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A14783 Albions England a continued historie of the same kingdome, from the originals of the first inhabitants thereof: and most the chiefe alterations and accidents there hapning: vnto, and in, the happie raigne of our now most gracious soueraigne Queene Elizabeth. VVith varietie of inuentiue and historicall intermixtures. First penned and published by VVilliam VVarner: and now reuised, and newly inlarged by the same author.; Albions England. Book 1-12 Warner, William, 1558?-1609. 1597 (1597) STC 25082A; ESTC S119589 216,235 354

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Vpstarts and all Were ouercome So Spencers both from heauen to hell did fal Put to a fowle and shamefull death with others that misled The King in Out-rages more great than earst in England bred Prolers Blood-thirstie Parasites Make-shifts Bawdes did thriue Nor was an ancient English Peere vnbanisht or aliue For forraine and domesticke Swords Plague Famine and Exile Did more than tythe yea tythe the Tythe of men within this I le Of Baldricks Hoodes Tabrides and Furres from Knights disgraded tore Attaintures of Nobilitie and Armes reuersed store So many Spurres hewen off the heeles and Swords broke ouer head Were through a King so light and lewd a Councell neuer read The King in prison and depos'd tyrannised he dide By Trecheries of Mortimer that ruld the Roste that tide Whilst Edward in Minoritie his Fathers throne supplide CHAP. XXVIII THIS third of that same Name as yet in Nonage for a time Although a King was vnder-kept by some that ouer-clime Queene mother proude Mortimer familiar more than should Did and vndid more than they might not lesse than as they would Till Edward better counselled hong Mortimer the death Of many a Peere who Earle of March and haughtie for his birth Was Lord of nine skore dubbed Knights his other traynes except For greater pompe than did his Prince this Lord of VVigmore kept But more he had bene happie though lesse hautie in his Halls More honour in humilitie than safetie in walls Proud Climers proue not monuments saue onely in their falls The senselesse pride of Fooles therefore whome reuerently we ride Should lessen at the least because that earth their earth shall hide The Countrie purg'd of Fleecers and of Flatterers the Court The King became a Mars for Armes a Iupiter for Port Th Olymp●ds the Pythea and the prowesse of the Earth Did seeme euen now and not but now to haue in him their birth East South and North gaue ayme farrc off admiring so the West As if that Mars discarding them had set our Realme his Rest. Philip Valois Dauid Bruz of power and courage more Than any French or Scottish Kings since or of long before Confedrate with three other Kings and Princes farre and neere Warre all at once on Edward but did buy their warring deere Dauid debelled left his land but lastly did returne And whilst our King did war in France much did he spoyle burne And proud of mightie Troopes of men of vnresisted prayes And Edwards absence prosperously he on aduantage playes Vntill not sending hence for helpe the Queene did muster Knights And with the Foe though tripled-wise victoriously she fights The Scots for most did perish and their King was Prisner taine And Scotland wholly for a pray to England did remaine Meane while was Paris scarcely left to rescue Philips Goale Whom Edward ferrits so from hold to hold as Fox from hoale That Melancholie he deceast and valiant Iohn his sonne Was crowned King of France and then the wars afresh begonne But after many fieldes vnto the Foes continuall wracke The French King captiuated to the English Monarke backe His Victor sayles the Prince of VVales Edward surnamed blacke The flower of Chiualrie the feare of France and scourge of Spaine Wheare Peter dispossest of Crowne was crownde by him againe Fower yeeres the French eleuen yeres was the Scotch K. prisners heere Whose the Dolphines ransomes were as great as good their cheere PRince Edw. Iohn of Gaunt all their Fathers sonnes might boaste Of famous Sier and he of sonnes matchlesse in any Coaste Howbeit King and Prince at last misled by counsell ill Through Taxes lost a many hearts that bore them earst good will Thence finding Fortune contrary to that she was before Yeat either dying seaz'd of French and Scottish Conquests store Yea Callice late and Barwick yet of their Exployts is lest Though Sonne before the Sier and both of liues long since bereft When Barwick was besieged and stood brauely at defence Sir Alexander Seiton theare chiefe Captaine had pretence To linger forth the Siege till Scots should draw the English thence In rescue of Northumberland and therefore sent his sonne A Pledge of treated Truce and when the guile-got Truce was done And Barwick not releeued nor resigned as it ought Two sonnes of Seiton were before the walls besieged brought They ready for the Iybbet and their Father for his Graue For eyther he must yeeld the Towne or them he might not saue In griefe he then his Countries cause and Childrens case reuolues But partiall vnto either he on neither Choyce resolues To be a loyall Subiect and a louing Father too Behooued him but both to bee was not in him to doo Nature and honour wrought at once but Nature ouer-wrought And but his Ladie it preuents to yeeld the Towne he thought O what pretend you Sir quoth she is Barwick woorth no more Than error of such loue I ioy that I such Children bore Whom cruell Edward honoureth with such a cause of death For that especiall cause for which we all receaue our breath Euen for their Countries cause they dye whose liues for it be dewe Why see their faces constantly she did their faces viewe The same my Seiton seeme so farre from dreading any woe As if they skornde that Barwicke should redeeme them from the Foe Full deere they were to me vnborne at birth and borne and now And Mother like I moane their death and yet their death allow Moe Sonnes and such you may beget your honour if you staine Defected honour neuer more is to be got againe Preuent not then your selfe your Sonnes and me so great a blis Adiew dye sweet Sonnes your soules in heauen shall liue for this With such perswasions did she win her husband from the walls And Edward executes their Sonnes and to assault he falls So long that Barwicke yeelds at length and still vs master calls THese were the dayes when English armes had eu'rie where request And Edw. knights throughout the world had prick praise for best Not Knights alone but Prelates too Queenes whereof were twain The quondam in esse Queenes by Armour honour gain By Warre the Queene that was did cease her husbands tragicke Rayn And by the Queene then being was the Scotch King Prisnet tayne It followes then that as the Pawnce doth circkle with the Sonne So to the vice or vertue of the Prince are people wonne O that our Muse might euermore on such a Subiect ronne But Vulcan forgeth other Tooles and sharpneth deadlier swords For little els then ciuill warres our following Penne affords French Expeditions badly thriue whereof we cease to speake Not forraine but Domestick warres grew strong to make vs weake Melpomen here might racke her wits Sylla Marius hate Pharsalian Fields were gentle Frayes regarding this debate The second Richard sonne vnto the blacke Prince Edward dead Was crownde an Infant and from him the Stratagem was bread The bace attempts of Ball
chap. 10. pag. 45 The Storie of Iupiter and Calisto chap. 11. pag. 49 Of Cacus his secret Thefts and Tyrannies and how he was lastly discouered and slaine by Hercules pag. 53 Of the honour done to Hercules in Italie and of Queene Marica on whom he was supposed to beget Latinus Grandfather to Brute chap. 12. pag. 55 How Hercules vanquished King Picus and fell in loue with Iole p. 56 How Hercules ouercame the Tyrant Diomedes and gaue him to be eaten of his owne horses and how in Lycia hee betooke himselfe to ease and effeminacie pag 57 Of the tragicall end of Hercules and Deianira chap. 13 pag. 59 The occasion and circumstances of the third and last warre at Troy The destruction thereof and banishment of Aeneas pag. 61 Brute his petigree from either Parent his Exile from Italie and ariuall in this Isle then called Albion pag. 62 The third Booke HOw Brute named and manured this Iland built Troy-nouant or London and at his death deuided the Isse between his three Sonnes chap. 14. pag. 63 How Locrine ouercame Humbar and his Hunnes fell in loue with Estrild and of Queene Guendoleine her reuenge on him Estrild and Sabrin pag. 64 Of King Leir and his three Daughters pag. 65 Of Porrex and Ferrex and how Queene Iden murthered her sonne Porrex chap. 15. pag. 67 How and when the Scots and Pichts first entred Brutaine and of their Originals pag. 68 Of Belinus and Brennus their Contention Attonement renowmed Acts and death of Brennus chap. 16. pag. 69 Of the kindnes shewed by King Elidurus to his deposed Brother Archigallo pag. 76 How Iulius Caesar after two Repulses made the Brutaines tributarie to the Romaines chap. 17. pag. 77 The Fable of the old man the boy and the Asse pag. 80 The Birth of our Sauiour Iesus Christ. chap. 18. pag. 81 How Guiderius his brother Aruiragus ouercame the Romaines how Aruiragus was reconciled to the Romaines and married the Emperours Daughter pag. 81 How Queene Uoada vanquished the Romanes and of hers and her Daughters deaths pag. 82 Of the first Christian King in Brutaine how the Crowne thereof became Emperiall and of the Marriage and Holiday in Hell pag 85 Of the extreame distresse and thraldome that the Brutaines were brought vnto by the Scots and Pichts and how they were relieued by the King of little Britaine chap. 19. pag. 87 How King Vortiger intertained Hengistus and his Saxons how they droue Uortiger and the Brutaines into Wales and planted themselues in Britaine pag. 88 Of King Arthur and his Chiualrie pag. 90 How after the death of King Arthur the Saxons altogether subdued and expelled the Brutaines and of Cadwallader their last King pag. 91 The fourth Booke THe Storie of Curan and Argentile chap. 20. pag. 93 Of King Sigibert his tyrannie miserable end chap. 21. pa. 98 Of the amorous King Osbret slaine by the Danes who vnder Hungar and Hubba did warre and win much of England pag. 99 Of the politick and couragious Kings Alured and Adelstone and how they vanquished and chased the Danes pag. 100 How Egelred by treason of his mother became king and how all the Danes were murthered in one night pag. 101 Of the extreame thraldome wherein the English liued vnder the Danes How Swayne king of Denmarke and Canutus his sonne wholly subdued England to themselues chap. 22. pag. 102 Of the precepts that King Egelred on his death-bed gaue to his son Edmond Irneside pag. 103 Of the noble warre betwixt Edmond Irneside and Canutus of their Combat Attonement and friendly partition of England betwixt them c. pag. 105 Of the holy king Edward his vertuous and valiant gouernment Of the treacherous Earle Goodwin and of his End How king Harold was slaine and England Conquered by William Duke of Normandy chap. 22. pag. 107 Of the holy king Edward and of his sayings pag. 111 The fift Booke HOw king William Conqueror altered the lawes and gouernmet in England Of Edgar Athelstone and of his mother and Sisters entertainement in Scotland And of the restoring of the English royall blood chap. 23. pag. 113 Of King Henrie the second of Thomas Becket and of his death pag. 114 Of King Richard the first his Victories his imprisonment in Austrich his reuenge therfore and of his death chap. 24. pag. 117 Of King Iohn and how he was poysoned by a Monke pag. 118 A Tale of the beginning of Friers and Cloysterers pag. 119 Of a blunt Northerne man his speeches pag. 120 How king Edgar wowed the Nunne and of his pennance therefore pag. 121 Of the warres betwixt King Henrie the third and his Barons chap. 25. pag. 123 Of the vertuous and victorious Prince king Edward the first and of his counsell giuen to his Sonne c. pag. 124 Of king Edward the second his euill gouernment Of good Thomas Earle of Lancaster of his conference with an Hermit pa. 125 How lecherous Turgesius the Norwegane hauing conquered Ireland was by certaine young Gentlemen in the habites of Ladies slaine and Ireland so recouered chap. 26. pag. 126 Of amorous king Dermot and his Paramour the Queene of Meth in Ireland and of Ireland conquered to England pag. 129 Of the Hermits speeches to Earle Thomas of Lancaster chap. 27. pag. 131 How King Edward the second for his euill gouernement was deposed and his Parasites put to death chap. 28. 136 Of King Edward the third his Victories and noble Gouernement pag. 137 Of the magnanimitie of a Scottish Lady Sir Alexander Seitons wife at the besieging of Barwicke pag. 138 Of the troublesome Raigne of king Richard the second and how he was deposed by Henry surnamed Henry of Bolingbroke Duke of Hertford and Lancaster c. pag. 140 The sixt Booke OF king Henry the fourth of the Rebellions in his time and of Richard the seconds death chap. 29. pag. 142 Of the victorious Prince king Henry the fift Of Queene Katherine and Owen Tuder pag. 143 Of the wowing and wedding of Vulcan and Venus and of the strife betwixt Venus and Phoebus chap. 30. pag. 146 How Pan wowed and was deceiued chap. 31. pag. 152 Of Mercurie his successes loue pag. 154 Of Mars his Censure of loue and women and of Iupiters Sentence and sayings pag. 156. and 157 Of the troublesome Raigne of King Henrie the sixt how he was lastly deposed And of King Edward the fourth chap. 32. pa. 158 Of King Richard the third and of his Tyrannies pag. 160 How Henry Earle of Richmond ouercame and slew King Richard the third chap. 33. pag. 161 Of the vniting of the two hous 〈…〉 Lancaster and Yorke by intermariage pag. 163. The Seauenth Booke OF the great difficulties ouerpassed by Henrie the Seauenth heire of the Line of Lancaster or euer he attained to the Crowne chap. 34. pag. 164 Of the like great difficulties ouerpassed by his wife Queene Elizabeth heire of the Line of Yorke or euer the same two houses by their intermariage were vnited pag. 166 Of
conclude by Combacy to winne or loose the Game Within a little Island neare round which the Armies stand The Kingly Champions trie their Force by fighting hand to hand They spur their Horses breake their Speares beat at Barriars long And then dismounting did renew a Battell braue and strong Whil'st eyther King thus Martially defends and did offend They breathing King Canutus said we both I see shall end E●e Empire shall begin to one then be it at thy choyce To fight or part With it their Knights crie out with common voyce Deuide most valiant Kings deuide enough ye haue of Fight And so the Champions did embrace forgetting malice quite Partition equally was made betwixt these Princes twaine And Brother-like they liue and loue till by a deu'lish traine Earle Edricus a Traytor to the Father and the Sonne Did murther Edmund and his head supposing to haue wonne The fauour of Canutus so presenting sayd O King For loue of thee I thus haue done Amazed at the thing Canutus sayd and for that thou hast headed him for me Thy head aboue all English heads exalted it shall be The Earle was headed and his head poold vp for all to see Of England Danske Norway then Canut was perfect Lord And in this triple Regiment all with vertue did accord Harold Hardi-knought his sonnes each th' other did succeede Of either which small certaine Fame of well or ill we reede Saue by their Raigns to Engl●sh-men did grieuous thraldō breede But after Hardt-knought his death the Danes were chased hence Not intermedling with the state of England euersince CHAP. XXII OF foresaid Egelred his Sonnes Alured and his brother Was Edward King for Goodwins guile had made away that other Religious chaste wise fortunate stout francke and milde was hee And from all Taxes wrongs and Foes did set his Kingdome free By ouer-ruling of his Lords intreating long the same Least dying Issuelesse he leaue succession out of frame He tooke to Queene a Damsell faire howbeit by consent In vowes of secret chastitie their louing liues they spent The Father of this maiden-wife he sitting by the King And seeing one that stumbled but not falling vp to spring Did laughing say the brother theare the brother well hath eas'd His meaning was the Stumblers feete And haddest thou so pleas'd So had my Brother quoth the King bin easing vnto me The traitrous Earle tooke bread and sayd so this digested be As I am guiltlesse of his death these words he scarcely spoke But that in presence of the King the bread did Goodwyn choke His sonne Harold by Hardi-knoghts late daughter him suruiues He crossed by contrary winds in Normandie ariues Where Goodwins sonne did take an oth Duke VVilliam vrging so To keepe vnto the Duke his vse when Edward hence should go The Crowne of England claimed by Adoption and by blood But Harold after Edwards death not to his promise stood And for he was in wealth in friends in blood and Armor strong And title had his Mothers right he forced not the wrong But arming him against the Duke so vrged vnto wroth Did seaze the Crowne vnto himselfe contrary to his oth Whil'st VVilliam therfore works for war King Harold had not rest For Harold Hare-foote King of Danes and Norwaies much opprest The English with his puissant Bands But Harold him assailes And after fearce and doubtfull fight most valiantly preuailes And with the Norgaine Prince he slew his people almost all When for deuision of the spoyle did much contention fall Betwixt the King and English-men and many a noble Knight Not onely murmur and maligne but did forsake him quight Such malice growing VVilliam with his Normanes taking land Found hot hot spur Harold prest in Armes his puissance to withstand And either Battell Marshalled as either Captaine wild The King of England eagerly the Normane Oste behild And with his cheerefull speeches thus his men with courage fild See valiant War-friends yonder be the first the last and all The Agentes of our Enemies they hencefoorth cannot call Supplies for weedes at Normandie by this in Porches groe Then Conquer these would Conquer you and dread no further Foe They are no stouter than the Brutes whom we did hence exile Nor stronger than the sturdy Danes or victory er while Not Saxo●●e could once containe or scarce the world beside Our Fathers who did sway by sword where listed them to bide Then doe not ye degenerate take courage by discent And by their burialles not abode their force and flight preuent Ye haue in hand your Countries cause a Conquest they pretend Which were ye not the same ye be euen Cowards would defend I graunt that part of vs are fled and linked to the Foe And glad I am our Armie is of Traytours cleered so Yea pardon hath he to depart that stayeth Mal-content I prize the minde aboue the man like zeale hath like euent Yeat troth it is no well or ill this Iland euer had But through the well or ill Support of Subiects good or bad Not Caesar Hengest Swayn or now which neretheles shall fayle The Normane Bastard Albion true did could or can preuaile But to be selfe-false in this Isle a selfe-Foe euer is Yeat wot I neuer Traytour did his Treasons S●ipend mis. Shrinke who wil shrinke let Armor's wayte presse downe the burdned earth My Foes with wondring eyes shal see I ouer prize my death But since ye all for all I hope a like affected bee Your Wiues your Children liues and Land from s●●uitude to free Are Armed both in shew and zeale then gloriously contend To winne and weare the home brought Spoyles of Victorie the end Let not the Skinners daughters Sonne possesse what he pretends He liues to die a noble death that life for freedome spendes As Harold hartned thus his men so did the Normane his And looking wishly on the earth Duke William speaketh this To liue vpon or lie within this is my Ground or Graue My louing Souldiers one of twaine your Duke resolues to haue Nor be ye Normanes now to seeke in what you should be stout Ye come amidst the English Pikes to hewe your honors out Ye come to winne the same by Launce that is your owne by law Ye come I say in righteous warre reuenging swords to draw Howbeit of more hardie Foes no passed Fight hath spead ye Since Rollo to your now-Abode with Bands victorious lead ye Or Turchus Sonne of Troylus in Scythian Fazo bread ye Then worthy your Progenitors ye Seede of Pryams sonne Exployt this businesse Rollons do that which ye wish be done Three People haue as many times got and forgone this shore It resteth now ye Conquer it not to be Conqured more Fot Normane and the Saxon Blood conioyning as it may From that consorted Seede the Crowne shall neuer passe away ●efore vs are our armed Foes behind vs are the Seas On either side the Foe hath Holdes of succour and for ease But that Aduantage
