THE PILGRIMAGE TO PARADISE.
FROM all those courses of a vaine conceit,
Where vertue proues, her honor hath no place,
Vnto the Sunne, of that bright shining heighte:
Where all the graces haue their highest grace,
My Muse is weande, by wisedomes sounde aduise,
To make her pilgrimage, to paradise.
Which pilgrimage, is not, as poets faine,
Nor pieuish people, blindely doe conceiue:
A kinde of walke, that worldly wealth may gaine,
VVhereby the deuill, doth the worlde deceiue:
But, tis a walke, of onely vertues will,
And to be founde, but by the spirits skill.
Now, they that must this trauaile take in hande,
Are onely fiue, ech differente in theire nature,
Which, with consent, doe all contented stand,
To yeeld theire seruice, to one onely creature:
By whom they are vnto theire comforte led:
And, as hee fares, are found, aliue or dead.
Now, lies this walke, alonge a wildernes,
A forrest, ful of wild, and cruell beastes:
The earth vntilde, the fruit, vnhappines,
The trees all hollow, full of howletes nestes,
The aier vnholsome, or so foule infected:
as,
[...]ardely restes, that may not be reiected.
But, to goe on with my intended tale,
Fiue seruants, ledde, by one chiefe lord there were:
which, all were sworne in either blisse, or bale,
Their masters fortune, faithfully to beare:
And so resolu
[...]de, to see, their seruice done,
On gods good speed their trauaile thus begonne.
The lorde and Master, first the Muses called,
And bad them stay, their straying kinde of Musing:
whose pure conceite, their spirits so apalled,
As, made them haue, their humors in refusing:
And make their state, but on that only story,
That was the grace, of their eternall glory.
Then gaue a charge to euery one, aparte,
To keepe the compasse of a true conceite:
what euery one, should haue for her desart,
That, to her hope, coulde keepe the high waie streight:
And then his seruants, soundely did aduise,
How they shoulde finde the path to paradise.
The first, his charge, was onely, but to see,
what best might please, & what might worst offend:
what obiects might but all as abiects be,
what harme to scape, what honour to attende:
A farre, neare hand, each side, before, behinde,
How best to guide a pure, and perfect minde.
The seconde calde, his charge was but to heare,
In sweetest sounds, which was the soundest sweete:
what graces might, in Musickes grounde appeare,
And where the honors of the humors mee
[...]e:
what carefull notes, doe comfort best conclude,
while Sitens songes, doe but the soule delude.
The third then calde, was charg'd to take the sent,
Of euery flower and herbe, within the fielde:
which might but grow, whereas their graces went,
what sauoure might, the sweetest profit yeelde:
And what might hurt, least that the braine displeased,
The body might perhaps be all diseased.
The fourth then calde, did take his charge, to tast,
Of euery fruite, that should become their foode:
what beast might nourish, and might sweetest last,
And, in their trauaile most might doe them good:
How sweete with sower, might best be tempred so,
As, tone, the tother might not well forgoe.
Then came the fifte who tooke his charge to feele,
The grauelde causey from the hollow grounde:
How best the toe, might trust vnto the heele,
when settled faith had surest footing sounde:
And so by leasure finde, where sweetely lies,
The louely path, that leades to paradise.
When thus ech one, had learned what to doe,
Instructed by the guide vnto their grace:
Weying the worth, they were, to walke vnto,
Wishing, & longing, to beholde the place.
Onwards they passe, but with two poore attendauntes,
And, (on the earth) but with two poore defendauntes.
Their cariage was, but an vnwildy trunke,
Wherein to neare their trash, was laied their treasure,
With weight whereof, their shoulders often thruncke,
Before they came, vnto their place of pleasure,
But let that passe, vntill the time be cumme.
To make the reckening of a Roial summe.
But, to goe on as I did first intend,
To tell the course, of these resolued creatures,
To take a trauaile, that should neuer ende,
A note, aboue the reache of earthly natures,
Lo, thus it was, at least, as he did write,
That, seemde he winckt not, when he hit the white.
Alōg the walke, the walke, alas, to long,
Amidde the haples hils, and dolefull dales:
where sighes & sobs, doe sound but sorrows song,
while sweetest truthes are crost by sorie tales:
And darkest cloudes, are clapt before the sunne,
This wary creatures, haue their waie begunne.
A path vnpleasant where no pleasure was,
That earthly people easely might perceiue:
A passage harde, and narrow for to passe,
But for the life, that of his life tooke leaue:
To passe the lake where death, & sorrow lies,
And kill them both, to come to paradise.
Wherein, no sooner, were they all set forth,
with resolution, neuer to returne:
There did appeare a light of little worth,
A mocking loie, whose end was but to morne:
Vpon the left hand, of this selly creature,
Venus, faire painted, with her finest feature.
Who, wanting nothing, that might wel adorne,
A cunning dame, to compasse her desire:
with looke askaunce, as if shee had in scorne,
A meaner hope, them might a heauen aspire:
with straunge deuises of a world of toies,
would stoppe his passage to his further loies.
And vp shee standes a tipto, in her state,
As, if the earth, too base were for her feete:
with such a glaunce, as if shee had in hate,
That lesse, then Monarches, should her presence meete:
when, with such smiles, so neare this walke she went,
As made them wonder what the vision ment.
When he, that first had taken charge to view,
What might their trauaile hinder or auaile:
Finding, that in his sight a dimnes grew,
whereby the cleerenes of his sence might faile:
Feeling the humor, grow vnto an Itche,
Beganne to feare the wonder was a witch.
VVhen of the sodaine, holding vp his hande,
Betwixte his sight, and this same perlous thing:
Hauing no leasure, on his thoughtes to stande,
what issue would, of this, ill humor spring:
wente on alonge and kepte his walke aright,
Vntill this vision vanisht out of sight.
VVhen, on the right hand fourthwith did appeare,
Diana, shee, of whom the poets writ:
A dame of state, yet with such smiling cheere,
As shewd, where kindenes, did with honor sit:
who, with her nimphes, appareld all in white,
Did seeme to pure an obiect for his sight.
VVhen fearing, that the poets did not faine,
That did set forth Diana for diuine:
when in her Beauty was so bright a vaine,
As, seemde, that Phoebus on her face did shine:
Betwixt his sight, and this conceiued sunne,
Helde vp his hande, ere any hurte was donne.
And thus betwixt first Venus, then Diane,
Onwardes he goes, his right intended way,
And noting well what he had vndertane,
And, that a stoppe might cause to longe a staie,
Keeping the path, looking on neither side,
He followes on his best beloued guide.
When, walking on, his hoped happy way,
Vpon the left hande rose a sodaine sounde,
which might haue beene a most vnhappy staie,
But, that a sodaine remedy was found,
For he that knew her Musicke was a charme,
His hearing stopt, for feare of further harme.
And, this was he that had the charge to heare,
And harken soundly to each secret sounde.
what noise might not by any meanes cum neare,
And where the Muses, soone woulde be a ground,
who hauing heard but how her harpe was stronge,
would not vouchsafe the hearing of her songe.
But, when shee saw how hardly shee was vsed,
Her Beauty first barde from the walke of blisse,
And then her Musicke so in skorne refused,
As idle noise, wherein no honor is,
Awaie shee went all angry as shee was,
And left the poore man, o
[...] his waie to passe.
When, one the right hand of the sodeine rose,
An other sound, but of a deeper sweete,
Where sure Diana, with her Nimphes had chose,
The ground of grace where all the Muses meete,
To shew the world the heauenly harmony,
VVhere Nightingales, doe make a company.
VVhen hee that heard the sweetnes of the sound,
Fearing what hurt might quickly growe vpon it,
If once his Muse, vnhapply might be drownde,
In worldes delight, ere, wit had ouergonne it.
The hearing stopt, of his vnworthy sence:
Of such a sound, of such an excellence.
But when Diana plainly gan to find,
That, one of all the world had warning tooke?
For comming neere vnto Acteons kinde,
And that her siluer sound was so forsooke,
Away shee went, but yet, with this sweet blessing,
Vertue is plac'd where pride may not be pressing.
VVhen these were gon, that might haue stopt
[...] his waie,
Had he not kepte the course of better care,
A new devise, againe to breede his staie,
Came Flora forth, with all his fairest ware,
Laying abroad the ward
[...]ope of her wealth,
Her fairest flowers, and
[...]ittest herbes for health.
But he that had the charge to take the sente,
Of euery sauoure, both the sower and sweete,
Knowing what best might comforte, or contente,
How, weedes were all, to tread but vnder feete,
The ho
[...]some sauoure to his seruice vsed,
And faire flourd weedes, as poison foule refused.
But when that Flora, saw her great disgrace:
VVithered with griefe, she shrunke into the ground,
And, (as it seemed) displeased with the place,
For that, so little fauour their she found,
She lets him goe, vntill anone he met,
An other Lady, with another let.
And this was she, of whom the Poets writ,
Ceres the Princes of the Pesaunts treasure,
VVho, both fortast, and eke for hunger fit,
Did onely worke, but for the bellies pleasure,
VVho, with a cornu copia, sweetely dight:
would staie the spirit, with the flesh delight.
But he that had the charge, to take a tast:
Of every fruit, whereon, they were to feede,
what soone would rot, and what would longest last,
And what would proue, the sweetest foode indeede.
Vpon his lippe his little finger plas't:
As if her gift were vtterly disgras't.
Not, that the present seemed of no price,
But, that their comforts were of other kinde:
And that, (God wot) it was a base deuise,
with belly pleasures to abuse the minde:
which Ceres seeing, parted in a rage,
And left the pilgrime, to his pilgrimage.
Which, selly creature, softly going on,
Encountred with more crosses, then before:
A world of fooles, and deuils many a one.
In shape of men, in shape, and somewhat more:
which labourd sore, to make some stoppe, or stay,
To hinder loue, in hitting vertues waie.
But, he, whose charge, was charily to feele,
what grounde was best to grounde his footing on:
spurnde with his toe, and kickt of with his heele,
Their stumbling stones, till all the stops were gone:
which, when they saw, his blisse they could not balke,
They tanne away, and left him to his walke.
By which good howre, when heauens had happly tried,
How constant care, his passage, truely past:
And in the harte, no vile desire did bide,
while patient will, was with discretion plac't:
They rockt the rules, of natures sence asleepe,
while Angels songs, the soule did waking keepe.
But, waking wit, that had no will to rest,
Till ioie might come, vnto her iourneies sende:
And that the spirit, was not fully blest,
Till humble faith, might see her heauenly friende:
Awakte this pilgrime, from his pensiue vaine,
And set him sweetely on his waie againe.
When, passing on, they fell into a wood,
A thicket full, of brambles, thornes, and briers:
A graceles groue, that neuer did man good,
But wretched sendinges of the worldes desires:
where Snakes, and Adders, & such venu
[...]d things,
Had slaine a number, with their cruell stinges.
Some, Metamorphosde, like Acteon, were,
Diana smiling at their lewde desires:
Some, Semitawres, and some, more halfe a Beare,
Other halfe swine, deepe wallowing in the miers:
All beastly mindes, that could not be reformed,
were to the shapes of their owne shame transformed.
