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A19946 Dauisons poems, or, A poeticall rapsodie Deuided into sixe bookes. The first, contayning poems and deuises. The second, sonets and canzonets. The third, pastoralls and elegies. The fourth, madrigalls and odes. The fift, epigrams and epitaphs. The sixt, epistles, and epithalamions. For variety and pleasure, the like neuer published.; Poetical rapsody Davison, Francis, 1575?-1619? 1621 (1621) STC 6376; ESTC S109387 98,578 288

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light as wind I feele no heate in all thy fire Goe change thy bow and get a stronger Goe breake thy shafts and buy thee longer In vaine thou bait'st thy hooke with beauties blaze In vaine thy wanton eyes allure These are but toyes for them that loue to gaze I know what harme thy lookes procure Some strange conceit must be deuised Or thou and all thy skill despised Scilicet asserui iam me fugique catenas XXV ODE The Tombe of dead Desire WHen Venus saw Desire must dye Whom high disdaine Had iustly slaine For killing Truth with scornfull eye The earth she leaues and gets her to the skie Her golden haire she teares Blacke weeds of woe she weares For helpe vnto her father doth she cry Who bids her stay a space And hope for better grace To saue his life she hath no skill Whom should she pray What doe or say But weepe for wanting of her will Meane time Desire hath tane his last farewell And in a Meddow faire To which the Nimphs repaire His breathlesse corps is laid with wormes to dwell So glory doth decay When death takes life away When morning Starre had chasde the night The Queene of Loue Lookt from aboue To see the graue of her delight And as with heedfull eye she viewd the place She spide a flower vnknowne That on his graue was growne In stead of learned verse his tombe to grace If you the name require Hearts-ease from dead desire XXVI ODE Three Odes translated out af Anacreon the Greeke Lyricke Poet. OF Atreus Sonnes faine would I write And faine of Cadmus would I sing My Lute is set on Loues delight And onely Loue sounds eu'ry string Of late my Lute I alt'red quite Both frets and strings for runes aboue I sung of fierce Alcides might My Lute would sound no tune but Loue. Wherefore ye worrhies all farewell No tune but Loue my Lute can tell XXVII ODE A comparison betwixt the strength of beasts the wisedome of Man and the beauty of a womans heart THe Bull by nature hath his hornes The Horses hooues to daunt their foes The light-foote Hare the hunter scornes The Lyons teeth his strength disclose The fish by swimming scapes the wheele The bird by flight the Fowlers net With wisedome man is arm'd as steele From women none of these can get What haue they then faire beauties grace A two-edg'd Sword a trusty shield No force resists a louely face Both fire and sword to Beauty yeeld XXVIII ODE OF late what time the Beare turn'd round At midnight in her wo●●ed way And men of all sorts slept full sound Orecome with labour of the day The God of loue came to my dore And tooke the ring and knocks it hard Whose the●e quoth I that knocks so sore You breake my sleep my dreams are mar'd A little boy forsooth q●●th he D●ng wet with ●ain●●s moonlesse night With that me thought it pittied me I op't the doore and candle light And straight a little boy I spide A winged Boy with shafts and bow I tooke him to the fire side And set him downe to warme him so His little hands in mine I straine To rub and warme them therewithall Out of his locks I crush the raine From which the drops apace downe fall At last when he was waxen warme Now let me trie my Bow quoth he I feare my string hath caught some harme And wet wil● 〈◊〉 ●oue too slack for me He said and 〈◊〉 bow and shot And weighty 〈…〉 heart The wound was ●ore and ●●ging hot The heate like fie●y 〈◊〉 my ●●art Mine Hhoast quoth he my s●●ng is well And laught so that he leapt againe Looke to your wound for feare of swell Your heart may