Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n king_n lord_n treasurer_n 6,502 5 10.8931 5 true
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
A13415 All the vvorkes of Iohn Taylor the water-poet Beeing sixty and three in number. Collected into one volume by the author: vvith sundry new additions corrected, reuised, and newly imprinted, 1630.; Works Taylor, John, 1580-1653.; Cockson, Thomas, engraver. 1630 (1630) STC 23725; ESTC S117734 859,976 638

There are 36 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

former Seruants of seuer all Offices in his Maiesties House and other Esquires his ma●stres seruants of good qualitie The Gentlemen of his Maiesties Chappel in Surplaices and rich Copes the Sergeant of the Vestry accompanying them Chaplaines Doctors of Phisicke Doctors of Diuinity Knights Gentlemen of the Priuy Chamber Gentlemen of the Bed-chamber to the Prince Baronets Barons younger sonnes Knights of the Priuy-Councell Viscounts eldest sonnes a Veluet cushen cart●ed by an Esquire The Comptroller Treasurer Steward and Chamberlain to his Grace bearing white Staues Barons of Ireland Scotland and England Bishops Earles eldest Sons Viscounts Earles of Scotland and England The Duke of Linox eldest Sonne The Arch-Bishop of Canterbury The Mace The Purse The Iora Keeper Preacher Sergeant Trumpetter and foure Trumpets The Great Banner borne by an Earles Sonne accompanied with an Herald The chiefe mourning Horse couered with blacke Veluet and garnished with Eschochens of Tassata with Shaffron and Plumes led by M r. Harton Clauell His Graces Hatchinements borne as followeth The Gauntlets and Spurres The Helme and Crest and the Sword borne by three Heralds The Targe and Coate of Armes borne by two Kings of Armes Then the ●●uely Effigies or representation of his Grace drowne in a Chariot by sixe goodly Horses garnished as the former couered with a Canopy of black Veluet The Pall supported two Earles Sons and two Marquesses Sons The Fo●●● going on each side the Chariot and likewise ten small Banners carried by 10. Knights 5 of Scotland and 5 of England round about the Chariot two Principall Gentlemen riding at his head and feet in the said Chariot Then folowed Garter principall King of Armes accompanied with a Gentleman ● sher who went bareheaded the Duke of Linox chief Mourner The Lord Tresurer and Lord President of the Councell his supporters 10 other Assistants The Lord Priuy Seale and Duke of Buckingham The Marquis Hamilton and Earle Marshall The Lord Chamberlaine of his Maiesties House and the E. of Sussex the E. of Southampton and E. of Essex the E. of Salisbury and E. of Exceter The M r of the Horse to his Grace in close mourning leading the Horse of Honor ●●●●●● furnished Thus past this sad shew from his Graces House in Holborne to Westminster where the Funerall Rites being solemnely ended his Graces liuely Effigies was le●● in the Abby of S t. Peter vnder a Rich Hearse FINIS GREAT BRITAINE ALL IN BLACKE OR A short Elegie written in the manner of AEquiuoques in a sad and dutifull remembrance of the Royall Prince HENRY OH for a Quill of that Arabian Wing That 's hatcht in embers of Sun-kindled fire Who to her selfe her selfe doth issue bring And three in one is Young and Dam and Sire Oh that I could to Virgils veine aspire Or Homers Verse the golden-languag'd Greeke In polish'd phrases I my lines would tyre Into the depth of Art my Muse would seeke Mean time she 'mongst the linguish'd Poets throngs Although she want the helpe of Forraigne Tongs TO write great Britaines wo how am I able That hauing lost a peerelesse Princely Sonne So wise so graue so stout so amiable Whose Vertues shin'd as did the mid-dayes Sunne And did illustrate all our Hemispheare Now all the world affoords not him his pheare His Royall minde was euermore dispos'd From vertue vnto vertue to accrue On good deserts his bountie he dispos'd Which made him follow'd by so braue a crue That though himselfe was peerlesse many a Peere As his Attendants dayly did appeare In him the Thundrers braine-borne daughter Pallas Had tane possession as her natiue Clime In him and his terrestriall heau'nly Palace Was taught how men by vertuous deeds shal clime So that although his yeeres were in the spring He was true honours Fount and valors Spring So firme so stable and so continent So wise so valiant and so truly chaste That from his Microcosmos continent All heau'n-abhorred hel-hatch'd lust was chac'd Hee ran no vicious vice alluring grace To staine the glory of his Royall race His soule from whence it came is gone againe And earth hath tane what did to earth belong He whilom to this Land was such a Gaine That mem'ry of his losse must deeds belong All states and sexes both the young and graue Lament his timelesse going to his Graue Man-murdring death blinde cruell fierce and fell How dost thou gripe him in thy meagre armes By thy rude stroke this Prince of Princes fell Whose valor brau'd the mighty God of Armes Right well in peace he could of peace debate Dreadlesse of dreadfull danger or debate Robustuous rawbon'd monster death to teare From vs our happy hope we did enioy And turne our many ioyes to many a teare Who else might ioyfully haue liu'd in ioy As wind on thousands all at once doth blow By his deaths stroke so millions feele the blow Well could I wish but wishing is in vaine That many millions and amongst them I Had slue'd the bloods from euery flowing veine And vented floods of water from each eye T' haue sau'd the life of this Maiestike Heyre Would thousand soules had wandred in the ayre But cease my Muse thou farre vnworthy art To name his name whose praise on hie doth mount Leaue leaue I say this taske to men of Art And let his soule rest to sweet Zions Mount His Angell spright hath bid the world adue And earth hath claim'd his body as a due Epitaph Here vnder ground great HENRIES corps doth be If God were pleas'd I wish it were a lye IOHN TAYLOR THE MVSES MOVRNING OR FVNER ALL SONNETS ON THE Death of IOHN MORAY Esquire TO THE WHOLE AND ENTIRE NVMBER OF THE Noble and Ancient name of Morayes Iohn Taylor dedicates these sad Funerall Sonnets Sonnet 1. VVHen King Corbredus wore the Scottish Crowne The Romanes did the Britaine Land afflict But Corbred ioyn'd confederate with the Pict By whom Queen ●eadaes foes were ouerthrowne The Morayes then to haue their valour knowne Did first the Romane forces contradict And made them render vp their liues so strict That horse and foot and all were beaten downe Loe thus began the Morayes honour'd Race Of memorable Ancient worthy fame And since the fiue and fiftieth yeere of Grace ●● Scotland hath suruiu'd that noble name To whom aliue and to my dead friends hear so In duty heere I consecrate this verse Hee that is euer obliged to your Noble name IOHN TAYLOR Sonnet 2. WEepe euerlastingly you Nymphs diuine Your very Quintessence is waste and spent Sigh grone and weepe with wofull languishment Dead is the life that made your Glories shine The heau'nly numbers of your Sacred nine He tun'd as an Aetheriall Instrument So sweet as if the Gods did all consent In him their Consort wholy to combine Weepe Muses euerlastingly lament Eclipsed is your Sire Apollo's shrine Grim Death the life hath from your Champion rent And therefore sigh grone weepe lament and pine And let the Lawrell rot consume and wither Dye Muses
yeeres after the cities of York Rochester and Bathe were burnt Hee reigned 18. yeeres 10 moneths and was buried at Feuersham Henry the second An Dom. 1154. THis King vnto the Empresse Maud was Heyre And lawfully obtain'd the Regall Chayre He was couragious and yet most vnchaste Which Vice his other Vertues all defac'd He lou'd faire Rosamond the worlds faire Ros● For which his wife and children turn'd his foes He made his sonne Copartner in his Crowne Who rais'd strong warres to put his Father downe Faire Rosamond at Woodstock by the Queene Was poyson'd in reuengefull iealous spleene In toyle and trouble with his Sonnes and Peere● The King raign'd almost fiue and thirty yeeres Hee neere his death did curse his day of birth Hee curst his Sonnes and sadly le●t the earth Hee at Founteuerard in his Tombe was laid And his Son Richard next the Scepter swa●d Henry the 2. In the 12. yeer of this King an earthqu●●● in Norfolk Suffolk and Eiye that made ●●●●●● shaking the sleeples and ouerthrew men that stood on this feete Nicholas Breakespeare an English man was ●●ope of Rome and was named Adrian the fourth hee gaue ●●● Lord-shippe of Ireland to King Henry Richard Cordelion An. Dom. 1189. THis braue victorious Lyon-hearted Prince The foes of Christ in ●●●y did conuince Whilst at Ierusalem he wan Renowne His Brother Iohn at home vsurp'd his Crowne And as he home return'd his owne to gaine By Austria's Duke the King was Prisoner ●ane His ransome was an hundred thousand pound Which paid in England he againe was crown'd Yet after nine full yeeres and 9. months raigne Hee with a Shot was kild in Aquit●ne His buriall at Founteuerard was thought meet At his dead Fathers second Henries feet Richard the 1. he conquered the kingdome of Cypresse and he tooke from the Infidels the Cities of Acon Ioppa and deliuered them to Christians In his 2. yeere the ●●s of the renowned King Arthur were found at Glastenbury King Richards bowels were buried at Chalne Castle in Aquitane his heart at Roane and his body at Founteuerard King Iohn An. Dom. 1199. IOhn Earle of Morton tooke the regall Seate His state his toyle his pompe his cares all great The French the Welsh the Scotsh all prou'd his foes The Pope King Iohn did from his Crowne depose His Lords rebel'd from France the Dolphin came And Wasted England much with sword and flame And after seuenteene yeeres were full expir'd King Iohn being poysoned to his graue retir'd King Iohn In the 8. yeere many men Women and cattell ● slain● with thunder and many houses burnt and the ●●●● was beaten downe with haile as bigge as goose egges Some say the King was poyson'd by a monke and others ●rite that he died of a surfeit at Newark but his life was full of troubles and after his death he was by base villaines ●●●d and l●●t naked without any thing to couer the corpes hee was buried at Worcester Henry the third An. Dom. 1216. Wars bloody wars the French in England made Strong holds Towns Towres Castles they inuade ●●t afterwards it was K. Henries chance By force perforce to force them backe to France Great discord 'twixt the King and Barons were ●nd factions did the Realme in pieces teare A world of mischiefes did this Land abide And fifty sixe yeeres raign'd the King and dy'd Henry the 3. This King was born at Winchester crowned at Glocester buried at Westminster In the 17. of his reigne on the 8. of Aprill 1233. there were 5 Sonnes in the firmament and the naturall Sun was as red as blood Edward Long-●hanks An. Dom. 1271. THis was a hardy wise Victorious King The Welshmen he did to subiection bring He Scotland wan and brought from thence by fate Their Crowne their Scepter Chaire and Cloth of state That Kingdome with oppression sore he brusde Much tyranny and bloodshed there he vsde When thirty fiue yeeres he the Crowne had kept At Westminster he with his Father slept Edward the 1. In the 13. yeere his sonne Edward was borne at Carnaruan who was the first sonne of any King of England that was Prince of Wales Edward of Carnaruan An. Dom. 1307. THe hard mis-haps that did this King attend The wretched life and lamentable end Which he endur'd the like hath ne'r bin seene Depos'd and poyson'd by his cruell Queene Which when the poyson had no force to kill Another way she wrought her wicked will Into his Fundament a red hot Spit Was thrust which made his Royall heart to split In his 8. yeere such a death that dogges and horses were good food many ate their owne children and old prisoners tore such as were newly committed in pieces and deuoured them halfe liuing The King reigned 19. yeeres 6. moneths Edward the third An. Dom. 1326. IN Peace and warre this King was right good He did reuenge his murdred Fathers blood Hee and the blacke Prince his most valiant Sonne The Field at Cressle and at Poytiers wonne At first and last in his victorious raigne Of French and Scots were six score thousand slaine And more his glory further to aduance He tooke the Kings of Scotland and of France The noble order of the Garter he At Windsor instituted caus'd to be When fifty yeeres this Land had him obaid At Westminster he in his tombe was laid In his 12. yeere he quartered the Armes of England and France as they are at this day Henry Pichard Vintuer in his Moral●y feasted at once Edward King of England Dauid King of Scotland Iohn King of France the King of Cypres the Prince of Wales the Dolphin of France with many other great Personages of Honour and Worship Richard the second An. Dom. 1377. YOng King rash co●sell lawes right neglected The good put downe the bad in State erected The Court with knaues flat'rers here did swarm The Kingdome like a Farme was let to Farme The Commons tost in Armies Routes and throngs And by soule treason would redresse soule wrongs In this Kings raigne began the Ciuill warre Vnnaturally 'twixt Yorke and Lancaster Oppression on oppression breedes Confusion Bad Prologue bad Proceeding bad Conclusion King Richard twenty two yeeres raign'd misse-led Deposed and at Po●●r●s knock'd ith'head This King was Grandchild to Edward the 3. and sonne to the black Prince he was borne at Burdeux in France and was but 11. yeeres old when he was crowned so that all his miserable Calamity may be imputed to him not hauing or not regarding good counsell Henry the fourth An. Dom. 1399. THe Crown wrong got frō the wrong'doing king More griefe then ioy did to King Henry bring France England Scotland Wales arose in Armes And menac'd Henry with most fierce Alarmes Hot Percy Dowglas Mortimer Glendowre At Shrewsbury the King orethrew their power He fourteene yeeres did raigne and then did dye At Canterbury buried he doth lye Henry the 4. Hee began his reigne the 29. of September 1399. and the 14.
eldest daughter to Henry the 7. from whom our graci●●● soueraigne is ●ineally descended Henry the eight An. Dom. 1509. FRom both the Lines and both the Ioynes did spring Of York Lancaster this mighty King Katherine that was his brothers wife of late He tooke to wife and crown'd her Queene in state Empson and Dudley lost their heads at Tower For racking the poore Commons by their power Warres dreadfull wars arose 'twixt vs and French Lord Edward Howard drowned by mis-chance At Brest he was high Admirall in fight Cast ouerboord dy'd like a valiant Knight In England Suffolks Duke did lose his head The King to Turwin did an army lead Turney he wonne with his victorious blade King Iames of Scotland England did inuade But Surries Earle● the Scotsh King ouercame Who lost life there but wonne immortall fame Now Cardinall Wolsey in the Kings high Grace Was rais'd to honours from great place to place Lordship on Lordship laid vpon his backe Vntill the burthen was the bearers wracke The Duke of Buckingham his head did lose And La●ber stoutly did the Pope oppose ●●finde ignorance that long had look'd awry Began to see Truth with a clearer eye And then the King inspir'd with seruent Zeale Reformed both the Church and Common weale ●●●●● with his power Omnipotent Did make this King his gracious Instrument ●●T'vnmaske his Truth from Antichristian fables And purge this wofull Land from Babels bables This king at Boloigne was victorious ●● peace and warre Magnifique Glorious ●● his rage bounty he did oft expresse His Liberality to bee excesse ●●● Reuels Iusts and Turnies he spent more Then fiue of his Fore-fathers did before His Auarice was all for Noble fame Amongst the Worthies to inrole his Name A valiant Champion for the Faiths defence Was the great Title of this mightie Prince ●●●● wiues he had 3 Kates 2. Aunes one Iane Two were diuorc'd two at the blocke were slaine One sonne and two faire daughters he did leaue Who each from other did the Crowne receiue The first was Edward Mary next whose death Left State and Realme to Queene Elizabeth He thirty eight yeeres kept this Royall Roome At windsor hee 's enter'd without a Tombe L●●th Edenbourgh and diuers other parts of Scotland were spoyled by Sir Iohn Dudley Lord Viscount ●sle Lord high Admirall of England with a Navy of 200 tall Ships Anno 1544. King Henry went to Boloigne hee ●●●● France the 13. of Iuly and into Boloigne the 25. of September in which yeere were taken 300. French ●hips for prices Edward the sixt An. Dom. 1546. HAd this Kings reigne bin long as it was good Religion in a peaceable state had stood What might haue his age bin when his blest youth ●o valiantly aduanc'd Gods sacred truth At nine yeeres age the Crowne on him hee tooke And ere sixteene he Crowne and life for sooke Too good for earth th' Almighty tooke his spirit And Westminster his Carkas doth inherit In his 5. yeere a strange Earth-quake did much harm● in diuers places of Surry and a sweating sicknesse generally ouer England that dispatched those that were in good health in 12. houres or 24. at the most In one weeke there dyed of it in London 806. the most of them being men of best strength Queene Mary An. Dom. 1553. AFter a while this Queene had worne the Crown Idolatry was rais'd and Truth put downe The Masse the Images the Beades and Altars By tyrannie by fire and sword and Halters Th'vngodly bloudy Antichristian sway Men were force perforce forced to obey Now burning Bonner London Bishop he Was from the Ma●s●al-sea againe ●● free Iohn Dudley great Duke of Northumberland And Sir Iohn Gates dyed by the Headsmans hand With them Sir Thomas Palmer likewise dy'd Hoping for heau'n through ●●●●● Crucified In Latine Seruice must be sung and said Because men should not know for what they pra●'d The Emp'rors sonne great Philip King of Spaine A marriage with Queene Mary did obtaine Against which match Sir Thomas Wyat rose With powers of Kent the Spaniards to oppose But Wyat was or'throwne his armie fled And on the Tower hill after lost his head Lord Gray the Duke of Suffolke also dy'd An Axe his Corps did from his head diuide A little after the Lord Thomas Gray The Dukes owne brother went that headlesse way A Millers sonne assum'd King Edward● name And falsely in that name the Crowne did claime But he was tane and iustly whip'd and tortur'd And claiming it once more was hang'd quarterd King Philip won Saint Quintins with great cost But after to our shame was Callice lost Callice was lost which threescore yeeres and ten Had beene a Garrison for Englishmen Thus by Gods mercy Englands Queene did dye And England gain'd much ease and rest thereby Fiue yeeres and 4. months was her bloudy reigne And all her glory doth one graue containe Though of her selfe this Queene was well inclin'd Bad-minded counsell altred much her minde She married Philip King of Spaine on Saint Iames his day 1554. at Winchester Callice was won by Edward the 3. in the 21. of his reigne 1347. and it was lost the I. of Ianuary 1557. after the English-men had possest it 210. yeeres August 7. 1558. a tempest neere Nottingham beat downe 2. Townes and Churches and cast the Bels to the further side of the Church-yard threw whole sheetes of Lead 400. foot into the fields where they were crumpled together like burns parchment the streame and mud of the Riuer of Trent was blowne a-land a quarter of a mile a childe blowne out of a mans hand 100. foot and kild there fell hayle 15. Inches about Queene Elizabeth An. Dom. 1558. A Debora a Iudith a Susanna A Virgin a Virago a Diana Couragious Zealous Learned Wise and Chasle With heauenly earthly gifts adorn'd and grac'd Victorious glorious bountious gracious good And one whose vertues dignifi'd her bloud That Muses Graces Armes and liberall Arts Amongst all Queens proclaim'd her Queen of hearts She did repurifie this Land once more From the infection of the Romish whore Now Abbies Abbots Fri'rs Monks Nuns Stews Masses and Masse-priests that mens soules abuse Were all cast downe Lamps Tapers Relikes Beads And Superstitions that mans soule misse-leads All Popish pardons Buls Consessions With Crossings Cristening bels Saints Intercessions The Altars Idols Images downe cast All Pilgrimage and Superstitious Fast Th'acknowledging the Pope for supreme head The holy water and the god of bread The mumbling Mattins and the pickpurse Masse These bables this good Queene did turne to grasse She caus'd Gods seruice to be said and sung In our owne vnderstanding English tongue In Scotland and in France fierce warres she held The Irish she subdu'd when they rebeld The Netherlands her name doe still admire And Spaine her like againe doth not desire When forty foure yeers reigne was past and gone She chang'd her earthly for a heauenly Throne At Greenwich she was borne at Richmond dy'd At
woes opprest and prest Blest curst friends foes diuided and aron'd And after seuenteene yeeres were gone and past At Swinsted poys'ned there I dranke my last Anno 1199 Aprill 6 Tuesday Iohn ●●●●stly intruded the Crowne it being by right his nephew Arthurs who was sonne to Ieffry Duke of Britaine Iohns eldest brother howsoeuer Iohn was crowned on the 6 of May at Westminster by Hubert Archbishop of Canterbury but after a false reconciliation betwixt Philip King of France Iohn king of England and Arthur ' Duke of Britaine the said Duke Arthur was murthered some Authors in malice taxing king Iohn with the murther and some Writers altogether clearing him Hoasoeuer he had not one quiet day in his whole-Reigne his Principalities in France seazed only the French Wales in combustion Ireland in vproare Scotland preparing against him England all in confusion defender and hurliburly the King the Peeres the Prelates and Commons at perpetuall diuisioen The Pope of Rome thunders out his Excommunications against the King and all that obeyed him and interacts the whole Realme Soe that for three yeeres no Church was opened either for Gods Seruice to be exercised or Sacraments administred There was no Christian buriall allowed to any but the Carcasses of the dead were barbarously laid in vnhallowed places or cast like dogges into ditches yet all this time many of the English Nobilitie loyally serued their Soueraigne mangre the Papall Anathemizing The King went into Ireland and finding it shattered into contentions fractures ioynes and vnites it againe and returnes into England When suddenly Lewilyn Prince of Northwales who had married King Iohns daughter inuades the Marches of England but Lewilyn was soyled and Wales conquered But in the yeere 1211 the Popes set all curse beganne to fall heauy vpon king Iohn which curse also made many great Lords and other to far from the King neuerthelesse Scotland being in contention by a Traytor that claimed the Crowne there ●●● Gothred King John went thither aided his friend K. William and in that expedition set all in good peace taking the Traitor Gothred caused him to be hanged The Pope very liberally gaue the kingdome of England to Phil. of France An. 1112. More then 3000 people were burn'd drown'd on vnder London bridge in the space of 4 yeers King John made his peace with the Pope surrendred his Crown to Pandulphus the Legat for money and good words was blest and had his Crowne againe Philip of France attempts Englands inuasion his Fleet is beaten discontented sunke scattered taken by king Iohn Lewis the Dolphin of France landed at Sarawich with 650 ships came to London and tooke oaths of Allegeance of the Barons and Citizens in Pauls yet at last Lewis it forsaken of the English Lords yet holds possessions heere King Iohn being thus freed from Inuasion and Forraigne assaults was assaulted with poyson by a Monk in Swinsted Abbey hauing reigned more powerfull then fortunate 17 yeeres 5 moneths and odde dayes was interred at Worcester HENRY THE THIRD KING OF ENGLAND LORD OF JRELAND DVKE OF NORMANDY G●●en and Aquitaine c. IN toyle and trouble midst contentions broyles ●● z'd the Scepter of this famous land Then being gready wasted with the spoyles Which ●●●● I made with his French furious band But I with Peeres and people brauely mand Repald repulst expa●st insulting foes My ●●●ons did my Soueraignty withstand And wrap them●● and me in warres and woes But in each Battell none but I did lose I lost my Subiects lines on euery side From Ciuill warres no better gaining growes Friends foes my people all that fought or died My gaines was losse my pleasure was my paine These were the triumphs of my troublous raigne Anno 1216 October 19 Wednesday Henry the third the eldest sonne of King Ioha and Isabel which was the daughter of Aym●r Earle of A●golesme Thus Henry was borne at Winchester ●● first crowned at Gloucester by Peter Bishop of Winchester Iosseline Bishop of Bath and after ag●●man with his Lords he was againe crownes at Westminster by Stephen Langton Archbishop of Conterbury ●● Whitsanday God in mercy lookes gentle 〈…〉 calamities that this wofull Land pressed by forraigne warres and ciuill discord It all turned to a happy ●●●● betwixt the King and his Lords which continued a long time Gualo the Popes Legate the Bishop of Winchester William Marshall Earle of Pombroke being the protector of the Kings Realme the King ●●●●●●●●●● old by whose good gouernment Lewts the ●●●●●● of France with all his French Armies were exp●●ed out of the kingdome The King forg●●e all of the La●●●● the had taken part with Lewis but he made the Clerg●●● great sines Alexander the King of Scotland was married to the Leaytane sister to King Henry at which misiery Dragons were●●●●●●●●●●●●●● the ●●●●●● coun●●●●● fellow said he ●●● Iesus Christ sheuing the markes ●●● were of Nayles in his hands feet ●er the which bla●●●● my bewa● Crucified at a place called Atterbury neare the Towne of Banbury Some say hee was 〈…〉 two walls and started at Cathnes in Scotland The Bishop did excem 〈…〉 the people because they would ●● pay their Tithes for the which they burned the Bishop aliue for reward of which wicked act their King caused 400. of the chife offenders to be ●arged golded ●●●●●●● dr●● and put the Earle from his Earledoms Iohn King of Ierusclem came into England to ●raue ●● de●●f King Henry But the King was so busied here that he co●al●● ayd him K. Henry with a great Arm went into Britaine against Lewis King of France and spoyled the C●●●● mighty till at last a Peace was co●●l●ded The Emperor Fred●rick married the Lady Isabell the King ●●●● Eig●●●● Iewes were hanged for cru●●ring a ●●●●dre Lincolne Richard Earle of Cornwall the Kings●●● ther was made King of the Romanes The King l●●●●●●●● lands in France except the Duchy of Aquitaine Wales was in insurrection Ireland in rebellion England in a hurty-burly ●●stoy all Diuision betwixt the King and his ●●● Lords Anno 1233. 5 Sunnes were ●e●u 〈…〉 ●●●●●● in the East one in the West one in the South ●● in the North ●●●●● the fifth in the m●●st of the firmament The King entertaines Poictouines out of France and giues them places of great honour in Court and ●●●●●●● which made the English Barons raise At●●● agan●●●● King The Earl of Leicester and Gloucester ●●●●the King of England in the battell at Lewes The Lord Chiefe iustue●●●'d in Westminster-●●● ●●●●● after all these ones the King dyed in peace hauing reigned 56 yeeres ●●● burried at Westminster 127● EDWARD THE FIRST KING OF ENGLAND LORD OF IRELAND DVKE OF AQVITAINE c. MY Victories my Valour and my strength My actions and my neuer-conquer'd name ●ere spred throughout the world in bredth lēgth ●● mortall deeds I want immortall Fame ●●ebellious Wales I finally did tame ●● made them Vassalls to my princely Sonne ●●red Scotland fierce with
