Selected quad for the lemma: land_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
land_n find_v great_a king_n 3,579 5 3.5272 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A43596 The generall history of vvomen containing the lives of the most holy and prophane, the most famous and infamous in all ages, exactly described not only from poeticall fictions, but from the most ancient, modern, and admired historians, to our times / by T.H., Gent. Heywood, Thomas, d. 1641. 1657 (1657) Wing H1784; ESTC R10166 531,736 702

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Almighty that she might not so vively love so their chast bodies might not be separated in death As she earnestly praied so it futurely hapned 〈◊〉 died in one day and were both buried in one S●pulchre ●●ing ●ellowes in one House 〈◊〉 bed and Gra●● and now no question 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 Kingdome Thus 〈…〉 But now to return 〈…〉 have been kind to their paren●● 〈…〉 Sicilia when the mountain Aetna began first to burn Damon snatcht his mother from the 〈◊〉 Aeneas in the fatall massacre of Troy took his father upon his back his son Ascanius in his hand his wife C●●usa following him and pas●ed through the sword and fi●e We read like wise in Hyginus of Cleops and Bilias whom Herodotus cals Cleobis and 〈◊〉 who when their mother C●d●ppe the Priest of Juno Are you should be at the Temple at the appointed hour of the Sacrifice or failing to furfeit her life but when she came to yoke the Oxen that should draw her Ch●rior they were found dead her two sons before named laid their necks under the yoke and supplying the place of those beasts d●ew her in time convenient unto the place where the sacred Ceremonies were according to the custome celebrated The Oblations ended and she willing to gratifie the●● filiall duty besought of the goddesse That it ever with chast and undefiled hands she had observed her sacrifice or i● her sons had born themselves prou●ly and religiously towards her that she would grant unto them for their goodnesse the greatest blessing that could happen to any 〈◊〉 or humane creatures This Praier was heard and the two zealous sons drawing back their mother in her chariot from the Temple unto the place where she then sojourned being weary with their travell laid them down to sleep The mother in the morning comming to give her sons visitation and withall thanks for their extraordinary and unexpected pains and travel found them both dead upon their Pallers by which she conceived That there is no greater blessing to be conferred upon man then a fair death when Love good Opinion and Honor attend upon the Hearse These I must confesse are worthy eternall memory and never dying admiration But hath nor the like piety towards their parents been found in women I answer Yes How did Pelopea the daughter of Th●estes revenge the death of her father Hypsile the daughter of 〈◊〉 ●ave her father life when he was utterly in despair of hope or comfort Calciope would not lose her father o● leave him though he had lost and left his opinion 〈◊〉 the daughter of Harpalicus restored her father in battel and after defeated the enemy and put him to slight Er●gon● the daughter of Icarus hearing of the death of her father strangled her selfe Agave the daughter of Cadmu● slew the King 〈◊〉 in Illy●i and pastest her father of his before usurped Diad●m Xantippe fed her father Ny●onus or as some will have it Cimonus in prison with milk from her breasts Tyro the daughter of Salmoneus to relieve her father slew her own children Who will be further resolved of these let him search Hyginus And so much shall suffice for filiall duty towards their P●●e●ts Of S●sters that have been kind to their Brothers THE Poets and Historiographers to impresse into us the like naturall piety have left divers presidents to posterity Innumerable are the examples of fraternall love betwixt Brother and Brother To illustrate the other the better I will give you 〈◊〉 of some few Volater lib. 14. cap. 2. d● A●ropo relates how in that war which Cai. Cornelius Cinna Tribune being expelled the City with Calus Marius and others commenced against the Romans there were two brothers one of the Pompey's army the other of 〈◊〉 who meeting in the battel in single encounter one slew the other but when the victor came to rifle the de●d body and found it to be his own naturall brother after infinite sorrow and lamentation he cast himselfe into the fire where the sloughtered carcas●e was burned M. Fabius the Consul in the great conflict against the He●rutians and Ve●entians obtained a glo●ious victory when the Senate and the people of Rome had with great magnificence and cost at their own charge prepared for him an illustrious triumph he absolutely refused that honour because Q. Fabius his brother fighting manfully for his Countrie was slain in that battel What a fraternal piety lived in his breast may be easily conjectured who refused so remarkable on honour to mourn the losse of a beloved brother Valer cap 5. lib. 5. We read in our English Chronicles of Archigallo brother to Gorbomannus who being crowned King of Brittain and extorting from his subjects all their goods to enrich his own Coffers was after five years deposed and deprived of his roiall dignity in whose place was elected Elidurus the third son of Morindus and brother to Archigallo a vertuous Prince who governed the people gently and Justly Upon a time being hunting in the Forrest he met with his brother Archigallo whom he lovingly embraced and found such means that he reconciled him both to the Lords and Commons of the Realm that done he most willingly resigned unto him his Crown and Scepter after he himselfe had governed the Land five years Archigallo was re-instated and continued in great love with his brother reigning ten years and was buried at York after whose death Elidurus was again chosen King What greater enterchange of fraternall love could be found in brothers To equall whom I will first begin with the sisters of Phaeton called by some Heliades by others Phaetontides who with such funerall lamentation bewailed the death of their brother that the gods in commiseration of their sorrow turned them into trees whose transformations Ovid with great elegancy expresseth lib. 1. Metamorph as likewise Virgil in Cutice their names were Phaethusa Lampitiae Phebe c. Antigone the daughter of Oedipus when her brother Eteocles was slain in battel she buried his body ma●gre the contradiction of the Tyrant Creon of whom Ovid lib. 3. Tristium Fratrem Thebana peremptum Supposuit tumulo rege vetante soror The Theban sister to his Tomb did bring Her slaught'red brothers Corse despight the king Hyas being devouted of a Lyon the Hyades his sisters deplored his death with such infinite sorrow that they wept themselves to death And for their piety were after by the gods translated into stars of whom Pontanus Fratris Hyae quas perpetuus dolor indidit as●ris Thus you see how the Poet did strive to magnifie and eternize this Vertue in Sisters No lesse compassionate was ●lectra the daughter of Agame●n● on her brother O●estes and Iliona the issue of Priam when she heard of the death of young Polydore Stobaeus Serm. ●2 out of the History of Nicolaus de morib gentum saith That the Aethiopians above all others have their sisters in greatest reverence insomuch that their Kings leave their succession not to their children but to these sisters
