Public Domain Poetry And Stories - To The Right Gracious Prince, Lodowick, Duke Of Richmond And Lennox. by Robert Herrick
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To The Right Gracious Prince, Lodowick, Duke Of Richmond And Lennox.

    By Robert Herrick



    Of all those three brave brothers fall'n i' th' war
    (Not without glory), noble sir, you are,
    Despite of all concussions, left the stem
    To shoot forth generations like to them.
    Which may be done, if, sir, you can beget
    Men in their substance, not in counterfeit,
    Such essences as those three brothers; known
    Eternal by their own production.
    Of whom, from fame's white trumpet, this I'll tell,
    Worthy their everlasting chronicle:
    Never since first Bellona us'd a shield,
    Such three brave brothers fell in Mars his field.
    These were those three Horatii Rome did boast,
    Rome's were these three Horatii we have lost.
    One C[oe]ur-de-Lion had that age long since;
    This, three; which three, you make up four, brave prince.



Extra Info:
To the right gracious Prince, Lodowick, Duke of Richmond and Lennox. There appears to me to be a blunder here which Dr. Grosart and Mr. Hazlitt do not elucidate, by recording the birth of Lodowick, first Duke of Richmond, in 1574, his succession to the Lennox title in 1583, creation as Duke of Richmond in May, 1623, and death in the following February. For this first duke was no "stem" left "of all those three brave brothers fallen in the war," and the allusion here is undoubtedly to his nephews--George, Lord d'Aubigny, who fell at Edgehill; Lord John Stewart, who fell at Alresford; and Lord Bernard Stewart (Earl of Lichfield), who fell at Rowton Heath. In elucidation of Herrick's Dirge (219) over the last of these three brothers, I have already quoted Clarendon's remark, that he was "the third brother of that illustrious family that sacrificed his life in this quarrel," and it cannot be doubted that Herrick is here alluding to the same fact. The poem must therefore have been written after 1645, i.e., more than twenty years after the death of Duke Lodowick. But the duke then living was James, who succeeded his father Esme in 1624, was recreated Duke of Richmond in 1641, and did not die till 1655. It is true that there was a brother named Lodovic, but he was an abbot in France and never succeeded to the title. Herrick, therefore, seems to have blundered in the Christian name.



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