vshers of the Mortimers intollarable aspiring conetousnesse and destruction and which was most insupportable there were for all most 20 yeers space the plagues and desolation of the King and kingdomes After great coutentions were betwixt the 2 Realmes of England and Scotland a peace was concluded and Dauid-le Bruce the young Prince of Scotland was married to Iane King Edward the 3 sister K. Edward maried with the Lady Philip daughter to the Earle of Henault at Yorke with whom she liu'd 42 yeers She sounded Queens Colledge in Oxford She was mother to that mirrour of manhood and st●●●● of Chiu●● it Edward surnamed the black Prince There was a dreadfull batell sought at Hallidon hill in which were slaine 8 Earles 80 Knights and Baroness and 35000 Common soldiers on the Scots side the losses on the English side through the parciality of Writers were not set downe About the 12 yeers of this Kings reigne a quarter of Wheate was sold for 28 an Oxe 6 d a Geose 2d a fat Sheepe 6 d fixe Pidgeons and a fat Pigge for 2 d. The King claimed the Crowne of France and with 200 ships sought with 300 French ships and flew 33000 of the French This King first instituted the Honorable Order of the Garter at Windsor there being alwaies 26 in number The King sought the battell of Cressie in France wherein was slain the King of Bohemia with 10 Princes 80 Knights Baroness and 1200 Knights with 330000 Common Soldiers The King made 4 inroades into Scotland with great armies and was still victorious Anno 1338 the arms of France were quartered wth the armes of England the King prepared a great armie against France and on the Sea neere Sluce in Flanders he vanquished 400 French ships with the losse of 30000 of their men Then was France taken or halfe a yeere the wars againe renewing King Edward besieged Callice and ●ocke it An. 1347 Dauid King of Scotland was taken prisoner by one Iohn Copland an Esquire of the North. At the battell of Potiers Edward the black Prince of Wales had a glorious victory for there hee ●ocke King Iohn of France with his Sonne Phillip the Dolphin prisoners There were slaine of the French 52 Neblemen 1700 Knights and Esquires and 600 Common men 100 Ensignes and many men of note taken prisoners Dauid King of Scots was set at liberty hauing bin a prisoner 11 yeers paying 100000 marks st●●●ing Iohn K. of France after 4 yeeres imprisonment set free paying 1000000 ● for his ransome Finally neuer was English King more triumphant and fortunate in war in the fruition of a vertuous Queen 7 sons and daughters a glorious and lang reign of 50 yeeres buried at Sheene Anno Domini 1378. RICHARD THE IJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND c. A Sunshine Morne precedes a showry day A Calme at Sea ofttimes foreruns a storme All is not gold that seemes so glistring gay Foule Vice is fairest features Canker-worme So I that was of blood descent and forme The perfect image of a Royall Stock Vnseason'd young aduice did me deforme Split all my hopes against despaires blacke rock My Regall name and power was made a mock My Subiects madly in rebellion rose Mischiefe on mischiefe all in troopes did flock Oppos'd depos'd expos'd inclos'd in woes With wauering fortunes troublously I raing'd Slaine by soule mur ther peace and rest I gain'd Anno Dom. 1377 June 21 Sunday Richard the second borne as Burdeux the ●●●●● nate Grandebilde and son of the two 〈…〉 and Paragons of Armes and all Noble vertues Edward the third and his euer-famous sonne Edward the ●●●●● Prince was crowned at Westminster by the 〈…〉 mond Sudbury Archbishop of Canterbury the K●●● being but 11 yeeres old The glory of the English N●●● was in a continual Eclips the most part of this K●●g●●● his youth with all the frailties incident vn●●●● with ●●●● gouernours both of his Kingdome and person 〈…〉 main Ruines of the King almost the Realm The 〈…〉 of his fortunes after his Coronation was that 50 French ships landed at Rye in Suffex who burnt and spoyled the Towne and diuers other parts of the kingdome and ●●● Alexander Ramsey a valiant Scottish Gentlemen with but 40 men withhim tooke the Castle of Barwicke which the Earle of Northūberland man from him ●●●● with a great number The French did so far preuaile ●●●●● they came to Granesend and burnt and rifled it T●●● Comment arose in rebellion in diuers places as Kent ●●●● sex Surrie Suffolk Norfolk Cambridge the K●●●● men being 50000 came to London where the ●●●● cammitted many outrages vnder the cemman●● of ●●●●● solent rebels Wat Tyler and Iack Sraw who ●●●●● mated to that mischief by one Iohn Ball an●●●●●● priest but Tyler was killed by the famous Sir William Walworth Lord Maior of London the rebele dispe●●●● Iack Staw and Ball the Priest extented the Com●●●● pardoned and all at peace for a short time These Bascalls had beheaded Sinon Tibald Archbishop of Canterbury●● and Sir Robert Hales Lord Treasurer of England ●●● burnt and spoylea the Sahoy the like they had ●●● Lanibeth destroying all the Rowles and Record of ●●●●● Chancerie Iohn of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster the King vnckle was accused for Treason by a Carmilite Fryer ●●●● the Fryer was cruelly murdered and the Duke suspici●●●● cleared Barwick was wonne againe by the Scots ●●●● againe recouered by the Earle of Northumberland The French prepare a great Nauy and Army purpa ●●●● inuade England King Richard raiseth a ●●●●● intending to conquer Scotland all which desig●●●●● neither good or profitable euents 1386 mischiefe and ●● serie hauing sate long abroad began to batch the ●●●●● insulting on the one side and the people rebellious ●●● other did Bandy the regall power in to hazard The Scott enter England vnder the command of the valiant Sir William Dowglasse and are met and ●●●● tred by the Right Noble Lord Henry Hotspurre Dowglasle was staine and Hotspur taking Ireland rebel'd the King went thither in person and lest England the whilest he bring forced to surrender himselfe but Crow●●● and kingdome to his kinsman Henry Bullingbrooke Son to Iohn of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster 1400. HENRY THE IV KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND c. FRom right wrong-doing Richard I did wrest His Crowne mis-guided but on me mis-plac'd Vnciuill Ciuill warres my Realme molest And English men did England spoyle and wast The Sire the Son the Son the Father chas'd Vndutifull vnkind vnnaturall Both Yorke and Lancaster were rais'd and rac'd As Conquest did to either Faction fall But still I grip'd the Scepter and the Ball And what by wrong I won by might I wore For Prince of Wales I did my Son install But as my Martiall Fame grew more and more By fatall Fate my vitall threed was cut And all my Greatnesse in a graue was put Anno Dom. 1399 September 19 Munday Crownes misplaced on vnrightfull heads are commonly lined with
perdurable cares and vexation as appeared in the lines and raignes of Rusus Henry the first Stehpen Iohn and now this King Henry the fourth who though hee were minion of Fortune the Darling of the peolpe euery way a compleate Noble Prince yet was his vsurpation still attended with dangerous molestations he was crowned at Westminster by Thomas Arundell Arbhishop of Canterbury hee was scarce warme in his seat before the Dukes of Exeter Aumerie Surry with the Earles of Glocester and Salisbury conspired to kill him and to raise King Richard againe but their plot was discouered and satisfied with the losse of there heads shortly after king Richard the 2 was starued to death some say murdred at Pomfret castle in short time after the Princes of English poets Ieffry Chaucer and Iohn Cower dyed all those Noble men who either fouored king Richard or were raised by him were degraded disinherited or out of King or courrtly favour The French in Aquitaine intend rebellion against K. Henry but are pacified by Tho Percy Earle of Worcester The Welsh rebell vnder the cōmand of their captine Owne Glendowre and the king went thither in person and with losse and danger quieted them An. 1403 the terrible battel of Shrewsbury was fought betwixt the King and the Earle of Worcester the Earle Dowglasse the Lord Henry Percy alias Hotspur and others where after a bloody triall Percy was slain buried taken vp againe and quartered the Earle of Worcester was beheaded the Dowglasse taken and the King victorious Owen Glendowere again raiseth wars in Wales and inuades the Marches of England although king Richard the 2 be dead and buried yet is he still sained to be aliue and by counterfeit impostures King Henry was much molested 140 ships came out of France arriued at Milford hauen to the aid of Owen Glendowre the Earle of Northumberland rebelled with the Lord Bardolph and were both taken beheaded Thus was king Henries reigne a Maiesticall missery a soueraignty of sorrow and a regall power alwaies attended with perplexity so that hauing raign'd 13 yeers 6 months wanting 5 daies he dyed the 20 of March 1413 and leauing 4 sonnes 2 daughters he was with all funerall and Royall solemnity interred at Canterbury HENRY THE FIFTH KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND FRom my Iancastrian Sire successiuely I Englands glorious golden Garland gots I temper'd Iustice with mild clemency Much blood I shed yet blood-shed loued not Time my Sepulchre and my bones may not But Time can neuer end my endlesse fame Oblinion cannot my braue acts out blot Or make Forgetfulnesse forget my name I plaid all France at Tennise such a game With roaring Rackets bandied Balls and Foyles And what I plaid for still I won te same Triumphantly transporting home the spoyles But in the end grim death my life assail'd And as I lin'd I dy'd belon'd bewail'd Anno Dom. 1413. March 20 Sunday Henry the 5 borne at Monmouth in Wales about 28 yeeres old when he began to reigne he was crowned at Westminster by the hands of Thomas Arundell Archbishop of Canterbury and howsoeuer some Writers haue imputed wildnesse and irregular courses so youth vnto him yet when hee attained the Scepter he proued the mirror of Princes and Paragon of the world in that age He banished from his Court and presence all prophane and lewd companions and exiled from his eares all flattring Parasites and Sicophants In the 1 yeer of his reigne he prepared a great Armie against France an●●● Southampton very happily escaped murthering by the Treason of Richard Earle of Cambridge Henry Lord Scroope and Sir Thomas Gray Knight Soone after the King past with 1500 sail into France where hee wanne the strong Tow●●●● Hatflew and intending to march back with his ●● my toward Callice he was neere a place called Agincourt encountrea by the whole power of France where King Henry had a triumphant victories in which battel were slaine many of the French Nobility with 10000 cōmon soldiers as many of them taken prisoners The whole English Army at that time being not 10000 being wasted with the fluxe famine and other sicknesses yet did they ●●●●●● more prisoners then they were themselues in number in all the battel lost not aboue 28 mē After which the King returned into England and ●●●● was met with 400 Citizens and magnificantly ●●● tertained into London King Henry attributing all his conquests and victories to God The E●●●●● Sigismond came into England and entred leag●●● with King Henry the Emperors intent was to ●●● made a peace betwixt England France but he could not accōplish it The king passed into I ra●●● againe and wonne many Cities Townes C●●●●●● strong holds in the end he married the Lady Katherin daughter to K. Charles of France with when he came into England and hauing crowned ●●●● Queene be returned into I rance the third ●●● was in Paris proclaimed heire apparent to the Crowne Finally he sickened and dyed at Boyses● Vincennois in France from whence his corps ●● brought and buried at Westminster I September 1422. HENRY THE VI KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF JRELAND GReat England Mars my Father being dead I not of yeares or yeare but eight months old The Diadem was plac't vpon my head In Royall Robes the Scepter I did hold But as th' Almighties workes are manifold Too high for mans conceit to comprehend In his eternall Register eurold My Birth my troublous Life and tragicke End ● Gainst me the house of Yorke their force did bend And Peeres and People weltred in their gore My Crown and Kingdome they from me did rend Which I my Sire and Grandire kept and wore Twice was I crown'd vncrown'd oft blest oft crost And lastly murdred life and Kingdome lost Anno Dom. 1422 August 31 Munday Henry the 6 born at Windsor the son of Henry the 5 was but 8 moneths old at the death of his father so that by reason of his infancy himselfe and kingdome were gouerned by his vnckles the Dukes of Bedford and Glocester An. 1419 Nouember 6 the King was crowned first at Westminster by the hands of Henry Chichley Archbishop of Canterbury hee was againe the second time crowned at Paris the 7 of December 1431 by the Cardinalls of York and Winchesters and returns into England the 11 day of February following In these times France was in miserable perplexity diuided betwixt French and English in continuall bloody wars for the Dolphin Charles made wars in sundry places claiming the Crowne the English won and lost towns and territories as fortune found or fround till at last by reason of the King childhood in the beginning of his reigne his soft milde gentle inclination in his ripe yeeres and his indisposition to marshall affaires hee beeing more sit for the Church thē for chinalry for praier thē for prowesse a man in al his actions more like a Saint then to one that should weild a warlike
and ●●● to King Edward the sixt Shee was crowned at Westminster the first of October 1553 by the hands of Stephen Gardner Bishop of Winchester King Edward being dead his death was concealed two daies by reason of the feare of Queene Maries alteration of the religion which King Edward had established for which cause the Lady Iane was by many of the Lords and the Londoners proclaimed Queene This Lady Iane was eldest daughter to Henry Duke of Suffolke shee was then married to the Lord Guiford Dudlty fourth sonne to Iohn Duke of Northumberland her mother was the Lady Francis the daughter of Mary the French Queene and the younger sister of King Henry the 8. Queene Mary bearing that Iane was proclaim'd Queen begain to rowse raised an Army and was first proclaimed in the City of Norwich her powers still increasing she made towards London where all supplies forsocke the Lady Iane so that she with her husband and father and the Lord Thomas Gray with others were beheaded The Queene ceases all the protestant Bishops and Clergie to bee degraded suspended or imprisoned She raised againe the Mase and with it masse of misery to this kingdome King Philip of Spaine was contracted to Queene Mary but Sir Thomas Wiat with an Armie opposed it and after much bickering was taken and executed on the Towre●●● The Lady Elizabeth the Queenes sister was wrong●●ly imprisoned and in danger to be put to death Philip King of Spaine was married to Queene Mary with●● Royall solemnity at Winchester the 25 of Iuly Anno 1454. This wofull Land was in those daies a very Achetdima or field of blood the Popes M●reban●s ●●● Church and Commonwealth with holy Water Pax Censors Oyle Spittle Creame Altars Pictures Images ● Crosses Crucifixes Beades Lights Tapers Cand●●● the Breaden god these Romish warres did cost the li●es neere 6000 people that refused them some hanged ●●● burne and diuers others suffering other deaths and ●●ties K. Philip Queen Mary send defiance into France Philip went thither in person besieged the strong ●●● of S t. Quintins and man it but shortly after the English men lost Callice which had beene the King of English Towne 21 yeeres Wherefore Queene Mary tooke ●●● griefe that she● neuer enioyed her life-long after ●●● Callice was lost the 17 of Ianuary and the Queene ●●● at Saint Iames house the 7 of Nouember following ●●● 1558 when she had reigned 5 yeeres 4 moneth●●●● daies she lieth buried as Westminster ELIZABETH QVEENE OF ENGLAND FRANCE and IRELAND Defender of the Faith c. THe griefes the feares the terrors and the toiles The sleights tricks snares that for my life were laid ●pes prisons poysons pistois bloody broyles ●● these incompast me poore harmelesse Mayd ●● I still trusting in my Makers ayde Was still defended by his power diuine ●y glory and my greatnesse was displai'd ●● farre as Sunne and Moone did euer shine Gods mingled Seruice I did re-refine From Romish rubbish and from humane drosse ● yearely made the pride of Spaine decline ●●● and all Belgia I sau'd from losse I was Arts patterne t' Armes I was a Patron I liu'd and dyed a Queene a Maid a Matron Anno Dom. 1558 Nouember 17 Thursday Lady Elizabeth borne at Greenwich second daughter to King Henry the eight sister and heire to the late Queene Mary after shee had by Gods gracious prouience past through many afflictions as scandals calumnations sundry imprisonns ●●● and hazard of her life shee was at the age of 25 yeeres and od dayes crowned Queen of England France and Ireland at Westminster by the hand of Owen Oglethorpe Bishop of Carlielc the 13 of Ianuary The first good worke of hers after her coronation was to reforme and restore and Seruice of God to the Primitiue sincerity and prayer and preaching to be vsed in the English tongue she caused all the bables of Babek and all the Romish rubbish to bee cast out of the Church shee dismissed those Bishops and others of the Clergie as would not be reformed She caused all base momes and coyneste to be supprest and to be no vallue and in their stead she ordained that no coyne but Gold and Siluer shou● passe for current in her Dominions The French King Henry at a ●l●ng was vnfortunately slaine by a Lord named Mountgomery ●●inter of the l●●●nce running into his eye An. 1559. Sorne after the French molest Scotland but by Queene Elizabeths ●yde they were expulsed The Noble Earle of Arraw in Scotland and Ericus King of Sweaden were suuer●● to marry ●●● the Queene which her Maiesty with all princely modesty refused She was after sued to by Henry Duke of Aniou brother to the French King Charles the 9. Anno 1514. The bloody massaker was in France where in the City of Paris only 10000 Protestarts were m●n thered by the Pepists The Irish fell to rebellian vnder the Earle of Tirone which rebellion put England to much cost and trouble Henry Lord Darneley King of Scots most inhumanely murdred Anno 1568 and his Queen Mary assaulted by the oppression of her rebellicus Subiects came into England and was royally welcomed One Thomas Appletree discharging his ●●ce the Queene was in her Barge vpon the Thames the bullet ranne thorow both the Armes of one of her Watermen but the Queene vnderstanding that the shot was by casualtie pardoned the offender Her mercie iustice temperance fortitude magnanimity prudence learning and incomparable wisedome would each of them fill a volume So that neither ●●● vnablenesse of me the writer nor the briefnesse which I am ●●● to in thus abstract can no waies touch the ●em of her vertues wherefore I refer the reader to the great volumes of Hollinsheds story the Reuerend learned Cambden Master speed and others who haue writen more largely of her though all of them are much short of her vnimmitable merits shee ayed the 24 of March 1602 aged 69 y●eeres 6 moneths and 7 dayes she reigned 44 yeeres ●4 months and 7 daies On the 28 of Aprill after shee was buried at Westminster IAMES Of that Name THE FIRST And I. Monarch of the whole Iland of GREAT BRITAINE c. WEre all the flatt'ry of the world in me Great King of hearts Arts great Britaines King Yet all that flattery could not flatter thee Or adde to thy renowne the smallest thing My Muse with truth and freedome dares to sing Thou wert a Monarch lou'd of God and Men. Two famous Kingdomes thou to one didst bring And gau'st lost Britaines name her name agen Thou cansedst Doctors with their learned pen The sacred Bible newly to translate Thy wisdome found the damned powder'd Den That hell had hatcht to ouerthrow thy state And all the world thv Motto must allow The peace makers are blast and so art thou Anno Dom. 1602 March 24 Thursday Iames the first of that name King of England Scotland France Ireland the first King that was ●●● in England since the Norman conquest
hauing past with troubles griefes and cares This transitory life this vale of teares Yet LANCELOT ANDREWES name doth this portend All sure All due content Crownes all art end FINIS True louing Sorrovv ●●TTIRED IN A ROBE OF VNFAINED ●efe presented vpon occasion of the much bewailed Funerall that Gracious and Illustrious Prince LEVVIS STEVVARD ●●e of Richmond and Linox Earle of Newcastle and Darnely Lord of Torbolt●n and ●●uen Baron of Settrington Knight of the Noble Order of the Garter Lord High ●●●●irall great Chamberlain of Scotland Lord high Steward to the Kings most ●●lent Maiesties most Honourable Houshold Gentleman of his Maiesties Bed-chamber ●●● one of his Maiesties most Honourable Priuie Councell for England and Scotland who ●●●●departed this life at White-hall on Thursday the 12 of February 1624. whose obsequies were solemnly and Princely celebrated on Munday the 19 of Aprill following described in forme as followeth Dedicated generally to all his worthy Friends and louing Seruants and particularly to that trusty and welbeloued Seruant of his Arthur Neassmith ANd first my Muse findes that his Graces name Significantly makes an Anagram LEWIS STEWARDE Anagram VERTV IS WEL EAS'D His Vertues such continuall paines did take For King and Countrie Church and peoples sake That for Earths courtly toyle to him 't was giuen His VERTV IS WEL EAS'D t 'the Court of Heauen A Funerall Elegie GReat God that to thy self wilt take thine own By sundry waies and means to man vnknown Whose Eye of prouidence doth still perceiue When where why who to take or else to leaue Whose mercy and whose Iustice equall are Both Infinite to punish or to spare All men doe know that men to dye are borne And from the earth must to the earth returne But Time and Circumstance coniecture may For some great cause thou took'st this Duke away Amongst vs lurks so many a foule offence Which giues thee cause to take good men from hence And that this Prince was good as well as great His life and timelesse losse doth well repeate Deuout and zealous to his God aboue True to his King as did his seruice proue Discreet in Counsell Noble in his minde Most Charitablly Honourably kinde So Affable so Hopefull vnto all And so Repleat with vertues generall That we may say This Land in losing him Hath lost a gracious Peere a prop a lim It must be true that well he spends his daies Whose actions doe attaine all peoples praise And surely I suppose hee doth not liue Who of this Duke a bad report can giue So full endu'd he was of all good parts With Noble Courtesie he wan all hearts To loue and honour his admired minde So well addicted and so well enclin'd That as a Diamond in gold transfixt His vertues with his greatnesse were so mixt That he as one of an immortall Race Made Vertue vertuous and gaue Grace to grace Then since his goodnesse was so generall The losse of him is Gen'rall vnto all This being true let 's recollect our spirits And weigh his worth with our vnworthy merits The manner of the Funerall 8. Conductors with black staues poore Gowns 10● Seruants to Gentlemen and Esquires in Cloakes 50. Seruants to Knights 46. Seruants to Baroness ●● Three Trumpeters Then came the Standard borne by Sir Ge●● Samms Knight accompanyed with an Officer of Armes The first Horse couered with blacke cloth ●●● with Scutchions Shoffron and Plumes ledly a gro●● Heere went seruants to Baron younger Sonnes ●●● some others of like quality in number 15. The seruants to Knights of the Priuy Councell,30 Seruants to Earles younger Sonnes 24. Seruants to Viscounnts eldest Sonnes 6. Then the Schollers of Westminster in ●oun●● Surplices their Masters following in mourning Go●● Three Trumpeters The Guiators borne by Sir Andrew Boyd Knight ●●● companyed with an Officer of Armes The second Horse led by a Groome and furnished the former Barons seruants 60. Bishops seruants 10. Earles eldest Sonnes seruants 15. Viscount seruants 10. Marquesses eldest Sonnes seruants 3 Trumpeters The Banker of the augmentation borne by a kni●● companied with an Officer of Armes The third Horse led by another Groome of his Gr●● Stable furnished as the others Earles seruant ma●●● set and Dukes seruants The Lord Priuy-Seales Seruant● President of the Cuoncell Seruant Lord Treasurers Seruant Lord Keepers Seruant And Lord Archbishops Seruant 3 Trumpeters The Banner of Steward borne by ●● Iohn Steward accompanied with an Officer of Armes● The fourth Horse sed by a Yeoman of his Graces ●●●ble And then our fraileties truely will confesse God tooke him hence for our vnworthinesse Death was in Message from th' Almighty sent To summon him to Heau'ns high Parliament He chang'd his Gracious Title transitory And by the grace of God attain'd true Glory And as his King had his integrity So did the Commons share his Clemency Which was so pleasing to his Makers sight That bounteously he did his life requite That Lambe-like mildely hence hee tooke him sleeping To his Eternall euer-blessed keeping Thus as his name includes so God is pleas'd From worldly sorrows VERTV IS WEL EAS'D No sicknesse or no physicke made him languish He lay not long in heart-tormenting anguish But as Gods feare was planted in his brest ●●●oat his Rest God tooke him to his Rest. When like a good Tree laden full of fruite Of Grace of Vertue Honour and Repute Euen in his best estate too good for Earth Then did his soule put on a second Birth And though his part of fraile mortality Yet Monumentall Marble heere doth lye As thousands weeping soules with deepe laments ●●●s his most woefull mourning Monuments ●●● daily see whose visages doe show That Hee 's inter'd within their hearts below Whose faces seeme an Epitaph to beare That men may Reade who is intombed there Epitaph GOod Gracious Great Richmond Linox Duke God King and Countries seruant heere doth lye ●hose liuing Merits merit no rebuke ●●●● whose liues losse lamenting Memory ●●●●● hearts are groning Graues of griefes and cares ●hich when we dye wee 'l leaue vnto our heyres ME thinks the Sable Mourners did appeare As if in forme they numbring Figures were ●●● 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. Whilst all that view'd like Ciphers did combine Their mourning with the Mourners to vnite Which made thier Lamentations infinite And Infinite are now his Ioyes aboue With the Eternall God of peace and loue Where for a mortall Duke dome he hath wonne Through boundlesse merits of th'Amighties Son ●●● Kingdome that 's immortall where hee sings ●erpetuall praise vnto the King of Kings Thus what the Earth surrendred heau'n hath seaz'd Most blest LEWIS STEWARDE VERTV IS WEL EAS'D ble furnished as the other Seruants to his Grace in Cloakes Officers to his Grauce in Gownes 3 Trumpeters The Banner of Steward and the augmentation quartered with it borne by a Baronet accompanied with a Herald of Armes The 5 Horse led by a Yeoman of his Graces Stable furnished as the
not be blinde may plainely spy That their insulting proud commanding Priest Is ●bsolute and onely Antichrist H'exalts himselfe ' boue all that 's called God Vpon the Emperours necke he proudly trod Hee is th'abomination void of grace That mounts himselfe into the holy place He makes the Princes of the Earth drinke vp And quaffe the poyson of his cursed Cup. Who being drunken with the dr●gs of sinne They haue his sworne and forsworne vassals beene Bewitched with his foule Inchanting charmes Gainst one another they haue rose in armes By forreine and domesticke bloudie broyles Whilst he hath fild his his coffers with their spoyles His double dealing too plaine appeares In setting Christian Princes by the eares Whilst he into his anatitious hands Hath feiz'd their persons moueables and lands And as the Christian Kings themselues made weake The Turke into their Kingdomes gan to breake And thus the Turke and Pope joynd with the deuill Haue beene the authors of all Christian euill FINIS THE BOOKE OF MARTYRS The Second Part. DEDICATED TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE PHILLIP EARLE OF MONTGOMERIE c. MY Lord the liues and deaths of Saints and Kings This little Booke vnto your Greatnesse sings Protection and acceptance if you giue It shall as shall Your selfe for ever liue IOHN TAYLOR VVHen the 7 Henry in his graue was laid And the eight Henry Englands Scepter sway'd Romes bloudy persecution raged more In England than in ten Kings raignes before And therefore Reader in this little Booke For euery Martyrs name thou must not looke But men of chiefest note respect and same That dyed in England onely these I name And first the Papists tyranny beganne In murthering Richard Hun a zealous man For being kept in prison by their power They closly hang'd him in the Lollards Tower And then they all in generall decreed Reporting Hun himselfe had done the deed Ann sixteene dayes iust after this was don They burn'd the foresaid corps of Richard Hun. Then to the number of full thirty fiue The surious flames did all of life depriue In seuerall places of this wofull land Because they did the Pope of Rome withstand At which time Thomas Bilney did begin To preach and teach against Antichristian sinne Where in Saint Georges Church in Ipswich Towne The Papists from the Pulpit pluckt him downe And as in dolefull prison he did lie He put his finger in the flames to try He prou'd aud God did giue him strenght to beare His death to liue with his Redeemer deare The next of note was one Iohn Frith a man Of learning great a Martyrs same he wan Then learned Luther and graue Zwinglius With Caluin Beza Occolampadius All glorious gracious reuerend lamps of light Were instruments to cleare blear'd Englands sight In Flanders William Tindall for Gods Word Was Sacrific'd to glorifie the Lord. Iohn Lambert valiantly his death did take And burn'd in Smithfield for his Sauiour sake About this time that Honourable man Lord Cromwels life and timelesse death began Hee like an Earthquake made the Abbies fall The Fryeries the Nunneries and all This famous Noble worthy Essex Earle This Iemme this Iewell this most orient pearle Was for his truth from all he had discarded And with his heads losse all his faith rewarded The next of worthy note by fire that dide Was good Anne Askew who did strong abide Rackes tortures and the cruell raging flame To magnifie her high Creators name Then gan the Kings eyes to be opended quite Inlightened by the euerlasting light He banisht Superstitious idle sables And packt the Papists hence with all their bables Then Bonner Gardner Brethren both in euill Factors and Actors bloudhounds for the Deuill Their burning fame to infamy soone saded They Godlesse gracelesse were disgracst degraded The King thus hauing this good worke begun He dyed and left the Kingdome to his Sonne Then raign'd young Edward that sweet Princely childe By whom all Popery was cleane exilde But he too good to liue mongst wicked men Th' Almighty tooke him hence to Heauen agen No sooner Edward was laid in his Tombe But England was the slaughter-house of Rome Gardner and Bonner were from prison turn'd And whom they pleas'd were eyther sau'd or burn'd Queene Mary imitating Iezabell Aduanc'd againe the Ministers of Hell Then tyranny began to tyrannize Tortures and torments then they did deuise Then Master Rogers with a saith most feruent Was burn'd and dy'd in Smith field Gods true Seruant Next vnto him did Laurence Sanders dye By fire for Iesus sake at Couentry He did embrace and kindly kisse the stake To gaine Heau'ns glory did the world for sake Good Byshop Hooper was at Gloster burn'd Cause he against the Romish Doctrine spurn'd And Doctor Taylor a true zealous man At Hadly burn'd eternall glory wan Then Byshop Ferrar next his life did spend In fire to gaine the life shall neuer end Next William Fowler first did loose his hand Then burn'd because the Pope he did withstand In Essex Thomas Hawkes with faith victorious Did dye by fire to gaine a life most glorious Master Ioha Bradford for his Sauiours sake In Smithsield burn'd a godly end did make Two reuerend Byshops Father Latimer And Ridley each of them a heauenly starre Liu'd in Gods foare and in his fauour dy'd At Oxford burn'd and now are glorisi'd Ioh● Philp●t gladly did the fire embrace And died and liues in his Redeemers grace Then that graue Father and religious man Arch-Bishop of Cranmars troubles hot began His Pompe his state his glory and his pride Was to know Iesus and him crucifide He liu'd a godly Preacher of Gods Word And dy'd a glorious Martyr of the Lord. Iohn Carcles in close Prison carefully Did change his cares for ioyes eternally But this small volum cannot well containe One quarter of the Saints in England flaine In Henries Raigne and Maries cruell Queene Eight thousand people there hath slaughtered beene Some by the Sword some Hang'd some burnt in fire Some staru'd to death in Prison all expire Twelue thousand and seuen hundred more beside Much perse●uting trouble did abide Some wrackt som whipt som tortur'd som in stocks Some doing penance with a world of mockes Some with an yron in the faces burn'd Some out of all their goods to beggry rurn'd Some barefoot bearing faggots on their shoulders We●e made a wondring stocke to the beholders All this and more much more they did endure Because they would not yeeld to liue impure But now to speake the law lesse ●ause wherefore And why these people troubled were so sore Because they would not make their plaints mones To senseles I mages dead stockes and slones Because they said the Sacramentall bread Is not the Lord which shall iudge quick and dead Because they not beleeu'd a Purgatory And held the Popes decrees an idle story Because they would not creepe vnto the crosse And change Gods sacred Word for humane drosse Because they held the Masse an Idoll soule At once which
