Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n die_v life_n see_v 16,095 5 3.5035 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A18410 An epicede or funerall song on the most disastrous death, of the high-borne prince of men, Henry Prince of Wales, &c. With the funeralls, and representation of the herse of the same high and mighty prince ... VVhich noble prince deceased at St. Iames, the sixt day of Nouember, 1612. and was most princely interred the seuenth day of December following, within the Abbey of Westminster, in the eighteenth yeere of his age. Chapman, George, 1559?-1634.; Hole, William, d. 1624, engraver. 1613 (1613) STC 4974; ESTC S107694 17,429 56

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Iawes doth vomit ever Quitture and Venome yet is empty neuer Then burnt her bloudshot eyes her Temples yet Were cold as Ice her Necke all drownd in swet Palenes spred all her breast her lifes heat stung The Minds Interpreter her scorched tongue Flow'd with blew poison frō her yawning Mouth Rhumes fell like spouts fild frō the stormy South Which being corrupt the hewe of Saffron tooke A feruent Vapor all her body shooke From whence her Vexed Spirits a noysome smell Expyr'd in fumes that lookt as blacke as Hell A ceaseles Torrent did her Nosthrils steepe Her witherd Entrailes tooke no rest No sleepe Her swoln throte ratl'd warmd with lifes last spark And in her salt jawes painfull Coughs did barke Her teeth were staind with Rust her sluttish hand Shee held out reeking like a New-quencht Brand Arm'd with crook'd Tallons like the horned Moone All Cheere all Ease all Hope with her was gone In her left hand a quenchles fire did glow And in her Right Palme freez'd Sithonian Snow The ancient Romanes did a Temple build To her as whome a Deitie they held So hyd and farre from cure of Man shee flyes In whose Life 's Power she mates the Deities When fell Rhamnusia saw this Monster nere Here steele Heart sharpning thus she spake to her Seest thou this Prince great Maid seed of Night Whose brows cast beams about thē like the Light Who joyes securely in all present State Nor dreams what Fortune is or future Fate At whome with fingers and with fixed eyes All Kingdomes Point and Looke and Sacrifice Could be content to giue him Temples rayse To his Expectance and Vnbounded Praise His Now-ripe Spirits and Valor doth despise Sicknesse and Sword that giue our Godheads Prise His worth contracts the worlds in his sole Hope Religion Vertue Conquest haue no scope But his Indowments At him at him flie More swift and timelesse more the Deitie His Sommer Winter with the jellid flakes His pure Life poyson sting out with thy Snakes This is a worke will Fame thy Maidenhead With this her speach and she together fledde Nor durst she more endure her dreadfull eyes Who stung with goads her roaring Lyons thyes And brandisht round about her Snak-curld head With her left hand the Torch it managed And now Heavens Smith kindl'd his Forge blew And throgh the round Pole thick the sparkls flew When great Prince Henrie the delight of fame Darkn'd the Pallace of his Fathers Name And hid his white lyms in his downie Bed Then Heaven wept falling Stars that summoned With soft and silent Motion sleepe to breath On his bright Temples th' Ominous forme of death Which now the cruel Goddes did permit That she might enter so her Mayden fit When the good Angell his kind Guardian Her withet'd foot saw neare this spring of Man He shrik't and said what what are thy rude ends Cannot in him alone all vertues friends Melted into his all-vpholding Neru's For whose Assistance euery Deity serues Mooue thee to proue thy Godhead blessing him With long long life whose light extinckt wil dim All heavenly graces all this moou'd her nought But on in his all our rujnes wrought She toucht the Thresholds and the thresholds shooke The dore-posts Palenes pierst with her faint look The dores brake open and the fatall Bed Rudely sh'aproacht thus her fell mouth said Henrie why tak'st thou thus thy rest secure Nought doubting what Fortune fates assure Thou neuer yet felt'st my red right hands maims That I co thee and fate to me proclaimes Thy fate stands jdle spinns no more thy thread Die thou must great Prince sigh not beare thy head In all things free even with necessity If sweet it be to liue t is sweet to dye This said shee shooke at him her Torch