Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n life_n live_v love_n 9,426 5 5.6923 4 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
A03756 Newe sonets, and pretie pamphlets. Written by Thomas Howell gentelman Howell, Thomas, fl. 1568-1581. 1570 (1570) STC 13876; ESTC S118216 26,129 62

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

woes and care Finis A pithy Precept ¶ When youth hath ronne his race Olde age doth steppe in place In youth therfore beware Least age be clad with care Finis Another ¶ Who wanteth force against his foes to fight Shall seldom be deuoyde of painfull plight Finis The expressing of his vnluckie happes diuersly chaunced LYke as the shippe of force doth driue Which way the winde shall him constraine So out of natiue soyle I liue As destnie doth me leade and traine Now here now there now vp now downe As Fortune listes to smile or frowne And as the horse the rider rides Of force must take such way as he With pricking spours doth perse his 〈◊〉 Shall thinke most first for him to be So I of force must yelde to bide Suche hope as fate will me prouide As I by proofe doo playnly see Whiche longe haue sought in hope to finde Some place to ease my miserie With toyle I toste and troubled minde By seas by lande in many a coaste In daunger ofte like to be loaste I wish and wante what should I say I seeke and finde nothing at all I toyle and still in great decay I fayne woulde rise yet still do fall With sondrie cares I am oprest But Pen be still and take thy rest Finis His complaint to the God Cupide because he vvith his Darts perseth him alone OCupid Uenus darlynge deare Whose powre no mortall might may bide If once in hande thy bow thou beare And flaminge forckers by thy side Why dost thou this lie still and sleape When I to thee doo wayle and weepe Wheare is become thy wonted powre Art thou vanquisht and put to flight Or els art thou disposde to lowre On me alone most wofull wight Say no say no Oh I thee pray And turne the harte breedes mine anoy In whiche time ●arbes and trées that Winters winde did weare Enforce them selues to bud and growe some pleasant fruicte to beare The litle Byrde that reason wants doth then with chirping cheare From twig to twig and bushe to bushe greet oft his lotted feare The flotinge Fish in sturdie streames that trauels day and night Doth eke vnto their fancied feares repeare with all their might The weake and wreatched wormes forgetteth not this day Whom wée may finde aboute this time faste coplide by the way As nature hath decreede all these by course of kinde In thinges that reasons rule doth want right so hath man asingde For witnesse of the same in this apoin●ted time That euery man and woman eke shall haue a Ualentine In signe of that hir force whiche no wight can subdew Lo this the only cause I say that all thinges doth renew Lo this the cause also why Fortunes lots be had Whose hoped hap and haplesse hope doth make both wo and glad But I aboue the reast may Fortune highly prayse Who hath geuen me the fearest Dame that liues in these our daies Suche one I say whom Nature hath with Uertue so I deckte That none there is or shall haue powre hir name once to deteckte Euen suche a one whom I as Fortune hath asignde Will alwaies be at hir commaunds till death shall do his kinde Finis To a proude Dame. THe fem so fonde of vnaduised brayne That mountes in seate by pride of blinded harte No prayse may get but shewes a wisdom vaine Lo passe degrée in seate by no desart Be thou content to sit on squared stoole Least séeming wise thou prooue the fonder foole It might been sayd by prudent voyce of grace Presuming Dame retire from stately place Finis The lamentable ende of Iulia Pompeyes vvife SOre plungde in piteous paines and wofull smarte Bespred with tr●ckling teares on death like face Downe trils the droppes on cheekes and sighes from harte To heare and see hir hus bandes greeuous case Thus goes the spouse O wofull Julia Besprent with bloud when Pompeis cote she saw Downe deap she faules in lamentable sounde Of sence bereft so great was Julis straine The childe conceiued within with deadly wounde Untimely fruite came forth with proching paine When all was doone for loue hir life she lost For Pompeyes sake she yéelded vp hir gost So dead she lay bewaylde with many teares A Matron wise a famous ornament O Cesar had liued full cherefull yeares If thou with Pompey couldst haue ben content But Ciuell warres hath wrought this fatall lawe To Pompeye death and death to Julia. Ye Matrones graue and worthy spoused mates Ye mayden Nymphes whiche liue in larger partes O reade and see vewe not and iudge of states And folow eke such faithfulnesse of harts Such liuely loue embrace saith vertue graue As Julie true for mate hir life she gaue Finis To his frovvarde friende THis is not solom Sophocles In learned trade which treads This is not hardie Hercules That conquerd Hydras heads Feare not his bousteous vantinge worde Though he woulde sée me to braule He will aduise his angrie sworde On whom his strokes doo fall Wordes be but winde to purge his heate His stomacke to abate Wherein he shewes his manly feate When most he seemes to prate Time may a swage these choloricke fomes Where Hercles is so bolde Thinke not good Hercles all are momes When all thy Cardes be tolde Wée know the Wood by sight of trees Wee know the