Idolatrous Egyptians did formerly adore and Worship Onions and Garlicke And as there are many that for desert are worthy Pilots Steeremen and Mariners in the worship and are ship'd into her onely for their merits so there are a great many and more then a good many that by falsehood and indirect courses haue ship'd themselues in her ●●● for as Cornelius Agrippa saith in his Vanity ●● Sciences some haue goten the worship by co●ting throats in the wars some by being great mens Bawdes or Cuckolds in peace some for marrying cast stale Concubine or Bastard●● some by bribery extortion or oppression some by false weights and measures some by ●●● cessiue drunkennesse of others some by these some vpon credit some for ready money and some for fauour which is a word crept ●●● the place of merit ●ince the dayes of Quin●●● the Oratour the most corrupted Iustice ●●● boord her the slothfullest Diuine will hauen Cabin in her the carpet Knight will be ship●● in her the most cowardly Captaine will ente●●● her and many of least faith and conscience will lay clayme to her shee hauing store o● such false owners I say no more of her b●● commit her to the mercy of Wind Tide a●●●● Time There went with her in her Regiment these that follow 1 The Abuse an old ship too much i● vse 2 The Purchasse a vessell all for Simony ●●● ready money 3 The Mittimus a dangerous Barke whose word is At your perill The Huntsmans-SHIP or Woodman-SHIP with her Squadron or Regiment A Good Huntsman is a good Woodman and a Wood-man is a mad man in the North parts of England for when they thinke that a man is distracted or frenzy they will say The man is Wood meaning Mad the reason why it is called Woodman-SHIP I take it to be thus deriued as first a ship hath a multiplicity of Ropes Cordage Masts Rigging and Ground-tackle which I haue partly named before in the Lady-ship so hath this Woodman-ship diuers and sundry tearmes Art almost past numbring as you must ●●● Rowse a Bucke Start a Hare and vnkennell a ●●● againe you must Harbour a Hart and Lodge ●●agge or a Bucke and in processe of time wayes a Hars or a Bucke doe come to perfe●on which many men through imperfe●on doe neuer attaine to as a Bucke is first ●●aune the second yeere a Priket the third ●●ell the fourth a Sore the fifth a Bucke of ●● first head and the sixt yeere a Bucke so a ●●rt is the first yeere a Calse the second a Bro●●● the third a Spaide the fourth a Staggard the ●●th a Stagge and the sixt yeere a Ha●t but ●●me are of the mind that a Stagge cannot be Hart vntill some King or Prince haue almost ●●nted his heart out besides these ambiguous ●ntigrigated Phrases the hornes haue many ●●gmaticall Epithites as a Hart hath the Burs ●e Pearles the Antliers the Surantlers the Roy●● ●●● the Surroyals and the Croches A Buckes ●●rnes are composed of Burre Beame Branch ●●duancer Pal●●e and Spelier And to decline ●●m the Crowne or horne to the Rump or ●●rouper A Deere Bore a Hare a Foxe ●d a Wolfe haue no more tayle then a Iacke●●es●●-Apes for it is a Deeres Single a Bores ●●ath a Hare or Connies Scut a Foxes Bush ●●d a Wolfes Stern besides there are most excellent Terragraphicall and mundified names ●d titles for that which is in Welch a Ba●r ●● French a ● Marde I could name it in English but Sir Reuerence for that in Wood●●-ship it is cald a Deeres Fewmets a Bore or eares Leasses a Hare or Conneys Crottores a ●oxe or a Badgers Feance and an Otters ●●aintes all which in English is a T c. I ●●inke Nimrod the great Hunter would haue ●ere a made man or a Wood-man if he had ●●died halfe the wild and harebraind tearmes ●at belongs to this SHIP and sure it made ●●cteon horne-mad in his too vehement pur●te of the Game for what Necromanticke ●●ell are Rut Vault Slot Pores and En●●●yes Abatures and Foyles Frayenstockes ●ith and Fell Layres Dewclawes and Dowl●●●rs drawing the Couert Blemishes Sewel●●●g Auant-laye Allaye Relaye Foreloy●ng Hunt-cownter Hunt-change Quarry Reward and a thousand more such Vtopian fragments of confused Gibberish that should I proceed farther I should in stead of an vnderstanding Wood-man shew my selfe to be an ignorant mad man Is it not a worthie peece of seruice for fiue or sixe men in the Countrey whose dwellings are foure or fiue miles asunder to make a mad match to meete together on such or such a morning to hunt or course a Hare where if she be hunted with Hounds shee will leade them such dance that perhaps a Horse or two are kil'd or a man or two spoil'd or hurt with leaping hedges or ditches at the least after foure or fiue dayes preparation and some ten pounds charge among men horses and dogs besides an infinite deale of toyle and trouble and an innumerable number of oathes and curses after this great deale of doo the maine purchase can bee ●●o more then a poore silly Hare which is but a dry meate and will take more butter in the basting then her carkasse is worth Our ancient Progenitor or first King of this Iland Brute was so expert in this Woodman-ship that he kil'd his owne father Siluius shooting him with an arrow mistaking him for a Hart a Stagge or a Bucke and William the second surnamed Rusus King of England was by the like mischance of a shot made at a Deere by Sir Walter T●●●ell Knight slaine with the glance of an arrow agoinst a tree in the Newforrest in Hampshire I thanke Coopers Dictionary that tells mee that Venator is a Hunter and Venatrix a Huntresse or a Woman Hunting and that Meretrix is a Whore or a Woman Hunted all these words hauing deriuation from or allusion to ●enersu● ●●●●●●●h●●●●us for though Diana the hunting Goddesse of Chastity bee a constant Venatrix yet Venus the Queene of Loue neuer failes a right W●●●man of a Meretrix But if Venator and Venatri●●● ●●ald hunt as much as Meretrix is or ●●●●●●●● hunted I thinke verily that there hath not beene or in time would not be one Deere left in many of the greatest Forrests Parkes and Chases of Christendome Besides there is not a perfect Mariner in the Woodman-SHIP but hee hath ingrafted in him a most abundant gift of promising for one of them will sweare and vowe to giue more Deere away to sundry persons then there are vnder the keeping and command of six or seuen of them and I haue heard that one white Bucke in a small Parke in a place which I could name within the Walles of Christendome hath beene giuen away at least to a thousand seuerall persons by one Keeper and the said Keeper is so kind that hee will neuer deny a Bucke to whosoeuer will aske A Deere friend whom I loue Deere did promise mee a Decre foure yeeres since and foure Deere iourneyes I made
a warme stuffe of diuers colours which they call Tartane as for breeches many of them nor their forefathers neuer wore any but a ierkin of the same stuffe that their hose is of their garters being hands or wreathes of hay or straw with a plead about their shoulders which is a mantle of diuers colours much finer and lighter stuffe then their hose with blue flat caps on their heads a handkerchiefe knit with two knots about their necke and thus are they attyred Now their weapons are long bowes and forked arrowes Swords and Targets Harquebusses Muskets Durks and Loquhabor-Axes With these Armes I found many of them armed for the hunting As for their attire any man of what degree soeuer that comes amongst them must not disdaine to weare it for if they doe then they will disdaine to hunt or willingly to bring in their Dogges but if men be kind vnto them and be in their habit then are they conquered with kindnesse and the sport will be plentifull This was the reason that I found so many Noblemen and Gentlemen in those shapes But to proceed to the hunting My good Lord of Marr hauing put me into that shape I rode with him from his house where I saw the ruines of an old Castle called the Castle of Kindroghit It was built by King Malcolm Canmore for a hunting house who raigned in Scotland when Edward the Confessor Harold and Norman William raigned in England I speake of it because it was the last house that I saw in those parts for I was the space of twelue dayes after before I saw either House Corne-field or habitation for any creature but Deere wilde Horses Wolues and such like creatures which made mee doubt that I should neuer haue seene a house againe Thus the first day wee traueld eight miles where there were small cottages built on purpose to lodge in which they call Lonquhards I thanke my good Lord Erskin hee commanded that I should alwayes bee lodged in his lodging the Kitchin being alwayes on the side of a banke many Kettles and Pots boyling and many spits turning and winding with great variety of cheere as Venison bak't sodden rost and stu'de Beefe Mutton Goates Kid Hares fresh Salmon Pidgeons Hens Capons Chickins Partridge Moorecoots Heathcocks Caperkellies and Termagants good Ale Sacke White and Claret Tent or Allegant with most potent Aquavitae All these and more then these we had continually in superfluous aboundance caught by Faulconers Fowlers Fishers and brought by my Lords Tenants and Purueyers to victuall our Campe which consisteth of fourteen or fifteene hundred men and horses the manner of the hunting is this Fiue or sixe hundred men doe rise early in the morning and they doe disperse themselues diuers wayes and seuen eight or tenne miles compasse they doe bring or chase in the Deere in many heards two three or foure hundred in a heard to such or such a place as the Noblemen shall appoint them then when day is come the Lords and Gentlemen of their Companies doe ride or goe to the said places sometimes wading vp to the middles through bournes and riuers and then they being come to the place doe lye downe on the ground till those foresaid Scouts which are called the Tinckhell doe bring downe the Deere But as the Prouerbe sayes of a bad Cooke so these Tinckhell men doe like their owne fingers for besides their bowes and arrowes which they carry with them wee can heare now and then a Harquebusse or a Musket goe off which they doe seldome discharge in vaine Then after we had stayed there three houres or thereabouts we might perceiue the Deere appeare on the hills round about vs their heads making a shew like a wood which being followed close by the Tinkhell are chased downe into the valley where we lay then all the valley on each side being way-laid with a hundred couple of strong Irish Grey-hounds they are let loose as occasion serues vpon the heard of Deere that with Dogges Gunnes Arrowes Durkes and Daggers in the space of two houres fourescore fat Deere were slaine which after are disposed of some one way and some another twenty and thirty miles and more then enough left for vs to make merry withall at our Rendez-vous I liked the sport so well that I made these two Sonnets following VVHy should I waste Inuention to endite Ouidian fictions or Olympiam games ●● My misty Muse enlightned with more light To a more noble pitch her ayme the frames I must relate to my great Master IAMES The Calydonian annuall peacefull warre How noble mindes doe eternize their fames By martiall meeting in the Brea of Marr How thousand gallant Spirits came neere and farre With Swords Targets Arrowes Bowes Guns That all the Troope to men of iudgement are The God of Warres great neuer conquered Sonnes The Sport is Manly yet none bleed but Beasts And last the Victor on the vanquisht feasts IF Sport like this can on the Mountaines be Where Phebus flames can neuer melt the Snow Then let who lift delight in Vales below Skie-kissing Mountaines pleasure are for me What brauer obiect can mans eye-sight see Then Noble Worshipfull and worthy Wights As if they were prepard for sundry fights Yet all in sweet society agree Through heather mosse mōgst frogs bogs fogs 'Mongst craggy cliffes thunder battered hills Hares Hinds Bucks Roes are chas'd by Men dogs Where two houres hunting fourscore fat Deere kills Low land your Sports are low as is your Seate The High-land Games Minds are high and great Being come to our lodgings there was such Baking Boyling Roasting and Stewing a● if Cooke Russian had beene there to haue sealded the Deuill in his feathers and after supp●● a fire of Firre-wood as high as an indifferent May-pole for I assure you that the Earle of Marr will giue any man that is his friend for thankes as many Firre trees that are as good as any shippes masts in England as are worth if they were in any place neere the Thames or any other portable riuer the best Earledome in England or Scotland either For I dare affirme hee hath as many growing there as would serue for masts from this time to the end of the world for all the shippes Carackes Hoyes Galleyes Boates Drumlers Barkes and Water-crafts that are now or can be in the world these fourty yeeres This sounds like a lye to an vnbeleeuer but I and many thousands doe knowe that I speake within the compasse of truth for indeede the ●ore is the pitty they doe grow so farre from ●y passage of water and withall in such rockie Mountaines that no way to conuey them is ●●ssible to bee passable either with Boate ●●dorse or Cart. Thus hauing spent certaine dayes in hun●●ing in the Brea of Marr wee went to the next County called Bagenoch belonging to the Earle of Engie where hauing such sport and entertainement as we formerly had after foure or ●●●● dayes pastime we
many times the text we doe forget Thinke but of this and then the yeere before Must be abated halfe or some what more Thus many a Christian sixty yeeres hath trod The earth and not six months hath sem'd his God When we our liues vnequally thus share In thinking of it I am full of care I care in all my actions so to liue That no occasion of offence I giue To any man with either pen or tongue In name or same or goods to doe them wrong For he 's the greatest murderer aliue That doth a man of his good name depriue With base calumnious slanders and false liess T is the worst villany of villanies To blast a good mans name with scandals breath Makes his dishonor long furuiue his death For Infamie's a colour dyde in graine Which scarcebliuion can wash out againe As nothing's dearer then a mans good name So nothing wounds more deeper then desame Nature gaue man a paire of eares and eyes And but one tongue which certainely implies That though our sight and hearing still is free ●● must we not speake all we heare or see Then he 's a Viper that doth lyes inuent To worke thereby anothers detriment T is sinne to slander a notorious Knaue But sinne and shame a good man to depraue Thus good or bad or whatsoe'r they are To doe to neither of them wrong I care I care to get good Bookes and I take heed And care what I doe either write or read Though some through ignorance some through spite ●● said that I can neither read nor write ●● though my lines no Scholership proclaime ●● I at learning haue a kind of ayme And I haue gatherd much good obseruations From many humane and diuine translations ● was well entred forty Winters since ●● farre as possum in my Accidence And reading but from possum to posset There I was mir'd and could no further get Which when I thinke vpon with mind deiected ●● care to thinke how learning I neglected The poet * Part of the Bookes of ●●ry that I haue read Quid or Ouid if you will Being in English much hath helpt my skill And Homer too and Virgil I haue seene And reading them I haue much better'd beene ●●frey of Bulloyne well by Fairfax done ●●● that much loue hath rightly wonne Did Chaucer Sidney Spencer Daniel Nash ●●dip'd my finger where they vs'd to wash As I haue read these Poets I haue noted * Bookes that I haue read of Poesie Much good which in my memory is quoted Of Histories I haue perusde some store As no man of my function hath done more The Golden legend I did ouer tosse And found the Gold mixt with a deale of drosse ●● haue read Plutarchs Morals and his Liues And like a Bee suckt Hony from those Hiues ●sepbus of the Iewes Knowles of the Turks Marcus Aurelius and G●● works ●yd Grimstane Montaigne and Suetonius Agrippa whom some call Cornelius Graue ●●● and C●●bden Purchas Speed Did Monumentall ●●● and Hollinshead And that sole Booke of Bookes which God hath giuen The ●●● Testanic●ts of heauen That I haue read and I with care confesse My selfe unworthy of such happinesse And many more good Bookes I haue with care Lookt on their goods and neuer stole their ware For no booke to my hands could euer come If it were but the Treatise of Tom Thumb Or Scoggins Iests or any simple play Or monstrous nowes came Trundling in my way All these and ten times more some good some bad I haue from them much obseruation had And so with care and study I haue writ These bookes the issue of a barren wit The most of them are verse but I suppose It is much ease to name them here in prose The names of many of the bookes that I haue written First the Sculler Vpon Coriat three merry bookes called Odcombs complaint Coriats resurrection and Laugh and be fat The nipping or snipping of Abuses Two mad things against Fenor Taylors Vrania The marriage of the Princesse An Elegy on Prince Henry Two bookes of all the Kings of England Three weekes three dayes and three houres obseruations in Germany Trauels to Scotland Trauels to Prague in Bohemia An Englishmans loue to Bohemia The Bible in verse The Booke of Martyrs in verse The praise of Hempseed A kicksy winsy The great O Toole Iacke a Lent The praise of Beggery Taylors Goose. Faire and soule weather The life and death of the Virgin Mary The Whip of Pride And lastly since the reigne of th' Emperour * I was much beholding to this Emperors name to make vp the meeter OTTO Was neuer seene the like of TAYLORS MOTTO All these and some which I haue quite forgot With care as is aforesaid I haue wrote I care how to conclude this carefull straine In care I care how to get out againe I care for food and lodging fire and rayment And what I owe I care to make good payment But most of all I care and will endeuer To liue so carefull that I may liue euer Thus without wronging any man a iot I shew I haue what euery man hath not● My wants are such that I forgiue them free That would but steale the most of them from me My cares are many as I here expresse Poore couzin Germans vnto carelesnesse I haue a knowledge some men will read this I want the knowledge how their liking is I care in all that I herein haue pend To please the good and shew the bad to mend And those that will not thus be satisfi'd I haue a spirit that doth them deride I flattry want mens likings to obtaine I care to loue those that loue me againe Thus be mens iudgements steady or vnsteady To like my Booke the care is tane already The Prouerb sayes that haste makes often waste Then what is waste impute it to my haste This Booke was written not that here I bosst Put houres together in three dayes at most And giue me but my breakfast I 'l maintaine To write another e'r I eate againe But well or ill or howsoe'r t is pend Lik't as you list and so I make an END ODCOMBS COMPLAINT OR CORIATS FVNERALL EPICEDIVM OR DEATH-SONG VPON HIS late-reported drowning With his Epitaph in the Barmuda and Vtopian tongues And translated into English by IOHN TAYLOR The Authour in his owne defence IF any where my lines doe fall out lame I made them so in merriment and game For be they wide or side or long or short All 's one to me I writ them but in sport Yet I would haue the Reader thus much know ' That when I list my simple skill to show In poesie I could both read and spell I know my Dactils and my Spondees well My true proportion and my equall measure What accent must be short and what at leasure How to transpose my words from place to place To giue my poesie the greater grace Either in Pastorall or
into their Countrey So that he earnestly disswaded me from the iourney if I loued my life and welfare at last he concluded his discourse with me by a summe of mony that he threw downe from a window thorow which he looked out into a sheete tied vp by the foure corners and hanging very neere the ground a hundred pieces of siluer each worth two shillings sterling which counteruailed ten pounds of our English mony this businesse I carried so secretly by the helpe of my Persian that neither our English Ambassadour nor any other of my Countrymen sauing one special priuate and intrinsicall friend had the least inkling of it till I had throughly accomplished my designe for I well knew that our Ambassadour would haue stopped and Barracadoed all my proceeding therein if he might haue had any notice thereof as indeed he signified vnto mee after I had effected my proiect alleaging this forsooth for his reason why he would haue hindred me because it would redound somewhat to the dishonour of our Nation that one of our Countrey should present himselfe in that beggerly and poore fashion to the King out of an insinuating humour to craue money of him But I answered our Ambassadour in that stout and resolute manner after I had ended my businesse that hee was contented to cease nibbling at me neuer had I more need of money in all my life then at that time for in truth I had but twenty shillings sterling left in my purse by reason of a mischance I had in one of the Turkes Cities called Emert in the country of Mesopotamia where a miscreant Turke stripped me of almost all my monyes according as I wrote vnto you in a very large letter the last yeere which I sent from the Court of this mighty Monarch by one of my Countrymen that went home by Sea in an English shippe laden with the commodities of this India which letter I hope came to your hands long since After I had beene with the King I went to a certain Noble and generous Christian of the Armenian race two dayes iourney from the Mogols court to the end to obserue certaine remarkeable matters in the same place to whom by meanes of my Persian tongue I was so welcome that hee entertained me with very ciuill courteous complement and at my departure gaue mee very bountifully twenty pieces of such kind of mony as the King had done before counteruayling forty shillings sterling About ten dayes after that I departed from Azmere the court of the Mogoll Prince to the end to begin my Pilgrimage after my long rest of fourteene moneths backe againe into Persia at what time our Ambassadour gaue mee a piece of Gold of this Kings Coyne worth foure and twenty shillings which I will saue if it bee possible till my ariuall in England so that I haue receiued for beneuolences since I came into this countrey twenty markes sterling sauing two shillings eight pence and by the way vpon the confines of Persia a little before I came into this country three and thirty shillings foure pence in Persian money of my Lady Sherly a● this present I haue in the City of Agra where-hence I wrote this letter about twelue pounds sterling which according to my manner of liuing vpon the way at two pence sterling a day for with that proportion I can liue pretty well such is the cheapnesse of all eateable things in Asia drinkable things costing nothing for seldome doe I drinke in my pilgrimage any other liquor then pure water will maintaine me very competently three yeeres in my trauell with meat drinke and clothes Of these gratuities which haue beene giuen me willingly would I send you some part as a demonstration of the filiall loue and affection which euery child bred in ciuility and humility ought to performe to his louing and good mother but the distance of space betwixt this place and England the hazard of mens liues in so long a iourney and also the infidelity of many men who though they liue to come home are vnwilling to render an account of the things they haue receiued doe not a little discourage mee to send any precious token vnto you but if I liue to come one day to Constantinople againe for thither I doe resolue to goe once more by the grace of Christ and therehence to take my passage by land into Christendome ouer renouned Greece I will make choice of some substantiall and faithfull Countriman by whom I will send some prety token as an expression of my dutifull and obedient respect vnto you I haue not had the oportunity to see the King of Persia as yet since I came into this country but I haue resolued to goe to him when I come next into his Territories and to search him out wheresoeuer I can find him in his Kingdome for seeing I can discourse with him in his Persian tongue I doubt not but that going vnto him in the forme of a Pilgrime hee will not onely entertaine me with good words but also bestow some worthy reward vpon me beseeming his dignity and person for which cause I am prouided before-hand with an excellent thing written in the Persian-tongue that I meane to present vnto him and thus I hope to get beneuolences of worthy persons to maintaine me in a competent manner in my whole pilgrimage till come into England which I hold to be as laudable and a more secure course then if I did continuall carry store of mony about mee In the letter which I wrote vnto you by an English ship the last yeere I made relation vnto you both of my iourney from the once holy Hierusalem hither and of the state of this Kings Court and the Customes of this Country therefore I hold it superfluous to repeat the same things againe but what the Countryes are that I meane to see betwixt this and Christendome and how long time I will spend in each country I am vnwilling to aduertise you of at this present desiring rather to signifie that vnto you after I haue performed my designe then before howbeit in few words I will tell you of certaine Cities of great renoune in former times but now partly ruined that I resolue by Gods helpe to see in Asia where I now am namely ancient Babylon and Nimrods Tower some few miles from Niniue and in the same the Sepulcher of the Prophet Ionas spacious and goodly C●● in Egypt heretofore Memphis vpon the famous Riuer Nilus where Moses Aaron and the children of Israel liued with K. Pharaoh whose ruined Palace is shewed there till this day and a world of other moueable things as memorable as any City of the whole world yeeldeth sauing onely Ierusalem but in none of these or any other Cities of note doe I determine to linger as I haue done in other places as in Constantinople and Azmere in this Easterne India onely some few daies will I tarry in a principall citie of fame to obserue euery
