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A73300 The triumphs of fame and honour, or, The noble accomplish'd solemnity, full of cost, art and state, at the inauguration and establishment of the true worthy and right nobly minded Robert Parkhurst, into the right honourable office of Lord Maior of London the particularities of every invention in all the pageants, shewes and triumphs both by water and land, are here following fully set downe, being all performed by loves, liberall costs, and charges of the right worshipfull and worthy Brother-hood of the Cloth-workers the 29 of October 1634 / written by Iohn Taylor. Taylor, John, 1580-1653. 1634 (1634) STC 23808; ESTC S5206 8,852 44

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the crest of the Cloth-workers armes there being neere or next unto him an ancient monument of fame at the approach of my Lord the shepherd entertaines him with this speech The Speech of Endimion My Honour'd Lord let me a rurall Swaine And humble shepherd from the lowly plaine As plainly bid thee welcome to this state Of Englands greatest civill Magistrate A shepherd joyes to see this day and I Will fleece my flock's t'nrich thy company I am Endimion that of yore did keepe Upon th' Arcadian hils my harmeles sheepe Whereas by study and by observations I found the Moones change and her variations And for my sake the Swaines doe still prefer The booke ycleap'd the shepherds Kallender Apollo kept Admetus sheepe t is said And Tamberlaine whom Mighty Kings obey'd Was once a shepherd and the Time was when That shepherds were the noblest ablest men This golden crested Ram on which I ride To welcome you and see you dignifide Is the Celestiall figne Aries by name Come from the Zodiack to adorne your fame And from the Ram and his increasing breed Neere halfe mankinde have meanes to Cloath and feed By picking wooll thousands releife doe gaine ●s many carding spinning doth maintaine Wooll-men a great and wealthy trade doe drive Weavers in great abundance worke and live The Clothiers Fullers Tuckers Shermen Dyers From the sheepes fleece have feeding and attires But all these Trades which I doe here infer Have all relation to the Cloth-worker For were it not for him the rest were nothing He onely makes it Cloth and fit for Clothing Without the Cloth-worker the Drapers Trade And Merchants Traffick would decay and fade These from the fleece got Clothes and nutriment For under heaven the Ram's the Instrument And when bright Phoebus shall in March begin To take the Ram for his celestiall Inne Such golden tincture on his fleece hee●le set Which many golden peeces shall beget And whereas men to make their worths appeare Doe give their servants Liveries once a yeare The Ram in bounty passeth man I note And gives his Master every yeare a coate Thus poore Endimion with the beast he tides Doth wish you prosperous windes and happy tides That by commerce and good Negotiation Wooll turn'd to Cloth and Cloth by transformation Be turn'd to gold that you may say with joy That Iasons fleece to yours was but a toy A dance of shephards with drinking in leather bottles in the 〈◊〉 Lastly at night when his Lordship returnes from Pauls the Pageants being six in number going all before him in their order attending him to his house then the last Pageant being an ancient Monument of Fame shall present it selfe to his Lordship in the front of which peace is erected a figure representing Fame with a silver Trumpet in her hand the Monument being adorn'd with the Armes Escucheons Hatchments and Impresses of divers Lord Mayors that have bin of the worshipfull company of the Cloth-workers whom though Time hath interred Fame revives sounding their praises and inforceth Time to revive their noble Memory encouraging his Lordship to follow them in all their Honourable actions that when Time shall determinate his Lordships shield of Honour may be added to the rest of his predecessors and as this Pageant of the Monument of Fame is a representation of the night so the night and this following speech at his Lordships Gate is a conclusion and dutifull farewell to the daies Triumph and solemnity Time speaks Time that this day his service hath exprest In duty brings your Lordship to your rest Yet er'e I take my leave for your content I 'le shew the meaning of this Monument Then know this ruind peece doth shew that stones And tombes consume as doe their owners bones For Time is circular in his effects Builds and throwes downe and ruins and erects But fortune death or fame or Time cannot Make vertuous men or vertue be forgot For Immortallity is pleas'd to make Fame with his Trumpe the drowsie world to wake Who from demollished delapidations Proclaimes the memorable nominations Of worthies of this worthy company