Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n bear_v great_a see_v 1,565 5 3.0235 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A17462 A poore knight his pallace of priuate pleasures Gallantly garnished, with goodly galleries of strang inuentio[n]s and prudently polished, with sundry pleasant posies, [et] other fine fancies of dainty deuices, and rare delightes. Written by a student in Ca[m]bridge. And published by I.C. Gent. Student in Cambridge.; Robinson, Richard, fl. 1574, attributed name.; I. C. 1579 (1579) STC 4283; ESTC S104857 56,414 86

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the same His paper hath no liberty his pen may not display That which his Muse in learned stile is now forbid to say His auditors who willingly his lectures did frequent By publike charge they must abstaine in feare of punishment Till mighty Ioue which raised vp this bow this branch this tree Sent siluer ●●wes and christall springes his comfort for to bee By whom this branch did blow againe with bloomes that were most bright With ●●led pen and reasons rule hee put his foes to flight The combat was proclaimed on hye olde Rumus must begin In liftes his manhood for to try his foes b●e entred in Not one nor twaine but many foes assembled were togeather To lanche the barke into y waues against the stormes wealthe●● Olde Ramus hée whose worthy wit whose force to few was knowne Ariueth in porte but in the seas his foes bee ouerthrowen And they which made this fire for to consume this florishing trée Through heate of kindled coales them selues to ashes wasted bee The pit with Pretus wife did dig Belerephon to intray As pleased the fates to winde their clew returnd to her mishap Euen so Don Phoebus dained at last his glittering beames to show Erpulsing Winters hoary head with boysterous-windes that blow And Ramus gates which earst were lockt ●ee now vnbard againe Frée passage is permitted there where bondage did remaine The learned route frequented him the Muses did him fauor The graces sought by gracious meanes ●or to requite his labor The bowes did flourishing fruitfully while sommer did remaine When season came hee yeelded fruit and France did reape the gaine And eft olde Ramus sayd come come come learne if that you will I haue the key that doth vnfolde and openeth vnto skill Grammarians come and learne I pray come Re●ors come quoth hée In Logickes art I will you teache so shall you perfite bee Oh happy place oh ioyfull man which hast such ware in sight Twise happy France if France had knowē to vse thy fruites aright Oh blessed man whose listning eare might heare thy dubled voyce What cause had they which were thy freends of thee for to reioyce Thus while the skyes were cleare while calme did beare the sway Olde Ramus wan his fame and praise which shall remaine for aye And pend his frute in volumes great which all the learned know The g●ine they reape which taste his frute the paine hee did bestow What cause haue they that studients bée and taste his frutes aright For him and his to yeeld great praise vnto the Lorde of might But as they haue cause to reioyce so may they weepe and waile Though d●lefull d●●pes trickling tea●es his cause will not auaile Waile w●ile w●●pe they may for why the tempest raised on hye When foes did frowne then winde did wrest frute did scattered lye The tree was digged vp by the roote the branch was lopped low And France disdayned at the frute which on this tree did grow When hundreds which professed the Lord with hart with déed with word With these was Ramus put to death m●rdred with y sword When noble péeres and Gentilmen when men of martiall might By bloody hands and ●inty harts alas I rue that wight Partaker of such misery by those of Tigers traine Whom pittie neuer seemde to mooue for Christ his cause were slain Then Ramus hée that Lampe of light of learning in our daies Did ende his life and purchast fame which shall remaine alwaies Whose death although his foes did wish which haue therto consented Yet all the world no doubt the losse of him haue long lamented In Christ hee liued in Christ hée died with Christ hée doth inioy A place no doubt for which hée died which nothing can anoy As then his life deserued fame his death deserueth more Then cease the losse of such a life yee Muses to deplore And graunt to him his guerdon due which all his déedes doo merit I meane within your Courts of fame his méede hée may inherit Vt voce sic vultu ac vita An Epitaph vpon the death of P. Starling Somtime Schoolemaister of Bury Schoole CEase sighing now and thinke no more of care Goe grisly ghost goe tell thy heauy