hee in Progresse went Of whores Bawds Panders such a Rabblement Sixe hundred Waggons History reports Attended onely on these braue consorts This was a Royall whoremaster indeed A speciall a Or rather Malefactor Benefactor at their need But now since Heli●gabalm deceast I thinke the world with whores is so increast That if it had an Emperour as mad He might haue twice so many as he had For by experience wee see euery day That bad things doe increase good things decay And vertue with much care from vertue breeds Vice freely springs from vice like stinking weeds Sardanapalus King of Babylon Was to his whores such a companion That hee in their attire did fow and sing An exercise vnfitting for a King This seruent Lust which some call ardent Loue Did cause the Bastard b Hercules of the mighty Ioue To please his Iole hee tooke a Wheele And laying by his Club did spin and Reele Great Ioue himselfe could not this snare escape Lust led him on to many a shamelesse Rape Poore Hebe Hele * Iupiter transformed himselfe into all these shapes to attaine his desire Darna and Europae Alcmena lo Sem●●● and Leada Antiopa Asterie Gan●●●●●● These and a number more his fancy fed To compasse which his shifts were manifold T' a Bull a Ram a Swan a showre of Gold To dreadfull Thunder and consuming fire And all to quench his inward flames desire Apollo turn'd faire Daphus into a The Bay tree of Lawrell Bay Because shee from his Lust did flye away Hee lou'd his Hiacinct and his Coronis As feruently as Venus and Adonis So much hee from his God-head did decline That for a wench he kept Admetus Kine And many other gods haue gone astray If all he true which Ouids Booke doth say Thus to fulfill their Lusts and win their Truls Wee see that these vngodly gods were Guls. The mighty Captaine b Aebilles who was flaine besotted to his death for the loue of Polixena of the Mermidons Being captiu'd to these base passions Met an vntimely vnexpected slaughter For faire Polixena King Priams daughter Lucrecia's Rape was Tarquins ouerthrow Shame often payes the debt that sinne doth owe. What Philomela lost and Tereus wonne It causde the luft full Farther c Tereus King of Thrace ate of his owne Sonne It is made into pyment by his wife Pr●gne ●ate his Sonne In this vice Nero tooke such beastly ioy He married was to Sporus a yong Boy And d A Tyrant Prince in Corinth Periander was with Lust so led He with Mellissa lay when shee was dead Pigmaliou e Plutarch with an Image made of Stone Did loue and lodge I 'le rather lye alone Aristophanes ioyn'd in loue would be To a shee Asse but what an Asse was he A Roman f Appius murthered himselfe because V●rginias father had slaine her to free her from his L●●● Appius did in Iale abide For loue of faire Virginia where hee dyde Our second Henry g King Henry the second King of England Aged Childish fond On the faire feature of faire Rosamond That it rais'd most vnnaturall hatefull strife Betwixt himselfe his children and his wife The end of which was that the iealous Queene Did poyson h At 〈…〉 Rosamond in furious spleene The fourth King Edward lower did descend He to a Goldsmiths wife i Mistris Shore his loue did bend This sugred sinne hath beene so generall That it hath made the strongest Champions fall For Sichen rauisht k She was Iacobs daughter whose Rape was accutsedly reuenged by her brethren Si●ers ●●● Leui Genesis Dina for which deed A number of the Sichemites did bleed And Samson in the prime of manly strength By Dalila was ouercome at length King Dauid frailely fell and felt the paine And with much sorrow was restor'd againe Though Saul his foe he no way would offend Yet this sinne made him kill his loyall friend Ammon with l ● Sam 11. m ● Sam. 13. Thamar Incest did commit And Absalon depriu'd his life for it And Salomon allow'd most Royall meanes To keepe three hundred Queenes seuen hundred queanes By whose meanes to Idolatry he fell Almost as low as to the gares of Hell At last repeating he makes declaration That all was vanity and spirits vexation Aboundance of examples men may finde Of Kings and Princes to this vice inclin'd Which is no way for meaner men to goe Because their betters oft haue wandred so For they were plagu'd of God and so shall we Much more if of their sinne we partners be To shew what Women haue beene plagued in The bottomlesse Abysse of this sweet sinne There are examples of them infinite Which I ne'r meane to read much lesse to write To please the Reader though I 'l set downe some As they vnto my memory doe come Flora a Whore in Rome great wealth did win By her deare trading and her Commings in Which wealth she freely gaue when she did dye Vnto the Roman people generally For which they all to shew their thanks vnto her Made her a Goddesse and did Reuerence doe her And L●is of Corinth ask'd Demosthenes One hundred Crownes for one nights businesse For which a crue of Whores did set vpon her A Whore she was and whores to death did stone her There was a famous Whore a She was seruant to Exanthus and fellow to Esop the Fabulist Rhodope nam'd Who for her gaine at such high price she gam'd That she most liberall did the charges beare A stately high Piramides to reare Great Iulius Caesar was much ouerseene With Cleopatra the AEgyptian Queene And after she insnar'd Marke Antony For which they both by their owne hands did dye b Queene of Babylon slaine by her Sonne whom shee would haue had to haue lyen with her Semiramis plaid the inhumane Trull And was enamour'd with a beastly Bull So did c Pasipha wife to Minos King of ●●●le Pasipha but me thinks 't is strange That Queenes so farre from womenhood should range Muba Adonis mother caus'd her father The flower of her virginitie to gather If wife Vlysses had not well beene arm'd Inchanting Circe had his honor charm'd When youthfull Paris stole the lustfull Punke Faire Hellen had the ship that bore them sunke Then thirty Kings in peace at home had staid Nor Troy or Troians in their ruines laid Faire d Messalina and Faustine two Empresses Messalina a most royall Whore Wife vnto Cla●dius the Emperour The sports of Venus in the Stewes did play Sometimes full fiue and twenty times a day Marcus Aurelius did faire Paustine wed And she with Whoring did behorne his head And many Princes and great Potentates With Vulcans crest haue arm'd their noble pates This to the poorest Cuck old seemes a bliss That he with mighty Monarchs sharer is That though to be cornuted be a griefe Yet to haue such braue partners is reliefe These Whores and Whore-masters which I
Giue him the praise and he that is out-strip'd For his reward let him be soundly whip'd To this I dare thee thou poore Poet Ape And I 'l behang'd if thou a whipping scape Thy Muse or Mule can frame some Riming not●● To borrow shillings six-pences or Groates Of Vintners boyes and that 's the highest straine Thy borrowed stolne inuention can attaine For thine owne credit some rare worke deuise Turne into Verse the Chimney-sweepers cries Or worke for Tinker Couers for close stooles Then shalt thou be disputed on in Schooles And held a braue man and thy famous Verse About the Towne thy Patrons will rehearse Besides I wish thee beg the Monopolly That to thy selfe thou maist ingrose it wholly That none but thee may write the Elegies And Epitaphs of Tiburne Tragedies And so the Hangmans Poet thou shalt be And sometimes haue as good a Fee as he No course to thriue is to be counted base And I 'l speake for thee thou maist haue the place I muse how Ladies dares to heare thy stile 'T is so abominable harsh and vile How canst thou from them any fauour win Me thinkes thy Rimes should fret their tender ski● For 't is more rougher then a Russian Beare And rubs and frets and gaules each gentle eare Thou art the rarest fellow aboue ground To serue some Costiue Lord that is hard bound Thy riming would procure an easie stoole That seruice hath some sauour Goodman foole The Doctors and Apothecaries swears How they will lugge thee by the Asses cares Because thy riming now doth purge men more Then all their Art in many yeeres before Thou nam'st here for a rabblement of fooles Tom Coriat Archy and the great Otooles Asse for thy selfe a foole I ne'r did take thee Dame Nature at the first I thinke did make the● One compound of two simples Foole and Knaue Who striuing in thee which should maistry haue The crafty knauish part got all the sway And turn'd the silly harmelesse Foole away And in thy making Natures care was chiefe To fashion thee on purpose for a Thiefe ●●ee turn'd thine eyes keele vpwards for the nonce That thou might'st see fiue or six waies at once For why thou hast an admirable looke T●forme a Thiefe from windowes how to hooke Apparell Cushions Carpet Rugge or Sheete That they withall by hooke or crooke can meete I doe not say thou dost this trading vse ●● therein thou they making dost abuse Is that thou closely follow'st not the trade For which thee thy thiefe-like eyes were made When as a great mans house men flocke about thee T is not to heare thee time but cause they doubt thee And therefore euery one keeps carefull watch For feare thou should'st the plate or sōwhat catch Thou think'st they do applaud when thou hast rim'd And they are fearefull that thy fists are lim'd The Butlers sweat for feare whil'st thou dost prate And double diligently guard their plate Thy beautious Phisnomy doth this for which Most women feare thee that thou art a Witch And therefore snatch their children vp and run Toy ominous ill-looking looke to shun For if before a Iudge thou euer speake Thy very countenance thy neck will breake More I could say and more I could deuise But that I thinke I should rime out thine eyes It all trades faile I 'd haue thee pull them out And I 'll procure thee liuing doe not doubt ●●● thy nose will put an Iron ring And lead thee vp and downe the Towne to sing To Feasts and Markets Wakes Sturbridge faire And then to euery place with me repaire I would aduance a faire ingrossed bill That in these words should promise wondrous skill Then I or else my Boy will beat a Drum If any be desirous for to come At two a clocke within the after noone There shall you see an old blind braue Baboone That can put on the humor of an Asse Can come aloft Iack heigh passe and repasse That for ingenuous study downe can put Old Holdens Camell or fine Bankes his Cut And for his action he eclipseth quite The ●igge of Garlick or the Punks delight King Ninus motion or the great tall Dutch-man O●th'Elke or man-Beare baiting was no such man To all your costs he will his wis wits imploy To play the second part of Englands Ioy. Hee ' rime and sing well and if need require Cantell more lies then you would all desire Our Lady Fayre nor yet Saint Bartholomew A motion like to this did neuer shew These things I hope for to employ thee in By which wee needs must store of money win I neither hate good counsell or yet thee But why shouldst thou presume to counsell me I prethee then leaue off thy fruitlesse taske No godnesse comes from such a mustie Caske My Defence against thy Offence HOw proudly thou thy Ancestors dost praise Aboue the Pleyades their Fame to raise Was euer seene so vile a paltry Nag So much of his Antiquity to brag As if his Grandam had some Burgesse beene In Parlament vnto the Diamond Queene If I should answer all thy base contention I then should haue no roome for my inuention And therefore famous Monsier Le Foggnier I will but only nip thee here and there According as I see the time and place I will my byting phrases enterlace And first Don Bussard vnto you 't is knowne The writing of my play was all mine owne And though thou tearm'st it fopp'ry like a ●op Into the Hangmans Budget thou wilt drop Before thy muddie Muse Dame ignorance On a conceit so good as it shall glance Thou brag'st what fame thou got'st vpon the stage Indeed thou set'st the people in a rage In playing Englands Ioy that euery man Did iudge it worse then that was done at Swan I neuer saw poore fellow so behist T' applaud thee few or none lent halfe a fist Some stinkards hands perhaps went pit to pat Who ignorantly lik'd they knew not what Besides thou knowst thou promist in thy Bill In rare extempory to shew thy skill When all thou spok'st thou studiedst had before Thou know'st I know aboue a month and more Besides the best conceits that were in it Poore Foole thou had'st them from a better wir Then is thine owne thy beggerly conceit Could ne'r haue mounted to so high a height Good wine is spild in stinking vessels leaking And so good words were mar'd with thy ill speaking Where like a Scar-crow or a Iack of lent Thou stoodst and gau'st the people small content And yet thy impudence wouldst raise thy fame From out the loathsome Garbage of thy shame Thy little honesty so high thou deem'st And more then Thames reuennew it esteem'st Make much on 't thou art worthy to haue more Thou mak'st such reck'ning of so little store Thy honesty is bred within the bone Out of the flesh I thinke came neuer none Thou sai'st I call'd a Christian Cur O fie ' Will Fennor wilt thou neuer leaue to lye
weaknes may babble of Reformation thoug● to no end and so I end FINIS The Nipping or Snipping of ABVSES OR The Wooll-gathēring ôf VVit A Skeltonicall salutation to those that know how to reade and not merre the sense with hacking or mis-construction THou true vnderstander my inuention doth wander with the quill of a Gander to shield mee from slander to thy good protection I yeeld in subiection my poore imperfection with friendly correction and as thou dost ●●e or stroake mee or strike mee reproue mee or proue mee or mooue mee ●● loue mee or quiteme or spight me friend me or mend me or else not offend ●●●● If in ought that is written thy humors are bitten seeme not to espy it and ●one will descry it But if thou doest kick the spurre sure will prick and if thou ●●●●ing the waspe then will sting My verses are made to ride euery Iade but ●●are forbidden of Iades to be ridden they shall not bee snaffled nor braued ●or baffled wert thou George with thy Naggon that foughtst with Draggon or ●●re you Great Pompey my verse should bethumpe ye if you like a Iauel against ●●● dare cauill I doe not intend it as now to commend it or yet to defend it But ●● mee I doe send it to like it or mend it and when thou hast end it applaud it ●● rent it my wits I could bristle for a better Epistle but yet at this time this ●●● Rime I send to thy view because it is new So Reader adue I thine if thou mine IOHN TAYLOR To the Castalian Water-writer Splende dignoscar ● Diall set vpon an eminent place ● i● clouds doe interuall Apolloes face ●●●● a flgur'd shape whereby we knowe ●●le of Time which it doth owe ●● expectations yet wee see ●●●ctes by which Times should distinguish'd be ●●●alelled punctuall ciphered lines ●● by a shadow when the faire sunne shines Explaines the houres So if the Sonne of men Thy Glorious Patron deeme to blesse thy pen With his faire light Thy Muse so young so faire So well proportion'd in conceites so rare And Naturall streames and stile and eu'ry part That Nature therein doth exceed all Art Will then as with Enthusiasme inspir'd Print Legends by the world to be admir'd Thine Iames Ratray To my friend by land and by water Iohn Taylor THese leaues kind Iohn are not to wrap vp drams That doe containe thy witty Epigrams Let worser Poems serue for such abuse Whilst thine shall be reseru'd for better vse And let each Critick cauill what he can T is rarely written of a Water-man Thy friend assured Rob Branthwaite To his deare friend Master Iohn Taylor ME thinkes I see the Sculler in his boate With goodly motion glide along faire Thames And with a charming and bewitching noate So sweet delightfull tunes and ditties frames As greatest Lording● and the nicest Dames That with attentiue eare did heare thy layès Of force should yeeld due merit to thy praise Worth to all Watermen straine forth thy voice To proue so pleasing in the worlds proud eye As eyes and eares and hearts may all reioyce To see heare muse vpon the melodie In contemplation of thy harmony Let Thames faire bankes thy worth and praises ring While I thy worth and praise beyond sea sing Tho Gent. To the Water-Poet Iohn Taylor Honest Iohn Taylor though I know 't no grace To thee or me for writing in this place Yet know I that the multitudes of friends Will thee protect from vile malignant mindes The rather cause what euer thou hast snowne Is no one mans inuention but thine owne Malicious minded men will thee dispraise Enuy debases all her selfe to raise Then rest content whilst to thy greater fame Both Art and Nature striue to raise thy name Thine euer as thou knowest R Cudner To my friend Iohn Taylor IF Homers verse in Greeke did merit praise If Naso in the Latine won the Bayes If Maro 'mongst the Romanes did excell If Tasso in the Tuscan tongue wrote well Then Taylor I conclude that thou hast don In English what immortall Baies haue won Thy friend Iohn Taylor To my honest friend Iohn Taylor THy Taylors shears foule vices wings ●●●●● The scames of impious dealings are vnript So Art-like thou these captious times hast quipt As if in Helicon thy pen were dipt All those who ' gainst thy worth are enuious lipt Thy sharpe Satyrick Muse hath nipt and s●ip●● And to conclude thy nuention is not chipt Or stolne or borrowd begd or basely gript Then Taylor thy conceits are truely sowde And Sculler on my word it was well roude Thine to mybest pow●● Enoch Ly● In Laudem Authoris MOst commonly one Taylor will dispraise Anothers workmanship enuying alwai●s At him that 's better then himselfe reputed Though he himselfe be but a botcher bruted So might it well be said of me my friend Should I not to thy worke some few lines lend Which to make probable this sentence tendeth Who not commends he surely discommendeth In my illiterate censure these thy rimes Deserue applause euen in these worst of times VVhen wit is onely worthy held in those On whom smooth flattery vaine praise besto●es But I not minding with thy worth to flatter Do know thy wit too good to toyle by water Rob. Taylor To my friend IOHN TAYLOR THis worke of thine thou hast compil'd so●●● It merits better wits thy worth to tell Thine Maximilian W●● The Authours description of a Poet and Poesie with an Apology in defence of Naturall English Poetry SHall beggers dine into the Acts of Kings Shall Nature speake of supernat ' rall things ●●●● Eagles flights attempted be by Gnats ●●●● mighty Whales be portraied out by Sprats These things I know vnpossible to be ●●●d it is as vnpossible for mee That am a begger in these Kingly acts Which from the heau'ns true Poetrie extracts ●●● foole by Nature I ●●● neuer knew this high-bome mystery ●●● worthlesse gnat I know my selfe more weake ●●● the Princely Eagle dare to speake ●●●y sprat the Ocean seekes so sound ●● seek this Whale though seeking he be drown'd ●●● to proceed a Poets Art I know ●●● compact of earthly things below ●●● is of any base substantiall mettle That in the worlds rotundity doth settle ●●●tis Immortall and it hath proceeding ●rom whē●e diuinest soules haue all their breeding ●● is a blessing ●●●u'n hath sent to men ●y men it is di●●lged with their pen And by that propagation it is knowne And ouer all the world disperst and throwne ●●● verball elocution so refinde That it to Vertue animates mans minde The blessed Singer of blest Israel ●● this rare Arte he rarely did excell He sweetly Poetiz'd in heau'nly verses ●●● lines which aye eternity rehearses ●●● and glorious great esteeme ●●● C●●●● did a Poet deeme ●●mired Virgils life doth plainely show ●●t all the world a Poets worth may know ●●● leauing Israels King and Romane Caesar ●●seeke in England English Poets
labours and takes paine May with a better Conscience sleepe in bed Then he that is with ill got thousands sped So well I like it and such loue I owe Vnto it that I 'll fall againe to Rowe 'T will keepe my health from falling to decay Get money and chase Idlenesse away I 'm sure it for Antiquity hath stood Since the worlds drowning vniuersall Flood And howsoeuer now it rise or fall The Boate in Noahs Deluge carried all And though our wits be like our purses bare With any Company wee 'll make compare To write a Verse prouided that they be No better skild in Schollership then wee And then come one come thousands nay come all And for a wager wee 'll to Versing fall Epilogue to those that know what they haue read and how to censure TO you whose eares and eyes haue heard seene This little pamphlet and can iudge betweene That which is good or tol'rable or ill If I with Artlesse Nature wanting skill Haue writ but ought that may your thoughts content My Muse hath then accomplisht her intent Your fauors can preserue me but your frownes My poore inuentions in obliuion drownes With tolerable friendship let me craue You will not seeke to spill what you may saue But for the wrymouth'd Critick that hath read That mewes puh's and shakes his brainlesse head And saies my education or my state Doth make my verse esteem'd at lower rate To such a one this answer I doe send And bid him mend before he discommend His Enuy vnto me will fauours prooue The hatred of a foole breeds wise-mens loue My Muse is iocund that her labours merits To be malign'd and scornd by Enuious spirits Thus humbly I craue pardon of the best Which being gaind Sir reuerence for the rest FINIS A MEMORIALL OF ALL THE ENGLISH MONARCHS being in number 151. from Brute to King CHARLES TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE LIONEL Lord Viscount Cranefield Earle of Middlesex c. MY humble Muse in lofty manner sings a The y. Kingdomes were 1. Kent 2 ●●● Sussx and Surry 3 ●●●● ●●● Norfolke and Cambridge-shire 4 ●●●●●● ●●● Somersetshire and Corne●●● 5 Mertia Glostershire Hertfordshire Worcester Shra●●● Staffordshire Cheshire Warwike Leycester North Oxford Buckingham Bedford and halfe Hartfordshire 6 East-Saxon Essex Middlesex and halfe Hartfordshire 7 Northumberland diuided to two Kingdomes Deyrs and all brought to one Monarchy by Eghert King of sae●●● and called England 1968. yeeres after Brute A Catalogue of Englands mighty Kings At first I do begin with Troian BRVTE And following Chronicles I do dispute Proceeding briefely with their Raignes and Names Till these blest dayes of our best Monarch IAMES T is but an Argument that 's written here That in such time such and such Princes were But he that meanes their Actions were to know May read Boetius Hollinshed or Stow Or our true labouring Moderne Master How Which Authors Learned Iudgement do allow Or if you le see how former times doe runne Reade the laborious paines of Middleton We haue had Kings since Brute of royall Blood One hundred forty sixe some bad some good Foure Queenes in all this time did only Raigne Whose Memories in Histories remaine So in two thousand and seuen hundred yeeres We had thrice 50 Princes it appeares This Kingdome here was fiue times won and lost And Kings as God decreed oft chang'd and tost Sometimes one swaid the Scepter sometime twaine And sometime seuen at once did rule and raigne Till sixe by bloudy warres lost life and throne And valiant Egbert ioyn'd them all in one But since through Heauens high prouidence I see T is growne more great and greater like to be Long may He liue by whom in one 't is guided And may they sinke that wish't againe diuided ●●●e Noble Lord with good acceptance take ● Poem for the Royall Subiects sake ●●though it be not compleate as it should ●●with it and accept of what I could ●●●●● matter 's worthy though the manner 's poore Which makes me heere your Patronage implore And may you be externall and internall Blest and aduanc'd to happinesse eternall Your Honours in all obseruance to be commanded Iohn Taylor BRVTE THE FIRST KING OF BRITTAINE began his Reigne 1. BRVTE ●●●●●●munds 2858. Before Christ 1108. AENE AS from subuerted Troy exilde In Tuscais wedded King Latinus childe By whom the Realme of Italy he gain'd And after he had 3. yeeres fully raign'd He died and left Ascanius in his stead To whom Siluius Posthumus did succeed From which Posthumus Royall loynes did spring ●●● Great Brutus Brittaines first commanding King The people then were here all voyd of pride Borne Naked Naked liu'd and Naked dy'd Three Sonnes Brute left Locrinus was his Heire To England Cambria Wales was Cambers share To Albanact the youngest 't was his lot To sway the Scepter of the valiant Scot. Thus 'mongst his Sonnes this Ile he did diuide And after twenty foure yeeres Reigne he dy'd Brute being of the age of 15 yeeres as he shot at a wild beast the arrow glanced unfortunately and slew his Father Sinius AEneas for the which he was exiled and came on this ●●●●● then called Albyon I follow the common opinion for many Writers doe neither write or allow of Brutes being here accounting it a dishonor for our Nation to haue originall from a Pa●●●ide and one that deriued his descent from the Goddesse alias strumpet Venus Howsoeuer Histories are obseured and clouded with ambiguities some burnt left defaced by antiquity and some abused by the malice ignorance or partialitie of Writers so that truth is hard to be found Amongst all which variations of Times and Writers I must conclude there was a BRVTE Locrine 20. yeeres 1034. LOcrinus Eldest of old Brutus Sonnes By Valour vanquisht the inuading Hunnes He chas'd them their power did quite confound And their King Humber was in a The Riuer of Humber tooke the name from the drowned King of the Huns now Hungarians Humber drownd This Locrine had a Queene faire b Guendoline was daughter vnto Corineus Duke of Cornewall Estrild was a beautious Lady of King Humbers whom Locrinus tooke prisoner Guendolin Yet folly led him to the Paphaean sinne Besotted sence and blood with lust inflam'd He lou'd a beautie Beautious Estrild nam'd By whom he had a Daughter Sabrin hight In whome the King had whole and sole delight For which the Queene made war vpon her Lord And in the Fight she put him to the Sword And after a reuengefull bloody slaughter Queene Guendoline tooke Estrild and her daughter And drownd them both to quéch her ielous flame And so from Sabrine Seauerne got the name Yeeres before Christ. Q. Guendoline 1064. About this time Saul was King of Israel VVHen 15. yeeres this Queen'had wisely raign'd She dy'd then her Son the kingdome gain'd Queene Guendoline was allowed the gouernment in her Sonne Madans minority whose prudent reigne is applausefully recorded in histories Madan
with the sword at the siedge of ●elphos in Greece Bochas They were the sonnes of Mulmutius Donwallo Belinus brought Denmarke to ●butary to Brittaine they were a paire of worthy bro●●●● G●rguintus 373. GVrguintus was Belinus first-borne sonne Victoriously he Denmark● ouer-runne ●●e the vnpeopled Ireland did supply ●eign'd nineteen yeeres a King and then did dye This King gaue leaue to a company of stragling ●●●●ssed Spaniards to possesse themselues in Ireland hee ●●● buried at Caerlion Yeeres before Christ. Guinthelinus 456. HE married Merci● a renowned Dame From whom the iust ● wise Mer●●●an Statutes came He sixe and twenty yeeres the Scepter swaide And then with honour in his Tombe was laide He was the sonne of Gurguintus he builed Warwick and ly●th buried at London Cecilius 330. Kimarus 223. SEuen yeeres Cecilius kept the Regall Cha●re Three yeeres Kimarus rul'd as his ●ole Heire The Syre with loue did well and ●ustly reigne His sonne Kimarus was a hunting slaine About this time a sauage people called the Picts beg'd habitation of the King of Scots and liued in the Mar●●es betweene England and Scotland Kimarus was a vicious Prince and killed by wild Beasts as hee was hunting he was the sonne of Cecilius Cecilius was buried at Caerlion Elanius 321. ELanius as most Histories agree Was King of Brittaine yeeres iust three times three What Acts he did or what Lawes he decreed They are vnwrit and therefore are vnread Elanius was the sonne of Kimarus Yeeres before Christ. Morindus reigned 8 yeeres 311. THis King Morindus valiant more then wise A rau'ning Monster from the Sea did ●ise Which many people to destruction brought Who kil'd this braue King as he brauely fought He killed the Monster after the Monster had de●●●red him for he was in the belly of it liuing and found dead with his dagger in his hand Gorbomanus 303. THis King eleuen yeers wore the Brittain crown He founded Cambridge built Grantham Town His subiects peace past Kingdomes he prefer'd Lou'd and bewai●'d at London was inter'd He built the Townes of Cambridge and Grantham Archigalo and Elidurus 392. THese brothers were not Kings both at one time But for extortion an vnkingly crime The Eldest hauing gaind his Subiects hate Depos'd and Elidurus got the State But he not greedy after worldly reigne To Archigalo gaue it vp againe Rul'd tenne yeeres more thus twenty yeeres in all His State Maiesticke did twice rise and fall Archigalo put away from him and reiected the true and ancient Nobility and Gentry and in their roomes was supplyde with the counsels of flatterers and parasites which was his downefall Yeeres before Christ. Elidurus 272. Vigenius Peredurus 270. THen A●chigale beeing dead and gone Good Elidure two yeers kept Brittaines Throne Vigenius Peredurus two yeeres more Thrust Elidure from all the sway he bore But they both dy'd the third time he was crown'd Elidurus 261. And reigned foure yeeres more belou'd renown'd Once subiect twice a slaue and thrice a King Thus Fortunes fauours vp and downe did sling Heere because Hystories make little or ●o mention of any the doings of the Kings from the reigne of Elidurus to King L●● I thinke it fit onely to insert their names and the times of their reignes with their yeeres before Christ. 258. Gerbonian reigned ten yeeres 248. Morgan foureteene yeeres 224. Emeria●●s seuen yeeres This King was deposed from al●●● gall gouernment for his tyranny 227. Iuall twenty yeeres This King was a iust and ●●● Prince Yeeres before Christ. 207. Rimo sixteen yeeres His reigne was blest with abundance of Peace and Plenty 191. Geruncius twenty yeeres 171. Catillus ten yeeres Catillus caused all the oppressors of the poore to be hanged vp but since his time they are doubly increased 161. Coylus twenty yeeres A peaceable King and a quiet reigne 141. Porrex fiue yeeres A good Prince 136. Chirimus one yeere Chirimus through excessiue drinking got his death 135. Tulgon two yeeres 133. EL●red one yeere Yeeres before Christ. 132. Androgius one yeere 131. Varianus one yeere Varianus giuen all to lust purchsed himselfe a short reigne and it may bee perceiued that all these Princes either by treason or their own bad liues were soon brought to their ends for 25 of them did not reigne aboue 62 yeeres 12● Eliud fiue yeeres 120. Dedamius fiue yeeres 118. Gurginius three yeeres 115. Merianus two yeeres 113. Blodunus two yeeres 110. Capenus three yeeres Yeeres after Christ. 108. Quinus two yeeres 106. Silius two yeeres 94. Bledgabredus ten yeeres A great louer of Musicke and a good Patron to Musicians 92. Archemalus two yeeres 90. Eldolus two yeeres 88. Rodianus two yeeres 86. Redargius three yeeres Yeeres after Christ. 84. Samullius two yeeres 81. Penisellus three yeeres 78. Pirrhus two yeeres 76. Caporus two yeeres 74. Diuellus foure yeeres A Noble and ver●nous Prince 70. Hellius one yeere The I le of Ely tooke the n●m●●●tion from this Prince There hee ●●●● a Palace and there he dying was buried Lud reigned 11. yeeres 66. A Long time after Troynouant was fram'd It was by Lud Kair-Lud or Lud-sto●s nam'd Yeeres before Christ. ●●e made it strong with Battlements and Towres ●●● against foes inuasiue pow'rs ●●●free Stone for Free-men Ludgate hee founded ●● here freemen wanting freedom are confounded ●●dy'd and left two Sonnes too young for reigne Therefore his brother did the Crowne obtaine Some Writers doe affirme that this King builded London from Ludgate to London-stone and that the stone ●●●● thereof was called Luds stone Cassibelan 17. yeeres 58. V● dead the nobles crown'd Cassibelan ●●● whose reign here the Romanes conquest wan ●● Iulius Caesar sailed out of France ●in this Land his Eagle did aduance ●●●●● bold scorn'd base at first to stoope ●●● Caesar fled before their warlike troope ● Ciuill warres this Kingdome ouer-runnes ●twixt Cassibelan and Luds two Sonnes ●●● they vnnaturall sought each others fall ●●● Romanes tooke aduantage conquer'd all T●●● Caesar by his high Imperiall doome ●●● Britaine Tributary vnto Rome Nemias a valiant Duke of this Kingdome receiued deaths wound of Caesar Yet after that he tooke Caesars ●●●nd from him and with the same kil'd Labianus a Romane Tribune and lastly was she field and dyed Caesar ●the Castles of Douer Canterbury and the Tower ●● London Theomantius 37. THen Theomantius of the royall blood The sole Sonne liuing of his Father Lud ●●ign'd three and twenty yeeres a King in State ●hose Picture stands on Luds vnlucky gate Yeeres before Christ. Cimbilinus IN this Kings reigne the glorious King of Kings In person came and mans saluation brings When through the world all bloody wars did cease For our soules peace then came the Prince of peace Our Sauiour Iesus Christ was borne his reigne in the 42. yeere of Augustus Caesar then being Emperour of Rome Cimbelinus was the Sonne of Theomantins Guiderius anno Christi 21. THis King and Subiects brauely nobly ioyne To hold from Rome the tributary Coyne But