and cast A fire in him that all his breast embrac't Then darting through his heart a deadly cold And as much venome as his vaines could holdj Death Death O Death jnserting thrusting in Shut his faire eyes and op't our vglie sinne This seene resolu'd on by her selfe and fate Was there a sight so pale and desperate Euer before seene in a thrust-through State The poore Verginian miserable sayle A long-long-Night-turnd-Day that liu'd in Hell Neuer so portrayd where the Billowes stroue Blackt like so many Devils which should proue The damned Victor all their furies heighting Their Drum the thunder their Colours lightning Both souldiers in the battel one contēding To drown the waues in Noyse the other spēding His Hel-hot sulphurous flames to drink thē dry When heaven was lost when not a teare-wrackt eye Could tell in all that dead time if they were Sincking or sayling till a quickning cleere Gaue light to saue them by the ruth of Rocks At the Bermudas where the tearing shocks And all the Miseries before more felt Then here halfe told All All this did not melt Those desperate few still dying more in teares Then this Death all men to the Marrow weares All that are Men the rest those drudging Beasts That onely beare of Men the Coates and Crests And for their Slaue sick that can earne thē pence More mourne O Monsters thē for such a Prince Whose soules do ebbe flow still with their gain Whō nothing moues but pelf their own pain Let such great Heauen be onely borne to beare All that can follow this meere Massacre Lost is our poore Prince all his sad jndurers The busie Art of those that should be Curers The sacred vowes made by the zealous King His God-like Syre his often visiting Nor thy graue prayers and presence holy Man This Realme thrice Reverend Metropolitan That was the worthy Father to his soule Th'jnsulting Feuer could one fit controule Nor let me here forget on farre and neare And in his lifes loue Passing deepe and deare That doth his sacred Memorie adore Virtues true favtor his graue Chancellor Whose worth in all workes should a Place enioie Where his fit Fame her Trumpet shall jmploie Whose Cares and Prayers were euer vsde to ease His feu'rous Warre send him healthfull peace Yet sicke our Prince is still who though the steps Of bitter Death he saw bring in by heaps Clouds to his Luster and poore rest of light And felt his last Day suffering lasting Night His true-bred-braue soule shrunck yet at no part Downe kept he all sighs with his powers al-Hart Cler'd euen his dying browes and in an Eye Manly dissembling hid his Misery And all to spare the Royall heat so spent In his sad Father fearefull of th' event And now did Phoebus with his Twelfth Lampe show The world his haples light and in his Brow A Torch of Pitch stuck lighting halfe t'half skies When life 's last error prest the broken eyes Of this heart-breaking Prince his forc't look fled Fled was all Colour from his cheekes yet fed His spirit his sight with dying now he cast On his kind
King and Father on whome fast He fixt his fading beames and with his view A little did their empty Orbs renew His Mind saw him come frō the deeps of Death To whome he said O Author of my Breath Soule to my life and essence to my Soule Why grieue you so that should al griefe cōtroule Death's sweet to me that you are stil lifes creature I now haue finisht the great worke of Nature I see you pay a perfect Fathers debt And in a feastfull Peace your Empire kept If your true Sonnes last words haue any right In your most righteous Bosome doe not fright your hearkning kingdoms to your cariage now All yours in mee I here resigne to you My youth I pray to God with my last powres Substract from me may adde to you and yours Thus vanisht he thus swift thus instantly Ah now I see euen heauenly powres must dye Now shift the King and Queene from court to court but no way can shift off their cares resort That which we hate the more vve flie pursues that which we loue the more we seek eschewes Now weepes his Princely Brother Novv alas His Cynthian Sister our sole earthly Grace Like Hebes fount still ouerflowes her bounds And in her colde lips stick astonisht sounds Sh'oppresseth her sweet kinde In her soft brest Care can no vent finde it is so comprest And see hovv the Promethean Liuer growes As vulture Griefe deuoures it see fresh showes Reuiue woes sence and multiply her