</a>, <a href="#pg32">32</a>, <a href="#pg63">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Lord, <a href="#pg27">27</a>, <a href="#pg28">28</a>, <a href="#pg29">29</a>, <a href="#pg30">30</a>, <a href="#pg31">31</a>, <a href="#pg48">48</a>, <a href="#pg50">50</a>, <a href="#pg63">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Sir William, <a href="#pg33">33</a>, <a href="#pg36">36</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Fanshaw, Sir Richard, <a href="#fn19_491" >49 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Fauconberg, Lady, <a href="#pg95">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Viscount (afterwards Earl), <a href="#pg71">71</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Finch, Sir Heneage, <a href="#pg91">91</a>, <a href="#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>First Anniversary of the Government under His Highness the Lord-Protector, The</i>, <a href="#pg60">60</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Five Mile Act, <a href="#pg117">117</a>, <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href="#pg203">203</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Flagellum Parliamentum</i>, <a href="#pg97">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Flanders, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Flecknoe, Richard, <a href="#pg20">20</a>, <a href="#pg21">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>France, <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href="#pg184">184</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>, <a href="#pg204">204</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;<i>Free Impartial Censure of the Platonick Philosophy, A</i>&rdquo; (Parker), <a href="#fn63_1522" >152 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#pg174">174</a>.</li>
+
+<li>French Alliance, <a href="#pg188">188</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_G" name="IX_G"></a>G</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li><i>Gallery, The</i>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Garden Poetry,&rdquo; <a href="#pg75">75</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Garden, The</i>, <a href="#pg66">66</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gee, Dr., <a href="#pg220">220</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gilbey. Colonel, <a href="#pg95">95</a>, <a href="#pg98">98</a>, <a href="#pg101">101</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gillingham, <a href="#pg127">127</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gladstone, <a href="#pg23">23</a>, <a href="#fn42_1041" >104 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>Golden Remains</i> (Hales), <a href="#pg51">51</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Golden Treasury</i> (1863), (Palgrave), <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Gombroon, <a href="#pg194">194</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Government of the People of England</i>, etc. (Parker), <a href="#pg172">172</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Green, Mr., <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grosart, Mr., <a href="#pg7">7</a>, <a href="#pg65">65</a>, <a href="#pg84">84</a>, <a href="#pg85">85</a>, <a href="#pg106">106</a>, <a href="#fn64_1651">165-9 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#fn72_1761" >176 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#fn73_1781" >178 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#fn75_1811" >181 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#fn78_1871" >187 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#fn83_2041">204-6 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#fn86_2091" >209 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Grosvenor, Colonel, <a href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Growth of Popery</i> (quoted), <a href="#pg203">203</a>, <a href="#pg206">206</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_H" name="IX_H"></a>H</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Hague, The, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hale, Sir Matthew, <a href="#pg92">92</a>, <a href="#pg125">125</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hales, John, <a href="#pg51">51</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hallam, <a href="#pg231">231</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hamilton, <a href="#pg172">172</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Harding, Dean, <a href="#pg118">118</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Harrington, James, <a href="#pg76">76</a>, <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Harrison, <a href="#pg29">29</a>, <a href="#pg30">30</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Harwich, <a href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hastings, Lord Henry, <a href="#pg27">27</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hazlitt, <a href="#pg61">61</a>, <a href="#pg239">239</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Herrick, <a href="#pg27">27</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>His Majesty&rsquo;s most Gracious Speech to Both Houses of Parliament</i>, <a href="#pg200">200</a>.<a name="pg236" id="pg236"></a><span class="pagenum">236</span></li>
+
+<li><i>Historical Dictionary</i> (Jeremy Collier), <a href="#fn14_243" >24 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>History of England</i> (Ranke), <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href="#fn77_1851" >185 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>History of His Own Time</i> (Burnet), <a href="#pg129">129</a>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>, <a href="#fn62_1521" >152 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#fn80_1891" >189 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>History of His Own Time</i> (Parker), <a href="#fn40_961" >96 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#fn71_1701" >170 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>History of Literature</i> (Hallam), <a href="#fn93_2311" >231 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England, The</i>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hobbes, <a href="#pg11">11</a>, <a href="#pg12">12</a>, <a href="#pg156">156</a>, <a href="#pg157">157</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Holland, <a href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href="#pg135">135</a>, <a href="#pg182">182-4</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Lord, <a href="#pg172">172</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hollis, Thomas, <a href="#pg64">64</a>, <a href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Holy Dying</i>, <a href="#pg151">151</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Horatian Ode upon Cromwell&rsquo;s Return from Ireland</i>, <a href="#pg63">63</a>, <a href="#pg66">66</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href="#pg229">229</a>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Hortus</i> (quoted), <a href="#pg45">45-6</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Household Book of English Poetry</i> (1809) (Dean Trench), <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Houses of Convocation, <a href="#pg101">101</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Howard, Sir Robert, <a href="#pg195">195</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Hudibras</i> (Butler), <a href="#pg231">231</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hull, <a href="#pg2">2</a>, <a href="#pg5">5</a>, <a href="#pg8">8</a>, <a href="#pg17">17</a>, <a href="#pg18">18</a>, <a href="#pg50">50</a>, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg84">84</a>, <a href="#pg95">95</a>, <a href="#pg98">98</a>, <a href="#pg99">99</a>, <a href="#pg101">101</a>, <a href="#pg209">209</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>, <a href="#pg224">224</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li>Town Hall, <a href="#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li><i>Hull, History of</i> (Gent), <a href="#pg17">17</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Humber, The, <a href="#pg99">99</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Hyde, Mrs., <a href="#pg202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Sir Edward (Earl of Clarendon), <a href="#fn19_491" >49 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_I" name="IX_I"></a>I</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Imposition upon wines, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Indies, East and West, <a href="#pg93">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Inigo Jones, <a href="#pg221">221-2</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Insolence and Impudence Triumphant</i>, <a href="#pg153">153</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ireland, <a href="#pg122">122</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>, <a href="#pg209">209</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Irish Cattle Bill, <a href="#pg122">122</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_J" name="IX_J"></a>J</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Jessopp, Mr., <a href="#pg120">120</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Johnson, Dr., <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href="#pg227">227</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Johnson&rsquo;s <i>Poets</i>,&rdquo; <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_K" name="IX_K"></a>K</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Kremlin, <a href="#pg108">108</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_L" name="IX_L"></a>L</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Lamb, William, <a href="#pg20">20</a>, <a href="#pg61">61</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lambert, General, <a href="#pg29">29</a>, <a href="#pg31">31</a>, <a href="#pg82">82</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lambeth, <a href="#pg175">175</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Last Instructions to a Painter about the Dutch Wars, The</i>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>quoted, <a href="#pg130">130</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href="#pg135">135</a>.</li>
+ </ul></li>
+
+<li>Laud, Archbishop, <a href="#pg91">91</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg221">221</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lauderdale, Lord, <a href="#pg150">150</a>, <a href="#pg185">185</a>, <a href="#pg201">201</a>, <a href="#pg202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lawson, Admiral, <a href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lenthall, Speaker, <a href="#pg81">81</a>, <a href="#pg83">83</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Letter from a Parliament Man to his Friend&rdquo; (Shaftesbury), <a href="#pg97">97</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Leviathan</i> (Hobbes), <a href="#pg156">156</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Life of the Great Lord Fairfax</i> (Markham) (quoted), <a href="#pg31">31</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Lines on Paradise Lost</i>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Locke, John, <a href="#pg6">6</a>, <a href="#pg179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li>London, <a href="#pg90">90</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li>Great Fire of, <a href="#pg17">17</a>, <a href="#pg119">119</a>, <a href="#pg209">209</a>;</li>
+ <li>Great Plague of, <a href="#pg115">115</a>, <a href="#pg116">116</a>, <a href="#pg119">119</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Lort, Dr. (Master of Trinity), <a href="#pg10">10</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Louis XIV., <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href="#pg185">185</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>, <a href="#pg188">188</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Lovelace, Richard, <a href="#pg25">25</a>, <a href="#pg26">26</a>, <a href="#pg227">227</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Lucasta</i>, <a href="#pg25">25</a>, <a href="#pg26">26</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_M" name="IX_M"></a>M</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Macaulay, <a href="#pg70">70</a>, <a href="#pg92">92</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;MacFlecknoe&rdquo; (quoted), <a href="#pg21">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Manton, Dr., <a href="#pg162">162</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Mari&aelig; Marvell relict&aelig; et Johni Greni Creditori</i>, <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marlborough, Earl of, <a href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Martin Marprelate, <a href="#pg24">24</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Marvell, Andrew, born 1621, <a href="#pg4">4</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li>ancestry, <a href="#pg4">4-5</a>;</li>
+ <li>Hull Grammar School, <a href="#pg8">8</a>;</li>
+ <li>school days, <a href="#pg8">8-9</a>;<a name="pg237" id="pg237"></a><span class="pagenum">237</span></li>
+ <li>goes to Trinity College, Cambridge, <a href="#pg10">10</a>;</li>
+ <li>life at Cambridge, <a href="#pg11">11-12</a>;</li>
+ <li>becomes a Roman Catholic, <a href="#pg12">12</a>;</li>
+ <li>recantation and return to Trinity, <a href="#pg14">14</a>;</li>
+ <li>life at Cambridge ends, <a href="#pg17">17</a>;</li>
+ <li>death of mother, <a href="#pg17">17</a>;</li>
+ <li>abroad in France, Spain, Holland, and Italy, <a href="#pg19">19</a>;</li>
+ <li>acquainted with French, Dutch, and Spanish languages, <a href="#pg19">19</a>;</li>
+ <li>poet, parliamentarian, and controversialist, <a href="#pg20">20</a>;</li>
+ <li>in Rome (1645), <a href="#pg20">20</a>;</li>
+ <li>invites Flecknoe to dinner, <a href="#pg22">22</a>;</li>
+ <li>neither a Republican nor a Puritan, <a href="#pg23">23</a>;</li>
+ <li>a Protestant and a member of the Reformed Church of England, <a href="#pg23">23</a>;</li>
+ <li>stood for both King and Parliament, <a href="#pg23">23</a>;</li>
+ <li>considered by Collier a dissenter, <a href="#fn14_243" >24 <i>n.</i></a>;</li>
+ <li>civil servant during Commonwealth, <a href="#pg24">24</a>;</li>
+ <li>rejoices at Restoration, <a href="#pg25">25</a>;</li>
+ <li>keeps Royalist company (1646-50), <a href="#pg25">25</a>;</li>
+ <li>contributes commendatory lines to Richard Lovelace in poems published 1649, <a href="#pg25">25</a>;</li>
+ <li>defends Lovelace, <a href="#pg26">26</a>;</li>
+ <li>loved to be alone with his friends, lived for the most part in a hired lodging, <a href="#pg26">26</a>;</li>
+ <li>one of thirty-three poets who wept for the early death of Lord H. Hastings, <a href="#pg27">27</a>;</li>
+ <li>went to live with Lord Fairfax at Nunappleton House as tutor to only child and daughter of the house (1650), <a href="#pg27">27</a>;</li>
+ <li>anonymity of verses, <a href="#pg34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li>small volume containing &ldquo;The Garden Poetry&rdquo; (1681), <a href="#pg34">34</a>;</li>
+ <li>tells story of Nunappleton House, <a href="#pg36">36-45</a>;</li>
+ <li>applies to Secretary for Foreign Tongues for a testimonial, <a href="#pg48">48</a>;</li>
+ <li>recommended by Milton to Bradshaw for post of Latin Secretary, <a href="#pg50">50</a>;</li>
+ <li>appointed four years later, 51:</li>
+ <li>frequently visits Eton, <a href="#pg51">51</a>;</li>
+ <li>Milton intrusts him with a letter and copy of <i>Secunda defensio</i> to Bradshaw, <a href="#pg52">52</a>;</li>
+ <li>appointed by the Lord-Protector tutor to Mr. Dutton, <a href="#pg54">54</a>;</li>
+ <li>resides with Oxenbridges, <a href="#pg54">54</a>;</li>
+ <li>letters, <a href="#pg53">53</a>, <a href="#pg54">54-5</a>, <a href="#pg85">85-7</a>, <a href="#pg92">92-3</a>, <a href="#pg94">94-6</a>, <a href="#pg99">99</a>, <a href="#pg100">100-1</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg109">109-12</a>, <a href="#pg121">121</a>, <a href="#pg122">122</a>, <a href="#pg140">140</a>, <a href="#pg141">141-3</a>, <a href="#pg145">145-7</a>, <a href="#pg148">148-50</a>, <a href="#pg189">189-91</a>, <a href="#pg191">191</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href="#pg210">210</a>;</li>
+ <li>begins his career as anonymous political poet and satirist (1653), <a href="#pg56">56</a>;</li>
+ <li>dislike of the Dutch, <a href="#pg56">56</a>;</li>
+ <li>impregnated with the new ideas about sea power, <a href="#pg59">59</a>;</li>
+ <li>reported to have been among crowd which witnessed Charles I.&rsquo;s death, <a href="#pg64">64</a>;</li>
+ <li>first collected edition of works, verse and prose, produced by subscription in three volumes, <a href="#pg64">64</a>;</li>
+ <li>became Milton&rsquo;s assistant (1657), <a href="#pg68">68</a>;</li>
+ <li>friendship with Milton, <a href="#pg69">69</a>;</li>
+ <li>takes Milton&rsquo;s place in receptions at foreign embassies, <a href="#pg69">69</a>;</li>
+ <li>plays part of Laureate during Protector&rsquo;s life, <a href="#pg71">71</a>;</li>
+ <li>produces two songs on marriage of Lady Mary Cromwell, <a href="#pg72">72-3</a>;</li>
+ <li>attends Cromwell&rsquo;s funeral, <a href="#pg73">73</a>;</li>
+ <li>is keenly interested in public affairs, <a href="#pg75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li>becomes a civil servant for a year, <a href="#pg75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li>M.P. for Hull, <a href="#pg75">75</a>;</li>
+ <li>friend of Milton and Harrington, <a href="#pg76">76</a>;</li>
+ <li>well disposed towards Charles II., <a href="#pg77">77</a>;</li>
+ <li>remains in office till end of year (1659), <a href="#pg77">77</a>;</li>
+ <li>elected with Ramsden M.P. for Kingston-upon-Hull, <a href="#pg78">78</a>;</li>
+ <li>attended opening of Parliament (1659), <a href="#pg80">80</a>;</li>
+ <li>is not a &ldquo;Rumper,&rdquo; <a href="#pg84">84</a>;</li>
+ <li>again elected for Hull (1660), <a href="#pg84">84</a>;</li>
+ <li>begins his remarkable correspondence with the Corporation of Hull, <a href="#pg84">84</a>;</li>
+ <li>a satirist, not an enthusiast, <a href="#pg85">85</a>;</li>
+ <li>lines on Restoration, <a href="#pg90">90</a>;</li>
+ <li>complains to House of exaction of &pound;150 for release of Milton, <a href="#pg91">91</a>;</li>
+ <li>elected for third, and last, time member for Hull, <a href="#pg95">95</a>;<a name="pg238" id="pg238"></a><span class="pagenum">238</span></li>
+ <li>receives fee from Corporation of Hull for attendance at House, <a href="#pg96">96</a>;</li>
+ <li>reviled by Parker for taking this payment, <a href="#pg96">96</a>;</li>
+ <li><i>Flagellum Parliamentum</i> attributed to, <a href="#pg97">97</a>;</li>
+ <li>goes to Holland, <a href="#pg100">100</a>;</li>
+ <li>is recalled, <a href="#pg101">101</a>;</li>
+ <li>while in Holland writes to Trinity House and to the Corporation of Hull on business matters, <a href="#pg101">101</a>;</li>
+ <li>goes as secretary to Lord Carlisle on an embassy to Sweden and Denmark, <a href="#pg106">106</a>;</li>
+ <li>public entry into Moscow, <a href="#pg108">108</a>;</li>
+ <li>assists at formal reception of Lord Carlisle as English ambassador, <a href="#pg109">109</a>;</li>
+ <li>renders oration to Czar into Latin, <a href="#pg109">109</a>;</li>
+ <li>Russians object to terms of oration, <a href="#pg109">109</a>;</li>
+ <li>replies, <a href="#pg109">109-12</a>;</li>
+ <li>returns from&nbsp; embassy, <a href="#pg113">113</a>;</li>
+ <li>reaches London, <a href="#pg113">113</a>;</li>
+ <li>attends Parliament at Oxford, <a href="#pg116">116</a>;</li>
+ <li><i>The Last Instructions to a Painter about the Dutch Wars</i>, <a href="#pg129">129-35</a>;</li>
+ <li>bitter enemy of Hyde, <a href="#pg136">136</a>;</li>
+ <li>lines upon Clarendon House, <a href="#pg138">138</a>;</li>
+ <li>inquires into &ldquo;miscarriages of the late war,&rdquo; <a href="#pg139">139</a>;</li>
+ <li><i>The Rehearsal Transprosed</i>, <a href="#pg151">151</a>;</li>
+ <li>its great success, <a href="#pg152">152</a>;</li>
+ <li>literary method described by Parker, <a href="#pg162">162</a>;</li>
+ <li>called &ldquo;a droll,&rdquo; &ldquo;a buffoon,&rdquo; <a href="#pg163">163</a>;</li>
+ <li>replies to Parker, <a href="#pg163">163</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
+ <li>intercedes, <a href="#pg168">168</a>;</li>
+ <li>abused by Parker in <i>History of His Own Time</i>, <a href="#fn71_1701" >170 <i>n.</i></a>;</li>
+ <li><i>The Rehearsall Transpros&rsquo;d</i> (second part), <a href="#pg171">171-2</a>;</li>
+ <li>pictures Parker, <a href="#pg172">172</a> <i>seq.</i>;</li>
+ <li>latterly fears subversion of Protestant faith, <a href="#pg179">179</a>;</li>
+ <li>his famous pamphlet, <i>An Account of the Growth of Popery and Arbitrary Government in England</i>, <a href="#pg180">180-1</a>, <a href="#pg203">203-5</a>, <a href="#pg206">206-8</a>;</li>
+ <li>gives account of quarrel with Dutch, <a href="#pg186">186-7</a>;</li>
+ <li>commendatory verses on &ldquo;<i>Mr. Milton&rsquo;s Paradise Lost</i>&rdquo; (1674), <a href="#fn81_1991" >199 <i>n.</i></a>;</li>
+ <li>mock speech, <i>His Majesty&rsquo;s Most Gracious Speech to Both Houses of Parliament</i>, <a href="#pg200">200-2</a>;</li>
+ <li>story of proffered bribe, <a href="#pg209">209-10</a>;</li>
+ <li>last letter to constituents, <a href="#pg210">210</a>;</li>
+ <li>rarely speaks in the House of Commons, <a href="#pg211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li>longest reported speech, <a href="#pg211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li>speech reported in <i>Parliamentary History</i> (1677), <a href="#pg211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li>&ldquo;<i>Debate on Mr. Andrew Marvell&rsquo;s striking Sir Philip Harcourt</i>,&rdquo; etc., <a href="#pg212">212-14</a>;</li>
+ <li>friend of Prince Rupert, <a href="#pg214">214</a>;</li>
+ <li>lines on setting up of king&rsquo;s statue, <a href="#pg214">214-15</a>;</li>
+ <li>&ldquo;Britannia and Raleigh,&rdquo; <a href="#pg216">216-19</a>;</li>
+ <li>dies, <a href="#pg219">219</a>;</li>
+ <li>thought to have been poisoned, <a href="#pg219">219</a>;</li>
+ <li>this suspicion dissipated, <a href="#pg220">220</a>;</li>
+ <li>account of sickness and death, <a href="#pg220">220-1</a>;</li>
+ <li>burial, <a href="#pg221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li>obsequies, <a href="#pg223">223</a>;</li>
+ <li>epitaph, <a href="#pg221">221</a>;</li>
+ <li>humour and wit, <a href="#pg163">163</a>;</li>
+ <li>not a fanatic, <a href="#pg179">179</a>;</li>
+ <li>insatiable curiosity, <a href="#pg182">182</a>;</li>
+ <li>power of self-repression, <a href="#pg211">211</a>;</li>
+ <li>as poet, <a href="#pg225">225-30</a>;</li>
+ <li>as satirist, <a href="#pg228">228</a>, <a href="#pg230">230-1</a>;</li>
+ <li>as prose writer, <a href="#pg231">231-2</a>;</li>
+ <li>love of gardens, <a href="#pg227">227</a>;</li>
+ <li>appearance described, <a href="#pg232">232</a>;</li>
+ <li>Hull&rsquo;s most famous member, <a href="#pg223">223</a>;</li>
+ <li>enemies, <a href="#pg224">224</a>;</li>
+ <li>portraits of, <a href="#pg224">224</a>;</li>
+ <li>statue of, <a href="#pg224">224</a>;</li>
+ <li>editions of works, <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Marvell, Rev. Andrew (father), <a href="#pg7">7</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Mary (wife), <a href="#pg3">3</a>, <a href="#pg222">222-3</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Marvell&rsquo;s Cottage,&rdquo; <a href="#fn91_2231" >223 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>Marvell&rsquo;s Ghost</i> (in <i>Poems on Affairs of State</i>), <a href="#fn90_2201" >220 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>May, <a href="#pg119">119</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Mead, William, <a href="#pg191">191</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Meadows, Philip, <a href="#pg51">51</a>, <a href="#pg54">54</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Medway, <a href="#pg139">139</a>, <a href="#pg187">187</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Memorials</i> (Whitelock), <a href="#pg29">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Milton, John, <a href="#pg2">2</a>, <a href="#pg19">19</a>, <a href="#pg20">20</a>, <a href="#pg21">21</a>, <a href="#pg48">48</a>, <a href="#pg49">49</a>, <a href="#pg52">52</a>, <a href="#pg64">64</a>, <a href="#pg68">68</a>, <a href="#pg69">69</a>, <a href="#pg73">73</a>, <a href="#pg76">76</a>, <a href="#pg77">77</a>, <a href="#pg91">91</a>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>, <a href="#pg151">151</a>, <a href="#pg199">199</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>, <a href="#pg226">226</a>, <a href="#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li><a name="pg239" id="pg239"></a><span class="pagenum">239</span>Monk, General, Duke of Albemarle, <a href="#pg80">80</a>, <a href="#pg83">83</a>, <a href="#pg91">91</a>, <a href="#pg128">128</a>, <a href="#pg139">139</a>, <a href="#pg140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Dr., Provost of Eton. <a href="#pg94">94</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Monmouth, Duke of, <a href="#pg116">116</a>, <a href="#pg191">191</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Monument (&ldquo;tall bully&rdquo;), <a href="#pg118">118</a>.</li>
+
+<li>More (Moore), Thomas, <a href="#pg7">7</a>.</li>
+
+<li>More, Robert, <a href="#pg6">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Morpeth, Lord, <a href="#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Moscow, <a href="#pg105">105</a>, <a href="#pg107">107</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Mr. Milton&rsquo;s Paradise Lost&rdquo; (Marvell), <a href="#fn81_1991" >199 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>Musa Cantabrigiensis</i>, <a href="#pg16">16</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Muskerry, Lord, <a href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_N" name="IX_N"></a>N</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Napoleon, <a href="#pg24">24</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Narrative of the Restoration</i> (Collins), <a href="#pg81">81</a>.</li>
+
+<li>National Portrait Gallery, <a href="#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Navigation Act, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg63">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nettleton, Robert, <a href="#pg64">64</a>;
+ <ul class="IX"><li>(Marvell&rsquo;s grand-nephew), <a href="#pg221">221</a>.</li>
+ </ul></li>
+
+<li>New Amsterdam, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li>New Guinea, <a href="#pg127">127</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Novgorod, <a href="#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Nunappleton House, <a href="#pg63">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Nymph and Fawn, The</i>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Nymph complaining for the Death of her Fawn, The</i>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_O" name="IX_O"></a>O.</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Oaths Bill, <a href="#pg202">202</a>, <a href="#pg205">205</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Oceana</i> (James Harrington), <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Ode upon Cromwell&rsquo;s Return from Ireland, The</i>, <a href="#pg34">34</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Omniana</i> (Southey), <a href="#fn11_201" >20 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Opdam, Admiral, <a href="#pg115">115</a>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orleans, Duchess of, <a href="#pg185">185</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ormond, Duke of, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Orrery, <a href="#pg150">150</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Owen, Dr. John, <a href="#pg81">81</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Oxenbridge, John, <a href="#pg51">51</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Oxford, <a href="#pg116">116</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_P" name="IX_P"></a>P</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li><i>Paradise Lost</i>, <a href="#pg10">10</a>, <a href="#pg52">52</a>, <a href="#pg69">69</a>, <a href="#pg91">91</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Paradise Regained</i>, <a href="#pg91">91</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Parker, Dr. Samuel, <a href="#pg9">9</a>, <a href="#pg151">151-3</a>, <a href="#pg155">155</a>, <a href="#pg157">157</a>, <a href="#pg159">159-60</a>, <a href="#pg162">162-3</a>, <a href="#pg167">167</a>, <a href="#pg171">171-2</a>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Parliamentary History</i>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Paston, Sir Robert, <a href="#pg114">114</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pattison, Mark, <i>Essays</i>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Peak, Sir William, <a href="#pg215">215</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pease, Anne, <a href="#pg6">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pelican (Inn), <a href="#pg21">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pell, J., D.D., <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pembroke, Earl of, <a href="#pg202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Penderel, Richard, <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Penn, William, <a href="#pg191">191</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pensionary or Long Parliament, <a href="#pg95">95</a>, <a href="#pg96">96</a>, <a href="#pg135">135</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pepys, Samuel, <a href="#pg69">69</a>, <a href="#pg90">90</a>, <a href="#pg95">95</a>, <a href="#pg96">96</a>, <a href="#pg113">113</a>, <a href="#pg117">117</a>, <a href="#pg118">118</a>, <a href="#pg120">120</a>, <a href="#pg121">121</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li><i>Diary</i>, <a href="#pg129">129</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Pett, Mr. Commissioner, <a href="#pg133">133</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Petty Navy Royal&rdquo; (Dee), <a href="#pg56">56</a>;
+ <ul class="IX">
+ <li>(quoted), <a href="#pg57">57</a>, <a href="#pg58">58</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Pickering, Sir Gilbert, <a href="#pg69">69</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress, The</i>, <a href="#pg158">158</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Plymouth, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;<i>Poem upon the Death of his late Highness the Protector, A</i>,&rdquo; <a href="#pg74">74</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Poems</i> (1081), <a href="#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Poems and Satires of Andrew Marvell</i>, <a href="#fn18_471" >47 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>Poems on Affairs of State</i>, <a href="#pg228">228</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Poleroone, <a href="#pg127">127</a>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;<i>Politic Plat (plan) for the Honour of the Prince, A</i>,&rdquo; <a href="#pg56">56</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Poll Bill, <a href="#pg122">122</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Ponder, Nathaniel, <a href="#pg171">171</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pope, <a href="#pg34">34</a>, <a href="#pg130">130</a>, <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Popish Plot, <a href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Popple, Edmund, <a href="#pg6">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; William, <a href="#pg6">6</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Portland Papers</i>, <a href="#fn45_1161" >116 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Portsmouth, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Pride, Colonel, <a href="#pg94">94</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Prince of Orange, <a href="#pg63">63</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Prynne, <a href="#pg96">96</a>.</li>
+
+<li><span title="Pyretologia">&#928;&#965;&#961;&#949;&#964;&#959;&#955;&#959;&#947;&#7985;&#945;</span> (Richard Morton), <a href="#pg220">220</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_Q" name="IX_Q"></a>Q</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Quarles, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.<a name="pg240" id="pg240"></a><span class="pagenum">240</span></li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_R" name="IX_R"></a>R</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Ramsden, John, <a href="#pg78">78</a>, <a href="#pg84">84</a>, <a href="#pg95">95</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; William. <a href="#pg189">189</a>, <a href="#pg210">210</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Rehearsal</i> (Duke of Buckingham), <a href="#pg154">154</a>;
+ <ul class="IX">
+ <li>quoted, <a href="#pg154">154-5</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li><i>Rehearsal Transprosed, The</i> (quoted), <a href="#pg23">23-4</a>, <a href="#fn20_511" >51 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#pg151">151</a>, 152n., <a href="#pg162">162</a>;
+ <ul class="IX">
+ <li>(second part), <a href="#pg171">171</a>;</li>
+ <li>quoted, <a href="#pg172">172-8</a>, <a href="#pg211">211</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li><i>Religio Laici</i>, <a href="#fn13_242" >24 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>Reproof to the Rehearsal Transprosed</i> (quoted), <a href="#pg162">162</a>, <a href="#pg168">168</a>, <a href="#pg169">169</a> <i>seq.</i></li>
+
+<li>Reynolds, Dr., Bishop of Norwich, <a href="#pg93">93</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Riga, <a href="#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Robinson, Matthew, <a href="#pg11">11</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rochester, Earl of, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rome, <a href="#pg193">193</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Roos Divorce Bill, <a href="#pg148">148</a>, <a href="#pg149">149</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Rota&rdquo; Club, <a href="#pg3">3</a>, <a href="#pg76">76</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rouen, <a href="#pg139">139</a>, <a href="#fn55_1391" >139 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li><i>Royal Charles, The</i>, <a href="#pg115">115</a>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rump Parliament, <a href="#pg81">81</a>, <a href="#pg82">82</a>, <a href="#pg83">83</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rupert, Prince, <a href="#pg3">3</a>, <a href="#pg214">214</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Rushworth, <a href="#pg28">28</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_S" name="IX_S"></a>S</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>St. Giles&rsquo;s Church in the Fields, <a href="#pg221">221</a>.</li>
+
+<li>St. John, Oliver, <a href="#pg51">51</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i><ins class="correction" title="Saint's">Saints&rsquo;</ins> Rest</i> (Baxter), <a href="#pg151">151</a>. </li>
+
+<li><i>Samson Agonistes</i>, <a href="#pg91">91</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Santa Cruz, <a href="#pg69">69</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Savoy Conference, <a href="#pg90">90</a>, <a href="#pg101">101</a>, <a href="#pg103">103</a>, <a href="#pg104">104</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scotland, <a href="#pg204">204</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Scroggs, Lord Chief Justice, <a href="#pg100">100</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Secunda defensio</i>, <a href="#pg52">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Select Poets</i> (Hazlitt), <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Shadwell, <a href="#pg20">20</a>, <a href="#pg21">21</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Shaftesbury, Earl of, <a href="#pg205">205</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sharp, Archbishop, <a href="#pg224">224</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sheerness, <a href="#pg127">127</a>, <a href="#pg128">128</a>, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sheldon, Dr., Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#pg153">153</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Shirley (dramatist), <a href="#pg118">118</a>, <a href="#pg222">222</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Shrewsbury, Lady, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sidney Sussex College, <a href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Skinner, Mrs., <a href="#pg18">18</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Skynner, Mr., <a href="#pg54">54</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sluys, <a href="#pg186">186</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Smith, Mr. Goldwin, <a href="#fn48_1231" >123 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Sobieski, John, <a href="#pg214">214</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Social England Illustrated</i>, <a href="#fn22_561" >56 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Solemn League and Covenant, <a href="#pg29">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Song of Agincourt</i> (Drayton), <a href="#pg70">70</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Southampton, Lord, <a href="#pg95">95</a>, <a href="#pg203">203</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Southey, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Spain, <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href="#pg184">184</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Specimens (Campbell), <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Specimens</i> of Early English Poets (Mr. George Ellis), <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>State Trials</i>, <a href="#pg191">191</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sterne, Bishop of Carlisle, <a href="#pg94">94</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Stockholm, <a href="#pg113">113</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Surat, <a href="#pg113">113</a>, <a href="#pg194">194</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Surinam, <a href="#pg187">187</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Sutton, Mrs., <a href="#pg202">202</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Swift, <ins class="correction" title="Christian name not mentioned in text. Probably means Jonathan.">Benjamin</ins>, <a href="#pg152">152</a>, <a href="#pg231">231</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_T" name="IX_T"></a>T</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li><i>Table Talk</i> (Selden), <a href="#pg179">179</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tait, Archbishop, <a href="#pg23">23</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Temple, Sir William, <a href="#pg183">183</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Tender Conscience</i>, <a href="#pg161">161</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li>quoted, <a href="#pg161">161-2</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li><i>Tentamina <ins class="correction" title="Physico-Theologica in text">Physico Theologica</ins></i> (Parker), <a href="#pg174">174</a>. </li>
+
+<li>Test Bill, <a href="#pg188">188</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Texel, <a href="#pg127">127</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thompson, Captain Edward, <a href="#pg10">10</a>, <a href="#pg64">64</a>, <a href="#pg68">68</a>, <a href="#pg73">73</a>, <a href="#pg84">84</a>, <a href="#fn82_2021" >202 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#pg221">221</a>, <a href="#pg223">223</a>, <a href="#pg224">224</a>, <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Thurloe, John, <a href="#pg50">50</a>, <a href="#pg52">52</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>To his Coy Mistress</i>, <a href="#pg66">66</a>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Torbay, <a href="#pg136">136</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Tower, The, <a href="#pg206">206</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Travels and Voyages</i> (Harris), <a href="#pg106">106</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Treatise on Education</i> (Milton), <a href="#pg9">9</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Treatise on the breeding of the Horse,&rdquo; <a href="#pg32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Treaty of Dover, <a href="#pg184">184</a>, <a href="#fn61_1501" >150 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>.<a name="pg241" id="pg241"></a><span class="pagenum">241</span></li>
+
+<li>Treby, George, M.P., <a href="#pg219">219</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trench, Dean, <a href="#fn30_671" >67 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Trevor, <a href="#pg150">150</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trinity Church, Hull, <a href="#pg223">223</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; College, Cambridge, <a href="#pg10">10</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; House, <a href="#pg100">100</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Triple Alliance, The, <a href="#pg183">183</a>, <a href="#pg184">184</a>, <a href="#pg186">186</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Trot, Sir John, <a href="#pg197">197</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>True Greatness of Kingdoms and Estates, The</i> (Bacon), <a href="#pg60">60</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Truth and Innocence Vindicated</i> (Owen), <a href="#pg153">153</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Turner, Sir Edward, <a href="#pg135">135</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_U" name="IX_U"></a>U</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li><i>Unreformed House of Commons, The</i> (Porritt), <a href="#fn40_961" >96 <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Upnor Castle, <a href="#pg128">128</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Upon His House,&rdquo; <a href="#pg138">138</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Upon Appleton House</i>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Upon the Hill and Grove of Billborow</i>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Urquhart, Sir Thomas, <a href="#pg89">89</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_V" name="IX_V"></a>V</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Vane, Sir Harry, <a href="#pg89">89</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Van Tromp, <a href="#pg59">59</a>, <a href="#pg61">61</a>, <a href="#pg63">63</a>, <a href="#pg115">115</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Vere, Lord, <a href="#pg32">32</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Villiers, George, Duke of Buckingham, <a href="#pg33">33</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Viner, Sir Robert, <a href="#pg214">214</a>, <a href="#pg215">215</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Virginia, <a href="#pg58">58</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_W" name="IX_W"></a>W</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Walcheren, <a href="#pg186">186</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Walker, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Waller, <a href="#pg73">73</a>, <a href="#pg144">144</a>, <a href="#fn58_1451" >145 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&ldquo;Walton&rsquo;s <i>Life</i>&rdquo; (Wotton), <a href="#pg19">19</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li>quoted, <a href="#pg20">20</a>.</li>
+ </ul></li>
+
+<li>Ward, Seth, <a href="#fn63_1522" ><ins class="correction" title="Should read 152">153</ins> <i>n.</i></a></li>
+
+<li>Watts, Dr., <a href="#pg65">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Weckerlin, Georg Rudolph, <a href="#pg49">49</a>;
+<ul class="IX">
+ <li>Latin Secretary to Parliament, <a href="#fn19_491" >49 <i>n.</i></a>, <a href="#pg50">50</a>.</li>
+</ul></li>
+
+<li>Welch, Mr., <a href="#pg210">210</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Westminster Hall, <a href="#pg140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Parliament of, <a href="#pg83">83</a>.</li>
+
+<li>White, Bishop of Ely, <a href="#pg13">13</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Whitehall, <a href="#pg117">117</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Whitelock&rsquo;s <i>Memorials</i>, <a href="#pg29">29</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>William and Margaret</i> (Mallet), <a href="#pg65">65</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wine Licenses, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Winestead, <a href="#pg4">4</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wise, Lieutenant, <a href="#pg140">140</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wither, <a href="#pg226">226</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wood, Anthony, <a href="#pg25">25</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Wordsworth, <a href="#pg229">229</a>.</li>
+
+<li>Worshipful Society of Masters and Pilots of Trinity House, <a href="#pg84">84</a>.</li>
+
+</ul>
+<p><a id="IX_Y" name="IX_Y"></a>Y</p>
+<ul class="IX">
+
+<li>Yarmouth, <a href="#pg58">58</a>.</li>
+
+<li>York, Duchess of, <a href="#pg193">193</a>, <a href="#pg196">196</a>.</li>
+
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; Duke of, <a href="#pg115">115</a>, <a href="#pg188">188</a>, <a href="#pg189">189</a>.</li>
+
+<li><i>Young Love</i>, <a href="#pg225">225</a>, <a href="#pg229">229</a>, <a href="#pg230">230</a>.</li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS</h2>
+
+
+<p class="center"><b>Edited by JOHN MORLEY</b></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b><span style="margin-right:3em;">Cloth</span> 12mo <span style="margin-left:3em;">75 cents net, each</span></b></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 20%;" />
+
+<p><b>GEORGE ELIOT.</b> By Leslie Stephen.</p>
+
+<p><b>WILLIAM HAZLITT.</b> By Augustine Birrell.</p>
+
+<p><b>MATTHEW ARNOLD.</b> By Herbert W. Paul.</p>
+
+<p><b>JOHN RUSKIN.</b> By Frederic Harrison.</p>
+
+<p><b>JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.</b> By Thomas W. Higginson.</p>
+
+<p><b>ALFRED TENNYSON.</b> By Alfred Lyall.</p>
+
+<p><b>SAMUEL RICHARDSON.</b> By Austin Dobson.</p>
+
+<p><b>ROBERT BROWNING.</b> By G.&nbsp;K. Chesterton.</p>
+
+<p><b>CRABBE.</b> By Alfred Ainger.</p>
+
+<p><b>FANNY BURNEY.</b> By Austin Dobson.</p>
+
+<p><b>JEREMY TAYLOR.</b> By Edmund Gosse.</p>
+
+<p><b>ROSSETTI.</b> By Arthur C. Benson.</p>
+
+<p><b>MARIA EDGEWORTH.</b> By the Hon. Emily Lawless.</p>
+
+<p><b>HOBBES.</b> By Leslie Stephen.</p>
+
+<p><b>ADAM SMITH.</b> By Francis W. Hirst.</p>
+
+<p><b>THOMAS MOORE.</b> By Stephen Gwynn.</p>
+
+<p><b>SYDNEY SMITH.</b> By George W.&nbsp;E. Russell.</p>
+
+<p><b>WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT.</b> By William A. Bradley.</p>
+
+<p><b>WILLIAM HICKLING PRESCOTT.</b> By Harry Thurston Peck.</p>
+
+<p><b>EDWARD FITZGERALD.</b> By A.&nbsp;C. Benson.</p>
+
+<p><b>ANDREW MARVELL.</b> By Augustine Birrell.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 20%;" />
+
+<p class="center"><b>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York</b></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS</h2>
+
+
+<p class="center"><b>Edited by JOHN MORLEY</b></p>
+
+<p class="center">The earlier issues of this series are also to be had conveniently bound
+in twelve uniform volumes.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b><span style="margin-right:3em;">Cloth.</span> $1.00 per volume</b></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 20%;" />
+
+
+<p>
+<b>CHAUCER.</b> By Adolphus William Ward.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>SPENSER.</b> By R.&nbsp;W. Church.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>DRYDEN.</b> By George Saintsbury.</span><br />
+
+<b>MILTON.</b> By Mark Pattison, B.&nbsp;D.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>GOLDSMITH.</b> By William Black.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>COWPER.</b> By Goldwin Smith.</span><br />
+
+<b>BYRON.</b> By John Nichol.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>SHELLEY.</b> By John Addington Symonds.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>KEATS.</b> By Sidney Colvin, M.&nbsp;A.</span><br />
+
+<b>WORDSWORTH.</b> By F.&nbsp;W.&nbsp;H. Myers.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>SOUTHEY.</b> By Edward Dowden.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>LANDOR.</b> By Sidney Colvin, M.A.</span><br />
+
+<b>LAMB.</b> By Alfred Ainger.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>ADDISON.</b> By W.&nbsp;J. Courthope.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>SWIFT.</b> By Leslie Stephen.</span><br />
+
+<b>SCOTT.</b> By Richard H. Hutton.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>BURNS.</b> By Principal Shairp.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>COLERIDGE.</b> By H.&nbsp;D. Traill.</span><br />
+
+<b>HUME.</b> By T.&nbsp;H. Huxley, F.R.S.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>LOCKE.</b> By Thomas Fowler.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>BURKE.</b> By John Morley.</span><br />
+
+<b>FIELDING.</b> By Austin Dobson.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>THACKERAY.</b> By Anthony Trollope.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>DICKENS.</b> By Adolphus William Ward.</span><br />
+
+<b>GIBBON.</b> By J. Cotter Morison.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>CARLYLE.</b> By John Nichol.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>MACAULAY.</b> By J. Cotter Morison.</span><br />
+
+<b>SIDNEY.</b> By J.&nbsp;A. Symonds.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>DE QUINCEY.</b> By David Masson.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>SHERIDAN.</b> By Mrs. Oliphant.</span><br />
+
+<b>POPE.</b> By Leslie Stephen.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>JOHNSON.</b> By Leslie Stephen.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>GRAY.</b> By Edmund Gosse.</span><br />
+
+<b>BACON.</b> By R.&nbsp;W. Church.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<b>BUNYAN.</b> By J.&nbsp;A. Froude.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<b>BENTLEY.</b> By R.&nbsp;C. Jebb.</span>
+</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 20%;" />
+
+<p class="center"><b>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
+64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York</b></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2>ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS</h2>
+
+
+<p class="center"><b>Edited by JOHN MORLEY</b></p>
+
+<p class="center"><b><span style="margin-right:3em;">Cloth</span> 12mo <span style="margin-left:3em;">40 cents each</span></b></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 20%;" />
+
+<div class="center">
+<table summary="List of books in 2 columns">
+ <tr><td>
+<p>
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+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/17388.txt b/17388.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c2f1972
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17388.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9602 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Andrew Marvell, by Augustine Birrell
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Andrew Marvell
+
+
+Author: Augustine Birrell
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 25, 2005 [eBook #17388]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ANDREW MARVELL***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Irma Spehar, Louise Pryor, and the Project Gutenberg
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/) from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries
+(http://www.archive.org/details/toronto)
+
+
+
+Note: Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
+ http://www.archive.org/details/andrewmarvell00birruoft
+
+ The caret character (^) indicates that the remainder of the word
+ is superscripted.
+ Italicized words or phrases are placed between underscore (_)
+ marks.
+
+
+
+
+
+English Men of Letters
+Edited by John Morley
+
+ANDREW MARVELL
+
+by
+
+AUGUSTINE BIRRELL
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+The MacMillan Company
+London: MacMillan & Co., Ltd.
+1905
+All rights reserved
+Copyright, 1905,
+By the MacMillan Company.
+
+Set up and electrotyped. Published September, 1905.
+Norwood Press
+J.S. Cushing & Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
+Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+I desire to express my indebtedness to the following editions of
+Marvell's Works:--
+
+ (1) _The Works of Andrew Marvell, Esq., Poetical, Controversial, and
+ Political_: containing many Original Letters, Poems, and Tracts
+ never before printed, with a New Life. By Captain Edward
+ Thompson. In three volumes. London, 1776.
+
+ (2) _The Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Andrew Marvell, M.P._
+ Edited with Memorial-Introduction and Notes by the Rev. Alexander
+ B. Grosart. In four volumes. 1872.
+
+ (_In the Fuller Worthies Library._)
+
+ (3) _Poems and Satires of Andrew Marvell, sometime Member of
+ Parliament for Hull._ Edited by G.A. Aitken. Two volumes.
+ Lawrence and Bullen, 1892.
+
+ _Reprinted_ Routledge, 1905.
+
+Mr. C.H. Firth's Life of Marvell in the thirty-sixth volume of _The
+Dictionary of National Biography_ has, I am sure, preserved me from
+some, and possibly from many, blunders.
+
+ A.B.
+
+3 NEW SQUARE, LINCOLN'S INN,
+ June 3, 1905.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+ PAGE
+EARLY DAYS AT SCHOOL AND COLLEGE 1
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"THE HAPPY GARDEN-STATE" 19
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A CIVIL SERVANT IN THE TIME OF THE COMMONWEALTH 48
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS 75
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+"THE REHEARSAL TRANSPROSED" 151
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+LAST YEARS IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS 179
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+FINAL SATIRES AND DEATH 211
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WORK AS A MAN OF LETTERS 225
+
+
+INDEX 233
+
+
+
+
+ANDREW MARVELL
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+EARLY DAYS AT SCHOOL AND COLLEGE
+
+
+The name of Andrew Marvell ever sounds sweet, and always has, to use
+words of Charles Lamb's, a fine relish to the ear. As the author of
+poetry of exquisite quality, where for the last time may be heard the
+priceless note of the Elizabethan lyricist, whilst at the same moment
+utterance is being given to thoughts and feelings which reach far
+forward to Wordsworth and Shelley, Marvell can never be forgotten in his
+native England.
+
+Lines of Marvell's poetry have secured the final honours, and incurred
+the peril, of becoming "familiar quotations" ready for use on a great
+variety of occasion. We may, perhaps, have been bidden once or twice too
+often to remember how the Royal actor
+
+ "Nothing common did, or mean,
+ Upon that memorable scene,"
+
+or have been assured to our surprise by some self-satisfied worldling
+how he always hears at his back,
+
+ "Time's winged chariot hurrying near."
+
+A true poet can, however, never be defiled by the rough usage of the
+populace.
+
+As a politician Marvell lives in the old-fashioned vivacious
+history-books (which if they die out, as they show some signs of doing,
+will carry with them half the historic sense of the nation) as the hero
+of an anecdote of an unsuccessful attempt made upon his political virtue
+by a minister of the Crown, as a rare type of an inflexible patriot, and
+as the last member of the House of Commons who was content to take wages
+from, instead of contributing to the support of, his constituents. As
+the intimate friend and colleague of Milton, Marvell shares some of the
+indescribable majesty of that throne. A poet, a scholar, a traveller, a
+diplomat, a famous wit, an active member of Parliament from the
+Restoration to his death in 1678, the life of Andrew Marvell might _a
+priori_ be supposed to be one easy to write, at all events after the
+fashion in which men's lives get written. But it is nothing of the kind,
+as many can testify. A more elusive, non-recorded character is hardly to
+be found. We know all about him, but very little of him. His parentage,
+his places of education, many of his friends and acquaintances, are all
+known. He wrote nearly four hundred letters to his Hull constituents,
+carefully preserved by the Corporation, in which he narrates with much
+particularity the course of public business at Westminster.
+Notwithstanding these materials, the man Andrew Marvell remains
+undiscovered. He rarely comes to the surface. Though both an author and
+a member of Parliament, not a trace of personal vanity is noticeable,
+and vanity is a quality of great assistance to the biographer. That
+Marvell was a strong, shrewd, capable man of affairs, with enormous
+powers of self-repression, his Hull correspondence clearly proves, but
+what more he was it is hard to say. He rarely spoke during his eighteen
+years in the House of Commons. It is impossible to doubt that such a
+man in such a place was, in Mr. Disraeli's phrase, a "personage." Yet
+when we look for recognition of what we feel sure was the fact, we fail
+to find it. Bishop Burnet, in his delightful history, supplies us with
+sketches of the leading Parliamentarians of Marvell's day, yet to
+Marvell himself he refers but once, and then not by name but as "the
+liveliest droll of the age," words which mean much but tell little. In
+Clarendon's _Autobiography_, another book which lets the reader into the
+very clash and crowd of life, there is no mention of one of the author's
+most bitter and cruel enemies. With Prince Rupert, Marvell was credited
+by his contemporaries with a great intimacy; he was a friend of
+Harrington's; it may be he was a member of the once famous "Rota" Club;
+it is impossible to resist the conviction that wherever he went he made
+a great impression, that he was a central figure in the lobbies of the
+House of Commons and a man of much account; yet no record survives
+either to convince posterity of his social charm or even to convey any
+exact notion of his personal character.
+
+A somewhat solitary man he would appear to have been, though fond of
+occasional jollity. He lived alone in lodgings, and was much immersed in
+business, about a good deal of which we know nothing except that it took
+him abroad. His death was sudden, and when three years afterwards the
+first edition of his poems made its appearance, it was prefaced by a
+certificate signed "Mary Marvell," to the effect that everything in the
+book was printed "according to the copies of my late dear husband."
+Until after Marvell's death we never hear of Mrs. Marvell, and with this
+signed certificate she disappears. In a series of Lives of Poets' Wives
+it would be hard to make much of Mrs. Andrew Marvell. For different but
+still cogent reasons it is hard to write a life of her famous husband.
+
+Andrew Marvell was born at Winestead in Holdernesse, on Easter Eve, the
+31st of March 1621, in the Rectory House, the elder Marvell, also
+Andrew, being then the parson of the parish. No fitter birthplace for a
+garden-poet can be imagined. Roses still riot in Winestead; the
+fruit-tree roots are as mossy as in the seventeenth century. At the
+right season you may still
+
+ "Through the hazels thick espy
+ The hatching throstle's shining eye."
+
+Birds, fruits and flowers, woods, gardens, meads, and rivers still make
+the poet's birthplace lovely.
+
+ "Loveliness, magic, and grace,
+ They are here--they are set in the world!
+ They abide! and the finest of souls
+ Has not been thrilled by them all,
+ Nor the dullest been dead to them quite.
+ The poet who sings them may die,
+ But they are immortal and live,
+ For they are the life of the world."
+
+Holdernesse was not the original home of the Marvells, who would seem to
+have been mostly Cambridgeshire folk, though the name crops up in other
+counties. Whether Cambridge "men" of a studious turn still take long
+walks I do not know, but "some vast amount of years ago" it was
+considered a pleasant excursion, either on foot or on a hired steed,
+from Cambridge to Meldreth, where the Elizabethan manor-house, long
+known as "the Marvells'," agreeably embodied the tradition that here it
+was that the poet's father was born in 1586. The Church Registers have
+disappeared. Proof is impossible. That there were Marvells in the
+neighbourhood is certain. The famous Cambridge antiquary, William Cole,
+perhaps the greatest of all our collectors, has included among his
+copies of early wills those of several Marvells and Mervells of Meldreth
+and Shepreth, belonging to pre-Reformation times, as their pious gifts
+to the "High Altar" and to "Our Lady's Light" pleasingly testify. But
+our Andrew was a determined Protestant.
+
+The poet's father is an interesting figure in our Church history.
+Educated at Emmanuel College, from whence he proceeded a Master of Arts
+in 1608, he took Orders; and after serving as curate at Flamborough, was
+inducted to the living of Winestead in 1614, where he remained till
+1624, in which year he went to Hull as master of the Grammar School and
+lecturer, that is preacher, of Trinity Church. The elder Marvell
+belonged, from the beginning to the end of his useful and even heroic
+life, to the Reformed Church of England, or, as his son puts it, "a
+conformist to the Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England, though
+I confess none of the most over-running and eager in them." The younger
+Marvell, with one boyish interval, belonged all through his life to the
+paternal school of religious thought.
+
+Fuller's account of the elder Marvell is too good to be passed over:--
+
+ "He afterwards became Minister at Hull, where for his lifetime he was
+ well beloved. Most facetious in discourse, yet grave in his carriage,
+ a most excellent preacher who, like a good husband, never broached
+ what he had new brewed, but preached what he had pre-studied some
+ competent time before. Insomuch that he was wont to say that he would
+ cross the common proverb which called Saturday the working-day and
+ Monday the holyday of preachers. It happened that Anno Dom. 1640,
+ Jan. 23, crossing Humber in a Barrow boat, the same was sandwarpt,
+ and he was drowned therein (with Mrs. Skinner, daughter to Sir Edward
+ Coke, a very religious gentlewoman) by the carelessness, not to say
+ drunkenness of the boatmen, to the great grief of all good men. His
+ excellent comment upon St. Peter is daily desired and expected, if
+ the envy and covetousness of private persons _for their own use_
+ deprive not the public of the benefit thereof."[6:1]
+
+This good man, to whom perhaps, remembering the date of his death, the
+words may apply, _Tu vero felix non vitae tantum claritate sed etiam
+opportunitate mortis_, was married at Cherry Burton, on the 22nd of
+October 1612, to Anne Pease, a member of a family destined to become
+widely known throughout the north of England. Of this marriage there
+were five children, all born at Winestead, viz. three daughters, Anne,
+Mary, and Elizabeth, and two sons, Andrew and John, the latter of whom
+died a year after his birth, and was buried at Winestead on the 20th
+September 1624.
+
+The three daughters married respectively James Blaydes of Sutton,
+Yorkshire, on the 29th of December 1633; Edmund Popple, afterwards
+Sheriff of Hull, on the 18th of August 1636; and Robert More. Anne's
+eldest son, Joseph Blaydes, was Mayor of Hull in 1702, having married
+the daughter of a preceding Mayor in 1698. The descendants of this
+branch still flourish. The Popples also had children, one of whom,
+William Popple, was a correspondent of his uncle the poet's, and a
+merchant of repute, who became in 1696 Secretary to the Board of Trade,
+and the friend of the most famous man who ever sat at the table of that
+Board, John Locke. A son of this William Popple led a very comfortable
+eighteenth-century life, which is in strong contrast with that of his
+grand-uncle, for, having entered the Cofferers' Office about 1730, he
+was made seven years later Solicitor and Clerk of the Reports to the
+Commissioners of Trade and Plantations, and in 1745 became in
+succession to a relative, one Alured Popple, Governor of the Bermudas, a
+post he retained until his death, which occurred not
+
+ "Where the remote Bermudas ride
+ In the ocean's bosom unespied,"
+
+but at his house in Hampstead. So well placed and idle a gentleman was
+almost bound to be a bad poet and worse dramatist, and this William
+Popple was both.
+
+Marvell's third sister, Elizabeth, does not seem to have had issue, a
+certain Thomas More, or Moore, a Fellow of Magdalen College, Cambridge,
+whose name occurs in family records, being her stepson.
+
+In the latter part of 1624 the elder Marvell resigned the living of
+Winestead, and took up the duties of schoolmaster and lecturer, or
+preacher, at Hull. Important duties they were, for the old Grammar
+School of Hull dates back to 1486, and may boast of a long career of
+usefulness, never having fallen into that condition of decay and
+disrepute from which so many similar endowments have been of late years
+rescued by the beneficent and, of course, abused action of the Charity
+Commissioners. Andrew Marvell the elder succeeded to and was succeeded
+by eminent headmasters. Trinity Church, where the poet's father preached
+on Sundays to crowded and interested congregations, was then what it
+still is, though restored by Scott, one of the great churches in the
+north of England.
+
+The Rev. Andrew Marvell made his mark upon Hull. Mr. Grosart, who lacked
+nothing but the curb upon a too exuberant vocabulary, a little less
+enthusiasm and a great deal more discretion, to be a model editor, tells
+us in his invaluable edition of _The Complete Works in Verse and Prose
+of Andrew Marvell, M.P._,[8:1] that he had read a number of the elder
+Marvell's manuscripts, consisting of sermons and miscellaneous papers,
+from which Mr. Grosart proceeds:--
+
+ "I gather three things.
+
+ "(1) That he was a man of a very brave, fearlessly outspoken
+ character. Some of his practical applications in his sermons before
+ the Magistrates are daring in their directness of reproof, and
+ melting in their wistfulness of entreaty.
+
+ "(2) That he was a well-read man. His Sermons are as full of
+ classical and patristic allusions and pat sayings from the most
+ occult literatures as even Bishop Andrewes.
+
+ "(3) That he was a man of tireless activity. Besides the two offices
+ named, he became head of one of the Great Hospitals of the Town
+ (Charter House), and in an address to the Governors placed before
+ them a prescient and statesmanlike plan for the better management of
+ its revenues, and for the foundation of a Free Public Library to be
+ accessible to all."
+
+When at a later day, and in the midst of a fierce controversy, Andrew
+Marvell wrote of the clergy as "the reserve of our Christianity," he
+doubtless had such men as his father in his mind and memory.
+
+It was at the old Grammar School of Hull, and with his father as his
+_Orbilius_, that Marvell was initiated into the mysteries of the Latin
+grammar, and was, as he tells us, put to his
+
+ "Montibus, inquit, erunt; et erant submontibus illis;
+ Risit Atlantiades; et me mihi, perfide, prodis?