fier is hot Wee know your power and wise decrees Though fooles you call our lot Farewell good hardie Hercules As hardie as thou arte Thou maiest be vext with litle Bees Though greater be thy harte Finis A friendly salutation to his beloued THese lines vew dearest friende Wherein I close my harte Beholde therein my great good will Prouokte by iust desarte This simple slender shew Accept your harte to mooue For this my harte and golden will Restore your golden loue For if greate riches coulde Encopled mates the more I haue both seen and liue as now Wherin I might haue store But naught I care the welth Nor yet the gorgeous gaine My handes and hart I only geue Thee only to obtaine You only woulde I craue Before all other wight Before the fayrest proferde Nimphes You most do me delight Whose choyse is now at will To take or els refuse And if it lay so much in me You only woulde I chuse Accept my proferde loue As trust by truth may binde If it thee please I am thine owne O my approued friende In worthy state to stay I will forsake thee neuer My harte my ioy my only care I will thée loue for euer Accepte and vewe these lines And thinke my hart you see Beholding eke this menssenger Somtimes consider mee Suppose I present were To talke in friendly parte But though my body absent be Yet bounde you haue my parte Finis Complaint of ingratitude MY Pen in piteous part Cannot in halfe descrie The inwarde woes in moning hart That gripes me secretlie If outwarde face coulde mone The woes of inwarde shape The senslesse trées and Flintie stone
forme so wyse and sage He semde a sample sure to be And Lantarne to the yonger age And to conclude he passed those That thought they made a goodly glose ¶ This brute as youth will haue a spurte When lusty blood be gyns to broyle Dyd flee from fredom to the courte Where Uenus only kepes the coyle Thus reason banisht quite a waye He warneth will to beare the swaye Then fancy forced by and by The wandringe eyes as skowtes to bee In secret sorte for to espie Or publykely to marke and see If any Lady weare in sight That might deserue this worthie knyght ¶ But sone alas they haue espyde The marke wheareat they shot so longe Faire Procris bewtie is descryde She blazde so bright her mates amonge Lo Sephalus doth nowe be gynne His Ladyes fauor fyrst to wynne ¶ ●ewe daies were past lesse yeares were spēt Tyll flattringe Fortune strake the stroke To loue eche other both were bent Loue did them both so sore prouoke What will you more if Fortune saye Yt shal be thus saye you not naye ¶ Now nothinge greeued Sephalus But for to be a brydged fro His Ladies sight most gloryus What greater greef might any grow Fayre Procris Parents were so hard That she as Byrde in Cage was barde ¶ But Sephalus by fyne deuyse Of wytty hed and wary wyt Did put in practyse to intyse His Ladie thence what hap shoulde hit By letter then he did conclude That she her kepers should delude ¶ And to a Forest bye a pace Which he in letter namd also Where here he did meane to ●y●● her 〈◊〉 ▪ If that it woulde her pleace to goe The letters red shee sought his will. In euery poynte for to fulfyll ¶ And to the apoynted place shee hide Expectinge still her Sephalus She gaue the flippe vnto her gyde Oh tracte of tyme most tedyus Oh Procris sure thine is the wronge That Sephalus a bydes so longe ¶ But neuer is the same to longe The Prouerbe sayth that comes at last She spyde him in the ende amonge A sort of trees not makyng hast His Boowe was bent his arowe fast ▪ In Nut to shoote alredy plast ¶ She would not call for feare of foes Nor yet to hym she woulde repayre Lest that she shoulde the Deere vnroes That Sephalus had spyde at layre She geues him leaue to range his fill Full loth she is his sporte to spill ¶ The tyme did passe no game was founde And Sephalus was welnere tyrde Fayre Procris absence did hym wounde For she was all that he desyrde Hee stoode not still he trugde about Lose if he might fynde her out ¶ Lo fortune brought him nere the place Where Procris still alas did stande She blusshed yet to she we her face She made no sygne but with her hand She tooke the bowes and them did shake A fearde to great a noyse to make ¶ But Sephalus when he espyde The leaues to wagge and bowes to shake ▪ He thought some beast did there him hyde And at hys commynge did awake Wherfore to see he thought it best If he might fynde him takinge rest ¶ And as he peeped here and theare He spyde a thinge of coler darke And indginge it an ouglie Beare Dyschardgde hys bowe and hit the marke Through sturdy stroke and deadly wound He nayled Procris to the grownde ¶ Alas vnwares did Sephalus His Ladie kill and murder thus Oh greeff of greefs most dolorous Oh hap of Happs most pyt●ous Deare Ladies steppe your foote to myne To mourne with me your hartes inclyne ¶ When Sephalus his Precris founde Imbrude with blood on euery side The arowe stickinge in the wounde That bleedinge sore did gape full wyde He curst the gods that skies possest The systers three and all the rest ¶ And fayntly spake no Ladie no You shall not vanishe hence a lone My ghoste alas your frendly foo Shall wayte your precyous soule vpon And wyth that worde to ende his lyfe He ●●ue him selfe with bloody knyfe ¶ Lo Lordynges here by take a vewe And Ladies marke what I shall saye Eche one to lyfe must say adue And to the earthe her owne repaye There