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A73861 The battaile of Agincourt Fought by Henry the fift of that name, King of England, against the whole power of the French: vnder the raigne of their Charles the sixt, anno Dom. 1415. The miseries of Queene Margarite, the infortunate wife, of that most infortunate King Henry the sixt. Nimphidia, the court of Fayrie. The quest of Cinthia. The shepheards Sirena. The moone-calfe. Elegies vpon sundry occasions. By Michaell Drayton, Esquire. Drayton, Michael, 1563-1631. 1631 (1631) STC 7191; ESTC S109888 153,591 328

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borne Of Christian Kings the greatest then aliue Now he the Crowne full forty yeeres had worne Doth all his Regall Soueraignety suruiue Of all men liuing and the most forlorne So strange a thing can destiny contriue So many sundry miseries as he No King before had euer liu'd to see To heare all this Queene Margarite must end● Yet sadly to her fathers Court confin'de And now King Edward held himselfe secure When things fell out so fitly to his minde But when of rest he did himselfe assure Vpon a suddaine rose so rough a wind In his strong hand which shooke his Scepter mo 〈…〉 Then all the stormes that ere had blowne before For then in minde to league himselfe with Fr 〈…〉 Which he perceiu'd would be the surest way His questiond Tytle highly to aduance And at his need should serue him for a kay ●o open him their policies vvhose chance ●as then in casting and the next to play For Margarite still the French King Lewis prest For second aydes nor would she let him rest Wherefore he sends a marri'ge to entreat ●ith beautious Bona with whose rich report ●ame was opprest with and a taske too great ●he French Queenes sister and with her in Court ●arwicke the man chose foorth to worke the feat ●●● is sent thither in such sumptuous sort And in short time so well his businesse plyes That she was like to proue an English prize In the meane while this youthful King by chance ●omming to Grafton where the Dutchesse lay ●hen stil'd of Bedford his eye haps to glance 〈…〉 her bright Daughter the faire Widdow Gray 〈…〉 se beauties did his senses so intrance 〈…〉 stole his heart so suddainly away That must he lose his Crowne comeweale come woe She must be his though all the world say no Her lookes like Lethe make him to forget ●on what businesse he had Warwicke sent 〈…〉 this Lady he his loue so set 〈…〉 at should his Crowne from off his head be rent ●his rebellious people rise to let ●s choyse of his they should it not preuent For those pure eyes his bosome that had pierc'd Had writ alaw there not to be reuers'd What lesse amends this Lady can I make For her deere husband in my quarrell slaine Then lawfull marri'ge which for iustice sake I must performe quoth hee lest she complaine For a iust Prince so me the world shall take Soothing himselfe vp in this amorous vaine With his affections in this sort doth play Till he a Queene made the faire Lady Gray This Act of Edwards com'n to Warwicks eare And that the sequell show'd it to be true In his sterne eyes it eas'ly might appeare His heart too great for his strait bosome grew He his Commission doth in piece-meale ●eare Breakes the broad Seale and on the ground it th● And prayes blest heau'n may curse him if that ● For this disgrace reuenged would not be Haue I quoth hee so lifted thee 〈…〉 That to thy greatuesse I the scorne am growne Haue I for thee aduentur'd beene so oft In this long Warre as to the world is knowne And now by thee thus basely am I scoft By this disgrace vpon me thou hast throwne If these thy wrongs vnpunish'd slightly passe Hold Warwicke base and falne from what he was Know t w'as the Nevills forthy Title stood Else long e'r this layd lower then the ground And in thy cause my Father shed his blood None of our house for thee but beares a wound And now at last to recompence this good 〈…〉 for me this Guerdon hast thou ●ound 〈…〉 proud head this h●d shal pluck thy crown Or if thou stand then 〈…〉 Warwick down Yet he to England peaceably repaires And with a smooth browe smother● his intent And to the King 〈…〉 the French affaires ●● what in Court had past there since he went His spleene he for a fitter season spares 〈…〉 he the same more liberally might vent Calme was his countenance and his language faire But in his brest a deepe revenge he