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A12633 Mœoniæ. Or, Certaine excellent poems and spirituall hymnes: omitted in the last impression of Peters complaint being needefull thereunto to be annexed, as being both diuine and wittie. All composed by R.S. Southwell, Robert, Saint, 1561?-1595. 1595 (1595) STC 22955.5; ESTC S117673 10,446 38

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tell me I must die And yet my life amend not I. My ancestors are turnd to clay And many of my mates are gone My yongers dayly drop away And can I thinke to scape alone No no I know that I must die And yet my life amend not I Not Salomon for all his wits Nor Sampson though he were so strong No king nor euer person yet Could scape but death laid him along Wherefore I know that I must die And yet my life amend not I. Though all the East did quake to heare Of Alexanders dreadfull name And all the West did likewise feare To heare of Iulius Cesars fame Yet both by death in dust now lie Who then can scape but he must die If none can scape deaths dreadfull dart If rich and poore his becke obey If strong if wise if all do smart Then I to scape shall haue no way Oh grant me grace O God that I My life may mend sith I must die A vale of teares AVale there is enwrapt with dreadful shades Which thicke of mourning pines shrouds from the sunne Where hanging clifts yeld short dumpish glades And snowie flouds with broken streames doe runne Where eie-roume is from rocke to cloudie skie From thence to dales which stormie ruines shroud Then to the crushed waters frothie frie Which tumbleth from the tops where snow is thow'd Where eares of other sound can haue no choice But various blustring of the stubburne winde In trees in caues in straits with diuers noise Which now doth hisse now howle now roare by kinde Where waters wrastle with encountering stones That breake their streames and turne them into foame The hollow clouds ful fraught with thundering groans With hideous thumps discharge their pregnant wombe And in the horror of this fearefull quier Consists the musicke of this dolefull place All pleasant birds their tunes from thence retire Where none but heauie notes haue any grace Resort there is of none but pilgrim wights That passe with trembling foot and panting heart With terrour cast in cold and shuddring frights And all the place to terrour framde by art Yet natures worke it is of arte vntoucht So strait indeede so vast vnto the eie With such disordred order strangely coucht And so with pleasing horror low and hie That who it viewes must needes remaine agast Much at the worke more at the makers might And muse how Nature such a plot could cast Where nothing seemed wrong yet nothing right A place for mated minds and onely bower Where euerie thing doth sooth a dumpish mood Earth lics forlorne the cloudie skie doth lower The wind here weepes her sighs her cries aloude The strugling floud betweene the marble grones Then roring beates vpon the craggie sides A little off amidst the pibble stones With bubling streames a purling noise it glides The pines thicke set hie growne and euer greene Stil cloathe the place with shade and mourning vaile Here gaping cliffes there mosse growne plaine is seene Here hope doth spring and there againe doth quaile Huge massie stones that hang by tickle stay Still threaten foule and seeme to hang in feare Some withered trees ashamde of their decay Be set with greene and forcde gray coats to weare Here christall springs crept out of secret vaine Strait finde some enuious hole that hides their graine Here seared tufts lament the wants of grace There thunder wracke giues terror to the place All pangs and heauie passions here may find A thousand motiues suitly to their griefes To feede the sorrowes of their troubled mind And chase away dame pleasures vaine reliefes To plaining thoughts this vaile a rest may bee To which from wordly toyes they may retire Where sorrow springs from water stone and tree Where euerie thing with mourners doth conspire Sit here my soule mourne teares afloate Here all thy sinfull foiles alone recount Of solemne tunes make thou the dolefulst note That to thy ditties dolor may amount When Eccho doth repeat thy painfull cries Thinke that the verie stones thy sinnes bewray And now accuse thee with their sad replies As heauen and earth shall in the latter day Let former faults be fuell of the fire For griefe the Limbecke of thy heart to still Thy pensiue thoughts and dumps of thy desire And vapoure teares vp to thy eyes at will Let teares to tunes and pains to plaints be prest And let this be the burthen to thy song Come deepe remorse possesse my sinfull brest Delights adue I harbourd you too long The prodigall childs soule wracke DIsankered srom a blisfull shore and lancht into the meane of cares Grown rich in vice in vertue poore from freedom faln in fatal snares I found my selfe on euerie side enwrapped in the waues of wo And tossed with a toile some tide could to no port for refuge go The wrastling wind with raging blasts still hold me in a cruel chace They breake my anchors saile and masts permitting no reposing place The boistrous seas with swelling flouds on every side did work their spight Heauen ouercast with stormie clouds denide the Planets guiding light The hellish furies lay in wait to winne my soule into their power To make me bite at euery bait wherein my bane I might deuoure Thus heauen and hel thus sea land thus storms aud tēpests did conspire With iust reuenge of scourging hand to witnes Gods deserued