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A18410 An epicede or funerall song on the most disastrous death, of the high-borne prince of men, Henry Prince of Wales, &c. With the funeralls, and representation of the herse of the same high and mighty prince ... VVhich noble prince deceased at St. Iames, the sixt day of Nouember, 1612. and was most princely interred the seuenth day of December following, within the Abbey of Westminster, in the eighteenth yeere of his age. Chapman, George, 1559?-1634.; Hole, William, d. 1624, engraver. 1613 (1613) STC 4974; ESTC S107694 17,429 56

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Armes viz. The Spurres by Windsor The Gauntlets by Somerset The Helme and Crest by Richmond The Targe by Yorke The Sword by Norroy King of Armes The Coat by Clarencieux King of Armes Three Gentlemen Vshers to the Prince bearing their wands The Corps of the Prince lying in an open Chariot with the Princes representation thereon inuested with his Robes of estate of Purple Veluet furred with Ermines his Highnesse Cap and Coronet on his head and his Rod of Gould in his hand and at his feet within the said Chariot sat Sir Dauid Murrey the Master of his Wardrobe The Chariot was couered with blacke Veluet set with Plumes of blacke feathers and drawne by sixe Horses couered and Armed with Scuchions hauing their Cheiffrons and Plumes A Canopy of blacke Veluet borne ouer the representation by sixe Baronets Tenne Bannerols borne about the body by ten Baronets Sir Moyle Finch Sir Thomas Mounson Sir Iohn Wentworth Sir Henry Sauile Sir Thomas Brewdnell Sir Anthony Cope Sir George Gresley Sir Robert Cotten Sir Lewis Tresham Sir Phillip Tiruit Foure Assistants to the Corps that bore vp the corners of the Pall. viz. 1 The Lord Zouch 2 The Lord Abergaueny 3 The Lord Burghley 4 The Lord Walden William Seger Garter Principall King of Armes betweene the Gentleman-Vsher of Prince Charles and the Gentleman-Vsher of the Prince Palatine Prince CHARLES chiefe Mourner supported by the Lord Priuy-Seale and the Duke of Lenox His Highnesse Traine was borne by the Lord Dawbney Brother to the Duke of Lenox Then followed the Prince Elector FREDERICK Count Palatine of the Rhein His Highnesse Traine was borne by Mounsieur Shamburgh Twelue Earles Assistants to the chiefe Mourner viz. Earle of Nottingham Earle of Shrewsbury Earle of Rutland Earle of Southampton Earle of Hartford Earle of Dorset Earle of Suffolke Earle of Worcester Earle of Sussex Earle of Pembroke Earle of Essex Earle of Salisburie Earles strangers attendants on Count Palatine Count VVigensten Count Lewis de Nassau Count Leuingsten Count Hodenlo Count Ringraue Count Erback Count Nassaw Scarburg Count Le Hanow Iunior Count Isinbersh Page Count ●olmes Page Count Zerottin Page The Horse of Estate led by Sir Robert Dowglas Maister of the Princes Horse The Palzgreaues Priuy-Counsellors viz. The Count of Solmes Mounsieur Shouburgh Mounsieur de Pleshau Mounsieur Helmestedt Mouns Shouburgh Iunior Mouns Landshat Officers and Groomes of Prince Henries stable The Guard The Knight Marshall and twenty seruants that kept order in the proceeding Diuers Knights and Gentlemen the Kings seruants that came in voluntary in blacks So that the whole number amounted to 2000. or thereabout FINIS Expostulatio à perturbatione Potentia expers sapientiae quo maior est eo perniciosior sapientia procul à potentia manca videtur Plat. Chymaera a monster hauing his head and brest like a Lyon his belly like a Gote and taile like a Dragon To Death The Prayer of the King in the Princes sicknes Simil. Apodesis Reditio ad Principem Those that came to the Princes seruice seem'd compared with the places they liu'd in before to rise from death to the fields of life intending the best part of yong and noble Gentlemen The parting of the Princes Seruants The Princes house an Olimpus where all contention of vertues were practised Non Homeri Aurea Restis Saint Iames his house Richmond The Prince not to be wrought on by flattery His knowledge and wisdome Any man is capable of his own fit course and office in any thing Apostrophe Men grow so vgly by trusting flattery with their informations that when they see themselues truely by casting their eyes inward they cast themselues away with their owne lothing * Simil. Simil. Musae lachrimae The cause and manner of the Princes death Rhamnusia Goddesse of reuenge and taken for Fortune in enuy of our Prince