• {t}he

    ure light of poetcal intelligenc (1/2)

    From Arthur Neuendorffer@21:1/5 to All on Fri Aug 20 09:27:35 2021
    --------------------------------------------------------
    . Meres's Palladis Tamia; Wits Treasury,
    . Being the Second Part of Wits Commonwealth (1598)
    .
    ... the best for Comedy amongst vs bee,

    . Edward Earle of Oxforde,

    . Doctor Gager of Oxforde,
    . Maister Rowley once a rare Scholler of learned *PEMBROOKE Hall*,
    . Maister Edwardes one of her Maiesties Chappell,
    . eloquent and wittie Iohn Lilly,
    . *LODGE*,
    . Gascoyne,
    . Greene,
    . Shakespeare,
    . Thomas Nash,
    . Thomas Heywood,
    . Anthony Mundye OUR BEST PLOTTER,
    . Chapman,
    . Porter,
    . *WILSON*,
    . *HATHWAY*, and Henry Chettle. --------------------------------------------------------------
    A January 17, 1579 marriage entry in the Stratford Church Register:
    .
    . . . . "William *WILLSONNE* and
    . . . . . . Anne *HATHAWAY* of Shotterye."

    January 17 St. Anthony's Day: <<On this day in the age of
    Queen Elizabeth, a sick pig would be led to the dung-heap
    and was not allowed to be slaughtered.>> -----------------------------------------------------------
    In his Frontline essay, William Murphy
    mentions *THOMAS LODGE* once and only once: ......................................................
    Thirty-Six Plays in Search of an Author
    by William M. Murphy, Union College Symposium 1964 .............................................................
    There are those, like Delia Bacon, who are afflicted with what
    has been called the "Corporation Syndrome," holding that such
    distinguished literature must be the work of a commi[T]tee.
    Its members wou[L]d include, in additi[O]n to BACON and Oxfor[D],
    Robert GREENE, Geor[G]e PEELE, Samuel DANI[E]L, Thomas NASHE,
    *THOMAS LODGE*, Michael Drayton, and Thomas Dekker. ....................................................
    _________ <= 17 =>
    .
    . .m u s t .b. e t h e w o r k o f a c
    . .o m m i [T] t e e.I t s m e m b e r
    . .s w o u [L] d i n c l u d e,i n a d
    . .d i t i [O] n t o B a c o n a n d O
    . .x f o r [D] R o b e r t G r e e n e,
    . .G e o r [G] e P e e l e,S a m u e l
    . .D a n i [E] l,T h o m a s N a s h e,
    . *T H O M .A. S L O D G E*

    [T.LODGE] 17 : Prob. stuck on *THOMAS LODGE* ~ 1 in 100,000 -------------------------------------------------------------
    david kathman wrote:

    <<In 1596, *THOMAS LODGE* in his *WITS MISERy* mentioned
    the "ghost which cried so MISERably at the Theatre,
    *like an OISTER-WIFE*, 'HAMlet, REVEnge'.">> ------------------------------------------------------------- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Lodge

    <<THOMAS LODGE (1558 - September 1625) was an English dramatist.
    He was born at West HAM, the second son of Sir Thomas Lodge,
    who was Lord Mayor of the City of London in 1562-1563.

    Young Thomas served as *PAGE* to the Stanleys, Earls of Derby,
    until approximately 1571, when he enrolled in the
    Merchant-Taylors' School. From there he went on to
    Trinity College, Oxford, where he took his degree in 1577.>> -------------------------------------------------
    Ben Jonson (1623) _To the Memory of Shakespeare_ .............................................
    My Shakespeare, rise; I will no{T LODGE} thee by
    Chaucer, or Spenser, or bid Beaumont lye
    A little further, to make thee a roome :
    Thou art a Moniment, without a TOMBe, .............................................
    Shine *FORTH*, thou Starr{E O}f Poets, and wi[T]h rage,
    Or inf[L]uence, chide, [O]r cheere the [D]rooping Sta[G]e;
    Which, sinc[E] thy flight fro' hence, hath mourn'd like night,
    And despaires day, but for thy Volumes light. .............................................
    . . . . . <= 11 =>
    .
    . S h i n e*F O R T H* t
    . h o u S t a r r{E O} f
    . P o e t s,a n d w i [T]
    . h r a g e.O r i n f [L]
    . u e n c e,c h i d e,[O]
    . r c h e e r e t h e [D]
    . r o o p i n g S t a [G]
    . e;W h i c h,s i n c [E]
    . t h y f l i g h t
    .
    [T LODGE] 11 : Prob. at end of poem ~ 1 in 18,000 ..................................................
    (Shortest positive ELS [T LODGE] skip in KJV = 25) ------------------------------------------------------
    Source: http://tinyurl.com/lju45g7 https://archive.org/stream/poeticalworksofw00bass#page/114/mode/2up
    .
    . ELEGY ON SHAKESPEARE,
    . From Lansdowne MS.(777) TEMP. James I. ......................................................
    . On Mr. Wm. Shakespeare
    . HE DYED IN APRILL 1616
    .
    . Renowned Spencer lye a thought more nye
    . To learned Chaucer, and rare Beaumond lye
    . A little neerer Spenser, to make roome
    . For *SHAK{E}SPEARE* in your threefold, fowerfol{D} Tombe.
    .(To LODGE) all fowre in one bed m{A}ke a shift
    . Untill Doomesdaye, for ha{R}dly will a sift
    . Betwixt ys day and yt {B}y *FATE* be slayne,
    . For whom your Curta{I}nes may be drawn againe.
    . If yoUr prec{E}dency in death doth barre
    . A *FOURTH* place in your sacred sepulcher,
    . Under this carved marble of thine owne,
    . Sleepe, rare Tragœdian, Shakespeare, sleep alone;
    . Thy unmolested peace unshared Cave,
    . Possesse as Lord, not Tenant, of thy Grave,
    . That unto us & others it may be
    . Honor hereafter to be layde by thee.

    - Wm. Basse
    .....................................
    . . . . <= 30 =>
    .
    . For*SHAK{E}SPEARE* .inyour.threefoldf
    . owerfol {D} TOMBE (ToLODGE)allfowrein
    . onebedm {A} keash .iftUnti.llDoomesda
    . yeforha {R} dlywi .llasift.Betwixtysd
    . ayandyt {B} yFATE .beslayn.eForwhomyo
    . urCurta {I} nesma .ybedraw.nagaineIfy
    . oUrprec {E} dency .indeath.dothbarreA
    . FOURTHp .l. acEin .yoursac.redsepulch
    .
    {E.DARBIE} 30 : Prob. ~ 1 in 10,300 .......................................................... http://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A12017.0001.001?view=toc

    <<The most lamentable Romaine tragedie of Titus Andronicus
    As it was plaide by the right honourable the {E}arle of {DARBIE},
    *Earl of PEMBROOKE* , and Earl of Sussex their seruants.

    London: Printed by Iohn Danter, and are to be sold by
    Edward White & Thomas Millington, at the little North
    doore of Paules at the signe of the Gunne, 1594.>> .....................................................
    (Shortest positive ELS {DARBIE} skip in KJV = 33) ------------------------------------------------------ http://pages.uoregon.edu/rbear/muses.html

    . THE TEARES OF THE MUSES (1591) BY ED. Sp.
    . (dedicated to *[ALICE S]PENCER*, Countess of Derby) .......................................................
    All places th{EY} with follie have possest,
    And with vaine toyes the vulgar[E] entertaine;
    But me have banished, with all the rest
    That whi[L]ome wont to wait upon my traine,
    Fine Counterfesaunce and u[N]hurtfull Sport,
    Delight and Laughter deckt in seemly sort.

    [A]ll these, and all that els the comick stage
    With seasoned wi[T] and goodly pleasance graced,
    By which mans life in his like[S]t image
    Was limned *FORTH*, are wholly now defaced;
    And those s[W]eete wits which wont the like to frame
    Are now despizd, and made a laughing game.

    And he, the man whom Nature selfe had made
    To mock her selfe, and *TRUTH* to imitate,
    With kindly counter under *MIMICK SHADE* ,
    Our p{LE(a)SANT WILLY}, ah! *IS DEAD* of late:
    With whom all joy and jolly meriment
    Is also deaded, and in dolour drent. ...................................................
    . p{LE(a)SANT WILLY}
    . {WILL STANLEY}
    .......................................................
    . . . . . . <= 49 =>
    .
    . Allplacesth {E/Y} withfolliehavepossestAndwithvainetoy
    . esthevulgar [E] entertaineButmehavebanishedwithallthe
    . restThatwhi [L] omewonttowaituponmytraineFineCounterf
    . esaunceandu [N] hurtfullSportDelightandLaughterdeckti
    . nseemlysort [A] lltheseandallthatelsthecomickstageWit
    . hseasonedwi [T] andgoodlypleasancegracedBywhichmansli
    . feinhislike [S] timageWaslimnedFORTHarewhollynowdefac
    . edAndthoses [W] eetewitswhichwonttheliketoframeArenow
    . despizdandm .a. dealaughinggame
    .
    [W.STANLE/Y}] -49 :
    Prob. near to {Our p-LE(a)SANT WILLY} ~ 1 in 32,000 ...................................................
    In stead thereof scoffing Scurrilitie,
    And scornfull Follie with Contempt is crept,
    Rolling in rymes of shameles ribaudrie
    Without regard, or due decorum kept;
    Each idle wit at will presumes to make,
    And doth the learneds taske upon him take.

