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A09644 Vertues anatomie. Or A compendious description of that late right honorable, memorable, and renowned Bedfordshire lady, the Lady Cheany, of Tuddington. By Charles Pierse Pierse, Charles. 1618 (1618) STC 19909; ESTC S102573 34,544 80

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support her houses fame A widdow wife and maide confinde in one In all and seuerall states so free from blame That enuy nor the iniurious hand of time Could euer staine or touch with any crime Her thoughts so continent and her chast desires Which neuer rioted in exppense of time Sprung from those true eternall liuing fires Which doth all vertue to it selfe combine Not lightly led nor starting now and then To place new fancies in affecting men But truely kept her selfe vnto her loue Her worthy loue in youth in age in death So constant faithfull true as turtle doue Where her affections gaue no second breath But liu'd in one pure loue and neuer changed In thoughts so firmly knit they neuer ranged Which for the space of almost thirty yeares Did rule alone her house admir d of many Such holy graces in her life appeares Such perfect vertues seldome seene in any A virgin wife a widow maide to be So old in honor yet from folly free Could not her long deceased spouse before Grac'd with so many worthy after loues Nor time nor nature which could argue more Nor any thing from that strict course remoue But still her resolution doth perseuer Inuiolate vnto the first for euer Why then poore pen doest thou attempt so far And canst not touch the riches of her honor Nor nothing neere describe this glorious starre But rather much vnhidden worth take from her The little world of thy poore wit on fire Will rather burne then satisfie desire Yet giue me leaue great Readers to admire Faire imitators of her honors worth Although I cannot satisfie desire Nor set her high desarts and honor forth Accept my will which must remaine your debtor Till time or heau'ns shall grace me to sing better She in whose breast grace such impression tooke That made her time not like a mortall creature Which honors state and dignities forsooke A thing most hard and wondrous strange to nature That vertue should be found for to contemne Such meanes and fortunes as aduanceth them Could grace and vertue natures force expell And breake those lawes wherein she binds too many Could heauenly gifts in such a concord dwell So welbelou'd within the heart of any That in so many daies they should not fall Nor yet be toucht with any crime at all Pure-thoughted Lady which preserues thy soule So cleane from fleshly crimes and carnall pleasures Nor didst consent vnto such actions foule Wherein too many wallow out of measure That inbred sin which neuer leaues the most Till nature's ready to yeeld vp the ghoast One loue thy soule delighted which decease Did liue a fresh in the still vndiuided Two persons ioynd in one makes no release Till both be dead in loue so firmly guided Death parts the body but the soule doth honor In shadie groues to meete so true a louer So constant Lady thou which after death In strengh of yeares to no such bayts did yeeld Gaines fame a second life and longer breath Whose stedfast loue on better ground did build Where palmes of victorie in thy hands are found And lawrell wreaths to girt thy temples round Where thou Diana-like didst lead a life In sacred loue mixt with most chast desire Or like those holy vestalls void of strife Which keepes their honors spotlesse and intire And neuer lookes so true a course they liue To those inchantments which the world doth giue Where purest loue like to the morning dew Sent downe from him which all good gifts infuses Inioyes those rare contents giuen but to few To very few which worldly traffique vses So great and meeke so chast and yet a wife For not a mortals but an Angels life Which onely keeps not from societie Thy person free but quencht those inward fires And from loose thoughts and vaine delights didst flie Hating th'imbracements of vnchast desires And gaue no place to such inticements vaine Which proues the owners losse the actors paine How canst thou then great Lady all forsake So many thousand bayted hopes to see And many great ones little rest to take Whilst thou securely sleeps from dangers free No thy chast bosome neuer lusted so To loose a freind for to imbrace a foe Thou worthy patterne of this wanton age Whose pure affections dispossesseth sin And acts thy part vpon this earthly stage As chast as she whose loue Troy towne did win Oh who would wish more honor in this life Then die a vertuous widow virgin wife Thou mighst haue knit thy selfe in sacred bands With honorable persons in degree In Hymens rites vniting hearts and hands And not haue wrong this first loue being free Oh but thy soule sayes to thy selfe alone That fayth most firme that keeps