is no choyse we see it so When death doth call we needs must go Finis A freindly admonishment to 〈◊〉 freinde to choose a wife HEre liue in loue for thy behoue let reason rule thy choyce so shalt thou weare Ulisses eare to shun the Syrens voyce Beware and care before thou stare on womens painted eyes like Crocodiles with poysoned smiles they will thee cleane disguise If thou to catche intendst a match to liue in mariage sporte first marke and heare what fame she beare amonge the wiser sorte For market men can tell thee then how doth the market go if well thou heare then draw thee neare and be in sute not ●●o In womens mindes are diuers winds which stur their Aspin funge to prate and chat they know not what by that much strife is sprong But take thou heede and euer dreede to matche with carters kinde for carters seede is base of breede whose maners ill wee finde They will deuise both tales and lies to bring thy house to square no honest man if that she can with hir shall credit beare Such rusticke kinde such faults will finde whē they desarue the blame and wil be proude and scould full loude not passyng for hir fame The seruants good from meate and foode she will debar with paine and yet complaine as though thy gaine by them were spent in vaine To blinde thine eyes she will haue spies to bringe thee tales and lies as though for thrift good huswiues shift she doth for thee deuise When she in deede her selfe will feede and take her priuate gaine and make the weare kyng Midas eare as though she tooke the paine But in hir Wyne she will diuine and blab the secretminde to such hir mates as chats and prates according to hir kinde By this I say a foole in play by hir thou shalt be made and all the towne will call thee clowne which ridest on such a Jade Agayne a mayde of honest trade if thou wilt seeke to haue though riches want yet like the Ant by trauell will she saue An still enough thy man at plough and all thy seruants els shall of h●r meate both drinke and eate no toyes nor lies she tels In quiet rest she maketh nest to lodge thy weary bones 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 keepe in quiet sleepe from all deepe sights and grones Amonge hir maydes with honest trades she puts hir hande in vse and alwaies dreades hir husbands deedes with scoldyng to abuse Besides all this thou shald not misse but haue an honest fame for such a wife is chaste of life and like Ulisses dame He is a cokes and worthy strokes whose wife the Breeches beare a Cuckolds hoode to do him good deserueth he to weare Take heede therfore and keepe in store this short admonishment Least had I wist alas I mist then doest
thyrst for goods so thrall The bolder men foolehard ye call The fearefull wights are dastards all Then ill eschew embrace thinges cleane Howell welfare thy golden meane Finis He lamenteth the vngratefull person for inconstancie ALas I vnhappie and most wofull wight Whom Fortune so déeply hath now in despight That tonge cannot tell ne Pen haue powre to wright My pittifull playnt and heauie pining plight How shall I to case me vnborden my brest Of these double dolours that breedes mine vnrest When speeche wanteth powre when Pen is vnprest And witte wanteth conning thervnto adrest This great restlesse rage in my minde doth renew And where I fayne helpe woulde finde harme doth ensew But yet was I neuer founde false or vntrew Which causeth me much more my dolors to rew She that I did honour aboue all the rest To whom I reserued the harte in my brest Hath me quite forsaken and broke hir behest And another taken to loue and like best And séemeth now sleightly to beare me in hande That I was cause only of breatche of hir bande But truth if me tried full searched and scande Then trespas in me should she non vnderstande Wherfore to the Spider I may her compare That cruelly killeth what 's caught in hir snare For she by like tyranie nothing doth spare Most spitefully to spoyle thus my carcas with care Finis The shevving of his good Hart. THe Gloue for gadge is rightly geuen where thinges concluded 〈◊〉 Wherefore I do accompte therof more then of golde or fee Of whiche if I were storde like Cresus in his time I vow to thée if thou so woulde it should be wholy thine Where to if I with Salomon in wisdome might compare And bewtie had like Absolon whose matche is very rare Like eloquence to Cicero in power Caesars peare Yet would I be as now I stande your faithfull seruant deare And thus I rest in Hauen hope whose bosome doth imbrace Your gloue as you till trackte of time may purchase further grace Finis The declaration of the vnstablenesse of fickle Fortune WHere Fortune fauoureth not what labour may preuaile Whom frowning fate will needes thrust downe what shall he win to waile With patience to yeelde for such Ideeme most best And cast their cares and griefes on him that rewleth fates behest Wee see by perfit proofe that none so Princely goes But that by will of God the hiest out of this worlde he floes Sith then suche fickle force in mortall might wee finde Let nothing that shall hap thée heare to much torment thy minde For all to liue a like of this assured bee Was neuer yet nor shal be seene but cache in his degree As like the Potters pottes be made to sundrie vse So some men serue and some are serude here néedes no fine e●scuse The labouring man to toyle that spares ne night