Minor Poems of Michael Drayton
It is in the songs interspersed in the Eclogues that Drayton's best work at this time is to be found: already his metrical versatility is discernible; for though he doubtless remembered the many varieties of metre employed by Spenser in the Calendar , his verses already bear a stamp of their own. The long but impetuous lines, such as 'Trim up her golden tresses with Apollo's sacred tree', afford a striking contrast to the archaic romance-metre, derived from Sir Thopas and its fellows, which appears in Dowsabel , and it again to the melancholy, murmuring cadences of the lament for Elphin. It must, however, be confessed that certain of the songs in the 1593 edition were full of recondite conceits and laboured antitheses, and were rightly struck out, to be replaced by lovelier poems, in the edition of 1606. The song to Beta was printed in Englands Helicon , 1600; here, for the first time, appeared the song of Dead Love , and for the only time, Rowlands Madrigal . In these songs, Drayton offends least in grammar, always a weak point with him; in the body of the Eclogues, in the earlier Sonnets, in the Odes, occur the most extraordinary and perplexing inversions. Quite the most striking feature of the Eclogues, especially in their later form, is their bold attempt at greater realism, at a breaking-away from the conventional images and scenery.
In 1607 and 1609, Drayton published two editions of the last and weakest of his mediaeval poems—the Legend of Great Cromwell ; and for the next few years he produced nothing new, only attending to the publication of certain reprints and new editions. During this time, however, he was working steadily at the Polyolbion , helped by the patronage of Aston and of Prince Henry. In 1612-13, Drayton burst upon an indifferent world with the first part of the great poem, containing eighteen songs; the title-page will give the best idea of the contents and plan of the book: 'Poly-Olbion or a Chorographicall Description of the Tracts, Riuers, Mountaines, Forests, and other Parts of this renowned Isle of Great Britaine, With intermixture of the most Remarquable Stories, Antiquities, Wonders, Rarityes, Pleasures, and Commodities of the same: Digested in a Poem by Michael Drayton, Esq. With a Table added, for direction to those occurrences of Story and Antiquities, whereunto the Course of the Volume easily leades not.' &c. On this work Drayton had been engaged for nearly the whole of his poetical career. The learning and research displayed in the poem are extraordinary, almost equalling the erudition of Selden in his Annotations to each Song. The first part was, for various reasons, a drug in the market, and Drayton found great difficulty in securing a publisher for the second part. But during the years from 1613 to 1622, he became acquainted with Drummond of Hawthornden through a common friend, Sir William Alexander of Menstry, afterwards Earl of Stirling. In 1618, Drayton starts a correspondence; and towards the end of the year mentions that he is corresponding also with Andro Hart, bookseller, of Edinburgh. The subject of his letter was probably the publication of the Second Part; which Drayton alludes to in a letter of 1619 thus: 'I have done twelve books more, that is from the eighteenth book, which was Kent, if you note it; all the East part and North to the river Tweed; but it lies by me; for the booksellers and I are in terms; they are a company of base knaves, whom I both scorn and kick at.' Finally, in 1622, Drayton got Marriott, Grismand, and Dewe, of London, to take the work, and it was published with a dedication to Prince Charles, who, after his brother's death, had given Drayton patronage. Drayton's preface to the Second Part is well worth quoting:
Michael Drayton
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CONTENTS
CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE OF DRAYTON'S LIFE AND WORKS
INTRODUCTION
FOOTNOTES:
SONNETS
[from the Edition of 1594]
FINIS.
[from the Edition of 1599]
Sonet 1
Sonet 3
Sonet 5
Sonet 8
Sonet 9
Sonet 10
Sonet 12
Sonet 13
Sonet 21
Sonet 22
Sonet 24
Sonet 25
Sonet 27
Sonet 31
Sonet 43
Sonet 44
Sonet 45
Sonet 55
[from the Edition of 1602]
Sonnet 17
Sonnet 27
Sonnet 31
Sonnet 41
Sonnet 58
[from the Edition of 1605]
Sonnet 43
Sonnet 46
Sonnet 47
Sonnet 50
Sonnet 51
Sonnet 57
Sonnet 58
[from the Edition of 1619]
1
6
8
21
27
48
52
61
ODES
[from the Edition of 1619]
[from the Edition of 1606]
ELEGIES VPON SVNDRY OCCASIONS
[from the Edition of 1627]
NIMPHIDIA
THE COVRT OF FAYRIE
FINIS.
THE QVEST OF CYNTHIA
FINIS.
THE SHEPHEARDS SIRENA
FINIS.
THE MVSES ELIZIVM
The Description of Elizium
The fift Nimphall
Claia, Lelipa, Clarinax a Hermit.
SONGS FROM THE 'SHEPHERD'S GARLAND'
[From the Edition of 1593]
[From the Edition of 1605]
[From the Edition of 1606]
APPENDIX
FINIS.
NOTES
ERRATA