hap to feele the paine XXIX ODE Anacreons second Ode otherwise NAture in her worke doth giue to each thing that by her do liue A proper gift where she may Preuent in time her owne decay The Bull a horne the Horse a hoofe The light-hoofe hare to run aloofe The Lyons strength who may resist The birds aloft flye where they list The fish swimmes safe in water deep The silly worme at least can creepe What is to come men can forecast And learne more wit by that is past The womans gift what might it be The same for which the Ladies three Pallas Iuno Venus straue When each desired it to haue XXX ODE Anacreons third Ode otherwise CVpid abroad was lated in the night His wings were wet with ranging in the raine Harbour he sought to me he tooke his flight To dry his plumes I heard the Boy complaine I opt the dore and granted his desire I rose my selfe and made the wag a fire F●ying more narrow by the fiers flame I spide his Quiuer hanging at his back Doubting the Boy might my misfortune frame I would haue gone for feare of further wrack But what I fear'd did me poore wretch betide And forth he drew an Arrow from his side He pierst the quick and I began to start A pleasing wound but that it was too high His shaft procur'd a sharpe yet sugred smart Away he flew for now his wings were drye But left the Arrow sticking in my brest Therefore I grieue I welcom'd such a Guest XXXI ODE That time and absence proues Rather helps then hurts to loues ABsence heare thou my Protestation Against my strength Distance and length Do what you can for alteration For hearts of truest mettle Absence doth ioyne and time doth settle Who loues a Mistresse of such quality He soone hath found Affections ground Beyond time place and all mortality To hearts that cannot vary Absence is present time doth tarry My sences want their outward motions Which now within Reason doth win Redoubled in her secret notions Like rich men that take pleasure In hiding more then handling Treasure By absence this good meanes I gaine That I can catch her Where none can watch her In some close corner of my braine There I imbrace and kisse her And so I both enioy and misse her XXXII ODE Of Cinthia THe ancient readers of heauens booke Which with curious eye did looke Into Natures story All things vnder Cynthia tooke To be transitory This the learned only knew But now all men find it true Cynthia is descended With bright beames and heauenly hew And lesser starres attended Lands and seas she rules below Where things change and ebbe and flow Spring waxe old and perish Only time which all doth mow Her alone doth cherish Times yong houres attend her still And her eyes and cheekes do fill With fresh youth and beauty All her louers old do grow But their hearts they do not so In their loue and duty The end of the fourth Booke THE FIFT BOOKE OF Epigrams and Epitaphs Of Epigrams Epigrams translated out of Martiall Ad Aelian 76. l. 1. Si memini fuerant tibi quatuor Aelia dentes Expuit vnta duos tussis vna duos Iam secura potes totis tussire diebus Nil
passed loue 112 Of the Sunne A Iewell being a Sun-shining c. 113 To his mistresse eyes 114 His hart araigned of theft c 115 Deadly sweetenesse 116 Ladies eyes fed Cupid for darts fire 116 Loues contrarieties 117 Her outward gesture deceiued his inward hope 118 That he is vnchangeable 119 Vpon her absence 120 The louers absence kils me her presence c. 121 Faire face and hard heart 123 An Inuectiue against loue 124 Vpon his Ladies buying strings for her Lure 125 Car● wil not let him liue nor hope dye 126 In praise of the Sunne 127 Death in loue 128 Breake heauy heart 129 Desires gouernment 130 Loues properties 1●1 Liuing death 132 The passionate Prisoner 132 Hopelesse desires soone withers dies 233 Naturall comparisons with perfect loue 134 Loue is not like in beggers and in Kings 134 To time 137 A hymn in praise of Neptune 140 An hymne in praise of Musick 138 An hymn in praise of his Mistresse face 141 Vpon her palenesse 142 Vpon his Ladies sicknesse of the Poxe 143 Of Corin●es singing 143 In the grace of wit tong and face 144 An inuectiue against women 145 Of loue gift 146 The anotomy of loue 147 Loue the only price of loue 148 D Death in loue 128 Description of loue 23 Desire of hope 133. 