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A64749 Thalia rediviva the pass-times and diversions of a countrey-muse, in choice poems on several occasions : with some learned remains of the eminent Eugenius Philalethes, never made publick till now. Vaughan, Henry, 1622-1695.; J. W.; Vaughan, Thomas, 1622-1666. Viri insignissimi et poetarum. 1678 (1678) Wing V127; ESTC R1483 43,453 114

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Non erat augurium hoc aliud victoria pennis Et dignum vel te gessit Adolphe suis. Moriens Wallenstenium fundit ADsis extrema major Gustave ruinâ Quàm per tot vitae sparsa trophaea tuae Hîc congesta jacent tanti miracula belli Contrahit inque unum se tua fama diem Cedite Romani vobis vicisse triumphus Gustavo plus est quàm superare mori Testatur se Germanorum libertatem sanguine suo sigillare SCripserat hanc hostisque priùs sua dextra cruore Jam signata suo sanguine charta valet Libertas quàm lata tibi Germania magna est Cujus vel mundo tessera major erat Carolus Primus Anglorum Rex EN en Deorum Magnes tracti Numinis Sub sole Thronus Ignium Coeli Silex Ferroque tritus in suas flammas abiens Depressa palma quae veram palmam tulit Crevitque in ipsos oneri non cedens deos Christi suoque sanguine hic unctus fuit Crucisque nemo majus Exemplum dedit Rex ille Regni rex idem vixit sui Legemque quam nec subditi ferrent tulit Jus semper illi summa regalis comes Fidesque sancta dirigens dextram suam Quam sic coercet praesidem agnovit manum Furor rapina caedes dolus malus Unius omnes regium invadunt caput Caditque nôsti coelum tam sanctus parens Ab his peremptus vel quibus vitam daret Secunda ab ipso victima haec Christo fuit Disce Lector NOn semper bona invenit qui bonum quaerit Epitaphium Gulielmi Laud Episcopi Cantuariensis OFida tellus coeli depositum cape Neque illum topho premas sed amplectere Hic jacet Lector serva tu lachrymas malis Ecclesiae pharus Idemque naufragium sibi Repumicator Orbis Coeli pugil Frigentis arae titio haud ignis novus Sed Angelorum flamma Manoae capax Desiste saeclûm majus non potes nefas Lassata crux est martyrum appendix fuit Quotidiana non est talis manus Liberiùs nemo sanguinem patriae daret Si res vocâssent nec confidentiùs dedit Cum non vocabant nempe curavit mori Anteitque istam quam stabiliret fidem Sic ille coelum rapuit vitae tomos Obliteratos maculis adversae manûs Proprio rescripfit sanguine innocuus simul Et condemnatus sic citat testes Deus O festus ille cinis foelix miser Qui probro honores mutat mundi satur Injuriis emit coelos ac Stellas tenet Fecisti probè fidei senex malum Mors est Ereptus vitae pugillus tibi Cum diis acquirit annos omisit diem Palles sceleste non 〈◊〉 sanum sibi Cruorem quisquis sic alienum sitit Sed non in terram fluxit ne bibit lutum Fluentem sitiens sanguinem pulvis suum Pulvere formatus homo est Non periit ergo Laudis tam justae threnos Nec morituras naenias hostes sui Qui habent aures audient Abi jam Lector benè discas mori Mauritius Pontisfracti Castrum ingreditur ARx alta Caroli spes una atque ultima nostri Quâ tria conveniunt hospita regna simul His extrema fides ponet vestigia muris Clarior éque tuis moenibus astra petet Non superesse licet cupio fundamina mortis Ponere hoc nostram condere teste necem Praeside Mauritio tua moenia digna tueri Nec nisi Mauritio praeside digna capi Propositâ ab hoste pactione solus excluditur HAnc mea mors mea vita diem celebrate paresque Et similes habeant utraque fata vices Vita meam mortem celebra tu mors mea vitam Sitque audere mori pactio Mauritii Vivere me trepidant hostes faciamus ipsos Quam petiere meam vel trepidare necem Dedito Castro pactione exclusus per medios hostes erumpit SOl orbis spectator ades curruque represso Mirandum è superis aspice Mauritium Solus in hostiles audet procedere turmas Hac illi oblata est conditione salus Mille refert mille ruit varia arte per hostes Et varios quasi se dividit usque locos Stravit totam aciem dux atque Exercitus ipse Illa dies quod vix postera credat habet Victricem obtinuit morte indignante salutem Credibile est tantum fata timere manum Aliud ARcta est quam tribuis fortuna redemptio vel mors Vel requiem hostilis pervia turma dabit Aut manus haec nobis tutela aut nulla cadamque Hoste semel major me Caroloque minor Par illi exemplum est regem assimulare docemur Fataque inauditis exuperare modis 〈◊〉 levis est vobis nullusque triumphus Non poteram vinci nec dabo posse mori Aliud VEnit summa dies quâ pepigisse perire est Major sum quàm cui sic superesse licet Percutimus pulchrum posito cum funere foedus Sitque haec pro vita pactio velle mori Plebeius vigor hoc quivifque gregarius haud dat Hoc solius habent pectora Mauritii Desiderantur Alcippus Jacintha Poema Heroicum absolutissimum cum multis aliis 〈◊〉 ab Authore relictis FINIS A Catalogue of Books Printed for and sold by Robert Pawlet at the Bible in Chancery Lane near Fleetstreet VIllare Anglicanum or a view of all Towns Villages c. In England and Wales so that naming any Town or place you may readily find what Shire Hundred Rape or Wapentake it is in Also the number