bare MEane while Queene Margarit a poore exile heares How things in England in her absence went 〈…〉 halfe burst heart which but a little cheeres ●●● from her head she felt the Crowne was rent ●et though fare off a little glimpse appeares ● seeming hope and though it fain●ly lent It might hau● said had not the F●●es said no These stormes at home might her some profit blow 〈…〉 heares how Warwicke cunningly had wrought 〈…〉 Duke of Clarence from his brothers side ●●● that braue Youth at Callice hauing caught ●●● eldest daughter had to him affide How to rebell the Northerne men were brou● And who by Warwicke poynted was their guide A● on the W●l●h he had a mighty hand By Edward rais'd those rebels to withstand Of new Rebellions at Northampton rais'd And to despight the King what they had done How they at Grafton the Earle Riuers seas'd And Sir Iohn Wooduile his most hopefull Sonne Who with their heads could hardly be appeas d And of the fame by puissant Warwicke wonne Who hauing taken Edward in his Tent His King his prisoner into York●shir● sent Then heares againe how Edward had escapt And by his friends a greater power had got How he the men of Lincolneshire intrapt Who neere to Stamford pay'd a bloody shot And when the Earle his course for Callice shapt When England lastly grew for him to hot Vaucleere who there his Deputy he put The Ports against his late grand Captaine shut Lastly shee heares that he at Deepe ariues And lately com'n to Amboyes to the Court ●●ereas King Lewis to his vtmost striues ●o entertaine him in most Princely sort When the wise Queene her businesse so contriues That she comes thither small what though her port Yet brings along the sweet yong Prince her son●e To proue what good with Warwick might be done Wen both in Court and presence of the King Their due respect to both of them that gaue ●● will'd them in so pertinent a thing That they the like should of each other haue The teares began from both their eyes to spring That each from other Pitty see●'d to craue In gracefull manner when the grieued Queene Thus to that great Earle gently breaths her spleene Warwicke saith shee how mercilesse a Foe ●●st thou beene still to my poore child and mee ●hat villaine Yorke which hast aduanced so Which neuer could haue risen but for thee ●hat Valour thou on Edward didst bestow ● hadst thou show'd for him thou here dost see Our Damaske Roses had adorn'd thy Crest And with their wreathes thy ragged Staues bene drest First at Saine Albans at Northampto● then 〈…〉 fatall Towt●n that most fearefull fight 〈…〉 many nay what multitudes of men 〈…〉 fierce Warwicke slaine and put to flight O if thy Sword that euer stood for ●en Had but beene drawne for Henry and his right He should
well that all things went not right For with his succours Clarence came not in Whom to suspect he greatly doth beginne And not in vaine for that disloyall Lord Taking those forces he had leuied leaues The Earle and with his Brother doth accord Which of all hope braue VVarwicke so bere●ue●● ●hat now King Edward hopes to be restor'd Which then too late the credulous Earle perceiues Edward towards London with an Army sped To take the Crown once more from Henrys head The Queene in France this woful newes that heard How farre through England Edward thus had past As how by Glarence whom she euer fear'd VVarwicke behind-hand mightily was cast This most vndaunted Queene her hopes yet cheer'd By those great perills she had lately past And from King Lewis doth three thousand prest To ayde her friends in England in distresse Whilst she is busie gathering vp those aydes In so short time as France could her afford Couragious VVarwicke basely thus betray'd By Clarence lewdly falsifying his word The most couragious Earle no whit dismayd But trusting still to his successefull Svvord Follovves the King towards London march'● before Each day his Power increasing more and more But Edward by the Londoners let in Who in their Gates his Army tooke to guard VVarwicke this while that trifling had not bin But with a povver sufficiently prepar'd T' approach the City brauely doth begin To dare the King vvho lately him had dar'd Who then from London his Arm'd forces leades Towards where his march ambitious VVarwicke tread● From London this that from Saint Albans set These two grād souldiers shoul●ring for the Crown They in the mid-way are at