Lecture the Ninth. SIR JOHN BEAUMONT-PHINEAS FLETCHER-GILES FLETCHER-THOMAS CAREWー GEORGE WITHER - WILLIAM BROWNE - HENRY KING-FRANCIS QUARLES GEORGE HERBERT ROBERT HERRICK-JOSEPH HALL. 1 HE remaining English miscellaneous poets connected with the period which we are at present considering, though numerous, will not generally require notices so extended as those who have already passed in review before us. Of these poets, those who in the order of time first present themselves are, Beaumont, the Fletchers, Carew, Wither, Browne, King, and Quarles. JOHN BEAUMONT was the son of Sir Francis Beaumont, and elder brother of the celebrated dramatic poet, Francis Beaumont. He was born at GraceDieu, in Leicestershire, in 1582, and admitted gentleman commoner of Broadgate Hall, Oxford, in 1596. After having passed three years at the university, he removed to one of the Inns of Court, London, but he soon relinquished the study of the law, and retired to the family estate in Leicestershire. In 1626, he was knighted by Charles the First, and died two years after, in the forty-seventh year of his age. Sir John Beaumont wrote a number of pieces, the principal of which are Bosworth Field, and Lines to the Memory of Ferdinando Pulton. These poems are both in heroic verse-a measure which Beaumont wrote with great ease and correctness. 'Bosworth Field' is generally cold and unimpassioned, though there are in it occasional spirited passages; but the 'Lines to the Memory of Pulton' contain many passages of rare excellence, such as the following: Why should vain sorrow follow him with tears, N Yet this large time no greater profit brings, The shortest space, which we so lightly prize To the above extract we feel constrained to add the following fine epitaph upon Sir John's son, Gervase Beaumont : Can I, who have for others oft compiled PHINEAS and GILES FLETCHER were brothers, and were sons of the celebrated Doctor Giles Fletcher, who stood so high in the favor of Queen Elizabeth that she employed him on various important foreign embassies. Both these brothers were clergymen, and their lives, therefore, afford little variety of incident. PHINEAS FLETCHER was born in 1584; and after passing through preparatory studies at Eton, he entered the university of Cambridge, whence being graduated, he took orders, and soon after settled at Kilgay, in Norfolk, where he passed his life in the quiet of the country. He died in 1650, in his sixty-seventh year. The principal poems of Phineas Fletcher are, the Purple Island, or the Isle of Man, and Piscatory Eclogues. The name of the former poems suggests images of poetical and romantic beauty, such as we may suppose an admirer and follower of Spenser to have drawn; but a perusal of the work soon dispels this illusion. The 'Purple Island' of Fletcher is no 'sunny spot amid the melancholy main, but is an elaborate and anatomical description of the body and soul of man. Its value, therefore, must not rest upon the plot, but upon isolated passages and poetical descriptions. Some of his stanzas have all the easy flow and mellifluous sweetness of the 'Faery Queen;' and clearly show a luxuriance of fancy, which had it been disciplined by taste and judgment, must have rivalled the softer scenes of Spenser. To justify this remark we take the following passage : DESCRIPTION OF PARTHENIA, OR CHASTITY. With her, her sister went, a warlike maid, Her goodly armour seem'd a garden green, Ever the same, but new in newer date: And underneath was writ, 'Such is chaste single state.' Thus hid in arms she seem'd a goodly knight, And fit for any warlike exercise: But when she list lay down her armour bright, Upon her forehead Love his trophies fits, And ready shafts; deadly those weapons show; Yet sweet the death appear'd, lovely that deadly blow. A bed of lilies flow'r upon her cheek, And in the midst was set a circling rose; Whose sweet aspect would force Narcissus seek New liveries, and fresher colours choose To deck his beauteous head in snowy 'tire; Her ruby lips lock up from gazing sight A troop of pearls, which march in goodly row; Yet all these stars which deck this beauteous sky GILES FLETCHER was younger than his brother, but neither the date of his birth, nor the period of his death has been preserved. His only important poetical production is a sacred poem entitled Christ's Victory and Triumph. There is a massive grandeur and earnestness about this performance, which strike the imagination with great force. The materials of the poem are more harmoniously linked together than those of the 'Purple Island.' Hallam remarks that, both of these brothers are deserving of much praise: they were endowed with minds eminently poetical, and not inferior in imagination to any of their contemporaries. But an injudicious taste, and an excessive fondness for a style which the public was fast abandoning, that of allegorical personification, prevented their powers from being effectively displayed.' Campbell also observes that, 'they were both the disciples of Spenser, and with his diction gently modernized, retained much of his melody and luxuriant expression. Giles, inferior as he is to Spenser and Milton, might be figured in his happiest moments, as a link of connec tion in our poetry between these congenial spirits, for he reminds us of both, and evidently gave hints to the latter in a poem on the same subject with Paradise Regained.' We shall close our notice of these brother poets with the following passage from 'Christ's Victory and Triumph :' THE RAINBOW. High in the airy element there hung Beneath those sunny banks a darker cloud, About her head a cypress heaven she wore, Yet strange it was so many stars to see, Over her hung a canopy of state, Not of rich tissue nor of spangled gold, THOMAS CAREW was of an ancient family, and was born in Gloucestershire, in 1589. He was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, after which he travelled, for some time, upon the continent, and on his return to England, entered into the service of Charles the First, by whom he was made gentleman of the privy chamber, and was personally very highly esteemed. From this period his life was that of a courtier-witty, affable, and accomplished-without reflection; and in a strain of loose revelry which, according to Lord Clarenden, 'he deeply repented in his latter days.' He died in 1639, not having quite attained the fiftieth year of his age. Carew was the precursor and representative of a numerous class of poetscourtiers of a gay and gallant school, who, to personal accomplishments, rank, and education, united a taste and talent for the conventional poetry then most popular and most cultivated. Their visions of fame were, in general, bounded by the circle of the court and of the nobility. To live in future generations, or to sound the depth of the human heart, seems not to have entered into their contemplations. A 'rosy cheek or coral lip' formed their |