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A02127 The honorable historie of frier Bacon, and frier Bongay As it was plaid by her Maiesties seruants. Made by Robert Greene Master of Arts.; Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay Greene, Robert, 1558?-1592. 1594 (1594) STC 12267; ESTC S105968 34,430 63

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may haue The loue of louely Margret to my selfe And as I am true Prince of Wales I le giue Liuing and lands to strength thy colledge state VVarren Good Frier helpe the Prince in this Raphe Why seruant Ned will not the frier doe it Were not my sword glued to my scabberd by coniuration I would cut off his head and make him do it by force Miles In faith my lord your manhood and your sword all alike they are so fast coniured that we shall neuer see them Ermsbie Wat doctor in a dumpe tush helpe the prince And thou shalt see how liberall he will prooue Bacon Craue not such actions greater dumps than these I will my lord straine out my magicke spels For this day comes the earle to Fresingfield And fore that night shuts in the day with darke Thei le be bet●othed ech to other fast But come with me w●e le to my studie straight And in a glasse pro●pectiue I will shew What 's done this day in m●rry Fresingfield Edward Gramercies Bacon I will quite thy paine Bacon But send your traine my lord into the towne My scholler shall go bring them to their Inne Meane while wee le see the knauerie of the earle Ed●a●d Warren leaue me and Ermsbie take the foole Let him be maister and go reuell it Till I and Frier Bacon ta●ke a while VVarr●n We will my lord Raphe Faith Ned and I le lord it out till thou comest I le be Prince of Wales ouer all the blacke pots in Oxford Exeunt Bacon and Edward goes into the study Bacon Now frolick ●d●ard welcome to my Cell Heere tempers Frier Bacon many toies And holds this place his consistorie court Wherin the diuels pleads homage to his words Within this glasle pr●●pectiue thou shalt see This day what 's done in merry Fresingfield Twixt louely Peggie and the Lincolne earle Edward Frier thou gladst me nowshall Edward trie How Lacie meaneth to his soueraigne lord Bacon Stand there and looke directly in the glasse Enter Margret and Frier Bungay● Bacon What sees my lord Edward I see the keepers louely lasse appeare As bright-sunne as the parramour of Mars Onely attended by a iolly frier Bacon Sit still and keepe the christall in your eye Margret But tell me frier Bungay is it true That this faire courtious countrie swaine Who saies his father is a farmer nie Can be lord Lacie earle of Lincolnshire Bunga● Peggie t is true t is Lacie for my life Or else mine art and cunning both doth faile Left by prince Edward to procure his loues For he in greene that holpe you runne your cheese Is sonne to Henry and the prince of Wales Margret Be what he will his lure is but for lust But did lord Lacie like poore Margret Or would he daine to wed a countrie lasse Frier I would his humble handmayd be And for great wealth quite him with courtesie Bungay Why Margret doest thou loue him Margret His personage like the pride ofvaunting Troy Might well auouch to shadow Hellens cape His witis quicke and readie in conceit As Greece affoorded in her chiefest prime Courteous ah Frier full of pleasing smiles Trust me I loue too much to tell thee more Suffice to me he is Englands parramour Bungay Hath not ech eye that viewd thy pleasing face Surnamed thee faire maid of Fresingfield Margret Yes Bungay and would God the lo●ely Earle Had that in esse thatso many sought ●ungay Feare not the Frier will not be behind To shew his cunning to entangle loue Edward I thinke the Frier courts the bonny wench Bacon me thinkes he is a lustie churle Bacon Now looke my lord ●nter Lacie Edward Gogs wounds Bacon heere comes Lacie Bacon Sit still my lord and marke the commedie Bungay Heere 's Lacie Margret step aside awhile Lacie Daphne the damsell that caught Phaebus fast And lockt him in the brightnesse of her lookes Was not so beautious in Appollos eyes As is f●●re Margret to the Lincolne earle Recant thee Lacie thou art put in trust Edward thy soueraignes sonne hath chosen thee A secret friend to court her for himselfe And darest thou wrong thy Prince with trecherie Lacie loue makes no acception of a friend Nor deemes it of a Prince but as a man Honour bids thee controll him in his lust His wooing is not for to wed the girle But to intrap her and beguile the lasse Lacie thou louest then brooke not such abuse But wed her and abide thy Princes frowne For better die then see her liue disgracde Margret Come Frier I will shake him from his dumpes How cheere you sir a penie for your thought Your early vp pray God it be the neere What come from Beckles in a morne so soone Lacie Thus watchfull are such men as liue in loue Whose eyes brooke broken slumbers for their sleepe I tell thee Peggie since last Harlston faire My mind● hath felt a heape of passions Margret A trustie man that court it for your friend Woo you still for the courtier all in greene I maruell that he sues not for himselfe Lacie Peggie I pleaded first to get your grace for him But when mine ●i●s furuaid your beautious lookes Loue like a wagge straight diued into my heart And there did shrine the Idea of your selfe Pittie me though I be a farmers sonne And measure not my riches but my loue Margret You are ver●e hastie for to garden well Seeds must haue time to sprout before they spring Loue ought to creepe as doth the dials shade For timely ripe is rotten too too soone Bungay Deus hic roome for a merry Frier What youth of Beckles with the keepers lasse T is well but tell me heere you any newes Margret No Frier what newes Bungay Heere you not how the purseuants do post With proclamations through ech country towne Lacie For what gentle frier tell the newes Bungay Dwelst thou in Beckles heerst not of these news Lacie the Earle of Lincolne is late fled From Windsor court disguised like a swaine And lurkes about the countrie heere vnknowne Henrie suspects him of some trecherie And therefore doth proclaime in euery way That who can take the Lincolne earle shall haue Paid in the Exchequer twentie thousand crownes Lacie The earle of Lincoln Frier thou art mad It was some other thou mistakest the man The earle of Lincolne why it cannot be Margret Yes verie well my lord for you are he The keepers daughter tooke you prisoner Lord Lacie yeeld I le be your gailor once Edward How familiar they be Bacon Bacon Sit still and marke the sequell of their loues Lacie Then am I double prisoner to thy selfe Peggie I yeeld but are these newes iniest Margret In ●●st with you but earnest vnto me For why these wrongs do wring me at the heart Ah how these earles and noble men of birth Flatter and faine to forge poore womens ill Lacie Beleeue me lasse I am the Lincolne earle I not denie but tyred thus in rags I
courting for your grace When as mine eye ●uruaid her curious shape And drewe the beautious glory of her looks To diue into the center of my heart Loue taught me that your honour did but iest That princes were in fancie but as men How that the louely maid of Fresingfield Was fitter to be Lacies wedded wi●e Than concubine vnto the prince of Wales Edward Iniurious Lacie did I loue thee more Than Alexander his Hephestion Did I vnfould the passion of my loue And locke them in the closset of thy thoughts Wert thou to Edward second to himselfe Sole freind and partner of his secreat loues And could a glaunce of fading bewtie breake Theinchained fetters of such priuat freindes Base coward false and too effeminate To be coriuall with a prince in thoughts From Oxford haue I posted since I dinde To quite a traitor fore that Edward sleepe Marg. T was I my Lord not Lacie stept awry For oft he sued and courted for yourselfe And still woode for the courtier all in greene But I whome fancy made but ouer fond Pleaded my selfe with looks as if I lovd I fed myne eye with gazing on his face And still bewicht lovd Lacie with my looks My hart with sighes myne eyes pleaded with tear● My face held pittie and content at once And mor● I cou●d not siph●r out by signes But that I lovd Lord Lacie with my heart Then worthy Edward measure with thy minde If womens fa●ours will not force men fall If bewtie and if da●●s of 〈◊〉 ●oue Is not of force to bury thoughts of friendes Edward I tell thee Peggie I will haue thy loues● Edward or none shall conquer Margret In Frigats bottomd with rich Sethin planks Topt with the loftie firs of Libanon Stemd and incast with burnisht luorie And ouerlaid with plates of Persian wealth Like Thetis shalt thou wanton on the waues And draw the Dolphins to thy louely eyes To daunce lauoltas in the purple streames Sirens with harpes and siluer psalteries Shall waight with musicke at thy frigots stem And entertaine faire Margret with