soule And worthely for vvho would teares controle On such a springing ground T is dearely fit To pay all tribute Thought can poure on it For vvhy vvere Funerals first vs'd but for these Presag'd and cast in their Natiuities The streames were checkt a while so Torrents staid Enrage the more but are left free allaid Now our grim waues march altogether Now Our blacke seas runne so high they ouerflow the clouds they nourish now the gloomy herse Puts out the Sunne Reuiue reuiue dead vierse death hath slain death there ther the person lies VVhose death should buy out all mortalities But let the world be now a heape of death Lifes ioy lyes dead in him and challengeth No lesse a reason If all motion stoode Benumb'd and stupified with his frozen blood And like a Tombe-stone fixt lay all the seas There were fit pillers for our Hercules To bound the world with Men had better dye Then out-liue free times slaues to Policie On on sad Traine as from a crannid rocke Bee-swarmes rob'd of their honey ceasles flock Mourne mourne dissected now his cold lims lie Ah knit so late vvith flame and Maiestie where 's now his gracious smile his sparkling eie His Iudgement Valour Magnanimitie O God what doth not one short hour snatch vp Of all mans glosse still ouer-flowes the cup Of his burst cares put with no nerues together And lighter then the shadow of a feather On make earth pomp as frequent as ye can 'T will still leaue black the fairest flower of man Yee vvell may lay all cost on miserie T is all can boast the proud'st humanitie If yong Marcellus had to grace his fall Sixe hundred Herses at his Funerall Sylla sixe thousand let Prince Henry haue Sixe Millions bring him to his greedy graue And now the States of earth thus mourn below Behold in Heauen Loue with his broken Bow his quiuer downwards turn'd his brands put out Hanging his wings with sighes all black about Nor lesse our losse his Mothers heart infests Her melting palmes beating her snowy brests As much confus'd as when the Calidon Bore The thigh of her diuine Adonis tore Her vowes all vaine resolu'd to blesse his yeeres VVith Issue Royall and exempt from freres Who now dyed fruitlesse and preuented then The blest of women of the best of men Mourne all ye Arts ye are not of the earth Fall fall with him rise with his second birth Lastly with gifts enrich the sable Phane And odorous lights eternally maintaine Sing Priests O sing now his eternall rest His light eternall and his soules free brest As ioyes eternall so of those the best And this short verse be on his Tomb imprest EPITAPHIVM SO flits ahlas an euerlasting Riuer As our losse in him past will last for euer The golden Age Star-like shot through our Skye Aim'd at his pompe renew'd and stucke in 's eye And like the sacred knot together put Since no man could dissolue him he was cut Aliud EPITAPH VVHom all the vaste frame of the fixed Earth Shrunck vnder now a weake Herse stands beneath His Fate he past in fact in hope his Birth His youth in good life and in spirit his death Aliud EPITAPH BLest be his great Begetter blest the Wombe That gaue him birth though much too neare his Tombe In them was hee and they in him were blest What their most great powers gaue him was his least His Person grac't the Earth and of the Skies His blessed Spirit the praise is and the prise FINIS THE FVNERALS OF THE HIGH AND MIGHTY PRINCE HENRY Prince of Wales Duke of Cornewaile and Rothsay Count Palatine of Chester Earle of Carick and late KNIGHT of the most Noble Order of the GARTER Which Noble Prince deceased at St. Iames the sixt day of Nouember 1612. and was most Princely interred the seuenth day of December following within the Abbey of Westminster in the Eighteenth yeere of his AGE LONDON Printed by T. S. for Iohn Budg●e and are to be sould at his shop at the great south dore of P●ules and at Brittanes Bursse 1613. THE FVNERALS OF THE HIGH AND MIGHTIE PRINCE HENRY Prince of VVales Duke of Cornewaile and Rothsay Count Palatine of Chester Earle of Carick and late Knight of the most Noble Order of the GARTER VVhich Noble Prince deceased at Saint IAMES the 6. day of Nouember 1612. and was most Princely interred the 7. of December following within the Abbey of Westminster in the Eighteenth yeere of his AGE THe body of the said PRINCE being bowelled enbalmed and closed vp in Lead there were foure Chambers hung with blackes