excited Feuer against him The Feuer the Prince died on by Prosopopeia described by her effects circumstances The Fever the Prince dyed off is observ'd by our Moderne Phisitions to bee begun in Hungarie Out of the property of the Hare that never shuts her eyes sleeping Marmaricae Leunes of Marmarica a Region in Affrica where the fiercest Lyons are bred with which Feuer is supposd to bee drawn for their excesse of heat violence part of the effects of this Feuer The properties of the Feuer in these effects Rhamnusi● excitatiō of feuer Rham durst no lōger indure her beeing stirred into furie The starry Euening describ'd by Vulcans setting to worke at that time The Night being ever chiefesly consecrate to the Works of the Gods and out of this Deities fires the Starres are supposd to flye as sparkles of them The good Angell of the Prince to the Fever as shee approache Feuer to the prince who is thougght by a friend of mine to speake too mildly not being satis compos mētis Portice in this Her counsell or perswasiō shewing onlie how the Prince was perswaded resolu'd in his deadlyest sufferāce of her which shee is made to speake in spight of her selfe since he at her worst was so sacredly resolute Descriptiō of the tempest that cast Sir Th. Ga●es on the Bermudas the state of his Ship and Men to this Kingdomes Plight applyed in the Princes death The Archbishop of Cantebury passing pyous in care of the Prince S. Ed Phillips Master of the Rols and the Princes Chancelor a chiefe sorrower for hlm The prince heroical his bearing his sicknes at the Kings comming to see him careful not to discomfort him The Twelfth day after his beginning to bee sicke his sicknes was hold incurable The prince dying to the King The sorrowes and bemones of the King Queene Prince and his most Princely Sister for the Princes death The funerall described
Funeralls his Princely body was brought forth of his Bed-chamber into his priuie chamber Friday it was brought into his Presence-chamber and set vnder his cloath of estate Satterday the fift of December about three of the clocke in the after-noone it was remoued into the Guard-chamber where all his chiefe seruants and Officers being assembled and the Officers of Armes in their Coates the corps was solempnly carried into the Chappell of that house and placed vnder a canopy in the middest of the Quire the Bishop of Lich-field red the Seruice and the Gentlemen of the Kings Chappell with the children thereof sung diuers excellent Antheams together with the Organs and other winde instruments which likewise was performed the day following being Sunday Munday the 7. of December the Funerall day the representation was layd vpon the Corps and both together put into an open Charior and so proceeded as followeth Pooremen in gownes to the number of 140. About 300. Gentlemens seruants About 300. Esquires seruants About 300. Knights seruants About 300. Baronets seruants About 300. Barons sonnes seruants About 300. Viscount sonnes seruants About 300. Earles sonnes seruants Two Drummes and a Fife their Drummes couered with blacke cloth and Scuchions of the Prince his Armes therevpon Portesmouth Pursuiuant of Armes The great Standard of Prince HENRY being a Lyon crowned standing on a Chappean borne by Sir Iohn Win KNIGHT and Baronet the Motto therein Fax mentis honestae gloria About 306. Prince HENRY his Houshold Seruants according to their seuerall Offices and Degrees with Trades-men and Artificers that belonged vnto his Highnesse Trumpets The Coronet of the Prince being the three Feathers in a Crownet with his Motto Iuuat ire per altum borne by Sir Roger Dallison Knight and Baronet About 360. Barons seruants About 360. Viscounts seruants About 360. Earles seruants as well English as Strangers About 360. The Duke of Lenox his seruants About 360. The Lord Chauncellors seruants About 360. Count Henry de Nassau his seruants Trumpets A Banner of th'Earledome of Carick borne by Sir Dauid Fowles A Horse led by a Quirry of the Stable the Horse was couered with blacke cloath and armed with Scuchions of that Earledome hauing his Cheiffron and Plumes About 80. Archbishops seruants About 80. Prince Palatine his seruants About 80. Prince Charles his seruants Blew-mantle Pursuyuant of Armes A Banner of the Earledome of Chester borne by the Lord Howard of Effingham A Horse led by a Quirry of the Stable couered with blacke cloath and armed with Scuchions of that Earledome his