Lapithae genus Heroinae Centaur●s m●d●o grata rap●●a me●o Such as Iscomache that was Of the L●●y 〈…〉 She whom the Centaurs would have rapt Am●dst their cups of wine Per●●les for his love to Aspasia made was against the Samians For Chrysaeis the daughter of Chryses Priest to Apollo 〈◊〉 by 〈◊〉 a plague was sent amongst the the Greekish host which ceased not till she was returned back to her father for so writes Tortellius Lavinia's beauty the daughter of King Latinus and the Queen Amata was cause of the comb●●ion betwixt Turnus and Aeneas so saith 〈◊〉 lib. 4. de S●●llis Lysimach●● the son of Agathocles poisoned his own son Agathocles by whose fortunate hand he had received the honour and benefit of many glorious victories at the instigation of his wife Arsinoe the sister of Prolomaeus 〈◊〉 Iphis a youth of exquisite feature strangl●● himselfe because he was despised by the fair but cruell Anaxarite Archelaus King of Macedon was slain by a young man called Cra●●na because having first promised him his faire daughter he after bestowed her upon another The Poet Archilocus called Iambographus because Lyc●●bes denied him his daughter in marriage writes against him such bitter Iambicks that he despaired and hanged himselfe therefore Ovid thus writes Post modo si p●ges in te mihi liber Iambus Tincta Licambaeo sanguine ●ela dabit If thou pursu'st me still my book Just vengeance shall implore And in Iambick weapons yeeld Dipt in Lycambes gore Justine in his twenty seventh book relates That Seleucus Callinicus King of Syria for exiling Berenice his step-mother sister to Ptolomaeus was by the same Ptolomaeus invaded and prosecuted by armes Deip●●bus after the death of Paris having married Hell●n to which infortunate match her beauty had invited him was by her treachery not only murdered but his body hackt and mangled being almost made one universall wound Tortellius reports of one Evander the nephew 〈◊〉 Pall●s King of the Arcadians at the perswasion of his mother Nicostrate sl●w his own father Orestes the son of Agame●●●n slew Pyrrhus the son of Achilles being surprised with the beauty of Hermione daughter to Mene●eus and Helena 〈◊〉 King of the Thebans was slain by King Cr●eon being betraied by his own Polydices Cleopatra was the cause of that bloody war betwixt Ptolomaeus Phil●pater and her own father Alexander King of Syria Idas and Lyncaeus the sons of Aphareus and Arbarne fought a great battel neer to Sparta about the two fair daughters of Leu●ippus Phebe and ●●aira against Castor and Pollux both which were slaine in that battell and perisht not by shipwrack as some write in the pursuit of Paris by sea for the rape of their sister Hellen. Li●y lib 36. writes of Antiochus who warning against Rome was so taken with the beauty of a 〈…〉 that neglecting all warlike discipline to spend his 〈…〉 with his wanton he became a 〈…〉 to the enemy Octavia the sister of Aug●lius being repudi●ted by Anthony was the 〈◊〉 of a civill and intestine war The Poet Lucretius grow●●● 〈◊〉 for the love of a 〈◊〉 damosell drank poison and so died Tullia incited ●●rquinius S●perbus to kill her own father Servius Tullius Martia the strumper caused Antonius Commodus the Emperor whose Concubine she was to 〈◊〉 slain by a souldier with whom she had many times lustfull congression Titus Corrancanus being sent on Embassie to Teuca Queen of the Illyrians because he spake to her ●reely and boldly she caused him to be put to death against the lawes of Kingdomes and Nations Livius and Florus Volla●eranus writes of one Rhodoricus King of the Goths who because he stup●ated the daughter of Iulianus who was Prefect in the Province or Tingitana the father of the ravisht virgin brought in the Moo●s and raised a war which before it was ended was the death of seven hundred thousand men Chilpericus the son of Cloth●rius was slain by the instigation of his wife Fridegunda in his return from hunting Luchinus a Court of Italy wa●ied upon Vgolinus Gonzaga because he had adulterated his fair wife Isabella Volla●●ran Otratus King of Bohemia accused of sloath and cowardise by his wife Margarita for entring league with Rodulphus Caesar raised war betwixt them in which her husband was defeated Gandulphus the martyr for but counselling his wife to a more chast and temperate life was murdered betwixt her and the adulterer Of wars and many other mischiefes of which faire women have been the originall Ovid elegantly delivers in 2 Eleg. thus concluding Vidi ego pro nivea pugnantes conjuge tauros Spectatrix animos ipsa 〈…〉 For a white He●fer I have seen 〈◊〉 ●ight Both gathering rage and cou●age fr●● her sight At the building of Rome R●m●lus to people the City and get wives for his souldiers caused them to ravish the Sabin women and demosels for which wa● grew betwixt the two Nations Of which Proper lib. 2. Cur exempla 〈◊〉 Graecum Tu criminis author Nutribus 〈…〉 lact● lupae c. What need I from 〈◊〉 Greek● example ask Thou 〈◊〉 by 〈…〉 she-wo●fe nurs'd To rape the 〈◊〉 m●d'st thy souldiers task Rape Rome still love● because thou taught'st it fi●st Since men the form at best 〈◊〉 ●oon fades and th● beauty hath been the came of so much blood-shed Why should women be so proud of that which rated 〈◊〉 the highest is no better then in excellent evill or a wretched wonder that had beginning therefore subject to end created from earth and therefore consequently trans●●●ry but on the contrary since the vertues of the mind ●●ely acquire after 〈◊〉 and glory conquer oblivion and survive envy and Ph●nix-like recover fresh youth from forgotten ashes To such I yeeld the first place and so begin with the Amazons Of the Amazons AND first of their Country Cappadocia is a land that breedeth goodly and brave horses it hath on the East side Armenia on the West Asia the lesse on the North Amazonia on the South Mount Taurus by which lieth Sicilia and 〈◊〉 as far as the Cilicke Sea that stretcheth towards the Island of Cyprus The lesse Asia called Asia minor joineth to Cappadocia and is closed in with the great sea for it hath on the North the mouth and sea that is called Euxinus on the West Propontides on the South the Aegyptian sea This lesse Asia conteineth many Provinces and Lands 〈◊〉 the North side Bythinia butting upon the sea against Thracia and is called Phrygia the greater The chiefe City of Bythinia is Nicomedia Galathia takes name of the 〈◊〉 that assisted the King of Bythinia in his wars and therefore had that Province given them to inhabit It was first called Gallograecia as being people mixt of the Gals and Grecians but now they be called Galathians and these are they to whom Saint Paul writ his Epistles Ad Galatas The third part of
