The Lives of the Most Famous English Poets (1687) by William Winstanley
page 132 of 249 (53%)
page 132 of 249 (53%)
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Prophaneness.
Nor was he only one of the inspired Train of _Phoebus_, but also a most judicious Historian, witness his Lives of our _English_ Kings since the Conquest, until King _Edward_ the Third, wherein he hath the happiness to reconcile brevity with clearness, qualities of great distance in other Authors; and had he continued to these times, no doubt it had been a Work incomparable: Of which his Undertaking, Dr. _Heylin_ in the Preface to his _Cosmography_, gives this Character, speaking of the chiefest Historians of this Nation; _And to end the Bed-roll_ (says he) _half the Story of this Realm done by Mr._ Daniel, _of which I believe that which himself saith of it in his Epistle to the Reader, that there was never brought together more of the Main_. Which Work is since commendably continued (but not with equal quickness and judgment,) by Mr. _Truffel_. As for his Poems so universally received, the first in esteem is, that Heroical one of the Civil Wars between the two Houses of _York_ and _Lancaster_; of which the elaborate Mr. _Speed_, in his Reign of _Richard_ the Second, thus writes: _The Seeds_ (saith he) _of those fearful Calamities, a flourishing Writer of our Age_ (speaking of Mr. _Daniel_) _willing nearly to have imitated_ Lucan, _as he is indeed called our_ English Lucan, _doth not unfortunately express, tho' he might rather have said he wept them, than sung them; but indeed so to sing them, is to weep them._ I sing the Civil Wars, tumultuous Broils And bloody Factions of a mighty Land, Whose people haughty, proud with foreign spoyls; Upon their selves turn back their conquering hand |
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