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A39220 Eliana a new romance / formed by an English hand. 1661 (1661) Wing E499; ESTC R31411 400,303 298

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have need of our Charity and since she is of our imbeciller sex we will not feare to satisfie our selves with a better discovery and see to what acts of charity the Gods conduce us with this strengthning our selves with a close adjunction we aproacht you and not perceiving you to breath I forc'd my self to so much hardinesse as to feel whether your body had been destitute of heat by the relinquishment of your soul which ●ction it seems awaked you I madam replyed I that gentle touch hath rais'd me from the grace of my distresses and your continuall presence will consolidate all my happinesse for which felicite evenement I am indebted a hundred thousand prayers to the Gods and as many lives if I had them to your service other discourse we had till those maiden strokes had brought us to the landing place where we left our floateing house and set our feet upon the more solid element The envious darkness wrapt in obscurity all the rarities of the place and denied me the intuition of those pleasant gardens that circundated the habitacle of Atalanta But by the sicke sight of the nights gubernatrix I could perceive that the place gloried no lesse in its site● and all the happy adornments nature could out of her greatest benignity afford than in being the blessed habitation of one of the greatest bauties in the world Art could likewise challenge no lesse share in the conservation and imbellishment of its pride and deserv'ed no lesse praise for its exact and exquisite Imitation every thing being methodiz'd into a naturall wildnesse so that it was hard to say whether nature Imitated art or art nature in those compartments and indentments of groves and walkes It was a place fit indeed to be the receptacle of so fair a creature and where pleasure seem'd to glory in becoming a servant to her greatnesse Between that object of all my desires and her tutoresse I was conducted along a most pleasant walke which led from the place where we landed to the house being set on each side and mingled alternately with yellow and orange coulour fruit-bearing trees which gave so fragrant a smell that would have reviv'd a benummed sense and which surpassed the odours of the Arabick forrests The fruites like those of Alcinous hung with a continuall fairenesse and those golden apples fairer than those of the fabulated Hesperides hung like aureated studds amoungst the fresh verdure of their tremulous leaves which delighted the optick sence with their sight and the odorate with their fragrancies Between these pleasurable trees treeding upon a continuall spring of virdant grasse we walked till we came to the house which in all things equall'd the concinnity of the best and corresponded with the greatnesse of Atalanta Being entred Atalanta renewed her welcomes with many strickt embraces and at last saluted me as a token of her Love and frindship The touch of those Rubies had allmost extracted my soul totally from my body which fled to the portalls of its structure that it might with more ardency receive the impression of her lips My senses hardly exerciseing their functions for some time after the receipt of that inflaming kisse I exhibited an amazednesse in my looks and hardly answered sense to what she said but at last recovering my selfe and perceiving she took notise of it I excused it the best I could with these words Madam Truly I had lost my selfe in the Maeanders of your goodnesse which contemplation had so implicated me that it was imposible for me suddenly to returne I cannot but see that my greatest acknowledgement will be but as it were ingratitude if compar'd to the excesse of that goodnesse you exhibite for in beholding the exiguitie of my deserts I find the immensity of your favours No marvell then if I am amazed being none besides your self could perswade me that my senses had the fre exercise of all their functions but that these immense favours were but the pleasing phantasmes presented in the Kingdome of Morph●us Atalanta answered me with no lesse grace than the Queen of Heaven her words exhibiting her to be the daughter of Mercurie I beseech you said she do not magnifie these small testifications of my amity to so great a magnitude for I professe they are so much below the desires I have to accommodate your goodnesse that I will not own them farther than the diminitive of my will and that by this minute service you may Judge the cordiality o● my affection Other discourses we had in which she exhibited her wit and goodness till she had conducted me into a chamber where riches and decency strove to accomodate beauty After she had put off an accessary mantle which serv'd to keep off the cold blasts of the night and that we had seated our selves Atalanta in very good terms pray'd the audition of my foruntes I then not without fear of triping told her at large this sigment with many circumstances and imbellishments which I will tell you in two or three words I fain'd my self to be niece to King Juba though I was borne after his death I told her a brother unto that King hearing of the voluntary death of Juba and that he saw the hand of fortune resolv'd to sling that kingdome into the lap of the Romans loath to follow the example of his brother and yet loath to become a slave to the Romane greatnesse fled from that unfortunate place and passing beyond the mountaine Atlas natures bound-mark to the Roman Empire he found a habitation in the court of the King of the Getulans where at last he was maried to a neece of the Kings from which conjunction I feign'd my self to be produc'd My father I told her dyed when I was very young and whom I could not remember my mother I feign'd liv'd till I was fourteen years of age who in her life time had bred me in an extraordinary way of behaviour and civility contrary to the custome of that Rude people And that after her death my small formosity increasing with my years made one of the chiefest in the kingdome desire me but that I not enduring the great incivility and rude nature of those Getulans despised him and forbad him ever to mention his sute any more But he I told them more enflam'd with Lust than Love sought one day having an opportunity to have forc't me a crime of the smallest nature amongst them and seldome punisht but by laughter However I made my force to resist his violence and with helpe to preserve my chastity and that my complaints and teares to the King at last procur'd his banishment which filling that wicked Getulan with enragement lawes being of too small force to curbe his Insolency watching his opportunity stab'd the King and having a party ready set the whole Kingdome into a combustion and flames of war I said that hearing the truth of the Kings death and fearing death lesse than to fall into the hands of that parricide
