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A19945 A poetical rapsodie containing: diuerse sonnets, odes, elegies, madrigals, epigrams, pastorals, eglogues, with other poems, both in rime and measured verse. For varietie and pleasure, the like neuer yet published. Davison, Francis, 1575?-1619? 1611 (1611) STC 6375; ESTC S105119 99,741 216

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But so they speake that thee and thine disdaine And I my selfe confesse my skill too small To pleade for loue and cleere my selfe with all What reason can my simple wit deuise Why bootlesse griefe should thus my minde afflict I loue the thoughts that loue it selfe despise I seeke for that I neuer looke to finde Oft haue I heard for which I thinke I die Thine angrie tongue all kind of loue defie Yet is my life vpon thy promise staid By which thou hast assur'd me of thy loue And though thereby my heate be not allaide No stay of flight where gaine is still aboue Yet since thy heart can yeeld to loue no more I rest content although I die therefore Quis Deus opposuit nostris sua numina votis A repentant Poeme Though late my heart yet turne at last And shape thy course another way T' is better lose thy labour past Then follow on to sure decav What though thou long haue straid away In hope of grace for mercy cry Though weight of sinne doth presse thee downe And keepe thee grou'ling on the ground Though blacke despaire with angrie frowne Thy wit and iudgement quite confound Though time and wit haue bene mispent Yet grace is left if thou repent Weepe then my heart weepe still and still Nay melt to flouds of flowing teares Send out such shrikes as heau'n may fill And pierce thine angrie Iudges ea●…es And let thy soule that harbours sin Bleede streames of bloud to drowne it in Then shall thine angrie Iudges face To cheerefull lookes it selfe apply Then shall ●…hy soule be fild with grace And feare of death constraind to flie Euen so my God oh when how long I would but sin is too too strong I strine to rise sin keeps me downe I fly from sin sin followes me My will doth reach at glories crowne VVeake is my strength it will not be See how my fainting soule doth pant O let thy strength supply my want To the Epitaph vpon the heart of Henry the third late King of France and Poland slaine 1589. by a Iacobine Frier Vpon the Tombe of his heart in the Church of Saint Clou neere Paris adioyning to the house where he was slaine Adsta viator dole Regum vicem Cor Regis isto conditum est sub marmore Qui iura Gallis iura Sarmatis dedit Tectus Cucullo hunc sustulit Sicarius Abi Viator dole Regum vicem Th●…s Paraphastically Englished WHether thy choice or chance thee hither brings Stay Passenger and while the hap of kings This little stone a great Kings heart doth hold That ru'ld the fickle French and ●…olackes bold Whom with a mightie worlike host attended With traiterous knife a coused monster ended So fraile are euen the highest earthly things Go passenger and waile the hap of Kings F. D. Addit per Cha. Best Arm. An Epitaph on Henry the fourth the last French King THat we should more bewaile the hap of kings Great Henry Bo●…bons death occasion brings To Henry Valois ne●…t crownd King of France Next both in bloud in name in reigne in chance Perils his youth wa●…s did his manhood spend His old a●…e peace till murder his life did end His conquests glory his wisedome peace did wi●… His faith heauen Christ pardon for his sinne An Epitaph on Queene Elizabeth ELiza that great maiden Queene lies heere Who gouern'd England foure and fortie yeare Our coines refinde in Ireland tamde Belgia protected Friended France foiled Spaine and Pope reiected Princes found her powerfull the world vertuous Her subiects wise and iust and God religious God hath her soule the world her admiration Subiects her good deeds Princes her imitation Vnions Iewell Diuers rare gems in thee O vnion shine First seauen Margarites in thy Iewell stand Matildaes three three Ianes of regall line Two royall Maries two Elizaes and One Isbell Anne Sibill and Margery All royall gems set princely shine in thee But first in it doth Agasia shine Who first with Durstus it began to make Then Margret next of our King Edgars line VVhom Malcolme King of Scots to wife did take VVhose grandchild Mawde our Empresse did conioine Scots Saxon Norman bloud in our Kings line For their child Mawde our first Henry did marry Of them Matild our said Empresse did spring By whose second husband our Kings did carry Name of great Plantagenet then Scots King First Alexander did Sibilla wed VVho sprong from our VVilliam conquerors bed The third Matild their first