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A18594 Englands mourning garment worne heere by plaine shepheards, in memorie of their sacred mistresse, Elizabeth; queene of vertue while she liued, and theame of sorrow being dead. To the which is added the true manner of her emperiall funerall. With many new additions, being now againe the second time reprinted, which was omitted in the first impression. After which followeth the shepheards spring-song, for entertainment of King Iames our most potent soueraigne. ... Chettle, Henry, d. 1607? 1603 (1603) STC 5122; ESTC S104885 24,274 50

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ENGLANDS Mourning Garment Worne heere by plaine Shepheards in memorie of their sacred Mistresse ELIZABETH Queene of Vertue while she liued and Theame of Sorrow being dead To the which is added the true manner of her Emperiall Funerall With many new additions being now againe the second time reprinted which was omitted in the first Impression After which followeth the Shepheards Spring-Song for entertainment of King IAMES our most potent Soueraigne Dedicated to all that loued the deceased Queene and honour the liuing KING Imprinted at London for Thomas Millington and are to be sold at the signe of the Crane in Paules Churchyard by Walter Burre 1603. To all true Louers of the right gracious Queene Elizabeth in her life being vndoubtedly those faithfull Subiects that now honour and affect our most potent Lord King Iames after her death MY Epistle to you is like the litle Towne that the Cynicke would haue perswaded the Citizens was readie to runne out at the great gates being scarce so long as the Title In a word the negligence of many better able hath made me bold to write a small Epitomie touching the abūdant vertues of Elizabeth our late sacred Mistris Intreating of her Princely birth chast life royall gouernment and happie death being a Lady borne liuing raigning dying all for Englands good The manner is handled between Shepheards the forme of speech like the persons rude Affection exceedeth Eloquence and I haue not shewne much Art but exprest the dutie of a louing hart Shead some teares in reading our Shepheards sorrow and in that true passion let your loue to our royall Lord be shewne who hateth hypocrites as iust men hell Farewell all of you that giue the dead Queene a sad Farewell and the liuing King a glad Welcome the rest are Time-pleasers and I write not to them Foelicem fuisse infaustum Englands Mourning Garment Worne by plaine Shepheardes for the death of that most excellent Empresse Elizabeth Queene of Vertue while she liued and Theame of Sorrow being dead THENOT COLLIN Thenot. COllin thou lookst as lagging as the day When the Sun setting toward his westerne bed Shewes that like him all glory must decay And frolique life with murkie clouds o re-spred Shall leaue all earthly beautie mongst the dead Such is the habite of thy new aray Why art thou not preparde to welcome May In whose cleare Moone thy younglings shall be fed With nights sweete dewes and open flowers of day Collin I aunswer thee with woe and wel away I am in sable clad sith she cannot be had That me and mine did glad there 's all I 'le say Thenot. Well spoken Swaine let me thy sorrow ken Rich soule though wrong'd by idle Antike men And driuen by falshood to a cloudie den Tell me thy griefe Collin O it is past releefe and which is worst of worst Bayards and beasts accurst with grosest flattery nurst Haue sung her sacred name and prais'd her to their shame Of mayden Queenes who was our last and first Thenot. Deere Collin doe not checke the humblest song The will is euer maister of the worke Those that can sing haue done all Shepheards wrong Like Lozels in their cottages to lurke The ayres the ayre though it be thicke and murke If they to whom true Pastorals belong In needefull layes vse neither pipe nor tong Shall none the vertuous raise Collin Yes those that merit Bayes though teares restraine their layes Some weeping houres or dayes will finde a time To honour Honour still not with a rurall quill But with the soule of skill to blesse their rime Aye me why should I dote on rimes on songs or note Confusion can best quote sacred Elizaes losse Whose praise doth grace all verse that shal the same reherse No gold neede decke her herse to her all gold is drosse With that Collin in discontent brake his pipe and in that passion as if his heart had beene like his pipe parted each peece from the other hee fell without sense on the earth not then insensible of his sorrowe for it yeelded wept and groand at once with his fall his weepings and his sighs Poore Th. showted for help at whose call came some Nymphs full of sorrow for their Soueraigne and no whit amazed to see him lie as dead their hearts were so dead with thinking of that which had astonied his But yet as gathering of companies draw more more to wonder so prooued it among the Shepheards that left none but their curres to attend their flockes themselues flocking about Thenot Collin who now recouered from his trance and all asking the reason of his griefe with teares abounding in his eyes that likewise drew more aboundantly from theirs he distractedly