Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n bring_v good_a work_n 2,437 5 5.8344 4 true
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
A41818 Gratiae theatrales, or, A choice ternary of English plays composed upon especial occasions by several ingenious persons. T. W., fl. 1662. Thorny-abbey.; Watson, Thomas, d. 1686. 1662 (1662) Wing G1580; ESTC R26436 30,642 73

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

Open thy mouth and let in these Morsels of mortality to gorge thy hunger Well I 'le in to a corner and feed like a mandi● Soldier Exit Ent. Edmund and Bishop Edm. Seek not to disallow my good intent For I must visit her Bish. To give your grace some satisfaction I 'le pass a little with Religious Orders For ne're no man unless a ●rier in confession Might meet in private with a sacred Nunne Edm. High seated Iove far meaner shapes di● take When he did visit his fair Parramour And shall I that am a mortall then disdaine The holy habit of a frolick Fryer No Reverent man stand it with thy good liking That shape above all other I would take Bish. You shall in hope your deeds Shall no way tend to acts of sacriledge Edm. To sacriledge no our thoughts are pur● and free From the least thought of such a horrid crime The habit I will take onely because I would be admitted to her unknown Bish. Your thoughts are noble Sir and we'l● assist you Puts on a Fryer's shape Put on this habit and affect your wishes Let me alone to get admittance for you Edm. How doe you like me in this habit my Lord Bish. Now by my holy Order Royall Lord You in this shape may be admitted Unto all our Nunnes and be a helper To increase their stoie Edm. There will be one the less by her I fear Ent. Abesse and Nunnes Ab. Your humble hand-maids High and Reverent Lord Thus bow themselves before your Fatherhood Bish. We come grave Lady to have conference With one of your Religious Votarists That has we hear without Confession Lived many years in this your Nunnery Whose Father being a worthy Cittizen All careless of his life hath left his calling And by the River Thames a mile from London He late ha●h builded up a famous Abbey Call'd by his own name Thorny and for this Fearing some sin of hers hath thus inforc't him I have here brought a holy Confessor That finding the true cause we may appear To reconcile her to her Fathers love Ab. 'T is a pious work Bish. Is she not here amongst these holy Sisters Ab. No my good Lord go on and call her forth Edm. I 'le be her Confessor Bish. And will not trouble your devotion Come holy Sister leave them to themselves Ab. Beleeve me gratious Lord I know no cause In her that should inforce her Father In such sort to estrange his love Her life is modest chaste and vertuous Ent. Anne with a deaths-head See here she comes sadly alone Ever in grief and contemplation It is the Reverent Bishop holy Daughter That here has brought a holy Confessour To have some conference about your Father Ex●● Edm. Oh! who can see a beauty mufflled up Thus like the sun in a malignant cloud And not shed tears Beauteous Nun I came from your Father An. My Father oh holy powers forgive him That has forgotten me but I 'le pray for him He never more will see me but in death As this sad token sent me witnesseth And 't is more wellcome comming from hi● hands Then all earths pleasure here I 'le learn to dye And never grieve him with my memory This object tells me that this life is vain All come from earth and must to earth again Edm. A good resolve a vertuous persuasion But tell me fairest what was the cause That made your Father to forsake you thus An. Heaven pardon him I pray that sundred us Edm. Him who why were ●here more Originalls Then your self An. Oh holy Frier let that point alone I may hurt one by that confession Which once I dearly loved but woe is me His love has brought me to this misery Edm. Wha● was he speak for you are swor● To open every ●cruple of your conscience To your Confessor that hi● sa●ient judgment May minister a balsome to your wounds The oy● of vertuo●s counsell ●hat's distilde From he unf●ined co●●sell of a tongue T●a● st●ll speaks truth Play t●e good Chirurgeon Draw forth the filthy ulcers of your ill That your immaculate good may still rest sound Else the corrupted fistula of Sin Will putrifie the purest of your goodness Nor need you fear I will disclose For I am sworn ever to keep it close An O! holy Father pray for