Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n earl_n lord_n york_n 3,185 5 9.8571 5 false
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
A20916 The time triumphant declaring in briefe, the ariual of our soueraigne liedge Lord, King Iames into England, his coronation at Westminster: together with his late royal progresse, from the Towre of London throúgh the Cittie, to his Highnes manor of White Hall. Shewing also, the varieties & rarieties of al the sundry trophies or pageants, erected ... With a rehearsall of the King and Queenes late comming to the Exchaunge in London. By Gilbert Dugdale. Dugdale, Gilbert. 1604 (1604) STC 7292; ESTC S110914 8,327 14

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

honours as freely to our Nation as their harts would wish as creating Knights of gentlemen Lordes of Knights and Earles of Lords no doubt hereafter Dukes of Earles I and raised vp an honor to England that to this day haue bin long in obliuion which as now it is honorably liuing so it will neuer die I meane our noble knights of the Bath young and gallant worthy and valiant nay see the beauty of our all kinde Soueraigne not onely to the indifferent of worth and the worthy of honor did he freely deale about thiese causes but to the meane gaue grace as taking to him the late Lord ch●mberlaines seruants now the Kings acters the Queene taking to her the Earle of Worsters seruants that are now her acters the Prince their sonne Henry Prince of Wales full of hope tooke to him the Earle of Nottingham his seruants who are now his acters so that of Lords seruants they are now the seruants of the King Queene and Prince But to returne againe to our time Triumphant now the hower is come and the day appointed the preperation of which is mightye I and so great as neither can my tongue tell or my pen set downe yet to make a flourish of a flourish thus it was our heretjcke King hearing of the preparation to be great aswell to note the other thinges as that was desirous priuately at his owne pleasure to visit them and accompanied with his Queene in his Coach be came to the Exchange there ●o see for their recreation and thinkeing to passe vnknowne the wylie Multitude perceiuing something began with such hurly burly to run vp and downe with such vnreuerent rashnes as the people of the Exchange were glad to shut the staire dores to kéepe them out heare they ●ost the pleasing sight they might haue enioyde but for their rashnes when his Highnes had beheld the Marchantes from a Windowe all below in the walkes not thinking of his comming whose presence else would haue binne more they like so many pictures ciuilly séeming all ●are stood silent modestie commanding them so to doe which sight so delighted the King that he greatly commended them saying 〈◊〉 neuer more delighted then seeing so many of diuers and sundry on s so well ordred and so ciuill one with the other but with all 〈◊〉 mended the rudenes of the Multitude who regardles of time 〈◊〉 person will be so troublesome And contrymen let me tell you this if you hard what I h●●● concerning that you would stake your feete to the Earth at such 〈◊〉 ere you would runne so regardles vp and downe say it is highne●● sure to be priuate as you may note by the order of his comming●● you then be publique and proclaime that which loue and duty c●lence too this she wes his loue to you but your open ignorance 〈◊〉 you will say perchance it is your loue will you in loue prease 〈◊〉 your Soueraigne thereby to offend him your Soueraigne per●● mistake your loue and punnish it as an offence but heare m●● hereafter comes by you doe as they doe in Scotland stand still 〈◊〉 and vse silence so shall you cherish his visitation and see him th●● once amongst you but I feare my counsell is but water turnd●●● Tems it helps not But to our Solempnitie they couet the Citty and country 〈◊〉 preparation to they day the couet the order for the Kings pers●● in the Cittie his welcome to it and his quiet passe through the●● the country they post vp to attend so that all are bussed to thi●●● nity and reason I trow being the day of Triumph so long 〈◊〉 The Tower was emptye of his prisoners and I beheld the 〈◊〉 Walter Rawly the late Lord Cobham the late Lord Gray M●● with others convaid some to the Marshalsies others to the g●●● and others appointed paisonres the Tower it selfe prepared v●● pompe as eye neuer sawe such glory in the hangings such M●● the Ornaments of the chambers such necessarie prouiston 〈◊〉 I beheld it I could no lesse then say God giues KING IAMES the place And glory of the day As neuer King possest like place That came the Northen way And since the heauens will haue it so