A FunerallElegie.

An Anatomy&c.1611-69The first Anniversary.1612-69(First1612-25):om. 1611The entrie &c.1612-21:om. 1625-33:1611 and 1635-69 have no notes2 Whom1611,1612-25,1669:Who1633:whõ1635-545 Deedes1611,1612-25:deeds,1633-696 In-mate1611-12:Inmate1621-25:immate1633:inmate1635-6910 Song,1611:Song.1612-33:Song:1635-6914 then1611,1612-39:them1650-6918 shee,1611:shee1612,1669:shee.1621-5422 care,1611-21:care.1625-3324 Lethargie.] Letargee.1611,1612-2526 Man.1611,1621-25:man.1633-6931 name,1611,1612-25:name1633-6933 Font,1611:Fount,1612-6936 Palace1611-12,1621-25:palace1633-6940 times1611,1612-33:time1635-6948 law,1612,1669:law.1611,1621-25:law;1633-5450 glue] give1650-69What life &c.1612-21:om. 1625-3370 walke;1611,1612-25:walke,1633-6971 good,1633:good1612-25,1635-6975 old world, free,1611-12,1633-69:old world, free1621-2579 though] thought1621-3380 home-borne] homborne1611,1621-25:homeborne1633-6985 Yet,1612-25:Yet1633-69The sicknesses &c.1612:The sicknesse &c.1621:The sicknes &c.1625-3389 then] them1650-6999 ruine!Ed:ruine?1611,1612-25:ruine,1633-69100 mankinde!Ed:mankinde?1611,1612-69113 When as, the Sunne and man1633-39:no commas1650-69:When as the Sunne and man,1611,1612-25114 survive;1650-69:survive.1611,1612-39116 minoritie;1650-69:minoritee.1611,1621-25:minoritie,1633-39131 Grandsires1611,1612-21:Gransires1625-69sorrow,1611-21:sorrow.1625:sorrow:1633-69133 peasant1611,1612-25:pesant1633-69134 lives.1611,1633:lives1612:lives,1621-25135 man1611:man.1612-25:man,1633-69145 addes1611-21:adds1635-69:ads1625,1633149 silver;1611-12:silver1621-25:silver,1633-69150 scatter'd] scattred1612-25152 bodies,1611-25:bodies1633-39153 close weaving1633-69:close-weaning1611-12:close weaning1621-25161 Thus man,1611,1612-33:This man,1635-69,Chambers166 use:] use.1611,1621-33167 t'attend] t'atend1633169 man,1611:man1612-69171 any thing,1611-12:any thing;1621-33172 wast,1633:wast,1611:waste,1635-69178 Allay1611,1612-25:allay1633-69179 Sex;1611:Sex,1621-25:Sex:1633-69181 thoughts,1611-12,1635-69:thought,1621-33183 Shee, shee1611,1612-25:She, she1633-69186 no] no no1621188 Religion,1611,1650-69:Religion.1612-25:Religion:1633-39189 Growth1611:grouth1612-25:growth1633-69withered] whithered1621-25191 Then,1611,1621-25:Then1633-69195 Angels,1612-69:Angells:1611200 man.1611,1612-25:man,1633-39:man:1650-69210 Firmament1611-12:firmament1621-69212 Atomies.] Atomis.1611,1612-25213 cohaerence1611,1612-25:coherence1633-69217 then1611,1612-69:thereGrosart, who with Chambers attributes to 1669223 invented] innented1621228 copies,1633-69:copies;1611-12:copies1621-25229 Fate;1612-69:Fate:1611brest1611:brest:1612-25:breast,1633230 West Indies,1611:West-Indies,1621-69East;1611:East,1621-69234 money,1611-21:money1625-69237 knowst1611:knowest1612-69:and so in238237 this,] this1633-35238 is.1611,1612-33:is,1635-69244 contrould,] contrould.1611,1612-25251 Sphericall,1650-69:Sphericall1611,1612-39252 all.1611,1612-25:all,1633-69257 forme:1633-69:forme.1611,1612-25258 sheires,1633-35:sheeres,1611,1612-25:shieres,1639-69267 Tropiques1611,1612-25:tropiques1633-69273 with] of1635-69284 pace.] peace.1612-33286 Tenarif,1611,1612-25:Tenarus1633-69Hill1611,1612-25:hill1633-69288 there,1611,1612-21:there1625-69289 strooke1611,1612-25:strucke1633-69290 to morrow,1611,1612-25:to morrow1633-69295 Vault1611,1612-25:vault1633-69298 straight] strait1611-25300 pock-holes] pockholes1633-69301 th'earth?] th'earth;1633306 beauties best, proportion,1611,1612-39:beauty's best proportionChambers:1650-69drop the second comma313 infer,1611-12:infer.1621-25:infer1633-69318 proportions1611-12:proportion1621-69321 Elements,1611-12:Elements1621-69325 Shee, shee1611,1612-25:She, she1633-69shee's] she's1633-69knowst1611:knowest1612-25:know'st1633-69326 knowst1611,1612-25:knowest1633-69336 Deformitee.1611,1612-25:deformitie.1633-69351 inow,1611,1612-25:enough,1633:enow,1635-69352 allow.] allow,1621-33366 Diaphanous,1611,1612-25:diaphanous,1633-69369 Shee, shee,1611,1612-25(shee1625): She, she1633-69(butShee,1633,in pass-over word)370 knowst1611:knowest1621-69374 vanitie, to thinke1633-69:vanity to think,1611,1612-25379-80 feele this, ... barren is.1611,1612-69:feele this. ... barren is;Chambers.See note383 Th'Ayre1611,1612-21:Th'ayre1625-69387 Th'Ayre1611:Th'ayre1612-69390Mages]No change of type,1611-12394 Charme,1611-21:Charme1625-54404 Ashes1611,1612-25:ashes1633-69407 Swan,1611,1612-25:swan,1633-69415 Impressions1611:Impression1612-25:impression1633-69416 But,1611:But1621-69Receivers1611-12:rest no capital421 have] have,1633427 is dead;] is dead,1633-69shee's dead;1611-25:she's dead;1633-69431 nothing] no thing1611-21442 they're] thy're1633443 And,1611,1612-25:and,1633-69467 (in due measure)1611,1612-25(but 1625 drops second bracket):commas1633-69468 Office1611,1612-25:office1633-69473 nature:1611-25:nature,1633-69

An Anatomy&c.1611-69The first Anniversary.1612-69(First1612-25):om. 1611

The entrie &c.1612-21:om. 1625-33:1611 and 1635-69 have no notes

2 Whom1611,1612-25,1669:Who1633:whõ1635-54

5 Deedes1611,1612-25:deeds,1633-69

6 In-mate1611-12:Inmate1621-25:immate1633:inmate1635-69

10 Song,1611:Song.1612-33:Song:1635-69

14 then1611,1612-39:them1650-69

18 shee,1611:shee1612,1669:shee.1621-54

22 care,1611-21:care.1625-33

24 Lethargie.] Letargee.1611,1612-25

26 Man.1611,1621-25:man.1633-69

31 name,1611,1612-25:name1633-69

33 Font,1611:Fount,1612-69

36 Palace1611-12,1621-25:palace1633-69

40 times1611,1612-33:time1635-69

48 law,1612,1669:law.1611,1621-25:law;1633-54

50 glue] give1650-69

What life &c.1612-21:om. 1625-33

70 walke;1611,1612-25:walke,1633-69

71 good,1633:good1612-25,1635-69

75 old world, free,1611-12,1633-69:old world, free1621-25

79 though] thought1621-33

80 home-borne] homborne1611,1621-25:homeborne1633-69

85 Yet,1612-25:Yet1633-69

The sicknesses &c.1612:The sicknesse &c.1621:The sicknes &c.1625-33

89 then] them1650-69

99 ruine!Ed:ruine?1611,1612-25:ruine,1633-69

100 mankinde!Ed:mankinde?1611,1612-69

113 When as, the Sunne and man1633-39:no commas1650-69:When as the Sunne and man,1611,1612-25

114 survive;1650-69:survive.1611,1612-39

116 minoritie;1650-69:minoritee.1611,1621-25:minoritie,1633-39

131 Grandsires1611,1612-21:Gransires1625-69

sorrow,1611-21:sorrow.1625:sorrow:1633-69

133 peasant1611,1612-25:pesant1633-69

134 lives.1611,1633:lives1612:lives,1621-25

135 man1611:man.1612-25:man,1633-69

145 addes1611-21:adds1635-69:ads1625,1633

149 silver;1611-12:silver1621-25:silver,1633-69

150 scatter'd] scattred1612-25

152 bodies,1611-25:bodies1633-39

153 close weaving1633-69:close-weaning1611-12:close weaning1621-25

161 Thus man,1611,1612-33:This man,1635-69,Chambers

166 use:] use.1611,1621-33

167 t'attend] t'atend1633

169 man,1611:man1612-69

171 any thing,1611-12:any thing;1621-33

172 wast,1633:wast,1611:waste,1635-69

178 Allay1611,1612-25:allay1633-69

179 Sex;1611:Sex,1621-25:Sex:1633-69

181 thoughts,1611-12,1635-69:thought,1621-33

183 Shee, shee1611,1612-25:She, she1633-69

186 no] no no1621

188 Religion,1611,1650-69:Religion.1612-25:Religion:1633-39

189 Growth1611:grouth1612-25:growth1633-69

withered] whithered1621-25

191 Then,1611,1621-25:Then1633-69

195 Angels,1612-69:Angells:1611

200 man.1611,1612-25:man,1633-39:man:1650-69

210 Firmament1611-12:firmament1621-69

212 Atomies.] Atomis.1611,1612-25

213 cohaerence1611,1612-25:coherence1633-69

217 then1611,1612-69:thereGrosart, who with Chambers attributes to 1669

223 invented] innented1621

228 copies,1633-69:copies;1611-12:copies1621-25

229 Fate;1612-69:Fate:1611

brest1611:brest:1612-25:breast,1633

230 West Indies,1611:West-Indies,1621-69

East;1611:East,1621-69

234 money,1611-21:money1625-69

237 knowst1611:knowest1612-69:and so in238

237 this,] this1633-35

238 is.1611,1612-33:is,1635-69

244 contrould,] contrould.1611,1612-25

251 Sphericall,1650-69:Sphericall1611,1612-39

252 all.1611,1612-25:all,1633-69

257 forme:1633-69:forme.1611,1612-25

258 sheires,1633-35:sheeres,1611,1612-25:shieres,1639-69

267 Tropiques1611,1612-25:tropiques1633-69

273 with] of1635-69

284 pace.] peace.1612-33

286 Tenarif,1611,1612-25:Tenarus1633-69

Hill1611,1612-25:hill1633-69

288 there,1611,1612-21:there1625-69

289 strooke1611,1612-25:strucke1633-69

290 to morrow,1611,1612-25:to morrow1633-69

295 Vault1611,1612-25:vault1633-69

298 straight] strait1611-25

300 pock-holes] pockholes1633-69

301 th'earth?] th'earth;1633

306 beauties best, proportion,1611,1612-39:beauty's best proportionChambers:1650-69drop the second comma

313 infer,1611-12:infer.1621-25:infer1633-69

318 proportions1611-12:proportion1621-69

321 Elements,1611-12:Elements1621-69

325 Shee, shee1611,1612-25:She, she1633-69

shee's] she's1633-69

knowst1611:knowest1612-25:know'st1633-69

326 knowst1611,1612-25:knowest1633-69

336 Deformitee.1611,1612-25:deformitie.1633-69

351 inow,1611,1612-25:enough,1633:enow,1635-69

352 allow.] allow,1621-33

366 Diaphanous,1611,1612-25:diaphanous,1633-69

369 Shee, shee,1611,1612-25(shee1625): She, she1633-69(butShee,1633,in pass-over word)

370 knowst1611:knowest1621-69

374 vanitie, to thinke1633-69:vanity to think,1611,1612-25

379-80 feele this, ... barren is.1611,1612-69:feele this. ... barren is;Chambers.See note