Who Honourd liv'd and did with Honour die Sir William Hewet was as you my Lord To poyz the ballance and to weild the sword Sir Rowland Hayward next next Sir Iames Hawes Did rule this Citie justly by the lawes Next was Sir Edward Osboorne Londons Mayor Then Sir Iohn Spencer gaind the honourd Chaire Sir Thomas Schinner after had the place Next did Sir Nicholas Mosley gaine the Grace Then Sir Iohn Watts his yeare with Honour past And Noble Freeman who deceased last King Iames the wisest and the learnedst King Whose fame throughout the spacious world doth ring He knew your merits worth and dignity And therefore chose your worthy company To be his Brother-hood he did understand You were most fit for his fraternall band And you my Lord whom Time hath brought to be The noblest Branch of this fraternity Time here salutes you wishing you may move More high in Honour as you doe in love T is truly said that man that rules his passions Doth conquer more than he that conquers Nations As you have rul'd your selfe let it appeare In ruling London this ensuing yeare So you with Time shall be together blest And Time shall bring you to Eternall Rest For a period to these Triumphs and to give desert her due It were shamefull impudence in mee to assume the invention of these Structures and Architectures to my selfe they being busines which I never was inured in or acquainted with all there being little of my directions in these shewes onely the Speeches and Illustrations which are here printed I doe justly challenge as mine owne all the rest of the Composures and Fabricks were formed and framed by the ingenious and industrious M'r Robert Norman Citizen and Painter of London who was indeed the prime inventor prosecuter and finisher of these works with the assistance of Zachary Taylor a quaint and well knowne curious Carvar which being gracefully accepted approved of after good CHRISTMAS the authors may be the more merry at the next The explanation of the first Pageant of Thetis THetis daughter to the sea-god Nereus she was wife to King Peleus also Thetis was the mother of Achilles who was seven cubits in height and the most valiant Captaine amongst the Greekes at the siege of Troy Danubia is a great River that runs through Hungaria by the famous Cities of Buda Brundusium and Belgrad and so it passeth into Germany by the Towne of Regensberg and through Swabe Bavaria and Austria it is also called Donawe but passing into Illyria it is at a part of Thracia cald Istria changed into the name of Ister it receives 60 rivers into it the most part of which are navigable it falls into the sea called Pontus Euxinus or the Euxine sea Po a famous river in Italy Seine a river in France which runs through Paris Volgu a river that runs through the large Empire of Russia
THE TRIVMPHS OF FAME and HONOVR OR THE NOBLE ACcomplish'd solemnity full of Cost Art and state at the Inauguration and Establishment of the true worthy and right nobly minded ROBERT PARKHVRST into the Right Honourable office of Lord Maior of LONDON The particularities of every Invention in all the Pageants Shewes and Triumphs both by Water and Land are here following fully set downe being all performed by the Loves Liberall Costs and charges of the Right Worshipfull and worthy Brother-hood of the Cloth-workers the 29 of October 1634. Written by Iohn Taylor ¶ Imprinted at London 1634. TO THE MOST WELCOME AND expected Pattern and Patron of Vertue and Goodnesse the hopefull deserver of all the Costs and Honours which the Noble Fellowship and Brother-hood of Clothworkers and ample Love of the whole City in full and generous Bounty bestow upon him the Right Honourable and Judicious ROBERT PARKHVRST Lord Major of the famous City of London RIght Honourable Patron to your state In duty I these Triumphs dedicate Wherein your Worthy Brother-hood Approves Greatnesse and goodnes of their minds and loves Their true affections and their liberall charge They have most bountifull exprest at large And London in these Triumphs is renownd Above all cities in the worlds wide Round For no Kings Deputy or Magistrate Is with such pompous state inaugurate As Londons Mayor is which most plainly showes The Kings illustrious greatnesse whence it flowes To whom then should my dedication run But unto you for whom these things were done Your power is Londons watch-towre to espie Dangers far off and perills that are nigh Your foresight must see much and it is plaine Millions of eyes will looke on you againe For envy and detraction pries and stares T' assault true honour and t'intrap in snares All that is good for it is manifest That envie alwaies feeds upon the best This citie the Kings Chamber must be kept Cleane for his use from foule pollution swept And sure that power that hath you thus advanc'd