A web-based edition of early seventeenth-century political poetry from manuscript sources. It brings into the public domain over 350 poems, many of which have never before been published.

Piii3 Dearling off Kings, Patrone off armes


Notes. Defending Buckingham as royal favourite, military leader and artistic patron, this epitaph provocatively links the posthumous “detractione” of the Duke by libellers (“poetasteres cankred breath”) to the anti-monarchical politics of those who “love not Kings”.


“An Epitaph upon the Duke off Buckinghame”

Dearling off Kings, Patrone off armes,

Muses protector,1 who from harmes

Did sheild professores off them twaine,

Lyes heere by a base Soldier2 Slaine

And by poetasteres3 cankred breath

5

Dyes everie day a lingring death:

Be silent malice from henceforth,

And know detractione from his worth

(off Kings off Mars,4 off Muses lov’d)

Is onely from such spirits mov’d,

10

As love not Kings and would advance

Base Cowardise and Ignorance.



Source. First and Second Dalhousie Manuscripts 189

Piii3






1   Muses protector: patron of the arts. <back>

2   base Soldier: John Felton was a lieutenant during the 1627 expedition to the Ile de Ré. “[B]ase” here may simply mean morally vile, but it has a social resonance too: Felton was from an obscure and socially precarious branch of a Suffolk gentry family. <back>

3   poetasteres: poetaster, “a writer of poor or trashy verse” (OED). Contemporary stereotypes of libellers depict them as incompetent poets. <back>

4   Mars: the god of war. <back>