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A18766 A sparke of frendship and warme goodwill, that shewest the effect of true affection and vnfoldes the finenesse of this world VVhereunto is ioined, the commoditie of sundrie sciences, the benefit that paper bringeth, with many rare matters rehearsed in the same: with a description & commendation of a paper mill, now and of late set vp (neere the towne of Darthford) by an high Germayn called M. Spilman, Ieweller to the Qu[een's]. most excellent maiestie. Written by Thomas Chvrchyard Gent. Churchyard, Thomas, 1520?-1604. 1588 (1588) STC 5257; ESTC S109866 15,367 36

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famous worke this man coulde bring to light The glory then and honor of this deede is hers and ours shall be the gayne therein We reape the Corne whoeuer sowde the seede who ere haue lost we shall be sure to winne This mill remaynes a sampler to the rest that after comes to shewe whose worke is best No doubt but some this course will followe on a straunger left this worke to looke vpon That many moe by this may builded be and many heads and handes may thriue thereby He merits much that first plants fruitfull trée they purchase prayer that first doth practises try They ought not reap that neuer ment to sowe they winne great hap that can through hazards go They lose no time that toyles for publike state they glory gayne that first a conquest gate Nowe gallant witts that ioyes in doing well ply pen a pace whiles learning may be had Now stripplings yong but late come out of shell to Schoole good boyes to make your parents glad Now Printers presse that sets foorth many a booke besturre the stampe that worlde for newes may looke Now Stationers that worketh all the yeere sell bookes good cheape for Paper is not déere Nowe writers graue that studies heauenly things your workes shall shine by meane of Papers grace Nowe Marchant wise that home great profit brings send letters out abroad to euery place For Paper doth present it selfe to those in common weale that writeth verse and prose The merry myll nowe grindes and goes so braue that worlde at will shall alwayes Paper haue When Paper was not throwly knowne of men they wrote in stones and barks of trees for shift But loe long since the Paper and the Pen by deepe deuice found out a finer drift And most to prayse because of trifling toyes so great a wealth our worthy world enioyes Of drosse and rags that serues no other meane and fowle had shreds comes Paper white and cleane And euen so the baddest people may became good folke if they will bide the stampe Which people first with many a worthy way must be well wrought like oyle that burnes in Lampe For Oyle is tried and pur'd eare it be solde and searcht throw out as fyre tries out the golde And when the oyle is fit to blaze or burne it is applied at néede to serue our turne So man is méete to serue his natiue soyle when thumping worlde abroad hath tried him throwe Or heere at home his life hath scaped foyle and he thereby may shew a blotlesse browe But this must be as Paper passeth mill mans doubtfull dayes must passe through perilles still And though great blowes do beat him backe a space hee bides the brunt to get the greater grace And yéeldes to thumps and thwartes as yce to thawe as frost to fier will soft and gentle waxe Or as stiffe neckes will stoupe and yéelde to lawe compelde by flame to yéelde to fire like flaxe For nothing more becomes a noble minde than bide the blastes and puffe of euery winde Whose bellowes blowes to hinder well wonne fame when doe well shall in spight possesse good name If ship passe storme and tries the surging seas comes quiet home to harber in a roade Man must of force through torment purchace ease and must beleeue great burthen is no load And so bace ragges whereof is no account through straining hard past tenter hookes may mount And bodie cost and tumbled vp and downe may come to rest and reap right rare renowne Mans secrete faultes and foule defects of minde must be reformde like ragges in Paper mill When hammers help hath changde his cankered kinde and clensde the heart from spots and former ill A second shape and forme full fresh and new he doth receiue in nature grace and hiew When Water streames hath washt him ouer quite than man becomes like paper faire and white If Water were as scant as deerest wine how should this world mainteine each science heere In Water thin there dwels a power diuine where face is seene as in a Christall cleere An Element that euery creature needes wherein full oft both fowle and fishes breedes Whereby a world of people daily liue and God to man doth manie a blessing giue What earth or soyle can flourish where it wants colde Water sweete doth coole the scalded brest The drops whereof doth comfort hearbes and plants and graces great by Water is possest Then muse not man if Water thee reforme that art but earth and foode for scraling worme A bladder pufte with winde and ayer full thinne that can not bide the push of baggage pinne Our finest coyne of siluer or of golde in grossest sort is handled as ye knowe And beaten long and thumped treble folde before it doth for currant money goe The wollen cloth that from the walkemill