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A14779 Albions England Or historicall map of the same island: prosecuted from the liues, actes, and labors of Saturne, Iupiter, Hercules, and Æneas: originalles of the Brutons, and English-men, and occasion of the Brutons their first aryuall in Albion. Continuing the same historie vnto the tribute to the Romaines, entrie of the Saxones, inuasion by the Danes, and conquest by the Normaines. With historicall intermixtures, inuention, and varietie: proffitably, briefly, and pleasantly, performed in verse and prose by William Warner.; Albions England. Book 1-4 Warner, William, 1558?-1609. 1586 (1586) STC 25079; ESTC S111586 85,079 130

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my blisse or soone discharge my breath For if my prayers add no edge vnto thy begged doome The Uintage of my thristles loue is blasted in the bloome Be fauour able to my fier for thy swéet sake be bold I durst attempt euen Hell if hell so swéet a thing might hold Well thinke her coye or thinke her chaste my Censure I suspend Most women yeeld not at the first yet yeeld they in the end She gaue repulses to his lust and he Replies of Loue Not all the Wrights Diana had might Cupids Plaint remoue She countermaunding his demaund he ceased Courting now And did with her by vyolence what vertues disalowe And then departed leauing her in selfe-conceit disgraste More trespassed then some would thinke and yet perhaps as chaste Home came her Lord whose Browes had buds and found his wife in teares And foolish thing she told a troth for which reuenge he sweares But so the Man did proue a Beast he better might haue hid it Some such are mistically domme yet dombly doe forbid it His wifes Escapes done secretly if by the man detected Shewes hilled būpes supposed būpes mere hornes not hornes suspected At Denmarke in his Cosens Court he telleth of his wrong And gaines against his soueraigne Lord of Danes an Armie strong Hungar and Hubba and himself Conductors of this Oste Did with their forren Forces land and spoyle the Northerne Coste The vicious valiant Osbret that had vanquished ere then The King and Kingdome of the Scottes though wanting Armes men Thought skorne his Foes should beard him so barre him vp in walles And therefore issuing out of Yorke vpon the Danes he falles A bloodie Bargane then begonne no fight might fearcer bee And of the Danish parte were slayne for euery English three But manhood lost and number wonne the Danes they got the feelde And Osbret dyed valiantly that not to liue would yeelde MEane while the Danes with fresh Supplies ariue at euery Shore And warre almost in euery Shire infesting England sore With whom couragious Etheldred contended long in vayne By them was he King Ella and the holly Edmond slayne Nothing was done but all vndone till King Alured hée In daunger of his royall selfe did set his Subiects frée For euery day in euery place the Danes did so increase That he nor any English King enioye one day of peace Nor mightier men at Armes then they might any where be found Who in their diuers Warres els-where did diuers Realmes confound For as the Gothes the Vandales Hunnes and Saxons earst did range So now the Danes did plague the world as sent by interchange This Westerne and victorious King and greatest Monarke here Perceiuing of this spoyled Isle a toward Rewen nere Disguised like a Minstrell poore did haunt the Danish Tentes And with his feates and melodie the Enemie presents And of their sloth their gluttonie and Councels priuie so He tooke aduantage giuing them a sudden ouerthroe And slayeth Hubba Hungar and the Cause of their repaer And putteth all to Sword and Seas that vnbaptised waer Yet to Northumberland return'd fearce Gurmond with the Danes Meane tyme did King Alured dye the Hatchet of their Tranes But Adelstane one King betwixt not only clear'd the Land Of Danes but of all England had sole Empier in his hand Thus of this long dismembred Realme was he the only King In which till Egelred his raigne did prosper euery thing He raigning much of England then the Lordly Danes did hold Exacting Tributes euery yeare and selling Peace for Gold And which no doubt did hatch those Plagues the King a wicked one Did enter by his Brothers blood extorting thus his Throne KIng Edgar that subdew'd the Scottes and slaughtered the Danes And of the Welsh had Tribute Wolffes of whom it more remanes That as it were in Triumph-wise Eight Under-kings did roe Him Sterns-man on the Riuer Dee with diuers honors moe This Edgar by a former wife had Edward by an other This Egelred a Sonne vnto a kinde and cruell Mother For as she