Page:Grierson Herbert - First Half of the Seventeenth Century.djvu/41

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HOLLAND—VERSE AND PROSE.
21

rhythmical. His metres seem to me even lighter and more dancing than Brederoo's—

"Doen ik was in't bloeyen van mijn tyd, in 't groeyen van mijn jaren
In 't groenst, in 't soetst, in 't sotst, in 't boertigst van mijn jeught
Docht ik noyt myn selven met een vrouw of vrouws gelijck te paren,
Maar te leven vry onghcbonden in de vreught
                    Och, ick wurpt soo veer
                    En docht altyd weer
Die een vrouw heeft heeft in 't gemeen een heer."

or,

          "Sult ghy dan niet beginnen een reys?
           Waarna begheert ghy doch langer te beyen?
           Naaste Gebuyrtje voldoet ghy mijn eys
           Heft op een Liedtjen, men sal u geleyen."

As Professor Kalff says, Starter's songs sing themselves. Those in a patriotic strain are of the fierce breed of the Geuzenliederen.

Starter never forgot altogether his English origin. It betrays itself in occasional phrases; many of his songs are written to English airs; and two at any rate are translations—Is Bommelalire zoo groote geneughd and the Menniste Vryagie, the latter from the "Wooing of a Puritan" in the old comedy How a man may choose a good wife from a bad.[1] Starter's songs were collected in 1621 and 1622 in a volume entitled De Friesche Lusthof.

The greatest of Dutch poets united a large measure of the culture of Hooft to the racy vigour of Brederoo,

  1. Dodsley's Old English Plays, vol. ix.