answered Illum nec enim reprehendere fas est Qui fleat hanc cuius fregerunt stamina parcae Solus honor sequitur mortales ille misellos And therewithall making a signe for the Shepheards and Nymphs to sit downe he told them they had lost that sacred Nymph that carefull Shepheardesse ELIZA but if it pleased them to lend attention he would repeate somthing of her worth memorie that should liue in despite of death whereupon a still silence seizd them all sauing only now and then by sighing they exprest their hearts sorrow and Collin thus began Seeing Honor onely followeth mortals and the works of the vertuous die not with their deaths and yet those workes neuerthelesse with the honours and rites due to the departed might be much blemished if there were no gratitude in their successors let vs poore Rurals though no other wayes able to erect Statues for our late dread Soueraigne worthy all memory among our selues repeate part of her excellent Graces and our benefite obtained by her Gouernment for to reckon all were Opus infinitum alabour without end She was the vndoubted issue of two royall Princes Henry of Lancaster and Elizabeth of Yorke In whose vnion the quiet of vs poore Swaines began for till that blessed mariage England was a shambles of slaughtred men so violent was the blood of ambition so potent the factions and so implacable their heads whose eyes were neuer cleard till they were washt in blood euen in the deare blood of their Obiects hearts This King Grandfather to our late Queene was the first Brittish King that manie a hundred yeeres before wore the Emperiall Diademe of England France Ireland in him began the name of Tewther descended from the ancient Brittish King to florish the issue male of royal Plantagenet ending in his beginning his wife Grandmother to our late Elizabeth being the last Plantagenet whose Temples were heere circled with a sphere of gold Which King and Queene liued and loued and now lie intoombed in that most famous Chappell built at his Kingly charge in the Abbey of Westminster King Henry dying in a good age left England rich beautifull and full of peace and so blest with his issue after royally matcht to Scotland France besides his vndoubted heire
how her Highnesse in one of her Progresses walking in the Garden of a house where she was receiued being somewhat neere the highway heard on a suddaine a market woman crie and from an Arbour behelde one of her owne seruants a Taker vp of prouision vse the woman vnciuillie whereupon the cause being examined and the poore woman found by the same fellowe to be wrongd as well afore as then her Highnesse causd him presently to be dischargd of her seruice and punished yet the fault being but slight the Taker was countenanced to make sute to be restord and some halfe yeere after fell downe before her Maiestie desiring mercie and restoring her Highnesse pittying his distresse commaunded him to be prouided for in some place where he could not wrong her poore subiects but in any case not to make him a Taker Manie such false ones she hath punished with death and those that haue by power friends or fauour scapd let then Zacheus restore least their ends be worse than their beginnings I could in this as all the rest reckon multitudes of examples but I will end with her Excellence in this Act of Charitie extended to her neighbours whom shee hath by her bountie deliuered from the tyrannie of oppression and ayded the right of others against rebellious subiects others assisted to recouer their Kingdomes not sparing millions to sustaine the quarrell of the righteous The reward of which mercy and charitie she now findes being done for his cause that leaueth no deed of mercy vnrecompenced As shee was richly stored with diuine graces so in morall vertues no Princesse euer-liuing in the earth can be remembred to exceede her Her wisedome was without question in her life by any vnequalled shee was sententious yet gracious in speech So expert in Languages that she answered most Embassadors in their Natiue tongues her capacitie was therewith so apprehensiue and inuention so quicke that if anie of them had gone beyond their bounds with gracious maiestie she would haue limitted them within the verge of their duties as shee did royallie wiselie and learnedlie the last strutting Poland Messenger that thought with stalking lookes and swelling words to daunt her vndaunted Excellence But as he came proud he returned not without repentance hauing no other wrong heere but the shame of his owne sausinesse Manie such examples I could set downe but I will satisfie you with one more When the Spaniards hauing their Armatho readie temporisde with her Highnesse Commissioners in the low Countries thinking to find her vnprouided at last when they accounted all sure they sent her their Kings choise either of peace or warre wittilie included in foure Latine verses portending that if she would cease to defend the Lowe Countries restore the goods taken by reprisall from the Spaniards build vp the Religious houses diuerted in her Fathers time and let the Romane Religion bee receiued through her land why then she might haue peace if not it was too late to expect any Which proud