nor day Gets skarce to feede his famely when some howrde heapes that play Yet doth he not dispayre nor yet from labours flie But liues contente when worldlinges make of wealth their miscrie Who gripte with greater greif if Fortune list to lowre Then suche as earst did feede at fill vpon hir fruitfulst flowre Whiche change full oft hath chaunst through hir vnconstantnesse And whom she lately laught vpon throwne downe remedilesse Was Alexander greate that many daungers past For all his mightie conquestes wonne not poysned dead at last A Kynges sonne eke I finde for Fathers tirannie Constrainde to worke in Smithes Fordge by harde necessitie Suche is the fading force of Fortunes fickle flower Whose fruitfulst fruite both ripes rots in lesse space then one hower Such is hir tickle trust suche are hir slipper steppes That what she seemes to sowe in ioye with sorow oft she reapes Attribute all to him that ruleth fate therefore To him I meane whiche lefte the riche and fed the pinyng poore For thus do I intende whilse vit all breath shall last Though earst I practisde many meanes which proofe hath tride in wast Finis Themislocles ansvver concerninge his Daughter to be maried THemislocles by whose great skill th' Athenians longe were led His only Daughter did bestow on meane yonge man to wed Whiche when his freindes did wonder sore these wordes he did expresse My daughter deare hath wonne ꝙ he more wealth then ye do gesse Whom I accompt muche better plaste when truth I truely scan Upon a man that money wants then money wanting man. Finis The Lamentation of the vvofull man hauinge for entire Loue no goodvvyll THe time that I began to enter first to life Woulde God the sisters three had cut the threade with fatale knife Wolde God that death had béen with arowes readie bente To pearce the wofull harte of mine whiche now with care is spente Then should I not at all haue folowed fancies lewre Whose outwarde showe of suger sweet is mirt with poyson sowre As now I am constrainde by destnie sure I thinke That still doth finde but bitter tast yet cannot choose but drinke Thus I God knowes full oft a heauie harte do beare ●hen out wardly I seeme to shew a mery carelesse cheare Desembling eke my case in hope of happier day But aye from time to time I finde nought els but my decay I pine in secret flanies like ware consumde with fyre I wishe but alwaies wante my will lo this mine only hier What Paps did geue hir foode that nought regardes my wo What Tiger fearce alas coulde hate the harte that loued hir so Great crueltie it is to slay the yéelding wight That mercy stil doth sue to haue and vseth none other fight But sith my haplesse hap alas must néedes be so With speede come death to ende my life and ridde me of this wo. Finis The Louer declares his constant harte neuer to forge the thinge that vvas decreed SHall any wight preuayle to bringe to passe by powre Away to mooue or rule our loue that faith hath firt tindewre Shall either force of friendes or frowarde frownyng foes Cause vs forgoe our hoped ioyes bought with so many woes No no for my parte here a vowe to thee I make That first eache torment shall me teare care I my faith forsake Finis An admonition concerning the tracte of time ¶ As time all thinges findes out So time eache thinge must bide In time therefore I wishe That time may well prouide Finis A friendly admonition to his friende that craued good Counsaile COndemne no cause till it be throughly knowne Eche brutish broyle that forth abrode is blowne Beléeue not lightly least by some suche acte Thou chaunce repent of déede informer facte Accuse no wight of crime till trouth thou trie Ne credit then thine eare before thine eye Suche false reporte abrode may often go As perfit proofe shall finde out nothing so In iudgement rashe se that thou neuer bee Deale not in thinges that passe capasitie Thy porcion spende that some thou haue to spare If thou wilt liue deuoyde of
trew Care not for them that mend Appelles shew FINIS He declareth his greate mishappes and lamentable sorovves of harte WHen eache wight wonted is to take by nature rest I lie alas through gréeping griefe and thought so sore oprest That from my goyng to bead vntill the time I rise Sleape once hath skarse the powre to close my wéeping wakefull eyes In whiche longe lothsome nightes my Pen full oft I blame For that the wofull state of me t' indite he doth not frame Whose youthfull yeares and daies by nature were not ripe When cruell fate them cleane cut of at one most soden wipe Though life do yet remaine to length my time in teares Whiche fliyng fame seemes not to cease to blow in each wightes eares For singe me oft God knowes a heauie harte to beare When outwardly I séeme to shew a glad and mery chere And eke a carefull minde more troublously itost Then is the shipman on the Sea in daunger nie the lost Whose care no greater is then life and goods to saue When I of God continually with humble voyce do craue That he by death will quite my grief away expell And geue to me a place amonge the saued soules to dwell Which now longe times haue béen so tossed with vnrest That scarse I may the woes sustaine that lie in wofull brest To thinke on my mishaps whiche do me still betide When happie hap to finde redresse full fast away doth glide What greater greife may growe in any honest minde Then is to wante such wonted