Letters from Spenser to Gabriel Harvey
A Note on the Renascence Editions
text:
This HTML etext is based upon The Complete Works in Verse and
Prose of Edmund Spenser [Grosart, London, 1882] by Richard Bear at the
University of Oregon. Grosart is
here less reliable than in the verse;
I have compared his text with a copy of the original in the collection
of the Huntington Library, and made a number of corrections. The text
is in the public domain. Markup is copyright © 1995 University of
Oregon; this version is distributed for nonprofit use only. Comments
and emendations to: rbear@oregon.uoregon.edu.
To the Worshipfull his very singular good friend, maister
G. H., Fellow of Trinitie Hall in Cambridge.
Ood Master G. I perceiue by your most curteous
and friendly Letters your good will to be no lesse in deed, than I
alwayes esteemed. In recompence whereof, think I beseech you, that I
wil spare neither speech, nor wryting, nor aught else, whensoeuer, and
wheresoeuer occasion shal be offred me: yea, I will not stay, till it
be offred, but will seeke it, in al that possibly I may. And that you
may perceiue how much your Counsel in al things preuaileth with me,
and how altogither I am ruled and ouer-ruled thereby: I am now
determined to alter mine owne former purpose, and to subscribe to your
aduisement: being notwithstanding resolued stil, to abide your farther
resolution. My principal doubts are these. First, I was minded for
a while to haue intermitted the vttering of my writings: leaste by
ouer-much cloying their noble eares, I should gather a contempt of
myself, or else seeme rather for gaine and commoditie to doe it, for
some sweetnesse that I haue already tasted. Then also meseemeth the
work too base for his excellent Lordship, being made in Honour of a
priuate Personage vnknowne, which of some yl-willers might be
vpbraided, not to be so worthie, as you knowe she is: or the matter
not so weightie, that it should be offred to so
weighty a Personage: or the like. The selfe former Title stil liketh
me well ynough, and your fine Addition no lesse. If these, and the
like doubtes, maye be of importaunce in your seeming, to frustrate any
parte of your aduice, I beseeche you without the leaste selfe loue of
your own purpose, councell me for the beste: and the rather doe it
faithfullye, and carefully, for that, in all things I attribute so
muche to your iudgement, that I am euermore content to annihilate mine
owne determinations, in respecte thereof. And indeede for your selfe
to, it sitteth with you now, to call your wits & senses togither,
(which are alwaies at call) when occasion is so fairely offered of
Estimation and Preferment. For, whiles the yron is hote, it is good
striking, and minds of Nobles varie, as their Estates. Verùm
ne quid durius.
I pray you bethinke you well hereof, good Maister G.
and forthwith write me those two or three special points and caueats
for the nonce, De quibus in superioribis illis mellitissimus
longissimisque Litteris tuis. Your desire to heare of my late
beeing with hir Maiestie, muste dye in it selfe. As for the twoo
worthy Gentlemen, Master Sidney and Master Dyer, they
haue me, I thank them, in some vse of familiarity: of whom, and to
whome, what speache passeth for your credite and estimation, I leaue
your selfe to conceiue, hauing alwayes so well conceiued of my
unfained affection, and zeale towardes you. And nowe they haue
proclaimed in their areopagos a generall surceasing and silence of
balde Rymers, and also of the very beste to: in steade whereof, they
haue, by authoritie of their whole Senate, prescribed certaine Lawes
and rules of Quantities of English sillables for English Verse: hauing
had thereof already great practice, and drawen mee to their faction.
Newe Bookes I heare of none, but only of one, that writing a certaine
Booke, called the Schoole of Abuse, and dedicating it to
Maister Sidney, was for his labor scorned: if at leaste it be
in the goodnesse of that nature to scorne. Suche follie is it, not to
regarde aforehande the inclination and qualitie of him to whom wee
dedicate oure Bookes. Suche mighte I happily incurre, entituling My
Slomber, and the other Pamphlets vnto his honor. I meant them
rather to Maister Dyer. But I am, of late, more in loue wyth
my English Versifying than with Ryming: whyche I should haue done long
since, if I would then haue followed your councell. Sed te solum
iam tum suspicabar cum Aschamo sapere: nunc Aulam video egregios alere
Poëtas Anglicos.
Maister E. K. hartily desireth to be commended vnto
your Worshippe: of whome, what accompte he maketh, youre selfe shall
hereafter perceiue, by hys paynefull and dutifull Verses of your
selfe.