comes at first must passe through manie handes and thums Yea washt and walkt with Water where it goth ere it do take his breadth and thicknes both What linnen lawne or cambricke can be white if Water do not throughly wash the same It scowres that cleane that is as dunne as Kyte and brings fowle cloth in perfect forme and frame All slubbred things must néedes be washt anue fowle things are nought if prouerbe olde be true Thus prooue I plaine by course of Water mill and hammering world mens manners changeth still Though some do say in France and other place are Paper mils as fayre and straunge as this Whats that to vs this giues our Country grace and to all Kent a double honor is That in the soyle was borne our worthy Quéene by straungers meane so straunge a worke is séene And straungers are so glad with straunge deuice to serue and please our Prince of péerelesse price In other Realmes there milles are not in woorth scarce halfe so good the proofe may well be founde This is so fine with workmanship set foorth so surely built and planted in the ground That it doth séeme a house of some estate a Mill moste rare a worke deuisde of late Whose goodnesse great excéedes the outward showe and from whose stampe shall publike profite flowe And troth to tell the mill is blacke and white and Water doth worke all the Paper there The sight thereof shall bréede more rare delight than man with eye beholdes in many a where This somewhat more may moue a maruell héere no profite may be reapt in many a yéere The author than of this newe Paper Mill bestowes great charge and gaynes but worldes goodwill Death may preuent his hope and purpose too death cuts off all from him if it so hap If losse so fall what then shall Spilman doe but so receiue the losses in his lap This daunger great deserueth some regard or of the worlde doth merit some reward Giue him good speech as reason doth require yéelde duety so the labror hath his hire An high Germaine he is as may be prooude In Lyndoam Bodenze borne and bred And for this Mill may héere be truly loude and praysed too for déepe deuice of head But if the hope of gaine quit not the cost the world will iudge his labour is but lost To hazards hap he doth commit the same and séemes as yet to care for naught but Fame Wealth wit and time with toyle and trauaile great he plyes a pace and spareth for no charge The Mill goes round the workmen moyle and sweate the streame goes straight that earst ranne all at large The whéeles conueyes the Water diuers wayes the Hammers thump the stamp but seldome stayes The ragges and clowts becomes as white as snowe and all these knackes the master néedes must knowe Whose purse whose paynes and purpose is not small whose plot points out a peece of worke right fayre To hinder none but made to please vs all to which braue Mill do thousandes still repayre To sée what things are wrought by cunning skill to Gods great prayse and Princes honor still And to the place and soyle where it doth stand a goodly grace and Paper neere at hand Loe heere how man to paper is comparde that readie is to take both stampe and print Though triall great and manie a passage hard more stiffe than steele that strikes out fire from flint But though most hard the path and passage be in the right way it sets man franke and free That hath bene brought in bondage from his birth and makes him seeme a little God on earth Full fraught with wit with Art and science great with learned lore with skill and knowledge deepe With giftes diuine that feares not fortunes threat with quick deuice that can both get and keepe With reason such as rules each other thing of Beast and Fowle the onely Lord and King A Prince of all the earthly pleasures héere found out with paine and bought with trauayle déere AA FINIS Byshop of Ely
A SPARKE OF FRENDSHIP AND WARME GOODWILL THAT SHEWES THE EFFECT OF TRVE AFFECTION AND VNfoldes the finenesse of this world VVhereunto is ioined the commoditie of sundrie Sciences the benefit that paper bringeth with many rare matters rehearsed in the same with a description commendation of a Paper Mill now and of late set vp neere the Towne of Darthford by an high Germayn called M. Spilman Ieweller to the Qu. most excellent Maiestie Written by THOMAS CHVRCHYARD Gent. Nulla potest esse incunditas sublata amicitia Cic. pro Flace Printed at London 1588. EN·DIEV·ET·MON· ROY· Churchiards Armes TO MY HONORABLE Frend Sir Water Ralegh Knight Seneshall and Chancelor of the Duchie of Cornwal Exon Lord Warden of the Stanneries and her Maiesties Lieffetenant of the Countie of Cornwall c. ENFORCED by affection that leades the mindes of men to a multitude of causes I stood studying howe to requit a good turne receiued and confessing that no one thing is more mōstrous in nature than an vnthankefull minde I saw my self in debt bound either one way or other to pay that Iowe but not in such degree as I receiued but in such sort as my abilitie serueth as a man might say to make a cunning exchange in steed of due payment to offer glasse for gold bare words for friendly deedes In good truth my honorable Frend if my creditours will so stande contented I am readier to depart from wordes and discharge debt therewith than to promise treasure and offer that