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A09203 The period of mourning Disposed into sixe visions. In memorie of the late prince. Together vvith nuptiall hymnes, in honour of this happy marriage betweene the great princes, Frederick Count Palatine of the Rhene, and the most excellent, and aboundant president of all virtue and goodnes Elizabeth onely daughter to our soueraigne, his Maiestie. Also the manner of the solemnization of the marriage at White-Hall, on the 14. of February, being Sunday, and St. Valentines day. By Henry Peacham, Mr. of Arts. Peacham, Henry, 1576?-1643? 1613 (1613) STC 19513.5; ESTC S110403 28,237 60

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Earth in happinesse doe dwell It was Elisium a delightfull plaine Where Zephyre makes an euerlasting Spring And Fruits and Flowers doe all the yeere retaine Their tast and beauties sweetest Birds doe sing In Laurell shades where coolest siluer brookes Diuorce their courses by a thousand crookes Within there was a Theater of gold Rais'd on a mount in semi-circle wise Which stately columnes strongly did vphold That by ascent did ouer other rise And railde betweene with Christall lights that shone Against the Sunne like Rockes of Diamond Not Scaurus Scaene might with this same compare That eightie thousand could at one time hold Nor that of Pompey nor that wounder rare Vespasian reard nor that with pouldred gold Which Nero as with sand I read bestrew And seel'd with silke all starry gilt in blew Three rowes it had where Princes onely sat To view their worldly miseries foregone Their Kingdomes changes and to contemplate Their happinesse in full fruition These liued well or for the Faith were slaine Or younglings were who neuer saw their raigne Each were in order rancked as they dy'd The formost Heire apparants of our land VVhose deaths were by Impresas specifide So sweetly limn'd as by an Angels hand William first Henries sonne did giue a sea Enrag'd aboue was written Cast away The sonne of Stephen Prince Eustace next did sit Who gaue a braunch of bitter Hellebore Dispayre's not holpe was scored ouer it Henry the sonne of second Henry bore A Phaeton with this Too soone I clime A King and Rebell in my Fathers time Appeared then in Armes a goodly Prince Of swarthy hew by whom there hung a Launce Of wondrous length preserued euer since Hee ouerthrew at Poiteirs Iohn of Fraunce A Dial his deuice the stile at One And this No night and yet my day is done By him I saw in white a comely youth Vpon whose breast appear'd a gaping wound That would haue mou'd a heart of Flint to ruth Wherewith the place was smeared all around A withered crimson Rose by him was fixt His word The last as sonne of Henry sixt A little lower sat two beauteous Impes Of smyling cheere as fresh as flower in May Not Tyndaris faire twinnes Plerian Nimphes Or Myrrba's Boy so louely faire as they These were the Brother-Princes that in bed The Tyrant slew and left vnburied One had a Pillow with his crowne thereon His Mot The Price of my eternall rest The other gaue a Vulture ceasing on The heart of Titius with The Tyrants breast Prince Arthur this aboue an Orange flower Though seemes the fayrest yet the fruit is sower The last sat our late HENRY on a Throne By one degree rais'd higher then the rest About whose brow an heauenly glory shone And certaine beames appeared from his breast Which who so did with neerer eye admire Were striken blinde or had their hearts on fire Where when I saw that Brow that Cheeke that Eye Hee left imprinted in Eliza's face That louely cheere and gracefull Maiestie In hopefull CHARLES that take their second place With Ioy surprized to my home before I bad returne wee cared for no more FINIS A EPICEDIVM of the Author STay Royall Body ere thou go'st To sleepe in Mothers armes the dust And let our Teares distilling fast Embalmne thy Louely Limmes the last Whom Heauen so deere while here did hold It tooke both Modell and the mold From Nature least there might remaine A hope to haue his like againe HENRIE too to forward Rose HENRIE terror to his foes HENRIE Friendes and Fathers stay HENRIE Sunne-rise of our Day HENRIE Loadstar of the Arts HENRIE Loadstone of all harts But now our bud hath bid the frost And Britaine warlike Arthur lost Friendes and fathers want their stay And ouer-clouded is our day This starre is fallen from our sight And lost with all our compasse quite Oh losse of losses griefe of griefe Beyond compassion or reliefe But was our young Iosias shot From Babell Aegypt ward or not His Iourney scarsly yet begunne Or was this deede by Heauen done The cause were Earths all Horrid crimes Hatch'd in these faithlesse fruitlesse times 'T is sinne hath drawne the deluge downe