To her most Honoured Father
Thomas Dudley Esq;
these humbly presented.
DEar Sir of late delighted with the sight | { T.D. On the four parts |
Of your four Sisters cloth'd in black and white, | of the World. |
Of fairer Dames the Sun ne'r saw the face; | |
Though made a pedestal for Adams Race; | |
Their worth so shines in those rich lines you show | |
Their paralels to finde I scarely know | |
To climbe their Climes, I have nor strength nor skill | |
To mount so high requires an Eagle's quill; | |
Yet view thereof did cause my thoughts to soar, | |
My lowly pen might wait upon those four | |
I bring my four times four, now meanly clad | |
To do their homage, unto yours, full glad: | |
Who for their Age, their worth and quality | |
Might seem of yours to claim precedency: | |
But by my humble hand, thus rudely pen'd | |
They are your bounden handmaids to attend |
These same are they, from whom we being have |
These are of all, the Life, the Nurse, the Grave; |
These are the hot, the cold, the moist, the dry, |
That sink, that swim, that fill, that upwards fly, |
Of these consists our bodies, Cloathes and Food, |
The World, the useful, hurtful, and the good, |
Sweet harmony they keep, yet jar oft times |
Their discord doth appear, by these harsh rimes |
Yours did contest for wealth, for Arts, for Age, |
My first do shew their good, and then their rage. |
My other foures do intermixed tell |
Each others faults, and where themselves excell, |
How hot and dry contend with moist and cold, |
How Air and Earth no correspondence hold, |
And yet in equal tempers, how they 'gree |
How divers natures make one Unity |
Something of all (though mean) I did intend |
But fear'd you'ld judge Du Bartas was my friend. |
I honour him, but dare not wear his wealth |
My goods are true (though poor) I love no stealth |
But if I did I durst not send them you |
Who must reward a Thief, but with his due. |
I shall not need, mine innocence to clear |
These ragged lines, will do 't when they appear: |
On what they are, your mild aspect I crave |
Accept my best, my worst vouchsafe a Grave. |
From her that to your self, more duty owes |
Then water in the boundess Ocean flows. |
March 20, 1642. |
ANNE BRADSTREET. |
THE
PROLOGUE.
1. |
TO sing of Wars, of Captains, and of Kings, |
Of Cities founded, Common-wealths begun, |
For my mean pen are too superior things: |
Or how they all, or each their dates have run |
Let Poets and Historians set these forth, |
My obscure Lines shall not so dim their worth. |
2. |
But when my wondring eyes and envious heart |
Great Bartas sugar'd lines, do but read o're |
Fool I do grudge the Muses did not part |
'Twixt him and me that overfluent store, |
A Bartas can, do what a Bartas will |
But simple I according to my skill. |
3. |
From school-boyes tongue no rhet'rick we expect |
Nor yet a sweet Consort from broken strings, |
Nor perfect beauty, where's a main defect: |
My foolish, broken blemish'd Muse so sings |
And this to mend, alas, no Art is able, |
'Cause nature, made it so irreparable. |
4. |
Nor can I, like that fluent sweet-tongu'd Greek, |
Who lisp'd at first, in future times speak plain |
By Art he gladly found what he did seek |
A full requital of his, striving pain |
Art can do much, but this maxime's most sure |
A weak or wounded brain admits no cure. |
5. |
I am obnoxious to each carping tongue |
Who says my hand a needle better fits. |
A Poets pen all scorn I should thus wrong. |
For such despite they cast on Female wits: |
If what I do prove well, it won't advance, |
They'l say it's stoln, or else it was by chance. |
6. |
But sure the Antique Greeks were far more mild, |
Else of our Sexe why feigned they those Nine |
And poesy made, Calliope's own child; |
So 'mongst the rest they placed the Arts Divine: |
But this weak knot, they will full soon untie, |
The Greeks did nought, but play the fools & lye. |
7. |
Let Greeks be Greeks, and women what they are. |
Men have precedency, and still excell. |
It is but vain unjustly to wage warre, |
Men can do best, and women know it well |
Preheminence in all and each is yours; |
Yet grant some small acknowledgement of ours. |
8. |
And oh ye high flown quills that soar the Skies, |
And ever with your prey still catch your praise, |
If e're you daigne these lowly lines your eyes |
Give Thyme or Parsley wreath; I ask no bayes, |
This mean and unrefined ore of mine |
Will make you glistring gold, but more to shine: |
The
Four Elements
THe Fire, Air, Earth and Water did contest |
Which was the strongest, noblest and the best, |
Who was of greatest use and might'est force; |
In placide Terms they thought now to discourse, |
That in due order each her turn should speak; |
But enmity this amity did break |
All would be chief, and all scorn'd to be under |
Whence issu'd winds & rains, lightning & thunder. |
The quaking earth did groan, the Sky lookt black |
The Fire, the forced Air, in sunder crack; |
The sea did threat the heav'ns, the heavn's the earth, |
All looked like a Chaos or new birth: |
Fire broyled Earth, & scorched Earth it choaked |
Both by their darings, water so provoked |
That roaring in it came, and with its source |
Soon made the Combatants abate their force |
The rumbling hissing: puffing was so great |
The worlds confusion, it did seem to threat |
Till gentle Air, Contention so abated |
That betwixt hot and cold, she arbritrated |
The others difference, being less did cease |
All storms now laid, and they in perfect peace |
That Fire should first begin, the rest consent, |
The noblest and most active Element. |
Fire. |
What is my worth (both ye) and all men know, |
In little time I can but little show, |
But what I am, let learned Grecians say, |
What I can do well skil'd Mechanicks may: |
The benefit all living by me finde, |
All sorts of Artists here declare your mind. |
What tool was ever fram'd, but by my might? |
Ye Martilists, what weapons for your fight, |
To try your valour by, but it must feel |
My force? Your Sword, & Gun, your Lance of steel, |
Your Cannon's bootless and your powder too |
Without mine aid, (alas) what can they do; |
The adverse walls not shak'd, the Mines not blown |
And in despight the City keeps her own; |
But I with one Granado or Petard, |
Set ope those gates, that 'fore so strong were bar'd. |
Ye Husband-men, your Coulters made by me |
Your Hooes your Mattocks, & what e're you see |
Subdue the Earth, and fit it for your Grain |
That so it might in time requite your pain: |
Though strong limb'd Vulcan forg'd it by his skill |
I made it flexible unto his will; |
Ye Cooks, your Kitchen implements I frame |
Your Spits, Pots, Jacks, what else I need not name. |
Your dayly food I wholsome make, I warm |
Your shrinking Limbs, which winter's cold doth harm. |
Ye Paracelsians too in vain's your skill |
In Chymistry, unless I help you Still. |
And you Philosophers, if e're you made |
A transmutation it was through mine aid, |
Ye silver Smiths, your Ure I do refine |
What mingled lay with Earth I cause to shine; |
But let me leave these things, my fame aspires |
To match on high with the Celestial fires: |
The Sun an Orb of fire was held of old, |
Our Sages new another tale have told: |
But be he what they will yet his aspect |
A burning fiery heat we find reflect, |
And of the self same nature is with mine |
Cold sister Earth, no witness needs but thine; |
How doth his warmth, refresh thy frozen back |
And trim thee brave, in green, after thy black: |
Both man and beast rejoyce at his approach, |
And birds do sing, to see his glittering Coach |
And though nought, but Salamanders live in fire |
And fly Pyrausta call'd, all else expire, |
Yet men and beast Astronomers will tell |
Fixed in heavenly Constellations dwell, |
My Planets of both Sexes whose degree |
Poor Heathen judg'd worthy a Diety; |
There's Orion arm'd attended by his dog; |
The Theban stout Alcides with his Club; |
The valiant Perseus, who Medusa slew, |
The horse that kil'd Belerophon, then flew. |
My Crab, my Scorpion, fishes you may see |
The Maid with ballance, wain with horses three, |
The Ram, the Bull, the Lion, and the Beagle, |
The Bear, the Goat, the Raven, and the Eagle, |
The Crown, the Whale, the Archer, Bernice Hare, |
The Hidra, Dolphin, Boys that water bear, |
Nay more, then these, Rivers 'mongst stars are found |
Eridanus, where Phæton was drown'd. |
Their magnitude, and height, should I recount |
My story to a volume would amount; |
Out of a multitude these few I touch, |
Your wisdome out of little gather much. |
I'le here let pass, my choler, cause of wars |
and influence of divers of those stars |
When in Conjunction with the Sun do more |
Augment his heat, which was too hot before. |
The Summer ripening season I do claim |
And man from thirty unto fifty frame. |
Of old when Sacrifices were Divine, |
I of acceptance was the holy signe, |
'Mong all thy wonders which I might recount, |
There's none more strange then Ætna's Sulphry mount |
The choaking flames, that from Vesuvius flew |
The over curious second Pliny flew, |
And with the Ashes that it sometimes shed |
Apulia's 'jacent parts were covered. |
And though I be a servant to each man |
Yet by my force, master, my masters can. |
What famous Towns, to Cinders have I turn'd? |
What lasting forts my kindled wrath hath burn'd? |
The stately Seats of mighty Kings by me |
In confused heaps, of ashes may you see. |
Wher's Ninus great wall'd Town, & Troy of old |
Carthage, and hundred more in stories told |
Which when they could not be o'recome by foes |
The Army, through my help victorious rose |
And stately London, (our great Britain's glory) |
My raging flame did make a mournful story, |
But maugre all, that I, or foes could do |
That Phœnix from her Bed, is risen New. |
Old sacred Zion, I demolish'd thee. |
So great Diana's Temple was by me, |
And more than bruitish Sodom, for her lust |
With neighbouring Towns, I did consume to dust |
What shall I say of Lightning and of Thunder |
Which Kings & mighty ones amaze with wonder, |
Which made a Cæsar, (Romes) the worlds proud head, |
Foolish Caligula creep under 's bed. |
Of Meteors, ignis fatuus and the rest, |
But to leave those to th' wise, I judge it best. |
The rich I oft make poor, the strong I maime, |
Not sparing Life when I can take the same; |
And in a word, the world I shall consume |
And all therein, at that great day of Doom; |
Not before then, shall cease, my raging ire, |
And then because, no matter more for fire. |
Now Sisters pray proceed, each in your Course |
As I, impart your usefulness and force. |
Earth. |
The next in place Earth judg'd to be her due, |
Sister (quoth shee) I come not short of you, |
In wealth and use I do surpass you all, |
And mother earth of old men did me call: |
Such is my fruitfulness, an Epithite, |
Which none ere gave, or you could claim of right |
Among my praises this I count not least, |
I am th' original of man and beast. |
To tell what sundry fruits my fat soil yields, |
In Vineyards, Gardens, Orchards & Corn-fields, |
Their kinds, their tasts, their colors & their smells |
Would so pass time I could say nothing else: |
The rich the poor, wise, fool, and every sort |
Of these so common things can make report. |
To tell you of my countryes and my Regions, |
Soon would they pass not hundreds but legions; |
My cities famous, rich and populous, |
Whose numbers now are grown innumerous. |
I have not time to think of every part, |
Yet let me name my Grecia, 'tis my heart. |
For learning arms and arts I love it well, |
But chiefly 'cause the Muses there did dwell. |
Ile here skip ore my mountains reaching skyes, |
Whether Pyrenean, or the Alpes, both lyes |
On either side the country of the Gaules |
Strong forts, from Spanish and Italian brawles, |
And huge great Taurus longer then the rest, |
Dividing great Armenia from the least; |
And Hemus, whose steep sides none foot upon, |
But farewell all for dear mount Helicon, |
And wondrous high Olimpus, of such fame, |
That heav'n itself was oft call'd by that name. |
Parnassus sweet, I dote too much on thee, |
Unless thou prove a better friend to me: |
But Ile leap ore these hills, not touch a dale, |
Nor will I stay, no not in Tempi Vale, |
Ile here let go my Lions of Numidia, |
My Panthers and my Leopards of Libia, |
The Behemoth and rare found Unicorn, |
Poysons sure antidote lyes in his horn, |
And my Hiæna (imitates mans voice) |
Out of great numbers I might pick my choice, |
Thousands in woods & plains, both wild & tame, |
But here or there, I list now none to name; |
No, though the fawning Dog did urge me sore, |
In his behalf to speak a word the more, |
Whose trust and valour I might here commend; |
But time's too short and precious so to spend. |
But hark you wealthy merchants, who for prize |
Send forth your well man'd ships where sun doth rise, |
After three years when men and meat is spent, |
My rich Commodityes pay double rent. |
Ye Galenists, my Drugs that come from thence, |
Do cure your Patients, fill your purse with pence; |
Besides the use of roots, of hearbs, and plants, |
That with less cost near home supply your wants. |
But Mariners, where got you ships and Sails, |
And Oars to row, when both my Sisters fails? |
Your Tackling, Anchor, compass too is mine, |
Which guides when sun nor moon nor stars do shine. |
Ye mighty Kings, who for your lasting fames |
Built Cities, Monuments, call'd by your names, |
Were those compiled heaps of massy stones |
That your ambition laid, ought but my bones? |
Ye greedy misers, who do dig for gold |
For gemms, for silver, Treasures which I hold, |
Will not my goodly face your rage suffice |
But you will see what in my bowels lyes? |
And ye Artificers, all Trades and forts |
My bounty calls you forth to make reports, |
If ought you have, to use, to wear, to eat, |
But what I freely yield, upon your sweat? |
And Cholerick Sister, thou for all thine ire |
Well knowst my fuel must maintain thy fire. |
As I ingenuously with thanks confess, |
My cold thy fruitfull heat doth crave no less: |
But how my cold dry temper works upon |
The melancholy Constitution; |
How the autumnal season I do sway, |
And how I force the grey-head to obey, |
I should here make a short, yet true Narration, |
But that thy method is mine imitation. |
Now must I shew mine adverse quality, |
And how I oft work mans mortality: |
He sometimes finds, maugre his toiling pain |
Thistles and thorns where he expected grain. |
My sap to plants and trees I must not grant, |
The vine, the olive, and the figtree want: |
The Corn and Hay do fall before the're mown, |
And buds from fruitfull trees as soon as blown; |
Then dearth prevails, that nature to suffice |
The Mother on her tender infant flyes; |
The husband knows no wife, nor father sons, |
But to all outrages their hunger runs: |
Dreadfull examples soon I might produce, |
But to such Auditors 'twere of no use, |
Again when Delvers dare in hope of gold |
To ope those veins of Mine, audacious bold; |
While they thus in mine entrails love to dive, |
Before they know, they are inter'd alive. |
Y'affrighted wights appal'd, how do ye shake, |
When once you feel me your foundation quake? |
Because in the Abbysse of my dark womb |
Your cities and yourselves I oft intomb: |
O dreadful Sepulcher! that this is true |
Dathan and all his company well knew, |
So did that Roman, far more stout then wise, |
Bur'ing himself alive for honour's prize. |
And since fair Italy full sadly knowes |
What she hath lost by these remed'less woes. |
Again what veins of poyson in me lye, |
Some kill outright, and some do stupifye: |
Nay into herbs and plants it sometimes creeps, |
In heats & colds & gripes & drowzy sleeps; |
Thus I occasion death to man and beast |
When food they seek, & harm mistrust the least. |
Much might I say of the hot Libian sand |
Which rise like tumbling Billows on the Land |
Wherein Cambyses Armie was o'rethrown |
(but windy Sister, 'twas when you have blown) |
I'le say no more, but this thing add I must |
Remember Sons, your mould is of my dust |
And after death whether interr'd or burn'd |
As Earth at first so into Earth return'd. |
Water. |
Scarce Earth had done, but th' angry water mov'd |
Sister (quoth she) it had full well behov'd |
Among your boastings to have praised me |
Cause of your fruitfulness as you shall see: |
This your neglect shews your ingratitude |
And how your subtilty, would men delude |
Not one of us (all knows) that's like to thee |
Ever in craving, from the other three; |
But thou art bound to me, above the rest, |
Who am thy drink, thy blood, thy sap and best: |
If I withhold what art thou? dead dry lump |
Thou bearst nor grass or plant nor tree, nor stump, |
Thy extream thirst is moistned by my love |
With springs below, and showres from above |
Or else thy Sun burnt face and gaping chops |
Complain to th' heavens if I withhold my drops |
Thy Bear, thy Tiger and thy Lion stout, |
When I am gone, their fierceness none needs doubt |
Thy Camel hath no strength, thy Bull no force |
Nor mettal's found, in the courageous Horse |
Hinds leave their calves, the Elephant, the Fens |
The wolves and savage beasts, forsake their Dens |
The lofty Eagle, and the Stork fly low, |
The Peacock and the Ostrich, share in woe, |
The Pine, the Cedar, yea, and Daphne's Tree |
Do cease to nourish in this misery. |
Man wants his bread and wine, & pleasant fruits |
He knows, such sweets, lies not in Earths dry roots |
Then seeks me out, in river and in well |
His deadly malady I might expell: |
If I supply, his heart and veins rejoyce, |
If not, soon ends his life, as did his voyce; |
That this is true, Earth thou can'st not deny |
I call thine Egypt, this to verifie, |
Which by my fatting Nile, doth yield such store |
That she can spare, when nations round are poor |
When I run low, and not o'reflow her brinks |
To meet with want, each woful man he thinks: |
And such I am in Rivers, showrs and springs |
But what's the wealth, that my rich Ocean brings |
Fishes so numberless, I there do hold |
If thou shouldst buy, it would exhaust thy gold: |
There lives the oyly Whale, whom all men know |
Such wealth but not such like, Earth thou maist show. |
The Dolphin loving musick, Arians friend |
The witty Barbel, whose craft doth her commend |
With thousands more, which now I list not name |
Thy silence of thy Beasts doth cause the same |
My pearles that dangle at thy Darlings ears, |
Not thou, but shel-fish yield, as Pliny clears, |
Was ever gem so rich found in thy trunk, |
As Egypts wanton, Cleopatra drunk? |
Or hast thou any colour can come nigh |
The Roman purple double Tirian dye? |
Which Cæsar's Consuls, Tribunes all adorn, |
For it to search my waves they thought no scorn. |
Thy gallant rich perfuming Amber-greece |
I lightly cast ashore as frothy fleece: |
With rowling grains of purest massie gold, |
Which Spains Americans do gladly hold. |
Earth thou hast not moe countrys vales & mounds |
Then I have fountains, rivers lakes and ponds. |
My sundry seas, black, white and Adriatique, |
Ionian, Baltique, and the vast Atlantique, |
Ægean, Caspian, golden Rivers five, |
Asphaltis lake where nought remains alive: |
But I should go beyond thee in my boasts, |
If I should name more seas than thou hast Coasts, |
And be thy mountains n'er so high and steep, |
I soon can match them with my seas as deep. |
To speak of kinds of waters I neglect, |
My diverse fountains and their strange effect: |
My wholsome bathes, together with their cures; |
My water Syrens with their guilefull lures, |
Th'uncertain cause of certain ebbs and flows, |
Which wondring Aristotles wit n'er knows, |
Nor will I speak of waters made by art, |
Which can to life restore a fainting heart. |
Nor fruitfull dews, nor drops distil'd from eyes, |
Which pitty move, and oft deceive the wise: |
Nor yet of salt and sugar, sweet and smart, |
Both when we lift to water we convert. |
Alas thy ships and oars could do no good |
Did they but want my Ocean and my flood. |
The wary merchant on his weary beast |
Transfers his goods from south to north and east, |
Unless I ease his toil, and do transport |
The wealthy fraight unto his wished port: |
These be my benefits, which may suffice: |
I now must shew what ill there in me lies. |
The flegmy Constitution I uphold, |
All humors, tumors which are bred of cold: |
O'er childhood and ore winter I bear sway, |
And Luna for my Regent I obey. |
As I with showers oft times refresh the earth, |
So oft in my excess I cause a dearth, |
And with abundant wet so cool the ground, |
By adding cold to cold no fruit proves found. |
The Farmer and the Grasier do complain |
Of rotten sheep, lean kine, and mildew'd grain. |
And with my wasting floods and roaring torrent, |
Their cattel hay and corn I sweep down current. |
Nay many times my Ocean breaks his bounds, |
And with astonishment the world confounds, |
And swallows Countryes up, n'er seen again, |
And that an island makes which once was Main: |
Thus Britain fair (tis thought) was cut from France |
Scicily from Italy by the like chance, |
And but one land was Africa and Spain |
Untill proud Gibraltar did make them twain. |
Some say I swallow'd up (sure tis a notion) |
A mighty country in th' Atlantique Ocean. |
I need not say much of my hail and snow, |
My ice and extream cold, which all men know, |
Whereof the first so ominous I rain'd, |
That Israels enemies therewith were brain'd; |
And of my chilling snows such plenty be, |
That Caucasus high mounts are seldome free, |
Mine ice doth glaze Europes great rivers o're, |
Till sun release, their ships can sail no more, |
All know that inundations I have made, |
Wherein not men, but mountains seem'd to wade; |
As when Achaia all under water stood, |
That for two hundred years it n'er prov'd good. |
Deucalions great Deluge with many moe, |
But these are trifles to the flood of Noe, |
Then wholly perish'd Earths ignoble race, |
And to this day impairs her beauteous face, |
That after times shall never feel like woe, |
Her confirm'd sons behold my colour'd bow. |
Much might I say of wracks, but that Ile spare, |
And now give place unto our Sister Air. |
Air. |
Content (quoth Air) to speak the last of you, |
Yet am not ignorant first was my due: |
I do suppose you'l yield without controul |
I am the breath of every living soul. |
Mortals, what one of you that loves not me |
Abundantly more then my Sisters three? |
And though you love Fire, Earth and Water well |
Yet Air beyond all these you know t' excell. |
I ask the man condemn'd that's neer his death, |
How gladly should his gold purchase his breath, |
And all the wealth that ever earth did give, |
How freely should it go so he might live: |
No earth, thy witching trash were all but vain, |
If my pure air thy sons did not sustain, |
The famish'd thirsty man that craves supply, |
His moving reason is, give least I dye, |
So loth he is to go though nature's spent |
To bid adieu to his dear Element. |
Nay what are words which do reveal the mind, |
Speak who or what they will they are but wind. |
Your drums your trumpets & your organs found, |
What is't but forced air which doth rebound, |
And such are ecchoes and report of th' gun |
That tells afar th' exploit which it hath done. |
Your Songs and pleasant tunes they are the same, |
And so's the notes which Nightingales do frame. |
Ye forging Smiths, if bellows once were gone |
Your red hot work more coldly would go on. |
Ye Mariners, tis I that fill your sails |
And speed you to your port with wished gales. |
When burning heat doth cause you faint, I cool, |
And when I smile, your ocean's like a pool. |
I help to ripe the corn, I turn the mill, |
And with my self I every Vacuum fill. |
The ruddy sweet sanguine is like to air, |
And youth and spring, Sages to me compare, |
My moist hot nature is so purely thin, |
No place so subtily made, but I get in. |
I grow more pure and pure as I mount higher, |
And when I'm throughly rarifi'd turn fire: |
So when I am condens'd, I turn to water, |
Which may be done by holding down my vapour. |
Thus I another body can assume, |
And in a trice my own nature resume. |
Some for this cause of late have been so bold |
Me for no Element longer to hold, |
Let such suspend their thoughts, and silent be, |
For all Philosophers make one of me: |
And what those Sages either spake or writ |
Is more authentick then our modern wit. |
Next of my fowles such multitudes there are, |
Earths beasts and waters fish scarce can compare. |
Th' Ostrich with her plumes, th' Eagle with her eyn |
The Phœnix too (if any be) are mine, |
The stork, the crane, the partridge, and the phesant |
The Thrush, the wren, the lark a prey to th' peasant, |
With thousands more which now I may omit |
Without impeachment to my tale or wit. |
As my fresh air preserves all things in life, |
So when corrupt, mortality is rife; |
Then Fevers, Purples, Pox and Pestilence, |
With divers moe, work deadly consequence: |
Whereof such multitudes have di'd and fled, |
The living scarce had power to bury dead; |
Yea so contagious countryes have we known |
That birds have not 'scapt death as they have flown |
Of murrain, cattle numberless did fall, |
Men feared destruction epidemical. |
Then of my tempests felt at sea and land, |
Which neither ships nor houses could withstand, |
What wofull wracks I've made may well appear, |
If nought were known but that before Algere, |
Where famous Charles the fifth more loss sustained |
Then in his long hot war which Millain gain'd. |
Again what furious storms and Hurricanoes |
Know western Isles, as Christophers, Barbadoes, |
Where neither houses, trees nor plants I spare, |
But some fall down, and some fly up with air. |
Earthquakes so hurtfull, and so fear'd of all, |
Imprison'd I, am the original. |
Then what prodigious sights I sometimes show, |
As battles pitcht in th' air, as countryes know, |
Their joyning fighting, forcing and retreat, |
That earth appears in heaven, O wonder great! |
Sometimes red flaming swords and blazing stars, |
Portentous signs of famines, plagues and wars, |
Which make the Monarchs fear their fates |
By death or great mutation of their States. |
I have said less than did my Sisters three, |
But what's their wrath or force, the fame's in me. |
To adde to all I've said was my intent, |
But dare not go beyond my Element. |
Of the four Humours in Mans
Constitution.
THe former four now ending their discourse, |
Ceasing to vaunt their good, or threat their force, |
Lo other four step up, crave leave to show |
The native qualityes that from them flow: |
But first they wisely shew'd their high descent, |
Each eldest daughter to each Element. |
Choler was own'd by fire, and Blood by air, |
Earth knew her black swarth child, water her fair: |
All having made obeysance to each Mother, |
Had leave to speak, succeeding one the other: |
But 'mongst themselves they were at variance, |
Which of the four should have predominance. |
Choler first hotly claim'd right by her mother, |
Who had precedency of all the other: |
But Sanguine did disdain what she requir'd, |
Pleading her self was most of all desir'd. |
Proud Melancholy more envious then the rest, |
The second, third or last could not digest. |
She was the silentest of all the four, |
Her wisdom spake not much, but thought the more |
Mild Flegme did not contest for chiefest place, |
Only she crav'd to have a vacant space. |
Well, thus they parle and chide; but to be brief, |
Or will they, nill they, Choler will be chief. |
They seing her impetuosity |
At present yielded to necessity. |
Choler. |
To shew my high descent and pedegree, |
Your selves would judge but vain prolixity; |
It is acknowledged from whence I came, |
It shall suffice to shew you what I am, |
My self and mother one, as you shall see, |
But shee in greater, I in less degree. |
We both once Masculines, the world doth know, |
Now Feminines awhile, for love we owe |
Unto your Sisterhood, which makes us render |
Our noble selves in a less noble gender. |
Though under Fire we comprehend all heat, |
Yet man for Choler is the proper seat: |
I in his heart erect my regal throne, |
Where Monarch like I play and sway alone. |
Yet many times unto my great disgrace |
One of your selves are my Compeers in place, |
Where if your rule prove once predominant, |
The man proves boyish, sottish, ignorant: |
But if you yield subservience unto me, |
I make a man, a man in th'high'st degree: |
Be he a souldier, I more fence his heart |
Then iron Corslet 'gainst a sword or dart. |
What makes him face his foe without appal, |
To storm a breach, or scale a city wall, |
In dangers to account himself more sure |
Then timerous Hares whom Castles do immure? |
Have you not heard of worthyes, Demi-Gods? |
Twixt them and others what is't makes the odds |
But valour? whence comes that? from none of you, |
Nay milksops at such brunts you look but blew. |
Here's sister ruddy, worth the other two, |
Who much will talk, but little dares she do, |
Unless to Court and claw, to dice and drink, |
And there she will out-bid us all, I think, |
She loves a fiddle better then a drum, |
A Chamber well, in field she dares not come, |
She'l ride a horse as bravely as the best, |
And break a staff, provided 'be in jest; |
But shuns to look on wounds, & blood that's spilt, |
She loves her sword only because its gilt. |
Then here's our sad black Sister, worse then you. |
She'l neither say she will, nor will she doe; |
But peevish Malecontent, musing sits, |
And by misprissions like to loose her witts: |
If great perswasions cause her meet her foe, |
In her dull resolution she's so slow, |
To march her pace to some is greater pain |
Then by a quick encounter to be slain. |
But be she beaten, she'l not run away, |
She'l first advise if't be not best to stay. |
Now let's give cold white sister flegme her right, |
So loving unto all she scorns to fight: |
If any threaten her, she'l in a trice |
Convert from water to congealed ice: |
Her teeth will chatter, dead and wan's her face, |
And 'fore she be assaulted, quits the place. |
She dares not challeng, if I speak amiss, |
Nor hath she wit or heat to blush at this. |
Here's three of you all see now what you are, |
Then yield to me preheminence in war. |
Again who fits for learning, science, arts? |
Who rarifies the intellectual parts: |
From whence fine spirits flow and witty notions: |
But tis not from our dull, slow sisters motions: |
Nor sister sanguine, from thy moderate heat, |
Poor spirits the Liver breeds, which is thy seat. |
What comes from thence, my heat refines the same |
And through the arteries sends it o're the frame: |
The vital spirits they're call'd, and well they may |
For when they fail, man turns unto his clay. |
The animal I claim as well as these, |
The nerves, should I not warm, soon would they freeze |
But flegme her self is now provok'd at this |
She thinks I never shot so far amiss. |
The brain she challengeth, the head's her seat; |
But know'ts a foolish brain that wanteth heat. |
My absence proves it plain, her wit then flyes |
Out at her nose, or melteth at her eyes. |
Oh who would miss this influence of thine |
To be distill'd, a drop on every Line? |
Alas, thou hast no Spirits; thy Company |
Will feed a dropsy, or a Tympany, |
The Palsy, Gout, or Cramp, or some such dolour: |
Thou wast not made, for Souldier or for Scholar; |
Of greazy paunch, and bloated cheeks go vaunt, |
But a good head from these are dissonant. |
But Melancholy, wouldst have this glory thine, |
Thou sayst thy wits are staid, subtil and fine; |
'Tis true, when I am Midwife to thy birth |
Thy self's as dull, as is thy mother Earth: |
Thou canst not claim the liver, head nor heart |
Yet hast the Seat assign'd, a goodly part |
The sinke of all us three, the hateful Spleen |
Of that black Region, nature made thee Queen; |
Where pain and sore obstruction thou dost work, |
Where envy, malice, thy Companions lurk. |
If once thou'rt great, what follows thereupon |
But bodies wasting, and destruction? |
So base thou art, that baser cannot be, |
Th' excrement adustion of me. |
But I am weary to dilate your shame, |
Nor is't my pleasure thus to blur your name, |
Only to raise my honour to the Skies, |
As objects best appear by contraries. |
But Arms, and Arts I claim, and higher things, |
The princely qualities befitting Kings, |
Whose profound heads I line with policies, |
They'r held for Oracles, they are so wise, |
Their wrathful looks are death their words are laws |
Their Courage it foe, friend, and Subject awes; |
But one of you, would make a worthy King |
Like our sixth Henry (that same virtuous thing) |
That when a Varlet struck him o're the side, |
Forsooth you are to blame, he grave reply'd. |
Take Choler from a Prince, what is he more |
Then a dead Lion, by Beasts triumph'd o're. |
Again you know, how I act every part |
By th' influence, I still send from the heart: |
It's nor your Muscles, nerves, nor this nor that |
Do's ought without my lively heat, that's flat: |
Nay th' stomack magazine to all the rest |
Without my boyling heat cannot digest: |
And yet to make my greatness, still more great |
What differences, the Sex? but only heat. |
And one thing more, to close up my narration |
Of all that lives, I cause the propagation. |
I have been sparings what I might have said |
I love no boasting, that's but Childrens trade. |
To what you now shall say I will attend, |
And to your weakness gently condescend. |
Blood. |
Good Sisters, give me leave, as is my place |
To vent my grief, and wipe off my disgrace: |
Your selves may plead your wrongs are no whit less |
Your patience more then mine, I must confess |
Did ever sober tongue such language speak, |
Or honesty such tyes unfriendly break? |
Dost know thy self so well us so amiss? |
Is't arrogance or folly causeth this? |
Ile only shew the wrong thou'st done to me, |
Then let my sisters right their injury. |
To pay with railings is not mine intent, |
But to evince the truth by Argument: |
I will analyse this thy proud relation |
So full of boasting and prevarication, |
Thy foolish incongruityes Ile show, |
So walk thee till thou'rt cold, then let thee go. |
There is no Souldier but thy self (thou sayest,) |
No valour upon Earth, but what thou hast |
Thy silly provocations I despise, |
And leave't to all to judge, where valour lies |
No pattern, nor no pattron will I bring |
But David, Judah's most heroick King, |
Whose glorious deeds in Arms the world can tell, |
A rosie cheek Musitian thou know'st well; |
He knew well how to handle Sword and Harp, |
And how to strike full sweet, as well as sharp, |
Thou laugh'st at me for loving merriment, |
And scorn'st all Knightly sports at Turnament. |
Thou sayst I love my Sword, because it's gilt, |
But know, I love the Blade, more then the Hilt, |
Yet do abhor such temerarious deeds, |
As thy unbridled, barbarous Choler breeds: |
Thy rudeness counts good manners vanity, |
And real Complements base flattery. |
For drink, which of us twain like it the best, |
Ile go no further then thy nose for test: |
Thy other scoffs, not worthy of reply |
Shall vanish as of no validity: |
Of thy black Calumnies this is but part, |
But now Ile shew what souldier thou art. |
And though thou'st us'd me with opprobrious spight |
My ingenuity must give thee right. |
Thy choler is but rage when tis most pure, |
But usefull when a mixture can endure; |
As with thy mother fire, so tis with thee, |
The best of all the four when they agree: |
But let her leave the rest, then I presume |
Both them and all things else she would consume. |
Whilst us for thine associates thou tak'st, |
A Souldier most compleat in all points mak'st: |
But when thou scorn'st to take the help we lend, |
Thou art a Fury or infernal Fiend. |
Witness the execrable deeds thou'st done, |
Nor sparing Sex nor Age, nor Sire nor Son; |
To satisfie thy pride and cruelty, |
Thou oft hast broke bounds of Humanity, |
Nay should I tell, thou would'st count me no blab, |
How often for the lye, thou'st given the stab. |
To take the wall's a sin of so high rate, |
That nought but death the same may expiate, |
To cross thy will, a challenge doth deserve |
So shed'st that blood, thou'rt bounden to preserve |
Wilt thou this valour, Courage, Manhood call: |
No, know 'tis pride most diabolical. |
If murthers be thy glory, tis no less, |
Ile not envy thy feats, nor happiness: |
But if in fitting time and place 'gainst foes |
For countreys good thy life thou dar'st expose, |
Be dangers n'er so high, and courage great, |
Ile praise that prowess, fury, Choler, heat: |
But such thou never art when all alone, |
Yet such when we all four are joyn'd in one. |
And when such thou art, even such are we, |
The friendly Coadjutors still of thee. |
Nextly the Spirits thou dost wholly claim, |
Which nat'ral, vital, animal we name: |
