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A13415 All the vvorkes of Iohn Taylor the water-poet Beeing sixty and three in number. Collected into one volume by the author: vvith sundry new additions corrected, reuised, and newly imprinted, 1630.; Works Taylor, John, 1580-1653.; Cockson, Thomas, engraver. 1630 (1630) STC 23725; ESTC S117734 859,976 638

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sword or Royall Scepter being a most vnfortunate Prince in all his worldly attempts the Peers in England bandied factions against each other the Duke of York claimed the Crowne the cōmons of Kent vnder the leading of their captiain lack Cade being in number 50000 came to London the Rebels murdered the Bishop of Sali bury and beheaded the Lord Say at the standard in Cheape the King was taken prisoner by the Duke of Yorke at the bartell of Saint Albans the French with 15000 men landed at Sandwich spoyled the Towne fierd it stew the Maior with all in authority there and likewise hauing burnt and pillaged many other places in De●on●●●●shire and the West they departed Queene Margaret the wife to King Henry the 6 met the Duke of Yorke with an Army neere Wakefield where the victory fell to the Queen the Duke being slaine with his son the Earle of Rutland and many others Thus for the space of 60 yeeres the three Kings Henries the 4,5 and 6 kept the Crowne in the Lancastrian line the house of Yorke got the soueraignty King Henry hauing reign'd 38 yeers ● months 4 daies he was ouercome by King Edward at a place called Mortimers Crosse neere Ludlow more of this vnfortunate Prince shall be spoken in the reigne of the next King Edward EDWARD THE IIIJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND c. I Yorkes great heire by fell domesticke Warre Inthroaned was vn-King'd and re-inthroan'd Subiecting quite the house of Lancaster Whilst wofull England ouer-burthen'd groan'd Old Sonlesse Sires and Childlesse Mothers moan'd These bloody broyles had lasted three score yeares And till the time we were in peace attoan'd It walked fourescore of the Royale Peeres But age and time all earthly things out-weares Through terrours horrors mischiefe and debate By trult by treason by hopes doubts and feares I got I kept I left and Lost the State Thus as disposing heauens doe smile or frowne So Cares or Comforts wait vpon a Crowne Edward the fourth was Earle of March some and heire to Richard Duke of Yorke sonne to Richard Earl of Cambridge s●nto Edmund of langley ●●● of York 4 sento Edward the 3 King of England This King Edward the fourth Was borne at Roane is Normandy and in the yeere 1461 the 29 of Iune hee●● crowned at Westminister by the hands of Thomas Bourgchier Arcbishop of Canterbury Henry the fixt hauing a great power in the Nor●● was ●●● and encountred by King Edward neere Towton on Palmssunday where bet●●●xt the two Kings was fought a●●●● battell which continued ten houers in which cruell conflict the English ground dranke the sangkired ●●●● of ●●● 37000 of her naturall englishmen after ●●●●●●●●●● as Hexam by the Lord Montracute King Henry was again put to fight with great lesse be was afterward●●● disquid'd ●●●●●isoned ●● the Towre of London Edward new supposed all was well his minde was on m●●ruj● wherefore he sent Richard Neuill The great King ●● ker Ex●le of Warwich into France so treate forth Lady Bona sister to the French Quene but with meane space King Edward prou●ed himselfe man home and was married to the Lady Elizabeth Gray ●●● match was so deslatefull to Warwick that hee ●●●●●● fals aff from King Edward after which he took the King Prisoner but he escaping againe fled beyend the Saw The Earle of Warwick tooke King Henry out of the T●●nt and caused him againe to be crowned King Edward landed agains in England at Bornet s●ld tra 〈…〉 London his Army was met by the Earles of Warwick and Oxford King Henry being them againe ●●●●●●● s●●er where was fought a fierce battell where Edward was Vector the Earle of Warwicke with ●●●● N●●●● men were slaint● and comment on eath sides 10000 King Henry was againe committed to the Tonre Edward Prince of Wales the son of Henry the first was●●● the battel of Tewxbury murdred by Richard ●●● of Gloecether Soon after the bastard Lord ●●● vaised an Army of 17000 men against King Edward but the bastard was soons supprest and the most ●●●●● King Edward the fixt freed from his long●●● being murdred by the bloody hands of Richard ●●● of Glocester The King b●●ing through must ●●● ●●● peacs ●●● himselfe ●●●●●● Iane Shore his Combine ●●● pleasures were mixed with greife for his ●●● George Duke of Clarence who was ●●● of Malmsey the Towre of London 1475. ●●● of Scotland threatned was against England Richard Duke of Glocester was some against the Scots ●●●●●● king Edward ●●● haning ●●● Aprill 9 1483 ●●● at Windsor EDWARD THE V KING OF ENGLAND AND FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND IF birth if beauty innocence and youth Could make a Tyrant feele one sparke of grace My crooked Vncle had beene mou'd to ruth Beholding of my pitty-pleading face But what auailes to spring from roy all Race What suerty is in beauty strength or wit What is command might eminence and place When Treason lurkes where Maiesty doth sit My haplesse selfe had true false proofe of it Nipt in my bud and blasted in my bloome Depr●'d of life by murther most vnfit And for three Kingdoms could not haue one tombe Thus Treason all my glory ouer-topt And ●●● the Fruit could spring the Tree was lop't Edward the fifth borne in the Sanctuary at Westminster Sonne of King Edward the fourth beganne his short reigne ouer the Real●●● of England at the age of ●3 yeeres but ●●y the cunning dealing of Richard ' Duke of Gloucester his vnnaturall Vnckle he was neuer crowned ●●● young King with his younger brother Richard Duke of Yorke was at London with his mother and in the guidance of his Vnckle by the mothers side named Sir Anthony Wooduill Lord Riuers but by the ●●● and crafty dealing of the Duke of Glouster all the Queene kindred were remoued from the King and the Lord Riuers sent from Northampton to Pomfret with others whence they were imprisoned and beheaded The protector Richard hauing the King in his keeping and power his onely ●yn●● was next how to get into his hands ●●● person of Richard Duke of Yorke the Kings brother whom the Queene their mother kept close in the Sanctuarie at Westminster which Prince was gotten from the said Sanctuary by the ●● till plots and perswation of the Lord protector and the Duke of Buckingham The poore innocent Lambs being as it were put into the greedy Iawes of the Wolfe their rauenous Vnckle for safegard and protection and at the first approach of Richard Duke of York into his Vnckles presence he was entertained in all seeming reuerence with a Iudas kisse by his Vnckle The Duke of Buckingham was promised by the Protector for his trusty seruices to him in helo●●● him to the person of this Prince and for his future seruices to ayde him in his vnlawsfull attaining the Crowne of England that Gloucesters Sonne should be married to Buckinghams daughter and netball that Buckingham should haue the Earledome of Hertford with many other
the next By whom good Hezekiab was perplext But when blasphemous Pagans puft with pride Contemptuously the God of gods deside The Lord of Lor●s whom no pow'r can withstand Tooke his owne gracious glorious cause in hand He vs'd no humane Arme or speare or sword But with his All-commanding mighty Word One Angell sent to grisly Plutoes den A hundred eighty and fiue thousand men Then fiftly was Ierusalem subdude In Iudaes blood th' ●●●yrians hands imbrude Manasses godlesse Glory did expire All yeeld vnto th' insulting foes desire Vsurping Conquest all did seaze vpon The King in chaines-bound sent to Babylon Till he repenting to his God did call Who heard his cry and freed him out of thrall Then sixtly Pharaob-Necho Egypts King To great distresse all Iudaes Land did bring With fell confusion all the Kingdome fill'd And with a Dart good King Iosias kill'd The Shepheard for his wandring sheep was strook The godly Prince from godlesse people tooke So this iust zealous and religious Prince Whose like scarce euer Raign'd before or since Th' Almighty to himselfe did take agen As knowing him too good for such bad men Nabuchadnezer next made them obey When Zedekiah did the Scepter sway King Kingdome Peeres and people all o'rethrown All topsie-turuy spoyld and tumbled downe The curst Caldeans did the King surprize Then slew his Sons and next pluck'd out his eyes Then vnto Babylon he was conuayde In Chaines in Priso and in Darknesse layde Till death his Corps did from his soule deuide He liu'd a slaue and sadly gladly dyde The Citty and the Temple burnt and spoyld With all pollution euery place was soyld The holy vessels all away were borne The sacred Garments which the Priests had worne All these the Caldees voyde of all remorce Did cary vnto Babylon perforce Which seuenty yeeres in slauery and much woe They kept and would by no meanes let them goe Till Persian Cyrus did Earths glory gaine Who freed the Iewes and sent them home againe He rendred backe their vessels and their store And bad them build their Temple vp once more Which many yeeres in glorious state did stand Till Piolomy the King of Egypts band Surpriz'd the Iewes and made them all obey Assaulting them vpon the Sabbath day Next after that from Rome great Pompey came And Iudaes force by force perforce did tame Then did the Caesars beare the earthly sway The vniuersall world did them obey And after that the Romane pow'r did place The Idumean Herods gracelesse Grace Him they created Tetrarch demy King 'Gainst whom the Iewes did boldly spurne and ●ling For they had sworne that none but Dauids seed In the seat Royall euer should succeed But Sossius and King Herods Armies strength Did ouer-run them all in breadth and length By hostile Armes they did them all prouoke To beare the burthen of their awfull yoke And lastly when the Romanes ouer-run By valiant Titus old Vespasians sonne Then fell they to an vnrecouer'd wane They all in generall were or slaine or tane Then was the extirpation of them all Their iust worst last most fatall finall fall Thus mercy being mock'd pluckd iudgmēt down Gods fauour being scorn'd prouokes his frowne Aboue all Nations he did them respect Below all Nations he did them deiect Most vnto them his fauour was addicted Most vpon them his fury was inflicted Most neere most deare they were to him in loue And farthest off his wrath did them remoue He blest he curst he gaue and then he tooke As they his Word obeyde or else forsooke How oft Iebouab seem'd his sword to draw To make them feare his precepts and his Law How oft he raisd them when they hedlong fell How oft he pardond when they did rebell How long did Mercy shiue and Iustice winke When their foule crimes before Gods face did stinke How oft Repentance like a pleasing sauour Repurchasd Gods abused gracious fauour When he did blessings vpon blessings heape Then they ingratefull held them meane and cheape Their plenty made them too too much secure They their Creators yoke would not endure They gracelesse fell from goodnesse from grace And kick'd and spurn'd at Heau'ns most glorious face The Prophets and the Seers that were sent To warne them to amendment repent They ston'd they kill'd they scorn'd they heat they bound Their goodnesse to requite their spight did wound The Prophets came with loue and purchas'd hate They offred peace and were return'd debate They came to saue and were vniustly spill'd They brought them life and were vnkindly kill'd No better entertainment they afford Vnto the Legates of their louing Lord. Thus were the Lab'rers in GODS Vineyard vsde Thus was their loue their care their paines abusde Their toyles and trauailes had no more regard Bonds death and tortures was their best reward At last th' Almighty from his glorious seat Perceiu'd his seruants they so ill intreat No more would send a Prophet or a Seer But his owne Sonne which he esteem'd most deare He left his high Tribunall and downe came And for all Glory enterchang'd all shame All mortall miseries he vnderwent To cause his loued-louelesse Iewes repent By Signes by Wonders and by Miracles By Preaching Parables and Oracles He wrought sought their faithlesse faith to cure But euer they obdurate did endure Our blest Redeemer came vnto his owne And 'mongst them neither was receiu'd or knowne He whom of all they should haue welcom'd best They scorn'd and hated more then all the rest The GOD of principalities and pow'rs A Sea of endlesse boundlesse mercy showres Vpon the heads of these vnthankefull men Who pay loue hate and good with ill agen Their murdrous-minded-malice neuer lest Till they the Lord of life of life bereft No tongue or pen can speake or write the story Of the surpassing high immortall glory Which he in pitty and in loue forsooke When he on him our fraile weake nature tooke To saue Mans soule his most esteemed ●era And bring it to the new Ierusalem From Greatest great to least of least he fell For his belouee chosen Israel But they more mad then madnesse in behauiour Laid cursed hands vpon our blessed Sauiour They kill'd th'ternall Sonne and Heirs of Heau'n By whom and from whom all our liues are giu'n For which the great Almighty did refuse Disperse and quite forsake the saithlesse Iewes And in his Iustice great omnipotence He left them to a reprobated sence Thus sundry times these people fell and rose From weale to want from height of ioyes to wo●●● As they their gracious GOD forsooke or tooke His mercy either tooke them or forsooke The swart Egyptians and the Isralites And raging Rezin King of Aramnes Then the Assyrians twice and then againe Th' Egyptians ouer-run them all amaine Then the Caldeans and once more there came Egyptian Ptolomy who them o'recame Then Pompey next King Herod last of all Vespasian was their vniuersall fall As in Assyria Monarchy began They lost it to the
rest he 's one that I must thanke With his good wife and honest brother Frank. Now for the City 'T is of state and Port Where Emperors Kings haue kept their Court 939 yeere the foundation Was layd before our Sauiours Incarnation By * Ebrank was the fift K. of Britain after Brule Ebrank who a Temple there did reare And plac'd a * An Arch-Flam●● which was as an idolatrous high Priest to Dians Flammin to Diana there But when King Lucius here the Scepter swaid The Idols leuell with the ground were layd Then Eleutherius Romes high Bishop plac'd An Archbishop at Yorke with Titles grac'd Then after Christ 627. Was Edwin * Edwin and his whole family were baptized on Easter day the 12. of Aprill 6 7● baptiz'd by the grace of heauen He pluck'd the Minster down that then was wood And made it stone a deed both great and good The City oft hath knowne the chance of warres Of cruell forraigne and of home-bred iarres And those that further please thereof to read May turne the volumes of great Hollinshead 'T is large 't is pleasant and magnificent The Norths most fertile famous ornament 'T is rich and populous and hath indeed No want of any thing to serue their need Abundance doth that noble City make Much abler to bestow then need to take So farewell Yorke * Yorkshire the greatest shire in England and 308. ●●● about Speed the tenth of August then Away came I for London with my men To dinner I to Pomfret quickly rode Where good hot Venison staid for my abode I thanke the worshipfull George Shillito He fill'd my men and me and let vs goe There did I well view ouer twice or thrice A strong a faire and ancient Edifice Reedifi'd where it was ruin'd most At th' high and hopefull Prince * Pomfret Castle of Wales his cost I saw the roome where Exton * Prince Charles and his rowt Of Traytors Royall Richards braines beat out And if that King did strike so many blowes As hackes and hewes vpon one pillar showes There are one hundred slashes he withstood Before the Villaines shed his Kingly blood From Pomfret then vnto my noble friend Sir Robert Swift at Doncaster we wend An ancient Knight of a most generous spirit Who made me welcome farre beyond my merit From thence by Newarke I to Stam●ord past And so in time to London at the last With friends and neighbors all with louing hearts Did welcome me with pottles pintes and quarts Which made my Muse more glib and blythe to tell Thistory of my Voyage So farewell * Sir Pierce of Exton Knight King Richard the second murdered there An Epilogue Thus haue I brought to end a worke of paine I wish it may requite me with some game For well I wote the dangers where I ventered No full bag'd man would euer durst haue entered But hauing further shores for to discouer Hereafter now my Pen doth here giue ouer FINIS THE GREAT O TOOLE ENglands Scotlands Irelands Mirror Mars his fellow Rebels Terror These lines doe gallop for their pleasure Writ with neither feet or measure Because Prose Verse or Anticko Story Cannot Blaze O Tooles great Glory GReat Moguls Landlord and both Indies King Whose selfe-admiring Fame dot ● lowdly ring Writes 4. score yeeres More Kingdomes he hath right to The Starres say so And for them be wi● Fight to● And though this worthlesse Age will not beleeue him But clatter spatter slander scoffe and grieue him Yet he and all the world in this agree That such another TOOLE will deuer bee AN ENCOMIVM OR ENCO-MI-ASS TRICK DEDICATED TO THE VNLIMITED memory of Arthur O Toole or O Toole the Great Being the Sonne and Heire of Brian O Toole Lord of Poores Court and farre Collen in the County of Dublin in the Kingdome of Ireland The Mar● and Mercury the Agamemnon and Vlisses both for Wisdome and Valour in the Kingdomes of Great Britaine and Ireland Prologue BRaue Vsquebough that fierce Hibernian liquor Assist my braine and make my wit run quicker To heat my Muse like to a well warm'd Chimney I beg thy merry ayde kinde Polyhimny I list not to call Fables into question Nor of Baboones or idle bables jest I on And yet if Sence or reason heere you looke for For neither or for either read this Booke for And if perchance I doe in any word lye Doe as I writ it reade it o'r absurdly Though in these daies there are a Crew of fond men That for inuention striue to goe beyond men And write so humerous Dogmaticall To please my Lord and Lady what d' ee Cail With Inkehorne tearms stiffe quilted bumbast●● And though not vnderstood yet are well tasted And therefore I 'l not reach beyond the bounds of My weake capacity nor search the sounds of Deepe Natures secrets or Arts spacious cirquit My Muse is free from those my selfe will her qu● But leauing idle toyes with toyle endure I on To write the praise of this braue bold Centuti●● THE ARGVMENT AND MEANING of this following History IN all Ages and Countries it hath euer bin knowne that Famous men haue florished whose worthy Actions and Eminency of place haue euer beene as conspicuous Beacons Burning and blazing to the Spectators view the sparkes and flames whereof hath sometimes kindled Courage in the most coldest and Effeminate Cowards as Thersites amongst the Grecians Amadis de Gaule Sir Huon of Burdeaux in France Sir Beuis Gogmagog Chinon Palmerin Lancelot and Sir Tristram amongst vs here in England Sir Degre Sir Grime and Sir Gray Steele in Scotland Don Quixot with the Spaniards Gargantua almost no where Sir Dagonet and Sir Triamore any where all these and many more of the like Ra●● haue fill'd whole Volumes with the ayrie Imaginations of their vnknowne and vnmatchable worths S● Ireland amongst the rest had the Honor to produce and breed a sparke of Valour Wisedome and Magninimity to whom all the Nations of the world must giue place The Great O Toole is the toole that my Muse takes in hand whose praises if they should be set forth to the full would make Apollo and the Muses Barren To whom the nine Worthies were neuer to be compared betwixt whom and Haniball Scipio the Great Pompey or Tamberlaine was such oddes that it was vnfit the best of them should ●ell his stirrop and who by his owne Report in whom Ireland may reioyce and England be merry whose Youth was Dedicated to Mars and his Age to Westminster which ancient Cittie is now honour'd with his beloued Residence To the Honour of the Noble CAPTAINE O TOOLE THou Famous man East West and North and Southward ●om Boreas cold rump t' Austers slauering mouthward ●all Apolloes daughters all to witnes ●uch would I praise thee but my Wit wants fitnes● ●● thou thy selfe of thy selfe canst speake so-well ●●ut though my Rimes not altogether goe-well ●●et if the worlds applause would not