king Dauid maried Earle VValdoffes daughter neece to great K VVilliam Iane our King Iohns daughter thither was caried By their second Alexander after came Their third King Alexander who did marry An other Margret daughter of our third Harry From them two did another Margret spring VVho by Norwaies Prince a fourth Margret had Scots infant Queene whom first Edward our king To haue married to his sonne would haue bene glad So Scotlands Peares would too her death sayd nay VVhich onely this great vnion then did stay Though that most noble and victorious king This naturall vnion could not then aduance Another he as great t' effect did bring VVhen he his sonne maried to the heire of France Isbell by whom since all our kings haue claimed The crowne of France which some of the haue gained Though this our second Edward did preuent That he from Scotland did not not take his wife His daughter Iane performed his intent VVith second Dauid spending there her life He did the child of second Edward marry As third Alexander did of our third Harry Without issue they died then Margery Their first King Roberts daughter Bruse by name Scots Queene by birth must needs remembred be By whom Lord Stewart did encrease his fame From them second Robert Iames Stewart from him Third Robert namde whence first Iames did begin A valiant Prince who spent his youthfull prime In martiall deeds with our fift Henry in France To whom our sixt king Henry in his time Iane our third Edwards grandchild did aduance In mariage she of Henry Bewford sprong Somersets Earle was vertuous faire and yong Fifth Margaret Richmonds Countes forth did bring Our seuenth Henry who one diuision ended With Eliza heire of our fourth Edward king From both whom great'st Margret of all descended From whom and fourth Iames fift Iames Scottish king And from him Mary Scots last Queene did spring Fourth Iames being dead Margret did Douglas marry They a daughter Margret had Earle Lyneux wife Whose sonne Lord Darnley married their last Mary Of whom comes Charles Iames finisher of strife Who with Anne makes vnion by the childlesse death Of our Queenes Mary and Elizabeth The rarest pearles and richest Margarits all Which euer did in any Iewell stand The rarest Iewell too and most Angelicall Almost made vp by God and Natures hand By men to be finisht to this Isle sent Then to be worne for her best ornament A Panegyricke to my soueraigne Lord the King GReat King since
A POETICAL RAPSODIE Containing Diuerse Sonnets Odes Elegies Madrigals Epigrams Pastorals Eglogues with other poems both in Rime and measured verse For varietie and pleasure the like neuer yet published The Bee and Spider by a diuerse power Sucke Hony and Poyson from the selfe same flower Nevvly corrected and augmented LONDON Printed by William Stansby for Roger I●…ckson dwelling in Fleetstreet neere the great Conduit 1611. To the most Noble Honorable and worthy Lord William Earle of Pembroke Lord Herbert of Cardiffe Marmion and Saint Quintine GReat Earle whose braue Heroike minde is higher And nobler then thy noble high Degree Whose outwarashape though it most louely be Doth in faire Robes a fairer Soule attier Who rich in fading wealth endlesse Treasure Of Vertue Valour Learning richer art Whose present greatnesse men esteeme but part Of what by line of future Hope they measure Thou worthy Sonne vnto a peer elesse mother Or Nephew to great Sidney of renowne Who hast deseru'd thy Coronet to crowne With Lawrell crowne a crowne excelling th' other I consecrate these Rimes to thy great Name Which if thou like they seeke no other fame FRA. DAVISON To the Reader BEING induced by some priuate reasons and by the instant entreaty of speciall friends to suffer some of my worthlesse poems to be published I desired to make some written by my deere friends Anonymoi and my deerer Brother to beare them company Both without their consent the latter being in the low-Country warres and the rest vtterly ignorant thereof My friends names I concealed mine owne and my brothers I willed the Printer to suppresse as well as I had concealed the other which he hauing put in without my priuity we must now vndergo a sharper censure perhaps then our namelesse workes should haue done and I especially For if their Poems be liked the praise is due to their inuention if disliked the blame both by them and all men will be deriued vpon mee for publishing that which they meant to suppresse If thou thinke we affect fame by these kinds of writings though I thinke them no disparagement euen to the best iudgements yet I answere in all our behalfes with the princely shepheard Dorus Our hearts do seeke another