that speech was the least of his graces and that he came not thither to talke but to fight The Parthean claping fast his cask retyred a little taking a Pathean javelin flung it with a terrible fury against my Prince that had it hit him his armes would hardly have p●ov'd of force to have withstood it Arizobanes collimated his lance with better fortune for meeting him in the cutrere gave him so terrible a shok that all his endeavours could not keep him from falling over his horses cro●pe● The Prince scorning advantage alighted and meeting Pampatius with his sword they began an encourter worthy of Romes theater When I saw them engaged I allighted and drawing my sword I told Pamaptius's Squire that it did not become us to stand in that posture whil'st our Masters were in that engagement The Squire not refusing me we did our devoyres to take each others life Fate not my valour after near an howers dispute gave me the victory by the death of my adversary This encounter hindred me from beholding the admirable actions of my Master and so deprives you of the best part of that combate As I had concluded my victory I perceiv'd Arizobanes had meet with a champion who would him the victory at an easie rate and I saw him cover'd with blood and wounds before Pampatius fell not so much wounded as the Prince but mightily disabled through a cut on the the joynt of his right arme and by a gash in his forehead which yielded so much blood into his eyes that it blinded him Arizobanes seeing him fall set his sword to his throat expecting he would have implored his life I 'le never confesse my selfe conquered said Pampatius so long as I have a heart to resist I confesse fortune hath declared you the victor and I cannot resist a Fate that is uncontroulable but neither fortune you nor the world can conquer my heart that is invincible take my life but when I am dead then confesse that dyed spontaneously and that though you kil●'d me you never overcame me The Prince seeing his resolution and courage No said he I am none of those who desire to rebate such great courages who are able to conquer death upon a point unworthy any generous spirit Live then Pampatius I will not say I have given you your li●e but that 't was the greatnesse of your own courage neither will I attribute the victory to my own valour but to the justice of the cause and your teme●i●y At that mstant came two of his Squires came into the place it being almost night to whose care he left Pampatius who retired with them to his traine Before we could recover the City we met a great many knights and gentlemen going to seek the Prince whose departure was not kept so secret but it came to the Kings eare whose care and vigilancy had en●aged the whole court in our pe●quisition The Prince having lost much blood which continually destilled at many wounds fainted in sight of the City and was fain to be carried to the court upon our arms The court was in great fear for his recovery and the generall love he had acquired of all men made all interested in his welfare But coming to himself he assured them he was not in such danger they thought him in Ah! brother said Philadelphia it had been better that I had been prey to that truculent Parthian and that I had endured the worst of miseries rather then you should have engag'd the whole Kingdome into danger with your selfe and our parents into sorrow for your hurt He satisfied that faire one with many fraternal words and told her the combate was as well for his own honour as her safety The Chirurgions giving them hopes of his sudden recovery returned part of their former joy into their faces The wounds I had receiv'd by my adversary were not considerable enough to make me keep my bed so that I had enough to do to be the praeco of the combat which was enternain'd by all with joy for the valour of the Prince His love and desire to see the Princesse your sister contributed much to his cure and made him willingly undergo what they told him would festinate it They could hardly congratulate him for 's victory after he had recovered his wounds which had enchain'd him to his bed but that he left the court full of heavinesse for his departure Assoon as we came to Byzantium the prince understood that your self Argelois and the princesse El●ana were remov'd to some castle in Asia for pleasure and repose and that the Princesse Panthea having been sick of a feavour was not throughly recovered Did not I tell thee said the Prince to me that the princesse Panthea was in some danger of her life those palpitations I felt were not caused by absence but through a simpathy that my soul had with hers languishing Love is Magicall and distance of place is not able to hinder us from those knowledges which we receive from the hidden and secret virtue thereof Arizobanes was received by the King your father with his wonted courtesie and kindnesse Assoon as he saw the princesse he perceived that the fire of her seavour had left its ashes in her face and had much dimed that luster that formerly displayed it selfe in her eyes But whatsomever the matter was he trembled at her first fight and told me afterwards that he saw an●er in those lookes she exhibited and though it could not alter the suavity of her countinance yet he found that it terified his heart After some few dayes that he had been there the Princesse leaving her chamber was walking in the garden where Arizobanes met her and being transported by his passion he confest to me afterwards that he approached her with too much audacity and did not shew all the respect he ought to have done to that visible Goddesse proceeding with the precipitancy of his passion he ●ell towards that tended only to the exhibition of his and all though he knew she was not ignorant of his Love yet he proceeded too far and the princesse not accustomed to speeches of that nature left him with anger and hardly saw him in a week after I cannot tell you with how many tears and words he repented his insultity he endured torment enough to expiate a greater fault and he desir'd but to live to gain her pardon for his boldnesse This made him seek out all occasions of meeting her alone that he might fling himself at her feet and beg her pardon for what he had done But Panthea as dilligently avoided him as if she had known his desire or fe●r'd his intentions His desire led him to all places where he might find the P●incesse which she perceiving I beleve she attributed to impudency or importunancy At last he espieo Panthea and her gentlewoman Arselia one evening to enter a close Umbraculum Ventering all his hopes at that cast he surpriz'd her in her