with the sword at the siedge of ●elphos in Greece Bochas They were the sonnes of Mulmutius Donwallo Belinus brought Denmarke to ●butary to Brittaine they were a paire of worthy bro●●●● G●rguintus 373. GVrguintus was Belinus first-borne sonne Victoriously he Denmark● ouer-runne ●●e the vnpeopled Ireland did supply ●eign'd nineteen yeeres a King and then did dye This King gaue leaue to a company of stragling ●●●●ssed Spaniards to possesse themselues in Ireland hee ●●● buried at Caerlion Yeeres before Christ. Guinthelinus 456. HE married Merci● a renowned Dame From whom the iust ● wise Mer●●●an Statutes came He sixe and twenty yeeres the Scepter swaide And then with honour in his Tombe was laide He was the sonne of Gurguintus he builed Warwick and ly●th buried at London Cecilius 330. Kimarus 223. SEuen yeeres Cecilius kept the Regall Cha●re Three yeeres Kimarus rul'd as his ●ole Heire The Syre with loue did well and ●ustly reigne His sonne Kimarus was a hunting slaine About this time a sauage people called the Picts beg'd habitation of the King of Scots and liued in the Mar●●es betweene England and Scotland Kimarus was a vicious Prince and killed by wild Beasts as hee was hunting he was the sonne of Cecilius Cecilius was buried at Caerlion Elanius 321. ELanius as most Histories agree Was King of Brittaine yeeres iust three times three What Acts he did or what Lawes he decreed They are vnwrit and therefore are vnread Elanius was the sonne of Kimarus Yeeres before Christ. Morindus reigned 8 yeeres 311. THis King Morindus valiant more then wise A rau'ning Monster from the Sea did ●ise Which many people to destruction brought Who kil'd this braue King as he brauely fought He killed the Monster after the Monster had de●●●red him for he was in the belly of it liuing and found dead with his dagger in his hand Gorbomanus 303. THis King eleuen yeers wore the Brittain crown He founded Cambridge built Grantham Town His subiects peace past Kingdomes he prefer'd Lou'd and bewai●'d at London was inter'd He built the Townes of Cambridge and Grantham Archigalo and Elidurus 392. THese brothers were not Kings both at one time But for extortion an vnkingly crime The Eldest hauing gaind his Subiects hate Depos'd and Elidurus got the State But he not greedy after worldly reigne To Archigalo gaue it vp againe Rul'd tenne yeeres more thus twenty yeeres in all His State Maiesticke did twice rise and fall Archigalo put away from him and reiected the true and ancient Nobility and Gentry and in their roomes was supplyde with the counsels of flatterers and parasites which was his downefall Yeeres before Christ. Elidurus 272. Vigenius Peredurus 270. THen A●chigale beeing dead and gone Good Elidure two yeers kept Brittaines Throne Vigenius Peredurus two yeeres more Thrust Elidure from all the sway he bore But they both dy'd the third time he was crown'd Elidurus 261. And reigned foure yeeres more belou'd renown'd Once subiect twice a slaue and thrice a King Thus Fortunes fauours vp and downe did sling Heere because Hystories make little or ●o mention of any the doings of the Kings from the reigne of Elidurus to King L●● I thinke it fit onely to insert their names and the times of their reignes with their yeeres before Christ. 258. Gerbonian reigned ten yeeres 248. Morgan foureteene yeeres 224. Emeria●●s seuen yeeres This King was deposed from al●●● gall gouernment for his tyranny 227. Iuall twenty yeeres This King was a iust and ●●● Prince Yeeres before Christ. 207. Rimo sixteen yeeres His reigne was blest with abundance of Peace and Plenty 191. Geruncius twenty yeeres 171. Catillus ten yeeres Catillus caused all the oppressors of the poore to be hanged vp but since his time they are doubly increased 161. Coylus twenty yeeres A peaceable King and a quiet reigne 141. Porrex fiue yeeres A good Prince 136. Chirimus one yeere Chirimus through excessiue drinking got his death 135. Tulgon two yeeres 133. EL●red one yeere Yeeres before Christ. 132. Androgius one yeere 131. Varianus one yeere Varianus giuen all to lust purchsed himselfe a short reigne and it may bee perceiued that all these Princes either by treason or their own bad liues were soon brought to their ends for 25 of them did not reigne aboue 62 yeeres 12● Eliud fiue yeeres 120. Dedamius fiue yeeres 118. Gurginius three yeeres 115. Merianus two yeeres 113. Blodunus two yeeres 110. Capenus three yeeres Yeeres after Christ. 108. Quinus two yeeres 106. Silius two yeeres 94. Bledgabredus ten yeeres A great louer of Musicke and a good Patron to Musicians 92. Archemalus two yeeres 90. Eldolus two yeeres 88. Rodianus two yeeres 86. Redargius three yeeres Yeeres after Christ. 84. Samullius two yeeres 81. Penisellus three yeeres 78. Pirrhus two yeeres 76. Caporus two yeeres 74. Diuellus foure yeeres A Noble and ver●nous Prince 70. Hellius one yeere The I le of Ely tooke the n●m●●●tion from this Prince There hee ●●●● a Palace and there he dying was buried Lud reigned 11. yeeres 66. A Long time after Troynouant was fram'd It was by Lud Kair-Lud or Lud-sto●s nam'd Yeeres before Christ. ●●e made it strong with Battlements and Towres ●●● against foes inuasiue pow'rs ●●●free Stone for Free-men Ludgate hee founded ●● here freemen wanting freedom are confounded ●●dy'd and left two Sonnes too young for reigne Therefore his brother did the Crowne obtaine Some Writers doe affirme that this King builded London from Ludgate to London-stone and that the stone ●●●● thereof was called Luds stone Cassibelan 17. yeeres 58. V● dead the nobles crown'd Cassibelan ●●● whose reign here the Romanes conquest wan ●● Iulius Caesar sailed out of France ●in this Land his Eagle did aduance ●●●●● bold scorn'd base at first to stoope ●●● Caesar fled before their warlike troope ● Ciuill warres this Kingdome ouer-runnes ●twixt Cassibelan and Luds two Sonnes ●●● they vnnaturall sought each others fall ●●● Romanes tooke aduantage conquer'd all T●●● Caesar by his high Imperiall doome ●●● Britaine Tributary vnto Rome Nemias a valiant Duke of this Kingdome receiued deaths wound of Caesar Yet after that he tooke Caesars ●●●nd from him and with the same kil'd Labianus a Romane Tribune and lastly was she field and dyed Caesar ●the Castles of Douer Canterbury and the Tower ●● London Theomantius 37. THen Theomantius of the royall blood The sole Sonne liuing of his Father Lud ●●ign'd three and twenty yeeres a King in State ●hose Picture stands on Luds vnlucky gate Yeeres before Christ. Cimbilinus IN this Kings reigne the glorious King of Kings In person came and mans saluation brings When through the world all bloody wars did cease For our soules peace then came the Prince of peace Our Sauiour Iesus Christ was borne his reigne in the 42. yeere of Augustus Caesar then being Emperour of Rome Cimbelinus was the Sonne of Theomantins Guiderius anno Christi 21. THis King and Subiects brauely nobly ioyne To hold from Rome the tributary Coyne But
By whom the Christians all were slaine or vext Constantius was a victorious Prince and triumphed in Rome yet ●●●●uell oppressor and an Arian hereticke 89 Maximinianus 375. NExt Iulian raigned Valenti●ia● And after him succeeded Grasi●● Maximianus was of life depriu'd 'Cause he with Gratian for the Empire striu'd How like Bauius these tyrants consumed on● another these were all Emperours of Rome Kings of Brittaine 90. Gratian. 376. THen Gratian claim'd this Kingdome as his right But hauing gain'd it he was slaine in fight Fierce warres the Romane Empire did deuide And Caesars and their Viceroyes fought and dyde Honorius Romes Tribunall did obtaine Next after him did Theodosius raigne Then did the Scot ioyne with the barbarous pict This headlesse Kinglesse Kingdome to afflict The Romane Scepter we had long obayd Foure hundred eightythree yeeres Tribute payd And now this land shook off their wrongd comand When Ciuill discord had neer spoyl'd this Land In one ●●●●● the whole nation of the Picts were ●● Yeeres after Christ. ●●●●●●shed about this time the Romanes gouernment ●●here Gratian was a Brittaine Emperour but some●● 91 Vortiger 447. THis King through murder did the Throne ascend And had a troublous Raigne and murdrous end ●●●●●● Constantines lawfull Heyre and Sonne By vortigers false meanes to death was done For which to keepe the Crowne vniustly gain'd The Saxons for his ayde he entertain'd Then Heng●st with his Brother Horlus crue ●● Britaine 's best bloud did their blades embrew King Vortiger with doting loue inthral'd ●atch't Hengists daughter beauteous Rowan cal'd ●●● Saxons troopes on troopes came in so fast That Britaines did depriue the King at last Hee murdered his lawfull Prince and vsurping the Throne was enforced to haue ayd of the Saxons who at the ●● almost ouer-ran this Kingdome but the Brittaines ●●●●ed Vortiger and crowned his Sonne Vortimer 92. Vortimer 454. THen * On the Plaine of Salisbury at Stonching where the Stones are to be seene as this day Vortimer the Sonne of Vortiger Vpon the Saxons made successfull warre Till he by Rowan was by craft o'r-tane From whose false hands he dy'd by poys'nous bane Deposed Vortiger his Sonne once slaine His ill gain'd ill kept Crowne he gain'd againe Hengistus with his Saxon fresh supplies The Plaines of Salisbury did all surprize The King tooke counsell of his Brittaine Lords And all in generall to a Peace accords The Saxons and the Brittaines did agree That at this meeting all vnarm'd should be ●●xt traitrous Hengist did a watch-word speake Which did the Law of Armes and Honour breake Yeeres after Christ. The Saxons vnsuspected drew forth Kniues Foure hundred threescore Lords all lost their liues All Brittaine Nobles then the Saxons there Surpris'd the King constraining him through feare To giue Kent Sussex Suffolke Norfolke and That Hengist King should in those Lands command But after nineteene yeeres were quite expir'd * The King Queene burnt to death Reuenging Fire the King in 's Castle fir'd And thus the Saxons and Great Hengists Heyres Won Shire to Shire till Brittaine all was theirs Vortiger married his owne daughter to his third wife 93. Aurelius Ambrose 466. IN honour of the Nobles basely slaine This King set vp the Stones on Sarum plain● The Gospell with great zeale he dignifi'd Raign'd thirty two yeeres and by poyson dy'd This King was a Romane and brother to Vter Pendragon that succeeded him 94. Vter Pendragon raigned 18 yeeres 498. THis King by Merlins meanes a skilfull man Igrene the Duke of Cornewals Dutchesse wan On her he got though illegittimate The Christian Worthy Arthur stilde the Great Vter Pendragon poysoned by the Saxons after he had reigned 18 yeeres Yeeres after Christ. 95. Arthur 516. OF the nine Worthies was this Worthy one Denmarke and Norway did obey his Throne In twelue set Battels he the Saxons beat Great and to make his Victories more great The Faithlesse Sarazens he ouercame And made them honour high Ichonah's Name The Noble order of the Table round At Winchester his first inuention found Whilst he beyond Sea fought to win Renowne His Nephew Mordred did vsurpe his Crowne But he return'd and Mordred did confound And in the fight great Arthur got a wound That prou'd so mortall that immortally It made him liue although it made him dye Full sixteene yeeres the Diadem he wore And euery day gaind Honour more and more Arthur the great was buried at Glastenbury 96 Constantine the fourth 542. 97 Aurelius Conanus 545. COnstantine was by King Aurelius kil'd Aurelius ' Brittaine thirty three yeeres held Seuen Kingdomes heere at once the Saxons held And slaughter launc'd when proud ambition sweld This Constantine was kinsman to King Arthur and was slaine by Conanus Constantine was a wicked Prince and slaine in battell by his kinsman Conanus when he had reigned neere 3. yeeres Of the tyme of this Aurelius Conanus his reigne there is much variation in Histories Yeeres after Christ. Heere beganne the Heptarchy or 7 Kingdomes i● this Land namely Kent South-Saxons West-Saxons East-Saxons Northumberland Mercia and East-Angles which diuision continued more then 600. yeeres be fore it was all vnited into one Monarchy ●●e names of the Kings times of their reignes and limits of their Kingdomes are hereunder expressed 1 KEnt was only a kingdome which had 17 Kings namely 1 Hengist 2 E●●●●s● 3 Octa 4 Ymerick 5 Ethelbert who was the first Christian King of Kent hee was an ayde● and helper of Sebert King of the East-Saxons in the famous and memorable buildings of S t Pauls Church in London and Saint Peters at Westminster 6 Eabald 7 Ercombert 8 Egl●●● 9 Lother 10 Edrick 11 Withred 12 Eaber● 13 Edelbert 14 Alick 15 Ethilbert 16 Cuthred 17 Baldred These Kings reigned in Kent 372 yeeres from the yeere of Grace 455. till the yeere 827. 2 The kingdome of the South-Saxons contained the Counties of Suffex and Surrit ●● continued from the yeere 488. vntill the yeere 601. being 113 yeeres they had three Kings● namely 1 Ella 2 Cissa 3 Ethelwolse a Christian King 4 Berthrum 5 Authum 3 The West-Saxons kingdome whose beginning was in the yeer 519. and ended Anno● 166. lasted 561 yeeres hauing 17 Kings namely 1 Cherdick 2 Kenrick 3 Chequilen 4 Cealick 5 Chelwold 6 Kingils a Christian 7 Kenwald 8 Eskwin 9 Kentwin 10 Ceadwald 11 Inas 12 Ethelarc 13 Cuthred 14 Sigebat 15 Kenwolse 16 Brightrik 17 Egbert These Kings had vnder their gouernments the Counties of Cornewall Deuonshire Somersetshire Wiltshire Hampshire and Barkshire 4 The East-Saxons reigned 281 yeeres beginning Anno. 527. and ending in the yeere 827. Their bounds were Essex and Middle-Sex and their Kings were in number● 14 namely 1 Erchenwin 2 Sledda 3 S●●●●● a Christian King that assisted Ethelbert Yeeres after Christ. King of Kent it in the building of the ●hurches of saint Paul and Saint Peter afore●●● 4 Seward 5 Sigebert 6 Sigibert 7 Swithe●●● 8 Sighere 9 S●bba 10 Sigherd 11 Seo●●l