than needeth that we kisse as stands the cace Rid hence yonn same your knauish Page you sent him with a Mouse To spie my secretes or belike to braue me in my house Gods pretious would you knew I beare a mind lesse bace then that I can disgest your Drudge with me so saucely should chat Iacke Napes forsooth did chase because I eate my Slaue the Bat. O what a world is this that we can nothing priuate haue Vncensur'd of our Seruants though the simplest Gill or Knaue Well rid him of your seruice Nay it skils not if of life At least if so you meane that we shall loue as man and wife For such Colecarriers in an house are euer hatching strife The Cuckooe hearing this complaint flew on his trusty Page And vndiscreatly gaue him strokes that kild him in that rage Yeat eare he left his life he thus vnto his Maister sayd Thus many honest Seruants in their Masters hastie brayd Are Dog-like handled either yeat like deare in Ioues iust eyes Of Harlots and of hastines beware sayd he and dyes When now her gluttony and spight had thus dispatched twaine The Cuckooe plying amorously her fauour to obtaine Euen then and looking very bigge in came the Buszard who Did sweare that he would kill and slay I mary would he doe If any Swad besides himselfe faire Madam Owle did wowe The Cuckooe seeing him so bog waxt also wondrous wroth But thus the Owle did stint the strife Shee cals them husbands both Now fie quoth she if so you could betwixt your selues agree Yee both should haue your bellies full and it no hurt to me The Buszard faintly did consent the Cuckooe sayd Amen And so was Hen inough for Cocke not Cocke inough for Hen For she deceyues them both and had besides them other game The Gende Buszard dying soone for sorrow of the same The Cuckooe wisely saw it and did say but little to it As nooting she was set on it and knowing she would doe it But what the Swallow warned him of Harlots proued trew For as was gessed also him by trecherie she slew The Goddesse Pallas to giue end vnto these tragicke deedes Descended and the dead reuiu'd to Sentence thus proceedes The Bat because begild of Dis See pittieth partly and Permits him Twy-light flight to giue thereby to vnderstand That to aspire is lawfull if betwixt a Meane it stand The Swallow for that he was trew and slaine for saying well Shee doomb'd a ioyfull Sommers Bird in Winter time to dwell Euen with Mineruas secrete store as learned Clarkes doe tell The Buszard for he doted more and dared lesse than reason Through blind bace Loue induring wrong reuengeable in seasō She eie-blur'd and adiudged Praies the dastard'st and least geason Vnto the Cuckooe ouerkinde to brooke Coriuals she Adiudg'd a Spring-times changeles note and whilst his yong ones be By others hatcht to name and shame himselfe in euery Tree But liue quoth she vnto the Owle ashamed of the light Be wondred at of Birds by day fly filch and howle all night Haue lazie wings be euer leane in fullen corners rucke When thou art seene be thought a signe to folke of euill lucke Nor shall thine odious forme vile Witch be longer on my Shield Whence racing forth her Figure so the Goddesse left the field IVst Guerdons for Ambition for poore Soules opprest for well For dastard Dotards Wittolrie and Harlots nice you tell Said Perkens Wife But thus now of her husbands pride befell At last when sundry Armes had end Henry victorious still And Perkens passage was fore-stald he yeelds of his owne will Himselfe from Churches Priuiledge to Henries Mercy who Did onely limitte his abode and lesse he could not doe But when he sought escapes he then had petite punishment And after for some new attempts to Tower was he sent Whence practising escape t' was sayd he won to his intent Young Edward Earle of Warwicke that indeed was Clarenes son And euer had been Prisner theare eare Henries raigne begon And now by law too strickt me seemes for this to death was don Perken was hang'd and hang may such but that the Earle should die Some thought hard law saue that it stood with present pollicie Sir VVilliam Stanley dide for this oft King-law is doe thus Deseruing better of the King but what is that to vs The last of our three Phaetons was tuter'd of a Fryer Who being fitted now by Art and nature to aspier The foresaid name of VVarwicke fain'd seduced folke thereby As I my selfe in Essex heard and saw a Traitor dye That fain'd himselfe sixt Edward and to grace-out such his lye Lookes bodie words and gesture seem'd heroycall to view He had like age like markes and all that might inforce it trew Whereby to him assisting minds of simple Folke he drew Our Cowle-mans foresayd Actor so preuailed that the Fryer In Pulpets durst affirme him King and Aydes for him requier But lastly both were taken both did fault in one same ill Yeat rope-law had the Youth the Frier liu'd Clergie-knaued still VVHen Armour ended Auarice began for then begins The slye Mercuriles● and more by wyles then valour wins Beneuolences Taxes and sore Fines for penall lawes To Henry hoords from Henry hearts of many a Subiect drawes Empson Dudly fur'd Esquiers more harmefull being gown'd To Englands friends than Englands foes through Auarice profound In such exacting chiefly Act applaused of the King To whom their ciuill Thefts not Thrifts exceeding wealth did bring Yeat whē the gracious King found out their tacking Rich Poore He then did pardon much and much did purpose to restore But dying those two Harpies lost their hated heads therefore So hardly fauoured of Kings themselues in bownes containe That they securely stout at length doe perish through disdaine So hardly too some Princes are from priuate Lucar wonne As though their bags ore-flow they think no harme abroad vndone Henry acquite his latter dayes of Auarice fore named Deceast for Prowesse Policie and Iustice highly famed THE EIGHT BOOKE OF ALBIONS ENGLAND CHAP. XXXIV EIGHT Henry heire indubitate of Yorke and Lancaster Succeeded and with Kingly rites his Father did interr His mind his words his lookes his gaet his lynaments and Stature Weare such for Maiesties as shew'd a King compos'd by Nature All Subiects now of ciuill strife all counter-minds for Raigne All enuious of his Empier now weare rid weare pleas'd or slaine Rich weare his sundrie Tryumphs but his cost had foyzen than When Terwin and strong Turnay in resisting France he wan When Maximilian Emperour did vnder Henry fight When English Ships did often put the French Sea-powre to flight And that the French King was inforc'st to craue and buy his peace Who wiuing louely Mary so the warres for then did cease This sister to our King and then the French Kings goodly Queene Was welcommed with Tryumphs such as erst in France vnseene Iustes Barriers Tylts Turneyes were proclaymed
in that Climate Frozen dead shut vp with isie Driftes Thus died he and all with him if so to die be death But no saith Heauen no saith their Fame suruiuing them on Earth Then Chancelor his onely Ship remayning of that Fleete For Fynmarke at the VVardhouse sayles with his Conforts to meete There day it is two months of length and Mal-strands Poole it makes Such hidious rore deuouring floods that tenne miles distance shakes Wheare frustrate of his Friends in quest with courage not deiect He for the Course preposed did his ventrous Sayles direct KIng Arthur Malgo Edgar once to haue subdewd are saide Orkney Gotland Island and those former in that Traide Gronland VVireland Curland and colde Scrikfyn them obayde Newland with others and those Isles wheare men saue Eyes alone Are hid in hides of Beasts and Beasts saue Fish haue Fothernone Now Chancelor ariuing mong'st the Laplande●s at last They seeing vncouth Men and Shippes weare wondringly agaste For eare that day was heard no Shippe that churlish Pole had past The Lapland Bay wheare he ariu'd now cald Saint Nicholas Bay Though Russiah fifteene hundreth Miles from Mosco is away Theare Winterd he at Newnox till safe-Conduct being sent Thence to their King on swift-drawne Sleads through frozen waies he went Not like Sarmatian Scithians for the Moscouites be so He found them plaine but rather much in Pompe to ouer-floe They neuer in the Russian Courte till then did English see His intertainment therefore was as stately as might be In sundrie Roomes weare hundreds seene in Gold and Tyssue clad A Maiestie Augustus-like their King inthroned had Let passe what paste in speech betwixt our Pilot and their King Full well could Chancelor demeane himselfe in euery thing Let passe how in Basilius Court most royally he fead Suffise it that our Agent of his arrant thither spead That is that Ours might trade with thē of which large leaue is read More not vnworthie note here of our purpose is to say But this be first of Mandeuil remembred by the way CHAP. LXIV WE left him form'd a Trauelet braue Pilgrim Knight farewell And Elenor sweete Soule in Loue with whom she could not tell He trauels for to leaue his Loue not caring where he lose it She for her Loue to finde it skils not whom so him that Oose it The greene-Knight be whoso he shall her heart had branded hers Wheare is that Second She that Loue for Vertue so prefers Her onely speede howso he shall his heart had branded his Wheare liues that second He that so by louing betterd is T' is often seene Loue works in Man a weake deiected minde T' is euer seene a Womans Loue doth alter as the winde Example then be Mandeuil for Men not to be idle In Amorous Passions Labor is to loue at least a Bridle Example too be Elenor But let vs say no more For Women euer alter saith the Gospell preach't before Conclude we then when Elenor and Mandeuil did die The Method of true louing did with them to Heauen flie For euer since too feruent in their Loue are Men for most But Iris-like in Womens Hearts Loue too and fro doth poste One Stafford of a Noble House a Courtiour of good hauor A friend and fast to Mandeuil and in the Prince his Fauor From Gyprus from his Friend receiu'd two Letters one was his The other sent to Elenor and that purported this Of you receiued I a Ring a Token to your Minde If so I met it and it is my fortune it so finde For if the Heart may as it might for Minde be vnderstood My Heart is yours your Ring so mine Harts interchang'd were good More did I feare than euer in your Ladiship I found Disdainefull Lookes frō those faire Eyes that me with loue did woūd Now speake I Loue far from those Lookes so forceable to kill Howbeit that I loue is not to worke or wish you ill Not more than this though Princes Frownes beare death with them feard I For had you lou'd the King mislikt what had I for'st to die Wheare I haue been were blasphemie from Women to detract Great store of Beauties haue I seene but none as yours exact Courts also more than stately with faire Ladies in the same Which seemed common Formes to me remembring but your name When in the Holly-land I prayd euen at the holy Graue Forgiue me God a sigh for sinne and three for Loue I gaue Against the fearce Arab●ans I the Soldans Pay did take When oft at O●set for Saint George Saint Elenor I spake The Amazones those lustie Girles beleeue me lik't me Well But nothing in the best of them but doth in you excell I look't vpon the sterile Lake where Heauen-fir'd Sodom was For one thought I here such as you not so had come to pas Most sweete and Soueraigne Balsamum in Indian Fields I saw More soueraign sweeter Sēts thought I my lips frō yours could draw Nere Aethiop when the spice-sweete Well of youth I saw I saide My Lady lacketh not hereof Perfection needs not Ayde I sawe nor wonder you I should who sees you sees as much The onely Phoenix Foule and Faier but it and you none such But flying thus about your Blaze your Gnat doth burne his wings To my despairing Passion more your praised Bewtie brings Not Trauell tiers my Loue a whit but Loue doth tire on me Which should I wish me better or you baser of degree Be still the same you are let me exile my selfe for euer Two diffidenses I conceit will let me hope you neuer The first my selfe vnworthy you the latter and the least The Kings Consent But well I wot Loue is a Lordly Feast Aguize so should you so and so despayre is part releast One comfort is before you doome is Execution done My voluntary Banishment already is begon Which if you neuer shall repeale shall neuer end or when Ah can I hope it should you not for vs is England then Nor is it but our minds that make our natiue Homes our Graue As we to Ours Others to theirs like parciall Fancie haue Transmute we but our Mindes and then all one an Alien is As if a Natiue One resolu'd makes euery Country his Your Answer that by Pen our speech to this return'd shall be Voutsafe it vnto Stafford for an Other-I is he In perfect Friendship no suspect for two are one in all Communitie or doubling ioy or making griefe more small But would you to an Vnitie of hearts twixt vs incline Wheare Friendship is angelicall our Loue should proue diuine More write I not blest may you liue teares ouertake this Line When Stafford present Elenor this Letter had perus'de She said as else-where shall ensew Now is in vs infus'de Fresh matter of Discoueries How Chancelor he speade Is said before of Russia thus remaineth to be reade CHAP. LXV AVaste and spatious Empier is Moscouie in the same Bee Riuers Tanais Volga and Boristhenes of fame With
ALBIONS England A Continued Historie of the same Kingdome from the Originals of the first Inhabitants thereof And most the chiefe Alterations and Accidents there hapning vnto and in the happie Raigne of our now most gracious Soueraigne Queene ELIZABETH VVith varietie of inuentiue and historicall Intermixtures First penned and published by VVilliam VVarner and now reuised and newly inlarged by the same Author BY WISDOME·PEACE BY PEACE PLENTY LONDON Printed by the Widow Orwin for I. B. and are to be sold at her shop in Paules Church-yard at the signe of the Bible 1597. To the right Honorable my very good Lord and Maister Henrie Carey Baron of Hunsdon Knight of the most noble Order of the Garter Lord Chamberlaine of her Maiesties most Honorable Houshold Lord Gouernour of Barwick Lord Warden of the East Marches for and anenst Scotland Lord Lieftenant of Suffolke and Norfolke Captaine of her Maiesties Gentlemen Pencioners and one of her Highnes most Honorable Priuie Counsell THis our whole Iland anciently called Brutaine but more aunciently Albion presently containing two Kingdomes England and Scotland is cause right Honorable that to distinguish the former whose only Occurrents I abridge from the other remote from our Historie I intitle this my Booke ALBIONS ENGLAND A subiect in troth without vaine-glory be it spokē worthy your Honorable Patronage had it passed frō the Pen of a more countenaunced Author But for great Personages gratefully to entertaine the good wils of meane workemen is answerable to themselues and animating to feeble Artists I therefore secure of your Honors Clemencie herein not vnlike to Phaëton who at the first did fearefully admire euē the Pallace of Phoebus but anon feareles aduenture euen the presence of Phoebus hauing dedicated a former Booke to him that from your Honor deriueth his Birth now also present the like to your Lordship with so much the lesse doubt and so much the more duty by how much the more I esteeme this my latter laboure of more Valew I owe your Lordship expecteth especiall dutie at the hands of your Seruant And thus right Honorable hoping better than I may offend desirous to please desperate of praise destitute of a better Present I make Tender onely of good will more I haue not for your Honors good word lesse I hope not Your Lordships most humble and dutifull Seruant W. Warner To the Reader WEl know I that Pearls low-prised in India are precious in England that euen Homer was slightly authorised in Greece but singularly admired elswhere and that for the most part the best Authors find at home their worst Auditors howbeit whatsoeuer VVriter is most famous the same is therefore indebted to his natiue Language Neither preferre I aboue three speeches before ours for more sententious VVritten haue I alreadie in Proese allowed of some and now friendly Reader offer I Uerse attending thine indifferent ensure In which if grosely I faile as not greatly I so feare in Ueritie Breuitie Inuention and Uarietie profitable patheticall pithie and pleasant so farre off shall I be from being opinionate of mine owne Labours that my selfe will also subscribe to prescribe the same for absurd and erronious But in Uaine is it either to intreat or feare the Courteous or Captious the one will not cauill nor the other be reconciled My labour is past and your liking to come and things hardly founded may easily be confounded Arrogancie is Linx-eyed into aduantages Enuie and selfe-conceited Readers capable of the least errour But such are good Mindes and the Contraries of these Men in reading of Books as were the Paganes in reuerencing their Gods sacrificing as deuoutly to a woodden Iupiter as to a golden Iupiter to an Oxe a at or vnreuerent Priapus as to the Sunne the Starres or amiable Venus deuotion and discretion being euermore senceles in detraction Of the latter sorte therefore I craue pardon presupposing their patience to the former presupposing impatience I offer pardon resting to either and to you all in good will such as I should Yours W. W. A Table for euery of the seuerall Bookes to find out the speciall Stories and matters directing from their Chapters and Pages The first Booke OF the deuision of the World after the generall Flood And of the confusion of Tongues chap. 1. pag. 1 How and vnder whome the first Monarchie began pag. 2 Of the debate betwixt Titan and Saturne for the kingdome of Crete and of their conditionall Attonement pag. 2 How Iupiter at his birth by commaundement of Saturne his Father should haue been put to death and how he was preserued chap. 2. pag. 4. Of the crueltie of Lycaon and how hee was driuen out of his kingdome by Iupiter chap. 3. pag. 7 How Iupiter deliuered his Parents being imprisoned by Titan. pa. 7 Of Aesculapius and of his death pag. 8 How Saturne wilfully enforcing his Sonne Iupiter to Armes was chaced out of Crete and Ganimaedes taken prisoner pag. 9 How Iupiter on the Sea ouercame the cruell Gyant and Pyrat Aegaeon pag. 10 How Iuno pretending the death of Hercules and hismother being in trauaile of him was preuented chap. 4. pag. 11 How Hercules vanquishing the Gyant Philoctes fetched a bootie out of the Isle of Hespera pag. 12 How Hercules rescued fayre Hesione King Laomedons Daughter from death and of Laomedons treachery towards him pag. 13 How Hercules sacked Troy and put Laomedon to flight pag. 15 How dangerously Hercules ouercame three fierce Lyons in the Forrest of Nemea chap. 5. pag. 16 How Hercules in Agypt subdued and sacrificed the Gyant Busiris pag. 17. How Hercules rescued Hippodame the Bride of Pirithous from the Centaures that would haue rauished her pag. 18 How Proserpinc was rapted by Pluto her deliuerie attempted first by Orpheus then by Theseus and Pirithous and how she was at the length rescued by Hercules chap. 6. pag. 19. How Androdamus ouercame Philoctes spoyled Thaebes slew King Creon How Lycus vsurped in Thaebes imprisoned Megara the wife of Hercules and how hee and Megara were lastly slaine of Hercules pag. 23 How King Laomedon was slaine by Hercules and Troy by him the second time spoyled c. pag. 25 The second Booke OF the warre and fierce Combat betwixt Hercules and Antaeus and of King Atlas chap. 7. pag. 26 How two Amazonian Ladies challenged the Combat of Hercules and Theseus and of the braue performance thereof pag. 29 Of the warre contention and Combat betwixt Hercules and Achelous for the loue of Deianira pag. 30 How the Centaure Nessus would haue rauished Deianira of his death and malitious treacherie towards Hercules chap. 8. pag. 32 How Hercules slew the subtile and cruell Monster Hydra pag 34 Of Gerion subdued and slaine by Hercules pag. 35 How the Tyrant Cacus driuen out of his kingdome by Hercules liued in a Caue with three Ladies Daughters to King Pi●us pag. 36 The tragicall Storie of Queene Daphles and Doracles chap. 9 p 37 The Tale of the old woman and Battus
