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death_n life_n love_n soul_n 8,923 5 5.0064 4 true
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A11095 The bride by S.R. Rowlands, Samuel, 1570?-1630? 1617 (1617) STC 21365.5; ESTC S2862 12,668 38

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some of womens ioye and peace And shall not we performe obedience then As wee are bound by law of God and nature Yealding true harts affection vnto men Ordain'd to rule and gouerne euery creature Why then of all on earth that liue and moue We should degenerate and monsters proue Besse Monsters forsoth nere sleepe in maidens beds But they are lodged with your married wiues The knotty browes and rugged butting heds Concerne not vs professing single liues To learne your horne-booke we haue no deuotiō Keepe monsters to your selues we scorne the motion Bride Besse of such shapes whē your turne coms to marry A carefull mynd in choyse of husband beare For if your browes from former smothnes varry Thinke on this speach It commeth with a feare Which I am past perplexe me no feare can Being sure I haue a constant honest man Iane. Belieue you haue and t' is enough they say But you and I agree not in a mynde I read in storyes men will run astray Yet make their foolish wiues beleeue th' are kind And therefore since they are so cunning knowne I le keepe my selfe a maide and trust to none Had I one sutor swore himselfe loue-sicke Another for his Mistris sake would die A third thorow Cupids power growne lunaticke A fourth that languishing past hope did lye And so fist sixt and seauenth in loues passion My Maiden-head for them should ner'e change fashion Aeneas told many a cogging tale To Dido that renowned worthy Queene And Iason with his flatterings did preuaile Yet falser knaues in loue were neuer seene And at this instant hower as they were then The world aboundeth with deceitfull men Doll Iane that 's too true for to you all I sweare How I was bobd by one t is shame to tell A smoother fellow neuer wench did heare And as I liue I thought he lou'd me well Heere you shall see one of his cunning letters Which still I keepe meane to shew his betters In Romane hand on guilded paper writ Pray Dorothy read you it to the rest But whether his owne head inuented it Or robd some printed Booke I doe protest I cannot tell but his owne name is to it Which proues he takes vpon him for to doe it The Loue Letter The truest heart shall nought but falshood cherish The mildest man a cruell tyrant prooue The water drops the hardest flint shall perish The hilles shall walke and massie earth remooue The brightest Sun shall turne to darke some clowde Ere I prooue false where I my loue haue vowde Ere I prooue false the world desolu'd shall be To that same nothing that it was before Ere I prooue false mine eyes shall cease to see And breath of life shall breath in me no more The strong built frame shall moue from his foundation Ere I remoue my soules determination Death shall forget to kill and men to dye Condemned soules shall laugh and cease to mourne The lowest hell shall rise and meete the skye Time shall forget his course and backe returne Contrary vnto kinde each thing shall proue Ere I befalse or once forget my loue Oh then deare heart regard my sad estate My passions griefe and wofull lamentation Oh pittie me ere pittie come too late That hold thee deare past mans imagination Preserue my life and say that thou wilt haue me Or else I die the whole world cannot saue me Grace This is a Ballad I haue heard it sung Doll Well be or be not that 's not to the matter But who will trust a louers pen or tongue That vse all protestations thus to flatter For this base fellow that was so perplext Sent this one monday and was married next Sara Now out vpon him most dissembling creature I le warrant you that he can neuer thriue He showes himselfe euen of as bad a nature As euer was in any man aliue Alas poore foole that hath this fellow got Shee hath a Iewell of him hath she not Nell Yes surely hath she waying all things deepe A louer that will tast as sweete as gall One that is better farre to hang then keepe And I perswade me you doe thinke so all Excepting onely partiall Mistris Bride For she stands stoutly to the married side Bride So farre as reason and as right requires I will defend them both by word and deede Yet haue I no apology for lyers And ill conditions that false hearts doe breede All that are married be not faithfull kinde Nor all vnmarried are not chast in minde Are there not maids vpon your cōscience speake Knowne to your selues as well as you knowe me Will vowe their loue to men and falsly breake Which in the number of your Virgins be That will delude some halfe a score young men And hauing gull'd them take some other then I will not name her was in loue with ten But in your eares I 'le note her secret harke She had both Courtiers Cockneys Country-men Yet in the ende a Saylor boards her Barke And therefore put not men in all the blame But speake the trueth and so the diuell shame Grace I knowe the partie well that you doe meane And thus much for her I dare boldly say To diuers sutors though she seemed to leane To trye her fortunes out the wisest way Yet did she neuer plight her faith to any But vnto him she had among so many And ther 's no doubt but diuers doe as she Your selfe in conscience haue had more then one To whom in shewe you would familiar be And comming to the point why you would none Ciuilitie allowes a courteous cariage To such as proffer loue by way of marriage An affable behauiour may be vsed And kinde requitall answere kinde deseart And yet no honest man thereby abused With fained showes as if he had the heart When there is purpose of no such intent To gull him with his time and mony spent Mall Were I to giue maides counsell they to take it And that they would consent to doe as I Who offered vs his loue we would forsake it And like Dianes Nymphs would liue and die For I protest your louers should haue none But wiues and widdowes to put tricks vpon We would reuenge the crafty double dealing Thousands of harmelesse virgins doe endure By their deceitfull art of kinde-hart stealing Keeping our loues vnto our selues secure And credit to their vowes should be no other But in at one eare and goe out at t'other Bride This you would doe and y' are in that minde now But I perswade me t is but rashly spoken And therefore Mary make no foolish vow For if you doe in conscience t' will be broken Say you doe meane to keepe you free from man But to be sure still put in If you can Or else you may presume aboue your power Twixt words and deedes great difference often growes You may be taken such a louing hower Your heart may all be Cupids to dispose Then vve shall haue you sicke pine and
