Drawn by the unctuous snail
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| The Dandelion Fairy, by Cicely Mary Barker |
In such employments, as rearing the drooping flower, and arranging the disordered chamber, the Fairies of South Britain gradually lost the harsher character of the dwarfs, or elves. Their choral dances were enlivened by the introduction of the merry goblin Puck, for whose freakish pranks they exchanged their original mischievous propensities. The Fairies of Shakespeare, Drayton, and Mennis, therefore, at first exquisite fancy portraits, may be considered as having finally operated a change in the original which gave them birth.
(Scott, The Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (1802))
Yes, I get it, and this was a line of winsome fairy evolution that proliferated wildly in the century after Scott wrote those words. It issued, for instance, in the Langs' Fairy Books and in Cicely Mary Barker's lovely Flower Fairies. In the century after Scott, those once-daemonic spirits completed their long journey to the nursery, as C.S. Lewis probably remarked.
The development in A Midsummer Night's Dream and in Drayton's Nymphidia was also a poetic escape of fancy crossed with nascent science, with huge influence on later poetry and across all the arts.
But who's ever heard of "Mennis"? The name meant nothing to me.
So after an hour of café research, to which Al contributed nothing, I arrived at Vice-Admiral Sir John Mennes or Mennis (1599 - 1671), and the poem that Scott was surely thinking of, "King Oberon's Apparell", which appeared in Musarum Deliciae, or The Muses Recreation (1656).
KING OBERON'S APPARELL
[Poem source: https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b3539530&seq=89 .]
In Victorian times, when the poem acquired some popularity with anthologists, it was somtimes assigned to Sir John Mennes and sometimes to his friend and co-author Dr James Smith, but it's somewhat untypical of their crudely witty collection of drolleries. Perhaps for good reason: it seems to date from thirty years before, c. 1626, when it was attributed to Sir Simeon Steward. But Steward isn't otherwise known as a poet, and many have supposed the real author was Robert Herrick. Anyway it was evidently a companion-piece to Herrick's three other Oberon poems (Oberon's Chapel, Oberon's Palace, Oberon's Feast). Whoever wrote it, I hope you'll agree with me that it was well worth copying out for the digital age.
For the Herrick connection, see the 1869 edition of Hesperidae by William Carew Hazlitt:
four-leaved true-love grasse: Herb-paris (Paris quadrifolia).
crispy mosse: Perhaps the red seaweed commonly called Irish Moss (Chondrus crispus), source of carrageenan. Gelatinous extracts were used as food additives as far back as the 15th century, and might be the "oyle" referred to here.
dandelyon push: a typo for "plush", I'm guessing.
Nisus: King Nisos of Megara, whose purple lock of hair kept him safe from harm, until cut off by his daughter Scylla (who had fallen in love with his enemy Minos). The story is in Book 8 of Ovid's Metamorphoses: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Metamorphoses_(tr._Garth,_Dryden,_et_al.)/Book_VIII .
buskins: laced boots.
cow-lady: ladybird, ladybug.
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| Sir John Mennes, portrait by Anthony van Dyck. |
[Image source: Wikipedia .]
Labels: Cicely Mary Barker, James Smith, Robert Herrick, Sir John Mennes, Sir Simeon Steward, Sir Walter Scott


































