Thus much was written at Westminster yesternight: but
comming this morning, beeyng the sixteenth of October, to Mystresse
Kerkes, to haue it deliuered to the Carrier, I receyued youre
letter, sent me the laste weeke: whereby I perceiue you otherwhiles
continue your old exercise of Versifying in English: whych glorie I
had now thought shoulde haue bene onely ours heere at London and the
Court.
Truste me, your Verses I like passingly well, and
enuye your hidden paines in this kinde, or rather maligne, and grudge
at your selfe, that woulde not once imparte so muche to me. But once,
or twice you make a breach in Maister Drants Rules: quod
tamen condonabimus tanto Poëtæ, tuæque ipsius
maximæ in his rebus autoritati. You shall see when we meete
in London (whiche, when it shall be, cerifye vs) howe fast I haue
followed after you in that Course: beware, leaste in time I ouertake
you. Veruntamen te solùm sequar, (vt soepenumerò, sum
professus,) nunquam sanè assequar dum viuam.
And nowe requite I you with the like, not with the
verye best, but with the verye shortest, namely, with a few
Iambickes:
I dare warrant, they be precisely perfect for the feete (as you can
easily iudge), and varie not one inch from the Rule. I will imparte
yours to Maister Sidney, and Maister Dyer, at my nexte
going to the Courte. I praye you, keepe mine close to your selfe, or
your verie entire friendes, Maister Preston, Maister
Still, and the reste.
Iambicum Trimetrum.
Vnhappie Verse, the witnesse of my vnhappie state,
Make thy selfe fluttring wings of thy fast flying
Thought, and fly forth vnto my Loue whersoeuer she be:
Whether lying reastlesse in heauy bedde, or else
Sitting so cheerelesse at the cheerfull boorde, or else
Playing alone carelesse on hir heauenlie Virginals.
If in Bed, tell hir, that my eyes can take no reste:
If at Boorde, tell hir, that my mouth can eate no meate:
If at hir Virginals, tell hir, I can heare no mirth.
Asked why? say: Waking Loue suffereth no sleepe:
Say, that raging Loue dothe appall the weake stomacke:
Say, that lamenting Loue marreth the Musicall.
Tell hir, that her pleasures were wonte to lull me asleepe:
Tell hir, that hir beautie was wonte to feede mine eyes:
Tell hir, that hir sweete Tongue was wonte to make me mirth.
Nowe doe I nightly waste, wanting my kindely reste:
Nowe doe I dayly starue, wanting my liuely foode:
Nowe doe I alwayes dye, wanting thy timely mirth.
And if I waste, who will bewaile my heauy chaunce?
And if I starue, who will record my cursed end?
And if I dye, who will saye: this was, Immerito?
I thought once agayne here to haue made an ende, with a
heartie Vale, of the best fashion: but loe, an ylfauoured
myschance. My last farewell, whereof I made great accompt, and muche
maruelled you shoulde make no mention thereof, I am nowe tolde, (in the
Diuels name) was thorough one mans negligence quite forgotten, but
shoulde nowe vndoubtedly haue been sent, whether I hadde come, or no.
Seeing it can now be no otherwise, I pray you take all togither, wyth
all their faultes: and nowe I hope, you will vouchsafe mee an answeare
of the largest size, or else I tell you true, you shall bee verye
deepe in my debte: notwythstandying, thys other sweete, but shorte
letter, and fine, but fewe Verses. But I woulde rather I might yet see
youre owne good selfe, and receiue a Reciprocall farewell from your
owne sweete mouth.
Ad ornatissimum virum, multis iam diu
NOMINIBUS CLARISSIMUM G. H. IMMERITO
sui, mox in Gallias nauigaturi,
entuchein.
Sic malus egregium, sic non inimicus Amicum:
Sicque novus veterem iubet ipse Poëta Poëtam,
Salvere, ac coelo mage, post secula multa secundo
Iam reducem, coelo mage, quàm nunc ipse, secundo
Vtier. Ecce Deus, (modò sit Deus ille, renixum
Qui vocet in scelus, & iuratos perdat amores)
Ecce Deus mihi clara dedit modò signa Marinus,
Et sua veligero lenis parat Æquora Ligno,
Mox sulcanda, suas etiam pater Æolus Iras
Ponit, & ingentes animos Aquilonis-----
Cuncta vijs sic apta meis: ego solus ineptus.
Nam mihi nescio quo mens saucia vulnere, dudum
Fluctuat ancipiti Pelago, dum Nauita proram
Inualidam validus rapit huc Amor, & rapit illuc.