her laies England and Englands wealth shall wait on thee Brittaine shall bend vnto her princes loue And doe due homage to thine excellence If thou wilt be but Edwards Margret Margret Pardon my lord if Ioues great roialtie Sent me such presents as to Danae If Phoebus tied in Latonas webs Come courting from the beautie of his lodge The dulcet tunes of frolicke Mercurie Not all the wealth heauens treasurie affoords Should make me leaue lord Lacie or his loue Edw. I haue learnd at Oxford then this point ofschooles Abbata causa ●●llitur effectus Lacie the cause that Margret cannot loue Nor fix her liking on the English Prince Take him away and then the effects will faile Villaine prepare thy selfe for I will bathe My poinard in the bosome of an eatle Lacie Rather then liue and misse faire Margrets loue Prince Edward stop not at the fatall doome But stabb it home end both my loues and life Marg. Braue Prince of Wales honoured for royall deeds T were sinne to staine fair Venus courts with blood Loues conquests ends my Lord in courtesie Spare Lacie gentle Edward let me die For so both you and he doe cease your loues Edward Lacie shall die as traitor to his Lord. Lacie I haue deserued it Edward act it well Margret What hopes the Prince to gaine by Lacies death Edward To end the loues twixt him and Margeret Marg. Why thinks king Henries sonne that Margrets loue Hangs in the vncertaine ballance of proud time That death shall make a discord of our thonghts No stab the earle and fore the morning sun Shall vaunt him thrice ouer the loftie east Margret will meet her Lacie in the heauens Lacie If ought betides to louely Margret That wrongs or wrings her honour from content Europes rich wealth nor Englands monarchie Should not allure Lacie to ouerliue Then Edward short my life and end her loues Margret Rid me and keepe a friend worth many loues Lacie Nay Edward keep● a loue worth many friends Margret And if thy mind be such as ●ame hath blazde Then princely Edward let vs both abide The fatall resolution of thy rage Banish thou fancie and imbrace reuenge And in one toomb● knit both our carkases Whose hearts were linked in one perfect loue Edward Edward Art thou that famous prince of Wales Who at Damasco beat the Sarasens And broughtst home triumphe on thy launces point And shall thy plumes be puld by Venus downe Is it princely to disseuer louers leagues To part such friends as glorie in their loues Leaue Ned and make a vertue of this fault And further Peg and Lacie in their loues So in subduing fancies passion Conquering thy selfe thou getst the richest spoile Lacie rise vp faire Peggie heere 's my hand The prince of Wales hath conquered all his thoughts And all his loues he yeelds vnto the earle Lacie enioy the maid of Fresingfield Make her thy Lincolne countesse at the church And Ned as he is true Plantagenet Will giue h●● to thee franckly for thy wi●e Lacie Humbly I take her of my soueraigne As if that Edward gaue me Englands right And richt me with the Albion diadem Margret And doth the English Prince mean true Will he vouchsafe to cease his former loues And yeeld the title of a countrie maid Vnto lord Lacie Edward I will faire Peggi● as I am true lord Marg. Then lordly sir whose conquest is as great In conquering loue as Caesars victories Margret as milde and humble in her thoughts As was Aspatia vnto Cirus selfe Yeelds thanks and next lord Lacie doth ●nshrine Edward the second secret in her heart Edw. Gramercie Peggie now that vowes are past And that your loues are not be reuolt Once Lacie friendes againe come we will post To Oxford for this day the king is there And brings for Edward Castile Ellinor Peggie I must go see and view my wife I pray God I like her as I loued thee Beside lord Lincolne we shall hea●e dispute Twixt frier Bacon and learned Vandermast Peggie wee le leaue you for a weeke or two Margret As it please lord Lacie but loues foolish looks Thinke footsteps Miles and minutes to be houres Lacie I le hasten Peggie to make short returne But please your houour goe vnto the lodge We shall haue butter cheese and venison And yesterday I brought for Margret A lustie bottle of neat clarret wine Thus can we feast and entertaine your grace Edward T is cheere lord Lacie for an Emperour If he respect the person and the place Come let vs in for I will all this night Ride post vntill I come to Bacons cell Exeunt Enter Henrie Emperour Castile Ellinor Vandermast Bungay Emperour Trust me Plantagenet these Oxford schooles Are richly seated neere the riuer side The mountaines full of fat and fallow deere The batling pastures laid with kine and flocks The towne gorgeous with high built colledges And schollers seemely in
her downe with a thing vnpossible Henry What 's that Raphe Raphe Why Harrie didst thou euer see that a woman could both hold her tongue and her handes no but when egge-pies growes on apple-trees then will thy gray mare prooue a bagpiper Emperour What saies the lord of Castile and the earle of Lincolne that they are in such earnest and secret talke Castile I stand my lord amazed at his talke How he discourseth of the constancie Of one surnam'd fot beauties excellence The faire maid of merrie Fresingfield Henrie T is true my lord t is wondrous for to heare Her beautie passing Marces parramour Her virgins right as rich as Vestas was Lacie and Ned hath told me miracles Castile What saies lord Lacie shall she be his wife L●ci● Or els lord Lacie is vnfit to liue May it please your highnesse giue me leaue to post To Fresingfield Ilefetch the bonny girle And prooue in true apparance at the court What I haue vouched often with my tongue Henrie Lacie go to the quirie of my stable And take such coursers as shall fit thy turne Hie thee to Frefingfield and bring home the lasse And for her fame flies through the English coast If it may please the ladie Ellinor One day shall match your excellence and her Ellinor We Castile ladies are not very coy Your highnesle may command a greater boone And glad were I to grace the Lincolne earle With being partner of his marriage day Ed●ard Gramercie Nell for I do loue the lord As he that 's second to my selfe in loue Raph. You loue her madam Nell neuer beleeue him you though he sweares he loues you Ellinor Why Raphe R●p●e Why his loue is like vnto a tapsters glasse that is broken with euery tutch for he loued the faire maid of Fresingfield once out of all hoe nay Ned neuer wincke vpon me I care not I. Hen. Raphe tels all you shall haue a good secretarie of him But Lacie haste thee post to Fresingfield For ere thou hast fitted all things for her state The solemne marriage day will be at hand Lacie I go my lord Exit Lacie Emperour How shall we passe this day my lord Henrie To horse my lord the day is passing faire Wee le flie the partridge or go rouse the deere Follow my lords you shall not want for sport Exeunt Enter frier Bacon with fri●r B●nga● to his cell Bungay What meanes the frier that frolickt it of late To sit as melancholie in his cell To sit as melancholie in his cell As if he had neither lost nor wonne to day Bacon Ah Bungay my Brazen-head is spold My glorie gone my seuen yeares studie lost The fame of Bacon bruted through the world Shall end and perish with this deepe disgrace Bungay Bacon hath built foundation on his fame So surely on the wings of true report With acting strange and vncoth miracles As this cannot infringe what he deserues Bacon Bungay sit down for by prospectiue skill I find this day shall fall out ominous Some deadly act shall tide me ere I sleep But what and wherein little can I gesse Bungay My minde is heauy what so ere shall hap Enter two schollers sonnes-to Lambert and Serlby Knockc Bacon Whos 's that knockes Bungay Two schollers that desires to speake with you Bac. Bid the come in Now my youths what would you ●aue 1. Sholler Sir we are Suffolke men and neighbouring friends Our fathers in their countries lustie squires Their lands adioyne in Crackfield mine doth dwell And his in Laxfield we are colledge mates Sworne brothers as our fathers liues as friendes B●con To what end is ail this 2. Scholler Hearing your worship kept within your cell A glasse prospectiue wherin men might see What so their thoughts or hearts desire could wish We come to know how that our fathers fare Bacon My glasse is free for euery honest man Sit downe and you shall see ere long How or in what state your friendly father liues Meane while tell me your names L●mbert Mine Lambert 2. Scholler And mine Serlsbie Bacon Bungay I smell there will be a tragedie Enter Lambert and Serlsbie with Rapiers and dagg●rs L●mbert Serlsby thou hast kept thine houre like a man Th' art worthie of the title of a squire That durst for proofe of thy affection And for thy mistresse fauour prize thy bloud Thou knowst what words did passe at Fresingfield Such shamelesse braues as manhood cannot brooke