Of all these teares wherein we drowne Wherein not onely we are d●ent But all the Christian continent Yea vtmost climes and coastes vnknowne Whereto his winged Fleere is flowne Whose Pilot while the Maister sleepes Is sounding of the Northerne deepes Encountring Icie Mountaines Coasts Rak'd vp in Snowes or bound with frosts Who saue the Deitie diuine Could say the depth of his designe As when a Comet doth amaze The world with it's prodigious blaze While in some pitchie night from North Sword brandisht flames it shooteth forth All ghessing what it might portend Or where th' effect would fall it 'h end So when this youth in Armor shone He was with terror look'd vpon Which way mought turne his sword or launce To Turke to Spaine to Roome or Fraunce But this a Meteor was no Starre Imperfect mixt as glories are Though Belus terme himselfe a God And Commodus beare Hermes rod Marcellus call in thunder downe From Heauen an artificiall crowne Clearchus in his charge beare fire Augustus clepe the Sunne his Sire Domitian his owne Mother scorne To say of Pallas he was borne Yet all are Adams earthy weake Adord like Idols till they breake Become the scorne of Time and Fate And obiects of the meanest Hate By Bodkins greatest Caesar 's dead A Shepherdesse take Cyrus head A Weasils bite kils Aristide And Lice did punish Herods pride Blinde Times ascribing these to be Th' effects of Fate or Destinie Ineuitable mocking vs With th'Ato'mes of Democritus The Soule of this which VVorld we call Or Influence Coelestiall 'T is no Aegyptian Iron Line But prouidence of Power Diuine VVhose high Idaeas are beeings And all Essentiall formes of things Disposing of all here below Whose ends himselfe doth onely know Who made a cord of seuerall sinne To whip vs out or hold vs in That what Rome of her Titus said May to late Henry be applyed That he for his owne good is gone But for our full affliction For whose deare losse oh let the Towers Of each heauen-daring crime of ours Be cast to ground as Carthage were When she her Princes death did heare And to expresse her sorrow more Her wals with blacke quite couer'd o'er Or with th' Aegyptians let vs mourne Tenne times seauen dayes about his Vrne Or strow his Herse with bud and bloome As Thetis her Achilles Tombe Or crowne his Ashes left to vs As they did of Demetrius Or hang with Athens Laurell by In signall of his Victory Triumphing ouer Sinne and Death Wherewith wee struggle still beneath That happy thus why fooles doe wee With vainest vowes sollicite thee Teares after teares to Heauen send That should vpon our selues descend But rather let thee quiet rest Where thou perpetually art blest Then farewell Henry heauenly Iemme Adorning new
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 beside the nature of the Verse could not admit the Name Frederick so often or so well ERRATA IN the fourth Hymne for from Casimire reade to Casimire in the Marginall Notes for Charolus reade Carolus And what else Reader thou shalt finde of the like nature let mee entreate thee to correct out of thine owne iudgement since mine owne leasure serued mee not to ouer-looke the Proofes so often as I desired Thine assuredly H. P. FINIS * Three of England and that one of Scotland * Vnitie * Noble personages of the land whose Crests these are * Marti Epi●r Lib. 1. Epist. 1. Barbara pyramidum c. * Hee was drowned at 17 yeeres of age comming into England out of Normandie and with him his brother Richard and Richard Earle of Chester and his brother O●w●le the Princes Tutor the Countesse of Perch the Kings daughter named Mary and his Neece the Countesse of Chester with many young Noble-men and Knights to the number of an 60. persons * Eustace being angry with his Father Stephen for making peace with Henry Duke of Normandie departed from him at Bury sittin● downe to dinner feil mad vpon the receiuing of the first mor●ell † Henry eldest sonne of Henry the second borne in London was crowned in his Fathers 〈…〉 to the quiet of the Realme as it was thought but he rebelled in No●m●ndie whose pu●t ' e●e tooke against his Father Lewis King of Fraunce William King of Scots H●nry Ge●●ffrey 〈◊〉 his sonnes Robert Earle of Leicester Hugh Earle of Chester c. 