383 Th'Ayre1611,1612-21:Th'ayre1625-69

387 Th'Ayre1611:Th'ayre1612-69

390Mages]No change of type,1611-12

394 Charme,1611-21:Charme1625-54

404 Ashes1611,1612-25:ashes1633-69

407 Swan,1611,1612-25:swan,1633-69

415 Impressions1611:Impression1612-25:impression1633-69

416 But,1611:But1621-69

Receivers1611-12:rest no capital

421 have] have,1633

427 is dead;] is dead,1633-69

shee's dead;1611-25:she's dead;1633-69

431 nothing] no thing1611-21

442 they're] thy're1633

443 And,1611,1612-25:and,1633-69

467 (in due measure)1611,1612-25(but 1625 drops second bracket):commas1633-69

468 Office1611,1612-25:office1633-69

473 nature:1611-25:nature,1633-69

Note

'TIS lost, to trust a Tombe with such a guest,Or to confine her in a marble chest.Alas, what's Marble, Jeat, or Porphyrie,Priz'd with the Chrysolite of either eye,5Or with those Pearles, and Rubies, which she was?Joyne the two Indies in one Tombe, 'tis glasse;And so is all to her materials,Though every inch were ten Escurials,Yet she's demolish'd: can wee keepe her then10In works of hands, or of the wits of men?Can these memorials, ragges of paper, giveLife to that name, by which name they must live?Sickly, alas, short-liv'd, aborted beeThose carcasse verses, whose soule is not shee.15And can shee, who no longer would be shee,Being such a Tabernacle, stoop to beIn paper wrapt; or, when shee would not lieIn such a house, dwell in an Elegie?But 'tis no matter; wee may well allow20Verse to live so long as the world will now,For her death wounded it. The world containesPrinces for armes, and Counsellors for braines,Lawyers for tongues, Divines for hearts, and more,The Rich for stomackes, and for backes, the Poore;25The Officers for hands, Merchants for feet,By which, remote and distant Countries meet.But those fine spirits which do tune, and setThis Organ, are those peeces which begetWonder and love; and these were shee; and shee30Being spent, the world must needs decrepit bee;For since death will proceed to triumph still,He can finde nothing, after her, to kill,Except the world it selfe, so great as shee.Thus brave and confident may Nature bee,35Death cannot give her such another blow,Because shee cannot such another show.But must wee say she's dead? may't not be saidThat as a sundred clocke is peecemeale laid,Not to be lost, but by the makers hand40Repollish'd, without errour then to stand,Or as the Affrique Niger streame enwombsIt selfe into the earth, and after comes(Having first made a naturall bridge, to passeFor many leagues) farre greater then it was,45May't not be said, that her grave shall restoreHer, greater, purer, firmer, then before?Heaven may say this, and joy in't, but can weeWho live, and lacke her, here this vantage see?What is't to us, alas, if there have beene50An Angell made a Throne, or Cherubin?Wee lose by't: and as aged men are gladBeing tastlesse growne, to joy in joyes they had,So now the sick starv'd world must feed uponThis joy, that we had her, who now is gone.55Rejoyce then Nature, and this World, that you,Fearing the last fires hastning to subdueYour force and vigour, ere it were neere gone,Wisely bestow'd and laid it all on one.One, whose cleare body was so pure and thinne,60Because it need disguise no thought within.'Twas but a through-light scarfe, her minde t'inroule;Or exhalation breath'd out from her Soule.One, whom all men who durst no more, admir'd:And whom, who ere had worth enough, desir'd;65As when a Temple's built, Saints emulateTo which of them, it shall be consecrate.But, as when heaven lookes on us with new eyes,Those new starres every Artist exercise,What place they should assigne to them they doubt,70Argue,'and agree not, till those starres goe out:So the world studied whose this peece should be,Till shee can be no bodies else, nor shee:But like a Lampe of Balsamum, desir'dRather t'adorne, then last, she soone expir'd,75Cloath'd in her virgin white integritie,For marriage, though it doe not staine, doth dye.To scape th'infirmities which wait uponWoman, she went away, before sh'was one;And the worlds busie noyse to overcome,80Tooke so much death, as serv'd foropium;For though she could not, nor could chuse to dye,She'ath yeelded to too long an extasie:Hee which not knowing her said History,Should come to reade the booke of destiny,85How faire, and chast, humble, and high she'ad been,Much promis'd, much perform'd, at not fifteene,And measuring future things, by things before,Should turne the leafe to reade, and reade no more,Would thinke that either destiny mistooke,90Or that some leaves were torne out of the booke.But 'tis not so; Fate did but usher herTo yeares of reasons use, and then inferreHer destiny to her selfe, which libertyShe tooke but for thus much, thus much to die.95Her modestie not suffering her to beeFellow-Commissioner with Destinie,She did no more but die; if after herAny shall live, which dare true good prefer,Every such person is her deligate,100T'accomplish that which should have beene her Fate.They shall make up that Booke and shall have thanksOf Fate, and her, for filling up their blankes.For future vertuous deeds are Legacies,Which from the gift of her example rise;105And 'tis in heav'n part of spirituall mirth,To see how well the good play her, on earth.

'TIS lost, to trust a Tombe with such a guest,Or to confine her in a marble chest.Alas, what's Marble, Jeat, or Porphyrie,Priz'd with the Chrysolite of either eye,5Or with those Pearles, and Rubies, which she was?Joyne the two Indies in one Tombe, 'tis glasse;And so is all to her materials,Though every inch were ten Escurials,Yet she's demolish'd: can wee keepe her then10In works of hands, or of the wits of men?Can these memorials, ragges of paper, giveLife to that name, by which name they must live?Sickly, alas, short-liv'd, aborted beeThose carcasse verses, whose soule is not shee.15And can shee, who no longer would be shee,Being such a Tabernacle, stoop to beIn paper wrapt; or, when shee would not lieIn such a house, dwell in an Elegie?But 'tis no matter; wee may well allow20Verse to live so long as the world will now,For her death wounded it. The world containesPrinces for armes, and Counsellors for braines,Lawyers for tongues, Divines for hearts, and more,The Rich for stomackes, and for backes, the Poore;25The Officers for hands, Merchants for feet,By which, remote and distant Countries meet.But those fine spirits which do tune, and setThis Organ, are those peeces which begetWonder and love; and these were shee; and shee30Being spent, the world must needs decrepit bee;For since death will proceed to triumph still,He can finde nothing, after her, to kill,Except the world it selfe, so great as shee.Thus brave and confident may Nature bee,35Death cannot give her such another blow,Because shee cannot such another show.But must wee say she's dead? may't not be saidThat as a sundred clocke is peecemeale laid,Not to be lost, but by the makers hand40Repollish'd, without errour then to stand,Or as the Affrique Niger streame enwombsIt selfe into the earth, and after comes(Having first made a naturall bridge, to passeFor many leagues) farre greater then it was,45May't not be said, that her grave shall restoreHer, greater, purer, firmer, then before?Heaven may say this, and joy in't, but can weeWho live, and lacke her, here this vantage see?What is't to us, alas, if there have beene50An Angell made a Throne, or Cherubin?Wee lose by't: and as aged men are gladBeing tastlesse growne, to joy in joyes they had,So now the sick starv'd world must feed uponThis joy, that we had her, who now is gone.55Rejoyce then Nature, and this World, that you,Fearing the last fires hastning to subdueYour force and vigour, ere it were neere gone,Wisely bestow'd and laid it all on one.One, whose cleare body was so pure and thinne,60Because it need disguise no thought within.'Twas but a through-light scarfe, her minde t'inroule;Or exhalation breath'd out from her Soule.One, whom all men who durst no more, admir'd:And whom, who ere had worth enough, desir'd;65As when a Temple's built, Saints emulateTo which of them, it shall be consecrate.But, as when heaven lookes on us with new eyes,Those new starres every Artist exercise,What place they should assigne to them they doubt,70Argue,'and agree not, till those starres goe out:So the world studied whose this peece should be,Till shee can be no bodies else, nor shee:But like a Lampe of Balsamum, desir'dRather t'adorne, then last, she soone expir'd,75Cloath'd in her virgin white integritie,For marriage, though it doe not staine, doth dye.To scape th'infirmities which wait uponWoman, she went away, before sh'was one;And the worlds busie noyse to overcome,80Tooke so much death, as serv'd foropium;For though she could not, nor could chuse to dye,She'ath yeelded to too long an extasie:Hee which not knowing her said History,Should come to reade the booke of destiny,85How faire, and chast, humble, and high she'ad been,Much promis'd, much perform'd, at not fifteene,And measuring future things, by things before,Should turne the leafe to reade, and reade no more,Would thinke that either destiny mistooke,90Or that some leaves were torne out of the booke.But 'tis not so; Fate did but usher herTo yeares of reasons use, and then inferreHer destiny to her selfe, which libertyShe tooke but for thus much, thus much to die.95Her modestie not suffering her to beeFellow-Commissioner with Destinie,She did no more but die; if after herAny shall live, which dare true good prefer,Every such person is her deligate,100T'accomplish that which should have beene her Fate.They shall make up that Booke and shall have thanksOf Fate, and her, for filling up their blankes.For future vertuous deeds are Legacies,Which from the gift of her example rise;105And 'tis in heav'n part of spirituall mirth,To see how well the good play her, on earth.

'TIS lost, to trust a Tombe with such a guest,

Or to confine her in a marble chest.

Alas, what's Marble, Jeat, or Porphyrie,

Priz'd with the Chrysolite of either eye,

5Or with those Pearles, and Rubies, which she was?

Joyne the two Indies in one Tombe, 'tis glasse;

And so is all to her materials,

Though every inch were ten Escurials,

Yet she's demolish'd: can wee keepe her then

10In works of hands, or of the wits of men?

Can these memorials, ragges of paper, give

Life to that name, by which name they must live?

Sickly, alas, short-liv'd, aborted bee

Those carcasse verses, whose soule is not shee.

15And can shee, who no longer would be shee,

Being such a Tabernacle, stoop to be

In paper wrapt; or, when shee would not lie

In such a house, dwell in an Elegie?

But 'tis no matter; wee may well allow

20Verse to live so long as the world will now,

For her death wounded it. The world containes

Princes for armes, and Counsellors for braines,

Lawyers for tongues, Divines for hearts, and more,

The Rich for stomackes, and for backes, the Poore;

25The Officers for hands, Merchants for feet,

By which, remote and distant Countries meet.

But those fine spirits which do tune, and set

This Organ, are those peeces which beget

Wonder and love; and these were shee; and shee

30Being spent, the world must needs decrepit bee;

For since death will proceed to triumph still,

He can finde nothing, after her, to kill,

Except the world it selfe, so great as shee.

Thus brave and confident may Nature bee,

35Death cannot give her such another blow,

Because shee cannot such another show.

But must wee say she's dead? may't not be said

That as a sundred clocke is peecemeale laid,

Not to be lost, but by the makers hand

40Repollish'd, without errour then to stand,

Or as the Affrique Niger streame enwombs

It selfe into the earth, and after comes

(Having first made a naturall bridge, to passe

For many leagues) farre greater then it was,

45May't not be said, that her grave shall restore

Her, greater, purer, firmer, then before?

Heaven may say this, and joy in't, but can wee

Who live, and lacke her, here this vantage see?

What is't to us, alas, if there have beene

50An Angell made a Throne, or Cherubin?

Wee lose by't: and as aged men are glad

Being tastlesse growne, to joy in joyes they had,

So now the sick starv'd world must feed upon

This joy, that we had her, who now is gone.

55Rejoyce then Nature, and this World, that you,

Fearing the last fires hastning to subdue

Your force and vigour, ere it were neere gone,

Wisely bestow'd and laid it all on one.

One, whose cleare body was so pure and thinne,

60Because it need disguise no thought within.

'Twas but a through-light scarfe, her minde t'inroule;

Or exhalation breath'd out from her Soule.

One, whom all men who durst no more, admir'd:

And whom, who ere had worth enough, desir'd;

65As when a Temple's built, Saints emulate

To which of them, it shall be consecrate.

But, as when heaven lookes on us with new eyes,

Those new starres every Artist exercise,

What place they should assigne to them they doubt,

70Argue,'and agree not, till those starres goe out:

So the world studied whose this peece should be,

Till shee can be no bodies else, nor shee:

But like a Lampe of Balsamum, desir'd

Rather t'adorne, then last, she soone expir'd,

75Cloath'd in her virgin white integritie,

For marriage, though it doe not staine, doth dye.

To scape th'infirmities which wait upon

Woman, she went away, before sh'was one;

And the worlds busie noyse to overcome,

80Tooke so much death, as serv'd foropium;

For though she could not, nor could chuse to dye,

She'ath yeelded to too long an extasie:

Hee which not knowing her said History,

Should come to reade the booke of destiny,

85How faire, and chast, humble, and high she'ad been,

Much promis'd, much perform'd, at not fifteene,

And measuring future things, by things before,

Should turne the leafe to reade, and reade no more,

Would thinke that either destiny mistooke,

90Or that some leaves were torne out of the booke.