+ Me mihi prodis? ait.
+
+ "For as I remember this scanning was a liberal art that we learn'd at
+ Grammar School, and to scan verses as he does the Author's prose
+ before we did or were obliged to understand them."[8:2]
+
+Irrational methods have often amazingly good results, and the Hull
+Grammar School provided its head-master's only son with the rudiments of
+learning, thus enabling him to become in after years what John Milton
+himself, the author of that terrible _Treatise on Education_ addressed
+to Mr. Hartlibb, affirmed Andrew Marvell to be in a written testimonial,
+"a scholar, and well-read in the Latin and Greek authors."
+
+Attached to the Grammar School there was "a great garden," renowned for
+its wall-fruit and flowers; so by leaving Winestead behind, our
+"garden-poet," that was to be, was not deprived of inspiration.
+
+Apart from these meagre facts, we know nothing of Marvell's boyhood at
+Hull. His clerical foe, Dr. Parker, afterwards Bishop of Oxford, writes
+contemptuously of "an hunger-starved whelp of a country vicar," and in
+another passage, which undoubtedly refers to Marvell, he speaks of "an
+unhappy education among Boatswains and Cabin-boys," whose unsavoury
+phrases, he goes on to suggest, Marvell picked up in his childhood. But
+truth need not be looked for in controversial pages. The best argument
+for a married clergy is to be found, for Englishmen at all events, in
+the sixty-seven volumes of the _Dictionary of National Biography_, where
+are recorded the services rendered to religion, philosophy, poetry,
+justice, and the empire by the "whelps" of many a country vicar.
+Parsons' wives may sometimes be trying and hard to explain, but an
+England without the sons of her clergy would be shorn of half her glory.
+
+Marvell's boyhood seems to have been surrounded with the things that
+most make for a child's happiness. A sensible, affectionate, humorous,
+religious father, occupying a position of authority, and greatly
+respected, a mother and three elder sisters to make much of his bright
+wit and early adventures, a comfortable yet simple home, and an
+atmosphere of piety, learning, and good fellowship. What more is wanted,
+or can be desired? The "Boatswains" and "Cabin-boys" of Bishop Parker's
+fancy were in the neighbourhood, no doubt, and as stray companions for a
+half-holiday must have had their attractions; but it is unnecessary to
+attribute Andrew Marvell's style in controversy to his early
+acquaintance with a sea-faring population, for he is far more likely to
+have picked it up from his great friend and colleague, the author of
+_Paradise Lost_.
+
+Marvell's school education over, he went up to Cambridge, not to his
+father's old college, but to the more splendid foundation of Trinity.
+About the date of his matriculation there is a doubt. In Wood's _Athenae
+Oxonienses_ there is a note to the effect that Marvell was admitted "in
+matriculam Acad. Cant. Coll. Trin." on the 14th of December 1633, when
+the boy was but twelve years old. Dr. Lort, a famous master of Trinity
+in his day, writing in November 1765 to Captain Edward Thompson, of whom
+more later on, told the captain that until 1635 there was no register of
+admissions of ordinary students, or pensioners, as they are called, but
+only a register of Fellows and Foundation Scholars, and in this
+last-named register Marvell's name appears as a Scholar sworn and
+admitted on the 13th of April 1638. As, however, Marvell took his B.A.
+degree in 1639, he must have been in residence long before April 1638.
+Probably Marvell went to Trinity about 1635, just before the register of
+pensioners was begun, as a pensioner, becoming a Scholar in 1638, and
+taking his degree in 1639.
+
+Cambridge undergraduates do not usually keep diaries, nor after they
+have become Masters of Art are they much in the habit of giving details
+as to their academic career. Marvell is no exception to this provoking
+rule. He nowhere tells us what his University taught him or how. The
+logic of the schools he had no choice but to learn. Molineus, Peter
+Ramus, Seton, Keckerman were text-books of reputation, from one or
+another of which every Cambridge man had to master his _simpliciters_,
+his _quids_, his _secundum quids_, his _quales_, and his _quantums_.
+Aristotle's Physics, Ethics, and Politics were "tutor's books," and
+those young men who loved to hear themselves talk were left free to
+discuss, much to Hobbes's disgust, "the freedom of the will, incorporeal
+substance, everlasting nows, ubiquities, hypostases, which the people
+understand not nor will ever care for."
+
+In the life of Matthew Robinson,[11:1] who went up to Cambridge a little
+later than Marvell (June 1645), and was probably a harder reader, we are
+told that "the strength of his studies lay in the metaphysics and in
+those subtle authors for many years which rendered him an irrefragable
+disputant _de quolibet ente_, and whilst he was but senior freshman he
+was found in the bachelor schools, disputing ably with the best of the
+senior sophisters." Robinson despised the old-fashioned Ethics and
+Physics, but with the new Cartesian or Experimental Philosophy he was
+_inter primos_. History, particularly the Roman, was in great favour at
+both Universities at this time, and young men were taught, so old Hobbes
+again grumbles, to despise monarchy "from Cicero, Seneca, Cato and other
+politicians of Rome, and Aristotle of Athens, who seldom spake of kings
+but as of wolves and other ravenous beasts."[12:1] The Muses were never
+neglected at Cambridge, as the University exercises survive to prove,
+whilst modern languages, Spanish and Italian for example, were greedily
+acquired by such an eager spirit as Richard Crashaw, the poet, who came
+into residence at Pembroke in 1631. There were problems to be "kept" in
+the college chapel, lectures to be attended, both public and private,
+declamations to be delivered, and even in the vacations the scholars
+were not exempt from "exercises" either in hall or in their tutors'
+rooms. Earnest students read their Greek Testaments, and even their
+Hebrew Bibles, and filled their note-books, working more hours a day
+than was good for their health, whilst the idle ones wasted their time
+as best they could in an unhealthy, over-crowded town, in an age which
+knew nothing of boating, billiards, or cricket. A tennis-court there was
+in Marvell's time, for in Dr. Worthington's _Diary_, under date 3rd of
+April 1637, it stands recorded that on that day and in that place that
+learned man received "a dangerous blow on the Eye."[12:2]
+
+The only incident we know of Marvell's undergraduate days is remarkable
+enough, for, boy though he was, he seems, like the Gibbon of a later
+day, to have suddenly become a Roman Catholic. This occurrence may serve
+to remind us how, during Marvell's time at Trinity, the University of
+Cambridge (ever the precursor in thought-movements) had a Catholic
+revival of her own, akin to that one which two hundred years afterwards
+happened at Oxford, and has left so much agreeable literature behind it.
+Fuller in his history of the University of Cambridge tells us a little
+about this highly interesting and important movement:--
+
+ "Now began the University (1633-4) to be much beautified in
+ buildings, every college either casting its skin with the snake, or
+ renewing its bill with the eagle, having their courts or at least
+ their fronts and Gatehouses repaired and adorned. But the greatest
+ alteration was in their Chapels, most of them being graced with the
+ accession of organs. And seeing musick is one of the liberal arts,
+ how could it be quarrelled at in an University if they sang with
+ understanding both of the matter and manner thereof. Yet some took
+ great distaste thereat as attendancie to superstition."[13:1]
+
+The chapel at Peterhouse, we read elsewhere, which was built in 1632,
+and consecrated by Bishop White of Ely, had a beautiful ceiling and a
+noble east window. "A grave divine," Fuller tells us, "preaching before
+the University at St. Mary's, had this smart passage in his Sermon--that
+as at the Olympian Games he was counted the Conqueror who could drive
+his chariot wheels nearest the mark yet so as not to hinder his running
+or to stick thereon, so he who in his Sermons could preach _near Popery_
+and yet _no Popery_, _there was your man_. And indeed it now began to be
+the general complaint of most moderate men that many in the University,
+both in the schools and pulpits, approached the opinions of the Church
+of Rome nearer than ever before."
+
+Archbishop Laud, unlike the bishops of Dr. Newman's day, favoured the
+Catholic revival, and when Mr. Bernard, the lecturer of St. Sepulchre's,
+London, preached a "No Popery" sermon at St. Mary's, Cambridge, he was
+dragged into the High Commission Court, and, as the hateful practice
+then was, a practice dear to the soul of Laud, was bidden to subscribe a
+formal recantation. This Mr. Bernard refused to do, though professing
+his sincere sorrow and penitence for any oversights and hasty
+expressions in his sermon. Thereupon he was sent back to prison, where
+he died. "If," adds Fuller, "he was miserably abused in prison by the
+keepers (as some have reported) to the shortening of his life, He that
+maketh inquisition for blood either hath or will be a revenger
+thereof."[14:1]
+
+By the side of this grim story the much-written-about incidents of the
+Oxford Movement seem trivial enough.
+
+Not a few Cambridge scholars of this period, Richard Crashaw among the
+number, found permanent refuge in Rome.
+
+The story of Marvell's conversion is emphatic but vague in its details.
+The "Jesuits," who were well represented in Cambridge at the time, are
+said to have persuaded him to leave Cambridge secretly, and to take
+refuge in one of their houses in London. Thither the elder Marvell
+followed in pursuit, and after search came across his son in a
+bookseller's shop, where he succeeded both in convincing the boy of his
+errors and in persuading him to return to Trinity. An odd story, and
+not, as it stands, very credible; but Mr. Grosart discovered among the
+Marvell papers at Hull a fragment of a letter without signature,
+address, or date, which throws some sort of light on the incident. This
+letter was evidently, as Mr. Grosart surmises, sent to the elder Marvell
+by some similarly afflicted parent. In its fragmentary state the letter
+reads as follows:--
+
+ "Worthy S^r,--M^r Breerecliffe being w^th me to-day, I related vnto
+ him a fearfull passage lately at Cambridg touching a sonne of mine,
+ Bachelor of Arts in Katherine Hall, w^ch was this. He was lately
+ inuited to a supper in towne by a gentlewoman, where was one M^r
+ Nichols a felow of Peterhouse, and another or two masters of arts, I
+ know not directly whether felowes or not: my sonne hauing noe
+ p'ferment, but liuing meerely of my penny, they pressed him much to
+ come to liue at their house, and for chamber and extraordinary bookes
+ they promised farre: and then earnestly moued him to goe to Somerset
+ house, where they could doe much for p'ferring him to some eminent
+ place, and in conclusion to popish arguments to seduce him soe rotten
+ and vnsauory as being ouerheard it was brought in question before the
+ heads of the Uniuersity: _Dr. Cosens_, being _Vice Chancelor_ noe
+ punishment is inioined him: but on Ash-wednesday next a recantation
+ in regent house of some popish tenets Nicols let fall: I p'ceive by
+ M^r Breercliffe some such prank vsed towards y^r sonne: I desire to
+ know what y^u did therin: thinking I cannot doe god better seruice
+ then bring it vppon the stage either in Parliament if it hold: or
+ informing some Lords of the Counsail to whom I stand much oblieged if
+ a bill in Starchamber be meete To terrify others by making these some
+ publique spectacle: for if such fearfull practises may goe vnpunished
+ I take care whether I may send a child ... the lord."[15:1]
+
+The reference to Dr. Cosens, or Cosin, being Vice-Chancellor gives a
+clue to the date, for Cosin was chosen Vice-Chancellor on the 4th of
+November 1639.[15:2]
+
+Though we can know nothing of the elder Marvell's methods of
+re-conversion, they were more successful than the elder Gibbon's, who,
+as we know, packed the future historian off to Lausanne and a Swiss
+pastor's house. What Gibbon became on leaving off his Romanism we can
+guess for ourselves, whereas Marvell, once out of the hands of these
+very shadowy "Jesuits," remained the staunchest of Christian Protestants
+to the end of his days.
+
+This strange incident, and two college exercises or poems, one in
+Greek, the other in Latin, both having reference to an addition to the
+Royal Family, and appearing in the _Musa Cantabrigiensis_ for 1637, are
+all the materials that exist for weaving the story of Marvell, the
+Cambridge undergraduate. The Latin verses, which are Horatian in style,
+contain one pretty stanza, composed apparently before the sex of the
+new-born infant was known at Cambridge.
+
+ "Sive felici Carolum figura
+ Parvulus princeps imitetur almae
+ Sive Mariae decoret puellam
+ Dulcis imago."
+
+After taking his Bachelor's degree in 1639, Marvell, being still a
+Scholar of the college, must have gone away, for the Conclusion Book of
+Trinity, under date September 24, 1641, records as follows:--
+
+ "It is agreed by y^e Master and 8 seniors y^t M^r Carter and D^r
+ Wakefields, D^r Marvell, D^r Waterhouse, and D^r Maye in regard y^t
+ some of them are reported to be married and y^t others look not after
+ y^eir days nor Acts shall receave no more benefitt of y^e Coll and
+ shall be out of y^ier places unless y^ei shew just cause to y^e Coll
+ for y^e contrary in 3 months."
+
+Dr. Lort, in his amiable letter of 1765, already mentioned, points out
+that this entry contains no reflection on Marvell's morals, but shows
+that he was given "notice to quit" for non-residence, "then much more
+strictly enjoined than it is now." The days referred to in the entry
+were, so the master obligingly explains, "the certain number allowed by
+statute to absentees," whilst the "acts mean the Exercises also enjoyned
+by the statutes." Dr. Lort adds, "It does not appear, by any subsequent
+entry, whether Marvell did or did not comply with this order." We may
+now safely assume he did not. Marvell's Cambridge days were over.
+
+The vacations, no inconsiderable part of the year, were probably spent
+by Marvell under his father's roof at Hull, where his two elder sisters
+were married and settled. It is not to be wondered at that Andrew
+Marvell should, for so many years, have represented Hull in the House of
+Commons, for both he and his family were well known in the town. The
+elder Marvell added to his reputation as a teacher and preacher the
+character of a devoted servant of his flock in the hour of danger. The
+plague twice visited Hull during the time of the elder Marvell, first in
+1635 and again in 1638. In those days men might well pray to be
+delivered from "plague, pestilence, and famine." Hull suffered terribly
+on both occasions. We have seen, in comparatively recent times, the
+effect of the cholera upon large towns, and the plague was worse than
+the cholera many times over. The Hull preacher, despite the stigma of
+_facetiousness_, which still clings to him, stuck to his post, visiting
+the sick, burying the dead, and even, which seems a little superfluous,
+preaching and afterwards printing "by request" their funeral sermons. A
+brave man, indeed, and one reserved for a tragic end.
+
+In April 1638 the poet's mother died. In the following November the
+elder Marvell married a widow lady, but his own end was close upon him.
+The earliest consecutive account of this strange event is in Gent's
+_History of Hull_ (1735):--"This year, 1640, the Rev. Mr. Andrew
+Marvell, Lecturer of Hull, sailing over the Humber in company with
+Madame Skinner of Thornton College and a young beautiful couple who were
+going to be wedded; a speedy Fate prevented the designed happy union
+thro' a violent storm which overset the boat and put a period to all
+their lives, nor were there any remains of them or the vessel ever after
+found, tho' earnestly sought for on distant shores."
+
+Thus died by drowning a brave man, a good Christian, and an excellent
+clergyman of the Reformed Church of England. The plain narrative just
+quoted has been embroidered by many long-subsequent writers in the
+interests of those who love presentiments and ghostly intimations of
+impending events, and in one of these versions it is recorded, that
+though the morning was clear, the breeze fair, and the company gay, yet
+when stepping into the boat "the reverend man exclaimed, 'Ho for
+Heaven,' and threw his staff ashore and left it to Providence to fulfil
+its awful warning."
+
+So melancholy an occurrence naturally excited great attention, and long
+lingered in local memories. Everybody in Hull knew who was their
+member's father.
+
+There is an obstinate tradition quite unverifiable that Mrs. Skinner,
+the mother of the beautiful young lady who was drowned with the elder
+Marvell, adopted the young Marvell as a son, sending to Cambridge for
+him after his father's death, and providing him with the means of
+travel, and that afterwards she bequeathed him her estate. Whether there
+is any truth in this story cannot now be ascertained. The Skinners were
+a well-known Hull family, one of them, a brother of that Cyriac Skinner
+who was urged by Milton in immortal verse to enjoy himself whilst the
+mood was on him, having been Mayor of Hull. The lady, doubtless, had
+money, and Andrew Marvell was in need of money, and appears to have been
+supplied with it. It is quite possible the tradition is true.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[6:1] Fuller's _Worthies_ (1662), p. 159.
+
+[8:1] "The Fuller Worthies Library," 4 vols., 1872. Hereafter referred
+to as _Grosart_.
+
+[8:2] _Mr. Smirke or the Divine in Mode._--Grosart, iv. 15.
+
+[11:1] _Autobiography of Matthew Robinson_. Edited by J.E.B. Mayor,
+Cambridge, 1856.
+
+[12:1] _Behemoth_, Hobbes' Works (Molesworth), vol. vi., see pp. 168,
+218, 233-6.
+
+[12:2] Worthington's _Diary_, vol. i. p. 5 (Chetham Society).
+
+[13:1] Fuller, _History of Cambridge University_ (1655), p. 167.
+
+[14:1] Fuller, p. 166.
+
+[15:1] Grosart, I., xxviii.
+
+[15:2] See Worthington's _Diary_, vol. i. p. 7.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"THE HAPPY GARDEN-STATE"
+
+
+The seventeenth century was the century of travel for educated
+Englishmen--of long, leisurely travel. Milton's famous Italian tour
+lasted fifteen months. John Evelyn's _Wander-Jahre_ occupied four years.
+Andrew Marvell lived abroad in France, Spain, Holland, and Italy from
+1642 to 1646, and we have Milton's word for it that when the traveller
+returned he was well acquainted with the French, Dutch, Spanish, and
+Italian languages. Andrew Marvell was a highly cultivated man, living in
+a highly cultivated age, in daily converse with scholars, poets,
+philosophers, and men of very considerable scientific attainments. In
+reading Clarendon and Burnet, and whilst turning over Aubrey's
+delightful gossip, it is impossible not to be struck with the width and
+variety of the learning as well as with the wit of the period.
+Intellectually it was a great age.
+
+No record remains of Marvell's travels during these years. Up and down
+his writings the careful reader will come across pleasant references to
+foreign manners and customs, betokening the keen humorous observer, and
+the possession of that wide-eyed faculty that takes a pleasure, half
+contemplative, half the result of animal spirits, in watching the way of
+the world wherever you may chance to be. Of another and an earlier
+traveller, Sir Henry Wotton, we read in "Walton's _Life_."
+
+ "And whereas he was noted in his youth to have a sharp wit and apt to
+ jest, _that_ by time, travel, and conversation was so polished and
+ made useful, that his company seemed to be one of the delights of
+ mankind."
+
+In all Marvell's work, as poet, as Parliamentarian, as controversialist,
+we shall see the travelled man. Certainly no one ever more fully grasped
+the sense of the famous sentence given by Wotton to Milton, when the
+latter was starting on his travels: "_I pensieri stretti ed il viso
+sciolto._"
+
+Marvell was in Rome about 1645. I can give no other date during the
+whole four years. This, our only date, rests upon an assumption. In
+Marvell's earliest satirical poem he gives an account of a visit he paid
+in Rome to the unlucky poetaster Flecknoe, who was not in Rome until
+1645. If, therefore, the poem records an actual visit, it follows that
+the author of the poem was in Rome at the same time. It is not very
+near, but it is as near as we can get.
+
+Richard Flecknoe was an Irish priest of blameless life, with a passion
+for scribbling and for printing. His exquisite reason for both these
+superfluous acts is worth quoting:--
+
+ "I write chiefly to avoid idleness, and print to avoid the imputation
+ (of idleness), and as others do it to live after they are dead, I do
+ it only not to be thought dead whilst I am alive."[20:1]
+
+Such frankness should have disarmed ridicule, but somehow or another
+this amiable man came to be regarded as the type of a dull author, and
+his name passed into a proverb for stupidity, so much so that when
+Dryden in 1682 was casting about how best to give pain to Shadwell, he
+devised the plan of his famous satire, "MacFlecknoe," where in biting
+verse he describes Flecknoe (who was happily dead) as an aged Prince--
+
+ "Who like Augustus young
+ Was called to empire and had governed long;
+ In prose and verse was owned, without dispute,
+ Through all the realms of nonsense absolute."
+
+Dryden goes on to picture the aged Flecknoe,
+
+ "pondering which of all his sons was fit
+ To reign and wage immortal war with Wit,"
+
+and fixing on Shadwell.
+
+ "Shadwell alone my perfect image bears,
+ Mature in dulness from his tender years;
+ Shadwell alone, of all my sons, is he
+ Who stands confirmed in full stupidity:
+ The rest to some faint meaning make pretence,
+ But Shadwell never deviates into sense."
+
+Thus has it come about that Flecknoe, the Irish priest, whom Marvell
+visited in his Roman garret in 1645, bears a name ever memorable in
+literature.
+
+Marvell's own poem, though eclipsed by the splendour of Glorious John's
+resounding lines, has an interest of its own as being, in its roughly
+humorous way, a forerunner of the "Dunciad" and "Grub Street"
+literature, by which in sundry moods 'tis "pleasure to be bound." It
+describes seeking out the poetaster in his lodging "three staircases
+high," at the sign of the Pelican, in a room so small that it seemed "a
+coffin set in the stair's head." No sooner was the rhymer unearthed than
+straightway he began to recite his poetry in dismal tones, much to his
+visitor's dismay:--
+
+ "But I who now imagin'd myself brought
+ To my last trial, in a serious thought
+ Calm'd the disorders of my youthful breast
+ And to my martyrdom prepared rest.
+ Only this frail ambition did remain,
+ The last distemper of the sober brain,
+ That there had been some present to assure
+ The future ages how I did endure."
+
+To stop the cataract of "hideous verse," Marvell invited the scarecrow
+to dinner, and waits while he dresses. As they turn to leave, for the
+room is so small that the man who comes in last must be the first to go
+out, they meet a friend of the poet on the stairs, who makes a third at
+dinner. After dinner Flecknoe produces ten quires of paper, from which
+the friend proceeds to read, but so infamously as to excite their
+author's rage:--
+
+ "But all his praises could not now appease
+ The provok't Author, whom it did displease
+ To hear his verses by so just a curse
+ That were ill made, condemned to be read worse:
+ And how (impossible!) he made yet more
+ Absurdities in them than were before:
+ For his untun'd voice did fall or raise
+ As a deaf man upon the Viol plays,
+ Making the half-points and the periods run
+ Confus'der than the atoms in the sun:
+ Thereat the poet swell'd with anger full,"
+
+and after violent exclamations retires in dudgeon back to his room. The
+faithful friend is in despair. What is he to do to make peace? "Who
+would commend his mistress now?" Marvell
+
+ "counselled him to go in time
+ Ere the fierce poet's anger turned to rhyme."
+
+The advice was taken, and Marvell, finding himself at last free from
+boredom, went off to St. Peter's to return thanks.
+
+This poem is but an unsatisfactory _souvenir de voyage_, but it is all
+there is.
+
+What Marvell was doing during the stirring years 1646-1650 is not
+known. Even in the most troubled times men go about their business, and
+our poet was always a man of affairs. As for his opinions during these
+years, we can only guess at them from those to which he afterwards gave
+expression. Marvell was neither a Republican nor a Puritan. Like his
+father before him, he was a Protestant and a member of the Reformed
+Church of England. He stood for both King and Parliament. Archbishop
+Laud he distrusted, and it may well be detested, but good churchmen have
+often distrusted and even detested their archbishops. Mr. Gladstone had
+no great regard for Archbishop Tait. Before the Act of Uniformity and
+the repressive legislation that followed upon its heels had driven
+English dissent into its final moulds, it was not doctrine but
+ceremonies that disturbed men's minds; and Marvell belonged to that
+school of English churchmen, by no means the least distinguished school,
+which was not disposed to quarrel with their fellow-Christians over
+white surplices, the ring in matrimony, or the attitude during Holy
+Communion. He shared the belief of a contemporary that no system is bad
+enough to destroy a good man, or good enough to save a bad one.
+
+The Civil War was to Marvell what it was to most wise men not devoured
+by faction--a deplorable event. Twenty years after he wrote in the
+_Rehearsal Transprosed_:--
+
+ "Whether it be a war of religion or of liberty it is not worth the
+ labour to inquire. Whichsoever was at the top, the other was at the
+ bottom; but upon considering all, I think the cause was too good to
+ have been fought for. Men ought to have trusted God--they ought to
+ have trusted the King with that whole matter. The arms of the Church
+ are prayers and tears, the arms of the subject are patience and
+ petitions. The King himself being of so accurate and piercing a
+ judgment would soon have felt it where it stuck. For men may spare
+ their pains when Nature is at work, and the world will not go the
+ faster for our driving. Even as his present Majesty's happy
+ Restoration did itself, so all things else happen in their best and
+ proper time, without any heed of our officiousness."[24:1]
+
+In the face of this passage and many another of the like spirit, it is
+puzzling to find such a man, for example, as Thomas Baker, the ejected
+non-juring Fellow and historian of St. John's College, Cambridge
+(1656-1740), writing of Marvell as "that bitter republican"; and Dryden,
+who probably knew Marvell, comparing his controversial pamphlets with
+those of Martin Marprelate, or at all events speaking of Martin
+Marprelate as "the Marvell of those times."[24:2] A somewhat
+anti-prelatical note runs through Marvell's writings, but it is a
+familiar enough note in the works of the English laity, and by no means
+dissevers its possessor from the Anglican Church. But there are some
+heated expressions in the satires which probably gave rise to the belief
+that Marvell was a Republican.[24:3]
+
+During the Commonwealth Marvell was content to be a civil servant. He
+entertained for the Lord-Protector the same kind of admiration that such
+a loyalist as Chateaubriand could not help feeling for Napoleon. Even
+Clarendon's pedantic soul occasionally vibrates as he writes of Oliver,
+and compares his reputation in foreign courts with that of his own
+royal master. When the Restoration came Marvell rejoiced. Two
+old-established things had been destroyed by Cromwell--Kings and
+Parliaments, and Marvell was glad to see them both back again in
+England.
+
+Some verses of Marvell's attributable to this period (1646-1650) show
+him keeping what may be called Royalist company. With a dozen other
+friends of Richard Lovelace, the Cavalier poet and the author of two of
+the most famous stanzas in English verse, Marvell contributed some
+commendatory lines addressed to his "noble friend, Mr. Richard Lovelace,
+upon his Poems," which appeared with the poems themselves in that year
+of fate, 1649. "After the murder of the King," says Anthony Wood,
+"Lovelace was set at liberty, and having by that time consumed all his
+estate, grew very melancholy, became very poor in body and purse, was
+the object of charity, went in ragged clothes (whereas when he was in
+glory he wore cloth of gold and silver), and mostly lodged in obscure
+and dirty places, more befitting the worst of beggars and poorest of
+servants."
+
+Then it was that _Lucasta_ made its first appearance. When the fortunes
+of the gallant poet were at their lowest and never to revive, Marvell
+seizes the occasion to deplore the degeneracy of the times, a familiar
+theme with poets:--
+
+ "Our civil wars have lost the civic crown,
+ He highest builds who with most art destroys,
+ And against others' fame his own employs."
+
+He then glances scornfully at the new Presbyterian censorship of the
+press:--
+
+ "The barbed censurers begin to look
+ Like the grim consistory on thy book,
+ And on each line cast a reforming eye,"
+
+and suggests that _Lucasta_ is in danger because in 1642 its author had
+been imprisoned by order of the House of Commons for presenting a
+petition from Kent which prayed for the restoration of the Book of
+Common Prayer. This danger is, however, overcome by the ladies, who rise
+in arms to defend their favourite poet.
+
+ "But when the beauteous Ladies came to know
+ That their dear Lovelace was endangered so,
+ Lovelace that thaw'd the most congealed breast,
+ He who lov'd best and them defended best,
+ They all in mutiny, though yet undrest,
+ Sally'd."
+
+One of them challenged Marvell as to whether he had not been of the
+poet's traducers, but he answered No!
+
+ "O No, mistake not, I reply'd, for I
+ In your defence or in his cause would die.
+ But he, secure of glory and of time,
+ Above their envy or my aid doth climb.
+ Him, bravest men and fairest nymphs approve,
+ His book in them finds Judgment, with you, Love."
+
+Lovelace did not live to see the Restoration, but died in a mean lodging
+near Shoe Lane in April 1658, and was buried in St. Bridget's Church.
+Let us indulge the hope that the friends who occupied so many of the
+introductory pages of Lovelace's _Lucasta_ occasionally enlivened the
+solitude and relieved the distress of the poet whose praises they had
+once sung with so much vigour. As Marvell was undoubtedly a friendly
+man, and one who loved to be alone with his friends, and had never any
+house of his own to keep up, living for the most part in hired lodgings,
+it would be unkind to doubt that he at least did not forget Lovelace in
+his poverty and depression of spirit.
+
+In 1649 thirty-three poets combined to weep over the early grave of the
+Lord Henry Hastings, the eldest son of the sixth Earl of Huntingdon, who
+died of the smallpox in the twentieth year of his age. Not even this
+plentiful discharge of poets' tears should rob the young nobleman of his
+claim to be regarded as a fine example of the great learning,
+accomplishments, and high spirits of the age. We can still produce the
+thirty-three poets, but what young nobleman is there who can boast such
+erudition as had rewarded the scorned delights and the laborious days of
+this Lord Hastings? We have at least the satisfaction of knowing that
+did such a one exist he probably would not die of the smallpox. Among
+the poets who wept on this occasion were Herrick, Sir John Denham,
+Andrew Marvell, and John Dryden, then a Westminster schoolboy, whose
+description of the smallpox is as bad as the disease.
+
+Marvell's verses begin very prettily and soon introduce a characteristic
+touch:--
+
+ "Go, stand betwixt the Morning and the Flowers,
+ And ere they fall arrest the early showers,
+ Hastings is dead; and we disconsolate
+ With early tears must mourn his early fate."
+
+In 1650 Marvell, then in his twenty-ninth year, went to live with Lord
+Fairfax at Nunappleton House in Yorkshire, as tutor to the only child
+and daughter of the house, Mary Fairfax, aged twelve years (born 30th
+July 1638). This proved to be a great event in Marvell's life as a poet,
+and it happened at an epoch in the distinguished career of the famous
+Parliamentarian general
+
+ "Whose name in arms through Europe rings."
+
+Lord Fairfax, though he had countenanced, if not approved, the trial
+and deposition of the king, had resolutely held himself aloof from the
+proceedings which, beginning on Saturday the 20th of January 1649,
+terminated so dismally on Tuesday the 30th. The strange part played by
+Lady Fairfax on the first day of the so-called trial (though it was no
+greater a travesty of justice than many a real trial both before and
+after) is one of the best-known stories in English history. There are
+several versions of it. Having provided herself with a seat in a small
+gallery in Westminster Hall, just above the heads of the judges, when
+her husband's name was called out as one of the commissioners, the
+intrepid lady (no Cavalier's dame, be it remembered, but a true blue
+Presbyterian), a brave soldier's daughter, cried out, "Lord Fairfax is
+not here; he will never sit among you. You do wrong to name him as a
+sitting Commissioner." This is Rushworth's version, and he was present.
+Clarendon, who was not present, being abroad at the time, reports the
+words as, "He has more wit than to be here."
+
+Later on in the day, when the President Bradshaw interrupted the king
+and peremptorily bade him to answer the charges exhibited against him
+"in the name of the Commons of England assembled, and of the people of
+England," Lady Fairfax again rose to her feet and exclaimed, "It's a
+lie! Not half the people. Where are they and their consents? Oliver
+Cromwell is a traitor."
+
+Lieutenant-Colonel Axtell, who during the trial was in command of a
+regiment in Westminster and charged by his military superior, Lord
+Fairfax himself, with the duty of maintaining order, hearing this
+disturbance, went forward and told Lady Fairfax to hold her tongue,
+sound advice which she appears to have taken. After the Restoration
+Axtell was put to his trial as a "regicide." His defence, which was,
+that as a soldier he obeyed his orders, and was no more guilty than his
+general, Lord Fairfax, was not listened to, and he was sentenced to
+death, a fate which he met like the brave man he was.
+
+Although Fairfax did not immediately resign his command after the king's
+death, from that moment he lost heart in the cause. Lady Fairfax, whose
+loyalty to Charles may have been quickened by her dislike of Oliver, had
+great influence with him, and it may well be that his conscience pricked
+him. The rupture came in June 1650, when Charles's son made his
+appearance in Scotland and his peace with the Presbyterians, subscribing
+with inward emotions it would be unkind to attempt to describe the
+Solemn League and Covenant, and attending services and listening to
+sermons the length of which, at least, he never forgot. War was plainly
+imminent between the two countries. The question was, who should begin?
+Cromwell, who had hurried home from Ireland, Lambert, and Harrison were
+all keen to strike the first blow. Fairfax felt a scruple, and in those
+days scruples counted. Was there, he asked, a just cause for an invasion
+of Scotland? A committee was appointed, consisting of the three warriors
+above-named with St. John and Whitelock, to confer with the Lord-General
+and satisfy him of the lawfulness of the undertaking. The six met, and
+having first prayed--Oliver praying first--they proceeded to a
+discussion which may be read at length in Whitelock's _Memorials_, vol.
+iii. p. 207. The substance of their talk was as follows: Fairfax's
+scruple proved to be that both they and the Scots had joined in the
+Solemn League and Covenant, and that, therefore, until Scotland assumed
+the offensive, there was no cause for an invasion. Cromwell's retort,
+after a preliminary quibble, was practical enough. "War is inevitable.
+Is it better to have it in the bowels of another's country or in one's
+own? In one or other it must be." Fairfax's scruple, however, withstood
+this battery, though it was strongly enforced by Harrison, who, in reply
+to the Lord-General's question, "What was the warrant for the assumption
+that Scotland meant to fall upon England?" inquired, if Scotland did not
+mean to invade England, for whose benefit were levies being made and
+soldiers enlisted.
+
+Fairfax proved immovable. "Every man," said he, "must stand or fall by
+his own conscience"; and as he offered to lay down his command, there
+was nothing for it but to accept the resignation and appoint his
+successor. This was speedily done, and on the 28th of June 1650 "Oliver
+Cromwell, Esquire," was appointed Captain-General and Commander-in-chief
+of all the forces. On 16th July Cromwell crossed the Tweed, and on the
+3rd of September the Lord delivered Leslie into his hands at Dunbar.
+
+It was in these circumstances that Lord Fairfax and his energetic lady
+and only child went back to their Yorkshire home in the midsummer of
+1650, taking Marvell with them to instruct the Lady Mary in the tongues.
+
+Nunappleton House is in the Ainstey of York, a pleasant bit of country
+bounded by the rivers Ouse, Wharfe, and Nidd. The modern traveller, as
+his train rushes north, whilst shut up in his corridor-carriage with his
+rug, his pipe, and his novel, passes at no great distance from the house
+on the way between Selby and York. The old house, as it was in Marvell's
+time, is thus described by Captain Markham, who had a print to help
+him, in his delightful _Life of the Great Lord Fairfax_:--
+
+ "It was a picturesque brick mansion with stone copings and a high
+ steep roof, and consisted of a centre and two wings at right angles,
+ forming three sides of a square, facing to the north. The great hall
+ or gallery occupied the centre between the two wings. It was fifty
+ yards long, and was adorned with thirty shields in wood, painted with
+ the arms of the family. In the three rooms there were chimney-pieces
+ of delicate marble of various colours, and many fine portraits on the
+ walls. The central part of the house was surrounded by a cupola, and
+ clustering chimneys rose in the two wings. A noble park with splendid
+ oak-trees, and containing 300 head of deer, stretched away to the
+ north, while on the south side were the ruins of the old Nunnery, the
+ flower-garden, and the low meadows called _ings_ extending to the
+ banks of the Wharfe. In this flower-garden the General took especial
+ delight. The flowers were planted in masses, tulips, pinks, and
+ roses, each in separate beds, which were cut into the shape of forts
+ with five bastions. General Lambert, whom Fairfax had reared as a
+ soldier, also loved his flowers, and excelled both in cultivating
+ them and in painting them from Nature. Lord Fairfax only went to
+ Denton, the favourite seat of his grandfather, when the floods were
+ out over the _ings_ at Nunappleton, and he also occasionally resorted
+ to his house at Bishop Hill in York."[31:1]
+
+In this garden the muse of Andrew Marvell blossomed like the
+cherry-tree.
+
+Lord Fairfax, though furious in war, and badly wounded in many a fierce
+engagement, was, when otherwise occupied, a man of quiet literary
+tastes, and a good bit of a collector and _virtuoso_. Some of the rare
+books and manuscripts he had around him at Nunappleton are now in the
+Bodleian, the treasures of which he had protected in troubled times. He
+loved to handle medals and coins, and knew the points of old
+engravings. He wrote a history of the Christian Church down to our own
+ill-conducted Reformation, and composed a complete metrical version of
+the Psalms of David and of the Song of Solomon. These and many other
+productions, which he characterised as "The Employment of my Solitude,"
+still remain in his own handwriting. Amongst them, Yorkshire men will
+hear with pleasure, is a "Treatise on the breeding of the Horse."
+
+Of the quality of his wife we have already had a touch. She was one of
+the four daughters of Lord Vere of Tilbury, who came of a fine fighting
+family, and whose daughters had a roughish bringing-up, chiefly in the
+Netherlands. None of the daughters were reckoned beautiful, either in
+face or figure, and it may well be that Lady Fairfax had something about
+her of the old campaigner; but of her courage, sincerity, and goodness
+there can be no question. Her loyalty was no sickly fruit of "Church
+Principles," for her strong intelligence rejected scornfully the slavish
+doctrines, alien to our political constitution, of divine right and
+passive obedience; but a loyalty, none the less, it was, of a very
+valuable kind. She was fond of argument, and with Lady Fairfax at
+Nunappleton there was never likely to be any dearth of sensible talk and
+lively reminiscence. The tragedy of the 30th of January could never be
+forgotten, and it is possible that Marvell's most famous verses, so
+nobly descriptive of the demeanour of the king on that memorable
+occasion, derived their inspiration from discourse at Nunappleton.
+
+Of the Lady Mary, aged twelve, we have no direct testimony. When she
+grew up and had her portrait painted she stands revealed as a stout
+young woman with a plain good-natured face. The poor soul needed all
+the good-nature heaven had bestowed upon her, for she had to bear the
+misery and disgrace which were the inevitable marriage-portion of the
+woman whose ill-luck it was to become the wife of George Villiers,
+second Duke of Buckingham. Somebody seems to have taught her philosophy,
+for she bore her misfortunes as best became a great lady, living as one
+who had sorrow but no grievance. The duke died in 1688; she lived on
+till 1704. She was ever a good friend to another ill-used solitary wife,
+Catherine of Braganza. Marvell had every reason to be proud of his
+pupil.
+
+Beside the actual inmates of the great house, the whole countryside
+swarmed with Fairfaxes. At the Rectory of Bolton Percy was the late
+Lord-General's uncle, Henry Fairfax, and his two sons, Henry, who
+succeeded to the title, and the better-known Brian, the biographer of
+the Duke of Buckingham. At Stenton, four miles off, lived the widow of
+the gallant Sir William Fairfax, who died, covered with wounds, in 1644
+before Montgomery Castle. There were two sons and two daughters at
+Stenton, whilst Charles Fairfax, another uncle, and the lawyer and
+genealogist of the family, lived at no great distance with no less than
+fourteen children. There were also sisters of Lord Fairfax, with
+families of their own, all settled in the same part of the county.
+
+Such were the agreeable surroundings of our poet for two years,
+1650-1652. I must leave it to the imaginations of my readers to fill up
+the picture, for excepting the poems, which we may safely assume were
+written at Nunappleton House, and--who can doubt it?--read aloud to its
+inmates, there is nothing more to be said.
+
+Before considering the Nunappleton poetry, a word must be got in of
+bibliography. College exercises and complimentary verses excepted,
+Marvell printed none of his verse under his own name in his lifetime. So
+far as his themes were political there is no need to wonder at this.
+Indeed, the wonder is how, despite their anonymity, their author kept
+his ears; but why the Nunappleton verse should have remained in
+manuscript for more than thirty years is hard to explain.
+
+Until Pope took his muse to market, poetry, apart from the drama, had no
+direct commercial value, or one too small to be ranked as a motive for
+publication. None the less, the age loved distinction and appreciated
+wit, and to be known as a poet whose verses "numbered good intellects"
+was to gain the _entree_ to the society of men both of intellect and
+fashion, and also, not infrequently, snug berths in the public service,
+and secretaryships to foreign missions and embassies. Thus there was
+always, in addition to natural vanity, a strong motive for a
+seventeenth-century poet to publish his poems. To-day one would hesitate
+to recommend a young man who wanted to get on in the world to publish a
+volume of verse; but the age of "wit" and "parts" is over.
+
+It was not till 1681--three years after Marvell's death--that the small
+folio appeared with a fine portrait, still dear to the collector, which
+contains for the first time what may be called the "garden-poetry" of
+our author, together with some specimens of his political and satirical
+versification.
+
+Marvell's most famous poem--_The Ode upon Cromwell's Return from
+Ireland_--is not included in the 1681 volume, and remained in manuscript
+until 1776, as also did the poem upon Cromwell's death.
+
+The remainder of the political poems, which had made their first
+appearance as broadsheets, were reprinted after the Revolution in the
+well-known _Collection of Poems on Affairs of State_.[35:1] These verses
+were never owned by Marvell, and it is probable that some of them,
+though attributed to him, are not his at all. We have only tradition to
+go by. In the case of political satires, squibs, epigrams, rough popular
+occasional rhymes flung off both in haste and heat to be sold with old
+ballads in the market-place, we need not seek for better evidence than
+tradition, which indeed is often the only external evidence we have for
+the authorship of much more important things.
+
+Now to return to the Nunappleton poetry.
+
+In a poem of 776 lines Marvell tells the story and describes the charms
+of the house which Lord Fairfax built for himself during the war, and to
+which, as just narrated, he retired in the summer of 1650. The story is
+only too familiar a one, being writ large over many a fine property.
+Appleton House was Church loot. In the time of Henry, "the majestic lord
+that burst the bonds of Rome," the old house at Nunappleton was a
+Cistercian nunnery, a religious house. In 1542 the community was
+suppressed and its property appropriated by the great-grandfather of the
+Lord-General--one Sir Thomas Fairfax. The religious buildings were
+pulled down and a new secular house rose in their place. In these bare
+and sordid facts there is not much room for poetry, but there is a story
+thrown in. Shortly before 1518 a Yorkshire heiress, bearing the
+unromantic name of Isabella Thwaites, was living in the Cistercian
+abbey, under the guardianship of the abbess, the Lady Anna Langton.
+Property under the care of the Church is always supposed to be in
+danger, and the Lady Anna was freely credited with the desire to make a
+nun of her ward, and so keep her broad acres in Wharfedale and her
+messuages in York for the use of Mother Church. None the less, the young
+lady was allowed to go about and visit her neighbours, and whilst so
+doing she fell in love with Sir William Fairfax, or he fell in love with
+her or with her estates. Thereupon, so the story proceeds, the abbess
+kept her ward a close prisoner within the nunnery walls. Legal
+proceedings were taken, but in the end the privacy of the nunnery was
+invaded, and Miss Thwaites was abducted and married to Sir William
+Fairfax at the church of Bolton Percy. The lady abbess had to submit to
+_vis major_, but worse days were in front of her, for she lived on to
+see the nunnery itself despoiled, and the fair domains she had during a
+long life preserved and maintained for religious uses handed over to the
+son of her former ward, Isabella Thwaites.
+
+Our poet begins by referring to the modest dimensions of the house, and
+the natural charms of its surroundings:--
+
+ "The house was built upon the place,
+ Only as for a mark of grace,
+ And for an inn to entertain
+ Its Lord awhile, but not remain.
+ Him Bishop's-hill or Denton may,
+ Or Billborow, better hold than they:
+ But Nature here hath been so free,
+ As if she said, 'Leave this to me.'
+ Art would more neatly have defac'd
+ What she had laid so sweetly waste
+ In fragrant gardens, shady woods,
+ Deep meadows, and transparent floods."
+
+And then starts the story:--
+
+ "While, with slow eyes, we these survey,
+ And on each pleasant footstep stay,
+ We opportunely may relate
+ The progress of this house's fate.
+ A nunnery first gave it birth,
+ (For virgin buildings oft brought forth)
+ And all that neighbour-ruin shows
+ The quarries whence this dwelling rose.
+ Near to this gloomy cloister's gates,
+ There dwelt the blooming virgin Thwaites,
+ Fair beyond measure, and an heir,
+ Which might deformity make fair;
+ And oft she spent the summer's suns
+ Discoursing with the subtle Nuns,
+ Whence, in these words, one to her weav'd,
+ As 'twere by chance, thoughts long conceiv'd:
+ 'Within this holy leisure, we
+ Live innocently, as you see.
+ These walls restrain the world without,
+ But hedge our liberty about;
+ These bars inclose that wilder den
+ Of those wild creatures, called men,
+ The cloister outward shuts its gates,
+ And, from us, locks on them the grates.
+ Here we, in shining armour white,
+ Like virgin amazons do fight,
+ And our chaste lamps we hourly trim,
+ Lest the great Bridegroom find them dim.
+ Our orient breaths perfumed are
+ With incense of incessant prayer;
+ And holy-water of our tears
+ Most strangely our complexion clears;
+ Not tears of grief, but such as those
+ With which calm pleasure overflows;
+ Or pity, when we look on you
+ That live without this happy vow.
+ How should we grieve that must be seen
+ Each one a spouse, and each a queen,
+ And can in heaven hence behold
+ Our brighter robes and crowns of gold!
+ When we have prayed all our beads,
+ Some one the holy Legend reads,
+ While all the rest with needles paint
+ The face and graces of the Saint;
+ Some of your features, as we sewed,
+ Through every shrine should be bestowed,
+ And in one beauty we would take
+ Enough a thousand Saints to make.
+ And (for I dare not quench the fire
+ That me does for your good inspire)
+ 'Twere sacrilege a man to admit
+ To holy things for heaven fit.
+ I see the angels in a crown
+ On you the lilies showering down;
+ And round about you glory breaks,
+ That something more than human speaks.
+ All beauty when at such a height,
+ Is so already consecrate.
+ Fairfax I know, and long ere this
+ Have marked the youth, and what he is;
+ But can he such a rival seem,
+ For whom you heaven should disesteem?
+ Ah, no! and 'twould more honour prove
+ He your devoto were than Love.
+ Here live beloved and obeyed,
+ Each one your sister, each your maid,
+ And, if our rule seem strictly penned,
+ The rule itself to you shall bend.
+ Our Abbess, too, now far in age,
+ Doth your succession near presage.
+ How soft the yoke on us would lie,
+ Might such fair hands as yours it tie!
+ Your voice, the sweetest of the choir,
+ Shall draw heaven nearer, raise us higher,
+ And your example, if our head,
+ Will soon us to perfection lead.
+ Those virtues to us all so dear,
+ Will straight grow sanctity when here;
+ And that, once sprung, increase so fast,
+ Till miracles it work at last.'"
+
+What reply was given by the heiress to these arguments, and others of a
+still more seductive hue, the poet does not tell, but turns to the eager
+lover who asks, What should he do? He hints that a nunnery is no place
+for a virtuous maid, and that the nuns (unlike himself, I hope) are only
+thinking of her property. He complains that though the Court has
+authorised him to use either peace or force, the nuns still stand upon
+their guard.
+
+ "Ill-counselled women, do you know
+ Whom you resist or what you do?"
+
+Using a most remarkable poetic licence, the poet refers to the fact that
+this barred-out lover is to be the progenitor of the great Lord Fairfax.
+
+ "Is not this he, whose offspring fierce
+ Shall fight through all the universe;
+ And with successive valour try
+ France, Poland, either Germany,
+ Till one, as long since prophesied,
+ His horse through conquered Britain ride?"
+
+The lover determines to take the place by assault. It was not a very
+heroic enterprise, as Marvell describes it.
+
+ "Some to the breach, against their foes,
+ Their wooden Saints in vain oppose;
+ Another bolder, stands at push,
+ With their old holy-water brush,
+ While the disjointed Abbess threads
+ The jingling chain-shot of her beads;
+ But their loud'st cannon were their lungs,
+ And sharpest weapons were their tongues.
+ But waving these aside like flies,
+ Young Fairfax through the wall does rise.
+ Then the unfrequented vault appeared,
+ And superstition, vainly feared;
+ The relicks false were set to view;
+ Only the jewels there were true,
+ And truly bright and holy Thwaites,
+ That weeping at the altar waits.
+ But the glad youth away her bears,
+ And to the Nuns bequeathes her tears,
+ Who guiltily their prize bemoan,
+ Like gypsies who a child have stol'n."
+
+The poet then goes on to glorify the results of this union and to
+describe happy days spent at Nunappleton by the descendants of Isabella
+Thwaites.
+
+ "At the demolishing, this seat
+ To Fairfax fell, as by escheat;
+ And what both nuns and founders willed,
+ 'Tis likely better thus fulfilled.
+ For if the virgin proved not theirs,
+ The cloister yet remained hers;
+ Though many a nun there made her vow,
+ 'Twas no religious house till now.
+ From that blest bed the hero came
+ Whom France and Poland yet does fame;
+ Who, when retired here to peace,
+ His warlike studies could not cease;
+ But laid these gardens out, in sport,
+ In the just figure of a fort,
+ And with five bastions it did fence,
+ As aiming one for every sense.
+ When in the east the morning ray
+ Hangs out the colours of the day,
+ The bee through these known alleys hums,
+ Beating the dian with its drums.
+ Then flowers their drowsy eyelids raise,
+ Their silken ensigns each displays,
+ And dries its pan, yet dank with dew,
+ And fills its flask with odours new.
+ These as their Governor goes by
+ In fragrant volleys they let fly,
+ And to salute their Governess
+ Again as great a charge they press:
+ None for the virgin nymph; for she
+ Seems with the flowers a flower to be.
+ And think so still! though not compare
+ With breath so sweet, or cheek so fair!
+ Well shot, ye firemen! Oh, how sweet
+ And round your equal fires do meet,
+ Whose shrill report no ear can tell,
+ But echoes to the eye and smell!
+ See how the flowers, as at parade,
+ Under their colours stand displayed;
+ Each regiment in order grows,
+ That of the tulip, pink and rose.
+ But when the vigilant patrol
+ Of stars walk round about the pole,
+ Their leaves, which to the stalks are curled,
+ Seem to their staves the ensigns furled.
+ Then in some flower's beloved hut,
+ Each bee, as sentinel, is shut,
+ And sleeps so too, but, if once stirred,
+ She runs you through, nor asks the word.
+
+ Oh, thou, that dear and happy isle,
+ The garden of the world erewhile,
+ Thou Paradise of the four seas,
+ Which heaven planted us to please,
+ But, to exclude the world, did guard
+ With watery, if not flaming sword,--
+ What luckless apple did we taste,
+ To make us mortal, and thee waste?
+ Unhappy! shall we never more
+ That sweet militia restore,
+ When gardens only had their towers
+ And all the garrisons were flowers,
+ When roses only arms might bear,
+ And men did rosy garlands wear?
+ Tulips, in several colours barred,
+ Were then the Switzers of our guard;
+ The gardener had the soldier's place,
+ And his more gentle forts did trace;
+ The nursery of all things green
+ Was then the only magazine;
+ The winter quarters were the stoves,
+ Where he the tender plants removes.
+ But war all this doth overgrow:
+ We ordnance plant, and powder sow.
+
+ The arching boughs unite between
+ The columns of the temple green,
+ And underneath the winged quires
+ Echo about their tuned fires.
+ The nightingale does here make choice
+ To sing the trials of her voice;
+ Low shrubs she sits in, and adorns
+ With music high the squatted thorns;
+ But highest oaks stoop down to hear,
+ And listening elders prick the ear;
+ The thorn, lest it should hurt her, draws
+ Within the skin its shrunken claws.
+ But I have for my music found
+ A sadder, yet more pleasing sound;
+ The stock-doves, whose fair necks are graced
+ With nuptial rings, their ensigns chaste,
+ Yet always, for some cause unknown,
+ Sad pair, unto the elms they moan.
+ O why should such a couple mourn,
+ That in so equal flames do burn!
+ Then as I careless on the bed
+ Of gelid strawberries do tread,
+ And through the hazels thick espy
+ The hatching throstle's shining eye,
+ The heron, from the ash's top,
+ The eldest of its young lets drop,
+ As if it stork-like did pretend
+ That tribute to its lord to send.
+
+ Thus I, easy philosopher,
+ Among the birds and trees confer;
+ And little now to make me, wants,
+ Or of the fowls, or of the plants;
+ Give me but wings as they, and I
+ Straight floating on the air shall fly;
+ Or turn me but, and you shall see
+ I was but an inverted tree.
+ Already I begin to call
+ In their most learn'd original,
+ And where I language want, my signs
+ The bird upon the bough divines,
+ And more attentive there doth sit
+ Than if she were with lime-twigs knit,
+ No leaf does tremble in the wind,
+ Which I returning cannot find.
+ One of these scattered Sibyls' leaves
+ Strange prophecies my fancy weaves,
+ And in one history consumes,
+ Like Mexique paintings, all the plumes;
+ What Rome, Greece, Palestine e'er said,
+ I in this light mosaic read.
+ Thrice happy he, who, not mistook,
+ Hath read in Nature's mystic book!
+ And see how chance's better wit
+ Could with a mask my studies hit!
+ The oak-leaves me embroider all,
+ Between which caterpillars crawl;
+ And ivy, with familiar trails,
+ Me licks and clasps, and curls and hales.
+ Under this Attic cope I move,
+ Like some great prelate of the grove;
+ Then, languishing with ease, I toss
+ On pallets swoln of velvet moss,
+ While the wind, cooling through the boughs,
+ Flatters with air my panting brows.
+ Thanks for your rest, ye mossy banks,
+ And unto you, cool zephyrs, thanks,
+ Who, as my hair, my thoughts too shed,
+ And winnow from the chaff my head!
+
+ How safe, methinks, and strong behind
+ These trees, have I encamped my mind,
+ Where beauty, aiming at the heart,
+ Bends in some tree its useless dart,
+ And where the world no certain shot
+ Can make, or me it toucheth not,
+ But I on it securely play
+ And gall its horsemen all the day.
+ Bind me, ye woodbines, in your twines
+ Curl me about, ye gadding vines,
+ And oh so close your circles lace,
+ That I may never leave this place!
+ But, lest your fetters prove too weak,
+ Ere I your silken bondage break,
+ Do you, O brambles, chain me too,
+ And, courteous briars, nail me through!
+
+ Oh what a pleasure 'tis to hedge
+ My temples here with heavy sedge,
+ Abandoning my lazy side,
+ Stretched as a bank unto the tide,
+ Or to suspend my sliding foot
+ On the osier's undermined root,
+ And in its branches tough to hang,
+ While at my lines the fishes twang?
+ But now away, my hooks, my quills,
+ And angles, idle utensils!
+ The young MARIA walks to-night;
+
+ 'Tis she that to these gardens gave
+ That wondrous beauty which they have;
+ She straightness on the woods bestows;
+ To her the meadow sweetness owes;
+ Nothing could make the river be
+ So crystal pure, but only she,
+ She yet more pure, sweet, straight, and fair
+ Than gardens, woods, meads, rivers are.
+
+ This 'tis to have been from the first
+ In a domestic heaven nursed,
+ Under the discipline severe
+ Of FAIRFAX, and the starry VERE;
+ Where not one object can come nigh
+ But pure, and spotless as the eye,
+ And goodness doth itself entail
+ On females, if there want a male."
+
+This poem, having a biographical value, I have quoted at, perhaps, too
+great length. Other poems of this garden-period of Marvell's life are
+better known. His own English version of his Latin poem _Hortus_
+contains lovely stanzas:--
+
+ "How vainly men themselves amaze
+ To win the palm, the oak, or bays;
+ And their uncessant labours see
+ Crowned from some single herb or tree,
+ Whose short and narrow-verged shade
+ Does prudently their toils upbraid;
+ While all the flowers and trees do close,
+ To weave the garlands of Repose!
+
+ Fair Quiet, have I found thee here,
+ And Innocence, thy sister dear?
+ Mistaken long, I sought you then
+ In busy companies of men.
+ Your sacred plants, if here below,
+ Only among the plants will grow;
+ Society is all but rude
+ To this delicious solitude.
+
+ No white nor red was ever seen
+ So amorous as this lovely green.
+
+ What wond'rous life is this I lead!
+ Ripe apples drop about my head;
+ The luscious clusters of the vine
+ Upon my mouth do crush their wine;
+ The nectarine, and curious peach,
+ Into my hands themselves do reach;
+ Stumbling on melons, as I pass,
+ Insnared with flowers, I fall on grass.