the poor The King upon Holy-Rood day was released and besieged the Empresse in the City of Oxford from Michelmas day to mid winter where being oppressed with famine she took the advantage of the Frost and Snow and attiring her selfe all in white escaped over the Fens and came to the Castle of Wallingford And so much shall suffice to expresse the magnanimity and warlike dispositions of two noble and heroick English Ladies A French Lady comes now in my way of whom I wil give you a short character In the minority of Henry the sixt when France which was once in his entire possession was there governed by our English Regents the famous Duke of Bedsord and others Charls the Dolphin stiled after by the name of Charls the seventh being a Lord without land yet at that time maintaining what hostility he was able whilst the English forraged through France at their will and commanded in all places at their own pleasure the French in utter despaire of shaking oft the English yoke there arose in those desperate times one Joane Are the daughter of James Are and his wife Isabel born in D●mprin This James was by profession a Shepherd and none of the richest Joane whom the French afterwards called Joane de Pucil whilst she was a young maid and kept her fathers sheep would report to divers That our blessed Lady S. Agnes and S. Katharine had appear'd unto her and told her that by her means France should regain her pristine liberty and cast off the yoke of English servitude This comming to the eare of one Peter Bradicourt an eminent Captain then belonging to Charls the Dolphin he used means that she should be sent to have conference with his master who sojourned then in Chynon in his lowest of dejection and despair of hope supply or comfort In her journie thither she came to a Town called Faire-bois where taking up her Inne a place which she had never before seen she desired a souldier to goe to a secret by-corner where was a heap of old iron and from thence to bring her a sword The souldier went according to her direction and searching the place amidst a great quantity of old tongs shovels hand irons and broken horse shooes found a faire bright sword with five Flower-Deluces upon either side engraven This sword with which she after committed many slaughters upon the English she girt to her and so proceeded to Chynon to give the Dolphin meeting Being there arrived Charls concealed himself amongst many others whilst he was brought into a faire long gallery where he had appointed another to take his place and to assume his person she looking upon him gave him neither respect nor reverence but sought out Charls among all the other in that assembly and pickt him from amongst the rest to whom making a low obeisance she told him that to him only was her businesse The Dolphin at this was amazed the rather because she had never before seen him and was somewhat comforted by reason that she shewed chear and alacrity in her countenance they had together long and private conference and shortly after she had an army given him to be disposed and directed by her She then bespake her selfe armor Cap a Pe bearing a white Ensign displaid before her in which was pourtraied the picture of the Saviour of the world with a Flower-de-luce in his hand and so marched to O●leance Her first exploit was fortunately to raise the siege and ●elieve the Town From thence she passed to Reams took the City and caused the Dolphin there to proclaim himselfe King and take upon him the Crown of France She after took Jargueux a strong Town and in it the Earl of 〈◊〉 with many other brave English Gentlemen She ●ought the great battell of Pathay with good successe in which were taken prisoners the Lord Talbot the scourge and terror of the French Nation the Lord Scales the Lord Hungerford with many others both of name and quality she took in Benveele Mehun Trois and divers other Towns of great import and consequence at length in a ca●●●ado or skirmish she was taken prisoner by Sir John of Entenburch a Burgonian Captain and sent to Roan The French Chronicles affirm that the morning before she was surprized she took the Sacrament and comming from Church told to divers that were about her that she was betraid her life sold and should shortly after be delivered up unto a violent death For Sir John gave a great sum of monie to betray her The English comming to invest themselves before Mondidier Joan was advised to issue out by Fla●y and skirmish with them who was no sooner out but he shut the gates upon her being taken she was sent to Peter Bishop of Bevoise who condemned her to the fire for a forceres●e which judgement was accordingly executed upon her in Roan in the Market place Twenty six years after Charls the King for a great sum of monie procured an annihilation of the first sentence from the Pope in which she was proclaimed a Vi●ago inspired with divine instinct in memory of whose vertuous life and unjust death he caused a faire crosse to be erected just in the place where her body was burned I return again to the English F●b●an and Harding speak of Emma sister to the Norman Duke called Richard who for her extraordinary beauty was called The flower of Normandy she was married to E●hel●ed King of England By 〈◊〉 heroick spirit and masculine instigation the King seat to all parts of the Kingdome secret and strict commissions That upon a day and hour assigned all these Danes which had usurped in the Land and used great cruelty should be slaughtered which at her behest and the Kings command was accordingly performed which though it after proved ominous and was the cause of much misery and mischiefe yet it shewed in her a noble and notable resolution O● Queen Margaret the wi●e of Henry the sixt her courage resolution and magnanimity to speak at large would ask a Volume rather then a compendious discourse to which I am strictly tied And therefore whosoever is desirous to be further instructed in the successe of those many battels fought against the house of York in which she was personally present I refer them to our English Chronicles that are not sparing in commending her more then woma●ish spirit to everlasting memory With her therefore I conclude my female Martialists And now me thinks I am come where I would be and that is amongst you faire ones Of faire Women IT is reported of a King that for many yeers had no issue and desirous to have an heire of his own blood and begetting to succeed in the throne upon his earnest supplication to the divine powers he was blessed with a faire son both of beauty and hope And now being possessed of what he so much desired his second care was to see him so educated that he might have as much comfort