elements together The one forsaking aire the other water And they that woare the finne to weare the feather Remaining changelings all the worlds time after The course of nature will be so beguilde One maide shall get another maide with childe When euery Crow shall turne to be a Parret And euery Starre out-shine the glorious Sunne And the new water works runne white and clarret That come to towne by way of Islington Woemen and men shall quite renounce each other And maides shall bee with childe like Merlins mother Grace Like Merlins mother how was that I pray For I haue heard he was a cunning man There lines not such another at this day Nor euer was since Brittans first began Tell vs the story and we well will minde it Because they say In written bookes we finde it Bride Marry this Merlins mother was welsh Lady That liued in Carnaruan beautious maide And loue of Lords and Knights shee did not way by But set all light and euery one denay'd All Gentlemen as all you knowe be there That came a wooing were no wit the neere At length it hapned that this gallant girle Which scorned all men that she euer saw Holding her selfe to be a matchlesse Pearle And such a Loadestone that could Louers draw Grew belly-full exceeding bigge and plumpe Which put her Mayden-credit in a dumpe Time running course and her full stomacke fed When consumation of fewe months expired Shee husbandlesse a mayde was brought to bed Of that rare Merlin that the world admired This to be honest all her friends did doubt i● Much prittle prattle was in Wales about it So that ere long the strangnes of the thing To heare that Lady Adhan had a childe Caus'd famous Arthur being Brittans King Send for her to the Court and reason milde To know how this rare matter could be done And make her finde a father for her sonne She told his Maiestie with sighes and teares That keeping beautie carefull from the Sunne Within her chamber safely shut from feares Till Phaebus horses to the West were runne The doores fast lock'd and she her selfe alone Came in a gallant stranger meere vnknowne Who euer came in courting manner to her With all the louing courage could be thought So powerfull in perswasions force to woe her That to his will constrained she was brought Although her heart did firme deniall vow Yet she was forc'd to yeeld and knew not how So oft he came quoth she priuate and strange When I shut vp my selfe in most sad humor That I began to finde an inward change Which brought me quickly to an outward tumor An 't please your highnes I was in such case That to the world I durst not show my face My foes reioyced all my friends were sad My selfe in sorrow spent both day and night No satisfaction my wrong'd honour had Was neuer maide in such perplexed plight To be with child whether I will or no And for my child no humane father know Had I bin married quoth she as I ought And with my loue the loue of man requited I had not to this woefull state bin brought In all contempt disgracefully despighted And tearmed strumpet by the rude vnciuill Who say my sonne is bastard to the diuell Wherefore I wish Ladies of my degree And all the rest inferiour sorts of maydes To rake a warning for their good by me Yeelding affection when kind men perswades And hate disdaine that vile accursed sin Least they be plagu'd for pride as I haue bin How say you to this warning wenches now That Lady Adhan giues vnto you all Were you not better marriage to allow Then in a manner for a Midwife call I thinke you were if I might iudge the cause How say you Susan speake good Doll and Grace Grace This is a story that seemes very strange And for my part it doth me full perswade My Mayden-head with some man to exchange I will not liue in danger of a mayde The world the flesh the diuell tempts vs still I le haue a husband I protest I will If I were sure none of you here would blabbe I would euen tell you of a dreame most true And if I lye count me the veriest drabbe That euer any of you saw or knewe When a friend speakes in kindnes do not wrong her For I can keepe it for my life no longer One night I haue the day of moneth set downe Because I will make serious matters sure Me thought I went a iourney out of towne And with a propper man I was made sure As sure as death me thought we were assured And all things for the businesse were procured We did agree and faith and troath did plight And he gaue me and I gaue him a Ring To doe as Mistris Bride will doe at night And I protest me thought he did the thing The thing we stand so much vpon he tooke And I vpon the matter bigge did looke Forsooth in sadnes I was bigge with childe And had a belly marry God forbid Then fell a weeping but he laught and smil'd And boldly said wee le stand to what we did Fye fye quoth I who euer stands I fall Farewell my credit maydenhead and all Thus as I cry'd and wept and wrong my hands And said deare maydes and maydenhead adue Before my face me thought my mother stands And question'd with me how this matter grew With that I start awake as we are now Yet feard my dreame had bin no dreame I vow I could not for my life tell how to take it For I was stricken in a mightie maze Therefore if marriage come I le not forsake it T is danger to liue virgin diuers wayes I would not in such feare againe be found Without a husband for a thousand pound Susan Is it euen so Grace are you come to this You that perswaded me from loue of late When you knew who sent me a Ring of his And would haue had me bin his turtle mate You cunningly did make me to forsake him Because I thinke in conscience you will take him I le trust your word another time againe That can dissemble so against your heart Wishing that I should earnestly refraine From that which thou thy selfe embracer art This is braue doing I commend you Grace But I le nere trust you more in such a case Bride I pray you here let this contention ende We being all of selfe same woman kind And each the other with aduise befriend Because I see some of you well enclin'd To take good wayes and so become good wiues I le teach you certaine rules to leade your liues You that intend the honourable life And vvould vvith ioy liue happy in the same Must note eight duties doe concerne a wife To vvhich vvith all endeuour she must frame And so in peace possesse her husbands loue And all distast from both their hearts remooue The first is that she haue domestique cares Of priuate businesse for the house vvithin Leauing her