I for I skorne to beare such piercing taunts Prepare thee Serlsbie one of vs will die Serl●bie Thou seest I single thee the field And what I spake I le maintaine with my sword Stand on thy guard I cannot scold it out And if thou kill me thinke I haue a sonne That liues in Oxford in the Brodgates hall Who will reuenge his fathers bloud with bloud Lambert And Serlsbie I haue there a lusty boy That dares at weapon buckle with thy sonne And liues in Broadgates too as well as thine But draw thy Rapier for wee le haue about Bacon No● lustie yonkers looke within the glasse And tell me if you can discerne your ●ires 1. Scol Serlsbie t is hard thy father offers wrong To combat with my father in the field 2. Schol. Lambert thou liest my fathers is the abuse And thou shalt find it if my father harme Bungay How goes it sirs 1. Scholler Our fathers are in combat hard by Fresingfield Bacon Sit still my friendes and see the euent Lambert Why standst thou Serlsbie doubtst thou of thy life A venie man faire Margret craues so much Serlbie Then this for her 1. Scholler Ah well thrust 2. Scholler But marke the ward They fight and kill ech other Lambert Oh I am slaine Serlbie And I Lord haue mercie on me 1. Scholler My father slaine Serlby ward that The two schollers stab on another 2. Scholler And so is mine Lambert I le quite thee well Bungay O strange strattagem Bacon See Frier where the fathers both lie dead Baconthy magicke doth effect this massacre This glasse prospectiue worketh manie woes And therefore seeing these braue lustie brutes These friendly youths did perish by thine art End all thy magicke and thine art at once The poniard that did end the fatall liues Shall breake the cause efficiat of their woes So fade the glasse and end with it the showes That Nigromancie did infuse the christall with He breakes the glasse B●ng What means learned Bacon thus to breake his glasse B●con I tell thee Bungay it repents me sore That euer Bacon medled in this art The houres I haue spent in piromanticke spels The fearefull tossing in the latest night Of papers full of Nigromanticke charmes Coniuring and adiuring diuels and fiends With stole and albe and strange Pentaganon The wresting of the holy name of God As Sother Elaim and Adonaie Alpha M●noth and Tetragramiton With praying to the fiue-fould powers of heaue● Are instances that Bacon must be damde For vsing diuels to counteruaile his God Yet Bacon
cheere thee drowne not in despaire Sinnes haue their salues repentance can do much Thinke mercie sits where Iustice holds her seate And from those wounds those bloudie Iews did pierce Which by thy magicke oft did bleed a fresh From thence for thee the dew of mercy drops To wash the wrath of hie Iehouahs ire And make thee as a new borne babe from sinne Bungay I le spend the remnant of my life In pure deuotion praying to my God That he would saue what Bacon vainly lost Exit Enter Mar●ret in Nuns apparrell Keeper her father and their friend Keep Margret be not so headstrong in these vows Oh burie not such beautie in a cell That England hath held famous for the hue Thy fathers haire like to the siluer bloomes That beautifie the shrubs of Affrica Shall fall before the dated time of death Thus to forgoe his louely Margret Margret A father when the hermonie of heauen soundeth the measures of a liuely faith The vaine Illusions of this fl●ttering world Seemes odious to the thoughts of Margret I loued once lord Lacie was my loue And now I hate my selfe for that I lovd And doated more on him than on my God For this I scourge my selfe with sharpe repent●● But now the touch of such aspiring sinnes Tels me all loue is lust but loue of heauens That beautie vsde for loue is vanitie The world containes nought but alluring baites Pride flatterie and inconstant thoughts To shun the pricks of death I leaue the world And vow to meditate on heauenly blisse To liue in Framingham a holy Nunne Holy and pure in conscience and in deed And for to wish all maides to learne of me To seeke heauens ioy before earths vanitie Friend And will you then Margret be shor● a Nunne and so leaue vs all Margret Now farewell world the engin of all woe Farewell to friends and father welcome Christ Adew to daintie robes this base attire Better befits an humble minde to God Than all the shew of rich abilliments Loue oh Loue and with fond Loue farewell Sweet Lacie whom I loued once so deere Euer be well but neuer in my thoughts Least I offend to thinke on Lacies loue But euen to that as to the rest farewell Enter Lacie Warrain Ermsbie booted and spurd Lacie Come on my wags weere neere the keepers lodge Heere haue I oft walkt in the watrie Meades And chatted with my louely Margret VVarraine Sirha Ned is not this the keeper Lacie T is the same E●msbie The old lecher hath gotton holy mutton to him a Nunne my lord L●cie Keeper how farest thou holla man what cheere How doth Peggie thy daughter and my loue Ke●per Ah good my lord oh wo is me for Pegge See where she stands clad in her Nunnes attire Readie for to be shorne in Framingham She leaues the world because she left your loue Oh good my lord perswade her if you can Lacie Why how now Margret what a malecontent A Nunne what holy father taught you this To taske your selfe to such a tedious life As die a maid t were iniurie to me To smother vp such bewtie in a cell M●rgret Lord Lacie thinking of thy former miss● How fond the prime of wanton yeares were spent In loue Oh fie vppon that fond conceite Whose hap and essence hangeth in the eye I leaue both loue and loues content at once Betaking me to him that is true loue And le●uing all the world for loue of him Lacie Whence Peggie comes this Metamorphosis What shorne a Nun and I haue from the co urt Posted with coursers to conuaie thee hence To Windsore where our Mariage shal be kept Thy wedding robes are in the tailors hands Come Peggy leaue these peremptorie vowes Margret Did not my lord resigne his interest And make diuorce twixt Margret and him● Lacy. T was but to try sweete Peggies constancie But will faire Margret leaue her loue and Lord Margret Is not heauens ioy before earths fading blisse And life aboue sweeter than life in loue Lacie Why then Margret will be shorne a Nun Marg. Margret hath made a vow which may not be reuokt Warraine We cannot stay my Lord and if she be so strict Our leisure graunts vs not to woo a fresh Ermsby Choose you faire damsell yet the choise is yours Either a solemne Nunnerie or the court God or Lord Lacie weich contents you best To be a Nun or els Lord Lacies wife Lacie A good motion Peggie your answere must be short Ma●gret The flesh is frayle my Lord doth know it well That when he comes with his inchanting face What so er● betyde I cannot say him nay Off goes the habite of a maidens heart And seeing Fortune will faire Fremingham And all the shew of holy Nuns farewell Lacie for m● if he wil be my lord Lacie Peggie thy Lord thy loue thy husband Trust me by truth of knighthood that the King Staies for to marry matchles Ellinour Vntil I bring thee richly to the court That one day may both marry her and thee How saist thou Keeper art thou glad of this Keeper As if the English King had giuen The parke and decre of Frisingfield to me Erms. I pray thee my Lord of Sussex why art thou in a broune study Warraine To see the nature of women that be they neuer so neare God yet they loue to die in a mans armes Lacie What haue you fit for breakefast we haue hied and posted all this night to Frisingfield Margret Butter and cheese and humbls of a Deere Such as poore Keepers haue within their lodge Lacie And not a bottle of wine Margret Wee le find one for my Lord. Lacie Come Sussex lets in we shall haue more for she speaks least to hold her promise sure Exeunt Enter a denill to seeke Miles Deuill How restles are the ghosts of hellish spirites When euerie charmer with his Magick spels Cals vs from nine-fold trenched Blegiton To scud and ouer-scoure the earth in post Vpon the speedie wings of swiftest winds Now Bacon hath raisd m● from the darkest deepe To search about the world for Miles his man For Miles and to torment his lasie bones For careles watchidg of his Brasen head See where he comes Oh he is mine Enter Miles with a gown● and a corner cap. Miles A scholler quoth you marry sir I would I had bene made a botlemaker when I was made a scholler for I can get neither to be a Deacon Reader nor Schoolemaister no not the clarke of a parish some call me dunce another saith my head is as full of Latine as an egs full of oatemeale thus I am tormented that the deuil and Frier Bacon haunts me good Lord heer 's one of my maisters deuils I le goe speake to him what maister Plutus how chere you Deuill Doost thou know me Miles Know you sir why are not you one of my maisters deuils that were wont to come to my maister Doctor Bacon at Brazen-nose Deuil Yes marry am I.