labors to preferre her owne by well and ill So to destroy her Sonne-in-law she wanted meanes not will And meanes did hit King Edward hunts and hunting lost his Trayne Whom Man-les at her Castell Corfe the Quéene did intertayne He hauing seene to whom he came in curtesie to see Made haste away in Quest of them that still a Hunting bee And mounted when he should departe to him his Stepdame drinkes Whom pledging him an Hierling stab'd and lifeles downe he sinkes Thus Egelred obtaynd the Crowne but for his crowning so His Subiects grudge and he became the Preface to their woe For when this proude and vicious King was neither lou'd of his Nor liued safely for the Danes his secret Edict is That suddenly in one selfe hower throughout the Land should passe A common slaughter of the Danes which so performed was And Welwyn called Wealth-wyn then for promptnes in that charge Beginning other Townes as it themselues from Danes inlarge CHAP. XXI THis common Massacre of Danes was common mirth to all The English whom they did oppresse with slaueries not small Compelling men by greeuous Draught as Beastes to plough their Land Of whom the English as of Gods or Feends in terror stand The Husband durst not vse his Wife if liked of a Dane Nor House nor Goods nor aught he had for who resistes was slane That prankes and feedeth daintely this pynes and fareth ill And of his Sweat that hath the sweete and is imperious still Each house maintayned such a Dane that so they might preuent Conspiracies if any were and grope how mynds were bent Lord Dane the same was called then to them a pleasing name Now odiously Lur-dane say we when ydell Mates we blame When Swayne the Dacian King did heare his Danes were murdred so With bitter vowes he shipt his men for Englands ouerthroe And landing spaerd no Shrine nor Sainct nor Sex nor any State Not wanting Ayders English-men that held their King in hate Especially false Edricus the Admirall deceiues His King and Countrie oftentymes and Bribes of Swayne receiues And Egelred his cowardisse incouraged the Foe Till Swayne at length by Masses great was bribed hence to goe But making short returne the Péeres of England that disdayne Th'indignities of such a King that did féebly rayne Submit them Subiects vnto Swayne and Egelred did flye Unto the father of his Quéene the Duke of Normandie And Swayne possessed of the Land did shortly after dye His sonne Canutus present here had Seazen of the Crowne Till Egelred returning backe by Armor puts him downe Who scarcely giueth breathing tyme but that he backe resayles From Denmarke and by force by friends and Fortune here preuayles For in this Warre King Egelred did sicken and decease And then the broyles Canutus King did for a tyme decrease Till Edmund sonne of Egelred did interrupt that peace COnferring Armes to Edmunds age when Egelred did lye On Death-bed to
set his Kingdome frée By ouer-ruling of his Lords intreating long the same Least dying Issules he leaue succession out of frame He tooke to Quéene a Damsell faire howbeit by conscent In vowes of secret chastitie their louing liues they spent The Father of this Mayden-wife in sitting by the King And seeing one that stumbled but not falling vp did spring He laughing sayd the brother there the brother well hath easd His meaning was the Stumblers Feete And haddest thou so pleasd So had my Brother quoth the King bin easing vnto me The traytrous Earle tooke bread and sayd so this digested be As I am giltles of his death these words he scarcely spoke But that in presence of the King the bread did Goodwyn choke Harolde his sonne by Hardi-knoghts late daughter him suruiues He crossed by contrary windes in Normandie ariues There Goodwyns Sonne did take an oth Duke William vrging so To keepe vnto the Duke his vse when Edward hence should goe The Crowne of England clayming by Adoption and by blood But Harolde after Edwards Death not to his promise stood And for he was in wealth in friends in blood and Armor strong And title had his Mothers right he forced not the wrong But arming him against the Duke so vrged vnto wroth Did seaze the Crowne vnto himselfe contrary to his Oth. Whil'st William therfore works for Warre King Harolde had not rest For Harolde Hare-foote King of Danes and Norwaies much opprest The English with his pusant Bands But Harolde him assayles And after fearce and doubtfull fight most valiantly preuayles And with the Norgayne Prince he slewe his people almost all When for deuision of the Spoyle did much contention fall Betwixt the King and English-men and many a noble Knight Not only murmor and malinge but did forsake him quight Such mallice