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A14871 Monuments of honor Deriued from remarkable antiquity, and celebrated in the honorable city of London, at the sole munificent charge and expences of the right worthy and worshipfull fraternity, of the eminent Merchant-Taylors. Directed in their most affectionate loue, at the confirmation of their right worthy brother Iohn Gore in the high office of His Maiesties liuetenant ouer his royoll [sic] chamber. Expressing in a magnificent tryumph, all the pageants, chariots of glory, temples of honor, besides a specious and goodly sea tryumph, as well particularly to the honor of the city, as generally to the glory of this our kingdome. Invented and written by Iohn Webster Merchant-Taylor. Webster, John, 1580?-1625? 1624 (1624) STC 25175; ESTC S111504 7,759 22

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as Antwerpe Paris Rome Venice and Constantinople vnder these sit fiue famous Schollers and Poets of this our Kingdome as Sir Ieffery Chaucer the learned Gower the excellent Iohn Lidgate the sharpe witted Sr. Thomas Moore and last as worthy both Souldier and Scholler Sir Phillip Sidney these being Celebrators of honor and the perseruers both of the names of men and memories of Cities aboue to posterity I present riding afore this Temple Henry de Royall the first Pilgrime or Gatherer of quartridge for this Company and Iohn of Yeacksley King Edward the thirds Pavillion maker who purchast our Hall in the sixt yeare of the aforesayd Kings gouernment These liued in Edward the firsts time likewise in the sixt of whose Raigne this Company was confirmed a Guild or Corporation by the name of Taylors and Linnin Armores with power to choose a Maister and Wardens at Midsomer these are decently habited and hooded according to the ancient manner My Lord is heere saluted with two Speeches first by Troynouant in these lines following The speech of Troynouant HIstory Truth and Vertue seeke by name To celebrate the Merchant-Taylors fame That Henry de Royall this wee call Worthy Iohn Yeacksley purchast first their Hall And thus from low beginnings their oft-springs Societies claime Brother-hoods of Kings I Troynovant plac't eminent in the eye Of these admire at my felicity Fiue Cities Antwerpe and the spacious Paris Rome Venice and the Turkes Metropilis Beneath these fiue learned Poets worthy men Who do eternize braue acts by their pen Chaucer Gower Lidgate Moore and for our time Sr. Phillip Sidney glory of our clime These beyond death a fame to Monarckes giue And these make Cities and Societies liue The next deliuered by him represents Sir Phillip Sidney TO Honor by our Wrightings Worthy men Flowes as a duty from a iudging pen And when we are emploid in such sweet praise Bees swarme and leaue their honey on our bayes Euermore Musically Verses runne When the loth'd vaine of flattery they shun Suruey most Noble Pretor what succeedes Vertue low bred aspiring to high deedes These passing on in the next place my Lord is incountred with the person of S. Iohn Hawkwood in compleate Armour his plume and Feath●r for his Horses shafforne of the Companies colours white and Wa●chet this worthy Knight did most worthy seruice in the time of Edward the third in France after serued as Generall Diuers Princes of Italy went to the Holy-land and in his returne backe dyed at Florence and there lyes buried with a faire Monument ouer him This worthy Gentleman was Free of our Company and thus I prepare him to giue my Lord entertainment Sir Iohn Hawkwoods Speech MY birth was meane yet my deseruings grew To eminence and in France a high pitch flew From a poore common Souldier I attaind The stile of Captaine and then Knight-hood gaind S●rud the Blacke Prince in France in all his warrs Then went t 'the Holy-land thence brought my scars And wearied body which no danger feard To Florence where it nobly lyes Inteerd There Sir Iohn Hawkewoods memory doth liue And to the Merchant-Taylors fame doth giue After him followes a Triumphant Chariot with the Armes of the Merchant-Taylors colored and guilt in seueral places of it and ouer it there is supported for a Cannopy a rich and very spatious Pauillion coloured Crimson with a Lyon Passant this is drawne with fower horses for Porters would haue made it moue tottering and Improperly In the Chariot I place for the honor of the Company of which Records remaine in the Hall Eight Famous Kings of this Land that haue bin free of this Worshipfull Company First the Victorious Edward the Third that first quartered the Armes of France with England next the Munificent Richard the Second that kept Ten-Thousand daily in his Court in Checkroult By him the Graue and discreet Henry the Fou●th in the next Chayres the Scourge and Terrour of France Henry the Fifth and by him his religious though vnfortunate Sonne Henry the sixt the two next Chayres are supplied with the Persons of the Amarous and Personable Edward the Fourth for so Phillip Commineus and Sir Thomas Moore describe him the other with the bad man but the good King Richard the third for so the Lawes he made in his short Gouernment doe Illustrate him But lastly in the most Eminent part of the Chariot I place the wise and politique Henry the Seauenth houlding the Charter by which the Company was Improued from the Title of Linin-Armorers into the name of Master and Wardens of Merchant-Taylors of Saint Iohn Baptist. The Chayres of these Kings that were of the House of Lancaster are garnisht with artificiall Red Roses the rest with white but the Vniter of the deuision and houses Henry the Seauenth both with White and Red from whence his Royall Maiesty how raigning tooke his Motto for one peice of his Coyne Henricus rosas regna Iacobus The speaker in this Pageant is Edward the third the last Line of his speech is repeated by all the rest in the Chariot Edward the Third VIew whence the Merchanttaylors honor springs From this most Royall Conuenticle of Kings Eight that Successiuely wore Englands Crowne Held it a speciall honor and renowne The Society was so worthy and so good T'vnite themselues into their Brotherhood Thus Time and Industry attaine the prise As Seas from Brookes as brookes from Hillocks rise Let all good men this sentence oft repeate By vnity the smallest things grow great The Kings By vnity the smallest things grow great And this repetition was proper for it is the Companies Motto Concordia paruaeres crescunt After this Pageant rides Queene Anne wife to Richard the second free likewise of this Company nor let it seeme strange for besides her there were two Dutchesse fiue Countesses and two Barronnesses free of this Society s●uenteene Princes and Dukes one Arch-bishop one and thirty Earles besides those made with Noble Prince Henry one Vicount twenty foure Bishops sixty six Barons seuen Abbotts s●uen prior or subprior and with Prince Henry in the yeare 1607. the Duke of Linox the Earles of Nottingham Suffolke Arundel Oxford Worcester Pembrooke Essex Northampton Salisbury Montgomery the Earle of Perth Vicount Cranborne Barons the Lord Euers Hunsden Hayes Borley Mr. Howard Mr. Sheffield Sir Iohn Harrinton Sir Thomas Chaliner besides States of the Low-Countries and Sir Noel Caroone their Legier Embassadour And in regard our Company are stild Brethren of the Fraternity of St. Iohn Baptist and that the ancient Knights of St. Iohn of Ierusalem to which now demolisht House in St. Iohns Streete our Company then vsing to go to offer it is recorded Henry the seuenth then accompaning them gaue our Mr. the vpper hand because these Knights I say were instituted to secure the way for Pilgrimes in the desert I present therefore two of the Worthiest Brothers of this Society of St. Iohn Baptist I can find out in Hystory The first Amade le Graunde