what liuing soule dares answere no. Vpon the Thames the water workes for his entertainm Mirraculus and the Fire workes on the water passed pleasing as a Castell or fortresse builded on two barges seeing as a settled Forte in of an Iland planted with much munition of defence and two pinnases ready rigde armd likewise to assault the Castle that had you beheld the mannaging of that fight with onset on the Castle repulse from the Castle and then the taking of it in it was a show worthy the sight of many Princes being there plast at the cost of the Sincke-ports whereat the King all pleasd made answere that their loue was like the wilde Fire vnquenchable And I pray God it may euer be so Well from the Tower he came heare cost was quite careles desire that was fearelesse and content flourisht in aboundance but so Royally attended as if the Gods had summond a Parliament were all in their steps of Triumph to Ioues high court This worthy traine ending so Maiestique a presence and the companies of London in their liueries plast in streete double raild for them and the passingers the Whiflers they in their costly suites and Chaines of Gold walking vp and downe not a conduit betwixt the Tower and Westminster but runnes Wine drinke who wil comming thus with his Royal assembly all so gallantly mounted as the eie of man was amazed at the pomp In Fanchurch street was erected a stately Trophie or Pageant at the Citties Charge on which stood such a show of workmanship and glorie as I neuer saw the like top and top gallant whereon were showes so imbrodered and set out as the cost was incomparable who speaking spéeches to the King of that excellent eloquence and as while I liue I commend The Cittie of London very rarely and artificially made where no church house nor place of note but your eye might easilye find out as the Exchange Coleharber Powles Bowe Church c. There also Saint George and Saint Andrew in compleat Armour not in one combate fought for the victorie but an old hermitt passing by in an Dration ioynd them hand in hand and so for euer hath made them as one harte to the ioy of the King the delight of the Lords and the vnspeakeable comfort of the comminallty Our gratious Queene Ann milde and curteous plaste in a Chariot of excéeding beauty did all the way so humbly and with mildenes salute her subiects neuer ●eauing to bend her body to them this way and that that women and men in my sight wept with ioy The young hopeful Henry Fredericke or Fredericke Henry Prince of Wales smiling as ouer-ioyde to the peoples eternall comfort salute them with many a bende befor● the Lord Mayor of the Cittie
THE Time Triumphant Declaring in briefe the ariual of our S●●●raigne liedge Lord King IAMES into Engl●●● His Coronation at Westminster Together with his late roya●●●●gresse from the Towre of London through the Cittie to 〈◊〉 Highnes mannor of WhiteHall Shewing also the Varieties Rarieti●●●●●al the sundry Trophies or Pageants erected a● 〈◊〉 by the worthy Cittizens of the honorable Cittie of London a 〈◊〉 by certaine of other Nations Namely Italians Dutch a●● French With a rehearsall of the King and Queenes late 〈◊〉 comming to the Exchaunge in London By Gilbert Dugdale IN DOMINO CONFIDO ¶ At London printed by R. B. 1604. ❧ A Dedicatorie poem to the Trium●● of our most dreade and Soueraigne Lorde King Iames. HONOR attend thy gratious Maiestie Blisse be her Partner in thy Soueraigntie Though Dayes are yet young olde Ioyes wil hast When fearefull times are dateles deade and gone Thy gouerning hand that neuer yet knew other Then a Rulers equall suckt from thy faire Mother Whose carefull thoughtes in thee by Gods commaunde Hast from thy Childe-hoode helde a happie hande By which fayre hand Gods grace hath led thee hither To plant thy peace plenty and grace together So as our Tryumphs glorious be in showe So Tryumph-like Ioy may with quiet goe That both in one and one both wayes may be A double Ioy in this Solempnitie So Tryumph sings this song of Ioy and Mirth King IAMES live happie happiest on the Earth That God all seeing may so blesse thy Lande That seeing all may all thy evils withstande Death Spurneth Life starteth By Eliza. Life returneth Death departeth By K. Ia The time Triumphant The refayners inhabitants both young and olde of that excellent order and gouerment nothing of that giddie rashnes as in times before they were accustomed to be but all in one and one in all most worthely receiued the Imperiall name of King Iames and fréely consented to his Titles as by the grace of God of England Scotland Fraunce Irelande King Defender of c. The Day then generally knowne of his comming forwarte to the possession of the Regall