commaunding Embassie with royall magnanimitie gratious wisedome and fluent wit she answered instantly in one knowne prouerbiall line which she sodainly made into a Verse Ad Graecas haec fiant mandata Kalendas O Thenot did not assurance of our kingly Poets loue to the Muses somewhat comfort me I should vtterly dispaire euer to heare Pastorall song againe fild with anie conceit seeing her Excellence whose braine was the Hellican of all our best and quaint inuentions is dried vp by the ineuitable heate of death Her owne iustice was such as neuer any could truly complaine of her neither did shee pardon faultes vnpardonable as murder rape Sodomie that sin almost not to be namd neither was there in her with her knowlege extremitie of iustice showne to other malefactors if any such did fall it was either by falshood or malice of the euidence practise of corrupt men or some other secret wherwith poore Shepheards are vnacquainted only this we are taught that God sometime punisheth the sins of parents on their children to many generations But for her selfe she was alwaies so enclined to equity that if she left Iustice in any part it was in shewing pittie as in one generall punishment for murder it appeared whereas before time there was extraordinary torture as hanging wilfull muderers aliue in chaines shee hauing compassion like a true Shepheardnesse of their soules though they were of her erring and vtterly infected flocke said their death satisfied for death aud life for life was all could bee demāded affirming more that much torture distracted a dying man in particular she saued many Among some vnworthy of her mercy that proud fellow who vniustly named himselfe Doctor Parry and an other as I remember called Patrick an Irish man the first hauing offended in burglary against a lawier able willing to take away his life therto vrged by many misdemeanours and for that Parry doubted his attempt to kill act of fellony was without compasse of pardon considering the place where it was done and against whom thought a lease of his life safest which of her benigne mercy he obtained for 21. yeares but ere 3. of thē were past he did vnnaturally attempt her death that had giuē him life for which traiterous ingratitude he worthily was cut off the Irish man likewise being pardoned for a man slaughter proued vnthankfull and ended as he liued shamefully Besides she was so inclinable to mercy that her iust and seuere Iudges told her how some desperate malefactors building on friends and hopes of pardon cared not for offending but euen scoffed at authority wherof when she heard she tooke speciall care considering it was as great iniustice to pity some as spare others taking order to signe no pardon except the Iudges hand were at it first which truly knew the cause why the party was condemned by which meanes murderers and presumptuous offenders were cut off from all hope One notable example of her iustice among many I wil here remember Certaine condemned for Piracie hauing made some end with them they wronged lay for their liues at her mercy and the Iudge of her Admiraltie hauing signified fauourably of the qualitie of their offence she was moued to pittie them and had commanded their pardon to be drawne In the meane time two of them trained vp in the fashion of our cōmon Cutters that I may tel thee Thenot swarm rather like deuils than men about the country that sweare as if they had license to blaspheme stab men as if they had authority nay sometime themselues for very trifles two such I say were in the company of these condemned Pyrates hourely hoping for their liues and brauing either other of their manhoode saying one durst more than the other the eldest being Maister of their late ship wherein they had sailed to that place of sorrow slyces his owne flesh with a knife asking the other if he durst doo as much the Younker was very readie and two or three times
almost thirtie yeares agoe courting it now and then I haue seene the Ladies make great shift to hide away their looking-glasses if her Maiestie had past by their lodgings O humble Lady how meeke a spirite hadst thou How farre from affecting beautie or vaine pride when thou desiredst not to see that face which all thy subiects longed dayly to behold and sundry Princes came from farre to wonder at As in these things shee kept truely the Meane so likewise in her gifts as I first nored touching her Charitie which was still so tempered notwithstanding her great charge in aiding her distressed neighbours that she was euer truely liberall and no way prodigall as I trust his Royall Maiestie shall by the treasure finde As shee was adorned with all these vertues so was she indued with Fortitude and Princely courage so plentifully that her displeasure shooke euen her stoutest aduersaries and those vnnaturall traytors that came armed sundry times with bloodie resolution to lay violent hands on her sacred Maiestie her very lookes would daunt and their instruments prepared for her death dropt from their trembling hands with terrour of their consciences and amazement to behold her countenance Nay when she knew they came of purpose to kill her she hath singled diuerse of them alone and let some passe