12 Offa 13 S●lred 14 Suthred 5 Northumberland was sometimes diuided into two kingdomes It contained the ●●ies of Yorkshire Durham Lancashire West●land Cumberland and Northumberland this Kingdome beganne in the yeere of our Lord ●7 and expired in 926. continuing 379. ●eeres vnder 23 Kings whose names were 1 ●● 2 Ad●●a 3 Theodwald 4 Frethulfe 5 The●●●●●●ick 6 Ethelrick 7 Ethel●rid 8 Edwin 9 Os●●● 10 Oswy 11 Egfrid 12 Alkfrid 13 Ofred 14 ●●red 15 Oswolfe 16 Ceolnuph 17 Egbert 18 Oswicke 19 Edilwald 20 Alured 21 Ethel●●● 22 Alswald 23 Osred Amongst these ●dwin was their first Christian King 6 The East Angles vnder 15 seuerall Kings continued 353 yeeres beginning in Anno 575. ●●d ended in 914. their Territories were ●●lolke Norfolk Cambridgeshire and the ●● of Ely their Kings names were 1 Vffa 2 ●●●lus 3 Redwald their first Christian King ●●●wold 5 Sigebert 6 Egrik 7 Anna 8 ●●●bert 9 Ethwald 10 Aldwol●e 11 Aswald 12 Beorn 13 Ethelred 14 Ethelbert 15 Edmund ●●● The seuenth Kingdome were the Mer●●●●●● who had 20 Kings and 17 shires ●nder their command their Kings were●● Creda 2 Wibba 3 Cheorle 4 Penda 5 Peada ●heir first Christian King 6 Wolfere 7 ●●helred 8 Kenred 9 Chelred 10 Ethebald 11 Offa 12 Egfrid 13 Kenwolfe 14 Kenelme 15 Chelwolfe 16 Bernulfe 17 Ludecan 18 ●●itlafe 19 Bertwolfe 20 Burdred Their ●ounds and dominions were 17 Counties as of Northampton Leister Darby Lincolne Huntington Rutland Notingham Cheshire Oxfordshire Staffordshire Worcestershire Glostershire Shropshire Warwickeshire Bedfordshire Buckinghamshire and ●artfordshire Yeeres after Christ. 98 Vortiporus 578. 99 Malgo 581. THis Vortipore from good Kings did decline Kept his wiues Daughter as his Concubine And Malgo p●t his Wi●●e to broady slaughter To liue in ●ncest with his brothers Daughter About this time Augustine the Monke Mellitus Iustus and Iohn all ●●● men came from Rome and preached the Gospell to the English m●n Vortipore reigned 4. yeeres Malgo his raign●● was short and wicked 100. Careticus 586. GVrmundus hither out of Ireland came And with the Saxons ioyn'd with sword and flame The King to Wales did flye his ife●t● saue Whereas he chang'd his Kingdome for a Graue He reigned 3. yeeres and now the Saxons had all England the Brittaines and their Kings being expulsed and chased to the West sides of the Riuers Seauerne and D●● Cadwane 613. THis Cadwane did the Saxon ●orce withstand Of Ethelfridus of Northumberland And made him to entreate and sue for peace Raign'd two and twenty yeeres then did decease Yeeres before Christ. 102. Cadwallin 635. CAdwallin slew King Edwin Egfrids Sonne He Penda Merciaes King did ouer-runne He neuer fought but Conquest home did bring And eight and forty yeeres did raigne a King Cadwallin was buried at London in Saint Martins Church neere Ludgate 103. Cadwallader 685. THis King renowned was both neere and farre The last of Brittaines Kings Cadwallader The name of Brittaine was quite alterd then The Kings of England subiects Englishmen Then in this Land of Kings there raign'd so many That Subiects knew not to obey all or any Their names and times of raigne I meane to tell Should I write more my Book too big would swell Here the inhabitants lost the name of Brittaines the land being called Anglia or England and the people Englishmen 687. Cadwallader left his Crowne went to Rome and dyed there These Kings following were of the West Saxons 726 Ethelard was King of the West Saxons Yeeres before Christ. 740. Cuthred succeeded him 757. Sigebert next him was slain● by a Swineheard 758. Kenulphus was slaine by Kinsman of Sigebert 786. Brithricus In his time i● rained blood IN the 800. yeere of Christ the Danes landed at Po●●land but Brithricus beat them backe and after●●●● was poysoned by his wife Ethelburga Egbri●us King of West-Saxons 839. ●●● 839. Adelnulphus ouercame ●● Danes that came to inua●e the Kingdome with 350. ships 857. Athelbald Yeeres after Christ. 860. Athelbrict 866. Etheldrid 872. AElfred 900. Edward surnamed Se●ior Heere end the Kings of the West-Saxons now follow the Kings of Britaine 104. Athelstane reigned 15. yeeres 905. THis King did tame the Welsh the Danes subdu'd He conquered Scotland and the Marches rude The Danish Gyant Colebrand in Hyde-meads ●y G●y the Earle of Warwick was struck dead King Athelstane was crowned at Kingstone hee fought this Land againe to one sole Monarchy hee was buried at M●l●●●bury Yeeres after Christ. 105. Edmund 940. 106. Eldred 640. EDmund reign'd next his brother Athelstane And after fiue yeeres was vntimely slaine Nine yeeres was Eldrid Englands King instil'd Th' insulting Danes he from this Realme exilde Edmund was buried at Glastenbury Eldred was brother to Edmund hee was crowned as Kingstone hee expelled the Danes and was buried at Winchester 107. Edwin 955. 108 Edgar 959. THen Edwin as his right obtain'd the Crowne For Rape and brutish Lust he was put downe His brother Edger a man iust and wi●e By Edwins fall vnto the Throne did rise The Church and Commonwe●le long time deform'd He by his Iustice and good Lawes reform'd Raign'd sixteen yeeres and then by death assail'd As he had liu'd belou'd he dy'd bewail'd Edwin was Eldreds kinsman crowned a Kingstone he deftowred his owne kinswoman and slew her husband for which ●●● acts hee was deposed of all Kingly dignity and his brother Edgar was in his stead crowned at Bath● Edgar had 3600 skips to withstand the inuasion of his enemies hee founded and repaired 47. religious houses hee was buried at Glastenbury 109 Edward 975. 110 Etheldred 978. EDward was slain by his accurst Stepmother Ayded by Etheldred his cruell brother This Etheldred caus'd all the Danes be slaine And dyed the thirty eightth yeere of his raigne He was crowned at Kingstone be reigned 3. yeeres and was buried at Shaftsbury Etheldred was buried in St. Pauls Church in London 111 Edmond Irònside 1016. THe Danes came to reuenge with sword and fire Both Kings to Combat single did desire On equall tormes their valours both were tride In loue the Realme betwixt them they deuide Edricus a traitor murdered King Edmond Ironside for the which Canutus the Dane caused him to bee tormented to death gri●●uously as he deserued 112 Canutus 1018. THis mighty Danish King foure Kingdomes held Danes Norway England Scotland he compeld Taxes and toles he rais'd in England here And dyed when he had gouern'd twenty yeere In Canutus his raigne the Danes possessed all England he ●●●● buried at Winchester 113 Harold 1038. 114 Hardianutus 1041. HArold from England did exile his Mother And kild Allured his King and his Brother Hardianutus then the Crowne obtain'd Who qua●●ing died when he 3. yeeres had raign'd Harold was a Tyrant hee was called Hartfoott ●● h●●●●●●● running be murdered Prince Allured hee raigned three yeeres and was buried at Westminster Hee caused the body of Harold to be digged out of the graue and cast into the Thames in reuenge of his brother Allureds death he
was buried at Winchester 115. Saint Edward 1043. 116. Harold the second 1066. SAint Edward from the Danes this Kingdom freed● And for he had no Heyre he heere decreed That William Duke of Normandy should be Next King but Harold seem ●●● to agree As soone as Edward was laid in his Toombe This hasty Harold mounted in his roome But William came from Normanay amaine By whom King Harold was vnking'd and slaine The end of the first part The second part William Conquerour An. Dom. 1066. VVHen Britains Romanes Saxons Danes had done The Normans fiftly England● glory won● New Lords brought in new Lawes incontinent And all were Conquer'd but the County Kent King William after he had all surpriz'd Insulted domineer'd and tyranniz'd All Englishmen like slaues their doores must lock On paine of death each night at eight of clocke The English from all Offic● were disgrac'd And in their places the proud French were plac'd ●●ill beating down the right with wrong on wrong Disdaining men should speake the English tongue And so to bring our memory to naught The Grammar and the Lawes in French were taught King Swanus Sonnes with Danes a mighty band Arriu'd in Humber to inuade the Land Then Yorke was burnt the wealth away was borne And Danes on Composition home did turne A dearth in England was so great that heere Cats Dogs and mans flesh was our wofull cheere The Mercians and Northumbers they rebel'd Strong warres the Scott within our Country held The I le of Ely did the King surprize He caus'd the Rebels lose hands feet and eyes The Normans did rebell and were subdu'd Danes came and fled with all their multitude The Kings sonne Robert by the French Kings ayd Did diuers parts of Normandy inuade The Scots spoild England with all might and maine And Durbans Bishop in a broyle was slaine Heere euery Acre of mens Lands were measur'd And by a heauy taxe the King was treasur'd Slaine by a Deere the Kings sonne lost his life And Glassenbury Monkes were kill'd in strife The English Nobles almost were decay'd And euery place of rule the Normans swai'd And all mens goods and lands and coyn were rated Through England and vnto the King related The French mens pride did England ouerwhelme And grieuous tributes did oppresse the Realme Churches and Chappels were throwne down with speed ●o make New Forrest as the King decreed Who hauing rul'd in trouble toyle and care And tryannously pol'd this Kingdome bare Neere twenty one yeeres death was then his bane He lyes in Normandy enterr'd at Cane William Conquerour was crowned on Christmas-day 1067 the yeere then beginning on that day In the ●●●● Forrest in Hampshire called New Forrest ●●ere this King had defaced many Churches wherein the ●●● of God was called vpon and placed wild Beasts for His disportun the same Forrest two of his owne sonnes were ●●●● Prince Robert killed by a Deere and William Rufus by a Knight shooting at a Deere William Rufus An. Dom. 1087. WIlliam the cruell Conquerours second Sonne With ease got what his Fathers paines had won Oppressed England he opprest and prest And great Exactions wrongfully did wrest For Symony and base corrupting gold The King most Churches and Church-liuings sold And more his Subiects vilely to abuse Against them he in armes did arme the Iewes And swore if they the victory did gaine That he their faithlesse faith would entertaine Vpon his eldest brother hee raysd warres His youngest brother troubled him with iarres At London such a furious winde did blow Which did sixe hundred houses ouerthrow The City Gloster was by Welshmen sack'd Northumberland was by King William wrack'd William de Oue and William de Aluery In cruell torments dyed at Salisbury Duke Robert laid all Normandy to gage Vnto the King warres with the Turkes to wage Westminster Hall was built the Danes came in And th' Orchades and the I le of Man did win But as the King was hunting in Hampshire Sir Walter T●rr●ll shooting at a Deere The Arrow glauncing'gainst a Tree by chance Th' vnhappy King kild by the ha●lesse Glaunce A Comers Cart to Winchester did bring The Corps where vnbemoand they laid the King Rufus In the 8. yeere of his reigne the Christian Army went to Ierusalem vnder the conduct of Godfry Duke of Bulleine in which warres serued Robert Duke of Normandy the Kings eldest brother who pawned his Dukedome for 16666. pounds weight of siluer In the 11. yeere the Lands of the late Earle Godwine sunk in the sea and are to this day called Godwine ●ands This King died the 2. of August 1100. He reigned 12. yeeres 11. Moneths and was buried at Winchester Henry the first An. Dom. 1100. THis Henry for his wisedome Beuclarke nam'd Th'vnlawfull Lawes and measures he reclaim'd The Norman Duke eld'st Brother to the King To claime the Crowne a mighty Hoast did bring Saint Barthol●mewes was founded and Saint Gyles And Henry stop'd Duke Roberts mouth with wiles Then peace was made but after warres did rise The King tooke's brother and put out his eyes Here Windsor Church and Castle were erected And Wales rebeld most sharpely was corrected All the King's Sonnes and eight score persons more Were drown'd by tempest neere the Norman shore Thus all his Ioy in Childrens losse bereft Saue onely Maud the Widdow Empresse left Whom Geffrey Anioy's Earle to wife did get From whom did spring the name Plantagenet The King proclaim'd his Daughter or her seede After his death should in the Realme succeede And after thirty fiue yeeres time was past King Henry by a surfet breath'd his last Much trouble in his dayes this Kingdome wearied He dyed and dead at Redding he lies buried Thus God that lifts the low casts downe the high Caus'd all the Conquerors sonnes vntimely dye Henry the ● He held the Crowne wrongfully from his elder brother Robert Duke of Normandy and ouercomming him in battell most vnnaturally put out his e●es he reigned 35. yeeres his braines eyes and bowels were buried at Roane in France and the rest of his body at Redding his Phisicion that opened his head was killed suddainely with the stench of his brai●er King Stephen An. Dom. 1135. STephen Earle of B●loig● th' Earle of Bloy● his son From th' Empresse M●nd this famous Kingdome won Domestike forraigne dangerous discords 'Twixt factions factions of the King and 's Lords Wars 'twixt the King and th' Empresse for the crown Both tasted Fortunes fauours and her frowne Now vp now downe like balles at Tennis tost Till Stephen gain'd the goale and th ' Empresse lost And after eighteene yeeres were come and gone The King not hauing any lawfull Sonne He dyed and chang'd his Kingdome his strength For a small Sepulcher of sixe foote length King Stephen He was noble valiant liberall and politique and almost in continuall trouble In the 1. yeere of his reigne a fire burnt all the streete from London-stone East to Pauls and West to Algate and within 2.
yeeres after the cities of York Rochester and Bathe were burnt Hee reigned 18. yeeres 10 moneths and was buried at Feuersham Henry the second An Dom. 1154. THis King vnto the Empresse Maud was Heyre And lawfully obtain'd the Regall Chayre He was couragious and yet most vnchaste Which Vice his other Vertues all defac'd He lou'd faire Rosamond the worlds faire Ros● For which his wife and children turn'd his foes He made his sonne Copartner in his Crowne Who rais'd strong warres to put his Father downe Faire Rosamond at Woodstock by the Queene Was poyson'd in reuengefull iealous spleene In toyle and trouble with his Sonnes and Peere● The King raign'd almost fiue and thirty yeeres Hee neere his death did curse his day of birth Hee curst his Sonnes and sadly le●t the earth Hee at Founteuerard in his Tombe was laid And his Son Richard next the Scepter swa●d Henry the 2. In the 12. yeer of this King an earthqu●●● in Norfolk Suffolk and Eiye that made ●●●●●● shaking the sleeples and ouerthrew men that stood on this feete Nicholas Breakespeare an English man was ●●ope of Rome and was named Adrian the fourth hee gaue ●●● Lord-shippe of Ireland to King Henry Richard Cordelion An. Dom. 1189. THis braue victorious Lyon-hearted Prince The foes of Christ in ●●●y did conuince Whilst at Ierusalem he wan Renowne His Brother Iohn at home vsurp'd his Crowne And as he home return'd his owne to gaine By Austria's Duke the King was Prisoner ●ane His ransome was an hundred thousand pound Which paid in England he againe was crown'd Yet after nine full yeeres and 9. months raigne Hee with a Shot was kild in Aquit●ne His buriall at Founteuerard was thought meet At his dead Fathers second Henries feet Richard the 1. he conquered the kingdome of Cypresse and he tooke from the Infidels the Cities of Acon Ioppa and deliuered them to Christians In his 2. yeere the ●●s of the renowned King Arthur were found at Glastenbury King Richards bowels were buried at Chalne Castle in Aquitane his heart at Roane and his body at Founteuerard King Iohn An. Dom. 1199. IOhn Earle of Morton tooke the regall Seate His state his toyle his pompe his cares all great The French the Welsh the Scotsh all prou'd his foes The Pope King Iohn did from his Crowne depose His Lords rebel'd from France the Dolphin came And Wasted England much with sword and flame And after seuenteene yeeres were full expir'd King Iohn being poysoned to his graue retir'd King Iohn In the 8. yeere many men Women and cattell ● slain● with thunder and many houses burnt and the ●●●● was beaten downe with haile as bigge as goose egges Some say the King was poyson'd by a monke and others ●rite that he died of a surfeit at Newark but his life was full of troubles and after his death he was by base villaines ●●●d and l●●t naked without any thing to couer the corpes hee was buried at Worcester Henry the third An. Dom. 1216. Wars bloody wars the French in England made Strong holds Towns Towres Castles they inuade ●●t afterwards it was K. Henries chance By force perforce to force them backe to France Great discord 'twixt the King and Barons were ●nd factions did the Realme in pieces teare A world of mischiefes did this Land abide And fifty sixe yeeres raign'd the King and dy'd Henry the 3. This King was born at Winchester crowned at Glocester buried at Westminster In the 17. of his reigne on the 8. of Aprill 1233. there were 5 Sonnes in the firmament and the naturall Sun was as red as blood Edward Long-●hanks An. Dom. 1271. THis was a hardy wise Victorious King The Welshmen he did to subiection bring He Scotland wan and brought from thence by fate Their Crowne their Scepter Chaire and Cloth of state That Kingdome with oppression sore he brusde Much tyranny and bloodshed there he vsde When thirty fiue yeeres he the Crowne had kept At Westminster he with his Father slept Edward the 1. In the 13. yeere his sonne Edward was borne at Carnaruan who was the first sonne of any King of England that was Prince of Wales Edward of Carnaruan An. Dom. 1307. THe hard mis-haps that did this King attend The wretched life and lamentable end Which he endur'd the like hath ne'r bin seene Depos'd and poyson'd by his cruell Queene Which when the poyson had no force to kill Another way she wrought her wicked will Into his Fundament a red hot Spit Was thrust which made his Royall heart to split In his 8. yeere such a death that dogges and horses were good food many ate their owne children and old prisoners tore such as were newly committed in pieces and deuoured them halfe liuing The King reigned 19. yeeres 6. moneths Edward the third An. Dom. 1326. IN Peace and warre this King was right good He did reuenge his murdred Fathers blood Hee and the blacke Prince his most valiant Sonne The Field at Cressle and at Poytiers wonne At first and last in his victorious raigne Of French and Scots were six score thousand slaine And more his glory further to aduance He tooke the Kings of Scotland and of France The noble order of the Garter he At Windsor instituted caus'd to be When fifty yeeres this Land had him obaid At Westminster he in his tombe was laid In his 12. yeere he quartered the Armes of England and France as they are at this day Henry Pichard Vintuer in his Moral●y feasted at once Edward King of England Dauid King of Scotland Iohn King of France the King of Cypres the Prince of Wales the Dolphin of France with many other great Personages of Honour and Worship Richard the second An. Dom. 1377. YOng King rash co●sell lawes right neglected The good put downe the bad in State erected The Court with knaues flat'rers here did swarm The Kingdome like a Farme was let to Farme The Commons tost in Armies Routes and throngs And by soule treason would redresse soule wrongs In this Kings raigne began the Ciuill warre Vnnaturally 'twixt Yorke and Lancaster Oppression on oppression breedes Confusion Bad Prologue bad Proceeding bad Conclusion King Richard twenty two yeeres raign'd misse-led Deposed and at Po●●r●s knock'd ith'head This King was Grandchild to Edward the 3. and sonne to the black Prince he was borne at Burdeux in France and was but 11. yeeres old when he was crowned so that all his miserable Calamity may be imputed to him not hauing or not regarding good counsell Henry the fourth An. Dom. 1399. THe Crown wrong got frō the wrong'doing king More griefe then ioy did to King Henry bring France England Scotland Wales arose in Armes And menac'd Henry with most fierce Alarmes Hot Percy Dowglas Mortimer Glendowre At Shrewsbury the King orethrew their power He fourteene yeeres did raigne and then did dye At Canterbury buried he doth lye Henry the 4. Hee began his reigne the 29. of September 1399. and the 14.