There might he see, a Monky with an Ape,
Climing a tree, and cracking of a Nut:
One sparrow teache an other how to gape,
But, not a tame one, taught to keepe the cut:
And many a lacke daw, in, his foolish chat,
while parets prated of they knew not what.
[...]
But, when shee saw, humilities affection,
wonne from the world to seeke for heauenly fauour,
And that the soule, by wisdome▪
[...]ound direction,
In sacred flowers, should finde the sweetest sauour,
Shee raisde him vp, and badde him there receiue,
The true delightes, should not the soule deceiue.
When lifted vp, by that faire hande of loue,
That brought the hart an vnknowen happines,
And euery seruant, sweetly did approue,
A blessing in their Masters blessednes,
with silent thoughtes, they humbly did attende,
The words, that did their comfort comprehende.
Poore wretch quod shee, thy faithfull patient hart,
the highest powers in pitty doe regarde:
where true repentance pleades for no desart,
But, bounties grace, where mercy giues rewarde:
The heauens haue harde, thy humble happy praier,
To helpe thy hope, and keepe thee from despaire▪
The labour, that thy loue hath tane in hande,
Thy trauaile, minding, neuer to retire:
The happy staie, whereon thy hope doth stande,
where humble praier, but pitty doth aspire:
Haue got thee grace in mercies glorious eies,
To finde the path that leades to paradise.
This is the
[...], that patience onely treades,
where life doth goe on pilgrimage to loue:
whose humble hart, the holy spirite leades,
vnto the height of blessed hopes behoue:
whom graces garde, till perils al be past,
And faith resolu'de, doe finde her rest at last.
Since thou hast scapte the vaunt of Venus vaine,
And not presumde Diana to approch:
Since Flora coulde no further fauour gaine,
Nor Ceres coulde thy carefull thought encroch:
Since fooles, and deuils, all are driuen awaie,
Bide but a night, and thou shalt see the daie.
Since thou hast scapte the way of wretchednes,
where shameles mindes to shamefull shapes are turned▪
And founde the waie of fairest blessednes,
where hart enflamde, with vertues fire hath burned:
Keepe on the path, and turne on neither side,
Grace to thy hope will be a happy guide.
Thinke it not longe, to cumme to heauen at last,
Nor linger time to hinder happy speede:
Feare not the sunne, though skies be ouercast,
And let a candell stande the night in steede,
So marke the light, that liues in vertues eies,
And loue shall leade thee straight to paradise.
Feare not the foes, nor forces thou shalt meete,
For thou shalt meete with monsters, many a one:
But faith resolu'de treds fortune vnder feete,
where vertue comes, will vices all be gone:
Hell cannot hurt, whom heauenly powers defend,
where grace begins▪ hope makes a happy end.
Lo neere at hand, he that would hurt thee most:
An ougly Monster, full af all corruption:
By whose illusion, many soules haue lost,
Their liuely hopes, by lowdenes interruption.
A Lier, Theife, and master of all evill,
The sier of sinne, the fiend
[...] of hell, the deuill.
Seauen are his heades, as many are his tailes,
Ec
[...] head a tongue and every taile a sting,
And woe to them, with whom his tongues prevailes,
within the compase of his tails to bringe.
But skorne his wordes, or quite him with disgrace,
and thou shalt kill, or make him fly the place.
His body is the very sinke of sinne,
Into which hole, all hellish filth doth runne.
A plague of pride, presumption did beginne,
An endles plague, that was in pride begunne,
where every head the body standes in steed,
with poisoned soules, the filthy paunch to feede.
His swordes, are wordes, with which he is to fight,
whose forces can but faithles hartes offende,
For, if hee looke, but once at vertues light,
He faintes for feare, and feeles his forces ende,
But heare him speake, and neuer feare his spight,
when vertue laughes at vanities delight.
His greatest head, and that doth gape most wide,
Is proude Ambition, swallowing worldly wealth:
which faithles soules, infectes, with filthy pride,
Killing the spirit, for the bodies health:
Vpon which head, he beares a triple crowne,
That, (Vertue sees) is neere his tumbling downe.
In which great head, his tongue is all vntruth,
Lies, to bewitch the worlde vnto his will:
The ease of Age, and high conceit of youth:
are greatest groundes of his vngratious skil:
To gouerne states, is such a stately thinge:
what slaue is he, that would not be a king?
And thus the villaine, would the world perswade,
To prowde attemptes that may presume to high,
But earthly ioies, wil make him proue a
[...]ade,
when vertue speakes of loues diuinity:
where humble hart, doth to that heauen aspire,
where is no place for any proude desire.
The seconde heade, is wicked avarice,
Choking it selfe, with trash, in steade of treasure:
whose tongue, is treason that can best deuise,
To hurte the spirite, with the bodies pleasure:
But talke of vertues ioie in Misery,
And he wil pine to death in penury.
The thirde foule head, is filthy Gluttony,
Deuouring more, then it can well disgest:
Leading the harte, to loathsome villany,
And of a man doth make an ougly beaste:
But, answere him with fasting, and with praier,
The very wordes, will kill him with their aier.
The fourth bad head, is beastly slothfulnes,
Sleeping, and snorting, like a filthy swine:
Loosing the time in loathsome Idlenes,
Dreaming, of that, which neuer was diuine:
But answere him, with vertues carefull watching,
He faintes, and falls, to finde his ouermatching.
The fifte vile heade, is filthy lechery,
which leades the hart, to hateful wickednes:
His tongue, a forge of fancies treachery,
To bring the soule, to all vnhappines:
But, answere him, with vertues chaste desire,
And, he will bite his very taile for ire.
The sixte is enuy full of malice fraught,
Feeding on Snakes, that faine would vertue stinge:
which, where they finde their forces come to nought,
Into his mouth, they backe their poison bring:
But say how patience, leades to paradise,
He frets, and fumes, and in impatience dies.
The seuenth is murther, most accursed head,
whose tongue is blasphemy, all dide in blood:
which, with the harts of harmeles creatures feade,
Lappes in the broath of an Infernall foode:
But, saie how vertue doth for vengeance crie,
And dead he falles, or els awaie doth flie.
Now, beare these heauenly lessons all by harte,
And take these bookes to benefite thy minde:
In each of which is hidde a secret arte,
whose proper vse, maie profite in his kinde:
But chiefly doe this holly booke peruse,
where speciall comfortes, maie thy spirit chuse.
When, hauing giuen into his humble hande,
Seuen sundry bookes, whereonto vse his wit:
And last, the staie, whereon the state did stande,
Of happy life, where heauenly loue doth sit:
The holy booke, of vertues blessed vaine,
Home shee returnes vnto her heauen againe.
Which, when the pilgrime humbly did beholde,
Carying in minde, the comforts of his hart:
which, to his faith, her fauour did vnfolde,
To keepe the soule, from an Infernall smart:
Against the fury, of this fiende of hell,
Onwardes he goes, God speede his passage well.
When, not to stand, on circumstance too long,
He meetes anon with this same monster thing:
who, by illusion, of the Sirens song,
would seeke, a worlde, in bondage how to bring.
Turning himselfe, into a thousand shapes,
To feare fond children, and to cosen Apes.
And first, he looks, like to a fiery light,
which would consume, what so did crosse his waie:
But, soone was donne, the force of his despight,
where vertue came, he had no power to staie,
And then, he would become a speaking birde,
But, God once namde, he durst not speake a worde.
And by and by, he would become a Beare,
To feare young children with a foolish noise:
But, when a man, a beast, can neuer feare,
He found it prou'de, olde children were no boies:
when, by and by, he woulde become an Ape,
Oh beastly thing, too neare a humaine shape.
But, when that vertue founde the vile effect,
Of Apish humors, with the Monckish mindes,
Shee wholy did, the vermins iestes reiect,
And forst him seeke, for shapes of other kindes:
when all his sleightes, could doe him little boote,
For, vertue knew, the deuil by his foote.
No, though into an Angell faire of light,
He coulde transforme him selfe, for to deceiue:
Yet coulde he not his foote keepe out of sight,
But, vertue coulde his filthy clawe perceiue:
So by his foote, shee plainely did descrie him,
Bidding auaunte, foule fiende, shee did defie him.
When, as the pilgrime lifting vp his eies,
To heauenly powers from hell for to defende him:
Sweete Christ once namde, awaie the Serpent flies,
And, for awhile vnable to offende him:
Til, once againe, the heauens had giuen him leaue,
To doe his worst, sweete vertue to deceiue.
When, in the shape whereof before I spake,
with his seuen heads, the wicked Serpent standes:
with such a sounde, as made the earth to shake,
As, halfe the worlde, were subiect, to his handes:
when first, his head, of pride began to speake,
And, to this pilgrime, did this poison breake.
Thou little wretch, quod he, of lesser worth,
In humaine shape I know not what to name:
whom honors spirit, neuer coulde bring forth,
To seeke the fortune of imperial fame:
How didst thou fal into this forlorne path,
wherein the worlde so little pleasure hath.
Where, see the ground of euery secret griefe,
which mortifies the body with the minde:
Subiect to euery crosse, and for reliefe,
Pitty, the whole, that thou must hope to finde:
Patience a paine set downe, life, but a death,
where care, and sorrow draw a sickely breath.
VVhere eies must be embased to the ground,
Their pleasing humors, barred to beholde:
And bended knees, to cappe, and courtzy bounde,
while bared head, must bide the bitter colde:
The minde must stoupe, the hande must loose his strength,
The hart must droupe, and life must yeelde at length.
Is this the reach, of Reasons noble wit?
To see a world, and seeke for nothing in it,
In such a chaire doth charie humor sit?
To know a worke of worth and not beginne it:
who could of power conceiue, the kingly pleasure,
would no conceit with such a comfort measure.
Humility? a iolly creeping thought,
Patience, a prety purgatory:
Sorrow, a fit, for the phisitian wrought
And death, a gentill ende of misery.
Fasting and praier, al the spirits pleasure,
Notes for a King, to looke vpon at leasure.
No, stoupe no thought, seeke only to subdue,
Set no conceit, in honor with a crowne:
In begger minde, true conquest neuer grew,
The village, is a cotage to the towne:
The Monarchy, doth shew, the noble minde,
He hath no life, that cummes of lower kinde.
VVhat slaue wil serue, that easely may commaunde?
what sence wil stoupe, that may be set alofte?
who wil desire, that needes not to demaunde?
who loues the boordes may haue his bedde made softe?
Or who regardes, the rascall beggers teares?
That may haue Musicke to contente his eares.
What poore conceit, wil begge for crūmes of bread?
May haue his table furnisht all with cates?
Or breake his hart with hammers of his head?
May passe his humors, with his pleasing mates:
Faire, wise, rich, learned, valiant, young, and olde.
Power is the hande, doth at commandement holde.
And so he stopt, but swelling with such pride,
As if his braine, woulde haue with poison burst:
To whom, the pilgrime, presently replied,
Avaunt foule fiende, and Monster most accurst:
Thou hate of heauen, and greatest hagge of hell,
what wicked tale hast thou presumde to tell.
Wretched, blasphemous spirit of presumption,
Ougly in shape, and horrible in sence,
Thou cursed substance of the souls consumption,
The heauens displeasure, and the worlds offence,
That knowst no worth, & art not worth the knowing,
Rot in thy roote, ere thou haue further growing.