together one morning in the fields our words still as we spoke them froze before us in the air and that so hard that such as the next day past that way might read them as perfectly and distinctly as if they had been texted in Capitall Letters to which one of the Gentlemen with great modesty replied Truly Sir methinks that should be a dangerous Country to speak treason in especially in the depth of winter Something before this discourse was fully ended came up the Gentlewoman of the house to bid her guests welcome and taking her chair at the upper end of the table It seems Gentlemen saith she your discourse is of Russia my first husband God rest his soule was a great Traveller and I have heard him in his life time speak much of that Country but one thing amongst the rest which I shall never forget whilst I have an hour to live That riding from Mosco the great City to a place in the Countrie some five miles off in a mighty great Snow and the high way being covered and he mistaking the path he hapned to tumble horse and man into a deep pit from which he could not find any possible way out either for himselfe or for his beast and lying there some two hours and ready to starve with cold as necessity will still put men to their wits so he bethought himselfe and presently stepping to a Village some half a mile off borrowed or bought a spade with which comming back he fell to work and first digged out himselfe and after his horse when mourning he without more 〈◊〉 came to the end of his journey And this saith she 〈◊〉 told to a hundred and a hundred Gentlemen 〈…〉 own hearing To end this discourse in a word which by examples might be exemplified into an infinite one of the guests sitting by said I can tel you a stranger thing then all these being demanded what he answered I beleeve all these things related to be true Plutarch in his book De educandis liberis saith Praeter haec omnia adsuefaciendi sunt pueri ut vera dicant c. Above all things children ought to be accustomed to speak the truth in which consisteth the chiefe sanctimony but to lie is a most servile thing worthy the hate of all men and not to be pardoned in servants Homer Iliad 1. to shew the difference betwixt Truth and Falshood hath these words Poene mihi est orci portis invisior ipsis Cujus verba sonant aliud quam mente recondit He 's to me hatefull as the doors of hell That when he ill doth mean doth promise well Juvenal in his third Satyr gives it a more ful and ample expression after this manner Quid Romae feciam mentiri nescio librum Si malus est nequeo laudare c. What should I do at Rome I cannot lye If a bad Book be laid before me I Nor praise it nor desire it I have no skill In the Stars motions neither can nor will I make deep search into my fathers fate To know when he shall die nor calculate From the Frogs entrails by inspection never Was it my study how by base endeavour To panderize or close conveiance hide Betwixt th' Adulterer and anothers Bride These practises seek they that list t' attain Such as I have been I will still remain This Muse Polyhimnia under whom I patronize this seventh Book as she is the Mistresse and Lady of Memory and consequently of the multiplicity both of Hymns and Histories so from her I assume a kind of liberty to continue my variety of discourse and from Mendacia come to Sales or Dicteria i. From Lies to Jeasts or ingenious witty answers For which Athenaeus in his Dypnos lib. 13. remembers these women famous Lamia Gnathena Lais Glicera Hyppo Nico Phrine Thais Leontium and others Yet lest women should not be content to equall men only but to antecede them I wil here commemorare some things wittily and facetiously spoken by Princes and others Auton in Melissa Part. 1. Serm. 56. speaks of an unskilfull Physitian comming to visit an old friend of his or at least an acquaintance saluting him in this manner Sir God be thanked you have lived to a fair age and are grown an old man Yes Sir said he and you have my health too for I never made use of any Physitian Cicero thus plaid upon Vatinius who was but a few daies Consul A great prodigy saith he there hapned in the year of his Consul-ship That there was neither Spring Summer Autum nor Winter one asking him Why he had neglected to visit the Consul in his honour he answered He had purposed it but the night prevented him He sported in the like kind upon Caninius of him saith he we had a most vigilant Consul who never so much as slept in his Consulship Lucilius Manilius an excellent Painter had drawn wondrous beautiful faces but his children were exceedingly deformed A friend of his supping with him one night taunted him in these words Non similiter ●ingis pingis as much to say Thou dost not get thine own children as thou dost paint others No wonder answered he For I get those faces in the dark but when I paint others I do them by the light of the Sun The Christian Princes having united their forces to redeem the Holy Land from the oppression of the Infidels Santius brother to the King of Spain was made Generall of the Christian forces a man of great sanctity and of an austere life and withall a noble souldier he amongst other Princes sitting in Council with the Pope but not understanding the Roman Tongue in which the businesse was then debated only having his interpreter placed at his feet upon the sudden after their Decree there was a great acclamation and clamour with flinging up their caps c. At which Santius demanded of his interpreter what that sudden joy meant he told him It was because the Pope and Colledge of Cardinals had by their publick sustrage created him King of Aegypt for the Saladine then usurped in the Holy City Is it so saith he then arise and proclaim the Pope Caliph of Baildacha Thus with a Princely liberty modestly taxing their forwardness who as they gave him a Kingdome without a Country he to requite the Popes gratitude gave him a Bishoprick without a Diocesse Pacuvius Taurus having for his former service sued to Augustus Caesar for some great and grosse sum of money and the rather to induce the Emperor to bounty told him That it was voiced in the City and was frequent in every mans mouth how he had already received a large donative from Caesar to whom he answered Let them say what they will but donot thou Pacuvius beleeve it To another that was removed from his command and sued for a pension yet insinuating with the Emperor that it was for no covetous intent or any hope of gain but because it should be