me and him I once did love Edm. It is my duty for to pray for him To entreat the powers above to quit his sin And yours what e're it were but one You once did love in that there is no sin An. Not if the hearts be true But ours met not and there my sorrow grew His place wa● high and eminent in State Mine low of birth and most unfortunate Oh! let me name his Name with Reverence He is a Royal great and gracious Prince Nay more he 's now a King Edm. But tell me pray Was not your love equally paid from him An. Oh no! his very thought yet comforts me Yet 't is for him I live in misery Lord Edmund Brother to the King deceast Made me believe he lov'd me and I thought His oaths and protestations like himself Should all be Noble true and virtuous So rendred up my Virgin state to him Oh! then my grief began he soon forgot His former vows and left me big with child Which being by my Father once espide And I not daring to make known my love Lest I should wrong the Prince in rage and grief He thrust me forth his doors exclaim'd on me Taking such grief unto his aged heart That never since he would acknowledge me And in a grave he leads a life so poor That to my heart it is a grievous sore The angry Fates have all conspird to show The most that their enraged power can do My father's heart hath quite renounc't his child And my affections from my self exil'd I onely wish my hasty hour-glass run And with my cares my daily tears were done Edm. The King is just how can there be then Such unexpected Constancy in men Anne My noble King is just to whose royal breast 'T is too great boldnesse for me to make request I am too mean for him to think upon Long may he live and long t' enjoy his own That everlasting dayes may Crown his-head Shall be my pray'rs while here I 'me Cloistered Edm. What a soul of Virtue hath this woman Anne My father's Legacy this Sceleton Shall be my mate and sole Companion This face will not deceive me 't is my dear And counstant tutour I will it hear And in my armes for ever shall it lye 'Till death and dust have hid my misery Edm. Oh my heart how heavy art thou grown My lord Bishop I can no longer own This F●yars Coul for I must now disclose My self sh' has suffer'd for my woes But yet I 'le stay and see the event of all Enter Wiltshire young Edmund and Abbesse Woodf Here comes your fair Son To see you Nun. Ann. Oh my dear Child Young Edm. Am
knows whose hands were bathed in the blood Wilt. You see the cruell terrors of these times Oh! gratious Prince and that which doth exceed The strength of all amazement since the death Of our late murdered Lord and Soveraign The Sun and Moon was never seen to shine Edm. The eye of heaven is banish't from the earth And gone to wander in eternall night And ransake some Cemerian seated cave To finde the Murderers that with horror sitts Starting at every apparition And never will illuminate the world Till it hath brought him to transparent view And to him speaks this thunder Sib. No 't is to me but I 'le not answer Though the boults should flie and strike me to the center Edm. How horridly it cracks A generall desolation sure is come And heavens glorious eye I think is banish't hence eternally Sib. Take courage Sir a Royall thought Stoops not to Fortunes blindness great thoughts are ever Fixt to the publik good and not kept down by passions Oh! the blood Wilt. Let 's invocate the powers above For to reveal the horrid Murderers Sib. Hot vengeance light on him that so perswades him Edm. Swear as you hope for heaven your carefull studies Shall be to si●t this execrable deed And bring to light this damned Murtherer Sib. Zoundes I must kill him too and prevent his purpose VVilt We vow the same with force and diligence Edm. As for my self I will outwatch the night Wast these life-seeing tapers of mine eyes Till they drop forth the sockets of my skull But I will finde the execrable Slave Why standst thou silent Sibert Sib. Alas my Lord I am hid in sorrow That in my house this mischief happened And yet dear Prince I have already spent The utmost minutes in this fatall business No place no person no suspected breast That might unto the act be aidable But I have torne it open and examin'd So that deceit it self could not deceive me But all in vain the damn'd Murderer lies unrevealed And heaven or none must find him hee 's so subtill Edm. I feare thy Loyalty come let 's to Coventry And there we will fift out