Miles Good Lord M. Plutus I haue seene you a thousand times at my maisters and yet I had neuer the manners to make you drinke but sir I am glad to see how conformable you are to the statute I warrant you heesasyeomanlya man as you shall see marke you maisters heer 's a plaine honest man without welt or garde but I pray you sir do you come lately from hel Deuil I marry how then Miles Faith t is a place I haue desired long to see haue you not good tipling houses there may not a man haue a lustie fier there apot of good ale a paire of cardes a swinging peece of chalke and a browne toast that will clap a white wastcoat on a cup of good drinke Deuil All thisyou may haue there Miles You are for me freinde and I am for you but I pray you may I not haue an office there Deuil Yes a thousand what wouldst thou be Miles By my troth sir in a place where I may profit my selfe I know hel is a hot place and men are meruailous drie and much drinke is spent there I would be a tapster Deuil Thou shalt Miles There 's nothing lets me from going with you but that t is a long iourney and I haue neuer a horse Deuil Thou shalt ride on my backe Miles Now surely hers acourteous deuil that for to pleasure his friende wil not stick to make a iade of himselfe but I pray you goodman f●iend let me moue a question to you Deuil What 's that Miles I pray you whether is your pace a trot or an amble Deuil An amble Miles T is well but take heede it be not a trot But t is no matter I le preuent it Deuil What doost Miles Marry friend I put on my spurs for if I find your pace either a trot or els vneasie I le put you to a false gallop I le make you feele the benefit of my spurs Deuil Get vp vpon my back Miles Oh Lord here 's euen a goodly meruaile when a man rides to hell on the Deuils backe Exeunt roring Enter the Emperour with a pointles sword next the King of Castile carrying a sword with a point Lacie carying the globe Ed. Warr●carrying arod of gold with a doue on it Ermsby with a crowne and Scepter The queene with the faire maide of Frisingfield on her left hand Henry ●acon with other Lords attending Edward Great potentates earths miracles for state Thinke that prince Edward humbles at your feet And for these fauours on his martiall sword He vowes perpetuall homage to yourselues Yeelding these honours vnto Ellinour Henrie Gramercies Lordlings old Plantagenet That rules and swayes the Albion diademe With teares discouers these conceaued ioyes And vowes requitall if his men at armes The wealth of England or due honours done To Ellinour may quite his fauorites But all this while what say you to the Dames That shine like to the cristall lampes of heauen Emperour If but a third were added to these two They did surpasse those gorgeous images That gloried Ida with rich beauties wealth Margret T is I my lords who humbly on my knee Must yelde her orisons to mighti● Ioue For lifting vp his handmaide to this state Brought from her homely cottage to the court And graste with Kings Princes and Emperours To whom next to the noble Lincolne Earle I vowe obedience and such humble loue As may a handmaid to such mightie men Ellinour Thou m●rtiall man that wears the Almaine crowne And you the westerne Potentates of might The Albian Princesse English Edwards wife Prowde that the louely star of Frisingfield Faire Margret Countesse to the Lincolne Earle Attendes on Ellinour gramercies Lord for her T is I giue thanks for Margret to you all And rest for her due bounden to your selues Henrie Seeing the marriage is solemnised Le ts martch in triumph to the royall feast But why stands Frier Bacon here so mute Bacon Repentant for the follies of my youth That Magicks secreat misteries misled And ioyfull that this roiall marriage Portendes such blisse vnto this matchles realme Hen. Why Bacon what straunge euēt shall happē to this land Or what shall grow from Edward and his Queene Bacon I find by deepe praescience of mine art Which once I tempred in my secreat cell That here where Brute did build his Troynouant From forth the royall garden of a King S●all flowrish out so rich and faire a bud Whose brightnesse shall deface proude Phoebus flowr● And ouer-shadow Albion with her leaues Til then Mars shal● be maister of the field But then the stormie threats of wars shall cease The horse shall stampe as careles of the pike D●ums shall be turnd to timbrells of delight With wealthy fauours plentie shall enrich The strond that gladded wandring Brute to see And peace from heauen shall harbour in these leaues That gorgeous beautifies this matchles flower Appollos Hellitropian then shall stoope And Venus hyacinth shall vaile her top Iuno shall shut her Gilliflowers vp And Pallace bay shall bash her brightest greene● Ceres carnation in consort with those Shall stoope and wonder at Dianas rose Henrie This Prophesie is mysticall But glorious commaunders of Europas loue That makes faire England like that wealthy I le Circled with Gihen and first Euphrates In royallising Henries Albion With presence of your princelie mightines Le ts march the tables all are spread And viands such as Englands wealth affoords Are ready set to furnish out the boords You shall haue welcome mighty potentates It rests to furnish vp this royall feast Only your hearts be frolick for the time Craues that we tast of nought but iouysaunce Thus glories England ouer all the west Exeunt omnes Finis Frier Bacon made by Robert Greene Maister of Arts. Omne tulit punctum qui miscuit vtil● dulci. S●t down and knocke your head
disguisd among the countrie swaines Fain th art a farmers sonne not far from thence Espie her loues and who she liketh best Coat him and court her to controll the clowne Say that the Courtier tyred all in greene That helpt her handsomly to run her cheese And fild her fathers lodge with venison Commends him and sends fairings to herselfe Buy some thing worthie of her parentage Not worth her beautie for Lacie then the faire Affoord● no Iewell fitting for the mayd And when thou talkest of me note if she blush Oh then sh● loues but if her cheekes waxe pale Disdaine it is L●cie send how she fares And spare no time nor cost to win her loues Lacie I will my lord so execute this charge As if that Lacie were in loue with her Edward Send letters speedily to Oxford of the newes Rap●e And sirha Lacie buy me a thousand thousand million of fine bels Lacie What wilt thou do● with them Raphe ●aph● Mary euery time that Ned sighs for the keepers daughter I le tie a bell about him and so within three or foure daies I will send word to hi● father Harry that his sonne and my maister Ned is become Loues morris dance Edward Well Lacie ●ooke with care vnto thy charge And I will hast to Oxford to the Frier That he by art and thou by secret gifts Maist make me lord of merrie Fresingfield Lacie God send your honour your harts desire Exeunt Enter frier Bacon with Miles his poore scholer with bookes vnd●r his arme with them Burden Mason Clement three doctors Bacon Miles where are you Miles Hi● sum dos●issime reuerendissime doctor Bacon Attuli●●in●s libr●s m●●s de Necromantia Miles Ecce quam bo●um quam i●cundum habitares libr●s in●num Bacon Now maisters of our Academicke state That rule in Oxford Vizroies in your place Whose heads containe Maps of the liberall arts Spending your time in deapth of learned skill Why flocke you thus to Bacons secret Cell A F●ier newly stalde in 〈◊〉 Say what 's your mind that I may make replie Burden Bacon we hear that long we haue ●●spect That thou art read in Magicks mys●erie In Piromancie to diuine by flames To tell by Hadromaticke ebbes and tides By Aeromancie to discouer doubts To plaine out questions as Apollo