〈◊〉 toug●● against his Father and after dyed of a Feuer de●iring for ●●uenes●e his Father sent him his R●●● in token he had or giuen him which he humbly kissed He dyed at Martell and was buried at Roane his body wound in those linne● clothes hee was annoin●ed King in * Edward the blacke Prince first sonne to Edward the 3. some make his name rather from the black dayes Fraunce endured by him then from his Countenance † Prince Edward who was slaine at Tevvksbury King Edward the first ●●ote him on the face vvith his Gauntlet afterward hee was most cruelly slaine being runne through the breast with an a●ming-sword His mother Queene Margaret at the same ●●me being taken prisoner and slaine Iohn Duke of Somerset Courtney E. of D●uonshire the Lord Wenlocke c. * King Edward the fift and Richard his Brother taken out of Sa●ctuary Murdered in the Tower The l●●ly pourtracture of these Princes came to my hands limned in a Manuscript which was written by Anti●●●y Earle Riuers their Vncle and giuen to King Edward the fourth and this was the first bo●ke that eu●r was Printed in England as Master Cambden told me this being the ●ame that the Earle gaue the King bound in greene Veluet c. Prince Arthur maried Catharine Daughter of Ferdinando king of Spaine By this deuice the Author seemes couertly to shew a distast of our Princes matching with Spaine * The difference between an Epecide and Epitaph is as Seru●us teacheth that the Epicidium is propper to the body while it is vnburied the Epitaph otherwis● yet our Poets stick not to take one for the other it hath the Etymon from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is curar● inferias saith Sca●●ger in Poet Kings 2. cap. 23. vers 29. * Hee alludeth to that famous vvorke of Henry the seauenths Chappell so contriued that from euery windovv in the same in the Foundation a line vvas laid to the Kings Graue and in the same to his heart as hee ordaidained it in his life * Coronā auream multis● gemmis insignitā caetitus S. Ladis●a● Hungariae Regi delatam legimus in Annal. Hun. quod ab illis adeo constanter creditur vt penes quemcunque ea sit pro legitimo Rege haberi debeat Vide Hist. Hung. Angl. * Called in Latine Flammeum it was of a yealovvish colour vvorne of the Romane Virgins going to be marryed to conceale hide their b●ushing and bashfulnes † Plutarch saith these Torches vvere of vvaxe like ours Plautus onely once mentioneth one of these vvaxen Lights but for the most part they vvere of Pine or thorne tree * The Bride neuer vsed to touch the threshold vvhich custome is yet obserued in some places of Italy but very warily pasted ouer the same least charmes or some other kinde of Witch-craft might be laid vnder the same eyther to cause debate or to the hinderance of procreation By the Threshold at her comming home vvas set fire and vvater vvhich shee touched vvith eyther hand Io c. Io c. * Vienna valiantly defended by Phi●●p Ear●● Palatine against Soliman vvho besieged it vvith 300000. men An. 1529. Io c. * This girdle vvas dedicated to Diana vvhom the Grecians called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Latines Cinxia it vvas vvouen vvith vvool and knit with a kinde of knot vvhich they called Herculean in signe of fruitfulnes vvhich Virgins vvare and neuer vvas taken avvay vntill the first night of their Marriage vvhich then the b●●de maid vnknit but with two fingers onely * Nuts at their going to bed vvere vvoont to be throvvne among children those without that do●● in token as Scaliger saith of renouncing the deli●hts of youth and childhood and vndertaking the vveighty charge of houshold affaires Diuers other opinions the auncient vvriters haue had hereof Io c. Io c. 1 A most valiant Souldier and Nephevv to Charlemaine vvho with his companion O●iuer vvas slaine vpon the Pyranaean Hils in Ro●●● valley or Ro●landi valley vvarring against the Infidels His Horne wherevvith he called his Souldiers together and his Svvord are yet to be seene at a Village in Xanto●gue of vvhom as of the Emperour Charlemaigne the Palsgraue is lineally desce●ded 2 Pipin King of France the Father of Charolus Martellus he begat Pipin the Father of Charlemaigne auncetour to Count FREDERICK I vvill shortly publish the Pedigree it selfe being too long for this place 3 Whose ancient Armes vvas the Lyon vvhich the Hollanders beare as descended from the auncient F●an●i The Romane Empire vvas diuided into tvvo Kingdomes the one called Lombardicum the other Teutonicum this latter being indeede Germany it selfe vvas againe subdiuided and gouerned iure Francon●● Saxonico that of Saxonie stretched it selfe vnto the Balticke-sea the other of Franconia contained eyther side about the Rhine 〈◊〉 Franconia East and all Bauaria The Palatinate of the Rhene to make a difference betvveene that of Saxonie had the beginning in the time of Otho the third Emperour about the yeere of Grace 985. At vvhat time the seauen Electors vvere ordained at Qued●●gburge 4 Otto the Sonne of Lewes Duke of Bauaria or rather Bo●aria marryed Agnes Daughter and Heire of Henry Count Palatine of the Rhine in the yeere 1215. as saith Auen●inus vvhich vvas the first vniting of these noble Houses Bauaria was sometime a great Kingdome lying one part vpon Hungary the second