Thou wicked witch, fonde fortunes first deuiser,
To bring a desperate spirit to defame,
And by illusion, first the soules surpriser,
That heares thy wordes, and wil beleeue the same,
How durst thou once presume so neere this path,
where hatefull humor, neuer passage hath.
Thou grounde of griefe, heere is the grounde of grace,
Thou foule infection, heere is fairest health,
Thou crosse of crosses, heere is comfortes place,
Thou pitties want, and heere is pitties wealth,
Thou dire impatience, dole▪ and deadly strife,
Curst be the death, that stoppes the waie of life.
Whose blinded eies, are barde all blessed light,
whose crooked knees, are crampt for crafty creeping:
whose triple crowne, in vertues humble sight,
will breake thy necke, and rest in better keeping,
whose hart subdued, by hande of heauenly strength,
Must liue in paine of neuer ending length.
Calst thou the rage of wil, the rules of wit?
Is all the world, ought els but vanitie?
who in the chaire of chaunging choise doth sit,
Knowes nothing of diuine humanity,
Nor in conceit, can comfort truly measure,
That knows, not pride, the plage of high displeasure.
Humility, high Angels happy thought,
while patience, is the deuils purgatory:
Sorrow a fit, for faithes phisitians wroughte,
while high heauens mercy, endes worldes misery,
Fasting, and praier, happines procuring,
while true repentance is but hope enduring.
Then stoupe foule pride, whom heauens did full subdue,
Know that thy crowne is cumming tumbling downe:
Vertue doth see how by Illusion grew,
The worldes disgrace, to grace thee with a crowne:
Monarch of mischiefe, such is all thy minde,
Nor hath he life, that cummes of such a kinde.
His seruice, freedome, that made thee a slaue,
His seate alofte, that makes thee lie full lowe:
His wante a welth, that sees thee nothing haue,
His boorde a bed, that makes thee watch for woe:
His almes sweete, that saues the beggers teares,
while thou hast naught, but cries to fill thine eares.
A poore conceite, that starues for lacke of crums,
And yet will tell the worlde of delicates:
who ofte for hunger feedst vpon thy thumbes,
when death and sorrowe, are thy hellish mates:
Faire, wise, riche, learned, valiant, olde, and young,
Take heede of pride, and of his poisned tongue.
And with that worde I knowe not how it fell,
But, downe the crowne, came tumbling on the grounde:
when as the head, with anger seemde to swell,
Like an Aposthume, of a poisoned wounde:
which breaking inwarde, of the sodaine shroncke,
Into the body, oh most beastly troncke.
The heade of pride thus suddainely consumde,
Or, shroncke into this filthy sincke of sinne:
The second head, foule Auarice presumde,
with wicked wordes, the miser mindes to winne:
Ah, begger, worme, and needy wretch quod he,
what dost thou thinke, that will become of thee.
Hath patience bred in thee this poore conceite,
That colde and hunger be thy harts content?
Doest thou not see, how manie thousandes waite,
In honors fielde, vpon the golden tente?
Or knowest thou not, power, wisedome, wit and pleasure,
All, haue their Essence, in the golden treasure.
What face so faire, that is not grac't in golde,
what wit of worth, but hath in golde his wonder?
what learning, but, with golden lines doth holde,
what state so high, but gold will bring him vnder?
what thought so sweete, but gold doth better season,
And what rule best, but in the golden reason.
Be lorde of landes, and cram thy chest with coine,
Feare nought but neede, mony will make a friende:
Let conscience learne, the cunning to purloine,
wit without welth, hath but a wofull ende,
The golden scepter, and the golden crowne,
Doth make the subiect on his knees come downe.
The grounde is fat, that yeeldes the golden fruite,
The study high, that hits the golden state:
The labour sweete, that gets the golden suite,
The reckning right, that makes the goldē rate:
The hap is sure, that golden hope doth holde,
And rich is gaine, that serues the god of golde,
And with that worde the wicked thing did cease,
when presently the pilgrime thus replied:
Oh cursed cancker, crosse of conscience peace,
whose hatefull harte, doth all ill humors hide:
Thou kindling cole of an Internall fire,
Die in the ashes, of thy dead desire.
Impatient spirite liuing all by spoile,
Drunke like the dropsy, and yet euer drye:
Consumde with care, and tired out with toyle,
Seeminge to liue, and yet dost ever die,
How du
[...]st thou so the name of god blaspheme,
To giue to drosse so great a Diademe.
Thou stone-colde hart, with hungri
[...]g after coine,
My care in heauen, doth seeke my hartes content,
Thou scrapst for pelfe, I seeke not to purloine,
In vertues field, I seeke but mercies tent,
When wisdome, findes, in power of highest pleasure,
The world, al trash, compard to heauenly treasure.
Fowle is the faire that hath her gold in grace,
worthines the wit, that hath in wealth his wonder:
vnlearned liues, put gold in honors place,
wicked the state, that will to coine cume vnder:
Base the conceite, that seasonde is with golde,
And begger, rules, that such a reason holde.
Thou plodst for landes, I seeke a liuing place,
Thou fearste but neede, I, mony make no fri
[...]de:
Thy conscience, cunning, and my care is grace,
Thy wits welth, wo, my harts wish, heauen at ende:
Thy golde is drosse, and vertue is my crowne,
where hartes submission, puls ambition downe.
Earth giues thee golde, heauens giue me higher grace,
Men study wealth, but Angels wisedomes state:
Laboure seekes pence, loue hath a higher place,
Death makes thy reckening, life is all my rate:
Thy happe is hell, my hope of heauen doth holde,
God giue me grace, die deuill with thy golde.
And with that worde, the head beganne to shrincke,
The face dead pale, and hollow grew the eies:
And so, at laste, did all, and wholy sincke,
Into that hell, that heade of Auarice:
when vp did start the heade of Gluttonie,
Vomiting out theese wordes of villany.
Poore
[...] begger, whereon dost thou feede,
well fare the mouth, that feedes the belly full▪
what staruing humor, standes thy wit insteede,
The want of victuaile, makes the body dull▪
I finde it true no triumph to a feast,
the belly full the bones will be at rest.
Some feede their eies withstaring on the starres,
And starue the body to content the minde:
Some with their wittes will be so long at warres,
They grate on crusts, when other men haue dinde,
But let the franticke so their humor please,
Giue me the life, of meate, and drinke and ease.
VVhen that the earth, doth giue vs pleasing foode,
what reason is it nature shoulde refuse it:
If reason finde, what wil doe nature good,
what bootes to haue it, if we doe not vse it:
Then let me feede, while I haue power to eat,
The mouth was made to giue the body meat.
Oh, when the tongue is pleased with a tast,
The stomacke feeds, vntil the hart do laugh,
And then a cuppe with a carowsing cast,
And then a health out of a frindely quaffe:
Then workes the braine in such a blessed wise,
As if the body were in paradise.
VVhen thinking more to speake, his mouth ranne ouer,
with beastly humors, loathsome to beholde,
And in such sort, as he coulde not recouer,
Till that he did, his filthy sence vnfolde,
when stopping so, the pilgrime gan replie,
Die ougly venum in thy villany.
Thou filthy, fat, and ouerfoggy flesh,
Foule bagpipe-cheekes, eies starting from the head,
whom heauenly humors neuer can refresh,
That all in hel, hast made thy hateful bedde,
Heauens let me fast, from such a loathsome feast,
where to much feeding makes a man a beast.
Earth fill thine eies, heauens feede my humble hart,
Drosse fil thy belly, Grace content my minde,
Of worldly lunckets take thy pleasing part,
Grace, giue my soule, one crum, & I haue dinde,
So with thy frensies, doe thy fansie please,
Heauens be my rest, whom earth can neuer ease.
Earth feedes of earth, heauens giue the spirit foode,
Nature corrupted lost the key of reason,
The body knowes not of the spirits good,
Vse is abuse, where truth is
[...]aust with treason,
Then role, and tumble in thy beastly
[...]iot,
The dish of mercy, be my spirits diet.
Oh, when the tongue is toucht with cruel fire,
The stomacke feedes, of an infernal flame,
A cuppe of coles to quench a foule desire,
A cureles hatt, consuming in the same:
Then workes the spirit with such woful cries,
As, proues in hel, was neuer paradise.
When, this same filthy hedde of Glotony,
Beastly bedight with his abhorred diet:
Choked with venum of such villany,
As, breedes the ground of natures most disquiet▪
Soncke backe into the belly of the beast,
which, of such spirites, made his speciall feast.
When started vp the head of slouthfulnes,
with ougly clawes picking his gummy eies:
who with the noddes of natures he uines,
Did in few wordes, this filthy speech deuise,
what humor, wretch, doth thee so waking keepe,
That thou canst feede vpon so little sleepe.
Sleepe is the pride of ease, the height of pleasure,
The Nurse of nature, and the rule of rest:
The thoughtes attonement, and the sences treasure,
The bedde of loue, that likes the body best:
Against vnrest the only remedy,
And onely medicine to ech mallady.
And, therewithall vnwilling more to speake,
Such heauy qualmes his harte had ouercome:
with stretching yawnes, as if his Iawes would breake,
Hee stopt his speech, as wholy stroken dumme:
when, nodding of his heade from side to side,
To his deafe eares, the pilgrime thus replied.
Thou cursed serpent, grounde of al disgrace,
By Idlenes begetting Ignorance:
which dost the sprigges of fairest rootes deface,
with lothsome course of lifes discountenaunce:
And makst a pleasure of the spirits paine,
Die in thy dreame, and neuer wake againe.
Sleepe is the soules discase, the mindes despight,
The curse of Nature, and the crosse of rest:
The thoughtes disquiet, and the darkesome night,
wherein the spirit, likes the body lest:
A losse of time and reasons malladie,
where death is found but sorrowes remedy.
The watching virgins kindely were receiued,
when such as slept did loose their happy houre:
In dreames, the sences often are deceiued,
when waking wits finde shadowes haue no power:
Then sleepe thy last, where life hath neuer place,
God graunt my soule, to watch, & praie for grace.
When thus the head of hateful slouthfulnes,
was soncke into the filthy sincke of sinne:
The harmeful head of al vnhappines,
Did lechery, this loathsome tale beginne:
Alas poore pilgrime, childe of chast desire,
Hast thou bin burnt thou canst not bide the fier?
A gentle iest, a man to be a maide,
what minsing humor doth the sences measure?
That Nature can of beauty be afraide:
And loose her prime, before she know her pleasure,
Fleshe hath no fauour in diuinity,
Nor Nature, pleasure in virginity.
The childe, that knowes not how to make his choice,
Must be a babe, so babishe let him bee:
But he that knowes, how better to reioice,
will seeke a worlde, where sweeter thoughtes agree:
No, thinke of loue, to be that pleasing thought,
That, for his will, sets all the worlde at nought.
What figure findes not loue out of a face?
what humors notes he not, in euery heare?
In beauties eies, what stars doth he not place,
what roses in her cheekes, doth she not beare?
what hony in her lippes, and sweeter worth?
In her faire ground but he can gather forth.
It whets the wit, and doth embolden will,
And maketh Arte to worke beyond her selfe,
It maketh nature, study reasons skill,
And in her humors, play the pretty elfe:
It bringeth fancy to a deinty feast,
And makes a man, that woulde be els a beast.
