Page:Poetical Works of John Oldham.djvu/161

151 Or, forced to a retreat for want of room, Give over, and ridiculous become. Do not, like that affected fool, begin, 'King Priam's fate, and Troy's famed war, I sing!' What will this mighty promiser produce? You look for mountains, and out creeps a mouse. How short is this of Homer's fine address And art, who ne'er says anything amiss? 'Muse, speak the man, who, since Troy's laying waste, Into such numerous dangers has been cast, So many towns and various people passed.' He does not lavish at a blaze his fire, To glare awhile, and in a snuff expire; But modestly at first conceals his light; In dazzling wonders then breaks forth to sight, Surprises you with miracles all o'er, Makes dreadful Scylla and Charybdis roar, Cyclops, and bloody Lestrygons devour; Nor does he time in long preambles spend, Describing Meleager's rueful end, When he's of Diomed's return to treat; Nor when he would the Trojan war relate, The tale of brooding Leda's eggs repeat; But still to the designed event hastes on, And at first dash, as if before 'twere known, Embarks you in the middle of the plot, And what is unimprovable leaves out, And mixes truth and fiction skilfully, That nothing in the whole may disagree. Whoe'er you are, that set yourselves to write, If you expect to have your audience sit Till the fifth act be done, and curtain fall, Mind what instructions I shall further tell, Our guise and manners alter with our age, And such they must be brought upon the stage. A child, who newly has to speech attained, And now can go without the nurse's hand,