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death_n sick_a young_a youth_n 22 3 8.0126 4 false
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A02618 A happy husband or, Directions for a maide to choose her mate As also, a wiues behauiour towards her husband after marriage. By Patricke Hannay, Gent. To which is adioyned the Good wife, together with an exquisite discourse of epitaphs, including the choysest thereof, ancient or moderne. By R.B. Gent. Hannay, Patrick, d. 1629?; Brathwaite, Richard, 1588?-1673. Good wife. aut 1619 (1619) STC 12747; ESTC S103737 79,392 200

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terram repetat pars altera coelum Nec mutas mores caela petendo tuos At vale ●…am faciem nequeo discernere gratam Qua mihi semper erit gratia sed arcta nimis Arcta nimis sed amaena satis dum fider a vultum Splendida praestantem continuere tuum Sie perijt quod terra parit quod vertic●… coeli Profluit in coelum tendat alta petat Aliud Hic fitus est Satyru●… qui stupra latere potentum Impatiens patiens limina mortis adit Englished Heere lies a Satyre now reduc'd to dust Who scourg'd d●…sertlesse honour great mens lust These taxt He roundly and had vow'd to doe it More boldly yet if He had liu'd vnto it ¶ A Funerall Poeme vpon the death of the hopefull yong Gentleman Mast. Will. Horsey who deceased the 24. of Aprill Ann. Dom. 1615. Plants that transplanted are haue 〈◊〉 grouth Yet fares it othe●…ise with this blest youth For he transplanted to another Sphere Perfects that tender grouth which he had here Tender indeed yet me thinks there appeares Age in his houres though youth was in his yeares For by experience of this sur●… I am Neuer came childe more neere vnto a Man Well may we then excuse his mothers mone To lose her Sonne and that her onely One Whose hope gaue life vnto her house and her If mothers erre in this they lightly erre For natiue loue must ●…eeds enforce a teare To see them laid on Beare whom they did beare To see their Birth turn'd Earth their very womb●… Which brought them forth conuerted to a Tombe Yet this should make his mother change her song To see her hope translat'd ' boue hope so yong To see her onely and now happy Sonne To haue his Pilgrime-taske so quickly done But shee ha's lost him no he is not lost For where He seemes to lose He gaineth most And though He haue not Her He ha's another For now the Church triumphant is his Mother Feeding his infant-glory with her pap Dandling him sweetely in her heauenly lap For this is confirm'd by the sacred word He cannot die that dieth in the Lord. Cease then thou tender Mother cease to w●…epe Thy Sonne 's not dead but onely falne asleepe Which sleepe dissolu'd his corps shall be vnited Vnto his soule amongst the Saints delig●…ted Peace happy Soule crowne thy eternall dai●…s With wreath of glory to thy Makers praise That as thou liu'd a Mirror to thy Age So thou may shine in Sions heritage His Epitaph Heere interred in this Tomb●… Yong yet vertues hop●…full Bloome Fathers Boy Mothers ioy Shrined is yet from this shrine There 's a substance that 's diuine Which no graue Can receaue Making claime to Heauens pure clime ¶ The Author vpon his selected and euer to be remembred E. C. Parragon for beautie and vertue who died the 5. of Decemb Ann. Dom. 1615. Take mother Earth thy virgin-daughter heer●… Born●… on her Bere ere sh●… was borne to b●…are Take her for of her wonders may be said Heer●… one and 〈◊〉 lies who di'd●… a Maid ¶ Vpon the much lamented Death of the vertuous virgine A. T. in Scarborough lately deceased and of her sorrowfull Parents incessantly moned Dead say no more shee 's dead keepe in that word It will goe neere to drowne her teare-swolne Foord Why He must know it true yet such as these If grieues should be imparted by degrees How must they be imparted By her Tombe It cannot speake Such grieues are seldome dumbe Vpon her Tombe Weepe weepe Rosemarie sprig and shew remor●…e Thou shold haue deckt her bride now decks her corse ¶ Vpon the Tombe of ..... lately erected ..... Perhaps thou may haue Shebnaes doome To haue thy corps deuided from thy Tombe And haue name of that crest thou gaue thy Neighbor To close thy corps in Earth and saue this labor How fond then thou to build so costly Shrine Neither perchance for * thee nor none of thine Yet if thou want thy Tombe thou shalt not misse To haue thy Epitaph and this it is ....... Is Dead The cause if you would know His winde-pipe burst and he no more could blow ¶ Vpon a late deceased Pinch-gut Macer dide rich they