Musicks Duell.
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Ow Westward Sol had spent the richest Beams Of Noons high Glory, when hard by the streams Of Tiber, on the sceane of a greene plat, Under protection of an Oake; there sate
A sweet Lutes-master: in whose gentle aires
He lost the Dayes heat, and his owne hot cares. Close in the covert of the leaves there stood A Nightingale, come from the neighbouring wood: (The sweet inhabitant of each glad Tree, Their Muse, their Syren, harmlesse Syren she) There stood she listning, and did entertaine The Musicks soft report: and mold the same In her owne murmures, that what ever mood His curious fingers lent, her voyce made good: The man perceiv'd his Rivall, and her Art, Dispos'd to give the light-foot Lady sport Awakes his Lute, and 'gainst the fight to come Informes it, in a sweet Præludium Of closer straines, and ere the warre begin, He lightly skirmishes on every string
Charg'd with a flying touch: and streightway she Carves out her dainty voyce as readily, Into a thousand sweet distinguish'd Tones, And reckons up in soft divisions,
Quicke volumes of wild Notes; to let him know By that shrill taste, she could do something too.
His nimble hands instinct then taught each string A capring cheerefullnesse; and made them sing To their owne dance; now negligently rash He throwes his Arme, and with a long drawne dash Blends all together; then distinctly tripps From this to that; then quicke returning skipps And snatches this again, and pauses there. Shee measures every measure, every where Meets art with art; sometimes as if in doubt, Not perfect yet, and fearing to be out,
Trayles her plaine Ditty in one long-spun note, Through the sleeke passage of her open throat, A cleare unwrinckled song; then doth shee point it With tender accents, and severely joynt it By short diminutives, that being rear'd In controverting warbles evenly shar'd, With her sweet selfe shee wrangles. Hee amazed That from so small a channell should be rais'd The torrent of a voyce, whose melody Could melt into such sweet variety,
Straines higher yet; that tickled with rare art The tatling strings (each breathing in his part) Most kindly doe fall out; the grumbling Base In surly groans disdaines the Trebles Grace; The high-perch't treble chirps at this, and chides, Untill his finger (Moderatour) hides And closes the sweet quarrell, rowsing all
Hoarce, shrill, at once; as when the Trumpets call Hot Mars to th'Harvest of Deaths field, and woo Mens hearts into their hands: this lesson too Shee gives him back; her supple Brest thrills out Sharpe Aires, and staggers in a warbling doubt Of dallying sweetnesse, hovers o're her skill, And folds in wav'd notes with a trembling bill The plyant Series of her slippery song; Then starts shee suddenly into a Throng Of short thicke sobs, whose thundring volleyes float, And roule themselves over her lubrick throat In panting murmurs, still'd out of her Breast, That ever-bubling spring; the sugred Nest Of her delicious soule, that there does lye Bathing in streames of liquid Melodie; Musicks best seed-plot, where in ripen'd Aires A Golden-headed Harvest fairely reares His Honey-dropping tops, plow'd by her breath Which there reciprocally laboureth
In that sweet soyle, it seemes a holy quire Founded to th' Name of great Apollo's lyre, Whose silver-roofe rings with the sprightly notes Of sweet-lipp'd Angell-Imps, that swill their throats
In creame of Morning Helicon, and then Preferre soft-Anthems to the Eares of men, To woo them from their Beds, still murmuring That men can sleepe while they their Mattens sing: (Most divine service) whose so early lay, Prevents the Eye lidds of the blushing day! There you might heare her kindle her soft voyce, In the close murmur of a sparkling noyse, And lay the ground-worke of her hopefull song, Still keeping in the forward streame, so long Till a sweet whirle-wind (striving to get out) Heaves her soft Bosome, wanders round about, And makes a pretty Earthquake in her Breast, Till the fledg'd Notes at length forsake their Nest, Fluttering in wanton shoales, and to the Sky Wing'd with their owne wild Eccho's pratling fly. Shee opes the floodgate, and lets loose a Tide Of streaming sweetnesse, which in state doth ride On the wav'd backe of every swelling straine, Rising and falling in a pompous traine. And while she thus discharges a shrill peale Of flashing Aires; she qualifies their zeale. With the coole Epode of a graver Noat, Thus high, thus low, as if her silver throat Would reach the brasen voyce of war's hoarce Bird; Her little soule is ravisht: and so pour'd Into loose extasies, that shee is plac't Above her selfe, Musicks Enthusiast.
Shame now and anger mixt a double staine In the Musitians face; yet once againe (Mistresse) I come; now reach a straine my Lute Above her mocke, or be for ever mute. Or tune a song of victory to me,
Or to thy selfe, sing thine owne Obsequie; So said, his hands sprightly as fire he flings, And with a quavering coynesse tasts the strings. The sweet-lip't sisters musically frighted, Singing their feares are fearefully delighted. Trembling as when Appollo's golden haires Are fan'd and frizled, in the wanton ayres
Of his own breath: which marryed to his lyre
Doth tune the Sphæares, and make Heavens selfe looke higher From this to that, from that to this he flyes Feeles Musicks pulse in all her Arteryes, Caught in a net which there Apollo spreads, His fingers struggle with the vocal threads, Following those little rills, he sinkes into A Sea of Helicon; his hand does goe
Those parts of sweetnesse which with Nectar drop, Softer then that which pants in Hebe's cup. The humourous strings expound his learned touch, By various Glosses; now they seeme to grutch, And murmur in a buzzing dinne, then gingle In shrill tongu'd accents: striving to be single. Every smooth turne, every delicious stroake Gives life to some new Grace; thus doth h’invoke Sweetnesse by all her Names; thus, bravely thus (Fraught with a fury so harmonious) The Lutes light Genius now does proudly rise, Heav'd on the surges of swolne Rapsodyes. Whose flourish (Meteor-like) doth curle the aire With flash of high-borne fancyes: here and there Dancing in lofty measures, and anon Creeps on the soft touch of a tender tone: Whose trembling murmurs melting in wild aires Runs to and fro, complaining his sweet cares Because those pretious mysteryes that dwell, In musick's ravish't soule he dares not tell, But whisper to the world: thus doe they vary Each string his Note, as if they meant to carry Their Masters blest soule (snatcht out at his Eares By a strong Extasy) through all the sphæares Of Musicks heaven; and seat it there on high In th' Empyræum of pure Harmony. At length (after so long, so loud a strife Of all the strings, still breathing the best life Of blest variety attending on
His fingers fairest revolution
In many a sweet rise; many as sweet a fall) A full-mouth Diapason swallowes all.
This done, he lists what she would say to this, And she although her Breath's late exercise Had dealt too roughly with her tender throate, Yet summons all her sweet powers for a Noate Alas! in vaine! for while (sweet soule) she tryes To measure all those wild diversities
Of chatt'ring strings, by the small size of one Poore simple voyce, rais'd in a naturall Tone; She failes, and failing grieves; and grieving dyes. She dyes and leaves her life the Victors prise, Falling upon his Lute; ô fit to have (That liv'd so sweetly) dead, so sweet a Grave!
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