wealth as it some time did finde Such prouidence for man doth Fortune oft procure When smilingly she séemes to trayne with bayte of golden leure By meane wherof she will a canckred poyson lay Full closely coucht in pleasant bayte with that poore soule to tray As I but lately tried who doth her bayts so taste That secretly I sup the smarts whiche caufe me pine and waste Would God when I began to enter first to life That present death had pearst my hart and rid me cleane this strife So should my Parents not haue béen at such great cost To bringe me vp on whom by fate their great good gifts are lost Ne yet haue left to me no whit such wealth at all Whereby from wealth to miserie might chaunce a soden fall But should the same els where haue well bestowed I say Which they in leauing vnto me did naught but cast away Whose heauie helplesse haps increasing euery hower Doth force me wéepe when others sleape where fortune doth not lowe ▪ Thus passe I forth the nighte when wishe doth wante his will Whom fortune seekes by great despight most cruellie to spill And when the dawninge day I do perceaue and see And eke how Titan lifteth vp him selfe in first degree Whose glorious glyttering beames doth mooue eache thing to ioy Saue only I whose haplesse hap hath wrought all mine anoy Then from my coutche I creepe all clad with woe and care And for to walke in Desart place my selfe I do prepare Where none but wofull wights do wandring wayle their gréefe Where violence doth vengance take where neuer coms releefe Where pleasure plaies no parte nor wanton life is lead Where daintinesse no daunger makes ne finesse once is fead Where deepe dispayre doth dwell in owgle lothsome lake Where feurious feendes do fersly fight an sorowes neuer slake Euen there in dolefull Den I do driue forth the day Where as my pitious plainte and wo no time hath once to stay And then a new I wish that I had neuer been To voyde the painefull piteous plight that now I wretch amin Within whose troubled head such thronge of thoughts doth rise That now on this and then on that I cease not oft to vise Amonge whiche thoughts I note this one that doth ensew Which as the younge Byrde brought from neast put in cage or mew Doth ioye in that her life as much as though she might From wood to wood or feilde to feilde at pleasure take hir flight whiche plainly doth declare a man from byrth brought vp In meane estate that neuer knew the taste of wanton cup Doth holde himselfe so well contente with his degree That he in life doth seldome seeke to craue more greater sée But I as byrde vnlike that flew hir timely flight Throughout the groues and fertill fielde in ioyes and great delight Which shall no sooner feele hir selfe to be restrainde From her such wonted libertie as some time she retainde But forth withall she doth such inwarde thought conceaue That yelding vp hir pleasures past hir life therewith doth leaue when as the byrde in Cage with chirpyng cheare doth singe That neuer knew the place wherein she had more better b'inge So I do playnly see eche wight that wealth hath taste And afterwardes doth wante the same with sorow is imbraste Wherefore sith life apointed was in me this longe to last In simplest sorte woulde God I had the same to this time past Then should I sure haue liude contente with this my pay Which now because of carefull change in wo do wast away Finis Keper to his frende Hovvell WHen surging Seas with raginge blastes be blowen In whiche is man with ship of troublous saile He must beware least Hulcke be ouerthrowen When deathly seas compels weake hart to quaile So though thou be returnd from Port of blisse With hoysing waues and windes so hardly tost Thou maist thy selfe full well assure of this Thou art not he that first hath had the lost It is a healpe sometimes in miserie To haue a sort as felows eke of thrall Ah many man hath felt the chaunce of thee When witlesse youth doth range so prodigall Then hoyse thy sayle and be not ouerblowen The feare of harmes may not thy stomacke slake And rise from couche when chearefull light is showen And draw thee backe from paines of Plutoes lake Haue stronger hart then simple Birdes on trée Let manly corps a manly minde embrace No woes can helpe then frende be rulde by mée Let pacience in quiet breast haue place For all disease for cares and woes each one A quiet minde is only salue alone Finis The restlesse paynes of the Louer forsaken IN springe time when fresh flowers in Feilde do florish fayre When Trees do bud and blosoms beare when temperate is th' ayre When Byrdes with chirping cheare when Beastes that be but brute As course of kinde doth force them forth through loue begins great sute Then I whose fansie fed my sprites to sporte and play To Forrist fayre of pleasant ayre began to take the way As I did passe throughout a valey fayre and gréene Where Birds did singe and Beastes to runne oft pleasant I had séen All husht I founde it tho such silence was there kept As midnight then if it had béen and all thinges sounde had slept Where at amasde I stoode and listning longe might heare At last a hollow sounding voice with lowde lamenting cheare