it selfe to one No friend nor louer since thy bosome smothers But Christ thy Sauiour spouse and husband deare For whose deare sake thou hast forsooke all others How great or rich so e're they liued here And sworne vnto thy selfe and made a vow To serue loue feare and keepe him onely now Oh happy choyse yet man and wife do varry From these pure paths which vnto vertue tends They care not who nor yet how oft they marry For loue of lucre lust or worldy freinds Exchanging oft the better for the worse Who weds a second neuer lou'd the first Such soule respects are so ingrauen in vs First beauty that faire obiect doth allure vs. Then mighty friends in state or meanes doth win vs That from insuing dangers may secure vs But last and greatest is wealth reuenewes riches The which the soules of men so much bewiches Long maist thou liue in thy more happier choise That euerlasting loue which fadeth neuer Long mayst thou with that Bridegroome faire reioice In those triumphing ioyes which lasteth euer Long maist thou honor praise and glory sing Vnto the soueraigne Lord the King of Kings Where thy pure thoughts chast bosome vertuous life Weds thy vnspotted soule to endlesse ioyes Whose loue to that great spouse makes a chast wife And whose rare gifts weake flesh and bloud destroyes Whose outward honors many equals finde But few to match the honor of the minde Why should my striuing pen desire to tell What it by force cannot attaine to know Why should my will against my skill rebell My passions thus ' gainst reasons lawes to show What ardent furies workes within my minde To seeke for that no wit nor toile can finde Oh giue me leaue to breake off thou my Muse I cannot diue so deepe I may be drown'd Then spare my weakenesse and defects excuse Which must retire when it can feele no ground That glorious streame of honor 't is too deepe For my weake braine aboue the waues to keepe But yet her bountie doth inuite my pen That vertue which doth challenge praise with best And vrges my dull hand to write agen Which crownes her with more glory then the rest And makes her name and honor mount the higher With such great grace as makes the
which most hold is tru'st gentility But let them haue it I will not contend Their honors may deceiue them all i' th end Great King of heauen and earth how shall I speake Which am but dust and ashes vnto thee When my soules faculties are all too weake Once to conceiue the meanest thought of thee And yet thou tearmst thy selfe but Sonne of man Which vild wormes scorne whose glorie 's but a span Ambitions age can Auarice blinde thee so To build such castles in vncertaine ayre What can your honors powers and riches doe For age and death thei 'le leaue you to despaire Where thou canst not redeeme an howers time Though al the goods in thousand worlds were thine Thinke yee to buy his fauour with a price Or fee him with so many golden mines Can any let sinne purchase paradise Or giue sufficient ransome for your crimes Oh no these dreames doe but your senses tickle For in that hower all that you hau's too little Reuerse your error let not these molest you Why should faire falshood blinde your mentall eies That it may once be said vertue possest you Wherein the truest fame and honor lies For smal's that greatnes poore weak's that glory Which hath his trust vppon things transitory Then seeke not to enrich posterity With an oppressing hand and cruell might Nor build your houses vp by tyranny Nor take possession of the poore mans right Lest Achab-like in buying so you sell Your house your soule and all you haue to hell VVhat profit shall your tired soules receiue Of all these riches you haue heap'd together VVhen in a moment you must take your leaue Of all your store and goe you know not whither Your childrē shew your wealth the world your shame And all doe hate the memory of your name Most odious euer hated of God and men Accursed riches which will waste in vsing Vnluckie and vnblessed issue then VVhen all you haue is purchas'd by abusing Your parents knew not that their goods ill gotten Their heires wold spēd whē they were dead rottē Oh what a ioyfull thing 't is to behold Heires to succeed their fires in vertuous lore And striue their houses honor to vphold VVith greater glory then it had before Studying by noble deeds t' inrich their name To their immortall praise and endlesse fame But ah I feare what I would not mistrust That heires to prodigall vices rather turne And leaue their honors trodden in the dust The losse whereof some ancient houses mourne Not liuing like themselues in birth but slaues Burying all vertue in their fathers graues The cause of which great waste and fall of heires I iudge the impious times of wretched fathers VVhose auaritious thoughts and greedie cares To fatten them and theirs vniustly gathers And waste their braines in studying day and night To purchase that which is anothers