12 Offa 13 S●lred 14 Suthred 5 Northumberland was sometimes diuided into two kingdomes It contained the ●●ies of Yorkshire Durham Lancashire West●land Cumberland and Northumberland this Kingdome beganne in the yeere of our Lord ●7 and expired in 926. continuing 379. ●eeres vnder 23 Kings whose names were 1 ●● 2 Ad●●a 3 Theodwald 4 Frethulfe 5 The●●●●●●ick 6 Ethelrick 7 Ethel●rid 8 Edwin 9 Os●●● 10 Oswy 11 Egfrid 12 Alkfrid 13 Ofred 14 ●●red 15 Oswolfe 16 Ceolnuph 17 Egbert 18 Oswicke 19 Edilwald 20 Alured 21 Ethel●●● 22 Alswald 23 Osred Amongst these ●dwin was their first Christian King 6 The East Angles vnder 15 seuerall Kings continued 353 yeeres beginning in Anno 575. ●●d ended in 914. their Territories were ●●lolke Norfolk Cambridgeshire and the ●● of Ely their Kings names were 1 Vffa 2 ●●●lus 3 Redwald their first Christian King ●●●wold 5 Sigebert 6 Egrik 7 Anna 8 ●●●bert 9 Ethwald 10 Aldwol●e 11 Aswald 12 Beorn 13 Ethelred 14 Ethelbert 15 Edmund ●●● The seuenth Kingdome were the Mer●●●●●● who had 20 Kings and 17 shires ●nder their command their Kings were●● Creda 2 Wibba 3 Cheorle 4 Penda 5 Peada ●heir first Christian King 6 Wolfere 7 ●●helred 8 Kenred 9 Chelred 10 Ethebald 11 Offa 12 Egfrid 13 Kenwolfe 14 Kenelme 15 Chelwolfe 16 Bernulfe 17 Ludecan 18 ●●itlafe 19 Bertwolfe 20 Burdred Their ●ounds and dominions were 17 Counties as of Northampton Leister Darby Lincolne Huntington Rutland Notingham Cheshire Oxfordshire Staffordshire Worcestershire Glostershire Shropshire Warwickeshire Bedfordshire Buckinghamshire and ●artfordshire Yeeres after Christ. 98 Vortiporus 578. 99 Malgo 581. THis Vortipore from good Kings did decline Kept his wiues Daughter as his Concubine And Malgo p●t his Wi●●e to broady slaughter To liue in ●ncest with his brothers Daughter About this time Augustine the Monke Mellitus Iustus and Iohn all ●●● men came from Rome and preached the Gospell to the English m●n Vortipore reigned 4. yeeres Malgo his raign●● was short and wicked 100. Careticus 586. GVrmundus hither out of Ireland came And with the Saxons ioyn'd with sword and flame The King to Wales did flye his ife●t● saue Whereas he chang'd his Kingdome for a Graue He reigned 3. yeeres and now the Saxons had all England the Brittaines and their Kings being expulsed and chased to the West sides of the Riuers Seauerne and D●● Cadwane 613. THis Cadwane did the Saxon ●orce withstand Of Ethelfridus of Northumberland And made him to entreate and sue for peace Raign'd two and twenty yeeres then did decease Yeeres before Christ. 102. Cadwallin 635. CAdwallin slew King Edwin Egfrids Sonne He Penda Merciaes King did ouer-runne He neuer fought but Conquest home did bring And eight and forty yeeres did raigne a King Cadwallin was buried at London in Saint Martins Church neere Ludgate 103. Cadwallader 685. THis King renowned was both neere and farre The last of Brittaines Kings Cadwallader The name of Brittaine was quite alterd then The Kings of England subiects Englishmen Then in this Land of Kings there raign'd so many That Subiects knew not to obey all or any Their names and times of raigne I meane to tell Should I write more my Book too big would swell Here the inhabitants lost the name of Brittaines the land being called Anglia or England and the people Englishmen 687. Cadwallader left his Crowne went to Rome and dyed there These Kings following were of the West Saxons 726 Ethelard was King of the West Saxons Yeeres before Christ. 740. Cuthred succeeded him 757. Sigebert next him was slain● by a Swineheard 758. Kenulphus was slaine by Kinsman of Sigebert 786. Brithricus In his time i● rained blood IN the 800. yeere of Christ the Danes landed at Po●●land but Brithricus beat them backe and after●●●● was poysoned by his wife Ethelburga Egbri●us King of West-Saxons 839. ●●● 839. Adelnulphus ouercame ●● Danes that came to inua●e the Kingdome with 350. ships 857. Athelbald Yeeres after Christ. 860. Athelbrict 866. Etheldrid 872. AElfred 900. Edward surnamed Se●ior Heere end the Kings of the West-Saxons now follow the Kings of Britaine 104. Athelstane reigned 15. yeeres 905. THis King did tame the Welsh the Danes subdu'd He conquered Scotland and the Marches rude The Danish Gyant Colebrand in Hyde-meads ●y G●y the Earle of Warwick was struck dead King Athelstane was crowned at Kingstone hee fought this Land againe to one sole Monarchy hee was buried at M●l●●●bury Yeeres after Christ. 105. Edmund 940. 106. Eldred 640. EDmund reign'd next his brother Athelstane And after fiue yeeres was vntimely slaine Nine yeeres was Eldrid Englands King instil'd Th' insulting Danes he from this Realme exilde Edmund was buried at Glastenbury Eldred was brother to Edmund hee was crowned as Kingstone hee expelled the Danes and was buried at Winchester 107. Edwin 955. 108 Edgar 959. THen Edwin as his right obtain'd the Crowne For Rape and brutish Lust he was put downe His brother Edger a man iust and wi●e By Edwins fall vnto the Throne did rise The Church and Commonwe●le long time deform'd He by his Iustice and good Lawes reform'd Raign'd sixteen yeeres and then by death assail'd As he had liu'd belou'd he dy'd bewail'd Edwin was Eldreds kinsman crowned a Kingstone he deftowred his owne kinswoman and slew her husband for which ●●● acts hee was deposed of all Kingly dignity and his brother Edgar was in his stead crowned at Bath● Edgar had 3600 skips to withstand the inuasion of his enemies hee founded and repaired 47. religious houses hee was buried at Glastenbury 109 Edward 975. 110 Etheldred 978. EDward was slain by his accurst Stepmother Ayded by Etheldred his cruell brother This Etheldred caus'd all the Danes be slaine And dyed the thirty eightth yeere of his raigne He was crowned at Kingstone be reigned 3. yeeres and was buried at Shaftsbury Etheldred was buried in St. Pauls Church in London 111 Edmond Irònside 1016. THe Danes came to reuenge with sword and fire Both Kings to Combat single did desire On equall tormes their valours both were tride In loue the Realme betwixt them they deuide Edricus a traitor murdered King Edmond Ironside for the which Canutus the Dane caused him to bee tormented to death gri●●uously as he deserued 112 Canutus 1018. THis mighty Danish King foure Kingdomes held Danes Norway England Scotland he compeld Taxes and toles he rais'd in England here And dyed when he had gouern'd twenty yeere In Canutus his raigne the Danes possessed all England he ●●●● buried at Winchester 113 Harold 1038. 114 Hardianutus 1041. HArold from England did exile his Mother And kild Allured his King and his Brother Hardianutus then the Crowne obtain'd Who qua●●ing died when he 3. yeeres had raign'd Harold was a Tyrant hee was called Hartfoott ●● h●●●●●●● running be murdered Prince Allured hee raigned three yeeres and was buried at Westminster Hee caused the body of Harold to be digged out of the graue and cast into the Thames in reuenge of his brother Allureds death he
was buried at Winchester 115. Saint Edward 1043. 116. Harold the second 1066. SAint Edward from the Danes this Kingdom freed● And for he had no Heyre he heere decreed That William Duke of Normandy should be Next King but Harold seem ●●● to agree As soone as Edward was laid in his Toombe This hasty Harold mounted in his roome But William came from Normanay amaine By whom King Harold was vnking'd and slaine The end of the first part The second part William Conquerour An. Dom. 1066. VVHen Britains Romanes Saxons Danes had done The Normans fiftly England● glory won● New Lords brought in new Lawes incontinent And all were Conquer'd but the County Kent King William after he had all surpriz'd Insulted domineer'd and tyranniz'd All Englishmen like slaues their doores must lock On paine of death each night at eight of clocke The English from all Offic● were disgrac'd And in their places the proud French were plac'd ●●ill beating down the right with wrong on wrong Disdaining men should speake the English tongue And so to bring our memory to naught The Grammar and the Lawes in French were taught King Swanus Sonnes with Danes a mighty band Arriu'd in Humber to inuade the Land Then Yorke was burnt the wealth away was borne And Danes on Composition home did turne A dearth in England was so great that heere Cats Dogs and mans flesh was our wofull cheere The Mercians and Northumbers they rebel'd Strong warres the Scott within our Country held The I le of Ely did the King surprize He caus'd the Rebels lose hands feet and eyes The Normans did rebell and were subdu'd Danes came and fled with all their multitude The Kings sonne Robert by the French Kings ayd Did diuers parts of Normandy inuade The Scots spoild England with all might and maine And Durbans Bishop in a broyle was slaine Heere euery Acre of mens Lands were measur'd And by a heauy taxe the King was treasur'd Slaine by a Deere the Kings sonne lost his life And Glassenbury Monkes were kill'd in strife The English Nobles almost were decay'd And euery place of rule the Normans swai'd And all mens goods and lands and coyn were rated Through England and vnto the King related The French mens pride did England ouerwhelme And grieuous tributes did oppresse the Realme Churches and Chappels were throwne down with speed ●o make New Forrest as the King decreed Who hauing rul'd in trouble toyle and care And tryannously pol'd this Kingdome bare Neere twenty one yeeres death was then his bane He lyes in Normandy enterr'd at Cane William Conquerour was crowned on Christmas-day 1067 the yeere then beginning on that day In the ●●●● Forrest in Hampshire called New Forrest ●●ere this King had defaced many Churches wherein the ●●● of God was called vpon and placed wild Beasts for His disportun the same Forrest two of his owne sonnes were ●●●● Prince Robert killed by a Deere and William Rufus by a Knight shooting at a Deere William Rufus An. Dom. 1087. WIlliam the cruell Conquerours second Sonne With ease got what his Fathers paines had won Oppressed England he opprest and prest And great Exactions wrongfully did wrest For Symony and base corrupting gold The King most Churches and Church-liuings sold And more his Subiects vilely to abuse Against them he in armes did arme the Iewes And swore if they the victory did gaine That he their faithlesse faith would entertaine Vpon his eldest brother hee raysd warres His youngest brother troubled him with iarres At London such a furious winde did blow Which did sixe hundred houses ouerthrow The City Gloster was by Welshmen sack'd Northumberland was by King William wrack'd William de Oue and William de Aluery In cruell torments dyed at Salisbury Duke Robert laid all Normandy to gage Vnto the King warres with the Turkes to wage Westminster Hall was built the Danes came in And th' Orchades and the I le of Man did win But as the King was hunting in Hampshire Sir Walter T●rr●ll shooting at a Deere The Arrow glauncing'gainst a Tree by chance Th' vnhappy King kild by the ha●lesse Glaunce A Comers Cart to Winchester did bring The Corps where vnbemoand they laid the King Rufus In the 8. yeere of his reigne the Christian Army went to Ierusalem vnder the conduct of Godfry Duke of Bulleine in which warres serued Robert Duke of Normandy the Kings eldest brother who pawned his Dukedome for 16666. pounds weight of siluer In the 11. yeere the Lands of the late Earle Godwine sunk in the sea and are to this day called Godwine ●ands This King died the 2. of August 1100. He reigned 12. yeeres 11. Moneths and was buried at Winchester Henry the first An. Dom. 1100. THis Henry for his wisedome Beuclarke nam'd Th'vnlawfull Lawes and measures he reclaim'd The Norman Duke eld'st Brother to the King To claime the Crowne a mighty Hoast did bring Saint Barthol●mewes was founded and Saint Gyles And Henry stop'd Duke Roberts mouth with wiles Then peace was made but after warres did rise The King tooke's brother and put out his eyes Here Windsor Church and Castle were erected And Wales rebeld most sharpely was corrected All the King's Sonnes and eight score persons more Were drown'd by tempest neere the Norman shore Thus all his Ioy in Childrens losse bereft Saue onely Maud the Widdow Empresse left Whom Geffrey Anioy's Earle to wife did get From whom did spring the name Plantagenet The King proclaim'd his Daughter or her seede After his death should in the Realme succeede And after thirty fiue yeeres time was past King Henry by a surfet breath'd his last Much trouble in his dayes this Kingdome wearied He dyed and dead at Redding he lies buried Thus God that lifts the low casts downe the high Caus'd all the Conquerors sonnes vntimely dye Henry the ● He held the Crowne wrongfully from his elder brother Robert Duke of Normandy and ouercomming him in battell most vnnaturally put out his e●es he reigned 35. yeeres his braines eyes and bowels were buried at Roane in France and the rest of his body at Redding his Phisicion that opened his head was killed suddainely with the stench of his brai●er King Stephen An. Dom. 1135. STephen Earle of B●loig● th' Earle of Bloy● his son From th' Empresse M●nd this famous Kingdome won Domestike forraigne dangerous discords 'Twixt factions factions of the King and 's Lords Wars 'twixt the King and th' Empresse for the crown Both tasted Fortunes fauours and her frowne Now vp now downe like balles at Tennis tost Till Stephen gain'd the goale and th ' Empresse lost And after eighteene yeeres were come and gone The King not hauing any lawfull Sonne He dyed and chang'd his Kingdome his strength For a small Sepulcher of sixe foote length King Stephen He was noble valiant liberall and politique and almost in continuall trouble In the 1. yeere of his reigne a fire burnt all the streete from London-stone East to Pauls and West to Algate and within 2.
of February following king Richard the 2. being in prison at Po●●fret-Castle ●●● murdered The raigne of King Henry was acc●●●●● warre and trouble Henry the fift An. Dom. 1412. THis was a King Renowned neere and farre A Mars of men a Thunderbolt of warre At Agencourt the French were ouerthrowne And Henry heyre proclaim'd vnto that Crowne In nine yeeres raigne this valiant Prince wan more Then all the Kings did after or before Intomb'd at Westminster his Carkas lyes His soule did like his Acts ascend the skies Henry the 5. In his 3. yeere hee past the sea with 1000. saile of Ships and Ve●●els into France His tombe or ●●●● was couered with siluer but this yr●n age ●●th ●●●●●● Henry the sixt An. Dom. 1422. THis Infant Prince scarce being nine moneths old The Realmes of France and England he did hold But he vncapable through want of yeeres Was ouer-gouern'd by mis-gouern'd Peeres Now Yorke and Lancaster with bloudy wars Both wound this kingdome with deep deadly scars Whilst this good King by Yorks oppos'd depos'd Expos'd to dangers is captiu'd inclos'd His Queene exilde his sonne and many friends Fled murdred slaughtred lastly Fate contends To crowne him once againe who then at last Was murdred thirty nine yeeres being past King Edward the sixt being 10. yeers old was crowned King of France in Paris but with the strife betwixt the Nobility and the Commons in England the most part of France was lost againe which was neuer recouered ●●●●● Edward the fourth An. Dom. 1460. EDward the 4. the house of Yorks great heire By bloudy wars attain'd the Regall Chaire The poore King Henry into Scotland fled And foure yeeres there was royally cloath'd and fed Still good successe with him was in the wane ●●e by King Edward●● power at last was tane Yet yet before the tenth yeere of his reigne Hence Edward fled and Henry crown'd againe By Warwicks meanes sixe moneths he held the same Till Ed●ward backe in armes to England came And fighting stoutly made this kingdome yeeld And slew great Warwicks Earle at Barnot field Thus Ciuill wars on wars and broyles on broyles And England against England spils and spoyles Now Yorke then Lancaster then Yorke againe ●uels Lancaster thus ioy griefe pleasure paine ●●oth like inconstant waters ●bbe and flow Ones rising is the others ouerthrow King Edward twenty two yeeres rul'd this Land And lies at Windsor where his Tombe doth stand Edward the 4. In the first yeere on Palme-sunday 1460. there was a battell fought betwixt King Edward and King Henry neere Todcaster wherein were s●aine of English-men on both sides 53000 700 and 11. persons The bloudy victory fell to King Edward In the 10. yeere of his reigne he was forced to forsake this Land whereby King Henry was restored againe to the Crowne But shortly after Edward returned and Henry was murthered Edward the fifth An. Dom. 1483. HIgh birth blood state and innocent in yeeres Eclips'd and murdred by insulting Peeres This King was neuer crown'd short was his raigne For to be short hee in short space was slaine Edward the 5. Within 3. moneths after the death of his father hee and his brother Richard Duke of Yorke were depriued both of their liues and he of the Crowne by their tyrannous Unkle Richard Duke of Gloster Richard the third An. Dom. 1483. BY Treason mischiefe murder and debate Vsurping Richard wonne the royall state Vnnaturally the children of his brother The King and Duke of Yorke he caus'd to smother For Sir Iames Tirrell Dighton and Blacke ●ill Did in the Tower these harmlesse Princes kill Buckinghams Duke did raise King Richard high And for reward he lost his head thereby A fellow to this King I scarce can finde His shape deform'd and crooked like his minde Most cruell tyrannous inconstant stout Couragious hardy t' abide all dangers out Yet when his sinnes were mellow ripe and full Th' Almighties iustice then his plumes did pull By bloudy meanes he did the kingdome gaine And lost it so at Bosworth being slaine This Richard was neuer a good subiect but when he had got the Crowne be striued by all meanes to be a good King for in his Short reigne of two yeeres two moneths he made very profitable Lawes which are yet in force by which it may be perceiued how willing he was to redeeme his mis-spent time Henry the seuenth An. Dom. 1485. VVHen Ciuill wars full fourescore yeers more Had made this kingdome welter in her Gore When eightie of the royall blood were kild That Yorke and Lancasters crosse faction held Then God in mercy looking on this Land Brought in this Prince with a triumphant band The onely Heire of the Lancastrian line Who graciously consented to combine To ease poore England of a world of mone And make the red Rose and the white but one By Marriage with Elizabeth the faire Fourth Edwards daughter and Yorks onely heire But Margret Burgunds dutches storm'd frown'd That th' heire of Lancaster in state was crown'd A counterfeit one Lambert she suborn'd Being with Princely ornaments adorn'd To claime the State in name of Clarence sonne Who in the Tower before to death was done Wars'gainst the French King Henry did maintaine And Edward braue Lord Wooduile there was slaine Northumberlands great Earle for the Kings right Was slaine by Northerne rebels in sharpe fight The King besiedged Boloigne but a Peace The French king fought and so the siedge did cease Still Burgunds Dutchesse with inueterate hate Did seeke to ruine Henries Royall state She caus'd one Perkin Warbacke to put on The name of Richard Edwards murdred sonne Which Richard was the youngest of the twaine Of Edwards sonnes that in the Tower was slaine The King at last these traitors did confound And Perkin for a counterfeit was found Sir William Stanley once the Kings best friend At Tower hill on a Scaffold had his end On Blacke Heath Cornish rebels were o'rthrowne A Shoomaker did claime King Henries Crowne The Earle of Warwicke lost his haplesse head And Lady Katherine did Prince Arthur wed But ere sixe moneths were fully gone and past In Ludlow Castle Arthur breath'd his last King Henry built his Chappell from the ground At Westminster whose like can scarce be found Faire Margret eldest daughter to our King King Iames the fourth of Scotland home did bring Where those two Princes with great pompe and cheare In State at Edenborough married were But as all Mortall things are transitory So to an end came Henries earthly glory Twenty three yeeres and 8. months here he swaid And then at Westminster in 's Tombe was laid He all his Life had variable share Of Peace Warre Ioy Griefe Royaltie and Care In his I. yeere in 7. weekes space there dyed in London 2. Maiors and 6. Aldermen besides many hundred others of a strange sweating sicknesse 1485. Anno Reg. 12. at Saint Need● in Beafordshire there fell hail-stones 18. inches about King Iames the 4. of Scotland married Margret
Westminster she buried doth abide And as the fame of this Imperiall Ma●de Is through the world by the foure winds displaid So shall her memory for euer grace Her famous birth her death and buriall place At Teuxbury Anno 1574. the 24. of February being a hard frost the Riuer of Seuerne was couered with Fl● and Beetles so that it was thought within the length of a paire of Bu●● to be 100. quarters of them the m●●●●en stopped with them but from whence they came is unknown 1582. A piece of Land of three Acres in Dorsotshire i● the Parish of Armitage was suddenly remoo●ed 600. f●●t from the place where formerly it stood King Iames. An. Dom. 1601. VVHen as Elizaes wofull death was acted When this lamenting land was halfe distracted● Whē tears each loyall heart with grief had drown'd Then came this King and made our ioyes abound Ordain'd for vs by heauenly power diuine Then from the North this glorious starre did shine The Roall Image of the Prince of Peace The blest Concorder that made warres to cease By Name a STEVVARD and by Nature one Appointed from I●houahs sacred Throne And by th' almighties hand supported euer That Treason or the Diuell should hurt him ne●●● And as his Zeale vnto his God was great Gods blessings on him were each way compleat Rich in his Subiects loue a Kings best treasure Rich in content a Riches aboue measure Rich in his Princely Issue and in them Rich in his hopefull Branches of his stemme Rich in Munition and a Nauy Royall And richer then all Kings in seruants Loyall When Hell and Rome together did conspire To blow him and his kingdome vp with fire Then did the King of King● preserue our King And all the Traytors to confusion bring And who so reckons vp from first to last The many hel-hatch'd dangers he hath past Through all his daies he will beleeue no doubt That he with heauenly pow'rs was wall'd about All Christian Princes held his friendship deare Was fear'd for loue and not belou'd for feare And P●●gan Monarchs were in League combin'd With him as farre as is the Easterne Inde ●●● like a st●●● amidst a Riuer fix'd ●● was his ●●flic● with his mercy mix'd He ●riu'd to imitate his Maker still ●ed clemency preseru'd where Law would kill He hath cur'd England and heal'd Scotlands wounds And made them both great anciēt Britains bounds ●●● bloudy deadly ●eud the caus'd ●● cease And ●●●●●'d hate he turn'd to Christian peace The mouth of warre he muzzled mute and dum He fill'd the roaring Cannon and the Drum ●●ure in peace his people si●● and dine With their owne fig-trees shaded and their vine Whilst in an vprore most of Christendome ●●e nation doth another ouercome Vnto the King of Kings let 's pratles sing For giuing vs this happy peacefull King ●●●one know so well how they should peace prefer ●●s those that know the miseries of warre ●Tis true though old and must not be forgot The warres are sweet to such as know them not Peace happy peace doth spread tranquillity Through all the bounds of Britaines Monarchy And may we all our actions still addresse For peace with God and warre 'gainst wickednesse Vnto which peace of God this King 's ascended ●o reigne in glory that shall ne'r be ended His mortall part at Westminster enter'd His soule and Fame immortally preser'd God did wonderfully preserue him vpon two seueral●● Tue●daies from 2 most dangerous treasons the one at the Towne of Saint Iohnston in Scotland on Tuesday the 5. of August 1600. where the Earle of Gowry attemptea to kill his Maiesty The other was in England in that fearfull treason and deliucrance from the Powder-plot on Tuesday the 5. of November 1606. King CHARLES TWo Williams Henries 8. I. Steuen I. Iohn Sixe Edwards Richards 3. and I. Queene Mary Elizabeth and Iames all dead and gone Our gracious Charles doth now the Scepter carry And may they liue and dye of God accurst Who wish the preiudice of Charles the first ●ust 25. Kings and Queenes of England since the Norman Conquest A BRIEFE REMEMBRANCE OF ALL THE ENGLISH MOnarchs from the Normans Conquest vntill this present TO THE HONOVRABLE AND TRVLY Noble Sir ROBERT CARR Knight one of the Gentlemen of his Maiesties Royall Bed-chamber c. T Is not in expectation of reward That I this booke vnto your hands doe tender But in my humble dutie in regard That I am bound my daily thanks to render And though my stile be harsh my learning slender My Verse defectiue and my Accent rude Yet if your Patronage be my Defender Iam defended'gainst a multitude Thus to auoyd Hell-hatch'd ingratitude My dutious Love my Liues and Life shall be To you deuoted euer to conclude May you and your most vertuous Ladie see Long happie dayes in Honour still encreasing And after death true Glorie neuer ceasing Your Honours in all seruice Iohn Taylor WILLIAM THE FIRST Surnamed the CONQVEROVR KING OF ENGLAND And DVKE OF NORMANDY BY bloody Battels Conquest and by Fate Faire Englands Crown kingdome l surpris'd Itopsie-tutuy turn'd elie Eng'ish State And Lawes and Customes new and strange deuis'd And where ● vanquisht there I tyrannaiz'd Instead of peoples loue inforcing feare Extorting Ioils I daily exercis'd And Tributes greater then the Land could beare Besides the Normans fame the more to reare The English I forbad the English tongue French Schooles of Grammer I ordayned here And gainst this Nation added wrong to wrong At last my Crown Sword scepter Cōquest braue I left I lost scarce found an earthly Graue Anno 1066 October 14 Saturday William Conqueror the sonne of Robert the 6. Duke of Normandy Ianded with a 1000. shippes furnished with men horse all warlike prouision at Hastings in Sussex and after a bloody battell with King Harold with the slaughter of nere 70000. men on both parts Hareld beeing slaine Duke William came in Triumph to London and was crowned at Westminster on Christmas day following by Aldred Archbisbop of Yorke he vsed his victorie and conquest here tyrannically dispossesing most part of the English of their lands giuing them to the Normans for which appressions he was continually molested sometimes with the Danes then with the Welsh with the Scots out of Ireland and at home amongst his owne people besides many miseries did at once afflict this Land as I. an vniuersall feauer amongst people 2 Barrennesse of the ground 3 Dearth and famine 4 Moraine of Cattell and the Church of St Pauls in London burnt and all that was in it The Country extremely ruin'd and spoyled for 60 miles space betwixt York and Durham The king pulled downe 36 Churches Townes and Villages laying the Country waste and open for 30 miles space from the City of Salisbury Southward which is now called Newforrest and was by him made a wildernes or place for beasts for his game of hunting In which place by Gods iust Iudgement his second sonne Richard
was kil'd by a Deere his son K. William Rusus kil'd for a Deer Henry his grandchilde strucke into the iawes with a bough and hanged so till he was found dead Neuerthlesse he built many Abbies Priories Garisons Houses and Caslles amongst the which the Towre of London was one He died at Roane 1087 September 9. he was not onely robd and risted of all his goods and Kingly ornaments and riches but barbarously stripped and left naked on the floore not hauing any one to attend his carcasse but for saken of all Such is the frailty and misery of earthly greatnesse Lastly he had much adoe to get a graue which in the end with great difficulty was purchased for him at Cane in Normandy WILLIAM THE IJ Surnamed RVFVS KING OF ENGLAND And DVKE OF NORMANDY VVHat my triumphant Father wan I held I pill'd poll'd this Kingdom more then he Great Tributes from my people I compeld No place in Church or Common-wealth was freee But alwaies those that would giue most to me Obtain'd their purpose being wrong or right The Clergy I enforced to agree To sell Church-plate and Chalices out-right Vntill at last by the Almighties might My Kingly power and force was forcelesse made My glorious pompe that seem'd t'eclips mens sight Did vanish by a glance by chance and fade For hunting in new-forrest voyd of feare A Subiect flew me shooting at Decre Anno 1087. September 26. being Sunday William the second surnamed Rufus by ●● son of his ruddy or red colour was crowned at Westminster by Lanfrank Archbishop of Can●●terbury his elder brother Robert being Duke ●● Normandy who likewise claimed the Crowne ●● he was pacified with the mediation of the friends ●● William and the promise of 3000 markes a yeere ● Robert departed this Land after is had beene ●● wasted with their contentions Then after little breathing time the Welsh arose in Armes and Malcolme King of Scots Inuaded England burning and spolying as farre as Chester ●● soone as the peace was made betwixt the King William and Malcolme the two brothers William and Robert sell at oddes again and again are appeased After that Malcolme King of Sco●●● made an inroad into England againe whom Ro●bert Moubray Earle of Northumberland ly●● in ambush suddenly slew in which action Edw●● King Malcolms sonne likewise was slaine Af●● which the third time the 2 brothers Robert ●● William sell againe at variance and after ●● trouble are againe reconciled Then Duke Robert●● goeth to Ierusalem and conquers it In the yeere 1099. the Schisme began there beeing 2 Popes ● at Rome the other at Auigniou in France The K. William was as valiant a prince as the war● yeelded and a great opposer of the indirect cours●● the see of Rome Many fearefull things happened in his reigne as earthquakes dreadfull lightning and Apparitions Blazing Commets in strange● gures Inundations Deluges to the destruction is people and much land ouerwhelmed with the●neuer to be recouered amongst the which ●● Goodwins lands were drowned and are now c●●● Goodwin sands At Finchamsted in Barkin● there was a Well of blood which flowed 15 dayes When this King had reigned neere 13 years he was vnfortunately slaine by a French Knight S t Water Tirrell and brought to Winchester in a C●liers cart and there buried Anno 1100 Ang●●● HENRY THE FIRST Surnamed BEAVCLARKE KING OF ENGLAND And DVKE OF NORMANDY MY Father and my Brother Kings both gone With acclamations Royall I was crown'd Had hauing gain'd the Scepter and the Throne I with the name of Beauclarke was renown'd The English Lawes long lost I did refound False waights and measures I corrected true The power of Wales in fight I did confound And Normandy my valour did subdue Yet I vnmindfull whence these glories grew My eldest Brother Robert did surprise Detain'd him and vsurp'd his Royall due And most vnnat ' rally pluckt out his eyes Kings liue like Gods but yet like men they dye All must pay Natures due and to did I. Anno 1100. August I Wednesday Henry the I a Prince of incomparable wisdom learning for which indowments he was surnamed Beauclark he mollified the seuentty of his Father and brother lawes he cashierd and punished all flatrers parasites frō his Court but his elder brother Robert Duke of Normandy hearing of the death of his brother Rufus makes haste from is Conquest and Kingdome of Ierusalem if hee had pleased and comming into England landed at Portsmouth claiming the Crowne but by aduice of the Nobles on either part it was agreed that King Henry should pay vnto Duke Robert 3000 markes yeerely but by the instigation of some discontented persons the two brothers disagree againe and in the fift yeere of King Henry Duke Robert landed in England again then there was a ●ayned peace made between them which in the 7 yeere of this king was broken and in the 8 yeere King Henry tooke his brother Duke Robert and caused his eyes to be put out Thus iust the same day forty yeers that the Duke of Normandy conquered England that very day did this Henry the first King of England conquer Normandy Henry the fourth Emperour of Germany marryed Maude the Daughter of king Henry This King was the first thai ordained the High court of Parliament In the yeare 1020. Prince William the sonne of king Henry of the age of 17 crossing the Seas from France towards England with his wife the Duke of Anious daughter and his sister Maud the Lady Lucy a Neece of the Kings the Earle of Chester with diuers other Noblemen Ladies and others to the number of 160 were all most miserably drown'd not any of them saued but a poor Butcher The king hauing no children left but his daughter Maude the Empresse The Emperor her Husband beeing dead she came into England to whom the king her father caused his Nobles to sweare allegeance as to his lawfull heire after his decease which Empresse after was married to Ieffrie Plantagenet Earle of Aniou The King after many troubles with the French Welsh Scots and Englsih with forraigne and Ciuill warres vnfortunate and vntimely losse of children and friends after 35 yeeres reigns he dyed at Saint Dennis in Normandy whose corpes were brought into England and buried at Reding 1135. STEPHEN KING OF ENGLAND AND DVKE OF NORMANDY BY wrested Titles and vsurping claime Through storms tempests of tumultuous wars The Crowne my fairest marke and foulest ayme I wonne and wore beleaguerd round with iars The English Scots and Normans all prepares Their powers exposing to oppose my powers Whilst this land ladeo and o'rwhelm'd with cares Fndures whilst war wo want and death deuoures But as yeers months weeks days decline by houres Houres into minutes minutes into nought My painfull pompe decai'd like fading flowers And vnto nought was my Ambition brought Thus is the state of transitory things Ther 's nothing can be permanent with Kings Anno 1135. December 26. Munday On Saint Stephens