him a little while immovable Fatall face cryed she to attract but more fatall and cruell heart to despise and to be so invincible against Love How what said I No no Argelois those pale cheeks discover the secreet flames of thy heart Thou art not exempt from his tyranny that wounded me Yes you cannot deny it and 't is Eliana too Argelois was extremely troubled at these words but Dardanus having before made him acquainted with her suspicion he was the better able to answer her Madam said he I hope you will have more charitable thoughts than to thinke I should offer so much dishonour to a princesse as to set my affection so aspiringly You judge of me by the greatnesse which I am ariv'd at by your immens favours and not by that which otherwise I am You may said the princesse deny it if you please but these are no arguments to contradict what I say for it is no voluntary action to love and I cannot account that an injury which one is impelled to Yes Argelois I know her charmes to be more attracting than mine and I will yeild her the victory but it shall be with my life Argelois would have answered her but that Eliana and Tribulus walking by the place caused them to joyne company with them where they passed good part of the day in those umbracula's in severall discourses whilst their hearts entertained divers Cogitations The next day Argelois having not visited Euripides a good while was walking towards his grot when meeting with Epidauro they discoursed together of severall particulars till they came to the Grove Argelois believing he should do Euripides a pleasure to let him hear some actions of Dardanus took his favourite with him Euripides embracing him gave him his wonted reception which was all kindnesse being as it were ty'd to him by those charmes that allwayes accompained his presence Euripides understanding for what end he had brought Epidauro gave him many thanks and presently prepared for the audition Epidauro understanding from Argelois what they desired of him was nothign difficult to perform that taske at the request of his masters greatest friend Argelois being desirous to repose himself or rather to give way to his wonted amorous meditations slung himself upon a bed Euripides and Lonoxia takeing Epidauro by the hand led him into another room where haveing placed him between them they invited him by their silence to what he knew they expected After a little recollection he began thus THE HISTORIE of DARDANUS MY years not exceeding those of the Prince declare that what I speak from his infancy were the dictates of those who were both this masters and his servants Palemon after that notable overthrow of Mark Antonie living in great fear of the Romans for the affection he had shewn that Prince retired amongst the Getes and pitching in Tomos lived amongst a people civilized by the swan-like notes of the Sulmonian bard Marying with Agauue the nece of Tarcondemus King of Celisia they produced Dardanus the fruit of that conjunction into the world About that time by a strange misfortune Palemedon son to Palemon by his other wife was lost being ravished out of the arms of his nurse by some wicked Assassius Euripides could not but but shew his interest in that speech by a sigh that he emitted but it not being noted Epidauro continued thus But sure the Gods fore-seeing the virtues of the prince my master shewed by this action that he deserved to be something more than second to the Crown There was great lamentation for the loss of that young Prince and the King had not been to be comforted but by the sight of Dardanus who now received the whole influence of the Kings love which else must have been shared between them After that the Romans had reduced Capadocia Comagena and other kingdoms into provinces and that the King saw they did not disturb him they removed to Chalcedon where he made his peace with the Romans And for some tribute which he was forced to pay them they assigned him Byzantium for his court and gave him good part of Thrace and in Asia all that along the Pontic sea In the mean time the young Prince Dardanus haveing tutors that were most excellent grew so expert in all the sciences that he shewed that the barbarity of the place where he was born had contributed nothing to his nature and made all expect the incomparable fruit of so fair blossomes He not only excelled in litte●ature but also in armes in which in a very little time he seemed to be rather a master than a tyro and soon exhausted all the knowledg of his preceptors In a word Nature had with a lavish hand bestowed those favours which might make him excell all men He was but young in years when the King perceiving that his tutors was not sufficient for his large cappacity sent him to Athens where in that nurse of the muses his pregnant wit ran through and peirc'd into the profundity of Philosophy I had then the honour to accompany him and to be his servant In that place it was that he fell acquainted with the amiable and no lesse generous Argelois The parity of their yeares their consimilitude of their featurs the profundety of their wits and the correspondency of thier affections composed an amity indissolvable but by the power of Eternall Night They were seldome a part and for all the submission of Argelois knowing Dardanus to be a Prince yet he would give him no other appellation than Brother and commanded him to do the like They were the mirror of Athens both for frindship and all things else at prizes they strove to make each other conquerer and to con●er the honour from themselves upon each other glorying more in one anothers victory than for their own There was no prize that could be got from them nor no ●●●rell crown but it addorned one of their heads whether it were for learning or Martiall sports This continued untill Argelois was sent for home by his too indulgent father this mesage raized a war betwixt love and obedience in Argelois but the last lecture he had read being so full of paraenetick instructions concerning obedience to parents he was forced to leave his friend Dardanus by the strong impressions thereof This separation was not without teares and reciprocall ingagement on either side to overcome time and absence by their constant and intire affection They vow'd that friendship which was to last eternally and which was not to be defaced by any accidents of Forune or Time He had not long lest the Tritonian towers but that my master found the miss of that incomperable man in his eyes the Muses had accompained his friend and left their ancient seat The graces were no where to be sound and the City seemed dissolate and melancholy since the absence of Argelois Epidauro said he to me I can no more find that delight a suavity in these dull lucubrations