did Bacon Well maister B●●den what of all this Miles Marie ●ir he doth but fulfill by rehearsing of thes● names the Fable of the Fox and the g●●pes that which is abou● vs pertains nothing to vs. Burden I tell thee Bacon Oxford makes report Nay England and the court of Henrie saies Th art making of a brazen head by art Which shall vnfold strang● doubts and Aphorisme● And read a lecture in Philosophie And by the helpe of Diuels and ghastly fiends Thou meanst ere many yeares or daies be past To compasse England with a wall of brasse Bacon And what of this Miles What of this maister why he doth speak mystically for he knowes if your skill faile to make a brazen head yet mother waters strong ale will ●it his turne to make him haue a coppernose Clement Bacon we come not greeuing at thy skill But ioieng that our Academi● yeelds A man supposde the woonder of the world For if thy cunning worke these myracles England and Europe shall admire thy fame And Oxford shall in characters of brasse And statues such as were built vp in Rome Eternize Frier Bacon for his art Mason Then gentle Frier tell vs thy intent Bacon Seeing you come as friends vnto the frier Resolue you doctors Bacon can by bookes Make storming Boreas thunder from his caue And dimme faire Luna to a darke Eclipse The great arch-ruler potentate of hell Trembles when Bacon bids him or his fiends Bow to the force of his Pentageron What art can worke the frolicke frier knowes And therefore will I turne my Magicke bookes And straine out Nigromancie to the deepe I haue contrivd and framde a head of bras●e I made Belcephon hammer ●ut the stuffe And that by art shall read Philosophie And I will strengthen England by my skill That if ten Caesars livd and raig●d in Rome With all the legions Europe doth containe They should not touch a grasse of English ground The worke that Ninus reard at Babylon The brazen walles framde by Semiramis Carued out like to the portall of the sunne Shall not be such as rings the English st●ond From Douer to the market place of Ri● Burden Is this possible Miles I le bring ye to or three witnesses Burden What be those Miles Marry ●ir three or foure as honest diuels and good companions as any be in hell Mason No doubt but magicke may doe much in this For he that reades but Mathematicke rules Shall finde conclusions that auaile to worke Wonder● that passe the common sense of men Burden But Bacon roues a bow beyond his reach And tels of more than magicke can performe Thinking to get a fame by fooleries Haue I not past as farre instate of schooles And red of many secrets yet to thinke That heads o● Brasse can vtter any voice Or more to tell of de●pe philosophie This is a fable Aes●● had forgot Bacon Burden● thou wrongst me in detracting thus Bacon loues not to stuffe himselfe with lies But tell me fore these Doctors if thou dare Of certaine questions I shall moue to thee Burden I will aske what thou can Miles Marrie si● hee le straight be on your pickpacke to knowe whether the feminine or the masculin gender be most worthie Bacon Were you not yesterday maister Burden at Henly vpon the Thembs Burden I was what then Bacon What booke studied you there on all night Burden I none at all I red not there a li●e Bacon Then doctors Frier Bacons art knowes nought Clement What say you to this maister Burden doth hee not touch you Burden I passe not of his friuolous speeches Miles Nay maister Burden my maister ere hee hath done with you will turne you from a doctor to a dunce and shake you so small that he will leaue no more learning in you than is in Ba●aams Asse Bacon Maisters for that learned Burdens skill is deepe And sore he doubts of Bacons Cabalisme I le shew you why he haunts to Henly oft Not doctors for to tast the fragrant aire But there to spend the night in Alcumie To multiplie with secret spels of art Thus priuat steales he learning from vs all To prooue my sayings true I le shew you straight The booke he ke●pes at Henly for himselfe Miles Nay now my maister goes to coniuration take heede Bacon Maisters stand still feare not I le shew● you but his booke ●eere he coniures Pe● omnes deos infernales Belcephon Enter a woman with a shoulder of mutton on a spit and a Deuill Miles Oh maister cease your coniuration or you spoile all for heere 's a shee d●uell c●me with a shoulder of mutton o●●spit you haue mard the diuels supper but no
surges like the batte●ments That compast high built Babell in with towers Welcome my lords welcome braue westeme kings To Englands shore whose promontorie cleeues Shewes Albion is another little world Welcome sayes English Henrie to you all Chie●ly vnto the louely Eleanour Who darde ●or Edwards sake cut through the seas And venture as Agenors d●msell through the deepe To get the loue of Henries wanton sonne Castile Englands rich Monarch braue Plantagenet The Pyren mounts swelling aboue the clouds That ward the welthie Castile in with walles Could not detaine the beautious Eleanour But hearing of the fame of Edwards youth She darde to brooke Neptunus haughtie pride And bide the brunt of froward Eolus Then may faire England welcome her the more Elinor After that English Henrie by his lords Had sent prince Edwards louely counterfeit A present to the Castile Elinor The comly pourtra●t of so braue a man The vertuous fame discoursed of his deeds Edwards couragious resolution Done at the holy land fore Damas walles Led both mine eye and thoughts in equall links To like so of the English Monarchs sonne That I attempted perrils for his sake Em●erour Where is the Prince my lord Henrie He posted down not long since from the court To Suffolke side to merrie Fremingham To sport himselfe amongst my fallow deere From thence by packets sent to Hampton house We heare the Prince is ridden with his lords To Oxford in the Academie there To heare dispute amongst the learned men But we will send foorth letters for my sonne To will him come from Oxford to the court Empe. Nay rather Henrie let vs as we be Ride for to visite Oxford with our traine Faine would I see your Vniuersities And what learned men your Academie yields From Haspurg haue I brought a learned clarke To hold dispute with English Orators This doctor surnamde Iaques Vandermast A Germaine borne past into Padua To Florence and to faire Bolonia To Paris Rheims and stately Orleans And talking there with men of art put downe The chiefest of them all in Aphorismes In Magicke and the Mathematicke rules Now let vs Henrie trie him in your schooles Henrie He shal my lord this motion likes me wel Wee le progresse straight to Oxford with our trains And see what men our Academi● bringes And woonder Vandermast welcome to me In Oxford shalt thou find a iollie frier Cald Frier Ba●on Englands only flower Set him but Non-plus in his magicke spels And make him yeeld in Mathematicke rules And for thy glorie I will bind thy browes Not with a poets garland●made of Baies But with a coronet of choicest gold Whilst then we fit to Oxford with our troupes Le ts in and banquet in our English court Exit Enter Raphe Si●●●ll in Edwardes apparrell Edward Warr●● Er●sby disgu●sed Raphe Where be these vacabond knaues that they attend no better on their maiste● Edward If it please your honour we are all ready at an inch Raphe Sirha Ned I le haue no more post horse to ride on I le haue another fetch Ermsbie I pray you how is that my Lord Raphe Marrie sir I le send to the I le of Eely for foure or fiue dozen of Geese and I le haue them tide six and six together with whipcord Now vpon their backes will I haue a faire field bed with a Canapi● and so when it is my pleasure I le flee into what place I please this will be easie Warren Your