from her with milde caueats a farre off whose lenitie rather increasing then diminishing their malice they haue followed destruction which too timely ouertooke them I could in this place name many particular men as Parry and others but I will content yee with one priuate example ouerpassing the generall when Appletree whom I remembred before had hurt her water-man being next to her in the Barge the French Ambassador being amazed and all crying Treason Treason yetshee with an vndaunted spirite came to the open place of the Barge and bade them neuer feare for if the shotte were made at her they durst not shoote againe such maiestie had her presence and such boldnesse her heart that shee despised all feare and was as all Princes are or should be so full of diuine fulnesse that guiltie mortalitie durst not behold her but with dazeled eyes But I wonder saith Thenot she in so many yeares built no goodly Aedifice wherein her memorie might liue So did shee answered Collin the goodliest buildings in the earth such as like fleeting Iles commanded the seas whose outward wal's are dreadfull Engins of brasse sending fearefull thunder among enemies And the inhabitants of those wooden Iles are worthy Seamen such as dread to danger but for her would haue runne euen into destructions mouth I tell thee Thenot I haue seene in a fight some like nimble spirites hanging in the aire by little cords some lading ordinance with deathfull powder some charging Muskets and discharging ruine on their enemies some at the foreship others busie at helme skipping here and there like Roes in lightnesse and Lions in courage that it would haue powred spirite into a sicke man to see their resolutions For such tenants made she many buildings exceeding any Emperours Nauy in the earth whose seruice I doubt not will be acceptable to her most worthy Successor our dread Soueraigne Lord and King Other Pallaces shee had great store of which shee maintained and yearely repaired at least would haue done if those that had care of her suruaying would haue beene as carefull for hers as for their owne What should I say of her the clowdie mantle of the night couers the beautie of the heauen and this euening lookes like those foure days that preceeded the morning of her death The beasts the night that she ended her fate in earth kept an vnwonted bellowing so that I assure thee Thenot being assured of her sickenesse I was troubled being awakened with their cries with imagination of her death that I pittied not my bleating flocke who with their innocent notes kept time with my true teares till the houre of her death was past when immediately a heauy sleepe shut vp the windowes of mine eyes at which time as I haue since heard deaths eternal sleep vtterly benummed all her sences whose soule I doubt not hath already entred endlesse rest whither God will draw her glorified body in his great day Sweete Virgine she was borne on the Eue of that blessed Virgines Natiuitie holy Mary Christs mother shee died on the Eue of the Annunciation of the same most holy Virgin ablessed note of her endlesse blessednesse and her societie in heauen with those wise Virgines that kept Oyle euer in their Lampes to awayte the Bridegroome Shee came vnto the Crowne after her Royall sisters death like a fresh Spring euen in the beginning of Winter and brought vs comforte as the cleare Sunne doeth to storme-dressed Marriners shee left the Crowne likewise in the winter of her Age and the beginning of our Spring as if the Ruler of heauen had ordained her Coronation in our sharpest Winter to bring vs happinesse and vncrowned her in our happiest Spring to leaue vs in more felicitie by her Succeeder O happy beginning and more happy end which notwithstanding as naturall sonnes and subiects let her not goe vnwept for toher graue This euening let vs be like the Euening that drops dewy teares on the earth and while our hindes shut vp the sheepe in their folds sing a Funerall song for the losse of diuine Elizabeth inuocating absent Schollers to bewaile her whom in sundry Schooles shee cherisht and personally in either of their Vniuersities visited let vs bid souldiers lament her toward whom besides many apparant signes of her exceeding loue this is one most worth memorie shee came amongest them mounted at Tilburie being gathered into a royall Armie against the Spanish Inuasion promising to share with them in all fortunes if the enemie durst but shew his face aland Let Citizens likewise shead teares for her losse especially those of London to whome she was euer a kinde Soueraigne and bountifull neighbour I neede not bidde the Courtiers weepe for they can neuer forgette the countenance of their gracious Mistresse till they haue ingrauen in their hearts the fauour of their most Royall Maister For vs poore Shepheards though we are not able to sute our selues in blacke fine inough to adorne so Royall an Enterrement yet Thenot quicken thy inuention Dryope and Chloris shall beare parte and let vs conclude our sorrow for Eliza in a Funerall Hymne that shall haue power to draw from the swelling Clowdes waters to assist our woe The Springs taught by the teares that breake from our eyes already ouerflow their bounds The Birds sit mute to heare our musicke and our harmelesse flocke hearken to our moanes To this they all as gladly as their griefe would suffer them consented Collin for his broken Pipe toooke Cuddyes who could neither sing nor play Hee was so full of passion and sighes The Funerall Song betweene Collin and Thenot Dryope and Chloris vpon the death of the sacred Virgine ELIZABETH Collin YE sacred Muses