therwith stands contente For they that seeke most highest them selues for to aduance Are often seen to be the niest to daungerous mischance Example by the trée which growes vpon the Hill That subiect is vnto eache blast when trees below are still The higher state always the greater care doth bringe The greater care the lesser ease which prooues the meane surest thing And Hystories deuine vs bidth from cares and woes And wils vs all to view the byrdes and Lyllies fresh that groes The Byrds ne sowe nor reape and yet do wante nothing The Lillie eake it doth compare with Salomon the King Afirming plaine that he in all his princely power Was neuer decked like vnto the simple Lilly flower A voyde such care therefore as quailes the corage ofte And put thy confidence in him that sits in Throue a lofte Contente thy selfe alway with that he shall assine Against those whom he doth exalte se thou do not repine If riches do increase be thankefull for the same If wante of that do chaunce to prease do not thy Fortune blame Better it is of bothe to be contente with ought With greate and heaped howrdes of golde then haue vnquiet thought Did not Diogenes prefar the shining Sonne Before the mightie kingdomes great that Alexander wonne When this greate conquerour woulde haue geuen him giftes of golde He saide like gifte thou canst not geue as thou from me dost holde Tho sundrie others mo whose workes were wonderous wise I might here name to like effecte yet let this sayd suffice For nothing here so sure that certaine may remayne Acompte therfore all worldly powre as transitorie vayne Finis The vnquiet estate of the Louer vvherein is vvished redresse LIke as the Captaine stoute constrainde is in th' ende Oprest with powre to yéelde himself and what he did defende So I with Cupid caught am forst at last to yéelde To you whose vertuous wayes hath wonne of me both Forte fielde I may no longer cloke the scortchinge flames of fire That still in s●acret breast doth burne through wante of my desire But forth it findes away that hid hath line full longe And loue doth boldly bid me seeke to haue redresse of wronge Sith then in you it lies on me to worke your will By mercie for to length my life by contrary to kill Let pittie mooue your minde in humble wise I sue And seeke to saue the Captiue harte that wisheth well to you For here I do confesse the only state and stay Of my led life and eke my death to rest in you alway Whose graunte of grace hath powre to glade my griped brest Whose stay therof hath like effect to further mine vnrest Graunte yea therfore my deare let nay be out of minde As I haue vowde to worke your will till death shall do his kinde And thus I cease to write the twenteth parte of greife That my poore payned harte endures as yet without releife Finis Liberalitee ¶ Where wise do suffer wante And driuen in hard distresse Cut not thy cantle skante That maiste their cause redresse Finis Prouidence TWyse happie is the wight Whom others harmes doth cause To shonne the snare of noysome care That growes by breache of lawes Finis Good aduise to his faithfull friende OF Louers restles liues I li●t not wright Let learned heads describe their playnfull plight But plaine in tearmes I wishe thee euen as well As those that can their tales more trimly tell Whose friendly meaning if thou wilt receaue Fyrst flie from Uice and vnto Uertue cleaue Nexte seeke by honest meanes such wealth to winne As may thee helpe what néede thou shalt be in Counte not thy Chickens that vnhatched be Waye wordes as winde till thou finde certaintée For filid wordes that deeds do neuer yeelde May well be likened to the baren fielde Be ware of had I wiste whilst youth doth last Whose stealinge steps do passe away in hast Prouide in time thine aged yeres to chearishe And let fayre wordes go feede the fonde and foolishe Acompte eache thinge as proofe the same shall trie Trust not to farre before thou finde cause why For vnder Flowers so fayre oft poyson lurkes Whose showe of flagrant smell much mischéefes workes Take héede least Argus with his crastie Net And wily subtle sleights do thee be se● Thus wishinge aye thy wealth I make an ende Least tedious talke should nought but thee offende Finis Youth still bevvayleth VVhen naught it auaileth MY retchlesse rage of wanton youthe With griefe I do lament When vnto minde I call the truthe How I my time haue spent Finis An humble sute to his friende requesting Loue for Loue. I Saw of late a wofull wight That Willo wandes did winde to weare Whose face declarde the painfull plight Which he through loue then present beare He lookte a loft as though he woulde Haue fled vnto the starrie skies But still he stoode as though he coulde Not once heaue vs his heauie thées His feathered handes he flashed foorthe And thyther fayne he woulde haue ●●ead But wofullman he was full wroothe To see his limmes all lade with lead You are the bright and starrie skie I am the man in painfull plight My l●●●es are lade I cannot flie My corps may not sustaine my weight I read the woes of Sigismonde The childe of Tanckred Salerne kinge Her loue to Guystarde did so bounde She fanced els none other thinge For riches naught nor for his wealth Whereof he had but slender store His vertue was hir only health She likte that well she sought no more They had their hoped hap and ioye If Tanckred coulde content him so But he by workyng their anoy Unto himselfe brought deepest woe You Sigismonde are fayre and bright Woulde I had Guystardes vertuous life And Tanckred chaste cleane out of sight Then woulde I wish for such a