growing William with his Normanes taking land Found hot-spurr Harolde prest in Armes his pusance to withstand And either Battell Marshalled as either Captaine wild The King of England eagerly the Normane Oste behild And with his chearfull speeches thus his men with courage fild Sée valiant Warr-friends yonder be the first the last and all The Agents of our Enemies they henceforth cannot call Supplies for weedes at Normandie by this in Porches groe Then Conquer these would Conquer you and dread no further Foe They are not stouter then the Brutes whom we did hence exile Nor stronger then the sturdie Danes our Uictorie erwhile Not Saxonie could once contayne or scarce the world beside Our Fathers who did sway by Sword where listed them to bide Then doe not ye degenerat take courage by discent And by their Buryalles not abode their force and flight preuent Ye haue in hand your Countries cause a Conquest they pretend Which were ye not the same ye be euen Cowards would defend I graunt that parte of vs are flead and linked to the Foe And glad I am our Armie is of Traytors cléered so Yea pardon hath he to departe that slayeth Mal-content I prize the mynd aboue the man like zeale hath like euent Yet troth it is no well or ill this Iland euer had But through the ill or well Support of Subiects good or bad Not Caesar Hengest Swayn or now which nertheles shall fayle The Normane Bastard Albion true did could or can preuayle But to be selfe-false in this Isle a selfe-Foe euer is Yet wot I neuer Traytor did his Treasons Stypend mis. Shrinke who will shrinke let Armors wayte presse downe the burdned Earth My Foes with wondring eyes shall see I ouer-prize my death But since ye all for all I hope a-like affected be Your Wiues your Children liues and Land from Seruitude to frée Are armed both in shewe and zeale then gloriously contend To winne and weare the home-brought Spoyles of Uictorie the end Let not the Skinners daughters Sonne possesse what he pretends He liues to dye a noble death that life for Fréedome spends As Harolde hartned thus his men so did the Normane his And looking wishly on the Earth Duke William speaketh this To liue vpon or lye within this is my Ground or Graue My louing Soldiours one of twaine your Duke resolues to haue Nor b●ye Normanes now to seeke in what ye should be stout Ye come amidst the English Pykes to hewe your Honors out Ye come to winne the same by Launce that is your owne by lawe Ye come I say in rytious Warre reuenging Swords to drawe Howbeit of more hardie Foes no passed Fight hath spead ye Since Rollo to your now Abode with Bands victorious lead ye Or Turchus Sonne of Troyelus in Scythian Fazo bread ye Then worthy your Progenitors ye Séede of Priams Sonne Exployt this busnesse Rollons doe that as ye wish be donne Thrée People haue as many tymes got and for-g●n this Shore It resteth now ye Conquer it not to be Conqured more For Normane and the Saxon Blood conioyning as it may From that consorted Séede the Crowne shall neuer passe away Before vs are our armed Foes behinde vs are the Seas On either side the Foe hath Holds of succour and for ease But that Aduantage shall returne their Disaduantage thus If ye obserue no Shore is left the which may shelter vs And so hold out amidst the Rough whil'st they hael in for Lée Whereas whil'st men securely sayle not seldome Shipwrackes bée What should I cite your passed Acts or tediously incence To present Armes your faces shewe your hearts conceiue offence Yea euen your Courages deuine a Conquest not to fayle Hope then your Duke doth Prophesie and in that hope preuayle A People braue a terren Heauen hath Obiects wroth your Warres Shall be the Prizes of your Prow's and moun● your fame to Starres Let not a Traytors periur'd Sonne extrude vs from our right He dyes to leaue a famous life that doth for Conquest sight By this the furious Battelles ioyne a bloodie day to either And long they fight the Uictorie inclyning vnto neither At length the English had the ods who kéeping close aray Unto the Duchie Forces gaue no entrance any way Then fayning feare and Martially retyring as opprest The English so became secure and followe on disperst To which aduantage furiously the Normanes did returne And got a bloodie victorie In vayne the English th●●ne Amidst the Pykes against the pricke 〈◊〉 Harolde then was slayne From him began the Normanes sole but soone ●●●ioyned ray●e For second Henrie Mawde her Sonne fréed Englands blood agayne Since whence and euer may they so that Of-spring ruled vs Of whose Coniunction in the Crowne the Genalogue is thus King Edmund Irne side Issue had Edward the Our-law he Had Margret Mawde by Mancholyn the King of Scottes had she Mawde to the Conqueror his Sonne first Henrie Mawde did beire This second Mawde the Angeos wife had second Henrie heire EDward King Harolds Preregnant of this same Change foretold Who present and succéeding tymes thus dying did vnfold It is a World to note quoth he