viz. the Gaurd chamber and the Presence with blacke Cloth the Priuy Chamber with finer Cloth and that which was his Highnes Bed-chamber with blacke Veluet in the middest whereof was set vp a Canopy of blacke Veluet valanced and fringed vnder which vpon Tressels the Coffin with the body of the PRINCE was placed couered with a large pall of blacke Veluet and adorned with Scuchions of his Armes Vpon the head of which Coffin was layde a Cushion of blacke Veluet and his Highnesse Cap and Coronet set thereon as also his Robes of estate Sword and Rod of Gould and so it remayned being daily and nightly watched vntill two or three dayes before his Highnesse Funerals In which time euery day both Morning and Euening Prayers were said in his Presence or Priuy Chamber by his Chaplaines and his Gentlemen and chiefe Officers attendant thereat Thursday before the
Armes viz. The Spurres by Windsor The Gauntlets by Somerset The Helme and Crest by Richmond The Targe by Yorke The Sword by Norroy King of Armes The Coat by Clarencieux King of Armes Three Gentlemen Vshers to the Prince bearing their wands The Corps of the Prince lying in an open Chariot with the Princes representation thereon inuested with his Robes of estate of Purple Veluet furred with Ermines his Highnesse Cap and Coronet on his head and his Rod of Gould in his hand and at his feet within the said Chariot sat Sir Dauid Murrey the Master of his Wardrobe The Chariot was couered with blacke Veluet set with Plumes of blacke feathers and drawne by sixe Horses couered and Armed with Scuchions hauing their Cheiffrons and Plumes A Canopy of blacke Veluet borne ouer the representation by sixe Baronets Tenne Bannerols borne about the body by ten Baronets Sir Moyle Finch Sir Thomas Mounson Sir Iohn Wentworth Sir Henry Sauile Sir Thomas Brewdnell Sir Anthony Cope Sir George Gresley Sir Robert Cotten Sir Lewis Tresham Sir Phillip Tiruit Foure Assistants to the Corps that bore vp the corners of the Pall. viz. 1 The Lord Zouch 2 The Lord Abergaueny 3 The Lord Burghley 4 The Lord Walden William Seger Garter Principall King of Armes betweene the Gentleman-Vsher of Prince Charles and the Gentleman-Vsher of the Prince Palatine Prince CHARLES chiefe Mourner supported by the Lord Priuy-Seale and the Duke of Lenox His Highnesse Traine was borne by the Lord Dawbney Brother to the Duke of Lenox Then followed the Prince Elector FREDERICK Count Palatine of the Rhein His Highnesse Traine was borne by Mounsieur Shamburgh Twelue Earles Assistants to the chiefe Mourner viz. Earle of Nottingham Earle of Shrewsbury Earle of Rutland Earle of Southampton Earle of Hartford Earle of Dorset Earle of Suffolke Earle of Worcester Earle of Sussex Earle of Pembroke Earle of Essex Earle of Salisburie Earles strangers attendants on Count Palatine Count VVigensten Count Lewis de Nassau Count Leuingsten Count Hodenlo Count Ringraue Count Erback Count Nassaw Scarburg Count Le Hanow Iunior Count Isinbersh Page Count ●olmes Page Count Zerottin Page The Horse of Estate led by Sir Robert Dowglas Maister of the Princes Horse The Palzgreaues Priuy-Counsellors viz. The Count of Solmes Mounsieur Shouburgh Mounsieur de Pleshau Mounsieur Helmestedt Mouns Shouburgh Iunior Mouns Landshat Officers and Groomes of Prince Henries stable The Guard The Knight Marshall and twenty seruants that kept order in the proceeding Diuers Knights and Gentlemen the Kings seruants that came in voluntary in blacks So that the whole number amounted to 2000. or thereabout FINIS Expostulatio à perturbatione Potentia expers sapientiae quo maior est eo perniciosior sapientia procul à potentia manca videtur Plat. Chymaera a monster hauing his head and brest like a Lyon his belly like a Gote and taile like a Dragon To Death The Prayer of the King in the Princes sicknes Simil. Apodesis Reditio ad Principem Those that came to the Princes seruice seem'd compared with the places they liu'd in before to rise from death to the fields of life intending the best part of yong and noble Gentlemen The parting of the Princes Seruants The Princes house an Olimpus where all contention of vertues were practised Non Homeri Aurea Restis Saint Iames his house Richmond The Prince not to be wrought on by flattery His knowledge and wisdome Any man is capable of his own fit course and office in any thing Apostrophe Men grow so vgly by trusting flattery with