day Stephen Earle of Mortaigue and Bulloyne the Sonne of Stephen E●●● Bloys and Champaine was crowned at Westminster by William Corbell Archbishop of Canterbury tak● Gouernement vpon him vsurpingly compare to his ●● made to King Henry the I in the behalf of Maudth ' Empresse for the which his whole reigne was full of como● all troubles For the Empresse claiming her right great parties weere taken on each side the King had on his part his brother Henry Bishop of Winchester William Archbishop of Canterbury Roger Bishop of Salisbury Hugh Bigott late Lord Steward to King Henry the first On the Empresse part were Robert Earle of Glocester her halfe brother Dauid King of Scotland Owen and Cadwallader sent to Griffith ap Co●● Prince of Wa es and in Normandy Geffry the Empresse Husband made hauocke in the right of his ●●●● in which space the King was dangerously sicks recouered and went into Normandy appeasing the tumults and leauing his Sonne Eustace Duke there makes league with France buyes his peace with the Empresse for 5000 marks yeerely and returnes into England after which Dauid King of Scotland with his valiant Sonne Pre●● Henry wasted and spoyled call the North parts of England till by Thurstane Archbishop of York and Ralp● Bishop of Durham He was ●●●● and discomfited In ● me and space K. Stephen in diuers parts of this Kingdom was victortous chasing and killing many of those but a●●●● posed him inforcing Robert Earle of Glocester to ●●● into France ●●whilst Stephen in England ●●●● ●●●●● and Castles After in a great ●●●● the King was ●●●● at Lincolne by th' Empresse and committed ●●●● Bristow Castle but the Nobility distastins the ●●●● s●rict gouernment fell off from her to King Stephens ●● againe In these broyles more the ●●●● Char●●●● burnt in Winchester with almost the wha●●●●● med to ashes In the end Robert Eearle of Glocester was taken prisoner and ex●hanged for King Stephen● the warres more and more encreasing till at last ●●●● mercy looking on this miserable Land was pleased ●●●● Stephen should ordaine Henry the Empresse form Sonne●● Hetre after him vpon which conditions peace ●●●● blished The King aged at Douer and was buried at Feuersham October 25 1154. hauing reigned ●●●● all vexation neere 19 yeeres HENRY THE SECOND KING OF ENGLAND DVKE OF NORMANDY Guyen and Aquitaine c. TO th' Empresse Maud I was vndoubted Heyre And in her Right my Title being iust By iustice I obtain'd the Regall Chayre Fayre Rosamond I soyled with soule lust For which Heauens lustice hating deeds vniust Stir'd vp my Wife and Sonnes to be my foes Who sought to lay my Glory in the dust And he m'd me round with cruell warres and woes They poys'ned my sweete beautious tainted ●● By Isabels deuice my furious Queene My very bowels 'gainst me did oppose Such fruit hath lust such force hath iealons spleene My cursed cross●s made me curse my birth With her I liu'd raignd died and arm'd to earth Anno ●●●●●●●●●●●● RICHARD THE FIRST Surnamed CVER DE LYON KING OF ENGLAND DVKE OF NORMANDY Guyen and Aquitaine c. THrough my Creators mercy and his might Ierusalem conquer'd and set free False mis-beleeuing Iewes and Turkish spight From Iury force perforce I forc'd to flee The Realme of Cypresse was subdude by me Su●ha trembled at my prowesse bold King Tanered bought his peace and did agree And paid me threescore ounces of fine gold Whilst I abroad won Honour manifold Aspiring Iohn my brother vext my Realme In Austria I was tane and laid in hold Thus noods of griefe each way me ouer whelme At last I home return'd my ransome paid My earthly glory in a Graue was laid Anoo 1189 Iuly 6 Thursday Richard the first surnamed Cuer De Lyon or Lyons Heart was crowned at Westminster by Baldwin Archbishop of Canterbury Shortly after his Co●●●tion he sold and pawned lands and gathering a great sum of 1100000● he left England in the guidance of William Longchamp Bishop of Ely the Popes Legate and Lord Chancelor of England William king of Scotla'd being in amity with King Richard this king sailed in France with whom the French K. Philip went with their armies toward the holy Land in their voyage they touched the kingdom of Sicilia where Tancred the vsurping King of that Country gaue king Richard 6000. ounces of ● I know not whether it was for loue or feare He saild from thence and in a Tempest his Nauie was disperst and fo● wrack'd neere the I le of Cyprus whom lsakius the by courteous King of that kingdome would not harbour vnlieue but contrarily pillaged and abused king Richard and inraged landed conquerd Cyprus carrying the king and his daughter away prisoners leauing the kingdoms vds ●● two trusty Viceryes hee put againe to Sea bit ●●●●● number more then 300 he met with a great Arg●●●●●●● the Sarazens with 1500 men in her and fur●●● munition and victuals for their friends at Acon ● Argosey the King tooke after hee sailed to Acon ● ciently called Ptol omais which City he likewise conquered Philip king of France being with him and ●●●med 1500 Christians that were there in bondage The king of France weary or ennious of King Richards ●● ries returned home In the meane time Earle Iohn Kings brother driues the proud gouerning Bishop of E● out of his gouernment and this kingdome T●●●●●●● King Richard fortified Ascalon marched before Ien●● lem fought with the Salladine took 7000 C●●●●● other beasts killing the Infidels in heaps At last ●●● Duke of Burgundy forsakes the warres whereby th●●● was inforced to come to truce with the Saladine for ●●●● yeeres Hee returning in disguise like a March●● ●● discouered and taken by Leopoldus Duke of Austria ● the Emperor took him from him In the meant space ●●● the Kings brother vseth all the foule play he c 〈…〉 Crowne After 15 moneths imprisonment the king ● released paying a great Ransome be landed in England was crowned againe at Winchester for gaue his brother Iohn sailed into Normandy against his mortall e●●●● the King of France who fled from the siege of Vernoy●● so soene as he heard of Richards comming yet new●●●● arose betweene them wherein King Richard was●●● Victorius Lastly at the battell of Gisors 1192 after ●●●● sion he was most infortunately slain at the siege of ●●●● named Chaluz with an Arrow the 6 of April 119●● hauing reigned nobly and prosperously neere 10 yeere IOHN KING OF ENGLAND DVKE OF NORMANDY Guyen and Aquitaine LORD OF IRELAND c. ROmes mighty miter'd Metropolitan I did oppose and was by him depos'd He turn'd this cursed blessings to his ban And caus'd me round to be with cares inclos'd The English and the Normans me oppos'd And Lewis of France my Kingdome did molest Whilst I to all these miseries expos'd Consum'd my Kingly dayes in restlesse rest At last the Pope was pleas'd and I reblest Peace was obtain'd proclaim'd I re-inthroan'd This was my raigne with
Sword and Flame ●●d almost all that Kingdome ouer-run ●●ll where I fought triumphantly I won ●hrough Blood and Death my glory I obtain'd ●● in the end when all my Acts were done ●● Sepulcher was all the game I gain'd For though great Kings contend for earthly sway Death binds them to the peace and parts the fray An. Dom. 1272. Nouember Wednesday Edward the first was 35 yeares old when he beganne to reigne but at the death of his Father he was in warres in the Holy L●●d against the Saracens So that he returned not home till the next yeere a ●time hee was crowned the 14 day of December in the second yeere of his reigne the ●●●●mins●ty of ●●● Coro●●●●●●●● performed by Robert K●lwarby Ar●●●●●● of Canterbury at Westminster Thus King brought Wales wholy vnto subsection to the crowne of England he effect ●●●● peace be caused all co●●●●tred Iudges and Officers of Note to be must exemplertly p●●n●●ea with sines ●● pri●●men and bantshment A Nauy of 60 English s●●ps ou●●●ams and tooke 800 ships of France An. 1293. Sir William Wallace A Noble va●●●ant Sco● a●d warr● vpon King Edward and in the seruice of his Countrey did much ●●●●●● to England The King ca●●● this Sonne Edward being an in●●rt to be the first Prince of Wales that was of to● English blood Since when all the Kings of Englands elaest Sonnes are by right Princes of Wales 284 Iewes were executed for ●●●ptes of the Kings coyne An 1280. King Edward caused Bay●trds Castle to be buils in London now the mansion house of the Right Honourable Earle of Pemb●●●● In the 15 yeers of this kings reigne Wheate was sold for 3 d the B●she● and the next yeere being 1288 it was sold for 18 d the Bush●● which in those d●●ies was accoūted a great price but after as long as The King liued the price came to 5● the Bashell King Edwards Armi●●●ew 70000 of the Scots in one day as the ●●tt●k of Fau●●rke Sir William Wallace was betrayed taken and brought out of Scotland and executed in Smithfield has head being set on London Bridge and his quarters sent into Scotland yes be is by ●●●●● men had in Honorable remembrance The warres ●●● so set in this Kings reigne betwixt him and the Scots that as ●enerall times there were more then 130000 men slaine on both parts yet amongst all our English Kings that past before him Edward was not inferiour today he was religious valiant victorious wise affable of a comely Ma●estmall Aspect and proportion he had two wiues the first was Eleanor daughter to Ferdinand the third King of Castile the second was Margaret daughter to Philip surnamed Hardy King of France by them hee had 4 Sonnes and 10 Daughters bee reigned neere 35 yeeres and was burried at Westminster 1307. July 7. EDWARD THE II KING OF ENGLAND LORD OF IRELAND DVKE OF AQVITAINE c. SOone after was my fathers corps inter'd Whilst Fate and Fortune did on me attend And to the Royall Throne I was prefer'd With A●e Ceaser euery knee did bend But all these fickle ioyes did fading end Peirce Gaueston to thee my loue combind My friendship to thee scarce left me a friend But made my Queene Peeres People all vnkind I tortur'd both in body and in mind Was vanquisht by the Scots at Bannocki Rourne And I enfor'cd b flight some safety find Yet taken by my Wife at my returne A red-hot Spit my Bowels through did gore Such misery no slaue endured more Anno Dom. 1307 Iuly 8. Edward the second surnamed Carnaruan ●… cause he was born at Carnaruan Castle is Wales was crowned at Westminster by the hands of William Bishop of Winchester deputy for Robert Archbishop of Canterbury then absent in exile ●● 24 of February next following He was much ●●●●cted to follow the aduice and counsell of light ●●●● which caused the Nobility to rebel against him ●●● at the first he ouercame them and tooke Thomas Earle of Lancaster a Peers of the blood their chief Leader fate in iudgment himself on him at Pomfret where the Earle had iudgment giuen against him to be drawne for is Treason for his murder spoyle burning robberies to be hangd and for his shamefull flying away to be beheaded but because ●●● was of the Kings kindred he was only beheaded ●●● the last such of the Barons as had escap'd ●●● the Mortimers with the helpe of the Queene ●●● the yong Prince then come out of France newly tooke the King and imprisoned him neuer ●●● kingdome in more ●●sery then this Kings ●●● for his immoderate loue to Peirce Gau●●●● a meane Gentleman of France was the cause of the Kings and has owne destruction with the ●●● calamity of the ●●●●● kingdom This Gaueston ●●● banished hence by the Kings father was in ●●● times exil'd but at his third ●●●rne Guy ●●● Watwick took him in Warwick Castle ●●● his head to be snore off which so inraged the ●●●●●●●●ing King that bee vowed reuenge vpon all ●●● Lords others who were the causers of Gauest● death in the meane space Robert Bruce King Scots gaue King Edward a mighty ouer●●● place cal'd Bannocksbourne where the English ●●● their confederates Hollanders Brabanders ●●● landers Flemings Picards Gascognes ●●● mans Poloiners wer in number ooooo ●●● foot yet were discomfited with the losse of 5000 ●●● the King in great danger to be taken famine foul and pestilence at once afflicted England so that ●●● ple did eat one another halfe-aliue and the ●●● scarce able to bury the deed The King prepares for reuenge against his Lords for Gaueston ●●● Hugh Dispencer from meane estate to be ●●● Chamberlaine The King caused 2● of his ●●● suffer death diuers ●●●●●● He makes a second ●●● against Scotland ●●●● againe with great ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● This was the miserable ●●● this King who was deposed the Spencers ●●● Edward reign'd 19 years 7 months and 17 days EDWARD THE IIJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND IN Peace and War my Stars auspicious stood False Fortune stedfast held her wauering wheele I did reuenge my Fathers butcher'd blood I forced France my furious force to feele I warr'd on Scotland with triumphing Steele Afflicting them with slaughtering Sword and Fire That Kingdome then diuided needs must reele Betwixt the Bruces and the Balliols ire Thus daily still my glory mounted higher With black Prince Edward my victorious Sonne Vnto the top of honour wee alpire By manly Princely worthy actions done But all my Triumphs fortunes strength and force Age brought to death death turn'd to a Coarse Anno 1327 Ianuary 25 Saturday Edward the 3 being borne at Windsor being 15 yeers old was crowned by Walter Reignolds Arcbishop of Canterbury ● in his 2 yeere Edward his Father was murthred The Court in those daies was seldome without a vipē for as Gaueston was the forerūner of the Spencers in ambition rapine pride and confusion So the Spencers were the
sword or Royall Scepter being a most vnfortunate Prince in all his worldly attempts the Peers in England bandied factions against each other the Duke of York claimed the Crowne the cōmons of Kent vnder the leading of their captiain lack Cade being in number 50000 came to London the Rebels murdered the Bishop of Sali bury and beheaded the Lord Say at the standard in Cheape the King was taken prisoner by the Duke of Yorke at the bartell of Saint Albans the French with 15000 men landed at Sandwich spoyled the Towne fierd it stew the Maior with all in authority there and likewise hauing burnt and pillaged many other places in De●on●●●●shire and the West they departed Queene Margaret the wife to King Henry the 6 met the Duke of Yorke with an Army neere Wakefield where the victory fell to the Queen the Duke being slaine with his son the Earle of Rutland and many others Thus for the space of 60 yeeres the three Kings Henries the 4,5 and 6 kept the Crowne in the Lancastrian line the house of Yorke got the soueraignty King Henry hauing reign'd 38 yeers ● months 4 daies he was ouercome by King Edward at a place called Mortimers Crosse neere Ludlow more of this vnfortunate Prince shall be spoken in the reigne of the next King Edward EDWARD THE IIIJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND c. I Yorkes great heire by fell domesticke Warre Inthroaned was vn-King'd and re-inthroan'd Subiecting quite the house of Lancaster Whilst wofull England ouer-burthen'd groan'd Old Sonlesse Sires and Childlesse Mothers moan'd These bloody broyles had lasted three score yeares And till the time we were in peace attoan'd It walked fourescore of the Royale Peeres But age and time all earthly things out-weares Through terrours horrors mischiefe and debate By trult by treason by hopes doubts and feares I got I kept I left and Lost the State Thus as disposing heauens doe smile or frowne So Cares or Comforts wait vpon a Crowne Edward the fourth was Earle of March some and heire to Richard Duke of Yorke sonne to Richard Earl of Cambridge s●nto Edmund of langley ●●● of York 4 sento Edward the 3 King of England This King Edward the fourth Was borne at Roane is Normandy and in the yeere 1461 the 29 of Iune hee●● crowned at Westminister by the hands of Thomas Bourgchier Arcbishop of Canterbury Henry the fixt hauing a great power in the Nor●● was ●●● and encountred by King Edward neere Towton on Palmssunday where bet●●●xt the two Kings was fought a●●●● battell which continued ten houers in which cruell conflict the English ground dranke the sangkired ●●●● of ●●● 37000 of her naturall englishmen after ●●●●●●●●●● as Hexam by the Lord Montracute King Henry was again put to fight with great lesse be was afterward●●● disquid'd ●●●●●isoned ●● the Towre of London Edward new supposed all was well his minde was on m●●ruj● wherefore he sent Richard Neuill The great King ●● ker Ex●le of Warwich into France so treate forth Lady Bona sister to the French Quene but with meane space King Edward prou●ed himselfe man home and was married to the Lady Elizabeth Gray ●●● match was so deslatefull to Warwick that hee ●●●●●● fals aff from King Edward after which he took the King Prisoner but he escaping againe fled beyend the Saw The Earle of Warwick tooke King Henry out of the T●●nt and caused him againe to be crowned King Edward landed agains in England at Bornet s●ld tra 〈…〉 London his Army was met by the Earles of Warwick and Oxford King Henry being them againe ●●●●●●● s●●er where was fought a fierce battell where Edward was Vector the Earle of Warwicke with ●●●● N●●●● men were slaint● and comment on eath sides 10000 King Henry was againe committed to the Tonre Edward Prince of Wales the son of Henry the first was●●● the battel of Tewxbury murdred by Richard ●●● of Gloecether Soon after the bastard Lord ●●● vaised an Army of 17000 men against King Edward but the bastard was soons supprest and the most ●●●●● King Edward the fixt freed from his long●●● being murdred by the bloody hands of Richard ●●● of Glocester The King b●●ing through must ●●● ●●● peacs ●●● himselfe ●●●●●● Iane Shore his Combine ●●● pleasures were mixed with greife for his ●●● George Duke of Clarence who was ●●● of Malmsey the Towre of London 1475. ●●● of Scotland threatned was against England Richard Duke of Glocester was some against the Scots ●●●●●● king Edward ●●● haning ●●● Aprill 9 1483 ●●● at Windsor EDWARD THE V KING OF ENGLAND AND FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND IF birth if beauty innocence and youth Could make a Tyrant feele one sparke of grace My crooked Vncle had beene mou'd to ruth Beholding of my pitty-pleading face But what auailes to spring from roy all Race What suerty is in beauty strength or wit What is command might eminence and place When Treason lurkes where Maiesty doth sit My haplesse selfe had true false proofe of it Nipt in my bud and blasted in my bloome Depr●'d of life by murther most vnfit And for three Kingdoms could not haue one tombe Thus Treason all my glory ouer-topt And ●●● the Fruit could spring the Tree was lop't Edward the fifth borne in the Sanctuary at Westminster Sonne of King Edward the fourth beganne his short reigne ouer the Real●●● of England at the age of ●3 yeeres but ●●y the cunning dealing of Richard ' Duke of Gloucester his vnnaturall Vnckle he was neuer crowned ●●● young King with his younger brother Richard Duke of Yorke was at London with his mother and in the guidance of his Vnckle by the mothers side named Sir Anthony Wooduill Lord Riuers but by the ●●● and crafty dealing of the Duke of Glouster all the Queene kindred were remoued from the King and the Lord Riuers sent from Northampton to Pomfret with others whence they were imprisoned and beheaded The protector Richard hauing the King in his keeping and power his onely ●yn●● was next how to get into his hands ●●● person of Richard Duke of Yorke the Kings brother whom the Queene their mother kept close in the Sanctuarie at Westminster which Prince was gotten from the said Sanctuary by the ●● till plots and perswation of the Lord protector and the Duke of Buckingham The poore innocent Lambs being as it were put into the greedy Iawes of the Wolfe their rauenous Vnckle for safegard and protection and at the first approach of Richard Duke of York into his Vnckles presence he was entertained in all seeming reuerence with a Iudas kisse by his Vnckle The Duke of Buckingham was promised by the Protector for his trusty seruices to him in helo●●● him to the person of this Prince and for his future seruices to ayde him in his vnlawsfull attaining the Crowne of England that Gloucesters Sonne should be married to Buckinghams daughter and netball that Buckingham should haue the Earledome of Hertford with many other
golden promises which were neuer performed but with the taking of Buckinghams head at sha●●●●● after specified Now mischiefe beganne to 〈…〉 the Queene was accused of sorcery by the Potector Hastings Lord Chamberlaine was beheaded suddenly without either crime or ●●● in the Towre Poore Iane Shore was also taken and carried to the Towre her goods to the vallue of 3000 ma● kes were seazedon and confiscate to the vse of the Protector She was a woman hauing many good parts and howsoeuer by the command of King Edward the fourth and her owne fra●●● shee fell into ●●● with the King ●●● she was euer inclined and did much good and cannot be taxed in Histories for doing any man hurt The King and his brother were both standred with bastard Duke of Gloucester was proclaimed King which ●●● much modelly he refused though hee meant with all his ●●●●● to take it Anno 1483. RICHARD THE IIJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND c. AMbition's like vnto quenchlesse thirst Ambition Angels threw from Heauen to Hell Ambition that infernall Hag accurst Ambitiously made me aspire rebell Ambition that damned Necromanticke Spell Made me clime proud with shame to tumble down By bloody murther I did all expell Whose right or might debard me from the Crown My smiles my gifts my fauours or my frowne Were fain'd corrupt vile flattry death and spite By cruell Tyranny I gat renowne Till Heau'n iust Iudge me iustly did require By blood I won by blood I lost the throne Detested liu'd dy'd lou'd bewail'd of none Anno 1483 June 22. Richard Duke of Glocester the 3 some of Richard Duke of Yorke the 3 Duke of Glocester and third of that name King of England Is tyranny and vsurpation griped the Scepter of the kingdome after hee he had proclaimed his Nephewes Bastardy his brother the deceased King Edward the fourths scandall and accused his own mother of adultry making his way to the Regality by the murther of his two innocent Nephewes which murther was committed by the bands of Sir Iames Tirrell Knight and one Myles Forrest and Iohn Dighton which villains murthered then in their bed and buried them beneath a paire of staires vnder an heape of stones in the Towne and in that ledging which in memory of that blanke deed is first named the bloody Towre their bodies were taken ● and againe buried obscurely no man knoweswhere By these means hauing gotten the Goale God ●●●●red his reigne to be his perpetuall sormens ●●●●● without and continuall horrory within the murtherers had part of their payment in this world for Myles Fo●rest ●otted aboue ground peece meale in S t Martins Str Iames Tirrell was executed for treason on the Towre-hill Dighton liu'd a hatted miscreant both of God and man the Duke of Buckingham though innocent of dthe murther yet hee suppresse the young Princes and raised the Tyrant and his end was the losse of his head at Salisbury Shortly after the Diuine iustice began to fall heauy vpon King Richard many of the Nobility and Gentrie for sooke him and fled into Britaine in France to Henry Earle of Richmond who was the onely heyre to the English crowne of the Line of the house of Lancaster king Richard in the dangers would haue procured a most wicked safety by marr●ing the Lady Elizabeth eldest daughter is his deceased brother King Edward the fourth the only inheritix of the house of York lawfull heyre to the Crowne but Gods prouidence and the Ladies vertue with stood that incestuous match shortly after Henry of Richmond arriued at Milford hauen in Wales where his Army encreasing met Richard at Redmere field neere Posworth seuen miles from Leicester where Richard vahautly fighting was slaine 1485 August 23 and was buried at Leycester HENRY THE VIJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND ●Was the man by Gods high grace assign'd ●That for this restlesse Kingdome purchas'd rest ●ork and Lancaster in one combin'd ●● sundred had each other long opprest ●● strength and policy th' Almighty blest ●● good successe from first vnto the last ●● high ●houab turned to the best ● orld of perills which my youth o're past ●● white and red Rose I conioyned fast ●sacred Marriages coniugall band ●●ytors tam'd and treason stood agast ●● strong guarded by my Makers hand ●nglory and magnificence I raign'd And fame loue and a tombe was all I gain'd Anno Dom. 1485 August 22 Monday Henry of that name the seuenth King of England was Earle of Richmond borne in Pembroke-Castle in Wales sonne of Edmund of Hadham Earle of Richmond Sonne of Owen Theodore and Queene Katherin the French King daughter late wife to King Henry the sist was crowned at Westminster the 30 day of October by the bands of Thomas Bourghchier Archbishop of Conterbury this Prince was wise valsant and fortunate Through many perals hazards he had past his life and attained the Royalty of Englands throne and with much prudence and mu●●●ble fortitude be gouerned this Land Maugre many dangerous attempts and treacherom consp●acses plott●● against hun and his designes had such ausptcsous euents thus still hee was victori●●● ouer surre●gne cuall and 〈…〉 troubles One Lambest Simnei a Bakers sonne claimed the crowns countersetting in●●●else to be Edward Earle of Warwicke sonne of George Duke of Clarence Some write that ●●e assumed to bee one of king Edward the fourthes sonne which was murthered in the Toure howsoeuer Hambert gat into Ireland and in Christ Church in Dublin was crowned King of England and Ireland hee with an Armie landed at Fowdrey in Lancashire but King Henry met him and at the battell of Stoke he took him prisoner pardon'd him his life and gaue him a turn-spits place in his kitchen and after maue him one of his saulkners Lambert was net long supprest but another of his stamp supphes his roome of a rebellious imposture Peter or Perkin Warbecke the sonne of a Iew borne in Torney claimed the Crowne by the counterfest stile of Richard Second sonne to King Edward the fourth Perkin gat into England and after into Scotland where ●●● preuailed that he was married to the Lady Katherin Gordon the Earle of Huntleys daughters K. Iames the fourths kinsnman the rebels in Kent were ouen thwone and their Captante the Lord Audley taken and beheaded Perkin came out of Scotland and moues the ●●● men to ayae him King Henry net ouercame and ●●● and pardon ' him another counterfest a shoemakers son named Ralph Milford ●●● the Crowne and purchast'd a balter Perkin Warback Sica from the King and againe was taken and executed as Tyburnc King Henry gaue his daughter the Lady Margaret in ●●● to Iames ●●e fourth King of Scotland Arthur Prince of Wales the eldest Sonne of Henry Married with the Lady Katherin daughter to the King of Spaine but the Prince dyed ●●● after The King gathered a ●●● masse of money to the general grieuance of the subiects he had three font Arthur Henry