woes opprest and prest Blest curst friends foes diuided and aron'd And after seuenteene yeeres were gone and past At Swinsted poys'ned there I dranke my last Anno 1199 Aprill 6 Tuesday Iohn ●●●●stly intruded the Crowne it being by right his nephew Arthurs who was sonne to Ieffry Duke of Britaine Iohns eldest brother howsoeuer Iohn was crowned on the 6 of May at Westminster by Hubert Archbishop of Canterbury but after a false reconciliation betwixt Philip King of France Iohn king of England and Arthur ' Duke of Britaine the said Duke Arthur was murthered some Authors in malice taxing king Iohn with the murther and some Writers altogether clearing him Hoasoeuer he had not one quiet day in his whole-Reigne his Principalities in France seazed only the French Wales in combustion Ireland in vproare Scotland preparing against him England all in confusion defender and hurliburly the King the Peeres the Prelates and Commons at perpetuall diuisioen The Pope of Rome thunders out his Excommunications against the King and all that obeyed him and interacts the whole Realme Soe that for three yeeres no Church was opened either for Gods Seruice to be exercised or Sacraments administred There was no Christian buriall allowed to any but the Carcasses of the dead were barbarously laid in vnhallowed places or cast like dogges into ditches yet all this time many of the English Nobilitie loyally serued their Soueraigne mangre the Papall Anathemizing The King went into Ireland and finding it shattered into contentions fractures ioynes and vnites it againe and returnes into England When suddenly Lewilyn Prince of north-Northwales who had married King Iohns daughter inuades the Marches of England but Lewilyn was soyled and Wales conquered But in the yeere 1211 the Popes set all curse beganne to fall heauy vpon king Iohn which curse also made many great Lords and other to far from the King neuerthelesse Scotland being in contention by a Traytor that claimed the Crowne there ●●● Gothred King John went thither aided his friend K. William and in that expedition set all in good peace taking the Traitor Gothred caused him to be hanged The Pope very liberally gaue the kingdome of England to Phil. of France An. 1112. More then 3000 people were burn'd drown'd on vnder London bridge in the space of 4 yeers King John made his peace with the Pope surrendred his Crown to Pandulphus the Legat for money and good words was blest and had his Crowne againe Philip of France attempts Englands inuasion his Fleet is beaten discontented sunke scattered taken by king Iohn Lewis the Dolphin of France landed at Sarawich with 650 ships came to London and tooke oaths of Allegeance of the Barons and Citizens in Pauls yet at last Lewis it forsaken of the English Lords yet holds possessions heere King Iohn being thus freed from Inuasion and Forraigne assaults was assaulted with poyson by a Monk in Swinsted Abbey hauing reigned more powerfull then fortunate 17 yeeres 5 moneths and odde dayes was interred at Worcester HENRY THE THIRD KING OF ENGLAND LORD OF JRELAND DVKE OF NORMANDY G●●en and Aquitaine c. IN toyle and trouble midst contentions broyles ●● z'd the Scepter of this famous land Then being gready wasted with the spoyles Which ●●●● I made with his French furious band But I with Peeres and people brauely mand Repald repulst expa●st insulting foes My ●●●ons did my Soueraignty withstand And wrap them●● and me in warres and woes But in each Battell none but I did lose I lost my Subiects lines on euery side From Ciuill warres no better gaining growes Friends foes my people all that fought or died My gaines was losse my pleasure was my paine These were the triumphs of my troublous raigne Anno 1216 October 19 Wednesday Henry the third the eldest sonne of King Ioha and Isabel which was the daughter of Aym●r Earle of A●golesme Thus Henry was borne at Winchester ●● first crowned at Gloucester by Peter Bishop of Winchester Iosseline Bishop of Bath and after ag●●man with his Lords he was againe crownes at Westminster by Stephen Langton Archbishop of Conterbury ●● Whitsanday God in mercy lookes gentle 〈…〉 calamities that this wofull Land pressed by forraigne warres and ciuill discord It all turned to a happy ●●●● betwixt the King and his Lords which continued a long time Gualo the Popes Legate the Bishop of Winchester William Marshall Earle of Pombroke being the protector of the Kings Realme the King ●●●●●●●●●● old by whose good gouernment Lewts the ●●●●●● of France with all his French Armies were exp●●ed out of the kingdome The King forg●●e all of the La●●●● the had taken part with Lewis but he made the Clerg●●● great sines Alexander the King of Scotland was married to the Leaytane sister to King Henry at which misiery Dragons were●●●●●●●●●●●●●● the ●●●●●● coun●●●●● fellow said he ●●● Iesus Christ sheuing the markes ●●● were of Nayles in his hands feet ●er the which bla●●●● my bewa● Crucified at a place called Atterbury neare the Towne of Banbury Some say hee was 〈…〉 two walls and started at Cathnes in Scotland The Bishop did excem 〈…〉 the people because they would ●● pay their Tithes for the which they burned the Bishop aliue for reward of which wicked act their King caused 400. of the chife offenders to be ●arged golded ●●●●●●● dr●● and put the Earle from his Earledoms Iohn King of Ierusclem came into England to ●raue ●● de●●f King Henry But the King was so busied here that he co●al●● ayd him K. Henry with a great Arm went into Britaine against Lewis King of France and spoyled the C●●●● mighty till at last a Peace was co●●l●ded The Emperor Fred●rick married the Lady Isabell the King ●●●● Eig●●●● Iewes were hanged for cru●●ring a ●●●●dre Lincolne Richard Earle of Cornwall the Kings●●● ther was made King of the Romanes The King l●●●●●●●● lands in France except the Duchy of Aquitaine Wales was in insurrection Ireland in rebellion England in a hurty-burly ●●stoy all Diuision betwixt the King and his ●●● Lords Anno 1233. 5 Sunnes were ●e●u 〈…〉 ●●●●●● in the East one in the West one in the South ●● in the North ●●●●● the fifth in the m●●st of the firmament The King entertaines Poictouines out of France and giues them places of great honour in Court and ●●●●●●● which made the English Barons raise At●●● agan●●●● King The Earl of Leicester and Gloucester ●●●●the King of England in the battell at Lewes The Lord Chiefe iustue●●●'d in Westminster-●●● ●●●●● after all these ones the King dyed in peace hauing reigned 56 yeeres ●●● burried at Westminster 127● EDWARD THE FIRST KING OF ENGLAND LORD OF IRELAND DVKE OF AQVITAINE c. MY Victories my Valour and my strength My actions and my neuer-conquer'd name ●ere spred throughout the world in bredth lēgth ●● mortall deeds I want immortall Fame ●●ebellious Wales I finally did tame ●● made them Vassalls to my princely Sonne ●●red Scotland fierce with
Sword and Flame ●●d almost all that Kingdome ouer-run ●●ll where I fought triumphantly I won ●hrough Blood and Death my glory I obtain'd ●● in the end when all my Acts were done ●● Sepulcher was all the game I gain'd For though great Kings contend for earthly sway Death binds them to the peace and parts the fray An. Dom. 1272. Nouember Wednesday Edward the first was 35 yeares old when he beganne to reigne but at the death of his Father he was in warres in the Holy L●●d against the Saracens So that he returned not home till the next yeere a ●time hee was crowned the 14 day of December in the second yeere of his reigne the ●●●●mins●ty of ●●● Coro●●●●●●●● performed by Robert K●lwarby Ar●●●●●● of Canterbury at Westminster Thus King brought Wales wholy vnto subsection to the crowne of England he effect ●●●● peace be caused all co●●●●tred Iudges and Officers of Note to be must exemplertly p●●n●●ea with sines ●● pri●●men and bantshment A Nauy of 60 English s●●ps ou●●●ams and tooke 800 ships of France An. 1293. Sir William Wallace A Noble va●●●ant Sco● a●d warr● vpon King Edward and in the seruice of his Countrey did much ●●●●●● to England The King ca●●● this Sonne Edward being an in●●rt to be the first Prince of Wales that was of to● English blood Since when all the Kings of Englands elaest Sonnes are by right Princes of Wales 284 Iewes were executed for ●●●ptes of the Kings coyne An 1280. King Edward caused Bay●trds Castle to be buils in London now the mansion house of the Right Honourable Earle of Pemb●●●● In the 15 yeers of this kings reigne Wheate was sold for 3 d the B●she● and the next yeere being 1288 it was sold for 18 d the Bush●● which in those d●●ies was accoūted a great price but after as long as The King liued the price came to 5● the Bashell King Edwards Armi●●●ew 70000 of the Scots in one day as the ●●tt●k of Fau●●rke Sir William Wallace was betrayed taken and brought out of Scotland and executed in Smithfield has head being set on London Bridge and his quarters sent into Scotland yes be is by ●●●●● men had in Honorable remembrance The warres ●●● so set in this Kings reigne betwixt him and the Scots that as ●enerall times there were more then 130000 men slaine on both parts yet amongst all our English Kings that past before him Edward was not inferiour today he was religious valiant victorious wise affable of a comely Ma●estmall Aspect and proportion he had two wiues the first was Eleanor daughter to Ferdinand the third King of Castile the second was Margaret daughter to Philip surnamed Hardy King of France by them hee had 4 Sonnes and 10 Daughters bee reigned neere 35 yeeres and was burried at Westminster 1307. July 7. EDWARD THE II KING OF ENGLAND LORD OF IRELAND DVKE OF AQVITAINE c. SOone after was my fathers corps inter'd Whilst Fate and Fortune did on me attend And to the Royall Throne I was prefer'd With A●e Ceaser euery knee did bend But all these fickle ioyes did fading end Peirce Gaueston to thee my loue combind My friendship to thee scarce left me a friend But made my Queene Peeres People all vnkind I tortur'd both in body and in mind Was vanquisht by the Scots at Bannocki Rourne And I enfor'cd b flight some safety find Yet taken by my Wife at my returne A red-hot Spit my Bowels through did gore Such misery no slaue endured more Anno Dom. 1307 Iuly 8. Edward the second surnamed Carnaruan ●… cause he was born at Carnaruan Castle is Wales was crowned at Westminster by the hands of William Bishop of Winchester deputy for Robert Archbishop of Canterbury then absent in exile ●● 24 of February next following He was much ●●●●cted to follow the aduice and counsell of light ●●●● which caused the Nobility to rebel against him ●●● at the first he ouercame them and tooke Thomas Earle of Lancaster a Peers of the blood their chief Leader fate in iudgment himself on him at Pomfret where the Earle had iudgment giuen against him to be drawne for is Treason for his murder spoyle burning robberies to be hangd and for his shamefull flying away to be beheaded but because ●●● was of the Kings kindred he was only beheaded ●●● the last such of the Barons as had escap'd ●●● the Mortimers with the helpe of the Queene ●●● the yong Prince then come out of France newly tooke the King and imprisoned him neuer ●●● kingdome in more ●●sery then this Kings ●●● for his immoderate loue to Peirce Gau●●●● a meane Gentleman of France was the cause of the Kings and has owne destruction with the ●●● calamity of the ●●●●● kingdom This Gaueston ●●● banished hence by the Kings father was in ●●● times exil'd but at his third ●●●rne Guy ●●● Watwick took him in Warwick Castle ●●● his head to be snore off which so inraged the ●●●●●●●●ing King that bee vowed reuenge vpon all ●●● Lords others who were the causers of Gauest● death in the meane space Robert Bruce King Scots gaue King Edward a mighty ouer●●● place cal'd Bannocksbourne where the English ●●● their confederates Hollanders Brabanders ●●● landers Flemings Picards Gascognes ●●● mans Poloiners wer in number ooooo ●●● foot yet were discomfited with the losse of 5000 ●●● the King in great danger to be taken famine foul and pestilence at once afflicted England so that ●●● ple did eat one another halfe-aliue and the ●●● scarce able to bury the deed The King prepares for reuenge against his Lords for Gaueston ●●● Hugh Dispencer from meane estate to be ●●● Chamberlaine The King caused 2● of his ●●● suffer death diuers ●●●●●● He makes a second ●●● against Scotland ●●●● againe with great ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● This was the miserable ●●● this King who was deposed the Spencers ●●● Edward reign'd 19 years 7 months and 17 days EDWARD THE IIJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND IN Peace and War my Stars auspicious stood False Fortune stedfast held her wauering wheele I did reuenge my Fathers butcher'd blood I forced France my furious force to feele I warr'd on Scotland with triumphing Steele Afflicting them with slaughtering Sword and Fire That Kingdome then diuided needs must reele Betwixt the Bruces and the Balliols ire Thus daily still my glory mounted higher With black Prince Edward my victorious Sonne Vnto the top of honour wee alpire By manly Princely worthy actions done But all my Triumphs fortunes strength and force Age brought to death death turn'd to a Coarse Anno 1327 Ianuary 25 Saturday Edward the 3 being borne at Windsor being 15 yeers old was crowned by Walter Reignolds Arcbishop of Canterbury ● in his 2 yeere Edward his Father was murthred The Court in those daies was seldome without a vipē for as Gaueston was the forerūner of the Spencers in ambition rapine pride and confusion So the Spencers were the
vshers of the Mortimers intollarable aspiring conetousnesse and destruction and which was most insupportable there were for all most 20 yeers space the plagues and desolation of the King and kingdomes After great coutentions were betwixt the 2 Realmes of England and Scotland a peace was concluded and Dauid-le Bruce the young Prince of Scotland was married to Iane King Edward the 3 sister K. Edward maried with the Lady Philip daughter to the Earle of Henault at Yorke with whom she liu'd 42 yeers She sounded Queens Colledge in Oxford She was mother to that mirrour of manhood and st●●●● of Chiu●● it Edward surnamed the black Prince There was a dreadfull batell sought at Hallidon hill in which were slaine 8 Earles 80 Knights and Baroness and 35000 Common soldiers on the Scots side the losses on the English side through the parciality of Writers were not set downe About the 12 yeers of this Kings reigne a quarter of Wheate was sold for 28 an Oxe 6 d a Geose 2d a fat Sheepe 6 d fixe Pidgeons and a fat Pigge for 2 d. The King claimed the Crowne of France and with 200 ships sought with 300 French ships and flew 33000 of the French This King first instituted the Honorable Order of the Garter at Windsor there being alwaies 26 in number The King sought the battell of Cressie in France wherein was slain the King of Bohemia with 10 Princes 80 Knights Baroness and 1200 Knights with 330000 Common Soldiers The King made 4 inroades into Scotland with great armies and was still victorious Anno 1338 the arms of France were quartered wth the armes of England the King prepared a great armie against France and on the Sea neere Sluce in Flanders he vanquished 400 French ships with the losse of 30000 of their men Then was France taken or halfe a yeere the wars againe renewing King Edward besieged Callice and ●ocke it An. 1347 Dauid King of Scotland was taken prisoner by one Iohn Copland an Esquire of the North. At the battell of Potiers Edward the black Prince of Wales had a glorious victory for there hee ●ocke King Iohn of France with his Sonne Phillip the Dolphin prisoners There were slaine of the French 52 Neblemen 1700 Knights and Esquires and 600 Common men 100 Ensignes and many men of note taken prisoners Dauid King of Scots was set at liberty hauing bin a prisoner 11 yeers paying 100000 marks st●●●ing Iohn K. of France after 4 yeeres imprisonment set free paying 1000000 ● for his ransome Finally neuer was English King more triumphant and fortunate in war in the fruition of a vertuous Queen 7 sons and daughters a glorious and lang reign of 50 yeeres buried at Sheene Anno Domini 1378. RICHARD THE IJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND c. A Sunshine Morne precedes a showry day A Calme at Sea ofttimes foreruns a storme All is not gold that seemes so glistring gay Foule Vice is fairest features Canker-worme So I that was of blood descent and forme The perfect image of a Royall Stock Vnseason'd young aduice did me deforme Split all my hopes against despaires blacke rock My Regall name and power was made a mock My Subiects madly in rebellion rose Mischiefe on mischiefe all in troopes did flock Oppos'd depos'd expos'd inclos'd in woes With wauering fortunes troublously I raing'd Slaine by soule mur ther peace and rest I gain'd Anno Dom. 1377 June 21 Sunday Richard the second borne as Burdeux the ●●●●● nate Grandebilde and son of the two 〈…〉 and Paragons of Armes and all Noble vertues Edward the third and his euer-famous sonne Edward the ●●●●● Prince was crowned at Westminster by the 〈…〉 mond Sudbury Archbishop of Canterbury the K●●● being but 11 yeeres old The glory of the English N●●● was in a continual Eclips the most part of this K●●g●●● his youth with all the frailties incident vn●●●● with ●●●● gouernours both of his Kingdome and person 〈…〉 main Ruines of the King almost the Realm The 〈…〉 of his fortunes after his Coronation was that 50 French ships landed at Rye in Suffex who burnt and spoyled the Towne and diuers other parts of the kingdome and ●●● Alexander Ramsey a valiant Scottish Gentlemen with but 40 men withhim tooke the Castle of Barwicke which the Earle of Northūberland man from him ●●●● with a great number The French did so far preuaile ●●●●● they came to Granesend and burnt and rifled it T●●● Comment arose in rebellion in diuers places as Kent ●●●● sex Surrie Suffolk Norfolk Cambridge the K●●●● men being 50000 came to London where the ●●●● cammitted many outrages vnder the cemman●● of ●●●●● solent rebels Wat Tyler and Iack Sraw who ●●●●● mated to that mischief by one Iohn Ball an●●●●●● priest but Tyler was killed by the famous Sir William Walworth Lord Maior of London the rebele dispe●●●● Iack Staw and Ball the Priest extented the Com●●●● pardoned and all at peace for a short time These Bascalls had beheaded Sinon Tibald Archbishop of Canterbury●● and Sir Robert Hales Lord Treasurer of England ●●● burnt and spoylea the Sahoy the like they had ●●● Lanibeth destroying all the Rowles and Record of ●●●●● Chancerie Iohn of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster the King vnckle was accused for Treason by a Carmilite Fryer ●●●● the Fryer was cruelly murdered and the Duke suspici●●●● cleared Barwick was wonne againe by the Scots ●●●● againe recouered by the Earle of Northumberland The French prepare a great Nauy and Army purpa ●●●● inuade England King Richard raiseth a ●●●●● intending to conquer Scotland all which desig●●●●● neither good or profitable euents 1386 mischiefe and ●● serie hauing sate long abroad began to batch the ●●●●● insulting on the one side and the people rebellious ●●● other did Bandy the regall power in to hazard The Scott enter England vnder the command of the valiant Sir William Dowglasse and are met and ●●●● tred by the Right Noble Lord Henry Hotspurre Dowglasle was staine and Hotspur taking Ireland rebel'd the King went thither in person and lest England the whilest he bring forced to surrender himselfe but Crow●●● and kingdome to his kinsman Henry Bullingbrooke Son to Iohn of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster 1400. HENRY THE IV KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND c. FRom right wrong-doing Richard I did wrest His Crowne mis-guided but on me mis-plac'd Vnciuill Ciuill warres my Realme molest And English men did England spoyle and wast The Sire the Son the Son the Father chas'd Vndutifull vnkind vnnaturall Both Yorke and Lancaster were rais'd and rac'd As Conquest did to either Faction fall But still I grip'd the Scepter and the Ball And what by wrong I won by might I wore For Prince of Wales I did my Son install But as my Martiall Fame grew more and more By fatall Fate my vitall threed was cut And all my Greatnesse in a graue was put Anno Dom. 1399 September 19 Munday Crownes misplaced on vnrightfull heads are commonly lined with