I believe I shall give you some satisfaction to tell you briefly in what posture at present we stand This Kingdome hath by a peculiar providence for these three hundred yeares been most commonly governed by Queens neither sex being debarred from the regency and by our lawes the first partus of his or her Majesty that reignes is evermore proclaimed successour to the crown whether it be male or female and although many males afterwards be born yet the first succeeds although it be a female The reason for this is because we believe that the Gods haveing the sole disposing of the conception and forming of the Embrio will create it according to their sole wills and pleasures from them as disposed and ordered by them to govern and rule us But if the eldest dye then the next succeeds according to the order of their birth If we have a good Prince we rejoyce and thank the Gods for him and if we have an evill Prince believing it to be the wills and pleasure of the Gods to have him so we yield to him without murmuring And if it may be accounted a blessing to a Kingdome as sure it is to have good and wise Princes we have been extreamly happy and as I have said though we have not had but two Kings this three hundred yeares yet we have enjoyed all those blessings under the female sex that we could have expected from the other the Gods having poured upon them all the influences of the regall and Majestick starres and inspired them with prudence and Magnanimity But least we should receive any detriment by the mariage of our Queens 't was so ordained that they ought to have the consent of their council which consists of the chiefest men in the Kingdome before they may contract themselves to any but yet this good law hath not alwayes been kept and many have married without putting it to the councill Indeed I liked it so well that I would have made it to have reached Kings as well as Queens and I urging it when the father of our raigning Queen was to be married being very young and fearing least he should choose one not Qualified for the place and considering that we were in little leffe danger by the marriage of our King as well of our Queens when they permit them by their affection to incroach upon their authority I say urging it that the King might be brought under that Law I gained his disfavour and being ever after looked upon as one repugnant to his interests I was ejected from being one of the councill I tooke it patiently enough and retireing from the court have ever since enjoyed the sweets of a private life without the least aspiring to my former dignity He dying about fewer yeares since left his daughter and his only Amarillis to succeed a princesse I confesse filled with the divinity of the Gods who beareth the perfect image of themselves So glorious and transcendent a beauty our Eastern world could never yet glory of she is beyond compare both in the goods of body and of minde she is filled with all the rarest endowments the Gods and nature could infuse and though she hath scarce compleated the fifth lustre of her age she hath exhausted all the learning of the Gymnosophists and Brachmans We have lived hitherto extreamly happy under her raign she allwayes mixing lenity and prudence with all her actions but now some evill Daemon disturbing our quietude hath set the whole Kingdome into a combustion We are invironed with many great and formidable Princes on all sides with whom we have continually kept a very good correspondence and maintained our interests with policy Most of them seeing the beauty of Amarillis our Queen so transcendent have desired the possession of her either for themselves or their sons but she shewing her selfe averse from marriage by her gentlenesse and good behaviour hath pacified most of them On the East side of us is the most mighty Kingdome Sinana the greatest and largest in the whole world being divided into fifteen provinces every one of which is as big as most Kingdomes in the world the one side of it butteth upon ours and runneth all along to the great gulfe of Bengan It is incredible if I should tell you of the number and vastnesse of their Cityes and towns and of the innumerable company of people that inhabit them Those are the subtillest people in the world but indeed they a●e pufillanimous and fearfull cowards as the weapons with which they annoy us may well declare They seldome dare to incounter us with weapons like to ours wherein m●nhood and strength doth consist in the using but with a strange diabolicall engine murther us at a distance and with which the most saint hearted coward may do as great execution as the most valiant man these engines are made of Iron and steel mixed about four foot or more long hollow throughout into which they put a composition framed in the stygian Kingdome and I believe taught them by some of Tl●to's servants 't is of a sulphurious matter to which they give fire with reeds twisted together at a little hole made on purpose at the higher end of the engine After they have put in their hellish powder they ramme down upon it certain stones of a plumbeous substance or peices of Iron or such like matter then collimating it at us they give fire it with their reed which sends the globulus's with such a lightning flash thunder clap that they strike us often dead above have of the same sort so big that they drew them on hundred pace distance Besides those they carrs with which they batter batter down our towns and slaughter above a hundred of us at a time With this sort of weapons they have made themselves so formidable that himself King of Kings governour of the whole Earth and son to the Sun They are feared of the whole east who otherwise are the veriest cowards in the world Those that make the engines and that black dust which causes the slaughter they keep continually prisoners in a large house made on purpose containing about ten thousand of them not suffering them to passe beyond the limits of the wals lest they might teach any other nation the use of them And though that we have gained many of the engines from them yet not knowing how to make the composition they are inservicable to us so that we have slung those murtherers for so we call them into the rivers not knowing what use to make of them The King of this potent and formidable people calls call the Sun their genitor because he arises at the utmost limits of his Kingdom The Son of him that now reignes in this Kingdome of Sinana was lately at the court of our Queen where he stiled himself her servant in hopes to possesse her but going away not long since in great discontent hath sent a Herauld that Proclaimed warrs against us threatning the utter