wife I reade how Luna loued one Of birth but meane of right good fame By name iclipt Endimione Whose loue was quite deuoyde of blame In Laemi Hill it thus befell She saw him sit all sad alone T is I que she I know full well For whom he mournes and makes his mone She was not shamde of Laemi Hill Nor yet of Louers simple state But straight consents vnto his will And him did choose for louing make O Luna looke vpon thy Loue Endimion makes his mone to thée Be not ashamde let pittie moue And loue me like as I loue thée Finis The Commendation of the meane in all thinges AS meane in Musicke soundeth best So meane estate liues most in rest The higher climde the fall more deepe The deeper fall the double paine And pensife paine doth carefull keepe In man eache liuely lim and vaine Whiche prooues what change or chaunce do fall Contented meane excéedeth all Finis I. K. To his friende H. THe high estate is dangerous The poore degrée is burdenous The richer sorte are couetous The néedie soule is dolorous The youthfull imps are prodigall The aged
liberally extende As longe as thou with m●ncy storde or qualities art freight most ●ay●e thy maister speekes to thee most ioyfull is his plight 〈◊〉 chearefull peares his pleasant face all times continually And still he saith he full is bent to help and chearish thee ●ayr words they say make fooles to faine trust not swet promise kind before the deedes agree to wordes which thou by proofe shalt finde For though thou be in fauour greatst yet coms a sudden blast that Maisters loue may turne to hate as one dispisde at last ●till shalt thou plie both carks and cares for maysters worthy state to ride to r●● in heate and colde at times both er and late In perels plungr and dangers greate thou fealst continuallie thy life thou dost aduenture oft for Maisters cause to dye When others ●●●ape in quiet bedde thou ridst in nightes that be in shewres and 〈◊〉 to do the thyng that Lorde commits to thee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 swordes in groues and bushie place 〈…〉 for Masters cause thou runst in painfull race 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in presence be to shewe thy diligence 〈…〉 is but all thine owne expense 〈…〉 addresse both here and theare to goe 〈…〉 and 〈◊〉 to talke and ●●yle this is thy endles woe 〈…〉 now mistris speakes now vp and downe goe now 〈…〉 thou theare at all commaundes be thou Yet when thy Maister likes thee well thy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and thus betwene Caribdis rockes thou ●ailst in doubtfull state ▪ Yf both thee loue t is but for times they stande 〈◊〉 for maister geues his eare perhaps to fau●inge 〈◊〉 And then a preuie foo● maye worke a treuthles ●ale to ●ell that fauour fleeth and maister 〈◊〉 whom late he loued full well ▪ O cruell tonge O masters fonde that so will bende 〈◊〉 eares to cause a faithfull seruantes ●ar● to m●ne in 〈◊〉 c●e●re● But thousande wayes besides may ●rowe displeasurs great in place that shall thee bring from ioyfull hart into a dolefull case This is the surest certaintie of seruice that maie fall this is the wofull haps of men in place illiberall At beck thou art to come and goe a bondage t is yee see wh● wilde li●●●t 〈◊〉 seruitude if well he may go free The crouked clowne with all his ●oyle fealth not one halfe thy paine to whom the tylled soyle restores for laboures gratefull gayne But thou for fruites so 〈◊〉 deserued by longe applied care perchaunce may get but only hate not one good worde to spare O Barraine lande O frutelesse feilde to bringe a fort to woes for when they hopde to haue rewarde nought els but hatred groes What man can iudge of such a soyle that hath both eyes to see but that he will accompt the ende a mortall misere If once thou hapst away to be when maister cals thee well what checks thou hast at thy retorne I neede not here to tell Yea oft we see for absence small though cause full great appeare thy maister taunth and maistris frownes as Heg of Hell she weare And once if thou from fauour fall then laboureth flatteryng spies to hoyse thee out of fauour cleane by lewde and knauish lies And commonly this thing doth hap when youth and goods are spent for then to driue thee of in deede his minde is fully bent And soone will he geue credit then to those that thee depraue alas for all our carkes and cares this is rewarde wee haue When faithfull man hath thus long serued in truth of tried hart in th end shall vice ingratytude retracte his iust desarte O youth beware O men be wyse what foole so blinde is hee that will spende out his youthfull yeres such seruingman to be A seruyngman what mome will loue their names are adsous their life abhorde as wicked waies and trade most impious This will the hellish sclaunderous lipps of honest man report and though the seruinge man be good yet rayles the enwous sort When thus is spent thy golden youth and many goodly yeres and left the waies of surer life where greater fruites appeares When spent be goods both stock and store and all in seruice eare and liued longe at charge of freinds whose bagges for thee go bare Then comth on thee displeasures great at one vnhappy howre that maister hates whom well he loued turnes thee out his dowre Then age with charge and toyling paines so many yeres of trust are now at once on sudden lost and all is layde in dust Thus thou for toyle and