Melancholy giuen we Saturnists doe call His Wife and Sister kissing ost her Nephewe and her Sonne For she his Aunt and Mother was with Vesta seeke to shunne The voted Fathers deadly doome to kill so sweete a Childe Their eyes and very soules abhorre who nothing so vnmilde Doe weeping kisse his laughing mouth in minde the Babe to saue Howbeit feare of Saturnes wroth contrary counsell gaue But when in haste the Babe his heart was sent for by and by So Saturne wild so Cybell must and Vesta not de 〈…〉 e It was a woe to heare their woe and death to see them die Vnhollowed wretch then Cybell sayd in wombe why did I beare This double Burthen happy Twins saue that my Twins they are So that my teeming with these throwes had ending well were I Or would I might not giue them life that liuing foorth with die Thy Scepter Saturne is not worth Perfourmance of thy vow Thy conscience doth a scruple holde that Gods nor men allow Frō Gods frō men from brutish beasts from nature nought doth grow But fosters what it bringeth soorth thou onely doest not so Thy Sonnes alone for slaughters serue and I mean while their mother Am Saturnes Wife lesse prowd of it then that he is my Brother Vnhappy Cybell borne to beare and therefore borne to woe And fruitlesse fertill to a man that soweth not to mow Now teares had drowned further speech till she as one bestrought Did crie that with a knife the Babe should to her bed be brought My selfe quoth she will be his death with whome my selfe will die For so may S●turne saue and shunne his vow and destinie But Vesta countermaunds her charge yeat Saturnes will must stand For Ioue must die or they not liue A Damsell theare at hand Was then enforced to that charge Thrice toucht her knife his Skin But thrice his smiles did cause her teares she fourthly did beginne And fourthly ended as before Betide me death or life Liue still at least for me she sayd and casting downe the knife She kist that sweete and prety mouth that laughed on her lippes And brings him back to Cybels bed Her heart reuiued skippes Reuiewing life where reckned death had wrought repentant teares The Father fronted with a guile at length the Damsell beares The Infant vnto Oson Towne and in her Ladies name Intreates Melissus Daughters twayne to nourish vp the same Vp to a Mountaine beare they him and in a secret Caue A Mountaine Goat did giue him milke and so his life they saue His Nou●ses sounding Simbals once to drowne the Infants crie A many Bees the Muses birds into the Caue did flie Where making Honie Saturnes Sonne did long time liue thereby CHAP. III. IT doth remayne of Iupiter as how but then a Lad From Epire to Pelasgis him the Lordes Epyrote had To fetch their pledge Lycaon held when times of truce had ende Lycaon fayning to consent that did not so intend Next day as though he would dismisse the Legates with estate Did make to them a solemne feast when hauing slaine of late The noble pledge he brings his limmes and setteth them before His Countreymen to feede vpon in saused dishes store The Strangers and his Subiects too abhorring such a sight Sit gazing each in others face bereft of speech and sprite Vntill that lustie Iupiter a stripling to beholde Did take the limmes dismembred so and with a courage bolde Did shew them throw Pelasgis streetes declaring by the way The murther of their bloodie King which did so much dismay The Citizens that euen they detesting such vnright Did rise in armes against their King where youthfull Ioue did fight So valiantly that by his force Lycaon tooke his flight And after did by Robberies by blood and Rapines liue For which to him a Wooluish shape the Poets aptly giue IN Epyre and Pelasg●s thus Ioue first his honour wonne But greater things vntouched are by this same Worthy donne And partly in the monstrous warre that Titan and his Crue Did holde with Saturne when by search of Issues males he knew The which his brother had aliue against their couenant made When Titan Victor fast in hold was vanquisht Saturne laide Together with his wife and friends where sorrow much they past Till Iupiter did vnderstand his parentage at last He therefore landing tooke in Crete with well prouided men And ●lew his Vncle Titan and the Giant Tiphon then With most part of the Titanoies and sets his Father free By meanes whereof they reconcile and well a while agree NOt brooking then Apollos fault in that he ente●tainde The re●naunt of the Titano●es that after warres remainde Ap●ll● was by Iupiter inforced for to flie His kingdome Paphos and to liue exilde in Thessalie There loue but chiefly penurie constrained him to keepe Vntill he was restored home the King Admetus sheepe And for his Sonne disdainefully enuied Ioue his praise Ioue was the same Phisitions death that dead to life could raise Whos 's same grew thus As Aesculap an heardsman did espie That did with easie fight enforce a Basiliske to flie Albeit naturally that Beast doth murther with the eye Apollos Sonne perceiuing him with Garland on his head Imagins as it was indeede some hearb such vertue bred And for a proofe he caused him to cast the wreath away When strait the beast her onely eyes the silly man did slay Then Aesculap himselfe did take the wreath and puts it o● And by that meanes he ouercame the Basiliske anon In hearbs that deeper force is hid then Science may containe I finde sayd he and hearb by hearb into his mouth did straine That lay for dead an hearb at last reuiuing him agayne Henceforth men thought him more thē man whē by his wondrous skill He rendred life to many like so winning great good will But as he waxed famous thus he famous waxed proud Disdayning all yea Ioue himselfe for Peere he disalowd Vntill that Saturns angry Sonne reueng'd his pride by death Correcting iustly each abuse as Rector on the Earth THe Sonnes renoune thus added grace vnto the Fathers name But shadowes waite on substances and enuie followes fame Euen Saturne pompous Saturne ridde by Iupiter of Foes And feare of Titan did renewe his supersticious woes As touching former Oracle and hastie sommons sent Throughout his Realme to muster men in purpose to preuent By death of Ioue his destinie The men of Crete repinde To put on armour to his ill whom they had found so kinde But will they nill they so they must for so their King assignd And Saturne with his armed troupes into Arcadia went Where Iupiter forewarned of his Fathers ill intent Intreated peace to him denide so that perforce he must Defend him from his froward Sire or rather foe vniust Theare might ye see King Saturne fight like to a Lion wood Whilest Iupiter did beare his blowes and spares his Fathers blood And him that foe-like would him sley he friendly did defend Desiring Saturne to
retyre but wordes were to no end The wilfull man pursuing blood Ioue ceaseth to perswade And rushing in amongst his foes so hote a skirmish made That euery blowe sets blood abroch and so in little space Euen he who late he did entreat is followed now in chace By Arcas and his company for Ioue resraind the flight Because against his countrey men he had no will to fight Whilest lucklesse Saturne did escape by flight and fortune then And wandred long in vncouth Seas depriude of wealth and men Victorious Iupiter was crownde with glory King of Create And Saturne now ariude at Troy for succour did entreat Ganymedes King Troys sonne was sent in Saturnes ayde A worthy Knight and valiant warre to Iupiter he made But he and his were chased backe euen to their Citie walles For whoso stoode with Iupiter by Iupiter he falles And theare the Troyan Paragon Ganymedes was taine Twixt whome and Iupiter thenceforth sound friendship did remaine Then Saturne did the second time to Seas with shame retire And neuer after durst by warre against his sonne conspire But sayling into lower Realmes in Italie did dwell And hereof it is said his sonne did chase him into hell MEane while lesse ioyous of his fame then ielous of his freakes Her wrong Queene Iuno on the Truls of Iupiter she wreakes Which was the cause that all too late he purposing returne To rescue Danae in whose loue he amorously did burne Was cast by stormes into the Seas that forthwith tooke the name Of him whom for his Piracies Ioue vanquisht in the same Ye might haue seene Aegeon theare with wreakfull wrath inflamde At sight of Ioue at whose decay he long in vaine had aimd And how that Ioue had now the worst and in a trise againe The Gyant with his twise three Barkes in hazard to be ●aine The Centaures shew them valerous so did Ixeon stout And braue Ganymaedes did deale his balefull dole about But when couragious Iupiter had beaten to the ground Aaegeon and in the selfesame Chaynes wherein he often bound The harmelesse soules that crost those Seas himselfe in fetters lay Ye might haue sayd and truly sayd that then did end the fray So many were his high exploits whereof such wonder bread That for the same the Heathen folke doe deifie him dead Which since they are so manifold I many ouerpasse And though Amphitrio blush to heare how he deceiued was And that Alcmena pinch my tongue possest with bashfull shame Yea though that Iupiter himselfe my lauish tongue shall blame Yeat since that iealous Iuno knowes already of the same I dare to tell how Iupiter so cunningly beguilde His loue Alcmena that by him she traueled with childe Of Hercules whose famous Acts we orderly shall tell Whereof the first but not the least in Cradle-time befell CHAP. IIII. QVeene Iuno not a little wroth against her husbands crime By whome shee was a Cockqueane made did therefore at the time In which Alcmena cride for helpe to bring her fruit to light Three nights and dayes inchaunt her throwes and of a Diuelish spight Intended both the Ladies death and that wherewith she went Till Galinthis vnwitching her did Iunos spels preuent Howbeit cankered Iuno still pursuing her intent Two poysoned Serpents got by charmes into the chamber brought Where Hercules in cradle lay and thinking to haue wrought A Tragedie did let them loose who smelling out their pray Skaerd Hercules his brother that in selfe same cradle lay But Hercules as Children vse with little whelpes to play Did dallie childishly with them and no whit did dismay Vntill at last his tender flesh did fecle their smarting stings And then displeasd betwixt his hands the Snakes to death he wrings Amphitrio and the Thebanes all of this same wonder tell And yeeres permitting Hercules did with Euristeus dwell This King by spitefull Iunos meanes did set him taske on taske But Hercules perfourmed more then both of them could aske Yea yet a Lad for Actiuenes the world did lack his like To Wrestle Ride Run Cast or Shoote to Swim to Shift or Strike As witnes his inuention first those solemne actiue Plaies That were on Mount Olimpus tride where he had prick and praise For which his Nouell and himselfe in those not hauing Peeres The Graecians by th'Olimpides kept reckning of their yeeres KIng Atlas daughters in the Isles of Hesperae did holde A many Sheepe and Poets faine their fleeces were of Golde For rarenes then of Sheepe and Wooll in figures so they faine Euristeus pricks his Puple on this nouile Prize to gaine The Greekes applie their sweating Oares and sailing doe persist Vntill they reach the wished shoare where ready to resist Their entrance to the closed Isles an armed Giant stayd Whose grim aspects at first approch made Hercules afraide Now buckle they and boysterous bloes they giue and take among A cruell fight But Hercules had victorie ere long The Giant slaine Philoctes tooke the vanquisher in hand An harder taske had Hercules then pausing now to stand Most dreadfull was their doubtfull fight both lay about them round Philoctes held the harder fight by keeping higher ground The Sonne of Ioue perceauing well that prowesse not auail'd Did faine to faint the other thought that he in deed had quaild And left th' aduantage of his ground and fiercely smites his Foe But Hercules whose policie was to contriue it so Renewing fight most eagerly so strikes and strikes againe That to endure the doubled force his valiant Foe had paine Who yeelding to his Victors will did finde in him such grace As Hercules did thenceforth vse his friendship in each place Hesperides the goodly Nimphs their Keepers chaunce lament But Hercules did comfort them and cure their discontent And shipping then of Rammes and Ewes a parcell thence he went IN coasting back by new-built Troy he saw a monefull sort Of people clustering round about their yet vnconquered Port. He musing much and striking Saile did boldlie aske wherefore They made such dole Laomedon then standing on the Shoare Did tell the cause the cause was thus Laomedon ere than To reare the statelie walles of Troy a costly worke began And wanting pay to finish vp the worke he had begunne Of Neptunes and of Phoebus Priests the Godes of Sea and Sunne He borrowed money promising repaiment of the same By certaine time which thereunto he did expresly name The walles are built the time is come the Priests their money craue Laomedon forsweares the debt and naughtie language gaue Forthwith the Sea the Diuell then did many wonders showe Began to swell and much of Troy with violence ouerflowe And thereupon the swealtie Sunne the wastfull Sea retierd So vehementlie did shine vpon the Oosie plashes myerd That thereof noisome vapours rose and of those vapours spread Such plagues as scarce the liuing might giue buriall to the dead Repentant then their wretched king to diuell-god Delphos goes Where at the Oracle he knew his wrongs to cause
Oracle had showen Doo offer vp strange bloud they bid and so auert our ire Busiris prone before to bloud had now his hearts desire No sooner Stranger toucht the shoare but them the barbarous King To frie in flames before his Gods for Sactifice doth bring Yea custome added worse to ill his Subiect and his friend When Strangers misse supplie the flames his murthers had no end Howbeit with these Butcheries the drought did still remaine For in Busiris was the bloud that should redeeme the raine The Gods did meane which they not minde that lewd Busiris he An Alien borne that Stranger was who dead no drought should be A Noble man of Iunos kin Busiris late had slaine For losse of whome the craftie Queene did often sorrowes faine Cease Madame saieth Hercules not long the time shall be But I his tyrannie shall end else it giue end to me Her sorrowes did not tith her ioy when he had giuen consent To vndertake that deathfull taske for death was it she ment Now Hercules in Aegypt meetes Busiris and his Crew When sodainelie with maine assault on him the Giant flew Supposing to haue dealt with him as he had done before With other Strangers Hercules alonely and no more To take his part with skathfull stroakes bestird his Club so well In battering of the Tyrants bones that strengthlesse downe he fell Then did he kill and chase away his lewd and cruell traine Till hearing of no further foe he commeth backe againe And taketh vp the wretched King that cryeth out for ayde And on the Altar where himselfe had Strangers often layde Himselfe was made a Sacrifice and as his blood did staine The Altar euen at that same time there fell a ioyfull raine With ended drought and Tyrants death a common ioy befell And all in Memphis entertaine the vnknowen Champion well From thence returning back to Thaebes he there a while did dwell KIng Creons Daughter Megara at Thaebes he did espouse To coūtenāce their wedding feast did wāt nor knights nor prowse Which triumphs ended whē the knights should thence depart away Pirithous to his wedding bids them all and names the day Wherein to meete at Thessalie to which did all consent And at the time concluded of at Thessalie conuent Amidst their cheere the solemne feast the Centaures did disqueat Whom by no meanes the Nobles there to patience might intreat For they an hundred Gyants strong with drinking whitled well Amongst their cups from words to blowes and worser dealings fell And too outragious at the last fierce Eurytis their Guide Vnreuerently they rauish thence Hippodame the Bride But Hercules not brooking it to arme himselfe begunne And all alone in rescue of the rapted Bride did runne By this time did Ixeons Seede stand still in battell ray When he but one against them all began a bloodie fray Ech arrow that with ayming hand from sturdy Bow he sent Did answere by the death of one the Sender his intent Whilest Hercules with deadly bow had store of Centaures slaine And wanting arrowes with their blood his valiant Club did staine The Bridegroome and the other knights came to the ceasing fight When all were soyld excepting twelue that sau'd their liues by flight Alonely Lycus yeelded him a prisoner and liues And liuing vnto Hercules much after-sorrow giues But Nessus that escaped then in time him worser grieues CHAP. VI. THe glory of this high attempt and sauing of the Bride They all ascribe to Hercules and whilst they heere abide To exercise his Piracies as Pluto King of Hell Such was the lewdnes of his life and place where he did dwell That hee and it were titled so lay houering neere the shore And saw the folke of Cicilie their Gods with rights adore This rouing King with armed Guardes of his disordered Crew Did come a land to make their Pray but for to outward view They faine deuotion none suspect the ill that did ensue Anon a wreathing Garlands sweet hard at her mothers side King Pluto sawe Proserpine and liking whom he spide Concluding with his companie how to conuay her thence Betwixt his boistrous armes he tooke the faire and fearefull wench And doo what the Cicilians might he setteth her aboord And to his giltie Sailes the Aire did gentle Gales afoord A number eyes in Cicilie for her did weepe in vaine For her her Mother Ceres and her Loues mate did complaine Her selfe sweet Lady of her moane did finde no meane God wot Though Dis to please did say and giue what might be said or got Imbarked then with him his Harpe did wofull Orpheus take And to Molessa Plutos Realme with speedie Sailes did make Where he vnknowne at gate of Hell did harp such Musick sweete As lumpish Cerberus could not but shake his monstrous feete His foule and warpt ill-fauoured face ore-hung with cole-black haires His horslike teeth his lolling lips his Doglike hanging eares His hooked nose his skowling eyes his filthie knotted Beard And what not in his vgly shape but presently appeard More milder than his common moode and lesser to be feard This hellish Porter deeming that such musick would delight His weeping Mistris did conuay the Harper to her sight Where Pluto swore by dreadfull Stix if Orpheus did by play But make her laugh what so he askt he should receiue for pay Anon such Heauenly Harmonie on skilfull Harpe he plaid That she her husbands musick knew and ioyfull was she made Now Orpheus did a watch-word giue and she to laugh began And for reward to haue from thence his wife he asked than Although it gawled Plutoes soule his sweet-heart to forgo Yeat for to quit him of his oath he yeelds it shall be so With this condition that before they fully passed Hell He should not backwards looke on her what chance so ere befell Now as they passe through blinde by-waies he fearing least perchance She erre or lag returnes a looke and who should marke that glance But Cerberus that purposely for such aduantage waites Who still detaining her did shut her Husband out the gates When Ceres heard of this mischance she Cicill leaues anon And knowing all the Knights of Greece to Thessalie were gone She thether goes in hope of helpe where presently she meetes With Thaeseus and Pirithous whose salutings she regrectes They wondring what the noble Queene of Cicill there should make Become inquisitiue thereof to whom sad Ceres spake First of Proserpine her greefe and then of Plutoes guile For her she weepes on him she railes and mooueth them meane while The mother of false Dis his rape had more behinde vnsaid When Aegeus and Ixions Sonnes did ioyntly offer aide About the desert parts of Greece there is a valley lowe To which the roaring waters fall that from the Mountaines flowe So Rockes doe ouershadow it that scarce a man may vewe The open ayre no Sun shines there Amidst this darksome Mewe Doth stand a Citie to the same belongs one onely Gate But one at once