with her guard to the next town where she was accommodated as well as the time and ●lace would afford As soon as the Sun appeared in the East chaceing away the horrors of the night with his splendid beams the General gave order for the burning of the bodies of the slain and the inte●rement of the chiefest Captains being very many slain on both sides This being effected and the Chirurgions permitting the General to travel they returned to Sinda with their banners displayed the insign●'s of their enemies trailed on the ground trophies of their armes carried in Chariots before them and with all the signes of joy tryumph and magnificence that could possibly be imagined They were scarcely lodg'd in Sinda before the Queen received word by the Posts that her other Army in the Frontiers had received a great overthrow through the unskilfulness of their Leader and that the enemies troops advanceing apace came accompanied with victory fire and sword This news put a damp upon the Generals rejoyceing and made them see their danger was not over The Queen sending for Peomontile and Araterus told them this newes and withal that she was not to expect victory from any other hands than from the sage Peomontile and the valiant Araterus that it was for their glory that her army had received the overthrow the gods having ordained that none besides themselves should contribute any thing to hers and her kingdomes happiness And that it was them alone that she ought justly to stile her Protectors and deliverers These speeches were answered by a great deal of submission and humility by them both they testifying that pride could make no advantage on their souls by the praises of the Queen but rather inspired them with a generous valour and desire of serving her After they had assured her of their utmost endeavours and given her their Council how to proceed they received her commands to go meet them with their victorious army She could not chuse but express her sad resentments for their so sudden departute which she did with notable address and in general terms but Araterus might have seen that if it might have stood with his honour and her safety he should have stayed behind The Soldiers having received a largess from the Queen with promises of greater rewards marched with a courage and resolution that already assured them of the victory over their enemies The General that received the former overthrow hoping to regain what he had lost was so rash and unadvised to hazard another battle wherein he resolved to dye or regain his former honour knowing it would be an in supportable disgrace to appear any more before his Queen having lost it through his own unskilfullness more then his cowardize But fortune resolving the victory for Araterus he lost both his life and the better halfe of the Army in the Conslict so that the enemies came flesht with their victories and tryumphing till they heard of the loss of their other Army which gave such a check to their exultancies that it half conquered them before the other Army could come to oppose them Fortune that seem'd to be sworn now to Araterus's side gave us the first victory in which the enemy lost a hundred thousand men and twenty thousand Elephants Seeking still to ingage them we obtained two or three one after another in all which sights Araterus did such actions that the most envious of them all could not but contribute to his glory seeing they tended to theirs and their kingdomes preservation 'T was more then once or twice that he saved the life of Peomontile he slew with his own hand two of the enemies Generals and by his examples inspired others with such courage and animosity that he often turned the fortune of the battle and although reduced to extremities and Exigents he still came off victorious and tryumphant Having oftentimes discom●ited them with extraordinary loss strong holds there not being regarded to retard a War but determining all with pitched battles the War was soon finished and in halfe a year there was not an enemy that dar'd appear in the Kingdome and of so many hundred thousand men very few returned into their own Countrey Peace being setled in those parts we returned to Sinda where Peomontile and Araterus were received by the Queen with such caresses of joy and in such state triumph and magnificence that the East never beheld the like These publick rejoyceings after many weeks beginning to lessen the Queen who was generous and noble having before acquainted her Uncle Peomontile and Araterus with her intentions who gave her their approbation sent for the Prince of Sinana He who thought it had been to receive the sentence of death came with so dejected a countenance that he disgraced the quality he represented and the apprehensions of which made him speak and do things so misbecoming a Prince that the Queen had much ado to endure him in her presence whilst she told him That he now saw the fruits of his insolency pride and temerity and that although she had respected him above his demerits and according to that regality which he bore yet that he had unworthily and altogether misbecoming a Prince behaved himself That he saw how the number of his men his threatnings insolencies and pride were overthrown by the gods who protected her innocency against his violencies That being her prisoner and guilty of such hor●ible crimes she could justifie his death to all the world and that she ought not to have deferred it so long but yet for all this that she had given him his life clearly with his lib●rty not that he had any wayes deserved the least favour but rather more than death by his pusillanimity and dejected carriage so unworthy a P●ince but that she accounted him unworthy her revenge or anger and she permitted him to live that she might conserve him for the Subject of her hate and scorn The Prince received this sentence with some sign of joy and though it was so little to his glory applauded the Queens Mercy According to her order he was conducted to the Frontiers of the kingdome with all the other prisoners which she had taken with them she sent a letter to his father the king of Sinana in which she old him That 't was her desire to live in peace amity with all her neighbour-Princes but especially with him the interests of whose kingdome her Ancestors had alwayes made their own That she wondred he was so unadvised to follow the temerity of his son and to ingage himself in a Warre so unjust and illegal thereby breaking those Leagues which she ever had kept inviolable That what she had done was but in her own defence and to keep her and her Subjects from ruin and destruction and therefore that he was to thank himself and fortune for his overthrow and loss That for her part she desired not to make use of her good fortune nor advantages that she