golden promises which were neuer performed but with the taking of Buckinghams head at sha●●●●● after specified Now mischiefe beganne to 〈…〉 the Queene was accused of sorcery by the Potector Hastings Lord Chamberlaine was beheaded suddenly without either crime or ●●● in the Towre Poore Iane Shore was also taken and carried to the Towre her goods to the vallue of 3000 ma● kes were seazedon and confiscate to the vse of the Protector She was a woman hauing many good parts and howsoeuer by the command of King Edward the fourth and her owne fra●●● shee fell into ●●● with the King ●●● she was euer inclined and did much good and cannot be taxed in Histories for doing any man hurt The King and his brother were both standred with bastard Duke of Gloucester was proclaimed King which ●●● much modelly he refused though hee meant with all his ●●●●● to take it Anno 1483. RICHARD THE IIJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND c. AMbition's like vnto quenchlesse thirst Ambition Angels threw from Heauen to Hell Ambition that infernall Hag accurst Ambitiously made me aspire rebell Ambition that damned Necromanticke Spell Made me clime proud with shame to tumble down By bloody murther I did all expell Whose right or might debard me from the Crown My smiles my gifts my fauours or my frowne Were fain'd corrupt vile flattry death and spite By cruell Tyranny I gat renowne Till Heau'n iust Iudge me iustly did require By blood I won by blood I lost the throne Detested liu'd dy'd lou'd bewail'd of none Anno 1483 June 22. Richard Duke of Glocester the 3 some of Richard Duke of Yorke the 3 Duke of Glocester and third of that name King of England Is tyranny and vsurpation griped the Scepter of the kingdome after hee he had proclaimed his Nephewes Bastardy his brother the deceased King Edward the fourths scandall and accused his own mother of adultry making his way to the Regality by the murther of his two innocent Nephewes which murther was committed by the bands of Sir Iames Tirrell Knight and one Myles Forrest and Iohn Dighton which villains murthered then in their bed and buried them beneath a paire of staires vnder an heape of stones in the Towne and in that ledging which in memory of that blanke deed is first named the bloody Towre their bodies were taken ● and againe buried obscurely no man knoweswhere By these means hauing gotten the Goale God ●●●●red his reigne to be his perpetuall sormens ●●●●● without and continuall horrory within the murtherers had part of their payment in this world for Myles Fo●rest ●otted aboue ground peece meale in S t Martins Str Iames Tirrell was executed for treason on the Towre-hill Dighton liu'd a hatted miscreant both of God and man the Duke of Buckingham though innocent of dthe murther yet hee suppresse the young Princes and raised the Tyrant and his end was the losse of his head at Salisbury Shortly after the Diuine iustice began to fall heauy vpon King Richard many of the Nobility and Gentrie for sooke him and fled into Britaine in France to Henry Earle of Richmond who was the onely heyre to the English crowne of the Line of the house of Lancaster king Richard in the dangers would haue procured a most wicked safety by marr●ing the Lady Elizabeth eldest daughter is his deceased brother King Edward the fourth the only inheritix of the house of York lawfull heyre to the Crowne but Gods prouidence and the Ladies vertue with stood that incestuous match shortly after Henry of Richmond arriued at Milford hauen in Wales where his Army encreasing met Richard at Redmere field neere Posworth seuen miles from Leicester where Richard vahautly fighting was slaine 1485 August 23 and was buried at Leycester HENRY THE VIJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND ●Was the man by Gods high grace assign'd ●That for this restlesse Kingdome purchas'd rest ●ork and Lancaster in one combin'd ●● sundred had each other long opprest ●● strength and policy th' Almighty blest ●● good successe from first vnto the last ●● high ●houab turned to the best ● orld of perills which my youth o're past ●● white and red Rose I conioyned fast ●sacred Marriages coniugall band ●●ytors tam'd and treason stood agast ●● strong guarded by my Makers hand ●nglory and magnificence I raign'd And fame loue and a tombe was all I gain'd Anno Dom. 1485 August 22 Monday Henry of that name the seuenth King of England was Earle of Richmond borne in Pembroke-Castle in Wales sonne of Edmund of Hadham Earle of Richmond Sonne of Owen Theodore and Queene Katherin the French King daughter late wife to King Henry the sist was crowned at Westminster the 30 day of October by the bands of Thomas Bourghchier Archbishop of Conterbury this Prince was wise valsant and fortunate Through many perals hazards he had past his life and attained the Royalty of Englands throne and with much prudence and mu●●●ble fortitude be gouerned this Land Maugre many dangerous attempts and treacherom consp●acses plott●● against hun and his designes had such ausptcsous euents thus still hee was victori●●● ouer surre●gne cuall and 〈…〉 troubles One Lambest Simnei a Bakers sonne claimed the crowns countersetting in●●●else to be Edward Earle of Warwicke sonne of George Duke of Clarence Some write that ●●e assumed to bee one of king Edward the fourthes sonne which was murthered in the Toure howsoeuer Hambert gat into Ireland and in Christ Church in Dublin was crowned King of England and Ireland hee with an Armie landed at Fowdrey in Lancashire but King Henry met him and at the battell of Stoke he took him prisoner pardon'd him his life and gaue him a turn-spits place in his kitchen and after maue him one of his saulkners Lambert was net long supprest but another of his stamp supphes his roome of a rebellious imposture Peter or Perkin Warbecke the sonne of a Iew borne in Torney claimed the Crowne by the counterfest stile of Richard Second sonne to King Edward the fourth Perkin gat into England and after into Scotland where ●●● preuailed that he was married to the Lady Katherin Gordon the Earle of Huntleys daughters K. Iames the fourths kinsnman the rebels in Kent were ouen thwone and their Captante the Lord Audley taken and beheaded Perkin came out of Scotland and moues the ●●● men to ayae him King Henry net ouercame and ●●● and pardon ' him another counterfest a shoemakers son named Ralph Milford ●●● the Crowne and purchast'd a balter Perkin Warback Sica from the King and againe was taken and executed as Tyburnc King Henry gaue his daughter the Lady Margaret in ●●● to Iames ●●e fourth King of Scotland Arthur Prince of Wales the eldest Sonne of Henry Married with the Lady Katherin daughter to the King of Spaine but the Prince dyed ●●● after The King gathered a ●●● masse of money to the general grieuance of the subiects he had three font Arthur Henry
and Prince a Shepheard and a Wolfe Epigram 12. TVmultuous thoughts within my brest deth struggle To thinke how sinely popish Priests can iuggle And make the world beleeue a a wafer g ●though all the Scriptures doe affirme that the corporael pre●●● of Christ is in heauen from whence he will not come in his ●●●● forme till hee comes to ●●● eternall ●udgement yet a ●●●●ing Priest will dayly take vpon him to command and him ●●●● and to iuggle him into the shape of a Cake or a piece of bread Cake Is that Creator that did all things make Or that the sinne-polluted bald-crownd Priest With coniurations can create his Christ When our beliefe d●th plainly testifie He sits at Gods right hand in Maiestie From whence in humaine for me he will not come Till quicke and dead shall all abide his doome What Fooles are they then thinks the Priest Baker With impious hands makes their immortall maker Epigram 13. NOt all the sophistrie of Aristosle Cannot perswade me but the Pope did erre When he and 's sonne mistooke the poy●ned h ●●● the 6 and his sonne Casar Borgin● were both poyso●●d in mistaking their liquor But if his Holinesse had beene in ●●● Chayre he could not haue erred in such a matter bottle ' T was ' error sure what euer they inferre O' t had beene good then both for him and 's heyre He had beene haltered fast in Peters Chayre Epigram 14. THe wa● like Emperours before Christ come Subdu'd the wo●ld both Sea and Land to Rome Then afterwards the i Heauen Earth sea and Land being all wonne before these ●times by the Emperours and the godly Bishops there re●●●●es● onely Hell for the Pope to make a lawfull claime●●● Heauens their Bishops wonne By preaching truly Gods Immortall Sonne Heauen Earth and Sea being taken in the prime What rests now for the Popes this latter time Since of the heauens and earth they loose their part They will haue hell despight the diuels hart Epigram 15. CHrists Church in no wayes is the k That Church that is so oposite to the doctrine of Christ cannot be Christs wi●e but the deuils whore Church of For Paul sayes in the latter time should come Apostates that the truth should quite forsake That lyes and fables should Religion make Affi●ming meates and Matrimony euill Which Paul doth call the doctrine of the deuill Then since the Pope and all his shaueling rout What Christ commands they wilfully thrust out I with my betters must conclude this doome The Deuils deere drab must be the Church of Rome Epigram 16. O Yes if any man would know a place Where God himselfe hath neither power nor might Where as th' Al●ighty neuer shew'd his face Where words nor swords can neither talke nor sight O such a place● esse place ●● l God made heauen and earth the Sea and all things contained in them the Pope made Purgatory without Gods leaue or knowledge therefore it is no reason that God should haue any thing to doe there without the Popes leaue Purg●●tory Created by the Pope without Gods leaue To amplifie his Antich●●●●ian glory And all the world with counning to deceiue Where as the Pope hangs drawes condemnes and ●dges Commits acquits sets free or ●●●●●● all Whether he thousands sends on heapes like drudges For in this no place hee is all in all And like a mighty ●●● crownd P●●● Prince With threats and bansh●●● so the world be witches In sending thither and recalling ●●●●● He gaines himselfe the D●●ll and all for riches Epigram 17. THe m H●s holinesse domineeres ouer all the deuils in this life but t is but borrowed ware for they pay him all his old score when hee dyes and comes to ●●● host Pope hath charge of heauens immortall keyes And triple-headed Cerberus obeyes His triple Crowne and who so e're he please He sends to Hell for payne or Heauen for ease He can command the Angels and the Fiends What pleases them for him or for his friends Like as a Dog doth feare a sti●ch of Bacon So his great name Heauen Earth Hell hath shaken Epigram 18. VVHo dares affirme the Popes of Rome are Proud Amongst the Heretickes himselfe must shroud Or who dares say they 'r giuen to Auarice In selling Heauen and Hell for summes of price Or who dares speake such words of treachery To say the Pope is giuen to n Seauen goodly vertues naturally ingrasted in his hellish Holinesse Letchery Or who is he dares be so impious To say his Holinesse is Enuious Or who for seare of euerlasting scath Dares once accuse his Holinesse of Wrath. Or who is he that dares once verifie The Pope doth vse excessiue Gl●ttony Or who dares say that like a drone or moath Like an vnpreaching Priest he liues by El●●th He that against him this dares justifie Is a plaine Protestant and such am I. Epigram 19. MAy it be call'd intollerable Pride For man to sit in the o His holinesse neuer learned this of Christ nor yet of Peter Almighties seate Or on mens shoulders pompously to ride To terrifie the world with thundering threat To weare a three● pilde Crowne vpon his head To haue both Kings and Princes at his becke Whose Horse by mighty Potenta●es is led Who proudly ●ootes vpon the Emperours necke If trickes like these ●o● pride may be allow'd Then I conclude the Pope must needs be proud Epigram 20. IF it be couetous for gripple gaine To sell● the Heauens the Earth yea God himselfe To dispossesse Kings from their lawfull raigne To cramme his co●fers with vnlawfull pel●e To pardon sinnes for p If you wil know the price of sinne any ordinary Priest can tell you as well as Tom Tapster can tell a penny is the price of a pot of Ale money more then pitty Nay more to pardon sinnes that are to come To maintaine Whores and Stewes in Towne and City Who yerely payes the Pop● a countlesse sum Who takes great interest puts great summes to vse 'T is Couetousuesse I thinke without excuse Epigram 21. IS it not bruitish sensuall q Why may not his Holinesse haue as much priuiledge as a Beast for a beast may lawfully ●ngender with his owne kindred and the Pope is called a Beast in many places of the Bible appetite The Sire to make a strumpet of his child Or is not Letcherie an Epethire For him that hath his Fathers bed defilde For him that hath des● our'd Virginitie That hath defilde the Damozell and the Damme Without respect of Consanguinitie That like a wolfe hath spovld both Ewe and Lambe This may be rearm'd incestuons Luxury And yet his Holinesse not wrong'd thereby Epigram 22. HE like a God that gouernes in the world That Eu●●es ●●ch mans honour but his owne He ●●●●●●●● through the earth hath hurld Who●● E●uie hath great Kingdomes ouer-throwne He that vngra●●s his ●●● that 's o●●ce intomb'd For Enu●● that
But let our wils attend vpon his will And let this will be our direction still Let not Pleibeans be inquisitiue Or into any profound State-businesse diue We in fiue hundred and nere sixty yeare Since first the Norman did the Scepter beare Haue many hopefull royall Princes had Who as Heau'n pleas'd to blesse were good or bad Beanclarke was first who was first Henry crown'd For learning and for wisdome high renown'd Beyond the verge of Christendomes Swift Fame Did make the world admire his noble name The blacke Prince Edward all his life time ran The race of an accomplisht Gentleman His valour and tryumphant victories Did still the world and mount vnto the skyes The warlike Henry of that name the fist With his innated vertue vp did lift His name and fame to such perspicuous grace Which time or no obliuion can deface Prince A●●hur whom our Chronicks record To be a vertuous and a hopefull Lord His budding fortunes were by death preuented And as he liued belou'd he dy'd lamented His brother Henry from his fall did spring First to be Prince of Wales then Englands King He was magnificent and fortunate According to the greatnesse of his state Next Edward his vndoubted heyre by birth Who for the sins of men vpon the earth God tooke him hence as he began to bloome Whose worthy memory mens hearts into● be Prince Henry last a Prince of as great hope As ere was any yet beneath the Cop● He liu'd and dy'd be wailed and renown'd And left this Land with teares or sorrow drown'd Then onely this illustrious b●●● remain'd Our gracious Charles by Heauen● high grace ord●in'd To be our loy whose vertues as I gather Will length the life of his beloued Father True loue and honour made his Highneste please Aduenturously to passe ore Lands and Seas With hazard of his royall person and In that the hope of all our happy Land But blessed be his Name whose great protection Preseru'd him still from change of ayres infectiorn That gaue him health and strength mongst su●dry Nations T' endure and like their dyers variations That though to others these things might be strange Yet did this Princely vlgour neuer change But with a strong and able constitution He bore out all with manly resolution Loue sometimes made the Gods themselues disguise And mussle vp their mighty Dieties And vertuous Princes of the Gods haue ●ds When Princes goodnesse doe outgoe the Gods Then foolish man this is no worke of thine But operation of the power Diuine Let God alone with what he hath in hand 'T is sawcy folly madnesse to withstand What his eternall wisedome hath decreed Who better knowes then we doe what we need To him le ts pray for his most safe protection Him we implore for his most sure direction Let his assistance be Prince Charles his guide That in the end God may be glorifide Let vs amendment in our liues expresse And let our thankes be more our sins be lesse Amongst the rest this is to bee remembred that two Watermen at the Tower Wharfe burnt both their Boats in a Bonefire most merrily FINIS AN ENGLISH-MANS LOVE TO BOHEMIA DEDICATED To the Honourable well approued and accomplisht Souldier Sir ANDREVV GRAY Knight Colonell of the Forces of Great Britaine in this Noble Bohemian Preparation SIR ANDREVV GRAI● Anagramma I GARDE IN WARRES Honourable Knight THere are two especiall Causes that haue moued me most boldly to thrust these rude lines into the world The first is my heartie affection to the generality of the cause you vndertake which I beleeue God and his best seruants doe affect and the other is my loue and seruice which I owe to your worthy Selfe in particular for many vnde serued friendships which I haue receiued from you and many of your noble friends for your sake Ingratitude is a Deuill so farre worse them all the deuils that if I should craue harbour of me in the likenesse of an Angell of light yet it would neuer by perswaded to entertaine it My thankfull acknowledgement of your goodnesse towards me is my prayers and best wishes which shall euer be a poore requitall towards you not forgetting my thankes in the behalfe of all the worthy Ladies and others of that Angelicall sex that are maried and resident in London whose chast honours you as became a true Knight defended when an audacious Frenchman most slaunderously did without exception sweare there was not one honest Women dwelling within the bounds of this populous Citie but that they had all generally abused the bed of Mariage then did your noble selfe inforce the pestiferous peasant to swallow his odious calumny and in humilitie to comfesse there were fifty thousand or a greater number that neuer had wronged their Husbands in that vnlawfull act I haue made bold to speake of this matter here because the abuse was so generall and your quarrell so Honourable which I thinke vnfit to be buried in silence or forgetfulnesse howsoeuer I craue your pardon and worthy acceptance whilst I most obsequiously remaine Euer to be commanded by you IOHN TAYLOR AN ENGLISH-MANS LOVE TO BOHEMIA With a friendly Farewell to all the noble Souldiers that goe from great Britaine to that honourable Expedition As ALSO The most part of the Kings Princes Dukes Marquisses Earles Bishops and other friendly Confederates that are combined with the Bohemian part WArres noble warres and manly braue designes Where glorious valour in bright Armour shines Where God with guards of Angels doth defend And best of Christian Princes doe befriend Where mighty Kings in glittering burnisht armes Lead bloudy brusing battels and alarmes Where honour truth loue royall reputation Make Realmes and Nations ioyne in combination Bohemia Denmarks and Hungaria The vpper and the lower Bauaria The two great Counties of the Pa●●atine The King of Sweden friendly doth combine The Marquesse and Elector Brandenburge The Dukes of Brunswicke and of Lunenburge Of Holstein Deuxpont and of Wittemberge Of the Low-Saxons of Mackelberge Braue Hessens Lantsgraue Anholts worthy * Prince of Tuscani● Prince The inhance Townes whom force cannot conuince Prince Mauric● and the States of Netherlands And th' ancient Knights of th' Empire lend their hands fam'd These and a number more then I haue nam'd Whose worths and valours through the world are With many a Marquesse Bishop Lord and Knight Toppose foule wrong and to defend faire right Whose warlike troopes assembled brauely are To ayde a gracious Prince in a iust warre Byshops of Ha●●flads Magenberg Hoeshri●●●senburgh The Marquesse of Auspasts ●●ullinbag Dwil●gh The Count Palatine of ●●●tricks and Luxemburgh Tho States of v●●●●and Sauoy For God for Natures and for Nations Lawes This martiall Army vndertakes this cause And true borne Britaines worthy Countrymen Resume your ancient honors once agen I know your valiant minds are sharpe and keene To serue you Souereignes daughter Bohems Queen I know you need to spur to set you on But you thinke dayes are