estimation If thou condemne Poetry in generall and affirme that it doth intoxicate the braine and make men vtterly vnfit eyther for more serious studies or for any actiue course of life I onely say Iubeo te stultum esse libenter Since experience proues by examples of many both dead and liuing that diuers delighted and excelling herein being Princes or States-men haue gouerned and counselled as wisely being souldiers haue commanded armies as fortunately being Lawyers haue pleaded as iudicially and eloquently being Diuines haue written taught as profoundly and being of any other profession haue dischargèd it as sufficiently as any other men whatsoeuer If liking other kinds thou mislike the Lyricall because the chiefest subiect thereof is Loue I reply that louc being vertuously intended and worthily placed is the whetstone of wit and spurre to all generous actions and many excellent spirits with great fame of wit and no staine of iudgement haue written excellently in this kind and specially the euer-praiseworthly Sidney So as if thou will needs make a fault for mine owne part Hand timeo ●…i iam neque●… defendere crimen Cum tanto commune viro If any except against the mixing both at the beginning end of this booke of diuerse things written by great learned personages with our meane and worthlesse scriblings I vtterly disclaime it as being done by the Printer eyther to grace the forefront with Sir Philip Sidneys and others names or to make the booke grow to a competent volume For these Poems in particular I could alledge these excuses that those vnder the name of Anonymos were written as appeareth by diuers things to Sir Philip Sidney liuing and of him dead almost twenty yeares since when Poetry was farre from that perfection to which it hath now attained that my brother is by profession a Souldier and was not 18 years old when he writ these toyes that mine owne were made most of them sixe or seuen yeares since at idle times as I iourneyed vp and downe during my trauails But to leaue their works to iustifie themselues or the Authors to iustifie their works and to speake of mine owne thy mislikes I contemne thy praises which I neither deserue nor expect I esteeme not as hoping God vvilling ere long to regaine thy good opinion if lost or more deseruedly to continue it if alreadie obtained by some grauer worke Farewell FRA. DAVISON An alphabeticall Table of all the Sonnets Odes Poems Madrigals Epigrams Elegies Pastorals Eglogues Dialogues Hymmes and Epitaphes with all other the principall matters contained in this present Volume A A Contention betwixt a Wife a Widow and a Maid 7 A Fiction how Cupid made a Nimph wound her selfe 21 A liuing death see Poem 1 Absence 190. 191 Absence and time see Ode 11 Affection see Poeme 25 Aiax who killed himselfe see inscription 1 Allegory of his loue to a ship see Sonnet 3 Allusion to Theseus voyage against the Minotaure see Sonnet 4 Anacreons Odes 159. An answere to what loue is 90 An i●…uectiue against loue see Sonnet 5 Anatomie of loue see Poem 33 Astreas praise with silence see Dialogue 7 B Bacheler 2 Beautie causeth loue see Sonnet 15 Beggars life praised 161 Belides his torments 53 Blankes 7. Bodkin 6 Bracelets 6 Breake heauie heart see Poe. 4 Brutus his inhabiting of this I le see Poeme 30 C Cato Vtican who slew himselfe see inscription 5●… Chaine 6 Childs Epitaphs see Epitaph 1 Christian Stoicke see Poem 34 Climenestra to Orestes Inscription 57 Commendation of bea●…ie c. see Ode 13 Commendation of verses see Sonnet 44 Comparison betwixt the strength of beast see Ode 1 Comparison of loue in Beggars and Kings 160 Comparison to a candle-flie see Madrigall 6 Comparison with perfect loue see Poeme 23 Complaint of loue very wittily 30 56 Conceit see Poeme 25 Contention betwixt a Wife a Widow and a Maid 7 Contention of loue and reason see Sonnet 8 Contrarieties of loue see Poeme 24 Corinaes singing see Poeme 26 Counterfait answer see Ode 26 Country Gentleman 2 Courtier 1 Courtiers rule see Epi. 1 Courtly life dispraised see Pastorall 3 Coyfe and Crosse-cloath 6 Crambo the l●…wzie shifter see Epigram 5 Cuccolds Epigram see Epigrā 3 Cuddies Embleme 40 Cuddies Pastorall Eglogue see Eglogue 6 Cupids dialogue with a louer see Dialogue 2 Cupid made a Nimph to wound her selfe see Eglogue 5 Cupids mariage with dissimulation see Ode 6 Cupid proued a Fence●… see Madrigall 7 Cupid shootes light but wounds sore see Poeme 6 Curtizans Epigram see Epigrā 4 Cushinet 7 Cynthia Queene of Fortune 3. 196. D Deadly sweetnesse see Poeme 7 Death in loue see Poeme 8 Death liuing see Poeme 1 Description of loue see Sonnet 2 Desire 202 Desire and hope see