right Oh why should these be grac'd why should a pen Dip'd in the purest liquor of those springs Attend the earthly glory of these men VVhich shame vnto the truest honor brings As we doe see Fame none so much doth boast As those whose liues haue tyranniz'd it most If these vnto such fortunes haue attain'd Built on the slippery ground of fading Fame Then what great glorie shall thy honor gaine Or what sufficient pen can praise the same If Vice with Tombes and Epitaphes is renown'd VVherwith shal thy rare vertuous deeds be crown'd If out-side honor if vsurped greatnesse If painted pictures of Iniquitie Can haue their praises sung with wondrous sweetnesse Which nere deseru'd the meanest dignitie VVhat shall the true bred honor of the minde Adorn'd with vertues excellencies finde Did not thy ventures challenge from Fames wings One quill or pen t'immortalize thy name Is any enuious Serpent left that stings Or can with th'smallest tincture touch thy fame Are not thy vertues and thy honors blest VVith as great grace and glory as the rest Then why should not some worthy spirits vprise And with vndaunted quill her honor sing VVhy should they not her worth and vertues prise As high as theirs which from corruption springs Whose shame 's their glory their aime's their stain At nought but worldly things and glory vaine No worthy Lady doe not thinke a Tombe Can thy fresh memory from this world diuide Nor thinke that this earths all-deuouring wombe Within her bowels can thy vertues hide Nor wrong thy merits nor arrest thy worth Which spite of Time will spring and flourish forth That monumentall white faire marble Tombe Cannot containe thy noble deeds and merits When all the world is knowne too little roome To comprehend in bounds thy boundlesse spirit But still shall time with vs be euer telling Ages to come thy vertuous life excelling Nor doe not thinke though in corruptions bed Thy body lies interr'd at Tuddington That therefore thou art quite forgot and dead Or from our memories cleane exil'd and gone No no thy name and fame againe will raise thee And spite of death will make the world to praise thee No 't was decreed of euerlasting fate That vertue should endure and neuer die Made to out-liue Times rage and longest date Writ with a pen of sure eternitie Where if the Muses faile her worth to raise Then babes and sucklings will speak forth her praise Which hath induc'd my infant Muse to write My suckling wits which all too meane presumes Where if that learning cannot well indite How shall I doe with these impolish'd tunes But hope the best for euils come soonest then When least suspected and deseruing them Then launch into the Ocean of her honor So rare a Phaenix and our countries wonder Thy Muse I doubt much merit will take from her Or else her silly backe will split asunder Yet beare the sayles vp heauens may send a winde T' inspire me how to praise her vertuous minde Which they that true religion pure and blest Not mixed with Idolatrie nor defil'd Whose vertuous life and deeds did her professe An Israelite true in whom there was no guile Imbracing of the sacred truth in loue From which no worldly cares could her remoue That sought to know and learne those artes Diuine Which onely vnto true saluation tend And therein much did exercise her minde To profit by the truth which all defend Misplacing errors which doe seeke to blinde The way of truth in selfe-affected minde No verball but a mentall true profession Ingrauen in her honorable brest Wherein it tooke most sure and deepe impression That grace and honor heere did euer rest Making the one illustrious by the other As if they were both twins sprung from one mother And surely so they are as neere allyed Who wins their honors by their vertues first Can witnesse well their noble deeds haue tried Though Fortune now bestowes them on the worst 'T is but externall honor they doe winne Whose houses end before they doe beginne For thou Religion art a seely sound Accounted in these nice
and curious times Of many mightie troubles made the ground VVhom ouer-searching doubts and errors blindes So many truths that which of them to take To many wandering wits doe question make This is the truth they 'le neuer start away From this vnto another straight they are gone Then to that sect they know not what to say Thus are they busie in all but firme in none Then this they like then that then straight they le turne To any thing I thinke before they le burne Such trees which like the fig-tree seemes most faire VVhen nought but leaues and blossomes it affords And in the eyes of th' world are iudg'd most rare That onely paints Religion out in words That learnes to tip their tongues with Artes diuine VVhen damn'd Hypocrisie resteth in their minde VVhose gesture workes lookes words and actions all VVith similar showes are varnish'd to deceiue men VVith heau p vp hands and eyes to