King Henry of famous memory the eight that no Kingdome in the earth more flourished His sonne the Father of our Elizabeth was to his Enemies dreadfull to his friends gracious vnder whose Ensigne the Emperour himselfe serued so potent a Prince he was besides so liberall and bounteous that he seemed like the Sunne in his Meridian to showre downe gold round about the Horizon But hee died too and left vs three Princely hopes all which haue seuerally succeeded other royallie maintaining the right of England and resisted with power all forraine wrong For King Edward our late Soueraignes Brother though he died young in yeeres left instance hee was no Infant in vertues his learning towardnes and zeale was thought fitter for the societie of Angels than men with whom no doubt his spirit liues eternally Such assurance haue wee of the happines of that royall gracious and worthy Ladie Mary his eldest sister who in her death exprest the care of her Kingdomes so much lamenting one Townes losse that she told her attendant Ladies if they would rip her heart when shee was dead they should finde Callice written in it O Thenot with all you other Nymphs and Swaines setting by her affection to Papall religion wherein shee was borne and liued learne by this worthy Queene the care of Soueraignes how heart-sick they are for their subiects losse and think what felicity wee poore wormes liue in that haue such royall Patrons who cark for our peace that we may quietly eate the bread of our owne labour and tend our flocks in safetie asking of vs nothing but feare and duty which humanity allowes and heauen commaunds With this Thenot interrupted Collin telling him there were a number of true shepheards misliked that Princes life and ioyed greatly at her death withall beginning to shew some reasons but Collin quickly interrupted him in these words Peace Thenot peace Princes are sacred things It fits not Swaines to thinke amisse of Kings For saith he the faults of Rulers if any be faultie are to be reprehended by them that can amend them and seeing none is superiour to a King but God to him alone referre their actions And where thou termest them true shepheards that so enuied that Ladies gouernment thou art deceiued for the true shepheards indeede that suffered in her time by the malice of Romish Prelates prayed hartily for her euen in the fire and taught the people to obey her gouernment but such as rayld at her are still as they then were proud phanatike spirited counterfaites expert in nothing but ignorance such as hate all rule for who resisteth correction more than fooles though they deserue it most Beleeue mee Thenot and all you well affected Swaines there is no greater marke for a true shepheard to be knowne by than Humilitie which God hee knowes these mad men most want too much experience haue wee of their threed-bare pride who bite the dead as liuing Curres may Lyons not contented with their scandals of that Royal Lady our late Soueraignes Sister but they haue troubled the cleare springs of our Mistresse Elizabeths blessed gouernment nay my selfe haue seene and heard with glowing eares some of them euen in the fields of Calydon when his Excellence that is now our Emperiall shepheard was onely Lord of their foldes speake of his Maiestie more audaciouslie malapertly than any of vs would doe of the meanest officer For as I said euen now if Rulers chance to slip it is most vnsufferable that euery impudent rayler should with the breath of his mouth stirre the chaffie multitude whose eares itch for nouelties whose mindes are as their numbers diuers not able to iudge themselues much lesse their Soueraignes But they ought if they be true Pastors to follow the great Pan the Father of all good shepheards Christ who teacheth euery of his Swaines to tell his brother priuatly of his fault and againe and againe by that glorious number three including numbers numberlesse before it be tolde the Church If then they must being true shepheards deale so with their brethren how much more ought their followers doe to their Soueraignes being Kings and Queenes And not in the place where sacred and morall manners should be taught contrarily to teach the rude to be more vnmannerly instructing euery Punie to compare with the most reuerend Prelate and that by that example to haue euerie Cobler account himselfe a King Oh said Thenot Collin there are some would ill thinke of you should they heare you thus talke for they reproue all out of zeale and must spare none Peace to thy thoughts Thenot answered Collin I know thou knowest there is a zeale that is not with knowledge acquainted but let them and their mad zeale passe let vs forget their raylings against Princes And beginne with her beginning after her Royall Sisters ending who departing from this earthly