Edmund and foure daughters Margaret Elizabeth Mary and Katherin reigned 23 yeeres 8 moneths dyed at Richmond buried at Westminster in the most ●●● Chappell of his owne building 1508. HENRY THE VIIJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND TO both the Royall Houses I was Heyre I made but one of long contending twaine This realme diuided drooping in despaire I did rebind in my auspicious Raigne I banisht Romish Vsurpation vaine In France I Bullen Turwin Turney Wan The Stile of Faiths Defender I did gaine Sixe wiues I had three An's two Kates one lane In my expences Royall beyond measure Striuing in Noble Actions to exceede Accounting Honour as my greatest Treasure Yet various fancies did my frailty feede I made and marr'd I did and I vndid Till all my Greatnesse in Graue was hid Anno Dom. 1509 Aprill 22 Sunday Henry the eight with his beautcous queen ●●●dy Catherin who had bin before the wife of his ●●● borhter Prince Arthur on Sunday the 25 of Iune were both crowned King Queen of England ●●● minster by the bvnds of William Warham ●●● bishop of Canterbury He entre France wish as and was the strong Towns of Terwin and Tumay● valiant King lames the sourth of scotland ●●● land with a great Host and was met and sought ●●● by the Noble Lord Thomas Howard Earle●●● and at a place called Flodden in Northumber king lames vailiantly fighting was ●●● Bishops 2 Abbots 12 Earles 17 Lords and ● common Soldiers Thomas Wolsey from mea●● some say the sonne of a Butcher in Ipswich by ● mounted to the tope Fortunes wheel ●●● to be a scholem after next a seruant to the Treas● Callis 3 to be one of the Kings chaplainer 4 the ●● Almoner 5 he was made Deane of Linco●●e 6 ●●● chosen for priuy Councellour 7 be was ●●● shop of Tornay 8 after that Archbishops of Yorke ●● ated Cardinall 10 ne was Lord Chancellor 11 ●●● all these boneurs at once with the Bishoprick of ●●● ster Worcester Bathe Heresord ●●● Saint Albans Lastly all these ●●● which in many yeeres hee attained were in a●●● the kings displeasure and his own ●●● lost The King had the Title of Defender of the ●●● from Rome neuer was any King of England ●●● nificent hee was visited three times by the ●●● and one of them Maximillian serued ●●●●●● warres in France the other Charles ●●● England so likewise did the King of Denmarke● Queene who all were most Royalty entertained King Henry wa●●he first of the English King ●●tuled ●●● himselfe King of Ireland In the ●●● Citie of Rome was taken by the French Clement with 23 cardinak● imprisoned ● moneths King Henry and thepope fell at●●● that the King caused● all ●●●● obedience to ●● den and in the tempest of histurie seased ●●●● power in These his Dominiens ●●●● to him ●●● Land hauing too long borne the ●● of Antichristian Tyramny for the which ●●● King caused to bee suppressed in England and 283 ●●● 215 Pr●ries 108 ●●●●●● 84 colleages 9 cells and 103 Hospitals Henry reigned 37 years 9 moneths and ●●● 28 of January 1546 buried at Windsor EDWARD THE VI KING OF ENGLAND FRANCE and IRELAND Desender of the Faith c. ●●● Seem'd in wisedome aged in my youth ●●● A Princly patterne I reform'd the time ●●● With zeale and courage I maintain'd Gods truth ●●d Christian faith 'gainst Antichristian crime ●●● Father did begin l●in my prime ●●h Baal and Beltall from this Kingdome droue With concords true harmonious heauenly chime ●●●'d be said and sung Gods truth and loue ●●● vertue vnto vertue still I stroue ●●●'d beloued both of God and men ●●y soule vnto her Maker soar'd aboue ●●●y earthly part return'd to earth agen Thus Death my faire proceedings did preuent And Peeres and People did my loffe lament Anno Dom. 1546 Ianuary 28 Thursday Edward the 6 borne at Hampton Court the only son and Heire to King Henry the 8 at 9 yeers of age began his reigne ouer this kingdome hee was crowned the 27 day of February 1547 at Westminster by the hands of Thomas Cranmer Arcbishop of Canterbury his vnkle by the mother side Edward Earle of Hestford and Duke of Somerset was gouernomy of his person and kingdome This King was a second losias inreforming many errors on the Church he was contracted to the Lady Mary this young Queene of Scotland daughter and sole beyre to King Iames the fi●●t mother to our late King Iames deceased and Grandmother to our gracious Someraigne King Charles now reigning but some ●●● spirits brake of the match which caused much blood shed for the Duke of Somerset entred Scotland with a strong Army whom the Scottish Nobit●●● with their powers met at a place neere Musklebrough where was sought a fierce and sharpe battell where many men at ●●● on both sides but in the end the victory tell to be English us the meane space the young Queene was conveyed into France where afterward she ●●● the Dolphin Rebellion in Cornewall commotion in Norfolke descention in many places and lastly in the Northren parts of England some striu●ng to bold vp the rotten fragments of Romish Religion some seeking lawlesse liberty to haue all things in command to lay open all enclosures so that much mischief was done and at last ended with executions of the slaughter and executions of many of the Rebels in diuers places of this Las●●i Malice and mischiefe had no sooner done amongst the Commons but they thrust themselues amongst the Nobilsty The Lord Protector procured or tollerated his brother the Lord Thomas Seimer to be beheaded and shortly after himselfe followed the same way whose death was much bewailed by the poore Commons and the King neuer ha● he heath or ioy after the deathes of both his Vnkles This hopefull France was endued with wisdom farre about his yeeres he was tearned and a louer of learning he was exceedingly delighted in reading the Scriptures he was iust merestull ●●●ing and beloued hee ended his late at Greenwich fifth day of Iuly Anno 1552 in the fix entbyeere at his age when he had reigned sixe yeeres nine months eight dayes He was buried at westminster MARY QVEENE OF ENGLAND FRANCE and IRELAND Desender of the Faith c. NO sooner I possest the Royall Throne But true Religion straight was dispossest Bad Councell caus'd Rome Spaine and I as one To persecute to martyr and molest All that the vnstain'd truth of God profest All such as dar'd oppugne the pow'rfull Pope With grieuous tortures were opprest and prest With Axes Pire and Faggot and the Rope Scarce any Land beneath the Heauenly Cope Afflicted was as I caus'd this to bee And when my Fortunes were in highest hope Death at the fiue yeeres end arrested mee No Bale would serue I could command no ayd But I in prison in my graue was laid Anno. Dom. 1553 Iuly 6 Thursday Queene Mary was borne at Creenwich elder daughter to King Henry the eight and sister
at the age 36 yeeres 9 monethe and 5 daies hee was crowned Westminster with his wife Queene Anne by the ●●● of Iohn Whitguist Archbishop of Canterbury The●● was a conspiracy to surprise the King and insorce him to grant a tolleration of Religion but the plot was discoue●● and the offenders were some executed some otherwise by the King elemency banished and imprisoned with good competency of meanes allowed them This king was a King of Peace and with all victorious for he did ●●● then his predecesser King Henry the 7 th who ioyned ●● Roses of Lancaster and Yorke But King Iames ●●● happily ioyned kingdomes vniting England and Scotland into one glorious Monarchy by the name and ●●● Great Britaine Anno 1605 Nouember 5 the ●●● de-plot of perdition was but by the mercy of the Almighty ●● a mis-taken deliuerie of a Letter and the deepe wisedome of the King the horrid Treason was ●●● preuented and the Traitours confounded in their ●●●●●●ked deuices King Iames was so crowned and ●●● that Germany Polland Sweaueland Russia France Spaine Holland Zealand the Arch-Duke of Austria the estate and S●●gmory of Venice The great Duke of Florence all these Princes and Potentates did ●●● Ambassadors into England to hold Amity and ●●● with King Iames. Amongst Kings he was the ●●● mirrour of Learning the Patterne and Patron of piety ●● pittie such a sweet and well composed mixture of Iustice and mercy was inuated in his Royall brest that ●●●●●● truth did meet kisse and combine together all the ●●● his most auspicious reigne like a second Sallomon gouernment was blest with peace and plenty so that be ●●● iustly be stiled vnder God The Peace-maker of ●●● Christendome and the louing father and preseruer of ●●● own people Realmes and Dominions his life was generally beloued and his death as much lamented which was ●●● of March being Sunday there being but 2 daies differ●●● or ods betwixt the accompt of the beginning and ending of his reigne for he began the 24 of March 1602 ●●● the 27 of March 1625. Two Tuesdaies were ●●nate to him for on a Tuesday the 5 of August 1602 ●● escaped a dangerous conspiracy of the Earle Cowries and on Tuesday the 5 of Nouember 1605 he wis●h of that could be called his was preferred from that Great master piece of Satan the Powder Treason and as ●● Sat●rday ●●● the 8 of May 1603 he was receiued within ioy ●●● London so on Saterday the 8 of May 1625 ●●● with grise buried at Westminster CHARLES Of that Name THE FIRST And II. Monarch of the whole Iland of GREAT BRITAINE KING OF ENGLAND SCOTLAND FRANCE and IRELAND Gods immediate VICEGERENT Supreame HEAD c. ●●●●strious Off-spring of most glorious Stems Our happy hope our Royall CHARLES the great ●●● Heyre to foure Rich Diadems With gifts of Grace and Learning high ●epleat ●●● thee th' Almighties ayd I doe intreate ●●● guide and prosper thy proceedings still ●●●●● long thou maist suruiue a Prince compleat ●●● guard the good and to subuert the ill ●●● when thy ●●● determin'd boundlesse will Thy mortall part shall made immortall be ●●●● let thy liuing Fame the world full fill ●●● bles●ed famous memory of thee And all true Britaines pray to God aboue To match thy life and fortune with their loue STEWART● CHARLES MARIE Anagramma Christ Arme vs E●● AT AL Though fe●●ds and men to ●●●● should endeuer Against their force AT AL CHRIST ARME VS EVER Anno. Dom. 1625-March 27. Sunday The ●● sall ●●●●●●●●●●●●● kingdomes hauing ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● full Iames ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● eternall Our Royall Charles the ●●● heire of his blessed Fathers Crowne and vertues ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● Westminster by the hands of the Right Reue●●nd fahter in God ●●●●●●●●●●● Iohn Williams ●●● new present Lord Bishop of Lincolne and Deane of Westminister He is Charles the first of that name and second Monarch of great Britaine ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● Vicegerent and God is his ●●●● Seueraigne he is Defender of the True ●●●● Apotlolicasll and Christian I ●●●● and that faith is his shield against all his bedily and ghostly enemies in the first yeare of his reigne he married with the illustrious and vertuous Princesse Henneretta Maria daughter to that admired Mirrer and Mars of martiallilis of Henry the 4 th the French King last of that name vopn the 22 day of Iune 1625 shee safely arrived ●●●●●● in Kent where the King stay'd till ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● and to both their ioyes and the ●●●● of this kingdome he enioyed and enioyes her This Noble P●●●ce was borne the 19 th of Nouember A no 1602 he was second and youngest Sonne to king Iames the ●●● of Scotland and first of that name of England Our last ●●● Soueraigne In the yeere 1623 ●●● into Spaine priuately and by Gods gracious assistance came backe safely from thence the 26 or October in the some yeere whose safe returne all true hearted Britaines did and doe esteem ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● and happy blessing his elemency ●●●● is manifest his Royall end princely en●●● are ample ●●● his same and Magnificenceis ●●●● sall The graces and cardinall vertues haue ●●●●●●●●●●●● taken ●●● their habitatiens in his Heroick and Mag●●●●●● brest ●●● may hee with his gracious Queene reigne our these his Dominions to the glo●●●●● of God and the good of this famous Iland with the rest of his Territories and to the ioy and comfort of his ●●● Amen ALIVING SADNES INDVTY CONSECRATED TO THE IMMORtall memory of our late Deceased all-beloued Soueraigne LORD the Peerelesse Paragon of Princes IAMES King of great Britaine France and Ireland who departed this Life at his Manour of Theobalds on Sunday the 27. of March 1625. TO THE MOST HIGH AND PVISSENT Prince CHARLES by the Grace of GOD the first of that name and second Monarch of the whole Iland of Great BRITAINE HIS VNDOVBTED ROYALTIES BEING VNITED VNDER one and the same his most glorious Crowne the Kingdomes of England Scotland France and Ireland Gods Immediate Vice-Gerent Supreme head of all Persons and Defender of the true ancient Christian Faith in these his Empires and Dominions MOst Mighty Monarch of this mourning Land Vpon the knees of my submissiue mind I begge acceptance at your Royall hand That my lamenting Muse may fauour finde My Gracious Master was so good so kinde So iust so much beloued neere and sarre Which generally did Loue and Duiy binde From all and from me in particular But as your Maiesty vndoubted are The Heire vnto his Vertues and his Crowne I pray that whether Heauen send Peace or Warre You likewise may inherit his Renowne And as Death strucke his Earthly Glory downe Left you in Maiesty and mourning Chiefe Yet through the World apparantly 't is knowne Your Sorrow is an vniuersall Griefe Let this recomfort then your Princely heart That in this Duty all men beares a part Your Maiesties most humble and obedient Subiect and Seruant IOHN TAYLOR A Funerall Elegie vpon King IAMES YOu gushing Torrents
Sir Iohn Wats Clothworker Lord Maior gaue to Christ Church Hospitall ten pound ●● to the Hospitall of S. Thomas in Southwarke●tic pound King Ioses our most gracious Soueraigne was made a Irec ● of the Worshipfull Company of Clothworkers Sir Iohn ●●● being then Lord Maior who seasted his Marestie Sir Wis●● Knight being then Master of the Company at which ● the King gaue a Guist of two brace of Buckes to the said Company yearely for euer to bee spent at their feast in their ●●●● Richard Faringdon Clothworker and Aldermangaue to the seuerall Hospitals in London and the Suburbs 66. pound 13. shillings 4d Sir William Stone Clothworker gaue to the ●●rall Prisons in London 50 pound Lady Barbara Stone wife to the forenamed Sir William Stone gaue to the Hospitall of Christ church one hundred pounds Lady Spencer wife to Sir Iohn Spencer clothworker gaue to the seuerall Hospitals 20. pound William Lambe Esquire free of the Company Clothworkers and one of the Gentlemen of the Chappell to King Henry the 8. built a Free Grammer Schoole at Sutton Valence in Kens where he was borne allowing yearely for euer to the Master of the said Schoole twenty pound and to the Vsher ten pound Also he built sixe Alemet-houses there with Gardens and Orchards and ten pound yearely to each of them foreuer Besides he gaue to the Free Schoole at Maidstone in Kent ten pound yearely for euer which he appointed to bee bestowed onely vpon ●● children who were destitute of friends and ●courlesse Also hee bestowed three hundred pound for the vse of decayed Clothiers in the countie ●●●● of Suffolke and in the Townes of Bridg●●●le and Ludlow Moreouer hee built two conduits in London one at Holbourne Bridge and the other on the Hill towards New Gate ●oth of which cost 1500 pounds at which time ●●gaue 120. new Pailes to so many poore wo●● to beare Water withall Moreouer hee gaue thirty pound a yeare to his Company for euer and 4. pounds yearely to a Minister for 4. Sermons and 301. yearely for euer to be bestowed on twelue poore men and twelue poore women each of them to haue a Freeze Gowne one Lockerom shirt or smocke one paire of winter shooes which guist is yearely distributed on the first of October he also gaue to the poore of Saint Giles Parish without Cripplegate fifteene pound To the poore of the Company of Stationers hee gaue sixe pounds thirteene shillings 4d yearely for euer to be bestowed euery Friday in the Parish of S. Faiths on twelue poore people twelue pence in bread and twelue pence in money He gaue to Christs Hospitall Sixe pounds yearely for euer and 100. pound in readie money present Hee gaue to S. Thomas Hospitall 4. pounds yearely for euer and to poore Maides marriage hee gaue 20. pounds besides Newgate Ludgate the two Comptors in London the Marshalsea the Kings Bench and the White Lyon had all most louing tasts of his Charitable liberalitie and in conclusion he gaue 108. Gownes to poore aged people at his Funerall This was a Lambe whose like was neuer any Whose loue and pitty fed and cloth'd so many And'sis no doubt but these good deeds of his Did helpe to lift his soule to endlesse Blisse Master Iohn Berriman of Byshops Tannton in the Countie of Deuonshire Clothier and free Draper of London gaue to the Hospitall of Christ Church 100. pounds to S Bartholomews 5 pounds to S. Thomas Hospitall 6. pounds to Bridewell 40. shillings and to the Hospitall of Bethlehem 50. pounds Peter Blundell Clothier gaue to Christ-Church Hospitall 500. pounds to Saint Bartholomewes Hospitall 250. pounds to Saint Thomas Hospitall 250. pounds to Bridewell 8. pounds yearely for euer to the Reparation of the Church at Tiuerton where he was borne fiftie pounds towards the mending of High-wayes one hundred pounds to the twelue Companies in London to euery of them one hundred and fiftie pound to poore Maides marriages in Tiuerton foure hundred pound to the poore at Exeter hee gaue nine hundred pound to build a Grammar-schoole at Tiuerten 2400.l and after layd out by his Executors one thousand pound to the Schoole-master fiftie pounds yearely for euer to the Vsher 13. pound 6. shillings 8. pence yearely to the Clarke 40. shillings yearely to place foure poore boyes yearely Apprentises twenty pounds per annum to keepe 3. Schollers at Oxford and three at Cambridge 2000. pound Robert Chilcot seruant to the aforesaid M r. Blundell gaue to Christs Hospitall 100. pound towards a meauer Schoole to haue Children taught to be fit for his Masters Grāmer schoole he gaue 400. pound to maintaine it he gaue 90. pound allowing the Scholemaster yearely 20. l. the Clarke 3. pound and toward Reparations 40. shillings per annum to fifteene poore men he gaue sixteene pounds 10. shillings a yeare for euer to 15. poote labouring men 15. pound to 15. poore people weekely sixe pence each for euer to mend the Church at Tiuerton 19. pound ten shillings to mend High wayes ten pounds and to other charitable vles more then is mentioned Thus hath it pleased God that these men whose trades and liuings were deriued from the poore Sheepes backe haue not onely growne to great wealth and places of honour but haue bin also great Instruments of the Almightles mercy in relieuing the needie and impotent members of Christ should I reckon vp the particulars of profits that arise from this Beast to Graziers Butchers Skinners Glouers Felmongers Leather sellers Feltmongers Taylors and an infinite number of other Trades and Functions who could not liue or else liue very hardly without this Commoditie I say should I write of these things in particular my worke would neuer bee done in generall Wooll hath beene formerly in such esteeme in England that in Parliament holden the 36. of Edward the 3 the King had his Subiects payd him in Wooll and before that in the eleuenth yeare of his Raigne it was forbidden to be transported out of this Kingdome and then did strangers come ouer hither from diuers parts beyond the Seas who were Fullers Weauers and Clothworkers whom the King entertained and baro all their charges out of his Exchequer at which time the Staples or places of Merchandize for Wools were kept at diuers places of this Land at once as at Newcastle Yorke Lincolne canterbury Norwich Westminster Chichester Winchester Exeter Bristoll and carmarthen by which may bee perceiued what a great commodity Wooll was in those dayes But in the 6. yeare of King Edward the 4. the King sent certaine Sheep out of Cotswold in Glocester shire into Spaine the encrease of which so enriched the Spaniards with our Wooll that euer since it hath beene in the lesse request in England neuerthelesse as it is it is the means of life and maintainance for many hundred thousands Here fokoweth a touch of paultry Scabbed and infectious kinds of Sheepe which I thinke sit to place by themselues in the lagge end of my Booke as
at my returne which now I haue performed not out of any malice but because I would be as good as my word with him Thus crauing you to reade if you like and like as you lift I leaue you a Booke much like a pratling Gossip full of many words to small purpose Yours as you are mine IOHN TAYLOR TAYLORS TRAVELS From the Cittie of LONDON in England to the Cittie of PRAGVE in Bohemia WITH The manner of his abode there three Weekes his Obseruations there and his returne from thence AS ALSO How hee past 600. Miles downe the Riuer of Elue through Bohemia Saxonie Anhalt the Byshopricke of Magdenburg Brandenburg Hamburgh and so to England With many Relations worthy of note I Came from Bohem yet no newes I bring Of busines 'twixt the Keysar and the King My Muse dares not ascend the lofty staires Of state or write of Princes great affaires And as for newes of battels or of War Were England from Bohemia thrice as far Yet we doe know or seeme to know more heere This was is or will be euer knowne there At Ordinaries and at Barbar-shops There tidings vented are as thicks as hops Hyu many thousand such a day were slaine What men of more were in the battle ta'us When where and how the bloody fight begun And ●●● such scences and such Townes were won How so and so the Armies brauely met And which side glorious victorie did get The moneth the weeks the day the very hours And ●●● they did oppose each others powre These things in England prating fooles dee chatter When all Bohemia knowes of no such matter For all this Summer that is gone and past Vntill the first day of October last The armies neuer did together meet Nor scorce their eye-sight did each other greet The fault is neither in the foot or horse Of the right valiant braue Bohemian force From place to place they daily seeke the foe They march and remarch watch ward ride run goe And grieuing so to waste the time away Thirst for the hazard of a glorious day But still the Enemy doth play boe peepe And thinkes it best in a whole skin to sleepe For neither martiall policie or might Or any meanes can draw the foe to fight And now and then they conquer speele and pillage Some for thatcht houses or some pelting Village And to their trenches run away againe Where they like Foxes in their holes remaine Thinking by lingring out the warres in length To weaken and decay the Beamish strength This is the newes which now I meane to books He that will needs haue more must needs goe looke Thus leauing warres and matters of high state To those that dare and knowes how to relate I 'le onely write how I past heere and there And what I haue obserued euery where I 'le truely write what I haue heard and eyed And those that will not so be satisfied I as I meet them will some tales deuise And fill their eares by word of mouth with lies THe Mouth that beares a mighty Emp'rers name Augustus bight I passed downe the streame Friday the fourth just sixteene hundred twenty Full Moone the signe in Pisees that time went I The next day being Saturday a day Which all Great Brittaine well remember way When all with thankes doe annually combine Vntoth ' Almighty maiesty diuine Because that day in a most happy season Our Soueraigne was preseru'd from Gouties treason Therefore to Churches people doe repaire And offer sacrifice of praise and prayer With Bels and be●fires euery towne addressing And to our gracious King their loues expressing On that day when in euery nooke and angle Fa●gets and banins smoak'd and bels did ●angle Onely at Graues end why I cannot tell There was no sparke of fire or sound of bell Their ●eepls like an instrument unstrung Seem'd as I wish all scolds without a tongue Their bonfires colder then the greatest frost Or chiller then their charities almost Which I perceiuing said I much did muse That Graues-end did forget the thankefull vse Which all the townes in England did obserue And cause I did the King of Britaine serue I and my fellow forour Masters sake Would neere the water side ab●fire make With that a Scotchman Tompson by his name Bestowed foure forgets to encrease the flame At which to kindle all a Graues-end Baker Bestowed his baui●e and was our partaker We eighteene feete from any house retir'd Where we a Iury of good Faggots fir'd But e're the flames or scarce the smoake began There came the fearefull shadow of a man The Ghost or Image of a Constable Whose franticke actions downeright dance-stable Arm'd out of France and Spaine with Bacchus bounty Of which there 's plenty in the Kentish County His addle coxcombs with tobacco puff'd His guts with ●●● full bumbasted and stuff'd And though halfe blind yet in a looking glasse He could perceiue the figure of an Asse And as his slauering chaps non since did flutter His breath like to a jakes a ●●● did vtter His legs indenting scarcely could beare vp His drunken trunke o'er charg'd with many a cup This riff raff rubbish that could hardly stand Hauing a staffe of office in his hand Came to vs as our fire began to smother Throwing some faggots one way some another And in the Kings name did first breake the peace Commanding that our banfire should succease The Scotchman angry as this rudenesse done The scatlered faggots be againe layd on Which made the ●●my Constable goe to him And punch him on the brest and outrage doe him At which a cuffe or twaine were giuen or lent About the eares which neither did content But then to be are bow fearefull be asse braid With what a hideous noyse be howld for ayde That all the ●●● in Graues-end in one houre Turn'd either good bad strong small sweet or soure And then a kenuell of incarnate currs Hang'd on poore Thompson no like so many burrs Haling him vp the dirty streets all foule Like Diuels pulling a condemned foule The Iaylor like the grand den'● gladly sees And with an itching hope of ●●●s and fees Thinking the Constable and his sweet selfe Might drinke and quaffe with that ill gotten pelfe For why such beunds as these may if they will Vnder the shew of good turne good to ill And with authority the peace first breake With Lordly domineering ●●● the weake Committing oft they care not whom or why So they may exercise themselues thereby And with the Iaylor share both fee and fine Drowning their damned gaine in smoaks and wine Thus hiredings Constables and Iaylors may Abuse the Kings liege people night and day I say they may I say not they doe so And they know best of they doe so or no They hal'd poore Thompson all along the street Tearing him that the ground scarce touch'd his feet Which be perceiuing did request them cease Their rudenesse vowing he would goe in peace He would with quietnesse