Barnet met Where then they set their puissant Armies downe VVarwicke as neere as euer hee could get But Edward onely taketh vp the Towne Betwixt whose ●ents a Heath call'd Gladmore lyes Where they prepare to act this bloody prize With Drums and Trumpets they awake the day ●uffled in mists her lowring selfe that showes To stop their madnesse doing all it may ●howing what blood her light was like to lose But hope of slaughter beares so great asway That with the Sunne their rage still higher growes Full were their hands of death so freely dealt That the most mortal wounds the least were felt The aduerse Ensignes to each other waue As t' were to call them forward to the field The King the Earle The Earle the King doth braue Nor cares he for the Leopards in his shield And whilst one friend another striues to saue He 's slaine himselfe if not enforc'd to yeeld In either Army there is not one eye But is spectator of some Tragedy Those wrongs the King had from the Earle receiu'd ●●pulst the Kingdome onely by his power ●●en to the height his powerfull hand vp heau'd ●or full'reuenge in this vnhappy houre And by the King the Earle his hopes bereau'd ●heltred by him from many a bloody shower Spurres vp reuenge and with that violent rage That scarsely blood their fury could asswage VVarwicke who sees his Souldiers had the worse And at a neere point to be put to flight Throwing himselfe from o● his Armed Horse Thrusts in on foote into the deadliest fight Edward againe with an vnusuall force In his owne person in the Armies sight Puts for the Garland which if now he lose Warwicke his Crowne at pleasure would dispos● To Edwards side but fortune doth encline Warwickes high valour then was but in vaine His noble soule there destin'd to resigne Braue Mountacute his valiant Brother slaine Here Sommerset with them that did combine Forced to flye and Exceste● is faine To saue himselfe by Sanctuary this day Edward's victorious and beares all away THis fatall field vnluckily thus lost That very day so Destiny contriues That the grieu'd Queene at Sea turmoyl'd and tost Neere twenty dayes in Weymouth Road ariues Where scarcely landed but Post after Post Brings her this ill newes vvhich so farre depriues Her of all comfort that shee curst and band Those plaguy winds that suffered her to land Wert thou quoth shee so fortunate in fight O noble VVarwicke when thou wert our foe And now thou stood'st in our indoubted right And should'st for Henry thy high valour show Thus to be slaine what power in our despight Watcheth from heau'n vpon our ouerthrow Th' vnlucky Starres haue certainly made lawes To marke for death the fauourers of our cause O vvhat infernall brought that Edward backe 〈…〉 late expel'd by VVarwickes powerfull hand Was there no way his rotten Ship to wracke Was there no Rock was there no swallowing sand And too the wretched Subiects were so slacke To suffer him so traiterously to land Surely whole heau'n against vs haue conspir'd Or in our troubles they had else beene tyr'd Was I for this so long detayn'd in France From ragefull Tempests and reseru'd till now That I should land to meete with this mischance ●t must needes be the Powers haue made a vowe Vp to that height my sorrowes to aduance That before mine all miseries shall bowe That all the sorrow mortalls can surmise Shall fall far short o● Margarites miseries These vvords scarse spoke her halfe-slaine heart to ease ●t the least breath of comfort to preuent ●he next ill newes in rushing after these ●as that King Henry to the Tower was sent As though it selfe euen Destiny should please 〈…〉 wretched Margarites heauy discontent Thrunging so thick as like themselues to smother Or as one ranne to ouertake another Those scattered Troopes from Barnet that escap'd ●earing the Queene thus landed with her power ●ugh much dismay'd with what had lately hapt 〈…〉 Gore drown'd Gladmore in that bloody shower And fearing by the foe to be entrapt Through vntrod grounds in many a tedious how● Flocke to her dayly till that by her ayde Equall with Edwards they her Army made When Somerset and Devonshire came in To the sad Queene and bad her not dispaire Though they of late infortunate had bin Yet there vvas helpe that Ruine to repaire What they had lost they hop'd againe to win And that the way lay open yet and faire For that the West would wholly with her rise Besides from