To play Philosopher I have no list, |
Nor yet Physitian, nor Anatomist, |
For acting these, l have no will nor Art, |
Yet shall with Equity, give thee thy part |
For natural, thou dost not much contest; |
For there is none (thou sayst) if some not best; |
That there are some, and best, I dare averre |
Of greatest use, if reason do not erre: |
What is there living, which do'nt first derive |
His Life now Animal, from vegetive: |
If thou giv'st life, I give the nourishment, |
Thine without mine, is not, 'tis evident: |
But I without thy help, can give a growth |
As plants trees, and small Embryon know'th |
And if vital Spirits, do flow from thee |
I am as sure, the natural, from me: |
Be thine the nobler, which I grant, yet mine |
Shall justly claim priority of thine. |
I am the fountain which thy Cistern fills |
Through warm blew Conduits of my venial rills: |
What hath the heart but what's sent from the liver |
If thou'rt the taker, I must be the giver. |
Then never boast of what thou dost receive: |
For of such glory I shall thee bereave. |
But why the heart should be usurp'd by thee, |
I must confess seems something strange to me: |
The spirits through thy heat made perfect are, |
But the Materials none of thine, that's clear: |
Their wondrous mixture is of blood and air, |
The first my self, second my mother fair. |
But Ile not force retorts, nor do thee wrong, |
Thy fi'ry yellow froth is mixt among, |
Challeng not all, 'cause part we do allow; |
Thou know'st I've there to do as well as thou: |
But thou wilt say I deal unequally, |
Their lives the irascible faculty, |
Which without all dispute, is Cholers own; |
Besides the vehement heat, only there known |
Can be imputed, unto none but Fire |
Which is thy self, thy Mother and thy Sire |
That this is true, I easily can assent |
If still you take along my Aliment; |
And let me be your partner which is due, |
So shall I give the dignity to you: |
Again, Stomacks Concoction thou dost claim, |
But by what right, nor do'st, nor canst thou name |
Unless as heat, it be thy faculty, |
And so thou challengest her property. |
The help she needs, the loving liver lends, |
Who th' benefit o'th' whole ever intends |
To meddle further I shall be but shent, |
Th'rest to our Sisters is more pertinent; |
Your slanders thus refuted takes no place, |
Nor what you've said, doth argue my disgrace, |
Now through your leaves, some little time I'l spend |
My worth in humble manner to commend |
This, hot, moist nutritive humour of mine |
When 'tis untaint, pure, and most genuine |
Shall chiefly take the place, as is my due |
Without the least indignity to you. |
Of all your qualities I do partake, |
And what you single are, the whole I make |
Your hot, moist, cold, dry natures are but four, |
I moderately am all, what need I more; |
As thus, if hot then dry, if moist then cold, |
If this you cana't disprove, then all I hold |
My virtues hid, I've let you dimly see |
My sweet Complection proves the verity. |
This Scarlet die's a badge of what's within |
One touch thereof, so beautifies the skin: |
Nay, could I be, from all your tangs but pure |
Mans life to boundless Time might still endure. |
But here one thrusts her heat, wher'ts not requir'd |
So suddenly, the body all is fired, |
And of the calme sweet temper quite bereft, |
Which makes the Mansion, by the Soul soon left. |
So Melancholy seizes on a man, |
With her unchearful visage, swarth and wan, |
The body dryes, the mind sublime doth smother, |
And turns him to the womb of's earthy mother: |
And flegm likewise can shew her cruel art, |
With cold distempers to pain every part: |
The lungs she rots, the body wears away, |
As if she'd leave no flesh to turn to clay, |
Her languishing diseases, though not quick |
At length demolishes the Faberick, |
All to prevent, this curious care I take, |
In th' last concoction segregation make |
Of all the perverse humours from mine own, |
The bitter choler most malignant known |
I turn into his Cell close by my side |
The Melancholy to the Spleen t'abide: |
Likewise the whey, some use I in the veins, |
The overplus I send unto the reins: |
But yet for all my toil, my care and skill, |
Its doom'd by an irrevocable will |
That my intents should meet with interruption, |
That mortal man might turn to his corruption. |
I might here shew the nobleness of mind |
Of such as to the sanguine are inclin'd, |
They're liberal, pleasant, kind and courteous, |
And like the Liver all benignious. |
For arts and sciences they are the fittest; |
And maugre Choler still they are the wittiest: |
With an ingenious working Phantasie, |
A most voluminous large Memory, |
And nothing wanting but Solidity. |
But why alas, thus tedious should I be, |
Thousand examples you may daily see. |
If time I have transgrest, and been too long, |
Yet could not be more brief without much wrong; |
I've scarce wip'd off the spots proud choler cast, |
Such venome lies in words, though but a blast: |
No braggs i've us'd, to you I dare appeal, |
If modesty my worth do not conceal. |
I've us'd no bittererss nor taxt your name, |
As I to you, to me do ye the same. |
Melancholy. |
He that with two Assailants hath to do, |
Had need be armed well and active too. |
Especially when friendship is pretended, |
That blow's most deadly where it is intended. |
Though choler rage and rail, I'le not do so, |
The tongue's no weapon to assault a foe: |
But sith we fight with words, we might be kind |
To spare our selves and beat the whistling wind, |
Fair rosie sister, so might'st thou scape free; |
I'le flatter for a time as thou didst me: |
But when the first offender I have laid, |
Thy soothing girds shall fully be repaid. |
But Choler be thou cool'd or chaf'd, I'le venter, |
And in contentions lists now justly enter. |
What mov'd thee thus to vilifie my name, |
Not past all reason, but in truth all shame: |
Thy fiery spirit shall bear away this prize, |
To play such furious pranks I am too wise: |
If in a Souldier rashness be so precious, |
Know in a General tis most pernicious. |
Nature doth teach to shield the head from harm, |
The blow that's aim'd thereat is latcht by th'arm. |
When in Batalia my foes I face |
I then command proud Choler stand thy place, |
To use thy sword, thy courage and thy art |
There to defend my self, thy better part. |
This wariness count not for cowardize, |
He is not truly valiant that's not wise. |
It's no less glory to defend a town, |
Then by assault to gain one not our own; |
And if Marcellus bold be call'd Romes sword, |
Wise Fabius is her buckler all accord: |
And if thy hast my slowness should not temper, |
'Twere but a mad irregular distemper; |
Enough of that by our sisters heretofore, |
Ile come to that which wounds me somewhat more |
Of learning, policy thou wouldst bereave me, |
But 's not thine ignorance shall thus deceive me: |
What greater Clark or Politician lives, |
Then he whose brain a touch my humour gives? |
What is too hot my coldness doth abate, |
What's diffluent I do consolidate. |
If I be partial judg'd or thought to erre, |
The melancholy snake shall it aver, |
Whose cold dry head more subtilty doth yield, |
Then all the huge beasts of the fertile field. |
Again thou dost confine me to the spleen, |
As of that only part I were the Queen, |
Let me as well make thy precincts the Gall, |
So prison thee within that bladder small: |
Reduce the man to's principles, then see |
If I have not more part then all you three: |
What is within, without, of theirs or thine, |
Yet time and age shall soon declare it mine. |
When death doth seize the man your stock is lost, |
When you poor bankrupts prove then have I most. |
You'l say here none shall e're disturb my right |
You high born from that lump then take your flight |
Then who's mans friend, when life & all forsakes? |
His Mother mine, him to her womb retakes: |
Thus he is ours, his portion is the grave, |
But while he lives, I'le shew what part I have: |
And first the firm dry bones I justly claim, |
The strong foundation of the stately frame: |
Likewise the usefull Slpeen, though not the best, |
Yet is a bowel call'd well as the rest: |
The Liver, Stomack, owe their thanks of right, |
The first it drains, of th'last quicks appetite. |
Laughter (thô thou say malice) flows from hence, |
These two in one cannot have residence. |
But thou most grosly dost mistake to think |
The Spleen for all you three was made a sink, |
Of all the rest thou'st nothing there to do, |
But if thou hast, that malice is from you. |
Again you often touch my swarthy hue, |
That black is black, and I am black tis true; |
But yet more comely far I dare avow, |
Then is thy torrid nose or brazen brow. |
But that which shews how high your spight is bent |
Is charging me to be thy excrement: |
Thy loathsome imputation I defie, |
So plain a slander needeth no reply. |
When by thy heat thou'st bak'd thy self to crust, |
And so art call'd black Choler or adust, |
Thou witless think'st that I am thy excretion, |
So mean thou art in Art as in discretion. |
But by your leave I'le let your greatness see |
What Officer thou art to us all three. |
The Kitchin Drudge, the cleanser of the sinks |
That casts out all that man e're eats or drinks: |
If any doubt the truth whence this should come, |
Shew them thy passage to th'Duodenum; |
Thy biting quality still irritates, |
Till filth and thee nature exonerates: |
If there thou'rt stopt, to th'Liver thou turn'st in, |
And thence with jaundies saffrons all the skin. |
No further time Ile spend in confutation, |
I trust I've clear'd your slanderous imputation. |
I now speak unto all, no more to one, |
Pray hear, admire and learn instruction. |
My virtues yours surpass without compare, |
The first my constancy that jewel rare: |
Choler's too rash this golden gift to hold, |
And Sanguine is more fickle manifold, |
Here, there her restless thoughts do ever fly, |
Constant in nothing but unconstancy. |
And what Flegme is, we know, like to her mother, |
Unstable is the one, and so the other; |
With me is noble patience also found, |
Impatient Choler loveth not the sound, |
What Sanguine is, she doth not heed nor care, |
Now up, now down, transported like the Air: |
Flegme's patient because her nature's tame, |
But I, by virtue do acquire the same. |
My Temperance, Chastity is eminent, |
But these with you, are seldome resident; |
Now could I stain my ruddy Sisters face |
With deeper red, to shew you her disgrace, |
But rather I with silence vaile her shame |
Then cause her blush, while I relate the same. |
Nor are ye free from this inormity, |
Although she bear the greatest obloquie, |
My prudence, judgement, I might now reveal |
But wisdom 'tis my wisdome to conceal. |
Unto diseases not inclin'd as you, |
Nor cold, nor hot, Ague nor Plurisie, |
Nor Cough, nor Quinsey, nor the burning Feaver, |
I rarely feel to act his fierce endeavour; |
My sickness in conceit chiefly doth lye, |
What I imagine that's my malady. |
Chymeraes strange are in my phantasy, |
And things that never were, nor shall I see |
I love not talk, Reason lies not in length, |
Nor multitude of words argues our strength; |
I've done pray sister Flegme proceed in Course, |
We shall expect much sound, but little force. |
Flegme. |
Patient I am, patient i'd need to be, |
To bear with the injurious taunts of three, |
Though wit I want, and anger I have less, |
Enough of both, my wrongs now to express |
I've not forgot, how bitter Choler spake |
Nor how her gaul on me she causeless brake; |
Nor wonder 'twas for hatred there's not small, |
Where opposition is Diametrical. |
To what is Truth I freely will assent, |
Although my Name do suffer detriment, |
What's slanderous repell, doubtful dispute, |
And when I've nothing left to say be mute. |
Valour I want, no Souldier am 'tis true, |
I'le leave that manly Property to you; |
I love no thundring guns nor bloody wars, |
My polish'd Skin was not ordain'd for Skarrs: |
But though the pitched field I've ever fled, |
At home the Conquerours have conquered. |
Nay, I could tell you what's more true then meet, |
That Kings have laid their Scepters at my feet; |
When Sister sanguine paints my Ivory face: |
The Monarchs bend and sue, but for my grace |
My lilly white when joyned with her red, |
Princes hath slav'd, and Captains captived, |
Country with Country, Greece with Asia fights |
Sixty nine Princes, all stout Hero Knights. |
Under Troys walls ten years will wear away, |
Rather then loose one beauteous Helena. |
But 'twere as vain, to prove this truth of mine |
As at noon day, to tell the Sun doth shine. |
Next difference that 'twixt us twain doth lye |
Who doth possess the brain, or thou or I? |
Shame forc'd the say, the matter that was mine, |
But the Spirits by which it acts are thine: |
Thou speakest Truth, and I can say no less, |
Thy heat doth much, I candidly confess; |
Yet without ostentation I may say, |
I do as much for thee another way: |
And though I grant, thou art my helper here, |
No debtor I because it's paid else where. |
With all your flourishes, now Sisters three |
Who is't that dare, or can, compare with me, |
My excellencies are so great, so many, |
I am confounded, fore I speak of any. |
The brain's the noblest member all allow, |
Its form and Scituation will avow, |
Its Ventricles, Membranes and wondrous net, |
Galen, Hippocrates drive to a set; |
That Divine Offspring the immortal Soul |
Though it in all, and every part be whole, |
Within this stately place of eminence, |
Doth doubtless keep its mighty residence. |
And surely, the Soul sensitive here lives, |
Which life and motion to each creature gives, |
The Conjugation of the parts, to th' braine |
Doth shew, hence flow the pow'rs which they retain |
Within this high Built Cittadel, doth lye |
The Reason, fancy, and the memory; |
The faculty of speech doth here abide, |
The Spirits animal, from hence do slide: |
The five most noble Senses here do dwell; |
Of three it's hard to say, which doth excell. |
This point now to discuss, 'longs not to me, |
I'le touch the sight, great'st wonder of the three; |
The optick Nerve, Coats, humours all are mine, |
The watry, glassie, and the Chrystaline; |
O mixture strange! O colour colourless, |
Thy perfect temperament who can express: |
He was no fool who thought the soul lay there, |
Whence her affections passions speak so clear. |
O good, O bad, O true, O traiterous eyes |
What wonderments within your Balls there lyes, |
Of all the Senses sight shall be the Queen; |
Yet some may wish, O had mine eyes ne're seen. |
Mine, likewise is the marrow, of the back, |
Which runs through all the Spondles of the rack, |
It is the substitute o'th royal brain, |
All Nerves, except seven pair, to it retain. |
And the strong Ligaments from hence arise, |
Which joynt to joynt, the intire body tyes. |
Some other parts there issue from the Brain, |
Whose worth and use to tell, I must refrain: |
Some curious learned Crooke, may these reveal |
But modesty, hath charg'd me to conceal |
Here's my Epitome of excellence: |
For what's the Brains is mine by Consequence. |
A foolish brain (quoth Choler) wanting heat |
But a mad one say I, where 'tis too great, |
Phrensie's worse then folly, one would more glad |
With a tame fool converse then with a mad; |
For learning then my brain is not the fittest, |
Nor will I yield that Choler is the wittiest. |
Thy judgement is unsafe, thy fancy little, |
For memory the sand is not more brittle; |
Again, none's fit for Kingly state but thou, |
If Tyrants be the best, I'le it allow: |
But if love be as requisite as fear, |
Then thou and I must make a mixture here. |
Well to be brief, I hope now Cholers laid, |
And I'le pass by what Sister sanguine said. |
To Melancholy I'le make no reply, |
The worst she said was instability, |
And too much talk, both which I here confess |
A warning good, hereafter I'le say less. |
Let's now be friends; its time our spight were spent, |
Lest we too late this rashness do repent, |
Such premises will force a sad conclusion, |
Unless we agree, all falls into confusion. |
Let Sangine with her hot hand Choler hold, |
To take her moist my moisture will be bold: |
My cold, cold melancholy hand shall clasp; |
Her dry, dry Cholers other hand shall grasp. |
Two hot, two moist, two cold, two dry here be, |
A golden Ring, the Posey UNITY. |
Nor jarrs nor scoffs, let none hereafter see, |
But all admire our perfect Amity |
Nor be discern'd, here's water, earth, air, fire, |
But here a compact body, whole intire. |
This loving counsel pleas'd them all so well |
That flegm was judg'd for kindness to excell. |
Of the four Ages
of Man.
LO now four other act upon the stage, |
Childhood and Youth the Manly & Old age; |
The first son unto flegm, Grand-child to water, |
Unstable, supple, cold and moist's his nature. |
The second frolick, claims his pedegree |
From blood and air, for hot and moist is he. |
The third of fire and Choler is compos'd, |
Vindicative and quarrelsome dispos'd. |
The last of earth, and heavy melancholy, |
Solid, hating all lightness and all folly. |
Childhood was cloth'd in white & green to show |
His spring was intermixed with some snow: |
Upon his head nature a Garland set |
Of Primrose, Daizy & the Violet. |
Such cold mean flowrs the spring puts forth betime |
Before the sun hath throughly heat the clime. |
His hobby striding did not ride but run, |
And in his hand an hour-glass new begun, |
In danger every moment of a fall, |
And when tis broke then ends his life and all: |
But if he hold till it have run its last, |
Then may he live out threescore years or past. |
Next Youth came up in gorgeous attire, |
(As that fond age doth most of all desire) |
His Suit of Crimson and his scarfe of green, |
His pride in's countenance was quickly seen; |
Garland of roses, pinks and gilli-flowers |
Seemed on's head to grow bedew'd with showers: |
His face as fresh as is Aurora fair, |
When blushing she first 'gins to light the air. |
No wooden horse, but one of mettal try'd, |
He seems to fly or swim, and not to ride. |
Then prancing on the stage, about he wheels, |
But as he went death waited at his heels. |
The next came up in a much graver sort, |
As one that cared for a good report, |
His sword by's side, and choler in his eyes, |
But neither us'd as yet, for he was wise: |
Of Autumns fruits a basket on his arm, |
His golden God in's purse, which was his charm. |
And last of all to act upon this stage |
Leaning upon his staff came up Old Age, |
Under his arm a sheaf of wheat he bore, |
An harvest of the best, what needs he more? |
In's other hand a glass ev'n almost run, |
Thus writ about This out then am I done. |
His hoary hairs, and grave aspect made way; |
And all gave ear to what he had to say. |
These being met each in his equipage |
Intend to speak, according to their age: |
But wise Old age did with all gravity |
To childish Childhood give precedency; |
And to the rest his reason mildly told, |
That he was young before he grew so old. |
To do as he each one full soon assents, |
Their method was that of the Elements, |
That each should tell what of himself he knew, |
Both good and bad, but yet no more then's true. |
With heed now stood three ages of frail man, |
To hear the child, who crying thus began: |
Childhood. |
Ah me! conceiv'd in sin, and born with sorrow, |
A nothing, here to day, but gone to morrow, |
Whose mean beginning blushing can't reveal, |
But night and darkeness must with shame conceal. |
My mothers breeding sickness, I will spare; |
Her nine months weary burthen not declare. |
To shew her bearing pains, I should do wrong, |
To tell those pangs which can't be told by tongue: |
With tears into the world I did arrive, |
My mother still did waste as I did thrive, |
Who yet with love and all alacrity, |
Spending, was willing to be spent for me. |
With wayward cryes I did disturb her rest, |
Who sought still to appease me with the breast: |
With weary arms she danc'd and By By sung, |
When wretched I ingrate had done the wrong. |
When infancy was past, my childishnesse |
Did act all folly that it could express, |
My silliness did only take delight |
In that which riper age did scorn and slight. |
In Rattles, Baubles and such toyish stuff, |
My then ambitious thoughts were low enough: |
My high-born soul so straightly was confin'd, |
That its own worth it did not know nor mind: |
This little house of flesh did spacious count, |
Through ignorance all troubles did surmount; |
Yet this advantage had mine ignorance |
Freedom from envy and from arrogance, |
How to be rich or great I did not cark, |
A Baron or a Duke ne'r made my mark, |
Nor studious was Kings favours how to buy, |
With costly presence or base flattery: |
No office coveted wherein I might |
Make strong my self and turn aside weak right: |
No malice bare to this or that great Peer, |
Nor unto buzzing whisperers gave ear: |
I gave no hand nor vote for death or life, |
I'd nought to do 'twixt King and peoples strife. |
No Statist I, nor Martilist in'th field, |
Where ere I went mine innocence was shield. |
My quarrels not for Diadems did rise, |
But for an apple, plumb, or some such prize; |
My strokes did cause no blood no wounds or skars, |
My little wrath did end soon as my Warrs: |
My Duel was no challeng, nor did seek. |
My foe should weltring in his bowels reek. |
I had no suits at law neighbours to vex, |
Nor evidence for lands did me perplex. |
I fear'd no storms, nor all the wind that blowes, |
I had no ships at sea, nor fraights to loose. |
I fear'd no drought nor wet, I had no crop, |
Nor yet on future things did set my hope. |
This was mine innocence, but ah! the seeds, |
Lay raked up of all the cursed weeds |
Which sprouted forth in mine ensuing age, |
As he can tel that next comes on the stage: |
But yet let me relate, before I go |
The sins and dangers I am subject to, |
Stained from birth with Adams sinfull fact, |
Thence I began to sin as soon as act: |
A perverse will, a love to what's forbid, |
A serpents sting in pleasing face lay hid: |
A lying tougue as soon as it could speak, |
And fifth Commandment do daily break. |
Oft stubborn, peevish, sullen, pout and cry, |
Then nought can please, and yet I know not why. |
As many are my sins, so dangers too; |
For sin brings sorrow, sickness death and woe: |
And though I miss the tossings of the mind, |
Yet griefs in my frail flesh I stilt do find. |
What gripes of wind mine infancy did pain, |
What tortures I in breeding teeth sustain? |
What crudityes my stomack cold hath bred, |
Whence vomits, flux and worms have issued? |
What breaches, knocks and falls I daily have, |
And some perhaps I carry to my grave. |
Sometimes in fire, sometimes in water fall: |
Strangely presev'd, yet mind it not at all: |
At home, abroad my dangers manifold, |
That wonder tis, my glass till now doth hold. |
I've done; unto my elders I give way, |
For tis but little that a child can say. |
Youth. |
My goodly cloathing, and my beauteous skin |
Declare some greater riches are within: |
But what is best I'le first present to view, |
And then the worst in a more ugly hue: |
For thus to doe we on this stage assemble, |
Then let not him that hath most craft dissemble. |
My education and my learning such, |
As might my self and others profit much; |
With nurture trained up in virtues schools |
Of science, arts and tongues I know the rules, |
The manners of the court I also know, |
And so likewise what they in'th Country doe; |
The brave attempts of valiant knights I prize, |
That dare scale walls and forts rear'd to the skies. |
The snorting Horse, the trumpet, Drum I like, |
The glitt'ring Sword, the Pistol and the Pike: |
I cannot lye intrench'd before a town, |
Nor wait till good success our hopes doth crown: |
I scorn the heavy Corslet, musket-proof: |
I fly to catch the bullet that's aloof. |
Though thus in field, at home to all most kind, |
So affable, that I can suit each mind. |
I can insinuate into the breast, |
And by my mirth can raise the heart deprest: |
Sweet musick raps my brave harmonious soul, |
My high thoughts elevate beyond the pole: |
My wit, my bounty, and my courtesie, |
Make all to place their future hopes on me. |
This is my best, but Youth is known, Alas! |
To be as wild as is the snuffing Ass: |
As vain as froth, as vanity can be, |
That who would see vain man, may look on me. |
My gifts abus'd, my education lost, |
My wofull Parents longing hopes are crost, |
My wit evaporates in merriment, |
My valour in some beastly quarrell's spent: |
My lust doth hurry me to all that's ill: |
I know no law nor reason but my will. |
Sometimes lay wait to take a wealthy purse, |
Or stab the man in's own defence (that's worse) |
Sometimes I cheat (unkind) a female heir, |
Of all at once, who not so wise as fair |
Trusteth my loving looks and glozing tongue, |
Until her friends, treasure and honour's gone. |
Sometimes I sit carousing others health, |
Until mine own be gone, my wit and wealth |
From pipe to pot, from pot to words, and blows, |
For he that loveth wine, wanteth no woes; |
Whole nights with Ruffins, Roarers Fidlers spend, |
To all obscenity mine ears I lend. |
All Counsell hate, which tends to make me wise, |
And dearest friends count for mine enemies. |
If any care I take tis to be fine, |
For sure my suit, more then my vertues shine |
If time from leud Companions I can spare, |
'Tis spent to curle, and pounce my new-bought hair. |
Some new Adonis I do strive to be; |
Sardanapalus now survives in me. |
Cards, Dice, and Oathes, concomitant I love; |
To playes, to masques, to taverns still I move. |
And in a word, if what I am you'd hear, |
Seek out a Brittish bruitish Cavaleer: |
Such wretch, such Monster am I but yet more, |
I have no heart at all this to deplore, |
Remembring not the dreadfull day of doom, |
Nor yet that heavy reckoning soon to come. |
Though dangers do attend me every hour, |
And gastly Death oft threats me with his power, |
Sometimes by wounds in idle Combates taken, |
Sometimes with Agues all my body shaken; |
Sometimes by fevers, all my moisture drinking, |
My heart lies frying, & mine eyes are sinking; |
Sometimes the Quinsey, painfull Pleurisie, |
With sad affrights of death doth menace me; |
Sometimes the two fold Pox me fore be-marrs |
With outward marks, & inward loathsome scarrs; |
Sometimes the Phrenzy strangly mads my brain, |
That oft for it in Bedlam I remain. |
Too many my diseases to recite, |
That wonder tis, I yet behold the light, |
That yet my bed in darkness is not made, |
And I in black oblivions Den now laid. |
Of aches full my bones, of woe my heart, |
Clapt in that prison, never thence to start. |
Thus I have said, and what I've been, you see |
Childhood and Youth are vain ye vanity. |
Middle Age. |
Childhood and Youth (forgot) I've sometimes seen |
And now am grown more staid who have been green |
What they have done, the same was done by me, |
As was their praise or shame, so mine must be. |
Now age is more; more good you may expect, |
But more mine age, the more is my defect. |
But what's of worth, your eyes shall first behold, |
And then a world of drosse among my gold. |
When my wilde oates were sown & ripe and mown |
I then receiv'd an harvest of mine own. |
My reason then bad judge how little hope |
My empty seed should yield a better crop: |
Then with both hands I graspt the world together, |
Thus out of one extream into another: |
But yet laid hold on virtue seemingly, |
Who climbs without hold climbs dangerously: |
Be my condition mean, I then take pains |
My Family to keep, but not for gains. |
A Father I, for children must provide; |
But if none, then for kindred near ally'd. |
If rich, I'm urged then to gather more, |
To bear a part i'th' world, and feed the poor. |
If noble, then mine honour to maintain, |
If not, riches nobility can gain. |
For time, for place, likewise for each Relation, |
I wanted not, my ready allegation. |
Yet all my powers for self ends are not spent, |
For hundreds bless me for my bounty lent. |
Whose backs I've cloth'd, and bellyes I have fed; |
With mine own fleece, & with my houshold bread. |
Yea, justice have I done, was I in place, |
To chear the good, and wicked to deface. |
The proud I crush't, th' oppressed I set free, |
The lyars curb'd but nourisht verity. |
Was I a Pastor, I my Flock did feed, |
And gently lead the Lambs as they had need. |
A Captain I, with Skill I train'd my Band, |
And shew'd them how in face of Foes to stand. |
A Souldier I, with speed I did obey |
As readily, as could my leader say. |
Was I a labourer, I wrought all day |
As cheerfully as e're I took my pay. |
Thus hath mine Age in all sometimes done well, |
Sometimes again, mine Age been worse then Hell. |
In meanness, greatness, riches, poverty. |
Did toyle, did broyle; oppress'd, did steal and lye. |
Was I as poor as poverty could be, |
Then baseness was Companion unto me. |
Such scum as hedges and high-ways do yield, |
As neither sow, nor reap, nor plant nor build, |
If to Agricolture I was ordain'd, |
Great labours, sorrows, Crosses I sustain'd. |
The early Cock did summon but in vain |
My wakeful thoughts up to my painful gain: |
My weary Beast rest from his toyle can find, |
But if I rest the more distrest my mind. |
If happiness my sordidness hath found, |
'Twas in the Crop of my manured ground. |
My thriving Cattle and my new-milch-Cow, |
My fleeced Sheep, and fruitful farrowing Sow: |
To greater things I never did aspire, |
My dunghil thoughts or hopes could reach no higher. |
If to be rich or great it was my fate, |
How was I broyl'd with envy and with hate? |
Greater then was the great'st was my desire, |
And thirst for honour, set my heart on fire. |
And by Ambition's sails I was so carried, |
That over Flats and sands, and Rocks I hurried, |
Opprest and sunk, and stav'd all in my way |
That did oppose me, to my longed Bay. |
My thirst was higher then nobility, |
I oft long'd sore to tast on Royalty: |
Then Kings must be depos'd or put to flight, |
I might possess that Throne which was their right. |
There set, I rid my self straight out of hand |
Of such Competitors, as might in time withstand. |
Then thought my state firm founded sure to last, |
But in a trice 'tis ruin'd by a blast, |
Though cemented with more then noble bloud, |
The bottom nought, and so no longer stood. |
Sometimes vain glory is the only baite |
Whereby my empty Soul is lur'd and caught. |
Be I of wit, of learning, and of parts, |
I judge I should have room in all mens hearts, |
And envy gnawes if any do surmount, |
I hate, not to be held in high'st account. |
If Bias like I'm stript unto my skin, |
I glory in my wealth I have within. |
Thus good and bad, and what I am you see, |
Now in a word, what my diseases be. |
The vexing stone in bladder and in reins, |
The Strangury torments me with sore pains. |
The windy Cholick oft my bowels rend, |
To break the darksome prison where it's pen'd. |
The Cramp and Gout doth sadly torture me, |
And the restraining, lame Sciatica; |
The Astma, Megrim, Palsy, Lethargie, |
The quartan Ague, dropsy, Lunacy; |
Subject to all distempers (that's the truth) |
Though some more incident, to Age or Youth. |
And to conclude, I may not tedious be, |
Man at his best estate is vanity. |
Old Age. |
What you have been, ev'n such have I before |
And all you say, say I, and somewhat more. |
Babes innocence, youths wildness I have seen, |
And in perplexed middle Age have been: |
Sickness, dangers, and anxieties have past, |
And on this stage am come to act my last. |
I have been young, and strong and wise as you: |
But now Bis pueri senes, is too true. |
In every Age I've found much vanity, |
An end of all perfection now I see. |
It's not my valour, honour, nor my gold, |
My ruin'd house now falling can uphold. |
It's not my learning Rhetorick wit so large, |
Hath now the power, death's warfare to discharge. |
It's not my goodly state, nor bed of downe |
That can refresh, or ease if Conscience frown. |
Nor from Alliance can I now have hope, |
But what I have done well, that is my prop; |
He that in youth is godly, wise, and sage, |
Provides a staff then to support his Age. |
Mutations great, some joyful and some sad, |
In this short pilgrimage I oft have had. |
Sometimes the Heavens with plenty smil'd on me, |
Sometime again rain'd all Adversity. |
Sometimes in honour, sometimes in disgrace, |
Sometime an Abject, then again in place. |
Such private changes oft mine eyes have seen, |
In various times of state I've also been. |
I've seen a Kingdome flourish like a tree, |
When it was rul'd by that Celestial she; |
And like a Cedar, others so surmount: |
That but for shrubs they did themselves account; |
Then saw I France and Holland, sav'd Cales won, |
And Philip and Albertus half undone. |
I saw all peace at home, terror to foes, |
But ah, I saw at last those eyes to close, |
And then methought the day at noon grew dark, |
When it had lost that radiant Sun-like Spark, |
In midst of griefs I saw our hopes revive, |
(For 'twas our hopes then kept our hearts alive) |
We chang'd our queen for king under whose rayes |
We joy'd in many blest and prosperous dayes. |
I've seen a Prince, the glory of our land, |
In prime of youth seiz'd by heavens angry hand, |
Which fil'd our hearts with fears, with tears our eyes, |
Wailing his fate & our own destinies. |
I've seen from Rome, an execrable thing, |
A Plot to blow up Nobles and their King, |
But saw their horrid fact soon disappointed, |
And Land and Nobles sav'd with their anointed. |
I've Princes seen to live on others lands, |
A royal one by gifts from strangers hands, |
Admired for their magnanimity. |
Who lost a Prince-dome and a Monarchy. |
I've seen designs for Ree and Rochel crost. |
And poor Palatinate forever lost. |
I've seen unworthy men advanced high, |
(And better ones, suffer extremity) |
But neither favour, riches, title, State, |
Could length their days or once reverse their fate. |
I've seen one slash'd, and some to lose their heads |
And others fly, struck both with gilt and dread. |
I've seen and so have you, for tis but late, |
The desolation of a goodly State, |
Plotted and acted so that none can tell, |
Who gave the counsel, but the Prince of hell, |
Three hundred thousand slaughtered innocents, |
By bloudy Popish, hellish miscreants: |
Oh may you live, and, so you will I trust |
To see them swill in bloud untill they burst. |
I've seen a King by force thrust from his throne, |
And an Usurper subt'ly mount thereon. |
I've seen a state unmoulded, rent in twain, |
But ye may live to see't made up again. |
I've seen it plunder'd, taxt and soak'd in bloud, |
But out of evill you may see much good. |
What are my thoughts, this is no time to say. |
Men may more freely speak another day. |
These are no old-wives tales, but this is truth. |
We old men love to tell what's done in youth. |
But I return from whence I stept awry, |
My memory is bad, my brain is dry: |
Mine Almond tree, grey hairs, doe flourish now, |
And back once straight, apace begins to bow: |
My grinders now are few, my sight doth fail, |
My skin is wrinkled, and my cheeks are pale, |
No more rejoyce at musicks pleasing noise, |
But waking glad to hear the cocks shrill voice: |
I cannot scent savours of pleasant meat, |
Nor sapors find in what I drink or eat: |
My arms and hands once strong have lost their might |
I cannot labour, much less can I fight. |
My comely legs as nimble as the Roe |
Now stiff and numb, can hardly creep or goe, |
My heart sometimes as fierce as Lion bold, |
Now trembling is, all fearful sad and cold; |
My golden Bowl and silver Cord e're long |
Shall both be broke, by racking death so strong; |
Then shall I go whence I shall come no more, |
Sons, Nephews, leave my farewel to deplore. |
In pleasures and in labours I have found. |
That Earth can give no consolation sound; |
To great to rich to poor, to young to old, |
To mean to noble, fearful or to bold: |
From King to begger all degrees shall find |
But vanity vexation of the mind. |
Yea, knowing much the pleasants life of all, |
Hath yet among those sweets some bitter gall; |
Though reading others works doth much refresh, |
Yet studying much brings weariness to th' flesh: |
My studies, labours readings all are done, |
And my last period now ev'n almost run. |
Corruption my Father I do call, |
Mother and Sisters both, the worms that crawle |
In my dark house, such kindred I have store, |
Where I shall rest till heavens shall be no more, |
And when this flesh shall rot and be consum'd, |
This body by this Soul shall be assum'd: |
And I shall see with these same very eyes, |
My strong Redeemer comming in the Skies. |
Triumph I shall o're sin, o're death, o're Hell, |
And in that hope I bid you all farewel. |
The four Seasons of
the Year.