    But that same gentle spirit, from whose pen
    Large streames of honnie and sweete nectar flowe,
    Scorning the boldnes of such base-borne men,
    Which dare their follies *FORTH* so rashlie throwe,
    Doth rather choose to sit in idle cell,
    Than so himselfe to mockerie to sell. --------------------------------------------------- http://www.bartleby.com/331/186.html
    .
    . Rosalynde (1590) by *THOMAS LODGE*
    _Phoebe's Sonnet, a Reply to Montanus' Passion_

    When Love was first begot,
    And by the *moVER's WILL*
    Did fall to human lot
    His solace to fulfil,
    Devoid of all deceit,
    A chaste and holy fire
    Did quick[E]n man's conce[I]t,
    And women's [B]reast inspi[R]e.
    The gods th[A]t saw the goo[D]
    That mortal{S} did approve,
    {W}ith kind and holy mood
    Began to talk of Love.
    ...................................
    . . . . . . . . <= 11 =>
    .
    . D i d q u i c k [E] n m
    . a n's c o n c e [I] t,A
    . n d w o m e n's [B] r e
    . a s t i n s p i [R] e.T
    . h e g o d s t h [A] t s
    . a w t h e g o o [D] T h
    . a t m o r t a l {S} d i
    . d a p p r o v e,{W} i t
    . h k i n d a n d (H) o l
    . y m o o d
    .
    [{W.S.} DARBIE] -11 : Prob. in song ~ 1 in 3,650,000 .......................................................
    But during this accord,
    A wonder *STRANGE* to hear,
    Whilst Love in deed and word
    Most faithful did appear,
    False-semblance came in place,
    By Jealousy attended,
    And with a double face
    Both love and fancy blended;
    Which made the gods forsake,
    And men from fancy fly,
    And maidens scorn a make,
    Forsooth, and so *WILL I*.
    ..................................................
    . Epilogue _ROSALYNDE OR, EUPHUES' GOLDEN LEGACY_
    .
    If you grace me with that favor, you encourage
    me to be more forward; and as soon as I have
    overlooked my labors, expect the Sailor's Calendar.
    .
    . *T. LODGE. FINIS*
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    Was *THOMAS LODGE* the *PAGE* that served W.S.'s WIT? ........................................................
    Job 31:32 The *STRANGER* did no{T LODGE} in the street:
    . but I opened my doores to the trauailer. -----------------------------------------------------------
    . . . CYNTHIA'S REVELS: ACT I SCENE I. -- Ben Jonson
    .
    CUPID: So Hercules might challenge priority of us both, because
    . he can throw [T]he bar farther, or [L]ift more join'd st[O]ols at
    . the arm's en[D], than we. If this mi[G]ht carry it, then w[E], who
    . have made the whole body of divinity tremble at the twang of our bow,
    . and enforc'd Saturnius himself to lay by his curled front, thunder,
    . and three-fork'd fires, and put on a masking suit, too light
    . for a reveller of eighteen to be seen in -- ....................................................
    . . . . . . . . . . <= 15 =>
    .
    . h e c a n t h r o w [T] h e b a
    . r f a r t h e r,o r [L] i f t m
    . o r e j o i n'd s t [O] o l s a
    . t t h e a r m's e n [D],t h a n
    . w e.I f t h i s m i [G] h t c a
    . r r y i t,t h e n w [E],

    [T.LODGE] 15
    ---------------------------------------------------
    Henry IV, Part 1 (Quarto 1, 1598) Act I, scene iii
    .
    EARL OF WORCESTER: Peace coosen, say no more.
    . And now *I WILL UNCLASPE a SECRET BOOKE* ,
    . And to your quicke conceiuing discontents
    . Ile read[E] you matter deepe and daun[G]erous,
    . As full of perill an[D] aduenterous spirit,
    . As to [O]rewalke a Current roring [L]owd,
    . On the vnstedfast foo[T]ing of a *SPEARE*. ....................................................
    . . . . . . . . . . . . . <= 22 =>

    . *U N C L A S P E a S E C R E T B O O K .E* A n
    . .d t o y o u r q u i c k e c o n c e i .u. i n
    . .g d i s c o n t e n t s I l e r e a d [E] y o
    . .u m a t t e r d e e p e a n d d a u n [G] e r
    . .o u s,A s f u l l o f p e r i l l a n [D] a d
    . .u e n t e r o u s s p i r i t,A s t o [O] r e
    . .w a l k e a C u r r e n t r o r i n g [L] o w
    . .d,O n t h e v n s t e d f a s t f o o [T] i n
    . .g o f a*S P E A R E*.
    .
    [T.LODGE] -22 (one of 6 *SPEARE*s) (only *SECRET BOOKE*) ----------------------------------------------------------
    Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. by Washington Irving. http://www.bartleby.com/109/6.html

    . . . THE MUTABILITY OF LITERATURE.
    . . .A COLLOQUY IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY.

    I had taken down a little thick quarto, curiously bound in
    parchment, with brass *CLASPS*, and seated myself at the table
    in a venerable elbow-chair. Instead of reading, howEVER, I was
    beguiled by the solemn monastic air and lifeless quiet of the
    place, into a train of musing. As I looked around upon the old
    volumes in their mouldering covers, thus ranged on the shelves
    and apparently nEVER disturbed in their repose, I could not but
    consider the library a kind of literary catacomb, where authors,
    like mummies, are piously entombed and left to blacken and
    moulder in dusty oblivion.

    While I sat half-murmuring, half-meditating, these unprofitable
    speculations with my head resting on my hand, I was thrumming
    with the other hand upon the quarto, until I accidentally
    loosened the *CLASPS*; when, to my utter astonishment, the
    little book gave two or three yawns, like one awaking from
    a *DEEP* sleep, then a husky hem, and at length began to talk. .....................................................................
    “Ah,” said the little quarto, with a heavy sigh, “I see how it is;
    these modern scribblers have superseded all the good old authors.
    I suppose nothing is read now-a-days but Sir Philip [SIDNEY]’s
    Arcadia, Sackville’s stately plays, and Mirror for Magistrates,
    or the fine-spun euphuisms of the ‘unparalleled John Lyly.”’

    “There you are again mistaken,” said I; “the writers whom you
    suppose in vogue, because they happened to be so when you were last
    in circulation, have long since had their day. Sir Philip [SIDNEY]’s
    Arcadia, the immortality of which was so fondly predicted by
    his admirers, and which, in truth, is full of noble thoughts,
    delicate images, and graceful turns of language, is now
    scarcel[Y E]ver me[N]tione[D]. Sackv[I]lle ha[S] strutted
    into obscurity; and even Lyly, though his writings were
    once the delight of a court, and apparently perpetuated
    by a proverb, is now scarcely known even by name.
    ......................
    . . . <= 6 =>
    .
    . . s c. a. r c e
    . . l [Y E] v e r
    . . m e [N] t i o
    . . n e [D] S a c
    . . k v [I] l l e
    . . h a [S] s t r
    . . u t .t. e d

    [SIDNE/Y] -6
    ............................................................
    "My very good sir," said the little quarto, yawning most drearily
    in my face, "excuse my interrupting you, but I perceive you are
    rather given to prose. I would ask the fate of an author who
    was making some noise just as I left the world. His reputation,
    however, was considered quite temporary. The learned shook their
    heads at him, for he was a poor, half-educated varlet, that knew
    little of Latin, and nothing of Greek, and had been obliged to
    run the country for deer-stealing. I think his name was
    Shakespeare. I presume he soon sunk into oblivion."

    "On the contrary," said I, "it is owing to that *VERy man* that
    the literature of his period has experienced a duration beyond the
    ordinary term of English literature. There rise authors now and
    then who seem proof against the mutability of language because
    they have rooted themselves in the unchanging principles of
    human nature. They are like gigantic trees that we sometimes
    see on the banks of a stream, which by their vast and *DEEP* roots,
    penetrating through the mere surface and laying hold on the VERy
    foundations of the earth, preserve the soil around them from
    being swept away by the EVER-flowing current, and hold up many
    a neighboring plant, and perhaps WORTHless WEED, to perpetuity.
    Such is the case with Shakespeare, whom we behold defying the
    encroachments of time, retaining in modern use the language and
    literature of his day, and giving duration to many an indifferent
    author, merely from having flourished in his vicinity. But even
    he, I grieve to say, is gradually assuming the tint of age,
    and his whole form is overrun by a profusion of commentators,
    who, like clambering vines and creepers, almost
    *bury the NOBLE plant* that upholds them." .........................................................
    {W}hat (D)reary waste{S} (o)f m(E)taphysics! H[E|r)e a(N)d there o(N)ly
    . [D|o) we behold th(E) he[A|v)en-illumine(D) ba[R|d}s, e{L}evated like
    . [B|e}ac{O}ns on their w[I|d}ely-separated h[E]ights, to transmit
    .
    {t}he <P>ure light of poet<I>cal intelligenc<E> from age to age."

