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A67124 A panegyrick of King Charles being observations upon the inclination, life, and government of our Soveraign Lord the King / written by Sir Henry Wotton ... Wotton, Henry, Sir, 1568-1639. 1649 (1649) Wing W3645; ESTC R34764 12,099 132

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ingratefull aspect as Bats and Owls condemn'd by nature to hate the light and I know that some Prin-have held it among the secrets of Empire and for a great mystery of craft to be adored afar off as if reverence did only dwell in holes and caves and not in full light Whence flow those Sophistries of Goverment I will speak in a word and freely they wandred in crooked paths because they knew not the shortest way to bee good But Your Majestie doth not flie the eyes and accesse of your subjects you do not joy to be hid you do not withdraw your self from those that are yours you doe not catch at false veneration with a rigid and clouded countenance yea sometime you vouchsafe to descend to a certain affability without offence of your dignitie for thus you reason with your self in the clearness of your owne bosome if it were not above our power to lie concealed yet were it below our goodness to will it then which nothing in conclusion is more popular for good Princes are by all good men openly revered and even silently by bad so much do the beams of vertue dazle even unwilling eies Wherfore as of late I did pass with Tranquillus Suetonius who hath anatomized the very bowels of the Cesars to beguil in the time of your absence with some literate diversion the tedious longitude of dayes and had by chance faln upon that passage so lively describing the wailings of Augustus after the Varian defect often crying out Render me Quintilius Varus straight there arose a fervent desire of Your Majestie and wishes glowed for your return for it seemed much juster that England should solicit her sister with panting suspirations then Augustus the ghost of Quintilius Restore to mee Scotland my sister our King restore the best of men whom none but bad doth not love none but ignorant doth not praise both the ruler of our Manners and the rule together that we may not only be the gladder but the better for it while we shal never contemplate a thing most rare in the highest degree a pattern of the least licentiousness Seeing therefore excellent King that you are such permit I most humbly beseech you if supplications may more prevaile then arguments that nine people of distinct language for so many they are in my account whose realms you moderate may glory that you are such and proves that not only in every ones particular Idiom which would bee in truth too narrow for our joy but in this common language however exprest that even forreigners may know heretofore yeelded the best Emperor and of greatest name to the Christian world not to be so drie at this day but that it still can afford a type of a most laudable Soveraign IV. Now having as I hope a little mollified the way to your patient hearing hence forth I shall take a pleasure out of a generall habit course of your life to crop a few things like the gatherers of flowers for I joy more in the chief then in the plenty though not ignorant that either the diligence or ambition of Ancients in this kind was so profuse as perchance Timeus did not say unpleasantly that Alexander the Macedonian had sooner subdued all Asia then Isocra●es had writ his panegyrick The truth is art was much cherished in those dayes while in a rank age of eloquence the wits of Orators were wanton but it becometh me being mindfull both of my simplicity and age to touch rather the generall heads of your due praises then to prosecute the particulars that the very brevity of my speech may in a sort imitate the defluxion of my sliding years Now before other things there offereth it selfe unto mee the singular Nobility of your birth whereby in the long pedegre of antecedent King● yee are eminent above them all even your blessed father not excepted this I will deduce more clearly your great great-grandfather Henry the seventh I know not whether more beholden to his fortune or his fortitude being almost at once an Exile and a Conquerer united the white and red Roses the Armomories of two of our mighty families by the marriage of Elizabeth of York wch being in division had so many yeers polluted their own Countrie with infestous rancor and bloody fewds A more blessed Colligation of the Kingdoms then of the Roses wee owe to the good dayes of your father even for that alone never to bee remembred without high veneration But in you alone most Imperiall Charles is confluent the glory of all nations of all ages which since the Romans have possessed Britannie either by right or by Arms In you I say alone whom of all hither●o crowned we acknowledg the only branch of the Cabrians Anglosaxons Scottish Norma● and Danish Race In this perchance if the comparison bee not too mean not unlike to the Ister that 〈…〉 river of ●●rope which rolling down so ●minense a 〈◊〉 enn●bled by 〈◊〉 way with the contri●●tion of so many famous streams Among our authors one of no mean condition that our Elders would not legitimate the Norman government in England till Maude marrying with Henry the first brought into the world a branch of the ancient Saxon Kings she was the sister of David nephew twice removed of King Ethelred your Progenitor What greater cause have we to imbrace Your Majestie with open arms descending to our times from so manifold a stock of Kings adorned with access of the Cambryan line by Queen Ann your Mother a Lady of a masculine carriage and more truely may we challenge that which Buchanan who next the ancients had the happiest strain attributed to your grandmother to whom might a better fate have faln Yee sway Scepters independing From elders numberless descending But these you scarcely account your own I pass to your peculiar glories which no less give then receive lustre V. Three things are remarkable in your beginning Best of Kings give me leave to call you so often of no small moment to your following felicities and things in their encrease for the most part keep a relish of the beginnings first that you were not born to the supream hope of Soveraigntie whereby flattery though a swift watchfull evill clinging to the very cradle of Heirs apparant slowly crept on your tender years giving time to your naturall goodness to suck in the generous juice of honesty for certainly it much importeth the Common-weal to see that the first propensions even of private men bee well informed and instilled how much more of Princes whereof they are not only sustainer● for the present but patterns for the future Next that you suc●eed a brother of no ●mall endowments of ●ature this redoubled ●nd contracted the se●ulity of your parents 〈◊〉 I call it sedulity for ●t exceeded an ordi●ary care about the ●mprovement of their ●nly son Nay by this ●our own spirits were the more and more ●rected when now such a weight of exp●●ctation was faln onl● upon