presenting himselfe to the block it hapned on that time that he had a rich and precious garment of purple embroidered with gold of which the executioner being greedy and carefull to keep it from blood thereby to make the better sale of it he spent so much time this and that way not for the prisoners case but for his own advantage till the messengers appeared from the King and called aloud to make stay of justice by which means Bepolitanus his garment was as much beneficiall to his life as the Kings mercy and covetousnesse that hath been the destruction of many was the means of his unexpected safety The executioner in his greedinesse making good the old English Adage All covet all loose To leave circumstances and come to the matter The body of Toredorix was cast out and by the Kings edict denied all rites of buriall with a grievous penalty imposed upon any such as should contradict the Kings writ This notwithstanding dismaied not a faire Pergamaean damosell with whom Toredorix had been in familiarity to accomplish the vowed office of a lover and a friend who in the night watched the opportunity to take thence the body and bestow on it a fair interment but being taken by the souldiers in the performance of this last memorable duty and brought before the Tyrant either her beauty so much moved him or her rears so far prevailed with him as that his body was not only left freely to her dispose but to recompence her love and loialty she had a fair and competent dower allotted her out of the lands and goods of the trespasser Stratonica OF Stratonica Galatia may boast as breeding a Lady scarce marchable before her time or since in her condition she being the wife of King Deiotarus and barren and knowing how desirous her husband was to have issue from his own ●o●ns to succeed in the Kingdome sollicited him and that with great importance to select some beautifull Lady whom he best fancied and by her to raise his posterity which the King overcome with so unexpected a curtesie and therefore unwilling to wrong her bed refusing she of her own accord out of many captive virgins chused one who seemed to excell all the rest in feature and modesty and suiting her in all respects like a Princesse presented her to the King as a jewell to be received from her hand This virgins name was El●ctra by whom Deiotatarus had faire and fortunate issue to whom Stratonica was a second mother and saw them educated with as much magnificence and state as if they had been born of her body and she given them suck from her own brests Her example is memorable but since her time by few that I can read of imitated Valeria and Cloelia TArquinius Superbus being expulsed the Kingdome because his sonne Sextus had stuprated the faire Lucretia wife to Collatine to reobtaine his principality he insinuated unto his aid Porsenna King of the Tuscans These with an infinite army besieged Rome insomuch that the Citizens were not only wearied with long war but opprest with famine therefore knowing Porsenna as well in war as peace to be a Prince eminent both for justice and humanity they made choice of him to arbitrate and determine all controversies betwixt Tarquin and them This motion being offered by the Romans Tarquin refused to stand to any such comprimise not allowing Porsenna a lawfull judge in regard of their late league commenced This Porsenna not well relishing treated with the Romans about a peace conditionally that they should restore back certain lands before taken from the Etruscians and of them put him in peaceable possession and till this were performed to send him ten young men and as many virgins of the noblest families for hostage which was accordingly done and he dismist his army These virgins walking by the river side which parted Camp and City for though he had sent away the greatest part of his army he had not yet raised his Tents two of the chiefe the one Cloelia the other Valeria daughter to the Consul Publicola perswaded the rest and by perswading so far prevailed that they were all resolved to passe the River when st●ipping themselves naked and holding as well as they conveniently could their cloaths above their heads they ventured over that unknown passage full of whirlpools and whe●e there was no stedfast footing and what by wading and swimming to all mens wonders got safe to shore and presented themselves to their fathers and friends who though they admired their boldnesse and commended their resolutions yet disallowing the act it selfe as those that in their faith and honour would not be outbid by any they sent them back to King Porsenna and submitted their rashnesse to be punished at his pleasure These Virgins being presented before him he demanded of them Which she was that first animated and encouraged the rest to so rash and dangerous an enterprize When Cloelia beckning to the rest to silence took all the injury contempt or whatsoever they pleased to call it upon her selfe protesting the rest innocent and she of what would be objected the sole author Porsenna observing and withall admiring her undanted courage caused presently a horse furnished with trappings to be brought which he gave to Cloelia in recompence of her magnanimous attempt sending them all in his regall curtesie back to their friends and parents Upon this horse given to Cloelia by Porsenna some have grounded that she first past the river on horseback sounding the way for the rest which others denie only that the King thought to gratifie her manly courage with the meed of a souldier Her statue on horseback is erected in Via sacra this some confer upon Cloelia others on Valeria Olympias ALexander having caused himselfe to be called the son of Jupiter writ to his mother in this manner King Alexander the son of Jupiter Hamon to his mother Olympias sends health to whom with great modesty she thus rescribed Dear son as you love me instead of doing me honour proclaim not my dishonour neither accuse me before Juno besides it is a great as persion you cast upon me to make me a strumpet though to Jupiter himselfe A great moderation in a woman who for no swelling title or vaine oftentation could be won to lose the honour to be called a loyall and chast wise Troades AMongst those frighted Trojans that fled from the fearfull ruines of subverted Troy some by the violence of outragious tempests were driven upon the coasts of Italy where landing at certain Ports neer to the river Tygris they made up into the Countrie the better to acquaint themselves with the conditions of those places In which interim the women began to apprehend that they had better far to take up an abiding place in any land then again to commit themselves to the mercilesse furie of the seas Wherefore with one joint consent they agreed to make that their fixed habitation seeing all hope of