    I was just about to launch *FORTH* into eulogiums upon the poets
    of the day, when the sudden opening of the door caused me to
    turn my head. It was the VERgEr, who came to inform me that
    it was time to close the library. I sought to have a parting
    word with the quarto, but the worthy little tome was silent;
    the *CLASPS* were closed: and it looked perfectly
    unconscious of all that had passed. .........................................................
    . . . . . . <= 15 =>
    .
    . {W. H} a. t. (D) r e a r y w a .s. t e
    . {S}(o) f. m. (E) t a p h y s i .c. s!H
    . [E](r) e. a. (N) d t h e r e o (N) l y
    . [D](o) w. e . b. e h o l d t h (E) h e
    . [A](v) e. n- .i. l l u m i n e (D) b a
    . [R]{d} s, e. {L} e v a t e d l .i. k e
    . [B]{e} a. c. {O} n s o n t h e .i. r w
    . [I]{d} e. l . y- s e p a r a t .e. d h
    . [E]{i} g. h . t. s,t o t r a n .s. m i
    . .t {t} h. e. <P> u r e l i g h .t. o f
    . (P. O. E. T) <I> c a l i n t e .l. l i
    . .g (E) n. c. <E> f r o m a g e .t. o a
    . .g .e.
    .
    [{W.S.} E.DARBIE] 15
    {dedit} 15 : He gave (Latin)
    (voro) -15 : I devour/read eagerly (Latin)
    (NED) -15,15 : Prob. both in array ~ 1 in 150
    .
    Prob. of [{W.S.} E.DARBIE] in last 2 sentences ~ 1 in 57,000,000. --------------------------------------------------------------- http://lgbt.wikia.com/wiki/Esm%C3%A9_Stewart,_1st_Duke_of_Lennox

    <<{E}smé [STEWART](1542 – 26 May 1583), 1st Duke of Lennox,
    was the son of John Stewart, 5th Lord of Aubigny. Sir James
    Melville described him as "of nature, upright, just, and gentle".

    At the age of 37 {E}smé was introduced to the 13-year-old James VI of Scotland at the time when the latter made his formal entry into Edinburgh. The two became extremely close and it was said by an English observer that "from the time he was 14 years old and no more, that is, when the Lord Stuart came into Scotland... even then he began... *to CLASP* some one in the embraces of his great love, above all others" and that James became "in such love with him
    as in the open sight of the people often he *WILL CLASP* him about the neck with his arms and kiss him". This affair was to lead to Stewart's return
    to France and early death in 1583.

    The King first made Stewart a gentleman of the bedchamber, then went on to the Privy Council. He was created 1st Earl of Lennox, on 5 March 1580, and finally 1st Duke of Lennox on 5 August 1581. In Presbyterian Scotland the thought of a Catholic duke
    irked many and Lennox had to make a choice between his Catholic faith or his loyalty to James. At the end Lennox chose James and the king taught him the doctrines of Calvinism. The Scottish Kirk remained suspicious of Lennox after his public conversion
    and took alarm when he had James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton tried and beheaded on charges of treason. The Scottish ministry was also warned that the duke sought to “draw the King to carnal lust.”

    In response the Scottish nobles plotted to oust Lennox. They did so by luring James to Ruthven Castle as a guest but then kept him as prisoner for ten months. The Lord Enterprisers forced him to banish Lennox. The duke journeyed back to France and kept a
    secret correspondence with James. Lennox in these letters says he gave up his family "to dedicate myself entirely to you"; he prayed to die for James to prove "the faithfulness which is engraved within my heart, which will last forever." The former duke
    wrote "Whatever might happen to me, I shall always be your faithful servant... you are alone in this world whom my heart is resolved to serve. And would to God that my breast might be split open so that it might be seen what is engraven therein."

    James was devastated by the loss of Lennox. With his return to France, Lennox had met a frosty reception as an apostate. The Scottish nobles had believed they that would be proven right in their convictions that Lennox's conversion was artificial when he
    returned to France. Instead the former duke remained Presbyterian and died shortly after, leaving James his embalmed heart. James had repeatedly vouched for Lennox's religious sincerity and memorialized him in a poem called "Ane Tragedie of the *PHOENIX*"
    , which said he was like an exotic bird of unique beauty killed by envy.>> ----------------------­------------------------------­--
    The SUSAN Constant: May 26
    ...................................................
    May 26, 604 1st Archbishop of Canterbury AUGUSTINE dies

    May 26, 1583 {E}smé {STEWART} 1st Duke of Lennox dies
    May 26, 1583 SUSANna Shakespeare Hall born
    _____________ (after a 26 week gestation!)

    May 26, 1587 SUSANna Vere Herbert born

    May 26, 1599 (HENRY) PORTER disappears
    May 26, 1609 Fighting FRANCIS Vere dies
    May 26, 1703 Samuel Pepys ( *PEEPS* ) dies ----------------------------------------------------------------- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esm%C3%A9_Stewart,_3rd_Duke_of_Lennox

    <<{E}smé {STEWART}, 3rd DUKE of Lennox (1579 - 30 July 1624)
    was the son of {E}smé {STEWART}, 1st DUKE of Lennox.
    He was a patron of the playwright *BEN JONSON*,
    who lived in his household for five years. ......................................................
    He died & was interred, on *August 6, 1624* in Westminster Abbey.>> .............................................................
    <<On August 6, 1623, Anne Hathaway dies in Stratford>> .............................................................
    <<On August 6, 1623, longtime friend & protector of Galileo
    Maffeo Barberini was elected Pope Urban VIII.>> ---------------------------------------------------------------
    On the 14th anniversary of Anne Hathaway's death [August 6, 1637]
    Ben Jonson was BURIED UPRIGHT against the wall of his crypt.

    'Two feet by two feet will do for all I want'. - Jonson ---------------------------------------------------
    *the T{urtle an[d} Phoenix]*
    (Version I : http://tinyurl.com/jsxgzrf)

    first published in 1601 as a supplement to a long
    poem by Robert Chester, entitled Love's Martyr. ..............................................
    Let the bird of lowdest lay,
    On the sole Arabian tree,
    Herauld sad and trumpet be:
    To whose sound chaste wings obay.
    But thou shriking harbinger,
    Foule precurrer of the fiend,
    Augour of the feuers end,
    To this troupe come thou not neere.
    From this Session interdict
    Euery foule of tyrant wing,
    Saue the Eagle feath'red King,
    Keepe the obsequie so strict.
    Let the Priest in Surples white,
    That defunctiue Musicke can,
    Be the death-deuining *SWAN*,
    .
    Lest the Requi[E]m lacke hi[S] right.
    And [T]hou trebl[E] dated Cro[W],
    That thy s[A]ble gende[R] mak'st,
    With \T\he breath thou giu'st and tak'st,
    Mongst our mourners shalt thou go.
    ......................................
    . . . <= 9 =>
    .
    . L e s .t. t h e R e
    . q u i {E} m l a c k
    . e h i [S] r i g h t
    . A n d [T] h o u t r
    . e b l [E] d a t e d
    . C r o [W] T h a t t
    . h y s [A] b l e g e
    . n d e [R] m a k's t,
    . W i t .h\T\ h e b r
    . e a t .h. t h o u g
    . i u's .t. a n d t a
    . k's t,
    .
    [{E.}STEWAR\T\] 9
    ---------------------------------------------------- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Phoenix_and_the_Turtle

    <<[The Phoenix and the Turtle] was first published in 1601 as a supplement to a long poem by Robert Chester, entitled Love's Martyr. The full title of Chester's book explains the content:

    http://tinyurl.com/gpqcxgk

    Love's Mar(T)yr: or Rosalins Complaint. Allegorically [S]hadowing *THE TRUTH* of Loue, in the constan[T] *FATE* of [The Phoenix and the Turtle]. A Poeme ent[E]rlaced with much varietie and raritie; no[W] first translated out of the venerable It[A]lian
    Torquato Caeliano, by Robert Cheste[R]. With the true legend of famous King Arthur \T\he last of the nine Worthies, being the first Essay of a new Brytish Poet: collected out of diuerse Authenticall Records. To these are added some new compositions of
    seuerall moderne Writers whose names are subscribed to their seuerall workes, vpon the first subiect viz. [The Phoenix and Turtle].
    ......................................................
    ____ <= 35 =>
    .
    . LovesMar (T) yrorRosalinsComplaintAlleg
    . orically [S] hadowingTHETRUTHofLoueinth
    . econstan [T] FATEofthePhoenixandTurtleA
    . Poemeent [E] rlacedwithmuchvarietieandr
    . aritieno [W] firsttranslatedoutoftheven
    . erableIt [A] lianTorquatoCaelianobyRobe
    . rtCheste [R] WiththetruelegendoffamousK
    . ingArthu r\T\ helastofthenineWorth

    [(T)STEWAR\T\] 35 : Prob. ~ 1 in 3240 ...................................................
    Chester prefaced his poem with a short dedication addressed to the Phoenix and Turtledove. The Phoenix is envisaged as female and the dove as male:

    Chester's main poem is a long allegory in which the relationship between the birds is explored, and its symbolism articulated. It incorporates the story of King Arthur, and a history of ancient Britain, emphasizing Welsh etymologies for British towns. It
    culminates with the joint immolation of the Phoenix and Turtledove, giving birth to a new and more beautiful bird from the ashes.