What deinty glaunces passe from eies to eies?
when sweete conceites, are secretly conceiued,
what comfortes can the kissing hearts deuise?
where kinde effectes of fauour are receiued:
Age can reporte, and youth doth daily prooue,
There is no comforte to the course of loue.
And with that worde, did ende his wicked charme,
Vnto which sounde, the pilgrime gan reply,
Thou hatefull head, and grounde of euery harme,
Venum, compounded all of villany:
A foule infection of the fairest creature,
Die in the filth, of thy corrupted nature.
Thou sleepy slouth, that figurste out the swine,
with groueling humors, tumbling on the grounde,
That canst not thinke, vpon a thought diuine,
But liu'st in dreames, where all deceits are founde:
How durst thou speake in that foule thoughts defence,
which breedeth nothing, but the soules offence.
Vertue and vice, were neuer friendes in deede,
Diana knowes, that Venus is no maide,
But faith, that doth on heauenly blessing feede,
Of foolish beauty, maie be well afraide:
when Natures pleasure in virginity,
Shewes, flesh hath fauoure in diuinity.
[...]
Equality is but a childish humor,
He is alone, that keepes the lofty seate:
what voice is hard? where al are in a rumor,
Or who is seru'd? where euery one is great?
why, patience is the paterne of a villaine,
That neuer came neare to a Kings pauilion.
And with that word she fed vpon her Snakes,
As if her heart, did like none other foode:
where to the pilgrime soone this answere makes,
Vngratious grifte, and voide of heauenly good:
Feede on thy Snakes, vntill the poison fill thee,
And thine owne cancker with corruption kill thee.
Equality is childrens blessednes,
where many brethren are but one in loue:
The voice hard sweete, whose sounde is holinesse,
And God wel seru'd, where graces glory proue:
And he that patience paternes for a villaine,
shal neuer know the King of heauens pauilion.
Thou neuer readst the booke of Christ his Crosse,
Nor canst endure so sweete an A B C:
But, thou art bounde to liue with labours losse,
where al the woes of al the worlde maie be:
God giue my spirit, grace, to seeke no more,
Then goe the waie, his Sainctes haue gone before.
When, (as it seemde) the venum wrought so sore,
within the hart, as poisned so the heade,
As shrinking downe, it sight, and spake no more,
But with the rest the filthy body fedde:
when started vp the head of Murthring wrath,
As newly cumme, from out, summe bloody bath.
VVho grating of his teeth with knitting brow,
Shaking his fist, as if he mente to fight:
Thou patch quod he, where art thou plodding now?
hath patience thinkst thou, such a princely might:
That shee can thee against my force defende,
And bring thee safely to thy Iourneies ende?
My life is most, to lay me downe in blood,
I can endure no daunting of mine eie:
I onely loue to feede on bloody foode,
whom I once cease on, they are sure to die:
How durst thou then approch so neere my sight,
whose fury standes withal the worlde to fight?
Poore patient hartes are tost from post to post,
when bloody swordes doe walke the worlde with wonder:
Poore patience many a patrimony lost.
while will resolu'de, put wit and reason vnder:
Patience is oft from princely seate puld downe,
while bloody mindes, do brauely beare the crowne.
Pitty is knowen sometime to marre a citty,
And Anger, oftentimes is cause of quiet:
Sometime as good be wilful as be witty,
when bloody dishes make a dainty diet:
what armes of honor? to a bloody field?
where Angers hande, makes patient harts to yeelde.
VVhen (as it seemde) halfe stuffed vp with blood,
Stopping his tale the pilgrime thus replied:
Choke vp thy throat, with that foule butchers food,
That neuer couldst the sounde of mercy bide:
But dost consume the hart of many a creature,
Die in the fury, of thy filthy nature.
Fret, fume, and chafe, I feare not of thy force,
I plod with patience, where thou canst not cumme:
My patience hath, such power in her remorse,
As furies sences, quickely wil benumme:
And by her prowesse, stoutly so defende me,
That thou, nor thine, nor ought els offende me.
Then lie, and bath, and tumble in thy bloode,
And stare, & stampe, til thou hast donne thy worst:
Thy foule adherents, I haue all withstoode,
And thou, art but a spirit all accurst:
who though thou makst a number know thy might,
Where patience cums, thou hast no power to fight.
Poore patient harts, are tost from paine to peace,
When bloody swords, do breede but hellish woes:
And patience patrimony is no leace,
But in a grounde, where grace & wisedome growes:
And patience sits with an Immortal crowne,
where tir aunt heads to hel are beaten downe.
Pitty must be the princesse of a citty,
And Anger breedeth nothing but disquiet:
wilful is good, so that the wil be witty,
where bloode is bard, the dish of mercies diet:
what Armes of honor, to that heauenly fielde,
where patience force, makes angers fury yeelde.
At which last worde, the
[...]retting furious head,
Fel with the rest, into that sincke of sinne:
And with the body fel downe stroke as dead,
when patience did this pilgrimes ioy beginne:
with praysing heauens, & vsing humble praier,
To comforte hope, and keepe of al dispaire.
When leauing so the ougly Monster slaine,
Onwardes she leades him on his happy way:
where ioiful pleasure after feare of paine,
Had set his sences at so sweete a staie:
That now, he thought, no Monster could offende him,
He had such proofe, that patience woulde defende him.
But when the heauens that pitty haue of nature,
And know that sences, woulde be gladde of rest:
Although the spirite, waking keepe the creature,
Vnto such worke, as like the wisedome best:
Into their garde, did will the Angels take him,
Vntill they wilde the spirite shoulde awake him.
BVT when the spirite little time coulde spare,
Vnto the harte, to giue the sences rest:
And reason founde, that vertues happy fare,
was in the hande, where with the soule is blest:
He wilde the sences from their sleepe arise,
And follow patience to their paradise.
When hauing past the path along the wood,
They came vnto a shore, neare to a sea:
where lofty▪ waues did threaten little good,
when rockes with patience make a drowning plea:
where stormes, and tempests, flawes, and rocks, and sands,
The perils shew, wherein the sea man standes.
With patience heere this pilgrime must Imbarke,
within a shippe the buonauenture named:
when in the Mappe he founde out many a marke,
whereby conceite his course most happly framed:
And to be shorte with a resolued minde,
They hoist vp sailes, God sende a merry winde.
When as they founde the tide would tary none,
And little wit, it was to loose the winde,
what grounde was best to cast their ancker on,
And how they might their surest passage finde:
To scape the rockes, and to auoide the sandes,
And keepe their carriage, out of pirots handes.
And so, along the surging seas they slide,
Till passing by capa di buon speranza,
Not farre from thence, they did intende to ride,
Till, some sweete winde that vertue ben auanza:
woulde bid them hoice their sailes and to be gone,
Towardes the heauen, they were to hope vpon.
Where, after sounding, casting ancker out,
And striking saile, and winding vp the cable,
Setting in order all thinges rounde aboute,
As well as such young Mariners were able:
with such good thoughtes as might the time beguile,
They fell to walke vpon the boordes awhile.
And riding but a while anone they spied,
A fisher man▪ all in his boate alone,
with euery billow tost from side to side,
As made them leare his last farewell anone:
when moued, with the pitty of good nature,
They calde aboo
[...]de this selly wretched creature.
[...]
But, for I did but little time bestow,
Amidde the fielde to seeke for honors fame:
And fortune sought, my
[...] ouerthrow,
Before my ha
[...] had entrance to the same:
I lefte that life, and to the seas I gat,
where, how I liu▪d I neede not tell you that.
I thinke your selues can te
[...] as wel as I,
If not, alas, it is no ease to learne:
So many labours in the life doe lie,
As are not in a daie for to dis
[...]erne:
A daie, a month, nor many a yeare, God wot,
As I could tel, if I haue not forgotte.
First I did learne to set my compasse right,
And by my compasse, how my course to run:
To marke each point, as wel by day, as night,
By night, to marke the stars, by day the funne:
Then take the Mappe, to looke for rockes & sandes,
Of which ful ofte, the shippe in daunger standes.
Then narrowly to looke to euery leake,
And when the winde, did serue to hoise my sailes:
To sounde the depth, where se as beginne to breake,
And strike my saile, when once my sea roome failes:
To Arme my fightes, and plant mine ordnaunce so,
I might not stande, in fea
[...]e to meete my foe.
Then did I learne, to stande and guide the sterne,
And now and then to helpe to hoise vp ancker:
And otherwhiles the cunning to discernce,
To dresse hir sides to keepe hir from the cancker,
My termes of arte, and patient to be painefull,
And how to hope to make my voiage gainful.
To lie ful colde, and harde, and fare full thinne,
To frame my carkas to vnkindest natures,
To beare of stomes, and in a calme beginne,
To learne to kill the little creeping creatures,
To eate a fusty cake, and teinted fish,
And one fresh morfell, make a deinty dish.
To make no conscience, so there came in gaine,
when siluer crosses, keepe of many a curse,
A pitteous case to see the Merchant slaine,
For his owne goods to fil the pirots purse,
To sweare, and stare, vntil we come on shore,
Then rifty tufty, each one to his skore.
The Master, he, sometime would fall asleepe,
The Masters mate to much
[...]pon the can,
The boson, he, his cabin tooke to keepe,
And in the cookerome, there the rie begare,
when all and some, in halte a dronc
[...]en swowne,
would leaue the shippe, to sincke, themselues to drowne▪
But, when I saw the kinde of life was such,
The griefe to great for any true good minds:
The labour sore, the sorrow was to much,
To seeke for that which but repentance finds,
I left the shippe, with manie a sorrie note,
And tooke me sweetely to my little boate.
And heere, my trade is poore, yet ful of peace,
And peace is riches, though my trade be poore,
The sea is large, whose landlorde makes no lease,
I toile for fishes, and I seeke no more,
when stormes arise, vnto the heauen I high me,
And in the sunne-shine, set me downe and drie me.
But, for I see the barke, wherein you ride,
Of Buonaventure hath the blessed name,
And patience is a pure a perfect guide,
Vnto the fauour of eternal fame,
I hope the course, is good that you intende,
Heauens bring you happly, to your Iournies end.
This poore mans tale when thus the pilgrime harde,
He did along his company entreate,
Promising him, a pilgrimes poore rewarde,
Besides his hope, his comfort woulde be great,
If heauens did fauoure vertues enterprise,
Humbly to passe, the path to paradise.
But, when the fisher harde that fairest worde,
Of paradise once sounding in his eare:
He gaue consent, and hoist his boat a boarde,
And casting of, al sorrow, care, and feare:
They hoist vp sailes, windes seru'de what would you more,
Onwardes they goe, God sende them well a shore.
VVhen leauing Scilla to those selly guides,
That careles are to keepe their course aright:
By cu
[...]st Charibdis, on he smoothly slides,
Till by good happe they had a land in sight:
To which they made, with might & maine as fast:
As windes woulde serue, and got to shore at last.
Yet, let me tel you, ere they came a shore,
As through the Oceā they did make their way:
Tempests arose, and many a winde blew sore,
That threatend, ofte the course of their decay:
Besides the pirots, that they put to flight,
which chrost their course with many a cruell fight.