his bones to grinde And all this carke and care and toile of his Most chiefly for this onely purpose is That his gay Land-lord may weare silke feather Whilst he poore drudge can scarce get frize or leather Because his Land-lady may dog the fashion Hee 's rack'd and tortur'd without all compassion Because his Land-lords Heyre may haue renowne Of Gentle though the Father be a Clowne Because his Landlords daughters deckt with pride With ill-got portions may be Lad side In briefe poore tenants pinch for clothes and food To dawb with pride their Landlords their brood The time hath bin and some aliue knowes when A Gentleman would keepe some twenty men Some thirty and some forty lesse or more As their Reuenews did supply their store And with their Charities did freely feed The Widow Fatherlesse and poore mans need But then did Pride keepe residence in Hell And was not come vpon the earth to dwell Then Loue and Charity were at the best Exprest●in Action not in words profest Then conscience did keepe men in much more aw Than the seuerest rigour of the Law And then did men feare God with true intent For 's Goodnesse not for feare of punishment But since the Leprosie of Pride hath spred The world all ouer from the foot to head Good bounteous house-keeping is quite destroyd And large reuenewes other wayes imployd Meanes that would foure men meate and meanes allow Are turnd to garters and to roses now That which kept twenty in the dayes of old By Satan is turn'd sattin silke and gold And one man now in garments he doth weare A thousand akers on his backe doth beare Whose ancestours in former times did giue Meanes for a hundred people well to liue Now all his shrunke in this vaine glorious age T' attire a coach a footman and a page To dice drinke drabs tobacco hanks hounds These are th' expence of many thousand pounds Whilst many thousands starue and daily perish For want of that which these things vs'd to cherrish There is another Pride which some professe Who pinch their bellies for their backs excesse For thogh their guts through wāt of fodder clings That they will make sweet filthy fiddle strings Yet they will suffer their mawes pine and lacke To trap with rich caparisons the backe These people for their Pride doe Iustice still Vpon themselues although against their will They doe in their owne stomacks try examine And punish outward Pride with inward famine But sure the people can be good for nothing Whose reputation onely lyes in cloathing Because the hangman oft may execute A thiefe or traytor in a sattin sute And that sute which did from the gallowes drop May be againe hang'd in a Broakers shop And then againe hang'd and bought and worne And secondly perhaps to Tiburne borne And so at sundry times for sundry crimes The Hangman may fell one sute sixteene times And euery Rascall that the same did fit To be exceeding pockie proud of it And all this while if I be not mistooke It rests vnpaid for in the Mercers booke Thus many simple honest people haue Giu'n worship to a Broakers wardrobe slaue Thus Tiburne ornaments may be the chiefe To grace a graceles arrant whoore or thiefe A Seruing-man I in cast cloathes haue seene That did himselfe so strangely ouerweene That with himselfe he out of knowledge grewe And therefore all his old friends he misknewe Vntill at last his Glory did decrease His outside fac'd with tatters rags and greace Then did the changing time the youth transforme From Pride to be as lowly as a worme A many of these fellovves may be had That 's meeke or proud as clothes are good or bad I leaue true Noble Gentry all this while Out of the reach of my inuectiue stile T is fit that those of worthy race and place Should be distinguisht from the Vulgar base Particulars Ile not to question call My Satyre is 'gainst Pride in generall Soft Rayment is in Princes Courts allow'd Not that the wearers should thereof be proud For worth and wisedome knowes most certainely That Hell giues pride and Heau'n Humility And be their garments ne'r so rare or rich They neuer can make Pride their hearts bewitch Then if all sorts of men considred this Most vaine the pride of any rayment is For neither Sea land fish fowle worme or beast But man's beholding to the most and least The silly Sheepe puts off his coate each yeere And giues it to forgetfull man to weare The Oxe Calfe Goate and Deere doe not refuse To yeeld their skins to make him boots shooes And the poore silke-worme labours night and day T' adorne and granish man with rich array Therefore if men of this did rightly thinke Humility would grow and pride would shrinke Fowles of the ayre dee yeeld both fans plumes And a poore Ciuet-cat allowes perfumes The Earth is rip'd and bowel'd rent and torne For gold and siluer which by man is worne And sea and land are rak'd and search't sought For Iewels too farre fetcht and too deare bought Thus man's beholding still to make him trim Vnto all creatures and not they to him Nature without mans helpe doth them supply And man without their helpe would starue and dye If men I say these things considered well Pride then would soone be tumbled downe to hell Their golden suits that make them much renown'd Is but the guts and garbage of the ground Their Ciuet that affords such dainty sents Is but a poore Cats sweating Excrements Their rarest Iewels which most glister forth Are more for outward shew then inward worth They are high valu'd at all times and season But for what reason none can giue a reason The best of them like whoores hath euer bin Most faire without and full of bane within And let a great man weare a piece of glasse It for his sake will for a Diamond passe But let a man that 's of but meane degree Weare a faire Diamond yet it glasse must be This valuing of a Iewell is most fit It should not grace a man man should grace it A good man to his suite is a repute A knaues repute lyes onely in his sute And for a stone that but three drams hath weigh'd Of precious poyson hundreds haue bin paid And who can tell how many liues were lost In fetching home the Bables of such cost For many of them as are as dearely bought As if they from a The field of blood that the Iewes bought with thirty pieces of siluer which Iudos brought back againe after he betrayed Christ Ma● 27 7. Acts 1.19 Acheldama were brought Yet some rush through fantastques pates to please Rocks sands change of aire rough winds seas Storms tēpests gusts flawes pirates sword fire Death or else slauery neuer to retire And thus prides various humours to su●fice A number hazard these calamities When our owne Countrey doth afford vs heere Iewels more precious
exprest Which to require my thankfulnesse I 'l show ●nd that I 'l euer pay and euer owe. On Tuesday morning we with maine and might From Portsmouth crost vnto the ●●e of Wight By Cowes ftout Castle we to ● armouth hasted And still the windes and Seas fierce fury lasted On Wedn'●day we to Hursts strong Castle crost Most dangerously sowsd turmoyl'd and tost Good harbour there we found and nothing deere I thanke kinde * ●atthew Figge a right good fellow M. Figge the Porter there He shew'd vs there a Castle of defence Most vsefull of a round circumference Of such command that none can passe those Seas Vnsunke or spoyl'd except the Castle please On Thursday we our Boat row'd pull'd and hal'd Vnto a place which is K●y Hauen call'd The winde still blowing and the Sea so high As if the lofty waues would kisse the skie That many times I wish'd with all my hart My selfe my Boat and Crue all in a Cart Or any where to keepe vs safe and dry The weather raged so out ragiously For sure I thinke the memory of man Since windes a●d Seas to blow or flow began Cannot remember so stormy weather In such continuance held so long together For ten long weekes e'r that t is manifest The wind had blown at South or west Southwest And rais'd the Seas to shew each others power That all this space ca●me weather not one hower That whether we did goe by Sunne or Moone At anytime at midnight or at noone If we did launce or if to land we set We still were sure to be halfe sunke and wet Thus toyling of our weary time away That Thursday was our last long look'd for day For hauing past with perill and much paine And plow'd furrow'd o'r the daugerous maine O'r depths and flats and many a ragged Rocke We came to Christ-Church Hau'n at fiue a clocke Thus God in mercy his iust iudgement sparing Gainst our presumption ouer-bold and daring Who made vs see his wonders in the deepe And that his power alone aloft did keepe Our weather-beaten Bonte aboue the waues Each moment gaping to be all our Graues We sinking seap'd then not to vs to Him Be all the Glory for he causd vs s●im And for his mercy was so much extended On me whose temptings had so farre offended Let me be made the scorne and scoffe of men If euer I attempt the like agen My loue my duty and my thankfulnesse To Sir George Hastings I must here expresse His deedes to me I must requite in words No other payment poore mens state affords With fruitlesse words I pay him for his cost With thanks to M r. Templeman mine host So leauing Christ-Church and the Hauen there With such good friends as made vs welcome ●●● Some serious matter now I must compile And thus from verse to prose I change my stile GOD who of his infinite wisdome made Man of his vnmeasured mercy redeemed him of his boundlesse bounty immense power and eternall eye of watchfull prouidence relieues guards and conserues him It is necessary that euery man seriously consider and ponder these things and in token of obedience and thankfulnesse say with Dauid What shall I render and the man hauing thus searched considerately the Causer of his being then let him againe meditate for * Men should consider why God hath giuen them a being in this life what cause hee hath a being indeed it may be obiected that almost euery thing hath a being as stones haue being trees hearbs and plants haue being and life Beasts fowles and fishes haue being life and sence but to man is giuen a Being life sence and reason and after a mortal an immortal euer-being This cōsideration will make a man know that hee hath little part of himselfe which hee may iustly call his owne his body is Gods he made it his soule is his who bought it his goods are but lent him by him that will one day call him to a reckoning for the well or ill disposing of them so that man hauing nothing but what he hath receiued and receiued nothing but what is to be imployed in the seruice of God and consequently his Prince and Countrey it is plainely to be perceiued that euery man hath * No man is owner of himselfe the least share or portion of himselfe to boast of I haue written this Preamble not onely to enforme such as know not these things already but also to such whose knowledge is as it were falne into a dead sleepe who doe liue as though there were no other being then here and that their life and being was ordayned onely of themselues neither God Prince or Countrey hauing no share or portion of them or of what they call theirs But oh you Inhabitants of Salisbury I hope there are ●●● such crawling Cankerwormes or Comm●● wealth Caterpillers amongst you Nay I ●●● assured of the contrary that there are ma●●● who with religious piety open hands ●●● relenting hearts doe acknowledge that yo●● goods are but lent in trust vnto you and ●●● patiently beare the ouer-burthensome ●●●uing of many hundreds of poore wret●●● which were it not for your charity wo●●● perish in your streets This being entred into my consideration that your City is so * Here is an honest course set downe for the inriching●● your rich and the relieuing of your poore much ouercharged ●●● poore as hauing in three Parishes neere ●●● besides decayed men a great many and ●●● those few which are of the wealthier sort ●●● continually onerpressed with sustaining ●● wants of the needy the City being as it ●●● at the last gaspe the poore being like Ph●●ohs leane Kine euen ready to eat vp the ●●● ones I haue made bold to write this Tr●●tise ensuing both to entreat a constant per●uerance in those who haue begun to doe go●● workes and an encouragement or anima●●● of all others who as yet seeme slow in the●● good proceedings And if any thing he●● written by me be either impertinent ex●●uagant rude harsh or ouer-bold I humb●● entreat you to impute it rather to my want ●●● iudgement learning and capacity then to ●ny presumption or want of loue and duty ●●● the City cause which is hereafter handled It is sufficiently knowne that my intent and purpose at this time was not to make any profit to my selfe ' vpon any aduenture as it is deemed by many by my passage from London ●● Salisbury with a Wherry but I was entread by a * His ●●●● Gregory Bastable and his ordinary place where he ●●● or attends his labour is at the Temple and there also ●●● Thomas Estman another Wiltshire man which wi●●●● Waterman which was born in Salisbury that I would beare him company for the discouery of the sands flats depths shoales Mils and Weares which are impediments and ' lets whereby the Riuer is not Nauigable from Christ-Church or the Sea to Salisbury Which after many dangerous gusts
many times the text we doe forget Thinke but of this and then the yeere before Must be abated halfe or some what more Thus many a Christian sixty yeeres hath trod The earth and not six months hath sem'd his God When we our liues vnequally thus share In thinking of it I am full of care I care in all my actions so to liue That no occasion of offence I giue To any man with either pen or tongue In name or same or goods to doe them wrong For he 's the greatest murderer aliue That doth a man of his good name depriue With base calumnious slanders and false liess T is the worst villany of villanies To blast a good mans name with scandals breath Makes his dishonor long furuiue his death For Infamie's a colour dyde in graine Which scarcebliuion can wash out againe As nothing's dearer then a mans good name So nothing wounds more deeper then desame Nature gaue man a paire of eares and eyes And but one tongue which certainely implies That though our sight and hearing still is free ●● must we not speake all we heare or see Then he 's a Viper that doth lyes inuent To worke thereby anothers detriment T is sinne to slander a notorious Knaue But sinne and shame a good man to depraue Thus good or bad or whatsoe'r they are To doe to neither of them wrong I care I care to get good Bookes and I take heed And care what I doe either write or read Though some through ignorance some through spite ●● said that I can neither read nor write ●● though my lines no Scholership proclaime ●● I at learning haue a kind of ayme And I haue gatherd much good obseruations From many humane and diuine translations ● was well entred forty Winters since ●● farre as possum in my Accidence And reading but from possum to posset There I was mir'd and could no further get Which when I thinke vpon with mind deiected ●● care to thinke how learning I neglected The poet * Part of the Bookes of ●●ry that I haue read Quid or Ouid if you will Being in English much hath helpt my skill And Homer too and Virgil I haue seene And reading them I haue much better'd beene ●●frey of Bulloyne well by Fairfax done ●●● that much loue hath rightly wonne Did Chaucer Sidney Spencer Daniel Nash ●●dip'd my finger where they vs'd to wash As I haue read these Poets I haue noted * Bookes that I haue read of Poesie Much good which in my memory is quoted Of Histories I haue perusde some store As no man of my function hath done more The Golden legend I did ouer tosse And found the Gold mixt with a deale of drosse ●● haue read Plutarchs Morals and his Liues And like a Bee suckt Hony from those Hiues ●sepbus of the Iewes Knowles of the Turks Marcus Aurelius and G●● works ●yd Grimstane Montaigne and Suetonius Agrippa whom some call Cornelius Graue ●●● and C●●bden Purchas Speed Did Monumentall ●●● and Hollinshead And that sole Booke of Bookes which God hath giuen The ●●● Testanic●ts of heauen That I haue read and I with care confesse My selfe unworthy of such happinesse And many more good Bookes I haue with care Lookt on their goods and neuer stole their ware For no booke to my hands could euer come If it were but the Treatise of Tom Thumb Or Scoggins Iests or any simple play Or monstrous nowes came Trundling in my way All these and ten times more some good some bad I haue from them much obseruation had And so with care and study I haue writ These bookes the issue of a barren wit The most of them are verse but I suppose It is much ease to name them here in prose The names of many of the bookes that I haue written First the Sculler Vpon Coriat three merry bookes called Odcombs complaint Coriats resurrection and Laugh and be fat The nipping or snipping of Abuses Two mad things against Fenor Taylors Vrania The marriage of the Princesse An Elegy on Prince Henry Two bookes of all the Kings of England Three weekes three dayes and three houres obseruations in Germany Trauels to Scotland Trauels to Prague in Bohemia An Englishmans loue to Bohemia The Bible in verse The Booke of Martyrs in verse The praise of Hempseed A kicksy winsy The great O Toole Iacke a Lent The praise of Beggery Taylors Goose. Faire and soule weather The life and death of the Virgin Mary The Whip of Pride And lastly since the reigne of th' Emperour * I was much beholding to this Emperors name to make vp the meeter OTTO Was neuer seene the like of TAYLORS MOTTO All these and some which I haue quite forgot With care as is aforesaid I haue wrote I care how to conclude this carefull straine In care I care how to get out againe I care for food and lodging fire and rayment And what I owe I care to make good payment But most of all I care and will endeuer To liue so carefull that I may liue euer Thus without wronging any man a iot I shew I haue what euery man hath not● My wants are such that I forgiue them free That would but steale the most of them from me My cares are many as I here expresse Poore couzin Germans vnto carelesnesse I haue a knowledge some men will read this I want the knowledge how their liking is I care in all that I herein haue pend To please the good and shew the bad to mend And those that will not thus be satisfi'd I haue a spirit that doth them deride I flattry want mens likings to obtaine I care to loue those that loue me againe Thus be mens iudgements steady or vnsteady To like my Booke the care is tane already The Prouerb sayes that haste makes often waste Then what is waste impute it to my haste This Booke was written not that here I bosst Put houres together in three dayes at most And giue me but my breakfast I 'l maintaine To write another e'r I eate againe But well or ill or howsoe'r t is pend Lik't as you list and so I make an END ODCOMBS COMPLAINT OR CORIATS FVNERALL EPICEDIVM OR DEATH-SONG VPON HIS late-reported drowning With his Epitaph in the Barmuda and Vtopian tongues And translated into English by IOHN TAYLOR The Authour in his owne defence IF any where my lines doe fall out lame I made them so in merriment and game For be they wide or side or long or short All 's one to me I writ them but in sport Yet I would haue the Reader thus much know ' That when I list my simple skill to show In poesie I could both read and spell I know my Dactils and my Spondees well My true proportion and my equall measure What accent must be short and what at leasure How to transpose my words from place to place To giue my poesie the greater grace Either in Pastorall or