    It is followed by a brief collection of "Diverse Poeticall Essaies"
    by the "best and chiefest of our moderne writers, with their names
    sub-scribed to their particular workes". These include, in addition
    to Shakespeare, *BEN JONSON*, George Chapman, John Marston and the
    anonymous "Vatum Chorus" and "Ignoto". All use the same imagery: .......................
    Hereafter follow Diverse Poeticall Essaies on the Former subiect; viz.:
    *the T{urtle an[d} Phoenix]*. Done by the best and chiefest of our
    moderne writers, with their names subscribed to their particular workes:
    neuer before extant. And (now first) consecrated by them all generally
    to the loue and merite of the *TRUE-noble* Knight, Sir lohn Salisburie. ..................................................
    . *the T{urtle an[d} Phoenix]*
    . {e.rutland}[oxenpho(r)d] -----------------------------------------------------------
    . *the T{urtle an[d} Phoenix]* (Version II ?)
    .
    . Let the bird of loudest lay,
    . On the sole Arabian tree,
    . Herald sad and trumpet be,
    . To whose sound cha(S)te wings obey.
    . But tho(U) shrieking harbinge(R),
    . Foul precurrer of th(E) fiend,
    . Augur of the fe(V)er's end,
    . To this troup(E) come thou not near!
    ......................................
    . . . . . . <= 18 =>
    .
    . L e t t h e .b. i r d o f l o u d e s
    . t l a y,O n .t. h e s o l e A r a b i
    . a n t r e e, H. e r a l d s a d a n d
    . t r u m p e .t. b e,T o w h o s e s o
    . u n d c h a (S) t e w i n g s o b e y.
    . B u t t h o (U) s h r i e k i n g h a
    . r b i n g e (R),F o u l p r e c u r r
    . e r o f t h (E) f i e n d,A u g u r o
    . f t h e f e (V) e r's e n d,T o t h i
    . s t r o u p (E) c o m e t h o u n o t
    . n e a r!

    {E.VERUS} 18 : (Oxford's Latin name)
    . Prob. at start ~ 1 in 6,860
    ......................................
    . Let the priest in surplice white,
    . That defunctive music can,
    . Be the death-divining *SWAN*,
    . Lest the requ{I}/E/m lack hi{S} right.
    . And {T}hou trebl{E}-dated cro{W},
    . That thy s{A}ble gende{R} makest
    . Wi{T}h (T)he breath (T)hou gives(T) and takes(T),
    . 'Mongst our mourners shalt thou go.
    ......................................
    . . <= 9 =>

    . L e s t t .h. e r e
    . q u {I}/E/ m. l a c k
    . h i {S} r .i. g h t. A
    . n d {T} h .o. u t r e
    . b l {E}-d .a. t e d c
    . r o {W},T .h. a t t h
    . y s {A} b .l. e g e n
    . d e {R} m .a. k e s t
    . W i {T} h (T) h e b r
    . e a .t. h (T) h o u g
    . i v .e. s (T) a n d t
    . a k .e. s (T),

    {I.STEWART} 9 Prob. ~ 1 in 137,000
    ......................................
    . Whereupon it made this threne
    . To the phoenix and the dove,
    . Co-su(P)remes (A)nd sta(R)s of lo(V)e,
    . As ch(O)rus to their tragic scene.
    ......................................
    ___ <= 6 =>
    .
    . C o-s u (P) r
    . e m e s (A) n
    . d s t a (R) s
    . o f l o (V) e,
    . A s c h (O) r
    . u s t o .t. h
    . e i r t .r. a
    . g i c s .c. e
    . n e.
    .
    (PARVO) 6 : (Rutland/Manners' motto)
    . Prob. at end ~ 1 in 15,000 -------------------------------------------------------------
    Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. by Washington Irving.
    .
    THE BOAR'S HEAD TAVERN, EASTCHEAP.
    A SHAKESPEARIAN RESEARCH.
    .
    There was something truly cheering in this triumph of warmth and
    verdure over the frosty [T]hraldom of winter; it was, as the squire
    observed, an emblem of Ch[R]istmas hospitality breaking through the
    chills of ceremony [A]nd selfishness and thawing ev{E}ry heart into
    a flow. He point(E)d [W]ith pleasure to the indication{S} of good cheer
    reeking from th{E} chi(M)ney{S} of the co{M}fortabl{E} far{M}-hous(E)s
    and low thatched cot[T]ages. "I love," said he, "to see this day w{E}ll
    kept by rich and poor; it i[S] a great thing to have one day in the
    year, at least, when you are sure of being welcome wherever you
    go, and of having, as it were, the world all thrown open to you;
    and I am almost disposed to join with Poor Robin in his
    malediction on every churlish enemy to this honest festival:
    .
    . "`Those who at Christmas do repine,
    . And would fain hence dispatch him,
    . May they with old Duke Humphry dine,
    . Or else may Squire Ketch catch'em.'" .........................................................................
    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . <= 52 =>
    .
    . The r ewassomethingtru l y .c. hee r ing i nthistr i umphofw a r m t h a
    . ndv e rdureoverthefros t y [T] hra l dom o fwinter i twasast h e s q u i
    . reo b servedanemblemof C h [R] ist m ash o spitali t ybreaki n g t h r o
    . ugh t hechillsofceremo n y [A] nds e lfi s hnessan d thawing e v{E}r y h
    . ear t intoaflowHepoint(E)d [W] ith p lea s uretoth e indicat i o n{S}o f
    . goo d cheerreekingfrom t h {E} chi(M)ney{S}oftheco{M}fortabl{E}f a r{M}h
    . ous(E)sandlowthatchedc o t [T] age s Ilo v esaidhe t oseethi s d a y w{E}
    . llk e ptbyrichandpoori t i [S] agr e att h ingtoha v eoneday i n t h e y
    . ear a tleastwhenyouare s u .r. eof b ein g welcome w herever y o u g o
    .
    [STEWART] -52 : Prob. in phrase ~ 1 in 3,000
    {ESME} 8,53
    (ESME) 29 : Prob. 3{ESME}s in phrase ~ 1 in 30 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    . Venus and Adonis (1593)
    .
    For there his smell with others being mingled,
    The hot sent-snuffing hounds are driuen to doubt,
    Ceasing their clamorous crie, till they haue singled
    With much ado the cold fault cleanlie out,
    Then do they spend their mouth's, *ECCHO replies* ,
    As if an o{T}he{R} ch{A}se {W}er{E} in {T}he {S}ki{E}s. ...............................................
    . . <= 3 =>
    .
    . .A. .s. i
    . .f. .a. n
    . {O} {T} h
    . {E} {R} c
    . (H) {A} s
    . (E) {W} e
    . (r) {E} i
    . (n) {T} h
    . (E) {S} k
    . (I) {E} s.
    .............................
    {E.STEWART} -3: Prob. in any V&A line ~ 1 in 2500
    (HErnEI)
    ................................................
    By THIS POORE WAT farre off vpon a hill,
    Stands on his hinder-legs with listning eare,
    To hearken if his foes pursue him still,
    Anon their loud alarums (H)e doth h(E)are,
    And (N)ow his g(R)iefe ma(Y) be compared well,
    To one sore sicke, that heares the passing bell. ...............................................
    . . <= 3 =>
    .
    . (H) e d o t h h
    . (E) a r e,A n d
    . (N) o w h i s g
    . (R) i e f e m a
    . (Y) b e c o m p
    . .a. r e d w e l l,
    .
    (HENRY) 7
    ................................................ ................................................
    Here kennel’d in a brake she fin[D]s a hound,
    And asks the weary c[A]itiff for his master,
    And the[R]e another licking of his wou[N]d,
    ’Gainst venom’d sores the on[LY] sovereign plaster;
    And her[E] she meets another sadly scowling,
    To whom she speaks, and he replies with howling. ................................................
    . . . . <= 24 =>
    .
    . H .e. r e k e n n e l’d i n a b r a k e s h e f i
    . n [D] s a h o u n d,A n d a s k s t h e w e a r y

    [continued in next message]

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Arthur Neuendorffer@21:1/5 to All on Fri Aug 20 12:25:21 2021
    --------------------------------------------------------
    . Meres's Palladis Tamia; Wits Treasury,
    . Being the Second Part of Wits Commonwealth (1598)
    .
    ... the best for Comedy amongst vs bee,

    . Edward Earle of Oxforde,

    . Doctor Gager of Oxforde,
    . Maister Rowley once a rare Scholler of learned *PEMBROOKE Hall*,
    . Maister Edwardes one of her Maiesties Chappell,
    . eloquent and wittie Iohn Lilly,
    . *LODGE*,
    . Gascoyne,
    . Greene,
    . Shakespeare,
    . Thomas Nash,
    . Thomas Heywood,
    . Anthony Mundye OUR BEST PLOTTER,
    . Chapman,
    . Porter,
    . *WILSON*,
    . *HATHWAY*, and Henry Chettle. --------------------------------------------------------------
    A January 17, 1579 marriage entry in the Stratford Church Register:
    .
    . . . . "William *WILLSONNE* and
    . . . . . . Anne *HATHAWAY* of Shotterye."