134 Desire hath cōquered reuenge 86 Desires gouernement 130 Dialogues Between a louer and his Lady 57 Between a Louer and Cupid 189 Betweene a louer death and Cupid 190 Betweene a louers flaming heart and his Ladies frozen brest 104 Betweene the louer and his heart 50. 129 Betweene the soule and the Body 56 In praise of Astraea 156 Didoes inscription 106 Disdaine at variance with desire 239 Disdaines Altar sacrifice 55 Dispraise of a courtly life 152 Dispraise of louers folly 242 Deuine 1 Dozen of points 44 Diall 46 Deuises A Lottery before Queene Elizabeth 42 Inscriptions of Thesbe Orestes Aiax Romulus Fabritius Curio and Cato Vtican 47 to 50 Of the lightnesse of a Woman 50 A Dialogue betweene the louer his heart 50 A Dialogue betweene a louer death and loue 51 Phaleuciacks 52 Phaleuciacks 53 Phaleuciacks 54 An altar and sacrifice to disdaine 55 Vpon beginning without making an end 56 A Dialogue betweene the soule the body 56 Saphicks vpon the Passion of Christ 57 A Dialogue betweene the Louer and his Lady 57 Of mans fall in Adam and restoring by Christ 59 Elegies He renounceth his foode and former delight 196 For what cause he obtaines his Ladies fauour 197 To his Lady who vowed Virginity 199 Her Praise is in her want 202 Of a womans heart 202 Loues Embassie c 203 Eglogues Eglogue intituled Cuddy 175 Eglogue concerning old age 192 Epigrams Ad Alian 255 In Herm 256 De Mannella 256 De Milone 256 De Codro 257 Ad quintum 257 To poore Schollers 257 In Cinnam 258 To his friends 258 De Philone 258 Ad Pessimos coniuges 259 A rule for courtiers 259 On a painted Courtizan 259 In Aulam 259 For a looking glasse 260 On a limping Cuckold 260 On Crambo a lowzie shifter 260 In Asinium 260 In Quintum In Sabam 261 In Aulum 261 Epitaphs An Epitaph on King Henry the 3 King of France 265 An Epitaph on King Henry the 4 King of France 265 An Epitaph on Queene Elizabeth 266 Epistles Sundry Epistles or letters in verse 662 F Fabritius Curio his Vertues 49 Face 141 145 Faire face and hard heart 123 Falling band 45 Fanne 46 Fortunes Wheeles 43 G Garden 21 Garters 45 Girdle 44 Glasse 144 Gloues 44 Gift 146 H Hand 110 Handkerchiefe 44 Hexameters to Sir Philip Sidney 262 Horace imitated 20 Hearts captiuity 93 Hymnes In praise of Musick 138 In praise of Neptune 140 An hymne in praise of his mistresse face 141 I Of Aiax who kild himselfe 48 Of Cato Vtican who slew himself 49 Of Climennestra and her sonne Orestes 49 Of Dido 106 Of Fabritius curio 49 Of Romulus who was nursed by a she Wolfe 48 Of Thesbie 47 Inuectiue against loue 107. 124 Inuectiue against women 145 Inuerted rimes of loue 158 Ixion his torments 20● K Kisse begged 208 Kisse receiued 209 King Henries Epitaph 265 Kniues 44 L Lace 4 Lawyer 2 Lenuoy in riming 53 Loue makes a man a Poet 84 Lottery presented before Queene Elizabeth 42 Lots 44 Loue enters by fame 87 Loue like childrens Physicke 87 Loue punishable with loue 71 Louers knot 216 Loue the only price of loue 148 Louers complaint 136 Loues contention 73 Loues contrarieties 117 Loues description 123 Loues discommodities 110 Loues dispraise and folly 242 Loue verball ●14 Loues naturall comparisons 134 Loues properties 131 Loues Embasie 203 Lye 100 M Maid 45 Married man 3 Marriners song speech 42 Maske 44. 