The Hesperides Noble Numbers: Vol. 1 and 2

Robert Herrick
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Title: The Hesperides & Noble Numbers: Vol. 1 and 2
Author: Robert Herrick
Release Date: August 28, 2007 [EBook #22421]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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ROBERT HERRICK
THE HESPERIDES & NOBLE
NUMBERS: EDITED BY
ALFRED POLLARD
WITH A PREFACE BY
A. C. SWINBURNE

VOL. I.

_REVISED EDITION_

[Illustration]

LONDON: NEW YORK:
LAWRENCE & BULLEN, LTD., CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 16
HENRIETTA STREET, W.C. 153-157 FIFTH AVENUE
1898. 1898.
Transcriber's Note
Original spelling and punctuation has been retained.
Asterisks and daggers have been used to highlight sections. In this
version of the text, daggers have been rendered as +.
Greek words have been transliterated and shown between {braces}.
The oe ligature is shown by [oe], whilst ^ indicates 'superscript'.
Obvious typesetting errors have been corrected without note, however
additional corrections have been recorded in the Transcriber's Endnotes
at the end of each volume.
EDITOR'S NOTE.
In this edition of Herrick quotation is for the first time facilitated by the
poems being numbered according to their order in the original edition.
This numbering has rendered it possible to print those Epigrams, which
successive editors have joined in deploring, in a detachable Appendix,
their place in the original being indicated by the numeration. It remains
to be added that the footnotes in this edition are intended to explain, as
unobtrusively as possible, difficulties of phrase or allusion which might
conceivably hinder the understanding of Herrick's meaning. In the
longer Notes at the end of each volume earlier versions of some
important poems are printed from manuscripts at the British Museum,
and an endeavour has been made to extend the list of Herrick's debts to
classical sources, and to identify some of his friends who have hitherto
escaped research. An editor is always apt to mention his predecessors
rather for blame than praise, and I therefore take this opportunity of
acknowledging my general indebtedness to the pioneer work of Mr.

Hazlitt and Dr. Grosart, upon whose foundations all editors of Herrick
must necessarily build.
ALFRED W. POLLARD.
PREFACE.
It is singular that the first great age of English lyric poetry should have
been also the one great age of English dramatic poetry: but it is hardly
less singular that the lyric school should have advanced as steadily as
the dramatic school declined from the promise of its dawn. Born with
Marlowe, it rose at once with Shakespeare to heights inaccessible
before and since and for ever, to sink through bright gradations of
glorious decline to its final and beautiful sunset in Shirley: but the
lyrical record that begins with the author of "Euphues" and "Endymion"
grows fuller if not brighter through a whole chain of constellations till
it culminates in the crowning star of Herrick. Shakespeare's last song,
the exquisite and magnificent overture to "The Two Noble Kinsmen,"
is hardly so limpid in its flow, so liquid in its melody, as the two great
songs in "Valentinian": but Herrick, our last poet of that
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