Do not conceal those breasts of thine, Lest, if there be like cold and frost, Do not conceal that fragrant scent, No spices grow in all the east! Do not conceal thy heavenly voice, Lest, music hearing no such thing, The nightingale forget to sing! Do not conceal, nor yet eclipse, Thy pearly teeth with coral lips; Lest, that the seas cease to bring forth Gems which from thee have all their worth! Do not conceal no beauty, grace, Lest virtue overcome by vice TO CYNTHIA, ON HER MOTHER'S DECEASE. APRIL is past! then do not shed, Nor do not waste in vain, Upon thy mother's earthy bed, Thy tears of silver rain. Thou canst not hope that her cold earth A flower like thee, or will give birth To one of the like worth. 'Tis true the rain fall'n from the sky, Or from the clouded air, Doth make the earth to fructify, And makes the heaven more fair. With thy dear face it is not so, If thou rain down thy showers of woe, Therefore, when sorrow shall becloud Thy fair serenest day, Weep not! my sighs shall be allow'd To chace the storm away. THOMAS BEEDOME, Author of "Poems divine and humane," (London, 1641) a very scarce little volume. These posthumous poems contain many good lines, but in general wretchedly marred by extravagant conceits. The following is, perhaps, the least faulty specimen. From the numerous complimentary verses by contemporary wits, which, according to the custom of the times, usher in the author and his productions with hyperbolical praise, it appears that Beedome died very young. THE QUESTION AND ANSWER. WHEN the sad ruin of that face By time undone falls slack, and dies; Wilt thou not sigh, and wish, in some vex'd fit, That it were now as when I courted it? And when thy glass shall it present Without those smiles which once were there, Shewing, like some stale monument, A scalp departed from its hair; At thyself frighted, wilt not start, and swear Yes, yes, I know thou wilt; and so Pity the weakness of thy scorn, That now hath humbled thee to know, Though fair it was, it is forlorn. Love's sweets thy aged corpse embalming not, Then shall I live; and live to be Thy envy, thou my pity: say Whene'er thou see me, or I thee, (Being nighted from thy beauty's day) ""Tis he! and had my pride not wither'd me, "I had, perhaps, been still as fresh as he." Then shall I smile, and answer, "True; thy scorn "Left thee thus wrinkled, slackt, corrupt, forlorn." HENRY DELAUNE, A writer concerning whom nothing seems to be known, except that he published a small volume in 1657, under the title of "Пarpıxov Awpov, or, a legacy to his sons, "being a miscellany of precepts, theological, moral, poli"tical, and œconomical, digested into seven centuries of "quadrins," second edition: the first appeared in 1651. These moral and religious epigrams (for such they are) appear to be the real dictates of paternal solicitude, and the result of long experience. A few specimens, taken by chance from the concluding century, may serve as examples of the author's style; which is uniformly nervous and correct, and highly creditable to his learning and good sense as well as piety, but seldom very eminently poetical. WHEN the straight columns, on whose well-knit chine Some stately structure leans its weighty head, Are from their centre mov'd, or made incline, The pile soon sinks, and shrinks to its first bed: So, when you see death's agents daily come, |