+
+ Meanwhile the mind, from pleasure less,
+ Withdraws into its happiness;--
+ The mind, that ocean where each kind
+ Does straight its own resemblance find;--
+ Yet it creates, transcending these,
+ Far other worlds, and other seas,
+ Annihilating all that's made
+ To a green thought in a green shade."[46:1]
+
+Well known as are Marvell's lines to his Coy Mistress, I have not the
+heart to omit them, so eminently characteristic are they of his style
+and humour:--
+
+ "Had we but world enough and time,
+ This coyness, lady, were no crime.
+ We would sit down and think which way
+ To walk, and pass our long love's day.
+ Thou by the Indian Ganges' side
+ Should'st rubies find: I by the tide
+ Of Humber would complain. I would
+ Love you ten years before the Flood,
+ And you should, if you please, refuse
+ Till the conversion of the Jews.
+ My vegetable love should grow
+ Vaster than empires and more slow.
+ An hundred years should go to praise
+ Thine eyes, and on thy forehead gaze;
+ Two hundred to adore each breast,
+ But thirty thousand to the rest;
+ An age at least to every part,
+ And the last age should show your heart.
+ For, lady, you deserve this state,
+ Nor would I love at lower rate.
+ But at my back I always hear
+ Time's winged chariot hurrying near,
+ And yonder all before us lie
+ Deserts of vast eternity.
+ Thy beauty shall no more be found,
+ Nor in thy marble vault shall sound
+ My echoing song; then worms shall try
+ That long-preserved virginity,
+ And your quaint honour turn to dust,
+ And into ashes all my lust.
+ The grave's a fine and private place,
+ But none, I think, do there embrace.
+ Now, therefore, while the youthful hue
+ Sits on thy skin like morning dew,
+ And while thy willing soul transpires
+ At every pore with instant fires,
+ Now, let us sport us while we may;
+ And now, like amorous birds of prey,
+ Rather at once our time devour,
+ Than languish in his slow-chapt power!
+ Let us roll all our strength, and all
+ Our sweetness up into one ball;
+ And tear our pleasures with rough strife,
+ Through the iron gates of life!
+ Thus, though we cannot make our sun
+ Stand still, yet we will make him run."
+
+Mr. Aitken's valuable edition of Marvell's poems and satires can now be
+had of all booksellers for two shillings,[47:1] and with these volumes
+in his possession the judicious reader will be able to supply his own
+reflections whilst life beneath the sun is still his. Poetry is a
+personal matter. The very canons of criticism are themselves literature.
+If we like the _Ars Poetica_, it is because we enjoy reading Horace.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[20:1] For an account of Flecknoe, see Southey's _Omniana_, i. 105. Lamb
+placed some fine lines of Flecknoe's at the beginning of the Essay _A
+Quakers' Meeting_.
+
+[24:1] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 175.
+
+[24:2] _See_ preface to _Religio Laici_, Scott's _Dryden_, vol. x. p.
+27.
+
+[24:3] Jeremy Collier in his _Historical Dictionary_ (1705) describes
+Marvell, to whom he allows more space (though it is but a few lines)
+than he does to Shakespeare, "as to his opinion he was a dissenter." In
+Collier's opinion Marvell may have been no better than a dissenter, but
+in fact he was a Churchman all his life, and it was Collier who lived to
+become a non-juror and a dissenter, and a schismatical bishop to boot.
+
+[31:1] _Life of Lord Fairfax_, by C.R. Markham (1870), p. 365.
+
+[35:1] The fifth edition is dated 1703.
+
+[46:1] Many a reader has made his first acquaintance with Marvell on
+reading these lines in the _Essays of Elia_ (_The Old Benchers of the
+Inner Temple_).
+
+[47:1] _Poems and Satires of Andrew Marvell_, 2 vols. Routledge, 1905.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A CIVIL SERVANT IN THE TIME OF THE COMMONWEALTH
+
+
+When Andrew Marvell first made John Milton's acquaintance is not known.
+They must both have had common friends at or belonging to Cambridge.
+Fairfax may have made the two men known to each other, although it is
+just as likely that Milton introduced Marvell to Fairfax. All we know is
+that when the engagement at Nunappleton House came to an end, Marvell,
+being then minded to serve the State in some civil capacity, applied to
+the Secretary for Foreign Tongues for what would now be called a
+testimonial, which he was fortunate enough to obtain in the form of a
+letter to the Lord-President of the Council, John Bradshaw. Milton seems
+always to have liked Bradshaw, who was not generally popular even on his
+own side, and in the _Defensio Secunda pro populo Anglicano_ extols his
+character and attainments in sonorous latinity. Bradshaw had become in
+February 1649 the first President of the new Council of State, which,
+after the disappearance of the king and the abolition of the House of
+Lords, took over the burden of the executive, and claimed the right to
+scrape men's consciences by administering to anybody it chose an oath
+requiring them to approve of what the House of Commons had done against
+the king, and of their abolition of kingly government and of the House
+of Peers, and that the legislative and supreme power was wholly in the
+House of Commons.
+
+Before the creation of this Council the duties of Latin Secretary to the
+Parliament had been discharged by Georg Rudolph Weckherlin, a German
+diplomat who had married an Englishwoman. He retired in bad health at
+this time, and Milton was appointed to his place in 1649. When, later
+on, the sight of the most illustrious of all our civil servants failed
+him, Weckherlin returned to the office as Milton's assistant. In
+December 1652 ill-health again compelled Weckherlin's retirement.[49:1]
+
+Milton's letter to Bradshaw, who had made his home at Eton, is dated
+February 21, 1653, and is as follows:--
+
+ "MY LORD,--But that it would be an interruption to the
+ public wherein your studies are perpetually employed, I should now
+ and then venture to supply thus my enforced absence with a line or
+ two, though it were onely my business, and that would be no slight
+ one, to make my due acknowledgments of your many favours; which I
+ both do at this time and ever shall; and have this farther, which I
+ thought my part to let you know of, that there will be with you
+ to-morrow upon some occasion of business a gentleman whose name is
+ Mr. Marvile, a man whom both by report and the converse I have had
+ with him of singular desert for the State to make use of, who also
+ offers himself, if there be any employment for him. His father was
+ the Minister of Hull, and he hath spent four years abroad in Holland,
+ France, Italy, and Spain to very good purpose, as I believe, and the
+ gaining of these four languages, besides he is a scholer and
+ well-read in the Latin and Greek authors, and no doubt of an approved
+ conversation, for he now comes lately out of the house of the Lord
+ Fairfax, who was Generall, where he was intrusted to give some
+ instructions in the languages to the Lady, his daughter. If upon the
+ death of Mr. Weckerlyn the Councell shall think that I shall need any
+ assistance in the performance of my place (though for my part I find
+ no encumbrance of that which belongs to me, except it be in point of
+ attendance at Conferences with Ambassadors, which I must confess in
+ my condition I am not fit for) it would be hard for them to find a
+ man so fit every way for that purpose as this gentleman: one who, I
+ believe, in a short time would be able to do them as much service as
+ Mr. Ascan. This, my Lord, I write sincerely without any other end
+ than to perform my duty to the publick in helping them to an humble
+ servant; laying aside those jealousies and that emulation which mine
+ own condition might suggest to me by bringing in such a coadjutor;
+ and remain, my Lord, your most obliged and faithful servant,
+ JOHN MILTON.
+
+ "_Feb. 21, 1652_ (O.S.)."
+
+ Addressed: "For the Honourable the Lord Bradshawe."
+
+No handsomer testimonial than this was ever penned. It was unsuccessful.
+When Milton wrote to Bradshaw, Weckherlin was in fact dead, and on his
+retirement in the previous December, John Thurloe, the very handy
+Secretary of the Council, had for the time assumed Weckherlin's duties,
+and obtained on that score an addition to his salary. No actual vacancy,
+therefore, occurred on Weckherlin's death. None the less, shortly
+afterwards, Philip Meadows, also a Cambridge man, was appointed Milton's
+assistant, and Marvell had to wait four years longer for his place.
+
+When Marvell's connection with Eton first began is not to be
+ascertained. His friend, John Oxenbridge, who had been driven from his
+tutorship at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, by Laud in 1634 to
+
+ "Where the remote Bermudas ride,"
+
+but had returned home, became in 1652 a Fellow of Eton College. Oliver
+St. John, who at this time was Chancellor of the University of
+Cambridge, and had married Oxenbridge's sister, was known to Marvell,
+and may have introduced him to his brother-in-law. At all events Marvell
+frequently visited Eton, where, however, he had the good sense to
+frequent not merely the cloisters, but the poor lodgings where the "ever
+memorable" John Hales, ejected from his fellowship, spent the last years
+of his life.
+
+ "I account it no small honour to have grown up into some part of his
+ acquaintance and conversed awhile with the living remains of one of
+ the clearest heads and best prepared breasts in Christendom."[51:1]
+
+Hales died in 1656, and his _Golden Remains_ were first published three
+years later. Marvell's words of panegyric are singularly well chosen. It
+is a curious commentary upon the confused times of the Civil War and
+Restoration that perhaps never before, and seldom, if ever, since, has
+England contained so many clear heads and well-prepared breasts as it
+did then. Small indeed is the influence of men of thought upon their
+immediate surroundings.
+
+The Lord Bradshaw, we know, had a home in Eton, and on the occasion of
+one of Marvell's evidently frequent visits to the Oxenbridges, Milton
+entrusted him with a letter to Bradshaw and a presentation copy of the
+_Secunda defensio_. Marvell delivered both letter and book, and seems at
+once to have informed the distinguished author that he had done so. But
+alas for the vanity of the writing man! The sublime poet, who in his
+early manhood had composed _Lycidas_, and was in his old age to write
+_Paradise Lost_, demanded further and better particulars as to the
+precise manner in which the chief of his office received, not only the
+book, but the letter which accompanied it. Nobody is now left to think
+much of Bradshaw, but in 1654 he was an excellent representative of the
+class Carlyle was fond of describing as the _alors celebre_. Prompted by
+this desire, Milton must have written to Marvell hinting, as he well
+knew how to do, his surprise at the curtness of his friend's former
+communication, and Marvell's reply to this letter has come down to us.
+It is Marvell's glory that long before _Paradise Lost_ he recognised the
+essential greatness of the blind secretary, and his letter is a fine
+example of the mode of humouring a great man. Be it remembered, as we
+read, that this letter was not addressed to one of the greatest names in
+literature, but to a petulant and often peevish scholar, living of
+necessity in great retirement, whose name is never once mentioned by
+Clarendon, and about whom the voluminous Thurloe, who must have seen him
+hundreds of times, has nothing to say except that he was "a blind man
+who wrote Latin letters." Odder still, perhaps, Richard Baxter, whose
+history of his own life and times is one of the most informing books in
+the world, never so much as mentions the one and only man whose name
+can, without any violent sense of unfitness, be given to the age about
+which Baxter was writing so laboriously.
+
+ "HONOURED SIR,--I did not satisfie my self in the account I
+ gave you of presentinge your Book to my Lord, although it seemed to
+ me that I writ to you all which the messenger's speedy returne the
+ same night from Eaton would permit me; and I perceive that, by reason
+ of that hast, I did not give you satisfaction neither concerninge the
+ delivery of your Letter at the same time. Be pleased therefore to
+ pardon me and know that I tendered them both together. But my Lord
+ read not the Letter while I was with him, which I attributed to our
+ despatch, and some other businesse tendinge thereto, which I
+ therefore wished ill to, so farr as it hindred an affaire much better
+ and of greater importance, I mean that of reading your Letter. And to
+ tell you truly mine own imagination, I thought that he would not open
+ it while I was there, because he might suspect that I, delivering it
+ just upon my departure, might have brought in it some second
+ proposition like to that which you had before made to him by your
+ Letter to my advantage. However, I assure myself that he has since
+ read it, and you, that he did then witnesse all respecte to your
+ person, and as much satisfaction concerninge your work as could be
+ expected from so cursory a review and so sudden an account as he
+ could then have of it from me. Mr. Oxenbridge, at his returne from
+ London, will, I know, give you thanks for his book, as I do with all
+ acknowledgement and humility for that you have sent me. I shall now
+ studie it even to the getting of it by heart; esteeming it, according
+ to my poore judgment (which yet I wish it were so right in all things
+ else), as the most compendious scale for so much to the height of the
+ Roman Eloquence, when I consider how equally it turnes and rises with
+ so many figures it seems to me a Trajan's columne, in whose winding
+ ascent we see imboss'd the severall monuments of your learned
+ victoryes: And Salmatius and Morus make up as great a triumph as that
+ of Decebalus, whom too, for ought I know, you shall have forced, as
+ Trajan the other, to make themselves away out of a just desperation.
+ I have an affectionate curiousity to know what becomes of Colonell
+ Overton's businesse. And am exceeding glad that Mr. Skynner is got
+ near you, the happinesse which I at the same time congratulate to him
+ and envie, there being none who doth, if I may so say, more jealously
+ honour you then, Honoured Sir, Your most affectionate humble servant,
+ ANDREW MARVELL.
+
+ "Eaton, _June 2, 1654._"
+
+ Addressed: "For my most honoured friend,
+ John Milton, Esquire, Secretarye
+ for the Forrain affaires
+ at his house in Petty France,
+ Westminster."
+
+To conclude Marvell's Eton experiences; in 1657, and very shortly before
+his obtaining his appointment as Milton's assistant in the place of
+Philip Meadows, who was sent on a mission to Lisbon, Marvell was chosen
+by the Lord-Protector to be tutor at Eton to Cromwell's ward, Mr.
+Dutton, and took up his residence with his pupil with the Oxenbridges.
+The following letter, addressed by Marvell to Oliver, will be read with
+interest:--
+
+ "May it please your Excellence,--It might, perhaps, seem fit for me
+ to seek out words to give your Excellence thanks for myself. But,
+ indeed, the only civility which it is proper for me to practice with
+ so eminent a person is to obey you, and to perform honestly the work
+ that you have set me about. Therefore I shall use the time that your
+ Lordship is pleased to allow me for writing, onely for that purpose
+ for which you have given me it; that is, to render you an account of
+ Mr. Dutton. I have taken care to examine him several times in the
+ presence of Mr. Oxenbridge, as those who weigh and tell over money
+ before some witnesse ere they take charge of it; for I thought that
+ there might be possibly some lightness in the coyn, or errour in the
+ telling, which hereafter I should be bound to make good. Therefore,
+ Mr. Oxenbridge is the best to make your Excellency an impartial
+ relation thereof: I shall only say, that I shall strive according to
+ my best understanding (that is, according to those rules your
+ Lordship hath given me) to increase whatsoever talent he may have
+ already. Truly, he is of gentle and waxen disposition; and God be
+ praised, I cannot say he hath brought with him any evil impression;
+ and I shall hope to set nothing into his spirit but what may be of a
+ good sculpture. He hath in him two things that make youth most easy
+ to be managed,--modesty, which is the bridle to vice; and emulation,
+ which is the spur to virtue. And the care which your Excellence is
+ pleased to take of him is no small encouragement and shall be so
+ represented to him; but, above all, I shall labour to make him
+ sensible of his duty to God; for then we begin to serve faithfully,
+ when we consider He is our master. And in this, both he and I owe
+ infinitely to your Lordship, for having placed us in so godly a
+ family as that of Mr. Oxenbridge, whose doctrine and example are like
+ a book and a map, not only instructing the ear, but demonstrating to
+ the eye, which way we ought to travell; and Mrs. Oxenbridge has
+ looked so well to him, that he hath already much mended his
+ complexion; and now she is ordering his chamber, that he may delight
+ to be in it as often as his studys require. For the rest, most of
+ this time hath been spent in acquainting ourselves with him; and
+ truly he is chearfull, and I hope thinks us to be good company. I
+ shall, upon occasion, henceforward inform your Excellence of any
+ particularities in our little affairs, for so I esteem it to be my
+ duty. I have no more at present, but to give thanks to God for your
+ Lordship, and to beg grace of Him, that I may approve myself, Your
+ Excellency's most humble and faithful servant,
+ ANDREW MARVELL.
+
+ "Windsor, _July 28, 1653_.
+
+ "Mr. Dutton[55:1] presents his most humble service to your
+ Excellence."
+
+Something must now be said of Marvell's literary productions during this
+period, 1652-1657. It was in 1653 that he began his stormy career as an
+anonymous political poet and satirist. The Dutch were his first victims,
+good Protestants though they were. Marvell never liked the Dutch, and
+had he lived to see the Revolution must have undergone some qualms.
+
+In 1652 the Commonwealth was at war with the United Provinces. Trade
+jealousy made the war what politicians call "inevitable." This jealousy
+of the Dutch dates back to Elizabeth, and to the first stirring in the
+womb of time of the British navy. This may be readily perceived if we
+read Dr. John Dee's "Petty Navy Royal," 1577, and "A Politic Plat (plan)
+for the Honour of the Prince," 1580, and, somewhat later in date,
+"England's Way to Win Wealth," 1614.[56:1]
+
+These short tracts make two things quite plain--first, the desire to get
+our share of the foreign fishing trade, then wholly in the hands of the
+Dutch; and second, the recognition that England was a sea-empire,
+dependent for its existence upon a great navy manned by the seafaring
+inhabitants of our coasts.
+
+The enormous fishing trade done in our own waters by the Dutch, the
+splendid fleet of fishing craft with twenty thousand handy sailors on
+board, ready by every 1st of June to sail out of the Maas, the Texel,
+and the Vlie, to catch herring in the North Sea, excited admiration,
+envy, and almost despair.
+
+ "O, slothful England and careless countrymen! look but on these
+ fellows that we call the plump Hollanders! Behold their diligence in
+ fishing and our most careless negligence! Six hundred of these
+ fisherships and more be great Busses, some six score tons, most of
+ them be a hundred tons, and the rest three score tons and fifty tons;
+ the biggest of them having four and twenty men, some twenty men, and
+ some eighteen or sixteen men apiece. So there cannot be in this fleet
+ of People no less than twenty thousand sailors.... No king upon the
+ earth did ever see such a fleet of his own subjects at any time, and
+ yet this fleet is there and then yearly to be seen. A most worthy
+ sight it were, if they were my own countrymen, yet have I taken
+ pleasure in being amongst them, to behold the neatness of their ships
+ and fishermen, how every man knoweth his own place, and all labouring
+ merrily together.[57:1]
+
+ "Now, in our sum of fishermen, let us see what vent have we for our
+ fish in other countries, and what commodities and corn is brought
+ into this Kingdom? And what ships are set in work by them whereby
+ mariners are best employed. Not one. It is pitiful! ... This last
+ year at Yarmouth there were three hundred idle men that could get
+ nothing to do, living very poor for lack of employment, which most
+ gladly would have gone to sea in Pinks if there had been any for them
+ to go in.... And this last year the Hollanders did lade 12 sail of
+ Holland ships with red herrings at Yarmouth for Civita Vecchia,
+ Leghorn and Genoa and Marseilles and Toulon. Most of these being
+ laden by the English merchants. So that if this be suffered the
+ English owners of ships shall have but small employment for
+ them."[57:2]
+
+Nor was the other aspect of the case lost sight of. How can a great navy
+necessary for our sea-empire be manned otherwise than by a race of brave
+sea-faring men, accustomed from their infancy to handle boats?
+
+ "Fourthly, how many thousands of soldiers of all degrees would be by
+ these means not only hardened well to brook all rage and disturbance
+ of sea, but also would be well practised and trained to great
+ perfection of understanding all manner of fight and service of sea,
+ so that in time of great need that expert and hardy crew of some
+ thousands of sea-soldiers would be to this realm a treasure
+ incomparable.[58:1]
+
+ "We see the Hollanders being well fed in fishing affairs and stronger
+ and lustier than the sailors who use the long Southern voyages, but
+ these courageous, young, lusty, strong-fed younkers that shall be
+ bred in the Busses, when His Majesty shall have occasion for their
+ service in war against the enemy, will be fellows for the nonce! and
+ will put more strength to an iron crow at a piece of great ordnance
+ in training of a cannon, or culvining with the direction of the
+ experimented master Gunner, then two or three of the forenamed
+ surfeited sailors. And in distress of wind-grown sea and foul
+ winter's weather, for flying forward to their labour, for pulling in
+ a top-sail or a sprit-sail, or shaking off a bonnet in a dark night!
+ for wet or cold cannot make them shrink nor stain, that the North
+ Seas and the Busses and Pinks have dyed in the grain for such
+ purposes."[58:2]
+
+The years, as they went by, only served to increase English jealousy of
+the Dutch, who not only fished our water but did the carrying trade of
+the world. It was no rare sight to see Yarmouth full of Dutch bottoms,
+and Dutch sailors loading them with English goods.
+
+In the early days of the Commonwealth the painfulness of the situation
+was accentuated by the fact that some of our colonies or plantations, as
+they were then called--Virginia and the Barbadoes, for example--stuck to
+the king and gave a commercial preference to the Dutch, shipping their
+produce to all parts of the world exclusively in Dutch bottoms. This was
+found intolerable, and in October 1651 the Long Parliament, nearing its
+violent end, passed the first Navigation Act, of which Ranke says: "Of
+all the acts ever passed in Parliament, it is perhaps the one which
+brought about the most important results for England and the
+world."[59:1]
+
+The Navigation Act provided "that all goods from countries beyond Europe
+should be imported into England in English ships only; and all European
+goods either in English ships or in ships belonging to the countries
+from which these articles originally came."
+
+This was a challenge indeed.
+
+Another perpetual source of irritation was the Right of Search, that is,
+the right of stopping neutral ships and searching their cargoes for
+contraband. England asserted this right as against the Dutch, who, as
+the world's carriers, were most subject to the right, and not
+unnaturally denied its existence.
+
+War was declared in 1652, and made the fame of two great admirals, Blake
+and Van Tromp. Oliver's spirit was felt on the seas, and before many
+months were over England had captured more than a thousand Dutch trading
+vessels, and brought business to a standstill in Amsterdam--then the
+great centre of commercial interests. When six short years afterwards
+the news of Cromwell's death reached that city, its inhabitants greatly
+rejoiced, crowding the streets and crying "the Devil is dead."
+
+Andrew Marvell was impregnated with the new ideas about sea-power. A
+great reader and converser with the best intellects of his time, and a
+Hull man, he had probably early grasped the significance of Bacon's
+illuminating saying in the famous essay on the _True Greatness of
+Kingdoms and Estates_ (first printed in 1612), "that he that commands
+the sea is at great liberty and may take as much and as little of the
+war as he will." Cromwell, though not the creator of our navy, was its
+strongest inspiration until Nelson, and no feature of his great
+administration so excited Marvell's patriotic admiration as the
+Lord-Protector's sleepless energy in securing and maintaining the
+command of the sea.
+
+In Marvell's poem, first published as a broadsheet in 1655, entitled
+_The First Anniversary of the Government under His Highness the
+Lord-Protector_, he describes foreign princes soundly rating their
+ambassadors for having misinformed them as to the energies of the new
+Commonwealth:--
+
+ "'Is this,' saith one, 'the nation that we read
+ Spent with both wars, under a Captain dead!
+ Yet rig a navy while we dress us late
+ And ere we dine rase and rebuild a state?
+ What oaken forests, and what golden mines,
+ What mints of men--what union of designs!
+ ...
+ Needs must we all their tributaries be
+ Whose navies hold the sluices of the sea!
+ _The ocean is the fountain of command_,
+ But that once took, we captives are on land;
+ And those that have the waters for their share
+ Can quickly leave us neither earth nor air.'"
+
+Marvell's aversion to the Dutch was first displayed in the rough lines
+called _The Character of Holland_, published in 1653 during the first
+Dutch War. As poetry the lines have no great merit; they do not even
+jingle agreeably--but they are full of the spirit of the time, and
+breathe forth that "envy, hatred, malice, and all uncharitableness"
+which are apt to be such large ingredients in the compound we call
+"patriotism." They begin thus:--
+
+ "Holland, that scarce deserves the name of land,
+ As but the off-scouring of the British sand,
+ And so much earth as was contributed
+ By English pilots when they heaved the lead,
+ Or what by the ocean's slow alluvion feel
+ Of shipwrecked cockle and the muscle-shell,--
+ This indigested vomit of the sea
+ Fell to the Dutch by just propriety."
+
+The gallant struggle to secure their country from the sea is made the
+subject of curious banter:--
+
+ "How did they rivet with gigantic piles,
+ Thorough the centre their new-catched miles,
+ And to the stake a struggling country bound,
+ Where barking waves still bait the forced ground,
+ Building their watery Babel far more high,
+ To reach the sea, than those to scale the sky!
+ Yet still his claim the injured ocean laid,
+ And oft at leap-frog o'er their steeples played,
+ As if on purpose it on land had come
+ To show them what's their _mare liberum_.
+ A daily deluge over them does boil;
+ The earth and water play at level coil.
+ The fish ofttimes the burgher dispossessed,
+ And sat, not as a meat, but as a guest."
+
+This final conceit greatly tickled the fancy of Charles Lamb, who was
+perhaps the first of the moderns to rediscover both the rare merits and
+the curiosities of our author. Hazlitt thought poorly of the jest.[61:1]
+
+Marvell proceeds with his ridicule to attack the magistrates:--
+
+ "For, as with pygmies, who best kills the crane;
+ Among the hungry, he that treasures grain;
+ Among the blind, the one-eyed blinkard reigns;
+ So rules among the drowned, he that drains:
+ Not who first see the rising sun, commands,
+ But who could first discern the rising lands;
+ Who best could know to pump an earth so leak,
+ Him they their Lord, and Country's Father, speak;
+ To make a bank, was a great plot of state;
+ Invent a shovel, and be a magistrate."[62:1]
+
+When the war-fever was raging such humour as this may well have passed
+muster with the crowd.
+
+The incident--there is always an "incident"--which served as the actual
+excuse for hostilities, is referred to as follows:--
+
+ "Let this one courtesy witness all the rest,
+ When their whole navy they together pressed,
+ Not Christian captives to redeem from bands,
+ Or intercept the western golden sands,
+ No, but all ancient rights and leagues must fail,
+ _Rather than to the English strike their sail_;
+ To whom their weather-beaten province owes
+ Itself."
+
+Two spirited lines describe the discomfiture of Van Tromp:--
+
+ "And the torn navy staggered with him home
+ While the sea laughed itself into a foam."
+
+This first Dutch War came to an end in 1654, when Holland was compelled
+to acknowledge the supremacy of the English flag in the home waters, and
+to acquiesce in the Navigation Act. It is a curious commentary upon the
+black darkness that conceals the future, that Cromwell, dreading as he
+did the House of Orange and the youthful grandson of Charles the First,
+who at the appointed hour was destined to deal the House of Stuart a far
+deadlier stroke than Cromwell had been able to do, either on the field
+of battle or in front of Whitehall, refused to ratify the Treaty of
+Peace with the Dutch until John De Witt had obtained an Act excluding
+the Prince of Orange from ever filling the office of Stadtholder of the
+Province of Holland.
+
+The contrast between the glory of Oliver's Dutch War and the shame of
+Charles the Second's sank deep into Marvell's heart, and lent bitterness
+to many of his later satirical lines.
+
+Marvell's famous _Horatian Ode upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland_ in
+1650 has a curious bibliographical interest. So far as we can tell, it
+was first published in 1776. When it was composed we do not know. At
+Nunappleton House Oliver was not a _persona grata_ in 1650, for he had
+no sooner come back from Ireland than he had stepped into the shoes of
+the Lord-General Fairfax; and there were those, Lady Fairfax, I doubt
+not, among the number, who believed that the new Lord-General thought it
+was high time he should be where Fairfax's "scruple" at last put him. We
+may be sure Cromwell's character was dissected even more than it was
+extolled at Nunappleton. The famous Ode is by no means a panegyric, and
+its true hero is the "Royal actor," whom Cromwell, so the poem suggests,
+lured to his doom. It is not likely that the Ode was composed after
+Marvell had left Nunappleton, though it may have been so before he went
+there. There is an old untraceable tradition that Marvell was among the
+crowd that saw the king die. What deaths have been witnessed, and with
+what strange apparent apathy, by the London crowd! But for this
+tradition one's imagination would trace to Lady Fairfax the most famous
+of the stanzas.
+
+But to return to the history of the Ode. In 1776 Captain Edward
+Thompson, a connection of the Marvell family and a versatile sailor with
+a passion for print, which had taken some odd forms of expression,
+produced by subscription in three quarto volumes the first collected
+edition of Andrew Marvell's works, both verse and prose. Such an edition
+had been long premeditated by Thomas Hollis, one of the best friends
+literature had in the eighteenth century. It was Hollis who gave to
+Sidney Sussex College the finest portrait in existence of Oliver
+Cromwell. Hollis collected material for an edition of Marvell with the
+aid of Richard Barron, an early editor of Milton's prose works, and of
+Algernon Sidney's _Discourse concerning Government_. Barron, however,
+lost zeal as the task proceeded, and complained justly enough "of a want
+of anecdotes," and as the printer, the well-known and accomplished
+Bowyer, doubted the wisdom of the undertaking, it was allowed to drop.
+Barron died in 1766, and Hollis in 1774, but the collections made by the
+latter passed into the hands of Captain Thompson, who, with the
+assistance of Mr. Robert Nettleton, a grandson of one of Marvell's
+sisters, at once began to get his edition ready. On Nettleton's death
+his "Marvell" papers came into Thompson's hands, and among them was, to
+quote the captain's own words, "a volume of Mr. Marvell's poems, some
+written with his own hand and the rest copied by his order."
+
+The _Horatian Ode_ was in this volume, and was printed from it in
+Thompson's edition of 1776.
+
+What has become of this manuscript book? It has disappeared--destroyed,
+so we are led to believe, in a fit of temper by the angry and uncritical
+sea-captain.
+
+This precious volume undoubtedly contained some poems by Marvell, and as
+his handwriting was both well known from many examples, and is highly
+characteristic, we may also be certain that the captain was not mistaken
+in his assertion that some of these poems were in Marvell's own
+handwriting. But, as ill-luck would have it, the volume also contained
+poems written at a later period and in quite another hand. Among these
+latter pieces were Addison's verses, _The Spacious Firmament on High_
+and _When all thy Mercies, O my God_; Dr. Watts' paraphrase _When Israel
+freed from Pharaoh's Hand_; and Mallet's ballad _William and Margaret_.
+The two Addison pieces and the Watts paraphrase appeared for the first
+time in the _Spectator_, Nos. 453, 465, and 461, in 1712, and Mallet's
+ballad was first printed in 1724.
+
+Still there these pieces were, in manuscript, in this volume, and as
+there were circumstances of mystification attendant upon their prior
+publication, what does the captain do but claim them all, _Songs of
+Zion_ and sentimental ballad alike, as Marvell's. This of course brought
+the critics, ever anxious to air their erudition, down upon his head,
+raised his anger, and occasioned the destruction of the book.
+
+Mr. Grosart says that Captain Thompson states that the _Horatian Ode_
+was in Marvell's handwriting. I cannot discover where this statement is
+made, though it is made of other poems in the volume, also published for
+the first time by the captain.
+
+All, therefore, we know is that the Ode was first published in 1776 by
+an editor who says he found it copied in a book, subsequently destroyed,
+which contained (among other things) some poems written in Marvell's
+handwriting, and that this book was given to the editor by a
+grand-nephew of the poet.
+
+Yet I imagine, poor as this evidence may seem to be, no student of
+Marvell's life and character (so far as his life reveals his character),
+and of his verse (so much of it as is positively known), wants more
+evidence to satisfy him that the _Horatian Ode_ is as surely Marvell's
+as the lines upon _Appleton House_, the _Bermudas_, _To his Coy
+Mistress_, and _The Garden_.
+
+The great popularity of this Ode undoubtedly rests on the three
+stanzas:--
+
+ "That thence the royal actor borne,
+ The tragic scaffold might adorn,
+ While round the armed bands;
+ Did clap their bloody hands:
+
+ He nothing common did, or mean,
+ Upon that memorable scene,
+ But with his keener eye
+ The axe's edge did try;
+
+ Nor called the gods with vulgar spite
+ To vindicate his helpless right,
+ But bowed his comely head
+ Down, as upon a bed."
+
+It is strange that the death of the king should be so nobly sung in an
+Ode bearing Cromwell's name and dedicate to his genius:--
+
+ "So restless Cromwell could not cease
+ In the inglorious arts of peace,
+ But through adventurous war
+ Urged his active star;
+
+ ...
+
+ Then burning through the air he went,
+ And palaces and temples rent;
+ And Caesar's head at last
+ Did through his laurels blast.
+
+ 'Tis madness to resist or blame
+ The force of angry Heaven's flame;
+ And if we would speak true,
+ Much to the man is due,
+
+ Who, from his private gardens, where
+ He lived reserved and austere,
+ (As if his highest plot
+ To plant the bergamot),
+
+ Could by industrious valour climb
+ To ruin the great work of time,
+ And cast the kingdoms old
+ Into another mould."
+
+The last stanzas of all have much pith and meaning in them:--
+
+ "But thou, the war's and fortune's son,
+ March indefatigably on!
+ And for the last effect,
+ Still keep the sword erect.
+
+ Besides the force it has to fright
+ The spirits of the shady night,
+ The same arts that did gain
+ A power, must it maintain."[67:1]
+
+It is not surprising that this Ode was not published in 1650--if indeed
+it was the work of that, and not of a later year. There is nothing
+either of the courtier or of the partisan about its stately
+versification and sober, solemn thought. Entire self-possession,
+dignity, criticism of a great man and a strange career by one well
+entitled to criticise, are among the chief characteristics of this noble
+poem. It is infinitely refreshing, when reading and thinking about
+Cromwell, to get as far away as possible from the fanatic's scream and
+the fury of the bigot, whether of the school of Laud or Hobbes. Andrew
+Marvell knew Oliver Cromwell alive, and gazed on his features as he lay
+dead--he knew his ambition, his greatness, his power, and where that
+power lay. How much might we unwittingly have lost, if Captain Thompson
+had not printed a poem which for more than a century of years had
+remained unknown, and exposed to all the risks of a single manuscript
+copy!
+
+When Cromwell sent his picture to Queen Christina of Sweden to
+commemorate the peace he concluded with her in 1654, Marvell, though not
+then attached to the public service, was employed to write the Latin
+couplet that accompanied the picture. He discharged his task as
+follows:--
+
+ _In effigiem Oliveri Cromwell_.
+
+ "Haec est quae toties inimicos umbra fugavit
+ At sub qua cives otia lenta terunt."
+
+The authorship of these lines is often attributed to Milton, but there
+is little doubt they are of Marvell's composition. They might easily
+have been better.
+
+Marvell became Milton's assistant in September 1657, and the friendship
+between the two men was thus consolidated by the strong ties of a
+common duty. Milton's blindness making him unfit to attend the reception
+of foreign embassies, Marvell took his place and joined in respectfully
+greeting the Dutch ambassadors. After all he was but a junior clerk,
+still he doubtless rejoiced that his lines on Holland had been published
+anonymously. Literature was strongly represented in this department of
+State just then, for Cromwell's Chamberlain, Sir Gilbert Pickering, who
+represented Northamptonshire in Parliament, had taken occasion to
+introduce his nephew, John Dryden, to the public service, and he was
+attached to the same office as Andrew Marvell. Poets, like pigeons, have
+often taken shelter under our public roofs, but Milton, Marvell, and
+Dryden, all at the same time, form a remarkable constellation. Old Noll,
+we may be sure, had nothing to do with it. Marvell must have known
+Cromwell personally; but there is nothing to show that Milton and
+Cromwell ever met. The popular engraving which represents a theatrical
+Lord-Protector dictating despatches to a meek Milton is highly
+ludicrous. Cromwell could have as easily dictated a book of _Paradise
+Lost_, on the composition of which Milton began to be engaged during the
+last year of the Protectorate, as one of Milton's despatches.
+
+In April 1657 Admiral Blake, the first great name in the annals of our
+navy, performed his last feat of arms by destroying the Spanish West
+Indian fleet at Santa Cruz without the loss of an English vessel. The
+gallant sailor died of fever on his way home, and was buried according
+to his deserts in the Abbey. His body, with that of his master, was by a
+vote of Parliament, December 4, 1660, taken from the grave and drawn to
+the gallows-tree, and there hanged and buried under it. Pepys, who was
+to know something of naval administration under the second Charles, has
+his reflections on this unpleasing incident.
+
+Marvell's lines on Blake's victory over the Spaniards are not worthy of
+so glorious an occasion, but our great doings by land and sea have
+seldom been suitably recorded in verse. Drayton's _Song of Agincourt_ is
+imperishable, but was composed nearly two centuries after the battle.
+The wail of Flodden Field still floats over the Border; but Miss
+Elliot's famous ballad was published in 1765. Even the Spanish Armada
+had to wait for Macaulay's spirited fragment. Mr. Addison's _Blenheim_
+stirred no man's blood; no poet sang Chatham's victories.[70:1] Campbell
+at a later day did better. We must be content with what we get.
+
+Marvell's poem contains some vigorous lines, which show he was a good
+hater:--
+
+ "Now does Spain's fleet her spacious wings unfold,
+ Leaves the new world, and hastens for the old;
+ But though the wind was fair, they slowly swum,
+ Freighted with acted guilt, and guilt to come;
+ For this rich load, of which so proud they are,
+ Was raised by tyranny, and raised for war.
+ ...
+ ...
+ For now upon the main themselves they saw
+ That boundless empire, where you give the law."
+
+The Canary Islands are rapturously described--their delightful climate
+and their excellent wine. Obviously they should be annexed:--
+
+ "The best of lands should have the best of Kings."
+
+The fight begins. "Bold Stayner leads" and "War turned the temperate to
+the torrid zone":--
+
+ "Fate these two fleets, between both worlds, had brought
+ Who fight, as if for both those worlds they fought.
+ ...
+ ...
+ The all-seeing sun ne'er gazed on such a sight,
+ Two dreadful navies there at anchor fight,
+ And neither have, or power, or will, to fly;
+ There one must conquer, or there both must die."
+
+Blake sinks the Spanish ships:--
+
+ "Their galleons sunk, their wealth the sea does fill,
+ The only place where it can cause no ill";
+
+and the poet concludes:--
+
+ "Ah! would those treasures which both Indias have
+ Were buried in as large, and deep a grave!
+ War's chief support with them would buried be,
+ And the land owe her peace unto the sea.
+ Ages to come your conquering arms will bless.
+ There they destroyed what had destroyed their peace;
+ And in one war the present age may boast,
+ The certain seeds of many wars are lost."
+
+Good politics, if but second-rate poetry. This was the last time the
+Spanish war-cry _Santiago, y cierra Espana_ rang in hostility in English
+ears.
+
+Turning for a moment from war to love, on the 19th of November 1657
+Cromwell's third daughter, the Lady Mary Cromwell, was married to
+Viscount, afterwards Earl, Fauconberg. The Fauconbergs took revolutions
+calmly and, despite the disinterment of their great relative, accepted
+the Restoration gladly and lived to chuckle over the Revolution. The
+forgetfulness, no less than the vindictiveness, of men is often
+surprising. Marvell, who played the part of Laureate during the
+Protectorate, produced two songs for the conventionally joyful
+occasion. The second of the two is decidedly pretty for a November
+wedding:--
+
+ "_Hobbinol._ PHILLIS, TOMALIN, away!
+ Never such a merry day,
+ For the northern shepherd's son
+ Has MENALCAS' daughter won.
+
+ _Phillis._ Stay till I some flowers have tied
+ In a garland for the bride.
+
+ _Tomalin._ If thou would'st a garland bring,
+ PHILLIS, you may wait the spring:
+ They have chosen such an hour
+ When she is the only flower.
+
+ _Phillis._ Let's not then, at least, be seen
+ Without each a sprig of green.
+
+ _Hobbinol._ Fear not; at MENALCAS' hall
+ There are bays enough for all.
+ He, when young as we, did graze,
+ But when old he planted bays.
+
+ _Tomalin._ Here she comes; but with a look
+ Far more catching than my hook;
+ 'Twas those eyes, I now dare swear,
+ Led our lambs we knew not where.
+
+ _Hobbinol._ Not our lambs' own fleeces are
+ Curled so lovely as her hair,
+ Nor our sheep new-washed can be
+ Half so white or sweet as she.
+
+ _Phillis._ He so looks as fit to keep
+ Somewhat else than silly sheep.
+
+ _Hobbinol._ Come, let's in some carol new
+ Pay to love and them their due.
+
+ _All._ Joy to that happy pair
+ Whose hopes united banish our despair.
+ What shepherd could for love pretend,
+ Whilst all the nymphs on Damon's choice attend?
+ What shepherdess could hope to wed
+ Before Marina's turn were sped?
+ Now lesser beauties may take place
+ And meaner virtues come in play;
+ While they
+ Looking from high
+ Shall grace
+ Our flocks and us with a propitious eye."
+
+All this merriment came to an end on the 3rd of September 1658, when
+Oliver Cromwell died on the anniversary of Dunbar fight and of the field
+of Worcester. And yet the end, though it was to be sudden, did not at
+once seem likely to be so. There was time for the poets to tune their
+lyres. Waller, Dryden, Sprat, and Marvell had no doubt that "Tumbledown
+Dick" was to sit on the throne of his father and "still keep the sword
+erect," and were ready with their verses.
+
+Westminster Abbey has never witnessed a statelier, costlier funeral than
+that of "the late man who made himself to be called Protector," to quote
+words from one of the most impressive passages in English prose, the
+opening sentences of Cowley's _Discourse by way of Vision concerning the
+Government of Oliver Cromwell_. The representatives of kings,
+potentates, and powers crowded the aisles, and all was done that pomp
+and ceremony could do. Marvell, arrayed in the six yards of mourning the
+Council had voted him on the 7th of September, was, we may be sure, in
+the Abbey, and it may well be that his blind colleague, to whom the same
+liberal allowance had been made, leant on his arm during the service.
+Milton's muse remained silent. The vote of the House of Commons ordering
+the undoing of this great ceremony was little more than two years ahead.
+_O caeca mens hominum!_
+
+Among the poems first printed by Captain Thompson from the old
+manuscript book was one which was written therein in Marvell's own hand
+entitled "A poem upon the Death of his late Highness the Protector." Its
+composition was evidently not long delayed:--
+
+ "We find already what those omens mean,
+ Earth ne'er more glad nor Heaven more serene.
+ Cease now our griefs, calm peace succeeds a war,
+ Rainbows to storms, Richard to Oliver."
+
+The lines best worth remembering in the poem are the following:--
+
+ "I saw him dead: a leaden slumber lies,
+ And mortal sleep over those wakeful eyes;
+ Those gentle rays under the lids were fled,
+ Which through his looks that piercing sweetness shed;
+ That port, which so majestic was and strong,
+ Loose, and deprived of vigour, stretched along;
+ All withered, all discoloured, pale and wan,
+ How much another thing, no more that man!
+ O, human glory vain! O, Death! O, wings!
+ O, worthless world! O, transitory things!
+ Yet dwelt that greatness in his shape decayed,
+ That still though dead, greater than Death he laid,
+ And in his altered face you something feign
+ That threatens Death, he yet will live again."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[49:1] In 1659 Clarendon, then Sir Edward Hyde, and in Brussels, writing
+to Sir Richard Fanshaw, says, "You are the secretary of the Latin tongue
+and I will mend the warrant you sent, and have it despatched as soon as
+I hear again from you, but I must tell you the place in itself, if it be
+not dignified by the person who hath some other qualification, is not to
+be valued. There is no signet belongs to it, which can be only kept by a
+Secretary of State, from whom the Latin Secretary always receives orders
+and prepares no despatches without his direction, and hath only a fee of
+a hundred pound a year. And therefore, except it hath been in the hands
+of a person who hath had some other employment, it hath fallen to the
+fortune of inconsiderable men as Weckerlin was the last" (_Hist. MSS.
+Com._, _Heathcote Papers_, 1899, p. 9).
+
+[51:1] _The Rehearsal Transprosed_.--Grosart, iii. 126.
+
+[55:1] Even Mr. Firth can tell me nothing about this Ward of Cromwell's.
+
+[56:1] For reprints of these tracts, see _Social England Illustrated_,
+Constable and Co., 1903.
+
+[57:1] "England's Way to Win Wealth." See _Social England Illustrated_,
+p. 253.
+
+[57:2] _Ibid._ p. 265.
+
+[58:1] Dr. Dee's "Petty Navy Royal." _Social England Illustrated_, p.
+46.
+
+[58:2] "England's Way to Win Wealth." _Social England Illustrated_, p.
+268.
+
+[59:1] Ranke's _History of England during the Seventeenth Century_, vol.
+iii. p. 68.
+
+[61:1] See Leigh Hunt's _Wit and Humour_ (1846), pp. 38, 237.
+
+[62:1] Butler's lines, _A Description of Holland_, are very like
+Marvell's:--
+
+ "A Country that draws fifty foot of water
+ In which men live as in a hold of nature.
+ ...
+ ...
+ They dwell in ships, like swarms of rats, and prey
+ Upon the goods all nations' fleets convey;
+ ...
+ ...
+ That feed like cannibals on other fishes,
+ And serve their cousin-germans up in dishes:
+ A land that rides at anchor and is moor'd,
+ In which they do not live but go aboard."
+
+Marvell and Butler were rival wits, but Holland was a common butt; so
+powerful a motive is trade jealousy.
+
+[67:1] "To one unacquainted with Horace, this Ode, not perhaps so
+perfect as his are in form, and with occasional obscurities of
+expression, which Horace would not have left, will give a truer notion
+of the kind of greatness which he achieved than could, so far as I know,
+be obtained from any other poem in our language."--_Dean Trench_.
+
+[70:1] "In the last war, when France was disgraced and overpowered in
+every quarter of the globe, when Spain coming to her assistance only
+shared her calamities, and the name of an Englishman was reverenced
+through Europe, no poet was heard amidst the general acclamation; the
+fame of our counsellors and heroes was entrusted to the gazetteer."--Dr.
+Johnson's _Life of Prior_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
+
+
+Cromwell's death was an epoch in Marvell's history. Up to that date he
+had, since he left the University, led the life of a scholar, with a
+turn for business, and was known to many as an agreeable companion and a
+lively wit. He was keenly interested in public affairs, and personally
+acquainted with some men in great place, and for a year before
+Cromwell's death he had been in a branch of the Civil Service; but of
+the wear and tear, the strife and contention, of what are called
+"practical politics" he knew nothing from personal experience.
+
+Within a year of the Protector's death all this was changed and, for the
+rest of his days, with but the shortest of occasional intervals, Andrew
+Marvell led the life of an active, eager member of Parliament, knowing
+all that was going on in the Chamber and hearing of everything that was
+alleged to be going on in the Court; busily occupied with the affairs of
+his constituents in Hull, and daily watching, with an increasingly heavy
+heart and a bitter humour, the corruption of the times, the declension
+of our sea-power, the growing shame of England, and what he believed to
+be a dangerous conspiracy afoot for the undoing of the Reformation and
+the destruction of the Constitution in both Church and State.
+
+"Garden-poetry" could not be reared on such a soil as this. The age of
+Cromwell and Blake was over. The remainder of Marvell's life (save so
+far as personal friendship sweetened it) was spent in politics, public
+business, in concocting roughly rhymed and bitter satirical poems, and
+in the composition of prose pamphlets.
+
+Through it all Marvell remained very much the man of letters, though one
+with a great natural aptitude for business. His was always the critical
+attitude. He was the friend of Milton and Harrington, of the political
+philosophers who invented paper constitutions in the "Rota" Club, and of
+the new race of men whose thoughts turned to Natural Science, and who
+founded the Royal Society. Office he never thought of. He could have had
+it had he chosen, for he was a man of mark, even of distinction, from
+the first. Clarendon has told us how members of the House of Commons
+"got on" in the Long Parliament of Charles the Second. It was full of
+the king's friends, who ran out of the House to tell their shrewd master
+the gossip of the lobbies, "commended this man and discommended another
+who deserved better, and would many times, when His Majesty spoke well
+of any man, ask His Majesty if he would give them leave to let that
+person know how gracious His Majesty was to him, or bring him to kiss
+his hand. To which he commonly consenting, every one of his servants
+delivered some message from him to a Parliament man, and invited him to
+Court, as if the King would be willing to see him. And by this means the
+rooms at Court were always full of the members of the House of Commons.
+This man brought to kiss his hand, and the King induced to confer with
+that man and to thank him for his affection, which could never conclude
+without some general expression of grace or promise, which the poor
+gentleman always interpreted to his own advantage, and expected some
+fruit from it that it could never yield."
+
+The suspicious Clarendon, already shaking to his fall, goes on to add,
+"all which, being contrary to all former order, did the King no good,
+and rendered those unable to do him service who were inclined to
+it."[77:1]
+
+It is a lifelike picture Clarendon draws of the crowded rooms, and of
+the witty king moving about fooling vanity, ambition, and corruption to
+the top of their bent. That the king chose his own ministers is plain
+enough.
+
+Marvell was at the beginning well disposed towards Charles. They had
+some points in common; and among them a quick sense of humour and a turn
+for business. But the member for Hull must soon have recognised that
+there was no place for an honest quick-witted man in any Stuart
+administration.
+
+Marvell and his great chief remained in their offices until the close of
+the year 1659, when the impending Restoration enforced their retirement.
+Milton used his leisure to pour forth excited tracts to prove how easy
+it would still be to establish a Free Commonwealth. Once again, and for
+the last time, he prompted the age to quit its clogs
+
+ "by the known rules of ancient liberty."
+
+These pamphlets of Milton's prove how little that solitary thinker ever
+knew of the real mind and temper of the English people.
+
+The Lord Richard Cromwell was exactly the sort of eldest son a great
+soldier like Oliver, who had put his foot on fortune's neck, was likely
+to have. Richard (1626-1712) was not, indeed, born in the purple, but
+his early manhood was nurtured in it. Religion, as represented by long
+sermons, tiresome treatises, and prayerful exercises, bored him to
+death. Of enthusiasm he had not a trace, nor was he bred to arms. He
+delighted in hunting, in the open air, and the company of sportsmen.
+Whatever came his way easily, and as a matter of right, he was well
+content to take. He bore himself well on State occasions, and could make
+a better speech than ever his father was able to do. But he was not a
+"restless" Cromwell, and had no faith in his destiny. I do not know
+whether he had ever read _Don Quixote_, in Shelton's translation, a very
+popular book of the time; probably not, for, though Chancellor of the
+University of Oxford, Richard was not a reading man, but if he had, he
+must have sympathised with Sancho Panza's attitude of mind towards the
+famous island.
+
+ "If your highness has no mind that the government you promised should
+ be given me, God made me of less, and perhaps it may be easier for
+ Sancho, the Squire, to get to Heaven than for Sancho, the Governor.
+ _In the dark all cats are gray._"
+
+The new Protector took up the reins of power with proper forms and
+ceremonies, and at once proceeded to summon a Parliament, an Imperial
+Cromwellian Parliament, containing representatives both from Scotland
+and Ireland. In this Parliament Andrew Marvell sat for the first time as
+one of the two members for Kingston-upon-Hull. His election took place
+on the 10th of January 1659, being the first county day after the
+sheriff had received the writ. Five candidates were nominated: Thomas
+Strickland, Andrew Marvell, John Ramsden, Henry Smyth, and Sir Henry
+Vane, and a vote being taken in the presence of the mayor, aldermen, and
+many of the burgesses, John Ramsden and Andrew Marvell were declared
+duly elected.
+
+Nobody to-day, glancing his eye over a list of the knights and
+burgesses who made up Richard Cromwell's first and last Parliament,
+would ever guess that it represented an order of things of the most
+recent date which was just about to disappear. On paper it has a solid
+look. The fine old crusted Parliamentary names with which the clerks
+were to remain so long familiar as the members trooped out to divide
+were more than well represented.[79:1] The Drakes of Amersham were
+there; Boscawens, Bullers, and Trelawneys flocked from Cornwall; Sir
+Wilfred Lawson sat for Cumberland, and his son for Cockermouth; a
+Knightly represented Northamptonshire, whilst Lucys from Charlecote
+looked after Warwick, both town and county. Arthur Onslow came from
+Surrey, a Townshend from Norfolk, and, of course, a Bankes from Corfe
+Castle;[79:2] Oxford University, contented, as she occasionally is, to
+be represented by a great man, had chosen Sir Matthew Hale, whilst the
+no less useful and laborious Thurloe sat for the sister University.
+Anthony Ashley Cooper was there, but in opposition, snuffing the morrow.
+Mildmays, Lawleys, Binghams, Herberts, Pelhams, all travelled up to
+London with the Lord-Protector's writs in their pockets. A less
+revolutionary assembly never met, though there was a regicide or two
+among them. But when the members found themselves alone together there
+was some loose talk.
+
+On the 27th of January 1659 Marvell attended for the first time in his
+place, when the new Protector opened Parliament, and made a speech in
+the House of Lords, which was pronounced at the time to be "a very
+handsome oration."
+
+The first business of the Commons was to elect a Speaker, nor was their
+choice a very lucky one, for it first fell on Chaloner Chute, who
+speedily breaking down in health, the Recorder of London was appointed
+his substitute, but the Recorder being on his deathbed at the time, and
+Chute dying very shortly afterwards, Thomas Bampfield was elected
+Speaker, and continued so to be until the Parliament was dissolved by
+proclamation on the 22nd of April. This proclamation was Richard
+Cromwell's last act of State.
+
+Marvell's first Parliament was both short and inglorious. One only of
+its resolutions is worth quoting:--
+
+ "That a very considerable navy be forthwith provided, and put to sea
+ for the safety of the Commonwealth and the preservation of the trade
+ and commerce thereof."
+
+It was, however, the army and not the navy that had to be reckoned
+with--an army unpaid, angry, suspicious, and happily divided. I must not
+trace the history of faction. There is no less exalted page in English
+history since the days of Stephen. Monk is its fitting hero, and Charles
+the Second its expensive saviour of society. The story how the
+Restoration was engineered by General Monk, who, if vulgar, was adroit,
+both on land and sea, is best told from Monk's point of view in the
+concluding chapter of _Baker's Chronicle_ (Sir Roger de Coverley's
+favourite Sunday reading), whilst that old-fashioned remnant, who still
+love to read history for fun, may not object to be told that they will
+find printed in the Report of the Leyborne-Popham Papers (_Historical
+Manuscripts Commission_, 1899, p. 204) a _Narrative of the Restoration_,
+by Mr. John Collins, the Chief Butler of the Inner Temple, proving in
+great and highly diverting detail how this remarkable event was really
+the work not so much of Monk as of the Chief Butler.
+
+Richard Cromwell having slipped the collar, the officers assumed
+command, as they were only too ready to do, and recalled the old,
+dishonoured, but pertinacious Rump Parliament, which, though mustering
+at first but forty-two members, at once began to talk and keep journals
+as if nothing had happened since the day ten years before, when it was
+sent about its business. Old Speaker Lenthall was routed out of
+obscurity, and much against his will, and despite his protests, clapped
+once more into the chair. Dr. John Owen, an old parliamentary preaching
+hand, was once again requisitioned to preach before the House, which he
+did at enormous length one fine Sunday in May.
+
+The Rump did not prove a popular favourite. It was worse than Old Noll
+himself, who could at least thrash both Dutchman and Spaniard, and be
+even more feared abroad than he was hated at home. The City of London,
+then almost an Estate of the Realm, declared for a Free Parliament, and
+it soon became apparent to every one that the whole country was eager to
+return as soon as possible to the old mould. Nothing now stood between
+Charles and his own but half a dozen fierce old soldiers and their
+dubious, discontented, unpaid men.
+
+It was once commonly supposed (it is so no longer), that the Restoration
+party was exclusively composed of dispossessed Cavaliers, bishops in
+hiding, ejected parsons, high-flying _jure divino_ Episcopalians,
+talkative toss-pots, and the great pleasure-loving crowd, cruelly
+repressed under the rule of the saints. Had it been left to these
+ragged regiments, the issue would have been doubtful, and the result
+very different. The Presbyterian ministers who occupied the rectories
+and vicarages of the Church of England and their well-to-do flocks in
+both town and country were, with but few exceptions, all for King
+Charles and a restored monarchy. In this the ministers may have shown a
+sound political instinct, for none of them had any more mind than the
+Anglican bishops to tolerate Papists, Socinians, Quakers, and Fifth
+Monarchy men, but in their management of the business of the Restoration
+these divines exposed themselves to the same condemnation that Clarendon
+in an often-quoted passage passed upon his own clerical allies. When
+read by the light of the Act of "Uniformity," the "Corporation," the
+"Five Mile," and the "Conventicle" Acts, the conduct of the
+Presbyterians seems recklessness itself, whilst the ignorance their
+ministers displayed of the temper of the people they had lived amongst
+all their lives, and whom they adjured to cry _God save the King_, but
+not to drink his Majesty's health (because health-drinking was forbidden
+in the Old Testament), would be startling were it not so eminently
+characteristic.[82:1]
+
+The Rump, amidst the ridicule and contempt of the populace, was again
+expelled by military force on the 13th of October 1659. The officers
+were divided in opinion, some supporting, others, headed by Lambert,
+opposing the Parliament; but _vis major_, or superior cunning, was on
+the side of Lambert, who placed his soldiers in the streets leading to
+Westminster Hall, and when the Speaker came in his coach, his horses
+were turned, and he was conducted very civilly home. The regiments that
+should have resisted, "observing that they were exposed to derision,"
+peaceably returned to their quarters.