had satisfied themselves with beholding them they delivered them again to Meador who translated them into his vernacular speech and made them speak thus MAURISHIA HIS ORATION Seigniours THis which my Lord Peomontile hath moved in the Counsel I must confess with him is of great concernment to the kingdom and ought not to be proceeded on temerariously or without deliberation Every one here ought to speak their minds freely and fully and not to be swayed by the favour or fear of others And I hope noble Seigniours that you will candidly interpret what I shall speak and believe that the scope of my speech is for the good of my Prince and welfare of my Countrey I must needs then declare that in my opinion this marriage which my Lord Peomontile moves cannot be for the good and welfare of the people My reasons I 'le give you in a word because I will not tyre you with prolixity A little reform your judgements and do but consider the disparity between them I mean not in age but in quality Is he any more then what the goodness of our Queen hath made him Hath he any thing but what depends on her sole donation Some say he is a Prince what proof have we of it but himself and who would not attribute Titles of honour to himself where he knows he cannot be disproved a likely matter that a Prince should be driven so far from his own Countrey and be so willing to remain here without the least desire of returning I will not give you my thoughts of him because the Queen hath made him honourable But I pray consider in opposition to his inferiority the Queens greatness Look on her as a Queen as having a● her command a kingdom nay one of the greatest richest and most potentest in the East and tell me then the great disparity that is betwixt them She is a mark fair enough for an ambitious man and who would not pretend greatness for so great a glory The Queen out of her generousness and goodness hath left the management of this affair to us and we ought now to regard how to confirm our future happiness and to provide for a continual peace that our posterities may enjoy the fruits of what we in our wisdomes have acted for them It may be that we may never have the like occasion as this let us not therefore conjoyn such disparing peeces and make a structure that may not out last half our dayes Methinks I heard you ask me why this disparity should be any obstacle to the happiness of the kingdome or should be a just let to this marriage I answer you that concord amity and peace things so essential to the happiness of the kingdome cannot harbour long in persons dispar in quality age or manners Disagreement is like to happen and the disparity after some small time will quickly breed dissentions Do you not think that the queen knowing him to be her Creature and so inferiour to her will not still exercise her authority over him and though he be in the place of an husband account him in that of a servant Do you not think that he haveing attained the dignity of a king and the place of a husband will be ever able to bear it and not rather endeavour to subjugate her to his Will will not this think you breed divisions discords and dissentions will not the queen still consider her dignity and his inferiority and will not she think you be obedient or obsequious to him whom she hath raised as her place and case of matrimony requires will she not rather look that he should obey her and cede to her will in all things which thing consider your selves how prejudicial it would be to a kingdom where a King cannot freely act but by the consent and will of another A thousand other wayes is this disparity of births capable of begetting disunion disagreements and disjunctions which were they in a private family or in lesser persons of quality were nothing but in this case in persons so eminent as the King and queen disunion and disagreement cannot but be very prejudicial to the kingdome and greatly to its disadvantage This is a thing so obvious that I need not mention what sideings jealousies factions ●hat complotings what treasons this may produce what murther it may cause what ruin and confusion it may infer when through disunions and disparity the one seeks the destruction of the other Examples of this kind are frequent which might induce us to be wise by others harms But suppose that none of this happen as the gods grant it may not if this marriage be effected but that they live in peace and happy concord and agreement nevertheless consider that Araterus is one of whom we have had but small experience 'T is true that he hath shewed himself valiant and a good Captain but every good Captain may not make a good King he may prove fortunate in the field and unfortunate on the Throne good in the Camp but bad in the Court the discipline of which are far different He may know how to govern an Army and yet not know how to rule a kingdome Princes are only indued with a capacity from the gods to rule others to obey It may be you object in your thoughts that he hath merited the dignity by his valour and having saved the kingdome deserves the Queen But consider hath he not been royally rewarded and must he of necessity have the Crown for his pains he hath saved it and may be may also shew you he hath the art to ruin it Some let me tell you have been very partial in ascribing so much valour to Araterus that hath ecclipsed that of all the Sornaleans against all equity and justice and as if he himself had beaten all the Sinanans without either help or assistance Did not many other valiant men venture their lives as freely and exhibit their valour as couragiously though they came off not so fortunately nor their deeds so much acknowledged 'T is true my Lord Peomontiles life was saved by him but yet I hope my Lord knows how sufficiently to gratifie him without making him King Some of you it may be at this instant would tell me of the affable courteous and loving disposition of Araterus his excellent parts sweet and winning behaviour his many vertues moderation and generosity I cannot deny but all this appears in him but who knows not that these are sutable exhibitions purposely prepared to forward his high designes And who knows but that he endures it with regret enough through aspiring hopes of a kingly dignity till he hath attained that place wherein he may exhibit his own nature and disposition freely and uncontroulably This difference there is between a Prince and one of his condition the one hides himself through fear the other exhibits himself freely having power enough to back his enormities so that his vertues will appear nakedly he acting without