Spring. |
ANother four I've left yet to bring on, |
Of four times four the last Quarternion |
The Winter, Summer, Autumn & the Spring, |
In season all these Seasons I shall bring: |
Sweet Spring like man in his Minority, |
At present claim'd, and had priority. |
With smiling face and garments somewhat green, |
She trim'd her locks, which late had frosted been, |
Nor hot nor cold, she spake, but with a breath, |
Fit to revive, the nummed earth from death. |
Three months (quoth she) are 'lotted to my share |
March, April, May of all the rest most fair. |
Tenth of the first, Sol into Aries enters, |
And bids defiance to all tedious winters, |
Crosseth the Line, and equals night and day, |
(Stil adds to th' last til after pleasant May) |
And now makes glad the darkned nothern wights |
Who for some months have seen but starry lights. |
Now goes the Plow-man to his merry toyle, |
He might unloose his winter locked soyl; |
The Seeds-man too, doth lavish out his grain, |
In hope the more he casts, the more to gain: |
The Gardner now superfluous branches lops, |
And poles erects for his young clambring hops. |
Now digs then sowes his herbs, his flowers & roots |
And carefully manures his trees of fruits. |
The Pleiades their influence now give, |
And all that seemed as dead afresh doth live. |
The croaking frogs, whom nipping winter kil'd |
Like birds now chirp, and hop about the field, |
The Nightingale, the black-bird and the Thrush |
Now tune their layes, on sprayes of every bush. |
The wanton frisking Kid, and soft-fleec'd Lambs |
Do jump and play before their feeding Dams, |
The tender tops of budding grass they crop, |
They joy in what they have, but more in hope: |
For though the frost hath lost his binding power, |
Yet many a fleece of snow and stormy shower |
Doth darken Sol's bright eye, makes us remember |
The pinching North-west wind of cold December. |
My second moneth is April, green and fair, |
Of longer dayes, and a more temperate Air: |
The Sun in Taurus keeps his residence, |
And with his warmer beams glanceth from thence |
This is the month whose fruitful showers produces |
All set and sown for all delights and uses: |
The Pear, the Plum, and Apple-tree now flourish |
The grass grows long, the hungry beast to nourish. |
The Primrose pale, and azure violet |
Among the virduous grass hath nature set, |
That when the Sun on's Love (the earth) doth shine |
These might as lace set out her garments fine. |
The fearfull bird his little house now builds |
In trees and walls, in Cities and in fields. |
The outside strong, the inside warm and neat; |
A natural Artificer compleat. |
The clocking hen her chirping chickins leads |
With wings & beak defends them from the gleads |
My next and last is fruitfull pleasant May, |
Wherein the earth is clad in rich array, |
The Sun now enters loving Gemini, |
And heats us with the glances of his eye, |
Our thicker rayment makes us lay aside |
Lest by his fervor we be torrifi'd. |
All flowers the Sun now with his beams discloses, |
Except the double pinks and matchless Roses. |
Now swarms the busy, witty, honey-Bee, |
Whose praise deserves a page from more then me |
The cleanly Huswife's Dary's now in th' prime, |
Her shelves and firkins fill'd for winter time. |
The meads with Cowslips, Honey-suckles dight, |
One hangs his head, the other stands upright: |
But both rejoyce at th' heaven's clear smiling face, |
More at her showers, which water them a space. |
For fruits my Season yields the early Cherry, |
The hasty Peas, and wholsome cool Strawberry. |
More solid fruits require a longer time, |
Each Season hath his fruit, so hath each Clime: |
Each man his own peculiar excellence, |
But none in all that hath preheminence. |
Sweet fragrant Spring, with thy short pittance fly |
Let some describe thee better then can I. |
Yet above all this priviledg is thine, |
Thy dayes still lengthen without least decline. |
Summer. |
When Spring had done, the Summer did begin, |
With melted tauny face, and garments thin, |
Resembling Fire, Choler, and Middle age, |
As Spring did Air, Blood, Youth in's equipage. |
Wiping the sweat from of her face that ran, |
With hair all wet she puffing thus began; |
Bright June, July and August hot are mine, |
In th' first Sol doth in crabbed Cancer shine. |
His progress to the North now's fully done, |
Then retrograde must be my burning Sun, |
Who to his Southward Tropick still is bent, |
Yet doth his parching heat but more augment |
Though he decline, because his flames so fair, |
Have throughly dry'd the earth, and heat the air. |
Like as an Oven that long time hath been heat, |
Whose vehemency at length doth grow so great, |
That if you do withdraw her burning store, |
Tis for a time as fervent as before. |
Now go those frolick Swains, the Shepherd Lads |
To wash the thick cloth'd flocks with pipes full glad |
In the cool streams they labour with delight |
Rubbing their dirty coats till they look white: |
Whose fleece when finely spun and deeply dy'd |
With Robes thereof Kings have been dignified. |
Blest rustick Swains, your pleasant quiet life, |
Hath envy bred in Kings that were at strife, |
Careless of worldly wealth you sing and pipe, |
Whilst they'r imbroyl'd in wars & troubles rife: |
Which made great Bajazet cry out in's woes, |
Oh happy shepherd which hath not to lose. |
Orthobulus, nor yet Sebastia great, |
But whist'leth to thy flock in cold and heat. |
Viewing the Sun by day, the Moon by night |
Endimions, Dianaes dear delight, |
Upon the grass resting your healthy limbs, |
By purling Brooks looking how fishes swims, |
If pride within your lowly Cells ere haunt, |
Of him that was Shepherd then King go vaunt. |
This moneth the Roses are distil'd in glasses, |
Whose fragrant smel all made perfumes surpasses |
The Cherry, Gooseberry are now In th' prime, |
And for all sorts of Pease, this is the time. |
July my next, the hott'st in all the year, |
The sun through Leo now takes his Career, |
Whose flaming breath doth melt us from afar, |
Increased by the star Canicular. |
This month from Julius Cæsar took its name, |
By Romans celebrated to his fame. |
Now go the Mowers to their flashing toyle, |
The Meadowes of their riches to dispoyle, |
With weary strokes, they take all in their way, |
Bearing the burning heat of the long day. |
The forks and Rakes do follow them amain, |
Which makes the aged fields look young again. |
The groaning Carts do bear away this prize, |
To Stacks and Barns where it for Fodder lyes. |
My next and last is August fiery hot |
(For'much, the Southward Sun abateth not) |
This Moneth he keeps with Virgo for a space, |
The dryed Earth is parched with his face. |
August of great Augustus took its name, |
Romes second Emperour of lasting fame, |
With sickles now the bending Reapers goe |
The rustling tress of terra down to mowe; |
And bundles up in sheaves, the weighty wheat, |
Which after Manchet makes for Kings to eat: |
The Barly, Rye and Pease should first had place, |
Although their bread have not so white a face. |
The Carter leads all home with whistling voyce. |
He plow'd with pain, but reaping doth rejoyce. |
His sweat, his toyle, his careful wakeful nights, |
His fruitful Crop abundantly requites. |
Now's ripe the Pear, Pear-plumb and Apricock, |
The prince of plumbs, whose stone's as hard as Rock |
The Summer seems but short, the Autumn hasts |
To shake his fruits, of most delicious tasts |
Like good old Age, whose younger juicy Roots |
Hath still ascended, to bear goodly fruits. |
Until his head be gray, and strength be gone. |
Yet then appears the worthy deeds he'th done: |
To feed his boughs exhausted hath his sap, |
Then drops his fruits into the eaters lap. |
Autumn. |
Of Autumn moneths September is the prime, |
Now day and night are equal in each Clime, |
The twelfth of this Sol riseth in the Line, |
And doth in poizing Libra this month shine. |
The vintage now is ripe, the grapes are prest, |
Whose lively liquor oft is curs'd and blest: |
For nought so good, but it may be abused, |
But its a precious juice when well its used. |
The raisins now in clusters dryed be, |
The Orange, Lemon dangle on the tree: |
The Pomegranate, the Fig are ripe also, |
And Apples now their yellow sides do show. |
Of Almonds, Quinces, Wardens, and of Peach, |
The season's now at hand of all and each, |
Sure at this time, time first of all began, |
And in this moneth was made apostate Man: |
For then in Eden was not only seen, |
Boughs full of leaves, or fruits unripe or green: |
Or withered stocks, which were all dry and dead, |
But trees with goodly fruits replenished; |
Which shows nor Summer Winter nor the Spring |
Our Grand-Sire was of Paradice made King: |
Nor could that temp'rate Clime such difference make, |
If scited as the most Judicious take. |
October is my next, we hear in this |
The Northern winter-blasts begin to hiss, |
In Scorpio resideth now the Sun, |
And his declining heat is almost done. |
The fruitless Trees all withered now do stand, |
Whose sapless yellow leavs by winds are fan'd, |
Which notes when youth and strength have past their prime |
Decrepit age must also have its time. |
The Sap doth slily creep towards the Earth |
There rests, until the Sun give it a birth. |
So doth old Age still tend unto his grave, |
Where also he his winter time must have; |
But when the Sun of righteousness draws nigh, |
His dead old stock, shall mount again on high. |
November is my last, for Time doth haste, |
We now of winters sharpness 'gins to tast. |
This moneth the Sun's in Sagitarius, |
So farre remote, his glances warm not us. |
Almost at shortest is the shorten'd day, |
The Northern pole beholdeth not one ray, |
Nor Greenland, Groanland, Finland, Lapland, see |
No Sun, to lighten their obscurity; |
Poor wretches that in total darkness lye, |
With minds more dark then is the dark'ned Sky. |
Beaf, Brawn, and Pork are now in great request, |
And solid meats our stomacks can digest. |
This time warm cloaths, full diet and good fires, |
Our pinched flesh, and hungry mawes requires; |
Old, cold, dry Age, and Earth Autumn resembles, |
And Melancholy which most of all dissembles. |
I must be short, and shorts, the short'ned day, |
What winter hath to tell, now let him say. |
Winter. |
Cold, moist, young flegmy winter now doth lye |
In swadling Clouts, like new born Infancy |
Bound up with frosts, and furr'd with hail & snows, |
And like an Infant, still it taller grows; |
December is my first, and now the Sun |
To th' Southward Tropick his swift race doth run: |
This moneth he's hous'd in horned Capricorn, |
From thence he 'gins to length the shortned morn, |
Through Christendome with great Feastivity, |
Now's held, (but ghest) for blest Nativity, |
Cold frozen January next comes in, |
Chilling the blood and shrinking up the skin; |
In Aquarius now keeps the long wisht Sun, |
And Northward his unwearied Course doth run: |
The day much longer then it was before, |
The cold not lessened, but augmented more. |
Now Toes and Ears, and Fingers often freeze, |
And Travellers their noses sometimes leese. |
Moist snowie February is my last, |
I care not how the winter time doth haste, |
In Pisces now the golden Sun doth shine, |
And Northward still approaches to the Line, |
The Rivers 'gin to ope, the snows to melt, |
And some warm glances from his face are felt; |
Which is increased by the lengthen'd day, |
Until by's heat, he drive all cold away, |
And thus the year in Circle runneth round: |
Where first it did begin, in th' end its found. |
My Subjects bare, my Brain is bad, |
Or better Lines you should have had; |
The first fell in so nat'rally, |
I knew not how to pass it by; |
The last, though bad, I could not mend, |
Accept therefore of what is pen'd, |
And all the faults that you shall spy |
Shall at your feet for pardon cry. |
The four Monarchyes,
the Assyrian being the first,
beginning under Nimrod, 131. Years
after the Flood,
WHen time was young, & World in Infancy, |
Man did not proudly strive for Soveraignty: |
But each one thought his petty Rule was high, |
If of his house he held the Monarchy. |
This was the golden Age, but after came |
The boisterous son of Chus, Grand-Child to Ham, |
That mighty Hunter, who in his strong toyles |
Both Beasts and Men subjected to his spoyles: |
The strong foundation of proud Babel laid, |
Erech, Accad, and Culneh also made. |
These were his first, all stood in Shinar land, |
From thence he went Assyria to command, |
And mighty Niniveh, he there begun, |
Not finished till he his race had run. |
Resen, Caleh, and Rehoboth likewise |
By him to Cities eminent did rise. |
Of Saturn, he was the Original, |
Whom the succeeding times a God did call, |
When thus with rule, he had been dignify'd, |
One hundred fourteen years he after dy'd. |
Belus. |
Great Nimrod dead, Belus the next his Son |
Confirms the rule, his Father had begun; |
Whose acts and power is not for certainty |
Left to the world, by any History. |
But yet this blot for ever on him lies, |
He taught the people first to Idolize: |
Titles Divine he to himself did take, |
Alive and dead, a God they did him make. |
This is that Bel the Chaldees worshiped, |
Whose Priests in Stories oft are mentioned; |
This is that Baal to whom the Israelites |
So oft profanely offered sacred Rites: |
This is Beelzebub God of Ekronites, |
Likewise Baalpeor of the Mohabites, |
His reign was short, for as I calculate, |
At twenty five ended his Regal date. |
Ninus. |
His Father dead, Ninus begins his reign, |
Transfers his seat to the Assyrian plain; |
And mighty Niniveh more mighty made, |
Whose Foundation was by his Grand-sire laid: |
Four hundred forty Furlongs wall'd about, |
On which stood fifteen hundred Towers stout. |
The walls one hundred sixty foot upright, |
So broad three Chariots run abrest there might. |
Upon the pleasant banks of Tygris floud |
This stately Seat of warlike Ninus stood: |
This Ninus for a God his Father canonized, |
To whom the sottish people sacrificed. |
This Tyrant did his Neighbours all oppress, |
Where e're he warr'd he had too good success. |
Barzanes the great Armenian King |
By force and fraud did under Tribute bring. |
The Median Country he did also gain, |
Thermus their King he caused to be slain; |
An Army of three millions he led out |
Against the Bactrians (but that I doubt) |
Zoroaster their King he likewise slew, |
And all the greater Asia did subdue. |
Semiramis from Menon did he take |
Then drown'd himself, did Menon for her sake. |
Fifty two years he reign'd, (as we are told) |
The world then was two thousand nineteen old. |
Semiramis. |
This great oppressing Ninus, dead and gone, |
His wife Semiramis usurp'd the Throne; |
She like a brave Virago played the Rex |
And was both shame and glory of her Sex: |
Her birth place was Philistines Ascolan, |
Her mother Dorceta a Curtizan. |
Others report she was a vestal Nun, |
Adjudged to be drown'd for th' crime she'd done. |
Transform'd into a Fish by Venus will, |
Her beauteous face, (they feign) reteining still. |
Sure from this Fiction Dagon first began, |
Changing the womans face into a man: |
But all agree that from no lawfull bed, |
This great renowned Empress issued: |
For which she was obscurely nourished, |
Whence rose that Fable, she by birds was fed. |
This gallant Dame unto the Bactrian warre, |
Accompanying her husband Menon farr, |
Taking a town, such valour she did show, |
That Ninus amorous of her soon did grow, |
And thought her fit to make a Monarchs wife, |
Which was the cause poor Menon lost his life: |
She flourishing with Ninus long did reign, |
Till her Ambition caus'd him to be slain. |
That having no Compeer, she might rule all, |
Or else she sought revenge for Menon's fall. |
Some think the Greeks this slander on her cast, |
As on her life Licentious, and unchast, |
That undeserv'd, they blur'd her name and fame |
By their aspersions, cast upon the same: |
But were her virtues more or less, or none, |
She for her potency must go alone. |
Her wealth she shew'd in building Babylon, |
Admir'd of all, but equaliz'd of none; |
The Walls so strong, and curiously was wrought, |
That after Ages, Skill by them was taught: |
With Towers and Bulwarks made of costly stone, |
Quadrangle was the form it stood upon, |
Each Square was fifteen thousand paces long, |
An hundred gates it had of mettal strong: |
Three hundred sixty foot the walls in height, |
Almost incredible, they were in breadth |
Some writers say, six Chariots might affront |
With great facility, march safe upon't: |
About the Wall a ditch so deep and wide, |
That like a River long it did abide. |
Three hundred thousand men here day by day |
Bestow'd their labour, and receiv'd their pay. |
And that which did all cost and Art excell, |
The wondrous Temple was, she rear'd to Bell: |
Which in the midst of this brave Town was plac'd, |
Continuing till Xerxes it defac'd: |
Whose stately top above the Clouds did rise, |
From whence Astrologers oft view'd the Skies. |
This to describe in each particular, |
A structure rare I should but rudely marre. |
Her Gardens, Bridges, Arches, mounts and spires |
All eyes that saw, or Ears that hear admires, |
In Shinar plain on the Euphratian flood |
This wonder of the world, this Babel stood. |
An expedition to the East she made |
Staurobates, his Country to invade: |
Her Army of four millions did consist, |
Each may believe it as his fancy list. |
Her Camels, Chariots, Gallyes in such number, |
As puzzles best Historians to remember; |
But this is wonderful, of all those men, |
They say, but twenty e're came back agen. |
The River Indus swept them half away, |
The rest Staurobates in fight did slay; |
This was last progress of this mighty Queen, |
Who in her Country never more was seen. |
The Poets feign'd her turn'd into a Dove, |
Leaving the world to Venus soar'd above: |
Which made the Assyrians many a day, |
A Dove within their Ensigns to display: |
Forty two years she reign'd, and then she di'd |
But by what means we are not certifi'd. |
Ninias or Zamies. |
His Mother dead, Ninias obtains his right, |
A Prince wedded to ease and to delight, |
Or else was his obedience very great, |
To sit thus long (obscure) rob'd of his Seat. |
Some write his Mother put his habit on, |
Which made the people think they serv'd her Son: |
But much it is, in more then forty years |
This fraud in war nor peace at all appears: |
More like it is his lust with pleasures fed, |
He sought no rule till she was gone and dead. |
What then he did of worth can no man tell, |
But is suppos'd to be that Amraphel |
Who warr'd with Sodoms and Gomorrahs King, |
'Gainst whom his trained bands Abram did bring, |
But this is farre unlike, he being Son |
Unto a Father that all Countryes won |
So suddenly should loose so great a state, |
With petty Kings to joyne Confederate. |
Nor can those Reasons which wise Raileih finds, |
Well satisfie the most considerate minds: |
We may with learned Usher better say, |
He many Ages liv'd after that day. |
And that Semiramis then flourished |
When famous Troy was so beleaguered: |
What e're he was, or did, or how it fell, |
We may suggest our thoughts but cannot tell. |
For Ninias and all his race are left |
In deep oblivion, of acts bereft: |
And many hundred years in silence sit, |
Save a few Names a new Berosus writ. |
And such as care not what befalls their fames, |
May feign as many acts as he did Names; |
It may suffice, if all be true that's past. |
T' Sardanapalas next, we will make haste. |
Sardanapalas. |
Sardanapalas, Son to Ocrazapes, |
Who wallowed in all voluptuousness, |
That palliardizing sot that out of dores, |
Ne're shew'd his face but revell'd with his whores |
Did wear their garbs, their gestures imitate, |
And in their kind, t' excel did emulate. |
His baseness knowing, and the peoples hate |
Kept close, fearing his well deserved fate; |
It chanc'd Arbaces brave unwarily, |
His Master like a Strumpet clad did spye. |
His manly heart disdained (in the least) |
Longer to serve this Metamorphos'd Beast; |
Unto Belosus then he brake his mind, |
Who sick of his disease, he soon did find |
These two, rul'd Media and Babilon |
Both for their King, held their Dominion; |
Belosus promised Arbaces aid, |
Arbaces him fully to be repayd. |
The last: The Medes and Persians do invite |
Against their monstrous King to use their might. |
Belosus, the Chaldeans doth require |
And the Arabians, to further his desire: |
These all agree, and forty thousand make |
The Rule, from their unworthy Prince to take: |
These Forces mustered and in array |
Sardanapalas leaves his Apish play. |
And though of wars, he did abhor the sight; |
Fear of his diadem did force him fight: |
And either by his valour, or his fate, |
Arbaces Courage he did so abate; |
That in dispair, he left the Field and fled, |
But with fresh hopes Belosus succoured, |
From Bactria, an Army was at hand |
Prest for this Service by the Kings Command: |
These with celerity Arbaces meet, |
And with all Terms of amity them greet. |
With promises their necks now to unyoke, |
And their Taxations sore all to revoke; |
T'infranchise them, to grant what they could crave, |
No priviledge to want, Subjects should have, |
Only intreats them, to joyn their Force with his, |
And win the Crown, which was the way to bliss. |
Won by his loving looks, more by his speech, |
T' accept of what they could, they all beseech: |
Both sides their hearts their hands, & bands unite, |
And set upon their Princes Camp that night; |
Who revelling in Cups, sung care away, |
For victory obtain'd the other day: |
And now surpris'd, by this unlookt for fright, |
Bereft of wits, were slaughtered down right. |
The King his brother leavs, all to sustain, |
And speeds himself to Niniveh amain. |
But Salmeneus slain, the Army falls; |
The King's pursu'd unto the City Walls, |
But he once in, pursuers came to late, |
The Walls and Gates their hast did terminate, |
There with all store he was so well provided: |
That what Arbaces did, was but derided: |
Who there incamp'd, two years for little end, |
But in the third, the River prov'd his friend, |
For by the rain, was Tygris so o'reflown, |
Part of that stately Wall was overthrown. |
Arbaces marches in, the Town he takes, |
For few or none (it seems) resistance makes: |
And now they saw fulfil'd a Prophesy, |
That when the River prov'd their Enemy, |
Their strong wal'd Town should suddenly be taken |
By this accomplishment, their hearts were shaken. |
Sardanapalas did not seek to fly, |
This his inevitable destiny; |
But all his wealth and friends together gets, |
Then on himself, and them a fire he sets. |
This was last Monarch of great Ninus race |
That for twelve hundred years had held the place; |
Twenty he reign'd same time, as Stories tell, |
That Amaziah was King of Israel. |
His Father was then King (as we suppose) |
When Jonah for their sins denounc'd those woes. |
He did repent, the threatning was not done, |
But now accomplish'd in his wicked Son. |
Arbaces thus of all becoming Lord, |
Ingeniously with all did keep his word. |
Of Babylon Belosus he made King, |
With overplus of all the wealth therein. |
To Bactrians he gave their liberty, |
Of Ninivites he caused none to dye. |
But suffer'd with their goods, to go else where, |
Not granting them now to inhabit there: |
For he demolished that City great, |
And unto Media transfer'd his Seat. |
Such was his promise which he firmly made, |
To Medes and Persians when he crav'd their aid: |
A while he and his race aside must stand, |
Not pertinent to what we have in hand; |
And Belochus in's progeny pursue, |
Who did this Monarchy begin anew. |
Belosus or Belochus. |
Belosus setled in his new old Seat, |
Not so content but aiming to be great, |
Incroaching still upon the bordering lands, |
Till Mesopotamia he got in's hands. |
And either by compound or else by strength, |
Assyria he gain'd also at length; |
Then did rebuild, destroyed Nineveh, |
A costly work which none could do but he, |
Who own'd the Treasures of proud Babylon, |
And those that seem'd with Sardanapalas gone; |
For though his Palace did in ashes lye, |
The fire those Mettals could not damnifie; |
From these with diligence he rakes, |
Arbaces suffers all, and all he takes, |
He thus inricht by this new tryed gold. |
Raises a Phænix new, from grave o'th' old; |
And from this heap did after Ages see |
As fair a Town, as the first Niniveh. |
When this was built, and matters all in peace |
Molests poor Israel, his wealth t' increase. |
A thousand Talents of Menahem had, |
(Who to be rid of such a guest was glad;) |
In sacrid writ he's known by name of Pul, |
Which makes the world of difference so full. |
That he and Belochus could not one be, |
But Circumstance doth prove the verity; |
And times of both computed so fall out, |
That these two made but one, we need not doubt: |
What else he did, his Empire to advance, |
To rest content we must, in ignorance. |
Forty eight years he reign'd, his race then run, |
He left his new got Kingdome to his Son. |
Tiglath Pulassar. |
Belosus dead, Tiglath his warlike Son, |
Next treads those steps, by which his Father won; |
Damascus ancient Seat, of famous Kings |
Under subjection, by his Sword he brings. |
Resin their valiant King he also slew, |
And Syria t' obedience did subdue. |
Judas bad King occasioned this war, |
When Resins force his Borders sore did marre, |
And divers Cities by strong hand did seaze: |
To Tiglath then, doth Ahaz send for ease, |
The Temple robs, so to fulfil his ends, |
And to Assyria's King a present sends. |
I am thy Servant and thy Son, (quoth he) |
From Resin, and from Pekah set me free, |
Gladly doth Tiglath this advantage take, |
And succours Ahaz, yet for Tiglath's sake. |
Then Resin slain, his Army overthrown, |
He Syria makes a Province of his own. |
Unto Damascus then comes Judah's King, |
His humble thankfulness (in haste) to bring, |
Acknowledging th' Assyrians high desert, |
To whom he ought all loyalty of heart. |
But Tiglath having gain'd his wished end, |
Proves unto Ahaz but a feigned friend; |
All Israels lands beyond Jordan he takes, |
In Galilee he woful havock makes. |
Through Syria now he march'd none stopt his way, |
And Ahaz open at his mercy lay; |
Who still implor'd his love, but was distrest; |
This was that Ahaz, who so high transgrest: |
Thus Tiglath reign'd, & warr'd twenty seven years |
Then by his death releas'd was Israels fears. |
Salmanassar or Nabanassar. |
Tiglath deceas'd, Salmanassar was next, |
He Israelites, more then his Father vext; |
Hoshea their last King he did invade, |
And him six years his Tributary made; |
But weary of his servitude, he sought |
To Egypt King, which did avail him nought; |
For Salmanassar with a mighty Host, |
Besieg'd his Regal Town, and spoyl'd his Coast, |
And did the people, nobles, and their King, |
Into perpetual thraldome that time bring; |
Those that from Joshuah's time had been a state, [10 years. |
Did Justice now by him eradicate: |
This was that strange, degenerated brood, |
On whom, nor threats, nor mercies could do good; |
Laden with honour, prisoners, and with spoyle, |
Returns triumphant Victor to his soyle; |
He placed Israel there, where he thought best, |
Then sent his Colonies, theirs to invest; |
Thus Jacobs Sons in Exile must remain, |
And pleasant Canaan never saw again: |
Where now those ten Tribes are, can no man tell, |
Or how they fare, rich, poor, or ill or well; |
Whether the Indians of the East, or West, |
Or wild Tartarians, as yet ne're blest. |
Or else those Chinoes rare, whose wealth & arts |
Hath bred more wonder then belief in hearts: |
But what, or where they are; yet know we this, |
They shall return, and Zion see with bliss. |
Senacherib. |
Senacherib Salmanasser succeeds, |
Whose haughty heart is showne in words & deeds |
His wars, none better then himself can boast, |
On Henah, Arpad, and on Juahs coast; |
On Hevahs and on Shepharvaims gods, |
'Twixt them and Israels he knew no odds, |
Untill the thundring hand of heaven he felt, |
Which made his Army into nothing melt: |
With shame then turn'd to Ninive again, |
And by his sons in's Idols house was slain. |
Essarhadon. |
His Son, weak Essarhaddon reign'd in's place, |
The fifth, and last of great Bellosus race. |
Brave Merodach, the Son of Baladan, |
In Babylon Lieftenant to this man |
Of opportunity advantage takes, |
And on his Masters ruines his house makes, |
As Belosus his Soveraign did onthrone, |
So he's now stil'd the King of Babilon. |
After twelve years did Essarhaddon dye, |
And Merodach assume the Monarchy. |
Merodach Balladan. |
All yield to him, but Niniveh kept free, |
Untill his Grand-child made her bow the knee. |
Ambassadors to Hezekiah sent, |
His health congratulates with complement. |
Ben Merodach. |
Ben Merodach Successor to this King, |
Of whom is little said in any thing, |
But by conjecture this, and none but he |
Led King Manasseh to Captivity. |
Nebulassar. |
Brave Nebulassar to this King was son, |
The famous Niniveh by him was won, |
For fifty years, or more, it had been free, |
Now yields her neck unto captivity: |
A Vice-Roy from her foe she's glad to accept, |
By whom in firm obedience she is kept. |
This King's less fam'd for all the acts he's done, |
Then being Father to so great a Son. |
Nebuchadnezzar, or Nebopolassar. |
The famous acts of this heroick King |
Did neither Homer, Hesiod, Virgil sing: |
Nor of his Wars have we the certainty |
From some Thucidides grave history; |
Nor's Metamorphosis from Ovids book, |
Nor his restoriag from old Legends took: |
But by the Prophets, Pen-men most divine, |
This prince in's magnitude doth ever shine: |
This was of Monarchyes that head of gold, |
The richest and the dreadfullest to behold: |
This was that tree whose branches fill'd the earth, |
Under whose shadow birds and beasts had birth: |
This was that king of kings did what he pleas'd, |
Kill'd, sav'd pul'd down, set up, or pain'd or eas'd; |
And this was he, who when he fear'd the least |
Was changed from a King into a beast. |
This Prince the last year of his fathers reign |
Against Jehojakim marcht with his train, |
Judahs poor King besieg'd and succourless |
Yields to his mercy, and the present 'stress; |
His Vassal is, gives pledges for his truth, |
Children of royal blood, unblemish'd youth: |
Wise Daniel and his fellowes, mongst the rest, |
By the victorious king to Babel's prest: |
The Temple of rich ornaments defac'd, |
And in his Idols house the vessels plac'd. |
The next year he with unresisted hand |
Quite vanguish'd Pharaoh Necho with his band: |
By great Euphrates did his army fall, |
Which was the loss of Syria withall. |
Then into Egypt Necho did retire, |
Which in few years proves the Assirians hire. |
A mighty army next he doth prepare, |
And unto wealthy Tyre in hast repair. |
Such was the scituation of this place, |
As might not him, but all the world out-face, |
That in her pride she knew not which to boast |
Whether her wealth, or yet her strength was most |
How in all merchandize she did excel, |
None but the true Ezekiel need to tell. |
And for her strength, how hard she was to gain, |
Can Babels tired souldiers tell with pain. |
Within an Island had this city seat, |
Divided from the Main by channel great: |
Of costly ships and Gallyes she had store, |
And Mariners to handle sail and oar: |
But the Chaldeans had nor ships nor skill, |
Their shoulders must their Masters mind fulfill, |
Fetcht rubbish from the opposite old town, |
And in the channel threw each burden down; |
Where after many essayes, they made at last |
The sea firm land, whereon the Army past, |
And took the wealthy town; but all the gain, |
Requited not the loss, the toyle and pain. |
Full thirteen years in this strange work he spent |
Before he could accomplish his intent: |
And though a Victor home his Army leads, |
With peeled shoulders, and with balded heads. |
When in the Tyrian war this King was hot, |
Jehojakim his oath had clean forgot, |
Thinks this the fittest time to break his bands |
Whilest Babels King thus deep engaged stands: |
But he whose fortunes all were in the ebbe, |
Had all his hopes like to a spiders web; |
For this great King withdraws part of his force, |
To Judah marches with a speedy course, |
And unexpected finds the feeble Prince |
Whom he chastis'd thus for his proud offence, |
Fast bound, intends to Babel him to send, |
But chang'd his mind, & caus'd his life there end, |
Then cast him out like to a naked Ass, |
For this is he for whom none said alas. |
His son he suffered three months to reign, |
Then from his throne he pluck'd him down again, |
Whom with his mother he to Babel led, |
And seven and thirty years in prison fed: |
His Uncle he establish'd in his place |
(Who was last King of holy Davids race) |
But he as perjur'd as Jehojakim, |
They lost more now then e're they lost by him. |
Seven years he kept his faith, and safe he dwells; |
But in the eighth against his Prince rebels: |
The ninth came Nebuchadnezzar with power, |
Besieg'd his city, temple, Zions tower, |
And after eighteen months he took them all: |
The Walls so strong, that stood so long, now fall. |
The cursed King by flight could no wise fly |
His well deserv'd and foretold misery: |
But being caught to Babels wrathfull King |
With children, wives and Nobles all they bring, |
Where to the sword all but himself were put, |
And with that wofull sight his eyes close shut. |
Ah! hapless man, whose darksome contemplation |
Was nothing but such gastly meditation. |
In midst of Babel now till death he lyes; |
Yet as was told ne're saw it with his eyes. |
The Temple's burnt the vessels had away. |
The towres and palaces brought to decay: |
Where late of harp and Lute were heard the noise |
Now Zim & Jim lift up their scrieching voice. |
All now of worth are Captive led with tears, |
And sit bewailing Zion seventy years. |
With all these conquests, Babels King rests not, |
No not when Moab, Edom he had got, |
Kedar and Hazar, the Arabians too, |
All Vassals at his hands for Grace must sue. |
A total conquest of rich Egypt makes, |
All rule he from the ancient Phraohes takes, |
Who had for sixteen hundred years born sway, |
To Babilons proud King now yields the day. |
Then Put and Lud do at his mercy stand. |
Where e're he goes, he conquers every land. |
His sumptuous buildings passes all conceit, |
Which wealth and strong ambition made so great. |
His Image Judahs Captives worship not, |
Although the Furnace be seven times more hot. |
His dreams wise Daniel doth expound full well, |
And his unhappy chang with grief foretell. |
Strange melancholy humours on him lay, |
Which for seven years his reason took away, |
Which from no natural causes did proceed, |
But for his pride, so had the heavens decreed. |
The time expir'd, bruitish remains no more, |
But Government resumes as heretofore: |
In splendor, and in Majesty he sits, |
Contemplating those times he lost his witts. |
And if by words we may ghess at the heart, |
This king among the righteous had a part: |
Fourty four years he reign'd, which being run, |
He left his wealth and conquests to his son. |
Evilmerodach. |
Babel's great Monarch now laid in the dust, |
His son possesses wealth and rule as just: |
And in the first year of his Royalty |
Easeth Jehojakims Captivity: |
Poor forlorn Prince, who had all state forgot |
In seven and thirty years had seen no jot. |
Among the conquer'd Kings that there did ly |
Is Judah's King now lifted up on high: |
But yet in Babel he must still remain, |
And native Canaan never see again: |
Unlike his Father Evilmerodach, |
Prudence and magnanimity did lack; |
Fair Egypt is by his remisness lost, |
Arabia, and all the bordering coast. |
Warrs with the Medes unhappily he wag'd |
(Within which broyles rich Croesus was ingag'd) |
His Army routed, and himself there slain: |
His Kingdome to Belshazzar did remain. |
Belshazzar. |
Unworthy Belshazzar next wears the crown, |
Whose acts profane a sacred Pen sets down, |
His lust and crueltyes in storyes find, |
A royal State rul'd by a bruitish mind. |
His life so base, and dissolute invites |
The noble Persian to invade his rights. |
Who with his own, and Uncles power anon, |
Layes siedge to's Regal Seat, proud Babylon, |
The coward King, whose strength lay in his walls, |
To banquetting and revelling now falls, |
To shew his little dread, but greater store, |
To chear his friends, and scorn his foes the more. |
The holy vessels thither brought long since, |
They carrows'd in, and sacrilegious prince |
Did praise his Gods of mettal, wood, and stone, |
Protectors of his Crown, and Babylon, |
But he above, his doings did deride, |
And with a hand soon dashed all this pride. |
The King upon the wall casting his eye, |
The fingers of a hand writing did spy, |
Which horrid sight, he fears must needs portend |
Destruction to his Crown, to's Person end. |
With quaking knees, and heart appall'd he cries, |
For the Soothsayers, and Magicians wise; |
This language strange to read, and to unfold; |
With gifts of Scarlet robe, and Chain of gold, |
And highest dignity, next to the King, |
To him that could interpret, clear this thing: |
But dumb the gazing Astrologers stand, |
Amazed at the writing, and the hand. |
None answers the affrighted Kings intent, |
Who still expects some fearful sad event; |
As dead, alive he sits, as one undone: |
In comes the Queen, to chear her heartless Son. |
Of Daniel tells, who in his grand-sires dayes |
Was held in more account then now he was. |
Daniel in haste is brought before the King, |
Who doth not flatter, nor once cloak the thing; |
Reminds him of his Grand-Sires height and fall, |
And of his own notorious sins withall: |
His Drunkenness, and his profaness high, |
His pride and sottish gross Idolatry. |
The guilty King with colour pale and dead |
Then hears his Mene and his Tekel read. |
And one thing did worthy a King (though late) |
Perform'd his word to him that told his fate. |
That night victorious Cyrus took the town, |
Who soon did terminate his life and crown; |
With him did end the race of Baladan: |
And now the Persian Monarchy began. |
The End of the Assyrian Monarchy.
The Second Monarchy,
being the Persian, began under
Cyrus, Darius being his Uncle and
Father in-law reigned with him
about two years.