+
+Monk, in the meanwhile, was advancing with his army from Edinburgh, and
+affected not to approve of the force put upon Parliament. The feeling
+for a Free Parliament increased in strength and violence every day. The
+Rump was for a third time restored in December by the section of the
+London army that supported its claim. Lenthall was once more in the
+chair, and the journals were resumed without the least notice of past
+occurrences. Monk, having reached London amidst great excitement, went
+down to the House and delivered an ambiguous speech. Up to the last Monk
+seems to have remained uncertain what to do. The temper of the City,
+which was fiercely anti-Rump, may have decided him. At all events he
+invited the secluded, that is the expelled, members of the old Long
+Parliament to take their seats along with the others, and in a formal
+declaration addressed to Parliament, dated the 21st of February 1660, he
+counselled it among other things to dissolve legally "in order to make
+way for a succession of Parliaments." In a word, Monk declared for a
+Free Parliament. Great indeed were the national rejoicings.
+
+On the 16th of March 1660 a Bill was read a third time dissolving the
+Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, 3rd November 1640, and for
+the calling and holding of a Parliament at Westminster on the 25th of
+April 1660. This time an end was really made of the Rump, though for
+many a long day there were parliamentary pedants to be found in the land
+ready to maintain that the Long Parliament had never been legally
+dissolved and still _de jure_ existed; so long, I presume, as any
+single member of it remained alive.
+
+Marvell was not a "Rumper," but on the 2nd of April 1660 he was again
+elected for Hull to sit in what is usually called the Convention
+Parliament. John Ramsden was returned at the head of the poll with 227
+votes, Marvell receiving 141. There were four defeated candidates.
+
+With this Convention Parliament begins Marvell's remarkable
+correspondence, on fine folio sheets of paper, with the corporation of
+Hull, whose faithful servant he remained until death parted them in
+1678.
+
+This correspondence, which if we include in it, as we well may, the
+letters to the Worshipful Society of Masters and Pilots of the Trinity
+House in Hull, numbers upwards of 350 letters, and with but one
+considerable gap (from July 1663 to October 1665) covers the whole
+period of Marvell's membership, is, I believe, unique in our public
+records. The letters are preserved at Hull, where I hope care is taken
+to preserve them from the autograph hunter and the autograph thief.
+Captain Thompson printed a great part of this correspondence in 1776,
+and Mr. Grosart gave the world the whole of it in the second volume of
+his edition of Marvell's complete works.
+
+An admission may as well be made at once. This correspondence is not so
+interesting as it might have been expected to prove. Marvell did not
+write letters for his biographer, nor to instruct posterity, nor to
+serve any party purpose, nor even to exhibit honest emotion, but simply
+to tell his employers, whose wages he took, what was happening at
+Westminster. He kept his reflections either to himself or for his
+political broadsheets, and indeed they were seldom of the kind it would
+have been safe to entrust to the post.
+
+Good Mr. Grosart fusses and frets terribly over Marvell's astonishing
+capacity for chronicling in sombre silence every kind of legislative
+abomination. It is at times a little hard to understand it, for Hull was
+what may be called a Puritan place. No doubt caution dictated some of
+the reticence--but the reserve of Marvell's character is one of the few
+traits of his personality that has survived. He was a satirist, not an
+enthusiast.
+
+I will give the first letter _in extenso_ to serve as a specimen, and a
+very favourable one, of the whole correspondence:--
+
+ "_Nov. 17, 1660._
+
+ "GENTLEMEN, MY WORTHY FRIENDS,--Although during the necessary absence
+ of my partner, Mr. Ramsden, I write with but halfe a penn, and can
+ scarce perswade myselfe to send you so imperfect an account of your
+ own and the publick affairs, as I needs must for want of his
+ assistance; yet I had rather expose mine own defects to your good
+ interpretation, then excuse thereby a totall neglect of my duty, and
+ that trust which is divided upon me. At my late absence out of Town I
+ had taken such order that if you had commanded me any thing, I might
+ soon haue received it, and so returned on purpose to this place to
+ haue obeyed you. But hearing nothing of that nature howeuer, I was
+ present the first day of the Parliament's sitting, and tooke care to
+ write to Mr. Maior what work we had cut out. Since when, we have had
+ little new, but onely been making a progresse in those things I then
+ mentioned. There is yet brought in an Act in which of all others your
+ corporation is the least concerned: that is, where wives shall refuse
+ to cohabit with their husbands, that in such case the husband shall
+ not be liable to pay any debts which she may run into, for clothing,
+ diet, lodging, or other expenses. I wish with all my heart you were no
+ more touched in a vote that we haue made for bringing in an Act of a
+ new Assessment for six moneths, of 70,000li. _per mensem_, to begin
+ next January. The truth is, the delay ere monyes can be got in, eats
+ up a great part of all that is levying, and that growing charge of the
+ Army and Navy doubles upon us. And that is all that can be said for
+ excuse of ourselues to the Country, to whom we had giuen our own hopes
+ of no further sessment to be raised, but must now needs incurre the
+ censure of improvidence before or prodigality now, though it becomes
+ no private member, the resolution having passed the House, to
+ interpose further his own judgment in a thing that can not be
+ remedied; and it will be each man's ingenuity not to grudge an
+ after-payment for that settlement and freedome from Armyes and Navyes,
+ which before he would haue been glad to purchase with his whole
+ fortune. There remain some eight Regiments to be disbanded, but those
+ all horse in a manner, and some seauenteen shipps to be payd of, that
+ haue laid so long upon charge in the harbour, beside fourscore shipps
+ which are reckoned to us for this Winter guard. But after that, all
+ things are to go upon his Majestye's own purse out of the Tunnage and
+ Poundage and his other revenues. But there being so great a provision
+ made for mony, I doubt not but ere we rise, to see the whole army
+ disbanded, and according to the Act, hope to see your Town once more
+ ungarrisond, in which I should be glad and happy to be instrumentall
+ to the uttermost. For I can not but remember, though then a child,
+ those blessed days when the youth of your own town were trained for
+ your militia, and did, methought, become their arms much better than
+ any soldiers that I haue seen there since. And it will not be amisse
+ if you please (now that we are about a new Act of regulating the
+ Militia, that it may be as a standing strength, but not as ill as a
+ perpetuall Army to the Nation) to signify to me any thing in that
+ matter that were according to your ancient custome and desirable for
+ you. For though I can promise little, yet I intend all things for your
+ service. The Act for review of the Poll bill proceeds, and that for
+ making this Declaration of his Majesty a Law in religious matters.
+ Order likewise is giuen for drawing up all the votes made during our
+ last sitting, in the businesse of Sales of Bishops' and Deans' and
+ Chapters' lands into an Act, which I should be glad to see passed. The
+ purchasers the other day offerd the house 600,000li. in ready mony,
+ and to make the Bishops', etc., revenue as good or better then before.
+ But the House thought it not fit or seasonable to hearken to it. We
+ are so much the more concernd to see that great interest of the
+ purchasers satisfyed and quieted, at least in that way which our own
+ votes haue propounded. On Munday next we are to return to the
+ consideration of apportioning 100,000li. per annum upon all the lands
+ in the nation, in lieu of the Court of Wards. The debate among the
+ Countyes, each thinking it self overrated, makes the successe of that
+ businesse something casuall, and truly I shall not assist it much for
+ my part, for it is little reason that your Town should contribute in
+ that charge. The Excise bill for longer continuance (I wish it proue
+ not too long) will come in also next weeke. And I foresee we shall be
+ called upon shortly to effect our vote made the former sitting, of
+ raising his Majestie's revenue to 1,200,000li. per Annum. I do not
+ love to write so much of this mony news. But I think you haue observed
+ that Parliaments have been always made use of to that purpose, and
+ though we may buy gold too deare, yet we must at any rate be glad of
+ Peace, Freedom, and a good Conscience. Mr. Maior tells me, your
+ duplicates of the Poll are coming up. I shall go with them to the
+ Exchequer and make your excuse, if any be requisite. My long silence
+ hath made me now trespasse on the other hand in a long letter, but I
+ doubt not of your good construction of so much familiarity and trouble
+ from, Gentlemen, your most affectionate friend and servant,
+
+ "ANDR: MARVELL.
+
+ "WESTMINSTER, _Nov. 17, 1660._"
+
+Although this first letter of the Hull correspondence is dated the 17th
+of November 1660, the Convention Parliament began its sittings on the
+25th of April.
+
+In composition this Convention Parliament was very like Richard
+Cromwell's, and indeed it contained many of the same members, whose
+loyalty, however, was less restrained than in 1659. All the world knew
+what brought this Parliament together. It was to make the nation's
+peace with its king, either on terms or without terms. "We are all
+Royalists now" are words which must often have been on the lips of the
+members of this House. One can imagine the smiles, half grim, half
+ironical, that would accompany their utterance. Such a right-about-face
+could never be dignified. It is impossible not to be reminded of
+schoolboys at the inevitable end of "a barring out." The sarcastic
+comment of Clarendon has not lost its sting. "From this time there was
+such an emulation and impatience in Lords, Commons, and City, and
+generally over the Kingdom, who should make the most lively expressions
+of their duty and of their joy, that a man could not but wonder where
+those people dwelt who had done all the mischief and kept the King so
+many years from enjoying the comfort and support of such excellent
+subjects."[88:1]
+
+The most significant sentence in Marvell's first letter to his
+constituents is that in which he refers to the Bill for making Charles's
+declaration in religious matters the law of the land. Had the passing of
+any such Bill been possible, how different the history of England would
+have been!
+
+The declaration Marvell is referring to was contained in the famous
+message from Breda, which was addressed by Charles to all his loving
+subjects of what degree or quality, and was expressed as follows:--
+
+ "And because the passion and uncharitableness of the times have
+ produced several opinions in Religion by which men are engaged in
+ parties and animosities against each other (which, when they shall
+ hereafter unite in a freedom of conversation, will be composed or
+ better understood) we do declare a liberty to tender Consciences, and
+ that no man shall be disquieted or called in question for differences
+ of opinion in matters of Religion which do not disturb the peace of
+ the Kingdom; and that we shall be ready to consent to such an Act of
+ Parliament as upon mature deliberation shall be offered to us for the
+ full granting of that indulgence."
+
+It is only doing the king bare justice to say that he was always ready
+and willing to keep this part of his royal word--but it proved an
+impossibility.
+
+A Roman Catholic as a matter of creed, a Hobbist in conversation, a
+sensualist in practice, and the shrewdest though most indolent of cynics
+in council, Charles, in this matter of religious toleration, would
+gladly have kept his word, not indeed because it was his word, for on
+the point of honour he was indifferent, but because it jumped with his
+humour, and would have mitigated the hard lot of the Catholics. Charles
+was not a theorist, all his tastes being eminently practical, not to say
+scientific. He was not a tyrant, but a _de facto_ man from head to heel.
+For the _jure divino_ of the English Episcopate he cared as little as
+Oliver had ever done for the _jure divino_ of the English Crown. Oliver
+once said, and he was not given to _braggadocio_, that he would fire his
+pistol at the king "as soon as at another if he met him in battle," and
+the second Charles would have thought no more of beheading an Anglican
+bishop than he did of sending Sir Harry Vane to the scaffold. Honesty
+and virtue, on the rare occasions Charles encountered them, he admired
+much as a painter admires the colours of a fine sunset. Above everything
+else Charles was determined never again, if he could help it, to be sent
+on his travels, to be snubbed and starved in foreign courts.
+
+Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromartie, the first and best translator of
+Rabelais, is said to have died of laughing on hearing of the
+Restoration; Charles did not die, but he must have laughed inwardly at
+the spectacle that met his eyes everywhere as he made his
+often-described progress from Dover to London, and examined the gorgeous
+beds and quilts, fine linen and carpets, couches, horses and liveries,
+his faithful Commons had been at the pains and at the expense of
+providing for his comfort.
+
+A few years afterwards Marvell wrote the following lines:--
+
+ "Of a tall stature and of sable hue,
+ Much like the son of Kish, that lofty Jew;
+ Twelve years complete he suffered in exile
+ And kept his father's asses all the while.
+ At length, by wonderful impulse of fate,
+ The people called him home to help the state,
+ And what is more they sent him money too
+ To clothe him all from head to foot anew;
+ Nor did he such small favours then disdain,
+ Who in his thirtieth year began his reign."[90:1]
+
+The "small favours" grew in size year by year.
+
+Why it was impossible for Charles to keep his word may be read in
+Clarendon's _Life_, and in the history of the Savoy Conference, and need
+not be restated here. In the opinion of the Anglican clergy, the king's
+divine right stood no higher than their own. They too had suffered in
+exile. They had been "robbed" of their tithes, and turned out of their
+palaces, rectories and vicarages, and excluded from the churches they
+still called "theirs." Their Book of Common Prayer was no longer in
+common use, having been banished by the "Directory of Public Worship"
+since 1645. So late as July 1, 1660, Pepys records attending a service
+in the Abbey, and adds "No Common Prayer yet." If we find ourselves
+wondering why the Anglican party should have been so powerful in 1660,
+our wonder ought not to be greater than is excited by the power of the
+Puritan party when Laud was put to death. Both parties were, on each
+occasion, in a minority. Though England has never been long
+priest-ridden, it has often been priest-led.
+
+The Convention Parliament did all that was expected of it. It was,
+however irregularly summoned, a truly representative assembly. Its
+members all swore--what will not members of Parliament swear?--that the
+king was supreme in Church and State, the only rightful king of the
+realm and of all other his dominions, and that from their hearts they
+abhorred, detested, and abjured the damnable doctrine that princes,
+excommunicated or deprived of the Pope, might be murdered by their
+subjects. They proceeded to pass a very useful Act of Indemnity and
+Oblivion, agreeing to let bygones be bygones, except in certain named
+cases. They ordered Mr. John Milton to be taken into custody, and
+prosecuted (which he never was) by the Attorney-General. Later on the
+poet was released from custody, and we find Mr. Marvell complaining to
+the House that their sergeant had extracted L150 in fees before he would
+let Mr. Milton go. On which Sir Heneage Finch, afterwards Lord
+Chancellor, laconically observed that Milton deserved hanging. He
+certainly got off easily, but, as he lived to publish _Paradise Lost_,
+_Paradise Regained_, and _Samson Agonistes_, he may be said to have
+earned his freedom. All his poetry put together never brought him in a
+third of the sum the sergeant got for letting him out of prison. General
+Monk, the man-midwife, who so skilfully assisted at that great Birth of
+Time, the Restoration, was made a duke, and Cromwell's army, so long the
+force behind the supreme power, was paid its arrears and (two regiments
+excepted) disbanded. "Fifty thousand men," says Macaulay, "accustomed to
+the profession of arms, were thrown upon the world ... in a few months
+there remained not a trace indicating that the most formidable army in
+the world had just been absorbed in the mass of the community."[92:1]
+
+After this the House of Commons fell to discussing religion, and made
+the sad discovery that differences of opinion still existed. In these
+circumstances they decided to refer the matter to their pious king, and
+to such divines as he might choose. They then voted large sums of money
+for the royal establishment, and, it being the very end of August,
+adjourned till the 6th of November. As for making constitutional terms
+with the king, they never attempted it, though Sir Matthew Hale is
+credited with an attempt to induce them to do so. Any proposals of the
+kind must have failed. The people were in no mood for making
+constitutions.
+
+Having met again on the 6th of November, Marvell, in a letter to the
+Mayor and Aldermen of Hull, dated the 27th of the month, reports that
+"the House fell upon the making out of the King's revenue to L1,200,000
+a year." "The Customs are estimated toward L500,000 per annum in the
+revenue. His lands and fee farms L250,000. The Excise of Beer and Ale
+L300,000, the rest arise out of the Post Office, Wine Licenses,
+Stannaries Court, Probate of Wills, Post-fines, Forests, and other
+rights of the Crown. The excise of Foreign Commodities is to be
+continued apart until satisfaction of public debts and engagements
+secured upon the excise."
+
+This settlement of revenue marks "the beginning of a time." Cromwell, as
+Cowley puts it in his _Discourse_, by far the ablest indictment of
+Oliver ever penned, "took armes against two hundred thousand pounds a
+year, and raised them himself to above two millions." It is true.
+Cromwell spent the money honestly and efficiently, and chiefly on a navy
+that enabled him to wrest the command of the sea from the Dutch, to
+secure the carrying trade, and to challenge the world for supremacy in
+the Indies, both East and West. In doing this, he had the instinct of
+the whole nation behind him. But it was expensive.
+
+Had Charles been the most honest and thrifty of men, instead of one of
+the most dishonest and extravagant, he must have found his financial
+position a very difficult one. He was poorer than Cromwell. The feudal
+taxation had fallen into desuetude. To revive wardships, etc., was
+impossible, to recover arrears hopeless. There was nothing for it but
+scientific taxation. One of his first Acts contains a schedule of taxed
+articles extending over fifteen double-columned pages of a quarto
+volume. To raise this revenue was difficult--in fact impossible, and the
+amount actually obtained was always far below the estimates.
+
+Marvell's letter concludes thus:--
+
+ "To-morrow is the Bill for enacting his Majesty's declaration in
+ religious matters and to have its first reading. It is said that on
+ Sunday next Doctor Reynolds shall be created Bishop of Norwich."
+
+The rumour about Reynolds's bishopric proved to be true. The new bishop
+was a very "moderate" Anglican indeed, and his appointment was meant as
+a sop to the Presbyterians. Richard Baxter and Edmund Calamy refused
+similar preferment.
+
+On the 29th of November Marvell's letter contains the following
+passage:--
+
+ "Yesterday the Bill of the King's Declaration in religious matters
+ was read for the first time; but upon the question for a second
+ reading 'twas carried 183 against 157 in the negative, so there is an
+ end of that Bill and for those excellent things therein. We must
+ henceforth rely only upon his Majesty's goodness, who, I must needs
+ say, hath hitherto been more ready to give than we to receive."
+
+It is a noticeable feature of this correspondence that Marvell seldom
+mentions which way he voted himself.
+
+The letter of the 4th of December contains some interesting matter:--
+
+ "GENTLEMEN,--Since my last, upon Thursday, the Bill for Vicarages
+ hath been carryed up to the Lords; and a Message to them from our
+ House that they would expedite the Bill for confirmation of Magna
+ Charta, that for confirmation of marriages, and other bills of
+ publick concernment, which haue laid by them euer since our last
+ sitting, not returned to us. We had then the Bill for six moneths
+ assesment in consideration, and read the Bill for taking away Court
+ of Wards and Purveyance, and establishing the moiety of the Excise
+ of Beere and ale in perpetuum, about which we sit euery afternoon in
+ a Grand Committee. Upon Sunday last were consecrated in the Abby at
+ Westminster, Doctor Cossins, Bishop of Durham, Sterne of Carlile,
+ Gauden of Exeter, Ironside of Bristow, Loyd of Landaffe, Lucy of St.
+ Dauids, Lany, the seuenth, whose diocese I remember not at present,
+ and to-day they keep their feast in Haberdasher's hall, in London.
+ Dr. Reinolds was not of the number, who is intended for Norwich. A
+ Congedelire is gone down to Hereford for Dr. Monk, the Generall's
+ brother, at present Provost of Eaton. 'Tis thought that since our
+ throwing out the Bill of the King's Declaration, Mr. Calamy, and
+ other moderate men, will be resolute in refusing of Bishopricks....
+ To-day our House was upon the Bill of Attainder of those that haue
+ been executed, those that are fled, and of Cromwell, Bradshaw,
+ Ireton, and Pride, and 'tis ordered that the carkasses and coffins
+ of the four last named, shall be drawn with what expedition
+ possible, upon an hurdle to Tyburn, there (to) be hanged up for a
+ while, and then buryed under the gallows....
+
+ "WESTMINSTER, _Dec. 4, 1660_."
+
+Marvell's cool reporting of the hideous indignity inflicted upon his old
+master, and allowing it to pass _sub silentio_, is one of the many
+occasions that stirred Mr. Grosart's wonder. Nerves were tough in those
+days. Pepys tells us unconcernedly enough how, after seeing Lord
+Southampton sworn in at the Court of Exchequer as Lord Treasurer, he
+noticed "the heads of Cromwell, Bradshaw, and Ireton set up at the
+further end of Westminster Hall." It is quite possible Lady Fauconberg
+may have seen the same sight.[95:1]
+
+The Convention Parliament was dissolved on the 29th of December 1660.
+
+On 1st April 1661 Marvell was returned for the third and last time for
+Hull, for Charles the Second's first Parliament was of unconscionable
+long duration, not being dissolved till January 1679, after Marvell's
+death. It is known in history as the Pensionary or Long Parliament. The
+election figures were as below:--
+
+ Colonel Gilbey, 294
+ Mr. Andrew Marvell, 240
+ Mr. Edward Barnard, 195
+ Mr. John Ramsden, 122
+
+Marvell was not present at or before the election, for on the 6th of
+April he writes:--
+
+ "I perceive by Mr. Mayor that you have again (as if it were grown a
+ thing of course) made choice of me now, the third time, to serve for
+ you in Parliament, which as I cannot attribute to anything but your
+ constancy, so shall I, God willing, as in gratitude obliged, with no
+ less constancy and vigour continue to execute your commands and study
+ your service."
+
+A word may here be said about payment of borough members. The members'
+fee was 6s. 8d. for every day the Parliament lasted. The wages were paid
+by the corporation out of the borough funds. It was never a popular
+charge. Burgesses in many places cared as little for M.P.'s as do some
+of their successors for free libraries. Prynne, perhaps the greatest
+parliamentary lawyer that ever lived, told Pepys one day, as they were
+driving to the Temple, that the number of burgesses to be returned to
+Parliament for any particular borough was not, for aught Prynne could
+find, fixed by law, but was at first left to the discretion of the
+sheriff, and that several boroughs had complained of the sheriff's
+putting them to the charge of sending up burgesses.
+
+In August 1661 the corporation paid Marvell L28 for his fee as one of
+their burgesses, being 6s. 8d. a day for eighty-four days, the length of
+the Convention Parliament. Marvell continued to take his wages until the
+end of his days; but it is perhaps a mistake to suppose he was the very
+last member to do so. It was, however, unusual in Marvell's time.[96:1]
+
+This Pensionary Parliament, though of a very decided "Church and King"
+complexion, was not in its original composition a body lacking character
+or independence, but it steadily deteriorated in both respects.
+Vacancies, as they occurred, and they occurred very frequently in those
+days of short lives, were filled up by courtiers and pensioners.
+
+In the small tract, entitled _Flagellum Parliamentum_, which is a highly
+libellous "Dod," often attributed to Marvell, a record is preserved of
+more than two hundred members of this Parliament in 1675. Despite some
+humorous touches, this _Flagellum Parliamentum_ is still disagreeable to
+read. But the most graphic picture we have of this Parliament is to be
+found in one of Lord Shaftesbury's political tracts entitled "A letter
+from a Parliament man to his Friend" (1675):--
+
+ "SIR,--I see you are greatly scandalized at our slow and confused
+ Proceedings. I confess you have cause enough; but were you but
+ within these walls for one half day, and saw the strange make and
+ complexion that this house is of, you would wonder as much that ever
+ you wondered at it; for we are such a pied Parliament, that none can
+ say of what colour we are; for we consist of Old Cavaliers, Old
+ Round-Heads, Indigent-Courtiers, and true Country Gentlemen: the two
+ latter are most numerous, and would in probability bring things to
+ some issue were they not clogged with the numerous uncertainties of
+ the former. For the Old Cavalier, grown aged, and almost past his
+ vice, is damnable godly and makes his doting piety more a plague to
+ the world than his debauchery was, for he is so much a by-got to the
+ B(ishop) that he forces his Loyalty to strike sail to his Religion,
+ and could be content to pare the nails a little of the Civil
+ Government, so you would but let him sharpen the Ecclesiastical
+ Talons: which behaviour of his so exasperates the Round-Head, that
+ he on the other hand cares not what increases the Interest of the
+ Crown receives, so he can but diminish that of the miter: so that
+ the Round-Head had rather enslave the Man than the Conscience: the
+ Cavalier rather the Conscience than the Man; there being a
+ sufficient stock of animosity as proper matter to work upon. Upon
+ these, therefore, the Courtier mutually plays, for if any Ante-court
+ motion be made he gains the Round-Head either to oppose or absent by
+ telling them, If they will join him now he will join them for
+ Liberty of Conscience. And when any affair is started on behalf of
+ the Country he assures the Cavaliers, If they will then stand by him
+ he will then join with them in promoting a Bill against the
+ fanatics. Thus play they on both hands.... Wherefore it were happy
+ that he had neither Round-Head nor Cavalier in the House, for they
+ are each of them so prejudicate against the other that their sitting
+ here signifies nothing but their fostering their old venom and lying
+ at catch to stop every advantage to bear down each other, though it
+ be in the destruction of their country. For if the Round-Heads bring
+ in a good bill the Old Cavalier opposes it, for no other reason but
+ because they brought it in."[98:1]
+
+Such was the theatre of Marvell's public actions for the rest of his
+days, and if at times he may need forgiveness for the savagery of his
+satire, it ought to be found easy to forgive him.
+
+The two members for Hull were soon immersed in matters of much local
+importance. They began by quarrelling with one another, Marvell writing
+"the bond of civility betwixt Col. Gilby and myself being unhappily
+snappt in pieces, and in such manner that I cannot see how it is
+possible ever to knit them again." House of Commons quarrels are usually
+soon made up, and so was this one. The custom was for _both_ members to
+sign these letters, though they are all written in Marvell's hand--but
+if this was for any reason inconvenient, Marvell signed alone. No
+letters, unless in Marvell's writing, are preserved at Hull, which is a
+curious fact.
+
+One of these bits of local business related to a patent alleged to have
+been granted by the Crown to certain persons, authorising them to erect
+and maintain _ballast wharfs_ in the various ports, and to make charges
+in respect of them. This was resented by the members for the ports, and
+on Marvell's motion the matter was referred to the Committee of
+Grievances, before whom the patentees were summoned. When they came it
+appeared that the patent warranted none of the exactions that had been
+demanded, and also that the warrant sent down to Hull naming these
+charges was nothing more than a draft framed by the patentees
+themselves, and not authorised in any way. The patent was at once
+suspended. Marvell, like a true member of Parliament, wishes to get any
+little local credit that may be due for such prompt action, and
+writes:--
+
+ "In this thing (although I count all things I can do for your service
+ to be mere trifles, and not worth taking notice of in respect of what
+ I owe you) I must do myself that right to let you know that I, and I
+ alone, have had the happiness to do that little which hitherto is
+ effected."
+
+The matter required delicate handling, for a reason Marvell gives:
+"Because, if the King's right in placing such impositions should be
+weakened, neither should he have power to make a grant of them to you."
+
+Another much longer business related to a lighthouse, which some
+outsiders were anxious to build in the Humber. The corporation of Hull,
+acting on Marvell's advice, had petitioned the Privy Council, and were
+asked by their business-like member "to send us up a dormant credit for
+an hundred pound, which we yet indeed have no use of, but if need be
+must have ready at hand to reward such as will not otherwise befriend
+your business." Some months later Marvell forwards an account, not of
+the L100, but of the legal expenses about the lighthouse. He wishes it
+were less, but hopes that the "vigorous resistance" will discourage the
+designers from proceeding farther. This it did not do. As a member of
+the bar, I find two or three of the items in this old-world Bill of
+Costs interesting:--
+
+ To Mr. Scroggs to attend the Council, L3 6 0
+ " " " again for the same, 3 6 0
+ Spent on Mr. Scroggs at dinner, 18 0
+ To Mr. Scroggs again, 3 0 0
+ Fees of the Council Table, 1 10 0
+ Fee to Clerk of the Council, 2 0 0
+ For dinner for Mr. Scroggs and wine after, 1 0 0
+ To Mr. Cresset (the Solicitor), 20 0 0
+ To Mr. Scroggs for a dinner, 1 0 0
+
+The barrister who was so frequently "refreshed" by Marvell lived to
+become "the infamous Lord Chief Justice Scroggs" of all school
+histories.
+
+A week before the prorogation of Parliament, which happened on the 19th
+of May 1662, Marvell went to Holland and remained there for nine months,
+for he did not return until the very end of March 1663, more than a
+month after the reassembling of the House.
+
+What took him there nobody knows. Writing to the Trinity House about the
+lighthouse business on the 8th of May 1662, Marvell says:--
+
+ "But that which troubles me is that by the interest of some persons
+ too potent for me to refuse, and who have a great direction and
+ influence upon my counsels and fortune, I am obliged to go beyond
+ sea before I have perfected it (_i.e._ the lighthouse business). But
+ first I do thereby make my Lord Carlisle (who is a member of the
+ Privy Council and one of them to whom your business is referred)
+ absolutely yours. And my journey is but into Holland, from whence I
+ shall weekly correspond as if I were at London with all the rest of
+ my friends, towards the affecting your business. Then I leave Col.
+ Gilbey there, whose ability for business and affection to yours is
+ such that I cannot be wanted though I am missing."
+
+It is plain from this that Lord Carlisle is one of the powerful persons
+referred to--but beyond this we cannot go.
+
+Whilst in Holland Marvell wrote both to the Trinity House and to the
+corporation on business matters.
+
+In March 1663 Marvell came back in a hurry, some complaints having been
+made in Hull about his absence. He begins his first letter after his
+return as follows:--
+
+ "Being newly arrived in town and full of business, yet I could not
+ neglect to give you notice that this day (2nd April 1663) I have been
+ in the House and found my place empty, though it seems, as I now
+ hear, that some persons would have been so courteous as to have
+ filled it for me."
+
+In none of these letters is any reference made to the debates in the
+House on the unhappy Bill of Uniformity, nor does any record of those
+discussions anywhere exist. The Savoy Conference proved a failure, and
+no lay reader of Baxter's account of it can profess wonder. Not a single
+point in difference was settled. In the meantime the restored Houses of
+Convocation, from which the Presbyterian members were excluded, had
+completed their revision of the Book of Common Prayer and presented it
+to Parliament.
+
+In considering the Bill for Uniformity, the House of Lords, where
+Presbyterianism was powerfully represented, showed more regard for those
+"tender consciences" to which the king (by the new Prayer Book called
+for the first time "our most religious King") had referred in his Breda
+Declaration than did the House of Commons. "The Book, the whole Book,
+and nothing but the Book" was, in effect, the cry of the lower House,
+and on the 19th of May, ten days after Marvell had left for the
+Continent, the Act of Uniformity became law, and by the 24th of August
+1662 all beneficed ministers and schoolmasters had to make the
+celebrated subscription and profession, or go out into the wilderness.
+
+There has always been a dispute as to the physical possibility of
+perusing the compilation in question before the day fixed by the
+Statute. The Book was advertised for sale in London on the 6th of
+August, but how many copies were actually available on that day is not
+known.
+
+The Dean and Chapter of Peterborough did not get their copies until the
+17th of August. When the new folios reached the lonely parsonages of
+Cumberland and Durham--who would care to say? The Act required a verbal
+avowal of "unfeigned assent and consent to all and everything contained
+and prescribed in and by the Book of Common Prayer, and administrations
+of the Sacraments and other rites and ceremonies of the Church according
+to the use of the Church of England, together with the Psalter, and the
+form of manner of making, ordaining, and consecrating Bishops, Priests,
+and Deacons" to be made after the service upon "some Lord's day" before
+the Feast of St. Bartholomew, _i.e._ the 24th of August 1662. The Act
+also required subscription within the same time-limit to a declaration
+of (_inter alia_) uniformity to the Liturgy of the Church of England "as
+it is now by law established."
+
+That this haste was indecent no layman is likely to dispute, but that it
+wrought practical wrong is doubtful. The Vicar of Bray needed no time to
+read his new Folio to enable him to make whatever avowal concerning it
+the law demanded; and as for signing the declaration, all he required
+for that purpose was pen and ink. Neither had the incumbent, who was a
+good churchman at heart, any doubts to settle. He rejoiced to know that
+his side was once more uppermost, and that it would be no longer
+necessary for him, in order to retain his living, to pretend to tolerate
+a Presbyterian, or to submit to read in his church the Directory of
+Public Worship. Convocation had approved the new Prayer Book, which was
+in substance the old one, and what more did any churchman require? As
+for the Presbyterians and others who were in possession of livings, the
+failure of the Savoy Conference must have made it plain to them that the
+Church of England had not allowed the king to keep his word, that
+compromise and comprehension had failed, and that if they were to remain
+where they were, it could only be on terms of completely severing
+themselves from all other Protestant bodies in the world, and becoming
+thorough Episcopalians. No Presbyterian of any eminence was prepared to
+make the statutory avowal. Painful as it always must be to give up any
+good thing by a fixed date, it is hard to see what advantage would have
+accrued from delay.
+
+When the day came, some two thousand parsons were turned out of the
+Church of England. Among them were included many of the most devout and
+some of the most learned of our divines. Their "coming in" had been
+irregular, their "going out" was painful.
+
+Save so far as it turned these men out, the Act was a failure. It did
+not procure that uniformity in the public worship of God which it
+declared was so desirable; it prevented no scandal; it arrested no
+decay; it allayed no distemper, and it certainly did not settle the
+peace of the Church. Inside the Church the bishops were supine, the
+parochial clergy indifferent, and the worshippers, if such a name can
+properly be bestowed upon the congregations, were grossly irreverent.
+Nor was any improvement in the conduct of the Church service noticeable
+until after the Revolution, and when legislation had conceded a somewhat
+shabby measure of toleration to those who by that time had become rigid,
+traditional, and hereditary dissenters. Then indeed some attempts began
+to be made to secure a real uniformity of ritual in the public worship
+of the Church of England.[104:1] How far success has rewarded these
+exertions it is not for me to say.
+
+Marvell did not remain long at home after his return from Holland. A
+strange adventure lay before him. He thus introduces it in a letter
+dated 20th June 1663:--
+
+ "GENTLEMEN, MY VERY WORTHY FRIENDS,--The relation I have to your
+ affairs, and the intimacy of that affection I ow you, do both
+ incline and oblige me to communicate to you, that there is a
+ probability I may very shortly have occasion to go beyond sea; for
+ my Lord of Carlisle being chosen by his Majesty, Embassadour
+ Extraordinary to Muscovy, Sweden, and Denmarke, hath used his power,
+ which ought to be very great with me, to make me goe along with him
+ Secretary in those embassages. It is no new thing for Members of our
+ House to be dispens'd with for the service of the King and Nation in
+ forain parts. And you may be sure that I will not stirre without
+ speciall leave of the House; that so you may be freed from any
+ possibility of being importuned or tempted to make any other choice,
+ in my absence. However, I can not but advise also with you, desiring
+ to take your assent along with me, so much esteeme I have both of
+ your prudence and friendship. The time allotted for the embassy is
+ not much above a yeare: probably it may not be much less betwixt our
+ adjournment and next meeting; and, however, you have Colonell Gilby,
+ to whom my presence can make litle addition, so that if I cannot
+ decline this voyage, I shall have the comfort to believe, that, all
+ things considered, you cannot thereby receive any disservice. I
+ shall hope to receive herein your speedy answer...."
+
+What was the "power" Lord Carlisle had over Marvell is not now
+discoverable, but the tie, whatever it may have been, was evidently a
+close one.
+
+A month after this letter Marvell started on his way.
+
+ "GENTLEMEN, MY VERY WORTHY FRIENDS,--Being this day taking barge for
+ Gravesend, there to embark for Archangel, so to Muscow, thence for
+ Sweden, and last of all Denmarke; all of which I hope, by God's
+ blessing, to finish within twelve moneths time: I do hereby, with my
+ last and seriousest thoughts, salute you, rendring you all hearty
+ thanks for your great kindnesse and friendship to me upon all
+ occasions, and ardently beseeching God to keep you all in His
+ gracious protection, to your own honour, and the welfare and
+ flourishing of your Corporation, to which I am and shall ever
+ continue a most affectionate and devoted servant. I undertake this
+ voyage with the order and good liking of his Majesty, and by leave
+ given me from the House and enterd in the Journal; and having
+ received moreover your approbation, I go therefore with more ease
+ and satisfaction of mind, and augurate to myselfe the happier
+ successe in all my proceedings...."
+
+It was Marvell's good fortune to be in Lord Carlisle's frigate which
+made the voyage to Archangel in less than a month, sailing from
+Gravesend on the 22nd of July and arriving at the bar of Archangel on
+the 19th of August. The companion frigate took seven weeks to compass
+the same distance.
+
+Nothing of any importance attaches to this Russian embassy. It cost a
+great deal of money, took up a great deal of time, exposed the
+ambassador and his suite to much rudeness and discomfort, and failed to
+effect its main object, which was to secure a renewal of the privileges
+formerly enjoyed in Muscovy by British merchants.
+
+One of the attendants upon the ambassador made a small book out of his
+travels, which did not get printed till 1669, when it attracted little
+notice. Mr. Grosart was the first of Marvell's many biographers to
+discover the existence of this narrative.[106:1] He found it in the
+first instance, to use his own language, "in one of good trusty John
+Harris' folios of _Travels and Voyages_" (two vols. folio, 1705); but
+later on he made the sad discovery that this "good trusty John Harris"
+had uplifted what he called his "true and particular account" from the
+book of 1669 without any acknowledgment. "For ways that are dark" the
+old compiler of travels was not easily excelled, but why should Mr.
+Grosart have gone out of his way to call an eighteenth-century
+book-maker, about whom he evidently knew nothing, "good and trusty"?
+Harris was never either the one or the other, and died a pauper!
+
+A journey to Moscow in 1663-64 was no joke. Lord Carlisle, who was
+accompanied by his wife and eldest son, although ready to start from
+Archangel by the end of September, was doomed to spend both the 5th of
+November and Christmas Day in the gloomy town of Vologda, which they had
+reached, travelling by water, on the 17th of October. Some of this time
+was spent in quarrelling as to who was to supply the sledges that were
+required to convey the ambassador and all his _impedimenta_ along the
+now ice-bound roads to Moscow. It was one of Marvell's many duties to
+remonstrate with the authorities for their cruel and disrespectful
+indifference; he did so with great freedom, but with no effect, and at
+last the ambassador was obliged to hire two hundred sledges at his own
+charges. Sixty he sent on ahead, following with one hundred and forty on
+the 15th of January 1664. It was an intensely cold journey, and the
+accommodation at night, with one happy exception, proved quite infamous.
+On the 3rd of February Lord Carlisle and his _cortege_ found themselves
+five versts from Moscow. The 5th of February was fixed for their entry
+into the city in all their finery. They were ready on the morning of
+that day, awaiting the arrival of the Tsar's escort, but it never came.
+Lord Carlisle had sent his cooks on to Moscow to prepare the dinner he
+expected to eat in his city-quarters. Nightfall approached, and it was
+not till "half an hour before night" that the belated messengers
+arrived, full of excuses. The ambassador was hungry, cold, and furious,
+nor did his anger abate when told he was not to be allowed to enter
+Moscow that night, as the Tsar and his ladies were very anxious to
+enjoy the spectacle. The return of the cooks from Moscow and the
+preparation of dinner, though a mitigation, was no cure for wounded
+pride, and Lord Carlisle, calling Marvell to his side, and with his
+assistance, concocted a letter in Latin to the Tsar, complaining
+bitterly of their ill-treatment _inter fumosi gurgustii sordes et
+angustias sine cibo aut potu_, and going so far as to assert that had
+anything of the kind happened in England to a foreign ambassador, the
+King of England would never have rested until the offence had been
+atoned for with the blood of the criminals. When, some forty years
+afterwards, Peter the Great asked Queen Anne to chop off the heads of
+the rude men who had arrested his ambassador for debt, he had, perhaps,
+Marvell's letter before him.
+
+On the 6th of February Lord Carlisle and his suite made their public
+entry into Moscow; but so long a time was occupied over the few versts
+they had to travel, that it was dusk before the Kremlin was reached.
+
+The formal reception of the ambassador was on the 11th of February.
+Marvell was in the ambassador's sledge and carried his credentials upon
+a yard of red damask. The titles of the Russian Potentate would, if
+printed here, fill half a page. All the Russias, Great, Little, and
+White, emperies more than one, dukedoms by the dozen, territories,
+countries, and dominions--not all easy to identify on the map, and very
+hard to pronounce--were read out in a loud voice by Marvell. At the end
+of them came the homely title of the Earl and his offices, "his
+Majesty's Lieutenant in the Counties of Cumberland and Westmorland."
+
+The letters read and delivered, the Tsar and his Boyars rose in their
+places simultaneously, and their tissue vests made so strange, loud, and
+unexpected a noise as to provoke the ever too easily moved risibility
+of the Englishmen.[109:1] When Marvell and the rest of them had ceased
+from giggling, the Tsar inquired after the health of the king, but the
+distance between his Imperial Majesty and Lord Carlisle being too great
+for the question to carry, it had to be repeated by those who were
+nearer the ambassador, who gravely replied that when he last saw his
+master, namely on the 20th of July then last past, he was perfectly
+well. To the same question as to the health of "the desolate widow of
+Charles the First," Carlisle returned the same cautious answer. He then
+read a very long speech in English, which his interpreter turned into
+Russian. The same oration was rendered into Latin by Marvell, and
+presented. Over Marvell's Latin trouble arose, for the Russians were
+bent on taking and giving offence. Marvell had styled the Tsar
+_Illustrissimus_ when he ought, so it was alleged, to have called him
+_Serenissimus_. Marvell was not a schoolmaster's son, an old scholar of
+Trinity, and Milton's assistant as Latin Secretary for nothing. He
+prepared a reply which, as it does not lack humour, has a distinct
+literary flavour, and is all that came of the embassy, may here be given
+at length:--
+
+ "I reply, saith he, that I sent no such paper into the
+ Embassy-office, but upon the desire of his Tzarskoy Majesty's
+ Councellor Evan Offonassy Pronchissof, I delivered it to him, not
+ being a paper of State, nor written in the English Language wherein I
+ treat, nor put into the hands of the near Boyars and Councellors of
+ his Tzarskoy majesty, nor subscribed by my self, nor translated into
+ Russe by my Interpreter, but only as a piece of curiosity, which is
+ now restored me, and I am possessed of it; so that herein his
+ Tzarskoy majestie's near Boyars and Councellors are doubtless ill
+ grounded. But again I say concerning the value of the words
+ _Illustrissimus_ and _Serenissimus_ compared together, seeing we must
+ here from affaires of State, fall into Grammatical contests
+ concerning the Latin tongue; that the word _Serenus_ signifieth
+ nothing but still and calm; and, therefore, though of late times
+ adopted into the Titles of great Princes by reason of that benigne
+ tranquility which properly dwells in the majestick countenance of
+ great Princes, and that venerable stillness of all the Attendants
+ that surround them, of which I have seen an excellent example when I
+ was in the presence of his Tzarskoy majesty, yet is more properly
+ used concerning the calmness of the weather, or season. So that even
+ the night is elegantly called _Serena_ by the best Authors, Cicero in
+ Arato 12, Lucretius i. l. 29. '_Serena nox_'; and upon perusing again
+ what I have writ in this paper, I finde that I have out of the
+ customariness of that expression my self near the beginning said, And
+ that most serene night, &c. Whereas on the contrary _Illustris_ in
+ its proper derivation and signification expresseth that which is all
+ resplendent, lightsome, and glorious, as well without as within, and
+ that not with a secondary but with a primitive and original light.
+ For if the Sun be, as he is, the first fountain of light, and Poets
+ in their expressions (as is well known) are higher by much than those
+ that write in Prose, what else is it when Ovid in the 2. of the
+ Metamorphoses saith of Phoebus speaking with Phaethon, _Qui terque
+ quaterque concutiens Illustre caput_, and the Latin Orators, as
+ Pliny, Ep. 139, when they would say the highest thing that can be
+ exprest upon any subject, word it thus, _Nihil Illustrius dicere
+ possum_. So that hereby may appear to his Tzarskoy Majestie's near
+ Boyars and Counsellors what diminution there is to his Tzarskoy
+ Majesty (which farr be it from my thoughts) if I appropriate
+ _Serenissimus_ to my Master and _Illustrissimus_ to Him than which
+ _nihil dici potest Illustrius_. But because this was in the time of
+ the purity of the Latin tongue, when the word _Serenus_ was never
+ used in the Title of any Prince or Person, I shall go on to deale
+ with the utmost candor, forasmuch as in this Nation the nicety of
+ that most eloquent language is not so perfectly understood, which
+ gives occasion to these mistakes. I confess therefore that indeed in
+ the declination of the Latin tongue, and when there scarce could be
+ found out words enough to supply the modern ambition of Titles,
+ Serenissimus as several other words hath grown in fashion for a
+ compellation of lesser as well as greater Princes, and yet befits
+ both the one and the other. So there is _Serenissima Respublica
+ Veneta_, _Serenitates Electoriae_, _Serenitates Regiae_, even as the
+ word Highness or _Celsitudo_ befits a Duke, a Prince, a King, or an
+ Emperour, adjoyning to it the respective quality, and so the word
+ _Illustris_. But suppose it were by modern use (which I deny)
+ depressed from the undoubted superiority that it had of _Serenus_ in
+ the purest antiquity, yet being added in the transcendent degree to
+ the word Emperour, the highest denomination that a Prince is capable
+ of, it becomes of the same value. So that to interpret
+ _Illustrissimus_ unto diminution is to find a positive in a
+ superlative, and in the most orient light to seek for darkness. And I
+ would, seeing the near Boyars and Counsellors of his Tzarskoy Majesty
+ are pleased to mention the Title given to his Tzarskoy Majesty by his
+ Cesarian Majesty, gladly be satisfied by them, whether ever any
+ Cesarian Majesty writ formerly hither in High-Dutch, and whether then
+ they styled his Tzarskoy Majesty Durchluchtigste which is the same
+ with _Illustrissimus_, and which I believe the Caesar hath kept for
+ Himself. But to cut short, his Royal Majesty hath used the word to
+ his Tzarskoy Majesty in his Letter, not out of imitation of others,
+ although even in the Dutch Letter to his Tzarskoy Majesty of 16 June
+ 1663, I finde Durchlauchtigste the same (as I said) with
+ _Illustrissimus_, but out of the constant use of his own Court,
+ further joyning before it Most High, Most Potent, and adding after it
+ Great Lord Emperour, which is an higher Title than any Prince in the
+ World gives his Tzarskoy Majesty, and as high a Title of honour as
+ can be given to any thing under the Divinity. For the King my Master
+ who possesses as considerable Dominions, and by as high and
+ self-dependent a right as any Prince in the Universe, yet contenting
+ Himself with the easiest Titles, and satisfying Himself in the
+ essence of things, doth most willingly give to other Princes the
+ Titles which are appropriated to them, but to the Tzarskoy Majesties
+ of Russia his Royal Ancestors, and to his present Tzarskoy Majesty
+ his Royal Majesty himself, have usually and do gladly pay Titles even
+ to superfluity out of meer kindness. And upon that reason He added
+ the word most Illustrious, and so did I use it in the Latin of my
+ speech. Yet, that You may find I did not out of any criticisme of
+ honor, but for distinction sake use it as I did, You may see in one
+ place of the same speech _Serenitas_, speaking of his Tzarskoy
+ Majesty: and I would have used _Serenissimus_ an hundred times
+ concerning his Tzarskoy Majesty, had I thought it would have pleased
+ Him better. And I dare promise You that his Majesty will upon the
+ first information from me stile him _Serenissimus_, and I
+ (notwithstanding what I have said) shall make little difficulty of
+ altering the word in that speech, and of delivering it so to You,
+ with that protestation that I have not in using that word
+ _Illustrissimus_ erred nor used any diminution (which God forbid) to
+ his Tzarskoy Majesty, but on the contrary after the example of the
+ King my Master intended and shewed him all possible honor. And so God
+ grant all happiness to His most high, most Potent, most Illustrious,
+ and most Serene Tzarskoy Majesty, and that the friendship may daily
+ increase betwixt His said Majesty and his most Serene Majesty my
+ Master."
+
+On the 19th of February the Tsar invited Lord Carlisle and his suite to
+a dinner, which, beginning at two o'clock, lasted till eleven, when it
+was prematurely broken up by the Tsar's nose beginning to bleed. Five
+hundred dishes were served, but there were no napkins, and the
+table-cloths only just covered the boards. There were Spanish wines,
+white and red mead, Puaz and strong waters. The English ambassador was
+not properly placed at table, not being anywhere near the Tsar, and his
+faithful suite shared his resentment. Time went on, but no diplomatic
+progress was made. The Tsar would not renew the privileges of the
+British merchants; Easter was spent in Moscow, May also--and still
+nothing was done. Carlisle, in a huff, determined to go away, and,
+somewhat to the distress of his followers, refused to accept the costly
+sables sent by the Tzar, not only to the ambassador, Lady Carlisle, and
+Lord Morpeth, but to the secretaries and others. The Tzar thereupon
+returned the plate which our king had sent him, which plate Lord
+Carlisle seems to have appropriated, no doubt with diplomatic
+correctness, as his perquisite in lieu of the sables; but the suite got
+nothing.
+
+The embassy left Moscow on the 24th of June for Novgorod and Riga, and
+after visiting Stockholm and Copenhagen, Lord Carlisle and Marvell
+reached London on the 30th of January 1665.
+
+During Marvell's absence war had been declared with the Dutch. It was
+never difficult to go to war with the Dutch. The king was always in want
+of money, and as no proper check existed over war supplies, he took what
+he wanted out of them. The merchants on 'Change desired war, saying that
+the trade of the world was too little for both England and Holland, and
+that one or the other "must down." The English manufacturers, who felt
+the sting of their Dutch competitors, were always in favour of war. Then
+the growing insolence of the Dutch in the Indies was not to be borne.
+Stories were circulated how the Hollanders had proclaimed themselves
+"Lords of the Southern Seas," and meant to deny English ships the right
+of entry in that quarter of the globe. A baronet called on Pepys and
+pulled out of his pocket letters from the East Indies, full of sad tales
+of Englishmen having been actually thrashed inside their own factory at
+Surat by swaggering Dutchmen, who had insulted the flag of St. George,
+and swore they were going to be the masters "out there." Pepys, who
+knew a little about the state of the royal navy, listened sorrowfully
+and was content to hope that the war would not come until "we are more
+ready for it."
+
+In the House of Commons the prudent men were against the war, and were
+at once accused of being in the pay of the Dutch. The king's friends
+were all for the war, and nobody doubted that some of the money voted
+for it would find its way into their pockets, or at all events that
+pensions would reward their fidelity. A third group who favoured the war
+were supposed to do so because their disloyalty and fanaticism always
+disposed them to trouble the waters in which they wished to fish.
+
+The war began in November 1664, and on the 24th of that month the king
+opened Parliament and demanded money. He got it. Clarendon describes how
+Sir Robert Paston from Norfolk, a back-bench man, "who was no frequent
+speaker, but delivered what he had a mind to say very clearly," stood up
+and proposed a grant of two and a half million pounds, to be spread over
+three years. So huge a sum took the House by surprise. Nobody spoke;
+"they sat in amazement." Somebody at last found his voice and moved a
+much smaller sum, but no one seconded him. Sir Robert Paston ultimately
+found supporters, "no man who had any relation to the Court speaking a
+word." The Speaker put Sir Robert Paston's motion as the question, "and
+the affirmative made a good sound, and very few gave their negative
+aloud." But Clarendon adds, "it was notorious very many sat silent."
+
+The war was not in its early stages unpopular, being for the control of
+the sea, for the right of search, for the fishing trade, for mastery of
+the "gorgeous East." The Admiralty had been busy, and a hundred
+frigates, well gunned, were ready for the blue water by February 1665.
+The Duke of York, who took the command, was a keen sailor, though his
+unhappy notions as to patronage, and its exercise, were fatal to an
+efficient service. On the 3rd of June the duke had his one victory; it
+was off the roadstead of Harwich, and the roar of his artillery was
+heard in Westminster. It was a fierce fight; the king's great friend,
+Charles Berkeley, just made a peer and about to be made a duke, Lord
+Muskerry and young Richard Boyle, all on the duke's ship the _Royal
+Charles_, were killed by one shot, their blood and brains flying in the
+duke's face. The Earls of Marlborough and Portland were killed. The
+gallant Lawson, who rose from the ranks in Cromwell's time, an
+Anabaptist and a Republican, but still in high command, received on
+board his ship, the _Royal Oak_, a fatal wound. On the other side the
+Dutch admiral, Opdam, was blown into the air with his ship and crew. The
+Dutch fleet was scattered, and fled, after a loss estimated at
+twenty-four ships and eight thousand men killed and wounded; England
+lost no ship and but six hundred men.
+
+The victory was not followed up. Some say the duke lost nerve. Tromp was
+allowed to lead a great part of the fleet away in safety, and when the
+great De Ruyter was recalled from the West Indies he was soon able to
+assume the command of a formidable number of fighting craft.
+
+In less than ten days after this great engagement the plague appeared in
+London, a terrible and a solemnising affliction, lasting the rest of the
+year. It was at its worst in September, when in one week more than seven
+thousand died of it. The total number of its dead is estimated at
+sixty-eight thousand five hundred and ninety-six.
+
+On account of the plague Parliament was summoned to meet at Oxford in
+October 1665.
+
+Marvell must have reached Oxford in good time, for the Admission Book of
+the Bodleian records his visit to the library on the last day of
+September. His first letter from Oxford is dated 15th October, and in it
+he tells the corporation that the House, "upon His Majesty's
+representation of the necessity of further supplies in reference to the
+Dutch War and probability of the French embracing their interests, hath
+voted the King L1,250,000 additional to be levied in two years." The
+king, who was the frankest of mortals in speech, though false as Belial
+in action, told the House that he had already spent all the money
+previously voted and must have more, especially if France was to prefer
+the friendship of Holland to his. Amidst loud acclamations the money was
+voted. The French ambassadors, who were in Oxford, saw for themselves
+the temper of Parliament.
+
+Notwithstanding the terrible plight of the capital, Oxford was gaiety
+itself. The king was accompanied by his consort, who then was hopeful of
+an heir, and also by Lady Castlemaine and Miss Stewart. Lady Castlemaine
+did not escape the shaft of University wit, for a stinging couplet was
+set up during the night on her door, for the discovery of the authorship
+of which a reward of L1000 was offered. It may very well have been
+Marvell's.[116:1]
+
+The Duke of Monmouth gave a ball to the queen and her ladies, where,
+after the queen's retirement, "Mrs. Stewart was extraordinary merry,"
+and sang "French songs with great skill."[116:2]
+
+Ten Acts of Parliament received the royal assent at Oxford, of which
+but one is still remembered in certain quarters--the Five Mile Act,
+which Marvell briefly describes as an Act "for debarring ejected
+Nonconformists from living in or near Corporations (where they had
+formerly pursued their callings), unless taking the new Oath and
+Declaration." Parliament was prorogued at the end of October.
+
+Another visitation of Providence was soon to befall the capital. On
+Sunday morning, the 2nd of September, Pepys was aroused by one of his
+maid-servants at 3 A.M. to look at a fire. He could not make out much
+about it and went to bed again, but when he rose at seven o'clock it was
+still burning, so he left his house and made his way to the Tower, from
+whence he saw London Bridge aflame, and describes how the poor pigeons,
+loth to leave their homes, fluttered about the balconies, until with
+singed wings they fell into the flames. After gazing his fill he went to
+Whitehall and had an interview with the king, who at once ordered his
+barge and proceeded downstream to his burning City, and to the
+assistance of a distracted Lord Mayor.
+
+The fire raged four days, and made an end of old London, a picturesque
+and even beautiful City. St. Paul's, both the church and the school, the
+Royal Exchange, Ludgate, Fleet Street as far as the Inner Temple, were
+by the 7th of the month smoking ruins. Four hundred streets, eighty-nine
+churches (just a church an hour, so the curious noted), warehouses
+unnumbered with all their varied contents, whole editions of books,
+valuable and the reverse of valuable, were wiped out of existence. Rents
+to an enormous amount ceased to be represented any longer by the houses
+that paid them. How was the king to get his chimney-money? How were
+merchants to meet their obligations? The parsons on Sunday, the 9th of
+September, ought to have had no difficulty in finding texts for their
+sermons. Pepys went to church twice, but without edification, and
+certainly Dean Harding, whom he heard complaining in the evening "that
+the City had been reduced from a folio to a duo decimo," hardly rose to
+the dignity of the occasion.
