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A19946 Dauisons poems, or, A poeticall rapsodie Deuided into sixe bookes. The first, contayning poems and deuises. The second, sonets and canzonets. The third, pastoralls and elegies. The fourth, madrigalls and odes. The fift, epigrams and epitaphs. The sixt, epistles, and epithalamions. For variety and pleasure, the like neuer published.; Poetical rapsody Davison, Francis, 1575?-1619? 1621 (1621) STC 6376; ESTC S109387 98,578 288

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Alexander after came Their third King Alexander who did marry Another Margaret daughter of our third Harry From them two did another Margaret spring Who by Norwaies Prince a fourth Margret had Scots infant Queene whom first Edward our King To haue married to his Sonne would haue beene glad So Scotlands Peares would too her death said nay Which 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 When he his sonne married to th' heire of France Isbell by whom since all our Kings haue claimed The crowne of France which some of thē haue gained Though this our second Edward did preuent That he from Scotland did not take his wife His daughter Iane performed his intent With 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 dyed 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 nam'd 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 marriage 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 fourh Edward King From both whom great'st Margaret of all descended From whom 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 VVhich 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 XVII POEM Or Panegyricke to my Soueraigne Lord the King GReat King since first this I le by Ioues owne hand Was set apart within great Oceans armes And was appointed by her selfe to stand Fenc't round about with rockes from forren harmes She into sundry parts hath oft beene torne And greatest wounds by her owne blowes hath borne But all the fractions now which man did make Since it in one whole number nature gaue Are added vp and brought to one great stake And being all sum'de vp one totall haue For Brittaine now to all the diuidend In one whole quotient all doth comprehend For thou the Monarch of this westerne I le Now all her shiuered parts hast brought together Spreading thy Empires wings eight hundred mile In length and foure in breadth there staying neither But ore old Oceans breast thy arme doth stretch Through Ireland making it to India reach To Iuda thou the Tribes hast brought againe Which by themselues did in Samaria dwell Iordane by thee whose streame did runne amaine Is now dride vp that euery Tribe may well To other go thou hast broke downe the wall Which Adrian made and which we Picticke call Thou vertues Orbe where Fame is still ascendent And neuer can her highest auge attaine Conqueror of all hearts all flattries transcendent Who hold'st it losse to take to giue great gaine Of bountious deeds the euer-running spring To many wealth to all dost gladnesse bring The Muses dearling who with golden Pen And silu'red tongue thy princely mind canst tell In whom learning a Princes richest Iemme Both humane and diuine abounding dwell The great contriuer of this triple I le To one Imperiall Diadem and stile The royall product of the princely Doue Which Englands Noah from peaces Arke sent forth After warres deluge who Oliue branch of loue Dost bring with thee in thy returne from North How ioyfully did Brittaine reach her hand To take thee in t ' the Arke of this her land With great Eliza glory of her owne Wonder of future times true Churches nurse The ancient faiths reuiuer on whom were shewne Heauens blessings all mens prayers no mans curse Fortunes fauours natures wealth Gods high grace The Muses lodge all vertues dwelling place Our Sunne did set with great Elizabeth Before night thou a new day-light didst bring Our summers peace did close at her cold death VVithout warres winter thou renewd'st our spring All our liues ioyes with her dead seem'd to be Before intombde they were reuiude by thee Center of royall births in whom do meete Lines drawne from all the noble Conquerors blood VVhich euer in any part with warlike feete Of this great Iles circumference haue stood With thy faire Queene a sea whither do runne Streames of all royall blood of Christendome Both royall plants whence princely branches spring Whereon grow our best fruits of hope and ioy Great off-springs both of many a Noble King An antidote sh ' against this lands annoy In whose milde lookes hath princely maiestie A marriage made with modest courtesie She vertues booke bound in a golden couer Wherein nature hath writ with Gods owne quill All beauties learning where thou her true louer Maist reade sweete lectures of delight at will And on the frame of whose diuinest feature All graces shine that can be in a creature Sprung of a double knit to a triple King Late quadruple the holy number Three Gratefull to God did seeme more apt to bring Peace to this Land with loue and vnity Plant royall set by Iuno in this land Whose ancestors by Mars heere once did stand Sacred beauty makes seeme angelicall Thee heauenly wisedome to the starrs do raise Minerua her Apollo thee do call Their dearlings both truest theames of all our praise Together liue and loue and long do raigne To our to your to Gods ioy blisse and gaine Heere endeth the Poems I. DEVICE A Lottery presented before the late Queenes Maiesty at the Lord Chancelors house 1601. A Marriner with a Boxe vnder his arme contayning all the seuerall things following supposed to come from the Carrick came into the Presence singing this Song CYnthia Queene of Seas and Lands That fortune euery where commands Sent forth fortune to the Sea To try her fortune euery way There did I fortune meet which makes me now to sing There is no fishing to the Sea nor seruice to the King All the Nymphs of Thetis traine Did Cinthias fortunes entertaine Many a Iewell many a Iem Was to her fortune brought by them Her fortune sped so well as makes me now to sing There is no fishing to the Sea nor seruice to the King Fortune that it might be seene That she did serue a