CYrus Cambyses Son of Persia King, |
Whom Lady Mandana did to him bring, |
She daughter unto great Astiages, |
He in descent the seventh from Arbaces. |
Cambyses was of Achemenes race, |
Who had in Persia the Lieftenants place |
When Sardanapalus was overthrown, |
And from that time had held it as his own. |
Cyrus, Darius Daughter took to wife, |
And so unites two Kingdomes without strife. |
Darius unto Mandana was brother, |
Adopts her son for his, having no other. |
This is of Cyrus the true pedegree, |
Whose Ancestors were royal in degree: |
His Mothers dream, and Grand-Sires cruelty, |
His preservation, in his misery, |
His nourishment afforded by a Bitch, |
Are fit for such, whose ears for Fables itch. |
He in his younger dayes an Army led, |
Against great Cressus then of Lidia head; |
Who over-curious of wars event, |
For information to Apollo went: |
And the ambiguous Oracle did trust, |
So overthrown by Cyrus, as was just; |
Who him prasues to Sardis, takes the Town, |
Where all that dare resist are slaughter'd down; |
Disguised Cressus hop'd to scape i'th' throng, |
Who had no might to save himself from wrong; |
But as he past, his Son who was born dumb, |
With pressing grief and sorrow overcome: |
Among the tumult, bloud-shed, and the strife, |
Brake his long silence, cry'd, spare Cressus life: |
Cressus thus known, it was great Cyrus doom, |
(A hard decree) to ashes he consume; |
Then on a wood pile set, where all might eye, |
He Solon, Solon, Solon, thrice did cry. |
The Reason of those words Cyrus demands, |
Who Solon was? to whom he lifts his hands; |
Then to the King he makes this true report, |
That Solon sometimes at his stately Court, |
His Treasures, pleasures, pomp and power did see, |
And viewing all, at all nought mov'd was he: |
That Cressus angry, urg'd him to express, |
If ever King equal'd his happiness. |
(Quoth he) that man for happy we commend, |
Whose happy life attains an happy end. |
Cyrus with pitty mov'd, knowing Kings stand, |
Now up and down, as fortune turns her hand, |
Weighing the Age, and greatness of the Prince, |
(His Mothers Uncle) stories do evince: |
Gave him his life, and took him for a friend, |
Did to him still his chief designs commend. |
Next war the restless Cyrus thought upon, |
Was conquest of the stately Babilon, |
Now treble wall'd, and moated so about, |
That all the world they need not fear nor doubt; |
To drain this ditch, he many Sluces cut, |
But till convenient time their heads kept shut; |
That night Belshazzar feasted all his rout, |
He cut those banks, and let the River out, |
And to the walls securely marches on, |
Not finding a defendant thereupon; |
Enters the Town, the sottish King he slayes, |
Upon Earths richest spoyles his Souldiers preys; |
Here twenty years provision good he found, |
Forty five miles this City scarce could round; |
This head of Kingdomes Chaldees excellence, |
For Owles and Satyres made a residence; |
Yet wondrous monuments this stately Queen, |
A thousand years had after to be seen. |
Cyrus doth now the Jewish Captives free, |
An Edict made, the Temple builded be, |
He with his Uncle Daniel sets on high, |
And caus'd his foes in Lions Den to dye. |
Long after this he 'gainst the Scythians goes, |
And Tomris Son and Army overthrows; |
Which to revenge she hires a mighty power, |
And sets on Cyrus, in a fatal hour; |
There routs his Host, himself she prisoner takes, |
And at one blow (worlds head) she headless makes |
The which she bath'd, within a But of bloud, |
Using such taunting words, as she thought good. |
But Xenophon reports he di'd in's bed, |
In honour, peace, and wealth, with a grey head; |
And in his Town of Passagardes lyes, |
Where some long after sought in vain for prize, |
But in his Tombe, was only to be found |
Two Scythian boys, a Sword and Target round: |
And Alexander coming to the same, |
With honours great, did celebrate his fame. |
Three daughters and two Sons he left behind, |
Innobled more by birth, then by their mind; |
Thirty two years in all this Prince did reign, |
But eight whilst Babylon, he did retain: |
And though his conquests made the earth to groan, |
Now quiet lyes under one marble stone. |
And with an Epitaph, himself did make, |
To shew how little Land he then should take. |
Cambyses. |
Cambyses no wayes like his noble Sire, |
Yet to inlarge his State had some desire, |
His reign with bloud and Incest first begins, |
Then sends to find a Law, for these his sins; |
That Kings with Sisters match, no Law they find, |
But that the Persian King may act his mind: |
He wages war the fifth year of his reign, |
'Gainst Egypts King, who there by him was slain. |
And all of Royal Blood, that came to hand, |
He seized first of Life, and then of Land, |
(But little Narus scap'd that cruel fate, |
Who grown a man, resum'd again his State.) |
He next to Cyprus sends his bloudy Host, |
Who landing soon upon that fruitful Coast, |
Made Evelthon their King with bended knee, |
To hold his own, of his free Courtesie. |
Their Temple he destroys, not for his Zeal, |
For he would be profest, God of their weal; |
Yea, in his pride, he ventured so farre, |
To spoyle the Temple of great Jupiter: |
But as they marched o're those desert sands, |
The stormed dust o'rewhelm'd his daring bands; |
But scorning thus, by Jove to be outbrav'd, |
A second Army he had almost grav'd, |
But vain he found to fight with Elements, |
So left his sacrilegious bold intents. |
The Egyptian Apis then he likewise slew, |
Laughing to scorn, that sottish Calvish Crew: |
If all this heat had been for pious end, |
Cambyses to the Clouds we might commend. |
But he that 'fore the Gods himself prefers, |
Is more profane then gross Idolaters; |
He after this, upon suspition vain, |
Unjustly caus'd his brother to be slain. |
Praxaspes into Persia then is sent, |
To act in secret, this his lewd intent: |
His Sister (whom Incestuously he wed,) |
Hearing her harmless brother thus was dead. |
His wofull death with tears did so bemoan, |
That by her husbands charge, she caught her own, |
She with her fruit at once were both undone |
Who would have born a Nephew and a son. |
Oh hellesh husband, brother, uncle, Sire, |
Thy cruelty all ages will admire. |
This strange severity he sometimes us'd |
Upon a Judge, for taking bribes accus'd, |
Flay'd him alive, hung up his stuffed skin |
Over his seat, then plac'd his son therein, |
To whom he gave this in remembrance, |
Like fault must look for the like recompence. |
His cruelty was come unto that height, |
He spar'd nor foe, nor friend, nor favourite. |
'Twould be no pleasure, but a tedious thing |
To tell the facts of this most bloody King, |
Feared of all, but lov'd of few or none, |
All wisht his short reign past before 'twas done. |
At last two of his Officers he hears |
Had set one Smerdis up, of the same years, |
And like in feature to his brother dead, |
Ruling, as they thought best under this head. |
The people ignorant of what was done, |
Obedience yielded as to Cyrus son. |
Toucht with this news to Persia he makes, |
But in the way his sword just vengeance takes, |
Unsheathes, as he his horse mounted on high, |
And with a mortal thrust wounds him ith' thigh, |
Which ends before begun his home-bred warr: |
So yields to death, that dreadfull Conquerour. |
Grief for his brothers death he did express, |
And more, because he died Issueless. |
The male line of great Cyrus now had end, |
The Female to many Ages did extend. |
A Babylon in Egypt did he make, |
And Meroe built for his fair Sisters sake. |
Eight years he reign'd, a short, yet too long time |
Cut off in's wickedness in's strength and prime. |
The inter regnum between Cambyses And Darius Histaspes. |
Childless Cambyses on the sudden dead, |
(The Princes meet, to chuse one in his stead, |
Of which the chief was seven, call'd Satrapes, |
Who like to Kings, rul'd Kingdomes as they please, |
Descended all of Achemenes bloud, |
And Kinsmen in account to th'King they stood. |
And first these noble Magi 'gree upon, |
To thrust th' imposter Smerdis out of Throne: |
Then Forces instantly they raise, and rout |
This King with his Conspirators so stout, |
But yet 'fore this was done much bloud was shed, |
And two of these great Peers in Field lay dead. |
Some write that sorely hurt they scap'd away, |
But so, or no, sure 'tis they won the day. |
All things in peace, and Rebels throughly quell'd, |
A Consultation by those States was held, |
What form of government now to erect |
The old, or new, which best, in what respect |
The greater part declin'd a Monarchy |
So late crusht by their Princes tyranny, |
And thought the people would more happy be |
If govern'd by an Aristocracy: |
But others thought (none of the dullest brain) |
That better one then many tyrants reign. |
What Arguments they us'd, I know not well, |
Too politick, its like, for me to tell, |
But in conclusion they all agree, |
Out of the seven a Monarch chosen be. |
All envy to avoid, this was thought on |
Upon a green to meet by rising sun, |
And he whose horse before the rest should neigh, |
Of all the Peers should have precedency. |
They all attend on the appointed hour, |
Praying to fortune for a kingly power. |
Then mounting on their snorting coursers proud, |
Darius lusty Stallion neigh'd full loud. |
The Nobles all alight, bow to their King, |
And joyfull acclamations shrill they ring. |
A thousand times, long live the King they cry, |
Let Tyranny with dead Cambyses dye: |
Then all attend him to his royall room: |
Thanks for all this to's crafty stable-groom. |
Darius Hystaspes. |
Darius by election made a King, |
His title to make strong, omits no thing: |
He two of Cyrus daughters then doth wed, |
Two of his Neeces takes to Nuptial bed, |
By which he cuts their hopes for future time, |
That by such steps to Kingdomes often clime. |
And now a King by mariage choice and blood: |
Three strings to's bow, the least of which is good; |
Yet firmly more, the peoples hearts to bind. |
Made wholsome, gentle laws which pleas'd each mind. |
His courtesie and affability. |
Much gain'd the hearts of his nobility. |
Yet notwithstanding all he did so well, |
The Babylonians 'gainst their prince rebell. |
An host he rais'd the city to reduce; |
But men against those walls were of no use. |
Then brave Zopirus for his masters good, |
His manly face disfigures, spares no blood: |
With his own hands cutts off his ears and nose, |
And with a faithfull fraud to th' town he goes, |
Tells them how harshly the proud king had dealt, |
That for their sakes his cruelty he felt, |
Desiring of the Prince to raise the siege, |
This violence was done him by his Liege. |
This told, for entrance he stood not long; |
For they believ'd his nose more then his tongue. |
With all the city's strength they him betrust, |
If he command, obey the greatest must. |
When opportunity he saw was fit |
Delivers up the town, and all in it. |
To loose a nose, to win a town's no shame, |
But who dares venture such a stake for th' game. |
Then thy disgrace, thine honour's manifold, |
Who doth deserve a statue made of gold. |
Nor can Darius in his Monarchy, |
Scarce find enough to thank thy loyalty: |
Yet o're thy glory we must cast this vail, |
Thy craft more then thy valour did prevail. |
Darius in the second of his reign |
An Edict for the Jews publish'd again: |
The Temple to rebuild, for that did rest |
Since Cyrus time, Cambises did molest. |
He like a King now grants a Charter large, |
Out of his own revennues bears the charge, |
Gives Sacrifices, wheat, wine, oyle and salt, |
Threats punishment to him that through default |
Shall let the work or keep back any thing |
Of what is freely granted by the King: |
And on all Kings he poures out Execrations |
That shall once dare to rase those firm foundations |
They thus backt by the King, in spight of foes |
Built on and prosper'd till their house they close, |
And in the sixth year of his friendly reign, |
Set up a Temple (though a less) again: |
Darius on the Scythians made a war, |
Entring that larg and barren Country far: |
A Bridge he made, which serv'd for boat & barge |
O're Ister fair, with labour and with charge. |
But in that desert 'mongst his barbarous foes |
Sharp wants, not swords, his valour did oppose, |
His Army fought with hunger and with cold, |
Which to assail his royal Camp was bold. |
By these alone his host was pincht so sore, |
He warr'd defensive, not offensive more. |
The Salvages did laugh at his distress, |
Their minds by Hiroglyphicks they express, |
A Frog a Mouse, a bird, an arrow sent, |
The King will needs interpret their intent, |
Possession of water, earth and air, |
But wise Gobrias reads not half so fair: |
(Quoth he) like frogs in water we must dive, |
Or like to mice under the earth must live, |
Or fly like birds in unknown wayes full quick, |
Or Scythian arrows in our sides must stick. |
The King seeing his men and victuals spent, |
This fruitless war began late to repent, |
Return'd with little honour, and less gain. |
His enemies scarce seen, then much less slain. |
He after this intends Greece to invade, |
But troubles in Less Asia him staid, |
Which husht, he straight so orders his affairs, |
For Attaca an army he prepares; |
But as before, so now with ill success |
Return'd with wondrous loss, and honourless. |
Athens perceiving now their desperate state |
Arm'd all they could, which eleven thousand made |
By brave Miltiades their chief being led: |
Darius multitudes before them fled. |
At Marathon this bloudy field was fought, |
Where Grecians prov'd themselves right souldiers stout |
The Persians to their gallies post with speed |
Where an Athenian shew'd a valiant deed, |
Pursues his flying foes then on the sand, |
He stayes a lauching gally with his hand, |
Which soon cut off, inrag'd, he with his left, |
Renews his hold, and when of that bereft, |
His whetted teeth he claps in the firm wood, |
Off flyes his head, down showres his frolick bloud, |
Go Persians, carry home that angry piece, |
As the best Trophe which ye won in Greece, |
Darius light, yet heavy home returns, |
And for revenge, his heart still restless burnes, |
His Queen Atossa Author of this stirr, |
For Grecian maids ('tis said) to wait on her. |
She lost her aim, her Husband he lost more, |
His men his coyne, his honour, and his store; |
And the ensuing year ended his Life, |
(Tis thought) through grief of this successless strife |
Thirty six years this noble Prince did reign, |
Then to his second Son did all remain. |
Xerxes. |
Xerxes. Darius, and Atossa's Son, |
Grand child to Cyrus, now sits on the Throne: |
(His eldest brother put beside the place, |
Because this was, first born of Cyrus race.) |
His Father not so full of lenity, |
As was his Son of pride and cruelty; |
He with his Crown receives a double war, |
The Egyptians to reduce, and Greece to marr, |
The first begun, and finish'd in such haste, |
None write by whom, nor how, 'twas over past. |
But for the last, he made such preparation, |
As if to dust, he meant, to grinde that nation; |
Yet all his men, and Instruments of slaughter, |
Produced but derision and laughter, |
Sage Artabanus Counsel had he taken, |
And's Couzen young Mardonius forsaken, |
His Souldiers credit, wealth at home had staid, |
And Greece such wondrous triumphs ne'r had made. |
The first dehorts and layes before his eyes |
His Fathers ill success, in's enterprize, |
Against the Scythians and Grecians too, |
What Infamy to's honour did accrew. |
Flatt'ring Mardonius on the other side, |
With conquest of all Europe, feeds his pride: |
Vain Xerxes thinks his counsel hath most wit, |
That his ambitious humour best can fit; |
And by this choice unwarily posts on, |
To present loss, future subversion. |
Although he hasted, yet four years was spent |
In great provisions, for this great intent: |
His Army of all Nations was compounded, |
That the vast Persian government surrounded. |
His Foot was seventeen hundred thousand strong, |
Eight hundred thousand horse to these belong |
His Camels, beasts for carriage numberless, |
For Truths asham'd, how many to express; |
The charge of all, he severally commended |
To Princes, of the Persian bloud descended: |
But the command of these commanders all, |
Unto Mardonius made their General; |
(He was the Son of the fore nam'd Gobrius, |
Who married the Sister of Darius.) |
Such his land Forces were, then next a fleet, |
Of two and twenty thousand Gallies meet |
Man'd with Phenicians and Pamphylians |
Cipriots, Dorians and Cilicians, |
Lycians, Carians and Ionians, |
Eolians and the Helespontines. |
Besides the vessels for his transportation, |
Which to three thousand came (by best relation) |
Brave Artemisia, Hallicarnassus Queen |
In person present for his aid was seen, |
Whose Gallyes all the rest in neatness pass, |
Save the Zidonians, where Xerxes was: |
But hers she kept still seperate from the rest, |
For to command alone, she judg'd was best. |
O noble Queen, thy valour I commend; |
But pitty 'twas thine aid thou here didst lend. |
At Sardis in Lydia, all these do meet, |
Whether rich Pythias comes Xerxes to greet, |
Feasts all this multitude of his own charge, |
Then gives the King a king-like gift full large, |
Three thousand talents of the purest gold, |
Which mighty sum all wondred to behold: |
Then humbly to the king he makes request, |
One of his five sons there might be releas'd, |
To be to's age a comfort and a stay, |
The other four he freely gave away. |
The king calls for the youth, who being brought, |
Cuts him in twain for whom his Sire besought, |
Then laid his parts on both sides of the way, |
'Twixt which his souldiers marcht in good array. |
For his great love is this thy recompence? |
Is this to do like Xerxes or a Prince? |
Thou shame of kings, of men the detestation, |
I Rhetorick want to pour out execration. |
First thing he did that's worthy of recount, |
A Sea passage cut behind Athos mount. |
Next o're the Helespont a bridge he made |
Of Boats together coupled, and there laid: |
But winds and waves those iron bands did break; |
To cross the sea such strength he found too weak, |
Then whips the sea, and with a mind most vain |
He fetters casts therein the same to chain. |
The work-men put to death the bridge that made, |
Because they wanted skill the same to've staid. |
Seven thousand Gallyes chain'd by Tyrians skill, |
Firmly at last accomplished his will. |
Seven dayes and nights, his host without least stay |
Was marching o're this new devised way. |
Then in Abidus plains mustring his forces, |
He gloryes in his squadrons and his horses. |
Long viewing them, thought it great happiness, |
One king so many subjects should possess: |
But yet this sight from him produced tears, |
That none of those could live an hundred years. |
What after did ensue had he foreseen, |
Of so long time his thoughts had never been. |
Of Artubanus he again demands |
How of this enterprise his thoughts now stands, |
His answer was, both sea and land he fear'd, |
Which was not vain as after soon appear'd. |
But Xerxes resolute to Thrace goes first, |
His Host all Lissus drinks, to quench their thirst; |
And for his Cattel, all Pissyrus Lake |
Was scarce enough, for each a draught to take: |
Then marching on to th' streight Thermopyle, |
The Spartan meets him brave Leonade; |
This 'twixt the mountains lyes (half Acre wide) |
That pleasant Thessaly from Greece divide |
Two dayes and nights, a fight they there maintain, |
Till twenty thousand Persians fell down slain; |
And all that Army then dismaid, had fled, |
But that a Fugitive discovered. |
How some might o're the mountains go about, |
And wound the backs of those brave warriors stout |
They thus behem'd with multitude of Foes, |
Laid on more fiercely their deep mortal blows. |
None cries for quarter nor yet seeks to run; |
But on their ground they die each Mothers Son. |
O noble Greeks, how now degenerate, |
Where is the valour of your ancient State? |
When as one thousand could a million daunt, |
Alas! it is Leonades you want. |
This shameful victory cost Xerxes dear, |
Among the rest, two brothers he lost there; |
And as at Land, so he at Sea was crost, |
Four hundred stately Ships by storms was lost; |
Of Vessels small almost innumerable, |
The Harbour to contain them was not able, |
Yet thinking to out match his Foes at Sea, |
Enclos'd their Fleet i'th' streight of Eubea: |
But they as fortunate at Sea as Land, |
In this streight as the other firmly stand. |
And Xerxes mighty Gallyes battered so, |
That their split sides witness'd his overthrow; |
Then in the streight of Salamis he try'd, |
If that small number his great force could 'bide: |
But he in daring of his forward Foe, |
Received there a shameful overthrow. |
Twice beaten thus at Sea he warr'd no more, |
But then the Phocians Country wasted sore; |
They no way able to withstand his force, |
That brave Themistocles takes this wise course, |
In secret manner word to Xerxes sends, |
That Greeks to break his Bridg shortly intends: |
And as a friend warns him what e're he do |
For his Retreat, to have an eye thereto, |
He hearing this, his thoughts & course home bended |
Much fearing that which never was intended. |
Yet 'fore he went to help out his expence, |
Part of his Host to Delphos sent from thence, |
To rob the wealthy Temple of Apollo, |
But mischief sacriledge doth ever follow. |
Two mighty Rocks brake from Parnassus hill, |
And many thousands of those men did kill; |
Which accident the rest affrighted so, |
With empty hands they to their Master go: |
He finding all, to tend to his decay, |
Fearing his Bridge, no longer there would stay. |
Three hundred thousand yet he left behind, |
With his Mardonius Index of his mind; |
Who for his sake he knew would venture farre, |
(Chief instigator of this hapless warr.) |
He instantly to Athens sends for peace, |
That all Hostility from thence forth cease; |
And that with Xerxes they would be at one, |
So should all favour to their State be shown. |
The Spartans fearing Athens would agree, |
As had Macedon, Thebes, and Thessaly, |
And leave them out, this Shock now to sustain, |
By their Ambassador they thus complain, |
That Xerxes quarrel was 'gainst Athens State, |
And they had helpt them as Confederate; |
If in their need they should forsake their friends, |
Their infamy would last till all things ends: |
But the Athenians this peace detest, |
And thus reply'd unto Mardon's request. |
That whil'st the Sun did run his endless Course |
Against the Persians, they would bend their force; |
Nor could the brave Ambassador he sent, |
With Rhetorick gain better Complement: |
A Macedonian born, and great Commander, |
No less then grand-Sire to great Alexander |
Mardonius proud hearing this Answer stout, |
To add more to his numbers layes about; |
And of those Greeks which by his Skill he'd won, |
He fifty thousand joyns unto his own: |
The other Greeks which were Confederate |
In all one hundred and ten thousand made. |
The Athenians could but forty thousand Arme, |
The rest had weapons would do little harm; |
But that which helpt defects, and made them bold, |
Was victory by Oracle foretold. |
Then for one battel shortly all provide, |
Where both their Controversies they'l decide; |
Ten dayes these Armyes did each other face, |
Mardonius finding victuals wast apace, |
No longer dar'd, but bravely on-set gave, |
The other not a hand nor Sword would wave, |
Till in the Intrails of their Sacrifice |
The signal of their victory did rise, |
Which found like Greeks they fight, the Persians fly, |
And troublesome Mardonius now must dye. |
All's lost, and of three hundred thousand men, |
Three thousand only can run home agen. |
For pitty let those few to Xerxes go, |
To certifie his final overthrow: |
Same day the small remainder of his Fleet, |
The Grecians at Mycale in Asia meet. |
And there so utterly they wrackt the same, |
Scarce one was left to carry home the Fame; |
Thus did the Greeks consume, destroy, disperse |
That Army, which did fright the Universe. |
Scorn'd Xerxes hated for his cruelty, |
Yet ceases not to act his villany. |
His brothers wife solicites to his will, |
The chast and beautious Dame refused still; |
Some years by him in this vain suit was spent, |
Nor prayers, nor gifts could win him least content; |
Nor matching of her daughter to his Son, |
But she was still as when he first begun: |
When jealous Queen Amestris of this knew, |
She Harpy like upon the Lady flew, |
Cut off her breasts, her lips her nose and ears, |
And leavs her thus besmear'd in blood and tears. |
Straight comes her Lord, and finds his wife thus ly, |
The sorrow of his heart did close his Eye: |
He dying to behold that wounding sight, |
Where he had sometime gaz'd with great delight, |
To see that face where rose, and Lillyes stood, |
O'reflown with Torrents of her guiltless bloud, |
To see those breasts where Chastity did dwell, |
Thus cut and mangled by a Hag of Hell: |
With loaden heart unto the King he goes, |
Tells as he could his unexpressed woes; |
But for his deep complaints and showres of tears, |
His brothers recompence was nought but jears: |
The grieved prince finding nor right, nor love, |
To Bactria his houshold did remove. |
His brother sent soon after him a crew, |
With him and his most barbarously there slew: |
Unto such height did grow his cruelty, |
Of life no man had least security. |
At last his Uncle did his death conspire, |
And for that end his Eunuch he did hire; |
Who privately him smother'd in his bed, |
But yet by search he was found murthered; |
Then Artabanus hirer of this deed, |
That from suspition he might be fre'd: |
Accus'd Darius Xerxes eldest Son, |
To be the Author of the crime was done. |
And by his craft order'd the matter so, |
That the Prince innocent to death did goe: |
But in short time this wickedness was known, |
For which he died, and not he alone, |
But all his Family was likewise slain: |
Such Justice in the Persian Court did reign. |
The eldest son thus immaturely dead, |
The second was inthron'd in's fathers stead. |
Artaxerxes Longimanus. |
Amongst the Monarchs, next this prince had place |
The best that ever sprung of Cyrus race. |
He first war with revolted Egypt made, |
To whom the perjur'd Grecians lent their aid: |
Although to Xerxes they not long before |
A league of amity had firmly swore, |
Which had they kept, Greece had more nobly done |
Then when the world they after overrun. |
Greeks and Egyptians both he overthrows, |
And payes them both according as he owes, |
Which done, a sumptuous feast makes like a king |
Where ninescore dayes are spent in banquetting. |
His Princes, Nobles, and his Captains calls, |
To be partakers of these Festivals: |
His hangings white and green, and purple dye, |
With gold and silver beds, most gorgeously. |
The royal wine in golden cups did pass, |
To drink more then he list, none bidden was: |
Queen Vasthi also feasts, but 'fore tis ended, |
She's from her Royalty (alas) suspended, |
And one more worthy placed in her room, |
By Memucans advice so was the doom. |
What Esther was and did, the story read, |
And how her Country-men from spoyle she freed, |
Of Hamans fall, and Mordicaes great Rise, |
The might of th' prince, the tribute of the Isles. |
Good Ezra in the seventh year of his reign, |
Did for the Jews commission large obtain, |
With gold and silver, and what ere they need: |
His bounty did Darius far exceed. |
And Nehemiah in his twentieth year, |
Went to Jerusalem his city dear, |
Rebuilt those walls which long in rubbish lay, |
And o're his opposites still got the day, |
Unto this King Themistocles did fly, |
When under Ostracisme he did lye: |
For such ingratitude did Athens show, |
(This valiant Knight whom they so much did owe) |
Such royal bounty from his prince he found, |
That in his loyalty his heart was bound. |
The king not little joyfull of this chance, |
Thinking his Gresian warrs now to advance, |
And for that end great preparation made |
Fair Attica a third time to invade. |
His grand-Sires old disgrace did vex him sore, |
His Father Xerxes loss and shame much more. |
For punishment their breach of oath did call |
This noble Greek, now fit for General. |
Provisions then and season being fit, |
To Themistocles this warr he doth commit, |
Who for his wrong he could not chuse but deem |
His Country nor his Friends would much esteem: |
But he all injury had soon forgit; |
And to his native land could bear no hate, |
Nor yet disloyal to his Prince would prove, |
By whom oblig'd by bounty, and by love; |
Either to wrong, did wound his heart so sore, |
To wrong himself by death he chose before: |
In this sad conflict marching on his wayes, |
Strong poyson took, so put an end to's dayes. |
The King this noble Captain having lost, |
Disperst again his newly levied host: |
Rest of his time in peace he did remain, |
And di'd the two and forti'th of his reign. |
Darius Nothus. |
Three sons great Artaxerxes left behind; |
The eldest to succeed, that was his mind: |
His second Brother with him fell at strife, |
Stil making war, till first had lost his life: |
Then the Surviver is by Nothus slain, |
Who now sole Monarch doth of all remain. |
The two first sons (are by Historians thought) |
By fair Queen Esther to her husband brought: |
If so they were the greater was her moan, |
That for such graceless wretches she did groan. |
Revolting Egypt 'gainst this King rebels, |
His Garisons drives out that 'mongst them dwells; |
Joyns with the Greeks, and so maintain their right |
For sixty years, maugre the Persians might. |
A second trouble after this succeeds, |
Which from remissness in Less Asia breeds. |
Amorges, whom for Vice-Roy he ordain'd, |
Revolts, treasure and people having gain'd, |
Plunders the Country, & much mischief wrought |
Before things could to quietness be brought. |
The King was glad with Sparta to make peace, |
That so he might those troubles soon appease: |
But they in Asia must first restore |
All towns held by his Ancestors before. |
The King much profit reaped by this league, |
Regains his own, then doth the Rebel break, |
Whose strength by Grecians help was overthrown, |
And so each man again possest his own. |
This King Cambises-like his sister wed, |
To which his pride, more then his lust him led: |
For Persian Kings then deem'd themselves so good |
No match was high enough but their own blood. |
Two sons she bore, the youngest Cyrus nam'd, |
A Prince whose worth by Xenophon is fam'd: |
His Father would no notice of that take |
Prefers his brother for his birthrights sake. |
But Cyrus scorns his brothers feeble wit, |
And takes more on him then was judged fit. |
The King provoked sends for him to th' Court, |
Meaning to chastise him in sharpest sort, |
But in his slow approach, e're he came there |
His Father di'd, so put an end to's fear. |
'Bout nineteen years this Nothus reigned, which run, |
His large Dominions left to's eldest Son. |
Artaxerxes Mnemon. |
Mnemon now set upon his Fathers Throne, |
Yet fears all he enjoys, is not his own: |
Still on his Brother casts a jealous eye, |
Judging his actions tends to's injury. |
Cyrus on th' other side weighs in his mind, |
What help in's enterprize he's like to find; |
His Interest in th' Kingdome now next heir, |
More dear to's Mother then his brother farr: |
His brothers little love like to be gone, |
Held by his Mothers Intercession. |
These and like motives hurry him amain, |
To win by force, what right could not obtain; |
And thought it best now in his Mothers time, |
By lower steps towards the top to climbe: |
If in his enterprize he should fall short, |
She to the King would make a fair report, |
He hop'd if fraud nor force the Crown would gain |
Her prevalence, a pardon might obtain. |
From the Lieutenant first he takes away |
Some Towns, commodious in less Asia, |
Pretending still the profit of the King, |
Whose Rents and Customes duly he sent in; |
The King finding Revenues now amended, |
For what was done seemed no whit offended. |
Then next he takes the Spartans into pay, |
One Greek could make ten Persians run away. |
Great care was his pretence those Souldiers stout, |
The Rovers in Pisidia should drive out; |
But lest some blacker news should fly to Court, |
Prepares himself to carry the report: |
And for that end five hundred Horse he chose; |
With posting speed on t'wards the king he goes: |
But fame more quick, arrives ere he comes there, |
And fills the Court with tumult, and with fear. |
The old Queen and the young at bitter jarrs, |
The last accus'd the first for these sad warrs, |
The wife against the mother still doth cry |
To be the Author of conspiracy. |
The King dismaid, a mighty host doth raise, |
Which Cyrus hears, and so foreslows his pace: |
But as he goes his forces still augments, |
Seven hundred Greeks repair for his intents, |
And others to be warm'd by this new sun |
In numbers from his brother dayly run. |
The fearfull King at last musters his forces, |
And counts nine hundred thousand Foot & horses. |
Three hundred thousand he to Syria sent |
To keep those streights his brother to prevent. |
Their Captain hearing but of Cyrus name, |
Forsook his charge to his eternal shame. |
This place so made by nature and by art, |
Few might have kept it, had they had a heart. |
Cyrus dispair'd a passage there to gain, |
So hir'd a fleet to waft him o're the Main: |
The 'mazed King was then about to fly |
To Bactria and for a time there lye, |
Had not his Captains sore against his will |
By reason and by force detain'd him still, |
Up then with speed a mighty trench he throws |
For his security against his foes. |
Six yards the depth and forty miles in length, |
Some fifty or else sixty foot in breadth; |
Yet for his brothers coming durst not stay, |
He safest was when farthest out of th' way. |
Cyrus finding his camp, and no man there, |
Was not a little jocund at his fear. |
On this he and his souldiers careless grow, |
And here and there in carts their arms they throw |
When suddenly their scouts come in and cry, |
Arm, Arm, the King with all his host is nigh. |
In this confusion each man as he might |
Gets on his arms, arrayes himself for fight, |
And ranged stood by great Euphrates side |
The brunt of that huge multitude to 'bide, |
Of whose great numbers their intelligence |
Was gather'd by the dust that rose from thence, |
Which like a mighty cloud darkned the sky, |
And black and blacker grew, as they drew nigh: |
But when their order and their silence saw, |
That, more then multitudes their hearts did awe; |
For tumult and confusion they expected, |
And all good discipline to be neglected. |
But long under their fears they did not stay, |
For at first charge the Persians ran away, |
Which did such courage to the Grecians bring, |
They all adored Cyrus for their King: |
So had he been, and got the victory, |
Had not his too much valour put him by. |
He with six hundred on a Squadron set, |
Of thousands six wherein the King was yet, |
And brought his Souldiers on so gallantly, |
They ready were to leave their King and fly; |
Whom Cyrus spies cryes loud, I see the man, |
And with a full carreer at him he ran: |
And in his speed a dart him hit i'th' eye, |
Down Cyrus falls, and yields to destiny: |
His Host in chase knows not of this disaster, |
But treads down all, so to advance their master; |
But when his head they spy upon a Lance, |
Who knows the sudden change made by this chance |
Senseless & mute they stand, yet breath out groans, |
Nor Gorgons head like this transform'd to stones. |
After this trance, revenge new Spirits blew, |
And now more eagerly their Foes pursue; |
And heaps on heaps such multitudes they laid, |
Their Arms grew weary by their slaughters made. |
The King unto a Country Village flyes, |
And for a while unkingly there he lyes. |
At last displays his Ensigne on a Hill, |
Hoping by that to make the Greeks stand still; |
But was deceiv'd. to him they run amain, |
The King upon the spur runs back again: |
But they too faint still to pursue their game, |
Being Victors oft, now to their Camp they came. |
nor lackt they any of their number small, |
Nor wound receiv'd, but one among them all: |
The King with his disperst, also incamp'd, |
With Infamy upon each Forehead stamp'd. |
His hurri'd thoughts he after recollects, |
Of this dayes Cowardize he fears th' effects. |
If Greeks in their own Country should declare, |
What dastards in the Field the Persians are, |
They in short time might place one in his Throne; |
And rob him both of Scepter and of Crown; |
To hinder their return by craft or force, |
He judg'd his wisest and his safest Course. |
Then sends, that to his Tent, they streight address, |
And there all wait, his mercy weaponless; |
The Greeks with scorn reject his proud Commands |
Asking no favour, where they fear'd no bands: |
The troubled King his Herrld sends again, |
And sues for peace, that they his friends remain, |
The smiling Greeks reply, they first must bait, |
They were too hungry to Capitulate; |
The King great store of all provision sends, |
And Courtesie to th' utmost he pretends, |
Such terrour on the Persians then did fall, |
They quak'd to hear them, to each other call. |
The King perplext, there dares not let them stay; |
And fears as much, to let them march away, |
But Kings ne're want such as can serve their will, |
Fit Instruments t' accomplish what is ill. |
As Tyssaphernes knowing his masters mind, |
Their chief Commanders feasts and yet more kind, |
With all the Oaths and deepest Flattery, |
Gets them to treat with him in privacy, |
But violates his honour and his word, |
And Villain like there puts them all to th' Sword. |
The Greeks seeing their valiant Captains slain, |
Chose Xenophon to lead them home again: |
But Tissaphernes what he could devise, |
Did stop the way in this their enterprize. |
But when through difficulties all they brake, |
The Country burnt, they no relief might take. |
But on they march through hunger & through cold |
O're mountains, rocks and hills as lions bold, |
Nor Rivers course, nor Persians force could stay, |
But on to Trabesond they kept their way: |
There was of Greeks setled a Colony, |
Who after all receiv'd them joyfully. |
Thus finishing their travail, danger, pain, |
In peace they saw their native soyle again. |
The Greeks now (as the Persian king suspects) |
The Asiaticks cowardize detects, |
The many victoryes themselves did gain, |
The many thousand Persians they had slain, |
And how their nation with facillity, |
Might gain the universal Monarchy. |
They then Dercilladus send with an host, |
Who with the Spartans on the Asian coast, |
Town after town with small resistance take, |
Which rumour makes great Artaxerxes quake. |
The Greeks by this success encourag'd so, |
Their King Agesilaus doth over goe, |
By Tissaphernes is encountered, |
Lieftenant to the King, but soon he fled. |
Which overthrow incens'd the King so sore, |
That Tissaphern must be Viceroy no more. |
Tythraustes then is placed in his stead, |
Commission hath to take the others head: |
Of that perjurious wretch this was the fate, |
Whom the old Queen did bear a mortal hate. |
Tythraustes trusts more to his wit then Arms, |
And hopes by craft to quit his Masters harms; |
He knows that many Towns in Greece envyes |
The Spartan State, which now so fast did rise; |
To them he thirty thousand Tallents sent |
With suit, their Arms against their Foes be bent; |
They to their discontent receiving hire, |
With broyles and quarrels sets all Greece on fire: |
Agesilaus is call'd home with speed, |
To defend, more then offend, there was need, |
Their winnings lost, and peace their glad to take |
On such conditions as the King will make. |
Dissention in Greece continued so long, |
Till many a Captain fell, both wise and strong, |
Whose courage nought but death could ever tame |
'Mongst these Epiminandes wants no fame, |
Who had (as noble Raileigh doth evince) |
All the peculiar virtues of a Prince; |
But let us leave these Greeks to discord bent, |
And turn to Persia, as is pertinent. |
The King from forreign parts now well at ease, |
His home-bred troubles sought how to appease; |
The two Queens by his means seem to abate, |
Their former envy and inveterate hate: |
But the old Queen implacable in strife, |
By poyson caus'd, the young one lose her life. |
The King highly inrag'd doth hereupon |
From Court exile her unto Babilon: |
But shortly calls her home, her counsells prize, |
(A Lady very wicked, but yet wise) |
Then in voluptuousness he leads his life, |
And weds his daughter for a second wife. |
But long in ease and pleasure did not lye, |
His sons sore vext him by disloyalty. |
Such as would know at large his warrs and reign, |
What troubles in his house he did sustain, |
His match incestuous, cruelties of th' Queen, |