But 'tis not so; Fate did but usher her

To yeares of reasons use, and then inferre

Her destiny to her selfe, which liberty

She tooke but for thus much, thus much to die.

95Her modestie not suffering her to bee

Fellow-Commissioner with Destinie,

She did no more but die; if after her

Any shall live, which dare true good prefer,

Every such person is her deligate,

100T'accomplish that which should have beene her Fate.

They shall make up that Booke and shall have thanks

Of Fate, and her, for filling up their blankes.

For future vertuous deeds are Legacies,

Which from the gift of her example rise;

105And 'tis in heav'n part of spirituall mirth,

To see how well the good play her, on earth.

FunerallElegie.1611,1612-69:whole poem printed in italics1612-25:in roman 16111 lost,1611,1612-25:lost1633:losse1635-692 chest.1611-21:chest,1625-698 Escurials,] escurials.1611-2513 aborted1611,1612-33:abortive1635-6917 or,1612-25:or1633-6918 a] an1635-6922-5 Princes, Counsellors&c.all in capitals exceptOfficers1611,1612-25:later editions erratic24: backes,1611:backes1612-25:backs1633-69Poore]speltPore1611-1228 peeces] peeces,1633-69301625 inserts marginal note, Smalnesse of stature.See p.23533 as1611-21:om. 1625:was1633-6947 in't,] in't;1612-21:in'ts,162548 her, here1611,1612-25:her, here,1633:her here,1635-6958 one.1612-25:one;1633-6964 worth] worke163374 expir'd,1633-69:expir'd;1611,1612-2575 integritie,1633-69:integritie;1611-2576 it doe1611,1612-25:it doth1633-69dye.1611,1612-69(speltdie1633-69):Chambers closes the sentence at74 expir'dand prints75-7thus—Clothed in her virgin white integrity—For marriage, though it doth not stain, doth dye—To 'scape&c.83 said1611,1612-33:sad1635-6994 tooke1611,1612-25:tooke,1633-6998 prefer,1611,1612-25:prefer;1633-69

FunerallElegie.1611,1612-69:whole poem printed in italics1612-25:in roman 1611

1 lost,1611,1612-25:lost1633:losse1635-69

2 chest.1611-21:chest,1625-69

8 Escurials,] escurials.1611-25

13 aborted1611,1612-33:abortive1635-69

17 or,1612-25:or1633-69

18 a] an1635-69

22-5 Princes, Counsellors&c.all in capitals exceptOfficers1611,1612-25:later editions erratic

24: backes,1611:backes1612-25:backs1633-69

Poore]speltPore1611-12

28 peeces] peeces,1633-69

301625 inserts marginal note, Smalnesse of stature.See p.235

33 as1611-21:om. 1625:was1633-69

47 in't,] in't;1612-21:in'ts,1625

48 her, here1611,1612-25:her, here,1633:her here,1635-69

58 one.1612-25:one;1633-69

64 worth] worke1633

74 expir'd,1633-69:expir'd;1611,1612-25

75 integritie,1633-69:integritie;1611-25

76 it doe1611,1612-25:it doth1633-69

dye.1611,1612-69(speltdie1633-69):Chambers closes the sentence at74 expir'dand prints75-7thus—

Clothed in her virgin white integrity—For marriage, though it doth not stain, doth dye—To 'scape&c.

Clothed in her virgin white integrity—For marriage, though it doth not stain, doth dye—To 'scape&c.

Clothed in her virgin white integrity

—For marriage, though it doth not stain, doth dye—

To 'scape&c.

83 said1611,1612-33:sad1635-69

94 tooke1611,1612-25:tooke,1633-69

98 prefer,1611,1612-25:prefer;1633-69

Wherein,

By occasion of the Religious death of

MistrisElizabeth Drvry,

the incommodities of the Soule in

this life, and her exaltation in

the next, are contemplated.

TWO Soules move here, and mine (a third) must movePaces of admiration, and of love;Thy Soule (deare virgin) whose this tribute is,Mov'd from this mortall Spheare to lively blisse;5And yet moves still, and still aspires to seeThe worlds last day, thy glories full degree:Like as those starres which thou o'r-lookest farre,Are in their place, and yet still moved are:No soule (whiles with the luggage of this clay10It clogged is) can follow thee halfe way;Or see thy flight, which doth our thoughts outgoeSo fast, that now the lightning moves but slow:But now thou art as high in heaven flowneAs heaven's from us; what soule besides thine owne15Can tell thy joyes, or say he can relateThy glorious Journals in that blessed state?I envie thee (Rich soule) I envy thee,Although I cannot yet thy glory see:And thou (great spirit) which hers follow'd hast20So fast, as none can follow thine so fast;So far, as none can follow thine so farre,(And if this flesh did not the passage barreHadst caught her) let me wonder at thy flightWhich long agone hadst lost the vulgar sight,25And now mak'st proud the better eyes, that theyCan see thee less'ned in thine ayery way;So while thou mak'st her soule by progresse knowneThou mak'st a noble progresse of thine owne,From this worlds carkasse having mounted high30To that pure life of immortalitie;Since thine aspiring thoughts themselves so raiseThat more may not beseeme a creatures praise,Yet still thou vow'st her more; and every yeareMak'st a new progresse, while thou wandrest here;35Still upward mount; and let thy Makers praiseHonor thy Laura, and adorne thy laies.And since thy Muse her head in heaven shrouds,Oh let her never stoope below the clouds:And if those glorious sainted soules may know40Or what wee doe, or what wee sing below,Those acts, those songs shall still content them bestWhich praise those awfull Powers that make them blest.

TWO Soules move here, and mine (a third) must movePaces of admiration, and of love;Thy Soule (deare virgin) whose this tribute is,Mov'd from this mortall Spheare to lively blisse;5And yet moves still, and still aspires to seeThe worlds last day, thy glories full degree:Like as those starres which thou o'r-lookest farre,Are in their place, and yet still moved are:No soule (whiles with the luggage of this clay10It clogged is) can follow thee halfe way;Or see thy flight, which doth our thoughts outgoeSo fast, that now the lightning moves but slow:But now thou art as high in heaven flowneAs heaven's from us; what soule besides thine owne15Can tell thy joyes, or say he can relateThy glorious Journals in that blessed state?I envie thee (Rich soule) I envy thee,Although I cannot yet thy glory see:And thou (great spirit) which hers follow'd hast20So fast, as none can follow thine so fast;So far, as none can follow thine so farre,(And if this flesh did not the passage barreHadst caught her) let me wonder at thy flightWhich long agone hadst lost the vulgar sight,25And now mak'st proud the better eyes, that theyCan see thee less'ned in thine ayery way;So while thou mak'st her soule by progresse knowneThou mak'st a noble progresse of thine owne,From this worlds carkasse having mounted high30To that pure life of immortalitie;Since thine aspiring thoughts themselves so raiseThat more may not beseeme a creatures praise,Yet still thou vow'st her more; and every yeareMak'st a new progresse, while thou wandrest here;35Still upward mount; and let thy Makers praiseHonor thy Laura, and adorne thy laies.And since thy Muse her head in heaven shrouds,Oh let her never stoope below the clouds:And if those glorious sainted soules may know40Or what wee doe, or what wee sing below,Those acts, those songs shall still content them bestWhich praise those awfull Powers that make them blest.

TWO Soules move here, and mine (a third) must move

Paces of admiration, and of love;

Thy Soule (deare virgin) whose this tribute is,

Mov'd from this mortall Spheare to lively blisse;

5And yet moves still, and still aspires to see

The worlds last day, thy glories full degree:

Like as those starres which thou o'r-lookest farre,

Are in their place, and yet still moved are:

No soule (whiles with the luggage of this clay

10It clogged is) can follow thee halfe way;

Or see thy flight, which doth our thoughts outgoe

So fast, that now the lightning moves but slow:

But now thou art as high in heaven flowne

As heaven's from us; what soule besides thine owne

15Can tell thy joyes, or say he can relate

Thy glorious Journals in that blessed state?

I envie thee (Rich soule) I envy thee,

Although I cannot yet thy glory see:

And thou (great spirit) which hers follow'd hast

20So fast, as none can follow thine so fast;

So far, as none can follow thine so farre,

(And if this flesh did not the passage barre

Hadst caught her) let me wonder at thy flight

Which long agone hadst lost the vulgar sight,

25And now mak'st proud the better eyes, that they

Can see thee less'ned in thine ayery way;

So while thou mak'st her soule by progresse knowne

Thou mak'st a noble progresse of thine owne,

From this worlds carkasse having mounted high

30To that pure life of immortalitie;

Since thine aspiring thoughts themselves so raise

That more may not beseeme a creatures praise,

Yet still thou vow'st her more; and every yeare

Mak'st a new progresse, while thou wandrest here;

35Still upward mount; and let thy Makers praise

Honor thy Laura, and adorne thy laies.

And since thy Muse her head in heaven shrouds,

Oh let her never stoope below the clouds:

And if those glorious sainted soules may know

40Or what wee doe, or what wee sing below,

Those acts, those songs shall still content them best

Which praise those awfull Powers that make them blest.

Of the Progresse&c.1612-69:The second Anniversary.1612-69(in 1612-21 it stands at head of page)The Harbinger&c.]In 1612-25 this poem printed in italics8 are:] are1612-2512 that now] as now1635-69,Chambers27 soule] soules161228 owne,1635-69:owne.1612-3334 while] whilst166935 upward] upwards1612

Of the Progresse&c.1612-69:The second Anniversary.1612-69(in 1612-21 it stands at head of page)

The Harbinger&c.]In 1612-25 this poem printed in italics

8 are:] are1612-25

12 that now] as now1635-69,Chambers

27 soule] soules1612

28 owne,1635-69:owne.1612-33

34 while] whilst1669

35 upward] upwards1612

Note

Note (Supp.)