Shaft the Rauisher he slue And though the arrow galled him euen at the very heart Yeat for a while he did indure the not induring smart And hauing brought his trembling Rape into a vallie said See Deianira how thy Loue an end of me hath made Yeat is my death lesse griefe to me then that thou shouldst bestow Thy selfe on such a changing Churle as Hercules I know Sweete Wench I know he dooth preferre contrarie Loues to thee Wherefore my graue the lesse my griefe in this thy good shall be Take this he gaue a folded cloth and to the baene therein He mixed somewhat of his bloud this same quoth he shall win To thee again thy Husbands loue when he shall it estrange For out of doubt I know it I he takes delight in change When thou suspectest such a wrong doe boyle a shirt with this No sooner shall he weare the same herein such vertue is But that his nouell Loue will change and fall whence it did flie Meane while doe not the vnction touch least so the vertue die In all this time betwixt his armes he did the Ladie claspe And hild her so as Hawke a Pray vntill his latest gaspe Then leauing him a liuelesse Coarse mistrusting nought his drift She meaning simply tooke with her the traitours poysned gift And Hercules by this had past the Riuer deepe and wide Who Deianira first imbrast drew from the Centaures side The fatall Shaft that should the death of braue Achilles proue In Phoebus Church by Paris hand for Polixenas loue THe Centaure left vntoombed there Hee Shee and all their traine are come to Lerna whom the King did noblie entertaine Theare had he from their common teares the cruell hauock made By Lernan Hydra whom in Fenne not armies durst inuade His vpper parts had humane forme his nether Serpentine The whole was monstrous yeat his wit more monstrous but most fine For wit is moustrous when the same from vertue doth decline Such were his subtill arguments and still supplies therein That he by often losse of heads was fained heads to winne And wittie thus to others wrong confounded all hee found Propounding questions and a word vnanswered was a wound The Scourge of Tyrants hearing this did promise death or ayde Whilst fearefull Deianira did the contrarie perswade But womans speech from weapons vse might not withdraw him then Til entring Palus he had rousd the Monster from his Denne Disdainfully did Hydra take the presence of his Foe And after subtill arguments to sturdie fight they goe Two blowes at once with Glaue and Taile made Hercules to reele Who since he first had vsed armes the like did neuer feele Not long he borrowed had the Loan but Hydra had the like So either twaine repaye their debt and neither faintly strike But who might stand with Hercules By him the monster fell Who burning vp his vgly shape did passe his soule to hell Which happie fate of Hydras fall left Lerna glad and well From whence to Athens and from thence to Lycia did he saile Then to Hesperia Gerions Realme his outrages to quaile HE by his triple tyrannie for Gerion he was said three headed in respect that him three other Giants aid So spoild and plag'd y e neighbour Realmes with daily wrongs war That all the force of Africa his furie could not barre In Gadira when Hercules his Pillers reared had The which our westerne world not knowne men farther land forbad Then with victorious ships he sets on Gerions chased Fleet And secondly at Megida did either armie meete Theare Gerion with his brothers twaine the Citie did beset And scornefullie aduance themselues as men not to be met Prouiding therefore murall workes they threaten hot assault Whilest Hercules contrarie warres vnto his souldiers taught The Gates wide opned out he comes vnto the Giants three Your men he said are well at worke well met are also wee This lesse then monster more than man a Fiende in humane shape The Spanyard said is he from whom I made so hard escape Yet hardlier shalt thou now escape said Hercules and than Betweene them foure three to one A cruell fight began And euery of the Giants thought himselfe an ouer-match To Hercules who almost gaue to one a quick dispatch The second he dispatcht in deed who fell his latest fall Then thousands came to rescue them yeat one he fights gainst all Till Theseus with the other knights did march their Armie out And ioyne to him their Foes with them and all make battaile stout Then Gerions brother fights againe and both did bathe in bloud It was no fighting where they fought or standing where they stood King Meleus Theseus Hispan and Philoctes did no lesse But soueraignlie the sonne of Ioue bestird him in the presse The Giant Gerions brother then by him did breath his last And Gerion did retire his men into their Gallies fast But where they land theare Hercules wonne landing though he past The Pikes withstanding thousand Swords warding thousand slings Himselfe alone ere that his men to fight on Shore he brings Then Gerion cursing heauen earth bestirre ye friends he cride Now is the time to liue or die let good or bad betide Doe liue as men or die as men see tenne we are for one What lets vs then from victorie that victors haue beene knowne Reuenge your selues reuenge your friends reuenge our cōmō mone Nor did he shrinke from what he said or said not as he wrought His onely deeds were manies death Till Hercules he sought Whome singling after combat long of him his end he cought So to subiection Hespera by Hercules was brought NO better Spanish Cacus sped for all his wondrous strength Whom Hercules from out his Realme debelled at the length A richer King or Tyrant worse liu'd not in any Land Nor any one gainst Hercules in hardier fight did stand Yeat chased by his Conqueror he was inforc'd to flie Vpto a Mountain in those parts where as at poynt to die Through famine by his Magicke Arte he made the Mountaine flame And by that shift escapt his Foe long wondring at the same Then fled the Giant night and day for feare did lend him wings And as about from place to place the wandring Tyrant flings He on a Mount in Italie cal'd Auentine did light Where laboured Cacus did repose his wearied limmes all night In this same Hill he found a Caue which fitting place espide He did resolue in secrecie thenceforth himselfe to hide In that same Mount from sight of men and being theare alone That words at least might vent his woes he maketh thus his mone Ah wretch quoth he no longer King that title now must change Thou late were fearfull vnto all now fearing all must range This ragged Caue must now suffice in stead of Royall seat And though alas the place should please yet want I what to eat Where be my solemne banquets now where is my stately traine My Tributes nay my
proper Goods or doe my friends remaine Not one I feare proud wealth was such that now in time of need I knowe not where to seeke a friend in any hope to speede And yeat despaire not Picus liues indebted much to me For great good turnes to him I will ere here I setled be Thus droue he foorth the dismall night and vp by peepe of day He sped him vnto Calabrie for there King Picus lay His daughters three of long before and still did loue him well And whether with the kings consent or not it so befell He took them all to Auentin and there with him they dwell About his boisterous neck full oft their daintie armes they cast Still plying him with kisses sweet no sport was ouer-past That Cacus would they might worke and more their custome was By pleasant tales in order told the wearie times to passe And once especially it was concluded on a row That each of them should tell her tale the first beginning so CHAP. IX KIng Aganippus ere his death had with his Lords decreed His only daughter Daphles should in Empire him succeed A fairer Ladie liu'd not then and now her like doth lack And nature thinke I neuer will a second She compact The King intombed Daphles of his Scepter was possest And one there was a Noble man that could it not disgest Who for he was of fame and force did bid her battaile and In doubtfull end of victorie their ciuill quarrels stand At length the Argiue Maiden Queene she Doracles subdued But Cacus of this Stratagem a Tragedie ensued Now Loues not Launces came in vre the man that lost the day And lies in Chaines left her in cares her Conquest was his pray Full often did she blame her selfe for louing him her Foe But oftner thought she it more blame not to haue erred so Thus whom in Campe she loathed late in chaines she loued now And thought him sure because so sure To Princes prisoners bow Thinks she and watching fitting time vnto the Prison went Where at the dore of such his Lodge a many teares she spent But entring when her eyes beheld the Image of her hart To her still peerelesse though his bands had altred him in part She casting downe her bashfull eyes stood senceles then a space Yeat what her tonguelesse loue adiornd was extant in her face And now the Goaler left to her the Prisoner and the place Then cheering carefull Doracles let it suffice quoth shee That I repent me of thy bands and frankly set thee free And let that Grace grace-out the rest for more remaines behind Then being said may decent seeme to such as faults will find My selfe my Land my Loue my life and all what so is mine Possesse yet loue and saue my life that now haue saued thine Then sownes She at his sullen feete that yet abode in thrall Which to auoid he faintly rubs his Liuer on his gall And with his hand not with his heart did reare her sinking downe And faining to approue her Choise had promise of the Crowne But neither Crowne nor Countries care nor She worth all the rest Nor grace nor dutie reconcile whom enuie had possest No sooner was he got at large and wealth suppli'd his lack But he to seeke her ouerthrow to forren aids did pack Demaund not how the wronged Queene disgested such her wrong But aske if she the tidings tolde to heare them liu'd so long She liu'd in deede yet sowned oft and sowning ouerpast From her mistempered head she teares her louely Tresses fast And beateth on her Iuorie brests and casts her on the ground And wrings her hands and scricheth out and flingeth vp and downe Her Ladies pittying her distresse had got their Queene to rest From whenceforth outward signes sighs her inward griefe exprest Her sparing Diet seldome sleepe her silence and what not Had framd her now right Louer-like when thus to him she wrot WHat fault of mine hath causd thy flight doth rest in cloudes to me But faultles haue I heard of none and faultie may I be Yet not my Scepter but my selfe haue kingly Suters sought Did all amisse saue thou alone that settest both at nought At nought said I Yea well I said because so easly cought One crime but cite and I for it will shead a million teares And to be penitent of faults with it a pardon beares Ah Doracles if our extreames thy malice and my loue The formers euer ill shall not the latters good remoue I heare thou doest frequent the warres and war thou wilt with mee Forgetfull that my Argiue men impatient Warriours bee Sweet hassard not the same to sword that Loue doth warrant thee Ech Speare that shal but crosse thy Helme hath force to craese my hart But if thou bleede of that thy blood my fainting soule hath part With thee I liue with thee I dye with thee I loose or gaine Liue safe therefore for in thy life consists the liues of twaine Most wisely valiant are those men that backe their armed Steeds In beaten Paths ore boorded Tylthes to break their staffe-like Reeds Wheare not the dint of wounding Launce but some deuise of loue Sans danger hath sufficient wait their manhoods to approue Wheare braue Aspects of louely Dames Tantara to the fight Whose forms perhaps are weg'd in harts whē Fauours wag in sight Whearas the Victors Prize is praise and Trumpets sound ech blow Wheare all is well that seemes but well in courage or in show Wheare Ladies doffe their Champions Helmes and kisse wheare Beauers hid And parlie vnder Canapies how well or ill they did Retire therefore sweet heart retire or if thou wilt be arm'd Then fight as these where all things make that all escape vnharm'd Such manhood is a merriment things present are regarded Not thousand drammes of bloud in warre one drop is here rewarded In few the warres are full of woes but here euen words of warre Haue brauer grace thē works thēselues for Courts frō Campes be far Than are the valiāt who more vaine Than Cowards who more wise Not men that trauell Pegasus but Fortunes fooles doe rise Me thinks I see how churlish lookes estrange thy cheerefull face Me thinks thy gestures talke gate haue changd their wonted grace Me thinks thy sometimes nimble Limbs with armour now are lame Me thinks I see how scars deforme where Swords before did maime I see thee faint with Summers heat and droup with winters cold I see thee not the same thou art for young thou seemest old I see not but my soule doth feare in fight thou art too bold I sorrow lastly to haue seene whom now I wish to see Because I seeloues Oratresse pleads tediously to thee If words nor weepings loue nor lines if ease nor toyle in fight May waine thee from a pleasing ill yet come thou to my sight Perchance my presence may disswade or partnership delight But wo am I dead paper pleads a senceles thing of
wretch in miserie alwaies Cease further prate said Hercules in troth it greeueth much To see a King in this Distresse but since thy life is such As neither in aduersitie nor prosperous estate Thou canst afford one iot of good I purpose to rebate Thy wicked dayes by worthy death prepare therefore to dye When Cacus sawe he must perforce so harde a combate trye He by inchanted flames againe endeuored to flye But Hercules deluded once by that deuise before Had learned now for being so deceiued any more And casting feare aside did leape into the flaming Caue And theare by Arte did conquer Arte. The Gyant then to saue Himselfe did take his Axe in hand wheare Hercules and he Couragiously bestirre themselues vntill they did agree To trye it out in open ayre So doubtfull was their fight That Lookers on could not discerne to whether best should light The frighted Ladies did their best to helpe their fighting friend But Hercules had victorie and Cacus had his end CHAP. XII FOr Gyants of Cremona slayne and Cacus ridded so The Latine Princes prayse on him and presents did bestoe Wheare Rome is now Pallantia then Euander hee did frame A temple and to Hercules did dedicate the same And he intreated thereunto in Italie did stay To honor whome did Princes come from farre and euerie waye King Faunus had affaires abroad when from Laurentum came His wife Marica Facua some this louely Queene doe name From liking did shee fall in loue with Hercules and he More readie to haue made demaunde then like to disagree Conceauing her by circumstance so coupled by contract That had King Faunus neuer liu'd Latinus had not lackt Yeat home came Faunus fathering his late Corriuals act But whether gotten lawfully or thus in loue forbod Latinus Brute his Gran-dames Syer was sonne vnto a God WHilst that in loue of this same Queene and lande of all besides The vanquisher of Vulcans sonne in Italie abides Of Calabries a mightie host King Picus he prouides And in reueng of Cacus swore his Slayer should be slaine But he ere long that so did sweare vnsweared it againe When chased home into his holdes theare sparred vp in gates The valiant Thebane all in vaine a following fight awaites Who for dispatch did fayne himselfe a Legate to the King And him the Porters as the same before their Tyrant bring Then shaking off his ciuil robes his shining Armes appeare And renting downe 〈◊〉 ●ro● sparre both Prince and people feare Some ran to Armor other some did fight with him their last Both court and Cittie in the end did lay vpon him fast Theare Picus worthely did winne of valiantnesse a name Yeat Hercules more valiantly by death did Picus tame And to attend their King his ghoste he sendeth flocke by flocke His furie was as fier to Ferne his foes as waues to Rocke Nor did his Lyons Spoyle giue place to darting or to knocke Meane tyme his men assault without whil'st he assayles within Wheare fighting to beate downe the Gates he so the Goale did win Within the King his ransackt Court he Iole espyes Whose teares then mounting frō her hart dismount thē frō her eyes King Picus now a lifeles corse was Father of this Mayde In vaine therefore did Hercules her pensiuenesse disswayde Nor could he but lament her fate and loue so sweete a face Whose person also did containe the type of female grace At first she was so farre from loue she rather seem'd to hate Yeat could she not so giue the Checke but that she tooke the Mate Then eithers loue was eithers life poore Deianira she Was out of commons yea of thought an other had her fee. WIth this so faire and portly wench he sayled into Thrace And heares how Diomedes did tyrannize in that place No Straunger scapes vnraunsomed but Raunsome wanting then He casteth them as prouender to Horses eating men A Garde of Tyrants like himselfe attending on him still Who richly did maintaine themselues by such their doings ill The Scourge of such was moued not to be remoued now By Iole whose louing teares such labours disalow With Diomedes and his Garde in Forrest did he meete Who with their common Stratagem the Stranger thinke to greete Hands of commaunded Hercules for Horse I am no hay All Straungers Raunsom once for all my comming is to pay Which sayd himselfe against them all began a noble fray The sturdie Thracians mightie men did hardly loose their ground But than the King a mightier man not any wheare was found These all at once assayle and strike and thunder on his Sheeld But number fitted to his force vnwonted so to yeeld For with his club he skuffles then amongst their Curets so That speedie death was sweeter dole then to suruiue his blo Well mounted comes the King himselfe whom he dismounts anon But reseued to his Horse againe away he would be gon Lesse has●e he sayd I Harts out-runne no● shalt thou me out-ride Out stripping so the man-feade horse he topled ore his side The Monstrous King that resculesse to flying people cride Who lying all to frus●hed thus the sonne of Ioue did bring His cruell Iades that soone deuoure their more than cruell King The Thracians all submit themselues and ioye their Tyrants death And thinke some God had left the Heauens to succour men on earth From such as what they would they will and what they will they can And what they can they dare and doe and doing none withstan Nor thought they better of the man then did his deedes approue That neuer was a Conqueror vnto his owne behoue But to establish vertuous men and Tyrants to remoue This common Soldiour of the world with Iole did land In Lycia and the earth in peace discharged theare his band Sweete busses not sharpe battels then did alter man and minde Till he as others sorrowe in securitie did finde From Assur went the Empire then when Tonos he had time To court his Trulles Arbaces so espying place to clyme Secure in Tomyris her flight was valiant Cyrus slaine From Capua not from Cannas grewe braue Hanibal his baine The same to whose victorious Sword a second world was sought That Macedon in court not Campe to traytrous end was brought A louer not a Soldiour went Achilles to his graue And Caesar not in steele but silke to Rome his farewel gaue Euen so this second vnto none superior vnto all To whome did sooner Causes cease then Conquests not befall This monster-Master Hercules this Tyrant-Tamer hee Whose high Exploytes did leaue the earth from spoyl spoylers free In pleasures did he perish now that did in perils thriue A greeuous Taske I vndertake his dying to reuiue CHAP. XIII WHen Deianira vnderstood her busbands back returne She thought it strange that he frō her so strangely did soiorne Explorers sent to search the cause returne was made that he Did loyter in a Strangers Loue and Iole was she That euer hanged at his lips and hugged
Belles offend the Romaine eares When Caesars oft succesles fight had tyred him and his Inringed with his mayhmed Campe the Romane speaketh this Are these same Bands those selfe-same Bands that neuer fought in vaine And ye the men that following still my Standard still did gaine Euen these and ye are verie those nor can I discommend Your manhoodes that with lesser work brought greater Wars to end But not as was my wont to wright the Senate now shall reede I came I sawe I ouer-came such Foes forbid such speede Nor let the Senate muse for Troy with Troy doth here contend This warlike people fame is so from whence sprong we discend Yea if Aeneas had not left the Phrygian Gods to vs And Greekes Palladium Shipt to Greece this Fortune foyling thus I would haue thought those very Gods had followed our anoy But them haue we these onely haue vndanted harts from Troy But what shall Caesar doubt to fight against so brauea Foe No Caesars Tryumphes with their Spoyles shall giue the brauer shoe Ye Gods that guide our Capitoll Mount Palatin thou Throne Of stately Rome ye Followers too of her affayres each one Delay not but depriue me quite my Triumphes now in hand Nor let me liue if so I leaue vnconquered this Land This Land the last of Westerne Isles an Isle vnknowen ere this Which famous now through Caesars fight and our misfortune is Enough my fellow friends in Armes enough we Romaines haue To seeke reuenge your Conquest loe a Countrie rich and braue And which perswadeth victorie in Troynouant there bee That hold that Citie to our vse the Brutons disagree No Scot or Pichte assisting them in these our Warres I see Their ciuill strife will proue their scourge how stout soere they seeme And perpetuitie doth faile in euery thing extreeme Not Fortune still is good or bad and now let be our day Too long we liue if that so long we shall on trifles stay Said Caesar. And with such his words did so inflame his men That with lesse patience did they liue than linger battell then The Romaines bid the Bace and then did cruell Warre begin And little wanted that the Brutes the better did not win But Caesar so foresawe Supplies and Succors here and theare Perswading this disswading that controuling flight and feare That after many Romaines slaine the Brutons tooke their flight To Southerne Shores whereas to proofe Cassiuelan did fight With oft Eruptions out of Woods vntill the traiterous Knight The Earle of London yeelds his Charge and Citie to the Foe Through which disloyall president did other Cities soe And then with hard-won Tribute hence the Conquerour did goe BVt he that wonne in euery Warre at Rome in ciuill Robe Was stab'd to death no certaintie is vnderneath the Globe The good are enuied of the bad and glorie finds disdaine And people are in constancie as Aprill is in raine Whereof amidst our serious penne this Fable intertaine An Asse an Old-man and a Boye did through a Citie passe And whil'st the wanton Boye did ride the Old-man led the Asse See yonder doting foole said Folke that crauleth scarce for age Doth set the Boye vpon his Asse and makes himselfe his Page Anon the blamed Boy alightes and lets the Old-man ride And as the Old-man did before the Boye the Asse did gide But passing so the people thē did much the Old-man blame And told him Churle thy limbes bee tough the Boye should ride for shame The fault thus found both Man and Boye did backe the Asse and ride Then that the Asse was ouer-charg'd each man that met them cride Now both a-light and goe on foote and leade the emptie Beast But then the people laugh and say that one might ride at least With it they both did vndershore the Asse on either side But then the wondring people did that witles pranke deride The Old-man seeing by no waies he could the people please Not blameles then did driue the Asse and drowne him in the Seas Thus whil'st we be it will not be that any pleaseth all Els had bin wanting worthely the noble Caesars fall CHAP. XVIII AVgustus quayling Anthonie was Emperour alōe In whose vn-focd Monarchie our cōmon health was knowne The Brooser of the Serpents head the Womans promisd Seede The Second in the Trinitie the Foode our soules to feede The Vine the Light the Doore the Way the Shepheard of vs al Whose Manhood ioynd to Deitie did Raunsome vs from thrall That was and is and euermore will be the same to his That sleepes to none that wake to him that turns our Cursse to blisse Whom yet vnseene the Patriarkes saw the Prophets haue foretold Th'apossles preacht the Saints adore and Martyres doe behold The same Augustus Emperour in Palestine was borne Amongst his owne and yeat his owne did crosse their Blisse in skorne Bi-formed Ianus then in Mewe so would this Prince of Peace That Caesars Edict euerie wheare should Mars his enuie ceace THen raigned here King Cymbelyn King Theomantius sonne Next him Guiderius that with-held the Tribute Caesar wonne The Romaines that in our respect neglected Misia Spaine Armenia France and Siria then Recusants of their Raine Not by their Captaines but himselfe the Emperour of Rome Into relapsed Brutaine with imperiall Ensignes come Then hotter than the Punike Warres to Romaines did begin And Claudius looseth valiantlie all that the Brutons win But Romish Hamo from whose death Southhampton had that name In Brittish Armes salutes the King and slewe by guile the same Duke Aruiragus vsing then the Armor of the King Maintained fight and wonne the field ere Brutons knewe the thing This hardie Knight his Brother slaine was Crowned in his place And with his winnings also wonne the Emperour to grace Who sending for his daughter faire Genissa so did ende The Warres in Wedding and away did Claudius Caesar wende But Aruiragus after this reuolted and to stay The hauocke made of Romaines here came succors euery day His Queene Genissa childing died when his Reuolt she knew And Voada deuorsed late became his Queene of new Then he that at Ierusalem the fatall siege begonne Was sent from Rome and warring here the wonted Tribute wonne And through his gentle Victorie bound Aruiragus still A friend to Caesar whome the King adopted heire by will I here omit the dismall Warre in Isle of Mona made Against the Romaines whome the Priests the Druides inuade With banning words and women with their haire vntrussed stand With brands of fire in furious wise about their desperat Band. The King deceased Voada and her two daughters they Abused by the Romaine Lords doe hotter warres assay THe noble Scot King Corbred he confedrates with the King of Pichts and they and Brittish Peeres to field their Armies bring To aide the Queene of Brutes that like the Amazonian Dame That beating downe the bloodie Greekes in Priams succour came Had pight her Iauelin at her feete when entred in among The fearce confedrates
