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A18243 Marcus Ausonius his foure bookes of morall precepts, intituled Cato concerning the precepts of common life / translated out of Latin hexamiters into English meter by Walter Gosnold gentleman ...; Catonis disticha. Gosnold, Walter. 1638 (1638) STC 4863.5; ESTC S280 51,283 144

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in grace thy glasse doth run Leave thou not off untill thy thred be spun Heaven 's of more worth then earthly treasure here Lose earth for heaven tho friends to thee be deare Lord ravish thou my soule with heavens delight To worke my peace before the dismall night Good nat'rall parts wil stand us in no stead If parted hence from living to the dead Thy name peruse and beare it in thy mind And see if thou no contradiction find Thou canst not zealous be on no condition But thou shalt even there meet with opposition Resist thou not Gods spirit in thy soule Though Satan instantly doth thee controule Weeds springeth up in every fruitfull ground The like in every one is to be found The flesh against the spirit doth rebell If we the flesh resist it will be well Sweet Jesus make me zealous in my youth And bold for to maintaine with zeale thy truth But yet O God I this desire of thee That unto knowledge I may zealous be The times doth call for zeale le ts pray with zeale That God in mercy to this land may deale WALTER GOSNOLD An Ode or Carroll in the praise and commendation of learning THe poore that live in needy rate By learning doth great riches gaine The rich that live in wealthy state By learning doe their wealth maintaine Thus rich and poore are furthered still By sacred rules of learned skill The simple man by learning is Vnto great height of wisdome growne The prudent man through learning is In grace and vertue alwaies knowne So wise and simple simpathies By learned Science to grow wise The child that 's weaned from the teat Hath not such cause for to complaine As he that wants this heavenly meat His hungry soule for to sustaine Then strive for learning what you can For learning makes the richest man ●old silver pearles and pretious stones ● man may have yet be but poore ●s learning that doe save the bones ●hen richer men must labour more ●hen learning prize above thy wealth ●or thats the way to raise thy selfe ● want the skill for to expresse The World of good that learning doth ●o all man-kinde both more and lesse Though to attaine it man be loth Learning is that which will availe And sticke to man when riches faile All fond conceits of franticke youth The golden gift of learning staies Of doubtfull things to search the truth Learning sets forth the ready waies O happy him doe I repute Whose brest is fraught with learnings fruit There growes no corne within the field That oxe and plough did never till Right so the minde no fruit can yeeld That is not led by learnings skill Of Ignorance comes rotten weeds Of learning springs right noble deeds Like as the Captaine hath respect To traine his souldiers in aray So learning hath mans mind direct By vertues staffe his life to stay Though friends and fortune doe waxe scant Yet learned men shall never want To the well or ill disposed Reader I care not which REader who ere thou art that reads this little booke search not for others crimes but thy owne faults there looke Where thou shalt find thy selfe so like a criple halt That thou no time wilt have to spy an others fault Therefore let me advise thee and informe thy mind For to reforme thy faults before thou fault doe find Falts may have scap'd my heedlesse pen I doe confesse But what is that to thee if thine be nere the lesse Mend then thy owne before thou others teach or schoole Left for thy labour thou be'st thought a prating foole For fond it is a moat in others workes to spy V nlesse thou first do pull the beame out of thy eye Which hides from seeing in thy selfe one fault of ten But sets your eyes wide ope to laugh at other men For who is he that ever writ that you can name Whose pen by such as you could freed be from blame With malice then against me swell with envie burst I never will be vex'd since I am not the first But gentle courteous reader if thou dost intend In reading this such faults as you doe find to mend Without reproachfull scurvie termes disdainfull taunts Distil'd from wicked minds where envie daily haunts And speake the best what ere it is you reade or see To such as any way shall laugh or squib at me I shall be thankfull which ingratitude disdaines And ever mindfull be for to requite your paines By troubling you hereafter in an other straine Which may perhaps more pleasing be unto your vaine ●he meane time imbrace grave Catos precepts mild ●o ere thou art that reads them man woman or child ●d therefore honest matrons if so be you please be so curteous as to accept of these ●re lines which offer here themselves unto your view read at your owne leisure when it pleaseth you ●d not to be displeas'd or cast an angry brow ● me as if my labours you did disallow ● reason of the Latin verses intermixt ●ove beneath the English meters and betwixt ●his be all turne angry frowns to loving smiles ●o left them have to you but as low Country stiles ●ere you may easily over steppe and yet be in ●e selfe same beaten path where first you did begin ● read to walke to meditate and spend your time ● which you still may do and never spoyle my rime ●r marre the sence Forbeare not then to take in hand ● read my verses poore and leane yet truly scand ●t what you will that do read some read all spare not ●ou read none at all al 's one to me I care not Walter Gosnold To the Reader Courteous Reader I was purposed long si● to have put this yong infant into sw●● ling-clouts and sent it unto the presse so soone it had been borne had I not had intelligence t● there was already an elder brother had suppl● the place which made me presently to enquir● the Stationers whether it were so or no l● some sudden passion should make me to strang● in the wombe before it came to full perfecti● But finding report not alwaies to be true co●ming there I found none so neare akin unto as Cousin jermans twice removed which g● such life and refreshing to my vitall spirits cherishing that wherewith I was in travell t● like a fruitfull mother in stead of one it hap● in short time without the helpe of a Mid●i I was safely delivered of two twins one named the name of Cato the elder the other by ● name of Cato the younger who hung not lo● on the brest before they were named and sent broad into the world to see what service t● were able to performe for their countries go● Therefore Gentlemen that which I shall req● ● your hands in their behalfe is onely this that ● you chance to meete with any of them to doe ●em but the grace as to honour their persons ●ith your presence in taking acquaintance of ●em who