+
+Strange to say, not a life was actually lost in the fire,[118:1] though
+some old Londoners (among them Edmund Calamy's grandfather) died of
+grief, and others (and among them Shirley the dramatist and his wife)
+from exposure and exhaustion. One hysterical foreigner, who insisted
+that he lit the flame, was executed, though no sensible man believed
+what he said. It was long the boast of the merchants of London that no
+one of their number "broke" in consequence of the great fire.
+
+Unhappily the belief was widespread, as that "tall bully," the monument,
+long testified, that the fire was the work of the Roman Catholics, and
+aliens, suspected of belonging to our old religion, found it dangerous
+to walk the streets whilst the embers still smoked, which they continued
+to do for six months.
+
+The meeting of Parliament was a little delayed in consequence of this
+national disaster, and when it did meet at the end of the month, Marvell
+reports the appointment of two Committees, one "about the Fire of
+London," and the other "to receive informations of the insolence of the
+Popish priests and Jesuits, and of the increase of Popery." The latter
+Committee almost at once reported to the House, to quote from Marvell's
+letter of the 27th of October, "that his Majesty be desired to issue out
+his proclamation that all Popish priests and Jesuits, except such as not
+being natural-born subjects, or belong to the Queen Mother and Queen
+Consort, be banished in thirty days or else the law be executed upon
+them, that all Justices of Peace and officers concerned put the laws in
+execution against Papists and suspected Papists in order to their
+execution, and that all officers, civil or military, not taking the
+Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance within twenty days be displaced."
+
+In a very real sense the great fire of London continued to smoke for
+many a weary year, and to fill the air with black suspicions and civil
+discord.
+
+Parliament had not sat long before it was discovered that a change had
+taken place in its temper and spirit. The plague and the fire had
+contributed to this change. The London clergy had not exhibited great
+devotion during the former affliction. Many of the incumbents deserted
+their flocks, and their empty pulpits had been filled by zealots, who
+preached "Woe unto Jerusalem." The profligacy of the Court, and the
+general decay of manners, when added to the severity of the legislation
+against the Nonconformists, gave the ejected clergy opportunities for a
+renewal of their spiritual ministrations, and as usual their labours,
+_pro salute animarum_, aroused political dissatisfaction. Some of the
+more outrageous supporters of the royal prerogative, the renegade May
+among them, professed to see in the fire a punishment upon the spirit of
+freedom, for which the City had once been famous, and urged the king not
+to suffer it to be rebuilt again "to be a bit in his mouth and a bridle
+upon his neck, but to keep it all open," and that his troops might enter
+whenever he thought necessary, "there being no other way to govern that
+rude multitude but by force."
+
+Rabid nonsense of this kind had no weight with the king, who never
+showed his native good sense more conspicuously than in the pains he
+took over the rebuilding of London; but none the less it had its effect
+in getting rid once and for ever of that spirit of excessive (besotted
+is Hallam's word) loyalty which had characterised the Restoration.
+
+The king, of course, wanted money, nor was Parliament disposed to refuse
+it, we being still at war with Holland; but to the horror of that
+elderly pedant, Lord Clarendon, the Commons passed a Bill appointing a
+commission of members of both Houses "to inspect"--I am now quoting
+Marvell--"and examine thoroughly the former expense of the L2,800,000,
+of the L1,250,000 of the Militia money, of the prize goods, etc." In an
+earlier letter Marvell attributes the new temper of Parliament, "not to
+any want of ardour to supply the public necessities, but out of our
+House's sense also of the burden to be laid upon the subject." Clarendon
+was so alarmed that he advised a dissolution. Charles was alarmed, too,
+knowing well that both Carteret, the Treasurer of the Navy, and Lord
+Ashley, the Treasurer of the Prize Money, issued out many sums upon the
+king's warrant, for which no accounts could be produced, but he was
+still more frightened of a new Parliament. In the present Parliament he
+had, so Clarendon admits, "a hundred members of his own menial servants
+and their near relations." The bishops were also against a dissolution,
+dreading the return of Presbyterian members, so Clarendon's advice was
+not followed, and the king very reluctantly consented to the commission,
+about which Pepys has so much to say. It did not get appointed at once,
+but when it did Pepys rejoices greatly that its secretary, Mr. Jessopp,
+was "an old fashioned Cromwell man"; in other words, both honest and
+efficient.
+
+The shrewd Secretary of the Navy Office here puts his finger on the
+real plague-spot of the Restoration. Our Puritan historians write rather
+loosely about "the floodgates of dissipation," etc., having been flung
+open by that event as if it had wrought a sudden change in human nature.
+Mr. Pepys, whose frank Diary begins during the Protectorate, underwent
+no such change. He was just the same sinner under Cromwell as he was
+under Charles. Sober, grave divines may be found deploring the growing
+profligacy of the times long before the 29th of May 1660. An era of
+extravagance was evidently to be expected. No doubt the king's return
+assisted it. No country could be anything but the worse for having
+Charles the Second as its "most religious King." The Restoration of the
+Stuarts was the best "excuse for a glass" ever offered to an Englishman.
+He availed himself of it with even more than his accustomed freedom. But
+it cannot be said that the king's debauchery was ever approved of even
+in London. Both the mercurial Pepys and the grave Evelyn alike deplore
+it. The misfortune clearly attributable to the king's return was the
+substitution of a corrupt, inefficient, and unpatriotic administration
+for the old-fashioned servants of the public whom Cromwell had gathered
+round him.
+
+Parliament was busy with new taxes. In November 1666 Marvell writes:--
+
+ "The Committee has prepared these votes. All persons shall pay one
+ shilling per poll, all aliens two, all Nonconformists and papists
+ two, all servants one shilling in the pound of their wages, all
+ personal estates shall pay for so much as is not already taxed by the
+ land-tax, after twenty shillings in the hundred. Cattle, corn, and
+ household furniture shall be excepted, and all such stock-in-trade as
+ is already taxed by the land-tax, but the rest to be liable."
+
+Stringent work! Later on we read:--
+
+ "Three shillings in the pound for all offices and public employments,
+ except military; lawyers and physicians proportionate to their
+ practice."
+
+Here is the income-tax long before Mr. Pitt.
+
+The House of Lords, trembling on the verge of a breach of privilege,
+altered this Poll Bill. Marvell writes in January 1667:--
+
+ "We have not advanced much this week; the alterations of the Lords
+ upon the Poll Bill have kept us busy. We have disagreed in most.
+ Aliens we adhere to pay double. Nonconformists we agree with them
+ _not_ to pay double (126 to 91), to allow no exemptions from patents
+ to free from paying, we adhere; and we also rejected a long clause
+ whereby they as well as the Commoners pretend distinctly to give to
+ the King, and to-day we send up our reasons."
+
+The Lords agreed, and the Bill passed.
+
+Ireland supplied a very stormy measure. I am afraid Marvell was on the
+wrong side, but owing to his reserve I am not sure. An Irish Cattle Bill
+was a measure very popular in the House of Commons, its object being to
+prevent Ireland from sending over live beasts to be fattened, killed,
+and consumed in England. You can read all about it in Clarendon's _Life_
+(vol. iii. pp. 704-720, 739), and think you are reading about Canadian
+cattle to-day. The breeders (in a majority) were on one side, and the
+owners of pasture-land on the other. The breeders said the Irish cattle
+were bred in Ireland for nothing and transported for little, that they
+undersold the English-bred cattle, and consequently "the breed of Cattle
+in the Kingdom was totally given over," and rents fell. Other members
+contended in their places "that their countries had no land bad enough
+to breed, and that their traffic consisted in buying lean cattle and
+making them fat, and upon this they paid their rent." Nobody, except the
+king, gave a thought to Ireland. He, in this not unworthy of his great
+Tudor predecessor, Henry the Eighth, declared he was King of Ireland no
+less than of England, and would do nothing to injure one portion of his
+dominions for the benefit of another. But as usual he gave way, being in
+great straits for money. The House of Lords was better disposed towards
+Ireland than the House of Commons, but they too yielded to selfish
+clamour, and the Bill, which had excited great fury, became law, and
+proved ineffective, owing (as was alleged) to that corruption which
+restrictions on trade seem to have the trick of breeding.[123:1]
+
+It is always agreeable to be reminded that however large a part of our
+history is composed of the record of passion, greed, delusion, and
+stupidity, yet common-sense, the love of order and of justice (in
+matters of business), have usually been the predominant factors in our
+national life, despite priest, merchant, and party.
+
+Nowhere is this better illustrated than by two measures to which Marvell
+refers as Bills "for the prevention of lawsuits between landlord and
+tenant" and for "the Rebuilding of London." Both these Bills became law
+in February 1668, within five months of the great catastrophe that was
+their occasion. Two more sensible, well-planned, well-drawn, courageous
+measures were never piloted through both Houses. King, Lords and
+Commons, all put their heads together to face a great emergency and to
+provide an immediate remedy.
+
+The Bill to prevent lawsuits is best appreciated if we read its
+preamble:--
+
+ "Whereas the greatest part of the houses in the City of London having
+ been burnt by the dreadful and dismal fire which happened in
+ September last, many of the Tenants, under-tenants, and late
+ occupiers are liable unto suits and actions to compel them to repair
+ and to rebuild the same, and to pay their rents as if the same had
+ not been burnt, and are not relievable therefor in any ordinary
+ course of law; and great differences are likely to arise concerning
+ the Repairs and rebuilding the said houses, and payment of rents
+ which, if they should not be determined with speed and without
+ charge, would much obstruct the rebuilding of the s^d City. And for
+ that it is just that everyone concerned should bear a proportionate
+ share of this loss according to their several interests wherein in
+ respect of the multitude of cases, varying in their circumstances, no
+ certain general rule can be prescribed."
+
+After this recital it was enacted that the judges of the King's Bench
+and Common Pleas and the Barons of the Exchequer, or any three or more
+of them, should form a Court of Record to hear and determine every
+possible dispute or difference arising out of the great fire, whether
+relating to liability to repair, and rebuild, or to pay rent, or for
+arrears of rent (other than arrears which had accrued due before the 1st
+of September) or otherwise howsoever. The proceedings were to be by
+summary process, _sine forma et figura judicii_ and without court fees.
+The judges were to be bound by no rules either of law or equity, and
+might call for what evidence they chose, including that of the
+interested parties, and try the case as it best could be tried. Their
+orders were to be final and not (save in a single excepted case) subject
+to any appeal. All persons in remainder and reversion were to be bound
+by these orders, although infants, married women, idiots, beyond seas,
+or under any other disability. A special power was given to order the
+surrender of existing leases, and to grant new ones for terms not
+exceeding forty years. The judges gave their services for nothing, and,
+for once, released from all their own trammels, set to work to do
+substantial justice between landlord and tenant, personalty and realty,
+the life interest and the remainder, covenantor and covenantee, after a
+fashion which excited the admiration and won the confidence of the whole
+City. The ordinary suitor, still left exposed to the pitfalls of the
+special pleader, the risks (owing to the exclusion of evidence) of a
+non-suit and the costly cumbersomeness of the Court of Chancery, must
+often have wished that the subject-matter of his litigation had perished
+in the flames of the great fire.
+
+This court sat in Clifford's Inn, and was usually presided over by Sir
+Matthew Hale, whose skill both as an arithmetician and an architect
+completed his fitness for so responsible a position. Within a year the
+work was done.
+
+The Act for rebuilding the City is an elaborate measure of more than
+forty clauses, and aimed at securing "the regularity, safety,
+conveniency and beauty" of the new London that was to be. The buildings
+were classified according to their position and character, and had to
+maintain a prescribed level of quality. The materials to be employed
+were named. New streets were to be of certain widths, and so on. This is
+the Act that contains the first Betterment Clause: "And forasmuch as the
+Houses now remaining and to be rebuilt will receive more or less
+advantage in the value of the rents by the liberty of air and free
+recourse for trade," it was enacted that a jury might be sworn to
+assess upon the owners and others interested of and in the said houses,
+such sum or sums of money with respect of their several interests "in
+consideration of such improvement and melioration as in reason and good
+conscience they shall think fit."
+
+It takes nothing short of a catastrophe to suspend in England, even for
+a few months, those rules of evidence that often make justice
+impossible, and those rights of landlords which for centuries have
+appropriated public expenditure to private gain.[126:1]
+
+The moneys required to pay for the land taken under the Act to widen
+streets and to accomplish the other authorised works were raised, as
+Marvell informs his constituents, by a tax of twelve pence on every
+chaldron of coal coming as far as Gravesend. Few taxes have had so
+useful and so harmless a life.
+
+All this time the Dutch War was going on, but the heart was out of it.
+Nothing in England is so popular as war, except the peace that comes
+after it. The king now wanted peace, and the merchants on 'Change had
+glutted their ire. In February 1667 the king told the Houses of
+Parliament that all "sober" men would be glad to see peace. Unluckily,
+it seems to have been assumed that we could have peace whenever we
+wanted it, and the fatal error was committed of at once "laying up" the
+first-and second-rate ships. It thus came about that, whilst still at
+war, England had no fleet to put to sea. It did not at first seem likely
+that the overtures for peace would present much difficulty, when
+suddenly arose the question of Poleroone. It is amazing how few
+Englishmen have ever heard of Poleroone, or even of the Banda Islands,
+of which group it is one. Indeed, a more insignificant speck in the
+ocean it would be hard to find. To discover it on an atlas is no easy
+task. Yet, but for Poleroone, the Dutch would never have taken
+Sheerness, or broken the chain at Gillingham, or carried away with them
+to the Texel the proud vessel that had brought back Charles the Second
+to an excited population.
+
+Poleroone is a small nutmeg-growing island in the Indian Archipelago,
+not far from the eastern extremity of New Guinea. King James the First
+imagined he had some right to it, and, at any rate, Oliver Cromwell,
+when he made peace with the Dutch, made a great point of Poleroone. Have
+it he would for the East India Company. The Dutch objected, but gave
+way, and by an article in the treaty with Oliver bound themselves to
+give up Poleroone to the Company. All, in fact, that they did do, was to
+cut down the nutmeg trees, and so make the island good for nothing for
+many a long year. Physical possession was never taken. For some
+unaccountable reason Charles, who had sold Oliver's Dunkirk to the
+French for half a million of money, stuck out for Poleroone. What
+Cromwell had taken he was not going to give up! On the other hand,
+neither would the Dutch give up Poleroone. This dispute, about a barren
+island, delayed the settlement of the peace preliminaries; but
+eventually the British plenipotentiaries did get out to Breda, in May
+1667. Our sanguine king expected an immediate cessation of hostilities,
+and that his unpreparedness would thus be huddled up. All of a sudden,
+at the beginning of June, De Ruyter led out his fleet, and with a fair
+wind behind him stood for the Thames. All is fair in war. England was
+caught napping. The doleful history reads like that of a sudden
+piratical onslaught, and reveals the fatal inefficiency of the
+administration. Sheerness was practically defenceless. "There were a
+Company or two of very good soldiers there under excellent officers, but
+the fortifications were so weak and unfinished, and all other provisions
+so entirely wanting, that the Dutch Fleet no sooner approached within a
+distance but with their cannon they beat all the works flat and drove
+all the men from the ground, which, as soon as they had done with their
+Boats, they landed men and seemed resolved to fortify and keep
+it."[128:1] Capture of Sheerness by the Dutch! No need of a halfpenny
+press to spread this news through a London still in ruins. What made
+matters worse, the sailors were more than half-mutinous, being paid with
+tickets not readily convertible into cash. Many of them actually
+deserted to the Dutch fleet, which made its leisurely way upstream,
+passing Upnor Castle, which had guns but no ammunition, till it was
+almost within reach of Chatham, where lay the royal navy. General Monk,
+who was the handy man of the period, and whose authority was always
+invoked when the king he had restored was in greater trouble than usual,
+had hastily collected what troops he could muster, and marched to
+protect Chatham; but what were wanted were ships, not troops. The Dutch
+had no mind to land, and after firing three warships (the _Royal James_,
+the _Royal Oak_, and the _London_), and capturing the _Royal Charles_,
+"they thought they had done enough, and made use of the ebb to carry
+them back again."[129:1] These events occupied the tenth to the
+fifteenth of June, and for the impression they produced on Marvell's
+mind we are not dependent upon his restrained letters to his
+constituents, but can turn to his longest rhymed satire, which is
+believed to have been first printed, anonymously of course, as a
+broadsheet in August 1667.
+
+This poem is called _The Last Instructions to a Painter about the Dutch
+Wars_, 1667. The title was derived from Waller's panegyric poem on the
+occasion of the Duke of York's victory over the Dutch on the 3rd of June
+1665, when Opdam, the Dutch admiral, was blown up with his ship.[129:2]
+Sir John Denham, a brother satirist of Marvell's, and with as good an
+excuse for hating the Duke of York as this world affords, had seized
+upon the same idea and published four satirical poems on these same
+Dutch Wars, entitled _Directions to a Painter_ (see _Poems on Affairs of
+State_, 1703, vol. i.).
+
+Marvell's satire, which runs to 900 lines, is essentially a House of
+Commons poem, and could only have been written by a member. It is
+intensely "lobbyish" and "occasional." To understand its allusions, to
+appreciate its "pain-giving" capacity to the full, is now impossible.
+Still, the reader of Clarendon's _Life_, Pepys's _Diary_, and Burnet's
+_History_, to name only popular books, will have no difficulty in
+entering into the spirit of the performance. As a poem it is rough in
+execution, careless, breathless. A rugged style was then in vogue. Even
+Milton could write his lines to the Cambridge Carrier somewhat in this
+manner. Marvell has nothing of the magnificence of Dryden, or of the
+finished malice of Pope. He plays the part, and it is sincerely played,
+of the old, honest member of Parliament who loves his country and hates
+rogues and speaks right out, calling spades spades and the king's women
+what they ought to be called. He is conversational, and therefore
+coarse. The whole history of the events that resulted in the national
+disgrace is told.
+
+ "The close cabal marked how the Navy eats
+ And thought all lost that goes not to the cheats;
+ So therefore secretly for peace decrees,
+ Yet for a War the Parliament would squeeze,
+ And fix to the revenue such a sum
+ Should Goodricke silence and make Paston dumb.
+ ...
+ Meantime through all the yards their orders were
+ To lay the ships up, cease the keels begun.
+ The timber rots, the useless axe does rust,
+ The unpractised saw lies buried in the dust,
+ The busy hammer sleeps, the ropes untwine."
+
+Parliament is got rid of to the joy of Clarendon.
+
+ "Blither than hare that hath escaped the hounds,
+ The house prorogued, the chancellor rebounds.
+ What frosts to fruits, what arsenic to the rat,
+ What to fair Denham mortal chocolate,[130:1]
+ What an account to Carteret, that and more,
+ A parliament is to the chancellor."
+
+De Ruyter makes his appearance, and Monk
+
+ "in his shirt against the Dutch is pressed.
+ Often, dear Painter, have I sat and mused
+ Why he should be on all adventures used.
+ Whether his valour they so much admire,
+ Or that for cowardice they all retire,
+ As heaven in storms, they call, in gusts of state,
+ On Monk and Parliament--yet both do hate.
+ ...
+ Ruyter, the while, that had our ocean curbed,
+ Sailed now amongst our rivers undisturbed;
+ Surveyed their crystal streams and banks so green,
+ And beauties ere this never naked seen."
+
+His flags fly from the topmasts of his ships, but where is the enemy?
+
+ "So up the stream the Belgic navy glides,
+ And at Sheerness unloads its stormy sides."
+
+Chatham was but a few miles further up.
+
+ "There our sick ships unrigged in summer lay,
+ Like moulting fowl, a weak and easy prey,
+ For whose strong bulk earth scarce could timber find,
+ The ocean water, or the heavens wind.
+ Those oaken giants of the ancient race,
+ That ruled all seas, and did our channel grace;
+ The conscious stag, though once the forest's dread,
+ Flies to the wood, and hides his armless head.
+ Ruyter forthwith a squadron doth untack;
+ They sail securely through the river's track.
+ An English pilot too (O, shame! O, sin!)
+ Cheated of 's pay, was he that showed them in."
+
+The chain at Gillingham is broken, to the dismay of Monk, who
+
+ "from the bank that dismal sight does view;
+ Our feather gallants, who came down that day
+ To be spectators safe of the new play,
+ Leave him alone when first they hear the gun,
+ (Cornbury,[131:1] the fleetest) and to London run.
+ Our seamen, whom no danger's shape could fright,
+ Unpaid, refuse to mount their ships for spite,
+ Or to their fellows swim on board the Dutch,
+ Who show the tempting metal in their clutch."
+
+Upnor Castle avails nought.
+
+ "And Upnor's Castle's ill-deserted wall
+ Now needful does for ammunition call."
+
+The _Royal Charles_ is captured before Monk's face.
+
+ "That sacred Keel that had, as he, restored
+ Its excited sovereign on its happy board,
+ Now a cheap spoil and the mean victor's slave
+ Taught the Dutch colours from its top to wave."
+
+Horrors accumulate.
+
+ "Each doleful day still with fresh loss returns,
+ The loyal _London_ now a third time burns,
+ And the true _Royal Oak_ and _Royal James_,
+ Allied in fate, increase with theirs her flames.
+ Of all our navy none shall now survive,
+ But that the ships themselves were taught to dive,
+ And the kind river in its creek them hides.
+ Freighting their pierced keels with oozy tides."
+
+The situation was indeed serious enough. One wiseacre in command in
+London declared his belief that the Tower was no longer "tenable."
+
+ "And were not Ruyter's maw with ravage cloyed,
+ Even London's ashes had been then destroyed."
+
+But the Dutch admiral returns the way he came.
+
+ "Now nothing more at Chatham's left to burn,
+ The Holland squadron leisurely return;
+ And spite of Ruperts and of Albemarles,
+ To Ruyter's triumph led the captive _Charles_.
+ The pleasing sight he often does prolong,
+ Her mast erect, tough cordage, timber strong,
+ Her moving shape, all these he doth survey,
+ And all admires, but most his easy prey.
+ The seamen search her all within, without;
+ Viewing her strength, they yet their conquest doubt;
+ Then with rude shouts, secure, the air they vex,
+ With gamesome joy insulting on her decks.
+ Such the feared Hebrew captive, blinded, shorn,
+ Was led about in sport, the public scorn."
+
+The poet then indulges himself in an emotional outburst.
+
+ "Black day, accursed! on thee let no man hail
+ Out of the port, or dare to hoist a sail,
+ Or row a boat in thy unlucky hour!
+ Thee, the year's monster, let thy dam devour,
+ And constant Time, to keep his course yet right,
+ Fill up thy space with a redoubled night.
+ When aged Thames was bound with fetters base,
+ And Medway chaste ravished before his face,
+ And their dear offspring murdered in their sight,
+ Thou and thy fellows saw the odious light.
+ Sad change, since first that happy pair was wed,
+ When all the rivers graced their nuptial bed;
+ And father Neptune promised to resign
+ His empire old to their immortal line;
+ Now with vain grief their vainer hopes they rue,
+ Themselves dishonoured, and the gods untrue;
+ And to each other, helpless couple, moan,
+ As the sad tortoise for the sea does groan:
+ But most they for their darling Charles complain,
+ And were it burned, yet less would be their pain.
+ To see that fatal pledge of sea-command,
+ Now in the ravisher De Ruyter's hand,
+ The Thames roared, swooning Medway turned her tide,
+ And were they mortal, both for grief had died."
+
+A scapegoat had, of course, to be at once provided. He was found in Mr.
+Commissioner Pett, the most skilful shipbuilder of the age.
+
+ "After this loss, to relish discontent,
+ Some one must be accused by Parliament.
+ All our miscarriages on Pett must fall,
+ His name alone seems fit to answer all.
+ Whose counsel first did this mad war beget?
+ Who all commands sold through the navy? Pett.
+ Who would not follow when the Dutch were beat?
+ Who treated out the time at Bergen? Pett.
+ Who the Dutch fleet with storms disabled met?
+ And, rifling prizes, them neglect? Pett.
+ Who with false news prevented the Gazette?
+ The fleet divided? writ for Rupert? Pett.
+ Who all our seamen cheated of their debt,
+ And all our prizes who did swallow? Pett.
+ Who did advise no navy out to set?
+ And who the forts left unprepared? Pett.
+ Who to supply with powder did forget
+ Languard, Sheerness, Gravesend, and Upnor? Pett.
+ Who all our ships exposed in Chatham net?
+ Who should it be but the fanatic Pett?"
+
+This outburst can hardly fail to remind the reader of a famous outburst
+of Mr. Micawber's on the subject of Uriah Heep.
+
+The satire concludes with the picture of the king in the dead shades of
+night, alone in his room, startled by loud noises of cannons, trumpets,
+and drums, and then visited by the ghost of his father.
+
+ "And ghastly Charles, turning his collar low,
+ The purple thread about his neck does show."
+
+The pensive king resolves on Clarendon's disgrace, and on rising next
+morning seeks out Lady Castlemaine, Bennet, and Coventry, who give him
+the same advice. He knows them all three to be false to one another and
+to him, but is for the moment content to do what they wish.
+
+I have omitted, in this review of a long poem, the earlier lines which
+deal with the composition of the House of Commons. All its parties are
+described, one after another--the old courtiers, the pension-hunters,
+the king's procurers, then almost a department of State.
+
+ "Then the Procurers under Prodgers filed
+ Gentlest of men, and his lieutenant mild
+ Bronkard, love's squire; through all the field arrayed,
+ No troop was better clad, nor so well paid."
+
+Clarendon had his friends, soon sorely to be needed, and after them,
+
+ "Next to the lawyers, sordid band, appear,
+ Finch in the front and Thurland in the rear."
+
+Some thirty-three members are mentioned by their names and habits. The
+Speaker, Sir Edward Turner, is somewhat unkindly described. Honest men
+are usually to be found everywhere, and they existed even in Charles the
+Second's pensionary Parliament:--
+
+ "Nor could all these the field have long maintained
+ But for the unknown reserve that still remained;
+ A gross of English gentry, nobly born,
+ Of clear estates, and to no faction sworn,
+ Dear lovers of their king, and death to meet
+ For country's cause, that glorious thing and sweet;
+ To speak not forward, but in action brave,
+ In giving generous, but in council grave;
+ Candidly credulous for once, nay twice;
+ But sure the devil cannot cheat them thrice."
+
+No member of Parliament's library is complete without Marvell, who did
+not forget the House of Commons smoking-room:--
+
+ "Even iron Strangways chafing yet gave back
+ Spent with fatigue, to breathe awhile tabac."
+
+Charles hastened to make peace with Holland. He was not the man to
+insist on vengeance or to mourn over lost prestige. De Ruyter had gone
+after suffering repulses at Portsmouth, Plymouth, and Torbay. Peace was
+concluded at Breda on the 21st of July. We gave up Poleroone. _Per
+contra_ we gained a more famous place, New Amsterdam, rechristened New
+York in honour of the duke. All prisoners were to be liberated, and the
+Dutch, despite Sheerness and the _Royal Charles_, agreed to lower their
+flag to all British ships of war.
+
+The fall, long pending, of Clarendon immediately followed the peace.
+Men's tempers were furious or sullen. Hyde had no more bitter, no more
+cruel enemy than Marvell. Why this was has not been discovered, but
+there was nothing too bad for Marvell not to believe of any member of
+Clarendon's household. All the scandals, and they were many and
+horrible, relating to Clarendon and his daughter, the Duchess of York,
+find a place in Marvell's satires and epigrams. To us Lord Clarendon is
+a grave and thoughtful figure, the statesman-author of _The History of
+the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England_, that famous, large book,
+loftily planned, finely executed, full of life and character and the
+philosophy of human existence; and of his own _Autobiography_, a
+production which, though it must, like Burnet's _History_, be read with
+caution, unveils to the reader a portion of that past which usually is
+as deeply shrouded from us as the future. If at times we are reminded in
+reading Clarendon's _Life_ of the old steward in Hogarth's plate, who
+lifts up his hands in horror over the extravagance of his master, if his
+pedantry often irritates, and his love of place displeases, we recognise
+these but as the shades of the character of a distinguished and
+accomplished public servant. But to Marvell Clarendon was rapacious,
+ambitious, and corrupt, a man who had sold Oliver's Dunkirk to the
+French, and shared the price; who had selected for the king's consort a
+barren woman, so that his own damaged daughter might at least chance to
+become Queen of England, who hated Parliaments and hankered after a
+standing army, who took money for patents, who sold public offices, who
+was bribed by the Dutch about the terms of peace, who swindled the
+ruined cavaliers of the funds subscribed for their benefit, and had by
+these methods heaped together great wealth which he ostentatiously
+displayed. Even darker crimes than these are hinted at. That Marvell was
+wrong in his estimate of Clarendon's character now seems certain;
+Clarendon did not get a penny of the Dunkirk money. The case made
+against him by the House of Commons in their articles of impeachment was
+felt even at the time to be flimsy and incapable of proof, and in the
+many records that have come to light since Clarendon's day nothing has
+been discovered to give them support. And yet Marvell was a singularly
+well-informed member of Parliament, a shrewd, level-headed man of
+affairs, who knew Lord Clarendon in the way we know men we have to see
+on business matters, whose speeches we can listen to, and whose conduct
+we discuss and criticise. "Gently scan your brother-man" is a precept
+Marvell never took to heart; nor is the House of Commons a place where
+it is either preached or practised.
+
+When Clarendon was well nigh at the height of his great unpopularity, he
+built himself a fine big house on a site given him by the king where now
+is Albemarle Street. Where did he get the money from? He employed, in
+building it, the stones of St. Paul's Cathedral. True, he bought the
+stones from the Dean and Chapter, but if the man you hate builds a great
+house out of the ruins of a church, is it likely that so trivial a fact
+as a cash payment for the materials is going to be mentioned? Splendid
+furniture and noble pictures were to be seen going into the new
+palace--the gifts, so it was alleged, of foreign ambassadors. What was
+the consideration for these donations? England's honour! Clarendon House
+was at once named Dunkirk House, Holland House, Tangiers House.
+
+Here is Marvell upon it:--
+
+ UPON HIS HOUSE
+
+ "Here lie the sacred bones
+ Of Paul beguiled of his stones:
+ Here lie golden briberies,
+ The price of ruined families;
+ The cavalier's debenture wall,
+ Fixed on an eccentric basis:
+ Here's Dunkirk-Town and Tangier-Hull,
+ The Queen's marriage and all,
+ The Dutchman's _templum pacis_."
+
+Clarendon's fall was rapid. He knew the house of Stuart too well to
+place any reliance upon the king. Evelyn visited him on the 27th of
+August 1667 after the seals had been taken away from him, and found him
+"in his bed-chamber very sad." His enemies were numerous and powerful,
+both in the House of Commons and at Court, where all the buffoons and
+ladies of pleasure hated him, because--so Evelyn says--"he thwarted some
+of them and stood in their way." In November Evelyn called again and
+found the late Lord-Chancellor in the garden of his new-built palace,
+sitting in his gout wheel-chair and watching the new gates setting up
+towards the north and the fields. "He looked and spoke very
+disconsolately. After some while deploring his condition to me, I took
+my leave. Next morning I heard he was gone."[139:1]
+
+The news was true; on Saturday, the 29th of November, he drove to Erith,
+and after a terrible tossing on the nobly impartial Channel the weary
+man reached Calais, and died seven years later in Rouen, having well
+employed his leisure in completing his history. His palace was sold for
+half what it cost to the inevitable Monk, Duke of Albemarle.
+
+On the 3rd of December Marvell writes that the House, having heard that
+Lord Clarendon had "withdrawn," forthwith ordered an address to his
+Majesty "that care might be taken for securing all the sea ports lest he
+should pass there." Marvell adds grimly, "I suppose he will not trouble
+you at Hull." The king took good care that his late Lord-Chancellor
+should escape. An act of perpetual banishment was at once passed,
+receiving the royal assent on the 19th of December.
+
+Marvell was kept very busy during the early months of 1668, inquiring,
+as our English fashion is, into the "miscarriages of the late war." The
+House more than once sat from nine in the morning till eight at night,
+finding out all it could. "What money, arising by the poll money, had
+been applied to the use of the war?" This was an awkward inquiry. The
+House voted that the not prosecuting the first victory of June 1665 was
+a miscarriage, and one of the greatest: a snub to the Duke of York. The
+not furnishing the Medway with a sufficient guard of ships, though the
+king had then 18,000 men in his pay, was another great miscarriage. The
+paying of the fleet with tickets, without money, was a third great
+miscarriage. All this time Oliver Cromwell's skull was grinning on its
+perch in Westminster Hall.
+
+Besides the honour of England, that of Hull had to be defended by its
+member. A young Lieutenant Wise, one of the Hull garrison, had in some
+boisterous fashion affronted the corporation and the mayor. On this
+correspondence ensues; and Marvell waits upon the Duke of Albemarle, the
+head of the army, to obtain reparation.
+
+ "I waited yesterday upon my Lord General--and first presented your
+ usual fee which the General accepted, but saying that it was
+ unnecessary and that you might have bin pleased to spare it, and he
+ should be so much more at liberty to show how voluntary and
+ affectionate he was toward your corporation. I returned the civilest
+ words I could coin on for the present, and rendered him your humble
+ thanks for his continued patronage of you ... and told him that you
+ had further sent him up a small tribute of your Hull liquor. He
+ thanked you again for all these things which you might--he said--have
+ spared, and added that if the greatest of your military officers
+ should demean himself ill towards you, he would take a course with
+ him."
+
+A mealy-mouthed Lord-General drawing near his end.[140:1]
+
+Wise was removed from the Hull garrison. The affronted corporation was
+not satisfied, and Marvell had to argue the point.
+
+ "And I hope, Sir, you will incline the Bench to consider whether I am
+ able or whether it be fit for me to urge it beyond that point. Yet it
+ is not all his (Wise's) Parliament men and relations that have
+ wrought me in the least, but what I simply conceive as the state of
+ things now to be possible and satisfactory. What would you have more
+ of a soldier than to run away and have him cashiered as to any
+ command in your garrison? The first he hath done and the second he
+ must submit to. And I assure you whatsoever he was among you, he is
+ here a kind of decrepit young gentleman and terribly crest-fallen."
+
+The letter concludes thus:--
+
+ "For I assure you they use all the civility imaginable to you, and as
+ we sat there drinking a cup of sack with the General, Colonel
+ Legge[141:1] chancing to be present, there were twenty good things
+ said on all hands tending to the good fame, reputation, and advantage
+ of the Town, an occasion that I was heartily glad of."
+
+Corporations may not have souls to save and bodies to kill, but
+evidently they have vanities to tickle.
+
+In November 1669 the House is still busy over the accounts. Sir George
+Carteret was Treasurer of the Navy. Marvell refers to him in _The Last
+Instructions to a Painter_ as:--
+
+ "Carteret the rich did the accountants guide
+ And in ill English all the world defied."
+
+The following letter of Marvell's gives an excellent account of House of
+Commons business, both how it is conducted, and how often it gets
+accidentally interrupted by other business unexpectedly cropping up:--
+
+ "_November 20, 1669._
+
+ "GENTLEMEN, MY VERY WORTHY FRIENDS,--Returning after our adjournment
+ to sit upon Wednesday, the House having heard what Sir G. Cartaret
+ could say for himselfe, and he then commended to withdraw, after a
+ considerable debate, put it to the question, whether he were guilty
+ of misdemeanour upon the Commissioners first observation, the words
+ of which were, That all monyes received by him out of His Majesty's
+ Exchequer are by the privy seales assigned for particular services,
+ but no such thing observed or specified in his payments, whereby he
+ hath assumed to himselfe a liberty to make use of the King's
+ treasure for other uses then is directed. The House dividing upon
+ the question, the ayes went out, and wondered why they were kept out
+ so extraordinary a time. The ayes proved 138 and the noes 129; and
+ the reason of the long stay then appeared; the tellers for the ayes
+ chanced to be very ill reckoners, so that they were forced to tell
+ severall times over in the House, and when at last the tellers for
+ the ayes would have agreed the noes to be 142, the noes would needs
+ say that they were 143, whereupon those for the ayes would tell once
+ more and then found the noes to be indeed but 129; and the ayes then
+ coming in proved to be 138; whereas if the noes had been content
+ with the first error of the tellers, Sir George had been quit upon
+ that observation. This I have told you so minutely because it is the
+ second fatall and ominous accident that hath fain out in the
+ divisions about Sir G. Cartaret. Thursday was ordered for the second
+ observation, the words of which are, Two hundred and thirty thousand
+ seven hundred thirty and one thousand pounds thirteen shillings and
+ ninepence, claimed as payd, and deposited for security of interest,
+ and yet no distinct specification of time appeares either on his
+ receits or payments, whereby no judgment can be made how interest
+ accrues; so that we cannot yet allow the same. But this day was
+ diverted and wholy taken up by a speciall report orderd by the
+ Committee for the Bill of Conventicles, that the House be informed
+ of severall Conventicles in Westminster which might be of dangerous
+ consequences. From hence arose much discourse; also of a report that
+ Ludlow was in England, that Commonwealths-men flock about the town,
+ and there were meetings said to be, where they talkt of New Modells
+ of Government; so that the House ordered a Committee to receive
+ informations both concerning Conventicles and these other dangerous
+ meetings; and then entered a resolution upon their books without
+ putting it to the question, That this House will adhere to His
+ Majesty, and the Government of Church and State as now established,
+ against all its enemyes. Friday having bin appointed, as I told you
+ in my former letter, for the House to sit in a grand Committee upon
+ the motion for the King's supply, was spent wholy in debate, whether
+ they should do so or no, and concluded at last in a consent, that
+ the sitting in a grand Committee upon the motion for the King's
+ supply should be put of till Friday next, and so it was ordered. The
+ reason of which kind of proceeding, lest you should thinke to arise
+ from an indisposition of the House, I shall tell you as they appeare
+ to me, to have been the expectation of what Bill will come from the
+ Lords in stead of that of ours which they threw out, and a desire to
+ redresse and see thoroughly into the miscarriages of mony before any
+ more should be granted. To-day the House hath bin upon the second
+ observation, and after a debate till foure a'clock, have voted him
+ guilty also of misdemeanor in that particular. The Commissioners are
+ ordered to attend the House again on Munday, which is done
+ constantly for the illustration of any matter in their report,
+ wherein the House is not cleare. And to say the truth, the House
+ receives great satisfaction from them, and shows them extraordinary
+ respect. These are the things of principall notice since my last."
+
+Carteret eventually was censured and suspended and dismissed.
+
+The sudden incursion of religion during a financial debate is highly
+characteristic of the House of Commons.
+
+Whilst Queen Elizabeth and her advisers did succeed in making some sort
+of a settlement of religion having regard to the questions of her time,
+the Restoration bishops, an inferior set of men, wholly failed. The
+repressive legislation that followed upon the Act of Uniformity,
+succeeded in establishing and endowing (with voluntary contributions)
+what is sometimes called, absurdly enough, Political Dissent. On
+points, not of doctrine, but of ceremony, and of church government, one
+half of the religiously-minded community were by oaths and declarations,
+and by employing the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper as "a picklock to a
+place," drawn out of the service of the State. Excluded from Parliament
+and from all corporate bodies, from grammar-schools and universities,
+English Dissent learned to live its own life, remote from the army, the
+navy, and the civil service, quite outside of what perhaps may be fairly
+called the main currents of the national life. Nonconformists venerated
+their own divines, were reared in their own academies and colleges, read
+their own books, went, when the modified law permitted it, to their own
+conventicles in back streets, and made it their boast that they had
+never entered their parish churches, for the upkeep of which they were
+compelled to subscribe--save for the purpose of being married. The
+nation suffered by reason of this complete severance. Trade excepted,
+there was no community of interest between Church and Dissent. Sobriety,
+gravity, a decent way of life, the sense of religious obligation (even
+when united with the habit of _extempore_ prayer, and a hereditary
+disrespect for bishops' aprons), are national assets, as the expression
+now goes, which cannot be disregarded with impunity.
+
+The Conventicle Act Marvell refers to was a stringent measure, imposing
+pecuniary fines upon any persons of sixteen years of age or upwards who
+"under pretence of religion" should be present at any meeting of more
+than five persons, or more than those of the household, "in other manner
+than allowed by the Liturgy and practice of the Church of England."
+Heavier fines were imposed upon the preachers. The poet Waller, who was
+"nursed in Parliaments," having been first returned from Amersham in
+1621, made a very sensible remark on the second reading: "Let them alone
+and they will preach against each other; by this Bill they will
+incorporate as being all under one calamity."[145:1] But by 144 to 78
+the Bill was read, though it did not become law until the following
+session. An indignant Member of Parliament once told Cromwell that he
+would take the "sense" of the House against some proposal. "Very well,"
+said Cromwell, "you shall take the 'sense' of the House, and I will take
+the 'nonsense,' and we will see who tells the most votes."
+
+In February 1670 the king opened a new session, and in March Marvell
+wrote a private letter to a relative at Bordeaux, in which he "lends his
+mind out," after a fashion forbidden him in his correspondence with his
+constituents:--
+
+ "DEAR COUSIN,-- ... You know that we having voted the King, before
+ Christmas, four hundred thousand pounds, and no more; and enquiring
+ severely into ill management, and being ready to adjourn ourselves
+ till February, his Majesty, fortified by some undertakers of the
+ meanest of our House, threw up all as nothing, and prorogued us from
+ the first of December till the fourteenth of February. All that
+ interval there was great and numerous caballing among the courtiers.
+ The King also all the while examined at council the reports from the
+ Commissioners of Accounts, where they were continually
+ discountenanced, and treated rather as offenders than judges. In
+ this posture we met, and the King, being exceedingly necessitous for
+ money, spoke to us _stylo minaci et imperatorio_; and told us the
+ inconveniences which would fall on the nation by want of a supply,
+ should not ly at his door; that we must not revive any discord
+ betwixt the Lords and us; that he himself had examined the accounts,
+ and found every penny to have been employed in the war; and he
+ recommended the Scotch union. The Garroway party appeared with the
+ usual vigour, but the country gentlemen appeared not in their true
+ number the first day: so, for want of seven voices, the first blow
+ was against them. When we began to talk of the Lords, the King sent
+ for us alone, and recommended a rasure of all proceedings. The same
+ thing you know that we proposed at first. We presently ordered it,
+ and went to tell him so the same day, and to thank him. At coming
+ down, (a pretty ridiculous thing!) Sir Thomas Clifford carryed
+ Speaker and Mace, and all members there, into the King's cellar, to
+ drink his health. The King sent to the Lords more peremptoryly, and
+ they, with much grumbling, agreed to the rasure. When the
+ Commissioners of Accounts came before us, sometimes we heard them
+ _pro forma_, but all falls to dirt. The terrible Bill against
+ Conventicles is sent up to the Lords; and we and the Lords, as to
+ the Scotch busyness, have desired the King to name English
+ Commissioners to treat, but nothing they do to be valid, but on a
+ report to Parliament, and an act to confirm. We are now, as we
+ think, within a week of rising. They are making mighty alterations
+ in the Conventicle Bill (which, as we sent up, is the quintessence
+ of arbitrary malice), and sit whole days, and yet proceed but by
+ inches, and will, at the end, probably affix a Scotch clause of the
+ King's power in externals. So the fate of the Bill is uncertain, but
+ must probably pass, being the price of money. The King told some
+ eminent citizens, who applyed to him against it, that they must
+ address themselves to the Houses, that he must not disoblige his
+ friends; and if it had been in the power of their friends, he had
+ gone without money. There is a Bill in the Lords to encourage people
+ to buy all the King's fee-farm rents; so he is resolved once more to
+ have money enough in his pocket, and live on the common for the
+ future. The great Bill begun in the Lords, and which makes more ado
+ than ever any Act in this Parliament did, is for enabling Lord Ros,
+ long since divorced in the spiritual court, and his children
+ declared illegitimate by Act of Parliament, to marry again. Anglesey
+ and Ashly, who study and know their interests as well as any
+ gentlemen at court, and whose sons have marryed two sisters of Ros,
+ inheritrixes if he has no issue, yet they also drive on the Bill
+ with the greatest vigour. The King is for the Bill: the Duke of
+ York, and all the Papist Lords, and all the Bishops, except Cosins,
+ Reynolds, and Wilkins, are against it. They sat all Thursday last,
+ without once rising, till almost ten at night, in most solemn and
+ memorable debate, whether it should be read the second time, or
+ thrown out. At last, at the question, there were forty-two persons
+ and six proxys against it, and forty-one persons and fifteen proxys
+ for it. If it had not gone for it, the Lord Arlington had a power in
+ his pocket from the King to have nulled the proxys, if it had been
+ to the purpose. It was read the second time yesterday, and, on a
+ long debate whether it should be committed, it went for the Bill by
+ twelve odds, in persons and proxys. The Duke of York, the bishops,
+ and the rest of the party, have entered their protests, on the first
+ day's debate, against it. Is not this fine work? This Bill must come
+ down to us. It is my opinion that Lauderdale at one ear talks to the
+ King of Monmouth, and Buckingham at the other of a new Queen. It is
+ also my opinion that the King was never since his coming in, nay,
+ all things considered, no King since the Conquest, so absolutely
+ powerful at home, as he is at the present; nor any Parliament, or
+ places, so certainly and constantly supplyed with men of the same
+ temper. In such a conjuncture, dear Will, what probability is there
+ of my doing any thing to the purpose? The King would needs take the
+ Duke of Albemarle out of his son's hand to bury him at his own
+ charges. It is almost three months, and he yet lys in the dark
+ unburyed, and no talk of him. He left twelve thousand pounds a year,
+ and near two hundred thousand pounds in money. His wife dyed some
+ twenty days after him; she layed in state, and was buryed, at her
+ son's expence, in Queen Elizabeth's Chapel. And now,
+
+ "Disce, puer, virtutem ex me verumque laborem,
+ Fortunam ex aliis.
+
+ "_March 21, 1670._"
+
+This remarkable letter lets us into many secrets.
+
+The Conventicle Bill is "the price of money." The king's interest in
+the Roos divorce case was believed to be due to his own desire to be
+quit of a barren and deserted wife.[148:1] Our most religious king had
+nineteen bastards, but no lawful issue. It may seem strange that so high
+a churchman as Bishop Cosin should have taken the view he did, but Cosin
+had a strong dash of the layman in his constitution, and was always an
+advocate of divorce, with permission to re-marry, in cases of adultery.
+
+A further and amending Bill for rebuilding the city was before the
+House--one of eighty-four clauses, "the longest Bill, perhaps, that ever
+past in Parliament," says Marvell; but the Roos Divorce Bill and the
+Conventicle Bill proved so exciting in the House of Lords that they had
+little time for anything else. Union with Scotland, much desired by the
+king, but regarded with great suspicion by all Parliamentarians, fell
+flat, though Commissioners were appointed.
+
+The Conventicle Bill passed the Lords, who tagged on to it a proviso
+Marvell refers to in his next letter, which the Lower House somewhat
+modified by the omission of certain words. Lord Roos was allowed to
+re-marry. The big London Bill got through.
+
+Another private letter of Marvell's, of this date, is worth reading:--
+
+ "DEAREST WILL,--I wrote to you two letters, and payd for them from
+ the posthouse here at Westminster; to which I have had no answer.
+ Perhaps they miscarryed. I sent on an answer to the only letter I
+ received from Bourdeaux, and having put it into Mr. Nelthorp's hand,
+ I doubt not but it came to your's. To proceed. The same day (March
+ 26th letter) my letter bore date, there was an extraordinary thing
+ done. The King, about ten o'clock, took boat, with Lauderdale only,
+ and two ordinary attendants, and rowed awhile as towards the bridge,
+ and soon turned back to the Parliament stairs, and so went up into
+ the House of Lords, and took his seat. Almost all of them were
+ amazed, but all seemed so; and the Duke of York especially was very
+ much surprized. Being sat, he told them it was a privilege he
+ claimed from his ancestors to be present at their deliberations.
+ That therefore, they should not, for his coming, interrupt their
+ debates, but proceed, and be covered. They did so. It is true that
+ this has been done long ago, but it is now so old, that it is new,
+ and so disused, that at any other but so bewitched a time as this,
+ it would have been looked on as an high usurpation, and breach of
+ privilege. He indeed sat still, for the most part, and interposed
+ very little; sometimes a word or two. But the most discerning
+ opinion was, that he did herein as he rowed for having had his face
+ first to the Conventicle Bill, he turned short to the Lord Ross's.
+ So that, indeed, it is credible, the King, in prospect of diminishing
+ the Duke of York's influence in the Lord's House, in this, or any
+ future matter, resolved, and wisely enough at present, to weigh up
+ and lighten the Duke's efficacy, by coming himself in person. After
+ three or four days continuance, the Lords were very well used to the
+ King's presence, and sent the Lord Steward and Lord Chamberlain, to
+ him, when they might wait, as an House on him, to render their
+ humble thanks for the honour he did them. The hour was appointed
+ them, and they thanked him, and he took it well. So this matter, of
+ such importance on all great occasions, seems riveted to them, and
+ us, for the future, and to all posterity. Now the Lord Ross's Bill
+ came in order to another debate, and the King present. Nevertheless
+ the debate lasted an entire day; and it passed by very few voices.
+ The King has ever since continued his session among them, and says
+ it is better than going to a play. In this session the Lords sent
+ down to us a proviso[149:1] for the King, that would have restored
+ him to all civil or ecclesiastical prerogatives which his ancestors
+ had enjoyed at any time since the Conquest. There was never so
+ compendious a piece of absolute universal tyranny. But the Commons
+ made them ashamed of it, and retrenched it. The Parliament was never
+ embarrassed, beyond recovery. We are all venal cowards, except some
+ few. What plots of State will go on this interval I know not. There
+ is a new set of justices of peace framing through the whole kingdom.
+ The governing cabal, since Ross's busyness, are Buckingham,
+ Lauderdale, Ashly, Orrery, and Trevor. Not but the other cabal too
+ have seemingly sometimes their turn. Madam,[150:1] our King's
+ sister, during the King of France's progress in Flanders, is to come
+ as far as Canterbury. There will doubtless be family counsels then.
+ Some talk of a French Queen to be then invented for our King. Some
+ talk of a sister of Denmark; others of a good virtuous Protestant
+ here at home. The King disavows it; yet he has sayed in publick, he
+ knew not why a woman may not be divorced for barrenness, as a man
+ for impotency. The Lord Barclay went on Monday last for Ireland, the
+ King to Newmarket. God keep, and increase you, in all
+ things.--Yours, etc.
+
+ "_April 14, 1670._"
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[77:1] Clarendon's _Life_, vol. ii. p. 442.
+
+[79:1] The clerks, however, only _counted_ the members who voted, and
+kept no record of their _names_. Mr. Gladstone remembered the alteration
+being made in 1836, and how unpopular it was. The change was a greater
+revolution than the Reform Bill. See _The Unreformed House of Commons_
+by Edward Posselt, vol. i. p. 587.
+
+[79:2]
+
+ "And a Parliament had lately met
+ Without a single Bankes."--_Praed_.
+
+[82:1] See Dr. Halley's _Lancashire--its Puritanism and Nonconformity_,
+vol. ii. pp. 1-140, a most informing book.
+
+[88:1] Clarendon's _History_, vol. vi. p. 249.
+
+[90:1] An Historical Poem.--Grosart, vol. i. p. 343.
+
+[92:1] Macaulay's _History_, vol. i. p. 154.
+
+[95:1] I am acquainted with the romantic story which would have us
+believe that Lady Fauconberg, foretelling the time to come, had caused
+some other body than her father's to be buried in the Abbey (see _Notes
+and Queries_, 5th October 1878, and Waylen's _House of Cromwell_, p.
+341).
+
+[96:1] See _The Unreformed House of Commons_, by Edward Porritt, vol. i.
+p. 51. Marvell's old enemy, Parker, Bishop of Oxford, in his _History of
+his own Time_, composed after Marvell's death, reviles his dead
+antagonist for having taken this payment which, the bishop says, was
+made by a custom which "had a long time been antiquated and out of
+date." "Gentlemen," says the bishop, "despised so vile a stipend," yet
+Marvell required it "for the sake of a bare subsistence, although in
+this mean poverty he was nevertheless haughty and insolent." In Parker's
+opinion poor men should be humble.
+
+[98:1] _Parliamentary History_, vol. iv., App. No. III.
+
+[104:1] Mr. Gladstone's testimony is that no real improvement was
+effected until within the period of his own memory. 'Our services were
+probably without a parallel in the world for their debasement.' (See
+_Gleanings_, vi. p. 119.)
+
+[106:1] There is a copy in the library of the _Athenaeum_, London: "A
+Relation of Three Embassies from his sacred Majestie Charles II. to the
+Great Duke of Muscovie, the King of Sweden, and the King of Denmark.
+Performed by the Right Ho^ble the Earle of Carlisle in the Years 1663
+and 1664. Written by an Attendant on the Embassies, and published with
+his Lordship's approbation. London. Printed for John Starkie at the
+Miter in Fleet Street, near Temple Barr, 1669."
+
+[109:1] "I have mentioned the dignity of his manners.... He was at his
+very best on occasion of Durbars, investitures, and the like.... It
+irritated him to see men giggling or jeering instead of acting their
+parts properly."--_Life of Lord Dufferin_, vol. ii. p. 317.
+
+[116:1] _Hist. MSS. Com., Portland Papers_, vol. iii. p. 296.
+
+[116:2] See above, vol. iii. p. 294.
+
+[118:1] Sir Walter Besant doubted this. See his _London_.
+
+[123:1] Mr. Goldwin Smith says this was the first pitched battle between
+Protection and Free Trade in England.--_The United Kingdom_, vol. ii. p.
+25.
+
+[126:1] Being curious to discover whether no "property" man raised his
+voice against these measures, I turned to that true "home of lost
+causes," the Protests of the House of Lords; and there, sure enough, I
+found one solitary peer, Henry Carey, Earl of Dover, entering his
+dissent to both Bills--to the Judicature Bill because of the unlimited
+power given to the judges, to the Rebuilding Bill because of the
+exorbitant powers entrusted to the Lord Mayor and Aldermen to give away
+or dispose of the property of landlords.
+
+[128:1] Clarendon's _Life_, vol. iii. p. 796.
+
+[129:1] Clarendon's _Life_, vol. iii. p. 798.
+
+[129:2] "Instructions to a Painter for the drawing of the Posture and
+Progress of His Majesty's forces at Sea under the command of His
+Highness Royal: together with the Battel and Victory obtained over the
+Dutch, June 3, 1665."--Waller's _Works_, 1730, p. 161.
+
+[130:1] Sir John Denham's wife was reported to have been poisoned by a
+dish of chocolate, at the bidding of the Duchess of York.
+
+[131:1] Clarendon's eldest son.
+
+[139:1] It is disconcerting to find Evelyn recording this, his last
+visit to Clarendon, in his Diary under date of the 9th December, by
+which time the late Chancellor was in Rouen. One likes notes in a diary
+to be made contemporaneously and not "written-up" afterwards. Evelyn
+makes the same kind of mistake about Cromwell's funeral, misdating it a
+month.
+
+[140:1] The duke died in 1670 and had a magnificent funeral on the 30th
+of April. See _Hist. MSS. Com., Duke of Portland's Papers_, vol. iii. p.
+314. His laundress-Duchess did not long survive him.
+
+[141:1] Afterwards Lord Dartmouth, a great friend of James the Second,
+but one who played a dubious part at the Revolution.
+
+[145:1] The poet Waller was one of the wittiest speakers the House of
+Commons has ever known.
+
+[148:1] For a full account of this remarkable case, see Clarendon's
+_Life_, iii. 733-9.
+
+[149:1] "Provided, etc., that neither this Act nor anything therein
+contained shall extend to invalidate or avoid his Majesty's supremacy in
+ecclesiastical affairs [or to destroy any of his Majesty's rights powers
+or prerogatives belonging to the Imperial Crown of this realm or at any
+time exercised by himself or any of his predecessors Kings or Queens of
+England] but that his Majesty his heirs and successors may from time to
+time and at all times hereafter exercise and enjoy all such powers and
+authorities aforesaid as fully and amply as himself or any of his
+predecessors have or might have done the same anything in this Act (or
+any other law statute or usage to the contrary) notwithstanding." The
+words in brackets were rejected by the Commons. See _Parliamentary
+History_, iv. 446-7.
+
+[150:1] Madame's business is now well known. The secret Treaty of Dover
+was the result of this visit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+"THE REHEARSAL TRANSPROSED"
+
+
+It is never easy for ecclesiastical controversy to force its way into
+literature. The importance of the theme will be questioned by few. The
+ability displayed in its illumination can be denied by none. It is the
+temper that usually spoils all. A collection in any way approaching
+completeness, of the pamphlets this contention has produced in England,
+would contain tens of thousands of volumes; full of curious learning and
+anecdotes, of wide reading and conjecture, of shrewdness and wit; yet
+these books are certainly the last we would seek to save from fire or
+water. Could they be piled into scales of moral measurement a single
+copy of the _Imitatio_, of the _Holy Dying_, of the _Saint's Rest_,
+would outweigh them all. Man may not be a religious animal, but he
+recognises and venerates the spirit of religion whenever he perceives
+it, and it is a spirit which is apt to evaporate amidst the strife of
+rival wits. Who can doubt the sincerity of Milton, when he exclaimed
+with the sad prophet Jeremy, "Woe is me my Mother that thou hast borne
+me a man of strife and contention."