his Sonne he sayd not quite forlorne am I Whose life hath had so much of gréefe thus graciously to dye Add more thy vertues glad my death yet two things gréeue among To leaue my Kingdome thus in Warres and thée for Warres so yong So may these troubles waer to none as thou doest wax I pray And so possesse thy fathers Seate that all approue thy Sway. Not to be made a King my Sonne is so to make thée proude For mildnes fitteth Maiestie high mynds are disaloude Sée me thy father now a King and by and by but earth Nor thinke that euery King hath happ to dye a happie death Let Nature for perfection mold a Paragon each way Yet Death at least on finest lumpes of liuing flesh will pray For Nature neuer framed it that neuer shall decay The brauest are as Blossomes and the longest Liuer dyes And dead the louelest Creature as the lothsomst Carrion lyes Then thinke not but that Kings are men and as the rest miscarrie Saue that their fame or infamie continually doth tarrie Déeme past Examples Sentences and which did fayle in me Make vse of those not now in vse for now will cease to be Attempt not things beyond thy reach ioyne Fortune to thy will Least Phaebus Chaire doe els surcharge rash Phaoton his skill If Fortune helpe whom thou would'st hurt freat not at it the more When Aiax stormed then from him the Prize Vlisses bore Trye friends by Touch a feeble friend may proue thy strongest Foe Great Pompeis head to Caesars hand it was betrayed so Admit thou hadst Pactolian waues to land thée Gold at will Knowe Craesus did to Cyrus knéele and thou maist spéede as ill Abandon lust if not for sinne yet to auoyde the shame So Hoggs of Ithacus his men the Latian Witch did frame Be not to modie in thy wrath but pause though Fist be bent Oft Phillips Sonne did rashly strike and leisurly repent Content thée with vnthreatned Meane and play not AEsops Dogg The Gold that gentell Bacchus gaue was gréedie Midas Clogg Be valiant not to venterous but fight to fight againe Euen Hercules did hold it ods for one to striue with twaine Be not ambiciously a King nor grudgingly decline One God did roote out Cis his stocke and raise vp Iesses line Iest not with edge tooles suffer Saincts let mightie Fooles be mad Note Seneca by Neros doome for Precepts pennance had Haue care to whom of whom and what to speake though spéech ●e trew That Misse made Phaebus contrary his Rauens Swan-like hew He frameth torments to himselfe that feedes a Tyrants vayne Perillus was by Phalaris adiudg'd to selfe-taught payne Praise not the beautie of thy wife though she of forme be sped For Gyges moued so did graft on Candaules his head Shunne Ielosie that hart-breake Loue if Cat will goe to kinde Be sure that Io hath a meane that Argus shalbe blinde Commit not Treasure with thy Childe to greedie mynded men Thou leauest Polydor a Spoyle to Polymnestor then Occurrants giue occasions still of like in which be sure To serue thy God to saue thy selfe and well to all procure Be vertuous and assure thy selfe thou canst not then but thriue In only Uertue is it sayd that men themselues suruiue As for the vicious such they are as is the heedlesse Flye That killes it selfe and hurts his sight that hath her in his Eye Farewell my Sonne England farewell thy neuer happie Prince Doth take his leaue an happie leaue if taken so long since And Edmund burying not with me thy vertues nor my speech I blesse thee in his blessed name whom I of blesse beseech Sayd Egelred and shortly gaue a quiet gaspe or twayne And being dead his noble Sonne succeeded him in Rayne THis like himselfe euen knightlike and an English-man in deede Did quicken Englands quayling Prowes and Mars-like did proceed A brauer Captaine then was he not any Band might haue And yet a Mars did match this Mars Canutus was as braue These Wonders of that age for Armes and Dirij of those daies Did often battell equally to eithers losse and praies Now after many bloodie Fieldes when none might estimate The better or the worser parte a Knight that sawe the state Then present and by likelihoodes presaged what might fall Sayd hearing it the diffring Kings and Soldiours almost all We euer warre and neuer winne Edmund hath Fortitude Canutus Fortune neither thus of other is subdude Death feares not vs nor for their liues our Contraries doe crare It followes then that all must