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A09533 The tryumphes of Fraunces Petrarcke, translated out of Italian into English by Henrye Parker knyght, Lorde Morley. The tryumphe of loue. Of chastitie. Of death. Of fame. Of tyme. Of diuinitie; Trionfi. English Petrarca, Francesco, 1304-1374.; Morley, Henry Parker, Lord, 1476-1556. 1555 (1555) STC 19811; ESTC S110435 47,644 104

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blame That haue not or nowe remembred the same The faulte is in me that longe I say or this Shuld haue considered my great foly I wys And so opened myne eyes not fallen to slothe To haue perceyued and knowen the troughe In differing my lyfe vnto the last combrous age Which by course of tyme continually do asswage But slowe was neuer the deuyne grace To call me to goodnes and vertue apase In hym I put my trust that yet in me shall be High operacion from all euell to flye Thus with my selfe disputing to and froo I thought euen very thus yf that it be soo These thinges that in this wise turne about y e ski And guides gouernes it in ordre so merueloussi After so much turnyng and reuoluing to and froo What ende shall I haue I would fayne knowe soo And as that I was solitarie in this meditacione It semed to me I sawe a wonderfull facion I newe fayre worlde stable and eterne And this olde world that semeth so ferme The sonne and the stares and the heauen rounde And the great se also with the earth and ground To vanyshe clene awaye in theyr rome place A newe merier world made by godes grace What great trowe ye then admiracion had I When I sawe the sonne firmament and the skye Stand fyrme on one fote sure stable and faste That with his swyft course runnyng at the laste Changed all thinges mortall and then restrained His thre partes brought to one part vnfayned And then no distinction no difference of them at al But the herbe and grasse and flowers with all All bareyne and bare before and behynde Which variacion doth naturally behynde Much bitter sorowe to our nature frayle All at ones together then and there to fayle Then the thought passeth as the sonne the glasse And much more for nothing the powre hase It for to holde or elles for to restrayne O what grace shall that be for man to attayne To se in that place the euerlasting god And none euell at all which of the tyme woode Onely commeth and goeth here and there To be out of doubte of all dread and feare The sonne than shall haue no more his place Neyther in the hornyd bull nor in lyke case In the fyshe in which two variable sygnes Uarieth the yerbes the season and the tymes Nowe we do sowe and after we do reape Nowe creasynge nowe discresing so is our heape But happye and blessed be those spirites certenly That be found in that holy state eternally Sure and very certayne in honor to encrease Without terme or tyme neuer to sease O howe happye is he that fyndeth that way To passe this Rabidus and dul passage I say That is called in this vnstable world a lyfe And is so troublouse and so ful of stryfe Blynd and wretched I say are the mortal That hoopeth in thynges that sone doth fall Which tyme taketh away with a thought And turneth al our fancis and foly to nought Surely they are both vnwise deffe and frayle Poore of iudgment and of Counsayle Yea worse then like in dead wretched therto That doth not as our deutie is regard hym so That with his becke may trouble and appease The clementes al as it doth hym please Whome to honour we are not bound onlye But the Aungels that sit in the heauen hye Are contented of the thousand partes as one With y e sight of his godhed in his gloriouse trone And so stand stedfast with a feruent Intention Are not our myndes then worthy of reprehenciō To loke on that which in the very ende Commeth to no profite therevnto to pretende For that which we so fast gather together With much paine in mani years hether thether With great and troubles cumbrance of mynd To day and to morowe at the last we fynde As the shadowe doth passe away and glyde Euen at the poynt so shall all our pryde Then remember ye well I truly counsell this That after goddes great dreadfull iudgement is Was and shalbe shall haue no more time and place But one eternitie together in one selfe space Nor further there shalbe none obiecte at all To hurte by our sight our weake memoriall Which is the occacion and the very cause Many an vnprudent person in vanitie to pause That the lyfe present semeth but a playe Thinking they are to morowe as to day But then all otherwyse shalbe no diuision at all But litle and litle the hole vniuersall Shalbe together and wynter and somer paste And tyme quiete gone and no lenger laste Nor these yeares y t we do nowe presently name Shall haue nomore the domynion of fame But ones theyr famouse that shall neuer disseuer But in eternitie to endure famouse foreuer O happie are those soules that are in that way Of which so much I nowe speake of and say In ioy glory and rest styll