The poems and fragments of catullus
Or the hendecasyllables immediately preceding,
Catullus.
Browning , ring and book , v. 664.
Tickell , theristes or the lordling , 23-26.
For a spirited, though coarse, version of this poem, see cotton's poems, p. 608, ed. 1689.
Browning , flight of the duchess , v. 21.
Move quickly over the road. so shakespeare:
2nd part of henry iv. , act i. sc. 1.
In the metre of this poem catullus observes the following general type -
Troilus and cressida , act iv. sc. 5.
Abide as, i think, in spenser's faerie queene , vi. 2, 19.
Midsummer night's dream , iii. 2.
Longfellow's dante inf . iii. 22.
Keats , endymion , ii. ad fin.
Bent as they move rapidly through the water.
A verse seems to have been lost here, which i have thus supplied.
- pope , epitaph on the children of lord digby.
Browning , ring and book , i. 925.
1.
Come all hendecasyllables whatever,
Wheresoever ye house you, all whatever.
I the game of an impudent adultress?
She refuse to return to me the tablets
Where you syllable? O ye can't be silent.
Up, have after her, ask renunciation.
Would ye know her? a woman, you shall eye her
Strutting loftily, whiles she laughs a loud laugh
Vast and vulgar, a Gaulish hound beseeming.
Form your circle about her, ask her, urge her.
'Hark, adulteress, hand the note-book over.
Hark, the note-book, adultress, hand it over.'