fear then that she will think either of his inferiority or her greatness but of her place and duty Love is the mother of obedience for who obeys the gods better than those who love them neither fear or honour can beget so true obedience as love the other are servile this free and ingenuous There is then no fear of those disunions disjunctions and disagreements which he imagins Love being the conjoyner no fear that she will usurp more authority over him than is meet and that she hath gained over his affection But these are vain and idle suppositions for may not the gods cause a disunion and disjunction where they please These things must be left to them who take a special regard over Princes and Kingdomes placing titular Demons or inferior spirits for their safeties If they are minded to unite hearts for the prosperity and felicity of a kingdome what disparity can be an obstacle but if they will disunite and disjoyn the hearts of the Princes for a plague to us what love can bind For this we should make our dayly orations this should be the subject of our prayers and petitions to the gods that they would continue their unity and concord In the the next place my Lord was much besides himself in saying Araterus was one of whom we have had but small experience I wonder what experience he would have can there be greater than we have had can there be more Hath he not given us an essay of his valour prudence magnanimity policy courage and animosity Hath he not been sufficiently trusted with the Army with the Navey with the City what mischief might he have done us had he been false how beneficial hath he been to this kingdome and how much experience have we had of him what greater would he have what greater can he have and yet this man tells us that he is one that we have had small experience of when for this two years he hath been sufficiently employed by the Queen who with all others that are not as malicious as himself have had sufficient experience of his vertues and generosity I am sorry I have said so much to evince a truth so obvious and which in spite of envy himself was forc'd to confess when he goes to eclipse his valour What and every good Captain may not make a good King yet 't is requisite that every good King ought to be a good Captain and he that proves fortunate in the field is most likely to prove fortunate in the Throne and he that is bad in the Camp is not likely to prove good in the Court Their discipline is not so far different as he imagins and though it be granted that he who knowes how to rule an Army may not know how to govern a Kingdome I am sure he that knowes not how to to govern an Army cannot rule a Kingdome for how can he that cannot rule few govern a multitude Is it not most likely that he which can rule himself should rule others and he which can govern an Army govern a Kingdom How can he which cannot rule himself govern a family How can he which cannot govern a family rule a City And how can he which cannot govern a City rule a Province So how can he which cannot rule an Army govern a kingdome But Araterus can tell how to rule an Army therefore we have no fear but that he knowes how to govern a Kingdome He hath shewed himself valiant in the Camp and therefore most likely to shew himself wise in the Court. And truly good Kings ought to be good Captains for where a good Captain comes to be a King there most commonly is the best Government for he which cannot rule few can never govern a multitude At last he would fain insinuate into us a Maxime of policy fram'd to beat down aspiring minds That Princes were only indued with a capacity from the gods to rule others to obey which I deny and though it be little to the purpose I cannot let it pass unanswered I could stop his mouth thus by telling him that Araterus was a Prince and therefore by his own Maxime of a capacity to reign But the falsity is so perspicuous that I need but mention to you the experience we have had of many Princes about us that have lacked a capacity to rule and of others far from the line of Nobility which have received their Titles and Kingdomes and have not only had the capacity to rule but to rule well Is the gods inspiration into Princes any other than education They having a greater means to beget Majesty and magnanimity knowing besides the excellency of Teachers that they are born to a Crown and to rule And were they ignorant of their birth and not nursed up in those princely employments we should see that the gods inspiration is secondary through education But again my Lord mistakes to think we would make our Queen mercenary we know he hath merited much and he hath been well rewarded and we know his modesty would not have accepted the honours the Queen hath given him neither is it his seeking nor our desire as he thinks to reward his deserts with the Queen and kingdome But that my Lord might see that he hath the art to continue its happiness and peace Alas how weak hath he shewed himself in repineing at Araterus's valour when the enemies themselves acknowledge it And though he pleads that his praise was against equity and Justice I never heard him yet superlaudated nor did I hear any ascribe more to him than he deserved Shall we repine at the valour of a man though it eclips'd that of the Sornalians so long as it was for their safety and welfare is this according to equity and justice is this his best gratification for his being instrumental in saving the Kingdome and us What if he beat not the Sornalions himself He cannot deny but that he was the chief cause of their overthrow what if many others ventured their lives as freely what if they were not equally rewarded was there any that did deserve it I believe though that none returned with life from the wars ever complained to him or any else of the ingratitude of the Queen or that they were not satisfied But Araterus's glory is too splendent to be eclipsed with this durt What he is pleased to reflect upon me I value it not though it be contrary to the use and custome of this place to move secret suspition If he thinks me guilty of any thing worthy condemnation let him accuse me according to the way and order of our Lawes For I protest I do it not in any way of gratification to Araterus for that life which I confess I hold from his valour but that I think in my conscience it will be for the happiness and prosperity of the Kingdome Alas what avails it to be vertuous since it cannot shelter from the Calumniator How wickedly and maliciously goes
