A POEM ON HER Sacred Majesty Catherine Queen Dowager.
PArdon! Oh
Sacred Mourner! that we paid
Our first sad Tributes to the
Royal Dead;
Which did our Souls to rending sighs convert,
Drain'd our fixt eyes, and pierc'd the bleeding heart;
And for a
Loss that Heav'n can ne're redress,
Our
Raging Griefs were rude in their excess:
Which, while with
wild Devotion we pursue
Ev'n
Heav'n neglected lay, ev'n Sacred
YOV:
Our
own dire
Fates did
all our Tears employ,
Griefs have self-interest too as well as
Ioy.
But when
such Sacrifice from
us is due,
What must the
Mighty Loss exact from
You,
Who Mourn a
King, and dear lov'd Husband too!
How shall we measure that vast tide of
Woe,
That did Your Royal
breaking Heart o'reflow?
[Page 2] And almost, with a high imperious force,
Bore down the Banks of
Life in its too rapid course.
Your
Languishments and
Sorrows, who repeats,
Or by his
own, on
Yours a
Value sets,
Compares
deep Seas to
wand'ring Rivolets;
Who though a while in their own Meads they stray,
Lose their young streams at last in the unbounded Sea.
Shou'd all the Nations tenderest griefs combine,
And all our Pangs in one vast body joyn,
They cou'd not sigh with
Agonies like
Thine.
That You survive, is Heav'ns peculiar care,
To
charm our
Grief, and
heal our wild
Despair;
While we to
Charles's Sacred Relict bow,
Half the
great Monarch we Adore in You:
The
rest, our Natural Devotions grant;
We
Bless the
Queen, and we
Invoke the
Saint:
Nor fades your
Light with
Englands Worship'd Sun,
Your
Ioys were set, but still Your
Glory shon:
And with a Luster that shall still increase,
When worlds shall be no more, and Natures self shall cease;
For never in
one mortal Frame did joyn
A
Fortitude and
Vertue more
Divine:
Witness the
Steady Graces of your Soul
When charg'd by
Perjuries so black and foul,
As did
all Laws, both
Humane and
Divine controul.
When Heaven (to make the
Heroin understood,
And Hell it self permitted loose abroad,)
Gave you the
Patience of a
Suffering God.
So our Blest
Saviour his
Reproaches bore,
When Piercing Thorns His
Sacred Temples wore,
And stripes compell'd the Rich
redeeming Gore.
Your pretious
Life alone, the Fiends disdain'd,
To Murder home, your
Vertue they prophan'd;
[Page 3] By Plots so rude, so Hellish a Pretence,
As ev'n wou'd call in question
Providence:
Or why Avenging
Thunder did not strike
Those
Cursed hands durst touch the Sacred
Ark;
But as where
long the Sun is
Set in
Night,
They with
more joy Salute the breaking
Light,
Heav'n cast this
Cloud before your Radient
Beams,
To prove their
Force by contrary
Extreams;
The Nations all with new Devotion bow,
To
Glories never understood till now:
'Twas
Majesty and
Beauty Aw'd before,
But now the
Brighter Vertue they adore.
This the
Great Lord of all Your Vows beheld,
And with disdain Hells baffl'd rage repell'd;
He knew Your
Soul and the soft
Angel there,
And long (kind Rivals) did that Empire share;
And all your Tears, your pleading Eloquence,
Were needless Treasures, lavish'd to convince
Th' Adorer of your known, and Sacred
Innocence.
When not for
Life the Royal
Suppliant mov'd,
But
His belief, whom more than Life she lov'd;
From whom, if e're a frown she cou'd receive,
'Twas when She
doubted that He cou'd believe;
While he repeats the dear confirming Vows,
And the
first soft adressing
Lover shows.
By your
reflecting Smiles the World was gay,
Faction was fled, and
Vniversal Ioy
Made the glad business of the welcome day.
Ah! too secure we baskt beneath the
Sun,
And little thought his
Race so near was run,
[Page 4] But as if
Phaeton had usurp'd its Rule,
In the full Brightness of its Course it fell,
Whilst all the
frighted World with wonder gaz'd,
And
Nature at her own disorder stood amaz'd:
While you, ah
Pious Mourner did prepare
To offer up to
Heav'n your early Prayer;
You little thought 'twou'd meet your dear-lov'd Monarch there:
But on the Wings of
Death the News approach't,
And e'ne destroy'd the wondring sense it touch't;
O Mighty
Heav'n-Born Soul! that cou'd support
So like a God! this cruel
first effort!
Without the
Feebler Sexes mean replies,
The
April Tributes of their
Tears and
Cries.
Your
Valu'd Loss a
Noysey Grief disdain'd
Fixt in the
heart, no outward sign remain'd;
Though the
soft Woman bow'd and dy'd within;
Without, Majestick Grace maintain'd the
Queen!
Yet swiftly to the
Royal Bed You fly,
Like short-liv'd Lightning from the parted sky;
Whose new-born Motions do but flash and dy.
Such
Vig'rous Life ne're mov'd your steps before,
But here—they
sunk beneath the
Weight they bore.
Princes we
more than
Humane do allow,
You must have been
above an
Angell too;
Had You
resisted this sad
Scene of
Woe;
So the
Blest Virgin at the Worlds great loss,
Came, and beheld, then
Fainted at the
Cross.
Methinks I see, You like the
Queen of
Heav'n,
To whom all
Patience and all
Grace was giv'n;
When the Great
Lord of
Life Himself was lay'd
Upon her Lap, all wounded, Pale, and Dead;
[Page 5] Transpierc'd with Anguish, ev'n to Death
Transform'd,
So She
bewail'd Her God! so
sigh'd, so
Mourn'd;
So His blest
Image in Her Heart
remain'd,
So His blest
Memory o're Her Soul still
Reign'd!
She Liv'd the
Sacred Victim to deplore,
And never
knew, or
wisht a Pleasure more.
But when to Your Apartment You were brought,
And
Grief was Fortify'd with
second Thought;
O how it burst what e're its Force withstood,
Sight to a
Storm, and swell'd into a
Flood;
Courage, which is but a peculiar Art
By
Honour taught; where
Nature has no Part:
When e're the
Soul to fiercer
Passions yield,
It ceases to be brave and quits the field;
Do's the abandon'd sinking
heart expose
Amid'st Ten Thousand Griefs, its worst of Foes.
Your
Court, what
Dismal Majesty it wears,
Infecting all around with
Sighs and
Tears;
No Soul so
dull, so
insensible is found,
Without concern to tread the hallowed Ground;
Awful, and
silent, all the Rooms of State,
And
Emptiness is Solemn there, and great;
No more Recesses of the sprightly Gay,
But a Retreat for
Death, from Noise and Day:
Eccho's from Room to Room we may pursue,
Soft
sighs may hear, but
Nothing is in view;
Like Groves inchanted, where wreck'd Lovers ly,
And breath their Moans to all the Passers-by;
Who no kind Aids to their Relief can bring,
But Eccho back their
Pitying sighs agen.
[Page 4] But the mysterious
Sanctum is conceal'd,
To
vulgar Eyes that must not be reveal'd;
To your
Alcove your Splendours you confine,
Like a
Bright Saint veil'd in a
Sable Shrine;
As the
Chast Goddess of the
silent Night,
You Reign alone, retir'd from
Gaudy Light;
So Mourning
Cinthia with her Starry Train,
Wept the sad Fate of her Lov'd Sleeping
Swain.
FINIS.