to Endure That are and shalbe perpetually so sure And amonge the other that so gracious be Most blessed of all other playnly is she That cruell death kylled or she came to age There shalbe seene in that angelyke vysage The honest wordes the thought cleane and chast That nature had set in her in olde tymes past And forbecause that euery thought and thynge Is playne and manyfest to the eternall kynge When the blessed elect soules turned be Unto the moost happy state of theyr fyrst degre With the poyntinge of the fynger euen then Shalbe sayde how where and also when Lo this is he whiche that loue deteyned And longe and many a day lamēted complained And yet was most fortunate for to se the cheare Aboue al other ioyes in the world of his lady dere And she also of whome that wepyng I synge Shall of her selfe haue greate maruelyng To beholde and fele in euery wyse and degre Her selfe aboue all other in Ioy and felicitie When this shalbe God wote I cannot tell But she that is nygh of the great goddes councel This hygh preuy secrete in parte doth know And for to declare and tel that I trowe It is as I do ymagin very nygh at hande And when that commeth men shal vnderstande How euyl they theyr wanton tyme haue spent In gettyng worldly goodes landes and rent Wenyng for euer them to holde and possesse And yet for the final conclusion it is doubtles They shal se them selues in very dede Mockt and scorned to trust vnto suche mede No secrete nor hyd thing shalbe then and there But all secretes vnshote open playne and cleare All our conscience whether it be bright or darke Before al the world shall appeare our werke And then y e myghtie and gloriouse king celestiall That in his fearefull Iudgment is not percial As reason is and as it ought to be His wise Iudgment therto shall agre And when that sentence is both gone and past Eche man his viage with great dread and hast As the wylde beastes that hast them fast to flye Afore the
those that haue suche destanye They semed all fayre bryght starres The Sonne in the myddes that not debarres The lyght away but geueth them lyght Hauynge on theyr fayre heades on hyght Rose garlandes and vyolets fresh and gay And as a louynge gentle hart alwaye Getteth honour for his vertuouse lyfe So past this company without debate or stryfe When that all sodenly there dyd appeare A sadde blacke baner that approched nere And a woman wrapped all in blacke With suche a fury and with suche a wracke That vnneth I cannot the truth tell In the tyme of the great myghty gyauntes fell Were any so lothesome for to beholde and see Unto this Lady so gastly moued he And sayde O swete and excellent mayde That goest here moost perfytely arayde With youth and beautye and doste not se The terme that I shall present arrest the I am the same importune cruell best Callyd death fearefull that doth arrest All creatures wyth my greate force and myght Or the daye end● makyng it the nyght It is I that hath quite and cleane wastyd The great grekes nation and also hastyd The noble Troyans vnto theyr declyne And last of all hath made to ende and fyne The Romaynes glory wyth this blade kene That prycketh and cutteth all away cleane And infinite of other barbarouse nations Using euermore these wayes and facions When that they loke not for me at all Wyth sodeyne stroke I make them downe to fall A thousand thoughtes of men frayle and vayne I haue broken this is true and certayne And nowe to you when lyfe semeth best Here am I comen your body to arrest Or any harde fortune to you chaunce to fall I wyll you take and ende not one but all This excellent Lady hauing no peare In al the worlde wyth sad and wise chere Aunswered vnto death there present agayne In these chast companyes this is true playne Thou hast no reason nor yet noo power And lesse of all other in me at this houre Onely the spoyle that thou shalt haue It is my chast body vnto the graue That well knoweth one as well as I That take well my death most heauely Hys lyfe on my health all doth depende But vnto the this is thy small ende It shalbe to me no displeasure at all To departe the frayle worlde lo this is all This cruell beast with hyr wyse reason Was no lesse marueld at that tyme and season Than one that doth a thynge in soden haste And when the dede is so done and paste Doth blame hym selfe of that that he hath done Euen so dyd this terrible monster soone And when he had hym selfe paused a whyle With a more softe speache and gentle style Thou sayes he that present here doest guyde This fayre chast bande on euery syde That hast not yet my fearefull stroke assayde By my councell be not so sore afrayde For that I wyll nowe do is for the best To make the fle O mayde from age opprest Whiche hath alwayes longynge thervnto Muche grief and dolour with payne longe wo And to this nowe present disposed I am Thou fayre creature and swete woman To do the suche honor present in this place That thy spirite shall from the body passe Without feare