One where they saw wrakes lie without reliefe,
An otherwhere, whales tumbling in the waues:
An other while, vnto their deadly griefe,
Stormes threaten sore, the fishes maws their graues,
Yet, when the worst, of all these illes were past:
Safely arriu'de they came to shore at last.
Where, wethring of themselues against the sunne,
First praising God, by his almighty power,
That guided them since first their course begunne,
And brought them safely to that happy howre:
The hart laide downe, the sences all to rest,
while Angels watch, the waking spirit blest.
BVT, when the spirit had but little time,
To giue the sences leaue to take their rest,
Nor was the laboure little for to clime,
The fiery ashes, of a Phoenix nest:
Hee bad them sweetely from their sleepe arise,
And set them in their path to paradise.
Where, walking on, they met on their rigt hande,
A worlde of people, making pitteous mone,
Some lost their goods, some other lost their lande,
Their parents, some, and some, their friends were gone:
Not one, of all, but some way were oppressed,
when all, and some, in some, were al distrested.
The Courtier, hee, complainde, of loues disgrace,
The souldier, he cried out, of lacke o
[...] paie,
The lawier, lacke of hearing of his case,
The client, how his coine went to decaie:
The merchaunt, of the losse of his aduenture,
The prentice of the bandes of his Indenture.
The landlorde, of his tenaunts beggery,
The passinger of lacke of amity:
The tenaunt, of the landlordes misery,
The begger, all, of lacke of charity:
The church men, of their small possessions,
The laie men, of the church transgressions.
Now, on the left hande, went an other crue,
A hatefull sort, of hellish company:
which, to their welth, and wortheles honor grue,
By wicked workes, of wofull villany:
which, by the trades of Machauile instructed,
were by the deuill, to his hel conducted.
One, he blasphemde, and murthred many an othe,
An other, made of honesty, a iest:
An other made a tush, at faith, and troth,
An other boasted of a bloudy feast:
And some, in power, how will did gouerne reason,
And other, of their pollicy in treason.
The Courtier, boasted of this braue attire,
what lordshippes, he had laid vpon his backe:
The souldier bragde what townes he set on fire,
How many citties he had helpt to sacke:
The lawier, of his quidities, and quirkes,
The client, of the knowledge of his ierkes.
The landlorde, of his tenants slauery,
And, how hee kept the pesauntes all in awe,
The tenant of his cunning knauery,
when, with his landlorde, he could go to law:
The Merchant, how his gaines were brought about,
The prentice, how, he got his freedome out.
The church men, they wente boasting on their tenthes;
And twenties too, and yet they would haue more,
The Laie men, of their laying lines at lengthes,
And how a chalke, did make a pretty skore:
The passinger, offained amity,
The begger, of the bagge of charity.
After all these, vpon the right hand went,
A selly foole, for so I tearme him right,
with wringing hands, that seemed to lament,
Some crossing humor, to a vaine delight:
For, loue forsooth, & nought but loue it was,
That made a woman make a man an Asse.
Of Venus frailty and of Cupids blindenes,
He cried out, oh, that euer they were borne,
And of his mistris, more, then most vnkindnes,
That did so much, his truest seruice skorne:
Yet, still, he lou'de her, and he did so loue her,
It was his death, he neuer coulde recouer.
And then he sight, and sobde, and hong the head,
And wept, and wailde, and cast vp both the eies,
And in a trance, as if a man were dead,
Or did some dying kinde of fit deuise:
Vntill he walkte, and then he cried oh loue,
That euer louer shoulde such sorrowe proue.
And then he redde his verses and his
[...]imes,
wherein he praisde her to to, out of reason,
And then he sight to thinke how many times,
he watcht, the day, the night, the hower the season:
To finde some fruite, of her deserued fauoure,
But al his flowers, were we
[...]des that had no sauour.
And then farewell, and then againe farewell,
And farewell loue, and farewell louely sweete:
And farewel sweete, where loue doth sweetly dwel;
And farewell dwelling, for loue sweetenes meete:
And farewell meeting, with loues stately store,
And farewell loue, for hee coulde liue no more.
And thus the pilgrime, let the poore man goe,
To loose his will, and seeke his better wits:
which he had lost with following fancy so,
Vnto the fury of those franticke fits:
That in his hart, had wrought that mallady,
that he must die, there was no remedy.
Now on the left hande went another creature,
Or rather spirit, in an ougly shape:
Hollow dead eies, and most ilfauourde feature,
Mopping, and Mowing, like an olde she Ape:
which in the fury of youthes frenzy,
To crosse loues Ioie, is called Ielousy.
Cursing that euer Venus was so faire,
Or Cupid had the power to bende his bow:
Or euer worde, had passage through the Aier,
From fansies tongue, to beauties eares to go:
when tickling humors, in Affections brest,
By feare of loies is Ielousies vnrest.
Then winckt, and pinckt, and leerde and honge the lippe,
And seemde to start, at euerie sodaine breath:
And grounde her teeth, as though some priuy nip,
within her head, did fret her hart to death:
when, out she mumbled, most vnhappy loue,
That makst the minde, these passions to approue.
But when the pilgrime saw her Agony,
And, in what taking, wretched thing, she was:
Little contented, with such company,
He giues her leaue vpon her way to passe:
And keepes his course, vntil an one he came,
Vnto a citty, needles is the name.
Where entring in, on each side of the gate,
He found it poorely al with beggars garded:
And by the forefront of that feeble state,
He thought smal wealth where poore were so rewarded:
Til entred further, in the streetes he founde,
A worlde of wealth in euery streete abounde.
I meane such welth, as worldly people chuse,
To make the comfort of their chiefest kinde:
And such a bait as wicked spirites vse,
To blinde the sight of a bewitched minde:
In euery shoppe, or siluer golde or wares,
To starue the poore, & fill the rich with cares.
VVhen notinge wel, by ettery doore he went,
He saw each house was with a plage infected:
where, though they liu'de content with discontente,
were in the rules of better cares reiected:
For, though the poison did not kill at first,
Yet did they swel, vntil at last they burst.
One house was plaged with a wicked master,
An other, with a most accursed dame:
An other with a childe that was a waster,
An other, with a seruaunt out of frame:
The richmen, most, were plaged with disease,
The pooremen, with smal vermin, and fleas.
[...]
The Counsaile, graue, as best beseemde their place,
The Courtiers, gallant, full of fine conceite:
The Ladies, faire, and full of honours grace,
The seruantes, wise, that humbly did awaite,
Nothing amisse, that nature coulde deuise,
To please the humor of Affections eies.
And, let me not, to slightly ouerpasse,
The pleasing ground of euery priuate grace:
where euery sence, so sweetely pleased was,
As brought the wits into a wondrous case:
And such a case, as had not vertue ben,
To garde their sence, they had ben ouerseene.
To see the presence of a princely Queene,
To marke the course, of graue discretion care:
To note the sightes, that are but seldome seene,
where youthes desartes, in beauties fauoure are:
To heare the musicke of most siluer voices,
And finde the restes, wherein the song reioices.
To see what pleasure, power hath in her hande,
To heare how youth, can courte his kinde desire,
To see, how wisedome doth in power commaunde,
And finde, how beauty sets the hart on fier:
while humble seruauntes, shewe their diligence,
Are not these notes, for sweete experience?
To see how vertues are in honor placed,
To see the aged all with reuerence serued,
To see the humble, by their seruice graced,
And beauties fame by faithfull loue preserued:
To see peace, plenty, wisedome, honour, loue:
Are these not pleasures, for the hart to proue?
Now heere the pilgrime did beginne to feare,
Some of his seruants, woulde be stolne awaie,
Either the Sente, the rast, the Eie, the Eare,
Or els the Feeling woulde be forst to staie:
Yet, for they sware, their seruice to his will,
He fearde the lesse, to leade them from their ill.
And, when he sawe, what perill was in greatnes,
while idle thoughtes, in youthfull humors sit,
And, what a folly, was in to much featenes,
where beauties wonders did but blinde the wit:
And what long suites, did gaine but little grace,
And last, what daungers doe possesse the place.
With humble praier vnto the powers on high,
To blesse that prince and all those princely peeres,
which in the honour of discretions eie,
were calde the wonders of these latter yeeres:
From care, and cost, fancy, and wisedomes folly,
He tooke his walke vnto a waie more holly.
WHere ere they came, they came yet by the way,
Vnto a Campe, on rather, kingly fielde:
where, many a stop, did feare too long a stay,
Such choice of honors, did such humors yeelde:
where horse and foote, were so in order planted,
As, no direction, in discretion wanted.
The chiefe commaunder, in his stately tente,
with noble mindes of Martiall men attended:
For euery doubt of euery ill intent,
with strongest gardes, of watche and warde defended:
whose graue discretion rulde by sounde aduise,
Performde the plot of many a rare deuise.
To see the carefull Collonels directed,
Ech to his quarter, and his regiment:
And how ech Captaine, valiauntly effected,
The wonder grace of warlike gouernement:
To see the true discharge, of euery office,
And then the honor of aduentures seruice.
To note the greate prouision euery waie,
For victuaile first, munition, armor, shot:
For forrege for their horse for grasse, and hay,
And such prouaunte, as cheapest may be got:
For euery grounde, for euery quarterfit,
Are not the workes, for euery simple wit.
To heere the drummes and
[...] the larum strike,
The horses neie, and then, the trumpets sounde,
To see the horsemen charge vpon the pike,
And then the pikemen laie the horse on grounde:
To heare the Canons roar, the small shot rattle,
And see their triumph, that doe winne the battaile.
To marke the ordring of a court de garde,
To note the rules in walking of the rounde,
The scintinels, and euery watch, and warde,
And of the mines, and working vnder grounde:
To marke the planting of their Ambuscados,
And in the night, their sodaine canuassados.
To see a Citty sende her bullets out,
Against the force, of all her cruell foes,
To see her wals, all fortified about,
To beare the force of all their cruell blowes:
To make her foes, perforce their siege to raise,
And through the world to winne a wonder praise.
Are heere not sights of force to staie the eie?
Or soundes, of power, for to in chaunt the eare,
Nay, maie not wel the hart be drawen awry,
From all conceites, to keepe his compasse there:
Sure, so it had, had not the spirit still,
Preseru'de the sences from a secretill▪
For, then againe, to see a citty sackte,
Her buildings ruinde, and her people slaine:
Her wals, al razed, and her castles crackt,
And al her welth, but in a woful vaine:
Her olde men mourning, and her young men dying,
The mothers, weeping, and their children crying.
To see her streetes, alrunne with streames of blood,
Her houses, burning, all in flames offier:
To see her state, that al in honor stoode,
Yeelde to the forces, of their foes defire:
Her roial strength, become a ruful storie,
And death, & sorrow, ende of al her glorie.
To see the fielde, with dead men ouer spread,
To see the aire infected al with smoake:
To see, the valiaunt Caualieros dead,
And many a soldiour hurt with many a stroake,
To see the steedes, lie tumbling on the earth,
And through the campe a Sickenes or a dearth.
To see the soldiour starue, with lake of foode,
And, in his march, to die with lacke of drincke:
To see the rich men liue on poore mens bloode,
And one close humor, at an other wincke:
To see each Captaine, euerie waie anoied,
And, by disorder, all the campe destroied.