+
+Marvell's chief prose work, the two parts of _The Rehearsal
+Transprosed_, is a very long pamphlet indeed, composed by way of reply
+to certain publications of Samuel Parker, afterwards Bishop of Oxford.
+Controversially Marvell's book was a great success.[152:1] It amused the
+king, delighted the wits, was welcomed, if not read, by the pious folk
+whose side it espoused, whilst its literary excellence was sufficient to
+win, in after years, the critical approval of Swift, whose style, though
+emphatically his own, bears traces of its master having given, I will
+not say his days and nights, but certainly some profitable hours, to the
+study of Marvell's prose.
+
+Biographers of controversialists seldom do justice to the other side.
+Possibly they do not read it, and Parker has been severely handled by my
+predecessors. He was not an honour to his profession, being, perhaps, as
+good or as bad a representative of the seamy side of State Churchism as
+there is to be found. He was the son of a Puritan father, and whilst at
+Wadham lived by rule, fasting and praying. He took his degree in the
+early part of 1659, and migrating to Trinity came under the influence of
+Dr. Bathurst, then Senior Fellow, to whom, so he says in one of his
+dedications, "I owe my first rescue from the chains and fetters of an
+unhappy education."[152:2] Anything Parker did he did completely, and
+we next hear of him in London in 1665, a nobleman's chaplain, setting
+the table in a roar by making fun of his former friends, "a mimical way
+of drolling upon the puritans." "He followed the town-life, haunted the
+best companies and, to polish himself from any pedantic roughness, he
+read and saw the plays with much care and more preparing than most of
+the auditory." In 1667 the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Sheldon, a very
+mundane person indeed, made Parker his chaplain, and three years later
+Archdeacon of Canterbury. He reached many preferments, so that, says
+Marvell, "his head swell'd like any bladder with wind and vapour." He
+had an active pen and a considerable range of subject. In 1670 he
+produced "A Discourse of Ecclesiastical Politie wherein the Authority of
+the Civil Magistrate over the Consciences of Subjects in Matters of
+External Religion is Asserted; The Mischiefs and Inconveniences of
+Toleration are represented and all Pretenses pleaded in behalf of
+_Liberty of Conscience_ are fully answered." Some one instantly took up
+the cudgels in a pamphlet entitled _Insolence and Impudence Triumphant_,
+and the famous Dr. Owen also protested in _Truth and Innocence
+Vindicated_. Parker replied to Owen in _A Defence and Continuation of
+Ecclesiastical Politie_, and in the following year, 1672, reprinted a
+treatise of Bishop Bramholl's with a preface "shewing what grounds there
+are of Fears and Jealousies of Popery."
+
+This was the state of the controversy when Marvell entered upon it with
+his _Rehearsal Transprosed_, a fantastic title he borrowed for no very
+good reasons from the farce of the hour, and a very good farce too, the
+Duke of Buckingham's _Rehearsal_, which was performed for the first time
+at the Theatre Royal on the 7th of November 1671, and printed early in
+1672. Most of us have read Sheridan's _Critic_ before we read
+Buckingham's _Rehearsal_, which is not the way to do justice to the
+earlier piece. It is a matter of literary tradition that the duke had
+much help in the composition of a farce it took ten years to make.
+Butler, Sprat, and Clifford, the Master of Charterhouse, are said to be
+co-authors. However this may be, the piece was a great success, and both
+Marvell and Parker, I have no doubt, greatly enjoyed it, but I cannot
+think the former was wise to stuff his plea for Liberty of Conscience so
+full as he did with the details of a farce. His doing so should, at all
+events, acquit him of the charge of being a sour Puritan. In the
+_Rehearsal_ Bayes (Dryden), who is turned by Sheridan in his adaptation
+of the piece into Mr. Puff, is made to produce out of his pocket his
+book of _Drama Commonplaces_, and the play proceeds (_Johnson_ and
+_Smith_ being _Sheridan's_ Dangle and Sneer):
+
+ "_Johnson._ _Drama Commonplaces_! pray what's that?
+
+ _Bayes._ Why, Sir, some certain helps, that we men of Art have found
+ it convenient to make use of.
+
+ _Johnson._ How, Sir, help for Wit?
+
+ _Bayes._ I, Sir, that's my position. And I do here averr, that no man
+ yet the Sun e'er shone upon, has parts sufficient to furnish out a
+ Stage, except it be with the help of these my rules.
+
+ _Johnson._ What are those Rules, I pray?
+
+ _Bayes._ Why, Sir, my first Rule is the Rule of Transversion, or
+ _Regula Duplex_, changing Verse into Prose, or Prose into Verse,
+ _alternative_ as you please.
+
+ _Smith._ How's that, Sir, by a Rule, I pray?
+
+ _Bayes._ Why, thus, Sir; nothing more easy when understood: I take a
+ Book in my hand, either at home, or elsewhere, for that's all one,
+ if there be any Wit in 't, as there is no Book but has some, I
+ Transverse it; that is, if it be Prose, put it into Verse (but
+ that takes up some time), if it be Verse, put it into Prose.
+
+ _Johnson._ Methinks, Mr. _Bayes_, that putting Verse into Prose
+ should be called Transprosing.
+
+ _Bayes_. By my troth, a very good Notion, and hereafter it shall be
+ so."
+
+Marvell must be taken to have meant by his title that he saw some
+resemblance between Parker and Bayes, and, indeed, he says he does, and
+gives that as one of his excuses for calling Parker Bayes all through:--
+
+ "But before I commit myself to the dangerous depths of his Discourse
+ which I am now upon the brink of, I would with his leave, make a
+ motion; that instead of Author I may henceforth indifferently well
+ call him Mr. Bayes as oft as I shall see occasion. And that first
+ because he has no name, or at least will not own it, though he
+ himself writes under the greatest security, and gives us the first
+ letters of other men's names before he be asked them. Secondly,
+ because he is, I perceive, a lover of elegancy of style and can
+ endure no man's tautologies but his own; and therefore I would not
+ distaste him with too frequent repetition of one word. But chiefly
+ because Mr. Bayes and he do very much symbolise, in their
+ understandings, in their expressions, in their humour, in their
+ contempt and quarrelling of all others, though of their own
+ profession."
+
+But justice must be done even to Parker before handing him over to the
+Tormentor. What were his positions? He was a coarse-fibred, essentially
+irreligious fellow, the accredited author of the reply to the question
+"What is the best body of Divinity?" "That which would help a man to
+keep a Coach and six horses," but he is a lucid and vigorous writer,
+knowing very well that he had to steer his ship through a narrow and
+dangerous channel, avoiding Hobbism on the one side and tender
+consciences on the other. Each generation of State Churchmen has the
+same task. The channel remains to-day just as it ever did, with Scylla
+and Charybdis presiding over their rocks as of old. Hobbes's _Leviathan_
+appeared in 1651, and in 1670 both his philosophy and his statecraft
+were fashionable doctrine. All really pious people called Hobbes an
+Atheist. Technically he was nothing of the sort, but it matters little
+what he was technically, since no plain man who can read can doubt that
+Hobbes's enthronement of the State was the dethronement of God:--
+
+ "Seeing then that in every Christian commonwealth the civil sovereign
+ is the supreme factor to whose charge the whole flock of his subjects
+ is commuted, and consequently that it is by his authority that all
+ other pastors are made and have power to teach and perform all other
+ pastoral offices, it followeth also that it is from the civil
+ sovereign that all other pastors derive their right of teaching,
+ preaching and other functions pertaining to that office, and that
+ they are but his ministers in the same way as the magistrates of
+ towns, judges in Court of Justice and commanders of assizes are all
+ but ministers of him that is the magistrate of the whole
+ commonwealth, judge of all causes and commander of the whole militia,
+ which is always the Civil Sovereign. And the reason hereof is not
+ because they that teach, but because they that are to learn, are his
+ subjects."--(_The Leviathan_, Hobbes's _English Works_ (Molesworth's
+ Edition), vol. iii. p. 539.)
+
+Hobbes shirks nothing, and asks himself the question, What if a king, or
+a senate or other sovereign person forbid us to believe in Christ? The
+answer given is, "such forbidding is of no effect; because belief and
+unbelief never follow men's commands." But suppose "we be commanded by
+our lawful prince to say with our tongue we believe not, must we obey
+such command?" Here Hobbes a little hesitates to say outright "Yes, you
+must"; but he does say "whatsoever a subject is compelled to do in
+obedience to his own Sovereign, and doth it not in order to his own
+mind, but in order to the laws of his country, that action is not his,
+but his Sovereign's--nor is it that he in this case denieth Christ
+before men, but his Governor and the law of his country." Hobbes then
+puts the case of a Mahomedan subject of a Christian Commonwealth who is
+required under pain of death to be present at the Divine Service of the
+Christian Church--what is he to do? If, says Hobbes, you say he ought
+to die, then you authorise all private men to disobey their princes in
+maintenance of their religion, true or false, and if you say the
+Mahomedan ought to obey, you admit Hobbes's proposition and ought to
+consent to be yourself bound by it. (See Hobbes's _English Works_, iii.
+493.)
+
+The Church of England, though anxious both to support the king and
+suppress the Dissenters, could not stomach Hobbes; but if it could not,
+how was it to deal with Hobbes's question, "if it is _ever_ right to
+disobey your lawful prince, who is to determine _when_ it is right?"
+
+Parker seeks to grapple with this difficulty. He disowns Hobbes.
+
+ "When men have once swallowed this principle, that Mankind is free
+ from all obligations antecedent to the laws of the Commonwealth, and
+ that the Will of the Sovereign Power is the only measure of Good and
+ Evil, they proceed suitably to its consequences to believe that no
+ Religion can obtain the force of law till it is established as such
+ by supreme authority, that the Holy Scriptures were not laws to any
+ man till they were enjoyn'd by the Christian Magistrate, and that if
+ the Sovereign Power would declare the Alcoran to be Canonical
+ Scripture, it would be as much the Word of God as the Four Gospels.
+ (See _Hobbes_, vol. iii. p. 366.) So that all Religions are in
+ reality nothing but Cheats and impostures to awe the common people to
+ obedience. And therefore although Princes may wisely make use of the
+ foibles of Religion to serve their own turns upon the silly
+ multitude, yet 'tis below their wisdom to be seriously concerned
+ themselves for such fooleries." (Parker's _Ecc. Politie_, p. 137.)
+
+As against this fashionable Hobbism, Parker pleads Conscience.
+
+ "When anything that is apparently and intrinsically evil is the
+ Matter of a Human Law, whether it be of a Civil or Ecclesiastical
+ concern, here God is to be obeyed rather than Man."
+
+He forcibly adds:--
+
+ "Those who would take off from the Consciences of Men all obligations
+ antecedent to those of Human Laws, instead of making the power of
+ Princes Supreme, Absolute and Uncontrollable, they utterly enervate
+ all their authority, and set their subjects at perfect liberty from
+ all their commands. For if we once remove all the antecedent
+ obligations of Conscience and Religion, Men will no further be bound
+ to submit to their laws than only as themselves shall see convenient,
+ and if they are under no other restraint it will be their wisdom to
+ rebel as oft as it is their interest." (_Ecc. Politie_, pp. 112-113.)
+
+But though when dealing with Hobbes, Parker thinks fit to assert the
+claims of conscience so strongly, when he has to grapple with those who,
+like the immortal author of _The Pilgrim's Progress_, "devilishly and
+perniciously abstained from coming to Church," and upheld "unlawful
+Meetings and Conventicles," his tone alters, and it is hard to
+distinguish his position from that of the philosopher of Malmesbury.
+
+Parker's argument briefly stated, and as much as possible in his own
+vigorous language, comes to this:
+
+There is and always must be a competition between the prerogative of
+the Prince or State and that of Conscience, which on this occasion is
+defined as "every private man's own judgment and persuasion of things."
+"Do subjects rebel against their Sovereign? 'Tis Conscience that takes
+up arms. Do they murder Kings? 'Tis under the conduct of Conscience. Do
+they separate from the communion of the Church? 'Tis Conscience that is
+the Schismatick. Everything that a man has a mind to is his Conscience."
+(_Ecc. Politie_, p. 6.)
+
+How is this competition to be resolved? Parker answers in exact language
+which would have met with John Austin's warm approval.
+
+ "The Supreme Government of every Commonwealth, wherever it is lodged,
+ must of necessity be universal, absolute and uncontrollable. For if
+ it be limited, it may be controlled, but 'tis a thick and palpable
+ contradiction to call such a power supreme in that whatever controls
+ it must as to that case be its Superior. And therefore affairs of
+ Religion being so strongly influential upon affairs of State, they
+ must be as uncontrollably subject to the Supreme Power as all other
+ Civil concerns." (_Ecc. Politie_, p. 27.)
+
+If the magistrate may make penal laws against swearing and blasphemy,
+why not as to rites and ceremonies of public worship? (39.) Devotion
+towards God is a virtue akin to gratitude to man; religion is a branch
+of morality. The Puritans' talk about grace is a mere imposture, (76)
+which extracts from Parker vehement language. What is there to make such
+a fuss about? he cries. Why cannot you come to Church? You are left free
+to _think_ what you like. Your secret thoughts are your own, but living
+as you do in society, and knowing as you must how, unless the law
+interferes, "every opinion must make a sect, and every sect a faction,
+and every faction when it is able, a war, and every war is the cause of
+God, and the cause of God can never be prosecuted with too much
+violence" (16), why cannot you conform to a form of worship which,
+though it does not profess to be prescribed in all particulars, contains
+nothing actually forbidden in the Scriptures? What authority have
+Dissenters for singing psalms in metre? "Where has our Saviour or his
+Apostles enjoined a directory for public worship? What Scripture command
+is there for the _three_ significant ceremonies of the Solemn League and
+Covenant, viz. that the whole congregation should take it (1) uncovered,
+(2) standing, (3) with their right hand lift up bare" (184), and so on.
+
+In answer to the objection that the civil magistrate might establish a
+worship in its own nature sinful and sensual, Parker replies it is not
+in the least likely, and the risk must be run. "Our enquiry is to find
+out the best way of settling the world that the state of things admit
+of--if indeed mankind were infallible, this controversy were at an end,
+but seeing that all men are liable to errors and mistakes, and seeing
+that there is an absolute necessity of a supreme power in all public
+affairs, our question (I say) is, What is the most prudent and expedient
+way of settling them, not that possibly might be, but that really is.
+And this (as I have already sufficiently proved) is to devolve their
+management on the supreme civil power which, though it may be imperfect
+and liable to errors and mistakes, yet 'tis the least so, and is a much
+better way to attain public peace and tranquillity than if they were
+left to the ignorance and folly of every private man" (212).
+
+I now feel that at least I have done Parker full justice, but as so far
+I have hardly given an example of his familiar style, I must find room
+for two or three final quotations. The thing Parker hated most in the
+world was a _Tender Conscience_. He protests against the weakness which
+is content with passing penal laws, but does not see them carried out
+for fear of wounding these trumpery tender consciences. "Most men's
+minds or consciences are weak, silly and ignorant things, acted by fond
+and absurd principles and imposed upon by their vices and their
+passions." (7.) "However, if the obligation of laws must yield to that
+of a tender conscience, how impregnably is every man that has a mind to
+disobey armed against all the commands of his superiors. No authority
+shall be able to govern him farther than he himself pleases, and if he
+dislike the law he is sufficiently excused (268). A weak conscience is
+the product of a weak understanding, and he is a very subtil man that
+can find the difference between a tender head and a tender conscience
+(269). It is a glorious thing to suffer for a tender conscience, and
+therefore it is easy and natural for some people to affect some little
+scruples against the commands of authority, thereby to make themselves
+obnoxious to some little penalties, and then what godly men are they
+that are so ready to be punished for a good conscience" (278). "The
+voice of the publick law cannot but drown the uncertain whispers of a
+tender conscience; all its scruples are hushed and silenced by the
+commands of authority. It dares not whimper when that forbids, and the
+nod of a prince awes it into silence and submission. But if they dare to
+murmur, and their proud stomachs will swell against the rebukes of their
+superiors, then there is no remedy but the rod and correction. They must
+be chastised out of their peevishness and lashed into obedience (305).
+The doctor concludes his treatise with the words always dear to men of
+fluctuating opinions, 'What I have written, I have written'" (326).
+
+Whilst Parker was writing this book in his snug quarters in the
+Archbishop's palace at Lambeth, Bunyan was in prison in Bedford for
+refusing to take the communion on his knees in his parish church; and
+Dr. Manton, who had been offered the Deanery of Rochester, was in the
+Gate House Prison under the Five Mile Act.
+
+The first part of _The Rehearsal Transprosed_, though its sub-title is
+"Animadversions upon a late book intituled a Preface shewing what
+grounds there are of Fears and Jealousies of Popery," deals after
+Marvell's own fashion with all three of Parker's books, the
+_Ecclesiastical Politie_, the _Bramhall Preface_, and the _Defence of
+the Ecclesiastical Politie_. It is by no means so easy to give a fair
+notion of the _Rehearsal Transprosed_ in a short compass, as it was of
+Parker's line of argument. The parson wrote more closely than the Member
+of Parliament. I cannot give a better description of Marvell's method
+than in Parker's own words in his preface to his _Reproof to the
+Rehearsal Transprosed_, which appeared in 1673 and gave rise to
+Marvell's second part:--
+
+ "When," writes Parker, "I first condemned myself to the drudgery of
+ this Reply, I intended nothing but a serious prosecution of my
+ Argument, and to let the World see that it is not reading Histories
+ or Plays or Gazettes, nor going on pilgrimage to Geneva, nor learning
+ French and Italian, nor passing the Alps, nor being a cunning
+ Gamester that can qualify a man to discourse of Conscience and
+ Ecclesiastical Policy; in that it is not capping our Argument with a
+ story that will answer it, nor clapping an apothegm upon an assertion
+ that will prove it, nor stringing up Proverbs and Similitudes upon
+ one another that will make up a Coherent Discourse."
+
+Allowing for bias this is no unfair account of Marvell's method, and it
+was just because this was Marvell's method that he succeeded so well in
+amusing the king and in pleasing the town, and that he may still be read
+by those who love reading with a fair measure of interest and enjoyment.
+
+Witty and humorous men are always at a disadvantage except on the stage.
+The hum-drum is the style for Englishmen. Bishop Burnet calls Marvell "a
+droll," Parker, who was to be a bishop, calls him "a buffoon." Marvell
+is occasionally humorous and not infrequently carries a jest beyond the
+limits of becoming mirth; but he is more often grave. Yet when he is,
+his gravity was treated either as one of his feebler jokes or as an
+impertinence. But as it is his wit alone that has kept him alive he need
+not be pitied overmuch.
+
+The substance of Marvell's reply to Parker, apart altogether from its
+by-play, is to be found in passages like the following:--
+
+ "Here it is that after so great an excess of wit, he thinks fit to
+ take a julep and re-settle his brain and the government. He grows as
+ serious as 'tis possible for a madman, and pretends to sum-up the
+ whole state of the controversy with the Nonconformists. And to be
+ sure he will make the story as plausible for himself as he may; but
+ therefore it was that I have before so particularly quoted and bound
+ him up with his own words as fast as such a Proteus could be
+ pinion'd. For he is as waxen as the first matter, and no form comes
+ amiss to him. Every change of posture does either alter his opinion
+ or vary the expression by which we should judge of it; and sitting he
+ is of one mind, and standing of another. Therefore I take myself the
+ less concern'd to fight with a windmill like Quixote; or to whip a
+ gig as boyes do; or with the lacqueys at Charing-Cross or
+ Lincoln's-Inn-Fields to play at the Wheel of Fortune; lest I should
+ fall into the hands of my Lord Chief-Justice, or Sir Edmond Godfrey.
+ The truth is, in short, and let Bayes make more or less of it if he
+ can, Bayes had at first built-up such a stupendous magistrate as
+ never was of God's making. He had put all princes upon the rack to
+ stretch them to his dimension. And as a straight line continued grows
+ a circle, he had given them so infinite a power, that it was extended
+ unto impotency. For though he found it not till it was too late in
+ the cause, yet he felt it all along (which is the understanding of
+ brutes) in the effect. For hence it is that he so often complains
+ that princes know not aright that supremacy over consciences, to
+ which they were so lately, since their deserting the Church of Rome,
+ restored; that in most Nations government was not rightly understood,
+ and many expressions of that nature: whereas indeed the matter is,
+ that princes have always found that uncontroulable government over
+ _conscience_ to be both unsafe and impracticable. He had run himself
+ here to a stand, and perceived that there was a God, there was
+ Scripture; the magistrate himself had a conscience, and must 'take
+ care that he did not enjoyn things apparently evil.' But after all,
+ he finds himself again at the same stand here, and is run up to the
+ wall by an angel. God, and Scripture, and conscience will not let him
+ go further; but he owns, that if the magistrate enjoyns things
+ apparently evil, the subject may have liberty to remonstrate. What
+ shall he do, then? for it is too glorious an enterprize to be
+ abandoned at the first rebuffe. Why, he gives us a new translation of
+ the Bible, and a new commentary! He saith, that tenderness of
+ conscience might be allowed in a Church to be constituted, not in a
+ Church constituted already. That tenderness of conscience and scandal
+ are ignorance, pride, and obstinacy. He saith, the Nonconformists
+ should communicate with him till they have clear evidence that it is
+ evil. This is a civil way indeed of gaining the question, to perswade
+ men that are unsatisfied, to be satisfied till they be dissatisfied.
+ He threatens, he rails, he jeers them, if it were possible, out of
+ all their consciences and honesty; and finding that will not do, he
+ calls out the magistrate, tells him these men are not fit to live;
+ there can be no security of government while they are in being. Bring
+ out the pillories, whipping-posts, gallies (=galleys), rods, and
+ axes (which are _ratio ultima cleri_, a clergyman's last argument, ay
+ and his first too), and pull in pieces all the Trading Corporations,
+ those nests of Faction and Sedition. This is a faithful account of
+ the sum and intention of all his undertaking, for which, I confess,
+ he was as pick'd a man as could have been employed or found out in a
+ whole kingdome; but it is so much too hard a task for any man to
+ atchieve, that no goose but would grow giddy with it."[165:1]
+
+In reply to what Parker had written about the unreasonable fuss made by
+the Dissenters over the "two or three symbolical ceremonies" called
+sacraments, Marvell says:--
+
+ "They (the Nonconformists) complain that these things should be
+ imposed on them with so high a penalty as want nothing of a
+ sacramental nature but divine institution. And because a human
+ institution is herein made of equal force to a divine institution
+ therefore it is that they are aggrieved.... For without the sign of
+ the Cross our Church will not receive any one in Baptism; as also
+ without kneeling no man is suffered to come to the Communion.... But
+ here, I say, then is their (the Nonconformists') main exception that
+ things indifferent and that have no proper signature or significancy
+ to that purpose should by command be made conditions of
+ Church-communion. I have many times wished for peaceableness' sake
+ that they had a greater latitude, but if, unless they should stretch
+ their consciences till they tear again, they cannot conform, what
+ remedy? For I must confess that Christians have a better right and
+ title to the Church and to the ordinances of God there, than the
+ Author hath to his surplice.... Bishop Bramhall saith, 'I do profess
+ to all the world that the transforming of indifferent opinions into
+ necessary articles of faith hath been that _insana laurus_ or cursed
+ bay tree, the cause of all our brawling and contention.' That which
+ he saw in matter of doctrine, he would not discern in discipline....
+ It is true and very piously done that our Church doth declare that
+ the kneeling at the Lord's Supper is not enjoined for adoration of
+ those elements and concerning the other ceremonies as before. But
+ the Romanists (from whom we have them and who said of old we would
+ come to feed on their meat as well as eat of their porridge) do offer
+ us here many a fair declaration and distinction in very weighty
+ matters to which nevertheless the conscience of our Church hath not
+ complyed. But in this particular matter of kneeling which came in
+ first with the doctrine of transubstantiation, the Romish Church do
+ reproach us with flat idolatry, in that we, not believing the real
+ presence in the bread and wine, yet do pay to something or other the
+ same adoration. Suppose the ancient pagans had declared to the
+ primitive Christians that the offerings of some grains of incense was
+ only to perfume the room--do you think the Christians would have
+ palliated so far and colluded with their consciences? Therefore
+ although the Church do consider herself so much as not to alter her
+ mode unto the fashion of others, yet I cannot see why she ought to
+ exclude those from communion whose weaker consciences cannot, for
+ fear of scandal, step further."[166:1]
+
+With Parker's thunders and threats of the authority of princes and
+states, Marvell deals more in the mood of a statesman than of a
+philosopher, more as a man of affairs than as a jurist. He deplores the
+ferocity of Parker's tone and that of a certain number of the clergy.
+
+ "Why is it," he asks, "that this kind of clergy should always be and
+ have been for the most precipitate, brutish, and sanguinary counsels?
+ The former Civil War cannot make them wise, nor his Majesty's happy
+ return good-natured, but they are still for running things up unto
+ the same extremes. The softness of the Universities where they have
+ been bred, the gentleness of Christianity, in which they have been
+ nurtured, hath but exasperated their nature, and they seem to have
+ contracted no idea of wisdom but what they learnt at school--the
+ pedantry of Whipping. For whether it be or no that the clergy are not
+ so well fitted by education as others for political affairs I know
+ not, though I should rather think they have advantage above others,
+ and even if they would but keep to their Bibles, might make the best
+ Ministers of State in the world; yet it is generally observed that
+ things miscarry under their government. If there be any council more
+ precipitate, more violent, more extreme than other, it is theirs.
+ Truly, I think the reason that God does not bless them in affairs of
+ State is because he never intended them for that employment."[167:1]
+
+Of Archbishop Laud and Charles the First, Marvell says:--
+
+ "I am confident the Bishop studied to do both God and his Majesty
+ good service; but alas, how utterly was he mistaken. Though so
+ learned, so pious, so wise a man, he seem'd to know nothing beyond
+ Ceremonies, Armenianism, and Mainwaring. With that he begun, with
+ that ended, and thereby deform'd the whole reign of the best prince
+ that ever wielded the English sceptre. For his late Majesty, being a
+ prince truly pious and religious, was therefore the more inclined to
+ esteem and favour the clergy. And thence, though himself of a most
+ exquisite understanding, yet he could not trust it better than in
+ their treatment. Whereas every man is best at his own post, and so
+ the preacher in the pulpit."[167:2]
+
+Kings, Marvell points out to Parker, must take wider views than parsons.
+
+ "'Tis not with them as with you. You have but one cure of souls, or
+ perhaps two as being a nobleman's chaplain, to look after, and if you
+ made conscience of discharging them as you ought, you would find you
+ had work sufficient without writing your 'Ecclesiastical Policies.'
+ But they are the incumbents of whole kingdoms, and the rectorship of
+ the common people, the nobility, and even of the clergy. The care I
+ say of all this rests on them, so that they are fain to condescend to
+ many things for peace sake and the quiet of mankind that your proud
+ heart would break before it would bend to. They do not think fit to
+ require any thing that is impossible, unnecessary or wanton of their
+ people, but are fain to consider the very temper of the climate in
+ which they live, the constitution and laws under which they have been
+ formerly bred, and upon all occasions to give them good words and
+ humour them like children. They reflect upon the histories of former
+ times and the present transactions to regulate themselves by in every
+ circumstance.... They (Kings) do not think fit to command things
+ unnecessary."[168:1]
+
+These extracts, however fatal to Marvell's traditional reputation in the
+eighteenth century as a Puritan and a Republican, call for no apology.
+
+An example of Marvell's Interludes ought to be given. There are many to
+choose from.
+
+ "There was a worthy divine, not many years dead, who in his younger
+ time, being of a facetious and unlucky humour, was commonly known by
+ the name of Tom Triplet; he was brought up at Paul's school under a
+ severe master, Dr. Gill, and from thence he went to the University.
+ There he took liberty (as 'tis usual with those that are emancipated
+ from School) to tel tales and make the discipline ridiculous under
+ which he was bred. But not suspecting the doctor's intelligence,
+ coming once to town he went in full school to give him a visite and
+ expected no less than to get a play day for his former acquaintances.
+ But instead of that he found himself hors'd up in a trice, though he
+ appeal'd in vain to the priviledges of the University, pleaded
+ _adultus_ and invoked the mercy of the spectators. Nor was he let
+ down till the master had planted a grove of birch in his back-side
+ for the terrour and publick example of all waggs that divulge the
+ secrets of Priscian and make merry with their teachers. This stuck so
+ with Triplet that all his life-time he never forgave the doctor, but
+ sent him every New Year's tide an anniversary ballad to a new tune,
+ and so in his turn avenged himself of his jerking pedagogue."[168:2]
+
+Marvell's game of picquet with a parson plays such a part in Parker's
+_Reproof_ to the _Rehearsal Transprosed_ that it deserves to be
+mentioned:--
+
+ "'Tis not very many years ago that I used to play at picket; there
+ was a gentleman of your robe, a dignitory of Lincoln, very well
+ known and remembered in the ordinaries, but being not long since
+ dead, I will save his name. Now I used to play pieces, and this
+ gentleman would always go half-a-crown with me; and so all the while
+ he sate on my hand he very honestly '_gave the sign_' so that I was
+ always sure to lose. I afterwards discovered it, but of all the money
+ that ever I was cheated of in my life, none ever vexed me so as what
+ I lost by his occasion."[169:1]
+
+There is no need to pursue the controversy further. It is still
+unsettled.
+
+Parker's _Reproof_, published in 1673, is less argumentative and
+naturally enough more personal than the _Ecclesiastical Politie_. Any
+use I now make of it will be purely biographical. Let us see Andrew
+Marvell depicted by an angry parson--not in passages of mere abuse, as
+_e.g._ "Thou dastard Craven, thou Swad, thou Mushroom, thou coward in
+heart, word and deed, thou Judas, thou Crocodile"; for epithets such as
+these are of no use to a biographer--but in places where Marvell is at
+least made to sit for the portrait, however ill-natured.
+
+ "And if I would study revenge I could easily have requited you with
+ the Novels of a certain Jack Gentleman, that was born of pure parents
+ and bred among cabin-boys, and sent from school to the University and
+ from the University to the Gaming Ordinaries, but the young man,
+ being easily rooked by the old Gamesters, he was sent abroad to gain
+ courage and experience, and beyond sea saw the Bears of Berne and the
+ large race of Capons at Geneva, and a great many fine sights beside,
+ and so returned home as accomplished as he went out, tries his
+ fortune once more at the Ordinaries, plays too high for a gentleman
+ of his private condition, and so is at length cheated of all at
+ Picquet." ... "And now to conclude; is it not a sad thing that a
+ well-bred and fashionable gentleman that has frequented Ordinaries,
+ that has worn Perukes and Muffs and Pantaloons and was once Master of
+ a Watch, that has travelled abroad and seen as many men and
+ countries as the famous Vertuosi, Sorbier and Coriat, that has heard
+ the City Lions roar, that has past the Alps and seen all the
+ Tredescin rarities and old stones of Italy, that has sat in the
+ Porphyric Chair at Rome, that can describe the methods of the
+ Elections of Popes and tell stories of the tricks of Cardinals, that
+ has been employed in Embassies abroad and acquainted with Intrigues
+ of State at home, that has read Plays and Histories and Gazettes;
+ that I say a Gentleman thus accomplished and embellished within and
+ without and all over, should ever live to that unhappy dotage as at
+ last to dishonour his grey hairs and his venerable age with such
+ childish and impotent endeavours at wit and buffoonery."--(_Reproof_,
+ pp. 270, 274-5.)[170:1]
+
+Marvell was very little over fifty years of his age at this time, nor is
+Parker's portrait to be regarded as truthful in any other
+particular--yet something of a man's character may be discovered by
+noticing the way he is abused by those who want to abuse him.
+
+Marvell, though no orator, or even debater, was the stuff of which
+controversialists are made. In a letter, printed in the Duke of
+Portland's papers, and dated May 3, 1673, he writes:--
+
+ "Dr. Parker will be out the next week. I have seen it--already three
+ hundred and thirty pages and it will be much more. (It was five
+ hundred twenty-eight pages.) I perceive by what I have read that it
+ is the rudest book, one or other, that ever was published, I may say
+ since the first invention of printing. Although it handles me so
+ roughly, yet I am not at all amated by it. But I must desire the
+ advice of some few friends to tell me whether it will be proper for
+ me and in what way to answer it. However I will for mine own private
+ satisfaction forthwith draw up an answer that shall have as much of
+ spirit and solidity in it as my ability will afford and the age we
+ live in will endure. I am, if I may say it with reverence, drawn in I
+ hope by a good Providence to intermeddle on a noble and high
+ argument. But I desire that all the discourse of my friends may run
+ as if no answer ought to be expected to so scurrilous a
+ book."--(_Hist. MSS. Comm., Portland Papers_, iii. 337.)
+
+The title-page of the Second Part of the _Rehearsal Transprosed_ is a
+curiosity:--
+
+ THE
+ REHEARSALL
+ TRANSPROS'D:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE SECOND PART.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Occasioned by Two Letters: The first Printed
+ by a nameless Author, Intituled, A
+ Reproof, etc.
+
+ The Second Letter left for me at a Friends
+ House, Dated Nov. 3, 1673. Subscribed
+ J.G. and concluding with these words;
+ If thou darest to Print or Publish any
+ Lie or Libel against Doctor Parker, By
+ the Eternal God I will cut thy Throat.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Answered by ANDREW MARVEL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON,
+
+ Printed for Nathaniel Ponder at the Peacock
+ in Chancery Lane near Fleet-Street, 1673.
+
+The _Second Part_ is an exceedingly witty though too lengthy a
+performance. Marvell's "companion picture" of Parker is full of matter,
+and of the very spirit of the times. Some of it must be given:--
+
+ "But though he came of a good mother, he had a very ill sire. He was
+ a man bred toward the Law, and betook himself, as his best practice,
+ to be a sub-committee-man, or, as the stile ran, one of the Assistant
+ Committee in Northamptonshire. In the rapine of that employment, and
+ what he got by picking the teeth of his masters, he sustain'd himself
+ till he had raked together some little estate. And then, being a man
+ for the purpose, and that had begun his fortune out of the
+ sequestration of the estates of the King's Party, he, to perfect it
+ the more, proceeded to take away their lives; not in the hot and
+ military way (which diminishes always the offence), but in the cooler
+ blood and sedentary execution of an High Court of Justice.
+ Accordingly he was preferr'd to be one of that number that gave
+ sentence against the three Lords, Capel, Holland, and Hamilton, who
+ were beheaded. By this learning in the Law he became worthy of the
+ degree of a serjeant, and sometimes to go the Circuit, till for
+ misdemeanor he was petition'd against. But for a taste of his
+ abilities, and the more to reingratiate himself, he printed, in the
+ year 1650, a very remarkable Book, called 'The Government of the
+ People of England, precedent and present the same. _Ad subscribentes
+ confirmandum, Dubitantes informandum, Opponentes convincendum_; and
+ underneath _Multa videntur quae non sunt, multa sunt quae non
+ videntur_. Under that ingraven two hands joyn'd, with the motto, _Ut
+ uniamur_; and beneath a sheaf of arrows, with this device, _Vis unita
+ fortior_; and to conclude, _Concordia parvae res crescunt discordia
+ dilabuntur_.' A most hieroglyphical title, and sufficient to have
+ supplied the mantlings and atchievements of the family! By these
+ parents he was sent to Oxford, with intention to breed him up to the
+ ministry. There in a short time he enter'd himself into the company
+ of some young students who were used to fast and pray weekly
+ together; but for their refection fed sometimes on broth, from whence
+ they were commonly called Grewellers; only it was observed that he
+ was wont still to put more graves than all the rest in his porridge.
+ And after that he pick'd acquaintance not only with the brotherhood
+ at Wadham Colledge, but with the sisterhood too, at another old
+ Elsibeth's, one Elizabeth Hampton's, a plain devout woman, where he
+ train'd himself up in hearing their sermons and prayers, receiving
+ also the Sacrament in the house, till he had gain'd such proficience,
+ that he too began to exercise in that Meeting, and was esteem'd one
+ of the preciousest young men in the University. But when thus, after
+ several years' approbation, he was even ready to have taken the
+ charge, not of an 'admiring drove or heard,' as he now calls them,
+ but of a flock upon him, by great misfortune the King came in by the
+ miraculous providence of God, influencing the distractions of some,
+ the good affections of others, and the weariness of all towards that
+ happy Restauration, after so many sufferings, to his regal crown and
+ dignity. Nevertheless he broke not off yet from his former habitudes;
+ and though it were now too late to obviate this inconvenience, yet he
+ persisted as far as in him was--that is, by praying, caballing, and
+ discoursing--to obstruct the restoring of the episcopal government,
+ revenues, and authority. Insomuch that, finding himself
+ discountenanced on those accounts by the then Warden of Wadham, he
+ shifted colledges to Trinity, and, when there, went away without his
+ degree, scrupling, forsooth, the Subscription then required. From
+ thence he came to London, where he spent a considerable time in
+ creeping into all corners and companies, horoscoping up and down
+ concerning the duration of the Government; not considering anything
+ as best, but as most lasting and most profitable. And after having
+ many times cast a figure, he at last satisfyed himself that the
+ Episcopal Government would endure as long as this King lived; and
+ from thence forward cast about how to be admitted into the Church of
+ England, and find the highway to her preferments. In order to this he
+ daily enlarged, not only his conversation, but his conscience, and
+ was made free of some of the town-vices; imagining, like Muleasses
+ King of Tunis (for I take witness that on all occasions I treat him
+ rather above his quality than otherwise), that by hiding himself
+ among the onions, he should escape being traced by his perfumes.
+ Ignorant and mistaken man, that thought it necessary to part with any
+ virtue to get a living; or that the Church of England did not require
+ and incourage more sobriety than he could ever be guilty of; whereas
+ it hath alwayes been fruitful of men who, together with obedience to
+ that discipline, have lived to the envy of the Nonconformists in
+ their conversation, and without such could never either have been
+ preserved so long, or after so long a dissipation have ever
+ recover'd. But neither was this yet, in his opinion, sufficient; and
+ therefore he resolv'd to try a shorter path, which some few men had
+ trod not unsuccessfully; that is, to print a Book; if that would not
+ do, a second; if not that, a third of an higher extraction, and so
+ forward, to give experiment against their former party of a keen
+ stile and a ductile judgment. His first proof-piece was in the year
+ 1665, the _Tentamina Physico-Theologica_; a tedious transcript of his
+ common-place book, wherein there is very little of his own, but the
+ arrogance and the unparalleled censoriousness that he exercises over
+ all other Writers. When he had cook'd up these musty collections, he
+ makes his first invitation to his 'old acquaintance' my lord
+ Archbishop of Canterbury, who had never seen before nor heard of him.
+ But I must confess he furbishes-up his Grace in so glorious an
+ Epistle, that had not my Lord been long since proof against the most
+ spiritual flattery, the Dedication only, without ever reading the
+ Book, might have serv'd to have fix'd him from that instant as his
+ favourite. Yet all this I perceive did not his work, but his Grace
+ was so unmindful, or rather so prudent, that the gentleman thought it
+ necessary to spur-up again the next year with another new Book, to
+ show more plainly what he would be at. This he dedicates to Doctor
+ Bathurst; and to evidence from the very Epistle that he was ready to
+ renounce that very education, the civility of which he is so tender
+ of as to blame me for disordering it, he picks occasion to tell him:
+ 'to your prevailing advice, Sir, do I owe my first rescue from the
+ chains and fetters of an unhappy education.' But in the Book, which
+ he calls 'A free and impartial Censure of the Platonick Philosophy'
+ (censure 'tis sure to be, whatsoever he writes), he speaks out, and
+ demonstrates himself ready and equipp'd to surrender not only the
+ Cause, but betray his Party without making any conditions for them,
+ and to appear forthwith himself in the head of the contrary interest.
+ Which, supposing the dispute to be just, yet in him was so mercenary,
+ that none would have descended to act his part but a divine of
+ fortune. And even lawyers take themselves excused from being of
+ counsel for the King himself, in a cause where they have been
+ entertain'd and instructed by their client. But so flippant he was
+ and forward in this book, that in despight of all chronology, he
+ could introduce Plato to inveigh against Calvin, and from the
+ Platoniques he could miraculously hook-in a Discourse against the
+ Nonconformists. (_Cens. Plat. Phil._, pp. 26, 27, 28, etc.) After
+ this feat of activity he was ready to leap over the moon; no scruple
+ of conscience could stand in his way, and no preferment seemed too
+ high for him; for about this time, I find that having taken a turn at
+ Cambridge to qualifie himself, he was received within doors to be my
+ Lord Archbishop's other chaplain, and into some degree of favour;
+ which, considering the difference of their humours and ages, was
+ somewhat surprizing. But whether indeed, in times of heat and
+ faction, the most temperate spirits may sometimes chance to take
+ delight in one that is spightful, and make some use of him; or
+ whether it be that even the most grave and serious persons do for
+ relaxation divert themselves willingly by whiles with a creature that
+ is unlucky, inimical, and gamesome,--so it was. And thenceforward the
+ nimble gentleman danced upon bell-ropes, vaulted from steeple to
+ steeple, and cut capers out of one dignity to another. Having thus
+ dexterously stuck his groat in Lambeth wainscot, it may easily be
+ conceived he would be unwilling to lose it; and therefore he
+ concern'd himself highly, and even to jealousie, in upholding now
+ that palace, which, if falling, he would out of instinct be the first
+ should leave it. His Majesty about that time labouring to effect his
+ constant promises of Indulgence to his people, the Author therefore
+ walking with his own shadow in the evening, took a great fright lest
+ all were agoe. And in this conceit being resolv'd to make good his
+ figure, and that one government should not last any longer than the
+ other, he set himself to write those dangerous Books which I have now
+ to do with; wherein he first makes all that he will to be Law, and
+ then whatsoever is Law to be Divinity."[176:1]
+
+The Second Part is not all raillery. There is much wisdom in it and a
+trace of Machiavelli:--
+
+ "But because you are subject to misconstrue even true English, I will
+ explain my self as distinctly as I can, and as close as possible,
+ what is mine own opinion in this matter of the magistrate and
+ government; that, seeing I have blamed you where I thought you
+ blame-worthy, you may have as fair hold of me too, if you can find
+ where to fix your accusation.
+
+ "The power of the magistrate does most certainly issue from the
+ divine authority. The obedience due to that power is by divine
+ command; and subjects are bound, both as men and as Christians, to
+ obey the magistrate actively in all things where their duty to God
+ intercedes not, and however passively, that is, either by leaving
+ their countrey, or if they cannot do that (the magistrate, or the
+ reason of their own occasions hindring them), then by suffering
+ patiently at home, without giving the least publick disturbance. But
+ the dispute concerning the magistrate's power ought to be
+ superfluous; for that it is certainly founded upon his commission
+ from God, and for the most part sufficiently fortified with all
+ humane advantages. There are few soveraign princes so abridged, but
+ that, if they be not contented, they may envy their own fortune. But
+ the modester question (if men will needs be medling with matters
+ above them) would be, how far it is advisable for a prince to exert
+ and push the rigour of that power which no man can deny him; for
+ princes, as they derive the right of succession from their ancestors,
+ so they inherit from that ancient and illustrious extraction a
+ generosity that runs in the blood above the allay of the rest of
+ mankind. And being moreover at so much ease of honour and fortune,
+ that they are free from the gripes of avarice and twinges of
+ ambition, they are the more disposed to an universal benignity
+ toward their subjects. What prince that sees so many millions of men,
+ either labouring industriously toward his revenue, or adventuring
+ their lives in his service, and all of them performing his commands
+ with a religious obedience, but conceives at the same time a
+ relenting tenderness over them, whereof others out of the narrowness
+ of their minds cannot be capable? But whoever shall cast his eye
+ thorow the history of all ages, will find that nothing has alwayes
+ succeeded better with princes then the clemency of government; and
+ that those, on the contrary, who have taken the sanguinary course,
+ have been unfortunate to themselves and the people, the consequences
+ not being separable. For whether that royal and magnanimous
+ gentleness spring from a propensity of their nature, or be acquired
+ and confirmed by good and prudent consideration, it draws along with
+ it all the effects of Policy. The wealth of a shepherd depends upon
+ the multitude of his flock, the goodness of their pasture, and the
+ quietness of their feeding; and princes, whose dominion over mankind
+ resembles in some measure that of men over other creatures, cannot
+ expect any considerable increase to themselves, if by continual
+ terrour they amaze, shatter, and hare their people, driving them into
+ woods, and running them upon precipices. If men do but compute how
+ charming an efficacy one word, and more, one good action has from a
+ superior upon those under him, it can scarce be reckon'd how powerful
+ a magick there is in a prince who shall, by a constant tenour of
+ humanity in government, go on daily gaining upon the affections of
+ his people. There is not any privilege so dear, but it may be
+ extorted from subjects by good usage, and by keeping them alwayes up
+ in their good humour. I will not say what one prince may compass
+ within his own time, or what a second, though surely much may be
+ done; but it is enough if a great and durable design be accomplish'd
+ in the third life; and supposing an hereditary succession of any
+ three taking up still where the other left, and dealing still in that
+ fair and tender way of management, it is impossible but that, even
+ without reach or intention upon the prince's part, all should fall
+ into his hand, and in so short a time the very memory or thoughts of
+ any such thing as publick liberty would, as it were by consent,
+ expire and be for ever extinguish'd. So that whatever the power of
+ the magistrate be in the institution, it is much safer for them not
+ to do that with the left hand which they may do with the right, nor
+ by an extraordinary, what they may effect by the ordinary, way of
+ government. A prince that goes to the top of his power is like him
+ that shall go to the bottom of his treasure."[178:1]
+
+And as for the "common people" he has this to say:--
+
+ "Yet neither do they want the use of reason, and perhaps their
+ aggregated judgment discerns most truly the errours of government,
+ forasmuch as they are the first, to be sure, that smart under them.
+ In this only they come to be short-sighted, that though they know the
+ diseases, they understand not the remedies; and though good patients,
+ they are ill physicians. The magistrate only is authorized,
+ qualified, and capable to make a just and effectual Reformation, and
+ especially among the Ecclesiasticks. For in all experience, as far as
+ I can remember, they have never been forward to save the prince that
+ labour. If they had, there would have been no Wickliffe, no Husse, no
+ Luther in history. Or at least, upon so notable an emergency as the
+ last, the Church of Rome would then in the Council of Trent have
+ thought of rectifying itself in good earnest, that it might have
+ recover'd its ancient character; whereas it left the same divisions
+ much wider, and the Christian people of the world to suffer,
+ Protestants under Popish governors, Popish under Protestants, rather
+ than let go any point of interested ambition."[178:2]
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[152:1] "But the most virulent of all that writ against the sect was
+Parker, afterwards made Bishop of Oxford by King James: who was full of
+satirical vivacity and was considerably learned, but was a man of no
+judgment and of as little virtue, and as to religion rather impious:
+after he had for some years entertained the nation with several virulent
+books writ with much life, he was attacked by the liveliest droll of the
+age, who writ in a burlesque strain but with so peculiar and
+entertaining a conduct that from the King down to the tradesman his
+books were read with great pleasure, that not only humbled Parker but
+the whole party, for the author of the _Rehearsal Transprosed_ had all
+the men of wit (or as the French phrase it all the laughers) on his
+side."--Burnet's _History of his Own Time_.
+
+[152:2] See the dedication to _A Free and Impartial Censure of the
+Plutonick Philosophy_, by Sam Parker, A.M., Oxford 1666. Parker was a
+man of some taste, and I have in my small collection a beautifully bound
+copy of this treatise presented by the author to Seth Ward, then Bishop
+of Exeter, and afterwards of Salisbury.
+
+[165:1] Grosart, vol. iii. pp. 145-8.
+
+[166:1] Grosart, vol. iii. pp. 155-9.
+
+[167:1] Grosart, vol. iii. pp. 170, 210-1.
+
+[167:2] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 211.
+
+[168:1] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 171.
+
+[168:2] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 63.
+
+[169:1] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 198.
+
+[170:1] For a still more unfriendly sketch of Andrew Marvell by the same
+spiteful hand, see Parker's _History of his Own Time_, a posthumous
+work, first published in Latin in 1726, and in an English Translation by
+_Thomas Newlin_ in 1727. This book contains an interesting enumeration
+of the numerous conspiracies against the life and throne of Charles the
+Second during the earlier part of his reign, a panegyric upon Archbishop
+Sheldon and plentiful abuse of Andrew Marvell. Parker died in unhappy
+circumstances (see Macaulay's _History_, vol. ii. p. 205), but he left
+behind him a pious nonjuring son, and his grandson founded the famous
+publishing firm at Oxford.
+
+[176:1] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 284.
+
+[178:1] Grosart, vol. iii. p. 370.
+
+[178:2] _Ibid._, p. 382.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+LAST YEARS IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
+
+
+Marvell's last ten years in the House of Commons were made miserable by
+the passionate conviction that there existed in high quarters of the
+State a deep, dangerous, and well-considered plot to subvert the
+Protestant faith and to destroy by armed force Parliamentary Government
+in England. Marvell was not the victim of a delusion. Such a plot, plan,
+or purpose undoubtedly existed, though, as it failed, it is now easy to
+consider the alarm it created to have been exaggerated.
+
+Marvell was, of all public men then living, the one most deeply imbued
+with the spirit of our free constitution. Its checks and balances jumped
+with his humour. His nature was without any taint of fanaticism, nor was
+he anything of the doctrinaire. He was neither a Richard Baxter nor a
+John Locke. He had none of the pure Erastianism of Selden, who tells us
+in his inimitable, cold-blooded way that "a King is a King men have made
+for their own sakes, for quietness' sake." "Just as in a family one man
+is appointed to buy the meat," and that "there is no such thing as
+spiritual jurisdiction; all is civil, the Church's is the same with the
+Lord Mayor's. The Pope he challenges jurisdiction over all; the Bishops
+they pretend to it as well as he; the Presbyterians they would have it
+to themselves, but over whom is all this, the poor layman" (see Selden's
+_Table Talk_).
+
+This may be excellent good sense but it does not represent Marvell's
+way of looking at things. He thought more nobly of both church and king.
+
+In Marvell's last book, his famous pamphlet "_An Account of the Growth
+of Popery and Arbitrary Government in England," printed at Amsterdam and
+recommended to the reading of all English Protestants_, 1678, which made
+a prodigious stir and (it is sad to think) paved the way for the "Popish
+Plot," Marvell sets forth his view of our constitution in language as
+lofty as it is precise. I know no passage in any of our institutional
+writers of equal merit.
+
+ "For if first we consider the State, the kings of England rule not
+ upon the same terms with those of our neighbour nations, who, having
+ by force or by address usurped that due share which their people had
+ in the government, are now for some ages in the possession of an
+ arbitrary power (which yet no prescription can make legal) and
+ exercise it over their persons and estates in a most tyrannical
+ manner. But here the subjects retain their proportion in the
+ Legislature; the very meanest commoner of England is represented in
+ Parliament, and is a party to those laws by which the Prince is sworn
+ to govern himself and his people. No money is to be levied but by the
+ common consent. No man is for life, limb, goods, or liberty, at the
+ Sovereign's discretion: but we have the same right (modestly
+ understood) in our propriety that the prince hath in his regality:
+ and in all cases where the King is concerned, we have our just remedy
+ as against any private person of the neighbourhood, in the Courts of
+ Westminster Hall or in the High Court of Parliament. His very
+ Prerogative is no more than what the Law has determined. His Broad
+ Seal, which is the legitimate stamp of his pleasure, yet is no longer
+ currant, than upon the trial it is found to be legal. He cannot
+ commit any person by his particular warrant. He cannot himself be
+ witness in any cause: the balance of publick justice being so
+ delicate, that not the hand only but even the breath of the Prince
+ would turn the scale. Nothing is left to the King's will, but all is
+ subjected to his authority: by which means it follows that he can do
+ no wrong, nor can he receive wrong; and a King of England keeping to
+ these measures, may without arrogance, be said to remain the onely
+ intelligent Ruler over a rational People. In recompense therefore and
+ acknowledgment of so good a Government under his influence, his
+ person is most sacred and inviolable; and whatsoever excesses are
+ committed against so high a trust, nothing of them is imputed to him,
+ as being free from the necessity or temptation; but his ministers
+ only are accountable for all, and must answer it at their perils. He
+ hath a vast revenue constantly arising from the hearth of the
+ Householder, the sweat of the Labourer, the rent of the Farmer, the
+ industry of the Merchant, and consequently out of the estate of the
+ Gentleman: a large competence to defray the ordinary expense of the
+ Crown, and maintain its lustre. And if any extraordinary occasion
+ happen, or be but with any probable decency pretended, the whole Land
+ at whatsoever season of the year does yield him a plentiful harvest.
+ So forward are his people's affections to give even to superfluity,
+ that a forainer (or Englishman that hath been long abroad) would
+ think they could neither will nor chuse, but that the asking of a
+ supply were a meer formality, it is so readily granted. He is the
+ fountain of all honours, and has moreover the distribution of so many
+ profitable offices of the Household, of the Revenue, of State, of
+ Law, of Religion, of the Navy and (since his present Majestie's time)
+ of the Army, that it seems as if the Nation could scarce furnish
+ honest men enow to supply all those imployments. So that the Kings of
+ England are in nothing inferiour to other Princes, save in being more
+ abridged from injuring their own subjects: but have as large a field
+ as any of external felicity, wherein to exercise their own virtue,
+ and so reward and incourage it in others. In short, there is nothing
+ that comes nearer in Government to the Divine Perfection, than where
+ the Monarch, as with us, injoys a capacity of doing all the good
+ imaginable to mankind, under a disability to all that is
+ evil."[181:1]
+
+This was the constitution which Marvell, whose means of information
+were great and whose curiosity was insatiable, believed to be in danger.
+No wonder he was agitated.
+
+The politics in which Marvell was immersed during his last years are
+difficult to unravel and still more difficult to illuminate, for they
+had their dim origin in the secret thoughts and wavering purposes of the
+king.
+
+Charles the Second, like many another Englishman guiltless of Stuart
+blood in his veins, was mainly governed by his dislikes, his pleasures,
+and his financial necessities. To suppose, as some hasty moralisers have
+done, that Charles cared for nothing but his women is to misread his
+character. He had many qualifications to be the chief magistrate of a
+nation of shopkeepers. He was ever alive to the supreme importance of
+English trade upon the high seas. His thoughts were often turned in the
+direction of the Indies, east and west. He took a constant, though not
+always an honest, interest in the navy. He hated Holland for more
+reasons than one, but among these reasons was his hatred of England's
+most formidable and malicious trade competitor. He also disliked her
+arid and ugly Protestantism, and blood being thicker than water, he
+hated Holland for what he considered her shabby treatment of his
+youthful nephew, whose ultimate destiny was happily hidden from
+Whitehall. Among Charles's many dislikes must be included the Anglican
+bishops, who had prevented him from keeping his word, and foiled his
+purpose of a wide toleration. He envied his brother of France the wide
+culture, the literature and art of Catholicism. He regretted the
+Reformation, and would have been best pleased to see the English Church
+in communion with Rome and in possession of "Anglican liberties" akin
+to those enjoyed by the Gallican Church. Charles was also jealous of
+Louis the Fourteenth, and in many moods had no mind to play perpetually
+a second fiddle. He longed for a navy to sweep the seas, for an army
+strong enough to keep his Parliament in check, and for liberty for
+himself and for all those of his subjects who were so minded, to hear
+Mass on Sundays. Behind, and above, and always surrounding these desires
+and dislikes, was an ever-present, ever-pressing need for money. Like a
+royal Becky Sharp, Charles might have found it easy to be a patriotic
+king on five millions a year.
+
+The king was his own Foreign Minister, and being what he was, and swayed
+by the considerations I have imperfectly described, his foreign policy
+was necessarily tortuous and perplexing. As Ranke says, "Charles was
+capable of proposing offensive alliances to the three neighbouring
+powers, to the Dutch against France, to the French against Spain and
+Holland, to the Spaniards against France to the detriment of Holland,
+but in these propositions two fundamental views always recur--demands
+for money, and assurance of world-wide commerce for England."[183:1]
+
+Charles first allowed Sir William Temple, a cool, prudent man, to form,
+in a famous five days' negotiation, the defensive treaty with Holland,
+which, after Sweden had joined it, became known as the Triple Alliance
+(1668). This alliance had for its objects mutual promises between the
+contracting parties to come to each other's assistance by sea and land
+if attacked by any power (France being here intended), to force Spain to
+make peace with France on the terms already offered, and to compel
+France to keep those terms when agreed to by Spain.