murthers darkest ways Sibert let 's have your Company along Were millions given this purpose to prevent All Europe shall not hinder our intent Be ready Sibert Sib. With all my heart my Lord. Mischief confound it Edm. Set forward Lords Thou that still guards the right Bring this dark obscure murther to the light Exeunt Manet Sibert So the King 's for Coventry and I as mark't With some brand of suspicion must be the man To attend above the rest Sfoot what note Or character of guilt lies on my brow More then the rest my speech was firm I was less frighted with this loud tongu'd thunde● Then was the King or any of his Peeres And but my conscience nothing troubles me And that is no mans burthen but my own Which I 'le conceal though with the Kingdoms ruine Let Hell spit fire I 'le not accuse my self Although the Sun and Heaven be hid in clouds And with an everlasting darkness cover us Thunder loud Oh! I presume too much that crack has mazed me Horrour of Hell what shall I doe think Sibert and conceive What if the King should call my wife in question Or that the Murderers we hir'd to doe 't Should be surpris'd and brought unto the King Examined put to death where 's Sibert then Thrown in Hell fire never to rise again Which to prevent I 'le presently make flight And leave with them my feare and jealousie I 'le ship my self for Ireland and there Shrowd my self safe and there close up my eares From this loud peals of thunder which are sent And on my head with winged vengeance bent Exit Ent. Mr Woodford and Anne Thorny Wood. Now you are a happy mother the good Heavens Has brought your burthen to a happy issue you may Now curse the cause you shall have my instructions To direct you An. Now Heaven forbid VVood. By his delay you may see how he stands affected An. 'T is a delay without proportion VVood. Your Father threatens and persues your lives best shipwrack Vowing if you should starve not to give A penny for to comfort you An. Yet I will pray for him eternally And for my Sovereign which hath forsaken me But of his love I will expect no more Think wise or dream then of that thing Unknown unsought or never thought upon Wood. Oh! be not to your self so cruel An. Since in his loss I have lost my self and honour I now resolve in this unblemisht habit to weare out The remnant of my days in penetance Amongst the holy Nunnes of Holy well Into whose Sister-hood I am admitted And there for ever will I plant my being VVood. Oh! gentle Cuz An. I am deaf to all persuasions My best of blood I have no friend but you And in your virtue I impose my trust That with all secret care you chuse a time To give this ring to my dear Soveraign The once dear pledge of his forgotten love With it this letter in whose sad contents Is nothing but a vertuous milde intreaty That he would gratiously behold this child His hapless Son and called by his name Edmund that mongst the longer of my sighes I may have comfort to keep down my griefs VVood. And as my own I mean to tender it An. Your vertue makes my care lie easy on me Good Cosen speak what temper holds my Father VVood. Has given o're his house and all his wealth He means for to distribute to holy uses An. And yet I live and breath that am the sinfull author Of these sorrows but flows this deluge for his own Offences Or the remembrance of my hatefull shame VVood. From your disgrace An. Then to this World Adieu why doe you urge To hold me longer here a Prisoner I have out lived myne honour buried alive My old and vertuous Father for which I am below All reach of humane pitty that I know They wish to Serpents more prosperity My soul 's as black as darkness and can take no light Of other beauty till my teares have washt it I doe beseech you Cuz commend my duty To my Father and intreat his vertue To l●y no more affliction on his age for my offences past And last to thee my first of cares Whose innocence is spotted with my sin Oh! be thou made so blest that in thy vertues I and my faults may loose their memories Take my last kiss and with it these my teares Which to thy Royall Father thou shalt beare Now take it ●r and with it all my comforts all my prayers Love it dear Cuz though from grief it spring Yet 't is the onely Son unto a King farwell I feare we never more shall meet on earth Here my joys end you have my sorrows birth Exit VVood. Success attend you would all that stept awry Would be but subject to thy penalty Come on thou