The entrance.1NOTHING could make me sooner to confesseThat this world had an everlastingnesse,Then to consider, that a yeare is runne,Since both this lower world's, and the Sunnes Sunne,5The Lustre, and the vigor of this All,Did set; 'twere blasphemie to say, did fall.But as a ship which hath strooke saile, doth runneBy force of that force which before, it wonne:Or as sometimes in a beheaded man,10Though at those two Red seas, which freely ranne,One from the Trunke, another from the Head,His soule be sail'd, to her eternall bed,His eyes will twinckle, and his tongue will roll,As though he beckned, and cal'd backe his soule,15He graspes his hands, and he pulls up his feet,And seemes to reach, and to step forth to meetHis soule; when all these motions which we saw,Are but as Ice, which crackles at a thaw:Or as a Lute, which in moist weather, rings20Her knell alone, by cracking of her strings:So struggles this dead world, now shee is gone;For there is motion in corruption.As some daies are at the Creation nam'd,Before the Sunne, the which fram'd daies, was fram'd,25So after this Sunne's set, some shew appeares,And orderly vicissitude of yeares.Yet a new Deluge, and ofLetheflood,Hath drown'd us all, All have forgot all good,Forgetting her, the maine reserve of all.30Yet in this deluge, grosse and generall,Thou seest me strive for life; my life shall bee,To be hereafter prais'd, for praysing thee;Immortall Maid, who though thou would'st refuseThe name of Mother, be unto my Muse35A Father, since her chast Ambition is,Yearely to bring forth such a child as this.These Hymnes may worke on future wits, and soMay great Grand children of thy prayses grow.And so, though not revive, embalme and spice40The world, which else would putrifie with vice.For thus, Man may extend thy progeny,Untill man doe but vanish, and not die.These Hymnes thy issue, may encrease so long,As till Gods greatVenitechange the song.A iust disestimation2of this world.45Thirst for that time, O my insatiate soule,And serve thy thirst, with Gods safe-sealing Bowle.Be thirstie still, and drinke still till thou goeTo th'only Health, to be Hydroptique so.Forget this rotten world; And unto thee50Let thine owne times as an old storie bee.Be not concern'd: studie not why, nor when;Doe not so much as not beleeve a man.For though to erre, be worst, to try truths forth,Is far more businesse, then this world is worth.55The world is but a carkasse; thou art fedBy it, but as a worme, that carkasse bred;And why should'st thou, poore worme, consider more,When this world will grow better then before,Then those thy fellow wormes doe thinke upon60That carkasses last resurrection.Forget this world, and scarce thinke of it so,As of old clothes, cast off a yeare agoe.To be thus stupid is Alacritie;Men thus Lethargique have best Memory.65Look upward; that's towards her, whose happy stateWe now lament not, but congratulate.Shee, to whom all this world was but a stage,Where all sat harkning how her youthfull ageShould be emploi'd, because in all shee did,70Some Figure of the Golden times was hid.Who could not lacke, what e'r this world could give,Because shee was the forme, that made it live;Nor could complaine, that this world was unfitTo be staid in, then when shee was in it;75Shee that first tried indifferent desiresBy vertue, and vertue by religious fires,Shee to whose person Paradise adher'd,As Courts to Princes, shee whose eyes ensphear'dStar-light enough, t'have made the South controule,80(Had shee beene there) the Star-full Northerne Pole,Shee, shee is gone; she is gone; when thou knowest this,What fragmentary rubbidge this world isThou knowest, and that it is not worth a thought;He honors it too much that thinkes it nought.Contemplation of our state in our death-bed.85Thinke then, my soule, that death is but a Groome,Which brings a Taper to the outward roome,Whence thou spiest first a little glimmering light,And after brings it nearer to thy sight:For such approaches doth heaven make in death.90Thinke thy selfe labouring now with broken breath,And thinke those broken and soft Notes to beeDivision, and thy happyest Harmonie.Thinke thee laid on thy death-bed, loose and slacke;And thinke that, but unbinding of a packe,95To take one precious thing, thy soule from thence.Thinke thy selfe parch'd with fevers violence,Anger thine ague more, by calling itThy Physicke; chide the slacknesse of the fit.Thinke that thou hear'st thy knell, and think no more,100But that, as Bels cal'd thee to Church before,So this, to the Triumphant Church, calls thee.Thinke Satans Sergeants round about thee bee,And thinke that but for Legacies they thrust;Give one thy Pride, to'another give thy Lust:105Give them those sinnes which they gave thee before,And trust th'immaculate blood to wash thy score.Thinke thy friends weeping round, and thinke that theyWeepe but because they goe not yet thy way.Thinke that they close thine eyes, and thinke in this,110That they confesse much in the world, amisse,Who dare not trust a dead mans eye with that,Which they from God, and Angels cover not.Thinke that they shroud thee up, and think from thenceThey reinvest thee in white innocence.115Thinke that thy body rots, and (if so low,Thy soule exalted so, thy thoughts can goe,)Think thee a Prince, who of themselves createWormes which insensibly devoure their State.Thinke that they bury thee, and thinke that right120Laies thee to sleepe but a Saint Lucies night.Thinke these things cheerefully: and if thou beeDrowsie or slacke, remember then that shee,Shee whose Complexion was so even made,That which of her Ingredients should invade125The other three, no Feare, no Art could guesse:So far were all remov'd from more or lesse.But as in Mithridate, or just perfumes,Where all good things being met, no one presumesTo governe, or to triumph on the rest,130Only because all were, no part was best.And as, though all doe know, that quantitiesAre made of lines, and lines from Points arise,None can these lines or quantities unjoynt,And say this is a line, or this a point,135So though the Elements and Humors wereIn her, one could not say, this governes there.Whose even constitution might have wonneAny disease to venter on the Sunne,Rather then her: and make a spirit feare,140That hee to disuniting subject were.To whose proportions if we would compareCubes, th'are unstable; Circles, Angular;She who was such a chaine as Fate employesTo bring mankinde all Fortunes it enjoyes;145So fast, so even wrought, as one would thinke,No Accident could threaten any linke;Shee, shee embrac'd a sicknesse, gave it meat,The purest blood, and breath, that e'r it eate;And hath taught us, that though a good man hath150Title to heaven, and plead it by his Faith,And though he may pretend a conquest, sinceHeaven was content to suffer violence,Yea though hee plead a long possession too,(For they're in heaven on earth who heavens workes do)155Though hee had right and power and place, before,Yet Death must usher, and unlocke the doore.Incommodities of the Soule in the Body.3Thinke further on thy selfe, my Soule, and thinkeHow thou at first wast made but in a sinke;Thinke that it argued some infirmitie,160That those two soules, which then thou foundst in me,Thou fedst upon, and drewst into thee, bothMy second soule of sense, and first of growth.Thinke but how poore thou wast, how obnoxious;Whom a small lumpe of flesh could poyson thus.165This curded milke, this poore unlittered whelpeMy body, could, beyond escape or helpe,Infect thee with Originall sinne, and thouCouldst neither then refuse, nor leave it now.Thinke that no stubborne sullen Anchorit,170Which fixt to a pillar, or a grave, doth sitBedded, and bath'd in all his ordures, dwelsSo fowly as our Soules in their first-built Cels.Thinke in how poore a prison thou didst lieAfter, enabled but to suck, and crie.175Thinke, when'twas growne to most,'twas a poore Inne,A Province pack'd up in two yards of skinne,And that usurp'd or threatned with the rageOf sicknesses, or their true mother, Age.But thinke that Death hath now enfranchis'd thee,Her liberty by death.180Thou hast thy'expansion now, and libertie;Thinke that a rustie Peece, discharg'd, is flowneIn peeces, and the bullet is his owne,And freely flies: This to thy Soule allow,Thinke thy shell broke, thinke thy Soule hatch'd but now.185And think this slow-pac'd soule, which late did cleaveTo'a body, and went but by the bodies leave,Twenty, perchance, or thirty mile a day,Dispatches in a minute all the wayTwixt heaven, and earth; she stayes not in the ayre,190To looke what Meteors there themselves prepare;She carries no desire to know, nor sense,Whether th'ayres middle region be intense;For th'Element of fire, she doth not know,Whether she past by such a place or no;195She baits not at the Moone, nor cares to trieWhether in that new world, men live, and die.Venusretards her not, to'enquire, how sheeCan, (being one starre)Hesper, andVesperbee;Hee that charm'dArguseyes, sweetMercury,200Workes not on her, who now is growne all eye;Who, if she meet the body of the Sunne,Goes through, not staying till his course be runne;Who findes inMarshis Campe no corps of Guard;Nor is byIove, nor by his father barr'd;205But ere she can consider how she went,At once is at, and through the Firmament.And as these starres were but so many beadsStrung on one string, speed undistinguish'd leadsHer through those Spheares, as through the beads, a string,210Whose quick succession makes it still one thing:As doth the pith, which, lest our bodies slacke,Strings fast the little bones of necke, and backe;So by the Soule doth death string Heaven and Earth;For when our Soule enjoyes this her third birth,215(Creation gave her one, a second, grace,)Heaven is as neare, and present to her face,As colours are, and objects, in a roomeWhere darknesse was before, when Tapers come.This must, my Soule, thy long-short Progresse bee;220To'advance these thoughts, remember then, that she,She; whose faire body no such prison was,But that a Soule might well be pleas'd to passeAn age in her; she whose rich beauty lentMintage to other beauties, for they went225But for so much as they were like to her;Shee, in whose body (if we dare preferreThis low world, to so high a marke as shee,)The Westerne treasure, Easterne spicerie,Europe, and Afrique, and the unknowne rest230Were easily found, or what in them was best;And when w'have made this large discoverieOf all, in her some one part then will beeTwenty such parts, whose plenty and riches isEnough to make twenty such worlds as this;235Shee, whom had they knowne who did first betrothThe Tutelar Angels, and assign'd one, bothTo Nations, Cities, and to Companies,To Functions, Offices, and Dignities,And to each severall man, to him, and him,240They would have given her one for every limbe;She, of whose soule, if wee may say, 'twas Gold,Her body was th'Electrum, and did holdMany degrees of that; wee understoodHer by her sight; her pure, and eloquent blood245Spoke in her cheekes, and so distinctly wrought,That one might almost say, her body thought;Shee, shee, thus richly and largely hous'd, is gone:And chides us slow-pac'd snailes who crawle uponOur prisons prison, earth, nor thinke us well,250Longer, then whil'st wee beare our brittle shell.Her ignorance in this life and knowledge in the next.4But 'twere but little to have chang'd our roome,If, as we were in this our living TombeOppress'd with ignorance, wee still were so.Poore soule, in this thy flesh what dost thou know?255Thou know'st thy selfe so little, as thou know'st not,How thou didst die, nor how thou wast begot.Thou neither know'st, how thou at first cam'st in,Nor how thou took'st the poyson of mans sinne.Nor dost thou, (though thou know'st, that thou art so)260By what way thou art made immortall, know.Thou art too narrow, wretch, to comprehendEven thy selfe: yea though thou wouldst but bendTo know thy body. Have not all soules thoughtFor many ages, that our body'is wrought265Of Ayre, and Fire, and other Elements?And now they thinke of new ingredients,And one Soule thinkes one, and another wayAnother thinkes, and 'tis an even lay.Knowst thou but how the stone doth enter in270The bladders cave, and never breake the skinne?Know'st thou how blood, which to the heart doth flow,Doth from one ventricle to th'other goe?And for the putrid stuffe, which thou dost spit,Know'st thou how thy lungs have attracted it?275There are no passages, so that there is(For ought thou know'st) piercing of substances.And of those many opinions which men raiseOf Nailes and Haires, dost thou know which to praise?What hope have wee to know our selves, when wee280Know not the least things, which for our use be?Wee see in Authors, too stiffe to recant,A hundred controversies of an Ant;And yet one watches, starves, freeses, and sweats,To know but Catechismes and Alphabets285Of unconcerning things, matters of fact;How others on our stage their parts did Act;WhatCæsardid, yea, and whatCicerosaid.Why grasse is greene, or why our blood is red,Are mysteries which none have reach'd unto.290In this low forme, poore soule, what wilt thou doe?When wilt thou shake off this Pedantery,Of being taught by sense, and Fantasie?Thou look'st through spectacles; small things seeme greatBelow; But up unto the watch-towre get,295And see all things despoyl'd of fallacies:Thou shalt not peepe through lattices of eyes,Nor heare through Labyrinths of eares, nor learneBy circuit, or collections to discerne.In heaven thou straight know'st all, concerning it,300And what concernes it not, shalt straight forget.There thou (but in no other schoole) maist beePerchance, as learned, and as full, as shee,Shee who all libraries had throughly readAt home in her owne thoughts, and practised305So much good as would make as many more:Shee whose example they must all implore,Who would or doe, or thinke well, and confesseThat all the vertuous Actions they expresse,Are but a new, and worse edition310Of her some one thought, or one action:She who in th'art of knowing Heaven, was growneHere upon earth, to such perfection,That she hath, ever since to Heaven she came,(In a far fairer print,) but read the same:315Shee, shee not satisfied with all this waight,(For so much knowledge, as would over-fraightAnother, did but ballast her) is goneAs well t'enjoy, as get perfection.And cals us after her, in that shee tooke,320(Taking her selfe) our best, and worthiest booke.Of our company in this life, and in the next.Returne not, my Soule, from this extasie,And meditation of what thou shalt bee,To earthly thoughts, till it to thee appeare,With whom thy conversation must be there.325With whom wilt thou converse? what stationCanst thou choose out, free from infection,That will not give thee theirs, nor drinke in thine?Shalt thou not finde a spungie slacke DivineDrinke and sucke in th'instructions of Great men,330And for the word of God, vent them agen?Are there not some Courts (and then, no things beeSo like as Courts) which, in this let us see,That wits and tongues of Libellers are weake,Because they do more ill, then these can speake?335The poyson's gone through all, poysons affectChiefly the chiefest parts, but some effectIn nailes, and haires, yea excrements, will show;So lyes the poyson of sinne in the most low.Up, up, my drowsie Soule, where thy new eare340Shall in the Angels songs no discord heare;Where thou shalt see the blessed Mother-maidJoy in not being that, which men have said.Where she is exalted more for being good,Then for her interest of Mother-hood.345Up to those Patriarchs, which did longer sitExpecting Christ, then they'have enjoy'd him yet.Up to those Prophets, which now gladly seeTheir Prophesies growne to be Historie.Up to th'Apostles, who did bravely runne350All the Suns course, with more light then the Sunne.Up to those Martyrs, who did calmly bleedOyle to th'Apostles Lamps, dew to their seed.Up to those Virgins, who thought, that almostThey made joyntenants with the Holy Ghost,355If they to any should his Temple give.Up, up, for in that squadron there doth liveShe, who hath carried thither new degrees(As to their number) to their dignities.Shee, who being to her selfe a State, injoy'd360All royalties which any State employ'd;For shee made warres, and triumph'd; reason stillDid not o'rthrow, but rectifie her will:And she made peace, for no peace is like this,That beauty, and chastity together kisse:365She did high justice, for she crucifiedEvery first motion of rebellious pride:And she gave pardons, and was liberall,For, onely her selfe except, she pardon'd all:Shee coy'nd, in this, that her impressions gave370To all our actions all the worth they have:She gave protections; the thoughts of her brestSatans rude Officers could ne'r arrest.As these prerogatives being met in one,Made her a soveraigne State; religion375Made her a Church; and these two made her all.She who was all this All, and could not fallTo worse, by company, (for she was stillMore Antidote, then all the world was ill,)Shee, shee doth leave it, and by Death, survive380All this, in Heaven; whither who doth not striveThe more, because shees there, he doth not knowThat accidentall joyes in Heaven doe grow.But pause, my soule; And study, ere thou fallOn accidentall joyes, th'essentiall.Of essentiall joy in this life and in the next.385Still before Accessories doe abideA triall, must the principall be tride.And what essentiall joy can'st thou expectHere upon earth? what permanent effectOf transitory causes? Dost thou love390Beauty? (And beauty worthy'st is to move)Poore cousened cousenor,thatshe, andthatthou,Which did begin to love, are neither now;You are both fluid, chang'd since yesterday;Next day repaires, (but ill) last dayes decay.395Nor are, (although the river keepe the name)Yesterdaies waters, and to daies the same.So flowes her face, and thine eyes, neither nowThat Saint, nor Pilgrime, which your loving vowConcern'd, remaines; but whil'st you thinke you bee400Constant, you'are hourely in inconstancie.Honour may have pretence unto our love,Because that God did live so long aboveWithout this Honour, and then lov'd it so,That he at last made Creatures to bestow405Honour on him; not that he needed it,But that, to his hands, man might grow more fit.But since all Honours from inferiours flow,(For they doe give it; Princes doe but shewWhom they would have so honor'd) and that this410On such opinions, and capacitiesIs built, as rise and fall, to more and lesse:Alas, 'tis but a casuall happinesse.Hath ever any man to'himselfe assign'dThis or that happinesse to'arrest his minde,415But that another man which takes a worse,Thinks him a foole for having tane that course?They who did labour Babels tower to'erect,Might have considered, that for that effect,All this whole solid Earth could not allow420Nor furnish forth materialls enow;And that this Center, to raise such a place,Was farre too little, to have beene the Base;No more affords this world, foundationTo erect true joy, were all the meanes in one.425But as the Heathen made them severall gods,Of all Gods Benefits, and all his Rods,(For as the Wine, and Corne, and Onions areGods unto them, so Agues bee, and Warre)And as by changing that whole precious Gold430To such small Copper coynes, they lost the old,And lost their only God, who ever mustBe sought alone, and not in such a thrust:So much mankinde true happinesse mistakes;No Joy enjoyes that man, that many makes.435Then, Soule, to thy first pitch worke up againe;Know that all lines which circles doe containe,For once that they the Center touch, doe touchTwice the circumference; and be thou such;Double on heaven thy thoughts on earth emploid;440All will not serve; Only who have enjoy'dThe sight of God, in fulnesse, can thinke it;For it is both the object, and the wit.This is essentiall joy, where neither heeCan suffer diminution, nor wee;445'Tis such a full, and such a filling good;Had th'Angels once look'd on him, they had stood.To fill the place of one of them, or more,Shee whom wee celebrate, is gone before.She, who had Here so much essentiall joy,450As no chance could distract, much lesse destroy;Who with Gods presence was acquainted so,(Hearing, and speaking to him) as to knowHis face in any naturall Stone, or Tree,Better then when in Images they bee:455Who kept by diligent devotion,Gods Image, in such reparation,Within her heart, that what decay was growne,Was her first Parents fault, and not her owne:Who being solicited to any act,460Still heard God pleading his safe precontract;Who by a faithfull confidence, was hereBetroth'd to God, and now is married there;Whose twilights were more cleare, then our mid-day;Who dreamt devoutlier, then most use to pray;465Who being here fil'd with grace, yet strove to bee,Both where more grace, and more capacitieAt once is given: she to Heaven is gone,Who made this world in some proportionA heaven, and here, became unto us all,470Joy, (as our joyes admit) essentiall.Of accidentall joys in both places.But could this low world joyes essentiall touch,Heavens accidentall joyes would passe them much.How poore and lame, must then our casuall bee?If thy Prince will his subjects to call thee475My Lord, and this doe swell thee, thou art than,By being greater, growne to bee lesse Man.When no Physitian of redresse can speake,A joyfull casuall violence may breakeA dangerous Apostem in thy breast;480And whil'st thou joyest in this, the dangerous rest,The bag may rise up, and so strangle thee.What e'r was casuall, may ever bee.What should the nature change? Or make the sameCertaine, which was but casuall, when it came?485All casuall joy doth loud and plainly say,Only by comming, that it can away.Only in Heaven joyes strength is never spent;And accidentall things are permanent.Joy of a soules arrivall ne'r decaies;490For that soule ever joyes and ever staies.Joy that their last great ConsummationApproaches in the resurrection;When earthly bodies more celestiallShall be, then Angels were, for they could fall;495This kinde of joy doth every day admitDegrees of growth, but none of losing it.In this fresh joy, 'tis no small part, that shee,Shee, in whose goodnesse, he that names degree,Doth injure her; ('Tis losse to be cal'd best,500There where the stuffe is not such as the rest)Shee, who left such a bodie, as even sheeOnly in Heaven could learne, how it can beeMade better; for shee rather was two soules,Or like to full on both sides written Rols,505Where eyes might reade upon the outward skin,As strong Records for God, as mindes within;Shee, who by making full perfection grow,Peeces a Circle, and still keepes it so,Long'd for, and longing for it, to heaven is gone,510Where shee receives, and gives addition.Conclusion.Here in a place, where mis-devotion framesA thousand Prayers to Saints, whose very namesThe ancient Church knew not, Heaven knows not yet:And where, what lawes of Poetry admit,515Lawes of Religion have at least the same,Immortall Maide, I might invoke thy name.Could any Saint provoke that appetite,Thou here should'st make me a French convertite.But thou would'st not; nor would'st thou be content,520To take this, for my second yeares true Rent,Did this Coine beare any other stampe, then his,That gave thee power to doe, me, to say this.Since his will is, that to posteritie,Thou should'st for life, and death, a patterne bee,525And that the world should notice have of this,The purpose, and th'authoritie is his;Thou art the Proclamation; and I amThe Trumpet, at whose voyce the people came.