say but it 's not so For he dide poore and was indebted too How sh●…ld that be Obserue me and I le tell ye He dide indeb●…ed b●…th to backe and belly For all he scrap't from his Atturnies Fees Seru'd but to starue his Maw with bread cheese So as'mongst those we rightly may him call Whose life spent lesse then did his Funerall For all his life his House scarse eate one Beast Yet Dead his Sonne makes vp the Churles Feast ¶ This the Authour wrote vpon an excellent Bowler and his Friend aptly resembling Mans life to a game at Bowles The World is the Alley wh●…re we play The Bowles we play with Creatures that we vse The Rubs the Passio●…s of our minds the way Needs no Ground-giuer there 's but one to chuse The way of all Flesh Seauen's our Game we say For Seauen yeere is liues-lease that limits vs The Blocke our end which when it draw●…th on We po●…ke our Bowles and so our Game is done ¶ Vpon a singular Irishman By him lies heere I finde from whence we came Where we must goe how lif●…'s an Irish game This day in health and wealth next poore sicke For Irish games haue still an Iri●…h tricke ¶ Vpon the death of one Cookes wife an Inscription allusiue to her name Death 's the cooke pro●…ideth meate For the crawling wormes to eate Why shouldst thou then Cool e repine Death should dresse that wife of thine All must die yea time will be Thou wilt thinke he pleasur'd thee For no question being told She was s●…plesse 〈◊〉 old He thought fit she'sd liue no longer That thou might chuse out a yonger This then on her Age thy youth May be writ as grounded truth Heere she lies long may she li●… Ere she d. de was wish'd to die This the Author presently composed vpon this occasion being with sundry Gentlemen at Waltham exceeding merrily disposed one Cooke a neighbour of the Hoasts where he lay came suddenly in pitteously lamenting the death of his wife being newly departed euery one laboured to allay his sorrow but by how much more instant were their comforts by so much more violent were his Passions at last the Author percei●…ing by his Hoast that he expressed a dissembling sorrow being impatient of her life and therefore by all probabilitie inwardly content with her death being an old decrepite woman and He in the Prime of his age in stead of all vnnecessarie comforts applied this soueraigne Discourse as a salue to his griefe without further premeditation coenae fercula nostrae Mallem conu●… quàm placuisse cocis Englished As in my choise of meate so in my Booke I 'd rather please my guests then please my Cooke ¶ In Actorem Mimicum cui vix parem
Pagans dissolution reposing a more true happines in his end then in his Birth his exit or passage then his intrat to this Theatre or transitorie Pilgrimage making his diem fatalem his diem natalem the day of his death the day of his birth where Man by an imputatiue goodnesse deduced from God not inherent in himselfe may in his death be rather said to be translated then departed Corinth both wise and rich in treasures store Keepes Perianders Bodie in her shore Continued by Laertius by way of an Epigram Greeue not that Thou shouldst not obtaine thy wish But ioy in that the Gods haue giuen thee this For Thou by death hast past those sorrowes now Which many one would doe but cannot doe ¶ Vpon the much lamented death of the truly honourable eminent patterne of vnblemished Iustice Sir Augustine Nicholls one of our Iudges of the Northerne Circuit who died at Kendall the third day of August Anno 1616. Sic Nicholaus obit potius Nicodemus astra nunc Astraea petit quae mori●…ndo tenet Nicholls is dead or Nicodemus rather The Widd●…ws cheerer and the Orphans father Dead why it cannot ●…e Iustice should die For she ha's will and power enough to flie Aboue the reach of Death It s true yet Death Ha●…h reft this Iustice-patron of his breath Of Breath No matter Breath is but a winde That vades but cannot preindice the Minde Where Iustice sits as Regent wherefore then Since Iustice liues should she be mon'd by men As if deceast I le tell you Heere is one Or was one rather for he now is gone Who seeing th' end of Iustice-circuit nie Embracing Death did i●… his Circuit die No mar●…ell then if men do Iustice mone When They do find her mansion vnder stone And hard it is to finde Her whom They seeke As ●… ' heare the stone that couers her to speake This then shall be her Dirge her dying Song Shepleads in hea●…en on earth she ha's lost her tong Terras Astraea reliquit Another Dialogue wise Eubaeus and Tymaeus Eubaeus Silence awake not Iustice. Tymaeus Who