their informations that when they see themselues truely by casting their eyes inward they cast themselues away with their owne lothing * Simil. Simil. Musae lachrimae The cause and manner of the Princes death Rhamnusia Goddesse of reuenge and taken for Fortune in enuy of our Prince excited Feuer against him The Feuer the Prince died on by Prosopopeia described by her effects circumstances The Fever the Prince dyed off is observ'd by our Moderne Phisitions to bee begun in Hungarie Out of the property of the Hare that never shuts her eyes sleeping Marmaricae Leunes of Marmarica a Region in Affrica where the fiercest Lyons are bred with which Feuer is supposd to bee drawn for their excesse of heat violence part of the effects of this Feuer The properties of the Feuer in these effects Rhamnusi● excitatiō of feuer Rham durst no lōger indure her beeing stirred into furie The starry Euening describ'd by Vulcans setting to worke at that time The Night being ever chiefesly consecrate to the Works of the Gods and out of this Deities fires the Starres are supposd to flye as sparkles of them The good Angell of the Prince to the Fever as shee approache Feuer to the prince who is thougght by a friend of mine to speake too mildly not being satis compos mētis Portice in this Her counsell or perswasiō shewing onlie how the Prince was perswaded resolu'd in his deadlyest sufferāce of her which shee is made to speake in spight of her selfe since he at her worst was so sacredly resolute Descriptiō of the tempest that cast Sir Th. Ga●es on the Bermudas the state of his Ship and Men to this Kingdomes Plight applyed in the Princes death The Archbishop of Cantebury passing pyous in care of the Prince S. Ed Phillips Master of the Rols and the Princes Chancelor a chiefe sorrower for hlm The prince heroical his bearing his sicknes at the Kings comming to see him careful not to discomfort him The Twelfth day after his beginning to bee sicke his sicknes was hold incurable The prince dying to the King The sorrowes and bemones of the King Queene Prince and his most Princely Sister for the Princes death The funerall described
her neere Nuptials Could not O could not the Almighty ruth Of all these force thee to forbeare the youth Of our Incomparable Prince of Men whose Age had made thy Iron Forcke his Pen T'eternise what it now doth murder meerely And shal haue from my soule my curses yerely Tyrant what knew'st thou but the barbarous wound Thou gau'st the son the Father might cōfound Both liu'd so mixtly and were ioyntly One Spirit to spirit cleft The Humor bred In one heart straight was with the other fed The bloud of one the others heart did fire The heart and humour were the Sonne Sire The heart yet void of humors slender'st part May easier liue then humour without heart The Riuer needes the helpfull fountaine euer More then the Fountaine the supplyed Riuer As th'Iron then when it hath once put on The Magnets qualitie to the vertuous Stone Is euer drawne and not the stone to it So may the heauens the sonnes Fate not admit To draw the Fathers till a hundred yeeres Haue drown'd that Issue to him in our teares Blest yet and sacred shall thy memory be O-nothing-lesse-then-mortall Deitie Thy Graces like the Sunne to all men giuing Fatall to thee in death but kill me liuing Now as inuerted like th' Antipodes The world in all things of desert to please Is falne on vs with thee thy ruines lye On our burst bosomes as if from the skye The Day-star greater then the world were driuen Suncke to the Earth and left a hole in Heauen throgh which a secōd deluge now poures down On our poore Earth in which are ouer-flowne The seeds of all the sacred Vertues set In his Spring-Court where all the prime spirits met Of all our Kingdomes as if from the death That in men liuing basenes and rapine sheath VVhere they before liu'd they vnwares were come Into a free and fresh Elisium Casting regenerate and refined eyes On him that rais'd them from their graues of vice Digg'd in their old grounds to spring fresh on those That his diuine Ideas did propose First to himselfe then would forme in them VVho did not thirst to plant his sonne neer him as neer the Thames their houses what one worth VVas there in all our world that set not forth All his deserts to Pilgrime to his fauors VVith all deuotion offering all his labors And how the wilde Bore Barbarisme