City ecchoed with long-live Araterus King of Sornalia and his fair Queen Amarillis and every part of it shone with fires of rejoycing It was every way glorious and graced with domestick and neighbour Princes who with the stateliness of their trains added lustre to the Hymenaean triumph There was all manner of triumps turnies balls and sports exhibited after the manner of the Countrey which lasted for many dayes without intermission After those rejoycings and sports had expired their time and that Araterus had sufficiently tasted the pleasures of his bride he betook him to graver and weightier affairs as in setling the Kingdome making of Lawes ordaining of Councels rewarding his friends all which he effected with so much wisdome and prudence that his very enemies were forc'd to confess that he was worthy of the dignity he had gain'd After a years injoyment of all the happinesses and blisses heaven can afford on earth I solicited Araterus to let me return that I might bring you the tidings of his felicity but he unwilling to part with me caused me to marry which he thought would be a sufficient tye to keep me there Indeed it was so for having a wife and children I was engag'd to continue there and under the bounties of Araterus I liv'd all my dayes with content and pleasure Araterus had a very fair issue by his Queen all partaking of the external and internal blessings of their parents In so many years there was not the least difference nor a cession of those flames that possest them in their youth The Kingdom never florisht in so happy and continued peace nor with such prosperity and felicity before Never was there Wars Tumults or insurrections amongst the people but a continual co●cord and amity and every one praising the gods for giving them so good a Prince I was alwayes conversant with him nor did his greatness abate any thing of that familiarity which he used to me before and because he would not forget his own language there was never a day but we discoursed in it and when by our selves for the most part altogether in it so that you may not wonder to hear me speake it so readily after so many years absence I know not what it was but I am sure all the pleasures that I there injoyed could not utterly extinguish that Love I had to my own Countrey and desire that I had to see it The gods I think for the purpose took away my wife and three children that I had that I might have no obstacle to hinder my return Araterus's intreaties stayed me two years but at last seeing I persevered in my intreaties he yielded to them though with much regret Having at length consented to my abscession he knew not which way to return me safe the voyage ●●ng long and dangerous At last he resolved to write letters to all such Pr●nces through whose dominions we should pass desiring them that they would grant me a free and safe passage through their dominions to induce them to which he sent very costly and rich presents to every one which indeed freed us from a great deal of danger and trouble and gained us not only a free passage through the Eastern Princes dominions but also a Convei●h in the most dangerous places the fame of Araterus being spread thorow all the East The day being come and every thing prepared for my departure he caused twenty Camels to be laded with the most precious things that those Countries could afford Presents indeed worthy so great a Prince to be given to you and some to be presented to those Princes thorow whose dominions I was to pass It was not without a great deal of trouble that we parted and indeed had it not been the desire of seeing my native home and my master whose image still liv'd in my breast I should not have been induced to have left him who with an extraordinary affection loved me He told me that had it not been to have returned to his Cozen and that he had some hopes to see me again or at least to hear from me and of your health and happiness by my means I should not have gained his consent for my departure At which words he gave me this letter which he then pulled out of his sleeve and presented to his Master which I have kept till now that it might also jump with my relation Euripedes taking it from his Squire and perusing it seeing nothing but what was communicable read it to those noble Auditors the contents of which was thus Araterus to his Cozen Furipedes Health and Happiness I could have wisht that I might have had the happiness and content of seeing your face which neither time nor absence hath obliterated in my breast The variety and vicissitudes of things hath not extinguished that love and affection I have alwayes born you and nothing grieves me more than that I am forc'd to live so remote from you I profess it is not the glory of a Kingdome that could have detain'd me nor any other thing but Love which is of it self excusable and had I not been engag'd by those bonds which are irrefragible I should have preferred your company to all the Kingdomes of the East But seeing so many providential accurrances in bringing me hither and in establishing me in a Throne of unexpected happiness the relation of which I leave to Meador I am enforced to abide where the gods themselves as it were have placed me However I hope that these may come safe to your hands with those small testifications of remembrance and finding you in all prosperity and happiness may tell you I want nothing to complete my happiness but your fight which to purchase I could part with half my Kingdome and that however my fortune is raised that I am still your affectionate Kinsman Araterus After the reading of this letter Meador went on Having said he received this letter we parted after I had promised that he should hear from you as soon as I was returned Leaving Sinda I began my voyage and by the care and tuition of the gods passed through all those large Kingdomes betwixt this place and the East presenting the Kings and ●rinces of the Countries with Presents that bought our way through their dominions After long and tedious travel I arrived in Cilicia with that joy that every one hath to behold his native Countrey after so tedious a separation But my joyes were soon quelled when I heard by my friend of your disastors and leaving of your habitation This made me dispose of many of those servants that came with me keeping but a few of them and knowing a trusty f●iend of mine I committed the treasure that I brought with me being but five Camels load the remainder of that which had bought our passage through the East but it was of the choicest and richest things that I had into his hands but without discovering the treasure I trusted him with lest