+
+The Triple Alliance was not only very popular in England, but was good
+diplomacy, for it was quite within the range of practical politics that
+France and Holland might have combined against England; nor could it
+easily be maintained that the alliance was hostile to France, as it
+provided that Spain should be forced to accept the terms France had
+already proposed.
+
+What wrecked the Triple Alliance and prepared the way for the secret
+Treaty of Dover (1670), was the impossibility of settling those
+religious difficulties which, despite the Act of Uniformity, were more
+rampant than ever. The king wanted to patch up peace, and to secure some
+working plan of comprehension or composure, under cover of which the
+Catholic religion should be tolerated and Presbyterianism formally
+recognised. But, king though he was, he could not get his way. The
+Church and the House of Commons, full as the latter was of his pimps and
+pensioners, were as obstinate as mules in this matter of toleration.
+They would neither favour Papists nor Dissenters, protested against
+Indulgences as unconstitutional, and clamoured for a rigorous
+administration of that penal legislation against Nonconformists which
+they had purchased with so many and such lavish supplies. As a matter of
+fact, these penal laws were very fitfully enforced. In London they were
+often totally disregarded, and we read of congregations numbering two
+thousand openly attending Presbyterian services. The Lord Mayor for the
+time being took his orders direct from the king.
+
+What was Charles to do? After the fall of Clarendon, the king's
+favourite privy councillors, called the "Cabal," because the initial
+letters of their names formed a word which for some time previously had
+been in common use, represent only too faithfully the confusion and
+corruption of the times. Clifford was a zealous Roman, Arlington a
+cautious one, Buckingham a free-thinker and mocker, friendly to France
+and on good terms with the more advanced English sectaries; Ashley made
+no pretence to be a Christian, but favoured philosophic toleration;
+whilst Lauderdale, one of the most learned ministers that ever sat in
+council (so Ranke says[185:1]), was, as a matter of profession, a
+Presbyterian, but in reality a man wholly and slavishly devoted to the
+king's interests, and prepared at any moment to pour into the kingdom
+soldiers from Scotland to purge or suppress all Free Institutions.
+
+Irritated, disgusted, thwarted, and annoyed, the king, acting, it well
+may be, under the influence of his accomplished sister, the beautiful
+and ill-fated Duchess of Orleans, struck up, to use Marvell's own words,
+"an invisible league with France." The negotiations were either by word
+of mouth or by letters which have been burnt. Dr. Lingard in his history
+gives an interesting account of this mysterious transaction. Two things
+are apparent as the objects of the Treaty of Dover. The Dutch Republic
+is to be destroyed, and the cause of Catholicism in England is to be
+promoted and maintained. It was this latter object that seems most to
+have excited the hopes of the Duchess of Orleans. A woman's hand is
+traceable throughout. Charles promised to profess himself openly a Roman
+Catholic at the time that should appear to be most expedient, and
+subsequently to that profession he was to join with Louis in making war
+upon the Dutch Republic. At the date of this bewildering agreement, it
+was high treason by statute even to _say_ that Charles was a Roman
+Catholic. In case the king's public conversion should lead to
+disturbances, Louis promised an "aid" of two millions of _livres_ and an
+armed force of six thousand men. He also agreed to pay the whole cost of
+the Dutch War _on land_, and to contribute thirty men-of-war to the
+English fleet. Holland once crushed, England's share of the plunder was
+to be Walcheren, Sluys, and Cadsand. A remarkable conversion! It is
+difficult to suppose that either Charles or Louis were quite serious
+over this part of the business. Yet there it is. The Catholic provisions
+of the secret Treaty of Dover were only known to Clifford, whose soul
+was fired by them, and to Arlington, who did not share the confident
+hopes of his co-religionist. Clifford thought there were thousands of
+Englishmen "of light and leading" among the English Catholics who would
+be both willing and able to assume the burdens of the State and to rally
+round a Catholic king. Arlington thought otherwise.
+
+The king's public conversion never took place. No hint was given of any
+such impending event. Parliament met on the 24th of October 1670, and
+after hearing a good deal about the Triple Alliance and voting large
+sums of money, was prorogued in April 1671, and did not meet again till
+February 1673.
+
+To pick a quarrel with the Dutch was never difficult. Marvell tells us
+how it was done. "A sorry yacht, but bearing the English Jack, in August
+1671 sails into the midst of the Dutch fleet, singles out the Admiral,
+shooting twice as they call it, sharp upon him. Which must sure have
+appeared as ridiculous and unnatural as for a lark to dare the hobby."
+The Dutch admiral asking "Why," was told "because he and his whole fleet
+had failed to strike sail to his small craft." The Dutch commander then
+"civilly excused it as a matter of the first instance, and in which he
+could have no instruction, therefore proper to be referred to their
+masters, and so they parted. The yacht having thus acquitted itself,
+returned fraught with the quarrel she was sent for."[187:1] Surinam was
+a perpetual _casus belli_. Some offence against the law of nations was
+always happening there. A third matter, very full of gunpowder, was made
+great use of by the promoters of the war already agreed upon. A picture
+had been hung at Dort representing De Witt sailing up the Medway very
+much in the manner described in Marvell's poem. Medals also had been
+struck and distributed in commemoration of the same event. War was
+declared against Holland by England and France in March 1672. The
+Declaration of War was preceded by the Declaration of Indulgence,
+whereby, wrote Marvell, "all the penal laws against Papists for which
+former Parliaments had given so many supplies, and against
+Nonconformists for which this Parliament had paid more largely, were at
+one instant suspended in order to defraud the nation of all that
+religion which they had so dearly purchased, and for which they ought at
+least, the bargain being broke, to have been reimbursed."[187:2]
+
+The unconstitutional suspension of bad laws put lovers of freedom in a
+predicament. Marvell was what he calls a "composure," that is a
+"comprehension," man. In the _Growth of Popery_ he sorrowfully admits
+that it is the gravest reproach of human wisdom that no man seems able
+or willing to find out the due temper of Government in divine matters.
+
+ "Insomuch that it is no great adventure to say, that the world was
+ better ordered under the ancient monarchies and commonwealths, that
+ the number of virtuous men was then greater, and that the Christians
+ found fairer quarter under those than among themselves, nor hath
+ there any advantage accrued unto mankind from that most perfect and
+ practical model of humane society, except the speculation of a better
+ way to future happiness, concerning which the very guides disagree,
+ and of those few that follow, it will suffer no man to pass without
+ paying at their turnpikes." (Vol. iv. p. 280.)
+
+The French Alliance made the war, though with Holland, unpopular.
+Writers had to be hired to defend it. France was supposed to look on
+with much composure as her two maritime competitors battered each
+other's fleets. At sea the honours were divided between the Dutch and
+the English. On land Louis had it all his own way. Besides, rumours got
+abroad of an uncomfortable plot to restore Popery. Jesuits seemed to
+abound. Roman Catholics asserted themselves, the laws being suspended.
+An army was collected at Blackheath. The Treasury was closed. Charles
+had been badly bled by the goldsmiths or bankers, who had charged him
+L12 per cent.; but in commercial centres Acts of Bankruptcy are seldom
+popular, and though the bankers were compelled to be content with L6 per
+cent., the closing of the Treasury brought ruin into many homes.
+
+When Parliament met in February 1673, its temper was bad. It would have
+nothing to do with the Declaration of Indulgence, and though the king
+had told them, in the round set terms he could so well command, that he
+was resolved to stick to his declaration, he had to give way and to see
+the House busy itself with a Test Bill that drove all Roman Catholics,
+from the Duke of York (who had "gone over" in the spring of 1672)
+downwards, out of office. The only effect of Charles's policy was to
+mitigate the hostility of the House of Commons to Protestant Dissenters,
+and to drive it to concentrate its jealousy upon the Catholics. Any
+lurking idea of the king declaring himself a Romanist had to be
+abandoned. His hatred of Parliament increased. He lost all sense of
+shame, and frankly became a pensioner of France. In 1676 he concluded a
+second secret treaty, whereby both Louis and himself bound themselves to
+enter into no engagements with other powers without consent, and in case
+of rebellion within their realms to come to each other's assistance.
+Louis agreed to make Charles an annual allowance of a hundred thousand,
+afterwards increased to two hundred thousand _livres_. This money was
+largely spent in bribing the House of Commons. The French ambassador was
+allowed an extra grant of a thousand crowns a month to keep a table for
+hungry legislators.[189:1] Did not Marvell do well to be angry?
+
+Some of Marvell's letters belonging to this gloomy period are full of
+interest.
+
+
+ _To William Ramsden, Esq._
+ "_Nov. 28, 1670._
+
+ "DEAR WILL,--I need not tell you I am always thinking of you. All
+ that has happened, which is remarkable, since I wrote, is as
+ follows: The Lieutenancy of London, chiefly Sterlin the Mayor, and
+ Sir J. Robinson, alarmed the King continually with the Conventicles
+ there. So the King sent them strict and large powers. The Duke of
+ York every Sunday would come over thence to look to the peace. To
+ say truth, they met in numerous open assemblys, without any dread of
+ government. But the train bands in the city, and soldiery in
+ Southwark and suburbs, harassed and abused them continually; they
+ wounded many, and killed some Quakers especially, while they took
+ all patiently. Hence arose two things of great remark. The
+ Lieutenancy, having got orders to their mind, pick out Hays and
+ Jekill, the innocentist of the whole party, to show their power on.
+ They offer them illegal bonds of five thousand pounds a man, which
+ if they would not enter into, they must go to prison. So they were
+ committed, and at last (but it is a very long story) got free. Some
+ friends engaged for them. The other was the tryal of Pen and Mead,
+ quakers, at the Old Baily. The jury not finding them guilty, as the
+ Recorder and Mayor would have had them, they were kept without meat
+ or drink some three days, till almost starved, but would not alter
+ their verdict; so fined and imprisoned. There is a book out which
+ relates all the passages, which were very pertinent, of the
+ prisoners, but prodigiously barbarous by the Mayor and Recorder. The
+ Recorder, among the rest, commended the Spanish Inquisition, saying
+ it would never be well till we had something like it. The King had
+ occasion for sixty thousand pounds. Sent to borrow it of the city.
+ Sterlin, Robinson, and all the rest of that faction, were at it many
+ a week, and could not get above ten thousand. The fanatics under
+ persecution, served his Majesty. The other party, both in court and
+ city, would have prevented it. But the King protested mony would be
+ acceptable. So the King patched up, out of the Chamber, and other
+ ways, twenty thousand pounds. The fanatics, of all sorts, forty
+ thousand. The King, though against many of his council, would have
+ the Parliament sit this twenty-fourth of October. He, and the Keeper
+ spoke of nothing but to have mony. Some one million three hundred
+ thousand pounds, to pay off the debts at interest; and eight hundred
+ thousand for a brave navy next Spring. Both speeches forbid to be
+ printed, for the King said very little, and the Keeper, it was
+ thought, too much in his politic simple discourse of foreign
+ affairs. The House was thin and obsequious. They voted at first they
+ would supply him according to his occasions, _Nemine_, as it was
+ remarked, _contradicente_; but few affirmatives, rather a silence as
+ of men ashamed and unwilling. Sir R. Howard, Seymour, Temple, Car,
+ and Hollis, openly took leave of their former party, and fell to
+ head the King's busyness. There is like to be a terrible Act of
+ Conventicles. The Prince of Orange here is much made of. The King
+ owes him a great deal of mony. The Paper is full.--I am yours," etc.
+
+The trial of William Penn and William Mead at the Old Bailey for a
+tumultuous assembly, written by themselves, may be read in the _State
+Trials_, vol. vi. The trial was the occasion of Penn's famous remark to
+the Recorder of London, who, driven wellnigh distracted by Penn's
+dialectics, exclaimed, "If I should suffer you to ask questions till
+to-morrow morning you would never be the wiser." "That," replied Penn,
+"would be according as the answers are."
+
+
+ _To William Ramsden, Esq._
+ (Undated.)
+
+ "DEAR WILL,--The Parliament are still proceeding, but not much
+ advanced on their eight hundred thousand pounds Bill on money at
+ interest, offices, and lands; and the Excise Bills valued at four
+ hundred thousand pounds a year. The first for the navy, which scarce
+ will be set out. The last to be for paying one million three hundred
+ thousand pounds, which the King owes at interest, and perhaps may be
+ given for four, five, or six years, as the House chances to be in
+ humour. But an accident happened which liked to have spoiled all:
+ Sir John Coventry having moved for an imposition on the playhouses,
+ Sir John Berkenhead, to excuse them, sayed they had been of great
+ service to the King. Upon which Sir John Coventry desired that
+ gentleman to explain whether he meant the men or the women players.
+ Hereupon it is imagined, that, the House adjourning from Tuesday
+ before till Thursday after Christmas-day, on the very Tuesday night
+ of the adjournment, twenty-five of the Duke of Monmouth's troop, and
+ some few foot, layed in wait from ten at night till two in the
+ morning, by Suffolk-street, and as he returned from the Cock, where
+ he supped, to his own house, they threw him down, and with a knife
+ cut off almost the end of his nose; but company coming made them
+ fearful to finish it, so they marched off. Sir Thomas Sands,
+ lieutenant of the troop, commanded the party; and O'Brian, the Earl
+ of Inchequin's son, was a principal actor. The Court hereupon
+ sometimes thought to carry it with a high hand, and question Sir
+ John for his words, and maintain the action. Sometimes they flagged
+ in their counsels. However, the King commanded Sir Thomas Clarges,
+ and Sir W. Pultney, to release Wroth and Lake, who were two of the
+ actors, and taken. But the night before the House met they
+ surrendered them again. The House being but sullen the next day, the
+ Court did not oppose adjourning for some days longer till it was
+ filled. Then the House went upon Coventry's busyness, and voted that
+ they would go upon nothing else whatever till they had passed a
+ Bill, as they did, for Sands, O'Brian, Parry, and Reeves, to come in
+ by the sixteenth of February, or else be condemned, and never to be
+ pardoned, but by an express Act of Parliament, and their names
+ therein inserted, for fear of being pardoned in some general act of
+ grace. Farther of all such actions, for the future on any man,
+ felony, without clergy; and who shall otherwise strike or wound any
+ parliament-man, during his attendance, or going or coming,
+ imprisonment for a year, treble damages, and incapacity. This Bill
+ having in some few days been dispatched to the Lords, the House has
+ since gone on in grand Committee upon the first eight hundred
+ thousand pounds Bill, but are not yet half way. But now the Lords,
+ instead of the sixteenth of February, put twenty-five days after the
+ King's royal assent, and that registered in their journal; they
+ disagree in several other things, but adhere in that first, which is
+ most material. Adhere, in this place, signifies not to be retracted,
+ and excludes a free conference. So that this week the Houses will be
+ in danger of splitting, without much wisdom or force. For
+ considering that Sir Thomas Sands was the very person sent to
+ Clarges and Pultney, that O'Brian was concealed in the Duke of
+ Monmouth's lodgings, that Wroth and Lake were bayled at the sessions
+ by order from Mr. Attorney, and that all persons and things are
+ perfectly discovered, that act will not be passed without great
+ consequence. George's father obliges you much in Tangier. Prince
+ Edgar is dying. The Court is at the highest pitch of want and
+ luxury, and the people full of discontent, Remember me to
+ yourselves."
+
+
+ _To William Ramsden, Esq._
+ (Undated.)
+
+ "DEAR WILL,--I think I have not told you that, on our Bill of
+ Subsidy, the Lord Lucas made a fervent bold speech against our
+ prodigality in giving, and the weak looseness of the government, the
+ King being present; and the Lord Clare another to persuade the King
+ that he ought not to be present. But all this had little
+ encouragement, not being seconded. Copys going about everywhere, one
+ of them was brought into the Lords' House, and Lord Lucas was asked
+ whether it was his. He sayd part was, and part was not. Thereupon
+ they took advantage, and sayed it was a libel even against Lucas
+ himself. On this they voted it a libel, and to be burned by the
+ hangman. Which was done; but the sport was, the hangman burned the
+ Lords' order with it. I take the last quarrel betwixt us and the
+ Lords to be as the ashes of that speech. Doubtless you have heard,
+ before this time, how Monmouth, Albemarle, Dunbane, and seven or
+ eight gentlemen, fought with the watch, and killed a poor bedle.
+ They have all got their pardons, for Monmouth's sake; but it is an
+ act of great scandal. The King of France is at Dunkirke. We have no
+ fleet out, though we gave the Subsidy Bill, valued at eight hundred
+ thousand pounds, for that purpose. I believe, indeed, he will
+ attempt nothing on us, but leave us to dy a natural death. For
+ indeed never had poor nation so many complicated, mortal, incurable,
+ diseases. You know the Dutchess of York is dead. All gave her for a
+ Papist. I think it will be my lot to go on an honest fair employment
+ into Ireland. Some have smelt the court of Rome at that distance.
+ There I hope I shall be out of the smell of our.... --Yours," etc.
+
+
+ _To a Friend in Persia._
+ "_August 9, 1671._
+
+ "DEAR SIR,--I have yours of the 12th of October 1670, which was in
+ all respects most welcome to me, except when I considered that to
+ write it you endured some pain, for you say your hand is not yet
+ recovered. If I could say any thing to you towards the advancement
+ of your affairs, I could, with a better conscience, admit you should
+ spend so much of your precious time, as you do, upon me. But you
+ know how far those things are out of my road, tho', otherwise, most
+ desirous in all things to be serviceable to you. God's good
+ providence, which hath through so dangerous a disease and so many
+ difficultys preserved and restored you, will, I doubt not, conduct
+ you to a prosperous issue, and the perfection of your so laudable
+ undertakings. And, under that, your own good genius, in conjunction
+ with your brother here, will, I hope, though at the distance of
+ England and Persia, in good time operate extraordinary effects; for
+ the magnetism of two souls, rightly touched, works beyond all
+ natural limits, and it would be indeed too unequal, if good nature
+ should not have at least as large a sphere of activity, as malice,
+ envy, and detraction, which are, it seems, part of the returns from
+ Gombroon and Surat. All I can say to you in that matter is, that you
+ must, seeing it will not be better, stand upon your guard; for in
+ this world a good cause signifys little, unless it be as well
+ defended. A man may starve at the feast of good conscience. My
+ fencing master in Spain, after he had instructed me all he could,
+ told me, I remember, there was yet one secret, against which there
+ was no defence, and that was, to give the first blow. I know your
+ maxim, _Qui festinat ditescere, non erit innocens_. Indeed while you
+ preserve that mind, you will have the blessing both of God and man.
+ In general I perceive, and am very glad of it, that by your good
+ management, your friends here get ground, and the flint in your
+ adversarys' hearts begins to be mollifyed. Now after my usual
+ method, leaving to others what relates to busyness, I address
+ myself, which is all I am good for, to be your gazettier. I am sorry
+ to perceive that mine by the Armenian miscarryed. Tho' there was
+ nothing material in it, the thoughts of friends are too valuable to
+ fall into the hands of a stranger. I wrote the last February at
+ large, and wish it a better passage. In this perhaps I may interfere
+ something with that, chusing rather to repeat than omit. The King
+ having, upon pretence of the great preparations of his neighbours,
+ demanded three hundred thousand pounds for his navy (though in
+ conclusion he hath not set out any) and that the Parliament should
+ pay his debts, which the ministers would never particularize to the
+ House of Commons, our House gave several bills. You see how far
+ things were stretched, though beyond reason, there being no
+ satisfaction how those debts were contracted, and all men foreseeing
+ that what was given would not be applyed to discharge the debts,
+ which I hear are at this day risen to four millions, but diverted as
+ formerly. Nevertheless such was the number of the constant courtiers
+ increased by the apostate patriots, who were bought off, for that
+ turn, some at six, others ten, one at fifteen thousand pounds in
+ money, besides what offices, lands, and reversions, to others, that
+ it is a mercy they gave not away the whole land, and liberty, of
+ England. The Earl of Clare made a very bold and rational harangue,
+ the King being present, against the King's sitting among the Lords,
+ contrary to former precedents, during their debates; but he was not
+ seconded. The King had this April prorogued, upon the Houses
+ cavilling, and their harsh conferences concerning some bills, the
+ Parliament from this April till the 16th of April 1672. Sir John
+ Coventry's Bill against Cutting Noses passed, and O'Brian and Sir
+ Thomas Sands, not appearing at the Old Baily by the time limited,
+ stand attainted and outlawed, without possibility of pardon. The
+ Duke of Buckingham is again one hundred and forty thousand pounds in
+ debt, and, by this prorogation, his creditors have time to tear all
+ his lands in pieces. The House of Commons has run almost to the end
+ of their line, and are grown extreme chargeable to the King, and
+ odious to the people. Lord St. John, Marquess of Westminster's son,
+ one of the House of Commons, Sir Robert Howard, Sir John Benet, Lord
+ Arlington's brother, Sir William Bucknoll, the brewer, all of the
+ House, in fellowship with some others of the city, have farmed the
+ old customs, with the new act of Imposition upon Wines, and the Wine
+ Licenses, at six hundred thousand pounds a year, to begin this
+ Michaelmas. You may be sure they have covenants not to be losers.
+ They have signed and sealed ten thousand pounds a year more to the
+ Duchess of Cleveland, who has likewise near ten thousand pounds a
+ year out of the new farm of the country excise of Beer and Ale, five
+ thousand pounds a year out of the Post Office, and, they say, the
+ reversion of all the King's leases, the reversion of places all in
+ the Custom House, the green wax, and indeed, what not? All
+ promotions, spiritual and temporal, pass under her cognizance.
+ Buckingham runs out of all with the Lady Shrewsbury, by whom he
+ believes he had a son, to whom the King stood godfather; it dyed,
+ young Earl of Coventry, and was buryed in the sepulchre of his
+ fathers. The King of France made a warlike progresse this summer
+ through his conquests of Flanders, but kept the peace there, and
+ detains still the Dutchy of Lorain, and has stired up the German
+ Princes against the free towns. The Duke of Brunswick has taken the
+ town of Brunswick; and now the Bishop of Cullen is attacking the
+ city of Colen. We truckle to France in all things, to the prejudice
+ of our honour. Barclay is still Lieutenant of Ireland; but he was
+ forced to come over to pay ten thousand pounds rent to his Landlady
+ Cleveland. My Lord Angier, who bought of Sir George Carteret for
+ eleven thousand pounds, the Vice-treasurership of Ireland, worth
+ five thousand pounds a year, is, betwixt knavery and foolery, turned
+ out. Dutchess of York and Prince Edgar, dead. None left but
+ daughters. One Blud, outlawed for a plot to take Dublin Castle, and
+ who seized on the Duke of Ormond here last year, and might have
+ killed him, a most bold, and yet sober fellow, some months ago
+ seized the crown and sceptre in the Tower, took them away, and if he
+ had killed the keeper, might have carried them clear off. He, being
+ taken, astonished the King and Court, with the generosity, and
+ wisdom, of his answers. He, and all his accomplices, for his sake,
+ are discharged by the King, to the wonder of all.--Yours," etc.
+
+
+ _To William Ramsden, Esq._
+ "_June 1672._
+
+ "DEAR WILL,--Affairs begin to alter, and men talk of a peace with
+ Holland, and taking them into our protection; and it is my opinion
+ it will be before Michaelmas, for some reasons, not fit to write. We
+ cannot have a peace with France and Holland both. The Dutch are now
+ brought very low; but Amsterdam, and some other provinces, are
+ resolved to stand out till the last. De-wit is stabbed, and dead of
+ his wounds. It was at twelve a clock at night, the 11th of this
+ month, as he came from the council at the Hague. Four men wounded
+ him with their swords. But his own letter next morning to the States
+ says nothing appeared mortal. The whole Province of Utrecht is
+ yielding up. No man can conceive the condition of the State of
+ Holland, in this juncture, unless he can at the same time conceive
+ an earthquake, an hurricane, and the deluge. France is potent and
+ subtle. Here have been several fires of late. One at St.
+ Catherine's, which burned about six score or two hundred houses, and
+ some seven or eight ships. Another in Bishopsgate-street. Another in
+ Crichet Fryars. Another in Southwark; and some elsewhere. You may be
+ sure all the old talk is hereupon revived. There was the other day,
+ though not on this occasion, a severe proclamation issued out
+ against all who shall vent false news, or discourse ill concerning
+ affairs of state. So that in writing to you I run the risque of
+ making a breech in the commandment.--Yours," etc.
+
+The following letter deals with another matter of human concern than
+politics, for it seeks to condole with a father who has lost an only
+son.
+
+
+ _To Sir John Trott_
+ (Undated.)
+
+ "HONOURED SIR,--I have not that vanity to believe, if you weigh your
+ late loss by the common ballance, that any thing I can write to you
+ should lighten your resentments: nor if you measure things by the
+ rules of christianity, do I think it needful to comfort you in your
+ duty and your son's happyness. Only having a great esteem and
+ affection for you, and the grateful memory of him that is departed
+ being still green and fresh upon my spirit, I cannot forbear to
+ inquire, how you have stood the second shock at your sad meeting of
+ friends in the country. I know that the very sight of those who have
+ been witnesses of our better fortune, doth but serve to reinforce a
+ calamity. I know the contagion of grief and infection of tears, and
+ especially when it runs in a blood. And I myself could sooner imitate
+ than blame those innocent relentings of nature, so that they spring
+ from tenderness only and humanity, not from an implacable sorrow. The
+ tears of a family may flow together like those little drops that
+ compact the rainbow, and if they be placed with the same advantage
+ towards Heaven as those are to the sun, they too have their
+ splendour; and like that bow, while they unbend into seasonable
+ showers, yet they promise, that there shall not be a second flood.
+ But the dissoluteness of grief, the prodigality of sorrow, is neither
+ to be indulged in a man's self, nor complyed with in others. If that
+ were allowable in these cases, Eli's was the readyest way and highest
+ compliment of mourning, who fell back from his seat and broke his
+ neck. But neither does that precedent hold. For though he had been
+ Chancellor, and in effect King of Israel, for so many years (and such
+ men value, as themselves, their losses at an higher rate than
+ others), yet, when he heard that Israel was overcome, that his two
+ sons Hophni and Phineas were slain in one day, and saw himself so
+ without hope of issue, and which imbittered it farther, without
+ succession to the government, yet he fell not till the news that the
+ ark of God was taken. I pray God that we may never have the same
+ parallel perfected in our publick concernments. Then we shall need
+ all the strength of grace and nature to support us. But on a private
+ loss, and sweetened with so many circumstances as yours, to be
+ impatient, to be uncomfortable would be to dispute with God. Though
+ an only son be inestimable, yet it is like Jonah's sin, to be angry
+ at God for the withering of his shadow. Zipporah, though the delay
+ had almost cost her husband his life, yet, when he did but circumcise
+ her son, in a womanish peevishness reproached Moses as a bloody
+ husband. But if God take the son himself, but spare the father, shall
+ we say that He is a bloody God? He that gave His own son, may He not
+ take ours? It is pride that makes a rebel; and nothing but the
+ over-weening of ourselves and our own things that raises us against
+ Divine Providence. Whereas Abraham's obedience was better than
+ sacrifice. And if God please to accept both, it is indeed a farther
+ tryal, but a greater honour. I could say over upon this beaten
+ occasion most of those lessons of morality and religion which have
+ been so often repeated, and are as soon forgotten. We abound with
+ precept, but we want examples. You, sir, that have all these things
+ in your memory, and the clearness of whose judgment is not to be
+ obscured by any greater interposition, should be exemplary to others
+ in your own practice. 'Tis true, it is an hard task to learn and
+ teach at the same time. And, where yourselves are the experiment, it
+ is as if a man should dissect his own body, and read the anatomy
+ lecture. But I will not heighten the difficulty while I advise the
+ attempt. Only, as in difficult things, you would do well to make use
+ of all that may strengthen and assist you; the word of God; the
+ society of good men; and the books of the ancients; there is one way
+ more, which is by diversion, business, and activity; which are also
+ necessary to be used in their season. But I myself, who live to so
+ little purpose, can have little authority or ability to advise you in
+ it, who are a person that are and may be much more so, generally
+ useful. All that I have been able to do since, hath been to write
+ this sorry Elogy of your son, which if it be as good as I could wish,
+ it is as yet no indecent employment. However, I know you will take
+ any thing kindly from your very affectionate friend, and most humble
+ servant."
+
+Milton died on the 8th of November 1674. Marvell remained among the
+poet's intimate friends until the end, and intended to write his life.
+It is idle to mourn the loss of an unwritten book, but Marvell's life of
+Milton would have been a treasure.[199:1]
+
+When Parliament met on the 13th of April 1675, members found in their
+places a mock-speech from the throne. They _knew_ the hand that had
+penned it. It was a daring production and ran as follows:--
+
+ _His Majesty's Most Gracious Speech to Both Houses of Parliament_.
+
+ "MY LORDS AND GENTLEMEN,--I told you at our last meeting, the winter
+ was the fittest time for business, and truly I thought so, till my
+ Lord Treasurer assured me the spring was the best season for sallads
+ and subsidies. I hope therefore that April will not prove so
+ unnatural a month, as not to afford some kind showers on my parched
+ exchequer, which gapes for want of them. Some of you, perhaps, will
+ think it dangerous to make me too rich; but I do not fear it; for I
+ promise you faithfully, whatever you give me I will always want; and
+ although in other things my word may be thought a slender authority,
+ yet in that, you may rely on me, I will never break it.
+
+ "MY LORDS AND GENTLEMEN,--I can bear my straits with patience; but my
+ Lord Treasurer does protest to me, that the revenue, as it now
+ stands, will not serve him and me too. One of us must pinch for it,
+ if you do not help me. I must speak freely to you: I am under bad
+ circumstances, for besides my harlots in service, my reformado
+ concubines lye heavy upon me. I have a passable good estate, I
+ confess, but, God's-fish, I have a great charge upon 't. Here's my
+ Lord Treasurer can tell, that all the money designed for next
+ summer's guards must, of necessity, be applyed to the next year's
+ cradles and swadling-cloths. What shall we do for ships then? I hint
+ this only to you, it being your busyness, not mine. I know, by
+ experience, I can live without ships. I lived ten years abroad
+ without, and never had my health better in my life; but how you will
+ be without, I leave to yourselves to judge, and therefore hint this
+ only by the bye: I do not insist upon it. There's another thing I
+ must press more earnestly, and that is this:--It seems a good part of
+ my revenue will expire in two or three years, except you will be
+ pleased to continue it. I have to say for 't, pray, why did you give
+ me so much as you have done, unless you resolve to give on as fast as
+ I call for it? The nation hates you already for giving so much, and
+ I'll hate you too, if you do not give me more. So that if you stick
+ not to me, you must not have a friend in England. On the other hand,
+ if you will give me the revenue I desire, I shall be able to do those
+ things for your religion and liberty, that I have had long in my
+ thoughts, but cannot effect them without a little more money to carry
+ me through. Therefore look to 't and take notice that if you do not
+ make me rich enough to undo you, it shall lie at your doors. For my
+ part I wash my hands on 't. But that I may gain your good opinion,
+ the best way is to acquaint you what I have done to deserve it, out
+ of my royal care for your religion and your property. For the first,
+ my proclamation is a true picture of my mind, He that cannot, as in a
+ glass, see my zeal for the Church of England, does not deserve any
+ farther satisfaction, for I declare him wilful, abominable, and not
+ good. Some may, perhaps, be startled, and cry, how comes this sudden
+ change? To which I answer, I am a changling, and that's sufficient, I
+ think. But to convince men farther, that I mean what I say, there are
+ these arguments:--
+
+ "First, I tell you so, and you know I never break my word.
+
+ "Secondly, My Lord Treasurer says so, and he never told a lye in
+ his life.
+
+ "Thirdly, My Lord Lauderdale will undertake it for me; and I
+ should be loath, by any act of mine, he should forfeit the
+ credit he has with you.
+
+ "If you desire more instances of my zeal, I have them for you. For
+ example, I have converted my natural sons from Popery; and I may say,
+ without vanity, it was my own work, so much the more peculiarly mine
+ than the begetting them. 'Twould do one's heart good to hear how
+ prettily George can read already in the Psalter. They are all fine
+ children, God bless 'em, and so like me in their understandings. But,
+ as I was saying, I have, to please you, given a pension to your
+ favourite my Lord Lauderdale; not so much that I thought he wanted
+ it, as that you would take it kindly. I have made Carwell dutchess of
+ Portsmouth, and marryed her sister to the Earl of Pembroke. I have,
+ at my brother's request, sent my Lord Inchequin into Barbary, to
+ settle the Protestant Religion among the Moors, and an English
+ Interest at Tangier. I have made Crew Bishop of Durham, and, at the
+ first word of my Lady Portsmouth, Prideaux Bishop of Chichester. I
+ know not, for my part, what factious men would have; but this I am
+ sure of, my predecessors never did anything like this, to gain the
+ good will of their subjects. So much for your religion, and now for
+ your property. My behaviour to the Bankers is a publick instance; and
+ the proceedings between Mrs. Hyde and Mrs. Sutton for private ones,
+ are such convincing evidences, that it will be needless to say any
+ more to 't.
+
+ "I must now acquaint you, that, by my Lord Treasurer's advice, I have
+ made a considerable retrenchment upon my expenses in candles and
+ charcoal, and do not intend to stop there, but will, with your help,
+ look into the late embezzlements of my dripping-pans and
+ kitchen-stuff; of which, by the way, upon my conscience, neither my
+ Lord Treasurer nor my Lord Lauderdale are guilty. I tell you my
+ opinion; but if you should find them dabling in that busyness, I tell
+ you plainly, I leave 'em to you; for, I would have the world to know,
+ I am not a man to be cheated.
+
+ "My Lords and Gentlemen, I desire you to believe me as you have found
+ me; and I do solemnly promise you, that whatsoever you give me shall
+ be specially managed with the same conduct, trust, sincerity, and
+ prudence, that I have ever practised, since my happy
+ restoration."[202:1]
+
+Mock King's Speeches have often been made, but this is the first, and I
+think still the best of them all.
+
+There was no shaking off religion from the debates of those days. A new
+Oaths Bill suddenly appeared in the House of Lords, where it gave rise
+to one of the greatest debates that assembly has ever witnessed,
+lasting seventeen days. The bishops were baited by the peers with great
+spirit, and the report of the proceedings may still be read with gusto.
+
+Marvell, in his _Growth of Popery_, thus describes what happened:--
+
+ "While these things were upon the anvil, the 10th of November was
+ come for the Parliament's sitting, but that was put off till the 13th
+ of April 1675. And in the meantime, which fell out most opportune for
+ the conspirators, these counsels were matured, and something further
+ to be contrived, that was yet wanting; the Parliament accordingly
+ meeting, and the House of Lords, as well as that of the Commons,
+ being in deliberation of several wholesome bills, such as the present
+ state of the nation required, the great design came out in a bill
+ unexpectedly offered one morning in the House of Lords, whereby all
+ such as injoyed any beneficial office, or imployment, ecclesiastical,
+ civil, or military, to which was added privy counsellors, justices of
+ the peace, and members of Parliament, were under a penalty to take
+ the oath, and make the declaration, and abhorrence, insuring:--
+
+ 'I A.B. do declare, that it is not lawful upon any pretence
+ whatsoever to take up arms against the King, and that I do
+ abhor that traiterous position of taking arms by his authority
+ against his person, or against those that are commissioned by
+ him in pursuance of such commission. And I do swear, that I
+ will not at any time indeavour the alteration of the government
+ either in Church or State. So help me God.'
+
+ "This same oath had been brought into the House of Commons in the
+ plague year at Oxford, to have been imposed upon the nation, but
+ there, by the assistance of those very same persons that now
+ introduce it, 'twas thrown out, for fear of a general infection of
+ the vitals of this kingdom; and though it passed then in a particular
+ bill, known by the name of the Five Mile Act, because it only
+ concerned the non-conformist preachers, yet even in that, it was
+ thoroughly opposed by the late Earl of Southampton, whose judgement
+ might well have been reckoned for the standard of prudence and
+ loyalty."[204:1]
+
+Of the proposed oath Marvell says, "No Conveyancer could ever in more
+compendious or binding terms have drawn a dissettlement of the whole
+birthright of England."
+
+This was no mere legal quibbling.
+
+ "These things are no niceties, or remote considerations (though in
+ making of laws, and which must come afterwards under construction of
+ judges, _durante bene placito_, all cases are to be put and imagined)
+ but there being an act in Scotland for 20,000 men to march into
+ England upon call, and so great a body of English soldiery in France,
+ within summons, besides what foreigners may be obliged by treaty to
+ furnish, and it being so fresh in memory, what sort of persons had
+ lately been in commission among us, to which add the many books then
+ printed by license, writ, some by men of the black, one of the green
+ cloth, wherein the absoluteness of the English monarchy is against
+ all law asserted.
+
+ "All these considerations put together were sufficient to make any
+ honest and well advised man to conceive indeed, that upon the passing
+ of this oath and declaration, the whole sum of affairs depended.
+
+ "It grew therefore to the greatest contest, that has perhaps ever
+ been in Parliament, wherein those Lords, that were against this oath,
+ being assured of their own loyalty and merit, stood up now for the
+ English liberties with the same genius, virtue, and courage, that
+ their noble ancestors had formerly defended the great Charter of
+ England, but with so much greater commendation, in that they had here
+ a fairer field and a more civil way of decision; they fought it out
+ under all the disadvantages imaginable; they were overlaid by
+ numbers; the noise of the House, like the wind, was against them, and
+ if not the sun, the fireside was always in their faces; nor being so
+ few, could they, as their adversaries, withdraw to refresh themselves
+ in a whole day's ingagement: yet never was there a clearer
+ demonstration how dull a thing is humane eloquence, and greatness
+ how little, when the bright truth discovers all things in their
+ proper colours and dimensions, and shining, shoots its beams thorow
+ all their fallacies. It might be injurious, where all of them did so
+ excellently well, to attribute more to any one of those Lords than
+ another, unless because the Duke of Buckingham and the Earl of
+ Shaftesbury, have been the more reproached for this brave action, it
+ be requisite by a double proportion of praise to set them two on
+ equal terms with the rest of their companions in honour. The
+ particular relation in this debate, which lasted many days, with
+ great eagerness on both sides, and the reasons but on one, was in the
+ next Session burnt by order of the Lords, but the sparks of it will
+ eternally fly in their adversaries' faces."[205:1]
+
+In a letter to his constituents, dated April 22, 1675, Marvell was
+content to say: "The Lords sate the whole day yesterday till ten at
+night without rising (and the King all the while but of our addresses
+present) upon their Bill of Test in both houses and are not yet come to
+the question of committing it."
+
+After prolonged discussion the Oath Bill was sent to the Commons, where
+doubtless it must have passed, had not a furious privilege quarrel over
+Sir John Fagg's case made prorogation in June almost a necessity. In
+October Parliament met again, and at once resolved itself into a
+Committee upon Religion to prevent the growth of Popery. This time the
+king made almost an end of the Parliament by a prorogation which lasted
+from November 1675 until February 1677--a period of fifteen months.
+
+On the re-assembling of Parliament the Duke of Buckingham fathered the
+argument much used during the long recess, that a prorogation extending
+beyond twelve months was in construction of law a dissolution.
+
+For the expression of this opinion and the refusal to recant it the
+Duke of Buckingham and three other lords were ordered to the Tower, the
+king being greatly angered by the duke's request that his cook might be
+allowed to wait on him. On this incident Marvell remarks: "Thus a
+prorogation without precedent was to be warranted by an imprisonment
+without example. A sad instance! Whereby the dignity of Parliament and
+especially of the House of Peers did at present much suffer and may
+probably more for the future, _for nothing but Parliament can destroy
+Parliament_. If a House shall once be felon of itself and stop its own
+breath, taking away that liberty of speech which the King verbally, and
+of course, allows them (as now they had done in both houses) to what
+purpose is it coming thither?"[206:1]
+
+The character of this House of Commons did not improve with age.
+
+Marvell writes in the _Growth of Popery_:--
+
+ "In matters of money they seem at first difficult, but having been
+ discoursed with in private, they are set right, and begin to
+ understand it better themselves, and to convert their brethren: for
+ they are all of them to be bought and sold, only their number makes
+ them cheaper, and each of them doth so overvalue himself, that
+ sometimes they outstand or let slip their own market.
+
+ "It is not to be imagined, how small things, in this case, even
+ members of great estates will stoop at, and most of them will do as
+ much for hopes as others for fruition, but if their patience be tired
+ out, they grow at last mutinous, and revolt to the country, till some
+ better occasion offer.
+
+ "Among these are some men of the best understanding were they of
+ equal integrity, who affect to ingross all business, to be able to
+ quash any good motion by parliamentary skill, unless themselves be
+ the authors, and to be the leading men of the House, and for their
+ natural lives to continue so. But these are men that have been once
+ fooled, most of them, and discovered, and slighted at Court, so that
+ till some turn of State shall let them in their adversaries' place,
+ in the mean time they look sullen, make big motions, and contrive
+ specious bills for the subject, yet only wait the opportunity to be
+ the instruments of the same counsels which they oppose in others.
+
+ "There is a third part still remaining, but as contrary in themselves
+ as light and darkness; those are either the worst, or the best of
+ men; the first are most profligate persons, they have neither
+ estates, consciences, nor good manners, yet are therefore picked out
+ as the necessary men, and whose votes will go furthest; the charges
+ of their elections are defrayed, whatever they amount to, tables are
+ kept for them at Whitehall, and through Westminster, that they may be
+ ready at hand, within call of a question: all of them are received
+ into pension, and know their pay-day, which they never fail of:
+ insomuch that a great officer was pleased to say, 'That they came
+ about him like so many jack-daws for cheese at the end of every
+ Session.' If they be not in Parliament, they must be in prison, and
+ as they are protected themselves, by privilege, so they sell their
+ protections to others, to the obstruction so many years together of
+ the law of the land, and the publick justice; for these it is, that
+ the long and frequent adjournments are calculated, but all whether
+ the court, or the monopolizers of the country party, or those that
+ profane the title of old cavaliers, do equally, though upon differing
+ reasons, like death apprehend a dissolution. But notwithstanding
+ these, there is an handful of salt, a sparkle of soul, that hath
+ hitherto preserved this gross body from putrefaction, some gentlemen
+ that are constant, invariable, indeed Englishmen; such as are above
+ hopes, or fears, or dissimulation, that can neither flatter, nor
+ betray their king or country: but being conscious of their own
+ loyalty and integrity, proceed throw good and bad report, to acquit
+ themselves in their duty to God, their prince, and their nation;
+ although so small a scantling in number, that men can scarce reckon
+ of them more than a _quorum_; insomuch that it is less difficult to
+ conceive how fire was first brought to light in the world than how
+ any good thing could ever be produced out of an House of Commons so
+ constituted, unless as that is imagined to have come from the rushing
+ of trees, or battering of rocks together, by accident, so these, by
+ their clashing with one another, have struck out an useful effect
+ from so unlikely causes. But whatsoever casual good hath been wrought
+ at any time by the assimilation of ambitious, factious and
+ disappointed members, to the little, but solid, and unbiassed party,
+ the more frequent ill effects, and consequences of so unequal a
+ mixture, so long continued, are demonstrable and apparent. For while
+ scarce any man comes thither with respect to the publick service, but
+ in design to make and raise his fortune, it is not to be expressed,
+ the debauchery, and lewdness, which, upon occasion of election to
+ Parliaments, are now grown habitual thorow the nation. So that the
+ vice, and the expence, are risen to such a prodigious height, that
+ few sober men can indure to stand to be chosen on such conditions.
+ From whence also arise feuds, and perpetual animosities, over most of
+ the counties and corporations, while gentlemen of worth, spirit, and
+ ancient estates and dependances, see themselves overpowered in their
+ own neighbourhood by the drunkness and bribery, of their competitors.
+ But if nevertheless any worthy person chance to carry the election,
+ some mercenary or corrupt sheriff makes a double return, and so the
+ cause is handed to the Committee of elections, who ask no better, but
+ are ready to adopt his adversary into the House if he be not
+ legitimate. And if the gentleman agrieved seek his remedy against the
+ sheriff in Westminster-Hall, and the proofs be so palpable, that the
+ King's Bench cannot invent how to do him injustice, yet the major
+ part of the twelve judges shall upon better consideration vacate the
+ sheriff's fine and reverse the judgement; but those of them that dare
+ dissent from their brethren are in danger to be turned off the bench
+ without any cause assigned. While men therefore care not thus how
+ they get into the House of Commons, neither can it be expected that
+ they should make any conscience of what they do there, but they are
+ only intent how to reimburse themselves (if their elections were at
+ their own charge) or how to bargain their votes for a place or a
+ pension. They list themselves straightways into some Court faction,
+ and it is as well-known among them, to what Lord each of them
+ retain, as when formerly they wore coats and badges. By this long
+ haunting so together, they are grown too so familiar among
+ themselves, that all reverence of their own Assembly is lost, that
+ they live together not like Parliament men, but like so many good
+ fellows met together in a publick house to make merry. And which is
+ yet worse, by being so thoroughly acquainted, they understand their
+ number and party, so that the use of so publick a counsel is
+ frustrated, there is no place for deliberation, no perswading by
+ reason, but they can see one another's votes through both throats and
+ cravats before they hear them.
+
+ "Where the cards are so well known, they are only fit for a cheat,
+ and no fair gamester but would throw them under the table."[209:1]
+
+It is a melancholy picture.
+
+Here, perhaps, may be best inserted the story about the proffered bribe.
+The story is entitled to small credit, but as helping to swell and
+maintain a tradition concerning an historical character about whom
+little is positively known, it can hardly escape mention in any
+biography of Marvell. A pamphlet printed in Ireland (1754) supplies an
+easy flowing version of the tale.
+
+ "The borough of Hull, in the reign of Charles II., chose Andrew
+ Marvell, a young gentleman of little or no fortune, and maintained
+ him in London for the service of the public. His understanding,
+ integrity, and spirit, were dreadful to the then infamous
+ administration. Persuaded that he would be theirs for properly
+ asking, they sent his old school-fellow, the Lord Treasurer Danby, to
+ renew acquaintance with him in his garret. At parting, the Lord
+ Treasurer, out of _pure affection_, slipped into his hand an order
+ upon the treasury for L1000, and then went to his chariot. Marvell,
+ looking at the paper, calls after the Treasurer, 'My Lord, I request
+ another moment.' They went up again to the garret, and Jack, the
+ servant boy, was called. 'Jack, child, what had I for dinner
+ yesterday?' 'Don't you remember, sir? you had the little shoulder of
+ mutton that you ordered me to bring from a woman in the market.'
+ 'Very right, child.' 'What have I for dinner to-day?' 'Don't you
+ know, sir, that you bid me lay by the _blade-bone to broil_.' ''Tis
+ so, very right, child, go away.' 'My Lord, do you hear that? Andrew
+ Marvell's dinner is provided; there's your piece of paper. I want it
+ not. I knew the sort of kindness you intended. I live here to serve
+ my constituents: the ministry may seek men for their purpose; _I am
+ not one_.'"[210:1]
+
+One more letter remains to be quoted:--
+
+
+ _To William Ramsden, Esq._
+ "_June 10, 1678._
+
+ "DEAR WILL,--I have time to tell you thus much of publick matters.
+ The patience of the Scots, under their oppressions, is not to be
+ paralleled in any history. They still continue their extraordinary
+ and numerous, but peaceable, field conventicles. One Mr. Welch is
+ their arch-minister, and the last letter I saw tells, people were
+ going forty miles to hear him. There came out, about Christmas last,
+ here, a large book concerning the growth of popery and arbitrary
+ government. There have been great rewards offered in private, and
+ considerable in the Gazette, to any one who could inform of the
+ author or printer, but not yet discovered. Three or four printed
+ books since have described, as near as it was proper to go, the man
+ being a Member of Parliament, Mr. Marvell, to have been the author;
+ but if he had, surely he should not have escaped being questioned in
+ Parliament or some other place. My good wishes attend you."
+
+The last letter Andrew Marvell wrote to his constituents is dated July
+6, 1678. The member for Hull died in August 1678. The Parliament in
+which he had sat continuously for eighteen years was at last dissolved
+on the 30th of December in the year of his death.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[181:1] Grosart, vol. iv. p. 248.
+
+[183:1] Ranke's _History of England_, vol. iii. p. 471.
+
+[185:1] Ranke, vol. iii. p. 520.
+
+[187:1] Grosart, vol. iv. (_Growth of Popery_), p. 275.
+
+[187:2] _Ibid._, p. 279.
+
+[189:1] See note to Dr. Airy's edition of Burnet's _History_, vol. ii.
+p. 73.
+
+[199:1] Marvell's commendatory verses on "Mr. Milton's Paradise Lost"
+(so entitled in the volume of 1681) were first printed in the Second
+Edition (1674) of Milton's great poem. Marvell did not agree with Dryden
+in thinking that _Paradise Lost_ would be improved by rhyme, and says so
+in these verses.
+
+[202:1] Printed in Captain Thompson's edition, vol. i. p. 432.
+
+[204:1] Grosart, vol. iv. p. 304.
+
+[205:1] Grosart, vol. iv. p. 308.
+
+[206:1] Grosart, vol. iv. p. 322.
+
+[209:1] Grosart, vol. iv. p. 327.
+
+[210:1] This story is first told in a balder form by Cooke in his
+edition of 1726. It may be read as Cooke tells it in the _Dictionary of
+National Biography_, xxxvi., p. 329. There was probably some foundation
+for it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+FINAL SATIRES AND DEATH
+
+
+Marvell was no orator or debater, and though a member of Parliament for
+nearly eighteen years, but rarely opened his mouth in the House of
+Commons. His old enemy, Samuel Parker, whilst venting his posthumous
+spite upon the author of the _Rehearsal Transprosed_, would have us
+believe "that our Poet could not speak without a sound basting:
+whereupon having frequently undergone this discipline, he learnt at
+length to hold his tongue." There is no good reason for believing the
+Bishop of Oxford, but it is the fact that, however taught, Marvell had
+learnt to hold his tongue. His longest reported speech will be found in
+the _Parliamentary History_, vol. iv. p. 855.[211:1] When we remember
+how frequently in those days Marvell's pet subjects were under fierce
+discussion, we must recognise how fixed was his habit of
+self-repression.
+
+On one occasion only are we enabled to catch a glimpse of Marvell
+"before the Speaker." It was in March 1677, and is thus reported in the
+_Parliamentary History_, though no mention of the incident is made in
+the Journals of the House:--
+
+ "_Debate on Mr. Andrew Marvell's striking Sir Philip Harcourt, March
+ 29._--Mr. Marvell, coming up the house to his place, stumbling at Sir
+ Philip Harcourt's foot, in recovering himself, seemed to give Sir
+ Philip a box on the ear. The Speaker acquainting the house 'That he
+ saw a box on the ear given, and it was his duty to inform the house
+ of it,' this debate ensued.
+
+ "Mr. _Marvell_. What passed was through great acquaintance and
+ familiarity betwixt us. He neither gave him an affront, nor intended
+ him any. But the Speaker cast a severe reflection upon him yesterday,
+ when he was out of the house, and he hopes that, as the Speaker keeps
+ us in order, he will keep himself in order for the future.
+
+ "Sir _John Ernly_. What the Speaker said yesterday was in Marvell's
+ vindication. If these two gentlemen are friends already, he would not
+ make them friends, and would let the matter go no further.
+
+ "Sir _Job. Charlton_ is sorry a thing of this nature has happened,
+ and no more sense of it. You in the Chair, and a stroke struck!
+ Marvell deserves for his reflection on you, Mr. Speaker, to be called
+ in question. You cannot do right to the house unless you question it;
+ and moves to have Marvell sent to the Tower.
+
+ "The _Speaker_. I saw a blow on one side, and a stroke on the other.
+
+ "Sir _Philip Harcourt_. Marvell had some kind of a stumble, and mine
+ was only a thrust; and the thing was accidental.
+
+ "Sir _H. Goodrick_. The persons have declared the thing to be
+ accidental, but if done in jest, not fit to be done here. He believes
+ it an accident, and hopes the house thinks so too.
+
+ "Mr. Sec. _Williamson_. This does appear, that the action for that
+ time was in some heat. He cannot excuse Marvell who made a very
+ severe reflection on the Speaker, and since it is so enquired,
+ whether you have done your duty, he would have Marvell withdraw, that
+ you may consider of it.
+
+ "Col. _Sandys_. Marvell has given you trouble, and instead of
+ excusing himself, reflects upon the Speaker: a strange confidence, if
+ not an impudence!
+
+ "Mr. _Marvell_. Has so great a respect to the privilege, order, and
+ decency, of the house, that he is content to be a sacrifice for it.
+ As to the casualty that happened, he saw a seat empty, and going to
+ sit in it, his friend put him by, in a jocular manner, and what he
+ did was of the same nature. So much familiarity has ever been between
+ them, that there was no heat in the thing. He is sorry he gave an
+ offence to the house. He seldom speaks to the house, and if he commit
+ an error, in the manner of his speech, being not so well tuned, he
+ hopes it is not an offence. Whether out or in the house, he has a
+ respect to the Speaker. But he has been informed that the Speaker
+ resumed something he had said, with reflection. He did not think fit
+ to complain of Mr. Seymour to Mr. Speaker. He believes that is not
+ reflective. He desires to comport himself with all respect to the
+ house. This passage with Harcourt was a perfect casualty, and if you
+ think fit, he will withdraw, and sacrifice himself to the censure of
+ the house.
+
+ "Sir _Henry Capel_. The blow given Harcourt was with his hat; the
+ Speaker cast his eye upon both of them, and both respected him. He
+ would not aggravate the thing. Marvell submits, and he would have you
+ leave the thing as it is.
+
+ "_Sir Robert Holmes_ saw the whole action. Marvell flung about three
+ or four times with his hat, and then gave Harcourt a box on the ear.
+
+ "Sir _Henry Capel_ desires, now that his honour is concerned, that
+ Holmes may explain, whether he saw not Marvell with his hat only give
+ Harcourt the stroke 'at that time.' Possibly 'at another time' it
+ might be.
+
+ "The _Speaker_. Both Holmes and Capel are in the right. But Marvell
+ struck Harcourt so home, that his fist, as well as his hat, hit him.
+
+ "Sir _R. Howard_ hopes the house will not have Harcourt say he
+ received a blow, when he has not. He thinks what has been said by
+ them both sufficient.
+
+ "Mr. _Garraway_ hopes, that by the debate we shall not make the thing
+ greater than it is. Would have them both reprimanded for it.
+
+ "Mr. Sec. _Williamson_ submits the honour of the house to the house.
+ Would have them made friends, and give that necessary assurance to
+ the house, and he, for his part, remains satisfied.
+
+ "Sir _Tho. Meres_. By our long sitting together, we lose, by our
+ familiarity and acquaintance, the decencies of the house. He has seen
+ 500 in the house, and people very orderly; not so much as to read a
+ letter, or set up a foot. One could scarce know anybody in the house,
+ but him that spoke. He would have the Speaker declare that order
+ ought to be kept; but as to that gentleman (Marvell) to rest
+ satisfied."
+
+The general impression left upon the mind is that of a friendly-familiar
+but choleric gentleman, full of likes and dislikes, readier with his
+tongue in the lobby than with "set" speeches in the Chamber. A solitary
+politician with a biting pen. Satirists must not complain if they have
+enemies.
+
+Marvell's vein of satire was never worked out, and the political poems
+of his last decade are fuller than ever of a savage humour. How he kept
+his ears is a repeated wonder. He is said to have been on terms of
+intimate friendship with Prince Rupert, and it is a steady tradition
+that the king was one of his amused readers. It is hard to believe that
+even Charles the Second could have seen any humour, good or bad, in such
+a couplet:--
+
+ "The poor Priapus King, led by the nose,
+ Looks as a thing set up to scare the crows."
+
+Nor can the following verses have been read with much pleasure, either
+at Whitehall or in a punt whilst fishing at Windsor. Their occasion was
+the setting up in the stocks-market in the City of London of a statue of
+the king by Sir Robert Viner, a city knight, to whom Charles was very
+heavily in debt. Sir Robert, having a frugal mind, had acquired a statue
+of John Sobieski trampling on the Turk, which, judiciously altered, was
+made to pass muster so as to represent the Pensioner of Louis the
+Fourteenth and the Vendor of Dunkirk trampling on Oliver Cromwell.
+
+ "As cities that to the fierce conqueror yield
+ Do at their own charges their citadels build;
+ So Sir Robert advanced the King's statue in token
+ Of bankers defeated, and Lombard Street broken.
+
+ Some thought it a knightly and generous deed,
+ Obliging the city with a King and a steed;
+ When with honour he might from his word have gone back;
+ He that vows in a calm is absolved by a wrack.
+
+ But now it appears, from the first to the last,
+ To be a revenge and a malice forecast;
+ Upon the King's birthday to set up a thing
+ That shows him a monkey much more than a King.
+
+ When each one that passes finds fault with the horse,
+ Yet all do affirm that the King is much worse;
+ And some by the likeness Sir Robert suspect
+ That he did for the King his own statue erect.