ire I plunged in this heauie plight found in my faults iust cause to feare My darkenesse taught to know my light the losse whereof enforced teares I felt my inward bleeding sores my festred wounds began to smart Stept far within deaths fatal doores the pangs wherof were nere my hart I cried truce I craued peace a league with death I would conclude But vaine it was to sue release subdue I must or be subdude Death deceit had pitcht their snares put their wonted proofes in vre To sinke me in dispairing cares or make me stoupe to pleasures lure They fought by their bewitching charmes so to enchant my erring sense That when they sought my greatest harmes I might neglect my best defence My dazled eies could take no view no heede of their receiuing shifts So often did they alter hew and practise new deuised drifts With sirens song they fed mine eares till luld a sleepe on errors lap I found their tunes turnd into teares and short delights to long mishap For I inticed to their lore and soothed with their idle toies Was trained to their prison doore the end of all such flying ioies Where chainde in sinne I lay in thrall next to the dungeon of dispaire Till mercie raisde me from my fall and grace my ruine did repaire Mans ciuill warre MY houering thoughts would flie to heauen and quiet nestle in the skie Faine would my ship in virtues shore without remoue at anchor lie But mounted thoughts are hailed down with heauie poise of mortal load And blustring stormes denie my ship in vertues hauen sure abode When inward eie to heauenly sights doth draw my longing hearts desire The world with lesses of delights would to her pearch my thoughts retire Fond fancie traines to pleasures lure though reason stiffely do repine Thogh wisedom woo me to the saint yet sense would win me to the shrine Where reason loathes there fancie loues and euer rules the captiue wil Foes senses and to vertues lore they draw the wit their wish to fill Neede craues consent of soule to sence yet diuers bents breed ciuil fray Hard hap where halues must disagree or trust of halues the hole betray O cruel fight where fighting frend with loue doth kil a fauouring foe Where peace with sense is warre with God and selfdelight the seed of wo. Dame pleasures drugges are steept in sin their sugred tast doth breed anoy O fickle sense beware her ginne sell not thy soule for brittle toy Seeke flowers of heauen SOare vp my soule vnto thy rest cast off this loathsome lode Long is the date of thy exile too long the strickt abode Graze not on worldly withered weede it fitteth not thy taste The flowers of euerlasting spring do grow for thy repaste Their leaues are staind in beauties die and blazed with their beames Their stalks inameld with delight and limbde with glorious gleames Life giuing iuice of liuing loue their sugred vaines doth fill And watred with euerlasting showers they nectared drops distill These flowers do spring from fertile soile though from vnmanurde field Most glittering gold in lieu of glebe these fragrant flowers do yeeld Whose soueraigne sent surpassing sense so rauisheth the minde That worldly weedes needes must he loath that can these flowers find FINIS
did eclipse their raines Yet through this cloud their passage they did finde And pierc'd these sages hearts by secret waies Which made them know the ruler of the skies By infant tongue and lookes of babish eies Heauen at her light earth blushes at her pride And of their pompe these peeres ashamed be Their crownes their robes their traines they set aside When Gods poore cottage clouts and crew they see All glorious things their glorie now despise Sith God Contempt doth more then glory praise Three gifts they bring three gifts they beare away For incense mirre and gold faith hope and loue And with their gifts the giuers hearts do stay Their mind from Christ no parting can remoue His humble state his stall his poore retinew They fancy more then all their rich reuenew The Presentation TO be redeemed the worlds Redeemer brought Two silly turtle doues for ransome paies O wares with empires worthy to be bought This casie rate doth sound not drowne thy praise For sith no price can to thy worth amount A doue yea loue due price thou doest account Old Simeon cheape penny worth and sweete Obteind when thee in armes he did imbrace His weeping eies thy smiling lookes did meet Thy loue his heart thy kisses blest his face O eies O hart meane sights and loues auoyde Base not your selues your best you haue enioyde O virgin pure thou dost those doues present As due to lawe not as an equall price To buy such ware thou wouldst thy selfe haue spent The world to reach his worth could not suffice If God were to be bought not worldly pelfe But thou wert fittest price next God himselfe The flight into Egypt ALas our day is forst to flie by night Light without light and sunne by silent shade O nature blush that suffrest such a wight That in thy sunne thy darke eclipse hast made Day to his eies light to his steps denie That hates the light which graceth euery eie Sunne being fled the starres do loose their light And shining beames in bloodie streames they drench A cruell storme of Herods mortall spight Their liues and lights with bloody showers do quench The tyrant to be sure of murdring one For feare of sparing him doth pardon none O blessed babes first flowers of christian spring Who though vntimely cropt faire garlandes frame With open throats and silent mouthes you sing His praise whom age permits you not to name Your tunes are teares your instruments are