Consilijs Ratio melioribus vsa, decusque
Immortale leui diffessa Cupdinis Arcu.
Angimur hoc dubio, & portu vexamur in ipso.
Magne phretrati nunc tu contemptor Amoris,
(id tibi Dij nomen precor haud impune remittant)
Hos nodos exsolue, & eris mihi magnus Apollo.
Spiritus ad summos, scio, te generosus Honores
Exstimulat, maiusque docet spirare Pötam,
Quàm leuis est Amor, & tamen haud leuis est Amor omnis.
Ergo nihil laudi reputas æquale perenni,
Præque sacrosancta splendoris imagine tanti,
Cætera, quæ vecors, vti Numina, vulgus adorat,
Prædia, Amicitias, vrbana peculia, Nummos,
Qæque placent oculis, formas, spectacula, Amores,
Conculcare soles, vt hummum, & ludibria sensus.
Digna meo certè Harueio Sententia, digna
Oratore amplo, & generoso pectore, quam non
Stoica formidet veterum Sapientia vinclis
Sancire æternis: sapor haud tamen omnibus idem
Dicitur effæti proles facunda Laëtæ,
Quamlibet ignoti iactata per æquora Coeli
Inque procelloso longùm exsul gurgite ponto,
Præ tamen amplexu lachrymosæ Coniugis, Ortus
Coelestes Diuûmque thoros spreuisse beatos.
Tantùm Amor, & Mulier, vel Amore potentior. Illum
Tu tamen illudis: tua Magnificentia tanta est:
Præque subumbrata Splendoris Imagine tanti,
Præque illo Meritis famosis nomine parto
Cætera, quæ Vecors, vti Numina, vulgus adorat,
Prædia, Amicitias, armenta, peculia, nummos.
Quæque placent oculis, formas, spectaculata, Amores,
Quæque placent ori, quæque auribus, omnia temnis.
Næ tu grande sapis, Sapor at sapientia non est:
Omnis & in paruis benè qui scit desipuisse,
Sæpe supercilijs palmam sapientibus ausert.
Ludit Aristippum modò tetrica Turba Sophorum,
Mitia purpureo moderantem verba Tyranno
Ludit Aristippus dictamina vana Sophorum,
Quos leuis emensi male torquet Culicis umbra:
Et quisquis placuisse Studet Heroibus altis,
Desipuisse studet, sic gratia crescit ineptis.
Denique Laurigeris quisquis sua tempora vittis,
Insignire volet, Populoque placere fauenti,
Desipere insanus discit, turpemque pudendæ
Stultitiæ laudem quærit. Pater Ennius vnus
Dictus in innumeris sapiens: laudatur at ipsa
Carmina vesano sudisse liquentia vino.
Nec tu pace tua, nostri Cato Maxime sæcli,
Nomen honorati sacrum mereare Poëtæ,
Quantamuis illustre canas, & nobile Carmen,
Ni stultire velis, sic S[t]ultorum omnia plena.
Tuta sed in medio superest via gurgite, nam Qui
Nec reliquis nimiùm vult despuisse videri,
Nec sapuisse nimis, Sapientem dixeris vnum.
Hinc te merserit vnda, illinc combusserit Ignis.
Nec tu delicias nimis aspernare fluentes,
Nec serò Dominam, venientem in vota, nec Aurum.
Si sapis, ablatum, (Curijs ea, Fabricijsque
Linque viris miseris miseranda Sophismata: quondam
Grande sui decus ij, nostri sed dedecus æui:)
Nec sectare nimis. Res utraque crimine plena.
Hoc bene qui callet, (si quis tamen hoc bene callet)
Scribe, vel inuito sapientem hunc Socrate solum.
Vis facit vna pios: Iustos facit altera: & altra
Egregiè cordata, ac fortia pectora: verùm
Omne tulit punctum, qui miscuit utile dulci.
Dij mihi, dulce diu dederant: verum vtile nunquam:
Vtile nunc etiam, ô vtinam quoque dulce dedissent.
Dij mihi (quippe Dijs æquivalia maxima paruis)
Ni nimis inuideant mortalibus esse beatis,
Dulce simul tribuisse queant, simul vtile: tanta
Sed Fortvna tva est: pariter quæque vtile, qæque
Dulce dat ad placitum: sæuo nos sydere nati
Qæsitum imus eam per inhospita Caucasa longè,
Perque Pyrenæos montes, Babilonaque turpem,
Qu`d si quæsitum nec ibi inuenerimus, ingens
Æquor inexhaustis permensi erroribus, ultrâ
Fluctibus in medijs socij quæremus Vlyssis.