Kingdome the seuenteenth of Nouember in the yeere of our Lord 1558. immediatlie thereupon Elizabeth the hand-maide to the Lord of Heauen and Empresse of all Maides Mothers Youth and men then liuing in this English Earth was proclaimed Queene with generall applause being much pittied for that busie slander and respectlesse enuie had not long before brought her into the disfauour of her Royall Sister Mary whom wee last remembred In the continuance of whose displeasure stil stil made greater by some great Enemies how she scap't needes no repeating being so wel knowne Preserued shee was from the violence of death her blood was precious in the sight of GOD as is the blood of all his Saints it was too deere to be poured out like water on the greedy earth she liued and wee haue liued vnder her fortie and odde yeeres so wonderfully blest that all Nations haue wondred at their owne afflictions and our prosperity and shee died as she liued with vs still careful of our peace finishing euen then the greatest wonder of all our deserts considered by appointing the Kingdome to so iust and lawfull a Ruler to succeede her whom all true English knew for their vndoubted Lord immediatly after her death But least wee end ere we begin I wil returne to her who being seated in the Throne of Maiestie adorned with all the vertues diuine and morall appeared to vs like a goodly Pallace where the Graces kept their seuerall Mansions First faith aboundantly shone in her then young lost not her brightnes in her age for shee beleeued in her Redeemer her trust was in the King of Kings who preserued her as the Apple of his eye from all treacherous attempts as many being made against her life as against any Princesse that euer liued yet she was stil confident in her Sauiour whose name shee glorified in all her actions confessing her victories preseruings dignities to be all his as appeared by many luculent examples this one seruing for the rest that after the dissipation of the Spanish Armatho accounted inuincible shee came in person to Paules crosse and there among the meanest of
a conuicted Deputie was that hee went about by poyson to haue tooke away the life of Feff Mac Hue a Rebell more immane and barbarous than any of the other two the Lord chiefe Iustice of the Common Pleas yet liuing opening at the same time how iust a spirit her Maiestie was possessed with that she hated treason euen to traytors much more then to annointed Kings whose honours and reputations shee so maintained that shee not long since punished by fine and imprisonment a wealthie rayler for vnreuerent words spoken against the person of King Philip her open and professed enemie So faithfull so iust so gracious was she And to make it more plaine that Spaine intended England the first wrong long time before it was muttered but after that memorable battaile of Lepanto wherein Don Iohn of Austria obtained the tryumphant Christian victorie against the Turkes to reward him England was the Kingdome set downe being then in her Maiesties possession but hee had it when they could giue him it that promised the same which was at latter Lammas And I trust his Neece shal haue as good successe with her pretended title For if God strengthened her Maiestie so that against her being a woman they could not preuaile we trust his Almightinesse will be as carefull of our King being alreadie Lord of three such people as haue seldome beene equalled in battel except they haue vnnaturally contended among themselues the sight of which day deere shepheards let vs pray neuer againe to see Besides to expresse her farther intent to preserue faith and league notwithstanding infinite of open wrongs and certaine knowledge that a Nauie for inuasion of this Realme had been preparing more than fifteene yeere yet did she beare vntill against all law of Nations the Ambassador liedger of Spaine honoured with many fauours did notwithstanding plot and confeder with natiue traitors of this land and the matter being apparantly proued hee was by her milde sufferance admitted to depart the Realme without any violence to his perpetuall reproch and her neuer-dying glorie Well I will heere conclude touching this vertue of faith both toward God and man shee was as firme in the one as mortalitie could be and in the other approued glorious among all the Princes of her time For Hope the second diuine vertue shee rather therein abounded than was any way wanting for her Hope was no way wandring shee beleeued and it came to passe her enemies arise but before their arising shee was certaine to see them fall shee hauing by example of things past nothing doubted of things to come And she was not deceiued till the houre of her death For euer her expectation was fulfilled she kept peace within chased the spoyler without and euen as it is sung of Epaminondas that valiant Theban Captaine in his last victorious battaile wherein yet death of him got victorie he thus gloried Herein am I comforted that I dye a conquerour For euen when death laide his last siege to her yet vnvanquished life Tyrone the long disturber of her State besought by agents mercie at her feete O Nymphs and Shepheards doubt not she was full of diuine Hope whose