seate let me tell you by the way the ioy was not so great in England by the English to fetch him as the sorrowe was in Scotland of the Scots to leaue him and that was more confounding to their Ioyes then the rest the parting betwixt his Quéene and him in the open stréete in the full eye of all his subiects who spent teares in aboundance to behold it heare English and Scottish in one simpathy Ioyned first in hartie affected loue in signe whereof the flouds of their eyes drawne frō their kind harts conioyned there Amitie and no doubt they that in kindnes being possessed with one ioy can wéepe togither they wil now and at all times liue and die together but to make hast to the principall whereof this is part towards England he comes his Royal entertainment in Barwicke I néede not set downe both of the traine of England Souldiers there yet I will tell you of a wise answere of the King to a question propounded when he entered in the town it rayned smal drops whereby some things had hinderance which should have Royalizd the time but his Grace gratiously being attended in his Chamber on the sudden looking from his window might sée the sunne shine one by of no small account began to question thus I muse why the temperate season was so quickly ouercast by a shower of raine and now that raine so ouerthrowne by this sunne-shine it presages somewhat sure the King smiling no great matter quoth he onely this imagine the first faire shew of Weather my prosperous setting forwards by Gods sufferance The latter shower the vniuersall teares of my Cuntrey to leaue their King and this suddaine Sun-shine the Ioy of Englande for my approach which vndoubtedly it was so as it appeared for the Cost Paynes loue of his Subiects was such all the way from Barwicke to Yorke from thence to Stamforde from thence to Theobals so to the Charter-house in London where hee remayned for certaine dayes and then he went to the Tower of London and so seating his most royall Person héere as the like hath seldome binne or 〈◊〉 euer will be againe to the worlds end to any mans immaginat●●● Well heere he is happily planted hartely welcome what 〈◊〉 then but his blessed Corronation at which was no small 〈◊〉 For had you seene him in progresse to it as many did when 〈◊〉 Barge at White Hall on S. Iames his day such was his salu●●●● the people and theirs to him but anon comes foorth England ●●●umph the worth of women Anne Quéene of Englande an● 〈◊〉 Wife to our most gratious King whose father was a King ●●●ther no lesse he a King and whose husband fower Kings in 〈◊〉 companied with louely Ladies the onely wed starres of the w●●●● beautye and good graces following her deare Husband to ●●●●tion with her seemely hayre downe trailing on her princely 〈◊〉 shoulders on which was a crownet of Gold she so mildely sal●●●●● Subiectes that the women wéeping ripe cryed all in one vo●●●blesse the Royall Queene welcome to England long to liue 〈◊〉 so to Westminster they went and tooke on them the Royalty 〈◊〉 the compleat order of Coronation and by a generall and fre●●●●● enioyd the rights of Royaltye and were insest in honour 〈◊〉 Maiesty owners of Royaltie and made the onely Commau●●●● principalitie the Triumph of that time I omitte but let me London whose heartes were wilde Fire and burned vnque●●●● in loue to this Royall couple and expressing her desires 〈◊〉 heads togither to solemnize in Triumph that happy day wh●●●er of glory was dasht by the omnipotencie of Gods power v●●●●tally visitting the Cittie and land with a general visitation h● 〈◊〉 that time taking thousands to his mercye and laide their head 〈◊〉 that else in thiese actions would haue held them hie yet sée a●●●● newe loue of his Maiestie he noblie regarding the cost toget●●● there loues and that there expectations should goe currant a● 〈◊〉 when the full possession of their Ioyes should be that was 〈◊〉 ●●●angery hand of God had workt the will of his all commaund●●●●er when the Infection ceased then should the Triumph of t●● 〈◊〉 solemnized to this consent cost prepared and the Cittie with ●●●●●gers Marchants and others erected Trophies of glory Pag●●●●● that magnificence the like was neuer well the time appoin●●●● his highnes would set forward should be in the holy time in 〈◊〉 ●oyfull sp●ing time when the ground in Triumph of the time should ●ike wise flourish in ample equipage and she no niggard of her pompe attires hers in a gréene liuery Imbrodered with flowers of a thousand ●ullers diuers and sundry thus heauen and earth applaudes the Triumph of King Iames mortals al agree to make that hower famous In the meane time his grace together with his Queene and children progrest in the country and dealt