VValles assur'd her of Supplyes And euery day still adding to their Force As on their Host tow'rds Glocester they guide When Edward finding their intended course Againe for Battell strongly doth prouide Both Armies they supply vvith Foote and Horse By both their friends as they affect the side And in their march at T●wkesbury they met Where they in Order their Battalions set Ill was her choyse of this vneuen ground Lucklesse the place vnlucky vvas the howre The Heauens vpon her so extreamely frownd As on her head their plagues at once to powre As in a Deluge here her hopes were drown'd Here sees she death her faithfull friends deuoure The earth is fil'd with grones the aire with cry 〈…〉 Horrour on each side
my conceipt friend thou didst neuer see A righter Madam then thou hast of mee For now as Elegiacke I bewaile These poore base times then suddainely I le raile And I am Satiricke not that I inforce My selfe to be so but euen as remorse Or hate in the proud fullnesse of their hight Master my fancy iust so doe I write But gentle friend as soone shall I behold That stone of which so many haue vs told Yet neuer any to this day could make The great Elixar or to vndertake The Rose-Crosse knowledge which is much like that A Tarrying-iron for fooles to labour at As euer after I may hope to see A plague vpon this beastly world for mee Wit so respected as it was of yore And if hereafter any it restore It must be those that yet for many a yeere Shall be vnborne that must inhabit here And such in vertue as shall be asham'd Almost to heare their ignorant Grandsires nam'd With whom so many noble spirits then liu'd That were by them of all reward depriu'd My noble friend I would I might haue quit This age of these and that I might haue writ Before a● other how much the braue pen Had here bin honoured of the English men Goodnesse and knowledge held by them in prise How hatefull to them ignorance and vice But it falls out the contrary is true And so my Ieffereyes for this time adue Vpon the death of Mistris Elianor Fallowfield ACcursed Death what need vvas there at all Of thee or who to councell did thee call The subiect vvhere upon these lines I spend For thee was most vnfit her timelesse end Too soone thou wrought'st too neere her thou didst stand Thou shouldst haue lent thy leane and m●ager hand To those who oft the helpe thereof beseech And can be cured by no other Leech In this wide world hovv many thousands be That hauing past fourescore do call for thee The wretched debtor in the Iayle that lyes Yet cannot this his Creditor suffice Doth woe thee oft with many a sigh and teare Yet thou art coy and him thou wilt not heare The Captiue slaue that tuggeth at the Oares And vnderneath the Bulls tough sinewes rores Begs at thy hand in lieu of all his paines That thou vvould'st but release him of his chaines Yet thou a niggard listenest not thereto W 〈…〉 short gaspe which thou might'st easily do But thou couldst come to her ere there was need And euen at once destroy both flovvre and seede But cruell death if thou so barbarous bee To those so goodly and so young as shee That in their teeming thou wilt shew thy spight Either from marriage thou wilt Maides affright Or in their Wedlocke Widdowes liues to chuse Their husbands bed and vtterly refuse Fearing conception so shalt thou thereby Extirpate mankind by thy cruelty If after direfull Tragedy thou thirst Extinguish Himens Torches at the first Build Funerall pyles and the sad pauement strew With mournful Cypresse and the pale-leau'd Yewe Away with Roses Mirtle and with Bayes Ensignes of mith and iollity as these Neuer at Nuptialls vsed be againe But from the Church the new Bride entertaine With Weeping Nenias euer and among As at departings be sad Requiems song Lucina by th' old Poets that wert sayd Women in Child-birth euermore to ayde Because thine Altars long haue layne neglected Nor as they should thy holy fiers reflected Vpon thy Temples therefore thou doest flye And wilt not helpe them in necessity Thinking vpon thee I doe often muse Whether for thy deare sake I should a●cuse Nature or Fortune Fortune then I blame And doe impute it as her greatest shame To hast thy timelesse end and soone agen I vexe at Nature nay I curse her then That at the time of need she was no stronger That wee by her might haue enioy'd thee longer But whilst of these I with my