dolour or grief at all Be of good comfort O may de I haue sayde all This Angelyke creature when she had harde What death had sayde agayne aunswerd As it pleaseth Christ our Lorde almyghtye That ruleth and tempereth all thynges eternally Do thou vnto her as thou doest to all men Thus this fayre Lady aunswered there and then And lo euen there present all sodenly Full of dead bodyes theyr great place dyd lye In such a number that them for to rehearse It cannot be countyd in prose nor yet in verse Of Cateya of Marow of Spayne and Inde Innumerable deade of all mankynde There were those that men happy dyd call Kynges Emperours and Bysshoppes all Now be they poore as poore as beggers be stones Where is there ryches honour trowe ye Theyr scepters theyr crownes w t theyr preciouse Theyr myters of purple dected for the noones Gone is all theyr glory and theyr freshe luste A foole is he that to such thinges doth truste But those that wyll nedes hope thervnto At length shall se the matter to be so Them selues vtterly scornyd and beguyled When all theyr fancys shalbe quyte exiled O blynde fooles euen worse then madde For all the pleasures and ioyse ye haue hadde To your olde mother ye muste nedes passe And your names forgotten and turned to was What profyte hath it then bene vnto you Wyth swerde and blode strong nacions to subdue To mucke vp treasure and your soules to defyle It had bene better to haue lyued a whyle Porely in thys world with browē bread water But nowe wyll I returne agayne to my matter I say than whan the extreme houre was come Of thys fayre Lady this is all and some And that she must the doubtfull passe assay That puttes all the worlde in dreade and fraye There came to se her of women many one To knowe and se or that the lyfe were gone What payne the fayre Creature dyd abyde Both fryndes and Neybors diuers on eche syde And so as they her great beautie dyd beholde Death dissolued the fayre here of golde And so the fayrest flower that euer was He dyd roote vp Alas I say Alas Not for no hate that he to her then hadde But in heauen for to make her spirite gladde O howe many complayntes and bewaylinges Syghes and teares and other lamentinges Were there than among the women all When that that fayre bryght eyes celestiall For which many a swete songe I made Many a sonete many a freshe balade Were closed and shot vp Alas O wo is me This fayre Creature what trowe ye then did she Syt styll and glade in quiete and pease And gether the fructe of her vertuousnesse Go thy wayes O deare godes well content In peace and quiet with all thy vertues excellent But litle it auayled agaynst deathes myght Then if he haue agaynst such a one ryght What shall it be trowe ye of the reste O humayne hope with al mysery opprest In a fewe myghtes so swete a mayde Goone and past in so short a brayde So many teares for her death sprede Thou that seste it or heryst it redde Thinke what it is the worlde for to truste When such a creature is turned vnto dust It was for truth the sixe day of Apryll That loue to loue hyr dyd me compell And euen that same selfe houre and daye Death dyd take my loue and ioye awaye And nowe as fortune is wont for to chaunge Hath broken the knot and eke the raunge With suche sorowe vnto my wofull harte That I am afrayde I saye as for my parte To tell it ether in verse or in ryme It was to me so sorowfull a tyme Uertue sayde they that were present there Excellent beutye and moost
decerne what they would There was one in that preace of Pargamo His science is now past it is verye so But in his tyme it was muche set by Anaxarco without dread most hardye And Denocrates more fyrme then a stone So that there coulde no euyll temptation Moue hym to any thinge that was vyle Or by vnclennes his chast body defyle There folowed hym self there Archemenides With sadde regarde he stode in that pres And the pensyfe Democryte next in ordre there Blynde of both his eyes he had no pere There was Hyppia also of great auncient age That durst affyrme that he was so wyse and sage That he knewe and vnderstode all thynge Archisilao ensued not much vnlyke such rekening That he accompted by hys scyence playne All thynge to be doubtfull and certayne I sawe Heraclito with wordes couert and close And Diogenes folowyng his sensual purpose That lytle shamed his desyre to ensue Amonge the other this straunge clerke I knewe And he that shewed a gladde mery chere When al his landes were lost and other gere There was also Dicearco the curyouse Quintilian Sceneke and Plutarke the famouse And after these excellent and connynge men I sawe a great number together then Disputinge of dyuers sundry cases Not to knowe but to fynde secret places One contrarye vnto the tother alwayes That it semed there clateryng was lyke iayes With a romblynge as the shyppes that be In a raygne tempest vpon the large see Euen as Lyons and serpentes hurle together Withoute profyte nowe hyther nowe thyther Was there disputation and after