Passibus inde Deam fessis comitabimur ægram,
Nobile qui furtum quærenti defuit orbis.
Namque sinu pudet in patrio, tenebrisque pudendis
Non nimis ingenio Iuuenem infoelice, virentes,
Officijs frustra deperdere vilibus Annos,
Frugibus & vacuas speratis cernere spicas.
Ibimus ergo statim: (quis eunti fausta precetur?)
Et pede Clibosas fesso calcabimus Alpes.
Quis dabit interea conditas rore Britanno,
Quis tibi Litterulas? quis carmen amore petulcum?
Musa sub Oebalij desueta cacumine montis,
Flebit inexhausto tam longa silentia planctu,
Lugebitque sacrum lachrymis Helicona tacentem.
Harueiusque bonus, (charus licet omnibus vnus,)
Angelus & Gabriel, (quamuis comitatus amicis
Innumeris, geniûmque choro stipatus amæno)
Immerito tamen vnum absentem sæpe requiret,
Optabitque, Vtinam meus hîc Edmundus adesset,
Qui noua scripsisset, nec Amores conticuisset,
Ipse suos, & sæpe animo, verbisque benignis
Fausta precaretur, Deus illum aliquando reducat, &c.
Plura vellem par Charites sed non licet per Musas.
Vale, Vale plurimù, Mi amabilissime Harueie, meo
cordi, meorum omnium longè charissime.
I was minded also to haue sent you some English verses: or
Rymes, for a farewell: but by my Troth, I haue no spare time in the
world, to think on such Toyes, that you know will demaund a freer
head, than mine is presently. I beseeche you by all your Curtesies, and
Graces, let me be answered, ere I goe: which will be, (I hope, I feare,
I thinke) the next weeke, if I can be dispatched of my Lorde. I goe
thither, as sent by him, and maintained most what of him: and there am
to employ my time, my body, my minde, to his Honours seruice. Thus
with many superhartie Commendations, and Recommendations to your selfe,
and all my friendes with you, I ende my last Farewell, not thinking
any more to write vnto you, before I goe: and withall committing to
your faithfull Credence the eternal Memorie of our euerlasting
friendship, the inuiolable Memorie of our vnspotted friendshippe, the
sacred Memorie of our vowed friendship: which I beseech you Continue
with vsuall writings, as you may, and of all things let me heare some
Newes from you. As gentle M. Sidney, I thank his good Worship, hath
required of me, and so promised to do againe. Qui monet, vt facias,
quod iam facis, you know the rest. You may alwayes send them most
safely to me by Mistresse Kerke, and by none other. So once againe,
and yet once more, Farewell most hartily, mine owne good Master H.
and loue me, as I loue you, and thinke vpon poore Immerito, as he
thinketh vpon you.
Leycester House. This 5. of October. [1]579.
Per mare, per terras,
Viuus, mortuusque
Tuus Immerito.
To my long approued and singular good frende, master
G. H.
Ood Master H. I doubt not but you haue some great important
matter in hande, which al this while restraineth youre Penne, and wonted
readinesse in prouoking me vnto that, wherein your selfe nowe faulte.
If there bee any such thing in hatching, I pray you hartily, lette vs
knowe, before al the worlde see it. But if happly you dwell altogither
in Iustinians Courte, and giue your selfe to be deuoured of secreate
Studies, as of all likelyhood you doe: yet at least imparte some your
olde, or newe Latine, or Englishe, Eloquent and Gallant Poesies to vs,
from whose eyes, you saye, you keepe in a manner nothing hidden.
Little newes is here stirred: but that olde greate matter still
depending. His Honoure neuer better. I thinke the Earthquake was also
there wyth you (which I would gladly learne) as it was here with vs:
ouerthrowing diuers old buildings, and peeces of Churches. Sure verye
straunge to be hearde of in these Countries, and yet I heare some saye
(I knowe not howe truely) that they haue knowne the like before in
their dayes. Sed quid vobis videtur magnis Philosophis? I like
your late Englishe Hexameters so exceedingly well, that I also enure
my Penne sometime in that kinde: whyche I fynd indeede, as I haue
heard you often defende in worde, neither so harde, nor so harshe,
that it will easily and fairely, yeelde it selfe to our Moother tongue.