dye where all so despret are If all be slayne then who shall serue our Princes that suruiue Or fence out Forrens better one then none of both should thriue To thriue therefore were not a-misse that seeing one of twayne Will Owner all that only they the quarrell doe maintayne Or if Combattansie not please the Land is rich and large And they Coperciners may liue and vs of death discharge If Combate nor Partition be then will this Warre reuiue Till one suruiuing all of vs wants one with whom to striue This sayd the Kings did marke and make a profite of the same And did conclude by Combacie to loose or winne the Game Within a little Island nere round which the Armies stand The Kingly Champions trye their force by fighting hand to hand They spurre their Horses breake their Speares and beate at Barriars long And then dismounting did renewe a Battell braue and strong Whil'st either King thus Martially defends and did offend They breathing King Canutus sayd we both I see shall end Ere Empier shall begin to one then be it at thy choyce To fight or parte With it their Knights crye out with common voyce Deuide most valiant Kings deuide enough ye haue of sight And so the Champions did imbrace forgetting Mallice quight Partition equally was made betwixt these Princes twaine And brother-like they liue and loue till by a deulish traine Earle Edricus a Traytor to the Father and the Sonne Did murther Edmund and his head supposing to haue wonne The fauour of Canutus so presenting sayd O King For loue of thee I thus haue done Amazed at the thing Canutus sayd and for that thou hast headded him for mee Thy head aboue all English heads exalted it shall bee The Earle was headded and his head poolde vp for all to see Of England Danske and Norway then Canut was perfect Lord And in his triple Regment all with vertue did accord Harolde and Hardi-knought his Sonnes each did succeede Of either which small certen Fame of well or ill we reede Saue by their Raynes to English-men did gréeuous thraldome bréed But after Hardi-knought his death the Danes were chased hence Not intermedling with the State of England euer sence CHAP. XXII OF forsayd Egelred his Sonnes Alured and his brother Was Edward King for Goodwyns gile had made away that other Religious chaste wise fortunate stout franke and milde was he And from all Taxes wrongs and Foes did
the waies that men adoor And how Hippocrasie hath bred of God-like Deuilles stoer That speake to seeme that seeme to shift that shift to spoyle by gile That smooth and sooth and yet deceiue with Scriptum est meane while But let them heaue their hands to Heauen they haue their hier in Hell That seeme deuoute to cloke deceipt and say but doe not well The Rich are retchles in their willes their ●iking is for lawe The Poore repine and Goods not theirs by ydell Shiftings clawe The Lords and Landed ouer-rent and cunningly the same The Parrasite doth ouer-reach and beares away the game One riseth by an others fall and some doe clime so fast That in the Clowdes they doe forget what Esymates they haue past But Egell-winged mynds that flye to nes●ell in the Sunne Their loftie heads haue leaden héeles and end where they begunne It is a common poynt on which the aged grosely ronne On●e to haue dared sayd and seene more then was euer donne The Youth are foolish-hardie or lesse hardie then they ought Effeminate phantasticall in fewe not fewe are nought At Cypris not the wanton Sainct nar yet her wylie Sonne Did want their Orgies nor at Rome did Vesta lacke her Nonne The Lampsacens gaue Pryapus his filthie Rytes and Creat To Ioue his Bulles and Cicilie to Ceres tythed Wheat The Thracians with their Bachinales did Lybers Temple fill And Italie did blood of Babes on Saturns Alters spill And fatall wreathes of Myrtell boughes were sacred vnto Dys In fewe there was no Pagane God his Sacrafice did mys But English-men nay Christian men not only seeme prophayne But Man to Man as Beast to Beast holds ciuell dueties vayne Yea Pulpits some like Pedlers packes yéeld forth as men affect And what a Synod shall conclude a Sowter will correct The rude thus hosting Litrature one Sisme begets an other And grosely though a Sisme yet hath each Sismatike his Soother Meane while the learned want their Méede and none with profite heares The tedious Doult whose artles tongue doth preach to wearie Eares Here could I enter in a Feild of Matter more then much But gesse that all is out of frame and long tyme hath bin such And what shalbe let tyme disclose This only will I touch A Gréene Trée cut from withered Stocke deuided Furlongs thrée From proper Roote it shall reioyne and after fruitfull