    January 17 St. Anthony's Day: <<On this day in the age of
    Queen Elizabeth, a sick pig would be led to the dung-heap
    and was not allowed to be slaughtered.>> -----------------------------------------------------------
    . . In his Frontline essay, William Murphy
    . . mentions *THOMAS LODGE* once & only once: ......................................................
    Thirty-Six Plays in Search of an Author
    by William M. Murphy, Union College Symposium 1964 .............................................................
    There are those, like Delia Bacon, who are afflicted with what
    has been called the "Corporation Syndrome," holding that such
    distinguished literature must be the work of a commi[T]tee.
    Its members wou[L]d include, in additi[O]n to BACON and Oxfor[D],
    Robert GREENE, Geor[G]e PEELE, Samuel DANI[E]L, Thomas NASHE,
    *THOMAS LODGE*, Michael Drayton, and Thomas Dekker. ....................................................
    _________ <= 17 =>
    .
    . .m u s t .b. e t h e w o r k o f a c
    . .o m m i [T] t e e.I t s m e m b e r
    . .s w o u [L] d i n c l u d e,i n a d
    . .d i t i [O] n t o B a c o n a n d O
    . .x f o r [D] R o b e r t G r e e n e,
    . .G e o r [G] e P e e l e,S a m u e l
    . .D a n i [E] l,T h o m a s N a s h e,
    . *T H O M .A. S L O D G E*

    [T.LODGE] 17 : Prob. stuck on *THOMAS LODGE* ~ 1 in 100,000 -------------------------------------------------------------
    david kathman wrote:

    <<In 1596, *THOMAS LODGE* in his *WITS MISERy* mentioned
    . the "ghost which cried so MISERably at the Theatre,
    . . *like an OISTER-WIFE*, 'HAMlet, REVEnge'.">> ------------------------------------------------------------- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Lodge

    <<THOMAS LODGE (1558 - September 1625) was an English dramatist.
    He was born at West HAM, the second son of Sir Thomas Lodge,
    who was Lord Mayor of the City of London in 1562-1563.

    Young Thomas served as *PAGE* to the Stanleys, Earls of Derby,
    until approximately 1571, when he enrolled in the
    Merchant-Taylors' School. From there he went on to
    Trinity College, Oxford, where he took his degree in 1577.>> -------------------------------------------------
    Ben Jonson (1623) _To the Memory of Shakespeare_ .............................................
    My Shakespeare, rise; I will no{T LODGE} thee by
    Chaucer, or Spenser, or bid Beaumont lye
    A little further, to make thee a roome :
    Thou art a Moniment, without a TOMBe, .............................................
    Shine *FORTH*, thou Starr{E O}f Poets, and wi[T]h rage,
    Or inf[L]uence, chide, [O]r cheere the [D]rooping Sta[G]e;
    Which, sinc[E] thy flight fro' hence, hath mourn'd like night,
    And despaires day, but for thy Volumes light. .............................................
    . . . . . <= 11 =>
    .
    . S h i n e *F O R T H* t
    . h o u S t. a r r{E O} f
    . P o e t s, a n d w i [T]
    . h r a g e. O r i n f [L]
    . u e n c e, c h i d e,[O]
    . r c h e e. r e t h e [D]
    . r o o p i. n g S t a [G]
    . e;W h i c. h,s i n c [E]
    . t h y f l. i g h t
    .
    [T LODGE] 11 : Prob. at end of poem ~ 1 in 18,000 ..................................................
    (Shortest positive ELS [T LODGE] skip in KJV = 25) ------------------------------------------------------
    Source: http://tinyurl.com/lju45g7 https://archive.org/stream/poeticalworksofw00bass#page/114/mode/2up
    .
    . ELEGY ON SHAKESPEARE,
    . From Lansdowne MS.(777) TEMP. James I. ......................................................
    . On Mr. Wm. Shakespeare
    . HE DYED IN APRILL 1616
    .
    . Renowned Spencer lye a thought more nye
    . To learned Chaucer, and rare Beaumond lye
    . A little neerer Spenser, to make roome
    . For *SHAK{E}SPEARE* in your threefold, fowerfol{D} Tombe.
    .(To LODGE) all fowre in one bed m{A}ke a shift
    . Untill Doomesdaye, for ha{R}dly will a sift
    . Betwixt ys day and yt {B}y *FATE* be slayne,
    . For whom your Curta{I}nes may be drawn againe.
    . If yoUr prec{E}dency in death doth barre
    . A *FOURTH* place in your sacred sepulcher,
    . Under this carved marble of thine owne,
    . Sleepe, rare Tragœdian, Shakespeare, sleep alone;
    . Thy unmolested peace unshared Cave,
    . Possesse as Lord, not Tenant, of thy Grave,
    . That unto us & others it may be
    . Honor hereafter to be layde by thee.

    - Wm. Basse
    .....................................
    . . . . <= 30 =>
    .
    . For. *SHAK{E} SPEARE* inyour. threefoldf
    . owe. rfol {D} TOMBE (ToLODGE) allfowrein
    . one. bedm {A} keash .iftUnti. llDoomesda
    . yef. orha {R} dlywi .llasift. Betwixtysd
    . aya. ndyt {B} yFATE .beslayn. eForwhomyo
    . urC. urta {I} nesma .ybedraw. nagaineIfy
    . oUr. prec {E} dency .indeath. dothbarreA
    . FOU. RTHp .l. acEin .yoursac. redsepulch
    .
    {E.DARBIE} 30 : Prob. ~ 1 in 10,300 .......................................................... http://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A12017.0001.001?view=toc

    <<The most lamentable Romaine tragedie of Titus Andronicus
    As it was plaide by the right honourable the {E}arle of {DARBIE},
    *Earl of PEMBROOKE* , and Earl of Sussex their seruants.

    London: Printed by Iohn Danter, and are to be sold by
    Edward White & Thomas Millington, at the little North
    doore of Paules at the signe of the Gunne, 1594.>> .....................................................
    (Shortest positive ELS {DARBIE} skip in KJV = 33) ------------------------------------------------------ http://pages.uoregon.edu/rbear/muses.html

    . THE TEARES OF THE MUSES (1591) BY ED. Sp.
    . (dedicated to *[ALICE S]PENCER*, Countess of Derby) .......................................................
    All places th{EY} with follie have possest,
    And with vaine toyes the vulgar[E] entertaine;
    But me have banished, with all the rest
    That whi[L]ome wont to wait upon my traine,
    Fine Counterfesaunce and u[N]hurtfull Sport,
    Delight and Laughter deckt in seemly sort.

    [A]ll these, and all that els the comick stage
    With seasoned wi[T] and goodly pleasance graced,
    By which mans life in his like[S]t image
    Was limned *FORTH*, are wholly now defaced;
    And those s[W]eete wits which wont the like to frame
    Are now despizd, and made a laughing game.

    And he, the man whom Nature selfe had made
    To mock her selfe, and *TRUTH* to imitate,
    With kindly counter under *MIMICK SHADE* ,
    Our p{LE(a)SANT WILLY}, ah! *IS DEAD* of late:
    With whom all joy and jolly meriment
    Is also deaded, and in dolour drent. ...................................................
    . p{LE(a)SANT WILLY}
    . {WILL STANLEY}
    .......................................................
    . . . . . . <= 49 =>
    .
    . Allplacesth {EY} withfolliehavepossestAndwithvainetoy
    . esthevulgar [E] entertaineButmehavebanishedwithallthe
    . restThatwhi [L] omewonttowaituponmytraineFineCounterf
    . esaunceandu [N] hurtfullSportDelightandLaughterdeckti
    . nseemlysort [A] lltheseandallthatelsthecomickstageWit
    . hseasonedwi [T] andgoodlypleasancegracedBywhichmansli
    . feinhislike [S] timageWaslimnedFORTHarewhollynowdefac
    . edAndthoses [W] eetewitswhichwonttheliketoframeArenow
    . despizdandm .a. dealaughinggame
    .
    [W.STANLE/Y}] -49 :
    Prob. near to {Our p-LE(a)SANT WILLY} ~ 1 in 32,000 ...................................................
    In stead thereof scoffing Scurrilitie,
    And scornfull Follie with Contempt is crept,
    Rolling in rymes of shameles ribaudrie
    Without regard, or due decorum kept;
    Each idle wit at will presumes to make,
    And doth the learneds taske upon him take.