66 Meditations on the frailty of mans life 27 Marchant 3 Madrigals He must loue her if he loue his life 205 That all happines is deriued from her 205 Vpon her dreaming that she saw him dead 206 Vpon his departure 206 To Cupid 207 Vpon his Mistresse sicknesse and his owne health 208 He begs a kisse 208 Vpon a kisse receiued 209 Allusion to the confusion of Babel 209 To her hand vpon giuing him her gloue 210 Cupid proued a Fencer 210 He compares himself to a candle-flye 211 Answer to the question what loue is 211 Vpon his timerous silence in her presence 212 Vpon her long absence 212 Vpon her hiding her face from him 213 Vpon her heauty and inconstancy 213 In praise of her eyes 214 Verball loue 214 In praise of two 215 To his ladies garden being absent far from her 215 The true loues knot 216 In praise of his loue 217 N Necklace 46 Neptun●s praise 140 Nutmeg 46 O That only her beauty and voyce pleaseth him 218 Vpon her protestation of kind affection 219 His restlesse estate 220 His farewell to his mistresse 223 A Prosopopaeia wherein his heart c. 224 Vpon her giuing him backe the paper c. 225 Commendation of her beauty stature c 226 That each creature hath his abiding 227 His Lady to be condēned c 228 A Dialogue betweene him and his heart 229 Wherein his Lady keepes his heart 231 The more fauour he obtaines the more he desires 232 Desire and hope 233 Vpon visiting his Lady by moon-light 234 The kind louers complaint 236 Vnhappy eyes 238 Disdaine at variance with desire 239 Cupids marriage with dissimulation 240 Dispraise of Loue and louers follyes 242 To his Muse 243 To his heart 244 A defiance of disdainefull loue 146 The tombe of dead desire 247 Three Odes translated out of Anacreon 148 A comparison betwixt the strength of beasts the wisedome of Man and the beauty of a womans heart 249 Anacreons second Ode 251 Anacreons third Ode 252 That time and absence proues ra-rather helps thē hurts to loues 253 Of Cinthia 254 P Petrarck● sonet Pace non trouo c. 108 Physitian 2 Poxs 143 Poesie of a Ring 44 Prayer book 45
Praise of a Beggers life 136 Praise of her eyes 73 Praise of Musicke 138 Praise of Sir Philip Sidney 262 Praise of the two countesses of Cumberland and Warwick 98 Purse 43 Twelue wonders of the world 1 Cupid makes a Nimph wound her selfe 15 A complaint of which al the staues end with the words of the first 17 A dialogue in imitation of Horace 20 Cupid shoots light but wounds sore 21. 22 A true description of loue 23 Of the first inhabiting this I le by Brute c 25 A Meditation on the frailty of this life 27 A Poesie to proue affection is not loue 29 A Louers request if hee hold his peace 30 A complaint for Iustice flight 30 A Poem in the nature of an Epitaph 31 Loues contentment 32 A Repentant Poem 34 Vnions Iewell 35 A Panegyricke to the King 38 Q Quatraine 105 R Repentant Poem 34 Reporting Sonet of praise 72 Ring plaine 44 Rings poesie 44 Roundelay very pretty in inuerted Rimes 158 S Saphicks vpon the Passion of Christ 57 Scarfe 45 Sicknesse 208 Sicknesse and recouery 89 Sizers Snufkin 45 Hee tells her how hee le hide his ioyes 62 Hee promiseth to loue as he is loued 63 To mistresse Diana 63 Dedication of these Rimes c 64 That he cannot hide or dissemble his affection 65 Vpon his absence from her 65 To Q. E. at a Maske 1594 66 To pitty 67 Vpon her acknowledging his desert 67 Her answer in the same 68 Vpō her cōmending his verses 69 To a worthy Lord now dead 70 He demands pardō for louing 70 Loue punishable 71 He calls his eares 72 Praise of her eyes 73 Contention of loue 73 That she hath great power ouer his life c. 74 Of his Ladies weeping 75 He paints out his torment 75 His sight teares are bootles 76 Her beauty makes him liue euen in despaire 77 Why her lips yeelds him no comfort 77 Comparison of his heart c 80 That he cānot leaue to loue c 81 He desires leaue to write c 81 That time hath no power to end his loue 82 Of the Moone c 83 That loue only made him a Poet. 84 Desire hath cōquered reuenge 86 To his eies for causing his pain 86 Vpon loues entering by the eare 87. 