Samuel Daniel

Here you will find the Long Poem The Civil Wars (excerpts) of poet Samuel Daniel

The Civil Wars (excerpts)

XXXVI
 The swift approach and unexpected speed
 The king had made upon this new-rais'd force,
 In the unconfirmed troops, much fear did breed,
 Untimely hind'ring their intended course.
 The joining with the Welsh they had decreed
 Was hereby dash'd; which made their cause the worse.
 Northumberland, with forces from the north,
 Expected to be there, was not set forth.

XXXVII
 And yet undaunted Hotspur, seeing the king
 So near arriv'd, leaving the work in hand,
 With forward speed his forces marshalling,
 Sets forth his farther coming to withstand.
 And with a cheerful voice encouraging
 His well experienc'd and adventurous band,
 Brings on his army, eager unto fight;
 And plac'd the same before the king in sight.

XXXVIII

 "This day," saith he, "my valiant trusty friends,
 Whatever it doth give, shall glory give;
 This day, with honour, frees our state, or ends
 Our misery with fame, that still shall live.
 And do but think, how well the same he spends,
 Who spends his blood, his country to relieve.
 What? have we hands, and shall we servile be?
 Why were swords made, but to preserve men free.

XXXIX

 "Besides, the assured hope of victory
 Which we may even promise on our side,
 Against this weak constrained company,
 Whom force and fear, not will and love doth guide,
 Against a prince, whose foul impiety
 The heavens do hate, the earth cannot abide:
 Our number being no less, our courage more,
 No doubt we have it, if we work therefore."

XL

 This said, and thus resolv'd, even bent to charge
 Upon the king; who well their order view'd,
 And wary noted all the course at large
 Of their proceeding, and their multitude,
 And deeming better, if he could discharge
 The day with safety, and some peace conclude,
 Great proffers sends of pardon and of grace
 If they would yield, and quietness embrace.

XLI

 Which though his fears might drive him to propose,
 To time his business, for some other end;
 Yet, sure, he could not mean t' have peace with those
 Who did in that supreme degree offend.
 Nor were they such, as would be won with shows;
 Or breath of oaths, or vows could apprehend:
 So that in honour the offers he doth make,
 Were not for him to give nor them to take.

XLII

 And yet this much his courses do approve,
 He was not bloody in his natural;
 And yield he did to more then might behove
 His dignity to have dispens'd withal:
 And, unto Worcester, he himself did move
 A reconcilement to be made of all:
 But Worcester, knowing it could not be secur'd,
 His nephews onset, yet for all, procur'd.

XLIII

 Which seeing, the king, with greater wrath incens'd,
 Rage, against fury, doth with speed prepare.
 "And though," said he, "I could have well dispens'd
 With this day's blood, which I have sought to spare;
 That greater glory might have recompens'd
 The forward worth of these, that so much dare;
 That we might good have had by th' overthrown,
 And the wounds we make might not have been our own:

XLIV

 "Yet, since that other men's iniquity
 Calls on the sword of wrath, against my will;
 And that themselves exact this cruelty,
 And I constrained am this blood to spill;
 Then on, brave followers, on courageously,
 True-hearted subjects, against traitors ill;
 And spare not them, who seek to spoil us all
 Whose foul confused end, soon see you shall."

XLV

 Forthwith, began these fury-moving sounds,
 The notes of wrath, the music brought from Hell,
 The rattling drums, which trumpets voice confounds
 The cries, the encouragements, the shouting shrill;
 That, all about, the beaten air rebounds
 Confused thundering-murmurs horrible;
 To rob all sense, except the sense to fight.
 Well hands may work; the mind hath lost his sight.

XLVI

 O war! begot in pride and luxury,
 The child of malice, and revengeful hate;
 Thou impious good, and good impiety,
 That art the foul refiner of a state;
 Unjust-just scourge of men's iniquity,
 Sharp-easer of corruptions desperate;
 Is there no means but that a sin-sick land
 Must be let blood with such a boisterous hand?

XLVII

 How well mightst thou have here been spar'd this day,
 Had not wrong-counsell'd Percy been perverse?
 Whose forward hand, inur'd to wounds, makes way
 Upon the sharpest fronts of the most fierce:
 Where now an equal fury thrusts to stay
 And back-repel that force, and his disperse:
 Then these assail, then those re-chase again,
 Till stay'd with new-made hills of bodies slain.

XLVIII

 There, lo that new-appearing glorious star,
 Wonder of arms, the terror of the field,
 Young Henry, labouring where the stoutest are,
 And even the stoutest force