hap Come dolefull Dames cast of these weedes you ware Reioyce with mee which lye in ioyfull lap Where ioy it selfe longe since did keepe and dwell Cease from your plaints and harke what newes I tell The prety birde which you haue fostered longe Which buylt her neast within the Iuory tree Which did delight your eares with sugred song Though from her kinde those notes dissending bee ▪ Hath now of late built vp her neast on hye And sunge her songe within the lofty skye For while hée serued with sheeld of learned lore And wan such thinges as furnished his nest Iudge you ye Dames which knew this bird before Might not hee well compare him with the best In learnings lap and vertues brants br●d hee Oh happy wight what gifte could better bée And euery day vpon Parnassus hill Hee tought his young most sweetly to recorde● His pleasant tune eche vacant place did fill His ioyfull notes did please the liuing Lorde A constant hart in him was truly tryed Thus Starling liued thus Starling lately died And in the clowdes hée doth possesse his place When as the Dames his fatall clew had spun Vntimely death did win him in his race And stopt the steps which hee did thinke to run Yet sith in heauen hée doth inioy his blisse Hée liueth in place where perfit pleasure is Vt voce sic vultu ac vita An Epitaph on the death of M. Sharpe of Trinity Colledge in Cambridge IF wailyng would preuaile if we would vaunt at will Or if th● faries three were linked all in one To helpe them for to mone whose greefe haue banisht skill Then happy wee the case of him which made this mone But sith the penūue hart ma● linger where it lye And sith the dolefull doome● will not release the hue While that I ●eade my life I will not cease to cry And waile with them which say my owne good Sharpe adue And waile with them which say my owne good Sharpe adew Adew farewell adew vnto thy clampe of clay Whom when thy breath forsooke to that which should insew A proo●e o●●eruing life most glorious for aye No panges which wicked feare could breake thy hart in sunder But ●●edfast in thy trust Christ Iesus was thy stocke To whom in all thy woe which caused the wicked wonder Thou only calest for ayde to him which was thy rocke Thou only callest to him for ayde which was thy rocke To whom thou yeeldest life hoping for sweeter gaine Whole vse is not disceite the faithfull for to mocke Rewarding iust with life the wicked with their paine The foolish liue in sinne the wicked asketh woe Their woe is burning f●er whose flame shall euer last Then happy maist thou bee which passed thy time so Whom
army came Desire doth séeke to bee reuengde of his appointed foe And wandring in the Laurell woods vnto Eurota goe Wheras Fidelity was prest his force for 〈◊〉 withstand And in defence of Dians right did fight longe hand to hand But what could Thisbe then res●st when Pyram came in sight Or when as worthy Troylus came how could Dame Cressid fight Phedra shee was content to yéelde Desire did force her so And from Dianas faithfull freend to Cupids campe to go What shall I say Dianas host which in the wood did stay Was sore abasht Fidelity was chased quite away And many yéelded recreant not able to deny Desire perforce did force them so eyther to yeeld or dye But rather then Dame Cressid would so quickly séeme as dead Shee vowed her selfe from Troylus true to slattering Diomede So that the periured Grecian or els the Troyan knight Should haue Dame Cressid vnto loue yea both if so it might Thus while Desire do cleare the coast and make the passage free The host marcht on into the féeld with thundring harmony The noise wherof do beate the skies and eke from thence reboundes And Mars his musicke in the seeld aloft Tantara soundes The souldiers set them selues in rankes the winges to succor go Audacity by Mars his will hee had commaunded so But Dian and her worthy traine when as her fréend was fled And for the losse of all those freends with fury was much led And oft repeating worthily my harts take chéere quoth shée My life for yours continue still so shall you victors bée The souldiers fought so valyantly the Captaines did so well That cupid gan to Crouch for feare and Dian did excell Audacity then shooke for feare when chastity withstood And Constancy shee followed fast to see the forrain blood And if God Cupids pollicy a reskue had not found Both Venus and her darlings deare had ●●●lyng fell to ground But Pollicy came rushing in and sent forth mighty Ioue Who then discended from the skyes to serue the God of loue Who vanquished Dame Dians host and made them for to tremble And sundry kindes of vgly shapes hee 〈◊〉 