her Let me alone the tenement is mine own and I may lie where I list so long as I pay rent for the house Some few nights after comming home in the like tune and sitting asleep in a chair before the chimnie his wife being gone to bed presently the man fals into the fire the maid cries out to her Mistresse O mistresse my Master is falne and lies in the fire even in the midst of all the fi●e she lay still and turning her on the other side said so long as he paies rent for the house he may lie where he please But to more serious businesse for I have done sporting Of English Viragoes And of Joan de Pucil OF Guendoline the wife of King Locrine and daughter to Corinaeus Cuke of Cornwall I shall take more occasion to speak more at large in the discourse of the beautifull Estreld Elphleda was sister to King Edward before the conquest sirnam'd the fourth she was wife to Etheldredus Duke of Mercia who assisted her husband in the restoring of the City of Chester after it had been destroied and demolished by the Danes encompassing it with new wals he was Generall to the King in all his expeditions against the Danes in the last battell that he fought against them at a place called Toten Hall in Stafforshire he gave them a mighty overthrow but a greater at Wooddensfield where were slain two Kings two Earls and of the souldiers many thousands which were of the Danes of Nothumberland In this battel were the King and Elphleda both present Soon after this victory Etheldredus died and she governed many years after him in all Mercia or middle England except the two Cities of London and Oxford which the King her brother reserved to himselfe She builded many Cities and Towns and repaired others as Thatarn Brimsbury the B●idge upon S●vern Tamworth Liechfield Stafford Warwick Shrewsbury Watrisbury Edisbury in the Forrest besides Chester which is since utterly defaeced and destroied Also she built a Cily and a Castle in the North part of Mercia which then was called Runcofan and after Runcorn Thus far Ranulphus William de regib with others give her this noble Character This Lady having once assaid the throwes of childbirth would never after be drawn to have any carnall society with her husband alledging that it was not sitting or seemly for a woman of her degree being a Princesse a Kings daughter and a Kings sister to 〈◊〉 selfe to such wanton embraces whereof should 〈◊〉 so great pain and sorrow She tamed the Welchmen and in many conflict chased the Danes after whose death the King took the province of Mercia intirely into his own hand 〈◊〉 her daughter Elswina whom he led with him into West-Saxon Henricus lib. 5. hath left this Epitaph as a memoriall over her Tomb Oh Elphlede mighty both in strength and mind The dread of men and victoresse of thy kind Nature hath done as much as nature can To make thee maid but goodnesse makes the man Yet pity thou shouldst change ought save thy name Thou art so good a woman and thy same In that growes greater and more worthy when Thy seminine valour much out shineth men G●eat Caesars acts thy noble deeds excell So sleep in peace Virago maid farewell Muc● to this purpose hath Trevisa expressed these verses in old English Maud the daughter of Henry the fourth Emperour of that name after the death of her husband she bore the title of Maud the Empresse her father in his life time swore all the nobility to her succession but he being dead many fell from their oaths of Alleagiance adhering to Stephen Earl of Bullein who by the sisters side was Nephew to the deceased King He notwithstanding he had before sworn to her homage caused himselfe to be crowned at London upon St Stephens day by William Archbishop of Canturbury one that had before past his Oath of Alleapiance to the Empress Much combustion there was in England in those daies betwixt Maud and Stephen and many battel 's fought in which the successe was doubtfull the victory sometimes inclining to the one and again to the other the circumstances rather would become a large Chronicle then a short tractate I will therefore come to that which sorts best with my present purpose This Lady took the King in battell and kept him prisoner at Bristoll from Candlemas day to Holyrood day in harvest for which victory the people came against her with procession which was approved by the Popes legate From Bristol she came to Winchester thence to Wilton to Oxford to Reding and St Albans all the people acknowledging her their Queen and soveraign excepting the Kentish men only she came thence to London to settle the estate of the Land whither came King Stephen for her husbands delivery upon condition that Stephen should surrender the Kingdome up entirely into her hands and betake himselfe ever after to a sequestred and religious life But to this motion the Empresse would by no means assent the Citizens likewise intreated her that they might use the favourable lawes of S Edward and not those strict and severe Statutes and Ordinances devised and established by King Henry her father neither to this would the bold spirited Lady agree For which the people began to withdraw their affections from her and purposed to have surprized her of which she having notice left all her houshold provision and furniture and secretly conveied her selfe to Oxford where she attended her forces who were by this time dispersed and divided But taking with her her Uncle David King of the Scots she came before Winchester laying a strong siege to the Bishops Tower which was defended by the brother of King Stephen But now observe another another female warrior The wife of the imprisoned King being denied his freedome now takes both spirit and arms and associated with one William Iperus came with such a thundring terror to raise the siege that the hardy Empresse to give way to her pre●ent ●ury was from strength forced to s●e to stratagem for finding her powers too weak to withstand the incensed Queen she counterseited her selfe dead and as a Corse caused her body to be conveied to the City of Glocester and by this means escaped But Robert her brother was there taken prisoner and committed to safe custody Then the Queen emploied her selfe on the one part for the release of her husband and the Empresse on the other for the enfranchisement of her brother at length after long debating of the businesse it was determined by the mediators on both sides that Stephen should be restored to the Kingdome and Duke Robert to his Lordship and Earldome and both as they had disturbed the peace of the Land so now to establish it To this the Earl would not assent so that all that year there was nothing but spoile man-slaughter direptions and all manner of violence robbing of the rich and oppressing of