heauen they call As if deuotion would of sense bereaue them And knock their brests when as their hearts within Lie buried vp in flesh and bloud and sinne Such strange comixtures of Religion holds them That they like mad-men care not where they bite And Iudas-like a little price hath sold them That euen the worst of errors they doe like Thus are they through their owne rash-daring skill Led captiue of the Diuell to doe his will How many strange Religions are there found That will dispute of truth and seeme to know it How many sects and rules yet all vnsound As this vaine light-beleeuing age can show it If such a number into errors fall How many more which hold no truth at all Good God which art the onely truth and guide Keep 's from those errors wherein some are caught That we from thee may neuer fall nor slide But willingly embrace the Gospell taught That no inuentions heresies crafts or guiles May worke in vs our safetie to beguile But worthy Lady who did'st keepe the truth From superstition and Idolatrie free Both in old age in middle yeares and youth That in such greatnesse few haue done like thee Where many liue to whom that name belongs Which onely Christianize it in their tongues But thy firme resolution fixed was And vnremoued stood against all those Which seemes to set a colour and a glosse Vpon Religion falshood to inclose Vnder which faire pretext often doth lie Most dangerous deepe deceits our soules to trie The truth thy soule delighted not to striue On idle questions which no profit brings Whil'st some new sought inuentions can contriue To draw hard questions from the meanest things Wresting those words that sence to what they 'd haue it And not as right and true constructions craue it But thou the praise of these vnconstant times Mad'st not this world the patterne to doe ill But like a candle did'st in darknesse shine And fram'dst thy life vnto thy Makers will Not tossed to and fro with euery winde Which wraps in many errors wandring mindes But did'st continue to thy vtmost breath A zealous Protestant and religious friend Not stain'd with heresie in thy life nor death But seald'st thy last gaspe with a glorious end Which made the Angels sing and heauens reioyce That thou with Mary madest so good a choyse Thy faith as great and rare did apprehend The second person in the Trinitie On whom thy whole saluation did depend Wrought by his passions so effectually Not mingling of his merits with humane powers Ascribing that to vs which is not ours But to thy selfe by priuate application Did'st ceize on all those promises sweet and faire Writ in the Scriptures for our consolation To keepe vs vp from horror and despaire That when deepe flouds waters seeme to drowne vs Our faith may shine in darknesse then crowne vs. And bring our soules into that glorious rest Wrought by his passions sufferings death and merit Which he hath purchas'd for the chosen best After this mortall labour to inherit Redeeming vs when we were cast away With such a price as none but he could pay That holy one that pure vnspotted Lambe That did descend from his eternall throwne For vs vile sinners being God and man To satisfie the wrath of heauen alone And vnderwent such torments griefes and paines To make his greatest losse our greatest gaines Oh happie Lady whose erected minde This glorious obiect of thy faith so loues Thy soules delight which ioyes and comforts finde Where all the triall of thy faith he proues And viewes the pure deuotions of thy heart Which for his seruice thou had'st set apart There in that euerlasting booke of fate Are written downe the triall of thy loue Thy faith zeale piety and that happy state Which far beyond our thoughts thy soule doth proue Such great felicitie ioyes which ioyes excell That tongues of men and Angels cannot tell Could the heau'ns see thy labours and endeuor And to thy louing cares giue no regard Thy constancie whereby thou did'st perseuer Vnto the end and yeeld thee no reward Oh no 't is hard to thinke but worse to say That heau'ns great giuer should himselfe denay He that rewards vniust and wicked men With ample benefits shall he not be kinde Vnto his owne deare chosen children then Or suffer them to slip out of his minde If he so liberall be to the vniust What shall he be to those that in him trust Oh no Great Lady he will doe no wrong Nor once deny himselfe let none so thinke Hee 's iust and true although he beareth long Nor is he blinde although he seeme to winke But doth behold thy faith which neuer faints Where he doth crowne thee with his dearest Saints That bitter combate held with flesh and blood And mightie conflict which assaults the best Which by his powerfull hand thou hast withstood And quench'd those fiery darts which neuer rest But still new battailes warre and strife begin Against our soules faire Sions for t to win Yet all these cannot shake thy glorious hold See