not to dissemble Aurora loued the snowy Bull and L●d● word the Swan And Io lickt her fathers face which then was pale and wan For as the Woolfe among the lambes so Ioue among the host I meane among Dame Dians flocke of whom shée vaunt and bo●●● But when as Fame had sounded forth and Brute had blased his wil That Ioue did vanquish worthily with Pollicy and Skill Then Danae fled her way for feare vnto Acrisius Towre Till Iupiter through Pollicy discended in a showre Achilles then began to rage before that Troy was sackte And craued of Pollicy his guide the armur that hee lackte Who armed him corragiously in Maydens feate aray Till Derdanna swelling wombe his pollicy did bew●ay And Licomedes was deceiude the father of the May And therfore could not stop the step● of young Achilles way Then Clodius rushed in in haste Pompeya for to quell Bedect like to the vestall Dames wheras his loue did dwell Thus Cupid was incorraged with all his warlike trayne Diana which was erst aloft is now beat downe agayne And all the Gods and Souldiers the did play their parts so well That Cupid is extolde to heauen and Dian fell to Hell. Medusa Gorgon hearing this to Pallas alter fled Hoping by her assisting hand in time to bee releeued Whom mighty Neptune through deceit intangled in such sort That shée forsook Dianas campe and fled to Venus Court. Then Phedr● whom desire had brought from Dian and her traine Ceased not in Cupids cause to fight till Hyppolite was slayne With Pollicy came Gluttony and Idlenesse his mate And Drowsinesse hee followed fast for feare hee came to late Antonius resisted long Queene Cleopatras host But yet at last through Gluttony did yee●● to her request When Constancy had seene the force and hauocke of their foes Shee vowed both life and lands and fame in Dians cause to lose Rather then Cupid should preuaile vnto their vtter shame And all Dame Dians valian●wights accorded in the same And ioyning harts and hands in one that battered Cupid so That hee was neare constraind againe out of the feeld to go There Temperance stood stifly too and Labor laid on lode Sobriety did helpe at neede when they in danger stoode But yet alas this wished ioy was soone brought to an ende For Curtesy came rushing forth and brought Delight his freend For to reuenge this fresh assalt of Dian and her traine And to renew the wonted state of Cupid once againe With him came Duke Protesilaus with him came Alcyde stout Hee sought for Laedomia this found Dianeira out Hector vanquished Andrqmache that worthy wight of Troy And Pryamus with Hecuba did liue in perfit ioy Thus when Dianas Souldiers began to slip away Through Curtesy a thousand fled to Cupid in one day And few there were which would remain with Dian to abide But yeeld them selfe vnto Delight betide what might betide Who pardned euery one of those which came with free consent And did remit eche ones offence before hee did repent Then Pluto posted out for rage which did this while abide And kept the winge with Cruelty which lay on the left side Who sent forth tryple Cerberus that deuillish dogge of Hel To fetch away Proserpina which then 〈◊〉 Greece did dwell Then Appius swelled with rage Virginia to deflowre Achilles spryte did rage from Hell Polixina to deuowre Lucrecia was tooke in trip Rage was her forrain foe Apollo cursed Cassandra faire for Rage bid will him so Thus cruell Rage with Curtesy and with his freend Delight With fond Desire and Pollicy which weare God Cupids might Haue chased away Dianas force that shee her selfe must flye Or yeeld to those whose bloody harts would cause her for to dye And to a pleasant vally hard by her trayne beeing very small Shee did conuay herselfe by flight as wofull of her fall Quoth Morpheus marke this well my freend and note her trayne I pray Which when I purposed for to doo their backes were turnd away So was I much vnable left their names for to rescite Which taried with Diana faire when shée was put to flight And so my guide himselfe could not their names vnto mee shew But this hee had mée publish forth the Souldiers were not few Whom Cupid with his louely rout perswade with might amayne But yet Diana fled so fast her foes returnd agayne And vnto Cupid his curious tent they went for to returne With bibbing Baccus and his mate a while for to soiorne But as they gan for to returne to their appointed 〈…〉 Beholde they saw a virgin pure which gallantly did come Although to late to ayd her deare which then had lost the day But Theseus stepped from the rout and stepped in her way Oh then quoth I vnto my guide whom keepes hée in the tent T is Hellena which too to late