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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A19527 The poeticall essayes of Alexander Craige Scotobritane Seene and allowed. Craig, Alexander, 1567?-1627. 1604 (1604) STC 5958; ESTC S105268 18,837 46

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to our complaints giue place Our Garland lacks the Rose our chatton tins the stone Our Volier wants the Philomel we left allace alone What art thou Scotland then no Monarchie allace A oligarchie desolate with straying and onkow face A maymed bodie now but shaip some monstrous thing A reconfused chaos now a countrey but a King When Paris fed his flockes among the Phrigian plaines Aenone's loue was his delights his death were her disdaynes But when allace he knew that Priam was his Sire He left Aenone sweet and syne for H●lene would aspire Proud Pellex England so thou art the adulterat brid Who for Aenone thinkes no shame to lye by Paris sid Who knowes ere it be long but our your happy King With Belgic Celtic Aquitan to his Empire may bring And he why should he not your Troynauant shall leaue And vnto Parise spurre the post his right for to receaue Then then shall England weepe and shed abounding teaires And we shall to our comfort find companions in our caires And till it so befall with pitie not with scorne Vpon this confinde Kingdome looke as on a land forlorne Wise Plato would not once admit it in his minde He lou'd Xenocrates so well he could become vnkinde And no more can we thinke dread Leige though thou be gone Thou will vngratly leaue vs thus disconsolat allone By Contrars Contrars plac'd no dout most clearely kith And now thy absence breedes our bale whose biding made vs blith O were thou not both wise and good we should not mourne We would not for thy absence weepe nor wish for thy returne Long sleepe made Rufus loose the vse of both his eene O do not thou sweet Prince make stay lest thou forget vs cleene Like Epimenides when thou returns againe The shapp of al things shal be chaing ' thine own sheepe shal be slaine Democrit rather choose no King at all to bee Then ouer wicked men to rule and such allace are wee Our Iewell England ioyes yet no way dooth wrong vs The world may see we were not worth that thou shuld be among vs But since it must be thus and thou art forc'd to flitt Now like a Heart in to the mids of thy great body sitt And from thy Troynauant which pleasures store impairts Behold thy Kingdom 's round about thy hand in all the Airts Examples old thou taks and layis before thy face The famous Numids thoght the midst to be most honored place Thus by Hyempsals side Adherbal Salust sets And so Iugurtha in the midst wee reed no intrance gets Graue Maro maks likway the Queene of Cartage braue Betwix Ascanius and the wise Aeneas place to haue Dooth not Apollo too in proudest pompe appere With bright and day-adorning beames in his meridian sphere So thou has choos'd the midst of all thy Kingdom 's knowne For looke about thee where thou list thou looks but on thine owne And since the Gods decree Great King that so shall bee Since Peace must florish in thy time Wars must cease die But competition too since thou has Englands Crowne Which was a Heptarchie of old of vncontrould renowne Let Vs and Al-bi-on that wee with one consent One God one King one Law may be t' adore serue keepe content In Rome the Sabins grew with Tyrians Troians mixt And Iuda ioynd with Israel but least wee seeme prolixt And that our louing plaint's and teares may now take end Thee to thy Crowns thy Crowns to thee the great good God defend CALIDONS COMPLAINT At the apparent Voyage to her England of ANNA Queene of Great Britaine France and Ireland with HENRIE Prince of Wales her most gracious Sonne AND shall no light at all to len vs light be left Shal Sunn Moone fixed those smal erratic stars be reft And was it not ynough that Titan tooke the flight Might not sweete Cynthia yet made stay for to haue lent vs light Since Sunne and Moone must goe that bright Harie starr Let Pluto now compare with vs in darknes if he darr From darknes was alace our deriuation old The fatall name MKOTIA nought but darknes doth vnfold Shall our estate allace from state be thus downthrowne Shal Scotland hensforth haue againe no cround K. of their owne Shal wee from King Queene Prince all their brood disseuer And shall not Scotland be againe inhabited for euer Shall ghastly Ziim cry and Oim make there sport Within the Palaces where once but Monarch's made resort At libertie alas shall Fauns and Satyrs lope And to a hellish cold dispare conuert our former hope And dare not Orpheus looke but once againe abacke Or shall wee finde nothing at all but fundamentall wracke Would God that vmquhyle Dame the wisest Dame in deed That euer Britaine earst hath borne or yet againe shall breed Would God as yet shee were to brooke her trident Mace Then shuld we not bin poynted at for wrake scorne disgrace Thou saild the glassie salt and conquered endles fame In prime of loue Heroic Prince to see thy Danish Dame In sl●eing towrs of tree thou croc'd the bounded Roares And brought our Queene thy sacred Spous to Calidonian shoares wind O let not loue wax cold nor be not now vnkind Thou need not feare for foamie floods nor pray for prosperous Since shee sweet Dame is seik thy Sonn but young in yeers With Cancer Leo burns aboue into their torrid Spheers Make then a bles'd returne to see them both againe But ô allace wee ware those words vnto the winds in vaine For they must go to thee more to increas our cairs And leaue no thing behind them here but sorow sighs teairs Thē wherto serue those plaints who know's what is appoynted Or what the Destanies decrees to do with their Anoynted Nor Dou●ir nor those Alps nor Tybers volted Arche Vnto that Archunonarche great King Iames must be a Marche The heauins of the great Prince hade care in to thy Coode And kept thee when thou no thing knew of ather bad or good How many treasons strange and conspirations great Haue bin contriu'd against thy crowne standing of thy state Before thou was and since thou has eskaip'd huge snairs Be blithe Tued march'd thy kingdoms once now must march thy cairs Thy name shal be enough to conquer seas lands And manumit afflicted Grece from Turks and tyrans hands When Rome shall be subdew'd may thou no go abroad And make Bizantium old obey the great alguiding God But if thou greyus great King our greiued harts to glade Of thy triennall visiting performe thy promeis made Faire gracious Dame whose match nor was nor shall be seene Though fortune smile remēber yet that thou was first our Queene Accompleisd peereles Prince in body both and mind Thinke on thy natiue soyle with loue and be not cald vnkind And so since King Queene Prince and all our all must go The Trinitie aboue preserue this Trinitie be-low ELIAZABETH LATE QVEENE OF ENGLAND HER GHOST