Did make the pilgrime willing to depart,
The place so ful of daunger and distresse:
where wits might worke but woful was the Arte,
where one mans health, bred many heauines:
And therefore making there but little staie,
He followes patience on another way.
AND on they walke, vntil anone they came,
Vnto a Church not built of lime or stone:
But that true Church, of that Immortal fame,
That is worldes wonder, and heauens loue alone:
whose head, is Christ, whose Martirs are his pillers,
And al whose members, are his wordes wel-willers.
The gate, is Grace, Contrition, is the key,
The locke, is loue, the porter, Penitence,
where hūble faith, must heauenly fauour stay,
Till pitty talke, with vertues patience,
while Angels sighes, the sinners waie deuise,
To haue his entraunce into paradise.
Which is in deede, the plot of al perfection,
Drawne by the compasse of diuine conceite,
whose line, is life, laide by his loues direction,
who makes al flesh vpon the spirite waite,
whose flowers are fruites, of faithes eternal fauour,
Sweete to the soule, in euerliuing sauour,
[...]
Here sorrowes teares, doe quenche the heate of sine,
And fire of loue, doth kindle life againe:
Heere doth the grounde of glory first beginne,
And, heere is vertue, in her highest vaine:
Heere, is, in some, the state of honours story,
And of all goodnes, the eternall glory.
And heere is, lo, that heauenly paradise,
whereto the pilgrime, made his pilgrimage:
where sa
[...]red hi
[...]rcy first did solempnize,
The spirite to the fleshe in mariage:
And here the hart did finde his spirit blest,
To bring the sences to eternall rest.
Gloria in excelsis Deo.
IN this
[...] plot of reasons highest pleasure,
The heaunly cour
[...], of the high king of kings:
where sacred spirits, haue their speciall treasure,
And sweetest comfort, of contentment springs:
God bring your sences, by your harts desire,
To feele the comfort of his kingly fier.
THE COVNTESSE OF PENbrookes loue.
FAIRE in a plot of earthly paradise,
Vpon a hill, the Muses made a Maze:
In midst whereof within a Phoenix eies,
There sits a grace, that hath the world at gase:
which Phoenix is but name vnto a nature,
That shews, the world, hath scarcely such a creature.
This true loues saint, by worthy beauty crowned,
Did seeme to wish, but not expresse her will:
when straunge desires, were in deuises drowned,
To finde, out wonders, farthest from her wil:
The worlde came in, with presents many a one,
But, yet, alas, her loue could like of none.
Cleare was the day, when Phaebus shonne ful bright,
But, her hartes eie, did higher light aspire:
Aprill, brought in, both earth, and Aires delight,
But earth, nor Aire, could answere her desire:
Fortune? shee skornde, friendes? who durst be a foe?
Seruants? a worlde, would serue her will or no.
Welth, was buttrash, and health was natures ioie,
Honour, a Title, beauty, but a blast:
Power, but a trouble, pleasure, but a toie,
Youth, but a time, to quickely ouerpast:
Learning, alas, it liueth in her schoole,
wisedome, her will, knowes worldly wit a foole.
Yet still she wisht, but saide not what shee woulde,
when still the worlde, did worke, but still in vaine:
Care with conceite, did all the best he coulde,
Brought in his giftes, but bare them backe againe:
when welth, helth, beauty, honor, power nor ease
wit, youth, nor learning, could her humor please.
Some brought in pearles, most orient to beholde,
Shee knew them pearles, and so shee did regarde them:
Some brought in gemmes, of diamondes set in golde,
Shee knewe their worth, and so shee did rewarde them:
Some brought in workes, of weomens rare deuises,
Shee knew their paines, and so did giue the prices.
Some brought in musicke of most siluer sounde,
which all, woulde cease, if
[...]hee but tucht astring:
Some brought in first the fairest flowers they founde,
Shee tooke them as the comforts of the spring:
Some brought in this and some woulde bringe in that,
But yet her wish was still shee knewe not what.
The souldiers came, and brought in all their armes,
Shee smilde to see, how beauty made a peace:
The pesants came, and offred vp their farmes,
But, shee saide loue did neuer make a lease:
The merchants, came withall their mony treasure,
Shee put it off, id did her minde no pleasure.
The lawiers came, and laide downe all their bookes,
Shee knew, that truth, was all in yea and no:
The courtiers came with all their lofty lookes,
But when shee lookt she made them curtzy low:
The scholars came and brought in all their artes,
Shee knew their practise, ere they learnd their partes.
The sailers brought their Rubies from the roc
[...]es,
But, of such toies, her treasure was to full:
The shepards brought the fairest of their flockes,
But shee coulde weare no cloth was made of woll:
Thus euery one did bring in what they coulde,
Yet still shee wisht, but knew not what shee woulde.
The poets came, and brought in their inuentions,
But well shee knew their fancies were but fained:
The muses brouhht the truth of their intentions,
which in their kindes were kindely entertained:
But yet the best, with all her worthines,
Toucht not the humor of her happines.
But when the world, could not come neare her wish,
And saw in vaine it was, her will to seeke▪
The earth coulde yeelde no fruite, the sea no fishe,
That coulde be founde, that might her fancy leeke:
Some with a sigh, other, with pitteous mone,
All went awaie, and left her all alone.
[...]
They wil, sweete loue is but the summe of wel,
Thy well, is well, wel, better, and the best:
That, with thy loue, thy liuing soules may dwell,
Safe, in the hope of their eternal rest:
Thy rest the Ioie, the soule cannot conceiue,
Thy soules, the Saintes, thy Mercy doth receiue.
Thy comfort is the tuch stone of true kindenes,
Thy kindenesse is, the very life of loue:
Thy loue is light, all other light but blindenesse,
Thy light is life, that death can neuer proue:
Thy death, was life, thy life is Ioie for euer,
Vnto the soules, that loue and leaue thee neuer.
VVhat was? or is? or, on the earth shall be,
But that thou knowst, and knowst al what they are:
And that they haue, their beeing but in thee,
Made by thy hande, and gouerne by thy care:
which thou dost prosper, comfort, or defende,
And when thou wilt, shal wholy make an ende.
Grast is the King, whom thou dost only crowne,
And wise the wit, that only knowes thy wil,
Happy the state, where thou dost blesse the towne,
And blest, the hart, that thou dost keepe from ill,
But yet the soule, doth in her faith approue,
The life, the life, is onely in thy loue.
Shall I describe thy sweete and glorious seate?
But, as thou art vnto thy seruants seene,
Or shall my spirite humbly el
[...]e entreate?
Some Angels help, that in the heauens hath beene?
That to the world, such glory may vnfolde,
Or, saie it is, too glorious to beholde.
Thy throne is Iudgement, Iustice is thy sworde,
Mercy and truth are still before thy face:
Loue, is thy law, and wisedome is thy worde:
Vertue thy loue, and Bounty is thy grace:
Pitty thy state, where patience is the story,
Grace is thy gift, and Mercy is thy glory.
Thus in the seate of sacred excellence,
With Virgins, Saints, and Angels all attended,
Dost thou possesse that princely residence:
Till Iudgement passe and Ioies be neuer ended:
When all the host of heauen and heauens do th sing,
An Alleluia, to their heauenly king.
Where trembling Ioyes distill the teares of loue.
And louing feare doeth bring forth blushing faces,
And blushing faces, in their faith approue,
Vnworthy creatures, to behold their graces.
which graces doe this glorious musicke moue,
The life of life, is in thy heauenly loue.
Now for thy loue; it cannot turne to hate,
Thou hatest the life, that once doth alter loue
It is the staie of an eternall state,
A mansion house, that neuer can remoue:
which, on the rocke, of true Religion standes,
And neuer feares the seas of errors sandes.
Now, thy Religion is the rule of life,
whose chiefest blessing is the ioie of peace:
where loue, cuts of the cause of euery strife,
And sweete accord, doth bring out loues encrease:
And loues encrease is such a ioie to see,
As bringes the soule, vnto his life in thee.
Alas, alas, all treasure is but trashe,
where loue is banisht by the state of strife:
The sweetest wine, is but as swinish wash,
Vnto the water, of the well of life:
No, no, the pleasures, that, the world can proue,
Are all but sorrowes, to thy heaunly loue.
But, let me see what fruite, thy fauour yeeldes,
Or in thy loue, what happy life is founde.
when sea, and lande, hils, dales, and fairest fieldes,
Doe all, but in, thy blessed giftes abounde:
Besides the peace, wherewith the hart is blest,
To bring the soule to thy eternall rest.
Thou dost not ioie to see a sinners death,
But, true repentaunce pleaseth thee farre better:
Yea, thou wilt helpe at latest gaspe of breath,
To make the soule confesse it selfe thy debter:
And where the soule, such comforts doth approue,
Can there be thought a comfort like thy loue?
No, no, this worlde is full of wanton toies,
which oft keepes backe, the comfort of thy care:
And many waies, doth worke the harts anoies,
when fortunes hope doth proue but heauy fare:
Oh heauens, who knew but halfe thy blessednes,
woulde hate the world with all his wretchednes.
Where shew of faith doth shape but falshods cloke,
when fancies teares, proue drops offonde desire:
wherefree conceites, will yeeld to kindenes yoke,
when sorrow paies, repentance for their hire:
while in thy loue maie liuing faith vnfolde,
Hart, may her hope, hope may her heauen behold.
What shadowes here, doe ouershroude the eie?
while Masking thoughts doe March before the winde:
where loues conceite, doth but illusion trie,
when careles wit becometh the wilfull blinde,
And Nature findes her selfe still misconceiued,
where forme, for matter hath the soule deceiued.
[...]
Not that my wits can touch the smallest worth,
Of that high wonder worthines of thine,
For, from a sinner, what can issue forth?
And who more sinner then this soule of mine?
which doth with teares of true repentance moue,
thy gratious helpe to glorifie thy loue.
For, as vnto the sea, a water droppe,
And to the sandes a little pibble stone,
And as a corne, vnto a haruest croppe,
And vnto infinite, the number one:
So are my Muses in their Musicke short,
thy Kingly prayse of prayses to report.
But, as a scholer, that doth goe to schoole,
To make a letter, ere he learne to write,
And as the wit, that knowes it selfe a foole,
Till higher wisedome teach it to endite:
So let my soule in her submission proue,
Hate of the world, and honour of thy loue.
For, what is heere that can content the hart?
That knowes content, or what it doth containe:
what thought
[...]o sweete, but brings as sowre a smart,
Or pleasure such? but breedes a further paine:
what thing so good? but proues in fine so euil,
As, but for God, woulde beare men to the deuill.
What is the Earth? the labour of our life,
what is the sea? a gulfe of griezy lakes:
what is the Aire? a stuffe of filthy strife,
what is the fire? the spoile of what it takes:
when these are al, whence euery thing doth springe,
what is the worlde? but euen a woful thing.
What thing is man? a cloddde of miry claie,
Slime of the Earth, a slaue to filthie sinne:
Springes like a weede, and so doth weare awaie,
Goes to the earth, where first he did beginne:
Oh heauens thinke I, when man is wholy such,
what is in man? that man shoulde loue so much.
VVhat hath the worlde, to leade the minde to loue?
In true effect, a fardel ful of toies:
where, wey the pith, what euery one doth proue,
The perfectst gems, are most vnperfect Ioies:
Consider al, what fansie bringeth forth,
The best conceite will fal out nothing worth.