Vnto Ixeon stood their Sprights that had their lusts for law Rebellants to a common good and sinning without awe To Titius lastly ioyned Ghosts whose hearts did emptie hate As Todes their poyson growing when it seemeth to abate About flie Apples Stones and Tubs the wheele was tumbled downe The Vultur girds no Ghoste but had at least a broken crowne This skufling and confedracie in hell made such a reare That wontles of such braules and blowes Proserpine did feare But Pluto laughing told his Bride to Ela it was Fa To morrowes dinne should prooue that same to be a ciuill day In peace these were their practises on earth and here in hell Saue that their Soules haue neuer peace we finde them as they fell They worke to me each of these fiue though dailie count I aske Doe newlie number Million Soules whose torments is their taske The Queene of such not free of fear replied thus againe And yeat me thinks that Pluto should haue pittie on their paine He lowers and Feast with Fray had end and drinke did euery soule Of Lethe who their ioyes forgot euen yet in torments houle Nay Pluto must be Pluto still and so I will quoth he For this same onely day the Ghosts indebted are to thee For as the like shall neuer come so neuer like befell But henceforth all yea Prince and Pope shall euer find it hell So dreamed one but ouer-long on fantazies I dwell CHAP. XIX THe Cosen of great Constantine in Rome and here succeeds Betwixt the Brutes the Scots and Pichtes continuall trouble breeds And long the reg'ment of this Land the Romanes did inioy Transmitting Captaines euermore as Foes did here anoy But Rome it selfe declined now and Brutaine was opprest No longer were the Scottish Spoyles by Romaine Swords redrest Then ends the Tribute then began new troubles worser farre Then Tribute for the Scots and Pichtes inferre consuming warre The Brutons vnder Rome secure as men that did relie On others were disabled now by Martiall meanes to trie The fame of fight but Captainelesse confusedly they deale And giue a wretched instant of an headles Common-weale And whom so many Romaine Peers grand-Captaines of such might Of whome nine Emperors themselues in persons here did fight Could hardly foyle were fronted now euen of a barbarous Foe And at the point a wondrous change their Country to forgoe Such fruit hath ease such pollicie did serue the Romaines turne Who waining Martiall minds themselues the quietlier here soiorn The Brutons thus dispoy'ld of Armes and courage in effect Of Prince of Captaines and aduise their busines to direct Dispatch their Legate to the Land Diminutiue in name To Brutaine where the Legate thus his Ambassie did frame The back-slide of our helplesse friends the down-fall of our flate Our lacke of Prince of people and our wealth not now as late The sauage dealing of our Foes consuming outs and vs Is cause right mightie King that we approach thy presence thus Not for we are in blood allied or that whil'st Fortune smil'd Your Ancestors had rule from vs not for the Dames defil'd At Cullin who withstanding lust for it did loose their liues That els to Conon and his Knights had liued noble wiues We are emboldned in our suit though all of these might mooue But for our former wants O King and for thine owne behooue Great Brutaine doth submit it selfe thy Subiect if thou please Or els dispose it at thy will Prouided we haue ease Against such Foes as would not saue our liues to haue our Land Whom to conclude except thou helpe we neuer may withstand The King Aldroen pittying much the cause of his Allies Arm'd thence his brother Constantine a Captaine stout and wise He chasing hence the Scottes Pichtes with glory wore the Crowne And through his vertue stayed vp a Kingdome sinking downe WIthin a while did Vortiger the Duke of Cornewalle raigne When Constans Sonne of Constantine he traitrously had slaine The Scotts did ruffle then anew nor did the King affye In Brutones for they hated him and reason had they why And Saxon Fleetes from Germanie in Armor here arriue Through whose support the King in wars against the Scots did thriue The Foe by Hengest foyled thus he and his brother git The chiefest credit with the King but few gaine-saying it Necessitie of Souldiers here so well for them did fit And Hengests Daughter intertain'd King Vortiger so well That to misliking of his wife and liking her he fell And sotted thus in forren Loue did wed the Saxon Wench Which wrought vnto the Saxons weale but to the Brutes offence For whatsoere the Queene did aske the King would not deny Vntill his Subiects ran to Armes and made the Saxons flie They putting downe the Father then did set vp Vortimer He poisoned by his Stepdame they restored Vortiger With this condition that he should no Saxons intertaine But Hengest hearing from the Queene that Vortimer was slaine And Vortiger his Sonne-in-lawe re-kinged did resaile With Saxon forces though with fraud not force he did preuaile For thus by pollicy he did the Brutons circumuent He craued Parlie as a man that were to quietnes bent The place appoynted Parlantes him in simple meaning meet Farre from their Armie all vnarm'd whom Saxon Traitors greet With deadly wounds by hidden kniues held the King with them Confounding so the Brittish Oste. Nor cease they to contemne Both Christian rights and ciuill Rule subuerting either twaine And what they would of Vortiger through feare●ull threats they gaine And plant themselues in Southfolke Kent and elsewhere at their will And ruffling runne throughout the Land oppressing Brutons still The King and Brutons fled to Wales and Feend-got Marlin theare Bewraied more then I beleeue or credit seemes to beare As shewing how the Castell worke rear'd daily fell by night By shaking of two Dragons great that vnderneath it fight With other wonders tedious if not trothlesse to resight Aurelius Ambrose brother to King Constans murdred late From either Bruton hauing aid wonne so the kingly state And ere that Hengest or his Sonne stout Octa he subdew'd First to reuenge his Brothers death he Vortiger pursew'd In vaine the Welsh wild Mountaines fence the Flier from his Foe Or Gerneth Castell when as flames throughout the buildings goe In midst whereof the wretched King did end his dayes in woe THe Brutons thus had peace a while till Vortigerus Sonne And Gutllamour the Irish King in new Conflicts begonne Whom whil'st that Vter valiantly in VVales to wracke did bring His Brother Ambrose did decease and Vter then was King What Vter did by Marlins Art in compassing his will Vpon the Wife of Garolus transfigured by skill Into the likenesse of her Lord on whom he got a Sonne Renowmed Arthur or to name the Acts by Vter donne Were much and needlesse onely note he was a valiant Prince But such as was his noble Sonne was not before or since Yeat blazing Arthur as haue some
I might be ouer-seene He was victorious making one amongst the Worthies neene But with his pardon if I vouch his world of Kingdomes wonne I am no Poet and for lacke of pardon were vndonne His Scottish Irish Almaine French and Saxone Battelles got Yeeld fame sufficient these seeme true the rest I credite not But Bruton is my taske and to my taske I will retire Twelue times the Saxon Princes here against him did conspire And Arthur in twelue Battles great went vanquishor away Howbeit Saxon forces still amongst the Brutons stay This King to entertaine discourse and so to vnderstand What Accidents in after-times should happen in this Land He with the Brutish Prophet then of Sequelles fell in hand Of sixe long after-Kings the man not borne of humane seede Did Prophesie and many things that came to passe in deede Now Arthur chiefe of Chiualrie had set his Crowne at stay And to his Nephew Mordred did commit thereof the sway When with his Knights the wonders of the world for Martiall deeds Beyond the Scas in forren fights he luckely proceedes Till faithlesse Mordred cal'd him backe that forward went with fame For at his Vncles Diadem he traiterously did aime Twise Arthur wonne of him the field and thirdly slewe his Foe When deadly wounded he himselfe victorious died so INterred then with publique plaints and issules ensewes A drouping of the Brittish state the Saxon still subdewes Howbeit worthy Kings succeed but destiny withstood The auncient Scepter to iniure in Brutes succeeding blood Vnlou'd Careticus was he that lost the Goale at length Whenceforth in vaine to win their losse the Brutons vse their strēgth Yea God that as it pleaseth him doth place or dispossesse When foes nor foiles nor any force their courage might suppresse Seem'd partiall in the Saxon Cause and with a Plague did crosse The Brutons that had els at least rebated from their losse For Cadwane and Cadwallyn and Cadwallader the last But not the least for valorous of Brittish Princes past Brought out of VVales such knightly wars as made their foes agast The Plague worse spoyler then the Wars left Cambre almost waste Which to auoid the remnant Brutes into their Ships did haste Cadwallader in leauing thus his natiue Shore he fixt His eyes from whence his bodie should and with his sighes he mixt His royall teares which giuing place he speaketh thus betwixt Sweet Brutaine for I yet must vse that sweet and ceasing name Adew thy King bids thee adew whose flight no weapons frame But God cōmaunds his wrath commandes al counter-maund is vaine Els for thy loue to die in thee were life to thy Remaine Thus tymes haue turnes thus Fortune still is flying to and fro What was not is what is shall cease some come and others goe So Brutaine thou of Nation and of name endurest change Now balking vs whome thou hast bread and brooking people strange Yeat if I shoot not past mine aime a world of time from me Part of our blood in highest pompe shall Englands glorie be And chieflie when vnto a first succeeds a second She. But leauing speeches ominous Cadwallader is woe That seeing death determines griefe he dies not on his foe Ah Fortune fayleth mightie ones and meaner doth aduance The mightiest Empier Rome hath change then Brutaine brooke thy chance Let it suffice thou wert before and after Rome in fame And to indure what God intends were sinne to count a shame Nor vaunt ye Saxons of our flight but if ye needs will vaunt Then vaunt of this that God displac'd whom you could neuer daunt This said the teares cōtrould his tong sailes wrought land frō sight When saue a Remnant small the Isle was rid of Brutons quight THE FOVRTH BOOKE OF ALBIONS ENGLAND CHAP. XX. THe Brutons thus departed hence Seauen Kingdomes here begonne Where diuerslie in diuers broyles the Saxons lost and wonne King Edel and King Adelbright in Diria iointly raigne In loyall concorde during life these Kingly friends remaine When A delbright should leaue his life to Edel thus he sayes By those same bondes of happie loue that held vs friends alwaies By our by-parted Crowne of which the Moyetie is mine By God to whome my soule must passe and so in time may thine I pray thee nay I coniure thee to nourish as thine owne Thy Neece my Daughter Argentile till she to age be growne And then as thou receiuest it resigne to her my Throne A promise had for this Bequest the Testator he dies But all that Edel vndertooke he afterward denies Yeat well he fosters for a time the Damsiell that was growne The fairest Lady vnder Heauen whose beautie being knowne A many Princes seeke her loue but none might her obtaine For grippell ●del to himselfe her Kingdome sought to gaine And for that cause from sight of such he did his Ward restraine By chance one Curan Sonne vnto a Prince in Danske did see The Maid with whom he fell in loue as much as one might bee Vnhappie Youth what should he doe his Saint was kept in Mewe Nor he nor any Noble-man admitted to her vewe One while in Melancholy fits he pines himselfe away Anon he thought by force of Armes to win her if he may And still against the Kings restraint did secretly inuay At length the high Controller Loue whom none may disobay Imbased him from Lordlines vnto a Kitchin Drudge That so at least of life or death she might become his Iudge Accesse so had to see and speake he did his loue bewray And tells his bearth her answer was she husbandles would stay Meane while the King did beat his braines his booty to atchieue Nor caring what became of her so he by her might thriue At last his resolution was some Pessant should her wiue And which was working to his wish he did obserue with ioye How Curan whom he thought a drudge scapt many an amorous toy The King perceiuing such his vaine promotes his Vassall still Least that the baseuesse of the man should let perhaps his will Assured therefore of his loue but not suspecting who The Louer was the King himselfe in his behalfe did wowe The Lady resolute from Loue vnkindly takes that he Should barre the Noble and vnto so base a Match agree And therefore shifting out of doores departed thence by stealth Preferring pouertie before a dangerous life in wealth When Curan heard of her escape the anguish in his hart Was more then much and after her from Court he did depart Forgetfull of himselfe his bearth his Country friends and all And onely minding whom he mist the Foundresse of his thrall Nor meanes he after to frequent or Court or stately Townes But solitarily to liue amongst the Country grownes A brace of yeeres he liued thus well pleased so to liue And Shepherd-like to feede a flocke himselfe did wholly giue So wasting loue by worke and want grewe almost to the Waene But then began a second Loue the worser of the twaene A
by grieuous Draught as Beasts to plough their Land Of whom the English as of Gods or Feends in terror stand The Husband durst not vse his Wife if liked of a Dane Nor House nor Goods nor ought he had for who resists was slaine That frankes and feedeth daintily This pines and fareth ill And of his sweat that hath the sweete and is imperious still Each house maintained such a Dane that so they might preuent Conspiracies if any were and grope how mindes were bent Lord Dane the same was called then to them a pleasing name Now odiously Lur-dane say we when idle Mates we blame When Swaine the Daciā King did hear his Danes were murther dso With bitter vowes he shipt his men for Englands ouerthroe And landing spar'd no shrine nor Saint nor Sex nor any State Not wanting Aiders English-men that held their King in hate Especially false Edricus the Admirall deceiues His King and Countrey oftentimes and Bribes of Swaine receiues And Egelred his cowardisse incouraged the Foe Till Swaine at length for Masses great was bribed hence to goe But making short returne the Peeres of England that disdaine Th'indignities of such a King that did so feebly raigne Submit them Subiects vnto Swaine and Egelred did flie Vnto the Father of his Queene the Duke of Normandie And Swaine possessed of the land did shortly after die His sonne Canutus present here had Seazon of the Crowne Till Egelred returning back by Armor puts him downe Who scarcely giueth breathing time but that he back resailes From Denmarke and by force by friends and fortune here preuailes For in this Warre King Egelred did sicken and decease And then the broiles Canutus king did for a time decrease Till Edmund sonne of Egelred did interrupt that peace COnferring Armes to Edmonds age when Egelred did lie On death-bed to his sonne he said not quite forlorne am I Whose life hath had so much of griefe thus gratiously to dye Ad more thy vertues glad my death yeat two things greeue among To leaue my Kingdom so in Warres and thee for Warres too young So may these troubles weare to none as thou doest waxe I pray And so possesse thy Fathers Seate that all approoue thy sway Not to be made a King my Sonne is so to make thee proude For Mildenes fitteth maiestie high mindes are disaloude See me thy Father now a King and by and by but earth Nor thinke that euerie King hath hap to die a happie death Let nature for perfection molde a Paragon each way Yeat death at last on finest lumps of liuing flesh will pray For nature neuer framed it that neuer shall decay The brauest are as blossomes and the longest Liuer dies And dead the louelest Creature as the lothsom'st Carrion lies Then thinke not but that kings are men and as the rest miscarrie Saue that their fame or infamie continually doth tarry Deeme past Examples Sentences and which did fayle in me Make vse of those not now in vse for now will cease to be Attempt not things beyond thy reach ioyne fortune to thy will Least Phoebus Chaire doe else surcharge rash Phaeton his skill If Fortune helpe whom thou would'st hurt fret not at it the more When Aiax stormed then from him the Prize Vlysses bore Try friends by touch a feeble friend may prooue thy strōgest Foe Great Pompe●s head to Caesars hand it was betrayed so Admit thou hadst Pactolion waues to land thee Golde at will Know Craesus did to ●yrus kneele and thou maist speed as ill Abandon lust if not for sinne yeat to auoyd the shame So Hogges of Ithacus his men the Latian Witch did frame Be not too moody in thy wrath but pause though fist be bent Oft Philips Sonne did rashly strike and leisurely repent Content thee with vnthreatned Meane and play not Aesops Dogge The Golde that gentle Bacchus gaue did greedy Mydas clogge Be valiant not too venterous but fight to sight againe Euen Hercules did hold it ods for one to striue with twaine Be not ambitiously a King nor grudgingly decline One God did root out Cis his stock and rayse vp Iesses line Iest nor with edge tooles suffer Saints let mightie Fooles be mad Note Seneca by Neroes doome for Precepts pennance had Haue care to whom of whō what to speak though speech be trew That Misse made Poe●●us contrary his Rauens Swan-like hew He frameth torments to himselfe that feeds a Tyrants vaine Perillus was by Phalaris adiudg'd to self-taught paine Prayse not the beautie of thy Wife though she of forme be sped For Gyges moued so did graft on Candaules his head Shunne Ielousie that heart-breake loue if Cat will goe to kind Be sure that Io hath a meanes that Argus shall be blind Commit not Treasure with thy Child to greedy minded men Thou leauest Polidor a spoyle to Polymnestor then Occurrants giue occasions still of like in which be sure To serue thy God to saue thy selfe and well to all procure Be vertuous and assure thy selfe thou canst not then but thriue In onely vertue it is sayd that men themselues suruiue As for the vicious such they are as is the heedlesse Flye That killes it selfe and hurts his sight that hath her in his eye Farewell my Sonne England farewell thy neuer happy Prince Doth take his leaue an happy leaue if taken so long since And Edmond burying not with me thy vertues nor my speech I blesse thee in his blessed Name whome I of blesse beseech Said Egelred and shortly gaue a quiet gaspe or twaine And being dead his noble Sonne succeeded him in Raigne THis like himselfe euen Knight-like and an English-man indeede Did quickē Englands quailing Prowes Mars-like did proceed A brauer Captaine than was he not any band might haue And yeat a Mars did match this Mars Canutus was as braue These wonders of that age for Armes and Dirii of those dayes Did often battell equally to eithers losse and praies Now after many bloody Fieldes when none might estimate The better or the worser part a Knight that saw the state Then present and by likelyhoods presaged what might fall Said hearing it the differing Kings and Souldiers almost all We euer warre and neuer winne Edmund hath Fortitude Canutus Fortune neither thus of other is subdude Death feares not vs nor for their liues our Contraries doe care It followes then that all must die wheare all so despret are If all be slayne then who shall serue our Princes that suruiue Or fence out Forrens better one then none of both should thriue To thriue therefore were not a-misse that seeing one of twaine Will Owner all that onely they the quarrell doe maintaine Or if Combattensie not please the Land is rich and large And they Copernicers may liue and vs of death discharge If Combat nor Partition be then will his Warre reuiue Till one suruiuing all of vs wants one with whome to striue This sayd the Kings did marke and make a profit of the same And did