they proposed unto us honest rules and examples among which this was one That every man should have inspection into his own and guide himselfe by that compasse I verily beleeve she is matchlesse above all other women and deservedly to merit that character you have given her but withall I beseech you that you will not perswade me to any thing which is not lawfull At these words the King seemed to be displeased and repli'd Be confident O Gyg●s and neither distrust me in so perswading thee nor my wife who is altogether ignorant of what I intend since from neither of us any damage or detriment no not so much as the least displeasure can arise for first I have devised that she shall not know nor once suspect that thou hast beheld her for I will order it that thou shalt be secretly conveied into the chamber and unseen behold every passage of her making unready and comming to bed Now when thou hast freely surveied her in every part and lineament and spiest her back towards thee convey thy selfe out of the room only in this be carefull that at thy removing she cast no eie upon thee This done the next morning give me thy free and true censure Gyges that could by no means avoid his importunity was prepared against the time The King according to his accustomed hour conveys himselfe into his chamb●● and so to bed the Queen soon after entring ●●poils her selfe of all her 〈◊〉 and ornaments even to her 〈◊〉 all which Gyges was spectator of who no soner spied her back 〈◊〉 to go towards bed but Gyges slips from the place where he was hid which was not so cu●●ingly done ●ut he 〈◊〉 espied by the Queen she demanding the reason of it from her husband and ne certifying the truth but 〈◊〉 what modesty he could excusing it she neither seemed to be angry nor a ●rogether well pleased but in her silence meditated revenge for amongst the Lydians and almost all those barborous nations it is held great incivility and immodesty to behold a man much more a woman naked The next morning by such servants as she best trusted she caused Gyges to be sent for who misdoubting nothing that had past as one that had many times free accesse unto her instantly came she causing her servants to withdraw themselves thus bespake him Two waies are proposed thee O Gyges and one of them instantly and without least premeditation to make choise of Either thou must kill Candaules and that done be possessed of me and with me the Crown of Lydia or instantly die for thy doom is already determined of because thou shalt know that in all things it is not convenient to obey the King or search into that which thou oughtest not to know There is now a necessity that either he that counselled thee to this must perish or thou that obeiedst him against all Law or Justice to behold me against reason or modesty naked Gyges at these words was first wondrously amazed but after recollecting himselfe entreated her not to compell him to so hard an exigent as to the choice of either But finding that necessity that he must be forced to one or the other to kill the King or to be slain by others he rather made choice to survive and let the other perish and thus answered her Since generous Lady you urge me to an enterprize so much opposite to my milder nature and disposition propose some safe course how this may de done Even saith she in the selfe-same place where he devised this mischiefe against himselfe namely his bed-chamber where to thee I was first discovered Therefore providing all things necessary for so determinate a purpose and the night comming on Gyges who knew no evasion but to kill his master or die himselfe awaited his best advantage and having notice when Candaules was asleep followed the Queen into her chamber and with a Ponyard by her provided for the purpose stabbed him to the heart by which he attained both the Queen and Kingdome Of this history Archilochus Parius makes mention in his Iambicks who lived about the same time affirming that Gyges was by the Oracle of Delphos confirmed in the Kingdome after the faction of the Heraclides had opposed his soveraignty Rowan and Estrilda ROwan was a maid of wonderfull beauty and pleasantnesse daughter to Hengest a Captain of the Saxons Of this Lady Vortiger then King grew so enamoured that for her sake he was divorced from his wife by whom he had three sons for which deed the greatest part of the Brittains forsook him therefore he by the instigation of Rowan still caused more and more Saxons to be sent for under pretence to keep the Land in subjection But the Brittains considering the daily repair of the Saxons came to the King and told him the danger that might ensue entreating him whilst it was yet time and to prevent a future miserie to expell them the Land But all in vain for Vortiger was so besotted in the beauty of his fair wife by whose counsell he was altogether swaied that he would in no wife listen to the counsell of his subjects Wherefore they with one united consent deprived him of his Crown and dignity making Vortimerus his eldest son King in his stead Who was no sooner Crowned but with all expedition he raised an army and pursued the Saxons and in four main battels besides conflicts and skirmishes became victorious over them The Saxons and their insolencies thus supprest and the King now governing the Land in peace after he had reigned seven years was by this Rowan in revenge of the disgrace done to her King deposed and her Countrimen disgraced most trecherously poisoned Locrin the eldest son of Brute chased the Huns which invaded the realm of England and so hotly pursued the●● that many of them with their King were drowned in a river which parteth England and Scotland and after the name of the King of the Huns who there perished the river is to this day called Humber This King Locrin had to wife Guendoline a daughter of Corineus Duke of Cornwall by whom he had a son called Madan He kept also a Paramour called the beautifull Lady Estrilda by whom he had a daughter called Sabrina Locrine after the death of Corineus of whom he stood in awe divorced himselfe from his lawfull wife and took to his embraces his fair concubine moved with this injury Guendoline retired her self into Cornwall where she gathered a great power fought with her husband slew him in battell and after caused him to be buried in Troy-novant That done she caused the fair Estrilda with her daughter Sabrina to be drowned in a river that which parts England and Wales which still bears the name of the young Virgin and is called Severn These her designs accomplished for so much as Madan her young son was but in his pupillage and not of capacity or age to govern the Land by the
