And none will lay Any oblation on thy shrine, But such as would betray Thy faith to faiths as false as thine. Yet, if thou choose On such thy freedom to bestow, Affection may excuse, For love from sympathy doth flow. MARGARET, Duchess of Newcastle, was the daughter of Sir Charles Lucas, and was born about 1622. She early evinced a fondness for literary pursuits, and was educated with the greatest care. Having been appointed one of the maids of honor to Henrietta Maria, consort of Charles the First, she accompanied the queen to France, and at Paris married the Marquis of Newcastle, in 1645. The marquis, soon after their marriage, took up his residence at Antwerp, and there his lady wrote and published, in 1653, a volume entitled Poems and Fancies. The marquis assisted her in her compositions, and so indefatigable were the noble pair, that they filled nearly twelve volumes folio, with plays, poems, orations and philosophical discourses. On the restoration of Charles the Second, the marquis and his lady returned to England, and lived in domestic happiness and devoted loyalty until her death, which occurred in 1673. As a poetess, the Duchess possessed invention, knowledge, and imagination, but wanted energy and taste. The Pastime and Recreation of the Queen of Fairies in Fairy Land, is her most popular work. The following description of the elvish queen is extremely fine : She on a dewy leaf doth bathe, And as she sits, the leaf doth wave; Mirth and Melancholy are also very fancifully personified. The former woos the poetess to dwell with her, promising sport and pleasure, and drawing the following gloomy but forcible and poetical sketch of her rival Melancholy: Her voice is low, and gives a hollow sound; She loves naught else but noise which discord makes, And shrieking owls which fly i' the night alone; The tolling bell, which for the dead rings out; The roaring winds, which shake the cedars tall, To this passage we add the picture of Melancholy's dwellings, as drawn by herself: I dwell in groves that gilt are with the sun; Sit on the banks by which clear waters run; My music is the buzzing of a fly; I walk in meadows, where grows fresh green grass; Walk up the hills, where round I prospects see, To hear how sheep do bleat, and cows do low; Yet better lov'd, the more that I am known; KATHERINE PHILIPS, born in 1631, was a worthy contemporary of the Duchess of Newcastle. She was honored with the praise of Cowley and Dryden, and Jeremy Taylor addressed to her a Discourse on Friendship. This amiable lady was the wife of James Philips of the Priory, Cardigan, and died of the small-pox, in the year 1664. Her poetical name of 'Orinda' was very popular with her contemporaries; but her effusions are said to have been published without her consent. The following lines On a Country Life offer a fair specimen of the productions of her delicate muse :— A COUNTRY LIFE. How sacred and how innocent A country-life appears, How free from tumult, discontent, From flattery or fears! This was the first and happiest life, When man enjoy'd himself, Till pride exchanged peace for strife, 'Twas here the poets were inspir'd, Here taught the multitude; The brave they here with honour fir'd, And civiliz'd the rude. The golden age did entertain No passion but of love: The thoughts of ruling and of gain Did ne'er their fancies move. Them that do covet only rest, Opinion is the rate of things, From hence our peace doth flow; When all the stormy world doth roar, I can not fear to tumble lower, Secure in these unenvied walls, Silence and innocence are safe; A heart that's nobly true, The name of CHARLES COTTON calls up a number of pleasing associations. It is best known from its piscatory and affectionate union with that of good old Izaak Walton, but Cotton was a cheerful, witty, accomplished gentleman, and only wanted prudence to have made him one of the leading characters of his day. He was the son of Sir George Cotton, and was born in Staffordshire, in 1630. His father, at his death, which occurred in 1658, left him an estate at Ashbourne, in Derbyshire, near the river Dove, so celebrated in the annals of trout-fishing. The property at the time was greatly encumbered, and the poet soon added to its burdens. As a means of proeuring relief, therefore, as well as recreation, Cotton translated several works from the French and the Italian, with both of which languages he seems to have been critically familiar. Of these translations, that of the Essays of Montaigne was dedicated to the Marquis of Halifax, and was of such rare excellence as to receive the unqualified approbation of that learned and accomplished nobleman. In 1670, when forty years of age, Cotton obtained a captain's commission in the army; and soon after made a fortunate marriage with the Countess Dowager of Ardglass, who possessed an annual income of fifteen hundred. pounds. The lady's fortune was, however, secured from his mismanagement, and his embarrassments were still unrelieved; but amidst them all, his happy, careless disposition seems to have enabled him to study, to angle, and to afford delight to his friends. His death occurred in 1687, and in the fifty-eighth year of his age. Besides his numerous translations, Cotton published several burlesques and travesties, the principal of which was Lucian burlesqued; or the Scoffer Scoffed. He wrote, also, some copies of verses full of genuine poetry, and as a poet, he may properly be ranked with Marvell. The following beautiful stanzas were addressed to Izaak Walton as an invitation to him to visit the poet, and angle with him in the Dove. Though Walton was at that time in the eighty-third year of his age, yet the invitation seems to have been accepted : INVITATION TO IZAAK WALTON. Whilst in this cold and blustering clime, Where bleak winds howl, and tempests roar, We pass away the roughest time Has been of many years before; Whilst from the most tempestuous nooks Whilst all the ills are so improv'd Of this dead quarter of the year, That even you, so much belov'd, We would not now wish with us here: In this estate, I say, it is Some comfort to us to suppose, That in a better clime than this, You, our dear friend, have more repose; And some delight to me the while, If the all-ruling Power please We then shall have a day or two, A day with not too bright a beam; And, master, half our work is done. Then, whilst behind some bush we wait And think ourselves in such an hour, Of meaner men the smaller fry. This, my best friend, at my poor home, JOHN DRYDEN, one of the most voluminous writers of the language, and the most popular poet of the age of Charles the Second, was the son of Erasmus Dryden, of Tichmersh, in Northamptonshire, and was born at Aldwincle, in that county, on the ninth of August, 1631. His early studies were pursued as king's scholar at Westminster school, where his attainments seem to have been rather solid, than brilliant, as he did not leave that school until the nineteenth year of his age, when he was elected to Trinity College, Cambridge. Dryden, both at school and at college, had occasionally indulged his poetic vein, and on one occasion translated 'The third satire of Persius,' as an evening exercise; but his first important poetical production did not appear until 1658, and was then drawn forth in the form of heroic stanzas on the death of Oliver Cromwell. The ripeness of style and versification of these stanzas, indicated the future excellence of the author; and in all Waller's poems on the same subject, there is nothing equal to such verses as the following: His grandeur he deriv'd from heaven alone, For he was great ere Fortune made him so; Dryden's father was a strict Puritan, and he himself had been educated in that faith; but when monarchy was restored, he went over with the tuneful throng who welcomed Charles the Second to England. He had now done with the Puritans, and was prepared to write poetical addresses to the king and the lord chancellor. The amusements of the drama, which had been suppressed during the commonwealth and the administration of Crom |