Cheiffron and Plumes About 40. Faulconers and Huntsmen About 40. Clearkes of the workes About 40. Clearkes of the Poultry About 40. Clearkes of the Acatry About 40. Clearkes of the Larder About 40. Clearkes of the Spicery About 40. Clearkes of the Kitchin About 40. Clearkes of the Coffery About 40. Clearkes of the Stable About 40. Clearkes of the Auery About 40. Clearkes of the Wardrobe About 40. Mr. of the Workes About 40. Pay-Mr. About 40. And Clearke Comptroller About 60. Seriants of the Vestry About 60. Children of the Chappell About 60. Gentlemen of the Chappell in rich Copes About 60. Musitians About 60. Apothecaries and Surgions 6. Doctors of Physicke 24. The Princes Chapleyns Portcullis Pursuyuant of Armes A Banner of the Dukedome of Rothsay borne by the Lord Bruse Baron of Kinlosse A Horse led by a Quirry of the Stable couered with blacke cloath armed with Scuchions of that Dukedome his Cheiffron and Plumes About 80. Pages of the Chamber About 80. Gentlemen the Princes seruants extraordinary About 80. The Princes Solicitor and Counsell at Law About 80. Groome Porter About 80. Gentlemen Vshers quarter Waiters About 80. Groomes of the Priuy-Chamber extraordinary About 80. Groomes of the Priuy-Chamber in ordinary About 80. Groomes of the Bed-chamber About 80. Pages of the Bed-chamber and the Princes owne Page Rouge-Dragon Pursuyuant A Banner of the Dukedome of Cornewall borne by the Lord Clifford A Horse led by Mr. Henry Alexander couered with blacke cloath armed with Scuchions of that Dukedome his Cheiffron and Plumes About 146. Count Henrickes Gentlemen About 146. Count Palatines Gentlemen viz. viz. Mounsieur Eltz. viz. Mouns Helmstadt viz. Mouns Colbe viz. Mouns Benefer viz. Mouns Adolshein viz. Mouns Nenzkin viz. Mouns Walbron viz. Mouns Waldgraue viz. Mouns Factes viz. Mouns Carden viz. Mouns Berlinger viz. Mouns Grorode viz. Mouns Cawlt viz. Mouns Stensels viz. Mouns Ridzell viz. Mouns Helinger viz. Mouns Henbell viz. Mouns Auckensten viz. Mouns Gellu viz. Mouns Wallyne viz. Mouns Pellinger viz. Mouns Berlipps viz. Mouns Shott viz. Mouns Weldensten viz. Mouns Croilesemere viz. Mouns Leuinsten viz. Mouns Pathenes viz. Mouns Colbe Scultetez viz. Mouns Rampf viz. Mouns Dawnsier viz. Mouns Maier viz. Mouns Wanebach About 146. Prince Charles his Gentlemen About 146. Gentlemen of Prince Henries Priuy-Chamber extraordinary About 146. Knights and Gentlemen of his Highnesse Priuy-Chamber in ordinary and of his Bed-Chamber with Sewers Caruers and Cupbearers About 146. The Prince his Secretary About 146. The Prince his Thresorer of his Houshold The Thresorer of his Reuenewes and the Comptroller of his Houshould together bearing their white staues Roug-croix Pursuyuant of Armes A Banner of the Princes Principalitie of Scotland with a Labell borne by the Viscount Fenton A Horse led by Sir Sigismond Alexander couered with blacke cloath armed with Scuchions of that Kingdome his Cheiffron and Plumes Baronets Barons yonger sonnes Sir Edward Phillips Mr. of the Roles being the Prince his Chaunceller going alone Knights Priuy Councellors to the KING viz. Sir Iohn Herbart Secretary Sir Iulius Cesar Chaunceller of the Exchequer Sir Thomas Parry Chaunceller of the Duchie of Lancaster Barons eldest sonnes Three Trumpets Lancaster Herauld A Banner of England France and Ireland quartered with Wales borne by the Viscount Lisle A Horse led by Sir William VVebb Knight couered with blacke cloath his Cheiffron and Plumes Earles yonger sonnes Viscounts eldest sonnes Barons of Scotland Barons of England viz. Lord Kneuit Lord Arundell of VVardor Lord Stanhop Lord Spencer Lord Danvers Lord Peters Lord VVotton Lord Norris Lord Hunsden Lord Northe Lord Sheffeild Lord VVharton Lord VVentworth Lord Mounteagle Lord Stafford Lord Morley Lord Candish Lord Carewe Lord Denny Lord Garrard Lord Harington Lord Russell Lord Knowles Lord Compton Lord Chandos Lord Darcy of Chich. Lord Rich. Lord Evers Lord VVindesor Lord Dudley Lord Dacres Lord Laware Bishops 5. The Bishop of Rochester The Bishop of Couentry and Lichfield The Bishop of Ely The Bishop of Oxford The Bishop of London The Earle of Excester The Prince his Chamberlayne Sir Thomas Chaloner alone bearing his white staffe The Lord Chancellor and Count Henricke The Archbishop of Canterbury Preacher The great Embrodered Banner of the Vnion borne by the Earles of Montgomery and Argyle A Horse led called Le Cheual de deul couered with blacke Veluet and ledde by a chiefe Quirry Monsieur Sant Antoin The Prince his Hachments of HONOVR caried by Officers of