these than Wyttye Carneades that well lerned man That coulde with speach a case so fyle That were it true or false hys subtyll style It was harde his craft to knowe and discerne He lyued longe without all syknes and harme Tyll false enuy agaynst hym dyd soo aryse That he coulde not although he were wyse Resyst the fury of them that hym hatyd Nor the veneme that agaynst hym was debatyd There was also the bablyuge Epicurus That agaynst Cirus was greatlye contrariouse That affirmed oure soules neuer to dye This Epycure cleene contrary dyd denye And sayd that our soules were very mortall And perysshes as best soules do with the body all Wherby he deserued to haue reproue and blame And scant worthy for to folowe fame I sawe dyuers other folowinge thys secte Lyppo and Metrodorus and Aristippus y e electe For theyr excellent conniuge that they then hade Praysed greatly though theyr saynges were bad There was also that Phylozopher y t in very dede Spune the subtle and wonderouse crafty threde Hys wyt was so excellent and his learning so fine That he semed to haue a knowledge deuyne zemone the Father of the Stoykes secte Aboue the rest he was best electe Well declared he as he dyd there stande By the palme and closyng of his hande Howe the truth was in eche season and case For he so declared it with his wyse face The vayne argumentes from the true euen so That many after hym dyd ensue and go Here I do leue to speake more of the rest And nowe wyll tell of that thyng which is best ¶ The ende of the Tryumphe of Fame ❧ The excellent and moste dyuyne Tryumphe of Tyme FRome hys golden harboroughe restyng place The fayre Aurora going afore his face Yssewed out the sonne so clear syrmely set With radient and bryght beames burnished bet That thou woldest haue said euen with a thought Thys faire swete planet was gotten vp a loft Thus vp rysen in lyke maner and guyse As do these sage men sober sadde and wyse He loked all about and to hymselfe he sayde What doest thou nowe I se well at this brayde Yf to thyne one selfe thou take no better hede All thy great glory wylbe gone in dede Take thou then I aduyse the good and wise cure For yf that it be very certeyne and sure That worthy men by fame dyeng do not dye Thys vniuersall and fyrme course eternally Of the large heuen most sure and certayne Shalbe accompted at the last but vayne And yf fame mortall foreuer do encrease That a litle short houre shuld cause to scase I se my great excellence shall soone declyne And howe can I haue a worse ende and fyne Than to haue no more in the heuenly skye Than man in earth that dying cannot dye That thynkes my selfe equall by speciall grace Aboue all other to haue the highest place In the great wyde and large see Occeane Foure horses of myne are there and than That with great studye I nourishe and dresse In theyr rennyng course of infinitie switenesse And yet for all theyr great wonderfull hoste Cannot a mortall man that is dead and past Put in forgetting neyther his laude nor fame It muste neades greue and anger me that same Not onely I my selfe the chefe in my degree But the thyrde or seconde wold therat greued be I must than hast my selfe with a great zele Agaynst these men for the wrong that I fele In doublyng my course to there double harme For I do enuy there same that is so farme That after a thousand and a thousand yeares Theyr high renow me and theyr glory cleres Much more after theyr death then in theyr lyfe Which playne is vnto me a perpetuall stryfe That am nowe no higher nor in no better rate Than I was or the earth was in his firste state Goyng in compasse with my beames bryght By thys great to und bole which is infinite When this fayre beautifull sonne had thus sayde Dysdaynyng furth with and euen at a brayde She toke her course far more swyfter I say Then Faukon that from a high flyeth to y e praye Her wonders swiftnes I can nether tel nor write For it is not possible for me it to endyte Noo I say with my thought to expresse it in dede So that to remember it I am in feare and dreade Then I saye when that wyttely I mynded this I compted oure lyfe to be a vyle thynge as it is and none other nor no better but a terrible vanite To put oure hartes on that which sone doth fle So fast away that euen with a thought Wenyng to holde hym we holde hym noughte He whosoeuer doth loke vnto his state Let hym sone prouyde for hym selfe algate Whyles he hath his fre wyl in his propre myghte In thynges that be stable to set his delyght For when I sawe the tyme goo so fast After his guyde that maketh post hast I wyll not saye it for tell it I ne can For I sawe euen at one verye poynte than The yse and the rose one after the other Nowe colde nowe hote euen with the tother That for to tell it is a maruelous case Howe after the tone the tother hyeth a pase He that with a wyse iudgement this markes Shall se by true experience all these warkes Whiche lytle I noted in my yonge lusty age And that maketh me nowe with