selfe debate I call to mind how flinty-hearted Fate Seaseth the olde the yong the faire the foule No thing of earth can Destiny controule But yet that Fate which hath of life bereft thee Still to eternall memory hath lef● thee Which thou enioy'st by the deserued breath That many a great one hath not after death FINIS * The law Salique was that women should no● i● herite wh● law Edward the third ● his right to ● the Crowne by his mot● cancelled w● his sword so much as at that ti● made way his clarme though in France th● law bee inviolable * Henry th● so named ● Town in L● colne Shi● where he borne * Henry the fift borne Munmou● in W●●●● Dowglas in that battaile ●ew three in the Kings ●oat A●mo●● Wickliffe a learned Diuine and the greatest Propestant of those times A Parliament at Leicester Henry Chichly succeeding Arund●ll late dec●●sed in that See * So they termed it as unworthy of a better title The Archbishop of Canterburies Oration to t●● King●●nd Parliament at Lecester● in the 〈…〉 following Stanzaes The Cr●●●● of France descended vpon Edward the third from Isabell ●u Mother Daughtar and su●●●●●ing heire to King Philip of France named the faire * Iames Daulp●●●● of Viennoies The Dukes of L●●raine Burbon The Earles of Aumerl● Savoye Mountbilliard Flaunders Nevers ●●arcourt King Iohn of France and Philip his son taken by the Blacke Prince at the Battaile of Poyteers brought Prisoners to ●● land Iohn of Cleumount Peter of Burbon Examples of such as haue aduan●d themselues to the Crowne of France against the strict letter of the lawe Salique in two following Stanzaes Ralph Neuill then warden of the Marches betwixt England and Scotland An ●●● adag● He that will France wi● must with Scotland first beginne The Duke of Excester the Kings owne ●●●● The first brea●h with France The Countries demanded by the King of England The King and Daulphine of France d●●●deth the King of England Henry the fist answered for the Tennis Balles The language of Tennis * Blades accounted of the best tem●er Armed at all poynts * Armings for the thigh and legge * Armings for the arme and shoulder Great Ordnance then ●u● newly in ●●● Halfe th●●●●● cutt of the Island from the Spanish to the German Ocean Edward the third * The Soa betwixt France and England ●● called A Catalogue of the S●ps in ●● Stanzaes The names of the Kings 7. Ships of War An Indian Bird so great that she is able to carrie an Elephant The Bay of Portugal ● of the high working S● that is know●● * A country ●●ng vpon ●e ●ast Sea ordering vpon Poland ●amous for ●●erring fishng ●ydes to the ●ing by the ●obility a A blazon of the Ensignes of the seueral Shire● in 14. Stanzas following b Expressing their freedome as still retaining their ancient liberties by surprizing the Conqueror like a mouing wood c An expression of King Harolds deat● slaine with an Arrow i● the head at ● the Ba●ta●●● of Hastings fighting against the Conquerour d The first famous Earle of
that country e Expressing the pleasantnesse of the scituation of that country lying vpon the French Sea f At lying the fittest to expell or fore warne Inua●●on g Express●ng the delica●y of the Bath their chiefe City h The Armes of the ancient Family of Clare Earle of Gloster borne by the City Stonidge being the first wonder of England standing in Wiltshire An old Em●l●m● of B●●●c● or ●●rkshire i A ●adge of the ancient Family of the Staffords Dukes of that place k Queene 〈…〉 Founder-of the Crosse wife to Constantine and daughter to King Co●ll builder of Colches 〈…〉 Essex l Suffolke the most Easterly of the English shieres m For the br●● prospect to 〈…〉 Germaine Ocean a Hauing relation to that famous Vniuersity their Shire townes b The Armes of the Town● somewhat alluding to th● name c The Armes of the towne of Hunting don first so named of a place where Hunters met d The Armes of the towne e From the aboundance of wool in that tract f A sport more vsed in that shire from ancient time then in any other g For the length that it hath vpon the German Ocean h The Bear and ragged Staffe th● Ancient Armes of that Earledome i For the abundance of fruite more there then in any other tract k The fine 〈…〉 of the Wooll of Lemster in that shire l Many Hermites liued there in the woods in ti 〈…〉 pas● it being all forrestrie m Expressing the loftinesse of the mountaines in that S 〈…〉 on which many Hawkes were wont ●● ay●y n That famous out law ●●●ed 〈…〉 ch in that Country and is yet by many places there Celebrated o A●c●●nted o●●r the best Archers of England p For their 〈…〉 with the sp●are 〈…〉 of their Nagg● q Being ready stil in Armes against the Scots r Expressing the s●it● ther●f ●uting ou● into those dangerous S●●● betwixt England and Ireland ſ Their 〈…〉 conflicts 〈…〉 with the Scots expr●ss●d in the fight between ●●● golden ●●d Lyon a Milford Hauen in Penbrooke shi●●● one of the 〈…〉 harbours in the kno 〈…〉 world therefore not vnaptly so expressed b Partly Dut●● partly English partly Welch c Me● i● by whose birth and knowledg that towne ●● ma●● f●mous d A watch Tower or pharus hauing the scituation wh●●● Seuor● beginneth to● widden as when Pirats haue come in to gi●e warning to the other Maritine Countryes e For the glory it hath attained to be the Kings birth-place and to ex 〈…〉 sse his principalities f The Armes of Brecknocke g Lying towards the mi●st of W●l●● 〈…〉 for abundance of Sheepe liuing on those high mountaines g Lying towards the mi●st of W●l●● 〈…〉 for abundance of Sheepe liuing on those high mountaines i For the abundance of G●ate● 〈…〉 those inac●essible Mountaines h Expressing the scituation 〈…〉 Sh●●r● lying on the Maritine part vpon the Irish Sea k The shiere breeding the best Horses of Wales l As 〈…〉 it selfe to the great North or Deucal●donian Sea in Expressing the abundance of Corn and grasse in that little Tract A Simile of the Nauy The braus solemnity of the departing of the ●l●et The Nauy Landing in the mouth of Seyne The br●ue encouragement of a ●o●ragious King A charitable Proclamation made by the King The Kings mayne Standard for the p●nderousnes thereof eu●● borne vpon a Carriage The King makes his aproches on three parts The King summons Harflew Charles de A●bert and Iohn Boweequalt A Simile of the French power A discription of the siege of Harflewe in the 19 following Stanzaes * Crosbowe Arrowes The King of England entreth Harflew in triumph Hing Henry offereth to decade his right by single combat A f●●●d found in the riuer of Soame A counsill held at Roan against the King of England A speech of the Duke Alanzon against the English The Duke of Berrys answere to Alanzon Yong mens counsails oft-times proue the vtter subuersion both of themselues and others The French King sendeth ●o dare the King of England to Battaile The King of Englands modest answere A Simily of the rising of the French Dauid Ga● a great Captaine in that Warre The Duke of Yorke The French scorning the English being so few in respect of their mighty power The ryot in the French Campe the night before the Battell Pondering in hu thoughts hu Fathers comming to the crowne by deposing of the rightfull King Henry the fift caused the body of King Richard to be taken vp where it was meanly buried at Langly and to be layd in Westminster by his first Wife Queene Anne The great are of a wise ●nd p●litike aptaine This S●rat●gem the ouerthrow of the French The French mis-interpre● the flight of Rauens ●ouering ouer there owre 〈…〉 〈…〉 Marshal 〈…〉 of the 〈…〉 ch Ar●y ●ontai●●g three 〈…〉 The Marshal ling of the English Army containing fiue Stanzaes The brauery of King Henryes ow●e Person The scornfull message of the French to the King of England The Kings answer to the French The Constables Oration to the French The King of Englands Oration ●o the English The high 〈…〉 of the King of England Sir Thomas Erpingham gaue the signall to the English A Simily of the French charging the English The three hundred Ar●h●rs lay a in ambush disorder the French men ●● Armes at the first encounter Two wings of French horse defeated The English Va●●ard and 〈…〉 Bas●●●●e charge ●he French 〈…〉 at 〈…〉 Charles de 〈…〉 Constable of F 〈…〉 The A 〈…〉 Th● A●mi●all fl●●●● The Constable flaine The ●●●●ag● of Woodhouse remark●able A Simily 〈…〉 the appearance of the Battell The Duke of Burben and ●ri●ance to●●● prisoners 〈…〉 of some Guis●ard the Daulphine of A●ag●n The Daulphine of Auerney slaine The Earle 〈…〉 Ewe taken prisoner The Duke of Yorke slaine The King 〈…〉 of the Duk of Yorks 〈…〉 The Kings solution The bloody scuffle betweene the French and English at the ioyning of the two maine Battailes in fiue S●anzaes Called Cl●e● of Brabant The Earle of Suffolke chargeth the Earle of Huntington with brea●h of promise A desp 〈…〉 attempt by the Earle