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cause_n fruit_n good_a tree_n 4,830 5 9.4106 5 true
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A02624 A prophesie of Cadvvallader, last king of the Britaines containing a comparison of the English kings, with many worthy Romanes, from William Rufus, till Henry the fift. Henry the fift, his life and death. Foure battels betweene the two houses of Yorke and Lancaster. The field of Banbery. The losse of Elizabeth. The praise of King Iames. And lastly a poeme to the yong Prince. Herbert, William, fl. 1604.; Cadwaladr, Vendigaid, d. 664? 1604 (1604) STC 12752; ESTC S103828 31,064 72

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be seuere I speake not this vnto the learned wise For them I loue because the truth they loue T is the bleard iudgement of seditious eyes That doth my muse and my affection moue A most vnwilling Satirist to proue Nature hath made me milde but these hard men Turn'd my soft quill into a brazen pen. Play not the Satyr peace affecting muse I doubt not but their conscience will prouoke These Lucilists their follies to refuse And make them soft though they were hard as oke Conscience makes bad men good so wise men spoke I leaue them to their spurres my muse shall flye Vnto that Sphere where enuy dares not prye Vnto that Sphere whose circuit doth containe The neuer spotted essence of his soule Whose sacred intellect no worldly staine Could with desires rebelling aide controule This guilded Sphere is like a golden boule Which many lesser mazers doth containe So many vertues in this one do raigne Why parriall nature stepdame to my birth Ye mixed elements affections slaues VVhy did ye frame this vessell but of earth An equall matter to the dead mens graues And ioynd thereto a spirt like the waues Low as the earth although my Genius be Yet doth it touch skye threatning Maiestie O were my wit but equall to my will VVere I as wise as I am ignorant Here were a place that would deserue my skill Had I as great experience as I want Then would I in a booke of Adamant And Inke compoz'd by water made of golde VVith pens of Diamond thy prayse vnfolde Let Iustice rule the organ of thy speech And Clemency adorne thy Princely browe Vnto thine eares long absent patience teach By these which good men wish let all men knowe None but thy selfe thy selfe can ouerthrowe Let pittie check the rod when we offend That makes the good more good the bad to mend I witnesse call the seuen hilled Queene How we obey'd when Lawes obey'd were And shall not we be now as we have bene Feare made vs then vnnaturall bondage beare VVe now securely liue and cannot feare Doubt not thereof but come experience haue VVe loue to serue but loathe the name of slaue Our gazing expectation longes to see The true admired Image of thy Syre Which Nature hath so rightly grau'd in thee As Phisicke causes seem'd they did conspire To shape the like to him whom all admire So Sions sacred singer Dauid saies Good trees bring forth good fruit good fruit alwaies Do not sweete Sallets spring from soundest seed And is not man like God which man did make Can bad effects from causes good proceed Do we see fruite on any withered stake Or do we see in sea a bush or brake How canst thou then not good and perfect bee That wert engraft on such a goodly tree FINIS S. P. S. Baye Oliue and Oake Description of Fortune Geometry William the Conquerour Cadwallader last King of the Buranes his land being vexed with the scourge of Pestilence went to Rome where he vndertooke the habit of a Friar Wolues Madans second sonne The helmet was the ancient crest of the Teudors So called for assisting Godfrey of Bullion in his expedition to Judaea Bassianus and Geta. Henry the 2. sonne of Mawd the Empresse and Stephen Earle of Blois Nephew to Henry the first Brennus Henry the 2. the first Plantaginet Richard 2. Marcellus so called by Hanniball ●●nniball ●i●us Flam. ●●s slaine at ●●e batle of ●hrasimenus ●●ose death is by his ●●nne ●●enged in the ●●isoning of ●anniball ●enry the 3. Caius and Tiberius Gracchus The saying of Leoline himselfe as