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The Phoenix And The Turtle

Let the bird of loudest lay    On the sole Arabian tree    Herald sad and trumpet be,    To whose sound chaste wings obey.    But thou shrieking harbinger,    Foul precurrer of the fiend,    Augur of the fever's end,    To this troop come thou not near.    From this session interdict   Every fowl of tyrant wing,   Save the eagle, feather'd king;   Keep the obsequy so strict.   Let the priest in surplice white,   That defunctive music can,   Be the death-divining swan,   Lest the requiem lack his right.   And thou treble-dated crow,   That thy sable gender mak'st   With the breath thou giv'st and tak'st,   'Mongst our mourners shalt thou go.   Here the anthem doth commence:   Love and constancy is dead;   Phoenix and the Turtle fled   In a mutual flame from hence.   So they lov'd, as love in twain   Had the essence but in one;   Two distincts, division none:   Number there in love was slain.   Hearts remote, yet not asunder;   Distance and no space was seen   'Twixt this Turtle and his queen:   But in them it were a wonder.   So between them love did shine   That the Turtle saw his right   Flaming in the Phoenix' sight:   Either was the other's mine.   Property was thus appalled   That the self was not the same;   Single nature's double name   Neither two nor one was called.   Reason, in itself confounded,   Saw division grow together,   To themselves yet either neither,   Simple were so well compounded;   That it cried, "How true a twain   Seemeth this concordant one!   Love has reason, reason none,   If what parts can so remain."   Whereupon it made this threne   To the Phoenix and the Dove,   Co-supremes and stars of love,   As chorus to their tragic scene:

OS   Beauty, truth, and rarity,   Grace in all simplicity,   Here enclos'd, in cinders lie.   Death is now the Phoenix' nest,   And the Turtle's loyal breast   To eternity doth rest,   Leaving no posterity:    'Twas not their infirmity,   It was married chastity.   Truth may seem but cannot be;   Beauty brag but 'tis not she;   Truth and beauty buried be.   To this urn let those repair   That are either true or fair;   For these dead birds sigh a prayer.

Form: abba ... aaa1.

First printed in 1601 in Loues Martyr:

Or Rosalins Complaint.

Allegorically shadowing the truth of Loue, in the constant Fate of the Phoenix and Turtle.

A Poeme ... by Robert  Chester ....

To these are added some new compositions of seuerall workes, vpon the first subiect: viz. the Phoenix and Turtle.  The poems were "consecrated by them all generally, to the loue and merite of the true-noble Knight,

Sir Iohn Salisburie...." Other contributors to the volume were Jonson,

Chapman,

Marston,

Vatum Chorus, and Ignoto.

The phoenix and the turtle are familiar symbols of Love and Constancy (see line 22).

The poem falls into three divisions: the summoning of the other birds to a funeral pageant, the Anthem, and the ''threne.'' The best modern edition is that by F.

T.

Prince in Shakespeare:

The Poems (London:

Methuen, 1960). bird of loudest lay: not necessarily the nightingale; simply the bird of strongest voice. 2.

Arabian tree.

According to mythical tradition the unique phoenix bird, after a life of five hundred years in Arabia, was consumed in fire ignited by the sun on the Arabian tree near Heliopolis,

Egypt.

A new phoenix was born from its ashes. 3. trumpet: trumpeter. 4. chaste wings: i.e., of the other birds. 5. shrieking harbinger: the screech-owl, whose doleful call was popularly believed to be a foreboding of death or of some other disaster. 6. precurrer: precursor, forerunner. 14. defunctive music can: understands funeral music. 15. death-divining swan.

An allusion to the belief still current, that dying swans break out into beautiful song. 16. right.

Ambiguous in meaning; "due" or "rite." 17. treble-dated crow.

Crows were believed to have a life-span three times as long as that of man. 18-19.

That ... tak'st.

Alludes to the belief that crows and ravens conceive and lay eggs at the bill, the young ones becoming black on the seventh day. 22. is.

Singular, since love and constancy, the phoenix and the turtle, are one. 25-28.

So ... slain.

Cf.

Donne, "A Valediction Forbidding Mourning'' and "A Canonization." as: that. 27. distincts: separate persons. 28.

Number: that is, two becomes one, one being no "number.'' 32.

But in them: in any one else but in them. 34. his right: what was due to him. 36. mine: double meaning possible: "mine own" and "treasure"; the latter is less plausible. 37.

Property: peculiar quality, personality; from Latin proprietas.38.

That ... same: i.e., that personality had been destroyed. 44.

Simple: simples, elementary elements. 47.

Love has reason: for love ordinarily has no reason. 48. parts: departs. 49. threne: funeral song. 55.

Here enclos'd: enclosed in this urn\; the comma, omitted in many editions, is essential to the sense. cinders: ashes.

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William Shakespeare (bapt. 26 April 1564 – 23 April 1616) was an English playwright, poet, and actor, widely regarded as the greatest writer in …
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