now will roote these Quick-sets vp what hearb shall grow that is not sown in his inhumane tracts No thought of good shall spring but many acts Will crop or blast or blow it vp and see How left to this the mournfull Familie Muffled in black clouds full of teares are driuen With stormes about the relickes of this Heauen Retiring from the world like Corses herst Home to their graues a hundred waies disperst O that this court-schoole this Olimpus meerly VVhere two-fold Man was practisde should so early Dissolue the celebration purpos'd there Of all Heroique parts when farre and neere All were resolu'd t' admire None to contend VVhen in the place of all one wretched end VVill take vp all endeauours Harpye Gaine Pandare to Gote Ambition goulden Chaine To true mans freedome not from heau'n let fal To draw men vp But shot from Hell to hale All men as bondslaues to his Turckish den For Toades and Adders far more fit then men His house had well his surname from a Saint All things so sacred did so liuely paint Their pious figures in it And as well His other house did in his Name fore-tell what it should harbour a rich world of parts Bonfire-like kindling the still-feasted Arts which now on bridles bite and puft Contempt Spurres to Despaire from all fit foode exempt O what a frame of Good in all hopes rais'd Came tumbling downe with him as when was seisde By Grecian furie famous Ilion VVhose fall still rings out his Confusion VVhat Triumphs scatterd at his feete lye smoking Banquets that will not downe their cherers choking Fields fought and hidden now with future slaughter Furies sit frowning where late sat sweet laughter The actiue lying maim'd the healthfull crasde All round about his Herse And how amaz'd The change of things stands how astonisht ioy VVonders he euer was yet euery Toy Quits this graue losse Rainbowes no sooner taint Thinne dewye vapors which oppos'd beames paint Round in an instant at which children stare And slight the Sunne that makes them circular And so disparent then mere gawds peirce men Slighting the graue like fooles and children So courtly nere plagues sooth and stupefie And vvith such paine men leaue selfe flatterie Of vvhich to see him free who stood no lesse Then a full siege of such who can expresse His most direct infusion from aboue Farre from the humorous seede of mortal loue He knew that Iustice simply vsd vvas best Made princes most secure most lou'd most blest No Artezan No Scholler could pretend No Statesman No Diuine for his owne end Any thing to him but he vvould descend The depth of any right belong'd to it Where they could merit or himselfe should quit He would not trust with what himselfe concern'd Any in any kinde but euer learn'd The grounds of what he built on Nothing lies In mans fit course that his own knowledge flies Eyther direct or circumstantiall O what are Princes then that neuer call Their actions to account but flatterers trust To make their triall if vniust or iust Flatterers are houshold theeues traitors by law that rob kings honors their soules-bloud draw Diseases that keep nourishment from their food And as to know himselfe is mans chiefe good So that vvhich intercepts that supreame skill which Flattery is is the supreamest ill VVhose lookes will breede the Basilisk in kings eyes That by reflexion of his sight dyes And as a Nurse lab'ring a vvayward Childe Day and night watching it like an offspring wilde Talkes infinitely idly to it still Sings with a standing throate to worse from ill Lord-blesses it beares with his pewks and cryes And to giue it a long lifes miseries Sweetens his food rocks kisses sings againe Plyes it with rattles and all obiects vaine So Flatterers with as seruile childish things Obserue sooth the waiward moods of kings So kings that flatterers loue had neede to haue as nurse-like councellors contemn the graue Themselues as wayward and as noisome too Full as vntuneable in all they doe As poore sicke Infants euer breeding Teeth In all their humours that be worse then Death How wise then was our Prince that hated these and wold with nought but truth his humor plese Nor would hee giue a place but where hee saw One that could vse it and become a Law Both to his fortunes and his Princes Honor. Who wold giue fortune noght she took vpon her Not giue but to desert nor take a chance That might not iustly his vvisht ends aduance His