trust no friend Not one I knewe that wisht me ill nor any workt me well To lose lacke liue time frends in yncke an hell an hell an hell Then happie we quoth Robin Hood in merry Sherwood that dwell Thus sayd the Out lawe But no more of him I list to tell Grammarian-like in order wordes significant to speake Logitian-like to reason pro and contra am I weake Rhetoricall I am not with a fluant tongue to ster Arithmatieke in numbring hath substracted me from her Geometrie her Plattes Bownes and Proportions passe my strayne Not Musick with her Concords or her Discords breakes my braine Nor yeat Astronomie whose Globes doth Heauen and earth containe Let faire Mnemosine her broode their thrise three selues explaine Expect not here Anatomies of Lands Seas Hell and Skyes Such length bredth depth height I balke nor would I be so wise Least knowing all thing els I should not knowe my selfe precise The Skyes containe the fierie Lights Clowdes moysture the ayre Windes Birds Vapors men Beasts the vpper Earth doth beare Her Bowels Wormes and Mettals Seas to Fishes properare Whom this Astrologie and this Cosmographie mislike Beneath the Earth beyond the Moone further then farre must seeke Signes workings Planets Iunctures and the eleuated Ponle With thousand toyes and tearmes wherein our curious Artists roule Be strangers to my Cell yeat loe as sound a minde and heart As theirs that calculate their times eate sleepe and wake by arte What was the world before the world or God ere he was God Why this he did or doth not that his bidden or forbod I dare not thinke or arrogate such Misteries deuine Faith with her Fruites significant suffice these wittes of mine To loue God and our neighouer as our selfe is all in fine One Law and Gospell was and is and eithers drist is thus To shewe vs how the law doth kill and Gospell quicken vs Which Corasiue ahd Lenatiue of Simples made compound Doe rather cure he kindly heales that alsh feeles his wonnd This is my rest if more I knewe I should but know too much Or build in my eonceited brayne too high aboue my touch Or else against the hare in all proue toyous euen such As be too many blockish Clerkes and bookish Clownes extaceme In all things saue in honesty that haue no zeale but seeme As for the Court it is you knowe become a skittish Coult Of wise men hardlier mannaged than of the glorious doult Vice rides on horse backe vertue doth from out the saddell boult Theare all deformities in forme in some one man wee see More garded than regarded franke not to continue free When as the Marchants booke the Map of al his wealth shal be The Muses bacely begge or bibbe or both and must for why They finde as bad Bestoe as is their Portage beggerly Yea now by melancholie walkes and thred bare coates we gesse At Clyents and at Poetes none worke more and profite lesse None make too more vnmade of more the good of other men For those inrich our Gownests these eternize with their pen. Yeat soothly nodds to Poets now weare largisse and but lost Since for the nodant they obserue no pen-note worth the cost For pallace Hermites liue secure obscure in roufes imbost Some few there be much honored well worthy of so much Once wanting wealthie then and now in either fortune such But many a bace stoute blood theare is more lordly than be Lords Who wheare himself once coucht bowde nor cap or beck affords But should we sinne God sheild wee should in smallest sinnes offend What smaller sinne then skoffe such fooles so skornefull to no end The Souldiers qaue nor pay nor pray but if I may be bolde Themselues be prayed vpon by some that doe it vncontroulde And whilst the same on shore or s●as be ouer set or pine Or Cuppes on Cushions full secure we victorie define We cast what may bee done but keep the helps meane time awaye And diet thriftly our friends to giue our foes a pray The Citizens like ponned Pikes the lessers feede the greate The rich for meate seeke stomackes the poore for stomackes meate And euery wheare no Gospell is more gospelled than this To him that hath is giuen from him that hath not taken is Court Citie Countrie Campe and I at ods thus euen bee I intermeddle not with them they intercept not mee For still I tether thence mine eyes so heere my heart is free Beleeue mee Sir such is this world this crosse-blisse world of ours That Vertue hardly hides her selfe in poore and desart Bowres And such be best that seeme not best Content exceeds a Crowne They may be richer but more sweete my pennie than their powne For wrest they cark they build they sport they get they worlds together At first or last they die frō al passe they wot not whether Then comes their pelfe in plea themselues not praysed at a feather And then for so the Princes of great Alexander did Greedie of his they striue and let the dead-man stinke vnhid Or he that had a Countrie hath perhaps a Coffen now Perhaps lesse Cost a Sheete and corse perhaps his heires allow The toombe himselfe aliue had build els toombles might he lye As saue for fashion tearelesse And it matters not for why Testators and Executors so giue and so receaue As doubtfull whethers ioy or griefe is more to take or leaue For as do hogges their troughes to hounds so these giue and get place Death not the Dier giues bequests and therefore but Graue-grace Nor all die testate if they doe yet wieles may wills preuent Or what by rigor was misgot in ryote is mispent Then Churles why are they Churles vnto themselues and others too The good that commeth of their goods is good themselues shall doo But men doe walke in shadoes and disquiet themselues in vaine To gather Riches ignorant to whom they shall remaine The world thus brooding Vanities and I obseruing it Here in the world not of the world such as you see me sit The Earle did well allow his words and would haue liu'd his life Durst he haue stayd for whom pursute in euerie place was rife He reconuenting armes therefore and taken Prisner so Died to his Countries friends a friend and to her foes a foe NOr might y e Queene Kings own Son escape the Spēcers pride But fearing fled to France and there as banished abide Til thence supplanted safetie at Henaude they prouide Iohn brother to the Earle a Knight of Chiualrie the chiefe With little but a luckie band was shipte for their reliefe No sooner had the Zealand ships conuaide their men ashoare But English Succors daylie did increase their Standerds more Yeat first the Queene Prince Edward and the Nobles humbly crauc Theirs and their Countries enemies but no redresse might haue And then Sir Iohn of Henaude shewde himselfe a warrior braue The King his wicked Councellors his big
of Straw of Lyster tag and rag Of Villains Of-skoms Clownes knaues that checkmate durst to brag With Richards self to their deaths his chiefest Princes drag Till VVal 〈…〉 ths girdle-Armor made the Armes of London more Because his courage chiefly gaue an end to that vprore And what-so-els Occurrants much may interrupt our Vayne Digesting Yorke Lancaster acquiring eithers Rayne Our Penne shall not endenizen Now drops it sacred blood Of Men-Gods English Potentates that in this Faction stood Richard begun that ciuill warre that till the Seauenth from him Did last though often fields with blood of Citizens did swim Against the Nobles the vphild innoble and his Peeres And Commons went alike to wracke nor God nor man he feares In fewe Ambition Auarice and Counsell lewd had wrought In him a nature worser than into the world he brought Whereby and thus himselfe and house at length a down-fal cought Twixt Mowbray D. of Norffolke and the D. of Hertford sonne To Iohn of Gaunt close Conference of better dayes begun The King sayd Henry Hertford more remisse than doth beseeme Leaues France to French Scotland to Scots and vs to woes extreeme His Flatterers doe fleece the Crowne and Commons not a State Doth or dares counsell ancient Coats that on the Crowne should wate Giue aime to bastard Armorie what resteth then but this Plucke downe those grating Harpies that seduce our King amis If worthles still set vp a King worthier than he that is The other saying little then immediatly reueales The secrete and before the King his Foe-made frend appeales Whose Gauntlet raysed by the Duke defendant at the last It grew to single Combate when the King his Warder cast And to the Duke of Norffolke iudg'd for euermore exile And selfe same law Duke Henry had saue for a lesser while Thus That did This but This and That their Iudge did thus begile And to his Coffers did escheate a world of wealth a Pray Vnto his Parasites which thriu'd by other mens decay Meane while whose actious life had lawd did Iohn of Gaunt decease So to the banisht Duke his Sonne fiue Cronets did increase But with his kindly aire the King withheld him all the same Till entring ayded by his friends he wonne beyond his clame For Richard was imprison'd and by Parlament put downe And Henry Duke of Lancaster elected to the Crovvne The Lyne Lancastrian frollicke but the house of Yorke did frowne For to those Hydra-kinded warres that after did ensue Those Families gaue name though first the Diadem was due Vnto the house of Clarence till to Yorke that interest gre we By marriage here omitted for we onely giue a viewe How Yorke mis-raigning Lancaster did enter then how This Was dispossest That repossest and how their Vnion is THE SIXT BOOKE OF ALBIONS ENGLAND CHAP. XXIX HEnry the fourth so named hild the King deposed strate In Pomfret Castell howebeit in honourable State And got an Act that who so wrought the Prisner to restore That Richards selfe to voyd their hope should dye the first therefore Whose birth brought Nature gentle Lord returning whence it straid Now altred him erst altring it and Richard mildly said I must not say I am and would I might not say I was Of great the greatest lesse they grieue from whom doth little passe Nor more it grieues to contrarie the same I haue been then To haue deserued not to be vnmaliced of men Thus humbled and full penitent liues he lesse mal-content Than was the Duke of Exeter his brother whose intent Was as at a lusts to haue destroyd King Henrie but descryed Himselfe fower such and many Knights the death of Traytors dyed And by these primer Yorkests thus King Richards date grew out But whether brayned famisht or exiled rests a doubt For often Vprores did ensue for him as vndeceast How beit solemnely inter'd himselfe or Signe at least Twise by confedrate Chiualrie the P●ercies and their frends Did fight and fall for either warre to Henries honor ends He neuer had but warre and was victorious euermore Aswell at home as also of his Foes on forraine Shore Till lastly Armor ouercame all Enuie and he liues Of all beloued and his death a common sorrow giues HOt spur his Sonne Henry the fifth hung at his Fathers eyes To watch his Ghoste and catch his Crowne and that or ere he dyes And where the Father doubted if he got it well or noe The Sonne did sweare how so it came he would it not forgoe His bad did blisse the Bad the Good dispaire all good But neither Did aime aright for sodainly his chaunge deceiued either Of good becomming best that was of ill the baddest and The true perfection of a King was not but in this Land He lead good fortune in a line and did but warre and winne Fraunce was his Conquest Scots but brag and he did beate them in A friend vnto weldoings and an Enemie to sinne Yeat of the Yorkests neuer lackt he Princes that rebell Nor other than confusion to their still coniuring fell In fewe if any Homer should of this Achilles sing As of that Greeke My●midon the Macedonian King Once noted would I note both Prince and Poet happiest men That for deseruing prayse and This for well imployed pen For well this Subiect might increase the Worthies vnto ten He aged thirtie sixe deceast and left his infant Sonne His Kingdome Conquests and his Queene whose Fathers Realme he wonne To graue protection Regents and so royall for the port As that his Orphants Cradle seem'd an Alexanders Court Queene Katherin Daughter of the French King Henryes wife of late The fayrest Ladye in the West hild with her sonne Estate She oft behild and hild her peace a braue Esquier of VVailes That tyde her fancie to his forme till fancied forme preuailes All liking was reuersed Loue saue Owen Tuder all Saue him that durst not dreame such good to her was lesse than small She formally by quaint degrees attracting him to fauor Did nourish burnings in her selfe by noting his behauor She pitched Tewe he masshed She vncompaned To flie He bids her solitary moodes She askes the remedie Disclosed pangues sometimes quoth he in Phisicke Phisick is Which sometimes to obserue quoth she doth Patients patience mis Cureles to Aesculapius and Apellos selfe am I The latter felt my languor and immortall wisht to die And yeat saue one no one disease lay hidden to his Art For you were bootlesse then to gesse how to vngreeue my smart Had Daphne to Apollo beene Apollo Tuder said His might haue beene and so may be your Graces humor staid He other Gods and Goddesses found more contented Loue Beloe in diffring bosomes than in equall beddes aboue I aime at Loue for thereto your Aenigma doth incline And aime to him a Deity for whome I so deuine But gladly doubt I of the Man for if I doubted not I should but massacer my lacke in enuy of his lot Yeat are vnworthie
for thee the hope that to our House doth rest Now all are tryed we can trust if now we faile we fall Thy death is in the same request as is thy Fathers thrall And which I would it were the worst the Foe doth thirst my life To end his Triumph in the deaths of Husband Sonne and Wife Though thy great-Grandsier Grandsier thy Father wonne wore The King-ring which thy Father hild yeares thirtie eight and more Though by the cappitall Remote of Lancaster withstood Yeat fayle prescription and discents now lacke they but our blood Then learne against thou proue a man ah hardly hope I so The Line Lancastrian naturally doth labour of that Foe The Queene concluding thus in teares did then to Armor goe Fierce was the Field and either part did valiantly offend But Edward ouercomming when the Battell was at end The Queene was carried Captiue thence And Edwards men did bring Her Sonne the Prince sole sonne and heire vnto the captiue King Before the Victor whose demaunds receiuing answers stout He thrusts the manly Boy from him whom Glocester about The King Churle that he was did stab So tragicke was the spight Betwixt those Linages that oft each others so requite His death was more than death vnto his Parents but not long His Father moned vndispatcht alike for death and wrong By foresaid Duke of Glocester of whom succeedes our song THus won the Yorkestes ancient Raigne sixe bloodie Fields did seate Edward the Fourth in Englands Throne possest a while in queate He wonne his Subiects loue and loue was debt to his desarts But as must ours so lastly his vn-bodied Soule departs He left his Kingdome to his Sonne his Sonne to be protected By Richard Duke of Glocester Who pietie reiected Grew treble-wise tyrannicall malicious to the blood Of his deceased brothers Queene And what so Yorkest stood Betwixt the Scepter and himselfe aliue he pricked dead A Foe to all Lancastrians as the same by nature bread This common Deaths-man of those Kinnes and euery Nobles fall Whom he but gest Coriuall or might crosse him near so small This stoope-Frog Aesops Storke alike tyrannous vnto all To giltie giltlesse friend or foe was not secure one day But Either dyes as eithers death might fit him any way Yea euen whilst his Brother rulde when all Lancastrians and His Brothers twaine his Nephewes twaine Neeces three did stand Betwixt himselfe and home euen then by blood he hunted Raine For when his owne and ruthles hands King Henries heire had ●●ayue Then Henries selfe Henrie the sixt a giltles King in bands He stabd his brother Clarence dide through him by other hands But now Protector as doe Wolues the Lambes protected he And fared as if fearing that one wickedder might be Queene mother and her kindred hild the Orphant King a while Her Kinne hee murdred and from her he got the King by gile Whom though vncrowned tituled fist Edward rest his mother He made be murdred with the Duke of Yorke the yonger brother When neither Yorkest his Allies and of Lancastrians none Were left to let it who should let but he might leape the Throne He wore indeede the wrested Palme But yeat to better bad By murder of his wife he sought new marriage to be had With that Elizabeth that was the Eldest daughter to Edward the fourth But all in vaine the King his Neece did wowe For Henrie Earle of Richmonds friends such doings did vndoe Which Henry and Elizabeth by secrete Agents were Contracted he of Lancaster and she of Yorke the heire Of which letigious Famelies heer mapped be the Lines Euen till the Heire of these two Heires both Stockes in one combines CHAP. XXXIII HEnrie as if by myracle preseru'd by Forraines long From hence-ment Treasons did arriue to right his Natiues wrong And chiefly to Lord Stanlie and some other Succors as Did wish and worke for better dayes th● Riuall welcome was Now Richard heard that Richmond was assisted and a shore And like vnkenneld Cerberus the crooked Tyrant swore And all complexions act at once confusedly in him He studieth striketh threates intreates and looketh mildly grim Mistrustfully he trusteth and he dreadingly did dare And fortie passions in a trice in him consort and square But when by his conuented force his foes increased more He hastned Battell finding his Coriuall apt therefore When Richmond orderly in all had battelled his ayde Inringed by his Complices their chearefull Leader sayde Now is the time and place sweete Frends and we the Persons be That must giue England breath or els vnbreath for her must we No Tyrannie is fabled and no Tyrant was in deede Worse thā our Foe whose workes wil act my words if wel he speede For ill to ills Superlatiue are easely intist But intertaine amendment as the Gergesites did Christ. Be valiant then he biddeth so that would not be out-bid For courage yeat shall honor him though bace that better did I am right heire Lancastrian he in Yorkes destroyed right Vsurpeth But through Either ours for neither Claime I fight But for our Countries long-lackt weale for Englands peace I warre Wherein he speed vs vnto whom I all Euents refarre Meane while had furious Richard set his Armies in array And then with lookes euen like himselfe this or the like did say Why Lads shall yonder Welshman with his Straglers ouer-match Disdaine ye not such Riualles and deferre yee their dispatch Shall Tuder from Plantagenet the Crowne by craking snatch Know Richards very thoughts he toucht the Diademe he wore Be mettall of this mettall Then beleeue I loue it more Than that for other law than Life to super sead my Clame And lesser must not be his Plea that counter-pleads the same The weapons ouer-tooke his words blowes they brauely change When like a Lion thirsting bloud did moody Richard range And made large slaughters where he went till Richmond he espied Whom singling after doubtfull Swords the valerous Tyrant died THus ended Englands warre and woe vsurping Richard dead When Henry and Elizabeth vniting titles wed Of which two Heires th' vndoubted Heire of either Line did cum The Epilogue vnto these wounds digested in this sum Fourth Henry first Lancastrian King put second Richard downe Fourth Edward of the House of Yorke re-seazd sixt Henries Crowne Lad-Princes twaine were stabd in Field of either Linage one Foure Kings did perish Sundry times now-Kings anon were none Sixe three of either faction helde successiuely the Throne But from the second Richard to seuenth Henry we pretend Eight Kings this Faction to begin continue and to end The Princes Earles Barons and Knights this quarrell did deuour Exceede the tale of Gentry best and bacest at this houre So plagueth ciuill Warre so from Robe to Ragge dooth scoure Then luckiest of the Planets weare Predominants say we When by this Bedmatch either Heire that Bloud-mart did agree When Seuenth begot the Eight and Eight the First and Last for like Our now Pandora