of Bishopricks Counties under their several jurisdictions and the Shire-Towns Burroughs and Parishes in each County by the appointment of the eminent Sir Henry Spelman Kt. The Nuns Complaint against the Friers being the Charge given in the Court of France by the Nuns of St. Katharines near Provence against the Father Fryers their Confessors shewing their abuses in their allowance of undecent Books and Love-letters and Marriages of the Friers and Nuns their Frolicks and Entertainments c. several times printed in French and now faithfully done into English Mary Magdalen's Tears wiped off or the voice of Peace to an unquiet Conscience The Golden Remains of that ever memorable Mr. John Hales of Eaton Colledg c. the second Impression with many additions not before published in Quarto Episcopacy as established by Law in England written by the command of the late King Charles by Robert Saunderson late Lord Bishop of Lincoln in Oct. Incestuous Marriages or Relations of Consanguinity and Affinity hindering and dissolving Marriage as making all Marriages within such Relations to be Incestuous and all Children of such Marriages to be Illegitimate or Bastards to all intents and purposes A Collection of Articles Injunctions Canons Orders Ordinances and Constitutions Ecclesiastical and other publick Records of the Church of England with a Preface by Anthony Sparrow Lord Bishop of Norwich The Causes of the Decay of Christian Piety both by the Author of the whole Duty of Man A Scholastical History of the Canon of Holy Scripture or the certain and indubitable Books thereof as they are received in the Church of England by Dr. Cosin Lord B. of Durham An Historical Vindication of the Church of England as it stands separated from the Roman c. by Sir Roger Twisden Baronet Mr. Chillingsworth's Reasons against Popery perswading his Friend to turn to his Mother the Church of England from the Church of Rome The Book of Homilies appointed to be read in Churches Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiastical Divine Breathings or a Pious Soul thirsting after Christ in an hundred excellent Meditations Hugo Grotius de Rebus Belgicis or the Annals and History of the Low Countrey Wars A Treatise of English Particles with a Praxis upon the same by William Walker B. D. School-Master of Grantham The Royal Grammar commonly called Lillies 〈◊〉 explained with 〈◊〉 plainness to Children of the meanest capacity by William Walker B. D. Author of the Treatise of English Particles A Rationale on the Book of Common prayer of the Church of England by Anthony Sparrow Lord Bishop of Norwich with his caution to his Diocess against false Doctrines A Treatise proving Spirits Witches and Supernatural operations by pregnant Instances and Evidences by Meric Causabon Octa. A Catalogue of all the Parliaments or reputed Parliaments from the year 1640. A Narrative of some passages in or relating to the long Parliament by a Person of Honour Nemesius Nature of Man in English by George Withers Gent. Inconveniencies of Toleration Toleration intolerable A Thanksgiving Sermon preached before the King by J. Dolbin D. D. Dean of Westminster B. 〈◊〉 Sermons on Gunpowder-Treason A Narrative of the burning of London 1666. with an Account of the Losses and a most remarkable parallel between it and Mosco both as to the Plague and Fire Lluellins three Sermons on the Kings Murther 〈◊〉 Lusitanicum or the Portugal Voyage with what memorable passages 〈◊〉 at the Shipping and Transportation of her sacred Majesty Katharine Queen of Great Britain from Lisbon to England by Dr. Samuel Hind All sorts of Law-Books FINIS 1 S. Mark c. 1. v. 35. 1 S. Mark c. 1. v. 35. Job c. 38. v. 7. Job c. 38. v. 7. Job c. 38. v. 7. O supreme Bliss Muta puellae Ore fluentem Foedere litem Caede cruentos Haec mihi vitam
made my Fortunes humorous as wind But fix'd Affections to my constant mind She fed me with the tears of Starrs and thence I suck'd in Sorrows with their Influence To some in smiles and store of light she broke To me in sad Eclipses still she spoke She bent me with the motion of her Sphere And made me feel what first I did but fear But when I came to Age and had o'regrown Her Rules and saw my freedom was my own I did reply unto the Laws of Fate And made my Reason my great Advocate I labour'd to inherit my just right But then O hear Etesia lest I might Redeem my self my unkind Starry Mother Took my poor Heart and gave it to another To Etesia parted from him and looking back O Subtile Love thy Peace is War It wounds and kills without a scar It works unknown to any sense Like the Decrees of Providence And with strange silence shoots me through The Fire of Love doth fall like Snow Hath she no Quiver but my Heart Must all her Arrows hit that part Beauties like Heav'n their Gifts should deal Not to destroy us but to heal Strange Art of Love that can make sound And yet exasperates the wound That look she lent to ease my heart Hath pierc't it and improv'd the smart In Etesiam lachrymantem O Duicis luctus risuque potentior omni Quem decorant lachrymis Sydera tanta suis. Quam tacitae