heart obtained euer the thing it faithfully desired and that her desires were all of faith I could adde infinite examples to these alreadie alleadged but that it is needelesse to cast water in the Sea or to make question of that all men knowe and will confesse except some whose hearts are straungers from Truth and the professed Receptacles of falsehood Her Charitie the third and principall diuine Grace to the eye of mortals for that Faith and Hope bend principally their seruice to Heauen and Charities effects are manifested on earth hath beene extended ouer all her Realmes and stretched to the comfort of her oppressed neighbours The multitudes of poore daily releeued from her purse the numbers of sicke persons yeerely visited and by her owne hand their corrupt sores toucht the washing of poore womens feete and releeuing their wants was a signe that shee was humble as well as charitable for Humilitie is Charities sister they are two twins born at one time and as they are borne together in any soule whateuer so do they liue and die together the humble spirit being euer charitable and the charitable euer humble for it is as impossible to haue a proud man charitable as to reconcile fire and water or to make accord betweene any contraries As she was in these particulars exceeding all Ladies of her time giuen to this helpfull vertue so had she generall impositions through all her kingdome for her well able subiects to followe her example and so much did her example preuaile that besides the ordinarie and weekely almes distributed through the Realme there haue beene more particular Almes-houses builded for the reliefe of the aged then in anie sixe Princes Raignes before And as all parts of England haue in this imitation bin very forward so hath the Citie of London exceeded all wherein diuers priuate men haue builded sundrie houses for the poore and allowed them pensions but the Corporations haue beene most bountiful as most able and among all the right Worshipfull the Merchant-Tailors haue exceeded the rest all haue done well that haue done anie thing but they best of any other as I will one day in a song of liberall Shepheards thankfully expresse though for my selfe I knowe him not in the least gift to whom I am in that sort boundē but I ken not Thenot how I may for there is none liuing but may lack As the City so many knights Gentlemen honorable and deuout persons haue followed her example aboue the rest an honorable carefull reuer end and learned watchman as full of mildnesse pietie as he is of yeares and griefes for his good and royall Mistresse losse at Croiden hath builded a worthy Receptacle to the like charitable end As for the poore and decrepit with age her Royall Maiestie had this charitable care so for souldiers and suters she was very prouident The last being opprest in any part of her Realmes by men of much wealth and little conscience shee allowd them counsell and proceedings in Forma pauperis and maintenance weekely in the Termes for some part of their succour if any were delayd and abused it was vtterly against her will For souldiers and men of seruice her decrees of prouision are extant besides it is most cleare no Prince in the world to land or Sea-men was more bountifull or at least willing than her Highnesse out of her Coffers it went but there is an olde Prouerbe Thenot carriage is deere and I haue heard but I will stand to nothing base Ministers and vnder-officers curtall the liberalities of great and potent Maisters Some haue in her time beene taken with the manner and besides bodily punishment and fines displaced as I will remember and cannot omit amid my griefe to tell though somewhat from this subiect it dissent being of a fellow too meane
followed the olde foole in that desperate wounding of himselfe This brutish acte being committed in the prison belonging to her Maiesties owne house came quickly to her royall eare and some fewe dayes after their pardon to be signed who graciously gaue life to all the rest but commanded them by expresse name to execution saying they were vnworthy mercie that of themselues had none adding it was very likely that such as in a prison and in their state would be so cruell to shead their owne blood would haue small compassion of others whom they ouercame at sea and so leauing them to the lawe they were worthily executed Of her mercie nothing can be saide more but that it equalled or rather as I said before exceeded her iustice Among infinite numbers whom shee pardoned that one especially being a cleare witnesse who shot the Gunne off against Greenwich euen into her Maiesties Barge hurt the next man to her at broade day-light almost impossible to be excused by negligence or ignorance for that any man hauing his peece charged would rather vpon retyring home haue discharged it among the Reedes than toward the breadth of the Riuer whose siluer brest continually bore vp a number of vessels wherein men passed on sundrie affaires How euer wilfull or vnwilfull the act was done it was and by a Iurie he was found guiltie and adiudged to die toward execution he was ledde with such clamour and iniuries of the multitude as sildome any the like hath bene seene or heard