firme and constant faith doth still endure Which makes thy trust and confidence so bold Ayde him that most vndoubted ayde assure He takes thy part he will not see thee foil'd Nor to thy foes become a prey nor spoild Heere did the triall of thy faith appeare In his continuall fight with flesh and blood Which shew'd thy loue vnto thy Sauiour deare Which could not be by worldly hopes withstood But still persisted striuing for to winne That powerfull monster Hydra-headed sinne Thou neuer vnto Saints and Angels prayde Nor mad'st petitions to them in thy need Which whil'st they liu'd did want our Sauiours ayde Whose sinnes as well as ours did make him bleed And was the cause that stopp'd his glorious breath To ransome them as well as vs from death Yet will not these proud Pharisees be perswaded But vrge traditions from their fathers taught And haue the Gospell through their power inuaded And many holy needlesse reliques sought Of ancient Saint
were to perish Thus did thy faith beare sweete and pleasant fruits Which euer from that flourishing tree proceeds VVith such rich graces as best honor sutes And did extend it selfe to bounteous deeds Relieuing cheerefully those silly elues VVhich had no meanes here for to help themselues Thou faire example liue without compare Thou map of honor be for euer blest Since to the poore such pitty thou dost beare Which meaner persons in their pride detest And dost extend thy hand to helpe their neede Whilst their fell cruelties make their harts to bleede Nay not contented thus thou lefts behinde As long as any age or time indures A faire example of thy bounteous minde Which shall for euer stand most firme and sure Where thou hast meanes and liuing left in store To helpe the helpelesse and releiue the poore Could I but reckon what her honor gaue Or what a number at her gate she fed How many needie wretches liues she sau'd For want of foode halfe pinde and almost dead The sum I feare would grow so wondrous large And far extend my weakenesse to discharge No 't is not to be told with any tongue Those great accounts my pen must let alone Vnlesse attempting I should doe her wrong To take away from her what is her owne For numberlesse they are and so I 'le leaue them Where endlesse ioyes for endles good receiue them For what she gaue to those she lent to him VVhich will repay 't againe vnto a penny She shall not loose by that she knowes but win And crowned be in heauen with ioyes as many VVhere double recompence she shall surely haue And thousand fold more finde then here she gaue Her goods possessing she did not possesse But made them free for others which did neede them They were not hers she often would confesse But lent her to refresh the poore and feede them Where she as tenant held from his great hands All that she did possesse both goods and lands And knew right well that she account must giue Of all those rich demeanes she here inioyd And in so great a calling how she liue Vnto what vse her Talent was imployd Where now with that good seruant she doth finde Her masters ioy and ten times more assignde Oh Lady why doe I this vertue vrge So much in thee and cannot finde in others Art thou alone vnto these times a scourge To whip their dulnesse forward and discouer Those monstrous wolues which neuer will be fed But eate vp poorest Orphants like to bred Religion is the cause of this I hold That to good workes will not ascribe saluation Which makes our age in charitie grow so cold As few will giue because 't is out of fashion Then let our works be meritorious found It may be then more charity will abound Thus doth this topsie-turuie age delight In contraries and leaues the good vndon Wrong hath the vpper hand of truth and right And euery man to swift perdition runs If this saluation were as none it is Who would be damn'd then that should doe amisse But world thy share will come farre short I feare For vain 's that hope whose faith brings forth no fruit Nor showes it selfe in vertuous actions here What 's better for a tongue if one be mute Or for that rise which breeds a greater fall Or for that faith which showes no workes at all Good Lady thou which did'st possesse so much And spent'st so little vpon idle pleasure How farre doest thou digresse from these I touch And seeke to store thy soule with better treasures Those secret graces which the heau'ns impart To such as be vpright and true of heart Where zeale grace faith loue hope and pietie Concurre in one to make a blessed soule Where temperance bountie and humilitie Doe all foule Vice and errors false controule Where her renowned hospitalitie Makes her most happie ioyn'd with charitie Where with that worthy Captaine well shee speeds Nor feares shee death that freely is forgiuen Her prayers gifts rewards and almesdeeds Are now remembred in the sight of heauen Where shee doth heare the voice of him shee lou'd Which hath her