honour hath said well but shall we to Brasen-nose Colledge before we pull off our bootes Ermsbie Warren well motioned wee will to the Frier Before we reuell it within the towne Raphe see you keepe your countenance like a Prince Raphe Wherefore haue I such a companie of cutting knaues to wait vpon me but to ●eep and defend my countenance against all mine enemies haue you not good swords and bucklers Enter Bacon and Miles Ermsbie Stay who comes heere Warren Some scholler and wee le aske him where Frier Bacon is Bacon Why thou arrant dunce shal I neuer make thee good scholler doth not all the towne trie out and say Frier Bacons subsiser is the greatest blockhead in all Oxford why thou canst not speake one word of true Latine Miles No sir yes what is this els ●g●●um tuus hom● I am your man I warrant you sir as good Tullies phrase as any is in Oxford Bacon Come on sirha what part of speech is Eg● Miles Eg● that is I marrie nomen s●bstant●●● Bacon How prooue you that Miles Why sir let him prooue himselfe and a will I can b● hard felt and vnderstood Bacon Oh grosse dunce Here beate him Edw. Come let vs breake off this dispute between these two Sirha where is Brazennose Colledge Miles Not far from Copper-smithes hall Edward What doest thou mo●ke me Miles Not I sir but what would you at Brazennose Ermsbi● M●rrie we would speake with frier Bacon Miles Whose men be you Ermsbie Marrie scholler here 's our maister Raphe Sirha I am the maister of these good fellowes mayst thou not know me to be a Lord by my reparrell Miles Then heere 's good game for the hawke for heer 's the maister foole and a couie of Cockscombs one wise man I thinke would spring you all Edward Gogs wounds Warren kill him VVarren Why Ned I thinke the deu●ll be in my sheath I cannot get out my dagger Ermsbie Nor I mine Swones Ned I thinke I am bewitcht Miles A companie of scabbes the proudest of you all drawe your weapon if he can See how boldly I speake now my maister is by Edward I striue in vaine but if my sword be shut And coniured fast by magicke in my sheath Villaine heere is my fist Strike him a box on the eare Miles Oh I beseech you coniure his hands too that he may not lift his armes to his head for he is light fingered Raphe Ned strike him I le warrant thee by mine honour Bacon What meanes the English prince to wrong my man Edward To whom speakest thou ●●con To thee Edward Who art thou B●con Could you not iudge when all your swords grew fast● That frier B●con was not farre from hence Edward king Henries sonne and Prince of Wales Thy ●oole disgui●d cannot conceale thy sel●e I know both Erm●bie and the Suslex E●rle Els Frier Bacon had but little skill Thou comest in post from merrie Fresingfield● Fast fancied to the keepers bonny lasse To craue some succour of the iolly Frier And Lacie Eare of Lincolne hast thou left To treat faire Margret to allow thy loues But friends are men and loue can baffle lords The Earle both woes and courtes her for himselfe VVarren Ned this is strange the frier knoweth al. Ermsbie Appollo could not vtter more than this Edward I stand amazed to heare this iolly Frier Tell euen the verie secrets of my thoughts But learned Bacon since thou knowest the cause Why I did post so fast from Fresingfield Helpe Frier at a pinch that I
liued disguisd to winne faire Peggies loue Margret What loue is there where wedding ends not loue Lacie I meant faire girle to make thee Lacies wife Margret I 〈◊〉 thinke that earles wil stoop so low Lacie Say shal● I make thee countesse ere I sleep Marg. Handmaid vnto the earle so please himselfe A wife in name but seruant in obedience Lacie The Lincolne countesse for it shal be so I le plight the bands and seale it with a kisse Edward Gogs wounds Bacon they kisse I le stab them Bacon Oh hold your handes my lord it is the glasse Edward Coller to see the traitors gree so well Made me thinke the shadowes substances Bacon T were a long poinard my lord to reach betweene Oxford and Fresingfield but ●it still and see more Bungay Well lord of Lincolne if your loues be knit And tha● your tongues and thoughts do both agree To auoid insuing iarres I le hamper vp the match I le take my portace forth and wed you heere Then go to bed and seale vp your desires Lacie Frier content Peggie how like you this Margret What likes my lord is pleasing vnto me Bungay Then hand-fast hand and I wil to my booke Bacon What sees my lord now Edward Bacon I see the louers hand in hand The Frier readie with his portace there To wed them both then am I quite vndone Bacon helpe now if ere thy magicke serude Helpe Bacon stop the marriage now If diuels or nigromansie may suffice And I will giue thee fortie thousand crownes Bacon Feare not my lord I le stop the iolly Frier For mumbling vp his orisons this day Lacie VVhy speakst not Bungay Frier to thy booke Bungay is mute crying Hud hud. Margret How lookest thou frier as a man disttaught● To see if he will take this taske in hand Clement Stay what rumor is this the towne is vp in a mutinie what hurly burlie is this Enter a Constable with Raphe Warren Ermsbie and Miles Constable Nay maisters if you were nere so good you shall before the doctors to aunswer your misdemeanour Burden What 's the matter fellow Constable Marie sir here 's a companie of rufflers that drinking in the Tauerne haue made a great braule and almost kilde the vintner Mil●s Salue doctor Burden this lubberly lurden Ill shapte and ill faced disdaind and disgraced What he tels vnto v●bis mentitur de nobis Burden Who is the maister and chee●e of this crew Miles Ecce asinum mundi fugura rotundi Neat sheat and fine as briske as a cup of wine Burden What are you Raphe I am father doctor as a man would say the Belwether of this copany these are my lords and I the prince of Wales Clement Are you Edward the kings sonne Raphe Sirra Miles bring hither the tapster that drue the wine and I warrant when they see how soundly I haue broke his head thei le say t was done by no lesse man than a prince Mason I cannot beleeue that this is the prince of Wales Warren And why so sir Mason For they say the prince is a braue a wise gentleman VVar. Why and thinkest thou doctor that he is not so Darst thou detract and derogat from him Being so louely and so braue a youth Ermsbie Whose face shining with many a sugred smile Bewraies that he is bred of princely race Miles And yet maister doctor to speake like a proctor And tell vnto you what is veriment and true To cease of this quarrell looke but on his apparrell Then marke but my talis he is great prince of Walis The cheese of our gregis and fili●● regis Then ware what is done for he is Henries white sonne Raphe Doctors whose doting nightcaps are not capable of my ingenious dignitie know that I am Edward Plantagenet whom if you displease will make a shippe that shall hold all your colleges and so carrie away the Niniuersitie with a fayre wind to the Bankeside in Southwarke how sayst thou Ned Warraine shall I not do it VVarren Yes my good lord and if it please your lordship I wil gather vp al your old pantophles and with the corke make you a Pinnis of fiue hundred tunne that shall serue the turne maruellous well my lord Ermsbie And I my lord will haue Pioners to vndermine the towne that the very Gardens and orchards be carried away for your summer walkes Miles And I with scientia and great diligentia Will coniure and charme to keepe you from harme That vtrum horum mauis your very great nauis Like Bartlets ship from Oxford do skip With Colleges and schooles full loaden with fooles Quid dices ad hoc worshipfull domine Dawcocke Clement Why harebraind courtiers are you drunke or mad To taunt vs vp with such