His life may read in Plutarch to be seen. |
Forty three years he rul'd, then turn'd to dust, |
A King nor good, nor valiant, wise nor just. |
Dorius Ochus. |
Ochus a wicked and Rebellious son |
Succeeds in th' throne, his father being gone. |
Two of his brothers in his Fathers dayes |
(To his great grief) most subtilly he slayes: |
And being King, commands those that remain, |
Of brethren and of kindred to be slain. |
Then raises forces, conquers Egypt land, |
Which in rebellion sixty years did stand: |
And in the twenty third of's cruel raign |
Was by his Eunuch the proud Bagoas slain. |
Arsames or Arses. |
Arsames plac'd now in his fathers stead, |
By him that late his father murthered. |
Some write that Arsames was Ochus brother, |
Inthron'd by Bagoas in the room of th' other: |
But why his brother 'fore his son succeeds |
I can no reason give, 'cause none I read. |
His brother, as tis said, long since was slain, |
And scarce a Nephew left that now might reign: |
What acts he did time hath not now left pen'd, |
But most suppose in him did Cyrus end, |
Whose race long time had worne the diadem, |
But now's divolved to another stem. |
Three years he reign'd, then drank of 's fathers cup |
By the same Eunuch who first set him up. |
Darius Codomanus. |
Darius by this Bagoas set in throne, |
(Complotter with him in the murther done) |
And was no sooner setled in his reign, |
But Bagoas falls to's practices again, |
And the same sauce had served him no doubt, |
But that his treason timely was found out, |
And so this wretch (a punishment too small) |
Lost but his life for horrid treasons all. |
This Codomanus now upon the stage |
Was to his Predecessors Chamber page. |
Some write great Cyrus line was not yet run, |
But from some daughter this new king was sprung |
If so, or not, we cannot tell, but find |
That several men will have their several mind; |
Yet in such differences we may be bold, |
With learned and judicious still to hold; |
And this 'mongst all's no Controverred thing, |
That this Darius, was last Persian King, |
Whose Wars, and losses we may better tell, |
In Alexander's reign who did him quell, |
How from the top of worlds felicity, |
He fell to depth of greatest misery. |
Whose honours, treasures, pleasures had short stay, |
One deluge came and swept them all away. |
And in the sixth year of his hapless reign, |
Of all did scarce his winding Sheet retain: |
And last, a sad Catastrophe to end, |
Him to the grave did Traitor Bessus send. |
The End of the Persian Monarchy. |
The Third Monarchy,
Being the Grecian, beginning
under Alexander the Great in the
112. Olympiad.
GReat Alexander was wise Philips son, |
He to Amyntas, Kings of Macedon; |
The cruel proud Olympias was his Mother, |
She to Epirus warlike King was daughter. |
This Prince (his father by Pausanias slain) |
The twenty first of 's age began to reign. |
Great were the Gifts of nature which he had, |
His education much to those did adde: |
By art and nature both he was made fit, |
To 'complish that which long before was writ. |
The very day of his Nativity |
To ground was burnt Dianaes Temple high: |
An Omen to their near approaching woe, |
Whose glory to the earth this king did throw. |
His Rule to Greece he scorn'd should be confin'd, |
The Universe scarce bound his proud vast mind. |
This is the He-Goat which from Grecia came, |
That ran in Choler on the Persian Ram, |
That brake his horns, that threw him on the ground |
To save him from his might no man was found: |
Philip on this great Conquest had an eye, |
But death did terminate those thoughts so high. |
The Greeks had chose him Captain General, |
Which honour to his Son did now befall. |
(For as Worlds Monarch now we speak not on, |
But as the King of little Macedon) |
Restless both day and night his heart then was, |
His high resolves which way to bring to pass; |
Yet for a while in Greece is forc'd to stay, |
Which makes each moment seem more then a day. |
Thebes and stiff Athens both 'gainst him rebel, |
Their mutinies by valour doth he quell. |
This done against both right and natures Laws, |
His kinsmen put to death, who gave no cause; |
That no rebellion in in his absence be, |
Nor making Title unto Sovereignty. |
And all whom he suspects or fears will climbe, |
Now taste of death least they deserv'd in time, |
Nor wonder is't if he in blood begin, |
For Cruelty was his parental sin, |
Thus eased now of troubles and of fears, |
Next spring his course to Asia he steers; |
Leavs Sage Antipater, at home to sway, |
And through the Hellespont his Ships made way. |
Coming to Land, his dart on shore he throws, |
Then with alacrity he after goes; |
And with a bount'ous heart and courage brave, |
His little wealth among his Souldiers gave. |
And being ask'd what for himself was left, |
Reply'd, enough, sith only hope he kept. |
Thirty two thousand made up his Foot force, |
To which were joyn'd five thousand goodly horse. |
Then on he marcht, in's way he view'd old Troy, |
And on Achilles tomb with wondrous joy |
He offer'd, and for good success did pray |
To him, his Mothers Ancestors, (men say) |
When news of Alexander came to Court, |
To scorn at him Darius had good sport; |
Sends him a frothy and contemptuous Letter, |
Stiles him disloyal servant, and no better; |
Reproves him for his proud audacity |
To lift his hand 'gainst such a Monarchy. |
Then to's Lieftenant he in Asia sends |
That he be ta'ne alive, for he intends |
To whip him well with rods, and so to bring |
That boy so mallipert before the King. |
Ah! fond vain man, whose pen ere while |
In lower terms was taught a higher stile. |
To River Granick Alexander hyes |
Which in Phrygia near Propontike lyes. |
The Persians ready for encounter stand, |
And strive to keep his men from off the land; |
Those banks so steep the Greeks yet scramble up, |
And beat the coward Persians from the top, |
And twenty thousand of their lives bereave, |
Who in their backs did all their wounds receive. |
This victory did Alexander gain, |
With loss of thirty four of his there slain; |
Then Sardis he, and Ephesus did gain, |
Where stood of late, Diana's wondrous Phane, |
And by Parmenio (of renowned Fame,) |
Miletus and Pamphilia overcame. |
Hallicarnassus and Pisidia |
He for his Master takes with Lycia. |
Next Alexander marcht towards the black Sea, |
And easily takes old Gordium in his way; |
Of Ass ear'd Midas, once the Regal Seat, |
Whose touch turn'd all to gold, yea even his meat |
Where the Prophetick knot he cuts in twain, |
Which who so doth, must Lord of all remain. |
Now news of Memnon's death (the Kings Viceroy) |
To Alexanders heart's no little joy, |
For in that Peer, more valour did abide, |
Then in Darius multitude beside: |
In's stead, was Arses plac'd, but durst not stay, |
Yet set one in his room, and ran away; |
His substitute as fearfull as his master, |
Runs after two, and leaves all to Disaster. |
Then Alexander all Cilicia takes, |
No stroke for it he struck, their hearts so quakes. |
To Greece he thirty thousand talents sends, |
To raise more Force to further his intends: |
Then o're he goes Darius now to meet, |
Who came with thousand thousands at his feet. |
Though some there be (perhaps) more likely write |
He but four hundred thousand had to fight, |
The rest Attendants, which made up no less, |
Both Sexes there was almost numberless. |
For this wise King had brought to see the sport, |
With him the greatest Ladyes of the Court, |
His mother, his beauteous Queen and daughters, |
It seems to see the Macedonian slaughters. |
Its much beyond my time and little art, |
To shew how great Darius plaid his part; |
The splendor and the pomp he marched in, |
For since the world was no such Pageant seen. |
Sure 'twas a goodly sight there to behold, |
The Persians clad in silk, and glistering gold, |
The stately horses trapt, the lances gilt, |
As if addrest now all to run a tilt. |
The holy fire was borne before the host, |
(For Sun and Fire the Persians worship most) |
The Priests in their strange habit follow after, |
An object, not so much of fear as laughter. |
The King sate in a chariot made of gold, |
With crown and Robes most glorious to behold, |
And o're his head his golden Gods on high, |
Support a party coloured Canopy. |
A number of spare horses next were led, |
Lest he should need them in his Chariots stead; |
But those that saw him in this state to lye, |
Suppos'd he neither meant to fight nor flye. |
He fifteen hundred had like women drest; |
For thus to fright the Greeks he judg'd was best. |
Their golden ornaments how to set forth, |
Would ask more time than was their bodies worth |
Great Sysigambis she brought up the Reer, |
Then such a world of waggons did appear, |
Like several houses moving upon wheels, |
As if she'd drawn whole Shushan at her heels: |
This brave Virago to the King was mother, |
And as much good she did as any other. |
Now lest this gold, and all this goodly stuff |
Had not been spoyle and booty rich enough |
A thousand mules and Camels ready wait |
Loaden with gold, with jewels and with plate: |
For sure Darius thought at the first sight, |
The Greeks would all adore, but none would fight |
But when both Armies met, he might behold |
That valour was more worth then pearls or gold, |
And that his wealth serv'd but for baits to 'lure |
To make his overthrow more fierce and sure. |
The Greeks came on and with a gallant grace |
Let fly their arrows in the Persians face. |
The cowards feeling this sharp stinging charge |
Most basely ran, and left their king at large: |
Who from his golden coach is glad to 'light, |
And cast away his crown for swifter flight: |
Of late like some immoveable he lay, |
Now finds both legs and horse to run away. |
Two hundred thousand men that day were slain, |
And forty thousand prisoners also tane, |
Besides the Queens and Ladies of the court, |
If Curtius be true in his report. |
The Regal Ornaments were lost, the treasure |
Divided at the Macedonians pleasure; |
Yet all this grief, this loss, this overthrow, |
Was but beginning of his future woe. |
The royal Captives brought to Alexander |
T'ward them demean'd himself like a Commander |
For though their beauties were unparaled, |
Conquer'd himself now he had conquered, |
Preserv'd their honour, us'd them bounteously, |
Commands no man should do them injury: |
And this to Alexander is more fame |
Then that the Persian King he overcame. |
Two hundred eighty Greeks he lost in fight, |
By too much heat, not wounds (as authors write) |
No sooner had this Victor won the field, |
But all Phenicia to his pleasure yield, |
Of which the Goverment he doth commit |
Unto Parmenio of all most fit. |
Darius now less lofty then before, |
To Alexander writes he would restore |
Those mournfull Ladies from Captivity, |
For whom he offers him a ransome high: |
But down his haughty stomach could not bring, |
To give this Conquerour the Stile of King. |
This Letter Alexander doth disdain, |
And in short terms sends this reply again, |
A King he was, and that not only so, |
But of Darius King, as he should know. |
Next Alexander unto Tyre doth goe, |
His valour and his victoryes they know: |
To gain his love the Tyrians intend, |
Therefore a crown and great Provision send, |
Their present he receives with thankfullness, |
Desires to offer unto Hercules, |
Protector of their town, by whom defended, |
And from whom he lineally descended. |
But they accept not this in any wise, |
Lest he intend more fraud then sacrifice, |
Sent word that Hercules his temple stood |
In the old town, (which then lay like a wood) |
With this reply he was so deep enrag'd, |
To win the town, his honour he ingag'd: |
And now as Babels King did once before, |
He leaves not till he made the sea firm shore, |
But far less time and cost he did expend, |
The former Ruines forwarded his end: |
Moreover had a Navy at command, |
The other by his men fetcht all by land. |
In seven months time he took that wealthy town, |
Whose glory now a second time's brought down. |
Two thousand of the chief he crucifi'd, |
Eight thousand by the sword then also di'd, |
And thirteen thousand Gally slaves he made, |
And thus the Tyrians for mistrust were paid. |
The rule of this he to Philotas gave |
Who was the son of that Parmenio brave. |
Cilicia to Socrates doth give, |
For now's the time Captains like Kings may live. |
Zidon he on Ephestion bestowes; |
(For that which freely comes, as freely goes) |
He scorns to have one worse then had the other, |
So gives his little Lordship to another. |
Ephestion having chief command of th' Fleet, |
At Gaza now must Alexander meet. |
Darius finding troubles still increase, |
By his Ambassadors now sues for peace, |
And layes before great Alexanders eyes |
The dangers difficultyes like to rise, |
First at Euphrates what he's like to 'bide, |
And then at Tygris and Araxis side, |
These he may scape, and if he so desire, |
A league of friendship make firm and entire. |
His eldest daughter he in mariage profers, |
And a most princely dowry with her offers. |
All those rich Kingdomes large that do abide |
Betwixt the Hellespont and Halys side. |
But he with scorn his courtesie rejects, |
And the distressed King no whit respects, |
Tells him, these proffers great, in truth were none |
For all he offers now was but his own. |
But quoth Parmenio that brave Commander, |
Was I as great, as is great Alexander, |
Darius offers I would not reject, |
But th' kingdomes and the Lady soon accept. |
To which proud Alexander made reply, |
And so if I Parmenio was, would I. |
He now to Gaza goes, and there doth meet, |
His Favorite Ephestion with his Fleet, |
Where valiant Betis stoutly keeps the town, |
(A loyal Subject to Darius Crown) |
For more repulse the Grecians here abide |
Then in the Persian Monarchy beside; |
And by these walls so many men were slain, |
That Greece was forc'd to yield supply again. |
But yet this well defended Town was taken, |
For 'twas decree'd, that Empire should be shaken; |
Thus Betis ta'en had holes bor'd through his feet, |
And by command was drawn through every street |
To imitate Achilles in his shame, |
Who did the like to Hector (of more fame) |
What hast thou lost thy magnimity, |
Can Alexander deal thus cruelly? |
Sith valour with Heroicks is renown'd, |
Though in an Enemy it should be found; |
If of thy future fame thou hadst regard, |
Why didst not heap up honours and reward? |
From Gaza to Jerusalem he goes, |
But in no hostile way, (as I suppose) |
Him in his Priestly Robes high Jaddus meets, |
Whom with great reverence Alexander greets; |
The Priest shews him good Daniel's Prophesy, |
How he should overthrow this Monarchy, |
By which he was so much encouraged, |
No future dangers he did ever dread. |
From thence to fruitful Egypt marcht with speed, |
Where happily in's wars he did succeed; |
To see how fast he gain'd was no small wonder, |
For in few dayes he brought that Kingdome under. |
Then to the Phane of Jupiter he went, |
To be install'd a God, was his intent. |
The Pagan Priest through hire, or else mistake, |
The Son of Jupiter did streight him make: |
He Diobolical must needs remain, |
That his humanity will not retain. |
Thence back to Egypt goes, and in few dayes; |
Fair Alexandria from the ground doth raise; |
Then setling all things in less Asia; |
In Syria, Egypt, and Phenicia, |
Unto Euphrates marcht and overgoes, |
For no man's there his Army to oppose; |
Had Betis now been there but with his band, |
Great Alexander had been kept from Land. |
But as the King, so is the multitude, |
And now of valour both are destitute. |
Yet he (poor prince) another Host doth muster, |
Of Persians, Scythians, Indians in a cluster; |
Men but in shape and name, of valour none |
Most fit, to blunt the Swords of Macedon. |
Two hundred fifty thousand by account, |
Of Horse and Foot his Army did amount; |
For in his multitudes his trust still lay, |
But on their fortitude he had small stay; |
Yet had some hope that on the spacious plain, |
His numbers might the victory obtain. |
About this time Darius beautious Queen, |
Who had sore travail and much sorrow seen, |
Now bids the world adue, with pain being spent, |
Whose death her Lord full sadly did lament. |
Great Alexander mourns as well as he, |
The more because not set at liberty; |
When this sad news (at first Darius hears, |
Some injury was offered he fears: |
But when inform'd how royally the King, |
Had used her, and hers, in every thing, |
He prays the immortal Gods they would reward |
Great Alexander for this good regard; |
And if they down his Monarchy will throw, |
Let them on him this dignity bestow. |
And now for peace he sues as once before, |
And offers all he did and Kingdomes more; |
His eldest daughter for his princely bride, |
(Nor was such match in all the world beside) |
And all those Countryes which (betwixt) did lye |
Phanisian Sea, and great Euphrates high: |
With fertile Egypt and rich Syria, |
And all those Kingdomes in less Asia. |
With thirty thousand Talents to be paid, |
For the Queen Mother, and the royal maid; |
And till all this be well perform'd, and sure, |
Ochus his Son for Hostage should endure. |
To this stout Alexander gives no ear, |
No though Parmenio plead, yet will not hear; |
Which had he done. (perhaps) his fame he'd kept, |
Nor Infamy had wak'd, when he had slept, |
For his unlimited prosperity |
Him boundless made in vice and Cruelty. |
Thus to Darius he writes back again, |
The Firmament, two Suns cannot contain. |
Two Monarchyes on Earth cannot abide, |
Nor yet two Monarchs in one world reside; |
The afflicted King finding him set to jar, |
Prepares against to morrow, for the war, |
Parmenio, Alexander, wisht that night, |
To force his Camp, so vanquish them by flight. |
For tumult in the night doth cause most dread, |
And weakness of a Foe is covered, |
But he disdain'd to steal a victory: |
The Sun should witness of his valour be, |
And careless in his bed, next morne he lyes, |
By Captains twice is call'd before hee'l rise, |
The Armyes joyn'd a while, the Persians fight, |
And spilt the Greeks some bloud before their flight |
But long they stood not e're they're forc'd to run, |
So made an end, As soon as well begun. |
Forty five thousand Alexander had, |
But is not known what slaughter here was made, |
Some write th' other had a million, some more, |
But Quintus Curtius as before. |
At Arbela this victory was gain'd, |
Together with the Town also obtain'd; |
Darius stript of all, to Media came, |
Accompan'ed with sorrow, fear, and shame, |
At Arbela left his Ornaments and Treasure, |
Which Alexander deals as suits his pleasure. |
This conqueror to Babylon then goes, |
Is entertain'd with joy and pompous showes, |
With showrs of flours the streets along are strown, |
And incense burnt the silver Altars on. |
The glory of the Castle he admires, |
The strong Foundation and the lofty Spires, |
In this, a world of gold and Treasure lay, |
Which in few hours was carried all away. |
With greedy eyes he views this City round, |
Whose fame throughout the world was so renownd |
And to possess he counts no little bliss |
The towres and bowres of proud Semiramis, |
Though worne by time, and rac'd by foes full sore, |
Yet old foundations shew'd and somewhat more. |
With all the pleasures that on earth are found, |
This city did abundantly abound, |
Where four and thirty dayes he now did stay, |
And gave himself to banqueting and play: |
He and his souldiers wax effeminate, |
And former discipline begin to hate. |
Whilst revelling at Babylon he lyes, |
Antipater from Greece sends fresh supplyes. |
He then to Shushan goes with his new bands, |
But needs no force, tis rendred to his hands. |
He likewise here a world of treasure found; |
For 'twas the seat of Persian Kings renownd. |
Here stood the royal Houses of delight, |
Where Kings have shown their glory wealth and might |
The sumptuous palace of Queen Esther here, |
And of good Mordicai, her kinsman dear, |
Those purple hangings, mixt with green and white |
Those beds of gold, and couches of delight. |
And furniture the richest in all lands, |
Now fall into the Macedonians hands. |
From Shushan to Persipolis he goes, |
Which news doth still augment Darius woes. |
In his approach the governour sends word, |
For his receipt with joy they all accord, |
With open gates the wealthy town did stand, |
And all in it was at his high command. |
Of all the Cities that on earth was found, |
None like to this in riches did abound: |
Though Babylon was rich and Shushan too |
Yet to compare with this they might not do: |
Here lay the bulk of all those precious things |
That did pertain unto the Persian Kings: |
For when the souldiers rifled had their pleasure, |
And taken money plate and golden treasure, |
Statues some gold, and silver numberless, |
Yet after all, as storyes do express |
The share of Alexander did amount |
To an hundred thousand talents by account. |
Here of his own he sets a Garison, |
(As first at Shushan and at Babylon) |
On their old Governours titles he laid, |
But on their faithfulness he never staid, |
Their place gave to his Captains (as was just) |
For such revolters false, what King can trust? |
The riches and the pleasures of this town |
Now makes this King his virtues all to drown, |
That wallowing in all licentiousness, |
In pride and cruelty to high excess. |
Being inflam'd with wine upon a season, |
Filled with madness, and quite void of reason, |
He at a bold proud strumpets leud desire, |
Commands to set this goodly town on fire. |
Parmenio wise intreats him to desist |
And layes before his eyes if he persist |
His fames dishonour, loss unto his state, |
And just procuring of the Persians hate: |
But deaf to reason, bent to have his will, |
Those stately streets with raging flame did fill. |
Then to Darius he directs his way, |
Who was retir'd as far as Media, |
And there with sorrows, fears & cares surrounded |
Had now his army fourth and last compounded. |
Which forty thousand made, but his intent |
Was these in Bactria soon to augment: |
But hearing Alexander was so near, |
Thought now this once to try his fortunes here, |
And rather chose an honourable death, |
Then still with infamy to draw his breath: |
But Bessus false, who was his chief Commander |
Perswades him not to fight with Alexander. |
With sage advice he sets before his eyes |
The little hope of profit like to rise: |
If when he'd multitudes the day he lost, |
Then with so few, how likely to be crost. |
This counsel for his safety he pretended, |
But to deliver him to's foe intended. |
Next day this treason to Darius known |
Transported sore with grief and passion, |
Grinding his teeth, and plucking off his hair, |
Sate overwhelm'd with sorrow and dispair: |
Then bids his servant Artabasus true, |
Look to himself, and leave him to that crew, |
Who was of hopes and comforts quite bereft, |
And by his guard and Servitors all left. |
Straight Bessus comes, & with his trait'rous hands |
Layes hold on's Lord, and binding him with bands |
Throws him into a Cart, covered with hides, |
Who wanting means t' resist these wrongs abides, |
Then draws the cart along with chains of gold, |
In more despight the thraled prince to hold, |
And thus t'ward Alexander on he goes, |
Great recompence for this, he did propose: |
But some detesting this his wicked fact, |
To Alexander flyes and tells this act, |
Who doubling of his march, posts on amain, |
Darius from that traitors hands to gain. |
Bessus gets knowledg his disloyalty |
Had Alexanders wrath incensed high, |
Whose army now was almost within sight, |
His hopes being dasht prepares himself for flight: |
Unto Darius first he brings a horse, |
And bids him save himself by speedy course: |
The wofull King his courtesie refuses, |
Whom thus the execrable wretch abuses, |
By throwing darts gave him his mortal wound, |
Then slew his Servants that were faithfull found, |
Yea wounds the beasts that drew him unto death, |
And leaves him thus to gasp out his last breath. |
Bessus his partner in this tragedy, |
Was the false Governour of Media. |
This done, they with their host soon speed away, |
To hide themselves remote in Bactria. |
Darius bath'd in blood, sends out his groans, |
Invokes the heav'ns and earth to hear his moans: |
His lost felicity did grieve him sore, |
But this unheard of treachery much more: |
But above all, that neither Ear nor Eye |
Should hear nor see his dying misery; |
As thus he lay, Polistrates a Greek, |
Wearied with his long march, did water seek, |
So chanc'd these bloody Horses to espy, |
Whose wounds had made their skins of purple dye |
To them repairs then looking in the Cart, |
Finds poor Darius pierced to the heart, |
Who not a little chear'd to have some eye, |
The witness of this horrid Tragedy; |
Prays him to Alexander to commend |
The just revenge of this his woful end: |
And not to pardon such disloyalty, |
Of Treason, Murther, and base Cruelty. |
If not, because Darius thus did pray, |
Yet that succeeding Kings in safety may |
Their lives enjoy, their Crowns and dignity, |
And not by Traitors hands untimely dye. |
He also sends his humble thankfulness, |
For all the Kingly grace he did express; |
To's Mother, Children dear, and wife now gone. |
Which made their long restraint seem to be none: |
Praying the immortal Gods, that Sea and Land |
Might be subjected to his royal hand, |
And that his Rule as far extended be, |
As men the rising, setting Sun shall see, |
This said, the Greek for water doth intreat, |
To quench his thirst, and to allay his heat: |
Of all good things (quoth he) once in my power, |
I've nothing left, at this my dying hour; |
Thy service and compassion to reward, |
But Alexander will, for this regard. |
This said, his fainting breath did fleet away, |
And though a Monarch late, now lyes like clay; |
And thus must every Son of Adam lye, |
Though Gods on Earth like Sons of men they dye. |
Now to the East, great Alexander goes, |
To see if any dare his might oppose, |
For scarce the world or any bounds thereon, |
Could bound his boundless fond Ambition; |
Such as submits again he doth restore |
Their riches, and their honours he makes more, |
On Artabaces more then all bestow'd, |
For his fidelity to's Master show'd. |
Thalestris Queen of th' Amazons now brought |
Her Train to Alexander, (as 'tis thought.) |
Though most of reading best and soundest mind, |
Such Country there, nor yet such people find. |
Then tell her errand, we had better spare |
To th' ignorant, her title will declare: |
As Alexander in his greatness grows, |
So dayly of his virtues doth he lose. |
He baseness counts, his former Clemency, |
And not beseeming such a dignity; |
His past sobriety doth also bate, |
As most incompatible to his State; |
His temperance is but a sordid thing, |
No wayes becoming such a mighty King; |
His greatness now he takes to represent |
His fancy'd Gods above the Firmament. |
And such as shew'd but reverence before, |
Now are commanded strictly to adore; |
With Persian Robes himself doth dignifie, |
Charging the same on his nobility, |
His manners habit, gestures, all did fashion |
After that conquer'd and luxurious Nation. |
His Captains that were virtuously inclin'd, |
Griev'd at this change of manners and of mind. |
The ruder sort did openly deride, |
His feigned Diety and foolish pride; |
The certainty of both comes to his Ears, |
But yet no notice takes of what he hears: |
With those of worth he still desires esteem, |
So heaps up gifts his credit to redeem |
And for the rest new wars and travails finds, |
That other matters might take up their minds, |
And hearing Bessus, makes himself a King, |
Intends that Traitor to his end to bring. |
Now that his Host from luggage might be free, |
And with his burthen no man burthened be; |
Commands forthwith each man his fardle bring, |
Into the market place before the King; |
Which done, sets fire upon those goodly spoyles, |
The recompence of travails wars and toyles. |
And thus unwisely in a mading fume, |
The wealth of many Kingdomes did consume, |
But marvell 'tis that without mutiny, |
The Souldiers should let pass this injury; |
Nor wonder less to Readers may it bring, |
Here to observe the rashness of the King. |
Now with his Army doth he post away |
False Bessus to find out in Bactria: |
But much distrest for water in their march, |
The drought and heat their bodies sore did parch. |
At length they came to th' river Oxus brink, |
Where so immoderately these thirsty drink, |
Which more mortality to them did bring, |
Then all their warrs against the Persian King. |
Here Alexander's almost at a stand, |
To pass the River to the other land. |
For boats here's none, nor near it any wood, |
To make them Rafts to waft them o're the flood: |
But he that was resolved in his mind, |
Would without means some transportation find. |
Then from the Carriages the hides he takes, |
And stuffing them with straw, he bundles makes. |
On these together ti'd, in six dayes space, |
They all pass over to the other place. |
Had Bessus had but valour to his will, |
With little pain there might have kept them still: |
But Coward durst not fight, nor could he fly, |
Hated of all for's former treachery, |
Is by his own now bound in iron chains, |
A Coller of the same, his neck contains. |
And in this sort they rather drag then bring |
This Malefactor vile before the King, |
Who to Darius brother gives the wretch, |
With racks and tortures every limb to stretch. |
Here was of Greeks a town in Bactria, |
Whom Xerxes from their Country led away, |
These not a little joy'd, this day to see, |
Wherein their own had got the sov'raignty |
And now reviv'd, with hopes held up their head |
From bondage long to be Enfranchised. |
But Alexander puts them to the sword |
Without least cause from them in deed or word; |
Nor Sex, nor age, nor one, nor other spar'd, |
But in his cruelty alike they shar'd: |
Nor reason could he give for this great wrong, |
But that they had forgot their mother tongue. |
While thus some time he spent in Bactria, |
And in his camp strong and securely lay, |
Down from the mountains twenty thousand came |
And there most fiercely set upon the same: |
Repelling these, two marks of honour got |
Imprinted in his leg, by arrows shot. |
The Bactrians against him now rebel; |
But he their stubborness in time doth quell. |
From hence he to Jaxartis River goes, |
Where Scythians rude his army doth oppose, |
And with their outcryes in an hideous sort |
Beset his camp or military court, |
Of darts and arrows, made so little spare, |
They flew so thick, they seem'd to dark the air: |
But soon his souldiers forc'd them to a flight, |
Their nakedness could not endure their might. |
Upon this rivers bank in seventeen dayes |
A goodly City doth compleatly raise, |
Which Alexandria he doth likewise name, |
And sixty furlongs could but round the same. |
A third Supply Antipater now sent, |
Which did his former forces much augment; |
And being one hundred twenty thousand strong; |
He enters then the Indian Kings among: |
Those that submit, he gives them rule again, |
Such as do not, both them and theirs are slain. |
His warrs with sundry nations I'le omit, |
And also of the Mallians what is writ. |
His Fights, his dangers, and the hurts he had, |
How to submit their necks at last they're glad. |
To Nisa goes by Bacchus built long since, |
Whose feasts are celebrated by this prince; |
Nor had that drunken god one who would take |
His Liquors more devoutly for his sake. |
When thus ten days his brain with wine he'd soakt, |
And with delicious meats his palate choakt: |
To th' River Indus next his course he bends, |
Boats to prepare, Ephestion first he sends, |
Who coming thither long before his Lord, |
Had to his mind made all things to accord, |
The vessels ready were at his command, |
And Omphis King of that part of the land, |
Through his perswasion Alexander meets, |
And as his Sov'raign Lord him humbly greets |
Fifty six Elephants he brings to's hand, |
And tenders him the strength of all his land; |
Presents himself first with a golden crown, |
Then eighty talents to his captains down: |
But Alexander made him to behold |
He glory sought, no silver nor no gold; |
His presents all with thanks he did restore, |
And of his own a thousand talents more. |
Thus all the Indian Kings to him submit, |
But Porus stout, who will not yeild as yet: |
To him doth Alexander thus declare, |
His pleasure is that forthwith he repair |
Unto his Kingdomes borders, and as due, |
His homage to himself as Soveraign do: |
But kingly Porus this brave answer sent, |
That to attend him there was his intent, |
And come as well provided as he could, |
But for the rest, his sword advise him should. |
Great Alexander vext at this reply, |
Did more his valour then his crown envy, |
Is now resolv'd to pass Hydaspes flood, |
And there by force his soveraignty make good. |
Stout Porus on the banks doth ready stand |
To give him welcome when he comes to land. |
A potent army with him like a King, |
And ninety Elephants for warr did bring: |
Had Alexander such resistance seen |
On Tygris side, here now he had not been. |
Within this spacious River deep and wide |
Did here and there Isles full of trees abide. |
His army Alexander doth divide |
With Ptolemy sends part to th' other side; |
Porus encounters them and thinks all's there, |
When covertly the rest get o're else where, |
And whilst the first he valiantly assail'd, |
The last set on his back, and so prevail'd. |
Yet work enough here Alexander found, |
For to the last stout Porus kept his ground: |
Nor was't dishonour at the length to yield, |
When Alexander strives to win the field. |
The kingly Captive 'fore the Victor's brought, |
In looks or gesture not abased ought, |
But him a Prince of an undaunted mind |
Did Alexander by his answers find: |
His fortitude his royal foe commends, |
Restores him and his bounds farther extends. |
Now eastward Alexander would goe still, |
But so to doe his souldiers had no will, |
Long with excessive travails wearied, |
Could by no means be farther drawn or led, |
Yet that his fame might to posterity |
Be had in everlasting memory, |
Doth for his Camp a greater circuit take, |
And for his souldiers larger Cabbins make. |
His mangers he erected up so high |
As never horse his Provender could eye. |
Huge bridles made, which here and there he left, |
Which might be found, and for great wonders kept |
Twelve altars then for monuments he rears, |
Whereon his acts and travels long appears. |
But doubting wearing time might these decay, |
And so his memory would fade away, |
He on the fair Hydaspes pleasant side, |
Two Cities built, his name might there abide, |
First Nicea, the next Bucephalon, |
Where he entomb'd his stately Stalion. |
His fourth and last supply was hither sent, |
Then down Hydaspes with his Fleet he went; |
Some time he after spent upon that shore, |
Whether Ambassadors, ninety or more, |
Came with submission from the Indian Kings, |
Bringing their presents rare and precious things, |
These all he feasts in state on beds of gold, |
His Furniture most sumptuous to behold; |
His meat & drink, attendants, every thing, |
To th' utmost shew'd the glory of a King. |
With rich rewards he sent them home again, |
Acknowledged their Masters sovereign; |
Then sailing South, and coming to that shore, |
Those obscure Nations yielded as before: |
A City here he built, call'd by his Name, |
Which could not sound too oft with too much fame |
Then sailing by the mouth of Indus floud, |
His Gallyes stuck upon the flats and mud; |
Which the stout Macedonians amazed sore, |
Depriv'd at once the use of Sail and Oar: |
Observing well the nature of the Tide, |
In those their fears they did not long abide. |
Passing fair Indus mouth his course he steer'd |
To th' coast which by Euphrates mouth appear'd; |
Whose inlets near unto, he winter spent, |
Unto his starved Souldiers small content, |
By hunger and by cold so many slain, |
That of them all the fourth did scarce remain. |
Thus winter, Souldiers, and provisions spent, |
From hence he then unto Gedrosia went. |
And thence he marcht into Carmania, |
And so at length drew near to Persia, |
Now through these goodly Countryes as he past, |
Much time in feasts and ryoting did waste; |
Then visits Cyrus Sepulchre in's way, |
Who now obscure at Passagardis lay: |
Upon his Monument his Robe he spread, |
And set his crown on his supposed head. |
From hence to Babylon, some time there spent, |
He at the last to royal Shushan went; |
A wedding Feast to's Nobles then he makes, |
And Statyra, Darius daughter takes, |
Her Sister gives to his Ephestian dear, |
That by this match he might be yet more near; |
He fourscore Persian Ladies also gave, |
At this same time unto his Captains brave: |
Six thousand guests unto this Feast invites, |
Whose Sences all were glutted with delights. |
It far exceeds my mean abilities |
To shadow forth these short felicities, |
Spectators here could scarce relate the story, |
They were so rapt with this external glory: |
If an Ideal Paradise a man would frame, |
He might this Feast imagine by the same; |
To every guess a cup of gold he sends, |
So after many dayes the Banquet ends. |
Now Alexanders conquests all are done, |
And his long Travails past and over gone; |
His virtues dead, buried, and quite forgot, |
But vice remains to his Eternal blot. |
'Mongst those that of his cruelty did tast, |
Philotas was not least, nor yet the last, |
Accus'd because he did not certifie |
The King of treason and conspiracy: |
Upon suspition being apprehended, |
Nothing was prov'd wherein he had offended |
But silence, which was of such consequence, |
He was judg'd guilty of the same offence, |
But for his fathers great deserts the King |
His royal pardon gave for this foul thing. |
Yet is Phylotas unto judgment brought, |
Must suffer, not for what is prov'd, but thought. |
His master is accuser, judge and King, |
Who to the height doth aggravate each thing, |
Inveighs against his father now absent, |
And's brethren who for him their lives had spent. |
But Philotas his unpardonable crime, |
No merit could obliterate, or time: |
He did the Oracle of Jove deride, |
By which his Majesty was diefi'd. |
Philotas thus o'recharg'd with wrong and grief |
Sunk in despair without hope of Relief, |
Fain would have spoke and made his own defence, |
The King would give no ear, but went from thence |
To his malicious Foes delivers him, |
To wreak their spight and hate on every limb. |
Philotas after him sends out this cry, |
O Alexander, thy free clemency |
My foes exceeds in malice, and their hate |
Thy kingly word can easily terminate. |
Such torments great as wit could worst invent, |
Or flesh and life could bear, till both were spent |
Were now inflicted on Parmenio's son |
He might accuse himself, as they had done, |
At last he did, so they were justifi'd, |
And told the world, that for his guilt he di'd. |
But how these Captains should, or yet their master |
Look on Parmenio, after this disaster |
They knew not, wherefore best now to be done, |
Was to dispatch the father as the son. |
This sound advice at heart pleas'd Alexander, |
Who was so much ingag'd to this Commander, |
As he would ne're confess, nor yet reward, |
Nor could his Captains bear so great regard: |
Wherefore at once, all these to satisfie, |
It was decreed Parmenio should dye: |
Polidamus, who seem'd Parmenio's friend |
To do this deed they into Media send: |
He walking in his garden to and fro, |
Fearing no harm, because he none did doe, |
Most wickedly was slain without least crime, |
(The most renowned captain of his time) |
This is Parmenio who so much had done |
For Philip dead, and his surviving son, |
Who from a petty King of Macedon |
By him was set upon the Persian throne, |
This that Parmenio who still overcame, |
Yet gave his Master the immortal fame, |
Who for his prudence, valour, care and trust |
Had this reward, most cruel and unjust. |
The next, who in untimely death had part, |
Was one of more esteem, but less desert; |
Clitus belov'd next to Ephestian, |
And in his cups his chief companion; |
When both were drunk, Clitus was wont to jeer, |
Alexander to rage, to kill, and swear; |
Nothing more pleasing to mad Clitus tongue, |
Then's Masters Godhead to defie and wrong; |
Nothing toucht Alexander to the quick, |
Like this against his Diety to kick: |
Both at a Feast when they had tippled well, |
Upon this dangerous Theam fond Clitus fell; |
From jest to earnest, and at last so bold, |
That of Parmenio's death him plainly told. |
Which Alexanders wrath incens'd so high, |
Nought but his life for this could satisfie; |
From one stood by he snatcht a partizan, |
And in a rage him through the body ran, |
Next day he tore his face for what he'd done, |