Powell hath laid down in his life Queens Isabel wife to Edward the ● was next heire to Charles king of France whose title our present king doth enioy Scipio Lentulus two worthy Ro stroue vehemently in the campe of Pomper for the Bishoprick of Rome but the battels ioyning Caesar winning their strife ended with their liues Ed. the third maried Phillip daughter to the Earle of Henault Lord Roger Mortimer Earle of March and Queene Isabel compared to Anthony Cleopatra Edward the blacke Prince compared to Geranicus Edward the blacke Prince ayded the Erle of Artois against King Iohn of France Aristotle ●ermanicus ●●peased Ger●any but end●d his dayes by ●oison in As●i●a ●dward prince of Wales re●●ored Peter ●ing of Spaine ●nto his King●ome by the ●onquest of Henry his basard brother at ●he battle of Nazers ●ohn Lord ●eaumont ●ooke part with the eng●ish against the French nation but afterwards ●e fauoured the ●actiō of Iohn king of Frāce The lord Audley at the battle of Poytiers behaued himselfe most valiant as Crasinius did in Pharsalia who bad Caesar be of comfort and take courage before he fought and that day he should praise him aliue or dead which he performed for he lost his l●e in the pursuite of honor and for the safety of Caesar Ed. the 3. compared to Paulus Aemi● who in his greatest glory lost his chiefest ioy namely his t●● sonnes Romanes The halfe Moone is t●● armes of th● Percies Ea●● of Northu●● Hen. Bussi●●brooke D●●● of Heref. w●● accused by Th. Mowb●●● Duke of N●●folke of tre●son which 〈◊〉 not being 〈◊〉 to proue w●● contented t● maintaine 〈◊〉 allegation 〈◊〉 combat 〈◊〉 his aduersa●● did accept But better ●●uice being ●●●ken they w●●● both banish●● the land He●●ford for the terme of ten yeares and Mowbray 〈◊〉 the date of 〈◊〉 Caligula slain by his own friends The stone where the Kings of Englands chaire is placed at their Coronatiōs is reported to be that stone wheron Iacob laid his head whē the Angel appeared to him in his dream Genes brought frō Scotland by Edward the first Henry 4. The extremitie of his lawes are set downe at large in Powels Annales Owen Glēdour compared to Sertorius Edmund Mo●timer Earle o● March was d●signed heire apparant in the dayes o● Richard the 2. if the King dye● without issue The battle at Shaftsbury Henry the 5. borne at Monmouth shire in Wales Henr. 5. Pyrrhus The Duke of Yorke Earle of Suffolke were the onely men of Nobilitie that ended their liues in the battell of Agincourt Crassinius was the first Captain that charged the enemy in the Field which office of valure Edward the Duke of Yorke enioyed at Agincourt Mercuries Oration He dyed in a Chamber at the Deane of Westmi lodging named Ierusalem The Fates ●nswere Mercinys reply The ciuil wars of Marius and Sylla The battell Spayne whe● Caesar was victor Caesar slaine the Court of Pompey The battell 〈◊〉 Phillippia The feelde at Actium The first of Sain● Albons barrells Daysie in ●rench signi●●eth Margaret At Wakefield Rich. Duke of Yorke being taken by the Lord Clifford in reuenge of his fathers Ideath slaine at S. Albons I crowned the Dukes head with paper The secon● Battell of S Albons thard Earle Warwicke ●argret daugh●●r to Reino ●●rle of Aniow ●ho entituled ●●mself King of Naples Sycil ●erusalem but ●●ioyed none That day in which Caesar lost his 〈◊〉 in the Court of ●ompe● a poor man tendred him a petition which he light●y regarded the contents wherof if he had pervsed his life might haue bene preserued At her first c●ming landin● at Southham●ton some pa●● of Paules st●●ple and many other Church●● in England were set on fi●● A compari●on of Edward and Warwicke with Octaui●s Anthony Richard 3. The battle o● Bosworth Henry 7. Arthur Henry Margaret Mary Elizabeth eldest daughter to Edw. the 4. was maried to Henr. the 7 by which mariage the both houses of Yorke and Lancaster so long seuered wer vnited Henry 8. Christ Chur●● in Oxford Edward 6. Queene Mary married with Phillip Prince of Spayne ●●●stotle 〈◊〉 Iames the 1. of England and 6. of Scotland Basilicon Doron Chaucer so called by M. Camdon Philip Aristotle Cornelius Tanitus in the life of Agrippa