The entrance.1NOTHING could make me sooner to confesseThat this world had an everlastingnesse,Then to consider, that a yeare is runne,Since both this lower world's, and the Sunnes Sunne,5The Lustre, and the vigor of this All,Did set; 'twere blasphemie to say, did fall.But as a ship which hath strooke saile, doth runneBy force of that force which before, it wonne:Or as sometimes in a beheaded man,10Though at those two Red seas, which freely ranne,One from the Trunke, another from the Head,His soule be sail'd, to her eternall bed,His eyes will twinckle, and his tongue will roll,As though he beckned, and cal'd backe his soule,15He graspes his hands, and he pulls up his feet,And seemes to reach, and to step forth to meetHis soule; when all these motions which we saw,Are but as Ice, which crackles at a thaw:Or as a Lute, which in moist weather, rings20Her knell alone, by cracking of her strings:So struggles this dead world, now shee is gone;For there is motion in corruption.As some daies are at the Creation nam'd,Before the Sunne, the which fram'd daies, was fram'd,25So after this Sunne's set, some shew appeares,And orderly vicissitude of yeares.Yet a new Deluge, and ofLetheflood,Hath drown'd us all, All have forgot all good,Forgetting her, the maine reserve of all.30Yet in this deluge, grosse and generall,Thou seest me strive for life; my life shall bee,To be hereafter prais'd, for praysing thee;Immortall Maid, who though thou would'st refuseThe name of Mother, be unto my Muse35A Father, since her chast Ambition is,Yearely to bring forth such a child as this.These Hymnes may worke on future wits, and soMay great Grand children of thy prayses grow.And so, though not revive, embalme and spice40The world, which else would putrifie with vice.For thus, Man may extend thy progeny,Untill man doe but vanish, and not die.These Hymnes thy issue, may encrease so long,As till Gods greatVenitechange the song.A iust disestimation2of this world.45Thirst for that time, O my insatiate soule,And serve thy thirst, with Gods safe-sealing Bowle.Be thirstie still, and drinke still till thou goeTo th'only Health, to be Hydroptique so.Forget this rotten world; And unto thee50Let thine owne times as an old storie bee.Be not concern'd: studie not why, nor when;Doe not so much as not beleeve a man.For though to erre, be worst, to try truths forth,Is far more businesse, then this world is worth.55The world is but a carkasse; thou art fedBy it, but as a worme, that carkasse bred;And why should'st thou, poore worme, consider more,When this world will grow better then before,Then those thy fellow wormes doe thinke upon60That carkasses last resurrection.Forget this world, and scarce thinke of it so,As of old clothes, cast off a yeare agoe.To be thus stupid is Alacritie;Men thus Lethargique have best Memory.65Look upward; that's towards her, whose happy stateWe now lament not, but congratulate.Shee, to whom all this world was but a stage,Where all sat harkning how her youthfull ageShould be emploi'd, because in all shee did,70Some Figure of the Golden times was hid.Who could not lacke, what e'r this world could give,Because shee was the forme, that made it live;Nor could complaine, that this world was unfitTo be staid in, then when shee was in it;75Shee that first tried indifferent desiresBy vertue, and vertue by religious fires,Shee to whose person Paradise adher'd,As Courts to Princes, shee whose eyes ensphear'dStar-light enough, t'have made the South controule,80(Had shee beene there) the Star-full Northerne Pole,Shee, shee is gone; she is gone; when thou knowest this,What fragmentary rubbidge this world isThou knowest, and that it is not worth a thought;He honors it too much that thinkes it nought.Contemplation of our state in our death-bed.85Thinke then, my soule, that death is but a Groome,Which brings a Taper to the outward roome,Whence thou spiest first a little glimmering light,And after brings it nearer to thy sight:For such approaches doth heaven make in death.90Thinke thy selfe labouring now with broken breath,And thinke those broken and soft Notes to beeDivision, and thy happyest Harmonie.Thinke thee laid on thy death-bed, loose and slacke;And thinke that, but unbinding of a packe,95To take one precious thing, thy soule from thence.Thinke thy selfe parch'd with fevers violence,Anger thine ague more, by calling itThy Physicke; chide the slacknesse of the fit.Thinke that thou hear'st thy knell, and think no more,100But that, as Bels cal'd thee to Church before,So this, to the Triumphant Church, calls thee.Thinke Satans Sergeants round about thee bee,And thinke that but for Legacies they thrust;Give one thy Pride, to'another give thy Lust:105Give them those sinnes which they gave thee before,And trust th'immaculate blood to wash thy score.Thinke thy friends weeping round, and thinke that theyWeepe but because they goe not yet thy way.Thinke that they close thine eyes, and thinke in this,110That they confesse much in the world, amisse,Who dare not trust a dead mans eye with that,Which they from God, and Angels cover not.Thinke that they shroud thee up, and think from thenceThey reinvest thee in white innocence.115Thinke that thy body rots, and (if so low,Thy soule exalted so, thy thoughts can goe,)Think thee a Prince, who of themselves createWormes which insensibly devoure their State.Thinke that they bury thee, and thinke that right120Laies thee to sleepe but a Saint Lucies night.Thinke these things cheerefully: and if thou beeDrowsie or slacke, remember then that shee,Shee whose Complexion was so even made,That which of her Ingredients should invade125The other three, no Feare, no Art could guesse:So far were all remov'd from more or lesse.But as in Mithridate, or just perfumes,Where all good things being met, no one presumesTo governe, or to triumph on the rest,130Only because all were, no part was best.And as, though all doe know, that quantitiesAre made of lines, and lines from Points arise,None can these lines or quantities unjoynt,And say this is a line, or this a point,135So though the Elements and Humors wereIn her, one could not say, this governes there.Whose even constitution might have wonneAny disease to venter on the Sunne,Rather then her: and make a spirit feare,140That hee to disuniting subject were.To whose proportions if we would compareCubes, th'are unstable; Circles, Angular;She who was such a chaine as Fate employesTo bring mankinde all Fortunes it enjoyes;145So fast, so even wrought, as one would thinke,No Accident could threaten any linke;Shee, shee embrac'd a sicknesse, gave it meat,The purest blood, and breath, that e'r it eate;And hath taught us, that though a good man hath150Title to heaven, and plead it by his Faith,And though he may pretend a conquest, sinceHeaven was content to suffer violence,Yea though hee plead a long possession too,(For they're in heaven on earth who heavens workes do)155Though hee had right and power and place, before,Yet Death must usher, and unlocke the doore.Incommodities of the Soule in the Body.3Thinke further on thy selfe, my Soule, and thinkeHow thou at first wast made but in a sinke;Thinke that it argued some infirmitie,160That those two soules, which then thou foundst in me,Thou fedst upon, and drewst into thee, bothMy second soule of sense, and first of growth.Thinke but how poore thou wast, how obnoxious;Whom a small lumpe of flesh could poyson thus.165This curded milke, this poore unlittered whelpeMy body, could, beyond escape or helpe,Infect thee with Originall sinne, and thouCouldst neither then refuse, nor leave it now.Thinke that no stubborne sullen Anchorit,170Which fixt to a pillar, or a grave, doth sitBedded, and bath'd in all his ordures, dwelsSo fowly as our Soules in their first-built Cels.Thinke in how poore a prison thou didst lieAfter, enabled but to suck, and crie.175Thinke, when'twas growne to most,'twas a poore Inne,A Province pack'd up in two yards of skinne,And that usurp'd or threatned with the rageOf sicknesses, or their true mother, Age.But thinke that Death hath now enfranchis'd thee,Her liberty by death.180Thou hast thy'expansion now, and libertie;Thinke that a rustie Peece, discharg'd, is flowneIn peeces, and the bullet is his owne,And freely flies: This to thy Soule allow,Thinke thy shell broke, thinke thy Soule hatch'd but now.185And think this slow-pac'd soule, which late did cleaveTo'a body, and went but by the bodies leave,Twenty, perchance, or thirty mile a day,Dispatches in a minute all the wayTwixt heaven, and earth; she stayes not in the ayre,190To looke what Meteors there themselves prepare;She carries no desire to know, nor sense,Whether th'ayres middle region be intense;For th'Element of fire, she doth not know,Whether she past by such a place or no;195She baits not at the Moone, nor cares to trieWhether in that new world, men live, and die.Venusretards her not, to'enquire, how sheeCan, (being one starre)Hesper, andVesperbee;Hee that charm'dArguseyes, sweetMercury,200Workes not on her, who now is growne all eye;Who, if she meet the body of the Sunne,Goes through, not staying till his course be runne;Who findes inMarshis Campe no corps of Guard;Nor is byIove, nor by his father barr'd;205But ere she can consider how she went,At once is at, and through the Firmament.And as these starres were but so many beadsStrung on one string, speed undistinguish'd leadsHer through those Spheares, as through the beads, a string,210Whose quick succession makes it still one thing:As doth the pith, which, lest our bodies slacke,Strings fast the little bones of necke, and backe;So by the Soule doth death string Heaven and Earth;For when our Soule enjoyes this her third birth,215(Creation gave her one, a second, grace,)Heaven is as neare, and present to her face,As colours are, and objects, in a roomeWhere darknesse was before, when Tapers come.This must, my Soule, thy long-short Progresse bee;220To'advance these thoughts, remember then, that she,She; whose faire body no such prison was,But that a Soule might well be pleas'd to passeAn age in her; she whose rich beauty lentMintage to other beauties, for they went225But for so much as they were like to her;Shee, in whose body (if we dare preferreThis low world, to so high a marke as shee,)The Westerne treasure, Easterne spicerie,Europe, and Afrique, and the unknowne rest230Were easily found, or what in them was best;And when w'have made this large discoverieOf all, in her some one part then will beeTwenty such parts, whose plenty and riches isEnough to make twenty such worlds as this;235Shee, whom had they knowne who did first betrothThe Tutelar Angels, and assign'd one, bothTo Nations, Cities, and to Companies,To Functions, Offices, and Dignities,And to each severall man, to him, and him,240They would have given her one for every limbe;She, of whose soule, if wee may say, 'twas Gold,Her body was th'Electrum, and did holdMany degrees of that; wee understoodHer by her sight; her pure, and eloquent blood245Spoke in her cheekes, and so distinctly wrought,That one might almost say, her body thought;Shee, shee, thus richly and largely hous'd, is gone:And chides us slow-pac'd snailes who crawle uponOur prisons prison, earth, nor thinke us well,250Longer, then whil'st wee beare our brittle shell.Her ignorance in this life and knowledge in the next.4But 'twere but little to have chang'd our roome,If, as we were in this our living TombeOppress'd with ignorance, wee still were so.Poore soule, in this thy flesh what dost thou know?255Thou know'st thy selfe so little, as thou know'st not,How thou didst die, nor how thou wast begot.Thou neither know'st, how thou at first cam'st in,Nor how thou took'st the poyson of mans sinne.Nor dost thou, (though thou know'st, that thou art