AN EPICEDE OR Funerall Song On the most disastrous Death of the High-borne Prince of Men HENRY Prince of WALES c. With The Funeralls and Representation of the Herse of the same High and mighty Prince Prince of Wales Duke of Cornewaile and Rothsay Count Palatine of Chester Earle of Carick and late Knight of the most Noble Order of the GARTER Which Noble Prince deceased at St. Iames the sixt day of Nouember 1612. and was most Princely interred the seuenth day of December following within the Abbey of Westminster in the Eighteenth yeere of his Age. LONDON Printed by T. S. for Iohn Budge and are to bee sould at his shop at the great south dore of Paules and at Brittanes Bursse 1612. TO MY AFFECTIONATE AND TRVE Friend Mr. Henry Iones My truest Friend THE most vnualuable and dismaifull hope of my most deare and Heroicall Patrone Prince HENRY hath so stricken all my spirits to the earth that I will neuer more dare to looke vp to any greatnesse but resoluing the little rest of my poore life to obscuritie and the shadow of his death prepare euer hereafter for the light of heauen So absolute constant and noble your loue hath beene to mee that if I should not as effectually by all my best expressions acknowledge it I could neither satisfie mine owne affection nor deserue yours Accept therefore as freely as I acknowledge this vnprofitable signe of my loue till God blessing my future labours I may adde a full end to whatsoeuer is begunne in your assurance of my requitall A little blest makes a great feast my best friend and therefore despaire not but that out of that little our loues alwayes made euen may make you say you haue rather beene happy in your kindnesse then in the least degree hurt There may fauours passe betwixt poore friends which euen the richest and greatest may enuy And GOD that yet neuer let me liue I know will neuer let me die an empaire to any friend If any good more then requitall succeede it is all yours as freely as euer yours was mine in which noble freedome and alacritie of doing you haue thrice done all I acknowledge And thus knowing I giue you little contentment in this so farre vnexpected publication of my gratitude I rest satisfied with the ingenuous discharge of mine owne office Your extraordinary and noble loue and sorrow borne to our most sweet PRINCE entitles you worthily to this Dedication which with my generall Loue vnfainedly protested to your whole Name and Family I conclude you as desertfull of at my hands as our Noblest Earle and so euer remaine Your most true poore Friend GEO CHAPMAN The Herse and Representacion of our late Highe and Mighty HENRY Prince of Wales c AN EPICED OR Funerall Song On the most disastrous Death of the High-borne Prince of Men HENRY Prince of WALES c. IF euer aduerse Influence enui'd The glory of our Lands or tooke a pride To trample on our height or in the Eye Strooke all the pomp of Principalitie Now it hath done so Oh if euer Heauen Made with the earth his angry reckening euen Now it hath done so Euer euer be Admir'd and fear'd that Triple Maiestie VVhose finger could so easily sticke a Fate Twixt least Felicity and greatest state Such as should melt our shore into a Sea And dry our Ocean with Calamitie Heauen open'd and but show'd him to our eies Then shut againe and show'd our Miseries O God to what end are thy Graces giuen Onely to show the world Men fit for Heauen Then rauish them as if too good for Earth VVe know the most exempt in wealth power Birth Or any other blessing should employ As to their chiefe end all things they enioy To make them fit for Heauen and not pursue VVith hearty appetite the damned crue Of meerely sensuall and earthye pleasures But whē one hath done so shal strait the tresures Digg'd to in those deeps be consum'd by death Shall not the rest that error swalloweth Be by the Patterne of that Master-peece Help't to instruct their erring faculties VVhen without cleare example euen the best That cannot put by knowledge to the Test what they are taught serue like the worst in field Is power to force who will not freely yield Being great assistant to diuine example As vaine a Pillar to thy Manly Temple when without perfect knowledge which scarce one Of many kingdoms reach no other stone Man hath to build one corner of thy Phane Saue one of these But when the desperate wane Of power and of