"All in thy faithful Glass were so express'd, / As if they were Reflections of thy Breast, / As if they had been stamp'd on thy own mind"

— Oldham, John (1653-1683)


Place of Publication
London
Publisher
Printed for Jo. Hindmarsh [etc.]
Date
1684
Metaphor
"All in thy faithful Glass were so express'd, / As if they were Reflections of thy Breast, / As if they had been stamp'd on thy own mind"
Metaphor in Context
Plain Humour, shewn with her whole various Face,
    Not mask'd with any antick Dress,
  Nor screw'd in forc'd, ridiculous Grimace
    (The gaping Rabbles dull delight,
  And more the Actor's than the Poet's Wit)
    Such did she enter on thy Stage,
And such was represented to the wond'ring Age:
  Well wast thou skill'd, and read in humane kind,
In every wild fantastick Passion of his mind,
Didst into all his hidden Inclinations dive,
       What each from Nature does receive,
Or Age, or Sex, or Quality, or Country give;
  What Custom too, that mighty Sorceress,
    Whose pow'rful Witchcraft does transform
Enchanted Man to several monstrous Images,
  Makes this an odd, and freakish Monky turn,
  And that a grave and solemn Ass Appear,
And all a thousand beastly shapes of Folly wear:
  Whate're Caprice or Whimsie leads awry
  Perverted, and seduc'd Mortality,
       Or does incline, and byass it
From what's Discreet, and Wise, and Right, and Good, and Fit;
  All in thy faithful Glass were so express'd,
  As if they were Reflections of thy Breast,
  As if they had been stamp'd on thy own mind,

And thou the universal vast Idea of Mankind.
Provenance
Searching "stamp" and "mind" in HDIS (Poetry); found again "idea"
Date of Entry
04/06/2005

The Mind is a Metaphor is authored by Brad Pasanek, Assistant Professor of English, University of Virginia.