    But that same gentle spirit, from whose pen
    Large streames of honnie and sweete nectar flowe,
    Scorning the boldnes of such base-borne men,
    Which dare their follies *FORTH* so rashlie throwe,
    Doth rather choose to sit in idle cell,
    Than so himselfe to mockerie to sell. --------------------------------------------------- http://www.bartleby.com/331/186.html
    .
    . Rosalynde (1590) by *THOMAS LODGE*
    _Phoebe's Sonnet, a Reply to Montanus' Passion_

    . When Love was first begot,
    . And by the *moVER's WILL*
    . Did fall to human lot
    . His solace to fulfil,
    . Devoid of all deceit,
    . A chaste and holy fire
    . Did quick[E]n man's conce[I]t,
    . And women's [B]reast inspi[R]e.
    . The gods th[A]t saw the goo[D]
    . That mortal{S} did approve,
    .{W}ith kind and holy mood
    . Began to talk of Love.
    ...................................
    . . . . . . . . <= 11 =>
    .
    . D i d q u i c k [E] n m
    . a n's c o n c e [I] t,A
    . n d w o m e n's [B] r e
    . a s t i n s p i [R] e.T
    . h e g o d s t h [A] t s
    . a w t h e g o o [D] T h
    . a t m o r t a l {S} d i
    . d a p p r o v e,{W} i t
    . h k i n d a n d (H) o l
    . y m o o d
    .
    [{W.S.} DARBIE] -11 : Prob. in song ~ 1 in 3,650,000 .......................................................
    . But during this accord,
    . A wonder *STRANGE* to hear,
    . Whilst Love in deed and word
    . Most faithful did appear,
    . False-semblance came in place,
    . By Jealousy attended,
    . And with a double face
    . Both love and fancy blended;
    . Which made the gods forsake,
    . And men from fancy fly,
    . And maidens scorn a make,
    . Forsooth, and so *WILL I*.
    ..................................................
    . Epilogue _ROSALYNDE OR, EUPHUES' GOLDEN LEGACY_
    .
    If you grace me with that favor, you encourage
    me to be more forward; and as soon as I have
    overlooked my labors, expect the Sailor's Calendar.
    .
    . *T. LODGE. FINIS*
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    Was *THOMAS LODGE* the *PAGE* that served W.S.'s WIT? ........................................................
    Job 31:32 The *STRANGER* did no{T LODGE} in the street:
    . but I opened my doores to the trauailer. -----------------------------------------------------------
    . . . CYNTHIA'S REVELS: ACT I SCENE I. -- Ben Jonson
    .
    CUPID: So Hercules might challenge priority of us both, because
    . he can throw [T]he bar farther, or [L]ift more join'd st[O]ols at
    . the arm's en[D], than we. If this mi[G]ht carry it, then w[E], who
    . have made the whole body of divinity tremble at the twang of our bow,
    . and enforc'd Saturnius himself to lay by his curled front, thunder,
    . and three-fork'd fires, and put on a masking suit, too light
    . for a reveller of eighteen to be seen in -- ....................................................
    . . . . . . . . . . <= 15 =>
    .
    . h e c a n t h r o w [T] h e b a
    . r f a r t h e r,o r [L] i f t m
    . o r e j o i n'd s t [O] o l s a
    . t t h e a r m's e n [D],t h a n
    . w e.I f t h i s m i [G] h t c a
    . r r y i t,t h e n w [E],

    [T.LODGE] 15
    ---------------------------------------------------
    Henry IV, Part 1 (Quarto 1, 1598) Act I, scene iii
    .
    EARL OF WORCESTER: Peace coosen, say no more.
    . And now *I WILL UNCLASPE a SECRET BOOKE* ,
    . And to your quicke conceiuing discontents
    . Ile read[E] you matter deepe and daun[G]erous,
    . As full of perill an[D] aduenterous spirit,
    . As to [O]rewalke a Current roring [L]owd,
    . On the vnstedfast foo[T]ing of a *SPEARE*. ....................................................
    . . . . . . . . . . . . . <= 22 =>
    .
    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .*I. W .I. L L
    . *U N C L. A S P E a S E C R E T B O O {K} E* A n
    . .d t o y. o u r q u i c k e c o n c e {I} u. i n
    . .g d i s. c o n t e n t s I l e r e a {D}[E] y o
    . .u m a t. t e r d e e p e a n d d a u .n [G] e r
    . .o u s,A. s f u l l o f p e r i l l a .n [D] a d
    . .u e n t. e r o u s s p i r i t,A s t .o [O] r e
    . .w a l k. e a C u r r e n t r o r i n .g [L] o w
    . .d,O n t. h e v n s t e d f a s t f o .o [T] i n
    . .g o f a *S P E A R E*.
    .
    [T.LODGE] -22 (one of 6 *SPEARE*s) (only *SECRET BOOKE*)
    {KID} . . .22
    ----------------------------------------------------------
    Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. by Washington Irving. http://www.bartleby.com/109/6.html

    . . . THE MUTABILITY OF LITERATURE.
    . . .A COLLOQUY IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY.

    I had taken down a little thick quarto, curiously bound in
    parchment, with brass *CLASPS*, and seated myself at the table
    in a venerable elbow-chair. Instead of reading, howEVER, I was
    beguiled by the solemn monastic air and lifeless quiet of the
    place, into a train of musing. As I looked around upon the old
    volumes in their mouldering covers, thus ranged on the shelves
    and apparently nEVER disturbed in their repose, I could not but
    consider the library a kind of literary catacomb, where authors,
    like mummies, are piously entombed and left to blacken and
    moulder in dusty oblivion.

    While I sat half-murmuring, half-meditating, these unprofitable
    speculations with my head resting on my hand, I was thrumming
    with the other hand upon the quarto, until I accidentally
    loosened the *CLASPS*; when, to my utter astonishment, the
    little book gave two or three yawns, like one awaking from
    a *DEEP* sleep, then a husky hem, and at length began to talk. .....................................................................
    “Ah,” said the little quarto, with a heavy sigh, “I see how it is;
    these modern scribblers have superseded all the good old authors.
    I suppose nothing is read now-a-days but Sir Philip [SIDNEY]’s
    Arcadia, Sackville’s stately plays, and Mirror for Magistrates,
    or the fine-spun euphuisms of the ‘unparalleled John Lyly.”’

    “There you are again mistaken,” said I; “the writers whom you
    suppose in vogue, because they happened to be so when you were last
    in circulation, have long since had their day. Sir Philip [SIDNEY]’s
    Arcadia, the immortality of which was so fondly predicted by
    his admirers, and which, in truth, is full of noble thoughts,
    delicate images, and graceful turns of language, is now
    scarcel[Y E]ver me[N]tione[D]. Sackv[I]lle ha[S] strutted
    into obscurity; and even Lyly, though his writings were
    once the delight of a court, and apparently perpetuated
    by a proverb, is now scarcely known even by name.
    ......................
    . . . <= 6 =>
    .
    . . s c. a. r c e
    . . l [Y E] v e r
    . . m e [N] t i o
    . . n e [D] S a c
    . . k v [I] l l e
    . . h a [S] s t r
    . . u t .t. e d

    [SIDNE/Y] -6
    ............................................................
    "My very good sir," said the little quarto, yawning most drearily
    in my face, "excuse my interrupting you, but I perceive you are
    rather given to prose. I would ask the fate of an author who
    was making some noise just as I left the world. His reputation,
    however, was considered quite temporary. The learned shook their
    heads at him, for he was a poor, half-educated varlet, that knew
    little of Latin, and nothing of Greek, and had been obliged to
    run the country for deer-stealing. I think his name was
    Shakespeare. I presume he soon sunk into oblivion."

    "On the contrary," said I, "it is owing to that *VERy man* that
    the literature of his period has experienced a duration beyond the
    ordinary term of English literature. There rise authors now and
    then who seem proof against the mutability of language because
    they have rooted themselves in the unchanging principles of
    human nature. They are like gigantic trees that we sometimes
    see on the banks of a stream, which by their vast and *DEEP* roots,
    penetrating through the mere surface and laying hold on the VERy
    foundations of the earth, preserve the soil around them from
    being swept away by the EVER-flowing current, and hold up many
    a neighboring plant, and perhaps WORTHless WEED, to perpetuity.
    Such is the case with Shakespeare, whom we behold defying the
    encroachments of time, retaining in modern use the language and
    literature of his day, and giving duration to many an indifferent
    author, merely from having flourished in his vicinity. But even
    he, I grieve to say, is gradually assuming the tint of age,
    and his whole form is overrun by a profusion of commentators,
    who, like clambering vines and creepers, almost
    *bury the NOBLE plant* that upholds them." .........................................................
    {W}hat (D)reary waste{S} (o)f m(E)taphysics! H[E|r)e a(N)d there o(N)ly
    . [D|o) we behold th(E) he[A|v)en-illumine(D) ba[R|d}s, e{L}evated like
    . [B|e}ac{O}ns on their w[I|d}ely-separated h[E]ights, to transmit
    .
    {t}he <P>ure light of poet<I>cal intelligenc<E> from age to age."