I haue not For if free harted people fortunate in the worlde through bountie of minde towarde my sutes or preferment bestowe manye speaches to doo mee good where grace is to bee gotten I can but yeeld one ordinarie thanke for a thousande benefites except they ransacke my storehouse of vaine inuencions and finde some pleasant papers bepainted with verses or pollished Pamphlets beblotted with barraine matter where both verse prose shall make but a bad restitution for the goodnesse I haue stollen by fortune or borrowed by frendshippe Yet waying how little Fortune hath done for mee and howe fewe creditors I haue that haue either lent me anie porcion of preferment or procured me but a peece of anie certaine liuing I thinke my self somwhat able with the little talent God hath giuen me to repay all the debtes that euer I could bring to perfect remembrance sauing one a most honorable Personage that I dedicated my booke of Choice vnto who got me two great Seales besides common courtesies manie to shifte withall a season And furthermore your selfe 6. yeres past bestowed good speaches to the Q. Maiestie in my behalfe by the which I got some comfortable recreation to quicken my spirites keepe me in breath And yet loe a matter to be mused at I haue sixteene seuerall bookes printed presently to bee bought albeit they are but trifles dedicated in sundrie seasons to seuerall men off good and great credite but to be plaine not one among them all from the first day of my labour and studies to this present yeere and hower hath anie waye preferred my sutes amended my state or giuen mee anie countenaunce I hope I am not much indebted to those nor fallen so farre in their dangers but may easely get out though I yeelde them no more but a customable good will So finding my Muses franke and free from their seruitude I addresse this woorke of vnfeyned friendshippe to your good consideration which worke showes the value and woorth of frendes whose loue is necessarie about all Estates the flatterie and finenesse of foes and the dayly dissimulation of a cunning worlde And if the world meruaile why I treat of that which is so commonly knowen and often put in practise I answere not those wondring wits but shoot what bolts I thinke conuenient at the bad behauiour of transformed people that beares but the shapes of tame men showes the maners of wilde monsters and if the worlde say as I knowe it is talkatiue I show a kinde of adulation to fawne for fauour on those that are happie I answere that is a point of wisdome which my betters haue taught me and I haue read in a great booke of latine printed 400. yeres agoe that one of your owne Ancestors called Sir VVater Ralegh had more fawners followers than you haue for he was L. chiefe Iustice of England and so farre in credit with his Prince his learning was such that he made lawes edicts the which the Prince confirmed allowed I take an example from the fish that followes the streame the fowles that comes to the couert from the windes and the brute beastes that auoydes a sturdie storme vnder the sauegard of a strong and flourishing tree Their craftie forecast though they want reason may succor the simplenes of any reasonable creature the defence and prouision they make to escape open danger may set to schoole a great companie of ignorant schollers But I leaue to speake of their examples because they are brute and follow the grauest sort of sage wise personages that will not blush nor thinke scorne to learne a lessō of their forefathers that got al their good fortune by following the flood where we fish for preferment Thus honorable friend as my affection other good causes moues bad me go forward with this my deuice Present vnto you so beginning the same in health and falling sodainly sicke I feared God would haue cut me short from my purposed enterprise but his goodnes called me vp from the bed of sorrow where despaire had almost dispatched the life and set me afoote to go and ende my first determination and brought me in hope you wil accept my good will which may encourage me to a further labour and studie that may purchase more greater fauor thanks So resting yours in al that my small power may stretch vnto I take leaue and wish you what goodnes you can imagine or desire London at my lodging the 8. of March Most willing at commandement T. CHVRCHYARD AA ¶ A sparke of Friendship and warme goodwill Where Friendship findes good ground to growe vpon It takes sound roote and spreads his braunches out Brings foorth fayre fruite though spring be past and gon And blowmeth where no other grayne will sprout His flow'rs are still in season all the yeere His leaues are fresh and greene as is the grasse His sugred seedes good cheape and nothing deere His goodly barke shines bright like gold or brasse And yet this tree in breast must needes be shrinde And liues no where but in a noble minde BEing rockt too long in the careles cradle of idlenesse where slouthfull lims are soone lulled a sleepe the hinderer of health good happe and vertue a multitude of worldly causes my honorable friend awakened my wittes and bad the sensible Spirites arise from the forgetfull couch of drowsie rest and offer the bodie to some profitable exercises that therby the head