of Huntingdon One braue ●● pl●ie● begerteth another The Earle of Suffolk 〈…〉 The English kill she French with their owne Weapons The Duke of Glocester ●● 〈…〉 by the Duke of Alanzon The King of England in dan●e● to be slan● by the Duke of Alanzon Alanzon betten downe by the King of England The King kil le●o two Gentlemen that aduenture to ●resene the Duke The Duke Alanzon slaine The Duke Neuers taken prisoner Morrisby and Gam a● contention for the Duke of Neueres Morrisby ●● b●auey ●● Knigh Dauid Ga● oft mentioned in this P 〈…〉 The Duke of Excester commeth in with the Reare The Earle of Vandome slaine Sir Thomas Erpingham getteth in with his three hundred A●●hers The Marshal of France slaine Co 〈…〉 Vadamount The Duke of Brabant a most couragious Prince A bitter exclamation of the Duke of Brabant
Bona the French Queens sister The Dutchesse of Bedford after Iohn her husbands deceas● was w●dded●● Sir Richard Wooquile Knight whos● daughter ●●● Lady was Her husband slain at Saint Albans on the ●●●g● part 〈…〉 King 〈…〉 Warwicke deeply di●●●●bles his dis 〈…〉 a George second brother to King Edward and by him 〈…〉 Duke of Clarence b Warwicke by his Agents had stirred vp this rebellion in the North he himselfe being at Calli●● th● it might s●●●● not to be done by him they had to their Captaines Henry Fitz-Hugh Henry Neuil and Sir Iohn Coniers c The Ear●e of Penbroke and h●● brother Richard Herbert ouerthrowne at Banbury field d These R●b●ls had to their Captain one whom they termed Robin of Rids dale The Earle Riuers was Father to the Lady Gray then Queene of England f The Earle ●aketh the King prisoner at ●●lney in Warwickeshir● entring open this campe 〈…〉 the ●●ght g They had to their Captaine Robert W●lls sonn● to the Lord W●lles T 〈…〉 field h The Lord Vaucleere a Gascoyne borne i A knowne Port Towne of Normandy k A Towne where the French King lay l 〈…〉 The Queene● speech to the Earle in the soure following Stanzaes Barron ●●ulco● bringe was brother to Richard Ne●●ll Earle of Salsbury and Richard Earl of Warwicke Iohn Marquesse Moun●acute were Sonnes to the sayd Earle Warwickes reply in the two following Stanzaes Prince Edward affyed to Anne the Earle of Warwicks daughter Warwicke makes preparation for a ●●w Warre Warwicke so famous that he was seene with wonder A Simile Warwick driueth King Edward out of the Kingdome Warwicke takes Ki● Henry the T 〈…〉 King Edward and his adherents ai●ai●ted by act of Parliament Queene Margarite neuer sees any thing that might giue her comfort The Duke of Burgondy brother in Law to King Edward so was ●he 〈…〉 King Henry by his Grand mother being the daughter of Iohn of Gaunt Torke yeelded vp to King Edward Succours●on●●●ing into Edward King Edward sets downe h● Army beso● Couentry daring Warwicke to the field Clarence 〈…〉 his father in Law the Earle of Warwicke Warwicke followes the King towards London King Edward ●●ts ●●● of London 〈…〉 The Armies meet at Bar●t * The Armes of England Warwickes high 〈…〉 The Earle of Warwicke ●is brother Marquesse Mountacute ●aine ●hat very day ●hat Warwick ●as slaine the Queene ●ands ●he Queenes ●eech hea●ng of Warwicks defeat 〈…〉 the three ●ollowing ●anzaes Cause of new sorrow to the Queene The remnant of the Army which escaped a● Barnet resort to the Queene The Queene encouraged by her friends The Armies meete at Tukesbury A place ill ●●osen on the Queenes part A bloody battell The Queene● Army ouerthrowne Prince Edward taken prisoner Vpon the Kings Proclamation of a great reward to him that could bring him 〈…〉 As also of the Princes safety Sir Richard Crosts is won to discouer his prisoners Prince Edward stabd to death Queene Margarite gets into a poore Cell Lewis of France Duke Rayner ●●d●●th himselfe to rans 〈…〉 his Daughter The Earle of Gloster after Richard the third The Furies fetcha from hell to bring the World to ●●d A description of the furies ●●e Moone●lfe beg ●t the diuell The prodigious signs that foreran the birth of the Moone-Calfe A description of the Moon Calfe Mother Red-Cap● tal● The morali●y of mother Red-Caps tale The morallity of mother Bumbyes ●al● The morality of mother Howlets tale Gammer Gurtons tale The morallity of Mother Gurtons * The nearest harbour of Spaine An I le for the abunde● of wine supposed to be the habita● on of B 〈…〉 * An I le for the ab●ndance ●f Wine supposed to bee the habitati●n of Bacchus