nor till her our humbled sailes we strike For should we at her Grandsier reare our Colome yet too poore We could not write as Hercules on his Beyond no more For he lackt search our Muse hath Kend an Ocean is in store Euen matter that importeth worth coparing all before THE SEVENTH BOOKE OF ALBIONS ENGLAND CHAP. XXXIV NOw let vs poste-alone to Mars and Mercury repa●r At least so farforth as wee maye without controwlment daer Richard the third Henry the Seauenth last subiects of our pen Was slaine was crownde with hate with loue as worste as best of men So not with Yorke and Lancaster doth wonted enuie raigne Nor can Aeneas Off-springs now of Orphansie complaine But that Cadwalladers Fore-doomes in Tuders should effect Was vnexpected saue that God doth destinies direct Els Owen Tuder had not wiu'd Fift Henries noble Queene Nor had they of their bodies Earles Penbrooke and Richmon seene Nor Margret Somersets sole heire to Richmon had beene weade Nor they the heire of Lancaster Henry the Seuenth had bread Nor he of Yorks Inheritrix Elizabeth had sped Nor they vnited either house all other titles dead Yeat eare this vnion Either so ariued to their right As Psiches on an errant sent to Hell by Venus spight Worse Ferrymen than Charon Hoods contagious more than Styx Worse Porters than fowle Cerberus were pleas'd past stood betwix How therefore Either dangerously their Labyrinth did passe Shall not be ouerpassed Thus their seuerall fortune was Henries the fourth the fifte and sixt successiuely did raigne Vntill fourth Edwards sword to him did lawfull Empier gaine Lancastrians droupe the Yorkests had their long expected day Sixt Henry and the Prince his sonne by stabbes were made away The foresaid Margaret sole heire of Somerset earst wife Of Tuder Earle of Richmond had by him a Sonne in life To whom from her the Crowne-right of Lancastriās did accrewe He from his English foes himselfe by secrete stealth withdrewe To little Brutaine wheare he found the Duke a frendfull trewe This Henry Earle of Richmond now poore Lancasters Remaine Was by fourth Edward practis'd home by many a subtell traine Whome once the gentle Duke beguilde with promises vnment Deliuered to the English-men with whome he homewards went Forsaken Ladd for yet he was a Ladd what did remaine But certaine death so to assure his foes vncertaine raine Which to establish many a Prince of his Allies weare slaine But him eare broughta-boorde the Duke aduised better stayd And him as if by c●●●nce escapte to Sanctuarie conuaid The Lambe so rescued from the Wolfe that priuiledged place Assured him till Edwards death and then he hoped grace But he that was Protector of his murthered Nephewes than Vsurped England and became a Monsture not a man Richard the third omitting all his tyrannies beside To be possessed of the Earle by many a message tride Great wealth was sent greater assum'de but nothing might preuail The gracious Duke abhord to set his guiltles frend to sayle But furnished with money men and armor shipt him thence To winne his right yeat churlish Seas did lett such kind pretence Full hardly Richmonds threatned Ship escapt our armed Shoore For Richard of the Riuall got intelligence before Return'de the Duke did sicken and Landoise did beare the sway And he for Masses great was brib'de Earle Henry to betray Yeat through wise Bishop Murtons meanes by stealth he scap'te away In trauell then from Brutaine to his Grome himselfe was Grome By interchaunged rayment till to Anger 's they weare come The French King pittying his distresse pretended asked aide And secrete platformes for his weale his English friends had laide Henry in France at home his Friends bester them and the Foe Meane time with hope with fraud with feare imployde his witts also Now of the Earles conspiracy the totall drift was this Elizabeth the daughter of fourth Edward vow'd he his And she was vow'd to him if God with victory him blisse Our wounded Englands healing balme for thus thereof ensew'de The factious Families vnite the Tyrant was subdew'de And thence the surname Tuder doth Plantagenet include AS hardly as her husband did Elizabeth escape For why like Stratageme for both did bloody Richard shape Whilste that her Father liued now a King and now exilde Her Crosses then did happen from such victors as weare milde But now the same that murthered her Brothers to be King That did withfraud begin and then with bloud conclude ech thing That flattred friends to serue his turne and then destroyde the same That was her Vncle yeat did hate her Mothers very name That thought he liued not because his Neeces weare vndead Theis now and blame her not in her a world of terror bread But of vnpriuiledged bloud yet had he store to spill Yet sanctuaries weare not forc'te yet but expecting ill Theareofte the Queene her Mother Shee and Sisters would reporte Their happie and vnhappie da●es the fewer of first sorte Happy was I the olde Queene said when as a Maide vnweade Nor Husbands weale nor Childrens woe mistempered my head Yeat I beloued loued and so left that free estate And thought me happyer than before for louely was my Mate Iohn Gray a sweet Esquier for his prowysse dubbed Knight Was as behoued all my ioy who slaine in factious fight Your Father Daughters late my Lord and Husband now in earth From me had many a secrete curse as motyue of his death Lancastrian was my husband and that faction had the wourste So to releeue my Widdowhood I kneel'd to whom I curste Edward for Henry was depoes'de and Edward seaz'd the Crowne I wot not for what forme of mine did raise me kneeled downe And gaue me chearefull wordes and tooke me curteously aside And playd the ciuell Wanton and me amorouf●y he eide His plea was loue my sute was Land I plie him he plies me Too baece to be his Queene too good his Concubine to be I did conclude and on that point a while we disagree But when I was his Queene sweete King not for I was his Queene But for himselfe and for the loue that passed vs betweene I held me happiest vnderheauen yea when his aduerse Line Discrowned him I had inough that I was his he mine Then after fortunes often change he died and I suruiue A life exceeding death for griefe and greefes Superlatiue My heart ah Sonnes my heart deare Hearts was dead eare yee did die Too yong weare yee to censure of your vncles tyranny Then wept shee and her daughters wept their onely talke alwaies Was passed ioyes or present woes nor hope they better daies But in Earle Richmonds good successe that now a power did raise Too soone had Richard notice that Earle Henry would ariue By precontract his eldest Neece Elizabeth to wiue And well he knew in Yorks descent she was immediate heire And Henry like in Lancaster a Match for him to feare Which to preuent he flattered his Neeces from their mother Who fearefull Ladies
each wheare for All Whereforeto Paris at the time flockt Caueliers ful tall With Princes braue and Ladies faire of euery Realme about And hence with moe Charles Brandon in fine Chiualrie most stout Whose bodie fitted to his mind whose mind was puesant and Whose puesance yeelded not to Mars this Mars in France did lād With whō incoūtred valiāt knights but none might him withstād The English-French Queene standing theare admir'd for beautie rare Behild the Tryumphs in the which high Feates performed ware But Brandon yet no Duke he was the Knight aboue the rest That in her eye nor did she erre acquited him the best For whether that he trots or turnes or bounds his barded Steede Did runne at Tylt at Randon or did cast a Speare with heede Or fight at Barriers he in all did most her fancie feede Weake on a Couch her King lay theare whō though she loued well Yeat likte she Brandon and the same lou'd her ere this befell For chastly had they fancied long before she came to Fraunce Or that from meane estate to Duke Henry did him aduaunce The dayes of Triumph weare expir'd and English Peeres with praise Come home and Lewes King of France decea'st within few daies Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolke then with honour furnisht hence Was sent to France for to returne the widow Queene from thence Who had been wed scarce th●ice three weekes vnto a sickly King To her a fayre young Queene therefore smal time might solace bring Yet lesse did timethā braue Duke Charles asswage fair Maries griefe He chats she cheers he courts she coyes he wowes she yeelds in briefe No windes thought she assist those Sayles that seeke no certain Shore Nor find they constant liues that but they liue respect no more Let each ones life ayme some one end as if it be to marrie Then see heare loue and soone conclude it betters not to tarrie To cast too many doubts thought she weare oft to erre no lesse Than to be rash And thus no doubt the gentle Queene did gesse That seeing This or That at first or last had likelyhood A man so much a manly Man weare dastardly withstood Then Kisses reuel'd on their Lips to eithers equall good And least King Henry should dissent they secretly did wead And then sollicet his good will and of their wishes spead The periut'd valiāt Scotch-King Iames slayn at braue Flodons Slaughter Had also left in widowhood Englands fayre elder Daughter She also weds a Scottish Earle vnlicenc'st of her Brother And was to her Sons Daughters Sonne now sixt Iames great-Grandmother A Scruple after twentie yeares did enter Henries mind For wedding of Queene Katherin a Ladie fayre and kind Spaynes Daughter then the Emperours Aunt and for her vertuous life Well worthie Henry But for she had beene his Brothers wife And also of their coiture surmise directed Lawes He seem'd in conscience toucht and sought to rid him of the Cause Then was the matter of Deuorse through Christendome disputed The Match of all adiudged voyd and so the Queene non-suted She after teares to him from whom she was to be deuorste Did humbly say and am I not my Lord to be remorste That twentie yeeres haue bene your Wife borne your Children and Haue lou'd and liu'd obediently and vnsuspected stand I am ah too too sweetly err'd I was poore Soule the same Whom once you did preferre nor now of me you neede to shame The blossomes of my beautie was your Bootie nor my fauour Now alters so to alter so from me your late behauour But Conscience is the colour of this quarrell well I wot I also haue a conscience that in this accuseth not But as the same perhaps might say that me succeedes say I That for the pleasure of a Prince goe many things awry Which her Fore-doomes seem'd to effect in her that her succeeded In Queene Anne Bullyn who for she in Luther●sme proceeded Was hated of the Papists and enui'd because preferr'd And through the Kings too light beleefe for Kinges haue sometimes err'd She lost her head and might haue sayd some thought ere she did dye That for the pleasure of the Prince goe many things awry So dyde the gracious Mother of our now most glorious Queene Whose zeale in reuerent Fox his works autenticall is seene The Kings foure other Queenes for why he dide a Sexamus Shall passe though Iane did beare a Sonne to him a King to vs Edward the Sixt and of the same we shall deliuer thus CHAP. XXXV SVCH as was Loue in Figure of Ascanius whē the same In kisses slie did sheade himselfe into the Tyrian Dame Or such as was sweete Hyacint Apollos louely Boy Or Iupiters Ganymaedes rapt vp to heauen from Troy Or rather like young Salomon in sentencing betwixt Two mothers claiming one same Child was young Edward the Sixt. Now Rome fell sicke in England but how long she lay in traunce We list not write alonly death to her did neuer chaunce For old Rome neuer lackt that durst their liues for her bestoe Not new Rome that to Hell for her dare soules and bodies goe Then true Religion might be sayd with vs in Primatiue The Preachers and the people both then practiuely did thriue Our decent Church-Rites still in print not practise worthie those Whose reuerent heads collected them frō whence true wisedō groes Not mangled then of Nouesses and curious Doults which now Would haue they know not what would reform they know not how Omitting or admitting as their owne Conceits allow Did then put forth her Braunches and weare fruitfull in the bood And weare our Church-Lords now for zeale as Church-lawes now for good Soone might like vnion be now by indifferencie withstood For giue to vulgar Heads the head and looke for all confused At once they publish and repeale al els saue Order vsed And as Kytts Campe ill-form'd good forme at their reforming Tree Sonnes ost by aime consorting voice their Fathers hang'd should be So wheare the Multitude preuaile they censure ere they see But might I be so bould to speake to them should speake to mee A good example would doe good in Church-men seeing thay In saying ●●oth are lesse beleeu'd not doing as the say I know our Churchmen know that Faith is dead where lack good works Yeat know I not what pollicie in Almes vnpreached lurks Some teach wel that these concurre but few doe vrge the Theame Of charitie affeard perhaps our More should vrge their Beame But feare not Fathers preach at full Loue good workes Remorse More will your bad Examples let than shall your words inforce To preach by halfes is to be worse than those tongue-holly Iauells That cite good words but shift off works and Discipline by Cauells Oft haue ye handled pithily not preached without neede What good to giue what hurt to take frō those that Soules do feede But so obscurely hath beene blancht of good workes elsewheare done As many boasting only
to the fatall Blocke she praying on her booke Wence hauing made a godly end he was return'd whilst Shee Prepard for like and of her Lord the senceles Tronke did see A sight more deathful than her death that should consort him straite And for the which her feareles eies did euery moment waite She vnabashed mounting now the Skaffold theare attends The fatall Stroke-and vnto God her better parte commends And as she liu'd a vertuous life so vertuously she ends CHAP. XLI OMitting Knights three Dukes three Lords also a Queene elect Then perisht thus and somewhat some of Edwards death suspect All which fell out a Stratagem in God his secre Dome That should induce a Tragedie to England meant by Rome For when these mighty Protestants through Ones Ambition fell Queene Mary seem'd to shut vp Heauen and set wide open Hell Whence swarmed papish Tyrants that false doctrine did erect Whilst that seduced Mary did Gods threatned cause neglect Blamelesse she was not for a Crowne that could her Foes ore-goe Nor all too blame for mightie States do and haue erred so To Whome the Scriptures weare obscur'd by Christs Italian Foe Her courage was not common yeat abused ouer much By Papists cheefly She her selfe too naturally such Heere hence she is reprooued of a moste tyrannous Raigne And of a thriftles Mariage with the trustles King of Spaine But when rich Brabants supreame Faire the Bakers daughter staide The King in dalliance and the Queene had newes that false he plaide T is thought his tarriance greeu'd told that one should counsel this Haue patience Madam so it was and wil be as it is Fourth Edward did the like yeat lou'd his Queene no whit the lesse Nor did the like vnpatient her that knew him to transgresse As guiltie of a Leash of Loues Shores wife and other twaine She knew as Streams if stopt surrownd so Kings wil shew they raign As did our second Henry whome his Queene oft crost in vain● Which and one other Story if it please you that I tell I shall Yea doc quoth she Then thus quoth he it once befell NOt knowen of Rosamund his eie had stoed her in his heart Faire Maide quoth he beleeue me faire and all so faire thou art That weare I Henry Englāds King thou shouldst be Englāds Queene But so must fayle for Elenour already is betweene He bod me buy thy loue if so it might be bought with Golde If not he bod me sweare he loues in fayth he loues be bolde He bod me aske if so he came what should his welcome be And if perhaps he lated weare if he should lodge with thee Protesting secreasie thereof to all vnlesse to me With promise to performe at full each promise as I make it I promise Loue Wealth Secresie then promise thou to take it Content you Sir quoth Ro amund you aime your markes amis I am not for his Highnes nor for me his Highnes is And should he know I shame he should of this your Brokage bace He would acquaint you what it weare your Soueraigne to disgrace Whoso you be be still the same or better if you may Think not Lord Cliffords daughter will vn-maiden her for pay But know if Henryes selfe were heere himselfe should haue a nay Then know quoth he which being knowen well maist thou know I loue thee I am the King and for I am the rather let it moue thee In sooth sweet Wench thou saiest nay thou knowest not whereto For weare my wish at work lesse good wy wish than work would do What fearst thou shame no shame to be beloued of a King Or dread'st thou sinne The Pope for pay absolueth euery thing Or doubt'st thou iealous Elenour I will remoue that doubt At Woodstock shall she finde thy bower but neuer finde thee out Theare shalt thou passe a pleasant life commanding me and mine Then loue beloued Rosamund a King subiects him thine He kist She blusht and long it was ere loue from her he wroung For whilst vp played in her heart it paused on her toung Not Sibils Caue at Cuma nor the Labyrinth in Creat Was like the Bower of Rosamund for intricate and great The Pellicane theare neasts his Bird and sporteth oft with her Conducted by a Clew of thread els could he not but err Besides her Maydes a Knight of trust attended on her theare Who suffred for her Beautie long concealing it for feare At length at full and formally he courted her for grace But all in vaine nought booted him to haue both time and place Henry quoth she begonne and he shall end my thoughts vnchast Nor peach't she him nor he dismist did hold himselfe disgrac'st The Kings three Sonnes had notice of their Fathers Leiman now So had the Queene and the yof such coriuing disallowe Came I from France Queene Dowager quoth she to pay so deere For bringing him so great a wealth as to be Cuckquean'd heere Am I so old a woman he so young a wanton growen As that I may not please that pleas'd and still might with his owen What is the Drab or tempting Diuell or wherefore doteth he The French King once himselfe euen now for faire preferred me And hath he toyled vp his Game and settels he to loue her Nor Heauen nor hell shall crosse my course but that I will remoue her Like Phrogne seeking Philomel she seeketh for and found The Bower that lodg'd her Husbands Loue built partly vnder ground She entred but so intricate weare Turnings to and fro That welneere she had lost her selfe but could not finde her Foe Yeat out she got and backe she goes with her Attendants who Admire their furious Mistresse and mislike what she would doe With her Confedrates oft she went preuented of her will Howbeit lastly did preuaile For hap did hit so ill That whilst the Knight did issue out suspecting no assaut He was assailed from his giding Clewe they caught So wonne they vnto Rosamund Whom when the Queene did vew Most brauely clad in rich Attire her selfe more rich of hew The beautie and the brauenes of the Person and the place Amazed her and hers who stoode at gaze a certaine space No maruell quoth the Queene that oft the Court did mis the King Soone such an Hebe hither such a Iupiter might bring Now trust me weare she not a Whoore or anies Whoore but his She should be pardon'd But in faith I must not pardon this A Queane coriuall with a Queene Nay kept at Racke Manger A Husband to his honest bed through her become a Stranger Abide who list abye she shall how so I buy the daunger Faire Rosamund surprised thus eare thus she did suspect Fell on her humble Knees and did her fearefull hands erect She blush't out beauty whilst the tears did wash her pleasing face And begged Pardon meriting no lesse of common grace So farforth as it lay in me I did quoth she withstand But what may not so great a
