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THE EXEQUY.

ACCEPT thou Shrine of My dead Saint

Infteed of dirges this complaint;

And for sweet flowres to crown thy hearse,
Receive a strew of weeping verse

From thy griev'd friend, whom thou might'ft fee
Quite melted into tears for thee.

Dear lofs! fince thy untimely fate

My task hath been to meditate

On thee, on thee: thou art the book,
The library whereon I look

Though almost blind, for thee (lov'd clay)
I languish out not live the day,

Ufing no other exercife

But what I practise with mine eyes:
By which wet glaffes I find out
How lazily Time creeps about
To one that mourns: this, onely this
My exercise and bus'ness is :
So I compute the weary houres
With fighs diffolved into show'res.

Nor wonder if my time go
thus
Backward and most preposterous;
Thou haft benighted me, thy fet,
This Eve of blackness did beget,
Who wast my day, (though overcaft
Before thou hadst thy noontide past)

And

And I remember must in tears,
Thou scarce hadft feen fo many years
As day tells houres, by thy clear Sun
My love and fortune first did run;
But thou wilt never more appear
Folded within my hemifphear,
Since both thy light and motion
Like a fled ftar is fall'n and gon,
And twixt me and my foules dear with
The earth now interpofed is,

Which such a strange eclipse doth make
As ne're was read in Almanake.

I could allow thee for a time

To darken me and my

fad clime

Were it a month, a year, or ten,
I would thy exile live till then ;
And all that space my mirth adjourn,
So thou would'st promise to return;
And putting off thy ashy shrowd
At length difperfe this forrow's cloud.
But woe is me! the longest date
Too narrow is to calculate
These empty hopes: never fhall I
Be fo much bleft as to descry

A glimpse of thee, till that day come
Which fhall the earth to cinders doome,
And a fierce feaver must calcine
The body of this world like thine,
(My little world!) that fit of fire
Once off, our bodies shall aspire
To our foules blifs: then we shall rife,
And view ourselves with cleerer eyes
In that calm region, where no night
Can hide us from each others fight.
Mean time, thou hast her Earth: much good
May my harm do thee, fince it stood

With

With Heaven's will I might not call
Her longer mine, I give thee all
My fhort-liv'd right and interest
In her, whom living I lov'd beft:
With a most free and bounteous grief,
I give thee what I could not keep.
Be kind to her, and prethee look
Thou write into thy doomf-day book
Each parcel of this Rarity

Which in thy casket fhrin'd doth ly:
See that thou make thy reck'ning streight,
And yield her back again by weight;
For thou must audit on thy truft
Each graine and atome of this dust,
As thou wilt answer Him that lent,
Not gave thee my
dear monument.

So close the ground, and 'bout her fhade
Black curtains draw, my Bride is laid.

Sleep on, my Love, in thy cold bed
Never to be difquieted!

My last good night! thou wilt not wake
Till I thy fate fhall overtake :
Till age, or grief, or sickness muk
Marry my body to that dust

It fo much loves; and fill the room
My heart keeps empty in thy tomb.
Stay for me there; I will not faile
To meet thee in that hollow yale.
And think not much of my delay;
I am already on the way,
And follow thee with all the speed
Defire can make, or forrows breed.
Each minute is a fhort degree,
And ev'ry houre a step towards thec.
At night when I betake to reft,
Next morn I rife neerer my weft

of

Of life, almost by eight houres faile,
Then when fleep breath'd his drowfie gale.
Thus from the Sun my bottom stears
And my dayes compafs downward bears:
Nor labour I to ftemme the tide
Through which to thee I swiftly glide.

'Tis true, with fhame and grief I yield, Thou like the vann first took'st the field, And gotten haft the victory

In thus adventuring to dy

Before me, whose more years might crave
A just precedence in the grave.

But heark! my pulse like a soft drum
Beats my approach, tells Thee I come;
And flow howere my marches be,
I shall at last fit down by Thee.
The thought of this bids me go on,
And wait my
diffolution

With hope and comfort, Dear (forgive
The crime) I am content to live
Divided, with but half a heart,
Till we shall meet and never part.

Dr. King's Poems; p. 57+

Of

Of my deare Sonne, GERVASE BEAUMONT,

AN I, who have for others oft compil'd

CA

The fongs of Death, forget my sweetest child,
Which like a flow'r crusht, with a blast is dead,
And ere full time hangs downe his fmiling head,
Expecting with cleare hope to live anew,
Among the Angels fed with heav'nly dew?
We have this figne of joy, that many dayes,
While on the earth his ftruggling spirit stayes,
The name of Jefus in his mouth contains

His onely food, his sleepe, his ease from paines.
may that found be rooted in my mind

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Of which in him such strong effect I find.

Deare Lord, receive my Sonne, whose winning love
To me was like a friendship, farre above
The course of nature, or his tender age,
Whofe lookes could all my bitter griefes affwage;
Let his pure foule ordain'd fev'n yeeres to be
In that fraile body, which was part of me,
Remaine my pledge in Heav'n, as fent to fhew,
How to this port at ev'ry step I goe.

Bosworth Field, with other
Poems, by Sir John Beaumont,
Lond. 1629. Ed.

The

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