DAVISONS POEMS OR A Poeticall Rapsodie Deuided into sixe Bookes The first contayning Poems and Deuises The second Sonets and Canzonets The third Pastoralls and Elegies The fourth Madrigalls and Odes The fift Epigrams and Epitaphs The sixt Epistles and Epithalamions For variety and pleasure the like neuer published The Bee and Spider by a diuers power Sucke hony and poyson from the selfesame flower The fourth Impression Newly corrected and augmented and put into a forme more pleasing to the Reader LONDON Printed by B. A. for Roger Iackson 1621. To the most Noble Honourable and worthy Lord William Earle of Pembrok Lord Herbert of Cardiffe Marmion and Saint Quintine Lord Chamberlaine of his Maiesties houshold one of his Maiesties most Honorable Priuie Counsell and Knight of the most noble order of the Garter GReat Earle whose braue Heroike mind is higher And nobler then thy noble high Degree Whose outward shape though it most louely be Doth in faire Robes a fairer soule attire 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 Son vnto a peerelesse 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 Dauison To the Reader BEing induced by some priuate reasons and by the instant entreaty of special friends to suffer some of my worthlesse Poems to bee published I desired to make some written by my deere friends Anonym●i 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 own 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 wee must now vndergoe a sharper censure perhaps then our nameles workes should haue done and I especially For if their Poems be liked the praise is due to their inuention if mislked the blame both by them and all men will be deriued vpon me for published 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 answer in all our behalfes with the princely shepheard Dorus. Our hearts do seeke another estimation If thou condeme Poetry in generall and affirme that it doth intoxicate the braine and make men vtterly vnfit either for more serious studies or for any actiue course of life I only say Iubio 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 counselled as wisely being souldiers haue commanded armies as fortunately being Lawyers haue pleaded as iuditially and elequently being Diuines haue written and taught as profoundly and being of any other profession haue discharged it as sufficiently as any other mē whatsoeuer If liking other kinds thou mislike the Lyricall because the chiefest subiect thereof is Loue I reply that loue being vertuously intended and worthily placed is the whetstone of wit and spur to all generous actions and many excellent spirits with great fame of wit and no staine of iudgement haue writtē excellently in this kind specially the euer praise-worthy Sidney So as if thou wilt needs make a fault for mine own part Haud timeo si iam nequeo defendere crimen Cum tanto commune viro If any except against the mixing both at the beginning and end of this booke of diuers things written by great and learned Personages without meane and worthlesse scriblings I vterly disclaime it as being done by the Printer either 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 Anonymus 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. yeares old when he writ these toyes that mine owne were made most of them 6. or 7. yeeres since at idle time as I iournied vp and down during my trauails But to leaue their works to iustifie thēselues or the Authors to iustifie their works to speak of mine own thy mislikes I contemne thy praises which I neuer deserue nor expect I esteeme not as hoping God willing ere long to regaine thy good opinion if lost or more deseruedly to continue it if already obtained by some grauer worke Farewell Fra. Dauison An Alphabeticall Table of all the Canzonets Dialogues Deuises Eglogues Elegies Epigrams Epitaphs Epistles Epithalmions Madrigalls Odes Pastoralls Poems Sonets and other principall matters contayned in this booke A A Contention betwixt a Wife a Widow a Maid 5 A fiction how Cupid made a Nymph wound her selfe 15 A liuing death 132 Absence 212 Absence and time 253 Affection 29 219 A●ax who kild himselfe 48 Allegory of his loue to a ship 111 Allusion to Thesius voyage against the Minataure 90 Antereons Odes 248 An answere to what loue is 211 An inuectiue against loue 107 Anotomy of loue 147 Astreas praise with silence 156 Allusion to the confusion of Babel 209 B Batcheler 3 Beauty causeth loue 77 Beggers life praised 136 B●●ides his torments 109 Blankes 46 47 Bodkin 46 Bracelets 46 Breake heauy heart 129 Brutus his inhabiting this I le 25 C Cato Vtican who slew himself 49 Chaine 45 Christian Stoick 103 Clitemnestra to Orestes 47 Commendation of beauty 226 Commendation of Verse 69 Comparison between the strength of beasts 249 Comparison of loue between Beggers and Kings 136 Comparison to a candle flye 211 Comparison with perfect loue 134 Complaint of loue very wittily 17 Contention of loue reason 73 Contrarieties of loue 1●7 Corinaes singing 143 Country Gentlemen 3 courtier 1 Courtiers rule 259 Coife and Crascloth 45 Cra●●bo the louz●e shifter 260 Cuckolds Epigram Cuddies Embleme 103 Cuddies Pastorall 175 Eglogue 175 Cupid made a Nymph to wound her selfe 15 Cupids marriage with dissimulation 240 Cupid proued a Fencer 210 Cupid shoots light but wounds sore 21 Cushinet 46 Cinthia queene of fortune 254 Canzonets The lye giuen to sundry sorts and degrees 100 The christian Stoick 103 Vpō seeing his face in her eyes 104 A Dialogue betweene his flaming heart her frozen brest 104 He will esteeme of her as she is to him 105 An inscription for the Statute of Dido 106 Loues Hyperboles 106 An inuectiue against loue 107 Petrarcks sonnet translated 108 He prooues himself to endure the tortures of Tantalus 109 Loues discomodities 110 Execration of his