I did take And whil'st I liue I le keepe them for his sake Long may his Grace liue to be styl'd a man And then I le steale his bootes too if I can The shooes were vpright shooes and so was he That more them from all harme vpright and free He vs'd them for their vse and not for pride He neuer wrong'd them or e're trode aside Lambskin they were as white as Innocence True patternes for the foot steps of a Prince And time will come as I doe hope in God He that in childhood with these shooes was shod Shall with his manly feet once trample downe All Antichristian foes to his renowne The Citty of Prague hath in it by reason of the wars thrice the number of its owne Inhabitants and yet for all that victuals is in such great plenty that sixe men cannot eate three halfe penny worth of bread and I did buy in the Market a fat Goose well roast for the valew of 9. pence English and I and my brother haue dined there at a Cookes with good roasted meat bread beere so that we haue beene satisfied and left for the va● of fiue pence a good Turky there may bee bought for two shillings and for fresh fish I neuer saw such store for in one market day I haue knowne in Prague 2000. Carps besides other fishes which Carps in London are fiue shillings a piece there they were for 8. pence or 10 pence at the most so that one of their fresh fish markets here were worth at the least 5. or 600. pounds and as for all other manner of wilde fowle they are there in fatiety besides their fruites are in such aboundance that I bought a basket of Grapes of the quantity of halle a pecke for a penny and farthing and a hatfull of faire Peaches for as much pickled cowcombers I haue bought a pecke for three pence and muskmellions there hath beene cast fiue or sixe ca●● load of them in one day to their hogs As concerning the dyet that is in the Kings Armies I could neuer yet heare any man complaine of want but that it is more plentifull then in the Citty the greatest scarcitie hath beene to some sick souldiers who being not able to march with the Leaguers by reason of their weaknesse they haue beene left amongst the Boores or Husbandmen in the next villages where their Languages not vnderstood their succor hath bin but small but for all this in the Campe hath euer bin a continuall cheapenes of all things the King most duely paying his Souldiers at the end of euery month hauing in his great Leaguer vnder the conduct of the Princes of Hollock and Anhalt of foot and horse 43000. and at the least of carts and waggons to carry prouision and baggage for the Army to the number of 18000. In his little Leaguer vnder the leading of Count Mansfelt there are of Foot and Horse 7000 besides Carts and Waggons for carriage and yet for these great numbers of men and beasts there is food in all aboundance In the Campe with Graue Mansfelt is the Brittaine Regiment vnder the Col. Sir Andrew Gray Knight and in Prague I met with many worthy Gentlemen and Souldiers which were there sicke as the worthy Captaine Bushell Lieutenant Grimes Lieutenant Langworth Ancient Galbreath Ancient Vandenbrooke Master Whitney Master Blundell and others all which did most courteously entertaine me vnto whom I must euer rest thankfull and they do affirme that now it hath it pleased God to grant their Souldiers recouerie that they doe hope euery Britaine Souldier doth retaine more good spirit then three enemies of what nation soeuer Thus hauing shewed part of the best things in Bohemia the Court and City of Prague it shall not bee amisse if I relate a little merrily of some things there tolerable some intolerable some naught and some worse then naught for as euery Rose hath a prickle and euery Bee a sting so no earthly Kingdome hath such perfection of goodnesse but it may bee iustly taxed with imperfections PRague is a famous ancient Kingly seate In scituation and in state compleate Rich in aboundance of the earths best treasure Proud and high minded beyond bounds or measure In Architecture stately in Attire Beizonians Ple●beians doe aspire To be apparell'd with the stately port Of Worship Honour or the Royall Court Their Coaches and Caroches are so rise They doe attend on euery trades-mans wife Whose Husbands are but in a meane regard And get their liuing by the Ell or Yard How euer their Estates may bee defended Their wiues like demy Ladies are attended I there a Chimney-sweepers wife haue seene Habilimented like the Diamond Queene Most gaudy garish as a fine Maid-marrian With breath as sweet as any suger carrion With sattin cloak lin'd through with budg or sable Or cunny furre or what her purse is able With veluet hood with tiffanies and purles Rebatees frizlings and with powdred curles And lest her hue or sent should be attainted She 's antidoted well perfum'd and painted She 's fur'd she 's fring'd she 's lac'd and at her wast She 's with a massie chaine of siluer brac'd She 's yallow staach'd and ruff'd and cuff'd and muff'd She 's ring'd she 's braceleted she 's richly tuff'd Her petticote good silke as can be bought Her smock about the tale lac'd round and wrought Her gadding legges are finely Spanish booted The whilst her husband like d a slaue all sooted Lookes like A Courtier to infernall Pluto And knowes himselfe to be a base cornuto Then since a man that liues by Chimney sweepe His wife so gaudy richly clad doth keepe Thinke then but how a Merchants wife may go Or how a Burgamasters wife doth show There by a kinde of topsieturuy vse The women weare the bootes the men the shooes I know not if's be profit or else pride But sure th' are oft'ner ridden then they ride These females seeme to be most valiant there Their painting shewes they doe no colours scare Most Art-like plastring Natures imperfections With sublimated white and red complexions So much for Pride I haue obserued there Their other faults are almost euery where Thus hauing staid in Prague almost 3 weekes I returned from thence homeward on Tuesday the 26. of September hauing in my company a widow and foure small children whose Husband beeing an Englishman and the Kings Brewer for Beere deceased and was buried there in Prague whilst I was there the good desolate woman hauing receiued reward after seuen yeares Seruice there and at Heidelbergh beeing desirous to returne to her Country England came with vs with my brother and my fellow Tilbery We tooke two Coaches at the Castle of Prague and in a day and halfe we were carried 7. Dutch miles to a Towne in Bohemia standing on the riuer of Elue called Leutmeritz at w ch towne we all layd our moneyes together and bought a boat of 48. foot in length and not 3. foote in bredth and because
yeares till you are gone And being gone you 'l wealth and honour win Whilst ryot here at home addes sin to sin You God assisting may doe mighty things Make Kings of Captiues and of Captiues Kings Riches and loue those that suruiue shall gaine And Fame and Heauen the Portion of the slaine The wounds and scars more beautifull will make Those that doe weare them for true honours sake Since God then in his loue did preordaine That you should be his Champions to maintaine His quarrell and his cause● a fig for foes God being with you how can man oppose Some may obiect Your enemies are store If so your fame and victori'es the more Men doe win honour when they cope with men The Eagle will not tryumph o're a Wren The Lyon with the Mouse will not contend Nor men 'Gainst boyes and women wars will bend But clouds of dust and smoake and bloud and sweat Are the maine meanes that will true honour get Thus to Fames altitude must men aspire By noble actions won through sword and fire By trumpets Clangor drums guns flute of fife For as there is an end to euery life And man well knowes that one day he must end it Let him keep 't well defend and brauely spend it O griefe to see how many stout men lye Halfe rotten in their beds before they dye Some by soule surfets some by odious whoring In misery lye stinking and deploring And e're a lingring death their sad life ends They are most tedious loathsome to their friends Wasting in Physicke which addes woe to griefe That which should yeeld their families reliefe At last when wished death their cares doe cure Their names like to their bodies lye obscure Whereas the Souldier with a Christian brest Wars for his Soueraigues peace and Countries rest He to his Makers will his will inclines And ne're gainst Heauen impatiently repines He to his Sauiour sayes that thou art mine And being thou redeem'st me I am thine That if I liue or dye or dye or liue Blest be thy name whether thou take or giue This resolution pierces heauens high roofe And armes a Souldier more then Cannon proofe Suppose his life ends by some noble wounds His Soule to Heauen from whence it came reb●unds Suppose blowne vp with powder vp he flyes Fire his impurity repurifies Suppose a shot pierce through his breast or head He nobly liu'd and nobly he is dead He lyes not bedred stinking nor doth raue Blaspheming against him that should him saue Nor he in Physicke doth consume and spend That which himselfe and others should defend He doth not languish drawing loathsome breath But dyes before his friends doe wish his death And though his earthly part to earth doth passe His fame outweares a Monument of brasse Most worthy Country-men couragious hearts Now is the time now act braue manly parts Remember you are Sonnes vnto such Sires Whose sacred memories the world admires Make your names fearefull to your foes againe Like Talbot to the French or Drake to Spaine Thinke on braue valiant Essex and Mounti●y And Sidney that did Englands foes destroy With noble Norris Williams and the Veeres The Grayes the Willing ●bi●s all peerelesse Peeres And when you thinke what glory they haue won Some worthy actions by you will be done 34. Battels fought in France by Englishmen since the Conquest Henry the sixth Remember Poi●tiers Cressy Agincourt With Bullein Turwin Turnyes warlike sport And more our honours higher to aduance Our King of England was crown'd King of France In Paris thus all France we did prouoake T' obey and serue vnder the English yoake In Ireland 18. bloudy fields we fought And that fierce Nation to subiection brought Besides Tyroues rebellion which foule strife Cost England many a pound lost many a life And before we were Scotlands or it ours How often haue we with opposed powers In most vnneighboutly vnfriendly manners With hostile armes displaying bloudy banners With various victories on eyther side Now vp now downe our fortunes haue beene tride What one fight wins the other loosing yeelds In more then sixescore bloudie foughten fields But since that we and they and they and we More neere then brethren now conioyned be Those scattering powers we each gainst other lead Being one knit body to one royall head Then let this Iland East West South and North Ioyntly in these braue warres emblaze out worth And as there was a strife that once befell Twixt men of Iuda and of Israel Contending which should loue King Dauid best And who in him had greatest interest Long may contention onely then be thus Twixt vsand Scotland and twixt them and vs Stil friendly striuing which of vs can be Most true and loyall to his Maiesty This is a strife will please the God of peace And this contending will our loues encrease You hardy Scots remember royall Bruce And what stout Wallace valour did produce The glorious name of Stewards Hamiltons The Er●●kine M●rayes nd● he Leuingstons The noble Ramseyes and th' illustrious Hayes The valiant Dowglasses the Grimes and Grayes Great Sir Iames Dowglas a most valiant Knight Lead seauenty battels with victorious fight Not by Lieutenants or by deputation But he in person wan his reputation The Turkes and Sarazens he ouercame Where ending life he purchast end lesse fame And his true noble worth is well deriu'd To worthies of that name that since suruiu'd The praise of Sir Iames Dowglas in the Raigne of King Robert Bruce 1330. In 13. maine battel she ouercame Gods enemies and as last was slaine Then since both Nations did and doe abound With men approu'd and through all lands renown'd Through Europs and through Asia further farre Then is our blest Redeemers Sepulchre Through all the Coasts of tawny Affrica And through the bounds of rich America And as the world our worths acknowledge must Let not our valour sleeping lye and rust ●● to immortalize our Britaines name Let it from imbers burst into a flame We haue that Land and shape our Elders had Their courages were good can ours be bad Their deeds did manifest their worthy mindes Then how can we degenerate from kindes ●● former times we were so giuen to warre Witnesse the broyles 'twixt Yorke and Lancaster Hauing no place to sorreigne Foes to goe Amongst our selues we made our selues a Foe Fall threescore yeares with fierce vnkind alarmes Were practis'd fierce vnciuill ciuill armes Whilst fourescore Peeres of the bloud royall dyde With hundred thousands Com●oners beside Thus Englishmen to wars did beare good will They would be doing although doing ill And Scotlands Hystorie auoucheth cleare Of many ciuill warres and turmoyles there Rebellion discord rapine and foule spoyle Hath pierc'd the bowels of their Natiue soyle Themselues against themselues Peeres against Peers And kin with kin together by the cares The friend gainst friend each other hath withstood Vnfriendly friends weltering in their bloud Thus we with them and they with vs contending And we our selues
Carists faith did dye together Then Hengist with the Saxons hither came Who many kild with sword and furious flame Besides eleuen hundred Monkes were kild At Bangor Abby all their blouds were spild And when the Saxons race to end was run The Dines came in and all the Kingdome won Before whose Swords did many thousands fall Which on the name of IESVS CHRIST did call Then William Conquerour with a multitude Vnto the Norman● vo●ke this Land subdude The Pope then caus'd all Priests to leaue their wiues To leade soule Sodomiticke single liues Then afterward in second Hearies raig●e Was sawcy Sir Saint Thomas Becket slaine A Popish Saint and Martyr made because He dy'd a Traytor to his Soueraignes Lawes King Henry and King Richard dead and gone Their brother Iohn by right ascends the T●●rone Whom all his life the Pope of Rome did vexe And with oppressions all the Realme perplexe With Candle Booke and Bell he curst and blest And Bals and Legates did the King molest Vntill such time he on his knees fell downe And to the Pope surrendred vp his Crowne At last because he durst the Pope withstand He dyed imposned by a ●●yers hand When thus by treason they had kild King Iohn Then the third Henrie Englands Crowne put on Then England bought the R●mesh doctrine deare It cost her threescore thousand markes a yeare For Agnus Deses Pardons Peter pance For which the Pope had all this coine from hence King Henry dyed then Edward tooke the sway His Sonne and Grandchild England did obay The first of them call'd Long-shanks conquests won Lost by Carnaruan his vnhappy Son Who by his Queene was in a Dung●on cast Till being murthered sadly breath'd his last Edward the third a braue victorious King Did Frenchmens pride into subiection bring Kickard the second next to raigne began Who lost more than his Royall Grandsire wan Then gan Iohn Wicklisse boldly to begin To preach gainst Antichrist that man of sin Who many troubles stoutly did abide Yet spight the Pope he naturally dy'de And being dead from out is graue was turn'd And had his Martyr'd bones to ashes burn'd Which ashes they did cast into a Brooke Because he had the Romish Faith for sooke Yet whilst the second Richard here suruiu'd No Martyrs were by fire of lite depriu'd Henry the fourth was in the Throne inuested In whose Reigne many were too much molested And Wi●●●● Sautre first his life ●●●●●● Through flames of fire who now in heauen doth liue The next Iohn Ba●●by in the fu●●●● flame And William Tharpe both was immortail fame Then the fifth Henrie a victori●●● Prince The Realme of France did ●● quar and ●●● The good Lord Ceb●● then O ●●●●●● By Popish Priests an Hereticke proc●aim'd Washang'd and burn'd by the vnit ●tull doome Of Sathans Seruants sleues to Hell and R●●e And leauing some vnnam'd Iohn ' B●owne● qu●re Iohn Beu●●ly a Preacher dyed in ●●● B sid s a number from the Le●●rds Towre Rackes tortures halters and the flame deuoure Ioba Hu● a glorious Martyr of the Lord. Was in Eohe●●● burned or Gods word And ren●rend Icrome did to Constance come From Pragae and stoutly suffered Martyrdome In Smith-sield one Iohn Claydon suffered death And with him Richard Turming lost his breath At this time sixete●ne godly folkes in Kent The Antichristian vassals d●d torment Then death cut off the fifth King Henries Raigne The Crowne the sixth King Henrie did obrame And William Taylor a true zealous Priest Did passe through fire vnto his Sauiour Christ. Good Richard Houedon with him William White Each vnto God through fire did yeeld his sprite D●ke Humphrey though no Martyr kil'd in 's bed And Richard Wych a Priest was burned dead Then Saint like good King Henry was depos'd By the fourth Edward in the tower inclos'd Then Edward fl●d and Henry once againe By Warwickes power the Kingdome did obtaine Thds did the various slate of humane things Make Kings of Capriues and of Captiues Kings Vntill at last King Edward turning backe Brought Henries royalty to finall wracke In whose Raigne Iohn Go●se as the story saith Was the first Martyr burned for Christs faith King Henry in the Tower was ab'd to death And Edward yeelded vp his hie and breath His Sonne young Edward of that name the sift Whom the third Richard from his life did lift VVho by foule murthers ●loud and tyranny Vsurpt the Throne of Englands Monarchy Till valiant Henry of that name the seuen Kild him and made vncu●n England euen Then first Ioane Beugh●on and a man call'd Babram● By faith through fire went to old Father Abram An Old man was in Smithfield burnt because He did resist against the Roman Lawes One Ierom hang'd and burned on the Gallowes In Florence with two ot●er of his f●llowes And William Tiliesworth Thomas Bernard and Iames Morton cause they did the Pope withstand Burn'd all and Father Rogers and old Reine Did dye by fire a better life to gaine One Thomas Nouice and one Thomas Chase Dy'd constant Martyrs by the Heauenly Grace A woman and a man call'd Laurence Guest By Deah gain'd euerlasting life and rest Besides a number past mans reckoning vp For IESVS sake dranke of afflictions cup. Some carried faggots through a world of mocks Some rack'd some pinde some fettered in the stocks Some naked stript and scourged with a lash For their reiecting of their Romish trash Some branded in the cheeke did alwayes beare The marke and badge of their Redeemer deare Thus the insulting tyrannizing Pope With cursings tortures fire and sword and rope Did force the Soules and Consciences of men To run dispairing to damnations Den And those who valiantly his power withstood Did seale their resolution with their bloud Before his triple treble trouble Crowne In adoration Emperours must fall downe Were they as high as any Caesar borne To kisse his feet they must not hold it scorne Henry the sixth the Emperour did fall downe Whom with his Feet Pope Celestine did Crowne Henry the fourth his Empresse and his young Son All three to Rome did barefoot goe and run And three dayes so these three did all attend His holinesse a godlesse eare to lend Which afterward was granted on condition That he should giue his Crowne vp in submission Pandulphus the Popes Legate with a frowne Did make King Iohn of England yeeld his Crowne King Henry of that as me the second he Kneel'd downe and kist the Romish Legats knee The Emperour when Pope Adrian was to ride Did hold his stirrop on the neere wrong side For which his Holinesse in angry sort Disdainfully did checke the Emperour for 't When as the Pope doth ride in Cope of gold Kings like to foot-men must his bridle hold In pompe he must bee borne vpon mens shoulders With glorious shew amazing the beholders Whilst Kings and Princes must before him goe To vsher him in this vaine-glorious show This being true as no man can deny Those that will
pickt the purse damn'd the Soule Because they knew the Pope and all his crue H●● hounds whō heauern in rage on earth did spue And in a word they thus were ouer-trod Because they truly seru'd the liuing God This was the maine and onely cause of all Because they would not offer vnto B●el The Popes outragious and couragious actor Was Bishop Bonner hells most trusty factor Romes hangman and the firebrand of this Realme That with a sloud of bloud did ouerwhelme The true beleeuers of Gods holy truth He burchered not regarding age or youth With him was ioyn'd a man almost as ill Who tooke delight Gods seruants bleud to spill Cal'd Stephen Gardner Englands Chanceller And Bishop of the Sea of Winchester These two did striue each other to excell Who should doe greatest seruice vnto Hell Vntill at last God heard his seruants cry And each of them did die immediately Thus when I●honah heard the iust complaints Of his beloued poore afflicted Saints Then this too cruell Pope defending Queene The bloudiest Princesse that this land hath seene She did decease and persecution ceast And tired wofull● Englands purchast rest Queene Mary being dead her welcome death Reuin'd our ioyes in blest ELIZABETH Innumerable were her woes and cares Abundance were the subtill wiles and snares Which Sathan and his Ministers oft laid To reaue the life of that most harmelesse Maid She was accus'd abus'd reuil'd miscal'd She was from prison vnto prison hal'd Long in the Tower she shas close prisner shut Her louing seruants all way were put From thence to Windsor thence to Woodstocke sent Closely mewd vp from all the worlds content But God whose mercies euer did defend her Did in her greatest Sorrow comfort send her He did behold her from his Throne on hie And kept her as the apple of his eye Let Hell and Hell-hounds still attempt to spill Yet the Almighty guards his Seruants still And he at lest did ease her Sorrowes mone And rais'd her to her lawfall awfull throne This Royall Deborah this Princely Dame Whose life made all the world admire her fame As Iudith in Bet h●lias same was spread For cutting off great Holophernès head So our Eliza stoutly did begin Vntopping and beheading Romish sin Shee purg'd the Land of Papistry●agen Shee liu'd belou'd of God admir'd of men Shee made the Antichristian Kingdome quake She made the mighty power of Spaine to shake As farre as Sunne and Moone dispears'd her Rayes So farre and farther went her matchlesse praise She was at home abroad in euery part Loadstar and Loadstone to each eye and heart Supported onely by Gods powerfull hand She foure and forty yeares did rule this Land And then she lest her Royall Princely Seat She chang'd earths greatnesse to be heauenly great Thus did this Westerne Worlds great wouder dye She fell from height to be aduanc'd more hie Terrestriall Kings and Kingdomes all must fade Then blest is she that is immortall made Her death fild woefull England full of feares The Papists long'd for change with itching eares For her decease was all their onely hope To raise againe the doctrine of the Pope But he whose power is all omnipotent Di● their vnhappy hopelesse hopes preuent Succession lawfully did leaue the Crowne Vnto a Prince whose vertue and Renowne And learning did out-stripall Kings as sarre As doth the Sunne obseure a little starre What man that is but man could bass● more Romes seauen●headed purple beastly Whore How wisely hath he Bellarmine con●uted And how diuinely hath'he ost dispated How zealously he did Cods faith desend How often on Gods word he did attend How clement pious and how gracious good Was he as fits the greatnesse of his bloud Were 't not for him how should the Mu●●s doe He was their patterne and their patron too He was th' Apollo from whose radient Beames The quinteffence of Poetry our-streames And from the splendor of his piercing rayes A world of worthy writers won the bayes Yet all the worthy vertues so transparent And so well knowne to be in him inharent Could not perswade the Papists leaue their strife With cursed treasons to attempt his life For when their disputations helpt them not They would dispute in a damn'd powder plot In which the Romists went beyond the deuill For Hell could not inuent a plot so euill But he that plac'd him on his royall Throne The God of Iacob Iudahs holy one That God for Iesus sake I doe beseech With humble heart and with vnfained speech That he or his may Britaines Scepter sway Till time the world and all things passe away But now he 's gone into Eternall bliss̄e Crowne● And with Eternall glory crowned is Long may King CHARLES weare Britaines royall And heauens best blessings raise his high Renowne FINIS GODS MANIFOLD MERCIES IN THESE MIRACVLOVS DELIverances of our Church of England from the yeare 1565. vntill this present 1630. particularly and briefly Described IOSHVA 4.21 22. 24. When your Children shall aske their Fathers in time to come What meaneth this Pillar Then yee shall let your Children know saying THESE ARE THE DELIVERIES WHICH GOD HATH VOVCHSAFED TO HIS CHVRCH IN ENGLAND SINCE THE BEGINNING OF QVEENE ELIZABETHS RAIGNE TO THIS DAY That all the People of the Earth might know the hand of the Lord that it is mightie that yee might feare the Lord your God for euer THere was a Bull in Rome was long a breeding Which Bull prou'd little better then a Calfe Was sent to England for some better feeding To fatten in his Holinesse behalfe The vertues that this Beast of Babell had In thundring manner was to banne and curse Raile at the Queene as it were raging mad Yet God be thanked she was ne're the worse The goodly Sire of it was Impious * Pius the fufh of that name Pope of Rome piu● Hee taught it learnedly to curse and banne And to our faces boldly to defie vs. It madly ouer England quickly ranne But what succe●●e it had reade more and see The fruits of it herevnder written be This Bull did excommunicate and curse the Queene ●●dep●●eth her from her Crowne it proclaimed her an Here●●●● it cursed all such as loued her it threatned damnation to all subiects as dur●t obey her and it promised the kingdome of heauen to those that would oppose and kill her This was the effect and nature of this Popish Beast which all wise godly and vnder standing men did deride and contemne 1. A Priest call'd Moort●n by the Pope assign'd Northumberland and Westmerland seduceth With whom the Duke of * Duke of Norfolke and Earle of Northumberland beheaded Earle of Westmorland fled Norfolke is combin'd The whilst the Pope nocost or charge refuseth But pawnes his challices his Beads and Crosses Giues them his gracelesse blessing for their ayde The fruit where of were heads and honors losses God still defending Englands Royall Maid Thus we by proofe must thankefully confesse That where the pope doth
curse there God doth blesse year 1569 2. Dou Iohn * He was Brother to the King of Spaine and failing of the hope be had to be Crowned King of Tums be practiseth to inuade England Wherof sailing he dyes for griefe of Austri● whom the pope incites Our Queene and kingdome both to Cap●uate And whilst he warre prepares with sub●ll slights A fained peace he doth cap●●ulate Nay more he doth perpetuall peace proclaime Thereby to make vs sleepe the more secure But Gods great Mercy made him misse his aime And what he thought most certaine proud vnsure This plot of our inuasion thus orethrowne Don Iohns ambition with his life did end Whereby th' Almighty to the world makes known That he his Church will euermore defend His vine she is his power doth guard her round And all her Enemies he will confound year 1578 3. Romes malice and Spaines practice still concurs To vexe and trouble blest Elizabeth With S●nk●l●y they combine to raise new stirs And Ireland bragging sinkely promiseth To giue vnto the popes braue Bastard Sonne Iames ' Boncatn●ag●● an ambitious boy And St●●ely from the pope a prize hath Wonne A holy Peacocks Iaile a proper toy But St●●ely was in Maurstania slaine In that great batt●ll at Alcazor fought Whereby we see his power doth still defend H●● Church which on his mercy doth depend year 1578 Pope Gregory and the king of Spaine Conspire to ●●●● Rebell●●● in Ireland by meanes of Thomas Stuke●●an English● can who was slainem the field with three Kings with ●●●●● 4. An English Priest call'd Nicholas Saunders next A consecrated Banner gets from Rome And like a trayterons wretch mistakes his text Rebelliously doth into Ireland come He with the Desmons ioynes in bloudy manner And when * Iohn Desmond was brother to the Earle of Desmond Iohn Desmond murther did commit Then by the vertue of his bable banner Applauded it and did the crime remit This good successe Romes f●●●● p●r 〈…〉 had The Earle was by a common ●●●●●●●● And * Saunders r●n mad in the wild Mountains Woods and bogs of Ireland and dyed by ●●● Saunders pind● 〈…〉 ●●●● His conscience with 〈…〉 Thus treason is accordingl● rewa●●● And still the Church of Godby ●●● is guarded year 1579 5. P●rsons and Campion a most wicked brace Of English T●a●ors Ro●●●●h ●e●uites Get from the Pope the fauour and the grace To play in England the ●●ear●●●●ites Fr●e leaue they from his Holinesse obtaine To draw true subiects from their loyalty To make our Kingdome va●●all vnto Spaine And to depo●● the Queene from Royalty At last despight the blessing of the pope Their plots were kno● ne and qvickely Parsons ●i●d But Campion dy'd at Tyburne in a Rope Hang'd all as ' t is supposed but the head God still the practice and the p'ots orethrowes O● his most deare beloued churches foes year 1581 These ●esuites walked in disguise h●ve long before they were taken sometimes like swagge●●g Ruffians sometimes like Ministers sometimes like Noblemen sometimes like souldiers and sometimes like Aparators 6. Here So●●erui●● an English Gentleman Seduc'd by Romesh Priests the Queene to kill Attempts it in the despurat ' ● sort he can And with a drawne Sword runs her bloud to spill But by the way with one or two he met Who did oppose him and his damn'd intent Whilst like a mad man he gan rage and f●et At those that did the mischiefe then preuent But ●ane he was and clos● in prison pent There to remaine till Iustice him should trye And then to haue de●erued punishment That others might example take thereby But Sommer●●● was strangled in the layle Thus God to guard his Church doth neuer faile year 1583 It was thought that Sommeruill was strangled by some that set him on works for fear● least his con●ession might haue preferred them to the Ga●●owes 7. Mendoza here Ambassador for Spaine Foule trea●on with Throckmorton practiseth To moue sedition raise a warlike trains Inuade the Realme depose Elizabeth Mendoza is discoutred and disgrac'd And out of England in disgrace was thrust Whilst in each hand he hath a Letter plac'd Which he had got from Traitors most vniust In one of them was written all the Names Of English Lords that did the Pope affect In th' other all the Hauens and the streames For shipping and our foes how to direct But God his Church our Queene and Realme desended Thr●gmorton hang'd and quarter'd all was ended year 1584 In these dangerous times the Queenes mercit was very great towards the Priests and Ies●●es for shee commanded that the seueritie of the Law might bee mittiga●ed towards them 8. The Remish Vipers neuer taking rest Most dangerous Letters trait ero●sly were writ That foraigne Princes England might mole●t The b●arer was a * His name was Creighton being taken at Sea he cast his Letters torne in pieces into the Sea for feare of being discouered but the Winde blow them into the Ship againe Scottish ●os●ite Who by Dutch Pyrates on the Sea was tane His Letters torn● hee ouer boord did fling But the Winde blowing from the raging Maine The Papers backe into the Ship did bring Which though they were in many peeces rent Were plac'd together by Sir William Wade Who found the Guise the Pope and Spaines intent Were strong combined England to inuade These proiects thus were blasted in their bud And their pretence of Harme God made our Good year 1585 9. Here William Parry hath got leaue from Rome To broach new mischiefes on our English shore And he to kill Elizabeth doth come Though shee his life had pardon'd long before His Absolution from the Pope doth show That ere the murders done it is forgiuen Nay more his Holinesse doth free bestow Vpon the ●●sitor endlesse loyes of Heauen False Parry with his Dagger purposely Went to the Queen● in dutious sort dissembling When with her lookes of awfull Maiestie She strucke the villaine full of feare and trembling Then was he tooke and hang'd as he desern'd And onely God our Church and State preseru'd year 1586 Parry was a Doctor of the Ciuil Law whom the Queene had pardoned sixe yeares before for killing of one Huge Hare yet afterward by the diuels in●ligation and the Popes abselntion and encouragement he fe●● into this treason Exceuted at Westminster 10. Here Ballard Sauage Ti●●burne Babington Gage Trauerse Tilney Windsor Charneck D●● Iones Barnewell Salisbury and Abington These fourteene into dangerous treasons run They would but kill the Queene subuert the State Make England beare the yoake of Antichrist And for thofe ends they worke both soone and late Whilst Ignorance to Erro●r is entis'd They in Saint Giles his fields their proiects layd There was the consultations of their braines And in those fields they had their wages paid Handsomly hang'd and quarter'd for their paines Thus God doth still our Church defend and blesse And those that are her foes haue ill successe year 1586 This yeare