common sofferage of all the Brittains she was made Protectoresse and Lady Regent of the King which to the comfort of the Subjects and the weal of the Kingdome she dis●r●●tly governed for the space of fifteen years and therefore her memory might fitly hath been ranked amongst the most illustrious women Her son comming to age and years of discretion she to him resigned the S●epter The faire Lady of Norwich AND now because we traffick altogether with history it shall not be amisse sometimes to mingle Ser●a Jocis as shall appear by this discourse which I have often heard related A Knight both of fame and memory and whose name is still upon record being eminent and of note with Henry the fift as personally with him in all the wars in France after the King had both conquered and quiered the Land this noble Englishman retired himselfe into his Country He had a Lady that was of such beauty that she attracted the eies of all beholders with no common admiration in briefe I cannot speak of her feature sufficiently as being far beyond the compasse of my pen and therefore I put her into the number of my Fair ones This Lady with her husband residing in the City of Norwich He after so many troubles and torments purposed a more sequestred life and next the solace he had in the beauty and vertues of his wife to take a course meerly contemplative and thought out of the abundance of his wealth to do some pious deeds for the good of his soul he therefore erected in the City and neer to the place where his house stood a goodly Church at his own charge and betwixt them a Religious house that entertained twelve Friers and an Abbot allowing them demeans competent for so small a brother-hood In this covent there were two Frier John and Frier Richard these were still at continuall enmity and especiall notice taken of it among the rest which by no mediation could be truly reconciled but omitting that it was the custome of the Knight and his Lady daily to rise to morning Mattins and she being affable and courteous to all it bred a strange incivil boldnesse in Frier John for she never came through the Cloister but he was still with ducks and cringes attending her which she suspecting nothing simply with modest smiles returned thanks to him again which grew so palpable in the Frier that as farre as they durst it was whispered in the covent Briefly after these encouragements as he construed them it bred in him that impudency that he presumed to write a letter to her in which he laid open a great deal of more then necessary love This letter with great difficulty came to her hand at which the Lady astonished as not dreaming that such lewdnesse should come from one that professed chastity and not knowing whether it might be a trick complotted by her husband to make triall of her chastity howsoever lest her honour should be any way called in question she thought it the best and safest course to shew the letter to her husband of which he had no sooner took a view but he began to repent him of his former charity in regard of their so great ingratitude But there yet wants revenge for so great a wrong the Knight concealing his ●age causes an answer of this letter to be drawn to which he commanded her to set to her hand the contents to this effect That she was greatly compassionate of his Love and that such a night her husband being to ride towards London he should be admitted lodged and entertained according to his own desires This letter was sealed closely sent received by the Frier with joy unspeakable against the night he provides him clean linnen a perfumed night-cop and other necessaries he keeps the time observes the place is closely admitted and by her selfe without witnesse and so conveied him into a close chamber Which he was no sooner entred but in comes the Knight with his man and in great fury without giving him the least time either to call for help to the house or to heaven strangled the poor Frier and left him dead upon the ground The deed was no sooner done and his rage somewhat appeased but he began to enter into consideration of the foulnesse of the fact and heinousnesse of the murder withall the strict penalty of the law due for such an offence which would be no lesse then forfeiture of life and estate and now he begins better to ponder with himselfe how to prevent the last which may give him further leasure to repent the first After divers and sundry projects cast betwixt him and his man it came into his mind by some means or other to have his body conveied back into the Monastery which being divided from his house only with a brick wall might be done without any great difficulty this was no sooner motioned but instantly his man remembers him of a ladder in the back-yard fit for the purpose briefly they both lay hand to the body and the man with the Frier on his back mounts the ladder and sits with him astride upon the wall then drawing up the ladder to the contrary side descends with him down into the Monastery where spying the house of office he set him upon the same as upright as he could there leaves him and conveies himselfe again over the wall but for hast to getting the ladder and so delivers to his master how and where he had bestowed the Frier at which being better com●orted they betook themselves both to their rest All this being concealed as well from the L●dy as the rest or the ho●shold who were in their depth of sleep It hapned at the same instant that 〈◊〉 R●chard being much troubled with a loosnesse in his body had occasion to rise in the night and being somewhat hastily and unhandsomely taken makes what speed he can to the house of office but by the light of the Moon discerning some one before him whilst he could and was able he conteined himselfe but finding there was no remedy he first called and then in ●eated to come away but hearing no body answer he imagin'd it to be done on purpose the rather because approaching the place somewhat neerer he might plainly perceive it was Frier John his old adversary who the louder he called he seemed the lesse to listen I loath he was to play the sloven in the yard the rather because the whole covent had taken notice of a cold he had late go● and how it then wrought with him therefore thinking this counterfeit deasnesse to be done of purpose and spight to make him ashamed of himselfe he snatcht up a brick-bat to be revenged and hitting his adversary full upon the brest down tumbles Frier John without life or motion which he seeing thought at first to raise him up but after many proofs finding him to be stone dead verily beleeves that he had slain him What shall he now do The