so)260By what way thou art made immortall, know.Thou art too narrow, wretch, to comprehendEven thy selfe: yea though thou wouldst but bendTo know thy body. Have not all soules thoughtFor many ages, that our body'is wrought265Of Ayre, and Fire, and other Elements?And now they thinke of new ingredients,And one Soule thinkes one, and another wayAnother thinkes, and 'tis an even lay.Knowst thou but how the stone doth enter in270The bladders cave, and never breake the skinne?Know'st thou how blood, which to the heart doth flow,Doth from one ventricle to th'other goe?And for the putrid stuffe, which thou dost spit,Know'st thou how thy lungs have attracted it?275There are no passages, so that there is(For ought thou know'st) piercing of substances.And of those many opinions which men raiseOf Nailes and Haires, dost thou know which to praise?What hope have wee to know our selves, when wee280Know not the least things, which for our use be?Wee see in Authors, too stiffe to recant,A hundred controversies of an Ant;And yet one watches, starves, freeses, and sweats,To know but Catechismes and Alphabets285Of unconcerning things, matters of fact;How others on our stage their parts did Act;WhatCæsardid, yea, and whatCicerosaid.Why grasse is greene, or why our blood is red,Are mysteries which none have reach'd unto.290In this low forme, poore soule, what wilt thou doe?When wilt thou shake off this Pedantery,Of being taught by sense, and Fantasie?Thou look'st through spectacles; small things seeme greatBelow; But up unto the watch-towre get,295And see all things despoyl'd of fallacies:Thou shalt not peepe through lattices of eyes,Nor heare through Labyrinths of eares, nor learneBy circuit, or collections to discerne.In heaven thou straight know'st all, concerning it,300And what concernes it not, shalt straight forget.There thou (but in no other schoole) maist beePerchance, as learned, and as full, as shee,Shee who all libraries had throughly readAt home in her owne thoughts, and practised305So much good as would make as many more:Shee whose example they must all implore,Who would or doe, or thinke well, and confesseThat all the vertuous Actions they expresse,Are but a new, and worse edition310Of her some one thought, or one action:She who in th'art of knowing Heaven, was growneHere upon earth, to such perfection,That she hath, ever since to Heaven she came,(In a far fairer print,) but read the same:315Shee, shee not satisfied with all this waight,(For so much knowledge, as would over-fraightAnother, did but ballast her) is goneAs well t'enjoy, as get perfection.And cals us after her, in that shee tooke,320(Taking her selfe) our best, and worthiest booke.Of our company in this life, and in the next.Returne not, my Soule, from this extasie,And meditation of what thou shalt bee,To earthly thoughts, till it to thee appeare,With whom thy conversation must be there.325With whom wilt thou converse? what stationCanst thou choose out, free from infection,That will not give thee theirs, nor drinke in thine?Shalt thou not finde a spungie slacke DivineDrinke and sucke in th'instructions of Great men,330And for the word of God, vent them agen?Are there not some Courts (and then, no things beeSo like as Courts) which, in this let us see,That wits and tongues of Libellers are weake,Because they do more ill, then these can speake?335The poyson's gone through all, poysons affectChiefly the chiefest parts, but some effectIn nailes, and haires, yea excrements, will show;So lyes the poyson of sinne in the most low.Up, up, my drowsie Soule, where thy new eare340Shall in the Angels songs no discord heare;Where thou shalt see the blessed Mother-maidJoy in not being that, which men have said.Where she is exalted more for being good,Then for her interest of Mother-hood.345Up to those Patriarchs, which did longer sitExpecting Christ, then they'have enjoy'd him yet.Up to those Prophets, which now gladly seeTheir Prophesies growne to be Historie.Up to th'Apostles, who did bravely runne350All the Suns course, with more light then the Sunne.Up to those Martyrs, who did calmly bleedOyle to th'Apostles Lamps, dew to their seed.Up to those Virgins, who thought, that almostThey made joyntenants with the Holy Ghost,355If they to any should his Temple give.Up, up, for in that squadron there doth liveShe, who hath carried thither new degrees(As to their number) to their dignities.Shee, who being to her selfe a State, injoy'd360All royalties which any State employ'd;For shee made warres, and triumph'd; reason stillDid not o'rthrow, but rectifie her will:And she made peace, for no peace is like this,That beauty, and chastity together kisse:365She did high justice, for she crucifiedEvery first motion of rebellious pride:And she gave pardons, and was liberall,For, onely her selfe except, she pardon'd all:Shee coy'nd, in this, that her impressions gave370To all our actions all the worth they have:She gave protections; the thoughts of her brestSatans rude Officers could ne'r arrest.As these prerogatives being met in one,Made her a soveraigne State; religion375Made her a Church; and these two made her all.She who was all this All, and could not fallTo worse, by company, (for she was stillMore Antidote, then all the world was ill,)Shee, shee doth leave it, and by Death, survive380All this, in Heaven; whither who doth not striveThe more, because shees there, he doth not knowThat accidentall joyes in Heaven doe grow.But pause, my soule; And study, ere thou fallOn accidentall joyes, th'essentiall.Of essentiall joy in this life and in the next.385Still before Accessories doe abideA triall, must the principall be tride.And what essentiall joy can'st thou expectHere upon earth? what permanent effectOf transitory causes? Dost thou love390Beauty? (And beauty worthy'st is to move)Poore cousened cousenor,thatshe, andthatthou,Which did begin to love, are neither now;You are both fluid, chang'd since yesterday;Next day repaires, (but ill) last dayes decay.395Nor are, (although the river keepe the name)Yesterdaies waters, and to daies the same.So flowes her face, and thine eyes, neither nowThat Saint, nor Pilgrime, which your loving vowConcern'd, remaines; but whil'st you thinke you bee400Constant, you'are hourely in inconstancie.Honour may have pretence unto our love,Because that God did live so long aboveWithout this Honour, and then lov'd it so,That he at last made Creatures to bestow405Honour on him; not that he needed it,But that, to his hands, man might grow more fit.But since all Honours from inferiours flow,(For they doe give it; Princes doe but shewWhom they would have so honor'd) and that this410On such opinions, and capacitiesIs built, as rise and fall, to more and lesse:Alas, 'tis but a casuall happinesse.Hath ever any man to'himselfe assign'dThis or that happinesse to'arrest his minde,415But that another man which takes a worse,Thinks him a foole for having tane that course?They who did labour Babels tower to'erect,Might have considered, that for that effect,All this whole solid Earth could not allow420Nor furnish forth materialls enow;And that this Center, to raise such a place,Was farre too little, to have beene the Base;No more affords this world, foundationTo erect true joy, were all the meanes in one.425But as the Heathen made them severall gods,Of all Gods Benefits, and all his Rods,(For as the Wine, and Corne, and Onions areGods unto them, so Agues bee, and Warre)And as by changing that whole precious Gold430To such small Copper coynes, they lost the old,And lost their only God, who ever mustBe sought alone, and not in such a thrust:So much mankinde true happinesse mistakes;No Joy enjoyes that man, that many makes.435Then, Soule, to thy first pitch worke up againe;Know that all lines which circles doe containe,For once that they the Center touch, doe touchTwice the circumference; and be thou such;Double on heaven thy thoughts on earth emploid;440All will not serve; Only who have enjoy'dThe sight of God, in fulnesse, can thinke it;For it is both the object, and the wit.This is essentiall joy, where neither heeCan suffer diminution, nor wee;445'Tis such a full, and such a filling good;Had th'Angels once look'd on him, they had stood.To fill the place of one of them, or more,Shee whom wee celebrate, is gone before.She, who had Here so much essentiall joy,450As no chance could distract, much lesse destroy;Who with Gods presence was acquainted so,(Hearing, and speaking to him) as to knowHis face in any naturall Stone, or Tree,Better then when in Images they bee:455Who kept by diligent devotion,Gods Image, in such reparation,Within her heart, that what decay was growne,Was her first Parents fault, and not her owne:Who being solicited to any act,460Still heard God pleading his safe precontract;Who by a faithfull confidence, was hereBetroth'd to God, and now is married there;Whose twilights were more cleare, then our mid-day;Who dreamt devoutlier, then most use to pray;465Who being here fil'd with grace, yet strove to bee,Both where more grace, and more capacitieAt once is given: she to Heaven is gone,Who made this world in some proportionA heaven, and here, became unto us all,470Joy, (as our joyes admit) essentiall.Of accidentall joys in both places.But could this low world joyes essentiall touch,Heavens accidentall joyes would passe them much.How poore and lame, must then our casuall bee?If thy Prince will his subjects to call thee475My Lord, and this doe swell thee, thou art than,By being greater, growne to bee lesse Man.When no Physitian of redresse can speake,A joyfull casuall violence may breakeA dangerous Apostem in thy breast;480And whil'st thou joyest in this, the dangerous rest,The bag may rise up, and so strangle thee.What e'r was casuall, may ever bee.What should the nature change? Or make the sameCertaine, which was but casuall, when it came?485All casuall joy doth loud and plainly say,Only by comming, that it can away.Only in Heaven joyes strength is never spent;And accidentall things are permanent.Joy of a soules arrivall ne'r decaies;490For that soule ever joyes and ever staies.Joy that their last great ConsummationApproaches in the resurrection;When earthly bodies more celestiallShall be, then Angels were, for they could fall;495This kinde of joy doth every day admitDegrees of growth, but none of losing it.In this fresh joy, 'tis no small part, that shee,Shee, in whose goodnesse, he that names degree,Doth injure her; ('Tis losse to be cal'd best,500There where the stuffe is not such as the rest)Shee, who left such a bodie, as even sheeOnly in Heaven could learne, how it can beeMade better; for shee rather was two soules,Or like to full on both sides written Rols,505Where eyes might reade upon the outward skin,As strong Records for God, as mindes within;Shee, who by making full perfection grow,Peeces a Circle, and still keepes it so,Long'd for, and longing for it, to heaven is gone,510Where shee receives, and gives addition.Conclusion.Here in a place, where mis-devotion framesA thousand Prayers to Saints, whose very namesThe ancient Church knew not, Heaven knows not yet:And where, what lawes of Poetry admit,515Lawes of Religion have at least the same,Immortall Maide, I might invoke thy name.Could any Saint provoke that appetite,Thou here should'st make me a French convertite.But thou would'st not; nor would'st thou be content,520To take this, for my second yeares true Rent,Did this Coine beare any other stampe, then his,That gave thee power to doe, me, to say this.Since his will is, that to posteritie,Thou should'st for life, and death, a patterne bee,525And that the world should notice have of this,The purpose, and th'authoritie is his;Thou art the Proclamation; and I amThe Trumpet, at whose voyce the people came.

