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A P P E N D I X This page intentionally left blank [18.218.169.50] Project MUSE (2024-04-20 05:57 GMT) Appendix 625 Vaughan's Commendatory Poem (John, Lord Vaughan (1640-1713), later gd Earl of Carberry, was reported by Pepys (16 November 1667) to have been "one of the lewdest fellows of the age, worse than Sir Charles Sidley." Dryden later dedicated Limberham, or The Kind Keeper to him.] On Mr. Dryden's Play, The Conquest of Granada T H' applause I gave among the foolish Croud, Was not distinguish'd, though I clap'd aloud: Or, if it had, my judgment had been hid: I clap'd for Company as others did: Thence may be told the fortune of your Play, It's goodness must be try'd another way: Let's judge it then, and, if we've any skill, Commend what's good, though we commend it ill: There will be Praise enough: yet not so much, As if the world had never any such: Ben Johnson, Beaumont, Fletcher, Shakespear, are As well as you, to have a Poets share. You who write after, have besides, this Curse, You must write better, or, you else write worse: To equal only what was writ before, Seems stoln or borrow'd from the former store: Though blind as Homer all the Antients be, 'Tis on their shoulders like the Lame we see. Then, not to flatter th' Age, nor flatter you, (Praises though less, are greater when they'r true) You'r equal to the best, outdone by you; Who had outdone themselves, had they liv'd now. Vaughan. This page intentionally left blank ...

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