can keepe the eies of Iustice closed Eubaeus Death and Sleepe Tymaeus Death cannot do it Eubaeus Cannot pray thee see What Death hath done then Tymaeus Lasse how mortally lies Iustice wounded Eubaeus Wounded no shee 's dead Tymaeus Dead Eubaeus Yes see tong pulse arme eie heart hand head all motionless●… come nearer Tymaeus I 'me too near Eubaeus Doest weepe Tymaeus I offer to her Shrine a teare Eubaeus Thou art too childish Tymaeus No if I could more I would expresse it Eubaeus Why didst nere know b●…fore Iustice lie speechl●…sse Tymaeus Yes but nere did know despaire of her recouery till now Eubaeus No th●… hast h●…ard that saying 〈◊〉 growne common Tymaeus What might it b●… Eubae That Iustice's like a Woman Tymae In what respect Eubae In this it may be●…'ed When she lies speechles shee is neerly dead Tymae Most true in both Eubae It is but doe not weepe Let 's vanish hence suffer Iustice sleepe ¶ An Epitaph reduced to the forme of a Dialogue consisting of two Persons and two Parts representing in the Persons Affection and Instruction in the Parts Passion and Consolation prepared at first for the memory of his neuer-sufficiently remembred Father by the Authour emphatically shadowed vnder the name of Philopater The Persons names are Philopater and Philogenes Philop. Sleepes my deare Father Philoge Yes my Sonne I sleepe Philop. Wh●… then I wrong'd your quiet rest to weepe Sith Christians should not any difference make Twixt Death and Sleepe Philoge It 's true for ●…th awake Both lie them downe both rise bot●… bedding haue The liuing haue their couch the dead their graue For as our Death by Sleepe is shadowed So by our Bed our Graue is measured Philop. O pardon then my teares Philoge My Sonne I doe These teares thou sheds do thy aff●…ctiō show And beare record in He●…uen Philop. Where you are blest Philoge Indeede I am Philop. Heauens grant my Soule like rest ¶ A Diuine composition stiled The Pilgrimes Petition Keepe me O Lord ô daigne my Soule to keep Thou art her Shepheard shee the wandring Sheep Thou art the liuing life the Labourers way The Pilgrims staffe Faiths Anchor Iosuahs day Yea Iosuahs Day-starre who so if thou please Canst make the Sun goe backe without degrees ¶ The Sinners Cymball I cried vnto the Lord he healed me I sicke to death he sh●…w'd me remed●…e I hunger-staru'd he gaue me Angels food I all athirst he quench'd it with his blood ¶ In obitum Thomae Brathwaite optimae spei indolis generosissimae vitae probatissimae fidei integerrimae omni ex parte parati peri tique R. B. Memoriae eius studiosissimus lugubria ista Poemata grati animi pignora diu meditata iam serò sed seriò in publicam lucem prolata Dialogi more ccmposuit Philaretus and Euthymius Philaret Quò redis Euthym. In gremium matris Philaret Quos quaeris Euthym. Amicos Philaret His moriendo ●…ares Euthym. His moriendo fruor Philar. Tunc tibi mors lucrum Euthym. M●…hi lux via vita leuamen Philar. Tunc non amissus Euthy M●…ssus at ante meos ¶ In Anagramma quod sibi ipsi composuit Annulo inscripsit Brathwaite Vita vt herba Vita vt Herba tuum est Anagramma tuaque sub vrna Hoc videam br●…uis est vita sed herba leuis Annulus hoc tenuit namque Annulus arctus vt annus Quo velut afflatu fata futura refers ¶ Vpon the late decease of his much lamented friend and kinsman Alle●… Nicholson a zealous industrious member both in Church and Common-weale Hauxide laments thy Death Grasmyre not so Wishing I hou hadst b●…ene dead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 agoe For then her market had not so be●…ke done But had suru●…u'd ●…hy Age in time ●…o come And well may Hauxide grieue at thy Departure Since Shee receiu'd from thee her ancient charter Which Grasmyre su●…s since Thou art turn'd to To bring about now ha●…h broght to p●…sse grasse Thus much for th●…e nor would I haue thee know it For thy pure zeale could nere e●…dure a Poet Yet for the Loue I bore thee and that Blood Which twixt vs both by Nati●…e course hath flow'd This will I say and may for sure I am The North nere bred sincerer P●…rer man ¶ In obitum generosissimi viri L. P. genio quàm ingenio minus faelici Franciscus Ridgeway eius memoriae studiosissimus hosce th●…eneticos modos composuit Flebo cur amisi memorandi pignus amici Falleris amitti morte pe●…ente nequit Praemitti fate●…r Quis enim non fata capesset Discimur exemplo sic oriendo mori At dol●…t exemplis tua fata venisse sub illis Q●…is si tu perias fama perennis erit Quid dixi an peries peries sanè corpore quid si Hac species periat mens speciosa manet Altera pars