The entrance.1

NOTHING could make me sooner to confesse

That this world had an everlastingnesse,

Then to consider, that a yeare is runne,

Since both this lower world's, and the Sunnes Sunne,

5The Lustre, and the vigor of this All,

Did set; 'twere blasphemie to say, did fall.

But as a ship which hath strooke saile, doth runne

By force of that force which before, it wonne:

Or as sometimes in a beheaded man,

10Though at those two Red seas, which freely ranne,

One from the Trunke, another from the Head,

His soule be sail'd, to her eternall bed,

His eyes will twinckle, and his tongue will roll,

As though he beckned, and cal'd backe his soule,

15He graspes his hands, and he pulls up his feet,

And seemes to reach, and to step forth to meet

His soule; when all these motions which we saw,

Are but as Ice, which crackles at a thaw:

Or as a Lute, which in moist weather, rings

20Her knell alone, by cracking of her strings:

So struggles this dead world, now shee is gone;

For there is motion in corruption.

As some daies are at the Creation nam'd,

Before the Sunne, the which fram'd daies, was fram'd,

25So after this Sunne's set, some shew appeares,

And orderly vicissitude of yeares.

Yet a new Deluge, and ofLetheflood,

Hath drown'd us all, All have forgot all good,

Forgetting her, the maine reserve of all.

30Yet in this deluge, grosse and generall,

Thou seest me strive for life; my life shall bee,

To be hereafter prais'd, for praysing thee;

Immortall Maid, who though thou would'st refuse

The name of Mother, be unto my Muse

35A Father, since her chast Ambition is,

Yearely to bring forth such a child as this.

These Hymnes may worke on future wits, and so

May great Grand children of thy prayses grow.

And so, though not revive, embalme and spice

40The world, which else would putrifie with vice.

For thus, Man may extend thy progeny,

Untill man doe but vanish, and not die.

These Hymnes thy issue, may encrease so long,

As till Gods greatVenitechange the song.

A iust disestimation2of this world.

45Thirst for that time, O my insatiate soule,

And serve thy thirst, with Gods safe-sealing Bowle.

Be thirstie still, and drinke still till thou goe

To th'only Health, to be Hydroptique so.

Forget this rotten world; And unto thee

50Let thine owne times as an old storie bee.

Be not concern'd: studie not why, nor when;

Doe not so much as not beleeve a man.

For though to erre, be worst, to try truths forth,

Is far more businesse, then this world is worth.

55The world is but a carkasse; thou art fed

By it, but as a worme, that carkasse bred;

And why should'st thou, poore worme, consider more,

When this world will grow better then before,

Then those thy fellow wormes doe thinke upon

60That carkasses last resurrection.

Forget this world, and scarce thinke of it so,

As of old clothes, cast off a yeare agoe.

To be thus stupid is Alacritie;

Men thus Lethargique have best Memory.

65Look upward; that's towards her, whose happy state

We now lament not, but congratulate.

Shee, to whom all this world was but a stage,

Where all sat harkning how her youthfull age

Should be emploi'd, because in all shee did,

70Some Figure of the Golden times was hid.

Who could not lacke, what e'r this world could give,

Because shee was the forme, that made it live;

Nor could complaine, that this world was unfit

To be staid in, then when shee was in it;

75Shee that first tried indifferent desires

By vertue, and vertue by religious fires,

Shee to whose person Paradise adher'd,

As Courts to Princes, shee whose eyes ensphear'd

Star-light enough, t'have made the South controule,

80(Had shee beene there) the Star-full Northerne Pole,

Shee, shee is gone; she is gone; when thou knowest this,

What fragmentary rubbidge this world is

Thou knowest, and that it is not worth a thought;

He honors it too much that thinkes it nought.

Contemplation of our state in our death-bed.

85Thinke then, my soule, that death is but a Groome,

Which brings a Taper to the outward roome,

Whence thou spiest first a little glimmering light,

And after brings it nearer to thy sight:

For such approaches doth heaven make in death.

90Thinke thy selfe labouring now with broken breath,

And thinke those broken and soft Notes to bee

Division, and thy happyest Harmonie.

Thinke thee laid on thy death-bed, loose and slacke;

And thinke that, but unbinding of a packe,

95To take one precious thing, thy soule from thence.

Thinke thy selfe parch'd with fevers violence,

Anger thine ague more, by calling it

Thy Physicke; chide the slacknesse of the fit.

Thinke that thou hear'st thy knell, and think no more,

100But that, as Bels cal'd thee to Church before,

So this, to the Triumphant Church, calls thee.

Thinke Satans Sergeants round about thee bee,

And thinke that but for Legacies they thrust;

Give one thy Pride, to'another give thy Lust:

105Give them those sinnes which they gave thee before,

And trust th'immaculate blood to wash thy score.

Thinke thy friends weeping round, and thinke that they

Weepe but because they goe not yet thy way.

Thinke that they close thine eyes, and thinke in this,

110That they confesse much in the world, amisse,

Who dare not trust a dead mans eye with that,

Which they from God, and Angels cover not.

Thinke that they shroud thee up, and think from thence

They reinvest thee in white innocence.

115Thinke that thy body rots, and (if so low,

Thy soule exalted so, thy thoughts can goe,)

Think thee a Prince, who of themselves create

Wormes which insensibly devoure their State.

Thinke that they bury thee, and thinke that right

120Laies thee to sleepe but a Saint Lucies night.

Thinke these things cheerefully: and if thou bee

Drowsie or slacke, remember then that shee,

Shee whose Complexion was so even made,

That which of her Ingredients should invade

125The other three, no Feare, no Art could guesse:

So far were all remov'd from more or lesse.

But as in Mithridate, or just perfumes,

Where all good things being met, no one presumes

To governe, or to triumph on the rest,

130Only because all were, no part was best.

And as, though all doe know, that quantities

Are made of lines, and lines from Points arise,

None can these lines or quantities unjoynt,

And say this is a line, or this a point,

135So though the Elements and Humors were

In her, one could not say, this governes there.

Whose even constitution might have wonne

Any disease to venter on the Sunne,

Rather then her: and make a spirit feare,

140That hee to disuniting subject were.

To whose proportions if we would compare

Cubes, th'are unstable; Circles, Angular;

She who was such a chaine as Fate employes

To bring mankinde all Fortunes it enjoyes;

145So fast, so even wrought, as one would thinke,

No Accident could threaten any linke;

Shee, shee embrac'd a sicknesse, gave it meat,

The purest blood, and breath, that e'r it eate;

And hath taught us, that though a good man hath

150Title to heaven, and plead it by his Faith,

And though he may pretend a conquest, since

Heaven was content to suffer violence,

Yea though hee plead a long possession too,

(For they're in heaven on earth who heavens workes do)

155Though hee had right and power and place, before,

Yet Death must usher, and unlocke the doore.

Incommodities of the Soule in the Body.3

Thinke further on thy selfe, my Soule, and thinke

How thou at first wast made but in a sinke;

Thinke that it argued some infirmitie,

160That those two soules, which then thou foundst in me,

Thou fedst upon, and drewst into thee, both

My second soule of sense, and first of growth.

Thinke but how poore thou wast, how obnoxious;

Whom a small lumpe of flesh could poyson thus.

165This curded milke, this poore unlittered whelpe

My body, could, beyond escape or helpe,

Infect thee with Originall sinne, and thou

Couldst neither then refuse, nor leave it now.

Thinke that no stubborne sullen Anchorit,

170Which fixt to a pillar, or a grave, doth sit

Bedded, and bath'd in all his ordures, dwels

So fowly as our Soules in their first-built Cels.

Thinke in how poore a prison thou didst lie

After, enabled but to suck, and crie.

175Thinke, when'twas growne to most,'twas a poore Inne,

A Province pack'd up in two yards of skinne,

And that usurp'd or threatned with the rage

Of sicknesses, or their true mother, Age.

But thinke that Death hath now enfranchis'd thee,

Her liberty by death.

180Thou hast thy'expansion now, and libertie;

Thinke that a rustie Peece, discharg'd, is flowne

In peeces, and the bullet is his owne,

And freely flies: This to thy Soule allow,

Thinke thy shell broke, thinke thy Soule hatch'd but now.

185And think this slow-pac'd soule, which late did cleave

To'a body, and went but by the bodies leave,

Twenty, perchance, or thirty mile a day,

Dispatches in a minute all the way

Twixt heaven, and earth; she stayes not in the ayre,

190To looke what Meteors there themselves prepare;

She carries no desire to know, nor sense,

Whether th'ayres middle region be intense;

For th'Element of fire, she doth not know,

Whether she past by such a place or no;

195She baits not at the Moone, nor cares to trie

Whether in that new world, men live, and die.

Venusretards her not, to'enquire, how shee

Can, (being one starre)Hesper, andVesperbee;

Hee that charm'dArguseyes, sweetMercury,

200Workes not on her, who now is growne all eye;

Who, if she meet the body of the Sunne,

Goes through, not staying till his course be runne;

Who findes inMarshis Campe no corps of Guard;

Nor is byIove, nor by his father barr'd;

205But ere she can consider how she went,

At once is at, and through the Firmament.

And as these starres were but so many beads

Strung on one string, speed undistinguish'd leads

Her through those Spheares, as through the beads, a string,

210Whose quick succession makes it still one thing:

As doth the pith, which, lest our bodies slacke,

Strings fast the little bones of necke, and backe;

So by the Soule doth death string Heaven and Earth;

For when our Soule enjoyes this her third birth,

215(Creation gave her one, a second, grace,)

Heaven is as neare, and present to her face,

As colours are, and objects, in a roome

Where darknesse was before, when Tapers come.