    I was just about to launch *FORTH* into eulogiums upon the poets
    of the day, when the sudden opening of the door caused me to
    turn my head. It was the VERgEr, who came to inform me that
    it was time to close the library. I sought to have a parting
    word with the quarto, but the worthy little tome was silent;
    the *CLASPS* were closed: and it looked perfectly
    unconscious of all that had passed. .........................................................
    . . . . . . <= 15 =>
    .
    . {W. H} a. t. (D) r e a r y w a .s. t e
    . {S}(o) f. m. (E) t a p h y s i .c. s!H
    . [E](r) e. a. (N) d t h e r e o (N) l y
    . [D](o) w. e . b. e h o l d t h (E) h e
    . [A](v) e. n- .i. l l u m i n e (D) b a
    . [R]{d} s, e. {L} e v a t e d l .i. k e
    . [B]{e} a. c. {O} n s o n t h e .i. r w
    . [I]{d} e. l . y- s e p a r a t .e. d h
    . [E]{i} g. h . t. s,t o t r a n .s. m i
    . .t {t} h. e. <P> u r e l i g h .t. o f
    . (P. O. E. T) <I> c a l i n t e .l. l i
    . .g (E) n. c. <E> f r o m a g e .t. o a
    . .g .e.
    .
    [{W.S.} E.DARBIE] 15
    {dedit} 15 : He gave (Latin)
    (voro) -15 : I devour/read eagerly (Latin)
    (NED) -15,15 : Prob. both in array ~ 1 in 150
    .
    Prob. of [{W.S.} E.DARBIE] in last 2 sentences ~ 1 in 57,000,000. --------------------------------------------------------------- http://lgbt.wikia.com/wiki/Esm%C3%A9_Stewart,_1st_Duke_of_Lennox

    <<{E}smé [STEWART](1542 – 26 May 1583), 1st Duke of Lennox,
    was the son of John Stewart, 5th Lord of Aubigny. Sir James
    Melville described him as "of nature, upright, just, and gentle".

    At the age of 37 {E}smé was introduced to the 13-year-old James VI of Scotland at the time when the latter made his formal entry into Edinburgh. The two became extremely close and it was said by an English observer that "from the time he was 14 years old and no more, that is, when the Lord Stuart came into Scotland... even then he began... *to CLASP* some one in the embraces of his great love, above all others" and that James became "in such love with him
    as in the open sight of the people often he *WILL CLASP* him about the neck with his arms and kiss him". This affair was to lead to Stewart's return
    to France and early death in 1583.

    The King first made Stewart a gentleman of the bedchamber, then went on to the Privy Council. He was created 1st Earl of Lennox, on 5 March 1580, and finally 1st Duke of Lennox on 5 August 1581. In Presbyterian Scotland the thought of a Catholic duke
    irked many and Lennox had to make a choice between his Catholic faith or his loyalty to James. At the end Lennox chose James and the king taught him the doctrines of Calvinism. The Scottish Kirk remained suspicious of Lennox after his public conversion
    and took alarm when he had James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton tried and beheaded on charges of treason. The Scottish ministry was also warned that the duke sought to “draw the King to carnal lust.”

    In response the Scottish nobles plotted to oust Lennox. They did so by luring James to Ruthven Castle as a guest but then kept him as prisoner for ten months. The Lord Enterprisers forced him to banish Lennox. The duke journeyed back to France and kept a
    secret correspondence with James. Lennox in these letters says he gave up his family "to dedicate myself entirely to you"; he prayed to die for James to prove "the faithfulness which is engraved within my heart, which will last forever." The former duke
    wrote "Whatever might happen to me, I shall always be your faithful servant... you are alone in this world whom my heart is resolved to serve. And would to God that my breast might be split open so that it might be seen what is engraven therein."

    James was devastated by the loss of Lennox. With his return to France, Lennox had met a frosty reception as an apostate. The Scottish nobles had believed they that would be proven right in their convictions that Lennox's conversion was artificial when he
    returned to France. Instead the former duke remained Presbyterian and died shortly after, leaving James his embalmed heart. James had repeatedly vouched for Lennox's religious sincerity and memorialized him in a poem called "Ane Tragedie of the *PHOENIX*"
    , which said he was like an exotic bird of unique beauty killed by envy.>> ----------------------­------------------------------­--
    The SUSAN Constant: May 26
    ...................................................
    May 26, 604 1st Archbishop of Canterbury AUGUSTINE dies

    May 26, 1583 {E}smé {STEWART} 1st Duke of Lennox dies
    May 26, 1583 SUSANna Shakespeare Hall born
    _____________ (after a 26 week gestation!)

    May 26, 1587 SUSANna Vere Herbert born

    May 26, 1599 (HENRY) PORTER disappears
    May 26, 1609 Fighting FRANCIS Vere dies
    May 26, 1703 Samuel Pepys ( *PEEPS* ) dies ----------------------------------------------------------------- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esm%C3%A9_Stewart,_3rd_Duke_of_Lennox

    <<{E}smé {STEWART}, 3rd DUKE of Lennox (1579 - 30 July 1624)
    was the son of {E}smé {STEWART}, 1st DUKE of Lennox.
    He was a patron of the playwright *BEN JONSON*,
    who lived in his household for five years. ......................................................
    He died & was interred, on *August 6, 1624* in Westminster Abbey.>> .............................................................
    <<On August 6, 1623, Anne Hathaway dies in Stratford>> .............................................................
    <<On August 6, 1623, longtime friend & protector of Galileo
    Maffeo Barberini was elected Pope Urban VIII.>> ---------------------------------------------------------------
    On the 14th anniversary of Anne Hathaway's death [August 6, 1637]
    Ben Jonson was BURIED UPRIGHT against the wall of his crypt.

    'Two feet by two feet will do for all I want'. - Jonson ---------------------------------------------------
    *the T{urtle an[d} Phoenix]*
    (Version I : http://tinyurl.com/jsxgzrf)

    first published in 1601 as a supplement to a long
    poem by Robert Chester, entitled Love's Martyr. ..............................................
    Let the bird of lowdest lay,
    On the sole Arabian tree,
    Herauld sad and trumpet be:
    To whose sound chaste wings obay.
    But thou shriking harbinger,
    Foule precurrer of the fiend,
    Augour of the feuers end,
    To this troupe come thou not neere.
    From this Session interdict
    Euery foule of tyrant wing,
    Saue the Eagle feath'red King,
    Keepe the obsequie so strict.
    Let the Priest in Surples white,
    That defunctiue Musicke can,
    Be the death-deuining *SWAN*,
    .
    Lest the Requi[E]m lacke hi[S] right.
    And [T]hou trebl[E] dated Cro[W],
    That thy s[A]ble gende[R] mak'st,
    With \T\he breath thou giu'st and tak'st,
    Mongst our mourners shalt thou go.
    ......................................
    . . . <= 9 =>
    .
    . L e s .t. t h e R e
    . q u i {E} m l a c k
    . e h i [S] r i g h t
    . A n d [T] h o u t r
    . e b l [E] d a t e d
    . C r o [W] T h a t t
    . h y s [A] b l e g e
    . n d e [R] m a k's t,
    . W i t .h\T\ h e b r
    . e a t .h. t h o u g
    . i u's .t. a n d t a
    . k's t,
    .
    [{E.}STEWAR\T\] 9
    ---------------------------------------------------- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Phoenix_and_the_Turtle

    <<[The Phoenix and the Turtle] was first published in 1601 as a supplement to a long poem by Robert Chester, entitled Love's Martyr. The full title of Chester's book explains the content:

    http://tinyurl.com/gpqcxgk

    Love's Mar(T)yr: or Rosalins Complaint. Allegorically [S]hadowing *THE TRUTH* of Loue, in the constan[T] *FATE* of [The Phoenix and the Turtle]. A Poeme ent[E]rlaced with much varietie and raritie; no[W] first translated out of the venerable It[A]lian
    Torquato Caeliano, by Robert Cheste[R]. With the true legend of famous King Arthur \T\he last of the nine Worthies, being the first Essay of a new Brytish Poet: collected out of diuerse Authenticall Records. To these are added some new compositions of
    seuerall moderne Writers whose names are subscribed to their seuerall workes, vpon the first subiect viz. [The Phoenix and Turtle].
    ......................................................
    ____ <= 35 =>
    .
    . LovesMar (T) yrorRosalinsComplaintAlleg
    . orically [S] hadowingTHETRUTHofLoueinth
    . econstan [T] FATEofthePhoenixandTurtleA
    . Poemeent [E] rlacedwithmuchvarietieandr
    . aritieno [W] firsttranslatedoutoftheven
    . erableIt [A] lianTorquatoCaelianobyRobe
    . rtCheste [R] WiththetruelegendoffamousK
    . ingArthu r\T\ helastofthenineWorth

    [(T)STEWAR\T\] 35 : Prob. ~ 1 in 3240 ...................................................
    Chester prefaced his poem with a short dedication addressed to the Phoenix and Turtledove. The Phoenix is envisaged as female and the dove as male:

    Chester's main poem is a long allegory in which the relationship between the birds is explored, and its symbolism articulated. It incorporates the story of King Arthur, and a history of ancient Britain, emphasizing Welsh etymologies for British towns. It
    culminates with the joint immolation of the Phoenix and Turtledove, giving birth to a new and more beautiful bird from the ashes.