faith through such affliction prou'd And where her workes and deeds and vertues all Attends her after this expired breath And did not suffer her great name to fall Into obliuion by forgetfull death But breakes those prison doores and sweetly sings Hell where 's thy victorie Death where 's thy sting Thou fore-decreed by that eternall doome A sacred vessell of most free election A marke of pietie to the times to come Seal'd with heau'ns finger at thy first conception Grac'd with his grace which doth all grace secure VVhich time consumes not but doth still endure Looke when as Tytan from his scarlet bed Doth rise and all thicke vapors driue away And all the curtaines of the heau'ns are spred VVithout a cloud to blemish any way Where that bright frame to mortalls doth appeare Most wondrous calme most perfect faire cleare Euen so this rising Sunne of honor shines The hopefull signe of a most glorious day And all the graces firmely so combines That mists nor clouds nor vapors can dismay This faire vnblemish'd frame keepes still true honor Which Time Death Fortune neuer shal take frō her What man so great in pompe and earthly glorie That hunts full crie with hungrie breath for fame Can write insuing sinnes a fairer storie Or win more honor or a grater name Or graces be with more desarts and prayse Then shee had beene so truely all her dayes Those that in the full circuite ride of pride Liu'd in a world of eyes for to behold them Had what this earth could grace them with beside And at the highest rise of fame hath sold them Made all their words and deeds like Herods then Which cried the voice of God and not of men Yet in the mid'st of all their pride deceiued Haue brought their honor to vntimely ends And of their golden hopes haue bene bereaued VVhich with the world would die such mighty freinds Their mistris with vae vobis leaues them all VVhen they doe least dreame and suspect to fall But they which build their house one vertues ground And leade that life which thou before hast done No age no fortune euer shall confound Their honors when their naturall glasse is run But they shall flourish faire and still suruiue Death takes not them like those which dye aliue Thus hauing loos'd theese earthly fetters here That heauie bondage worse then Egipts thrall And ouercome by faith those doubts and feares VVhich greues the best and doth in question call Our liues and deeds with many frailties shaken How shal we stād when such strict reckonings taken But fly to the heauens true and onely sonne Deere Sauiour and redeemer whose strong might Di'dst that huge blacke internall host orecome And put those powers and enemies all to flight That conquerest quite hell sathan death and sin VVhich none before nor since
could euer win And open sets the doore t'eternall life Freed vs from all our enemies by thy death Although we suffer toyle cares greefe and strife VVithin our selues during this mortall breath Yet when thou thinkest good thou wilt inlarge vs And of our weary heauie load discharge vs. Whereof being freed and set at liberty Thou endlesse ioyes for ending greefe imbracest And di'st no more but liu'st eternally With him from whom thou hast bene euer grac'd Where now enioying what thou wantedst here Thou sing'st Halluiah with that heauenly quire Where now vnto that glory I will leaue thee That true felicity and eternall rest Which like to earthly ioyes will not deceiue thee But still indure effectuall and ere blest Triumphing with those Saints which euer sings All praise and glory to the King of Kings Here noble Lord some vertues of your owne May in this darke and little glasse appeare Or of that seede which you your selfe are sowne Which cannot like your honors shine so cleare Yet may you see some shaddow of your fauour If that you truely doe but read my labour For in this little booke I haue not err'd Although her honors worth I could not weild Nor vice before true vertue haue prefer'd Nor yet on such false slipperie grounds doe build As grace a sin by a dissembling tongue To doe the best and noblest natures wrong No let me neuer rise but rather fall If lower then I am I can descend When euer I take vices part at all Or ayme at any such vaine hopes or end But rather study vertuously to please Then haue my duty sicke of that disease No worthy Lord I le neuer sell my selfe Though I should be farre poorer then I am By vniust meanes to purchase worldly pelfe As sooth vp folly in the greatest man That gaine is losse that glory turnes to shame Which branded is with Gnato's flattering name Then let not honor iudge my liues amisse Although your iudgement farre extends my verse My duty 's true and so shall proue by this Which I vnworthy farre haue heere rehearst If I in ought through weaknesse haue offended Let greatnesse by their faire acceptance mend it For I doe know two noble natures springing From one pure fountaine cannot