This must, my Soule, thy long-short Progresse bee;

220To'advance these thoughts, remember then, that she,

She; whose faire body no such prison was,

But that a Soule might well be pleas'd to passe

An age in her; she whose rich beauty lent

Mintage to other beauties, for they went

225But for so much as they were like to her;

Shee, in whose body (if we dare preferre

This low world, to so high a marke as shee,)

The Westerne treasure, Easterne spicerie,

Europe, and Afrique, and the unknowne rest

230Were easily found, or what in them was best;

And when w'have made this large discoverie

Of all, in her some one part then will bee

Twenty such parts, whose plenty and riches is

Enough to make twenty such worlds as this;

235Shee, whom had they knowne who did first betroth

The Tutelar Angels, and assign'd one, both

To Nations, Cities, and to Companies,

To Functions, Offices, and Dignities,

And to each severall man, to him, and him,

240They would have given her one for every limbe;

She, of whose soule, if wee may say, 'twas Gold,

Her body was th'Electrum, and did hold

Many degrees of that; wee understood

Her by her sight; her pure, and eloquent blood

245Spoke in her cheekes, and so distinctly wrought,

That one might almost say, her body thought;

Shee, shee, thus richly and largely hous'd, is gone:

And chides us slow-pac'd snailes who crawle upon

Our prisons prison, earth, nor thinke us well,

250Longer, then whil'st wee beare our brittle shell.

Her ignorance in this life and knowledge in the next.4

But 'twere but little to have chang'd our roome,

If, as we were in this our living Tombe

Oppress'd with ignorance, wee still were so.

Poore soule, in this thy flesh what dost thou know?

255Thou know'st thy selfe so little, as thou know'st not,

How thou didst die, nor how thou wast begot.

Thou neither know'st, how thou at first cam'st in,

Nor how thou took'st the poyson of mans sinne.

Nor dost thou, (though thou know'st, that thou art so)

260By what way thou art made immortall, know.

Thou art too narrow, wretch, to comprehend

Even thy selfe: yea though thou wouldst but bend

To know thy body. Have not all soules thought

For many ages, that our body'is wrought

265Of Ayre, and Fire, and other Elements?

And now they thinke of new ingredients,

And one Soule thinkes one, and another way

Another thinkes, and 'tis an even lay.

Knowst thou but how the stone doth enter in

270The bladders cave, and never breake the skinne?

Know'st thou how blood, which to the heart doth flow,

Doth from one ventricle to th'other goe?

And for the putrid stuffe, which thou dost spit,

Know'st thou how thy lungs have attracted it?

275There are no passages, so that there is

(For ought thou know'st) piercing of substances.

And of those many opinions which men raise

Of Nailes and Haires, dost thou know which to praise?

What hope have wee to know our selves, when wee

280Know not the least things, which for our use be?

Wee see in Authors, too stiffe to recant,

A hundred controversies of an Ant;

And yet one watches, starves, freeses, and sweats,

To know but Catechismes and Alphabets

285Of unconcerning things, matters of fact;

How others on our stage their parts did Act;

WhatCæsardid, yea, and whatCicerosaid.

Why grasse is greene, or why our blood is red,

Are mysteries which none have reach'd unto.

290In this low forme, poore soule, what wilt thou doe?

When wilt thou shake off this Pedantery,

Of being taught by sense, and Fantasie?

Thou look'st through spectacles; small things seeme great

Below; But up unto the watch-towre get,

295And see all things despoyl'd of fallacies:

Thou shalt not peepe through lattices of eyes,

Nor heare through Labyrinths of eares, nor learne

By circuit, or collections to discerne.

In heaven thou straight know'st all, concerning it,

300And what concernes it not, shalt straight forget.

There thou (but in no other schoole) maist bee

Perchance, as learned, and as full, as shee,

Shee who all libraries had throughly read

At home in her owne thoughts, and practised

305So much good as would make as many more:

Shee whose example they must all implore,

Who would or doe, or thinke well, and confesse

That all the vertuous Actions they expresse,

Are but a new, and worse edition

310Of her some one thought, or one action:

She who in th'art of knowing Heaven, was growne

Here upon earth, to such perfection,

That she hath, ever since to Heaven she came,

(In a far fairer print,) but read the same:

315Shee, shee not satisfied with all this waight,

(For so much knowledge, as would over-fraight

Another, did but ballast her) is gone

As well t'enjoy, as get perfection.

And cals us after her, in that shee tooke,

320(Taking her selfe) our best, and worthiest booke.

Of our company in this life, and in the next.

Returne not, my Soule, from this extasie,

And meditation of what thou shalt bee,

To earthly thoughts, till it to thee appeare,

With whom thy conversation must be there.

325With whom wilt thou converse? what station

Canst thou choose out, free from infection,

That will not give thee theirs, nor drinke in thine?

Shalt thou not finde a spungie slacke Divine

Drinke and sucke in th'instructions of Great men,

330And for the word of God, vent them agen?

Are there not some Courts (and then, no things bee

So like as Courts) which, in this let us see,

That wits and tongues of Libellers are weake,

Because they do more ill, then these can speake?

335The poyson's gone through all, poysons affect

Chiefly the chiefest parts, but some effect

In nailes, and haires, yea excrements, will show;

So lyes the poyson of sinne in the most low.

Up, up, my drowsie Soule, where thy new eare

340Shall in the Angels songs no discord heare;

Where thou shalt see the blessed Mother-maid

Joy in not being that, which men have said.

Where she is exalted more for being good,

Then for her interest of Mother-hood.

345Up to those Patriarchs, which did longer sit

Expecting Christ, then they'have enjoy'd him yet.

Up to those Prophets, which now gladly see

Their Prophesies growne to be Historie.

Up to th'Apostles, who did bravely runne

350All the Suns course, with more light then the Sunne.

Up to those Martyrs, who did calmly bleed

Oyle to th'Apostles Lamps, dew to their seed.

Up to those Virgins, who thought, that almost

They made joyntenants with the Holy Ghost,

355If they to any should his Temple give.

Up, up, for in that squadron there doth live

She, who hath carried thither new degrees

(As to their number) to their dignities.

Shee, who being to her selfe a State, injoy'd

360All royalties which any State employ'd;

For shee made warres, and triumph'd; reason still

Did not o'rthrow, but rectifie her will:

And she made peace, for no peace is like this,

That beauty, and chastity together kisse:

365She did high justice, for she crucified

Every first motion of rebellious pride:

And she gave pardons, and was liberall,

For, onely her selfe except, she pardon'd all:

Shee coy'nd, in this, that her impressions gave

370To all our actions all the worth they have:

She gave protections; the thoughts of her brest

Satans rude Officers could ne'r arrest.

As these prerogatives being met in one,

Made her a soveraigne State; religion

375Made her a Church; and these two made her all.

She who was all this All, and could not fall

To worse, by company, (for she was still

More Antidote, then all the world was ill,)

Shee, shee doth leave it, and by Death, survive

380All this, in Heaven; whither who doth not strive

The more, because shees there, he doth not know

That accidentall joyes in Heaven doe grow.

But pause, my soule; And study, ere thou fall

On accidentall joyes, th'essentiall.

Of essentiall joy in this life and in the next.

385Still before Accessories doe abide

A triall, must the principall be tride.

And what essentiall joy can'st thou expect

Here upon earth? what permanent effect

Of transitory causes? Dost thou love

390Beauty? (And beauty worthy'st is to move)

Poore cousened cousenor,thatshe, andthatthou,

Which did begin to love, are neither now;

You are both fluid, chang'd since yesterday;

Next day repaires, (but ill) last dayes decay.

395Nor are, (although the river keepe the name)

Yesterdaies waters, and to daies the same.

So flowes her face, and thine eyes, neither now

That Saint, nor Pilgrime, which your loving vow

Concern'd, remaines; but whil'st you thinke you bee

400Constant, you'are hourely in inconstancie.

Honour may have pretence unto our love,

Because that God did live so long above

Without this Honour, and then lov'd it so,

That he at last made Creatures to bestow

405Honour on him; not that he needed it,

But that, to his hands, man might grow more fit.

But since all Honours from inferiours flow,

(For they doe give it; Princes doe but shew

Whom they would have so honor'd) and that this

410On such opinions, and capacities

Is built, as rise and fall, to more and lesse:

Alas, 'tis but a casuall happinesse.

Hath ever any man to'himselfe assign'd

This or that happinesse to'arrest his minde,

415But that another man which takes a worse,

Thinks him a foole for having tane that course?

They who did labour Babels tower to'erect,

Might have considered, that for that effect,

All this whole solid Earth could not allow

420Nor furnish forth materialls enow;

And that this Center, to raise such a place,

Was farre too little, to have beene the Base;

No more affords this world, foundation

To erect true joy, were all the meanes in one.

425But as the Heathen made them severall gods,

Of all Gods Benefits, and all his Rods,

(For as the Wine, and Corne, and Onions are

Gods unto them, so Agues bee, and Warre)

And as by changing that whole precious Gold

430To such small Copper coynes, they lost the old,

And lost their only God, who ever must

Be sought alone, and not in such a thrust:

So much mankinde true happinesse mistakes;

No Joy enjoyes that man, that many makes.

435Then, Soule, to thy first pitch worke up againe;

Know that all lines which circles doe containe,

For once that they the Center touch, doe touch

Twice the circumference; and be thou such;

Double on heaven thy thoughts on earth emploid;

440All will not serve; Only who have enjoy'd

The sight of God, in fulnesse, can thinke it;

For it is both the object, and the wit.

This is essentiall joy, where neither hee

Can suffer diminution, nor wee;

445'Tis such a full, and such a filling good;

Had th'Angels once look'd on him, they had stood.

To fill the place of one of them, or more,

Shee whom wee celebrate, is gone before.

She, who had Here so much essentiall joy,

450As no chance could distract, much lesse destroy;

Who with Gods presence was acquainted so,

(Hearing, and speaking to him) as to know

His face in any naturall Stone, or Tree,

Better then when in Images they bee:

455Who kept by diligent devotion,

Gods Image, in such reparation,

Within her heart, that what decay was growne,

Was her first Parents fault, and not her owne:

Who being solicited to any act,

460Still heard God pleading his safe precontract;

Who by a faithfull confidence, was here

Betroth'd to God, and now is married there;

Whose twilights were more cleare, then our mid-day;

Who dreamt devoutlier, then most use to pray;

465Who being here fil'd with grace, yet strove to bee,

Both where more grace, and more capacitie

At once is given: she to Heaven is gone,

Who made this world in some proportion

A heaven, and here, became unto us all,

470Joy, (as our joyes admit) essentiall.

Of accidentall joys in both places.

But could this low world joyes essentiall touch,

Heavens accidentall joyes would passe them much.

How poore and lame, must then our casuall bee?

If thy Prince will his subjects to call thee

475My Lord, and this doe swell thee, thou art than,

By being greater, growne to bee lesse Man.

When no Physitian of redresse can speake,

A joyfull casuall violence may breake

A dangerous Apostem in thy breast;

480And whil'st thou joyest in this, the dangerous rest,

The bag may rise up, and so strangle thee.

What e'r was casuall, may ever bee.

What should the nature change? Or make the same

Certaine, which was but casuall, when it came?

485All casuall joy doth loud and plainly say,

Only by comming, that it can away.

Only in Heaven joyes strength is never spent;

And accidentall things are permanent.

Joy of a soules arrivall ne'r decaies;

490For that soule ever joyes and ever staies.

Joy that their last great Consummation

Approaches in the resurrection;

When earthly bodies more celestiall

Shall be, then Angels were, for they could fall;

495This kinde of joy doth every day admit

Degrees of growth, but none of losing it.

In this fresh joy, 'tis no small part, that shee,

Shee, in whose goodnesse, he that names degree,

Doth injure her; ('Tis losse to be cal'd best,

500There where the stuffe is not such as the rest)

Shee, who left such a bodie, as even shee

Only in Heaven could learne, how it can bee

Made better; for shee rather was two soules,

Or like to full on both sides written Rols,

505Where eyes might reade upon the outward skin,

As strong Records for God, as mindes within;

Shee, who by making full perfection grow,

Peeces a Circle, and still keepes it so,

Long'd for, and longing for it, to heaven is gone,

510Where shee receives, and gives addition.

Conclusion.

Here in a place, where mis-devotion frames

A thousand Prayers to Saints, whose very names

The ancient Church knew not, Heaven knows not yet:

And where, what lawes of Poetry admit,

515Lawes of Religion have at least the same,

Immortall Maide, I might invoke thy name.

Could any Saint provoke that appetite,

Thou here should'st make me a French convertite.

But thou would'st not; nor would'st thou be content,

520To take this, for my second yeares true Rent,

Did this Coine beare any other stampe, then his,

That gave thee power to doe, me, to say this.

Since his will is, that to posteritie,

Thou should'st for life, and death, a patterne bee,

525And that the world should notice have of this,

The purpose, and th'authoritie is his;

Thou art the Proclamation; and I am

The Trumpet, at whose voyce the people came.


Back to IndexNext