88 Of his own and his Mistresse sicknesse at one time 89 Another of her sicknesse and recouery 89 Allusion to Thaesus voyage 90 Vpon her secret looking out at a window as he past by 91 To his Mistresse c 92 To the Sunne c. 92 Vpon sending her a Ring c 93 The hearts captiuity 93 For her heart only 94 That his loue kils him with kindnesse 95 She only might cure him c 96 He expresseth his great loue vnto her 96 He wisheth both their hearts euer vnited 97 Loues seuen deadly sins 97 To two most honorable and vertuous Ladies and sisters c. 98 To my Lord the Prince 99 To the Lady Elizabeth c. 99 T Time cannot end or diminish loue 82 The meane estate is best 152 To Pitty 67 Tongue 144 V Vnions Iewell 35 Vranias answere 163 W Writing tables 45 Wit 144 Womens weight in Latine and English 60 Womens hearts and vnconstancy 145 Epithalmion vpon the spousals of W.A. and I.A. He who first did institute holy wedlock Knitting man and woman in happy bedlock Putting on their concupisence a holy fetlock Not to be broken Grant O grant ye grace to loue one another Like a Sister Christian and a brother So make the weaker of you a mother Loues happy token Another of the same Loue is foolery if it be not founded And on heauēly beauty chiefely grounded All deformity from the first sin runneth Al true beauty from our God only cōmeth With loues puritie him then only praise ye That by mercy he to himselfe may raise ye Hee 's the fountaine of all true perfect beauty And best meriteth all harts loue and duty Then send vp to him al your sighs gronings Then poure out to him all your teares and mournings And fixe only on him your ioyes and gladnesse For to ioy in earthly things is madnesse A short Contents of all the sixe Bookes contained In this volume c. The 1. book contayning Poems Deuises begins fol. 1. to folio 62. The 2 book of Sonets Canzonets begins folio 62. to follio 150. The 3. book of Pastorals Elegies begins folio 150. to folio 205. The 4. book of madrigalls Odes begins folio 205. to folio 255. The 5. book of Epigrams Epitaphs begins folio 255. to folio 266. The 6. book of Epistles begins folio 266 to 272. And Epithalmions begins before follio 1. THE FIRST BOOKE OF POEMS AND DEVISES I. POEM YET OTHER TWELVE WONders of the World by Sir Iohn Dauis I. The Courtier LOng haue I liu'd in Court yet learn'd not all this while To sel poore sutors smoke nor where I hate to smile Superiors to adore Inferiors to despise To flye from such as fall to follow such as rise To cloake a poore desire vnder a rich array Not to aspire by vice though t were the quicker way II. The Diuine My calling is Diuine and I from God am sent I will no chop-Church be nor pay my patron rent Nor yeeld to sacriledge but like the kind true mother Rather will loose all the child then part it with another Much wealth I will not seeke nor worldly masters serue So to grow rich far while my poore flock doth sterue III. The Souldier My occupation is the noble trade of Kings The tryall that decides the highest right of things Though Mars my Master be I doe not Venus loue Nor honour Bacchus oft nor often sweare by loue Of speaking of my selfe I all occasion shunne And rather loue to doe then boast what I haue done IIII. The Lawyer The Law my calling is my robe my tongue my pen Wealth and opinion gaine and make me Iudge of men The knowne dishonest cause I neuer did defend Nor spun out sutes in length but wisht and sought an end Nor counsell did bewray nor of both parties take Nor euer tooke I fee for which I neuer spake V. The Physition I study to vphold the slippery state of man Who dies when we haue done the best and all we can From practise and from bookes I draw my learned skill Not from the knowne receipt of Pothecaries bill The earth my faults doth hide the world my cures doth see What youth and time effects is oft ascribde to me VI. The Merchant My trade doth euery thing to euery land supply Discouer vnknowne coasts strange Countries to ally I neuer did forestall I neuer did ingrosse Nor custome did withdraw though I return'd with losse I thriue by faire exchange by selling and by buying And not by Iewish vse reprisall fraud or lying VII The Country Gentleman Though strange outlādish spirits praise towns country scorn The coūtry is my home I dwel where I was born There