be diuided What wrong to her to you some blot is bringing Which cannot be but by your worth decided For you that doe succeed her roome and place Are heire vnto her vertues and her grace Whose faire example happie you may proue And like a greater light the lesser guide Adorn'd with honor glorie grace and loue And blest with all these earthly things beside That wanting nought to fill vp eithers store Your honor still may flourish more and more Who takes a patterne of his glorious maker And seekes to treade the tract of honor true Cannot at first be made a full partaker Of all those rich demeanes to honor due Such faire examples must haue time and space To ouertake them 't is no common race Which shee true vertues patterne left behinde Much like a marble pillar vnremou'd Such tokens of her honorable minde As make her heere generally belou'd Whereof when you shall take a fuller view Shall finde those honors fall to th' house and you Where I doe pray that heau'ns would grace it still With as great honor as it had before Or greater if it be his blessed will Vntill the surges ouerflow the shore That Wentworths noble race with Cheauies name May be inrol'd in euerlasting fame And you faire Lady grac'd with Natures gifts And with a spirit that hath true vertue in it Which my deiected Muse from sorrowes lifts And hath more power then others haue to win it bound with a dutie which must not be broken Giuen at my first conception for a token You the true Image of that Lady great For vertue and an honorable minde Of whom for your faire worth I would intreate More then affection doth in others binde To whom I owe more then you deigne to craue Loue seruice dutie life and all I haue A present all too meane if 't were farre better In one whom meanenesse meanenesse doth excell To whom I must and will remaine a debter A debter great how great I cannot tell Whos 's many fauours show'd to friends and me Lies hid within that cannot vttered be VVhat shall I giue that nothing haue to paie The widowes mite will not passe currant now That metall 's growne nought with vs now adaies Nor is it for true currant pay allow'd Yet where there 's nothing to be had you finde Accept good Lady of a gratefull minde This worke to your pure minde I doe present This honors prize vnto thy Iudgement sound VVhere if for any fault I should be shent Let some defence in thee be had and found Lest if some tempest should arise too fast I should be shiprack'd or in danger cast For well I know you lou'd her honor liuing Intirely so as pen cannot declare And after death in true affections giuing Did'st loue and zeale still to her honor beare Then for her sake let these some fauour finde That was her selfe so courteous free and kinde Good Lady which her life hast seene and knowne And all her vertues and her honors proued To whom her thoughts and counsels all were showne So much was you and shee of you beloued Can better tell what store of vertues lie Hid in her brest which no man can descrie I doe but adde a droppe vnto the sea For who can comprehend in any bounds Her honor 't is but labour cast away To finde out that which is not to be found But as a sparke is to a mightie fire So must I yeeld and valew my desire And though her modest blushes will not let her Her vertues prize nor take what is her owne Nor with that true deseruing praise beset her VVhich to the world is blaz'd so much and knowne Yet shall her vertues in their force abide Which through her modest vaile shee sought to hide For what can heart desire shee hath not found If wealth or riches shee hath not least store If fame or praise her name with that doth sound If honor who for her estate had more If with long life or length of daies and time VVho longer liu'd whose honor more did shine If with the gifts or graces of the minde VVho with her almost now may well compare Or hath had more or better beene inclinde VVhich kept her vertues with the fairest faire And like that praise which Scriptures Dauid gaue Brought good old age and honor to her graue Thus in this little volume may you reade Some vertues of her honorable minde Some of her merits worthie parts and deeds For all it is vnpossible to finde Vnlesse that I should out of nature dwell And learne such notes which humane notes excell Thus hoping of your gratious censures all I leaue yee to that euerlasting blisse 'T was fate not wit which to this taske did call My meaner spirits and rays'd my minde to this If ought miscaries blame not my intent For what is rudely sung is better meant To which pure sacred blessed Trinitie Which rules vnseene all things for th' best aboue vs Those Persons three inclos'd i th vnitie A wonder strange yet not so strange to loue vs Being such sinners ' gainst his Lawes rebelling Past all the tongues of men and Angels telling To him in all and vnto all in one Be all praise powre and glorie giuen alone FINIS