example to all good So spent is that one cannot turne the flood Of goodnes gainst her ebbe but both must plie And be at full to or her streame will drie VVhere shall they meete againe now he is gone Where both went foot by foot both were one One that in hope tooke vp to toplesse height All his great Ancestors his one saile freight VVith all all Princes treasures he like one Of no importance no way built vpon Vanisht vvithout the end for vvhich he had Such matchlesse vertues was God-l●ke made Haue thy best vvorkes no better cause t' expresse Themselues like men and thy true Images To toile in vertues study to sustaine vvith comfort for her want shame paine No nobler end in this life then a death Timeles and wretched wrought with lesse then breath And nothing solide worthy of our soules Nothing that Reason more then Sense extols Nothing that may in perfect iudgement be A fit foote for our Crowne eternitie All which thou seem'st to tell vs in this one Killing discomfort apt to make our mone Conclude gainst all things serious and good our selues not thy forms but Chymaeras brood Now Princes dare ye boast your vig'rous states That Fortunes breath thus builds and ruinates Exalt your spirits trust in flowry youth Giue reynes to pleasure all your humors sooth Licence in rapine Powers exempt from lawes Contempt of all things but your own applause And think your swindge to any tyranny giuen VVill stretch as broad last as long as heauen whē he that curb'd with vertues hand his powre his youth with continence his sweet with sowre Boldnes with pious feare his pallats height Applied to health and not to appetite Felt timeles sicknes charge state power to flie And glutted Death with all his crueltie Partiall deuourer euer of the best VVith headlong rapture sparing long the rest Could not the precious teares his Father shed That are with Kingdomes to be ransomed His Bleeding prayer vpon his knees t'implore That if for any sinne of his Heauen tore From his most Royall body that chiefe Limme It might be ransom'd for the rest of Him Could not the sacred eies thou didst prophane In his great Mothers teares The spightful bane Thou pour'dst vpon the cheeks of al the Graces In his more gracious Sisters The defaces with all the Furies ouer-flowing Galles Cursedly fronting
King and Father on whome fast He fixt his fading beames and with his view A little did their empty Orbs renew His Mind saw him come frō the deeps of Death To whome he said O Author of my Breath Soule to my life and essence to my Soule Why grieue you so that should al griefe cōtroule Death's sweet to me that you are stil lifes creature I now haue finisht the great worke of Nature I see you pay a perfect Fathers debt And in a feastfull Peace your Empire kept If your true Sonnes last words haue any right In your most righteous Bosome doe not fright your hearkning kingdoms to your cariage now All yours in mee I here resigne to you My youth I pray to God with my last powres Substract from me may adde to you and yours Thus vanisht he thus swift thus instantly Ah now I see euen heauenly powres must dye Now shift the King and Queene from court to court but no way can shift off their cares resort That which we hate the more vve flie pursues that which we loue the more we seek eschewes Now weepes his Princely Brother Novv alas His Cynthian Sister our sole earthly Grace Like Hebes fount still ouerflowes her bounds And in her colde lips stick astonisht sounds Sh'oppresseth her sweet kinde In her soft brest Care can no vent finde it is so comprest And see hovv the Promethean Liuer growes As vulture Griefe deuoures it see fresh showes Reuiue woes sence and multiply her soule And worthely for vvho would teares controle On such a springing ground T is dearely fit To pay all tribute Thought can poure on it For vvhy vvere Funerals first vs'd but for these Presag'd and cast in their Natiuities The streames were checkt a while so Torrents staid Enrage the more but are left free allaid Now our grim waues march altogether Now Our blacke seas runne so high they ouerflow the clouds they nourish now the gloomy herse Puts out the Sunne Reuiue reuiue dead vierse death hath slain death there ther the person lies VVhose death should buy out all mortalities But let the world be now a heape of death Lifes ioy lyes dead in him and challengeth No lesse a reason If all motion stoode Benumb'd and stupified with his frozen blood And like a Tombe-stone fixt