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A18410 An epicede or funerall song on the most disastrous death, of the high-borne prince of men, Henry Prince of Wales, &c. With the funeralls, and representation of the herse of the same high and mighty prince ... VVhich noble prince deceased at St. Iames, the sixt day of Nouember, 1612. and was most princely interred the seuenth day of December following, within the Abbey of Westminster, in the eighteenth yeere of his age. Chapman, George, 1559?-1634.; Hole, William, d. 1624, engraver. 1613 (1613) STC 4974; ESTC S107694 17,429 56

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Armes viz. The Spurres by Windsor The Gauntlets by Somerset The Helme and Crest by Richmond The Targe by Yorke The Sword by Norroy King of Armes The Coat by Clarencieux King of Armes Three Gentlemen Vshers to the Prince bearing their wands The Corps of the Prince lying in an open Chariot with the Princes representation thereon inuested with his Robes of estate of Purple Veluet furred with Ermines his Highnesse Cap and Coronet on his head and his Rod of Gould in his hand and at his feet within the said Chariot sat Sir Dauid Murrey the Master of his Wardrobe The Chariot was couered with blacke Veluet set with Plumes of blacke feathers and drawne by sixe Horses couered and Armed with Scuchions hauing their Cheiffrons and Plumes A Canopy of blacke Veluet borne ouer the representation by sixe Baronets Tenne Bannerols borne about the body by ten Baronets Sir Moyle Finch Sir Thomas Mounson Sir Iohn Wentworth Sir Henry Sauile Sir Thomas Brewdnell Sir Anthony Cope Sir George Gresley Sir Robert Cotten Sir Lewis Tresham Sir Phillip Tiruit Foure Assistants to the Corps that bore vp the corners of the Pall. viz. 1 The Lord Zouch 2 The Lord Abergaueny 3 The Lord Burghley 4 The Lord Walden William Seger Garter Principall King of Armes betweene the Gentleman-Vsher of Prince Charles and the Gentleman-Vsher of the Prince Palatine Prince CHARLES chiefe Mourner supported by the Lord Priuy-Seale and the Duke of Lenox His Highnesse Traine was borne by the Lord Dawbney Brother to the Duke of Lenox Then followed the Prince Elector FREDERICK Count Palatine of the Rhein His Highnesse Traine was borne by Mounsieur Shamburgh Twelue Earles Assistants to the chiefe Mourner viz. Earle of Nottingham Earle of Shrewsbury Earle of Rutland Earle of Southampton Earle of Hartford Earle of Dorset Earle of Suffolke Earle of Worcester Earle of Sussex Earle of Pembroke Earle of Essex Earle of Salisburie Earles strangers attendants on Count Palatine Count VVigensten Count Lewis de Nassau Count Leuingsten Count Hodenlo Count Ringraue Count Erback Count Nassaw Scarburg Count Le Hanow Iunior Count Isinbersh Page Count ●olmes Page Count Zerottin Page The Horse of Estate led by Sir Robert Dowglas Maister of the Princes Horse The Palzgreaues Priuy-Counsellors viz. The Count of Solmes Mounsieur Shouburgh Mounsieur de Pleshau Mounsieur Helmestedt Mouns Shouburgh Iunior Mouns Landshat Officers and Groomes of Prince Henries stable The Guard The Knight Marshall and twenty seruants that kept order in the proceeding Diuers Knights and Gentlemen the Kings seruants that came in voluntary in blacks So that the whole number amounted to 2000. or thereabout FINIS Expostulatio à perturbatione Potentia expers sapientiae quo maior est eo perniciosior sapientia procul à potentia manca videtur Plat. Chymaera a monster hauing his head and brest like a Lyon his belly like a Gote and taile like a Dragon To Death The Prayer of the King in the Princes sicknes Simil. Apodesis Reditio ad Principem Those that came to the Princes seruice seem'd compared with the places they liu'd in before to rise from death to the fields of life intending the best part of yong and noble Gentlemen The parting of the Princes Seruants The Princes house an Olimpus where all contention of vertues were practised Non Homeri Aurea Restis Saint Iames his house Richmond The Prince not to be wrought on by flattery His knowledge and wisdome Any man is capable of his own fit course and office in any thing Apostrophe Men grow so vgly by trusting flattery with their informations that when they see themselues truely by casting their eyes inward they cast themselues away with their owne lothing * Simil. Simil. Musae lachrimae The cause and manner of the Princes death Rhamnusia Goddesse of reuenge and taken for Fortune in enuy of our Prince excited Feuer against him The Feuer the Prince died on by Prosopopeia described by her effects circumstances The Fever the Prince dyed off is observ'd by our Moderne Phisitions to bee begun in Hungarie Out of the property of the Hare that never shuts her eyes sleeping Marmaricae Leunes of Marmarica a Region in Affrica where the fiercest Lyons are bred with which Feuer is supposd to bee drawn for their excesse of heat violence part of the effects of this Feuer The properties of the Feuer in these effects Rhamnusi● excitatiō of feuer Rham durst no lōger indure her beeing stirred into furie The starry Euening describ'd by Vulcans setting to worke at that time The Night being ever chiefesly consecrate to the Works of the Gods and out of this Deities fires the Starres are supposd to flye as sparkles of them The good Angell of the Prince to the Fever as shee approache Feuer to the prince who is thougght by a friend of mine to speake too mildly not being satis compos mētis Portice in this Her counsell or perswasiō shewing onlie how the Prince was perswaded resolu'd in his deadlyest sufferāce of her which shee is made to speake in spight of her selfe since he at her worst was so sacredly resolute Descriptiō of the tempest that cast Sir Th. Ga●es on the Bermudas the state of his Ship and Men to this Kingdomes Plight applyed in the Princes death The Archbishop of Cantebury passing pyous in care of the Prince S. Ed Phillips Master of the Rols and the Princes Chancelor a chiefe sorrower for hlm The prince heroical his bearing his sicknes at the Kings comming to see him careful not to discomfort him The Twelfth day after his beginning to bee sicke his sicknes was hold incurable The prince dying to the King The sorrowes and bemones of the King Queene Prince and his most Princely Sister for the Princes death The funerall described