velis quibusdam obtenditur every mans hea● is hid with many clokes of dissimulation and is covered as it were with curtaine drawne before that one can scarse believ● another there is so much flattery hypocrisie and by-respects used in the world yet I professe seriously unto you as yo● have my Epistle you have my heart an● I desire no otherwaies to be accounted then as I am Your true and faithfull servant WALTER GOSNOLD A Postscript IT is not long since it pleased your good Father out of the courteous favour and loving respect he beares to every schollerlike action to grace mee with a worthy acceptation of an Anagram which once I presented unto him upon his owne Name which lest antiquity should race it out of the old stocke by processe of time which weares eates and consumes up all things you being his eldest Sonne of his Name and every way like unto him I have thought fit to revive it in the young branch by presenting of it the second time unto your selfe that as it represents and shewes what your fathers life is and hath beene so it may demonstrate and lay ope● unto you not onely what your life ought to have beene and what it now should be but what it must be if ever you would be truely like your Father or have your life and Anagram concurre and agree together and therefore let it be your care to looke daily upon it as in a glasse that thereby you may be put in mind to see whether or no you are or desire truly to be such a one as the Anagram of your Name doth foreshew you to be that you may with the more safety arrive at the wished haven of endlesse happinesse which every blessed man shall one day be pertaker of In which navigation or progresse upon the tempestuous Sea of this wide world I leave you to that perfect guide and sure pilot Christ Iesus who hath both the winds and waters at his command to bring you with safety to his Fathers House to which place the Lord of his mercy bring you and us all being the full fruition of the reward laid up for all such as leade a blessed life An Anagram upon the Name of the right worshipfull Sr. Thomas Bowes Knight presented to the worshipfull young gentleman his son and heire Mr. Thomas Bowes Esquire Anagram THOMA BOWES Beatus Homo T ruth justice valour equity and right H e holds in hand to doe his country good O bedient to Gods Lawes both day and night M aintaining love in every brotherhood A lmes deeds where need requires he is not slacke S o helpfull to the poore he is that lacke B elov'd he is of all hated of none O nely the bad because he sinne reproves W here wickednesse is he doth still bemone E arth wants more such whose days are but a span S uch like as these foreshew a blessed man An Epigram upon him that shall finde fault with this Anagram You of this Anagram may disallow The reason is because thete wanteth you If you be it that makes my Anagram not right I 'le put in you and then my Anagram is right Another to Momus O Momus why why doe you scoffe at me In spying faults where is no faults to see If you doe spoile this Anagram of mine Why blam'st thou me when as the fault is thine Another Epigram Some squibbing at my Anagram said it was wrōg Much like my vers either too short or else too long Say what they will there wants but halfe a letter Take pen mendit and I le remaine their debter To the envious Reader Pale faced Reader dost thou envie me I thought thou wouldst have sought hier to clime More fitting for your place and pedigree Then to looke downe so low to view my rime If it be so ' gainst nature you will see 't You face to face my verse shall dare to meet An Anagram upon the Name of the vertuous and wel disposed young gentlewomen my much honoured friend and loving kinswoman Mistresse Elizabeth Barington wherein is lively set forth the rebellion and daily opposition betwixt the flesh and spirit nature and grace in the best of Gods children being more prone by nature to that which is ill then by grace unto that which is good Rom. 7. 21. A good Name is better than great riches and it endureth for ever Prov. 22. 1 Ecclus 41. 13. Our Names are written in heaven Luk. 10. 20. ELIZABETH BARINGTON God exalteth the names of such as keepe his Law Deut. 26. 19. ANAGRAM The spirit moving concerning the inner Man in mymind I delight in the Law of God Rom. 7. 22. On git zeale in heart Godly sorrow worketh zeale in us 2 Cor. 7. 11. It s good to be zealous in a good thing Gal. 4. 18. OR The flesh resisting O who shall deliver mee from this body of sin The good that I would that doe I not but that I wold not do that do I Rom. 7. 19. Git no zeale in heart There is a zeale not according to knowledge Rom. 10. 2. Thus the flesh stayeth even the most perfect to goe forward By nature wee are the children of wrath sold under sin but by grace are we made righteous before God Eph. 2. 3. 5. Ro. 3. 24. 7. 14. Verses upon the Subject BEhold twixt grace nature what great strife Is in each man and vertuous womans life Where grace doth put us on and pricke us forth There nature pullsus backe as too too loth To doe that which is good but all the ill That can be done nature will have her will If God assisting puts not to his hand Dame nature over grace will have command And grace out of our hearts at last will thrust Making us captive to each sinfull lust Get faith get love get zeale in heart saith grace But none of these say nature doe imbrace For nat'rall man delighteth not in these His appetite they no waies doe him please Natures chiefe ayme is his owne glorious praise When grace ne'r seekes it selfe but God alwaies The ballance is uneven and overswaid Where grace and nature are together weigh'd Why nature then 's so bad it is no wonder Being that nature is not kept more under Give me a heart O God I doe thee pray Where grace not nature may have chiefest sway Grace doth invite you to get zeale in heart Nature forbids you thereof to take part Examine well your heart doe not combine But search your waies to which you doe incline Where nature good with store of grace doth meet There is a life of harmony most sweet A woman milde of nature loving kind Indu'd with grace best fits an honest mind A nature firie hot a zeale key cold Become no woman living young nor old Hath nature outwardly adorn'd thy face Decke inwardly thy soule with splendant grace Beg it of God as he hath given thee store So that he would increase it more and more Proceed goe on