so hainous and odious his offence appeared vnto them that being vpon the ladder readie to be cast off the common people had no pitie of him when euen iust in that moment of dispaire and death her Maiestie sent a gracious pardon which deliuered him to all mens wonder I want but the Arcadian Shepheards inchaunting phrase of speaking that was many times witnesse to her iust mercies and mercifull iustice yet rude as I am I haue presumed to handle this excellent Theame in regard the Funerall hastens on of that sometime most Serene Lady and yet I see none or at least past one or two that haue sung any thing since her departure worth the hearing and of them they that are bestable scarce remember her Maiestie I cannot now forget the excellent and cunning Collin indeed for alas I confesse my selfe too too rude complaining that a liberal Mecaenas long since dying was immediatly forgotten euen by those that liuing most laboured to aduance his fame and these as I thinke close part of his songs Being dead no Poet seekes him to reuiue Though many Poets flattered him aliue Somewhat like him or at least to that purpose of a person more excellent though in ruder verse I speake Death now hath ceaz'd her in his ycie armes That sometime was the Sun of our delight And pittilesse of any after-harmes Hath veyld her glory in the cloude of night Nor doth one Poet seek her name to raise That liuing hourely striu'd to sing her praise He that so well could sing the fatall strife Betweene the royall Roses White and Red That prais'd so oft Eliza in her life His Muse seemes now to dye as she is dead Thou sweetest song-man of all English swaines Awake for shame honour ensues thy paines But thou alone deseru'st not to be blamde He that sung fortie yeares her life and birth And is by English Albion so much famde For sweete mixt layes of maiestie with mirth Doth of her losse take now but little keepe Or else I gesse he cannot sing but weepe Neither doth Corin full of worth and wit That finisht dead Musaeus gracious song With grace as great and words and verse as fit Chide meager death for doing vertue wrong He doth not seeke with songs to deck her herse Nor make her name liue in his liuely verse Nor does our English Horace whose steele pen Can draw Characters which will neuer die Till her bright glories vnto listning men Of her he seemes to haue no memorie His Muse an other path desires to tread True Satyres scourge the liuing leaue the dead Nor doth the siluer tongued Melicert Drop from his honied Muse one sable teare To mourne her death that graced his desert And to his laies opend her Royall eare Shepheard remember our Elizabeth And sing her Rape done by that Tarquin Death No lesse do thou sweet singer Coridon The Theame exceedeth Edwards Isabel. Forget her not in Poly-Albion Make some amends I know thou lou'dst her well Thinke t was a fault to haue thy Verses seene Praising the King ere they had mourn'd the Queen And thou delicious sportiue Musidore Although thou haue resign'd thy wreathe of Bay With Cypresse binde thy temples and deplore Elizaes winter in a mournfull Lay I know thou canst and none can better sing Herse songs for her and Paeans to our King Quicke Antihorace though I place thee heere Together with yong Moelibee thy frend And Hero's last Musaeus all three decree All such whose vertues highly I commend Proue not ingrate to her that many a time Hath stoopt her Maiestie to grace your rime And thou that scarce hast fligd thy infant Muse I vse thine owne word and commend thee best In thy proclaiming Iames the rest misvse The name of Poetry with lines vnblest Holding the Muses to be masculine I quote no such absurditie in thine Thee doe I thanke for will thy worke let passe But wish some of the former had first writ That from their Poems like reflecting glasse Steeld with the puritie of Art and wit Eliza might haue liu'd in euery eye Alwaies beheld till Time and Poems dye But cease you Goblins and you vnder Elues That with rude rimes and meeters reasonlesse Fit to be sung for such as your base selues Presume to name the Muses Patronesse Keep your low Spheres she hath an Angell spirit The learnedst Swaine can hardly sing her merit Onely her brother King the Muses trust Blóod of her Grandsires blood plac'd in her Throne Can raise her glory from the bed of dust To praise her worth belongs to Kings alone In him shall we behold het Maiestie In him her vertue liues and cannot die At this Thenot and the rest desired him to proceede in his discourse of her vertues remembring where hee left at Iustice and though the matter pleafed them so well that they could endure the hearing many dayes yet seeing the Sunne began to dye the West Sea with vermilion tincture the pallace of the morning being hidden in sable clouds and that the care of their flockes must be respected requested him to be as breefe as the time limited him To which Collin answered Thenot I perceiue thou art as all or the most part of the world is carefull onely of thine owne and how euer frends fall yet profit must be respected Well thou dost well and in this I dubbly praise thee to carke for sheepe and lambes that cannot tend themselues not to mourne as without hope our great