And would have slain himself for Clitus gone: |
This pot Companion he did more bemoan, |
Then all the wrongs to brave Parmenio done. |
The next of worth that suffered after these, |
Was learned, virtuous, wise Calisthenes, |
Who lov'd his Master more then did the rest, |
As did appear, in flattering him the least; |
In his esteem a God he could not be, |
Nor would adore him for a Diety: |
For this alone and for no other cause, |
Against his Sovereign, or against his Laws, |
He on the Rack his Limbs in pieces rent, |
Thus was he tortur'd till his life was spent. |
Of this unkingly act doth Seneca |
This censure pass, and not unwisely say, |
Of Alexander this th' eternal crime, |
Which shall not be obliterate by time. |
Which virtues fame can ne're redeem by far, |
Nor all felicity of his in war. |
When e're 'tis said he thousand thousands slew, |
Yea, and Calisthenes to death he drew. |
The mighty Persian King he overcame, |
Yea, and he kill'd Calisthenes of fame. |
All Countryes, Kingdomes, Provinces, he won |
From Hellispont, to th' farthest Ocean. |
All this he did, who knows, not to be true? |
But yet withal, Calisthenes he slew. |
From Macedon, his Empire did extend |
Unto the utmost bounds o' th' orient: |
All this he did, yea, and much more, 'tis true, |
But yet withal, Calisthenes he slew. |
Now Alexander goes to Media, |
Finds there the want of wise Parmenio; |
Here his chief favourite Ephestian dies, |
He celebrates his mournful obsequies: |
Hangs his Physitian, the Reason why |
He suffered, his friend Ephestian dye. |
This act (me-thinks) his Godhead should a shame, |
To punish where himself deserved blame; |
Or of necessity he must imply, |
The other was the greatest Diety. |
The Mules and Horses are for sorrow shorne, |
The battlements from off the walls are torne. |
Of stately Ecbatane who now must shew, |
A rueful face in this so general woe; |
Twelve thousand Talents also did intend, |
Upon a sumptuous monument to spend: |
What e're he did, or thought not so content, |
His messenger to Jupiter he sent, |
That by his leave his friend Ephestion, |
Among the Demy Gods they might inthrone. |
From Media to Babylon he went, |
To meet him there t' Antipater he'd sent, |
That he might act also upon the Stage, |
And in a Tragedy there end his age. |
The Queen Olimpias bears him deadly hate, |
Not suffering her to meddle with the State, |
And by her Letters did her Son incite, |
This great indignity he should requite; |
His doing so, no whit displeas'd the King, |
Though to his Mother he disprov'd the thing. |
But now Antipater had liv'd so long, |
He might well dye though he had done no wrong; |
His service great is suddenly forgot, |
Or if remembred, yet regarded not: |
The King doth intimate 'twas his intent, |
His honours and his riches to augment; |
Of larger Provinces the rule to give, |
And for his Counsel near the King to live. |
So to be caught, Antipater's too wise, |
Parmenio's death's too fresh before his eyes; |
He was too subtil for his crafty foe. |
Nor by his baits could be insnared so: |
But his excuse with humble thanks he sends, |
His Age and journy long he then pretends; |
And pardon craves for his unwilling stay, |
He shews his grief, he's forc'd to disobey. |
Before his Answer came to Babylon, |
The thread of Alexanders life was spun; |
Poyson had put an end to's dayes ('twas thought) |
By Philip and Cassander to him brought, |
Sons to Antipater, and bearers of his Cup, |
Lest of such like their Father chance to sup; |
By others thought, and that more generally, |
That through excessive drinking he did dye: |
The thirty third of's Age do all agree, |
This Conquerour did yield to destiny. |
When this sad news came to Darius Mother, |
She laid it more to heart, then any other, |
Nor meat, nor drink, nor comfort would she take, |
But pin'd in grief till life did her forsake; |
All friends she shuns, yea, banished the light, |
Till death inwrapt her in perpetual night. |
This Monarchs fame must last whilst world doth stand, |
And Conquests be talkt of whilest there is land; |
His Princely qualities had he retain'd, |
Unparalled for ever had remain'd. |
But with the world his virtues overcame, |
And so with black beclouded, all his fame; |
Wise Aristotle Tutor to his youth. |
Had so instructed him in moral Truth: |
The principles of what he then had learn'd |
Might to the last (when sober) be discern'd. |
Learning and learned men he much regarded, |
And curious Artist evermore rewarded: |
The Illiads of Homer he still kept. |
And under's pillow laid them when he slept. |
Achilles happiness he did envy, |
'Cause Homer kept his acts to memory. |
Profusely bountifull without desert, |
For such as pleas'd him had both wealth and heart |
Cruel by nature and by custome too, |
As oft his acts throughout his reign doth shew: |
Ambitious so, that nought could satisfie, |
Vain, thirsting after immortality, |
Still fearing that his name might hap to dye, |
And fame not last unto eternity. |
This Conqueror did oft lament (tis said) |
There were no more worlds to be conquered. |
This folly great Augustus did deride, |
For had he had but wisdome to his pride, |
He would had found enough there to be done, |
To govern that he had already won. |
His thoughts are perisht, he aspires no more, |
Nor can he kill or save as heretofore. |
A God alive, him all must Idolize, |
Now like a mortal helpless man he lyes. |
Of all those Kingdomes large which he had got, |
To his Posterity remain'd no jot; |
For by that hand which still revengeth bloud, |
None of his kindred, nor his race long stood: |
But as he took delight much blood to spill, |
So the same cup to his, did others fill. |
Four of his Captains now do all divide, |
As Daniel before had prophysi'd. |
The Leopard down the four wings 'gan to rise, |
The great horn broke, the less did tyranize. |
What troubles and contentions did ensue |
We may hereafter shew in season due. |
Aridæus. |
Great Alexander dead, his Armyes left, |
Like to that Giant of his Eye bereft; |
When of his monstrous bulk it was the guide, |
His matchless force no creature could abide. |
But by Ulisses having lost his sight, |
All men began streight to contemn his might; |
For aiming still amiss, his dreadful blows |
Did harm himself, but never reacht his Foes. |
Now Court and Camp all in confusion be, |
A King they'l have, but who, none can agree; |
Each Captain wisht this prize to bear away, |
But none so hardy found as so durst say: |
Great Alexander did leave Issue none, |
Except by Artabasus daughter one; |
And Roxane fair whom late he married, |
Was near her time to be delivered. |
By natures right these had enough to claim, |
But meaness of their mothers bar'd the same, |
Alledg'd by those who by their subtile Plea |
Had hope themselves to bear the Crown away. |
A Sister Alexander had, but she |
Claim'd not, perhaps, her Sex might hindrance be. |
After much tumult they at last proclaim'd |
His base born brother Aridæus nam'd, |
That so under his feeble wit and reign, |
Their ends they might the better still attain. |
This choice Perdiccas vehemently disclaim'd, |
And Babe unborn of Roxane he proclaim'd; |
Some wished him to take the style of King, |
Because his Master gave to him his Ring, |
And had to him still since Ephestion di'd |
More then to th' rest his favour testifi'd. |
But he refus'd, with feigned modesty, |
Hoping to be elect more generally. |
He hold on this occasion should have laid, |
For second offer there was never made. |
'Mongst these contentions, tumults, jealousies, |
Seven dayes the corps of their great master lies |
Untoucht, uncovered slighted and neglected, |
So much these princes their own ends respected: |
A Contemplation to astonish Kings, |
That he who late possest all earthly things, |
And yet not so content unless that he |
Might be esteemed for a Diety; |
Now lay a Spectacle to testifie, |
The wretchedness of mans mortality. |
After some time, when stirs began to calm, |
His body did the Egyptians embalme; |
His countenance so lively did appear, |
That for a while they durst not come so near: |
No sign of poyson in his intrails found, |
But all his bowels coloured, well and sound. |
Perdiccas seeing Aridæus must be King, |
Under his name began to rule each thing. |
His chief Opponent who Control'd his sway, |
Was Meleager whom he would take away, |
And by a wile he got him in his power, |
So took his life unworthily that hour. |
Using the name, and the command of th' King |
To authorize his acts in every thing. |
The princes seeing Perdiccas power and pride, |
For their security did now provide. |
Antigonus for his share Asia takes, |
And Ptolemy next sure of Egypt makes: |
Seleucus afterward held Babylon, |
Antipater had long rul'd Macedon. |
These now to govern for the king pretends, |
But nothing less each one himself intends. |
Perdiccas took no province like the rest, |
But held command of th' Army (which was best) |
And had a higher project in his head, |
His Masters sister secretly to wed: |
So to the Lady, covertly he sent, |
(That none might know, to frustrate his intent) |
But Cleopatra this Suitor did deny, |
For Leonatus more lovely in her eye, |
To whom she sent a message of her mind, |
That if he came good welcome he should find. |
In these tumultuous dayes the thralled Greeks, |
Their Ancient Liberty afresh now seeks. |
And gladly would the yoke shake off, laid on |
Sometimes by Philip and his conquering son. |
The Athenians force Antipater to fly |
To Lamia where he shut up doth lye. |
To brave Craterus then he sends with speed |
For succours to relieve him in his need. |
The like of Leonatus he requires, |
(Which at this time well suited his desires) |
For to Antipater he now might goe, |
His Lady take in th' way, and no man know. |
Antiphilus the Athenian General |
With speed his Army doth together call; |
And Leonatus seeks to stop, that so |
He joyne not with Antipater their foe. |
The Athenian Army was the greater far, |
(Which did his Match with Cleopatra mar) |
For fighting still, while there did hope remain |
The valiant Chief amidst his foes was slain. |
'Mongst all the princes of great Alexander |
For personage, none like to this Commander. |
Now to Antipater Craterus goes, |
Blockt up in Lamia still by his foes, |
Long marches through Cilicia he makes, |
And the remains of Leonatus takes: |
With them and his he into Grecia went, |
Antipater releas'd from prisonment: |
After which time the Greeks did never more |
Act any thing of worth, as heretofore: |
But under servitude their necks remain'd, |
Nor former liberty or glory gain'd. |
Now di'd about the end of th' Lamian war |
Demosthenes, that sweet-tongue'd Orator, |
Who fear'd Antipater would take his life |
For animating the Athenian strife: |
To end his dayes by poison rather chose |
Then fall into the hands of mortal foes. |
Craterus and Antipater now joyne, |
In love and in affinity combine, |
Craterus doth his daughter Phila wed |
Their friendship might the more be strengthened. |
Whilst they in Macedon do thus agree, |
In Asia they all asunder be. |
Perdiccas griev'd to see the princes bold |
So many Kingdomes in their power to hold, |
Yet to regain them, how he did not know, |
His souldiers 'gainst those captains would not goe |
To suffer them go on as they begun, |
Was to give way himself might be undone. |
With Antipater to joyne he sometimes thought, |
That by his help, the rest might low be brought, |
But this again dislikes; he would remain, |
If not in stile, in deed a soveraign; |
(For all the princes of great Alexander |
Acknowledged for Chief that old Commander) |
Desires the King to goe to Macedon, |
Which once was of his Ancestors the throne, |
And by his presence there to nullifie |
The acts of his Vice-Roy now grown so high. |
Antigonus of treason first attaints, |
And summons him to answer his complaints. |
This he avoids, and ships himself and son, |
Goes to Antipater and tells what's done. |
He and Craterus, both with him do joyne, |
And 'gainst Perdiccas all their strength combine. |
Brave Ptolemy, to make a fourth then sent |
To save himself from danger imminent. |
In midst of these garboyles with wondrous state |
His masters Funeral doth celebrate: |
In Alexandria his tomb he plac'd, |
Which eating time hath scarcely yet defac'd. |
Two years and more, since natures debt he paid, |
And yet till now at quiet was not laid. |
Great love did Ptolemy by this act gain, |
And made the souldiers on his side remain. |
Perdiccas hears his foes are all combin'd, |
'Gainst which to goe, is not resolv'd in mind. |
But first 'gainst Ptolemy he judg'd was best, |
Neer'st unto him, and farthest from the rest, |
Leaves Eumenes the Asian Coast to free |
From the invasions of the other three, |
And with his army unto Egypt goes |
Brave Ptolemy to th' utmost to oppose. |
Perdiccas surly cariage, and his pride |
Did alinate the souldiers from his side. |
But Ptolemy by affability |
His sweet demeanour and his courtesie, |
Did make his own, firm to his cause remain, |
And from the other side did dayly gain. |
Perdiccas in his pride did ill intreat |
Python of haughty mind, and courage great. |
Who could not brook so great indignity, |
But of his wrongs his friends doth certifie; |
The souldiers 'gainst Perdiccas they incense, |
Who vow to make this captain recompence, |
And in a rage they rush into his tent, |
Knock out his brains: to Ptolemy then went |
And offer him his honours, and his place, |
With stile of the Protector him to grace. |
Next day into the camp came Ptolemy, |
And is receiv'd of all most joyfully. |
Their proffers he refus'd with modesty, |
Yields them to Python for his courtesie. |
With what he held he was now more content, |
Then by more trouble to grow eminent. |
Now comes there news of a great victory |
That Eumenes got of the other three. |
Had it but in Perdiccas life ariv'd, |
With greater joy it would have been receiv'd. |
Thus Ptolemy rich Egypt did retain, |
And Python turn'd to Asia again. |
Whilst Perdiccas encamp'd in Affrica, |
Antigonus did enter Asia, |
And fain would Eumenes draw to their side, |
But he alone most faithfull did abide: |
The other all had Kingdomes in their eye, |
But he was true to 's masters family, |
Nor could Craterus, whom he much did love. |
From his fidelity once make him move: |
Two Battles fought, and had of both the best, |
And brave Craterus slew among the rest: |
For this sad strife he poures out his complaints, |
And his beloved foe full sore laments. |
I should but snip a story into bits |
And his great Acts and glory much eclipse, |
To shew the dangers Eumenes befel, |
His stratagems wherein he did excel: |
His Policies, how he did extricate |
Himself from out of Lab'rinths intricate: |
He that at large would satisfie his mind, |
In Plutarchs Lives his history may find. |
For all that should be said, let this suffice, |
He was both valiant, faithfull, patient, wise. |
Python now chose Protector of the state, |
His rule Queen Euridice begins to hate, |
Sees Arrideus must not King it long, |
If once young Alexander grow more strong, |
But that her husband serve for supplement, |
To warm his seat, was never her intent. |
She knew her birth-right gave her Macedon, |
Grand-child to him who once sat on that throne |
Who was Perdiccas, Philips eldest brother, |
She daughter to his son, who had no other. |
Pythons commands, as oft she countermands; |
What he appoints, she purposely withstands. |
He wearied out at last would needs be gone, |
Resign'd his place, and so let all alone: |
In's room the souldiers chose Antipater, |
Who vext the Queen more then the other far. |
From Macedon to Asia he came, |
That he might settle matters in the same. |
He plac'd, displac'd, control'd rul'd as he list, |
And this no man durst question or resist; |
For all the nobles of King Alexander |
Their bonnets vail'd to him as chief Commander. |
When to his pleasure all things they had done, |
The King and Queen he takes to Macedon, |
Two sons of Alexander, and the rest, |
All to be order'd there as he thought best. |
The Army to Antigonus doth leave, |
And Government of Asia to him gave. |
And thus Antipater the ground-work layes, |
On which Antigonus his height doth raise, |
Who in few years, the rest so overtops, |
For universal Monarchy he hopes. |
With Eumenes he diverse Battels fought, |
And by his slights to circumvent him sought: |
But vain it was to use his policy, |
'Gainst him that all deceits could scan and try. |
In this Epitome too long to tell |
How finely Eumenes did here excell, |
And by the self same Traps the other laid, |
He to his cost was righteously repaid. |
But while these Chieftains do in Asia fight, |
To Greece and Macedon lets turn our sight. |
When great Antipater the world must leave, |
His place to Polisperchon did bequeath, |
Fearing his son Cassander was unstaid, |
Too rash to bear that charge, if on him laid. |
Antigonus hearing of his decease |
On most part of Assyria doth seize. |
And Ptolemy next to incroach begins, |
All Syria and Phenicia he wins, |
Then Polisperchon 'gins to act in's place, |
Recalls Olimpias the Court to grace. |
Antipater had banish'd her from thence |
Into Epire for her great turbulence; |
This new Protector's of another mind, |
Thinks by her Majesty much help to find. |
Cassander like his Father could not see, |
This Polisperchons great ability, |
Slights his Commands, his actions he disclaims, |
And to be chief himself now bends his aims; |
Such as his Father had advanc'd to place, |
Or by his favours any way had grac'd |
Are now at the devotion of the Son, |
Prest to accomplish what he would have done; |
Besides he was the young Queens favourite, |
On whom (t'was thought) she set her chief delight: |
Unto these helps at home he seeks out more, |
Goes to Antigonus and doth implore, |
By all the Bonds 'twixt him and's Father past, |
And for that great gift which he gave him last. |
By these and all to grant him some supply, |
To take down Polisperchon grown so high; |
For this Antigonus did need no spurrs, |
Hoping to gain yet more by these new stirs, |
Streight furnish'd him with a sufficient aid, |
And so he quick returns thus well appaid, |
With Ships at Sea, an Army for the Land, |
His proud opponent hopes soon to withstand. |
But in his absence Polisperchon takes |
Such friends away as for his Interest makes |
By death, by prison, or by banishment, |
That no supply by these here might be lent, |
Cassander with his Host to Grecia goes, |
Whom Polisperchon labours to oppose; |
But beaten was at Sea, and foil'd at Land, |
Cassanders forces had the upper hand, |
Athens with many Towns in Greece beside, |
Firm (for his Fathers sake) to him abide. |
Whil'st hot in wars these two in Greece remain, |
Antigonus doth all in Asia gain; |
Still labours Eumenes, would with him side, |
But all in vain, he faithful did abide: |
Nor Mother could, nor Sons of Alexander, |
Put trust in any but in this Commander. |
The great ones now began to shew their mind, |
And act as opportunity they find. |
Aridæus the scorn'd and simple King, |
More then he bidden was could act no thing. |
Polisperchon for office hoping long, |
Thinks to inthrone the Prince when riper grown; |
Euridice this injury disdains, |
And to Cassandar of this wrong complains. |
Hateful the name and house of Alexander, |
Was to this proud vindicative Cassander; |
He still kept lockt within his memory, |
His Fathers danger, with his Family; |
Nor thought he that indignity was small, |
When Alexander knockt his head to th' wall. |
These with his love unto the amorous Queen, |
Did make him vow, her servant to be seen. |
Olimpias, Aridæus deadly hates, |
As all her Husbands, Children by his mates, |
She gave him poyson formerly ('tis thought) |
Which damage both to mind and body brought; |
She now with Polisperchon doth combine, |
To make the King by force his Seat resigne: |
And her young grand-child in his State inthrone, |
That under him, she might rule, all alone. |
For aid she goes t' Epire among her friends, |
The better to accomplish these her ends; |
Euridice hearing what she intends, |
In haste unto her friend Cassander sends, |
To leave his siege at Tegea, and with speed, |
To save the King and her in this their need: |
Then by intreaties, promises and Coyne, |
Some forces did procure with her to joyn. |
Olimpias soon enters Macedon, |
The Queen to meet her bravely marches on, |
But when her Souldiers saw their ancient Queen, |
Calling to mind what sometime she had been; |
The wife and Mother of their famous Kings, |
Nor darts, nor arrows, now none shoots or flings. |
The King and Queen seeing their destiny, |
To save their lives t' Amphipolis do fly; |
But the old Queen pursues them with her hate, |
And needs will have their lives as well as State: |
The King by extream torments had his end, |
And to the Queen these presents she did send; |
A Halter, cup of poyson, and a Sword, |
Bids chuse her death, such kindness she'l afford. |
The Queen with many a curse, and bitter check, |
At length yields to the Halter her fair neck; |
Praying that fatal day might quickly haste, |
On which Olimpias of the like might taste. |
This done the cruel Queen rests not content, |
'Gainst all that lov'd Cassander she was bent; |
His Brethren, Kinsfolk and his chiefest friends, |
That fell within her reach came to their ends: |
Dig'd up his brother dead, 'gainst natures right, |
And threw his bones about to shew her spight: |
The Courtiers wondring at her furious mind, |
Wisht in Epire she had been still confin'd. |
In Peloponesus then Cassander lay, |
Where hearing of this news he speeds away, |
With rage, and with revenge he's hurried on, |
To find this cruel Queen in Macedon; |
But being stopt, at streight Thermopoly, |
Sea passage gets, and lands in Thessaly: |
His Army he divides, sends post away, |
Polisperchon to hold a while in play; |
And with the rest Olimpias pursues, |
For all her cruelty, to give her dues. |
She with the chief o' th' Court to Pydna flyes, |
Well fortifi'd, (and on the Sea it lyes) |
There by Cassander she's blockt up so long, |
Untill the Famine grows exceeding strong, |
Her Couzen of Epire did what he might, |
To raise the Siege, and put her Foes to flight. |
Cassander is resolved there to remain, |
So succours and endeavours proves but vain; |
Fain would this wretched Queen capitulate, |
Her foe would give no Ear, (such is his hate) |
The Souldiers pinched with this scarcity, |
By stealth unto Cassander dayly fly; |
Olimpias means to hold out to the last, |
Expecting nothing but of death to tast: |
But his occasions calling him away, |
Gives promise for her life, so wins the day. |
No sooner had he got her in his hand, |
But made in judgement her accusers stand; |
And plead the blood of friends and kindreds spilt, |
Desiring justice might be done for guilt; |
And so was he acquitted of his word, |
For justice sake she being put to th' Sword: |
This was the end of this most cruel Queen, |
Whose fury scarcely parallel'd hath been. |
The daughter sister, Mother, Wife to Kings, |
But Royalty no good conditions brings; |
To Husbands death ('tis thought) she gave consent, |
The murtherer she did so much lament: |
With Garlands crown'd his head, bemoan'd his fates, |
His Sword unto Apollo consecrates. |
Her Outrages too tedious to relate, |
How for no cause but her inveterate hate; |
Her Husbands wives and Children after's death, |
Some slew, some fry'd, of others stopt the breath: |
Now in her Age she's forc'd to tast that Cup, |
Which she had others often made to sup. |
Now many Towns in Macedon supprest, |
And Pellas fain to yield among the rest; |
The Funerals Cassander celebrates, |
Of Aridæus and his Queen with State: |
Among their Ancestors by him they're laid, |
And shews of lamentation for them made. |
Old Thebes he then rebuilt so much of fame, |
And Cassandria rais'd after his name. |
But leave him building, others in their Urne, |
Let's for a while, now into Asia turn. |
True Eumenes endeavours by all Skill, |
To keep Antigonus from Shushan still; |
Having command o'th' Treasure he can hire, |
Such as no threats, nor favour could acquire. |
In divers Battels he had good success, |
Antigonus came off still honourless; |
When Victor oft he'd been, and so might still, |
Peucestes did betray him by a wile. |
T' Antigonus, who took his Life unjust, |
Because he never would forgoe his trust; |
Thus lost he all for his fidelity, |
Striving t'uphold his Masters Family. |
But to a period as that did haste, |
So Eumenes (the prop) of death must tast; |
All Persia now Antigonus doth gain, |
And Master of the Treasure sole remain: |
Then with Seleucus streight at odds doth fall, |
And he for aid to Ptolemy doth call, |
The Princes all begin now to envy |
Antigonus, his growing up so high; |
Fearing his force, and what might hap e're long, |
Enters into a Combination strong, |
Seleucus, Ptolemy Cassander joynes, |
Lysimachus to make a fourth combines: |
Antigonus desirous of the Greeks, |
To make Cassander odious to them seeks, |
Sends forth his declarations near and far, |
And clears what cause he had to make this war, |
Cassanders outrages at large doth tell, |
Shews his ambitious practises as well. |
The mother of their King to death he'd put, |
His wife and son in prison close had shut: |
And aiming now to make himself a king, |
And that some title he might seem to bring, |
Thessalonica he had newly wed, |
Daughter to Philip their renowned head: |
Had built and call'd a City by his name, |
Which none e're did, but those of royal fame: |
And in despight of their two famous Kings |
Hatefull Olinthians to Greece rebrings. |
Rebellious Thebes he had reedified, |
Which their late King in dust had damnified, |
Requires them therefore to take up their arms |
And to requite this traitor for these harms. |
Then Ptolemy would gain the Greeks likewise, |
And he declares the others injuryes: |
First how he held the Empire in his hands, |
Seleucus driven from Goverment and lands, |
The valiant Eumenes unjustly slain, |
And Lord of royal Shushan did remain; |
Therefore requests their help to take him down |
Before he wear the universal Crown. |
These princes at the sea soon had a fight, |
Where great Antigonus was put to flight: |
His son at Gaza likewise lost the field, |
So Syria to Ptolemy did yield: |
And Seleucus recovers Babylon, |
Still gaining Countryes eastward he goes on. |
Demetrius with Ptolemy did fight, |
And coming unawares, put him to flight; |
But bravely sends the prisoners back again, |
With all the spoyle and booty he had tane. |
Courteous as noble Ptolemy, or more, |
Who at Gaza did the like to him before. |
Antigonus did much rejoyce, his son |
With victory, his lost repute had won. |
At last these princes tired out with warrs, |
Sought for a peace, and laid aside their jarrs: |
The terms of their agreement, thus express |
That each should hold what now he did possess, |
Till Alexander unto age was grown, |
Who then should be enstalled in the throne. |
This toucht Cassander sore for what he'd done, |
Imprisoning both the mother and the son: |
He sees the Greeks now favour their young Prince |
Whom he in durance held, now, and long since, |
That in few years he must be forc'd or glad, |
To render up such Kingdomes as he had; |
Resolves to quit his fears by one deed done, |
So puts to death the Mother and her Son. |
This Roxane for her beauty all commend, |
But for one act she did, just was her end. |
No sooner was great Alexander dead, |
But she Darius daughters murthered. |
Both thrown into a well to hide her blot, |
Perdiccas was her Partner in this plot. |
The heavens seem'd slow in paying her the same; |
But at the last the hand of vengeance came. |
And for that double fact which she had done, |
The life of her must goe, and of her son |
Perdiccas had before for his amiss, |
But by their hands who thought not once of this. |
Cassanders deed the princes do detest, |
But 'twas in shew; in heart it pleas'd them best. |
That he is odious to the world, they'r glad: |
And now they were free Lords of what they had. |
When this foul tragedy was past and done, |
Polysperchon brings the other son |
Call'd Hercules, and elder then his brother, |
(But Olimpias would prefer the other) |
The Greeks toucht with the murther done of late, |
This Orphan prince 'gan to compassionate, |
Begin to mutter much 'gainst proud Cassander, |
And place their hopes on th' heir of Alexander. |
Cassander fear'd what might of this ensue, |
So Polisperchon to his counsel drew, |
And gives Peloponesus for his hire, |
Who slew the prince according to desire. |
Thus was the race and house of Alexander |
Extinct by this inhumane wretch Cassander. |
Antigonus, for all this doth not mourn, |
He knows to's profit, this at last will turn, |
But that some Title now he might pretend, |
To Cleopatra doth for marriage send; |
Lysimachus and Ptolemy the same, |
And lewd Cassander too, sticks not for shame: |
She then in Lydia at Sardis lay, |
Where by Embassage all these Princes pray. |
Choice above all, of Ptolemy she makes, |
With his Embassador her journy takes; |
Antigonus Lieutenant stayes her still, |
Untill he further know his Masters will: |
Antigonus now had a Wolf by th' Ears, |
To hold her still, or let her go he fears. |
Resolves at last the Princess should be slain, |
So hinders him of her, he could not gain; |
Her women are appointed for this deed, |
They for their great reward no better speed: |
For by command, they streight were put to death, |
As vile Conspirators that stopt her breath. |
And now he hopes, he's order'd all so well, |
The world must needs believe what he doth tell; |
Thus Philips house was quite extinguished, |
Except Cassanders wife who yet not dead. |
And by their means who thought of nothing less, |
Then vengeance just, against them to express; |
Now blood was paid with blood for what was done |
By cruel Father, Mother cruel Son: |
Thus may we hear, and fear, and ever say, |
That hand is righteous still which doth repay. |
These Captains now the stile of Kings do take, |
For to their Crowns their's none can Title make; |
Demetrius first the royal stile assum'd, |
By his Example all the rest presum'd. |
Antigonus himself to ingratiate, |
Doth promise liberty to Athens State; |
With Arms and with provision stores them well, |
The better 'gainst Cassander to rebel. |
Demetrius thether goes, is entertain'd |
Not like a King, but like some God they feign'd; |
Most grosly base was their great Adulation, |
Who Incense burnt, and offered oblation: |
These Kings afresh fall to their wars again, |
Demetrius of Ptolemy doth gain. |
'Twould be an endless Story to relate |
Their several Battels and their several fate, |
Their fights by Sea, their victories by Land, |
How some when down, straight got the upper hand |
Antigonus and Seleucus then fight |
Near Ephesus, each bringing all his might, |
And he that Conquerour shall now remain, |
The Lordship of all Asia shall retain; |
This day 'twixt these two Kings ends all the strife, |
For here Antigonus lost rule and life: |
Nor to his Son, did e're one foot remain |
Of those vast Kingdomes, he did sometimes gain. |
Demetrius with his Troops to Athens flyes, |
Hopes to find succours in his miseries; |
But they adoring in prosperity, |
Now shut their gates in his adversity: |
He sorely griev'd at this his desperate State |
Tryes Foes, sith friends will not compassionate. |
His peace he then with old Seleucus makes, |
Who his fair daughter Stratonica takes, |
Antiochus, Seleucus, dear lov'd Son, |
Is for this fresh young Lady quite undone; |
Falls so extreamly sick, all fear'd his life, |
Yet durst not say, he lov'd his Fathers wife, |
When his disease the skill'd Physitian found, |
His Fathers mind he wittily did sound, |
Who did no sooner understand the same, |
But willingly resign'd the beautious Dame: |
Cassander now must dye his race is run, |
And leaves the ill got Kingdomes he had won. |
Two Sons he left, born of King Philips daughter, |
Who had an end put to their dayes by slaughter; |
Which should succeed at variance they fell, |
The Mother would, the youngest might excell: |
The eld'st inrag'd did play the Vipers part, |
And with his Sword did run her through the heart: |
Rather then Philips race should longer live, |
He whom she gave his life her death shall give. |
This by Lysimacus was after slain, |
Whose daughter he not long before had ta'ne; |
Demetrius is call'd in by th' youngest Son, |
Against Lysimachus who from him won. |
But he a Kingdome more then's friend did eye, |
Seaz'd upon that, and slew him traitrously. |
Thus Philips and Cassander's race both gone, |
And so falls out to be extinct in one; |
And though Cassander died in his bed, |
His Seed to be extirpt, was destined; |
For blood, which was decre'd that he should spill, |
Yet must his Children pay for Fathers ill; |
Jehu in killing Ahab's house did well, |
Yet be aveng'd must blood of Jezerel. |
Demetrius thus Cassander's Kingdoms gains, |
And now in Macedon as King he reigns; |
Though men and mony both he hath at will, |
In neither finds content if he sits still: |
That Seleucus holds Asia grievs him sore, |
Those Countryes large his Father got before. |
These to recover, musters all his might, |
And with his Son in Law will needs go fight; |
A mighty Navy rig'd, an Army stout, |
With these he hopes to turn the world about: |
Leaving Antigonus his eldest Son, |
In his long absence to rule Macedon. |
Demetrius with so many troubles met, |
As Heaven and Earth against him had been set; |
Disaster on disaster him pursue, |
His story seems a Fable more then true. |
At last he's taken and imprisoned |
Within an Isle that was with pleasures fed, |
Injoy'd what ere beseem'd his Royalty, |
Only restrained of his liberty: |
After three years he died, left what he'd won, |
In Greece unto Antigonus his Son. |
For his Posterity unto this day, |
Did ne're regain one foot in Asia; |
His Body Seleucus sends to his Son, |
Whose obsequies with wondrous pomp was done. |
Next di'd the brave and noble Ptolemy, |
Renown'd for bounty, valour, clemency, |
Rich Egypt left, and what else he had won, |
To Philadelphus his more worthy Son. |
Of the old Heroes, now but two remain, |
Seleucus and Lysimachus these twain, |
Must needs go try their fortune and their might, |
And so Lysimachus was slain in fight; |
'Twas no small joy unto Seleucus breast, |
That now he had out-lived all the rest: |
Possession of Europe thinks to take, |
And so himself the only Monarch make; |
Whilst with these hopes in Greece he did remain, |
He was by Ptolemy Ceraunus slain. |
The second Son of the first Ptolemy, |
Who for Rebellion unto him did fly; |
Seleucus was a Father and a friend, |
Yet by him had this most unworthy end. |
Thus with these Kingly Captains have we done, |
A little now how the Succession run, |
Antigonus, Seleucus and Cassander, |
With Ptolemy, reign'd after Alexander; |
Cassander's Sons soon after's death were slain, |
So three Successors only did remain: |
Antigonus his Kingdomes lost and life, |
Unto Seleucus, Author of that strife. |
His Son Demetrius, all Cassanders gains, |
And his posterity, the same retains; |
Demetrius Son was call'd Antigonus, |
And his again was nam'd Demetrius. |
I must let pass those many Battels fought, |
Betwixt those Kings, and noble Pyrrhus stout, |
And his Son Alexander of Epire, |
Whereby immortal honour they acquire; |
Demetrius had Philip to his Son, |
(Part of whose Kingdomes Titus Quintius won) |
Philip had Perseus, who was made a Thrale |
T' Emilius the Roman General; |
Him with his Sons in Triumph lead did he, |
Such riches too as Rome did never see: |
This of Antigonus, his Seed's the Fate, |
Whose Empire was subdu'd to th' Roman State. |
Longer Seleucus held the royalty, |
In Syria by his Posterity; |
Antiochus Soter his Son was nam'd, |
To whom the old Berosus (so much fam'd,) |
His Book of Assurs Monarchs dedicates, |
Tells of their names, their wars, their riches, fates; |
But this is perished with many more, |
Which oft we wish was extant as before. |
Antiochus Theos was Soter's Son, |
Who a long war with Egypts King begun; |
The Affinityes and Wars Daniel sets forth, |
And calls them there the Kings of South & North, |
This Theos murther'd was by his lewd wife, |
Seleucus reign'd, when he had lost his life. |
A third Seleucus next sits on the Seat, |
And then Antiochus sirnam'd the great, |
Whose large Dominions after was made small, |
By Scipio the Roman General; |
Fourth Seleucus Antiochus succeeds, |
And next Epiphanes whose wicked deeds, |
Horrid Massacres, Murthers, cruelties, |
Amongst the Jews we read in Machabees. |
Antiochus Eupater was the next, |
By Rebels and Impostors dayly vext; |
So many Princes still were murthered, |
The Royal Blood was nigh extinguished; |
Then Tygranes the great Armenian King, |
To take the Government was called in, |
Lucullus, Him, (the Roman General) |
Vanquish'd in fight, and took those Kingdomes all; |
Of Greece and Syria thus the rule did end, |
In Egypt next, a little time wee'l spend. |
First Ptolemy being dead, his famous Son |
Call'd Philadelphus, did possess the Throne. |
At Alexandria a Library did build, |
And with seven hundred thousand Volumes fill'd; |
The seventy two Interpreters did seek, |
They might translate the Bible into Greek. |
His Son was Evergetes the last Prince, |
That valour shew'd, virtue, or excellence, |
Philopater was Evergetes Son, |
After Epiphanes sate on the Throne; |
Philometor, Evergetes again, |
And after him, did false Lathurus reign: |
Then Alexander in Lathurus stead, |
Next Auletes, who cut off Pompeys head. |
To all these names, we Ptolemy must add, |
For since the first, they still that Title had. |
Fair Cleopatra next, last of that race, |
Whom Julius Cæsar set in Royal place, |
She with her Paramour, Mark Anthony |
Held for a time, the Egyptian Monarchy, |
Till great Augustus had with him a fight |
At Actium, where his Navy's put to flight; |
He seeing his honour lost, his Kingdome end, |
Did by his Sword his life soon after send. |
His brave Virago Aspes sets to her Arms, |
To take her life, and quit her from all harms; |
For 'twas not death nor danger she did dread, |
But some disgrace in triumph to be led. |
Here ends at last the Grecian Monarchy, |
Which by the Romans had its destiny; |
Thus King & Kingdomes have their times & dates, |
Their standings, overturnings, bounds and fates: |
Now up, now down now chief, & then broght under, |
The heavn's thus rule, to fil the world with wonder |
The Assyrian Monarchy long time did stand, |
But yet the Persian got the upper hand; |
The Grecian them did utterly subdue, |
And millions were subjected unto few: |
The Grecian longer then the Persian stood, |
Then came the Roman like a raging flood; |
And with the torrent of his rapid course, |
Their Crowns, their Titles, riches bears by force. |
The first was likened to a head of gold. |
Next Arms and breast of silver to behold, |
The third, Belly and Thighs of brass in sight, |
And last was Iron, which breaketh all with might; |
The stone out of the mountain then did rise, |
and smote those feet those legs, those arms & thighs |
Then gold silver, brass, Iron and all the store, |
Became like Chaff upon the threshing Floor. |
The first a Lion, second was a Bear, |
The third a Leopard, which four wings did rear; |
The last more strong and dreadful then the rest, |
Whose Iron teeth devoured every Beast, |
And when he had no appetite to eat, |
The residue he stamped under feet; |
Yet shall this Lion, Bear, this Leopard, Ram, |
All trembling stand before the powerful Lamb. |
With these three Monarchyes now have I done, |
But how the fourth, their Kingdomes from them won, |
And how from small beginnings it did grow, |
To fill the world with terrour and with woe; |
My tyred brain leavs to some better pen, |
This task befits not women like to men: |
For what is past, I blush, excuse to make, |
But humbly stand, some grave reproof to take; |
Pardon to crave for errours, is but vain, |
The Subject was too high, beyond my strain, |
To frame Apology for some offence, |
Converts our boldness into impudence: |
This my presumption some now to requite, |
Ne sutor ultra crepidum may write. |
The End of the Grecian Monarchy. |
After some dayes of rest, my restless heart |
To finish what's begun, new thoughts impart, |
And maugre all resolves, my fancy wrought |
This fourth to th' other three, now might be brought: |
Shortness of time and inability, |
Will force me to a confus'd brevity. |
Yet in this Chaos, one shall easily spy |
The vast Limbs of a mighty Monarchy, |
What e're is found amiss take in good part, |
As faults proceeding from my head, not heart. |
The Romane Monarchy,
being the fourth and last,
beginning Anno Mundi,
3213.