scurilitie Deeme you vs men of base and light esteeme To bring vs such a fop for Henries sonne Call out the beadls and conuay them hence Straight to Bocardo let the roisters lie Close clapt in bolts vntill theirwits be tame E●msbie Why shall we to prison my lord Raphe What saist Miles shall I honour the prison with my presence Miles No no out with your blades and hamper these iades Haue a flurt and a crash now play reuell dash And teach these Sacerdos that the Bocardos Like pezzants and elues are meet for themselues M●s●n To the prison with them constable Warren Well doctors seeing I haue sported me With laughing at these mad and merrie wagges Know that prince Edward is at Brazennose And this attired like the prince of Wales Is Raphe king Henries only loued foole I earle of Essex and this Ermsbie O●e of the priuie chamber to the king Who while the prince with Frier Bacon staies Haue reueld it in Oxford as you see Mason My lord pardon vs we knew not what you wer● But courtiers may make greater skapes than these Wilt please your honour dine with me to day VVarren I will maister doctor and satisfie the vintner for h●● hurt only I must desire you to imagine him all this forenoon the prince of Wales Mason I will sir Raphe And vpon that I will lead the way onely I will haue Miles go before me because I haue heard Henrie say that wisedome must go before Maiestie Exeunt ●mnes Enter prince Edward with his poinard in his hand Lacie and Margret Edward Lacie thou canst not shroud thy traitrous thoughts Nor couer as did Cassius all his wiles For Edward hath an eye that lookes as farre As L●ncaeus from the shores of Grecia Did not I sit in Oxford by the Frier And see the● court the mayd of Fresingfield Seahog thy flattering fancies with a kisse Did not prowd B●ngay draw his portasse foorth And ioyning hand in hand had married you If Frier B●con had not stroke him 〈◊〉 And mounted him vpon a spirits backe That we might chat at Oxford with the frier Traitor what answerst is not all this true Lacie Truth all my Lord and thus I make replie At Harlstone faire there
thine art I will be English Henrie to thy selfe But tell me shall we dine with thee to day Bacon With me my Lord and while I ●it my cheere See where Prince Edward comes to welcome you Gratious as the morning starre of heauen Exit Ent●r Edward Lacic Warren Ermsbie Emperour Is this Prince Edward Henries royall sonne How mart●all i● the figur● of his face Y●t louely and be●●t with Amorets Henrie N●d where hast thou been Edward At Framingham my Lord to trie your buckes I● they could scape they teisers or the toile But hearing of these lordly Potentates Landed and prograst vp to Oxford towne I posted to giue entertaine to them Chiefe to the Almaine Monarke next to him And ioynt with him Castile and Saxonie Are welcome as they may b● to the English Court Thus for the men but see Venus appeares Or one that ouermatch eth Venus in her shape Sweete Ellinor beauties highswelling pride Rich natures glorie and her wealth at once Faire of all faires welcome to Albion Welcome to me and welcome to thine owne If that thou dainst the welcome from my selfe Ellinor Martiall Plantagenet Henries high minded sonne● The marke that Ellinor did count her aime I likte thee fore I saw thee now I loue And so as in so short a time I may Yet so as time shall neuer breake that so And therefore so accept of Ellinor Ca●●ile Feare not my Lord this couple will agree If loue may creepe into their wanton eyes And therefore Edward I accept thee heere Without suspence as my adopted sonne Henrie Let me that ioy in these consorting greets And glorie in these honors done to Ned Yeeld thankes for all these fauours to my sonne And rest a true Plantagenet to all Enter Miles with a cloth and trenchers and salt Miles Saluete ●mnes reges that gouern your Greges in Saxonie and Spaine in England and in Almaine for all this frolicke table must I couer thee table with trenchers salt and cloth and thenlooke for your broth Emperour What pleasant fellow is this Henrie T is my lord doctor Bacons poore scholler Mil●s My maister hath made me sewer of these great lords and God knowes I am as seruiceable at a table as a sow is vnder ●n apple tree t is no matter their cheere shall not be great and therefore what skils where the salt stand before or behinde Castile Theseschollers knowes more skill in actiomes How to vse quips and sleights of Sophistrie Than for to couer courtly for a king Enter Mi●es with a messe of po●●age and broth and after him Eacon Mile● Spill sir why doe you thinke I neuer carried twopeny chop before in my life by your leaue Nobile d●cus for here comes doctor Bacons pecus being in his full age to carrie a messe of pottage Bacon Lordings admire not if your cheere be this For we must keepe our Accademicke fare No riot where Philosophi● doth raine And therefore Henrie place these Potentates And bid them fall vnto their frugall cates Emp. Presumptuous Frier what scoffst thou at a king What doest thou taunt vs with thy pesants fare And giue vs cates fit for countrey swaines Henrie proceeds this iest of thy consent To twit vs with such a pittance of such price Tell me and Fredericke will not greeue the long Henrie By Henries honour and the royall faith The English monarcke beareth to his friend I knew not of the friers feeble fare Nor am I pleasd he entertaines you thus Bacon Content thee Fredericke for I shewd the cates To let thee see how schollers ●se to feede How little m●ate refines our English wits Miles take away and let it be thy dinner Miles Marry sir I wil this day shal be a festiual day with me For I shall exceed in the highest degree Exit Miles Bacon I tell thee Monarch all the Germane Peeres Could not a●●oord thy entertainmentsuch So roiall and so full of Maiestie As Bacon will present to Fredericke The Basest waiter that attends thy cups Shall be in honours greater than thy selfe And for thy cates rich Alexandria drugges Fetcht by Carueils from Aegypts richest straights Found in the wealthy strond of Affrica Shall royallize the table of my king Wines richer than the Gyptian courtisan Qua●t to Augustus kingly countermatch Shal be carrowst in ●●glish Henries feasts● Candie shall yeeld the richest of her canes Persia downe her volga by Canows Send d●wn the secrets of her spicerie The Africke Dates mirab les of Spaine Conserues and Suckets from Tiberias Cates from Iudea choiser than the lampe That fiered Rome with sparkes of gluttonie Shall bewtisie the board for Fredericke And therfore grudge not at a friers feast Enter two gentlemen Lambert and Serlby with the keeper Lambert Come frolicke keeper of our lieges game Whose table spred hath euer venison And Iacks of wines to welcome passengers Know I am in loue with iolly Margret That ouer-shines our damsels as the moone Darkneth the brightest sparkles of the night In Laxfield heere my land and liuing lies I le make thy daughter ioy●ter of it all So thou consent to giue her to my wise And I can spend fiue hundreth markes a yeare Serlbie I am the lan●lord keeper of thy holds By coppie all thy liuing lies in me Laxfield did neuer see me raise my due I will infeofe faire Margret in all So she will take her to a lustie squire Keeper Now courteous gentls if the Keepers girl● Hath pleased the l●king fancie of you both And with her beutie hath subdued your thoughts T is doubtfull to decide the question It ioyes me that such men of great esteeme Should lay their liking on this base estate And that her state should grow so fortunate To be a wife to meaner men than you But sith such squires will stoop to keepers fee I will to auoid displeasure of you both Call Margret forth and she shall make her choise Exit Lambert Content Keeper send h●rvnto vs. Why Serlsby is thy wife so lately dead Are all thy loues so lightly passed ouer As thou canst wed before the yeare be out Serlsby I liue not Lambert to content the dead Nor was I wedded but for life to her The graues ends and begins a maried state Enter Margr●t Lambert Peggie the louelie slower of all townes Suffolks faire Hellen and rich Englands star Whose beautietempered with her huswifrie Maks England talke of merry Fr●sing●ield Serlsby I cannot tricke it vp with poesies Nor paint my passions with comparisons Nor tell a tall of Phebus and his loues But this beeleue me Laxfield here is mine Of auncient rent seuen hundred pounds a yeare And if thou canst but loue acountrie squire I wil infeoffe thee Margret in all I can not flatter trie me if thou please Mar. Braue neighbouring squires the stay of Suffolks cli●e A Keepers daughters is too base in gree To match with men accoumpted of such worth But might I notdisplease I would reply Lambert Say Peggy nought shall make vs