his other sinnes he play the Thiefe And steale mens goods they all will sentence giue He must be hang'd he is vnsit to liue In the Low Countryes if a wretch doe steale But bread or meat to feed himselfe a meale They will vnmercifully beat and clowt him Hale pull and teare spurne kicke flowt him But if a Drunkard be vnpledg'd a Kan Drawes out his knife and basely stabs a man To runne away the Rascall shall haue scope None holds him but all cry * Run Thiefe Run Lope Scellum Lope Thus there 's a close conniuence for all vice Except for Theft and that 's a hanging price One man 's addicted to blaspheme and sweare A second to carowse and domineore A third to whoring and a fourth to fight And kill and slay a fist man to backbite A sixt and seuenth with this or that crime caught And all in generall much worse then naught And amongst all these sianers generall The Thiefe must winne the halter from them all When if the matter should examin'd be They doe deserue it all as much as he Nor yet is Thieuery any vpstart sinne But it of long antiquity hath bin And by this trade great men haue not disdain'd To winne renowne and haue their states maintain'd Grest Alexanders conquests what were they But taking others goods and lands away In manners I must call it Martiall dealing But truth will terme it rob'ry and flat stealing For vnto all the world it is well knowne That he by force tooke what was not his owne Some Writers are with Tamberlaine so briefe To stile him with the name of Seythian Thiefe * Plutar●b Licurgus lou'd and granted gifts beside To Thieues that could steale and escape vnspide But if they taken with the manne were They must restore and buy the bargaine deere Thieues were at all times euer to be had Examples by the good Thiefe and the bad And England still hath bin a fruitfull Land Of valiant Thieues that durst bid true men stand One Bellin Dun a Hen. I. a famous Thiefe surniu'd From whom the cowne of Dunstable's deriu'd And Robin Hood b Rich. 2. with little Iohn agreed To rob the rich men and the poore to feede c Edw. 3. The Priests had here such small meanes for their liuing That many of them were enforc'd to Thieuing Once the fist Henry could rob ex'lent well When he was Prince of Wales as Storeis tell Then Fryer Tucke a tall stout Thiefe indeed Could better rob and steale then preach or read Sir Gosselin Deinuill d Edw. 2. with 200. more In Fryers weedes rob'd and were hang'd therefore Thus I in Stories and by proofe doe finde That stealing's very old time out of minde E't I was borne it through the world was spred And will be when I from the world am dead But leauing thus my Muse in hand hath tooke To shew which way a Thiefe is like a Booke A Comparison betweene a Thiefe and a Booke COmparisons are odious as some say But my comparisons are so no way I in the Pamphlet which I wrote before Compar'd a Booke most fitly to a Whore And now as fitly my poore muse alludes A Thiefe t' a Booke in apt similitudes A good Booke steales the mind from vaine pretences From wicked cogitations and offences It makes vs know the worlds deceiuing pleasures And set our hearts on neuer ending treasures So when Thieues steale our Cattle Coyne or Ware It makes vs see how mutable they are Puts vs in mind that wee should put our trust Where Fellon cannot steale or Canker rust Bad Bookes through eyes and eares doe breake and enter And takes possession of the hearts fraile Center Infecting all the little Kingdome Man With all the poys'nous mischiefe that they can Till they hape rob'd and ransack'd him of all Those things which men may iustly goodnesse call Robs him of vertue and of heau'nly grace And leaues him begger'd in a wretched case So of our earthly goods Thieues steale the best And richest iewels and leaue vs the rest Men know not Thieues from true men by their looks Nor by their outsides no man can know Bookes Both are to be suspected all can tell And wisemen e'r they trust will try them well A Booke may haue a title good and faire Though in it one may finde small goodnesse there And so a Thiefe whose actions are most vile Steales good opinion and a true mans stile Some Bookes prophane the Sacred text abuse With common Thieues it is a common vse Some Bookes are full of lyes and Thieues are so One hardly can beleeue their yea or no. Some Bookes are scurrilous and too obsceane And he 's no right Thiefe that loues not a Queane Some Book 's not worth the reading for their fruits Some Thieues not worth the hanging for their suits Some Bookes are briefe and in few words declare Compendious matter and acutenesse rare And so some Thieues will breake into a house Or cut a purse whilest one can cracke a Louse Some Bookes are arrogant and impudent So are most Thieues in Christendome and Kent Some Bookes are plaine and simple and some Thieues Are simply hang'd whilest others get reprieues Some Books like foolish Thieues their faults are spide Some Thieues like witty Bookes their faults can hide Some Bookes are quaint and quicke in their conceits Some Thieues are actiue nimble in their sleights Some Bookes with idle stuffe the Author fills Some Thieues will still be idle by their wills Some Bookes haue neither reason law or sense No more haue any Thieues for their offence A Booke 's but one when first it comes to th'Presse It may increase to numbers numberlesse And so one Thiefe perhaps may make threescore And that threescore may make ten thousand more Thus from one Thiefe Thieues may at last amount Like Bookes from one Booke past all mens account And as with industry and art and skill One Thiefe doth daly rob another still So one Booke from another in this age Steales many a line a sentence or a page Thus amongst Bookes good fellowship I finde All things are common Thieues beare no such mind And for this Thieuing Bookes with hue and cry Are sought as Thieues are for their Fellony As Thieues are chasde and sent from place to place So Bookes are alwaies in continuall chase As Bookes are strongly boss'd and clasp'd bound So Thieues are manacled when they are found As Thieues are oft examin'd for their crimes So Bookes are vsde and haue bin at all times As Thieues haue oft at their arraignment stood So Bookes are tryde if they be bad or good As Iuries and Graund Iuries with much strife Giue vp for Thieues a Verdict death or life So as mens fancies euidence doe giue The shame or fame of Bookes to dye or liue And as the veriest Thiefe may haue some friend So the worst Bookes some Knaue will still defend As Thieues their condemnation must abide Bookes are
cutting edging stiffning and for lacing For bumbast stitching binding and for buckram For cotton bayes for canuas and for lockram All these I know but know not how to vse them Let trading Taylors therefore still abuse them My skil's as good to write to sweate or row As any Taylors is to steale or sow In end my pulsiue braine no Art affoords To mine or stamp or forge new coyned words But all my tongue can speake or pen can write VVas spoke and writ before I could indite Yet let me be of my best hopes berest If what I euer writ I got by theft Or by base symony or bribes or gifts Or beg'd or borrowd it by sharking shifts I know I neuer any thing haue done But what may from a weake inuention runne Giue me the man whose wit will vndertake A substance of a shaddow for to make Of nothing something with Arts greatest aide With Na●●● onely all his Muse arraide The solid matter from his braine can squeez ●●●● some lame Artists wits are drawn to 'th leez ●●●●aching Parrots prate and prattle can 〈…〉 ght an Ape will imitate a man And ●●● his hors shew'd tricks taught with much labor ●●● did the hare that plaid vpon the tabor ●●●ll man I pray so witlesse be besotted ●●●ll men like beasts no wisdome be allotted Without great studie with instinct of Nature Why then work man the worst and basest creature ●●●● are made the other creatures Kings ●●●● superiour wisdome from them springs ●●● therefore M●●● vnto thee againe ●●● dost suspect the issues of my braine ●● but my bastards now my Muse doth flie ●nd in thy throat giues thy suspect the lie ●nd to the triall dares thee when thou dar'st Accounting thee a coward if thou spar'st ●●● little wit and braine and spleene And gall memorie and mirth and teene ●●d passions and affections of the minde ● other Mortals vse to be enclinde A●● hauing all this wherefore should men doubt ●●● wit should be so crippled with the Gowt ●●● it must haue assistance to compile ●●●a l●●e dog that 's limping or a stile ●●●o no thou Z●yl●● thou detracting else ●●●gh thou art insufficient in thy selfe ●nd hast thy wit and studies in reuersion ●●●●●● on me that scandalous aspersion ●●● such ballad-mongring timing slaues ●●●●●ygging rascals such audacious knaues ●●e bane of learning the abuse of Arts ●●●me of Natures worst defectiue parts The scorne of schollers poison of rewards ●● dlesse vassalls of true worths regards The shame of time the canker of deserts The death of liberall and heroicke hearts ●●● like so many bandogs snarle and snatch ●●● all 's their owne they can from others catch ●●● licke the scraps of Schollers wits like dogs ●●●●● old draffs good enough for hogs ●●yning line by line and peece by peece ●●● from each place they read will filch a sleece ●●● thinks my Muse should piecemeale teare these rogues ●●● base vile thē tatter'd Irish brogues ●●● kissing raskals flattering parasites ●●●ne vices vassalls vertues opposites ●●● you da●●bde curs haue murderd liberall minds ●●● made best Poets worse esteem'd then hindes ●●● wherefore doe I take a Schollers part ●●● haue no ground or Axioms of Art ●●● in Poesie an artlesse creature ●●● haue no learning but the booke of Nature No Academicall Poeticke straines But home●●pu● medley of my mottley braines Th●●●●● on ● a Sch●●●r's wants bewaile And why against ●●fe litter'd whelps I raile I● this that they long time should time beftow In paint fall study secret Arts to know ●●d after liue in want contempt and scorne By euery d●●g-hill p●asant ouer-borne Ab●●d reiected doggedly disgrac'd De'p●ed ragged Iowzie and out-fac'd Whilst Bag-pipe-poets stuft with others wind Are g●●c'd for wit they haue from them purloind Now in my owned fence once more I 'l say Their too rash iudgements too much runne astray That ' c●●se my name is Taylor I doe theeue it I hope their wisdomes will no more beleeue it Nor let my want of learning be the cause I should be bitten with blacke envies iawes For whose'r by nature is not a Poet By rules of Art he neuer well can show it Ther 's many a wealthy heire long time at Schoole Doth spend much study and comes home a foole A Poet needs must be a Poet borne Or else his Art precures his greater scorne For why if Art alone made men excell Me thinks Tom Coriat should write ex'lent well But he was borne belike in some crosse yeere When learning was good cheap but wit was deare Then to conclude as I before began Though nought by Schollership or Art I can Yet if my stocke by nature were more bare I scorne to vtter stolne or borrowed ware And therefore Reader now I tell thee plaine If thou incredulous dost still remaine If yea or nay these reasons doe perswade thee I leaue thee and thy faith to him that made thee To the Kings most excellent Maiesty Anagramma Iames Stuart MVSKS TARI AT GReat Soueraigne as thy sacred Royall brest Is by the Muses whole and sole possest So do I know Rich Precious Peereleffe Iem In writing vnto Thee I write to them The Muses tarry at thy name why so Because they haue no further for to goe To the high and mighty Prince CHARLES STVART Anagramma Calls true hearts BRaue Prince thy name thy fame thy selfe and all With lone and seruice all true hearts doth call So royally indude with Princely parts Thy Reall vertues alwaies calls true hearts To Anna Queene of Great Brittaine THese back-ward and these forward lines I fend To your right Royall high Maiesticke hand And like the guilty prisoner I attend Your censure wherein blisse or bale doth stand If I condemned be I cannot grudge For neuer Poet had a iuster Iudge These lines are to bee read the same backward as they are forward Deer Madam Reed Deem if I meed Loues Iabyrinth with the description of the seuen Planets I Trauel'd through a wildernesse of late Ashady darke vnhaunted desart groue Whereas a wretch explain'd his piteous state Whose mones the Tygers vnto ruthe would moue Yet though he was a man cast downe by Fate Full manly with his miseries hee stroue And dar'd false Fortune to her vtmost worst And e'r he meant to bend would brauely burst Yet swelling griefe so much o'r-charg'd his heart In scalding sighes he needs must vent his woe Where groans and teares and sighes all beare a part As partners in their masters ouerthrow Yet spight of griefe he laught to scorne his smart And midst his depth of care demean'd him so As if sweet concord bore the greatest sway And snarling discord was inforc'd t' obey Thou Saint quoth he I whilome did adore Thinke not thy youthfull feature still can last In winters age thou shalt in vaine implore That thou on me such coy disdaine didst cast Then then remember old said fawes of yore Time was Time is but then thy Times is past And in the
belonging to the Graff or Graue of Shomburgh a Prince of great command and eminence absolute in his authoritie and power not countermanded by the Emperour or any other further then coutesie requires and in a word he is one of the best accomplisht Gentlemen in Europe for his person port and Princely magnificence He hath there to his inestimable charge built the Towne with many goodly Houses Streets Lanes a strong wall and a deepe ditch all well furnished with munition and Artillerie with a band of Souldiers which he keepeth in continuall pay allowing euery man a Doller a Weeke and double apparell euery yeare Besides he hath built a stately Church being aboue 120. steps to the Roofe with a fa●e paire of Organs a curious ca●ued P●lpit and all other Ornaments belonging to the same His owne Pallace may well be called an earthly Paradice which if I should run into praise of the description of I should bring my wits into an intricate Labyritch that I should hardly finde the way ou● yet according to the imbecility of my memory I will only touch a little at the shadow of it and let the substance stand where it doth At the front or outward gate is a most stately Arch vpon the top whereof is erected the image of E●uy as great as a de ny Coloss ●● betweene two Dragons all guilt with gold before the gate is an iron grate to open and that as it were of flowers or worke of E 〈…〉 at which gate stands alwayes a C●●●rt of Guard and a Sentinel and at the Lower part of the Arch is the Princes title or in Capitall Letters as followeth ERNESTVS DEIGRATIA COMES HOLST Scomburgh Sternburgh c. After I was entred within the outward gate I was shewed his stables where I saw very faire and goodly horses both for warre and other v●es amongst the rest there was one naturally spotted like a Leopard or Panther and is called by the name of Leopard a stately couragious beast and so formed as If Nature had layd all her cunning aside onely to compose that Horse and indeed I mvst acknowledge he was made for the Seruice of some great Prince and not for any inferiour Person Passing further I came to another Court of Guard and ouer a Draw bridge into the inner Court where on the right hand I was conducted into the Chappell in which Chappell if it were possible that the hand of mortall men with artificiall workemanship could visibly set forth the magnificent glory of the immortal Creator then absolutely there it is but being impossible so to doe as neere as I can I will describe it the pauement is all of blacke and gray marble curiously wrought with Chequer-worke the S●ats and Pues are carued wainscot of wonderful cunning and workemanship ● the roofe is adorned with the statues of Angel and Cherubins many in num●●● all so richly guilded as it Gold were as pentifull as pewter there could not bee more liberality bestowed besides there are a faire set of Organs with a brau sweet Q●ire of Q●iristers so that when they f●g the Lures Viols Bandoraes O gans Recorders S●gbuts and other musicall instruments all strike vp together with such a glorious delicious harmony as if the Angelicall musicke of the Sphea ●● were descended into that earthly Tabernacle The Prince himselfe is a Protest●●●● very zealous in his Prayer and diligent in his attention to the Preacher who although I vndestood not yet I perceiued he was a good D●●ine who grauely and sincerely with reuerence and eloquent ●locution deliuered the bread of life to the vnderstanding Auditors In this Towne I ●●● with my brother from Saturday the la●●o August till the Thursday following which was the fifth of September When I was conducted an English ●●●● on my way by certaine of my Countrey men my Lords Musicians where wee dranke and parted onely my Brother and my Guide brought me that night to a strong walled Towne called M●nden which standeth on the Riuer o● Weazar and belongeth to the Byshop of that See O● the morrow I walked to see the Towne where I bought thirty fi●e C●eeses for eight pence which I brought into England for raritres pence and a yarda●la halte of padding for fiue So about noone we tooke a Boat to passe downe the Riuer which boat is much longer then any Westerne Barge but nothing neere so broad it was halfe laden with Lime and Cnalke and by reason the W●●blew hard we were almost choaked with ●● flying and scattering of that d●stie commodity Besides the Water was so shallow that we ran a ground three or foure times and sometimes an houre sometimes lesse before we could get a float againe which made mee and my Guide goe a shore at a Village called Peterhaghen where we hired a Waggon to Leize where we stayed all night being come into our old way againe where were a crew of strowling Rogues and Whores that tooke vpon them the name of AEgyptians Iuglets and Fortune-tellers and indeed one of them held the Goodwise with a tale the whilst another was picking her chest and stole out ten dollers which is forty shillings and she that talked with her looked in her hand and told her that if shee did not take great heed she knew by her Art that some mischance was neere her which prooued true for her money was gone the whilst her fortune was telling But I appointed a Waggon ouer night to bee ready by three of the Clocke in the morning when I arose and applyed my trauaile so hard by changing fresh Wagons so that that day I came as farre as Rodenburgh which was nine Dutch miles where I stayd that night The next day being Sunday the eighth of Semptember we took Waggon towards Buckstahoo we had a merry Boore with an hundred tatters about him and now I thinke it fit a little to describe these Boores their natures habits and vnmannerly manners In our English tongue the name Bore or Boore doth truely explaine their Swinish condition for most of them are as full of humanity as a Bacon-hog or a Bore and their wiues as cleanly and courteous as Sowes For the most part of the men they are clad in thin buckerom vnlined bare legged and foored neyther band nor scarce shirt no woollen in the world about them and thus will they run through all weathers for money by the Waggons side and though no better apparelled yet all of them haue Houses Land or manuall meanes to liue by The substantiall Boores I did meet aboue 120. of them that Sunday with euery one a Hatchet in his hand I mused at it and thought they had beene going to fell Wood that day but my Guide told me they were all going to Church and that instead of Cloakes they carried Hatchets and that it was the fashion of the Country whereupon it came to my mind Cloake quasi Cleaue-oake ergo the Boores weare Hatchets in steed of Cloakes There are other fashion