swords Your ditty death and blood in hew of wordes Christs returne out of Egypt VVHen death and hell their right in Herod claime Christ from exile returnes to natiue soile There with his life more deepely death to maime Then death did life by all the infantes spoile He shewed the parents that the babes did mone That all their liues were lesse then his alone But hearing Herods sonne to haue the crowne The impious offspring of the bloudy sire To Nazareth of heauen beloued towne Flowre to a flowre he fitly doth retire For he is a flower and in a flower he bred And from a thorne now to a flowre he fled And well deserud this flower his fruit to view Where hee inuested was in mortall weede Where first vnto a tender bud he grew In virgin branch vnstaind with mortall seede Young flower with flowers in flower well may he be Ripe fruit he must with thornes hang on a tree Christes bloody sweat FAt soile full spring sweete oliue grape of blisse That yeelds that streams that powers that dost distil Vntild vndrawne vnstampt vntoucht of presse Deare fruit cleare brookes faire oile sweete wine at will Thus Christ vnforst preuents in sheeding blood The whips the thornes the naile the speare and roode He Pelicans he Phenix fate doth proue Whom flames consume when streames enforce to die How burneth bloud how bleedeth burning loue Can one in flame and streame both bath and frie How would he ioine a Phenix fiery paines In fainting Pelicans still bleeding vaines Christs fleeping friends WHen Christ with care pangs of death opprest From frighted flesh a bloody sweate did raine And full of feare without repose or rest In agony did watch and pray in vaine Three sundrie times he his disciples findes With heauie eies but farre more heauie mindes With milde rebuke he warned them to wake Yet sleepe did still their drousie sences hold As when the sunne the brightest shew doth make In darkest shrouds the night birds them infolde His foes did watch to worke their cruell spight His drousie friends slept in his hardest night As Ionas sayled once from Ioppaes shoare A boystrous tempest in the aire did broile The waues did rage the thundring heauens did roare The stones the rockes the lightnings threatned spoile The shippe was billowes game and chaunces pray Yet carelesse Ionas mute and slumbring lay So now though Iudas like a blustring gust Do stirre the furious sea of Iewish ire Though storming troopes in quarrels most vniust Against the barke of all our blisse conspire Yet these disciples sleeping lie secure As though their wonted calmes did still endure Ionas once his heauie limmes to rest Did shrowd himselfe in iuy pleasant shade But lo while him a heauy sleepe opprest His shadowy bowre to withered stalke did fade A cankered worme did gnaw the root away And brought the glorious branches to decay O gracious plant O tree of heauenly spring The paragon for lease for fruit and flower How sweete a shadow did thy branches bring To shrowd these soules that chose thee for their bower But now while they with Ionas fall asleepe To spoile their plant an enuious worme doth creepe Awake you slumbring wights lift vp your eies Marke Iudas how to teare your roote he striues Alas the glory of your arbor dies Arise and guard the comfort of your liues No Ionas iuy no Zacheus tree Were to the world so great a losse as he The virgin Mary to Christ on the Crosse. WHat mist hath dimd that glorious face what seas of griefemy sun doth tosse The golden raies of heauenly grace lies now ecclipsed on the crosse Iesus my loue my sonne my God behold thy mother washt in teares Thy bloody wounds be made a rod to chasten these my latter yeares You cruel Iewes come worke your ire vpon this worthlesse flesh of mine And kindle not eternall fire by wounding him which is diuine Thou messenger that didst impart his first discent into my womb Come helpe me now to cleaue my heart that there I may my sonne intombs You Angels all that present were to shew his birth with harmony Why are you now not ready here to make a mourning symphony The cause I know you waile alone and shed your teares in secresie Lest I should moued be to mone by force of heauie company But waile my soule thy comfort aies my wofull wombe lament thy fruit My heart giueteares vnto my eies let sorrow string my heauy lute A holy Hymne PRaise O Sion praise thy Sauiour
Moeoniae OR CERTAINE excellent Poems and spirituall Hymnes Omitted in the last Impression of Peters Complaint being needefull thereunto to be annexed as being both Diuine and Wittie All composed by R. S. LONDON Printed by Valentine Sims for Iohn Busbie 1595. The Printer to the Gentlemen Readers Hauing beheld kind Gentlemen the numberlesse Iudges of not to be reckoned labours with what kind admiration you haue entertained the diuine Complaint of holie Peter and hauing in my hands certaine especiall Poems and diuine Meditations full as woorthie belonging to the same I thought it a charitable de ede to giue them life in your memories which els should die in an obscure sacrifice gently embrace them gentle censurers of gentle indeuors so shall you not be fantastike in diuersity of opinions nor contradict your resolues by denying your former iudgements but still bee your selues discreetely vertuous nor could I other wish but that the courteous reader of these labors not hauing already bought Peters Complaint would not for so small a mite of money loose so rich a treasure of heauenly wisdome as these two Treatises should minister vnto him the one so needefully depending on the other One thing