VVhat worldely thinges doe follow fansie most?
welth Beutie, loue, fine diet, honor, fame:
what findes affect? both loue, and labour lost,
Disdaine, disease, dishonor, death, and shame,
where care, and sorrow, death, and deadly strife,
Doe rule the rost, in this accursed life.
What thing is Beauty? colour quickely gon,
And what is wealth? when riches fal to rust:
what thing is loue? a toy to thinke vpon,
Fine diet? drosse, to feede a filthy lust.
what worldly honour? oft vnworthy praise,
what ease? the cause, whereby the life decaies.
What is disdaine? the skorne of proud conceit,
And what disease? the death of discontent,
Dishonour next? the fruit of foule deceite,
And what is death? but ende of ill intent,
Now what is shame? a shamefull thing to tell,
And thus the world, but euen the way to hell.
For beasts & birds, for fishes, flowers & trees,
And al such things created for our vse:
what thing is man? to take such things as theese,
By want of grace, to turne vnto abuse:
Oh wretched world, when man that should be best.
In beastly things proues worse then al the rest.
But when I see this wretched state of man,
And al the world at such a woful passe:
That since the course of humane care began,
More ful of wo, good nature neuer was.
when this my soule, doth with her sorrow see,
Lord saies my Loue, that I might liue with thee.
And leauing so the world with all his woes,
And looking vp to heauen & heauenly ioies,
And to the grace where vertues glory goes,
Noting the life, that neuer loue anoies:
when in my soule, Idoe this sweetnes proue,
Lord saies my soule, howe sweete art thou my loue.
I see the sunne, the beauty of the skie,
The moone and stars, the candles of the night,
They haue their essence in thy heauenly eie,
That blindes the proude, and giues the humble light,
I see the raine-bow, bended by thy hand,
That doth both heauen, earth, sea & heauen cōmand.
Thou gauest the sunne, the moone & stars a course,
which they obserue according to thy will:
Thou makest the tides to take their due recourse,
And setst the earth, where it doth settle stil.
Thou framdst the substance of each Element,
And settst thy foote vpon the firmament.
Thus doest thou sitte in glory of thy throne,
with al the hoast, of highest heaues attended:
who, in thine ire, hast kingdoms ouerthrowen
And in thy loue hast little things defended:
whose glory more, then may by man be knowen,
And glory most, is in thy mercy showen.
Thus dost thou sit, in honor of thy power,
Calling the poore vnto thy rich reliefe,
Sowing the sweete, that killeth euery sower,
Giuing the salue, that healeth euery griefe:
Making them liue, that long were dead before,
And liuing so, that they can die no more.
Thou madst the worlde and what it doth containe,
Onely but man, thou madst vnto thy loue:
And mans good will was thy desired gaine,
Till proude attempt did high displeasure moue:
Thou plagst his pride, yet when thou sawst his paine,
Thou ga
[...]st the s
[...]lue, that heald the wound againe.
Vngratefull man, whom thou didst onely make,
In loue, to loue, and with thy loue preseruest,
And for his loue, enduredst for his sake,
Such death of life, as dearest loue deseruest:
what cursed hart woulde to displeasure moue thee,
That giuing all, askes nothing but to loue thee.
Oh loue, sweete loue, oh high and heauenly loue,
The onely lin
[...], that leades to happy life,
Oh loue, that liu
[...]st, for louing hartes behoue,
And makst an ende of euery hatefull strife:
Happy, are they, that kindely can attaine thee,
And how accurst, that dare but to disdaine thee.
Thy loue was cause, that first we were created,
Loue is the life, that thou wilt haue vs leade:
Loue is the cause, we neuer can be hated,
Loue is our life, when other life is dead:
Loue is thy grace, that higest good doth giue,
Loue me then lorde, and I shall euer liue.
And with that worde proceeding from her hart,
The trickeling teares distilled downe her eies:
As if her sence possest in euery part,
A secret ioie that did the soule surprise:
when lifting vp her handes, oh loue quod shee,
My soule is sicke, she cannot be with thee.
And from the mercy of thy maiesty,
Beholde the sorrowes, of my wounded soule:
Let pitties care of loues calamitie,
My ruthfull teares, thy register enrowle:
And thinke vpon the passions that I approue,
For, truely, lorde, my soule is sicke of loue.
And sicke it is, and so well maie it bee,
A sweeter sickenes, then a worldly health:
A healthfull sickenes, to be sicke for thee,
where Natures want doth, proue the spirits wealth:
while hart hath set her highest happines,
But to beholde thee in thy holines.
But, I am sicke, and sicke, in euery vaine,
Sicke to the death, but not to die to thee:
For why thy loue assures me life againe,
And there to liue, where death can neuer be:
Oh sweetest sicknes, where the soule may see,
The way through death, to come to liue with thee.
To liue with thee, oh euer liuing loue,
Oh let me die, that I may liue no more,
Till in thy loue, I may the life approue,
That may confesse I neuer liu'de before:
Life is but death, where, thy loue shineth neuer,
Onely thy loue, is happy life for euer.
My sinnes my sinnes with sorrow and with shame,
Of faultes and follies couerd haue my face,
Death is my due, I haue deseru'd the same,
Wo to the hart, in such vnhappy case:
But if repentance mercy may obtaine,
Looke on me loue, and I am well againe.
Vnhappy hart, that euer thee offended,
Vnworthy eies, thy blessing to beholde:
Vncarefull eare, that euer tale attended,
But to the truth, that hath thy mercy tolde:
vnfaithful soule, that euer thought did moue,
From euerliuing, with thine onely loue.
But, now the hartis dead to worldes delight,
And eies in teares, pronounce repentance truth,
The eare is deafe vntill the hart be right,
To see the life, that of thy loue ensueth:
The faithfull soule of pleasure is depriued,
Dead, till her life, be, by thy loue reuiued.
Nor, let me te
[...]pt that
[...] loue of thine,
To hasten time, beyonde thy holy will,
But only looke, vpon this soule of mine,
That in thy loue may be her liuing still:
Till shee may heare this ioiful
[...]ounde of thee,
Come away loue, and euer liue with me.
But, yet my loue, me
[...] I see thee looke,
As though my soule had thee displeased sore:
But, hath my loue▪ so high displeasure tooke?
That he will looke vpon my loue no more:
Oh, yes, my loue will not be angry euer,
And where he loues, he will be angry neuer.
Then, though thou chide, yet be not angry loue,
But in thy kindenes giues thy sweete correction,
That humble hart maie in repentance proue,
The dearest passage of thy loues direction:
whose blessed ende may in this only be,
To liue to die, to die to liue to thee.
[...]
Me thinkes, I see, that glorious seate of thine,
whereto thy Saints, and Angels al assemble,
And in the presence of thy power diuine,
with Ioifull feare, how euen the highest tremble:
And when those spirits, doe such passions proue,
Shall I presume, to think vpon thy loue?
Oh sweetest loue, that carries such a force,
As keepes the hart of humble hope in awe:
And sweete againe, that caries such remorse,
As hath cut off, the curses of the lawe:
And sweetest yit, that in the soule doth proue,
There is no sweete, indeede but in thy loue.
Which feeds the hūgry with a heauēly bread,
And cooles the thirsty from the liuing Rocke,
which heales the sicke, giues life vnto the dead,
And wakes the careful, with the morning Cocke:
which breedes the peace, that stinteth euery strife,
And giues the fountaine of the well of life.
It is the key that opes the doore of grace,
Vnto the care that thou hast constant proued
And shewes the fauour of thy shining face,
Vnto the blessed of thy deare beloued:
It is in summe, the infinite sweete pleasure,
Of tried faith, and true Repentance treasure.
Oh ioy ofioies, what hart can comprehend thee?
Oh sweet of sweets, what sence that can cōceiue thee
Blest be the harts, that truly doe attend thee,
And ten times blest, that in their soules receiue thee:
And fairely blest, whom thou hast faithful proued,
But chiefly blest, whom thou hast chiefly loued.
Me thinkes I see, how sweetly thou dost ride,
Aboue the heauens, vpon the Cherubs high,
with all thine Angels set on euery side,
with all the sound, of sweetest harmony:
wheral & some, their sweetest notes do frame
To sing the praises, of thy holy name.
Me thinkes I see thy holy Martyrs crowned,
On hūble knees cast down their crowns before thee,
And cry alowd, be thou alone renowned,
Let heauen and earth, and all the world adore thee.
when, my poore soule, with sinne oppressed sore,
Can say Amen yet, though it say no more.
Oh that my soule could see that sacred light,
That might but leade me to thy holy will,
And learne the rule, that keepes the soule aright,
In perfect faith, thy precepts to fulfill:
And might so neere, vnto thy hand abide,
As from thy loue, might neuer steppe aside.
But, what am I
[...] a worme, and wretched thing,
Vnworthy creature, made of earth and claie:
Once to presume to speake vnto my King,
On whom the state, of highest heauens doth staie:
Let not presumption thy displeasure moue.
But in thy pitty looke vpon my loue.
For I am sicke, oh sauiour sende me health,
My hart is hurt, come heale my deadly wounde:
And I, am poore relieue me, with thy wealth,
Yea, I am dead, oh raise me from the grounde:
My health, my wealth, my only resurrection,
let my soule liue, but in thy loues perfection.
Beholde the tear
[...]s, of my repentaunt truth,
And wey my sorrowes, by my sighing sobbes:
And in the rule, but of thy heauenly ruth,
Feele my poore hart, in horror how it throbbes:
And when thou seest my soule thus wo begun her,
In thy sweete mercy, sweete loue looke vpon her.
And from the dew of thy deare blessed loue,
Let fall one droppe, vpon my dried hart:
wherein my soule, such comfort maie approue,
As maie asswage the rigour of my smart:
And being so by thy sweete hand relieued,
Maie so reioice, as neuer more be grieued.
Lorde, who dare looke, against thy liuing power?
Or what doth liue? but onely in thy loue:
The sweete of sweets, where there was neuer sower,
But ioies of ioies, that can no sorrow proue:
Oh, purest proofe, of loue and lifes perfection,
Blest be the soule, that liues by thy direction.
But my hart pantes, my soule doth quake for feare,
And sorrowes paine, possesseth euery part:
My heape of sinnes, to heuy for to beare,
Presse downe desire, with terror of desart:
And, in great dread, of deepe dispaire doth crie,
Grace giue me life, for in my sinnes I die.
For still the flesh is subiect to offende,
while yet the spirit, groneth for thy grace:
But, thou hast power the weakest to defende,
That vnto thee, reueale, their heauy case:
Then from that hande, and mighty arme of thine,
Strengthen, this weake, & wounded soule of mine.
Thou that hast saide prowde Esaw was thy hate,
And humble Iacob, was thy chosen loue:
That dost the power of worldly pride abate,
And workst the heauen of humble hartes behoue:
Make Esawes life with lacobs loue agree,
Or kill the flesh, the soule maie liue with thee.
And from despaire, that poisned sting of death,
Deliuer lorde, the sorrowes of desire:
And at the latest houre, and gaspe of breath,
Let humble hart, the hope of heauen aspire:
where faithfull soules maie in thy fauour see,
That onely loue, doth onely liue in thee.