discontent Marg. Then gentils note that loue hath little stay Nor can the flames that Venus sets on fire Be kindled but by fancies motion Then pardon gentils if a maids reply Be doubtful while I haue debated with my selfe Who or of whom● loue shall constraine me like Serlsbie Let it be me and trust me Margret The meads inuironed with the siluer streames Whose Batling pastures fatneth all my flockes Yelding forth fleeces stapled with such woole As Lempster cannot yelde more finer stuffe And fortie kine with faire and burnisht heads With strouting duggs that paggle to the ground Shall serue thy dary if thou wed with me Lambert Let passe the countrie wealth as flocks and kine And lands that waue with Ceres golden sheues filling my barnes with plentie of the fieldes But peggie if thou wed thy selfe to me Thou shalt haue garments of Imbrodred silke Lawnes and rich networks for thy head attyre Costlie shal be thy fare abiliments If thou wilt be but Lamberts louing wife Margret Content you gentles you haue profered faire● And more than fits a countrie maids degree But giue me leaue to counsaile me a time For fancie bloomes not at the first assault Giue me but ten dayes respite and I will replye Which or to whom my selfe affectionats Serslby Lambert I tell thee thou art importunate Such beautie fits not such a base esquire It is for Serlsby to haue Margret Lamb. Thinkst thou with wealth to ouer reach me Serlsby I scorne to brooke thy country braues I dare thee Coward to maintaine this wrong At dint of rapier single in the field Serlsby I le aunswe●e Lamb●rt what I haue auoucht Margret farewel another time shall serue Exit Serlsby Lambert I le follow Peggie far●well to thy selfe Listen how well ●le answer for thy lo●e Exit Lambert Margeret How Fort●●● tempe●s lucky happes with frowns And wrongs me wi●h the sweets of my delight Loue is my blis●e and loue is now my bale Shall I be Hellen in my forward fates As I am Hellen in my ma●chles h●e And set rich Su●●olke with my face afire If louely Lacie were but with hi● Peggy The cloudie darckenes●e of his bitter ●rowne Would ch●●k the pride of these aspiring squires Before the te●●e of ten dayes be expired When as they looke for a●●swere of their loues My Lord will come to merry F●isingfield And end their fancies and their follies both Til when Peggie be b●●th and of good cheere Enter a post with a letter and a bag of gold Post Fair louely damsell which way leads this path How might I post mevn●o Frisingfield which footpath leadeth to the keepers lodge Margeret You● way is ●eady and this path is right My selfe do● dwe●● her●by in Frisingfield And if the keeper be the ●an you seeke I am his daughter may 〈…〉 the cause Post Louely and once b●lo●●d of my lord No merua●le if his ey● was ●odg● so low when brigh●●r 〈◊〉 is not ●n the he a●ens The Lincolne earle hath ●ent you letters here And with them iust an hundr●d pounds in gold Sweete bonny w●nch read them and make reply Margret The scrowles that Ioue sent Danae Wrapt in rich closures of fine burnisht gold Were not more welcome than these lines to me Tell me whilst that I doe vnrip the seales Liues Lacie well how fares my louely Lord Post Well if that wealth may make men to liue well The letter and Margre●reads it Margaret THe bloomes of the Almond tree grow in a night and vanish in a mome the flies Hamere faire Peggie take life with the Sun and die with the dew fancie that slippeth in with a gase goeth out with a winke and too timely loues haue euer the shortest length I write this as thy grefe and my folly who at Frisingfield lovd that which time hath taught me to be but meane dainties eyes are dissen●blers and fancie is but queasie therefore know Margret I haue chosen a Spanish Lad●e to be my wife cheefe waighting woman to the Pri●cess● Ellinour a Lady saire and no lesse faire th●n thy selfe honor●ble and wealthy in that I forsake thee I leaue thee to thine own liking● and for thy dowr●e I haue sent thee an hundred pounds and euer assur● thee of my fauour which shall auaile thee and thine much Farewell Not thine nor his owne Ed●ard L●●i● Fond Atae doomer of bad boading fates That wrappes proud Fortune in thy snaky locks Didst thou inchaunt my byrth-day with such stars As lightned mischeefe from their infancie If heauens had vowd if●tars had made decree To shew on me their froward influence If L●cie had but lovd heauens hell and all Could not haue wrongd the p●tience of my minde P●st It grieues me damsell but the Ear●● is forst To loue the Lady by the Kings commaund Margret The wealth combinde within the English shelues Europes commaunder no● the English King Should not haue moude the loue of Peggie from her Lord. P●s● What answere shall I returne to my Lord Margret First for thou camst from Lacie whom I lovd Ah giue me leaue to sigh at euery thought Take thou my freind the hundred pound he sent For Margrets resolution craues no dower The world shal be to her as vanitie Wealth trash loue hate pleasure dispaire For I will straight to stately Fremingham And in the abby there be shorne a Nun And yeld my loues and libertie to God Fellow I giue thee this not for the newes For those be hatefull vnto Margret But for th art Lacies man once Margrets loue Post What I haue heard what passions I haue seene I le make report of them vnto the Earle Exit P●●● Margret Say that she ioyes his fancies be at rest And praies that his misfortune may be hers Exit Enter Frier Bacon drawing the courtaines with a white sticke a booke in his hand and a lampe lighted by him and the brasen head and miles whith weapons by him Bacon Miles where are you Mites Here sir Bacon How chaunce you tarry so long Miles Thinke you that the watching of the brazen head craues no furniture I warrant you sir I haue so armed my selfe that if all your deuills come I will not feare them an inch Bacon Miles thou knowest that I haue diued into hell And sought the darkest pallaces of fiendes That with my Magick spels great Belcephon Hath left his lodge and kneeled at my cell The rafters of the earth rent from the poles And three-formd Luna hid her filuer looks Trembling vpon her concaue contenent When Bacon red vpon his Magick booke With seuen yeares tossing nigromanticke charmes Poring vpon darke Hecats principles I haue framd out a monstrous head of brasse That by theinchaunting forces of the deuil Shall tell out strange and vncoth Aphorismes And girt faire England with a wall of brasse Bungay and I haue watcht these threescore daye● And now our vitall spirites craue some rest If Argos livd and had his hundred eyes They could not ouerwatch Phobeters night Now