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26 THE HERALDRY OF YORK MINSTER.<br />

they of no mean capacity, in subsequent ages thereto, who have thought<br />

it<br />

out, have come to a different conclusion.<br />

Spenser lived in Elizabethan times, after the age of chivalry had<br />

closed, but his Fairie Queene is an endeavour to stimulate the same high<br />

sentiments, by reviving the imagery of the past. With what reverence<br />

does he draw the portrait of the ancient knight<br />

:<br />

"A gentle knight was pricking on the plaine,<br />

Ycladd in mighty arms and silver shielde,<br />

\Yherein old dints of deep wounds did remaine,<br />

And cruell marks of many a bloudy fielde.<br />

And on his breast a bloudie cross he bore,<br />

The deare remembrance of his dying Lord,<br />

For whose sweet sake that glorious badge he wore,<br />

And dead, as living ever, Him adored.<br />

Upon his shielde the like was also scored,<br />

For sovereign hope which in His helpe he had.<br />

Right faithful, true, he was in deede and worde ;<br />

But of his cheere did seem too solemn sad,<br />

Yet nothing did he dred, but ever was y drad."<br />

B. I, C. 2, St. 2.<br />

Dryden fully appreciated it,<br />

and would fain have attempted to revive<br />

by his pen the chivalrous sentiments of old ;<br />

but (as he says in his<br />

letters to the Earl of Dorset) being " encouraged only with fair words by<br />

"Charles II., my little salary ill paid, and no prospect of a future sub-<br />

" sistence, I was then discouraged at the beginning of my attempt ; and<br />

"now age has overtaken me, and want, a more insufferable evil, through<br />

"the change of the times has wholly disabled me."<br />

Walter Scott alludes to this in his introduction to Marmion, where<br />

he apologises for venturing to<br />

" Essay to break a feeble lance<br />

In the fair fields of old romance."<br />

And it is feeble (however graphic and poetic), for he seldom rises above<br />

the mere romance. He says, however,<br />

"The mightiest chiefs of British song<br />

Scorned not such legends to prolong:<br />

They gleam in Spenser's elfin dream,<br />

And muse in Milton's heavenly theme ;<br />

And Dryden in immortal strain<br />

Had raised the Table Round again,<br />

But that a ribald king and court<br />

Bade him toil on to make them sport:<br />

Demanded for their niggard pay,<br />

Fit<br />

for their souls, a looser lay,<br />

Licentious satire, song and play.<br />

The world, defrauded of the high design,<br />

Profaned the God-given strength and marred the lofty line."

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