For the onely, or cheifest hardnesse, whych seemeth, is in the
Accente: whyche sometime gapeth, and as it were yawneth ilfauouredly,
comming shorte of that it should, and sometime exceeding the measure
of the Number, as in Carpenter, the middle sillable being vsed shorte
in speache, when it shall be read long in Verse, seemeth like a lame
Gosling, that draweth one legge after hir: and Heauen being vsed
shorte
as one sillable, when it is in verse stretched out with a Diastole,
is like a lame Dogge that holds vp one legge. But it is to be wonne with
Custome, and rough words must be subdued with Vse. For, why a Gods
name may not we, as else the Greekes, haue the kingdome of our owne
Language, and measure our Accentes by the sounde, reseruing the
Quantitie to the Verse? Loe here I let you see my olde vse of toying
in Rymes, turned into your artificiall straightnesse of Verse, by this
Tetrasticon. I beseech you tell me your fansie without
parcialitie.
See yee the blindfoulded pretie God, that feathered Archer,
Of Louers Miseries which maketh his bloodie Game?
Wote ye why, his Moother with a Veale hath coouered his Face?
Trust me, least he my Looue happely chaunce to beholde.
Seeme they comparable to those two, which I translated you ex
tempore in bed, the last time we lay togither in Westminster?
That which I eate, did I ioy, and that which I greedily gorged,
As for those many goodly matters leaft I for others.
I would hartily wish, you would either send me the Rules
and Precepts of Arte, which you obserue in Quantities, or else followe
mine, that M. Philip Sidney gaue me, being the very same which M.
Drant deuised, but enlarged with M. Sidneys
own iudgement, and augmented with my Obseruations, that we might both
accorde and agree in one: leaste we ouerthrowe one an other, and be
ouerthrown of the rest. Truste me, you will hardly beleeue what great
liking and estimation Maister Dyer had of your Satyricall
Verses,
and I, since the viewe thereof, hauing before of my selfe had speciall
liking of Englishe Versifying, am euen nowe aboute to giue you some
token, what and howe well therein I am able to doe: for, to tell you
trueth, I minde shortely at conuenient leysure, to sette forth a Booke
in this kinde, whiche I entitle, Epithalamion Thamesis, whyche
Booke, I dare vndertake wil be very profitable for the knowledge, and
rare for the Inuention and manner of handling. For in setting forth
the marriage of the Thames: I shewe his first beginning, and
offspring, and all the Countrey, that he passeth thorough, and also
describe all the Riuers throughout Englande, whyche came to this
Wedding, and their righte names, and right passage, &c. A worke,
beleeue me, of much labour, wherein Master Holinshed hath muche
furthered and aduantaged me, who therein hath bestowed singular
paines, in searching oute their firste heades, and sourses: and also in
tracing and dogging oute all their Course, til they fall into the
Sea.
O Tite, siquid, ego,
Ecquid erit pretij?
But of that more hereafter. Nowe, my Dreames, and Dying
Pellicane,
being fully finished (as I partelye signified in my laste Letters) and
presentlye to bee imprinted, I wil in hande forthwith with my Faery
Queene, whyche I praye you hartily send me with al expedition: and
your frendly Letters, and long expected Iudgement wythal, whyche let
not be shorte, but in all pointes suche, as you ordinarilye vse, and I
extrordinarily desire. Multum vale. Westminster. Quarto Nonas
Aprilis 1580. Sed, amabò te, meum Corculum tibi se
ex animo commendat plurimùm: iamdiu mirata, te nihil ad literas
suas responsi dedisse. Vide quæso, ne id tibi Capitale sit: Mihi
certè quidem erit, neque tibi hercle impunè, vt opinor,
Iterum vale, & quam voles sæpè.
Yours alwayes to commaunde,
IMMERITO.
Postscripte.
I take best my Dreames shoulde come forth alone, being
growen by meanes of the Glosse, (running continually in maner of a
Paraphrase) full as great my Calendar. Therein be some things
excellently, and many things wittily discoursed of E. K. and the
pictures so singularly set forth, and purtrayed, as if Michael Angelo
were there, he could (I think) nor amende the beste, nor reprehende
the worst. I know you woulde lyke them passing wel. Of my Stemmata
Dudleiana, and especially of the sundry Apostrophes therein,
addressed you knowe to whome, must more aduisement be had, than so
lightly to sende them abroade: howbeit, trust me (though I doe neuer
very well,) yet in my owne fancie, I neuer dyd better. Veruntamen to
sequor solum: nunquam verò assequar.
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