STout Romulus, Romes founder, and first King, |
Whom vestal Rhea to the world did bring; |
His Father was not Mars as some devis'd, |
But Æmulus in Armour all disguiz'd: |
Thus he deceiv'd his Neece, she might not know |
The double injury he then did do. |
Where sheperds once had Coats & sheep their folds |
Where Swains & rustick Peasants kept their holds, |
A City fair did Romulus erect, |
The Mistress of the World, in each respect, |
His brother Rhemus there by him was slain, |
For leaping o're the wall with some disdain. |
The stones at first was cemented with blood, |
And bloody hath it prov'd, since first it stood. |
This City built and Sacrifices done, |
A Form of Government, he next begun; |
A hundred Senators he likewise chose, |
And with the style of Patres, honoured those, |
His City to replenish, men he wants, |
Great priviledges then to all he grants; |
That will within those strong built walls reside, |
And this new gentle Government abide. |
Of wives there was so great a scarcity, |
They to their neighbours sue for a supply; |
But all disdain Alliance, then to make, |
So Romulus was forc'd this course to take: |
Great shews he makes at Tilt and Turnament, |
To see these sports, the Sabins all are bent. |
Their daughters by the Romans then were caught, |
Then to recover them a Field was fought; |
But in the end, to final peace they come, |
And Sabins as one people dwelt in Rome. |
The Romans now more potent 'gin to grow, |
And Fedinates they wholly overthrow. |
But Romulus then comes unto his end. |
Some feigning to the Gods he did ascend: |
Others the seven and thirtyeth of his reign, |
Affirm, that by the Senate he was slain. |
Numa Pompilius. |
Numa Pompilius next chose they King, |
Held for his piety some sacred thing, |
To Janus he that famous Temple built: |
Kept shut in peace, set ope when blood was spilt; |
Religious Rites and Customes instituted, |
And Priests and Flamines likewise he deputed, |
Their Augurs strange, their gestures and attire, |
And vestal maids to keep the holy fire. |
The Nymph Ægeria this to him told, |
So to delude the people he was bold: |
Forty three years he rul'd with general praise, |
Accounted for a God in after dayes. |
Tullius Hostilius. |
Tullius Hostilius was third Roman King, |
Who Martial discipline in use did bring; |
War with the antient Albans he did wage, |
This strife to end six brothers did ingage. |
Three call'd Horatii on the Romans side, |
And Curiatii three Albans provide: |
The Romans conquer, th' other yield the day, |
Yet in their Compact, after false they play. |
The Romans sore incens'd, their General slay, |
And from old Alba fetch the wealth away; |
Of Latin Kings this was long since the Seat, |
But now demolished, to make Rome great. |
Thirty two years did Tullus reign, then dye, |
Left Rome in wealth, and power still growing high. |
Ancus Martius. |
Next Ancus Martius sits upon the Throne, |
Nephew unto Pompilius dead and gone; |
Rome he inlarg'd, new built again the wall, |
Much stronger, and more beautiful withal; |
A stately Bridge he over Tyber made, |
Of Boats and Oars no more they need the aid. |
Fair Ostia he built this Town, it stood |
Close by the mouth of famous Tyber floud, |
Twenty four years time of his Royal race, |
Then unto death unwillingly gives place. |
Tarquinius Priscus. |
Tarquin a Greek at Corinth born and bred, |
Who from his Country for Sedition fled. |
Is entertain'd at Rome, and in short time, |
By wealth and favour doth to honour climbe; |
He after Martius death the Kingdome had, |
A hundred Senators he more did add. |
Wars with the Latins he again renews, |
And Nations twelve of Tuscany subdues, |
To such rude triumphs as young Rome then had, |
Some State and splendor did this Priscus add: |
Thirty eight years (this stronger born) did reign, |
And after all, by Ancus Sons was slain. |
Servius Tullius. |
Next Servius Tullius gets into the Throne, |
Ascends not up By merits of his own, |
But by the favour and the special grace |
Of Tanquil late Queen, obtains the place. |
He ranks the people into each degree, |
As wealth had made them of ability; |
A general Muster takes, which by account, |
To eighty thousand Souls then did amount. |
Forty four years did Servius Tullius reign, |
And then by Tarquin Priscus son was slain. |
Tarquinius Superbus the last King of the Romans. |
Tarquin the proud, from manners called so, |
Sat on the Throne, when he had slain his Foe. |
Sextus his Son did most unworthily, |
Lucretia force, mirrour of Chastity: |
She loathed so the fact, she loath'd her life, |
And shed her guiltless blood with guilty knife |
Her Husband sore incens'd to quit this wrong, |
With Junius Brutus rose, and being strong, |
The Tarquins they from Rome by force expel, |
In banishment perpetual to dwell; |
The Government they change, a new one bring, |
And people swear ne'r to accept of King. |
An Apology
To finish what's begun, was my intent, |
My thoughts and my endeavours thereto bent; |
Essays I many made but still gave out, |
The more I mus'd, the more I was in doubt: |
The subject large my mind and body weak, |
With many moe discouragements did speak. |
All thoughts of further progress laid aside, |
Though oft perswaded, I as oft deny'd, |
At length resolv'd, when many years had past, |
To prosecute my story to the last; |
And for the same, I hours not few did spend, |
And weary lines (though lanke) I many pen'd: |
But 'fore I could accomplish my desire, |
My papers fell a prey to th' raging fire. |
And thus my pains (with better things) I lost, |
Which none had cause to wail, nor I to boast. |
No more I'le do sith I have suffer'd wrack, |
Although my Monarchies their legs do lack: |
Nor matter is't this last, the world now sees, |
Hath many Ages been upon his knees. |
A Dialogue Between Old En-
gland and New, concerning their
present Troubles, Anno, 1642.
New-England. |
ALas dear Mother fairest Queen and best, |
With honour, wealth, and peace, happy and blest, |
What ails thee hang thy head, & cross thine arms? |
And sit i' th' dust, to sigh these sad alarms? |
What deluge of new woes thus over-whelme |
The glories of thy ever famous Realme? |
What means this wailing tone, this mournful guise? |
Ah, tell thy daughter; she may sympathize. |
Old-England. |
Art ignorant indeed of these my woes? |
Or must my forced tongue these griefs disclose? |
And must my self dissect my tatter'd state, |
Which 'mazed Christendome stands wondring at? |
And thou a Child, a Limb, and dost not feel |
My fainting weakned body now to reel? |
This Physick purging potion, I have taken, |
Will bring consumption, or an Ague quaking, |
Unless some Cordial, thou fetch from high, |
Which present help may ease my malady. |
If I decease, dost think thou shalt survive? |
Or by my wasting state dost think to thrive? |
Then weigh our case, if 't be not justly sad. |
Let me lament alone, while thou art glad. |
New-England. |
And thus (alas) your state you much deplore |
In general terms, but will not say wherefore: |
What medicine shall I seek to cure this woe, |
If th' wound so dangerous I may not know. |
But you perhaps, would have me guess it out. |
What hath some Hengist like that Saxon stout |
By fraud or force usurp'd thy flowring crown, |
Or by tempestuous warrs thy fields trod down? |
Or hath Canutus, that brave valiant Dane |
The Regal peacefull Scepter from thee tane? |
Or is 't a Norman whose victorious hand |
With English blood bedews thy conquered land? |
Or is 't Intestine warrs that thus offend? |
Do Maud and Stephen for the Crown contend? |
Do Barons rise and side against their King, |
And call in foreign aid to help the thing? |
Must Edward be depos'd? Or is 't the hour |
That second Richard must be clapt i'th' tower? |
Or is't the fatal jarre, again begun, |
That from the red white pricking roses sprung? |
Must Richmonds aid, the Nobles now implore? |
To come and break the Tushes of the Boar, |
If none of these dear Mother, what's your woe? |
Pray do you fear Spains bragging Armado? |
Doth your Allye, fair France, conspire your wrack, |
Or doth the Scots play false, behind your back? |
Doth Holland quit you ill for all your love? |
Whence is the storm from Earth or Heaven above? |
Is't drought, is't famine, or is't pestilence? |
Dost feel the smart, or fear the Consequence? |
Your humble Child intreats you, shew your grief, |
Though Arms, nor Purse she hath for your relief, |
Such is her poverty, yet shall be found |
A Suppliant for your help, as she is bound. |
Old England. |
I must confess some of those sores you name, |
My beauteous body at this present maime, |
But forreign foe, nor feigned friend I fear, |
For they have work enough (thou knowst) elsewhere. |
Nor is it Alcies Son, nor Henryes daughter; |
Whose proud contention cause this slaughter, |
Nor Nobles siding to make John no King, |
French Jews unjustly to the Crown to bring; |
No Edward, Richard, to lose rule and life, |
Nor no Lancastrians to renew old strife; |
No Duke of York, nor Earl of March to soyle |
Their hands in kindreds blood whom they did foil |
No crafty Tyrant now usurps the Seat, |
Who Nephews slew that so he might be great; |
No need of Tudor, Roses to unite, |
None knows which is the red, or which the white; |
Spains braving Fleet a second time is sunk, |
France knows how oft my fury she hath drunk: |
By Edward third and Henry fifth of fame; |
Her Lillies in mine Arms avouch the same. |
My Sister Scotland hurts me now no more. |
Though she hath been injurious heretofore; |
What Holland is I am in some suspence? |
But trust not much unto his excellence. |
For wants, sure some I feel, but more I fear, |
And for the Pestilence, who knows how near; |
Famine and Plague, two Sisters of the Sword, |
Destruction to a Land, doth soon afford, |
They're for my punishment ordain'd on high, |
Unless our tears prevent it speedily. |
But yet I Answer not what you demand, |
To shew the grievance of my troubled Land? |
Before I tell th' Effect, I'le shew the Cause |
Which are my sins the breach of sacred Laws; |
Idolatry supplanter of a Nation, |
With foolish Superstitious Adoration, |
Are lik'd and countenanc'd by men of might, |
The Gospel troden down and hath no right: |
Church Offices were sold and bought for gain; |
That Pope had hope to find Rome here again, |
For Oaths and Blasphemies did ever Ear, |
From Belzebub himself such language hear; |
What scorning of the Saints of the most high? |
What injuries did daily on them lie? |
What false reports, what nick-names did they take |
Not for their own, but for their Master's sake? |
And thou poor soul, wert jeer'd among the rest, |
Thy flying for the truth was made a jest. |
For Sabbath-breaking, and for drunkenness, |
Did ever land profaneness more express? |
From crying bloods yet cleansed am not I, |
Martyres and others, dying causelesly. |
How many princely heads on blocks laid down |
For nought but title to a fading crown? |
'Mongst all the crueltyes by great ones done |
Of Edwards youths, and Clarence hapless son, |
O Jane why didst thou dye in flowring prime |
Because of royal stem, that was thy crime. |
For bribery Adultery and lyes, |
Where is the nation, I can't parallize. |
With usury, extortion and oppression, |
These be the Hydraes of my stout transgression. |
These be the bitter fountains, heads and roots, |
Whence flow'd the source, the sprigs, the boughs, & fruits |
Of more then thou canst hear or I relate, |
That with high hand I still did perpetrate, |
For these were threatned the wofull day, |
I mockt the Preachers, put it far away; |
The Sermons yet upon Record do stand |
That cri'd destruction to my wicked land: |
I then believ'd not, now I feel and see, |
The plague of stubborn incredulity. |
Some lost their livings, some in prison pent, |
Some fin'd, from house & friends to exile went: |
Their silent tongues to heaven did vengeance cry, |
Who saw their wrongs & hath judg'd righteously, |
And will repay it seven-fold in my lap: |
This is fore-runner of my Afterclap. |
Nor took I warning by my neighbors falls, |
I saw sad Germanyes dismantled walls, |
I saw her people famish'd, Nobles slain, |
Her fruitfull land, a barren Heath remain. |
I saw unmov'd, her Armyes foil'd and fled, |
Wives forc'd, babes toss'd, her houses calcined. |
I saw strong Rochel yielded to her Foe, |
Thousands of starved Christians there also. |
I saw poor Ireland bleeding out her last, |
Such crueltyes as all reports have past; |
Mine heart obdurate stood not yet agast. |
Now sip I of that cup, and just't may be |
The bottome dreggs reserved are for me. |
New-England: |
To all you've said, sad Mother I assent. |
Your fearfull sins great cause there 's to lament. |
My guilty hands in part, hold up with you, |
A Sharer in your punishment's my due. |
But all you say amounts to this effect, |
Not what you feel, but what you do expect, |
Pray in plain terms, what is your present grief? |
Then let's joyn heads & hearts for your relief. |
Old England. |
Well to the matter then, there's grown of late |
'Twixt King and Peers a Question of State, |
Which is the chief, the Law, or else the King. |
One said, it's he, the other no such thing. |
'Tis said, my Beter part in Parliament |
To ease my groaning Land, shew'd their intent, |
To crush the proud, and right to each man deal, |
To help the Church, and stay the Common-Weal. |
So many Obstacles came in their way, |
As puts me to a stand what I should say; |
Old customes, new Prerogatives stood on, |
Had they not held Law fast all had been gone: |
Which by their prudence stood them in such stead |
They took high Strafford lower by the head. |
And to their Laud be't spoke, they held i'th tower |
All Englands Metropolitane that hour; |
This done, an act they would have passed fain, |
No Prelate should his Bishoprick retain; |
Here tugg'd they hard (indeed,) for all men saw |
This must be done by Gospel, not by Law. |
Next the Militia they urged sore, |
This was deny'd, (I need not say wherefore) |
The King displeas'd at York, himself absents. |
They humbly beg return, shew their intents; |
The writing, printing, posting too and fro, |
Shews all was done; I'le therefore let it go. |
But now I come to speak of my disaster, |
Contention grown, 'twixt Subjects & their Master; |
They worded it so long, they fell to blows, |
That thousands lay on heaps, here bleeds my woes, |
I that no wars so many years have known, |
Am now destroy'd and slaught'red by mine own; |
But could the Field alone this strife decide, |
One Battel two or three I might abide: |
But these may be beginnings of more woe |
Who knows, but this may be my overthrow. |
Oh pity me in this sad perturbation, |
My plundred Towns, my houses devastation, |
My weeping Virgins and my young men slain; |
My wealthy trading fall'n, my dearth of grain. |
The seed-time's come, but ploughman hath no hope |
Because he knows not, who shall inn his Crop. |
The poor they want their pay, their children bread, |
Their woful Mothers tears unpittied, |
If any pity in thy heart remain, |
Or any child-like love thou dost retain, |
For my relief, do what there lyes in thee, |
And recompence that good I've done to thee. |
New-England. |
Dear Mother cease complaints & wipe your eyes. |
Shake off your dust, chear up, and now arise, |
You are my Mother Nurse, and I your flesh, |
Your sunken bowels gladly would refresh. |
Your griefs I pity, but soon hope to see, |
Out of your troubles much good fruit to be; |
To see those latter dayes of hop'd for good, |
Though now beclouded all with tears and blood: |
After dark Popery the day did clear, |
But now the Sun in's brightness shall appear. |
Blest be the Nobles of thy Noble Land, |
With ventur'd lives for Truths defence that stand. |
Blest be thy Commons, who for common good |
And thy infringed Laws have boldly stood |
Blest be thy Counties, who did aid thee still, |
With hearts and States to testifie their will. |
Blest be thy Preachers, who do chear thee on, |
O cry the Sword of God and Gideon; |
And shall I not on them wish Mero's curse, |
That help thee not with prayers, Arms and purse? |
And for my self let miseries abound, |
If mindless of thy State I e're be found. |
These are the dayes the Churches foes to crush, |
To root out Popelings head, tail, branch, and rush; |
Let's bring Baals vestments forth to make a fire, |
Their Mytires, Surplices, and all their Tire, |
Copes, Rotchets, Crossiers, and such empty trash, |
And let their Names consume, but let the flash |
Light Christendome, and all the world to see |
We hate Romes whore, with all her trumpery. |
Go on brave Essex with a Loyal heart, |
Not false to King, nor to the better part, |
But those that hurt his people and his Crown, |
As duty binds, expel and tread them down. |
And ye brave Nobles chase away all fear, |
And to this hopeful Cause closely adhere; |
O Mother can you weep, and have such Peers, |
When they are gone, then drown your self in tears |
If now you weep so much, that then no-more |
The briny Ocean will o'reflow your shore. |
These, these are they I trust, with Charles our King, |
Out of all mists such glorious dayes shall bring, |
That dazled eyes beholding much shall wonder |
At that thy settled peace, thy wealth and splendor. |
Thy Church and weal establish'd in such manner |
That all shall joy, that thou display'dst thy Banner; |
And discipline erected so I trust, |
That nursing Kings shall come and lick thy dust: |
Then Justice shall in all thy Courts take place, |
Without respect of person, or of case; |
Then Bribes shall cease, & Suits shall not stick long |
Patience and purse of Clients oft to wrong: |
Then high Commissions shall fall to decay, |
And Pursivants, and Catchpoles want their pay. |
So shall thy happy Nation ever flourish, |
When truth & righteousness they thus shall nourish. |
When thus in peace, thine Armies brave send out, |
To sack proud Rome, and all her Vassals rout; |
There let thy Name, thy fame, and glory shine, |
As did thine Ancestors in Palestine: |
And let her spoyls full pay, with interest be, |
Of what unjustly once she poll'd from thee. |
Of all the woes thou canst, let her be sped, |
And on her pour the vengeance threatned. |
Bring forth the Beast that rul'd the World with's beck, |
And tear his flesh, & set your feet on's neck; |
And make his filthy Den so desolate, |
To th' stonishment of all that knew his state: |
This done with brandish'd Swords to Turky goe, |
For then what is't, but English blades dare do, |
And lay her waste for so's the sacred Doom, |
And do to Gog as thou hast done to Rome. |
Oh Abraham's seed lift up your heads on high, |
For sure the day of your Redemption's nigh; |
The Scales shall fall from your long blinded eyes, |
And him you shall adore who now despise, |
Then fulness of the Nations in shall flow, |
And Jew and Gentile to one worship go. |
Then follows dayes of happiness and rest, |
Whose lot doth fall to live therein is blest: |
No Canaanite shall then be found i'th' Land, |
And holiness on horses bells shall stand. |
If this make way thereto, then sigh no more, |
But if at all, thou didst not see 't before; |
Farewel dear Mother; rightest cause prevail, |
And in a while, you'le tell another tale. |
An Elegie upon that Honou-
rable and renowned Knight Sir Philip Sidney,
who was untimely slain at the Siege
of Zutphen, Anno, 1586.
WHen England did enjoy her Halsion dayes, |
Her noble Sidney wore the Crown of Bayes; |
As well an honour to our British Land, |
As she that sway'd the Scepter with her hand; |
Mars and Minerva did in one agree, |
Of Arms and Arts he should a pattern be, |
Calliope with Terpsichore did sing, |
Of Poesie, and of musick, he was King; |
His Rhetorick struck Polimina dead, |
His Eloquence made Mercury wax red; |
His Logick from Euterpe won the Crown, |
More worth was his then Clio could set down. |
Thalia and Melpomene say truth, |
(Witness Arcadia penned in his youth.) |
Are not his tragick Comedies so acted, |
As if your ninefold wit had been compacted. |
To shew the world, they never saw before |
That this one Volume should exhaust your store; |
His wiser dayes condemned his witty works, |
Who knows the spels that in his Rhetorick lurks, |
But some infatuate fools soon caught therein, |
Fond Cupids Dame had never such a gin, |
Which makes severer eyes but slight that story, |
And men of morose minds envy his glory: |
But he's a Beetle-head that can't descry |
A world of wealth within that rubbish lye, |
And doth his name, his work, his honour wrong, |
The brave refiner of our British tongue, |
That sees not learning, valour and morality, |
Justice, friendship, and kind hospitality, |
Yea and Divinity within his book, |
Such were prejudicate, and did not look. |
In all Records his name I ever see |
Put with an Epithite of dignity, |
Which shews his worth was great, his honour such, |
The love his Country ought him, was as much. |
Then let none disallow of these my straines |
Whilst English blood yet runs within my veins, |
O brave Achilles, I wish some Homer would |
Engrave in Marble, with Characters of gold |
The valiant feats thou didst on Flanders coast, |
Which at this day fair Belgia may boast. |
The more I say, the more thy worth I stain, |
Thy fame and praise is far beyond my strain. |
O Zutphen, Zutphen that most fatal City |
Made famous by thy death, much more the pity: |
Ah! in his blooming prime death pluckt this rose |
E're he was ripe, his thread cut Atropos. |
Thus man is born to dye, and dead is he, |
Brave Hector, by the walls of Troy we see. |
O who was near thee but did sore repine |
He rescued not with life that life of thine; |
But yet impartial Fates this boon did give, |
Though Sidney di'd his valiant name should live: |
And live it doth in spight of death through fame, |
Thus being overcome, he overcame. |
Where is that envious tongue, but can afford |
Of this our noble Scipio some good word. |
Great Bartas this unto thy praise adds more, |
In sad sweet verse, thou didst his death deplore. |
And Phœnix Spencer doth unto his life, |
His death present in sable to his wife. |
Stella the fair, whose streams from Conduits fell |
For the sad loss of her dear Astrophel. |
Fain would I shew how he fame's paths did tread, |
But now into such Lab'rinths I am lead, |
With endless turnes, the way I find not out, |
How to persist my Muse is more in doubt; |
Which makes me now with Silvester confess, |
But Sidney's Muse can sing his worthiness. |
The Muses aid I crav'd, they had no will |
To give to their Detractor any quill, |
With high disdain, they said they gave no more, |
Since Sidney had exhausted all their store. |
They took from me the scribling pen I had, |
(I to be eas'd of such a task was glad) |
Then to reveng this wrong, themselves engage, |
And drove me from Parnassus in a rage. |
Then wonder not if I no better sped, |
Since I the Muses thus have injured. |
I pensive for my fault sate down, and then |
Errata through their leave, threw me my pen, |
My Poem to conclude, two lines they deign |
Which writ, she bad return't to them again; |
So Sidneys fame I leave to Englands Rolls, |
His bones do lie interr'd in stately Pauls. |
His Epitaph. |
Here lies in fame under this stone, |
Philip and Alexander both in one; |
Heir to the Muses, the Son of Mars in Truth, |
Learning, Valour, Wisdome, all in virtuous youth, |
His praise is much, this shall suffice my pen, |
That Sidney dy'd 'mong most renown'd of men. |
In honour of Du Bartas, 1641.
Among the happy wits this age hath shown |
Great, dear, sweet Bartas thou art matchless known; |
My ravished Eyes and heart with faltering tongue, |
In humble wise have vow'd their service long, |
But knowing th' task so great, & strength but small, |
Gave o're the work before begun withal, |
My dazled sight of late review'd thy lines, |
Where Art, and more than Art, in nature shines, |
Reflection from their beaming Altitude, |
Did thaw my frozen hearts ingratitude; |
Which Rayes darting upon some richer ground |
Had caused flours and fruits soon to abound; |
But barren I, my Dasey here do bring, |
A homely flour in this my latter Spring, |
If Summer, or my Autumm age do yield, |
Flours, fruits in Garden, Orchard, or in Field, |
They shall be consecrated in my Verse, |
And prostrate offered at great Bartas Herse; |
My muse unto a child I may compare |
Who sees the riches of some famous Fair, |
He feeds his Eyes, but understanding lacks |
To comprehend the worth of all those knacks: |
The glittering plate and Jewels he admires, |
The Hats and Fans, the Plumes and Ladies tires, |
And thousand times his mazed mind doth wish |
Some part (at least) of that brave wealth was his, |
But seeing empty wishes nought obtain, |
At night turns to his Mothers cot again, |
And tells her tales, (his full heart over-glad) |
Of all the glorious sights his Eyes have had; |
But finds too soon his want of Eloquence, |
The silly prattler speaks no word of sense; |
But seeing utterance fail his great desires, |
Sits down in silence, deeply he admires: |
Thus weak brain'd I, reading thy lofty stile, |
Thy profound learning, viewing other while; |
Thy Art in natural Philosophy, |
Thy Saint like mind in grave Divinity; |
Thy piercing skill in high Astronomy, |
And curious insight in Anatomy; |
Thy Physick, musick and state policy, |
Valour in warr, in peace good husbandry, |
Sure lib'ral Nature did with Art not small, |
In all the arts make thee most liberal, |
A thousand thousand times my senseless sences |
Moveless stand charm'd by thy sweet influences; |
More senseless then the stones to Amphious Lute, |
Mine eyes are sightless, and my tongue is mute, |
My full astonish'd heart doth pant to break, |
Through grief it wants a faculty to speak; |
Volleyes of praises could I eccho then, |
Had I an Angels voice, or Bartas pen; |
But wishes can't accomplish my desire, |
Pardon if I adore, when I admire. |
O France thou did'st in him more glory gain |
Then in thy Martel, Pipin, Charlemain, |
Then in St. Lewes, or thy last Henry Great, |
Who tam'd his foes in warrs, in bloud and sweat, |
Thy fame is spread as far, I dare be bold, |
In all the Zones, the temp'rate, hot and cold, |
Their Trophies were but heaps of wounded slain, |
Thine, the quintessence of an heroick brain. |
The oaken Garland ought to deck their brows, |
Immortal Bayes to thee all men allows, |
Who in thy tryumphs never won by wrongs, |
Lead'st millions chained by eyes, by ears, by tongues |
Oft have I wondred at the hand of heaven, |
In giving one what would have served seven. |
If e're this golden gift was showr'd on any, |
Thy double portion would have served many. |
Unto each man his riches is assign'd |
Of Name, of State, of Body and of Mind: |
Thou hadst thy part of all, but of the last, |
O pregnant brain, O comprehension vast; |
Thy haughty Stile and rapted wit sublime |
All ages wondring at, shall never climb, |
Thy sacred works are not for imitation, |
But Monuments to future Admiration, |
Thus Bartas fame shall last while starrs do stand, |
And whilst there's Air or Fire, or Sea or Land. |
But least mine ignorance shall do thee wrong, |
To celebrate thy merits in my Song. |
I'le leave thy praise to those shall do thee right, |
Good will, not skill, did cause me bring my Mite. |
His Epitaph. |
Here lyes the Pearle of France, Parnassus glory; |
The World rejoyc'd at's birth, at's death was sorry, |
Art and Nature joyn'd, by heavens high decree |
Now shew'd what once they ought, Humanity: |
And Natures Law, had it been revocable |
To rescue him from death, Art had been able, |
But Nature vanquish'd Art, so Bartas dy'd; |
But Fame out-living both, he is reviv'd. |
In Honour of that High and Mighty Princess
Queen Elizabeth
OF HAPPY MEMORY.
The Proeme. |
ALthough great Queen thou now in silence lye, |
Yet thy loud Herald Fame doth to the sky |
Thy wondrous worth proclaim in every Clime, |
And so hath vow'd while there is world or time. |
So great's thy glory and thine excellence, |
The sound thereof rapts every humane sence, |
That men account it no impiety, |
To say thou wert a fleshly Diety. |
Thousands bring offerings (though out of date) |
Thy world of honours to accumulate, |
'Mongst hundred Hecatombs of roaring verse, |
Mine bleating stands before thy royal Herse. |
Thou never didst nor canst thou now disdain |
T' accept the tribute of a loyal brain. |
Thy clemency did yerst esteem as much |
The acclamations of the poor as rich, |
Which makes me deem my rudeness is no wrong, |
Though I resound thy praises 'mongst the throng. |
The Poem. |
No Phœnix Pen, nor Spensers Poetry, |
No Speeds, nor Cambdens learned History; |
Eliza's works, warrs praise, can e're compact, |
The World's the Theatre where she did act. |
No memoryes, nor volumes can contain |
The 'leven Olympiads of her happy reign: |
Who was so good, so just, so learn'd so wise, |
From all the Kings on earth she won the prize |
Nor say I more then duly is her due, |
Millions will testifie that this is true. |
She hath wip'd off th' aspersion of her Sex, |
That women wisdome lack to play the Rex: |
Spain. Monarch sayes not so, nor yet his host: |
She taught them better manners, to their cost |
The Salique law, in force now had not been, |
If France had ever hop'd for such a Queen. |
But can you Doctors now this point dispute, |
She's Argument enough to make you mute. |
Since first the sun did run his nere run race, |
And earth had once a year, a new old face, |
Since time was time, and man unmanly man, |
Come shew me such a Phœnix if you can? |
Was ever people better rul'd then hers? |
Was ever land more happy freed from stirrs? |
Did ever wealth in England so abound? |
Her victoryes in foreign Coasts resound, |
Ships more invincible then Spain's her foe |
She wrackt, she sackt, she sunk his Armado: |
Her stately troops advanc'd to Lisbons wall |
Don Anthony in's right there to install. |
She frankly helpt, Franks brave distressed King, |
The States united now her fame do sing. |
She their Protectrix was, they well do know, |
Unto our dread Virago what they owe. |
Her Nobles sacrific'd their noble blood, |
Nor men nor Coyn she spar'd to do them good. |
The rude untamed Irish, she did quel, |
Before her picture the proud Tyrone fell. |
Had ever prince such Counsellors as she? |
Her self Minerva caus'd them so to be. |
Such Captains and such souldiers never seen, |
As were the Subjects of our Pallas Queen: |
Her Sea-men through all straights the world did round, |
Terra incognita might know the sound. |
Her Drake came laden home with Spanish gold: |
Her Essex took Cades, their Herculean Hold: |
But time would fail me, so my wit would to, |
To tell of half she did, or she could doe. |
Semiramis to her, is but obscure, |
More infamy then fame she did procure. |
She built her glory but on Babels walls, |
World's wonder for a while, but yet it falls. |
Fierce Tomris (Cyrus heads-man) Scythians queen, |
Had put her harness off, had she but seen |
Our Amazon in th' Camp of Tilbury, |
Judging all valour and all Majesty |
Within that Princess to have residence, |
And prostrate yielded to her excellence. |
Dido first Foundress of proud Carthage walls, |
(Who living consummates her Funeralls), |
A great Eliza, but compar'd with ours, |
How vanisheth her glory, wealth, and powers. |
Profuse proud Cleopatra, whose wrong name, |
Instead of glory, prov'd her Countryes shame: |
Of her what worth in Storyes to be seen, |
But that she was a rich Egyptian Queen. |
Zenobya potent Empress of the East, |
And of all these, without compare the best, |
Whom none but great Aurelius could quel; |
Yet for our Queen is no fit Parallel. |
She was a Phœnix Queen, so shall she be, |
Her ashes not reviv'd, more Phœnix she. |
Her personal perfections, who would tell, |
Must dip his pen i' th' Heliconian well, |
Which I may not, my pride doth but aspire |
To read what others write, and so admire. |
Now say, have women worth? or have they none? |
Or had they some, but with our Queen is't gone? |
Nay Masculines, you have thus taxt us long, |
But she, though dead, will vindicate our wrong. |
Let such as say our Sex is void of Reason, |
Know tis a Slander now, but once was Treason. |
But happy England which had such a Queen; |
Yea happy, happy, had those dayes still been; |
But happiness lyes in a higher sphere, |
Then wonder not Eliza moves not here: |
Full fraught with honour, riches, and with dayes, |
She set, she set, like Titan in his rayes. |
No more shall rise or set so glorious sun, |
Untill the heavens great revolution. |
If then new things their old forms shall retain, |
Eliza shall rule Albion once again. |
HER EPITAPH. |
Here sleeps THE Queen, this is the royal Bed |
Of th' Damask Rose, sprung from the white and red, |
Whose sweet perfume fills the all-filling Air: |
This Rose is wither'd, once so lovely fair. |
On neither tree did grow such Rose before, |
The greater was our gain, our loss the more. |
Another. |
Here lyes the pride of Queens, Pattern of Kings, |
So blaze it Fame, here's feathers for thy wings. |
Here lyes the envy'd, yet unparalled Prince, |
Whose living virtues speak, (though dead long since). |
If many worlds, as that Fantastic fram'd, |
In every one be her great glory fam'd. |
Davids Lamentation for
Saul and Jonathan.
2. Sam. I. 19. |
ALas slain is the Head of Israel, |
Illustrious Saul whose beauty did excell, |
Upon thy places mountainous and high, |
How did the Mighty fall, and falling dye? |
In Gath let not this things be spoken on, |
Nor published in streets of Askalon, |
Lest daughters of the Philistines rejoice, |
Lest the uncircumcis'd lift up their voice. |
O Gilbo Mounts, let never pearled dew, |
Nor fruitful showres your barren tops bestrew, |
Nor fields of offrings ever on you grow, |
Nor any pleasant thing e're may you show; |
For there the Mighty Ones did soon decay, |
The shield of Saul was vilely cast away. |
There had his dignity so sore a foyle, |
As if his head ne're felt the sacred oyl. |
Sometimes from crimson blood of gastly slain, |
The bow of Jonathan ne're turn'd in vain: |
Nor from the fat, and spoils of Mighty men |
With bloodless sword did Saul turn back agen. |
Pleasant and lovely, were they both in life, |
And in their death were founnd no parting strife. |
Swifter then swiftest Eagles so were they, |
Stronger then Lions ramping for their prey. |
O Israels Dames, o'reflow your beauteous eyes |
For valiant Saul, who on mount Gilbo lyes, |
Who cloathed you in Cloath of richest Dye, |
And choice delights, full of variety, |
On your array put ornaments of gold, |
Which made you yet more beauteous to behold. |
O! how in Battle did the mighty fall |
In midst of strength not succoured at all. |
O lovely Jonathan! how wast thou slain? |
In places high, full low thou didst remain. |
Distress'd for thee I am, dear Jonathan, |
Thy love was wonderfull, surpassing man, |
Exceeding all the love that's Feminine, |
So pleasant hast thou been, dear brother mine. |
How are the mighty fall'n into decay? |
And warlike weapons perished away? |
To the Memory of my dear and ever honoured Father,
Thomas Dudley; Esq.
Who deceased, July 31. 1653. and of his Age, 77.
BY duty bound, and not by custome led |
To celebrate the praises of the dead, |
My mournfull mind, sore prest, in trembling verse |
Presents my Lamentations at his Herse, |
Who was my Father, Guide, Instructor too, |
To whom I ought whatever I could doe: |
Nor is't Relation near my hand shall tye; |
For who more cause to boast his worth then I? |
Who heard or saw, observ'd or knew him better? |
Or who alive then I, a greater debtor? |
Let malice bite, and envy knaw its fill, |
He was my Father, and Ile praise him still. |
Nor was his name, or life lead so obscure |
That pitty might some Trumpeters procure. |
Who after death might make him falsly seem |
Such as in life, no man could justly deem. |
Well known and lov'd, where ere he liv'd, by most |
Both in his native, and in foreign coast, |
These to the world his merits could make known, |
So needs no Testimonial from his own; |
But now or never I must pay my Sum; |
While others tell his worth, I'le not be dumb: |
One of thy Founders, him New-England know, |
Who staid thy feeble sides when thou wast low. |
Who spent his state, his strength, & years with care |
That After-comers in them might have share, |
True Patriot of this little Commonweal, |
Who is't can tax thee ought, but for thy zeal? |
Truths friend thou wert, to errors still a foe, |
Which caus'd Apostates to maligne so. |
Thy love to true Religion e're shall shine, |
My Fathers God, be God of me and mine, |
Upon the earth he did not build his nest, |
But as a Pilgrim what he had, possest, |
High thoughts he gave no harbour in his heart, |
Nor honours pufft him up, when he had part: |
Those titles loath'd, which some too much do love |
For truly his ambition lay above. |
His humble mind so lov'd humility, |
He left it to his race for Legacy: |
And oft and oft, with speeches mild and wise, |
Gave his in charge, that Jewel rich to prize. |
No ostentation seen in all his wayes, |
As in the mean ones, of our foolish dayes, |
Which all they have, and more still set to view, |
Their greatness may be judg'd by what they shew. |
His thoughts were more sublime, his actions wise, |
Such vanityes he justly did despise. |
Nor wonder 'twas, low things ne'r much did move |
For he a Mansion had, prepar'd above, |
For which he sigh'd and pray'd & long'd full sore |
He might be cloath'd upon, for evermore. |
Oft spake of death, and with a smiling chear, |
He did exult his end was drawing near, |
Now fully ripe, as shock of wheat that's grown, |
Death as a Sickle hath him timely mown, |
And in celestial Barn hath hous'd him high, |
Where storms, nor showrs, nor ought can damnifie. |
His Generation serv'd his labours cease; |
And to his Fathers gathered is in peace. |
Ah happy Soul, 'mongst Saints and Angels blest, |
Who after all his toyle, is now at rest: |
His hoary head in righteousness was found; |
As joy in heaven on earth let praise resound. |
Forgotten never be his memory, |
His blessing rest on his posterity: |
His pious Footsteps followed by his race, |
At last will bring us to that happy place |
Where we with joy each other's face shall see, |
And parted more by death shall never be. |
His Epitaph. |
Within this Tomb a Patriot lyes |
That was both pious, just and wise, |
To Truth a shield, to right a Wall, |
To Sectaryes a whip and Maul, |
A Magazine of History, |
A Prizer of good Company |
In manners pleasant and severe |
The Good him lov'd, the bad did fear, |
And when his time with years was spent |
If some rejoyc'd, more did lament. |
An EPITAPH
On my dear and ever honoured Mother
Mrs. Dorothy Dudley,
Who deceased Decemb. 27. 1643. and of her age, 61.
Here lyes, |
A worthy Matron of unspotted life, |
A loving Mother and obedient wife, |
A friendly Neighbor, pitiful to poor, |
Whom oft she fed, and clothed with her store; |
To Servants wisely aweful, but yet kind, |
And as they did, so they reward did find: |
A true Instructer of her Family, |
The which she ordered with dexterity. |
The publick meetings ever did frequent, |
And in her Closet constant hours she spent; |
Religious in all her words and wayes, |
Preparing still for death, till end of dayes: |
Of all her Children, Children, liv'd to see, |
Then dying, left a blessed memory. |
CONTEMPLATIONS.