Boores who weare white Linnen breeches as close as lrish iouze● but so long that they are turned vp at the shooe in a role like a Maides sleeues at the hand but what these fellowes want in the bignesse of their Hose they haue in Dublets for their sleeues are as big as Breeches and the bodies great enough to hold a Kinderkin of beere and a barrell of Butter The Country is very full of Woods and especially Oakes which they very seldome cut down because of the Mast for their Swine which liue there in great abundance If any man bee slaine or murthered in the way they vse to set vp a wooden Crosse in the place for a memoriall of the bloudie fact committed there and there were many of those woodden Crosses in the way as I trauailed They seldome haue any Robbery committed amongst them but there is a murther with it for their vnmannerly manner is to knocke out a mans braines first or else to lurke behind a Tree and shoot a man with a peece or a Pistol and so make sure worke with the passenger and then search his pockets It is as dangerous to steale or killan Hare in some places there as it is to rob a Church or kill a man in England and yet a two penny matter will discharge the offender for the best and the worst is but an Halter and I was enformed that an English Marchant not knowing the danger as he was riding on the way hauing a peece charged in his hand as it is an ordinary weapon to trauaile with there by chance he espyed an hare and shot at her and killed her but hee was apprehended for it and it was like to haue ecst him his life but before he got out of the trouble he was faine to vse his best friends and meanes and pleading ignorance for his innocency at last with the losse of a great deale of liberty and five hundred pound in money he was discharged The reason of this strict course is because all the Hares in the Country doe belong to one Lord or other and being in aboundance they are killed by the owners appointment and carried to the markets by Cart-loads and sold fot the vse of the honourable owners And no Boore or Tenant that dwels in those parts where those Hares are plenty must Keepe a Dogge except hee pay fiue shillings a yeere to the Lord or else one of his fore feet must be cut off that hee may not hunt Hares A Man is in almost as high proportion to be a ●naue in England as a Knight in Germany for there a Gentleman is called a Youngcur and a Knight is but a Youngcurts man so that you shall have a scuruy Squire command a Knight to hold his stirrop plucke off his boots or any other vnknightly peece of seruice and verily I thinke there are an 100. seuerall Princes Earles Byshops and other Estates that doe euery one keepe a mint and in their owne names stampe Money Gold Siluer and Brasse and amongst 23. two pences which I had of their brasse money which they call Grushes I had 13. seuerall coynes Many more such worthic in●unctions and honourable ordinances I obserued which are hardly worth pen and inke the describing and therefore I omit them and draw toward an end for on the Wednesday morning I was at an anchor at Stoad and on the Friday night following I was by Gods gracious assistance Landed at London So that in three weekes and three dayes I sayled from England to Hamburgh and backe againe staying in the Countrey 17 dayes and trauailed 200. miles by Land there gathering like a busie Bee all these honied obseruations some by sight some by hearing some by both some by neither and some by bare supposition FINIS TAYLORS TRAVELS TO PRAGVE IN BOHEMIA Reader take this in your way A Pamphlet Reader from the Presse is hurld That hath not many fellowes in the world The manner 's common though the matter 's shallow And 't is all true which makes it want a fellow ANd because I would not haue you either guld of your mony or deceiued in expectatiō I pray you take notice of my plaine dealing for I haue not giuen my book a swelling bumbasted title or a promising inside of newes therfore if you look for any such matter from hence take this warning hold fast your mony and lay the booke downe yet if you do buy it I dare presume you shall find somwhat in it worth part of your mony the ●roth is that I did chiefly write it because I am of much acquaintance and cannot passe the streets but I am continually stayed by one or other to know what newes so that sometimes I am foure houres before I can goe the length of two paire of Buts where such non-sence or sencelesse questions are propounded to me that cals many seeming wise mens wisedomes in question drawing aside the curtaines of their vnderstanding and laying their ignorance wide open First Iohn Easie takes me and holds me fast by the fift halfe an houre and will needs torture some newes out of me from Spinola whom I was neuer neere by 500 miles for he is in the Phllatinate Country and I was in Bohemia I am no sooner eased of him but Gregory Gandergoose an Alderman of Gotham catches me by the goll demanding if Bohemia be a great Towne and whether there bee any meate in it and whether the last fleet of ships be arriued there his mouth being stop'd a third examines me boldly what newes from Vienna where the Emperours Army is what the Duke of Bauaria doth what is become of Count Buquoy how sares all the Englishmen Where lyes the King of Bohemiaes forces what Bethlem Gabor doth what tydings of Dampeier and such a tempest of inquisition that it almost shakes my patience in peeces To ease my selfe of all which I was inforced to set pen to paper and let this poore Pamphlet my harald or nuntius trauaile and talke whilst I take my ease with silence Thus much I dare affirme that whosoever he or they bee that doe scatter any scandalous speeches against the plenty in Bohemia of all manner of needfull things for the sustenance of man and beasts of the which there is more abundance then euer I saw in any place else or whatsoeuer they be that report any ill successe on the Kings party this little booke and I the Author doth proclaime and proue them false Lyers and they are to be suspected for coyning such falshoods as no well willers to the Bohemian prosperity One thing I must intreat the Readers patience in reading one hundred lines wherein I haue kept a filthy stirre about a beastly fellow who was at my going from England a peece of a Graues end Constable at which time he did me such wrong as might haue drawne my life in question for he falsly said that I would haue fired their Towne I did promise him a ierke or two of my pen
not be blinde may plainely spy That their insulting proud commanding Priest Is ●bsolute and onely Antichrist H'exalts himselfe ' boue all that 's called God Vpon the Emperours necke he proudly trod Hee is th'abomination void of grace That mounts himselfe into the holy place He makes the Princes of the Earth drinke vp And quaffe the poyson of his cursed Cup. Who being drunken with the dr●gs of sinne They haue his sworne and forsworne vassals beene Bewitched with his foule Inchanting charmes Gainst one another they haue rose in armes By forreine and domesticke bloudie broyles Whilst he hath fild his his coffers with their spoyles His double dealing too plaine appeares In setting Christian Princes by the eares Whilst he into his anatitious hands Hath feiz'd their persons moueables and lands And as the Christian Kings themselues made weake The Turke into their Kingdomes gan to breake And thus the Turke and Pope joynd with the deuill Haue beene the authors of all Christian euill FINIS THE BOOKE OF MARTYRS The Second Part. DEDICATED TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE PHILLIP EARLE OF MONTGOMERIE c. MY Lord the liues and deaths of Saints and Kings This little Booke vnto your Greatnesse sings Protection and acceptance if you giue It shall as shall Your selfe for ever liue IOHN TAYLOR VVHen the 7 Henry in his graue was laid And the eight Henry Englands Scepter sway'd Romes bloudy persecution raged more In England than in ten Kings raignes before And therefore Reader in this little Booke For euery Martyrs name thou must not looke But men of chiefest note respect and same That dyed in England onely these I name And first the Papists tyranny beganne In murthering Richard Hun a zealous man For being kept in prison by their power They closly hang'd him in the Lollards Tower And then they all in generall decreed Reporting Hun himselfe had done the deed Ann sixteene dayes iust after this was don They burn'd the foresaid corps of Richard Hun. Then to the number of full thirty fiue The surious flames did all of life depriue In seuerall places of this wofull land Because they did the Pope of Rome withstand At which time Thomas Bilney did begin To preach and teach against Antichristian sinne Where in Saint Georges Church in Ipswich Towne The Papists from the Pulpit pluckt him downe And as in dolefull prison he did lie He put his finger in the flames to try He prou'd aud God did giue him strenght to beare His death to liue with his Redeemer deare The next of note was one Iohn Frith a man Of learning great a Martyrs same he wan Then learned Luther and graue Zwinglius With Caluin Beza Occolampadius All glorious gracious reuerend lamps of light Were instruments to cleare blear'd Englands sight In Flanders William Tindall for Gods Word Was Sacrific'd to glorifie the Lord. Iohn Lambert valiantly his death did take And burn'd in Smithfield for his Sauiour sake About this time that Honourable man Lord Cromwels life and timelesse death began Hee like an Earthquake made the Abbies fall The Fryeries the Nunneries and all This famous Noble worthy Essex Earle This Iemme this Iewell this most orient pearle Was for his truth from all he had discarded And with his heads losse all his faith rewarded The next of worthy note by fire that dide Was good Anne Askew who did strong abide Rackes tortures and the cruell raging flame To magnifie her high Creators name Then gan the Kings eyes to be opended quite Inlightened by the euerlasting light He banisht Superstitious idle sables And packt the Papists hence with all their bables Then Bonner Gardner Brethren both in euill Factors and Actors bloudhounds for the Deuill Their burning fame to infamy soone saded They Godlesse gracelesse were disgracst degraded The King thus hauing this good worke begun He dyed and left the Kingdome to his Sonne Then raign'd young Edward that sweet Princely childe By whom all Popery was cleane exilde But he too good to liue mongst wicked men Th' Almighty tooke him hence to Heauen agen No sooner Edward was laid in his Tombe But England was the slaughter-house of Rome Gardner and Bonner were from prison turn'd And whom they pleas'd were eyther sau'd or burn'd Queene Mary imitating Iezabell Aduanc'd againe the Ministers of Hell Then tyranny began to tyrannize Tortures and torments then they did deuise Then Master Rogers with a saith most feruent Was burn'd and dy'd in Smith field Gods true Seruant Next vnto him did Laurence Sanders dye By fire for Iesus sake at Couentry He did embrace and kindly kisse the stake To gaine Heau'ns glory did the world for sake Good Byshop Hooper was at Gloster burn'd Cause he against the Romish Doctrine spurn'd And Doctor Taylor a true zealous man At Hadly burn'd eternall glory wan Then Byshop Ferrar next his life did spend In fire to gaine the life shall neuer end Next William Fowler first did loose his hand Then burn'd because the Pope he did withstand In Essex Thomas Hawkes with faith victorious Did dye by fire to gaine a life most glorious Master Ioha Bradford for his Sauiours sake In Smithsield burn'd a godly end did make Two reuerend Byshops Father Latimer And Ridley each of them a heauenly starre Liu'd in Gods foare and in his fauour dy'd At Oxford burn'd and now are glorisi'd Ioh● Philp●t gladly did the fire embrace And died and liues in his Redeemers grace Then that graue Father and religious man Arch-Bishop of Cranmars troubles hot began His Pompe his state his glory and his pride Was to know Iesus and him crucifide He liu'd a godly Preacher of Gods Word And dy'd a glorious Martyr of the Lord. Iohn Carcles in close Prison carefully Did change his cares for ioyes eternally But this small volum cannot well containe One quarter of the Saints in England flaine In Henries Raigne and Maries cruell Queene Eight thousand people there hath slaughtered beene Some by the Sword some Hang'd some burnt in fire Some staru'd to death in Prison all expire Twelue thousand and seuen hundred more beside Much perse●uting trouble did abide Some wrackt som whipt som tortur'd som in stocks Some doing penance with a world of mockes Some with an yron in the faces burn'd Some out of all their goods to beggry rurn'd Some barefoot bearing faggots on their shoulders We●e made a wondring stocke to the beholders All this and more much more they did endure Because they would not yeeld to liue impure But now to speake the law lesse ●ause wherefore And why these people troubled were so sore Because they would not make their plaints mones To senseles I mages dead stockes and slones Because they said the Sacramentall bread Is not the Lord which shall iudge quick and dead Because they not beleeu'd a Purgatory And held the Popes decrees an idle story Because they would not creepe vnto the crosse And change Gods sacred Word for humane drosse Because they held the Masse an Idoll soule At once which
but such dye● we had that the Prouerbe was truly verified God sent meat and the Diuel sent Cookes for as there was no respect of persons in the boat so all fellowes at the Table and all one price the Palatine and the Plebeian our first messe was great platters of blacke broth in shape like new tarre and in tast Cofen Germane to slut pottage our second were dishes of Eeles chop'd as small as hearbs and the broth they were in as salt as brin● then had we a boyld Go●se with choake peares and carrets buried in a deepe dish and when we demanded what was to pay it was but three pence a man I mused at the cheapenesse of it but afterward they came vpon vs with a fresh reckoning of fiue pence a man for beere for they neuer count their meat and drinke together but bring in seuerall reckonings for them but the morning being come we hired a Boor●s Waggon to carry vs to a place called Cit●zen three miles there or 12. English miles from Buckstahoo a little bald dorp it is where we came about noone and found such slender entertainement that we had no cause to boast of our good cheere or our Hostesse Cookery We hauing refreshed our selues and hyred a fresh Waggon away we went two miles further to a Dorp called Rodonburgh this village belongeth to the Byshop of Rodonburgh who hath a faire house there strongly walled and deepely ditched and Moated about very defensible with draw bridges and good Ordinance This Bishop is a temporall Lord notwithstanding his spirituall title and no doubt but the flesh preuailes aboue the Spirit with him So the Bishops of Breame Lunningburgh and diuers other places in Germany doe every charitably take the fleece for they themselues neuer looke to the flocke by reason they vse no Ecclesiastick function but onely in name Being lodged at Rodenburgh in a stately Inne where the Host Hostesse Guests Cowes Horses Swine lay all in one Roome yet I must confesse their beds to be very good and their linning sweet but in those parts they vse no couerlet rug or blanket but a good featherbed vndermost with cleane sheets pillowes and pillowbears and another featherbed vppermost with a faire sheet aboue all so that a mans lodging is like a wormans lying In all white August the 30. wee went from Rodenburgh and about noone wee came to an old walled towne called Feirden it hath two Churches in it and the hangmans statue very artificially carued in stone and set on a high pillar with a rod rampant in his hand at this Towne I met with sixe strangers all trauailers where wee went to dinner together all at one Table and euery man opened his knapsacke or budget with victuals for he that carries no meat with him may fast by authority in most places of that Country but to note the kindnesse of these people one to another some had bread and a boxe of salt butter some had raw bacon some had cheese some had pickled herring some dryed beefe and amongst the rest I had brought three ribs of rost beefe and other prouision from Hamburgh to conclude we drew all like fidlers and led for the most part like Swine for euery man eat what was his own and no man did proffer one bit of what he had to his neighbour so he that had cheese must diue with chesse for he that had meat would offer him none I did cut euery one a part of my rost beefe which my guide told me they would not take well because it is not the fashion of the Countrey I tryed and found them very tractable to take any thing that was good so that I perceiued their modesty to take one from another proceeds from their want of manners to offer But dinner being done away we went ouer a bridge in the midst whereof is a Iynn made in the likenesse of great Lanthorne it is hanged on a turning Gybber like a Crane So that it may bee turned on the bridge and ouer the Riuer as they shall please that haue occasion to vse it It is big enough to hold two men and it is for this purpose if any one or more do rob Gardens or Orchards or Corne fields if they be taken he or they are put into this same whiligig or kickumbob and the gybbet being turned the offender hangs in this Cage from the Riuer some 12. or 14. foot from the water then there is small Line made fast to the party some 5. or 6. fadome and with a tricke which they haue the bottome of the Cage drops out and the thiefe fals sodenly into the water I had not gone farre but at the end of the bridge I saw an old Chappell which in old time they lay was dedicated to S. Frodswicke which hath the day after Saint Luke the Enangelist I entering in perceiued it was a chartiable Chappell for the doores and windowes were alwayes open by reason there were none to shut and it was a common receptacle for Beggers and Rogues There was the Image of our Lady with a vaile ouer her made as I thinke of a Bakers bolter and Saint Peter holding a candle to her I cut a peece of her Vaile and taking Peter by the hand at my departure the kinde Image I know not vpon what acquaintance beeing loose handed let me haue his hand with ●ntc which beeing made of wood by reason of ruinous antiquitie burst off in the handling which two precious relickes I brought home with me to defend me and all my friends from Sparrow-blasting From this place wee were glad to trauaile on foot 1. Dutch mile to a Dorpe called Durfurne where we hired a Boores Waggon to a Towne called Neinburgh but we could not reach thither by 2. English miles so that we were glad to lodge in a Barne that night on the morrow early we arose came to Neinburgh which is a little walled towne belonging to that Byshopricke from whence it is so named There we stayed 3. houres before we could get a Waggon at last wee were mounted to a Dorpe called Leiz 2. Dutch miles I would haue bargained with the Boore to haue carried vs to Dorne which I bade my guide tell him it was but a mile further a mile quoth the Boore indeed we call it no more but it was measured with a Dog and they threw in the taile and all to the bargaine so to Leize he carried vs and there we found a Waggon of Dorne homeward bound which made vs ride the cheaper but it was the longest mile that euer I rode or went for surely it is as much as some ten of out miles in England But hauing ouercome it at last from thence I tooke a fresh Waggon to carry me two miles further to a towne called Buckaburgh where I had and haue I hope a Brother residing to whom my iourny was entended and with whom my perambulation was at a period This towne of Buckaburgh is wholely and solely