amongst the rest I am to admonish thee of that having in this Treatise read Maries visitation the next that should follow is Christs natiuity but being afore printed in the ende of Peters Complaint we have heere of purpose omitted that thou shouldest not be abridged of that and the other like comfort which that other treatise profereth thee Yours kind Gentlemen in all his abilities I. B. The Virgine Maries conception OVR second Eue puts on her mortall shroude Erth breeds a heauen for Gods new dwelling place Now riseth vp Elias little cloude That growing shal distil the showre of grace Her being now begins who ere she end Shall bring our good that shall our ill amend Both Grace and Nature did their force vnite To make this babe the summe of all their best Our most her least our million but her mite Shee was at easiest rate worth all the rest What grace to men or Angels God did part Was all vnited in this infants heart Foure only wights bred without fault are namde And all the rest conceiued were in sinne Without both man and wife was Adam framde Of man but not of wife did Eue beginne Wife without touch of man Christs mother was Of man and wife this babe was borne in grace Her Natiuitie IOy in the rising of our Orient star That shal bring forth the Sunne that lent her light Ioy in the peace that shall conclude our war And soon rebate the edge of Sathans spight Load-starre of all inclosed in worldly waues The care and compasse that from ship-wracke saues The Patriarches and Prophets were the flowers Which Time by course of ages did distill And cal'd into his little cloud the showers Whose gratious drops the world with ioy shall fil Whose moisture suppleth euerie soule with grace And bringeth life to Adams dying race For God on earth which is the royall throne The chosen cloth to make his mortall weede The quarry to cut out our corner stone Soile ful of fruit yet free from mortall seede For heauenly flowre shee is the Iessa rod The childe of man the parent of a god Her Spousals WIfe did she liue yet virgin did she die Vntaught of man yet mother of a sonne To saue her selfe and childe from fatall lie To end the web wherof the thred was spon In mariage knots to Ioseph she was tide Vnwonted workes with wonted wiles to hide God lent his paradise to Iosephs care Wherein he was to plant the tree of life His sonne of Iosephs child the title bare Iust cause to make the mother Iosephs wife O blessed man betroth'd to such a spouse More bless'd to liue with such a child in house No carnall loue this sacred league procurde Al vaine delights were farre from their assent Though both themselues in wedlocke bands assurde Yet chaste by vow they seald their chaste intent Thus had the Virgins wiues and widowes crowne And by chast child-birth doubled their renowne The Virgins salutation SPell Eua backe and Aue shall you finde The first began the last reuerst our harmes An Angels Aue disinchants the charmes Death first by womans weaknes entred in In womans vertue life doth now begin O Virgins breast the heauens to thee incline In thee they ioy and soueraigne thee agnize Too meane their glorie is to match with thine Whose chaste receit God more then heauen did prize Haile fairest heauen that heauen and earth do blesse Where vertues starre Gods sunne of iustice is With hauty minde to godhead man aspirde And was by pride from place of pleasure chac'de With louing minde our manhood God desirde And vs by loue in greater pleasure plac'de Man labouring to ascend procurde our fall God yeelding to discend cut off our thrall The Visitation PRoclaimed Queene and mother of a God The light of earth the soueraigne of Saints With Pilgrim foote vp tiring hils she trod And heuenly stile with handmaids toile acquaints Her youth to age her selfe to sicke she lends Her heart to God to neighbours hand she bends A prince she is and mightier prince doth beare Yet pompe of princely traine she would not haue But doubtles heauenly Quires attendant were Her child from harme her selfe from harme to saue Word to the voice song to the tune she brings The voice her word the tune her dittie sings Eternall lights inclosed in her breast Shot out such piercing beames of burning loue That when her voice her cosens eares possest The force thereof did cause her babe to moue With secret signes the children greet each other But open praise each leaueth to his mother His circumcision THe head is launst to worke the bodies cure with angry salue it smarts to heal our woūd To faultlesse sonne from al offences pure The faulty vassals scourges do redound The Iudge is cast the guilty to acquite The sunne defac'd to lend the starre his light The vine of life distilleth drops of grace Our rocke giues issue to an heauenly spring Tears from the eies blood runnes from wounded place Which showers to heauen of ioy a haruest bring This sacred dew let angels gather vp Such sacred drops best fit their nectared cup. With weeping eies his mother rewd his smart If blood from him teares came from her as fast The knife that cut his flesh did pierce his heart The paine that Iesus set did Mary taste His life and hers hung by one fatall twist No blow that hit the sonne the mother mist. The Epiphanie TO blaze the rising of this glorious sunne A glittering starre appeareth in the east Whose sight to pilgrims toile three sages wun To seeke the light they long had in request And by this starre to nobler starre they pace Whose armes did their desired sinne imbrace Stall was the sky wherein those plannets shinde And want the cloud that