Sometime now past in the Autumnal Tide, |
When Phœbus wanted but one hour to bed, |
The trees all richly clad, yet void of pride, |
Were gilded o're by his rich golden head. |
Their leaves & fruits seem'd painted, but was true |
Of green, of red, of yellow, mixed hew, |
Rapt were my sences at this delectable view. |
2 |
I wist not what to wish, yet sure thought I, |
If so much excellence abide below, |
How excellent is he that dwells on high? |
Whose power and beauty by his works we know. |
Sure he is goodness, wisdome, glory, light, |
That hath this under world so richly dight: |
More Heaven then Earth was here, no winter & no night. |
3 |
Then on a stately Oak I cast mine Eye, |
Whose ruffling top the Clouds seem'd to aspire. |
How long since thou wast in thine Infancy? |
Thy strength, and stature, more thy years admire, |
Hath hundred winters past since thou wast born, |
Or thousand since thou brakest thy shell of horn, |
If so, all these as nought, Eternity doth scorn. |
4 |
Then higher on the glistering Sun I gaz'd, |
Whose beams was shaded by the leavie Tree. |
The more I look'd, the more I grew amaz'd |
And softly said, what glory's like to thee? |
Soul of this world, this Universes Eye, |
No wonder, some made thee a Deity: |
Had I not better known, (alas) the same had I. |
5 |
Thou as a Bridegroom from thy Chamber rushes |
And as a strong man, joyes to run a race, |
The morn doth usher thee, with smiles & blushes. |
The Earth reflects her glances in thy face. |
Birds, insects, Animals with Vegative, |
Thy heart from death and dulness doth revive; |
And in the darksome womb of fruitful nature dive. |
6 |
Thy swift Annual, and diurnal Course, |
Thy daily streight, and yearly oblique path, |
Thy pleasing fervor, and thy scorching force, |
All mortals here the feeling knowledg hath |
Thy presence makes it day, thy absence night, |
Quaternal Seasons caused by thy might: |
Hail Creature, full of sweetness, beauty & delight. |
7 |
Art thou so full of glory, that no Eye |
Hath strength, thy shining Rayes once to behold? |
And is thy splendid Throne erect so high? |
As to approach it, can no earthly mould. |
How full of glory then must thy Creator be? |
Who gave this bright light luster unto thee: |
Admir'd, ador'd for ever, be that Majesty. |
8 |
Silent alone, where none or saw, or heard, |
In pathless paths I lead my wandring feet, |
My humble Eyes to lofty Skyes I rear'd |
To sing some Song, my mazed Muse thought meet. |
My great Creator I would magnifie, |
That nature had, thus decked liberally: |
But Ah, and Ah, again, my imbecility! |
9 |
I heard the merry grasshopper then sing, |
The black clad Cricket, bear a second part, |
They kept one tune, and played on the same string, |
Seeming to glory in their little Art. |
Shall Creatures abject, thus their voices raise? |
And in their kind resound their makers praise: |
Whilst I as mute, can warble forth no higher layes. |
10 |
When present times look back to Ages past, |
And men in being fancy those are dead, |
It makes things gone perpetually to last |
And calls back moneths and years that long since fled |
It makes a man more aged in conceit, |
Then was Methuselah or's grand-sire great: |
While of their persons & their acts his mind doth treat. |
11 |
Sometimes in Eden fair, he seems to be, |
Sees glorious Adam there made Lord of all, |
Fancies the Apple, dangle on the Tree, |
That turn'd his Sovereign to a naked thral. |
Who like a miscreant's driven from that place, |
To get his bread with pain, and sweat of face: |
A penalty impos'd on his backsliding Race. |
12 |
Here sits our Grandame in retired place, |
And in her lap, her bloody Cain new born, |
The weeping Imp oft looks her in the face, |
Bewails his unknown hap, and fate forlorn; |
His Mother sighs, to think of Paradise, |
And how she lost her bliss, to be more wise, |
Believing him that was, and is, Father of lyes. |
13 |
Here Cain and Abel come to sacrifice, |
Fruits of the Earth; and Fatlings each do bring, |
On Abels gift the fire descends from Skies, |
But no such sign on false Cain's offering; |
With sullen hateful looks he goes his wayes, |
Hath thousand thoughts to end his brothers dayes, |
Upon whose blood his future good he hopes to raise. |
14 |
There Abel keeps his sheep, no ill he thinks, |
His brother comes, then acts his fratricide, |
The Virgin Earth of blood her first draught drinks |
But since that time she often hath been cloy'd; |
The wretch with gastly face and dreadful mind, |
Thinks each he sees will serve him in his kind, |
Though none on Earth but kindred near then could he find. |
15 |
Who fancyes not his looks now at the Barr, |
His face like death, his heart with horror fraught, |
Nor Male-factor ever felt like warr, |
When deep dispair, with wish of life hath fought, |
Branded with guilt, and crusht with treble woes, |
A Vagabond to Land of Nod he goes, |
A City builds, that walls might him secure from foes. |
16 |
Who thinks not oft upon the Father's ages. |
Their long descent how nephews sons they saw, |
The starry observations of those Sages, |
And how their precepts to their sons were law, |
How Adam sighed to see his Progeny, |
Cloath'd all in his black, sinfull Livery, |
Who neither guilt, not yet the punishment could fly. |
17 |
Our Life compare we with their length of dayes |
Who to the tenth of theirs doth now arrive? |
And though thus short, we shorten many wayes, |
Living so little while we are alive; |
In eating, drinking, sleeping, vain delight |
So unawares comes on perpetual night, |
And puts all pleasures vain unto eternal flight. |
18 |
When I behold the heavens as in their prime |
And then the earth (though old) still clad in green, |
The stones and trees, insensible of time, |
Nor age nor wrinkle on their front are seen; |
If winter come and greeness then do fade, |
A Spring returns, and they more youthfull made, |
But Man grows old, lies down, remains where once he's laid. |
19 |
By birth more noble then those creatures all, |
Yet seems by nature and by custome curs'd, |
No sooner born, but grief and care makes fall |
That state obliterate he had at first: |
Nor youth, nor strength, nor wisdom spring again, |
Nor habitations long their names retain, |
But in oblivion to the final day remain. |
20 |
Shall I then praise the heavens the trees, the earth |
Because their beauty and their strength last longer |
Shall I wish there, or never to had birth, |
Because they're bigger, & their bodyes stronger? |
Nay, they shall darken, perish, fade and dye, |
And when unmade, so ever shall they lye. |
But man was made for endless immortality. |
21 |
Under the cooling shadow of a stately Elm |
Close sate I by a goodly Rivers side, |
Where gliding streams the Rocks did overwhelm; |
A lonely place, with pleasures dignifi'd. |
I once that lov'd the shady woods so well, |
Now thought the rivers did the trees excel, |
And if the sun would ever shine, there would I dwell. |
22 |
While on the stealing stream I fixt mine eye |
Which to the long'd for Ocean held its course, |
I markt, nor crooks, nor rubs that there did lye |
Could hinder ought, but still augment its force. |
O happy Flood, quoth I, that holds thy race |
Till thou arrive at thy beloved place, |
Nor is it rocks or shoals that can obstruct thy pace. |
23 |
Nor is't enough, that thou alone may'st slide, |
But hundred brooks in thy cleer waves do meet, |
So hand in hand along with thee they glide |
To Thetis house, where all imbrace and greet: |
Thou Emblem true, of what I count the best, |
O could I lead my Rivolets to rest, |
So may we press to that vast mansion, ever blest. |
24 |
Ye Fish which in this liquid Region 'bide |
That for each season, have your habitation, |
Now salt, now fresh where you think best to glide |
To unknown coasts to give a visitation, |
In Lakes and ponds, you leave your numerous fry, |
So nature taught and yet you know not why, |
You watry folk that know not your felicity. |
25 |
Look how the wantons frisk to tast the air, |
Then to the colder bottome streight they dive, |
Eftsoon to Neptun's glassie Hall repair |
To see what trade they great ones there do drive, |
Who forrage o're the spacious sea-green field |
And take the trembling prey before it yield, |
Whose armour is their scales, their spreading fins their shield. |
26 |
While musing thus with contemplation fed, |
And thousand fancies buzzing in my brain, |
The sweet-tongu'd Philomel percht o're my head, |
And chanted forth a most melodious strain |
Which rapt me so with wonder and delight, |
I judg's my hearing better then my sight, |
And wisht me wings with her a while to take my flight. |
27 |
O merry Bird (said I) that fears no snares, |
That neither toyls nor hoards up in thy barn, |
Feels no sad thoughts, nor cruciating cares |
To gain more good, or shun what might thee harm |
Thy cloaths ne're wear, thy meat is everywhere, |
Thy bed a bough, thy drink the water cleer, |
Reminds not what is past, nor whats to come dost fear. |
28 |
The dawning morn with songs thou dost prevent, |
Sets hundred notes unto thy feathered crew, |
So each one tunes his pretty instrument, |
And warbling out the old, begin anew, |
And thus they pass their youth in summer season, |
Then follow thee into a better Region, |
Where winter's never felt by that sweet airy legion. |
29 |
Man at the best a creature frail and vain, |
In knowledg ignorant, in strength but weak, |
Subject to sorrows, losses, sickness, pain, |
Each storm his state, his mind, his body break. |
From some of these he never finds cessation, |
But day or night, within, without, vexation, |
Troubles from foes, from friends, from dearest, near'st Relation. |
30 |
And yet this sinfull creature, frail and vain, |
This lump of wretchedness, of sin and sorrow, |
This weather-beaten vessel wrackt with pain, |
Joyes not in hope of an eternal morrow. |
Nor all his losses, crosses, and vexation, |
In weight, in frequency and long duration |
Can make him deeply groan for that divine Translation. |
31 |
The Mariner that on smooth waves doth glide, |
Sings merrily, and steers his Barque with ease, |
As if he had command of wind and tide, |
And now becomes great Master of the seas; |
But suddenly a storm spoiles all the sport. |
And makes him long for a more quiet port. |
Which 'gainst all adverse winds may serve for fort. |
32 |
So he that faileth in this world of pleasure, |
Feeding on sweets, that never bit of th' sowre, |
That's full of friends, of honour and of treasure, |
Fond fool, he takes this earth ev'n for heav'ns bower. |
But sad affliction comes & makes him see |
Here's neither honour, wealth, nor safety. |
Only above is found all with security. |
33 |
O Time the fatal wrack of mortal things, |
That draws oblivions curtains over kings, |
Their sumptuous monuments, men know them not; |
Their names without a Record are forgot. |
Their parts, their ports, their pomp's all laid in th' dust |
Nor wit nor gold, nor buildings scape times rust, |
But he whose name is grav'd in the white stone |
Shall last and shine when all of these are gone. |
The Flesh and the Spirit.
IN secret place where once I stood |
Close by the Banks of Lacrim flood |
I heard two sisters reason on |
Things that are past, and things to come; |
One flesh was call'd, who had her eye |
On worldly wealth and vanity; |
The other Spirit, who did rear |
Her thoughts unto a higher sphere: |
Sister, quoth Flesh, what liv'st thou on |
Nothing but Meditation? |
Doth Contemplation feed thee so |
Regardlessly to let earth goe? |
Can Speculation satisfy |
Notion without Reality? |
Dost dream of things beyond the Moon |
And dost thou hope to dwell there soon? |
Hast treasures there laid up in store |
That all in th' world thou count'st but poor? |
Art fancy-sick or turn'd a Sot |
To catch at shadows which are not? |
Come, come, Ile show unto thy sence, |
Industry hath its recompence. |
What canst desire, but thou maist see |
True substance in variety? |
Dost honour like? acquire the same, |
As some to their immortal fame: |
And trophyes to thy name erect |
Which wearing time shall ne're deject. |
For riches dost thou long full sore? |
Behold enough of precious store. |
Earth hath more silver, pearls and gold |
Then eyes can see, or hands can hold. |
Affect's thou pleasure? take thy fill, |
Earth hath enough of what you will. |
Then let not goe what thou maist find, |
For things unknown, only in mind. |
Spir. Be still thou unregenerete part, |
Disturb no more my setled heart, |
For I have vow'd, (and so will doe) |
Thee as a foe, still to pursue. |
And combate with thee will and must, |
Untill I see thee laid in th' dust. |
Sisters we are, ye twins we be |
Yet deadly feud twixt thee and me; |
For from one father are we not, |
Thou by old Adam wast begot, |
But my arise is from above |
Whence my dear father I do love. |
Thou speak'st me fair but hat'st me sore; |
Thy flatt'ring shews Ile trust no more. |
How oft thy slave, hast thou me made, |
When I believ'd, what thou hast said, |
And never had more cause of woe |
Then when I did what thou bad'st doe. |
Ile stop mine ears at these thy charms |
And count them for my deadly harms. |
Thy sinfull pleasures I doe hate, |
Thy riches are to me no bait, |
Thine honours doe, nor will I love; |
For my ambition lies above. |
My greatest honour it shall be |
When I am victor over thee, |
And triumph shall, with laurel head, |
When thou my Captive shalt be led, |
How I do live, thou need'st not scoff, |
For I have meat thou know'st not of; |
The hidden Manna I doe eat; |
The word of life it is my meat. |
My thoughts do yield me more content |
Then can thy hours in pleasure spent. |
Nor are they shadows which I catch, |
Nor fancies vain at which I snatch. |
But reach at things that are so high, |
Beyond thy dull Capacity; |
Eternal substance I do see, |
With which inriched I would be: |
Mine Eye doth pierce the heavens, and see |
What is Invisible to thee. |
My garments are not silk nor gold, |
Nor such like trash which Earth doth hold, |
But Royal Robes I shall have on, |
More glorious then the glistring Sun; |
My Crown not Diamonds, Pearls, and gold, |
But such as Angels heads infold. |
The City where I hope to dwell, |
There's none on Earth can parallel; |
The stately Walls both high and strong, |
Are made of precious Jasper stone, |
The Gates of Pearl, both rich and clear, |
And Angels are for Porters there; |
The Streets thereof transparent gold, |
Such as no Eye did e're behold, |
A Chrystal River there doth run, |
Which doth proceed from the Lambs Throne: |
Of Life, there are the waters sure, |
Which shall remain for ever pure, |
Nor Sun, nor Moon, they have no need, |
For glory doth from God proceed: |
No Candle there, nor yet Torch light, |
For there shall be no darksome night. |
From sickness and infirmity, |
For evermore they shall be free, |
Nor withering age shall e're come there, |
But beauty shall be bright and clear. |
This City pure is not for thee, |
For things unclean there shall not be: |
If I of Heaven may have my fill, |
Take thou the world, and all that will. |
The Vanity of all worldly things.
AS he said vanity, so vain say I, |
Oh! vanity, O vain all under Sky; |
Where is the man can say, lo, I have found |
On brittle Earth a Consolation sound? |
What is't in honour to be set on high? |
No, they like Beasts and Sons of men shall dye, |
And whil'st they live, how oft doth turn their fate; |
He's now a captive that was King of late. |
What is't in wealth, great Treasures to obtain? |
No that's but labour, anxious care and pain. |
He heaps up riches, and he heaps up sorrow, |
It's his to day, but who's his heir to morrow? |
What then? Content in pleasures canst thou find, |
More vain then all, that's but to grasp the wind. |
The sensual senses for a time they please. |
Mean while the conscience rage, who shall appease? |
What is't in beauty? No that's but a snare, |
They're foul enough to day, that once were fair. |
What is't in flowring youth, or manly age? |
The first is prone to vice, the last to rage. |
Where is it then, in wisdom, learning, arts? |
Sure if on earth, it must be in those parts: |
Yet these the wisest man of men did find |
But vanity, vexation of mind. |
And he that knowes the most, doth still bemoan |
He knows not all that here is to be known. |
What is it then, to doe as Stoicks tell, |
Nor laugh, nor weep, let things go ill or well. |
Such Stoicks are but Stocks such teaching vain, |
While man is man, he shall have ease or pain. |
If not in honour beauty, age nor treasure, |
Nor yet in learning wisdome youth nor pleasure, |
Where shall I climb, sound, seek search or find |
That Summum bonum which may stay my mind? |
There is a path, no vultures eye hath seen, |
Where Lion fierce, nor lions whelps have been, |
Which leads unto that living Crystal Fount, |
Who drinks thereof, the world doth naught account. |
The depth & sea have said tis not in me, |
With pearl and gold, it shall not valued be. |
For Saphire, Onix, Topaz who would change: |
Its hid from eyes of men, they count it strange. |
Death and destruction the fame hath heard, |
But where & what it is, from heaven's declar'd, |
It brings to honour which shall ne're decay. |
It stores with wealth which time can't wear away. |
It yieldeth pleasures far beyond conceit, |
And truly beautifies without deceit. |
Nor strength, nor wisdome nor fresh youth shall fade, |
Nor death shall see, but are immortal made. |
This pearl of price, this tree of life, this spring |
Who is possessed of, shall reign a King. |
Nor change of state, nor cares shall ever see, |
But wear his crown unto eternity. |
This satiates the Soul, this stays the mind, |
And all the rest, but Vanity we find. |
FINIS
The Author to her Book.
THou ill-form'd offspring of my feeble brain, |
Who after birth did'st by my side remain, |
Till snatcht from thence by friends, less wise then true |
Who thee abroad, expos'd to publick view, |
Made thee in raggs, halting to th' press to trudg, |
Where errors were not lessened (all may judg) |
At thy return my blushing was not small, |
My rambling brat (in print) should mother call, |
I cast thee by as one unfit for light, |
Thy Visage was so irksome in my sight; |
Yet being mine own, at length affection would |
Thy blemishes amend, if so I could: |
I wash'd thy face, but more defects I saw, |
And rubbing off a spot, still made a flaw. |
I stretcht thy joynts to make thee even feet, |
Yet still thou run'st more hobling then is meet; |
In better dress to trim thee was my mind, |
But nought save home-spun Cloth, i' th' house I find |
In this array, 'mongst Vulgars mayst thou roam |
In Criticks hands, beware thou dost not come; |
And take thy way where yet thou art not known, |
If for thy Father askt, say, thou hadst none: |
And for thy Mother she alas is poor, |
Which caus'd her thus to send thee out of door. |
Several other Poems made by the Author upon
Divers Occasions, were found among her Papers
after her Death, which she never meant should
come to publick view; amongst which, these
following (at the desire of some friends
that knew her well) are here inserted
Upon a Fit of Sickness, Anno 1632.
Ætatis Suæ, 19.
TWice ten years old, not fully told |
Since nature gave me breath, |
My race is run, my thread spun, |
lo, here is fatal Death. |
All men must dye, and so must I |
this cannot be revok'd |
For Adams sake, this word God spake |
when he so high provok'd. |
Yet live I shall, this life's but small, |
in place of highest bliss, |
Where I shall have all I can crave, |
no life is like to this. |
For what's this life, but care and strife? |
since first we came from womb. |
Our strength doth waste, our time doth hast, |
and then we go to th' Tomb. |
O Bubble blast, how long can'st last? |
that always art a breaking, |
No sooner blown, but dead and gone, |
ev'n as a word that's speaking. |
O whil'st I live this grace me give, |
I doing good may be |
Then death's arrest I shall count best, |
because it's thy decree; |
Bestow much cost there's nothing lost, |
to make Salvation sure. |
O great's the gain, though got with pain, |
comes by profession pure. |
The race is run, the field is won, |
the victory's mine I see, |
For ever know, thou envious foe, |
the foyle belongs to thee. |
Upon some distemper of body
In anguish of my heart repleat with woes, |
And wasting pains, which best my body knows, |
In tossing slumbers on my wakeful bed, |
Bedrencht with tears that flow'd from mournful head |
Till nature had exhausted all her store, |
Then eyes lay dry, disabled to weep more; |
And looking up unto his Throne on high, |
Who sendeth help to those in misery, |
He chac'd away those clouds, and let me see |
My Anchor cast i'th' vale with safety. |
He eas'd my Soul of woe, my flesh of pain, |
And brought me to the shore from troubled Main. |
Before the Birth of one of her Children.
All things within this fading world hath end, |
Adversity doth still our joyes attend; |
No tyes so strong, no friends so dear and sweet, |
But with deaths parting blow is sure to meet. |
The sentence past is most irrevocable, |
A common thing, yet oh, inevitable. |
How soon, my Dear, death may my steps attend. |
How soon't may be thy lot to lose thy friend, |
We both are ignorant, yet love bids me |
These farewell lines to recommend to thee, |
That when that knot's unty'd that made us one, |
I may seem thine, who in effect am none. |
And if I see not half my days that's due, |
What nature would, God grant to yours and you; |
The many faults that well you know I have |
Let be interr'd in my oblivious grave, |
If any worth or virtue were in me, |
Let that live freshly in thy memory |
And when thou feel'st no grief, as I no harms, |
Yet love thy dead, who long lay in thine arms. |
And when thy loss shall be repaid with gains |
Look to my little babes my dear remains. |
And if thou love thyself, or loved'st me, |
These O protect from step Dames injury. |
And if chance to thine eyes shall bring this verse, |
With some sad sighs honour my absent Herse; |
And kiss this paper for thy loves dear sake, |
Who with salt tears this last Farewel did take. |
A. B. |
To my Dear and loving Husband.
IF ever two were one, then surely we. |
If ever man were lov'd by wife, then thee, |
If ever wife was happy in a man, |
Compare with me ye women if you can. |
I prize thy love more then whole Mines of gold, |
Or all the riches that the East doth hold, |
My love is such that Rivers cannot quench, |
Nor ought but love from thee, give recompence. |
Thy love is such I can no way repay, |
The heavens reward thee manifold I pray. |
Then while we live, in love lets so persever, |
That when we live no more, we may live ever. |
A Letter to her Husband, absent upon
Publick employment.
My head, my heart, mine Eyes, my life, nay more, |
My joy, my Magazine of earthly store, |
If two be one, as surely thou and I, |
How stayest thou there, whilst I at Ipswich lye? |
So many steps, head from the heart to sever |
If but a neck, soon should we be together: |
I like the Earth this season, mourn in black, |
My Sun is gone so far in's Zodiack, |
Whom whilst I 'joy'd, nor storms, nor frost I felt, |
His warmth such frigid colds did cause to melt. |
My chilled limbs now nummed lye forlorn; |
Return; return, sweet Sol from Capricorn, |
In this dead time, alas, what can I more |
Then view those fruits which through thy heat I bore? |
Which sweet contentment yield me for a space, |
True living Pictures of their Fathers face. |
O strange effect! now thou art Southward gone, |
I weary grow, the tedious day so long; |
But when thou Northward to me shalt return, |
I wish my Sun may never set, but burn |
Within the Cancer of my glowing breast, |
The welcome house of him my dearest guest. |
Where ever, ever stay, and go not thence, |
Till natures sad decree shall call thee hence; |
Flesh of thy flesh, bone of thy bone, |
I here, thou there, yet both but one. |
A. B. |
Another.
Phœbus make haste, the day's too long, be gone, |
The silent night's the fittest time for moan; |
But stay this once, unto my suit give ear, |
And tell my griefs in either Hemisphere. |
(And if the whirling of thy wheels don't drown'd) |
The woful accents of my doleful sound, |
If in thy swift Carrier thou canst make stay, |
I crave this boon, this Errand by the way, |
Commend me to the man more lov'd then life, |
Show him the sorrows of his widdowed wife; |
My dumpish thoughts, my groans, my brakish tears |
My sobs, my longing hopes, my doubting fears, |
And if he love, how can he there abide? |
My Interest's more then all the world beside. |
He that can tell the starrs or Ocean sand, |
Or all the grass that in the Meads do stand, |
The leaves in th' woods, the hail or drops of rain, |
Or in a corn-field number every grain. |
Or every mote that in the sun-shine hops, |
May count my sighs, and number all my drops: |
Tell him, the countless steps that thou dost trace. |
That once a day, thy Spouse thou mayst imbrace; |
And when thou canst not treat by loving mouth, |
Thy rayes afar, salute her from the south. |
But for one moneth I see no day (poor soul) |
Like those far scituate under the pole, |
Which day by day long wait for thy arise, |
O how they joy when thou dost light the skyes. |
O Phœbus, hadst thou but thus long from thine |
Restrain'd the beams of thy beloved shine, |
At thy return, if so thou could'st or durst, |
Behold a Chaos blacker than the first. |
Tell him here's worse then a confused matter, |
His little world's a fathom under water, |
Nought but the fervor of his ardent beams |
Hath power to dry the torrent of these streams. |
Tell him I would say more, but cannot well, |
Oppressed minds, abruptest tales do tell. |
Now post with double speed, mark what I say, |
By all our loves conjure him not to stay. |
Another.
As loving Hind that (Hartless) wants her Deer, |
Scuds through the woods and Fern with harkning ear, |
Perplext, in every bush & nook doth pry, |
Her dearest Deer might answer ear or eye; |
So doth my anxious soul, which now doth miss, |
A dearer Dear (far dearer Heart) then this. |
Still wait with doubts, & hopes, and failing eye, |
His voice to hear, or person to discry. |
Or as the pensive Dove doth all alone |
(On withered bough) most uncouthly bemoan |
The absence of her Love and loving Mate, |
Whose loss hath made her so unfortunate: |
Ev'n thus doe I, with many a deep sad groan |
Bewail my turtle true, who now is gone, |
His presence and his safe return still wooes, |
With thousand dolefull sighs & mournful Cooes. |
Or as the loving Mullet, that true Fish, |
Her fellow lost, nor joy nor life do wish, |
But lanches on that shore, there for to dye, |
Where she her captive husband doth espy. |
Mine being gone, I lead a joyless life, |
I have a loving phere, yet seem no wife: |
But worst of all, to him can't steer my course, |
I here, he there, alas, both kept by force: |
Return my Dear, my joy, my only Love, |
Unto thy Hinde, thy Mullet and thy Dove, |
Who neither joyes in pasture, house nor streams, |
The substance gone, O me, these are but dreams. |
Together at one Tree, oh let us brouze, |
And like two Turtles roost within one house, |
And like the Mullets in one River glide, |
Let's still remain but one, till death divide. |
{ Thy loving Love and Dearest Dear, |
At home, abroad, and everywhere. |
A. B. |
To her Father with some verses.
MOst truly honoured, and as truly dear, |
If worth in me, or ought I do appear, |
Who can of right better demand the same? |
Then may your worthy self from whom it came. |
The principle might yield a greater sum, |
Yet handled ill, amounts but to this crum, |
My stock's so small, I know not how to pay, |
My Bond remains in force unto this day; |
Yet for part payment take this simple mite. |
Where nothing's to be had Kings loose their right |
Such is my debt, I may not say forgive, |
But as I can, I'le pay it while I live: |
Such is my bond, none can discharge but I, |
Yet paying is not payd until I dye. |
A. B. |
In reference to her Children, 23. June, 1659.
I Had eight birds hatcht in one nest, |
Four Cocks there were, and Hens the rest. |
I nurst them up with pain and care, |
Nor cost, nor labour did I spare, |
Till at the last they felt their wing |
Mounted the Trees, and learn'd to sing; |
Chief of the Brood then took his flight, |
To Regions far and left me quite: |
My mournful chirps I after send, |
Till he return, or I do end. |
Leave not thy nest, thy Dam and Sire, |
Fly back and sing amidst this Quire. |
My second bird did take her flight, |
And with her mate flew out of sight; |
Southward they both their course did bend, |
And Seasons twain they there did spend: |
Till after blown by Southern gales, |
They Norward steer'd with filled sayles. |
A prettier bird was no where seen, |
Along the Beach among the treen. |
I have a third of colour white, |
On whom I plac'd no small delight; |
Coupled with mate loving and true, |
Hath also bid her Dam adieu; |
And where Aurora first appears, |
She now hath percht, to spend her years; |
One to the Academy flew |
To chat among that learned crew; |
Ambition moves still in his breast |
That he might chant above the rest, |
Striving for more then to do well, |
That nightingales he might excell. |
My fifth, whose down is yet scarce gone, |
Is 'mongst the shrubs and bushes flown, |
And as his wings increase in strength, |
On higher boughs he'l perch at length. |
My other three, still with me nest, |
Untill they'r grown, then as the rest, |
Or here or there, they'l take their flight, |
As is ordain'd, so shall they light. |
If birds could weep, then would my tears |
Let others know what are my fears |
Lest this my brood some harm should catch, |
And be surpriz'd for want of watch, |
Whilst pecking corn, and void of care, |
They fall un'wares in Fowlers snare: |
Or whilst on trees they sit and sing, |
Some untoward boy at them do fling: |
Or whilst allur'd with bell and glass, |
The net be spread, and caught, alas, |
Or least by Lime twigs they be foyl'd, |
Or by some greedy hawks be spoyl'd. |
O would my young, ye saw my breast, |
And knew what thoughts there sadly rest, |
Great was my pain when I you bred, |
Great was my care, when I you fed, |
Long did I keep you soft and warm, |
And with my wings kept off all harm, |
My cares are more, and fears then ever, |
My throbs such now, as 'fore were never: |
Alas my birds, you wisdome want, |
Of perils you are ignorant; |
Oft times in grass, on trees, in flight, |
Sore accidents on you may light. |
O to your safety have an eye, |
So happy may you live and die: |
Mean while my dayes in tunes I'le spend, |
Till my weak layes with me shall end. |
In shady woods I'le sit and sing, |
And things that past, to mind I'le bring. |
Once young and pleasant, as are you, |
But former toyes (no joyes) adieu. |
My age I will not once lament, |
But sing, my time so near is spent. |
And from the top bough take my flight, |
Into a country beyond sight, |
Where old ones, instantly grow young, |
And there with Seraphims set song; |
No seasons cold, nor storms they see; |
But spring lasts to eternity. |
When each of you shall in your nest |
Among your young ones take your rest, |
In chirping language, oft them tell, |
You had a Dam that lov'd you well, |
That did what could be done for young, |
And nurst you up till you were strong, |
And 'fore she once would let you fly, |
She shew'd you joy and misery; |
Taught what was good, and what was ill, |
What would save life, and what would kill? |
Thus gone, amongst you I may live, |
And dead, yet speak, and counsel give: |
Farewel my birds, farewel adieu, |
I happy am, if well with you. |
A. B. |
In memory of my dear grand-child Elizabeth
Bradstreet, who deceased August, 1665,
being a year and half old.
FArewel dear babe, my hearts too much content, |
Farewel sweet babe, the pleasure of mine eye, |
Farewel fair flower that for a space was lent, |
Then ta'en away unto Eternity. |
Blest babe why should I once bewail thy fate, |
Or sigh the dayes so soon were terminate; |
Sith thou art setled in an Everlasting state. |
2. |
By nature Trees do rot when they are grown, |
And Plumbs and Apples throughly ripe do fall, |
And Corn and grass are in their season mown, |
And time brings down what is both strong and tall. |
But plants new set to be eradicate, |
And buds new blown to have so short a date, |
Is by his hand alone that guides nature and fate. |
In memory of my dear grand child
Anne Bradstreet.
Who deceased June 20, 1669, being three years and
seven Months old.
WIth troubled heart & trembling hand I write, |
The Heavens have chang'd to sorrow my delight. |
How oft with disappointment have I met, |
When I on fading things my hopes have set? |
Experience might 'fore this have made me wise, |
To value things according to their price: |
Was ever stable joy yet found below? |
Or perfect bliss without mixture of woe. |
I knew she was but as a withering flour, |
That's here to day perhaps gone in an hour; |
Like as a bubble, or the brittle glass, |
Or like a shadow turning as it was. |
More fool then I to look on that was lent, |
As if mine own, when thus impermanent. |
Farewel dear child, thou ne re shall come to me, |
But yet a while and I shall go to thee. |
Mean time my throbbing heart's chear'd up with this |
Thou with thy Saviour art in endless bliss. |
On my dear Grand-child Simon Bradstreet,
Who dyed on 16. Novemb. 1669. being but
a moneth, and one day old.
No sooner come, but gone, and fal'n asleep, |
Acquaintance short, yet parting caus'd us weep. |
Three flours, two scarcely blown, the last i'th' bud, |
Cropt by th' Almighties hand; yet is he good, |
With dreadful awe before him let's be mute, |
Such was his will, but why, let's not dispute, |
With humble hearts and mouths put in the dust, |
Let's say he's merciful as well as just. |
He will return, and make up all our losses, |
And smile again, after our bitter crosses. |
Go pretty babe go rest with Sisters twain |
Among the blest in endless joyes remain. |
To the memory of my dear Daughter-in-Law,
Mrs. Mercy Bradstreet, who deceased Sept. 6,
1669, in the 28. year of her Age.
And live I still to see relations gone, |
And yet survive to sound this wailing tone; |
Ah, woe is me, to write thy Funeral Song, |
Who might in reason yet have lived long, |
I saw the branches lopt the Tree now fall, |
I stood so nigh, it crusht me down withal; |
My bruised heart lies sobbing at the Root, |
That thou dear Son hath lost both Tree and fruit: |
Thou then on Seas sailing to forreign Coast; |
Was ignorant what riches thou hadst lost. |
But ah too soon those heavy tydings fly, |
To strike thee with amazing misery; |
Oh how I simpathize with thy sad heart, |
And in thy griefs still bear a second part: |
I lost a daughter dear, but thou a wife, |
Who lov'd thee more (it seem'd) then her own life. |
Thou being gone, she longer could not be, |
Because her Soul she'd sent along with thee. |
One week she only past in pain and woe, |
And then her sorrows all at once did go; |
A Babe she left before, she soar'd above, |
The fifth and last pledge of her dying love, |
E're nature would, it hither did arrive, |
No wonder it no longer did survive. |
So, with her Children four, she's now at rest, |
All freed from grief (I trust) among the blest; |
She one hath left, a joy to thee and me, |
The Heavens vouchsafe she may so ever be. |
Chear up, (dear Son) thy fainting bleeding heart, |
In him alone, that caused all this smart; |
What though thy strokes full sad & grievous be, |
He knows it is the best for thee and me. |
A. B. |
A Funeral Elogy.
Upon that Pattern and Patron of Virtue, the
truely pious, peerless & matchless Gentlewoman
Mrs. Anne Bradstreet,
right Panarets,
Mirror of Her Age, Glory of her Sex, whose
Heaven-born-Soul leaving its earthly Shrine,
chose its native home, and was taken to its
Rest, upon 16th. Sept. 1672.
ASk not why hearts turn Magazines of passions, |
And why that grief is clad in sev'ral fashions; |
Why She on progress goes, and doth not borrow |
The smallest respite from th'extreams of sorrow, |
Her misery is got to such an height, |
As makes the earth groan to support its weight, |
Such storms of woe, so strongly have beset her, |
She hath no place for worse, nor hope for better; |
Her comfort is, if any for her be, |
That none can shew more cause of grief then she. |
Ask not why some in mournfull black are clad; |
The Sun is set, there needs must be a shade. |
Ask not why every face a sadness shrowdes; |
The setting Sun ore-cast us hath with Clouds. |
Ask not why the great glory of the Skye |
That gilds the stars with heavenly Alchamy, |
Which all the world doth lighten with his rayes, |
The Persian God the Monarch of the dayes; |
Ask not the reason of his extasie, |
Paleness of late, in midnoon Majesty, |
Why that the palefac'd Empress of the night |
Disrob'd her brother of his glorious light. |
Did not the language of the starrs foretel |
A mournfull Scene when they with tears did swell? |
Did not the glorious people of the Skye |
Seem sensible of future misery? |
Did not the lowring heavens seem to express |
The worlds great lose, and their unhappiness? |
Behold how tears flow from the learned hill, |
How the bereaved Nine do daily fill |
The bosom of the fleeting Air with groans, |
And wofull Accents, which witness their moanes. |
How doe the Goddesses of verse, the learned quire |
Lament their rival Quill, which all admire? |
Could Maro's Muse but hear her lively strain, |
He would condemn his works to fire again, |
Methinks I hear the Patron of the Spring, |
The unshorn Deity abruptly sing. |
Some doe for anguish weep, for anger I |
That Ignorance should live, and Art should die. |
Black, fatal, dismal, inauspicious day, |
Unblest forever by Sol's precious Ray, |
Be it the first of Miseries to all; |
Or last of Life, defam'd for Funeral. |
When this day yearly comes, let every one, |
Cast in their urne, the black and dismal stone, |
Succeeding years as they their circuit goe, |
Leap o're this day, as a sad time of woe. |
Farewell my Muse, since thou hast left thy shrine, |
I am unblest in one, but blest in nine. |
Fair Thespian Ladyes, light your torches all, |
Attend your glory to its Funeral, |
To court her ashes with a learned tear, |
A briny sacrifice, let not a smile appear. |
Grave Matron, whoso seeks to blazon thee, |
Needs not make use of witts false Heraldry; |
Whoso should give thee all thy worth would swell |
So high, as 'twould turn the world infidel. |
Had he great Maro's Muse, or Tully's tongue, |
Or raping numbers like the Thracian Song, |
In crowning of her merits he would be |
Sumptuously poor, low in Hyperbole. |
To write is easie; but to write on thee, |
Truth would be thought to forfeit modesty. |
He'l seem a Poet that shall speak but true; |
Hyperbole's in others, are thy due. |
Like a most servile flatterer he will show |
Though he write truth, and make the Subject, You. |
Virtue ne're dies, time will a Poet raise |
Born under better Starrs, shall sing thy praise. |
Praise her who list, yet he shall be a debtor |
For Art ne're feigned, nor Nature fram'd a better. |
Her virtues were so great, that they do raise |
A work to trouble fame, astonish praise. |
When as her Name doth but salute the ear, |
Men think that they perfections abstract hear. |
Her breast was a brave Pallace, a Broad-street, |
Where all heroick ample thoughts did meet, |
Where nature such a Tenement had tane, |
That others souls, to hers, dwelt in a lane. |
Beneath her feet, pale envy bites her chain, |
And poison Malice whetts her sting in vain. |
Let every Laurel, every Myrtel bough |
Be stript for leaves t'adorn and load her brow. |
Victorious wreathes, which 'cause they never fade |
Wise elder times for Kings and Poets made |
Let not her happy memory e're lack |
Its worth in Fame's eternal Almanack, |
Which none shall read, but straight their loss deplore, |
And blame their Fates they were not born before. |
Do not old men rejoyce their Fates did last, |
And infants too, that theirs did make such hast, |
In such a welcome time to bring them forth, |
That they might be a witness to her worth. |
Who undertakes this subject to commend |
Shall nothing find so hard as how to end. |
Finis & non, |
John Norton. |
Omnia Romanæ fileant Mirecula Gentis. |