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A70281 Poems on several choice and various subjects occasionally composed by an eminent author ; collected and published by Sergeant-Major P.F. Howell, James, 1594?-1666.; Fisher, Payne, 1616-1693. 1663 (1663) Wing H3103; Wing F1035; ESTC R18936 41,382 172

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Firmament But now they are fix'd there again And all concentred in Charles wain Where since just Heaven did them restore They shine more glorious then before Long may they glitter in that Sky With Beams of new Refulgency May great Apollo from his Sphear Encrease their light and motions chear So that old Albion may from thence Grow younger by their Influence May no ill-boding Blazing Star No Northern Mist or Civil War No lowring Planet ever raign Their lustre to obscure again But may whole Heav'n be fair and cleer And evry Star a Cavaliter Before OHPOAO●●A Or The l'arly of Beasts 1658. TRees spake before now the same strength of Art Makes Beasts to cun the Alphabet by heart And cut their Breaths to sound Articulat Discoursive congruous Accents to prolate For Speech is breath Breath Air let in and out But 't is the Mind that brings the work about Such a rare Charter the worlds Architect Vouchsaf'd to give the Human Intellect To create Words for 't is Mankind alone Can Language frame and syllabize the tone But here Beasts speak● they mone chide cry complain And at the Bar of Justice men arraign Such are our erying sins that Beasts resent Our wickedness and wretched case lament Which shews the world is Hectical and near Its great and fatal Climacterik year The whole Cr●●ion mourns and doth deplore The ruthful state of Human Kind Therefore If Men cannot be warn'd when Men do teach Then let them hearken here what Beasts do preach In Formas mutatà novas Mens dicere gestit Corpora in primas iterum transversa Figuras Dii faveant caeptis An Eucharistical Rapture With A Gradual Hymn to the Heavenly Hierarchy NAtures great God the Cause of Causes be Ador'd and prais'd to all Eternity That supreme Good that Quintessential Light VVhich quickens all that 's hidden or in sight VVhich breathd in Man the Intellectual Soul Thereby to rule all Cretures and controul What Water Earth or Air produce The Hymn O Holy Souls O Heavenly Saints Who from corruption and the taints Of flesh and blood from pain and tears From pining griefs and panting fears And from all passions except Love Which onely raigns with you above Are now exempt and made in endless Bliss Free Denizens and Heirs of Paradis O glorious Angels who behold The Lord of Light from Thrones of Gold Yet do vouchsafe to look on Man To be his Guide and Gardian Praying always that He may be Partner of your felicity O Blissful Saints and Angels may ye still The Court of Heav'n with Hallelujahs fill Seraphik Powers Cherubs Throne Vertues and Dominations Supernal Principalities Glories and Intelligencies Who guide the course of Stars in Sky And what in their vast Concaves lie May ye for ever great Jehovah's Will And his Commands throughout the world fulfil A●●●●gels who the most sublime Degree 〈◊〉 hold in the ●●lestial Hierarchy And 〈…〉 and face●lone ●lone The 〈…〉 Vision A joy 〈◊〉 joys else transcends so far As doth the Morning S●● the meanest Star Archa●gels Angles Sai●es Souls serv'd may ye still The Empyrea●● Court with Hallelujahs fill Vpon the Exquisit Romance of the Bishop of Bellay Made English out of the French By Serjeant-Major John Wright MY Wit lay fallow and my teeming Brain Thought to repose a while from any strain Of Poetizing till the Air of France Rowz'd up my Fancy by this new Romance Which for variety for substance sence For rich Invention and neat Eloquence And now in point of Version may compare With any of this kind though nere so rare Original and Coppy co-excel The Prelat and the Souldier share the Bell In To●●● they differ but for Mind and Will They faithful are to one another still By this I find which men do seldome see The Mitre with the Helmet may agree 〈◊〉 Mr. 