To be thus honour'd lov'd and countenanc'd Will ever be your portion and content And governe you in this your government That you at helme a steddy course may steare Twixt Justice and blest Mercy many a yeare Especially in this your greatest state Let Hospitality still keepe your Gate And Liberality with welcome stand To greet men with a free and open hand Then Muses Graces Arts the praise shall sing Of you my Lord Lieutenant to my King THE TRIVMPHS OF FAME AND HONOUR T The first shew that is to be presented on the water is a vessell like a Boat or Barge adorned with the armes and Impresses of the honourable Citie and Company with seeming properties of being loaden with Packs dryfats and divers other commodities that marchants and others that are free of the Company of Cloth-workers doe receive from foreigne parts by sea this Barge attends the Lord Mayor and meets him about Pauls wharfe or attends further up the River Thetis the Goddesse of the sea and Thames or Thamisis being one of her fairest daughters sitting in the head of the Boate Thetis being habitimented in a mantle of sea-Greene with a corronet of shels of divers sorts of sea-fish on her head with a great whelk-fish in her hand with adornments of strange fishes and other significant representations Thamisis being habited in a white or silver coloured Robe having on her head a Chaplet of green Reeds Flowers and Rushes and about her feet deck'd with Sedge Bulrushes and Flaggs at which presentment Thetis speaks this following speech Know worthy Troop that I great Thetis am Who hearing of these Triumphs hither came From th' Azure court of my most deepe Abysse To grace my fairest daughter Thamisis I every twelve houres by this Child of mine Do send you silks and velvets oyle and wine Gold silver Jewels fish salt sundry spices Fine and course linnen druggs of divers prices What every Realme or climate can produce I see it safe transported for your use Thus from the bosome of the Deepe my floods By Thames doe every Tyde send up your goods For which this matchlesse well deserving River Your Cloth doth backe againe to me deliver With other riches which I o're the Sea Unto my other daughters doe convay For your commodities I 'le ever flow Unto Danubius Ister Rhine and Poe To Maze Seine Volga Ems Elve and Tanales To Tygris Nilus Ganges Euphrates To Tyber Jordan Xanthus Jndus Tagus Past Asphaltites or Blacke Mortuus Lacus As far as Sol or Cynthia spread their beames As far as Oceanus sends his streames So far will I your servant ever be In any thing you 'l deigne to put on me And humble thanks faire Thames and I doe render To you who of her well-fare are so tender Who with great cost and care doe lend your hands To cleare your servant Thames from shelves and sands Go on and cleanse her as you have begun And she shall doe for you as she hath done We are assur'd that Heaven will ever blesse Your stores who doe her injuries redresse Thetis and Thames their services shall show To you as long as they doe ebb and flow Thus with our humble dutious bending downe Long may this Citie flourish with renowne Then the Rowers consisting of foure in number being two Saylours two watermen being ouer-joyed pike their oares and every of them drinks his Kan as a health tossing them up and presently falling into a Rugged friskin daunce returne to Pauls wharfe and landing the said Barge she is carried as the formost Pageant in the shew through the Citie The second is a Pageant representing the figures of Time and Mercury Time being habited in a blew roabe with his Sithe in his hand which do wait and attend the Lord Mayor in Paules Chuch-yard The speakers being Mounted on two Griphons the Supporters of the Cloth-workers Armes which at the approach of my Lord Mercury upon one of the Griphons with his Caducens or charming rod in his hand with wings on his head to signifie quicknesse of Invention Acutenesse of wit and Volubility of tongue with Eloquence of speech He hath also wings on his feet to signifie his swiftnesse as Messenger to the Gods Time speakes as followeth The Speech of Time Almost 500 daies beheld have I The Triumphs of Great Londons Mayoralty And sure old Time with Joy doth truely say He n're was better pleas'd than at this day Not that I thinke a temporizing Lord Or Pleaser of the Time shall weild the sword But as your Honourable Predecessors Have mended Time by punishing Trangressors So Time hopes that th' addition of your yeare Will make him more Illustrate pure and cleare For of all fading things 't is manifest As Time is us'd hee 's either worst or best All those that rightly have their Honours won Have us'd Time well as you my Lord have done This Honour was ordaind you from your youth You ever lov'd my loveliest daughter TRVTH And she hath rais'd