spirant aurae vultusque nitentes Contristant veneres collachrymantque suae Ornat gutta genas oculisque simillima gemma Et tepido vivas irrigat imbre rosas Dicite Chaldaei quae me fortuna fatigat Cum formosa dies sine nube peruit To Etesia going beyond Sea GO if you must but stay and know And mind before you go my vow To ev'ry thing but Heav'n and you With all my Heart I bid Adieu Now to those happy Shades I 'le go Where first I saw my beauteous Foe I 'le seek each silent path where we Did walk and where you sate with me I 'le sit again and never rest Till I can find some flow'r you prest That near my dying Heart I 'le keep And when it wants Dew I will weep Sadly I will repeat past Joyes And Words which you did sometimes voice I 'le listen to the Woods and hear The Eccho answer for you there But famish'd with long absence I Like Infants left at last shall cry And Tears as they do Milk will sup Until you come and take me up Etesia absent LOve the Worlds Life what a sad death Thy absence is to lose our breath At once and dye is but to live Inlarg'd without the scant reprieve Of Pulse and Air whose dull returns And narrow Circles the Soul mourns But to be dead alive and still To wish but never have our will To be possess'd and yet to miss To wed a true but absent bliss Are lingring tortures and their smart Dissects and racks and grinds the Heart As Soul and Body in that state Which unto us seems separate Cannot be said to live until Reunion which dayes fulfill And slow-pac'd seasons So in vain Through hours and minutes Times long train I look for thee and from thy sight As from my Soul for life and light For till thine Eyes shine 〈◊〉 me Mine are fast-clos'd and will not see Translations Some Odes of the Excellent and Knowing Severinus Englished Metrum 12. Lib. 3. HAppy is he that with fix'd Eyes The Fountain of all goodness spies Happy is he that can break through Those Bonds which tie him here below The Thracian Poet long ago King Orpheus full of tears and wo Did for his lov'd 〈◊〉 In such sad Numbers mourn that he Made the Trees run in to his 〈◊〉 And Streams stand still to hear him 〈◊〉 The Does came fearless in one throng With Lyons to his mournful Song And charm'd by the harmonious sound The Hare stay'd by the quiet 〈◊〉 But when Love heightned by 〈◊〉 And deep reflections on his Fair Had swell'd his Heart and made it 〈◊〉 And run in Tears out at his Eyes And those sweet 〈◊〉 which did appease Wild Beasts could give their Lord no 〈◊〉 Then vex'd that so much grief and Love Mov'd not at all the gods above With desperate thoughts and bold intent Towards the Shades below he went For thither his fair Love was fled And he must have her from the dead There in such Lines as did well suit With sad Aires and a Lovers Lute And in the richest Language drest That could be thought on or exprest Did he complain whatever Grief Or Art or Love which is the chief And all innobles could lay out In well-tun'd woes he dealt about And humbly bowing to the Prince Of Ghosts begg'd some Intelligence Of his Euridice and where His beauteous Saint resided there Then to his Lutes instructed grones He sigh'd out new melodious mones And in a melting charming strain Begg'd his dear Love to life again The Music flowing through the shade And darkness did with ease invade The silent and attentive Ghosts And Cerberus which guards those coasts With his lowd barkings overcome By the sweet Notes was now struck dumb The Furies us'd to rave and howl And prosecute each guilty Soul Had lost their rage and in a deep Transport did most profusely weep Ixion's wheel stopt and the curst Tantalus almost kill'd with thirst Though the Streams now did make no haste But waited for him none would taste That Vultur which fed still upon Tityus his liver now was gone To feed on Air and would not stay Though almost farnish'd with her prey Won with these wonders their fierce Prince At last cry'd out We yield and since Thy merits claim no less take hence Thy Consort for thy Recompence But Orpheus to this law we bind Our grant you must not look behind Nor of your fair Love have one Sight Till out of our Dominions quite Alas what laws can Lovers awe Love is it self the greatest Law Or who can such hard bondage brook To be in Love and not to Look Poor Orpheus almost in the light Lost his dear Love for one short fight And by those Eyes which Love did guide What he most lov'd unkindly dyed This tale of 〈◊〉 and his Love Was meant for you who ever move Upwards and tend into that light Which is not seen by mortal fight For if while you strive to ascend You droop and towards Earth once bend Your seduc'd Eyes down you will fall Ev'n while you look and forfeit all Metrum 2. Lib. 3. WHat fix'd Affections and lov'd Laws which are the hid magnetic Cause Wise Nature governs with and by What fast inviolable tye The whole Creation to her ends For ever provident she bends All this I purpose to rehearse In the sweet Airs of solemn Verse Although the Lybian Lyons should Be bound with chains of purest Gold And duely fed were taught to know Their keepers voice and fear his blow Yet if they