+
+ Thus to see him disfigured--the herb-women chid,
+ Who up on their panniers more gracefully rid;
+ And so loose in his seat--that all persons agree,
+ E'en Sir William Peak[215:1] sits much firmer than he.
+
+ But Sir Robert affirms that we do him much wrong;
+ 'Tis the 'graver at work, to reform him, so long;
+ But, alas! he will never arrive at his end,
+ For it is such a King as no chisel can mend.
+
+ But with all his errors restore us our King,
+ If ever you hope in December for spring;
+ For though all the world cannot show such another,
+ Yet we'd rather have him than his bigoted brother."
+
+Of a more exalted vein of satire the following extract may serve as an
+example:--
+
+ BRITANNIA AND RALEIGH
+
+ "_Brit._ Ah! Raleigh, when thou didst thy breath resign
+ To trembling James, would I had quitted mine.
+ Cubs didst thou call them? Hadst thou seen this brood
+ Of earls, and dukes, and princes of the blood,
+ No more of Scottish race thou would'st complain,
+ Those would be blessings in this spurious reign.
+ Awake, arise from thy long blessed repose,
+ Once more with me partake of mortal woes!
+
+ _Ral._ What mighty power has forced me from my rest?
+ Oh! mighty queen, why so untimely dressed?
+
+ _Brit._ Favoured by night, concealed in this disguise,
+ Whilst the lewd court in drunken slumber lies,
+ I stole away, and never will return,
+ Till England knows who did her city burn;
+ Till cavaliers shall favourites be deemed,
+ And loyal sufferers by the court esteemed;
+ Till Leigh and Galloway shall bribes reject;
+ Thus Osborne's golden cheat I shall detect:
+ Till atheist Lauderdale shall leave this land,
+ And Commons' votes shall cut-nose guards disband:
+ Till Kate a happy mother shall become,
+ Till Charles loves parliaments, and James hates Rome.
+
+ _Ral._ What fatal crimes make you for ever fly
+ Your once loved court, and martyr's progeny?
+
+ _Brit._ A colony of French possess the Court,
+ Pimps, priests, buffoons, i' the privy-chamber sport.
+ Such slimy monsters ne'er approached the throne
+ Since Pharaoh's reign, nor so defiled a crown.
+ I' the sacred ear tyrannic arts they croak,
+ Pervert his mind, his good intentions choke;
+ Tell him of golden Indies, fairy lands,
+ Leviathan, and absolute commands.
+ Thus, fairy-like, the King they steal away,
+ And in his room a Lewis changeling lay.
+ How oft have I him to himself restored.
+ In's left the scale, in 's right hand placed the sword?
+ Taught him their use, what dangers would ensue
+ To those that tried to separate these two?
+ The bloody Scottish chronicle turned o'er,
+ Showed him how many kings, in purple gore,
+ Were hurled to hell, by learning tyrant lore?
+ The other day famed Spenser I did bring,
+ In lofty notes Tudor's blest reign to sing;
+ How Spain's proud powers her virgin arms controlled,
+ And golden days in peaceful order rolled;
+ How like ripe fruit she dropped from off her throne,
+ Full of grey hairs, good deeds, and great renown.
+ ...
+
+ _Ral._ Once more, great queen, thy darling strive to save,
+ Snatch him again from scandal and the grave;
+ Present to 's thoughts his long-scorned parliament,
+ The basis of his throne and government.
+ In his deaf ears sound his dead father's name:
+ Perhaps that spell may 's erring soul reclaim:
+ Who knows what good effects from thence may spring?
+ 'Tis godlike good to save a falling king.
+
+ _Brit._ Raleigh, no more, for long in vain I've tried
+ The Stuart from the tyrant to divide;
+ As easily learned virtuosos may
+ With the dog's blood his gentle kind convey
+ Into the wolf, and make his guardian turn
+ To the bleating flock, by him so lately torn:
+ If this imperial juice once taint his blood,
+ 'Tis by no potent antidote withstood.
+ Tyrants, like lep'rous kings, for public weal
+ Should be immured, lest the contagion steal
+ Over the whole. The elect of the Jessean line
+ To this firm law their sceptre did resign;
+ And shall this base tyrannic brood invade
+ Eternal laws, by God for mankind made?
+
+ To the serene Venetian state I'll go,
+ From her sage mouth famed principles to know;
+ With her the prudence of the ancients read,
+ To teach my people in their steps to tread;
+ By their great pattern such a state I'll frame,
+ Shall eternize a glorious lasting name.
+ Till then, my Raleigh, teach our noble youth
+ To love sobriety, and holy truth;
+ Watch and preside over their tender age,
+ Lest court corruption should their souls engage;
+ Teach them how arts, and arms, in thy young days,
+ Employed our youth--not taverns, stews, and plays;
+ Tell them the generous scorn their race does owe
+ To flattery, pimping, and a gaudy show;
+ Teach them to scorn the Carwells, Portsmouths, Nells,
+ The Clevelands, Osbornes, Berties, Lauderdales:
+ Poppaea, Tigelline, and Arteria's name,
+ All yield to these in lewdness, lust, and fame.
+ Make them admire the Talbots, Sydneys, Veres,
+ Drake, Cavendish, Blake, men void of slavish fears,
+ True sons of glory, pillars of the state,
+ On whose famed deeds all tongues and writers wait.
+ When with fierce ardour their bright souls do burn,
+ Back to my dearest country I'll return."
+
+The dialogue between the two horses, which bore upon their respective
+backs the stone effigies of Charles the First at Charing Cross and
+Charles the Second at Wool-Church, is, in its own rough way, masterly
+satire for the popular ear.
+
+ "If the Roman Church, good Christians, oblige ye
+ To believe man and beast have spoken in effigy,
+ Why should we not credit the public discourses,
+ In a dialogue between two inanimate horses?
+ The horses I mean of Wool-Church and Charing,
+ Who told many truths worth any man's hearing,
+ Since Viner and Osborn did buy and provide 'em
+ For the two mighty monarchs who now do bestride 'em.
+ The stately brass stallion, and the white marble steed,
+ The night came together, by all 'tis agreed;
+ When both kings were weary of sitting all day,
+ They stole off, incognito, each his own way;
+ And then the two jades, after mutual salutes,
+ Not only discoursed, but fell to disputes."
+
+The dialogue is too long to be quoted. Charles the Second's steed
+boldly declares:--
+
+ "De Witt and Cromwell had each a brave soul,
+ I freely declare it, I am for old Noll;
+ Though his government did a tyrant resemble,
+ He made England great, and his enemies tremble."
+
+Mr. Hollis, when he sent the picture of Cromwell by Cooper to Sidney
+Sussex College, is said to have written beneath it the lines just
+quoted.
+
+The satire ends thus:--
+
+ "_Charing Cross._ But canst them devise when things will be mended?
+
+ _Wool-Church._ When the reign of the line of the Stuarts is ended.
+
+ _Charing Cross._ Then England, rejoice, thy redemption draws nigh;
+ Thy oppression together with kingship shall die.
+
+ _Chorus._ A Commonwealth, a Commonwealth we proclaim to the nation,
+ For the gods have repented the King's restoration."
+
+These probably are the lines which spread the popular, but mistaken,
+belief that Marvell was a Republican.
+
+Andrew Marvell died in his lodgings in London on the 16th of August
+1678. Colonel Grosvenor, writing to George Treby, M.P. (afterwards Chief
+of the Common Pleas), on the 17th of August, reports "Andrew Marvell
+died yesterday of apoplexy." Parliament was not sitting at the time.
+What was said of the elder Andrew may also be said of the younger: he
+was happy in the moment of his death. The one just escaped the Civil
+War, the other the Popish Plot.
+
+Marvell was thought to have been poisoned. Such a suspicion in those bad
+times was not far-fetched. His satires, rough but moving, had been
+widely read, and his fears for the Constitution, his dread of
+
+ "The grim Monster, Arbitrary Power,
+ The ugliest Giant ever trod the earth,"
+
+infested many breasts, and bred terror.
+
+ "Marvell, the Island's watchful sentinel,
+ Stood in the gap and bravely kept his post."
+
+The post was one of obvious danger, and
+
+ "Whether Fate or Art untwin'd his thread
+ Remains in doubt."[220:1]
+
+The doubt has now been dissipated by the research of an accomplished
+physician, Dr. Gee, who in 1874 communicated to the _Athenaeum_ (March 7,
+1874) an extract from Richard Morton's {Greek: Pyretologia} (1692),
+containing a full account of Marvell's sickness and death. Art "untwin'd
+his thread," but it was the doctor's art. Dr. Gee's translation of
+Morton's medical Latin is as follows:--
+
+ "In this manner was that most famous man Andrew Marvell carried off
+ from amongst the living before his time, to the great loss of the
+ republic, and especially the republic of letters; through the
+ ignorance of an old conceited doctor, who was in the habit on all
+ occasions of raving excessively against Peruvian bark, as if it were
+ a common plague. Howbeit, without any clear indication, in the
+ interval after a third fit of regular tertian ague, and by way of
+ preparation (so that all things might seem to be done most
+ methodically), blood was copiously drawn from the patient, who was
+ advanced in years." [Here follow more details of treatment, which I
+ pass over.] "The way having been made ready after this fashion, at
+ the beginning of the next fit, a great febrifuge was given, a
+ draught, that is to say, of Venice treacle, etc. By the doctor's
+ orders, the patient was covered up close with blankets, say rather,
+ was buried under them; and composed himself to sleep and sweat, so
+ that he might escape the cold shivers which are wont to accompany the
+ onset of the ague-fit. He was seized with the deepest sleep and
+ colliquative sweats, and in the short space of twenty-four hours from
+ the time of the ague-fit, he died comatose. He died, who, had a
+ single ounce of Peruvian bark been properly given, might easily have
+ escaped, in twenty-four hours, from the jaws of the grave and the
+ disease: and so burning with anger, I informed the doctor, when he
+ told me this story without any sense of shame."
+
+Marvell was buried on the 18th of August, "under the pews in the south
+side of St. Giles's Church in the Fields, under the window wherein is
+painted on glass a red lion." So writes the invaluable Aubrey, who tells
+us he had the account from the sexton who made the grave.
+
+In 1678 St. Giles's Church was a brick structure built by Laud. The
+present imposing church was built on the site of the old one in 1730-34.
+
+In 1774 Captain Thompson, so he tells us, "visited the grand mausoleum
+under the church of St. Giles, to search for the coffin in which Mr.
+Marvell was placed: in this vault were deposited upwards of a thousand
+bodies, but I could find no plate of an earlier date than 1722; I do
+therefore suppose the new church is built upon the former burial place."
+
+The poet's grand-nephew, Mr. Robert Nettleton, in 1764 placed on the
+north side of the present church, upon a black marble slab, a long
+epitaph, still to be seen, recording the fact that "near to this place
+lyeth the body of Andrew Marvell, Esquire." At no great distance from
+this slab is the tombstone, recently brought in from the graveyard
+outside, of _Georgius Chapman, Poeta_, a fine Roman monument, prepared
+by the care and at the cost of the poet's friend, Inigo Jones. Still
+left exposed, in what is now a doleful garden (not at all Marvellian),
+is the tombstone of Richard Penderel of Boscobel, one of the five yeomen
+brothers who helped Charles to escape after Worcester. Lord Herbert of
+Cherbury, in 1648, and Shirley the dramatist, in 1666, had been carried
+to the same place of sepulture.
+
+Aubrey describes Marvell "as of middling stature, pretty strong-set,
+roundish faced, cherry-cheeked, hazell eye, brown hair. He was, in his
+conversation, very modest, and of very few words. Though he loved wine,
+he would never drink hard in company, and was wont to say that he would
+not play the good fellow in any man's company in whose hands he would
+not trust his life. He kept bottles of wine at his lodgings, and many
+times he would drink liberally by himself and to refresh his spirit and
+exalt his muse. James Harrington (author of _Oceana_) was his intimate
+friend; J. Pell, D.D., was one of his acquaintances. He had not a
+general acquaintance."
+
+Dr. Pell, one may remark, was a great friend of Hobbes.
+
+In March 1679 joint administration was granted by the Prerogative Court
+of Canterbury, _Mariae Marvell relictae et Johni Greni Creditori_. This is
+the first time we hear of there being any wife in the case. A creditor
+of a deceased person could not obtain administration without citing the
+next of kin, but a widow was entitled, under a statute of Henry
+VIII., as of right, to administration, and it may be that Mr.
+Green thought the quickest way of being paid his debt was to invent a
+widow. The practice of the court required an affidavit from the widow
+deposing that she was the lawful relict of the deceased, but this
+assertion on oath seems in ordinary cases to have been sufficient, if
+the customary fees were forthcoming. Captain Thompson roundly asserts
+that the alleged Mary Marvell was a cheat, and no more than the
+lodging-house keeper where he had last lived--and Marvell was a
+migratory man.[223:1] Mary Marvell's name appears once again, in the
+forefront of the first edition of Marvell's _Poems_ (1681), where she
+certifies all the contents to be her husband's works. This may have been
+a publisher's, as the affidavit may have been a creditor's, artifice. As
+against this, Mr. Grosart, who believed in Mary Marvell, reminds us that
+Mr. Robert Boulter, the publisher of the poems, was a most respectable
+man, and a friend both of Milton's and Marvell's, and not at all likely
+either to cheat the public with a falsely signed certificate, or to be
+cheated by a London lodging-house keeper. Whatever "Mary Marvell" may
+have been, "widow, wife, or maid," she is heard of no more.
+
+Hull was not wholly unmindful of her late and (William Wilberforce
+notwithstanding) her most famous member. "On Thursday the 26th of
+September 1678, in consideration of the kindness the Town and Borough
+had for Andrew Marvell, Esq., one of the Burgesses of Parliament for the
+same Borough (lately deceased), and for his great merits from the
+Corporation. It is this day ordered by the Court that Fifty pounds be
+paid out of the Town's Chest towards the discharge of his funerals
+(_sic_), and to perpetuate his memory by a gravestone" (_Bench Books of
+Hull_).
+
+The incumbent of Trinity Church is said to have objected to the erection
+of any monument. At all events there is none. Marvell had many enemies
+in the Church. Sharp, afterwards Archbishop of York, was a Yorkshire
+man, and had been domestic chaplain to Sir Heneage Finch, a
+lawyer-member, much lashed by Marvell's bitter pen. Sharp had also taken
+part in the quarrel with the Dissenters, and is reported to have been
+very much opposed to any Hull monument to Marvell. Captain Thompson says
+"the Epitaph which the Town of Hull caused to be erected to Marvell's
+memory was torn down by the Zealots of the King's party." There is no
+record of this occurrence.
+
+There are several portraits of Marvell in existence--one now being in
+the National Portrait Gallery. A modern statue in marble adorns the Town
+Hall of Hull.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[211:1] In reading the early volumes of the _Parliamentary History_ the
+question has to be asked, What authority is there for the reports of
+speeches? In Charles the Second's time some of the speakers, both in the
+Lords and Commons, evidently communicated their orations to the press.
+
+[215:1] Lord Mayor, 1667.
+
+[220:1] See _Marvell's Ghost_, in _Poems on Affairs of State_.
+
+[223:1] The cottage at Highgate, long called 'Marvell's Cottage,' has
+now disappeared. Several of Marvell's letters were written from
+Highgate.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WORK AS A MAN OF LETTERS
+
+
+Marvell's work as a man of letters easily divides itself into the
+inevitable three parts. _First_, as a poet properly so called; _Second_,
+as a political satirist using rhyme; and _Third_, as a writer of prose.
+
+Upon Marvell's work as a poet properly so called that curious, floating,
+ever-changing population to whom it is convenient to refer as "the
+reading public," had no opportunity of forming any real opinion until
+after the poet's death, namely, when the small folio of 1681 made its
+appearance. This volume, although not containing the _Horatian Ode upon
+Cromwell's Return from Ireland_ or the lines upon Cromwell's death, did
+contain, saving these exceptions, all the best of Marvell's verse.
+
+How this poetry was received, to whom and to how many it gave pleasure,
+we have not the means of knowing. The book, like all other good books,
+had to take its chance. Good poetry is never exactly unpopular--its
+difficulty is to get a hearing, to secure a _vogue_. I feel certain that
+from 1681 onwards many ingenuous souls read _Eyes and Tears_, _The
+Bermudas_, _The Nymph complaining for the Death of her Fawn_, _To his
+Coy Mistress_, _Young Love_, and _The Garden_ with pure delight. In 1699
+the poet Pomfret, of whose _Choice_ Dr. Johnson said in 1780, "perhaps
+no composition in our language has been oftener perused," and who
+Southey in 1807 declared to be "the most popular of English poets"; in
+1699, I say, this poet Pomfret says in a preface, sensibly enough, "to
+please everyone would be a New Thing, and to write so as to please no
+Body would be as New, for even Quarles and Wythers (_sic_) have their
+Admirers." So liable is the public taste to fluctuations and reversals,
+that to-day, though Quarles and Wither are not popular authors, they
+certainly number many more readers than Pomfret, Southey's "most popular
+of English poets," who has now, it is to be feared, finally disappeared
+even from the Anthologies. But if Quarles and Wither had their admirers
+even in 1699, the poet Marvell, we may be sure, had his also.
+
+Marvell had many poetical contemporaries--five-and-twenty at
+least--poets of mark and interest, to most of whom, as well as to some
+of his immediate predecessors, he stood, as I must suppose, in some
+degree of poetical relationship. With Milton and Dryden no comparison
+will suggest itself, but with Donne and Cowley, with Waller and Denham,
+with Butler and the now wellnigh forgotten Cleveland, with Walker and
+Charles Cotton, with Rochester and Dorset, some resemblances, certain
+influences, may be found and traced. From the order of his mind and his
+prose style, I should judge Marvell to have been both a reader and a
+critic of his contemporaries in verse and prose--though of his
+criticisms little remains. Of Butler he twice speaks with great respect,
+and his sole reference to the dead Cleveland is kindly. Of Milton we
+know what he thought, whilst Aubrey tells us that he once heard Marvell
+say that the Earl of Rochester was the only man in England that had the
+true vein of satire.
+
+Be these influences what they may or must have been, to us Marvell
+occupies, as a poet, a niche by himself. A finished master of his art he
+never was. He could not write verses like his friend Lovelace, or like
+Cowley's _Chronicle_ or Waller's lines "On a Girdle." He had not the
+inexhaustible, astonishing (though tiresome) wit of Butler. He is often
+clumsy and sometimes almost babyish. One has frequently occasion to
+wonder how a man of business could allow himself to be tickled by such
+obvious straws as are too many of the conceits which give him pleasure.
+To attribute all the conceits of this period to the influence of Dr.
+Donne is but a poor excuse after all. The worst thing that can be said
+against poetry is that there is so much tedium in it. The glorious
+moments are all too few. It is his honest recognition of this woeful
+fact that makes Dr. Johnson, with all his faults lying thick about him,
+the most consolatory of our critics to the ordinary reading man.
+"Tediousness is the most fatal of all faults.... Unhappily this
+pernicious failure is that which an author is least able to discover. We
+are seldom tiresome to ourselves.... Perhaps no man ever thought a line
+superfluous when he wrote it" (_Lives of the Poets_. Under _Prior_--see
+also under _Butler_).
+
+That Marvell is never tiresome I will not assert. But he too has his
+glorious moments, and they are all his own. In the whole compass of our
+poetry there is nothing quite like Marvell's love of gardens and woods,
+of meads and rivers and birds. It is a love not learnt from books, not
+borrowed from brother-poets. It is not indulged in to prove anything. It
+is all sheer enjoyment.
+
+ "Bind me, ye woodbines, in your twines,
+ Curb me about, ye gadding vines,
+ And oh, so close your circles lace,
+ That I may never leave this place!
+ But, lest your fetters prove too weak,
+ Ere I your silken bondage break,
+ Do you, O brambles, chain me too,
+ And, courteous briars, nail me through.
+ ...
+ Here at the fountain's sliding foot,
+ Or at some fruit-tree's mossy root,
+ Casting the body's vest aside,
+ My soul into the boughs does glide;
+ There, like a bird, it sits and sings."
+
+No poet is happier than Marvell in creating the impression that he made
+his verses out of doors.
+
+ "He saw the partridge drum in the woods;
+ He heard the woodcock's evening hymn;
+ He found the tawny thrush's broods,
+ And the shy hawk did wait for him.
+ What others did at distance hear
+ And guessed within the thicket's gloom
+ Was shown to this philosopher,
+ And at his bidding seemed to come."
+
+ (From Emerson's _Wood Notes_.)
+
+Marvell's immediate fame as a true poet was, I dare say, obscured for a
+good while both by its original note (for originality is always
+forbidding at first sight) and by its author's fame as a satirist, and
+his reputation as a lover of "liberty's glorious feast." It was as one
+of the poets encountered in the _Poems on Affairs of State_ (fifth
+edition, 1703) that Marvell was best known during the greater part of
+the eighteenth century. As Milton's friend Marvell had, as it were, a
+side-chapel in the great Miltonic temple. The patriotic member of
+Parliament, who refused in his poverty the Lord-Treasurer Danby's
+proffered bribe, became a character in history before the exquisite
+quality of his garden-poetry was recognised. There was a cult for
+Liberty in the middle of the eighteenth century, and Marvell's name was
+on the list of its professors. Wordsworth's sonnet has preserved this
+tradition for us.
+
+ "Great men have been among us; hands that penn'd
+ And tongues that utter'd wisdom, better none:
+ The later Sydney, Marvell, Harrington."
+
+In 1726 Thomas Cooke printed an edition of Marvell's works which
+contains the poetry that was in the folio of 1681, and in 1772 Cooke's
+edition was reprinted by T. Davies. It was probably Davies's edition
+that Charles Lamb, writing to Godwin on Sunday, 14th December 1800, says
+he "was just going to possess": a notable addition to Lamb's library,
+and an event in the history of the progress of Marvell's poetical
+reputation. Captain Thompson's edition, containing the _Horatian Ode_
+and other pieces, followed in 1776. In the great Poetical Collection of
+the Booksellers (1779-1781) which they improperly[229:1] called
+"Johnson's _Poets_" (improperly, because the poets were, with four
+exceptions, the choice not of the biographer but of the booksellers,
+anxious to retain their imaginary copyright), Marvell has no place. Mr.
+George Ellis, in his _Specimens_ of the early English poets first
+published in 1803, printed from Marvell _Daphne and Chloe_ (in part) and
+_Young Love_. When Mr. Bowles, that once famous sonneteer, edited Pope
+in 1806, he, by way of belittling Pope, quoted two lines from Marvell,
+now well known, but unfamiliar in 1806:--
+
+ "And through the hazels thick espy
+ The hatching throstle's shining eye."
+
+He remarked upon them, "the last circumstance is new, highly poetical,
+and could only have been described by one who was a real lover of
+nature and a witness of her beauties in her most solitary retirement."
+On this Mark Pattison makes the comment that the lines only prove that
+Marvell when a boy went bird-nesting (_Essays_, vol. ii. p. 374), a
+pursuit denied to Pope by his manifold infirmities. The poet Campbell,
+in his _Specimens_ (1819), gave an excellent sketch of Marvell's life,
+and selected _The Bermudas_, _The Nymph and Fawn_, and _Young Love_.
+Then came, fresh from talk with Charles Lamb, Hazlitt, with his _Select
+Poets_ (1825), which contains the _Horatian Ode_, _Bermudas_, _To his
+Coy Mistress_, _The Nymph and Fawn_, _A Drop of Dew_, _The Garden_, _The
+Gallery_, _Upon the Hill and Grove at Billborow_. In this choice we may
+see the hand of Charles Lamb, as Tennyson's may be noticed in the
+selection made in Palgrave's _Golden Treasury_ (1863). Dean Trench in
+his _Household Book of English Poetry_ (1869) gives _Eyes and Tears_,
+the _Horatian Ode_, and _A Drop of Dew_. In Mr. Ward's _English Poets_
+(1880) Marvell is represented by _The Garden_, _A Drop of Dew_, _The
+Bermudas_, _Young Love_, the _Horatian Ode_, and the _Lines on Paradise
+Lost_. Thanks to these later Anthologies and to the quotations from _The
+Garden_ and _Upon Appleton House_ in the _Essays of Elia_, Marvell's
+fame as a true poet has of recent years become widespread, and is now,
+whatever vicissitudes it may have endured, well established.
+
+As a satirist in rhyme Marvell has shared the usual and not undeserved
+fate of almost all satirists of their age and fellow-men. The authors of
+lines written in heat to give expression to the anger of the hour may
+well be content if their effusions give the pain or teach the lesson
+they were intended to give or teach. If you lash the age, you do so
+presumably for the benefit of the age. It is very hard to transmit even
+a fierce and genuine indignation from one age to another. Marvell's
+satires were too hastily composed, too roughly constructed, too redolent
+of the occasion, to enter into the kingdom of poetry. To the careful and
+character-loving reader of history, particularly if he chance to have a
+feeling for the House of Commons, not merely as an institution, but as a
+place of resort, Marvell's satirical poems must always be intensely
+interesting. They strike me as honest in their main intention, and never
+very wide of the mark. Hallam says, in his lofty way, "We read with
+nothing but disgust the satirical poetry of Cleveland, Butler, Oldham,
+Marvell," and he adds, "Marvell's satires are gross and stupid."[231:1]
+Gross they certainly occasionally are, but stupid they never are.
+Marvell was far too well-informed a politician and too shrewd a man ever
+to be stupid.
+
+As a satirist Marvell had, if he wanted them, many models of style, but
+he really needed none, for he just wrote down in rough-and-ready rhyme
+whatever his head or his spleen suggested to his fancy. Every now and
+again there is a noble outburst of feeling, and a couplet of great
+felicity. I confess to taking great pleasure in Marvell's satires.
+
+As a prose writer Marvell has many merits and one great fault. He has
+fire and fancy and was the owner and master of a precise vocabulary well
+fitted to clothe and set forth a well-reasoned and lofty argument. He
+knew how to be both terse and diffuse, and can compress himself into a
+line or expand over a paragraph. He has touches of a grave irony as well
+as of a boisterous humour. He can tell an anecdote and elaborate a
+parable. Swift, we know, had not only Butler's _Hudibras_ by heart, but
+was also (we may be sure) a close student of Marvell's prose. His great
+fault is a very common one. He is too long. He forgets how quickly a
+reader grows tired. He is so interested in the evolutions of his own
+mind that he forgets his audience. His interest at times seems as if it
+were going to prove endless. It is the first business of an author to
+arrest and then to retain the attention of the reader. To do this
+requires great artifice.
+
+Among the masters of English prose it would be rash to rank Marvell, who
+was neither a Hooker nor a Taylor. None the less he was the owner of a
+prose style which some people think the best prose style of all--that of
+honest men who have something to say.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[229:1] "Indecently" is the doctor's own expression.
+
+[231:1] See Hallam's _History of Literature_, vol. iv. pp. 433, 439.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+A
+
+"_Account of the Growth of Popery and Arbitrary Government in England_,"
+180-1, 187;
+ quoted, 188.
+
+Act of Uniformity, 143, 184.
+
+Addison, 65.
+
+Aitken, Mr., 47.
+
+Amersham, 145.
+
+Amsterdam, 59, 197.
+
+Angier, Lord, 196.
+
+_Appleton House_, 66.
+
+Arlington, 185, 186.
+
+_Ars Poetica_, 47.
+
+Ashley, Lord, 120, 150, 185.
+
+_Athenae Oxonienses_, 10.
+
+Aubrey, 222.
+
+Austin, John, 159.
+
+_Autobiography_ (Clarendon), 136.
+
+_Autobiography of Matthew Robinson_, 11 _n._
+
+Axtell, Lieut.-Colonel, 28, 29.
+
+
+B
+
+_Baker's Chronicle_, 80.
+
+Baker, Thomas, 24.
+
+Bampfield, Thomas, 80.
+
+Banda Islands, 127.
+
+Barbadoes, 58.
+
+Barnard, Edward, 95.
+
+Barron, Richard, 64.
+
+Baxter, Richard, 52, 93, 179.
+
+Bedford, 162.
+
+Bench Books of Hull, 223.
+
+Bennet, Sir John, 195.
+
+Berkeley, Charles, 115.
+
+Berkenhead, Sir John, 191.
+
+_Bermudas, The_, 66, 225, 230.
+
+Besant, Sir Walter, 118 _n._
+
+Bill for "the Rebuilding of London," 123, 124, 125, 126 _n._;
+ amended, 148.
+
+Bill of Conventicles, 142, 146, 147, 148.
+
+Bill of Subsidy, 193.
+
+Bill of Test, 205.
+
+Bill of Uniformity, 101.
+
+"_Bind me, ye woodbines_," 227.
+
+Blackheath, 188.
+
+Blake, Admiral, 59, 69, 71, 75.
+
+Blaydes, James, 6.
+
+---- Joseph, 6.
+
+_Blenheim_ (Addison), 70.
+
+Blood, Colonel, 196.
+
+Bodleian Library, 31, 116.
+
+Boulter, Robert, 223.
+
+Bowles, 229.
+
+Bowyer, 64.
+
+Boyle, Richard, 115.
+
+Bradshaw, John, Lord-President of the Council, 28, 48, 52, 94, 95.
+
+Braganza, Catherine of, 33.
+
+_Bramhall Preface_, 162.
+
+Breda, 88;
+ Declaration, 102, 127, 136.
+
+"_Britannia and Raleigh_," 216 _seq._
+
+Brunswick, Duke of, 196.
+
+Buckingham, Duke of, 150, 185, 196, 205, 206.
+
+Bucknoll, Sir William, 195.
+
+Bunyan, 162.
+
+Burnet, Bishop, 3, 163.
+
+Butler, 62 _n._, 154, 226.
+
+
+C
+
+"Cabal," 184.
+
+Cadsand, 186.
+
+Calamy, Edmund, 93, 94.
+
+Cambridge, 48, 175.
+
+Canary Islands, 70.
+
+Canterbury, Prerogative Court of, 222.
+
+Capel, 172.
+
+Carey, Henry, 126 _n._
+
+Carlisle, Lady, 113.
+
+---- Lord, 101, 108, 113.
+
+Carteret, Sir George (Treasurer of Navy), 120, 141, 143.
+
+Castlemaine, Lady, 134.
+
+_Character of Holland, The_, 60.
+
+Charles I., 29, 167.
+
+Charles II., 76, 80, 81, 90, 93, 95, 127, 182, 184, 185, 186, 188, 189,
+195, 196, 203, 205, 206, 214, 222.
+
+Chateaubriand, 24.
+
+Chatham, 128.
+
+Cherry Burton, 6.
+
+_Choice_ (Pomfret), 225.
+
+_Chronicle_ (Cowley), 227.
+
+Chute, Chaloner, 80.
+
+Civil War, 23, 219.
+
+Clare, Lord, 193, 195.
+
+Clarendon, Earl of, 28, 52, 77, 82;
+ _History_, 88, 114, 120;
+ _Life_, 129, 134, 135, 136, 138, 148 _n._
+
+Cleveland, Duke of, 226.
+
+---- Duchess of, 196.
+
+Clifford, 154, 185, 186.
+
+Clifford's Inn, 125.
+
+Cole, William, 5.
+
+_Collection of Poems on Affairs of State_, 35.
+
+_Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Andrew Marvell, M.P., The_, 8.
+
+Conventicle Act, 144.
+
+Convention Parliament, 87, 91, 95.
+
+Cooke, Thomas, 229.
+
+Cooper, 219.
+
+Copenhagen, 113.
+
+Cosin, Dr., Bishop of Durham, 94, 148.
+
+Cotton, Charles, 226.
+
+Council of Trent, 178.
+
+Court of Chancery, 125.
+
+Coventry, Sir John, 191.
+
+Cowley, 226.
+
+Crew, Bishop of Durham, 202.
+
+_Critic_ (Sheridan), 154.
+
+Cromwell, Oliver, 24, 25, 28, 29, 30, 59, 60, 63, 64, 68, 73, 75, 77,
+89, 92, 93, 94, 95, 127, 137, 140, 145, 215, 219.
+
+---- Lord Richard, 77, 79, 80, 81.
+
+---- the Lady Mary, 71.
+
+
+D
+
+Danby, Lord-Treasurer, 209, 228.
+
+_Daphne and Chloe_, 229.
+
+Dartmouth, Lord (Colonel Legge), 141 _n._
+
+Davies, T., 229.
+
+"_Debate on Mr. Andrew Marvell's striking Sir Philip Harcourt,
+March 29_," etc., 212.
+
+Declaration of Indulgence, 187, 188.
+
+Declaration of War, The, 187.
+
+_Defence and Continuation of Ecclesiastical Politie, A_ (Parker), 153.
+
+_Defensio Secunda pro populo Anglicano_ (Milton), 48.
+
+Denham, Sir John, 27, 129, 226.
+
+De Ruyter, 115, 128, 136.
+
+"_Description of Holland, A_" (Butler), 62.
+
+De Witt, John, 63, 187, 197.
+
+_Dialogue between two horses, Charles I. at Charing Cross, and
+Charles II. at Wool Church_, 218, 219.
+
+_Dictionary of National Biography_, 9, 210 _n._
+
+_Directions to a Painter_ (Denham), 129.
+
+Directory of Public Worship, 90, 103.
+
+_Discourse by Way of Vision concerning the Government of Oliver
+Cromwell_ (quoted), 73, 92.
+
+_Discourse concerning Government_ (Sidney), 64.
+
+"_Discourse of Ecclesiastical Politie wherein the Authority of the
+Civil Magistrate over the Consciences of Subjects in matters of
+external Religion is asserted_," etc., 153.
+
+Donne, Dr., 226, 227.
+
+_Don Quixote_ (Shelton's translation), 78.
+
+Dorset, 226.
+
+Dort, 187.
+
+Dover, 90.
+
+_Drama Commonplaces_, 154.
+
+_Drop of Dew, A_, 230.
+
+Dryden, John, 20, 24, 27, 69, 130.
+
+Dublin Castle, 196.
+
+_Dunciad_, 21.
+
+Dunkirk, 127, 137, 193, 215.
+
+Dutch War, 126.
+
+Dutton, Mr. (Cromwell's ward), 54.
+
+
+E
+
+East India Company, 127.
+
+_Ecclesiastical Politie_ (quoted), 157-8, 159-60.
+
+Edgar, Prince, 196.
+
+Elizabeth (Queen), 143.
+
+"Employment of my Solitude, The" (Fairfax), 32.
+
+"England's Way to Win Wealth," 56;
+ quoted, 56, 57, 58.
+
+Erith, 139.
+
+_Essays of Elia_, 230.
+
+Eton College, 51.
+
+Evelyn, John, 19, 121, 138, 139 _n._
+
+_Eyes and Tears_, 225, 230.
+
+
+F
+
+Fagg, Sir John, 205.
+
+Fairfax, Lady Mary, 27, 28, 32, 63.
+
+---- Lord, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 48, 50, 63.
+
+---- Sir William, 33, 36.
+
+Fanshaw, Sir Richard, 49 _n._
+
+Fauconberg, Lady, 95.
+
+---- Viscount (afterwards Earl), 71.
+
+Finch, Sir Heneage, 91, 224.
+
+_First Anniversary of the Government under His Highness the
+Lord-Protector, The_, 60.
+
+Five Mile Act, 117, 162, 203.
+
+_Flagellum Parliamentum_, 97.
+
+Flanders, 196.
+
+Flecknoe, Richard, 20, 21.
+
+France, 183, 184, 197, 204.
+
+"_Free Impartial Censure of the Platonick Philosophy, A_"
+(Parker), 152 _n._, 174.
+
+French Alliance, 188.
+
+
+G
+
+_Gallery, The_, 230.
+
+"Garden Poetry," 75.
+
+_Garden, The_, 66, 225.
+
+Gee, Dr., 220.
+
+Gilbey. Colonel, 95, 98, 101.
+
+Gillingham, 127.
+
+Gladstone, 23, 104 _n._
+
+_Golden Remains_ (Hales), 51.
+
+_Golden Treasury_ (1863), (Palgrave), 230.
+
+Gombroon, 194.
+
+_Government of the People of England_, etc. (Parker), 172.
+
+Green, Mr., 222.
+
+Grosart, Mr., 7, 65, 84, 85, 106, 165-9 _n._, 176 _n._, 178 _n._,
+181 _n._, 187 _n._, 204-6 _n._, 209 _n._, 223.
+
+Grosvenor, Colonel, 219.
+
+_Growth of Popery_ (quoted), 203, 206.
+
+
+H
+
+Hague, The, 197.
+
+Hale, Sir Matthew, 92, 125.
+
+Hales, John, 51.
+
+Hallam, 231.
+
+Hamilton, 172.
+
+Harding, Dean, 118.
+
+Harrington, James, 76, 222.
+
+Harrison, 29, 30.
+
+Harwich, 115.
+
+Hastings, Lord Henry, 27.
+
+Hazlitt, 61, 239.
+
+Herrick, 27.
+
+_His Majesty's most Gracious Speech to Both Houses of Parliament_, 200.
+
+_Historical Dictionary_ (Jeremy Collier), 24 _n._
+
+_History of England_ (Ranke), 59, 183, 185 _n._
+
+_History of His Own Time_ (Burnet), 129, 136, 152 _n._, 189 _n._
+
+_History of His Own Time_ (Parker), 96 _n._, 170 _n._
+
+_History of Literature_ (Hallam), 231 _n._
+
+_History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England, The_, 136.
+
+Hobbes, 11, 12, 156, 157.
+
+Holland, 120, 135, 182-4, 186, 197.
+
+---- Lord, 172.
+
+Hollis, Thomas, 64, 219.
+
+_Holy Dying_, 151.
+
+_Horatian Ode upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland_, 63, 66, 225, 229, 230.
+
+_Hortus_ (quoted), 45-6.
+
+_Household Book of English Poetry_ (1809) (Dean Trench), 230.
+
+Houses of Convocation, 101.
+
+Howard, Sir Robert, 195.
+
+_Hudibras_ (Butler), 231.
+
+Hull, 2, 5, 8, 17, 18, 50, 59, 84, 95, 98, 99, 101, 209, 223, 224;
+ Town Hall, 224.
+
+_Hull, History of_ (Gent), 17.
+
+Humber, The, 99.
+
+Hyde, Mrs., 202.
+
+---- Sir Edward (Earl of Clarendon), 49 _n._
+
+
+I
+
+Imposition upon wines, 196.
+
+Indies, East and West, 93.
+
+Inigo Jones, 221-2.
+
+_Insolence and Impudence Triumphant_, 153.
+
+Ireland, 122, 196, 209.
+
+Irish Cattle Bill, 122.
+
+
+J
+
+Jessopp, Mr., 120.
+
+Johnson, Dr., 225, 227.
+
+"Johnson's _Poets_," 229.
+
+
+K
+
+Kremlin, 108.
+
+
+L
+
+Lamb, William, 20, 61.
+
+Lambert, General, 29, 31, 82.
+
+Lambeth, 175.
+
+_Last Instructions to a Painter about the Dutch Wars, The_, 129;
+ quoted, 130 _seq._, 135.
+
+Laud, Archbishop, 91, 167, 221.
+
+Lauderdale, Lord, 150, 185, 201, 202.
+
+Lawson, Admiral, 115.
+
+Lenthall, Speaker, 81, 83.
+
+"Letter from a Parliament Man to his Friend" (Shaftesbury), 97.
+
+_Leviathan_ (Hobbes), 156.
+
+_Life of the Great Lord Fairfax_ (Markham) (quoted), 31.
+
+_Lines on Paradise Lost_, 230.
+
+Locke, John, 6, 179.
+
+London, 90;
+ Great Fire of, 17, 119, 209;
+ Great Plague of, 115, 116, 119.
+
+Lort, Dr. (Master of Trinity), 10.
+
+Louis XIV., 183, 185, 186, 188, 189, 193, 196, 215.
+
+Lovelace, Richard, 25, 26, 227.
+
+_Lucasta_, 25, 26.
+
+
+M
+
+Macaulay, 70, 92.
+
+"MacFlecknoe" (quoted), 21.
+
+Manton, Dr., 162.
+
+_Mariae Marvell relictae et Johni Greni Creditori_, 222.
+
+Marlborough, Earl of, 115.
+
+Martin Marprelate, 24.
+
+Marvell, Andrew, born 1621, 4;
+ ancestry, 4-5;
+ Hull Grammar School, 8;
+ school days, 8-9;
+ goes to Trinity College, Cambridge, 10;
+ life at Cambridge, 11-12;
+ becomes a Roman Catholic, 12;
+ recantation and return to Trinity, 14;
+ life at Cambridge ends, 17;
+ death of mother, 17;
+ abroad in France, Spain, Holland, and Italy, 19;
+ acquainted with French, Dutch, and Spanish languages, 19;
+ poet, parliamentarian, and controversialist, 20;
+ in Rome (1645), 20;
+ invites Flecknoe to dinner, 22;
+ neither a Republican nor a Puritan, 23;
+ a Protestant and a member of the Reformed Church of England, 23;
+ stood for both King and Parliament, 23;
+ considered by Collier a dissenter, 24 _n._;
+ civil servant during Commonwealth, 24;
+ rejoices at Restoration, 25;
+ keeps Royalist company (1646-50), 25;
+ contributes commendatory lines to Richard Lovelace in poems published
+ 1649, 25;
+ defends Lovelace, 26;
+ loved to be alone with his friends, lived for the most part in a hired
+ lodging, 26;
+ one of thirty-three poets who wept for the early death of Lord H.
+ Hastings, 27;
+ went to live with Lord Fairfax at Nunappleton House as tutor to only
+ child and daughter of the house (1650), 27;
+ anonymity of verses, 34;
+ small volume containing "The Garden Poetry" (1681), 34;
+ tells story of Nunappleton House, 36-45;
+ applies to Secretary for Foreign Tongues for a testimonial, 48;
+ recommended by Milton to Bradshaw for post of Latin Secretary, 50;
+ appointed four years later, 51:
+ frequently visits Eton, 51;
+ Milton intrusts him with a letter and copy of _Secunda defensio_ to
+ Bradshaw, 52;
+ appointed by the Lord-Protector tutor to Mr. Dutton, 54;
+ resides with Oxenbridges, 54;
+ letters, 53, 54-5, 85-7, 92-3, 94-6, 99, 100-1, 104, 105, 109-12, 121,
+ 122, 140, 141-3, 145-7, 148-50, 189-91, 191 _seq._, 210;
+ begins his career as anonymous political poet and satirist (1653), 56;
+ dislike of the Dutch, 56;
+ impregnated with the new ideas about sea power, 59;
+ reported to have been among crowd which witnessed Charles I.'s death, 64;
+ first collected edition of works, verse and prose, produced by
+ subscription in three volumes, 64;
+ became Milton's assistant (1657), 68;
+ friendship with Milton, 69;
+ takes Milton's place in receptions at foreign embassies, 69;
+ plays part of Laureate during Protector's life, 71;
+ produces two songs on marriage of Lady Mary Cromwell, 72-3;
+ attends Cromwell's funeral, 73;
+ is keenly interested in public affairs, 75;
+ becomes a civil servant for a year, 75;
+ M.P. for Hull, 75;
+ friend of Milton and Harrington, 76;
+ well disposed towards Charles II., 77;
+ remains in office till end of year (1659), 77;
+ elected with Ramsden M.P. for Kingston-upon-Hull, 78;
+ attended opening of Parliament (1659), 80;
+ is not a "Rumper," 84;
+ again elected for Hull (1660), 84;
+ begins his remarkable correspondence with the Corporation of Hull, 84;
+ a satirist, not an enthusiast, 85;
+ lines on Restoration, 90;
+ complains to House of exaction of L150 for release of Milton, 91;
+ elected for third, and last, time member for Hull, 95;
+ receives fee from Corporation of Hull for attendance at House, 96;
+ reviled by Parker for taking this payment, 96;
+ _Flagellum Parliamentum_ attributed to, 97;
+ goes to Holland, 100;
+ is recalled, 101;
+ while in Holland writes to Trinity House and to the Corporation of Hull
+ on business matters, 101;
+ goes as secretary to Lord Carlisle on an embassy to Sweden and
+ Denmark, 106;
+ public entry into Moscow, 108;
+ assists at formal reception of Lord Carlisle as English ambassador, 109;
+ renders oration to Czar into Latin, 109;
+ Russians object to terms of oration, 109;
+ replies, 109-12;
+ returns from embassy, 113;
+ reaches London, 113;
+ attends Parliament at Oxford, 116;
+ _The Last Instructions to a Painter about the Dutch Wars_, 129-35;
+ bitter enemy of Hyde, 136;
+ lines upon Clarendon House, 138;
+ inquires into "miscarriages of the late war," 139;
+ _The Rehearsal Transprosed_, 151;
+ its great success, 152;
+ literary method described by Parker, 162;
+ called "a droll," "a buffoon," 163;
+ replies to Parker, 163 _seq._;
+ intercedes, 168;
+ abused by Parker in _History of His Own Time_, 170 _n._;
+ _The Rehearsall Transpros'd_ (second part), 171-2;
+ pictures Parker, 172 _seq._;
+ latterly fears subversion of Protestant faith, 179;
+ his famous pamphlet, _An Account of the Growth of Popery and Arbitrary
+ Government in England_, 180-1, 203-5, 206-8;
+ gives account of quarrel with Dutch, 186-7;
+ commendatory verses on "_Mr. Milton's Paradise Lost_" (1674), 199 _n._;
+ mock speech, _His Majesty's Most Gracious Speech to Both Houses of
+ Parliament_, 200-2;
+ story of proffered bribe, 209-10;
+ last letter to constituents, 210;
+ rarely speaks in the House of Commons, 211;
+ longest reported speech, 211;
+ speech reported in _Parliamentary History_ (1677), 211;
+ "_Debate on Mr. Andrew Marvell's striking Sir Philip Harcourt_,"
+ etc., 212-14;
+ friend of Prince Rupert, 214;
+ lines on setting up of king's statue, 214-15;
+ "Britannia and Raleigh," 216-19;
+ dies, 219;
+ thought to have been poisoned, 219;
+ this suspicion dissipated, 220;
+ account of sickness and death, 220-1;
+ burial, 221;
+ obsequies, 223;
+ epitaph, 221;
+ humour and wit, 163;
+ not a fanatic, 179;
+ insatiable curiosity, 182;
+ power of self-repression, 211;
+ as poet, 225-30;
+ as satirist, 228, 230-1;
+ as prose writer, 231-2;
+ love of gardens, 227;
+ appearance described, 232;
+ Hull's most famous member, 223;
+ enemies, 224;
+ portraits of, 224;
+ statue of, 224;
+ editions of works, 229.
+
+Marvell, Rev. Andrew (father), 7.
+
+---- Mary (wife), 3, 222-3.
+
+"Marvell's Cottage," 223 _n._
+
+_Marvell's Ghost_ (in _Poems on Affairs of State_), 220 _n._
+
+May, 119.
+
+Mead, William, 191.
+
+Meadows, Philip, 51, 54.
+
+Medway, 139, 187.
+
+_Memorials_ (Whitelock), 29.
+
+Milton, John, 2, 19, 20, 21, 48, 49, 52, 64, 68, 69, 73, 76, 77, 91,
+129, 151, 199, 223, 226, 228.
+
+Monk, General, Duke of Albemarle, 80, 83, 91, 128, 139, 140.
+
+---- Dr., Provost of Eton. 94.
+
+Monmouth, Duke of, 116, 191.
+
+Monument ("tall bully"), 118.
+
+More (Moore), Thomas, 7.
+
+More, Robert, 6.
+
+Morpeth, Lord, 113.
+
+Moscow, 105, 107.
+
+"Mr. Milton's Paradise Lost" (Marvell), 199 _n._
+
+_Musa Cantabrigiensis_, 16.
+
+Muskerry, Lord, 115.
+
+
+N
+
+Napoleon, 24.
+
+_Narrative of the Restoration_ (Collins), 81.
+
+National Portrait Gallery, 224.
+
+Navigation Act, 59, 63.
+
+Nettleton, Robert, 64;
+ (Marvell's grand-nephew), 221.
+
+New Amsterdam, 136.
+
+New Guinea, 127.
+
+Novgorod, 113.
+
+Nunappleton House, 63.
+
+_Nymph and Fawn, The_, 230.
+
+_Nymph complaining for the Death of her Fawn, The_, 225.
+
+
+O
+
+Oaths Bill, 202, 205.
+
+_Oceana_ (James Harrington), 222.
+
+_Ode upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland, The_, 34.
+
+_Omniana_ (Southey), 20 _n._
+
+Opdam, Admiral, 115, 129.
+
+Orleans, Duchess of, 185.
+
+Ormond, Duke of, 196.
+
+Orrery, 150.
+
+Owen, Dr. John, 81.
+
+Oxenbridge, John, 51.
+
+Oxford, 116.
+
+
+P
+
+_Paradise Lost_, 10, 52, 69, 91.
+
+_Paradise Regained_, 91.
+
+Parker, Dr. Samuel, 9, 151-3, 155, 157, 159-60, 162-3, 167, 171-2, 211.
+
+_Parliamentary History_, 211.
+
+Paston, Sir Robert, 114.
+
+Pattison, Mark, _Essays_, 230.
+
+Peak, Sir William, 215.
+
+Pease, Anne, 6.
+
+Pelican (Inn), 21.
+
+Pell, J., D.D., 222.
+
+Pembroke, Earl of, 202.
+
+Penderel, Richard, 222.
+
+Penn, William, 191.
+
+Pensionary or Long Parliament, 95, 96, 135.
+
+Pepys, Samuel, 69, 90, 95, 96, 113, 117, 118, 120, 121;
+ _Diary_, 129.
+
+Pett, Mr. Commissioner, 133.
+
+"Petty Navy Royal" (Dee), 56;
+ (quoted), 57, 58.
+
+Pickering, Sir Gilbert, 69.
+
+_Pilgrim's Progress, The_, 158.
+
+Plymouth, 136.
+
+"_Poem upon the Death of his late Highness the Protector, A_," 74.
+
+_Poems_ (1081), 223.
+
+_Poems and Satires of Andrew Marvell_, 47 _n._
+
+_Poems on Affairs of State_, 228.
+
+Poleroone, 127, 136.
+
+"_Politic Plat (plan) for the Honour of the Prince, A_," 56.
+
+Poll Bill, 122.
+
+Ponder, Nathaniel, 171.
+
+Pope, 34, 130, 229.
+
+Popish Plot, 219.
+
+Popple, Edmund, 6.
+
+---- William, 6.
+
+_Portland Papers_, 116 _n._
+
+Portsmouth, 136.
+
+Pride, Colonel, 94.
+
+Prince of Orange, 63.
+
+Prynne, 96.
+
+{Greek: Pyretologia} (Richard Morton), 220.
+
+
+Q
+
+Quarles, 226.
+
+
+R
+
+Ramsden, John, 78, 84, 95.
+
+---- William. 189, 210.
+
+_Rehearsal_ (Duke of Buckingham), 154;
+ quoted, 154-5.
+
+_Rehearsal Transprosed, The_ (quoted), 23-4, 51 _n._, 151, 152n., 162;
+ (second part), 171;
+ quoted, 172-8, 211.
+
+_Religio Laici_, 24 _n._
+
+_Reproof to the Rehearsal Transprosed_ (quoted), 162, 168, 169 _seq._
+
+Reynolds, Dr., Bishop of Norwich, 93.
+
+Riga, 113.
+
+Robinson, Matthew, 11.
+
+Rochester, Earl of, 226.
+
+Rome, 193.
+
+Roos Divorce Bill, 148, 149.
+
+"Rota" Club, 3, 76.
+
+Rouen, 139, 139 _n._
+
+_Royal Charles, The_, 115, 136.
+
+Rump Parliament, 81, 82, 83.
+
+Rupert, Prince, 3, 214.
+
+Rushworth, 28.
+
+
+S
+
+St. Giles's Church in the Fields, 221.
+
+St. John, Oliver, 51.
+
+_Saint's Rest_ (Baxter), 151.
+
+_Samson Agonistes_, 91.
+
+Santa Cruz, 69.
+
+Savoy Conference, 90, 101, 103, 104.
+
+Scotland, 204.
+
+Scroggs, Lord Chief Justice, 100.
+
+_Secunda defensio_, 52.
+
+_Select Poets_ (Hazlitt), 230.
+
+Shadwell, 20, 21.
+
+Shaftesbury, Earl of, 205.
+
+Sharp, Archbishop, 224.
+
+Sheerness, 127, 128, 136.
+
+Sheldon, Dr., Archbishop of Canterbury, 153.
+
+Shirley (dramatist), 118, 222.
+
+Shrewsbury, Lady, 196.
+
+Sidney Sussex College, 219.
+
+Skinner, Mrs., 18.
+
+Skynner, Mr., 54.
+
+Sluys, 186.
+
+Smith, Mr. Goldwin, 123 _n._
+
+Sobieski, John, 214.
+
+_Social England Illustrated_, 56 _n._
+
+Solemn League and Covenant, 29.
+
+_Song of Agincourt_ (Drayton), 70.
+
+Southampton, Lord, 95, 203.
+
+Southey, 226.
+
+Spain, 183, 184.
+
+Specimens (Campbell), 230.
+
+_Specimens_ of Early English Poets (Mr. George Ellis), 229.
+
+_State Trials_, 191.
+
+Sterne, Bishop of Carlisle, 94.
+
+Stockholm, 113.
+
+Surat, 113, 194.
+
+Surinam, 187.
+
+Sutton, Mrs., 202.
+
+Swift, Benjamin, 152, 231. {Transcriber's note: Referred to by surname
+ only in the text. Probably means Jonathan.}
+
+
+T
+
+_Table Talk_ (Selden), 179.
+
+Tait, Archbishop, 23.
+
+Temple, Sir William, 183.
+
+_Tender Conscience_, 161;
+ quoted, 161-2.
+
+_Tentamina Physico-Theologica_ (Parker), 174.
+
+Test Bill, 188.
+
+Texel, 127.
+
+Thompson, Captain Edward, 10, 64, 68, 73, 84, 202 _n._, 221, 223, 224, 229.
+
+Thurloe, John, 50, 52.
+
+_To his Coy Mistress_, 66, 225, 230.
+
+Torbay, 136.
+
+Tower, The, 206.
+
+_Travels and Voyages_ (Harris), 106.
+
+_Treatise on Education_ (Milton), 9.
+
+"Treatise on the breeding of the Horse," 32.
+
+Treaty of Dover, 184, 150 _n._, 186.
+
+Treby, George, M.P., 219.
+
+Trench, Dean, 67 _n._
+
+Trevor, 150.
+
+Trinity Church, Hull, 223.
+
+---- College, Cambridge, 10.
+
+---- House, 100.
+
+Triple Alliance, The, 183, 184, 186.
+
+Trot, Sir John, 197.
+
+_True Greatness of Kingdoms and Estates, The_ (Bacon), 60.
+
+_Truth and Innocence Vindicated_ (Owen), 153.
+
+Turner, Sir Edward, 135.
+
+
+U
+
+_Unreformed House of Commons, The_ (Porritt), 96 _n._
+
+Upnor Castle, 128.
+
+"Upon His House," 138.
+
+_Upon Appleton House_, 230.
+
+_Upon the Hill and Grove of Billborow_, 230.
+
+Urquhart, Sir Thomas, 89.
+
+
+V
+
+Vane, Sir Harry, 89.
+
+Van Tromp, 59, 61, 63, 115.
+
+Vere, Lord, 32.
+
+Villiers, George, Duke of Buckingham, 33.
+
+Viner, Sir Robert, 214, 215.
+
+Virginia, 58.
+
+
+W
+
+Walcheren, 186.
+
+Walker, 226.
+
+Waller, 73, 144, 145 _n._, 226.
+
+"Walton's _Life_" (Wotton), 19;
+ quoted, 20.
+
+Ward, Seth, 153 _n._ {Transcriber's Note: 152}
+
+Watts, Dr., 65.
+
+Weckerlin, Georg Rudolph, 49;
+ Latin Secretary to Parliament, 49 _n._, 50.
+
+Welch, Mr., 210.
+
+Westminster Hall, 140.
+
+---- Parliament of, 83.
+
+White, Bishop of Ely, 13.
+
+Whitehall, 117.
+
+Whitelock's _Memorials_, 29.
+
+_William and Margaret_ (Mallet), 65.
+
+Wine Licenses, 196.
+
+Winestead, 4.
+
+Wise, Lieutenant, 140.
+
+Wither, 226.
+
+Wood, Anthony, 25.
+
+Wordsworth, 229.
+
+Worshipful Society of Masters and Pilots of Trinity House, 84.
+
+
+Y
+
+Yarmouth, 58.
+
+York, Duchess of, 193, 196.
+
+---- Duke of, 115, 188, 189.
+
+_Young Love_, 225, 229, 230.
+
+
+
+
+ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS
+
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