great expense hast smaller rewarde to take now age draweth on and all is spent and all men thee forsake And thou art left in beggers state that were in youth so fine what miserie is like to this what woes then like to thine In hope some liue to be preferde for worke to haue his gaine but hope may misse though wide he gap he gapeth perchaūce in vaine Where one wee see to be preferde three liue for lacke as staruid and other eke shall haue the fruites that they haue well deseruide And this is cause that I ol●e man am poore whom none regarde for I haue felt for seruice longe the maisters short rewarde What greater plagues or woes can be then lost deserued meede and Lorde to turue his seruant of in time of greatest neede Of seruice longe this is the ende as still by proofe ye see for faithfull harts of seruants true these are rewardes that bee For longe expense and charge of frein●s this is rewarde againe for lost of time in golden youth this is the tried gaine For toyling paines and labours longe this fruitelesse endes that bee alas this is the death of some when Lordes ingrate they see But cheefe when age doth once appeare that labour none they haue the mistres cries what makst thou heare be packing doting knaue So are they like vnto the Dog in Hunt that runs his race who hath in youth been well esteemde and liuide in careles case But when in age he weried is that hunting all is past go hange they crie the cursed our this is roward at last This is the ende this is rewarde for paines and lost of age O learne yonge man that seruice then in none inheritage A signe of this of youth ill spent an aged man am I alas no refuge is for me O death nowe let me die O wretched state O cruell course O port of penurie O pitte of pagnes O pesilent race O sincke of miserie O witles wates O frutles factts O badge of beggers state O plumpe of paines O endles woes O man infortunate Retire my sonne this race to run that life vnsertaine is who liues in state of Seruitours liues still in doubtfulnes What is the cause ingratitude withdrawes the helpyng hande since seruing weights by dayly toyle are praise of noble band What is the state of noble troope if saruants haue no powres alone is knowen a princely porte by traine of seruitoures By seruice dew is well distinct of state the right degrees as seruants serue in hoping harts and crouch with humble knees Where are the men more courteous then men of seruice free what men are more of comely corps then Courtly seruants be Who knowes the course and trade of men but seruants daily care who are more feate or trim traind vp then manerd seruants are Who stronge or tall of personage but men of seruants route who beares the cares bront of wars but seruants arms so stoute What then of more necessitie then seruitours full trewe why then shall they haue ill rewards in th end their states to rewe Lo here good sonne I haue declarde some part of thy degre be ware be times hereafter say that I haue tolde it thee Then came this courtly Courtier wherin his prayse redownes and gaue vnto this aged man for helpe full twentie Crownes And saide till death in mindefull brest this counsall will I graue and eke in time I hope by wit thereof the fruites to haue I thanckes restord withe hartye loue which tongue dooth faint to tell god thee preserue in happie dayes O ●ather deare farewell Fare well quoth he with thousande thankes God thy iorney speede which thus hast helpe my aged yeres in times of greatest neede Thus sayd that aged man full glad with lingring steps on went. and laith his corps in plesant shade of Oken tree to bent For tonge with talke now werie was and hart for gift was glad wherefore he went to recreat his limmes that weaknesse had And laying downe his bodie weake he layde his Staffe him bye and leande his head on Elbow bare and closde his sleeping eye Finis Howell to his freinde keper THe seruynge state which you reiect By open cause that you detect Deserues so great a prayse in deede As great contempts cannot exceede Who serues not God is voyde of blisse In noble seruice freedom is And he that hath cleare eyes to see Perceaues that all men seruants bee For Princes greatst serue God aboue And men them serue in God by loue As God geueth gifts who him regards So Lord his seruant true rewards What greate rewards of Maisters be By seruice got wee dayly see Some Knights be dubde for their awards To greater state thence forth prefarde And eke wee see in meaner sort The Lords that keepe the stately port Theire seruants keepe in ioylitie And them prefar to dignitie If seruants then receaue their meede And eche man seruant is in deede In this disprayse of them so prest Include your selfe emongst the rest They are preferd why say ye noe Their Maisters gifts do dayly growe Exalt therfore good Courteours And eke the courte ef Seruitours Finis keeper his answer to H. FReind Howe I hope thou quietly To serue thy Lord most faithfully No man to much can prayse such men No Maister good depraues my pen. I speake of Maister Couetous Unkinde vniust vncourteous Unsweet vnmeet to serue at all Not good not iust not liberall Therfore ye take my worde amisse All saruants are most true it is Yet I do gesse by inwarde moode All seruants serue not Maisters good Finis ¶ Imprinted at London in fleetstreet beneath the Conduyt at the signe of S. Iohn Euangelist by Thomas Colwell