lay all the seas There were fit pillers for our Hercules To bound the world with Men had better dye Then out-liue free times slaues to Policie On on sad Traine as from a crannid rocke Bee-swarmes rob'd of their honey ceasles flock Mourne mourne dissected now his cold lims lie Ah knit so late vvith flame and Maiestie where 's now his gracious smile his sparkling eie His Iudgement Valour Magnanimitie O God what doth not one short hour snatch vp Of all mans glosse still ouer-flowes the cup Of his burst cares put with no nerues together And lighter then the shadow of a feather On make earth pomp as frequent as ye can 'T will still leaue black the fairest flower of man Yee vvell may lay all cost on miserie T is all can boast the proud'st humanitie If yong Marcellus had to grace his fall Sixe hundred Herses at his Funerall Sylla sixe thousand let Prince Henry haue Sixe Millions bring him to his greedy graue And now the States of earth thus mourn below Behold in Heauen Loue with his broken Bow his quiuer downwards turn'd his brands put out Hanging his wings with sighes all black about Nor lesse our losse his Mothers heart infests Her melting palmes beating her snowy brests As much confus'd as when the Calidon Bore The thigh of her diuine Adonis tore Her vowes all vaine resolu'd to blesse his yeeres VVith Issue Royall and exempt from freres Who now dyed fruitlesse and preuented then The blest of women of the best of men Mourne all ye Arts ye are not of the earth Fall fall with him rise with his second birth Lastly with gifts enrich the sable Phane And odorous lights eternally maintaine Sing Priests O sing now his eternall rest His light eternall and his soules free brest As ioyes eternall so of those the best And this short verse be on his Tomb imprest EPITAPHIVM SO flits ahlas an euerlasting Riuer As our losse in him past will last for euer The golden Age Star-like shot through our Skye Aim'd at his pompe renew'd and stucke in 's eye And like the sacred knot together put Since no man could dissolue him he was cut Aliud EPITAPH VVHom all the vaste frame of the fixed Earth Shrunck vnder now a weake Herse stands beneath His Fate he past in fact in hope his Birth His youth in good life and in spirit his death Aliud EPITAPH BLest be his great Begetter blest the Wombe That gaue him birth though much too neare his Tombe In them was hee and they in him were blest What their most great powers gaue him was his least His Person grac't the Earth and of the Skies His blessed Spirit the praise is and the prise FINIS THE FVNERALS OF THE HIGH AND MIGHTY PRINCE HENRY Prince of Wales Duke of Cornewaile and Rothsay Count Palatine of Chester Earle of Carick and late KNIGHT of the most Noble Order of the GARTER Which Noble Prince deceased at St. Iames the sixt day of Nouember 1612. and was most Princely interred the seuenth day of December following within the Abbey of Westminster in the Eighteenth yeere of his AGE LONDON Printed by T. S. for Iohn Budg●e and are to be sould at his shop at the great south dore of P●ules and at Brittanes Bursse 1613. THE FVNERALS OF THE HIGH AND MIGHTIE PRINCE HENRY Prince of VVales Duke of Cornewaile and Rothsay Count Palatine of Chester Earle of Carick and late Knight of the most Noble Order of the GARTER VVhich Noble Prince deceased at Saint IAMES the 6. day of Nouember 1612. and was most Princely interred the 7. of December following within the Abbey of Westminster in the Eighteenth yeere of his AGE THe body of the said PRINCE being bowelled enbalmed and closed vp in Lead there were foure Chambers hung with blackes viz. the Gaurd chamber and the Presence with blacke Cloth the Priuy Chamber with finer Cloth and that which was his Highnes Bed-chamber with blacke Veluet in the middest whereof was set vp a Canopy of blacke Veluet valanced and fringed vnder which vpon Tressels the Coffin with the body of the PRINCE was placed couered with a large pall of blacke Veluet and adorned with Scuchions of his Armes Vpon the head of which Coffin was layde a Cushion of blacke Veluet and his Highnesse Cap and Coronet set thereon as also his Robes of estate Sword and Rod of Gould and so it remayned being daily and nightly watched vntill two or three dayes before his Highnesse Funerals In which time euery day both Morning and Euening Prayers were said in his Presence or Priuy Chamber by his Chaplaines and his Gentlemen and chiefe Officers attendant thereat Thursday before the