bée Thus sayd the King And thus doe some expound that Prophesie The Trée this Land the Stocke and Roote the thralled English line King Harold and the Williams twaine the Furlongs some define Henrie the Normane that begot one Mawde his English Quéene Mawde second Henries Mother was the Trées Returne to gréene KIng Stephen first though not so firme did in this Turne precéed● But second Henrie perfectly restalled Wodens Séede Nor supersticiously I speake but H. the Letter still Might be obserued ominous to Englands good or ill First Hercules Hesione and Hellen were the cause Of Warre to Troy AEneas seede becomming so Out-lawes Humbar the Hunne with forren Armes did first the Brutes inua●● Hellen to Romes imperiall Throne the Brittish Crowne conuaed Hengest and Horsus first did plant the Saxones in this Isle Hungar and Hubba first brought Danes that swayed here long while At Harolde had the Saxone ende at Hardi-knought the Dane Henries the first and second did restore the English Rayne Henrie Letigious Lancaster and Yorke vnites in peace Henrie the Eight did happely Romes Erreligion cease Much more escapes this Catalogue In Honor God increase Good double H. this workes Defence her Councell and Allie That ruleth vs and safe may rule long after I shall dye FINIS ¶ An Addition or Remaine in Prose to the Second Booke of ALBIONS ENGLAND contayning a Breuiat of the true Historie of AENEAS ACcept him friendly Reader where hée is not where he ought and as he speaketh not as hée should Misapplyed he is not for Matter preceadent howsoeuer the penning or misplacing may like or mislike for the English or Order The Printers forwardnesse presented me of seating AEneas in his 〈…〉 I the Taske to prosecute his Historie in Uerse howbeit rather hath my Remisnes borrowed of Decorum and your patience then that a Patriarke of our Brutones should bee obruptly estranged Of AEneas therefore it thus followeth AEneidos WHen the reuengfull Flames of Troy properly called Ilion the thē Metrapolitaine Citie of Asia had perfected the more then Tenne yearrs Siege of the Gretians expugning the same then AEneas howsoeuer by some aucthorities noted of disloyaltie towards Priam in this not vnworthely surnamed vertuous burdning his armed Shoulders with his féeble and most aged Father Anchises that laboured also vnder his Loode of the Troyan Gods sacret Reliques AEneas as I say with such his Burthen leading by the hand his Sonne Ascanius of the age of twelue yeares followed not onely of the beautifull Creusa his wife the Daughter of King Priam but also of a many Troyans participating that common calamitie brake through the wastfull Flames mauger the wrothfull Foes into the fields of Phrigia There the Ayre emptied of downe-burnt Turrets and filled with smoke of fixed Buildings assured frō their hearts more teares to their eyes then the benefite of their present Escape could promise them comfort Troy therfore not to be rescued or Creusa in this businesse lost and perishing to be recouered AEneas and his Followers imbarking themselues in Simois after long and wearie Sea-faring arriued in a parte of Thrace called Cressa bounding on Mygdonia Here AEneas purposing an end of his tedious Saylings and not meanly furnished of Treasure conuayed from Troy layed Foundation of a Cittie after the Founder called AEnea This Cittie going forward lesse effectually then was expected AEneas supposing the Gods to bee yet opposite to the Troyans knocking downe a milk-white Bull pitched an Alter to doe Sacrafice Neere at hand were growing vltiers shrubbed Trees the Boughes whereof for the greater reuerence and exornation of the present Solempnetie he cutting and sliuing downe perceiued blood in great aboundance issewing from the broken Branches whereat long admyring and with great terror and deuotion intercessing the Gods on his knées to reueale y e meaning of that miraculous Accident at the length he heard a pittifull and feeble voyce for diuersly in those daies did the Deuilles aunswer and giue Oracles thus aunswering Reason were it AEneas that y e Graues of the dead should priuiledge their bodies from the tyrannie of the liuing but by so much the lesse doe I esteeme my preiudice by how much the more I knowe thee vnwittingly iniurious Thou tearest AEneas in these Braunches thou tearest the bodie of thy vnfortunate Brother-in-lawe Polydor Sonne to the like starred Priamus Troy as yet was only threatned not besieged whē my Father as thou knowest deliuered me with a world of Treasure to Polymnestor the barborous King of this Countrie here daungerles as he pretended to abide as the Conseruor and Restauration of his House