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And up he toss't his huge pitchfork,

As visioned shrines uprose;
And right and left he went to work,

Till full over Durham, and Oxford, and York,
He stood with a menacing pose.

The rabble roar was hushed awhile,
As the hurricane rests in its sweep;
And all throughout the ample pile
Reigned silence dread and deep.

Then a thrilling voice cried: "Little John,
A little spell will do,

When there is mischief to be done,
To raise me up and set me on;
For I, of my own free will, am won
To carry such spiritings through.

"But when I am riding the tempest's wing,
And towers and spires have blazed,
'Tis no small conjuror's art to sing,
Or say, a spell to check the swing
Of the demons he has raised."

M

FAREWELL TO MEIRION.

[No date.]

EIRION, farewell! thy sylvan shades,
Thy mossy rocks and bright cascades,
Thy tangled glens and dingles wild,
Might well detain the Muses' child.
But can the son of science find,
In thy fair realm, one kindred mind,
One soul sublime, by feeling taught,
To wake the genuine pulse of thought,
One heart by nature formed to prove
True friendship and unvarying love?
No-Bacchus reels through all thy fields,
Her brand fanatic frenzy wields,
And ignorance with falsehood dwells,
And folly shakes her jingling bells.

VOL. III.

18

274

66 OH BLEST ARE THEY, AND THEY ALONE.”

Meirion, farewell-and ne'er again
My steps shall press thy mountain reign,
Nor long on thee my memory rest,
Fair as thou art—unloved, unblessed.
And ne'er may parting stranger's hand
Wave a fond blessing on thy land.
Long as disgusted virtue flies
From folly, drunkenness, and lies :
Long as insulted science shuns
The steps of thy degraded sons;
Long as the northern tempest roars
Round their inhospitable doors.

"OH BLEST ARE THEY, AND THEY ALONE.”

[No date.]

H blest are they, and they alone,

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To fame to wealth to power unknown;
Whose lives in one perpetual tenor glide,
Nor feel one influence of malignant fate :
For when the gods on mortals frown
They pour no single vengeance down,
But scatter ruin vast and wide
On all the race they hate.
Then ill on ill succeeding still,
With unrelaxing fury pours,

As wave on wave the breakers rave
Tumultuous on the wreck-strown shores,
When northern tempests sweep
The wild and wintry deep,

Uprending from its depths the sable sand,
Which blackening eddies whirl,
And crested surges hurl

Against the rocky bulwarks of the land,
While to the tumult, deepening round,
The repercussive caves resound.

In solitary pride,

By Dirce's murmuring side,

The giant oak has stretched its ample shade,

And waved its tresses of imperial might; Now low in dust its blackened boughs are laid Its dark root withers in the depth of night. Nor hoarded gold, nor pomp of martial power Can check necessity's supreme control, That cleaves unerringly the rock-built tower, And whelms the flying bark where shoreless oceans roll.

GL' INGANNATI.

THE DECEIVED.

A COMEDY

Performed at Siena in 1531.

[Published in 1862.]

seum.

PREFACE BY T. L. PEACOCK.

MR. COLLIER, in his Annals of the Stage,* published in 1831, gives an account of a Diary, in which he found recorded a performance of Shakspeare's Twelfth Night. "This Diary," he says, "I was fortunate enough to meet with among the Harleian MSS. in the MuIt was kept by an individual, whose name is nowhere given, but who seems to have been a barrister, and consequently a member of one of the Inns of Court. The dates, which are inserted with much particularity, extend from January, 1600-1, to April, 1603; and when I state, that it includes original and unpublished anecdotes of Shakspeare, Spenser, Tarleton, Ben Jonson, Marston, Sir John Davis, Sir Walter Raleigh, and others, it will not be disputed that it is a very valuable and remarkable source of information.

That

"The period when Shakspeare wrote his Twelfth Night, or, What You Will, has been much disputed among the commentators. Tyrwhitt was inclined to fix it in 1614, and Malone was for some years of the same opinion: but he afterwards changed the date he had adopted to 1607. Chalmers thought he found circumstances in the play to justify him in naming 1613; but what I am about to state affords a striking, and, at the same time, a rarely occurring and convincing proof, how little these conjectures merit confidence. comedy was unquestionably written before 1602, for in February of that year it was an established play, and so much liked, that it was chosen for performance at the Reader's Feast, on Candlemas Day, at the Inn of Court, to which the author of this Diary belonged-most likely the Middle Temple, which, at that date, was famous for its costly entertainments. After reading the following quotation, it is utterly impossible, although the name of the poet be not mentioned, to feel a moment's doubt as to the identity of the play there described and the production of Shakspeare :—

* Vol. i. pp. 327, 328.

"Feb. 2, 1601-2.

"At our feast we had a play called Twelve Night, or, What You Will, much like the Comedy of Errors, or Menechmi in Plautus, but most like and neere to that in Italian called Inganni. A good practice in it, to make the steward believe his lady widdowe* was in love with him, by counterfayting a letter, as from his lady, in general termes, telling him what she liked best in him, and prescribing his gestures, inscribing his apparaile, &c., and then, when he came to practise, making him believe they took him to be mad.'

"Should the Italian comedy, called Inganni, turn up, we shall probably find in it the actual original of Twelfth Night, which it has been hitherto supposed was founded upon the story of Apollonius and Silla, in Barnabe Riche's Farewell to Military Profession, twice printed, viz.: in 1583 and 1606."

Riche's Farewell was reprinted by the Shakspeare Society in 1846. The editor, after alluding to Bandello's tale of Nicuola and Lattantio, and Belleforest's French version of that tale, says: "It seems more likely that Riche resorted to Bandello; but it is possible that this novel was one of those which had been dramatized before Riche wrote, and if this were the case, it would establish the new and important fact, that a play on the same story as Twelfth Night, had been produced before 1581.

"Two Italian comedies, upon very similar incidents, one called Inganni, and the other Ingannati, were certainly then in existence, and may have formed the groundwork of a drama, anterior to Shakspeare, in our own language. The names given by Riche to the various personages are not those which occur in Bandello, Belleforest, or the Italian comedies: neither are they the same as any used by Shakspeare. Riche perhaps obtained them from the old English drama.'

If a play on the same subject as Twelfth Night had been produced before 1581, it could scarcely have escaped the notice of the writer of the Diary. As to the two comedies, Gl' Inganni and Gl' Ingannati, the latter was first in time, and claims to be strictly original.

The Ingannati was performed in Siena in 1531; the Inganni at Milan in 1547.+ The first has most resemblance to Twelfth Night, and was probably in the mind of the author of the Diary, though he called it Inganni. That he could make a slight mistake as to what was before him, is evident from his calling Olivia a widow.

I first became acquainted with the Inganni in the French version of Pierre de Larivey, under the title of Les Tromperies, 1611. This French comedy had become very scarce; but it has been republished

* Olivia is not a widow; but the misprision is of no moment.

+ Gl' Inganni, Comedia del Signor N. S. [Sechi], recitata in Milano l'anno 1547, dinanzi alla Maestà del Re Filippo. In Fiorenza, appresso i Giunti, 1562.*

Charles V., before leaving Spain in 1543, had given the title of King of Spain to his son Philip (Philip II.).

*This is the oldest edition I have seen referred to. There are editions in the British Museum of 1566, 1582, 1587, 1602, 1615.

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