〈◊〉 Johnson Vpon his Version of Pyrander IF 〈…〉 in England chan●e 〈…〉 such welcome as it did in France T will 〈◊〉 be esteem'd nor do I see But it may loc● for like Civility For neither ●ose nor Verse have lost but won In 〈◊〉 of str●ngth by this Traduction So have I known brisk Gascon wines brought ore And drink f●r better on our English shore Vpon Mr. Benlowes Divine Theophi●● POets have differing Fires some spend their stock On the grave Buskin or the mer●y Sock Others by 〈◊〉 feet do gently steal Into a Ladies bosome O●hers deal With Wars ●nd fing of 〈…〉 Knigh●● Of their high Trophies 〈…〉 Fights Some feed their Fancies on th' Ar●●●ian Plains And prosti●● their 〈…〉 All th●se 〈…〉 〈…〉 But thy Diviner Muse mounts to the Skies And Heaven fills with holy Rapsodies Fit to make Hymns for the Coelestial Quire And Angels with their Melody inspire On Doctor Charletons learned Piece by proving that Stone-henge is a Danish-Monument In his New Survay T Is hard to cleer Old Truths but to unmask An Old-grown Errour is a greater Task This You have done and undeceiv'd Mankind Of an Opinion kept us long so blind Wherefore in this Survay by just Extent You have made Stone-benge your own Monument Of Mrs. Diana Bill Born and Baptiz'd lately in Cane-wood hard by High-gate WHere shold Diana properly be born But in a Wood A Wood that thinks it scorn To yeild to Tempe or Dodonas Grove Which consecrated was to mighty Jove A Wood whence great Diana's Temple may Be seen four thousand paces off each day With a huge City who her Name doth owe Unto that Goddess as good Stories show May this new-born Diana like Cane-wood Grow up and Taper Germinat and Bud And in due course of yeers be fitly Mand To spread the Race of Noble Westmerland Vpon Her Majesties 31 days sayling from Lisbon to England GReat Britains Queen launching into the Deep From Tagus to the Thames her Court to keep Neptun and Eolus as they joyntly strove To do Her Homage fell so far in love VVith Her Seraphic countenance and grace That They so long kept Her in their Embrace Another Cause might be why Heav'n did please She shold so long stay steering on the Seas That coming to be Queen of that great King To whom so many Seas Allegeance bring She might some skill in Navigation gain And learn with Him how to command the Main Vpon the Posthume-Poems of Mr. Lovelace THe Rose with other fragrant flowrs smell best VVhen they are pluck'd and worn in Hand or Brest So this fair Flowr of Vertu this rare Bud Of Wit smells now as fresh as when he stood And in these Posthume-Poems lets us know That he upon the banks of Helicon did grow The beuty of his Soul did correspond With his fair outside if not go beyond Lovelace the Minion of the Thespian Dames Apollo's Darling born with Euthean flames VVhich is his Numbers wave and shine so cleer As sparks refracted from rich Gems appeer Such sparks that with their Atoms may inspire The Reader with a pure Poetik fire Vpon the Gran Climacterik Year 63. HE who nine seven in seven nine years Upon his stooping sholders bears When ore his head the glorious Sun About the world his course hath run Sixty three times and on that score Hath felt eight hundred Moons and more 'T is time high time that He shold ply The Art of Learning how to Die And think all Sounds his Passing-Bell To bid the Lower World Farewel Alia Desunt FINIS a Eruditissimus Dom Harley Scholae Hereford Archi-didascalus b Frater nostri Jacobi qui Episcop Bristoliensis mori●batur c Dendrologia d Therologia e Opus aliud clucubratissimam cui titulus Lexicon Tetraglotton f Aliud volumen non minoris molis quam emolumenti g Aliud volumen Pentaglotton Proverbiorum h Sobriae ejus inspectiones in actiones longi Parlimenti i Directiones peregre proficiscentibus k Hstoria ejus Voluminosa Venetum l Par etiam Neopolitanorum m Aliud etiam volumen de lmper●o Germano n Aliud exquisitum volumen de vita Ludovici Galliae xiii o Aliud nobile volumen cui titulus Londinopolis p Aliud opus usus omnifarii cui titulus Epistolae Hocllianae q Innuit Po●mata ejus in lucem jamjam proditura r Nobilissimus ille nuper Edoa●dus Dorcestriae comes s Illustrissimus Henricus Ma●chi● Durotrigum Comes de Kingston c. Katharinae filiae comitis de Derby a Palatinat b Carolus Magnus c Carolus Quintus * 1657. * Arhetine Virtuosa Anagr. of Henrieta * Maii 2. Eliz. * L●ndon