What booteth me the world for to possesse,
And want the iewell of my heauenly ioie:
what earths delight? but is to me distresse,
when natures health, doth proue the soules anoye:
No, my sweete loue, let this poore soule of mine,
Neuer haue life, but in that loue of thine.
One precious droppe, of thy pure oile of grace,
Power downe, sweete loue into my wounded hart:
And to my faith, so turne thy louing face,
That from thy fauour I maie neuer part:
Looke on thy Mary with her bitter teares,
That washt thy feete and wiptethe with her heares.
The greater depts forgiuen the greater loue,
Thy worde hath saide, and it saies euer true,
when patience life, in pitties loue doth proue,
In greatest mercy, greatest glory grue:
where one mans▪ sinne, procured all mens paine,
And one mans grace, gaue all men life againe.
Oh high creator of all creatures liuing,
who nothing wantst that all thinges dost possesse:
what hath the world that may be worth the giuing,
Vnto the honor of thy holines:
But, onely thankes, that thy true spirit moueth,
In that true hart, that, thy true mercy loueth.
But, still I see my loue is sore displeasde,
And tels me of my great vngratefulnes,
when so my soule, with sorrow is diseasde,
As in my hart, findes nought, but hatefulnes:
And with the teares of true repentance crieth,
Lorde saue the life, that in thy mercy lieth.
For, thou art loue, the euerliuing God,
And onely God, and onely of the liuing,
who, though thou smitst thy children with thy rod,
Sweete is the care of thy corrections giuing:
In which thy sweete, and kindest care correct me,
But in thy mercy, neuer doe reiect me.
Let neuer death against thy life preuaile,
Nor euer hate, once looke against thy loue,
Nor faithfull, hope thy heaunly fauour faile,
But harts contrition happy comfort proue:
And let the soule, euen at the dore of death,
Liue by the ai
[...]r but of thy heauenly breath.
Mine e
[...]es are dimme, my flesh, bare skin, and bone,
My sinewes shroncke, and all my limmes are num,
Mine eares are deafe, but to the sound of mone,
My speech, is but, to sorrow stroken dum:
My bloode dried vp, my hart with sorrow soken,
Oh helpe the soule, before the heart be broken.
Behold the sorrowes, that my soule doeth make,
And see what torments teare my heart a sunder,
where euery teare, doth other ouertake,
where fearefull care, puts faithfull comforts vnder:
Oh my sweete life though I be deadly wounded,
Let not my faith be vtterly confounded.
And Since oh king, that thou art onely able,
To helpe the helples, onely but in thee,
And by one crumme, from thy true mercies table,
The wofull soule, may well relieued be:
Of that sweete foode, oh let my faith so tast,
That by thy loue, my life may euer last.
What life is this, that wretches here we leade?
Caring and carking for our fleshly liues,
Neuer wel fild, when we are too much fedde,
where strange conceits for true contentment striues
Tearing our harts, and tiring out our mindes,
For that, in fine, which but repentance findes.
Where kindnes proues a kinde of leude conceite,
Leading the heart to lothsomnes of loue,
while wisest wits on wanton humours waite,
And wilfull fancies, doe but follies proue:
where power & pride, so plage the world with woes,
That peace and vertue, all to ruine goes.
Where gold is helde a God, siluer, a Saint,
And durt and drosse, are dearest in regarde:
where frendship failes, and faith beginnes to faint,
And curses rule, while blessed thoughts are barde:
And all and some, doe in conclusion proue,
wo to the world, that liues not by thy loue.
Where valure proues but foolish hardines,
And greatest wit, is wicked wilines,
And honour gotten by vnworthines,
Fils all the world with all vnhappines,
while vertue sighes, at sinners wickednes,
And Angels mourne, for our vngodlines.
Where parents grieue at childerns stubbornes,
And children smile, at parents childishnes,
where masters sigh, at seruants idlenes,
And seruants laugh at masters wantonnes,
while faithfull soules in sorrowes wretchednes.
Looke, but in heauen, to haue their blessednes.
Where subtle heads, are simple harts illusion,
while Tyraunt thoughts vniustly make intrusion,
And outward shewes, are inward thoughts allusion,
while strange delightes, are strong desires delusion:
And heedles care, doeth make vp this conclusion,
That lacke of grace, is all the worlds confusion.
Where brightest truth, by treason often blamed is,
VVhile faithles hart, with falshood all enflamed is,
And carefull age with sorrow all ashamed is,
That careles youth so long at large vntamed is,
That, where good nature, all (alas) misnamed is,
The faith of honour, vtterlie defamedis.
VVhere sore de
[...]aies the care of true Gentility,
And strong disquiet standeth for tranquility,
And vertue is of too much imbecility,
where faith is found but ful of al fragility,
when honors loue, that liues by hopes humility,
Must walke among the beggars for ability.
Oh wicked fruit, of woful hearts affection,
when once the soule, is toucht with sins infection,
And wil not learne, by care of thy correction,
To leade a life but by thy loues direction,
where in the fire, of thy bright sunnes reflexion,
They maie behold the height of their perfection.
But, what is Earth? and what but earth are we?
A goodly brag begunne, and endes in dust,
where old & young, & all the world may see,
From whence we came, and whetherto we must:
Short time we liue, no sooner dead, then rotten,
And scarce welburied, but wee are forgotten.
Oh Lord thou knowest, this world is all but wo,
where sinne doth seeke to get the vpper hand,
The flesh would faine, the spirit ouerthrow,
But that, her stay doth in thy mercy stand:
But, since the soule may conquer sinne by thee,
Lord, let thy mercy onely sight for me.
Let me but looke, vpon thy holie loue,
And sucke my honie from that heauenlie hiue:
wherein my soule, such sweetnes maie approue,
That with that foode shee maie for euer liue:
And feeding, so vpon thy sacred will,
when shee is fedde, yet maie shee hunger still.
Oh, bring me home, that long haue beene abroade,
And leade me streight, that long haue gone astraie:
And raise me vp, that haue beene ouertroade,
And on thy mercie, let me onlie staie:
That my poore soule, maie in thy comfort proue,
Lo, what it is, to liue but in thy loue.
Some wish for golde, and some for golden graces,
Some wish for wit, and some for worldely pleasure,
Some wish for power, and some for stately places,
And some, alone, doe wish for worldely treasure:
But, let my will, those wishes all displace,
And wish, alone, thy fauour, and thy grace.
Some in their chariots, some in horses trust,
But, be thou still a strong defence to me:
Some heere desire, but to possesse their lust,
Let my soules loue, be, but to liue to thee:
Some wish, but here, to purchase worldly fame,
Let me but ioie, to glorify thy name.
And not▪ alone, in sweetest wordes to moue,
The worldly eares to wonder at the same:
But in my workes thy praises I maie proue,
I doe but seeke the honour of thy name:
That all true soules maie iustly saie with me,
All that is good, directly comes of thee.
Let me but tuch the garment of thy grace,
I shall be healed of my sickest sore:
Let me but looke vpon thy louing face,
Such health will come, I shall be sicke no more:
Yea, if thy▪ mercy mi
[...]igate my paine,
If I were dead, I shoulde reuiue againe.
Forget, oh lorde the follies of my youth,
And giue me not the death of my desart▪
But of the treasures of thy heauenly Truth,
Bestow an almes on my needy hart:
That in the secrets, of thy sacred loue,
My carefull soule, her comfort may approue.
Let not mine eare one listen to the sounde,
Of vaine conceits, that but deceiue the minde,
Nor, let the worlde so giue my hart a wounde,
That, in my soule, mine eie be stroken blinde:
But, let my spirit onely make her choise,
But, in thy loue, and mercy to reioice.
Oh, that my waies, were all, and whole directed,
Vnto the seruice of thy sacred will,
And, that my faith, had in my soule effected,
The happy comfort, of that heauenly skill:
That, in true loue, might euer so attende thee,
As, in default, might, neuer more offende thee.
That I might leaue this lothsome world of ours,
And chuse the honor of thy childrens awe,
And in thy heauen, and with thy heauenly powers,
Learne, but obedience, to thy blessed lawe:
And with thy saints and holy Martyrs sing,
All lawde, and glory to my heauenly king.
Then, should my hart finde out my heaunly rest,
And sorrow then should tuch my soule no more,
But hart and soule, both in thy mercie blest,
Should daie and night, thy holy name dore:
And make the worlde, by some effectes to see,
It is thy loue hath wrought this life in me.
And with that worde, she sweetly fetch, a sigh,
And then a sobbe, and then a bitter teare,
As who should saie, that either death was nigh,
Or els her hart, was stroken with a feare.
Or els the spirit might be ouercome,
That for the time, her tongue was stroken dumme.
But, let it be, all blessed is the traunce,
when, so the soule is ouercome with loue,
That vertues choice, doth finde it is no chaunce,
when humble faith doth heaunly fauour proue:
And when the sences from their sleepe arise,
The spirit findes the life, that neuer dies.
So, when it seemde shee waked from her sleepe,
Or sodaine traunce, for so I tearme it right,
when such high care did so her sences keepe,
That shee awakt, with glory of the light:
Oh sacred loue, and sweetest life, quod shee,
what happy figure hath appearde to me?
Did I beholde, that fairest shining light?
That made me shake, for feare to see thy face,
And weepe for ioie, that in thy blessed sight,
My sinfull soule, might come, and sue for grace:
And did I see, thy loue so sweetely vse mee?
That, in thy mercy thou wouldst not refuse me.
And did thy mercy so thy loue entreate?
That iustice gaue her sworde to mercies hande,
And did thy mercy sit in iustice seate?
And did the iudgement in thy mercie stande?
Oh blessed loue, where mercie doth approue,
The fruite of loue, is mercie, mercies loue.
I must confesse my conscience did cond
[...]mne me,
Of such offence, as I coulde not denie:
And of such crime, as thou migh
[...]st well contēne me,
when by my due, I had deseru'd to die:
But when thy mercy did my sorrowe see,
How in thy pitty shee did pleade for me.
Beholde, quod shee, the true repentant hart,
which bleedes in teares with sorrowe of her sinne:
what passions haue perplexed euery part,
where penitence doth pitties suite beginne:
where true confession, doth submission proue,
And true contrition, cries to me for loue.
Beholde the faith that hath her fairest holde,
Vpon the gift of thy especiall grace,
Thy word of truth, that to the world hath told
The faithfull soule, in heauen shall haue a place:
And true repentance, shall by me obtaine,
The freed ioyes from euerlasting paine.
VVhen that vile serpent, euery soules accuser,
That sought to bring my comforts to decay,
That ougly deuil al the worldes abuser,
In furies rage, me thought did fly awaie:
And to the life, but of thy mercy leaue me,
who to thy seruice, sweetely did receiue me.
VVhen all thy Saintes, and martyrs came vnto me,
And in their armes thine Angels did embrace me,
And all were glad what comfort they could doe me,
And in a seate, of paradise so place me:
That al with ioie surprisde, these ioies to see,
I wake and praie, the vision true may bee.
For, this is it, sweete Lorde, that I would haue,
The world is short, in sounding my desire,
It is thy mercy that I onelie craue,
Thy vertues loue, that set my hart on fire,
And in thy loue, that onely liuing blisse,
That world may wish, but know not what it is.
FINIS.