ing us his unworthy servants with so gracious a Soveraigne, adding unto his royall crowne the highest tytle of majestie and earthlie dignitie; graunt, thou Most of Might, (Almightie King!) that our dread Soveraign JAMES, the first of that name of these three united kingdoms, England, France, and Ireland; and of Scotland the sixt; maye be so directed and governed by thy Almightie hand, that he may rule his several kingdoms in peace, to thy glory: raigne in tranquility Nestor's yeeres to our comfort; and, in the end, dye in thy favour, to live againe in glory with his æternized sister, divine ELIZA. Thus, not dreading your kinde acceptance of my love, I humblie take my leave. Your worship's most obsequious HENRY PETOWE." THE INDUCTION. I that obscure have wept till eyes be drye, For losse of her that now in peace doth sleep. Peace rest with her, but sorrowe with my pen, Amongst high sp'rited paragons of wit, That mount beyond our earthlie pitch to fame, Shee'l come to hand, if you but lure her to you, And if this infant of mine artlesse braine, Passe with your VOL. III. sweet applause, as some have done, E And meane good favour of the learned gaine, My Muse shall hatch such breed, when she's of yeres, The last of many, yet not the least of all, The blessed Queene of sweet eternitie. With her in heaven remaines her fame; on earth Somewhere in England shall my lines go sleep, The poem thus commences, and contains some pasthat are not wholly unpoetical. sages ELIZA'S FUNERAL. Then withered the primrose of delight, Hanging the head o're sorowe's garden wall; When you might see all pleasures shun the light, And live obscuer at Eliza's fall, Her fall from life to death; oh! stay not there, Though she were dead, the shril-tong'd trump of Heaven Rais'd her again; think that you see her heere, E'en heere, oh where? not heere, shee's hence bereaven, For sweet Eliza in elizium lives, In joy beyond all thought. Then, weepe no more, Your sighing weedes put off, for weeping gives, (Wayling her losse) as seeming to deplore Our future toward fortunes-mourne not then: Why should a soule in passion be deny'd To have true feeling of her essence misse? My soule hath lost herself, now deified, I needes must moan her losse, tho' crown'd with blisse. Then give me leave, for I must weepe awhile, Till sorrow's deluge have a lower ebbe : Let lamentation never finde a stile Το passe this dale of woe, untill the webbe, "Twill not be long before this web be spun, Dy'd blacke, worne out, and then my teares be done. Of April's month, the eight and twentith day, M. sixe hundred and three by computation, Is the prefixed time for sorowe's stay; That past-my mourning weedes grow out of fashion. Shall I by prayer hasten on the time? Faine would I so, because mine eyes are drie; Divine she is for whom my Muse doth mourne, Then come, faire day of joyfull smiling sorrow, Yee herralds of my heart, my heavie groanes, My teares which, if they could, would showre like raine; My heavie lookes, and all my surdging mones, She lives in heaven, and yet my soule laments. And with my sorrowes see the time doth wast, Gaze, greedy eye; note what thou dost beholde, As cleere as christall, and the day not olde, Yet thousand blackes present them to thy view. Three thousand and od hundred clowds appere Upon the earthly element belowe, As blacke as night trampling the lower sphere, Like clowds they were, but yet like clowded men, They vanish thence: note what was after seene- Who, like to Phoebus in his golden car, 1. Progress.] As if their Lady-mistris they did lacke, Would swear that figure were faire England's Queene. "Faire England's Queene, e'en to the life, tho' dead;" Like a sweet beauty in a harmless slumber :- At this rare sight he would have sworn and said— But that my warrant's seal'd by Truthe's one* hand, I would not say, that in this little land Pigmalion's equal doth admired dwell. Enough of that:-and now my teares are done; Whose beames soake up the moysture of all teares. A King, at whose faire crowne all glory ayms. • [own.] fi. e. resemblance, likeness.] |