    It is followed by a brief collection of "Diverse Poeticall Essaies"
    by the "best and chiefest of our moderne writers, with their names
    sub-scribed to their particular workes". These include, in addition
    to Shakespeare, *BEN JONSON*, George Chapman, John Marston and the
    anonymous "Vatum Chorus" and "Ignoto". All use the same imagery: .......................
    Hereafter follow Diverse Poeticall Essaies on the Former subiect; viz.:
    *the T{urtle an[d} Phoenix]*. Done by the best and chiefest of our
    moderne writers, with their names subscribed to their particular workes:
    neuer before extant. And (now first) consecrated by them all generally
    to the loue and merite of the *TRUE-noble* Knight, Sir lohn Salisburie. ..................................................
    . *the T{urtle an[d} Phoenix]*
    . {e.rutland}[oxenpho(r)d] -----------------------------------------------------------
    . *the T{urtle an[d} Phoenix]* (Version II ?)
    .
    . Let the bird of loudest lay,
    . On the sole Arabian tree,
    . Herald sad and trumpet be,
    . To whose sound cha(S)te wings obey.
    . But tho(U) shrieking harbinge(R),
    . Foul precurrer of th(E) fiend,
    . Augur of the fe(V)er's end,
    . To this troup(E) come thou not near!
    ......................................
    . . . . . . <= 18 =>
    .
    . L e t t h e .b. i r d o f l o u d e s
    . t l a y,O n .t. h e s o l e A r a b i
    . a n t r e e, H. e r a l d s a d a n d
    . t r u m p e .t. b e,T o w h o s e s o
    . u n d c h a (S) t e w i n g s o b e y.
    . B u t t h o (U) s h r i e k i n g h a
    . r b i n g e (R),F o u l p r e c u r r
    . e r o f t h (E) f i e n d,A u g u r o
    . f t h e f e (V) e r's e n d,T o t h i
    . s t r o u p (E) c o m e t h o u n o t
    . n e a r!

    {E.VERUS} 18 : (Oxford's Latin name)
    . Prob. at start ~ 1 in 6,860
    ......................................
    . Let the priest in surplice white,
    . That defunctive music can,
    . Be the death-divining *SWAN*,
    . Lest the requ{I}/E/m lack hi{S} right.
    . And {T}hou trebl{E}-dated cro{W},
    . That thy s{A}ble gende{R} makest
    . Wi{T}h (T)he breath (T)hou gives(T) and takes(T),
    . 'Mongst our mourners shalt thou go.
    ......................................
    . . . . <= 9 =>

    . L e. s. t .t .h e r e
    . q u {I}/E/ m. l a c k
    . h i {S} r .i. g h t A
    . n d {T} h .o. u t r e
    . b l {E}-d .a. t e d c
    . r o {W},T .h. a t t h
    . y s {A} b .l. e g e n
    . d e {R} m .a. k e s t
    . W i {T} h (T) h e b r
    . e a .t. h (T) h o u g
    . i v .e. s (T) a n d t
    . a k .e. s (T),

    {I.STEWART} 9 Prob. ~ 1 in 137,000
    ......................................
    . Whereupon it made this threne
    . To the phoenix and the dove,
    . Co-su(P)remes (A)nd sta(R)s of lo(V)e,
    . As ch(O)rus to their tragic scene.
    ......................................
    ___ <= 6 =>
    .
    . C o-s u (P) r
    . e m e s (A) n
    . d s t a (R) s
    . o f l o (V) e,
    . A s c h (O) r
    . u s t o .t. h
    . e i r t .r. a
    . g i c s .c. e
    . n e.
    .
    (PARVO) 6 : (Rutland/Manners' motto)
    . Prob. at end ~ 1 in 15,000 -------------------------------------------------------------
    Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. by Washington Irving.
    .
    . . THE BOAR'S HEAD TAVERN, EASTCHEAP.
    . . A SHAKESPEARIAN RESEARCH.
    .
    There was something truly cheering in this triumph of warmth and
    verdure over the frosty [T]hraldom of winter; it was, as the squire
    observed, an emblem of Ch[R]istmas hospitality breaking through the
    chills of ceremony [A]nd selfishness and thawing ev{E}ry heart into
    a flow. He point(E)d [W]ith pleasure to the indication{S} of good cheer
    reeking from th{E} chi(M)ney{S} of the co{M}fortabl{E} far{M}-hous(E)s
    and low thatched cot[T]ages. "I love," said he, "to see this day w{E}ll
    kept by rich and poor; it i[S] a great thing to have one day in the
    year, at least, when you are sure of being welcome wherever you
    go, and of having, as it were, the world all thrown open to you;
    and I am almost disposed to join with Poor Robin in his
    malediction on every churlish enemy to this honest festival:
    .
    . "`Those who at Christmas do repine,
    . . And would fain hence dispatch him,
    . . May they with old Duke Humphry dine,
    . . Or else may Squire Ketch catch'em.'" .........................................................................
    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . <= 52 =>
    .
    . The r ewassomethingtru l y .c. hee r ing i nthistr i umphofw a r m t h a
    . ndv e rdureoverthefros t y [T] hra l dom o fwinter i twasast h e s q u i
    . reo b servedanemblemof C h [R] ist m ash o spitali t ybreaki n g t h r o
    . ugh t hechillsofceremo n y [A] nds e lfi s hnessan d thawing e v{E}r y h
    . ear t intoaflowHepoint(E)d [W] ith p lea s uretoth e indicat i o n{S}o f
    . goo d cheerreekingfrom t h {E} chi(M)ney{S}oftheco{M}fortabl{E}f a r{M}h
    . ous(E)sandlowthatchedc o t [T] age s Ilo v esaidhe t oseethi s d a y w{E}
    . llk e ptbyrichandpoori t i [S] agr e att h ingtoha v eoneday i n t h e y
    . ear a tleastwhenyouare s u .r. eof b ein g welcome w herever y o u g o
    .
    [STEWART] -52 : Prob. in phrase ~ 1 in 3,000
    {ESME} 8,53
    (ESME) 29 : Prob. 3{ESME}s in phrase ~ 1 in 30 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    . Venus and Adonis (1593)
    .
    For there his smell with others being mingled,
    The hot sent-snuffing hounds are driuen to doubt,
    Ceasing their clamorous crie, till they haue singled
    With much ado the cold fault cleanlie out,
    Then do they spend their mouth's, *ECCHO replies* ,
    As if an o{T}he{R} ch{A}se {W}er{E} in {T}he {S}ki{E}s. ...............................................
    . . <= 3 =>
    .
    . .A. .s. i
    . .f. .a. n
    . {O} {T} h
    . {E} {R} c
    . (H) {A} s
    . (E) {W} e
    . (r) {E} i
    . (n) {T} h
    . (E) {S} k
    . (I) {E} s.
    .................................................
    {E.STEWART} -3: Prob. in any V&A line ~ 1 in 2500
    (HErnEI)
    ................................................
    By THIS POORE WAT farre off vpon a hill,
    Stands on his hinder-legs with listning eare,
    To hearken if his foes pursue him still,
    Anon their loud alarums (H)e doth h(E)are,
    And (N)ow his g(R)iefe ma(Y) be compared well,
    To one sore sicke, that heares the passing bell. ...............................................
    . . <= 3 =>
    .
    . (H) e d o t h h
    . (E) a r e,A n d
    . (N) o w h i s g
    . (R) i e f e m a
    . (Y) b e c o m p
    . .a. r e d w e l l,
    .
    (HENRY) 7
    ................................................ ................................................
    Here kennel’d in a brake she fin[D]s a hound,
    And asks the weary c[A]itiff for his master,
    And the[R]e another licking of his wou[N]d,
    ’Gainst venom’d sores the on[LY] sovereign plaster;
    And her[E] she meets another sadly scowling,
    To whom she speaks, and he replies with howling.

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