14. While thus he fpake, Erminia husht and still 15. ; She faid therefore, O fhepherd fortunate! In thepherds life, which I admire and love; Within these pleasant groues perchance my hart, 16. If gold or wealth of most esteemed deare, Two christall streames fell from her watrie eies; And wept, and with her wept that shepherd old. 17. With fpeeches kinde, he gan the virgin deare But But yet her geftures and her lookes (I geffe) Not those rude garments could obfcure, and hide, And milke her goates, and in their folds them place, POM POMFRET F Mr. JOHN POMFRET nothing is known but from a flight and confufed account prefixed to his poems by a nameless friend; who relates, that he was the fon of the Rev. Mr. Pomfret, rector of Luton in Bedfordshire; that he was bred at Cambridge *; entered into orders, and was rector of Malden in Bedfordshire, and might have risen in the Church; but that, when he applied to Dr. Compton, bishop of London, for institution to a living of confiderable value, to which he had been presented, he found a troublesome obftruction raised by a malicious interpretation of fome paffage in his Choice; from which it was inferred, that he confidered happiness as more likely to be found in the company of a mistress than of a wife +. This *He was of Queen's College there, and, by the University regifter, appears to have taken his Bachelor's degree in 1684, and his Master's in 1698. The paffage here meant, is the following: And as I near approach'd the verge of life, Should This reproach was easily obliterated for it had happened to Pomfret as to all other men who plan schemes of life; he had departed from his purpose, and was then married. The malice of his enemies had however a very fatal confequence the delay constrained his attendance in London, where he caught the fmall-pox, and died in 1703, in the thirty-fixth year of his age. He published his poems in 1699; and has been always the favourite of that clafs of readers, who, without vanity or criticifm, feek only their own amusement. His Choice exhibits a fyftem of life adapted to common notions, and equal to common expectations; such a state as affords plenty and tranquillity, without exclufion of intellectual pleasures. Perhaps no compofition in our language has been oftener perused than Pomfret's Choice. Should take upon him all my worldly care, * If my memory does not greatly mislead me, in the earlier edi tions the last line but one above-cited stood thus: Should take upon her all my worldly care. This has been frequently mentioned as the only paffage in the poem that could obftruct his inftitution, and the interpretation thereof is here, as elsewhere, ftigmatifed as malicious, and the rather, for that at the time of his application to the bishop he was married; a circumftance that revokes the fentiment no otherwise than by fhewing that the author had changed his opinion. But the preceding part of the poem contains a wish to have near him an "obliging fair one to converfe with, constant to herself and "to him, whofe conversation should infpire him with new joys, and "who fhould be said, even by envy, to go the least of womankind aftray." The lines are too filly to be worth inferting, but, if not capable of a bad conftruction, they must be owned to be at least ambiguous. In his other poems there is an cafy volubility; the pleasure of smooth metre is afforded to the ear, and the mind is not oppreffed with ponderous or entangled with intricate fentiment. He pleases many, and he who pleases many must have fome fpecies of inerit. ***Whoever will be at the pains of comparing the most admired of Pomfret's poems, his Choice, with Dr. Pope's Wish, will be convinced how much the manly fenfe of the latter outweighs the puerile inanity of the former. Of Pomfret's Poems, few have ever been readers but the illiterate, and fuch as are delighted with trite fentiments and vulgar imagery; and as these are the most numerous of those that can read at all, it is no wonder that by fuch they have been often perufed. |