lingring Torments who Fault to their Inquisition o● their Damned Rytes must doe Then better Bodies perish than should soules miscarrie too Of neither which hath Rome or Spaine remorse but thristing Sway Regard not whome by whom or how they treacherously berray How oft haue they the rest ore past subborn'd our Queenes decay By wars wiles witchcrafts daggers dags Pope poyson what not To her haue they attempted death for liewe the Traytors lot Vouchsafe O God those loues of thine be neuermore forgot Was neuer any thryued yet that threatned her amis For of anoynted Princes God sole Iudge and Rector is And if Examples might preuaile then Traytors might perceaue They perish in their purpose or but Spyders webbes doe weaue And heere occasion apteth that we catalogue awhile And vnto English Dukes from first to last addresse our Style Though numbers greater as great of power did pryde begyle Yeat in this one degree obserue what headding and exile Yf then such Mighties felt Gods frowne shal Meaners hope his smile CHAP. XLV EDward surnam'd the blacke Prince and third Edwards eldest sonne Third Thomas Duke of Norffolke This did ende and That begonne From Normaine VVilliams Conqueste heere of Dukes the Title hie Of fortie seuen but twentie two a naturall death did die Edward y e Duke of Yorke that lead fifth Henries Vaward Knightly Then slaine at Agencourt with fame we ouerpasse him lightly Nor Humfrey Duke of Glocester heere catalogue we rightly Nor VVilliam Duke of Suffolke who exilde on seas was met And hated headded howbeit sixt Henries Fauoret Nor Edmund Duke of Somerset that Henries loued Peere Nor Humfrey Duke of Buckingham to that same King as deere Nor sweet yong Richard Duke of Yorke of Glosters kyn too neere We also two Plantagenets both Dukes of Clarence cleere Of which was Thomas slaine in France George drownd in Malmsie heere For though these Eight remembred Dukes deceast not in their beads Yeat none of these had traytrous hearts that forfetted their heads Howbeit otherwise of these weare some that erred so That stomack't for such Errors did their ends vntimely groe Nor was the Duke of Ireland Vere in second Richards time A Traytor but a Parasite which proude no lesse a crime He as ambitious as he was enuious and enuied Was banisht by the Nobles and in banishment he died Mowbreie of Norffolke right or wrong by foresaid Richard was Exiled and in Italie did hence to nature pas When second Richard was deposde and Henrie wore the Crowne Two Hollands to restore the one and put the other downe Conspiring weare detected and at Cercester they both Of Excester and Surrey Dukes found death in Vulgar wroth Richard Plantagenet the Duke of Yorke fourth Edwards father Sought to depose fixt Henrie and was heard therein the rather For that to him by law-Descents the Scepter did acrew But they compound howbeit warres were reard and him they slew Iohn Holland Duke of Excester fourth Edwards sentence fleade And was long after in the sea suspuicusly found dead Then Henry Duke of Somerset rebelling lost his heade Of Edmund Duke of Somerset the like is also reade So Henrie Duke of Buckingham third Richards friend-foe speade And that tyrannous Richard Duke of Glocester his Raigne Vsurped was suppressed he for blood payd blood againe Iohn Duke of Norffolk fought and fell at Bosworth field His sonne Duke Thomas in Eight Henries daies did heading hardly shonne Adiudg'd perpetuall Durance in Queene Maries raigne vn-donne VVolsey that slye officious and too Lordly Cardnall wrought Who could would effect his wil that to the blocke was brought Eight Henrie raigning Edward Duke of Buckingham whose end That Prelate ioyde the people moend because his foe their friend Seimer the Duke of Somerset enuied more than reason By one that came the next to Blocke though mightie at that season Sixt Edward in Minoritie dide quit although of treason No sooner Marie got the crowne more liklie to be gon But Iohn Duke of Northumberland beheaded was anone Who wrought to set the Diedeme Iane Dudlies heade vpon Her Father Henrie Gray the Duke of Suffolke was also A friend vnto that Faction the Spanish Wowers foe But by that act he lost his heade as did too many moe In blessed Queene Elizabeth her happie Raigne of peace The Tragedies and Tytles too of English Dukes did cease Which Thomas Duke of Norffolke laste Tragedian did increase All theis weare mightie in their times yeat being Male-contents Both they and hundreds powerfull Peeres for like found like Euents Howbeit of the common wealth none worser did desarue Than such as flattred Princes faults who faulting all did swarue Which in their Pollicie the States of Hell did then fore-see When as they ioyned others Aydes vnto the Furies three Narcissus Shadowe and the Voice of Eccho than which twaine How fabulous so-ere it seeme nought hath or more doth baine Wherefore to such as know them not we either thus explaine CHAP. XLVI WHeare Cadmus old Agenors sonne did reste and plant his Raigne Narcissus of his Of spring theare for beautie fame did gaine His Mother was Lyriope faire Thetis fairer Daughter Whome cheefest as the choisest wowde and braue Cephisus caught her Boeotia was the fertile Realme Parnassus Plaine the place Whear this admired Youth was borne this Lass-Lad forme and face No Nymph so faire but wisht him hers howbeit all in vayne His selfe-loue wrought his selfe-losse his beauty prou'd his baine Who proud of Natures plentie hild all others in disdaine Till God who had created Man the fairest Creature Howbeit but a shadow of his proper Feature More differing far than Sun-shine frō the Suns selfe-substance pure Narcissus ouer-scornfull pride not longer would indure But frō his forme that pleas'd him most his plague did thus procure As this same fond selfe-pleasing Youth stood at a Fountaynes brym And proudly sees his shadow theare admiring euery lym Eccho an amiable Nymph long amorous of hym But louing vnbeloued now at least to please her Eye Conuaies her selfe vnseene into a Thicket ioyning by And thear as much ore-gone with loue as he ore-gone with pride She hears and sees and would haue pleas'd three Senses more beside And nothing more than euery part thus stealth-seene liked her And nothing lesse than hidden with vnhidden to conferre For well it had contented then in more then sight to erre Although not meanely did his scorne gainst it her stomacke sterre Meane while the Lad such power hath pride mens Senses to subdue Doats on his Shadow now suppos'd to be a Substance t●ue And lastly wowes so formally in words and gestures sweete That Eccho found his error and he saying Let vs meete Let 's meete quoth Eccho mockingly which hearing he with speed Beleeuing that his shadow was a Nymph and spake in deed Did leape into the Fountaine whear that Gallant drowning thus Hath left example how like pride may cause like plague to vs. How smooth-tongu'd Eccho that for him
disclayme to haue it so pardon therefore yee Gods 〈◊〉 desiring it him deseruing it Troth is it this one Sacrifice shall giue end to mine infinite sorrowes but not alas with these burnings rather found guiltie of new beginnings but with my hearts blood the latest Ceremonie wanting to this Exequse Scarcely had these words passed her mouth when with Aeneas his Sword she pearced her Brest so performing on herselfe a Tragedie sought for and to hers a terror vnlooked for WHilest Dido so named of this her death or as haue some not lesse probable of so preuenting Htarba menacing her mar●●age was thus passionate and did thus perish Aeneas after weary Sea-saring much sorrowe many people and places seene and sayled from arriuing in Sicisie was ●oyfully entertained of this auncient friend King Ace●●es and there as the yeare before at Drapenum did solemnize and Anniuersa●ie at the Tombe of his father Anchises The Masteries feates and actiue pastimes tried here by the Troian and Sicilian youth with land and sea Skirmidges the running riding leaping shooting wrestling and such like with Bacing on foote and on horsback this last a sport lately vsed of our English youthes but now vnpolliuckly discontinued Or how the Women of Troy whereof many were also imbarked from thence tyred with the perils of the Sea and intised with the pleasures of Sici●ie to preuent further sayling fired their Ships not without great losse rescued Or how A●neas building there the Citie A 〈…〉 peopled the same with his women and impotent Tro●●ns Or of the drowning and Reuise of Palinurus and many Occurrents hapning here at Cuma Caieta else-where I omit as lesse pertinent to our purpose then the hastning of Aeneas into Italie Wherefore shipping him from Sicilie I now land him in Latium in which part of Italie raigned and was Resident in his Citie Laurentum the King Latinus to whome Aeneas addressed an hundred Knights one of them deliuering this Ambassie Ignorant are we not most gratious King for in that Title art thou famous and in that triall may we proue fortunate of thy Consanguinitie with the Troians by noble descents from Dardanus our auncient Progenitor neither canst thou but know that Troy is sacked and her people for the most parte slaughtered onely know if already thou knowest it n●t that Aeneas our Duke with a few his Followers after more than seauen yeares sayling are lastly and lucki lie I hope arriued in thy Countrie Howbeit of many places for pleasure and ferulitie most worthy manuring haue wee abandoned the quiet possession yea many the greatest Princes of Europe and Affrica haue voluntarily desired our Tariance denied only infinit Seas haue wee sayled and more sorrowes sustained to seeke this Clime from whence wee Troians deriue our Originals and whither our Gods haue directed vs by their Oracles This thy Countrie in respect of the bignesse may easily affoord roome for a new Troy to be builded A plot more spacious we doe not aske A smaller suite thou canst not graunt if with our present extremities thou also peise our purposed loyalties Neuer were wee thy foes and euer will we continue thy friends Seated wee must be and here wee would be We dare not disobey the Gods commanding it nor would we discontent thee in demaunding it graciously therfore conceiue of our Petition and gratefully receiue from Aeneas these Presents Hauing thus sayd he in the name of Aeneas presented the King with a most rich Mantell or Robe with an inualuable Crowne of Golde enchased with precious Stones with the late royall Scepter of King Priamus and with other Treasure which Latinus cheerefully receiuing returned the Troians this answer Had not the Gods commāded your hither repaire which I gainsay not were we not of consanguinitie wherein I disclaime not Or my Kingdome not roome-some enough to receiue you as it is Or had ye not brought precious and peaceable Presents as ye haue yeat to dismisse Wayfarers vnrested and vnreleeued were contrary to the Gods of Hospitalitie and which they defend that I should therein offend Latinus his honour Ouer fast he sitteth that securely si●●eth for as he that is timorous hath 〈◊〉 little prouidence so he that is feareles hath too much presumption yea lesse grieuous are expected than vnlooked-for euils I speake not this as I feare to fall but as I fore-see I may fall for the vnpearching of others should be fore-preachings to vs. Priuie am I vnto your distresse applying the like possibility for me so to decline for who is priuiledged from becōming such And who is such that would not haue succour Sorrie I am that ye haue so ill cause to estrange your selues from home but glad that I am in so good case to entertaine you here Let Ae 〈…〉 feare him and prosper yee in Italie my land well may abide it and my selfe brooke it Yea more for the Oracle of my minde consorts no doubt with those of our Gods Lauinia my sole daughter and heire forbidden a Natiues and behighted a Strangers Marriage hath found a Husbande and I a Sonne-in-lawe at the least I wish it would bee and hope it will bee Make my thankes to Ae●eas for his Presents and bee you Masters of your Petitions The Troians being then sumptuously feasted euery man on a giuen Courser brauely and richly mounted dismissed returned and Latinus his answere and Present deliuered Aeneas neuerthelesse as farre from being secure as ioyous of such Tidings knowing the good speede of a Stranger to be an Eye-sore to the people and therefore not careles suspitious of it that might causeles succeede strongly inmured his Men in a new-built Fortresse In the meane while their Arriuall and Entertainment with Latinus occupied and for the most part offended all Italie Enuiously stormed Amata Queene that Lauinia her Daughter and Darling should be wedded to a Stranger an Exile as she termed him and therefore when she could not disswade the King by flatterie shee incensed his Nobles and Subiects to resist it forcibly On the other side Turnus Prince of the Rutiles in person exceeding all for comelinesse and in Armes equall to any for his courage to whom Lauinia was before promised in Marriage as Malcontent as any for being thus circumuēted by Aeneas held a Counsell in his sumptuous Citie Ardea scituate in the territorie of Latium how to intercept the Troians by wi●es expell them by Warres weaken them by wants disappoynt Aeneas and possesse himselfe of Lauinta Often sent he Messengers and sometimes Menaces to aduertise Latinus that he was promised he should and to ass●re him hee purposed hee would enioy her or anger him But by how much more Latinus was religiously vnremouable in his Resolution for Aeneas by so much the more did Turnus giue loose raines to his headie anger Howbeit sufficient matter wanted for his malice to worke vpon vntill by euill happe his choler tooke aduantage of this colour Ascanius with diuers Troian Gentlemen his Friends and others his Attendants hunting in a
Forrest not farre from their Fortresse by chance did incounter strike and chace a fayre and well spread Stagge which the Children of one Tyrrhus the Kings Raunger and Steward of his Grounds a Man of no meane account amongst the Latines had from a Fawne nourished and so intreated that no Beast might bee more tamer This Stagge thus stroken and followed of the Troians taking the readiest way to the house of Tyrrhus and with bleeding haunches entring the Hall was first espred of Syluta or Ilia a young Gentlewoman in whose lappe hee sleeping had often layd his head and at whose hands he had many a time taken Brouse been kemmed and trimmed She seeing the Stagge in such a plight almost swouned ere shee could weepe wept e●e shee might speake spoke ere shee was comforted and was comforted onely in promise of Reuenge At the winding of an Horne came flocking 〈…〉 Heards-men Shepheards Plow-men and 〈…〉 of Groomes finding Almon the eldest Sonne of Tyrrhus and their young Mistris Syluia grieuously passionate and the Stagge bloodie and braying his last question no further what should be done but were furiously inquisitiue after the Doers In this meane time by euil hap Ascanius and his Companie drawing by Parsie after the Stagge which they knew not for tame were entered the view of this Shoole of inraged Clownes who all at once and suddenly with such weapons as they had or found neerest at hand as Staues Sheep-hookes Dung-forks Flayles Plow-staues Axes Hedging-Beetels yea L●bbats newly snatched frō burning and what not fiercely assayled with down-right blowes the amazed Troians who not hauing leisure to aske questions couragiously entertaine the vnknowne Quarrell and so long and daungerously for either parte continued this confusion of blowes and effusion of blood that by now it was bruted at the Fortresse and at Laurentum and was anon increased by rescue from either Faction neither had this Skuffling an end vntill night was begun at what time the Latines Rutiles Troians left the wild Medley howbeit not discontinuing their malice Of chiefe account amongst the Latines were slaine lustie Almon and aged Galesus this latter a man of an honest and wealthie condition whilest he vnseasonably amongst blowes deliuered vnregarded perswasions of Peace The wounded Corses of these twaine did Turnus cause to bee conuayed to the view of Latinus as Arguments of their common dammage himselfe with an enuious heart and an inuectiue tongue amplifying the same ●o the vttermost not vnassisted therein by the yrefull Queene Amata or vn-furthered by the hurlie burlie of the impatient People all labouring the King to denounce Armour against the Troians Latinus in this tumult of his Subiects and trauell of his Sences assuring himselfe that Aeneas was the man prophesied to the Marriage of Lauinia and succession of Latium disswaded but might not perswade with the headie multitude In fewe with such efficacie did the dead Corses inuite it the Queene intreate it Turnus affect it the People follow it that lastly though against his minde the King did suffer the Laurentines to reare on their Walles absolute Tokens of imminent Warres Thus found Turnus that which he longed for and Aeneas no lesse than hee looked for and either solliciting succours were not long vnfurnished of hardie Souldiers yea in respect of their multuous Armies the Warres lately ceased at Troy might now haue been sayd to bee reuiued in Italie But as in his Wandrings so in his Warres my purpose is breuitie either of which the Lawriat Trumpetor of his glorie hath so effectually sownded that many might amplifie I could iterate but not any amend it neuerthelesse in remembring of this Historie I haue also vsed other Authorities IT followeth After long Warres valiantly on either part performed many great Kings Princes and Personages perished when lastly the Rutiles begunne to bee repentant of their wrong and the Troians wearie of the Warres Aeneas and Turnus meeting had these words And first Aeneas Often Truces haue wee had Turnus for the buriall of our dead neuer treaties of peace for the welfare of those aliue onely once as I haue been euer diddest thou seeme thou diddest but seeme prouident that no moe should miscarrie offering me C●mbate which I accepting haue in vaine expected for since thy minde changed I wot not by what meanes hath changed the liues of I wot not how many But now when for the palpable leasing thou shouldst not speak like Turnus shouldst thou deny the better of the wars to abide with Aeneas and yet I still be Aeneas though playing vpon that Aduantage with Turnus euen now I say my selfe doe request thee of that Combate whereby further Blood-sheds may happily be concluded Beleeue mee wert thou a Begger and I a Monark yet so much doe I emulate not enuie thy glorie I would hazard all in a Combat requested by thee so valerous a Competitor But least perhaps I ouer-breathe thy tickled Conceit with more selfe-l●king than is exped●ent know man Turnus know Nature Birth Arte Education not whatsoeuer els are in any thing more beneficiall to Turnus than that iustly he may enuie as much or more in Aeneas To this answered the Rutile thus Whether thou speakest this Aeneas as insulting ouer mine infortune or as insolent of thine owne felicitie or emulous as thou sayest and I beleeue it of my glorie trust me onely if thus in thy better successe to abandon thy selfe to such offered disaduauntage bee not indiscretion neuer heard I wherein to derogate from thy policie but say it indiscretion yet by Iupiter Aeneas it is honourable indiscretion Not to encounter so heroicall for in thee I enuie not that Epitheton a Combattant is as contrary to my thought as contenting to my very Soule and as contenting to my Soule as if A●neas were alreadie conquered and Turnus Conquerour either which I deuine at the leastwise I am determined to aduenture Be prouided therefore Ae 〈…〉 eas of courage for thou prouokest no Cowarde but euen Tu●●us that would haue asked no lesse had he not doubted Aeneas not to haue dared to answer so much Thus and with these Conditions that further warres should finish that the Espousall of Lauinia and Succession of Latium should bee the Prize to the Victor a Combat to bee tried by these twaine body against body was vpon Othes taken and other Circumstances agreed vpon Now were they Armed Mounted did Encounter and their Coursers breathlesse the Riders dismounting vigoriously buckle on Foote both offende either defende neither ●ainted Lastly not with vnrequited blowes was Turnus disarmed the Vanquished pleading for life the Victor not purposing his death had hee not espied on his Shoulders the sometimes Baldrike of his once especiall Friend Pallas King Euanders Sonne whom Turnus in Battell ouercomming had put to Sword then Aeneas saying onelie in this Spoyle thou shalt not triumph and onely for his sake am I vnintreatable shoffed his Sworde through his breast Turnus so ending the World and Aeneas the Warres Then was he peaceably wedded to Lauinia and shortly after possessed of Latium After which about three yeares he dying left his Kingdom to Aseanius and Lauinia with childe She at her time and at the house of the before remembred Tyrrhus was deliuered of Syl●i●s Post-humus so called of his being borne amongst the Woods after the death of his Father To him because in right it was the inheritance of Syluius from his Mother did As●anius voluntarily resigne the Kingdome of Latium and of him for his honorable Regiment were all the after Latine kings called Syl●ij Finally he hunting and mistaken amongst the Thickets for a Stagge was slaine with an Arrow by his Sonne Brutus This Brutus for sorrow and his sa●●tie accompanied with many lustie Gentlemen and others of Aeneas his Troians Ofsprings imbarking themselues after long Sayling ariued in this Iland then called Albion whose Giant-like Inhabitants in respect of their monstrous making inciuill Manners sayd to haue bin engendred of Diuels he ouercomming manured their Countrey and after his owne name called it Brutaine And thus hauing begotten Brutus an Originall to our Brutons I conclude this abridged Historie of his Grandfather Aeneas FINIS